‘ The Weather Sunday — Partly cloudy (Details Page 2) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition lllith YEAR x * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. SKPTEMBER 12, 1953—28 PAGES ASSOCIATED INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE PRESS UNITED PRESS 7c txaminat GM Wins $285 Million Army Order +> Truck Division Gets$85, 000,000: Tanks at Fisher Work to Carry Through 1954 for Grand Blanc and City Plants WASHINGTON (AP) — The army has awarded con- tracts totaling $285,000,000 to General Motors for Pat- ton medium tanks and 212- ton trucks. The truck contract for $85,000,000 goes to the GMC Truck & Coach Divi- sion at Pontiac. The Fisher Body Division of GM was announced as successful bidder on the 260-million-dollar contraet for the Patton tanks, to be built at Grand Blanc. Reo Motors Corp. at) Lansing will receive a 61- million-dollar contract for 212-ton trucks. A spokesman for GMs Truck & Coach Division said the new con- tract would not be effective until next year and would have no actual effect on the division's labor picture. He explained: ‘We have had military truck contracts foi the last three years and have had steady employment on them, except for one shut- down caused by the fire at the gear plant in Livonia.” (Philip J. Monaghan, general manager of the GMC Truck and a vice president of GM, told the Press totlay: “We are very happy to be able to continue our military truck production through 1954. Tu the citizens of Pontiac it will mean a_ continuing level of empleyment in this end of our business.’’) Secretary of the Army Robert T. Stevens said the General Mo- tors tank bid was about 12 per cent lower than one by the Chry- sler Corp. Both motor companies have been producing the tanks. | officially designated M48. The Army said Chrysler would continue building M48s at Newark, Del., until April 1954 and after- wards would keep its tools in ‘package storage’ so as to re- sume production ‘‘quickly if nec- essary.’’ Stevens said Chrysler would continue under a separate contract to design the M48. ° The secretary also said the Reo truck bid was slightly higher than GM’s but it was decided to keep both plants in production ‘to maintain a broader produc- tion ‘base and reduce delivery rates.”’ Stevens said other army ve- hicles will continue to be pro- duced by these manufacturers: Willys for the %-ton truck or ‘jeep; Dodge for the %4-ton International Harvester for the 5-ton and Mack for the 10-ton. James E. Goodman, § general manager of GM's Fisher Body Division, announced the medium T48 Patton tanks would be built at Grand Blanc, where GM al- ready is producing tanks for the army, The” Army said the GM tank contract would take more than a year to complete. ‘ bets ae: ei Me ~ AID EARTHQUAKE VICTIMS Kartsalides of 86 S. Shirley Ave. , who came here from Greece two years ago, donates a blanket in Junior Chamber of Commerce to obtain bedding for | Blankets Are Solicited for Greeks — Mrs. Despina victims of the Greek earthquakes. Gouvellis of St. Pontiac Press Photo The Rev. S. D. George Greek Orthodox Church, “‘Operatiun Warmth,” a drive sponsored by Pontiac) accepts the gift. Persons are asked to bring blankets to their church services this Sunday, Pilots Bail Out Near Chicago Search On for Airman in Lake Michigan; 2nd ‘Man Down on Land CHICAGO (UP)—Coast Guards- men searched Lake Michigan to- day for an Air Force pilot missing in a double jet plane crash. man of St. Louis, Mo., was be- lieved to have bailed out of his falling F86 jet plane during a vio- lent storm Friday night. liet, Dll., after the pilot, 2nd Lt. Rudy Koch 6f ° Cincinnati, bailed out over Chicago’s out- skirts. The plane apparently trav- eled at least 25 miles after Koch abandoned it. The two jets were part of a flight of four flying from Victor- ville, Calif. to O'Hare Field at Chicago. They ran into heavy weather as they approached Chicago. Koch said his fuel supply fell as he buffeted the storm. He informed his flight commander that he didn’t have enough fuel to fly the 30 remaining miles to O'Hare Field. The commander, ist Lt. Jack Bowman of Payette, Ida., ord- ered Koch to fly his plane away from the thickly-populatee Chi- cago area, Koch abandoned his jet over 113 ‘Street on Chicago's outskirts and jones in his parachute into neigh- boring Will County. Holly Mom Waits to Hear of Missing Son in Korea Mrs. Nora Bailey of Holly, mother of Sgt. Charles V. ’ Bailey. 23, who is listed as missing and possibly a pris- oner of the Communists in Korea, still had hopes today for her son’s safety. Mrs. Bailey is also the mother of 12 other chil- dren. Three besides Charles , are in service. Charles was one of two Oakland County men on the latest list of names released by the Defense Department as ‘missing and un- accounted for’ pris’ uers. The new list brought to 40 those named from Michigan, out of a total of 944. The United Nations Command has demanded that the Reds ad- vise it immediately what became of the men. **I hope and pray that Charlies gets home suafely,’ said Mrs. Bailey. “If I save up nope, | wouldn’t have anything left.” Mrs. Bailey said she hadn’t Charies as yet. The last time (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) The pilot, 2nd Lt. Henry L. Beer- | Another jet crashed near Jo-°* Schools to Need Added Rooms - Superintendent Says Condition Will Become Acute by 1959 Growing numbers of students will call for 114 more elementary class- rooms, 10 multi-purpose rooms and a new senior-junior high school by 1959, according to Frank J. Du- Frain. The superintendent of schools told the: Pontiac Board of Educa- tion that enrollment in Pontiac Public Schools probably will pass 19,000 by 1959. Present total is approximately 16,000. Board members estimate the new buildings would cost some $4 million. Only about $600,000 is left un- allocated in the current special struction which will run through 957. p New schools needed, DuFrain said, include a 45-room senior-ju- nior high school on Perry street, and new elementary; schools at Washington and Lincoln Junior Hign Schools on Kennett road, Baldwin and Joslyn avenue. » Additions will be called for at Malkim, McConnell, Owen, Haw- thorne, Whitfield, Whittier and Willis. schools, he said. The district also wants to re- place some 15 ‘“‘unsatisfactory”’ rooms—such as basement class- (peed and room lacking windows and install several multi-purpose _|rooms in, other buildings. Little Thief, Little Gun, Little Loot, Little Store DALLAS, Tex. (®—Add small- time crime: Said liquor store own- er Thomas LaRussa last night: “He ordéred a small bottle of whisky. then pulled a small pistol and made me give him all the money in the register.”’ LaRussa, who said the loss was $100, added that the robber, about 5 feet tall, ‘‘was so short and thin he might be taken for a jockey.” LaRussa's store is named the Little Man Package store. / 2.5 mill tax evy for building con-' Eviction Jurors Receive Police Escort in Lapeer LAPEER—Four women jurors on the panel that found Floyd Schreiber, 60, of Almont, guilty of assault during the eviction of Mrs. Elizabeth Stevens last year were given police escorts home earl} today because of the hos- tile attitude of court spectators. Schreiber, father of nine children, was the second de- fendant convicted in the widely-publicized eviction row that stemmed from the failure of a mutual fire insurance company in the 1930s, Eight others await trial. yo Np Sheriff's deputies escort- ed the women home after the verdict was returned at midnight. Angry sympa- thizers of Schreiber re- mained in the courtroom even after court was ad- journed. Schreiber and 10 other farmers were charged with assaulting of- ficers when they tried to evict Mrs. Stevens June 2, 1952. Sheriff Clark Gregory, who was mauled in the attempt, failed that time but returned two weeks later and car- ried the widow from the farm. Mrs. Stevens’ farm was one of several in the area, including the famed ‘Fort Ziegenhardt,’’ which were sold at public auc- tion to satisfy claims on them as the result of the bankruptcy of Lapeer County Farmers Mutual Fire Insurance Association, The farm owners had refused to pay the assessments and re- sisted eviction attempts. Judge Timothy C, Quinn set sen- tencing for Schreiber for Sept. 21 after he was found guilty by a jury of six men and six women. Red Embassy Picketed NEW DELHI, India W—A group of 75 demonstrators paraded be- fore Red China’s embassy here today shouting slogans demanding withdrawal of Chinese troops from Tibet. Movie-Kissing Banned MANILA (®—The Angeles City Council has banned kissing in theaters—in the audience that is. Violators face thé prospect of a fine. imprisonment or both. AP Newsman Tells of Imprisonment The AP’s William N. Oatis was the last correspondent out of Prague, the last representative of the world’s free press to Aeave that Commurit country where the reporting of ‘“un- official”” news is considered spying. a And he made a tong detour getting out: Two years in a {Ex-Communists , | young son of Gen. James A. Van Testify fo éN0 Red Clergymen Also Claim 3,000 Are! Sympathetic; Alleg ed Workers Deny Charge From AP & UP Dispatches WASHINGTON — For- mer Communist Party of- ficials have told the House} Un - Americar Activities | Committee that Commu-,; nists infiltrated American | churches with “great suc- cess.” One witness, in sworn testimony released Friday night, said 600 American clergymen are “secret”. Communists and between 3,000 and 4,000 are in the “fellow-traveling category.” The testimony was taken in closed-door hearings in New York last July from four former Party mem- bers. Joseph Zack Kornfedder, who quit the Party in 1934, told the Committee that Dr. Harry F. Ward, professor emeritus at Union Theological Seminary in New York was the ‘‘architect’’ of Commu- nist infiltration of the churches. Ward replied from his home in Cliffside, N. Jd., that the charge was ‘‘completely false’’ and accused the committee of a “gross violation’ of its rules by failing to inform him of the testi- mony. Benjamin Gitlew, who was oust- ed as general secretary of the Communist Party in 1929, said the Reds had been “‘highty successful” in penetrating the Methodist Church. “The principal individuals in- volved in the Communist conspir- acy to subvert the Methodist Church for Communist purposes are: Dr. Harry F. Ward, Rev. Jack R. McMichael, Rev. Charles Webber, Rev. Alson J. Smith, Dr. Willard Uphaus, Margaret For- syth, Rev. Lee H. Ball and Prof. Walter Rauthenstrauch,”’ he said. Uphaus said at Conway, N..H. that ‘there is just no truth’’ in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Reds May Hold 309 U. S. Pilots Gen. Van Fleet’s Son Is Included in Latest List Compiled WASHINGTON (UP) — The De- fense Department today identified 309 Air Force pilots and airmen believed captured but never ac- counted for by the Communists. Included oft the list were: Capt. James A. Van Fleet Jr., son of the former 8th Army commander, and double jet ace Capt. Harold E. Fischer, of Swea City, Ia. With today’s list, the Defense Department virtually completed the task of notifying the next of kin of 944 Americans. The United Nations Command informed the Communists it had reason to believe the Americans had once been held in Red captivity. The U. N. demanded an accounting of the fate of each man. The total names published is still 27 short of the 944 on the original list. A defense spokesman said the remaining names required further cross-checking before next of kin could be notified. Van Fleet was reported missing in action in April, 1952 after pilot- ing a B-26 bomber over North Korea. Today’s list was the first public announcement that the a Fleet may have been captured by the Communists. The large number of Air Force men on the latest list, coupled with the Red claim that Fischer was shot down over Manchuria, raised speculation that the Com- munists may be holding back some U. S. Airmen on the grounds they had been captured in the “neutral” ‘erritory of Red China. Air Force circles feared that the Communists may contend they are ‘“*special’’ prisoners who can be released only through diplomatic channels. De you knew? You can own 8 new 1953 Rocket “Engine Oldsmobile 88” de- Pon if fivered in tiac for as ttle as $2354.28. Including taxes & license, from Jerome Olds - rE 4-3300, 280 w Bt. ' WEDS HEIRESS—U. S. Sen. John F. Kennedy, 36, (D-Mass) and Jacqueline Lee Bouvier, 24, of Newport, R. I. (shown above) were married this morning in St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Newport. Arch- bishop Richard J. Cushing of Boston performed the ceremony before 700 prominent guests. 5 nin Mrccssans: é United Press Phote Nine Men Set Adrift in Barge Torn Loose in MARQUETTE (AP)—Nine men were adrift today in a powerless dredge barge, torn loose from the tug Purvis by the heavy seas that ravaged Lake Superior near Por- Lake Superior Hearing Is Set on Parking Land City Seeks to Condemn Farke Street Property for Public Use A hearing on Pontiac City's pe- tition to condemn property at 11-49 Parke St. for a public parking lot has been set for Oct. 22 in Oakland County Circuit Court. Circuit Judge H. Russel Hol- land Friday ordered property owners to appear at the hearing at 9:30 a.m. and show cause why the property should not pe con- demned. The city petition was filed in Oakland County Clerk’s office Friday by Pontiac City Attor- ney William A. Ewart. Pontiac City Commission Tues- day declared acquisition of the land a public necessity and in- structed Ewart to start court action. : The land in question is bounded on the east by Parke street, west by the Clinton River, and north by Slater Apartments. It borders city-owned land to the south, The City Commission announced some time ago it wanted to use the property in question, plus its own land in the area, for a 200-car, metered parking lot. U. §. Army Forces Impress Roger Kyes BERLIN, Germany » — U. S. Undersecretary of Defense Roger M. Kyes arrived in Berlin today impressed with the tip top appear- ance of American forces he al- ready has seen in West Germany. ‘They look good,’’ he said at Tempelhof Airport. The undersecretary, on a Eu- ropean inspection tour, was ac- companied by Gen. Thomas T. Handy, deputy U. S. commander in Europe. Asst. Defense Secre- tary Frank C. Nash and Airforce Undersecretary : James H. Doug- las. The party will return to West Germany tomorrow. Turkish Sheep Killed. ISTANBUL, Turkey —An early cold wave and snowstorm killed more than 3,000 sheep in eastern Turkey, the semi-official Anato- lian News Agency said today. Crops suffered heavy damage. In Today's Press Buliding News .....sceseeee-:: 13-20 Church News .....-cssceeess- 8 te # QUO ic iene ietcscepeenes Wh ss Comaty Mews ...ccccccccscccccess: 5 Dr George Crane ......66.-e005+: 4 ee yap CoS nOCOUOROOCDOOAOO: 4 Bemity Peet qc ccccccccscccccssnce 6 Markets . oc ccccrccccccvccces: 21 Dg OOOO OOCOR OULU Ce 6 pd & Radice Programs .........- - bi eeoooor oe 1@ te 11 Want Ads .........- 23, 24, 25, 26, 27 Women's Pages ....---.-0+++- 6 te 7 t *tage Canal last night. Coast Guard Stations along the shoreline were alerted, They re- ported the tug Pontiac and the freighter Albert C. Denkey ‘on the on Set for Tuesday in Rape Slaying Senator Married Today Father of Two Arraigned on Murder Count: Prosecutor Reports He Now Admits 6 Assaults in Past 4 Years Donald V. O’Brian, who has admitted six sex at- tacks, was charged yester- ‘iday with the first degree murder of Mrs. Hallie O. Perkins, 55. -The 27-year-old gardener demanded exan.ination when arraigned on the murder charge yesterday afternoon before Pontiac Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. The examina- tion was set for 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. A second warrant, charg- ing O’Brian with the com- mon-law rape of a 16-year- old girl, was approved by Oakland County Prosecuter Frederick C. Ziem, but held in abeyance by police pend- ing disposition of the mur- der Case. Under further questioning yes- terday, O'Brian flatly denied the sex-slaying of JoAnn, Gillespie early this year in Detroit and of- fered to take a lie detector test if police want him to. But he did admit the attempt- ed attacks on a young girl four years ago, a 65-year-old Pontiac woman in April and a Pontiac housewife in May, said Ziem. Earlier O’Brian, whose 19-year- way to the barge and the Purvis. The Purvis lost two other barges but they were unmanned. Also in difficulty but making headway was the 500-foot ore car- rier Maryland, owned by the Bethlehem Transportation , Co. Officials said the ships ragfo re- ported earlier that the vessel was in ‘“‘the rough of the sea.”’ The Maryland reported that she would put in at Marquette. Winds neared 40 m.p.h. in the area. The Coast Guard hurried help to the Purvis near Mich- ipicoten Island, 50 miles north of Sault Ste Marie. “» Small craft warnings were broad- cast in the area at 6 p. m. yes- terday. They were changed to a northeast storm warning at 6 a.m. today. The Coast Guard said the Den- key would pump oil onto the waters in an effort to tame the seas. Partly Cloudy, Cool Weather Forecast Partly cloudy and cool weather is the order of the day for Pon- tiac residents tonight and _ to- morrow. The U. S. Weather Bureau pre- dicts a low of 56 to 60 tonight and a high of from 67 to 70 degrees Sunday. Light showers which amounted to .24 of an inch of rain sent the mercury skidding from a high of 77 to a low of 58 de- grees on Friday. Today at 8 a. mesthe reading was 61, but by 2 p. m. in down- town Pontiac the mercury regis- tered 69 degrees. old wife and two small children live at 4 Liberty St., confessed the fatal rape-attack on Mrs. Perkins, the rape of the 16-year-old girl and the attempted attack on Mrs. Mary Forgette of 20 Oriole Rd., whose screams led to his capture, according to the prosecutor. Capt. Clark* M. Wheaton, chief of Pontiac detectives, said he be- lieves O'Brian may be responsible for other attacks that have not been reported to police. After the examination, O’Brian is scheduled to take a lie detector test in the Gillespie case and in other unsolved sex attacks, said Ziem. O'Brian was questioned yester- day by Ziem and Chief Assis- ant Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor, Others present Detective John DePauw, State Po- lice Detective Charles Leaf, Capt. Wheaton and Pontiac Police Chief Herbert W. Straley. O'Brian told the authorities, “I’m glad that I'm caught. I won't be able to hurt anybody else."’ He said ‘‘these urges started to come over me’’ several years ago. “There was nothipg I could do but take«walks in the dark, It was always the first woman I saw.”’ He said he never followed a plan, but roamed the streets, us- ually in dark, outlying sections of the city. “When I had a few beers, the urge would be the stronger,’’ said O'Brian. ‘“‘But it wasn’t drinking |that brought the urge on.’’ O’Brian was captured Wednes- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Denies Party Membership actress, maintained today Socialist grandfather. But the red-haired ever joining the Commu- \nist party or ever casting a ballot fos a Communis! candidate. Rep. Donald Jackson (R-Calif.) agreed ‘‘there is no indication that Miss Ball ever was a member of the Communist’ Party.”’ Jackson disclosed Friday that an investigator for the House Un- American Activities Committee, of which he is a member, had taken testimony from the act- ress, “Miss Ball has cooperated with the committee investigator in all respects,”’ Jackson said. ‘‘She has (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) comedienne, star 2 pe Love Lucy” sheW,~tlenied — House Committee Clears Lucille Ball of Red Ties HOLLYWOOD (UP)—Lucille Ball, television’s top she registered to vote as a Communist in a 1936 primary election only to please her of! at the questioning were Pontiac ° ‘ —_ \ pd __TWO Survey Shows 600 to 800 Vacant Building Places - Left in Birmingham City From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM—Is Birmingham running out of building space? - A check of city officials re- vealed that there are about 800 unoccupied lots left within the . present city limits. Not all of these will be used for ing units if it were annexed, they stated. ¢ * s * the Hills Church has scheduled a 12:45 p.m. luncheon this Monday at the Pontiac Yacht Club. Hos- tesses will be Mrs. Kenneth Ray- John Bathgate Circle of Kirk in|: THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 Detroiter Will Head Automobile Club LOS ANGELES, Calif (UP) — R. Thomas, a Detroit printing exe- cutive, has been reelected presi- dent of the American Automobile Association. The association elected officers Friday at an annual meeting here. || Eight hurtired delegates from 750 AAA-affiliated motor clubs took part in the meeting. Thomas told delegates the AAA’s membership now includes more Dems Gather for Big Parley To Try and Heal Party Wounds Suffered in ‘52 Election Defeat CHICAGO (UP) — Former Pres- ident Harry S. Truman and Demo- construction purposes, as many ee Harold Haskins and than peo Denanginven Rind by ie cratic leaders from all but two residents have acquired lots near| Mrs. L. R. Johns. second man from membership to the rhe * *« be AAA president. The first was states gathered today for their property to leave vacant, and many others are too small to sup- port buildings. City Assessor Elmer Haack said his ‘‘guesstament’’ would peg the number of construction lots at 600 at present. Assuming single family residen- tial development of these, with an average three member family, ap- proximately 2,000 new residents would be added via the construc- tion route. How fast are these lots being pressed into use? “We're over the peak of build- ing,’ both City Planning Director Robert Boatman and Building In- spector Jack Walker agree. ~ From a low of 57 units in 1945, city building jumped to 920 units In the top year, 1950, Walker stated. Since then, the number has been dipping annual- ly, from 557 in 1951 to 424 in 1952. A prediction tor 1953 envisions about 230 housing units, and if present boundaries and building trends continue, a gradual de- cline thereafter. Three large developments-total about 80 units alone this year. The trend is toward more cus- tom construction, as large num- bers of:lots decrease, according to Walker. Commercially, Boatman said, only about 60 per cent of the area zoned for business present- ly bears that usage, with the rest in residential use or vacant. The growt» picture will be vast- an ly changed, Haack, Walker and ! Boatman stressed, if the city ex- tends its boundaries through an- nexations, however. Contract for the North Wood- ward avenue water main be- tween Vinewood and Harmon, has been awarded to low bidder Larry Petrick of Royal Oak, by the City Commission for $3,073.- 30. This is slightly below the en- Rally Day at Redeemer Luther- an Church will be tomorrow, the Rev. Theodore Wuggazer has an- nounced, with awards for perfect attendance during the year awaré- ed in the Sunday school and church service. As is traditional, movies will be taken outside of the congregation and individual classes. = * * * Informed that the old well cur- rently in use in Springdale Park is no longer safe, the City Com- mission has authorized the sink- ing of a test well there, and to provide data on other wells there which might augment the city’s water supply until Detroit water is available in 1955. * * * . Chéir members of First Bap- tist Church have been invited to a picnic at 5:30 tonight at the home of Charlotte Smith, North Woodward. A hearing on the requested re- zoning from single family to in- come bungalow, on property of Miss Vida McGiffin on South Bates, has been set by city com- missioners for Oct. 12. City Manager Donald C. Egbert said the Planning Board was going to study rezoning of the area, and was opposed to spot zoning, but the hearing was requested by Miss. McGiffin. gineering department's estimate. . * * * Sunday School! CIRCUS FUN—Little Swedish Crown-Prince Karl-Gustaf (right), his sister Princess Christina (center) and a small friend Agneta Haeggloef are ‘‘in stitches” as they watch performers at a circus > ote in Stockholm. Royalty or not, people the world over love a circus, as the photo above illustrates. Holly Mom Waiting to Hear of Missing GI (Continued From Page One) she saw her son was December 1949, before he left to go over- seas. Charles left Holly High School, where he played on the football team, to enlist. Mrs. Bailey was notified of her son’s capture on Aug. 17, 1950,) over three years ago. Since he | left Tokyo, she said, she has re- ceived no word from him directly. On Aug. 24 of this year Sgt. Bailey was listed by the Com- Church to Hold Services at Baldwin School BIRMINGHAM — The Rev. Har- old Towne, minister of St. James Episcopal Church, announced to- day that services will be held at Baldwin School starting tomorrow. The move first became necessary when church remodeling was start- ed. It was further heightened when a fire caused a several months de- lay in completion of the project. Services will be held in the school until workers finish at St. James, Kev. Mr. Towne said. The regular 8:00, 9:30 and Il O'Brian Hearing Set for Tuesday (Continued From Page One) day night by James F. Brown, 18, of 37 Vinewood Ave., and Jack Seebald, 48, of 27 Oriole Rd., when they. answered the screams of Mrs, Forgette. After questioning by DePauw and Leaf, they said, O'Brian admit- ted the sex-slaying of Mrs. Per- kins, whose body was found Aug. 15 in a field at Beverly and Bald- win Aves., about four blocks from her home at 76 W. Longfellow Ave. ‘‘When she began struggling and tried to scream,’ said O'Brian, fone TV on the night of the attack on the teenager and said that he weighed about 175 pounds and was five feet, 10 inches tall. “At that time we were looking for a man who weighed about 200 pounds and was about five feet, eight. Phis description was given by the teenager, but later the physical description was revised.” He pointed out that police had narrowed the search down to men in the 20 to 40-year bracket who were taller and thinner than the original description of the suspect. “O'Brian certainly would have been placed in a show-up along with other suspects who had not already been shown to the the late Thomas P. Henry. Ex-Commies Testify fo 600 Red Pastors (Continued From Page One) allegations he was involved in an attemp’ to ‘“‘subvert’’ the Methodist Church. He said “I am positively not a Commu- nist.’ At Irvington, N. Y., Ball said the testimony was ‘“‘ridiculous.’’ “IT am not a member of the Communist Party nor do I follow what -is called the Communist ‘line’,”” Ball said. McMichael, who also was identi- fied as a Communist, denied the charge in a subsequent open hear- ing in Washington. His testimony has been sent to the Justice De- partment for examination for pos- sible perjury. Kornfedder cited as. examples ot boring from within the churches the Methodist Federa- tion for Social Service, once headed by Ward, and the Peo- ple’s Institute of Applied Re- ligion, headed by Rev. Claude C. Williams of Helena, Ala. Korn- fedder said both Ward and Wil- liams were Communists. In the Catholic Church, Korn- fedder said, the infiltration ‘‘is mainly among laymen.’’ He com- mented that Communists ‘‘had some experience trying to line up the Catholic priests and, well, something usually happened pretty party’s biggest conference since its ‘landslide November defeat. The main purpose of the two-day get-together starting Monday was believed to be the healing of party wounds suffered during the 1952 election battle. However, party spokesmen said Mr. Truman might well takegthe occasion to get in some licks at the Eisenhower administration. It was also possible, spokesmen said, that he would make some po- litical capital out of the resigna- tion of Martin P. Durkin from: the President’s cabinet. Mr. Truman, scheduled to arrive today, will take the main share of the spotlight with a 12-minute speech at a $100-a-plate fund-rais- ing dinner Monday night. The former President’s speech will be televised nationally, along with addresses by Alabama Sen. John Sparkman, the Democrats’ 1952 vice-presidential candidate, and other party leaders. Adlai Stevenson, the Demo- ctats’ champion in the last elec- tion, was expected to offer only a brief speech at the dinner, even though he was one of the most dominating figures at the conference. On Tuesday night, however, Stevenson will make a non-partisan report on his recently-completed world tour. The speech will be tele- vised nationally and the commit- tee sponsoring the address said there has been a ‘‘tremendous”’ demand for tickets from all over the nation. The 45-acre Porritt property on _ ~ * med quickly ... , munists as { the POWs who | ®- ™. services will be resu » , Adams roa a Troy Township Big doings are planned tomor- maa : setpe -o 0 ™ ‘aniceou. I put both hands around her teenager,’’ said DePauw. Chairman Jenner. (R-Ind) of the lj i { M F f e e island within the city lim! a fh s™|row for the First Methodist on ; Church: ached gin Sept. 20, will be held in the parish house as usual. Youngsters aged two-and-a-half to eight will meet at 11 a. m. Classes at 9:30 a. m. will be for nine-year-olds through high school age. Pilot Killed as Plane Crashes Into Field VANDALIA, Ill. (®)—A Navy fighter plane flying through a storm plunged into a corn field about 10 miles northeast of here last night, killing its only oceu- pant. He said he thought she was un- conscious when he bound her hands and feet, and covered her body with boards and an old coat. “I didn’t know she was dead until I read about it in the news- papers,’’ he added, O'Brian also admitted attacking the 16-year-old girl about nine hours after the discovery of Mrs. Perkins’ body, said Ziem. The suspect said he was unaware | police were investigating the mur- | der scene at the same time he , attacked the girl, only two blocks away. DePauw, investigation coordina- tor, said today that two small wered in the right bracket and who answered the revised description of the assailant. Meanwhile, Police Chief Straley and Mayor Arthur J. Law today lauded Brown and Seebald for capturing O'Brian. Straley told the pair, ‘‘Mayor Law and I acknowledge your out- standing action as a public service to the city of Pontiac.” Youngster, 6, Killed; Brother, 3, Is Hurt BATTLE CREEK (® — Struck down as she led a three-year-old group had information of ‘‘an ef- fort to establish a Communist cell in Catholic organizations.’’ Jenner cited testimony given here in June by two witnesses described as ‘active partici- pants’ in such an attempt. Sen- ate sources indicated the try at Catholic subersion was made some 10 or 15 years ago and failed. McMichael, now a Methodist pastor at Upper Lake, Cal., suc- ceeded Ward as head of the Meth- odist Federation in 1944 after the name was changed to the Method- ist Federation for Social Action. The federation is not an adjunct of the Methodist Church. Yachtman in Death DETROIT ‘(UP) — Attorneys for Stewart Kenyon, a_ professional yacht captain held in the investi- gation of a “abor Day drowning, planned to ask recorders court today to release him on a writ of habeas corpus. . Meanwhile, Detective Sgt. Glenn Coller said a lie detector test indi- cated Kenyon was telling the truth when he told investigators that Elizabeth Istvan, 29, fell acciden- tally into the Detroit River and drowned. The young woman's body was recovered last Wednesday after the : ' shots of O’Brian were shown time, it didn’t seem at all wrong |resurfacing progresses. Police} Was held Friday from the Sparks| ‘The plane. returning to Lambert! snaps ‘half broth -,.| He was named as a Commu- to try and please him. Chief Ralph W. Moxley said motor-| Griffin Chapel, with burial im) ¢, pe mn m ae Air Stas! a a cea a haga the Bea toenciinn “Gyear-old Shieiwor shat nist by Gitlow, Leonard Patterson, | 46-foot yacht was moved from its ists will be directed first over|Oak Hill Cemetery. The Rev.| °° “OWS “iNport avy vestigation, but she failed to iden- tev was killed by an autome.|® New York shipyard worker and | slip on police orders. Kenyon said “It was his last few years. He tify O’Brian as her attacker. Haynes street to Hunter, and later | John Mulder of the Central Meth-| tion from Norfolk, Va., where the | former Red, and Manning John-|the girl slipped and fell into the Pe celstireh-uy roomen, beccber on the detour will be moved north.{ dodist Church fficiated, pilot had been t aining with other} But the teenager maintained doen: the Ee sead wile mine son, a Party member for 10 years| water as she was boarding the and myself. That was all there was * *« & ‘| Mr, Bray died here Sunday. members of a squadron based here,| that she would never forget her| injuries. | ané now employed by the investi-| yacht. Henry Johnson is in charge of exploded as it struck the ground. ' attacker's voice, and _ picked gation section of the Immigration; He and Miss Istvan had met~in The scene was only 75 yards j ted myself... : : . to it, I never vo y O'Brian out after hearing his voice | from where Cliff Fisher, 22-months- and 17 years later they present me and Naturalization Service in New York. Navy officials identified the | pilot as Ens. Homer Archer Hol- a bar and had goné to-the yacht together Kenyon,-said. He said the program for Monday’s noon Luncheon meeting of the Rotary Uno F. Johanson Thursday, continued DePauw. She with this.’ Her husband, Desi Arnaz, who stars with her on the television show, also denied his wife +had ever been a member of the Com- munist Party. “She was never a party mem- ber or held a card,” Arnaz said. “She never belonged to any front organization or any committees. You know Lucy, she doesn’t even know who the hell was governor last year.” Congressman Jackson told a press conference: “In light of the fact that ir- reparable damage may result to Miss Ball unless the full extent of the committee's information is dis- closed, the committee has decided to release to the press and radio a sworn affidavit given to a com- mittee investigator by Miss Ball relating to her registration as a Communist Party voter and to her designation as a member of the state central committee in 1936.” “I believe she was influenced considerably by the political rea- soning of her late grandfather, who was sort of patriarch of the clan, and this led to the registra- tion of the entire family that year.” Jackson said. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly miles aa heur diminishing temerrow. Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m., At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 3 mphr. di- rection Southwest. Sun sets Saturday at 6:47 p.m. Sun rises Sunday at 6:10 a. m. ~ Moon sets Saturday at 8:16 p.m. Moon rises Sunday at 11:33 a.m. Dewntown Temperaeres B.MR. 000000 10 B.BB.vccccees 62 er -60 Al B.M..cc000 C4 .-61 1B Miccceccces 68 -63 1 P.M. .ccccees 67 P.M... +000.-68 Friday in Pentise (As recorded downtown) Highest temperature .......... cowee Tt Lowest CUFO nc occvcccccccess 58 Mean perature ......... mynococe 67.5 Weather—Cool, rain. .24 of an inch. Mean temperature Weather—Pair. Highest and Lewest Temperateres This Date in 81 Years 96 in 1952 38 in 1943 Saturday's Temperatere Chart Bismarck 78 38 Kan. City 95 «60 Brownsville 90 79 La rq 73 60 Buffalo 78 64 Memphis 95 #72 Cadillac 78 56 Miam! 85 «673 Chicago 90 60 Milwaukee 83 56 it? 89 66 Minneapolis 76 50 Pt. Worth 983 63 New Orleans 6s 66 53 New York Te 62 it 78 61 Phoenix 105 71 Du) 72 #43 Traverse C. 80 59 Gr. pids 86 71 Washington 177 63 Houghton 7% 41 = Club, to be held at the Com- munity House. He will introduce a representative from General Fireproofing in Detroit. There will be a film on fireproofing for businesses; also a question period. * * * As their first project, women of the Altar Society of the St. Colum- bia Catholic parish, to be built here soon, are not letting the fact that they lack a church building bother them, and have planned a family supper from 46 p.m. to- mortfow. teen Mile and Melton has been chosen as the spot for the supper, and all parishioners are invited. * * * A stop signal at Fourteen Mile and Southfield instead of a flasher has been agreed to by the City Commission. They had originally approved $75 for a flasher, sharing the costs with Southfield Township and the Oakland County Road Commission, but traffic increases in the area make the stop neces- sary, City Manager Donald C. Eg- bert stated. * * * Dr. Phillip Lett, First Baptist Church Sunday school superinten- dent, will install new officers of the Baptist Fidelis Class, as it holds its first fall meeting at 8:00 tonight in the church parlors. Husband and wife teams make up this year’s slate, with Ken- neth Kilbury to be installed as president, Duncan Hudson, vice- president, Mrs. Hudson as sec- rectary and Mrs. Kilbury as treasurer. f Program chairman Mrs. Stuart Smith has announced that Dr. Rob- ert Mason will speak to the group on polio. Mrs. Emil Kontz will give devotions and hostesses are Mrs. Clyde McClymonds, Mrs. J. C. Ak: erley and Mrs. Roland Erickson. * * * Because the Quarton School gymnasium is being used for class rooms until the new addition is completed, the PTA will hold no general meeting until November. As a substitute, a series of coffees has been arranged by Mrs. Ben Stone, chairman of room mothers. Family membership fees will be collected at the coffee hours? and the first two meetings will be at 10 Monday morning. Mrs. John Lorimer will host the Room 101 afternoon kindergarten group in her Fairview avenue home. Mothers of the afternoon Room 120 kindergartners will meet with Mrs.- Robert Heller on Berwyn road. RABAAA © * The site for the church at Four- j Uno F, Johanson, 69, of 15451 Rockdale St. in Detroit, died Fri- day morning. Mr. Johanson came to Pontiac from Chicago with the Yellow Cab Co. and resided here approximately 20 years be- fore going to Detroit 10 years ago. He was employed here by GMC Truck and Coach Division. Surviving are two sons, George and William of Pontiac; a brother, Godfrey in California; five grandchildren and one great- grandchild. Funeral willbe Monday at 1 p. m. from the Wilkie Funeral Home, 11583 W. Outer Drive, at! Lasher Road. The Rev. George R. Garver, paster of Ascension Lutheran Church here, will offi- proximately 2:30 ' p.m. in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Smash 37 Windows in Newly-Built Home BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Police chief Clarke Green esti- mated damage ‘‘in the thousands | of dollars’’ this morning, after!) vandals had shot 37 thermopane windows out of a house under construction at Adams and East, Long Lake road, Green said BB| guns had been used. Owner of the home is R. F.; Ackerman, of 20001 Goulburn, Detroit. ciate and burial will be at ap-| linghead, 24, of Springfield, Ml. Egyptian Army Men on Way to Visit U. S. CAIRO, Egypt — Fifty-five Egyptian army officers left today for the United States where they will visit military installations on invitation of the U. S. Government. The officers are being flown by a special Egyptian military plane to Wheelus Field, U. S. Military Base near Tripoli. From there they will be taken to the United States aboard an American mili- tary transport. Kids Don’t Like Bossing, assailant when she saw him in the six-man showup. O’Brian was among hundreds of men investigated during the month-long inquiry, said De- Pauw, and we had no reason to suspect him more than countless others. He said O’Brian did not have a police record, his wife said her husband was home watching tele- vision on the night of the attack on the teenager, and he failed to match the physical description the teenager first gave police following the attack. DePauw said _ they O’Brian's photographs after re- Institute Survey Reveals like least about parents? ‘‘Always being told what to do.”’ At least that was the major reaction among 5-to-12-year-olds questioned in a recent survey by the Youth Research Institute. After doing what they were told to do, the youngsters said, one of their parents’ biggest punishments was deprivation of television privi- leges. Hillsdale Justice Dies HILLSDALE — Tom Wood- bury, 67, Jonesville justice of the peace for eight years, died yes- terday at a Jackson hospital. NEW YORK (®—What do kids! ceiving two tips given by the same man shortly after Mrs. Perkins’ body was found. The informant said O’Brian was occasionally missing from work at night while working the after- noon shift at a factory in north Pontiac, and these brief disap- pearances occurred during April, four months before Mrs. Perkins’ body was found, reported DePauw. O'Brian changed jobs, and was employed at a Bloomfield Hills landscaping company at the time of his capture. “Investigators talked. with Mrs. O'Brian,”’ said DePauw, ‘‘and ob- tained the small snapshots from | obtained old, was killed by a truck Thurs- also pointed O'Brian out as her gay on South Kendall street. Patrolman Harold Bayn said Lou Griswold, 59, of Battle Creek, was the driver of the car which hit Shirley May and Daniel J. Richard near the center of the street as it made a left turn. Bayn said witnesses told him the children had a green light. pee The right front of the-ea¥ struck the children andthe right rear wheel crushéd Shirley May as she roHed beneath it. Flint Doctor to Speak on Rheumatic Fever LAPEER — Dr. Earl E. Cong- don of the Flint Osteopathic Hos- ‘pital will speak on rheumatic fever jbefore members of the Lapeer | Hospital Auxiliary Monday night. | The meeting will be held at 8 p. m. in the high school cafeteria. | All young mothers are invited to j hear the talk. 'Ten Hurt as Six Cars Pile Up on Turnpike | ELIZABETH, N. J. —Ten per- | sons were injured in a collision | on the New Jersey turnpike today involving about half a dozen cars. The crash occurred about a mile from the spot on. the turnpike where 20 vehicles piled up in a chain reaction crash in a smog Johnson testified the Commu- nists ordered ‘“thousands’’ of their members to _ rejoin churches in the 1930's. He said” they were ordered to “operate in cells designed to take control churches for the Communists.” _Phis method was not only pro- pounded,” he said, ‘‘but was exe- cuted with great success among large elements of Amerian church life.’’ Johnson, who was a Party mem- ber from 1930 to 1940, said the Party also had ‘‘small forces’’ planted in seminaries under Ward's leadership. Kornfedder said Red infiltration was aimed at all religions—Prot- i estant, Jewish, Catholic and Mos- ‘lem — but he said targets in the Catholic church were laymen rath- ler than priests. Child’s Leg Fractured When Struck by Auto Terry A. Feekart, 6, of 2995 Lapeer Rd., was treated for a fractured leg yesterday at Pon- tiac General Hospital after being | struck by a car while crossing ' Lapeer road near her home, ac- cording to Michigan State Police of the Pontiac Post. Russell Harris, 38, of 935 Hill- berg. Oxford. told police he was unable to stop when the child her. She said her husband was | last Saturday injuring 20 persons. | darted in front of his car. $2 CTING NURSERY RHYMES — Like all little girls, the Dionne quintuplets loved to dress up and act out nursery rhymes. That's the way to have fun on a rainy 2 day when you can't play outside, and the quints had an advantage— there was a permanent cast of five. One afternoon, for instance, they dressed Yvonne in a crown and neat with Marie, Annette, Emilie and Cecile robes and made a paper pie. Then. ey PE: ae “Sing a Song of Sixpence.” BRN was 4 fra WORLD © BY NEA SERVICE, INC. §. cs BE RAR ALLA LIICRE LEE ALLS il ee the happy scene at right as they that when she tumbled into the water-hé dived once for her body ieee soon became frightened and gave up the search. Cook-Nelson Post Will Install Officers Cook-Nelson Post 20, American Legion, will install new officers tonight at 8 o'clock in the post home, 206 Auburn Ave., said out- going Commander Joseph W. Gable. Leslie H. Dean succeeds Gable as post commander. Other new officers are V. K. Archer, first vice commander; Thomas Peter- son, junior vice commander; Ralph Dean, adjutant; Ross Hulet, fi- nance officer; Jay. Ruthenberg, sergeant-at-arms; Leo Mineweas- er, historian, and Arno Hulet, chaplain. County Deaths Robert Massie OXFORD — Service for Robert Massie, 91, formerly of thi$ area, will be Monday at 2 p. m. at West Berlin Church, Allenton, with burial in West Berlin Ceme- tery. He died yesterday, Arrange- ments are by Mabley Chapel, Oxford. Surviving are two sons and two stepsons, Robert of Pontiac and James of Allenton, Dr. J. A. Flowers of Detroit, and John Rey- nolds of Royal Oak; one sister, Miss Susan Massie of Dryden; and a brother, James, also of Dryden. Mrs. Iida May Schaffer WATERFORD — Service for Mrs. Ida May Schaffer, 75, of 4133 Wenonah Lane, will be in Ironton, Mo., with burial in Col- lins Cemetery. She died today. Survivors include three daught- ers, Mrs. Lillian Jones of Mis- souri, Mrs, Juanita Weager of Texas, and Mrs. Katherine Mills of Pontiac; and two sons, Robert of Arizona, and Jacob of Fern- dale. Arrangements are by C. J. God- hardt Funeral Home, Keego Har- bor. Found Guilty in Holdup ‘ George D. Lane, 27, of 6138 14th St., Detroit. and Floyd W. Lam- pela, 27, of 2211 Lathrup, Detroit, But the quints didn’t need any | show how little girls feel about | yesterday pleaded guilty to armed (left photo), they pulled blackbirds | Among their pictures just about the out of the pie as they acted out| time they were three, you'll find | > around the “king’’| script to make a merry show. | baskets of pretty May flowers. robbery and were set for sentenc- ing Sept. 18 by Oakland County "Circuit Court Judge Frank L. Doty. e ~ live up to our highest vi, PD S Outstanding Vales For Fal... ? P er 4 A wide selection of dia- mond bridal pairs that standards... at prices that are truly excep- uonal, Prices Range from $50.00 to $1,000.00 CONNOLLY’S 16 W. Huron St. . 4 Maren _THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 122, 1953 _ ee ATTENTION! Plant Employees! It you are in need of industrial safety giasses we are on the recommended list to fill your needs. Sell 17 N. Saginaw St. Optical Department Dr. B. R. Berman Optometrist Phone FE 4-7071 Wn By J. Lee Voorhees Boys and girls who'll take our places are go- ing back to school. They have absorbed Sunshine and muscle during the summer and now are going to absorb knowledge. We're going to meet busses, children walk- ing, laughing, running, playing enroute to VOORHEES school; that is our danger signal. DRIVE SLOW. BE ALERT, READY TO STOP INSTANTLY. We tell our sons and daughters to stay on sidewalks and use J. L. Cross Walks, but do they? They do until a boy jabs a girl with a rubber snake and like a flash she’s after him, or two boys toss a ball as they walk; the ball is fumbled and like a streak that boy is after it, out into the street and trouble. Hundreds of children are maimed, or worse, each year going to and. returning from school. Do your: part to mark up a Zero score for Pontiac. DRIVE SLOW WHEN YOU SEE CHILDREN AHEAD OF YOU. M. E. SIPLE VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 N. PERRY ST. PHONE FE 2-8378 Sinaia — ed | a lis STRAIN TOO GREAT—Mrs. John Antonis of San| prisoner of war, disembarked from the troopship * | Francisco collapses in the arms of her husband, right, | John Pope in San Francisco. | after her son, Pfc. Nick Antonis, He was one of 428 left, repatriated | repatriates aboard. d = Charge Official Was Kidnaped Poles Say U. S. Officers Abducted Interpreter Who Fled Reds PANMUNJOM uf — The Polish; Panmunjom Friday for delivery custody until the judge signs up, member of a four-nation commis- | three new members to the legion ' ‘sion policing the Korean truce charged today that a Polish inter- {preter who fled to freedom was | kidnaped by American Army oOffi- feturn. | |civilian interpreter, broke from a itruce inspection team at a South Korean air base Wednesday and was given political asylum by U.S. ' officers. * * * The Army won't say where Jaj- rdukiewicz is now. There has been | speculation that he was flown ei- | ther to Tokyo or Okinawa. Maj. Gen. M. Wagrowski, sen- ior Polish officer in Korea, Sat- urday read a letter of protest at |a meeting of the armistice super- | visory commission. | The letter charged that Hajdu- | kiewicz was kidnaped by American | officers and demanded his immedi- late return. — | The letter was addressed to Gen. | Mark W. Clark, U.N. commander, Get a Good USED TV $10-$15 Down — $5 ver Wk. at HAMPTON TV 286 State St. “YOU'LL BE THANKFUL FOR THAT TANK FULL! Twenty-eight years in the coal business in Pontiac has taught us one major point in heating the home. . better the product, the greater customer satisfaction. The Gee Coal Company have secured the finest quality fuel oil obtainable and offer families heating their home with Gee fortified fuel oil the same courteous delivery service that has won us hundreds and hundreds of friends and customers. Just one tank full of Gee better quality fortified fuel oil will convince you . . . Prepare now for a comfortable winter by.signing your fuel oil contract for a winterlong jen to an Allied liaison officer at | nias. lits contents. | tested against this violation of the | lcers and demanded his immediate | Tights guaranteed to the neutral Jan Hajdukiewicz, a 28-year-old | and was not submitted to the com- | Legion Members mission, The commission took no action) Dass the Goat on the letter, said Maj. Gen. Sven Grafstrom, Swedish delegate and| of Decatur, Il. commission. chairman. Grafstrom | é said the commission would not in-| DECATUR, Ill, W—Billy, a goat, tervene. He said the incident was is getting a fast brush-off by mem- a matter between the Polish dele-| bers of the Decatur post of the gation and the U. N. Command. | American Legion. The Red Peiping radio said a! _ Billy today is the unwanted prop- written copy of the letter was giv-| erty of County Judge Gus Grea- He'll remain in Greanias’ to Clark. The U. N. Command con- firmed a letter had been received, | post. but would not immediately divulge} The judge got the goat yesterday | from policeman Virgil Carr who Peiping said Wagrowski ‘“‘pro- | : he signed up three new members. Cody Holmes, city health com- ites as saddled w nations inspection teams by the| ™ssioner, who was saddled with armistice agreement and demand- turned to the inspection team.” three new members he said it was The commission met fo? two| illegal to raise goats within the hours and 35 minutes, took up only | Cty limits. routine matters after the protest, tha -j | pci elalaaaila another session for Measel or Measles, In Washington, the Pentagon re- | Bad However Spelled leased more names of 944 Ameri- | - are wre ove DETROIT (UP) — Mrs. Larry paue ibeen eh ca te ee baa Wright wasn't too astonished when still unaccounted for. her three children were stricken with the measles. What flabbergasted her was when she received her first traffic ticket while driving to a drug store for a prescription. The ticket was signed by Patrol- ;}man Tom Measels. Press Search for Boy Lost in Sequoia Park SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK, Calif. —More mountaineers were to join today in the search for 8-year-old Dana McClure, lost in this national park since early Wednesday. Dustlike pumice is thought to | cover the surface of the moon, | automatically lost possession when | the animal earlier this week, got; ed that Jan Hajdukiewicz be re-| Tid of it in a hurry. Reporting | ee i ~ ps FG\ The Good Sumaritan Now Watermelon-Less + hi have PORTALES, N.M. «&~—Homer| | Parsons is a Samaritan—without ; watermelons. Police caught five youngsters in | s patch and he said he would | been glad to give them a melon if they had asked. | The five came back—with three | friends. Parsons, true to his word, gave | ¢ + them each a melon—including his | last one. { THREE _ The ALBERTA MKT. 290 N. Paddock St. Will Be Open Monday, Sept. 14 —Frank Jacomino, Prop. A Diller A Dollar... ... some day a college scholar. And the tools of learn- ing you provide set a solid base of opportunities for your children in a grown-up world. START THEM ON A SAVINGS THAT WILL GROW! HIGHEST INTEREST RATE! INSURED SAVINGS! A Mutual Savings & Home Loan Association 16 EAST LAWRENCE STREET £ CURRENT RATE ww Dana wandered away from his | parents’ camp and an intensive | three-day search has failed so far. | The youngsters parents, Mr. and | Mrs. Delmar McClure of Pacoima, | (Los Angeles County), said the boy ° } was last seen watching a bear up a tree near their campsite. FUEL O00, \\ — supply of Gee Fortified Fuel Oil. You'll be thankful for that tank full! HOLDENS RED TRADING STAMPS GIVEN WITH FUEL OIL ORDERS! PHONE FEderal 5-818) GEE COAL CO. for Over 26 Years-Pontiac’s Leading Coal Dealer! 91 LAKE STREET ry” . the You are cordially invited to attend our ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE to be held Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday SEPTEMBER 15, 16 and 17 THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 361 S. Saginaw Street REFRESHMENTS DOOR PRIZES OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 DURING OPEN HOUSE A useful gift for each family FOUR SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac 12, Michigan O.S. Patent. Office Dally Except Sunday Published from Tus Pontiac Dany Paess Building Harotp A. Prrzceratp, Publisher Conaad N. Cuurcm Horact PF. Brovis Rosser. Bassett Editor Advertising Manager Nat'l Adv. Mgr ) Reg Entered at Post Office, Pontiac, Mich. as second class matte: MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press 1s entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all local news printed in this news- paper, as well as all AP news dispatches. Tue Pontiac Press is delivered by carrier for 40 cents @ week; where carrier service is not available, by mai) in Oakland and adjoining counties it is $1200 a year; else- where in Michigan and al) other places tn the United Btates $2000 a year. All mat] subscriptions are payable im advance. Phone Pontiac FE 2-8181. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS oe SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 Women’s Assailant Caught Pontiac's reign of terror is ended! - Thanks to/the qitick action of JAMES Brown, 18, and JACK SEEBALD, 48, the Suspect long sought in the sex attack which cost the life of Mrs. HALLIE PER- KINS is behind bars. More important to the com- munity, his confession that he com- mitted that crime. as well as an attack on a 16 year. old girl, means the prisoner, if convicted, probably will spend the rest of his life in a penitentiary. * * * As so often-happens in such cases, the confessed rapist’s downfall came as a result of an attempt to assault another victim, Mrs. Mary ForGeETTE of Oriole Road. Her screams attracted BRowNn and SEEBALD who pursued the fleeing Donatp V. O'Brian, captured him and held him till the police came. * * * ‘Besides facing a first degree murder charge in the death of Mrs. PERKINS, O'BRIAN is being questioned about sev- eral other sex crimes, including the mur- der of JOANN GILLESPIE in Detroit. Whether Brown and SEEBALD will be ruled eligible for the $5,000 reward posted by the City Com- missign, probably will have to await final disposition of the case. Nonetheless the commu- nity owes them a debt of grati- tude for bringing to an end one of the longest and most expen- sive manhunts in Pontiac’s his- tory. Tourist Trade Booming The fact that Michigan’s Summer tourist trade is setting a new high rec- ord is important not only to the resort industry but £0 all residents. Preliminary figures. reported by Michigan Tourist Council indicate total gross revenue will top last year’s $500,- 000,000 by 20 per cent. This means that if Autumn weather is favorable, resort owners: can hope to gross $600,000,000 in 1953. * * * From the start of the Summer season all signs pointed to a record year. Salés tax income for July and August was almost $8,000,000 ahead of last year. Stale ferry traffic showed an increase of 11 per cent and motor ‘traffic volume showed a similar gain. This year Michigar\’s scenic beauties and resort facilities attracted the bulk of our tourist visitors from nine. Mid- Western States. But far Western and Eastern seaboard States were repre- sented in larger numbers than usual. |e a ee From these facts it is easy. to under- stand why our third largest jndustry is so important to the State’s general eco- nomic health. Townships Gird for Fight Recent criticism of inequities and abuses in State aid to townships has brought quick reaction from township officials. . Already the Michigan Associa- tion of Township Officers has an- nounced the nucleus of an organ- ization to fight ‘abolition of the State’s township goveriffmeats,’ Now complete in nine counties, including Oakland, the organiza- tion will be extended to all 83 Michigan counties. * * * The association charges that among foes of township government are the Michigan League of Municipalities and the “Little Hoover Commission.” Criticisms of the townships include the charge that they are essentially local political lobbies which control nominations to the lower house of the Legislature. By that means, it is “ KR claimed, they direct the course of all. legislation affecting local governments. Critics also cite figures to show that while township tax levies aver- age $1.00 per capita in the State, the amount of State’ aid returned to the townships averages *$7.65 per capita. * * * It is natural and right that townships should plan to defend themselves against their critics. The fact remains that Michigan’s fiscal troubles reflect conditions which need correction. For example 26 per cent of all State revenue goes back to local government units. Of Michigan’s 1,266 townships, 785 get so much State aid that they don’t have to levy any local taxes. Townships would have a much better chance of taxpayers’ sup- port if they would emphasize in their crusade a willingness to accept reforms to end these in- equities. : An Unquenchable Flame There is a lesson of hope for us and a warning for Communists in the action of a young Pole who asked and got U. S. political asylum in Korea. It took real courage for JAN Hagpvu- - KIEWICZ, 28, to seize his last chance for flight from Red tyranny. An interpre- ter for the neutral nations truce inspec- tion team, he is worried about the safety of his parents in Poland. His successful bid for liberty points out a fact of human char- acter no one, especially the Com- munists, should forget. Police State methods can wipe out all vestiges of individual freedom. But neither it nor anything else can crush out man’s inborn de- sire for personal and political liberty. The People’s Business Soapy for Senator Capitol Gossip Foresees Williams vs. Ferguson ; By JACK I. GREEN LANSING—Capitol sky-gazers are becoming more and more convinced that Gov. Williams intends to run for the United States Senate in 1954, rather than seek a fourth term as governor. Of course, a lot of time and many events lie ahead which might change the decision, but that's the way it looks to the insiders now. If it works out that way, the 1954 campaign should be a bustling one. It'll then be Williams against the Incumbent Sen. Homer Ferguson and a real battle at the polls. Williams has been doing his best to keep the outside world guessing as to his real intentions. That's smart politics. The moment the Republicans know what he intends to do they can begin to slant their fire one way. And Williams’ opponents in the Demo- cratic ranks will know where to concentrate their fire, too. - So don’t expect the governor to make any definite public statements about his plans for a long time yet. -He has almost a year in which to keep thé enemy on the edge of its chair. ‘But around the official family the feeling grows that Williams in his own mind has about decided to try for the senatorship. For one thing, the gossip in Democratic circles is that many of the party loyal are cold to sup- porting the governor for a fourth term They apparently realize the odds against such a campaign. No man has ever served Michigan as governor four times in a row. People get tired of a face after while even when they like it. And Williams has never won the governorship by ahy sizable margin. ‘ True, there probably are some of Williams’ “egghead” friends who want him to attempt the virtually impossible on the theory that then he would be in a good position to seek the presidency in 1956, the next big year of decision. These, however, overlook the fact that southerr. Democratic leaders would give their eye teeth to cut Williams down at a national convention. They haven't forgotten his part in the anti-South ‘loyalty’ fight at the 1952 con- vention. . The harder heads in the party think that Ferguson is vulnerable. If so, a victory in 1954 would put Williams out on the national political stage and in position to seize the opportunities of the future. That’s what they figure. A decision by Williams to abandon the gov- ernorship would have tremendous effect on Michigan politics, both Republican and Democrat. For one thing, it probably would enhance the chances of State Treasurer D. Hale Brake getting the GOP nomination for governor. The rank-and-file Republican organization would like Brake for governor, but there seems to be some hesitation based on the fear that he could not beat Williams. Brake is something of the Taft of the Michi- gan GOP. The regulars lean to him, but might drop him in favor of a more glamorous candidate if they had to. & If Williams goes for the Senate, there is growing gossip that former U. S. Sen. Prentiss M. Brown, now chairman of the board of Detroit Edison, might be brought in as the Democratic candidate for governor. A lot of political wiseacres sniff at this gossip, but it is being found in too many well- — informed places *o be discounted. Brown is a party regular. conservative and, believed to have the desire to cap his career with a top political post. His return to the campaign trail would please a lot of the old guard Demo- crats and middle-of-the-roaders. In fact, Brown probably is the only prominent Democrat in Michigan who could knit the party together after Williams leaves a great void at the center of it. ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, 5 TOTS PII oY BPs ak —— Mainroad and the Sidetrack eS eon NN at Aa X\ \ ayy Cry 0 ae - XX \ \ gh °iF You = HAPPY ARE YOU IF YOu PRACTICE IT CHR/57 WhLAZE , i ys KNOW ALL THIS, SOHN /3:17 (wes. 75) Voice of the People ‘Local Pastor Cites O'Brian Case to Show Crimes That Result From Drinking Liquor (Letters will be condensed when neces- Bary because of lack of spare. Full name, address and telephone number of the ‘writer must accompany letters but these will mot be published if the writer so requests. unless the letter is critical in its nature). I was deeply stirred when I read about Donald O'Brian and his in- terview in which he stated, “I don't want to do it but I can't help myself . . . particularly when I drink.’ He mentioned nocturnal visits: to the downtown bars and of stalking the streets looking for victims. * The article stated that between 34 and 60 men were brought in for questioning regarding the crimes. Must we have all these question- able characters roaming our city streets? How long is it going to take to see the extreme hazard we bring to our city when we allow the liquor traffic to run wide open? This man states freely that the cause of the whole mess is liquor. There is no such thing as control of this menace except to banish it from our society. We must renew _eur efforts and consecration to the end that we might, through our churches and civic organizations, give to our city a life that is so far ahead of what many know that they will drop the “‘old life of sin’’:and find a ‘‘new birth in Christ.” Then and then alone will Pontiac be safe from such tragedy. George D. Murphy, Pastor The United Missionary Church 135 Prospect Questions ‘Christians’ Who Condemn Others It seems that Mr. Carter can find fault with a lot of good solid American people who do not at- tend church every Sunday or week day. So we are condemned by Christians. Do we condemn them? No. I have encountered many church- goers who sin as much or more as those that do not attend. Judge not lest ye shall be judged. A, J. Beardsley 21 Lake Avenue Route 1, Lake Orion Clarkston Reader Hears From Fellow Citizen Personally, I like opposition. It brings out another's viewpoint. For this reason I recently replied to Mr. Carter's letter. But I received a letter from an unsigned Clarkston source ac- cusing me of preaching anti- God and of being a Communist. This is abusing my privilege of expressing love in Divinity, love in life. That is not anti-God. That is love for my Father. I am as American as anyone can get. I am glad to see my coun- try open its doors to outsiders, and I try to emulate the courtesy my country extends to those souls seeking peace and rest from war torn countries and tyranny. Because I know the basic prin- ciples of Communism and where it started does not make me a Communist. I know where the term Hell originated and know I am not going there though all may wish me there. Leona I. Gonld 9593 Dartmouth Rd., Clarkston Reader Is Alien but Still Studying U. S. Our future choice as a nation is democracy or oligarchy. The prin- ciple of our national government is freedom for all. What I seek to learn_is where I fit in. T am an alien by birth and can never become a citizen, yet at the aze of 10 I was studying the Unit- ed States from coast to coast, its Declaration of. Independence and especially its Constitution. I shall always write lest we for- get that the pen is master over sword. William Reid 143 Prospect St. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Hearken to me, ye that follow efter righteousness, ye that seek the Lord: léok unto the rock whence ye are hewn, and to the hole of the pit whence ye are digged.—Isaiah 51:1. . * - * ’'Tis not the dying for a faith that’s so hard; ‘tis the living up to it that is difficult—Thackeray. ‘Days of All Faiths Rally Day Will Be Observed Tomorrow in Protestant Churches Throughout U. S. By CANON H. V. HARPER The calendar. still holds on to January 1 as the beginning of the New Year, but in the rhythm of American life the middle of—Sep- tember is the real start of the annual cycle. ‘n many Protestant churches. tomorrow will be Rally Day. Sun- day Schools especially make a big thing of Rally Day. in the hope of getting preliminaries out of the way as quickly as possible and settling down to business by next Sunday. Parish halls will be buzzing get- ting organized for the 1953-54 Sun- day School term. Sept. 14 will be The Exaltation of the Holy Cross, a day with a history almost as long as the history of Christianity itself. It goes back to 334, when, on Sept. 14, two churches were dedicated in Jerusalem — one over the tomb of Jesus and one on Calvary on the site of the Crucifixion. Aunt Het . was as good as takin’ a cold bath. When you can’t get awake in the -mornin’, nothin’ rouses you up like a sharp pain. On that occasion the True Cross was for the first time displayed to the people and housed in a fitting place of its own. For many years thereafter, Sept. 14 was known as the Feast of the Dedication, and was one of the high ranking days in the Christian calendar. In 1492, in the reign-of Ferdinand and Isabella, the Jews were ex- pelled from Spain. As with-any national upheaval, there were many acts of violence and force con- nected with the expulsion. In the Ebro river valley area there were many Jews who were compelled by fanatical Christians to accept Christianity and be baptized. Sept. 18 in Jewish congregations everywhere there will be a ritual known as Kol Nidre. The words Kol Nidre mean “all vows,”’ and the idea behind the ceremony is that here before the beginning of Yom Kippur men should not have to worry about vows they have made under pressure during the past year. The Kol Nidre prayer is chant- ed, releasing the people from promises made hastily under emo- tional stress, or fearfully under pressure. ‘ Shortly after 1492 a new formula came into the Kol Nidre service. Just before the chanting of the prayer, the rabbi and the leaders of the congregation, carrying the scrolls of the Law in their arms, repeat three times a statement, the gist of which is ‘‘tonight we Crackin’ my shins on that chair. @fe permitted to worship with But by a change of only two letters which would not be tak- ing too great a liberty with the Hebrew language, the word for sinners would become “the peo- ‘ple of the Ebro.” The fact that this particular piece of ritual was added to the service at the time when these people were compelled to swear an allegiance they did not mean makes it seem quite possible that it was added entirely out of con- sideration for them. In synagogues in every part of the world this ritual will be in- cluded. with understanding and sympathy. Case Records of a Psychologist Homosexuals ‘Fixated’ at Low Emotional Level Hundreds of military officers have been discharged from service because of Sam's trouble. And each year some college students are~sent home for the same cause. But homo- seruality simply indicates lack of emotional maturity. Read this case carefully. Homosez- uals can be cured if they really want to be. BY DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case H-384: Sam W., aged 22, is a brilliant college graduate. “Dr. Crane, he has been a won- derful boy,’’ his worried mother said. “He always made the highest grade in his classes. And he was also very active in the church. ‘In fact, he once thought he might go into the ministry. But all of a sudden, he has changed. During the last six months he refuses even to attend church. He claims he is an atheist. “And he pals around with an- other boy exclusively. His father Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE BE NEIGHBORLY Your neighbor is familiar or . . « A person strange and new . .. Across the street, just down - the black ... Or right next door to you... Your neigh- bor is a creature who... . . Is not unlike yourself . oe With house to clean, and _ groceries . .. To stack upon the shelf’ . With wage to earn, the children's care . . . The doc-_ tor, school and church . - And with that goal of joy and peace... For which all hu- mans search .. . Your neighbor can assist you in... Your trouble and distress And add a little brighter touch. . To all your happiness So why not be more _ neighborly . . « And pleasant through and through ... . Your neighbor may be longing to .. . Be neighborly with you. Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER International News Service Mr. Truman buzzed the vets that his containment gimmick sewed up the Russians like a tailor bird's nest. Harry, somebody turned ‘em looser than hair on the barber shop floor. When vou ran out from under your high silk hat there were Com- mies in everything but the broom closet. Your own state department was loaded to the plimsoll mark. Jt was during your adminis- tration they came pouring down over the 38th parallel like it was downhill. With the wind in back of their ears. If you call that containment we'll never send you to the store fr hot soup in a paper bag. The Commies have got into more things than benzoate of soda. The FBI found two on a bicycle. And one under the seat. We're not saying you didn’t have the right prescription. But you mixed it wrong. Your own appoint- ments sold you down the river oft- ener than logs at a paper mill. A man should be known by the staff he picks. Harry, some of your appointments would steal a star from Betsy Ross. The self-containment consisted of police action on a happy old penin- sula in Asia. Hafry, remember the story of the fellow who said “he would kill all. the flies in the butcher shop. He get himself a baseball bat, stood on the ‘street side of the door and _ hollered, “Now, turn ‘em out one by one.” That containment . policy is great. Provided they would come out one by one. Instead, the Kremlin unloaded Ripley's scampering Chinese on the astonished map. doesn't know what I am telling you, but Sam apparently is a homo- sexual. ; “At any rate, I have read some of the letters which this other boy has written Sam. And they sound just like the love letters you'd expect a girl to Write to the boy she loves. mo “Dr. Crane, I'm about to go crary, so I have come to you. “For I am afraid to tell Sam's father, vet I don't know what to do. Is there any hope for my,son? Can a homosexual be cured? ‘And don't you think this ab- normal attachment for this other boy is what makes Sam stay away from church?” : Yes, the usual atheist is either denying God as a belated protest at his own excessively religious childhood. Or he feels he is guilty of violating God's laws, so subcon- sciously tries to resolve his con- flict by eliminating God. “If there is no God,"’ he reasons. “then I am not guilty of break- ing His commandments.”’ You readers are aware of the fact that a wife who starts two- timing her husband, almost im- mediately grows cool toward church attendance. And the same may likewise be true of a husband who is involved in an affair with another female, Adult homosexuality is simply an extension of a normal stage in our emotional development. For at the age of 10 to 12, we are usually fondest of our own sex, Boys then have little interest in girls. And girls regard boys as a nuisance or a pest. This is the normal homosexual stage. But maybe 90 per cent of our young people soon reach the het- erosexual stage in emotional growth. That’s when they grow “‘sweet"’ on some member of the opposite sex, and carve entwined hearts on tree trunks with their initials linked with the girl's. But Sam is one of the 10 per cent who got ‘‘fixated’’ at the lower emotional level. He simply didn't grow up. He can change by resolutely going through the process of dat- ing an attractive girl. For love can be developed, broken and then re-developed with a more desirable mate. But the homosexual must want to change: His fond relatives can't do the job for him. He himself must have the sincere desire to grow up. For further advice on this tragic situation, send for my _ bulletin, ‘‘Sex Problems of Young People.” enclosing a stamped return en- velope, plus a dime. (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate Inc.) From Our Files 15 Years Ago SUDETENS DEMAND Czech martial law to be removed within six hours. FDR PLEDGES to aid in lift- ing farm prices. OBSERVERS THINK League of Nations may be aid against Nazis. 20 Years Ago FRED PERRY is new U. S. singles tennis champion. JUDGES OF MICHIGAN favor death penalty in an effort to halt killings. NRA RECOVERY Compliance Boards will be named in every city in the U.S. Light Luggage ‘‘Always ask for money in ad- vance when people have luggage that is over-emotional,’’ said the hotel manager to his new recep- tionist. “Over-emotional?’ she queried. “Yes,"" came the reply. ‘Too easily moved.” I Middle Age Can Be Only State of Mind and Losing Flabby Fat Is Youthful Push BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. THE MAIL BOX =, What's Middle Age? For about three years I have been fol- Tibed The 7 K to Vite (for send 25 cents —_ stamped, eaif-odarensed envelope) I have gradually lost flabby fat as I put cg oa C| a “ of well being. age holds no - rors for me now—if I felt any better Ia burst my skin... (Pauline ——) Answer—Atta girl. Middle age is like old age—mostly a state of mind. It's Here Just askéd a doctor here about leading the injection treatment for piles. He does not believe in it ... (C. C. A.) Answer—Does he believe in the automobile? . Itehing I ee everything for puritus Answer—For pamphlet on Pru- ritus (itching without - apparent cause) send stamped, self-address- ed envelope. treatment. (Mrs, R. Answer—Anyway it can do no harm. For all we know the warts might disappear as promptly if you just inserted your thumbs in your ears and waggled your finger at 'em. Warts come and go with- out known reason. Gently rubbing a little castor oil on them every night is a good way to get rid of castor oil. Great Why do I have to pay Velume more for whole wheat bread than for white bread, and .. for brown, red or natural rice than for white, polished rice? (C. J.) Answer—Greater demand for the processed food. Moreover, the by- products removed in the milling —such as wheat germ, bran, -ice polish—all have their own market value. Inside Piles My doctor says inside piles can be cured only by operation, but if I am not mistaken you say .. .(F. M.) Answer — The inside (internal) bleeding piles are best treated by injection (ambulant, office meth- od). External (outside) painful piles cannot be treated by injec- tion—but the surgery for external piles may be done under local anesthetic in the doctor's office. When a quaint old nineteenth cen- tury practitioner lays back his long ears and brays that the ambu- lant (injection) treatment is ‘no good’’ or “‘dangerous” he merely shows-his ignorance: Cigarettes? Doctor says if she doesn't stop smok- probably be amputate her legs ... . have thing that would help? (Mrs. PF. Answer—Five pages.in No. 2 Little Lesson in the Ways ct Health, C V D, about thrombo- angitis obliterans (Buerger's dis- ease’. For boo'let C V D ‘about heart and artery troubles) send twenty-five cents and stamped, self addressed envelope. ow letters, = more than one one! = toy I ote —— self addressed (Copyright 1953) — THF. PONTIAC’PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1953 The ‘‘Atlantic Seaman,”’ 659 feet long, is the world’s largest tanker fortifies this masonry paint! *5” ONLY . Gallon i mode ual Lae 1 wering Or” o,. "w 2 ~ F , . MW ehctom wn Easy Fant a OAKLAND Fuel & Paint Co. 436 Orchard Lake FE 5-6150 Montcalm Bowling Centre OPEN League Openings Still Available FREE INSTRUCTION 3 P.M. to 5 P.M. 30 E. Montcalm. FE 5-222) Large, Healthy, First Grade Only Fall Prices— Bulk Lawn Grass Seeds Ib. 1.00 Creeping Red Fescue, Ilehee Red Fescue....Ib. 1.25 Penn State Fescue...,.!b. 1.25 Meadow Fescue......lb. .65 Kentucky 31 Feseue...Ib. .65 Kentucky Blue Grass.. .Ib. 1.65 Pea) Trivalis).. +1: lb. .97 Highland Bent Grass... |b. 1.25 Fancy Red Top....... Ib. 1.10 White Dutch Clover... .Ib. 1.10 Perenial Rye Grass....!b. .35 Dothestic Rye Grass... . lb. .29 Merian Blue Grass... .Ib. 4.75 e Regal Feed & Supply 28 Jacksen St. Ph. FE 2-0491 —We Deliver— Launch Winter Recreation Program < > Lapeer Man Found Guilty for Part in Eviction Battle LAPEER—After deliberating nine hours, a jury of six men and six women returned a verdict of guilty against Floyd Schriber, second of 10 Lapeer County men to stand trial for obstrucing justice in a 1952 eviction case. ~ Schriber, 60, father of nine chil-+ dren, was charged with interfering | with Sheriff Clark Gregory’s efforts | to evict the late Mrs. Elizabeth! Lapeer Joins Waterford Sets Stevens. } | Ctreuit Judge Timothy C. Quinn ordered Schriber held in Lapeer County Jail for sentencing Sept. ' 21. Clem Bloch, Grand an appeal after the sentencing. l'2 year term. funct insurance company. men have not been set. Macomb Justice Faced With Ouster LANSING (UP) — Probate Judge Glen L. Hollenbeck, La- peer, has been named to con- duct a hearing in removal pro- ceedings against Chris Schulz, a Macomb County justice of the peace, for alleged improper con- duct in office. Hollenbeck was named by Gov. G. Mennen Williams on recom- mendation of Judge John Mc- Clellan, president of the Michigan Probate Judges association. He will conduct a hearing at Mt. Clemens Sept. 28. Attorney General Frank G. Millard asked Williams to remove Schulz from office last week. Mil- lard told the governor an inves- tigation had uncovered alleged irregularities on the part of Schulz Detroit factory workers. 6 New Teachers, I Returnee Greet Lapeer Students LAPEER—Six new teachers and one who has returned from service | will teach in Lapeer schools this } year. { | | Theft From Cash New teachers are: Mrs. June, junior high; William Valley, junior high (English); Mary Mc- Nulty, elementary (music and art); Corinne Stone, sixth grade; Doro- thy Van Kleek, fourth grade, and Mrs. Shirley Zemmer, sixth grade. Returning from the Navy to teach shop classes is Albert Ro- man. Box * ROCHESTER — Some $44 was reported stolen from a cash box last night at a dry cleaning estab- lishment at 650 Woodward St. The theft was reported this morning by Clarence P. Collins, owner of the firm. Rochester police said entry was gained through a rear window. , ., TURF BUILDER — Every lawn needs a generous foll feeding to help offset the ravages of summer. Feed 2500 sq ft - $2.50 SeXT LAWN SEED — Extra good Sei “SPECIAL — Makes serviceable lawn in sun or shade with ordinary core. 1 fb $1.35 5 tbs $6.65 for fall planting because seed is all perennial, 99.91% weedfree. Full s Sun or Moderate Shade. 1 h- $1.85 5 Ibs - $8.95 Nature selects the early fall to do her planting. Use this good season to build a new lawn or make the old one better. 10,000 sq ft - $7.85 LAWN CARE PRODUCTS bd ee ve j REGAL FEED & SUPPLY CO. 28 Jackson St. —We Deliver— Phone FE 2-0491 PONTIAC M-5 9 SPEEDWAY Eight Miles Out West Huron LLOYD SHUART, Manager Stock Car Races “THRILLS, SPILLS and CHILLS Come cut and watch dare-devil drivers match their wits and motors with one another in cash prize races. Time Trials SATURDAY SUNDAY General Admission $1.20 Time Trials 5:30 First Race 7:00 £2 8:30 7:00 Reserve Seats $1.50 First Race EM 3-2361 Sponsored by Land-O-Lakes Racing Association Rapids | lawyer who defended Schriber, did | not indicate whether he would file Erwin C. Russell, 60, of Lapeer, was convicted of a similar charge recently and was sentenced to a Mrs. Stevens’ farm was sold at public auction when she failed to pay an assessment against a de- Trial dates for the other eight in issuing garnisheements against : Ethel | Dialing System Changeover Starts at 9 Tonight With Mayor Making First Call LAPEER Telephone users here will begin dialing their num- | bers tonight. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. will begin the changeover to a new dial system at 9 p. m. Testing of the | completed at that time, according jto Clarence B. Riedel, local man- | ager. Mayor Bill Rowden will dial the first number from a stage in the Legion Building during inaugural ceremonies. A new telephone plant built: at a cost of $324,000 will also be dedi- cated during the ceremonies. Under the new system all La- peer telephone subscribers will have new numbers. An exchange name of MOhawk will be followed by dive numbers. Riedel said that distribution of new directories with the MOhawk listings will have been complet- ed by the time for the change- over. The exchange ties up with Bell Telephone’s nationwide numbering system so that customers may eventually dial all long-distance numbers. & $ 373 LLOYD C. Appointment of Lloyd C. Megee of Clarkston as vice president of the Michigan Municipal. League was announced today. He will represent Michigan village at all meetings of the State Board of Trustees. Megee has been a Clarkston village trustee for 10 years and served for six years as a trustee for the board. MEGEE | ‘District 4 School Sold for $2,500. METAMORA — Sale. of the old schoolhouse, which served district four for many years prior to the new elementary school, was award- }i/ed to Douglas Hardy at a special | :| meeting of the board of education this week. Purchase price was $2,500. Hardy said he plans to remodel the lower floor into living quarters for his family and use the upper story for apartments. Missionary to Africa to Talk at Keego Harbor KEEGO HARBOR — Flint Dis- trict of WSCS of Methodist church- es will hear Miss Edith Parks, 'a missionary home on furlough from Africa, Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. in Trinity Methodist Church here. Invited are the societies of the surrounding churches and those interested in the African field. A tea and social hour will con- clude the afternoon program. County Calendar . Waterford Township Waterford Township Child Study Club will meet Monday at 8 p.m. in the home of Mrs. Harlan Oakes, 2425 Denby Dr. Romeo Ladies. Auxiliary of Striber-McVicar Post 2052, VFW, will hold its regular meeting Monday in Veteran's Hall at GAUKLER STORAGE CO. 9 Orchard Lake fe, | on 0.5, Migheeye Mn. | ip Service fe. | bo Your Commmelt 9 Orcherd Lake Waterford Expects Enrollment Jump -|in the village school are expected lines of all subscribers will be |: >. The zoo is noted for its breeding of JUST ABOUT RIGHT—This three-year-old visitor to the Munich, Germany, zoo appears as though he may be ready to trade in his tricycle for the above pint-sized Shetland pony only three days old. FIVE . a wick inserted in its body, it can used as a candle. Many Activities Athletics, Ballet Class, ' Camera Club Included in Schedule WATERFORD — Launching a fall and winter recreation program designed for every member of the family, the Watefford Township Recreation Department today an- nounces a varied schedule for the coming season. Registration for the Saturday morning fun program will be held Sept. 19. This will include ballet classes for girls from five to 18 years of age. These classes run throughout the winter and into the early spring. Saturday afternoons will find the football clinic in full swing. To begin Sept. 19 and continue through Oct. 31, all children from ages 5 to 15.are invited to partici- pate from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Water- ford Township High School foot- ball field. OPEN TONIGHT ‘til 9 SUNDAY ‘til 4 P. M. SALE! Men’‘s HOBBY $498 JEANS GOODMAN'S Dept. Store 1 Block. North of Wilson Ave. 516 to 520 S. Saginaw St. FE 2-2784 According to Thomas Belton, rec- small ponies. St., Pontiac. WATERFORD -- &:n rol! ments to increase next week, according to Mrs. Ina Kent, .principal. A Officers T raining Session Ist Demonstration Activity | An officers training meeting Monday will open fall activities for Oakland County home demonstration groups. The event, under the sponsorship of Mrs. Josephine Lawyer, home : : ; , turning to the recreation program demonstration agent, and the Executive Committee for the groups, has . taal been set for 10:30 a. m. at the County Office Building at 1 Lafayette total of 472 pupils enrolled the first three days of school. The school now has_ kinder- | | garten through sixth grade with | a full-time schedulel. New teachers. this year include Mrs. Pauline Walls, first grade, Anne Deen, second, Mrs. Sara | Lou Voliva, fourth, and Mrs. Katherine Schmidt, fifth. Waterford Area Lists 26 Building Permits — WATERFORD TOWNSHIP— Lloyd Anderson, township super- | visor, reports that 26 building per- mits for about $122,500 were issued | this week. . Included were permits for 13 new homes at $103,750, eight for addi- ‘tions and remodeling at $11,100, four garages at $2,650 and remod- eling of one commercial building at $5,000. County Deaths Edwin A, Hull ALMONT—Servrce for Edwin A. Hull, 64,: of 410 S. Main, was to be today at 2 p.m. from Muir Bros. Funeral Home with burial in Elmwood Cemetery, Detroit. He died suddenly Wednesday at | his summer home in Ontario. Surviving besides his widow, Grace, is one brother, Emerson, of New York. reation director, stressed during the clinic will be fundamentals and games will be played, too. A camera club for those of all ages will hold its second meeting Sept. 22. Meetings are the second and fourth Tuesday of each month until spring. Entertainment and contests are part of each month's meetings. The Young Men's Athletic Club will begin the middle of October and continue into the early spring with meeting place to be the gymnasium of the Com- munity Activities building, Men of the township will have a | + Purpose of the program is to acquaint group officers with the 1953-54 demonstration program and to aid them fulfill their responsibilities. According ta Mrs. Lawyer, mimeographed materials for each officer and handbooks for members will be issued during the event. Mrs. Walter brown of Davisburg, new home demonstration chair- man, will be mistress of cere- monies at the affair. Included on the program will be a welcome to new officers by Mrs. Brown and an introduction of the Oakland County Home Demonstra- tion Committee by Mrs. George Perry, vice chairman. Mrs. Lawyer will address the group on “What Extension Offers You This Year.” Hill-Gazette Post Auxiliary Installs Officers Tuesday AUBURN HEIGHTS — The 18th District Past Presidents Ritual Team will conduct installation of new officers of Hill Gazette Ameri- can Legion Auxiliary Tuesday at 8 p. m. in the Legion hall. To be installed are: Mrs. Orvin Weaver, president; Mrs. Kenneth Collins, first vice president; Mrs. Harold Mather, second vice presi- dent; Mrs. Clifford Best, secretary; Mrs. Ralph Bogart, treasurer; Mrs. Norma Palmer, chaplain; and Mrs. Lawrence Howard, ser- geant-at-arms. Metamora Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Hardy announce the birth of a son, Clayton Gale, at Flint Hurley Hospital Sept. 9 Because You 269 Oakland Ave. in memory of those you love... pn TIAC GRANITE & MARBLE CO. Ph. FE °-4800 Dedicate It Because the memorial you are planning will be dedi- cated to a certain definite memory, the impartance of good design and individual treatment cannot be over- emphasized. Countless num- bers of new designs and carving suggestions are available in our files at all times to supplement our display of finished memor- ials we have on exhibit. We invite your visit at any time most convenient to you. Office Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Geofge E. Slonaker and Sons | basketball league. It is slated to begin Nov. 9 and games for this will be played in the Waterford Township High School Gymnasium. The all-family activity will be | the travel and lecture series re- | this year by popular request. | jm It will begin, Nov, 10 with | “Colombia Calvacade’’ by Au- bert Lavastida, and will continue | each month through Apr. 13, | Mr, Belton said that the rec- reation program is publicly ad- ministered and supported, and the j recreation board hopes the public | will make full use of it. Everyone | living in the township or connect- | | ed with the township in any way is | | invited to participate, he said. | Reception Planned for Keego Faculty KEEGO HARBOR — Roosevelt School faculty members will be | honored at an annual reception | in the gymnasium Tuesday at! | 8 p. m, } Roosevelt Mother's club and! P.T.A. are the sponsoring or- ganizations with Mrs. Victor Gold- | ing and Mrs. Charles Leaf, re- | spective presidents, as co - chair- | men. The cabaret style program, ac- | cording to Mrs. Edwin R. prey er, committee chairman, will in- clude a master of ceremonies, musical numbers by local talent, BEFORE {rr co _.«. Take Your Entertainment — With You! a Car Radio Today! FOR 1952-53 FORDS All New $ 3 9?- MOTOROLA OPEN SUNDAY 9:30 A.M. - 1:00 P.M. HANK AUTO STORES ‘2 *% : eo Instal 103 North Saginaw St. FE 5-2267 A. REN Tue NEW Lester Betsy Ross Spinet A Beautiful Piano with a Magnificent Tone +10 Monthly $20 Delivers Geen Frida GALLAGHER muse co. Lu" 18 E. Huron St. FE 4-0566 and variety acts. “Reliable INSURANCE. Protection” Wm. W. Donaldson Agency 714 Community National Bank Building Pontiac 14, Michigan Res. FE 5-6424 Phones: Office FE 2-9673 PIL) ti) Wits Y Wy) YYiy Yj Yj ords. Yyfff 4 You merely provide identification, if you are unknown to us; answer a few questions; and fill in some simple forms. That’s all there is to do — it takes very little time. It’s easy to put yourself in a position to save bill-paying trips and keep orderly rec- WOT! |-_ EEEEE@E ME@@C@#@! MJ CY YeeM@ aS TEENS S35 SX“ eh WW MWON C STATE BANAL COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE Y SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE Yj DRAYTON PLAINS AUBURN HEICHTS Y ae Www SS SIX SR EES SES = RS NI = Re a RRR RR SN MQ TT ASIEN SRR PASS SAMPDORIA I VSM = SYA i MS TEM dN RE nce ETA SINT SS SOE anti Ln Hea oe ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 -Many Women Place Cart Before Horse In Trying to Earn Pin Money Bossy In-law Tries to Run Household Wife Must Learn ' to Get Along With Hubby’s Mother By EMILY POST An yghappy wife tells me: ‘My husband’s father died, six months ago and as his mother was alone and unable to keep up the apart- ment, she came to live with my husband and me. “I always got on well a#ith my mother-in-law and never thought her to be a meddlesome person, but since she has come to live here she is trying to run my house and even my children, “True, she has had more ex- perience than I have had in run- ning a house, but I like to do things my own way. This is- making me nervous and I really don’t know what to do about it. “I'm writing to you in the hope that you may have a tackful so- lution to my problem.” Answer: This is a very unhappy situation not only for you but also probably for her, and unléss your husband is able to provide for her board elsewhere (which would make her independent and perhaps much happier) there is no solution other than for you and her to adjust yourselves to each other, and in doing this your hus- band may be able to help you both. Dear Mrs, Post When a friendship between a man and a girl almost reaches the en- gagement stage and then breaks off, what happens about their gifts to each other? Some of these were expensive, but all have been used. Should they be returned to nevertheless? Someone told me that etiquette demands the return of such pres- ents. Answer: Had been ‘engagement presents, should have been returned; but since they were. only friendship presents, you keep them. Dear Mrs. Post: The club to which I belong is giving its annual fall dance in mid-September. My mother died in mid-July. I would like to know if it would be proper for me to go to this dance, or is three months too soon? Answer: It is much too soon and would be considered very heartless. Dear Mrs. Post: Is it proper for the girl to applaud when the music stops while she is dancing? Or is this just for the man to do? Answer: Ordinarily just the man applauds, unless she is enthusias- tic about the music. Answers te Previeus Puzzle Vms AMM OOD} UZi mie . ' Led a a) 4 Ll ew olal>l< wlalal-lehNelmjelala Qj Mr} eZ) -|F/ZIC SJ RICIO}E| PRS @) VO} AlCl ye) 4/e) >i iF) MO] ZG BA Ole @}<|>ia} [oj mi al> Z|-|al@l falz[>lay [z2jojo]- am] 4] >]Q]-| 4]-13 al ViclaNelmzi-ick {mj a >| ea] 9} - r[>[alel f tos > pega 2 me “ es be Kd Baile 10 Sine 8 Camouflage those minor skin blemishes |and use a more serious treatment with medi- by wearing the proper medicated powder |cated cream that works while you sleep. base that helps heal while it conceals them, WSCS Holds Birthday Party A dessert luncheon to celebrate the annual birthday party of the they definitely they WSCS of the Oakland! Park Meth- odist Church was held Thursday in the church dining room. Mrs. Ralph Clara, spiritual life secretary, led devotions, speaking on ‘a sower went forth.’ She was assisted by Mrs. Ray Coombe, Mrs. Irl Williams, Mrs. Frank Ledford, Mrs. Gilbert Pierce, Mrs. Floyd Parks and Mrs. Linnie Young. . A collection Was donated to the Chelsea Methodist. Home for the Aged. Gleaners Hear Talk by Church Pastor Following a harvest luncheon in the Educational Building of the First Baptist Church, Wayside Gleaners heard the Rev. G. J. Bersche, pastor of the Christian and Missionary Alliance Church speak on the subject, ‘‘The Change- less Christ for This Changing World.” Mrs. Robert J. Murphy and Mrs. E. B. Rockwell: entertained with musical selections along with Stait Lloyd. ; Mrs. Herbert Flemington of Bir- mingham, past president, brought a devotional message and Mrs. Charles Lloyd was hostess for the day. AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE Sparkling clean carpets are as close as your phone. Just dial New Way then sit back and enjoy their quality craftsmanship that re- stores the life and beauty of your rugs. DOMESTIC 9x12 RUGS *49> Small Charge for Sizing New Way RUG and CARPET CLEANERS 42 Wisner Street FE 2-7132 Mothers Discuss January Installation Navy Mothers discussed a joint installation for all Michigan Navy Mothers Clubs when the group met Thursday in_the naval train- ing center. The joint installation will be held in January in Dearborn. A sum of money was appro- priated for a Navy veteran in Warm Springs, Ga., and the group was reminded of the founder’s birthday party sponsored by Michi- gan Past Commanders Club, which will be held Tuesday afternoon in a Betroit department store. The gorilla is the largest of all -known apes. LTHINGS TO COME —_ by Geant] Ge lee i j i fi i i piesa ik Busy Day for Central Units Thursday was a busy day for the groups of Central Methodist Church. Five clubs met in the afternoon, and five. more in the evening. The Fanny Crosby group met with a_ school-girl luncheon at the home of Mrs, William Martin on Waldo street. Mrs. John Gar- rison gave devotions based on the theme, ‘The Sower’. A cooperative luncheon in the church parlors was held by the Lucy Webb Hayes group. Skeins of yarn were distributed to be knit into garments for Korean children. The home of Mrs. Howard Simmons on East Iroquois road was the scene of the cooperative luncheon held by the’ Mary Reed group. Mrs. T,. M. Jacobson was cohostess, and devotions were led by Mrs. P. G. Latimer. Gertrude Howe group met for a dessert luncheon at the home of Mrs. I. J. Mintz on James K. boulevard. Mrs. Gelston Poole was devotional’ chairman, And Mrs. Frank Gray presented a skit. A sack ‘luncheon at the home of Eva, Elizabeth and Edith Crawford of Old Orchard drive was on the agenda for Clara Swain group. Mrs. Lloyd Pardee talked on abundant living and Mrs. Percy Jones reported on her study of alcoholic education at Cornell college. “ In the evening, Martha Shel- don group met with Mrs. Loy IF half size— Coat dress, step-in and jacket-drees costume for Full in sheer wool crepe or silk crepe add up to molded bet aot pinched-ia look. ‘ Mrs. H. S. — The coat dress remains the favorite for fall for the half-size figure. Styling-up and softening this classic daytime dress, illustrating the importance of the feminine look for fall, is the exciting news. Please Note: We will again be Open Sunday, 10:30 to 2:30 ODA OY ec ‘ . ‘ ‘ ' ‘ H ' ‘ ’ ' ‘ . J Methodist Women Meet Bennett of Oakland avenue to hear a program presented by By ANNE HEYWOOD Mrs. G. R. in Maryland asks me about a woman mentioned some weeks back who made ash- trays for pin money. She wants to know how to make the ashtrays, how much to charge for them, what kind of paint to use, and so forth, as she is most anxious to make additional money at home. In order to do this, however, Mrs. G. R. would have to learn an entirely new skill, and I do think that is doing it the hard way. Most women who successfully hit on something which they can make at home do it as a natural result of liking the article, know- ing how to handle it, and wanting to turn it into a professional ven- ture. So for Mrs. G. R., as well as for anyone else, the quickest way to make pin money at home is to Freshmen Tea at YW Sunday Girls who are entering college this fall will be honored at a tea Sunday at the YWCA from 3 to 5 o’clock. The occasion is the Pon- tiac City Panhellenic Back to Col- lege Tea. Mrs. Robert Burns is general chairman for the event, and Mrs. Robert Bronoel has charge of the program. Millicent McIntyre, a senior at Syracuse University, will speak on ‘The Freshman’ and Mrs. La Von Ryden will entertain with musical selections. Presbyterian Group Meets at Breakfast The February group of the First Presbyterian Church held a break- fast meeting Friday morning at the home of Mrs. Hazel Anderson on Silverside drive with 22 mem- bers and guests attending. Assisting the hostess were her daughters, Mrs. Thomas Tillson and Mrs. Clifford Johnson. Devotions were given by Mrs. Roy Vassbinder and the mission study by Mrs. R. E. Spurgeon. Mrs. H. E. McCulloch and Mrs. Edward Auchard were guests. Class Holds Meeting Mrs. Lottie Waldon of Wisner street opened her home to mem- bers of the Philathea class of the Oakland Avenue United Presby- terian Church Wednesday evening. Mrs. Helen LaMond led devotions with Mrs. Charles Seaman, Mrs. Nelson Rich, and Mrs. Charles Rowston as hostesses. Mrs. Harold Boughner and Mrs. ‘Keith Johnson. Ida Kahn group met at the home of Mrs. Hohn Mulder on Mary Day with Mrs. Wesley Johnson as cohostess. Mrs. How- ard Short presented devotions and a skit was given by other mem- bers. Sewing cancer pads was the project for the Fern Bank group at the home of Mrs. Ray Allen on State avenue. Mrs. Harry Hayes offered devotions and Mrs. Carrol Porritt reported on Dr. Alfreda Withington. Lois Parker group met at the home of Mrs. Richard Balmer on Chadwick drive. Mrs, Lester McClellan based her devotions on ‘faith’ and a report was does extremely well, whether it is baking cakes, making spilcovers, tending babies or whatever. For, if, instead, she goes after the acquiring of a brand-new skill which may take a great deal of time and which may not give her any pleasure, I’m afraid she will not make any money out of it. Many women, it seems to me, persist in putting ‘this cart in front of this horse. Time after time, when they ask how to sell magazine stories or how to make this and that, they bring, and neglecting the little matter of whether they will be able to do it successfully and happily. In every mail, I receive dozens of letters of this kind: “I need money, therefore I would like to do thus and so.” But the odd part is that, in the same mail, I receive letters from the successful women who [Attempt to Acquire Brand-New Skills Must Pair Instead of Putting Old Talents to Work select some activity which an, Get Blessing From Mom? Engagement Plans Should Be Talked Over With Mother BY ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: My boy are making money in a venture at home and sharing their success story with us, and invariably their | ‘round: “I loved to do thus and so, and first thing I knew, I was are thinking entirely in terms of the money which the venture may making money at it.” (Copyright 1953) ria Gs eats Man-Made By ELIZABETH HILLYER Man-made fibers are heralded and sung, but what about face- to-face meeting with them in stores? What home furnishings is each one used for? What does each one do? Here’s a brief check-list of the uses and advantageous character- istics of five of the man-made fibers that are most widely avail- able: Nylon is used for curtains, draperies, upholstery fabrics and rugs, and cords for furni- ture use. Its widest use is for curtains and for drapery fabrics, originally metelasses and brocatelles, but is now seen in simpler contempor- ary type upholstery fabrics with less shine. Drapery fabrics and rugs in ny- lon are in limited supply. Nylon has unusual wearing ability, is given by Mrs, Irwin Brockie, Mrs: William Sheffield led de- votions when Susannah Wesley group met at the home of Mrs. ns Donald Kibbey on Dover road. z The program was presented by Mrs. Frank Gray, ; City Chorus Starts Auditions Tuesday Fall rehearsals for Pontiac Wom- en's Chorus, affiliated with the De- partment of Parks and Recreation will begin Tuesday at 7:30. 3 Anyone interested in singing is invited to-.contact Mrs. George Tallerday. Auditions will be held Sept. 15, 22 and 29 at 7 p. m. in room 127 of Pontiac Senior High School. Charles E. Hutton is conductor and Mrs. Paul McKibben, is ac- companist. President for m= ing year is Mrs. Sidney Olsdh. Birthday Marked *:; by Nancy Eastham Nancy Eastham was honored Tuesday with a surprise birthday party in her home on Ferry ave- nue. Among those attending were Bonnie Hopp, Linda and Marlene Beyer, Johnnie DePaw, Linda and Darrell Duncan, Donita Esler and Pamela and Cherie Miller. Others included Suzanne Brown, Laura Yager, Robect Berkley, Madeline Erwin, Judy Birge, Cheryl Shelton, Sue and Kay Jack- son, Ronnie Gladden and Christy Dioyenis. LINtican -—_ 4 r SIEBACI Gay pts < ; I<" * ; ; : V (Za or Missionary Society A Gathers at Church Mrs. Albert Olson an Mro. Richard Erickson were hostesses when the Women’s Missionary So- ciety of St. John Lutheran Church met Thursday in the church. A devotional program was given by Mrs. Algot Nasstrom, Mrs. Gus Nelson, Mrs. Harold Person and Mrs. John Berglund. Brunch and Cards Benefit GOP Club The Pontiac Women’s Republi- can Club benefitted from the brunch and card party held at the home of Mrs. Albert Kohn on Dick avenue Thursday morning. Mrs. Lulu Luby was cohostess for the occasion. Another benefit event is being planneg for the near future. The ‘“‘back talk’”’ in fashion is a line to make your exits as exciting as your entrances. Tina Leser, in this instance, uses double ‘‘back talk’’ by combining a jersey shirt with a braid-outlined velveteen skirt. To Learn the Merle Norman Way to a Levely Complexion Call FE 2-4010 for FREE Demonstration and Maketp 405 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. 4| °°" Pattern 1021 is available in Mibignws wetoon ‘Back Talk’ Styles Make Exciting Exits tor Milady standard sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. The blouse requires 1% yards of 54-inch material for size 12, and the skirt 3% yards of 39- | inch fabric with nap. To order Pattern 1021, address The skirt is equally good in|Spadea Syndicate, Inc., P.O. Box tweed combined with a cotton! 535. Dept. 149, G. P. O., New York shirting for the top. For more|l, N. Y. State size. Send $1.00. festive moments make the skirt in| Airmail 25 cents extra. taille, offset with a blouse of vel-| New Pattern Booklet 9, including -|over 100 designs, available at 15 cents. (Copyright 1953) . » ~. 'remark is exatly the other way | friend and I would like to be en- | gaged for my 19th birthday, which is in a couple of weeks. “T have no father, but since we're both of age (he's 32), we waft to know if it’s compulsory for him to ask my mother if we can be en- |'gaged for my birthday.” Technically, I suppose you can make your own arrangements, but the closeness of your re- lationship with your mother and your affection for her would rule out making a decision without consulting her. She is still re- sponsible for you in her own mind and heart, no matter how independent and grownup you feel. She’s the one to announce your engagement officially. Why not talk the whole thing over with her so you can wear your engagement ring with her blessing? a “Dear Miss Woodward: When I was 14 I had several dates with Many Uses, Advantages fireproof and sun resistant, wash- es and cleans easily and has ex- cellent resistance to stain. Orlon makes curtains and dra- peries and is said to be the most resistant of all fibers to sunlight. It is heat resistant, mildew and moth proof, resists mineral acids and is easy to wash and clean. Dacron is seen increasingly of- ten for curtains, draperies, up- holstery fabrics and shower cur- tains. It is exceptionally resistant to heat, has good resistance to stain and is easy to wash and clean. peries, bedspreads and blankets and will soon come onto the mar- ket as upholstery fabric and in carpet blends. It has good properties of fire and sun resistance, in mildew, moth and acid proof, cleans and washes well. Three dynel fabrics are sketched at lower right. Fiberglass is glass spun inte fibers that can be woven like yarn for curtains and draperies, and the recent perfection of a new process makes it possible to print patterns on fiberglass fabrics. Fiberglass can be molded and is used for the one-piece seats and backs of some modern chairs. Up- holstery filling is a new use of fiberglass. It is fireproof, mothproof, mil- dew resistant and shows excellent stain resistance, can be washed but cannot be cleaned.;Two fiber- glass fabrics are sketthed below center. Shower Honors Yomar Member A handkerchief shower honoring Mrs. C. J. Murton, was held Tues- day evening when Yomar group of the First Presbyterian Church met at the church. Mrs. Murton will make her home in Detroit soon. Hostesses for the meeting were ard Wideman and Mrs. Hoyt| Hodges. Mrs. Wideman and Mrs. Jack Johnston gave the devotions. A social education report was led by Mrs. Neil Gray, assisted by Mrs. Murton, Mrs. William Hilder- ly, Mrs. George Gale and Richard Wright. Mrs. J. A. Brunton and Eleanor Kellogg were guests for the eve- ning. Woodbridge Home Opened for Meeting Mrs. Charles Woodbridge of Glenwood avenue was hostess at a luncheon of the Friendship birth- day Club Wednesday. Mrs. Ward Sly was cohostess for the occasion. Gladys Brondige presided at the business meeting which followed, and reports were given by the various committees. Plans were made for the next meeting which will be at the home of Mrs. W. B. Sharp on West Huron street in October. Plans Are Outlined for Mission Institute Plans for the Mission Insti- tute were completed when the executive board of the United Church Women met at the Mur- phy avenue home of Mrs. Walter Willson recently. The institute will be held Mon- day at Central Methodist Church, under the chairmanship of Mrs. Charles Parrott. Mrs. John Garrison reported on the tentative plans for World Com- Dynel is now available in dra-| Mrs. George Stinnett, Mrs. How-| a boy who was four years older than I. He was much more mature than I6, and one of the first boys I had ever dated. “He was nice but I was too young and we eventually just drifted apart with hard feelings at the end. No one made any effort to find out what went wrong with our few dates and repair the damages. ‘He was soon out of school and out of my sight, but he’s still on my mind, I have other dates, but I still long for one with him. I when I see him, but he’s always with a group of boys and he acts as though he doesn’t notice me, “TI know if we would just start speaking to each other our small difference would disappear. So | what new efforts should I make? You keep remembering all the gaffs you pulled when you were 14 and just starting to date. And you're terribly eager to have a chance to prove to that older boy who found you too young that | you've changed a lot, now know the score and keep up the pace he sets. You don’t want that date with |him because you're really crazy ‘about him. You want it to show off the new you you've become, And when he sees you he ree members the you you used -to be —a youngster who gave him a bad time. He’s dated lots of girls since he gave you a whirl — and he's still four years older than your age. I can't suggest that you stick your neck out, only to be snub- bed. If you catch his eye, smile ;}and speak to him and let him wonder where he ever saw you before. Try that again. And keep hoping he'll turn up somewhere at a dance or a party so that you can make a new im- pression on him. 7 “Dear Mrs. Woodward: A mew boy has just moved here and I’ve had two dates with him already. He had as much fun as I did, I’m sure, “On our second date I fell head over heels for him, but I don't want him to know or he'll drop me; then I’m sunk. I just wonder if there isn’t some way he can ask me for another date. “‘Am I too anxious? It’s just been about three days since our last one. I’m just scared to death he's out with some other girl. “I don't want to chase after him. So what can I do?” It doesn't take a master magic- jan to pull an excuse for getting the crowd together out of a hat. Couldn't you-put your head to- gether with a couple of the girls and concoct a reason why this new boy and several of the old ones should turn up at your door at a certain hour of a certain evening (and the sooner the bet- ter) to do something special. It’s not exactly a date, but it's a chance to be -with him again and get better acquainted. And once he feels comfortable around your house he’s lIfkely to come back for more, PETUNIA! You can make a ¢gift- box gay With ease —— To paper one, like this, Is just a breeze Goad idea, Petunia! Keep a few rolls of gay wallpaper around, and you can make the plainest boxes look fabulous! gd Day to be held in Novem- e Biswor -sRacxce , try to make some effort to speak” — 4 t THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 SEVEN ~ Autumn Summons Collegians Back to Their Books . _ Couple Wed | Delighted over the prospect of returning in Detroi t to the University of Michigan for her final year, Jeanne Killoran of Voorheis road Ceremony checks over the college catalogue in the} R, L. Mineweaser and Bride to Live in Birmingham Pontiac Susy WithMany | ; Weddings 2 Joyce Amsden and pat Earl Barker Speak < Vows Tonight This morning in Detroit Marjorie Mary midst of packing. Jeanne has remained an Adams became honor student throughout her three years. the bride of With the late summer wedding ‘ Pontiac Press Photos oh gown Ae Seti ba Adan . Richard L. season at its peak, friends and eS 7 ; when she became the bride of Mineweaser. relatives from various parts of the feds att r | Richard L. Mineweaser this morn- The Edward country have come to Pontiac to Jes a a : ing in St. Matthew Church of De- Martin . . . 7 A i in th ivities. eS a troit. 1 pecomire’ in the festivities Richard is the son ot He. and Adamses F The Glenn Waltons of Louis- Mrs. Leo Mineweaser of East ville, Ky. are in town to attend . ia ns 4 Montcalm street. Detroit and the == Joyce E. Amsden = a bit 5 2 : Marjorie’s wedding dress was Mr. andr Mra: of Dick avenue and FEari A. . fashioned in a Queen Anne style Barker of Menominee road this te : ee with a imedium-length train. Her Rap evening. Mr. Walton will be SII} PPS SAN Poise senate fingertip veil fell ftom a cloche- - nea ¥ Earl’s best man. Stat) S : Se si} ate type headpiece and she carried ha ineweaser of eet at * “ - : Other out-of-state guests include 3844 test $334) Renae 9 pA Sega rn ' Si East Montcalm haga Fo. Mae rysan ums ° a . Mrs. Stanley Barker and son, Mr. , it ah : ro ecadl peckiace Se werniat ber Tye So silest are ther and Mrs. F. B. Tanner, Mildred 333 SHi333343 4 throat. parents Boyd and Mrs. Marguerette ; ; eo cherie ih ang nd her ite sister's matron of honor. They are ee on rid “ the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. ronto, Ont. é De- * * * a Martin Adams of , ‘ The wedding this evening of M . Ralph Houfek of Akron Bonnie Jean Bray of Orlando ave- Ohio, was the other attendant. MRS. RICHARD L. MINEWEASER nue and Bruce Charles Brede of Both girls wore gowns of silver-4— i i ink trim. Mink Dover ‘road is the occasion for the blue taffeta with min ‘ a trimmed the cuffs of the match- A d M t M d visit of Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Brede ing jackets, and the girls carried I I lan a a erna arrl1e of California. * yellow and rust-colored chrysan-| , . . . Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Brede of tremums set off wits wy. Ty! 17 St, Michael Nuptial Rite Dover road, the prospective bride- also yield Sueuua wee his groom's parents, were hosts Fri- |- ere Ronee best casa aaa May: A bouquet of white roses was day evening at a pre-nuptial party .% mund Generaux of Lake Orion | dedicated on the altar of St. at Devon Gables. r was the groomsman. Michael Church this morning when Seating the guests were the; Amanda Marie Materna became + +* 8 gtigecty 7 Out-of-state guests for the #4. : he te bride's brother, Roi E. Adams of. the bride of John L. Pagacich, son wedding of Millicent Tosich of . ¥ > New York City, and Peter Rip-| of the Anton Pagacichs of Iron- Joslyn avenue and William H. , 4 wi saan was ‘ona tap master of Royal Oak. wood. Loughran Jr. of Miamisburg, KS, | ; ee es For the 10 o'clock ceremony the} The bride, wio is the daughter O., are Mr. and Mrs. William a bride's mother was dressed in| of Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Materna H. Kobinson and their son, “ _ navy blue chiffon and lace with! of Lowell street, wore a gown of David, of Miamisburg, James —— ~ ~ gold accessories and a corsage Of| white imported tulle with Rose yellow rose. Gabbord.of Cincinnati, the Clin- . — a — ton DeWitts with their daughter, ee een p . . : Charles Wolford Martha, of Oxford, Ohio, and Mr. Pointe lace appliques over satin. A traditonal neckline highlighted the bodice of lace and tulle over The bridegroom's mother wore aqua lace with brown and cham- - and Mrs. Wilbur .Cotner and . . pagne-colored accessories and a eatin Carolyn of Van Wert, Qhio. C lai ms Bride corsage of yellow roses. _ * * * . A breakfast at the Stockholm in Detroit was served after the cere- mony. Later the bride changed to a traveling dress of sheer black wool with a red velvet bex jack- et and matching hat. A tiara of seed pearls edged in appliqued Rose Pointe lace held her fingertip veil, and she carried a cascade of white rosealeis surrounding a _ white orchid. Her pearls and white prayerbook were gifts from the Mrs. E. C. Murphy and Mrs. Mary Olsen came from St. Paul, Minn. to attend the wedding this morning of Amanda Materna of Lowell street and’ John L. Paga- cich of Robinwood avenue. ” * * The N. W. Petersons of Ogemaw road entertained friends Thursday evening at dinner at Orchard Lake ‘Country: Club. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Lillycrop of Melbourne, Fla., are the weekend guests of the Floyd Mc- Graths of Elizabéth Lake road. « * * Mrs. Marion Philip recently en- tertained guests at her Cass Lake cottage for skiiing, boating and picnicking. in Lansing Rite The McCune Chapel of People’s Church in Lansing was the setting this afternoon as Nancy Ann Hard- ing became the bride of Charles Blackmer Wolford, son of the After a _ northern Michigan | bridegroom Glenn Wolfords of Ogemaw road. | honeymoon the couple will reside . The Rev. Roy Schram performed | in Birmingham. Mrs. Nick Pagacich of Detroit j the double-ring ceremony before! Marjorie is a graduate of De-| was matron of honor dressed in MRS. JOHN L. PAGACICH members of the family and inti-| troit Business Institute and Rich- | pink tulle with a tiara of flowers+ mate friends. ard is a graduate of Michigan | and a bouquet of romance rose-; For the 3 o‘clock service, the| State College where he was af- | aleis. 'Chapter Names bride, who is the daughter of. Mil-| filiated with Alpha Tau Omega.| The bride's sister, Mrs. O. D.| , ; ; ford E. Harding of Lansing, chose| He also did graduate work at, Loomis, wore coral berry tulle with| 53. 54 Chairman a dress of white satin. Catholic Paid in Washing: | a fitted bodice of satin and a bolero | ton, D. C. jacket covering the petaled neck-| A white lace jacket trimmed : ie 6 - o idesmaid.| Pointed by President Mrs. Buhl with pearls complemented her : ; ne, tor her role as bridesmal dress and pearl beading trimmed | Bridal Party Given She carried a bouquet of cavalier Burt ten the first meeting of her Jace hat. An orchid sur- rosealels. |Iota Eta chapter of Pi Omicron rounded by stephanotis on a for Thelma Kenney Jacquelyn Loomis, the bride’s| National sorority met Thur-“ey Mrs. L. W. Pilcher was hostess} niece, wore a similar gown of blue . in her Crescent road home at @! with golden rapture rosealeis for white Bile formed the bridal evening at her Baldwin avenue ouquet. miscellaneous shower honoring/ her bouquet. She was the junior home. Mrs. Herbert A. Allen Jr. of) reima Kenney Thursday evening. | bridesmaid. | Mrs. George Reuter will head Lansing attended Nancy in a gown : . a ey Thelma spoke her marriage vows . | ways and means; Mrs. E. Verne of blue net over satin. Matching ; | Nick Pagacich of Detroit was with Everett Lane this morning | McCall, philanth ; M - in St. Michael Church. She is the, Dest man for his brother, who | ©C®™. Pulantiropic; Airs, Ger ; . resides on Robinwo avenue. aid Kirkby, publicity; Mrs. Melvin hat and mitts completed her ensem- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Louis Petrusha and John Verbos _C. McPherson, membership; Mrs. ble. Mr, allen performed the duties Kenney of Florence avenue, and UP; ank Lan Cresce seated the guests. |Leon Skelley and Mrs. Nettie M. the Fr = es of = |Collins, telephone; and Mrs. Or- of best man for Charles. Aft th ; dinner “a Sy Sn, nal ee tn road are his parents. A street-length frock of chalet yjjje Judd, historian. crepe with velvet and rhinestone Chairmen of the year were ap- * * In celebration of their 25th wedding anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. John Kinzler of Sylvan Shores drive were hosts at a buffet dinner at their home Friday evening. * * * Anne Willitts, who is attending the University- of Michigan School of Nursing was recently elected to Phi Kappa Phi, hon- orary society. Anne is the daugh- ter of the John McGregor Willitts was held at The Poplars in East Lansing. of Dixie Highway. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Cramer, formerly of Pontiac, will be hosts in their Rochester home to Mr. and Mrs. Floyd B. Streeter of Hays, Kan. * * ® ‘Announcing the birth’ of a sofs Gary Jon, on Sept. 8, are Mr. and Mrs. Desmond Jones of Sylvan Lake. The William T. Jones’ of Roch- ester and the Clete Gordons of Kalamazoo are grandparents of the baby, who was born at St. Joseph Hospital. Lansing will be the home of the new Mr. and Mrs. Wolford when they return from a Chicago honey- moon. Both are students at Mich- igan State College. Sorority Picks Committees Beta Alpha Chapter of Sigma Beta sorority named new com- mittees for the coming year when the group met Wednesday evening in the home of Joan Bowhall on Orlando avenue, Mrs. Donald Hogue Hosts Church Group Mrs. Donald Hogue of Fairgrove avenue opened her home Friday vafternoon to members and guests of the Standish group of the First Congregational Church for a des- sert luncheon. Mrs. Ray Bennett led devotions. | It was announced that the October ‘meeting will be at the home of Mrs. John Morrison on East Huron | street. It will feature a paid lunch- | eon. trimming was worn by the bride’s mother with ice blue accessories and a corsage of orchids. After a breakfast at Devon Gables, the bride changed to a | trip to Canada and Niagara Falls. | PTA Activities Executive board of Pontiac PTA Council will meet at Wisner School Monday eve- | ning at 7:30. blue wool suit with black acces-| sories and the white orchid from! the bridal bouquet for the wedding| Named as delegate to the Pon- | tiac Council of Pi Omicron was Mrs. Reuter. Miss Mary Dillon | was appointed delegate and Mrs. | Hugo Harnack, alternate to the central district convention to be held in Youngstown, O., Sept. 26 through 27. | Mrs. McCall reported on the |national board of regents meet- | ing held in Chicago Sept. 5 and 6. The group’s philanthropic project for the year will be to aid Oak- land County Society for Crippled Children. | Joan Hilton will head the charity Ni al .* committee assisted by Miss pow. Betty Mae MacDonald Speaks Vows hall, Janet DeGraff, Josephine Mc- . . . . . Intosh and Beth McEvoy. Miss to Florida are Mr. and, married Friday evening in All girls are stashing their suitcases in the car| yyeryoy ; En route to ; . McEvoy is also chairman of the | yr. . wh Saints Episcopal Ch : now so they can be calm and unruffled when | pledge committee. . David R. Snider. who werel anc they arrive at Michigan State Normal Col-| Heading the telephone commit: eae for orientation. tee is Miss Bowhall with Virginia Freshmen off to college together are Charlotte Ward (left) of Sylvan Lake and Nadene Borsvold, also of Sylvan Lake, who The bride, the former Betty Mae MacDonald; is the daughter of the Archie G. MacDonalds of East Kennett road. Becomes Bride of Everett Lane Thelma K enney Before an altar arrayed with white gladioli and chrysanthe- Thelma Jean will make the trek to Y psilanti Sunday. The mums, Tieima Jean xeney. MQrgaret Mary Ranzilla Wed Today Hickson and Glenda Fisher to assist her. For the 7:30 o'clock ceremony, Betty chose a gown of Chan- mums, Joan Halvorson, Pat Sturgis, Married tilly lace over white satin. Her L. K t Fl be- Se ee ee ee Friday evening ea ee and : Dia dete reve enney 0 orence avenue . are on the social com : came the bride of Everett Lane Before ne altar banked with wusnis, Mpg pineal peequens va! | with halite Miss ficken in All Saint roses, stephanotis and ivy on j ing i j ‘white gladioli, chrysanthemums peach glamellias were carried | in aints hit book this morning in St. Michael Church. | d carnations, Margaret Mary iv tka cil’ wheels Miss Halvorson heads the con- . a white prayer - He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. | panzilla hecame the bride of Cpl. een DiGiando of Detroit arnt stitution committee aided by Miss Episcopal Barbara MacDonald was. her Frank A. Lane of Crescent road. | Floyd Ray’ Loomis in St. Vincent a gown similar to the honor maid's ; Seecaaiees han ie sua ae Church were sister's maid of honor, and the ik, eee ss oe de Paul Church this motning at for her duties as flower girl. She| 2%". Jackie Downer, scrapboxk| Betty Mae Sal aman ash ad ae lag shades of gray complemented with} Margaret, who is the daughter otal; my baxeet “now Tose! and Miss DeGraff, gratuity. MacDonald bam Newman and Mrs. Bruce deep rose velvet accessories. She|of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ranzilla of Robert Ranzilla, the bride’s| nd David Richards. —— vore a corsage of pink roses. Voorheis road, — oNagiel brother, was best man for Floyd, Mrs. Dodman Host ; 5 on All were dressed in white nylon ;|Chantilly lace and pleated nylon who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. nider. net over taffeta with tiered skirts Virginia McEnany was maid of . honor wearing a taored patie tulle for the ceremony. Floyd M. Loomis of North Perry to MOMS Group hn Beile ds and matching stoles. Red roses and suit contrasted by soft pink ac- A medium-length train finished street. Mrs. George Dodman of Martell green ivy formed their bouquets. cessories. Her corsage was com. | the full skirt, and a round neck- Ushers included the bride- | street opened her home Thursday the daughter of Dr. Stuart Snider of Detroit was posed of pink roses. line trimmed with seed pearis groom’s brother, Carl Loomis; evening to members of Zone 8 M nd M best man for David, who is the highlighted the fitted bodice. Mr. Sinkler and Art Visniski. |Past Presidents Club of MOMS of| ‘#77: @ i - son of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe E Jerry Walsh of Clarkston was} fer fingertip veil, edged it. Alan Lee Loomis carried the | America, Inc. Archie G. Snider of Detroit. : best man. Chantilly lace, was held by a tiara ring for his uncle. Opening the meeting was Mrs. For her daughter’s wedding,|of seed pearls, and she carried a Mrs. Ranzilla wore a beige lace|Joe Marshall with Mrs. Charles MacDonald of Seating the guests were Rich- Mrs. Kenney wore a brown suit|cascade of white roses and steph- dress with black accessories and/O’Brien in charge of devotions. | Eas¢ Kennett ard Gundle and Donald Wilson, with matching accessories set off! anotis with ivy streamers, sur- a corsage of Johanna Hill roses.; Mrs. Frank Polasek, state presi- both of Detroit. _ by a corsage of yellow auturon| rounding a white orchid. Her pearls Mrs. Loomis wore a dusty rose lace| dent, asked members to contact road. Mrs. MacDonald wore a mint flowers. A copper tweed dress|were a gift of the bridegroom. dress with navy blue accessories | Mrs. -L. B. Arnold for reservations The green taffeta dress for the candle- trimmed in black velvet with| A strapless gown of rust lace and a Johanna Hill rose corsage. |for the state parley to be held in . ; light ceremony, with white ac- matching accessories and a yellow|and champagne-colored tulle was A bridal dinner was held at| Auburn Heights Sept. 16. Luncheon br idegr oom $s cessories and a corsage of white corsage was chosen by Mrs. Lane.| worn with a matching lace jacket Devon Gables, and a reception|was served with Mrs. Malcolm parents are the orchids. Beige crepe was worn by by honor maid Rose Marie Spada- for 500 guests was given at the|Scantland assisting. x Mrs. Snider, with brown acces- A reception was held in the | (5... Hellenic Orthodox Community Hall. Roscoe E. sories and a corsage of yellow bride's home after which the | irs. Verne Sinkler, the bride's The bride later changed to a | }Y Bride-El id orchids newlyweds left on a honeymovn | sister, as honor matron and Janet beige wool suit with brown ac- onor Dride-clect Sniders of After a reception for 200 guests tour of Canada. Anderson and Betty Felice as cessories and the orchid from , A miscellaneous bridal shower Detroit. in the Rose Kneale Room of Upon their return they will live| bridesmaids wore champagne-col- her bouquet for traveling. honoring Donna Louise Zimmer- Stevens Hall, the new Mrs. Snider ° in Ypsilanti where they wil! re-|ored lace dresses with rust-col- After a two-week honeymoon in|man, bride-elect of William C. changed to a gray flannel fitted - sume their studies xt Michigan| red tulle, styled like the honor Florida, the new Mrs. Lapmis will | Lewin was given Tuesday evening dress with black accessories for ° State Normal College. Everett is|™4id’s ‘gown. reside with her family wHile Floyd| by her maid of honor, Shirley Al- the trip to Florida. : affiliated with Zeta Chi Sigma and| The maid of honor carried a finishes his tour of duty in the|brecht at the Albrecht home on On their return the couple will Phi Mu Alpha fraternities. crescent cascade of yellow giame- Marine Corps. Ogemaw road. reside in Pontiac. EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 The SALVATION ARMY | Priest Settles Sunday Sermonette Musical Revival SUNDAY SCHOOL Hie alaleiele) © sie eels elere cles .9:45 A. M. ‘Well, when I consider that pects are ninety per cent HOLINESS MEETING ........ ..11:00 A. M. No Y. P. Meeting Until Further Notice EVANGELISTIC MEETING .............. 7:30 P. M. Officer in Charge mID WEES A PRATER Captain Vernon Vie 7:30 P. M. 29 W. Lawrence Street SSS South Saginaw at Judson Another Strike Father Comey Speaks to Wildcat Dockmen; Stops 2nd Walkout PHILADELPHIA — For the sec- || ond time this year, a mild-man- | nered and quiet-spoken priest has | halted a wildcat strike of water- front workers at the Franklin Sugar Refinery here which threat- First Methodist Organized on the Donelson Farm in 1828 ev. Paul RK. Havens Mrs. Jean Putnam Minister Choir Director 10:00 A. M. “SIGNS OF THE TIMES” Rev. Haven, Preaching 11:15 A.M. Church School—Classes for all ages. Wed.—7:30 P.M. — “SO RUN TO WIN” Annual Harvest Home Banquet Oct. 9 ened to tie up Philadelphia’s port, third largest in the nation. | The peacemaker, 58 - year - old | Father Denis J. Comey, S. J., was called back front a seashore vaca- , tion to address longshoremen at the refinery by union leaders who had been unable to stop the un- | authorized walkout. After he had | Spoken to them, the wildcatters | returned to their jobs. | Last February the priest per- | suaded groups of dockworkers at | the refinery who started unauthor-|the First Social Brethren Church, ized strikes to go back to work. 316 Baldwin Ave., is expected to REV. JOE ROSE Minister Expected to Attend Meeting The Rev. Joe Rose, founder of “If You Don’t Go to Church On Sunday, When Do You Go?” SUNDAY SCHOOL. PROMOTION DAY EXERCISES | 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP. “Christ Preach- ing, Healing, Teaching” 6:45 P.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP. Week Christian” 7:30 P.M. EVENING SERVICE. without Christ” THE UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 135 Prospect St. Geo. D. Murphy, Pastor 10:00 A.M. “Seven-Day- “You are not safe FIRST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 249 Baldwin Avenue | Sunday Scheol ..... .10:00 A. M. | Morning Service 11:00 A. M. Sunday Eve Service .... 7:30 P.M. | Christian Endeavor 6:00 P.M. || Wed. Evening Prayer ... 7:30 P. M. H; Hampton, Choir Director | Rev. R. Garner, Pastor ¢ Church ee and Fairmount | Sunday Is the Closing Day of Our | Special Services | Come—Hear Rey, J. H. Felter, Evangelist Mrs. J. H. eller—Special Singer Sunday School (all ages) .......... 10:00 A.M. Worship, ....°.........ee0e0eee .11:00 A.M. Pilgrim Y. P. S he = eee hha eves enews o 45 P.M. Evangelistic Service :30 P.M. Come—Bring Your Family and Friends to “The Little Church with the BIG HEART” E. C. Swanson, Miriister Roy Overbaugh, S. S. Supt. ee ee eee ewe eens Bol Rares UMITED NATIONS W canara i Oakland Ave. United "* Presbyterian Church 10:00 A.M. Worship— “A WORKING CHURCH” ae 7:30 P.M.—Presentttion of the sound picture “THE FLAME” @ great Commission Films production. Pictures in Korea were photographed by | Bob Pierce. presents .. ra THE FLAME: The Oldest . Baptist Sunday School in Michigan 1837—1953 Attendance Last Sunday 890 Featuring This Week CRADLE ROLL DEPT. Mrs. Kenneth Skrine, Supt. 10:45 A. M. “THE FAILURE OF UNBELIEF” Dr. H. H. Savage. speaking This Service Will Be Broadéast ot 11:00 A.M. Over CKLW 7:30 F.M. “THE FEAST OF THE TRUMPETS” Dr. H. H. Savage. speaking | attend the annual meeting of the Illinois Association of Social Breth- CHURCH OF THE ren Churches, beinz held here GOOD SAMARITAN Thursday aioe Sunday next Town Hall, E. Pike St. ; week. ; Sunday Service 8 P. M. The Rev. Mr. Rose has been Silver Tea Tues., Sept. 15th pastor of the local church since Rev. Fred Phillips, Speaker it was organized Oct. 15, 1950, fol- Rev. Jeanits Parris, Faster lowing a revival led by him and ——— | the Rev. Carl Downey. wasn’t doing so badly. The physician’s point was ancestors who lived more than Yet as an animal, man is capable of moral effort. True enough, with 90 per more than an animal. But with less than God. animal, I think the human race is doing pretty good!” A white-haired, respected physician had been encountered beside a news-stand. A friend of his had stopped him, pointed to the newspaper headlines telling of war and disaster, and thén had asked him what he thought of the human race. The doctor ignored the headlines as he looked at his questioner and told him he thought the human animal have not changed physically in forty thousand years. People alive today are anatomically the same—with the identical teeth, hands, brain-structure, skeleton, and bodily appetites—as their What is more, the Kinsey Reports and similar studies have revealed only what every thoughtful person already , knows—that men and women have biological urges in common with other members of the animal kingdom. developed the use of the lever, the pulley, the wheel, and fire: ‘no other organism has harnessed the power of falling water, of steam, of gasses, and of electricity; nothing else in nature consciously produces musie and art simply for the jey of creating; and, most significant of all, well taken, for human beings a thousand generations ago. unique. No other creature has no other organism is cent of his being, man is little the other 10 per cent, he is little Pope Creates New Districts Ecclesiastical Province, Two Dioceses Added in in Second Week Christian Temple Plans to Conclude Program on Sept. 20 . A musical revival is in progress at the Christian Temple on Au-, burn avenue. Starting last Wednes- day, J. Roy MacMurray of Cleve- land, is conducting the revival which will conclude Sept. 20. Mr. MacMurrray is assisted by by his wife in a varied musical program featuring 16 instruments each evening at 7:45. Tonight, with his wife, he will | present “The Ninety and Nine” | at which time he will play ‘‘Cal- gary” by Rodney and “Ring the Bells of Heaven.” Herman Rouse will preside at the organ and the temple choir will sing. A service is scheduled for each evening except Monday, and Tues- day and Wednesday's meetings will be held at the Christian. Mis- sionary and Alliance Church on Green street. President to Greet 3,000 Church Women By Religious News Service WASHINGTON, D. C. — Presi- dent Eisenhower will bring per- sonal greetings to the national as- sembly of United Church Women at Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 58. A White House announcement said the President is scheduled to speak to.the delegates on Oct. 6. Some 3,000 Protestant and East- ern Orthodox church women from every state as well as Canada and Hawaii are expected to attend the sessions. Mrs. James D. Wyker of Three Pontiac Youths Attend Religious Retreat Three representatives from the Oakland Avenue United Presby- terian Youth Fellowship are at- Elizabeth Lake Christian >, Church Morning Service 00 A.M 9:00 Sunday School : | is 10:00 A.M ) Young People's Service 6:30 P. M. 183 S. Winding Charles D. Race, Drive Pastor For about six months, the Rev. James M. Johnson has been serv- ing as pastor of the church due to the illness of the Rev. Mr. Rose. Because of this illness, the Rev. Mr. Downey has oren called to be the minister for the following year. United States By Religious News Service ROME — A new ecclesiastical province and two new dioceses have been created in the United States by Pope Pius XII, it was Columbia, Mo., U. C. W. president, will preside. The women’s group is a general department of the Na- tional Council of Churches. One of the principal items on .he agenda will be a comprehensive report on the status of American women in the church which has tending the. Detroit Presbytery Youth Retreat at Cedar Lake Group Camp near Chelsea thif weekend. They are Jim North from Builder's Group, and Joan Mes- ser and Mrs. Walter Napersky from the Pioneer Group. Sault Ste. Marie fo Get New Pastor SAULT STE. MARIE # — The First Social Brethren Church of Pontiac 316 Baldwin Ave. | Rev. Joe Rose, Pastor Asst., Rev. James Johnson FE 656 | of Christ Church of Grosse Pointe will be the new rector of St. James’ Episcopal Church here. St. James’ today announced nis acceptance of a call to come here. Rev. Whittemore succeeds ‘he Rt. Rev. Dudley B. McNeil, Annual Session of Illinois Association Social Brethren Churches , to be held in |bishop of the Western Michigan PONTIAC Episcopal Diocese. As Western Michigan Bishop, Rev. McNeil suc- Thurs. Sept. 17 thru 19 ceeded Rev. Whittemore’s father, Thurs. Opening Session: the Rt. Rev. Lewis B. Whittemore, 2:00 P. M.—Business Session retired. The younger Rev. Whittemore will preach his first sermon at the Soo Sept. 20. He is a younger mem- | ber of the Episcopal clergy. He be- 7:30 P. M.—Service Friday and Saturday: Morning Business Session 9:30 A. M. came a clergyman in 1951. ao: iy Sena Followed A native of Detroit, Rev. Whit- 7:30 P. M.—Service temore is a graduate of Cranbrook . school at Bloomfield Hills. He was Sunday Services : la lieutenant commander in the Sunday School ....10:00 A. M. || Navy in World War II. He studied Preaching Service 11:00 A.M. ‘for the clergy at Episcopal Theo- Evening Service... 7:30 P.M. || logical School at Cambridge, Mass. INTRODUCING |He spent part of his earlier years ‘in Grand Rapids. The Incoming Minister for |" rand hap FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH REV. CARL DOWNEY Dedicate New Headquarters 'With Service By Religious News Service MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — A lo-| cal advertising agency held a re- ligious service to dedicate its new headquarters. The Rev. .George A. Butters, pastor of Minnehaha Methodist -|church, and Dr. Leonard Kendall, | | pastor of Messiah Lutheran church, re lofficiated at the dedication of : os ‘| Faber Advertising, Inc. | rel S ex *e—how | Donald and Winifred Boynton of Highland Park, Ill.| they. once saw, the Couple studied the art of wood- | jg Oe ne ed tee. | Built of native Wisconsin timber, the chapel is called carving and toiled nine years to produce the place ca t Stutfy, Dull but Amazingly Victorious By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE On a recent trip, I was sitting at an airport lunch counter, hav- ing a cup of coffee and a sand- wich while waiting for my plane. I was thinking over a speech for that night when, suddenly, I be- came conscious of a man who slipped into the seat next to mine, | picked up my check and said, take care of this.” Naturally enough, I was_ sur- ee prised and asked | why he. wanted | to pay my check. | ET owe you a| debt,” ed the help you give to those having personal DR, PEALE problems. “I seemed unusually tired and nervous and things were be- ginning to get me down; so I began to follow some of the sug- gestions in your column — s0 I think I-owe you at least the price of a sandwich.” “You wrote about ‘two scien- tits,"" he continued. ‘“‘These men claim that prayer is a real sci- ence and that the Bible is a scien- tifie book. “When they wanted to solve a difficult problem recently, they icalled in a third man because the Bible says that if three are gath- ered together they will receive help. And you said their prayers got remarkable results.”’ “That's so,’’ I nodded, ‘‘those men believed the spiritual meth- ods of the Bible operate with scientific precision. “This was new to me,” he con- tinued, ‘‘but I had to try some- thing. So I began to read the Bible and practice its techniques. I came across a passage in Mark which says: ‘What things soever ye de- sire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.’ “This meant to me that. I would have to think more positively about the things I wanted in life and -I tried doing just that. “Unfortunately, it didn't work very well at first, and I was tempted to give the whole thing up. But I went back to that same Bible passage first and read the next verse: ‘When ye stand pray- ing, forgive, if ye have ought against any: that your Father also which is in heaven may forgive you your trespasses.’ “Then I saw why it wasn’t working for me. I wasn’t for- American Latheran Conference Sunday School Parsonage: 145 Owege Drive ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN CHURCH HILL STREET AT CHERRY STREET "ee ee (Nationa! Latheran Ceunetl) see ew we Phene FE ¢-3404 Me RIT aa RN STS a ad | “A Changeless Christ for a Changing World” ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH ; The Church oj the Lutheran Hour Be JOSLYN AT FOURTH STREET 4 Fd 9:30 A. M., Sunday School — 10:45 A. M. Morning Service 3 ¥ Fe Fi George Mahder, Pastor Watcb “This ls the Life’—Sunaay, 1:30 P. M.—WJBK-TV SAE SA RMS ELIT, A I aE: Phone FE 5-0404 sr hae gd ets SPORES at ‘GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Glendale and S. Genesee SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 A. M. WORSHIP 9:30 - 11 A. M. he said. | “I've read your newspaper = arti- | ; giving people I knew. And the | power of prayer and faith was being stopped by that resent- | ment barrier and couldn't get | through. “So I went ‘all out spiritually. I got down on my knees and had to pray quite a few times to get the hate out of my mind and “Tl | heart. And then, suddenly, I be- | gan to feel that my prayers would get results. And they have. It is wonderful the way the power came through.” He concluded with a grin, “Things make sense when you pray.” | How right he is. There is noth- ing old-fashioned about prayer, nothing stuffy, nothing dull. On the cles, and I need- | contrary, it is an amazingly work- able power formula for victorious and useful living. The distin- guished Nobel Prize_ scientist, new book, ‘‘Reflections on Life,” a final summation of a lifetime of thought given to human problems, says: Prayer does not consist in the dreary recitation of words whose sense we do not understand. Its effect is nearly always positive. Everything happens as if God listened to us and gave us a di- rect answer; unexpected events occur; mental balance is re-es- tablished; our sense of isolation and importance and of the use- lessness of our efforts disap- pears. “The world ceases to be cruel and unjust and becomes friendly while a strange power develops in our own depths.’’ So says one of the world’s greatest: scientists. What is bothering you? What is your trouble? What is your prob- elem? What is your difficulty? The answer? Just start praying. First, fill your mind full of God thoughts and empty yourself of every bit of evil you have in you. | Then, have the faith to pray great, | big, daring prayers. Pray unsel- | fishly with outgoing good will in |; your heart. What do you want to be? Tell the Lord you want to be that. What do you want to accom- | plish? Tell Him. Tell Him. And believe. Be pre- |pared for Him to tell you no, for sometimes we ask amiss; but also be prepared for Him to say yes. Things make sense when you pray. (Copyright 1953) Members of Protestant churches in Highmount, N. Y., gathered on the 3,325 foot summit of Belleayre mountain for a sunset worship service, What do you want to happen? , a Sa REV. C. T. CORBETT First Nazarene Plans Evangelistic Meetings Evangelistic meetings have been planned at First Church of the Nazarene, 60 State Ave., starting Wednesday and continuing through Jept. 27. The Rev. C. T. Corbett of Kan- kakee, Ill., will be the evangelist | and Ray Dafoe of Flint will have | charge of the music. | Services will be held each night at 7:30 The Rev. Mr. Corbett has been in the Christian ministry 30 years, and has been in evangelistic work for the past 20 years. Baptist Senior Choir to Give 7th Fall Concert The seventh annual fall concert of the Senior Choir of Trinity Bap- | tist Church will be Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Guest soloists will be Miss Clara |Ramsey and Mrs. Edna Horrace. Two dramatic readings will be given by Louise Billings and Mrs. Rosa Kinder. Levi Eubanks directs the choir. <= o @ Bring the Entire Family (Free Bes Ride) EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE 60 Tilden at W. Huron Preaching 11 A.M. & 7:30 P.M. Youth Groups 6:30 P.M. Radio CKLW, 7:30 — WCAR, 8 A.M. A. Jj. Baughey, Pastor BRETHREN THE EVANGELICAL UNITED CHURCHES CALVARY Paddock at Prospect Rev. Bingaman. Minister Come to Church This Sunday BALDWIN AVE. Baldwin at Homes Rev. H. E. Rvan. Minister A.M.: The Sword of the Spirit P.M. Sharing the Fellowship Sunday School ......9:45 2. m. Morning Worship ...11:00 a.m. Evening Worship ...7:30 p. m. Youth Fellowship ....6:30 p. m. | will be released Sept. 20 by the | | Christian Science Church, it was | power of prayer in everyday life | Spiritualist Church 16 Chase Street SUNDAY SERVICE: Mrs. Agnes Hill, of Detroit 7:30 P.M. Evening Service Mid-Week Meeting, Wed., 7:30 P. M. announced today. | Each program presents a. first- hand, documentary narrative in | which a guest tells of his own) view the state liquor control com- | mission’s method of measuring the Oregon has honored the memory | Methodist missionary, by placing of the Rev. Jason Lee, a pioneer | his statue in the U. S. capitol. . FIRST CHURCH OF GOD 25 East Blvd., South of Lookout Drive General Offices—Anderson, Ind. ‘God's Mighty Acts’ Sunday 10:45 A.M. 7:30 P. M.—Evening Service “Holy Spirit Leadership” Sunday School 9:45 A. M. Rev. Grover C. Johnson WESLEYAN METHODIST 67 NORTH LYNN STREET 10:00 Sun. School Rev. C. D. Friess 11:00 Worship Pastor W.Y.P.S. 6:45 Evangelistic 7:30 FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Cor. E. Huron and Mt. Clemens at Mill St., Pontiac (Opposite Post Office) “THY WORD WILL BE JOY” Malcom K. Burton, preaching Rev. Maicolm K. Burton, Minister ‘PARKDALE NAZARENE; SPECIAL SERVICES Tonight: 7:30 Tomorrow 10:45 and 7:30 Hear Ray DaFoe sing Sunday School at 9:45 A. M. Guest Singers and Musicians Also Next Friday, Saturday and Sunday’ Don’t Miss These Services Sermons by the Pastor REV. WAYNE E. WELTON, Minister ‘ FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH W. Huron at Wayne §&t. Church School: 9:45 A. ML Morning Worship: 11:00 A.M. Sermon Topic: “A Band of Dedicated Men” Dr. William H. Marbach, Preaching William H. Marbach, Paster Edward D. Auchard, Associate Pastor enced physical healing through prayer in Christian Science. | | The thoroughly verified accounts | are being tape-recorded from per- | sons of many different walks of life |from all over the United States, | | Canada, Europe, Africa, Australia | and other parts of the world. | Following the narrative, a short | inspirational message will be pre- sented on how the listener can | solve his own problems thréugh | prayer. || CHURCH cS: NAZARENE 239 East Pike Street Small Enough to Appreciate You to Serve You SERVICES THAT INSPIRE 6:30 P. M.—N.Y.P.S. 7:30 P. M.—Evangelistic Serv. | 10:00 A. M.—Sunday School 11:00 A. M.—Worship Howard Ogden, Musical Director Rev. W. E. Varian, Pastor ... Large Enough The Church of Christ 210 Hughes Street 11 A.M. Sunday Worship R. L. WIGGINS. Minister 10 A.M. Bible School 6 P.M. Evening Service BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH 4 w Huron at Mark Fred Robert Tiffany, Paster 4 SUNDAY SERVICES > 9:30 a.m. Prayer 19:00 a. m. Worship > 11:00 a.m. Church School Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. BIBLE WORKSHOP FOR ALL ACES First Southern Missionary | BAPTIST CHURCH | 365 East Wilson Ave. | : Sunday School ........ 9:45 A.M. Worship ...:..0 . ere seem 11:00 A.M. B. p UU. o-ctere revere eens rermens 6:30 P.M. Worship ..-..2 2... eee 7250 P.M. Wed. Prayer Meeting .7.. 7:30 P.M. Pastor H. T. Starkey Phone FE 4-9633 HUBBS QUARTETTE “Membe: of Southern Baptist Convention” FREE METHODIST 87 Lafayette St. 2 Blocks West of Sears Church of the Light and Life Hour Hear Dr. Myron Boyd Every Sunday Morning in His Radio Revival Over WXYZ Detroit at 8:30 Sunday School 10 A. M. Morning Worship 11 Evening Service 7:30 HOWARD C. ARTZ, Pastor BURTELLA GREEN, §. 8S. Supt. Enjoy These Services Tonight (Sat.) 7:45 P. M. A Soul Stirring Musical Program 2) and Sermon “THE NINETY AND NINE” By Evangelist and Mrs. J. R. MacMurray National Known Musical Leaders! CHRISTIAN TEMPLE 505 Auburn Avenue Sunday, 10 A. M. — Communion and Sermon Rev. Lola P. Marion, speaker 7:45 P. M. — A Great Musical Program With Dr. Leland L. Marion, speaker Monday — No Service — Rest Night Tuesday and Wed.—Service Held in Christian Missionary Church on Green St. Thursday — Back of Temple. We Invite You to Hear and Enjoy These Great Musical Leaders. Every Night at 7:45 P. M. A Friendly Place to Worship —————= > All Saints Episcopal Church Williams Street at West Pike The Rev. C George Widdifieia, Rector Res. Waldo R Hunt Rev William C. Hamm Rev. Waré Clabuesch SUNDAY SERVICES 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:30 A.M.—Holy Communion and Church School 17:00 A.LM.—Holy Communion, Church School—Sermon by the Rector St. Andrew's Chapel 4386 Dixie Highway A Buiuding 411 Conditioned 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 10:30 A.M.—Family Worship Service, Inaugurating 1953-1954 Church Schoo! Season Family Sermon Story by the Rev. W. R. Hunt, Vicar Nursery for 2 to 17-year-old Children St. Mary’s-in-the-Hills of Lake Orion and Oxford Joslyn Rd. and Greenshieid Ra (Nina Scripps School) 8:00 A M.—Holy Communion 11:00 A.M.—Worship and Sermon by Rev. Wm. C. Hamm, Vicar CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 N. Saginaw St. Charles D. Race, Minister Ph. FE 4-0239 10:00 A. M.—Bible Schoo! 6:30 P. M.—Yeung People 11:00 A. M.—Merning Worship 7:30 P. M.—Evening Service | : Tues., 7:236—Annual Congregational Meeting | Wed., 7:30—Prayer and Bible Study Thurs., 7:30—Cheir Practice Fri., 6:30 P.M.—Men's and Gleaners Close Cooperative Dinner and Program Watch For Grand Opening Announcement Of Our New Location Christian Literature Sales 67 Oakland Ave. FE 2-1721 | EMMANUEL BAPTIST at Or sa aS) ¥ Evening Evangelistic Service 7:30 P.M. Hear Rev. Tom Malone “Where Did the Devil Come From?” The first in a series of messages on Satanology. Where ge came from; his work; his counterfeits; his purpose; his destiny. Hear the Bible answers to these vital questions. September 20th—’WHAT IS THE DEVIL'S WORK IN THE WORLD?” September 27th—""WHEN WILL COD DEFEAT HIM?” Also hear former Air Corp SERGEANT WILLARD STALLCUP tell of how he was converted in a B 29 over Tokyo with 463 shell holes in his plane. } Bi # ed gg oa testimonies to come out of o ar ° Hes Sunday School Attendance e . Last Sunday secures PRs . 7 54 CHURC Telegraph Road Ry. we % TEN 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 . . . RE Stanleys to Spare . Financial Leadership ~~ Plans Hearing [sxc a» TY REPAIRS : Work Guaranteed! UJ § G { A bell boy paging Stanley at the| they are by far the more courteous on . . overnmen HAMPTON TV drivers on the Toad. WASHINGTON (®—The U.S. gov- ; Oaks Club dinner in honor of St. ; 0 US | y C ion Stanislaus would have _ becn| 286 State St. STO — |ernment appeared to be under FE 4-2525 swamped. There were 32 Stanievs! | strong pressure today from other ‘at the dinner. | !countries fiscal representatives to McCarthy Says Secret | lead the way to convertible cur- Report Made Public for rencies and freer.trade. The 5onation World Bank and Having Red Slant eo HARTFORD, Conn. (UP) — The much criticized lady driver has at least one man on her side. City | manager Carleton F. Sharpe says TONITE—Last Complete Show Starts 10 P. M. Doors Open 1:45 P.M Monet . ° |} ary Fund came to the end of ' AIR-CONDITIONED 'an annual meeting, but Reginald By G. MILTON KELLY ON THE FUTURAMIC SCREEN! FREDERICK BRISSON presente | Maudling, United Kingdom repre- WASHINGTON «-—Sen. McCar- | , : Rosali d Russell | sentative, is staying here until thy (R-Wis) said today he eearel| “KANSAS PACIFIC” Sterling HAYDEN - in Color n Wednesday. Officials would not pu iieineanined Gexizoed (fo) shoe |comment on Maudling’s extended Rr 5$— 0 EN! Paul Douglas | stay, -but it aroused speculation whether he was justified in releas- PLU N OUR REGULAR SCRE : ing an intelligence report which FOUR BIG STARS...IN THEIR MOST DRAMATIC ROLES: . . 'that he hoped to learn in private Marie Wilson talks with U.S. Treasury officials 7” what help Britain can count on flan Wave from the United States if she drops . restrictions on free exchange of the | pound sterling. Another bank-fund governor re- maining after the close of the the Army had labeled a ‘“‘restrict- ALAN —_ DEBORAH CHARLES CORINNE ed’’ document. LADD KERR B - CALVET The senator told newsmen the hearing will be held before the te LT) Td) nM wHE EAST Senate investigations subcommit- | tee, which he heads, but he did not | _. | meeting was Hassen ,Polatkan, say when. *| Turkish minister of finance. Polat- McCarthy contends he made the Sta rts « kan’s aims also were undisclosed, report public Wednesday because a | but were thought to center about it contained ‘‘clearcut Communist UNDAY x i his country’s new program to at- propaganda.’”’ But the Army said tract private investment, particu- in a statement yesterday that Mc- | larly dollar investment. Carthy had withheld sections of the NOTE: “ROAD TO BALI”’ Has Not Been report which made it obvious the | Shown in the City of Pontiac! document was not Communist a ON THE GIANT FULL STAGE Besides, the Army said, releas- | ing any of the report disclosed | FUTORAMIC SCREEN! information affecting national de- ® fense ‘‘within the meaning of the espionage laws.” | The Army statement did not mention McCarthy by name or any plans to try to prosecute him—an action that seemed unlikely in these circumstances. But it said | THEIR NEWEST of the document: “G&G “The transmission or revela- AND FUNNIEST tion of its contents in any manner | to any unauthorized person is pro- | “ROAD SHOW AND hibited by law.” | _ , THEIR FIRST IN Tax Check Not Ended, | Just Taking Breather WASHINGTON (®#—The Internal | Revenue Service hasn't abandoned | its campaign to check up on tax- payers individually—it is only paus- ling to figure out the best way to | proceed. Revenue Commissioner T. Cole- man Andrews said yesterday this was the reason for orders to field | offices not to start any new can- rvassing programs, such as_ the door-to-door checks undertaken in | some parts of the country. = Ao TEARS ONS on ne Andrews said the campaign had Trouble Along the Way | been highly successful in bringing “Split Second” | in revenue and that there had been | few complaints. * * ' Unauthorized disclosure of ma- | terial bearing such classifications | Fa i as “restricted,” ‘‘secret’’ and ‘so| COLOR BY rT | on is punishable by up to 10 years | : ern J =. eS aA en ts MEE imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. | TECHNICOLOR nite ss The criticized report was de- i COOKING GENERAL—Brig. Gen. Frank Dorn may | his point. Here, the General (who scorns aprons and | classified veserday by thi cay, 3. be getting himself into ‘‘hot water’’ but he maintains | uses a dishtowel instead tries out one of his OWN’ because of its prior disclosure. | ’ that men are better cooks than women, and has! recipes collected from all parts of the world during; «]; have no choice but to go | | DRIVE-IN THEATER | Published a book the “Dorn Cook Book’’ to prove | his 30-year- Army ca career. ahead and expose it publicly,’’ Mc- THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN Carthy said in telling reporters he | The Army's 42nd Engineer Con-| ardson, Alaska, built its own chapel in expects to hold public hearings on : | Cor, Williams Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 6:30 | struction Battalion at Fort Rich- | entirely from salvaged materials. =, Community Theaters the issue before his subcommittee. | «<- : _ oe ‘Of their intfmation that there S A T U R D A Y biemingn was something wrong with expos: | rmingham , ; a a Y Bat, Tues: “Scared Stiff." Jerry ing this propaganda,’’ he said, | BLUE SKY = STARTS | 22.06.05 arg lac i Ma HIT NO. 2 ; ee Scourie,” Greer Garson, “er Communist propaganda or Com.- | | Pidgeon SUNDA Y Wed., Tues: “All I Desire.” Barbara | munist behind a label of ‘restrict: | Stanwyck Richard Carlson: “It Ca Coe SON OF , —~ from Outer Space Richard cari: led’.” : 4 7 * ‘ ’ ej | =—= Bicorfield | * . * Net ‘PORT < | On the Biggest and Bat: “Dangerous When wet.” | McCarthy said the document, | Esther Williams, Fernando Lamas: | dealing with conditions behind the i “Column South,’ Audie Murphy, Joan Brightest Screen Pecans! . a Iron Curtain, was “95 per cent | Sun, Sat: “South Sea Woman.’ Communist propaganda”’ and was | ee ng Burt Lancaster, Virginia Mayo | FIRST TIME...BIG STARS In 3-D eet Case Packt Mickey | Sent last year to 37 Army com- | toe OA Bali-Bali Girls 'n Everything mands, mostly in the Far East. Hills-Rochester | | Bat.: “Roar of the Crowd,’ os oe Howard Duff. Helene Stan! ey ‘ | Homesteaders,"’ Wild Bill El ilett | 8un., Mon “The Kid from Left Louis rea l | Pield,"” Dan Dailey, Anne Bancroft; HIT NO. 3 — OWL SHOW ee ee ee HOWARD HUGHES proseats ROBERT MITCHUM “World's Most Beautiful Girls."’ Tues, Thurs “she's Back on | Broadway,” color, Virginia Mayo, | inor ar agua e | Frank Lovejoy | ‘ Fri., Sat “The Pathfinder,’ color er colt de a ® PLUS e - } LINDA DARNELL | George ria vgs See Ha Carter ST. LOUIS (®—A minor earth- : | angs o retic,”’ irby G t, " # ‘ \ | Chinook ° ee ve EES quake rumbled in the St. Louis ; ee ON THE REGULAR | JACK PALANCE | gat: “Troup! ya se |area yesterday, causing wide- iwi Mens : : : uble Alon 1e ay ) : | ; aa } ad | Wayne, Donna Reed: “Split Gena | spread alarm among residents but % \ AS. SCREEN + ] Stephen Alle SN ln — ; only minor damage. . re.” | > , ies by r ave a a | > | ; a ED WAC," Rosalind Russell, Paul Doug- Windows rattled, dishes shook ‘ P las “Column South,” Technicolor, | ’ Audie Murphy. Joan Evans and canned goods fell from Bro ESCAPED: . bake-Walled Lake cery shelves. A few cases of| . - ™~ Sat: ‘‘Raiders of the Seven Seas.” . s . . | | i ‘ rh Gg ni | Technicolor, John Payne, Donna Reed cracks in plaster were rt ported. | CONVIC ss : | nat Tues.: ‘Never Wave at a WAC,” St. Louis University reported a : . pole 3 |} Rosalind Russell, Paul Douglas: “Blue | ‘yory j ¢ ON THE a — = , ; . < | | Gardenia,”’ Anne Baxter, Richard Conte, | = snag earthquake lasting . ; F ; Vittorio Color by Wed., Thurs.: ‘The Hitch Hiker,’ Ed- | very few seconds. > rae mm * GASSMAN | 20. } } Sow Hdd TECHNICOLOR the Hours” Teresa, Wright tlacDoww | School officials estimated the RUN... * ae Rea Y. te | AN Carey center of the disturbance near Ca- NTH e Borry . Milford : iF E 4 as | RS, CENTURY-FOX oat A ; EDMUND GRAINGER . — . hokia Creek, three miles west of | Se : ‘ ‘ PRODUCTION Sat Poney Express Technicolor, BAYOU OF . ‘ PRESENTS with PRIDE AND LOVE pie | csun ree Rhonda Fleming | Edwardsville, Ill., and anywhere | LOUISIANA it S hi BERGEN * a un, Tuer: “Francis Covers the Big | _ Sas “4 : t Town Donald O'Connor. wyete | from five to 15 miles below the | So i 2 Polly ‘ ’ | Oy ee Sa The Kid f | surface. ; F ‘ t.: “The rom Left a oe ——— - -_— — 3-D’ Viewers 15c, Bring Yours If You Have Them! | Field," Dan Dailey, Anne Bancroft Ps | | | Me | ANOTHER COLOR FEATURE | Gj; Father Prays 0 ti THEY'RE ROMANCING AGAIN’ ‘His Son ls Living | aS CING AGAIN! = THEY'RE DAN PHOENIX, Ariz. u—When 17- = : 2a (2 | ee — ~~ - Aa -- || year-old Gustavo G, Gomez Jr., an “3 Army private, arriv .ores arrived in Korea | three years ago, he wrote home. | | “Then I heard he was missing,"’ | uc e } his father said yesterday. ‘'There | | was no word until today.’’ The ‘‘word’’ came from the De- —— Department. It said young | list of name ‘‘was included in a| ; S list of (captured) Servicemen for | eaSsSOo I ; | whom No accounting has been! . " made.’ Daily, since his boy !anded in| | Korea, Gustavo Gomez has knelt | at his homemade altar and prayed ~~ | for his safety. Is WAYS pen | ‘My son is not dead,"’ said| Gomez, ‘‘But I must stay at the . altar until he is home.” ; Is Says Boston Defenses —~ Inadeouate for Bombs ‘ £5] DONALD OCONNOR-DEBBIE REYNOLDS | ="sssa-t ss Aircraft Command, says the air * ° ° ay dalenaies of Bositty are thadequate | It’s a wide-open field with no quotas, no limits. And you 3 mt rin om. me — LAST TIME TONIGHT — peta ‘othe this per nother | are the game! Its “sportsmen” will take you on any con- iy AYNE- E PUTTER | Pearl Harbor.’ » ceivable proposition. Once you nibble they’ll nev er tire of Lewis said after an inspecti » Robert Wagner : Helen Westcott Una Merkel - Richard Allan: Max Showalter | ROSALIND RUSSELL ‘N EVER WAVE tour yesterday that elena = a tr ying to hook you. are on a 24-hour alert but enemy | Written for salons See CUM Galtuime || PAUL DOUGLAS In AT A W Ac’ Bombers) all id eae toed : Beware the fast talking salesman who high pressures you MARIE WILSON _TECHNICOLOR /—- ~ ae we 7 — a he EF x- |) NEW MUSICAL a aN ' ‘ cre '} with those “Singin’ ; = -* if In The Rain” Stars! TECHNICOLOR Songs! Dances! Joy! as a boy promises to get his girl’s picture on a LOOK ae cover! & 4 , » pil into an unheard of bargain. Be cautious of door-to-door k MS Sir Francis Drake’ | ame 3 i Twelve terror-ridden hours ius amd ta ead required 34 ee promoters who represent vague faraway companies. months. Play safe: Deal with reliable local firms. eaiaeemmaies || AUDIE MURPHY in “COLUMN SOUTH” | raw aa aan | ‘ \ “wet \| BETTER BUSINESS BOARD | DA LU P | N 0 .) OWL SHOW TONIGHT @ 420 Pontiac Trail | | of the WALLED LAKE AIR-CONDITIONED SUN., MON., TUES. “NEVER WAVE AT A WAC” with Resalind Russell and — Wilsen ROBERT RYAN “BEWARE. BELA LUGOSI : In with Ann Barter, R. Conte ; : 4 ; VAC) ahal| “NIGHT MONSTER” |S “Saueene” 8 ; Sn. | —_ WY eda SNES it thn i 5 SOK ih SES Vote es Pontiac Chamber of Commerce Lso— “THE BLUE GARDENIA” + a aalalcatimntile a itl ner The race horse Kincsem never was defeated in the 544 races he ran during his lifetime. Shipping and fishing industries use half the world’s rope produc- tion. 4541 Dixie Hwy. E LES HUTCHINSON CAFETERIA and RESTAURANT Gene Shaw, Mgr. Roast Tom Dressing Baked V Baked Swiss S Natural Gravy Roast Round of Beef irginia Has SUNDAY SPECIALS! Turkey with & Cranberry Sauce & Mashed Chicken Ala King on Hot Biscuit -----77°°""" Potatoes 90¢ a Fox and Bounds Woodward at Long Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills Phone Birmingham MI 4-4800 NOW SERVING LUNCHES From 12 Noon as Well as Dinners from 5:30 Roast Turkey Roast Beef \ Swiss steak ~ - a. ”y \ Sunday Menu SPECIAL DINNERS 1. Complete Dinner WA ) OLD NY HEIDELBERG 1727. 8. Telegraph Road Cocktails, Wines, Beer Launches Drive : for T-H Repeal Solon Says Any. GOP Changes in Act Would Fall Short of Promises WASHINGTON (®—Sen. Murray (D-Mont) ‘said today a new drive for outright repeal of the Taft- ; Hartley Act may be the Demo- lcrats’ answer to Eisenhower | administration discord over labor | policies. Murray, top Democrat on the | Senate Labor Committee, said in | an interview he intends to sponsor 'a repealer in the next session of Congress and to make the matter an issue in next year’s congres- ' sional campaign, | * * “Secretary of Labor Durkin’s | resignation indicates very clearly | that any Taft-Hartley amendments | the Republicans offer are not going to be the kind promised by Presi- dent Eisenhower in last year’s campaign which would be sympa- thetic with the workers’ program,”’ Murray said. “The entire act ought to be re- pealed and I intend to move in that direction.” * * © ) Chairman H. Alexander Smith (R-NJ) of the Senate Labor Com- mittee expressed regret and sur- prise over Durkin’s_ resignation Thursday. Smith said in a tele- .* - ca an a a va 7 ; + > “~. ys * . > a 5 , < ; } * ROUGH 'N READY—This quartet of desperate ldoking men re-enact ' boasts such stars as handsome Guy Madison (right) Frank Lovejoy a tense scene from the new Western thriller, ‘‘The Charge at Feather and Helen Westcott. (not pictured.) River,’’ beginning Sunday at. a Pontiac theater. This 3-D adventure | ELEVEN 4 — < phoned statement he had ‘‘under- j Stood that conversations would | continue ‘to the end that a labor Actresses | program might be developed and D legislation prepared for introduc- 7 | tion in Congress early in January. ISprove | Sen. Hill (D-Ala), another Labor |Committee member, said he re- | Zards Durkin's resignation as in- |dicating that the Eisenhower ad- | ministration is ‘‘not going to come |up with any modification of the \Taft-Hartley Act that will satisfy | labor,’ Old Saying By JAMES BACON HOLLYWOOD: \*# Someone once said there is no such creature as an honest: actress. I discovered two in one day and |in Hollywood, a town where it is |sometimes difficult to find an | honest woman. * * * Durkin, a Democrat, quit the ; Cabinet to return to his post as president of the AFL plumbers and | jlideoleagut ye union, .saying White House aides had broken an agree- ment with him to put the admin- istration’s support behind 19 pro- posed Taft-Hartley law changes. New Yorkers Will Get Look at Revamped Met NEW YORK (®—New York thea- ter-goers will get their initial look tomorrow night at the first interior changes made in the orchestra} section of the Metropolitan Opera | House since 1892, The seating arrangement has} been changed, providing less stand- ing room and 116 more ‘seats. New seats and new carpeting also have been put in, and the floor has been inclined to permit | a better view of the stage. Any woman who wants to add Opening at the opera house to-| years to her age when she doesn’t morrow night for a brief engage- need to is a basically honest wom- The two are Katy Jurado, Mex- ico’s answer to Marilyn Monroe, and Carol Bruce, stage star of the touring musical ‘Pal Joey.” Both proved honesty by answers to two routine questions. In the case of Miss Jurado, I asked if the facts in her official studio biography were correct, hoping thus to avoid repetitious questioning about her early life. “My biography ees wrong,” she exclaimed. ‘“‘When I make ‘High Noon,’ I was 25 and the biography was hokay. Two years later, I make ‘Arrowhead’ and the biography still say I am -25. I asked them to feex but they no feex. You please say I am 27, res?’’ ment is the British Sadler's Wells|an. Katy explains why: ballet. | ‘Glamour is not a matter of age. ‘~wweeeree’wwvrvev»rrwwvvvvvwvwevwvevuruvuwuvv~vuyvyvuvw-vwvuvuvYyT’' {A woman can be glamorous at ‘wwwvvevrvwvwvvevwrvevvvvwwvwwVeYTY" Ww v~wwwrwwwvvwvvew™ vw Dixie Hwy. (US-10) i bi i be hn bb hi bh hi hi hi hi hi hi ha hi hi hi hi hi ho hi hi hh hal 1 Block N. of Teleg raph TVvVvVVVVVY FE hb he bn be be bn hh he hi hh he hh |any age. Look at Dolores Del Rio, |she was a star before my mother Admission Adults 70¢ was married but she still plays { glamorous leading ladies in Mexi- can films.’’ The question asked Miss Bruce | was the routine one asked all tour- | ing Broadway stars. Any movie offers? “I can honestly say,’ © she answered, ‘‘that not one producer has even so much as come back- stage to shake my hand. I have not even had one little nibble | from the movies. I think it is wonderful because I can relax and enjoy myself.” | Most Broadway stars would have | you believe that Zanuck and Schary do nothing but pound on their doors all the time that the play is in town. Miss Bruce had a brief fling in |the movies in 1941. That was right after she scored heavily as the star of ‘‘Louisiana Purchase’ * on Broadway. | Universal signed her for musical | ability and promptly put her in a picture with Indians. Out here, |that figures. Next came a movie with ‘Abbott and Costello and then one with the Ritz Brothers. “The title of that last one was| ‘Behind the 8 Ball’ and I decided | to leave Hollywood on that note.” | Propose Denver Judge DENVER wW — U. S. Circuit! Judge Orie L. Phillips of Denver | | was unanimously endorsed by the | | Colorado Bar Assn, yesterday for | appointment as chief justice of the | U. S. Supreme Court replacing Fred M. Vinson, who died this | week, Glasses 15¢ or Bring Your Own Vue es’: id 4 Doors Open Week Days at: 10:30 — Sundays at 12:30 5-4500—Open 6:30 P. M. 3—Big Days—3 TONIGHT - SUNDAY - MONDAY Last Times Today c} Loyde the ; ae Flame L | “The Tall of | H LAMAS HIE DAHL ee p&p fp fp fo bp fp fy by by be bn bp bn bn bo bo bp Li bo hi hi hi hi hi ha Li hi hi hi hi Li hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi ha nl oith KIRBY GRA MEDINA paahbhhrbaabb basi si hhh hh hehe hohe bebe bebe bebe bb bb bt tt bt be be be be he be be be he be he bn he he han hn han hn Man MM hh hehe heh he tanh he hn Mahe hh MMMM MM en eM hh he han ehh hha hahahahahahaha hahaha pAAAb hb hb bb bib ish bb hhh bbb bh bb tbh betty hy bbe bn bn bn bn bn bb bb bb hb hh hel hh hh hh hhh hh hh hh i hi hi hi hi hi Bi hi hi hi hi hn hi hi hi hi hi hi i Li hi hi hi i hh i hi hi hi hii hi hi hi hi hhh hh hhh hin lll pwwwvvvevvvvuwvuvvuwvwvVTY* rwwewvewevrevrververvrwvev«4+e.sevTvgéevwevwevyr-* wvvvVvVvVVVVVVVVVVVVYT TO-NIGHT z ee e ‘ Funnie I Se. TREACHER | N wT THOMAS GOMEZ "ANNE: GILLIS raf. SISTERS Margie, Bea and 64" Abbott and Costello Starts at 1:00, 4:05, 7:10, 10:25 : Bh ap r Two cut-ups in cutawoys busting the upper crust wide open! i « UTTON OWL Mona Freeman in ‘TOUGH GIRL’ wrvvvvVvVvVVVVVVVVVVVVVVY After Our Regular Show ‘wvvvwwweevrewreeevrYY* yw pO TEESE OUT CCC CCC CCCCCUCCCCCCCCCCTCT le i i hi hi i hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hh ha i hn be be be bp bp be tn te i tp tn in ip in tp bp tp tp i ip tp bp tp tp in ip ip ip tp ip ip ip in tp tp tp ip ip tp in ip hp bp ip be hp tp he Dp be be bp be bn be be be be be be be be he he be he bn be a ba be he ban han na aaa a anna aaaaaruiuiurbuinurhriiririrtiuiudour eb i bo bi ho ba Lo hi hi ho hi hi hi ha hi hi hi hi i he hi hi ha hi hi hi a hh hi hi a La hi Li hi hi hi hi i a ha hi i i Li hi hi i hi hi hi hi i Li hi hi hi hi hi hn hn hi hi hil Also—This Big Color Hit! p> SALOME Where Ste Dene TECHNICOLOR . in DE. ft) ye | (gia / & 4 Phe! AAS & Salome Where She Danced at 2:25, 5:35, 8:45 wi ; | | Asks to Have Virginia Pontiac Theaters | Declared Drought Area OAKLAND RICHMOND, Va. (®—President Starts Sun.: ‘‘Charge at Feather | Eisenhower has been asked by Gov. John S. Battle to declare River,’”’ 3-D, Guy Madison, Frank : | Virginia a drought disaster area. Lovejoy. : . The governor made the request STRAND | yesterday in the wake of a dry Starts Sat.: ‘‘White Witch Doc-! spell that has cost Virginia farmers tor," Susan Hayward, Robert! more than 100 million dollars in Mitchum; ‘“‘City That Never crop losses and shortages of feed. Sleeps,’’ Gig Young, Mala Powers,; U.S. Agriculture Department of- Edward Arnold. |ficials indicated, however, the Arizona, with a total area of get requested supplies of hay even about 114,000 square miles, is the, if the state is designated a dis- fifth largest state in the Union. {aster area. Among the principal rivers in the world are the Darling in Aus- tralia, the Orange in Africa, and the River of Doubt in South Ameri- ica. SHOP TONIGHT ‘til 9 P.M. Park Free Hubbard Carage 20 S. Perry St. | chances are slim that Virginia will | SPECIAL SERVICE TO GARAGES Meters Rebuilt Cracked Bilecks Repaired Crankshaft Grinding Cylinders Rebered Bearings Rebabbitted Cylinder Heads Regroeund Brake Drums Ground CALL FE deral 2-9111 Pontiac Piston Service Co. Complete Machine Shop Service 102 S. Saginew COMFORTABLY COOLED “alga xk* * LAST TIMES TODAY *& & & JANE L avsset HOWARD HAWKS’ Gentlemen | Prefer Blondes: TECHNICOLOR + NEW 3-D THRILL-HEIGHTS FROM WARNER BROS. PRODUCERS OF ‘HOUSE or WAX’ PRICES! Plus 15¢ for Viewers If You Don’t Have Them! / Feather River Peril of America’s # Plains! And You are © Part of every Glory of its Torrential ! Story! A 422 NG GUY FRANK TUEOVIS)) fan EO) 0) Added ~~~ | BUGS BUNNY CARTOON @ LATE NEWS STRAND NOW PLAYING! NEVER MORE VIOLENT... MORE MYSTERIOUS... MORE FLAMING WITH ‘| ADVENTURE i} AND ‘| PASSIONS! ——- a fe with WALTER SLEZAK SUNDAY —— NN EEUU UC CCC CCC CCCCCCCCCCCe Seal‘bration was arranged and Vita. «ve TWELVE ities nade THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 — ee a ee a a a a it el Braves Ignore ‘Handwriting on Wall By BEN PHLEGAR AP Sports Writer The handwriting is on the wall but all of a sudden the Milwaukee | Braves can't read. The stubborn Braves still seem _to be operating on the theory that ‘the National League pennant race is a two-team affair. And they're | ready to smack down any ane who says it isn't. * * * Brooklyn’s dashing Dodgers de- scended upon the brewing center | yesterday primed to wrap up their second straight flag. They needed just one more victory. The cele-' the | brass flew in from Brooklyn head-| the Braves for $50,000 during the’ In the American League the two quarters for the They're still waiting for the party. * * * Out at Milwaukee's County Sta- necessary. Since his dium last night one Andy Pafko made ‘the Dodgers realize that $50,000 was only money. He hit a home run with a man on base in the sixth inning and he won the game for the Braves with a 10th inning homer after two were out. The score was 9-8. * * * With 13 games to play the Braves now trail the Dodgers by 12. They | meet for the final time today. Pafko was sold by Brooklyn to} whing-ding. winter and the Dodger officials went to great pains to advise the fans that Pafko was no longer departure Brooklyn has used almost every: body on the roster in left field. * ~ * The deal didn’t set well with Pafko at the time and after last night’s game-winning homer, Paf- ko declared: “I hope O'Malley (Walter O’Mal- ley, the Brooklyn president) saw that one.”’ - * * * O'Malley did. He was there for the party. top teams both lost. The New York Yankees bowed to Detroit 3-2 in 10 innings and Cleveland lost to Washington 6-4. Chicago kept its mathematical pennant chances alive with a 9-4 verdict over Phil- adelphia. * * The Yankees lead the Indians by 10 games. and the White Sox by 13. Any combination of six New York victories and Cleveland losses will give the Yankees their fifth straight pennant. * * * At Washington the Senators sty- mied Bob Lemon in his attempt to win his 20th game, wrapping up the decision with a _ three-run splurge in the eighth inning. Duane Pillette blanked the Red Sox on three singles. Virgil Trucks of the White Sox hung up his 19th victory and aided his own cause at Philadelphia by driving in three runs, two of them on a home run. Robin Roberts of the Phils, who won his first 19 games breezing and who has been struggling ever since, was beaten again in his at- tempt to win his 22nd. A six-run Cincinnati uprising in the seventh inning kayoed him. U.S. Cuppers Mamie, John Observe Conference Grind Lightened by Golf; Take Big Lead Nixon Breaks 100, but Loses to Ike Over Canada Trabert, Seixas Win Easily; Team Up Today for Doubles By WILL GRIMSLEY MONTREAL (®—Tony Trabert and Vic Seixas try to finish to- gether today a job they started separately yesterday—that is, der feat of Canada in the American zone final of the Davis Cup tennis , competition. | They team in doubles against | Lorne Main and Paul Willey, two | 23-year old: dominion aces, need- | ing only this victory to assure Un- cle Sam's forces another trip to Australia this winter. | A doubles triumph will clinch the series for the Americans and qualify them to play Belgium, the European winner, in the interzone finals preceding the December challenge round at Melbourne. Trabert and Seixas are favored Trabert, the recently crowned National champion from Cincinnati didn't play his best tennis but nevertheless conquered Henri Ro- chon, 29-year-old cup veteran from Montreal, 6-2, 6-3, 86. Seixas, holder of the Wimbledon crown, crushed Main, Canada’s top-rank- ing player, 6-1, 6-1, 6-4. Vic was razor sharp. Trabert hurt his ankle slightly going for a ball at the net in the fourth gace of the third set. : “I thought at first I’d sprained my ankle but I found out it was just temporary,’’ Tony said. Seixas, after winning the first two- sets easily and leading, 3-0 in the third, suddenly pulled up short and winced, after trying to reverse position. “I didn’t hurt my knee again but I almost did,’’ the Philadel- phian said. ‘‘The court was very slick and I felt my knee pull just as it did at Newport. So I decided not to take any chances.” If the Americans win at doubles as expected then the second pla- toon probably will see action in the final and meaningless singles matches Sunday. | It’s Time Out! “Tennis, anyone?” Old-Timers to Play Pontiac Old-Timer baseball play- ers going to Toledo to play Sun- day should meet at the VFW hall at 396 S. Saginaw street at 8:30 a. m. Sunday. ‘and Tommy _ Sheehan, DENVER w — President Eisen- hower had just defeated Vice Pres- score than I did,’’ Nixon said after ‘their round yesterday at Denver’s ident Nixon on the golf course, but Cherry Hills Country Club. Nixon was as happy as a school boy about his score. “I did manage to break 100 for the 18 holes,’’ said Nixon, who took up the game for the first time only about * * * The vice president declined t6 disclose his precise score or that of the President, who is a veteran golfer, eight months ago. | Nixon is here for a round of conferences with. the vacationing President. The vice president will leave the United States Oct. 5 on a 70-day tour of the Far East, * * * Yesterday’s match started out as a contest between Eisenhower | and’ Nixon on the one hand and—} 6n the other—Ed Dudley, the pro’ at Colorado Springs’ Broadmoor “I am going to tell you only: Club, and L. B. (Bud) Maytag Pennant Races Pafko’s Big Bat at a Glance By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AMERICAN LEAGUE (Inc. Games of Sept. 41) L PCT GB Left New, Yerk ccce.: 92 48 .672 15(x) Cleveland ....... 84°6457 «596 10 1 Chieage .crcsees: 81 60 .574 13 1 Games remaining: New York — Home, Detroit (1), Cleve . and (3), St. Louls (3), Philadelphia (2), Boston (3). Away: Boston (3), (x — two rained out games in Washington will be made up only if they are nec- essary to determire first place). Cleveland — Home: Detroit (3). Away: Vashington (1), New York (3), Phila- lelphia (2), Detroit (2), Chicago (2). Chicago — Home: St. Louis (2), | Cleveland (2). Away: Philadelphia (1), * Licking in 10t Hands Brooklyn 1 Andy Breaks Up Battle With Homer to Trip His Ex-Mates, 9-8 MILWAUKEE (® — That wasn't Snston (3), Washington (2), St. Louis any stranger what broke up last (3), NATIONAL LEAGUE (Inc. Games of Sept. 11) Ww L PCT GB Left Brooklyn ..../... 97 44 .888 13 Milwaukee ...... 85 56 .603 12 #13 Games remaining: | Brooklyn — Home: Philadelphia (3), Pittsdurgh (1). Away: Milwaukee (1), Chicago (2), St. Louis (3), Philadelphia (3). Milwaukee — Home: Brooklyn (1), New York (2), Pittsburgh (2), Cincin- nati (3). Away: St. Louls (3), Cincin- nati (2). night's baseball game _ between Milwaukee and Brooklyn with a 10th inning home run tto give 'the Braves a 9-8 victory. It was Andy Pafko swinging the bat — and until last win- ter he was doing the same in Dodger flannels. Braves ac- quired him by trade and he earned his salary with his 14th | and 15th homers last night, ;: 7 The first, with a man on base e rol elf ins in the sixth, put the Braves Fish Contest. ie CHEBOYGAN (®#—Detroiter Ed- ward Coralla won the northern pike division of the Cheboygan County fishing contest with a catch that measured 47% inches. Other winners included: Brown trout, David Kroli¢k Jr., Detroit, 28 inches; Muskellunge, William A. Ayers Jr. Worthing- ton,.O., 40 inches; perch, Alvin Ste fensen, Grand Rapids, 13%sinches; rock bass, George Skeen, Colum- bus, O., 13 inches; rainbow trout, Mrs. Andrew Brow, Grosse Ile, 25%, inches; walleye pike, C. J. Renier, Detroit, 29% inches. 4 Cheboygan anglers won the other prizes, the most notable catch be- ing Howard Spedding’s 21%-inch small mouth bass. Detroiters in Finals | SHAWNEE-ON-DELAWARE, Pa. (» — Tommy Goodwin, Rye, N. Y., Detroit, meet Bob Smith, Detroit, and George Rowbotham, Philadelphia, today in the final round of the | eighth annual Bill Waite Memorial, best ball of partners tournament here. HAZEL PARK (UP) — Starboard stable’s Bated Breath has been assigned top weight uf 121 pounds for today’s $7,500 Water Wonder- land Handicap at Hazel Park. A total of 1@ top runners have been entered in the six furlong |event for three year olds and up. BLOOMINGTON, Ind. w—Capt. Bob Inserra of Indiana University played two seasons of Big Ten football with a blind left eye and disclosed his handicap only yes- terday after a kidney ailment end- Now It Can Be Told Hoosier Captain Played Despite Blinded Eye ed his college career. The 170-pound senior end from Monongahela, Pa., was blinded in the eye by falling on a stick’ when hé was three years old. Only a few close friends on the knew about it and they kept. the secret when he was a Flint to Honor Brazil Flint will honor Lloyd Brazil, its, first All-American football player, during halftime of the University of Detroit’s game with Fordham, Friday, Oct. 2. “Brazil Night’ will mark the 25th anniversary since football and basketball that year. regular defensive end in 1950 and 1951 seasons. He was being groomed for offense too, this year under the limited substitution rule, A pre-season practice injury kept him from playing last fall but he was so well liked by teammates that they elected him 1953 captain. He will undergo an operation Monday for removal of a kidney. Physicians said the ailment was a fore Inserra was hurt last fall. passes over my left shoulder be- cause I couldn't see past my nose. I had to turn clear around to re- ceive them. “It also was tough on defense when they had a flanker out on my side. Sometimes, he would cut in and block me out without my seeing him. “But,’’ Inserra grinned “I was able to get along pretty well.” ahead by 8&7 and the second, | By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH | this—the President kad a lower, Sr. of the washing machine May- | tags. , » | But Nixon said match play -with- in the foursome was abandoned early in the round in favor of pit- ting the party against a foursome behind which included Gov, Dan _ Thornton of Colorado and Ralph | (Rip) Arnold, the Cherry Hills pro. | The President's ‘foursome _ won, Hutch Will Try Second ‘Lefty: Against Champs Sends in Billy Hoeft to Follow Ted Gray’s 3-2 Win Friday CARTE” ea - ¥% NEW YORK (® — Detroit sends lefty Billy Hoeft (9-13) to the Nixon reported. * * * | A Before the switch, Eisenhower mound today in hopes he can be, ley and Maytag for the first two pennant-bound Yankees as lefty GRAY DAY FOR YANKS—Detroit Gray slides safely into home scoring from third on a fly by Harvey Kuenn. Catcher Yogi Berra pitcher Ted | AP wirepnete with the game-winning run against the New York grabs throw from centerfielder Mickey Mantle as Yankees ,in the 10th inning of Friday’s game at Umpire Art Passarella signals the score. Fred New York. Gray tripled with one out and scored Hatfield, next batter, watches. Tigers won, 3-2. holes—the only two reporters were | Ted Gray was yesterday. and Nixon were two up over Dud- 4S'successful at cutting down | permitted to observe, Gray managed to toss only two For a novice, Nixon showed sur- | home run balls at the Yankees, prisingly good form on those two) then clouted a triple in the top | | holeg. | Midway. during the round, the ' President and the vice president were joined by a couple of noted observers—Mrs. | Maj. John Eisenhower, only sun | of the chief executive and the first lady. The major, who came to Denver Thursday night from 14 months of active duty in Korea, drove his mother around the course in a motorized scooter car. Fiore. Decisions Danny Womber Brooklyn Welterweight Winning Since Giving Up Softball Play By MURRAY ROSE NEW YORK his heart to give up softball but = Carmine Fiore feels the sacrifice | Brooklyn from cinching its second prated his fourth straight boxing | at Shawnee Inn and Country Club | chronic condition and existed be- ' Inserra said his eye ‘‘hurt on: TEAM BATTING | INDIVIDUAL BATTING _ | Doug Ford. All Besselink, Tommy Ww oL Pet. GB - York AB. R it PCT sms PCT rcr Bolt, Johnny Palmer, Claude Har- Lak Rory saee o hd phy - ew ork cccvces 3 7 o 27 liams, Bos 439 Busby. Wash 2 : ve @vVelARE .cccccescose by Cleveland é 278 267 Kinder, Bos 370 Mitehell, Clev oi mon, George Fazio, Henry Wil- Chicage ...........0-- 81 60 574 13 Detroit 355 266 Coleman, Phil 353 Boyd, Chi 301 liam Jr., and Pete Cooper. Boston .....seecceeee 77 65 542 1718 Boston a 2 12 264 Snyder, Wash 347 Renna, NY 300. Th Ryde Cc : Washington .......- il 69 .507 22's: ashington ,....+-- 70R 634 1229 261 Westlake, Clev 339 Berra, NY 390 e Ryder Cup team includes petreit .............. 55 87.387 39s Phicago ......00....4746 645 1220 257 Vernon, Wash 332 Mantle, NY 300 Capt. Lloyd Mangrum, Jimmy Philadelphia ........ 53 88 376 41 Philadelphia ....... 4971 567 1°63 254 Resen, Clev 327 Pesky, Det 290 esa. Walt Burk E 7 St. Louis ............ 59 82 382 444s St. Louis .......... W818 S13 1218 252 Majeski, Clev 321 Nieman, Det 287) Turnesa, urkemo, Ed Oli- “ noeee . ae A cl ed , enhardt, StL 318 Boone, Clev-Det 786 ie eveland a ashington. 1:50 p.m.— TEAM FIELDING Carey, NY 316 Delsing, Det 226 ie. p peal Aah Jackie Burke Houtteman (3-12) vs Porterfield (19-10); cm PO. ne E PCT Bellwer, oY 314 Batts, Det egg JF., Cary Middlecoff, Dave Doug- Detroit at New Yors, Vie ee OhEO os: eee 383. ' 4 ' Minoso, i 313 Hatfield. Det 268 t : . (9-13) ws McDena (8-6); cago a Washington ........ s18t 1468 111 979 Geedeeane Bee sit Melis Der” see (25: Fred Haas Jr., and Ted Kroll. pyuseeiphia. 1 p.m. — Rogevin (6-11) i a 3758 y 116 «979 eH a a9 — Det 255 Me igus an + at ere ew or rt lll 979 oodling, NY %07 rono, Det 2458 p-m. — Kretlow (1-5) vs Brown (11-6) Detroit... cco. 122 97% MeDrmett, Bos 307 Buchs, Det 230 GOV FRIDAY'’S RESULTS Sy .3851 1549 127 977 Philley, Phil 306 Priddy. Det 227 ernor’s Purse Tops eo 3 abe York 2 reer 3789 1582 136 9875 Bauer, NY 303 Hitehecock, Det 211 W. + St. Louis 2 Bosten e St. Louls .....-.--.- 3789 1526 146 97% Souchock, Det 303 Kalime, Det 167 olverine Track Card Chicase | ® Fhiledeiphis ‘ 5 DETROIT ww — The $5 900 gov- ashington jevelan, LEADING PITCHERS : oe : SUNDAY'S GAMES w L.ERA WwW L ERA ¢rnor’s purse highlights tonight's . Cleveland at New York, 1:65 p.m.; Lopat, NY csesesesesseseees 159° 25E Stobhe, Wash o..seeseeeeees 18 8°341 racing at the Wolverine Harness Wastes 13) 1h ee BU haces at fo VRE wc ccc cccccccccces . ° ie DRE cececensen tenets oa = apa ae era = Ford. NY ooo cseeseeseses 17 5 2.59 Feller, Clevo 2s etcec es 8 6 BR Raceway as the track raises the Paladelpiis (2), 12:08 po ULE ° DaDermet Ben er mace wy Mh scccccdg 4g fgg Grand Circuit pennant. cuvetind at Now Yor 1 pant Cai: Sain, NY ecu tctnteeeeeeess 1S 6 3.07 Hudson, Bow ..-...eeeeeee 5 9» 372 Prince Philips, an Ohio-owned [p80 2* os om pm.; Detroit at Wash- arrero, Wash .............- 7 #7 3.09 YOR; CY cisiseecesewecny 17 12 3.73 . : . oe Garcia, Clev ................ 17 &\3.10 Shea, Wash .............., ii @ aie ovear-old, tops the field of eight Only games scheduled. Masterson, Wash .......... 10 11 is Kellner, Phil ..........20e005 11 12 3.88 entered in the event. NATIONAL LEAGUE Parmell, Beg ..gc.cccccsees i) 6S US) [UF rieiges, Feil ..-2.-:.--.:..; R° 18) 4.98 Mya inld ‘9 includes N ; . Ww L Pct. GB Dorish, Chi_..........00005- 19 6 ABV “arsen, Ste oo. e eee c eee ees BoD 4.38 at ‘ Sa - 7 Lemon, Clevo. ..cs.c sess. 19 18 BF Ow Bos 11 6 445 Song, Hot Scot, Master Key and Milwaukee 22000000507) 85 56.663. 12 } ° Candy Man. ; St. Louis .....ceseees 77 62 «4534 (19 ee ; ‘ Philadetphia ..... 716 G4 543 2044 Nationat Leu 2ue Grand Circuit racing '~‘!1 con- Runarens > ; 4 New. York sicciccecces 65 76 .461 82 ‘ ; tinue through the final night, Sept. | Cimeimmati’ .......... Gt 80 433 36 : * Celene: = 5 occccscccecs 7 82 .410 39 | TEAM BATTING | INDIVIDUAL BATTING 19. Pittsborgh ceeeeeeees rH 4 aa 58'% Pet. Pet. - Pet. Pet. TODAY’S GAMES PITCHERS Brooklyn 289 Philadelphia 264 Furille, Brk 344 Fendy, Chi 308 | Breeklyn at ilwaukee, 2:30 p.mi. — New York 2714 Chicago 261 Schoen’st, StL 339 Hughes, Brk 308 Castellani and Lombardo Erskine (18-6) vs Buhl (12-2) er Sur- - Lonis 273 Clnctnna tt = Mueller, NY 339 Hedges, Brk 305, kont (11-8); Philadelphia at Cinctonstt waukee 26. tteburg rvin, 338 Leckman, NY %04 ° 2 pm. — Drew (8-) vs fensberger Robinson, Brk %34 Mathews, Mil 304 Meet in Return Match (7-12); Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 1:30 p.m. TEAM FIELDING | Nuxhalt, Cia 333 Burgess, Phil 303 . — Dickson (9-18) vs Remonosky (0-0); Snider, Brk 330 Baemholtr, Chi 392 CHICAGO (® — Rocky Castel- New York at Chicage, 1:30 p.m.—Hearn Pct. Pet. Ashburn, Phil 324 Thom»yson, NY 302 . . ~~ (9-10) ws Willis (1-@) | Brooklyn 931 New york 975 Musiel, StL $24 Bell, Cin 301 | lani, seventh ranking middleweight - FRIDAY’S RESUETS | twaukee vis adelp' vis uszewski, Cin %°% Cox, Brk 301 : Milwaukee 9 Breoeklyn 8 Cimefhnati 91% Pittsburgh 978 Campan'la, Erk %1% Leonard, Chi 300 contender, will face rugged John- Chicago New York 2 St. Leu's 977 Chicago “4 Rice, StL-Pitt Bhi ed Lombardo of Mt. Carmel, Pa., Cincinnati ¢ Fatledeiphie H : : . 2 a r LEtDL To TreD : in a return bout at Rainbow Arena . SUNDAY’S GAMES | ST Walt Ww L.F@a tonicht. New York at Milwaukee (2), 2 p.m.;! 3 > .t - i a . . Breokiyn at Chicage, 1:30 p.m.; Phila- “4 ea secccssssesstsy Sg) The Luzerne, Pa., native who is detphts at St. Louis, 1:39 p.m.; Pitts. | nC ag SO Ce eesieisielniisi=isisisee a 9 4.41 j i “eve! burgh at Cincinnati (2). 1:30 p.m. Qoanooaace Nw LESS 1 16 416] DOW fighting out al Cleveland, took MONDAY’S SCHEDULE O) t57 Narkaet Wl cccccs- ce it & 42%1/@ Unanimous decision from Lom-’ Pode eo p-m.; Phila- tearm. NYE ..... cece eccccenss 4 ; ' oa -. 1s 338 Roe. Bre LE! 1's 435|bardo a year ago after being, a 12 as Minner, a se cecvevcccoeed 10 « a6 knocked down for an eight count. FRIDAY’S "L EXHIBITION a rews, Pail............2-5--- : : ’ , Cleve. Browns Chi. Bears 14 so RM Backer, Om icici 10 18 446 ees Be Cone weve be | FRIDAY’S COLLEGE FOOTBALL 2 3.5 onstanty, Ail ......++++ . elevised mally, “TY, SSOCIATED FERESS a StL oo. cece eee eee 16) 8 8:87 (Meyer, Erk )..0.00-6--.500-- 14 OSA Py = y- ( : Wayne, Neb. teh 19 Augustana p. m.) Pitts. (Kan.) St. 12 Olathe Navy 2 | straight National League pennant. The last time the Dodgers were here it was almost the same Story but with a different hero. The Dodgers had a 2-0 with two out in the ninth ning of the windup of a double header Aug. 6. Braves filled the bases and up came an unsung Eisenhower and} ; of the 10th and scored on Har- vey Kuenn's outfield fly to give himself a 3-2 victory. It was his ninth against 14 losses. In grabbing the game, Tigers looked like anything but sixth- placers, which they are. And in winning, they increased their margin over the seventh-place Athletics to a game and a half. A's lost to Chicago, 9-4. The loss, incidentally, didn't hurt the Yankees any. Washington whipped second-place Cleveland, 6-4, and thus left New York still in front by 10 full games. Detroit now has a five-game bulge over the Browns, who took over several weeks ago a cellar lease long held by the Tigers. Gray limited the Yankees to six hits, two of them homers by Joe Collins and Yogi Berra. Detroit got seven hits off Allie Réynolds, in- cluding Gray's triple. Detroit's first two runs came in the fifth on a walk to Bob Steve Souchock’ infield out and It broke Johnny Bucha's double. Loss gave Reynolds a 11-7 rec- DETROIT AB , ; Q RHNY ABR H with two out in the 10th, kept was worth it today as he cele- Kuenn, ss 5 © © McDgid, % 5 @ 0 Hatfid, 2b 5 @ 1 Colins, Ig 4 Tf 2 ot eho 3b 5 0 © Bauer, rf 5 @ 1 3 , elsing, cf 3 © @ Berra.c 5 1 8 , victory. — if 3 1 @ Mantle, ef 4 0 0 ropo, 1b 4 IL 2 Weoding, If 3+0 0 The 24-year-old Brooklyn wel- souchk, rf 4 0 1 Martin, 2 40 06 Bucha, 4 0 1 Ri 0, terweight racked up No. 4 last = Gray, . 412 Herasa, = 2 ° Q lead night by outpointing Danny | 330 “ue in- (Bang Bang) Womber of Chi- | DETROIT ........ 000 020 000-1 — 3 | NEW YORK ...... 100 001 000 0 — 2z cago with a strong finish in EE — Hatfield, Mantle. RGI — Collins, a ten rounder at St. Nicholas Seucheck, Bucha, Berra, Kuenn. 2B | — Bacha, Dropo. 3B — Gray. HR — Arena. | Collins, Berra. SB — Souchock, Mantle. rookie who just happened to be playing second base. The youngster Harry Hannebrink, belted a Russ Meyer pitch over the heads of two outfielders for a triple, giv- ing the Braves a 3-2 victory. Chuck Dressen, Brooklyn man- ager, was:more affable last night than after. the Hannebrink _inci- dent. “We just didn’t cut the mus- tard,’ he muttered in his club- house “‘it'll happen once in a while, You can't win ‘em all.” Sunshine Park in Florida is scheduled for a 5l-day racing meeting in 1954. The dates are Jan. 15 to March 15. It used to be the other way around for Carmine, a one-time shoe shine, boy. Fiore generally | fizzled’ out in the late rounds. His doctor learned that Fiore was playing softball almost every day. He told the fighter that the ballplaying plus fight training was | sapping his strength. , So Fiore gave up his pet sport and started winning. | He swept the last three rounds ‘from Womber and that was it as all three officials voted for the 9-5 underdog. Fiore, outweighed 146 to 148, matched his left hook against Womber’s left jabs and ! combinations and won out. ' Major League Averages American League DP— Souchock, Dropo, LOB — Detroit 6, New York & BB — Gray 4, Reynolds 1. SO — Gray 3, Reynolds 5. R-ER — Gray 2-2, Reynelds 3-3. HBP — Reynolds (Delsing). W — Gray 9-14, L — Rey- nolds 11-7. U Passarella, Grieve, Napp, Duffy. T — 2:36 A — 7,534 Ryder Cuppers in Pro-Am Test CHICAGO (®—There'll be a week | end of high class golf in Reading, Pa., when America’s Ryder cup team takes on a 10-man challenge squad in a one-day pro-amateur tourney followed by a variety of matches. Matches will open Sept. 18 and continue through Sept. 20. Jimmy Demaret is captain of the -group. Others on the chal- lenge team are Lew Worsham, | By GAYLE TALBOT | NEW YORK, Sept 12 uw—Almost without exception the nation’s top coaches are blasting the approach- ing return to one-platoon football and predicting that everybody will be happy to abandon the new lim- ited substitution rule within a sea- son or two. 1 On the other hand, we know a public relations man at a major school who took a private poll of his players during spring practice and didn't dare release his find- ings for publication, valuing his coach's friendship, He found that about 85 percent of the boys were tickled pink at a chance to play both on offense and defense, The smaller backs in particular, dying to prove that they can be defensive demons, too, if given a shot at it. * * * Latest reports from Greenwood Lake say that Roland LaStarza has abandoned his usual boxing tactics and is wading in on his spar mates with his neck bowed and both fists flying. Some ob- servers fear for the challengeér’s well being if he plans to fight | Rocky Marciano that way,'but Ro- land tells them to quit worrying. “TI can punch faster and harder than Rocky,"’ he is quoted as say- ing. “If I ever have him hurt the way Joe Walcott had him in the fifth, sixth and seventh rounds at he learned, have all heard of the Philadelphia I'll take him.”’ feats of such legendary little guys: No one can accuse the coilege | ‘Wolverines Holding 2nd Scrimmage Session Today By JOHN F. MAYHEW | ANN ARBOR U®—Coach Bennie Oosterbaan took his football squad into huge Michigan Stadium today for the second pre-season scrim- mages. The. Michigan coach closed the session, to all but the press and posted: guards at the gates. Though a number of points were to be checked, Oosterbaan’s chief interest remains centered on the two problems that faced him at season's opening. Aussie Stars Play at Grosse Pointe DETROIT w — Australian net stars Ken Rosewall and Lewis Hoad were scheduled for an ex- hibition tennis match today at sub- urban Grosse Pointe Hunt Club. The 18-year-old net prodigies from down under were to stop off here on their way to the forth- coming Pacific Southwest cham- pionships in Los Angeles. Also scheduled to appear were Australians Rex Hartwig and Ian Ayre and Americans Billy Talbert and Budge Patty. Baseball Results By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The work of sophomore quarter- | back Louie Baldacci will be checked closely, and development of a center to bolster the pgsition in view of a neck injury to regular , |center Dean Ludwig was hoped for. In the center role, work of Jim | Bates and Jolin Morrill will be ' watched chiefly. Oosterbaan needs | a combined center and linebacker. Failing that, he may make Capt. Dick O'Shaughnessy into a cen- | ter-guard, hoping to find another player who can fit into, the line- backing picture. Baldacci, who is a linebacker, |is expected to be more ‘‘on his own" today than at anytime thus far this’ season. Gates Proves Better Climber, Wins Mat Bout | | When Johnny Gates managed to scramble back into the ring Fri- day night, after he and Billy Fox | hac tumbled outside, he won a hot mat battle. In the Pontiac M-59 | Speedway bout, Fox had taken the | first fall and Gates the second. After the matmen had fallen through the ropes they exchanged fisticuffs at ground level. Gates yanked Fox back as he tried to get up, and Gates just got through the ropes as the referee reached the 9-count. wild scramble two weeks ago. | Winners of other bouts Friday night were: semifinal, Sandor Fozo ‘over Joe Dempsey, and the opener, Ted Marshall over Irish McGee, a fast and scientific match, won on a body press. | EAST LANSING Players Like New Rule ,as Albie Booth of Yale and are trained young man of selling tim- self short. * * & This is not a personal complaint, for we were fortunate enough to have_missed the latest slaughter of Britain's best amateur golfers in the so - called Walker Cup ‘‘matches.’’ But how much longer will the rulers of golf insist upon conducting this travesty of acom- f/f petition? . The same goes double for the women's Wightman Cup tennis. Full-Dress Drill for MSC Squad — A full- dress, game-type scrimmage was scheduled for Michigan. State foot- ball team this afternoon by coach Biggie Munn. ; The scrimmage, in the privacy of Macklin Stadium, will be open only to newsmen, with all other spectators barred. Munn said he planned to keep time.and to have assistant coach- es work’ as Officials for the, af- fair, “We have a lot of things to work out, particularly that sub- stitution business,'’ he said. ‘‘we'll get a start on solving some of those problems this afternoon.” Four State Nines in NABF’s Title Tourney YOUNGSTOWN, O. #—Eighteen teams from 10 states open*.the 39th National Amateur Baseball Federation tournament here today. Play continues in the double-elimi- nation event until Sept. 20. Detroit Dossin’s Pepsicolas, de- fending champions, drew as first- round opponent Jamestown, N. Y., which is in the tourney for the first time. First-round pairings include; © 12:15 p.m. (EST)—Dearbern, Mich. vs. Phil- adelphia; 2 p.m. Leuisville, Ky. vs. ROYAL OAK, MICH.; Fort Wayne, Ind, vs Flint; 2:15 p.m.—Detreit vs James- tewn, N. Y. Evans Ready for 44th Amateur Trial OKLAHOMA CITY (UP) — Field for the 53rd national amateur goif tournament was just about cofn- pleted today — Chick Evans had The bout was a rematch of @! arrived. Clipper Chick from Chicago, playing in his 44th National Ama. _ teur, will be joined Monday by 199 other qualifiers in the ‘‘sudden _ death"’ meet that will end Satur- day, probably with a new cham- pion. ‘MSC, Buckeyes Share Top - ‘Rating for Big Ten’s Race 1 CHICAGO w — A crushing new contender, Michigan State which topped the AP’s 1952 national poll, and well-manned Ohio State share pre-season favoritism in the Big Ten football race. It goes without saying, the re- ;turn of two-way football will keep the coaching noses to the grind- stone and could snarl the chase. Although Michigan State with 24 straight victories and two successful national titles was voted into the Big Ten on Dec. 13, 1948, it took a five-year span to work the Spartans. into the - league football schedule. Some think the tardiness could | have been an effort by conference ‘coaches to wait for MSC to cool off. But the Spartans are hotter than ever. doesn’t shape up as a cake-walk for the Spartans and Ohio’s Buck- eyes, who have the two best re- turning quarterbacks—Tom Yew- cic and Johnny Borton. Last year’s co-champions, Rose $| Bowl-visiting Wisconsin and Pur- Actually, “the 1953 title chase | due, may snarl plenty and ever- ready Michigan and Minnesota~ primed by superb Paul Giel—could rock the conference boat into com- plete confusion. % Illinois, Northwestern,‘ Iowa and Indiana figure to straggle. Andrews Sees Davey Bout Step to Fam SAGINAW (UP) Al An- drews, a fearless youngster from Chicago, hopes to turn his 10- round bout with Chuck Davey here Monday night into a per- manent meal-ticket. Less than a year ago,. the 23-year-old Andrews was serving as a sparring pariner for the | fast-rising Davey. Now, he fizurcs its his turn to make the head- lines. “This is my first big chance,” Andrews admitted. “And don't intend to waste it. I've gone maybe 40 rounds with Davey and I know his style. That should be a big help.” a A es ei Pte a a te, a ai i! a ee ee i a ne ee br A i ea, Li dn in a a a an i i THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 a bth al ila aio ei ee i sity BEES Oe OAL POR CA Sg Tae at a amon ¢ FAIRFAX THREE-CAR — Natural wood doors are used on the three car garage of the Harry Stevens garage at 1356 Fairfax, Birmingham. Built as a wing of the Stevens’ brick and ledgerock home, this garage has a full-length covered porch running across the street side. White wood pillars and trim give a modified colonial effect to this Great Structure in France Awes, Startles or Appalls Near the French city of Mar- seilles stands a gigantic mass of reinforced concrete which is the most controversial building completed in Europe,.in a quar- ter of a century. The building is the work of the architect Le Corbusier who has fought relentlessly all his life for a city of such plastic beauty and modern convenience. It has been called our time’s finest work in European archi- @ major monument tecture, of plastic art. It also has been called mad, inhuman, an of- fense to the aesthetic stand- ards of France. Vital statistics are impressive. 450 feet long, 66 feet thick, 200 feet tall,, the building contains 337 apartments located on 15 floors. Each one has a_two- story-high living room and an interior stair leading to a string of bedrooms. Halfway up the building are two ‘‘streets’”’ lined with every- _ timeless—it thing from stores to hotels to doctors’ offices. There is a nursery, school, gymnasium, movie theater, and restaurant. There is even a communal park. The great structure appears could be an Egyptian monument of 2000 B. C., or a preview of the twenty-first century. It is not a dispirited housing project, although it was built primarliy as new housing for bombed-out families. It looks like four hundred colorful peasant houses of stucco, piled sky-high. The panels separating adjoin- ing balconies are painted in brilliant colors. Never mediocre, it seems the perfect juncture of primitive and _ sophisticated taste. Whether you see this remark- able structure for the first time from aboard ship, coming from the coast of Toulon, or from the platform of a tramway coming Remodeled House Needs Face Lifting from the old port of Marseilles, you may detest it at first sight. You may possibly be over- whelmed by it. But you certainly ignore it. cannot _ a Sit aa ey ee A a Oh a a | Activity Area, Workshop, Storage ai Pontiac Press Photes modern home design. A paved circular driveway leads into the garage and a louvered natural wood screen at the curve of the driveway conceals the patio and grill adjacent to the garage. A builder and contractor, Stevens built his own design. ‘Family Garage Now Holds More Than Car The family garage has come into its own! Where once just anything in the line of a structure that would protect the family automobile sufficed, today;the garage is an integral part of the complete house plan. Architects assert the garage can make or break the good lines of a house design and whether it is planned as a part of the house structure or. sep- arately, it must be pleasing to the eye as well as practical. Most contemporary house de- ‘Red Paint’ Graves Well Known in Maine Well-known to residents of Maine are the ‘‘red paint’’ graves to be found on gravelly, well- drained knolls of Campbells and other islands in the Eggemoggin Reach. These “red paint’ graves, which contain traces of skeletal remains of aboriginal people who came to the Coast to gather shell- fish, are also marked by the de- posits of stone tools and quanti- ties of brilliant red. ochre. The use of red ochre was wide- ‘spread among primitive people and often had-ceremonial signifi- cance. Most of the stone tools found in the “‘red paint” graves are of distinctive forms. They include well-made gouges. and adzes, plummets, projectile points of stone and long slender spear points of ground slate. signs include a garage. Some are attached to the houses with breezeways. A variety of covered walks providing protected entrance from the house are being de- signed today. New trend noted this summer has been the addition of a porch * * * Removing Grass Stain Grass stains on white cottons are removable, by a solution of bottled chlorine bleach. On other washable fabrics use a solution of one teaspoon of sodium per- borate to one pint of hydrogen peroxide. Test in an_inconspic- ous portion. Then soak one- half hour or longer. Rinse well. or activity area (screened in) to the new garages. Workshop areas, too, are be- coming commonplace in to- day's garages. With so many of today’s houses basementless, a garage with storage area is a ‘“‘must” and additional space to house tools and garden machinery finds protection in modern garages. Gone are the days when you could tell how many cars a fam- ily had by the number of garage doors they had. For a few dol- lars extra, provided they have the lot space, today’s home .owners are building bigger and better garages to take care of all the household tools and machinery. BEFORE—Ray L. Ross of 501 E. Montcalm St. Pontiac, took one look at this garage located at the rear of his house and decided that a conversion job was in order. Walls that sagged, doors hanging askew on their hinges and a dirt floor completed the ‘‘before” picture of the Ross garage. a | = Many old houses are remodeled and modernized for use as room- ing houses and tourist homes. The operator may feel that he has accomplished enough in mod- ernizing bathrooms and providing neat rooms with good beds And mattresses. But he can best point up the quality of his accommoda- tions by putting a modern ‘‘face’’ MENOMINEE TWO-CAR—The Francis H. Snyders of 783 Menominee Rd., Pontiac, have a new two-car frame garage with an overhang which adds interesting eye-appeal to the garage and also protects the driver from the weather when opening eee greene nas he tte = 7 = 4 3 When You Need Steel—New or Used § 4> @ Angles—Channels—Beams > 4> @ Reinforcing Bars 4 4> @ Basement Posts 4 q> @ Plates 4 : ‘ @ Pipe > + We Cut to Size—— > ? FE 4-9582 . 4 , 135 Branch St. Across trom American Forging and Socket > From Call Today—We'll Be Glad o a rs 4 Wy se PROTECT YOUR HOME INVESTMENT ‘Fire — Storms — Tornadoes On Any Insurance Problems = LAZELLE AGENCY, INC. 4 504 Pontiac Bank Bldg. FE 5-8172 ¢ to Help You % Mh Bob Laselle Poorly Fitting Windows, Doors Let in Dampness WASHINGTON, D. C.—Moisture that seeps in around poorly fitted window and door frames, through cracks and other exterior openings can damage the structure of your home, warns John C. Moore, director of the scientific section of the National Paint, Varnish and Lacquer Assn. ‘‘By filling these spaces with calking compounds and, wherever necessary, making a few minor repairs,’ Mr. Moore says, you can keep out this menace. DeLuxe Truck “otis: Sa Easy to Make ing or other damaging conditions Much More Than Toy; may develop,’’ Moore cautions. ‘Countless thousands of dollars Pattern Can Be Secured at Slight Cost aré-spent every year to repair A rugged deluxe truck for Junior the proper places at the right time,’”’ he points out. Moore advises every home own- er to check the exterior of his home periodically to see if water Sand all surfaces before ond after applying enamel undercoat. Apply finish coot of flat alkyd enamel with good nylon brush. Brush first against grain, finish-off with grain. For satin finish, moisten f° | surface with oil then with fo * . super-fine waterproof Fu sandpaper; rub parallel to groin. } PAINT-YOUR-OWN—Painting unfinished furniture at home has re- gained much of its old-time popularity. It is easy and can save you plenty of money. wrvrvvvrvvevevevevevVvevVvevVeVe VV damages-of this sort. is easy to make. Many of these repair bills could have been avoided if calking compounds had been applied in This is the type of plaything | that generations of boys have been | proud to own. It may be a poten-/ is seeping in. Particular danger spots are: flashings and fittings about the chimney, window and door frames, areas where-mason- 462 N. Perry St. " BABY TRAINING SEAT F. J. Temple & Sons One-piece saddle—shape conforms to baby’s con- tours, supports legs properly, com fortable. Holds child naturally, prevents squirming. Slanted — child leans slightly forward, the most natural position for easy elimination. Wood plastic is warm to touch —‘fho pad needed. Baked-on white plastic enamel. Clamps to adult seat. FE 2-7055 {tern gives large three-dimensional feet of passing trains of Brit- sixteenth of an acre in area, and renting for a few shillings, raise millions of pounds worth of vegetables a year. ry, porches or steps meet wooden siding, certain. types of roof joints and all outlets for electrical wir- ing, telephones, radio or TV an- tennae, plumbing installations and gas pipes. “Sometimes a faulty flashing or window frame has to be re- placed to keep the water out,” he states. “‘Far more frequently, however, the application of a good caulking compound is all that’s needed.” “Since caulking compounds are so easy to use, there's really no reason to let one of these danger points go unattended,’’ Moore points out. ‘Naturally, it is im- portant to follow the manufactur- er’s recommendations as to the right type and grade for a specific job. COMERTIELE TO | STAKE TRUCK PATTERN 215 wend tial soap-box derby winner if you use eight-inch rubber tired disk wheels. Undersea Steel ‘H’ Beams Fall Prey to Shellfish SAN FRANCISCO W — Sea urchins have destroyed submerged steel beams 3% of an inch thick in the Pacific off Ellwood, Calif., Or make it entirely of wood scraps picked up around the home workshop, with metal fit- tings ‘available at hardware stores. The bottom of the bed is plywood or solid stock may be used. Pat- drawings of all parts and assembly procedure. It is -a sturdy little pick-up truck that will last until Junior grows up. the magazine Pacific Discovery, Use it for hauling in wood for | published by the California Acad- ithe fireplace and for those trips! emy of Sciences. to the grocery store. The pattern; The little marine animals, about is 25 cents and No. 215. Write to! the size of a silver dollar and Workshop, Pontiac Press. covered with spines, long have ri bori into The gardens within a few et ee bat thie ‘the first time they have been known to destroy metal, the magazine reported. Gold was discovered in the Canadian Klondike in 1897. ish railways, often only one- FHA TERMS 3 YEARS TO PAY NO MONEY DOWN Shake-Type Never Paint Your House Again 800 sq. ft. Labor and Material Supplies *219 OPEN SUN. JOHNS-MANVILLE} PRODUCTS SUPPLIED —- SPECIAIS Repeated by Popular Demand! This Is Positively — the Last Week. Offer Ends September 19th. Asbestos Siding - DON’T BE FOOLED! YOU GET WHAT WE ADVERTISE! In Business Since 1941 Call Anytime _ Day or Night Construction & Building 499 So. Saginaw St. a Co. | | { | \ Alumi ew umiInum e e , Siding Famous “REYNOLDS” and “ALCOA” | J Offer Ends Sept. 11th; Place Your Order Now v Lifetime Guarantee al V Installation by Trained 7 100% Perfection Assu ) dW Fire Resistant vo Won't—Chip or Crack _-—d Won't—Peel or Blister va JY Won't—Fade or Loosen ~ §00 sq. ft. Labor and. Material 389 FHA Terms, Up to 3 Yrs. to Pay FRIENDLY FREE ESTIMATES FE 3-7181 Mechanics | | | FE 3-7181 in a little more than 20 years, says | Painted Pieces Popular Again Alkyds, New Abrasives Make Do-=lt- Yourself Jobs Easy, Fun Painted furniture in the home has regained its 18th century pop- ularity. It is being used for color accent in living rooms as well as kitchens and bedrooms. And with this renaissance a new business has been born. It deals in new, unfinished furni- ture—ordered either by mail or direct from retail outlets. Many of these furniture pieces are made of inexpensive but sturdy woods, and are ideal for painting. Economy is their ob- vious feature. Along with these developments have come new paints, such as flat enamels made from synthetic alkyd resins, that are practically fool-proof in an amateur’s hands. The alkyds dry to a hard finish that can be rubbed to a fine, dull lustre with new and harder sand- papers. | Let’s say you have purchased a pair of unfinished wooden chairs | for your living room and want to do the finest possible job of| painting them with an alkyd paint. Here's how you would go about it: Most unfinished furniture has been fairly well sanded at the tac-| tory before delivery, but it is al-' ways best to go over the surface lightly with a fine production-type sandpaper to remove any dirt or abrasions picked up in transit. (Production sandpapers coated| with synthetic abrasives were) originally developed for industrial use and are now becoming avail- able in p&int stores. They are much harder and longer lasting than garnet and flint sandpapers.) Next, apply a coating of enamel undercoat or wood primer. Turn the chairs upside down on a table, dco the bottoms and legs first, then turn them over and paint the backs and seats. Undercoats are usually available BASIC WOODWORKING JOINTS & The A-B C of woodworking tech- nique is contained in this pattern showing how to-make more than thirty types of joints:-These range from the simplest to thoseused in the most intricate joinery. In-or- der to illustrate in utmost detail exactly how each is made I have drawn them instead of using pho- tos. Each one is done in the same clear detail that you will note in the above sketch. This pattern gives more solid woodworking knowledge at a glance than can be gotten in the usual ways. Tack the pattern on the workshop wall and you will use it for quick and easy reference. You will find it almost like having a skilled wood- working instructor standing by. Price of pattern 378 is only 25c. Pontiac Daily Press. Attention to Details Keep Basements Dry Achievements of FHA Noted Commissioner Claims Program Has Shown Its Worth ° WASHINGTON — _ Cooperative housing ‘“‘has more than demon- strated that it is a worthwhile and important part of the overall hous- ing program of the U. S. govern- ment,’’ Guy T. O. Hollyday, federal housing commissioner, wrote the Cooperative League recently. FHA has guaranteed repayment of $211 million in private loans on 22,625 co-op dwellings since the program started three years ago. Co-op housing ‘‘has achieved remarkable public support in that brief period,” Hollyday said. “Not only is it self-supporting, but it has brought some revenue to the government. It provides housing without subsidy to mid- die-income families who, unless they pooled their capital, might not be able to finance their own homes.”’ Merging co-op housing with other | multi-unit projects was -for ‘‘econ- omy,” Hollyday said, and it was not the intent of Congress ‘‘to de- stroy or minimize the cooperative housing program.” . In reply, Jerry Voorhis, the league’s executive director, said, “We look to the future with much greater hope than we did prior to receipt.of your letter.”’ FIRST For Best Price and Quick Service Land contracts Real Estate insurance Trust Service Inv nts Dawson & Watson Rebt J. Dawsen, Gugh A. Watse 11% WN. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 2-5420, Pontiac Best-known of all American steam locomotives was probably the New York Central's old ‘‘No. 999." It was the first 100-mile- an-hour engine and held the world’s speed record for more than 12 years, after covering a mile in 32 seconds (112.5 miles per hour) near Batavia, New York, on May 10, 1893. —_—_—— WHO'S YOUR ROOFER? We Do All Kinds of @ ROOFING @ ROOF REPAIRS @ ROOF COATING Phene FE 2-507) 353 N. Cass Established 1918 Get An Estimate Witheut Obligation HUGUS-MARSH ROOFING & INSULATION CO. HUNTING Ld A i eee ie r —~ oS We Garry a Complete Line of Hunting Equipment, Guns Coats, Boots and Ammunition Call FE 2-6506 Keego Hardware Warehouse 20 Osmun St. There are several construction elements in connection with base- | ments which may prove to be! sources. of dampness or cause a/| flooded basement if they are not | properly designed or installed. These include, gutters, cisterns and drains. Floor drains should | be located properly with reference to the area drained. Floors should slope evenly to drain. Drains may be simple or provided with grease traps and | sediment strainers. Traps may be integrated with the drain, Smooth Old Surfaces for New Enameling Before re-enameling old wood that has a cracked and chipped FRANK A. 4012 E. Pike St. GENERAL INSURANCE © Gots AGENCY REQUIRES ONLY 2% INCHES HEADROOM in white only, so it is best to tint finish, sand the surface smooth. them with a pure oil color to ap-!ADy cracked or gouged places proximately the color of the final should be filled with a crack filler, finish. ; then smoothen with a putty knife. When the undercoat has dried If your finishing coat is to be thoroughly (at least 24 hours), of a color that varies consider- sand all surfaces lightly with a ably from the preceding one, it is very fine production-type sand- wise to apply an enamel under- | irregularities. paper. Then apply the finish coa of flat alkyd enamel with a good nylon-bristled brush. Brush first across the grain. Finish off with the grain, using very little paint on the brush. This latter operation is known as “tipping off’ to professionals. It smooths vut the paint film, eliminates brush.marks and up-~ even places. a Alkyd enamels are 860 easy to, apply that brush marks, laps, sags, and streaks are seldom a problem. | The alkyds generally cover in a single coat. Because they dry to a much harder finish than conventional enamels, it is best to use on them a waterproof sandpaper with a synthetic abrasive, silicon carbide. Fit a super-fine grade of the paper to a sanding block, pref- erably one made of soft rubber, curved on one side, flat on the other. Moisten the painted surface with rubbing oil, then rub parallel to the grain—cleaning the surface often with a rag—until it is free of The chairs will have a satin! finish when wiped clean. All-Purpose Tile Can Be Installed Without Adhesive A new all-purpose tile has been introduced that does not need ad- hesive when laid. An exclusive precision cutting and squaring pro-, cess combined with a honeycomb construction make the tiles lie smooth and firm with a relatively slight compression. The imtroducing company points t coat first. Smith Moving Co. 401 West Huron FE 4-4864 Floor Laying, Sanding, Finishing MILLER BROS. 16 Years Service in Pontiac Call FE $-3162 Broker Willis M. BREWER ©Listings wanted ©Buy and Sell Contracts © Will trade contracts for Ranch Type Home ®Complete Real Estate Services Roosevelt Hotel Offices for Rent Beoms 114-115-116 FE 4-518) out that this tile, since it in itself is impervious to water or alkalies, can be laid in locations where moisture makes it impossible to lay conventional tile, since the dampness and alkalies would des- troy adhesives. Ten times more resilient and twice as thick as conventional tile, the company claims that this new product need never be waxed. Fur- ther, it can be taken up and moved from room to room or rearranged for a different pattern and design effects. | We Have ‘em 6-Inch MALL SAW BLADES Incorporated Crafts 532 Union St. FE 4-5139 GUARANTEED WELDED CONSTRUCTION Mechanism that AUTHORIZED GLIDE-AWAY DEALER 147-165 Oakland Avenue The Perfect New Overhead Type GARAGE DOOR with the Exclusive New Spring-Balanced ¢ FITS ANY GARAGE SIMPLY INSTALLED © NEEDS NO EXTRA. SPACE ¢ EFFORTLESS AND NOISELESS _@1S EASILY ADJUSTED SINGLE and * DOUBLE DOOR Sizes Available The F. J. POOLE C0. Plenty of Off-Street Parking FE 4-1594 @ One-piece, all-welded steel coa: struction for extreme rigidity @ New one-piece weather strip | gives perfect weather seal | @ Always easy 00 Open... easy to + close | @ Flanged edges for safe handling | @ Factory painted for added pro- | | } tection @ Sizes for 1 of 2 car garages Windows at slight additional cost. Other doors: partial recessing o¢ wood faced. GET OUR LOW INSTALLED PRICFS ... EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS, ° *® 950 9x7’ Steel Glide Away "68° $2.25 Ea. ROTH LUMBEP. 3360 W. Huron FE 5-6910 rpevvuvvuwvwvvvvvvrvvvvVVTYTY" ye EV VV VV VV VV VV, Furniture Refinishing Expert-W orkmanship on Modern and Antique Pieces rwvwuvuvuvvuWVTvwY?‘* i hh i he hn Skillful restoration of color, gild- ing and design on furniture mirrors and accessories ing and restoring of rooms. Phones OL 1-5631 or LI 2-6480 ~h= srupio ; 330 W. Tienken Road, } Rochester ? Affillated with H&R Decorating $ Company $ Finish- paneled rwvuvvVvVvVvuVVVuVvVvVVvVTVeVTVeT* le i i i i hi hi hi hi hi ha hi ha hi i i bn i he he i ph rwvwvvvvVvVVvVvVVVVuVvYeVvveVTVvVTVeVTVTT? i hi hi hi hi i hi i i i hi hh hi eh he ee hh rwwvevvvvvvvvuvvuvvuvvY* verTrCrCrCrTrTT TTT TT TT CCT CT eT REFRIGERATION SERVICE - All Types—All Makes Commercial and Residential DAY OR NIGHT SERVICE Authorized Kelvinator Dealer MASON REFRIGERATION FE 2-6400 ‘461 Elizabeth Lake Road 8'x7' Steel Glide Away ; |. | | opening from dining room and master bedroom. Side service vestibule offers access to kitchen, basement | Y. and study. Two-way fireplace cheers living room and +study. Two bathrooms occupy a minimum of space. _ INDOOR-ONTDOOR GARDEN x a oe ee nn 3 Ww ; LAV. BR. rd} 20°: 18° °ia4 = | ‘ me yn PARE: : 2 SS 14s" tanh t----F-tttH{¢ 2 ren clelele RA ai ts *V. Ul —— =—==cs ! Si |] oon ey EP Tee | ¢ ~—* STUDY 54 Nex 8° t —— . Wo a ie " PLAN *y-320 The house covers age and porch. This is Plan Y-320 by Herman York, architect, 115 New Hyde Park Rd., Garden City, N. (Further information and blueprints available from the architect). 1,737 square feet exclusive of gar- U. S. Develops Tradition in Designing of Fabrics ‘“‘America no longer depends on Europe for all its fine decora- tor fabrics,’’ says Bettina Byrd, designer. ‘‘We are beginning to develop our own tradition of de- sign that is sincerely American in feeling. “Until recent years,’’ she con- tinues, ‘‘our decorator fabrics could not compete with those from abroad. European design was infinitely better. Foreign fabrics could be imported and sold for less than ours due to the processes, dyes, mills, and the low cost labor to keep prices down. All these conditions stifled the American designer. “However, the situation has changed since the last war,’’ Miss Byrd said. “Modern American metheds make it possible to produce fine decorator fabrics within everyone’s budget. “Screen-printing of the design and new dyes now give us per- fection in design and color and fabrics superior to any of the imports. This has stimulated the new generation of textile artists to pioneer in American design. “Today homemakers want designs that are truly Ameri- can in feeling and suit our way of life which is simple, more direct and more casual than formal,’’ Miss Byrd ex- plains. “Americans want a style of Phone FE 2-4121 FUEL OIL TANKS Pontiac Welding and Machine Works 64 N. Parke St. Complete Baseme BLOCK BUILDINGS . RELIABLE WATE 24 Whitfield All Work Guaranteed—Free Estiates nt Waterproofing WEATHERPROOFED RPROOFING CO. Phone FE 4-0777 The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac Pontiac's Oldest and 50 Gallon Electric Hot Water Heat for $30 less than any other antee that proves its worth. See and buy real money-saving effi of PO Open Daily 9 to 5 51 W. Huron St. IOASTMASTER ==119% Only $10.00 Down The nationally famous heater that sells make. It’s backed with a service guar- The GOod HOUSEKEEPING’ 7, Largest Exclusive Appliance Dealer/ er famous it soon ciency. NTIAC :30—Friday 9 to 9 their own. Other countries have this. English floral chintz, in- spired by English gardens, is in- contestably English. “The design in a piece of Em- pire damask is definitely French. And today, American textile artists are creating floral chintzes that are truly American in style and take their inspira- tion from our own flowers, birds and trees. White Gasoline Good Paint Brush Cleaner Paint brushes can be cleaned after use by suspending them in benzine or white gasoline. The paint will be drawn out and settle. When clean, the brush is allowed to dry slowly — not near heat — bristles are dampened with lin- seed oil and brush is wrapped in wax paper. Never put a paint brush in water. If old varnish is in good condi- OK Car Wash a_i dae Building Permit Fred Gaukler Jr. Plans Construction of $15,000 Structure on Montcalm Fred Gaukler Jr. obtained a per- mit from the city’s building de- partment this week for construc- tion of a $15,000 car wash building at 105 Montcalm St. Among 15 other permits issued | during the week was one for con- struction of a $10,000 home at 584 | Meadow by Thomas A. Hunt and another for an $11,100 home to be built at 560 Sterling by Harry J. Alo. Other permits are: Build garage, 194 Going 8t., H. Byer, $1,000. Build garage, 250 Edison, Ambassador Insulation, $825. Rebuild chimney, 900 Woodward, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, $4,000. Build garage, 124 Earlmoor, G. & W. Construction, $700 : Build garage. 695 First, G & W. Con- struction, $850. Build garage, 510 N. Saginaw, G & W. Construction, $900. Build garage, 78- Gage, G. & W. Oan- struction, $1,600: Reside, 510° N. struction, $900. Bulid home, 1171 Cloverlawn, Bradford, $6,000. Replace porch, 23 W. Princeton, Doro- thy Ingamells, $500 Joseph Saginaw, G & W. Con- Max R. | | Build garage, 30 Hilldale, Grace M. Hamilton, $500. Build home, 480 Third, Leonard J. Coleman, $6,000 Re-side, 547 W. Huron, Garner Gro- gap, $1,250. Here’s WARM FLOOR COMFORT THE BIG SECRET of the Remarkable Warm- Floors Comfort Which This _€oleman Furnace Gives Is: IT MOVES “THE HEAT” AUTOMATIC! CLEAN! Burns Low Cost Fuel No Fire to Tend No Ashes to Remove Coleman — Oil Floor Furnaces GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. 38 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-7849 SETS IN tHe FLOOR FIFTEEN _ The breed of dog called ‘French’ poodle probably originated in Ger- many. ’ Lumber SASH & DOORS BLDRS’ SUPPLIES BUILDERS’ HDWE. PAINTS DICKIE Lumber Co. 2495 Orchard Lake Rd. Phone FE 4-3538 tion, you can apply another coat after sanding it lightly. BUILDING A NEW THE TIME TO PLAN YOUR DRIVEWAY is NOW! Save Future Expense and Trouble by Building NOW! Phone MAple 5-4601 for Free Estimate! ANN ARBOR CONSTRUCTION CO. CLARKSTON Eas I 5 Gate FRANKLIN AD Your Rambling Ranch Home In Beautiful Rolling Hills . . . Exclusively planned for gracious living in one of Oakland county’s most beautiful home sites. Gentle rolling hills and winding country roads, all plotted to make your home site “just a little better” makes this subdivision a distinctive community. One example of the homes under construction is the one shown above that we have just completed and is now open for your inspection. This custom ranch home with either 3 or 4 bedrooms can be duplicated, with all its modern conveniences from $25,000 up. We'll also be glad to build for you, using your plans or any of the scores of modern designs available to our firm exclusively. Lone Pine Village, planned for the family who wants “something a little better” then usnal, is Jacated iust a few minutes from downtown Pontiac on Telegraph Rd. and Lone Pine Rd. and 234 miles west of Woodward. OPEN FOR YOUR INSPECTION: Sunday: Noon to 8 P. M. — — — — Weekdays: 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. 1090 Lone Pine Road HOMES, Inc. MI 4-0023 and MI 6-0533 Phone FE 4-1555 ae Sh oot ne te tt i De | NC Ira i SS LO a = ee NE RN: AS ee Ne SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 Hunt Trouble to Save Costs Early Small Repairs in Home Can Stop Later Expensive Ones Ancient Egyptians used wooden|When soaked in water, the wood pegs to quarry stone. After cutting | swelled and split the rock. a groove in the rock they wanted to split, they drilled holes along net will keep poisons and dan-| radio in a bathroom where it may gerous drugs out of the reach of| fall into the bathtub and electro- children. cute a bather. Bathroom Caution Makes for Safety Keep light switches beyond the reach of anyone in the bathtub’ A locked medicine cabinet or or standing at the washstand. a locked compartment in a cabi-! Average length of a railroad the groove and drove in the pegs.'car is 72 feet. ~ Build it with NGRETE The Alaska Juneau gold mine produced 12,000 tons of ore in a Never allow a portable plug-in| ‘single day. e * Rtentd > READY MIXED | ERR E BEEOMEE G F xa Ce a SEE SAAR DOLE BO 4 BE BS, ‘ - ‘ | | Look for trouble to save your- NOW You Can Have : self trouble on home repair and oe | maintenance. | The break-downs and failures | | which prove so expensive and an- | _noying in home operationscan near- | ly be anticipated. | Perlodic inspections knowledge of potential trouble | points can save you many dol- lars by enabling you to make repairs before damage becomes extensive, or involves more than - The Garage You've Always Wanted AS LOW AS | PREPARE FOR JACK FROST—To prepare for a snug, comfortable winter, check carefully the following: 1. Heating system—check grates; boiler and fire box for cracks or leaks; covering of pipes; 2. Insulation —full thick mineral wool insures comfort, cuts fuel costs up to 40 | per cent; 3. Chimney—check to see that flue is clean, if chimney needs pointing and if cement is sound around smokepipe; woodwork adjoining chimney should be fire-proofed; 4. Roof—check from inside for holes; check for missing or broken tiles, shingles, etc.; check all flashings for rust or displacement; 5. Exterior—inspect woodwork for warping, cracking, rotting; look for holes or cracks at window sills; check win- dows and doors to see if caulking is needed around frames; check steps for structural defects, masonry for cracks, spalling and wear; 6. Gutters and downspouts—clean out leaves and rubbish that may block gutters and downspouts; clear out strainers; check to see if painting and a one area, Only CONCRETE FOOTINGS aive strong, non - sagging support! 1. The basement. Che¢k posts, | Sills, joists and other wood WORK aoe Winter is rolling around and the garage construction Here are some important areas | for such an inspection AND UP season will be closing soon . . . ORDER NOW TO INSURE COMPLETION BEFORE 1T’S TOO) LATE! Easy F.H.A. Terms Arranged . ¢ 2690 Woodward FE 2-267] « The BEST Paint for BLOCK*BRICK*STUCCC PEERLESS CEMENT PAINT It Beautifies and Protects LONGER ——— Ask Any Pointer” All concrete masonry walls will stay beautiful years longer if protected with Peerless Cement Paint. Its high portiond cement content prevents floking, cracking, rubbing off. Its stone-like texture becomes port of the woll. it contains titanium dioxide, which prevents tronsparency. it is available in 12 bright colors and white. | HELPS KEEP BASEMENTS BONE- DRY Because its portland cement base has a water- proofing agent ground right into it, Peerless Cement Paint KEEPS DAMPNESS €)UT. Recommended and sold by concrete products monu- $mcturers and paint and building supply dealers. PEERLESS CEMENT CORP., Free Press Bldg.» Detroit 26, Mich. | for possible termite damage. Ex- | amine floors and walls for cracks. Water can seep through them and , eventually cause real damage. | 2. The bathroom. Damaged bath- | room walls often let water through |}onto walls of adjoining rooms. A | good plan is to refinish them with 'a waterproof material like tile, |which is sanitary and easy to clean. 3. Exterior walls. Check mason- ry construction for cracks, brok- en bricks or blocks. Repointing may be needed. Open cracks or defects in wood siding should be repaired. ° 4. Exterior paint. Blisters on paint usually indicate a moisture condition, which should be elimi- nated. Peeled or cracking paint means that it is time to get the painter busy. 5. The chimney. Be sure that it does not need pointing. At the same time examine the heating plant or have it examined, to be sure that it is in good working condition for the months ahead. 6. Flashing over window caps. Flashing is needed to keep rain from coming through around the window area. If it is not in good condition, repair it before water comes through and ruins inter- jor paint or wall paper. 7. Steps and porches. Check wooden parts for rotting. Loose boards should be nailed down, and railings and hand grips should be installed as safety measures. 8. The roof. A visual inspection .|is usually enough for spotting loose shingles or deteriorating composi- tion materials, Painted masks, placed over the faces of mummies, were made by the Egyptians of plaster which was moulded on a linen hase. The masks were painted to represent the features of the departed. > * Siding * Cement * Sills * Sashes. * Steel or Aluminum Overhead Doors * Roofing * Cornices * High Quality Lumber * Doors * Windows =) = | , > t / rd % any \\ a x bored rf 5 You're TIME and MONEY Ahead When You Buy Garage Materials From DEPENDABLE CORWIN! Call Today! FHA BUDGET @ NO DOWN PAYMENT—Up te 8 years to pay @ You can budget up te $2,500.00 to cover both labor and materials cost. SAMPLE AMOUNTS AND MONTHLY PAYMENTS ’ If Your Monthly Average I. 2. Job Costs Payments S200 $ 6.39 38500 $15.97 $1,000 $31.94 Pick the ‘“BUILD-IT-PAY-LATER” Plan That Suits You @ NO DOWN PAYMENT—Up to 3 years to pay @ For amounts $1,500.00 er under, and where you need the WIDER COVERAGE as to type of job, and where funds can be used for beth LABOR AND MATERIALS. ; M7 S. Cass Ave. Corwin Lumber & Coal Co. FE 2-8385 | ] | or replacement is necessary. A checkup now will save dollars and | insure comfort in blustery winter weather. ‘Natural, or Knotty Woods Invade Southern Homes The ante-bellum Southern plan- tation house, with its wide ver- anda and impressive pillars, is no longer the ‘‘dream home’”’ of the South. The average Slipcovers Need Scientific Care Soil in Fabric Causes Wear, So Wash, Press Frequently Southern home Homemakers today are taking a more thoughtful approach to their housekeeping methods. If there's a really scientific way to do a job, | the average woman wants to find out about it. She's learning that proper care | increases the life and beauty of her furnishings to such a signifi- cant degree the subject is worth some study. Take the laundering of slip) covers, for instance — there's a right way even of doing that. And | it doesn't consist of just dumping them in the suds! The first part of the job, of course, is to see that you buy only colorfastl pre-shrunk fabrics and colorfast bindings, fasteners and thread. Never let your slipcovers become too badly soiled before you launder them — what wears them out is soil that’s allowed to remain in the fabric. First vacuum your covers thor- oughly, using the crevice attach- ment on seams and bindings. Then remove any abd spots. Uually spots spots will respond to thick soapsuds on a little brush if tackled while they're reasonably fresh. Mend any ripped seams. Close slide fastening or snaps and baste in the pleats. Always follow the washing ma- chine manufacturer's specific instructions, and be sure not to overcrowd the washer because too much of a load just won't come as clean as it should. If you like to starch your covers, it may be added to the final rinse —using more starch than usual if the covers are to be dried in an automatic dryer. If you hang slipcovers on the, line, pin them to parallel lines —| the front of a chair seat to one} line, the top of the back to another. | And while they're still slightly | | | | | damp, rip out the basting threads |and press pleats or flounces. | Covers fit better in the furni- | ture if they’re replaced before | | they get entirely dry. You can |press large areas right on the furniture if you like, though if the covers are made snug they'll need | no ironing. | This frequent beauty bath will | keep them looking fresh, and keep | them lasting longer. INSTALL ARMSTRONG’S AUTOMATIC OIL HEATING ! | ! | Armstrong's new automatic oil fired heating unit is designed to save space while giving maximum efficiency. Can be converted to gas at any time. WAYNE Heating and Air Conditioning Co. 460 W. Huren &t. FE 4-1063 623 N. Main, Rech. OLive 2-0?11 buyer today is looking for a ranch- style house, built if brick, con- taining at léast one pine-panelled room, and in the medium-price range. Sam Brannan Atlanta realtor, says there have been other changes: for instance, most South- ern families are now putting the porch in the back of the house for [ greater privacy. The porches gen- erally are screened. Pine paneling is very popular Brannan says it has invaded the kitchen in many cases, and most of the modern ranch homes have numerous natural finish knotty pine cabinets in the kitch- en. About 50 per cent, he added, are using natural: finish woodwork throughout the house, in addition to a pine paneled den or bedroom and a kitchen done in knotty pine. |: Brick of all types is being used. Most popular, though more expen- sive than the other types, is the used or ‘‘antique’’ brick, recovered from other buildings. Brannan says that the rustic effect given by the used brick is | much in demand. Most of the homes are of red brick, but other popular types are tri-colored and sand-colored Whatever you build, odd to it’s life with CONCRETE foot- ings that reduce to a minimum, danger of cracked walls and other expensive repair failures... get protectién again'st rats, termites ond rot. ROCK @ SAND @ GRAVEL READY-MIXED CONCRETE ANY AMOUNT, LARGE or SMALL BOICE BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES Member of Detroit and Michigan Concrete Block Association Complete Line of Builders’ Supplies 545 South Telegraph Road Phone FE 5-8186 © BRICK © BLOCKS © CONCRETE brick. Carports are a fairly new, but widely accepted, idea in the South The realtor says that almost all new homes are built with car- ports, and very few have garages. Basements, too, are on the way out. Utility rooms now are built beside the carports, and central heating plants are run horizontally and attached to the floor joists. Outdoor living is more popu- lar than ever before. The trend is toward terraces, patios and barbecue pits with the new homes. Margaret Reisman, Atlanta in- terior decorator, says that color trends are away from the dark colors generally associated with Early American decoration and toward lighter, dull shades of the same tones. Particularly popular. she pointed out, are shades of green, gray, beige and brown. ‘Plywood, Drapes Used at Window With Radiators Radiator under a single or double window? Cover it with’ an inexpensive enclosure, whose ends and top can be made of plywood, with lattice work slats across the front. Then hang side draperies and a valance at the window, and- place small plants on your cher- ished glass on shelves across the uncurtained window. If the walls are solid color, choose a fabric with background to harmonize with this color and design in keeping with the room |fabric authorities suggest. Finding Radiator Area When determining the amount of paint you will need for the re- painting of a radiator, multiply the width by the heighth, thén multiply this figure by seven. This will give you the number of square feet you need to figure on coner- ing. Before actual painting is begun with an oil base paint, make sure that the surfac@sto be painted are absolutely dry. oe i i i i i Li Li hi Li Li i hi i hi de Largest New, Home for Your Money! MODEL HOME 2314 Middlebelt Rd. Open 1 to 9 P.M. DIRECTIONS: Orchard Jake Read te Middlebelt Read. Watch fer Signs. Mahan Realty Co. Realtor-Builder 1075 West Huron FE 2-0263 Next te Branch Pest Office , hte htt fh, iM Ll, + All materials furnished includ- ing 8 x 7 steel door No Money Down... Up to 3 Years to Pay ORTONVILLE LUMBER CO. Ortonville, Mich. OPEN SUNDAYS 10-2. - Phone Ortonville 59 When You Order... Pocahontas Disco Kentucky Coal You Buy the Best! Let Us Be Your Coal Dealer KAISER COAL & SUPPLY €0. 702 S. Paddock Street Phone FE 4-3555 - FUME-RESISTANT Pittsburgh Extra Protection in Each Brushful Pittsburgh’s famous know- how with paints has produced outstanding new fume-resist- ant, SUN-PROOF House Paint. Throughout heavy in- dustrial centers, the bitumi- # nous coal sections, the sunlit # plains and the salt air areas, } SUN-PROOF House Paint has withstood every known climate condition for a longer patie’ of time than any other ouse paint! White stays white! Colors retain their original brightness! Pittsburgh ‘ Fume-Resistant, ’ Sun-Proof House Paint STAYS WHITE... Always Looks New! GALLON Come in for FREE copy “Paint Right with Color Dynamics” booklet. PONTIAC GLASS CO. 23 W. Lawrence St. Phone FE 5-644! STORE HOURS: Saturday 8 to 12:30 Daily 8 to 5:30 cael Ways to Adjust Sprung Doors Install Additional Hinge or Move Existing Ones at Door Jamb BUILDERS’ SPECIALTIES Tenn. Ledge Rock Briar Hill Stone Belden Face Brick Common Brick Metal Culverts Cement Culverts Doors seem to have almost as | many troubles as we human beings |Our doag troubles for today is | caused by the door being either | sprung inward or outward at the Glass Block hinge edge and the final result is . that it’s darn hard to close. Hot Lime The best way to deal with this situation is to install a third, hinge and this should be located midway | between the two existing hinges. Outdoor Fireplaces Heatalator Fireplaces Area Walls |) jware a sct of marts on the Silica Sand | it" scns tw intiate were th Calcium Chloride | mortise for the hinge should be Cement and Mortar pa Lapidolith Slip Seal Sewer Pipe Septic Tanks You'll need a mortise “on the edge of the door and on the door jamb. Now open the door, and adjust the new hinge to mark off the two mortises. Make sure that this new hinge is set in |as the two existing hinges. SIBLEY | COAL & SUPPLY CO. 140 N. Cass Ave. FE 5-8163 should force the door far enough away from the jamb to allow it to close easily. Another solution to this condi- tion which isn’t quite as workman- j like is just to set the existing | hinges a little further out on the | jamb. * All you have to do here is re- move the hinges from the jamb, fill up the existing holes with plastic wood and then drill new holes a fraction of an inch closer to the door opening. Reset the hinges and you should be okay for a while anyway. eRELOTF relation to the door and the jamb | When the hinge is in place {\| ponts: WN. Contractor ® WIRING To Buy or Sell Real Estate, See: 4) BATEMAN and KAMPSEN REALTY COMPANY bd FIXTURES 329 East Pike Street e POWER FE 4-0528 INSTALLATION , i A a i i, a __ ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 12. 1953 on one wall, the laundry equip- ment on the opposite, and the en- tire area finished in tile, which is both waterproof and durable. This | builder uses blue or medium green as the tilework color, so that the } | that is hammered up by the man who will live in it. Hundreds of | young couples are following suit in new phenomena in the building | field. This one is virtually all fir plywood to simplify cozastruction. Small House in Good Site Better Than the Opposite Are you planning to buy a home? If so, according to an expert, the 6. A plain house with simple lines will retain its resale value longer EE SESE SE OS SS ae, Oe ithe lawn mower, SWEAT EQUITY HOMES—Here'’s a ‘‘sweat equity’’ home—the kind cycles go in a basementless house? possibility that you will fit your mi than a house of new b « ;needs to a ‘'T’’ is almost. non- I ut confused architecture. existent. Dr. Fred FE. Case, assistant pro-} 7. Currently, a house with at| the basementless house is where to fessor of real estate and land} least three bedrooms and one and|Put the laundry. Kitchen-laundry ;economics at the University of one half baths has the most mar- ket appeal and can be sold for the best price. 8. A house with 1,000 square feet of living area usually is considered to be minimum of space required in a house, even for two people. | California at Los Angeles, says | buying a house always requires some compromise on the part of the. purchaser, even if he builds his own home. Dr. Case suggests prospective |home buyers check the following | 1. Location usually is more im- } portant than the property. Your | best buy usually will be a smaller | house in a superior location rath- | er than a large house in a less | desirable location. 2. An older home (15 to 20 years) | lis preferable to a new home if | you desire a lot of space for your | money. | 3. Good workmanship with poor | niaterials is preferable to good ma- terials with poor workmanship and | | prabably will cost less in repairs | in the foreseeable future. 5. A shorter term loan with higher monthly payments is pref- | erable for those who can afford reduce total cost of a new home one-third to one-half. | | | | | | 3t because the arrangement will | | See Our Complete Line of FIXTURES and WIRING SUPPLIES 845 W. Huron FE 2-3924 or FE 4-6405 See our many plans | CUSTOM-BUILT | | 670 West Huron % Constructed on your lot or one of our choice home-sites. ! JOHN KINZLER, Realtor RANCH HOMES | and select yours now. FE 4-3525 OUR 41st A eee ea Pure. SAVE NOW What better time than right naw to do that outside painting, when you can save a cool dollar bill on every gallon. Save With Confidence Pontiac Pure House Paint is guaranteed first quality. You need not step down to a “second grade” paint to enjoy this great saving. Pontiac Paint is the same high grade product that has been preven by careful buyers in Oakland County for over 40 years. — Hy REGULAR $5.95 QUALITY LAST DAY, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19th } % ATTIC ROOMS % ADDITIONS GAL. a. Self-Clean- ing — Non- Yellowing White. 10 popular non-fading, durable colors. All at the same low sal- price. > BREEZEWAYS WALNUT LAKE HOWE. Walnut Lake Road by BULMAN HARDWARE 3509 Elizabeth Lake Road McKIBBON G&G CHILD’S 1576 Union Lake Road KNAPP’S HARDWARE Walled Lake GINGELL BROS. Cingeliville For Your Convenience PONTIAC PURE OUTSIDE WHITE Will Be Available at the Following Friendly Dealers: HOUGHTON WALLPAPER, PAINT Drayton Plains "METAMORA ELEVATOR Metamora, Mich. MFG. CO. 17-19 S. Perry St. FE 5-6184 | Choose from a wonderful selection of models, we will build any size — frame or masonry, All jobs expertly constructed with quality materials! Complete cement work. | Free Estimates—No Obligation * COMB. DOORS, WINDOWS x WATERPROOFING Seek Alternate Storage Space Basementless House Should Provide Extra! Room for Equipment Where do the washing machine, trunks and bi- This is a\problem which every homemaker should face realistical- ly when she and her husband con- sider building or buying such a home. Eliminating the basement reduces the cost of a house as much as 10 per cent. It also elfm- inates a lot of stair climbing over the years. On the other hand,‘ the loss of the basement can — but shoud not — mean. the loss of badly needed storage and work space. Th* most pressing problem in combinations heat and steam up on wash day, and many home- | makers do not like them on that} account. One builder's solution is to com- bine the laundry with a second bathroom or powder room. Wash basin and water closet are set| | a A i) noe _SEVENTEEN _ Nothing Finer Built! JANITROL HEATING EQUIPMENT room will seem cool on wash day. The combination laundry-bath- room works best when it can | be reached easily from outdoors. Clothes can then’ be taken out- side easily for drying, and chil- dren can use the bath without tracking through the house. | Call for FREE Heating Survey and Estimate Today OTTO A. TRZOS CO. 3103 Orchard Lake Road FE 2-0278 For storage of bicycles, the lawn mower and bulky play equip- ment, many builders are now pro- viding special space in the carport or garage. This space does not need to be heated or insulated, as the house does, so that it costs much Iess than additional house | space would. Keego Harbor TREES — SHRUBS — EVERGREENS SPECIAL FALL SALE EVERGREENS @ FLOWERING SHRUBS @ LANDSCAPING Commercial and Industrial Wiring Specialists Electrical Contracting Fluorescent Lighting BALLARD | SERVICE ELECTRIC | 543 S. Paddock St. J. C. TEAR NURSERY FEderal 4-4201 | Van Dyke and 23 Mile Rd. . Pontiac, Mich. | 3 Miles North of Utica | |and maintenance in the long run, | - 4. A low down payment is pref- erable if you plan to sell the home | Protect Your Car From Winter’s Ice and Snow! | Improve the Value of Your Home! OMPLETE UILDING SERVICE ANY STYLE! ANY SIZE! All Types of Construction % PORCHES- ENCLOSURES % ROOFING—SIDING % SAND BLASTING % EAVESTROUGHING % RECREATION ROOMS ’ For An Expert Job Done With Quality Materials --- Call Us! EMENT OR ASPHALT PAVING DRIVEWAYS - - - BASEMENTS - - - PATIOS PLAYGROUNDS - - - PARKING AREAS - - - FOUNDATIONS PONTIACPAINT|| G&W CONSTRUCTION CO. 2010 Dixie Hwy. at Kennett Rd., Pontiac, Mich. FEderal 2-121] Open Sundays 12 noon to 4 P.M. ee ee a ee ee Co ee ee ae ae THF. PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 _FIGHTREN be PRE ES Fe REE SR tact he i MBS RO ee Dart SO came 1 5 ; If Your Furnace is 11 Years Old — OrMore... 6-E OIL “ATOMIZATION” CAN | # SAVE YOU FUEL DOLLARS! LOS BIE LG LE OI LA IG Ordinary method of burning oil. Droplets burn from outside in —leaving unburned “core” ¥ —shatters each drop of oil ~, into millions of particles. which forms black carbon. Re- Each particle burns com- sult! Wasted fuel; soot, and pletely. Result! Fuel say- oil smell ings and a cleaner home. OIL FURNACE © For warm air heating systems © Ae AE AOMORI AS Nigga BROT Cs Me oaks @ GENTLY circulates werm air @ FULTERS and humidifies air yow breathe @ QUICK, quiet hear @ SUMMERTIME COMFORT — blower fan con be operated alone ‘ * Call FE 5-6973 for FREE Home Heating Survey CH Heating and Sheet Metal Contractor p 351 N. Paddock Street Resourceful room designers util- }ize color when they are limited | by a modest budget, They also use color if subtle distinction is wanted when cost is no object. In its use of color every room should, of course, be adapted to |the personality of its owner and » | become part of the entire home. Today, we know more about the ‘“‘nuances”’ of color, so that ~no longer just a “green” is accept- able. It has to be-~exactly the right one . . . moss:green, olive |green, or chartreuse; it must~be :| subtle, rich and definite. We know *:|too that the so-called muted tints or the. grayed tones are more easily harmonized than the strong, clear colors, but these latter have | their place too. We have rid our- Right Color, When Used Artistically, Will Make Big Ditference in Room selves of the fear of using cer-, tain colors that were once con-| sidered unusual . . . such as cocoa brown, coral or purplish blues. Some color combinations, such as blue and green together, once were thought to be impossible in home decoration. Now, with the variety of tones and hues, they make for exciting, well-planned and colorful interiors. Texture is closely linked with | color. The gamut of texture has, been greatly increased. We work with surfaces that range from the | traditional sleek silks and man- made decorative fabrics to a new and extensive group of rough- coated fabrics “with new weaves and constructions. ‘Fhese are ex- fir pe. cellent contrasts for the wood finishes as well as rustless metals combined with. woods which we find in furniture today. Pattern is also closely allied with color. Seen in current home decoration are solid colored sur- faces . | which, by contrast, emphasize the patterned areas. Patterns continue to evolve . . getting their in-!| spiration from many sources: | floral designs, ecclesiastical forms, | ornaments and designs from for- eign lands, the recognized symbols of period motifs brought up-to-date. A room’s colors are related to | the degree of formality of the furnishings: subtile harmonies are best worked out in formal interiors, and brighter contrasts | in informal arrangements. One | general test of the success of | color scheme is that it ges a | “4ift’’ to the spirit of the person | who enters the room. A dining~rgom may be appro- | priately restful-or stimulating. If | used only for dining, its decors: | tion may provide for mere drama of color in draperies, upholstery and walls than for other inter- ~| 7. YF - YF > hn iin a ae i Maal ss By HUBBARD COBB é We've been doing a lot of stair . . either plain or textured, | climbing of late and we've noticed | several interesting things about | stairs in general. One point of | interest is that stair climbing is | very exhausting and the other | is that most stairs do a con- siderable amount of squeaking. | We've mentioned the subject of stair squeaks before and have also offered various methods of eliminating said squeaks. Today, however, we have a new method which we have tried and with very good results. Our new method consists of standing on the stair tread which is noisy and then driving into the outside edge or nose of the stair tread eight penny finishing nails that are coated with rosin. These should be driven down at an angle of about 45 degrees so that they enter the tongue of the | stair riser and take a really good | grip. The purpose of standing on iors of the home. However, as isthe tread while you drive the nail the trend today, the dining room may be a part of the living room, | down into place is to press it back into plaee so that the nail can be garage... Berry Door Taylor Door ARAG Insure yourself of a sturdy, life-long select lumber that is top- quality... lumber you know will last. Finest Overhead STEEL DOORS | or may be used as an additional sitting room with a sofa or easy chair as part of the furnishings | and so require a exciting background less In houses with a distinctly mod- ern architectural layout, the din- ing room may be separated from the living room by a wide open- | | really effective. | The purpose~of using a rosin | coated nail is td\increase the holding power of said~aail. Most nails hold pretty well bit when they are coated with rosin they After you have driven the nails ALBERT B. Phone FE 2-9104 ‘hold even better. nN po AEE LOWRIE LUMBER CO. Baldwin Ave. at Walton Blvd. . i Hae T into place, you'll need several to oe . T d 1 be ked i ing or a low parapet. This close do the job properly, set the heads . e >» _” = a N . r r in : = . . ” : , Se aN a Se ee cca, PLACE FOR GARDEN TOOLS—Garden tools can ac ;Telationship of dining room to liv lee eo ee. | neat order in an unfinished garage or tool shed by nailing a board jing room makes it a natural part across four or more studs. If nailed at an angle, the board will hold |of the latter interior when more . | tools of varying length. space is needed. To reinforce this Fib G| P| t ————- unity, the wall treatment, the floor | | ot f ass as IC | coverings, or an important color | > in other furnishings, is made the | [ d N p d t same for both room. Se in ew [0 uC S In successful handling of that | Plastic reinforced with fiber- | the dining | glass is also finding new places in | | the home, Et is now being molded jinto colorful ‘‘in@oor-outdoor’’ furni- | BEECH and PECAN | Hardwood Flooring § Utility Grade si 15” WINDOW Mirrors Seem ~ SAFE useful .combination, LE, ECONOMICAL, DEPEND background. |ture, cocktail shakers, refrigera- pas | Five: ‘Tric ks’ With! color and t xture re never ror ee Bey san aie 5 r B FE R. ° . Choice of ) 9 , - are nev ing machine agitators, lamp shade ; Exterior Birch Doors..... Lites $33.00 | CELLARS g < =. Mirrors Te | | How |More advantageously used than in \travs and garbage pails. - Always Service — All Ways STAIRS f ‘ a bedroom. Light hues ard deli-| And in the larger, stationary | E i DIXIE LUMBER CO., Inc. oe 18 Oo eisai Mae et woods [gemerucn of the heme, ti xperts in | of glass and new light woods, in-| pang yc 7 : pat re a c. Looking for a house-expander? | terpret in a new way an old- | being ysed for wall molding. awn-| @ Modernizating @ Porch Enclosures © Additions 831 Oakland Avenue FE 2-0224 { eo oo. oe os TO Ny OP os BATH \% Ze” \ KITCHEN Als | Vay Y i . ao FIRE » ! vii : Ns | ee “~\ [aepRooms TRAFFIC LANES — Beware of | traffic lanes through living room in a house planned like this. Good Looking, Sturdy 14x20 INCLUDES STUDS RAFTERS WINDOW NO. 2 AND BETTER CLEAR FIR ' SIDING Choice of colors of our regular heavy 215 Ib. 3-in-1 Asphalt SHINGLE ROOFING Here is your chance to get a garage at a new low fig- ure. Doing the work your- 8 P.M Burmeister Makes Another Money-Saving Offer! All the Lumber to Build a Saturday All Day ‘til -—Sunday 10 to 2 Open self you'll have extra-sav- ings! We Have Steel Overhead Doors from $52.50 BURMEISTER’S ¥ Wholesale and Retail © Cooley Lake Road ORTHER LUMBER COMPANY EM 3-4650 and EM 3-3996 Open Sundays 10 ‘til 2—Weekdays 8 to 8 10 Enlar e Home living .room, the basic need is | to provide a sympathetic, unified } One possible way is to expand, | without adding a room or digging | a cellar, is with mirrors. | | | “It's an optical illusion, of | | ; mirrors can stretch a room in’ size, double the furnishings in num- | ber, and even increase light in intensity.”’ Here are some house-expanding | | ideas: | 1. A narrow length of mirror on the window still makes a shelf for potted plants which allows maxf- mum sunlight for plant growth. Another mirror of equal size be- hind the shelf doubles the green, ‘‘outdoors’’ decoration effect of the plants. 2. A mirror secured to the closet ceiling will give a view of the top shelf and the hard-to-reach area near the wall. Mirrors will do a similar job above the kitchen cab- | inet shelves. 3. Mirrors about three feet |square and mounted on wooden blocks can be placed at an angle | @n each side of a fireplace to re- flect both heat and light into the room, The'll also make a small ! fireplace seem much larger. 4. Mirrors at slight angles on each side of an aftic dormer win- dow will reflect more daylight in- to the room, often turning a drab, useless attic into an active | living area of the home. | 5. A “mirror corner’? — high, | rectangular mirrors on each wall in a gloomy corner—will gather ky from elsewhere in the room | and dispel shadows. The addition of plate glass shelves for plants can turn the corner into the room’s- { focal point. | New baseboard convectors, like individual convector units, can be painted to match many decorating | schemes. They can be finished to | match the walls or draperies or | | can be painted a contrasting shade | | | to rooms. A DIFFERENT "TYPE. OF Oll BURNER! fiuid heat- TARY BURNER NOW: CONVENIENT TERMS ARRANGED William Lechner 27 N. Cass Ave. “eee _—— \light finishes, bleaches, or im™lac- | well time daintiness. For bedrooms with a masculine air, the decora- | tor uses stronger colors and rough- surfaced decorative fabrics. In addition to the usual ‘‘view test’’ | course,"’ advises one expert, “but Of how a room looks from the! \oather conditions without entrance door, a bedrom should also appear restful from the bed | The traditional pastel hues for a bedroom are supplemented by | stronger colors in window drap- | peries, rugs and upholstey fab-| rics for the covering of a slipper chair or easy chair. Woods in quers are always attractive. In recently designed rooms overhead and wall fixtures are being replaced by concealed lighting sources and modern lamps. As artificial light becomes more adequate, the full ‘value of delicate and subtle hues, too often lost through incomplete il- lumination, is brought out. | Compared with its usage many years ago, color is applitd ad-| roitly today in many new and | original ways, for a much wider | range of colors is being used by | architects, decorators and home- makers than ever before in the history of home decoration. Ae I PAITEAN 202 f | The mechanism of this amusing wind indicator is so simple that anyone handy with tools can make it. Set it up on a post and the wind is blowing as he saws wood at a terrific pace. All making and painting directions on pattern 202. to give a distinctive color accent | Price 25 cents. Write to Workshop, Pontiac Daily Press. | New convector units can be used in steam or hot water heated homes regardless of the type 0! fuel burned. They perform equally in coal, gas or oil-heated homes, STOVE oll 5 C .1¢ : FURNACE OlL rem vALLo’ J NO. 2 GRADE | ] CG FURNACE PER GALLON Oil FE 5-6159 eam OAKLAND | Fuel and Paint Co. 436 Orchard Lake Ave. awnings, partitions, bathtubs and lavatories. ; Its advantages over wood and metals for many uses lie in its toughness, color-fastness and abil- ity to stand up under varying | rust- ing or corroding. } Tractor Enamel Made to Take Hard Knocks Tractor enamel is_ especially formulated to be able to take the hard knocks it receives on the | job . . . also to keep its attrac- | tive appearance despite years of | gutdoor exposure. It is just one of the many thou- sands of finishes that are espe- | cially developed by product finish manufacturers to fill the require: | @ Garages @ Roofing @ Siding FHA Terms—No Money Down—3 Years to Pay 581 S. Telegraph Road AMBASSADOR INSULATION CO. FE 5-8405 —FE 5-6250 t 5 ments of special products. a EXCAVATING Ed. 1575 Stockline FE 4-5194 Woodward Prepare for Insulate Now! BURKE LUMBER CO. “Where ‘the Home Begins” Drayton Plains on the Dixie Build Your Own Ga zt. ———— mw tf, | . in Pkg. Winter Insulation Special! Rock Wool Blanket ; 100 Sq. Ft. *495 8 ft. long, 16 in. wide 1000 Sq. Ft. $49.50 rage! OR 3-1211 a ihe ————= Da i on Ae THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. Oo NINETEEN After a Fire you may be staggered by the realization that the amount of your insurance only partially covers your loss. Has your insurance cover- age kept: pace with your values? Make sure now.. and be qale financially. Austin-Norvell Insurance Agency, Inc. 70 W. Lewrence St. Corner Cass FE 2-922] Ralph J. Austin Ralph T. Norvell | Open Saturday and Sunday 12 to 7 p. m. Deluxe Two and Three Bedroom Brick Homes in Beautiful ... Pontiac’s Newest Fine Suburban Area DIRECTIONS: Turn off Dixie Highway on Cambrook Lane at Our Lady of the Lakes Chirch. Watch for “open” sign. | HELTMAN & TRIPP cenerat conurs Brclusive Builders ana Developers of Westridge et Waterford 22 W. Lawrence — FE 5-8161 Aerican Standard COLORED BATHROOM FIXTURES Immediate Delivery H. H. STANTON 103 State St. Plumbing Sales and Service FE 5-1683 | ‘WESTRIDGE’ | wee. ic Fae eo LEDS > ee eee ee aT Fiat = a Ee Sete rk. ae ee ‘Ya a. . woe . ae e “ 5 Pty {= - ae ey = COMBIN (TION CF WOODS—To show homemakers how to achieve | of scale and pretentiousness | beauty and unity of room arrangement when combining piec = > Pe 4" “a * ¥ . Pegi a x out “ i yon’ h furniture Varied Arrangement is gentle, won't scorc Varied furniture arrangement is placed near the unit. Too, convec- possible with modern .convector| tors are compact, demand little heating units. Convector heat flow | floor space. a SSR See a CUSTOM MACE VENETIAN BLINDS AND WINDOW SHADES You Owe It to Yourself to Shop at PONTIAC FLOOR COVERINGS lt. 8. TAYLOR, Owner— 379 Orchard Lake Avenue FE 2-2353 Compare Our Quality! Compare Our Prices! “5 a comparable fineness of finish. Here, of, a pine curio cauinet dignilies a room in which are gruuped a settle | different woods, the American Institute of Decoraters recently set @p a which is finished in a rich, dark gun-stock tone, a cocktail table series of furniture groups at Chicago’s famed Merchandise Mart. The , and a ladder-back chair of walnut in a cool brown and a side chair | elements that comprise such a successful grouping include sithilarity | of cherry in a tawny wine-brown finish. something new’’ — the traditional essential for bridal wear—is being translated into homefurnishings for fall, 1953. A study just completed by S. Robert Elton, director of the Na- + Bedroom Home Nearing Completion Large Living Room—Natural Fireplace—Completely Modern Located in Beautiful HURON WOODS A Controlled Residential Subdivision Lets Available Adjeining 800 acre recreational area. Geoed schools, impreved reads, public utilities, lake privileges, large sites and lew taxes. An ideal lecation for yeur future heme! Frank C. Newell Open Daily & Sunday 2-7 DIRECTIONS: Out Commerce Rd., turn right at Union Lake Rd. and follew signs. Overicoks west side of Moery’s Golf Course. Ps ; tional Homefurnishings Show in |Grand Central Palace, September |17-27, reveals that offerings which will be viewed by the public ‘“‘re- call the past in appearance, but belong to the present in function.”’ Elton’s study was made among ~the more than 400 representative manufacturers and decorators who will display new merchan- dise for the public at the |1-day show this fall. te ‘Although much of the past can ‘be seen in the forms of the new furniture, our present-day way of life is reflected in such modern notes as furniture to take care of limited storage space; chairs and 593 N. Woodward, Bifmingham Phone MI 4-0065 benches for TV viewing; and Elton reports, in previewing the Ss in France and America in the 18th century, is being adapted, he ex- plains, for today’s casual living. ity, English Regency and Italian Directoire are favored. rials has brought variety and color to furniture, Elton points out. tables and chars, and has caused designers to survey the possi- bilities of old materials used in new ways, he explains. ti enamel, glass fiber, leather, pew- ter and copper, cane and rattan are some of the many diverse materials that add new interest U.S. Hometurnishings Show to Exhibit| New Adaptations of Traditional Styles | NEW YORK — “Something old,) small-scale buffet servers for buf- ' fet dining.”’ . Provincial styles are important, how. Country furniture, popular For those who want more formal- The development of new mate- Use of these new materials has changed the outward ap- pearance of storage pieces, composi- | steel, plastics, stainless **Thermoset non _—i board, _ ting your car “sit out” all winter. Call us tod garage plans you may have. Roofing --- Siding Steel or Aluminum Overhead Garage Doo ¥ --.and Improves the Lumber of Best Quality Cement --- Cinder Blocks Doors - Windows — Frames ig. Ya &% t i‘ - S/H hives waft a te ay.. Value of Well! ; Why not protect your car's finish, and the big investments you have in it, by building that garage you've always wanted. Get rid of those cold balky winter starts that result from let- . well be glad to work with you on any 4 , Sk ee : a oe j 8, ; / We rs Complete Materials for a One-Car Garage (Minus Labor and Cement) as low as *395” 27 Orchard Lake Ave. & Donaldson Lumber Co. | FE 2-8381 and practicality to the 1953 pic-| st ture.”’ Elton, is another important design trend. Simplicity of these designs, ‘make them fit well into modern life.” adapted from the past,” said, “is actually chameleon-like. Dress up this furniture of the past with modern backgrounds and ac- cessories, and it becomes mod- ern.”’ Natural tones are favored in many presentations. — | The widespread use of leather was noted in his survey. ‘Seats, tops, banding, pulls and raps—all of leather—has brought | this material into the front as a The SayS/ decorative accent. Oriental influence, believes, show the increasing im- portance of neutrals and natural tones. The range ‘cascades from palest of whites, such as ‘“‘bone white,’’ to deep brown shades. Warm earth tones, particular- ly shades of deep pumpkin, terra cotta, rust and wuinber browns, are in high favor. “Overall, the study of the fall picture in the homefurnishings tield indicates that the American homemaker is entering a new era of comfort and liveability,”” Elton commented. “Much of the new furniture Elton Wood tones, he commented, will be softer. Fruit woods have an antiqued look, while light finishes lean toward oyster whites rather than yellow tones. Floor coverings and fabrics, he| ms ‘Get Our Price! Let us show you how much more we build into your garage tor a completed low price! CALL TODAY! Car-'n’-Half Single Double PAIRING © 207 W. Montcalm St WEW (NG e Phone FE 4-9544 MIDWEST SUPPLY 9 North Telegraph Near Heren FE 4-2575 Ext. 6 Eves, Sun.: FE 5-7433 BUILD REMODEL Vou (nviled’ TO SEE OUR Large ranch home sites with 175’ or more of frontage, includ- ing hillside lots and some private lake frontage, on winding roads in scenic rolling country-side. Hundreds of beautiful trees, in- cluding apple trees, pines and hardwoods. homes. Fine neighboring Excellent building restrictions— 1650 sq. ft. and up. Close to Kirk-in-the-Hills, lakes. Within Vaughan school golf courses, ° @ Zz J 5: uw district. Low township taxes. Lots priced from $3,500. See salesman on property; or tele- phone or write for location map and restrictions. 4th Floor, Washington Blvd. Bldg. Detroit 26, Mich. Phone WOodward 374816 BEAUTIFUL NEW SUBDIVISION ... BLOOMFIELD HEIGHTS (200 acres; formerly the G. D. Pope Estate, located on Southern Oakland County’s highest elevation) N. E. Corner of Frunklin and Lone Pine Rds. LONE PINE RO. O cHamers HOUSEMAN -SPITZLEY CORPORATION Branch Office W. Long Lake at Telegraph Roads Phone Midwest 4-7422 =| = = oaS3 == = ——} Ze = = = Ee = = =— = a a Ee = =a = = rr S= = == s = = == = 4 == = == == = SS = =] = = = = = | = SS = = = =e = | = i= = = => => = Bs == =— = B as == = FUEL SAVINGS UP TO 50% OWNERS REPORT BOILERS — FURNACES GENERAL QD ELECTRIC Terms Available HARNECK _ HEATING 2615 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 2-2530 | | 2 INTHE HOME WORKSHOP AS wm UTH WYETH SPEARS MATCHING GIRL FIGURE WITH WATERING CAN TTERN 22° CuT-OuT BOY GARDEN FIGURE PATTERN 3e Cut out this little lad from out- door plywood and paint his over- alls a bright blue; the big straw chat is yellow with a blue band. His shirt is done in stripes of white and blue. The figuré is traced right onto the wood, and the painting outlines are also traced, ready to be filled in with the colors indicated on the pattern. You may be confident of the most realistic results. The secret of painting life-like | cutouts is to keep the edges sharp where the colors join. Exact direc- tions for the kind of paint and brushes to use are given in detail on the pattern. Ask for No. 327 and enclose 25 cents to cover cost, Write to Work- shop, Pontiac Press. —— em Roly: A MORRISON [hac's why you'se happy abowt your gacage doors * = : Because the MORRISON Re/y-Door is ; 71 We Alt-Sreet all-seeel, overhead — and is so effortiess and sefe — ond evea a child can open and close x! W's POUR- Aad it costs lees to bey and less a install x SECTIONAL! Call us for a free estimate on installing MORRISON rts lows as Rely-Deers oa yout sew or old garage. WHAT’S BETWEEN YOU AND YOUR CAR? Complete Masonry Materials for Garages ® Blocks, Cement Products ® Structural Steel 922 Pontiac Drive TRU-BILT BLOCK CO. ° ““Modernfold Doors’ ® Waterproof Paint “THE PONTIAC Flint Second from Top A picture of a typically pros- perous American community and what makes it that way emerges from an analysis of data recent- ly made public by the U. S. Bu- reau of the Census. The survey covers the general characteristics of 119 urbanized areas with populations of 100,000 or more. The information is based on the 1950 census. The most prosperous cgm- munities, taking as the yard- ® Steel Sash ® Infra Insulation Phone FE 4-9531 RAY O’NEIL Realtor COMPLETE REAL ESTATE. SERVICE 75 W. Huron FE 3-7103 25° + me 4 PS af OIL FIRED weer. = ani INIT DISCOUNT Only at O’Brien Heating and Nee es ne. LR toe Se BOILERS & Fd & EE ET PONTIAC STORE 371 Voorheis Rd. - FE 2-2919 © HLTA LHL on General Motors Delco Heat Products—For a Limited Time Supply. BUY NOW AND SAVE! TR Pe es # oe wi ee: OIL TONERS 4696 PA AT HHH WATER HEATERS _ SORE LE ROLE BS CONDITIONAIR : FURNACES OIL Authorized Oakland County Distributor DRAYTON PLAINS STORE. OR 3-950] cc cA AA end 4 Ca il ANTON ———7 ’ GAS SOS a RE ER RO ee, BRE BR OS BE MENT —— 36 MONTHS TO PAY A = tI HH GAS Tr Ny” SUPPLY Dixie Hwy. fi stick the median income of all residents (families and unrelated individuals), are the smaller cities rather than large metropolitan areas. Their residents as a whole are somewhat older than the aver- age by comparison with the me- dian age of the U. S. population. And, as far as educational levels are concerned, they do not nec- essarily rate above the national average. “All the top income ccmmuni- ties have one factor in com- | mon. That is an unusually high proportion of the _ population earning a livelihood in manufac- turing, and particularly in dura- ble goods. “Here is further evidence of the intimate relationship be- tween’ industrialization and prosperity in the United States. Furthermore, all these com- munities are located in the North or Middle West, where industrialization came earliest in the nation’s history and is most concentrated. . “Any notion that the size of a community is a dominant factor in its prosperity is dispelled by the figures. As a matter of fact, the big metropolitan centers come off second best in the per- sonal income test. “Of the 10 urbanized areas which were at the ;top in median personal income in the 1950 cen- sus, five had less than 200,000 population each, and two others were larger but not in the big metropolitan class. “These seven were South Bend, Ind.; Flint, Mich.; Stam- ford, Conn.; Rockford, II; Schenectady, N. Y.; Toledo, Ohio; and Milwaukee, Wis. “South Bend, with a popula- tion of 168,000 in its built-up area in 1950 and with a median per- sonal income of $3,673 in that census, ranked as No. 1 in the income scale. “Flint, with 198,000 popula- tion and $3,666 median personal income, was in second place. Their income figares were more than a fifth greater than the national median for urban areas in that year. “Only three of the 12 big—ur- banized areas with populations . of more than a million had me- dian personal incomes high enough to qualify for the top ranking group. “They were Detroit, which was in third place; Chicago, which ranked sixth; and Cleve- land, which was ninth. New York, the biggest metropolis of all, was in 28th place in the in- come scale. Washington was 14th. “The outstanding characteris- tic of the occupational situation in all the top income cities is the high proportion of the work- ing population engaged in man- ufacturing. “In the case of Flint, the proportion was ah high as 57 per cent. Three others had ra- tios of more than 530 per cent. In all cases, too, the majority of those on manufacturing pay- rolls were in durable goods plants. “A tactor in Stamford’s rating in the top 10 is its location in one of New York City’s prime resi- dential and commuting areas. 4 PRESS, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 Neatness First Requisite in Gracious Table Setting “WELCOME!’’—A dramatic floor treatment is all that it takes to! ties the tiny hall in with adjoining rooms. make even an entranceway of postage-stamp proportions say a hig/|the flooring is a perfect choice for traffic lanes in a home since it welcome to your home. In this warm reception hall, it is made effective | shows little dirt, is easily cleaned and improves in polished appearance with a running design that gives an illusion of length and width and | with use. It is a flaor tile. —_ 7 a aw * sas >> — ~\, x i e - As pretty as it is practical, Prosperity Ratio Worked From Census Shows Small Cities Have Best Record However, 37 per cent of the working population of Stam- ford’s urbanized arca were in manufacturing, with the edge in durable goods plants. “As far as the median age of their populations is concerned, eight of these top 10 income com- munities were older than the national median. South Bend and Flint were the only two excep- tions. “The oldest of the group was Schenectady, with a median age of 33.9 years as against the na- tional figure of 30.2 years in 1950 for the population as a whole. “The educational level of the adults in a community is indi- cated by census figures on the median number of school years completed by persons 25 and over. Five of the top 19 income communities were under the na- tional median in this respect. “The city with the highest educational attainment of. its adult population for the coun- try as a whole in the 1950 cen- sus was Madison, Wis., where one of the nation’s biggest universities is located. “The median for this com- munity was 12.4 school years completed by persons 25 and over as against the national me- Have Experienced, Trained Men VACUUM CLEAN YOUR FURNACE GAS FURNACES by Mueller Clima-tro! MOERY’S OIL BURNER 2212 Maddy Lane, Keego—FE 2-4970 DOORS Flush—All Sizes P——==—PECIAL BUYO?= wteante 9975 MERCER FLUSH “DOOR SALES 256 Wellsboro ~ Walled Lake MA rket 4-2222 bn > GUN 8 BELUTIFOL iaaHOME We have many now avail- able in every price range. Call ROY ANNETT, Inc. REALTOR ts &. Buren st Phene FE &-7193 Open Eves sone Sen i-5 FM. We Heip Finance Down Payments BLACKWOOD. SCHAEFER Complete Real Estate 975 BALDWIN FE 2-4638 KEASEY ELECTRIC Electrical Contractor Appliance—Fixtures Drayten Plains Mich Phone OR 3-2601-OR 3-1483 4494 Dixie Highway dian of 10.2 years for urban areas in that year. “However, Madison's median personal income was $2,745, or some $200 under the national median. Most other urbanized areas in the top educational In this day, when maids are the ‘‘vanishing Americans” of our times, entertaining can be as gracious and formal as it was in grandmother's three-maids-and-a- butler era. Graciousness can be_ painlessly and maidlessly achieved by em- ploying contemporary aids and shortcuts thoughtfully created for that special purpose. Elegance has little to do with the quality of the dinnerware on your table. Prime requisite is neatness. This means nothing more than a little extra attention given to proper placement of patterned din- nerware at each setting, laying silver straight with the handles even at the bottom, and setting water goblets’ above the tip of the knife rather than at either side. Balance is second in importance. dinner plates are round, an oval as Try to use varied shapes. If your ————_——— or rectangular centerpiece, or odd- shaped individual ashtrays can help avoid the monotony of ex- cessive ‘roundness.’ Don’t have everything flat; try candlesticks and stemmed compotes at different heights, or chafing dishes and centerpieces. For a balanced table setting use the same principle employed in decorating rooms: don’t place all the heavy pieces at one end of the table, and the little pieces at the other. A NEW GARAGE NEW Seal Ritz One Coat FLAT PAINT group, though, had median per- sonal incomes higher than the national figure. “Of the 119 urbanized areas surveyed by the census bureau, 62 or just over half had median incomes larger than the median for the country’s urban areas as a whole. ‘“‘Many of the communities in the lower half of the income scale ‘were in the South, where industrialization came relatively late and where living and other conditions are also different than in other parts of the country.” Almost a billion people in the | world cannot read or write. For Nearest Dealer's Name, Call West Detroit Glass of Pontiac FE deral 2-8397 BUILD IT NOW ON EASY ABC BUDGET PAYMENTS! No Money Down For better performance, longer life and safety, pro- tect your car with a modern, weatherproof garage. We've an ABC Budget Pay- ment Plan exactly suited to your income. No red tape. Start payments when job is finished. Come in today and || see our garage plans—no obligation. (LED is LUMBER 3360 W. Huron FE 5-6910 To BUY or SELL In Waterford, Clarkston, Drayton Plains and Sur- rounding Territory WHITE 5660 Dixie Hwy. REAL ESTATE ~The, Tae, ay Waterford OR 3-1872 Phone Midwest Located 44 Mile South of West Long Lake Road, of Lone Pine Road, at 4275 Franklin Road. Charming New Ranch Home --- On Scenic Franklin Road Mile North Looking out upon beautiful hills and orchards, this modern home, just completed, offers one of the finest views of the surrounding country- side. Conveniently located in the Vaughan School district with school bus facilities—', mile from Kirk-in-the-Hills. Three-bedroom brick, with two baths, full basement and a two-car garage. The large living room 14’4’’x23’, is entered by a vestibule. There is a separate dining room and kitchen with birch cabinets. Formica counter tops, divided sink and garbage disposal. The living room has a fireplace and large windows, that make the most of the picturesque view. Beautifully decorated interior, completely finished exterior. Aluminum storms and screens included; landscaping and lawn completed. $15,500 Down—Excellent Mortgage and Terms Open Saturday and Sunday, 1 to 6 p. m., and any time by appointment. 4th Floor, 4-7422 Phone HOUSEMAN -SPITZLEY CORPORATION Branch Office W. Long Lake at Telegraph Roads Detroit Office Washington Blvd. Bidg. WOodwerd 3-4816 ee CD SC | | EO LE a: we LS ie, J Oe i ee - se os West Australia Has Gold Rush New Ore Is Uncovered in Old ‘Hill 50’ Mine at Mount Magnet PERTH, Australia (UP) — A spectacular strike at a mine 300, air miles northeast of Perth has west Australians hoping for an- other gold boom. The Hill 50 mine, the only cam- pany operating at the once-thriv-, ing town of Mt. Magnet,’ recently announced that gold up to 16 ounces to the ton had been struck. The “‘ghost town’’ of Mt. Mag- net woke up with the good news and a number of companies rushed to stake out claims in | Local Markets Produce Farmer to Consumer ee ee ee eee | Huckleberries, “quart Green peppers, 3 for Cucumbers, 6 for .......+- 25 Corn, dOSen ...cereceseece .50 Tomatoes, quart .......+..- 25 POF POCE viccevevsvscssve 150 per bushel .,:..-ccese:.- 2.00 String beans, quart ........ 20 Radishes, bunch .......... 10 Sy EG) osesounccntiicoancned 25 Carrots, Bunch ...cessccvce 10 i eee ee .25 Onions: bunch <.......-...- .10 LOR, Sarees crews ewaiets 25 Potatoes, bushel] 225 Cabbage, head ' 15 Apples, bushel . .» 1.78 to 2.50 Celery, BURCH) o.c00ec000 er 15 EgG6: GOREN joie ccuence a 65, 70 and 80 Peppers, bushel ............ 3.00 ! Flowers Carnations, dozen .......... 190 Geraniums, dozen ........ 1.00 Gladiolis, "bunch ......... 35.and = .50 Wholesale DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT (UP) — Wholesale prices on areas adjacent to Hill 50. All ground within a_ half-mile radius of Hill 50 has, been pegged | and claims unworked for years are’ up for sale. One feature of the mine. which | makes for easy workings is that! the rock in which the ore is found | is so hard that no timbering is| needed underground. Meanwhile, until Hill 50 gets into the big money, it is showing gaod | profits on the ore it is at present working. Fewer Aussies Marry, but They Wed Younger CANBERRA w — Fewer | Pears, the” public farmers’ markets: Fruits: Apples, Crab, No 1, 250-3 bu; apples. Greenings, fancy, 3.50 bu; No 1, 2.50-3 bu: apples, McIntosh, fancy, 4.00 bu; No 1, 3-3.50 bu; apples, Wealthy, fancy, 3.50 bu; No 1, 2.50-3 bu; apples, Wolf River, No 1, 2.25-2.75 bu. Cante- loupes, fancy, 3.00 bu; No. 1, 1.75-2 25 bu Grapes, No 1, 1-125 pk bskt. Peaches. Elberta. No 1, 3-350 bu; peaches, J H Hale, fancy, 5.50 bu; No 1, 3.50-4 bu. Bartlett, fancy, 3.50 bu; No 1, 2.50-3 bu. Plums, Damson, No. 1, 2.50- 3 bu; plums, prune. No. 1. 2-23.50 49-bu. Watermelons, No. 1, 2-2.50 bu Vegetables: Beets, No 1, 80-100 doz} bchs; beets, topped, No 1, 1-1.50 bu Broccoli, fancy, 2.50 42-bu; No 1, 1.50-2 1,-bu. Beans, green, flat, No 1, 1.50-2 bu; beans, green, Roman, No 1, 2.75-3.25 bu: beans, green, round, No 1, 2-2.50 bu; beans, Wax, No 1, 2.50-3 bu: beans, Ken- tucky Wonder, No 1, 2.25-2.78 bu: beans, Lima, fancy, 4.00 bu; No 1, 3-3.50 bu Cabbage. standard varieties, No. 1, 1-1.50 bu: cabbage, curly, No 1, 1-1.25 bu: cabbage, red, No 1. 1-1.25 bu; cabbage, sprouts, No 1, 90-1.25 bu. Carrots, No 1, 55-75 doz bchs: carrots, topped, No 1, 1.50-2 bu. Cauliflower, No 1, 2.25-2.75 doz. Celery, No 1, 1.75-2.25 crate; celery, No 1, 70-90 doz bchs. Corn, sweet, No 1, 1-1.25 §-doz bag Cucumbers, slicers, fancy, 4-4.50 bu; No. 1, 3-350 bu; cucum- bers, dill size. No 1, 3.50-4 bu: cucum- bers, pickle size, No 1, 450-5 bu. Dill Aus- tralians married in 1952, but government statistics show they married younger. Last year there were 74,172 marriages, the low- est total for three years. But the average age of bridegrooms | was 28.74 years, and that of | brides 25.61, compared with 28.92 and °25.71 in 1951. Two hundred and six girls of | 15 years and under marrried last | year, including one girl of 13. The boys were more cautious. They waited until they were 16 at least. « fi z oof C=) 1 dma is ASSESSORS PLAT NO 37 | & E ‘ CuipPpE ws ORDINANCE NO. 1223 An ordinance to amend the building sone map of Ordinance No. 944, known as the-‘‘Building Zone Ordinance.” Adopted September 8, 1953. Effective September 18, 1953. An ordinance to amend the building sone map of Ordinance No. 944, known as the “Building Zone Ordinance.” The City of Pontiac ordains: Section 1. The building sone map of the Building Zone Irdinance is hereby; amended to provide that the land in the description hereinafter set forth, be classified as Commercial 1. The North 395 feet of Lot 3 Asses- sor's Plat No. 37, City of Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan, subject . to agreement by the Community Na- tional Bank of Pontiac, dated the -*th day of August, 1953, to convey « retain property to the City of Pon- tiac. Section 2. The change in the building zone map in the above area to Com- mercial 1 is made pursuant to the rec- ommendation of the City Plan Commis- sion and said Commission is hereby appointed to make a final report upon this amendment to this Commission previous to the public hearing to be held before this amendment is adopted. pur- suant to Section 4 of Act No. 207 of Public Acts of 1921, as amended. Section 3. That not less than fifteen (15) days notice of the time and place of the public hearing on the final pas- sage of this amendment shall be given in @ newspaper of general circulation in this city; that such public hearing is hereby fixed at September 8, 1953. Section 4. is ordinance shall take effect ten (10) days from and after the date of its passage by the City Commis- sion of the City of Pontiac. Made and passed by the City Commis- sion of the City of Pontiac, this 8th day of September, A. D. 1953. No 1, 75-95 doz bchs. Eggplant, No 1, | 1-150 bu; eggplant, long tvpe. No 1, 1.25- | 1.75 bu. Bohlrabi, No 1, 1-1.50 doz bchs | Leeks, No 1, 1.25-1.75 doz behs. Oxre, | No 1, 2.25-2.50 pk bskt. Ontons, dry, No 1, 1-1.50 50-lb bag: ontons, green, fancy, 100 doz behs: No 1, 175-90 doz bchs: Onions, pickling, No 1, 12 per Ib Parsnips, No 1, 1.75-2.25 Ya-bu; parsley, curly, No 1, 50-75 doz bchs; parsley root, No 1, 75-883 doz bchs. Peas, black eye. No 1, 350-4 bu. Peppers, cayenne, No 1, 75-1.25 pk bskt peppers, hot. No 1, 1-150 bu; peppers, pimento, No 1, 2-250 13-bu: peppers, green, sweet, No 1. 2-2.80 bu; peppers, red. sweet. No 1, 2.50-3 bu Potatoes, new, No 1, 85-100 50-lb ba” potataes, No 1, 1.50-1.80 100-lb bag. Rad- ishes, white, No 1, 80-1.00 -doz bchs; 190 doz behs; No 1, Squash. Acorn, No -1, ¥y-bu: squash. Butternut, No 1. : squash. Hubbard; No 1. 1.50 bu; squash, Delicious, No 1, 1.50-2 bu: squash, Italian, fancy, 2.00 %2-bu; No 1, 1-150 bu: squash, Summer, No 1, 75-1.25 %4-bu. Tomatoes, No 1, 40-50 pk Bskt; tomatoes, outdoor, fancy, 1.50 '2-bu; No 1, 80-100 %4-bu: tomatoes. No 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. Turnip, fancy, 150 doz bchs; No 1, 90-1.25 doz bchs turnip, topped, No 1, 1.50-1.75 bu. Greens: ‘Cabbage, No 1, Collard. No 1, 1-125 bu Mustard, No 1, No 1, 1.75-2.25: bu Swiss Chard. No l, Turnip, No 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. Lettuce and salad greens: Celery cabbage. No 1, 2-250 bu. En- dive, No 1, 1-1.50 bu; endive, bleached, No 1, 2.50-2.75 bu. Escarole, No 1°! bu: escarole, bleached, No 1, 2.50-2.75 bu. Lettuce, Butter, No 1, 3.75-4 bu; lettuce, head, No 1, 3.25-3.75 3-doz; lettuce, head, No }, 1.25-1.75 bu:. lettuce, leaf, No 1, 2.25-2.75 bu. Romaine, No 1, 1.25-1.50 bu 125-1.75 bu Kale, No 1, 1.25-1.75. bu Sorrel, No 1-1 50 CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO (AP)—Butter firm; receipts 815.703; wholesale buying prices un- changed to % cent a pound higher; 93 score AA 66.25: 92 A 65.75; 90 B 63; 89 C 60.5; cars: 90 B64% 89 C 61. Eggs firm: receipts 4,467; wholesale buying prices unchanged except on U.8. extras twO cents a dozen higher outside; U.S. extras 565-60; U.S. mediums 48; U.S. standards 45-48; current receipts 41; dirties and checks 38.5. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP) (FSMNS)—Prices paid per dozen FOB Detroit for federal state graded eggs in case lots: ’ Whites—Grade A, jumbo 74-78, weighted average 7444; large 69-72, wtd avg 71; medium 53-56, wtd avg 54'2; small 36-39, wtd avg 3744: B large 59-63, wtd avg 62'4; peewees 32. Browns—Grade A jumbo 76, large 68- 71; wtd avg 6942; medium 54-55, wtd ave 54%4; small 39: B large 60-62, wtd ave 614: Peewees 27-32, wtd avg 31%; checks 32-39, wtd avg 33‘. Total weekly receipts Sept. 5-11 6,253 cases. *+ CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (AP) (USDA) — Potatoes: arrivals 136, on trdck 231; total U. 8. shipments 585; -supplies light, demand good; market firm to slightly stronger, especially russets; Idaho-Oregon russets $4.35; Washington russets $4.10-40; Wis- consin Chippewas $1.65-85, Pontiacs $2.00- 15, round whites $3.25, triumphs $1.90. ARTHUR J. LAW, Mayor ADA R. EVANS, City Clerk Sept. 12, 1953 MARQUETTE SUBD ; = = ALLEY = 20 a > a 199 f'98v197| 196) 195 fee > NS oO Ta n> C4 Lay ORDINANCE NO. 1222 Am ordinance to amend the building sore map of Ordinance No. 944, known as the ‘Building Zone Ordinance.” Adopted September 8, 1953. Effective September 18, 1953. An ordinance to amend the building gone map of Ordinance No. 944, known as the “Building Zone Ordinance.” The City of Pontiac érdains: Section 1. The building zone map of the Building Zone Ordinance is hereby amended to provide that the land in the description hereinafter set forth, be classified as Commercial! 1. Lots 195 to 197 inclusive, and Lots 198 and 199. Marquette Subdivision except the northerly 55 feet, pro- viding a 20 foot alley 1s deeded City of Pontiac,” Oakland County, Michi- an. Restion 2. The change in the building sone map in the above area to Commer- cial 1 ts made pursuant to the recom- mendation of the City Plan Commission and said Commission is hereby sappoint- ed to make a final report upon this amendment to this Commission previous to the public hearing to be held before this amendment is adopted, pursuant to Bection 4 of Act. No. 207 of Public Acts of 1921, as amended. Section 3. That not less than fifteen (15) days notice of the time and place of the public hearing on the final - sage of this amendment shall be given in a newspaper of genera) circulation in this city; that such public hearing is hereby fixed at June 9, 1953, Section 4. This ordinance shal] take effect ten (10) days from and after the Gate of its passage . the City Com- mission of the City of Pontiac. by the City Commis- 7 of Pontiac, this 8th day , A. D. 1963. ARTHUR J. LAW, Mayor ADA R. EVANS, City Clerk Sept. 12, 1953 Poultry DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) (FSMNS)—Prices paid per pound FIB Detroit for No. 1 quality live poultry: Heavy hens 2642-28; light hens 22-24; heavy broilers or fryers mixed sises 30- 35; heavy ducks 23 CHICAGO LIVE POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—Live poultry steady; ZZZZVeve% br ETAOIN ETAOINETA receipts 940; coops; F. O. B. paying agg unchanged;. heavy hens 23.5-26.5; ight hens 22-24, fryers or brollers 30- 33.5; old roosters 18-20; ducklings 27. Aga Khan to Be Sued Over Housing Project CARIO, Egypt (® — The Egyp- tian givernment is planning to sue the fabulously wealthy Aga Khan for 500,000 pounds ($1,441,- 250) charging the Moslem relig- ious leader failed to build prom- ised apartment houses on a 40- acre plot he bought in Cairo in 1946. ~- . Tewtik Attia, legal chief of the government's ministry of estates administered under Moslem law said today a summons is being prepared to be served on the 76-year-old chief of more than eight million Ismaili Moslems at his home in the south of France. Tremor Shakes Chile SANTIAGO, Chile W—A slight earth tremor hit Santiago last night. Reports from the port of Valpariso said the shock, also was felt there. There were no reports of damage in either city. Oak Parker Sentenced Stephen Szwarc, 42, of 23241 Wyomong, Oak Park, yesterday was sentendced to 7% to 15 years | in Southern Michigan Prison at! Jackson by Oakland County Cir- cuit Court Judge George B. Hart- rick on a morals charge. Business Notes: Nation's Roads Called Disgrace Michigan Included in Criticism by President of Trucking Association Countless bottlenecks which cut down the usefulness and safety of Michigan's 100,000 miles of highways and streets are typical of the entire nation, according to Walter F. Carey of Birming- ham, president of the American Trucking Association. Speaking before the 20th an- nual convention. of the Michigan | Trucking Association recently at St. Joseph, Carey said these bot- tlenecks on approaches to large metropolitan areas are ‘a na- tional disgrace costing us billions of dollars a year in wasted: fuel and time. « ‘Out on the country roaus, well- surfaced though they may be, narrow bridges, bad hills, sharp and dangerous curves are com- pounding our economic loss and are costing us!thousands of lives every year,”’ he asserted, Carey described inadequate highways as one of the major problems threatening the contin- ued economic growth of the na- tion. “We don’t need more road mileage,’ Mr. Carey said, ‘‘but if we don't do something about the mileage we have now — if we n't make it adequate for the volume and speed of today’s motor vehicle traffic — we are soon going to find ourselves in exactly the same position as though we had no automobiles or trucks.”’ Don H. Smith has been ap- pointed sales promotion man- ager of the Kaiser-Willys sales division of Willys Motors, Inc. Smith joined Willys through its predecessor company, Willys- “Overland, in 1949 as a regional sales manager. R. C. Trundle, president of Trundle Engineering Co., Cleve- land, will speak at the opening dinner meeting of the Michigan Chapter of the American Market- ing Association at 7 p. m. Tues- day in Detroit. Briggs Manufacturing Co. of Detroit has declared a dividend of 75 cents a share payable Sept. 30 to stockholders of record, Sept. 21. The nation’s life insurance companies now have more than $13,000,000,000 of their policy funds invested in public utility securities, and the earnings on behalf of policyholders from this investment now exceed $400,- 000,000 annually, according to the Institute of Life Insurance. Dr. Lynn D. Allen Jr. and Dr. F. M. Hathaway, both of Pontiac, will take part in a discussion on the effect of three dimensional movies on vision at the Michi- gan Optometric Association’s 57th annual convention Sept. 20-22 in Detroit. Dr. Allen is editor of the publication, the Hathaway is chairman of the association’s visual problems in schools committee. Policeman Goes AWOL to ‘Cool Off’ Troubles BROOKLINE, Mass, (—A po- liceman who went to sea for 10 days aboard a fishing trawler to “cool off’’ thinks his punishment— three months suspension—is too severe, Patrolman Joseph T. McLaugh- lin said in his appeal to the State Civil Service Commission yester- day that he had private difficul- | ties and needed to take the trip to ‘‘cool off.’’ His appeal was taken under ad- visement. Ex-Ring King Flings Accusation at Rogell DETROIT (®—Peter Rettich, 42, former Michigan middleweight boxing champion, stormed up to William G. (Billy) Rogell, former Detroit Tiger shortstop, in City Council chambers yesterday. “If it happens agdin,”’ Rettich sputtered, ‘‘I’ll give you a bust on the nose.” He accused Rogell, now a city councilman and up for re-election, of either removing Rettich - for - council placards or tacking Rogell signs over them at advantageous spots. “Nuts,” retorted Rogell, ‘I haven't bought any posters. You ean tear down any you find.” Nobody’s nose got busted. Fremont Opens Clinic FREMONT (® — Clinic for treat- ment of physically handicapped children has been opened here under the joint sponsorship of the Fremont Foundation and _ the United Cerebral Palsey Association of Michigan. SES ee SO rl eC et Awaiting Return of Servicemen SAN DIEGO, Calif. (—Hundreds of articles left behind by men on} their way to war at the Armed Services YMCA here are as faith- ful as the little tin soldier, red with rust, in the poem. A 3-foot high toy Panda sits pa- tiently, gathering dust. A model ; airplane and a cowboy hat bear | the same check number. Oscar Highly, 68, custodian, some | times dusts them off. Most of the | men, who checked the odd assort- ment of trinkets, souvenirs and personal effects, were outbound to Korea. Almost 15,000 servicemen used the lockers in the storage room each month. Some forget to call for their belongings, others don’t have time before going aboard transports and a good many ex- pect they will be there when they return. Highley gets 1,000 letters a year about these left-behind items and some carry heartbreaks. They come from mothers, wives and families of men asking that the contents of the lockers be sent to their homes. The men themselves will never call. Many pets have been checked, but there was one that Highley refused. It was a diamond-back rattlesnake. Premonition Wins St. Ledger Classic DONCASTER, England (?)— Premonition, owned by Brigadier Wyatt but handled by Queen Elizabeth's trainer, today won the famed St. Leger horse race, oldest of Britain's season classics. French-owned Northern Light II was second. Queen Elizabeth's chestnut colt, Aureole, was third. Premonition, who went off at 10-1 odds won by htree lengths. | Motor Car Production Declines During Week DETROIT w — Motor vehicle production in the United States this week will total 116,306 units, Ward’s Automotive Reports said today. Consisting of 97,317 cars and 18,- 989 trucks, this compares with 125,- 887 units produced last week. The decline was attibuted to the Labor Day holiday, a shortage of trans- mission parts, and inventory re- adjustments. Receives 1 to 5 Years Melvin R. White, 22, of 710 Hartland Rd., Birmingham, yes- terday was sentenced to one to five years in Southern Michigan Prison at Jackson on a charge of carrying concealed weapons by Judge George B. Hartrick. Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—Salable hogs 300, to- tal 2,000; compared week ago: Barrows and gilts steady, sows 25 to 60 lower. At the week's close the top stood at 25.50 sap very sparingly for some choice 275 b weights. A few lots choice 220-250 Ib butchers brought 25.35 and several loads choice, mostly one and two 215-230 ib weights 25.25. Closing bulk choice 190- 240 Ib butchers brought 24.75-25.25 with most choice 160-180 Ib weights at 23- 24.75 according to weight. Sows weigh- ing 400 lbs and lighter in sizable lots closed at 22-24.00, mainly 22.25 and above, with bulk 400-500 lb sows late at 21- 22.25, a few head to heavier weights as low as 20.00. Salable cattle 200, total not given; compared week ago: Slaughter steers and heifers mostly 1-250 higher, in- stances up 3.00 or more on kings grad- ing low-choice and below but light steer yearlings grading higher choice and bet- ter showing the least advance; cows 1-23.00 higher, most upturn on commercial cows; bulls 80-1.00 higher; vealers and Slaughter calves 1-2.00 higher, calves up most; good and choice stockers and feeders around 50 higher, common and medium grades 1.00 and more higher; top 30.00 for five loads prime 1240-1300 Ib fed steers, highest since last February with the exception of one day in mid- July when the top momentarily reached 30.50, week's bulk choice and prime fed steers and yearlings 900 lbs and heavier 24.00-29.00, mostly 25.00 up after Tues- day, few prime loads weight up to | 1350 Ibs 29.50 and 29.75, prime 1425 Ib steers peached 28.50. prime 1744 1b weights early 25.00. rough but choice 1600 lb weights late 25.25, most h: commercial to low chotce steers 19-24.00 good near-1500 Ib weights 23.25, six loads mostly commercial 1150-1418 lb Montanas 19-20.00 but these high-yielding cattle 12.00, load prime 1100 Ib mix steers and heifers 28.00, choice and prime heif- ers and mixed yearlings 23.00-27.00, © to low choice heifers 17.50-22.50, utility to low commercial grass heifers late 11-14.00; utility and commercial cows closed at 10.50-13.00 with a few to 13.50, late bulk canners and cutters 9-10.50. few heavy cutters 11-14.00, good heavy and mediumweight fat bulls 10.80-11.00: few prime vealers 22.00, bulk commercial to choice 14-21.00, few light culls down to 5.00; choice slaughter calves reached 18.50 late: most medium to low choice feeding steers and yearlings 13 50-18 ‘ common to low medium stock steers 10-12.75. Balable sheep 200. total not given; com- Pared week ago: Yearlings sold 159” higher, but there was no appreciable change in price of slaughter sheep. Light receipts locally and around the market circuit plus higher wholesale prices on choice and prime dressed lamb were mainly responsible for the upturn in the live market. Receipts at Chicago due at least inipart to the Labor Day holi- day, were the smallest in six weeks. Total salable supplies at the 12 leading markets were down some 40 per cent from last week and were about 60 per cent under the corresponding week of 1952. In the wholesale dressed meat trade prices of choice and prime lamb were boosted 2-400, but good grade lamb sold mostly steady. Early in the period @ string of 80-85 Ib choice and prime Utah lambs sold at 19.50 at which time the best natives moved at 18.50. On the close, however, good to prime native spring slaughter lambs sold at 18 50- 21.50, with a few selected sorts 21.75- 22.00 to city butchers. Seics of year- lings were completed at 12-16.00, the latter price late in the week for choice and prime sorts. The 12.00 yearlings were utility and good 88 lb weights sell- ing late in the period. — 609 Community Nationa] Bank 710-712 West Huron Street ‘Thatcher, Patterson & Wernet : Pontiac’s Oldest Insurance Agency B= 9 MIMEOGRAPHING PHOTO OFFSET PRINTING — LETTERS—BULLETINS—RULED FORMS — POSTAL CARDS — LEGAL FORMS — PRICE LISTS PONTIAC LETTER SHOP B idg. FE 2-9224 Phone FE 2-9921 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 |Stored Trinkets Lodge Calendar Notice is hereby given that a vacancy has occurred in the of- fice of Worthy Chaplain of the faternial order of the Eagles Aerie No. 1233 Pontiac. Nomina- tions’ at the next regular meet- ing, Tues., Sept. 15, 1953 at 8 p.m. All members are urged to attend the meeting. Albert D. Mallett, Secretary. News in Brief In Oakland County Circuit Court yesterday Gerald D. Ross, 17, of 4520 Bryant, Flint was fined $50 plus $50 court costs on a breaking and entering charge by Judge George B. Hartrick. Oakland County Circuit Court Judge George B. Hartrick yester- day sentenced Walter J. Smolarek, 18, of 13222 McDougall, Detroit, to 60 days in Oakland County Jail, three years probation and $250 court costs on charges of unlaw- fully driving away an automobile. Robert E. Dickson, of 1737 Kirkton, Clawson was placed on three years probation and assessed $250 court costs on a charge of | breaking and entering an automo- bile by Judge George B. rick in Oakland County Court yesterday. Hart- Circuit Pleading guilty to a morals charge yesterday LeRoy Smith, 33, of 1472 Rosedale Ave. was set for sentencing Sept. 18 by Oakland County Circuit Court Judge George B. Hartrick: If your friend’s in jail and needs bail, Ph. OR 3-7110. C. A. Mitchell. |Requirements Lowered for Observers in AF Requirements for entering trair- ing for a commission as an air- craft observer in the Air Force have been lowered, according to Sgt. P. R: Moore, in charge’ of Pontiac's Army and Air Force recruiting station. Only a high school diploma is now necessary to meet educa- tional requirements fér training, he | said. Previously two years of col- lege credit were asked. The two- year stipulation remains for men wishing to quality for pilot train- ing. ° Truck Driver Helps Police Catch Thugs NEW YORK (W®—tTruck driver James Brooks says he did nothing | more than any other citizen would | have done in helping capture two alleged holdup men Tuesday dur- ing a 60-mile-an-hour running 2) battle in the Lincoln Tunnel. Brooks, 53-year-old Negro, was officially honored yesterday by the | Port of New York Authority for | showing courage in carrying two officers on the running boards of| his truck to chase the holdup men. | Brooks—who drove off to work | after the arrest and whose identity wasn't learned until the toliowirig'! | day—said that he was more wor- | ried about the officers hanging dl | to his truck than himself? _ TWENTY-ONE Sentenced for Larceny James B. Edgil, 24, of 1737 Kirton, Royal Oak, was sentenced to one to five years in Southern Michigan Prison at Jackson on a grand larceny charge yesterday by Oakland County Circuit Court Judge George B. Hartrick. Call or See | James A. TAYLOR Agency 1210 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. for Your INSURANCE NEEDS! FE 4-2544 4 $ 3} DEEP FREEZE UPRIGHT > Newest and most modern freezer available today! We have $ several slightly marred in transit. $449.00 Value........ $249.00 ‘3 MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT 3 393 Orchard Lake Ave. 4 Here comes..... Scorchy Smith beg page Now another famous comic joins the Pontiac Press! Seorchy Smith, space ace, zooms into the comic pages with his exciting space adventures of a twentieth cen- tury man among the satellites and planets. Follow the story of Scorchy and Lera in this fast-paced science fiction that takes you right into the future. Start it nning next Monday in the comic of the Pontiac Press Monday in the comic page of the Press. - ‘TWENTY-TWO Gen. John Hull Succeeds Clark Leaves for Far East Soon to Take Over Job as U. N. Commander By FRE DHOFFMAN WASHINGTON (®—Gen. John E. Hull, a desk officer for much of his 36-year military career, leaves the Pentagon soon to command troops along the uneasy truce line in Korea. . The tall. strapping Ohioan was named by President Eisenhower vesterday to succeed Gen. Mark Clark as supreme United Nations commander in the Far East. Clark retires Oct. 30 rm Hull, now 58. has not seen com- hat since World War I when, as a yumior infantry officer, he won the Silver Star‘ for gallantry during the Aisne-Marne offensive. His World War II vears’ were spent in the less dramatic but vital yobs of handling operations for all the far fling overseas theaters. He worked closely in this work with Gen. George C Marshall, then Atmy chief of. staff * * Py Hull became something of an expert on atomic weapons five vears ago when he had charge of atom bomb tests condueted at Eniwetok atoll in the Pacific. He also is given credit for play- ing an important role in the devel- opment of the Army’s giant atom- ic cannon, one of the world's new- est and most potent weapons. For the past two years, Hull has been vice chief of staff of the Army. = * * Unlike many of his,fellow gen- eral officers, Hull is not a West Pointer. He entered the Army through the reserve in 1917 shortly after graduating from Miami Uni- * versity at Oxford, Ohio. After garrison duty and time spent {n both attending and in- structing at Army schools during peace time, just before Pearl Harbor Hull came to Washington to work with the war plans division of the General Staff. He held top administrative posts in Washington until July, 1946, when he took command of Army forces in the Middle Pacific, in- cluding Hawaii. President Warren G. opened the July, 1923. Harding Alaska railroad in nes | ie; oc © Wnwaey | Semrsten Gatmerat © Seema] SMe, | en; Rea) Wee, Cee Sree ert Mires ere Cem ee | SMS Perth A-Dust Bomb Nonexistant, Scientist Says TUCSON, Ariz. u—Secret atom- ic research conducted here for 242 years involves ‘‘the absorption of radioactive elements by plants,”’ University of Arizona scientist in charge says. Earlier, newsmen had quoted Dr. Wallace H. Fuller as _ indicating his work on radioactive strontium might be used to produce a power- ful ‘‘dust bomb” that might crip- for Lend Lease Pay ple food supplies for a nation. * * * But Fuller later issued a state- ment which said: “As far as I know the dust bomb is nonexistent and no dust bomb has ever been planned or pro- duced.”’ : He has been working under con- {tract to the Atomic Energy Com- mission, The research, Fuller said, ; had showed that strontium is simi- |lar to calcium and that both ele- |ments are absorbed equally well | i by plants through, their leaves or ifrom the soil, | * * Radio-strontium might cause ra- diation sickness in animals if it | were showered over forage, he isaid, and ‘‘man also could get it »y consuming leafy vegetables.” = $8 Million Budget Sets |Record for Lutherans | ST, LOUIS uw — The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod has. adopt- ed a record eight million dollar budget for the 1954-55 fiscal year. The figure, announced last night after the synod’s annual financial conference, tops the 1953 budget by about 25 per cent. More than. three million dollars will go for foreign missions, in- stitutions for blind and deaf and for students in non-church colleges and universities. A sum of $500,000 was voted for, continuation of the synod's nation- al television program, ‘'This Is the iter |‘Shalt Not Steal’ Book Most Frequently Gone TULSA, Okla —The book that commands, ‘‘Thou shalt not steal,”’ is the one most frequently stolen, City Librarian James E. Gourley reports. According to Gourley, six to eight "Bibles are missing from his shelves every year. ‘‘And,”’ he adds, ‘‘that seems to be the ex- perience of libraries all over the | | } | i |wrecked planes at the local air-| country.”’ Russia Pressed —Forgery Suspect Goes |Too Far on Hat Deal OKLAHOMA CITY \#—A 26-year- old forgery suspect pressed his} luck a little too far. WASHINGTON (® — The U. S. government is trying again to get . . back from Russia ships and money |~ Officers said the man gave a borrowed when the two countries| department store cashier a worth- were allies against Germany. | less $15 check to buy a cheap hat A memorandum handed Ambas-| Thursday. He received several dol- sador Georgi N. Zarubin yester-| ars in change. day renewed American demands| Yesterday he returned to get a for return of 670 ships, mostly refund on that hat. That's when small naval vessels. Under Secre-| detectives took him to city jail. ary of State Walter B. Smith also) reminded Zarubin that negotiations | for settling the lend lease account have been dragging on more than Town’s Tax Account Six years. 1-Cent Check Balances ——— a = a __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1953 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIE i sewers) | cherie Sees SR SANS SSE tee NDS By Merrill Blosser ei nA yu The United States asks 800 mil-| WEST SENECA, N. Y. uy — A lion dollars in compensation for an| one-cent check has balanced the estimated $2,.600,000,000 in lend | million-dollar tax account of this | | town rear Buffalo. William H. Wershin, the receiver | of taxes, wrote the check to cor- Club Collects Scrap | rect a shortage in his $1,233,354.84 pene ¥ : collections. KEENE, N. H. (UP) — The Ro- | County Treasurer Frank A. Slade tary Club here has collected 25|haq informed him his returns tons of scrap aluminum to finance | showed only $1,233,354.83. scholarship loans. Nearly one ton| For 24 years, Wershin had bal- of the scrap was obtained from| anced his books to the penny. He mailed Slade the one-cent check, using a three-cent stamp. by Galbraith lease items, The Russians last year offered 300 million. port. SIDE GLANCES ‘} 7. mo fag. © & PeL_OF Cop. 1953 by MEA Servien, me. 7-/2 4 ‘“‘Maybe that dog of your mother’s did win a blue ribbon, but I still says .he’s dumb—can’t even learn to shake hands!”’ THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert UTTLE GIRL WOLETS f= FREQUENTIN QOTTE WADEQDATE 5 “1 WMED YOU GET UNPACKED. MARN .1 SRHOOLD LIRE FOR YOu WO READ TO MES OOLET 1S NOW! COME .CHILD = 1 SHALL ACGDAINT WOO WTR TRE DUTIES 1 SHALL EXPECT NOOO TO FOLYVLL YSESIDES BEING RELPFOL TO MY DARLINGS, —— OF COURSE! « I KNEW j Boy wien ALL/ THIS BLI ENT ean WONG Of CAR SITS (DLE INR TANGLERCOT ING MY EYES, BuT IF 4) THE GARAGE! IF <4. AT NIGHT, r ser THe ZA MARTHA PERSISTS)? BUT NOW DOWN TLL Neues IN MAKING A HE'S GOING BE ABLE tO MULE TRAIN OF # { FULL BLAST S\( STACK IT y)\ ME, I MUST IN DAy- AGAIN/ BORROW IT/ TIMES OUT OUR WAY DIXIE DUGAN I HAVEN'T A FRIEND LEFT NO ONE L lay a) WENT_ON IN THERE / BY ITSELF / THERE ARE NO PROGRAMS THIS TIME OF NIGHT J , ‘ik i wi \ YIKES /Tuars ME R THINGS] N SHE WAS PRETTY ) NOW DON’T y MAD WHEN SHE BE GETTIN’ WENT TO SEE MORE OF THEM EAM — YOU FEMALE *INTUITIONS THAT'S NOT AUNT FRITZI--- HOW MUCH WILL YOU PAY ME TO BURN THESE LEAVES ? _. VERY MUCH tar bot ate. nies. FAS 7 f, Os Pt -SEMT- 12 Nie Tm fog Uo Fe —-ERWE Cape 1953 by United Feature Syndicat. te SPUASAV AW /L € CFE, Of AR Acts -omeewed VL) 4G OY sf, NEAT YOU MEAN THEM TWO THAT CARRIED THE BOSS IN? TREY RODE OFF... HEADIN’ . Sou OKAY, SMUGGLER ! THIS 1S THE END OF THE LINE FOR You! TIE HIM UP, Guys! ..) MISSION ACCOMPLISHED” HES THE ESCAPED SMUGGLER, ALL RIGHT, ASTRO/ ~ MISSION ACCOMPLISHED ”// A SMUGGLING RING ON THE MOON! 1S RIGHT/ WE FOUND ROGERS MISSING SPACE CHART-AND BUSTED UP SPACE ACADEMY IS GOING TO LOOK MIGHTY FINE - AND PEACEFUL! Lp 4 . s- Gupe. 1953 by MEA Berwice ine T Rog © SB Pe On ~ 3 SHE WAS DUE AT “DOVEENS” Ao GIRL! SHE MUST VE \| | AT 11:45, TO SEE A DISPLAY iv SNEAKED OUTA THES || | O° FOUNDATION GARMENTS... : BEAUTY PARLOR AT |] | WHATEVER THAT (5! mavee SOME OTHER EXIT... I CAM CATCH HER THERE! F SHES STICKING D J) wae PETS im” am CALLED YOU THREE TMES.’ AND KNOW YOU HEARD ME BECAUSE Lad) “a ; & | = ‘ 1 ——4 ate t S2ets55 SS 33 a Ax. mf a 00 SU. | \ We \ | wl] b bh i" hs \" | 4 | i | i! JIRwurans ~9- —_— “Ma A. 2 By GOT HERE W TH’) Sy HILLS, AL. ITS TH RIGHT 10€A-—f GETTIN’ AWAY pm FROM TH’ HOT, PS STUFFY CITY TRUMPING YOUR PARTNER’S ACE Webster-Roth a: GRANDMA YEP...THERE SHE IS, GAWKING AT SOME- THING! TLL UST SUP IN UNNOTICED... Pape. 1963 by th Bormee, ine TM hep. 8 Pet OF tart I KNOW IT’S TIME T’GO HOME, BUT YOU HEARD HER SAY SHE ~ Solar Experts Study Eneray cal and nuclear f ~ Ways to Harness Sun’s Power for Fuel MADISON, Wis. (®—Thirty five ! of the worlds’ top researchers on, solar energy convened here today | o “dream up” new approaches toward harnessing the sun for Chemical Society, nearly gone, longest. committee, declared in a speech | earlier this week that research on | utilization of solar energy is need- | ed because ‘‘the sun will still a going strong when all .our chemi- | Contest’ S End uels are exhaust- term as president of the American: test told that organ-! bridesmaids waiting for someone | the home ‘and industrial heat and pow- er. The “sun men''—and one “sun woman’’—will attempt to outline areas of further research best de- , ny ny releasi funds for gas and oil are exhausted. Up. to now ‘nothing of substantial prom- ise’ in that field has been turned up. one of the conference officials cities, Lester J. said nothing about future prospects for getting power from atomic fuels, but Dr. Farrington Daniels of the University of Wisconsin, who is chairman of the conference. would be week. Air Group to Consider Dole of Airport Funds airport struction at four lower peninsula it Was announced today. Maitland, spent until late f ty ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS today, as world's en. > * * con- | Last night next that division last night. | The other bathing suit winners | years, when he becomes 70. 2 Miss America Hopefuls Near N.J. W—The | nervous ization in a Chicago speech that to throw them a bouquet. “according to optimistic guesses, in a few hundred years, or at best a couple of thousand,” supply of ordinary fuels will be | with coal lasting the With the preliminaries over the | girls will wait out the day until the final judging tonight, when ten finalists will be named and the | elimination progresses until winner of the $50,000 title is chos- | Six of the contestants have aj} big jump on the field—their vic- / tories in talent and bathing suit | : LANSING (UP) — Michigan's | signed to allow future, generations Aeronautics Cocrttccnn will Beeet | | preliminaries in the past / to tap the. sun for such energy |), Te eeAVHa Sept. °4 to consider nights. when “limited’’ sources of coal, | - 2 ospk « ° = 21-year-old Miss Del- | aware, Lois Ann Alava of Wilming- | ton, won in the talent division by executive | playing the cadenza from Grieg's director of the State Aeronautics | picno concerto in A minor. said. - * #8 Department, said he would ask’ Miss California, Patricia Ann | The conference announcement | the commission to ‘approve re-| Johns, an 18-year-old beauty from | lease of the funds. However, he! Fresno, ed.”’ ATLANTIC CITY, So . : . uth Dakota, a |Miss America hopefuls went into | Top Scientists Consider Daniels, who just completed a) the last day of the week-long con- | Spearfish. . as 52 asts. the | three a year. on earlier nights were Miss Wyo- | ming Elaine Lois Holkenbrink of | Forrington and Miss Pennsylvania Evelyn Margaret Ay of Epharta. The other two girls with firsts in talent are Miss Virginia, Anne Lee Ceglis of Norfolk and Miss | Delores Jerde of ‘ Crime, a rarity in Sark's long and | peaceful history, packed the Is- land's jail today and put its police But the girls also are judged on ~ 00th of them—to searching for | Lon well they look in an evening |gown and on their personalities. | Results of these preliminaries are smallest of Britain's Channel Is- mot announced and add a large | amount of uncertainty to any fore: | Fi French coast. It has a population bootleg liquor. * “The jail, Carre, 34. His crime: GRAND RAPIDS | master Arthur W. | ter. Ends 40 Years Service Grand Rapids will complete 40! occupied} « years with the postal service Sun- Ww — Post- Hamilton of | years tha said he could not relep&e amounts | suit (one-piece as required by con-| ilton was an inspector from 1923 | use. or locations of airport$ where it test rules) well enough to win in| to 1948 when he became postmas- | got his poteen. SATURDAY. Uncommon 'Drunk Packs Island Jail SARK, Channel Three-mile-long Sark lands, nestling near the northwest reputedly the world’s None of the girls won more than SMallest caboose, | one preliminary and any one of | affair 15 feet long and 10 feet wide. | lthe 52 entrants has a chance to ' Packing it for the night was Dennis | be among the 10 finalists chosen | tonight. The number will be whit- | tled to five and then Miss America. still on the blacklist—sober Sark’s | | circus. of 1954 will be named to reign for! way of keeping tipplers on the! wagon by banning them from the slipped and plunged to the saw- island’s nine pubs, His punishment: and a four pounds ($11.20) fine. It was the second time in five } the tiny jail has been’ Jailed for Drunkeness ‘Officials had to borrow | | bedding’ and blankets because che | wore a_ white bathing | day. Holder of a law degree, Ham- old ones were too motheaten to’ jailed here last night for being too found drunk while! Police were conducting an all-| SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 _ TWE NTY- THREE _ Trapeze Artist Falls, ls Severely Injured TACOMA, Wash. wW — A young woman trapeze artist fell 50. feet to the ground last night before the eyes of a stunned audience. | She was. badly injured. | She was identified as Papa Do! Paulo, 22. She uses the name Miss Mara asa performer with Ring- ling Bros., Barnum & Bailey cir- cus. Hospital attendants said she suf- | fered several breaks of the back. and a broken ankle, elbow and wrist. She is a native of Spain. Her address was listed as Sarasota, Fla., winter headquarters of the Islands We the man, cover is trol. is a one-man Performing without a net, she ‘dust 50 feet below. a night in jail! | Uncle Sam in Jam; spirited, | was charged with being drunk. Farmers Near Adrian to Meet for Corn Day ADRIAN Michigan next Thursday at the Lloyd Rue- sink farm, five miles northwest of Adrian, for the annual Corn Field Day sponsored by Michigan State College. Liovd Nelson, crop specialist and program chair- | brid dev elopment, and disease con- Allied Troops Stage |, ‘Maneuvers in Europe FRANKFURT, Germany A — Defending forces counterattacked | sharply today as 175,000 Allied" troops went into the final a of Europe's biggest. postwar field | maneuvers. Simulated use of atomic weap. | ons featured the defense problem worked out French and Belgian troops in the DENVER —Uncle Sam was! hilly country north of here. “Operation Monte Carlo.”’ ; within artillery range of the Rus- Fred T. Uncle Sam, 48, an In-| sian Zone frontier, called for an) students He plans to retire in three out drive to determine where Carre! dian laborer from Mouton, Utah,| Allied push against a mythical No date has been set for the wet | invader from the East. Downriver Bus Strike Settlement Proposed DETROIT (UP) — King Boring, Dearborn director of transporta- tion, was expected to summon union and company officials to- day to discttss a proposed settle- ment of the Intertown Suburban will Lines bus sirike. hy- | The settlement was proposed !late Friday by a governor's fact- finding panec!. It called for a 12- ’ | cent-an-hour wage increase for suburban bus drivers. Drivers walked off their jobs ast Thursday, leaving 40,000 com- muters in Dearborn and other downriver communities without normal means of public transpor- - iaiion. — Southeastern ; will gather | (UP) farmers college farm Ss said tillage, demonstrations weed control, Romeo Parents Reveal Daughier’s Engagement ROMEQ—Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Jacob announce the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Ann, to | Harold L. Vincent, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Vincent of Midland. | Both Barbara and Harold are at Michigan State itn by U. ‘SS... British Staged | | ding. rd 4 5 Death Notices BRAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1957 AN- | drew D. Bentley, Mich, Funeral service was held Friday. Sept. 11, | a a et ee EE EE es, ee, The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS cancel the charges for that at 2 p.m. at the Sparks-Gn {fin ! Chapel with Rev. Miller officiat- at oe) ing. [yj DIAL FE 2.8181 LILLYCROP, .SEPTEMBER 10, 1953, | Eliza Ann, 19905 Beverly Rd, Bir- mingham. age &# beloved mother | From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. of Mrs. Hope G. Scott. Mrs. Dorts Huntwork, Sidnev and Claude! arte Lillycrop, dear sister ot John | od ee ee tes and Samuel] Outen. Funera serv. | eee ane Pree ne {ce will be held Monday, Sept. 14 for errors. other apteeaa at 2 p. m. at the Pursiley Funeral | . | Home with Rev. Savage Offictat- yortion o I ti ing, Mrs, Lillycrop will le in state | CEE ee of the advertisement which at the Pursley Funeral Home : ’ has been rendered valueless after 7 p. m. Saturday, Interment , : : i HI] C f | through the error. When in Oak Hill Cemetery. cancellations are made be SCHAFFER, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953, sure to get your “kill num- | Ida May, 4133 Wenonah Lane, | bers." No adjustments will Waterford Township: age 75, be-| be given without it, loved mother of Robert Land ‘ Jacob Schaffer Jr., Mrs. Lillian Closing time for advertise- Jones Mrs. Juanita Weager and ments containing type sizes Mrs. Katharine Mills. Mrs. Schaf- larger than regular agate fer will lie in state at the C, | type is 12 o'clock noon the Godhardt Funeral Home. Keego day previous to publication. Harbor, until tonight when she will be taken to Ironton. Mo. for Transient Want Ads may funeral service and _ burial in| be cancelled up to 9.30 the _ Collins Cemetery. _ et day of publication. a In Memoriam ) CASH WANT AD RATES wees ere r -— m—nn _—e ees Lines 1! Day 3 Days 6 Days IN MEMORY OF MAGGIE ROL- 2 125 1 63 52 lins, who passed away Sept. 12, | 4 ‘i 60 * 12 56 1946. , } 5 2.00 3.60 5.40 The memortes are jewels that | 6 2 40 i. 648 no one can steal. 1 28 5 04 7 58 : Death is a heart-ache that nothing | 8 : oe 5 ea acc can heal, 6 6 48 Some may forget you now that) Lo 3 60 648 — ! you're gone, But we shall remember nq mat- | ter how ‘ong. | Her six, chi'dren IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR belove' a : 5 % , Wanted! EXPERIENCED DOMESTIC RE- } : - frigeration & appliance service PINSETTERS Ambulance Service man. Excellent working cond., Appear in person, Moncalm FE 2-0189 ¢ salary open. FE 2-6400 rerthinae Center. 30 East Mont : al.n + I HAVE A JOB FOR YOU. YOU : ; Te 7? Oakland ave: name your own wages. Pay day CAB DRIVERS ON R ENTAL BAS- starts right away. Phone FE is, steady for night“ shift, also Funeral Directors 4). 45172. MAN OR tel A ie WORK IN part time Apply 438 Orchard Lake __ between 4 and 6 p.m, EXPERIENCED STOCK BOYS TO | parking lot eve., Sat. & Brace Funeral Home Sun. 16 or older. Apply Riker| work steady or part time. Spada- Estab. 1886 Distinguished Service| Garage. 59 Wa ee: TCE 10E Wer ot . = uron. | S 18 OR OLDER Donelson-Iohns! FUNERAL HOME “DESIGNED FOR FUNERALS” Tage, 59 Wayne. must be Dee graph. experienced, Voorhees-Siple Mercury line of cars. Poster at 40 W. Pike St. TO WORK from 5:30 to 12 midnight tn lge storage garage. Apply Riker WANTED TOOL LATHE HAND Wohlfeil- Engineering. 2274 8S. Tele- AUTO SALESMAN WANTED. AG- gressive & ambitious salesman to sell the fast-moving Lincoln and Bee Fred GAS STATION ATTENDANT WTD. mechanicrily inclined. 40009 Tele- _ graph. Bloomfield Hills EXPERIENCED PUMP INSTALLATION AND SERVICE MAN Work on contract basis Orly men with ex et need apply. Avply Plumb & Heating pt. Perry St. Dasemen t. FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service, Plane or Motor 2-8378 = Add It Up Sears, Roebuck & Co. 154 N. Saginaw SINGLE MAN ON FARM, | MILK. : ing exp. necessary. 3085 Cemetery Lots 4A meenener Ba. ~ eral WOOL | . APPLY Good hard work plus a Liberty Cleaners, Birmingham. I WHITE CHAPEL good product and organi-| yan wrp. FoR LIGHT REPAIR + 2 sections of 6 graves each. Of-| zation equals good pay! wort in Pontiac garage. Keego fered very reasonable. Talk to : : , Sales & Service. hard Mr. ei © W. Huron st.| for you. We make nO|_Lake Rd Keego Harbor, Mich. Ls oaiiioeel ; = wild promises but we do} S44ESMEN — WHO MUST EARN a@ good pav everv week of the rd say that if you will put year We have a low pressure Ps outdoor ‘mprovement servi that | BOX REPLIES forth some real effort} 7, out of io prospects, buy_ and ‘U| your weekly pay will be! ings "paid in full’ weekly. I you At 10 a.m. today. cetut wil give us hours per day of | . . very: satisfying. | If you! jour ‘ime — we will Ge th there were replies at ; : iterview ° PE 2-688 1 d = or interview Phone FE2 are an experienced auto the Press office in : x | ene S: _— mobile salesman, come in| ConTACT MEN FOR MEDIUM the following boxes: and see us | 3, 5, 6, 10, 15, 17, 18, | 20, 21, 27, $9, 41, 42, 66, 67, 73, 88, 94, 95, 97, 100, 107, 108, 113. of work Salary __Olds Garage, Northville. and learn! - about the many benefits and fine future we offer. Earl R, Milliman Co. WTD. BUMP & PAINT MAN. LOTS com mission. Vacation with pay. Chevrolet & heavy tool die & production shop. Good commission and drawing ac- __count. OL 1-3911 ACCOUNTANT, SEMI-SENIOR FOR public accounting firm. Submit written application giving details regarding training and qualifica- tions. Berger & Wild. 23810 Wood- ward, Pleasant Ridge. MAN TO EARN $150. AND UP PER week. Long needed invention. Ad- vertised worldwide. Prospects are everywhere. Full or part time. a Exclusive. No investment. Free Livby. McNeil & Libke Canned samples. Write Red Comet, Inc., Piece 2 Poods; opportunity for advance- |. DePt. 267-0 Littleton, Colorado. ment, must have desire for per- | B WANTED. IDEAL WORK- manent connection and ambition| {9g conditions, .iberal guarantee, AO progress, between 25 and 2 chair shop. Paul's Barber oe prog 35 . an (years, age, Lfrocery experience pre- | _2409 Voorheis Rd. Ph. FE 2-0508 erred, paid vacations, retirement e ‘y lan and other benefits. Must Sales Representative — ave car, expenses paid when used on company business. State I ontiac and ~S qualifications, write 201 Fox| Surrounding TErleory Bldg. Detroit 1. Michigan _ A permanent high earnin TO MAKE portunity representing wel rs ~ WANT A CHANCE MONEY?? Many of our new men are making tqblished firm with top line of pliant mairtenance products Don’t miss it! Get that! well over $100 a week. WHAT oc ‘ ! - : feituring famous PLASTIC ROCK DO THEY DO? THEY’ SELL!! FLOORING. “t Deal with indu:try . ° i ve ! efore MM vod job by reading the | are Caer men .who never} SION “VERA E30 Poiea eae ' " 5 ‘ on making oe pis at. Protected tertitory, leads from le p ‘ante columns ave: chr ° ; national advertising. Write United you have a car ‘ | and cam qualify. with top. ref __Laboratories Cleveland 12, Ohio. emcees, &r +f EVERY DAY, until you, PON DLAC BOX 29 WE'LL TELL YOU FREES. HOW TOOLMAKERS . ! Al NO — INCE NECESS eee a DIE PTRYOUT MEN has 1 = : i e it so, place a OFFICE MANAGER. STOCK CON- aly & Pere roi, credit and collection experi- Work Wanted ad to! ence required. Usual company Joda Industries, Inc, benetits, opportunity te advance. 66 N. Park Bt. ‘ommis SALESLADIES for sportswear permanent or part time positions PEGGY'S 16 N. SAGINAW TYPIST WHO CAN ASSIST BOOK- keeper. 4865 Higriand Rd. (M-59) Airway Products Inc WOMAY FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK and care of school age children. | COLORED GIRL. LIVE IN. Living in vicinity. 6 am. to 1 _ Pm. 249 Chamberiain. — ee WANTED CASHIER AND OFFICE girl, full time, steady work. Good wages. 40 hour week. Pleasant surroundings. Barnett's Clothing Store. 19 Saginaw { ! ' | YOUNG WOMAN WITH SCME! bookkeeping exp. wtd. for ac-| cointing and tax office Exr work cond., 5 day wk. FE 4-2909 for appt. TYP'’STS ADDRESS rah ar gi complete lists. aa “wen Free detrils beet Knoxville, “a HAPPY BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN Wante’ dealers to show our love- ly lingerie and children’s wear on plan. Earn $40 to 860 a week. Write to Mrs. Doroth Kay, 12666 McDougall, Detroit Mich. Licut “HOUSEWORK AND COOK- ing. No laundry. Other em- . ployed, $25. Live in. MI 4-1261. | Wanted Female Help 6 DINING ROOM WAITRESSES Experiences necessary. Must be over 18. Night shift) Apply in person. No phone calls, please. TED'S Woodward at Square Lk. Rd. FOUNTAIN WAITRESS | NO NIGHTS OR SUNDAYS UNIFORM FURNISHED MACHUS BAKERY _ 160 W. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM WANTED MIDDLEAGED HOUBE- keeper care. for home for gentle- man, anpear in person after 6 30 _ P-m., 225 Leon Rd., Walled Lake ELDERLY BABY SITTER. 5 DAYS 14 and. 25 mo. old children. Ap- ply after 4 p. m. Headquarters ge No. State Park. Mrs. _ Tom Kern. RECEPTIONIST FOR DOCTOR'S office -Must type. Age 25 to 40. Hours 10 a. m. to 7 p. m. Write for interview stating age and experience. Pontiac Press Box 107. exERmyreD WAITRESS WTD. A 5- ; 8ILK PRESSER, EXPERIENCED, steady or part time. Brown Clean- ers 1794 W. Maple, Birm. MI _ 4-2400 GIRL FOR HOUSEWORK AND cooking, stay nights, 5 days. May- air 6-3915. EXP. SALAD GIRI APPLY IN erson Elk s Temple. 114 Orchard ake Ave. WHITE WOMAN FOR housework and care of FE 2-5893 after 5 AVON PRODUCTS Has opening in good territories for re'table, ambitious women. Sub- stantial income. Write Mrs. Mar- garet Harvey. 42 Murphy St. Pon- tiac or call FE 2-7081 for appt. WOMAN TO CARE FOR CHIL- dren. More for home than wages. OA 832172 before 3 p. m. PERMANENT POSITION “WITH good salary bony? insurance bene- fits, paid vacations to agreeable energetic woman to clean, pare simple dinners and _ help some with 2 small children. Love- ly country home with every mod- ern convenience and appliance. _MA 6-2737 ; a 2 WAITRESSES FOR SODA fountain and grill 936 Joslyn. WOMaN FOR LIGHT HOUSE- work and care of five year oid boy More for home than wages. Call after 630. FE 5-0688 GIRL TO CARE FOR 2 CHILDREN, > day wk. FE 7-9107. LIGHT invalid. live tn. — EXPERIENCED . WAITRESS, 12 p m. to 8 p. m sift Apply in person only. “lenview Grill, 554 N. Perry ; WA AITRESS WANTED. EXPERT- NCE ONLY. APPLY IN PER- BON. eT WW. HURON ST LADY. CARE FOR CHILDREN, days. 92 Judson or call FE 5-7049 WAITRESS, FULL OR PART TIME. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS 3 ‘pm to ll p. m_ Sundays off. or in person, 531 E. Walton Blvd | WHITE GIRL FOR LIGHT HOUSE- w rk and care of 2 children. FE 2-4108 between 5 & 9 pm WN- stairs work Ample time off. Must haye references $35 4-8075. GIRL FOR INSPECTION DEPT. also must know how to sew. Appliv Fox Dry Cleaners, 719 W. Hurop LADY TO OPERATE CURTAIN le y with modern curtain fin- ishihg equipment. Good return for woman with spare time. rig 4 nours. "Must be experienced & oe we itd Automat Laun- dry. 25 elegraph Rd See RaTeICED GROCERY CASH- fers. Full or part time. Apply Tom's Market. 888 Orchard Lake , : desired. FE IRL FOR COUNTER WORK & marking dept Apviy Fox Dry Cleaners 719 W. Huron. WASHING & IRONING SHIRTS & blouses. FE 53871. _ WTD. WASHINGS & IRONINGS. FE 2-7259 EX?FRIENCTD BOOKKEEPER Good position with well estab- ished concern. Phone FE 3-7141 for appointment | WOMAN DESIRES HOUSEWORK or d@‘shw PE 2-389 CAPABLE & KELIABSLE C1LEAN- ing women for 2 cays a weer $7 a day plus car fare: Ee - (o 74a55 Watters o- M-s Higbte pas 62 home nights. | LADY FOR HOUSE WORX 2 JIN family, 52 week go home night, rear ent. 1146 W uron. WOMAN WANTED 25 50. GENERAL HOUSEWORK NO ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES PVT. ROOM AND VENTIONAL DAYS . OFF. 44351. CED CLERK TYPIST would like office after 4 and evening also Sat. FE 5 . CADY FOR RECORD DEPT. PRE- ferably one xperience. No oo calls. Gallagher Music Co. E. Huron Work | M:s | { | IMMEDIATE OPENING ‘ i} ] Wanted Female Help 6) Wanted Female Help 6 WER WITH 16 - YEAR - OLD A@ughter, wants middleaged wom- an for housekeeping. West side location. Give age and salary de- sired. Box 73, Pontiac Press Ww Comptometer FOR 3 WOMEN From Pontiac & surrounding towns with pleasing sata | & car. Who can work 3 or hours early evening & earn A. much as $75 to $100 a week. N ss Operators Ford Tractor NO PARTY DEMONSTRATION For interview call MI 48292 be- _ fore 12 noon WOMAN EXPERIENCED ONLY. Telephone sales work Living ¥!- Cinity Rochester Salary and com- mission. FE 4-7919 between 3 to 4 p.m. only EXPERIENCED WAITRESS 4 kitchen helper for 5 a m. shift, start 20. 577 Auburn. "stout "bent | FORD MOTOR WTD WHITE WOMAN FOR house on 1 floor & 2 school age girls, Close in. Prefer go home nights. FE 2-0871. HOUSEKEEPER MORE FOR home then wages No other wom- an in charge, FE 2-2228 after Division of —- | a | COMPANY _3 pom. Bet. 35 to 45 yrs. BABY SITTER, OVER 20. ep) ) PE eho tk ai Hasel 2500 East Maple hd. EXPERIENCED WAITRES- ses and soda fountain women Age % to 55. Days, afternoons, Nights, and swing shifts Call FE 2-9135 before 4 pgm MOTHER'S HELPER WHITE Must be fond of children. No laundry. Own room and bath. | Good wages. MA 6-3201 ~ CREDIT MANAGER _ Birminghain WOMAN work and care of 2 chiidren in no laun- "FOR LIGHT HOUSE- | Work Wauted Female 9A | WASHING AND IRONING. | FE 5-09988. | Busin.ss Service 13 FAVES’ TROUGHIN Brvan fF french iS Warm air neating & sheet rich anety ———___— - BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. _ Laundry Service 11 Walls ano Windows | Cleaned. Ph FE 2-1 WASHINGS & IRONINGS, WORK | | WTD BRICK. BLOCK AND STONE guaranteed. Pick up & delivery | work Cull eves FE_2-2936. SEWING, MENDING ‘FE 5-6278 _ OR 3-6115. ae | EXPERT FURNACE CLEANING FOR ©“AMILY LAUNDRY SERV. 494 repairing. OR 3-0593. ice phone Pontiac Laundry FF ELEC. iC MUTOR SERVICE, RE= S101 - | pairt: ‘@ and rewinding. 218 B LACE CUR1 ina ~PTAIN | _ Pike in _ FE 4-3981 ruffied Ueautifully finished Se - tiac Laundry Phone FE 2-810) | je TIN’ S I RE NCHING > F Footings water lines, and od 1 ainting-Decorating VIA! ana rain tile ines. FE 71-8643 | EXPERT FREE TRIMMING & RE- movVal. th, FE $-€6593 or OR 3-3000, i STEAM: CLEANING — Al: types ul steam cieaning done. DISABLED VET. &XP. SINCE bile | A-1 painting. Int. and ext. Fr: estimates Reas. rates FE 2-4155 after 6 p m. Sun | EX- 4NTER1OR DECORATING, Pontiac Farm: and Industria! Trac. es FES 0796. Expert mechan- ter Co FE 4-0461. PE 4-1442 cs ware TRADING Ril. BXCA\A:(NG GRADING, BULL- INTERIOR PAINTING & (PAPER | doting. tad Ph FR 2- hanging, tree estimates. OR 3-0464 ——— so HOME DECORATING COMPANY | Landscaping 13A lp in removing yh BRAN RR RRA paver ainting over plaster SODDING SE walls No fob too small OR 32183 | SOL . aoe plate la. or contact in person at 180 Wa- Preeii : complete landscaping, basso. Walled Lake | CRANE'S LANDSCAPE — ‘BERVICE. WOMEN WANT WALL “WASHING. | Complete lawn building and maine painug. OR $2284 tenance PAINTING AND DECORATING Paper removed. free estimates | FE 71-8333 ______—COPE_=*5-5386 FE 4-698 _ | CUSTOM MOWING: LIGHT, MED- WALLPAPERING AND PAINTING | tum. heavy power equipment, Call for est quality work. General landscape ing. Ask {or Ted at FE 4-046]. FE 4-0255 | PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING FE 3-9053. ROTO TILLING OUTSIDE PAINTING PAPEP- Gavden and iawn work. FE 2-5631 hancing. Plaster repeiring. FE) preauviruL BLUE GRASS SOD, _ - ——— } cut extra thick. 38¢ yd, PAPERING. PAINTING, WALL! White's. FE 5-3140. rd. deliv, washing. Paper removed. FE -- ~~ 9192. 0 Upholstering 13C working parents hb - a OS RET PARR for large Pontiac furniture store.| Ury complete charge. 3 Gay wk, | PAINTING INSIDE © UU] FREE An exc. opportunity for right more for home, some wages, child estimates FE 2-4137 me ‘ REFINISHING REPAIR, person. Write giving expertence, accepted. Call collect Thurs., Fri. ) | augues @ specialty, FE 4-0554. reference and salary desired. Bat. eves. MU 4-7525. \ all W ashing & “Pamun: S| Con vie ES DRAPERIES SLIP- Write Box 109, Pontiac Press. | 2 RANGE COOKS. WHITE WOM.| Pree estimates, eas FE 5-231) cove’s materials Beadle FB HOUSEWIVES EARN $1. to $3.| en Resicence Furmished Call | PAINTING, A-1 1 WORK, GUARAN- 5-1927 ; hourly in your spare time Pleas- Miss Murpner Kingswond School, teed PE 2-4315 CUETOM PURNITURE _ ant, dignified work. OR 3-7606. Cranbrook MI 4-1600~“between 8) PAPERING. PAINTING. REF FRB) U PHOLSTERING HOUSEKEEPER, STAY NIGHTS} _® ™ & 4 p_m =-4320 UPHY STERING. SERVICE family of 4. Ref, required. MI, ELDERLY LADY. MORE FOR 10 NT- | de AS ated Hone inst anes. "care for 10 I ier ee PAINT- | PREE EST PHONE FE 41988 SALFESLADY FOR CIGAR DE. yr. boy Call after 5 p.m. FE a | sur COVERS URAPES & 43805 | | sprea‘ts Your material. FE 5-5797, partment to work afternoon and nights. Excellent position for right | PART TIME OR FULL TIME | person Apply in person Man- fountain girls. Hours 11 a. m. to CUNNINGHAM DRUG 3 p.m. Apply at Waites basement ager STORE. Saginaw and Lawrence. GENERAL HOUSEWORK PRI- vate room and bath, 2 school age children, good wages, references __ MI 49487 WHITE WOMAN- OR GIRL TO __luncheonette. + WANTED Girl, prefer 18 to 21. for full time position in financial office care for 1's year old baby in not neces- home while mother works. trues aoe uk have Gonirig and have own transportation 6226 shorthand and be able to meet _ OR 3-8828 Drayton public. Hours 9 to 5. Saturday _ Plains, _ 9% to 1. Good starting pay and WTD. EXP BOOKKEEPER, FULL opportunity for adavncement, | OR PART TIME. Philip's. 79 plus other benefits. Excellent N. Saginaw working conditions See Mr Voss for personal interiew. 407 Community National Bank Bldg. Fé 5-812). EXPERIENCED RSEMAID BE- tween 30 and for 3 children, 74 and 2, uve on Lake Estate, good salary 2025 Lake Angelus Ra. FE 2-8393. MIDDLEAGED LADY TO CARE WANTED DISHWASHER, JET for mother of 2 school aged girls, . 9 Dincr. FE 70290 Work Wanted Male | Orne sees ees ee LADIES SPORTSWEAR AND AC- C¥®RSORI* 3S—PFRMANENT POSI- —_—~ 448 | VE" WITH 2 TON STAKE TRUCK FFE 5.9641 days, Moving & Trucking 12 | MAKERS OF CUSTOM BUILT PLOWING & FITTING. ALSO cone. | Teleraok Upnolstering. 34 Goutm plete landscaping 4 Thomas Upholstering Phone FE | 5-8888- FE 5-5386 after | FOR FAST, EFFICIENT PICKUP & delivery and light hauling at reasonable rates call FE 7-0759| CUSTOM“ FURNITURE OPHOL- anytime. stering est free. Don Eakle EM | RUBBISH, oor mg yao ee 3-469 . Basement cleaned. -8965. . VOLLMAR MOVING AND STOR- __Lelevisio n Service 14A age. Large vans anywhere in mtmctcd TOCXER'S TV SERVICE 4 Onited States. Hanect Quick service Ey reliable service. 5-8562 341 N_ Perry. Pike or FE 4-3690 eves, wan hauling. FE 4-45 Mouo™M LV AFTER ' SERVICE. TRU CKING AND HAULING ANY | 5 om call PE $-6727. ‘ truc < a time 74 Le poe Quase 9 vile or — $3.50 _| D & D EXPRESS CO | Pick-up and delivery service Mov- | MITCH LL’S TV ing de one” kinds 1089 N Saginaw PE 2-2871 - T ie LIGHT TRUCKING AND HAUL | tema ‘- cates FEY SERVICE, ing. Reas, FE 2-7432. M P STRAKA _ #UDDFN SERVICE, ASHES RUB- | GUARANTEED TV REPAIR: bish end heht trucking | Omare FE sn ane 4-607 | DONS Radio & [V Service. MAN WITH % TON TRUCK WANTS pox Tv & PADIO SERV SERV. call $350 Cor Gatcnery & Aire _ work. Call any time. FE 4-8421. | O'DELL CARTAGE = | — port Ra OR 3-1647 FE 17-7598. Local and Long Distance Moving | Building Service 15 Phone FE 5-6806 | INCINFRATOR SERVICE. ASHES. > rubbish shredded black dirt Peat | ROOFING op soti AU tyves new & old Free esti- __mar‘es Joy Pennebaker. FE 4-0612 . CARPE VTFR & CABINET MAKER Trucks’ for Rent! #°7.ar" 4 treet were | FE 40/20 TRUCKS, TRACTORS |; PLUMPING AND HEATING. 6. AND ee ' Comoton & Son. FE 4-3767, PB % Tor Picku 1% [fon Stakes 2-5440 and ump Trucks | QUARANL: ED ROOFS, ALL Pontiac Farm and 1 finds Fst i906. J. a, fuges ; } Sass - 23-8946. Industrial Iractor Co. | Ggwenw i wORK BLOCEE FE 4-0461—PE 4-1442 | porcnes, fireviaces and sea-walls. ee EM Carte SMITH MOVING | GENERA - ~ BUILDING REPAIR bri-k. stone & cement work. FE 4-2290 Wan or Pickup Service FE 2-4864. | LIGHT TRUCKING RUBBISH AND COMPETE LINE OF MASONRY, Bloom‘ e'4 I*nes, Wodward and } [ Long ‘Lake Rd. __ : Be nouwork § days & week, / warrREs WTD., EXPERIENCED. | GRLS FOR CENERAL *" ORK IN ee a5 FE 3-9205. laundry dep't. No experience nec- WTD WAITRESSES. WHITE WOM.- | — ‘ ; a evsary, Apply to Pontiac Laurcry en Some to live in residence, Help Wanted 540 S Telegraph. Near Orchard some to go nome nights Call Lo Bie Mi‘s Murphy. Kingswood School.| wrp. — PIANO OR ACCORDION | sta.| WAITRESS, FULL TIME. HOURS| f{renbrook | NI 41500 between | piaver, Modem and old time. EM 9 to 3:50. Mus’ be reliable. Part as oe pim 3-5112 after’4 30. time 430 to 9 30. Dixie Snack ‘ A gESS. ALSO EXP. T } Shop, M-18 af 08-19 Clarks’o | cong Eatinore Lunch. #21. W. DRIVER F FOR PRIVATE SCHOOL. WoMAN FOR PART TIME LiG* uron wT R KITCHEN AND STOCK ' Xo eee PART TIME HELP ON el gle tic white couple. Resi- washing of Ironin: ca in Person Bie 0G 2, god working cond dence furnished. Call Miss Mur- 29 BR Ser Siu 4 1} Grug 3.ore. 631 Orc! lard ey. Kiagswood School, Cran- e aY* a 2 STENOG R. APHE R ana wx 4-1690 between 3 a.m. | Shorthand no! necesiary Room |GET IN BUSINESS FOR YOUR- - 301 Community Natione! Bank | CURB se'f, Distributs nationally adcver- Bidg ‘ ferd Wat Preduc'’s Fu'l or WHITE LADY FOR LIGHT HOUSE- part time Apply 150 N. Perry, work & care of children FE IRLS - _7-0028 after 4 G Instructions — 8 CURB GIRL & WAITRESS. erowen es: Nights. Over 18 Raels Drive Night shift Must be 18 Apply in| ACCORDIONS LOANED FREE TO In, 6225 Highland Rd. ; person. be. rners. Lessons given at your SALESGIRL WTD. 5 DAYS A : | hows by experienced teacher. OR week. Anderson Bakery, 124 West ’ | 33-9466. age Mile Rd. Birmingham. MI TED S TEACHER OF PIANO. ELIZA- beth Lake =. 109 Exmoore. =rPlar POSITIONS AVAILABLE. _ Woodward at Square Lake Rd. FE 5$-5887 Many benefits, 5 day, 40 hr. wk.| R N. UNDER 35 FOR DOCTOR'S | GRAD’ ATE han: TEACHER. -— Hospitalization & life insurance, office. No night hours. No book. — enrol) now. $} a lesson. air — bing be gto keepink _Box 20. Pontiac Press | _ Myers, 86 Starr St _Siritear MRSS" | warrntaaee rou Tm At Tee OE cee UE EGPER@NCED SEAPTRES, On| Spi" ptt oP Me) LM Leas ghetth House FE 3-7396 "| SALESLADY WANTED TO eee |) <= - 9\pUMP TRUCK FOR HIRE. FE ashes. FE 4-2266 | ement » carpenter work. brick LIGHT AN. H&AVY PRUCKING block layme EM_3-8061. _ Rubbiso ed FE 3. CEMENT WORK. ALL KINDS floors. driveways. etc. Jensen FS ~ Garden Plowing __12A acre BLOCK BRICK _ CEMENT WORE & fireplaces FE 23-2468. 5-5336 —— ROUGH CARPENTER after 4 NEED APPLY IN PERCON ROT | IN THE VICINITY OF KEEGO) LIGHT TRUCKING & HAULING RT xen We speciailss 1 TON’S, 75 N. SAGINAW "| cleaning. paintiny, window wesh-| Reas. FE 5-£260 contemporary & bl FE wie ah - ing. floor cleaning & waxing.! GARDZN AND YARD PLOWING. | _ §-3ive d omes. = SALESLADY AND CASHIER handy man all the Way arcun discinz. \eveling. Any plece. any | ~ ~ ———n es rasa & M Dept. Store.) _Phone FE 2-3674 ask for Pop. = time prompt service. All power | EAVESTROUGHING . HAND DIGGING LAWN WORX | _ lift equip. Fe 43371 Coal. of! & gas burners McLain EXPERIFNCED GROCERY CASH-| Light hauling. Shrub setting. FE Wi) PLOWING. DISCING, DRAG-| Sheet Metal. PE 4-6051. in person ‘at "People's Foctc: ' 3288 -| ging. leveling hay & weed mow- CEMENT WORK. BASEMENT Mat’ 465 E. Pike’ gt fh ocea WOULD LIKE JOB AS WELDER | ing. Jaycox, FE 4-9997 \” Ronen dreseue etn yee Sas) des ee etween| EXP CARPENTER OPEN FOR | — —— 12 | tor large o- too smart Free an SILK FINISHER ue EN «| — jobs. I E 35-8325 ; _ | Busincss Service 13 matiun OR 3-0791 or FE 2 2-7: edge -f inspection. Reply in per- On SS To | ; Toe eh bie ee | PLUMBING HEATING REPAIRS, ai Cn ka 136 Or ern or oli time music OR 3-6872 APPLIANCF ° FERN ICKS a * = Wares =} : bet. 4 and 6 p. m. We service all makes of refriger- -——- -— PART TIME FOUNTAIN & KITCH- | GanpENTER WORK WANTED.| ®!0F8. washers, radios. cleaners TERKAZ70 RITBBER CERAMIC en heip. White. 735 Baldwin. Apply TR WNEANTe Dei Te Cablaetsie spect and all types of smal! appliances. tile tiagstane. Commercial ww ai person 7 _alty, FE 4210 ROY'S 96 Oakland Ave PE 2-4021 | Ries ee 22 terms. teady wo experience mecenne | MAN WANTS FLOOR LaYING | SAWS, LAWNMOWERS cement wORK 858, Apply ‘n person, Dell's inn. 346i | _®%4 sanding work. MAple $7104. MACHINES SHARPENED comm. free estimates Rayna _ Elizabeth Lake Rd. . . LIKE ANY a nl Pag ie _MANLEY LEACH — 10 BAULEY Commins CE 4-6366 WTD. WORKER WHITE of maintenance wor ve in = TOLLAUNDAY WORKER WHITE | Coury at @aubura | A&B TRENCHING | 8, CaMine, room Laem Call Miss Murphey, s wood CABINET MAKER & ~ CARPENTER. er water lines field tile. Ph FF 2 4405 School, Cranbrook. MI ¢ be-| Kitchens a specialty, FE2-2532, | FE 5181); 2 © CARPENTRY WORK — ALTERA. tween 8 a. m & 4 p. m. UNION CONTRACTOR DESIRES| [REF [RIMMING & REMOVAL. node repairs painting & decorating. FE 4-1663. Pree estimate FE 4-8808 FE neeenn rms roofing, “Mame” MAN DESIRES PART TIME WORK | __7-8628 a _| OL 2-21 ee mornings Gas station experience.| FR&Z ESTIMATES ON EAVES- | COMPLETE VINE OF MASONRY, 7 . _ FE_.§-1556 ee troughing. r g. cleaning. brick niock & ertence | and or payrol! exoverie:ce how- WwW ark Wanted Female 9A 9A ev'r, Will tren the. person we hire ‘if nee "SAAT TD, The psy will WASHING, IRONING, NEAT 8PE- | _" depen on ability. cia, rat to steady customers. | Way No: . , FE 608. a Come in and see us and find out WORK NEEDED BADLY. HOUSE- about the opportunities open to| Work in country more for good you. home than high wages. Write Pontiac Press Box 17 MIMEOGRAPHING TYPING. themes. ort ellen secretarial Earl R. Milliman Co. 147 S. Saginaw St. ; ra days. 92 Juddson or call ~~" WASHINGS & IRONINGS TEs WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK | WOMAN WANIS WASHINGS & and care of children. Live in. done in my home. Wore ' PLASTERING & PATCHING. FE | 7-678 FE 47564. P MILLER BROTHERS, FLOOR LAY- tne. sanding & finishing 16 years service tn Pontiac. FE 5-31€2. PLOOK SANDING LAYING PIN, R isardner 081 Caentrani OB BULLDOZING FREE ESTIMATES Prom, service R ODunn. FE + 925 or + exev.| | EXPERT REFRIGERATION r a tce. all makes reasonable FE) 3° .-ts REMODFLING AND _ 23-1427 ° nivine servie Attle rooms, EXPERT TREE ee & RE. | ee tha noma _——o ane movine _FE7 48 os vopet+ apartment altera- SUBURBAN oe TTANE LEANS | fa OR abe = _ers. Lake Ortoo - 2-2842 . a RLEC KIC ~) Cneconr Built Cabinets SEWER CLEANING | & atten tree Betimates on Ph ee - ee ee ee + SEWi - OF 0) rae ; rein, MAuIG. B pitirs Ts eee 3 bedroom brick ranch homes with | cups, milk house, chicken | payment at Oxbow Lake Nori! - De at vor nar Coe aaa let close to town | IN, BIRMINGHAM BUSINESS DIS." carport for $13.300 in village ot | house, tool shed and other | Side 2 -amily Work guaranteed. FE 2-28: Radi dears a a Ties a N | $rict house suitable for small Sylvan Lake. Lege. living rm. ves- buildings. School bus by . Chiropodists 20 Saginaw . | shop oF, office, with living quar- tibule, dinette. tile bath. plastered | door, $15,400, $5,800 down. LAND CONTRACTS > : = : z walls, gas heat, solid concrete = ee ee : a WILL RENT OUR BEAUTIFUL | 4d 65 ft lot wer aved | reer ors . S MAURICE THOME, D. 8. C. | furn. lakefront winterized 2 bed- | eee duking eben and boot |e ere Estate— Sie Eile oes Ranch T a $980 1203 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. : room apt. to responsible parties. rivilege. Buy direct from build > Lake F age , “ | Ranch Type Tlome, $0.% FE 2-7071. Wtd. Miscellaneous is 28 | Wanted Real Estate 31 3405 Detroit St, off Ormond Rd., oi ey yes exp. 1980 Warwick 500 as Bo d Wo Gilden coerce: agree j Be sure se@ this hase ~ Photo-Accessories 270A |'~<—_—_{--—{-T~_—"_-_—_©_—~_rCO™O*orr”™™™"—'_—_O-—_ ” ~ err | White Lake , | Rd. or ei Lake Ave, FE log hrcae features * ane FIFTY iand contracts with | run home, 2 bedrooms, living aw CUSED 16 IN, GIRLS BIKE wit | CASH FOR 4 kOO Ms an eet ote | living room with natural $2,000 to $5.000 balance | belay ail GaraeE, “All NEW 16 MM MAGAZINE MOVIE! ‘epair FE 4318 ‘OUR EOUITY At Woodhull ‘Lake, only $55 per : s(7 ae jineprace, oa ype this on 1%4 acres of land camera, F 35 Wollensak lens; | PLAYPEN on CLFAN 6 YEAR. YOUR EOL ments FAILL BARGAINS | kitchen, “heated garage. and best of all you can have case Accessories, magazine With size crib. etc. OR 3-1609. If you want immediate action and; | {( I. VIES-BARTRAM | $800 DOWN Sassen en ree pase immediate possession. We film all for $40. FE 7-6040 WTD. DOWN FILLED SLEEPING your price and terms are right. | | "2 RR. year around home with | = EMS) Gl Le have the kev and can show - : : } We | OR 3-1950 Eves. OR 3-8001 tifully landscaped grounds you -nytime. call for an PORTRAITS -. FRAME bags. FE 2-7760. we will buy your equity © nae | auto. o1] heat. Large lot with lake Pant cletal “ame | * 71S ; Treas, Pics. Restores WID TO BUY. QUANTITY OF; ¥#I pay cash for small homes 2 RM BACHELOR APT 1 BLOCK | | priv. Upper Straits Lake. A steal | an ah sicel evaiene lence. AND HARGER CO, appointment and terms. LoPatin Studio 12 E Pike open head steel drums with rims 07 equities oe ean OE a Boe: 1P Bh: Claes | Daily & Sunday, 2-8 p.m. Pn i Located Eppecatemntaiy | 10/ (Doing Business as) $2000 D ae, Tat t , ill be 0 . hi AG NiCnJLle &,SON ve own, « Interes 20. MM CAMER and tops. H. P Sutton. FE 5-831" et over scar ie miles north of Pontiac. $30.- Nil - mecunale hrs Lube e uA . MERON mT CL. ARK’ | CLEAN 3 LARGE - ROOMS AND | ; | Ro ee al plastered uv $10,000 down. 33 W. Huron St sul? a0 FE 5-8183 Sound good? The owner will _ CAMPERO. . Pete wear Gbecent LAKE. Contemporary Living | tion Lake priv. Middle Straits is Sacre Nes emir ser tne Lost and Found 21 Ww td. Contract Mt; tgs. ro Realtor Open Fvenings Brunswick near Crescent Lake | : s | ake BY OWNER. ALMOST NEW HOME above figure Better take ad- a mpce mye eee han Seek Ny LE Te | 7 | >\" < : 4 ~ R A tt | in. Woodward Estates subdcivis vantage of this mght away, LOST LARGE FAWN MALE BOX on $1.000,000.00 ible aon. s lial te eee asuipis “Ociy, aot wroult eed wh | FRED J. RIDDELL Oy nne nc. ton, ee heat. oak Wicks. storm | 5 rooms all on one floor with er wearing choke collar and tec. $1, : . 570 “ Trade or Sell drinkers. FE 4-2337.- + Pedal etiiee derienen ter 6586 Commerce Rd at Green Lake: REALTORS re ces ae Re hae al oo Abie oe “ Name, Tony. Reward. OL 1-3002, for new low-cost, easier. safer we specialize in trades We made 3 LGE. RMS.. BATH, PVT. ENTR, modern living are fast be- EMpire 3.3022 __ | 28 E. Huron FEderal 3-7193 | - eel aS ae eee only 2 vears old , LOST PAIR OF GLASSES IN fom = acre with 100 ft. homes “several satisfactory trades in.1952. | Lk Orion MY 2.2971 coming the most popular FLIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 LAKE ORION : SES , om - z ‘ i ct | ~ j case, Name on case, Sallans Jew- age Ne appraisal or closing fee. | Large down parinents are sree. FURN, APT. PYT. BATH. ADULTS Hoe 8 utd ote aie eT roe Were Ledrosna, laree | Bdrm with bath down 2 bdrms $1,000 Down eiry. Dare brown rims, Reward ‘Trades are made to sa a ony. 84 Norton. FE 4-3705 : 5 u - an ; bat Dp Large alving orn : . FE 21113 CHARLES REALTORS | parties concerned. Cail us. Do not attached 2 car garages. | vis living room, kitchen and dinette, | | Kitche F Nore rGee heall Can buy this 3 bedroom id - AGRE fee] obligated. |4 RM AND BATH, OIL HEAT, average 120x200» A few full bath and utility room. Plenty | . - | 6 2 n. Fu cutie ZaS bio modern home It has hara- LOS1 — LARGE GRAY CAT | 22!2 W. Binnor. 9 Ae oa DC RRIS & SON | hot water and garage. $15 month. choice sites still available of wardrobe space. Cedar shakes. : i te ah rt ia: Sano (nn wood floors plastered walls, oi breast + Doe foe After 6 FE 4-6862 or FE 5- 8891 O Sen = Deposit. Adulls prelerrea. 54 Myra oe ea jeunesse oa lake privileges. Full price $8,500 Franklin Blvd WALTER OREEL y MY 2-583! brewkfast now and: I bee nud s pe ewal : e ) ] ce > "E 7-7636—Gilford a art | . C ' “ room ns ' a Oo ‘ 2.8668. Detroit. Vic. ‘Wolverine | 4 Loy Meri AGeS | 52 w. Auron eeacust|* be cae Te ON. terms ‘Directions Just E. po ee : aN. 7 ROOM MODERN HOME NEAR 2 bedrooms on the 2nd floor. Lake 4/0 iG WE BUY—SFLL & TRADE “ of Telegraph Road. 3 biks. SUBURBAN INCOME: Huron St. # room lakefront in The full price ts only $7,200, | | RM. AND BATH. NEW DEC- . ake + ee 8 room brick and stucco { hed, | * LOST! LADY'S BLUE WALLET Single Moderp Owellings | BE Ee RRS OR Here 1 2 story, all n extra | COR ge Wcton Piste aoe Khe kee ee Keep money but please. return | A. C Paeres 5-8406 | W t t S 1? | orate 653 Markle Adults only. Shaded Lay po i Fy one | Star mettig foeuine, lot 100x30 in Drayton Plains. , important papers. FE 7-989 | HO Pontiac Sank Bide cE 5-672 | ant to el | 2 ge QUIET CLEAN COUPLE. | Also, see a few of our other biyers’ have been looking for with living room, dining BS pevill 2 GILES REALTY CO. LOST MANS WIDE WFDDING IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOouR | No drinkers. 272 8. Paddock a cag homes, located There is one 4 room and. bath | room. kitchen down 4 rtonvilie REALTOR ring un August 22. REWARD land contract or equity in your! ’ S WAITING 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH TO} 1330. Erie Drive. Harbor apt, @ 3 room and bath apt, bedrooms and sleeping porch Ww. Huron FE 5-6178 Phone FE 2-6538 home. BUYERS W.: A Quiet Christian couple only. No| Hine Cai Lake re ® 4 room apt to be finished, | up. Mistk uP attic. Full ac WOO : Open 9 ‘til 9 WILL PARiy WHO FOUND tiT-; K. L. Templeton, Realtor ty ¢ Se oa MOREE: Close in. | 450 Long Lake Road, Pine Sa vc, Enis home te te tuker, eee pect Toe orice BIRMINGHAM — OWNER TRANS- tle dpa icok at Teds trailer 9° 53'2 W Huron FE 2-6223 a ed ae site Dee tice oa. , . Lave it is clean. well decorated, and & terms ; SY] VAN VII I A( iE ferred. l'2 story 1990 veneer ovlocn N vy mignt please ol ; Pinson ke pote rt a NICELY eo APT, 3 ROOMS we eee ae Blvd, Pio- ready for occupancy. The 3 room 4 “\Y ahs op bay WO) be brick, near school, excellent neigh- FE ae Vga child's pet toe Dada Immediat Me and bath vt. entr Adults. No it wo ‘ ot | apt. 1 now rented for $60 per \W ‘. Sid Excellent ‘arge family home borhood, 2 bedrooms, large un- reared ediate results. drinkers. Professional or business Pit enonah Dr, tawa | month with new 2 car garage. est Aide Lake privileges. 2 car garage finished secoud floor, full base. LOST: MAN'S PLATINUM WED- persons. FE 2-1455 | ee Cherokee Rdanesemic | Located on 100x200 lot on Blend 5 Bedroom Home Hrd 7: newly decorated. 14,- nen SO ae greene ding band, inscribed. Reward. FE 2 ROOMS, SHARE BATH AND ] able up and coming business front- 2 u price. with terms, ol eat, water softener, natura $407 . oe | WI ITE BROS. Frigidaire, adults only. FE 2-1672 nole Hills age Let us show you this buy | SUBURB AN fireplace, porch. aluminum storms : dP ls 22 IMMEDEATE ACTION | Open 9 to 8 for Your c nience 2 ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE) Dees wrosad th, Beek Fea tua’ New, in 1051. 8 room brick . , aoc and screens, fenced vard, carpet- 4 cael : ' a ! or ur Conve MS ’ iis ala 1 - : (a : : 5 7 Notices and Personals _ 8,8 42 8 fot TOUT Con Tee ents ANtin Migs, PWorkiog | ? and’nee ell ot these ‘homer DRATOON PLAINS | gay) hea pee RANCH HOM Gh Pe eaee vem aiaetey - . . . et a. expérienced man handle 5660 Dixie Highway Waterford couple or 2 men. 16 Forence Plenty of material. labor Cozy modernistic home on beau- up. Natural fireplace, full , 5 rms and utilitv. 2 car garage ‘ oy ; ON AND AFTER THIS DATE “your contracts, We have buyers with guy OR LIST YOUR LAKE , APT. CLEAN, 3 RMS. BATH. | and time to build one of tifully landscaped lot 80x200 com- basement, oi] heat 2 car fo oenek constrn-; on with 212 acres S800 DOV N ent oe 1953, cnt dent OF te with eash waiting, to bus oe property. Purchasers waiting ast floor. Pvt. entrance, adults! ee ay or edee | re of ies ving Lig 2 attached brick earace Wil | aia Pull price $10.850 with Modern brick, ¢ rms. and bath pons > . lebts n- tracts Call FE 4-4525 and ask for Ae Ry ET only, working couple preferred | } i edrooms, full bath, kitchen with | consider trade for good city erms. —— . =o Os ; : Write tracted by anyone other than’ eq McCullough R. F) McKINNEY 2410 Dixie Hwy. ‘2 mi. N, of necessary financing and all =| eating space and utility room. A properts , CACANT “BUNGALOW | ES pee cee mee myself eae Smith, 74 Jackson {fice 8800 Commerce 8t. Telegraph | details, Ph FE 5-3109 | real buv for $8,250 with $2.500 . * Sic ‘i = alee Box 108 Pontiac Press St. Pontiac, Mich . . . * . ) ; ; vewly decorate ull basement, 5 31 s J SE. ox ane deren, Tas DATE.) Riygsell Young | ee eee ea alae TAL | dotin (At neighborhood to FAS* Dianeer Highlands ra Saban 3, ACRES, 6 RM. HOUSE, BASE. Aug 12 1993 I will not be — Hulbert. 1 bik. 6ff Elizabeth ‘Lk. | a look today and youll buy it S]. 500 DOW x ston. Only $1.000 down re-ponsible, for any debts con- - REALTOR For Rent Ruums 3Z RallOxbow . | tomorrow oo 3. bedroom brick. I'2z tile , at ne $590 dqgn. Neat 4 rm Basemert tracted other than a ser 412 W Huron St. FF 4-452) | wae eee we ~- | SMALL roles FURN. FLAT | | SILVER CRESI pe this = home opt a ay cee ay house. yuaning hot and cold, wae iver Jonnsor No, 31 1 +; : i S . . Me JIE 6 . . * “ Wd . - A 1 4 in PO a aoe, BOX NO ONS Open Eves Till 9 Sunday il 9 PLEASANT SLEEPING RM. FOR) Lake Orion MY 3-3682 after 6 | | A really neat 2 bedroom home Fonte pIUS lakes uiking cir). «| «nome immediately _ GEO. MARBLE = Eres pe aa5 WE HAVE young man in Christian home./3 poomMs PVT BATH & ENTR.| | with plastered walls and oak GiracesaThixtahuineieomin | NOR EH SIDI , NDI.T. GET IN LINE, NOW'S THE TIME | $200,000 Near 2 bus lines & walking dis-|~ Eoyp) : x rinkers. FE | floors Modernistic kitchen with A-1 conditioin. Fully insutat- | - gary ©6261 Andersonville Rd _ Waterford to try Fina Foam for cleaning Pe, tance of downtéwn. FE 2-576) ouple only, No drinkers. FE Sundav. 2 to 5 p.m. breakfast nook Full basement eau 6 16iSo0n = CTerin sill | Modern 5) rm_ bungalow with PHONE OR_ 3-1268 rags and upholstery, Waites No- At our disposa} to purchase new OF > si eEPIN GROOMS ‘ON FIRST 9 pags | "4340 Eason Road, just South | Sith rec room 2 lots, beauufalls Same wurniture included’ Full pric 8 RM¢.RANCH TYPE. SEMI-FIN: tions seasoned land contracts for our, “second floor, 1. block {rom 2 RMS. NEAR FISHER BODY | aieWatkins take. UNG WonVa= | land caped) with flowers. fruit | li 5 ae —_ 4950" $1250 “Jown Hurrs un vile ished. good location, Sacrifice for DAINTY MAtD FOR SUPPLIES, clients. See me before you eell j town FE 41844 “after 6 and ontiac Motor Prefer work- | cant Choice suburban home trees. shade trees. and healthy ZC SALE R - Pripp. Realtor pe a ‘ Li at ates foes Rinliplty rs Mrs. Burnes. FE 2-8814 93 Mark. ASK FOR BOB MAHAN ATTENTION TEACHERS PROFES- ing couple. FE 4-3413 \ All white bungalow — built in | garden. The owner purchased a 23 w Lawrence Street Open Eve 4-9880. . ON AND AFTER THIS DATE: | sional people, 2 room studio apt, MODERN KITCHENETTE APTS 2| 1942 5 extra-large rooms a meander as one en Age - FE 5-8161 or FE 4-427 . OWN Sept. 10, 1953, 1 will not be | in pvt. "home, bus stop at door rms. Children welcome 3490 | and bath plus large attic { Foote a ecateaent Wena: Take $600 DOWN C ae er $1,000 DC c ee , ; AY * | : ) rates Sleepy Hollow Motel, 3490 room finished in knotty pine i On tnis unfinished bed ranch Frame well constructed 3 bedrm. isarted. by any paint is: | 4 ‘ eaunie Ge SINGLE. KITCHEN Dixie Hwy. Screened terrace and Ase a gh Page Ams diome 890 sa tt 3 me x 975 Baldwin Ave FE 2-4638 home Water & toilet in. Has self, Albert Lee Brown 249 Rock- | REALTY CO.. REALTORS aleges” FE. 2-1785 3 RM. APT. LAKE ORION, ADULTS, tion room Lot 110x412. Good he ming and fishing on Elizabeth Office Open from 9 to 9 beauutui fireplace in living rm weil Ave, Pontiac, Mich Pb eile MEMBPRS Sure ntkee SL REBING ROOM... Only MY 2-421 | garden soll, 2 car garage poe and Cass Lake Near schools, with connecting rill ue tee en Evenings and Sundavs . OSLER I q ity au servic hale stores and trans t . cenl ne . screened front porfh ots ul WILL WIG /YOUNG. FORMERLY | 1075 W Huron Ph. FE 2-026) gentleman only, apply after ¢ pm | BEDEM FUBN APT. MODERN | transferred, May take smail WHITE BROS. Renter Farle, Heslior EAST SIDE rice $6000 $1000 down. s > rE 5-9 ouse or land contract in 7 | _ . . an } = tact Virignia Howard OR 3-6431. CASH FOR YOUR | ” 3-6485 trade Ph. FE 2-1947 Open 9 to 9 for Your Convenience | Linco!n 1-1373 or Carroll Bryan 4 rooms. Living room. Dining room SCIENTIFIC SWEDISH MASSAGE | Oe cey Pe BO ee a SMALL EFFICIENCY APTS ON | | Ph. OR 3-1872 or OR 3-1769 Lincoln 36150 _ “Kitchen, ‘bedroom add bain Near | MBREE & GREGG cuu Ss PE 4-2851 | LAND CON) RACT ) ss i a saan sae pontine Lake moe? Ria t. a Jol kKinzle Realtor 5660 Dixie Highway, Waterford ~ 8 Bedrooms—Vacant school and bus line. $850 down Main Office 1565 Union Lake Road ANY Fiat De “WOMAN NEEDING | Ralph B. * nome Do bie beds, $8 ea, OA & A Cabing Bat bine tang w._putem © eee 4.3525 12 ACRE 4 ROOM AND BATH Gooa north side location. 6 rooms Rirssell A. Nott. Realtor ; Baansh, Office, Ss, 2 - paved stret. ‘this S&S vr. old Iv including taxes and ‘nsurance. beautiful rooms with carpeting . me . FE 3 a ibta for ontment | | clean young men, any shift. FE 4 ROOMS. FRIG. ALL PVT. CALL — 2 bedroom all noden home Tard | suburban home has carpeted!” 41, per cent interest. Immediate and drapes lovely screened porch PACT. A KIRN, Realtor ae } 4-1113 FE 2-5170 wood floors. New ‘oll furnace 24x26 dining rm and hving rm. 2 possession overlooking large well landscaped 34 Oakland Ave FE 2-9209 160 WEDDING INVITA TIO! i ai | NICE PLEASANT ROOM 397 N. 3 RM. FURN. APT. WILL AC 4 Cement block xarace 1 acre Kar- large beurms, bath and tle DOROTHY SNYDER | LAVENDAR \ard and lake Two @edrooms | Real Estate Since 1919" int Gapkip Ame) ae Jonnson. FE 2-7034 cept 1 or 2 small children. 49° Gen soil Priced at $6900. terms. | kitchen with smack bar There REAL and paneled den spare bedroom ~ _ Sutherland Studios. 1 _ Huron. . . Clark . Bhs i Sl BL RBAN | ts a full basement pane'rd 3140 W Huron FE 2-4411 in basement plus 24x48 recrea- NAPP SHOES ROOM FOR CLEAN YOUNG MAN . - “ BAST . 2 MES | breeveway to two car garage en of Gara - tion room. bar and many more KNA Fe 4-2583. Wicow s home FURN. BASEMENT APT FOR Quonset~home. full basement. nice fireplace muto oil heat and IMM. POSSESSION features. to be seen when you FE 5-6720 Lind baa dane, “ betel me ROOM FOR RENT, BOARD IF} bachelors’ quarters) FE 4-8324 oe oe Yots Priced at only many other deluxe features Rereqmilrimelian (Meer Runde! make your appointment ° , | few modern up to date office! desired. FE 50988, 105 Home St 3 RMS PVT ENTRANCE. PVT with “reas terms Price? $13.900 $3.900 down ; Ss led : Meet, apt ARIDING | INSTRUC: saat pose . eT eacny aaite ROOMS FOR MEN NO eee a ad ea pron mee Ais ‘ 1 CRITE RARE ALT Y Gi & Hi k wah oes eee Pr Ledge dy R HILTZ ; . ; guar NS HAVE YOUR BYES! your Tua lin Get. le lac Sore aiter 6 Sar St, Ph. FE- Orchard Lk. Ave oe wea ee 1TOUX 1C S Suited Woe wacaat SIbnbe J. . Sunday - til Sold -i ‘s { your reai estate problems | ‘ ; : 6 Sacinas : | examinea at nome. Dr Harold| are still selling 05 per cent of GIKLS. ON BUS LINE PVT. BATH Rent Apt. Unturnished 30 Lance DWELLING HOUSELTO BE 180 Dixie Home | | Mraston Plains with terms Conicte Heal Ente SHRTICN 84 North Shore Dr. Bussey, Optametrist. FE 4-921). _ our listings and entrance, FE 4-2847 eae BS eS ee errand Sia wrecked apply City Engmeer, i9 DN va ; is ek tas ca } LAKE ORION = DOCKAGE A. JOUNSON, Realtor SLEEPING ROoMs NEAR FISHER 5 ROOM UPPER FLAT 2 CHIL- City Hall, Pontiac “NEW 6 RM HOUSE ALL MOD. CARROL I. PORRITT La rene Pe aoe A perfec’ family ‘tome with 23 And a tew memberships avail Ph. PE 4-2533 ody and Pontiac Motors. 36 dren welcome Close to Yellow ; nr ern 20 min ride to Chrvsler & 26'2 West Huron FE 2-7124 EVE SUN 2.6587 { ft hving room. full sized qaining be ag ae i TT ae ae | Our New Lo at | Tetayson! Cab $20 week FE 5-1453 tiomes & Cottages Pabicara’s: ea en ce ee « E . re ; eae _ — = ‘ais er ee ate Srcisacaee mire eautiful club ,rounds, swimming | c on MAN TO SHARE COMFORTABLE 3 RM APT 1 CHILD a LCOME WALLED LAKE & VICINITY . cien 2 yan o-operative ea state xen . A all _ as oor. a aD he ae wecuinen, 1104 S. Telegraph Rd. just south of | room. West side. Twin beds, No — utilities furn OL 21895. Dyke Highway. Ph Sullwell 1-2752 yFaR ROUND LAKE HOME. COR- cen on geet shee ae ahi b c a : : . : ; | 2 . 3 lakes. if you apply before Oct.» _2 Bluomfiel ashion Shop oS ee ao 5 ROOM SECOND FLOOR APART- | LAKE LAND REALTY CO CABIN. GOOD BIRD AND DEER "er of per egens aae a ee. | Inspect this Wome Sunday and Ist and are accepted you can WE HAVE CLIENTS WHO WILL 2 BEDRMS. WITH KITCHEN PRIV. ment in best West -side district. | 924 Pontes Trail, Walled L&. ; hunting. eee small lake aa — a. Ple ar els | move in next week M-24 to finish out this vear and all the trade lovely 5 room home’ in Auto. oil heat and water. Near $90.00 per mo With heat fur- MA 4-1554 _| 15 muss S. of rudeaville 1 mile Hi an Por = ae ae $7800 3995 Down New bungalowr, with Or.on le.t on Flint St, to North 1954 season for dues and fees nagth section of town with full bus. W. side. 1090 Boston. 7 nished Adults only. References. off M-18, about 160 miles from & wid ee 4 lake privileges. Exterior all com- Shore Dr Follow signs. totaling $50 including the whole basement. gas heat. 'a car g@ SLEEPING ROOM FOR GENTLE. Pontiac Press Box 1. | | Poaeee FE ee, bath, 2 weils with electric pumps. | D'ricc 3 pe bath. elect hot wa- Bateman & hampsen Gast Lake Yacht Club. Haiiiay , natnioraad abe 2''family" home, BaD. g Close to bus. % RMS. PVT gs 890 ROBIN. | | > boat. Coleman oil floor furnace, oa toi Po = A ag Office pen Sunday 1-5 p.m Park. 4300~ Cass-Elizabeth Rd.| separate entrance. gas or oil ok page storms, windows and doors in- Bre ADS SC Pues eee: War iT 18) Tele h, 2° bloc Frank Brown, Commodore. | heat. garage. good ‘neighbrhood | SLEEPING RMS. FOR CLEAN, 3 RMS, STOVE & REFRIG. LIGHT | settee ob neteen porches, dock. ig. and interior studding. Large | ‘7, S felegraph. 2 blocks — BE TRIM IN FALL CLOTHES. and pay ditference. Call FE 4-4930 sober men. 46 Mechanic. heat and gas furn, adults 13 Established 1916 . t | Warwick 81351. rooms Mestibule entrance Mr | Co-op Member Open Eves. ‘til ® veduvctte. PE 48862. L Cubley, Realty FE 2.0253 or FE 44930 BUSINESS GIRL TO SHARE ROOM | _ Pinegrove EAST, SIDE SE hx aod ~ ADAMS ROAD Workisig-man Here is the Me iene MODERN HOME ‘ SCHOOL GIRLS COLD WAVE, $550, “ ‘°"-MF ee | SS See ee | ere ROOM GAS, LIGHT. rms, and. beth. All. separate Geleidied ¥ beareem anes Howe Constructed home at a‘price Jou | acres, 634 Lochaven, FE 7-0 ee Dorothy's, 500 N Perry a La ‘Seeuad, Gaanary acinar & eae only, $95.00 per no. 5.30 to 7-30 units. individual basements and — <4000 5 ROOM BUNGALOW “ 24x4D.0n lot 100x190 Well and sepe can afford “Only $5,695 CUTE “AND COPN ae need listings of all types ' ‘ ; ; yE 2-37 \ ’ : { urnaces ear Ted's 1 Near bus and school, 2 bed- tic tank\installed. Only $5,850.-$1.- i << ke “ “line house eclete Sl ck “a from downtown, FE 2-3701 473 W Huron -' rented and showing good in-| rooms. oak floors, plastered walls’ 500 down , $4,000 down. “Truck farmer's de-| 4 room modern. basement. oil AC Wtd. Children to Board 25 your, or Wanted to Rent 32A Rent Houses Furnished 37) come. See this at only $19.500. | full hath | Wm. G WW scemb _réaltor one ; 5 aes of oe soil | ee rete ine lots, lake prive AnRAARN all us or stop in. Pa ee | ARAARAMR RR nernmems ees | FE™-7530 w ive stream whic as and | s ' own. . | YTON WOODS. Attractive 3- ena 5 TIN NG Vo West “7° Py PRE-SCHOOL AGE BY WEEK| CORI M, TMUGLLER "| omy SGuicn ean MOE 9 CHE| LOVES MIGOKRS TAR URRORT en eee eee ee ee eee ge a) RM, & RAT WN FUR) FO taesew 5 bed nokn, INCOME _ Good home. Exc. care. OR 38539. 111 Joslyn FE 49524) dren desire unfurn. house in city home on Square Lake, Lake | with stone fireplace, modern + rooms carpeted living and dining mace hea a t. to wih pavenent: a tinker SANTIT Fxtra clean. 6 and bath down,-~ LICENSED BOARDING HOME.-. p 5 | __limits Reas. rent. FE 2-6529 Orion, To lease from SEpt 15 to | kitchen with breakfast nook, 1'2 room, nice kitchen, 3 pc. bath. eo a ith rie a “Sox1s8: kitchen. Also large 28x46 ft, util-/ 3, rm apt up. plastered porch, Day Aare Ceer 5 yrs, 01d. FES | Peddling Your Property? Assistant SioRE | Ma nAGER| Jum 1's mo, Reference te.) bathe, full basement with oll lot $0x130 feet. A real value ic pels os ity building with two overhead) jack *hgheet s Barge, monies ft 440 It doesn't pa Our thod” of | with family desires 4 or 5 room | ulre neat reezeway to attache ; a ee garage doors and cement floor 2! aha Oly, auN a WILL BOARD CHILDREN IN_LI- showing only to qualified pros- | fait, Geeta Saud cones ae. aoa on Stes teat. BARI GES MB OO eee iecued’ Yok LAKEFRONT fruit trees, berries of all kinds | SPENCE STREET 4 et $ ” ° ; Wo cons 8. 500, terms own screene on WHE? Laarpin ; censed home. FE 5-2364. ; pee saves you time and money, same on lake Call 8S. S. Kresges u : = . ‘ ' . | 3 bedrm. colonial, 18 ft. living - and in many cases even the| 5 _ S. Kresge; entrance, employed couple pre- pooch 3 & bith ur hasement.| SATISFACTION Is DEFINITE “41 3tm down 3 pedroo odern | WILL CARE FOR CHILDREN NOT) feighbord don't know it's for _ C0. FE 5-6146 ferred, adults only, 4878 Fenmore | INDIAN VILAGE Good 3-bedrm gas furnace and water heater.. BUILT OF BRICK STONE home~wear Eastern Junior High. | pe Me gl wick Tenn car under 2 yrs. in licensed home. sale. ‘Don't worry with Lookers.’| SINGLE LADY DESIRES ROOM, Crescent Lake. west-side home. Full bath, in- garage. Here is a rent beater 7'2 *ooms on main floor 2'2 new sidi plastered walls. “See be arranged FE 4-0417. ; Call us now, We need your prop- & kitchen privileges within walk- 7 HOUSE FOR RENT. 9110 PONTIAC | sulated, full basement with gas . horse ressine rooms and cedar it today.’ ~~ | = i k Shar Li > t 26 erty We handle all details for; ing sistance of Orlando near Oak-| [are Rd | heat 2-car garage with over- $10,000. 2 FAMILY INCOME 5 panelled recreation room with fire- ~ Bate ‘man & ampsen e Living Quar ers financing and closing. land. FE 4-6177, bet, 2 & 5 p. heac doors. Attractively land-/| rooms with stoo] & lavatory down, lace in basement. This home $2500 down 3 bed home with | Office Open Sunday 1-5 p. m. Sa ean aed i | To Buy ~— To Sell — To Trade wk, days. SMALL COTTAGE. NEAT. LIGHTS | scaped yard Blacktop street, 4 & full hath vo, boessment. fur- as all the trimmings to make it oil furnace, located™on Second , S. Telegraph 2 blocks north MIDDLEAGED GENTLEMAN WILL! YOU BUY IT \VETL 'NSUPRE IT FAMILY OF 5 WOULD LIKE TO!. 894 gas. MY 2-3552' Lake Orion $13,500, reasonable terms mace, auto, water heater, 2 CAF: » | "ows ve~ Situ tes on te cre (Sire t, . beautiful ot wits nice! of Orchard Lake Rd. FE 4-0528 share beautiful 6 rm. home with , | rent 4 or-o rm. apt. or house, CABINS. BY THE WEEK. KAMP | k3srace Only 32.000 aown with 150 ft. of white, sandy large shade trees ‘‘excellen ~con- : mber Open Eve. till 9 young or middleaged couple Wife | c FE 4-6864. In OR 45-9316. FE 2-8081 ,; WEST pie ig ble eget ‘ios. TRADE OR BED 20 beach eA minute a {rom aie dition.” to d> housework -and cooking. ; 2 TEACHERS DESIRE 3 RQOM 2 MODERN HOMES. GAS HEAT. ed 3-bedrm. home with 2 com- | ; SELL cf Ptress for busines GATEWAYS t Close to St. Joseph Hosp, and nicely furn. apt. FE 4-2819. SOM? taupe 1. Can be nie til 5 plete baths, metern kitchen) ACRE FARM 7 room modern or professional, man. You must ¢33 999 Large 4 bedrm. brick fener | O G** Truck. No drink Ref REALTY CO, REALTORS | : 2 | With cabinet sink, plenty of house, large barn, tool shed and| see this to fully apreciate the ruck. °o rinkers ef- | YOUNG MICH COUPLE WITH IN- | dpm PE 5 2 Willow | : : This bh aly 14 Vase ania saliwe. ARO quality beauty of this home bungalow. 2 tile baths. attached erences exchanged. FE 5-6013. ers PERATIVE | | fant desire small furn. house or Beach, Keego. Harber’ co apace Le ot could ane uaa ccaute ba dudes | Cour next uae Ga tie ee. gar. ‘Lake front on Silver Lake.’ FAPPINESS SHARE HOME WITH RELIABLE {U7s'w Huron Ph FE 2.0263, 3, Toom spt. References. Box 8.) 3 BEDRM. HOME ON LAKE. OIL Full basement’ wah recreation | Would consider 6 or 7 room City a Leite isxso? ft. it. The wert | “17 .s er one Be NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH I icressenie his circulator, Will lease from Sept | space, 2-car garage. Corner lot Home in trade. TOHNSON, Realtor fronts on Dixie. “Mideal ‘site ell > ~ tow WANTS TO°SHARE HER | __ POST OFFICE __3 ROOM APT, PRIVATE BATH &| 15 to May 15. FE 4-7837 | $11,950 ‘with $3.00 down, or tb-| og) peat pty 4 PAMILY | 17048. Telegraph high class motel or kindered busi- | LOOK’AT THIS ee eeneoe wilt ay ee ie | Taraned er oid n VE | 2 BEDRM. $50. DEPOSIT, $65 mo. mee Olecoune ee’ SSP INCOME. Good Incation, 5 rooms FE 4-2533 or FE 5- pees: JUST A LITTLE DIFFERENT § : eee bs | home with couple for child care. - 465720 _| $500 cash FE 4-7474. SHARE MODERN HOME WITH. coup: pvt. entrance. Near Pon- tiac Plant No drinkers. Refer- ences required, FE 5846 WILL SHARE MY 6 RM. HOME lady or 2 wi: employed widow teachers. FE 4-5635 SHARE API TO. MIDDLEAGED map or 2 buddies. FE 5-5836. Wtd. Household Goods’ 27 an nw NOTICE — [F YOU WANT TO Get the high dollar for your .urni- ture we either buy tt or ction it for yon Call L & 8 Sales Co., FE 17-0783. FURNITURE NEEDED Entire nome or odo lots Get the buy outright or sel) tt for you. B. B Commnnity top dollar wil Sales Ph OR 3:2719 {eT US BUY [T OR AUCTION IT for you. OA 8-2681. WANTED ‘TO BUY ALL TYPES. Ph FE 25523 of furniture Wtd. |. Transportation 2 27A —enee RIDE .FROM 6829 = Lake ‘Rd. to State Hospital 8 -” § daily. FE 2-0901 Eves. uiri WANS tive eHeM near a to Pon- unr 3.3001 ~ aaa hours 8:30 to 5:30 WE WANT TO WORK We want action for our live- ly salesmen and we want to give you action on the sale of your properties. We can sell anything, anywhere at anytime. Homes, farms, bus. opp. commercial properties, land contracts. If we can't sell them we will buy them ourselves. Call now and have a salesman at your place in 30 minutes “GET RICH QUICK,” CALL” Edw. M. Stout, Realtor Open Eve. Till 8:30 77.N Saginaw St. Ph. FE 5-8163 | WANT GOOD BUILDING LOT IN Cherokee Hills Sub. at once. Box _7 Press ba yn rties Any loc also arm 0 ation, need smal) jhomes. abie aown ROY KN NAUF F, Realtor 26% W_ Huron Eve. OA 83339 | BUYRS FOR GOOD/ FE 27421 2 __2-5221 from 9 to 5. YOUNG MINISTER & WIFE WITH 1 child desire 5 or 6 rm_ unf. apt. or house. Reasonable FE | 4-7450. WORKING MOTHER WISHES UN- furn house or apt 2 bedrooms preferred and close to town. Rea- sonable 1. Children welcome. OR 3-2952. Near Drayton Plains. EXECUTIVE TYPE, 4 BEDROOM. dish- land- urnish- June 1 Oakley Phone modern, electric kitchen, washer, disposal, beautifull ;scapet, $125 Completely ed Available Sept. to Corner Ryan & Bus Dr., Park. Commerce Lake. Mr. Limond, UN 4-2376 YOUNG CLEAN COUPLE WITH!3 RM PARTLY MODERN FOR cat desire a nice. apt. Close in. FE | baby and pne* . ms ¢ orm SUPERVISOR AND EMPLOYED | wife's service or will rent, ent. 1146 W. Huron. 5 RM. FURN. HOME, NOT MORE than 1 child Call after 7 pm. rear wits desire % bedrm unfurn. apt 503 Central. or flat close to bus. Best of |g RMS AND BATH FOR RENT. references FE 4-7476, after 6:30 711 Lakeview Drive, Or ion. Pm. Heights, Lake Orion TEACHER. DAUGHTER. AND 4 scoo] age son desires furn. apt or home West side preferred. FE 4-7406 A a aglacey FURN. COTTAGE, FO FOR Ocs, and Nov. Call Linc “328 Hotel Rooms ee eS HOTEL AUBURIN Rooms by Day or Week Also 1 or 2 Room Apartments Cooking and refrigeration unit 464 Auburn Ph. FE 23-9239 Rooms With Board 32D REFINED YOUNG MEN, PVT. Home, FE 2-9514, FURN. HOUSE, CHILDREN ROOMS. BATH. NEAR CASS Lake. $65 per mo FE 5-4350 3 BEDRM HOME FOR RENT, furn. Immediate occupancy. Own- er will be on premises Sunday after .- 4566 Lakeview. Woodhull Lake . FULLY EQUIPPED & FURN 6 base- rm. lakefront home. Full ment. Auto. heat. EM 3-2500. _ WEL- come. Also furn. apt. Romeo 2360. FURN. 3 BEDROOM = MODERN till May 30th. Round Lake Rd. Apply Sunday or call VE & ry ROOM “AND BATH, OIL HEAT. per mo. and deposit, adults preferred, garage. 54 Myra. | De-wenr >. ap. hMember—OWn Fre Open Evenings gal wollawrente FE 5-6105 | ' 1362 W Huron 8st ; FE 4-6492 Next to Consumers Power BARGAIN! EMINOLE HILS' Large family home custom built with A-l ma- terial and workmanship. 6 rms. 3. apartments. Would take car) and cash or Housetrailer and cash | for $3650 equity on tst fir, including spacious dining rm., sun-rm and den with fireplace. 4 large bedrms. $11,500 NEAT 6 ROOM MOD- and 1% baths on 2nd fir., FRN 1! FIOOR BUNGA'TOW Neat and clean, good condition, 2 lots well landscaped on corner, City | property. Many more to choose from. Drive worlds of closet space. stairway to floored attic. F'ull basement, recreation rm, 3-car. garage. Large well-landscaped lot. Here is a beautiful home, surrounded to our office and look over by other fine homes. Priced at oe i $17,500 and worth it. 10-day pos- | ban PAs listings. Parking at session | | FLOYD KENT. | CAMERON HI. CLARK Realjor WEST SIDE SUBURBAN - BARGAIN! 8 rm family home, 4 bedrms. | . 1 + First offering-4 and bath and coee attain ‘arene full Peter utilitv -'2 acre of land, west,-sub- ; Lape dat | urban close to everything. $1250 ment, ol] steam heat acres on down, fast possession corner, landscaped borg hater 7 A egret Late ~ apriakers, fruit trees, paved VALUET Real F.state roads close to school. A_ real, 8 e FE_ 5-069 bargain. $5,000 dn. Terms. me — =— 24366. $700 DOWN ls rm. new home electric lights $8500 § rooms modern with 2 bedrooms. jr gent Rough plumbing, septic Natura) fireplace. Living room tank and well, 30 sheets of sheet- 15x20. Breezeway with attached rock included, 2 large lots Full 1% car garage. California red- price $5,750 wood storms and screens. V blinds. U living quarters plus income from | TO ROY Be: west of Pontiac. Owner. Adams Realty 2434. 382 AUBURN FE 43393 Nothing left undone-.for cece TU SELL. ar atTOe | . / —Hertridee ——= RD _ TO 8 Open Sunday 10-4 noon wt ae anne ™ r" living . Loe room venetian blinds, full ‘base- Small Chicken Farm | H, BROWN, Realtor ment. tubs, recreation sp @ te 2 Bedroom basement home. isa Ww Huron FE 2-4810 ner Ant pes Walton “pid Offered chicken house for approx. 300 Member Co-op Real Estate Exch.| gt $9950, terms. CALL TODAY — a el ground’ | BIRMINGHAM - 2 BEDRMS..| YOU'LL LIKE IT nig ‘dt ain al ‘, =. Let ori large screened patio. unfinished : a on ; matic hot water, lots of garden| 2° floor, oil. refrigerator, dish- SEE THIS TODAY space At $2,000 down, be sure you see it. a Eastern Jr. High Area 3 bedroo family home with full basement 2 car garage, lot. One bedroom and extra | ‘y bath down. 2 bedrooms and full bath un din-ne room, bin-fed_ stok- er. automatic hot water. Priced at $12,400, extra Close If Suburban Delightful 2 bedroom home with . large unfinished upstairs, full basement, oil furnace, automatic hot water, storms and screens. Excellent condition, only one year old, a fine home for the growing family, make your ap- : pointment TODAY H. Delos “BUD” NICHOLIE Real Estate and Insurance 49 Mt Clemens St. FE 5-1201 Eve. Mr. Deyo FE lot included. | RANCH TYPE 5 ROOM BRICK | ~ | LOG CABIN. 3 ROOMS AND UTIL- master, gas stove, outdoor grill. landscaped, $11,800. Kurth Real | Estate MI 4-7676, NEAR CLARKSTON First offering of this ranch type roon and bath 2 bedroom home fully insulated, plenty closet space, storms and screens, basement with oil heat. app roxi- mately one acre landscaping and home with fireplace. By Inquire 123 Mt. Clemens owner it’ and shower. 7 acres. Some ga den spot Privileges on Round frist trees, raspberries and straw- lake Offer-d at $9,590, $1,000 berries, Mrs Beach, 17160 Pon- down YOULL JIKE IT. tiac Lk Kd.. Pontiac, Mich | ROOM FRAME HOUSF ON }2 oo i! — To Sell To Trade OU BI'Y IT WE'LL INSURE IT MAHAN REALTY CO., REALTORS co- OPERATIVE MEMBERS Open Evenings ‘til 9 oe, eo! 1-9 lots, about 2 acres of land Full price $3,500 Only $1,500 down $30 mon*h 2742 Longview é&t, off Auburn Rd, near Dequinire, _ Avon Township WATKINS LAKE PONTIAC _ vermanent home with 2 bedrooms, ar WE HAVE HOUSES & in all parts of the city. Dinnan & Son “'0 Sag. YEAR AROUND MODERN LAKE saiaee $5500. Lake Orion. MY beautiful a ieee lot with —" trees. t terms or ike offer or trade DEAL WITH DANIELS! WEbster 3-7045 10406 W. Chicago, Detrolt i a a a a aa a a THE PONTIAC PRESS SPs ee ane Se Nn SS eS ERS eR Sh ee SS SS SR Sa atl ne t SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 12. 1953 TWENTY-FIVE = = Sale Houses 40 DORRIS BRICK RANCH HOME AT THE LAKE Long-Low-and Rambling, 65 ft. long home consisting of six ex- ceptionaiiv large and_ spacious rooms with all the modern fea- tures demanded by today's most particula buyers, Base-Ray gas fired heat living room 14x25 with 2 beautiful pictute windows and massive fireplace, beautiful oak floors and plastered walls through- out, full bath and ‘2 bath, 1800 square feet of tiving space Situ- ated on corner lot with 119 ft frontace and only a stone's throw from beautiful beach Owner leav- ing state Total price $21,500, LOVELY RANCH HOME ov ACRES OF LAND Lacaree just off Elizabeth Lake’ Roa located in excellent sur- roundings with a beautifu) lawn. Six rambling. spacious and love- rooms. fireplace, tull bath and half bath, attached garage, oak floors and plastered Walls, base- ment with oi fired hot water heat Price is right--$16 975, or will consider free-and-clear home in trade, or sel) with terms. LAKE FRONT BRAND NEW HOME Three bedroo full bath and half bath, cutf stone fireplace, spacious ‘living room witn pano- ramic view from Thermopane pic- ture window. A basement that 1s @ dream -- located at ground level with summer kitchen and lovely view of lake. $16,075, terms, OUR OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 } /DORRIS & SON REALTOR3 CO-OP MEMBER 5 Huron Street Phone FE 4-1557, or OR 3-2925 LARGE $ BEDRM. HOUSE, SUIT- able for 2 apts. Downstairs furn $1,500 down. Payments, §40 my. MY 2- 4884 OPEN DAILY 4531 CASS-ELIZ. RD. : This nearly ocew, privately built ranch type home has ail) the convenience of modern living. Large +¢ypacious rooms of exc. gat and construction. Beau- ful landscaped wooded corner lot with aa oa A quick sale as desired. e invite your iD specition. Russell A. Nott, Realtor 170 W Pike FE 4-5905 YOUNG 6 ROOM RANC Its a briution: Ranch home with natura’ fireplace in living room 17x26 ‘2 baths, fireplace Teation room, large picture win- dows throughout, ideal west side Bubdivision home on 3'2 acres wood jot, Call for appointment, INCOME We have several incomes with as much 8s $240 00 per month gross. See these bargains today, AUBURN HEIGHTS 4 rooms and bath with utility room. auto. oi] furnace, auto. hot water, plastered walls and oak floors, aluminum storm and screens, 65x223 foot lot. Priced for quick sale. Russell Young REALTOR an West Huron SB8t. FE 4-4525 Open &ves, Till 9, Sunday Till~5 OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 3 BEDROOM BRICK PIONEER HIGHLANDS All on one floor and in excellent cond. Sylvan Lake Privileges. Streamlined kitchen with tile fea- | tures, ceramic tile bath and show- ' 13x11 with sjid- | er Master bedrm ing wardrobe doors, carpeted 24 | ft. living room and dining et. au- | to. heat. 142 car garage with brick front. Richly landscaped & | and shaded 50 ft. lot. Directions: Drive out Telegraph Rd, to James K Bl ‘to 700 Pioneer Drive, Bateman & Kampsen Office Open Sunday 1-5 p. m. 377 8. Telegraph, 2 blocks north of Orchard Lake Rd. FE 4-0528 Co-op. member Open Eve. Till 9 LAMBERT SCHOOL 2 bedroom in exe cond Plastered and painted walls, large pleasant | kitchen, nice utility room with Bendix washer, oil forced air ed natural fireplace. Only $1,550 ow WALLED LAKE AREA 2 bedrm. ranch, 2 years old. 18x13 living rm. Large picture window. Tile bath, lovely kitchen. Generous utility room with Bendix Dryer. 16x20 garage. GI resale. CORT M. IMBLER 1111 Joslyn FE 4-9524 2 ACRES AND SMALL BUNGA- low near Lake Oakland, bargain, $4950. $1,000 down. PAUL M. JONES REALESTA 832 W. Huron EAST SUBURBAN Very modern 5 rm., lovely living room with natural fireplace, din- ing room and modern kitchen. 2 bedrm., tile bath, beautiful rec- reation rm. {1 basement, gas weg yt dow’ lot. Only $10,500 w ON PAN *EMENT 4 rm. with utility rm., large lot for garden, housework simplified with this good home design. Only $6,950 with $1850 down. — : CRAWFORD AGENC\ REALT OPE EVES 2141 Betis FE 46617; West Suburban) Flere's an ideat home for a large family. Beautiful set- ting w:th plenty of shade trees and shrubs. 4 bedrms. stool down, Full bath on second fir. Lake privileges on Marceday Lake. $8,500, $1,000 down. Ranch Home Only 2 years old and like new this 2 bedroom bungslow ts located on ex- tra large lot, 80x260 ft, forced air oil furnace, hard- wood floors, ull bath, close to school ‘us ‘ine past the door, located on good black- * top road west of airport. $7,950 with terms. PARADISE 10 acres with 3 bedrooms all modern home, all kinds of fruit frontage on private jake good tractor & spring equipment. Several hives of bees with separating equip- ment. All this for only $16.- 000 =«6with §6©$5.000 down or $13,500 without the equip- ment, Crescent Lake $450 DOWN BRAND NEW 2 BEDROOM BUN- GALOW COMPLETE ON ExX- TERIOR ONLY., LAKE PRIVI- LEGES, IMMEDIATE POSSES- F. C. Wood Co. REALTOR 1725 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-1235 __Office Opens 9 a.m. to 8 pm. “OPEN ON OTTAWA DRIVE 224 OTTAWA DRIVE comer MANITOU Strikingly different colonial, mahog- any paneled® den, twin rea | bedrooms, 2 baths, 10x18 breere- | way ane 2 car brick garage, ” “GAS HEAT: Customized decorating going on now Open 1-8 Sunday and by appoint ment C\REY HOMES, INC, UN 4-4476— 75 W. Huron | Member in rec- | | SEMINOLE HILLS | COLONIAL ELIZABETH LAKF. ESTATES Attractive 2 terms. THEEMA M. FE 5-1284: 4 rooms & bath | 428 W. | 8 ROOM N FE 41549 | nate Hou Houses 40 OPEN Sunday 2 to 2426 ST. JOSEPH ST. = In’ exclusive Sylvan Manor. At last! We offer for the discriminating buyer, ‘'The Home That Has Ever y- 1g’ Brick construction, ‘enna in attractive Briar Hr, Stone; with modern extefior lines, The interior ¢harta, “comfort, and liva- bility is remarkable in such @ moderate: price home, Tiled vestibule entrance to 14'2x18's living room and dining ell large picture window, 3 bedrooms ayverag- Ing 11x13 In size double closets eos | doors, an exceprionaily t planned full ceramic tile bath, shows er, inen closet, Deluxe kitchen with tile features, dining space, vent tan and garbage disposal. Complete » basements A. C. forced air gas furnace, Luxatire Incin- 1 erator, Rear patio, solid paved drive. 75 and 80 foot wide lots Se Eeer plumbing. We hive at exceptional home in these 08 8x40 foot Ranchers. Priced at only $15.950 Phone this minute for your appointment or: Drive out Orchard Lake to Middlebelt Rd., turn left, be sure to look for “O'NEIL'S” signs. 501 EAST MANSFIELD — Drive out Joslyn to open sign Inspect -this 6-room F. H. A. bungalow, 8 foot picture window in the pleas- ant living room, dceluxe hen, senarate din-tte, 2 hedrooms, tile bath, shower, expansion attic Complete basement, Timken oi) fur- nace Select. oak floors, plastered painted walls, Only $2700 dewn plus F. H. A. mortgage cost. Hurry we had 43 of these 3 fine homes, we now have 2. One of them can be yours 716 CRESCENT LAKE 'RD. -. $1 down. This com- act 6-room modern home, wing room with fireplace, dinette new modern kitche en, 3-bedrooms, full bath Basement with Timken oil heat, laundry trays. At- tached garage on ‘2 acre of ground near Waterford . Immediate possession. Elizabeth Lk. Crescent Lak Rd., Tight to property, RAY O'NEIL, peg 9-9 pen Phone FE 3-7103 or oR” B1e4a Co-op modern home in. exe. out. 4 roomy 10 rm. inside nq bdrms., 2 ceramic tile baths up, BOC , with mar- ble firep) ace, ‘dint ing room, kitchen den, bath on first floor, Nice large basement with gas heat, lprie recr at‘on room, 3 car ga- rage. This home ts priced to sell with very good terms. Eves, after 6, call Mr. Joll, FE 717-6610. ESTATES Beautiful ranch type 3 bdrm. heme with attached garage. Sit- uated on lovely landscaped’ lot 100x150 {t. Completely modern up-to-date furnishings. St. "Ne " Charles Kitchen, Ledgerock fire- place with heatolator. Flagstone porches. Must be seen to be ap- preciated. Full price $29,500 with very good terms.’ Eves. after 6, | Call Mr Johnson, FE 2:1598. SUBURBAN 4 rm. modern home 11x15 tr room, oak floo rs, plastered walk, 2 Jarze hear s ol furnace n. | full basement. Situated on lot 75 ¥100. Just 1 biock from stores Cal) Mr. Inman. FE 5-514] days, eves. after 6, FF 4-3473 en 4-50 new oil all modern home with basement, and hot water heater Really a_steal for only $6950 with $1,000 down, Fives. after 6, Call Mrs. Snyder OR 3-1975. i JOLIN SOR, 1704 S. Telegraph __ FE 4-2533 or FE 5-3781 Near Union Lake bedroom ranch home Kitchen 12x12. Living room 12x19 with beautiful cut stone fireplace. 5 rm ft. lots. fturrace Realtor! Extra large bedrooms. Utilty room Timken furnace. Attached 2 car garage with breezeway. Nicely landscaped 2 ACRES. Chick- en vard 25 apnle trees. Berries Exchange | CARNIVAL by Dick Turner Wap T. M. Reg. U. S Pat. Off. Copr. 1953 by NEA Service, Ine. “But I'm not tired of your cooking, Pet! However, I do get tired of catsup once in a while!’’ For Sale Houses 40 IRWIN Two bedroo ‘bungalow with auto- * matic heat. Has lovely kitchen with oodles of closet space. Only 2 years old. You must see these to appreciate them Only $9,000 With terms. LAKEFRONT A nice lakefront on Lotus Lake. Has automatic heat and hot wa- ter, garage, and basement. A bee ila lake i1ot. Only $8,250, 000 down. If you are inter- pone in a lake home you should see this, GEORGE R_ IRWIN, th deaaiad 269 Baldwin Aven _ Phone FE 5-0101 or FE LAKF FRONT HOME. bath. Full price _ equity. OR 3-0938 CLOSE 10 PONTIAC 3 apt smcome. Separate heating, “9.8544 5 RMS. & $5,800, $3,500 furn, in| of ail kinds. Nice garden spot. All for $16,700, terms. Elizabeth Lake - Will consider vour home as down payment on this brand new 3 bed- room ranch home, Plastered walls. Hardwood floors. 10 ft. pic- ture window. Large utility room. Automatic furnace. On bus line. —Avaterford School, Only $10,50Q ETAWOOD 5143 Cass-Flizabeth Rd. FF 4-3844; Onen 9 to 7 $650 DOWN lake Pe imme- diate possession. FE 4- . Ph. FE +3508 | /§ ROOM HOUSE AND 30'x40' CE- ment block shop. Corner of Church and Fenner. Box 166, Mar- lette, Mich Phone 2407 ROCHESTER AREA 3 room house with water and electricity: $3.000, $550 down. 5 bedroom sae in: choice lo cation: $1700 MAURICE WATSON Rochester Fourth OLive 6-0371 MODERN HOUSE garage Needs renair. $5200 com- vlete price. Must be sold im- mediately MA 5-483! CHARLES LIXCOLN 3ST. 2 cAMILY PAYING EXCELLENT | RETURN on investment required +$10500) 5 and bath down 4 and | bath ur 2? car garage 50x100 lo.. Reasonable down payment takes it Might consider small acreage or good car as part down payment Investigate — this is @ fine tocation. CRE R.NCH HOME AT DRAYTON PLAINS, Built 1950 Oak floors, picstered walls ° nice bedrooms ut.lity and % basement automatic gas heat. 2 car garage with tractor port.. Good, muck soil $10 950, reasonable down pavment. D. CHARLES ie lal Rea! Estate Exchange huron Ph. FE. 4-0521 FF 5-7145 or FE 2-1704. DONELSON PARK , FOR BETTER LIVING MODEL BRICK HOME OPEN SUN. 1-8 P. M. LOCATED AT 2991 Edgefield Drive, corner of Noyle Ey os WM. A. KENNEDY REALTOR 308° W Huron Open Eves. 4-3569 ‘till 8 pm. ‘RANCH BUNGALOW. 2660 MID- lebe't Rd. Bloomfield Twp. be- ween Pine Lk. Rd. Square Lk. 6 rms, fully ‘modern. Lot 100x150 Price $19,750. TERMS CALL UN_ 2-1335, Frank L. Sykes, Broker, James Couzens Hwy., Detroit. RANCH HOME. 2 YRS. OLD IN B) -mfie d Twp. on large acreage. Price $34,000 Low down pay- Ment. Call owner MI 4-5526, weekdays. 1 CAR | /26'2 W ~Huron ‘St 13 room house with city | gs 19138 baths & entrances, several fruit trees, outside fireplace, garage. 2 apt furn. complete 4 large lots On vavement, water on side & back Ideal set up. Good payment down terms East sice room house, stool, as, eiectric oil ge iia aved street. $4250. term wot MICLAR ty _ 2-2162 STONE Off Joslyn Let the other man help you pay for this attractive income. Fully mocern, 39 rooms down and 3 rooms up. Suitable for the large ; family. Quick possession and reas- | onable down payment Oft Baldwin 3 bedroom bungalow, full base- ment, full bath, oil forced air | heat. Nerds some finishing, but | see this today for only $6,000. Francs LE, “Bud” Maller Realtor Member Co-operative Realtors Exchange ° Daily 9 to 8 pm. Sunday 1 to 5 pm 919 Joysly FE 2-0253 Customer Parking Space in Rear 240 ACRE DAIRY FAR 12 room home with apt., barns, 3 silos, 4 car garage, im- plement shed and milk house. Crops. tools anid herd optional. 18 mi. N. of Pontiac. 30 day possession, $42 900, terms by ave M. JONES, REAL ESTATE | W. Huron FE 43505 | EAST SIDE |. | Look at this 5 room modern today. 24 ft living room, kitchen and atini ng area, 2 large bed- | rooms, newly decorated & painted, corner lot on paved streets. Only | $7,950 vith $1.750 Aawn $600 DOWN new & comniete on the outside. You can finish the in- s.de & save the difference. 4 rooms, bathroom and ut!lity room. Nice high ae or lake priv. on Crescent la TAY LOR ‘STREET 6 ronmm modern on large lot. 1 bedroom down and 2 up. Good neighborhood. within walking dis- tance of downtown $7950 terms. J.C. HAYDEN Brand M 2 large } $800 dwn TOR Eves "E 5-6852 * EM __3-5042 FOR COLORED OF Only $33 per month. —— Jo CG. HAYDEN, | 2642 .W. Huron St Eve. FE Realtor FE 5-2264 FE 5-5852 or EM 3-504 5042 Knudsen Menominee Rd. Large family home in excellent condition. 3 large bedrooms & 1% baths. Large living room, dining rm. kitchen sunroom. Excellent basement with gas heat. There is also a 2 car garage with a paved drive. Good landscaping. Location is perfect for schools, bus and shopping center. New Practically new ranch bad home consisting of 6 excellent kitchen & bath, high & ary basement. carpeting. ofl heat 1's car garage and paved . You can't beat this val- ue for $12,700. WM. H. KNUDSEN RFALTOR ne Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 44516, Eve. 2-5320—2-3759 Hammond EAST SIDE 50 S. Jessie — Corner Location - 3 bedroom modern home. - new rear summer porch — gas heat - garage Priced right at $10,500 with $2,500 down. PAUL D. HAMMOND FE 5-741 SYLVAN'SHORES _ 3 bedrm. ranch type Complete tn every detai!. Has 2? car finished garage, enclosed rear terrace, out- door bar-b-que, landscaped archi- tect’s yard, with dog run & baby vlay yard, 50-6 yr. old evergreens, new wall-to-wall carpets & drapes _ Sato" 30 day possession. FE- WEST SUBURBAN _ 3 bedroom home, double construct- ed, Dasement, new furnace, large Iot, plenty of fruit. near stores & school. Onlv $4650 with $2,150, bal. $35 monthly. New 2 bedroom home, large living rm., modern kitchen & bath, full basement, oi] hot water furnace. School bus by door. See th fore you buy. Only $9,750 with $2,000 down DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER ou lo Office FE adit . pa EM 3-3303 FE 5-2264 | water and | $3200 with $1.000 and!. is be-: For Sale Houses 40 Newer Lake. Front Ranch Home Built for an exacting owner & complete in every detail. Attractive white Colonial exterior. 5 well planned rooms, tile bath, wel equip- ped utility and storage room and insulated 2 car garage Radiant General Electric oil floor heat, dual pumps and thermostat. Extra jet lake pump for lawn sprinkling. To include fireplace fixtures, 1,000 ga’ oil tank, antenna, traverse rods, draperies, boat & dock. Price $18,000, terms. Ph. FE 5-8004. Sylvan Village Charming white frame 2 bedrm. bungalow, lovely tile bath, 2 picture windows, marble sills, carpeting. Rear porch. Attached garage Fine bsmt.. gas heat & fin- ished recreation room nicely landscaped lots. Pri- vate sand beach = nearby City bus service. Phone FE 2-5662 West Suburban 4 bedroom home itn excellent condition. 1 bedroom down and 3 up Lots of closet space. Breezeway and at- tached garage with 2 room apt. above. Large lot beau- tifully landscaped Priced for quick sale with terms. Ph, EM 3-5861, John Kinzler, 670 W. Huron St. Open Eves, Realtor FE 4-3525 "til 9 _ Co-operative Realtors Exchange 3 MILES EAST OF PONTIAC OUT- SIDE OF CITY. 6 YRS RMS, LIVING RM, GARAGE STORMS & SCREENS. CLOSE TO CITY SCHOOL, SCHOOL BUS TO HIGH SCHOOL. LAKE PRIVILEGES. $2,000 DOWN FE 5-3458 MUST SELL Modern 2 bedroom bungalow, with attached garage. Oak floors, plastered walls. Full basement with auto. gas furnace. $2,500 down. Inquire 112 Pioneer, (1 block behind Scribs.) LESS THAN RENT $39 a month inciuding taxes and inrurance 2 bedrm. modern home, enue storms & screens. $1500 dow 2 pecreom modern, $45 month, r down payment linds iat de 1919 M-15 Pa *O nvilie 132 feverse » charges. OXBOW AREA Large bungalow — 6 rooms and bath, oil heat, garage Lake priv- fleges. There are 3 big bedrooms (2. down, 1 up) and sunporch. Large lot, fruit trees, $11,500, terms. HANDSOME LOG HOME AT THE LAKE Extra nice — excellent construc- tion! Imagine — a 26x24 FULLY CARPETED living room graced by artist:c natural fireplace. pic- ture windows. Full dining room, also carpeted. Streamlined kitch- en. 1-2-3 bedrooms and bath-all on one floor Full basement, oil heat, recreation space. Oversized dbl. garage, Scenic setting. VA- CANT! See anytime—call right now! Humphries Co-operative Realtors Exchange 3 N. Telegraph FE 20474 Open Evenings SUSIN, LAKE Attractive bedroom, lake front, two shell home. Cedar shingle siding, partitioned interior excellent location. Full price had with $800 down. WM. A KENNEDY REALTOR 3097 W. Huron Open Eves. ‘till 8 p. m. Don't Fail to See This Brand new 3 bedroom home in exclusive Waterford Lakes Es- tates with lake priv. on Silver Lake Be sure to check all these wonderful feautres: SLOPED LOT. 140 ¥T X125 PT: RANCH “TYLED HOUSE, 26 FT. 8 in.x56 ft. Attached garage with overhead door; basement 26 ft. FT.. WITH CENTER SEPARATING RECREA- ION RM. FROM UTILITY RM. LARGF, Rea tae oa eee WITH 6x8 DINING AREA. IT HAS A 13 FT. PICTURE WINDOW K- a ON A BEAUTIFUL BATH ROOM HAS CERAMIC TILE AND Same eae LIGHT FIXTUR LARGE BEDROOMS . 2 ARE 13x13 WITH DOUBLE CLOSETS. 3RD BEDROOM IS 10x13. The very best of materials went into this home Come and see this beautiful home Friday after 4:30 pm. All day Sat. and Sun. WINKLEMAN West 1 block then turn right on * Win- _kleman $1.50 DOWN. $33 PER MO. cl and ins. at q pe cludes taxes garage. priv. Full price, $5,955. EM 3-5737. 318) rth Rarer FE 4-3569 + For Sale Houses 40 OP DAILY 3-9 P.M. SUNDAY 1-9 P.M. 2314 MIDDLEBELT ROAD _ Directions: Orchard Lake Road '4 mile west of Telegraph Road to Middlebelt Road — turn left to model. SEE THE LARGEST NEW HOMES FOR YOUR MONEY FOR THOSE WHO DESIRE GRACIOUS LIVING Recreation plus pine panelled laundry room. GAS AUTOMATIC FURNACE AND HOT WATER One year guarantee, PONTIAC SCHOOL SYSTEM NOTE THESE FEATURES: 3 BEDROOM, FACE BRICK HOME | Spacious, eye-appealing rooms. FULL BASEMENT — POURED CONCRETE Genuine stone sills. PLASTERED WALLS Select oak floors. INTERIOR SLAB DOORS Ceramic tile bath. DOUBLE SINK BOARD TILE Custom- made. mney? Pine kitchen cabinets. DINING 8BPACE IN KITCHEN Built-in benches, FULLY INSULATED Paved solid drive. COMB. ALUMINUM STORMS & SCREENS Space in $14,650 Complete On lots with 60 to 80 {t. frontage. This home with attached breeze- ao 2 car brick garage — MAHAN ALTY CO. dae Huron NEXT DOOR TO TORANCH POST OFFICE STOUTS: Best Buys Today SPARKLING Located just A-1 Toom batn conversion water throu plastered watts scree s a brand new offering is ve k BUNGALOW off Joslyn subdivision. A bungalow Full basmt. with gas heat and Newly. redecorated ghout. Oak floors and Storms and Built in ‘49. This and Ty salable at $10,950. ANCIT TIOME ns $1200 DO\WWN Brand new and your A »b shake rooms and bath ready for immediate occupancy. eautiful green cedar ranch containing 4 plus util. ity room. Outstanding tile floors. yt lots) Fully in- sulated is little beauty is located near Auburn Heights and mone TORE A ci A very nice shaded lot is really worth the y. See it today! $450 DOWN MOVED te little home located of Pike Street. Con- 4 good sized rooms, You can buy this little doll house for o nly $2,200. Investigate! INDIANWOOD COLONIAL Includes 10 beautiful rolling acres of land and nicely remodeled farm home. Base- ment you hing locati barn tn good shape. If are Booking for some- suburban in as good on, see this today! OFF AUBURN Cozy $450 DOWN little 4 room home with water and electricity and 2 lots insul 1 car garage. Warm ation siding. Quick pos- session. Payments much less than ELI Just of s lake and rent ZABETH LAKE FRONT about the best 100 feet andy frontage on the with an excellent brick Shingle home. Full 5 rooms with powder room on othe first floor Toom lus 3 bea- 5 and full bath on the second Basement with fin- ished recreation room and bar. and Includes other Chris outside Craft equip- ment. Call us for the price on this one, you. only, 5 rooms, large living room. it will amaze Shown by appointment Edward M. Stout, Realtor 17 N. Saginaw st. RANCH TYPE BRICK $11,500, $3,000 DN cove ceilings, possession DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER 3140 Office FE 2-4411 street you BADE | REALTOR W. Huron Livingrm , SIDE INCOME Very neat and clean 3 aera with income of $220 per mo 5 rm 3 rm hot ai water heaters, terms, apt.. one 2 rm. Separate bsmts., r furnace 3 car garage. quick possession. JOHN K. IRWIN : ° REALTOR 10142 N. Saginaw Btreet 2-403 Phone FE 1 Eve. Beautiful Old Home in Wal enc:osed porch upstairs. Kitchen. $25 000. Terms. MA 41213. or. Orchard Lake Rd. F le. DRAIN | basement Written construction FE 2-026) Sale Houses v") Partridge IS THE “BIRD" TO SEE 2 HOMES, 3.ACRES $7,700 — $1,750 DN. One modern home has 2 bed- rooms and is rented for $45 per mo. The other is a 4 room base- also rented for $45. Total income $90 per mo. Lo cated on Joslyn Rd. not far from the city limits, Trees on the lawn like @ park, grape arbor and small chicken coop. Live tn one and ‘et the other help make the payment. See it today. SEPTEMBER SPECIAL 5 ROOMS, $950 DN. A year ‘round home at White Lake with 4 large lots, chicken house and fruit trees It's a wonderful home value at only” $5.500 | DUTCH COLONIAL a,;2 - - | DESIRABLE LK. | FRONI After uw hard day there couldn't iy @ nicer place to come to Nan this lovely home that ac- Wally has 2 wonderful living rms And if you have children or ertertain a lot, youll favor the unique guest house that has even another big living room with | a fireplace. This very attractive home is so well built and has so many good things about it that vou'll want to stay at home all time, There's over an acre close in lake’ with a sandy @ garden, pic- turesque trees and a location you'll say is the handiest of all. The children will attend the Web- ster and Washington Jr. High in a city. Priced at only $22,500 th $7,500 down. We believe this pri ce to..be about half of today’s production cost. .Do vourself a Excellent building sites with good dra e to drive your own hehe 90504 an county WATKINS LAKE "AREA Close to oo in a good neigh- On vaved road Heavily wooded with garage, aro 1 left Good soil for fruit or Cc | 4286 Dixie H'wy 2 LOTS BASEMENTS DUG. 222 8S. Telegraph 2 LOTS AT WILLIAMS LAKE, 60x __ 300 each. Inquire, favor and make an appointment | now to see it, REALTOR, FE 2-8316 43 W. Huron St |5 ROOMS MODERN WITH GA- lot, facing M15, mice shaded lot, large garden, all in very nice shape. Full price $5.500 $1.500 down, Floyd W. Burt, Orton- _ Ville Ph. 64. Buys Galore LIFETIME TILE ROOF is _ fust one of the many fine features of this new modern ranch home overlooking Cass Lake Iacluded {s 3 bedrooms den, full base- ment, fireplace, l'2 car garage. end '« acre of land. Price $19,- 500, favorable terms, rage, 100 ft. 1 a mile from town is this new solid brick ranch home with fireplace, full basement, 2 car ga- rage. and 3 acres of land. Price $30,000, terms. OVERLOOKING ROCHESTER and jus CONTEMPORARY LIVING can be yours with this new 4 bedroom ultra-modern ranch home. Fea- tures include fireplace, solar heat 2 car garage. and 10 acres of land. Price $29,500, terms. LAKF FRONT featur- ing a lovely sandy beach. 3 bed- rooms, infra-ray heat, fireplace, large screened-in front porch, 1'2 Car garage. and large wooded | lot. Price $43,650; Terms, WOODHULI FE 5-8165 room & dining | guest closet, foyer entrance, plant ing box, fire- __Eves. EM 3-3303 ROSELAWN DR. 3 bedrm. home located on paved diningrm. and kitchen down, 3 nice bedrms. and) bath up Full bsmt, water heater, 2 car garage. Priced right with $1,500 dn. Let us show HA heat, and one each has and new | MARSHALL & OSMUN. 8. E. cor- FE 2-1804 Lake 1'2 acres. Com- pang redecorated inside and out. ew oi] furnace, 4 bedrms.. bath, Modern JAMES A, TAYLOR Real Estate —Insurance 1210 Pontiac State Bldg. FE 4-2544 | Open Evenings Coop Member Sale Lake Prop 41 OID OOO ow SMALL HOME, 3 MILES WEST OF town Cal! Ortonville 13F31 for appointment YFAR AROUND LAKE home, private, all Apply at Lumber yard & bozie Lake Rds er FM 43-2250 $10 5000 wt dn. Call week days after 5 30. 24x24 COTTAGE, 60 FT. FROM | Lake Fastman, nearly «complete will sell as is for $4300 or $4500 when done. rough plumbing, well, nepti Call owner. EM week days after 5.30 LAKE FRONT 2 Modern Year: round homes on, one hajf dow 1'PAUL M SONES REAL FSTATE } 832 W. Huron FE 4-3505 LAKEFRONT LOG HOME, 3 BED- rm knotty pine interior, auto. hot water, auto. ofl heat, fenced. Screened porch. $12,000 Low down payment, terms to suit. Pvt. 5 miles Pontiac. 3860 Athens Rd. Dravton Plains. UNiversity 1-7489 Detroit. Lakefront by Owner Dix home, 2 bedrooms, Ice. kit, finished rec. room, 2 fireplaces, $16.500, terms. OR 3-12312. . BY OWNER, 2500 SILVERSIDE Drive. S‘iver Lake, 3 miles N ; of Pontiac Attractive home, 2 larce lot 100 ft lake frontage. Immediate possession, no appoint- ment necessary, Phone OR 3-1411. UNFINISHED HOUSE ON BEAU- t:iful lot lake privileges. small down payment. Call EM 3-5253 _eves, or weekends. _ Sale Resort Prop. | AIB GREEN LAKE OFFICE (ON GREEN LAKE) “HEADQTRS. —o ALL Cottaces, Hom Lots SINCE 1995 LIST IT HE NO 1070 COMMFRCE RD _Line Prom Detroit WO 5-7744 For Sale Lots 42 —_—_— —_ BEAUTIFUL. 19 LOTS, 195x279, CORNER OF MARLINGION AND WOOD 8T. | | FE 5-2490 ileges at Upper Straits, Middle Straits and Union Lake. EASY TERMS. Scnneider, 924 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake. OPEN DAYS Phone MA 4-1554 HAVE SEVERAL LOTS NEAR Longfellow School. $350 and up, $25 down. also some in North end off Walton Blvd. WILLIS M. BREWER Roosevelt Hote) FE 4-5181 Eves & Sun EM 3- 4898 SILVER LAKE | 80 ft. front facing golf course one ot Waterford townsnip s’ subdivi- sions, from $495 Giroux & Hicks +4380 Dixie H'wy. Drayton Plains OR 3-9701 Place, kitchen cabinets with ’ wae chute. Now open. PERRY PARK: LARGE LOTS 50x a - ; _ 7 ; 122 with sewers and water, ex- . _ Se * lent building sites, $500 each— IN ORTONVILLE small down pay P : 4 i) ry oF 1 n payment 6 rms. & bath, utility rm, new ga- rage attached, paved” street. East Bloomfield Highlands: 200x300 block from stores, churches and; {!. beautiful high lot. low taxes. school, very nice location. lot 77x! Priced at only $2,000 150 ft. Pull price $7,750 with | terms. F. W. Burt, Ortonille 64 | Colonial Hills: 775x188, good high _— WE / r 7 i lot, excellent ranch type site. “ST STD dill 3 bedroom modern, ranch type, full | ia aiaee ior woke. Owkiand, 89x108 basement, near transportation $3.000 will handle, $66 monthly including taxes and insurance JOHN K IRWIN 4'2 per cent interest. Immediate | : REALTOR 101'2 N, Saginaw Street ; Phone FE 24031 Eve. FE 21804 | Live iN [THE COUNTRY NEAR the city om a large restricted homesite in Waterford Hil) &s- tates Convenient terms ar- ranged. For tnfcrmetion cal) OR %-7614 BEAUTIFUL CORNER LOT. 100x 200 F.eldwar and Hickory Drive. orrest Lake Estates, Sacrifice at $2,000. $1020 down. MI 6-0191. ~ DRAYTON WOODS — Ranch igh ge Some beautifully wooded. HOLMI S “SARTRAM 4392 Dixie A OR 3-1950; Eves O 3-8001 | ner, 40x120, $875. Next lot south \ 40x120, $750. Modern. Paved, new- ly wraded. UNiversity 1-3284. BEAUTIFU! LOTS WITH ORANGE grove at your back door, in the heart of Florida at Haines City, _¥n. MY 3-757). LOTS FOR SALE. Cass Lake Rd N. of Keego, 45° on waterway to Cass Lake, $1,195; lots 50’ wide $675, 40° for $595. Also 9 lots in tiac. JUDSON BRADWAY COMPANY WO 20700 Branch, Tele = rey Rd WARD FE. ae FRONT | conveniences. | at Cooley | or call own- | th $2 500 | -2250, i LOTS. OF LOTS WITH LAKE PRIV- | | Business For Sale Lots DRAYTON PLAINS 100 x 150 3495 110 x 150 $695 borhood access to stores. Close to us, oo Some wooded. Low as + ACRES “"\VOODED large trees. Excellent site with plenty of wl ie Some clear ground re for gardening. Low as $170 bait 10 ACRES rries. $2,100 with $210 down. } 3496 Pontiac Lk. Rd. er Cass Lake Rd FE 2-0207 Drayton Plains OR 3-2361 FOR LEASE TO RELIABLE TEN- | 2188 Cass Lake Rd. FE 2-4875 CARL W, BIRD, Realtor FE 4-4211 Here in. Drayton Plains. OR $25 DOWN 3-2955 _afler 4. 24 ACRE LOTS ON Brown Rd. between Joslyn and Baldwin. Good soil. Some w Close in, Shop early for choice lots. VALUET Real Estate FE_ 5-0693 OR 36734 SYLVAN VILLAGE A beautiful ranch homesite. llx 120 ft.. 'z block from bus line 1 gid from good beach. Only $2 OVERLOOKING ELIZ, LAKE Well located, nice sized lot with trees. New pavement. A steal at $800 Terms THELMA M. ELWOOD ™ 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Rd. | FE 5-1284; FE 4-3844; Open 9 to 7 CORNER LOT _FE 2-3240 _ 334 ACRES. NR, MANN RD. IN Oakland Lake, $700 cash. OR 3-7064 PEE THES beautiful home sites before you buy. Priced from $595 up. Some are as large as 100x400. Near schools, transportation and store. Some are only $10 down and $10 month. Larger ones are $15 dn. and $15 mo. ‘Excellent soil."’ lL. H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-4810 For Sale Acreage 43 OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 3 2-4 ACRES $15 to $25 Down| Only 1'2 miles from city limits EASY BUILDING CODE Drive out Josisn to Brown R to Sign. VALUET ~ Real Estate 222 S. Telegraph HOME SITE 4 acres — $1600 4 acres with stream — 10 acres — — Convenient term MAURICE Ww ATSON 428 W. Fourth Rochester OLive 60371 2 ACRES WITH RANCH TYPE LOG cabin 5 rm. house. Breezeway, ga- rage and chicken coupe, 1802 N, Rochester Re.. near Lakeville. For further information call or see John A. Cypher. 152 Albert son. OL 2-2601. Pontiac-Rochester Area Carefully restricted parcels, 2 acres and up. miles Rochester, 3 miles north on Ada and 1 mile west gn Silverbell Rd., or 7 miles no of Pontiac on M-24 and % mile east on Silver Bell Rd. Look for our sign, ‘‘SIL- VER BELL ESTATES. Agent on ees 5 to 4 Sunday. LMES, INC HAMMOND BL EDO. DETROIT WOodward 1-7101 % ACRES ON PAVEMENT. T. $25.00 down $10 month. P. W. DINNAN & SON_ (110 8. Saginaw ~ Sor 10 Acres“ S Boulevard between Adams & | Crooks Rd. Will sell Harold T. Coughiin. _ Boulevard, FE 2-5605 __ Business Property Knudsen West Huron St. 100 feet of choice frontage, zoned business, includes very well built stone home, built in 1928 and includes 4 bedrms. and lta baths. Excellent base- ment and 2 car garage. Space available ior buildin is ap- proximately 60 feet. all us, WM, H. KNUDSEN Realtor 510 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Ph. Federal 4-4516 on terms, 3305 5S ~ 44 NORTH frontage on 3 streets. ment place plus sewer, at onlv $13,500. WILILS M. BREWER Roosevelt Hotel | Eves & Sun. GARAGE BLDG. For lease, garage “—. ier Be _ ft. 2 parking Its. ap showroom, available aboat ‘ont 1S. Inquire 29 Auburn Ave come. 56 ft Ave. by 223 ft, deep. Zoned C-1 Double garage. five-room, 1 3-room apts. 3 baths front and rear stairs. Oak floors and trim. £225 monthly income. Good condition. Separate gas and electric, full basement, laundry tubs. steam heat. wil _ handle. Owner. FE 5-7233. Manufacturing No. 1 Cement block bidg. with glazed tile walle and excellent office — Approx. 3,000 square feet oor space plus good room modern home. Neat and very comfortable $26,500. PAUL A. KERN, Realtor 31 Oakland Ave. 2 ___ ‘Real Estate Since deity tS COM MERCIAL BUILDING 30 x 60 with full basement. Loading door. Suitable for any business or light mfg. xc. 5 room mod. ranch type home. All this on 5 acres with 164 . frontage on Eliza- beth Lk. Rd. Owner. FE 45931. ee eee er eae gg eer INDUSTRIAL BLDG. Pontiac coment block, 7 yrs. old. 2 docks. one -nclosed For k a e Terms to suit. $18,500 Clare Bedding Manufacturing Co., Clarkston. * . 4 WELL | | FE 2-0474 NEAR HOLLY, 86 ACRES. LARGE _& fon. 110 S. Saginaw. | FLOYD KEN, Realtor 24 Wz. , Business Opportunities 47 i} ee i ee ee d | | ) FE 5-0693 | $1600 west of | 00, FE PERRY TRIANGLE Suitable site large super market or amuse- water. paverient all in. Bargain priced | { FE 4-5181 | EM 3-4898 | FRONTAGE AND IN-{ frontage on Oakland | Income has’ two | ant. 20x40 modern building with ood ting space, Near school fo Keego Harbor JACK LOVELAND Keego Harbor OR 3-8662 M-59 FRONTAGE 18 READY FOR BUSINESS! See & select your site soon in this new controlled com- mercial section of Pontiac's fast growing west suburbs— W. Huron St.. (M-50) at Pontiac Lake Rd. $16 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. a Eves. FE 5-1392 For Sale Farm Prop. 45 POLL dl lel lh 87 ACRE FARM | is that ideal farm you .are looking for. Highly productive land-—34 miles from Pontiac— 7 room modern home with land- scaped setting on high ground. Scenic view. L barn, silo, com- plete outbuildings. This package is complete for $18,500. Humphries coo Realtors Exchange 83 . Telegraph Open Evenings house, barn, other building. Main road. $14.000. Very Jow down pay- ment. Call Fenton. 5555 Eve __Broker. if 80 ‘ACRES. 5 RM. HOME & BARN Near M-15. Suchy Realty, 290 South St Ortonville. WE HAVE FARMS OF ALL Some rea) bargains W. Dinnan KINDS. saat ~ | | 100 ACRES Near Fenton. Good level pro- ductive farm with clay loam soi) 85 acres tillable. 6 rm. | modern house, full bath and basement with furnace. Barn, | tool shed, poultry and brooder | house. 10 acres timber. Call | tonight at only $13, 250, terms. Lawrence Open Eves. FE 5-6105 Next to Consumers’ Power 90 ACRES, EXTRA GOOD SOIL 7 room house, bath, large barn, other buildings Needs paint School bus at door, 2 wells, one flowing, $16.500, 1 mile north of Ortonville on M-15 then 3 miles W., corner of Groeland and Tha)y- er. Owner, M. Mason For Sale Land Contract 46 ——ee eer 3050 DISCOUNT 4 rm. modern bungalow. $4200 to handle. Write Pontiac Press Box YOUNG LET YOUR SSS$SSSSSESSS WORK FOR YOU ! | Above Walgreen's FE . CORNER N. SAGINAW & HURON 42 | Business Property 44 | Business Opportunities 47 | Business Ope ey eee eee eee SS EXC. OFFICE SPACE OR WORK | shop with light housekeeping pri- Vilege upstairs, corner of. Sagi- naw and Raeburn FE 2-1455. | KITCHEN FOR LEASE IN BAR, 5864 Dxie Hwy.. Waterford MODERNIZATION BUSINESS. Wenderful opportunity for man interested tn home improvements. Aluminum windows, awnings, fure naces, etc. FE 5-3461. _ _ ie - yeaa SHELL PRODUGTS 2 BAY STATIONS ON M-59: 15,000 eallons, low rent and good lease. $3.500 buys new inventory to open, FE 2-8343. RESTAOR..N" FOR SALE. DOING an excellent business. EM 3-9166 Ca' anytim” except Thurs BEAUTY SHOP DOING Goop business, priced for quick sale. _ FE 2-5508 or FE 4-5435. RENT GAS STATION, HOME IN rear. Dixie nae 9191. Clark. _ ston on M 10, - 49 Money to Loan (State Licensed Lenders) MONEY WAITING You May Borrow $20-HO00 Today Group vour Bills, protect yous credit, low monthly payments at BUCKNER FINAN CO, 4-0541 CASH ~UP TO $500 to finance your auto or other purchases; to*re-finance for low- er payments: pay bills: sickness or other worthy purposes. Prompt, Friendly Service - IS YOURS AT ALL TIMES Our, business is assisting individ- ua and families with their mohey problems. Let us help you. Phone FE 5-8121. Write or call HOME & AUTO LOAN COMPANY . 407 COMM. NAT'L BANK BLDG. ATTENTION CONTRACT BUYERS I have five of the best invest- ments on the market today. Large discount, new property. Don't de- lay. investigate today Call FE 4-4525. Ask for Ted McCullough Russell Young REALTOR 412 W Huron St FE 4-4525 |Open Eves. Taj) 9 Sun. till -5 YOUR BUSINESS | Hours 9 to 5 Leslie Fleisher, Manager Berkeley Voss, President Sat. 9 tol SEE US WHEN _ YOU NEED MONEY $29 to $500 WF CAN HELP YOU IP YOU NFFD MONEY FOR SUMMER NEEDS, BUY A CAR OR REPAIR A CAR, PAY OFF OLD BILLS, OR ANY OTHER PURPOSE. YOU CAN GET UP TO 8560 WITHOUT ENDORSFR AND RE- PAY, IN SMALL MONTHLY PAY- MENTS ALL YOU NEED DO IS PHONE DAIRY “BAR — POOL HALL Fufly equipped, all modern fix- tures with going business, show- ing big returns, enjoyed village and school trade, 4 year lease at $80.00 per mo, Full price. in- clucing inventory $6,500, $2.900 down ~- BUSY SEASON JUST STARTING - MAHAN | REALTY Co., REALTORS 1075 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-0263 NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH _ POST OFFICE LIOUOR BAR Straight bar in the heart of one of the state's fastest growing townships just 20 minutes from Pontiac. Makes no_ difference | what time of the day, youll al- wavs find this spot busy. All equipment less than 2 years old and it's the best that money can buy. Custom built bar and back bar, formica tables, leatherette booths, etc. all -for only §15.660 down. Lease or buy modern brick bldg. (1389). BOWLING ALLEY $8,000 DOWN The only business of its kind in this busy farming and mfg. com- munity of 5.000. Spotless’ and in A-1 operating condition, it won't make a million, but $6,000 to $7,000 per year for only 10 months work and only 6 hours per day ‘ain't peanuts.’ Good lease (1254). STATE-WIDE REAL ESTATE SERVICE. INC. PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG .* Pontiac Office, J. Landmesser. Mer 2 FE 5-0978 BARRY located in the center of of Wixom. Has 5 and room for an- other. Shows $400 per month income. Onlv $12.800 with $3.000 down. Af¢tive couple can make a living here. GARRETT BARRY BROKER 749 N. Pontiac Trail at Maple Rd Ask for Carl MA 41333 or MA 41403. GROCERIES, BEER, WINE, GAS, Living quarters good year busi- ness, will take lease. MA 6-2586. GULF SURER SERVICE No layoff periods when you oper- ate your own Gulf station. Call L. H Co'r Oil Gn FE 2-9173. We _ have rea] opportunity for you. CHEBOYGAN 4 ACRES ON JU. &. 27 Hwy. 14 mi. from Mackinac City. Good site for motel. House 26@x36, also 23x33 traffic, go by _ same. FE 2-7287 _ TO BUY. TO SELL. REALTOR Partridge IS THE ‘BIRD’ to see. Mobil Gas Station For Lease ° , Located on US.-10, good neighbor- hood & transient business. Low inventory Available immediately. Phone Mr Dart, FE 2-0103 GROCERIES, BEER, WINE, GAS, Living quarters, good year busi- RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT. 43 _ Orchard Lake. FE 3-9865. APt. bide the village completed apts | Partridge I8 THE “BIRD’’ TO 8EE “TAL K TO THE RIGHT MAN WHEN YOU WANT TO BUY A BUSINESS TAVERNA, WILL TRADE Just a straight tavern, no food. Very good equipment and doing @ good business. Top location about 2 miles from west city limits Husband deceased, wife must sell $15.00. Easy terms or trade for home or contract. Better hurry! T SMALLGRILL, $800 DN. $1,200 full price. Average $1,000 soe mo. business. Only seats 12, ut it's a busy little spot. Just right for man and wife opera- tion. Rept only $30 per mo. Take it over ay. SUPER GAS ST. 2 stalls and = salesroom fully equipped. An exceptionally fine corner with an additional store that rents for $100 per mo. Con- | tract payments are only $150 per month with $12,500 down includ-' ing everything. WARD E. PARTRIDGE OFFICE OF NATIONAL BUSINESS BROKERS CLEARING HOUSE OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES COAST-TO-COAST ‘| World s Largest 43 W. Huron &t, FE 2-8316 ° OR CALL AT OUR OFFICE. STATE FINANCE CO, Ph. FE 4-1874 _716 Pontiae State Bank Bldg. CASH FAST! Ge $19 to $500 quickly on car, fur- niture or noe We've been making friendly ‘oans since 1906. Phone ©. come in today. Provident Loan aud Savin:« society, 7 West Law- _Tence St Pontiac — 2-9429. 2 $10- $500 | QUICK, FRIENDLY SERVICE | NO D TAPE FURNITURE, » LIVESTOCK, AUTOMOBILES | BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE FINANCE CO. 5314 W. Huron St. PE 4-1538 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 20014 S. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOANS $25 TO $500 AUTOS IVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD Goops ____Ph. Rochester. OL 6-0711 ~~ $25 to $500 Now! Here ts the casb loan service you bave been looking for GET YOUR LOAN IN ONE VISIT On 46° to ‘52 model cars. Bring your title Let us, finance your car or consolidate. present bills and reduce your monthly pay- ments by as much as %% ans made on furniture, signature, other securities. Up to 18 months to repay | OAKLAND LOAN CO. | 202 Pontiac 6t. Bk. Bidg. oho __Corner ‘r Saginaw and ~ LOANS Community Loan Co. 30 E. Lawrence FE 2-7131 FRIENDLY SERVICE __ 414% MORTGAGES PAUL 8 KANTZ 1310 Pont. Bk. Bldg. PE 5-8406 For | Sale Housetrailers 5U TRAILER EXCHANGE ANDERSON PRAIRIE SCHOONER, SKYLINE, ROYAL AND. OTHERS 1 & 2 bedrooms, 14 to 40 ft. over 50 floor plans, all kinds of equip- ment, furniture, roof coatings, paints, touraids, helper springs & complete line of other trailer parts and accessories. VISIT OUR 8TORE 60 South Telegraph Open Evenings apd Sunday p. m 27 FT. HOUSETRAILER. TERMS, | 603 Cedarlawn. NEW GENERALS, STEWARTS. IRONWOODS SKYLINE BANK RATES. WE NOW HAVE SEVERAL GOOD USED TRAILERS. LOW DOWN BALANCE LIKES OXFORD TRAILER 1488 La Rd. 1 Mi. 8 of Lake Orion 1948 BREMAN 27 FT. EXC. COND. a 39, Huron Trailer Camp, AMERICAN - GENERAL - WEST> WOOD - CONTINENTAL PALACE A nice :ine of trailers to from with the best of terms. Be sur- and see Genesee before | you buy your next mobile home. | GENESEE SALES | 2101 Dixie Hwy FE 2-8786 SALE OR RENT. cyl FT. LINTZ- Craft F siadasiiniaaiaide MY 2.6014 after 4. 195’ CHEVROLET 1 TON PICK-UP truck & 10 ft. 1853 Cree Coach, FE 4-9784 before 4.30 or OR 3-6114 after 4.30 $100-$200 DOWN. GOOD TRAILERS, rental pians, move in immediate- ly. Game rent. TRAILER EXCHANGE 60 8. Telegraph Open Eves. TWENTY-SIX THE PONTYAC PRESS. | For Sale Housetrailers 50 Pontiac Chiet MOBILE HOMES 26 ft. to 45 ft. in length. Up to & years to pay. You can buy a Les Hutchinson re- conditioned trailer as low as $100 down. Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales 4615 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains Phone OR 3-1201 Also Corner 11 Mile & Woodward, _ - Royal Oak LI 5-2810 TRAVELO HOUSETRAILER. metal 25 ft, ALL Electric refrigerator. Bargain if sold this week at Corner Marchar and Oakview | _Dr, North end Wolverine Lake. CALIFORNIA BOUND. MUST SELL | before Sept. 14. Schult. 3. di- vided rooms: sleeps 4 bedroom and living room carpeted, elec- tric refrigerator, Duo-therm heat- er. bottle gas cook stove 4 wheels; electric brakes, side hients: cedar plywood finish itn- ; mew tires; never been out- side of Pontiac See any time at 88 W. Mansfield, ACTOSS from Fisher Body ‘51 ANDERSON %s's FT, $900 down and take over payments. FE 45591 __ WE HAVE ADDED TO OUR TRAVELO line, 29 tt Marlette trailer, aj] mod- ern, birch interior finish, priced under $3000 Needham_ Trailer Sales 451 S Telegraph Rd. FE 5-175 FT, ALL ALUMINUM HOUSE- 3206 Shim- 18'2 trailer like new. $1275. mons Rada FE 5-2092 i951 30 FT SPECIAL PONTIAC Chef Storm windows: Like new. Trade equity for car or cash. FE 5-3998 "53 irs ACE HOUSETRAILER, 28 | s Trailer Park, Lot 7, MI Co 7965 FT. ALUMINUM Schooner, 49 new studio couch, bed and gas stove, dir. sig, elec- brakes, OR 3-7160. 2995 Barkman. PARK YOUR TRAILER WHERE you buy it. Have that extra pro- tection Drastic reductions on all tratlers: New Moon, Elcar, Mich- igan Arrow. Richardson. Also some good used trailers Park- hurst Court and Sales, 1540 La- per Rd. MY 2-4611, 1 _ of Lake Orion For Rent Trailer Space 51 51 23 PARKHURST LAKE TRAILER court. Sewer & water. MY 2-4611. TRAILER SPACE FOR RENT. Gordon's Trailer Camp, 3300 Eliz. Lk, Rd. 52 Auto Accessories — AUTO PARTS New — Rebuilt — Used OPEN EVES. AND SUN. Discount to all GM Employees Hollerback Auto Parts 340 Baldwin FE 3-9477 WRECKING FOR PARTS, °46 CARS ahd up Buicks, Fords, Ghevrolets, DeSotos, Oldsmobiles, ‘ Pontiacs, and others. New mufflers and tailpipes, rebuilt generators, Starters, Carburators, fuel pumps and transmissions. New and used springs LOUTF’S AUTO PARTS 936 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4513 NEW PARTS & ACCESSORIES WHITE WALL MARVEL Makes beautiful white walls on a black tire complete with brush, $2 89. SCHRAM AUTO PARTS 2539 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2105 GLASS!—GLASS! We specialize in new safety auto- glass. Installed while you wait. With your insurance all you need 1s your signature. All work guar- anteed Hub Auto Parts Co. 122 Oakland Ave. Ph. ‘ AUTO PARTS New—Rebuilt—Used Open Evenings & Sunday Discount to All GM Employes MOTOR MART 21 E. Moncalm | FE 4-8230 Auto Service 53 OPPs REPAIRS. BUMPING & PAI T sFREE ESTIMATE ALL MAKES OF CARS PAYMENT PLAN BRAID MOTOR SALES 30 Years Fair Dealing Cass at West Pike 8t. Phone FE 32-0186 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE car, cylinders rebored. Zuck Ma- gine Shop. 23 Hood. Ph. FE 2563 FOR COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE Bumping, painting, refinishing See Bob Rector at Oliver Motor Sales Collision Service Dept. $6 W. Pike St. Phone FE 2-9101 Wanted Used Cars 54 WTD: SCRAP OR CHEAP CARS. | OR 3-1663 See | | PRAIRIE mile North | _ For Sale Used Cars 55 ait PONTIAC RETAIL STORE GOODWILL USED CARS “Not a Name but a Policy” ACROSS FROM POST OFFICE ON MT. CLEMENS §8T. BUY YOUR USED CAR FROM A DEALER YOU KNOW 1946 AND 1947 PONTIACS FORDS OLDSMOBILES CHEVROLETS SPECIAL: 47 OLDS. $395 1948 and 1949 CHEVROLETS PONTIACS © PLYMOUTHS NASH 50, 51 AND ’52 AND A FEW ’53s CHEVROLETS PLYMOUTHS PONTIACS FORDS DODGES HARD TOPS MERCURYS NASH CONVERTIBLES SUBURBANS: STATION WAGONS PICKUPS FANELS PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Factory Branch Mt. Clemens at Mill Phone FE 3-7117 & FE 4-7066 | ~~ 451 8 Saginaw 8t. BUICK '51 4 DR. SPECIAL, DYNA BUICK, ‘52, 2 DR. SEDAN, FULLY | equipped with dyna., like new _ PE 5-3458 WANT A BUICK? 1951 SUPER 2 DR. $1295 1950 SPEC. 4 DR. $1045 1949 SUPER 2 DR. $795 1947 4 DR. $495 GUARANTEED LADD MOTOR SALES Your Studebaker Dealer FE 42552 tires new $200 for equity. 2-7053. WTD. WRECKED & JUNK “CARS a gal ‘50 SPECIAL 4 DR.. sDYNA FE 3-9477 340 Baldwin Ave. & H. $1125. OR 3-225 PARTY FROM OUT OF STATE | | sees SERIES CADILLAC. EXCEL Wat. clean ‘ate model All cash Appreciate a call 4-6898. WANTED JUNK & CHEAP CARS. | FE 3-0467 — FE 2-266 _ TOP $3 a CLEAN CARS OF _ all Kinds. 2 Auburn. PE 4-2131, _ CARS WANTED FOR PARTS _ 121 E. Montcalm rE 500 CARS WANTED | BAGLEY AUTO PARTS, Top dollar paid for wrecked & unk cars. ee pickup. 170 Bag- _ley | St. FE 23-2544 or FE 4-3585. | WE NEED 1949 TO ‘53 USED CARS for out of town buyers. Huron Motor Sales. 952 W Huron. Phone PE 2-2641. VIRGINIA BUYER PAYS TOP | ¢ dollar for clean ‘47 to ‘49 Fords Ponttacs, Chevrolets 4 Buicks. _ Motor Mart 121 E. Montcalm. FAIR & SQUARE Cash for Your Car Pointe Motor Sales _ Al S. Saginaw St. See M&M Motor Sales” for top dollar on late — cars 2627 Dixie Hwy. 3-1603 Top Price .or Your Car Sram 2020 DIXIE H'wy. PE 2-9878 FE 4-6896 WANTED ‘46 TO ‘52 MODELS BE SURE TO GET OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU SELL YOUR CAR, H. J. VAN- WELT 4540 DIXIE HIGHWAY _OR 3-1355 For dale Used Cars 55 ‘47 BUICK ROADMASTER, R & H., & new tires $400. cash. call 5-2388 after > pm BUICK, 1952, 4DR. R & H. Clean. $1575. Can fi- _ Rance. FE 2-7726, after 6:30 pm 40 BUICK, 4 DOOR, GOOD CON- _ dition, $165. 3100 Dixie Hwy. BUICK | CONVERTIBLE. 1951 LATE model. Only .6,000 mi. Full equipped. Clean $1695 for quick sale. Mo- bil gas station Cor, Waldo & W Huroo ' 1949 BUICK SUPER .SEDANET — family second car, low mileage, excellent condition, equipment in- cludes radio, heater tires, undercoat. Private owner. $825. Midwest 4-4838. ~ JACOBSON _ MOTOR SALES Your Hudson Dealer Ge W. Pike at Cass FE 2-8350 | BUICK SPECIAL ‘53, "NEW, 4-DR., dyna., complete with every ac: cessory including U. 8. Mas tires with puncture a vanes. Save, $500. OR 5 car. | MI | FE ' _ , CHEVIE. SPECIAL. 1 owner. Very good shape. | white wall | boat condition, $2.095. Phone BE 4A PROUD OWNER OF A Fleetwood 1947 Cadillac, very rea- sonable wrice Excellent condition throughout, including good paint job, inter‘or excellent, oractically new tires motor tn good condition. Must sacrifice. -Moving out of town. Must be seen and driven to be appreciated. OR 3-1486, 2760 Dixie Hwy. GRAY 1952 CADILLAC 62 SEDAN, power steering, window lift, de- luxe radio, heater, Easy-eye-glass. Midwest 4-2050. | CHEVROLET 1947, CLUB CPE., radio, heater; $25 fu3ll price. Cor. Orchard Lake and. Johnson. CHEVROLET, 1942 DLX. HEATER. FE 17-7385. CHEVIE BELAIR, 1951 “RADIO & heater. 610 E. Fourth St. FE 5- 4520. OLDS, 1940, COUPE; RADIO, _heater. TE 2-4024. AVERILL'S sharp, low mileage, one- owner cars. The best deal in town. ~ 2020 Dixie Hwy. FE 2-9878 or FE 4-6896 CHEVIE..'°50 2-DR. DLX. FLEET- line. 123 Norton Ave. CHEVIE. '52 2 DR. POWERGLIDE, r. & h., one piece windshield, 2 tone gray. FE2-5921, eves. FE __5-7835. 464 DR., BEAUTIFUL sii paint job. O DOWN PAYMENT LAKE DODG UTH | M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. MY 2-2611 CHEVIE, ‘39, MUST BE SOLD THIS week. $100 or best offer. Call oe- fore 2 p. m. OR 3-2550 CHEVE. ‘51 2-DR. 17.000 MILES. Pricea right! 921 Mt. Clemens. | _ FE 5.9830. : 50 CHEVIE 2-DR., DLX, R&H, Low miles, will sell or trade for ‘46 to ‘48 Ford or Chevie. FE __2-9783. 50 CHEVE. 2 dr.. R&H. 2 tone paint inside & out! Huron Motor Sales 952 W Huron FE 2-2641 CHEVROLET 1949. 4 DR. DLX. Radio. Heater. Foam rubber seats. Serviced for miles to come. Mi} 6-2417. CHEVIE 4 STATIONWAGON, needs work. EM 3-4040, Clean | DODGE '52 4 DR. SEDAN, | FORD, FUNNY BUSINESS by Hershberger “It gets dark earlier these evenings, so Genius Jones made ye himself a luminous ball! For Sale Used Cars. $9 Ask About Our Finance Plan 53 Mercury 53 Willys 52, 50, ’49, ’46 Ford: ’51 Kaiser, aes Olds V-8 engine. 51, °48, 47 Kaiser 51; °49, ’48, ’47 Chevie , 49, 742 Mercury , 49, ’48, ’47 Pontiac , 49, ’48 Studebaker "46 Dodge ECONOMY USED CARS 22 Auburn FE 42131 CHEVIE 1949, RADIO AND HEAT- _er Real clean. $750. OA 8-3245. _ “MUST SACRIFICE *53 CHEVE. BEL-AIR, 4 DR. 1500 miles, R H, powerglide, accessories. Will trade. FE 2-5825. CHEVROLET. 1942, BLACK, 2 DR. 105 East Strathmore CHEVIE » 41, 2 DR, $100. OR ; 3-1530 : CHEVROLET 1951 4DR Good cond s. Call after ae %6 @PM, FE 482630 0 CHEVROLET, '52, 4 DR. DLX., 2 tone blue, white wall tires, heat- _ er, 9000 miles, $1,500 FE 2-9400. CHRYSLER Demonstrator We have several low mileage dem- onstrators on hand at all times. These cars carry new car guaran- | with | tees and can be tremendous savings. bought KELILER-KOCH, INC. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER 47 S. Woodward, Birmingham MI 6-1200 1953 DESOTO DEMONSTRATOR, low muleage, radio, heater, fabu- lous power steering, tremendous savings. Ca.l Mr. McNellis. MI 4-7811. W A, Caltrider, Inc., 912 S. Woodward firm September Clearance SALE Compare and Save '§Q BUICK SPEC. DEL. $1095 '47 FORD SUPER DEL. TUDOR $445 NO. 160 "48 BUICK 4 DR. + $545 No. 99 EM~’49 BUICK SUP, 4 DR. $845 ' NO. 92 48 BUICK SUPER 2 DR. | $040 NO. 190 49 FORD 8 CUSTOM $645 ' No. 188 "Se GHEY. DEL. 2 DR. $1345 * NO. 171 48 BUICK CONV. $745 DOWN—We TRADE No Payments Until October 20th OLIVER'S 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 ‘35 Dodge _ GOOD TIRES. AND RUNS GOOD. | $45. 69 LINCOLN AFTER 6 P.M. 1941 DODGE, 2-DR. SEDAN, R&H, first call over $75 takes it. MI 4-3899. R. & H, tinted glass. Like new. LAKE ORION MOTOR 8ALES DODGE—PLYMOUTH M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. 1953 CONVERT. LOA with extras. Will take ae trade. Perf. cond. No dealers. “7 State St oe, FORD 1946 4 DR. $125 DOWN. Take over payments. $18 mo. Bal $263. OR 3-9697 51 FORD '%2 TON PICKUP, 8,223 actual! miles. Like new, take older Ford on trade 4046 Rochester _ Rd, Leonard, Michigan. slat ind "48 dither COND. VERY | clean, nee e mone for school. Call TE 5-5338 38 Mark. FORD ‘47 2-DR sin SELL OR trace 92) Mt. Clemens. FE 3-9830 FORD, °50, 2 DR., GOOD COND. FE 5- 1656 _after 3: 30. Serviceman. ' FORD ‘533 COUNTRY SEDAN, 7000 milés. Pvt. owner, 6387 Hatchery “Rd. at Williams Lk. FORD, ‘40, CLEAN PE 17-7871, _FE_ 5-4101 — after 6 FORD 1941-2 MY 2- Gy “EARL R. MILLIMAN A FORD DEALER OVER 31 YEARS REMEMBER. All Our’ Used Cars Carry a 6-Month or 6,000-Mile Warranty "49 Ford Custom Cpe. 8 cylinder—a real nice. automo- bile that is priced to sell quick. Radio, heater and seat covers. 51 Chev. Convertible One of those hard-to-find cars, equipped with Power-Glide, radio, and heater. $1195 50 Ford Custom 2 Dr. Hurry on this one! Will go at— $795 ’49 Dodge 4 Dr. Sedan Priced below market value—ra- dio, heater—ready to go. S695 ’48 Chev. Aero Sedan In excellent condition and yours for only— $495 Also, Several Transportation Specials! Including: 46 Ford ‘8’ deluxe 2 dr. "40 Pont. 2 dr.—a good one 40 Chev. 2 dr. ’48 Merc. Cl. Cpe, "48 Chev. Aero Sedan ‘EARL R. MILLIMAN 147 S. Saginaw, Open Eves. ‘til 9 FE 5-3588 _ 2 '41 FORD CONV’S. NEED SOME work on both $125 or HIGHEST BIDDER 4046 Rochester Rd. Leonard Mich. 1949 FORD, RADIO AND HEATER. Overdrive. A-1 cond. $675. OA ~~ SELECT USED CARS KIMBALL YOUR Ni ASH DE. ny rol 256 S. Sagip OPE N NIGH’ Ts S FORD 1950, RADIO, HEATER. EX- | FE cellent 3-7552 vondition. 493 Irwin, DR. BLACK. MO- tor in exc. cond $200. OL 2-6678 |FORD ‘51 COUNTRY SQUIRE Stat. Wagon. 12,000 miles. Just like new R H overdrive Wohlfeil Dee, Engineering, 2274 S. Telegraph ‘50 Pontiac 47 Plymouth °46 Nash ‘42 Chevie Will trade. 12 Mariva after 6 Pm | FORD ‘50, CUSTOM CLB. CPE., exc. cond., $995. OL 1-5771 Larry Jerome ROCHESTER FORD DEALER oy FORD CUSTOMLINE FORDOR $1395 Larry Jerome MAIN STREET AT THE BRIDGE Ph. OLive 1-9711 “FOR GOOD PLACE TO BUY" OPEN EVENINGS ‘50 FORD CONV. LIKE NEW. 26.- Take older car 000 actual miles in trade 4946 Rochester Road, Leonard, Mich FORD 46 GOOD MOTOR & _tires EM _ +2385 _ _ | HUDSON ‘48.4@DR. R. & H., SPOT aaeat lights. Will trade. FE TRADE FOR LESS ’51 Buick Roadmaster 4 dr. '’51 Buick special 4 dr. 50 Ford custom 8 4 dr. 50 Buick super 2 dr. 30 Cheve dlx. 2 dr. 50 Ford conv. "47 Cheve. 4 dr. Anderson Pontiac-Buick. 7551 Auburn, Utica, Mich. Ph. Collect, Utica, 001 41545 | 38 LA SALLE, w | 1947 °48, MORE THAN 30 YFARS A SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 ; a li For Sale Used Cars 55 eres MICHIGAN'S FINEST BARGAINS 48 HUDSON -SUPER 6 Original green finish, spotless upholstery, excellent motor. Priced to sell quickly. S465 Only $155 down = balance in easy payments. "$9 DODGE +4 DR. CORONET ! Original maroon finish with Gy- romatic drive, whitewall tires. An ideal family car, Kull Prieé $795 $265 Down — balance, $38 month. 47 OLDS, 2 DR. SW Aw 1 Radio, heater, seat covers, , clean, A-1 Mechanically. Only $395 $135 Down — balance at easy bank rates. 49 OLDS. “98” 2 DK. SEDAN A-1 Rocket Motor, clean inside and out, heater Full Price $995 1-3 down — balance at $40. per mo. 52 CHEVROLET 2 tone paint, seat covers heater. . Only $1195 $300 down — bal and SE SFTDEBAKER CHAMPION Powder blue finish, radio, heater plus overdrive, — . full Price S895 $224 ‘down — balance of $30. a month for 24 mos. 30 CHEVROLET CONVIERTIBLE New inside. Radio and heater Whitewall tires. Only 8095 $250 down and balance of $40. | month at bank rates. 49 PLYMOUTH - CONVERTIBLE Original Canary Finish, new black top. Beautiful shape one Full Price $895 1, down and balance at easy bank rates "52 PLYM. 4 DR. Original grey finish, radio and heater, 5 new tires Only $1195 $300 down — balance in 24 mos at bank rates. 40 PLYAG 2 DR, Original » blue paint, runs OK, good rubber . oe Full Price $595 $200 down — balance at easy bank rates Bank “Rates! Good Trade Allowance 150 New Car Trade-in Bargains to Choose , From MICHIGAN'S PIN EST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND | Pee HUDSON COMMODORE 8. body, motor, tires, good tion, MI 4-7285. 1340 Cedar, Birm KAISER ‘51, 2 PR rR & H 63 S Perrv FE 5-4685 wen CONVERTIBLE. _ Fe 2-7546. ania? net OR Ve. ‘50. 8221 4 DR. W. Tires, Self seal Wil take good 2 wheel in trade. 198 W. Auburn Rochester after 5 p. m MERCURY ‘46 CLUB he Grill bad. $135 full price. Cor Orchard Lk. and Johnson Peterson 1952 Henry J 2 Dr. 1951 Henry J 2 Dr. Kaiser 2 Dr. . 4 Dr. ‘49 ~Frazer. 1947438, 49 Kaiser. 1946, ‘47 Ford . GOOD tubes trailer Rd 1951 _ | 1949 Chevrolet panel. 3776 AUBURN AVE. FE 4-4693 ‘53 MERCURY MONTEREY 4 DR., load, sell or. trade. FE 2-2676. 51 MERCURY 4 DR., Cheap for cash. FE "4-7463 MERCURY ‘47 4DR., RADIO AND | heater. EM %-4040. NASH ‘50, BY ORIGINAL OWNER. Low mileage. R. & H. PROV- ABLE top condition. FE 5-5429. NASH ‘47 600, CLEAN, $350 FE 2-3457. 613 Markle. ‘School Is Open You owe it to the kids and to yourself, too. Drive a Safe Car! All of these cars listed be- low are guaranteed for safety, 51 CHEV. SEDAN ‘46 DODGE 2 Dk ‘$7 PLYMOUTH SEDAN | ‘46 OLDS SEDAN 49 FORD 2 DOOR 50 STUDEBAKER 51 MERCURY 2 DR. 49 LINCOLN CONV. 50 NASH ALL THESE CARS ARE “SAFE BUY” USED CARS We are open from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. for your con- venience. CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY MAIN LOT Pike at Cass FE 4-3885 For Sale Used Cars 55. HAGEL 5 good tires. | radio and | of $24 per mo- USED | CARS RECONDITIONED RIGHT IN A SEPARATE SHOP ‘50 Plym. | 2 dr., radio & heat $799 00 Dodge: 2 door, black $845 |_ STATION WAGON Radio & Tleater $895 condi- ~ | club coupe, black & lt Ae | equipped 2 TONE. | | 749 Ba.dwi “92 Pont. 2 door “8” 3 Radio—IJeater Hydramatic $1595 SEVEN ‘50 Chevs. 2 doors, 4 doors, Power-Glides & Synchromesh Your Choice $849 A Good Selection of ’$2-’48 Automobiles to Choose From 34 Years of | Customer Confidence THE WORKINGMAN’S LOT JACK HABEL CHEVROLET S. Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-4546 5 ‘50 OLDS all metal body Exc _ FE 5-2501. J. E. Whitlock. ; OLDS ‘49, 8 TUDOR. REAS. MY 2-3683 OLDS $125 38. 2, DE: 293 Seward GOOD COND., 13 MILE ROAD | OLDS ‘49 88 CONVERT. YELLOW, clean, $925. OR 3-8449. PACKARD 49 4 DR. R & H. 63 S. Perry FE 5-4685 wsw, 700 DISCOUNT. OA 8-3245 PACKARD 40 4 tires, $85 FE 4-0404 | PLYMOUTH, 1953, 1953 PACKARD ee eo DR., CRANBROOK $1750. OL 2-665 PLYMOUTH ‘50. WILL SACRIFICE First $840 takes it. Must sell. _ FE 5-1704 HAPPY DAYS | | ARE HERE AGAIN Sit, PIill. AND SAVE 50 PLYMOUTH 2 Dr. Radio and heater © "a1, LINCOLS Radio, heater 5 new white side- } walls hydramatic. back up lights, } and directional signals. }°52 MERCURY CL.. CPE. Twotone blue, very low mileage. | 48 OLDS Radio, heater white sidewalls, | '50 HUDSON 2 DR. Radio, heater and new seat covers 51 FORD Fordomatic, radio, heater, back up lights. directional signals. 417 FORD CONV. | New top and in very good running condition SPECIAL TODAY ‘46 NASH | Loaded with extras. $350 CENTRA | LINCOLN-MERCURY | BALDWIN AVE. LOT | (FE 4-7816 One Block Y Ave So of eee Body _ | PLYMOUTH, ‘48, DR, NEW tires 4 tubes, $575) Call OR OUTH ‘51 STATION WAGON. very sharp! Heater & turn PL Very signal LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES DODGE—PLYMOUTH M-24 at Buckhorn Lk MY 2-2611 PLYMOUTH, 1951, 2 DR. FE 17-0588 LINCOLN- MERCURY. IS THE BUY JACK HODGE IS THE GUY Salesman of new and used Cars CENTRAL LINCOLN MERCURY 40 W PIKE ST Cass at W Pike St Bus FE -9167 Rés. FE 2-0847 PLYMOUTH ‘50 DLX. 2 DR., VERY good throughout. One owner. 16,- .00v actual miles $795. FE 3-7542. 1948 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. GOOD cond. $595 FE 5-8889. | PONTIAC, ‘48. COUPE, 8 CYLIN- Ger “a FE 46-0647, 49 Merc.| ‘88 STATION WAGON. | cond. $1,650 | fully | | Clarkston, Mich. |; Open 8°30 ami ia | PONTIAC 6, A PLEA CUST I O BE ADVERTI HOLD RED-ST sents WITH Sale Used Cars USED, PURC HASED A COMM MOT ORS ‘49 PONTIAC) 82 dr.. r&h, hydra., $945 ‘93 STUDE. | V-8 Commander, r&h,| ee ecececcesceees S095 | ‘00 FRAZER 4 dr., r&h sheeees ‘ol CHEVE. Bel-Air .,... ‘Ol CHEVE. DIx.; 2 dr. Good Selection » $795 | $1,395 eecees $1,195 | Sale _Used Cars 55 SED OMER S UR ST SEMENT! EN'S AMPS GIVEN EVERY CAR T UNITY ‘52 PONTIAC 4 dr., $1,995 8 Chieftain dlx., hydra. '90 CHRYSLER Royal 4 dr., r&h, fluid drive .eseceeees $1,295 ‘49 MERCURY Club cpe., r&h.....$795 '51 BUICK Special 4 dr., r&h, dyna, .seoeeeees $1,595 | ''48 CHRYSLER Windsor 4 dr., r&h, fluid | drive, exc. cond... .$795 { | of Used Trucks GMAC Terms All Cars cA uaranteed COMM MOTOR IN At the North Open Every Ni! ‘eo N. Main ROCHEST UNITY SALES C. | End of Town ght ‘til 10 p.m. OL 2-7121 ER, MICH, | For Sale Used Cars 55 SMARI BUYERS CHOOSE SAFETY CHECKED USED CARS 1948 Plymouth. spec dix. ioe a real see and drive this car Plymouth ranbrook cib. cpe Se'''ng for $1075 Studebaker Land Cruiser 4dr WSW tires R & H Mechant- caily tops Selling for $775 Plymouth spec dix ¢dr Has new seat covers. R & H, motor reconditioned. good tires Sell ing for $485 Dodge Custom cib R H” with = spotlight ca. has Oil motor, cally selling for $475 Clarkston MOTOR SALES CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH clb cpe 195) 1950 1946 1947 cpe Has his R om ODailv PONTIAC 8 1947. RADIO HEAT- Clean inside. 1 owner. OP ‘36. NEW BRAKES, in. $100. FE 44318. E Blvd. South. ‘31, STANDARD. FE new dle 2-1546 PONTIAC, 1947, 8 DLX da R&H. Good cond OR 3-2574 PONTIAC 1952 2 TONE GREEN Hydramatic. All extras. 473 E. _ Beverly PONTIAC, 1953 FE 5-3527 _ "49 PONTIAC Streamliner 8 sedan dix. Heater. Hydramatic -Bart priced. Several others to choose from WE BUY, SELL, | OR TRADE West Side Used Cars 923 W. Huron . FE 42185 ‘51 PONTIAC, DLX., 18,000 MILES, excellent condition, standard shift, _ most acces. FE2-7458 '48 PONTIAC, 4 DR R & i, wil trade 180 Fulton St PONTIAC 49 & DLX. 2 DR., ONE owne . 22 000 actual miles. Hydra _R&H ‘Very clean, $305. FE 3-7542. REPOSSESSIONS Sold for Balance Due ‘49 Mercury 2 door ‘49 Ford station wagon RS AT NICHOLS AUTO SALES 203 Saginaw 24313 uy. vou will have. mechani- | Ph MA 5-2921 | oi ain | seat covers, 2-d Sale Used Cars 55 Specials! NO Down Payment 1948 FRASER 1947 NASH 1946 FORD 1946 STUDE. FULL PRICE $295 LADD MOTOR SALES Your Studebaker Dealer 451 S Saginaw FE 4-2552 PONTIAC ‘46 EXCELLENT CONDI- tion. Radio and heater. FE 2.0318. PONTIAC '53. 4 DR. HYDRA. CALL after 3:30 p. m. OR 3-2338 PONTIAC 50, new tires, low mileage. FE 2-1038 | 101 Oakland Ave. PONTIAC ‘48, liner R H FE 44658 PONTIAC, ‘53, 4 DR., matic Chieftain dix.. reasonable discount | PONTIAC, , 2 DR., | good, tires, exc motor, 46,000 miles, one owner, MI 4-3931. You'll Do Better At | JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC | low miles, MY 2-3551. 1941. R & H, PONTIAC ‘50, 8, HYDRA., 2 DR. sedan, 33000 actual miles. 26 | Clive.” PE 5-8693. PONTIACS ‘51 — "82. FE | PONTIACS, 1950 eK H, stick tob a “ona R&H., seat covers, hydr. Both cars new .ubber all around. Both in far better than average Orchard Dr. FE 5-8719 after 6. "62 PONTIAC 2 DR., DLX. R&H Standard, one owner. FE 5-3708 call after 5:30 46 WILLYS JEEP, 4 WH. DRIVE 4000 kl Lk. Rd. L 232 S. Saginaw St. STUDEBAKER '51 CONVERT, R. & M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. WILLYS ‘47 STAT. WAGON. MO- 232 8S. Saginaw St. Sale Used Cars 55 A PRICE FOR EVERY PURSE ‘60 Plymouth 4 dr. .... $708 Three ‘51 Dodges, 4 drs. $1206 *50 plym. suburban... ....... $995 ‘48 Plym. 4 dr. (sharp) ....... $595 ‘49 Dodge 4 dr. 7 New paint and am tires . ue ‘49 Packard 3 dF. ....cee-:: $74 ‘46 DeSoto SngononD $308 Two ‘41 Plymouths, 2 door and 4 door ... o.....$450 ‘47 Pontiac coupe ..... $495 49 DeSoto 4 door ......-«$805 ‘46 Mercury 4 dr. ......... $395 *§) Naeh 6 GP. oo .c..eesn $945 There are more— Visit our lot and See the many values offered RIEMENSCHNEIDER BROS. * Dodge Plymouth Dealer FE 2-0131 h., od.. white wall tires. Going cheapl “LAKB ORION MOTOR SALES DODGE—PLYMOUTH MY 2-2611 tor recently completely over- _ hauled. $275. EM 3-4006. — For Sale Trucks 50 DEPENDABLE USED TRUCKS ‘46 Chev. % ton stake ..... $305 ‘47 Dodge 1 ton stake. . $395 ‘44 Dodge % ton C&C $95 ‘51 Ford '8 ‘2 ton stake....$1295 ‘49 Dodge 172° W B C&C | $950 ‘47 Ford dump 445 Two 49 Dodge 1 ton pickups $696 ‘50 Dodge 1 ton stake, dual wheels PLUS MANY OTHERS RIEMENSCHNEIDER BROS. - Dodge Plymouth Dealer FE 2-9131 1951 CHEVROLET WITH BROWN- light auxiliary & air brakes, $995. 1948 Ford F 7 with air, $495. In- ternational dump truck, $495. Choice of 50 other trucks at _—— ilar barrains Terms. Will trad Michigan Auction Mart Inc. M 4 & Indianw Rd. Lake Orion. 1949 FORD PICK-UP, EXC. COND. MI €3205. - - Des STUDE. ‘46 STAKE. CHEAP! OR ~-3-7156. : _ Pontiac’s ONLY Exclusive Truck Dealer WILSON GMC CO. 809 S. Woodward FE 4-4531 O.K. USED TRUCKS, RECONDITIONED RIGHT INA, SEPARATE SHOP We Have 5 Used Pickups ‘Al Int'l A LOT OF TRUCK FOR THE PRICE $125 ‘46 Int'l WILL _PAINT TO SUIT $295 ‘48 GMC READY TO USE HASN’T BEEN ABUSED $545 '50 Ford NEVER HAS BEEN OVERWORKED $745 ‘51 Dodge NEW RED PAINT AND GOOD RUBBER $745 2 DR., A-1 COND., | 2 DR. STREAM- loaded with extras. | { _ HYDRA- ‘NEW CHEVROLET TRUCKS Take your choice of Amer- ica’s Choice. Our selec- tion is big, but money difference is small, THE THRIFTY TRUCKERS LOT JACK = S. Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-4546 — bm ‘ . by a bs Sa THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1953 TWENTY-SEVEN For Sale Trucks 56 [MODEST Paleeve By Jay Alan / Sale Household Goods 66| Sale Miscellaneous 68 Sale Miscellaneous 68, Sale Miscellaneous 68| Sale Farm Produce 71A| For Sale Livestock 73 ~ ~~ DLO OY w i DOO OOOO — a aed ~ — ~ ~ tt i ee ANGLES, CHANNELS, SEAMS. a CLOSE OUT BARTLETT PEARS PINTO RIDING | HORSE, GOOD 'CT : ’ : ’ rE f q 1 MICHIGAN'S = USED TRADE-IN | Bint, Simplctetune'at areca] 9) MYERS PUMPS WERAMEL Pants — [re rose’ * “iist GSomer_na.| 5 jeAd NOAN DURHAM FEED: DEPT steel, new ad used. Typhoon| Deep and shallow well $97.50 up.| 10 gal. gloss enamel ye ra 3 ; Steel Co. 138 Branch St. (across Plastic Pipe ina: 'y-yihennened $4.95 | PEACHES —ELBERTAS ARE RIPE.| er steers. OL 6- FINEST Coal : mie GS aaa enone ate - from American ae & Gack ia lg Al Sinks 20 rea ete floor & deck $3.45 land Gruame as SD Cocca sow . “OLD PIOS FE a e : * ~ eee. Scoeote 5] et). FE 4-9583. . _Used Pumps A pOOR OCG nok: na 5 oe ust — ee eee a Rocker erences Of. So $19 95 CLOTH ES “POSTS ~ KELLY > HAR DWARE 15 al oo . 83.95 Milford. Please wane terkea, fe neIRERS eet BARGAINS Bufenport chair (00000043880) | areEt @ woop | _autirat Heignte Fe Saoit__|49 ty glose"euamel ©? 88 | TOMATOES 4 VEGETABLES. A) October. 16, well {fained “suadie 6 piece dining room Pte . $49.50 = ze ooeecee. 1.95 or ake ' iorses and ponies 1 rubber tired 8 ie. dining rm. suite . ~ 649.50 COMBINATION DOORS | ~~ CEM EN rT BLOCKS 50 rots om enamel : PEE Oe - “it 313 Othman Ra's ai corm oc. 148 DODGE | any ITeqs ctr mz edintsiy Galivered M4 she tOeld. | TEE. NMR ace cece AMO) MARTLTE, PRAM FREAD | Oatora oo Wm. 1, ton panel, Act sehen ee CONVENIENT C CREDIT. TERMS PLYWOOD Russell. Lemon roliers vee 50 per cent off} Dobat, 2460 Dutton Rd. Roch-; WK. OLD HOLSTEIN HEIFER 2H . ~~~ —— —— -| Paint display & counter for sale ter. : . td airy, I's m poy ide fe Sma Soe ce M. A. Benson CGeam, Cheap. EM 3-393, °UN"| Many. ment coors to choose £70. j BARTLETT PEARS, PRUNE PLUMS, |, ©. o! Auburn Heights, Auburn Rd. bark aor DalaDce Bf eet | FURNITURE CO. oa. LE UNDER FLOOR| Our entire stock must go to make | PANTS (ee puims. crabappies, 18 SADDLE HORSES WITH 8AD- 146 CHEY. 1, ton pickup, body in good shape Yniv S349 $115 down and Beienea at easy FINEST THE BIG’ PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF * WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD A-1 TRUCKS 1 CHEVROLET over*™ Engine, complete $495 Dn. Cab 5th wheel, tractor, 48 FORD PICKUP 8675 "49 FORD 1 TON & chnassts dual wheels $395 Cab EARL R. MILLIMAN 147 8 Saginaw — Open Eves. ‘til 9 FF 5-4101 After 6 FE 5-2246 1950 CHEVROLET ™% TON PICKUP. ul FE Dix. cab. 1-1500 Eves. 4-0426. Larry Jerome Rochester Ford Dealer | PICKUPS | 947 FORD, 1 TON, © CYL., eT OEPD | TRANS... ... $545 1949 FORD 12 TON, 8 CYL 3SPD.. 0... $645 1950 FORD, ‘2 TON SMALL | | STAKE BODY, 8 CYL., 38PD. 2...) cee ceee .. $795 1951 FORD '2 TON, 6 | CYL. 3 SPD. |............$845'| Larry Jerome MAIN STREET AT THE BRIDGE Ph OL 1-9711 “FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO BUY" j OPEN EVENIN SALE OR TRADE, 1951 STUDE- baker '3 ton pick-up, Will accept 1'z tone as downpayment. FE- 71-9267. a IN NTERNATIONAL _ oT, % 3 TON pickup. $100 Call after 5 and all day Sat. 676 Cresce Lake Rd Motor Scc ters 58 MOTOR SCOOTER tires & brakes CUSHMAN Exc. cond. New 4} a for me—I'll just jump down!” 7 “I want to get off on the top floor and never mind waiting » Swaps 63! bank rates. ; 1948 F ORD } 1, ton pickup, Original fintsh— me Only $398 135 down and balance at easy bank rates MICHIGAN'S | MY EQUITY IN WILL TRADE EQUITY IN 19537 Studebaker Land Cruiser tor, lot. | OR 39510. CORNER LOT PERRY AND WAL- ton sub trade for John Deere H. and cultivator or sell n- quire 3425 Sherwood Rd., Ville EXCHANGE YOUR LAND CON- tract ‘where you have sold prop- erty) for late model car & cash. | H. J. VanWelt OR 3-1355 1948 PONTIAC 8 BLOCK ASSEM- bivy with new motor guarantee for @ 16 gauge Savage or Brown- ing automatic. Also a 12. ga. Western Field pump for a Reg. Brittany, trained. FE 4-6082 TRADE YOUR OLD REFRIGER- ator or anything of value on a_ new Cros'vy Shelvador, $199. terms. &2 per week. MY 3-371] AKC REG. BEAGLE, IDEAL GUN dog. has won Ist, 2nds in field trials, will trade for studio couch, bedrm. suite, apt. size electric range, 12 ga. pump gun, 2 wheel trailer or table saw. Or will ial _ for $100, FE 4-9165, NICE BUILDING LOT, NR. GAY- lord and Otsego Lk. trade for | camp trailer. E 4-6343. "49 CHEVIE, 142 TON PICKUP, clean, for sale or trade for equity in late model car. FE 2-3762 5 RM. MODERN HOME EQUITY- for new modern housetrailer. FE | + 5-3914. nw A ‘50 NASH Ambassador, A-1 cond. For good | "41 ee ‘42 pickup truck. FE 58135, \ after 4. | SALE ou TRADE EQUITY IN IN-| come home with acreage for 5 or rm. home in Pontiac, Write —. | 1941 _ Pontiac Press Box 99 -| DODGE 5 PASS.! coupe, for good 2-whee trailer, pickup. or sell $100, 2556 Wilhams Lk. | kd. Ortonville 39F12. or see at 2208 | Allen Rd. Bald Eagle Lake. _ NEW & USED CUSHMAN 8COOT- ers. J2 8. Paddock. FE 4-4246. DELUXE 4 HP. 53 ALL STATE scooter. excellent cond. Forced to sell FE 2-6002. 31 CUSHMAN, EAGLE FE 55053 after 4. For or Sale Motorcycles — 59 FOR PARTS @& SERVICE ON YOUR Harley Davidson, see Harley Davidson Sales Uv. 372 8. Sagi- | naw oe oo *60 INDIAN TY WARRIOR. CHEAP. FE 5-2053. For Sale Bicycles 59A [awww ner en | i 1 GIRLS & 1 BOYS 26” BICYCLE. ; 3195 Pridham, _ Keego Harbor. GIRL'S 26 IN. SCHWINN BIKE. Exc. cond. FE 4-4985. ENGLISH TYPE BICYCLES FOR sale, good cond., reas. FE 2-1208. J. C HIGGINS GIRL'S DELUXE 28 inch. Good condition. OR 3-2913 BOYS, AND GIRLS, 26 IN. BIKES. _ Like ne new, FE 2-4380. ~ Boats & Accessories 60 FVINRUDE vUTBOARD MOTORS ALUMACRAFT BOATS ANY HULL REFIN ENGINE AIRS MARINE SAL SERVICE 422 38. RAPH EGR MARINE SALES & SERVICE _ 4a 8. TELEGRAPH LET CAP HUTCHINSON, Boat builder, finish that fabricat- ed boat you are planning for next summer Terms very reasonable FE 2-2625. MERCURY MOTORS, els now isn for wemenien delivery. Term GENES EE SALES 2101 Dixie Hwy. FE 2-8786 14 PT. MAHOGANY WOLVERINE super deluxe: runabout. Center deck, steering wheel and taitlor- made tarp. A-l condition. FE 2-2066. WiLL SACRIFICE, | 14 FT, _ RUNA- 22 HP’ motor., steerin woeek mervtr) or what you have EM 3-4044 MERCURY “OUTBOARD MOTORS. | Sales & Service. Terms to suit you. Shorty Hook’s Place, 3730 Orchard Lk. Rd. at Pine Lake. FE 25260 18 FT. OLDTOWN SPONSON SAIL- ing canoe, complete with mast & “sail. ice value. MaAyfair 6-2461 10 PER CENT OFF ON ‘iar ¥ boats. das surf boards skills Marine Supplies. eo 36 Orebard’ Lake Ave 12 PT. RUNABOUT 7'3 H.P. MER- cury motor, tarpaulin and trailer | and access., $295, FE 54547, 14 FT WOL BOAT FOR motorcycle or scooter. FE 717-7700 _Sfter 6pm 1953 10 FT. RACING PRAM BOAT pane 3'2 Evinrude, §200. FE Row Boats—Sail Boats SEASON END SALE These are specially built, om weight, strong boats. Safe-Bea Unsinkab's. Designed for rugg commercial use. They all eee various amouats repairs & re- finishing Rowboats from $45 up. Sailboats from $95 up. Rebuild! & refinish your boat this winter. Save plenty. Sigel would cost from $150 to $450 new. HOLIDAY PARK On Cass & Eliz. Lakes near Keego Harbor. Sale Sat ie Sun. _— Sept. 12 & 13 8 a.m. to 6 _ See Frank Brown, Comm aes, APPROVED BOAT T CUSHIONS $2.95. Spo) goods of all the boat. ENS MARINE SUPPLIES | 306 Orchard Lake Ave FE Transportation Offered 62 . VAN GOING NORTH, PART load either way PE 5-6806 TRANSPORTATION PAID TO CAL- _ fornia, drive)cars. FE 46375. Swaps os Beem YOUR LAND CONTRACT, house, mortgage. equity, furniture, autos, for new or used : well known =e 60 8. _—— legrapd Open Eves. °36 CHEVIE. PICKUP. & sell. FE 27-1546. —* | LEATHER SEWING MACHINE, leather carving tools, cutters, thiners oress and ail acces. for leather Will swap or sell for _ cash OR 3-2244. _ 64 For Sale Clothing | POOP OPI PPE | POLICE EISENHOWER JACKET | Size 38-40 pr. wool pants. | Cheap. FE 5-1286 | LADY'S GRAY FUR COAT, 8IZE | 12, also fur-trimmed cloth coat. FE 5-0163. MAN'S GREY FLANNEL SUIT, size 38, 10 yr. old boy's trench coat, 10 yr. old beige alpacuna overcoat, genuine leather cowboy boots size 5; lady's grey fitted winter coat, size 14; black Hud- son vin ie fength coat size 14. _ FE 4-489 and grey; 2 suits, size 12. 32-5516. _ oe SUIT AND DRESS, EXCELLENT cond. size 18, 182, 20. Very | reasonable, FE 5-5238.. GENUINE REPTILE MATCHING | hapdbag and shoes, 5'2 B, like! new. FE 4-0849 —_ | — MATERNITY WARDROBE, SIZE 16, _ $20, MA 5-6403. | | LADY'S BLACK FLARED COAT, _ ‘THE | MOST MOD- | | 4 BURNER A eS a GAS STOVE. ali wool “suede cloth, Persian lamb trim, like new, size 18, $35. Call after 4:30 p. m. 65 W. Beverly MEN SUITS, SIZE 40. REAL BAR- gains. 19 Moreland. FUR COAT, EXC. COND., CHEAP. FE 5-0602. ~ Musical Instruction 63A | ———en ACCORDION LESSONS, YOUR home New and used accordion, _ Sale and rent. OR 3-8266. Sale Musical Goods 65 MAHOGANY PIANO AND MAN'S Salanti accordion. Res. FE 5-8847. PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR- ing. Oscar Schmidt. Ph. FE 2-9217. SPINET PIANO RENTALS WITH option to buy. $10 monthly. Gal- lagher’s. FE 4-0566. ACCORDION 120 BASS EXCEL- lent condition. Decorated for pro- fessional use. Sacrifice value. _ MAytair 6-2461. PAN AMERICAN CLARINET. BEST offer takes. OA 8-220]. Sale Household Goods 66 a in fe WAYNE GABERT’S FLOOR SAMPLE SALE Duotherm oil heater New floor sample. Reg $130 8. Heats 5 rooms... $1 $239.95 Bendix electric. dryer Flo.r demonstrator 1 $299.95 Motorola 21) an. 9 $189.95 be eed water heater, 3 way cap $140 | $269 % new Ercaey elec range, fully auto. dix $1 , Sentine, tube Guar |} Many others to choose from Up to. 24 months to pay 121 N. Saginaw St. FE 5-6189 ELECTROMASTER RANGE. GOOD cond. FE 5-6341. TV console New picture 389 $37.50. FE 2-5796 ELECTRIC § STOVE. EXC, COND., __ $75, FE 5-8901. DAVENPORT & CHAIR. GOOD cond., reasonable. FE 2-2166. 9x15 BLUE REVERSIBLE RUG & rubber topped pad, mahogany beige channel-hack ehair; striped Lawson style chair, 2 mahogany end table, rose tapestry Hide-a- : Trimble Aluminum frame bathinette: floor lamp. MI 42210. :7 FT. KELVINATOR. REFRIGER- ator, good cond. OR 3-0611 2% BURNER uo STOVE. ” KEN: more. Good cond. EM 3-4679. MODERN TABLETOP -PHILGAS _ Stove, $32. MA 5-3095. PC. LIVING R! M. SUITE, $15. 1) cubic ft. refrig@rator $45. Oth- er furnitire. 63 N. Cass. USED DAVENPORT | AND CHAIR. _ FE ¢1625. Call after 5.00 DUNCAN PHYFE TABLE, 5 chairs aod large buffet. MI 40640. PRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR 9 cu. ft.. $150; m any hail mir- ror x14 in. $15; Neseo. roaster __ $20. MI 4-5629. SOLID MAPLE “BEDROOM ‘SUITE (4 piece), single bed, spring and siding. Radio. smoker stand, 2 perce front room arm chairs FE sora BED NEARLY solied, modern a ae corner cupboard and get o— NEW, Lubes mahogan leaf tabie 7 ere mboo set. Commerce Rd. EM 5 PIECE CHROME DINETTE Excellent cond. OR 3-7724. Orton- | Free | _ ing, \7N OUR TRADE > i > EFT. | Sale | Household Goods 66 ‘SELLING BELOW WHOLESALE LINOLEUM AND TILE Reg. loc Asphait tile 3'!2c; - $4.95-9xl2 linoleum rugs $2.89; 49c 42 ft. wall tile 15c; $2.50 imlaid linoleum rem- 75sc yd.: 12 ft. Gold Beal Congoleums 50 pct. off; res. $4.79 Dutch Paint $2.25 gal; 9x9 linoleum tiles 7c Harold’s, 140 S. Saginaw Delive FE 2-5450 DOUBLE RED STAMPS TODAY ’ PC, ENGLISH OAK LARGE 8BIZE _ dining rm. suite. FE 2-6970. 2 RED FRIEZE TV CHAIRS, $25. MI 4-4115 after 3:30. “FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION | ON THE NECCHI Sewing Machine Sales Co. 21 E. Water St. FE 2-7848 GAS STOVE, APT. BIZE. SERVEL gas frefrigerator. Washing ma- chine 8 pc. dining room sguite. Duncan Phyfe table. MOVING Cail OL 6-2066 "PRACTICALLY NEW HOLLYWOOD twin beds. Mattresses and springs. Very reas, FE 42029. 113 CU. FT, 1952 MODEL KEL- parks food freezer, FE 4-6042 $295. 11 CUBIC FT.,COLDSPOT REFRIG- erator, perfect running order, $50. Midwest 4- 0040. 7 : ; STUDIO COUCH, GOOD COND. _Wiil sell cheap. 78 Poplar. 4 BURNER TABLE TOP STOVE, Electromaster, $40. FE 2-3304 BASF BURNER. EXCELLENT CON- dition. OA 8-2681, | BIGELOW BROADLOOM | “RUGS, 9x18 and 9x12 and stair carpet- Teasonable. _ MI 4-0925 Maytag “Dutch Oven” gas range with deep well; 2 years old; excellent con- dition, Phone OR 3-2640. GOOD SIDE ARM WATER HEAT- er, gas stove, davenport, misc. _ Cheap. FE 2-4836. HOOVER SWEEPER WITH AT- tachments, late model, must sell. _ FE 2-4416 CHROME KITCHEN TABLE WITH formica top, 2 chairs. EM 3-2052. 'LGE. CHEST OF DRAWERS A-l shape 397 N. Johnson. FE 2,7033. STOVES, BOUGHT SOLD AND ex Turner's, 602 wei Clemens. _ FE 2-0801. a METAL ICEBOX. _ eon COND. $10. Eas copper tub washer, __ $10. FE 5-440 ee LINOLEUM, 9x12. .$3.95 $4.95 outside paint, — JACK'S fatalde parse, PERRY There are — Good washers as low as $14.95 Servicable Refrizerators at $39.95 Elec. or gas ranges at $19.95. Elec, or gas ranges at $19.95 Televesion from $39.95 Motors 's and 16H. P. from $4 Circulating Oil Heaters $9.95. The Good Housekeeping Shop 51 W. Huron of Pontiac SMALL oe FE 5-875 BFDS, _ APRINGS & MATTRESS. like new. Misc.. FE 2-7552 SHOP SUBURBAN & SAVE Where your dollars have more sense at the L & 8 SAL CO. The Big Red Pl 3345 Auburn Rd., 1 mile east of Auburn Heights. 2 acres of free <2 AND USED Beds of all kinds and sizes Lamps, table and floor. $6. ALSO ONE $8. and tfadios | Refrigerators all kinds Ranges, gas and electric Heating stoves and oil space heat ers Chrome dinette sets Chest and dressers Bedroom suites Living room suites Dining room suiies. etc COME OUT AND SHOP L_ & S SALES CO DINING RM. SUITE LIKE NEw. FE 47500. HOLLYWOOD BEDS, aTPERETES snd davenports—you SAVE! Hill- berg. 52 Williams. FE 5-8633. SHELLANE BOTTLED GAS HOT water heaters, apartment and full size Win Leonard Electric Co., aple. Birmingham. Ph. wattie. yA REBUILT & guaranteed. FE 45169 HANDLEY BROWN CONVERSION gas burner, $75. 2 pr. garage doors 6 pane, $10. Green nylon seat covers for ‘46 Pontiac sedan coach like new, $15. Wardrobe trunk, $8. Dubonnet twin bed spreads, $10. B.d springs, $8. All good cond. 117 Mohawk RED CHAIR & DAVENPORT BL Haywood, 2 pcs. sect., 19” Dumont twin cots with mattresses, chrome table and 2 chairs, mise. electric ireplace grates, reason- able. 328 Marlborough,-# Bloom- field Highlands. 8 PIECE ITALIAN DINING ROOM set French bedroom complete. Chinese cabinet. Television. Hoo- ver vacuum. Washing machine. Tables, chairs. Extension. 40 ft. ladder. Exhaust fan. Many other Pieces. FE 2-0963 DINING ROOM OUTFIT _ FOR sale, 7 pieces, dark wood. $60. Corner cabinet, $10. FE 3-9010, _after 5. _ KNEEHOLE DESK, $35. ELECTRO- lux sweever, $15. 2 steel kitchen cahinets. $35. Ping pong tables, $20. MAple 55531. ye ELECTRIC STOVES > and ‘arge. FE 2-5125. ARMSTRONG PLASTIC VINOFLOR =— % PRICE Wall Tile, rnj ft.......19¢ BORKY MAID;ILNLAID TILE ..16c 12 PT. —- DEESL COM NGO. % rice 9x20 SYER’S, “141 W. HURON Pree Delivery—Pree PE 4-3064 USED WASHERS, $15 UP. USED ranges, $35 and up. Used refrig. $49.20 up. Cory apt. size dish- washer, $49.50. Used Philco radios, $19.50 up. Demonstrator Hotpoint sink and dishwasher comb., $320 Used ot] burner, $35. R. B. MUNRO ELEC CoO 20 W. Lawrence FE 5-8431 TAPPAN GAS STOVE. STAINLESS steel oven. Used. 85 Devon Rd. 4-0005 ae G*® REFRIG. “VERY “GOOD COND. $60; and Gas stove, $10. FE 45420 after 1 p.m. COLDSPOT oo ERA RATOR. 9 nnerspring mattress. 50 Johnson. TWIN BED INNERSPRING MAT- boy & springs, good cond. MI FE 4-1555 | E 17-0783 | ‘361 8. BAGINAW 21" MOTOROLA TV, _ FE 4-2780 _ 7 FT. KELVINATOR REFRIGER- ator, R.C Allen yee | machine, G. E. Irover. FE 5-06 CH OME TABLE & CHAIRS, $22.50: davenport & chair, $22.50; dining set, $49.50; washer, $1450; trunk $695; large crib. $10.50; Bank furniture. 13 Auburn, near Saginaw &t. ; LIVING ROOM SUITE: OAK dinette set, including buffet: 9x12 and matching throw ca slove, lamps, misc. OR 3-7534 2. PORTABLE WASHING MA- chines, 1 Easy spin dryer. Both _ like new. FE 53653, 45 Feneley. FRIGIDAIRE, FE_ 2-3360 E 8, REASONABLY 3-4308. ANTIQU _ priced. MY _ — GREEN TAPESTRY DAVENPORT and chair. Light walnut 4 postr bed. Good mattress and springs. FE 5-7558. oe - _ 18 CU FT. ALL PORCELAIN FRIG- idaire, excellent cond. ABC wash- er, OR 3-1438, after 6 p.m. BENDIX AUTO. WASHER. __new, $75. PE 4-3108. PHILGAS RANGES INSTALLED for 30 day free trial. Phillips A ane Co. 2625 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9195. WALTON TV Table mode) TV. $29 * 12%" Table model TV $49 TV antenna kits. $995 Joslyn cr Walton FE 2-2257 | Used Trade-i in Dept. LIKE { Buffet sped tereereeeat) Serer $9.95 |China Cabinet... seeees 814.95 | Apt. Size electric stove ....,.849.95 Table top gas range......... $39.95 Davenport See eee ee $19.95 pe living room $29.95 Small down ears a Terms. VYMAN’S _ _____18 *W. Pike only WTD: FURNITURE, ODDS & ends; antique dishes. MY 2-3022. TILE 10* Bonny Matd vinyl inlaid tile 9’’x9” FLOOR SHOP ui 99 S. Saginaw 8t. CASH FOR FURNITURE OR tools. Phone OR 3-2717 ra COMPLETE BED WITH DRAWS in the end. Spring mattress. 7260 ! Clement. ;|CONVERT YOUR CITY GAS stove to bottle gas. $10 deposit on 2-100 lb. cyclinder. Complete line of appliances. Kenyon Fuel- gas Co, 5268 Dixie Highway. Dray- _ton Plains. OR 3-2491. | NEW FURNITURE BARGAINS Hollywood bed frames. $895; bed Pillows, $2.95 pr.; cotton mat- tresses—all sizes, $12.95.; inner- spring mattresses. $19.95; unfin- | ishe drop-leaf tables, $10 95: | small 4-drawer unfinished chests, $895: metal beds, $12.95; coil spri ngs. $11.95; maple bunk beds, $36.9 sofa beds, $44.95; chrome sets, $4995. Renteare for the home, Bank Furniture. 13 Auburn ' pear Saginaw, FE 4788 SPECIALS 8 pe. walnut dining rm, suite . $49 2 Bet living rm. suite hae eee tudio couch ..... ........4.. $29 Table top gas stove ........ $15 Storage chest cooves-. 910 Oak Princess dresser ...... $12 Cabinet base $12 Oakland Furniture We ‘uy sell and exchange 104 S. Saginaw FE 2-§523 2 PC. LIVING SUITE, GOOD as new. $50; Simmons bed spring, $10.; tull size. FE 4-6804 FUEL ELECTRIC STOVES, RE- frig, tables, chairs, buffet, couch, desk. OL 60006. COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR Reasonable. 592 Hanna, Birming- ham. 3 PC. SECTIONAL DAVENETTE. $75. 103 N. Roselawn 20 GAL. AUTO. che WATER HEAT- er, $20. OR 3-15. VANITY & cnret ; TWIN spring & mattress, $35: porcelain top table, $15. MA 5-5531. FIRESTONE WASHER. LIKE NEW, _ $45. APpt. 308 454 Auhurn. ELECTRIC RANGE, $40. , FE 2-4742 | END TABLES, LAMPS, BEDDING & complete household furnish- | ings. FE 5-0043. DUO-THERM er, 30 gal, model TV. OIL WATER HEAT- $15. 17° Philco table | $125. 11 tube Philco cabinet radio, $20, Miscellaneous items, ali exc. cond. 256 NORGE REFRIGERATOR, GOOD condition $50, Play pen, metal kitchen stool, curtain stretchers $4 each. Lawn mower, like new $12. 1112 Lakeview St. FE 40740. BARGAIN PRICED FOR QUICK sale. Bunk beds, each with 2 extra jarge drawers, complete with springs and mattresses. cus- tom built of solid cherry wood. EM 3-4554. GENERAL ELECTRIC IRONER. $35; antique buffet: gray a aa es measuring 64x22, Store > Equipment 66B eee | aa BLONDE 8 FT. MERCHANDISE | show cases, table top. See Mr | Hodge, Federal Dept. Store, 91 N. Saginaw SCHAEFFER 15 CU. FT. DEEP _freeze, $150. FE 3-9888 .. | TYLER DOUBLE DUTY MEAT Case, meat grinder, and scales, and meat block. 254 8. Blvd W.. FF 2-6625 334 FT. PORCELINIZED SELF Ls serve grocery storage islands and - 16 ft. matching vegetable counter. ~ Highest offer. Can be seen at 309 East Third, Rochester or _phone OL 2-7511. Office Equipment 67 (WIL HOT WATER HEATER, FLAT TOP DESK, OAK AND walnut, $25 to $60. All kinds | office chairs, swivel chairs, $15; office and factory tables, all sizes, letter and legal files, steel. $35. other office equipment. Arnold Giliett. 31 Washington St. Oxford. Oakland 8-3122 for information. = - | Sale Miscellaneous 68 | LOOK Body Shop Equipment 300 AMP. ARC WELDER: FLOOR | R; AND IT AT 69 LINCOLN ' 6 _M. _ eae BED, 2 OVER 8TUFFED ! burner gas baby mattress. FE 5-2674. KENMORE WARM MORNING heater. Like new. $75. MU 44067. AUTOMATIC FRIGIDAIRE WASH- er. Fine condition. Reasonable. FE 2-4963. “RUIT JARS, DISHES, & LINENS, _FE 2- mewromen march SO OR be HOT WATER HEATFRS. 30 GAL. gas, new, approved on use on wtason & Co. s'™mers lines $89 50 value at $49. Slightly marred. Al- | oul ena oottle gas heat- | Michigan rd e ‘SEPTIC 2 erescent, 393 sane CLOSE COUPLED. NEwW- est ‘designs for modern bath- rooms. $ 9 value, $2295. These | are slightly factory marred. Also’ large selection of lavatories, bath- -tobs & shower stalls. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave. |\PORCH LIGHTS IN EARLY American lanterns and Old g- lish candle lantern designs. ss | most comonlete selection of lights in the house at for every room terrific values. Michigan Fluor-! escent, 393 Orchard e Ave. 5 RM. KENMORE rom, HEATER. Used. one year. 2883. AFTER |" 549 ‘Ny. Saginaw PE 4-2521 ALD BIZES GAS & ELECTRIC heat and cook stoves, full auto- matic electric ignition oi) fur- maces and floor furnaces, car- buretors and parts for oil burn- ers, bottle gas tanks, bot pilates fa fittings for trailers and cab- .PETRO HEAT BERVICE CO. Associated, Ph ae Trailer Exchange 8. Telegraph P.M. a {_Sevenings _& Sundays — Anchor Fence Erected by factory trained men. FHA app., no money down. Call FE 5-4962; free estimates. WOLVERINE LUMBER & WRECKING CO. 300 8. Padaock FE 2-9784 SPECIAL New reverse Seay unit toilets : .. $22.9 Poe oathbrm ‘gets, tdoaeg w- New fully “guaranteed 30° gal. Suto, hot water heaters .... §65 New interior flush doors (3 grade) $7 to $8 ane plumbing & builders supplies) new and used We sell for less. HOLLINGSHEAD VARIETY STORE 7 miles out Baldwin. Armstrong floor covering and Mac-O-Lac __ Paints, _We eae for less, RAGE Material for I x20' Garage All Fir $289.00 plus tax Overhea” Door included HAGGERTY LUMBER CO. 1947 ae Hy. Walled Lake MA 4-1084 ves LI 2-5069. REV-MASONRY COATING MADE with latex for exterior and in- terior services of brick, conc rete, asbestos siding, aer blocks. Choice of 9 colors. Oakland Fuel & Paint, 436 Or- chard Lake FE 56150 20" STEEL AND 24" CASP-IRON coal furnace. Good cond., very _ reas. FE 4-8898 or FE 5- 3885 GARAGE 20x"0 ready cut, $545. FE 4-2575. TWO 1710x185 WHITEWALL TIRES and tubes. Exc. coal stove, Com- plete. Outside toilet. OR 3-0821. WARDROBE TRUNK, LIKE NEW: violin and washing machine, 16] Dwight Ave. PROMPT DELIVERY ON BI.ACK dirt, sand, gravel ha dirt, and _ manure. FE 4-6640 cement and cin-|' TALBOT Rock lath, $1 a bundle; 4x8 sheet rock, $1.80; No. 2 box pine, $11 a/| hundred; No _ Sulation, 1025 Oakland. FE 4-2622. C & H LUMBER CO. | Open from 8 til 7 Mon. thru, Fri. Sat. open from 8 ‘til 5 Sua: Open from 10 ‘til 3 All holidays, open from 10 ‘til Except Faster ‘Thanksgiving, Xmas and New Year's, FE 2-6141 Surplus Lumber & Material Sales Co. NEW & USED LUMBER @x4x8 studs. 53c each. 1x4 maple flooring, good quality. 1x8 sheathing. Lee. assortment of used sash. MICH. WHITE PINE, 2z6, 10c A PT. Open 8 to 5:30 except Sundays 5340 Highland (M-59) OR 3-7092 HOUSES TO MOVE OR WRECK. te. oo $15 Detroit, TRin- itv 1-5 | Residential and commercial erected by exoereinced men. F. H A. approved. OR 23-1458. GRAHAM POST YARD 5445 Dixie Hwy. SAND YOUR OWN FLOORS, FLOOR sanding machines and waxers for Trent. We close Wed. afternoons. _ Barnes Hardware, 742 W. Huron. USED ELEC. REFRIGS. AND elect. washing machines. Guar- anteed. $39.50 up. Roy’s replace- __Ment, 96 Oakland Ave. JACKSON'S RENTAL Mixers, chain saws, Skilsaw. elec, hammer, pave. aind clay breaker. __ Pipe_ dies, etc _FE 4-5240 AIR COMPRESSORS ~ ‘with pavement breakers and clay spades for rent; other equip. CONF’S RENTAL Baldwin FE 2-0077 1251 Plumbing Specials 3 Pc BATA SET A QUALITY with TRIM $09.50 $2. GALLON ELECTRIC WATER NEATE.:S. INSTALLED FREE OM EDISON LINES... OIL PIPE F $3.75 10 am. to ; 2 flooring and tn-| _ p.m. Bight till Friday ARNASON Ph Ortonville 130. We Deliver cauacity, wood cond FE 43369, BATHROOM FIXTURES, SOIL pipes and fixtures. automatic o}! ant Jae water heaters. oij' and coal furnaces, steam and hot water boilerrs, oi] fired HEIGHTS SUPPLY 2685 Perry St __Phone FE 4- 5431 ~ PLYWOOD — at baci ie prices Kitchen cabinet ade °PONTIAC” PLYWOOD CO 1488 Baldwin PE 2-2543 GARAGES 14x20. $595 complete with cement work and overnead doors. FHA _terms. OR 3-2276 or EM 3-5624. HOLLAND STOKER. USED 1 WIN- PLU MBING| LGE. | ter Take over payments. FE- 70157 att r 4°30 USED FURNACE & STOKER COM- lete with all controls, good cond. PE 4-1276 after 5 p.m | | STEAM OR HOT WATER BOILER and = stoker, _ OL 1-7676 30 GAL auto. heater, FE 5-7496 PORCELAIN SINK, $7; RIGHT hand drainboard. Toilet, $8. Ola west 4-0040 complete. Controls. kitchen sink, $12 ,10 STORM SASH FRAMES_ 60x | 29's. $250 eacn. Midwest 4-0040 COMPLETE SINGLE BED, OVER- stuffed chair, vanity, dresser and | other pieces of furniture, Also electric hot water heater, ideal for cottage Must sacrifice, mov-/| ing _ of town. FE 3-1486, 77160 | 4.4.0 Hwy DELUXE EVANS OIL BURNER, | , large size with biower, §75. FE |* 4-9524. wer FORCED AIR FURNACE, I steel. good cond. OR 3-7170. | Bela “Bud” Nicholie Real Es- $65. 82 Hudson 'FOR SALE: A NEW WORLD| Standard De Laval cream sep-/ erator and a Gem Dandy deluxe! electric ‘ churn. Good condition. 71-8286. a PURNSCE WITH BLOW- Good $50. FE 5-115] afar 5:30. SPACE a: on ~ THERM with fan $30.; Girl's Ricvale, $12; coree ‘mail box, $4: ! tire tube never used 600x16, | $10. 7743 Locklin ‘north Shore Union Lake: EM |3-2520. SALE ON USED FURNACES - we also have a complete line of new furnaces and conversion burners FHA financing. Btan Girwood. EM 3-2080 | COMBUSTIONEER STOKER WITH Sroko' controls, 500 Ib. capacity, $25. FE 2-7712 ROLLED WIRE. 99 PT BY % IN; sun lamp; misc. MI 4-2415. | 30 GAL. OIL HOT WATER HEAT- er and 275 gal. storage tank. FE | 61 HOT WATER TANK, | | 4" STEEL LITT furnace $150. 1 yr. old. FE 7-6011 USE OUR TOOLS, DO YOUR OWN plumbing, wiring, repairing. Com- plete stock soil, sewer crock and cir e Montcalm’ Builder's Supply ‘56 W. Montcalm. FE-~ 64712. FE 2-7620 Fri. thru. Wed. @ to 6:30 Closed every Thur. TL ~ ’ LIONEL & AMERICAN FLYER-TRAINS AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE and genuine factory parts Free test on factory analyzer Taster's, Huren St. Phone FE 5-6261 USED REFRIG STOVES. FUR- naces, oi) fellga blowers, etc. Wayne Heating & Air Condition- ing Co. 460 West Huron. --FIR 2x4's, 7 cenw L. ft. vx6’s & 2x8's, $95 M, Krotty pine paneling, $155 M Del. Complete line of bidg. material In three different grades. BLACKETI’'S Building Supplies 2161 Dixie AHwy., Clarkston MA 5-4391 HEATING STOVE BROWN ename) jacket, new. OR 3-0126. GIRL'S STORM CQGAT SIZE 12 26 in. girl's bike lawn mowers. _ MAple 5-7896. a 7 LADIES DIAMOND, ‘32 CARAT ring, Pvt. party, reas FE_4-4007, SHALLOW WELL PUMP, TANK and pipes = perfect cond. MId- west 4-0040 TRENCHING Footings & field tile FE 6-8221. HEAT YOUR HOME Feonomically with H.C. Little fully auto. furn. «& heaters. The one that lights.itself & burns No. 1. 2, or 3 oi]. No messy low pilot fire. Floor furnaces a 8 aes A Demonstrations daily $ to $ allowance for your old heater. No casn down, liberal terms. PETRO HEAT SERVICE CO. Associated With Trailer Exchange 60 8. Telegraph Open Evenings and Sundays x MEDICINE CABINETS, PLA lass with fluorescent lights. 22 50 50 & A Thompson. 80 8 Perry _ AUTHORIZED REO LAWN MOW- er service dealer. Pickup and de- liver, OR 3-0951. CHAIN SAWS — NEW AND USED. Hardie Garden and Orchard sprayers, Garden tractors — with reverse gear. Rototillers, large and small, Power mowers — new and used, rotaries and reel type. Millers Garden & Lawn Equipt., 1593 8. Woodward Ave, (north of 14 Mile Rd.), Birmingham, phone Midwest 4-6009. Time payments available. We take trade-ins, _ GLIDDEN'S SPRED SATIN WAR- wick . suppiy. 'E 4-509 ne USED AUTO GAB FURNACE FE 5-7433.__ oe - ee ORDER NOW! HOLIDAY SEASON Speciality Advertising Gifts. Gala party assortments Etc., FE 44975. 30 GAL. TOLEDO OIL WATER heater One 275 gal. tank. Brand new. $100 cash, EM 3-5227. orn 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M. NDAY 10 TO 8 LUMBER 4x8 SHEET ROCK $1.35 PER SHEET 1x6, 1x10, 1x12 W. P. boards ,86 thousand 2x6 NO. 2 FIR @ - 8 = 10° = 12° - 14° + 16 © 18 $118 oer thousand sq. grade A birch doors $9.95, outside Boydell paints. a 95 gal HARDWARE — PL BING SY DEL L PAINTS sq. ft BO ‘IF YOU ARE BUILDING A HOUSE FENCING DRIVE OUT TQ BURMEISTERS AND SAVE UP) TO $500 ON ALL atielaaiin is ways its Burmeisters Northern Lumber Co. 8197 Cooley Lake Rd. WE DELIVER - 70 Mile Radius With 8 Trucks Serving You EM 3-4650 EM 3-3996 KITCHEN SINKS. 24°'x21'"', $29.95 value $18.45, Tollets, free stand- ing, $59.50 value, $22.95. Lavator- tes complete with gleaming chrome faucets, $2495 value, $1495 These are factory marred, Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orch- ard Lake Ave Overhead Garage Deors Stop & see the baa door with the stabilizing arm o more scuffed side jams Easy to operate, fully painted Built to hay the life of your cg e No 1 & No. 2 doors availa n all sizes. Installation and ceedsiig Call for free estimates BERRY DOOR CO 370 8. Paddock DIAMOND WRISTWATCH. 2 DIA- mond rings FE 40554. ERESGE FLOOR FURNACE, "220 al. oi) tank and space oil heater. A 5-5861. — FLORENCE OIL SPACE HEATER. good cond, 50,000 BTU, $25. EM 3-3166. 30 GAL. FUEL OIL WATER HEAT- er and 5 rm. Duo-Therm oil cir- culator FE 42163 86 E. Yale LUMBER BUILDERS SUPPLIES Plaster board 4x8x%, $1.45. Rocklath, 18°'x48" bdl. Doors for your home ofr store.. Trim & mouldings, clear white pine. Knotty pine and cedar paneling. Plywood, Plyscord Weldtex. Windows and Windowalls. Flooring, oak 4 Y. pine. i nom red cedar, fir Y. pin Lumber ‘for all your needs. Priced rig Cal) Now, EMpire 3-5259 for muanie Butiding Materials PAUL LUMBER CO. 20 Bogie Lake Ra at Commerce additional room for expansion for new Pm ni dep't. Our loss your gain CLAYTON'S 3065 ileal Pearce Rd. EKeego rbor FE 5-8811 FE 5-8974 Open 9 till 6. Fri. 9 to 9 i LATHE, 14° SWING, 8 FT. BED. | $400. Texaco Gas Station, Bald Eagle Lk.. 2140 M- 15, State Hwy FUEL OIL HOT WATER HEATER a.! 220 gal. tank, $60. Good cond. OR 3-8435. 120 GAL. OIL DRUM. Reasonable, FE 4-4244 FLOOR FURNACE, SUITABLE for 4 rooms Ortonville 37R4, 377 Mul St 2 age Ns CATTLE TRAILER, $25. A SUMP PUMP. GooD ‘SHAPE, $25. Coal and hot water heater, tank and fittings, like pew, $20. FE _ 51253 _ a a | BENDIX WASHER, $40. 5 GOLF clubs and bag, | 15. FE 4-9957. su Sigg WITH A FRINGE ON top, $75. acne cutter, $35. MI 4-8888 CY CLONE FENCE Materials or complete jobs, F.HA terms. Free estimates. FE 4-6343, | PLOOR. SANDERS, FURNACE cleaners, wallpaper steamers jor rent. Oakland Fuel and Paint. 436 , Orchard Lake. FE 5-6150. AIR DRIED DOUGLAS FIR H 16" “ON LEGS. | ! | ‘ | x6 - of 14 10¢ lin. ft 2x6 — 20’ 12c lin. {t 2x8 — iz 14 16c lin. ft | 2x4 - 8 to 16’ 6c lin. ft, x6 Roof boards D4S 4e lin. ft 1x2 — W. P. Shelving l2*ac lin tt.) HAGGERTY LUMBER CO. 1947 bs) aad Hy. Walled Lake | MA 4-1084 Eves. LI 2-5069 $150, “DIAMOND RING. WILL} sell for $75. 10 cut diamonds set | _in_ platinum. { §5-GAL. OIL DRUMS. 261 ay | Broadway, Lake Orion. Call MY 2-6131. POR SALE: 4 GOOD INSIDE HOUSE doors; also quantity of windows. H. P. Button. __FE5-8312, NEW PINISHED GLAZED ) PARTI- tions tile available for small rooms. Suitable for toilets and locker room partitions. eror rice, pickup and deliver. ur- tee Construction Co., Pontiag Rd. PE 4-456! NEW FINISHED GLAZED PAR- titions; tile available for small rooms. Suitable for toilets and locker room partitions. Reas. price, pickup and deliver. Schur- rer Cnstruction Co. Pontiac Rd. PE 4-4561 _Sand, Gravel, Dirt 68A WANTED. FILL DIRT, 20 LOADS. sand prf. at Upper Straits Lake lot, Call enice 9-5605 or write . Szumanski, 18686 Al- dion, Detroit 5, Mich. A-1 TOP BOIL, BLACK DIRT, peet & fill dirt. Chap. FE 2-2650. TOP sOI BLACK DIRT. PEET moss, fill dirt, sand 4 gravel FE_4-0922. TOP ~ SOIL, PROMPT DELIVERY. 71-7271 after 4. - - TOP SOIL Sand, gravel, fill dirt. FE 4-8080. ROAD GRAVEL, DRIVEWAY Travel, cement, gravel, fill sand. __FE 4-3263. Tanner Sand & Gravel. 2 YDS. BLACK DIRT. TOP soIL, woe or manure. FE 17-7224. PSOIL, SAND GRAVEL, AND Ton FE 5&-7850 or FE 41303. SAND. GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP soil, George Frayer, FE 54831. BEST GRADE, TOP SOIL, SAND. gravel 4 fill dirt. W. Kelty. FE __2-0557. _ __ AMERICAN STONE PRODUCT Pit PE 5-7431; Office FE 2-9453 Auburn Heights Road gravel, cement gravel, pit run, fill dirt. Loading daily 7:30 to 5. Mon. thru Sat. Call us for _a@ttractive prices. We deliver. BLACK DIRT, FILL DIRT, TOP soil, sand and gravel, Vern Goy- ette, re 30575 or uae 2-3148. Pi rain lack Wh gg RICH aS — Parvo & GRAVEL SAND, “GRAVEL eae L DIRT, aan. __ soul. . Kenneth 7 Tuttle. rR ane BAND, GRAVEL, FILL D soil, rock. FE 2-2817._ rE m See BLACK DIRT FOR LAWNS AND flowers, EM 3-8003. BLACK DIRT State tested. Fill dirt, sand and __ gravel. FE 4- ove. FILL SAND Sand & fave top soil, black dirt & manure. FE 4-6640. | | | 2 STACKS USED FLOORING, $30. | _ Built-in bath tub, $30. Some large windows, $7 2 Dutch doors, 2 French windows Large screen sections for porch. FE 2-0047. KENMORE, 4 TO § ROOM OIL _ heater, EM 3-5727. SUNBEAM COAL Cheap 1023 Lasalie $1,000 TAKES - BARRETT heavy duty brake ‘reliner. Van Nor.man brake drum lathe. Black Decker super-service valve facer EM }3-3471 MOVING OUT OF TOWN. GRAND piano: dehumidifier; steam iron; dog house; odds and ends, Li | ~~ 6-3634 METAL | BLILDING SUPPLIES steel clothes line props $1.25 Hook steel clothes poles Package or Milk chutes $5.65 | 1$x12 2 lite basement sash $3.60 Steel utility sash with” guards Steel coal chute widows $7.60 15x12 basement ‘FURNACE. Register grills for heatilators Basement wincow wells or ares walls BASEMENT le agen Joist angles 7° 20c ea. 9” JOIST HANGERS ALL ses” $x7 tin fla shingles Formed steel fireplace dampers 3x3x3-16 Steel angle iron Cast iron fireplace dampers formed steel fieplace dampers Aluminum roof ventilators Stee! a:tic vents or louvres Triangle or ‘s circle attic vents METAL LATH & CORNER BEAD Cast iron sewer pipe «trainers CISTERN COVERS AND FRAMES Cast Iron manhole rings & covers BLAYI OCK COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY 81 Orchard Lake Ave FE 3-7101 PORCH ENCLOSURES Screens and Storm Sections Wood and Aluminum See yellow pages Nos. 100, 130, 194 of phone book. Cc. co 1661 N. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2597 te- | co | | PROMPT DELIVERY ON BLACK dirt, sand, get fil) dirt. an manure. FE 4-66 service availabe GRAVEL, | SAND. Pi DIRT AND rich heavy to Howe, Sa p soil. C. nd and Gravel, OR 3-716 FE 2-0203' ROAD GRAVEL, PARKING LOT fill. Wilkinson Sand gravel and & Gravel. FE 4-6218. WASHED SAND ANQ GRAVEL, fill dirt, road gravel, trucking cement and mortar. Pontiac Lake _ Building Supplies. OR 3-1534. Sporting Goods 68B 22 CAL. WALNUT HILL TARGET rifle and mahogany case. $75. 12X unertl scope. $75. FE 2-0467, 2657 Woodbine Dr NEW COLT ‘45 AUTOMATIC. 1 month old $45. FE 4-8370 12 GAUGE 6 SHOT BOLT ACTION. like new. 49 shells. cleaning ‘rod and nylon case. $30. 101 8 John- son. 35 REMINGTON GAME oe Practically new. OR 3-615 NEW 16 GUAGE “OOnLE ‘BAR- Hee gun & P-38 pistol. FE 12 GAUGE REMINGTON AUTO- matic with Polly choke. 1 wall tent 7x9. 10232 Elizabeth Lk. Rd., Oxbow Lake HUNTING ARROWS $13 A DOZ. 9405 E. Commerce WANTED - TENT 12x14 or 14x16 OR 12x16. Call EMpire 3-4030. 20 GAUGE WINCHESTER PUMP, __model 12 poly choke. MI 4-2885. ~ Art Lawson Gun Shop T GUN REPAIR Rebluing, custom stocks, sights, scopes and access. Every caliber ammunition. New and used guns, sale or trade. Shooters’ supplies. 6455 Dixie Highway MA 5-7926 TRADE ARCHERY SUPPLIES FOR ane OR 3-2244. Carland’s Gun hop, across from eden BUR-SHELL GUN mz sell. trade. 375 8.. T searaph WANTED SHOT GUNS AND DEER __Tifles. Manley Leach, 10 Bagley. __Wood, Coal, Fuel o9A SLAB WOOD. - BEAUTIFUL REG. grapes. apples. 1% mi. E. of Bald-| win on Walton at roadside Sun- day PEARS. YOU PICK, $1.50 BU, 3450 Lone Pine Rd. Of Middlebelt. GRADED TOMATOES $1.00 BU., Delivered $1.50 bu. Ph. OA 8- 2618. WEALTHY APPLES, BARTLETT | pears, potatoes. 2173 Churchill Rd., Auburn Heights. PEACHES ARE NOW laa an Suttons Orchard 324 N. ke Ange..c FF 45-1800 - YORKWIN SEED WHEAT. PLENTY | of it. Leave order before we take | price support. A. G. Howe & Sons, | 5465 Oakwood Rd. | STRAW 30c PER BALE, IN FIELD. | MA 6-2996. j PEACHES High quality ‘ruit, drive in and | see us #800 Grange Hal) ka. Orvor ville , PEARS YOU PICK. $1.50 BU. 3450, Lone Pine Rd. off Middlebeit. | PICK YOUR OWN PEACHES Peifect fruit, ready now Also Bartlett pears and Wealthy appies Colonial Orchards 5370 Fish Lake | Rd, 1 m: west ‘44 mj. north of Civde ; BARTLETT PEARS, CLEAN! Sprayed Irult. Bring oWn contain- ' ers 284350 Haggerty Huy ‘6 mile | north of 12 Mile Rd., Farmington. | BARTLETT PEARS, POPULAR VA- meties of apples. Sprased fruit Kingsbury 2330 Clarkston Kd, Lake Orion MY = 3-5703. ee VOM A7 OFS Now ready for canning. Pick ‘em yourseimt $1. Jevel bushel basket. ting Own containers. Adults only in field) Not Open this Sunday. 3660 Giddings Rd FE 56666 | TOMATOES, $1.50 TO $2.00 BU.; { also peppers, FE 4-4228, 775 Scott | Lake’ Rd TOMATOES. | OR 3-8453 PLUMS FOR CANNING & FAT- | ing. Holtz's Orchard. John R. Rd.., | south of Auburn. OL 2-1097 HOME DRESSED BEEF & PORK Opdyke Market. \ APPLES, BARTLETT PEAR Prune plums. Waterford Hill Farms. 5941 Dixie Hwy. ~ For Sale Pets 71 HOUNDS FOR SALE: 2 RABBIT & 1 coon. 289 W. Wilson. REG. ENGLISH SETTER. 8915 VAN j Gordon (Union Lake village). EM 3-8531. : : _ AKC BEAGI€, FEMALE. 1% YRS old, excellent stock. Call between 5:30 & 7. FE 4-3443. ENGLISH SETTERS, 5 MOS. OLD, AKC registered, 9males, 1 female, $35 each. Tarry Farms, Rochester. __OLive 2-3779. _ ; _ AKC REG. DACHSHUND __ FE4-3425 PERSIAN KITTENS FE 4-1334 oe "TOY MANCHESTER TERRIERS, AKC, some champion aired, .$50 up: also collie puppies. Frey's Kennels, 6268 W. Mt Morris Rd., Mt. Morris. Mich. Ph. 7-9500 2 AKC COCKER PUPS, 10 WES old, $25. MA 5-6298 ‘ALFALFA aies and bridles, J085 Lapeer Rd , ABERDINE ANGUS HERD, SOME.__ cows with calves by side; also bull, outstanding pedigree. Priced to sel!’ Tom Montgomery, 4045 ECommerce Rd Milford. FE 2-9000 or MU 43255. | REGISTERED SORREL QUARTER horse, ~ ribbon winner. See at 13880 Neal Ra. Davisburg or phone Holly 3071 HOLSTEIN JERSEY FAMILY cow. M 200d, 2310 N. Adams Rd Lake “Orion 10 LARGE FEEDER PIGS. _W. Maple Walled Lake 4 NICE HEIFERS, 3 HOLSTEIN one Heretord. Sacrifice §325 tor all, MA 4-2547 Wanted Livestock 74 6310 LIVESTOCK OF ALL KINDS POR- rest Jones. MA 45-5206 WANTED SMALL CALVES, LIVE- stock, oorses Ph MAple 5-6731. __ May, Grain & Feed 75 Se oe CORN. STRAW. §-3502 HAY. 500 BALES. NO Maple 5-283} GOOW QUALITY. HEAVY Call MApie 5-283]. Clark. NEW HAY, MA rain OATS ciean ston. GOOL CLEAN WHEAT STRAW 406 t Dae ac ood mixed hay. Lerov Calkine. FE ¢-6588 YORKWIN SEED WHEAT. GROWN from cert.fied seed $2.35 bu. 688 F Avon” HKochester. OL 6-2103 Sale Farm Equipment 70 BAAALAL © AA AAAAAAAAAAAAS 1 15-IN. SEARS ROEBUCK HAM- mermill for sale. A-1 shape. MA 6-2620 | GARDEN TRACTOR & ~ TRAILER, hike new. 32 Whitheld. JOHN DEERE POLATO DIGGER,. George Miller. MA 5-3918. 2 ONLY WE HAVE 2 NEW - HOLLANDS AUGER IYPE ENSILAGE BLOW- ERB TO ie AT A BIG BAV- INGS TO ALSO 2 USED CHOPPERS BLACKETT INC. YOUR FERGUSON DEALER OR 3-1200 5454 Dixie’ Hwy. Waterford ELECTRIC BROODER $7.80. 22° ventilator fan, $40. Stewart Clip- master, §20. FE 4-0957. WHEAT PLANTING TIME “WILL BE HERE SOON BAFE, PLACE YOUR ORDER FOR FERTILIZER NOW > Your I-H Dealer Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke ! NEARLY NEW McCORMICK CORN binder, with conveyor bundle car. rier. Tractor drawn, 61171 De quindre Rd. BOLENS 2'2 HORSE GARDEN tractor With @ll attachments, cost $560 2 years ago, sacrifice for $200. MA 42547. 2-11x28 FIRESTONE TRACTOR tires and tubes, rims and wheels IRISH SETTER MALE 1 YR. EX- _ cellent hunter. EM 3-5087. BEAGLES AKC 6 MON. TO 3) year. MA 5-5961 call before 3 m™, and aliday Sat. or Sun. 9383 Eston . 2 mile on Baldwin and, _1 mile N. Clarkston, Orion Rd. AKC REG. BEAGLE, IDEAL GUN dog, sale or trade. FE 49165. 2 REG. GERMAN tee 11s E. Beverly. FE 40419 2 OUTSTANDING COON ‘pocs. 227 . Auburn Rd., Rochester. Er NICE PART PERSIAN KIT- ten. FE 3-7257. EAUTIFUL FAWN MALE BOXER, AEC reg. 26 mo. §45. Call be- . tween 6 and 8 p.m. FE 2-488]. PUPPIES. 5 WKS. OLD. HALF Bedlington-Terrier, $5. FE 4-7081 TROPICAL FISH 186 State St FE 41873 = BRITTANY SPANIELS, 5 will start this season. OA #2810 or Columbiaville 149F3. GUINEA PIGS, BIRD SUPPLIES. Al et Sbop. 69 8. Astor. FE FOR SALE REGISTERED ENG- lish Pointers #% mos. old from roven 5 mal 2 emales. om, 5200 REG. GERMAN | POINTER. 3 YRS. _ old. Ph. Southfield 3234 BABY PARAKEETS. FE 2-3340. 791 Melrose.- TROPICAL FISH AND PARA. Keets. 4154 Wenonah Lane. Dodge Park No. 4. FE 5-0048 SPECIAL a PARAKEETS $4.50 691 Fourth. Closed Sun. FE 2-4025 COLLIES, 4 MO. old and 1 vr. old. Sables & tri- colors. 4215 Pontiac Trail, Or- _ chard Lake. FE 2-3450 PRICED FOR QUICK SALE. AKC registered male beagle pups. FE __5-6961. 39 Ivy. a BOXER FOR SALE. FOR IN- _formation, phone FE 2-3497 DALMATIAN ©DOG, 9 : MONTHS HEPHERD OW AVAILABLE FORJAN KENNELS E . TROPICAL FISH & SUPPLIES Pincumbe’s. 49 Park &t. Oxford. OA 8297 _ _ n Eves. ADORASLE BABY PARAKEET | and Opalines, FE 4-6960. 1304 Mt | Clemens GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC were FE 54-0066 EKINGESE PUPPIES. | " Hounebroken F 17-7927. MALE GERMAN SHEPHERD a ater 3 mo., Champion bred. . AKC REG. AKC REG. BEAGLES, ALSO REG. _ English Pointer, FE 2-2468.. SPRINGER SPANIELS AT SACRI- fice, Overstocked kennels. Puppies and grown 2-6019. _ ; BEAGLE PUPS. 3 MOS. OLD. ONE 1“ yr. old Beagle. bits and birds) AKC reg. stock. Will consider trade OR 3-6840 PARAKEETS,’ CANARIES, CAGES, 3 food. Since 1927. 584 Oakiand Ave. FROPICAL FISH 3848 Beachgrove __ FE 2-154 AQUATIC GARDENS * TROPICAL Fk & oorriies 57 N. MILL 8T 4-2853 GREAT DANE rin AKC reg. To be sure of the best, buy your Danes from a member of the Great Danes Club of Michi 375 Wattles Rd. Corn. of Squ rei __ Rd., Bloomfield Hills. PARAKEETS AND CANARIES, 2489 Auburn RD NEAR Crooks FE ___For Sate Poultry GOooD $ CORD on _2 for $11. Del. FE 53980 afte 4. GOOD DRY wooD ar oe 2 for $11.00 delivered. FE aA WOOD OR 30456 OR FE Plants, Trees, Shrubs 70 PLANT NOW Fall sale of evergreens. Lakeside a 39.4 Elizabeth Lake Ra. Dogs Trained, Boarded 71 71 BOARDING. BATHING. & CLIP- ping. 704.N. Perry. PE 2-6113. Sale Farm Produce 71A BOICE’S ORCHARD lift B ARTLETT Pl TI“PEARS ELB ERT A . PEACH ES oe a Open 9 8. m. to 8 Dp m ee a | ™ LAYING WHITE LEG oan hens. 3305 8S. Blvd. FE 2-5605. WHITE ROCK HENS 40c LB. 4969! Huston off Brown Rd. RABBITS. EATING & BREEDING. _ OL 2-3308, 2130 Livernois Rd. — 2% TO 3 LBS., $1. 9925 | M-15, mi. N. of Clarkston. 1 MEAT. = POULTRY AT wholesale, reasonable, honestly | __prepared. Shore Market. FE 4-2233. | _ For Sale Livestock 73 | is 13 HAMPS “EWES AND 16 lambs. 2363 Hadley Rd., just off Seymour Lk. Rd. 15 HEAD OF REGISTERED HOL- | stein cows and heifers, fresh and | due this fall. Best of Burke & Rag Apple breeding. Calf hood | Good production rec-' MU «881 a HOLSTEIN HEIFER. | LARGE “s “¥R, “QLD HOLSTEIN milk cow. 2384 Duck Lk. Rad, 2 —— south of M-58). MUtual EGISTERED et rams. 10585 PPutine race TOMATOES. | 203 — 4 LAKE ANGELUS Rd, FE 4-0927 8 10 WEFK ‘OLD PIGS, $15 EACH. MA 5-3583. old. FE 4-8904. GERMAN 8 | N 2-650x16 implement tires tubes, 2—550x16 eg tires, tubes and wheels. WE HAVE ON KAND SEVERAL USED ACTORS. 8 GARDEN TRACTORS" AND ROTO-TILLERS. We take trade-ins Credit terms Call FE 4-0734 or PE 41112 KING BROS Your I-H Dealer Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke 1951 Ford tractor with plow, | pew drag. new 2 row cultivator. = set disc, all for §$1,1 Auction Pg Inc. M-24 wood Rd. Lake Orion. BIG SALE ° Ts with or with- out engine blowers. This brand new ent will be sold at substantial savings to you. This equipment eee a. ware bouse protection BLACKETT, IN Yel YOUR ERGUSON. DEALEB 3-1208 5454 Dixis Highway | Waterford McCORMICK CORN BINDER WITH bundle carrier, good condition. 900 Coats Rd ‘ord, Mich. CORN CRIBS, CORN CRIBBING. new and used corn pickers, stock tanks: DAVIS MACHINERY, _45 Ortonville. GARDEN TRACTORS Rota: Mowers Service and Repair TEE‘'S SALES & VICE 921 Mt. Ctemens ct. FE 3-0630 PLOWING FOR WHEAT? Ask for a free demonstration of our mew Case Ae You will see how much & faster it is to do the Houghton & Son, Inc. YOUR AUTHORIZED J. bk CASE SALES AND SERVICE “It Costs Less to Farm With Case” Ph OLive 1-9761 Ph Romeo 2332 | ONE MAN CHAIN SAWS — NEW & USED Stop in for a demonstration. time Dayments available. Miller's Gar- den & Lawn Equipment, 1593 8. Woodward (north of 14 Mile Rd.), Birmingham _Ph. MI 4-6009. CHAIN SAWS, 16” i 20" & 2% ~ 39. tng Free Gemonstration. MY -- BOLENS GARDEN TRACTO 2 HP to 6 HP Ridemaster. cu'tivators, discs, sycle par weed cutters, wheel we ers. mowers & r es, Evans a ee 6507 Dizie MA Hwy. JUST parre ppd ) 15 new American corn pickers. a rice $1, 1ee—while the ag $495. Bsed eo! corn pickers. e . Belection of blowers. Silo fillers. Michigan Auction Mart Inc. M-24 & Indianwood _Rd., Lake Orion. a 7) | Auction Sales NOTICE CHANGE OF HOURS TO 1 P. M. ON 2ND & 4TH MONDAYS Michigan Auction Mart Inc. 571 Lapeer Rd., Crn. Indianwood Lake Orion —e ! “ony type gh Ang ny type auc an - fi 636 Lapee r AUCTION SALE aPonsonieD BY St. Andrews Church, Rochester, at Smart's Auction House, 30 W. Tienken Rd. 8at., Sept. 12 starting at cy p.m ANTIQUE & eT ORNITURE ave: tion Wed. 1 . N. Washington a Onford — ts tique singin. ture pal ag quare pine chests spinn wheel and reel, le oo | chair, cow be Indian relics, furniture, bedrm., furniture, rugs. curtains, dishes, and garden tools, all from our me. alter Pa FARM AUCTION THURS. §& 17,. 1:30 p. — at 3530 Noble $ miles ee oe of beemaee: 35 head + “1 hall fine Holstein rg 18 months old, 2 stee auctioneers Ph. OA 8-2226, 16TH AT 130): Oxford. WED. SEPT 2% miles north of Ortonville an ment 17 head.of young H dairy cows. 5 fresh. some due this fall Others milking. 7 Holstein ve ‘ors. 2 entrs MeLaval magnetic milkers complete. 6 can Shults cooler. “= a cans. Rubber tired — ll dril ete <= st & D. Bank. Clerk. auctioneer. OA 8-2814 TWENTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1953 --- Today's Radio Programs -- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. CKLW (800) Www, (858) ° WCAR (1130) WXYZ (1270) WIJBK (1490) WIR (760) TONIGHT WWJ, St. Paul's Cath. WXYZ, Eddie Fisher CKLW, News :00—WJR, News CKLW, Pontiac Baptist WJBK, Blue Serenade WCAR, News, Club ww News WJBK, News, Serenade ; ick warsta 2:15—WJR, Perry Mason WXYZ. Ed McKenzie WCAR, News, Harmony ig tg fe urr: patie be : » 1 . ’ ews WIBK. nega, Records ee en ‘ CRLW News #| 2:30-WJR, Nora Drake WCAR, News. Ballads oe ee WIBK: News, Musi WWJ, Dave Garrowa , . : CKLW, Anglican Church WJBK, News, Music WXYZ. Crocker Wincer 6:15—WJR, Jimmy Clark WJBK, Sun. Serenade 11:15—WJR. UN on Record CKLW. Your Boy Bud WWJ. To Be Announced WCAR, Radio Temple WWJ. Sun. Serenade ’ CKLW, Secretary of State WCAR, Sports 6:30—WJR. Bob Reynolds WWJ, Boor Shelf ww, WXYZ, James Crowley wxyzZ, CKLW, Parli.ment sth WCAR, Ballad.: Wok. €:45—WJR,. Industry CKLW, Mich. Catholie WXYZ, Your Business CKLW, 7:00—WJR, Sat. at Chase WJBK, WWJ, Hawthorne, TBA WCAR, WXYZ, News; Disaster CKLW, Theater 7:15—WXYZ, McVane wxyYzZ, CKLW, 2:30—WJR, The Chicagoans WJBK. WWJ, Talent USA WCAR, WXYZ, Winter's Classic CKLW, Where tn World $:00—WJR, Broadway Beat WXYZ, Dancing Party CKLW, 20 Questions WJBK, Bob Murphy 8:.70—WJR, Gangbusters WWJ, Football U.S.A. » CKLW, Barn Dance WJBK, Bob Murphy 9:00—WJIR, Gunsmoke WWJ. Dude Ranch WXYZ, News, Party CKLW, Barn Dance 9:30—WJR, Jamboree WWJ, Grand Opry Party WXYZ, WwXyYzZ, CKLW, WXYZ, CKLW, WXYZ, News, WXYZ, CKLW, Lombardo CKLW, Van Deventer ° CKLW, N . Lavid 10 00—WJR, Sat. Nite 4 WCAR, Scoreboard WJBK, News, Gentile pL MM ed SES ail Town | 2:45—CKLW, Chosen People WCAR, News CKLW. Wayne King Se ieee ae 8:15—WJR. Bud Guest 10:185—WXYZ, Top Town 10:30—WJR, Town & Country WWJ, Pee Wee King WXYZ, CKLW, 11:45—WJR, Radio Spotlight 12:00—WJR, News 12:15—WJR, Best Guest WWJ, Quiet Hour 12:360—WJR, Opinion WWJ, Words to Live By SUNDAY AFTERNOON 1:00—WJR, Symphony WWJ, To Be Announced 1:15—WXYZ. Christ Church WWJ, Sunday Music 1:30—WJR, Lions vs. Wash. , 1:45—CKLW, People ' 2:00—WWJ, Catholic Hour 2:30—WWJ, Meet Congress 3:00—WWJ, Carnival WJBK, Salute to News Gloria Parker Labor News Tom George Tiger Tunes WWJ, Lorraine's WXYZ, Ballroom News Tiger Talks Warmup Time Piano Playhouse Back to God 6:15—WXYZ, News, Wolfe Tiger Game WCAR, Coffee With Clem oa Pant 7:00—WJR, Dick Burris WWJ, News Truth Herald 7:30—WJR, Listen Music Healing Wings 7:45—WWJ, News Pan American Elder Morton Healing Wings Church in Home Your Boy Bud 8:30—WJR, Music WXYZ, Chet Huntley CKLW, Tabernacle. 11:360—WJR, Star Symphony 11:4S—CKLW, Church of God MONDAY MORNING... 6:30—WJR, Parm Forum WWJ, Bob Maxwell WXYZ, Fred Wolfe CKLW, News, David WJBK, Rise & Shine WCAR, Coffee With Clem CKLW, News, David WJBK, Rise & Shine WCAR, News, Clem 7:15—WJR, Music Hall WXYZ, Dick Osgood CKLW, Toby David WXYZ, Fred Wolfe CKLW, Austin Grant WJBK, News, Rise & Shine CKLW, Toby David WXYZ, Dick Osgood 8:00—WJR. Jack White WWJ. Minute Parade. WXYZ, Osgood, Wolfe WXYZ, Fred Wolfe WCAR, Coffee With Clem WCAR, Lady of the Day WCAR, Sports 2:45—WJR, Brighter Day WWJ, R. Mulholland CKLW, Cashur, Antell WCAR, Club 1130 3:00—WJR, Hilltop House WWJ, Life Beautiful CKLW, News, City WCAR, News, Rhythm WJBK, News, George 3:15—WJR, House Party WW3J, Road of Life CKLW, Furnace 3:36—WWJ, Pepper Young WXYZ, Paul Winter CKLW, Eddie Chase WJBK, Don McLeod 3:45—WJR, Gal Sunday WWJ, Right to Happ. 4:00—WJR, News WWJ, Backstage Wife WXYZ, Wattrick McK. WJBK, News WCAR, News, Ballads WJBK, News, McLeod 4:15—WJR, Deland Show WWJ, Stella Dallas 4:30—WJR, Matinee WW3J, Widder Brown WXYZ, News. McKenzie WJBK, Don McLeod 4:45—WJR, Happens Daily WWJ, Women in House CKLW, News 5:00—WJR, News WWJ, Plain Bill WXYZ, Wattrick, McK. CKLW, Eddie Cfiase WCAR, News, Ballads 6:15—WJR, Music Hall WWJ, ist .Page Farrell CKLW, Bobby Benson Music Party and Live Hall CKLW, Dusty Lane ° , 5:30_WWJ. L. Jones 10:15_WIR, Town & Country Rye Dees Serenade | $:45_WCAR, Radio Revival | CKLW, Wild. Bill CKLW, L. Green Notes, : 9:00—WJR, News 5:45—WJR, Curt Massey 11:00_WJR, News aCe oun amssAtlantic | “ww, News, Maxwell” WWJ, To Be Announced WWJ, News CKLW. Your Boy Bud WXYZ, Breakfast Club CKLW, Cecil Brown WXYZ, News CKLW, News WJBK, News. Gentile 11:15—WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ, Joseph Harsch WXYZ, Top of Town _ CKLW, Israel Vistas 11:30—WJR, Orchestra WWJ. Dance Party CKLW, Phil With Musie wxyYzZ, CKLwW, CKLW, WXYZ, SUNDAY MORNING CKLW, 6:%—WJR. At Dawning WJBK, WW3J, News : WCAR, WJBK, Easy Listening 6:%0—WJR, Farm Review, WWJ, Coffee, Concert “WXYZ CKLW, Sky Chapel CKLW. W.JIBK, Easy Listening WJBK. 7.90—WJR, Favt. Hymns WWJ, Meditations CKIW, Breakfast Time WJBK, Tell Me, Doctor t Pa e WxyYzZ, Te — WIRE Fron 4 CKLW. 7:30—WJR, Sonata WJBK. WCAR, WWJ. Devotion Songs WXYZ, Bible Class CKLW, Baughey Tab Ww WJBK, Church of God ae 343—WXYZ, Morn. Dev. WJBK, WWJ. Devotion Songs WCAR, Morn. Musicals 4:00—WJR, Willys Festival WWJ, London Concert 4:30—CKLW, Dear Margy 4:45—WWJ, Hly'wd. Concert 5:00—WWJ, NBC Sympony 5:15—WJBK, Sports 5:30—WJR, To Be Announced SUNDAY EVENING 6:00—WJR, Gene Autry WWJ, Considine 6:15—WW4J,. TBA 6:30—WJR, Godfrey's Digest Revival Hour Under Arrest News CKLW, Kitchen Around the World The Shadow News News, Review WW4J, Here's the CKLW, Morning WXYZ, My True This Week in Music True Detective Melody Mon. Headlines Nick Carter News, Records News, Review 11:06—WWJ, Strike Cecil Brown Drew Pearson Record Room 11:15—WXYZ, Top WWJ, Mantovani CKLW, News :0—WJR, News WXYZ, Ed McKenzie ; ww3 Organ Recitals CKLW, Squad Room 11:30 WJR, Grand WXYZ, Healing Waters CKLW. Worship Hour WJBK, Comic Weekly WCAR, Gospel Hour 8:15—WJR, Karamu Quart. 8:30—WJR, Renfro Valley WWJ, News WXYZ, Light & Life CKLW, Pontiac Baptist WJBK, Ava Maria WCAR, Back to God 8:45—WWJ, Music Mem. WXYZ, CKLW, CKLW, 9:00—-WWJ, Crossroads WXYZ, CKLW, WXYZ, Religious News WJBK CKLW, Bethesda Tentp. WJBK, News, Serenade WCAR, News. Rhythm 9:15—WJR,. Faith Hymns WXYZ, Chanel Windew 9:30-—-WWJ, Magic Story CKLW, WJBK, 6:45—WXYZ, Vacationland 7:00—WJR, Jack Benny WWJ. First Nighter WJBK, News, Records 7:30—WJR, Dick Diamond WWJ, Forum WJBK, 8t. Francis Hour 8:00—WJR, Jr. Miss WW3J, Tony Martin 8:30—WJR, Little Margie WWJ, Best Plays 9:00—WJR, Hall of Fame Music Hall Tabernacle WWJ, Cederberg WJBK, News WCAR, News Radio Bible Music Hall Rev. C. J. Steiner Sen. Ferguson WCAR, Noonday Lutheran Hour Records ‘ CKLW, Good Neighbor Club WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News, Rhythm 9:15—WJR. Organ Footnotes WWJ, Bob Maxwell CKLW, Gabriel Heatter WJBK, Don McLeod 9:30—W.TR, Mrs. Paige WWJ, Bob Maxwell 9:45—WJR, Pete & Joe 10:00—WJR, A. Godfrey WWJ, Welcome Traveler CKLW, News, Homechats WJBK. News, McLeod WCAR, News, Temple 10:30—WWJ, Bob Hope WXYZ, Whispering Streets CKLW, Mary Morgan WCAR, Harmony Hall 10:45—WWJ, Marriage Pays WXYZ, When Girl Marries WXYZ, Curtain Calls CKLW, Ladies Fair WJBK, News. Cline WCAR, News, Harmony WW/4J, Phrase Pays WXYZ, Double or Nothing CKLW, Queen for a Day 11:45—WJR, Rosemary WWJ, Second Chance 12:00—WJR, Wendy Warren WXYZ, Turn to Priend CKLW, Curt Massey 12:15—WJR, Aunt Jenny WWJ, Pran Harris WXYZ, Betty Crocker 12:30—WJR, Helen WXYZ, News, Crocker CKLW, Your Boy Bud WCAR, Club 1130 12:45—WJR, Jack White MONDAY NIGHT 6:00—WJR, News {WJ, News by True XYZ, Wattrick-McKenzle CKLW, News, Sports WCAR, News, Ballads 6:15—WWJ, Clark Quartet ‘ WWJ, Budd Lyneh WXYZ, Lee Smith CKLW, Eddie Chase WCAR, Talk Sports 6:30—WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ, Racing WXYZ, McKenzie WCAR, Music 6:45—WJR, Lowell Thomas WWJ, Nation’s Business 7:00—WJR, Guest ‘House WWJ. 3 Star Extra WXYZ, Bill Stern CKLW, Fulton Lewis Jr, 7:15—WJR, Alex Drier WXYZ, Show World CKLW, Guy Nunn WJBK, Tiger Talks 7:30—WJR, Family Skeleton WXYZ, Lone Ranger CKLW, Gabriel Heatter WJBK, Tiger Game 7:45—WJR, Ed. R. Murrow WWJ, One Man's Family CKLW,. Perry Como 8:00—WJR, Suspense WWJ. Railroad Hour WXYZ, Your Land; Mine CKLW, The Falcon \ 8:15—WXYZ, Sammy Kaye 8:30—WJR, Talent Scouts WWJ, Voice Program WXYZ, Symphony CKLW, Fantasy Hal! 9:00—WJR, Radio Theater WWJ, Telephone Hour CKLW, Rep. Roundup 9:30—WWJ, Band of Am. CKLW, On, Off Record WJBK, Scores 10:00—WJR, Walk a Mile WWJ, Searchlight WXYZ, News CKLW, Edwards WJBK, L. Gentile Club Answer Special Story It Rich World Slam Caller Trent WXYZ, Voice WXYZ, Ta WXYZ, Talk 10:15—WXYZ, Top of Town . ylor Grant J \ CKLW, Frank & Ernest \ CKLW, Bufns Baptist —_— CKLW, Fran Warren WJBK, Detroit Pulpit MONDAY AFTERNOON WJBK, L: Gentile 9:45—WJR. Relig. in Act. WWJ. News CKLW, Healing Min. . WxYzZ 10:00—WJR, News . WWJ. Pulpit , CKLW. WXYZ, Israel) Message CKLW, Bible Class WJSBK, News, Serenade WCAR, News, Harmony 10:15—WJR, String Time 10:30—WJR, Chapel Hour WWJ, Art of Living WXYZ, Negro Choir CKLW, Voice WJBK, Sun. Serenade 10:45—WW4J, Storybook 1f:00—wsr, Tabernacle WXYZ, CKLW, wwd, WXYZ, CKLW, 9:15—WXYZ, Kiplinger 9:30—WJR, Escape WWJ. Confession WJBK. Record Room 9:45—WXYZ, A. Cook 10:00—WJR, Man of the Wk. WWJ, Barrie Craig WJBK, News, Records 10:15—WXYZ, A. Cook 10:30—WJR, Facts Forum Meet the Press 10:45—WJR, Christophers WWJ, News Call Me Freedom Dr. Barnhouse Christian Action Sunday Music CKLW, Your Boy News, Chautauqua Back to God WWJ, News WXYZ, Winter 1:00—WJR, Road of Life WXYZ, Charm Time CK’.W, Austin Grant WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News, ‘Club 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins CKLW, Johnson Music WJBK, Tom George 1:30——-WJR, Dr. Malone WXYZ, News, McBride CKLW, Your Boy Bud WJBK, Tom Geerge 1:145—WJR, Guiding 2:00—WJR, Mrs. Burton 10:30—WJR, Wizard WWJ, Hammersold WXYZ, Edwin Hill CKLW, News 10:45—WJR, Guest Star WWJ, Paris Stars WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, Quiet Sanctuary 1/00—WJR, News WWJ, News WJBK, News CKLW, News 11:15—WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ, Enchantment WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, Music Light Bud CKLW, PHil With Music Top Gate Receipts Proving U. N. Group Favors TV Help to Sports Events By EVE STARR NEW YORK — TELETORIAL: Does television really hurt atten- dance at sports events? the voices of Kukia, Ollie, and all the Kuklapolitan Players. Tillstrom is tops in his specialized Cut in U. 5. Support UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — |The U.N. Committee on Contribu- tions has approved a long-standing ‘line. Why? Let him tell you: ‘Just U-S. request that the American Many sports entrepreneurs claim tg make a puppet is not enough: , Share of United Nations costs be it does, but * man Seymour, Mintz, cites the all-star pro foot- val game at Soldiers Field, ob- serving that 93,818 fans saw the game “ this year, com- EVE STARR Yet 84 TV stations, plus 530 radio stations, carried this year’s game. | ! Several managers and owners of wrestling arenas have admit- ted that attendance has increased the past three years. They wouldn’t admit it was due to in- | creased interest in wrestling | through TV “exploitation,” but they didn’t deny it either. In any event, it doesn’t matter. What is significant is that atten- dance increased, rather than de- creased, during the years when TV has‘ made its greatest strides. TV thus is proving to help at- tendance at many sports events, | just as it has helped renew inter- est in government affairs, as wit- ness the Kefauver hearings. : = bd bd SKETCHBOOK: Versatile is the word for ‘‘You-Know-Who,”’ other- wise “B. T.” Such gibberish may puzzle you but it’s stock talk to those who really know the popular NBC “Kukla, .Fran, and Ollie” show. You’ve surely heard Kukla or Ollie or others of the group refer in hushed tones to some mysteri- ous backstage worker, usually as eB. Ta Well... this mystery man Is Burr Tillstrom, who is seen only briefly at the end of each show but is actually the creator and way is very much like life.” These now include Beulah Witch, Fletcher Rabbitt, Cecil Bill, Madam Oglepuss, Colonal Crackey, Mer- cedes, Dolores Dragon, and Mrs. Olivia Dragon. They’re all big favorites with viewers from coast Burr inherited from his mother a love of music and the arts; from his father he gained a deep feeling for nature and the great outdoors. He learned to love children while observing their likes and dislikes. Unmarried, he keeps in touch with children’s preferences by collect- ing books and fairy tales. ‘‘My favorite reading as a child was the ‘Oz’ series,” he says. “I hope sometime soon to base a TV series on these.” He reads an average of one child’s book a day. ‘‘That’s how I keep young in heart,”’ he says with impish grin. Set Sept. 18 as Date for Haymes’ Divorce Suit LOS ANGELES #® — Nora Ed- dington’s suit for divorce from Dick Haymes has been set for Sept. 18 in Superior Court here. The date was fixed yesterday after the court was advised that the crooner plans to obtain a Ne- vada divorce Sept. 21 and marry Rita Hayworth the same day. Mrs. Haymes filed her complaint last Aug. 22, charging cruelty. Previously she and Haymes had agreed upon a property settlement granting her $8,000 in cash and $100 weekly alimony. Nora, once the wife of Errol Flynn, married Haymes in 1949. ~ some think otherwise. but to make him perform is the | CUt from 35.12 per cent to 33 13 “Chicago TV ad- complete fulfillment, which in a| Per ent Only two Iron Curtain members lot the 10-nation committee dis- ‘sented from yesterday's majority | ruling favoring the reduction ‘in the American share of the annual budget. ._They were the Soviet , Union and Czechoslovakia. The cut would be effective for the 1954 fiscal year. The annual’ cost of the international organiza- tion has been running between 47 and 50 million dollars. ‘ | The committee also recommend- ed Russia’s share be hiked from | 12.28 per cent of the budget to 114.15 per cent. Britain's share would be reduced from 10.3 per cent to 9.8 per cent. “| | Slight adjustments—under one per cent—were recommended for 19 other countries. Mother, Baby Treated After 2-Car Collision Mrs. Eloise Parlow, 19, of 4980 Clintonville Rd. and her five- month-old son, Danny, were treat- ed-at Pmontiac General Hospital for cuts and bruises suffered in an auto accident at Saginaw and | Elm St. yesterday. | Driver James N. Parlow, 21,; with whom his wife and son were | passengers, told Pontiac Police the accident occurred when the driver of the other auto, Robert F, Milligan, 38, of 485 California Ave., was backing out of a filling station. Bank Marks Anniversary ) ‘ ZEELAND (® — The State Bank | of Zeeland, founded in 1878 by | Jacob Den Herder, will observe its 75th anniversary Sept. 17 with an open house. | 7 -- Today's Television Programs -- * Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WW4J-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:30—(4)—‘‘Ethel and Albert.”’ A dress-making problem. (2)— ‘Beat the Clock.” Bud Collyer with panel quiz. 7 7:00—(7)—"‘Wrestling.”” Film. (4) —‘‘I Bonino,”’ Ezio Pinza plays a concert artist who deserts stage for children. (2)—‘‘Larry Storch.”’ Cab Callaway on com- edy show. :30—(7)—‘‘Bowling Is Fun.” Fred Wolfe bowlers try for prizes: (4) —‘Amateur Hour.”” Ted Mack presents talent. :00 — 7 — ‘‘Boxing.’’ Middle- weight bout; Rocky Castellani vs. Terry Moore. (4)—‘‘Show of Shows.’’ Sid Caesar, Imogene Coca, Lily Pons, Nat ‘‘King”’ Cole, Tamara Toumanova, John Cameron Swayze. (2)—‘‘Two for the Money.”’ Herb Shriner, with comedy quiz. ; 8:30 — (2) — ‘‘My Favorite Hus- band.’’ Comedy with Joan Caul- field, Barry Nelson. 8:45—(7)—‘‘The Big Playback.” Film of important sports events. 9:00—(7)—‘‘Madison “Square Gar- den.” Film of events~at the Garden. (2)—‘‘Medallion ~The- ater.” Zachary Scott in the “Padre of San Pablo.’’ 9:30 — (7) — “Hank McCune.” Apartment turned into produce terminal. (4) —‘‘Hit Parade.’ Dorothy Collins, Snooky Lanson, Giselle McKenzie, Russell Arms, with top tunes of week. (2)— “Saturday News.”’ Chuck Berge- son, ' 9:45 — (2) — ‘‘Rosh Hoshanah’’— “Dr. Hertz.” 10:00—(7)—‘‘Film Theater.” Fea- ture Film to be announced. (4) —‘‘Boxing.”” Welterweight bout; Bud Smith vs. Charlie Spicer. (2) — “Feature Playhouse.” “Guest in the House.’’ Feature film. 11:00 — (4) — ‘Saturday Show.” 2:30—(4)—Excursion. (7) — City Kid. (2)—Don't Lose Your Vote 2:45—(2)—Featurette 3:00—(2)—Jewish Appeal Matinee 3:30—(4)—Zoo Parade. (7)—Cisco Kid. (2)—Facts Forum 4:00—(4)—Kickoff-1953. (7)—Super Circus. (2)—Lamp Unto Feet 4:30—(2)—Cowboy G-Man 5:00—(4)—Adv. Patrol. venture 5:30—(4)—Hopalong Cassidy. (7)— Terry and Pirates. (2)—You Are There SUNDAY’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(4)—‘‘International Chiefs of Police.” (2) — “Quiz Kids.” Young panelists answer ques- tions sent in by viewers. (7)— “You Asked for It."’ Art Baker is emcee of unusual program. 6:30—(4)—"‘Mr. Peepers.’”’ Wally Cox, Patricia Benoit, return to trials of small town teaching. (2)—"‘The Jack Benny Show.” Marilyn Monroe is guest on com- edy show. (7)—‘‘Ramar of the Jungle.’’ Jon Hall plays title role of Ramar. :00—(4)—"‘The Big Payoff.” Emcee Randy Merriman offers mink coats, world trips to hus- bands, winning for wives. (7)— “Motion Picture Academy.” (2) —‘‘Toast of the Town.”” Famed celebrities visit Ed Sullivan. :00—(4)—‘‘'Goodyear Playhouse.” “The Baby.” With Peg Hillias, Fred Tozere; story of a youngest child that family won't allow to grow up. (7)—‘‘Walter Win- chell.”” Up-to-the-minute news. (2)—"GE Theater.”’ 8:15—(7)—“‘Orchid Award.”’ 8:30 — (7) — “Plainclothesmen.” Stories taken from files of po- lice department. (2)—‘‘Arthur (4)— (2)—Ad- ~ John Bentley, Carole’ Marsh in “Salute the Toff.” Feature film. 11:30 — (7) — “Saturday Night . Movie Date.’’ Richard Arlen in ‘‘Accomplice.’’ (2) — ‘‘Man’s - World.’’ Sports. film. SUNDAY MORNING 8:55—(4)—News, Music 9: 00—(4)—Crossroads 9:30—(4)—Faith Frontiers 9: 45—(7)—Cartoons 10:00 — (4) — Christophers. (7)— Action Theater 10:15—(4)—Garden Show 10: 30—(4)—Cartoon. Pulpit 10:45—(4)—Garden Show 11:00—(4)—Rough Riders. Western Movie 11:30—(7)—Today Faith 12:00—(4)—Forward March. (7)— Auntie Dee. (2)—Modern Mind 12:30—(4)—News. (7)—Better Liv- ing. (2)—Featurette 12:45—(4)—Living Adventure. (2) — Sinema SUNDAY AFTERNOON 1:00—(4)—Meet Your Congress. (7)—World Adventure. (2) — Court of Health 1:30—(4)—Travel Unlimited. (7)— Sun. Matinee. (2)—This Is the (2)— Life 2:00—(4)—Rosh Hoshana. (2) — Your Trouble 2: 15—(2)—Christophers (2) — Detroit |. Murray Dance Party.’’ Guests prizes, and dancing add sparkle to show. 9:00—(4)—‘‘Nothing But the Best.” Eddie Albert emcees variety show that offers best talents from all fields. (2)—‘‘The Web.” Jennie Goldstein’ stars’ in **You’ve Got to Stop Sometime.” Story of mother and young_man trying to change his life. T)— “Boston Blackie.” | 9:30—(4)—"‘Meet the Press.”’ Mar- | tha Rountree is moderator. (7)— | “Jewish New Year.’’ Celebration is held. (2)—‘‘What’s My Line.”’ John Daly and people with odd occupations try to stump panel. 10:00 — (2) — ‘‘Foreign Intrigue.” Jerome Thor is star of exciting series laid in present day Eu- rope. (4)—‘‘Adventure Ho,” (7) —‘‘Stranger than Fiction.’’ True events on, film. 10:15—(7)—"‘Hour of Decision.’ Billy Graham speaks. 10:30 — (7) — ‘‘Hollywood Half Hour.”” Film featuring favorite stars. (2)—‘'Rocky King." Ros- | coe Karns plays hard hitting de- tective. | 11:00 — (4) — “‘Theater.’’ (7) —| “News.” (2)—''News.”’ ; 11:15—(2)—"'Packer Playhouse.” Feature film. (7)—‘‘Sunday With Surrell.’’ Jack Surrell presents musical show for your enjoy- ment. MONDAY MORNING 7:00— (4) —Today. (7) — W. M. Kelly 8:45—(2)—News 9:00—(4)—Playschool. (7) — Cof- fee 'n’ Cakes. (2)—Arthur God- frey Show 10:00 —(4) —Hawkins Falls. (7)— Playhouse 10:15{4)—The Bennetts 10:30—(4)—Steps to Heaven. (2)— Strike It Rich 10:45—(4)—Follow Your Heart. (2) —Bride and Groom 11:00 — (4) — Glamor Girl. (7) Sports. (2)—Bride and Groom 11:15—(2)—Love of Life 11:30--(4)—Movie Quiz... (2)—To- morrow’s Search 11:45 — (4) — News. (2)—Guiding Light 12:00—(4)—Ding Dong School. (7) —Comics. (2)—Murphy Calling 12:15—(2)—Beauty Is My Byline 12:30—(4)—Cinderella. (2)— Garry Moore. (7)—Bud Lanker Show MONDAY AFTERNOON 1:00—(4)—Jean McBride. (7)— Heart Theater. (2) — Dbl. or Nothing 1:30 — (4) — Sallye Show. (2)— Houseparty 1:45—(4)—Nancy Dixon 2:00—(4)—Break the Bank. (2)— —Big Payoff 2:15—(7)—Strictly Female 2:30—(4)—Welcome Travelers. (2) —Bob Crosby Show 2:45—(7)—News 3:00—(4)—On Your ‘Account. (7)— Stars on Seven. (2)—Ladies Day $:30—(4)—Ladies Choice 4:00—(4)—Atom Squad. (7)—Cow- boy Colt. (2)—Lindlahr, Theater 4:15—(4)—Gabby Hayes 4:30—(4)—Howdy Doody 4:45—(7)—News 5:00—(4)—Willie Wonderful. (7)— Auntie Dee 5:15—(4)—Sound the Alarm. (2)— Kartoons 5:30—(4)—Adventure Patrol. (7)— Wild Bill. (2)—Lady Dooit §:45—(2)—Sports MONDAY NIGHT 6:00—(4)—Music Time. (7)—De- troit Deadline. (2)—Gene Autry 6:15—(4)—News. (7)—News . 6:30—(4)—Bob and Ray. (7)—Lib- erace. (2)—Doug Edwards 6:45—(4)—News Caravan. (2)— Perry Como 71:00—(4)—Name the Tune. (7)— Mystery. (2)—Burns and Allen 71:30—(4)—Firestone. (7) 20th Cent. Tales. (2)—Talent Scouts 8:00—(4)—Juvenile Jury. (7) — Wrestling. (2)—Racket Squad 8;30— (4) —Robert Montgomery . (2)—Masquerade Local Doctors Attend Confab 5 Oakland Physicians Go to Grand Rapids for 4-Day Session Five Oakland County doctors will serve as members of Mich- igan State Medical Society's house of delegates at the society's eighty- eighth annual session ‘Sept. 21-25 in Grand Rapids. . * s Dr. R. H. Baker, Pontiac, is speaker of the house of delegates, the society’s policy making body. Delegates also include Drs. John M, Markley, Harold A. Furlong and Ethan B. Cudney of Pontiac and Dr. Palmer E. Sutton of Royal Oak. High on the house of delegates agenda is the selection of Mich- igan’s ‘‘Foremost Family Physi- cian for 1953" from 22 candidates’ nominated. | First two days of the convention will be devoted to a business ses- sion, with the final three days turned over to intensive study of recent advances in medical science | Twenty-six practicing physi-' cians, surgeons, medical research men and leading medical school teachers will conduct the 40 scien- tific discussions scheduled for the latter three days, City Airman Gets Own Convertible, Ritzy Hotel Suite By The Associated Press This is the Air Force? Airman 2-C Wilfred E. Gagne of 4995 Lockhart Dr., and his pret- : ty wife, Mary, today are settled in a luxurious suite at Detroit's , Statler Hotel. A canary yellow con- vertible stands ready for their exclusive use. For three days they will have Everything is’ ‘“‘on the house.’ The Pontiac airman was chosen “outstanding airman of the month’? for August at Selfridge Air Force Base. the best of Detroit entertainment. | Furnishings of Historic Mansion to Go on Block GALENA, Ill. @—The antique furnishings of a famous mansion _where two presidents were enter- tained will be sold at auction Thursday, ending an era for the historic city of Galena. For four generations, the 16 room home of Miss Anna E, Felt:was a center of gracious living and re- fined entertainment in the tradition of the last century. But Miss Felt, the last survivor of a prominent family, died June 13 at 93. s Her prized possessions and an- tique furniture soon will be re-- moved from the big house where Ulysses S. Grant and Theodore Roosevelt were guests. Thousands of persons, have visit- ed the Felt home during the last three years. It has been openéd to the public each September, along with other historic Galena land- marks. Deer and Bear Victims of Train at Michigammie MICHIGAMME, Mich. ® — Sportsmen scratched a deer and a bear today from their list of targets for the 1953 hunting season. The deer tried to race across railroad tracks ahead of a speed- ing train. He didn't make it. A bear, feasting on the deer's carcass, refused a short while la- ter to give the right-of-way to an- other train. He will not be around to get shot at, either. NEWS WHEN YOU WANT IT! Morning, noon, evening or in- between. Any- time you want the latest news ... Stay tuned tc 1130 ke. WCAR brings you news of the -hour on the hour, throughout the day. Start With Mrs. Gagne’s eyes shone as the couple took over their flower be- decked hotel suite. “It's quite a bit different from our trailer at Selfridge,’’ she re- marked happily. Gagne is a finance clerk at Selfridge. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred J. Gagne, of Pontiac. He entered the service in July 1951 and was assigned to Selfridge after training at Sampson Air Force Base, New York, and Scott Air Force Base, til. How does he feel about the three- 9:00—(7)—Hot Rod Races. (2)— Studio One 9:30—(4)—Who Said That? 10:00—(4)—Traffic Court. (T7)— Stage Seven. (2)—News 10:15—(4)—Picture Parade. (2)— Ed. Hayes ; 10:30—(4)—Man About Town. (7)— Hawk Tales. (2)—Featurette 10:45—(4)—Time off for Sports 11:00—(4)—News. (7)—Say There (2)—Telenews 11:15—(4)—Morey Show. (2)—The- ater. (7)—Feature Film 11:30—(4)—Monday Theater Aly Makes Conditions, Commie Literature Rita Turns ‘em Down LAS VEGAS, Nev. W—Rita Hay- worin last night turned down a million-dollar divorce settlement 3%4-year-old daughter Yasmin. ‘Nothing will make me give up Yasmin’s chance to live here in America among our precious free- doms and habits,’’ the film star told the Associated Press. Her attorney said Prince Aly had attached two conditions to the million-dollar offer: (A) Yasmin was to be exposed to Moslem teachings when she is seven and (B) the child was to be brought to Europe two or three months each year. | Guerrilla Fighting Ends ‘in Colombia By RICHARD G. MASSOCK BOGOTA, Colombia #—A bloody four-year guerrilla war against Colombia’s Conservative govern-_ ment reportedly has ended with the negotiated surrender of most of the insurgents. The fighting caused an estimated 5,000 deaths and millions of dollars damage. Reliable informants said last night 1,500 guerrillas surrendered this week to armed forces Com-| mander Brig. Gen. Alfredo Duarte | Blum in the Eastern Plains dis- trict around Monterrey. Earlier, 600 gave themselves up at Taura- mena, according to the newspaper | el Spectador. | Most of the guerrillas were Lib- eral party politicians and sympa- thizers. They began their battle in 1949 after accusing the Conserva- tive party. of trying to intimidate | them in a presidential election won | by former Chief Executive Lau- reano Gomez. The Liberals boy- = SERVICE $3 50. soe Charge | Call FE 2-2871 | Mitchell’s TV Sales and Service 109 ML Saginaw Se. TewuwvrewewvuvuvrvyTOWwWweuvUVeVeWwTwruUVVTYVTe@TVyVrTVYTOeyrUeUyYyVTYYTwvewvyv?r?y VTwTeVreweuevuep»wow" Pouring Into U.S. NEW YORK w—Customs offi- 11:30_WJR, Harry 8. Truman | from Aly Khan for support of their ¢jals say Communist propaganda from abroad keeps pouring in, even though most of it ends up in the discard. The Red literature often arrives in the form of packages, registered mail or bulk parcels, authorities said yesterday. In addition to individuals and Communist groups, the matter also has been directed to private, non- Communist organizations and even to governmental agencies. A care- ful record of all addresses is main- tained, Crack Down on Minors SPRING LAKE W® — Minors who drink risk being arrested hereafter. The eouncil of this Ot- tawa County village has adopted offenses punishable by $100 fine or up to 90 days in jail. | I Hurricane Weakening; Stays Out in Atlantic MIAMI, Fla. W — The season's ourth hurricane weakened in force today as it spun 120 miles north- east of Bermuda into the Atlantic. , day holiday? “This is tremendous,” Gagne said. 7 a.m. News Overnight Sports Monday thru Saturday ‘ @ Henry J. Taylor Comments on “Your Land and M’.e” Tuesdays—6:30 P.M, e—— Doubleheader .- Tigers vs. Senators Sunday at Noon }WCAR 1130 ke. | a | Picture Tube Too Small? Too Weak? DOES YOUR TV No Cash Needed! al Named Dolly for the fourth let- ter of the alphabet, the hurricane was centered near latitude 33.3 north, longitude 63.3 west at 5 a.m. (EST) today. It apparently was continuing to’ swing away from the U. S. main- land. The Weather Bureau said Dolly has weakened considerably and ' highest winds are now estimated at hurrican force (75 miles an hour) in squalls just east of the centér, Gales extend outward 175 miles in the eastern semicircle. Assumes Ship’s Command GRAND HAVEN W—Lt. Comdr. Ernest H. Burt Jr., has assumed command of the Coast Guard cut- ter Woodbine. i ‘wwwerrevrrvervrevrvrevrrrervrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrvevrvvevvvvvVeVTueVTVeYwTYTYi Trt TTT ew TT eee eC CC TT eT We Have Sales & 1157 W. Huron St. App b bbb hbAbbbb+b +b + ++ +b bbb bb bb be bb be be bb be hp bb bh he bh he he he he he he he he he hh he he he he teh LIFE MORE with... vTTwTrTCeTT TT TTT TTT CTT TTT eS | ‘ a Large Selection of New and Pre-Owned Radios and TV Sets STEFANSKI Radio & Television Service FE 2-6967 | 286 State St. — Open Eve TRADE IT IN! GET A NEW TV! WE HAVE ALL FAMOUS MAKES HAMPTON T-V NEED REPAIRS? Terms Available! ~~ Nite —- Phone FE 4-2525 1 a, a RY SEY OY HORNY OSU ene 't\When You Need Expert TV or Radio Service Call a Membe OAKLAND COUNTY ELECTRONIC ASSOCIATION The following members abide by deceive the public with misleading advertising. (2) Have courteous, (3) Give estimate betore major work (4) Do business-like manner only such work necessary for sat ot parts and labor kept at reasonable level. (6) Issue itemized bill (7) Guarantee all parts and tubes installed for 90 days. PONTIAC ANDY CONDON’S RADIO-TV BLAKE RADIOT-TV ry ELECTRIC SHOP eee EASTERN RADIO & TV HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO...) HOD’S RADIO & TV & ROY SALES & SERVICE . STFFANSEK!T RADIO & TV SWEETS RANIO— APPLIANCE WALTON RADIO & TV WKC INC SERVICF DEPT WEST OF CHAMBERLAIN RADIO & TV WAC RADIO RIDLEY'S TV SERVICE ‘UNION LAKE RADIO & TV r of the... this code of ethics: (1) Do not istactory performance (5) Prices «.+-- 176 Crestwood, FE 4-9736 eoee. 3149 W Huron. FE 4-5791 8 Oakland FE 2-6445 89 Chamberiain FE 2-740¢ miele fares 38 Miller, FE 5-8752 185 Oakland FE 5-213¢ 45 E Pontiac Rd. 96 Oskiand FE 2-402) scooo Lhkit Las PONTIAC 7289 Wil'ms Lk Rd. OR 38-1313 1515 OUnten Lk Rd. EM 83 3077 8228 Cooley Lk Rd. FM 3.396) 7196 Cooley Lk Rd. EM 3-394) ‘ BIRMINGHAM ELECTRONICS SERVICE CO 580 S. Woodward, Ml] 4-8765 CLARKSTON LAATSCH’S TV SERVICE 6734 Dixie, MA 5-531! . DRAYTON PLAINS LATIMER’S RADIO & TV... PHELPS ELECTRIC ... 3530 Sashabaw Rd. OR 3-2652 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1217 HOLLY CRI-CITY SALES & SERVICE BELTON RADIO & LAKE ORION rv S45 La 711 8. Broad. Holly 678) peer Rd.. MY 2-521) OXFORD OXFORD RADIO & TV SHOP 40 S Washington, OA 8-2032 ROCHESTER ROCHESTER RADIO & Iv 430 Main St. OL 2-214) SPENCER RADIO & TV SERV 3415 Emmons Ol 6-272! DOBAT & MORSF ELECTRON BOB'S TV Jap aodooc WALLED LAKE 1 Ics 28 Main SERVICE 1199 E. Lake Dr. MA 4-1379 or MA 4-1324 04 West Sth St. OL 2-4722 St. MA 4-136 Fo: informetion on Membership Phone FE 4-579! "