Thé Weather Thursday: Details page two 112th YEAR | Fair and Cool ‘ - Opposes Seating Red China ~ Girl, 1, Kidnaped and Brutally Slain in Mia THE ok ke ——o © PF od PONTIAC PRESS _ ce | ‘PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954—44 PAGES = * * Nixon Crowns Festival Queen AT JACKSON CELEBRATION — Vice President | | Miss Marty McDevitt, AP Wirephote se lected as queen of the Free- Richard Nixon places the crown ® on es bes ad of |dom Festival al at Jackson, Democracy Can 4 Dig as ‘Jet Crashes: Win Asiatics Vice President Communist Lies JACKSON President Nixon ‘last uw — Vice peoples of the world to not only | “expose Communist lies abroad” but also show 600 million uncom- Asiatics by democracy is the superior way of life ‘We must make equality in fact mitted example that as well as law the shining example | for all the world to see,"’ he told a Jackson Freedam Festival audi- ence estimated at 2.800. Speaking from notes at the week-long festival honoring the centennial of the first Republi- can Party convention, the vice president said the future of the free world is based on the de- night urged: the free , KANSAS CITY, Kan.—(AP)—An Air Force jet plane | attitude entirely Homes in Kansas City Free World to Expose. crashed today just outside the downtown district and an unofficial report said four persons were killed, including | worthy Several homes were set afire. the pilot. Two pérsons were also taken to Providence Hospital suffering burns and shock. They were King H. Simmons, | 47, 837 Nebraska, and his mother, whose name and age were not immediately available. probing the debris of homes in the crash area for otler | bodies. Search was being made for, three children who were reported to have been playing near the first home that was hit. by the F-84-F plane, which had just come off the assembly line. One of the three homes set afire was occupied by} | Eural Redwine, 45, an invalid. It was not known wheth- er he was in the house at the time. The plane, an F84, just off.the assembly line at the cision of the Asiatic peoples. local General Motors plant, crashed in the residential “The Communists know and we | area at 9th and Nebraska. Normally the F84 carries only know that whoever wins these el million people will win the world,’ he ‘said. “Make no mistake about it.”” he | added, “We are going to win be-! cause we have the resources and | we have the strength but, most | important, we're on the right side the side of freedom, the side of justice and the side of peace | against the forces of tyranny and | slavery. and the people are for | us" Nixon spoke in the covered fair- grounds grandstand with a ste ady drizzling-rain falling. The rain kept down the size of the crowd. The Eisenhower Administra- tion, he said, will continue to oppose United Nations recogni- tion of Red China. And then in a brief reference 10 Guatemala, Nixon said: ; “Every Communist dictator to- night sleeps abit more uneasily because Guatemala’s is the first Communist dictator government overthrown by the people.” During his one-day stopover, the vice president visited the in- scribe@ boulder, marking the area (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) U.S. Reports 1 Million Rise in Employment WASHINGTON (#—The govern- ment said today employment in- creas¢d by nearly one millien from May to June ard unemploy- ment. contrary to the usual season- ‘ al pattern, showed almost no increase. Employment rose during the month, according to a joint an- nouncement by the Department of Commerce and the Department of Labor, from 61,119,000 in early May to 62,098,000 estimated for early June. zs Meanwhile unemployment was estimated to have risen by no more than 42,000 during the month from | 3,305,000 in early May to 3,347,000 | in early June. Osmen’s Town & Country, Tel-Ruron. Open every night ‘til 9 o'clock the pilot. Bert Kinney, Jr., 43, was asleep in the first house struck but he escaped without injury. woke up covered with dust. debris, unaided. Mrs. Marian Reed, 30, who livés next door, looked out of her house after she heard a “terrific zoom- | He said he He crawled out of the said she ing” noise, to see the plane hit the first house. Other witnesses said the plane first struck a tree, then |the first house, bounced to the sidewalk and then bounced again across the street. Employment to Increase, Says GM Pontiac Head Substantially increased employment this fall at Pon- 'tiac Motor Division was forecast Tuesday by Robert M.- Critchfield, generat manager of the division and GM vice president, in a talk before Pontiac Kiwanians. He said he looked for stability in employment around present levels during the intervening weeks. Critchfield revealed that the schedule of Otters for the armed services was completed during June but that a supplementary schedule has been received for additional transmissions for these amphibious vehicles. Work ss the Bofors gun contract about complet- ed, but bids have been asked on a supplemental contract, so that further production of this item is anticipated, although there might be a brief gap between the two He reported that production. of the four and a half inch rocket has reathed full capacity, but that pro- duction of the 60 millimeter air- craft weapon still is increasing. He said approximately 12 per cent of the persons new on the division's payroll are employed on its four present defense con- tracts, In summarizing Pontiac's expag- sion and modernization program, Critchfield listed rehabilitation of lits engine plant, which covers some 15 acres, During this program en- gines are being produced in another (Continued on Page, Col. 6) ROBERT M. CRITCHFTELD Searching parties were | ‘ke Declares Standon Peiping Entry Into UN. Asserts He Can't Soy, U. S. Should Withdraw | | From Organization | (From AP & INS Dispatches) | | WASHINGTON — Presi- | dent Eisenhower said today | he is completely and un- | alterably opposed to let-| jting Red China into the | United Nations under pres- ent conditions. But he said | he is not ready to say this | country should mndras | from the U.N. if the Reds | are admitted. { Eisenhower thus took issue by implication with | | Republican Senate leader | | Knowland of California and | ‘some other lawmakers who | are urging United States) withdrawal from the U. N. | lif the Peiping government | is admitted over American | provests. fr. Eisenhower would not close | Search for Sl ayer of Tot in. Florida + a t ~ BLOODHOUND TRACKS CLUES—C nation written on the faces fireman man who, =p the aid ot a | bloodho is qt Charles Smith and an unidentified police- — Paya . pee the body of 7-year-old Judith Ann irim determi-|the area where of South Miami parents wére vi und, are — the door with finality against the | One Drow ns, 4 Injured possibility that Red China some ae Might be admitted to zak he said for this to come about. the Chinese Reds must |change their present aggressive record by deeds and ance to show that they perform, are trust | The President said that he and |} Knowland normally see eye to eye on most questions but that he does not agree with Knowland that the U. 8S. should | withdraw from the U.N. if Kee d China is admitted over U. protests. Mr. Eisenhower said he is op- | posed to any such legislation be ing passed in advance of such a occurrence He said he believes firmly that world problems should be dealt with as they arise, and that any |move by the U. S. regarding the question of Red China should be undertaken only after the most | serious and thorough study and consideration The President said that he does not beleve sach legisiation will get through Congress now. The President said that he will fight to the last ditch to keep Red China out of the United Na- tions, but that if the U. S. should be overridden,” the government then will have to consider its fu- ture course on the basis of the circumstances @xisting at that time Mr. Eisenhower said that the U. S. entered the U. N. under | the form of treaty obligations, He 'said that the U. N. was estab- lished in an attempt to marshal the moral strength of the world to keep peace. He said that the question of Red China's admission to the U. N. involved a great moral question. He said teday the world sees | Red China going to the Geneva | Conference and instead of adopt- ing a conciliatory attitude, if has | actually demanded repudiation of | the U. N. position. He added that the Red Chinese | are actually at war with the U. N (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Two British Pros Card 69s in Open SOUTHPORT, England (» — A pair of little known English pro- fessionals, Sam King and Bill Spence, shot 69's today to take the first round lead in the British Open Golf Tournament while Jim Tur- nesa paced the small American delegation with a 72. King, a onetime Kent farmer who was the first finisher, tied the ‘Royal Birkdale course record only to have Spence, a 42-year-old golf teacher, come in several hours later with a matching score. Par for the 6,837-yard layout is 36-37— 73. Dapper Jimmy Demaret of Kia- mesha Lake, N. Y., had the sec- ond best score among U. S. con- tenders with a 73. The veteran Gene Sarazen,. the sentimental favorite, fired a 75. Toney Penna of Cin- cirmati and Ai Watrous of’ Birm- ingham, Mich., each had 76, and establish a | for County Vote . Fair Skies Seen « Winds Lash Wave Hits Chicago Shore A Chicago lakeshore. | A man drowned and a mother and her three children | were injured in thé céllapse of their home before the} Four States, savage, freakish storm raked Southern Wisconsin with tornadoes and 100 mile-per-hour winds and sent the ;second giant wave in two weeks crashing against the | storm's fury abated late’ Tuesday night. —- * 229,119 Eligible Oakland Has Record Registration for Aug. 3 ’ State Primary A record 223119 Oakland County citizens, including 38,500 from Pon- tiac, were registered to vote in the Aug. 3 primary election at yes- terday'’s deadline. Oakland County Deputy Clerk Rath E. Windiate said the next high year was 1952 with 178,949 persons registered Some 214 Pontiac citizens have registered since the-June 14 school election, according to City Clerk Ada R. Evans The last similar primary was in 1962, a presidential election vear, the city clerk said, That | year 38,688 city dwellers were | registered, with 16,093 voting, she | which /per hour Mason City, Ia., Milwaukee, Wis., inches of rain and pounded Waukegan, IIl:,; with hail- stones 4s big as half dollars. The second storm raced across Texas, unroofing five houses at rarfield and killing a rodeo clown at Houston. The clown, Richard D. (Snuffy) Smith, 19, was struck by a lightning bolt that looked like a “streaking white ball." A violent thunderstorm swept through Berrien County in Michi- gan Tuesday night, knocking out telephones and power and felling scores of trees, deluged 1,300 telephones were put out of service temporarily in the: southern half of Berrien. County. No com- munities were isolated, however, because Bell had alternate routes it immediately put into service (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) explained. Registrations have dropped off | since 1952, Mrs. Evans stated, with persons who failed to vote dn a four - year. period dropped from the rolls as law requires Pontiac registrations wil] be re- opened after the primary through | Oct. 4 to allow residents to qualify | Jor the regular election on Nov. 2, | Mrs. Evans said. Cool. Weather, | { | for Pontiac Area Fair skies coupled with cool weather are forecast for the Pon- tiac area Thursday. A high of 72 to 76 is predicted According to the U.S. Weather Bureau, it will be partly cloudy and cooler tonight. Yestetday the temperature ranged from 55 to 78 degrees. At 8 a.m. today -the mercury read 61, and by 2 p.m. it had risen to 68 in downtown Pontiac. In Today’s Press Billy Rose. ......- sc cecereceee 12 Birmingham .... 6.6 - cerns svsss 8 Caine Meating.....--.s.e-ee eees "4 Comtes . . 87 Comnty News... ..cscvceececcense 4 David Lawrence . 6 Dr. George Crane......)--.> - & Editertals .. & Emily Pest walsiesieipennoee tices ces ae Mal Beyle........- ji etieewevien wees ee WRGRON .icccissrestvscnees SPE. PateerMe onc cccccccees ” rts 32, 38, 34 Theaters RS TV-Radio Programs 43 Want Ads a8, 30, 40, 41, 42 Women's Pages. ™ thre 3% Oemen's Town & Cotntry, Tel-Haren. every night ‘til 8 .o’clock Runoff Election Facing Senator Sen. Kerr Fails to Get) 50 Pct. of Primary Vote in Oklahoma OKLAHOMA CITY ™® — Sen. Robert S. Kerr (D-Okla) today was forced into a runoff election against former Gov. Roy J. Turner in Okla- homa's bitter primary election for the U.S. Senate despite a lead that held solid throughout counting of | roe nearly all the ballots. State Sen. Raymond Gary, Ma- dill, and William 0. Coe, Oklahoma City attorney, “landed in the July 27 runoffs for the Democratic gov- ernor’s race, leaving the other can- didates far behind. Gary held a small lead throughout tabulations in yesterday's primary. Mrs. Willie B.- Murray, wife of Gov. Johnston Murray, trailed far out of the picture in seventh place among the field of 16 can- didates. Murray is barred from a second consecutive term by the state cogstitution. Kerr's lead mounted to about 20.000 ,votes buf the combined tal- lies of Turner and seven other can- didates kept him below 50 per cent of the total. Returns from 2,420 of the state's 3,155 precincts gave Kerr 176463 votes and Turner 156,994, Roberts was found early The same storm system |sent gusts up to 90 miles sweeping —onto with two = Michigan Bell Telephone Co. said | Berrien County sheriff's ‘officers | Judith. Ann Roberts, blue- ar Wirepnets today. Judith and her siting grandparents in Miami when the tragedy « occ’ curred. | JUDITH ANN ROBERTS Her battered body was found to- day after she was_kidnaped from the home of her grandparents in where she was visiting with her parents. Miami, Bulletin The body of a man iden- tified as John W. Vore, 25, of 4920 Hatchery Rd., Waterford Township, was found beside Grand Trunk Western Railroad tracks | near Williams Lake road today. Police said he ap- parently had been struck by a train. _|Child Abducted While Visiting Grandparents Daughter of Baltimore Attorney - Labor Leader Beaten to Death MIAMI, Fla—(AP)— eyed, 7-year-old daughter of a Baltimore attorney and labor leader, was kidnaped — from the home of her grand- parents here today, raped and beaten to death. _ Police found the child's nude and brutally battered body in a clump of-bushes off fashionable Bayshore Drive five hours after her mother, Mrs. Shirley Rob- erts, reported her missing. She had been beaten on the head *jwith a heavy instrument and a piece of gauze was knotted about her throat. Her flimsy seergucker nightgown, white with red polka i dots, lay eight feet from the body, Judith Ann's body was caked with bleed and dirt, indicating she put up a fight for her life. Police said the killer sneaked in- to the home of the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rosenberg, about 1 a.m., stole the keys to Rosenberg’s car and took the child from the studio couch in the living room where she was sleeping. Mrs. Rosenberg was awakened | by the sound of the car roaring out jof the driveway. She discovered the child was gone and the front door standing open. Police. were called at 1:10 a.m, Four hougs and 10 minutes later, they found .the Rosenberg car abandoned in the strip of sandy land between Bayshore Drive and the shore of Biscayne Bay. its wheels were mired in the sand and tire marks showed the driver tried frantically to get it out. Judith’s bedy was found a block from the car, The child's father, James Rob- erts, was away from home con- ferring with a woman client seek- ing a Florida divorce, when the child's disappearance was reported, He returned home a few minutes after police arrived. $ ¥ 4 : } ~ a i E i i a ‘ransom. An examination by Dr. Ben pard, medical expert in the sher- iff's office, disclosed that comm Ann had been raped. Bloodhounds were taken to the spot where the car was -given the scent of Judith Ann's bloody nightgown, and tanned out in search of the killer. The Roberts family left Balti- more last Saturday for Miami on (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) : ing Tuesday. guests sat down to discuss dinner-meeting at Rotunda Special guests were Mon-. ie Gesail and Frank J. DuFrain, retiring board member and. superintend- ent.of schools, nha ager The meeting, was the first official session for Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, new superintendent, and Dr. Wal- ter L. Godsell, new board mem- ber The board elected Fred N. Thie- fels vice-president, re-elected Mrs. Harry E. (Lola B.) King as secre- tary, renamed Vern L, Schiller school treasurer and authorized him to sign school checks. Members again set the second Wednesday of each month as the reguiar meeting date. Sessions start at 7:30 p.m. in the school of- fices, 40 Patterson- St. The board laughed at Lady Luck as 13 members and Board of Education Elects Officers for.Coming Year Pontiac Board of Educationre-eleeted-Gienn H. Griffin { president, narned other officers and set the framework for the coming year's business at its organizational meet- 13 items of business at the Inn. nwsbow ~ Commission Wants New Willits. Woodward Check -* Belore Ma aking a Decision | removed, The last survey showed the intersection was used more by turning. than by through traffic. A traffic increase is anticipat- ed with the coming of the Wa- beek, - Jacobsen parking lot north ot Willits. City Engineer L. R. Gare pre- sented a possible solution, to in- clude relocating Willits to the north by acquiring an 80-foot strip north of the existing street, Willits would then be a fourdane street from Woodward to Bates. pointed out that the effective- spraying to combat the disease was underlined by the fact that only six of the diseased trees were on city property, while 34 privately-owned trees became dis- eased. The remaining eight trees are outside the city’s corporate limits. The elm trees in the city are al- most equally divided between pub- lic and private property. All city- owned trees have been sprayed. * . * For the first time, Birmingham's American Assn. of University Wom- en will host area branches of the organization at a workshop, to be- gin with a coffee hour at 9 a.nr. tomorrow at the Community House. Luncheon at 12:30 p.m., a late tea, plus a tour of Cranbrook and other points of interest will be in- cluded, along with group discus- Leading the seminars will be Mré: Roy E. Robinson, Oakland bfanth, study program; Mrs. Wayne W. Crosby, Lansing, com- of the puppet and fine arts dis- plays created by loca] members. Black Hawks Name Tommy lvan Coach CHICAGO — The buffeted Chi- cago Black Hawks of the National Hockey League’ today appointed Tommy Ivan, coach of the Detroit Red Wings, as ‘‘manager in charge of hockey operation’’ for the Hawks. The appointment was announced by President Arthur M. Wirtz and Board Chairman James D. Norris of the Hawks after a report today in the Detroit News that Ivan would replace Bill Tobin as Hawk Gen- eral Manager within 24 hours. Sid Able, also an ex-Red Wing associate, remains as Hawk coach. The announcement, however, made no mention of the general raanager post, stating Ivan has a new title and that Tobin remains in his “same cCapacity’’ as Hawk vice-president and a governor of the N. H. L. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cloudy and with f th » the Downtown One Year Age in Pentise Sicdegbevsveccesss OF « eee ee eeoeeereneee 83 eDenteeeeeteeeeerees 6 t —_—_ j Fe “ Mother Is Jailed + City Treasurer Russel] T. Ber- ger has announced that ad tee penalty deadline for paying taxes for the 1953-54 fiscal year is Aug. 31. Starting Sept. 1, Berger said, three-quarters of one per cent will be added each month through Feb- ruary of 1955. Residents who have net re- ceived their property tax state- ments by July 10 are asked to contact the City Treasurer's of- fice. * ¢ »« One of two overnight trips planned during this summer's YMCA Da-Y program will start at |9:30 a.m. tomorrow when young- sters leave for Arrowhead Lodge at Kensington Park. Children will bring their own lunches but will be served dinner, breakfast and Friday's lunch. The campers are due back at 5 p.m. Friday. ; More Permits =: for Gas Asked Consumers Hoping for 25,000 Extra Accounts; Some to Be in Pontiac LANSING uw — Consumers Pow- er Co, asked the state Public Serv- ice Commission today for authority to take on 25,000 additional space- heating customers in 278 commu- nities, including Pontiac. Consumers said that it will ob- tain sufficient natural gas for the additional customers under a new agreement with Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co. and the Michigan Gas Storage Co., its own subsid- iary. The new agreement would not become effective until nexg year, the company said, and is de- pendent.on the construction of additional pipelines by both sup- pliers, But, the company said, the addi- tional customers can be handled next winter from gas stored at the beginning of the heating sea- son. The company announcement did not specify how the additional serv- ice would be allocated among com- j munities but proposed that it be “on an equitable basis.” Consumers also petitioned the commission to rescind its order requiring commission approval to supply certain commercial and in- dustrial customers using large amounts of gas. Consumers said this was the sixth consecutive year in which it has asked state authority to add gas space - heating custom- ers, The company serves 152,000 gas -|space - heating customers in its »| service area which covers the com- munities in 30 southern counties. lke Hopes for Delay of A-Plant Strikes WASHINGTON u—President Ei- senhower voiced hope today that the strike against two vital atomic projects will be deferred pending a report from an emergency fact- finding board he already has named. A shutdown of the Oak Ridge, Tentr., and Paducah, Ky., plants, he told his news conference, would be a serious thing for the United States. Aside from the difficulty and em- barrassment involved, Eisenhower said, nothing should be done to hinder this country’s advance in atomic development at a_ time when potential enemies. are known to be advancing in that field. He said he had great hope that the CIO and AFL unions involved would await the fact finders’ re- port. (Earlier story page 44.) Birmingham Pair Special Guests in Kentucky Town HE NDERSON, Ky. i» — A Bir- mingham, Mich. couple resumed | their ‘‘just rambling’ vacation to- day convinced of southern hospi- tality. Mr. and Mrs, A. E. Kimberley, T1l1 Abbey Dr.. arrived at Hen- derson's city limits yesterday only to be stopped by a police cruiser. Out -Police Chief Fred Halle, who told the startled couple ‘to follow him downtown for a sur- prise. There, the Kimberleys were the guests of the Lions Club for lunch. Before leaving. the Michigan covu- ple received a number of gifts. Halle said the stunt would be con- tinted each Tuesday to acquaint oe with Henderson's hospital- ty Thieves Ransack Offices Mary Mclnerny. 39, who is expect- ing her 17th child after 18 years of married life, was sentenced to WILL PITCH FOR NATIONAL over American League in the 1954 Cleveland July 13 ride with these hurlers—four right- handers, three left-handers—chosen by Walter Alston of Brooklyn Dodgers. The righthanders, top row, < THE PONTIAC PRESS, WE DNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 LEAGUERS—The National League's hopes of making it five straight from left: Marv All-Star game at Robin Roberts, Conley, Milwaukee: AP Wirephete Grissom of New York Giants; Gene Carl Erskine, Brooklyn; and Philadelphia. Southpaws, bottom, from left; Warren Spahn, Milwaukee; Harvey Had- dix, St. Louis; and John Antonelli, New York Giants. Giant Wave, Winds Whip at Midwest (Continued From Page One) reported that two or three cars were wrecked by falling trees. No injuries were reported but high winds did minor damage to some homes and farm houses. The weather bureau reported that 2.3 inches of rain fell in the St. Joseph-Benton Harbor area during the night. — The Coast Guard at Benton Lake Michigan fell two te two and one-half inches at about the ‘same time the Chicago side of the lake was having a tdal wave. “It really went down quick,” a Coast Guard official said, ‘‘and it stayed that way for 15 minutes.” The storm struck hardest at the Madison, Wis. area, atthough the city itself did not suffer its full force. ‘Buildings were leveled, streets were blocked and telegraph cir- cults were cut as the storm cut a swath from San Prairie south- west through Cambridge and Elkhorn. Mrs. Mary Weber of Janesville. Wis., and her three children, aged four to one, were seriously injured when the winds battered down their summer home near Cambridge. Another serious accident was narrowly averted at Cambridge when a tree smashed onto a car carrying two persons. Neither was injured. Tornadoes ‘were reported at - Bristol, Sun Prairie, Cambridge, and near Elkhern and @ water spout Was seen over Lake Koh- konong, near Janesville, The tail end of the twisters swept into Northern Illinois, touching off violent storms in Chicago suburbs and the city itself. A “seiche’''—the same sort of rare giant wave that killed eight ; onto North Side beaches. Coast Guardsmen, anticipating the wave. prevented another tragedy by warning fishermen and bathers from the shore. Nick Dentemaro, harbor mas- ter at Montrose Harbor, said Tues- day night's seiche was even bigger than its predecessor. The wave washed over sidewalks and into a parking lot, where it swamped six autos, he said. The Lake Michigan = storm swamped a small boat in which Will Urban, 28. and bis pregnant wife, Vivian, 20, were fishing off Waukeegan, Hl. Urban drowned, but his wife clung to the boat until help reached her. Chicago was buffeted by 68 mile- per-hour winds during the storm and 20 to 30 trees were reported down in Waukeegar# — Electricity was cut off at Zion, Tll., and had not been restored by late last night. The Chicago Weather Bureau said the storm system would move tastward, centering over Southern Ohio by tonight. 2 Persons Hurt as Car Strikes Rear of Another BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Two persons were injured in a rear-end collision at Telegraph and Dedham Rds. last night. Ther@®» Neir, 33. of Dearborn. a passenger in a car driven by John M. Donlin, 29% of Wayne, is reported in good condition in St Joseph Mercy Hospital with head injuries. Treated and released was the driver of the other car, Wilfred Bourbonnais, of 244 W. Brown St., Birmingham. nalled for a left turn when his car was struck by. Dontlin’s. Donlin said Bourbonghis did not signal in time for him to stop. Norway Feels Quakes BERGEN, Norway #—Redhients of Norway's west coast were shaken early today by a moderate earthquake which rattled doors and windows in the area between Bergen and Stavanger. Two dis- tinct shocks were felt, No casual- 12 months in jail yesterday for ties or damage were reported. School Buildings, Bulging at Seams, to Be Repaired Two of Pontiac Public Schools’ buildings are literally bulging at the seams—so much so that they may be dangerous. Pontiac Board -of Education Tuesday told Dr. Dana P. Whit- mer, superintendent of schools, nd_J. C. Cox, assistant, to rush Harbor said that the water fevel of | emergency repairs at Bagley School and the school system's bus | garage at 40 Patterson St. Cox said an end wall at Bagley School; bulging out’ about three inches, can probably be held in place by some inch-thick steel rods. The bus garage, he said. will have to have the whole front wal] rebuilt—a bulge of six inches there is too big to hold with braces. Cox said architect William Zim- merman told him that “if one of our buses ever misses the door, the whole wall will fall- down in the street.’ A contractor, he said, told him the garage. probably wouldn't be standing if it weren't for the buildings on either side holding it up. lke Opposed fo Entry of Red China in U.N. (Continued From Page One) are branded as an aggressor by the U_N.,, hold U.-S. prisoners un- justifiably, are conducting war in Indochina, have enslaved peoples, and are guilty of the worst possi- ble diplomatic deportment, The President said that he does not see how any country can pos- sibly say that Red China should be admitted to the United, Nations. When the President was asked persons in Chicago June %—rolled | Bourbonnais told police he sig- his reaction to proposals that the U. S. withdraw from the U. N. if Red China is.admitted over U.S objections, the President said that this country is « member of the U. N. under the signed obliga- tion of a treaty He said that if ever the point is reached where it becomes nec- essary to consider changing that treaty obligation, such action most careful study. He said the American oe must consider whether U. S.. with- drawal would advance the cause of peace. Personally, the President said. he never gives up a battle until he is completely licked and destroyed. and cannot lift another hand in his defense. , He said he knows of no amend- ment being seriously considered by Congress to take the U. S. out of the U. N. He emphasized further his be- lief that it is the obligation of ‘the U. S. to continue to try to lead the world toward peace rather than to give up before any pres- sures or adversity in the cohduct of its foreign relations Knowland has predicted that the U.S. will ‘do everything it can’ — including possible use. of its Security Council veto — to keep Red China out of the world organ- ization. $4,400 Fire Damages Upstairs Apartment Fire gutted the upstairs apart- ment of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Fyfe, 93 Murphy Ave.. causing an esti- mated $1,400 damage Tuesday afternoon, according to Pontiac Fire Dept. No one was in the apartment when the fire broke out in a stor- age room, according to Fire Capt. John J. Morrissey. Three other families living In lower apartments fied the build- ing. . Mrs. Emily Williams, downstairs occupant, said she thought the fire started about 10 minutes after the Fyfes left their apartment. However, Capt. Morrissey quoted a neighbor as saying she saw smoke coming from the roof for several hours, but thought the ney, should be taken only after the) smoke was coming from the chim- } U.S. Will Reject Czech Barter Deal for the Return of 7 Americans Is Called New Low in Conduct WASHINGTON (UP) — The United States will. reject Czecho- slovakia's ‘‘unprincipled”’ deal for return of seven American soldiers seized by €zech border guards, of- ficials said today. The State Department itself said only that it is studying the case closely to decide what, if any, action is warranted. “We are assembling all the facts and will decide on the basis of the information gathered what action to take,”” a depart- ment spokesman said. The seven GI's — a captain and six enlisted men — strayed across the Iron Curtain during a Fourth of July jaunt. The Czechs imme- diately took them into custody. Czech border guards later told German guards that the seven would be released immediately if three Czechs who fled to the West are returned. Officials said they still don’t know whether. the deal actually represents the work of the Czech government or some local unit of Czech border guards. If it is an act of the govern- ment, officials said, the entire nratter will be treated as a “most serious affair.” \ “It is unprincipled.”” one official said. ‘‘Arbitrary seizure of Ameri- cans for the purpose of working out a barter is a new low in conduct.’ Officials said the United States cannot put itself in a position of trading American soldiers for per- sons who have fled to the West to find safety. Board of Education Elects New Officers (Continued From Page One) Street side of the new Perry street high school site. The deed the city sent in first covered only half the distance, The board paid a bill for $579 from Herbert’ A. Carter and Wesley B. Sibley for digging out informa- tion on the closed Pontiac Veterans Institute and sending it to the U.S. Government. Southfield Township's appeal for a change in its tax values forced the school board to ask Michigan Department of Public Instruction fo advance it $250.000 on future state aid money to pay a _ short- term loan due Aug. 1. The board had planned to pay the loan from duly property tax receipts; bat Pontiac City isn’t sending out tax bills until South- field’s appeal is settled, A change in Southfield’s tax value could change values on all property in Oakland County, The school district, members de- cided, can deposit up to $3,500,000 in Community National Bank and $1,000,000 in Pontiac State Bank this year, Any two of four people— Griffin. Mrs. King, Schiller or Whit- mer—can .open school safety de- posit boxes. Board officers will meet with Dr. Whitmer this week to suggest a definite salary for him. Welsh Woman Jailed for Blackmailing Father SWANSEA, Wales —Iris M. Chappell, 31, wag sentenced yes- terday ta a year in jail for trying to blackmail her own father. - Police witnesses said she ac- cused him of starting a fire which killed her mother and smal] son two years ago and threatened to expose him unless he paid her money. She admitted in court her accu- \sation w as false, 4 Ex-Cons Sought in Bank Holdup Police Also Looking for Female Companion of 2 Suspected of Stickup DETROIT ® — Armed with fed- eral warrants, police today searched for two ex-convicts in tonnection with the $11,459 holdup of a branch of the suburban Tren- ton State Bank June 28. A woman companion also is sought as a material witness. Special Agent Fred H. McIntire. thief of the Detroit. FBI office, said warrants were obtained yes- terday for Mahlon J. Fehl, 28. and Simon H. Thompson, 37, who were said to have been living in an apartment in suburban Taylor township at the time of the rob- bery. Thompson’s companion, Glo- tia Reyes, 22, also is sought. McIntire said the trio may have taken the woman's 3-year- forgery, the FBI agent said. The bank was held’ up by two The pair eluded a combined search by Canadian and Michigan authorities, McIntire said: Wayne County deputies provided the lead that put the FBI on the trai] of Thompson and Fehl. Pontiac Plant Head Optimistic for Fall (Continued From Page One) building. New machine tools are being installed’ in the engine plant. He also listed an addition to the foundry, with a new charging floor and new molding and forming equipment; installation of new equipment in the axle plant; and équipping of Plant 14 as a press plant. This plant was built and used for defense work during the war, but is now being devoted to peacetime production. + He also reported installation of a new plating line. Pontiac pio- neered in this type of continuous plating and is mow enlarging its capacity substantially. Other additions include a three- story addition to the personnel and purchasing building, new car finish- ing building and a building for factory delivery of cars sold by dealers. ; This brings capacity for this type of delivery up to 1,500 cars a month, he reported. A final item is expansion of the division's facili- ties for handling and _ shipping service parts, He pointed out that these items make up a substantial portion of the billion dollars which Harlow H, Curtice, General Motors presi- dent, reported some time ago the corporation is spending on expan- sion and rehabilitation, Following -Critchfield's talk a movie was shown portraying the need for more and better high- ways. It has many scenes filmed in and near Pontiac. Henceforth He'll Read His Words of Advice LUBBOCK, Tex. (®—Kenneth May, Lubbock Avalanche-Journal staff writer, wrote a story for his paper Monday. urging parents and CHILDREN ALIKE TO.HAND FI children alike to handle fireworks with extreme care. May wasn't at work yesterday. He was home nursing second de- gree burns after a skyrocket ex- ploded in his left hand as he was showing his small son how it should be lighted. ‘Can Win Asiatics With Democracy (Continued From Page One) of the now famed Oak Grove where the first delegates gath- ered 100 years ago to form = Republican Party. - é He left md plane on the return flight hag nation’s capital at 10 p. Wallace Lomoe, managing ediwe of the Milwaukee (Wis.) Joona ‘The Home Rule for Ireland move- ment jptarted in 1870. | f 2 ~|land Avenue United Presbyterian Kitchen Sink Included in Plunder-of Thieves The old saying: “Everything but | the kitchen sink” ~—was poligpat cade aigarer | Hyeoard der construction at 6145 Highland Rd., White Lake Township. Owner Ward Bailey said the home was entered sometime be- tween Saturday and last night. Listed missing were a medicine cabinet, bathroom bow! and fit- tings, plumbing. fixtures, blow+ torch, 15 gallons of paint and seal- er, a box of pipe fittings, bath- room tile and—the kitchen sink. Loss was estimated at $400. Pontiac Deaths Mother Testifies in Heir's Death Mrs. Marion Thorne Asserts _ Blackmailer’s Identity to Be Revealed CHICAGO » — The wealthy socialite mother of Montgomery Ward Thorne asserted today that the identity of the person “who was blackmailing my son” will be brought out. “That will come out and you will certainly be surprised,’’ Mrs. Mar- Mrs. Charlier G. Crouse Mrs. Charles G. ‘Ida Mae) Crouse, 65, of 84 Pine Grove Ave.. | died suddenly at her residence Tuesday. Born at Lyons March os 1889, and Helen* gs ‘ae died in 1949,’ Mrs. Crouse came to Pontiac from Birmingham 41 years ago a es eee her marriage. She was a member of the Oak- Church and was treasurer of the church at the time of her death. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Kenneth Clements of Clark- ston, Gelia at home, and two grand- children. Also surviving are a sister and three brothers, Mrs. Eva Albright and Ear! Lincoln of Muir, Russell Lincoln of Wayne and Ray of Lyons The funeral wil] be Friday at 2:30 p. m. from the Sparks-Grif- fin Funeral Home. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. George Davidson George Davidson, 43, of 59 Clark St., was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital Sunday. He was born in Onaway on April 4, 1911, the son of John and Mary St. Johns Davidson. There are no survivors. ; Funeral was held today from the Karr Funeral Home, Onaway, with burial in South Alice. Ar- rangements were made by the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mrs. Albin H. Kretzschmar After a prolonged iliness, Mrs. Albin H. (Freida A.) Kretzschmar, 76, of 670 Union Lake Rd. in White Lake Township, died Tuesday morning. Born in Germany July 3, 4878, she came to Oakland County 30 years ago from- Hamtramck. Surviving is her- husband, whom she married 53 years ago in Ger- many, and two sons, Herbert A. of Pontiac and John A. of Owosso. Funeral will be Thursday at 2 p.m, from the Pursley Funeral Home. The Rev. Orrin Van Loon of Berkley will officiate and burial will be in Roseland Park Ceme- tery at Royal Oak. Herman F. Stier Funeral for Herman F. Stier, 71, of 2222 Garland Ave., Sylvan Lake. will be Thursday at 2 p. m. from the Donelson. - Johns Funeral Home. Dr. W. H. Marbach, his pastor, will officiate and burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Stier died Tuesday morning after an illness of nearly a year. Miami Hunts Slayer of 7-Year-Old Girl (Continued From Page One) their annual summer visit with the Rosenbergs. Other members of the family are Roberts’ son, Jimmy, by a former marriage, and another maaan e Richard Gilbert, one of Roberts’ law partners, said it was a combi- nation business and pleasure trip. He said Roberts planned to obtain some depositions in Florida in a case on which he was working. Roberts, a Democrat, made an unsuccessful race for a seat in the Maryland House of Delegates in the June 28 primary. He was one of the organizers of the UAW local in the two General Motors plants in Baltimore, serving as its president from 1939 to 1943. He was international representa- tive from 1943 to 1947 except for a period when he served ‘in the Navy, Judith Ann had been a frequent patient at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, She was born with a growth on her throat and under- } was not trans- ported across a state line. Woman Suffers Cuts, Bruises in Accident. Mrs.-Raymond E, Dombrowski, 41,.0f 2670 Fisher Rd., was treated TAIPEH, Formosa ##—National- ist China today marked the 17th ione Thorne told Coroner Walter E. | McCarron. Her attorney. Henry asserted yesterday that a “‘bomb- shell would be dropped when ‘the ‘truth’ about young Therne’s death is brought out at the inquest hear ir ng. | * . * Mrs. Thorne, whose son died mysteriously, denied today that she ever said he was suffering from syphilis. She testified for the second time in the . coroner's inquest ito the death of her son. Dr. Harry Leon, coroner’s pa- thologist, testifying at yesterday's inquest, said he thinks Thorne may have been poisoned. “This is still a suspicious death,” he said. * * oa Leon read a report to Coroner Walter T. McCarron by Dr. W. J. R. Camp, state toxicologist, show- ing an “insignificant trace quantity of barbituate, a trace. quantity of alkaloid giving color reactions in- dicating morphine” were found in the youth’s brain. A combination of enough alcohols such as were found in Thorne's body and more dope could have caused. his death, Dr.—_Leoen de- clared. The alcohol, he said, may have evaporated or been dissipated in the body before the autopsy was performed. A conflicting picture of Thorne was painted yesterday at the in- quest centering on these ques- tions: . . Ed Ed 1, What was the relafionship of the dead youth and his mother, Mrs. Marion Thorne? “2 Was Thorne a ‘‘drunk”’ “dope addict?” 3. Why was he living in a.$73- a-month apartment, on Chicago's North Side out. of touch with his family when he was found dead June 19? 4. Why did he change his will and a leaving half his estate to his fi- ancee Maureen Ragen and one- quarter to her mother Aleen nin€é days before his death? mailed? s * * His mother entered the jammed courtroom with tion. Her chalk-white face con- trasted with her black crepe dress and the diamond-crusted cross at her throat. Bordering on collapse as the barrage of questons wore on, she made these points 1. She claimed she “barely knew” her son's 18-year-old fiancee who displaced her as chief heir in his last will. 2. She openly doubted that the pair meant to marry, saying, “He certainly had a lot of girls for an engaged boy.” 3. She charged that Thorne was being blackmailed when he died and didn't come home for that reason. No details of the blackmail were given. 4. She said Thorne had come home “drunk” once and she had heard rumors he was taking dope but strongly denied she ever had him arrested, accusing him of alcoholism or narcotics addiction. Three Local Youths Held in Robbery BIRMINGHAM — Det. Set. Mer- lin Holmquist today revealed the arrest of three Pontiac youths im- plicated in the June 18 armed robbery of the Woodward - Chap- in service station. More than $60 was taken from attendant John Whitehorn, 35. Holmquist said Whiterorn was taken to Flint where Robert Har- rraves, 16, of .1568 Petroilia Dr. and George Bonilla, 25, of 84 W. Huron St.. are being held on a similar offense. Whitehorn identified Hargraves as the gun holder. Jurisdiction has been waived on Hargraves by the Genesee County Juvenile Court, Holmquist said. A second juvenile, also 16, ad- mitted his part in the hold-up Holm- quist said, and faces a hearing in Oakland County Juvenile Court Tuesday. Genesee County for the Flint rob- bery, Holmquist stated. A detain- e: warrant has been issued by local police on Bonilla, he added. Gear Shift Just Flops (Transmission Stolen) INDIANAPOLIS # — A North Side woman called a garage and ;| complained her car wouldn't run. “The gear shift lever just flops .| around,” she said. Examination disclosed someone had stolen the transmission and drive shaft assembly. Communists Try Nine - BERLIN W—A Communist court opened trial today of nine East Germans charged with killing 3,35 pigs at a state-operated farm. The charged the men delib- erately. spread disease among the figs. a Kalcheim, : 5. Was Thorne being black- stoic determina- Hargraves will be prosecuted in. First wedding held in the White House wag during the administra- tion of Madison, when Miss Todd, a relative of Mfrs. Madison, be- Ld ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 came the bride of Rep. John G. Jackson of Virginia, ‘ NEW quip TOILET BOWL CLEANER with THE MIRACLE DETERGENT SNO-BOL QUICK AND EASY TO USE—NO WAITING! The ONLY liquid Pine-Scented Bathroom Cleaner with These Features— py CLEANS TOMET BOWLS INSTANTLY »/ > OPENS DRANES y/ REMOVES RUST SPOTS V7 SAVES HOUSEWORK y7 CLEANS GLASS, EARTHENWARE, COPPER AND TILE y/ DEODORIZES y/ SAFE IM SEPTIC TANKS Cleans! Deodorizes! Suds! * | | | CHINESE CRY-BABY—Not even winning the ‘title at a New York Chinese community club's annual baby contest | could make little Lisa Leong happy to howl, proving quite thoroughly her right to the title United Press Photo ‘Cryingest Baby’ | Fifteen-month-old Lisa continued She sits quite | oblivious amidst the glittering loving cups awarded at the festivities by Chinatown’s unofficial mayor Shavey Lee Fears Revealed by Mrs. Petrov | Wife of Ex-Soviet Spy | Tells Australians About | Embassy Captivity MELBOURNE (INS) Russia's former The wife of | Australia described in a drama packed appearance before a royal |commission today her fears that would be murdered in the | Soviet Embassy after her husband | deserted his post | Mrs. Vladimir Petrov, whose [husband fled to asylum with de- | tails of Moscow's espionage opera- | ton, had tears in her eyes as she spy-chief in | she ouffined her experiences before she | was rescued by Australian police Wearing a trim, olive-green | woolen shuit and a small black velvet hat, Mrs. Petrov made her portedly succeeded Gabor Peter as | embassy until he had done so On April 4, Mrs. Petrev testi fied, the Russian ambassador sum moned her and informed her that | —— something must have ‘happened to who actually was | her husband chief of the Soviet (MVD) operation in The ambassador told her she might be kidnaped and instructed her to pick up her clothing and come to the embassy. For the next year-old woman said she Virtual prisoner in_ the Hungary's No. 2 Red secret police | Australia the 40 Was A embass) 1> days Is Relieved of Jobs | VIENNA E-rnoe Hungary's ’ Communist, has | been relieved of his job as first | deputy prime minister and minis ter of the interior, Radio Budapest announced last night Appointed as new minister for | interior was Laszlo Piros, who re Geroe uP a ino L To DAY —_ second appearance in the Mel- | head of the ill-famed Hungarian | G ET S$ NO- BO bourne Courthouse where the | state secret police, after the lat- | hearings are being held. ters purge last year AT ALL LEADING GROCERS (72020505 Sie coe ei ise ai of her husband's plans to leave! will be appointed to another’im | his post as third secretary in the | portant position. | GET A HUDSON DEAL Best trade-in allowances, easiest terms in town | Own a powerful new Hornet, Wasp or Jet | We're bustin’ the market ‘| wide epen! You'll get so » | much extra for your car that it’s almost sure to more than make the down payment on a brand-new Hudson Hornet, Wasp or Jet. Our big, big trade-in allow- ance will likely cut your r | monthly payments to a lot leas than you'd ever expect. Ri andard trim and other specifications and arcessories gubjert to change without notice SAVE HUNDREDS IT’S A RED-HOT TRADE-IN JAMBOREE Celebrating our joining the new American Motors Family JACOBSON’S MOTOR SALES 58 WwW. Pike St., ) Pontiac, Michigan DIXON MOTOR SALES 89 M-24 Highway, ° Lake Orion, Michigan , 'Salesgirl Spots = paces | dasher is charged with suspicion] easier for ‘crooks’ and suggested Boss’ Shirts in Rival Window of larceny because the young sales- woman of a rival store noticed his | | cut-rate prices. Miss Joan Lack, 16, spotted a sign in the store advertising polo | shirts at three for a dollar She told her boss, stein, 42, that your prices.” Bronstein's wife inve stigated and found that the polo shirts resem bled those stolen from the Bron stein warehouse The proprietor of the cut-rate store Was arrested on suspicion Police quoted him as saying he bought the goods from seVeral men identified.as former Bronstein em Martin Bron “someone's beating | ployes . | South Carolina Town Proud of Prominence GREENWOOD, S.C. uF The Greenwood Chamber of Commerce | Was giving itself a pat on the back g Fire tae Is Crdsrad: ‘Tree Substitufe Refused (® -— An apartment) BOSTON house owner protested in court yes- terday hat bullding a ‘fire escape wortdt: ‘ust make it that much |a tree outside the building as a | substitute Municipal Court Judge Jennie | Loitman Barron did not accept the | substitute and found the defendant, Nishan S. 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Tt*sethe fa- proof end smear A teachers, SIMS. a ae, Si eentme catia Dem Senate Candidate Criticizes 8 Solons for Offering Assistance GRAND RAPIDS — Patrick} V. McNamara, Detroit candidate for the Democratic senatorial nom- ination, criticized yesterday the offer of eight United States sena- tors to help further the campaign of his ailing opponent, former Sen. Blair Moody. Moody is recovering from virus pneumonia at St. Joseph Hospital in Hancock. He was stricken while making a campaign tour of Mich- iganis Upper Peninsula. McNamara, in Grand Rapids on a spenking tour of the west- ern part of the state, sent tele- grams to the eight- senators, saying: “{ find the announcement un- believable that you will campaign in the Michigan primary for my ailing opponent.” The senators had pledged their |— assistance in filling Moody’s speak- ing engagements for him while HITCHHIKERS—Two hitchhiking seagulls, wearied from flying or chilled by the- SS winds, roost on backs of seemingly % unmindful pelicans fishing in the Melbourne, Australia. THE PONTIAC. PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JU LY 7, 1954 Asks That Debt Limit Be Raised Administration Says Boost Is Necessary for Functions WASHINGTON (INS) — Treas- ury Secretary George M.* Hum- phrey is expected to meet with Senate leaders during the next ten days to ask that the national debt limit be boosted to 290 mil- lion dollars. Administration sources say that the present 275-billion-dollar debt ceiling must be raised soon if the government is to carry on its au- thorized functions. Several Senators, led by Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D) Va., strongly oppose any such legislation, Byrd insists that the continued defi- cit spending will lead to mation- al bankruptcy. An .adminjstration bill, passed by the House, to raise the debt limit to 290 billion has been held for nearly qa year by the Senate waters of Port Phillip Bay, near | he is recuperating. Moody's cam- paign headquarters in Detroit said| the offer was accepted. The eight senators are Lehman | Helps Heal And Clear Itchy Skin Rash! Zemo, a doctor's antiseptic, promptly relieves ocean stops and se ps heal and r surface Lol ~~ Extra porcine | Zemo for stubborn cases! (D-NY), Douglas (D-Ill), Mans- | field (D-Mont), Kennedy (D-Mass), | Jackson (D-Wash), Humphrey (D- | Minn), Magnuson (D-Wash) and | Monroney (D-Okla). Moody is expected to be dis- — from the hospital within a week. Then he will spend some 7EMO i= resting before resuming his campaign. ARMY WAVY JOE'S SURPLUS Next to the State Theater FE 2-0022 om Sx7...... ma Gu? ..... 6x9. eeee Sale Priced At $ TARPAULINS Waterprool—Mildew-Prool SUMMER DRESS SHOES and LOAFERS Suedes — Mesh Tops — Leather — Sendels $3.50 9x12... $10.80 “20 12x15... 18.00 * 540 12x18... 21.60 : 720 15x20... 30.00 2” And ‘3° 9 x= 9 SIZES Screened door - Sewed-in floor. and window. Waterproof. Complete with ropes am stakes, $3 g95 UMBRELLA TENTS We Also RENT TENTS $°7 ssi Ur By the Week or Weekend 32 S. Saginaw St. JOE’S ARMY -NAVY SURPLUS Ph. FE 2-0022 Exclusive THRIFTY TWIN cooling saves up to % the cooling cost* t's like having twe air conditioners in one |! Look ot the comfort bonus thet only Frigidaire gives you — two ing gently surrounds you with dratt-free comfort. All-steel cobi- nets. Meter-Miser cooling systems worranted for 5 years. NE-ARCS-16 May be Installed flush with drapes coed a ee POWER COMPANY kk {state Secretaries Gather | ‘for Confab in Detroit — DETROIT (UP) — Secretaries of State from all over the nation | gathered here today for their an- nual conference with Owen J. Cleary, Michigan's Secretary -of State, acting as host, Enoch D. Fuller of New Hamp- shire is dean of the secretaries, having: served as secretary of his state for 26 consecutive years. The conference will continue through Saturday, Car Spins Over Walk, Killing 2 Pedestrians in Detroit Scatter Like Chickens Before Zig-Zag Auto DETROIT @® — “Pedestrians were running before it like a flock of chickens being attacked by a hawk.”’ That was the description a wit- ness gave last night when a car spun down 180 feet of sidewalk, killing two persons and injuring five others, before coming to a halt against a utility pole. The dead were identified as Mrs, Margaret Sebring, 52-year- old driver of the car, and a pedestrian, Netison, 45, who had been waiting for a bus. Police said Mrs. Sebring's car ran a red light at Grand River and W. Grand Bivd., reportedly one of the most dangerous intersections in the city. The careening auto struck -an- other driven by Adolph L. Burns, S4, before sailing on through the red light and up onto the side- walk. “The car was going in zig-zag fashion,"’ Burns told police, ‘‘and pedestrians were running before it like a flock of chickens being attacked by a hawk.” _ Mrs. Sebring’s two passengers were injured in the accident. Amin Kasem, 57, was reported in critical condition. His son, Mouner, 18, was treated for cuts about the face. Three pedestrians also were in- jured. George Shaw, 49, and Les- lie Q McIntyre, 33, escaped with leg bruises, police said. Mrs. Ber- tha Pulford, 60, was tossed through a store window by the erratic auto, but suffered only bruises on the arms and legs. Before being stopped |. he uttili- ty pole, the car broke two store windows and sheared off two 10- feet-bus-stop-signs,-a-_parking meter and a fire hydrant. Flint Mayor Injured; Stepped on Rusty Nail FLINT (UP) — Mayor Donald Riegle was on the sidelines today —a victim of a holiday mishap. Riegle stepped on a rusty nail while vacationing and has notified the. city manager that he will be “laid up’ for a few days. Savage Murder Yields No Clues Husband of Mutilated Woman Still to Aid Police Search CLEVELAND — His beaten | neck braced by a metal and leath- er support, Dr. Samuel H. Shep- pard hoped today to attend_ the funeral of his wile, Marilyn, 31. Three days after her pretty face was hacked viciously by a killer, police still lack important clues in the crime. After the private funeral, Deputy Sheriff Carl. Rossbach said, he would try to question the 30-year- old osteopathic neuro-surgeon who thus far has been able to give only a vague, sometimes incoherent ac- count_of the murder. Police must depend heavily on the doctor's help for clues to the slayer who beat his victim mercilessiy in her bed at the Sheppards’ big house in subur- ban Bay Village along Lake Erie's shore. Rossbach said none of the neigh- bors he interviewed reported see- ing or hearing anything suspicious at the house last Sunday morning in the period from a half hour after midnight until a half hour before sunrise, The Sheppards had neigh- bors visiting until after midnight, and dawn was beginning to break when friends answered the doc- tor’s call for help. The deputy sheriff said he in- | tended also to question the Shep- pards* 7-year-old son, Sam Jr., to- day. The boy slept in a room next to the bedroom while the killer rained 25 blows on the head of his mother. Coroner Samuel Gerber spent twe hours yesterday interviewing Dr. Richard A. Sheppard, father of the osteopath, and Dr. Steph- en Sheppard, Samuel's brother. They told the coroner the slain woman's husband was not yet in condition to be questioned, and promised ‘‘complete cooperation” for future questioning. A couple of days would not change matters, they explained. Files Guitar Bridge Suit GRAND RAPIDS \-—A_ suit charging patent infringement has been filed in Grand Rapids Federal Court by Sebastian Meljta, of Philadelphia, against Gibson, Inc., of Kalamazoo. Melita charges the jibson firm is making and selling a guitar bridge similar to one he claims he invented. Bataan Survivor Dies PETOSKEY (#—George Parrott, 46,. of Indian River, survivor of the Bataan death marclf in World War II, was found dead Monday in a woods near Indian River. State police said death was due to a heart ailment. aor aed White and Regular Colors 27_W. Lawrence St. Pontiac Glass Co. FE 5-6441 (Owned by the Reynolds Family for over 50 Years) Unable | Finance Committee headed by Sen. | ‘Motor Accident Kills |Eugene D. Millikin (R) Colo. | Official Treasury Department re- poet in New Mexico | |ports made public yesterday ARTESIA, N. M. W—Mrs. Laurel | showed that during the fiscal year | ART 65, of Detroit, died in an'| which ended June 30 the national Artesia hospital yesterday of in- | debt went up from 265 billion, juries suffered in a traffic accident | 500 million dollars to 270 billlon, sour of Hagerman, N. M., last | | 800 million, June 18. 4 The Treasury expects to have Five other *Detroit residents in-| te berrow a net 10 billion dol- | jured in the accident were released! lars between now and Dec, |from the hospital shortly after; which would mean that before | Mrs. Seller's death. | the year is over, the debt will $250,000 Fire Razes =" ven Two Grain Buildings BAD AXE \#—A fire of unde- | few weeks. termined origin last night de. | The year-end Treasury report | stroyed two warehouses and two, showed that cash on hand advanced grain elevators of the Bad Axe | from four billion, 700 million to Grain Co., causing an estimated | 5!X billion, 800 million dollars. $250,000 damages. | _ Deducting this gain from the No one was hurt in the spectacu-| rise in the public debt, there was lar blaze discovered at 11 p.m | a net outgo of three billion, 200 (EST). But it took the combined | million dollars. efforts ef 50 Volunteers from five| Treasury officials ex plained fighting companies of six ‘com-| however, that this does not re- munities to quell the fire and keep | flect the actual government defi- it from spreading to nearby build-| cit because hundreds of millions ings. of dollars in checks are stil] Mut- Witnesses standing. 31 — Because of a seasonal drop in tax | collections, the Treasury is report- ed to be making borrowing plans | which would up the debt above the present limit within the next said at times the flames leaped 100 feet in the air 4 over the towering, but only partly | Localite Wins Citation filled, sheet metal elevators. Aaron L. Middleton. of 43 Ben- A company spokesman, who | nett St., was among 539 ROTC ca- estimated the damages, said they | dets at Western Michigan College CALL NOW! YOU CAN SAVE °30 OR MORE! 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Phone or write us what you have and we will give you @ quick reply. would have been higher but for the | who were cited recently for high fact that it was inventory time and | scholastic achievement during the | the grain supply was low. past year, BERNARD EDELMAN 10300 Woodward TO 8-5010 CLIP TRIs AD Carpet Prices But You Still Can Buy | CARPET .- ‘at McCandless’ , at Their Usual Low Summer Prices! at Carpet prices are rising steadily at the mills. Only because of McCandless’ large ,stock-of carpet_and their volume business. i are you able to buy carpet at such low prices. 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DePauw said the description of Charles A. Woodard, 22, of 685 First St., was sent to other police departments after police here. Jearned Woodard sent his wife a letter from Cin Helicopter Pilot Finds 1 Body Renew Lake of a Fourth of July boating Huron Hunt for 4 in Boating Tragedy DETOUR (AP{ — An all but hopeless hunt was re- newed on upper Lake Huron today for possible survivors tragedy. The body of George Smick, 61, of Dearborn, one of the five aboard, was found late yesterday. But unless someone were to be found alive the mys- terious disappearance of the homemade, all-metal boat would bring Michigan's weekend holiday death toll to 54. were grownups and two! were children, At the end of the extended three- day holiday period the state had counted 49 deaths. cinnati. DePauw quoted the letter, which included a parking lot tag, as saying “Come to Cincinnati and pick up the car.” A warrant charging Woodard with the theft was issued yester- day after the loss was discovered. Police said a money bag stuffed with paper cut to the size of U. S currency replaced the company’s receipts. Woodard’s wife, Delores Mae, 20, | told police she last saw her hus- band at 11:30 a.m. Saturday when both had lunch together in the | department store. She said her | husband hadn't discussed leaving | Pontiac. DePauw said the couple, orig- here from California about a year ago with their two chil- dren. Woodard obtained the job in the store's camera department after his medical discharge from the Army about a year ago, DePauw added. Battalion Adopts Shaggy Mascot; Finds Difficulty PHOENIX, Ariz. ® — A U. S. Army battalion in Germany wants a buffalo for mascot. It probably won't get one, though. In a letter to Gov. Howard Pyle. soldiers with the 510th Heavy Tank Battalion asked: for one of Arizo- | na's remaining bison to go with | the outfit's buffalo crest. “It would really help morale,” one soldier said. Pyle passed the request on to the | Arizona Game and Fish Depart- ment, where a spokesman said | shipping a Buffalo to Germany would be ‘‘too expensive.” Architects Learned From Seminole Tribe GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UP) — A Iniversity of Florida professor says architects have learned a jot of valuable lessons from the Seminole Indians about the right way to build a house in Florida. Dr. William T. Arnette, dean_of the College of Architecture, ex- plained that the traditional Semi- nole houses get the full advantages of Florida's climate by providing a living space completely open to the breeze and at the same time protecting the interior from sun and rain®y a wide palmetto thatch reof. Dr. Arnette added that modern architecture in Florida is follow- ing the same principle by disre- garding the “customary distinction between walls, windows and doors. Walls on the south or east side of the house are of the folding or roll-back variety so that the house can’ be completely open to the breeze.” “We are seeing the prototypes of what may well be a new, but yet ancient, architecture,’ he con- cluded. i Ford to Expand Buffalo, Cleveland Stamp Plants DETROIT # — Ford Motor Co. has announced plans to construct additions to its stamping plants in Cleveland and Buffalo. The proposed expansion will in- land plant by 300,000 square feet, giving it 1,260,000 feet of manu- facturing space. Religious Recordings —Featuring— The Blackwood Bros. Quartet 50 Different Recordings From Which to Choose Blackwood Bros. were National TV Program, Hear Them Today! = ean CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland FE 4-9501 | recently featured on aj} A Coast Guard helicopter spotted | {the body of Smick. It lay on roc ks | | just off shore and: was partly sub- | merged There was evidence that the boat had been destroyed A cushion, oars and seat boards from the craft were found on the water and a tobacco pouch and pipe were found on shore The pouch and pipe were be- lieved those of George Onnela, 56, Drummond Island resort man. Onnela was a guest on the | boat trip of his brother, Roy | Alfred Onnela, 43, of Oak Park, Detroit suburb, builder of the craft. The two others were Rov On- nela's children, Betty Ann, 13, and | Lacry. 6 The 15-foot boat vanished in an area where the water is 40 to 60 feet deep off Scammon’'s Point in Big Shoal Bay. . might have made it too fast in rough water and forced it to capsize. as a good boatman. He built his boat from the steel hull of an- other craft. His boat was powered with a 60-horsepower Ford V8 en- gine which he adapted to marine use With Severe Burns Richard Johnson, 11, son of Dr. ,and Mrs. LeRoy C. Johnson of 43 | Illinois Ave., is reported in satis- | factory condition today with second and third-degree burns. Richard, according to Mrs, John- | was playing with two other | youngsters Monday in an aban- | | son, | doned basement of a home recently jtorn down in a vacant lot just southeast of the Tel-Huron Shop- ping Center. The two boys, Joseph Richards, 10, of 64 Illinois Ave. and Theodore Johnson Jr., 11, of 90 Wenonah Dr., pulled Richard out of the basement when his shirt caught fire. Two unidentified men, who heard Richard yelling, the Pontiac Osteopathic Hespital where Dr. Johnson is medical di- rector Mrs. Johnson said they were un- able to find out how the fire-in the boys were playing Together After 43 Years NEW BEDFORD, Mass. (UP)— Two New Beford sisters, Mrs. Ma- rie Pinard and Miss Bertha Arsen- ault. .recently were reunited with a third sister, Mrs. Rose Schnitzler, | 67, of Elmira, N. Y., for the first time in 8 years. Of the five aboard ieee ‘Arrest Police Chief ‘Mer 2-Car Accident COLUMBUS Ohio u — As soon 'as Police Chief George.W. Scholer jreported back to work yesterday, after sick leave, he was arrested. |The charge was failure’ to yield | right of way during a two-car col- lision here June 14. The chief had been recovering at his home from five fractured ribs received in the accident. He was released on $25 bond. and ordered to appear next Tuesday in Municial Court. Policeman Gerald H. Malone, 29, the driver of the other car, re- received a fractured skull. The car crashed as both men were return- ing home front their day's police Lakemen theorized that the | beat might have had teo much | motor for its size. They said this | could have Roy Onnela, however, was known | Boy, 11, Hospitalized. took the boy to_ basement started while theasthree | duties. |Pretty Classy Setup MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) — Willie Swank lives on Grand Street here. ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 Cure Disclosed for Rat Cancer Chemical Help Found for One Type but Not Yet for Humans NEW YORK (®—Development of a chemical compound: that pro- duced permanent cure of one type of transplanted cancer in 100 per cent of its trials on rats has been reported by the Sloan-Kettering Institute. The Institute, which made the announcement yesterday, noted that “no chemical cures of any form of cancer in man have been achieved to date.” The Institute, research unit for the Memorial Center for Cancer & Allied Diseases, has the largest chemical testing program among cancer research units. The report said the drug that routinely cured all cases of Jensen sarcoma in rats is known as TEM melamine—and was developed at the institute. The Institute's seventh annual progress report summed up the results of its research in chemical injection aimed at starving or poisoning cancer cells in mice and rats, The results, the report said, ‘‘jus- tify the hope that further study may reveal compounds capable of achieving permanent cure in man, not only of leukemia (blood can- cer) but eventually of other forms of cancer now beyond control." A compound combined of P165 BOYS 26-INCH MODEL A devhing, new kchwinn with the cow pedoling of @ highs weg the comtert end rvq- pedro of @ belleen A fully __eeinged beevty thats « de hight te own—e breere te ride Gverenteed As-Long- As-You- Own All Other Schwinn Models rox 3° | hand brakes. Girls’ ders and rims. models. | Corvette Bicycle 1.75 tires and tubes—3 speed hub with front and rear Opalescent colors. Front luggage carrier. Chrome fen- and boys’ EASY TERMS — SMALL DOWN PAYMENT 6 MONTHS ON BALANCE! WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL! SCARLETT’S BICYCLE SHOP | 20 E. 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It suggests the car of the future might substitute airplane type controls for the familiar steering wheel, accelerator and foot brake. * * * ° We suppose that to drive such © a car you would merely push the “stick” forward when you want to speed up, pull it back when you want to slow down or stop, and move the handles to right or left to steer. Coupled to modern power steering and power brak- ing, such a device might have its advantages. Ease of driving is not, however, the reason the Cornell aviation experts give for getting rid of the traditional steer- ing wheel. Working under a grant from an automobile insurance company, they are trying to design a car capable of preserving its occupants from unneces- sary injuries in accidents. * * * Rounded interiors, with no pro- jections or corners, and with an abundance of rubber padding, are advocated by the researchers. Plastic bodies, they think, hold promise of reducing “impact damage.” “We believe that further research will some day make possible the design and manufacture of cars from which occu- pants can walk away after a crash at, say 50 or 60 miles an -hour,” says Epwarp R. Dyes, chief of the laboratory. * * *- The automotive industry itself is building more and more safety into its product. Ideas from the aviation in- dustry may help in this process. But in the long run the final safety factor in driving is the brain that controls the hands and feet of the driver. Population Worries Japan One of Japan's biggest official worries is whether its population will stabilize at 100,000,000 before economic disaster strikes. At present, according to Paul Burgundy of Worldwide Press, Nippon’s national economy al- . ready is strained by the task of feeding 87,700,000 people. With half of them living on Honshu, it now is the most densely populated — island on earth. * * * » One encouraging development was the drop in the birth rate since 1947 from 34.7 to 21.4 per 1,000. This was traceable in part to the decline in the number of marriages from 939,170 in 1947 to 670,000 last year. A niajor reason for that decline “*~<4s the change in marriage cus- toms. In Tokyo a poll of 3,000 boys and girls all 20 years. old and single, showed that 80 per * cent intend to select their own partners without parental help. * x * Outside the capital, however, and for 20 per cent of Tokyo girls, parents con- tinue to arrange marriages and senti-. ment favors the traditionally large family. While these changes have eased the population pressure some- what, they haven't altered gov- ernment belief that the total should stabilize at 100,000,000 by 1985. Living standards have ~ risen since 1947 but the economy is unable to keep pace even with the reduced growth which totaled 1,000,000 last year. | “Women will not allow themselves to ed by members of their own sex,” _ That makes two the members of which women will pw themselves to be bossed by. ip ty + é . ABS YUIUIVUEL , ag Support Is Inequitable (Muncie Evening Press) - ' » Recent vote samplings taken among rank-and-file Indiana farmers show a decided distaste for the continuation of high rigid federal price rts. These ls back the Eisenhower-Benson-Aiken program for letting flexible price sup- ports start next January. In Congress, as expected, the Senate Agriculture Committee hearings are in- clined toward flexible prices, while the House hearings lean a bit toward exten- sion of rigid supports. House members, skittish about the farm vote this fall, are barking up the wrong tree if they think the dirt farmers want a continuation of the surplus-producing; price-depressing reg- imentation of the Roosevelt-Truman giveaway era. Who is getting the gravy in this high subsidy business anyway? Certainly © not the little fellow. Representative Abraham Multer of New York recently asked the Depart- ment of Agriculture some questions about it. Here are some of the answers: 1—In 1953 the five largest corn loans in Indiana averaged $85,291. ‘The av-... erage of all corn loans in Indiana was only $2,307. 2—The five largest wheat loans in Montana averaged $176,714. All wheat loans in the state @vetaged $4,000. 3—The loans to the five biggest cot- ton operators in Mississippi averaged $479,535. The average of all cotton loans in the state: $372. A similar vast divergence showed up for corn, wheat and cotton in other states.* These answers should be revealing to all who think the high rigid price sup- port program now on the books is de- signed for the small or average farmer. he farmers themselves are inning to wake up to the fact that the existing rogram is not pron failing to stop fall- ng prices, not only a burden on the taxpayers, not only a means of federal dictation over them, but is grossly in- equitable. Will our Hoosier congressmen also realize this? They certainly should. They should vote for sensible federal farm aid—not aid based on the bloc presure of the big operators—when the by rad flexible program comes est. : “Sue was painfully wounded when a hold-up man shot her in her delicates- sen.” — From news story. That hold-up man was no gentleman. The Man About Town - Going to Arizona Explorer Scouts to Attend National Camp There . Daffynition Perfume: The original chemical warfare. Twenty local Boy Scouts and two leaders will spend an outing at the famous Philmont Camp in Arizona, leaving Pontiac by train Aug. 16 and returning Aug. 28. The leaders are Stuart Williams and Hartley Thernten. All the Scouts are of the Explorer classifi- cation. 7 , Pwo top ranking General Motors officials in this area turned in right, smart golf games over the holiday weekend. L. C. Goad, executive vice presi- dent, notched a 39-41—80, and Phil Monaghan, boss of the Truck Plant, compiled a 78. Incidentally, Goad is left handed. He played a lot of Varsity baseball at the Uni- versity of -Illinois. Just to show how completely the service field is covered, District Manager Ed. Novak of the Michigan Bell Telephone Company, points out that there's an exchange in Texas with the name of “Grapevine.” For over 20 years residents of Pontiac, the Edward B. Cullen family, now living at Bryan, Texas, is in distressing circumstances. Three months ago Mr. Cullen, 54, suffered a cerebral hem- orrhage. He has since been in a coma in the Bryan hospital there. His friends are raising a fund for the family, sending con- tributions directly to the hospital. Purchasing a shoe store at Dundee, Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Dayton F. Kohiman, formerly of 87 West Beverly Ave., Pontigc, have moved there. “Recently awarded a certificate of achieve- ment for outstanding civilian service in con- nection with the office of the Far East Com- mand at Tokyo was Robert W. Bennett of Clarkston. He has been in Tokyo thé past four years, the last two years as a civilian Army employe. A phone call received from Carey Hillman of Oxford commends the Pontiac Press on that “Primer for. Americans” page in Mon- day’s paper. He says it was one of the most inspirational things he ever read. ° Verbal Orchids to— ® Mrs. Harriett Peck of 95 Douglas St.; eighty-fourth birthday. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Downey ; of 70 Mariva St.; fifty-third wedding anni- versary. ’ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Atkins of Clarkston; sixty-first wedding anniver- Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Lounsbury of Howell; golden wedding. - Voice of the People _ “War Is Hell—I Theenk!" Uncertain Future Created by Draft Cause of Growing Juvenile Delinquency (Letters will be condensed when neces- —— because of lack of space. Pull name. address and telephone number of the writer must accom y letters but these will not be pubiished ff the writer so requests. unless the letter is critical in ts pature.) Recently I saw a TV’ program dealing with juvenile delinquency. Everyone interviewed placed the blame on the parents. I have tried. to be on friendly terms with teenagers and have lis- From Our Files 14 Years Ago PANAMA CANAL defense work being rushed die to general world unrest; it is near completion. GUISEPPE SACCONE, former Metropolitan opera star and cousin to Enrico Caruso dies at age 49. 20 Years Ago SENATOR ARTHUR Vandenberg attacks Democratic policies at Re- publican party dinner. NAZI HIGH COMMAND secks to establish truce after Hitler's bloody “second revolution.” tened to their problems. None of these people, or any of the ones writing in national magazines, know what they-aré talking about. Some psychologists have arrived at the same conclusion I have had for some time. We have had military draft in this country for 14 years. The boys discover early that Uncle Sam can force them into military service when they are still legal- ly accountable ro their parents, This creates confusion about who has authority over them and also threatens to disrupt their life. The girls realize that the cream of our male youth is being dragged away from them and may be killed. The teenagers are trying to crowd a lifetime into their early years as they have little faith in the future. The basic solution is for our gov- ernment to find a way to live in peace and according. to Christian principles. : Harold Appleton 2968 Ek. Walton Bivd. Case Records of a Psychologist | a Bright Lights Irritate Drive-In Theater Patron Will someone please tel] me why they have those big bright lights on top of the screen at the drive-in theaters? They wake the children out of their sleep and they half blind grownups. Can't something be done about these lights? One Who Knows THOUGHTS FOR TODAY He that gathereth in summer is a wise son: But he that sleep- eth in harvest is a son that caus- eth shame. * * ® The law of harvest is to reap more than you sow. Sow an act, and- you reap a habit: sow a habit, and you reap a character; sow character and you reap a destiny. G. D. Bordman. Wife Must Use Psychology to Keep Hubby From Following Primrose Path After 40 Wives, be on guard lest Gedrge’s trouble invades your domestic bliss. If you have been married over 10 years; then be sure you pick up your husband's erotic cues, and go more than halfway to be stimulating in the romantic realm. Otherwise, some younger siren may “coo” when he “bills.” By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case L-351: George T., aged 47, lives in the suburbs. “So he drives to work each day,” his wife informed me. *'And six months ago, he hired a new sec- retary, who happened to live out our way. “So George suggested picking her up each morning in the car. Since then they have gone back and forth together each day. “Later, I learned that he had been taking her to lunch, And now he admits he is infatuated with the girl. ‘He acts just like a school boy in his first puppy love affair. Dr. Crane, what can I do, for he says he loves her and wants a di- vorce? “Vet we have three fine chil- dren and have always been a de- voted. couple till this secretary came into the picture.” George is a victim of what we psychologists call the “Ponce de Leon Complex.” For when men pass the age of Aunt Het The way Mary sacrifices her- seit don’t seem like « virtue to me. Sacrificin’ your life ain’t noble un. less what you're sacrificin’ for is worth it. 4, they often indulge in a lot of self-analysis (introspection). Earlier in marriage they are so preoccupied with outside problems that they haven't time to become self-analytical. For they are struggling to rise in the business world and to pay off the mortgage on their home and the doctor's bills for their children But after 40, they usually have achieved a fair degree of eco- nomic success and may own their home, as well as a TV set and a car. The children are then mar- ried or away at school, Se they have spare time and energy to wonder about them- selves. This is when they begin to realize with a shock that they don’t get a big thrill out of kiss- ing their wives. Subconsciously they then to act a little kittenish with decide their “Oh, act your age!” the wives may irritably exclaim, failing to realize this dangerous stage in men. For ‘such husbands are trying ‘to act 21 and revive love emo- tions that may have been in cold storage for 10 to 20 years. up her romantic band may wonder if maybe it is her fault that he is less erotic than 20 years before, Men first start straying in their imagination, before their feet fol- low the primrose path! So you wives must be doubly on guard after you have been mar- ried for 10: years, And after -40, beware! For men usually refuse to re- sign themselves to a senile role in the erotic realm. Furthermore, a strange young woman introduces the stagefright thrills which puts “butterflies” in their stomach, For strangers have this additional power to stimulate emotions. So never drop into a platonic state after the. age of, 40, even if you wives are content to do so. For you may lose your bread- winner in six months if by acci- dent or design, he bumps into a siren half your age who will ‘‘coo”’ when he “‘bills.”’ Even for financial security and the protection of your children, at least fight fire with fire! The odds favor the wife if she will play, her cards seductively. And most men admit they'd rather have their ‘‘affair’’ with their own wife if she'd just pick up her cues, instead of saying. ‘‘Oh, act your age'"’ . So send for the bulletin ‘‘How to Prevent Impotence -in Men,” Ke - 10:5 > enclosing a stamped return enye-_ lope. George's wife won him back by using it. (Copyright,. Hopkins Syndicate Inc.) ot, David Lawrence Says: WASHINGTON — Absence from a study of the testimony at the time by this writer. . However, an examination since of the many comments cofcern- ing the constitutional rights in- volved in a portion of the contro- versy leads to the impression that there is a widespread misunder- standing as to what is the law concerning the relations of the ex- ecutive and legislative branches of the government. * . * The rather widely publicized the- ory that a United States Senate committee would be doing some- thing illegal if it obtained from an employe of the executive branch of the government information which the employe himself is for- bidden to disclose, and used the data — Was demolished by the U. S. Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia. It was never overruled by the Supreme Court of the United States. | * «¢ « Judge Groner who spoke for a unanimous court of appeals in No- vembér 1936 noted in his opinion that the Federal Communications Commission and the Senate com- mittee investigating lobbying had been accused of conspiring to vio- late the provisions of the Constitu- tion relating to unlawful search and seizure and to the freedom of the press. < What was at issue was an or- der served on the Western Un- jon Telegraph Company to pro- duce messages passing betwern the head of a group of news- papers and some of his asso- clates in other cities. It was asserted by the telegraph company that the messages were confidential and that it would be a violation of federal law to dis- close them. But the FCC ordered it done and the messages were turned over to Hugo Black, then Democratic senator from Alabama, who was chairman of the Senate's Investi- gating Committee and who not long afterward was appointed to the Supreme Court of the United States by the late President Roose- velt. Mr. Biack is a member of the high court now and as a senator would not have knowingly com- mitted an illegal act. Judge Groner ruled that the tele- graph company should not have surrendered the messages for the purpose of any disclosure of their contents and that the FCC, while having a right to examine them, did not have any right to transmit them to the Senate committee. The Court of Appeals said: * * . “« . We are of the opinion that the resolution adopted by the commission, under which its agents took possession of the telegraph companies’ offices and examined wholesale the thousands of private telegraph messages received and dispatched therefrom over a period of seven months — for the purpose of securing to the Senate commit, tee knowledge of the contents of the messages — was without au- thority of law and contrary to the very terms of the act under which the commission was consti- tuted.” . * . But when it came to defining the rights of Sen. Black or his investigating committee, the U. S. Court of Appeals held that the courts were without power to in- terfere, It said: “The prayer of the bill (of com- plaint) is that the committee be restrained from keeping the mes- sages or making any use of them or disclosing their contents. we should say to the committee and to the Senate that tents could not be disclosed or used in the exercise by the Sen- ate of its legitimate functions. “We know of no case in which it has been held that a court of equity has authority to do any of these things. On the contrary, the unfversal, rule, so far as we know it, is that the legislative discretion in discharge of its constitutional functions, whether rightfully or ‘Division Not Very Clear ‘Tween Governing. Groups wrongfully exercised, is not a sub- + for judicial interterence. “The Constitution has lodged the legislative power exclusively in the Congress. If a court could say to the Congress that it could use or could not use information in its possession, the independence of the legislature would be destroyed and the constitutional separation of the powers of government invaded. “Nothing is better settled than that each of the three great de- partments of government shall be independent and not subject to be controlled directly or indirectly by either of the others.” So the case boils down to the fact that while a President of the United States may forbid any em- ploye in the executive branch from furnishing information to Congress and may fire the employe with or without giving any reasons, this does not mean that a senator or representative — who encourages an employe to risk his job by furnishing information to Congress in violation of the orders of his superior — is himself necessarily involved in any violation of law. The court went further and said that even if information-unconsti- tutionally acquired is disclosed in debate or discussion, the Senate committees cannot be enjoined against its use. But at the same time the court, expressing the pious hope that Sen- ate committees wouldn't damage the rights of the citizens by such use, admitted it was only a hope —not a means of legal coercion. (Copyright 1954) Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (international News Service) Now that Chairman Mundt brought the subject up let's look at the discard. The man with the vel- vet gavel said ‘Somebody was ly- ing.’’ Mundt is as correct as rail- road time. Somebody was lying as sure as fish in the ocean. Was it McCarthy or was it Ste- vens ?/ : In order to establish academic freedom and domestic neutrality let's monitor the gossip. There are some stuffings in the aftermath. In our rim-fire opinion both gentle- men were lying like bums. The greatest perjurer of slanted jurisprudence was Titus Oates. Who was the fimger during the bloody assizes of Judge Jef- frey. It was Oates’ ambition to cut off your head and throw it in your face. Chairman Mundt intimated there was something rotten this side of Copenhagen and it wasn't last year's snuff. Did he do anything about it? He was the referee in parlia- mentary bankruptcy and he han- died that gavel like he was afraid he might kill a roach. With truth upon the scaffold and a lie upon the throne Mr. Chairman Mundt nodded with the hares and affirmed with the hounds. It all seemed as beautiful as a posse following a trail of rosé petals. Which side was lying? We insist on two reliable signajures with every guess. Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE How many friends have you to- day .. . As friends are really true? . . . How many would respond at once .. . To testify for you? ... How many would defend you in... The face of accusation .. . And would unhesitatingly . . . Accept your explanation? .... Or if you lost your income and . . . You had to have some aid . . . How many still would measure up . . . To earn that friendship grade? Some day you may discover that .. . Your true friends are not many... And you may feel quite fortunate .. . To find that you have any. . \ But meanwhile think of those who think .. . You will be ever true... And when their tria] is at hand .. They can depend on you. (Copyright 1954) Subject of Old Age Decline Is Ghastly but Remember, It Happens to Everyone By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. ‘Mother is 71 years old and she has developed a slow gait. Inch by inch walking, shuffling slowly. “At times she makes an effort to lift the feet but soon tires and resumes shuffling. “Many doctors have examined her but none has told us what the trouble is, _¢ “X-rays made repeatedly, with- out revealing any abnormality. No without extra-sensory perception I might get a lead if I knew your mother’s present height and how much she has shrunk in stature in recent years. It she really lifts the feet as she should when walking, even . for a short time by special effort, she probably has no nerve or spi- nal cord ailment. Whatever in particular ails your mother it can do her no harm, may do her much good, to sup- plement her diet with a suitable daily ration of the three minerals and three vitamins most likely to be lacking in our refined mod- ern diet. Instructions in pamphlet Young Folks and Old Folks, for which send stamped, self-addressed en- velope. For health and prolonged life your mother should consume hot less than 1', pints (three glasses) of milk daily or the equivalent in milk products. only the gait but a noticeable slow- ness of all movements. It won't hold back senility much just driving oneself to walk faster or with moré lively step, although that is better than no exercise at all. Nor will such conscious affec- tation of. briskness conceal one's decline. The: best way to manage. this premonitary slowdown is to begin 30 or 40 years before it sets in, rolling somersaults, taking your iodin ration and practicing belly breathing. the three minerals and three vita- mins generally lacking in the ordinary diet will also help. Other things are described in Little Lesson No. 16, The 7 Keys to Vite, for which send 25 cents and stamped, self-addressed en- it happens to everybody in the world. . ‘It is the way we all go if we live long enough. letters, or-the words Ise, pertaining to percomat health and hygiene, not to disea cugeows or treatment, will be anewer by Brady if @ stamped, self addressed envelope is enc te , ete. (Copyright 1954) Germéns Plan: Raid Shelters Government at Bonn Prepares Program for Atomic Defense BONN, Germany ®—The West German :government will present to Parliament soon a plan for civil defense against atomic weapons, an official source said today. The progrm calls’ for the rebuilding of 3,000 giant World War Jt -com- munity shelters, demolished by Al- lied orders. A group of experts who visited the United States recently to study atomic defense jis drafting a report which will serve as a basis for the West German system, this source said. * . = In addition to rebuilding the old shelters, these plans call for 1. The compulsory construction in riew houses of air raid shelters giving protection against near hits by atomic weapons. 2. Organization “of an effective air raid warning system capable of alerting the West German popu- lation against impending enemy at- tack in a matter of seconds. 3. Expansion of the 20,000-man Federal Air Raid Protection Assn. to previde all communities with the required number of air raid wardens, ee *« ¢ The Interior Ministry also is studying plans to evacuate about five million people from big West German cities in case of war. About 100,000 volunteers already are serving in the technical aid service, a volunteer force com- posed of highly trained specialists, THE KITTY RIDES UNDER TRUCK—When Dale Eberts, right, drove into a Mansfield, Ohio, gas station he found he was transporting .a two-month-old kitten as a stowaway. Wadley, front wheel. 3 miles. Service station operator Al left, found the kitten perched above the springs of the left Eberts. estimates Tabby had been bouncing for about mechanics, engineers, electricians and others. The main task of thig service — West Germany's only effecti\e.civ- il defense force at the present time —is to keep such vital services _as public utilities and communications operating during an emergency. It also serves as qa peacetime emer- gency organfzation to fight floods, forest fires and other catastrophes Under the government's pro- gram, the service would enroll some 125,000 additional volunteers | to be trained specifically for civil | defense tasks. The role of this organization in war would include clearing rubble from streets and communication | lines, the repair of power and tel- ephone lines and the rescue of peo- ple from damaged air raid shelters. There is no stich thing as @ race of albinos. — Have a shopped at the at the ASPHALT TILE Light Merbleized Ist Quolity, 9x9x's ¢ JA Derk Marbleized Ist Quelity, 9x9x Vs — MART? — SEE THE BARG THE BARGAINS AT THE DO-IT-YOURSELF MART! MART! 12-Ft. Linoleum Heavyweight Regular $1.00 Sq. Yd. Armstrong's Felt Base {9' Square Yard Deluxe Colors Ist Quality, 9x9x Vs 10s Wall gs Paint Fast Drying Symphony Rubber Latex Money Back Guarantee 3" | We Carry a Full Stock of Super KEMTONE and KEMGLO PAINTS Full 9x9—“Tu inkler” Vinyl Tile Ist Quality—Reg. 19c ony JHE. | First Quality—9x9 Vinyl Plastic Tile For Concrete or Wood | Floors. 21: Hvy. Household Weight 9x9—Top Quality Rubber Tile 15%. Armstrong's Quaker Wall Covering signs. Low cost walls for kitchen, bath or laun- dry. We show you how to instal! it your- self—Tile, Marble and Knotty Pine de- 99° Lin. Pt. 54” wide For Your Bathroom Plastic Wall Tile Beveled Contour Deluxe Quolity 23°. We Furnish Tools and Instructions FREE H Rogers Outside Be 9x9 Florever House $67! VINYL TILE Red—Gray—White—Yellow . Reg. Cc VINATOP |” 15¢ 12 aria Top i wise Ea. Me DO IT RIGHT! ia ° : ey PARK FREE a Sa 256 S. SAGINAW ST. f | arms in lidu of a girl. a .( i ya | : e tH bin , waa PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954, = fens Delinquent Teen Minority Causes Major Headache By STAN REDDING But this “minority” is becoming HOUSTON, - Tex. «#—Should- you} 49 increasing problem across the decide to check, your eyes might land. For want of a better word they call it the problem of our be opened a bit at the activities of “juvenile delinquents." Houston's teen-agers. And gour child is eligible to join You might find your teen-age son this -‘‘minority."". I know, I have \—as I found somebody's teen-age | seen them. son—dancing druitkeniy around the} There are some 5,000 retail out- floor of a tavern. a half-empty bot-j lets for beer in Harris County. tle of gin clutched tightly in his| There are 700 retail liquor stores ) in the same area. To police these places and similar establishments You might find your young daughter — as I did someone's —| in 13 other counties, to enforce the slumped in the arms of a known|/@W. the state furnishes a grand teen-age law breaker, her eyes | total of 12 liquor agents. dazed by drink . * * »* e e e A study of Houston polige rec- ; ‘ oe shows that juvenile cases You might find them slum ming’ in any one of hundreds of | | handled by the Crime Prevention | : —— are on the increase, Of Houston and Harris County tay a an | artis aa 1 did | then 2.428 were handled last year | as ecules who committed an of Or maybe you'll just find him, | tense punishable by jail or prisor her or them packed tightly in an terms on the adult level automobile — its trunk full of foed | Thus the “juvenile delinquents" beer — speeding madly down 4/ compose less than 2 per cent of-all highway. Or parked on a lonely! the children in Houston. Assume lane, perhaps, an ideal place for “drinking and necking.”’ These children represent a very smaH minority of the teen-agers in Houston and Harris County. For each child I saw there are dozens of others who are content to follow accepted behavior standards. that an equal number go astray | but are not caught or are straight: | ened out by other than police agen- | cies. Officials agree that is a more | than “fair assumption.” What can be done in this city | about juvenile delinqueney? There is no one solution, no more —-PANTS-— than there is one cause. But there are things ‘that can be—acconi- plished. The big item is an institution for boys within Harris County. Such an. institution for younger boys, 10 to 14, will soon be availa- ble. Pushing the fight for this pro- ject was Domestic Judge J. W. Mills, one of the leading figures in the fight against delinquency, Rambler Gets Cooling E Appliance Does the Wot aguinat de Warm Mornin Judge Mills, who thinks that if, INCINERATOR broken homes contribute much to Quick-Buras Both TRASH delinquency, is seeking legislation to drop hasty marriages. and to AND GARBAGE stop thes trial of divorce cases where the husband and father doés not appear to contest divorce or seek child custody. * * « He also urges citizens as qa whole to interest themselves more in the | various social agencies, civic =~ ON EASY TERMS! — groups and community organiza detin-.| | LOOK ] imPorTANT HOOK | | arm Merning also offers the ONLY SOTTLED GAS ICINERETS ou the mar- ket today! For Further tions coping with juvenile quency ? 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Enameled Hardwood Directors’ Chairs 8.99 Save now on this solid, compact ch with canvas seat and back, with Rusiproot hardware, enamel finish. back, Folds compactly fer DON Tis SAGINAW AT WARREN OPEN MON FRI. ‘SAT ln ba = ie ON cy Mi ALWAYS THE BEST FOR LESS at RN | ORCHARD LAKE ROAD | BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH Qian Qs et Quon 5 6 DAY FOOD SALE FROM WED. JULY 7 THRU TUES. JULY 13 We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 MONARCH COFFEE we 4 =a . 4 KEEP Coc ENJOY REFRESHING ICED COFFEE MADE WITH . elie Fancy Pure REGULAR OR DRIP GRIND _-1-LB. VACUUM CAN L. & S. EXTRA FANCY PURE STRAWBERRY PRESERVES mt... PUNCH TOMATO JUICE _ oan 46 OZ. CAN LADY BETTY Unsweetened GIANT 46 OZ. CAN ad = 49) LOGANBERRY PUNCH wcrn32%:. 23° REFRESHING KOOL-AID 6 « 25< BENNETT'S FIX-A-DRINK ‘7327 25° LEMON JUICE outthin 2°65 25° DIXIE CUPS FOR COLD DRINKS! 2 x ve 1 5 DRINKING STRAWS °° 2 2%, 23° PLENTY OF FREE PARKING FLL YOUR FOOL EASKET WITH THESE! _GRAPELADE aw MARSHMALLOWS a 25 eee , VAN CAMP'S” TAL .. LL c CANS PLANTER'S Cocktail PEANUTS matin] 8 ‘OZ. Cc mes VAC. CAN BEECH-NUT Strained 4-39: BURNETTE FARMS | Cut Green | ASPARAGUS | For Tasty Vegetable esa WELCH’S 10 OUNCE DECORATED REUSABLE TUMBLER TALL 300 21 CT caN \ CRITE'S BEST Tender Delicious -L&S. COMBINATION Sliced @ Kosher Style Tere 7 ¥ *\ ‘ . . | ‘ iJ 4) a! ' al i i} Wha - ‘— LP 4 is7 ; ‘y = 29 ° ererere enero. OOOOO”T 52525 KO S505 + ¢ ¢.¢ erere BOOO OO) *,0,%,°% erere BOO SSO BBOO eee S550 . Tew ee mae — AAO < , oreceee, t = Sa ENTE TTT <3 Pm Te ae i a i tT ==. ae SS = SOO x. > maid +, 7 ————— *e%ere* BOO er ere BIOS ‘erere "ener '@ 5 ° ‘SWEET PEAS a QUART JAR 5 3 IN 1 PACK DONALD DUCK : SUNSHINE ORANGE AND; RAPEFRUIT = ss Krispy Crackers | & : oe 1 ue. Box | Bea SECTIONS a Re o? *,' > etatete OW etatere + £5.25 50505 t BOO 55K ‘ OO T ALL SSO SOO 2.4.4 ¢ OOO S550 303 RRR SOO +64 ,* BOO Patera CAN SOO OO SOO 24% H0000 woresetetctatate OOOO) OOOO tater ere" . ¢. 26.7 KRAFT or MIRACLE FRENCH DRESSING sor. BONDWARE WHITE PAPER PLATES | 35° re 39 poG Foo 3 2D STUFFED OLIVES 2": 27° SAVE 20¢ ie FRISKIES MEAL ae 5: BAG 49: NORTHERN TOWELS 2 ra 35 KRUN-CHEE 1 LB. POTATO CHIPS ‘i 69: 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 IMPERIAL BRAND Ready to Eat @ Sugar Cured Mello Smoked PICNICS Tender and Delicious 45. Short Shenk SALMON TALL | LB, CAN ‘iN WINGS a) || FRESH AND LEAN FOR TASTY HAMBURGERS! us. GRADED CHOICE QUALITY BEEF Lb. .. 35¢ 2 Lbs. 69c 3 94° 209 PESCHKE’S Grade 1 Skinless FRESH BEEF FRANKS SALMO) PLATE BOILING BEEF SLICED BEEF LIVER STANDING RIB FRESH AND LEAN 15), nt, 3% 7 ROAST TENDER lb FRESH BEEF : AT THE PEAK OF FLAVOR! . 19: TONGUES 15/77 ~ aren (LL YOUK FOOL EASKET 7 WITH THESE ! Rrichhe y ED . = , “me eesti | COUNTRYSAR (A SALE OF GENUINE 1954 CHOICE SPRING LAMB! | C m \ 43 > ORM! gy “cameo | LEG OF LAMB PESCHKE’S GRADE | OR 2 LB. CAN OF VT 59: Tender, Meaty.. pea Delicious Eating! .. , BEEF 2.8. $939 MEATY SHOULDER CUT 39; BOLOGNA /F prisker cat LAMB ROAST h. | MYGRAGE S MEATY SHOULDER CUT eying QO; i 1 eae LAMB CHOPS 5%. aes | » La hclalarlainida BREAST OF LAMB. | Bene | "MY OWN" mead HE LOTTAGE-4 Aa 1 LB. CTN. PINCONNING KRAFT’S FAMOUS Medium Sharp CHEESE 351. VELVEETA 23 LOAF Bs: BIRDS EYE <> SUNKIST | / 3 Fresh Frozen ii pines 8 es ” 4 Concentrated LEMONADE | | 6 OZ. CANS DOWNYFLAKE 3 49: WAFFLES ig 2 cs. 39° STRAWBERRIES ae, 3 3 85° #3: SOLID GREEN HEADS SEALD-SWEET eS Concentrated Frozen 4 ppt intone 4 ad oa ti q 2 PACKAGE OF 10 6 AS | ORANGE JUICE LARGE 12 OZ. CANS 2 = 49 ° ec eeeee, oe%s eee OOO) o*e*e 052525 2505 OOO) 50525 *4%,*,%, S54 e525 ore 52505 Se eecete: S525.25 SSeS 55 HESS e505 KS O055¢ RY eect _ CALIFOR OOO) +e SPOON NBEO YA JOOQOOOO OOO eee AA RTOOOOO) = FANCY YELLOW +e 7+ ee *+ee ¢*¢ 6 **+ +6 ‘o%6*,*, . e+ ‘i e+e 6 *¢¢ +e ++ *¢¢-* Orn “\ troubles with both the immigration New Alimony Suit Faced by Haymes LOS ANGELES @ — The mone-|} © tary blues of crooner Dick Haymes | | had: more sour notes today after a| f° ~ second ¢x-wife obtained a bench/| |. warrant for his arrest. eo Nora Eddington Flynn darell ty ee wad we te in alimony. } It was the second such wane for Haymes, who. aiso is having and internal revenue arms of Un- cle Sam. Last Friday in Santa Monica Su- | perior Courter Judge Orlando H. |. Rhodes issued a bench warrant for | Haymes on charges of another ex- | wife, Joanne Dru, that he is in arrears $4,800 in payments for sup-| WARNS FRANCE—United States | port of their three children Haymes is reported at Lake Ta~ hoe vacationing with Rita Hay- worth, wife No, 4. Ambassador C. Douglas Dillon has warned France it must decide soon | between a controlled German re- |armament within EDC, or the re- Cook eggs simmering rather | creation of an independent national than a rolling boil temperature to, German army. He said that if prevent a dark ring forming be- | changes were now made in EDC, | tween the white and the yolk France might be seriously harmed. | — = ——— PONTIAC’S LARGEST EXCLUSIVE ) 8) ANSWER ees cous FOR Pontiac’s Greatest Selection of SLACKS HERE MEN! A SPECIAL FEATURE VALUE | for FRIDAY and SATURDAY! Over 1000 pair of slacks in ygar-’round and summer fabrics .. . Gabardines .. . Flannels. . Tropicals. All sizes up to 52. Regulars, longs and shorts. Made to sell for a whole lot more! Specially Priced AND YOU CAN WAIT IN OUR AIR-CONDITIONED STORE WHILE THE SLACKS ARE ALTERED TO . FIT YOU... oto 4 | Tests Will Determine |Truman Will Leave $995 2 Pairs for $18.00 ne . {+t eu Cause of Child’s Death LOS ANGELES ® — Toxicologi- cal tests will be required to learn it John Joseph Correll, 7, son of Tadio’s “Andy,” died of “acciden- tal poisoning. An autopsy yesterday confirmed the youth succumbed to a kidney and liver ailment of undetermined nature, The coroner’s office be- lieves it may have resulted from accidental poisoning from an in- secticide. Hospital in Few Days KANSAS CITY «® — Former President Truman, recovering A pair of flaked rubber pillows with every mattress purchased on @ this sale. from a major operation, should be able to leave the hospital in a few} days A Research. Hospital spokesman said Truman showed €dfisiderable | | vigor yesterday and although he | still is on a soft-food diet his doc- | tors feel that he-can-return home shortly Truman's gall bladder and ap- pendix | were removed June 20. — MEN‘S ‘STORE £ . em giet eo Ud, . Sharkskins. .. ae ~ 18-20 North Saginaw Street/ A We Carry SIMMONS - SERTA RESTOKRAFT - RESTONAIRE SEALY, Etc. | RUBBER Combine to make your sleep more restful ~ ar Ae ~~ as LPO Wee FELT & COILS Tremendous Savings 243 coils in this fine innerspring mattress and box spring. Rubber flakes and felt to add to your com- fort. Heavy ticking for durability. BOX SPRING ALSO AT $25 USE OUR LIBERAL TERMS! - MODERN 3 PC. SUITE In Beautiful Sea Foam y You'll be thrilled with this bedroom spe- $ cial! The expertly crafted full size panel bed and spacious double dresser and plate glass mirror are fashion-detailed with smart pulls and unique, cut-out bases, and boast a modern, light finish. Chest available at $39.50. SAVE $60 ON THIS. OUTFIT. PAY ONLY $8.00 DOWN! “LOWER PRICES KEEP US BUSY” EASY CREDIT TERMS ARRANGED~-~No Carrying innerspring mattress and boxspring plus legs; any color. Truly a fine value. MODERN SOFA-BEDS ALL STYLES — ALL COLORS SPRING PLUS FLAKES OF FOAM RUBBER SISAL PAD AND FELT OUTFIT “Lowest Price Ever’’ er, Oltian-iielete AAT Ai] MOST a { THF USI FURNITURE STORE LL Small Weekly Payments Hal Boyle Says: _ Student Druggists: F ace Unlimited Opportunities By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK wW — “Wanted: Bright, responsible young men for »iindoor..jobs.in. pleasant .surround- ings. Starting salaries $100-$135 weekly. Promotion possibilities un- limited."’ vA newspaper ad like that would sound like the answer to a college graduate’s prayer. | But jobs with these advantages are practically going begging to- day in the nation’s four-billion- dollar-a-year drug industry. It is faced with a growing shortage of trained pharmacists. * . * “Enrollment in the country’s 5 | pharmacy colleges has dropped 25 per cent,” said Carl Willingham. secretary-treasurer of the National Assn. of Chain Drugstores. ‘‘They graduated 5,000 pharmacists five years ago, only 4,000 last year.” This falling enrollment has led the American Assn. of Colleges of Pharmacy: to issue 150,000 booklets to high school career advisers cit- ing the opportunities in the corner drugstore The United States has some 105,- 000 registered pharmacists—1 out of 10 is a woman—of whom about 90,000 are employed in the na- tion's 55,000 drug stores. The rest work in hospitals, government bu- reaus, research projects or for manufacturing firms. But a steadily increasing popula- tion and growing interest in health have spurred a need for more, not fewer pharmacists. And the de- mand is for better trained men. It is estimated that more than half the drugs used most often in pre- scriptions today were unknown be- fore the second world war. A generation ago druggists worked an average of 60 hours a week. That has been cut to 48 _NEW | The Smeliest, Lightest HEARING An IN ZENITH’S HISTORY! As powerful as some hearing aids at least twice its size. Comfort! moderate extra cost Easy time-payment plan avallabdle FRED WN. PAUL! CO. 28 West Huron FE 2-7257 A eee +De+- ? hours in most areas, to 40 in a number of targe cities. -* * Ld] > “In most states a young man can become a registered pharmacist after four years of college study and a year of internship. in a drug store,” said Willingham. ‘‘and he doesn't have to pound the pave- ment looking for work. “The jobs are there waiting. And there are plenty of openings at the top. There is a big negd for drug- store managers. A man can work himself, up to the $50,000 a year class, or higher, just as he can in } any other field. s a . “Owners of pharmacies make more money on the average than either dentists or lawyers.” He cited the case of George B | Burrus, a soda fountain clerk who studied pharmacy in his spare time, now is president of the Peo- ples Drugstore Chain, which has 151 stores and Yioes an annual 5! million dollar volume. Another ex-pharmacist who rose to the top in management, Harry J. Loynd, heads Parke, Davis & Co., which manufactured $109.000,- worth of pharmaceuticals in 1953. While industry leaders have the welcome mat out for girl students in pharmacy, they don't expect the ladies to solve the current short- age. = * cs “They work an average of four years—then get married,” said Willingham. Keeping the soda _ foundtains manned is about as much of a problem as keeping the prescrip- tion counter staffed. One big rea- son: The operators resent the old tags “soda jerk’ and ‘‘soda squirt.”’ One manufacturer tried to glam- erize the job by creating a new title—“‘fountaineers.” But the cam- paign flopped quickly. * - s “Another suggestion is to call them ‘fizz kids.’” remarked Wil- you think it will catch on?” As a retired soda jerk myself. | think they need a name with more military romance behind it—maybe something like “marshmallow grenadiers” or ‘‘scoop colonels."’ The modern word “fascist” de- rives from the Fascist regime in Italy which got its name from the fasces, bundles of rods used as symbols of authority in ancient Rome. DURING THIS SALE... ‘with prices to fit All models available with a BUDGET TERMS. - LOOK FOR THIS TAG . . for special values. It's yon guarantee that the used - machine you buy has been . 102 N. Saginaw PONTIAC Phone FE 2-081! INGER ’ GLEARANCE SALE Tremendous Values on SINGER Electric Trade-ins and salesmen's demonstrators . . . A wide selection of cabinet and portable models uree including a limited tity of used SINGE o Electric Portables at $49.50. ALSO ... a large selection of other make used ma- chines. Many one or two of a kind. SINGER SEWING CENTER SMALL DOWN PAYMENT 177 West Maple BIRMINGHAM MI 4-0650 ‘Sweetose Syrup smers . THE PONTIAC PRE Ss, WEDNESDAY, JULY 54 - Savings are in the spotlight at A&P : . . not just Customers’ Comer How to Take a Vacation .. _ About this time of year, lucky folks take off on long- “ planned vacations. And lots of these vacation funds have grown fatter from savings made at A&P' All year ‘round, smart shoppers (more than six million daily!) come to A&P for all their food needs. And since A&P has storewide low prices all through the year, these steady. consistent savings add up! * How about you? Even if you're not Planning a trip, take a vacation from food budget worries permanently. Come see .. . come save at A&P! 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BRANDS VANILLA OR NEAPOLITAN IN THE NEW SLICE PAK Crestmont Tce Cream =‘ 71% Swiss Cheese om 6.1... 5% Mel-0-Bit "ense, 5» 2 meas. 49€ Pinconning Cheese cour .... © 49% Silverbrook Butter % scone ae av 86 ! g S A SB, LESS THAN 1¢ A CUP . * "ee ¥. ae! al ein Ss Sho tl een Seana Se ry Ta - pal ia ait Take Home Everybody 's Favorite Flavor PiGghe-ETTES f Pitching H ae By BILLY ROSE A few weeks back I wrote an enthusiastic “Specs about a shimmering hunk of theater} own called “The Caine Mutiny Court Martial” which was produced by ‘Paul Gregory at a cost of about $20,000. Today I'd like toile a ngt.so enthusiastic repart about the movie cafitd “The Caine Mutiny” which was produced by Stanley Kramer for Colum- bia Pictures at a cost of about $2,000,000 . Let me say right off that it is not my purpose to pan the flicker version of the Herman Wouk novel. It’s big, slick, ex- pert and a cinch to give a good account of itself at the box office. j : It tells its story, however, in primer-book fashion, as though ——— the producer were afraid some Stage Model Caine. ‘Mutiny Trial Stronger Emotionally Than Film result is that he becomes his own stage design- er and is deeply moved by the settings of his “cregtion: The typhoon which whips through his head ig a real one, while the Hollyweod version, though skillfully photographed, is a compara- tive phony. The acting in the movie is competent and, at times, better than competent. But since the narrative is intent on covering a lot of terrain instead of concentrating on one emo- tional site, the performances are merely per- formances. Humphrey Bogart is fine as Capt. Queeg—if you haven't witnessed the anguish of Lloyd Nolan in the play. Jose Ferrer is impressive as Lieut. Greenwald—if you haven't seen Henry | Fonda. Edward Dmytryk's direction is smooth and proféssional, until you start comparing it with Charles. Laughton’s. As for the flaccid love story which chews up a lot of footage in the movie, it's pleasant Soman onan _THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 New Report Is Due ‘on U. 5. Job Picture p Phe repert.for dune. was. pre-+ ‘pared for issuance by the Com- |Leave Fleet Expanded WASHINGTON «® — A new gov- ernment report on the nation’s job situatiofi was due today, and ad- vance indications were it would re- flect increased employment—and also increased unemployment. tMmerce and Labor departments. The summer months traditional- | ly bring out students looking for vacation-time jobs and adults seek- | ing work in outdoor activities. More jobs open up, but there also are more people looking for them. This explains why in each of the past 14 years both employment and unemployment have increased be- | tween May and June. Employment} usually increases by about 14% mil- lion and unemployment rises by approximately 350,000. TOKYO w — The addition off SMART—BEAUTIFULLY STYLED SUN GLASSES OPTICALLY GROUND TO YOUR EXACT PRESCRIPTION © Fast Service © Guaranteed First Quality @ No Appointment Necessary GUARANTEED SATISFACTION WHY PAY MORE? NU-VISION OPTICAL L 00. Reoms 2 and 3 15 W. Lawrence St. DISPENSING fe) AS SEE Open 9-5:36 Friday “He another troop ship to the Army rest-leave fleet will make it pos- sible for 600 additional meh from =< Austin-Norvell Agency, Inc. 10-year-old in the balcony might misunder- stand the plot. . The script employs the old flagstone-laying technique, each slab neatly faqjowing the one before, and each. slab, though nicely trimmed, tending to be as flat as the one before. By contrast, “Caine,” the play, wastes no time on a stone-by-stone build-up. It focuses on the one piece of dynamite the story has to offer— the trial scene, and the audience is briefed on the incidents leading up to the mutiny in a series of quick takes. As a result, the theater version more than makes up in intensity for what it lacks in range, and comes through as a throat-grab- bing chunk of life. The movie version, despite all its spectacle, remiins a movie. Scenery-wise, the stage “Caine” consists of a few tables, benches and chairs. The spectator is asked to make up his own scenery, and the | Korea to have leave in Japan each enough—that is, if you haven’t seen “Caine” week, the Army said today. without this bit of irrelevant fluff. What it comes down to, I guess, is that the literalness of Hollywood is no match, in terms of impact, for the spectators’ imagination, once it’s artfully prodded. For that reason, when it comes to telling a | story without trimmings or trumperies, the legitimate theater is still the champ. Statistics, I think, bear me out. In recent years, the movies have lost a good part of their audience to radio and television. On Broad- way, however, hit shows these days run twice as long as they did a couple of decades ago. It all seems to add up to a show-business truism which was old when Aristophanes was wowing ‘em. on a bare stage in Athens: The hint is mightier than the blueprint. (C Si allt tend! ® Japan i in Market — INSURANCE istin rvell Whales have very small organs of smell and in some whales there are none. SAU HNN. 000 Beautiful Formica Dinettes Available in Chrome or Wrought Iron mC ay BOde 1... be King Size ICE CREAM Individuals PRESH PEACH Vanilla Peppermint RIPE BANANA PINEAPPLE SHERBET Butter Toasted Almond Checelate Cherry Vanille Black Cherry Ralph No 70 W an. nce FE 2-922) Tables made to order, amy size or shape, Including round, square and oval. 26 colors and patterns to select fr Tables are equipped with self-storing leat. Chairs are upholstered in Comark material—84 colors and patterns — 16° different styles. All chrome is triple-plated, included copper, nickel and chrome. Made to Order ap News said, people want to ap Politicians Reaches: aciiai pe WP ee A UMANY kt Want Speeches, for Secret Weapon Not Floor Show TOKYO uw — Japan is in the a Obtains +49” | G E Cc R E A Mv TOKYO w— Japanese politicos 3rd Divorce From Mate (aghast ine — ventas albaices Odd Chairs are exhibiting an unseasonal frost CHICAGO uw — Mrs. Rosalyn) Director Tokwtane bplonaty “a $ AND UP towards an American-style fund-| Becker, 35, was believed to have Japan's new self-def f ; 6 95 wulie Gined cicuid ue to & lagndcad o cecakd & Cesk Cane n't self-defense force said ° Lifetime Guarantee nance a merger of the three con-|ty (Chicago): yesterday when she today the army is interested in a AND UP on All Chrome ee Co y nicago) yes ) “,, |guided missile and would like to ° filed a suit seeking ber third di- vorce from the same man. The suit accused her husband Louis, 36, an elevatot operator, of | cruelty, the same grounds on which she obtained two previous divorces. They have g daughter, Ina, 8, servative political parties BUY DIRECT and In money-tight Japan, where SAVE % Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida's Liberal party (conservative) spon- sors a stark austerity plan, the $31-a-plate dinner with a $6 rebate gimmick is on the hot griddle buy the manufacturing license for such a weapon Other members of the defense board pointed out, however, that guided missiles still are rated top |; secret and onc® sold on the inter- |national market they can hardly Open Nites ’til 8:30 Metalmasters } Mfc. Co. 4436 North Woodward Near 14 Sle Road Y Gallon Feature CHOCOLATE FUDGE oO e IMPERIAL VANILLA si eacaicaumseess sant re nie But it's not. 80 much the ‘cont They were m: arrie d July 1, 1944; | be considered secret "Cherry Venille We ity of such lagniappe as ai he eee ana seers The earth has experienced at | z= Daily be an ot to st ~ = = Liberty seit Neapolitan oan charged wankd tin el eee a S010 dinner into a ‘‘cabaret Christmas| The American Bible Society has wy _yyyy Por S31 less the $6 refund, the languages and dialects. ddd i a~2 y ' Statement of Condition y Y Y ) PONTIAC STATE BANK » Z D Pontiac, Michigan ] jj June 30th, 1954 j | r RESOURCES | y Loans and Discounts ............ $ 3,550,219.96 ) Real Estate Mortgages ......... 3,217,331.63 Y ] ae eee 6,767,551.59 Jy Y, LESS RESERVE ............ 131,573.91 $ 6,635,977.68 Y Y United States Government Securities 11,279,032.95 Y j ] ] (Due Within 1 year ......... 2,048,537.64) Y j Due 1 to 4 Years ........... 6,229,620.31) . ] ih L State, County and Municipal ] Securities .................... 264,939.07 ) Cash and Due from Banks oa ve wei « 2,354,894.87 j ) Banking House and Furniture —_ 7 , and Equipment ............... 299,690.64 / Other Resources ............... 102,099.38 ) | TOTAL RESOURCES ...... $20,936,634.59 ] y 3 ] J LIABILITIES 7 PORZELAIN ENAMEL L aah bbe eee ween cece eeeeeeees $ prcigeape Y Sarplas 2... 6260, se0es 45 ves ,000. Y tpn Rh meatal eteldenespate : 7 Undivided Profits and Reserves .. 144,165.07 ° ] ak yy TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNT : $ 744,465.07 B LE Y Yy SSS Uj Demand Deposits ..-..........-, 11,053,465.21 Z Y U.S. Government Deposits ...... 392,045.44 : jj Time Deposits eer 8,538,465.09 Y Y TOTAL DEPOSITS ........ $19,983,975.74 Y Yj Other Liabilities 0... 208,193.78 j MEGREPESEGEL SD .- s+ s+ ws we ween weeoelevee c] Pe a Y : TOTAL LIABILITIES .;.... $20,936,634.59 | Yj , JY ] United States Government Securities carried at $800,000.00 in the foregoing j ) statement are pledged to yecure Federal and State Government Deposits. ] Beautiful | mew glacier | Mile J. ieee R s president : jena C D RECTORS ] blue interior : j Smith Falconer ......... ‘ Vice-President eealier > tn " morer ZY NO DOWN PAYMENT Y William A. Eubank........... (Cashier . American Forging 7 Ph np 2 Years te Pa ] Earl W. Bartlett Assistant Vice-President Mile J. Cress and Socket Co. Y MON Look this Admiral over carefully—see if it isn’t just what ; yy Sam 8. Hale.......... Assistant Cashier nen Uj} EF dopal you've been hoping to have in your kitchen! You can have Y Everett K. Garrison. ..... Assistant Cashier . Rodger J. Emmert stuart E. Whitfield Y i it gg inghet vi ne when you trade in your old refrigera- ] Mark S. Stewart General Motors Secretary Y ~ 3-14 storage Ful width Treser tho holds 59 pounds of ees / Harcld W. Schenle ~ me ne ren ply ram lly al L 108 NORTH SAGINAW a4 blue +3 make ag aie look” parla Barto % Turris MeCully ..... sessed Auditor ail fala ‘ ory t . r in’ now—enjo er refrigerati ;, nt le atobrel WY 4, Member Jot Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. ill __THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 C'MON OUT and JOIN the FUN at AIR L1MNES AN ALL-EXPENSE fo Mi AMI and Entry Boxee om Vie DELTA-C:S Airlines See the Following Stores: : a ' Delta-CceS Pages , —_igiiy Millionaire f y tues a , _ finysl)' 0 l\Wacation 0 alues There are still = / eta : (yA f h plenty Tel-Huron ae 9 = Fly Delt C&S to Miami rom these orn arwee | via luxurious scheduled L di BALLOONS een rr Stay at one of the fabulous MIAMI BEACH Floating around in snares Se de Ge ee won. Te | - H uron ders are yours... at no cost to you. Stores ! PONTIAC'S cunmincngn’s a LINDA LEE Women's Wear SKI ES MURRAY. SISTERS | Beauty Studio OSMUN’S : Town & Country Store ie With valuable SANDER’S ' merchandise. WIN THIS Retail Conlectioners sble. in Tel-Huron ALL EXPENSE Sa eG | stores. TRIP FOR TWO 5 ES ; Nothing to buy .. . just BOSTON SHOES pick up on entry blenk . Your Family Thrilt Centre = * a eee te . _ in any store in Tel-Huron, UNITED suirt ah Fill it out and drop it in ’ ae TEL-HURON the convenient box In'ony : WINKELMAN'S a store in Tel-Huron. WONDERLA LAND a ¥ By Herman Wouk hatred of Captain De Vriess. The if ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 é ‘ os bad re Denmark is a little larger in| Connecticut, Rhode Island and area than the combined areas of | Massachusetts. _ Tel-Huron Shopping Center’ Jamboree Specials! Choice of House Dress Sale Every summer dress in our entire stock included and to be sold for Ist Quality 51 Gauge, 15 Denier first quality nylon 69: hose. Choice of shades. Pr 2 PAIRS $1.25 In Our New Pontiac Store at Tel-Huron Shopping Center WONDERFUL SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS! Starting Thursday, 9:30 A. M. SUMMER DRESSES , $50 - regularly $895 Mi, Rie ci Sace lil age 2a ~ Town dresses, sunbacks with jackets—many, ERR, MOIS COED Rt EA Mtg cs: AM _ famous maker SWIM SUITS | $7770 7 regularly *10% Sleek, white-piped from a a inner bra td cuffed pants. Nylon, acetate, lastex in Wonderful collection of summer shorts, tops, blouses, skirts et Special July Jemboree 4 Lida’ stip was the measure of the Pa, o es P BN ' hs * commanding officer. He had fall- ‘ i ~ ‘ ‘ \ oe en into the hands of a bullying y oe “ae a 3 eae: a e . .@ ; tupid sloyen, He gritted his | | Oem : tes : teeth, and as seon as De Vriess e. - | e aine u tn was gone he pulled himself erect i , ‘ : and resumed decoding with new * : Copyright energy released by hate. emote ha Princeton; Maryk turned to ‘captain. | tan av-gas for the marine fliers) That night Willie found himself ‘eee eee “Sir, that doggone clip shack is | at Henderson Field. Ran torpedoes bean tates Gat G8 ie shone, ie pl inure ine sanitel over the engine room. These | up from New Zealand. That was 4/ opened his eyes and looked into the times he thinks of the left guys’'ll try it there—” happy deal, live torpedoes lashed | pa... Paynter. ‘“‘Whassa-matter hind yay ‘Bet be uae “Ensigns are expendable,” the | all over the deck and getting | now? he mumbled. the falas guia to Bondhus] “What I mean, sir, I think 1) Neve the Marines on Guadal. Ran) swat time is it?” ; a fumayed fing hs could hang a couple of bunks just | “°°V°Ys #° over “Jes, can't it wait till morn- pew home te meuing bol an 0ld as easy in Adams’ and Gorton’s “Supply scow, treop transport, - ony A.” CPAPTER 1 room or even in here over the| screen, mail carrier, or what | “Nope, Caine is information ad- couch—"’ dirty job have you? That's the | dressee. Any message where we're Willie planned to sleep after) The hell with that,” Adams} Caine, So if she’s @ little rum | an addressee is busted at once. lunch. He was longing for sleep) said. down, you know why.” Captain de Vriess’ orders.’ with every cell of his body. But it} “Isn't that a hull modification,| “A little run down is putting it “De Vriess,” snarled Willie, was not to be. He and Harding | Steve?” the captain said, chewing | politely,” said Willie. “de Vriess. Why doesn’t the were collared after coffee by the | POT “You'd have to get permis-| Adams straightened up. glared at| Navy send him back to high “vegetable. with a- face,” Ensign sion from .. | him, threw his cigarette into the| school to mature?” ; : “I can look it up, sir, but I don't | water, and walked aft. Over the! «come on. Keith.” mae: think it is.” loudspeaker came the chirp of the} «pai jet someone else break it. a Captain de Vriess says for me| weil, when you get around to it. | boatswain's pipe, then the words, I'm too tired to see.” to take you two on a tour of the| The shipfitters are way behind as| “Reville for aj] hands. Reveille.” | © "",, ‘icator al ship. Come along.” a , _ ie ssistant communicator always it is.” Captain de Vriess glanced | Adams snapped over his shoulder, i ” handles these night breaks,” said ‘ He dragged them for three hours | at the ensigns. “Do you gentlemen | “Check reveille in the after crew's Paynter, “as I know only too god- ae up and down ladders, and across | think you can survive a week or | quarters, Keith, Make sure they're | 4am well. Come on, Keith, I've teetering catwalks, and through | two in the clip shack?” all out of their sacks.” got to get back to the gangway.” narrow scuttles. They went from ; “Aye, aye, sir.” broiling engine spaces to icy} Willie was tired, and the sar- ce 8 8 Willie slid out of the bunk and j bilg casm irritated him. “Nobody's | -winie decided that he had better| descended to the wardroom, lean- , They splashed in water and aging velpin guard his mouth. Adams and the| ing heavily on bulkheads and rail-| sTORM SHELTER—A. J. (Bud) Fishler looks at a blueprint of an | slipped on grease aid scratched | De Vriess raised his eyebrows | other officers had been aboard the | ings. He propped his spinning head | underground steel fuel storage tank converted to a disaster shelter. : themselves on metal projections. and grinned. ‘That's the spirit, | Caine so long, they must be blind | 0" one arm and set about decoding. | Fishier conceived the idea of making a shelter out of the tank. It is | Willie saw everything through a | ™". Keith to the fact that it was a filthy] The message was addressed to the | heing occupied during a demonstration by Mrs. Melva Foater, holding Ppa ty wtgary ow a * * @ wreck. They might even be proud | aircraft catrier Brandywine Creek | her son, Mark, three, her daughter, Susan, six, and sister-in-law Sylvia / . Twoards the end of his first four-| of the ship. He swore to himself| for action. Foster, 16. The shelter is being installed at the Foster home at Flint, He ~~ only fo a papacy Leary ~“ profound- ~~ he would be different. ~ wo through = vars which is being rebuilt after it was leveled by a tornado last year. memory innumer able es grateful to see ° ams come i utte a > cluttered with junk or machines or| out of the wardroom hatchway, te lay gg al cry ‘ot or ta Some himself a t streaked with red marks beds, each hole with a novel odor his eyes. “How's it going, | another, he had gotten himself off | cup of sludgy cotfee, drained it, and) 2° 7-Toed Muggsy Useful imposed on the pervading smelis| Keith? Any strain?” the Caine, He set six months as| raced through the rest of the de- the creases of his pillow. os a Feline Fire Alone of mildew, oil, paint, and hot metal.| “No, sir.” . his limit. After all, there was an| coding, With the penciled message | “Well, well,” he said, with a —e os Carmody’s thoroughness was ex- Let’s inspect the lines admiral who was fond of him he ran up to the quarterdeck, small wry smile. “Call that good; CLAYTON, N. Y. W—A gray and plained when he mentioned that he| He walked around the ship with ° e’e threw his arms around Paynter, | news, do you. Keith? wlie ‘cal mamned Staeeey Gia iaven was an Annapolis man, class of/ Willie, kicking the manila ropes} An hour later, as Willie toiled| and kissed him. The dour engineer! “I guess it is for you sir, after six 43, the only regular officer aboard | that tied the Caine to the next over a decoding device spread out pushed him away in distaste.| years. You'll probably get a new toes on each foot, ahd he makes beside the captain and exec. destroyers. ‘This number-three line | on the wardroom table, the letters | “What the hell?” destroyer. Maybe shore duty.” | €00d use of them. At dinner that evening there we | Deeds chafing gear, the chock is | suddenly became a blur. The ward- “Look, friend, look. Tidings of} ‘You're all for shore duty, eh,| When an electrical storm knock- three officers at the wardroom ta-|Tubbing. Tell Engstrand.” Eng-/ room jerked back and forth, and| comfort and joy.” Keith? That's a thoroughly salty|eq down\ a high-tension wire out- ble including the captain: The rest | Strand was the first-class signal-| fel! on his hands. The fact that] Paynter took the stip of paper | Viewpoint. You've picked it up real! 4. the \home of Mr. and Mrs. =ere off on shore leave. Willie and = —, Willie’s watch. - Lieutenant Maryk was reading of-| to the light over the desk. Shielding | quickly. . ae = ee arding took chairs at the lower es, sir—Mr. Adams, frankly 1} ficia) mail at the table beside him it from the side glances of the| ‘Why, I sort of think you rate it, » Muggsy's owners, the end of the long white cloth and| had a hell of a time keeping the | made no difference. He was done| watch, he read: sir, that's ail.” cat clawed at the blankets of Mrs. began eating in silence. The others acta and the messenger from | jn Lieutenant Commander Philip | “Well, I hope the Bureau agrees! Baker's bed until she woke, saw a ie ee reeds ortaned wryly, then his| Me heard the opening of a bh rele par" sonra — Biri wees Se sparks showering about the house about things that had happened at agg aan long and stern. oem Ga nas captain's School Sam Francisco for train- | Willie left with a feeling that his| 4d notified the ‘power company. Guadalcanal and New Zealand and That's res | Berious yen me rg Siesta time Ing. Upoa completion proceed regpenarhrertiger age linge eager tors The next night Muggsy again Australia. They — to relieve Commanding Officer | the captain's hide. But he t| woke Mrs, Baker when a ware- Licutenant was the first |.,\02™s Dursed his lips, and) He did not dare raise his head. | Caine DMS 22, care. He could suffer through the| nouse fire became visible from Pi Mary = stopped to light a cigarette, lean-| “sir,” he heard Maryk say,| Paynter looked next weeks on the Caine gladly | 1. bedroom window. Poliice said geo their gee = ing against the life lines. “that clip shack’ is no place to} “Well,” said Willie in a low tone, | now. Deliverance was on the way, her phone call was their first word clous-looking, about rast a five, “Tell you what, Keith. You've | sleep. The kid is shot.” standing beside him, “aren't you| in the person of Lieutenant Com-/ (the blaze with a prison haircut. “You guys | et something to contend with. | “Kind of ripe in port, but it'll be| going to kiss me back?” mander Philip F. Queeg. : look kind 6f red-eyed,” he said. This ship has been in the for. | fine under way. Hell, Maryk, this}; “]’)) wait,” said Paynter, ‘until To Be Continued Mudd Willie said. “W tking | Ward sre since March "42. It's boy's had four months’ temporary | see this Queeg.” uddy Jewels Found e were cau 5 M ‘ ’ i eff far a few minutes in the ette | ee SUeH 8 tet Ot ection. The in Peart. Like to know how the| ‘When you're at. the bottom.|Chester Arthur's Desk NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UP) — Jas men are all Asiatic. They prob- | hell he arranged it. He ought to| there's no place to go but up,” said SCHENECTADY, N. Y. (UP) —| Three youngsters found a “‘buried — : - | ably think « fantail watch im | ave soaked up enough sleep to} Willie. “Can you imagine anyone | 4 desk used by Chester A. Arthur | treasure’ on the banks of the West Nothing like caulking off to| Pearl Harbor is foolishness. The | 0 without for a month. worse than De Vriess? before he became president in 1881| River Lagoon. They picked Se ee reer Tight.” the cap- trouble is the skipper thinks so, The captain's voice was mocking| ‘Well, it's conceivable, I'll take has been donated to Union College ent 00 glasea ot ndkey Sauk Ge opiate sain — too, Oe oat anaes and cruel. It filled Willie with rage. ee » | by the Albany County Historical | muddy shore. Police said the jew- which large ; ders, so we the guards. | What right had De Vriess to be so} ‘‘No, no, allow me uxXUFY- | Society. He graduated from might been discarded “Kind of hot in there, isn't it?”| You've just got to bear down.” | damned red hot? De Vriess was| Willie ran- down the ladder to| Union in 188. bya frightened burglar said Adams, the gunnery officer.| «- aieus @ara » | the man who permitted all the filth| the wardroom and rapped at the) — : : Lieutenant Adams wore fresh prim hedaey about stra avalhgd tl and sloth of the Caine, for which | captain's door a khakis, He had the long aristocra-| shalis raid Coral Sea—first Savo, | “eserved a court-martial. He “Come in—" ~ face and negligent superior look | second Savo—Rendova, Munda—" | *®¢med to reserve all his energies! «Geog news, Captain,” cried which 7 had seen often at} ‘what were you doing — mine-| {°F baiting ensigns. Willie, as he opened the door rh rinceton. meant good family sweeping” Willie’s accumulated resent- | The captain snapped on his bed “Kind of,” Harding said meekly, |. ver heard of a mine-| ment, weariness, and disgust | light and squinted at the mes = nae’ Meekily: " sweeper minesweeping? Mostly we! coagulated at thaf moment into sage, leaning on an elbow, his Tel-Huron Shopping a4 Center * / INCH Koolly cut, newly arrived, tagged at the very minimum! Prints and solid a ; broadcloths in pastel and deep colors. many in junior and misses sizes. sele, $5.50 =. A beautiful 26" table lamp at an astonishing low price. China base. silk shade trimmed, in pastel ruching. | Formerly *5” , ‘“ . b| Jamboree S$ 7 7 navy, black, lime, blue. Sizes 32 to 38. sale, $7.70. SPECIAL AT ONLY See our many other famous maker swimsuits at big July savings! sees m Sevings. “ Available Only At — TEL - HURON. SHOPPING CENTER ‘ul , Tel-Huron Shopping Center, Pontiac Telegraph end Huron Road OPEN TO 9 P.M. THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY n if ¢ | e % * we ee, ne vi . ‘ a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 ; ln Ox i272) Tel Huron’s JULY amboree 3 Specially Purchased for This Event! Year ’Round Regular to *40 LIGHT WEIGHT SPORT COATS $ Carefully tailored by two of the nation’s foremost makers, $8 Phoenix and Phillip Morris, all wool and dacren blended fabric , sport coats are an outstanding bargain for the well dressed man who likes something a little better and at a tremendous saving ieee: Regulars, shorts, longs. Plain and fancy patterns. By | Esquire’s “Chico” Slacks . 100% Wool-Crease Resistant Tropicals! Perfect for Casual or Dress Wear! Another special purchase just for this value event. Esquire’s Chico Slacks—an outstanding slack value at even the regular price — and at this special bargain, you'll want even more than one pair. Chocolate Brown, Navy Blue, Light Blue, Pearl Grey, Sand Beige, Light Tan. All sizes. Two Pair for *25- 100% Nylon Short Sleeve Sport Shirt A short sleeve lightweight open weave shirt that doubles for a sport shirt and % ey & office shirt. Just Wash—Rinse—Dry—No y Ironing Necessary.. Buy several now for: | vacation time. SPECIALLY PURCHASED FOR OSMUN'S JULY JAMBOREE! 30—60—90 Day Charge Accounts Offered! These Values Available at Both Our Stores! | . DOWNTOWN. STORE TOWN & COUNTRY Open Friday ’Til 9 P. M. Open Every Night "Til 9 P. M. 51 N. SAGINAW TEL-HURON CENTER “Two Fine Stores for Men Who Prefer the Finer Things” | | | | CRUISIN’ UP THE RIVER—Ted R. Boles pedals along his water highway on the Huron River near East Rockwood (Mich). A resident of Toledo, Ohio, ——— es Boles satisfied both his cycling and boating desires with his water bicycle, made of.a bicycle frame, pontoons and a paddle wheel. 14-Year-Old Stows Away 300 School Cooks Aboard Norwegian Liner NEW YORK W — For 14-year-! old Peter Deviin Smith there is no | docked in Copenhagen they got place like home, even if this home | landing cards like any other pas- is in hot, muggy ‘New York senger and had sandwiches ashore. His parents, however, thought it| “The rest of the time We ate wuld be a good idea if the boy | cookies mostly,” said Pete. ‘We'd the summer in Norway,|ask the cook for some and he where he goes to school. thought we were passengers.” This idea Pete didn't like at all.| The pair was discovered in the And the tall, blond boy had made |juggage room, only five hours be- it quite clear. fore the ship docked last F ri. “If you don't send me passage) Jon, Pete's companion, w money to come home, away,” he warned in a letter. But | Norway hig mother and stepfather, Nora! Pete's parents, and Kendall Smith, apparently had | | not be underestimated this grim determin- ation. Pete ain't get ine money. de- | however, could of town, and the immigration serv- ice offe red him a shelter at Ellis Island. "He stayed there for five days — compliments of the U.S government, of course. Pete's parents know now that vie he makes a promise he keeps Yosuiay. has they returned from a Fourth of July weekend trip, the telephone rang and the stepfather picked up the receiver | “Hallo, Papa, "he heard. “Papa, | here I am.’ ee It took some time for Papa to 7 ‘ figure out what was going on. Fin- | 14 Sa | | d ally an immigration official got on | ors njure the phone and explained. Yes, | as Quake Subsides Pete was here waiting to be picked up. Later, at his Manhattan home,| RENO W—The West's most jar- Pete explained everything | ring earthquake in two years spent He and 13-year-old Jon Eric Jo- | its force on the bleak plains of hannsen decided to come over. So| western Nevada and damage was they walked aboard the Norwegian | largely confined to the little com- American Line flagship Oslofjord| munity of Fallon and its neighbor- on the crew gangplank, and that | hood The first oud out when the ship | I'll stow | tained aboard to be returned to| j located as they were out ‘Attend Workshop Over 300 school lunch cooks and attended the School | Lunch Cooks Workshop on_ the | Mic higan State College campus in | East Lansing. last week, | Sponsored by the MSC Depart- ment of Institutiona! Administra- tion, the workshop was designed to help the women with operational | problems and to give them up-to date information, Attending . the workghop this area were Mary Haack end Sarah M. Vogel of Berkley, Adda Akin, Gertrude Killing Beatrice MacKay and Ethel Schaule of Birmingham, Elizabeth Morrow, Alma Powell and Lulu Zielesch of Bioomfield Hills; Levine BE. Parver. and Vivian C Luneser of B Savory of Ciyde; | Redith Walker of Alice Coe, Margaret Millicent Mathis and W Sundrie Farmington; Mrs. —_ Parkin and Mre. Barbara Wellever ; Mh Ganshaw of “area Armatrong and Mrs. Haze) = Mrs. Dorlie Balmer, Ae Dalieee, Mrs, Frances . Eleanor Pug- lese. Belna Rose and Mrs. Rena Theorin ef Pontiac; Lily Barker, Margaret Blanchard, Lyla Purdom, Mary Steward, Della Stekes, Ella Stranahan and Hazel Weaver of Rochester: Catherine Rothnie managers from Mrs Merton DeGraw and Mrs. Ward Whittamore of Romeo Sadie Perry Pear! Shutes, Vera Williams, Mary Josepha, Mrs Betty Hewitt, and Beulah Jennings of Royal Oak; Mrs. Ada Hope and Mrs. Ruth Sinclair of South Lyon Mrs. Eleanor Flynn, Mary Ouest, Marte Kleinhardt and Mrs. Edward Logie of Walled Lake also attended the workshop Kansas Town Opens ‘New Waterless Pool was if, |. Fourteen sailors were injured at “I traveled on that ship before, | the Fallon Naval Auxiliary Air Sta- you know,” Pete said ition. One suffered a broken leg, He had with him $10 and a bag containing pants, shirt, shoes, socks and underwear The two spent nine days aboard the ship, mixing with the paying | NORTON, Kan. —Norton has a new $90,000 municipal swimming the others were cut or bruised. | pool — minus the water A series of aftershocks culminat-| The pool was completed in time ed in a heavy rolling quake in| for the usual Fourth of July swim midafternoon which was felt in San | | ming rsh but because of the hot ‘Francisco and made chandeliers | dry weather this northwest Kansas passengers, playing deck games| swing in San Diego and sleeping in shower rooms. | Police Chief Peter Lugaski of As for food — it was simple, ex- | Fallon said six downtown buildings plained Pete. | were severely damaged. ltown has a water shortage. The city expects to overcome the shorage later this wéek through | an expanded water system. CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY NEW FRIGIDAIRES COME IN 8 SIZES From this compact 7.6 ev. ft. ( To this Beautiful new 10.3 ev. ft. CYCLA-MATIC IMPERIAL Medel Shown $49993 @ YOuR CHOICE OF @ ALL-ALUMINUM SHELVES ROLL OUT ALL THE WAYI/ @ COMPLETE SELF. SERVICE FROM TOP TO BOTTOM @ FULLY AUTOMATIC i DEFROSTING IN REFRIG- ERATOR @ EXCITING Niw WW. TERIOR STYLING IN PAS- Tet COLORS AND GOLD- «IN Tawa @ EXCiusivl UPETi“e PORCRLAIN OR DULUX ‘| GXTERIOR Penge ,| @ NEw PUL LENO . +. PULL USE PANTRY. _ POOR @ YOUR CHOICE OF RIGHT OR LEFT-OPEN- ING DOOR — AT NO EXTRA CHARGE PRICED FROM 190 huge 2-Door 15 ev. ft. Cycle-matie Imperial There's a glorious FRIGIDAIRE to meet every family need... ot the price they want to poy SAVE...GET THE BEST ; GET FRIGIDAIRE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 Mountain of Butter Grows but Try to Buy It at 40 Cents NEW YORK (INS) — Dig this crazy mixed-up world: , The government is buying be- tween 3,000,000 and 4,000,000 pounds of butter every weekday, following its price-support program. It now has about half a billion pounds in cold storage. It is taking up freezer ware- house space drastically needed by the frozen food industry, which will have a record packing this sum- There's never been a sitwation similar to the butter jam we're in, The gifts of butrer to schools, the armed forces and certain allies are tremendous, by normal measurement, but constitute - hardly a nick in the appalling mountain of the stuff we have on hand. Most of our allies don't want any of it, at any price. Australia, France, Denmark, Belgium and Holland have butter surpluses of their own. Russia and the other Commu- nist countries would take a lot of it. But if we gave it ‘to the Reds we would .be helping them solve their serious consumer prob- lems. If we sold it to them for the going surplus price of about 40 cents a pound, U.S. housewives who’ pay up to 70 cents at the cor- ner store would march on the White House with. muskets. In the meantime the mountain of golden fat grows by the hour. But try to get enough butter on your movie popcorn! Communism, an atheistic creed, is not above making a fast buck out of Christmas. About a million Christmas tree ornaments a month are arriving in New York from Gdynia, Poland. * Mes¢ of the cases bear the words “Poland” or “‘Eas¢ Ger- many” stamped microscopically upon them. They are sold to care- less U. 8. dealers as European- made ornaments. The dollars paid for these slave. labor decorations are channeled behind the Iron Curtain through AJ banks fn Secken and Holland. The New York corporation that handles most of the imports and thus is a party to the traffic’ in American dollars to the Reds explained re- cently to an irate veterans’ group that it engages in this trade “in the interests of world peace.” The pressures being put upon the U. S. to look the other way and let Red China slip into U.N. and the recent aggressive noises made. by Chaing Kai-shek, re- sharpen the focus on Formosa. But most ef us still know little about the island fortress where Chiang’s army is growing elder and into which we have poured many millions. There's a good piece on For- mosa in the current ‘“Maryknoll,”’ written by a recent visitor to the island, John J. Considine, Mary- knoll ‘missionary. The island is half as big as Ireland and has about the popula- tion of New York City. Some 6.- 500,000 of its inhabitants are native Palwanese: the other 2,500,000 are mainlanders. Excerpt: “Are you here to call on the boarders or to meet the family?” asked a Formosan, with a twin- kle in his eye. There is g big story behind this question, The Taiwanese are not hostile toward the Chinese mainlanders but they experience irritation to- ward them, They feel that the mainianders are not really in- terested in Taiwan. “To the Taiwanese,"’ one man explained, “the mainlanders are like a busload of New Yorkers camped in a Vermont village be- cause their: bus broke down." 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PORK LOIN ROAST wwsaver =u 47 FRESH GROUND BEEF svc: u. 39: m cempepeneagr t JULY 7, 1954 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, 4 Weruit for your table i is always Fresher from WRIGLEY’S Sweet Large Luscious NORTHWEST BING *Large “Juicy CALIFORNIA Santa Rosa Lily Brand - Grade “A” Large EGGS WRIGLEY’S Old Fashioned or Boling, 33 Country Churn Doz. in Carton ) 7 teenies Butter PINCONNING aan rid i Ci. =6 J | CHOCOLATE DRINK S=r-i «=3°29° ical LONGHORN "fun or Soa u. 49: CLOVER HONEY “ss ts 5 @ Nippy @ Gorlic KRAFT LINKS a + : « 3 . ‘ + % é : Pp ; r Py & wt * S ge Og PS ea * at & * ® ‘CHERRIES Plums *Firm ¢Ripe Yellow Now Is the Time for Canning € FREESTONE Ibs. ( an $95 . CALIFORNIA CANTALOUPE vt.irsx. 2 for 49° FRESH ORANGE JUICE ee = 49 CALIFORNIA SUNKIST LEMONS .3532.54.29° FLORIDA LIMES "Brncnns” —00'tice © tee 29" TOP FROST (fl CULTIVATED BLUEBERRIES uc. —», 29° Breaded Fantail -{ CALIF.PASCAL CELERY "“SGc\ic" 29° deta t= re HOME GROWN LEAF LETTUCE =. 15" RED DIAMOND WALNUTS =i; 49" Mesto: Toe 5 STOKELY’S Finest LIMEADE ‘= 97: FRUIT COCKTAIL iii, =97" Top Freet — tn Syrup BLUEBERRIES 234 CHICKEN PIE 350.54? STRAWBERRIES 4°98" 5: ead 7° PILLSBURY 'S S2ue's.cn'e'mi 3 nn 89° OUNNEE PILLSBURY’S “nu, 49" BROCCOLI w=» Dee GINGER BREAD ("Sir" 2 ny 49° ae “s ™ MELON re Ai Mims ASPARAGUS i | 222 29: OW Balls 29 Ot, Ae. 7 COUPON ON BAG WORTH 10¢ | eae TOMATO JUICE = ascten 17" ON Your NEXT PURCHASE PO ASPAGHETTI =o oor, 2 eS 25° ' GOLD » | WRIGLEY’S TEA BAGS fxr 4539 | | a MEDAL Bek B VANILLA WAFERS trict, ‘Ast 25° FRUIT DROPS iris, A 29" FLOUR HONEY GRAHAMS ‘333 35° Perea BROCK MINTLETS occ. $a 39° Tes, 4 5 SA BRACH’S JELLY ores i 29° ay come BROXIES =" irom 39 —— = =“ 39° These Prices Effective , Thru Saturday, July 10 GLACIER Genuine Pink Alaska | SALMON 30 Tall 1-Lb. Can e 536 NO. PERRY Open Thur.-Fri. til 9 P.M. @ 45 SO. TELEGRAPH | © 59SO0.SAGINAW 398 AUBURN OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY TILL 9 P.M. MEL-O-CRUST | CRACKED WHEAT BREAD ee - beem admitted as false. a FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M. 4 wee Ae od \ oil Bae v rg 2 t a Red Beestiot on Way Out as Food- Grows Shorter | Russian as well bs foreign scien- | tists derided Lysenko'’s theory. | the facts of life| They called it a fairy tale and | Prof. Trofim | called him a witch doctor. iracle man of |. But six years ago this. month; the | feentral committee of the Russian | ;}Communist party formally proved the Lysenke theory. A few} Ukrainian , | weeks later the Academy of Sci-| cated to be an ences of the Soviet Union dutifully job Now the authoritative Journal of General Biology, published by called Lysenko's theory taken.” to support the theory was faked. his word on plant life has been law followed suit sonally criticised Lysenko for cov- ering up a planning expert who has been fired from his government the Academy of Sciences, has | ap-| Lysenko is now 56. The son of a peasant, he was edu- agricultur al scien- \tist. He first started announcing | It has said that evidence | THE PONTIAC PRESS. as They Ride Streetcar LOS ANGELES w& — Commuters | ple supply of kibitzers. on the streetcar route here and suburban Bellflower have never had: it so good Their conductor, V. between WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 | | Now, the card fiends have a board, | | Bears Greek Gifts cards, score sheets — and an am More than 500,000 railway pas- | sengers enter and leave New York | c NEW BRITAIN, Conn. (UP) —| Mayor John L. Sullivan, campaign- | | ing for re-election, received a con- | tribution of 5,000,000 Greek drach- Pretty-| City each, day through the G rand | mas towards his campaign fund. “‘unsub- | Man, has roped off a special see-| Central and Pennsylvania terminal | | stantiated and enssentially mis- [tion of the car for card players. | stations. But he wasn’t worried about break- | ing election laws, limiting such con- | | 7 | tributions. The sum came to sas ($16 in U. S. currency. Pontiac's Most Complete Selection of Unpainted Furniture The - Pick and Paint Store 143 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9562 dig The ten-state Missouri River ba- | sin containg 582,000 Sarmers and | ranchers. Oklahoma leas all other states | | of the union in Indian popuation-; Now there are strong indications | ™, | revolutionary theories as far back that Lysenko is on his way out | The highest honors were heaped as 1929. It took him 2) years to} If he really is, it will mean that |" [Lysenko. To oppose him, in| peach the top. But in Russia it Russia, was to court disaster | does not take After Josef Stalin's death last | year, Premier Georgi M”~ Malen- | kov and Communist party first |Secretary Nikita’ S. Khrushchev embarked on the food program. The program lagged, and‘ re- ports started coming out of Mos- | cow that Lysenko’s theory was has been called to answer for failure of the Kremlin's at tempt to increase farm output and overcome an increasingly se- rious food shortage. it will man also that at long last Lysenko’s theories have get from the top to the bottom Clarkston Man Placed ‘on Two Years Probation Lysenko is the biologist who! being re-examined. The re-exami- | two years probation and assessed | startled the world of science in the} nation had nothing to do with his | $200 costs yesterday by Circuit | | 1940s with his radical theory of! theery, actually. Judge George B. Hartrick for} the effect of environment on plant Soviet scientists. and undoubted. breaking and entering in the night- life time ly a lot of high Soviet officials, | had known it was phony. But Khrushchev, the No, 2 man had personally taken responsibility for the food program. Lysenko went so far, for in- | Khrushchev — so far — can do no stance, as to assert that Soviet | wrong . —— scientists. had succeeded in | Variolis ministries were criti- Michigan peadaces 92 per cen changing wheat inte rye. , 'cised for failure. Khrushchev per- at the nation’ s white pea beans Briefly, the theory is that a plant may be changed by its environ- ment and it not necessarily subject to the accepted laws of heredity. Hill pleaded guilty May Kremlin's | breaking into the Township, last May 8 and also ad mitted two other school breakins Floyd D. Hill, 20, of 5250-Clarks- ton Rd., Clarkston, was placed on 24 to Sashabaw School at. $275 Maybee Rd., Independence long for a man to In Conjunction With . TEL-. avroy SULY JAMBOREE e! NON ONDEREAND Lp VS acsenre ITS VERY FIRST STORE-WIDE SALE! Great savings in every department . of the wearing season. Listed below are but a few of the great buys you will find. COME! SHOP! SAVE! Infants’ Wear — Boys’ Wear to 16. Girls’ and Sub Teens — Apparel for Chubbies. Toys and Gifts. Reg. ti $1, 59 Girls’ Shorts—Halters “sys Smart styles, cool pee cottons. spss . now at the height Sizes 3 to 6x, 7 to 14. * . 9 a a . Reg. $2.99 Girls Dresses Sweet and cool summer styles, cotton plisse. Sizes 1 ta 6x. Reg. $4.99, sizes 7 to 14, $2.88. Reg. *3.00 Girls’ Swim Suits Satin lastex and nylon in smart styles. Sizes 2to 8. Reg. $3 00 Girls Cotton Skirts Washable cottons in prints and solids. Sizes 3 to 6x, 7 to 14 Reg. *8.99 Sub- Teen Dresses 2 pieces Bolero, and sheer cotton styles. Sizes 8 to 14 . $y99 $ pos spss Reg. $21.99 Girls’ Spring Coats SHes Final clearance, all wool ‘toppers and full lengths. Sizes 7 to 14....$12.88 Sizes 3 to 6x Reg. $2.49 Girls’ Pajamas 1, 2 and 3-pes. styles in cool, no-iron plisse. Sizes 1 to 8 ae gine Retin Rie Be Bioline Reg. $1 49 Boys’ Shirts—Shorts Fine cotton knit polo shirts, plisse and gebardine shorts. Sizes 3 to10........ . , Reg. $2.49 Boys Sport Shirts Cool and dressy, no poder Plisse, cottons, nylons. Sizes 4 to 14 Reg. $1.99 Boys’ Wash Slacks Cool; easy to wash, no iron, plisse and denims. Sizes 2 to 10 ©... ee Reg. *2.99 Birdseye iianene $y 44 First quality. Absorbent. Birdseye. Limit 2 dozen........ DOzZ. Reg. *1.99 Baby Bonnets Cut, washable piques, corgandy, Boys’ » girls’ ..... Reg. $1.59 Baby Sun Suits is) 7 bloomer styles. Sizes CORDFCOCBRC CCR REP SHAS Cee een see eer enness A!R-COOLED |! ONDERLAN °° “Best for Children” FE 5.9955 39 TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER FREE PARKING bc od pe ee al es ee c ACun SALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY nin DRUG. YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT ham’s STORES 20 ‘MAGNESIA("?") 12 OUNCE SIZE: CUNNINGHAMS OWN SAVE.’ : CUNNINGHAMS OWN: BUY NOW. " OUNCE SIZE: CUNNINGHAM'S OWN...... PASTE ptt BREATH SWEET, TEETH WHITE * This gaily decorated icnscal wheels that play when you kids will want, it has move them. Measures length. Get one want and deserve Horse Ri - START 17" at head, 9” et tedey. Good little SAVING TODAY! ve Now This New Novel Wey TREASURE BOWL SAVINGS BANK 89: New clear fishbowl sav- ings bank lets you see > what. you save. Deco- rated with fish. Has locking cover with 2 heys. Seve to- day. BOLT INSECT BOMB I2-ounce spray type can. Only. .... 2.0... 5.cceceeec cece one of the fine—Quality Made—Kiddie ANTROL ROSE SPRAY For The rapes Pienic Fold-Away PICNIC _ GRILL djustable $449 Fire Pan Cooks, frys and broils. Folds into @ self-containin carry: ing case. Wonderful for picnics — outings of all Harnad Get a° picnic grill Cup Size $129 Get one of these lovel tea. pots today. Pick your 4 2 ef color and style from this ave on this ty offer. Limited quan. Dr. Miles NERVINE For nervous b= 18%" Brim LADIES’ STRAW HAT tension sleep- less nights, nerv- —_— » Mi oo 5 9 P ous headaches. ib 8 ounce Bide —y The Kids Will Love It 398 : BUBBLE HAT er Sits en head, r. Miles metre! QS Bl BACTINE The Family Anti- septic. Wonderful fee burns and sun- burn. Greasless, a Iren MAGAZINE stainless. RACK 6 ounce 8 3 c 14" D size only I wider $4.49 Kestrel Plestic Dr. Miles INFLATED One-A-Day CUSHION Multiple Vitamins Great fer r3 Eflective supple- f the beach. ag ga Bereble, Tight. eight, eens = vr SPORTSMAN BINOCULARS SOR: ores a | 1 Se] GOLF BALLS Seve Money Qn Every Pack “MARVEL CIGARETTES For a — sent for less then regular ‘priced cigarettes, switch today. set gle or. King Size. At our BUY THEM | BY THE CARTON! CC COH OH SETH ee TECH EH EHH ee eBesertssee Regular size. Only oes ee ee ee ee eee ee 2 a ® + ~S 7 F 3 SOs hae Zi a r A Size Bottle 2 Reg. S0c TUBES . TOOTH PASTE 21 69C Limited eaniie buy Today. WORLD'S LARGEST SELLING wosdu Lil [ames $p or A Better Gome of Golf TRAVELAIR TABCI iN Anti - Histaminic Anclgetic ti $5.69 onl for 12 49... Aplover "87 e Surety “ OP U.S. Govt. Graded “CHOICE” Tenderay BEEF Tender [0 Times out of [0 identified with the Blue and White Tenderay Label Kroger-Cut Tenderay gives you more meat, for your money ...less bone, less waste. The Kroger Tenderay method mokes finest U.S. "Choice" __ Grade Beef tender with- out ageing ... without loss of flavor and |uices. BETTER BEEF VALUES Two U.S. Gov't Grades .. . Commercial or Choice 100% pure U.S. Inspected lean, red beef, ground TENDE RAY wee We reserve the right to limit quantities, Prices effective through Sat., July 10, 1954 fresh several times every day. Less fat, less. waste, Sf 14 ‘Buy the 3-Ib. pkg. — Save 15¢ Kroger—the finest—Lb. 43¢ Ground Beef= _____ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 Japanese Pinball King arene of oS ‘eee eign Modernize Cotton Gins; i all a ne hops af but) Uses Deception to Have | Later. after ee — First Confederate . n inscription at se of the tons, and automatically: stop ma- ; discovered the man no er Is Honored With Statu a : e. statue wag written by the gover- Switchboards Added | chines, if cértain types of hazards Road Cleared to Tavern in Detroit, He had gone instead Found in Virginia Hotel NAGOYA, Japan (UP) — Japasi| nor of Aichi Prefecture, center of| BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UP)—The | | arise. PORT HURON (UP) During] to a tavern. MARTINSVILLE, Va, @—A flag 24 finally ha& gotten around to erect | the pinball machine industry cotton gin is catching up with the = = - | the height of the season's worst)” ~~ —+ rage nanons 4 _— here , ; ? ing a statue in hono: » St. C ; , . © SERVICE — rin r of one ‘of | | push: button era. | Knew He Was Coning blizzard, the St. Clair County Road Wrong Service Branch wanted to know what it was. No- elon You Tear Weak r Most famous citizens , the) Mail Must Ga Through | The Continental Gin Co. expects | Commission received a call from body. seemed to know, We'tt Your Tour Freel inventor of the pachinko pinball | to make deliveries this year of the| NORWALK,” Conn. (UP)—Wil- | 4 man who asked that a rural road}, HARTFORD, Conn. (UP) — A| A reporier:tooked in the dicton- Phone Mi 4-5711 game. FALL RIVER, Mass. (UP) — | first console switchboards designed | liam Beuchler found a gold wed-| near his home be cleared so he| week after completing a prison) ary under “flag.” There it was— ‘ +s P Five hundred pachinko parlor op- James Margarida has just received | to give one man control over the | ding ying in his yard and by means | could drive to Detroit for- his sis-| sentence for illegally wearing a/| the first flag of the Confederacy, Tickets, Reservations erators sponsored the life , sized, a postcard mailed to him by his | rows of fiber-combing machinery | of initifls traced it to Mrs. Harry | ter’s funeral t Navy uniform, an Army veteran, | used until the familiar Stars and to Anywhere bronze likeness of T. Masaqnura, friend, Francisco Pires, while Pires | in big cotton gins De Weil, who said she lost it Donald M. Belyea, a mainte-} Joseph H. Harvey, was sent to jail| Bars flag was adopted. 379 Hamilton, Birmingham the “king of Pachinko,’ who in-| was a private in the Army at Fort The controls can start or stop the | 18 years ago. She was so happy to! nance engineer, called an emer-|on a similar charge. Police said vented the national fad which takes Dix. N. J., five years and four machinery, move it in or out of | get it back that she baked him a| gency crew off a main highway to! it was his fifth conviction for this} Macaroni and spaghetti are made Grace Plummer Reilly : millions of yen yearly from the} months ago. - ginning position for ginning ort cake. | plow a path for the call offense. from durum wheat, : ; Mr er Has The Values...Vine Ripened Californ a: The largest Melon you'll find in town. Sizes desertbad ' by number can be very confusing. In Cantaloupe Potatoe car ng wane 5 Pook 99: Lemons Bing olives aon. ee 6 for 29° they wary from 45 te 23. The smaller the number, ° the larger the melon. This week Kroger is featuring * ; Firm, mellow, golden ripe. 2 c ideal fer these c Jumbe 23 Size Cantaloupe to assure you of mroe Ba . . bb. 0 S i for luesious maton for your monty. nana Serve at breakfast. s s re im eonqmae we Jum @, Sugar Pascal Celery .i'v~. "28° Honeydews "ws" us AQ: Fresh Carrots.c-c.2 ‘; 29° Blueberries ‘:"" » 39° Cherries2*™. "2.9: TENDER SHOULDER CUTS ROUND BONE RDAST FOR SWISS STEAK | wiss Steak \\ Chuck Roast | ow. U.S. Gev't. Breaded “Choice” * 3° bene roasts. C Freezer Beef Sale! ame: " De Hvgrade Cry-O-Vac Wrapped Hygrade “Old Fashioned” Frontquarters ‘wi Bel: ..° 08 Beef Bacon i: 43 7) = Oo rs) mi 5,000 doses of chloromycetin, to revolution-torn Guatemala is being | Davis & Co., | announced Tuesday. Bazley’s Thursday SUPER SPECIALS! 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET -. Se 63: ‘CUBE. STEAK @®eee 'This Valuable Coupon Entities the Boorey’ = 3 Ito@ 1-Ib. Limit, Fresh ‘REMUS UTTER =) ‘B eee With Any Purchase ! Oe ee ie ee a ae oe ol Cube Steaks 79: Hunt Table King WHOLE KERNEL CORN or PEAS Tomato Catsup 14 Ounce 2 for 296 FRESH Large Grade A CHICKEK ou BREAST (): Breast-O-Chicken Snunk Tuna Doz. 3 $700 No. 1 Tall Can Fruit Cocktail $*) 99 2 Ib. Can Donald Duck Tomato Juice 19: For That Duncan Hines White Cake Mix ~ Easy-to-Make CIRCUS CAKE 37 46 oz. Can California 125 Ft, Roll Gut Rite Wax Paper 2" 49° Oranges Birds Eye Frozen STRAWBERRIES 49 SUPER MARKET 3405 Ormond Rd.) 3286 Auburn Ave. Auburn Heights White Lake Cantaloupe for hi) COMMUNITY ALWARD’S DAVEY'S MARKET MARKET FRANK'S FULKERSON GROCERY Northern Toilet Tissue & Rolls 33 scars FELICE QUALITY Birds Eye Frozen LEMONADE The Saverite Summer Drink TENUTA'S SUPER 239 Wien 1012 Main St. 2701 nabeth #900 Petrie STORE MARKET = ii3-sms. j.MARKET MARKET Rochester — Loke Reed . 1321 Commerce 2205. Telegraph -*eehenter 856 Osklend 3515 Sashabow Pontiac Pontiac Lake Read Road Drayton Plains “WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 THE pa aS Cied PRESS —— > ee —_ Home Construction in New Subdivision to ee ~ PONTIAC, FUN AT THE LAKES — The above acrial photos show some of the people that flock weekly to beach and lake facilities in Oakland County. The top picture shows swimmers and picnickers at Dodge Park 4 at Cass Lake. The center photo shows MICHIG — ‘ : . a J George Washington's Loyalty Oath Deserves Consideration Today By IRENE CORBALLY KUHN Irene Corbally Kuhn is the author of “assigned to Adventure” and ‘The Enemy Within”, and a contributing edi- tor of the American Mercury Ever since the congressional in- vestigations made the people of the United States aware of the infil- tration of their government by Communist spies and sympathiz- ers, there has been controversy about the loyalty oath many Amef- icans have ‘been asked to take. Most Americans take the simple, straightforward position that a man who has nothing to conceal, nothing to fear, shoul. :be proud and willing to take an oath of loyalty to his country. Other Americans, who hate Communists and communism and would in no circumstances betray their country, take the opposite view and call the loy- alty oath requirement an insult. There was an earlier American, a general, who must have thought bitterly that the law requiring him ti take a loyalty oath was one di- rected specifically at him by his enemies in Congress Nevertheless, the general signed the oath. The year was 1778 and the general's name was George Washington. Nearly three years be- fore, on July 3, 1775, Washingtun had taken command of the armies of the new nation and he had been at the head of his troops hrough- | out the intervening period When, during the Gethsemane of the American cause in the terrible winter of 1777-78, Congress passed a law requiring all officers of the Army and Navy and all persons holding civil office under the gov- ernment to swear allegiance, Washington did not ask that he be made an exception. He signed the oath of alle- giance in May 1778. In June of that year, the British gave up Philadc iphia and the American fortunes took an upswing. Wash- inigton’s enemies in the Congress must have felt pretty small. However, it was not until Octo- bér 21, 1781, after another three years, that Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown and all of Washing- ton's faith and the young nation's sacrifices were justified. In the National Archives in Washington is the original of the oath of allegiance Washington signed, a testament to his belief that in the new nation he did ‘so much to create and preserve, he was no better than the next man; that he was éntitled to no more than his humbiest soldier. “I, George Washington, comman- der in chief of the Armies of the United States of America, do ac- knowledge the -United Statés of America to be free, independent and sovereign states, and declare that the people thereof owe no al- legiance. or obedience to George the Third, King of Great Britain; and I reriounce, refute and abjure any: allegiance or obedience to him and I do swear that I will to the utmost of my power, support, maintain and defend the said Unit- ed States, against the said King George the Third, his heirs and successors and his or their abet- tors, assistants and adherents and will serve the said United States in the office of commander in chief as aforesaid which I now hold, with fidelity, aecerding to the best of my skill and understanding.” The document was witnessed by one of Washington's major gener- als at Valley Forge. That was 176 years ago, but it bears thinking about_more today than at any time in our history. Free men give their allegiance to their country freely. Indeed, with them, loyalty is an article of faith, accepted without question of doubt. In totalitarian countries there is ne such concept, There is only the debasing and degrading obedience to this dogma or that dictator to protect one’s interests, to save one's skin, to live another day. Slaves’ loyalty can be purchased with fear and held with fear, and its strength and tenure are as un- certain as the master's whims. But free men, and the allegiance they give freely, cannot be bought or sold or bartered, + | | East Montcalm street do not vio- | | me | sume work in the subdivision, | said he Pm ‘Commissioners OK Plat Change No Violation of Pontiac | Building Code Seen in Green, Sarko Section Pontiac City Commission last | night concurred with the opinion) , of City Attorney William A. Ewart | that changes in the plat of the Green and Sarko Subdivision on late Pontiac's building code The firm will be allowed to re- Where about 150 structures are being built. Work had been held up for two weeks while a decision on the plat changes was reached In other action John E. Carry Commissioner said he felt resi dents in the Lois street area had} been improperly assessed for drain | improvements done last year Marry W. Vauts thought the matter should be settled in court and Commissioner Carry's motion te correct the assessment ro was defeated, with only Commissioner John A Dugan supporting him. A resolution was passed com mending Dr. John F. Spring D. D. §., for to the growth and betterment" of Pontiac. Dr. Spring is retiring after 61 years in professional life here An engineer's cost estimate of $4,881 was accepted od Fervent construction of a comb: in Columbia from ey hag “100 feet east. Deleted from this year's pub- He improvement program was on First from Highwood to Jos- lyn and on Smith from Jose- phine to James K. A public one week on intention to construct curb, gutter, draingge and _re- 1K to Smith. swimmers at the beach at Pontiac Lake. In the bottom photo, sailboat enthusiasts are shown in an Independence Day race as they swept past Apple Island in Orchard Lake. A 20-inch telephoto lens was used to take these = | Action was delayed one week on \a resolution to receive a special lassessment roll for road-mix oil | on Second from Jeslyn to Ivy Confirmation was deferred of special assessment rolls for con struction of: | A water main and a sanitary |} sewer in Pleasantview from Hills- * | mont to the east line of lot. 181, Woodward Estates Baltimore to Pennsylvania. Sanitary sewers in Ariene from Perry to First and between Ar- lene and Fuller on Madison, Mansfield, Tennyson, Beverly eand First. added as partners in a SMD pack age beer and wine license at 220 S. Telegraph Rd. Action on other, liquor license transfers and appli cations was deferred because of | ithe absence from the meeting of | Mayor Commissioner Floyd P. Miles. Specia] assessment folls were confirmed for construction of: Two-inch blacktop pavement on | Douglas from Pike to Mount | Clemens, Bliss from Hill to Park- | hurst and Belmont from Michigan to Hazel Bend, Curb, gutter drainage and re- lated work on Willard from Cen- ter to Paddock, Wilson from Go- ing to East Boulevard and Rut- gers from Baldwin to University. A resolution was approved cor- for two-inch paving on Algonquin | the street had been previously as- sessed. | | | “his contribution | | gutter, drainage and related work | hearing was deferred) help . | lated work om Linden from James | ever Road-mix oil on Emerson from James and Paul Felice were | William Donaldson — and | BLOODY RIOTS—Since 1952 when bloody riots were touched off in Osaka, ground Japanese Red Continues to By EDWARD R. KENNEDY NEA Special Correspondent | TOKYO—Behind President Eis- | enhower's recent warping that we Kremiin will take over unless we Japan maintain her freedom | lies the hard fact that the Japanese | Red undergrotind is stronger than | Since the |of two years ago, | Communists have changed their tactics from blatant demonstrations to stealthy infiltration, and police intelligence officers are worried. ‘We don't know where they are or what tg look for,’ one harried | gor ernment investigator explained. | “te is only when we stumble on a pistol range or a Molotov cocktail | training center that we get an ink- ling of what's going on—and those | are hard to come by." Despite crowded cities, there are Japan where the Reds can run 'their cland®stine training schools | with little fear of detection. Even the Soviet leadership has gone underground, Japanese po- lice believe. Since the defection of one of its members early this | bloody May Day riots | the Japanese | | vast areas of remote -wilderness in| Jap Commies have changed their tactics and gone under- The scene above shows some of the rioting ifi Osaka. Underground Gain Force Other mission members have since left without fanfare. When the Russian patrol boat captain was ordered deported for running a spy courier net in Northern Japan, there were reports he had attempted te de- fect, and that U.S. agents of- fered him $56,000 te do so, But the Communists physically pre- vented him from making a break. Although there are no more Red- agitated mobs storming police boxes, and few Gommunist-signed leaflets and posters are seen on the streets, police say the Japanese Communist Party has a member- ship of 100,000 and a swarm of 300,000 sympathizers gradually in- | filtrating every phase of national | activity. Acknowledged leaders are 24 men whom Gen, Douglas MacAr- thur barred from public office in 1950. At a recent trial of one of them, the court declared there was no ground on which to arrest these men in hiding. Informed sources say they'll re- main in hiding to wield the tre- mendous underground power they year and the deportation of a | have built up, rather than come to Russian patrol boat captain on espionage charges, the non-offi- | cial Russian Mission in Tokyo | has reduced its staff from 125 to 16, The defection incident, | made the biggest Cornmunist head- jan promptly hopped aboard a U-S./| youths | united by tight military discipline, Rustovorov, lines since they took cover, occured | skating team. With the team came a squard of | j hefty, non-skating Russians. Their o escort a comrade named sian Mission, unreliable Red. Rostevorov recting a special ass¢ssment roll | Army bus and disappeared Later, other strong-arm escorts | sion's leader home “‘in ill health.” which | during the visit of the Russian ice- | the surface. This undeground empire ts tepped by q military organiza- tien of three unite—the Military Commission, the Nuclear Self- Defense Corps, and the Indepene dent Partisans, The Commission is charged with | building -‘‘military organizations” among the masses and giving them guidance. The Nuclear Self-Defense Corps secretary of the Rus-| would spearhead any revolution. back to Moscow as | It has about 500 units and about 8000 members — ‘“‘revolutionary and military workers’ Their duties include training the when it was learned that part of | turned up. with the visiting Soviet | masses in military techniques, agi- | wrestling team and took the mis. tation and propaganda, mulation of weapons. accue RI Navy has printed an article with some details about her and deduc- tions as to some other probable features. The article is digested in the July issue of The Military Re- view, published by the Army's Command and General Staff Col- lege. The Navy says the Sverdiev is 490 feet long with a Ti-feot beam, indicating a displacement of about 16,300 tone—a little less than the heaviest U.S. cruisers of the Salem class, Armanent is reported to consist RUSSIAN MIGHT — The Soviet cruiser, Sverdiov, one of a number. of her class which the USSR is reported to have in service with more on the ways. British Publication Gives Description of Newest Soviet Navy Cruiser Class British experts. By AP NEWSFEATURES * eee A sensation of the naval review staged| graphs were taken, but at a distance, and in connection with the coronation of Eliz-| some external equipment had been re- abeth II a year ago was the appearance 6f | moved, so it was not possible to tell much- a new Soviet cruiser, the Sverdiov. Photo-! about the ship at the time. Now the British publication The¢—— of four triple 6inch gun turrets, 12 3.4inch gun houses, which may be gas-proof and air-conditioned, 32 37-mm antiaircraft guns in twin mounts, two sets of quintuple tor- pedo tubes arid two chutes for lay- ing mines: ’ Belt armor is believed to be about four incites thick, deck armor one or two inches. “It was interesting to see,” the Navy says, ‘that the Sverd- lov carried both visual range finders, mounted in cupolas Ger- % e eo | VARA. Carhwr AY eee Tal fushow a Pour Shot Aa Aru | a wth then | step din hg than genet. rita Scout Day Camps Teach. Girls Many New ‘Skills _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 ' 7 pg “Wild Meadows” and “West Winds,” day camps spon- re sored by the Northern Oakland County Girl Scout Council offer a varied program. “Wild Meadows,” which is situated on the banks of the Huron River, affords numerous water V sports for the camper. Karen Denham (below) of South § Marshall street demonstrates the technique of boating to Gail Murray of Warner drive. Miss Denham is waterfront camp aide. Ileane Wilson of Preston street, Jean Rexford of Dray- ton Plains and Kathleen Wylie of Hatchery road, (left to right, right photo) take over the duties of the reflector oven on their fire table in baking cookies for their noon meal _ A beginner who shows promise with the bow and arrou ts /ris Bunyan of Windiate Park drive (lower right me W ith 65 girls taking archery lessons, it is important to re- trieve every arrow. ‘ - Reeds are woven into many useful articles to be used in “West Winds” day camp. Margaret Wilson of Grayton street (left, bottom photo) and Grace Ann Stoll of W ater-» ford have gathered the reeds to begin making placemats. . Pentise Press Phetes | xiao negeal Rigs sa al Ars a r “SERA 7 an Lilly Dache Plans ‘Finish’’ Woman veal Dache, whose mangling of the language is also one of her most endear ing ever - young char ms, expressed herself memorably when | 7 the beauty press gathered ‘round | =. to congratulate her on the newest | > facet of“her career — president | © _ SUMMER. HATS IN THREE GREAT GROUPS Group #3 of the two large and flourishing | +> Reg. houses of Lucien LeLong and Ma-| & 100 ae 45.00 Tie Earle. ec weld Goal _ 8.95 15.00 40.00 Asked whether : 12.9 un bard to chit beck and tert 32 10.98 | 3200 Reo #1 hes #2 between designing hats and the heads under them, new makeup, | } hair color and so on, she said: “Tt, will be easier for me! All my life I have felt that woman was never finished. Now — I can fin- ish her!” Come early for best choice including pat- tern Hats, one-of-a-kind in white and alt - =. summer shades. Millinery Selon—Second Floor c7fpahury 48 N. Saginaw [Rey PE e- ] ADEs hundreds 48 N. Saginaw cies in our great COMPLETELY AIR CONDITIONED! st So Wonderful for Summer! SHORT, COOL SMART Cutting & Styling by Oscar! famed brands from regular stock REGULAR to 18.95 REGULAR to 10.95-§ REGULAR to 14.95° - G LA NOLIN : &4 > ° ENRICHED facguelones a wie | Oh arlinigues 4 : No Appointment N Vecessary! ! Ys 1)” Hurry ., . it’s only once in a blue moon you find such an exciting variety of slings, sandals, operas at such exciting savings! Hi, mid, little ond flot heels. Block patent: calf in white, se fed, blue, pastels; spectators. All ssizes in the group. OPEN WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & FRIDAY EVENINGS by APPT. sh PARISIAN. BEAUTY SHOP 7 West Lawrence si. FE 2-4959 Book Store Shoe Salon—Merzzanine Floor oe Z ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ~ JULY 3 » 1954 te COMPLETELY COOLED AIR-- | 48 North Saginaw Street Sale Were to 16.95 Were to 12.95 Were to 10.95 ’ Were to 35.00 Were to 29.95 Were to 24.95 Were to 22.95 Were to 19.95 Were to 17.95 ‘l The STYLES The FABRICS The COLORS One-piece, two-piece Pure silk, acetate Navy Petticoats, boleros Rayon taffetas Black Full skirts, slim skirts - Fine cottons Pastels Jackets, coat dresses Wool knits 7 Prints Wardrobe ensembles Sheer fabrics White Better Dresses—Second Floor i aise = e EE. er": ia ' ; may, ; 4 : & 1 STARTING PROMPTLY THURSDAY: AT-9:30:A.-M, , eee JULY CLEARANCE! SAVINGS TO 50% AND MORE! See What You Save . on BETTER DRESSES. Were to 69.95 Were to 59.95 Were to 39.95 ib The SIZES Junior sizes _ Misses’ sizes Women's sizes Half sizes Brief sizes Sale on BETTER COATS Were to 69.95 Were to 59.95 Were to 55.00 x Were to 35.00 Were to 24.95 Were to 22.95 il Were to 49.95 Were to 45.00 Were to 39.95 1 The STYLES The FABRICS The COLORS Boxy, fitted Poodle Navy Shorty, long Tweed White Flared, straight Nylon Pastels. Three-quarter length Imported Plaids, checks Topper «length Fleece Novelties Coat Salon—Second Floor Were to 69.95 Were to 59.95 Were to 55.00 “| Were to 49.95 Were to 45.00 Were to 39.95 Were to 35.00 Were to 29.95 Were to 24.95 tl “hs The STYLES - The FABRICS The COLORS Box styles Imported wool Navy Blouse, vest Gabardine White 2-3 pieces Rayon acetate Pastel Dressmaker, Wool jersey Novelties Tailored Flannel Checks Suit Salon—Second Floor ? = ote E Sale on BETTER SUF Were to 99.00 Were to 89.95 Were to 79.95 é | The SIZES Junior sizes Misses’ sizes Women's. sizes Half sizes Brief sizes Were to 89.95 Were to 79.95 Were to 75.00 Oh The SIZES. Junior sizes Misses’ sizes Women's sizes Half sizes Brief sizes a: 7.98 Sale on BUDGET DRESSES sas 4 93 Cottons, sheer rayons, and spun rayons Dressy and casual styles. Prints, stripes and solids. Perfect to wear now and into fall. Junior and misses sizes. Were to 10.98 ' Were to 12.98 Were to 14.98 Budget Dresses—Second Floor | SUMMER | SKIRTS. Od 5 hee Cottons, rayon spuns, sheer spuns, rayon failles. Slim, flared, and pleated styles. White ground prints, navy and summer colors. iF Sizes 22 to 28. Were to 5.98 Were to Were to 8.98 Skirts—Main Floor ee ats. e - SUMMER. BLOUSES ] ‘ | Were to = si Kee ree 2.98 scx rete IDE We ri eto” sip ~ 5.98 Were to , B9_ 7:98 Cotton, nylon, sleeveless or shost sleeve styles “Sale ( on BOUCLE | SWEATERS | &9 Orlon or nylon, cardigan or slip-on styles. Small collars, perfect to wear with skirts or slacks. White or pastels. Sizes 34 to 38. Were to 3.98 al ® + Sweaters—Main Floor . Original Tags on Every Garment! ee ol SS tee Pa 3 me >} ¥ for comfort, fit, - ERR w * 4 — == with convertible or scoop necks. White or x el postel, prints, stripes or solidi colors. ere Sizes 32 to 38. 8 og, Blouses—Main Floor ba , painanans _€ A Dian ret ee ome! f Pay te 6 ORs amaadae Oe feinicdlle: tee? <2 ee “ae come Boys’ | ie oe GIRLS’ DRESSES Were to 5.95 Were to 8.95 Ass Were to 10.95 Broadcloth, seersucker and‘ cot- ton sheers. Solid, print and stripes. Dressy and sport styles. Sizes | to 3, 3 to 6x, 7 to 14, 8 to 14. Gitls—Lower Level Boys’ SHIRTS Were to 2.95 pe Cotton plisse or puckered nylon. Short sleeve with conveftible collar, Checks, prints and solid colors. Sizes 3 to 8. Boys—Lower Level SHORTS Were to 2,95 33: Nylon cords,” cotton gabardine, chambray, denim. Tailored Style Were to 3.98 Were to 5.95 | pas Were to 7.95 48 | Cabana and Eatons. Two-piece sets. In cotton checks, seer- =e sao Hae Ew to 8. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7.1956 | ‘Balloon Look’ Coats to Be Popular Pion Newest. Woolens in Whisper Weight Clarkston four miles down, ocean pres- Darsandn's oldest and moot noted Paul Ta a |Exhibiting Paintings The Pontiac Society of Artists is sponsoring a one-man show by Paul B. Taylor at the Pontiac City engagement of their daughter, | The new whisper-weight woolens announce the | are anything but a whisper. in the | fashion showcase. It's because this new weight, with its crisp body and dry hand, gives curvaceous girls, tired of dimensional but weighs little, is sii-straight lines, chance to indulge in the blow./ leek above the waist while below, a slim and flattering skirt takes over. Sleeves are full and collar lines McCardellized into a casual, com- fortable look styled with short or thrge-quarter sleeves, open ne~\- line to frame the face and some- times a two-waistline, design. Corenna, = _| is rapidly transforming our follow the cardigan classic ok James GC. of when and where woolens can Cpe iook Aldrich, son }be worn. Now woolens can claim of the Lee A._| ie, reba, pce tn our year K ae of One famous rata a ] ewelr y to Take 7 : steps. ou iad wi . Dwight avenue. step alk ea gag ete Old World Look They are fal ics. Long regarded as the master blender of the world’s ak: S finer fibers, he is introducing | Main Street, U. S. A. as yet, but Michigan State| jew tighter-weights that are |there is a new look in precious College where turning into a heavyweight in- we this er and it has an ° fluence in the hands of such eeertd yea Dibra yg ceccescseecsesesee tenecsntint ~ee Most of the picterea: which may be seen through July 13 are scenes of vacation trips’ taken by mem- bers of the society. At the time the amateur work was done Mr. Taylor had had no instructions in painting The scenes include ‘‘Mountain Brook” — a trail of Mt. Rainier; “Mabry Mill” — an old grist mili along the Blue Ridge Park- way in Virginia and ‘‘Among the «cfRest-of-alit;for-these first = Paradoxical ‘‘Screeno,” a woolen out-of-doors without a coat, is a which looks Qiighttully three- | three-piece separates ensemble in “Gulliver Colors’ plaid. The colors in this case are “Siamese Red” and “London Fog Grey.” Here McCardell contrasts the cir- cular lines of the skirt with a sharp V-neckline on both the NEW YORK — It hasn't reached | matching plaid jacket and the plain grey jersey blouse. Pockets are set in on oblique lines and even the detachable tab fastening on the skirt is Individually styled to } flatter your facia) / contoure NEW HAIR DRYING COMFORT Like the sun and the breeze of a soft Summer's Day! BEAUTAIRE Air- — Hair Dryer graduates of asigorall HE ———— giacier- he was a trend setters as Claire Me- Old World. _———— —: V-shaped! Wenderfully easy ied lake in the Canadian Rock- member of | Cardell. The word here from Fifth Avenue | sleeves are also set-in with « ; ne . Siema Chi Two years ago Claire draped is that the newest designs in dia- V-eneped cased po and Opec Pond She pats ae “s . some coating into the first “Pyra- | monds and platinum are beginning re pe — y : 1 oe es fraternity. mid Coat.” This year, her|to ‘hark back to the creations of ique. site; ‘‘Mt. Manadock'’' — New Hampshire after a painting seen in an exhibit in Old Lynne, Conn.: “Sand Dunes'’' —. Cape Cod at Province Town, and ‘‘Lone Survi vor’ — a picture of a lone tree 40 Attend Meeting a “Balloon Look"’ of 1954 will appear piewelry’s patron saint, Benvenuto A light-weight Seece appears in = RTA ee in the new whisper-weight woolenS. | Cejini. The similarities are show- the important three-quarter length CORE NNA MORTON The McCardell _eredo, _ that ing up—both _in_design gee round-about coat with rounded clothes should fit the individual | «7a fsmanship. corners, huge pockets, and lots of . The charter was draped in mem-| and her way of life, finds a home| what is most evident in such new nnn And all the buttons = SFY of the late Martha Robertson. | '” these six and seven ounce tually button, according to ‘‘e . PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL = Ae in Yosemite | | Babel Lodge Ne oh gata aes jewelry as necklaces, earvings.| 1.4 McCardell tradition. ap iaig Wiens adapt so sai sare brooches and bracelets is a feeling ip acaiiere taxkt the only thik i : oman ' a b hac ear sagy votre Megson ng charge Mich. Completing the scenes are ‘Oc Pontiac Rebekah Lodge 450 held | Sept. 17 e to the American woman s colortu! | of lightness and simplicity of de- that hig these days," ee eee oe ee ee eee tober’ — a scene near Anderson- | its regular meeting Friday hind ; and all-occasioned wardrobe. a ; a ——_ gn, according to the noted con " ' a — : rs Cl M . “Clothes Write, phone or call in person for Free pamphiet. “Mt.| with 40 members present. Mr. and! Cosmic rays pass through the A grey 100% worsted fleck cern. T pleces, instead of eae sites design for ville; “Otsego Lake, N. Y."; q PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 Rainier” : “Our President.” a nd| Mrs. Loran Beech were accepted | bodies of ‘all human beings an| with dark blue silk turns up in | being and looking massive, now easy living.” Both functional and Sg “Early Morning Lake Louise.” : as new members. average of ten times a second. & “Ralicen “‘Lesk” dress - have a ) light and = —- easy-living are these new woolens, ee sag ea OPN DERSLER especially when styled by Ameri- ca’s most representative designer, Or ° Pins*Dramatize High Fashions New seasons have a way of find- ing new places for pins and brooches, and this year fashion suggests the waistline. Whether the midriff is softly wrapped, smoothly fitted, beltless or casu- ally dropped, it can be beautifully dramatized with an exquisite pin. And exquisite they are, reflecting the trend toward fragile, flower- like delicacy. Flowers are, in fact, the source of inspiration for many diamond : 1 jewelry designs—graceful, asym- a metric sprays with tiny mobile dia- . Sorry = mond drops set in platinum. Ru- No Returns! bies, emeralds, sapphires and other 7 colored gems bring contrastin : . No Approvals! : . 7 | ee, FE. 3-718 ee —_ — = — ee _ A FINER oo ~~! comfiel an Starts. Tonight... Open ‘til 9 + xcHION SHOP Park at Our Front Door! 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. i | color to shining diamond flowers, | wreaths, bow knots and scrolls. In costume jewelry pins, blossoms | add pale color, spilling from min- 'jature golden cornucopia. Shock | white enamel in bright gold-finish | settings spark springtime’s popular | navy blue. Quality summer fashions at reductions of 1/3 to 12 original price! Excellent selections of newest summer dresses! formals! cottons! cocktail dresses! summer suits! coats! toppers! play clothes! swim suits! shoes! hats! accessories! ... a om Qs cotton dresses Values to $29.95 8 $19 sheers, voilles, golfers, pimas, prints, ' better dresses designer dresses, formals, cocktail dresses, Ann Fogarty, Clare McCardell, Carolyn Schnurer “| Values to $45.00 +18 24 28 Juniors 9 to 15 — Misses 10 to 20 — Half Sizes nylons, jerseys, dots, sunbacks Play Clothes — ~ ‘Summer Hats ) Semi " Ann a | C rr white rick-rack trims shorts, pedal pushers, this romperette swimsuit. BAER RG Aare F . bras, jackets, blouses he halter strap may be re 10° values $422 Te $9" \ OFF ide hens bra side boning gives strap- 312 to 5.98 less assurance. POD ER ee cee. * ie a ee * en Me 3 ikon as task cae = sage of yellow carnations. Beauty Salon savings! You'll want several pairs . .. So be here early!! by McCall’s. It is an example of| Following the reception for 250/] 45 5 pa. ge FE 46-2878 how to put much into little space. | guests at the Knights of Pythias SHOP EARLY ! $16 Values to $10.95 . | 1 2 3 Rough Straws ... Milans... | | =Faittes Black > White . . «Navy... Pastels. ALL SALES FINAL! GLENHAVEN SUITS , NiVhites and Colors, Were $22.95 andi 625 CO. Special Purchase Cole of California and Jerry Gilden BRAS—GIRDLES _ Clearance of Discontinued — Numbers. Nationally Advertised. COTTON BLOUSES Values to $5.98 2.°3 *4 BETTER BLOUSES Values to $7.95 $3” = +5” | $3 _ $4 55 * Cotton Dresses Picture the incomparable styl- ing and fabric treatment as is always found in Cole of Cali- fornia and Jerry Gilden dress- es. Only a special purchase makes this group possible. You’ll want to take advantage of these extra “bonus” values. *] 0” SPECIAL PURCHASE— Cole of California 10 GIRDLES Were to $10.00 BRAS Were to $5.00 hs, Be! eyeye' = ta ‘et feel lel Le a UN? BrBiGidien 2 fe} s id fe . VS iPyes < COTTON SKIRTS Values to $7.95 $ 3 98 $ 4° ‘5 at) Biter en rh drew Ebr bi, PP PLAYWEAR REDUCED Shor tS Were $2.98. . Now $219 - Pedal Pushers $979 Were $3.98...Now. 79 . Bras Were $2.50 nae Now $] _— OTHER PLAYWEAR REDUCED: ACCORDINGLY! SWIM SUITS REDUCED Nationally Advertised Brands Group 1 $f Wa to $16.95 10 12 7/22 & *8” 3 Swim Suits 9 Park Free in Rear Group 2 Values to $19.95 om. “Telegraph at Huron Open Every Night ‘til 9 — Saturday ‘til 6:30 — Sunday 2 to 5’ = a = i eee ET a _twenry-ricHT. “Wise Parents. Refuse: to. Settle Little kee : "be Baby Try:t ‘Ws difficult” for a ‘parent to assistance, help him in the be But try not to interfere with his efforts. Too much help ‘ will only discourage him. 7 Summer C amp L or . } Vacation KIMMIN'’S LEATHER GOODS Beauty Clinic By Edythe McCulloch . Good Grooming . . ts an indefinite quality, but basically we will oQ doubt agree. It can be defined .as the routine of the four brushes (hain, toath, clothes and shoe brushes). Pius ona or two other thems in this group the halr brush ts probably the most neglected yet it will) perform miracles 'f dped regu larly. Daily brushing gives fhe hair buster and makes it manageable. The soft sheen of healthy hair myst not be mistaken for the artificial \sheen produced by many shampoos This type of shampoo while pro- @ucing a high luster at first. eften wipes detrimental tf used cons smatly auses the hair in time to becon-¢ Gry. smarly and brittie Obviously a good Permanen' can- get be given to such hair Many vegetable coler res also reb the Wwair of its natura! glow: ard elasticity The best care “a the hatr is the simplest. Mild soap. soft water, good heir cream. daily use of a hairbrush and a good Permanent properly given is the surest way to that lovely head of hair you have often dreamed of ~ Phene Edythe McCulloch Beauty Shop, FE 2-7431, 608 Pontiac Bank Bidg. Se ence Ail THE PONT IAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7; 1956 uarrels. Among e Youngs ters 7 a Children Are Not Bitter So They Quickly. Forget By MURIEL LAWRENCE We are dicing onions into choppe steak when we hear the shrieks from the back yard. We fly to the kitchen door,-In the yard, Kate's doll. carriage is overturned. “Kate herself is sprawled on her brother's back, banging at his shoulders with her clenched fists Between blows, Bobby raises his head like a spouting whale to emit | his shrieks of protest and outrage. 144—24% by - Marna Halos Half-sizer! Make this simple-to- sew, jiffy-to-irot Cool dress now! It has the sealloped touches you like so well—the slimming lines that are just right for the shorter fuller figures. This fashion is pro- portioned to fit—no alteration prob- lems. Pattern 4566: Half sizes 14's. 16'y, 18%, 204g, 22's, 24's. Size {to sew, 16'y takes 4 yards 35-inch fabric. This pattern easy to use, simple is tested for fit. Has com lplete illustrated instructions Send 35 cents in coins for this | pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern: for first-class mailing. Send to.Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St. New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly mame, address with zone. | size and style number. —_ china with $281 Dixie Hwy. Fine China Specials! Here's the china value of the season! Fine imported 22K gold band trim, yours at an excep- tional low price. This beautiful violet pattern china is available in open stock. Fine Imported China Specially Priced Place Setting Save up to 30% 16-P¢. Service for 4 .... 32-Pc. Service for 6 veweeeeeee 3 : 68-Pc. Service for 8 101-Pe. Service for 12 ¢ extra Cups $19.95 DIXIE POTTERY (Near Waterford) For Your Convenience Open Daily & Sun. 10 a.m. to 9 pm. $y “ee eee veveeeees 319,95 OR 3-1894 At the sound of our voice, our daughter scrambles to her feet and yells: ‘“‘He threw mud inte Bobby's got his breath. ‘She stepped on my Strato-liner first!” he gasps. ‘She busted it. She...” “I didnot!’ Kate cries to us. “He shoved it in my face! He. said he betted that I wished he'd let me fiy it! He said ...” In these situations, we act in- stead of talking. We put space be- tween Bobby and Kate. We send Bobby to his room and Kate to the eunporch, We maintain this space between them until their passions have lost their urgency. Even when they've lost it, we should take care in judging the rights and wrongs of our children's quarrel. For ‘each can only present us with prejudiced testimony. It we do make the mistake of judging on the prejudiced testi- mony offered us by our excited children, we are more apt to fo- ment more quarreling than te resolve their argument. We adults are very conscious of our rights to justice, If we our- selves cannot resolve a quarrel with a neighbor, judges, lawyers amt? juries have to decide it for us. As we don't have time for such impartial investigation into chil- dren's fights, we should not judge the fights. Our hasty judgments are dang- erous. If I aecept Bobby's preju- diced testimony against his sister, I can quickly become infected with prejudiced against her. Soon, whenever he and Kate quarrel, I will blame Kate for it, not on the merits of Bobby's case against her, but on my suspicion of Kate as a starter of quarrels. In no time at all, I will be incapable of impartial justice to Bebby and Kate. When children learn that we refuse judgment on thelr quar- rels, they resolve the quarrels themselves, They are able to do it, because their feelings for each other are not embittered and intensified by fear of our disapproval, or by de- pendence on our justification. Employ Tricks to Clean House With its round of outdoor pic- lnics, fishing sprees for men and shopping sprees for women, this is the season that brings forth dust- ers, mops, vacuum cleaners, et al. It’s a time for top to bottom house cleaning. All -housewives will have their share of chores, but keeping a few chore-tips in mind, they can lessen the working hours and the working strain on themselves, too, | For down-on-the-floor chores, use |a rubber mat or kneeling pad. It | will help save stockings and keep knees from roughening, too. For dusting, waxing and polish- ing, try the “glove gimmick.” Smooth a hand lotion or heavy face cream into the hands and cover them with an old pair of tight-fitting cotton gloves. It will save manicures and keep dust and grime from coarsening hands and knuckles. For cleaning electric appliances, let old toothbrushes pay their weigh in platinum. They're ideal for scouring anything that cannot be submerged in water. Everybody will be seein so make sure your legs are smooth and free from hair. The dry-method hair eraser, make mess or fuss. i i | g more of you this summer, s this possible without danger, | Mary. Margaret McBride Says: Casual Modern Parents Seem to OK Psychology seems to have elim- inated strict parents and I sup- pose the new crop of book-edu- cated, complex-conscious fathers and mothers are more efficient than the old. Yet I can't recall that any of the boys and girls I grew up with were juvenile delinquents or did anything much “more vandalistic than hiding gates at Halloween. Even then, though, there were two schools of thought about cer- tain kinds of teenage activities— kissing games, for instance. My mother and father belonged to the severe school, I was uncondi- tionally forbidden to play kissing games, My friend Nell's mother was not so strict. And at Nell's house boys and girls took kissing games as a matter of course. I remember Post Office, in which you paid f6r your letter with kisses, and Clap In and Clap Out, in the eourse of which you were clapped out if you sat in the wrong chair, kissed if you sat in the right one, One night, to everybody's sur- prise, I recklessly made one of the group forming for Clap In and Clap Out. Almost at once it was my turn to leave the room. I blushed } and trembled while I waited. and GOING ON NOW AT— ~~ Summer TRADE- IN SALE! LIBERAL ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD WATCH TOWARD THE PURCHASE OF ANY NEW BULOVA rere), 81 N. Saginaw St. Optometrists—le welers REDMOND’S FE 2-3612 ‘Post Oftice’ when they called me back, I could hardly lift my eyes. Of course I knew that if you didn’t want to, ‘be kissed, the thing te do was to sit in the chair of somebody who couldn't possibly have chosen you. There was a visiting boy at the party, a dashing redhead I had worshipped from afar all summer. I was sure he hadn't chosen me— he didn't even know I was alive— so I could have sat in his chair and been safe But instead I stumbled into the one behind which stood my old friend Frank. I thought he would have been too bashful to choose her!’ The giris pushed me and the boys shoved Frank who, blushing all over his freckled face, finally pecked. me on the cheek. erable and guilt-stricken to get any pleasure out of it! For weeks I worried every time any grown-up came to our house for fear they | might mention the kiss to Papa, | who I am sure would have whipped | 1 big girl that 1 was. Apparent- ly, though, nobody told on me. I suppose the carefree daughter of casual modern parents probably won't remember her first kiss at all. . 5 Remove That Shine When backs of skirts get shiny, | spenge them with a solution of half water and half ammonia. If shine persists. rub lightly with a clean suede brush. Use cheesecloth saturated with vinegar to remove | Shine from blue serge, black silk | and crepe. Bride-to-Be Asks About Gift Rule If Requested, She Can Name Items of Varied Value By EMILY POST | | me, But instead of clapping me | out, as I had expected, the crowd all shouted, “Go on, Frank, kiss | My first kiss. and I was too mis- | Today's first letter is from a bride-to-be who asks: ‘“‘What can I do when friends ask me, ‘What do ae want for a wedding present?’ It is embarrassing to ask for ithe things I want most because | I’ve no. idea how much the person | inte nds to spend. If I name a few items that are trifling I may be depriving myself of something of value that I would otherwise have received. I would appreciate your advice in this matter.” Name a few objects of varying values, You might perhaps name one of high value in a half-jesting voice; and then add seriously, “I'd love anything you give me.” Dear Mrs. Post: When three wom- en arrive together and are waiting .|) to be seated at a wedding, does ;;one of them take the usher's arm '|and the others follow directly be- hind, or should each one wait to || be taken to her seat by an usher? Answer: If there. are several 2 ushers and you the only arriving || guests at the moment, you might each expect to be escorted by an usher. But if there were many people ar- riving you would follow the one in your group who is being escorted rather than wait. Dear Mrs. Post: There seems to | cessity for taking presents to one’s hostess when going to spend a weekend. So to set us straight will you tell us just what is customary according to etiquette among Well- mannered guests. Answer: Etiquette does not exact that anyone take a gift to his (or her) hostess or even that anything\be sent afterwards—ex- cept a thank-you noté. On the other hand, to take a box of candy or a book is a courteous | gesture that many people like to make. Where there are young chil- dren guests almost always take them teys. Often these are no more than trifles. But children are always so pleased with a present — and this naturally pleases their mother, too. IF sturdy build— 4 Leave flutt and frosting to the small- boned. In tune with your sturdier build is @ whisper of sophistication in taffeta and crepe. Miss B.—The ‘dark cotton which appears sturdy and crisp is actual- ly your best daytime choice. For evening the equally crisp taffeta with eye-appeal for fall. Amethyst tones look fresh, teal and emerald green are for festive dresses, too. Louisiana led the 12 southern states in plantings of seedlings. Alabama ranked second and Ar- kansas was third. be a disagreement about the ne-_ ~Fembroidery In Front of Fireplace By ELIZABETH HILLYER How about a new arrangement of furniture in front of the fire-| place? An idea that's different from the usual facing pairs of chairs or loveseats can do won- ders for the style of the room. The grouping sketched breaks up u the typical huddle and is wide q & bay Sauna Wredkdr See how fast Baby makes friends with all these farm and circus pets! Before long, he'll know each by name. Use scraps for gay, little animals—fun to make! Zoo parade quilt! Pattern 654 transfers, applique pieces for quilt, 32 x 44 inches. Send 25 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, your name, address and zone. | A ca cichlids All Child ore: Summer Apparel oe peer a ee eee ae rer On Complete Variety of Gift Items! ce FLORA-MAE | Infants’ Specialty Shop - ' . 718 West Huron Street cS ae > ky chee ee ws | res LOOSE A A LE ER i i EAN SIE Sy CMR IE REESE Sa. Si. FE 2-3220 ah It's Fun to Shift Furniture and open to create a more spa- cious look for the room. It also places the furniture in better rela- tionship to the opposite wall. A low and somewhat lengthy table is equally useful to two chairs, and the lamp en it is extra tall to reach the height of a shorter lamp on a taller table, Balancing the weight of this table and chair grouping is one of today’s new favorite pieces of furniture, the tailored chaise longue. : Beside it and directly in front of the fireplace are two airy tables in brass and glass. The color scheme is striking—shades of bright blue and turqu®ise for upholstery covers and in the pictures, against white for walls and the rug. The room is from the Home Fashion League of Illinois’ color slide film, ‘‘Creating a Home.” Stylists Favor Ice Cream Hues for Upholstery NEW YORK (INS) to pastels if you want Switch to re- ‘|upholster or slipcover your seat- ing pieces in latest ‘style. The ice cream colors, in any flavor you can name, are the ones most favored by decorators for an up-to-date look. Showrooms at this week's In- ternational Home Furnishings Market almost unanimously fea- tured the pastel fabric. An off-white, like vanilla, was the favorite. Next came the deli- cate pinks of strawberry or cherry ice cream, and a cool lemon, like lemon ice. Pale pistachio green was used in many cases, and there was an occasional glimpse of a warm reddish pink like raspberry sherbet. The non-pastels ‘that were pre: ferred were almost all in the blue family. High-fashion turquoise and watery aquamarine were seen everywhere, not as the chief color for a whole suite of upholstered pieces, but as accent colors for single chairs or small sofas. Plain blue, in the softer baby tones, was a popular newcomer in fabric colors. The decorators, not having a home budget problem, relied heavily on synthetic fabrics that could be practical although pas- tel. Women who can't afford to buy the high-priced nylon and dacron upholstery fabrics could probably still have the 1954 pastel look if they kept to removable, washable covers. Cuts Milk Bill You can bring down your milk bill considerably by using dry milk ~ in cooking’and baking and in pre- paring puddings and flavored milk drinks. The magic lily, Lycorsi Squami- gera, grows foliage in the spring, then disappears. A month later, long flower stalks burst through the soil and grow to a height of several feet. (Advertisement) Mrs. Dennis Day WHY DO YOU PREFER BLUE BONNET? “T've discovered that all mar- garines are not the same! Take nutrition, for instance. Smooth- A and D. And it’s a valuable source of food-energy—my chil- dren thrive on it. BLUE BONNET truly is unsurpassed for Flavor, Nutrition, Economy!’ Touring Quebec and . Montreal following their wedding Saturday are the Allen : McBrides. She is the former Norma Gonzalez, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jose Gonzalez of South Shirley avenue. The Joseph UcBrides of Holbrook avenue are his parents. Norma Gonzalez Speaks Vows in Lutheran Church A gown of embroidered French lace over pleated nylon tulle im- ported from Mexico was worn by Norma Louise Gonzalez when she became the bride of Allen Eugene McBride Saturday eve- ning in St. Trinity Evangelical ‘ Lutheran Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jose-P. Gonzalez of South Shirley Avenue and he is the son of the Joseph McBridés of Hol- brook avenue. A crown of orange besesaies secured a veil of pink-tinted nylon, Her only jewelry was a double strand of pearis, a gift of the bridegroom, and peari ear- . rings. She carried a white orchid with lace streamers fastened to a fan, Three hundred guests witnessed the 8 o'clock ceremony perform- ed by the Rev. Ralph C. Claus before an altar decorated with white gladioli, delphinium and can- delabra. Mrs. Homer Howard was matron of honor wearing a pale biue ballerina-length gown of shantung. Other attendants were Jean John, Shirley Van Horn and Beverly Burton wearing shantung gowns of pink, green and orchid, respec- | tively, and carrying mniatching bouquets of carnations. Rose Marie Gonzales of Chicago wore a pink dress for her duties as flower girl and Willy Lupe Guz- man was ringbearer. Donald McBride of Crown Point, Ind., was his brother’s best man and Thomas Gonzalez, brother of the bride, Alfonso Cos- tello and Joe Priestiecy seated the guests, The bride's mother wore an aqua dress with matching accessories and a corsage of gardenias and carnations. Bracelet-length sleeves and a dolman cut lend elegance to a knitted jacket of wool. In alabaster white, it is ideal for cool evenings or over summer dresses. EXPERT Chairs Re-Upholstered As Low As $3,500 Call Today and Save on Manufacturer- ,to-You Prices! william wright Funiture Makers and Upholsterers “all work guaranteed 5 yr$. 270 Orchord Loke Ave. FE 4.0558 f ee MR. and MRS. ALLEN E. McBRIDE A yellow dress with |... white accessories and a corsage of gardenias and carnations was the choice of the bridegroom's mother. Following a reception at Chief- tain Hall, the bride changed to a pink linen dress with white acces- sories and the orchid from her bridal bouquet fora wedding. trip through Quebec and Montreal. Upon their return the newly- weds will reside on Whittemore street. ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, |Respecting Child’s Toys Fine Model Some children destroy property ‘|for the sake of destroying. They are the youngsters who, between _| the ages of 6 and 12, break win- dows, gouge furniture, mark up the walls and smash toys. You can prevent your child from becoming a destroyer. Throwing rocks through the win- dows of vacant buildings, marking up cars, breaking branches off small trees and shrubbery. — these are things you can stop your child from doing First — respect his property. Don’t throw around his Teddy bear because ‘it's, just a dirty old thing.’ Seq a good example. Show him that you expect him to be careful with family belong- ings. Explain that he mustn't grab things which don't belong to him, but allow him, in turn, to have a proprietary sense about his own things. If your child some day does take a toy which doesn't belong to him, be patient with him. He must re turn the toy himself, but. you can help give him the courage and perhaps go with him. Then maybe you and he can plan how he can earn one him- self by helping you around the house. It is not wrong to desire things we do not have. We all do. But some people then earn them — The Lawrence L. Terriens ‘of East Montcalm Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Julie, to Robert Kieft Klopfenstein. He is the son of the Chris J. Klopfensteins. of Battle Creek. She is a junior at University of where Vichigan he recently received his master of science degree. JULIE TERRIEN and others steal them. If you close the doors to many of your child's desires, he may come to believe he can only get what he wants by stealing. So show him the legitimate ways of obtaining things, and, of course, explain that they are better be- cause they are carried out without hurting others as we would not want to be hurt ourselves. date for Easter. Steam Your Straws To keep a straw hat clean, brush it frequently with a clean dry brush and steam it over kettle; then brush again. To prevent straw from bubbling or sagging. keep turning hat, holding it well over the steam blast. April 19 is the most frequent SPECIAL PRICE Large, Fashion. For camp, for the back yard pool or at the lake +)? thick and thirsty terry towels designed in Pic-K-Ners BOYS’ and GIRLS’ SHO i sj ‘5 $139 GIRLS’ Woven Seersucker gt 3 ee ¥ SHORTS. Sizes 3 to 6x y Regular $1.98 : $1.39 GIRLS’ Plisse SHORTS. $1.98 Value $1.39 ] a ad a a Ota NEW FALL c BABY 36''x36.._ RECEIVING SQUARES ove eeeeee DRAWSTRING GOWNS, Large Size, White Only .... CARTERS SHIRTS. i650: e. PLISSE BIB FRONT. SHORTS. Sizes 2 to 4 “ eee eee On = s ‘Oo “ tes RIS) TODDLER BOYS Regular $1.98 BUYS i roger ny oe ee ee eS oe a oe + Bal YOU'LL BE FIVE TIMES A WINNER... JULY 7, 1035 ‘Coming Events The, W8C8 of Baldwin Methodist Church will sponsor s public lawn sup- per Thureday from 6 until 7 o'clock, Weleome Rebekah Lodge 46 wi Thureday at & p.m. 2 tke Situs teaste on Per street. : _ eee opment Pilgrim Group of Piret ss will meet for plenic |e st home of Mrs. Iven Knight, 6008 lagstaff, Union Leké Oakiand County — VFW will meet Thursday at &@ pm. in the VFW club- rooms, Baginew 6. Society of Oakland Avenue 4 Presbyterian Church will meet at home of Mre, Park W: of Bast aan street Thursday at 1: Pioneer Missiona: wae ecge Permanents pauls $5.00 ( _CALLIE'S BEAUTY SHOP ia regational | > ing ot } the children’s shop Wonderful Gifts for the Baby Shower Free Gilt W rapping Svenings Untill 6—Gundays 1) A. M. te 8 FP. 8184 Cooley Lake Road one MAGNIFICENT PERMANENTS CREATED by ANDRE +5” 97° 0” COLD WAVE MACHINE or-MACHINELESS Including ANY STYLE-CUT STAFF of EXPERT OPERATORS to Serve You New Mobile Cutting *“*Multi-Curl” Haircut....... NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED! IMMEDIATE SERVICE! Andre ¢ Beauty CSalon 2ad Fleer Pontiac State Bank Bidg.—Ph. FE 5-4490 | = The MARGARET ANN BEACH TOWELS) THURSDAY SATUR July 8th, 9th and 10th FRIDAY & DAY . TAKING ADVANTAGE —OF OUR SPECIAL GRAND OPENING FEATURES. Our spacious new store makes it so much easier for you to make selections. Teenagers enjoy a department all their own. Infants have an expanded space devoted to them and toddlers’ clothes are unlimited in selection. Sabie’. ee a ie ae ae ee EAS OBZ 5: tt he at wt © la tee pert oman 3 had st schieitedliee css te MOREL. SAE ae In The Riker Building SHOP | BOYS SLACKS cat See the Famous Name Label in th Ne These Slacks! Sizes 2 to 6x, Reg. $2.69 Sizes 8 to 12, Reg. $2.98 ey, he Mk ta b.. . eeeeeweeve SUBTEEN EVERGLAZE HALF SLIPS to hold Milady’s dainty dress out to the breezes. Six gore style with ruffle edge and ribbon’ trim. Sizes 10 to 14. teson 1. al a :: Pe led ts = Breads Top reo. ~ I ing nterest in Fine, Fashion Ror. Pontiac 4 turn on floured board and knead until smooth looking. Turn into greased bowl, cover, and leave in warm place until doubled in bulk. | ; (about 1 hour). Shape into 3 loaves, place in. greased paris and let rise until doubled in bulk again. Bake in 330 oven about 530 minutes, or until well browned. Lying Parents Hurt Children “Junior, answer the phone. If him we're out of town.” Too many parents play ‘‘dodge- the-bill-collector’’ without realizing the effect on younger members of Private Party and @& Luncheon Rooms | WALDRON HOTEL COFFEE SHOP Downtown Location For Your Convenience 36 E. Pike St. Qutmea! Loaves Fit F Summer Appetites| stole that ties or drapes. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 Doing Things With Cement Looks Easy — ee Dark plaid for summer has freshness. The black and gold full-skirted cotton dress features a reversible cape Factory Is Her Choice By ANNE HEYWOOD Here is a letter from a distraught mother, who does not want her mentioned: daughter wishes to take a a dress factory rather to nurses’ training or at- secretarial school and later a secretarial position,” z : ai 4 ? 2 I attract an inferior crowd of went into nurses’ training?"’ This is a wise mother, becatse she states immediately that the choice will be up to the girl. And it ‘is perfectly natural that she should show some concern. Howere, here are some things for her to think about. Like outdoor dining? ‘Then you'll like S7rG OR STAI y LESS egee% ... the new, functional —- flatware that will add a émart touch to any casual dining setting with its distinctive modern styling. Only a minimum of care keeps its non-tarnishable satin finish ever-beautiful. Stegor is fine Gorham quality, perfectly balanced * flatware. In four open stock patterns: Verve, ° Motif (shown), Pace and Wheat. 5-piece place ' setting: knife with Stegor exclusive seamless hollow To Have Work One Likes Is Most Important Thing 1. Factory work is not what it used to be. In the old days, when 0, Henry was writing, for ex- ample, the factory worker was an Overworked, sweatshop drudge. Nowadays, that is not the case. There are regular hours, decent working conditions, good pay—all of which attract more ambitious and promising workers. 2. Many factory workers do ad- vance, so don't picture your girl as sitting always at the sewing ma- chine. If she is a good worker, and gets along with others, she may well move ahead into supervisory positions. 3. If she honestly prefers this to nursing or secretaria] work, she will make a bigger success in this field. To go into the others, without liking them, will probably mean thar she stays in a lowly job, whether 4. By the same token, if she goes into a field she hates, she will be- come miserable, bitter and hence unattractive, that she will not be likely to at- tract any of the doctors or interest- ing patients. If, on the other hand, she is in work she likes, she. will become so attractive that she will have all the friends she wants, not only at work, but everywhere she goes. (Copyright 1954) ¥ : i crete’ will Important; Also Be Sure to Dampen - By HUBBARD COBB Building things around the place with concrete looks easy and ac- tually it is easy except some- times things don’t seem to turn out the way they -were supposed to or the way the man who wrote the book or the column said they would. Sometimes “this is the fault of the man. Sometimes it's the fault of the concrete—it wasn't mixed | right, and sometimes it’s the fauit of the forms and the way in which the concrete was poured. Once you've gone to the trouble to mix up a good batch of con- crete, you want to make sure that aj all your work was not in vain. First, most concrete jobs re- quire forms of one sort. or another to hold the fresh con- crete in place until it is dry and Almost any good solid boards will do for this job but they must be well nailed and properly se- cured or the weight of the con- push them around something terrible. One inch thick.“boards braced with 2 in.-x 4 in. studding every 24 inches or. so should do for most home concrete jobs. If you want 4A a curved section,'use a sheet of metal instead of the wood. Concrete doesn’t stick to wood readily so it's usttally not neces- sary to coat the forms with any- thing so they can be removed. Grease can be smeared on the surface of the forms before the concrete is poured but the grease will stain the concrete and make future painting almost im- possible. When you pour the concrete into the forms, pour just a little at a time and then jab it with a trowel or shovel. This insures it becoming a compact mass free af air bubbles. Lastly, after the concrete has been poured, keep it covered with burlap- or hay and keep the covering damp for about a week. This will insure a: good quality concrete. If .the concrete dries out too quickly, the results are often not all that you expected. Ready Yourself Now for Baby’s Mischief-Making Before Baby gets to the mischief- making stage, think about how-you will handle the situations that may arise. And also how to keep such situations to a minimum. First of all, since children are sensitive to suggestion, you will ac- complish much simply in assuming the attitude that Baby will be well be well behaved, Since he must learn as he goes along, help him with suggestions and requests. Threats always are taboo. Don’t fill him with fears by threatening to cal] in a doctor or a policeman when he misbehaves. C2cyes ha IL) AIVIAI ele Tie | GBnNU0I03 Aire) OMI Si ALY] ) IMIG) TV Init iminl T) eTOIAls IT IS) ~ handle (won't discolor, cereal)... TeeePrter rattle or come pert), teaspoon, salad fork, place spoon (soup or , 28.W. FE 2. $Q% Huron 7257 the t _Neumode ee Specially priced for this sale! Cool and comfort- ‘able in complexion tones most becoming to you. Weod Forms Aret e- » ie > id Frosty cotton fashions for summer with| your arms for a lovely decollete effect. Easy elasticized midriffs and shoulder straps|to touch up with steam iron. which can go over your shoulders or across Don’t Snub Shy Girl, Try Helping Her By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: There's | a girl in our group who doesn't | belong. The rest of us are modeér- ately popular, while she is quiet and almost unfriendly. “She never talks, just tags along like a shadow. Whoever has to pair off with her feels left out. We've earnestly tried for a year now to help her get over her shy- ness—with no results. “The few of us that get stuck ¢ with her don’t know how to tell her she’s not wanted. “We're not snobbish, but it doesn't help your popularity to be If the rest of you could just once be big-hearted enough to make that girl feel wanted, you might see the greatest change in her. She's not so dumb and blind that she can't tell how you feel about her. You scramble to avoid being stuck with her. She senses it. You resentfully and impatiently let her go along with you when you can't get out of it. Your attitude is hardly a com- fort to her. She feels like a very sore thumb when she’s with you. Small wonder she has turned in eon herself and gone quiet and unfriendly. seen with a girl like this. How can we get sid of her?’’ You say you've tried to help her overcome her shyness, What posi- Try It A Fish Board for Scaling I do hope that you live where there is some water that is good for fishing. You may think that dad does not care to go fishing, but ask him if he wouldn't like to take you out to try your luck. Fishing is fun, even if your catch isn't great. HOSIERY — 82 N. Saginaw St. ST $4 Baldwin proudly presents the new French Provincial Acro- sonic , . . truly the piano for , those who want the finest-~ design. ' French Provincial by Bald- win today. Calbi Music Co. Pontiac’s Locally Owned Home of Conn Instruments and Baldwin Pianos and Organs ». .119 North Saginaw -St. diet_at regular intervals. on the average size of the fish caught around where you live. Ask dad to help you decide on the size, then draw a newspaper pattern of a fish and when your pattern suits you, lay it on a piece of wood plank and draw around it. Cut it out with a jig saw. Sand your board until smooth. Make a hole in the tail end for easy hanging, then drive a large nail through from the wrong side. This is to hold the head of the fish for scaling. You will find that the board is ‘Ta big help in scaling your Tisty, and that you can do tt in about half the regular time. You can use your board for cutting the fish up on, too. Thompson’s SPECIAL HIGH POTENCY B-COMPLEX VITAMINS CHILDREN and ADULTS B Vitamins are water soluble, therfore more easily lost in the human system as well as drained bfrom the food in cooking. B Vitamins cannot be stored in body tissue in high degree and therefore must be supplied in the Many of the B Vitamins form co-enzymes essential to normal metabolism of sugars and starches. Increased physical activity will also increase B Vita- min requirements. 100 TABLETS NATURAL HEALTH FOODS Phone FE 5-8222 or nervous 58 Wayne FE 4-460! Hetorerty | tive good have you done if you can see no results? Have you ever once tried to change the low opinion she has of herself? Have you ever oftce compli- mented her on something she has done, said or worn? Have-~ you ever once laughed uproariously at anything funny she said? Have you ever once sought her out, chosen her for your partner, gone out of your way to get her inte the middle of things? Trying to get rid of her would be a sorry solution to the whole problem. If you tell her she’s out, she'll be miserable. It would be a mighty blow to her morale, which is already low. And the rest of you girls would not have accomplished a single good thing for yourselves. As I see it. one girl's ‘distaste for the ‘‘shadow’’ has been con- tagious. You've all caught it. You. talk about it among yourselves un- til you've magnified it. You’ve even sold yourselves the mistaken idea that your popu- larity is suffering becaase of her. Why not put your heads together over a campaign’ that will something big for all of yoy? You have the summer in which to work miracles with that girl. The easiest, yet the biggest, thing is to convince her that you like her. Ask her opinion, tease her affectionately, call her up, see that she’s in on the things you plan. Give her a fegson for pride in herself. That will snap her out of her doldrums. Clothespin Bag A wire clothes hanger mokes a convenient base for a clothespin bag. Make the bag of sturdy cotton that will withstand the el- ements. do | Sun-Tan Oils Give Bronze Minus Burn Allergy Creams Best if Your Skin Gets Lobster-look If you're a danner, you're the envy of everybody. But if your skin reddens at the drop of a sun- beam, beware. The sun does give that necessary vitamin D, but it alse bestows ul- traviolet rays, capable of produc- ing severe burns. Remember that in mid-sum- mer, the rays are strongest from ten to two, Don’t be fooled by a hasy day; though your skin doesn’t feel hot, it can get a bad burn, Suhlight reflected by sand or water packs a double inten- sity of ultraviole¢ rays. Even the most inveterate tanner should use a good sun prepara- tion. Whether you choose a lotion, ° cream, or oil is purely a matter of personal taste. The anti-burning quality of any sun preparation depends on the ef- fectiveness of its chemica] ‘‘sun those experts who make their own screen,"’ so don't be fooled by concoctions of oil and vinegar— and smell like a salad. Mere ollness gives seant pre- tection. Mineral oil and baby oil, for, éxample, are almost com- | pletely transparépt-to ultraviolet rays. Some people with an unhappy history of freckling and burning believe that because some products are labeled sun-tan preparations, they will make them tan. Actually, the screening ingre- dient in most preparations rations the ultraviolet rays that reach your skin so you'll get enough to tan but not to burn. In other words, a sun-tan preparation promofes tan- ning without burning. If you simply can't take the sun at all, relax to the fact you'll never bronze. Your solu- tion is a sun-allergy cream, which completely biocks ultra- violet rays. But whatever you use, be sure to apply it thoroughly and at in- tervals throughout your exposure to the sun, because of skin absorp- tion and sun evaporation. Reapply it after each swim, even if the water doesn't wash it off, your beach towel may blot it off. Suds Dust Cloths Unless you use dustcloths that are spotlessly clean, you'll only be putting on dirt rather than taking it off. Suds them after daily dusting and they'll be ready to serve you the following day. PETUNIA! Honey butters Extra - fine To make a pancake - Rise and shine / Right, Petunia! Just cream one-half cup, butter with one-fourth cup honey, beat tillsmooth. Delicious! ACROSS 1 Baked Virginia ——— 4 Prepare potatoes 8 Cloverleaf 12 Eucharistic wine cup 13 ratic solo 14 Century plant - 15 Prench sea 20 Oatmeal 26 Worthless 27 Boy's nickname 30 Each 32 Cylindrical 34 Byeglass parts 35 Pootball team oy A 37 Crack 30 Political party members (eoll.) 40 Pronoun 41 Cyst 42 ~—— 45 Prickly plant @ Mitk from 3 Bread spread 4 Landed property 5 Greek war god fternoon nap princess 53 Air (prefix) 54 Abstract being 17 Jewish state 19 Is borne 23 Group of eight N is a 25 Imitated rnish 29 Liars 31 Shade of red DEFERRED Under this the student rt of his tuition each month paid in monthly installments this plan. 7 West Lawrence _ Peeve terssoee beret ereree PLAN AVAILABLE ~#n-eo-operation.. _Metropolitan Institute makes available to students may take Many of our outstanding graduates have taken advantage of Morning 8:00 to 10:45; Afternoon 11:15 to 1:30; Evening 6:30 to 9 VETERAN APPROVED Call, Write, or Phone for . Information % PAYMENT Credit, Inc., The Business progeny ghee in school, the balance to while after the training is completed. Phone FE 2-3551 eters a aoe THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 Siege Is Lifted in Guatemala eNew Anti-Red Regime Also Prohibits Voting} by Iliterctes eee GUATEMALA ® — Guatemala’'s new military government last night lifted the state of siege pro- claimed by ousted President Ja- cobo Arbenz Guzman. Pushing ahead with its anti- Communist, - back-to-normal _ pro- gram, the ruling five-man junta also: 1. Barred all illiterates — an estimated 65 per cent of the coun- try's three million population —| from voting; | 2. Froze the assets of Arbenz, | ex-Foreign Minister Guillermo To- riello and other persons prominent under the former Communist-back- ed government; 3. Continued the roundup of suspected Reds; | 4. Announced restrictions on civil rights would continue in effect until Aug. 8. However, the junta has already ended the Arbenz- imposed strict censorship of the | local and foreign press. Arbenz had proclaimed the state | of siege just before the outbreak | of the revolt which forced his res- ignation on June 27. Cancellation of the order was expected to end permanently the all-night curfew and other military controls The ban on voting by illiterates oe ~— 3 United Press Phete CONFUSED COCK SPARROW — This hardy little cock sparrow displays courage (even if a bit confused) as he battles grimly for what he believes to be a tasty worm. Fonzo, of Italy, who is trying to convince Ciccio the Sparrow, that spaghetti is not good for him.—Perhaps Ciccio, the pet of a Roman family, just likes spaghetti, like every other good Italian. His enemy is Giancario Di struck at wide support which the Communists have ,whipped up among the uneducated peasantry. | Under the 1945 Constitution which | ex-President Juan Jose Arevalo and Arbenz sponsored, all men — literates and illiterates — over 18 and-all literate women of that age could vote. The new junta decree limited balloting to those able to read and write. Somebody Bad Stole It TWIN FALLS, Idaho W— Some- body stole a parked car here yesterday, drove it a block and Farmer, 89, Leaves 369 Direct Descendants After Being Hit by Car | Girl Treated for Bruises LANCASTER, Pa. #—Aaron M. | Zimmerman, a member of the Mennonite church, is survived by 8 sons and daughters, 8% grand- children, and 1 great-great-grandchild. 274 «great-grandchildren Thomas Edison held 1200 pa- tents on hig various inventions in-| abandoned it. It belonged to Po-| cluding the electric light, phono- | lice Chief Howard Gillette. graph and others. SE , ROD cee caccecs ooo 0-0 4 omc 610 210 =—4 7 1 Ryan. Mines and Pritchard, Sheldon end Osika .. 001 000 o1—3 C] Birminghom . Porster 100 000 060-1 4 1 Walker, Reynolds and Kothe; Tanner — o11 OT 6 Acoorphccoaneec 003 100 1—4 7 | Woodruff! and Reed; Beers and Croteau Year's Leave Is Given Ed Furgol | National Open Champ |. to Give Exhibition at _ Chicago, Go on TV ST. LOUJS, July 7 #—Ed Furgol has been granted a year’s leave of ev g tL i _— champ, who event despite a left since a boyhood ac- for an exhibi- O'Shanter Country and then will go for television appear- get a8 af tn g his next scheduled ig the All-America at 7 Tam O'Shanter next. month. Yesterday's Stars ; ,_. PITCHING—Virgil Trucks, Chi- cago White Sox, hurled a one- hitter as the White Sox defeated the Detrait Tigers, 40. BATTING—Joe Adcock, Milwau- kee Braves, batted in five runs in- cluding a three-run homer as the — trounced the Chicago Cubs League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE 323; . . Chi ; 7; Mantle, New York, og New York. 17: le 1; Cleveland, 4 and dernial Philadeiphia. _ eee, i Rivera Boston and li; Rivera, Chicago. ~ ¢ Fox and Michae decisions) — 7 my, deciione)— Reyoit 103; 7 Seat NATIONAL LEAGUE for its llth victory in 13] | the Cleaners to] | “ . Only four D-I-C players | | base and none advaritéd| . PITCHES ONE. sarrEn-—Chicego White Sox man- ager. Paul. Richards congratulates his ace right hander Virgil (Fire) Trucks after he had pitched | Briggs Satdium. a 1-hitter pre: ar F Weeckeea against the Detroit Tigers at White Sox won, 40, as Harvey Kuenn’s 3rd inning single was the only hit off Trucks. By ED CORRIGAN Associated Press Sportswriter One series, any major league manager will tell you, does not make a season, s0 why get so ex- cited about the current set between the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers? But going into tonight's second game of the three-game series, the Giants were four-and-a-half games in front of the Brooks and if they go on to.sweep the series, manager Walter Alston and his Brooklyn operatives will be up against a mighty tough problem in their quest for a third straight National pennant. Consider the Brooks’ plight: 1. The pitching has been wobbly -|and worse, only Bob Milliken among the relievers has been ef- fective. 2. Their pinch bitters have been futile. In last night's 5-2 setback by the Giants, they loaded the bases with none out in the ninth only to have George Shuba and Rube Walker, two pinch hitters go down ignominiously. 3. They can't seem to shake the injury jinx. Pee Wee Reese, Roy Campanella and Jackie Robinson among the first-liners have been having miseries. The Giants, on the other hand, are sitting pretty. They have con- fidence. They've had fantastic good fortune with pinch hitters. When they're behind, they don't worry. With relief pitchers like Hoyt Wilhelm and Marv Grissom who took over for Sal Maglie last night in the ninth with none out and three men on base and got away unscathed, they have two firemen they can trust. In last night's game, Al Dark, Willie Mays and -Monte Irvin hit home runs, accounting for four of the Giants’ runs. Starter Preacher Roe was the victim of two and reliever Bob Milliken one. Maglie weathered a two-run first inning, then settled down until he ran into trouble again in the ninth and re- quired the services of Grissom to pull it out. Two National League games pro- duced shutouts. Gerry Staley blanked the Cincinnati Redlegs for the St. Louis Cardinals 6-0 and Curt Simmons of the Philadelphia Phillies whitewashed the Pitts- burg Pirates, 3-0. In the other Na- tional League game, the Milwau- kee Braves bombed the Chicago Cubs, 14-3. The Cleveland Indians held to their three-and-a-half game lead Giants tien NL Lead Against Dodgers over the New York Yankees in the American League. The Tribe plas- tered the Baltimore Orioles, 11-3, and the Yanks turned back the Boston Red Sox, 4-1. Johnny Schmitz of the Washington Senators, also was stingy with the base hits, allowing the Philadel- phia A’s only a half-dozen. The Nats hung.a 5-2 defeat on Eddie Joost’s club. Junior Rose Bow! Game Slated Dec. 11 PASADENA, Calif. —The Pas- adena Junior Chamber of Com- merce will hold its annual Junior Rose Bow! football game Dec. 11. Dick Hubbell, president of the chamber, in announcing the date, disclosed that last year's game between Bakersfield Junior College and Noftheast Oklahoma A&M, won by Bakersfield, 13-6, grossed more than $100,000. The money was allocated to recognized charities and to mem- ber schools of the cofiferences rep- resented by the contesting teams at Pasadena. Leo Eyes 104 Wins . By JOF REICHLER BROOKLYN (—Walter Ajston, Dodgers, probably is the only per- son in’ baseball who thinks the ‘rampaging New York, Giants must ‘| win at a faster pace to win the National League pennant. * ? LJ Including last night's 5-2 victory over the Dodgers, the Giants have won 53 games while losing only 25 cn for a .679 mark. They lead Brook- «4 lyn today by 4'2 games. Still Al- »| ston thinks that unless the Giants rookie manager of the Brooklyn |: “improve”, the Dodgers will over- take them. According to Leo Durocher, the effervescent Giant pilot, Alston remarked before. last night’s game between Brooklyn and New York that “if the Giants don't play better ball in the second halt of the season than they played in the first half, we'll beat ‘em for the flag."’ » * * “The Dodgers are bound to be much better from now on,” Leo quoted Alston second-hand... ‘Roy Four forfeits marred Tuesday's resumption of city junior league baseball following the holiday re- spite. Some good pitching showed up among the 5 games that were played, however, with Whitey Lar- son and Joe Tinson turning in ‘| 1-hitters, Rosebud Market tied for the lead in Class E by blanking Cass Ponts, 3-6, with Larson striking out 12 batters and yielding only a 6th inning single. Tinson tossed a 1-hi¢ shutout at St. George in Class F as Lansford Market won a -17-4_ronte. Other Class F game was for- feited by Welden’s to Boys Club | Nationals. Other forfeits were Rochester to Mets in Class D, and ;| Softball Games Sought dricks, : an outstanding team in the Jackson Class AAA | Softball League, are seeking exhj- :| bition games with ‘| teams in this area. Jets are par- - | ticularly interested in away-from- » home doubleheaders.. Any team in- | - Jackson Jets, top _ softball terested should contact Alan Bar- ker, basiness manager, 324-26 So. wins waa Jackson, — \Forfeits and Good Pitching sai! Mark City Junior Action | among the Knotholers, Yankees to Boys Club, and Lytell’s to the White Sox, Nicholie Realty registered a Class D victory, 9-1, over Doris Skating Rink in a game cut to 5 innings by darkness. Don Daniel's triple Aran Nicholie’s 5-run 3rd frame. Oriole Knotholers won their 3rd straight game by downing the Red Sox, 8-3, on Staley’s 2-hitter and 12 strikeouts, and Dick and Wes whipped the Indians, 10-4, with Lynn Johnston giving ‘up only 4 hits. CLASS Je STANDINGS wk last weék, said they will return Lyte-c'grove “20 Cass Ponts 1 2,19 time for her to defend the title Rosebud Mkt. 20 Pontiac Police ©3/in next year’s championship Sar8 Clee emete NATIONALS {matches at _Wichita,_Kan__The } wh w’| world tour will begin after rarer Se ee ieee ™ Ys RESULTS _ ; Bicol nent ae eee ect e 2) Races, Fireworks Feature and Gary; Smith and Hen- Rosebud Market...... 002 000 1-3 4 0 Cass its. ooo OO 1 2 Larson and ‘Trevino: Vaughn and Wa- terfield . CLASS F Lunsforé Market 17, St. George 6 “Boys Club Nationals 7. Wejden's 0. KNOT s *White Sox 7, L wm aod oe 6 Dick + ae hg 1 Yank Grice Bs Red 80x sakes 6. Durocher Scoffs at Alston’s Statement That Giants Will Have to Step Up Pace Campanella can't possibly hit as poorly as he did in the first half of the season. Carl Furillo is fin- ally beginning to hit like he did last year. And Don Newcombe is now pitching like he did before he went into the Army.” “So Alston thinks we'll have to play better from now on to win,” Leo chortled. “I got news for Al- ston. You can tell him I'm tickled pink with the way the Giants have been going up to now. And I only hope we can do the same in the second half as we did in the first. “We won 52 of our first 77 games,"’ Durocher continued. ‘“‘Un- less my arithmetic is bad, if we do as well in the second half, we'll win 104 games. I'll take that right now. In fact,"if I could be guar- anteed that many victories by the end of the season, I'd put my uni- form away until October 1 and go fishing. And let Alston do the worrying.”’ Babe and Big George Plan World Golf Tour Baltimore SALEM, Mass., July 7 ®—Babe Didrikson Zaharias and her hus- band, George, will make a world golfing tour starting next Janv- | (On! ary, she disclosed Tuesday. Mrs. Zaharias, who won her third U.S. Women's Open golf championship WLYA Holiday Program 7 pm. Eight boat races and a fireworks | wiwauxee ai display highlighted the holiday weekend program at the Watkins | Lake Yachting Association. Race winners were Harm Gillen, Glenn Fries Jr.. Jack Berlien; Stan Covert, Guy Duffield, and Triple-winner Don | Milwaukee Zannoth, Even Par Card; Locke Has 74 Watrous Qualifies for Test by Scoring 150 Yesterday SOUTHPORT, England #—Sam King, a one-time Kent farmer, equaled the competitive record for the Royal Birkdale Course today when he shot a 69 to take the early lead in the British Open Golf Championship’s 1st roynd. King, 1st man to finish the open- ing round, which began today, used only 29 putts on the 6,837 yard par 36-37—73 course by the Irish Sea. The record. of 69, breaking a mark which had stood 19 years, was set in yesterday's qualifying round by Tony Harman of Eng- land. Teney Penna of Cincinnati, 1st Dave Green, | pa of six Americans in the tourna- ment, shot an opening round of 36-40—76. Dapper Jimmy Demaret, his usual smile obscured by sneezes as he suffered-a severe attack of hay fever, sank a 7-foot putt on the 18th green to complete an even par round of 36-37—73. De- maret took three strokes from the edge of the green on the Ist, 9th and 15th holes to mar a round that might have put him right on King’s heels. Bobby Locke of South Africa, British Open champion in 1949, 1950 and 1952! shot a 74. Argen- tina’s Enrique Bertolino matched that score. Penna was playing par golf until the 16th hole. There his drive landed in some sandhills. His 2nd was off line and the ball was lost. He then tried another shot from the sandhills, playing his 4th stroke, and this time he was short. He pitched up and took two putts for a seven. Penna said he had been hitting the ball well and was in only one bunker. “This was my best round over here until that trouble on the 16th.” Penna barely qualified with 151. Toney had a birdie three on the Sth hole when he sank a 35-foot putt. Several times his long putts reached the lip on the cup but failed to drop. He three-putted the 6th and 13th holes. Australia’s Norman Van Nida set the pace yesterday in the tourney that saw three of the nine-man American delegation eliminated. Von Nida shot a 70-67—137 to set the low score in the qualifying round, The Americans stayed close to the little Australian though as veteran Gene Sarazen of German- town, N.Y., and amateur Frank Stranahan of Toledo, Ohio were tied for second plate in the 36-hole qualifying round. The 52-year-old Sarazen, winner of the International Senior pro championship last week, shot a T1-74—141, Stranahan also fired a TI-74—141. Jim Turnesa of Briarcliff, N.Y., and Tony Penna of Cincinnati fin- ished with 151 qualifying scores. The other American qualifiers were Jimmy Demaret of Kiamesha Lake, N.Y., with 148 and Al Wat- rous of Detroit with 150. They play 18-hole rounds today and Thursday with the 50 best golfers going into the 36-hole final on Friday. First prize money is 730 pounds ($2,100). Day’s Tie for Ist Day's Sanitary Service tied Drayton Drug for the leadership of Waterford Township's Junior Soft- ball League Tuesday by beating the Druggists, 9-4, on Roy Mc- Annally’s 4hit pitching. Men's League game between Dick & Wes Sports and Dixie Recreation was postponed, Major League Results a LEAGUE Lest Pet. Behind Cleveland ............ «4 -% ma — New York ....... 2 @ 6 3% no | eee 0 * 60 6 aveeeeeues 2 @ #23 6 Washington ........ 32 644421 oT - a Le SSHOOOnE Se 0 #47 30 OM Philadelphia coe & BT OM Boston - 2 6 66378 OM TODA GAMES at Cleveland. 7:30 p.m—Turley (7-7) vs. Garcia (10-5) Boston Reynolds ‘( =. 1 p.m.—Brewer (44) vs. Re Ch egg ny > p.m.—Johnson (44) vs. (+8) y hed). ESDAY'S RESULTS Chic: 4, Detroit 6 New York 4, Roston 1 w 5, Philadelphia 2 Cle 11, Baltimore 3 AY'S SCHEDULE Chicago at rit, 2 p.m Cleveland. 1 pm New. Vork——ecrrere —Se—_. cea rs) 5M 13 85 i _ a : ‘oly ve. M (as) Ridetk (3-2) wan ‘ Chicaee, m.—Nichols ( ws. ( dB Leste 8 eiviamia amie ais > Demaret Posts. ) Johnston. ———— Missouri Ditver: Wins 5 Races | at Goshen Track 3.Stakes_.Victories Included in String —-+- ce Frank Ervin be a pireiog” time before Frank Ervin, veteran driver out of Missouri, forgets July 6 at Historic Park. ; * *« « Ervin put together five winners yesterday on the stake-studded Grand Circuit program. Included in his victories. were triumphs “in three stakes. He won the E. H. Harriman Challenge Trophy as K. D. Owen's Childs Hanover of Hous- ton, Tex., hung up a new track record of 2:06 1-5 for 2-year-old trotters. * * * He also accounted for the Lady- ship Stakes for 3-year-old pacing fillies with Phantom Lady from the Walnut Hall Farm of Donerail, Ky. and The Acorn 2-year-old trot with Wilda Hanover, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wehle of Scotts- ville, N.Y. His other two victories were in overnight races. Gold Cup Race Loses: Entries Correlation, Determine and Imbros Withdfgwn From Event INGLEWOOD, Calif. uw» — The $100,000 Hollywood Gold Cup race July 17 has lost three top flight horses—Correlation, Determine and Imbros. 7 * * R. S. Lytle, owner of Correlation, said his horse will be blistered this week and turned out until next winter's racing at Santa Anita. Winner of two $100,000 races, the Florida Derby and the Wood Me- morial, Correlation has shown -the strain of long training. * * * Determine, although he has cam- paigned steadily for a year, is go- ing to Chicage for two $100,000 races, at Arlington July 17 and Washington Park, Aug. 21. Imbros may run in the Equipoise Mile at Arlington July 21, and whether he goes depends upon the weight assigned him. Harris Beats Parker DETROIT w — Duke Harris, 149, of Detroit won a unanimous eight round decision over Gene Parker, 1464, of Indianapolis, last night in the feature bout at Motor City arena. Harris scored repeatedly with crisp combinations to the head. Parker's left eye was nearly closed at the end of the bout. The victory was the 8th in 10 starts for the 22 year old Detroit fighter. ‘ Sports Calendar TODAY BASEBALL CLASS A—Jerome vs CIO 504 (Wisner 5.30) - CLASS D—Clarkston vs Griff's Grill (Washington, a it Lyteil-Colegrove vs Pontiac Police (C-J south, 5 0) CL. E—Rosebud Market vs Boys Club ‘C-J north, 5:30). AMERICAN LEGION—Berkiey vs Bir- mingham Reds at Pierce Field: Birming- ham Blues at Huron Valley Boys Club, both games at 6 p. m. SOFTBALL CITY MEN'’S—Geners! Motors vs CIO $04 (Beaudette, 7); Birmingham Rite- way vs Stadium Inn (Beaudette, 8:30); Moose vs paced s Tavern (North Side, 7) CITY RLS—General Motors vs Omeeitvitte. north Side, 8:30) WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Richardson pane vs Gidley Electric (Men's, 8:30) Inter-Lakes Steel vs White Brothers (Junior, 6:30). RACING Hardtops at Pontiac M-5¢ qreretwes: trials at 7 p. m., races at 8 3 THURSDAY BASEBALL CLASS A—Oliver Buick Motors (Wisner, 5:30). CLASS D—Pontiec Police vs Griffs Grill (Washington, 530); Mets vs Nicholie Realty (C-J south, $:30) CLASS E—Pontiac Police vs Colegrove (C-J north, 5:30). CLASS P—Wekien's Sports ve General Lytefl- st George (Washington, 9): Williams Lake a vs Lunsford Market (Washington, KNOTHOLE — Avondale vs Yankees (C-J south, 8); Vollmer’s vs Lytell- Colegrove (C-J north; 8}; Tigers vs Dick & Wes ‘C-+J south, 11); Red Sox vs Sen- ators iC-J ale 11) FTBALL ve * BXHIBITION- pers s Jewelers in dou- ble header ‘Beaudette. 7 and 8 30: CIVY GIRLS—Shaw's vs Giles Realty (North Side, 7); GMC vs Avondale (North Bide, 8:30). WATERFORD TWP —Dick & Wes vs Drayton Drug (Men's, 830): Drug vs Wiiliams Leke (Little Lg, 6.30). GOSHEN; WY: It is going to : «By JOE FALLS DETROIT ® — As the Detroit last place, all the ‘talk is about inefficient pitching. tt a look at the batting rec- ords today disclosed that Detroit hasn't a single hitter, above the 300 mark. Tigers reached this low point yes- Giardello Risks Almost Certain Crack af Title Faces ‘Upsetter’ Billy Kilgore in 10-Rounder at Philadelphia By RALPH BERNSTEIN PHILADELPHIA (#—Joey Giar- dello risks his almost certain_mid- dleweight title shot in a 10-round scrap at the Arena here tonight with ‘‘upsetter’’ Billy Kilgore of Miami, Fla. * Giardello, third ranking 160 pound contender, tentatively has been promised a full crack at champion Cari (Bobo) Olson if the latter successfully defends — his crown in his coming bout with Rocky Castellani. The Olson-Giar- dello bout would be Oct. 22. * - * But Giardello has to lick Kilgore and do it impressively. This Kil- gore bout, to be televised nation- ally (CBS), is another in the series ot ‘‘Forget Langlois’’ fights for the Philadelphia middleweight. Pierre Langlois recently took some of the shine off Joey with a good Jacing in New York, Since the Frenchman wouldn't go for a return bout, Giardello has been attempting to regain lost prestige against all-available oppo- bd ‘several weeks ago and now hopes to use Kilgore as another step up to his pre-Langlois perch. He'll be a heavy favorite. Giardello, winner of WO fights while losing 11 with five draws, also would like to give himself an early birthday present. He'll be 24 on July 46. Kilgore has a 27-15-4 record with recent wins over the faded Jake LaMotta, Jimmy Herring and Er- nie Durando. He stopped Durando in nine, The 28-year-old native of Birmingham, Ala., has dropped close decisions to Walter Cartier and Hans Stretz. Last year he worked only twice, defeating Mick- ey Laurent and kayoing Nemos Solomon. The bout, promoted by Herman | Taylor in cooperation with the In- | ternational Boxing Club of New | York, will be decided on a rounds | basis. There is no point system in Pennsylvania. Canadian Club Gets All-America Dobbs" HAMILTON, Ont., July 7 W— Glenn Dobbs,. former Tulsa All- America, has been signed by Hamilton's Tiger-Cats of the Inter- provincial Football Union and will report before the strat of the training season July 12. The Dobber,’’ one. of the great- est triple threats in the game un- til injuries interfered with his play two seasons back and forced his release by Saskatchewan, Rough- riders last season, is reported well and fit again and he is coming to Hamilton to make a place on the 1954 club like any other candidate. . Jets Forfeit Contest Pontiac Jets lost sole posses- sion of the City Class A Baseball League lead yesterday when they forfeited to Auburn Merchants. the game. Forfeit enabled General Motors to move into a tie for 1st place. “close to sition. He decisioned Bobby Jones | ¢, Only eight Jet players reported for. Trucks Trips Ex-Mates, 4-0, ‘Almost Chalks Up No- Hitter terday when Virgil (Fire) Trucksy- an ex-teammate, pitched an over- powering..one-hitter. to give . the Chicago White Sox’ a 40 victory, Only a 3rd inning single by Harvey Kuenn — a liner into short centerfield — kept the 35- year-old Alabaman from joining Bob Feller and Cy Young as the only pitchers in modern times to compile three no-hitters. Trucks pitched two no - hitters for the Tigers in‘the 1952 season but won only five games all yéar and the Tigers traded him to the St. Louis Browns, who in turn sent him to Chicago. Trucks’ masterpiece — and it |was one — dropped the Tigers | within four games of last place and left the regulars hitting like | this: Bill Tuttle, centerfield, .296 Frank House, catcher, .295. Ray Boone, 3rd base, .290. Walt Dropo, 1st base, .269 Harvey Kuenn, shortstop, .268. Al Kaline, right field, .240. Jim Delsing, left field, .237. Frank Bolling, 2nd base, .228. What makes—it—doubly_bad for the Tigers is that they've hit only 49 home runs to 67 for the epposi- tion. Plainly, the long-ball strength is missing. They submitted meekly to the fire-balling Trucks. who won his llth game against five losses with his 2nd one-lfitter of the season. He stopped Boston on May 1 with another one-hitter. Chicago, which has a perfect 6- for-6 record in Briggs Stadium this season, pecked away for single runs in the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and Sth innings. CHICAGO DETROIT ABH OA ABH OA Cars‘q!'.ss 5 2 @ 2 Kuenn, ss 3 1 2 3 fox. 2b 3 6 3'3 Tuttle. cf 40603 0 Minoso. if 4 1 1 © Houre.c 46 5 3 Mich'ls.Jo 1 1 6 6 of phd tp oD Marsh. 3> 2 © 2 5 Belardi. Ibi 6 8 0 Batis, c 4 1 6 @ BS’chock, ff 2 6 1 0 Jecks'n.1b 4 210 © Kaline. rf 3 0 3 1 Rivera. rf 4 3 2 © Bolling. 203 6 3 2 Groth, cf 3 b&b 3 © Aber. p 1e@0e Trucks, p 3 1 © 1 aDelsing 16 6 0 Miller. p 1 0 0 0 Totals Wi2TT 11 Tetals se 177 13 a—Fouled out for Aber Sth Chicago O11 110 @oo—4 rok 900 100-0 R—Carrasquel. Michaels. Marsh, Groth E—None RBi—Jackson, Carrasquel. Riv- &. Minoso 2B—Groth. Jackson. JB—Mi- chaels) SB—Marsh, Souchock. 8—Trucks, Fox. DP—Carrasquel, Fox and Jackson and Belardi. Left—Chicago 6, Detroit 3, BB—Trucks Miller 1 Trucks 4, Aber 4. Miller 1 HO—Aber 7 m 5. Miller 5 im 4 R-ER— ks 0-0. +4. Miller - HBP—By Aber (Michaelis) ial Sm aa —Trucks (11-5) a (1-3) Dane Hurley, Grieve —3:12. A—. ve More Than 00, in State Event JACKSON WW — More than 300 golfers were scheduled to tee off in today's qualifying rounds of the annual Michigan Amateur Golf tournament. Dick Norton, of Grand Rapids, runnerup in last year's Western Amateur, is one of the top chal- lengers in the huge field fighting for the vacant title. Defending champion Reggie Myles Jr., of Lansing, is currently in the armed forces. Qualifying rounds will continue through tomorrow when the field will cut to 64. Survivors will begin match play Friday. Remember? This speedy tank star was a national champion during his col- legiate days and should be well remembered by Pontiac area sports fans. His identity will bé Mound on today’s final sport page.. -Cincinnati Redleg rookie pitcher Art Fowler comes from a large family. He has five brothers and four sisters. . ture more batting stars than in the infield? Looking back into the past, three infield locations, have Eddie Collins, Nap hajeie, and great in infield. It has not only happened that way in past seasons, but it happens to be that way today. Gehrig and George Sisler on first base with Bill Terry close, in all-time company. At shortstop you have Honus Wagner—period. There are only one or two stars who stand out in hitting and fielding at these ‘ But 2nd base is loaded. Among others we by, Charley .Gehringer, Frank Frisch and Johnny Evers-—all ‘of these Hall of Famers. The first five) are all — hard hitters Today. you'll find more good 2nd basemen than you'll spot at any two other places on the As a starter we'll give you Granny Hamner of the Phillies any other spot you have Lou of this season. Rogers Horns- combined. From past to More Second Basemen Have Been Good Hitters. Than Players at Any Other Infield Positions By GRANTLAND RICE NEW YORK — Just why does 2nd base fea- and Roberto Gonzalez Avila of the Indians. Both men have been hitting over 360 most of the season. After this we come to Red Schoendienst of the Cardinals—a fine 2nd baseman and one. of the best hitters in botfi leagues. He hit for .342 last year and he has been around 340 most He is probably the best. all- around 2nd baseman in the game today. Then there are Nellie Fox of the White Sox | At 3rd you have Pie Traynor and Jimmy | and Junior Gilliam of the Dodgers..Dan O’Con-. nell is still another in the upper ranks. cm * * . There are more good 2nd basemen in both big leagues this season than there are good ist basemen, shortstops and 3rd basemen The throw from 2nd to Ist is of course much shorter than the longer heave from short or 3rd. But the main asset of the 2nd basemen seems large a matter of hitting. present at 2rd you have hard, consistent hitters as Hornsby, Collins. Lajoie, Frisch, Gehringer, Avila, Schoendeinst, Ham- ner, all 349 to 380 hitters. ,o THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESD AY, JULY 7, 1954 Stars Seek sth Straight Victory == re | Strong NL A Cleveland Ist Sacker Adds Homer, 2 Singles |; Chicago White Sox, Bob Porter-' Alston's own Bums head the list field of Washington, Allie Reynolds | numerically with six Dodgers, fol- of the Yanks and Bob Turley of | lowed by the Giants with five, St. PONTIAC M-59 SPEEDWAY een uh—The | National squad the National League has | and Casey Stengel of the New York the pitching assignments, were | 67-36 won-loss record for the July man Ray Jablonski, St.Louis; left lett | Claws. . : rongpe Bier tari ae flaw dle rjhas ever had,” said President | Yankees, pilot of the America| selected ty fans in a nationwide | 13 game. fielder Jackie Robinson, Brooklyn; | Tom Yewcic, recently signed @x- “* separ brporalen - Warren Giles today. “IT think we'll | All-Stars, announced their. pitching | poll. The National League bullpen) center fielder Duke Snider, Brook- oe € veland replies aie make it ave greigh - selections yesterday and rounded] Alston, the first freshman man-/ will be crowded with stars Robin | lyn, and right fielder Stan Musial, | 2° a ae ae ae oe ae oe ae oe oe oe oe 2 oe ie crew ory Walter ping ‘ “he = their rosters with additions to| ager to handle an All-Star squad, | Roberts of Philadelphia, Carl Er- | St.Louis. , . : aa tales o Resshiye positions. named four righthande! hurlers | skine of Brooklyn, Gene Conley of| Added to that aggregation by a 1 think this is the strongest | Dodgers, manager of the Nationals,| The starting berths, except for| and three leftres with a combined | Milwaukee, Marvin Grissom of| Alston, with the advice of New * TONIGHT, 8:30 P. M. New York, all righties, and Warren | York's Leo Durocher and Milwaw- |B” * “ Spahn of Milwaukee, Harvey Had-| kee's Charley Grimm were: * nn f its 2 dix of St.Louis and Johnny Anto-| Catchers Smoky Burgess, Phila- ie nelli. ot New York, the southpaw. | delphia, and Del Crandell, Milwau- + OF Antonelli has the best record, 12-2. | kee; infielders Gil Hodges and Pee |B . a’ * *°* * Wee Reese, Brooklyn; Red Schoen- Pr actice Lopez hr nine Ameriesn Leeges abl dienst, St.Louis, and Ransom Jack- . Two—15 Lop Semi-Mein Races ' ers, including two lefthanders, have |} son, Chicago; and outfielders Don : posted 80 wins and 38 losses. They | York; Gus Bell, Cincinnati, and | Bi _Two—25 Lap Feature Races De om are lefties Dean Stone of Washing- | Frank Thomas, Pittsburgh. x €- ca for ew ower ton and Whitey Ford of the Yan-|; Barring injuries, managers must MORE FOR YOUR MONEY! Promptly ar. kees, and righties Mike Garcia and | play the fans’ selections for three * Semi ond 0 at bes 7 Bob Lemon of Cleveland, Bob| innings oo . ecature Races trom Rain-Out a Keegan and Virgil Trucks of the > 8 @ * Program Made Up Tonight! 8:30 P. M, : a * * a = SS | in Rout of Orioles timore. ‘ Louis four, three each from Phila- (3 Miles West of the Airport) CLEVELAND {Cleveland first “2 6 delphia and Milwaukee, two Cin- # and {irs National League All-Star}cinnati and one Cub and one HRM RH eH ‘ crew named by the fans brings | Pirate. ha. tn ste ts HREM RH HH HHS together these great stars: Catcher *.¢ ® “= como | Roy Campanella, Brooklyn; first| The American League leads in = : ea baseman Ted Kluszewaki, Cincin-|the classic with 12 wins in 20 \ Get Our Deal on a New ~ ew nati; second baséman Granny | games, but the National Leaguers baseman Bill Glynn credits a lot of extra batting ‘practice and a helpful tip on balance from his manager for the new home-run die power that makes him “‘feel like Hamner, Philadelphia; shortstop | have won the last four encounters, 1954 a-hitter now.” Alvin Dark, New York; third base-|a tie for the record, -p ~ . * ower-Glide The 28-year-old Franklin, N.J., * latott man ated an” 3am |i Golfer Can Increase Fun awer Tribe rally bP erie ne is 7 . . Gove —— ‘t night’ -3 victo ver Ne ae in Game by Using Spoon (othe money man pitch more than 400 feet to SAM SNEAD t shot clear the right-center field fence. By SAM airway shot onte the green, or He also hit two singles in his four we nn at ny ge at parent to it, more often. times up, driving Rome two more spoon more than than important thing te runs, the two-wood, or bragsie, but that’s | remember about the spoon shot NORTH CHEVROLET " In Detroit Monday Glynn because my drives are usually long | ts that your club should hit the 1000 $. Weedward Ave., whacked three home runs in three ‘ Ph. Mi 4-2735 tries off three different pitchers— Ralph Branca, Ted Gray and Dick Weik. The first round-tripper was Glynn's initial grand-slam swat, and it carried into the upper right field deck. . ; 4 “Hitting one upstairs like that x. & 2 ’ Your Ne. 3 wood can save & gave me a big lift,” said Glynn,| WIND DELAYS SWIM—Personable Winnie Roach, AP Wirephote | lt of worry If you can poke that whose teammates currently call| (above) Canada’s 28-year-old St. Thomas, Ont. | so the channel would quiet down. She will try Thurs- him “Babe” instead of the usual | swimmer, was held up today in her attempt to swim | day, conditions permitting, to beat Florence Chad- Court Orders Fine enough so that I don't need exces- sive distance on my second shots. And, the weekend golfer can in- crease his fun in the game of golf by using the spoon, too. No Money Down Easy Pay! — — — OR OTHER MECHANICAL REPAIRS “McPug.” . ee the Catalina Channel. Winnie was ready to make | wick’s mark of 13 hours and 47 minutes for the Now ... with the cooperation of the attempt but high winds. failed to subside enough | 22-mile crossing. , Your Local Independent “A tip Al (Lopez) gave me just R f ded t 'B { Carageman before I hit that first one in Detroit . | e un 0 la F "| iti aaienoceshenaemanel / Pontiac Piston _ rrticed Td been lunging. at the Braves Nearing Olson Meets Gonzales in} wannsaurc. pa, say 10 parse rvice e ball—shifting my weight (195 The Dauphin County Court Tuesday So ige cl y Non-Title Bout on Coast |sariit o'min''s.to a s ® ® what I'd been doing. Next time up T followed his advice and hit OAKLAND, Calif, —Baldish | Honolulu, Bobo stopped J levied against Johnny Bratton, New 102 S$. Seginew St, P ul bo stopped esse Turn- that first homer.” Carl (Bobo) Olson, king of the | er of St.Louis with that kind of York City welterweight. MH FREE PARKING IN REAR During the current home stand. miie middleweights, stakes prestige but |... in President Judge Paul G. Smith — ~ Glyna said, he has “taken a lot of But 2 Million: Total or oa crown tonight in a sched- | . e ° ° ruled that the commission “failed ball before the clubhead passes ~é tra batting practice,” adding: ; u 10-round fight with willing | to comply with the mandatory pro- ee ee are eee for Attendance During [poe roms et ie" cnklens | Olson is expected to weigh about | visions of the administrative agen-| “=> ‘™ Punt i your owtng. installed in One Day ing to us almost every day.” 1954 Is Tough Task Auditorium. 165 pounds for the non-title go. The cy law” and that the commission| To do this play the ball back a apna empresa are eee |bout will mot be televised. The) is not supported by substantial | bit more toward the right foot. AND NEW!!! Tribe hep bid at first base in| 67 Cun EDMONDS is mill be Olson's tuneup bout| match will start at approximately | and legally credible evidence.” | Take a stance with your toes point: |] (MAsL GAUL Mula RRL years, Glynn was benched most of | | al hit the mit. {1>Tounder with Rocky Castellani at — — gee a ing slightly outward, but don't the time from April 25 until last waukee Braves the the San Francisco Cow Palace Aug Pennsy jowing @ bout! spread your feet too far apart be- % . ’ Ld “nar Saxton in in Philadel- leg 4 because he’s regarded as a/ lion mark in home attendance the | 20. And among the interested spec- Hardtop Twin Bill prea sagged cause you are liable to lose bal- ight hitter. next time they play at County Sta-|tators tonight will be Castellani ance as you swing. Since the spoon : court heard ast dium, but it appeared today that himself. The Cleveland, Ohio, box- §| Rin the case | is pe baggon than the driver or bras- Walled Lake Ti er is to participate in the official at at ay hat | Si. Stand closer to the ball and Buick, Chevrolet, a ake ligers the two million goal for the season Saul ‘corusacelad snmuacrene The commission cy yes ap ‘ Ford, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, "38 to ‘#® . L . oe rt more upr igh’ swing. a Hold Little Loop Lead a se While Olson is a lopsided favor-|, Are® hardtop fans have a “dou- | PEt ertorts" ot pout with Sax.| Although the ball will go farther SeSein, ChE ene DyETEE Walled Lake Tigers are in Ist The club had 36 dates in the | ite to beat Gonzales he isn't taking a header in store at the Pon- ton. with a three wood than with irons, _ Free Tewing—No Block Deposit place as the Walled Lake Little | book and 965,006 paid admissions the Rankin, Pa., entry lightly. pre Meaed i nae putea don't force your swing. Swing M Le ime t if in the till when it left on its pres- *. * @ . . gasily with your spoon and you will tor Exchange rong seagn” Glengarry ent road trip. The mid-season total; “You can't afford to let up-on caw peat F ta ane and Orioles’ Catcher Mokes be surprised at how far and how 40 ° Ge. Yanks are in 2nd place, followed| as far and away the best injany of them.” is the champ’s ce, an extra 1s lap semi and >| Unassisted Double Play | straight that ball will fly. 1 S. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 53-7482 by the Union Lake iedlntes ours either major league, the New York | observation. lap feature will be held. nassis y ;See ma _ Wixom Orioles. Giants trailing by some 300,000| Olson boosters think his devas-| The “bonus” races are those} BALTIMORE w — When catcher — ny | with 626,602 in. the National and|tating body attack will slow up rained out at the track last Fri-| Clint Courtney of the Orioles made Tigers will play off with the win-| 4 veiand and Baltimore running | Gonzales. Last month in his native day. They will open the program | an unassisted double play against = pera half of the se th neck and neck with 666 536 and —= at 8:30 Ape following qualifica- the Yankees on June 2 it was only : ‘ saan ip next month. | 661.746, respectively, in the Amer- Lobeck Horse Winn tions at 7 o'clock. The regularly | the 38th such play by a catcher in|}. ’ - . : ae SI ee ad Shel There’s so much to ad HOT ROD RACES ees Pastime Judy, a Gyear-old mare |" it happened this way. With Irv mucn fo aamire The first million for the Braves | owned by Henry Lobeck of Pon- ' Noren on third and Bob Grim af TONIGHT 8:30 is a cinch on the first night of the | tiac, won the mile B Pace 8th race | -Lioyd Waner of the Pittsburgh | the plate, the batter attempted-e next home stand. The Brooklyn | at Northville Downs last. night in| Pirates made 223 Hits in his first | squeeze bunt on the third strike. c e e - Dodgers, who drew 70,912 in their|two minutes eight seconds. Judy | season in the major leagues (1927). | He missed the ball for the strike. t b ht Pontiac m-59 Speedway only two previous appearances | jis trained and driven by Irving|This is a record for first-year | out and Noren was tagged out at in our smar / rl 3 Miles Past Airport here this year, are due in for 4/ Utter, players. I ) make-up game July 14 and will | — home. ™| undoubtedly pull the necessary ; Meet ee | sn T sport shirts | ; Fain May Be Lost 1 \ : ome | rT *LEARANCE! ne and SAVE DETROIT, July 7 #—The Chi- cago White Sox, still reeling from a4 59 a four-game trimming, by - first- ’ first-place Cleveland last weekend, } ’ Aute Safety Glass learned Tuesday first baseman Ferris Fain may be lost for the a | meee T UD. COMES rest of the season. with windshielé or decor m wtwesnield ov ¢ Fain and third baseman George Just in time for Vacation Traveling! Hub Auto Glass Co. pari var 7 an ee Kell Take a look at these prices for genuine U. S. Tires! eee FE 4-100 || nay be sidelined a month. 600-16 . . ole 710-15 . . 14 ram's @ quot dot ot DISTRIBUTOR of — 650-16 .. 3J5%.. 670-15 . . 73%... fil ea eas be a e e Prices Include Fed. Tax bright colors of these new Service Station Equipment @ Globe Hoists @ Champion Air Compressors @ Bink’s Spray Equipment @ ARO Lubrication Equipment @ Atlas Lathes and Saws S E AT @ Proto Tools Priced From @ Heinwerner Hydraulic Jacks |] | $795 © Heer Hr ats HH) COWERS, Automotive Machine Shop Service and Rebabbitting D "ha teatpere fo to ooo too WH Don R, MacDonald, Inc. PONTIAC MOTOR PARTS [1] (yspoyAl) “smn torte tw omer 84 South Perry St. Phone FE 2-0106 |H) | times |370 So. Seginaw | |", FE 6-6136-7 ' sport shirts. And there's pf” T7.Vaa BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL ||] orcs | | ments. The pay-off, how- a Ge ene & ae SPECIAL CHEVROLETS $75” PONTIACS | 7* ever, is in their luxurious r ‘ oe su even FORDS feeling and breeze- ;rneneer | weight lightness. Choose tise several. fitiwee- from 3° Drive In for Free Brake Inspection and Check-Up ? fate a U Fifteen M Sage Zs -& “py 4atat PatrERs0N. When Lt. Robert Oliver, Jr, was here recently on a flight from Mather A.F.B., California, he spent the weekend at the family cottage at Elizabeth Lake Noting some fishermen — troll- ing near the dock, he asked © dhem what they were catching. “Trout” was the reply. Bob decid- ed he'd go along » with the gag and © asked to see them. When they held up a_ nite stPing of rain- bows, he nearly fell in the lake. “My gosh” said Bob, “I had to go to California to catch my first trout and how I gel, home and find people catching them in my own front yard”. Seems as though fishing, like gold, is where you find it. We hadn't given- much thought Because he is a tool and die maker in a big automobile plant, William K. Meyers, 1006 Borton Ave., Easexville, Michigan, is naturally interested in how to improve his PATTERSON Gar’s performance. Not long ago @ switched to New Super Perma- Motor Oil. ‘ “He finds that this extraordinary new oil cuts engine drag and fric- ti6n so much “it saves me 3 gal- purpose by- hauling out..a_ goodly supply of the local representatives of the catfish tribe. Clarence | deciares, and we'll geo ajong with him, that despite their rather awésome appear- ance, no finer eating fish comes from lecal waters than the com- mon bulthead. John Birkhold of Royal Oak pass- es along information that blue- gill fishing in the lakes around Frankfort is little short of fabulous. According to John the fishermen’s conscience and the game laws are the only obstacles to filling a boat with big bluegilis in jig time. Nightcrawlers continue to be the preferred bait. ginners’. luck, except, perhaps, at water skiing; and are always giad to find tangible support for the theeryHoward Figzgeraid; reports that on a recent trip to Quebec's Mosie River, several better than 30 pound salmon were taken by first- time anglers, Many fishermen try unsuccessfully for years to get over the magic 30 mark, so, you see? We haven't had a chance, as yet, to try outthe new Winches- terauteleading shotgun, but our Ann Arbor assistant, Bob Patter- son, gave one a workout on the skeet range over the weekend. Fits well, handles nicely, is light | on recoil and is a natural pointer, j}says Bob, which is high praise |from him because he's a double chinery. ~ Somehow we got off on guns and gunning and we sfould re- port that the upland gunner is likely in for a rougher season this year, Sharptails and prairie chickeris Will undoubtedly be on the closed list in the L. P. and ruffed grouse appear to be scarc- er than they’ve been in the last few years. It's-a tittle teo- early to tell what effect the heavy spring rains had on the pheasant crop. Don't throw away the scattergun, though. A “poor” year in Michigan is bet- ter than ‘‘good’’ years in many another state, and early estimates are not always 100 per cent ac- We'r re ) long: time be lie vers in be-! | man ang has little truck with guns | curate. | ‘Bullheads’ Make Fine Eating County Anglers Big Fish Derby’ Is Wide Open in All Divisions Because there this is mid-summer, is no reason for Oakland efforts to capture one (or more) of the three big awards in the 1954 Pontiac Press ‘Big Fish Derby.” Fishing is still very good on the myriad lakes in this common- wealth, Every weekend nice catches of bass, bluegill and pike are reported. The big ones are still there, as witness the latest leaders in the three-way contest. Dick Reach of 2990 Pontiac Trail landed a one-pound.10 ounce bluegill on June 16 that went 1142 inches in length, It was taken on a bass fly, a method that certainly gives the angler a lot Can Still Get in Race for. 1954 Honors ; County fishermen-tetet—-up_in_ their | fons of gas in every tankful!”’ Change over to New Super Permalube Motor Oi! at your Standard Oil Dealer's and start to bullheads, lately, until we ran into Clarence Knechtel, squire of Commerce Township's Pitch-Hav- en Farm. Some of his guests put the recent holiday weekend to good @iving gaa today. . HOT WATER all you want —when you want it! ee with an_gutomatic BUDGET ffs, WATER HEATER by AMERICAN- Standard Here's a fast-working, economi- AS Low AS cal water heater. Attractive white $8075 enamel jacket with black trim. Galvanized steel tank . . . sizes for al] homes. See it today. Pies tnstallation EAMES and BROWN, "6 SAGINAW , ~{ For Those Who Appreciate the Finer Things ; . 4 Custom - Tailored : 4 Clothing ‘Showing the Finest Meteriels — qn Semples 4 ~ Assuring Finer Hand-Craftsmanship ; . Gueranteeing the Perfect Fit » RANDOLPH 4 ALTERATIONS DRESS 4 etme AAT IOOD ira | CUSTOM TAILORS—CLOTHIERS 4 re —_— a ae EAST SIDE AUTO PARTS OPEN SUNDAYS 9 A. M. to 2 P. M. Parts for All Make Cars! FE 5-6855 {81-7 East Pike St. 3 Blocks East of New City Hall nursday os Friday © Saturday FOUNDLINGS — Thomas O'Laughlin, Jr., of St Paul, Minn., poses with 6 of “his charges which, he estimates, are about 6 weeks old. Though the little animals look cute enough to cuddle, there is a good reason why O'Laughlin keeps his distance, for the pups with gloves. happen to developed a sharp set of teeth and must be handled They will be given distemper shots, then placed on view for campers at Gold Portage Camp, which O'Laughlin owns. of fun. Of course these tough fighters can be taken on the time-honored gob of worms as well as many other types of lures. Top black bass, a small-mouth specimen that weighed 5 pounds and 9 ounces, was taken by Pon- tiac’s Almon R. Austin on June 25 at Watkins Lake. It was 23 inches long and grabbed a jitterbug lure. James Sherrod of Oxford netted _|the biggest northern pike in the current contest, so far. ‘Sherrod’s ptize was a 10-pound-13-ounce lunk- er, taken from Tan Lake, near Ox- ford early in June. Derby continues through Labor Day. Winners in each of the divisions will receive a $50 U.S. Savings Killdeer Using Popular Beach as Nesting Site An intrepid—or crazy—killdear | has spent the last two weeks rais- | ing her family on Kent Lake beach * Island Lake recreation area, anager Roy Russell reports. United Press Phete be coyotes. They have already Symbol of Fire Prevention Becoming Children’s Idol LANSING — Comic ath letic heroes and movie-land cow- boys had all better look to their laurels or Smokey Bear, that wood- land buffoon with the serious mes- sage about forest fire prevention, is liable to cop top popularity hon- ors among the young fry. Smokey, it appears, is rapidly building up an ardent: following of youngsters. His popularity with the younger set is indicated by the wide variety of toys, nov- elties, and wearing apparel being - sold these days as part of the national forest fire. prevention puzzles, milk mugs and about a dozen other types of items bearing | the Smokey Bear theme now are | sold commercially in the United States books, Game Protector Saves | Life of Drowning Deer | TRYON. N.C. up — Grady Ross | game protector for a deer refuge | near here, takes his job seriously Driving by Green River, Ross saw a familiar-looking object in the water and stopped. It was the under water by a tangled grape- campaign. vine. Balloons, books, calendars, hand- Ross stripped, swam to the deer, kerchiets, hats, songs, tee-shirts, | 44 dragged it out of the river and a oe _ | into his car. He left the deer at a nearby farmhouse and_ reported ‘Today's Identity Possibly the finest swimmer in | Pontiac High School history, this | | free style ace won nafional cham- | = eee | pionship honors at 390 and 100! When Cleveland Indian pitcher yards and in 1945 was named the | | Art Houtteman was hurling for De- ee “AA's “swimmer of the year.” |troit in 1950 he led the American He's Merton Church as he ap-| League in shutouts. Ironically, he peared as a sophomore at Michi-| also allowed the most home runs happily that after g few hours’ warming up the buck was able to get on its feet. nose of a mature buck trapped | gan in 1943, ithe same year. Giynn, Indians: Collins. Carey. Yankees: Joss <= — in a ELimmer, Athletics . Mays, Irvin. title fight July 24, it was an- Giants; Adcock. Crandall, Bra i , . . . — 3 oc randa. raves; Kiner, t y. The little shorebird seemingly was not bothered by the thou- sands of visitors that trampled past her nest. The beach is one of the most popular available in the southeastern Michigan area. Park rangers report the bird and |her three youngsters all ‘doing well.” $480,000 Added fo Belmont Stake Cash NEW YORK, July 7 —Belmont Park Tuesday added | Stakes to its fall racing program. | boosting to 15 the number of stakes | two new jraces for the 25-day ening Sept. 22. The added money for the flat stakes totals $480,000 and when the |regular steeplechasing events are announced later the total will ex- | ceed half a million dollars. ¢ | One of the new stakes is the $50,000 Woodward, named in honor of the late William Woodward Sr., chairman of the Jockey Club. Anglers Find ‘Chasing Fish’ Calls for License CLINTON, lowa —You've got to have a license to chase fish as well as catch them in Iowa. © Owen Morehead and Herb Ivey) were each fined $10 and costs in Municipal Court here. They had been arrested by Conservation Of- ficer Howard Lovrien while they were with a party spearing fish in| le: the Mississippi River. First Tuna Reported The two men argued that they Reports from Wedgeport, N. S.| Weren't trying to catch fish them- indicate that the northward moving | %¢!ves. but were only driving the tuna have now reached that area, | #sh toward the spear holders. The judge ruled that the men's meeting op- one of the most favored tuna- : fishing areas of: the world. . The actions constituted illegal “‘pur- first the | suit’’ of fish, since they had no tuna were spotted off Halifax coast, June 24, according to George E. Herman, Nova Scotia bureau of information, at Halifax. Wedgeport is the site of the annual international tuna tournament. Xe fishing licenses Shirai Boxes Argentine _., TOKYO (®—World flyweight box- ing champion Yoshio Shirai will fly to Argentina Saturday to meet TUESDAY'S HOME RUNS tAha YAIR 4 's AVE | ‘almost ' : Not an Ordinary Cushion eee But a ~ sn CUSHION =F 190% Ventilated Never ' 4 ___Keaps You Cooler Before lets the] of This & Pricel... ’ MERCURY with new 161-horsepower V-8 engine YOU DON'T get an underpowered 6-cylinder engine or an_jold-fashioned straight 8. You BO get revolutionary new ball-joint ont wheel suspetision—the latest model of the car that Seder. leads the medium-price field for cee es TRADE-IN VALUE! MORE GOOD NEWS! We need used cars, ee ee in allowance on your present car. CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, ING. 40 West Pike St. Phone FE 2-9167 ONLY ) * . + As good as CAN Bt Automobile owners who belong to the ‘Automobile Club of Michigan, and in- sure with this Exchange at the Club, very properly have the warm, satisfying, con- fident feeling that they have protected their family, themselves and their car just as well as any motorist anywhere can be protected. Almost everyone knows that. Detroit Autemebile Inter-Insurance Exchange Attorneys-in-fact: Ralph Thomas Charles L. Wilson Rey M. Hood Robert G. Jamieson, General Manager at Automobile Club of Michigan YOUR NEAREST OFFICE FE 4-1496 FE 2-9255 NSSA PREXY — Top man for the National Skeet Shooting Asso- ciation this year is Dr. Frank Trucks tabove). Dr. Trucks, high scoring consistent trophy winner for years, is a busy man, operat- ing a big medical clinic in Bir- mingham, Ala. but takes time out to work hard at the job of direct- ing the NSSA, which holds its 19 shoot at OCSC, here next month. He is serving his 2nd year in the president's chair. Plant Killers to Aid Wildlife Will Be Used to Thin Dense Vegetation, Give ~ Game ‘Elbow Room’ LANSING—After 5¢veral years of testing, conservation department game division Avorkers announce they are now ready to begin use of a new wildlife management tool on a field operation basis, one that holds important promise of ad- vancing Michigan game work. Chemical plant killers, jong used to remove weeds, poison ivy and other obnoxiuos growths along highway and powerline rights-of-way, will how be used to develop and maintain openings in areas where thickly growing brush, weeds and trees have al- ready cut down wildlife habitat or where such growths are now threatening game abundance. Michigan has large areas of both open land and heavy timber, but in too many cases try and the timber are found in cencentrated blocks. The chemical sprays Wil create enough openings to give game more elbow room. Anglers Can Make Automatic Scaler LANSING—Here’s a new. wrinkle for fishermen who gre always so successful that their arms get tired | | scaling the fish they catch. A simple and effective fisn scaler | can be rigged by using an electric drill and a half-inch pipe tap. The pipe tap, of course, All you have to do is round off the square end so it fits in the drill socket, fit it in the drill socket and then go catch some fish to scale. John F. Weiler, manager at Al- gonac state park, says a number of campers have made use of such rigs at the park in recent weeks. Pontiac Man Acquires Field Champion Beagle Pontiac beagle breeder Gordon Lindsay of 1742 Opdyke Road recently acquired what he believes is the only field champion. stud beagle in the area. Lindsay last week purchased Eberle’s Buddy II, a 6-year-old beagle, from Earl Kopp of Water-. town, Wisconsin. ‘‘Buddy’’ already has sired’ one field champion, Hick- ory Lawn Brownie. Angler Gets a Hoot MONETT, Mo. & — Using a top- water bait while bass fishing at night, Ted Strecker got a terrific strike. There was a lot of com- motion on the water as Strecker recled in. He caught an owl which had mistaken the bait for a swim- ming mouse. Angered Rabbit Goes ‘Berserk’ | in Saginaw _Boys’ Pet Attacks “Neighbor Child and} Grandfather SAGINAW ® — A serene-look- ing little, white rabbit went. ber- serk the other day. The furry animal,. owned by young Fred Niemeyer, fled from his backyard pen to a neighbor's yard. There, without provocation, | he hit six-year-old Penney Bates | on both legs. Penney’s grandfather, Edward Jones, responded to the child's cries, He chased the rabbit until he caught it, then beoted it through the air for nearly 20 feet. Whereupon the seemingly mad hare charged Jones. The grandfather was dodging the rabbit's wild lunges like an adept bullfighter when the. Nie- meyer boy's mother and an on- jooker came to Ahe rescue. They seized the angfy animal and re- turned it to its pen, pending a test the open coun- | is spiney | on one end and square on the other for rabies. Penney was taken to a hospital for treatment. Mrs. ‘Niemeyer explained rabbit's action by saying: “He grew up fighting with my son's puppy.”’ the TIGER BATTING — Tuttle, RUNS— Boone, 40 HITS—Kuenn, 85 DOUBLES Kuenn TRIPLES— Tuttle, 7 HOME RUNS— Boone. 14 RUNS BATTED IN—Boone, 40. ~ PITCHING. Zuverink, 4-3, .571. STRIKEOUTS— Hoert. tr ~ LEADERS 296 i re ee GLMMOUMT a ee Johnson Outboerd Motors Teenee Boot Trailers Everything tor the Boat OWEN’S MARINE SUPPLIES 534 Orchard Late Ave. FE 2-s078 HOT ROD RACES TONIGHT 8:30 Pontiac M-59 Speedway 3 Miles Past Airport | | | FISHERMEN! All thoughts are on those days ahead... in the stream, on the lake or river and in camp. — Whn you think of Fishing, Camping or Recreation — Re- member we have everything you need . serve you. The Sports Shop Formerly Mac Rogers 16 South Cass FE 2-7621 . and we're happy te Brake Rell Plymouth $19.95 } ‘alue! OTHER CARS, CARS, ALIGNMENT, Ford, Chevrolet, Now *] 69> ) Now *B95 a Pay as Little a a SERVICE STORE | oe Sot Cone ne Special! Sf YF $24.95 VA VALUE $7.95 VALUE s $1] aa a Week FE 5-4123,, WATERFORD DRIVE iN THEATER THE Fy Cor. Willisms Lake-Airport Roads — Box Office Opens 7:30 P. M. TUES. - WED. - THURS. PLUS ACTION THRILLER! SUPREME ADVENTURE! John Ford's rousing drama of love and glory in the days of OFFICIAL HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP FILMS! | | tion of the world is so frightening =e |} up another good job. He'll have a = THE FONTIAG PRE SS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 People Turn to Religious Theme Films By LOUELLA 0;,PARSONS | HOLLYWOOD (INS)—The trend | toward_religious plays has never been as great as it is right now. I believe that's because the condi- and people are turning more and more to prayer and spiritual help I've just heard that Jack Warner has handed one of his staff writers a copy of Lieyd C. Douglas’ novel, “Forgive Us Our Trespasses,” to write a screen treatment. Tifis is the story of a newspaper man who finds God. Douglas’ books, which all have a religious note, are getting a hig play, what with “‘The Robe,”’ the remake of ‘‘Magnificent Obses sion,’’ Columbia's scheduled epic based on and now passes.”’ “Forgive Us Our Tres The boy who played the young honeymooner in ““The High and the Mighty,’ John Smith, has picked “We're No Bogart the romantic lead in Angels” with Humphrey at Paramount, and he'll have Mike Curtiz as his director and Pat Dug gan as his producer. John ts the young man Joseph Schenck invited to meet his niece, Nicola Schenck, and after that Nicky and Smith had several dates, About that John Smith name — no, it isn't his real one. He. was | born Robert Van Orden, but when he took up a movie career he de “The Big Fisherman,” | r 4 tf craze has even spread to Nippon! JAPANESE HEPBURN — The Audrey He pburn | young Japanese misses were entrants in the Miss Hepburn of Japan contest, sporting the same ragged These three pert haircut, Mihoke Ando, 19, (left) was the winner, posing with losers Naoko Inoue and Sumiko Amo, complete with bangs, Laned Frese ravsw so popular now. take the most common name olf all. In England an independent pro- | ducer is trying to clear the rights | which would make a great picture. | If this is possible, Edward | Arnold might play the Churchill British company, } Churchill's mother, part, He's been contacted by the | Jenny Ran- cided it would be a novelty to to Sir Winston Churchill's life, | | | Dinosaurs ‘roamed every conti- i nent of the earth for 130 million years be Hore they became extinct. Revolutionary Arms RIDGEFIELD, Conn. Three times in the past three y« residents here have dug up sen (UP) — TUNE TOPPERS MANNY’S "ss" “SULLY” at the KEYBOARD _ GENE MAGA Tenor Sax. W. Huron at Elizabeth Leke Rd. “YOU CAN'T BEAT MANNY’S FOR FUN” IT’S ALWAYS COOL AT THE STRAND _ ! OPEN 10:45 A. M. LAST TIMES TODAY an a BARRY SULLIVAN SAWP |,dolph, was an American, so it|[C isn't as strange as it might seem | °o | to-have an American play the one and only cigar-smoking Winnie, | England's most popular statesman. * * * Phone FE 5-833! Cc On Our New Giant Screen! ~~ AIR CONDITIONED EAT MORE LUNCH EVERY DAY LOW PRICES America’s flaming frontier! The star and Girecter of “The Quiet Man” 4 GREGG PALMER - RICHARD LONG MILLER , KENT TAYLOR .=-pquLEEN MILLE Fish & Chips, Salad “ 50° Pork Chops, Salad 80° | The best letter writer I know is rs Thru Sot.! Bread & Butter. Bread & Butter....... Rock Hudson, who lets me hear ae FEATURES AT - 12:50 - 3:55 - 7 - 7:00 - 10:05 P.M, ; ; from him with pleasant regularity. | fe - i Salt Fried Chichen 1 10 In his last letter he says that in| | nees pote Loving SECOND FEATURE Salad, Bread & Butter...... . lthe cast of “Captain Lightfoot,” || -SLUGGING CHAMPS—- now being made in Dublin, is Lord | UNITED STATES MARINES! . | and Lady Mount Charles, of Slane |, apres | Castle, The wardrobe girl asked her ladyship what kind of costume jewelry she wished to wear, Lady Mount Charles smiled and said that perhaps it wouldn't be nec- essary to borrow the. costume jewelry because she could une |: te tf. , ; | = BURYTE VTE: IRVING BACON and itroteeiny RACE GENTRY - A UnIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL PICTURE FEATURES AT - 11:20 - 2:25 - 5:34 - 8:40 P. M, sure JOHN WAYNE - HENRY FONDA ae her own. SHIRLEY TEMPLE - PEDRO ARMENDARIZ w~ ; Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500 W her reupon she opened her varse| _ - = with WARD BOND + GEORGE O'BRIEN _ and took out the most | VICTOR McLAGLEN © ANNA LEE + IRENE =~ ‘ ay of diamonds and emeralds ‘ array ¢ ar mera Serna * oY ee = a0 Te STARTS TONIGHT sheen were enly ech Complete Dinner ae Reservations protabte for Parties or — » Read , FE 38-9119 IN AND AROUND PONTIAC ae RAEL’S DRIVE-IN Jost Past City RESTAURANT 6225 Hithieng Ré. Seestng Ginna end Seats © Sow Penton Bove ov tn Your Cor bd A Chips Home Cooking Like Mother Used to Make! Home Made Bread and Pastries FRANK & ESTHER’S °™.’-'."“ yi? Asem LOG CABIN cont tm 8 = a? Dick & Jim DINE & DANCE DRIVE-IN Coiet ed rd nd 130 S. Telegraph JACK, SADIE and JACK JR. WONDERFUL MEALS JACK O’ HEARTS BAR ‘N GRILL 2528 Dixie Hwy. . “HOME OF FAMOUS. SALADS” Hot Dogs, Curb Service 11 A.M.-12:30 P.M. Closed Mondays Hoy Bloomfield Inn 8 tn Oakland * fas Bena 6 Ni and ‘FAMILY STYLE DINNERS— SPORTSMAN’ INN On US-10-——Ae Waterford, Mich. Phone OR 3-9325 PURE FOOD Those Baldwin et Montcalm Pork Bar-B-Que, 35¢c 20¢ ew that Service ate Parties RESTAURANT end BAR Spere Ribs — Shrimp UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT pe Howard Kelley Viola Karr Wed in Cass City Rite CASS CITY—United in marriage in a ceremony here Saturday were Geraldine Viola Karr of Cass City The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Ervin Karr, while the bridegroom’s parents are Kenneth Kelley and Mrs. Althea Kelley of Deford. Mrs. Kathleen Dalton of Deford, sister of the groom, and Robert Karr, brother of the bride, were the attendants at the ceremony at- tended by 30 friends and relatives. A reception at the gun club in Caro followed. The newlyweds will make their home on Houghton street after a short northern va- cation. Guest Minister Sunday to Be Seminary Student DRAYTON PLAINS—Guest min- ister Sunday morning at the wor- ship service of the Community United Presbyterian Church will be Harvey Beach, a student at Pittsburgh Xenia Seminary. Sterling College, Sterling, Kansas. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. | JULY 7, 1954 4 WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — Fi- nal plans were shaping up today for the Waterford Community Ac- tivities Inc, (CAI) Fair, to be staged in two weeks. Listed among the booth sponsors are the Merry Mixers Square Dance Club and the Republican Women's Club, In charge of booths at the fair, which wit) be held at the CAI Bidg. on Williams Lake road July . 23, 24 and 25, will be Ed Me- Laughlin, Fern Putnam, Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Gillette, Mr. and Mrs, William Kratt, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Akin and Mrs. Mar- garet Beattie, According to General Chairman A, L. Beebe there will be enter- tainment nightly, plus a Sunday matinee, Mrs, Patrick Wolfe will have charge of the acts. Highlighting the 8:15 p.m. show will be Les Fitzgerald and his col- lection of guns Door Sean will be given every hour, starting at 8 p.m. Friday and ‘continuing through the three days of the fair. Cli the event Sunday night will be the Sail Today From Quebec By SHERRY RINN Press Lapeer Correspondent LAPEER—The Rev. Charlies D. Braidwood of Grace Church and seven altar boys have left on their long-planned tour of Europe. Youths soon to be on the con- tinent are Mike Chase, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Chase; Robert Secson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louls Secson; Ralph Duerden, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Duerden, and Ron Mahaffey,’ son of Mr. and Mrs. Stan Mahaffy. Others are Bernard land and France. A jaunt through Switzerland will precede sailing for home from LeHavre, France, on August 21. County Calendar Leonard Leonard Woman's Club will hold its annual picnic dinner tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Floyd Bentiey on Roch- ester New Hudsen Chureh Night will be observed at the New Hudson Methodist Church tonight, with a cooperative set for 6:30. W8CS of the New Hudson Church wil) hold ite snnual picnic to- motrow at Kensington Park. Draytes Peliowship Class of the Community United Presbyterian ur of Shell, 288 Lake- side, Leake Orion, at 6:30 pm. This wil} be a potluck affair, and members end friends are invited to bring their own table service and foed. Almea ite annual ‘the Burlison Park, of Romeo. 825 W. HURON See the Latest _ TV Demonstrated! Get a Geod I| ||| Used Tv HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. 825 W. Huron. FE 4-2525 ‘\ See oe 2eu8 Nationally Recommended id od uN” width Open Every Day! ! Banquet Room Phone: OR 3-1907 OR 3-9303 J ~ SEGRE eeeee Pastor, Seven Altar Boys Leave on Tour of Europe | residents of Tull drive and town- ar sree |in Accident Death Hours of odd jobs for the past year helped the bays earn the $700 required for the tour. Churchrist urchrLists Funds Given for Building DRAYVON PLAINS — At the close of the second year of a three- year campaign of the building fund of the Community United Presby- terian Church, $50,000 has been con- tributed, it has been announced. Officials believe that at the cur- rent rate of payment the entire amount for the new educational unit will be paid off within the next 20 months. Recent furnishings for the new unit innclude fireplace fixtures, given by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Williams, in memory of Mrs. Grace Barnhart, a charter member of the congregation; three , lecterns, made by Peder Nielsen: ‘and eight tables given by Mr. and Mrs. J. Jones. : Tull Acres Assn. Picks Officers at Recent Parley WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — At a recent meeting of the Tull Acres Assn., Marvin Vest was elected prestient and Merle Lowe was named vice president. Mrs. Martin Downs Jr. was named recording secretary and treasurer of the organization, which was founded for community improvement purposes. Twenty-five new members joined the civic association at the meet- * | ing, which was held at the Downs home at 1238 Tull Dr. Member- ship is open to home owners and ship plat 27. To Quiz Car Driver A statement will be taken today from the driver of one to two cars involved in a fatal accident at 10-Mile and Beck Rds. yester- day morning, the Oakland County Prosecutor's office reported. The other driver, Scott Cannon, 48, of Livonia, died last night in University Hospital, Ann Arbor, from injuries suffered in the crash. Oakwood Couple Marks 50 Years of Marriage OAKWOOD — Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Groover, of 653 Hurd Rd., celebrated the 50th anniversary of their wedding recently with a fam- ily gathering. Twenty-seven members of the family were present for the din- ner and reunion session. County f Births Mr. and Mrs. leon announce the birth of a son on — at Lapeer County General Hospita Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Bishop of Ann Arbor announce the birth of a son on June 28. Mr. and Mrs. John Cowell of Burnside announce the birth of a. son, Michael John, June 25. "OL 2LL Lee AIR CONDITIONED Wed,, Jaty 7, 2 May Only "Fangs of the Wild” Starrt Charles Chaplin, Jr. ALSO | \ \ \ Vy id ddd wa aa eae. has been crowning of a queen, the awarding of three main ptizes and a fire- works display. Eight girls are entered in the fair queen contest. The one gar- nering the most penny votes will get the fair crown, Competing for the honor are Pat- ty Augugliaro, Shirley Bain, Etaine Willson, Connie Culver, Carol France, Nancy Dickman, Julie Hickman and JoAnn Valentine. Maddy Planning) fo Expand Camp Director of Interlochen Group Wants All-Year Music Study INTERLOCHEN (UP) — Dr. Jo- seph E. Maddy, founder and direc- tor of the National Music Camp, today disclosed. a long range ex- pansion plan for the 700 - acre camp, including establishment of a year-around program he said will “revolutionize” musical train- ing. The announcement follows re- cent threats by Maddy to move the camp from its present loca- tion — possibly out of the state — if a proposed jet base eight miles | away proves ‘“‘too noisy.”’ Maddy revealed he hopes to winterize the camp x0 some stu- dents can train for a \full year. The camp now operates only three months a year. “If we could operate year-around it would revolutionize development of musica] skills,’’ Maddy said. *‘A student just out of high school would be able to put in a full year developing skills before going to college. After 20 years of age it ig hard to develop the basic skills. “By making this a year- ~around camp we can give the nation's young musicians more incentive to further their musica! training.” The camp, beginning its 27th year, hag 1,600 students i sum- mer. Maddy said he hopes to be able to handle 300 students dur- ing the winter months, He said the winterization plan would take “about five years.” “Final Plans Take Shape’ for Waterford’s CAI Fair Hits High Taxes on Cigarettes Tobacco Expert Says Key to More Exports Is Lower Foreign Levy WASHINGTON (INS) — One of the nation’s top tobaccd experts says the key to greater export sales of American tobacco is a reduction of foreign taxes on the product which is the life blood of many. southern farmers. George W. Thomas, former direc- tor of the Foreign Agricultural Service's Tobacco and Tropical Products Division, explains that the most important single factor in limiting consumption of American cigarettes abroad is their high cost. Thomas, now a tebace com- pany executive in Raleigh, 8. C., adds that high retail prices for HAZEL CARTER Mr. and Mrs. Edward Carter of Ortonville have announced the engagement of their daughter. Hazel, to Kenneth, Austin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Austin, also of Ortonville. A July 31 wedding| cigarettes generally are a direct date has been set result of high tax rates. | He explains that these taxes rep- resent a government's attempt to obtain maximum revenue from | tobacco in lieu of other types of | taxation, The former Agriculture Depart- ment official points out that in most, nations, other than those hav- ing tobacco monopolies, duties and taxes combined represent from 50 to 8 per cent of the retail price. He cites the United Kingdom as /an example — and says in that country tobacco revenues are ob- tained almost entirely from import duties on unmanufactured tobacco. These revenues, says Thomas, represent about 83 per cent of the retail price of cigarettes. Thomas lists Italy, France and | Sweden as nations that have to- bacco monopolies instead of im- port duties or taxes. He says the monopolies — which are, in effect, taxes — represent roughly 75 per cent of the retail price on cigarettes. Thomas explains .that duties and taxes on tobacco are steady, rela- tively easy to collect, and reliable sources of government income. He says they are of major in most European and in several Far Eastern nations. He notes, however, that in some cases tax rates on tobacco have been raised to such a height that total revenues to governments have been reduced. Thomas calls Cana- |'da an example of this. . He says that following an in- UF Members to Consider Curb | on Single Drives opined he TOWNSHIP — A by-law change aimed primarily at reducing the number of separate drives by community charitable agencies will be considered at a meeting of the general member- ship of the Farmington-area United Fund and Community Chest orga- nization tomorrow night. The proposed amendment reads, in part: ‘ . Participating agen- cies will not conduct a drive for funds from the general public and will report all sums received from other sources..." It states further that funds given to the campaign fund but ear- marked for a specific agency would be deducted from the agency's share of the total United Fund and Conmunity Chest collection The meeting will be held at 8 p.m. in the Farmington Town Hall. U. S.-Owned Wheat Sold in Special Plan WASHINGTON (INS) — Agriculture Department sas that 48 and one-third million bush- els of government-owned wheat have been sold under a special export program, The special program was begun in early December, and has boosted Maddy said he expects the full- year plan to meet with enthusi- astic support from educational | ing year which ended June 30 wheat exports which dropped dras- tically under the International |W heat Agreement, in the market- leaders. One of the first projects in! the long-range expansion program | cannot be listed against the export is construction of an 800-seat opera | quota set up for the United Sates building. Maddy said the building | by the ‘Internaional Wheat Agree- would be finished by September. | |ment, nor can importing countries | to lower its taxes on cigarettes Republicans to Meet LAPEER — The Lapeer County | wheat pact had accounted for the Republican convention to elect del-|sale of only 105 million bushels egates to the state convention in/of U. August will be held August 12, it | original U. S. quota for the year announced. |has been 210 million bushels. crease in cigarette taxes in Can- ada in April, 1951, the average | retail price for a pack rose from about 38 cents to 42 cents, In the following fiscal year, con- suntption declined almost 14 per cent, and revenues decreased de- Spite the rise in taxes! To meet this crisis, Canada had Wheat sold under the special pro- gram at competitive world price count this wheat as part of their | in April, 1952 — cutting the price IWA quotas. | per pack by about five cents. Once By the end of June, the world | again consumption boomed. WSCS Sets Potluck LEONARD — The July meeting of the Leonard Methodist WSCS will be held as a potluck picnic at S. wheat in one year. The 6 p.m. tomorrow. The affair will be held at the cottage of Mr. and Mrs, Robert Cascaddon at Lake- (Marlette Opens - Swimming Pool’ Over Weekend ‘-MARLETTE — Hundreds of chil- new $30,000 swimming pool opened here over the holiday week end. The 50-by-75-foot pool was built as a Lions Club project and fur- nishes water recreation for resi- dents from miles around, Sanilac County is one of the few in the state with no inland lakes. A small admission fee is charged children, with adults assessed a slightly higher fee. Surrounded by floodlights for night swimming, the pool is open until 9 p.m. Man Found Hanged in Home Tuesday UTICA — In il] health for several months, Donald Anderson, 36, of 44294 Mound Rd., Sterling Town- ship was found hanged in the base- ment of his home early yesterday. Anderson's death was ruled a stii- cide by the Macomb County Coro- ner’s office. He was the brother of Police Chief Hazen Anderson and Sgt. Ed- ward Anderson of the Utica Police Dept. He was married, but had no children, Richardson Farm Dairy 7350 Highland Rd. ANNOUNCES NEW LOW PRICES PASTEURIZED NOW 35° = coe HOMOGENIZED ww 37 tt. vow 25° ci. EXCLUSIVE FURNISHINGS tm the Reart of Orayten Plains - 3526 Sashabaw OB 3-171) Guaranteed DAYTON JEWELERS Watch Repair 4. 3. DEXTROM, Prop. Deaths in Nearby Communities ville Lake’ 8 Doers North of the Bank be held at 2:30 p.m. Friday at the How Lake Theates Dudley H. Moore Funeral Home, vee tae with burial in White Chapel Memo- | Whittaker. of Johnson City, Tenn. p.m. Jhursday at the Schnaidt Fu- Mrs. Walter Pennington ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Serv- ‘fee for Mrs. Walter (Ethel B.) Pennington, 56, of 439 W. Guthrie will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at the Ashley Funeral Home, Hazel Park with burial in White Chapel Memorial Park Cemetery. She died Monday. = Besides her husband, Mrs, Pen- nington is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Ellen Riley of Royal Oak Township, a brother, a sister and one grandchild. Samuel KR, Dettorre ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Re- quiem Mass was sung today at Our Lady of La Sallette Church for Samuel R. Dettorre, 37, of 26534 Brush St., with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. He died suddenly Sunday. Surviving are his widow, Ida; Frank M. Hubbard ROCHESTER — Service for Frank M. Hubbard, 78, of 2960 John R will be held at 2 p. m. Friday at the Pixley Funeral Home, with burial in Mount Avon Cemetery. He died at his home} Tuesday night following a lengthy illness. Mr. Hubbard is survived by his widow, Viva; five daughters, Mrs. Frances Olson of Mason, Wis., Mrs. Mata Bearss of Berkley, Mrs. Viva Wood of Rochester, Mrs. Genevieve Hutchcins of Rochester and Mrs. Emily Maitrott of Clark- ston! two sons, Banks and William of Royal Oak, and 18 grandchil- dren. Mr. Hubbard was employed by the Ferry-Morse Seed Co. for 30 years. Mary Alice Hetherington AUBURN HEIGHTS — Funeral service for Mrs. Mary Alice Heth- erington, 64, of 224 Gray Rd., Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Pearl Fausette and Mrs. Sabra Albert E, ark ROYAL OAK — Service for Al- bert E, Clark, M4, of 2027 N. Ver. mont Ave. will be held at 1:30 | view Cemetery. He died Monday | , with burial in, Oak- at his home Owner of the Clark and Sons Engineering Co., Detroit, Mr. Clark is survived by his widow, Esther; two sons, Edmund W. of Royal Oak and Albert E. Jr. of Allen Park; q daughter, Mrs. Betty Fra- dette of Detroit; his father, Al- bert of England, two brothers, one sister and eight grandchildren. Albert F. Brazer OAK PARK—Funeral service for Albert Frank Brazer, 53, of 13684 Vernon Ave., will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at Sullivan and Son Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with | burial in Mt. Olivet Cemetery. He | died Monday at his home. Surviving are his widow, Louise, # son, Harry, of Detroit, and a daughter, Mrs. John Krawiec, of Royal Oak Township. Clara Young CLARKSTON — Funeral serv- ice for Clara Young, 90, will be held at 10 a.m. Thursday at the Sharpe Funeral Home, with burial in Redford Cemetery, Detroit. She died in a convalescent home Sun- DRY CLEANING with @ “Dapper Difference” TRIP AHOY! Remem- ber that cleaned clothes go better. Phone OR 3-7362 . FE 4-6171 day. There are no sutvivors. Anna L, Milton | DAVISBURG — Funeral se rvice | for Mrs. Anna L. Milton, 73, of | 8245. Pindte Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at Bendle Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. She died yesterday. Surviving are three sons, W. Hugh, of Keego Harbor, Earl, of Lapeer, C, G., of Fenton, a daugh- ter, Mrs. Gladys Eckles of Pon- tiac, a sister, Mrs. Lillian Cook, of Holly, one brother, George Ed- wards, of Clarkston, 17 grandchil- dren, and 17 great - grandchildren. Nancy May Wilby ROCHESTER — Prayer service was held today at the Pixley Fu- neral Home for Nancy May Myon infant HOT ROD RACES TONIGHT 8:30 Pontiac M-5 s9 Speedway M JULY SPECIAL! SOLID MAPLE BUNK BEDS *719” You Do Not Need to Look Further for a Better Value! With Ladder end Guard Rail ‘ @ Hand Rubbed Finjsh in Solid Maple. Pins e of @ Connecti are Ma Steel. @ Double Rail Slots in Post — for Adjustment in Width. @ Mokes 2 Twin Beds. Complete With Bunkette Innerspring Mattress,. $129.50 You Wil. Enjoy Shopping at DRAYTON HOME FURNISHINGS “The Friendly Store” DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-2300 Open Friday Eve. Till 9:'P. M.— Other Eves by Appointment x dren and adults frolicked in the — — » Cd THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 195%) 4 y Oo = Don't Forget Conventions By LAURA Z. HOBSON CHARLESTON, W. Va. INS — One major motoring hazard inno- cent tourists aren't alerted to halt enough is conventions — regional | or national. We had our fisst head-on col- | lision with one at the Daniel Boone | Hotel here, but my sons and | were able to walk away from the crash, not only unscathed, but with a happy surprise for the pay- off. | shanties clinging like warts and "ene to their base. It was evening when we fi- nally got to-(tarlesten and its magnifgicent state capitel; we had dinner at King’s, where the waitress sets down demitasses of strong hot coffee before she takes your order. Then we decided to push on -no further that night, and went to the Daniel Boone, an air-conditioned, modern hotel. Crash! We had entered West Virginia | about 120 miles back, at White Sulphur Springs where, our travel guide says, a pleasure- seeking group of four coald spend an entire day and night at the famous Greenbrier Hotel for $136 to $192 — meals tossed in but tips extra. ing, talking, be-badged men and women; large banners told us we'd barged in on 1,000 delegates of | and I say, “Oh, beans.” “Soyo’”’ stands for the Syrian | Orthodox Youth Organization, and |a. grand ball and contest to elect [the “SOYO” beauty queen was in We may be the stingy type but | full swing we passed up the chance at higher | than the legal speed limit, and pro- | ceeded along winding Route 60 through contrasts that made me| “uations unknown to us. At the nickname this surprising area, desk, we rejoiced when the room “The Paradox State.” | clerk said he still had two rooms We'd see sheep and short-horns | vacant, pushed a registration grazing and then see coal mines| ©®®4 at me and crooked his and factories; we'd smell new cut | flager at a beliboy. meadows and then smell sulphur | and chemicais; we followed the | down around midnight, ~ wouldn't Kanawha River with glorious | you guess?"’ mountains rising from it and slum! That's where the surprise was GRANDMA by Charlies Kuhn GOLLY, I HOPE IT'S NO ONE WHO WILL INTERFERE WITH MY HOUSE CLEANING.../ By this time, however, it was nearly 10, and alternate housing tS 2% ay) t JUNK, WiLL YOU?! oR CALL MY GOOD FURNITURE) | ——S ee oe e The lobby was thick with laugh- | ‘This noise,"’ I said, ‘‘should die | When Citing Travel Woes | sprung: For he firmly shook his | head fer no. ‘There'll be no sleep for anybody in this hotel tonight," he sait-“There never is with con- ventions —-no matter whose."’ The-bellboy Was waiting but our new-found guardian went righf\on guarding. ‘‘I've done lots of tour- ing myself, and I know how beat up a sleepless night leave you Maybes it’s bad business to talk this way, but there are some fine new motels about 20 miles further on.” “Bad business!"’ 1 said. ‘I bet | for the rest-of my days Pll never | forget the Daniel Boone Hotel | of Charlesten.”’ |the Midwest sector of “SOYO''— | In the lovely quiet that fell on | | us beyond the city limits, 1 mused about another paradox — by not “giving us the business,”’ our guardian had proved himself the best business type of all { ] j This summer, I've just learned, | Hot Springs, Ark., is scheduled for 117 conventions, Alburquerque for | 31, Atlantic City for 135, Indian- | apolis for 250, my own home town SIDE GLANCES of New York for 717, and hundreds of other cities for their full share. “Fun, frolic, and profat are in- volved in wholesale quantities; I know. But couldn't there be some new road signals or skywriting to alert all un-conventional vacation- ers about what they're heading straight into? Gets 60-Day Sentence for Leaving Accident | A Walled Lake youth was sen- | tenced to 60 days in Oakland | County Jail yesterday by Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick for leav- | ing the scene of an accident June Samuel Spencer, 20, of 200 Willow Camp, pleaded guilty June 28 to striking .a three-year-old boy with his car and then fleeing. He was also placed on two years proba- | tion and assessed $200 costs. | It is now predicted there will be | 50 million television receiving sets in use in U'nited States homes by | 1958 by Galbraith t | | 7. © Gog ©. & Pot OM, 1964 by HEA Bervice, tee, “I don't see why you get so worked up at these games when you say the championship won't be decided for months yet!” Saf | Pe tig WT NO TRACKS TO FOLLOW, IT'S GONNA BE HARD TO FIGGER WHERE /T CARRIED _ IRE SQUIGGS’ DAUGHTER. WE KNOW 115 WE DONT) CARRIED HER OFF HAFTA FIGGER THAT, SIR by T. V. Hamlin ’ TO THE IRON CASTLE! VA Gner 1004 0) Es Geren on ' @ Ong ob Ome ee I" Se Z yD alee “MATING You! No Matter What Your Problem May Be A Quick Action palhaerld AD you solve it, DIAL FE 2-8181 Ask for the Want Ad Dept. CISCO KID by Jose Luis Salinas J Ou VE GOT A RECORD} | WHY, YOu ; AW. SKIP IT! ) THATS WHY. PIP- SQUEAK, ' —— t TI — "LL... = _ | , ) , . YOu'RE A HORSE r aay f ' THIEF! H | h _ — [ , g => . of . tg i Sn GIVING THEM THE AIR 1 UT THIS 15 4 SOW, DOCTOR: 10 LIKE TO HAVE HIM PSYCHOANALYZ ED. He LOVES SINGING COMMERCIALS ys BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES THE DSPLAY STORE WWE PRICELESS v OF c YS READY FOR THE PUBLIC UWEILING TOMORROW t NANCY BOY--- I'M HOT TODAY I DONT CARES... SPUR UNG MUST HAVE CLASS... T'LL HAVE NO MORE LIVE- STOCK iN THE i PARLOR CARS!! A PEOPLE —. A COW Pave WE ONLY GET SIKTY CENTS A TRIP FROM THE BERR =u! LEAVE ME YOUR me LICENSE OUT OUR WAY CLS LSSSSSS” LAL Ap pp pfsfy i fy Me, EGAD, BURKE / LISTEN TO THIGD AD: “MAGNIFIC SUMMER JF ABODE HIGH IN SPLENDID 2 MOUNTAIN SETTING ON SPARK- LING LAKE =» DIRT CHEAP." MY WORD! SOUNDS LIKE AN IDEAL SYLVAN RETREAT WHERE I MIGHT FIND SORELY 4 NEEDED RELAXATION AND S. THE FITNESS OF HERCULES / MAJOR / mmm SAY, HOW DO YOU FIGGER I'M GONNA WORK INTO SHAPE Z IL LIKE TO HERE STicK THIS UNDER YOUR ARM! ANYTHING LESS THAN A BROKE BACK ER. LEG er — September contract leading. Part of the extreme advance was quick- ly given up but wheat remained strong in highly active dealings. |, Mills were big buyers with sell- ing coming from traders., who had been on the long side of the market. Wheat near the end of the first hour was 1% to 34% higher, July $2.02%, corn % lower to % higher, July $1.58%, oats “% lower to % higher, July 72, rye % to %high- er, July $1.03%, soybeans 2 to’ 5% lower, July $3.76% and lard 5 to 1% cents a hundred pounds lower, July $15.80. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO — (AP)—Opening grain: Wheat— Rye— July 201 duly 163% Bept 207 Bept 1.06', Dee 2.10 Dee il March , 210% Soybeans ee 2.08‘. July 342% Corn— Gept. , 2.85%, y . 150% Nov. , 4 60 Sept. 153% Jan 63 144% March 2.65% March 148% Lard— pt “a July : 2% iy nm oih— Gept. . 1% July , 3274 . 73 Sept. , 12.34 . Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT AP—Hogs—Salable 250 Early reecipte very small; barrows and gilts opening strong to 25 cents higher; chotce 180-320 Ibs. around 25.25. Cattle —. Galable 500. Fully 50 per cent fresh cows; market con-: sales good and choice fed steers 21.50- 24.50; few utility and commercial 13.00- 18.00; bulk utility and commercial cows 10.60-13.00; canners and cutters § 00- 11.00; some lightweight canners 850 Gown; few utility and commercial bulls 14.00-16.00; around 300 stockers and feeders carried from Monday and Tues- da no early sales Calves Salabie 150. Market slow, about steady: early sales mostly choice vealers 21.00-34.00, some held higher commercial and good 1500-2000 few cull and utility 14.00 down Sheep — Salable 150. Market opening about steady; small lot good and choice 90 Ib. spring lambs 23.00; short deck held higher; small jot utility to low good 70 > springers is few cull to choice | slaughter ewes 1340-700. some up to 7. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (‘AP)—Salable hogs 17.000, uneven; butchers and sows steady to 25 h ; choice 180-230 Ib butchers $24.25- 25.25; mainly $24.50 and above; several choice 190-210 Ib $35.35-25.50. 240- 270 Mm $22.78-24.25; some choice No. 1 and 2's 240-260 ib up to $25.00, 280-320 YW $90.50-22.50; a few §25-375 ib butchers $18.98-20.25; choice 330-400 Ib sews $17.00. 20.00; choice lighter weights $20 25-21 00; larger lots sows 425-600 Ib $14 75-17 00 Galable cattle 12.000. calves 500; prime steers over 1.200 Ib slow: weak: prime lighter weights steady, steers. grading good choice and below and heifers fully steady: canner and cutter cows and util- ity Holsteins steady to 25 higher; other wtiltty and commercial cows slow, weak; bulls fully steady: vealers steady to $1.00 ighér; prime 1.100-1,425 ib steers $26.00- 35; mixed choice and prime grades $25.00-25.75; most good and choice $20.50- 4.73; @ few loads mixed choice and 250 bu No. 1, 300-400 crate; celery, No 11, dos. potatoes. No. 1, 1.00-1.26 60-Ib. HOTEL NEXT—Bert Flower (center) of the Canadian National Railways’ shows two members of the Michigan Railroad Club, Mrs. Marjorie Powell and Howard Noble of Detroit, what the company’s Flower development in the Canadian city. new hotel will look like when it is completed in Montreal in 1957. built this model of the firm's central station terminal | MARKETS | Produce DETROIT MARKETS DETROIT ‘(UP)—Wholesale prices on public farmers’ markets reported by the bureau of markets: Pruits applies, steeie's $00 bu Nos, 3.50-3. 75 bu sour, No 1, 600 24 qt case: cherries, sweet, No 1, 600-650 16 qt case. Raap- berries, black. No 1, 1200 24 qt case raspberries, red, No 1, 800-850 24 pt case. Strawberries, No 1, 800-900 24 qt ctse; strawberres, No 1, 800-900 24 qt case; strawberries, No 1, 5.00-550 16 qt case ; Vegetables: asparagus, No. 1, 1.00-1.60 dos. behs. Beans, green, No. 1, 6.00- 600 bu. beans, wax, No 1, 6.00-6.50 bu. Beets, No. 1, 60-80 dos. behs. Broccoli, read, fancy, Cherries, fancy, 250 % bu: No. 1, 1.50-2.00 \% bu. Cabbage. red. No 1, 200-250 bu; cab- bage, No 1. 1 00-150 bu; cabbage, sprouts, No 1, 100-125 bu. Carrots, No 1, 60- 100 dost behs. Cauliflower, fancy No 1, 180-260 bu Celery. 1.25 box. Cucumbers, No. 1, 6.00-7.00 bu Dill, No 1, 75-1.00 dos behs Kohirabi, No 1, 100-150 bu. Leeks, No 1, 1.50 dos. behe Onions, green, No. 1, .70-80 . curly, No. 1, . y, root,.No. 1, . prime heifers $24.00-25.00: most good | No. 1, :60-15 dos. behs; radishes, white, and choice $19.00-23.75; utility and com-| No. 1, 60-75 dos. behs. Rhubarb, out- mercial cows $10.00-13.50; canners and/| door, No. 1, .60-75 behs. cutters $6.00-10.00: utility and commer- | Italian, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 % bu; squash, etal bulls $13.50-17.00: most good and | Squash, summer, No. 1, 1.25-1.78 % bu; chotee vealers $17.00-20.00; cull to com-/| 8@uash, summer, No. 1, 1.00-1.25 mercial $10 00-17.00 basket. Tomatoes, hothouse, Na 1, 2 Galable sheep 1,500: fairly active; | 3.00 6-Ib. basket; tomatoes, outdoor, No, and old crop lambs $0 higher than| !. 325-3.75 14-b bskt. Turnip, Ne higher; slaughter good to prime a short deck ); eull to low fond $12.00-20.00; o mostly choice old crop lambs and vear'ings $17.00: @ deck good and choice 80 Ib weights $16.00: cull to choice shorn slaughter ewes $4.00-5 50 STOCK. AVERAGES Comptied by a 5 Associated Press Collard, No. 1, 1, 100-125 dos. behas. Lettuce and salad greens: endive, No. 1, 125-18 bu Escarole, No. 1, 1.26-1.78 bu. Lettuce, butter. No. 1, 2.00-2.25 bu; lettuce head. No 1, 250-3 90 3-doz. erate; lettuce, head, No 1, 100-125 bu; let- tuce, leaf, No. 1. 6585 bu Romaine, No. 1, 100-125 bu Greens’ Cabbage, No. 1, .75-1.00 bu. 75-100 bu. mustard, No. 1, .75-1.00 bu Sorrel. No. 1, 1.00-1.78 bu. Spinach, No 1, 1.50-2.00 bu. Swiss chard, No. 1, 1.25-1.50 bu. Turnip, No. 1, .75-1.00 bu. Eggs: large. 13.00-1400 30-dos. case; medium, 10 00-11.00; small, 8.00-9.00. -_-— Poultry DETROIT POULTRY 6 18 60 Indust —_ Util — 95.0 613 129.2 06.1 613 1204 $3.7 4 1273 805 S04 122.1 03 0 6S28 «1001 05.1 613 1204 778 S54 1080 O36 S58 1163 73725 %SOoS 005 DETROIT STOCKS | ‘Hornblower & Weeks) High lew Noor Raldwin Rubber* 142 «14 D & C Navigation* 3 4 Gerity-Michigan* 2 24 Kingston Products 24 26) Masco wat Googsonas 26 27] Midwest Abrasives 55 #3 Rudy Mfg® ........... 45 46 pew nnn evess 14 15 Wayne *he sale; bid and asked. Foreign Exchange NEW YORK AP) — Foreign exchange rates follow Great Britain in dollars, others in cents): Canadian dollar in New York open 211/32 per cent premium or 0.8. cents, up 2/32 of a cent. . t Britain (pound) $2.81- 3/16, off 1/16 of a cent; 30 day futures & cent; -60 day “%. off 1/16 of a cent; 90 2.81 23/32. off 1/16 of a cent (franc! 200%, unchanged. (franc) 28 of a cent, unchanged (deutsche mark! (guilder) Italy ‘lira Portugal tkroma; HE Sserxe is} is ! ; ng : Argentina (free) 7.24, Brazil (free) 1.80, unchanged 2. unchanged. Venezuela unchanged. \ Kong dollar 1760, un- a a Fleece-lined work gloves. turned inside out, make handy polishing mitts for cleaning silverware and metal furnishings. DTROIT (AP)—Prees paid per pound | fob. Detroit for No 1 quailty live poul- try up to 10 am Heavy hens 18-20 light type 16-17 heavy brotiers or fryers (3-4 Ibs), reda 25. whites 25-27. gray crosses 27-27% Barred Rocks 27-29 light broilers or fry ers 20. caponettes +4'y-6', Ibs; 26-32. old roosters 14: heavy ducks 12-15: breeder turkeys, young heavy type hens 26 Comment: Market steady Good me- dium sized hens short wth farm offer- ings limited Bulk of hens mostly big and rough and clearing to dressers as they are not desirable for live trade. Fryers and caponettes more than ample to the slow trade Best demand noted for 2‘, to 3 Ib fryers and 4% to § Ib caponettes DETROIT EGGS DETROIT — AP—Eggs, f.0.b. Detroit, cases included, federal-state grades Whites — Grade A, jumbo 82-56, wtd. ave 52. large 44-47: wtd ave 45%: me- dium 36-38; wtd avg 37; small 29; grade B, large 37-39: wed. avg. 38 Browns -- Grade A jumbo 48: large 43-43; wid ave 43': medium 35-37: wtd avg 36'): small 29: grade B. large 36-38; wid avg 37%; grade C. large 25 Checks 20-21 wtd avg 20% Comment: Market steady to firm on the better quality receipts. Offerings of grade A large and medium and large B's barely ample to the good dematid. Smalis and peewees in fair demand and light supple ample. Undergrades ample with demand light CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO (AP)—Butter steady; re- ceipts 1,961,260; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 86.5; 92 A 56.5; © B 4; 88 C 48; cars 00 B 545; 68 c «#0 Eges steady; re- ceipts 12,498; wholesale buying prices un- changed to 1% higher: U. 6. large 34.5- 35; U. & mediums 285: U. &. standards 27; current receipts 23; dirties 20.5; checks 18. top firm: balance raw -Dawe-Grove Hi Insurance of All Kinds Bank Bldg. Ph. PE 2-8387 INSURANCE . } / 4 Market Taking Breather Today NEW YORK (® — The stock mar- ket dropped off in a mild reaction today after two sessions of strong advance The fall by early afternoon was mostly fractional but extended :o around 2 points in some instances. At the same time there were good plus signs in various areas. Trading was brisk at a rate around two million shares for the New York Stocks Figures after decimai points are eighths Adams Exp 44 Jones & L 43 Admiral ....., 41.3 Kelsey Hay 221 Air Reduc 23.6 Kennecott . 4 Alleg L Stl.... 33 Kimb Clk 6 Allied Ch .... 904 Kresge 6S ... 334 Allis Chal .,.. 58.5 Kroger . - 45 Alum Ltd ,.... 644 Go . 6 fer AM os a Lib ——— : Ao oe Liss y .. O84 Am Can ..,... 47.3 Lockh - 3 Cyan ..... &6 Loew's . . 46 Am Gas & E).. 347 Lone 8S Cem. 416 Am Loco . Lorillard . - 20.8 Am M & Pdy.. 28.2 Mack Trk ... 15.6 Am Motors ./. 11.4 Marsh Field . 30.7 Am .... 163 Martin GL... 23.3 Am Beating .. 28.7 May D Str .. 323 Am Smelt .... 366 Hey Co 62 Am 8tl Pa |. 30 Con Pet . 85.4 Am Tel & Tel 1674 Monsan Ch .. 93 Am Tob .. 864 Mont Ward 676 Am Woolen 21 Motorola : 414 Anae Cop 30.6 Mueller Br 26.7 ee Murray Co 22.3 Armco 8t! “74 Nat Bise “ne Armour & Co 10.1 Assd Dry G 24 Nat Casch R 80 7 G.. 3 Nat Dairy 18.4 Atchison .....112.6 Nat Gyps 32.1 Atl Cst Line. ..1184 Nat Lead - 545 oe 33g Nat Steel -.. 63.4 t r . “6 wt Avco Mig |... & NY Air Brk |. 18d Bald Lima 96.sNY Cent 21.1 Balt & Oh 233 Nia M Pw... 30.7 Bendix Av 816 worf w N & West . 1.7 Benguet 15/16 No Am Av .. 33.6 Beth 8t! 70.7 Nor Pac $45 Boeing Air 46.3 Nor Sta 15 Bohn Alum .. 20.7 N'wst Airlin 91 Bond Strs 134 Ohie OW . 62.1 Borden ....... 65.6 Oliver Cp 11 Borg Warn .. 83.4 is Elec... 61 | Briggs Mf .. 391 Owens Hi Gl . 886 Brist My - 221 Packard 31 Brun Balke 18. Pan A W Ale 121 Budd Co < 127 Panh EPL 6 754 Burroughs 2 Parem Pict 12.3 Calum & H 9@ Parke Davis - 31 Campb Wy 72; Pennev IC #8 6 Can Dry 134 Pe R 161 Cdn Pac 27 «Pepsi Gola .. 15.1 Capital Afri .. 10 PRelps D me ee er. aS Philip Mor..:; 36.3 w_ Phil Pet..... 60.4 Celanese ”.”.. Say Pilleby Mille... 45.1 ca n...... 22.7 Pit Plate G. 56.7 Cert-teeq “* 1g «=Proct & G... 87 Ches & On. 46 Pullman “4.2 Chile Cop . 32 Pure OU... 56.4 Chryelor ..... 04.4 Badte Cp...... 383 Cities Sve «4 Rem Rand.... 18.7 Clark Equip 2 46 Reo Motors... 27.2 Climax Mo ... 481 Repub. Sti 80.4 Cluett Pea 340 COReyn Met..... 7 Coon Cola ....117 Rey Ted B.. .30.8 Colg Palm $2 RKO Pict "tees 65 Col Gas is Soe 8 op Con Edis 436 Safeway Bt 45.5 Con GE 39 «St Jos Lead... 40 Consu Pe “ae St Reg Pap. 276 Con Pw pf 4% 1084 Beab AL RR 574 Cont k 224 Sears Roebd 65.4 Cont het a7 Shell Oll.,.... 46 Cont O11 645 Simmons 83 Copper Rng 41 Sinclair O..... 41.2 Crue 4 24¢@ Socony Vac... 43.4 Curtiss Wr .. 19 Sou Pac ..... 42.6 Det Edis 30.4 Sou Ry $7.1 Dis C Seag 30.1 Sparks W...... 46 Doug Aire e2.¢ Sperry . 63.3 Dow Chem 42.4 Std Brand 33.5 Du Pont 43. ‘Std Ol Cal 62.2 le P 22 «Std Of! Ind 78 East Air L 262 Std Ol] NJ... 87.1 t Kod 61 Std O11 Oh 318.5 El Auto L 39 Stevens JP.... 25.3 El & Mus In 25 Stew War 20.6 Emer Rad 1 Studebaker 184 Erie RR 167 Sun Oil. 73.5 Ex-Cell-O 72@ Suther Pap... 432 irb Mor 26 Swift & Co... 474 Firestone . 4 Syiv El Pd.. 38.5 Freept Sul 61 Texas Co . 67 Prueh Tra 26.7 Tex G Bul 95 Gen Bak - 95 Thomp Pd..... 685 Geh Elec “7 Timk R Bear 461 Gen Fads 72.7 Tran W Air... 164 Gen. Mills . 654 Transamer.... 42 oat Twent C Fox.. 202 Gen Time BE peters. 33 Oilletie a" Unit “Air Lin. 33.8 a ir 5 p vce = hog + gt} Unit Aire...... 63.4 Fee sod ‘#1 United Cp..... 5.6 —- 14 Unit Pruit...,. 48.5 Gt. Ro R : 2 hr Im.... 7 Gt West . 198 Us Rw...... 44 Go hound 1.7 vs Smelt eee “a ou 42 0 8 Steel. 508 Hayes Mig ... 48 U @ gteel pf. 152 Homest 44 wallig di Houd Her wt 0 © Tob...... 17 ‘| Hooker El ? Warn B Pic... 16 Mm Cent a2 W Ve Pulp... 31 Indust Rav aa West Un.Tel.. 41 Inland Sti... 39.2 Weste A Bk... 23 Inspir Cop .. 36 Westg El...... 72 Interlak Ir .. 14.6 White Mot..... 33 Int Harv 34 Wilson & Co... 8 Int Nick 41 Wise Pw... 31 Int m4 We Bee OB. tat Te . 85 Yale & Tow... 44. ie : .¢ 68 Yngst Gh.a& T 4 Johns Man .. 75.6@Zenith Red... 70 ee Lodge Calendar ~ There will be a meeting and nomination for trustee, for ladies’ auxiliary of the Huron Gar- dens Eagles, No, 2887, at 8:00 p. m. on Wednesday at the hall. —Adv News in Brief Raymond Gobler, line, Drayton Plains, pleaded guil- ty to a drunk driving charge and paid a $75 fine Tuesday when he Maurice E, Finnegan. Pleading guilty to a drunk driv- ing charge Tuesday before Pontiac Stephens, 45, of 2857 Knolison, Kee- go Harbor, paid a $100 fine. A $75 fine was paid by Mitchell Spradling, 44, of 22242 Main St., Rochester, Tuesday when he plead- ed guilty to drunk driving before Pontiac Judge Maurice Finnegan. Shedrick Miles, 51, of Flint, pleaded innocent to driving under the influence of liquor Tuesday when he appeared before Water- ford Township Justice Donald E. White. He was released on a $75 bond after being ordered to appear for trial July 15. Reckless driving cost Reece Spencer, 19, of Rochester, a $40 fine and $10 costs Monday after he pleaded guilty before Avon Town- ship Justice Luther C. Green. Lake Smith, 50, of Almont, paid a $75 fine and $25 costs after he influence of liquor Monday before Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Stanaback. Avon Township Justice Lather C. | Green assessed Stanislaw T. Bryla, 40. of Detroit costs after Bryla pleaded guilty ‘to driving under the liquor Monday. Pleading guilty to reckless driv- ing Monday before Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Stanaback, Don- ovan McGladdery, 22, of Detroit, was fined $100 and assessed $10 costs. James E. Cousins, 33, of Howell, paid a $50 fine and $10 costs after he pleaded guilty to reckless driv- ing Monday before Milford -‘Town- ship Justice Bartlett Smith. Lawrence E. Smith, 4, of Dray- ton Plains, paid a $50 fine and $10 costs when he pleaded guilty to driving under the influence of liquor Monday before Waterford Township Justice Donald E. White. if friend’s in and needs bail. Pu PE 5.5201, A. Mitenell Re-elect Clare Hubbell ‘Sheriff, Republican. Vote August 3rd. Adv Diamond Rings, 20% off. Georges-Newports. Jewelry Dept. 6-Year-Old Is Treated for Bruises in Mishap Macon Lenarce Fed Jr., 6, of 478 Branch St., was treated at Pontiac General Hospital for bruises suffered when struck by an auto Tuesday on Branch st near Clovese street. , Pontiac Police quoted Wesley E. | Muskeyvalley, 33, of 52 Hibbard | Ct., driver, as saying the boy ran in the path of his auto from be- | hind parked cars. About 147,000 Chinese fishermen live in boats in the territorial wa- ters of Hong Kong. Judge Ceci] McCallum, William F. | —Adv | Bowling Center Reports Theft of Small Change the | ,ing at the Montcalm Bowling Cen- | tiac Police said. 2, of 6875 Sa- | appeared before Pontiac Judge | pleaded guilty-to driving under the | | with certain specific assignments. a $100 fine and $15 | influence of | An undetermined amount of small change was reported taken during a breakin early this morn- ter at 30 E. Montcalm St., Pon- Thieves entered through a rear door and pried open several vend- ing machines, police said, Business Briefs The retirement of Reginald A. Brewer, recently in charge of the New York City offices of MacMa- nus, John & Adams, Inc., was an- nounced today by James R. Adams, president. Brewer was associated with the Bloom- field Hills agency and its predeces- sor organization for over 30 years. He joined Mac- Manus, Inc., in 1923 as head of af production, Later BREWER he became a member of the copy-contact staff serving many of the agency's ma- jor accounts, Brewer headed the agency serv- ice to the Dow Chemical Co. in 1934 and continued as accountant executive during that company’s growth to a large national organi- zation. In 1940, he was made a vice president of the agency, and was admitted to partnership as secre- tary and general manager four years later. He will continue to serve the agency as a consultant THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1954 ine Year + Profits Shrink - on Retail Sales Slight Spurt Could Give Manufacturers Third Best Year By DAVID J. WILKIE Associated Press Automotive Ed. DETROIT WwW — Despite wide- spread early. apprehensions, the auto industry appears certain to make 1954 one of its better years in production and retail deliveries. Profits probably will be smaller for many of the more than 40,000 retailers throughout the country. Some dealers even will lose heavily in the final totaling up of the year’s business. The industry built 2,958,000 pas- senger cars and 559,000 trucks in the first half. of 1954. Figures on retail deliveries still are wholly un- official. However, all surveys agree they | exceeded actual expectations of the. top sales executives. Opinions as to what lies ahead vary in the different areas of the country, But it is a reasonable assump- tion, based on a comprehensive survey of the leading marketing areas, that 1954 will be the in- dustry’s fourth best year. Just a modest spurt could make it third best. Most industry analysts say the year’s July-December period will bring another 2,300,000 cars from the assembly lines. The present third best year in industry records was 1951 when 5,338,435 cars and 1,426,000 trucks were built. Truck production, cut down sharply by the cancellation of nu- merous defense contracts, will break no records this year. But the condition of the market gen- erally is appraised by the volume of passenger car deliveries. A recent Associated Press sur- vey indicates sales volume is be- ing maintained but that most buyers expect—and get—bargain prices, This comes, usually, through high trade-in allowances and free accessories or other ex- pense-saving deals like free in- surance for a year. Few instances were reported where dealers complained of being overloaded by their factories. To some extent at least this results from factory assurance that pro- duction during the remainder of the current model year will be geared closely to retail requirements. More car buyers than ever are taking delivery at the factory and the manufacturers are encouraging the practice. Most car companies have set up facilities for making delivery to customers who want to save freight charges. The actual saving, of course, is not as great as appears at first impression, Reducing it is trans- portation to the factory city, fre- quently for the customer and his family, and lodging and fuel costs for the trip home. But the project usually consti- tutes the family vacation and is becoming increasingly popular. Dealers in sections distant from the factory are promoting the plan. In many instances they offer price reductions to the customer taking factory delivery. In another gimmick to promote new car sales several manu- facturers have initiated sales con- tests among their dealers. In these contests cash bonuses or extra dis- count allowances — in some in- stances up to $200 per car—are offered for the sale of a certain number of cars The appointment of / Marsden Thompson as director gf the Gen- || eral Motors customef research | section Was announced today by | William H. Hufstader, vice presi- dent in charge of distribution staff. He succeeds. Roland S. Withers who has been named merchandising manager of the AC Spark Plug Division of GM in Flint. : - Thompson, who has been assis- tant director jof customer re- search joined/General Motors in 1928 and became a member of the customer research staff in 1932. | Charles A. Stradella, manager of the New York staff of the General ‘Motors Overseas Op- erations / Division, has_ been elected president of the General Motors /Acceptance Corp. ~to suc- ceed, as of Aug. 1, John J. Schumann Jr. Schumann js re- tiring after an active career in business of 51 years. . The new president is a di- rector and former vice presi- dent of GMAC. He joined GMAC in 1919. In 1924, he was made manager of the London branch of GMAC and the following year he became European regional manager. In 1931 he was elected vice president in charge of Overseas branch operations. He was made a director ih 1940. In 1942 he was made finance manager of the General Motors Overseas Operations Division and, in 1949, manager, New York staff, a post he has held to date. jf dott, 24, of Detroit who said he J. R. ‘Hiltz announced ‘today that he has moved his real estate office from 14814 N, Saginaw St. to a new building at 1011 W. Huron St. The.20x30 cinder block and brick front building provides office space for Hilt® and his Most manufacturers have some | such arrangement, although they | do not all call them “bonus con- | tests.’’ In many instances the deal- | ;er passes the extra cash allowance | on to his salesmen. Advertisement Brings Results in a Big Way Results came in a big way from an advertisement placed in the Pontiac Press recently. Since May 17, the Pontiac Motor Federal Credit Union has enrolled 1,719 new depositers who responed to the advertisement. These deposi- tors put a total of $160.000 into the Credit Union over a period of six weeks, according to Francis H. Schneider, treasurer-manager. Last night at a banquet honoring members who helped to enroll new depositors, Waldo Pepper received recognition for having signed up 147 men personally. Three Men Injured in Crash on U. S. 10 Three men were injured, none seriously, when an auto rammed the rear of another Tuesday at a stop light at Dixie highway at Sil- ver Lake Rd., Waterford Town- ship Police said. Reported in satisfactory condi- tion at Pontiac General Hospital with neck injuries is James Tal- was stopped for the light when a car driven by Ronald Coleman, 25, of 959 LaSalle Ave, hit his car in the -rear, Treated for cuts and bruises were Coleman and Edward Malenfant, 43, of Royal Oak, a passenger with Talbott. Coleman said his brakes four-man sales force, failed to hold, y -~ » Death Notices DER, JULY 1 ero St.. ace OF be MAUDE, 15 ed mother . of Geo. Edw Bader, .Mrs. Al- bert Peterson, Mrs ; Mrs. Lawrence Beam “Mrs he Pm, at the with Rev. Walter E cia Interment Mrs r will lie in Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home un- ti] Thursday morning at which time she will be taken to the church. CROUSE, JULY 6, 1954, IDA MAE, #4 Pine Grove, age 65; beloved mother of Mrs. Kenneth Clements and Celia Crouse; dear sister Eve Albright, Russel) Lincoln, Ray Lincoln and Earl Lincoln. Funera)] servicé will be held Fri- day July 9, at 2:30 pm. from the Sparks-Griffin Funera] Home Interm at try Mt. Park Cemetery. Funeral arrangements by the Sparks-Griffin neral _wom.- HETHERINGTON, JULY 6, 1954, Mary Alice, 224 Gray Road Au- burn Heights, age 64: beloved aunt of Ernest Dunn: dear sister of Mrs. Pearl Fausette and Mrs Sabra Whittaker. Funeral) will be held Friday, July 9. at the Dudley: H. Moore Funeral Home. Auburn Heights. Michigan. at 2:30 pm with Rev. J. Harvey MeCann officiating. Interment at White Chapel Cemetery Mrs. Hethering- ton will lie in state at the Dud- ley H_ Moore Funeral Home, _ Auburn’ eights, Michigan KP ET7SCHMAR JULY 6 1054, A.,..670 Union Lake Rd ace Albin H. Kretzschmar; Herbert A. and John A_ Kretz schmar. Funeral will be held Thursday, July 8 at 2 pm from the Pursley Puneral Home with Rev. Orrin Van Loom offi- ciating. Interment at Roseland Park Cemetery. Funeral arrange- ments by the Pursley Funeral Home __ _ - . STIER. JULY 6 1954. HERMAN F. 2222 Garland Ave, Sytvan 71; beloved husband ary V. Stier: dear father of Mrs. Louise Shaver Mrs. Leona Jubenville, Mrs. Verna Hathway, Mrs Pauline Kelly and Herman M. Stier; dear brother of Ernest. Lewis and William Stier, Funera! will be held Thurs- Village age of Mrs. M day. July 8 at m. from the Donelson-Johns Funera] Home with Dr WH. Marbach off! ciating. Interment at White Chape) Cemetery Card of Thanks 1 THE FAMILY OF MRS. ADAM Becker wishes to thank the many friends and heighbors for their ect of kindness and sympathy during ‘our recent bereavement Special thanks to the Rev Milton Banks for his comfort words and to the Huntoon uneral” Home Mr Adam Becker and family In Memoriam 2 aan 80 8 ees IN LOVING MEMORY OF A-CC. Earl A. Davis killed tm Korea July 7th, 1963. Sadly missed by wife and daughter, mother, father and sisters Flowers 3 PPP PLD LL LOI SCHAFER'S FLOWERS 129 AUBURN PE 2.0173 Funeral Directors 4 Donelson-Johns FUNERAL. HOME _“DESIGNE") FOR FUNERALS” _ Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Plane or Motor rE 28378 BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at the Press office in * the following boxes: 9, 13, 14, 19, 29, 31, 33, 36, 57, 66, 67, 75, 83, 84, 85, 86, 92, 94, 110, 112, 116. * ~~ Cemetery Lots 5 SACRIFICE 4 GRAVE LOTS IN Oakland Hills for $200 Lot 80-C, Section JJ. FE 43308 Help Wanted Male 6 Automobile Salesmen Young men over 21 to sell Lincoln and Mercury cars. Experience helpful but not essential. We wil) train you, furnish leads and help you close your deals. Earn while learning a fine profession See Fred Foster in person at CENTRAL DPIXNGCOEN- MERCURY 40 West Pike St. Pontiac, Mich. BOYS, VETS, TRAVEL Entire U 8. w'th group for. large mid-west firm. No experience nec- essary, $300 monthly All travel expenses paid. Leave immediate- iow Mr. Harris, Roosevelt Hotel. UMP AND PAINT MEN. 3510 Elizabeth Lake Rd isher. MY 2-0923 after 6 pm. COLLEGE STUDENT = car —— $25 per day se flv ad fin chine Rg e Pree train= _ing. FE 4-2644. CARPENTERS WANTED UNION ._ First etess nen only. PE 7986 after 6 p.@ College Graduates Permanent positions on our sales staff open immediately. No over night treveling $4,700 salary and bonus arrangement. Prefer mar- ried to # Applications confidential Our men know of this advertisement. Write Pontiac Press, Box 1i€. DAIRY FARMER, EXPERIENCED. Permanent position on 300 acre dairy farm near Rochester. Milk- ing parior, pipe line milkers and complete lit, of machinery. Ex- cellent 5 room house with al! mod- ern factflities Write giving ref- erences experience. and family statue to Boa 98 Pontiac Press EARN $10 000 TO $18.000 IN FIRST year We have men with one month’: experience earning $1.- 000 per month ‘uction bonus and profit sharing ‘plan. Unlimited opportunity for m with good work habits. Avety 3513 Eliz. Lk. Rd 9:30 to 11:30 AM See F _Clark, EXPERIENCED MAN FOR WOOD- working shop. Call EM 3-4140. 8260 Cooley Lk. Rd. EXPERIENCED men's garments ers, 719 W, Rw PRESSER ON Apoly Fox Clean- ee PAY DEBTS PROMPT- LY with money made by selling things you're not using. To place For Sale ads in Pontiac Press dial FE 2-8181, ew : Help Wanted Male 6 w ~ EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER for dry cleanmg route. Apply Walker's Cleaners, Lake Orion EX Wa MA- chine repair m.n Steady wort. “good pay. vacation with pay. no drinkers. Must furnish references. Reply bor 65 Pontiac Press. EXPANDING IN LARGE CITIES, 140 wholesale units. perienced oomasey aw - oe y amp's merchandise, a Se eer ev tah'e, Vroseett, Iilt- nois. FOUR TOP NOTCH REAL ESTATS "parece ceeded, Me PE _€2i0 fot 8p INSPECTOR reo and. production. ty eg Co. Tie indianwood Rd Lk. Orion. MAN WITH CAR. APPLY 9@ N. Telegraph near to W. Bure - SRE eke, teretched. UTI __Well 1-9526 _ = .. : a pochE dc jas per month with advancement? I need 3 men in Oakland County. Those interester in ees ea 10°30 — ‘or 3°30 pm. 136 W. Huron - NEED | EXPERIENCED USED car salesman to balance out sales for us. Best pay set-up in city Many other fringe benefits. Cal! Bud Shelton at Jerome Motor _Sales_ FE $0488. Opportunity YOUNG MAN WHO. WOULD LIKE TO LEARN, BUSINESS MANAGEMENT, OR- GANIZATION, ENGI- NEERING, SALES. FOR THOSE WHO CAN QUALIFY, WILL BE FACTORY TRAIN- ED BY THE WORLD'S LARGEST MANUFAC. TURER OF HEATING AND AIR-CONDITION- ING. IMMEDIATE EARNINGS. APPLY WILLIAMSON FUR- NACE SUPPLY, 111 S. SAGINAW TOOLMAKERS WANTED. APPLY 217 Centra) from 8 to 123 am., 2 to 5 pm vias Tangible—Intangible $150 WEEKLY With ap opportunity for advance mens We have just added «a revolutionary product to our line. Ages 0 to . Car becessary. Complete training. “ome leads. Commissions 0a: at once. No salary. Call PE %-577! for appointment “UNION CARPENTERS Birmingham custom job. FE 5-4438 URGENTLY NEEDED DRIVERS with late model pickup trucks to transport house reilers through the United States Steatiy work with good rate of pay. For further tnformation contact Mor- an-Drive-Away Inc. 4471") Dixte wy Mich OR 3-8191 WATER SOFTENER SALESMEN New Revolutionary Completely sutomatic plas conversion unit for ee softener 158 N Telegraph Drayton Plains, WANTED CARPENTERS MUST _be union EM 34520 WANTED MANAGER FOR ARTT- ficial breeders association. Shou!d have farm background. Apply Oakland Co. Agriculture Agent. 1260 W. Bivd "E 4.2564. WANTED BARBER WITH OWN _equipment. Hotel Roosevelt YOUNG MEN OR VETERANS 18 to 2 Single neat. Free to trave! 6 states. Return. Transpor- tation free Expenses advanced Good Workers earn above average pay Must be ready to leave soon See Mr Blankinship, Mich State bg) series Agency. 10 to 12 noon Tridav only WANTED EXPERT. ENCED STEAM PRESSER. GOOD WAGES. STEADY PO- SITION. D & D CLEANERS 143 W. HURON _Help Wanted Female 7 AVON COSMETICS Well advertise¢ cosmetic concern needs local representative. Good income. Pleasant work. Write. Pon- tia Pres: Box 84. - : BAKERY SALES GIRL. EXPERI- enced preferred Write Pontiae Press x 86 BOOKKEEPE CAPABLE OF taking complete charge of books, wholesale distributor's office rural area near Pontiac.: rtunity for experienced person. Sire full information Box 29, Pontiac Press. BEAUTY OPERATOR, EXPERI- enced Salary and commission. Midwest 4-2666 CAPABLE MOTHER'S HELPER: desiring good home. child care and jight housekeeping. Private room and bath in new Birming- ham ranch home. References. MI 6-4268 CURB GIRLS Night shift must be over 18 Fx- terienced only Apply in person TED'S Woodward at Square Leke Ré._ Dining Room Waitress Night shift, must be over 18. Exr- Perienced only. Apply in person. TED'S Woodward at Square Lake Rd. CHURCH HOUSEKEEPER, FIRST Presbyterian Church. Birming- ham, Mich, First qualification: Supervising ‘and assisting with work ir kitchen. Second qualifi- cation’ Would be helping manace receptions marriages, funerals Third qualification: Light house- keeping. Write Pontiac Press Bor 118 giving full particulars and reference EXPERIENCED CASHIER WITH grocery store knowledge and Na- _tional cash register. EM_ 3-321. EXPERIENCED COLO domestic. § davs., 4 __ tation. FE 4-1639 after 4:30 _ EXPERIENCED MAID GEN- @ral housework, stay of go. $30. FE 5-8305 EXPERIENCED GIRI. FOR GEN- eral «a franine, Home — 220 week. Woothull Lake 31192 _ nee neers GIRL FOR COUNTER WORK IN markine deot Anniv Fos Drv Cleaners. 71189 W Huron GIRL FOR CREDIT DEPAFT- ment. Expertenced preferred. In- culre Speige’’s Inc. 115 N. Sac!- naw KITCHEN COOK. AND SHORT OR- _ der cook. 577 Auburn, FE 2-2463. MIDDLEAGED CHRISTIAN UNEM- cumbered oractical nurse for small convalescent home. tefined and neat in appearance. No smok - ers or drinkers need apply. Must ifve im. $100 pert mo. and maintenance. FE 4-4048, Wo calls , after 8 pm _ MAID. COOK AND GENFRAT. housework. Fine country home. Stay nieht« Write Pontiee Press. Ror 7) tate salary REFINED HOUSEKEEPER IN mot»erleses home. More for home —— hieh wages PR 92-4829. after SHORT COOK AND. WATTRESS” Apply in person Jet Diner. 714 8 Saginaw THOROUG*LY EXPERIENCED 18 men's alterations, Must be fast and experienced. Excellent par — working afttiens for one ean qualify Hub Clot 18 N. Saginaw Bt. _ | anti a __ Help Wanted Female 7 TEACHER With or without summer Good pay” “° Tore et Taylor See E oN “Telegraph Dear Huron. WAITE's_ —__ A LADY EXPE- rienced tp omen's alterations and fitting o hr week Pleasant working conditions Apply Per- sonnei Office. fifth floor WOMEN BETWEEN 25 « 4 FORK general housekeeping ~& acsiat with 3 small children 5% day Week. convenient to-Gra 498 — _™MI | 6-2 WANTED Experienced woman tor moder up-to-date Rea: Estate office reper be good at bookkeeping. and typ- ing. Please state age and marital Status. Goo* sary All replies held in strictest confidence. Please reply to Pontiac Press box 4 WANTED: EXPERL ENCED NIGHT COOK. REFERENCES. wae AT NOON. FE 320888, wo! 2: GEMreae oe 0, gts COOKING SMALL 2HOUSE- WITH MCDERN CONVENIENCES. PRI- VATE ROOM AND BATH. CON- abe ot heeiiees DAYS CFF. FE Trunk. moun FOR LAUNDRY WORK one day a week Morey’s Golf and Riding Ciib 2280 Unien Lake Rd. off Commerce Rd WOMEN WITH 2 OR MORE “AF- ternoons Or evenings. free to hold dress ana .ingerie parties Plea- sant work good pay. No at pere ence mececuary OR 3-7148 WAITRESS PART TIME STEADY. Apply after ¢ m. only, Dells Inn, 3481 Elizabeth Lake Rd YOUNG LADY FOR ACGOUNTING apd general office. Preferably with mortgage and real estate experience Applications being taken 8260 Cooley Lake Rd. Union _ bake Village Help Wanted 8 Bring your own containers and pe 25 ceats a quart I'y miles ast and 442 miles North of La- peer 3261 Rood Lake Rd CARHOPs, COUNTERMEN_ FOUN- tain heln Full or part time. Apply Arthur Murray Drive-In. 27625 Northrestern at Telegraph CHRISTIAN YOUNG COUPLE OR person for full time youth director and church parish visitation Pre- fer.-office or music experience. Box 17. Pontiac Press CARETAKER, RELIABLE MID- dlieaged couple to operate room- ing and boarding home Ref- erences required. EM 3-3 3-3008. SELL , OVER PHONE > EXPERI- ence not necessary. = show you how in 20 minwes. Be your own boss. Work hours you want. Phone and desk space provided If over 21, age po barrier. Call Mr. Arm- strong, 10 am. to 8 p.m. 80601. 4 __ Work Wed. Female 11 ——————eaeEeoOrrrnrrey WASHING, » IRONING AND. MEND- oy Pick up ~~ 1 —_ ittin; te. ey OO Oto Be ae sRONI INGS WANT- WOMAN WITH 5 , YEARS OF NURS- he OE experience desirés work, OR WOMAN WOULD - Like ts 3 Pe or house ¢ leaning WILL CARE FOR ELDERLY BED ridden patient in my heme, won- derful care FE 40003 5 DAYS WEEK. LIGHT y HOUSE- rarely and baby sitting FE_ Building Service 12 PIPL BLE ON OPP LE A-t Carpenter Remodelirg of all kinds, addt- tions, attics. breezeways, siding. etc. FHA terms. References. EM 3-2362 ATTENTION COMPLETE RE- modeling & modernizing service. - BLOCK BASEMENTS. BRICK VE- heer, ornamental stone brick fireplaces §- 2069 A-1 FLOOR LAYING AND SAND- ing. Reasonable. ». MAS ~9641. BRICK, BLOCK AND CEMENT work, Ais. chimievs. No jobd too “rge or too small. Guaranteed _ work — Ph PE 48604 B & J TRENCHING — Footing. field tile and water lines. OR 3-17640 __ BLOCK AND MS pragenech WORK. _FE 71-6421 or FE 1-001 _ BLOCK FOUNDATIONS CHIM- neys, fireplaces, cement work. Free Estimates. OR 3-1239. BULLDOZING, GRADING, BASE- ment digging. ee cutting. Will g° anywhere FE 5-388) or Orton- _ Yule 83F14 —-— BULL DOZING, EXCAVATING, driveway made. FE 44417. CARPENTER WORK Alterations .nd custom building. OR 32570 CARPENTER WORK, ALTERA- tions, modernizations, also custom _building. OLive 2-1221 CEMENT WORK A SPECIALTY. Floors. drive ways sidewalks steps. Free estimates. FE WORK. ALL KINDS. CEMENT Fre estimates Jensen FE 2-2340 CEMENT WORK. DRIVEWAYS, patios, and floors, _ FE_2-5703. CARPENTERY. BLOCK AND CE- ment work, ete. FE 5-078. CEMENT WORK: RESIDENTIAL & commercial; free estimates. Ray- __mond Commins, FE 4-9366. SOMPLETE LINE OP P MASONRY. __Brick block & stone EM 3-5182. CUSTOM BUILDER, RESIDEN- tial, commercial, new or remod- eling plan serv MY"30023. Feasonable, prom TaTr os “ . STATE DISTRIBUTOR Wants salesmen & women with car to sell the Miracle Auto Wax of the century on commission basis. This exclusive new ————— makes regular waxes obsolete The only permanent Auto Wax Applied on s new car it gos last the life of the car and any - other car the beautiful arene fimish will last one full year or jon. bard & cgeredy boon avail- Cody, ida Pontiac, Mich dich. ORlando SHORT ORDER COOK FOR STEAM table or woman, for part vards.”’ Birmingham. Mich. Flan- ders 1-3510 WANTED SEVERAL GOOD agents. Rea. Estate P. W. Din- & Son 66 W. Huron nan _— — Se Instructions 9 beg rng LOANED FREE TO mpers, Lessons given at your Accord ons also sold, al! proto at st factory prices. O OR 3-0466. PRIV: TE LESSONS SPEECH correction, tutoring consultation free Pontiac Press Box 26 TUTORING ELEMENTARY SUB- jects ornings only. 140 Judson _or Fe sesa ON Work Wanted Male 10 ACCOUNTANT BOOKKEEPER with diversified experience Ma- ture, intelligent and capable of ha: large work joad, pay- rolls and al) tax reports. Reason- able salary. Write P.O. Box 545 Keego Harbor or Phone FB 2-8904. - A-) CARPENTRY AND TILE . Ca FE 60054 ANY KIND OF WORK. FE BOY 18, a ANTS, an ANY KIND OF work. BOY 16 WANTS ANY KIND OF __ work. FE 5-7163. BOYS 17 A AND x) WANT WORK OF __any kind. OF 36382 BOY 17 Or WOUED oe JOB any FE S CARPENTER. GARAGE REMOD- eling, Ting FE 17-0274. COLLEGE STUDENT DESIRES summer employment. OR 31258. CARPENTER ae . REMOD- eling and siding. Wright, FE 40720. - on WANTED. R 3-2276. CARPENTER __ Part time only CARPENTER ae CABINET work. ble after 6 p. m. CABINET. M AND CARPEN- ter, Kitche+ a -pecialty FE HAND a LAWN ORK, rge-grass, bush cane: Fe fy well op tiie Rubbish hauled. LAWN C “CUTTING BY J JOB, | HOUR or season. Rates reasonable. Prompt service. EM 3-2422, MAN WANTS WORK. HAS OWN truck (53 Dodge) to pull trailers FE 48865. Jack Manze!! MAN WITH GOOD REFERENCES desires dairy farm job. OR 3-6410. PL BING WORK WTD.. REA- oN FE 5-1016. PAINTING WANTED BY ELDER _ly_ man, FE 5-6838. iro b ti \INTING AND WALL WASH- ing, screens repaired. FE 5-7008. PLASTERING |} NO JOB TOO Work Wid. Female 1i FLOOR SANDING LAYING. FIN. reas zc 41 Central FE _> FLOOR a, SANDING | AND tims 10 vears§ experience. eters. equipment John Taylor. me FE 40424 | __ FLOOR SANDING OLD *LOORS A speciality Car! Bills. FE 2-5 788, fay CLEANED SPECIAL $1.95 OR 3151) GENERAL BUILDING REPAIR, Brick stone and cement prot __Plaste.ing and tile wk. FE ¢ GARAGE “DOORS YOUR CHOICE REMODELING 4175 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-4101 GUARANTEED ROOPS ALL kinds Est. 1916. a8 . 333 " MOWING. PULLY . A. Young. FE_4-8450. mouse . RAISING 8.3669 House ouse Raising & Moving General bre LADY would like housework Mon. ae experien ed song Fe 1 EXPERIENCED VETERINARIAN'S assistant wants work in Pontiac area. Excellent references. Cail OR 3-6129. GIRL WANTS BABYSITTING 15 week. OR 3-1100 GIRL 16 DESIRES BABYSITTING and light housekeeping. $8018. or _Might, References. HIGH SCHOOL GIRL WOULD LIKE babysittine in of around vicinity of Walled Lake. MA 4-2609. HIGH bara DESIRES BABY sitiing light housework. FE $-7603 HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT WISHES summer employment. Ty ping. baby sitting or light ae ina, Sales experience, MY 2-5671. IRONIN GS DONE. SOTOMATE . Reasonable. r or fiat iron. 4-990) ADY WISHES DAY WORK a sework, by day or week. FE LA GENERAL as work Part or full time. oe rienced. Cood references. OR EOGRAPHINO. TY Pina. pa nQ, we retarial service, EM ame ; NEAT, aE wo: an desire. housework. Good ref- erences T-Woe TEMPORARY WORK. EPYICTENT bookkeeper, —— wants 2 weeks work Chimney Work Act now before the rush, clean, al build new chim- ny. fmney Co. DEPENDABLE SEPTIC TANK “'Ss108. service, MY ex T & moval Ph. FE 5-6593 or OR 3- 2000 ELECTRICAL WIRING, FREE ES- Some Rates reasonable. FE ELECTRIC NUTOR page? fe al RE- “ter ‘ne 218 E. fine EAVES TROUGHING coats Vane by all foams py we ~~ ELasTRicaL——__ SEWER CLEANING Sinks Sunday Sery. Ph. FE 4-2012 HOUSE MOVING RAISING, block, brick and cement work _of all kinds FE 5-0424, LAWNS SPRAYED 1D FOR WEEDS and crabgrass FE 2-0067 LIGHT HAULING. (MMEDIATE __Service. FE 5-7972 LAWN MOWERS’ SAWS SHARP by mact'ne. 23-3004. 1 Highwood Bivd. Carl Bu On” cons, | SLIDCOVERA: DRLPES IF PLAS TERING D. Meyers WM 3-0830, FE 41938 { : Sa ERE ees ene — . i fh PPE 2-7680 _ Business Services 13 lin itil indie iia die aie - PLASTERING | ALL TYPES, EX- cellent work! _onable. “OR 327 ~ PLASTERING _ FE 5-0626. .'E 5-0025, Leo Lustig ROBERT H _ end heating. RELIABLE WALL Service FE 5-0386 SAWS. LAWNMOWERS Accurately sharpened 18 Chamberlain Jib ~ CHAPIN PLUMBING Phene FE $-3479 “wKBHING SAWS M MACHINE FILED Maniey me oe b. 10 Bagley SUBURBAN 2 rc _ cleaners rake Orion. MY TANK 26631. TRENCHING Pootings, fie'¢ tile. ba ag tanks _ and sewers installed §-8221 TRI E TRIMMING AND REMOV- bap hee estimate. FE 48805. ~ TRANSIT MIXED CONCRETE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PG. EINE cin & SONS 15A A KANTER. FOOT 8PE- 3%a 8. Saginaw St. FE ~~ Foot. Specialist PBL LL BDPL LL E O R.A cialist, —S7326 a Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 SOOO eee eee ALTERATION MEN'S POCKETS. 219 ) Raeburn ORESSMAKINO | a1 AND | ALTERA. » PE 6-2765 Palmer "Garden Plowing 164 ALL POWER LIFT eee Garden plowing. discing, & l\eve}- ing> FE_ rat i ee EDMUNDS - SON Garden Plowin — Mowing velin PE 1-653! OR 3-665) GARDENS PLOWED WITH EITHER tractor or rototiller PE 4.43 4380 Laundry Service 418 FAMILY LAUNDRY SERV- Ph. Rontiae Laundry. FE FOR ice. 2-8102. LACE CURTAINS PLAIN OR RUF- fled, beautifull Laundry. | PIECES _for $1 12 25 PIECES and dried __ 561 8 1 FE 2 8i0l. WASHED & DRIED _N. Cass, FE 3-9341 OR LESS, WASHED 100 call FE 3-034) Sanfotd 25 18A SERVICE FE L nndeceping DANS LANDSCAPE complete lawn maintenance. 46510. FL AG “AND \ WALL STONE | FOR = landscaping. Lincoin — GASPER LANDSCAPE AND rdening by day, week. month odding end seeding. Phones: De- troit KE 27-4385, KE 2-1900. Pon- tiac EM }3-5421 NURSERY BLUE ‘QRAss 50D "DE- livered or laid 2-2650 LAWNS SPRAYED FOR WEEDS _and crabgra. FE 2-0967 L NDSCAPING _work. FE ¢6196 : : TREE SPRAYING Mosquitoes, Ape and shrubs. _Call OL 2 Moving ra Trucking 19 19 AA-1 MOVING & TRUCKING OR pickup & delive Good service at reas rates. FE 17-0759 anytime ALL KINDS OF HAULING, PICK and L CLEAN UP up delivery Cheap, FE TNCINER RATORS < CLEANED. Ashes & rubbism hauled. Clean up. FE +5134. _ YIGHT HAULING, _HANDY-MAN work. Keasonable FE 2-3064 LIGHT TRUCKING AND DUMP truck serivce Black dirt and fill dirt FE 17-6530, FE ¢9280. - LIGHT HAULING ~ IMMEDIATE service FE 5-7972 LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. Rubbish hauled. FE 32-0603. : MAN WITH 7 ay TON TRUCK wants work. Call anytime FE 7 642100 a ee 7 - MOVING AND LIGHT TRUCKING. Yards leveled and a cutting _EM 3-206) “REDUCED | RA TES Large Van to serve you Smith Moving. | rE 448s SUDDEN SERVICE - ASHES, RUB- bish and light trucking FE 5-5933 TRUCKING AND HAULING RUB- __dbish. Anytime e, cheap. FE 30296. Trucks to Rent Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. —__¥S_¢006) = VE 103 VET WITH 3 TON STAKE TRUCK Wants DELL O'DELL CARTAGE [#-@l an» Lene Lirtance Moving _____—*Phone _~FE_ 5-%806 - VOLLMAR MOVING AND 8TOR- bai Agents for N American Van Lines Large vans anywhere in United Sta‘es. Quick aes rE M1 =ON SOPerry Painting & Decorating 20 PAINTIN«= PAPERHANGING remov*. Fstimates. FE a1 pe,.r _ +018 ee 4-1 PAINTING INTERIOR & EX- terior. 10-per cent disc for cash. pated guaranteed free estimates rE 4-9205 = - PAINTING — | _Phone FE_ 5-5006 COMPLETE SERVICE. PAINTING well washing, paper cleaning. _ Reasonab.e. FE_5-2211. COMPLETE PAINTING, | WALL —— _ rhanging & clean- b> iding REASONABLE wr aintenance. CASH _ TERMS. Tupper. OR 3-7061 INT ‘RIOR AND EXTERIOR painting done, Reasonable. No job big or too small, Free esti- mates PE 2-1 922 REERICERATORS PAINTING ee OUT. FREE , , estimates. WASHING MACHINES paintina anp DECORATING. 1: IRONERS & MOTORS side and out. References, free REPAIRED __ estimates, FE ¢265. PHONE FE 4-2569 PAPERHANGING AND PAINTING ——— iP PAINTING. RESIDENTIAL. COM APPLIANCE SERVICE |" mercial ee paper _re- We service all makes of refriget moi = rles White, OA &3807 : eters, wasnr, rediee, eleansra, or Al lar PaiKo s sma es.\| Apa INTI ROY'S 96 Ave.. FR 2-4021 neERTIS AC a COMMER CIAL ALL } means OP INTAIN PENS \ er yates re oe. St per store. O & Wont wanT, Wh WALL WASHING Oftive y Co, 17 W. Law- OR 3-2284 rence St. 2¥E Wall Washing & Painting \ Herbert Hall FW 22706 WA APEKING AND PAINTING D for estimate. FE 40255 WA L, WASHING | AND | PAINTING. _A me, FE 17-6679. Photos ie icreceecleas 21 TREASURED PHOTOS. COPIED and Pike FE LoPatin Studio. 12 £ e FE 47391. - x5) B PRESSMAN. COM- plete with flash.. holders, mazga- zine, case and other accessories Absolutely like new. FE 2-3336 ___ Television Service 22 pay NGHT TV FE 5-126 FE M, P. STRAKA GUARANTEED TV TY REPAIR &a: ¥ DON’ 8 Ratio a TV ROME fon So arts MITCHE LUS" TV “48 E Pike FE 2871 SWEETS RADIO &” APPLIANCE 422 W. Huro~ FE #1133 Typewriter Service 22A PPP LLL eee SER VICE 5-8390. TY ENTED __Mitchell's, 123_N, Sooew st. Lh oho | ‘AND ADDING MA- 6 4 Ott Pp hine work jenera! g and Office Bup- ly Co. 7 W. Lew ence. Upholstering be) * AL'S a 9 Uphoiste Auto trim, free estimate FE ¢ KAKLE'S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- Ra. EM ing 8174 Cooley Leake % A Free estimates DRA SLIPCOVERS MATERIT FE 51927. 23 DRAPES Pine pena. ee REFINISHING. _4* rel Pe x». & "eis G oaramers Reas- | finished. Pontiac }- wtd. Transportation 31 : sLost & Found 24 SN NE ere re FOYND: WET WASH. WATER- {¥rd Drive In EM 3-661T ND 7” REDBONE “HOUNDS jin Bloomfield township FE 6-5823 LOST. MALE BRITTANY 'BPAN- jal, white = orang ¢ Wmarkings. Call OR 30 LOST Cae DRAWER CON- taining lingerie on W. Maple: be- tween La i Jemon and ‘white. Reward. FE 4-044) LOST WALLET 1 CONTAINING valuable papers. If fou return te Paul Cooper, pap or Identification enclosed fe LOST 2 DOGS. Blackie. 1 BLACK NAMED Neense ITTTL tan. Heense No 2778L, vicinity of Lincoln 8t, 54-4242 Reward LOST, PLASTERERS ~ TOOL » BAG and tools. vicinity Avon Inn. Re- ward FE 17-0381 LOST. STRAYED OR STOLEN: tov Boston Bull dog Black and white markings Wearing small harness Missed about noon Mon- Gay, June 728th in vicinity of Josephine &-W Huron Answers to “Duke.” Reward. Please call FE 3-7558 after aa Maf® cour BROWN NOSE: ® yts_old Reward FE 4 Cal Masseur oa SCIENTIFIC SWEDISH MASSAGE. cial foe technique, 72 Elm _St FE ¢2851. Notices & Personals 25 —_—eenerne LLL ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING @ friendly adviser contact Mrs. Vernon Vie. Ph. FE 2-8734 Conf} dential. The Salvation Army COL D WAVE SPECIAL. $5 7 COM- N. Perry. ie Dorothy a, 1244. COLD WAVE 8PEC End e500 IN styling. soe Dor! othy . : Perry... FE 23-1244. DAINTY_ MAID _ FOR as UPPL IES. Mrs. Birnes. PE 23-6814. 93 Mark. KNAPP are OR 3-1592 IF YOUR DRINKING HAS BE- eome @ problem. contact Alco helices AnomhYmous. P.O Box 55] ON AND APTER THIS DATE. WE will bé responsible by offering * you the best tuggage values in Pontiac VU. B. 21 Itnch over- nights, $9.05 Men's 2 switers. $1395 Samsonite $17 50 Skyway, Tourister $5.06 s° $1405 Car Saca, Philip's, 70 N Saginaw. ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, 7-7-54. I will not be responsible for any dette contracted by any other than myself Walter L. Agar, 477 Central Ave Pontiac Mich ON AND AFTER THIS DATE 1-71-54 I wil} not be responsible for any debts contracted by apy other than myself Henry A Bgodsdn 30 Melbourne Place, Pontiac 15 Mich PRIVATE DETECTIVE SERVICE” FI 33125 REDUCE AND RELAX _ Resu.ts with every visit Fast, safe and scientific FE 4-413]. THE FINER THINGS OF LIFE include Glato plastic type lino leum coating It ends waxing _Waite's Notions _ - ee ; 100 WEDDING INVITATIONS 67.50. Pree wedding consultations. OR 36522 or OR 36473 WALLPAPER FACTORY ~ OUTLET _how located at 105 N. Saginaw. Wtd. Household G Goods 27; LET Us BUY IT OR Av AUCTION IT for you. Oa 8-268 One ore PONTIAC TARO JEsT rniture buyers ¢ ¥ . PE 478i See iiie FURNITURE NtEDED Entire home or odd lots. Get the top dollar Will buy outright or sell it for you. B. B. Community sale. Ph. OR 32717 _ WANTED TO BUY ALL TYPES _of furniture. Ph PE 2-5523 - WANTED FURNITURE If you have anything for sale and want prompt cour- teous service and the high- est nS in cash call Il. & S SALES CO. tse pe COUNTY'S LARGEST SED FT’. TE 3 2N0e BUYER. —_—— LOL A el Ll Lal WANTE FREE FILL DIRT. Must an dirt. no Atty tbage mix- 29 _¢d_ in. Phone FE_ Wanted to Rent Call a Specialist! When You Want to Sell Heal Estate! Financial problems call for a bank- er, medical problems call for a doctor gnd property disposal for state specialist ist with ou have a real estate us proble For'sure results See— WHITE BROS. Phone OR 3-1872 of OR 13-1768 Open 9 to 8 Sun. 1 to 5 CLEAN AND RESPECTABLE FAM- ily of 4 desires 4 or room un- furnished house or apt or ae of Pontiac 30 years FE 7 Career girl wants 3 rooms unfurnished. apt. house! der $70 per mo. Stove & refrigerator included. Rhone FE 4-7683. CITY OFFICIAL, W rE TWO smal) children want 2 bedroo ing or not. FE 5-8753, FE 21438, and FE 5-6876 FEDERAL EMPLOYEE NEEDS 3 or-¢ bedroam home. Preferably northwest side of town. FE 5-788} betweer 8 a. m. 5 p.m. FREE SERVICE TO «LL » LAND LORDS Qualified Tenants fu 1 hr. Service. RUSSELL H yor RENTAL AGENCY _ FE ¢ FREE TO CANDLORTS cistince tsa Fami'v rental! agent. FE INTERN & WIFE 2 CHILDREN under 2 years tesire ¥mal] un- furnished house or 2 room apetiment near Pontiac Genera] ospital FE 2-2161. Ext _10 MOTHER & 4 CHILDREN WANT small furnished seme | in or around Pontiac. FE 2-6 ' OAKLAND COUNTY PLANNER desires to rent or lease 3 or 4 bedroom house Good ation, ex- cellent care. FE 3-T151, Ext. 68, 9 ww 5. ‘ ron RETIRED BUSINESS | polles i [ Mem floor room board ntiac, Please call "TE Danes, after 11 am STEADY EMPLOYED COUPLE, 4 children, badly need a place live, FE 65002, Mrs Aker WANTED: 3 OR 4 ROOM FURN apt -or small house. 9 mos. old __ baby? 2731" Share Living Quarters 30 4 to 2 BOYS TO SHARE ag rE 5-7017. Call after 4 PM REFINED LADY TO SHARE wy: ing quarters on first fieor. box 78 Pontiac Press. fh se ¢ iJ AC PR ES RESIDING ON PONTIAC TRAILE NEAR SOUTH MERCE ROAD, DESIRE TRANS- PORTATION "ROM WALL- ED BARKS £0 _ PONTIAC, MUST BE IN PONTIAC BY * OR 8:30 AM. TRANS- PO yar N D BY __THE PONTIAC PRESS, and “Benstein Rd. | LOST: ENGLISH POINTER DOO. American|- | PONTIAC _WEDNESDAY, SLICE OF HAM : “T can gee it, Doc, but i ei Rt ae \ JU LY Z, 1954 u ¥ f id i I can't pronounce it!"’ |} Wed. Transportation 31 RIDE OR SHARE DRIVING FROM Commerce area to and from Flint. 8 to 4 shift, EM 3-5288 PRESS EMPLOYE DE- sires ride from Oftonville Rad, porth of” Clarkston to Pontiac every day. Must be in Pontiac by _§ om Please call MApie 5-4788 Wtd. Contracts, Megs, 32 CASH FOR. CONTRACTS If you plan to sell your land contract Phone us. We have . plenty of funds at reasonable dis- a st ro Romar haar and contrac Clark ERON “in CL n-Eves fon E 46462 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS * Leads. Green, 2943 Auburn. FE ~ CASH FOR YOUR or equity i your Kt L. Templeton, Realtor 7330 Orchard Lake Rd ___ PE 44563 PRIVATE PARTY WANTS TO BUY a land contract in or near tiac FE 2-800) — To GET THE MOsT FOR YOUR contract Realtor ae ts the “bird” to see. 4) W. Hurop St. Ph FE 38316 5% MORTGAGES YW FARMS OR SUBURBAN, from % acre with 100 ft. frontage, ne mre D. CHARLES ae im i117 fe tint rE j_Bves, FE_ $ Unlimited $ for buying land e action, seer imm te hanes eall Mr medina reonaily “\ Ohtani Realtor FE 4-2533 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. CASH. FOR 1a AND PCONfR Acta. 4540 Dizie tis CASH IMMEDIATE enon oh a TOUR ce cholie & Hareer Co. Wed. . Miscellaneous 28. | I preferred, by Aug. 1. Un-| Ni 3). W_ Huron & Phone PE 6-818) ‘ WE HAVE At our @isposal to oew or seasoned jand con for our clients. ecll. ASK FOR BOB MAHAN. YOU BUY fT—WE'LL INSURE IT AHAN EALTY oo, REALTORS we Huron “Ph. PE S0903 | © Wanted Real Estate 32A ' CASH IN 24 HOURS For your equity im your tse ‘phone, we will be ot bee car” efter. betore you deat We —— business| EDW. M. STOUT Feng Ph. FB 56-8168 Eves ‘til 8:30 GREEN LAKE OFFICE ease you, Our 17 vears of satisfactory Real es- tate dealings in tise assres us that you will be satisfied. We handle all idetatis for financ- eh 5 = us today ine and to Mst your p To avn Sell—To YOU BUY IT — WELL INSUNE (Tr MAHA Laccomgr oli co., LTORS 2-0263 Eves. ‘ti #—Sun, 104 197s W DOOR PoOsT papncing Fo a re; condition alerrss are rieht, Call FE = fun t FE ¢6852 or immediate serv- tes, B.D Realtor 1717 8. Telegraph. LISTINGS WANTED Properties and homes needed for immediste sale. Red Horse Real Estate FE 4-2252 CASH FOR. EQUITIES |r% We hava investors, now buy — equities in mediu: — —— Cc ROY K KNAUF, Sl 26% W. Huron FE 27421 OA & ON Geo UL Scales wet a 2-601) WILL BUY A sithout Any size om (oun pr = a or deal with aoe 4 Woodward 1-1215. Pe puns ees : ED wo Buy) Sel ‘or Trade |? rorms ted both 2 “children per. H.C. Newingha, Broker K. G. Hem patead, a. Realtor —_ — RADES a Huron .« ene hen ‘suburban or farm chy | 5 ROOM. LOWER APARTMENT, mes inomes large Adults. Quiet. OL 2-8421 = pagal oe oe on CLEAN sil parties Can We. o>. Late, 60 RRIS & SON pad d Real Estate 32A PLO | LOWER coe DERLY COUPLE WANTS 4 OR 56 rooms. Modern home dh bus | _ and terms HAVE BUYERS FOR One or two bedroom modern home. either citv or suburban - FE 7-113 reo rdeng area with basement | end garare Income p with down, Call J. A, Taylor, Reaitor. FE 42544 ~ MILLER & STONE LISTINGS WANTED We have customers waiting for homes now covered by GI mort. mex. re = = Pree ‘all your STONE: RE ALTY. CO. ole J FE 2-025) 9 to = Daily: Gun. 1 to 6 WILL aie OR LIST YOUR LAKE FR. MCKINNEY Office RAND Soe Rad. Ph. Pontiac 33313 of oon” crane Johnson |= DONE IT AGAIN) reeeee right folks, we have sold | rty on take or house ities. At least 6 rooms Office Open 08 A JOHNSON, Realtor FE 4-2533 1704 S. Telegraph R Rd. Wanted Listings pore We have clients waiting | purchase 2 and 3 room homes, and can give you good a if the price and & en C. Wood Co. REALTOR pong of Williams Lobes Rd fms are _3-1235 Office Open 8 os ROOM MEN _ Westbrook off Joslyn. “3 CLEAN | noone: “ADULTS 3, CLEAN MODERN ROOMS. Everything furnished line. _ References. rE eae = 2 ROOM } COTTAGE. FURNISHED p Bi scandy from Rips. Inquire at 34 ROOM APARTMEN Fur- nished. Private evaast Ca Ls 7 ROOM APARTMENT G —- ENTLE- 7 ROOMS oe sae NO CHIL ¢ren. 99 Prankiin Bi ;-lanet lh ag gc od naa OR. SHARE * vain Por be Gachelar os $850 w 71 LARGE See PRIVATE B BATH ores ore, FE +065 __after 4 S noo oat APT. CHF . a re Priv _ france: e. 116 E. Howard 7 ROOMS AND BATH. ATTRAC. tive. Infant secented FE 2-165! between 4:00 an? * 00 pm 2 ROOMS NEAR - FISHER BODY Men. With pol odhiee and clean _linen. E 5-05: USTIAN en- 6 Pairgrove 2 ROOM FURNISHED APART- _ment_ Adults only, 420 N. Saginaw 2 ROOMS, PRIVATE “ENTRANCE and bath. 184 Mt. Clemens, FE jee rvaig goiranen, 6 FUR. nis! rive Trance wer nse nw weekly, adult, FE OOMS STUDIO. PVT EN. trance, couple only. Very nicely furnished Over Dr. Curson's _Clinie. 157 ¥. _ Huron. 2 ROOMS, AN, MODERN. cou- only 3 Orchard _L Lake Ave. 3 AND ADULTS ONLY L i YOUNG RENTAL . FE 1444 Call before “-* “pr N. 8 ANT BATH. PRIVATE entrance. 22) Mechanic. i. IN. ADULTS 4. Private en- D BATH. $80 PER month includin all utilities, Re- stricted area, near Zlizabeth Lake Couple only References required. _FE_ 20071. “UNION COURT APTS. 3 oe bath, adults only, $66. KG Hempead, Realtor W OLVERINE, rigs ae coor smerny | Two bedruvm modern home tn Hu- | | route Moderate og Deyment | 3 rooms and bath, $69. per month 'K. G, Hempstead, Realtor 4 ROOM, MODERN APARTME NT. Le _Rent Apts, Furnished 33 5 LARGE ROOMS E YTHING furnished couple preferred, 4 ATTRACTIVE 3 ROOM” APART ment. Near. Pontiac Motors, _ble only WE 2- : ELIZABWTH LAKE Attractive modern rooms end ~ ge $20 Weekly, ‘Adults. HOUSES AND APTS, ALL XIN _ Pamily rental /agent. FE na ARTMENT, PRI- 3080 Lexington ‘on UTILITIES 800 Robin working davs. Scott Lake. 2 ROOM, paid. Chise to bus, wood Perry Park SCHOOL ST, ? AND BATH, OiL heat, __adult’ _}. 2 32-1426. VERY NICE 2 fF 2 Room FUR: | nished, Private entrance and bath. _No children Phone FE 22-5653 Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 lentil 2 & 3 RMS. TOTS WELCOME. RUSSELL H. bios li RENTAL AGENCY FE ¢1444. 2 ROOMS, ~~ KITCHENETTE PRI- vate bath and entrance, ehild under 5, OR 3-4577 2 RM. APARTMENT, $25 MONTH. 3364 Bathurst 2 ROOMS PRIVATE. “BATH AND entrance. Close in. FE 40808. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 103 FE Huron, | CHILD WELCOME close 3 ROOMS: 1 Private bath & entrance, to Fishers FE 23-8470 ~~} ROOMS AND BATH. 224 8 Marshall WATERFORD, 3} ROOM MODERN Ground floor $50 month plus de- vit References required. OR ade after 4 ee 3 NICE CLEAN ROOMB, ple only. 300 N Saginaw UPPER DUPLEX UNFURNISHED rooms & bath with garage Moat furnished West Side C) children. $90 @ month. OR 3-7665; ugtp m. “UNION COURT APTS. 1 coU- Adults only 102 Huron FE 48284 Private entrance Adults only Phone PE 2-7632 after 5 30 p.m ROOM APARTMENT. FIRST floor west side near Tel-Muron No children Phone FE 2-3684 ARCADIA APARTMENTS 3 rooms and bath. a child per- mitted. $60 per mon’ KoG: Heapstead, Realtor 102 F_ HURON BT. . WE 48284 DEL-RIO-APTS. 281 Oakland 3 rooms and full bath, stove, re- frigerator, utilities furnished, cou- ple only an MODERN NEW .2 BEDROO home near Oxbow Lake. Fu basement. $125 per month Will give lease Call Boider. MA 4-1554. Lake Land Realty Co. 024 Pontiac Tratl Walled Lake | MODERN ¢ ROOM APT. NICELY a ag | in Rochester OL 6-2338. _efter 6 call, OA 6345300 Kent Houses Furnished 35 PI meen ee 3. OBED- mas, stoker heat, full base- papery arage $100 Dre | oad month. Year's lease, yton Plains area. mR 3-4468 5 —s JULY 11, | PREE RENT IN EXCHANGE FOR services care of invalid woman. FES05230 LAKE OME AND aPTS, KUS oot & Young Agency Pe +140 detec Clark ae _—aOnEAN HOME < ON Vinle Lake. 14 miles out Nicely furnished, Adults _diate possession. PE 4¢-6306 } CABINS NEAR BLUE 8KY child couples _ences FE &- 3} ROOM. PARTLY FURNISHED. Semi-modern Adults only. FE Wanted good west suburban lake | “Rent Apts. Furnished d 33/05 Rooms vz __ 44635 after 5 erred. Refer- TIP-TOP LOCATION Entire second floor. Right — Sears on Saginaw &t. mo. Excellent for doctor's or te ver's office or —_ other business Ward E. Part. ec, Realtor, w. FE 23-8316 Hureo &t., -TIP-TOP LOCATION Entire second floor. near Sears on Saginaw &t. per mo Exeellent for doctor's or lawyer's office any other busi- ness Ward E. Pa oy Real- tor, 43 W. Huron &t.. 16. 1; OFFICES PO RRENT. WEAT & Hebt furnished. Reasonable General Printing and Office ‘oun. piv iT w. hme fly ot. _ For Sale Houses 43 - ANNETT OFFERS West Side—Paved Street } ROOMS. MODERN. | HOT Wa. { ter heat OR 32352 |§ ROOM. LOWER. WELL run nished References. Call a _ pm. 162 Chamberiain “Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 | AVAILABLE JULY 15TH 3 ROOM house, ideal for working couple _M¥ Del — i ROOM HOUSE 6 MILES E. OF » Pontiac FE ¢0061, 7 4 ROOMS 1 OR 9 SMALL CHIL- dren - e ROOM MODERN USE 615 __ Leon Rd. Walled Lake. MA 42069. 6 ROOM UPPER. \ wit ® BE AVAIL- able July 16th 3 rooms, large living and dining room, kitchen, gas heat, garage ce West side location. Rent $00 per month References required. Reply Pon- _tiac Press. 104 tae _Frese, Bon 100 MODERN. ADULTS. 7 ROOMS $100. 4296 Hatchery, OR 3-1765 5AM WARW! » HAS 7 W bedroom houses lease 49000 1823 Warwick 706 ELIZ. LAKE RD. ¢ bath. basement, and hot al heat. es ee oops by July 13th 2 vance “Rent Lake Property 364 | bir = gg GOOD PISHING, OTSEGO re aan Week or month. Canin ON ase ORION, NICE . $30 week. MY 209681. MY _Ste. a ee FURNISHED COTTAGE: BOAT fishing swimming. $40 per week _FE 40219 LEASE Year aroun¢ furnished home on 2 ROOMS SvERYTRING . FUR: | Mished 5 mirutes walk from town. | No childrer or qeavy drinkers. | Dizie Lake 14 miles out Dixie. _ Adults Reterences _VE 46306. ated on 3 acres having fruit tree and = jarg nice landsc sonped. ute drive from Rochester on paved road $20,000 terms Lake Oakland— New Ranch Home =— new 6 reom ranch home, fireplace, 3 10x19, roatantion x4} with-tile floor furnace ae lavatory and hot water com 2 car Silver Lake Front . = and lave- rem in excellent con- tuated on well ter- lot. .—; room 14x31, ie room 11x19, & —— r 6 1082": porch racing lane ene race hb fac lake 12230, full eat, wessniinn = Teom, dock and good beach 3 miles from . $31,500, terms. Roy Annett Inc. LTORS PEderal 3-7193 garden, rr} min- |. long. ES mente’ al went tons Tone, tend "Matireat ATs es WEST PIDE. Hotel Rooms 39 wiicheg with reat HOTEL ROOSEVELT | Ssiy*taiit"Sowa!"s Socks’ trom Sed Cp HOTEL AUBURIN for breakiaat set, ths gotire Room. by, Day or week | giana tac ball es Aiso 1 oF 2 Room Apartments desirable home nt Nontyt Phares smamiatiie tas Beton) Must ‘be seen to *Certees co | ee = $14,000 FARM » Rene Office Space 41 r ACRES eae tied at end ofp. scan. Geet Crescent Lake Modern 2 low. base matic Dishmaster, extra lots this one. Kampsen | ou Terms, $1, sum cottage 1 ia ase ie Pom, Oe pe 300 feet. ioe reer qround. bas] $5,800, 61,800 down. . ‘month You get your money's worth here LAKE FRONT HOME Perfect near beak nt é LEASE WITH OPTION TO BUY Nearly new ?-bedrm. brick home — partly furnishei Exclusive west- side district. £150 a month FLOYD KENT, Realtor 24 W. Lawrence FE 5-6106 open eves Next to Consumers Power NORTHERN MODERN COTTAGES. MA S40et Lake. MA 56-3176 or per Make ur reservations now. On 3-0580. K. Cabin Bay. LAKE FRONT —_ yd Haag furnished, boat. OR 3-2279. For. RenwRooms | 3? BUS STOP. pate rah ahi wae “5 ooking Jaundry. uron 1 SINGLE SLEEPING ROOM AND 2 doubles tod gentiemen. Near Pontiac Moto 406 Lowell 1 DOUBLE 4 AND Te SINGLE. 1 OME zprrilenes_ FE ‘8-0907 nOME 2 NICE SLEEPING R State St. at 199 Florence, FE MIDD EA room. vate bath erage _ Walnut Lage. MA worry . . BUSINESS GIRLS TO SHARE Cail_FE 2.3701. BEDROOM FOR Beat @. _from downtown CLEAN. CO couple or lad~. with greece, screened porch and car gerage. $4,000 down and os per m Quick posses- A HOME OF YOUR OWN Suburban Living ge pg ae — ‘builder built), in @ lovely ee trees) erything alow this fine om we. in : diving— “priviteges Just @ \few miles west of town. Ottawa Daive Three Bedrooms Immediate possession. Located Lovely Only $750 Down Out foe te tos on igh ay NICHOLIE net Two 3 Pg P see BEAUTIFUL NEW B. D. Charles, Realtor FE 4-0521 1v717 8. Open Evenings fi i Z Acre NEAT ~~, a eee 3, /and — oo Fl th Lake | Tizabe Pruit vat, Terme a N FO caer ae brick : famfiy bomen" all of the} Avon Township appointments on very com soon? — you conditioned “iaronstees Vestibule. 5 aan i Room ome ft breakfast nook, down- ipo nm a 2 stairs lavatoty, screened / fu double brick garace. and a very|/ '¥- lov yer’. property / ve oat? Te ee ae. ‘ered eal oon Evenings = Sunday 1-4 Priced, at only sensd | venaal Doroth Snyder La ; A DANDY BUY | sie w. muse” re sda Laces | veset scm = eunquien | oom eee. / with stairway to expansion attic Oek floors Walls. | Very tastefully decorated. Fuli/ basement. HA heat, — lawn C HARLES and fenced rear yard. bus down and s pert i es . \NcH HOME - | lll call P Daa ¥ sai Aer Ml ag ws : om i w. Z 1363 —g Open E beces s \caroom : “path. oll 4, rss You'h like wt. 62.- moves you in. 500. BUY. $3,000 down ig s itn a Fully modern 2 bedrooms. 3 pe. Lary well pignned with dining apace. ; AN ATTRACTIVE FIVE N Le- netics a CAMERON H. CLARE _—— COUNTRY FRY. HOME A beautiful, ra, spacious five room with Rage ted other outstand- ‘TWO FAMILY BRICK WEST $2.500 WN ‘ive two famity street Seperate Upper per month A-l LAKE FRONT BARGAIN $10,500 WITH $1500 DOWN Attractive, modern. grey alo fireplace. built in bath and er, two large bedrooms, gtassed | in porch. full basement. and oi! | AC. heat. 66 f— on lake vig Saget he etal IN FOUNDATIO i al yoretig ptt rLinalesinad only | 3 years old lous, lovely) rooms throughout Exceptionally large bedrooms, flush doors m ern streamlined kitchen and bath, in china cunboards and dryer included Lot | 100x120 Nice lawn and shade | $2.000 down. wee j ELIZA LAKE ESTATES BEAUTIFUL escorted on and with full basement. kitchen, and living © room rear porch Garage [acs Cannot DORRIS & SON ALTORS CO-OP MEMBERS PE ¢1587 | lovely bath 1ixld | beat at sii. - 2 Retes | eee ee ae with part) basement I” vara Beton | ry “ room 5 aie west specious — of "Poatiac ‘The full — tf only $7,750 with $1995 down HITE. BROS. _ — Phe de or - Re Ned | Geese 7 ROOMS A = BATH ON. CEN. tral with basement and large lot | Close to OMT and Baldwin Rub- ber ble down payment rE > DRAYTON PLAI NS garden is in, 12520 living room, walls, Walk stores and Greyhound bus $84 - $1960 down 3325 Addie St 1361, al to | LAKE ESTATES 5 feeeed | ie Small down payment.— GATEWAYS to FIRST OFFERING Gl. RESALE — 4% MORTGAGE : huttt to 1900; this North Side, iv , 4% room, one floor cture window, tile bath com tion kitchen with tile ment gas heat, tubs, fruit cel- lar, room, fenced back jot, flowers and Convenient to Pontiac Pisher Body. Offered at $9.860, $2,565 down, $57 per month — taxes and in- HAPPINESS surance. r cent mortgage DON'T war” AN UNUSUAL BUY INS ‘ acreened porches | shingle | like oak | FULL Se | | $6,000 | | Alirectisaly Gules, Man” al ny eenvewtohsce. Dag one. ona a ve EM Bettie PS. Only 3 left 2 these prices, REAL TOR ; ™ 0 we i . 43568 | | HEY be | A lakefront income Brick and briar bili stone 5 rooms Tile | bath bungalow. Lake level, 3 room and tile bath 2 firepiaces Oil | automatic heat Only # miles from Pontiac Total price.$§13.500 with substantial down payment | days call Mr Blair, OR 1708 WEST SIDE | as | A peat modern ¢ room and bath \e- | Full besement Arranged for sol | | apartment complete showef, stool and lavatory Ges heat. extra lot | €24 Pontiac Trail Walled Lake — THE LAKE MAN - fice room house furnished 3} room apt. up $110 per month in- | come. § rooms down, living quar- ters 68000 Large down pay- _FE_ 2-1432- ; | Lotus | beth Lake Estates ali furnished is @ bargain $1350 down includes the furniture tal month rao! pec this at once il FD 60684 DON'T DELAY room home with every room newly decorated New oi) furnace close Total payments of | Vy EM 34432 Jack Loveland EQUITY IN x a Ban . te Se. Lake Rd.. Kee meee Soe Ee Spe a vt NEWLYWEDS LOOK | my STATE wel SACRI-| ‘This two bedroom home in Elisa- You will be proud to own this 6) L ake Front. reds. Terme. “hecsenable. Call ‘Here iy @ mredernistic 2 bedroom Hl RE I i lake front home. with plenty of A fanch Bae home at a bar- eye appeal. Featuring a iarge «ain price ree bedrooms pieas- lie room with 4@ briar stone ant perfect kitchen loors and fireplace. Beautiful sun poreh with trim in excellent condition At- jJealousie windows also a Florida tached garage & utility room room Complete with aluminum Owner compelled to leave this storms and screens A three quar-| lovely home. Wiil consider low ter basement with of] steam heat price and easy terms Call FE This lot ts beautiful landscaped 40584 with flowers and shrubs galore LAWRENCE W A one and heif car gatage with a too) shed and car port An ex- tra “y acre of land goes with this GAYL ORD rea! buy Total price $18,060 with convenient terms Cail for ap . 1 pointmens today | 136 PIKE Fhe 4-584 Co-operative Real Estate — Exch NEW Gol HOMES $1250. down includes mortgage | costs. 3 bedroom ranch de on large west subarban lered walls. oak floor BROS. _ On paved street. Only 66.050 with | oo 7 2 i. Pa on es windows marble sills tile bath $1. down oe - Full divided basement oil furnace (KO L. Temple ton, Realtor | LAKE ORION and automatic water heater | 2339 Orchard Lake Ra FE +4563 6 room modern nome. sun porch NORTH SIDE Office Open Eves 3 blocks from echool and down ..1 University St $6950. with $1500 town Must be cash dea! MY down 2 bedroom basement, fur- . ¥5719 After *& om nace H hries ‘MODERN RANCH TYPE. 4) 2 Tennyson St $9850 with $2850 ump ; rooms and bath on large lot also Pile aan per are Pr lerepig w at L room house included $1 100 kes OM insurance edrooms Max a6 ee, piecis at agent down Full oe $6.500 By own-, basement furnace sata haaie living room with er PE 5-33 3 Princeton $1375 down $65 per natural fireplace Pleasant mod- MODERN si OMe MIDDBTEF — ; tig ert ro paet ha $58 50 ern kitchen Large bedroom down Straits Lake $950) «down $75 eee Resale 68 balcony bedroom Has storms monthly. Immediate occupancy. | Pf! Month includes taxes and in- u and screens 103n! ft. lot too $8.360 with $1 900 down Humphries Available to you — lovely mod- | @24 Pontiac- Trail, Walled Lake surance on this modern 2 bed- room with basement with gas furnace HAYDEN Lake Land Realty Co. NEAR LAKE ORION ® acres § room modern house Expansion attic Barn A Good buy WALTER GRFEN REALTOR rn 3 year old bungalow on Mo | 26'y W Huron Bt FE 5-208 (orway Drive. Carpeted 20 ft | 66 Park Biv (M24) Loke Orton | Realtor _Open Eves living room. dining ‘'L AiR NEW. LARGE) BEDROOM COUN. | bath enit wiilny ae ot heat | try home. Cut sthne. Approx 3 Bereens and storms — includett acres Full basement EM 3-223 Fenced yard A 4 per cent mort- age if you pay down to the rms arrang Humphries Be prepared to see & beautiful | home when you arrange to in- 4 2 bath— | ston 210 ft ‘landseaped setting and the, inviting large White home Un usually fine decorations powell in the early American theme 25 ft living room with colonial | fireplace Family sized dining room, adjoins the screened porch apace out Modern kitchen with eatin 3 Den or bedroom down spact- | ous bedrooms and ceramic tile | bath up. Recreation space in the | basement Double gatage, circu- lar drive $19.950 = (wi $6,000 down Be sure to see this! Humphries Realtor FF 2-0474 83 N. Telegraph Evenings 4 | Co-operative Real Estate Exchange Income lete rice for thi» 2 family wher ves in lower apt Rent out 3 room upper at $40 month which makes payments Selling a due to increase tin fam Joseph ¥. Reisz 53'2 W. Huron 8&t | 5 $8950 =Com FE 2-0250. Eve Mi 44419 KINZLER | Watkins Lake Front Modern 1's story 6 room bungalow with nice glassed large | front 3 extra excellent s ‘lope to $16,000 with beach Price $5,000 down Pioneer Highlands Right in the heart of this 4. fine community is this neat and clean 2 bedroom bun- gaiow Has new oll furnace and new garage. Nice shade and lake privileges. Price $12,100, PHA terms. G.I. Veterans Att! Newer 6 room semi-bungs- low — all in perfect con- dition. Gas beat, recreation potrine and Ay — arpeting ‘, car ¢ Price $11,750 with 61. down, plus GT mtge costs $3,000 conn to non-veterans ry 6 Rooms — 10 Acres | In lake region west of city | Modern bungalow — 6 extra | large rooms and other butld- | NEW 6 ROOM HOME FARM HOUSE | NEAR BT Josephs Hospital, 4 room home on Waiton Bivd. BUCHY REAL- Ue _F F43143 | $245 DOWN | Ranch home built on your tot we unfinished Several mod- GOODELL at 3200 Rochester Road Phone OL 6083) | O'NEI COMFORTABLE LWING - This @room modern home with large living room and fireplace, has spacious din- ting room and kitchen with om. Plas- walls, taste- fully decorated in cool col- ors Larqe full basement = | ord copier . peek eee je | 1 |. Mi ] le’ r Stone ful Oiieae flee rosea yard with fruit trees. $8- EAST SIDE 950. terms too tedroom home. full bath. full | basement. gas heat auto water baci ols ard h mp ataee) %e trkenpertation | story located tn quiet east OFF JOSLYN suburban area Beautiful J Siny \ decorations, oak floors room home with full basement. throughout Fully tiled bath. full bath auto heal 60 ft lot, | Automatic heat and het wa- good north end location Can be | ter 802200" lot Reasonable 0 to GI's for $850 down in-| payments Be, first, not cman mortgage cost | sorry VOODWARD | gt MIKE 6 DisTRiCT, — cs TES xcellent 5-room alow I STATES Living room. dining room. room homes with unfintshed at- | 3-bedrooms. and bath Good tice, full bath. full basement. | basement with recreation auto heat. excellent neighbdor- room OU heat On shaded hoott paved street A good buy paved street .Must be sold for velerans . STONE REALTY CO. FIRST OFFERINO = On exceptions }- room un- Fes so @ally. ee eye ealow located on Riviera = ~ in beautiful Elizabeth Lake Estates 2 picture windows 1 } tile kitchen, and bath ex- | pansion attic are but a few — lb | of its many conveniences | $3850 handies and payments | of $56 at @ per cent T hs 7 . | TAKE ORION —-_ Enjov Tonite & eveny. Nite j year round comfort in 6 to g . this attractive 2-bedroom j modern lake home Situat- | ed vp a high. wooded lot. 97 COLEMAN -Brand new with the lake directly in }-bedroom FHA. bungalow back Immaculate. condition So many, Many outstanding throughout oi] furnace. plas- | in the features vestibule closet tered walls basement Ideal and pictur. window fur retiring couple or small spacious Uving room with family Easy berms dining ell, efffciency kitchen, ~ plenty of built-in cupboards. » * ign . beaufiful tile beth with col- RAY O'NEIL, Realtor ored ‘fimtures. and shower 3 Ww Huroa Open select oak floors, plastered Phone FE 3-7193 or OR 13-1648 ainted walls, 60 foot wide Co-operative Real Estate Exch _ jots, paved street. sidewalk. wICE LITTLE HOME .N COUN- sewer, water Oil furnace trv ‘n old apple or-hard. § acres | in the full basement. Com with take re beach. venient to Donelson School, smal’ down tet Church, and DENNIS Oc) “oR REAL Est shopping center Drive out 9281 2-0040 Huron = &t vay Sgeeery School, turn ri to model. rc ~Ar r $12430 FHA. terms. NEW BUNGALOW Near Crescent Lake Large new 2 bedroom iarge_ livin A room. plaster painted walls, RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 78 W_.Huron Open 98 il furnace. Terms arrang “ng Phone FE 3-7103 or OR 3-9573 | Near gt Joseph Hospital neat Co-operative Real Estate Exchange | @ roam 3 bedrooms. ‘plaster | OFF BALDWIN pol — __ areas. extra jot. and bath modern large &k garage coc agri — be used of PONT T "AC RE Al my CO. t) rr Grive 3 lots, $8,900 Si aso pods 171 Baldwin FE 5-8275 ROSE MCLARTY ee VE o¢e2 2 8=—S_ ROOM HOUSE, ELECTRIC 4 To —r. nice kitchen Close $750 d.éwn. ings. 200 five year old id terms 5450 White Lake Rd Waterford, eee vs trees, berries — 1A pot peer 37586. house utility hot wate bee hives with — —— lake Privileges on Lotus Cane or without al? sanare and 3 BEDROOM RANCH TYPE $1500 down. tools. $3.000 down for farm home. On lot 1002 las Huntoon Lake subdivision, 26x50 Now vacant is one is D Son 66 W. Huron. Reai ranch house, ful] basement 2 fire- tops! Better burry! _ Bargain slacee attach rage. 2 nice! room ith one rooms and taken space for up, oak floors, wal vene- tian biinds..-ful) basement, oil beat, storms and screens, new [ao new etdins. Boned awnings ‘s vacant, Offered $ ao te “a ‘own YOU'LL | RAMBLING RANCH NEAR 8SYLVAN LAKE potividughy styled ranch type home of charm and distinction one of the nicest streets tn the village consisting of 6 rooms. @ pictue window in. two lix a ‘ving rooms with Titehen “i Two joining 8 ° corner win- | Gows, tile bath, venetian biinds. . mice basement with rec- heat, tubs, wa- ‘jentor - dinette. down otern Sell-To Trade IT-— WE'LL INSURE IT "MAHAN REALTY CO. REA Co-operative Rea! wastes Tostanek -026: Auburn Heights ty $950 down oh thi 2 bedroom home with ea also a rene car pe tet gees with John Kinzler, Realtor 670 W. Huron St If no answer. nm Eve Co-operative Real KNUDSEN West Side Brick 6 rm and bath ranch tyrpe Full basm't gas heat any features Price reduced to $14- 500. with carpeting. Excellent uns Fstate a easat | | | j | | terms jE lizabeth Lake I-states F ple ture | Plas- | | } | | a | | | ' Corner —— ,OR FLD | t } | | 5 rood —. $16,000, very rea sonable GEO. MARBLE, REALTOR 6261 Andersonville Rd, Waterford. To SOT lL ___Fhone_OR_ +1300. endian | Partrid e| SOUTH MIDLAND Be sure to see this § room modern : hom- with basement. stoker heat. | Is THE “BIRD TO SEE glassed in front:porch. and I's car RAN arage Situated on nice lot - | @@rage and shop $14.950 with Large brick bidg & miles from living room with large. stone medium down yenent Call Ciif- Pontiac Call tonight for further fireplace ‘ieid-stone hearth ford Stanley roker| Ph. Fen- details ‘an aearoae HAS DONE IT ste if, baths up All Cypress 7 =p —. > = ° is at be ex peneling. maple. floors, oll 2 BEDROOM HOME FLOYD KENT, Realtor heat Large aon on south | AC ;AIN! | gmall town bergain, located in “Mw Eaureere os Open Eves. and east overlooking iake | a -room : You cant visualize this parnact eam Ele boo] pesgedlcorg Next to Consumers Power breath-taking spot. Call for 5 ae furnace and garage. Quiet, shad. | wae The price? IFIGH OL ALITY ed lot Price only $7500 with ————— LOW PRICE term Rent-Lease Bus. I Prop. 494 - whet = MEAGHER ATE le OS Leslie R. Tripp. Sos ' " h A8-3122 | a o EXCELLENT LOCATION FO 22 W. Lawrence Lahde | Low As ——_——_—_— | e R al vent | = 4 For Sale Lots rT smal} business or business & 35-8161 aa rE 21306 | aa | home together. only 1 block from | Labia J R. Hiltz, Reai- A. GO. ELLIOTT & SONS ae : 8 5 Northwestern at Middlebelt lar tOCERY STORE AT 5177 CASS- oy _JOrden 46121 MAyfair 62503. | Eliaabeth Rd. for lease Fast THIS WEEK’S | BIG LOTS 100X200 - | rowing community between 2 : : f Near Auburn and Rochester Rd.| lakes. Good business Will sell SPFCIAL | | U to $495. Woodward 2-9700 stock ee & ne license in- ; $1.200 DOWN Zz a a ee bedroom starter me x26 oe large ‘ot. This home te cue | 2 ACRES | Business ; Opportenitics 51 —_ — worsted Fagaals acon i Sor Corner of Perry. 8t and Giddings |~ ~~~ churches am main nichwar ly $1990. $300 down. Terms. BEAUTY SHOP ON MAIN STREET Monthly payments of $60 wil) ! . im Sou wali’. DAILY 12-9 Dorothy Spgs Pent OL 21931 after Sl oer VLOWN 2 bedroon Spanish stvie stucco. 3140 W_ Huron St. FE 2-441 | yi fome on ereslocts te chung 90? PRINCETON 5 SE eee ° a and » Thi- home has every COLONIAL HILLS. 75x188. acon | alating Wiot il mllarsctteaceel und Sorate en, ale + a im lot, excellent ranch type screened in front porch. All fur gate semeeer Be 66 COMPARE! te = site Tay aooes haste” nas as ~ = . ‘oom x EMBREE & GREGG | EAST BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS car garage Also a lovely 3 rom 1563 Union ake Rd A 200x300. beautiful peg lot. low and bath year around cottage for EM 23-4397 of BM 1.3251 lath & Plaster taxes. only $1400. cas owner (130 ft frontage on lake | . r an t bus front oe | * Aluminum Windows WOODWARD ESTATES 402133. highway Oni) “le piles irom Boas *D . > par street, sidewalks — 865006 rac THREE BEDROOM LAKE FRONT. Ranch Roof eeany bake. ee Beautiful setting eee 8 dew, FE ily Insulated ing site just off Petry St. Priced OFFICE OPEN OS Four room and bath partia: pase- - Tight =) - eee Ment good condition On five fer- ; aN It YIN SON, Realtor tile leve: acres 20 fruit trees ; LAKE FRONT About 15 mi FE 4-2533 $6500 $185. aown or $5000 cash fae Ree eet gl lake ; 4S ust of vement. only $15 New 2 edroom Therm e pic- J / uA Tele ‘graph kd. ture wiodow hardw rs aluminum storms & screens. Vew sharp DENNI€ OLONNOR Real Estate Russell H. Theatre Bidg. rE ‘on Y 2-0040 MA 5-7804_ 0.500. TERMS | Es « BEDROOMS, BATH AND Se = half. Union Lake privil Re- | 4 J modeling notscombictet Owns; |p, YEAR AROUND | on property 2526 Messena ovens with $000 down. FE 5-0729 ural fireplace. 2 large screened = —- | in Boat with tak 4 8 ae MODERN | Young _FE 17-7941. 44525 ONE 2 FAMILY INCOME, WITH 5) rooms down and 4 wu lot 200 $1.90 down ’ 1250 located close to Utica 83400.) FL RNISHED INCOME wi andie, | Three — apts Close in. alorel OF JOSLYN 2 Bedroom | ~ expansion attic, gas heat, | rN fenced yard and i's car garage — 50 DOWN $3000. will handle. | East suburban. '% block to Avon- | dale High School. 4 rooms. Wa- ter electric and gas. Venetian at onlv $9.500 with $2,000 down. ee bes FE 44091 5-5091 or FE 5-2564 7-616 OR 3-603 Lhe W. Huron Realtor Co-operative Real — Exchange 2B BEDROOM MODERN HOME. #02 ™” $500 DOWN bala fad ORCHAR Newly constructed 2 bedroom 2 bedroom a type doll starter me built on corner lot Pouse ve full seo beth Richey call ay : oors. au! a aie complete screens and storms. all $1,100. DOW N on a. large lot. price and terms to| 2 bed — — Basa oy sel). — of Rd. uto. gas tar near school —_ churches. Bear, bigh schoo ADAMS REALTY! CO. 382 Auburn Ave. 1 iw A dandy Dray Plains 2 bed- Toom bungalow me on large attic, close to and trans a sient at eo. $780 DOWN PIONEER HIGHLANDS - Moart new 2 bedroom bungalow oo STREET F Re Set on me ir new homes are now rea for your inspection. A few of the livable. Fast > many features of these homes R. J. VAL UET. Realtor are Face brick, 3 bedroom, slid- New L Location — Am Parkin: ing birch flush doors, ceramie tile | ¢ pie. ad bath vestibule entrance. oak | $45 Baklond Ave. n° FE peels floors, oe drive, aved | street, lake privjleges:on Sylvan > Lake All thi in one iac's| WAN OO ? most exclusive oo SEE | WA! T A G B JOB} FOR YOURSEL Place a Work Wanted ad Russell Young in Pontiac Press to reach aaew. Hor OF ore ocses | uron « Open Eves. ‘til 9 sun. ‘til 6) employers. Ss: e leges, Price+ at oniy 96.960 with ; nentiee lor 6 $51 per week. Priced | | ' SCHRAM | Battin hy a CUSTOM | DRAP ~RY. AND SLIP cores work ry ighway shop. 2 apartments in. Bay City area John K. Irwin REALTOR 4 Well established Upholstery could _ Since 1925 ; be profitably added ta ag sold. 101', N. Saginaw Street Tl health oe Kaw- Phone FE 2-4031 Eve FE 2-184) _kewiin. Mich Bay City 3. “a4 | DRY CLEANING AND LAUNDRY, business for sale cheap. FE 2-7508" x No 34, F Pontiac Press FOR ALL YOUR PROFITABLE TOMORROWS Partridge Cd $25 DOWN Beautiful %. acre north suburban building sites. Black-top road New development $25 DOWN 2%) acres. on Brown Rd Fasy | build ing . - $25 DOWN 60x225 ft _ceiiding lote in Orion Sensible restrictions JIM WRIGHT, Realtor Co-operative Real Estate Fxch ° “ tad 345 Oakland Ave sare FE. 5.9441 ee Sik TO SEs : j NETGHBORHOOD Elizabeth ten Estates MARKET 4 LARGO PARK an beech privileg es. “priced from | With living quarters. Located right Contac s Oe in Pontiac on & good paved i ret or nhone “or es street_ Includes one 4 rm_ apt. ye for $60 Tf mo. and of Tm. apt. for a S per mo. Now showing a good gross. Has beer & wine take-out Real estate, busi- ness and all for only $17,500 full price. Terms. Just Look At CHEROKEE HILLS! Compare th- advantages of its beth take na, Teme weet! TIRED OF WORK? ; Rd.—and select your Then this ts the business for you, Close early every day in time to do your gardening and fishing. It's the best deal we've seen in a- short order. short hour restau- rant We can show you excellent ha Have your money back in CARL W. BIRD. Realtor | $03 meaty National Bank Bidg PE ¢42:1 Eves. FE 5-1392 than a vear It's bus HOH CORNER LOT. 100 BY 200. about the only w "ten aut . L a Must é% ee $1500 down. LIn- in this grill ‘ to ay re . coin byork Pas busy. $5.000 full price. erie FT ON DEVON aoe T SHIRE IN id Highlands. Reduced ligase for quick sale. FE 8-0116_ Lots of All Kinds, Sizes BUSY TAVERN A long Mi cdageo tees wl lo- cated tavern in tac. Short heurs” Ps Tr week, and Description, oo Bigg! Be yo invest- trenoteae oa oon, aay , “ e e t be - . suited ag featy WARD FE. PARTRIDGE Others exposed OFFICE OF NATIONAL BUSINESS hacements BROKERS CLEARNING HOUSF. pages | raneine from $750 te IN PPINCTPA! CITIES — - ‘Oe from = to COAST- TO-COAST ROGER B. HENRY. Inc, World's Largest 51 Main OL 1-611 ow. Rochester, Michigua a ~_ Eve. FE 27-8310 rf}- a? | "ee .v& tavern with excellent l.ving quar. Money to Moan 53 . (State a. Licensed Lenders) 7 Business Opportunities ties 51 GROCERY sr0ne Ay we AT $177 CA8s- Rd for Elizabeth lease. Fast 1) <5 | Atala or agra nea Detween 2 I. O. ANS $25 TO $500 , siness Wil sick, Bder nd. ving Neel’ —- Baxter & Livingstone included. FE. 5-0165 64-W. Lawrence st __, FE ¢1538 HARDWARE 8TORE WITH LIVING oo : Quarters nea Lapeer, anh will accept home itn trad SUCHY tY REALTY FE 4-3142 INCOME. IF YU HAVE $3,000 | investigate hod 6 apt. (14 rooms) gyn Mh endined laid year. Will, | $25 to $500 $25 to $500 se. In years white i Betting large profit anbually Thee | Coinmanit fy Loan Co, ner can reire and hiv ff eome. Owner needs alk ‘ < 30 F. Law 2eUhSs _ Write Ponttar Tre.s. Box mk) & FE 2 Fes MILK ROUTE. ~ MA Sane Friendly service a Retirement Insurance | A class C bar with 6 room iiv- .# ing Quarters upstairs and in a masopry building this spot has Up to only had liquor a httle over a year and the gross is climbing steadily. A bar buy for $1§.000 H down on property and al! Phone for more information oan G Tile! I, for You Today 30.000 FAMILIES IN PONTIAC and Oakland County have bor- rowed trom Buckners in the last + & kor Sooo ters above located about 80 miies 37 years north. The. gross is not too large because of the present owner's BUCKNER'§ IS THE OLD RE- lack of interest apd implica- LIABLE UF - TO- DATE LOAN tions fn another business He will COMPANY WHERE YOU ARE sacrifice fur §8.000 down on prop ALWAYS WELL TREATED erty and eil. Will consider trade of propeely céntracts or what When illness comes: When there have you? ione {oT More in- are layoffs or shert time formation on No 506 employment you will be giad you are dealing with Buckner s + | wher» you are always sure of - |; Kind an considerate treatment ' Real, Estate Service of Pontiag BETTER BE SAFE THAN SORRY Pontiac State Bank Bicdg | John A, Landmesser, Broker FE 4-1582 "E 5-0978 BDD. AND SDM. SUPER MAR- You can obtain up to $500 to- Gay or any day at Buckners for a shor’ time or take up ket. No competition. Fast growing, ‘° 24 montns to repay on low community. Well equipped build monthly paymentd# | The charge ing. main highway. Carpeted 5 is jess tha. you think room apartment Owner occupy 3 room rental, $65 a month. auto- BORROW THE CASH matic ‘ce house Paid sales tax YOU :NEED aT $200 000 1953 $5000 to $10,000 - down plus Inventory. Liquor will | make pay mgnte Owner. Mr Go- | ing. Pontia® OR 3-2352 1 IC nN RESTAURANT | FOR LEASE | oR | sale located on lakes. E RENT ON SELL FOOL ao Ne : iness, FE 43383 Pcie CONN ; ens O54 RESTAURANT AND DRIVE-IN ON Corne. N Saginaw and Huron route to Ickes. Doing good busi- __ Call after ~ 4. RESTAURANT BY OWNER | Stock & eqtipment. brick butid ing. living quarters above. Sun- ! davs b¥ appointment MAYVILLE RESTAURANT, phone 4101, May- | TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN Ville. Michigan -ROCHESTER, MICH. Street Pontiac Also Drayton Plains 419 Dixie Highway Across from Post Ot- fice Phon. OR 3-1221. ness _ FE ¢3790 ——= DD AND 8D™M. 8UPER MAR- | ket. No competition. Fast growing community. Well equipped build- | AUTOS tg. main highway. Carpeted 5} room apartment Owner occupy 3 mouskeora ao room rental, $65 a month, auto Ph Rochester OL 60711. Of, 1-979) Paid sales tax $200.00 1953 §$$.000 to $10.00 down plus inventory. Liquor will | ___Mortgage Loans 54 make ayments Owner. Mr ~ ~~ Going. Pontiac OR 3-2352 LOW INTEREST BUY TO SELL REALTOR : ' . artridge IS THE." “BIRD' to see air opintel wemorigaze cancel WATCHMAKERS ATTENTION | 2 watch making establishments should borrower die. HOG PET ERSON doing excellent business Easy | terms Must sell. Watchmakes| 1310 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. leaving state for health -FE’ Phone FE 5-8406 or FE 56772 4-8406 Tea sg -——— -- Swaps 55 — oe DODGE PICKUP ‘4 PACKARD $250,000 Volume Sedan. Wil) trade for furniture New self-service food mart tools, real estate or what have tn excellent lake area A you B & B Auction, 6069 Dixie real money-maker. even for Hwy., OR 3-2717. parties Owner leaving . Call for details FE 40528 . Bateman & Kamp- sem Realty Co 377 8 Tele graph Rd EXCHANGE YOUR LAND CON- | tract (where vou have sold rected erty’ for late mode) ar HJ VanWweh. Om 3-135 EXCEPTIONAL ‘52 a acies club coupe, Loaded. Consider oid- _er_car_or trade. OR 3731 _ EXCHANGE MELILUM PRICED — for bullding ‘ots up to §500 J. Van Welt OR 3-1355 eaake ENTRANCE DOOR AND smail buffet for 44 inch plywood, or se. CR 33-9610 cas . Money to Loan = 53 (State Licensed Lenders) CASH PROMPTLY Get $10 t $500 quickly op car I A QUES FURNITURE @ ND 3-4308. —_ ~~ ~a-brac. MY APARTMENT SIZE 10953 oe stove, taupe wool rug, 7'6''x7 so 3, several 50x80" & "; Wall table, Formica to _for porch or itchen. 1 BENDIX ~ AUTOMATI ee m eyes A-l co WASHER. tion. 37 Spo- ase ~ AUTOM. ATIC WASHER ‘ed *§ ve BOTTL# GAS | Installed in your home, for $22 77 complete. Kenyon-Puel-gas 5268 Dixnte Hwy OR 3-2¥01 chair. Extsa large in vood cop- dition $56 OR 3-4510 ‘ BLUE KROEHLER LIVING. ‘ROOM 3292 Auburn Rd corner of Squir- rel Rd FE 5-3166 oe CROSLEY SHELVADOR, ® CU ft. late mode) repossessed. Pay DINING ROOM TABLE MAHOG any Duncan Phyfe %#x56 with leaf ani pads Like new FE 2-5704 DAVENPORT AND CHAIR. GOOD condition FE 40317 DAVENPORT AND CHAIR GOOD condition down filled cushions reasonable FE 4-0659 DETROIT JEWEL GAS Fcelient condition $50 FE 5-8630 —+ BAYENPORT up Wicker $1950. apartment gas stove, $19 50, electric range $29 59, washer. $1650. buffet 8895. new roll away beds complete, $1695, new cotton mattresses $11 95, RANGE Phone AND CHAIR, _ settee and $9 50 chair frigerators 6 up be sure to see our washers at 14 95 19 05 - Refrigerators at 4995 & TV at 2995 furniture or note. Weve been FoR SALE 08 DE. 4 ROOM The Good wouses espn Sho making friendly laons since 1906. | - year around tas os lake ts cla cl eat Fe Chass | i or roms = eared. | aeiles trom town Will take late hres rans REFRIGERATOR, ent Loan &@ avings lety mode: car as down ment. ttl as stove table top, FE 2.9240 : Le $25. 37 E. _ Fate rE 4-7278 Immediate possession HAVE PRESS CAMERA, ENLARG- er Hi-Fi amplifier, meta) exten- sion ladder. want boat and trail- er OR 37761 between 8 and 10 m , PIANO PICNIC TABLE AND BOAT trailer for what have you. Phone OR, 3-T292_ TRADE IN YOUR OLD “LAWN- mower on a new one Oarden . Aid tractor with "3° power driv- eErvlice en lawn mower $2" cutter bar 4a" snow plow no sulky Reg - | $567 for .400 One 4P outboard You can borrow $20-$500 quickly,| motor Reg. $265 now $150. One on signature car, or furniture.| Vovrager $8 HP outboard motor Loans made Without endorsers for Reg $165 now $9950 Barnes any worthwhile purpose. Up to _Hardware 742 W. Hurop St. __ 20 monthg to repay. HOUSEHOLD | ged FINANCE Extra East ‘wail house furniture, auto’ for new or us etratiers “@ CHEVIE DUMP. SELL OR trade. Phone *Y 3-808 3% Sou Bogie Bt Kay Bide | WILL SWAP LA LAND CONTRACT = | and cash for 1953 or 1 mode 2nd floor Phone: FEdera] ¢9535 car Write Pontiac Daily, Press ri ine NCH ADMIRAL CONSOLE. in pe for small outboard mo- or power mower. Call OR . 32-7810. WILL PAINT INSIDE OR OUT IN return for or aa toom or bedroom GET CASH QUICKLY Up to $500 ae wen Pinal ne son _furniture. FE 40462 minutes. Loans also made on | WILL SWAP PRACTICALLY NEW furniture. Signature afd oth-r se pump. and. Deering milker with curities. and motor for wood work- Ing ls, outboard motor or will sell 1 FES3317 . LIKE OAKLAND LOAN CO. PE 2-9206 | 1053 }_ PACKARD MAYFAIR. Will take smaller car ‘or land contract in trade. Will also | sell tor cash Call Mr. Johnson | FE 42533 WILL SWAP isi * POWER 2 MOWER Excellent condition. And cash for 2 hp .Johnson or Evinrude out- gre or will sell Phone FE 292 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG S or Sale Clothing 56 a PPPoE ir CHANTILLY LACE WEDDING Friendiv Service gown. Orange blossom hat and WHEN YOU NEED $29 to $900. We can he'p vou with rour ae problems You can get wu and_repayv in small mon me | fingertip vetl. Call after 4 pm F 7-98il RED GREY SUIT. Good con- TOPPE black dress size 14 dition. FE 5-7060 | Ras steeues WEATHER VANE. suit, pink, size 7-9. Worn once % ‘Wes $35 wil sell for $12. FE | | oe | saad Household nold Goods 57 87 Telephone us or cad at our office.| ISCOUNT SALE ; 9x12 L INOL EUMS, $1.89 $395 HOUSE PAINT Fone 2 gal. | 4%. FT, WALL TILE Be $e PUNE ue pe. : . 1 ile FINANCE CO. one TISPHALT. Tl ILE 2e—el FE 4-1574 $395 Enamel Paint $195 eal ‘ /10¢ INLAID TILE 9x9 ___102 Pontiar State Bank Bide, New Chest of Drawers $6 *5 “GARBAGE. CANS $149 “Need Money? | | Harold's 140 S. Saginaw rE rouse Free Deliver), Free Red Stamps *» ph : Arg nea. as your telephone. Just OPEN “PRIDAY NI Lm ma tee 9 M FPE5-6121 (See aS. APARTMENT SIZE ELEC- tric rangé Rebuilt electric Singer sewing machine and case Good condition. 1525 Marvlestone. EM Por auto fina.cing. refinancing. | CLEAN parments. Ndebie oe any cinet | ALMOST EM gr PE sod alee ett oat and | ALL SPRING CONSTRUCTION “aavenport in excellent condition A120 rte afte -_ aa tching chair irpos: completed on v vr first visit and tim a few winutes | eral repay: ment plan. Home& Auto ®! Hee "rE fe ayta sher ; ranges $19.95 up. -Loan Company) Ea’mcentars “ata 401, Community National Bank Bide CRUMP ELECT RIC @ to 4: Sa-urdey @ to) "3465 Auburn FE 43573 APARTMENT ELECTRIC RANGE, $2950 and up. Munro Electric. 1060 1 W. Huron. about ANYTHING >} YOU WANT AN BE FOUND AT L & 8. $100 T Onl Row garden cultivators. 5c up; On Your Name y new lamps. $350 up; used lamps, $350 down: beds ‘all sizes) $3 up; refrigerators, up; . i (gas. & elec @5 “p; sets 7 up soe up; Miller M for vacations, past . pacts ee err a eoreen on , new use : due Bune. any worthy pur- wanes $498 «up: ‘iving room Dose. * te all suites >$122* up: dining room you nee Other _ amounts suites $19.50 up Complete line $25 to noone day of Seal Rit cotor tint paints GENERAL PUBLIC. | “we’Boy’ seit On, Trape sete tae ANYTHING COME OUT. & LOAN CORPORATION MOP 2 ACRES OF FR 69 W. Huron Street Phone: FEderal 3-7181 , OPEN TO MON. THR’. a. ry 12 TO 3345 Auburn Rd | 1 mile east of Auburn A j PE 12-2866 a“ G00D | ELECTRIC “APT STOVE. $50. 32 Henderson E 22-6464 HOME OWNERS INTERESTED IN IF IT's USED APPLIANCES cau them rolls. SMALL RADIOS CLOCKS, BABY bed Singer sewing machine. 735 _ Purdy, irmingham. STOVES SQUGHT. SOLD, & EX- changed, Turner's 602 Mt. Ciem- _ens. 2-00. THREE UARTER HOLLYWOOD bed platform rocker, Electrol, __desk. piano, $25 Each _FE 2.0047. 2 Phy B Rane. ONE 86 AND PE 5-8755 Bree yseD. aan 18 ce SwRET 8 RADIO & APPLIAN 422_W. Huron FE 41133 and Myrtie, REFRIGERA- nas. O96 COLDSPOT PE 1 Foor hono console $40: 5 pc chrome | dinette. $25. Frigidaire refrigera- | sqvsae TOP to BALOON . |} Goods 57 BLUE PRIE7K DAVENPORT AND | 9x12 wool axminster rugs $1495 Wood 5 pe. breakfast set a 85 6 pe. walnut jr. dining rm. $59.95 6 pe. waltrul dining room 87950 2 pe living room suite $29 95 tudio couch $29 05 ing < . Wi MAN'S ; 18 W Pike Only |; USED ELECTRIC REPRI- ao ator $75 R ~ Munro 1060 ; Huron USED TRADE IN DEPARTMENT sulle, 2 rugs tables, & Holland | Desk ee Thermostat control OR Wasiier re os ~ = Studio ceuck a4 COMPLETE BEDROOM SUITE. 5 Drawer Chest $30.80 French style. satinwood; bed. | Davenport and. chair $34 50 dregser, vanity, stool and chest. § Piece Breakfast Set $29 50 like new, inclyses springs and Vanity Chest and Full Size mattress 859 jinding Dr. #8. / Bed _ Elizabeth Lake Estates CASH FOR igh ad OR _Wwols Phone OR 32 CLOSING OUT Mae Ophelias Surprise Shop moving | batE to Port Huron . Vases silverware jewelry etc balance at #14 month. MY viii | ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954 MOD Sale Household USED WASHER..1 WHEEL TRAIL- FE 5-8542 _er. Cheap. Used Trade-in Dept. — Guaranteed Washer Table» 6 Piece ee oom MA Y OTHER CONVE NIENT CRE THOMAS ECONGALY, top gas range Goods 57 Suite $78 $0 ITEMS MT TERMS FURNITURE CO! %1 8S Saginaw 16° CONSOLE te $40 95 “Outside antenna F:t \ ALTON TV FE 2-2257 Josiyn Cr Walton WAYNIT GABERT'S ‘Trade-in Specials Pull sige ga. range $33 Westinghouge Dryer = $99 GE Table model TV A-1 $09 Norge Washec A-1 $39 New 7 cubic ft $i6e Manv others to choose from 121 N Saginaw FE 5-6189 —_ Up to a4 months to pay 9xl2 LINOLEUM. .$3.95 Reg $495 House Paint $1 95 ga RU ‘hee: R BASE PAINT $3 90 gal 12X12 _ LINOLEUM $6 &> ARMSTRONG hrf 'y price BONNY MAID INLAID TILE 1c 4. FT WALL. TILE , Wc Syers 141 W Huron 4 FE 43064 | earning a- sutomatic washer or dryer by furnish.ng leads, cali FE 5-2981 _ ; HOME SOLD. 7 ROOMS OF EX- ceptionally clean modern furni- ture, 5 pe. walnut Waterfall bed- room suite, $85 Comb_ radio, | | ] tor like new. $100. TV 12',” con- sole $65. new baby bed $15, fruit ars and other misc. items. 6234) ontiac Lake ..d HOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR 95 cubic foot Excellent condition Call after 330 pm. of all day Saturday 163 8 Marshall St + $208 & up VACUUM CLEANERS BRUSHES. | | tor Ju. conditfon. Phone FE 21402, ' 4 ROOMS OF FURN 1251 gests. complete line steel Steel Co. ITURE FOR new innerspring mattresses $1995.) = shie including deep freeze. Used Hollywood frames §795, ‘ocker only 6 months Wesh machine $495, library table, $495, book- Call anytime forenoon until 1 case $696. sofa bed §15. new pm MA 5-3184. Sofa beds $3950 up. dresser 9 PIECE MAHOGANY DINING $1095, tilt back and ottoman suite. Same as new. Youth bed. eee mitehen cen aie See ea. 664 Emerson s springs, mattresses an everything for the home. Bank Meh Uh operating ah lu Furniture. New jocation 42. Or- . y - chard Lake Ave. next to Farmers 3 KITCHEN SINKS, YOUR CHOICE Gas Station, PE4-7881. Pree} $5 Excellent ange. 2s washer $30 parking ; T inch gas Las 25. Small gas DEEP FREEZE UPRIGHT. ONE | —"*"s* © FE! — of Americ best makes. freeser | 2 TABLE TOP ae STOVES + and food ranteedq for 5 years white one ivory and green. 87 $405 «value 8249 Siightiy| W Beverly — ; - scratched in transit Michigan|@ FT COLDSPOT REFRIGERA- Fluorescent. 393 Orchard Lake | tor 3 years old Eacellent cond- _ Ave tion. Too small, Reason for seli- 9 PC. DUNCAN PHYFE DINING. ‘De. FE 42387 suite Gas range Like new. 205 8 PIECE DINING ROOM SUITE — _ 8. Editn Excellent condition, 2469 Auburn, = TABLES: 1 BLOND & “TIMED | east of Adams o modernistic design, $36 50 value $1295 These are factory | For Sale Miscellaneous 00 Irregulars, You will save more ““~““~~eeeeeeeeeewrnrrrnrr than half reguiar prices Michi = gan Fluorescent 393 Orchard Lake AIR ( ‘COMP RE Sant IRS Ave Dirt conveyors, sewer cleaners FOR SALE GUARA cE C. sanders saws and pipe dies. E Gt AE ADESS RE CONE'S RENTAL Baldwin- FE 2-0077 Wrifger wacners ..... $1985 up _ —— Spinner washers ..... 95 up 28° EXHAUST FAN WITH AUTO Vacuum cleaners $795 up matic shutters $4000 1 Million Roy's 06 Oak.and- 2-4021 BTU stoker good condition ee es 7500. General Printing & Office Supply. 17 W. Lawrence St. Pon if r a le tiac “Oo eT | Baars Rugs. diming room suite and an- | “Alumimum r Comb. Doors tique chair and aris Pho ne FE COMPLETELY INSTALLED $49 96 56-5008 after 6 PM 4178 Dinie Hey OR 34101 ALWAY ) WRECKING -8a e op used tuilding matertals” ® PIECE MAHOGANY DINING A. million feet of good sound suite Same as new Youth bed lumber Doors, plumbing, sash, See at 664 Emerson pee enn ipa Co a Lota FULL SIZE ELECTRIC RANGE. ba aptletnd ti reps General Electric EM 3-2088 | aie Soe ps eee } ANN FOR GOOD 3ED — APPLIANCES pipe. retnforcine rods, basement of structural ‘ew and used Typhoon from American Foraing & Soctet.) _FE ¢0583 —ANCHOR FE} PRA approved. No Ph. FE $-4962 for fr BATHTUBS. FIVE cessed chipped, 838 complete with faucets $1495 Stall 45 _ chard Lake -Ave BEFORE YOU water softener Reynolds Shaffer No down we cose payments FE ¢ BOAT TRAIL ER. man 6'," skill saw, ts HP. engine. $20 _tric motor, $30 FE gieaming INVEST investigate the ~ $40 NCES | money down. ee estimates FOOT RE- 95. lavatories chrome showers $34 - Michigan Fluorescent. 393 Or- IN A Bal!-O- Mati Smal! menthiy 0073 FE 43573 CRAFTS- $55. Lawson Php. elec- +4340, Blackett's — BUILDING SUPPLIES 1t. cL ITTLE ha] ‘ST MAIDENS ~~ aN YApYy ” For Sale Miscellaneous 60 G & M COMPANY Screens recovered and repaired. FE ASI-BUILD. build tt yourself pat terns Small pieces of plywood for sale FE 57035 2529 Opdyke Ra GARAGE DOORS for new and old garages Stee|--Aluminum —Wood GREAT LAKES OVERHEAD DOOR CO 2010 DIXIE HWY. FE 45654 GRADE A PLUMBING WARE. 32 double sinks §21 50, _sink frames. G. a Perry GIRLS 26” BIKE 70 TEEN irls books Reasonabie 503 or FE 47589 HOME OWNERS: ALUM. ings factory price FE HEARING ALDS, 850 TO = AND accessories Pules FE 2-7 HOLLINGSREAD VARIETY econ AGE FE AWN. miles out Baidwin. Armstrong fess covering and Mac-O-Lac paints. Phone FE 17-7845. — LRON FIREMAN STOKER, EXCEL- lent condition. Complete with con- trols, hot water system and coal _ $150 MI 6-0422 after oh! pm ‘Garage Doors: ® by 7 no 2 $4000 up to $74 00. Bee the new Berry Detroiter, Detroiter no 1 8 by 7 $52 00 Detroiter no. 1 ® by 7 $59 50 Detroiter po 1 16 by T $110 00 We give free estimates and do e front remodeling. Free de- gar live ry Jit 8 Paddoc FE 20203 _ BERRY “DOOR SALES CO” HNARDWARE SPECIALS $495 picnic stoves, now 6) 65 Regular 68¢ bug bombs. now 67c Regular $49* 50 ft plastic gar- den hofe now $168 57 in wadi. pools §5 88 20 ft soare: sprinklers. 61 37 Regular $1395 rubber tired wheel barrows. now 80 95 Cochrane fire’ grade house patnt, $408 gal Regular a gal. ee By “coat house paint now $7 KELLY'S H ARDW "ARE Auborn Heights ~- 3904 Auburr at Adams FE 2-881! KITCHEN CABINET SINKS. BEAU tiful 42 in model $0600 value $50 50 Slightly ge dage her transit, also several 54 in 6 in models at terrific vane. tention Fluorescent. 393 Orchard Lake Ave 28° EXHAUST FAN WITH AUTO- matic shutters, $4000 1 million BTU rtoker ip good condition $75 00 General Printing & Office Suppiv, 17 W. Lawrence St. Pon- tiac KITCHEN CABINET SINKS, BEAU- tiful 42 inch model 885 00 vaiue $5050 SlighUly marred in transit, also several 54 in in models at terrific values Michi- an Fluorescent.’ 393 Orchard _Lake Ave 8° TABLE SAW. 40452 “OIL FLOOR FUR- 100 ri pf eas FUEL OIL TANK 5 gallon tank and fill cap and sag legs, gauge, Delivered com- = FACTORY 2N 8. por aid cad shallow well pumps with $95 50 Pane qr tank for 9 a jake water er sprinkling. $69 _G__A_ Thompson, 80 58- Perry. FANS FANS FANS “WE HOVE all sizes. all types At terrific values. $3.96 up. Michigan Fluor- vescent, @93 Orchard Lake Ave FLUORESCENT 4 FT CHAnHEL fixtures, ifeal work benches, shops, for use over warehouses. recreation rm $13.05 value, $4.00 These are slightly marted. Call at factory fa¢tory show- rooms Michigan Fluorescent. 393 Orchard Lake Ave. s need-we have and right prices Washers at ste'se. Bes, ae relearys Lge adler nace. T3000 8 TU. Excellent con- oo eel at lahat 9 “dagedmmead St) inch utility piv wood * $450 sheet} _ dition _ 5-3884 {24x20 double hung windows with e Good Housek Shop ab 81 by me orig e +1588 Laval gary bpamen oes Frigidaire automatic washer 16950 _ Lake Ave - oe ial Automatic washer $149 50 | DUO-THERM AIR CONDITIONED "er gee x fea ecindae dal i Kenmore automatic . $9950, furnace. Complete and in good 174.50. Leaf muicher avafiable. Used 3 HP Motor = $149.50 working condition. 910 Oakland Lee’s Sales & Service. CLAYTON'S _—FE + ewe] pipe | °2L Mt Clemens st. | FEE 3.0800 <4: DRAIN TILE, Pontia are te mower Furniture & Apphances sump crock, OREASE TRAPS Sealer, i ™ 3065 Orchard ood Rd Keego CEMENT CULVERT Ez = Harbor *° WHITE CEMENT. $230 BAO NO DOWN «PAYMENT OW RE: FE 5-8811 or FE 5-8974 90 Ib. Slate ai roofing. $396 ear to pay, Pontiac Piston Serv- "ian “WROUGHT | IRON (DAY BED. BLAYLOCK _ice 102 8 Saginaw. £8 ne rca tree, SEstt* | COAL & BUILDINO SUPPLY CO NEW AND USED BSe Meare oe re am? | $1 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101| Perniture. refrigerators, bottled | REFRIGERATOR 645 16 1 WEATT LeLoTHms_PdosTs.. 4 HOOK | £48 and all kinds hanganetedll ail | : a ee rr tire Gurplue Lumber Co,| ePe electric heaters be inghouse T V._ $650. Piano $15, 340 Highland Rd. OR 3.7002 appliances for a Simmons box springs never used. Ligh! cabins. Cash or ter $20. FE 5-2766 DR. AW =D) rE HITCHES P ig Der eatNeT co 2 Rue PADS Goop CONDITION. | The kind that bo'ts to the frame a Seon + eet lh | -. a eal Fon 31458 Open « Wueninge v. Mounéeye, PM SPECIALS thet Liabind hate wohl}: NEW GALVANIZED PIPE . : Fay) | “% in. (2) A. sengths 10c ft. | Pum “ “ 7005] " save: PLUMB! O SUPPLY 2 pe Mohair living room | DuPont fiat wail peint..62.70 eal | 100°s. Saginaw FE_5-2100 Norge refrigerator $39 | oa mserioe eet hae gel OnE, “COMPLETE SET OF CALI- Sellers kitchen cabinet S80 ee ee ee 6 fornie red wood storm doors Axminster rug ® x 12 $12 | McBride Hardware windows interlocking with copper 5 pe. breakfast set $18 | - S d 9 12 screening 444 Thi St. off Jos- New cotten mattress 31 0 Open undays ¥- _lyn _ New innerspring. mattress $16 50 1927 Auburn Rd ins Crooks) PICNIC AS 16 FOOT. bed peotnsagee set ged PE 2- 43707 ew table lam wt .e TC: EVERY SAT. & a : miderpete — PIANO. Freie TABLE AND BOAT We bay. cell and exchange erery- aguidation sale. J trailer, for whet have you. Phone Oat thy home _houge 467.8 Sacinaw, P ae R akland Furniture FOR SALE GOOD 1 sTORY 5|i3 H P PUMPS. 960 50. 104 8. Saginaw FE 25523 room house. — of “ss 1-3 “at - rian “Tha fe jet pumps STUDIO BED. ODD BED & DRESS- to be moved. H -P. Sutton. lig 12 ga = 11 desk chairs ®X12 rugs. other | _ 2-6432 _|o_ “thom. 80 _ Berry miscetiancous items OR 3-6979 ta diced add aes TS % Iv- bowls wi tings te ae bauer bel a 21x32 double sinks $10 95 Ciced cludine matrese 48 Eartmoor. VE PLOMBING SUPPr All kinds plain & decorative. Kitch- - hing posed doors-— drawers made BONY IAC Bei co. 1488 Ba Ave rE 2-2543 bet Priday night 7 p.m. at aue- _ Michigan Auction Mart, Inc. M- 24 Leke Orton RFE MINGTON | PORTABLE WLYPE ‘writer an! table Used about time. OR D719 ~ ROCK HOUNDS Cabachona mineralites, mineral & Nuorescent s ———— ph siab- oing rr N iting RER'S a* mea 5-6261 “I've been we caring this same old dress since the year one! - By Jay Aian | M. A. BENSON, S49 NN baginae PE 4-252) STALL SHOWERS, ¢ COMPLETE with faucets and curtain | node terrific vatge $3333. Lavatories compiete with gleaming chrome faucets $1485 Toilets & $1405 These are factory secotids Michigan Juoz. 383 ehera Lake Ave 100 8. ‘ WHEEL TRAILER 616 Good condition $75 FE TIRES 53074 Lumber, ware, septic tanks aystem for tock, rock 1025 Oakland Phone PE 4-2623 doors, windows, hard Open _$-3:30 Except _Sundave Burmeister’s OPEN & A. ae M. DAY 10 SUN TO “Do lt Yourself” . “Best Buys” LUMBER $1.17 4x8 Sheet Rock per boty per M. }x@ fig board~ No. 1 $110 ‘1x8 W pine boards $8900 per ixl2 W. Pine boards $99 per M Grade A Birch Door ox¢s No. 2 fir * Te t ft/ Rock Lath per bundle 98 | . 2 oak floorirz ‘139 per M P. Combination door $1395, Doors from $34 95 Aluminum Comb HARDW sethantes YDELL PAIN IF YOU ARE BUILDING H aca 5 OUT TO BURMEISTE DRIVE uP. TO $500 ON ALL MATERIALS. MAKE SURE IT's Burmeister’s Northern Lumber Co. 8197 Coole Lake Ra WE DELIVER ig Mie Radius With ks ~ TN 8.3996 You E M 3- "4650 iB M CUT. T-RATE . PRICES” ON ia PL — taucet 208 cece ra sta auce AVE SLUMBING 8 PLY 100 % Saginaw a re 2100 FOR THE HOME. 5 WORKSHOP Delta. Skiltool, Diack Decker, Porter - Cable, Miller's walle and Py De tools, saws. drills F.J. POOLE CO. 151 Oakland Ave PE 41504 FIBERGLAS 9005 CANOPIES JIF.IS . Cee Weedon HOME EQUIPMENT 1661 8, Telegraph FE ¢2597 } eee Liar | Seconds a PLUMBING B6UPPLY . Saginaw FE 54-2100 ee ; an v __ Do It | Yourself 61 For Sale Pets | POP wero | PURNACE CLEANERS. 1 wate, ath Pe aT | per mers and sanders. -,| AKC 13" Beagie | lend 1 and Paint, 46 7ad| Buddy Il. Bired by (be, Ave. eee saat +6150 Re i Pw “JA NTAL “ Hollow mits Wid” ; 1. Mixers, chain ane Mowers, Shee for sale Lonedale ,! tric hammer cone Mate arr Ovdyke Rd. i power post digger, te. +3040. BABY PAR a ASPNALT ‘HING NOW cage. $7. Call we | $7.29 per er delivered. cain 2 ‘blocks from « | CH@RCH’S INC. | BLOND 1 KITTENS } FE 20 | ¥. on SAVE! | BLACK Tera | Install it yourseif rebuilt and sr puppy guaranteed Auto pct road aravél, cement grave MICHIGA UOARED Is &: -EDDED BLA TOR TO A PACKAG! = separate or mixed; top soil, PA GES TO TO U es nd@ and gravel. Jack Marino, pags gs 5. 1 @ OR 3-9709. PEAS | TOP SOIL. BAND AND & ve. t | washed or bank runned.O} nS a8 ar en oy one Lote aly : SANG GRAVEL, WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL APPROXIMATELY 2% suenELS cement and mortar, an dirt es p> ae a: eres = SAND GRAVEL. FILL Wood, Coal & Fuel 7) $54 50 pape. me apoUT MENT WILL BE WT VEY'S L OCRER SERVICE 1012 N. noe ST. aoop WOOD, $5.50 ROCHESTER » OL 2-7111 uae Sap "Bat ‘= "F | Sale Farm Equipment 76 Exchang e wot Sale Pets 8 BARGAINS irc. AQUATIC GARDENS | 3h, "YR ICAL FISH & SUPPLIES POWER L. FINANCE | 57 N. Mill St. FE 4-2859 rte "AKC grt oy eee WE TAKE TRAD® INS CREDIT | PE «oT Pe 4112 AKC registered Irish Set- | ter puppies, 9 weeks old, | reasonable. 12270 Big. Lake Rd. MA 5- -2696, : | KING BROS. YOUR I-H DEALER tao" 2 Gas Pe ’ . ROTOTECER FRONT MOUNT @ Ward's Chor-trac, used once. Wanted Used Cars 88 ? For Sale Uséd Trucks 90 - See M&M Motor Sales AT TENTION om | Top Price for Your Car We wrootus 2 Aven "S 2020 +. We have several ‘ate hd ia at - trim 4 wa Pe yest! s Weed “Tiree “tubes, must SHANE _CARS. CRAM AUTO PARTS 70a cane 0 ICRI 9920_Diste Rwy, A. tron, FE ¢-0582. Eves. after 6:3¢ AUTO CLASS and Sundays cal) .1-—_ ae safety auto glass YOUR CAR- as BRING MORD bos while yo wen - cash ood GLEN'S MOTOR SALES : ONE ND Used Car Let wiscemn We urgent- & customer with each door| !¥ neéd a variety of late model lass or windshield. Hub Auto| ©®rs. Don't pass up our top dollar Co., 122 Oakland Avenue — for clean, late model FE 4-1066. a 8! today at 264 8 AUTO PARTS inaw 8t. "you'll be glad you pe Ser i ey oo make el. per cent discount to ell OM em- Fed) Sale Used ‘Trucks 90 Ca SSS ~ oot ore 1983 G M C. DIESEL BELL OR Parts contract PE 7-033 car or land Baldwin FE 3-477 reer tins PARTS oes 2. lhe, TON PICK-UP k : ) Bare eta “and generators”. "ease 1950 FORD MILK atee VAN. Rebuilt $7 50 e bodv . si in, Hew Wiotor Lets of ae for ‘46 cara a cooditlen. iret $400 takes it 006 Oakland Ave. Ph. FE_ a a Ra a “48 OL! OLDsMoBILE ~$ MOTOR, ith transmission. tis, haa MA A l A ] ‘Auto Service 81 NO & PAINTI nO eerEREE ESTIMATE ios © —— a BRAID MOTOR DR. SALES PHONE FE 186 oY sy Pair Dealing ____ Cass_at _West Pike St CRANKSHAPT | GRINDING IN THE ey‘indere reborei. Zuck Ma- 33. shop 23 Hood Ph. FE “Sale Motor Scooters 8 82 64 FAGLE 656 DOWN, AGES WEK. New & Used vm ie ett" 12.8 Paddock 44246 41 HARLEY 61. 6179. OR 3-6542 jis? CUSHMAN EAGLE G00D Lots accessories. RELIABLE TRUCKS TO DO YOUR JOB Call FE 2-060. | 53 FORD 1. ton Express. ee ., 5,00COmiles, See. w-anse Lake Farm Kenne!s. , & : - EquDAPP o00. ial 3 FORD F-600 3-5 yard ean $395 er hed pam dh Dump. = re FE ¢7497. 231 E. : ’S3 FORD ¥-900 Tractor “For § Sale Motorcycles 8&3] - : z 10 00x20 tires, air and yor PARTS AND SERVICE ON — Broviceon Harley De Devideos see Harie vacuum. Co.. 373 8. Bag 9e- , ee WARLEY s & ai ane 52 CHEV. 13 ton Panel. "a OTS, cs ere Feros !|’52 FORD F-6 2 ton ro P. Dump. 1952 Harkey - Davidson motorcycle. Good asnew.}]’52 FORD F-3 34 ton A-1 condition. Access. 1 Pickup. owner. Must be seen to be appreciated, FE AS S. Telegraph. For Sale Sale ) Bicycles 4 ’S1 CHEV. 2-8328. 9am. to 5 p.m. 1 *S1 CHEV. 1 ton Pickup. F-8 Tractor. 34 ton Pickup. FORD OLS BICYCLE AnD a povs|’51 INT'L 34 ton Pickup. han Gente tricycle. 735 , ; ; Reson wicYci xs; Ai G00 51 FORD V3 ton Panel. as new. Some . ~ _ 0 Adams and Hamiin R¢ | 751] FORD 12 ft. Vanette. Boats & Accessories 8&5 : . ~~ 1°51 GMC % ton Pickup. — 8 MP aes ia ell cheap. FE +002 4645 Center &. ‘SO FORD F-8 Tractor. vite ter ones te penn | 90 FORD 3-5 yard Dump. Ts MICHIGAN PRO- . Mani GALES, AND RERVICE 50 FORD v4 5 ton Pickup. CENTURY BOaTS AND BOAT. 49 CHEV. 34 ton Pickup. __ Sales. PE 2-6122. Ector "49 STUDE. 34 ton Pick- CANOE FOR SALE. GOOD CONDI- up. ae. BE 7 on nits. tratiers |'49 FORD 2 ton Stake. Tony's MM: Service, New 12 ft Kane WWF 3 crit NDER — ogy ee ay condition. 149 GMC 14 ton Pickup. rar Sore hoes to '49 FORD 14 ton Stake. ji FT. RUNABOUT BOAT AND 8 cylinder. 1 h. super-Cruiser Mercu motor, oth in first ciass cond 1 *49 FORD } ton Van. tion. Bargain EM 1@ FT. MOLDED PLYWOOD WOL- verte de —y runa’ tarp, ete. ™% HP Sartin Custom trailer. For quick best offer over $300 602 St. corner of Central bee offer, MAyfair 62572 | 12 FT. 4 PASSENGER ‘ speed boat. ot super 16 wheen. Mahoga: shield, running lights. speedometer, all chrome fixtures, canvas cover. No trailer, $500 EM 3-5726 after 6:30 p.m 4 OUTBOARD MOTORS. Starcraft aluminum boats Tee- trailers Everything for the OWENS eae gala 8 7 396 Orchard Lake FE 2 yaa | or “Boat aD FE 56-3766 MERCURY OUTBOARD MOTORS Craft # Yellow Jacket aster Craft ; SHORTY HOOKS PLACE At Pine Lake. Ph. FE 2-540 MOTORS AQUA- plywood boats, ’48 FORD 1% ton Cab and Chassis. ’48 CHEV. 2 ton Cab and Chassis: . ’48 FORD 1°; ton Stake. '47 DODGF. 34 ton Pick- up. "47 INT'L 12 ft. Stake. 45 FORD 1:3 They’re "A-1] Buys” CY ton Stake.) WILSON GMC PONTIAC’S ONLY Exclusive Truck Dealer s0''s, Woodward FE 4-4531 | ‘For. Sale Used Cars 91 ae coi etd oe ACTION! SPEAKS LOUDER THAN WORDS Come im and compare our deals We rah, close to 150 cars. From vv ‘S44 We arrange finance with * mall down yment. Fi- ves. Real es- on trafie. YOUR DEAL. No rea- sonable offer refused. Stop in ECONOMY USED Bore MARKET PE ¢2131 Auburn Ave 1950 BUICK 4 ie “EXCELLENT condition rood tires $500. FE 2-827 “8 BUICK TUDOR | ooo Com dition $335 FE 1948 BUICK nee CON. vertibie. radio and heater, very good condition. Also 1947 Buick Super four door sedan reason- able. Private owner Phone FE 70750 anytime ; 1962 BUICK SUPER 4 DOOR DYN aflow and all extras FE 5-3640, 8 to 5 1947 BUICK CONVERTIBLE. VERY clean Phone OR }0714 ieee) BUICK ‘SUPER. ible Excellent condition +950 CONVERT EM BUICK. 1951 CONVERTIBLE. ood top, b.P. Goodrich tubeless ‘tires, radio. heater tinted er sharp. 4872 Elizabeth Lake BUICK RIVIERA 1952. WHITE- wall tires. Easy-Eye glass Radio Heater Best offer, 674 Madison FE 2-6810 ‘53 RIVIE ta \ COUPE. an ) MILES. Fully equipped $24: 5-0850 1940 BUICK ees aT ARTS Sportsman Sinciair Service. 010 Josiva 63 BUICK SUPER RIVHERA. 321 Orchard Lake Ave CONVERTIYT Le rf. * out, with almost Le Ee $1 BUICK Clean in _hew white walls OLIVE BUICK $1265 1951 Buick 4 dr., Super Radw, heater & Dynaflow. $1095 1950 Pontiac, station wa- gon. 3 seater, radio, heatér and }Hydramatie. 1953 Henry J 2 dr. 3,- OOO actual miles. Fully equipped. $695 1950 Chevrolet .2 dr., fully equipped. A “Showroom Piece.” $495 4949 Buick 2 dr., radio & heater, Dynaflow, Fairly reconditioned. $395 197 Mercury. club coupe. A one-owner car. Transportation Specials! 48 Buick 4 dr .......$195 "48 Pontiac ......... S345 46 Buick cadnanbanig 47 Pontiac ......+.-$29 "48 Buick .......... Sats 49 Mercury Station Wagon:.....--5--- S145 We Are Open From 8 a.m. to 9 pom Oliver ‘THE P FUNNY BUSINESS D \ A ae ; ; / PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, _JULY 7 For Sale Used Cars 91 91 ——eeeee | 1950 HUDSON. RADIO AND mee er Runs good, Only $150. 965 _ Oakland HODYAY BPKCIALS ‘83 Pontiac Convertible with every- . thing. radio, heater, Hydramatic. $22 Convertible very. clean. ‘47 Pontiag Convertible, sharp A natrerm 3 dr. @ honey of a MIKE’ S AUTO SALESJuu by Hershberger | aa ‘—T6Y, Oakland DODGE. 1940, CLUB COUPE, clean, ition, Cheap. 404 fordor. radia. heatet turn sig- paca moe Original own- er al) FE 5-774], v P Sarit 4 es. FE FORD 48 ALSO “4 FORD. CL. EAN and good condition 140__Marion. 4 FORD CUSTOM, R&H, OVER- | ae vate new ehub coupe eel “a Club Cou » Cash ; NORTH PONTIAG ‘At AUTO SALES | 312 W. MONTCALM FE 40151 “Best in Wheels & Deals” Harold Turner Your FORD Dealer In Birmingham FORD 54 CUSTOM TUDOR OVER- 1 | | drive Drafted FE 40244 34 FORD cusToy “LINE — 8, white walls, mi Sacri | MI 43858 evifice ‘44 FORD CONVERTIBL E ~ DE- — pote be seen after 6 pm |"48 MERCURY. A REAL NICE For Sale Used Cars 91 ODREEOLE™OOOOOOOOOEEEeaEOooOoess ‘80 BUICK 2 DOOR , RADIO HEAT- er. dark green, "$465. Nortnwest Chevrolet, Woodward at 13 Mile _ Road, Lincotn 54-1100 Step at 68 Oakland *§2 Ford, custom 6 2 door, sharp "S| Chev deluxe, 2 door Pontias 8 2? 4oor Mercury % door Plymouc* chal Desoto custom Olds’ 4 dorr People’s Auto 6a Oakland _ club coupe door Sales FE 2-238! Y OWENS Used Car Corral "S51 FORD ......4.. $895 Tudor, Fordpmatic. radio, heater, and whitewalls. 'S3 IIUDSON ..... $1195 livdramatic, radio and heater. ‘SE CHEV. 22.2262. $098 Tudor, radio, heater’ and Power Glide. 52 FORD ...,..... $895 Radio and fieater. | SO MERC, .......: $595 Tudor, radio and heat- er. "SQ FORD Tudor. Radio and heater. 453 PONTIAG Tudor, ra- dio, and heater. "Sl HIHUDSON Sedan. Ra- dio and heater. ’°SO DODGE Tudor, Fluid drive, radio and heat- er. ‘S1 FORD. Radio, heater, and whitewalls. ’S2 HUDSON Wasp. Tu- dor. Radio and heater. §2 FORD Tudor. Radio heater and overdrive. 49 FORD Tudor. and heater.” ’ Radio 50 KAISER Sedan. Ra- dio and heater. ’SE DESOTO Sedan. Ra- “I guess it doesn’t like being disturbed!” grey 2 door with radio and heat- | er License No EW_ 1396 | Northwest Chevrolet at i3. mile road LInceln 5-1100 _. " 1932 MG RED SPORTSTER. TOP condition priced to sell, G Rich- _For or Sale Used Cars 91 man FE 4-1294 or FF 41234 53 NASH RAMBLER HARD-TOP Good -condit¥on. Used as second CHEVROLET BEL AIR “wanp-| car Must sell Make offer. EM “¢tep 1952. Price-eut for quick sale — 34216 ~ $250 for my equity. 65 E. Bivad | ” __North _ | CHEVE. . 46 2 DOOR VEKY . NO money dewn LAKE sence MOTOR SALES M-24 at Buckhorp Lk MY 2-261)! _ o wit « PM - NAS] 1962 CHEVROLET BEL AIRE : if. owergiide 19.000 miles. rad \ Ss No heater, other extras $1050 FE PATI M.\ 2-0006 or $2 Whitfield te DOOR SEDAN CHEVE ‘51 POWERGLIDE RA. | WIN BEDS dio. heater, excellent condition , | nie » Low mileage. $790. FE 40842 | CLS ( »M k \l AO rw VERY CLEAN 1951 Chevrolet CernaGE Styleline deluxe 2 door Beautt- | ful original black finish Has | KIMBALL large factory tnstalled radio and | 4 heater Special today, only $795 | Low down payment. Bank rates | mw. LAWRE wCP AT Cane + saat SCHUTZ MOTORS INC | $12 8. Woodw TV OPEN TIL OPN 1951 NASH. Statesman Large 8 tube eadig | ‘34 CHEVIE contest E. SAC-| Magic eye hot air heater. Custom _Tifice equity FE 3-960 | seat covers) This is @ beautiful = -}| l-owner peewe Only $145 down NO CASH | fxr sth) ovat? sm <¢ TU FZ MOTORS INC, NEEDED 912 W Woodward Birmingham DIPIP SS UI 8 AT ‘49 PLYMOUTH SBDAN RADIO = heater, custom seat covers. Orig- NASH RAMBLER, ‘53. CONVERT- inal finish like new. Mechanically tae Practically new. Only 9,000 perfect. Priced to sell today | 1 216? Pontiac Drive. Phone SCHLUTZ MOTORS INC! FE 481 912 8 Woodward Birmingham 48 OL DS CONVE] RT. OPEN "T1192 M. $305 aa WE WANT YOU What more) could voulleskifor TO HELP US BECOMF its | 68 (mad . THE MOST REPUTABLE dna eee ae RI cremate NEW AND USED CAR DEALER RITCHIE MOTORS IN 477 Auburr Ave FE 2-503! OAKLAND COUNTY! 1949 OLDS TUDOR, RADIO HEAT- hydramatic. Excellent me- Keller-Koch CHRYSLER-PLYMOU ™ DEALER z Mile Ra. er | chanical condition No rust. good ti res. original finish. FE B 1168 Woodward at 13* 1940 OLDSMOBILE EXTRA Lincoln 6-8410 | tte New tires, 875 Scott tase \s0 CHEVROLET A BEAUTIFUL, _®4 _ _ . \ jet black finish 4 door, radio OLDS ‘49 84 ° “DOOR. RADIO \and heater. Priced to please at heater and hydramatic, $350. FE \Northwest Chevrolet. Woodward! 4-008 Ward at 13 Mile Road. Lincoin | $1 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP RA. 941100 : | dio and heater. Will trade. 875 “53 \CHEVROLETS "ONE OF THE Scott Lake Rd, larges st and most complete stecks, PLYMOUTH “su BU RBAN 1 1954 all\colérs and models $1095 with powerflite @utomatic trene Northwest Chevrolet, Sayre Mission JI need cash and oldet at K-Mile Road Lincoln 51100 ear. Call Harris, MI 61200 ® till 93 CHEV'A, LESS THAN 10000 _*® a ~ miles \ Up to 36 months to pay. f 4) PLY MOUTH $565 LAKE ORION MOTOR ‘SALES | MY Yes-Sir vou really save money. on M-24 at Buckhorn Lk 23-2611 . o- ‘ti! 8 pm ue clean 2 door Has original 1953" CHEVROLET CONVERTI- Dies. Inist motor purr's like @ bie. Sun gold. Radio, heater, pow- RITCHH® MOTORS er glide, white side wall tires, | 477 tachern Ave FE 25031 Fasy eye lass Autronic eve ——— 2 Spotlight, umperguards grill | guard, Windshteld washers, turn signals, Back up lights, Kleenex | dispenser under coat, porcelain- fred, floor mats, courtesy lamps, 3 front fender guards 1 owner 8.000 actual miles Can_ finance and handle trade. Call FE_2-7726 RETAIL 1951 so ae pani L+ AIR sport co on power) lide. fully enuiped, * Caner w oe excellent condition _FE 2-7236_ ot ‘SO CHEV. | Style-line sedan, fully equipped. | new paint. mechanically perfect | and guaranteed. See this one at only $145 down, => bank rates. SCHULZ MOTORS INC. 912 W. Woodward ss Birmingham | 1952 ~ CHEVROLFETS PTS FORMERL Y¥| ' _taxt _cabs 101 w Huron. _ ‘64 CHEV. BEL AIR. 4 DOOR, Power-Giide All accessories Must | sacrifice M' 6477+ 1466 Bir- | _mingham Bivd; Birmingham. _ | GOODWILL _USEDCARS “NOT A NAME BUT A POLICY” eae SPECIA SEDAN WE'VE ‘cur THIS 1S PRICE "WAY DOWN AND IT IS TYPICAL OF eS OUR _ VACATION — BARGAINS, CHRYSLER, 47 NEW YORKER | SEE THEM TODAY, sy wall ghey radio & heater | $945 654 Parkwood 54 FORD DI ; : = gr pte 3,000 Miies - ae 8) ou 0311 Open “til 16 p.m 50 FORD Tudor. Radio. 30 FORD > he; 1653 DeSoto V-8 Fordor Power EVEN AT THIS LOW PRICE and heater. Steering. Radio Maroon and Gray YOU ARE ASSURED OF QUALI- 1952 PONTIAC 2 DR. DELUXE Ae Ws Pardes ¢ . toe ne i neo te READY al Private owner ~ Tr Y a 1052 DeSoto ordor wo Tone A ND IS R a “Se FORD Pudor. Radio Green Power Steering, WSW TO GO nA 1941 ~ PONTIAC, GOOD TIRES, | and heater. WNL Gia? GICCL, $395 _heater radio Reasonable. FE -—— rn T1ce . ——- . . 1952 DeSoto V-8 Forder Burma i _ TAY LOR CHEV “VROLET 47 STUDE. Commander | 79. Redlo. 50 DODGE 132 Chevrolet. 4 ar. Tudor. Radio and| 133 Desme—va—cinn Coupe | A REAUTIPUL BLACK SEDAN | (St Sue 3 on ¢ >. RARIO— EATER. HERE'S | ‘51 Studebaker, Champion 4 dr. heater. Light Gray, Radio, Very cleat { A CARA bk prace TEATS Cd derma club coupe. re ll Chev. 4 a ey green, directional signals. $643 ome | $695 TAYLOR’S "50 Chev. 4 dr., gray, very good rubber... .$525 i> Bu i : : = fou . FPORtiduades,Jaio0 © merle ; AT WALLED LAKE 51 Dodge 4 dr., gray, radio and heater... .$745 4.__and heater. man Radio. aim QNTIACS Phone Market. +1561 32 Ford 2 dr., “g” Customline, REH.N...$995 _ a DEL PS iyi dip tase d 'SO CHEV. Sedan. Radio] pe eee eeen oh) RADIO. HEATER AND HYDRA- hair Sa hese -Dark Green. — : thE EXTRAS. : rs 31 Stude. Starlite cpe., V-8, Hydramatic. .$595 ‘ 195) DeSoto Fordor Radio and . . many extras Clean in and out : . 23 Ww Huree re erco-U=- Matic, _ SO NASIT Tudor States-]| Msroon color 49 BUICK | Our tow overhew wil) -ave you w.w. tires, R&H, and 2 tone finish... .$2,595 ? at- to Forder Dark Grey COMPLETELY EQUIPPED, RA-| money on t_ good a car, , 2 = man. Radio and heat 1900 Desete order Dark Grey PO REATER Re Leta gS Nad We hare arise varuts al ‘33 Chev. Club Coupe. R&H, 2 tone. - $1, = ér. | MIGHTY SHARP LOOKING 4 E TRABE °UY AND SELL ‘32 Plym. Belvedere Sport Coupe, R&H.. . $975 ; ; oo $395" ’51 Nash Rambler Station Wagon, R&I. $645 48 KAISER Sedan. Ra- BRAID | oe PETE =RSON ~ "31 Ford 2 door, radio and heater... .. ve S695 dio and heater. | 49 CHEV. ‘31 Frazer Vagabond, radio and heater, ,. .$495 - THIS 18 A HONEY OF A CAR, | 1953 Willvs Sedan 50 CI 4 ‘$9 HIUDSON Sedan. Ra- Motor Sates NOT JUST TRANSPORTATION, | 1951 Katyer. 4 door sedan : vevrolets Dix. 2 dr. & 4 dr., choice. . 695 SON Sedat: DeSeto-Ply mouth BUT A CAR WITH MANY GOOD | 194@ Kaiser 4 door sedan SON 1 , 5 dio aud heater Se vccce tale deciiha MILER TO GO o48 Kalter sedan $06 50 Mercury 2 dr., R&H, overdrive....°... $695 « . » t > - ‘e r rc - | | _ Coss at W. Pike § 7 $325 cn SALES » SERVICE 50 Plym. Club Coupe, R&H.............$495 51 FORD Tudor. Radio, 3776_ AUBURN AVE. FE 50 Hudson Commodore “8” 4 door.......$645 ’50 Pontiac, radio and heater.......:...,.8645 49 Chev. 4 door, radio and heater........$425 "49 Dodge Club Coupe, radio and heater. . $395 "48 Mercury Club Coupe, radio & heater... $145 ’47 Olds. Club Coupe, Hydramatic...7....8165 *46 Olds. 4 dr.. radio and heater..........$145 "47 Chev. Aero Sedan, as is..... Sere saan 3 CONVERTIBLES, °47, '51, ’5 Matthews- -Hargreaves the Classified For that house, lot or section ! income property you want, see the Want Ads NOW. F Chevrolet -211 S. Saginaw. at Cottage St. FE 4-4546 Open ‘Til 9 p.m » ey —~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDN KS D. a JULY ‘ ha 54 = Pontiac Explorer | Matin Nate Pk, Weg Kath leen Magui re Makes Good on 1 elevisi va th on Scouts Complete 4 Killed, 5 in —_ — ' penne ene _|750-Mile Tour . “wr ‘ Pontiac Explorer Post 13 cli- Indi Collision ~— — I oday’ S. T elevision Programis: == ete Models | State robing stints een | Mt Ian during the holiday weekend with. ORT_WAYHE,—Indz- —_—— Channel 2— WJBK- TV - : x ~ pa dunemobile ride on Sleeping Bear s ——_—_—_—_ v rai Channel 4— WWJ-TV t= Channel 1—WXYZ-TV _* —~ ° . | Sand Dune near Traverse City, cher rth Pts ~ and five AGHT’ : re ee = —_—__ Ss were in TONIGHT'S HIGHLIGHTS |. Michael Kelly hosts dancers, | 2:30—(4)—Ask Washington IN. ree feps Isastrous Ath Plage Ragan soe ot we aad pete 6:00—(7) Detroit Deadline. Bud suests. (4) Harness tacing.| Theater. (2)—Featurette. tenes’ a ig eg ra gel miles north of here Tuesday night. Lanker, Bev Beltaire, Bob Ca, From Northville Downs (2) . ace » rington, Don Wattrick. (4) Time News. Jack LeGoff 3:00—(4)—Welcome Traveler. (2) Has to Learn Tricks of Preventive Measures) went swimming and canoeing m Dead were Mrs. Beatrice S, Har- for Music. J 4 ; Brighter Day . : . ~ ake Mictigan, Grand Traverse | Tt: #, Angola. Ind., and her two for Music. Jane Palmer sings., 1@:18—12) Weatherman | _ Posing; Lives in Village Sought After Michigan | Bay and Lake Huron. They com-|aughters, Mary Schnurr, 9, and Dicilichicsiecs +9:98° = TT) Fanos. Plaghgggg T#ISSSeeret Storm in New York City Leads U. S. in Deaths pleted a service project at Empire, | Sharon. 15. and Stan S. Kopen,' 6:15—(7) News Ace. “(4) Now. “The Roof,” film drama. (4) /§:38<(4)—On Your Account. (7)— a . helping civic leaders prepare for y' : Paul Williams. (2) Featurette Man About Town. Bob Maxwell | “A b )_L a gr ; NEW YORK — Like most little LANSING Up State officials | 4 City-wide benefit barbecue. State Police said Mrs. Harris’ ‘ n with Mews, mui @) Sesay irbase.. (.)—Ladies Da) girls, Kathleen Maguire decided in probed today for explanations for | Jim Spring, senior crew leader, | husband, Kenneth, W., 37, tried to 6:30—(7) Army Variety. (4) World A ety _— 4? ate 3: 45—(7)—Cowboy Colt early childhood that she wanted to Slichisun's diesstr Fourth ,| bad Eddie Winchester, Don Gege-| pass a semi-trailer and wag hit of Mr. Sweeney. Charles Rug ey ae be an actress; but unlike most lit- emgan's disastrous Fourth of man and Bruce Gillies as his as-|by a car driven by Joseph. J. gles as drug store operator, (2) !%:45—(4) Baseball Hall of Fame | #:00—(6)—Pinky ize ot ene er oes ial abit ede eZ re-| ststants Suitivan, 58, Garden City, Mich, News. Doug Edwards Sports film 4:30 — (4) — Howdy Doody. (2) ~ | idea portedly the highest in the nation.| The group plans to participate 11:00 7) Soupy’ Theater The actress. now in her twenties Gov, Wilhams, expressing him-|'" the Pontiac District Explorer} The country of Iraq was created 6:45—(1) News Caravan. John |"! Soupy's On Soupy | , portrays a glamorous New York self as “highly concerned,” called | ¢XPedition to Colorado’s Rocky! at the end of World War Il, Cameron Swayze. (2) TV Top Non pn r whic; ase Ae | 4:45—(7)—Barnaby Bear photographer's model in Three on the State Police and ‘highway — Tunes. Ray Anthony and Band news 4 fin eee (2) Te 5:00 — (4) — Happy’ Hallow. (7)— | Steps to Heaven. departments for prompt analyses i E play “Happy Wandere: a4 ‘A tie Dée PP) ‘ Many aspiring actresses do a of the three-day holiday toll -to/| Time Goes By 1t:15—(7) Armchair’ Theater. Rob oe , ---4 little modeling along the way . map preventive measures | ’ | s:-(1) Soupy’s Ranch. Jann: vu ae in “Snowbound,” fea 5:30—(4)—Adventure Patrol. (T)— ou ae ae acu a | BERT’S BACK — Ebullient Bert The Associated Press tabula | | ‘ CC . nea Jonnny ire tilm. (4) Adventure Special) ‘Terry and Pirates. (2)—Sports | thous ae cee " | Parks, pioneer emcee in such| tion, gathered by newspapers ; : Mack Brown in “Triggerman Delivery **Mardi-Gras.”’ A role and had to learn standard ‘| . “Doubl - Nothing’ | from law enforcement officials | film with Soupy’s comment. (4) hotel tries to bide a strange mal THURSDAY EVENING tricks of\ posing, including the |‘ gneapee as ou = - othing ished $4 tralite dentin . I Married Joan. Primping for a’ ady. (2) Wrestling — as | stance desdvibed as ‘standing at | and Stop the Music,’ returns to . : reunion Joan gets a ‘‘panda”’ cut . .6:00—(4)—Music Time. (7)—Det.| Tight angles\to oneself.” Jos television screens as host of a mate Police Com. Joseph A . | Joan Davis, Jim Backus star 11:30—(4) Moods in the Night Dendtine ra Hans C. Ander| The eoemiired (tl ved ae video quiz ‘‘Two in’ Love."’ The | Childs reported to Williams his 08 8 ste Music \.) — . : é . blue-eyed a -| weekly ’ rolves (2) Godfrey and His Friends | lusic | sen. | tress was born it New York City Potton capable oan Chulide conceded “thare _pornsnrea COMPLET 7 Variety. THURSDAY MORNING '6:15—(4)—News. (7)—News. rhein an re jem < t HB aie) and married couples, and made its | 80me which have not been reported an, Lo ; : lever had had any theatrical ambi : eee ‘ to us yet.” : 1:30—(4) My Little Margie. Boy $:90—(4)—Today. 2) — Morning §9®—(@)—Dinah Shore. (7)—Lone | tions or associations, Kathleen be- |“ but recently "Childs said the average highway friend Freddie gets news job sell-| Show.- Ranger. (2)—News. | gan .acting in school productions | | death toll in Michigan this year ing pots and pans in “What's ; , _ at St. Lawrence Academy in New ia Co M ; a ~ » : : 7 + . 6:45—(4)—News. (2)—J Fro- | has been slightly more than five Cooking Gale Storm, Charles 8:00—(7)—Breahfast Club mAh ws ane ~ | York—and later at Marymuunt Col | even ount en deaths a aay Sia that the av- — ‘ Farrell star. 9:00—(4)—Playschool. (7)—News 7 ; an Bel ‘Yourtute. jlege in Tarrytown, NY erage ia eight per day over * PHILCO REFRIGERATORS s:ee—(T)—Jimmie Wakley Show. | Wade. )—Arthur Godfrey. 1 CS id. «2)—Meet MeNuticy, | in es ees oo interested th x . Admitted fo State Bar) iv ossiay Bekena * DEEP FREEZE FOOD LOCKERS “< - isco Kid. (-)—Meet MeNutiey. g thaf she left college after twe He said there was only slight Song of the Wasteland with 10:00 — (1) — He "(7)—Char met as uy gn Jimmie Wakley, feature fi; Arts Strhon Homme. (Charm + 7:30—(4)—Justice, (7) — Where's | Years to study acting at the Neigh 1 Eleven Oakland County men| increase’ in the number of fatal | * WHIRLPOOL and THOR AUTOMATIC Televiaion Theatre, A ae curt “ Raymond. (2)—Playhouse. borhood degaiovaet in New York) were admitted to the Michigan | 4c¢idents over the holiday, but that WASHERS and DRYERS r 10: 30—19)—Strike It R ancing Mi a Gri ° Pr acc tries to bring up her father in It Rich 8:00—(4)—Dragnet. (7)—To Be An- . ees mu sth Cena) State Bar yesterday in an hour shot wp sharply! Thine onctheets * DISHWASHERS * IRONERS “Wish Tonight,” stars Pat Mc- 1:00—(4)—Bnde and Groom. (7) pounced. (2)—TV Golf Pro.’ She toured with Sylvia Sidney long ceremony before Cireutt!took 11: lives. one five and two | * AIR CONDITIONERS. : . i Vey, Susan Hallaran. (2) Strike uns (2\—Valiant Lady. in Joan of Lorraine and made | Jud ( B ] k aan noeeteack WATER “Tt It Rich. Warren Hell host, quiz. qyeag oa 8:30—(4)—Theater. (7)—Theater.| her Broadway debut in Sundown | udges George lartric iad as ers three each. { —__———— “HEATERS : i 11: 45— -Hawkins Falls. * (2)— _ 2)—Big -Town. Beach. Her video debut—wag_ in frank tb. -Doty | By comparison, the Memorial =" 8:30—(2) I've Got _a Seerct Carry! Love - Lie ——— meen are (4) — The Marriage. 129—| &%* of the ANTA series pro- Both judges spoke briefly at the | Day weekend saw 19 accidents as well as Moore host; panel tquiz - 11:30—(1)—Betty White. (2)—To-| public Defender. "| duced by Fred Coe who cast | cremony and Pontiac attorney| take only 20 deaths. ee + 1) Story Theater. ‘Lie! ows Searc her f le bev lack | 3 ) N T , mere Story oy. morraw’s Search 9:30 — (4) — Liberace. (7)—Hot | of TV experemes Flack | Cart A. Ingraham, chairman of the| Childs said Indiana reported 14] ame Brand elevision * Through,” film drama. (1) Ti 11:45—(2)—Guiding Licht Rods. (2)—"I Led 3 Lives.” } | qualifications and admissions com-| fatal accidents and Ohio 22, both | . Is Your Life. Ralph Edwards t 75 ae alV'eS. She continued to tour between | mittee of the State Bar, acted as | higher than normal. OPEN EVENINGS ~ recreates life of opera star Lily THURSDAY AFTERNOON 10:00 — (4) — Michigan Outdoors. | Stage and TV assignments, playing | inestes ok Cerenmnics The police head held out little Pons, a re-run. (2) B.C. Boxing. 49:@9—(4)—Travel Unlimited. (7 (2)—News. st summer ‘stock in Newbury, | ‘Those admitted include. James | hope for a relaxing of the ea Light heavyweight boxing bout 12 o'Clock Comics. (2)—Murphy , 10:15—(2)—Weather ass.. and Clinton, NJ. She ap-|} 1, Howlett of 104 Iroquois Rd. and | Pressure : Joey Giadello vs Billy Kilgne “al a ii iciaaial (ieee . peared in the road companies of | (orald G. White of 454 Auburn| He said the state conservation | _ , S | Calling. 10:30—(4)—Traffie Court (7)—| Harvey and Come Back, Little hee Stanley A. Burke. Charles | department reported 3,189,000 per- 9:30—(7) Man Against Crime. 12:15—(4)—Three Steps to Heaven Janet Dean. (2)—To Be An! Sheba, and appeared on Broadway F rv iMingham. Donald M. Wilkin- | 0S have visited state parks in the ; Ralph Bellamy in “No Place to ; a ._| nounced | again in Cry of the Peacock. 'son Jr. and Jack F. Shantz. all of| first six months this year, com- ELEC | Ri¢ ( Oo Hide.” (4) Mr. District Attorney My Life. (4)—Ladies ae Meanwhile she continued her | Royal Oak: S. James Pillars and pared to 2,835,000 in the =| e é The D. A. puts an end to a gang| First. (2)—Garry Moore. 10: 45—(4)—Baseball Hall of Fame. | study of dancing and joined the | Robert B. Atkins, of Birmingham, | Petiod last year . 825 W. Huron St. FE 4-252 that used te: ; and smoke 12:45—(7)—Stars 5 1 (7)—Soupy’s | Actors Studio, appearing on their Requests to the State Tourist how — ie a ee ene Om Seven. tee 18) = News. (i) —Rowey TV series. | ee ee Council for travel information this wi ; 9)\—New ; . fing : ve a ee 1:30—(2)—Houseparty. (4) — Jean | On. (2) ae Miss Maguire shares a Green dipbeheess . ane. ee year are running more than 100 per 9:45—(2) Greatest fights. Famous McBride. 11:15—(4)—Everybody Sing. (7)—| wich Village apartment with a girl and Robert P. Allen, Rochester cent above last year, Childs said. ‘ fights from the past ‘“ (2)—Big Payoff. (4)—Mrs Theater. (2)—Suspense Film. who, is in the producing end of | Fi Ch Pi ki d -____ | PONTIAC S OLDEST 2:00—(2 Z Mrs. _ i : . : showbusiness, and a cat, Timmy. irst Cherries Picke : 7) j ra} i Ss (13—h : —_ ‘ , . } 10:00--(7) Club Polka. Warreni USA. (7)—My Life. | 11:30—(4)—Moods in the Night She portcays Macy Gace (Pica) | Army to Buy Cherries TV SERVICE DEALER | Thurmond in Three Steps. TRAVERSE CITY Ut—The first) wasHINGTON UA—Sen. Ferguson | y m gag a epg fl pyar lars ee dla BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE =o O ol 's Cd 10 TOQTa S -- | this area began Tuesday in the|had informed him it has allotted ld f eart, larchard of Adolph La_ Franier, | $600,000 to buy 2.300.000 pounds of Authorized Factory Service tor 15 Difierent Manufacturers Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. south of Traverse City. The har-|sweet cherries—one-half of its re-|f ea a ———— vesting is expected to be well under | quirement—from Michigan cd Dea Melee %00—WJIR, Hilitop House %—WJIR, Summer Sympp p Darin not be used It is called ' $:45—WXYZ, Just Easy ’ WWJ. Welcome Travelegs oe a ener a “‘kardiopnewmopexy” or heart- 9:00—WJIR, Wm. Sheehan WWJ, Minute Parade WY2, Breakfast Club WXYZ, Martin WCAR, Sports Block CKLW, News, Davies ww WXYZ, Show Stoppers Roy Rogers WXYZ, Vandercook become plugged with deposits from the blood stream ios 9’x12’ VINYL-SEALED 9:30—WJR, Mrs. Paige | CKLW, Good Neighbor WJBK, Bob Murphy CKLW: Crime Pightere | Jung graft : a seen Beer | If continued research justifies 9:00—WJR, Crime Photog. WW45J, Groucho's Best WXYZ, Sammy Kaye WJBK, Tom George WCAR, News, Music WXYZ, Ed McKenzie INLAID 6 Ft. 9x9 c $ 4* N 9:45—WJR, Pete and Joe $:15—WJR, House Party | 9:00—WWJ, Jason jon the hnique, med Ea. CKLW, News, Music | CKLW, Tony =. CKLW, Bud Davies | WXYZ, Sammy Kaye mgee ell = Z i Running Foot 9-36-—WIR, Jack-Careon~ WCAR, Temple Acad. $:20-—WW4, Popper Young cCxLw, Beary: Roth cine ve a new approac Wide 6 Only « WWJ, Theater 10:00—WJIR, A. Godfrey WXYZ, Paul Winter - Jom ‘Ceorge to the problem of coronary WXYZ, Paul Whitemag CKLW, Author Meets Critic Chase WWJ, To Be Announced WXYZ, My True Story CKLW, Eddie | 9:15—CKLW, Roth heart disease, which kills 225,- Running Fr. | JE oo Ern . _Homechat 3:45—WJR, Gal Sunday 9:30—WJR, Escape 000 persons ear in the United 10:00 WIR. Tennessee /Brale | OTEK New Db WWJ, Right to Happiness WWJ, Bwayse. Cantor States syearin' —_— wR cals ae oe ¢ Pempy ] 400—WJR, Listen Lorene rane. eceaie meara as. Y crim Frank Edwards ie: IS WCAR. Temple } ha ee hen 9:45—WWJ, Eddie Cantor Although it is still in the experi- | QUAKERTEX ’ ’ et 7a —— fs ae ~~. ’ (e ellie = me | 10: Liege Bob Hope | CKLW, Eddie Chase 10:00—WJR. Tennessee Ernie | Mental stage, the operation brought C = = ee IR, Muste. Metrope WXYZ, Whispering Streets | WJBK. Don McLeod WWJ, Fikber McGee a special grant from the Washing- LAY YOUR OWN Lig t J) NCAR ews, Carousel * WXYZ, Headline Edition Ee pel A he Mica “ od) Date WCAR aang Pee (:15—WIR. Music Hall | CKLW. F Edwardes ton State Heart Association to con- | ! ollywood / ' | i mat “ ouse . . fico ern, Peet a oe WWJ Stella Dallas WJBK. Houseparty | tinue laboratory investigations COVERING 54” WIDE Colors 19 4a—WIR, Pr ouely We Hail =e | 10:13—WJR. Guest Star , - as i WWJ, Keys to QGapfto! WXYZ, Girt Marries 4:90_WWJ. Widder Brown | SO WER real Nene A colleague of the research sur- pe x ere ; ea CKLW, News, Sanctuary CKLW. Beauty Citale WXYZ, McKenzie WXYZ, Top of Tewn geon said . McLeod . 11:00—WJIR, Arthur Godfrey | WWJ, Strike It Rich wxXyYzZ, . Romance CKLW, Plorida, U.8.A. WJBK, News, Mcleod WCAR, News, Gongs 11:15—WXYZ, Ever Since Eve. Ll: oe Make Up Mind WW), Phrase That Pays WXYZ, Neighbor's Voice CKLW. Queen for a Day 11:45—WJR, Rosemary CKLW. Freddy Martin 4:45—WJR, Music, News | 10:30—WJR, Cathy & Elliott WWJ, Woman in House | WW4J, Proudly We Hail CKLW, George Wright | CKLW, News 5:00—WJR, News | 10:45—CKLW, Organaires j tf: ee News Ww, WHY, Sporta, Top CKLW, News WJBK. News | 4:18—WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ. Bruce Mayer “This could be a terrific ad- vance in heart surgery, or it could be a terrific flop. It.is too early to say yet.”’ TV Writers Meet fo Set Strike Date 11:06—WJR, News WWJ, News | WXYZ, 8 | Top CKLW, Kuren,/ Sports [2° 9"x9"’x! “ , Wattrick-McK. W, Eddie Chase WJBK, McLeod P WCAR, News $:15—WJR, Reynolds WJBK, Bob Murphy WCAR, Carousel Music 6:00—WJIR, marr, Melody WWJ. Second Chance WXYZ, Top of Town WWJ, News, Lazarow WXYZ. City Byline "ww L Jones Matinee CKLW Ante Plastic ‘WXYZ, News WCAR News ww), ones | rane . Fyae . CKLW. T$oy Davia it-00_—wae, weney warren | _CKEW. Eddie Chase ae WIM Mute ee oO? eine Vxccutive | Contour-Walltile | en ., News joard o ve Televisio riters o fit ee i _Wws. Paye | Elizabeth 4 em WIR, Curt — n c ‘ 2) Z. News CKLW Polleg McKelier Missouri Botany Group America says it will meet donigmt | to set a strike date unless the rors in conclusions reached by TV networks grant a union shop Michigan Bell Asks for Rate Rehearing, LANSING (UP) — The Michigan | the commission in May when the original request was turned down. The original application called for rate increases ranging from 50 cents to $2.75 a month for business Bell Telephone Company today pe-| | service and 25 to 90 cents a month | Doing Research on Hop ST. LOUIS ®# — The Missouri Botanical Gardens has been award- ed a $5,000 grant by the Brewing Industries Research Institute to make a study of the hop. and make a satisfactory a for scripts. Negotiations between TWA and the three networks have been un- der way since October 1953. Union officials say the networks and TWA Custom-Contour PROFESSIONAL INSTALLATIONS We Offer You Free Estimates and |‘ a@,* bes te ss edule Houle J *L 9 \m 1 mt ee still are far apart on minimum scales for scripts The union seeks $715 for a half. | Immediate PLASTIC TILE 3 5< Sq. Ft. titioned the public service caeaepe for residence service. No increase sion for a rehearing of its 2 get in long-distance rates was pro-,tor of the gardens, says there are application for a $22,000,000 rate | posed | three species of hops; the wild hour commercial show, $500 for a inerease throughoyt the company s No decision is expected today on! American, the Japanese and. the half-hour sustaining show and $425 | territory. the petition for rehearing | common Punipean Many varieties for a half-hour sustaining adapta- Bell officials said pe | exist and Anderson says the object tion. TWA says the network offers | investments and higher ee Cook potatoes as soon as possible | of the research wili be to find gut | $425 $¥5 and $215 respectively costs spurred the request for @ . alter they are peeled. The longer | the relationship they have to one rehearing. | potatoes are exposed to air the | another with the idéa of Paden Air extends 100 miles above the | The company also charged er- | more vitamin C. they lose. pe improved types. earth's surface, Edgar Anderson, assistant direc- = 99 S. Sacinaw a sid ae a. AVENUE an in¢rease iW FORTY-FOUR Atom Workers. Strike in South Union Demands 15-Cent Hourly Pay Boost, but ~ Plants Will Still Run . GAK RIDGE, Tenn,’ #—*Plan for a strike at the natiofi's two uranium-235 production plants here | , and in Paducah, Ky., went ahead early today even as Taft-Hartley law machinery began turning About 4500 atomic production workers were affected. CIO chemi cal workers union leaders ordered pickets on duty at 8 am., EST * * + Union officials said President Ei-| senhower's order for a fact-finding strike | board would not affect the plans. Supervisors were prepared to keep the vast acres of machinery working at their intricate proc- esses which, they said, would take a. year to get going again if once stdpped. An official of Carbide Chemicals Co., mission, said grimly last night 7” . * “We're going to run the plants strike or no strike." The ‘strike was ordered in sup- port of the union's demand for a 14-cent hourly pay raise. The de mand was scaled down from 21 cénts after union members reject ed a 6cent raise recommended by a presidential pane! Another 4.500 workers represent ed by the rival AFL Atomic Trades and Labor Council also rejected the presidential panel's 6-cent rec ommendation after parallel nego- tiations for a 19-cent raise * a * Members of both unions author ized a strike call, but Jess Haman president of the council. said the AFL workers would stay on the job. The scales for all plants range from $1.58 to $2.40 President Eisenhower's order that a fact-finding board be set up is the first. step toward invoking the Taft-Harley law's injunction The board would report in 15 days, after which the Presi dent could seek an injunction for an 8-day cooling-off — Air Derby Winner fo Be Picked Soon KNOXVILLE. Tenn. ue—A group of pilots met thday to determine which of 46 finishing women pilots Provision & Carbon | which operates the | plants for the Atomie Energy Com- | ' ) mean Las Vegas Hotel ‘Strike Postponed | LAS VEGAS, Nev, uy --A last- AF Discloses minute against casinos on the Las Vegas Strip Ernest J AFL Operating group had acceded to a request by | fighter — which flown up to about 1,500 miles an)! for the the be pu Leupp would continue Council said that if the gineers strike hotel employes lines La upp AFL the strike set to start this morning off until Friday THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7 and the hotels will shut down if | picket lines are established- | said wages ranged from 82 17% to | $2.45 an hour ;_postp« one ment WAS =F nounced. ‘today in a Strike scheduled? ‘Tes sting ‘Of New the. Seven lavish — hotel- ‘Daylight Fighter WASHINGTON W®-— The Air Force says a new daylight jet reportedly Leupp, business agent International Union of | Engineers, said the Central Lahor Council that | | hour - | Edwards Air Force Base said he hoped negotiations Yesterday's cryptic ‘The Central Labor} ment disclosed that the Lockheed Ralph Leigon,| XF104, an “air superiority’’ fight 80 operating en-|jer, had made its first flight last has passed flying tests at Calif. announce president the 3.200 other AFL | February will observe picket| The Air Force gave out little ‘specific information. How- said present pay scales; ever, other reliable sources have for the engineers average $2.30 an | said the ship weighs only about hour Roy luxury and the 10 per cent beost plus a health and | welfare program Flippin an increase half as much as jets now in the air, but is twice as fast as the swiftest of them, has. union is asking a representing — the said this .would A a 15 per cent! wings hotels butterfly two United Press Phote | ; WHAT, AGAIN!—No jsour_ eyes are not deceiving you. and fortu- | nately the styles of the ‘20s are | not staging a comeback. The young lady above is merely sporting the latest in walking skirts aptly termed the sportswhirl. Done in herringbone tweed, it to enhance the free and easy stride of the avid hiker. The skirt, which short at the knee hampers action; the outfit is designed never has stops | been rightly termed both practical | and pretty ‘Three Men Rob Priests | lof Money won the four-day Powder Puff Derby The straggling order of finish means little Each plane flies! agzinst an individual handicap and it takes some complex arithmetic to determine the winner. Prizes total $2.000 with $800 for first The last plane crossed the finish line in Knoxville yesterday at 4 28 p.m. — just 32 deadline. The daytime-only began at Long Beach, Calif., day race The 46th arrival was piloted by | Calif., | Loretta Foy of Van Nuys with Jean Bartel of Los Angeles, | Miss America of 1943. as copilot. By the time the race ended ves terday, five planes had been dis- qualified for various reasons 400 Living Descendants Attend Aunt’s Funeral IVA, S.C. w—“'Aunt Anna” Hat ten, 104. who was Anderson Coun ty's oldest citizen. was buried here today Nearly 400 living great-grand children and grandchildren at. | tended the funeral. It's MASONRY @6 BEAUTIFUL COLORS @ MODERNIZED and STREAMLINED @ GIVES YOU “DEAD AIR” INSULATION Free Estimate Will Amaze You at Its LOW COST! Complete Line of: FHA and VA Approved OPEN EVERY EVENING and SATURDAYS DIXIE &™ Diste Hwy. Drayton Plains ne OR 3-2345 minutes before thet Satur- | | | of $1,931 Collection Fund | LOS ANGELES uw sought three .men who tossed pep- | } Police today per into the eyes of two Catholic priests and robbed them of collec tion money totaling $1.931 The Rt. Rev. Msgr. John J Gallagher of St. Thomas Church and his assistant, the Rev. John J. | Ward, were taking the money to a bank yesterday, officers said They were stopped at a traffic light and the trio tossed pepper | into their eyes, grabbed the bag | hit Father Ward when he protested, and fled | inventor of the | Lake deposits William A. Burt solar compass, discovered Superior new iron ore | when the iron caused his compass | to fluctuate sharply ong survey-| We're Ready For I Relaalelaneh 7 Yesterday's railroads made today's America Without tod possible. 's railroads tomorrow's America hardly Would be possible. Yesterday's railroads enabled America to be- come a single nation spanning a continent —our amazing America of today. Tomorrow's America will be as dependent upon railroads as it was yesterday. A greater America is unlikely without railroads cap- oble of caring for its vast, vital, growing traffic needs. Teday those railroads are preparing for to- morrow’'s task. 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