5°: 4 nah } y ah ‘ 4 5; ee , y eke + , | = | ; é ; : ; iss ‘— THE PONTIAC PRESS Detalls page twe , 112th YEAR kk* PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 —g2 PAGES ae ey Te . eject Fr In Fund Post ch Armistice Terms | Annual School Census Starts Today Agree to Speed the Evacuation of Injured Men Vietminh Presents Own 8-Point Plan Similar to Korean Demands GENEVA (AP) — The Communists “totally” re- Communists to Give Names in Peress Case Group Meets in Secret) to Decide on Shortening the Public Hearing \ WASHINGTON — (AP) Heads Society si Gee U-M Professors F iRefuse to Talk Jat Clardy Quiz 2 Invoke Bill of Rights as 2-Day Probe Starts in Lansing LANSING (AP) — Two —Senate investigators to- University of Michigan fac- terms SS} \day ordered Secretary of ulty members today refused fedochbine annatioe’ to- ) | the Army Stevens to submit to answer questions of the day. They countered with ’ || the names of Army officials House Un-American activi- an eight. af int plan of their responsible for giving Maj. ties subcommittee on their own - Irving Peress—described by knowledge of Communist ‘+ The Communists agreed, however, to cooperate in quick action to remove the wounded from fallen Dien Bien Phu. The Communist armistice plan was submitted to the nine-party Indochinese conference by the Ys y 5 of the rd Pham Van Dong, after he assailed activities. Dr. Mark Nickerson, as- McCarthy as a “Fifth _|Amendment Communist”— an honorable discharge. The action came on a rul- ing by Chairman Mundt (R-SD) of the committee looking into the McCarthy- Army dispute after the p postponed until later HAZEN 8, ATKINS Newly appointed industrial di- vision chairman for Pontiac Area United Fund's 1954 campaign next fall ig Hazen S. Atkins, industrial relations director for Fisher Body Division, GM. A life-long Pontiac resident, Atkins has been active in the United Fund for five years. Oder new officers inctaded Sem-| the queetin f tine acai an ae ae ot the French plan for an interna- e question oO cu g : tionally guaranteed armistice. M uel D. eo Ann Pesta — short public hearings. French Bombers First on ae alae Pe jor points of the Communist rel " secretary: D. Bradford| Mundt 4 a closed session | , existence of a Communist cell at were: Blast Key Roads Planes Batter Vietminh Truck Convoys Moving Out of Dien Bien Phu HANOI, Indochina ® — French fighters and bombers today heavily attacked key roads leading northeastward from the fallen for- tress of Dien Bien Phu. The roads re jammed with thousands of Communist - led Vietminh troops Aq jany other testimony be taken in closed: session. | here,” 7 TF 5 Suspects Held in Bank Holdup Police Say All Admit Daring Stickup; Arrest: Solves 3 Other Cases f 4 it =f rtf | cies, DOOR-TO-DOOR COUNT—One of the first families contacted in Pontiac Public Schools’ 194 school census was the Edgar Arnold family at 6 N. Tas- mania Ave. Answering questions this morning were School-Census Cold Air.Moving South, . ~~'Normal Weather Expected Starting Today ‘Normal Weather Expec Seven days ago frigid air from Canada knifed into the Pontiac area, cutting the temperature 24 degrees in Parents Will Be Asked About Children Up to eight hours. Today that wintry air still covers the region. 20 Years of Age Forty men and women started But better news was given farmers and gardeners today by W. W. Oak, chief meteorologist for the U. 8. ringing Pontiac doorbells today as Pontiac Public Schools’ 1%4 cen- eres Ike's Foreign Policy e sus under : e,e 8 Ceneus takers will try w set| Criticized by Truman moving southeastward and a trend has start- ed. Nearly normal temp- eratures are expected every person from birth through 191 © wasiHINGTON (INS) — Former | Wednesday. years of age listed on school rec-| president Truman charged today| More scatiered frost is due to- ords by the census deadline June 1.|that the Eisenhower administra-| night. The official forecast calls Parents will be asked their | tion does not have a “clear-cut” | for a low of 34 to 38 tonight and children’s full names, exact birth foreign policy to meet the “‘terrible a 57-60 degree high Tuesday. dates, what sthools they attend, danger we confront.” During the week-long cold spell, Truman called on President Ei-| temperatures have averaged and other questions, senhower to define to the country| about 12 degrees below the nor- Pdul C. Allison, child accounting | “something that could be recog-| mm 54-degree mean temperature. director, said the school system is | Mized as a clear-cut administration} Up to today the highest tem- ki \ foreign policy.” perature during the siege of cold bl = the mumber of pos- The ex-President said that the; weather was 56 degrees recorded sible students, to plan for the num-| aiministration's foreign policy in| in downtown Pontiac last Friday. ber of new classrooms, teachers | recent months has been obscured |The coldest was 31 degrees May and equipment required in the next |by ‘“‘a succession of conflicting, | 4. : few years. vague and confusing statements, year's school census show proposals, and acts.” . Ae ee he ie Speaking to a National Press — > young peopl Club luncheon, Truman demanded birth-through-19 age range living even in the Pontiac school district, Alli- son said, Oak said he has noticed light Sunday at Pontiac Hospitals i Pontiac Prees Pheote Mrs. Arnold and the li-yearold Arnold twins, Patricia Lou and Edgar Lewis. Census taker was Mrs. Wellington Clements, 197 E. Huron St. 25 o8 i ‘i i a, i if Hi l z if man labeled this a phony aimed at winning French 3 i public SE es z | respect existing French cultural (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Saves Family From Mississippi Man Swims 2 Hours to Rescue Wife, Son, 8 After Boat Mishap MEMPHIS, Tenn. #—Ten-year- old Darlene Roaten, who doesn't swim, supported herself with a small piece of cork for more than three hours yesterday while the current swept her 10 miles down the Mississippi River. Her father, J. S. Roaten, mean- while, swam more than two hours : : to rescue his wife and their son =e tm Oakland County and Bobby, 8, after they and Darlene ot parts of Michigan. | had stepped off an underwater The Detroit meteorologist blam-| sandbar into the swift Mississippi ed the unseasonable weather on 4) cyrrent. huge low-pressure area over the | Roaten th them pieces of Great Lakes region that has pulled| 14 tte 4 jackets and leaped from <«eee= | Cold air down from Canada. ‘ sorters am The mercury has plunged into =e coe the 30s daily since the cold air hit. Today was no exception. The E i H i E B g | i | 5 : swer. He then invoked the Fifth Amendment permitting witnesses Fuk 9 Lf R > 5 g i | Wilson’s 1st Year Reviewed in Press Damage to early tomaio plant- ings and cherry trees has been since last Monday. conduct of foreign policy. tar. ig 4s frost at his home nearly every day ministration of a true bi-partisan eve ee we nara ences Ge Se she ee, — The boat began Grifting and at 6 a. m. in downtown Pontiac, | Roaten swam after tt for more then reso to 57 at 3 pm. | than two hours before he regained And that 58 is welcome. It's the | jt, Then he used the boat to pick highest reading since May 3. up his wife and Bobby hut Dariene Se had drifted out of sight. _—— H H j | She was picked up just County Historical Society | , Ste was? — to Hold Annual Meeting | s. Louis. A crewman uaw her bob- meeting and luncheon | bing along in the current. A wit- sf tee tates | Comm Pau oa ness said the piece of cork sup- * Historical Society will be held at porting her was about half the size Lake Orion Rateel : noon May 19, at the Oakland Ave- of a cigar box BOY, ROBERT FORDS BOY, JUNIOR DENEENS GIRL, MARCELLO TAMAYOS BOY, GLEN KINGERYS BOY, EARL. MORGANS BOY, CHARLES REEDS hue United Presbyterian Church. The family was on a pleasure , _ - ahs neta Varmingtes 08 N. Zast Biv. 30 Hovey St. Howard Peckham, director of the| cruise in a 17-foot inboard motor- Pontiac Press Phetes Clements Library at the Univer-| beat. The craft struck a sandbar Sixteen were sity of Michigan, will be the speak-| near an island, All except rooney Poe er, Reservations may be made be-| Michael got out to push the boat _ hours ending fore May 14 with Mrs. H. F. Going, | off the bar, the water was only sight. ‘The, frst of 214 West Pike St., FE 2-6087. | six inches deep where the boat left above were ; ran aground. In Today‘s Press Joseph Mercy. my eae - Five others are not pictured —— “98 they are still in incubators. They a = were bern at Pontiac General Sovia’ Lawrence : the James Adamses, } ed ‘: the Thomas Barrys, Ey Po Seton ew ahosesecrenet 8 . Sermen . aig Regret Ra a bays. oe a i. oo tape on he ee eS | the James Conners, Women's Pages B weg he Free Christian Setence Lecture Miracles, Clarkston. vee gee 0d page 2 ey to Hold Hearing Tonight Birmingham ‘Commission lo Mark Day | | on Rezoning From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM — A hearing to rezone the recently annexed Por- ritt property on Adams road be- tween Maple and Lincoln will start off tonight's City Commission meet- Several letters opposing the pro- posed business zoning on the Ad- ams frontage are already on file. Following passage last week of an ordinance that will allow re- toning of residential) property next to business or parking dis- tricts for parking use, two re- | quests will be considered for re- | zening five lots in the northwest section of the city. A licensing ordinance to operate | in conjunction with the new park- ing ordinance will be presented by City Planning Director Robert | Boatman. ~ He has also prepared a resolu- tion on the city's objections to the proposed extension of Lincoln ave- nue from Cranbrook to Lahser No Clue Yet Found fo Missing Ensign BIRMINGHAM — A four - day search for Ensign Donald R. Wil- during a Wednesday training flight Porritt Land (or Cranbrook | roads, to be forwarded to the Oak- , land County Planning Commission. | Another hearing, on Torry pave- | | ment and sidewalk from Holland | | north about 111 feet, will be held, | and adoption of a new awning li-| cense will be under consideration. | . . a | “Family and Child Relation- ships’ will be discussed by Mrs. Belle Farley Murray at tonight's Adam School PTA meeting at 8 Mrs. Murray has been lecturer and | consultant in family life for the | University of Michigan Extension Service since 1941 >* °« . There are big doings for High Twelve Club members and their | wives tonight when Ladies Night | will be celebrated, starting at iin will be mamed im honor of Shopping Center at Telegraph Rd. and W. Huron p. m. in the Community House. | Entertainment will be provided by | the Fenby-Carr Quintet. | - . . Hostesses will be Mrs, L. J. Mc-) Creedy and Mrs. Kenneth Kilbury, | with devotions by Mrs. Rayburn « The 300-acre campus, housing six | Massacar Events Sunday Highlight 50th Anniversary of Booth Family Gifts The 50th anniversary of the first purchase of Bloomfield Hills prop- erty for Cranbrook Institutions by | George E. and Ellen Scripps Booth | will be commemorated Sunday. The all-day event wil] be high- lighted by a 10:30 a.m. dedication of a new altar built on the site 4 where George Booth's father, Hen.- | ry, conducted the first public wor- | ship. A special Founders Day ser- vice at Christ Church Cranbrook will be held at 11:15 During the afternoon, Cran- THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 Nursing School's’ Open House Visited by 200 | | Some 200 Pontiac area young women turned out Sunday as Mc- |Auley School of Practical Nurs- ing’s “Open House” started St.“Jo- seph Mercy Hospital's Hospital Week festivities. Visitors can tour the hospital_it- self from 2 until 4 p.m. today through Thursday, with St. Joseph | Mercy alumnae as guides. Special demonstrations of hospital equip- b Communities Get Road Funds Oakland County Units to Share in $1,700,000 From State Fund Michigan State Highway Depart. ment is sending checks for abou $1,700,000 to Oakland County and on its cities and villages for use local streets and | OPENS THURSDAY—This new Winkelman store St. Manager of the store is Howard Sadow. The Neus lehed their own 'clathes in| roads. ment are planned for each day’s| The money is part of the $57,- program. | 268.62 collected in Michigan's M Sunday's open house for young | tor Vehicle Highway Fund during $ women interested in nursing ca-| January, February and March. The ~ |reers featured Miss Ilene Lang-| state Highway Department keeps % don, director of Highland Park 44 per cent or $25,349.24] as its General Hospital School of Nursing share of the funds, raised from and Miss Doris Holdwick, McAuley | license fees, gas taxes, and other student, as speakers. McAuley stu-| highway charges. Oakland County Read Com- brook School's new gymnasium | will open Thursday morning at the Tel-Huron gtore carries a full line of women’s wearing apparel. 4 style show, ‘What the Well-,. iesion wilt get $1,142,775.11 — Ciraries J. Keppel, member of the school’s first faculty and former essietant headmaster. The deat Pontiac Deaths Winkelman Store to Open isis sts ‘Aes tine cation will be heid at 2:15. Rounding out the program will | be a Founders Day tea at Cran-- Mrs. Frances G. Kohn brook House, former George Booth} irs. Frances G. Kohn, 66, of 29 home. Besides the Booth family, | nougias St.. died in Northville. guests and graduating groups from | saturday, after a three-week ill- Brookside | o< Mrs. Kot s born i alo, are sc ied to be nt. Aly = on Feb. 11 1888, ry tour of the Grounds will follow. ;.. of Frank and Isabell Brown educational institutions, was named | Mrs. Kohn came here from Buf- after the Booth ancestral birthplace | faio. 60 years ago. Surviving is a in England. | daughter, Mrs, Jean Kuenzel of Pontiac. | Funeral will be Tuesday at 2 |p.m. from the Pursley Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. The Rev. Cari Nelson of St. John Lutheran Church will of- ficiate. William H. McNally | Dressed Student Nurse Will Wear.” more than ether -ounty road The show ended with the four- pesca carpe ee Wayne, which ‘year-old Wendy Bordeaux, grand- | gets $4,749,330.18. Other ties’ shares are McAuley housemother, dressed as | sre te Leer '9163.082 pi at Center Next Thursday, *“““"““ Livingston: $568.03 for Macomb Pontiac will get $245,773.25 — the biggest share of any Oakland Coun- ty city. Birmingham will get $37,489; Bloomficid Hilis $6,982; Clarkston This is the chain's 26th store. $1,657; Clawson, $12,211; Clifford, n 8 (Continued From Page One) 91.000; F 85.238; Manager of the new 40x150-foot and economic interests in the three a ; store is Howard Sadow. who has states. Park $33.411; Holly $6,521; Hun- served as assistant , tington Woods $11,850; and Lake giles Vilage, $160, several of the company’s Detroit, A pledge of no reprisals | Angelus Vilug area stores since 1952. | against persons found guilty of | Lake Orion is down for $5,608; collaboration. City of Lathrup Village, $7,228; Immediately prior to this ap I 1, $1,867: Milford. $5,780: pointment as manager, Sadow, An exchange of prisoners of war. | o,, Pafk $18,967; Orchard Lake served as assistant manager at | An armistice in Indochina. This | 2 977. Ortonville. $1,806; and Ox- Winkelman’s Royal Oak Store. | would be given priority over all garg $5 706 other provisions. The Vietminh- | > atatn § The new store here has con. | ; The state is sending $6,725 to temporary styling, with the in- proposed armistice would include | Pieasant Ridge; $10,534 to Roches- being ‘m charcoal, ° “Teadjustment” of occupation ter; $135,660 to Royal Oak; $3.435 , lighter gray and pink. zones, a ban on import of troops | to South Lyon; and $3,705 to Syl- and bleached Winkeiman Brothers Apparel. Reds Totally Reject Inc., will open its new store in the Tei-Huron Shopping Center in Franch Truce Plan and arms in Indochina and control | yan Lake. of the missing jet pilot. She said| mts at a dinner at 6:30 tonight has gray carpeting é that Wilson's wife, Peggy, phoned| im the church, Guest speaker w H. McNally, 82. of 646 E. mahegany , fixtures. {of the armistice by mixed e_—_—"_—_-_—_—_—_—_ will be the Rev Thenms, = y, &2, of : | miasions. the news to her from Jacksonville . Perry Walton Bivd., died at his resi-| The front is fashioned of glass At the second session of the In- Free Lecture where Wilson was based. minister of the Commerce Meth- dence Saturday. with a base of Tennessee dochina phase of the Geneva Con- Other pilots in Wilson's forma- ** ¢ wie cm Jan 7, 1812, the ‘com of re parate depart edie ee ees er oe SCrT A . bs . | separate ment for fOun- ist Vietminh agreed t - rec armenia pwede oy Hav pation ply Boy Bd Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McNally. He| HOWARD SADOW dation and an enlarged sorts- meeting of field commanders in | CHURISTIAN plane drop from the flight mear | Kenny Anniversary Club are Rich- nw nf oo “wear department are among the Indochina to arrange evacuation SCIENCE: ard oman Ont., on April 4, 1907. features of the new store of wounded. - the Cuban coast. J gy — ‘: Mr. McNally, who was a county Youth 18 Achieves: The store will carry dresses.' such a meeting had been asked The Understanding of The missing airman is the son of | \- yr president; resident for 37 years, was a re-| ’ ’ coats, suits, sportswear, accessO- by the Trench three weeks ago.|f Man's Unity With God” Mrs. Ralph A. Wilson of 19370 Riv- ee rn Ber peny — tired fruit grower, ° | ries, foundations. lingerie and mil-/ The Vietminh move today " Dr., Birming sponding secretary, and Walter H. trig pgp aed se Best Driver Honor | linery in a full range of prices. | prompted French Foreign Minister by Donald, who has been in serv- son Clyde W., of tiac and a Daily hours are from 9:30 a.m. Georges Bidault to remark: “Bet- GEORGINA TENNANT, brother Hugh of Rockbridge, Wis 2MINGHAM — W to 5:4 p.m. The store will re- ter late than never.” ; The funeral will be Tuesd y at BIR a »HAM mele of main open until 9 p.m. Thursdays, ; c. 8. B. 2 p.m. from the Voorhees-Siple Saturday's Teenage Road-E-O. Fridays and Saturday's, Chapel with burial in Roseland | sponsored by the Junior Chamber Hf g 4 ; Rn of Lenden, England Member ef the Beard of Lectureship of The Mether Cherch. The First Cherch of Ctrtet, Scientist, te Today's meeting got off with a wrangle ag the Viet Nam delegate Gifts will be given ‘o customers and Bidault accused Soviet For- Park. The Rev. John W. Mulder of | of Commerce to determine the On opening day. ham High School graduate. Prior) 4 to his service entry was attending A Georgia Institute of Technology sented to Dexter Horton. president school of pharmacy. CLAUDE HENSON eign Minister V. M. Molotov of rues eg of the Sister Elizabeth Kenny; — the, Central Methodist Church will <1. best youthful driver. was iene waiding beck @ Viet Nem letter . Mass Foundation of Michigan, for use in A | officiate. ° " a : Thursda Ma 13 5 Hurt in Car Crash the equipment fund. Fy Union Head —— Donald Hite, 18, of 270 Wadding- Choir Members Robbed sagt Pigeon the Viet- Y- Y ~ o ! 7 = . . speak. . Fran Harris, Detroit radic and | Robert J. Percival | ton. During Sunday Service Molotov is today’s conference 8:00 P. M., in on U . 10 Sunday television personality, will speak |. | . | Robert J. Percival, 53, of 282, He competed with 41 others in| BIRMINGHAM — Eleven choir Chairman. | Church Edifice Joe on “Television and Your Child” | | | Union Lake Rd. was dead on hala through an obstacle course. members at St. James Episcopal! The sequence of events, as re- Cer. Williems & Five persons were injured early) ®* the Franklin School PTA meet. | 1e$ n awas rival at Pontiac General Hospital| 1p 9 run-off between the winning Church had their purses rifled dur- ported by official French sources, | : ‘ : yesterday, He had been ill for a iri and boy driver, Hite won over ing Sunday's service. Police said | was: W. Lowrenes when a motorist went to| coe tines nooting aw | eek about $30 in cash was taken, pl Church of Christ, sleep on U.S. 10 near Big Lake . . week. oo | Margaret Davis, 18, of 1152 Buck- | was » Plus = The Viet Nam delegation handed First Road in Springfield Township and iccee ‘Seine —_ Claude Henson Stricken owe ee bard gag ingham. Both are Birmingham | several wallets. la letter to Molotov. suggesting | Selentist, Pontiac, Michigan ~— his car swerved into oneaming | wine Jonnetone left today to e.| OM Fishing Trip; Was on Oc J. mm He mart High School seniors. Hite will go| A caretaker. told police he hed | something be done to evacuate lll Cordially Invites You ‘ |tend the National Convention of | Active in Local 653 |” Mr. Percival w her of |t@ Lansing for the state finals seen boys lurking outside the chair | seriously wounded French Union y William A. Harr, 19, of Detroit. | 2 = * ive in Loca 7 7 = i _ | June 5. : ‘ room. "prisoners. | | MOMS in Baltimore as local dele- Austin Lodge, F&AM, at Davis- | gates. MOMS Club Unit Three will! Claudé Henson, 56. of 588 Collier | burg. fallen asleep while driving north|™eet at the Community House at Rd.. died in Tawas Saturday while! Surviving are his widow, two on US. 10. causing his car to|® tonight. — on a fishing trip there. | daughters and eight sons, Mrs. | swerve into the outside lane of | . He was born in Bono. Ark.,| Katharine P. Stankoski of Fort | cntiheenh teil , Open house and a program by the 4 i111 117 1898, the son of William Worth, Tex., Robert C. of Del/ traffic and into @ Car! chidren is scheduled for tonight's | APP 11. ° Rio, Tex., William J. Partello of | by Carroll L. Bridgeman. | , : R. and Regina Henson 2%, of Detroit. Harr was ticketed | o'clock meeting of the Walnut for reckless driving. Bridgeman and a passenger. Sal- | vatore Soave, 30, also of Detroit, | and Harr and two passengers with him, Miss Janet C. Eurich, 16, and Thomas E. La Rochelle, 19, both of Flint, were treated at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital for cuts and bruises. Awaits Sentence Lake PTA. Installation of officers will also be included. with Keith Symon as president; Clare Hellen- berg, vice president; Mrs. John oe recording secretary; Mrs. | Korea, Robert L. Partello of Ft. Mr. Henson, who came here 31 Bliss. Tex., Anthony Herzog of years ago, was a member of the jioweil, John F.. Melvin E., Ed Marimont Baptist Church and yin G. Richard A. and Carol Ann, Was also past president of Local 21) 1 home. 653, UAW. He served with the | Funeral service will be Wednes- Ov. Don C. Brown, corresponding sec- | ‘retary, and Charles E. Robinson,| was last employed as a welder treasurer. | at Pontiac Motor Division. He } ji on Wie tee, | OO eee eee father vice president; Mrs, John Surviving are two brothers and A. Smith, mother vice president; | a Sister. Mrs, Irene Smith and Cari Nota Peasley, teacher ‘ice presi. |W., both of Jonesboro, Ark., and dent, and Mrs. Richard Freund, |Bert E. of Pontiac. historian. | Funeral will be Tuesday at 2:30 in Store Holdup Russell J. Courtney, 31, of 1763 Woodward Heights, Ferndale, wil | be sentenced May 17 for the} 34,098.46 holdup of a Huntington Woods supermarket last March 10. He was found guilty Friday by a circuit court jury before Judge Frank L. Doty and was returned to Oakland County Jail until sen- tence. A store employe picked Court- ney out of a police lineup after his arrest March 14 by Huntington Woods Police and also identified him in court as one of two men who entered the store with drawn guns A John Doe warrant has been is- sued for the arrest of another “s&s |p. m. at Marimont Baptist Church, Pictures of his recent trip to! with burial in Oakland Hills Ceme- Mexico will be narrated by W. tery. The Rev. David Mortensen Carleton Scott at tomorrow's noon of Marimont Church will officiate. luncheon meeting of the Exchange | The body is at Sparks-Griffin Fu- Club, at the Community House. | neral Home. _ ss | Pallbearers will be Abe Mossey. Charles Savage. boat president | andrew Montgomery, Guerney of the Kiwanis Club, wi! take Over | Wolverton. Curt Persinger. Irving tomorrow's 6:30 ._p. m. business : meeting at*the Community House. |Parker and Odell Lippard. President Clifford Wright is at- tending the national convention in|? U.M Professors suing screens and drop are: |Balk at Clardy Quiz! peries will be used to vary the seven interiors at Wednesday's spring benefit interior decora- tion show, sponsored by the local (Continued From Page One) quest was granted and the | cameras focused on members of U. 8. Army in World War Mand (aay at 2 p. m. from Donelson- suspect American Association of Univer- | the committee, Johns Funeral Home. Masonic | graveside services will be con- }ducted, and burial will be in the | Andersonville-Cemetery. Donald, Ronald Scruggs | Prayer service was held today j}from the Frank Carruthers Fu- | Sr Home for Donald and Ronald: Scruggs, twin sons of George and Goldie Shannon Scruggs of 203 Rockwell St. Burial was in Oak Hill Cemetery. | The infants were stillborn at the Pontiac General Hospital Friday. Surviving besides the parents are two sisters and a brother, George, Lena, and Ella Valinda all at home. Elver David Ward Elver David Ward, 66, of 271% N. Saginaw St., died at the Pontiac General Hospital Saturday. He was born in Rockford, Ohio, jon Dec. 15, 1887, the son of William |K. and Celina J. Peters Ward. Last employed as a cement fin- Wayne Gabert Will Give You TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE for Your Old Washer—Regerdiess of age or condition toward PURCHASE OF A BRAND NEW ~ Deluxe Washer a0 The Weather age | The professor said he had been | isher. Mr. Ward had lived here Bruce B. Bradshaw of a Detroit employed at the University of | for 30 years. EXACTLY AS PICTURED | department store is producing and Pro VICINITY —Partly | cloudy, tonight. and’ Twenaay. | ‘deat. | describing the show at 2 p. m. a bit warmer wonder. " migh 87 te 60, | 0M the Cranbrook gymnasium stage, West to northwest winds 16 te 15 miles; which will be framed to look like oll yl tonight becoming sertherly a giant shadow box. | Proceeds will be used for scholar- ships, international fellowship and FY) wy |community projects. Tickets may Direction’ weet ns “eloeity 1@ ™ DD! be obtained through /AUW mem- Sun sets Monday at 7:41 ag bers or at the door. a.m P e Teday in Pontiae Lowest temperature preceding 8 am /at John Hopkins, leading up to a Michigan School of Medicipe since 1951. He earned his medical degree at the University of Utah in 1950 and previous to that he had studied doctor of science degree. He earned his master’s degree at Brown University. He said he was born in Minnesota in 1916. Dr. Nickerson said that during Surviving are three sisters and one brother, Mrs, Anna Case of Powell, Ohio, Mrs. Maude Pardner, Mrs. Ellen Cowan and Grover C., all of Breckenridge, Tex. The body is at thé Pursley Fu- neral Home. Larry E. Williams Regular Price . . 4] 39” Trade-In..... 30” Sun rises Tuesday at §:1 } ben be Moon rises Monday at 12:58 p.m. ~ | his stay at Johns s was| Prayer service was held this Wringer Moon sets Tuesday at 2:07 a.m Mrs. Mefrili C. Adams emploved te rt ge ma-| afternoon from the William F. Costs You \ Today! . Downtown Temperatures | Service for Mrs, Merrill C. | terial “which at the time was Davis Funeral Home for Larry E. $ ees =Aaing es - a satin i (Vanche E.) Adams, 66. of 583 thought to be useful in chemical Williams, infant son of Joe and ees eer eee 33 N. Woodward, will be at 3 p. m. warfare. He did not further identify | Nettie Mae Powell Williams, of 38 dhe cate ~ Painaaiemer aah i Bang at Bell Chapel of the! the material. Lake St. Burial was in Oak Hill Only ' mene ‘illiam R, Hamilton Co., with bur- Cemetery ale : Sendey in Pontion |tal at White Chapel “Memorial _ Me added he had passed a se. | The baby, who was born here ; Highest \auamnnes bpninansieta Ssewsts ss | Cemetery. | curity clearance but that he did March 3, 1954, died in Pontiac Kiaeee temperature: 2000 Bh] Mrs, Adams, wife of the vice) "ot know who had cleared him. | General Hospital last Monday,| * Double Bowl Tubs = * Immediate Delivery Weather—Fair. , president of the Birmingham Na-| Before starting the testimony, | after a two-week illness. * Aluminum . i ger bes bene tional Bank. died Saturday at St.|the committee excused Nathaniel | Surviving besides the parents! Agitator — -* New Sefety Swing Wringer Highest tempersture.............+.+-. s3| Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac Coburn, associate professor of| are three sisters and a brother, * Automatic Timer Lowest temperature..:..:........::.. $1] following a brief illness. | mathematics at the University of | Ruth Ann Powell, Audrey Powell, _ ond the Tension, wt towns Born in Defiance, %hio, Mrs.| Michigan, who had been sub-/ Gloria Mae Williams and Joe Wil- : et ad ein er beer TH) Adams had lived here for 22 years. | poenaed. Committee staff members | liams Jr.. all of Clarksdale, Miss. 90 mm 1936 29 tm 1923 sn was a member of First Pres-' said they had investigated his Sunday's Temperstere Chart _byterian Church and the Rotary claim of illness and had found it ‘ Rattle Creek 60 32 Lansing so 33| Anns. to be true. Prof. Coburn, however, Man Gets Probation : yr - ‘ : Bismark 61 les 65 54 b ; . Pe Ay 8 Saat ett~hushand..she ig sur. was held under subpoena. | Edward Banteld’ >t S sag Miam st 73) vVived by three daughters, Mrs heer of =~ Ee ‘ ‘s , Se a ee - , ‘ale w i he : . Peng . { ; : ; son St.. was las i Cateage s ie Rew Grieans 3 és | Robin Adair of Birmingham, and Flying fox camps in Queensland, | for three years today by Circuit Your Electrical Appliance Specialist Cuscianatt 3 New 3g, Mrs. John L. Talbott and Mar- Australia, contain up to a quarter | Judge Frank L. Doty for the sta- : Phone 546 Detrent “ —. 95 | Jorie L., both of Denver, Colo.; a of a million foxes. One acre of tutory rape of a 14-year i. wash machine. Complete with brass ° Slik ures hn Ali Styles. ty Useful Chenitie hot pads with c that well. Aad it makes you look Begins Today 4 couplings. : eee Sterilizer 1° ee cae oak on wan T 5 { . . , , mbeam Shaver Cord .......... . a cae eae ee | © Mix Hot and Cold Water Without : . 7 ‘eee hang-up loop ee a | Junior gue Holds $ Costly Plumbing Installation ¢ > By) S MA S make your skin salvar end ee Water Mixer H : 0 Sapien ne FLOOR SPECIALS emoother looking. $1 plus tax. Pre-School Program|; Water er mose Yes cnn RAPPPPPPPPPSSSSPSSSSSSSS bey at Stevens Hall 1$ c ee : ~——— - (¢ Regular 38 . | ae ° Slight Irregulars of $1.00 2 Youngsters were lined up to re- | 4 $1.59 S ll J, t5 ° ‘ ur ceive free sight tests this morning | © ~ eller Vie ae te . ye” SX when the Pontiac Vision — : Use 2 water fo | : E L A S T | C S U P P '@) i T S Ledies’ Full Fashioned : Cent opened its doors for a regula bs) . in the laun- See NO yv . LIQUID three-day stay here at Poi : oo washing, ete. Sim- = ret — : A. R MEN & V MEN : > MAKE-UP Hal. All Saints Episcopal Church, | § an, : badd dd OF BAUER & BLA Nylon Hosiery illiams Sts. Nest suPPOR . Vision tests for children between | $ eh {{@ Second = § _ TS your pos BASHC STOCKINGS the ages of 3 and 5 are being given Ses Flees 6 ee patel easier’ ape d 4 Ph ticals | there from 9:30 to 4:30 today, Stvest BROTHER | es ' c Cc ca , , , exclusive et es Registered Pharmacists. —— ae eel = ecccccccoccccccoccccocesococcccococcccee ee oa pa | rs t ss ei isi = | @ Savings 10% to 40% Whea Your Prescription LOWER i Is Filled by Simms ..+ ONLY _ DIFFERENCE _— SUPER-SIZE Bring your films to Simms for faster service... 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor appointment is needed. the League volunteers welcome the tots and introduce them to the “sight games’ which constitute the examination. The Snellen sec- tion of the Massachusetts Vision Test is the one used. No diagnosis is made, but chil- dren whose vision is found to be faulty are referred to the family eye doctor for treatment. No eye drops are administered and the skilled workers are adept at mak- ing the tots feel at home. : The center is serviced by @ Cleaning Aids for: Home or Auto Generous size — average 30 inches. sa in time for Spring . ) SSSSSSHSSSSHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSEOCOESCSSESESES SOSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSOSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSOSSSSSSEHSSSSESSSSSSSOOSSESSSESOSEOSESESEESE ANOTHER SHIPMENT—Same Low Price Lifetime All Glass , Bird House} | Regulation WREN-SIZE Entrance 2 FOR 87c MAIL ORDER Add 5c ea. Exactly as pictured. Easy to hang anywhere, life- time all-glass with metal bottom and hang - up bracket SPECIAL PURCHASE! If Perfect Would Be $2.00 VALUES Scissors Tonite G Tuesday Only finishing flaws. $6.00 Goren! #78 B56 to $2.25 SUSPENSORIES 7 models to U7 EE 75¢ to $1.75 Hau’ $1.20 to $2.45 allowing normal mobility. = — $1.50 each {(@ BROTHERS fects bet the child reaches PRICES ccbeel age. Original c sony nen say ANKLETS & KNEECAPS friend] mosphe . - wearing « Toviees peta ee aan Hall,» trained Jenier VALUE => a ae 16-Ribbed 1 94 3 different styles ankle or knee NJ Drug De pt. ly CALCIUM—+0 important te humen health thet if your diet is deficient in this element over a period of time NEW PEP...NEW STRENGTH...NEW LIFE! For These Whe Need 2 Dietary Supplement of Calciem. iron, ledine and Other Wiserais or Vitemins Stert tedey te protect yourself against deficiencies of coicium, iron, lodine, ether minerels aad vitemias which mey be the couse of complicated ills or body in the form of hemoglobin to carry the oxygen to your lungs, to all the tissues of your body end pict up waste. It is necessery thet red blood cells constantly be replaced. C.L.V. Tablets supply the accepted daily minimum adult dietary require- ments for iron. 51 Geuge—15 Denier All the most popular shades and colors. You'll love their sheerness and fit. All sizes 8'2 to 11 SOSOSOSSSSSSSHSSSSSHSHSSHSSOESESESESESESESES Regular $2.88 and $3.89 Value! Ladies’ Umbrellas Style in these Your chorce Some Gay, colorful plaids sturdy umbrellas at this low price in cases For Ladies Who Carry Their Lunch! Colorful—Draw String Style SHAR Lunch Ki Wik, -unch Kits “989 Pouch without Bottle... 97e style, metal lined, Fabric in plaid plastic effect, in Matching ‘2 Pint Vacuum Bottle Drawstring pouch available with or without bottle choice of colors. Easy to clean BABY NEEDS The ‘No-Pin’ Way to Diaper Your Baby y Cc Prints Chamois CHOICE OF 2 STYLES NANCY DIDEE A Sender tte HIE Se, 39° _ 69° 7 Diaper Holder Size sharper prints. . . Perfect cutting edges and IRON—Rich. red bl = . ’ eater savings. = : ood—e require- er poirits but classified as at te vibrent heelthtul living le No Fuss! seconds” because of minor provided by the iron in the humen Holds all types of diapers and dise posaDies... snap on and off. Nancy no pins needed, they Soft, pliable Didee pants does not chafe, - made of boilable plastic. All sizes, 4 Infants’ Soft Flannelette * you may find yourself: Feeling age too soon, failing to get restful sleep, Wns onos ° easily out of breath, suffering from Why are So Many Sufferers from Pains of | +7 rirtton momestory dn: c Sponge aoe nervous and irritable, with dour 44 ittle teeth, ridges in nails, derme- > Oaliease Spence “ARTHRITIS, RHEUMATISM 222%!" Pemeerseeee BO y . e ‘or proper functioning of the thy- . . k t « C.1.V. Tablets supply the epprosi- reid gland and as a catelist for bet- eae OS eet OF he * : Turning to PRUVO for Sure Relief? mete amount of calcium you would ter assimilation of food ths price. Long sleeve style, with ’ 4 » + by drinking i ° . ™ tie front. No limit, buy as many . bd one quert of milk e : @! At Gest @ fow—then humdrede—then . . every day. They ere so economical Daily dietary supplements of the as iyou need © | the thousends the victions of arthritic end blond circulation "Tirees cumple reles'art | += | quart of milt alone will cost following minereh are lee included eae alia laden : seemnatio pata have turned to revo ited to chenme the pain-relieving er than the daily intake of C.1.V. in the superb C.1.V. Formule. S| Tablets for special soothing relief. eflects of PRUVO Tablets. ich furnith not leium but S| er oes He sy er tnt many ret | Fon inine and cn ‘in mins COPPER — SULFUR — MANGA. 8 Ps wa va fang — a mum daily adult requirements. NESE — FLUORINE — PHOSPHO- cule. sufler almost om. Lnagr thousands RUS — BIOTIN — RUTIN — CHO- e . pein in arms, neck, are living « better life with PRUVO — © | beck. Ings — you too may right today only $1.50 for the trial sim bottle of 75 LINE — INOSITOL - ZINC @/| change course life by tablets — and if you do not start getting $ | turning to PRUVO tor quick soothing pain relief before using half the tablets All of these elements supplied with @) relief. therapy is so sound just return the balance and your money consistent regularity go to make up bd a Sareea as © fan mate will be refunded in full by PRUVO. Your the complete di supplement 4 See ee saree So pees goed tedoment. druagiot bes FRUVO — end you don't —- ietery . Popular Oval Shape 8 | vicious cycle of pain — | Ad y-5- eR - SETTER SAFE THAN SICKE——™ ee Baby Bath $| Bre the 2 pam ot & rmecles coun Don't give up! No matter what you have VITAMINS—A prolonged deficien- at Ee Training Pot KnLS WEEDS AS PAST AS YOU WALK $| fesin trom movement. This inactivity com tavw — give the PRUVG pain relict pro, | <7 of vitemine leaves the system in | subeticute. With C.I'V. Tubes 26-tach $459 exe piate patton wonky | | Se see cee ec ee eee mee |e west cantina mee | pa ae Designed for ae .. Release... ° oly - . requirements established i Save of oat (.4-D or other wend ° PRUVO offers the longest last tor cxnteal of arthritic, rheumatic and the full benefits of vitemins con be c. a, ton ie Gee Easy Training ’ killer) 4 used ° Sg ym known oy = “on ty Gunesine ty. « — reelized. vitemine. Give CLV. a fair 25 Inch Baby Bath... .. $2.79 close be — Cy Rw ° Frente, completely harmon all ~ sen nee Seems in That is why C.I.V. Tablets ore made j noe Gut en ocean better Broad, sfoped, comfortable rim § Wide rolled edge for extra sate~ of durable plastic and brea. @| Siticylemide with 6 times the ensiguic ig talit Sart teaeyt #1 © complete mineral-vitemin die- || maining tamiets to CLV. Mn. ee Oe Laden ee P4 ae 6 es woe Som — ee emg » PRUVO is the only medice- tery suppl + and include: waukes, Wis, obtain full re- ior for easy cleaning. ; | Exactly os $] 95 $ | Directions with each bottle tell you how dhents Ci gone yun ash "Fe 00, “ee Vitemia A — Vitemin Bt — Vitemin Pictured e e > get Gp treet ae eneemane & $3.00, not $5.00 — bet just $1.50 for the 82 — 812 — Calcium — Vitamin 86 | $, aches and pains fade away, it is ' trial size pe igen J drug — =Vitemin C = Vitemia D — Liver TT 3) Sheer Tidet neene—enay movement "ae at $4.00 and the Heaptletine-|- Ziel k— B RS a SIMAS ( © , of the affected areas. is the way to Sine at $7.50, joreme — Folic acid — Yoast— , air 5 A ' = pe ROTHER S See ° tren — ledine 98 N. Saginew —Main o of Seginaw —2nd Floor ° > m2 oe - ™. Secccbesschcobocsececs Simme Bree. —. 96N.Seginew — Mein Floor 98 N. Saginaw St. Pontiac's Bargain Store | ’ Sig - 4 ) \ i 7 ? THE’ PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 Envoys to Get Promotions *Pective diplomatic representa-| Instructor Ends Lecture | tions from legation to embassy . . CAIRO, Egypt @—Egypt and jevel, an Egyptian Foreign Office With Graphic Example the Vatican plan to raise their re-' source said today. SAN FRANCISCO # — Con ——— |Dempsey, former Pittsburgh Pi- rate and San Francisco Seal hurl- er, told his junior high school phy-| | sical education class: | ‘Knowing how to jump and how | to fail is important." Then he stepped back, tripped | over a mat, fell and broke his NEW and USED REFRIGERATORS FOR ONE OF THE BEST MY 3-3711 DEALS IN TOWN CALL SHICK’S APPLIANCE 331 South Broadwey Lake Orion Our Former Price $20 - $25 OUR PRICE NOW ONLT— “THE GOLDENTONE” . , ° , America’s Most Popular Ladies’ Glasses! The tremendous larity of the Goldentone ts due te its eye appeal te all women regardiess of age or the occasion. Styled in the upsweep manner, with ite exquisitely hammered 12-karet gold-filled trim it is truly America’s leadin lady. You may choose the Goidentone from a wide assortment of colors, rs best ef all, the price ts only $8.98. YOU JUST CAN'T PAY MORE! ALL GLASSES ONE PRICE... . $8.98! Bisewhere the price of glasses depends on the variance and strength of your lenses and upon the frame of your choice At King you know in sdvance what your glasses will cost. One single -66.06 ce regardiess of your lens require- ment, or the frame of your choosing. (Bifecals, if desired, $4.86 additional) 100 STYLES, SHAPES AND COLORS! @ FOR MEN ¢ FOR WOMEN @ FOR CHILDREN Price Includes Frames oné Lenses! Presertption SUNGLASSES You may choose the Goidentone or select a frame te sult your personality and At Game Low Price facial contour from our tremendous assortment of frames and gold-filled mount- NO MORE NO LESS COMPLETE WITH FRAMES AND LENSES ings in various shapes, sizes and colors—ell at one price, 66 WHY PAY MORE? Though the price ts low, the quality of our NO SWITCHING! YOu CAN'T PAY mong! glasses is beyond. compare If we wanted te yecllncl, asta ay hon a ee ee eyes make glasses to sel) for $35.00. we couldn't we ## se eseaeemses # "Tv vvrrrrrrrryY,Y finer materials or better workmanship than that NO EXTRAS! $1,000.00 REWARD: which goes inte these glasses. -_o 4 4 . > We will pay $1,000.00 te 4 > anyone whe can pur- 4 > ehase glasses here for 4 > more than the price 4 ; quoted in this advertise- 4¢ ; : 4 4 4 4 NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED! ment Reward offer guaranteed by two lead- ing Lendon, Englaad Insurance Companies ~wwrrerereee,.* wrewvrvweerere., ~werereerveeeeeftr,* wewevwree''-verrery OPTICIANS — OVER 3,000,000 SATISFIED CUSTOMERS re OCLUISTS’ REPAIRS 3% S. SAGINAW ST, Metre? A. M.-5:30 FM Dally Inet. wed. tong = feng A ae & Sat.—Open Friday Nighte ‘8 F. M. Phene: FEdersl 6-0681 "~ tg _ 2 Deere Se. of Pike & Sag. Bast Side of e 4. ie « Ger. Gaginew cad Pike Ste. =, "54 Ficer Nest te Measchelé Finabee Branches In Many Principal Cities in the U. 5. and Canade SAME — Yeur Frames repaired reser thea ) BASE ties. Alt Glasses UNION MADE FOUNDED 1906 ‘Anti-Red Feelings Delay Ballet Opening |} season but there was no indica- j tion of what they might decide. |ernment was afraid bitter feelings | over the fall to the Communists of j ' } gq t MEET SENATOR — Charies Garcia (left), safety |boys are Virgil Zanardelli of St. Lawrence School, Oldtimers Meet Tonight Pontiac Oldtimers’ Baseball -As- sociation will hold a meeting to- night at 8 p.m. at the Veterans of One Full Yeor Guerantee . |] From Houses, Apartments, Gro- Foreign Wars Hall, 396 South Sagi cery Stores and Restaurants, Re- naw street. Business will include || main out only three hours. No plans for forming a ladies’ aux- |] signs used - iliary and reports on a recent drive to collect funds to sponsor Rox Ex Com J 1014 Pent. St. Bk. Bidg, FE 4-002 a teen-age baseball league. ESTABLISHED IN 1910 A. ELBLING & SONS Oil and Gas Burners Oil and Gas Furnace Oil and Gas Boilers Oil Water Heaters FE 4-1504 TivVenRen Sil née hule salle ‘- 4% OL mew 73 S. Parke St. a patrol boy from Pontiac's Wilson School, and two | Utica, and Thomas Coats (right) of Clawson Public | companions meet Sen. Homer Ferguson (R-Mich) | the Automobile Club of Michigan. The other patrol ®ttended the 18th annual affair. Halian Jet Plane Falls, |! 8 steep angle through the roof and into the office of plant man- Rams Coca Cola Factory jor Antonio Mercio. An account- NAPLES, Italy uw — An Italian | ant in the office was killed. Mercio : - Air Force jet plane spun out of | “4% uninjured. . PARIS —The French govern-| s formation today and crashed in-' _ ment postponed the Russian ballet lies a Coca Cola bottling plant, kill- GooD-BYE CORNS troupe's Paris opening again to-| ing the pilot and an office worker,| Enjoy quick relief end day. There was speculation the | Nine other workers were seriously | corns with thin, widely - awaited performances | injured by explosion and flames| ‘4 Dy. Gebel's Bias might not be held at all. following the crash. 4. Representatives of the govern- The stricken. plane, trailing D Scholls Zino pads ment and the Russian embassy smoke, plummeted into the plant School. The boys were among 115 from Michigan who | ' ! More Important DONT GAMBLE Than Ever WITH MOTHS Moth Proof Protection Part of Our Cleaning Process Store Winter Woolens PICK-UP & DELIVERY GENEY DRY CLEANERS 12 West Pike Street Phone FE 5-6107 conferred about a new starting — date for the visitors’ three-week Unofficial sources said the gov- Dien Bien Phu would produce anti- Red demonstrations. Princess, Actor to Wed | ROME W — Princess Giovanna Pignatelli and French actor Georges Brehad announced their engagement last night at a recep- tion .attended .by members of | Rome's nobility, diplomatic corps | and theatrical set. Cut out those tring «= \, \ fo the tank... Buy ao Modern ELECTRIC WATER HEATER —> EE, SEE YOUR DEALER or Detroit Edison Get tid of your old-fashioned woter heater sofa bed Trimly_ styled tapestry © vith decorative Ort Cover: omfortable bed. 6-Pc. Sofa Bed Group ony $QO9 Extraordinary! You soy — and it’s true! This wonderfully handsome, completely practical group—priced so invitingly. Chonges from smart sitting room to comfortable bedroom in minutes. Buy now—save! AMPLE FREE PARKING! EASY TERMS! YEARS OF SERVICE place your heater where you wish. THOMAS _ FURNITURE CO. 361 South Seginew Street 8 MODERN — ~ 4IVE BLECTRICALLY - Y 7 * = , ‘ < . ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 ee te a Keep Sons i in 1 State, nits Haya petted Baer Actor Asks’ Court (rors SF But on Saturday her estranged Racine —— [husband, actor’ Jess Baker,” fled sition to her plan to take her 9 an affidavit saying the boys should year-old twin sons with her to ei\™= be taken out of the public movie location at St. George, | school they attend. Miss Hayward Utah, had said she would provide a ‘tutor _ to keep up their school work. A hearing .on the matter has LOOK ? been set for May. 19. bad Barker previously obtained a Bring This Coupon court order preventing removal of the twins from the state. A divorce 00 trial for the couple has been set Worth $3 5% for June 14 No Time Limit/ ON SAVINGS PLAN te Cheops in Egy pt was originally 3 Hudson Household Co. feet higher than it is now. When 39@ Nelson St. | first built thousands of years ago, Puli Line of Household it was 481 feet, almost 200 feet | Necessities | higher than the Capitol building in The Great Pyramid of Khufu or | Ww ashington.— _ — } Television! Washers! Ranges! Sweepers! Rejrigerators! Radios! | ae CS an Take your choice’ New—Crate Marred! Floer Samples—Re possessions! | a <= F * Ray. ri . ; Used —Trade In-Rejects! {ll in good condition’ | oh, ! PLAN OUTING—These Eastern Junior High School students trace the route to Sleeper State Park where they and 46 other students will take | Pert in a — a outdoor education sores - Myrna —_ of 210 Whittemore St Regular 69c Genuine , starting Saturday. They are (left to right) Elwin Lapa . 10° | Beaty, of 385 Ferry St: Sue McMahan, of 48 ECKO SPATULAS W hile They Last Vou ee Auburn Ave.; Roy White, of 66 8S. Reselawn Dr., WASHERS and DRYERS! 50 Junior High Students tr ‘tees, ts Seer | ()3-keo 179.95 Easy Spindriers—new, slightly Larvick and Ronald West ‘ , to Study Nature for Week. Coonpleting. the et of students scratched |. 428.00 il be Don Smith, Ralph Ferdon —— ; ' Eastern Junior High School pu- er forecasting forestry game pirates aie Douglas Lucas ae 319. 00 Bendix Gyromatic Washer, 3 months fa oar papas or cn Sal-| fish, soil conservation, compass | Dale Mellon, Roy White, Larry | old, completely automatic 218.00 . urday tor a week's trip to Sleeper) instruction, compass hikes and na-! Colbert. Richard DeCea. Ronald 4 a State Park, Caseville, to parti ‘ture appreciation hikes Hopp, Jack Pyle and Cecil Dum- 3— Reg. 289. 95 New 1954 Easy Automatic Washers, citpate in an outdoor education Those attending will be Mary | brigue crate marr | FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION aves ro a vs Ann Leonard, Pat Tate? Flien Tay H a a bie f eae ha 199 soe . 198.00 The 30 eighth graders, will be jor Ann Whiting, Lona Lambdin, ; = t Poin tr ryer = OO 1-0" 17 is vOUR fam HORE j; accompanied by five faculty su- aevaty Gicmais. Shain hauney. Boy, 11, Swallows Pin flo, t , ectric ye eg 95 new, . | pervisors Beverly Ledford. Georgia Humph- @$ Reflexes Get Mixed oor samptie , 158.00 . Edwin N. Rydetl, director, wit "ey and Judy Harmes GRAND RAPIDS ®# — Inhaling 1—Bendix Automatic Dryer, Reg 239 95—new, be aided by Jean Kimple, Others going are Carol Olson.| .p., he should have exhaled lah Chartes Beyette, Mrs. Charles Donna Pruett, Karen Green, Jtine |) aed t1-vear old Anthony Wolfet StIg tly marred _ 188.00 + Beyette, all of Eastern Junior Hirsh. Sandra Sommerville, Kar-| - - \ one 5 High, and Mrs. Ralph Water- (en Burnworth, Sue McMahan = a Mar) i —— _ _— 4— Reg. 239 95 Easy Automatic Dryers—crate | man, of Wilson School. Jeanette Ohanesian, Sharon Wall, |‘ Pit 18 Tus stomas marred, new _.. 128.00 A state forester, a park super- Myrna Light, Carolyn Knisely, Car- | The boy had been shooting pins intendent. a U. S. soils man and/|0l Hanson, Carol Ann Wells andj through a ay shooter at infates Used Woshers—wringers—spinners—outomatics— Glenn Husted, Wilson School prin-, Andrea Micu balloons and got his” reflexes our h - ‘cipal, will complete the list of Other junior campers will be, ™xed y cnoice 7 as . . 14.50 | Outside helpers on the conserva-| Earl Brown, Donald Lucas, Robert | | tion trip ‘Randall, Elwin Beaty, Dale Mal-) Salt is used in the treatment of ] —Reg. 299.95 1OFt Freezer, chest type, new, | The schedule will include weath- lett, Lynn Nelson, Chuck Johnson,! steel to produce a hard surface , ” ea a - —_——— - ee slightly scratched _. 238.00 1—Reg. 99.95 Hoover Bweecer—recondifioned ped _. . 38.00 Americas biggest track buys! | 7 netied Secret Sa w C rol T 1—Reg. 169.95 New 52 Gal. Electric Water Heater. ... 119.00 1—Reg. 99.95 30 Gal. Gas Hot Water Heater—new— crate marred | Jo... 98.00 Electric Motors—used—all running—for workshop— grinders—drills—pumps, etc. 1/4-1/6h. p. ...... 5.00 ea. In good condition and os q & New 1953 running order PHILCO : REFRIGERATORS! TV oa vin 165” Radio--Phono-Combo ave on those extr C a Se : des a @w refrig \ 0 ] — erator ro°ose ne of these "s Od -a8-new on NMiV « »« « buys TODAY' Only ?' 4 New 1954 Delure 10---Sweepers ! * u KELVINATOR RANGE 10---Radio-Consoles ! Reg. 259.95 .. 00 : Each len 00 now only , oe 188 Going Out at ] x a Piece! Waite's Warehouse — Next to AAA Office Across From Pontiac Hotel! e Instantly stops perspiration odor © Checks perspiration moisture A @ smooths shin beautifully € , , Cream ete | | a tat ears Deodorant % America’s lowest-priced truck line! | oa Come in and see how much more you get... how much less you pay... with America’s number one truck! By Tussy MOST TRUSTWORTHY TRUCKS ON ANY 508! { Big “$l.Jar! Smooth, fragrant Tussy Cream Deodorant gives daintiest protection throughout MA r ] H EWS .- HARGREAVES, INC E the longest doy! It instantly stops perspiration odor, checks perspiration moisture, So easy ‘to use; so safe for normal skin and filmiest fabrics. Keeps your underarms a!_smoo ' REE es x8 ED rahe b. we tesla : AR ST Be end AU niin Maes ee eee PONTIAC, WCHIGAN | Plus tox Rateibbieetteentantsie ce AAs ro Hi Waites Cosmetics—Street Floor 4 , Fy ; ar o ES int Co ee a ieee oa — = te “ hes 1 ell / , , i243 “ee —..—_... THE PONTIAC PRESS hope for a-solution of the Indochina Associa Press is entitled exclusively to the use ton nptiication of on locsl news in this pews- —— paper a carrier for 40 cents oe ee Poe ent bie by mail in MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 Pontiac’s School Problem Let's face it—Pontiac is going to have to do something about its growing school problem. In 10 years total school enroll- ment will have increased from the present 17,000 to 23,000. To provide facilities for these chil- dren the Board of Education has found that it would have to spend $9,000,000 on new buildings. * * * These would include a 48 room high school, 48 junior high classrooms, 115 grade school classrooms and 10 small gymnasium-auditoriums. The Board also needs more money because while operat- ing costs are rising, State aid isn’t and the operating account will be $685,000 in the red by July, 1955. * * * That is why the Board of Edu- cation is asking school district voters to approve on June.14 an increase in school millage. Briefly, it needs an increase of 6.25 mills for the next three years and 8.75 for the following seven. The net increase would be about $4 on each $1,000 assessed valuation. We believe the Board is fully justified in asking this increase. As President Grirrin put it, Pontiac has come to the end of the road under our present school millage. * * * In fact, we don’t see how the district can afford to turn down this proposal. We are in the very center of the area likely to feel the greatest impetus from construction of the St. Lawrence water- way. We urge all school district electers te give this matter seri- © ous thought. The problem isn’t going to solve itself. Either we solve it or pay the price of the only alternative -—half day ses- sions and lower standards of public education. U.S. Indochina Policy Because of its timing, just after the fall of Dien Bien Phu, Secretary DuLLEs’ speech on the U. 8. position in the Indo- china crisis is important to all Ameri- cans. The address possessed an ad- ditional quality of timeliness because it was given on the eve of the opening of Indochina truce talks at Geneva. * * * Both our Secretary of State and an unusual Saturday session of the Secur- ity Council pointed to the direction of Administration policy. No announce- ment came from the Council meeting but Mr. Duties dealt frankly with the situation in his nationwide broadcast. He expressed confidence that negotiations now under way with 10 friendly nations would result in a coalition to save Southeast Asia from the Reds. But the Secretary made no effort to hide facts. He admitted that this coalition might involve “serious commitments by us all.” * * * Then came the most important part of the speech —the conditions under which the United States could enter such a coalition. First, Congressional approval would have to be given. Second, there would have to be adequate collec- tive effort. “adequa lective effort,” the American people have a right to expect a more equal sharing of the burden than was the case in the Korean War. te ye) atinamescid Failure at Geneva to get any place on the Korean settlement gives little of Lapeer: problem. In fact, Mr. DuLLEs conceded that the result there might be a truce | unacceptable to us or no truce at all. Either way, he said, the need for an anti-Communist coalition would be all the more urgent. Let's not delude ourselves — the fall of Dien Bien Phu has strengthened the Reds’ bargain- ing position, not the West’s. U.S. Butter for Britain There is hope for a sizable reduction of the Government’s surplus butter stock in negotiations Secretary BENson is con- ducting with Britain. Our Secretary of Agriculture wants to sell about 40,000,000 pounds of it to our transatlantic cousins. If completed, this deal would reduce the butter surplus of 364,000,000 pounds by 11 per cent. * * * Basis of negotiations 1s a proposed sale at the world market price of 47 cents a pound. While this is consider- ably below the average domestic retail price of 63 cents, it will cause no loss to American housewives. Under our pres- ent price support system we can’t have cheaper butter and our surplus can’t be thrown on the domestic market. * * * Existing conditions, therefore, eliminate the question of whether it is wise to sell this butter to a a friendly country. Our only choice is either to do that or let the butter spoil. Moreover, sale of it not only will save the taxpayers money by cutting the cost of price support, but help clear the way for a new policy that won't stimulate the accumulation of surpluses. We’tt praise the energetic ant, But emulate his ways we shan’t. ———————EEEEe The Man About Town Pontiac; Lake Port That Was Plan Under Way in City’s Early History Daffynition Old age: Something others reach long before you think you do. The assured building of the St. Lawrence Seaway brings to mind the fact that when Pontiac was first settled in 1818, there was a plan to . It was to be on a system of Michigan canals, the first of which was actually built from . Clair toa point near Manager of the Detroit Red Wings champion hockey team, Jack Adams, tells of being introduced at a Michigan banquet (not in Pontiac) as having been “formerly born in Canada.” Here in the Pontiac Press office we like to receive letters like one from Elaine Garrett, pupil in grade 6 of Webster School: “Our class enjoyed the tour through your plant and was .. amazed at the work that goes into just one day's _—_—_ In my last conversation with our Congressman George A. Dondero, he said, “I'll never be happy until the St. Lawrence Seaway is assured."’ So, George now has a smile even wider than usual. Nominated for Oakland County’s oldest active man is E. 8S. Ladd of Milford, 87 years of age. During his recent hospitalization, the Detroit poet, Edgar A. Guest, received flowers with the simple card, ‘Pontiac admirers.” Eddie now says he’s glad he has some admirers here, and wishes they would identify themselves, so he can acknowledge the gift. Pontiac residents who formerly lived in Millington (and there are said to be many of them) are requested to send their names and addresses to Kenneth Kennedy of that village. so they can be invited to a centennial banquet. That ever observant Lapeer newsman, Bill Myers, . reminds us that when a man tries to tuck in his shirt tail he always boosts up his shoulders, making the task more difficult. A thief with an evident patriotic instinct broke into the car of Harry Reed in Detroit the other night, stealing a flashlight, - but leaving Reed's navy uniform and hats un- molested. Verbal Orchids to— The Romeo Observer-Press; entering its eighty-eighth year of publication. of Holly; golden wedding. Cynthia Spencer birthday, ___'THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 LEIS HOPE WE CAN i(‘é‘S TAT RCT RG HDNE A LONGPERIOD «= WS OF TAS SORTOF ws TRANQUILITY’ / ¢ YOU KNOW WHATSq,;7 anh | “WE ONLY REASON | RAN WAS BECAUSE YOu GHP6ED Me /“ Voice of the People Victor Woods Praises Brotherhood Spirit Displayed in Benefit Concert . There is a project I feel the en- tire city of Pontiac can be proud - of. The MacDowell Male Chorus is giving a concert at Trinity Baptist Church with all of the proceeds munity where many elements are at variance, it is reassuring to know that there are groups of in- dividuals who practice the spirit of true brotherhood in their every- day lives. This spirit is certainly-in accord with our basic concept of democ- racy..It is also in strict adherence ‘Woe Begon’ Wants Jim He Claims Pvt. Schines Would Buy Enemy Off _GI says the U. S. would be in a bad way if we were attacked by invaders and our whole army was made of Schines. Wait a min- ute. He'd buy ‘em off and send everyone home happy. “sz "Nother GI THOUGHTS FOR TODAY there are broken walls and ruined buildings to return it, so is sorrow March of Reds in Asia Closely Parallels Hitler’s Goosestepping Into the Rhineland By DAVID LAWRENCE GENEVA — This is May 1954 trolled today by a Communist gov- ernment, and there would have been no Communist control of i i | f fH! i ; Hi A: tf HE SEF 238 War I and they believed another fighting has been (in munists Lie deepeenea. HiDHane Hi flute | jute i “Long drawn out itish public : and i E #3 cz : i cf i E : i it i Fa § i i ceilt ee HEL r : i ‘me see Dr, Brady Talks of Growth of Tissues, a stop to the war in Indochina i it | Eisenhower's words, the cork in the bottle. If it falls to the .Communists the insurrection in Malaya, spread- Indonesia, spilling over Case Records of a Psychologist Dieting More Difficult Than to Stop Smoking You can’t feel like a sports roadster with the chassis of a truck! So try the diet plan and your husbands will give you real movie kisses again in- stead of dutiful pecks on the cheek! By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case L-301: Lorna L., aged 27, is a very attractive wife. “But, Dr. Crane, my husband says I am too fat,’ she protested, ‘and he may be right, for I now weigh 130. “So I suggested if he quit his cigarets, then I would go on your famous 10-day diet. “But he argues that it is harder to quit tobacco than to lose weight. Is that true?” Ne, it is more difficult te diet than to stop the liquor or the tabacce habits, For it is easier to break a bad habit by quitting it entirely, in- stead of tapering off. You can thus stop drinking or smoking, all at once. But you can't quit taking food or you'll die. The dieter simply tapers off to fewer or smaller meals. But this tantalizes his appetite. Furthermére, the smoker can substitute candy coated gum and Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER International News Service Through the herring-boning of televised eaves-dropping the pub- lic has had the opportunity of watching its government at work in the rumpus room. The Senate committee on Sen- ate committees challenged Sena-. tor McCarthy's committee to a drool to the death. This is the second time our photogenic solons have gone for a parliamentary stampede on the channeled rostrum. We prefer Kefauver’s unspon- sored charades to the siege of Fort Monmouth. We met more interesting people. Kefauver’s class in applied curi- osity were not camera hogs. They all wore expressions they could hide behind. Most. of them had a rubber- stamped education that spanned the trackless wastes from the back of their hands to their mouthpiece’s ear. What this gentle inquisition lacked was a capa>le like the late Senator Tobey. When visor This last visible committee was politer than a rich aunt's neph- ew. It cross-crossed points of From Our Files 15 Years Ago GERMAN GOVERNMENT .-.-- launches informal negotiations for trade pact with the United States. End of penalty duties is goal. 20 Years Age carry it in the same pocket where he formerly had his cigarets, un ne tata { i: r ; | i bi : ri 9 RR = i 28 j i a 255 5 4 5 + i ‘ r if : i i oF SE i i I i ing away till she had gulped down 83 grams of wheat. Seo don’t sit in of Thanks- nd a ‘ ¢; : t i i H g I 3 8 | rie 4 H j Har ate ir : “F . eid rielingt 1 we h ri lee itt t i f EH z gi z es 4 Also Benign and Malignant Degeneration ts a F gale i vrtteity 4 ita Ie beplta| | : iff i Z sf ad generation and ene See eae eae SOY ane of Metchnikoff’s The Pro- poe gy me be vag hom gwd rl Putnam's Sons, New York, "10)—the |‘ professor turned up his toes at the tender age of Ti—I as- sert, in heavy type, please, print- ers The main cause of physical de- wa f pe ye ey SEVEN: a heartburn and gassy ins. Mioty. Pleasant-tastiag. Get ums today Sed only 10¢ © fof Tums foe THs TummY \'No Raid’ Pact |the board members would decide Both For 912° Matching Wedding | al: in 14K gold. Jewelry Department GEORGE'S NEWPORT'S ROYAL OAK OFFICES of the most modern design, near bank, P. O. City Building and parking. Space still available for discriminat- ing tenants. Reasonable! SMITH-BISSCHOP CO. WO 2-3666 STENOTYPE easy te ClO to Push has been kicked around for many months appeared likely to get a new shot in the arm at a special CIO Executive Board session to- day. Advance word from CIO infor- mants was that, barring an upset, to ask the AFL to go ahead at once with the labor peace plan negotiated last fall by the rival labor groups. The agreement would bind a un- ion in one federation against seek- action. There remained the possibility of some powerful opposition, how- ever. The ClO ‘steelworkers headed by David J. McDonald, one of the CIO's largest unions, may balk at approving. The Pittsburgh Post- Gazette reported yesterday that the steelworkers would balk. McDonald had a private talk here 10 days ago with Dave Beck, FEDERAL’S the WINNERS of its Grand Opening contests! GRAND PRIZE: 1954 BUICK salutes Cecilie McDonnell, 4627 Buckinghem, Detroit 24 WRINGER WASHER Cameron 7816 Pie Se. Detrea 9 DINETTE SET TS TELEVISION Mrs. Werd A. Snider 26 Jettersen SEWING MACHINE Mrs. Lionel B. Quelle 19381 Vetrebeck Detroi 19 RADIO Mes. Earl Gray 4469 17th Street Wryendotte CARPETING John J. Osowske 820 Spencer Ferndele MISC. FURNITURE Mrs. Bernis Reif 161536 Luxemburg i dept. stores | FEDERAL dept. stores THE-PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 eh Sage” Se VERSATILE GLORIA—Actress Gloria Swanson | models a clay head of her daughter, Michelle, in her exhibits another facet of her versatility as she |New York apartment. Three Children Die 4 ° lagers WiedlUs kiDoaen in Fire, One Escapes|~°

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Empty, that is, except for a “A wedding an- niversary,” he said. “The gen- BILLY ROSE tleman at the head ef the table is Mr. Schill— he’s president of a big research laboratory. Next to him is his wife. and the rest are children and grandchildren.”’ A minute later; as I pretended to study the menu, the chef him- self wheeled in an enormous pink and white cake with lighted can- dies on it. Mrs. Schill took a deep breath and, with the help of a couple of the youngsters, finally managed to blow the candles out. Everyone at the table laughed and applauded, and someone yelled, “Speech!"’ The 6id lady get to her feet, looking a little teary. “Thanks, children,” she sald. “As you knew, I'm not one for making speeches. All I can say is — well, I've been very happy ever since I married your father forty years ago.” She sat down and her husband | stood up. It was obvious he was | feeling no pain. Not wobbly, but mellow as you can get this side of wobbly. “Friends, Romans, countrymen,” Mr. Schill began. “‘For the past thirty-nine years, your mother and I have been celebrating our wed- ding anniversaries in this very room, and my speech has always been pretty much the same, How we fell in love the first time we met, and how I wouldn't give her a moment's peace until she prom- ised to marry me, “Well, children, it so happens that nothing could be further from the truth, and-tonight,-with your mother’s permission, I'd like to set the record straight. “As you've all heard many times, When Mother and I first started keeping company, I was working as handyman for an old Dutchman who had a laboratory in an East Side basement. My pay was cight dollars a week. “On the other hand, your moth- er, I don't have to tell you, came It goes without saying that I loved her, but I didn’t like the prospect of from a well-to-do family. her having to support me. “So, being a proud sort of cuss, i decided one day to stop seeing | your mother. But she'd have none lof it. She used to phone me half a dozen times a day, and come | around to get me when I was | through working. And finally, when the date for our wedding was set, jit was she who set it as the big day ap | “Well, | proached, 1 got a bad case of neryes, I knew her father wasn’t too keen about his daughter mar- rying a nobody, who spent! his spare time puttering with a gad- get then called the wireless, In these days, and I can’t say I blamed them, a let of people thought Mr. Marconi’s dingus would turn out to be a dud.” Mr. Schill reached for his wine glass and took a sip. “hi couple of nights before the “I took | your mother for a walk on River- | side Drive and told her I couldn't go through with the marriage. To my surprise, she didn’t seem at all upset. “ ‘You're entitled to change your mind,’ she said, ‘but I'm sure you wouldn't want to make me look silly before my friends and rela- tives. Instead of you jilting, me, I'd appreciate it if you made it look as if I had jilted you.’ “Her plan was a simple one. The wedding would proceed on schedule, except, at the iast min- ute, the bride would fall to show CURRENT DIVIDEND RATE OF... Any Amount Opens an Account! ‘ it makes C-E-N-T-S to save where your dollars grow faster. Enjoy our higher rate of interest PLUS the security of Insured savings to $10,000. Tt ‘ } a, A Mutual Savings @ Home Loan Association , 16 East Lawrence Street—Pontiac Main Street—Rochester up. That way, there could be no question about who had jilted whom. “Naturally, I agreed, and on our wedding day I put on the striped pants and cutaway I had rented and went to the church. As the procession started, I stood at the altar with my best man. First "|came the flower girls’ in pink, and then rows and rows of brides- maids in blue — there were six- it-| teen of them. “Well, you can guess the end of the story. As the organist played | the wedding march, your mother, Creater of ‘Lil Abner Calls McCarthy a Poet world that isn't beautiful and he uses poetic license to try to create the beautifully ordered world of good guys and bad guys that he lall white lace and satin, came | ¥@"ts. down the aisle on her father’s| | He seems at his best when ter- arm, and the smile on her face | Tifying the helpless and naive,” was as sly as the one on the Mona | S4id Capp. Lisa. “There was nothing I could do. Had I made a bolt for it, they would have hung me from the organ pipes. “That,"’ concluded Mr. Schill, “is the story of how your mother, bless her treacherous little heart, double-crossed me forty years ago. And judging by the happy faces around this table, I would. say it was the most successful bit of bamboozling since Eve got Adam to eat that apple.” The old gentleman sat down, and his wife got to her feet. ‘I'd like to propose a toast to Mr. Marconi, and tell you a little se- cret,” she said. “In 1929, when the market crashed, your father saved my father, bless his soul, from going into bankruptcy. The money he lent him, and it was quite a lot, all came from a radio invention| Style" Na l'te teen” he dreamed up while he was work- Gaukler Storage 8 Orchard Lake Ave. Ne. 1 & Commealty You Don't Pay Mere OVER 100 STYLES and SHAPE * FULLY GUARANTEED ! * ist QUALITY LENSES! * SHOP US and COMPARE ! Repairs and Special Leases at Savings NU-VISION OPTICAL U0. ROOMS 2 AND 3 15 W. LAWRENCE 5ST. 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COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE 367 East Pike FE 4-0588 Four Are Killed in Jordan Clash 3 Israeli Soldiers Die, 2 Policemen Missing, One Farmer Dead JERUSALEM, w—Three Israeli soldiers and a Jordan farmer were reported killed in clashes along the Israel-Jordan frontier yesterday. Two Israeli policemen were re- ported missing and believed dead. Jordan officials said their forces killed an officer and a private from the Jewish nation in respuls- ing an attack by a band of 9% Israelis on the Jordan village of Illin, in the Hebron = = 7” The officials said the Israeli band fired on Jordan members of gate the incident. . . es The Jordanians also charged village, in Jordan's northern sec- tor. Across the frontier, an Israeli spokesman said a force of armed Jordanians invaded Israeli teri® tory near Khirbet Ayalin, in the south Judean mountains, wounded two Israeli policemen and took them into Jordan. Later, he said, a Jordan broadcast reported two Israelis — believed to be the po- licemen — had been found dead on the Jordan side of the frontier. = - ° In another statement the Israeli army said raiders from Jordan attacked an army post in the same area late yesterday with mortars, killing one Israeli soldier and Buying a New Does your cash book look like this? \ 7; LORS. | ay The Loan Best for conveniently located branches. With Branches at N. PERRY at GLENWOOD ’ Out of City Branches WALLED LAKE Publisher, The Pontiac Press W. Russell Eames Fames & Brown President, Olancy, Inc. Harry Or a New Car? It’s Easy With a Community National BANK LOAN It takes but a few minutes to arrange a loan to make those dreams a reality. ~---—$tep-in-anytime-for-completedetails at our main bank or any. one of our Jhe Community National Bank of Pontiac, Michigan WHERE THOUSANDS SAVE MILLIONS W. HURON at TILDEN President Baldwin Rubber Co. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ee ae sce allo You CAN Make Those Dreams Come True You! KEEGO HARBOR Harold E. Howlett Howard W. Huttenlecher H. W. Huttenlocher Agency M. Pryale THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 _~ | wounding two more before they |were driven back across _ the frontier. Jordan demanded a meeting of the Mixed Armistice Commission, which Israel is boycotting. The U.N. Security Council also is to ;meet Wednesday in New York to debate other recent Israeli-Jordan clashes. Latvian DP Girls Master English, Get Faculty Jobs KALAMAZOO \—Language was just another barrier to be sur- mounted by three Latvian DP girls. Now Western Michigan College has graduated Anna Saline, Rita Pokornijs and Ausma Skerbele | |with high honors — though they didn't know a word of English |\when they came to America five | years ago Ohio State and Miss Pokornijs at Wisconsin. | Mediators See End of Strike Hope to Settle Wage Argument of Workers at Briggs Stadium DETROIT w — ‘‘We'll have ush- ers, groundskeepers and ticket tak- ers if we have to call in all the wives and have the baliplayers re- move the tarpaulin.” Walter O. (Spike) Briggs, Jr., president of the Detroit Baseball Co,, made that statement yester- day in the face of a proposed | picketing of Briggs Stadium Thursday night when the Detroit Tigers meet the New York Yan- | kees. Richard W. Cordtz, Oetroit head jof the AFL Building Service Inter- the U.N. Mixed Armistice Commis: | All three, one-time German DP | national Union. said the 145 mem- sion and its American chairman, |camp inmates, are taking jobs ON | pers of the local which services | U.S. Navy Cmdr. Elmo Hutchison, } university faculties—Miss Salne at} Briggs stadium would picket to when they went to Ilin to investi-| Michigan State, Miss Skerbele at| back up wage demands. State mediators hoped for settle- ment today. Queen and Duke Visit ‘Rock’; Spain Protests. GIBRALTAR # — The royal yacht Britannia brought Queen Elizabeth II and her family to “The Rock"’ today for their gala reception before they sail |home to Britain Most of Gibraltar’s 25,000 inhab- itants, undampened by neighbor- ing Spain's protests against the royal visit to the colony, crowded the harbor area to watch the Queen and the duke step ashore. In Spanish Algeciras, the prin- cipal reaction reportedly was one of disappointment that the popula- tion could not cross over to greet | the Queen. Generalissimo Franco's government banned border cross- ings during the visit to demon- strate official anger at Britain's refusal to recognize Spanish claims to Gibraltar A 21-gun salute from the British cruiser Glasgow echoed back from the Spanish hill as the Bri- | tannia passed through the break- water. For young Prince Charles and Princess Anne the biggest excite- Get « Good i ment came when the Britannia erdeck railing as the yacht moved et HAMPTON TV astern into her proper position. 825 West Huren scheduled | $10-$15 Down—$5 per Week Furniture ‘e #- yew Wi @ PROTECTION Buy them- eb @ cousTéous ligation # you're e Service ~ satiafied Seperate Cushion Covers —All Styles Aveilable—7%& to ge The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac Famous Brands at Lowest Prices! GIANT WASHER SALE! WASHER | Nationally Famous $ 95 109”._-. Luvury features’. . . economy priced! That’s what you get with this G-E washer. 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The GOOD HOUSEKEEP of PONTIAC ee Great Value Packed Wringer Washer By EASY | 119” 2 Check the features, see how much value there is in the Easy Wringer-type washer! 9- pound capacity . . . electric emp- tying pump... massive new safety-wringer . . . large balloon wringer roll. Buy yours tomor- row and save. SAVE *40 Easy Spindrier Reg. Price $179.95 With the extra-large 9-Ib. tub in this washer 13° and your washer sf 29% th famous Gyrofoam washing Roller Water Remover. Huge Sh -— ' + THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 | ELEVEN Turkey Replies fo Red Protest Charges Russia Exerts Pressure to Bar Efforts means to force countries to give up their efforts toward collective security. The charge, in firm, energetic " language, was in a note to Moscow which the semiofficial Anatolia if Son of the m= day the act of ms eee Norway Detects warren 'scecuen | am ssi tet tanaran tore O26 Kovion | |isue el team Only Aspirin At Its Best Speak at Banquet | The program, open to the public, |Close on Wednesday ~ [newspaper clippings concerning : Dave Ewalt, director of the Pon-| Will stast 6:30 p.m. ‘Thursday’ in| _ Persons wishing to nominate dogs should be addressed to Gordon Par-| Cig Fi tiac Department of Parks and Rec- |‘ "ullti-purpose room of Jetier for the annual “Hero Dog Award” | ham, Salem, Mich. This oreign anes reation, will given an illustrated unior High. Tickets may be! s+ the Oakland County Kennel| Show will be held at‘the Detroit! jisse talk on “Getting Your Dollars| obtained from PTA members and/Cjub's show, May 23, must file| Artillery Armory, West Eight Mile x their entries not later than Wednes- | road. News agency released here. It re- plied to a Soviet protest two months ago against the recent , Turkey-Pakistan alliance. ~ t Pakistan last week rejected the | same Soviet protest. The Karachi | y government said it was only exer- cising its sovereign right “‘to take all measures of self-defense.” . = Turkey denied the Russian accu- sations she was working against peace and added such accusations “are not only made by official and political means brt also by and publications.” said, “the Soviet Union tries to hold Turkey and other nations working for peace und security and promotion of cooperation among nations as responsible for present world tension. “No doubt the purpose behind the Soviet government action is to exert pressure on world opinion to force it to give up -sese efforts, which are aimed to strengthen col- lective security.” Norway Convicts 5 as Russian Spies KIRKENES, Norway @—A Nor- wegian court has found five Nor- wegians guilty of spying for the Soviet Union. It sentenced four of them to jail terms ranging up to four years and ordered them to pay the government the 23,100 kroner (about $4,000) the Russians had paid them. The fifth defendant could not be sentenced because of the statute of limitations. All were convicted of spying on civilian and military installations, including air bases and defenses along the border between the So- viet Union and Norway's northern province of Finnmark, The prosecution's star witness was Soviet Intelligence Lt. G. F. one case the identity of the plane was established as American. In Stockholm, the Swedish de- e fi planes Air Reserves Are Asked |e Ji, Sucden from Finland to Appear at Blood Drive | Saturday. They flew at a high alti- tude over Juoksengi. Finnish offi- ALE — Members of the/ cials confirmed the Swedish re- 960th Air Reserve Squadron are re-} port. quested te be present at the Armed! Similar flights over southern Forces blood drive which will re-| Sweden and the sound separating place the regular squadron meeting | Denmark from Sweden were re- tonight. : ported April 29. Capt. Lee Kenney) squadron com- mander, urges all members to ap-| A _ British imperial gallon is pear in uniform between 2 and. 8/ 25 per cent larger in liquid content p.m. at Wilson High School, Uni-| than a standard American gallon versity and Paxton. measure. You can enjoy world record performance ONLY in a CHRYSLER 235... New all-time performance records at Indianapolis and Daytona Beach . . . both set by Chrysler, America’s Number One in power! Now YOU come drive the very same engine: 235 HP FirePower Y-8. Plus PowerFlite, most automatic no-clutch drive of all. Plus today’s easiest, surest Power steering and brakes! No other car can give you all this . . . you'll feel anything less is “yesterday’s” car. Come in today! 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Oe ee Ee a ee ee Amt ne is offered in ointment FAST RELIEF HEADACHE Sar BAZ A F ASPIRIN Your Watch Adjusted $450 Regulated — Expansion Watch Bands Ladies’ — Men's Special $] 95 Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. weeseucesanseness D&D UPHOLSTERING 232 East Pike Strest FE 5-5042 a Take 12 Lives Weekend Toll Includes | of Power Mower By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Three men fatally injured in an auto-truck smashup near Ann Ar- bor raised to 12 today Michigan's weekend traffic death toll. A boy was killed when caught in | the blades of a power lawnmower lin Belleville, outside Detroit. Vietims of the auto-truck col- lision 4': miles north Arbor on U.S. %3 were William Paul Dow, #2, and Joseph John Lynch, 61, both of Ann Arbor, and Everett Wade Coleman, 31, of Sidman, Pa. The Washtenaw County Sheriff's Office said the three died as Dow smashed into the rear of an auto mobile-haulaway truck, whose driv- er had stopped to give aid to another motorist who had slammed into a tree. John Gareau, 25, of Roseville was killed and his four children injured seriously Saturday night in a two- car collision at Groesbeck Hwy. Sate Accidents | Boy Killed by Blades’ 52 of Ann |? SURVIVAL BAG—Alfred Angel peeks out from a new survival bag now being tested in London, Eng- land. Made of rubber it works on the principle of air insulation. Sur- vivors suffering from exposure are placed-in the inflated bag, and } their body temperature reportedly returns to normal in a short time. Artificial respiration can be car- ried out by a person inside the bag. H Class Set for May 12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY“10, 1954 , ac met ss ‘Community Service Barney Hopkins, secretary- treasurer of Michigan CIO Council and Miss Madeleine Half, director of Pontiac Child Guidance Clinic, ' |will speak at this week's ‘Know | Your Community Services’ class The meeting, second in a series, ,is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Wednes- |day at Local 594 Hall, 90 Mt, Cle-| in Waterford Township was broken explain | into Saturday night and $4.20 taken tax-supported | services local people can use and | Miss Half will detail the Child mens St. Hopkins will United Fund and Guidance Clinic's work The “Community Services’! locking it, Van Atta said ‘Steals $4.20 at School classes, open to the public free of 2 Hurt as Car Upsets when theif car overturned at West | were treated at Pontiac Generel charge, ae sponsored by Pontiac- | John C. Bollen, 27. of Detrott | Maple and Haggerty Rds. in Com. | Hospital for head cuts and bruises. Oakland County Industrial Union| .\4 cam A. Lacey. 21. of Arling-| Merce Township, Oakland County | Bollen told deputies he tried bo Council, CIO, and Pontiac Area ton Tex., were injured early today | sheriff's deputies said. Both men ‘avoid a car which ran a stop sign. United Fund, Anyone who wants to attend can call the CIO Coun- cil office, FEderal 4-0579, for reser- | vations or just “drop in” at the) Wednesday session } ° Our experience The Jayng Adams Grade School | is great... but our from a filing cabinet, according to Township Police Chief Frank Van Atta, Thieves entered by breaking out a section of window and un- service is geared to budget... VOORHEIS | 221 Baldwin HOUR CLEANING Custom “Keepshape” Finishing 6 Blocks from | Downtown always has been... always will be. plus 7 Bparks-(Hr itin, Home “Thoughtful Service® 46 Williams St. Ph. FE 23-5841 CLEANERS FE 4-4610 and 11-Mile Rd. outside Detroit. Charies Hairston, 11, of Detroit was killed Saturday when his bi- cycle collided with two cars on a Detroit street. | J.C. Terry, 20, of Paw Paw was | killed Saturday in a traffic acci-| dent involving two ‘cars and a truck on U.S. 12, eight miles west | of Kalamazoo. Mrs. Lelia Snell, 32, Falls was fatally injured Saturday | night when she lost control of her | car on an Iron County road, 10 miles west of Crystal Falls Benjamin Tipton, 4, of Detroit, a pedestrian, was killed Saturday in a traffic accident on a Detroit street. George Lakenen, 52, of Detroit was fatally injured in a two-car collision on a Detroit street early | Saturday. Sgt. Ransome E. Ward, 24, of | of Crystal (Advertisement) Announce New Way To Shrink Painful Piles Find Healing Substance That Relieves Pain—Shrinks Hemorrhoids New York, N. Y. (Special)—For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the aston- ishi ability to shrink hemor- r and to stop bleeding — with- out surgery. In case after case, pain was re- lieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took oy Most amazing of all—results were so rough that sufferers made astonishing statements like “Piles have ceased to be a problem!” : The secret is a new healing sub- stance (Bio-Dyne®)—discovery of a world-famous research institute. Now this new healing substance under the name of Preparation H.* Ask for it at all drug stores—money back guarantee. “Trade Mark. | Enjoy the bes! Bronte an old favorite “PEN HOUSE EVERY EVENING 825 W. HURON See the Latest TV Demonstrated! HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. 825 W. Huron. FE 4-2525 '\for Concealed Weapon St. Louis, Mo., was killed on Ford Road en route to Detroit from Wil- low Run Airport where he was sta- tioned. An unidentified pedestrian, about 65, was struck and killed by a car | in Detroit's suburban Berkley. P¢ | lice said -he stepped into. the path | of the car. : John Greenwood Jr., 6, of De- troit’s suburban Belleville was fatally injured Saturday when he got caught in the blades of a | power lawnmower. Harold W. Hinckley, 4, of Grand- ville was fatally injured Sunday while crossing U.S. 31 14 miles. north of Manistee. State Police | said the boy ran in front of a car driven by Merritt D. Bryant, 39, of Belding. ‘Police Hold Man ‘on Dope Charge Booked for investigation of ille- | St., faces further questioning today, | according to Pontiac Police. Sgt. Donny Ashley. head of the vice bureau, and Detective Ray- mond —E. Meggit said they -found 48 marijuana cigarettes and 17 cap- gules of heroine in Thomas’ pos- session Saturday night. side Pontiac bar after the two. of- | received an anonymous tele- | tip. Ashley said the confis- cated dope is worth about $100. | _Aahley said Thomas would be ar- | raigned in Municipal Court either late today or tomorrow. tices, Geen Probation Thomas was arrested in a south. | NN FIRST AL VW rm | ALL 18” to 9 ontn. STEEL VENETIAN BLINDS . ALL SIZES 36” wide 64” long Baked Enamel Finish, Easy to Clean Flexible Steel Slats Ephraim Bently, 25, of ‘Saginaw, was placed on one year’s probation today by Circuit Judge Frarik L. Doty for carrying concealed weapons. When Bently was arrested by Pontiac Police last Jan. 29 for speeding a .32 revolver was found in the glove compartment of his car, He pleaded guilty April 26. OPEN SUNDAY AFTERNOON selection in our large d prior to MAY MARKERS | from $3500 MONUMENTS $150 from Will Their Graves Be Marked DECORATION DAY? Now is the time to make your isplay of } Quality Monuments and Markers while we can promise delivery “Built to a Standard of Quality” <9] Inch Memorials, Inc. mo , Ac. ony Pontiac’ s Oldest Monument ' Builders 864 N. Perry St. Phone FE 56931 Rebert C. Burnes Lies4 W. Barnes FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE Ypres | ial ne epee ® > 2 ee t% ai be & | e . 4 a 4 ; ae ; F : | Jpp YOUR CHANCE FOR SAVINGS GALORE 98 ‘= =) Penney’s has a size for ~ every window. Hemmed ~ | and headed tops, 144” side © hems, 3” bottom hems. TOMORROW AT 9:30 ortynl RY 5g RL EE SCR BEI ye alm, <= RG rites 18 ay ay es - x = . ees ae : cng Pd TTT A bl voy i ; ; : ey einie 4 yeuad ot : . es BS UTE 2 'f] [| A double row of ruffles! A new tier of delicate rayon py tj | } ley STITT hyty aye, Marquisette, double-flounced for soft breezy fullness il 1 \I 2 °/'))/' at your windows. The tops are charming with 3” 7 / ruching! The colors, refreshing as Spring itself! 5; ~ And the way you can arrange them, simply unlimited! . : . Beautiful buys—specially offered for Penney’s Oppor- tunity Days! Come now choose from ivory, yellow, RAYON € EACH og | 41" x 81” 5 ay ny -~- @ 4 _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 Ws L Couple Returns From. 3-Week West Coast Vacation Deing their bu to make ACE breakfast a success Satur-| Royal Oak and Josephine Stilwell of South Shirley avenue day were Virginia Fowler of Pine Grove avenue, Dorothy | ( left to right). Devon Gables was the setting for the annual Virtues of Lincoln avenue, Mrs. Melvin H. Johnson of | May Breakfast. FEE veel ef ek 28% 70 Members, Guests Attend Jean Dorothy Eiter spoke her, ACE Breakfast |} vows with Norman Roger Ream Seventy members and guests at- in q ceremony performed Satur- tended the annual Association for | 4@yY morning at St. Michael Church. : For her wedding the bride, who is Childhood Education May Bresk-| ine daughter of Henry 0. ues fast served at Devon Gables Sat-| or Murphy avenue, chose a gown urday morning. |of Chantilly-type lace featuring a Music was furnished by Mrs.) sweetheart neckline. A bouffant: Harold Laudenslager of Webster | *kirt of nylon tulle over taffeta! School. Mrs. Melvin Johnson, presi- dsent of ACE, greeted the guests and introduced J. Cecil Cox, assis- - - tant superintendent of Pontiac Married Schools, and Gerald White, coor-| Saturday dinator of elementary education. | morning in Reports from delegates to the | Sr. Michael seg Sere, 71 were si | Church were = . and Josephine Stilwell reporting. Jean Eiter and Mrs, Claire Hinckley, secretary. | Norman R. erin of MACE, and Else Ream. ae aetion om the state | She is the daught Officers for 1954 who were in- ughter of _ troduced are Miss Stilwell, presi-| Henry O. Eiter dent; Mrs. Dodson, vice presi-| of Mur phy dsent; Nancy Prevette, recording watery, Coie Cte. oe and he is the son of responding secretary; Mrs. Alton Madden, treasurer, and Mrs. Mel-| Mrs. Hulda vin Johnson, adviser, | Ream of were made for the | : breakfast by Dorothy Virtues, Grosse Pointe. chairman; Mr. Alfred Rothweiler and Mrs. Everett Peterson, co- chairman. Mrs. N. R. Smith, Bar- bara Cullin, Mrs. Jean James and MR. and MRS. NORMA Jean D. Eiter Speaks Nuptial Vows and an apron-effect of Chantilly- type lace leading into a cathe- dral-length train were other fea- tures of the gown. - A shell of lace and seed pearis held her fingertip veil, and she carried a bouquer of white roses and carnations centered with a white orchid, Mrs. Richard Molter was matron R. REAM Virginia Fowler had charge of dec- orations. ATTENTION COLrEnes The 19th annual mother and daughter banquet was held by the | WSCS of Oakland Park Methodist Church Thursday. Mrs. James Deeg gave the invo- | cation and Mrs. Basil Meidiein, | of Detroit spoke and Mrs. Mine- Antioch Elects Mrs. Yntema Mrs. Theodore Yntema of Bloom- | field Hills, a 1928 graduate of An- tioch College, was today elected to the executive committee of the Banquet Held by WSCS weaser led group singing with Mrs. Dale Swanson accompanying her. | A teast to mothers was given by Sherry Everett, and Mrs. Rey Ross toasted the daughters. The Girts’ Choral Group of Lincoin Junior High School entertained. Mrs. Iri Williams gave the bene- | | diction, and dinner was served by | ‘the Men’s Club of the church under } the chairmanship of Reginald La- | Mont. On the ticket committee were | Mrs. Claude Kline and Mrs. Emer- | |son Brown. Program chairman | was Mrs. Leo Mineweaser, and Mrs. Carnie Loucks had charge of the dining room. On the decora-— tion committee was the Priscilla | Circle, and kitchen committee chairman was Mrs. Bert Weddle. PTA Activities Lincoln PTA of Lincoin te High ae | will meet Tuesday 7:30 pm Shelley will a films and we Harry | King will speak. bers of tener | meet Tuesday at 7.30 Cool | ice “BRUSH CURL your wi we have the stvle hat i for You and just look how little it costs. CREME OIL COLD WAVE Reg. $8.50 1. 6.85 ines coe a curls that are “locked in” and easy.to manage. OIL COLD WAVE Swirl end Twirl... 41 M. Saginaw St. STYLE $4.95 Complete Rough and ideal for Summer FE 2-0531 Longfellow avenue, is on the dean's list for the winter quarter at David of honor and the bride's two sis-| Lipscomb College, Nashville, Tenn. ters, Mrs. Leonard O. Ward and | she is a sophomore chemistry stu- Joyce Eiter, served as other at-| dent at the college. tendants. Flower girl was Linda . Molter of Drayton Plains. The matron of honor’s gown was| ceive diplomas from Grace Hos- of yellow lace over taffeta with| pital School of Nursing May 17 a bouffant skirt of nylon tulle.| will be Lets M. Thurman, daugh- A matching lace jacket with a/| ter of the Isaac Thurmans of Peter Pan collar and a matching! North Shirley avenue, and Ruth headpiece completed her costume:| J. Schrubba, daughter of Mr. and Mrs | Identically styled dresses of aqua were worn by the brides- maids, and the flower girl wore a yellow taffeta dress and car- ried a basket of white rose petals. | Richard Molter was. best man, | and ushers were Jerry Comos and lege’s production of ° Glenn Templeton, both of Rose- Juliet” = May 19 and 20. | | Ville. Larry Molter was ringbearer. | A reception was held at the Knights of Columbus Hall at 7:30) Word cames froma Mercy Col- lege that Helen Rigdon of Ward Crowded Closets? Let Us Store Your Woolens! Have more closet space this summer! . . let us store your woolen garments in Our refrigerated vaults, safe from heat and moths! Cell for Free Pick-Up and Delivery Gresham Cleaners 97 Ocklend Ave. FE 4-2579 nized Friday at the University of | Michigan's annual Michigan Inter- the association's Golden Pen nue and the Glen Travers, also of | F or Your Happiest Day... Wondering how po 4 going to everythi ready, that special day ae cae Then let handle any, or all, of the details for We leave no WORRISOME DET. for the bride-to-be or HER MOTHER! INVITATIONS $6.50 to $8.50 per hundred PHONE °& % Free Consultation *® Carleton & Smith - WEDDING SERVICE GET THE a _ Fourth avenue. . * Mr, and Mrs. Tom T. Reese (nee Loulse Pryor) of Warwick read, Sytvan Lake, announce the | birth eof a daughter, Marilyn Alane, April 24 in Highland Park General Hospital. The baby’s grandparents are the A. E. Pryors of Detroit and Dr. and Mrs, Ralph W. Reese of Cooley Lake. Mother-Daughter Banquet Scheduled Areme Chapter 503, OES, will sponsor a mother and daughter | banquet Friday at 6:30 p. m. in | Roosevelt Temple. A program fea- | turing the — will be given Taylor and Mrs. Lester Qles have | charge of tickets. The men of the ‘chapter will serve the dinner. ——< jo'clock. For greeting guests, the | | bridegroom's mother, Mrs. Hulda | Ream of Grosse Pointe, chose | a light blue dress and a corsage of | pink roses. For a trip to Florida the bride changed to a blue-gray suit with navy accessories and the white orchid corsage. Sunset Club Host | to Flint Old-Timers Sunset Club members were hosts | Thursday afterngon to 49 members of the Jolly Old-Timers Club of Flint. | A cooperative dinner was served | at V’ilson School and Charles Raw-! lins of Pontiac League of the Blind |entertained with piano selections. Henry Griswold showed a display of hand carving and George Balch | tof the YMCA entertained with ma-| gic tricks, Dale Stewart sang ‘“The Robe ot | Calvary” for the group. On the) refreshment committee for the afternoon's meeting were Mrs. Ber- Take advantage of Public Executive Secretarial, B typewriting, other courses. 7 W. Lawrence St. Pontiac eerr- tha Luke, chairman, Mrs. Marian until Aug. 20, 1954 to be enrolled Disbrow, Mrs. LeRoy Shafer and ~~ Ee —— Mrs. Emma Sullenger. ' KOREAN VETERANS education and prepare for advancement. Higher Accounting, Junior Accounting, Shordhand, Comptometer, ENROLL NOW DAY, HALF-DAY, and EVENING CLASSES Re Gusinslpstility Visit the School or Return This Ad for Information (NOTE) Korean veterans discharged pricr to Aug. 20 1952 only have Law 550 to improve. your We offer usiness Administration, and Calculator and Serer oe 15°aPyemEnEeT™ Phone FE 2-3551 eeees Other veterans who left service after the time of their discharge to begin I = ie S * t 7 ¥ , f J Pata, ~*~ 4 * @t seen in Vogue } Who cares how high the mercury climbs when you're in shoes F move is pleasure... ‘specially with Naturalizer’s heel-hugging, flexibility. And the look’s so smart... Nylon mesh in WHIT Beige mesh and Beige calf. Both styles all white. Shoe Salon — Merranine Floor COOL through and through aS a COMFORTABLE every inch SPECTATOR SHEERS by the Shoe with the Beautiful Fit 48 N. Saginaw St. ] OQ” that FAN YOU COOL! Every toe-free fit and. marvelous E with TAN or NAVY Calf. ee aed ae “| cone HM Sacony sult of Pain: Beach BD. @ Narrow shoulder look @ Never wilts @ Resists wrinkles @ Dimensional pockets @ Whittling waistline 4 q Skeiched @ Misses’ sizes oe, fr stock @ Red, brown, black = 25.00 “It's a wonderful buy!” S ; ter . 99.95! \ Others 24.95 to 35.00 Yee @ Costume dress @ White cord trim @ Removable jacket @ Its own corsage @ Grey, brown @ Junior sizes : , —-_ = "FOURTEEN _THE RONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 10 ~ v 645 SIZES $,10-12 M 14-16 i120 by Cura Whedbee Wrap ‘round this cool and pretty apron-sundress with the gay daisy pocket. Iron it in a jiffy—opens flat. Sew-easy, too. Pattern 645: Sizes small (10, 12); medium (14, 16); large (18, 20). Pattern pieces, embroidery trans- fer included. State size. “ 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 your name, address with zone, pattern number, size. PETUNIA! Hts easy to eat c As its easy to make-—~ This gorgeous, delectable, Glamorous cake / Right, Petunia! Just place te covered mints on hot fresh cake, swirl with a knife. {Child's Love Don't Keep to Yourself Direct His Young Emotions Outward Toward Others By MURIEL LAWRENCE The other day | sat in on an ad- vanced class at the New York | School of Social Work. Our lesson | was discussion of the case record of a 93-year-old child, frightened by a parent's desertion We came to a paragraph that read: “This afternoon Caroline told her social worker that she loved | her. The worker replied that she | liked Caroline, too; and that many | other people she'd net yet met | would also like her.’’ Our reading was interrupted by the teacher. He asked, “‘Why was it good for the worker to respond to Caroline's admission of love by telling her that others beside herself would like her?’’ “Because it was reassuring?” | queried a student. = ’ the teacher said. | “It wag good because it is discip- line for you not to monopolize A child's love. It is good not to lo- | calize his love in you personally It is always good to suggest that | his love will grow and enlarge as he grows to embrace many peo- en I was impressed by this profes- | sor’s counsel to Is students. It seems so universally important a Spring green in a buffet setting is high-| seasonal note on your table. The tablecloth | ' Emily Post Compiles Timely Advice for Spring an re Send 3 Weeks in Advance First Come the Invitations , 1954 . r) d Summer Brides (Editor's Note: First of a series of seven articles by Emily Post cover- ing all phases of wedding etiquette.) By EMILY POST Going to be married soon? Then you'll have lots to think about if you want your wedding to proceed smoothly. Even before you plan your trous- seau you should make up your in- vitation list so that you can get your order for the invitations to the engravers and have them mailed out well in advance of the great day. Invitations should De sent out in the names of the bride's par- ents, assuming both are living or that a divorce has not taken place. In the latter case, the in- vitations are sent out in the name of the bride’s mother. The wording of the invitation where parents are living together reads: Mr. and Mrs. John Abbot Doe request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their daughter Cynthia Anne to Mr. William Brown Smith lighted by these translucent square candles and appointments are in shades of orchid. in spring green, coral or blue to make a gay Lad Doesn’t Come Crawling to Her that I am reporting it to parents. Whether we are the social worker of a neglected child or the mother of one we cherish, it ef affection. This pride, overwhelming us, can losé us our chance to suggest his a hi H Hi il fear a triumph for us. It will mean ag z One trouble with the government is too much overhead and too piper - oeecuge much underhand. Wonderful, POTATOES Pre-cooked Minute Potatoes turn to creamy- smooth mashed potatoes right before your eyes. Just toss these tender shreds into sal water, add butter and beat. It’s as easy as that! And they're delicious! Try *em for dinner tonight. A new product seve trom the mokers of ~~ “ Mix-match these separates every day of the week! Sewing? Easy! Ironing? See for yourself—skirt, halter and blouse open flat. Tops and bottoms button to each other —always look sweet and neat! Get set for summer now! right side up as it is lifted out of the mailing envelope. 7 . “We have received an invitation | to a wedding reception addressed | Mr. and. Mrs. John Jones and) Family. There are five in the im- mediate family — mother, father, | two daughters and one son. Will | you please tell me how such an | invitation is answered?” If you know them formally, you write: Mr. and Mrs. James Johes Misses Mary and Alice Jones and “Mr. John Jones accept with pleasure. If you know them very well you would write: “The Joneses, all five, accept with pleasure.” Next: Showers, Lancheens Pattern 4791: Children’s sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 skirt and halter, 2 yards 35-inch fabric; blouse and shorts, 1°, yards. This pattern easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing: Send to Anme Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th _St.,_New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. Bacon’ Tops Kidney Bean Casserole Mrs. Leah Herveat Combines Several Flavors in Dish By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Here's a good recipe for those to give leg beauty. minutes moderate oven. Millinery | Classes Hav ‘Gimmick’ =| : Whenever a woman wants to|her miserable. Well, with exactly | to learn how. After all, it was a triumphantly asserts the label on a coffee-flavored item high in| make money at home by teaching, —— her hat, she question of making hats myself or favor with me just now. Another | she must be sure she has some being stuck without the kind of wrapper urges me to be sure that | specialized slant, something which “Naturally,” she continued, “it | hats I knew I needed. And vanity all my internal organs are func-| makes her services doubly desir- was frequently hard to find the |is a strong motivating power. tioning property before I partake} hj. hats I wanted, ready-made. So I “Now I have two classes a week, of what's inside. For exampte, the other day ! went to school and learned how | right in my home, teaching women My great favorite is a main | met a woman who teaches other to mate bate. vt tte a dish made of Jerusalem arti- | women how to make hats. Tt wasn't easy, thems. chokes that promises on the | Now, if that were ail she did, acnoss package to have three distinct she would probably run into dif. ' eon ae aes tally as aul making any money. But this | 13 Seqian river | ‘ j ‘oat | ag a : Don’t let anybody fool you,| “Hats are the most important | is Sympathetic. I've read those Te-|part of @ costume,” she told me | 31 Treasures assuring pieces all about how the| earnestly, “but on top of that, : dieter has never been so well-fed |they can’ be the making of your | i in his life and yet he’s dropping ff whole appearance. ship four pounds a week. He keeps “The right lines in a bat will | 3 telling you how he has learned to! ninimige @ toolong nose, or & ‘ sao mi eat a eet mat | fat round face, oF @ receding chin. oi. i without salt, e “You see, I have a much too big, ae or uki i squarish face. Because of it But take it trom me, he is ‘ist |S atmoet tampossibie for me’ to | # <7 mt making the best of a bad bargain | nq = decent hat. 3 Recs orene a an acning & lability into money’) «1 went te the Ubrary one day . ee 5 and read all the books 1 could ew Well, I've lost 12 pounds. | tind on beauty, and on drawing — I put back that time I wrote the 87 Letter of —4 column you're\talking about and| “By working out a formula I alphabet ae 6 ee is inp Sesine a telat is. 3 two days and two would make my face seem a bet-| 1 nim . But I'm going on with myjter shape. 1 really studied the| 3 *traters ' regime all right and don't mind| subject, and pretty soon I was 4 Cotns from 1 what I said about sorbitol and| advising friends. . $ One se reboves 3 mannitol. At least, I have them! \ “I remember one woman whose! * — A 4 ‘ . i - 4 é \ ¢ = oan. Missionary ls Speaker for WCTU: dedication for the temperance cause as “an organization of Christian women banded together for the protection of the home, the abolition of liquor traffic and the triumph of Christ's Golden Rule in custem and in law.” Mrs. A. D. Stimer greeted the guests and Mrs. L. G. Rowley led group singing accompanied by Mrs. John Venneman. Mrs. Eleah Patten led the Flag salute and Mrs. Frank Clemens announced a banquet to be held soon at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church by Anna Gor- don Unit. Announcement was made of an opportunity to train for leader- ship in Christian temperance fields through a training school at Bay View. Dues paid by members go toward the training program and toward the world organization. Israel’s Birthday to Be Celebrated THE Getting together over morning coffee recently to plan the annual benefit card party of Kirk Couples Club were (left to right) Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Ware of Barrington road and the hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Finch of East PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 a FIFTEEN Ponting Press Phote Square Lake road, general chairmen of the event. The party, which will be Friday at West Bloomfield Town Hall, will begin at 8 o'clock. Proceeds will benefit Kirk in the Hills. + Corinne E. Wright Wed Palms and gliadioli banked the altar of Central Methodist Church Rebecca Gould, contralto, will be guest artist thig evening at the sixth anniversary celebration of the establishment of the State Israel. The event, to be held at 8:30 in Congregation B'nai Israel on Onei- da road, will be sponsored jointly by the Pontiac Chapter of Hadas- sah and the Jewish Federation of Pontiac. Rabbi M. Robert Syme. assocl- ate rabbi of Temple Israel! of De- troit, will be the speaker. Charles A. Wilson, minister of music at First Congregational Church, will accompany Mrs. Gould. The public is invited to attend this program. | 1.14 out with a haop. A small em- At a family — broidered organdy bonnet held her supper steenware, —— =—— eye . Sunday, Ceramic Supplies en 8 | ivy. ; Mr. and Mrs. Kiln and Instructions a Sharie Husted was maid of honor , MRS, RICHARD G. ERVIN Charles Si dave Corsica : = nM vial wus Greed in anes ° Renfrew of 4460 Elisabeth Take B4. FE 5-5535 PERMANENT $5 and yellow organdy dresses, om Program Listed Birmingham © PERMANENTS...... . ioe WAVES ..-. $750 of | Saturday evening when Corinne FE. | Wright spoke her vows with Rich- ard G. Ervin. The Rev. Milton H. Bank performed the service. The bride is the daughter of Mrs Roy B. Wright of Garland avenue, Sylvan Lake, and the late Mr. Wright. The George P. Ervins of Crescent drive are the bride- groom's parents. For the 7:30; ceremony Corinne chose a gown of embroidered or- gandy over white taffeta. Short sleeves, a portrait neckline and a wide taffeta sash with stream- ers to the hem were highlights ef the dress. The full ballerina-length skirt was . : bo er ae Eee OY GUO-Fianists | baskets of spring flowers with! Mrs. Ferdinand Gaensbauer and matching streamers. __| Mrs. Addison Oakley, duo-pianists, Jerry Ervin was his brother's have announced their program for best man, and ushers were Mickey | the annual luncheon of Pontiac Bradley, Clarence Sproull and Tuesday Musicale to be held at George Kimball. | 12:30 p.m. Tuesday in Grace Lu- The bride was escorted to the | theran Fellowship Hall. alrar on the arm of her uncle, | On the program will be: Daughters of Pontiac 186 will meet 7 ewes as Sere” Mt Orote BAe BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Mr. and | Mrs. Philip H. Pretz of Bloomfield | proces tet B aedlocn ave. tors Village announce the engagement | !2:20 p.m. cooperative luncheon. of their daughter Jeanne Eva to | Maccabees Sewing Circle will Kenneth Edward Sanborn, son of | Dramm, 16 Mechanic 8. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Sanborn of | oe oo! Ti Bartlett, N. H. Mrs. Arthur Vite. "20 Jeanne is a graduate of Kings- wood School Cranbrook and is a . me Club Will hold at 8 p.m. with Marien &t. based at Norfolk, Va. - will be hostess. 9. st. | freshments, and the John A. Rob- erts', publicity. Planned Friday Tickets may be obtained from |Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Woolson by Kirk Couples | of Birmingham, Mr. and Mrs. Nel- é H, Long of Walnut Lake road Final arrangements are nearing | 5°" © . completion for the’ benefit card | the Richard Seheys of Birmingham, party scheduled for Friday. the Donald W. Neals of Pontiac Sponsored by Kirk Couples Club | and the Keith Symons of West the party will raise funds for Kirk Bloomfield Township. in the Hills. The affair will begin a at 8 o'clock in West Bloomfield Dinner Set May 20 Town Hall. Benefit Party Colonial Unit: _jare Mrs. Ross P. Tenny and Mrs. bee Plans May Breakfast The annual May Breakfast sponsored by the Colonial Group of the First Congregational Church will be held in the Casa del Rey ballroom Friday at 10 o'clock. General chairman is Mrs. D. R. Wilson and the program chairmen J. A. Rammes. Decorations are being ar- ranged by Mrs. Philip J. Vier- Look Younger with Our New Hair Styles Ponmavient Choose from nationally famous name — Eugene Fredericks, Helen Curtis and Realistic $6.50 9 ANNALIESE BEAUTY ‘SHOP 82% N. Saginaw S&t. Next to Bazley Market (Over Tasty Bakery) +a lech, and Mrs. Fred Voelker is On the social committee are | Mrs. Harold Euler, Mrs. J. Lee | Voorhees, Mrs. R. A. Armstrong, | Mrs. H. C. Cites, Mrs. James A. | Clark, Mrs. Harry Pearce, Mrs. C. H. Purdy, Mrs. Conrad N. Church, Mrs. F. C. Castell and Mrs. Mac T. Whitfield. Speaker will be Mrs. Eugene Cleland who will talk on ‘‘Grand- ma. Moses.” Music will be furnished by the Vocal Department of Pontiac High School under the direction of George Putnam. Eileen Ethridge Feted at Shower in Bailey Home Eileen Ethridge, bride-elect of John Killinger, was honored at a bridal shower Friday evening. P Cohostesses were Mrs. Leonard Underhill, Mrs. Jack Farms and Mrs. Lawrence Bailey. The shower was held in the Bailey home on Mansfield avenue. Guests included Mrs. Vertyn Dawsen, Mrs. Charlies Baker, Mrs. Edward Kern, Mrs. Flor- ence Woods, Mrs. James Ben- sken, Mrs. Arthur Ocsch, Mrs. Lester Jansen and Mrs. Richard Staable. Mr. and Mrs. Homer V. Finch Plans were made for the in- are chaifitien,.and.on committees are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shaver, tickets; the William Beauchamps, stallation of officers dinner to be held May 20 at Rotunda Inn Fri-/| day when the New Sylvanites Club Others were Mrs. George Long, Mrs. Henry Gallardo, Mrs. Bruce Moore, Mrs. Ralph Burt, Mildred Welch, Marja West and Mrs. Make your living room suite as pretty as the spring out- doors at Manufacturer-to-you-prices. Refinished or new... william wright Furniture Makers G Upholsterers “all work guaranteed 5 years” 270 Orchord Loke Ave. FE 4-0558 — “For Men Who Prefer the Finer Things” ~ meet Marie | Philathea Class of Oakland) Avenue | dies’ Aid has been postponed until) May | 1 Mrs. Robert Stireman, 323 Seward | prizes; Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Ware; | met at the home of Mrs. W. R. properties, the R. W. Smiths, re- Smith on Lakeland a\ enue. - announced the. engagement of | their daughter, Robin, to | Frederick C. Bahr, son of | Mrs. Frederick Bahr of Harold Miller. Marilyn Carlson, Mrs. Peter Kalohn, Mrs. Samuel Dow, Mrs. John Stephens, Vivian Wormnest, Mrs. Daniel Kaulfield and Mrs. Leo Wynn completed the list. “Custom Upholstering WILLIAM K. COWIE 21 Years of Practical Experience 378 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4¢-2857 OPEN °*til 9 P.M. Rix Plenty of Free Parking! a - Top News for Spring! Haircuts and perma- nents give the green light to hairstyling art for unusually pretty and gaily pat- terned coif designed for the tiny bonnets. So join the Spring | | i | senior at Connecticut College, New | Socescnees see Garetege Ave. Parade. London, Con * Quick will meet at the Call for An A tmen Mr. phere is a member of the pores of hares Bessie Rogardus, “34 &. Today FE $221 . RIGHT: Bandeau with 2-inch U.S. N: Submarine Service and | Luncheon will Rg .% ™ Bett LeCo Bea t Sh = gpm & a et sizes — rn to m broad- is stationed on the USS PomPom |, Wednesday meeting of ¥ y u uty op 306 Riker Bldg. They are planning a summer wedding Alpha Xi Alumnae Will Meet May 17 May 17 is the date set for a ANDRE'S MAGNIFICENT PE RMANENTS Start at $3750 $1.) COLD WAVE MACHINE or MACHINELESS js stays in cloth. . 1.75 to 3.00 Nylon Taffeta, 2.50 to 4.00 RIGHT: Three-quarter length low back longline, B, C. D cups, sizes 32 to 46, nylon taffeta. 9.00 THE place__F. with ot nylon marquisette. White only. B, a cups, sizes 32 to 38. 6.00 STRAPLESS that... won't pinch... Clair Wright. Mrs. John Nicolls ‘Now Come the Gentle Savior Bech | Grosse Pointe. . dr. sang the bridal recital. | as deat inode —— .. Brahms Frederick is a Pe A reception in the ‘church ‘par. > Buite’ Devussy | student at Law ) lors followed the ceremony. Re-! ..¢.. 24 moue ule)... aa ceiving the 200 guests, Mrs. Wright Bee ‘“ “ Munaus | School of the WEEK chose a Srey sik shantu a awk University of BR dress with white accessories a Valse” eee ene Arensty at 8 a corsage of pink camellias. Mrs. | “Jemaican Rumba” .......... Benjamin Michigan ; ‘Ervin wore gray and white silk | “Boy a =| — — is print with white accessories and | 2s MEY” pesceccccoesreres ° also a stu ent. 7 a pink rose corsage. < ™ For the wedding trip the bride | i e ; ened to a navy linen suit with | Coming Events , oe — ; Xx A ( A hasa controlling a red topper, navy accessories and|_ Omega Mu Sigma sorority will meet | ROBIN LOUISE RENFREW s _| a corsage of white camellias. | Eeese Len’ Sop Galea tate 84. TR interest in your curves P oy Aaah Ea 5 , Brief Hairdos “~ Jeanne retz | Btue Star Mothers Chapter Pour will | f Ti H This superd new Ball low longline is so to Become Br: > a. a eu a | or iny ats of an exclusive pre-shrunk cotton-and-nylon leno won't poke... won't ride up... won't slide down... LEFT: Three-quarter length in nylon taffeta and lace or full lengtn longline fin acetate satin and nylon Including the The Bowing lines and delicate foml aotif of Summer Sonc Italian Boy Haircut OR ANY STYLE-CUT lace .. . both in white or black, A B; © cups; sizes 32-to-42-- $.50 D-Cup, sizes 32 to 42, 8.50 he ' .. ABR . oe siitnaad nei te seer eaten Open Wednesday All Day RIOHT: | ima and win mn china sad glassware, 20 fresh and Friday ‘ti 9 P.M. marquisetie. A. B, :* few in spirie yet so ageless in ics : Come in and see it today. , Staff EXPERT D-Cup, sizes 32 to 42, 7.50 . y n- of OPERATORS Our expert graduate corsetiers are at your service for To Serve You! consultation, advise and fitting. JEWELERS 16 W. Huron St. No Appointment Needed! a= Immediate Sptyiiadiaiit: 2nd Floor Pontiec State Bonk Bidg.—Ph. FE 5-4490 ey } Andre Beauty Salon F Pe s ai SIXTEEN nek, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 Boy Falls Off Train, Loses Part of leg - PORT HURON (#—Seven-year- old Randall Clement, of Port Hu- fon, lost part of his left leg Sunday LAST 3 DAYS BRAND NEW ROUND BOBBIN ELECTRIC SEWING 108 NORTH Special m Combination Offer ; , _ under the ‘wheels of a boxcar. Police credited Boy Scout David , MACHINE “Dynamic” SAGINAW ' PULL-SIZE COASTER. . WAGON FILLED WITH We SPEED . age ¥! f Pi ee ay poy to Sher oe ne ~—temen Laundry Soap WITH YOUR NEW F 3] QUEEN Complete for only J. Edgar Hoover Gets Rid of Politics in FBI, (Editor's Note: When he took over rector, is this: “I'm proudest of the fact that we've made law enforcement an honorable profession. In all my career that achievement has made me happiest. “By observing civil rights, by i g& ; ea z i Hy Jit Lal : ay a3 iF a 53 hi Hd H ti 7 % > * . “We get everything out in the open. I will not stand for griping and grapevine gossiping. If any body has got a gripe, I tell my people to go to someone who can @o something about it or bring the gripe to me. I just won't ha belly-aching behind the barn door.” * * - Just what kind of a bureau did Hoover want to develop when he edie: el than a fet | i + . In the FBI, I tried to build on the basis of what you find in a large law office where one section deais with the trial, another with briefs, another with evidence, etc. After all, the Department of Jus- tice is just a large law office for the American people and in the FBI we ve the agency that : ty : “We don’t try the case. We don't evaluate the evidence. We “Now we are able to work with akes Police Work Honorable enforcement, enraged citizens de- manded action from the’ federal government. Congress in 19h passed a series of crime bills|in their city. which almost overnight changed| ,, pel hag ns the FBI from an unarmed force with no authority into a crime- privately, quite a sum of money, Cost of Painting Bridge Over Hudson $150,000 Set., May 15 7:00 P. M. Former Students and Friends Invited. . R. Nicholie Agency Insurance H. R. Nicholie, H. Delos “Bud” Nicholie Opposite Post Office Ph. FE 2-2326 This Valuable Coupon Entities the Bearer te @ 2-lh. Limit GRADE | BULK | 19. SAUSAGE + salsa BLUE CROSS - BLUE SHMLD gomed 278,174 now Biue Cross - Blue Shield pay out more dollars for hospital and doctor care, provide worry-free protection for more people in Michigan than all other kinds of medicat bill protection combined: —- _— Your Michigan Blue Cross - Blue Shield paid out $91,299,797 for subscribers in 1953. As of today the total paid out for hospital and doctor bills during the last 15 years is more than $400 million. Blue Cross is the most successful idea ever devised for protection against ital bills, Non- profit, it is the only organization for hospital care officially approved by the American Hospital Association. Over 3,000,000 Michigan people have Blue Cross. Chances are, your neighbor has it. Talk it over with him—and see if he doesn’t agree that there is no finer protection at any price! Hospital Service Protection ... the Bive Cross way Blue Cross differs from other kinds of hospital is is important since you rarely know in advance how mech a heapioel bil oll cnet Gun. Bo you ain's feel really safe with protection that limits to $10, $15 or some other sef amount per day. When you become a member of a Blue Cross Group it is like becoming the “owner” of a wide range of hospital services in advance of need. ‘Then, when you need hospital services . . . such as bed and board, expensive extras like oxygen, drugs and medicines, operating room, and others . . . these Blue Cross- Blue Shield have more Michigan members than , | all other plans combined! member @ 195). mew cower ower 1,000,000 m hticthagem Largest medical bill payment ever made for Michigan people! . specific amounts directly to your doctor thousands of surgi weeeee i every case, your beforehand what his charge will can’t tell you, however, is when STATEMENT OF CONDITION Report af Condition a2 af the Close of Business, December 31, 1953 MICHIGAN HOSPITAL Senvice nae —_—— The cost is bow For ; wel met. Reape Rareettirwes Shield most complete protec- den aguinst hecgitel end expen! it is possible - MICHIGAN MEDICAL SEaviCcE : YY | eee Le SS a gn, ere ee, Se Mich: gon Mospitol Service — Michigan Medica! Service 234 Steve Gtreet, Betrels 26° Pe ae ds BLUE CROSS~ BLUE SHIELD — TE —_- MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 THE PONTIAC PRESS ~*~ BY BEVERLY SMITH, Washington Editor of The Saturday Evening Post cori ya Saha Palin cake? Pre Pet sat In these days of atomic weapons and transoceanic bombing planes, it might well be said that our lives are in the hands of a stocky, white-haired man named Charles Erwin Wilson, the Secretary of Defense. Whether our armed forces are strong enough (a) to deter any sane enemy from attacking us, and (b) to win the war if the Kremlin starts one—this must depend considerably on the judgment and ability of Secretary Wilson. Since Americans have a life-or-death stake in this gentleman, they may like to know exactly what kind of a fellow he is. Yet even the careful newspaper reader and newscast fan must have a somewhat confused view of him. Since coming to Washington, Wilson's reputation has been taken for a rollercoaster ride. In recent months his) prestige has been rising steadily again, with Congress, with the press and with the military. President Eisen- hower’s faith in him remained high all along, though no doubt ‘he is pleased that others are beginning to appreciate the quality of his Defense Secretary. When Mr. Eisenhower, soon after his election, an- nounced that he was appointing as his Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson, president of General Motors, there was widespread public approval. It seemed most proper that the head of America’s largest manufacturing corporation should tackle the problems of America’s largest governmental department. Mr. Wilson’s patriot- ism was applauded. Here was a man at sixty-two, giving up irrevocably a job paying him over $600,000 a year, to take on,.at modest Government salary, the really appalling task of running the Department of Defense. This sunny climate of approval, + soon after Wilson reached Wash- ington, clouded into a series of chilling squalls. To mention a few: His initial reluctance to dispose of his GM stock, as the Senate confirming committee felt the law required, wa’ put down to narrow selfishness, though some quite other motives were involved. As soon as he clearly understood the views of the committee, he com- 3 i E E ! ! | “What's Good for GM (And Vice Versa)” | E 3 i k i i i fr H f r f E a id me home in the evening, to talk 8 z z : SREB Fg F 2 ry Rae i fet iH | d r : é F [ 5 z Gi a z i One ‘Erwin, Secretary Begins to Z : sh aH } Strong Support in Capital sprawling services. | Ways does.” Department?” Washington Learns Executive SE up with him | Maybe there are such business executives=it seems to me I've seen them in the movies — but Wilson is not one of them. He flunks out on all the specifica- tions. He considers dollars im- portant as one form of measur- ing rod, but his idea of good or- ganization is people working well together toward objectives they understand — once you achieve that, the em of dollars is relatively simple. He is not a high-pressure but rather a low- pressure or siow-pressure man who achieves his ends by pe- tience and persistence. It ig true he has great ‘‘drive,’’ but it is the drive of a distance runner rather than a sprinter. If his time is money, he is ap- "| parently unaware of it. If your like my former boss al- conversation develops interesting new facts and ideas, he will talk with you all day and half the night — dinner and other engagements forgotten. Recently two stalwart young officers tottered forth from such a session. Doesn't Seem to Need Either Food or Sleep “That Mr. Wilson,” said one i | 5 z ! : i g . ETARY OF DEFENSE CHARLES E. WILSON | people believe Wilson actually said that. And to this day, Wilson, “Wait—I better watch that vice = make “‘lightning-quick’’ decisions. He can make a fast decision in a crisig but, time permitting, he ex- Plores a problem with an exhaus- tive and almost exasperating thor- oughness. If the decision is a fun- damental one, the process may take days or weeks or months. He calls in all the important peo- ple concerned; he calls in others, however obscure, who may have new facts and ideas on the subject. Questions, suggestions, discussions go on seemingly without end. From time to time, Wilson will shift po- sition and advocate an opposite view, just to test the arguments; man who may be present. Wilson’s—we used to call them) ‘C. E.'s World Tours,’ " I was told | by one of Wilson's old colleagues in | Detroit. ‘“‘When I first sat in on} I thought they were a damn time. I would say to my- doesn't he cut the gab what to do?’ It took i FG? gs GF ERE eiHtge i fe 23 28 B 2. t : h ai | | 3 | | : t | i H ii Hy ; e F | vastness of the armed | staff of yes men can hardly keep America, otherwise well-informed , to drift te a stop among cautious colonels in the middie echelons. In fifteen months Wilson's work whenever he says ‘vice versa,” | has modified Washington's original flinches, smiles ruefully, and says, | quaint stereotyped picture of him. j But no very elear picture has | emerged to replace it in the public jmind, and some misapprehensions New Secretary Not Given to Snap Replies | remain, Maybe this is a good time to take a careful “‘new look’ at this man Returning to Wilson's failure to | upon whom our safety so largely conform to Washington's precon- | depends. If we can understand him ceived stereotype, he does not/| better as a person it may help— |more than charts and statistics— | to grasp what he is trying to do at the Pentagon, and what his so- called “new look’’ means in our national defenses. Wilson Started Life | in Engineering Job | ; ‘formative years of his manhood, an electrical engineer, and he was a brilliant one. He still has the mind of an engi- this is embarrassing to any yes, meer, a student, a technician. He | has the intense concentration of the ‘Those marathon conferences of | Scientist, and sometimes the ab- sent-mindedness. Wilson was past thirty before it was discovered that he had, besides these scien- tific-technical gifts, a high talent for administration and business management. The combination is rare. It carried him to the pin- nacle of America’s manufacturing industry, The advent of atomic and elec- tronic weaponry has made the Defense Department, beyond question, the most highly tech- Consequently this lesser-known side of Wilson — his technical and technological insights — may well prove as important to our defenses as his executive ability, which he calls the ability “to get people working well to- gether.” . Charlies Erwin Wilson was born on July 18, 1890, in the little town of Minerva, Ohio. Incidentally, about a dozen weeks later, a child named Dwight Eisenhower was - if q E Defense Charles E. Wilson, Mrs. It may help to remember that he | did not start out as a businessman | at all. His education, the first ten were devoted to his profession as nical organization in the world. | in Firs Wilson, was principal of the Mi- Defense Secretary Began Life Humbly Wilson, the auto man, grew up among the simplicities of the horse- and-buggy age. One of his earliest recollections is of sitting in a tin aT netics that I couldn't hold up my end of the conversation.” Son Ed Speaks Up to President Eisenhower your new job.” Eisenhower, after a quizzical moment, glanced across the room at the elder Wilson, smiled broad- ly and said, ‘I see what you mean.” During the campaign Ed had been an active leader in the Michi- gan pro-Eisenhower forces. Later, | when Wilson was appointed Secre- jtary of Defense, Ed joshed his \father about “riding into office on my coattails." (If I seem to be roaming around a dit, remember that I'm trying to follow Wilson's-own exploratory methods.) As a boy in small-town Ohio, Charies E. Wilson was taught many a lesson by his schoolteacher parents. The three he remembers best are these: (1) Education is not an un- pleasant duty, but an opportunity; | (2) Work is a normal part of life; and (3) It is always worth making a special effort to get along with |people. Erwin was also a great favorite with his Quaker grand- mother, though the old lady would often scold him, saying, ‘Thee hears, but thee does not heed.” Great Concentration Part of His Makeup Wilson sometimes shows this trait today, yea, even unto sena- Pie ke FAMILY GROUP—Shown here are Secretary of | ward E. Wilson, one of their three sons. Wilson, and Ed- his | hen teach him to play cards. Of course Ed, like the other Wil- qualified man in the country for t Year born in the little town of Denison,tors or generals, who it Texas. Erwin's father, Thomas E. dove bd arenemen His friends attribute it to his oc- casional intense concentration. When Wilson is hot on the trail of an elusive idea, they say, you baseball bat. They also claim that he hears you, automatically files your remark in hig mind and, an hour or a day later, will come up with a closely reasoned answer. If senator or geteral has de- parted in a dudgeon, however, he Tal snap him out of it with a 's. “Give him time,” they caution a newcomer, “and you will get your answer." When Erwin was 13—the Wilsons were now living in Mineral City, i through, every word, she Fai: Beglt riosity. The blacksmith let him i Er i i 4 z i { ate seSxi Wilson Graduates From H.S. at Sixteen BIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 _ Prestige of Defense Secretary Continu (Continued from Page 17) but already re- SEAEET. e1ile: ; & 3 i 2 my trousseau,” g2.437 7 % ETE? te dae apt | af eFyi ‘ i z i sit at Ze sleeves, on his hat he always wore in hours as-a-kind of badge of au- Becomes Assistant This meant that the lucky lads at Westinghouse, after ten hours a day from Monday through Fri- day, and four hours Saturday morning, had Saturday after- noons off. (‘‘The new leisure.’’) As noon approached on Satur- day, Mr. Lamme, with a ceremo- nial gesture, would remove his derby hat and plunk it down on the desk. This meant that the work the lip (of production). or the puz- zling new organizational problems of a big technical outfit. . Young Wilson Begins to Follow Automobile In some ways Wilson could help signed the first automobile-starting motors made by Westinghouse. He became more and more interested in the automotive side, and in 1916 was put in charge of all Westing- house automobile-electrical-equip- ment engineering. When World War I came along, Wilson was offered a captaincy in the Army. In spite of his growing family, he wanted to take it, but Westinghouse raised a fuss. Wil- son's special skills, they declared, were too important to the war ef- fort to be spared, Accordingly the company sent him to Washington on a series of special jobs for the Navy, the _| Army and the fledgling Air Corps. He designed and developed ra- dio generators and dynamotors for the Army and Navy, a primi- tive crystal set, granddaddy of the “walkie-talkie” for the infan- try, and a little generator to stick on the frail wing of a 1918 air- go to GM. Thus Wilson's first tasks in the national defense led him to- ments back to the Department of Defense. Has Offer Tripling $250 a Month Salary terested; said he wouldn't even said that many after Lamme’'s death. in 1924, an old document was discovered in the company’s files. It was a long con- fidential memorandum written by Lamme in the spring of 1918—a One by one, he rated each of them on analytical ability, initia- tive. originality and resourceful- ness, executive ability, accuracy and reliability, and personality. things have turned out, old Mr. Lamme's 1918 shows him as a pretty handicapper in the ability sweepstakes. And he was far ahead of the crowd in spotting Wilson's executive ability. Things Don’t Go Too Well Around Detroit In Detroit, Wilson did not find things as rosy as he had expected. Remy Electric, a struggling sub- sidiary, was having its troubles. It was something of a stepchild in the General Motors family. As sales manager, Wilson found himself try- ing to sell a line of products he was not satisfied with; as chief engi- neer he could not do much about this from his Detroit office, be- cause the Remy factory was down in Anderson, Indiana. It was decided he could do more good if he lived in Anderson. When he came home and told Mrs. Wil- son they were moving again, she rebelled. She liked Detroit. She wasn't. .goir move strange’ fittte tAbR TTA solutely not. At this point, Wilson, who was perhaps not entirely happy about his new job. lost his temper. explorations. that the products, while of good quality, were not well designed for mass production; too many kinds of machine tools were required; lacking a smooth flow of ma- ~ ae Pu FAMILIAR POSE—Secretary Wilson illustrates | have seen him in action at conferences. a point in a pose that has become familiar to all who terials, inventories piled up waste- fully and lopsidedly. The company had good men. but they were work- ing at cross-purpoes, Wilson Encounters Resistance at Remy At Westinghouse, Wilson had been the fair-haired boy. At Remy He was to encounter it in other places later on, incinding the De- fense Department. As he pushed ahead with radical new designs at Remy, even Conklin seemed to cool off toward him. Then came the sharp business slump of 1920-21. Why, it was asked, try to rebuild the ship in a if i Ei: TH Jim Mooney Assists Wilson in Dark Hour In those days, too, Wilson came d uf aPHE é ? sorbers. These had hitherto been a costly fancy item for motorcars. With mass production, Wilson got costs down so that the shock absorbers became standard equipment, first on Buicks and then quickly on other makes. As these two industries throve, the working force in Dayton was not merely retained but grew in size. Now Wilson Is Made G.M. Vice President By 1928 this series of solid suc- cesses had made Wilson a marked man in General Motors. He was made a vice president of the par- ent company and moved to Detroit to head the entire group of acces- sory companies, and to acquire new companies as advisable. In the next two or three years this work gave him an intimate af pif th Th H That is a fair sample of his Pz. =. g. . ae eae 7 re *”. [thinking, and a refutation of the idea that he expects to ‘“‘make the of Genera! Motors." Wilson Saves Run on His Bank in Anderson Recently in Detroit I learned of a telephone call from his friend, Lin- field Myers, in Anderson. Mr. Myers, head of a bank in Anderson of which Wilson was still a direc- tor, said there was reason to fear a fatal run on the bank in the ng. “Things like that,”’ said my in- formant, “put Wilson's inftgrity simply beyond any questidn. As we say out here, “You can always give C. E. the last count on your money.’ That may explain why Knudsen Assigns Him G.M. Labor. Relations In-1937-C.-E. Wilson was handed one of the toughest problems of his lile—one which was to occupy “You take care of this labor business,"" said the Grand Dane, who perhaps his own hot temper. “You've got ents, “‘make a special effort to get along with people,"’: was now to meet its severest test, but Wil- i i 5 i i io een Hi armed services over into an image | Made President G.M. Beginning Year 1941 In 1939 Wilson was chosen execu- tive vice-president of GM. In 1940, when Bill Knudsen went to Wash- Wilson was chosen as president on January 6, 1941. Just at this point Wilson, ice-skating near his home, Holds This His Best Aid to Labor Relations Wilson considers this his greatest contribution to good labor relations. efficiency, stability and industrial peace. He is especially proud of all the letters he has received from workers’ wives, saying in ef- dectined. In the spring of “41, stilt Afterward Wilson hobbled out and sat down on the steps to rest his aching bones. His clothes were even more rumpled than usual, his vest more strewn with cigarette ashes. He held his crutches in his left hand; with his right he laid down his hat and then mopped his swirl A passing strange paused looked at him sympathetically and dropped a quarter in Wilson's muscles and turned out guns, in 1953 to be Secretary of De- fense, he was by no means the novice Which his habit of asking questions suggested. Technical Knowledge Big Aid in Defense & alt i 733 i i : f cE itr th es Steady Rise want to feel they are doing some- | turnover of manpower in the armed thing valuable, doing it well, and not having their time wasted. I'm trying to improve the organization so that more people know what's expected of them—what's the right thing to do.” Brings in 30 Top Men to Help on Defense Wilson's third advantage is that he was not stuck with: an “‘in- herited” staff. Coming in with a change of Administration, he was given a free hand to pick all his chief assistants. He chose a number of able mem- bers of the old regime, but he also brought in about thirty top men from American industry, men skilled in the techniques of modern management. Wilson and these like-minded men, according to one of the holdovers from the old regime, “are making the greatest mass attack ever attempted against inefficiencies in Defense.” How far they will succeed re- maing to be seen. In a job of this magnitude it may take another two years to appraise results. Finally Wilson, who came in as the Korean war drew toward a close, has a calmer atmosphere and more time to work out his .| plans. His predecessor, Robert A. Lovett—whom Wilson greatly ad- mires—had to wrestle with the enormous military build-up which followed our defeat at the Yalu. He did not have much time to perfect organizational . improve- .}| ments. He saw the need for such changes. and suggested some of those which are being made. The much talked of ““New Look”’ in Defense is not entirely new and not entirely Wilson's. When the new Chiefs of Staff were chosen— Admiral Radford, Chairman: Gen- eral Ridgway, Army: Admiral Carney, Navy; and General Twin- ing, Air Force — Wilson asked them to make a reassessment of what America needed for adequate defense. The chiefs studied the situation and discussed it with Wilson. When they made their report, Wilson dis- cussed it further at great length with President Eisenhower and his top policy advisers of the National Security— Council. Air Force Has Added Responsibility Today Briefly, the New Look is, mili- the long pull, it means we must ,| make some cuts in the Navy and greater cuts in the size of the Army. Thus the Army will be gradually cut from its 1.500.000—in Korean days—to about 1,000,000 Last spring the Air Force was unhappy; now it is the Army: Wil- son believes an Army of 1,000,000, depicted chiefly a dollar-saver. It is true that he has cut waste and made notable savings in dollars. But the wastage in Defense which disturbs him most is the human wastage as in the tremendous represented services. When a highly skilled man fails to re-enlist—and re-enlistments are lagging alarmingly—it means not only a loss of the ten to fifty thousand dollars it cost to train that man; it means a weak spot in the outfit until his successor is trained. Wants More Men to Make Army a Career Wilson has not yet said much about this, but it is close to his heart. It is a thorny problem and he ig studying it with his usual thoroughness. He wants to enlarge the stabilizing, highly qualified core in each of the services. To do this, the service must be made more attractive as a career. Clearer policies and organization will make the service more satisfy- ing to good men, he believes, but something more is needed. In re- cent years many of the “fringe benefits’ and privileges have been chipped away from the military man and his family by legislation. Some of these should be restored, and certain new securities added. Wilson thinks. In this he will need help from Congress, and he be- lieves he will get it. Wilson has always insisted that dollars Here is one little point which may bear on the argument. Wilson, as you may have gath- ered, is a devoted family man. He has six children and fifteen grand- children, They are his pride and joy. Practically all of them live in the Detroit area—certainly a pri- mary target area in case of enemy atomic attack. It may reassure some parents to know that the Secretary of De- fense shares their human concerns. Popularity Rising in Washington Area For several months the press corps at the Pentagon, which ear- lier had regarded Wilson with what One reporter called “‘a built-in an- tipathy,” has been revising its opinions sharply upward. Once Wilson had “‘askéd enougt~ begin tiently to give honest answers with- One reporter, fascinated by the complex maneuvers of the secre- tarial shoes, recently wrote a light article on the subject, claiming that observers could read Wilson's thoughts by watching his feet. At the next press conference Wilson ostentatiously draped a curtain over the front of the Soon afterward Wilson was talk- ing with President Eisenhower at the White House. . “Mr. President.”’ he said, “I be- lieve I'm getting along a little bet- ter. They're working on my feet now, instead of my head.” Secretary Has Great Affection for President That was a joke, son, but I think it came from the heart. In effect. Eisenhower, for I've made some bobbles and but I've Tbe had a kind of rough time lieve I'm making real progress with this Defense job trusted me with.” Wilson was whom he has a proud and almost boyish adm you THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 Practical Joker's Call didn't have the $100. He * > to forget about it. Sets Sergeant in Action But Moore got to thinking over. he rounded up a bunch ealied-during a cerebral palsy tele= lected thon here and “contributed $100 for M-Sgt. Charles-E. Moore of There Offutt Field.” Moore then called and said he was told 109-Year- Old Veteran it| Takes First Plane Ride wiwte ‘ a all Sure Senate | age trom 21 to 18 when the meas-| Driver Discovers Nest w serge Suse: eels ty Mae a OK 18 Voting Age| ‘The legislation has long had an| of Freeloading Birds . So Torres, . cle uring «coretrat pny | igi Force buddies and cl yearsid veteran ot the, Span: | Younesr Se eaeee tes ana. for t as long. MIDWEST CITY, Okla. ® — Glenn Tomlinson, Blaine County Knowland of | farmer, kept hearing noises under Sen . mistic” that the Senate will @P) California, the GOP Senate leader,|his car as he drove here from his flight was from Tulsa| prove a proposed constitutional) agreed to bring the measure to/ farm home. 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In white, pink, blue and maize. Reg. 39¢ AAR ote te 4 tan tata ml Reg. 59¢ ee & Crisp Sugar Wafers ees Save 10c! Your family ond friends will rs enjoy munching these appetizing wofers Special Candy Mix | Save 12c! Young ond old go for these tasty ponned creams. Perfect for Soft Bath Towels Flufty-soft, spongy-absorbent Cannon towels in rich solids ond blazing stripes. Sizes 20x40” and lerge 22x44”. Reg. 59c each ? fer Reg. 2 for 25¢ Wash Cloths 3 for 27 Metal Baskets Ovel shoped, metal waste baskets 13” highs decorated in bright lithographed floral de- signs and colors. Lorge 12 33: qt. capacity. Sale priced! fruits, nuts and THE PONTIAC: PRESS. Sun to Explode, but Don’t Worry, Professor. Says BERKELEY, Calif, (*—The sun is going to blow up and destroy our entire solar system—but don’t fret about it. H|| Dr. Walter Beade of the Mt. || Wilson and Palomar Observatories j|| who made the prediction in a lec- ture at the University of California =| says it won't happen for a couple | of billion years or so. He explained that as Old Sol gets older it gradually changes its hydrogen into helium, When 12 per | cent of the hydrogen thus is trans- formed, he added, things will get | so hot the sun will explode and | wipe out al] planets in its sys- | tem. Fe) ‘hay. vom RIVE IN. Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500 WANTED TO BUY USED MAGAZINES We Sell pha ov rey Jokes Piper's Magazine Outlet FE 4-8000 JANET CURTIS~LEIGH = i with TORE THATCHER - Produced ny GEORGE Pat FS (iret oy GERIEE MARSA ~ Sereemptey ny POLI HORRIR Based on 4 book by Mevohd Keltach > f MURMIBEET MCT HAE Ma Pa Kettle at Home i BLUE SKY emp" om ™ eeu — NOW SHOWING! A . : * =] = ~ ? £3 24 on . ‘si v 4 ne © ALAN MOWBRAY ALICE KELLEY-BRETT HALSEY mera 2 OWES UAT «Sen coc RA (00D - ems RDA WS PLUS COLUMBIA PICTURES presents “2 JOHNNY WEISSMULLER © * VALLEY OF HEAD HUNTERS RLS ELS SL Te tern Penne by SU RATAN” Beet STARTS TUESDAY Mother's Day Ruined as Baby Smothers DALLAS &#—While Mrs. Jean Hall was enoying a Mother’s Day dinner in her honor yesterday with her husband and six of her chil- dren, her 3-month-old baby Phillip smothered to death in the next room. After dinner the father, Henry, discovered the baby lying face down on a feather pillow. He and a fire department inhalator team were unable to revive it. “We heard the baby wake up and my wife wanted to leave the table to tend it,” he said. ‘‘We all |made her stay and finish her | strawberry shortcake because it | was Mother’s Day.” Rodeo, Bronco Leaps Into Sea, Body Returns CAROLINA BEACH, N. C, ®— The sea has returned an escaped rodeo bronco to the men who pur- Its owner said he had intended to turn the anima] out to pasture if it ever returned. The Outer Banks area where it escaped ig famous for its wild horses — but no one knows what the horse was seeking in the sea. The bridle was still on the animal’s head. CLOWNING GRANDMA—Clown at the left and the right are one: and the same person. She is Rose Hanlon, who is probably the world’s only grand- mother who makes her living as a clown, Mrs. MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 fox: AP Wirepheote Hanlon has been clowning for 10 years with husband William and his brother. They make up one of Ringling Brothers most popular clown | acts. Bob's Chicken House 497 Gizabeth Lake Rd., near Telegraph DELICIOUS FOODS PHONE FE 3-9821 ALSO DINNERS FUT UP TO TAKE OUT! Mom and the kids love to eat at Ted's because they know they'll have fun and have good food, too, with all the little extra services so dear to the hearts of children. Testy meals prepared to take outl Ted, Woodward at Square Lake Road \the hour-long extravaganzas. EAT MORE LUNCH 921 W. Huron St. Next to Huron Theater EVERY DAY LOW PRICES Pork Chops, Salad, Bread and Butter eee eaoeaenrertees Cor. Williams. Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 7:00 WATERFORD |e) DRIVE-IN THEATER LAST TIMES TONIGHT FROM a ae ETERNITY sepenal KERR: “FRANK SINATRA DONNA REED 2nd FEATURE WOMAN OF THE NORTH COUNTRY can National Committee chairman |Leonard W. Hall announced Sun- HOLLYWOOD w#—Last night eong | 227 the appointment of Martin B a6 bs < | Buckner of Flint, ., as direc- |tor of a new woterens’ division | Jimmy Durante told me the | "ttn the committee. reason he won't be back on the| Buckner, 36, a former national | Sunday night extravaganza: vice commander of the American | “They're changing the whole Legion, was a B24 bomber pilot in | setup on the show. The advertising World War II and had a record of agency en over most of the 35 missions in 70 days shows (20 for next season). NBC) tial! also named an advisory | gg get a ip lng Moen committee headed by Rep. James - E. Van Zandt (R-Pa}-to assist the I don t that. I think oS cso Tanger be fie tn newly established veterans divi- bons than every four weeks. : “It's okay for guys like Martin | Formation‘of the division “‘is in and Lewis, because they're doing | line with the policy of the Eisen- pictures too. But I don’t want to|hower administration in giving @ ealy Gave or four 0 cones." | chose attention to tho problems of Last night's show marked the | Sates," Hall said. —— end of Durante's association wi — three years, mene, | sain Glidlally Deed kingpins of the All-Star a WASHINGTON i® — Pfc. Charles he}. Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. When that series hit the rocks, | | doshas dead, gee ices Schnozola Flint Man Named Up in Air to GOP Committee Over Plans WASHINGTON (UP) — Republi- | | Driving Violations The Michigan Department of State reports the following sus pensions of driver's licenses: Robert J. Bachand, 18555 Filmore, Parmington, for negligent operstion. Robert D. Baldwin, 4227 Bacon, Berk- ley, for driving wnder the influence of liquor Zari Burl, 45 Hillview, Pontiac, for ari under the influence luquor. Robert PF. Fox, 668 Lockhaven, Pontiac, Yor ¢riving under the influence of liquor Robert M. Greb, 2856 Cummings, Berk - ley, for negligent operation Doyle Hill, 923 13th &t., Birmingham for driving under the influence of iequer. William H. Houck, 3747 Lakewood, Pon- tiac, for driving under the influence of liquor. Bernard Johnsen, 3411 Rochester, pS. Sak, se under the influence Walter F) Johnson, 3122 Elwood, Bert- ley. negligent operation Charles E Kemp, Huron Hotel, Pon- tiac, driving under the influence of Ueuor Richard W. Kimberly 18160 Coral . Birmingham, driving under the Ainfivence of liquor Reymond J. Kirkey, 622 Walnut, Royal Oak, driving with revoked license James Kiein, 4136 eet, Hazel Park. ligent ula , 3087 Harvard, Berk- afied judgment Pern - dale Fhe re the influence of J. Paviic, 692 + eagree o Pern- dale, driving under influence of yd A. Perria, 6031 Eldera, Walled Lake, driving under the influence of uor. Cc. Reniff, 1657 W. Lake, Walled Lake, for habitually negligent < -= = Py 433 John M, Clawson, driving under the influence of Nquor Roy Thielman, 16444 Birmingham habituslty negligent ian Earliest route to the west ted | through the Cumberland gap in- | stead of the more convenient Hud- son vyalley, principally because the hostile Iroquois Indians lived there. I *¢A4Ahisssn New Lake Theater 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE On Our Wide Miracle Sereen | er 7 7 2 | REDUCE ‘WITH RENNEL Lost 40 Lbs. If you are overweight don’t advertise } it. There is no market oes “& Turning | te ee oa b mee Mall, Box Kaen colts tells Gs what it | | has done ;~a- her. She writes, “I weighed 260 — and so far with the help of Rennel have siready lost 46 pounds My bleed pressure is down and the heart burn ig gone. Net only do I look and | feel better but my general health is much improved To the makers of Rennel Concentrate I am so thankful oo Coral Gables, | of attraction. w ay ——_ success. Be 6& leasing sy By your community or he door to an exciting new + aa through » — screen or tele- vision. Write jor free descriptive folder and sample lesson. Motion Picture Institute Inc. Birmingham 9, Mich. ~ (Advertisement) Almost Frantic from DRY SKIN ITCH? First applications of Zemo—a doctor’s soothing antiseptic — relieve itch of surface skin and scalp irritations. Zemo stops scratching and so zemo aids healing. (Advertisement) More Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH * (denture Dreath). Get TEETH today ot any drug counter. Oakland NOW SHOWING Thru Thursdey Bact ? at 1:31, 3:36, 5:41, 7:46, 9:51 —- —_—- Tak ALIEN « CAGE GRUP PRTC MEDI « STENE FORREST ec eres mar ov amo eaen os Hats 0 wins canny lie oon? OF < Ga * tor on tee * Ne Cm. 08 THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES myer? reported Sunday. Pic. Miller a P- - hour-show routine is kinda rugged. NE canroon's arws § the they elute vend thet lines ott || ocerampp=emeeee NOW thra TUES, ||| ——_—_— that, cant ose that far wideut On Our Giant Screen Te a has never been not- ° ; ed tor s fabulous memory. taces The BEST LOVED Picture Of Our Time! camera for most of the show. And | The MOST HONORED Picture Of All Time! Walt Disney Carton “RUGGED BEAR” “f Pete Smith in “FISH TALES” SAT.: “CARNIVAL STORY” - “KILLERS FROM SPACE” z Phone FE 5-8331 TODAY and TOMORROW—2 BiG HITS 12:40 - 1:00 - 7:10 - 10:20 Oe a ee ee ee a - est SS ae CO ’ THE lige Detroit The steady, 22nd_birth- Hoeft celebrates his 0'Neill Wonders Why Phils Fold With East 9s After Roaring Through West, Phillies Drop 3 they three in a row to Brooklyn, 3-1, 30 “There isn’t any reason,” snapped O'Neill. “You can't ex- We just plate in each of the games with . Milwaukee and Cincinnati. O'Neill has the next two weeks Santee Holds )-Mile Record Kansan Betters Don Lash’s College Mark Chiets inish F hurdles, John Langhorne, a transfer By JACK HAND l NEW YORK w#®—Until the New A's had bewitched American League hitters for a perfect 40 record After watching Trice throw the normal reaction on enemy benches is “Give me a bat. I can hit this guy.” He looks so easy with his half speed pitches, his sliders and | Ask Trice what he throws and | 5 Records Fall | in Ist Big 10 | Relays Saturday) UM Runners Set New Marks in 2-Mile and Distance Medley CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP) — Mi-_ nois, Michigan and Indiana set five Hold 3rd Elimination ‘Third elimination race in the current series. of roller skate events at Rolladium were held during the weekend Winners included Class A—Terry | Ball and Sue Hedger; Class B— Lynn Johnson and Paulette Maca- bee; Class C—Henry Ball and TIGER AVERAGES INDIVIDU. AL AVERAGES AB R 4H HR RBI a Terhle ove “ ° 1 i eeves @-- @ --3-@ --3--3 B Ss? 12 #1 3) 8) 33 sy te 8 we 3 22 H 4b e@ 6 30 K 72 =#132¢«¢0 «68 (38 D 7 2 12 6 303 1 | a, 2 1 206 ° 2 ¢0 1 .206 7 ww e¢@ Tf #2 7? 26ffhlhlUliehUmFlhlU8llCT 1 0 2 ¢@ 1 .193 1 ee ee ee 6 § o ¢ 8 000 ° °° ¢e@e 80 000 PITCHING Ir H BB SOW L Pet Gromek ......47 3% 4 21 5 @ 1.000 Garver ....... 7764 6€ «12 6 1.000 Branca 6 7 6 12 0 1.000) Hoeft err ee ee ee ee ee) Herbert eee 6 11 6301 «00 = ececccess a 3 B | ; 0 : = ADOT seccceese 7 2 0 4 : 2 Miller ..cooee? @ © 06 0 0 S00 eee tS ® 5 2 td] ° 00 Marlowe ....: 2 @2 32080 yo] Zuverink ..... 1 1 6060686 “SEAM BATTING AB R Lt HR RBI as. ‘Soo 2 149 7 6 il i i i i ? : . ok if #32 ¢ 5 Ss = a3 a if sk 4 UE z ifs '‘A’s Rookie Trice Boasts "==: == 4-1 Record-on Nothing be is throwing, he g re Hey 5 i Be uf ie ote" ert bev Sauer leads the league with 10. Kiner has four to his credit. Ist Pro-Am Under Way 62-Foot Shotput Mark) Thir in Valley Track Test — dash—Won by Pierce (@). Time 220-yard dash—Won-bdy Pierce (6). Time oe heat: Medley relay—Won by Arthur x TIAC (Robinson-Watkins-Walker-Jack- — th. 2 minutes 4.4 seo- Balf-mile relay—Won by Arthur Hill PONTIAC | -Watkins-Jackson- . 3rd. 1 minute 33.5 sec- s Hasselle Wins .|29-Lapper at Pontiac Track if re ii B z ; ee rit zi rH hy : x AF ge 7 i tf Nelson Lacks ‘Birds’, but Wins Fine Horse Nelson quipped: “Well, I didn’t make but $30 for two birdies, but I got a horse.” . | have iC te PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 fl it -¥ HH =? oo} SHWOnK— we nem C~VatNEeHVe w-cce rs a B8e-vuvsvrcouveud bi is a s 34° a SOO-e-NNSOHOe—— em Beo-wos-cod-Suog S-evce.~co-cown? i ie tf BEEF Spartans Grab. Baseball Lead in Big 10 Race a ih pi his Sth straight game, beating the White Sox, 3-2. | the 10th inning. Shamrock, Ram Nines Tangle Both Teams Winless in SCL Diamond Play This Season A losing streak will come to an end today when St. Frederick and St. Michael, both winless in Sub- urban Catholic League baseball play, tangle at the Cotumbia-Jos- lyn south diamond. Shamrocks have lest two straight games, while the Freds dropped their ist three starts. Rams’ . sophomore _ left-hander Don Picmann will oppose Mikes’ Dave Smith, a right-handed junior, on the mound. Game time is 4 p. m. 2 + Only other action today involv- ing city teams sends Pontiac High’s golf team to Port Huron for a non-league match. May Enter Preakness LOUISVILLE, Ky. # — | Owner Allie E. Reuben and trainer Harry Trotsek indicated Sunday they will enter Hasty Road, run- nerup to Determine in the Ken- tucky Derby. in the Preakness. | || Then Off to Prom By LLOYD WOLFE STILLWATER, Okla. W — Romance almost cost Oklahoma A&M its Missouri Valley track championship over the wéekend. * © « And the hero.of the day isn’t a competitor at all—just a bystander with a passing interest in track who indirectly contributed two |points to the Aggies’ score. * ” * A&M won by a scant 1 1-6 point margin over second-place Houston The unusual series of events | began when Juanita Hampton, of Oyster Bay, N.Y., arrived at Still- water. Juanita is the sweetheart of Mario DeLucia, also of Oyster Bay, an A&M football player who throws the shot for the track team. DeLucia wanted to take Juanita to the Junior-Senior Prom Satur- day night. That meant he couldn't be in Houston for the track meet. He figured it didn’t matter. He never was a standout in track and jthe meet would draw a big array | of top competitors. 7 = ? But DeLucia’s Sigma Chi frater- nity brother, Leonard Peterson of Alliance, Neb., told the athlete he would fly him and Juanita to Hous- er 17 But he He | Musial's Fast Start Could Make Him a Potential AQQ Hitter in This, His 17th Professional Season years of service, ne is no longer .a Cincy Player Given has always taken marvelous care of to report at St. Petersburg . It is simply a brief toughening up a few ligaments and & | 1444 Romantic Shot-Putter Helps A&M ‘to Title ‘| and four citations S255 if wits 2 § My j fy g i Z f lst day winners. best effort of the year. They flew | back to Stillwater. Throughout the day, the confer- ence's best shot putters got into the competition. When the final resulis were in, DeLucia's toss netted A&M third place in the event—worth a meager two points, but enough to make it an A&M victory. what happens to a player’$ hitting average when he has a bad day earty in the season, ‘~The Redlegs’ Johnny Temple dropped 29 points (from 370 to | 341) as he failed to hit safely in | yesterday's doubleheader against the Cardinals. He went hitless in seven at bats. WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. W—Sam Snead’s words after he beat Ben Hogan in a play- off for the Masters title that ‘the | sun doesn't always shine on the same dog's tail twice” fitted per- fectly his loss to Herman Schariau of Boca Raton, Fila., yesterday in the third hole in a sudden death playoff. Up until Snead missed a short putt it appeared that the War Service Honors CINCINNATI @ — Cincin- outfielder Merriman was presented with four Gold Stars Sunday in pre- game for meritorious wn cae tvea a it hoe Korea, Maj... Robert C. Beckett of the U.S Marine Corps reserve gave the awards to the former Marine flyer. * | Western | playoff would provide him his | fourth straight triumph on the Old | White course at which he is the | pro. | He had come up from six strokes | off the pace in last round 72-hole tournament to tie aQ i oe 35 j Ge | i if tell 28 i 3 ali =. a (ines 6 ¥ Nihal that the Meichiena Kent State (Ohiod fi _aWENTY. TWO ‘Ric ards Joins § 3-2 in the first game of a double- header and then played to a 10- inning 0-0 standoff in the second game, White Sox Manager Paul Richards repeated what Casey had said. Today the Tigers are in first place with 11 victories against five defeats, a half gamie in front of Chicago, a full game ahead of Clevelatid and two ahead of the defending champion Yankees. They return home with a brilliant = record for their first road arnt other American League games, Baltimore defeated Cleve- land 2-1 in 10 innings, and the Yankees whipped and tied Phila- delphia in a doubleheader. Three home runs gave the Yanks a 7-4 opening game triumph and rookie Bill Skowron's run-scoring single in the eighth gave them a 1-1 tie | in the second game, halted after | opener 104. The New York Giants mine innings because of darkness. |walloped Pittsburgh 5-1 ead the __THE PONTIAC PRESS. “MONDAY, MAY Rain washed out a_ scheduled doubleheader between Washington | 5 and the Red Sox in Boston. Brooklyn opened up a half game lead in the National League, nip- ping the Philadelphia Phils 2-1 while the second place Cincinnati Redlegs split a doubleheader with St.Louis. The Redlegs came back to win the second game 6-5 after the Cardinals had captured the| With Progress Policy - Making Group 7 Schools CHICAGO ® — Colleges have made “notable progress” in eliminating athletic abuses, said the president of the NCAA today following the group’s censure of seven member schools. A. B. Moore, head of Alabama's graduate school and NCAA presi- dent, declared in a statement end- ing a special meeting of the NCAA Council in Chicago: “It appears that intercollegiate athletics has done much to curb Southfield Township. There is no age limit in Class A. Class B in-| cludes players from 18 to 21 years old and Class C, 14 to 17. Interested’ teams should contact | recreation director Robert Hall at 24675 Lahser road, Detroit, 19. He walked patna nicany ‘hit one and | (a yielded one hit as Reserve scored twice in the Ist frame. Cranbrook got four: hits, but failed to score. Takes Action Against) By DUTCH HARRISON My greatest shot put me in a play-off which I lost, but it still gave me the thrill of pulling off a big one. It came on the last hole of the Los Angeles Open in 1951, played over the Riviera Country Club course. Tommy Bolt and Jackie Burke were the leaders as I went to the 18th hole. I needed to pick up @-stroke to catch them and it was the final round. The hole is a 44-yard, par 4 and is regarded as one of the finest finishing holes in_ golf. Trapped to the left and right and Be The John Been VISU- ALINER shows YOU whether your cor needs steering service and Neo Charge for Analysis WHEELS BALANCED EXPERTLY $200 f.. includes Weights BRAKES ADJUSTED $1.50 BRAKES RELINED Convenient Terms B. F. Goodrich 111 N. Perry FE 2-0121 Upen fri. “1 8 B FGoodrich in my mind and I haven't for- gotten it yet. ‘Vines Is Winner of Coast Feature FRESNO, Calif. uw» — Long. lany Ellsworth Vines, a former world champion tennis player turned professional golfer, won the 194 California State Open golf aed today with a total of The big six-footer from Los An- geles put. together rounds of 70-71-46-70 for his winning score. Par for the hilly Fort Washington course is 36-36—72, tengel in Praising Tigers “rita Cubs edged out Milwaukee Cust Erskine outpitched Robin Roberts as the Dodgers swept the three-game series from Philadel- phia. Erskine permitted only five hits but was in constant hot water with nine bases on balls. Five double plays helped him. The Dodgers snapped a scoreless duel in the seventh when Sandy Amoros doubled in a run ‘and scored on Billy Cox’ single. + oe * Sal Maglie hurled a_ six-hitter against the pirates for his fifth triumph against one defeat. Home runs by Hank Sauer and Ralph Kiner helped Bob Rush de- feat Warren Spahn and the Braves for Chicago's ninth victory in 18 decisions . It was homer No. 10 for Sauer and No. 4 for Kiner. . « . Te@ Kluszewski hammered three home runs and drove in eight runs for the Redlegs: His last homer, and two singles fo lead the Cards to their first-game victory over the Reds. Musial collected two more hits in the nightcap to take over the league batting lead with a .382 average. 10, 1954 The heaviest player on the Phila- deiphia Athletics is outfielder Bill Renna. He weighs 220 pounds, ‘ . : —_ . The best lifetime batting average on the Milwaukee Braves is Andy ~" Pafko’s .291. Aqua-Lung Sales—Air Fills Aqua-Lung PREE Trials Here is the Aqua-Lung. Now you can safely explore the underwater world or dive for that lost motor. join America's fastest growing sport. Try your hand at underwater spear fishing and photography. FREE Trials and lessons by a real Frogman. membership. Phone Tom Mook, Club FE 2-3994 efter 5 P.M. III FIPD ODD DT \ 146 West Huron Street Toe-in Adjusted on Your Car for. . TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED FOR ALL WORK FIRESTONE STORE FAA kA Att thdA hd dh hd ddd La FEderal 2-925) ° WT AALALLAALLALLALLALALLL * Oe ae oe pel Ween WITHOUT OUR STOCK OF CLEVELAND MACHINE REAMERS IS COMPLETE © Fraction Sizes © Wire Gauge Sizes ® Decimal Sizes © Letter Sizes USE OUR CUTTING TOOL SERVICE F LONG LIFE Mil-0-2104, Supplement 1 level. THE ALL WEATHER | | HE toughest standard ever set up for automobile lu- brication is the Mil-0-2104 Supplement | test. New Trop- Artic is the first all-weather motor oil to meet the require- ments of this test. It is an oil which will serve you winter and summer . . . an oil so good it can double the life of an automobile engine ! Compared to ordinary motor oils, new Trop-ARTIC reduces ring wear 40% or more. It cuts oil consumption 15% to 45%. It keeps pistons and bearings cleaner .. . longer-lasting. It saves you money by increasing gasoline mileage. This has been demonstrated in tests representing more than 150,000 miles of driving. Irop. ECONOMY OIL CO. Phillips 66 Products -Are Distributed in Pontiac and Vi Trop-Artic is truly an all-weather oil . . through S.A.E. 30. Therefore it flows instantly for easy starting at sub-zero temperatures, and yet it retains the film strength necessary to prevent engine wear under high temperature driving conditions. It isn't just heavy duty. It’s double duty. THE NEW O-Weaithet O1L THAT CAN DOUBLE THE LIFE OF YOUR MOTOR! oe” Any car, in any climate, at any time of the year will per- form better with Phillips 66 Trop-Artic. It is a worthy companion product to Phillips 66 Firre-FueL, the new high performance gasoline recently introduced by Phillips. This year of ail years it pays to have your car serviced at the station where you see the Phillips 66 Shield. Puiturs Perroteum ComPANY ,; ieinity_ by: 3389 Dixie Hwy., Pontiac Worlds First Phillips 66 presents the first All-Weather Motor Oil which has proved it meets the most exacting standard ever established for automobile lubrication... . S.A.E. 10W YOUR INDUSTRIAL SuPPLY DistrisuToR Herlow’s Service Gee "s 66 Service Nuchoosk Service Cass-Elizebeth Service Buck & Bud's Service CUTTING TOOLS | & SUPPLIES INC. © ee Csween, Hick’s 66 Service va sli = Fem Men W. Pint, COdwen Gass PHONE FE 2-008 : Corner and Jemie Vines ’ Kennett 626 Broadway, Davisburg PLENTY OF OFF STREET PARKING SPACE Sportemen's Jim's 66 Service Peck Britten's Service 8 tabes © wile fer © gel to get « husband! sort Gastey hh Send Orisa Micke po A 120 E. Menteaim, Pontiac o _— a ee TIRE Co. Michigan's Largest Tire. Dealers! Buy on Budget! No Money Down! One Full Year to Pay! DAYTON “BLUE RIBBON” THOROBRED PLUS AT LEAST $5.00 Aflowence For Your Old aad Dayton Thorobred ist Quality- ist Line fh. stze List 600n16 $2010 $1265" 650x16 $25.95 $16.45 670x15 $2320 $14.45 10x15 $25.75 $16.15 160x15 $2840 $16.95 DAYTON’S BIG 3 _ GUARANTEE *18.95 Lifetiene Guaranteed — 6.00-16 $9.95 6.70-15 10.95 Plas Tax Exe. Recappable 68 * ; } THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954. MSC Still Deep; By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Three items of note came out of talent as they were last year when they went to the Rose Bowl. Michigan's Wolverines are not as deep as they would like to be. Trabert Meets Argentine Ace in Tennis Test American Star Heavily Favored to Advance in|) Italian Meet ROME @®—American Davis Cup | / ace Tony Trabert, who has yet to lose a set in the event, met Argen- tina's Enrique Morea today in the semi-final round of the Italian In-| | ternational tennis championship. The other semi-final pitted Budge Patty, the roving interna- tionalist from Los Angeles, against | ' Jaroslav Drobny of Egypt, one of the top players to tour the Euro pean tournaments, > a a Trabert and Morea gained their brackets yesterday. The 23-year- old American champion swept _ Orlando Sirola, a promising y Italian Davis Cupper 6-2, 64 el while Morea, the tall South Ameri- ee aa ae Se 2 3S % can, crushed Art Larsen, a former | © United States champion from San Leandro, Calif., 3-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-2. > = * Trabert, whose game has been approaching closer to -peak form | 7 with each match, was the heavy favorite over Morea, a good tour- nament player who has not won any big prizes. Patty and Drobny moved into the semi-finals Saturday. Patty, who resides in Paris, turned back Vie Seixas 63, 62, 10-8 while Drobny whipped France's Robert Bedard 6-2, 8-6, 6-1. Dick Bartell, Cincinnati Redieg coach, played 2.016 games during his major league career and com- piled a .234 lifetime -batting av- STICKEL 328 Orchard Lk. Ph. FE $-8722 HURDLER LOSES SHOE — at St. Louis, Mo., AP Wirephete Rich Hammerstein, suburban Uni- versity City High track star, clears one of the barriers after losing his left shoe during the high hurdles event in an invitational meet Saturday. Hammerstein, who lost the shoe on the 2nd hurdle, went on to win the race in 15.4 seconds. By ORLO ROBERTSON NEW YORK ® — Jet Action, newest threat for the $100,000 ood ed Preakness at Pimlico May 72. probably is the only horse in his- \tory whose success can be traced to beauty treatments. . 7 . The son of Jet Pilot, 147 Ken- tucky Derby winner, thrust him- self into the Preakness picture last Saturday. -. Nine months ago it was doubtful if the colt from Mrs. Elizabeth N. Graham's Maine Chance Farm éver would develop into champion- ship caliber. | After running out of the money in two races, Jet Action felt like doing a little skylarking one night last August at Saratoga. He broke out of his stall, ran loose in the JOHNSON Mercury 5 H. P. $202 “Al” Hardy... —= Sales and Service —_ SLAYBAUGH'S MOTORS Johnson 3 H. P. $127.45 Expert Mechanic 630 Oakland Avenue QUICK — DEPENDABLE — GUARANTEED COLLISION WORK COLLISION SHOP t OLIVER MOTOR NAME .... ADDRESS **ree *eree 2457 Weedwerd (Donoven Start Training Now in Your Spare Time! The Demand for Our Television Groductes Is For Greater ‘Than the: Supply. MODERN LABORATORY and Classroom Instruction Just 4 Hours - - - ONE EVENING A WEEK — ; “Phonan, Cell le Person. o Mell Coupon tor Fall Details ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE Three Blocks North of Fox Theater Bldg.) WO 2.5661 Jet Action Wins Withers, Gets in Preakness Picture stable area and even ventured into ‘town. He returned from his wan- derings with skinned knees and as- sorted cuts and bruises. Mrs. Graham, a cosmetics man- ufacturer, spent many hours each day treating the colt with her own products. a. a In the Preakness, a test of a mile and three-sixteenths, Jet Ac- tion probably will run against all the top three-year olds except De- termine, the Derby winner. That includes Correlation, beaten Derby favorite; the Derby and Fisherman, a dis- appointment at Churchill Downs. par Leaders vila, Cleveland and | Some * 3 i RUNB—Minoso Chicage, 18: Avila. Cleve | land. 16 M; Pox. Chicago. “Rowen uenn, Detroit and New York, RUNS BATTED In— Chicago, 21; Rosen, Cleveland. 18; Fain, and Sievers. W: Le Detroit, 16 and Avila, 2; Fox and Minoso, . Chicago, 7; McDou- gaid and Rizzuto, New-York, 6; Six tied | Mineso, Chicago. Westiake he o> Washington, 4 en. Cleveland and LEN or Nine tied with 2 i, 22. IN—Musial, 8t Bell. Cincinnati, 25: Jablonski, St. Louis 2B; Cht- . St. Louis, 22. . Louis, 36; Musial. i, Cincinnati, 32; Snider, m and Moon, 8. Louis, 31 ider, Brooklyn, 10 =. grass. Cincinnati, 9: Mueller ma ‘ork 8s. New York. 3; +; Temple. New Tork: Lopata. Pit and \covers Fullback said * outfit this fall.” Rudy Gaddini of Chicago, a ees es ee eres “Daugherty surveying the results ‘the team was hitting hard.’ * *¢ « We've got the makings of a good | Maxim It He NEW YORK @ — — Floyd Patter- son, the wonder boy of the 1952 Olympic boxing team, may be heading into deep water if he gets past Jesse Turner tonight at Brooklyn's Eastern, Parkway. Joey anion, ae clever ex- champ with the talented left hand, is being talked up as Patterson's next opponent with a_ tentative June 7 date. Pal Joey is head and the Argentine, a few weeks ago. He weighed 159 that night. Patter- son weighed 167 when he outpoint- ed Alvin Williams, April 19. He is having a little trouble building up to ae 1T5-pound elass. With the Patterson-Turner match the Parkway ends its television contract with DuMont, switching to ABC Monday May 17 with an Orlando Zulueta-Percy Bassett match. Carmen Basilio, bitter about be- ing passed over by welter champ Floyd Patterson May Get! Beats Turner Kid Gavilan for Johnny Saxton al- ball coach Chuck Kettering will think twice before giving ‘“‘lessons”’ to his physical education class. Kettering decided to give his Wini- fred High School class some point- ers on football. He was hospital- ized with leg injuries received dur- ing the ‘ ‘lesson.”” —444 S. Canter MU 4.5755 HURRY! SPECIAL MAY At prices too good to miss! Famous MARATHON SUPER-CUSHIONS SALE PRICED AT... 45 9122. Act now— don’t drive on dangerous worn tires — get safer, deep-tread Savethens, Neo No other tires at the price can match them for quality and performance, give so much for so little! And now, during our Special May Sale, you can get these famous Goodyear Tires for prices too good to pass up. See us now for new Marathons by Goodyear. You're 6.00 x 16 SIZE MARATHON sure to save money! © Wet © Secenat © Met « Retreed) = 1025 © Ws brand LOW PRICES ON OTHER SIZES, TOO! sm | ma | sae | ma res eg: me 6.40x 15 | $13.75*] 6.50x 16 | $16.95* 7.10x15| ¥5.95*] 7.60x15| 17.45 * Plus tek and your recappedie tire WHITE SIDEWALLS priced proportionately low! os Tou h, coo EASY PAY PLAN? running re and ee t Only $1.00 down per tire! Praising “totam As low as $1.25 a week! GOODYEAR DRAYTON SHELL SERVICE STORE SERVICE 30 $. Cass PE S-6123 4310 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9311 Drayton Plains __-ROY_PULVER 25 Pine St. JEROME MOTOR SALES 280 S. Saginaw FE 4-3566 Pontiac ee ee, ee Pontiac HOUGHTEN SONS 528 North Main. OL 1-976! Rochester 2705 Orchard Lake Keego Harbor FE 2-8549 ASA SMITH 150 Center MU 4-6572 low The new PATHFINDER by GOODFYEAR COOK’S SHELL SERVICE 2955 Highland MU 4.5085 Milford STURDEVANT SERVICE 250 North Perry FE 3-9547 Pontiac ~ eg TINE a 147 S. Saginaw = FES ~4001 eS SPECIAL 1952 IMPERIAL BLACK BEAUTIES 1952 DESOTO Custom club coupe, white well tires, ito heater and tie e8 SUMMER 1950 CHRYSLER Town sad top. “The most beaut car built.” Radic and ter, saute- ma leather and whipesrd trim, black and cream CARS 1950 CHRYSLER New Yorker four door. Automatic transmission, radio and heater, black finish, immaculate tnterior. almost new white wall tires, perfect mechanically $350 Down NO MONEY DOWN 1949 CHRYSLER First series, door. Ex 1 . Dark finish, radio, heater, and matic transmission. Very interior. Good tires. $34.00 a Month 1949 DESOTO Pour door. Radic and heater, sute- matic transmission, two tone paint, clean interior. $34 a Month 1948 PONTIAC Vircentne a. Excellent a radio SX wae four green aute- nice .. *2.WENTY-FOUR — not, why not. If mountains exist, it is felt, they too should be covered with could have ridged its surface. Other observatories working un- der coordination of the Interna- tional Mars Committee, which met in Washington March 9, will at- tempt to observe Martian moun- tains directly. At Mount Palomar in California, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity scientists will use the giant 200-inch Hale telescope to make temperature readings for various points on Mars. The Ponte Vecchio at Florence is one of the most famous bridges in the world. Webster-Roth nin iil |Wartime West Lhukov Praises But Russian Marshal} Calls. U. S. Aggfessor Since V-E Day MOSCOW « — Marshal Georgi | K. Zhukov, commemorating the World War II victory in Europe, | conceded yesterday that Britain | and the United States played a! heroic wartime role. But after- ward, he charged, Amezica turned | toward a policy of aggression. | A lengthy article by the first deputy defense minister was dis-| played prominently in Pravda, the | Communist party organ, to mark | V-E day. The piece was considered an event because prominent offi- cials seldom write for Soviet news-.| THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 President Eisenhower and Britain's Field Marshal’ Viscount Montgomery, saying, “It was un- der their leadership that the Usiit- ed States and British forces re- peatedly routed the Germah Fas- cist troops."’ Assailing America’s tater ‘‘ag- gressive foreign policy,"’ he said U. S. ruling circles ‘‘have created a large number of military bases and various military blocs directed | against the Soviet Union and the | peoples’ democracies."’ He said Russia was undismayed, however, because it has the world’s best army. + * He said that the people of Eu-' FRECKLES A be rope and Asia ‘‘do not want to eannon fodder’ for the United States and never will accept her | “‘antidemocratic ideas.”’ | Hot Dog Fle(a)s BLUEFIELD, W. Va. ‘#—Police papers and such praise for the | are looking for a “‘hot’’ dog, stolen | West is rare. . . + from the city dog pound last night | by an intruder who pried open a Zhukov paid particular tribute to| kennel and fled with its occupant. SIDE GLANCES ~~ by Galbraith DONALD DUCK- DAILY PRESS WANT AD DIAL FE 2-818) Ask for the Went Ad Vept. 0 chess pun nice Dele mF o4s MS irae , CISCO KID Tp et 17 NO, S8NOR GUNN, ARE YOU SURPRBED TOY | \7 EXPECTED YOu. SEE ME HERE, We, CISCO KID ‘ wes ‘ X Ry > wa * iN ay ee bh i ~ ae hd & 4 @ 4% Ws ALLEY OOP oT UAL —_— ——= ——— dacs | , sae 43 ALLEY OOP, FOOZY AND OOOLA SEEM TO BE HAVING Quire A WIM THEIR TEMPERAMENTAL WAR HORSE BACK THERE IN MOO... ge = 5 % i ’ SZ; s-0 — oA BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES LIGHT PROJECT. TS ABSOLUTELY NANCY ME THE SHERIFF YOU MY FRIEND ? PHOOEY-- I'LL GET ANOTHER CHANNEL Wheat Is Loser || MARKETS |Stocks Advance More Than Rest| cme _|but Moderately. CHICAGO @® -— Small losses of Markets . NEW s YORK # — The stock were recorded in grains on the| «0s bu: Me ee ta vapnne rece. | market advanced moderately to-| gional officers will highlight the board of trade today, wheat losing | ne Re 424278 bu: seein Northern |day with most areas of the list 194 regional meeting in Region appits, od, fancy, 490 bu; Be in the most ground. Old crop soybean | $A, Steele's Red, fancy, $90 bu; joining fy ie TV of the Michigan Municipal futures resisted the selling : Asperagts .| Gaing at : went to be- League. oun: PrCS | acs beha, thooas No''s, eectee (tween 1 and 2 but most Selling in wheat appeared Ny 1 tbh be, "Chives, Be 638" | around ‘a point dotted the list” ee eee oe based | 1.50 dos belts. Leeks, No 1, 1.00- éea | Tound a point dotted the list. city and village officials in the on prospects of a bearish govern- nf ag Et The market was higher at the counties of Oakland, Macomb and ment crop report fier the mar-| i Sy heet, Maat ct |tw tetanic fe Genesee will be held at the Com- a today, slackened tears) BP i'r Waite itn . turned quiet later but munity Building in Fefiton Wed- ted States might get in-}1. 00 100-m | "adlanes, re hot. a vay. eee nesday afternoon and evening china hostilities and additional light Rothouae, Ne I; Yeb-1 18 don beh row ee Site Sin of anti select a chairman, re- moisture in parts of the winter| “Greens. Spiasch.” Me t. 130-208 bx. | phone ppt ing ee: oo en a ee wheat belt over the weekend. | Pelleswt, No 1. 1-28-1.80 bu ad Oe te Tagen primarily responsible for the coor- on nn ee eins cain Copper, Mathieson Chemical, U. S. dination of activities of the league from wheat with May and!| perrorr iaP)—The Steel, Chrysler, and Republic Avia- with their region for the coming prices July soybeans doing better than| Rus Stn aPand tay Sees (Og : year. the rest of the market because of | Sided) of Tederai-siate graded eggs to- The stock market was ahead al- Porsennsl practices and pending | light sort coverings. Males: Orne 6 tno st Pedey i dehed te ne tn state legislation will be among sub-| Wheat near the end of the first | {1° mealum. 34.38, wea’ on ry Associated : jects of current interest to m yng Adie lower, May | 22%, wtd.ave 38. Grade lnre 30M a a oe ee | 01, corn to % lower, Suiumes Gente $1.53, cats % to % lower May T ave 45; large shecghe wid org 30%: Ah orga Met mow 1606 bigh and P PUBLIC rye % to 1 cent lower, May 94%, | stv srede't lanee'sa OS® B inres| Apri 17 en ree ae : ney Ay : , 3 . iy. y . sore tt Site Bey Ne 3 oe renter tos re as ge as 2 cents a hundred pounds higher — — w York Stocks displays the firt OK sticker and au | Gotham, of the Pontiac Auto Dealers Assn., ag lh mg A. 2 Seecce* | _ Mrs. Kohn May $18.57. ' Bn te steady: Te- | Pigures after decimal points ary eighths | Mayor William W Restored the windshield of | Mayor Donaldson and Donald Hildenbrandt, of the | Will be held. for cash to the nighet | sete ot the Pyrckey Dunerel : s car in connection |Chamber of Commerce Safety Committee which | at White, Loe Borvies beatin” White | tcNALLY, MAY © i954 WILLIAM Lake County, Michigan, the H., 46 E. Walton Bivd.. age 82: } : buying ices score AA 86.75; 02 A 15; | Adams Exp ... 325 Kelsey Ha a ‘sta r} 80 | Admiral y .. 164} with the current vehicle ‘ion program starting | is sponsoring the movement in cooperat th t place of storag , ; of Ciyé jon with the e | —— 00 B 8425; 0 C 53; cars 00 B 84.78, Grain Prices C 8. ae ee Oe - buying prices to 1% lower: U6. hing Led’. 3) ee tedey. Flanking Koren (left to right) are Henry E. | association and police. Dated: May 6 1964. MeNelly: dear father - ae ¢ C@ICAGO GRAIN ren Allied Ch ..... 2 Lehn . CONTRACT PURCHASE W. McNally; dear brother of qusneee Ur $; U. & mediums ° | Aimed 4 a Pt . ~ CORPORATIO Hugh MeNeily. Puneral servic Wheat —— oo ores S13; eurent se ies | allio Chal’... ae LOY Olese 07 . By Es BCIESZKA will be held Tuesda : Sept... 1.02% | 30; 29.3. Ae hal .. Lib MeN &L 9 . : . zr econ 209% Dee... Les _— Lid... 903 & Me ower DIrakin . Collection Manager| Oss Sun hes Sohn Ww. bodeer | yi i oe * Alum Co am.. 72 ton y.. 08 ome g usiness ofe May 10. 11. ‘4 Chapel with Rev. John W. Mulder Bae a Mp dS oe, ee is Sore at leer it Gains P ee ee Cora" 7 4 ee iH 219; on treek $48: totel US Suapee PP & Pay 367 Mack Trocks ia ains opularity | NEW YORK (INS) on Sunray | Court for the County of "Oabiané | will le in state ot ihe Weorhene- May s-eeceee BERN BOW cose. nns 389% ‘or y 1.079; Saturday 613 Am } yarn = Mareb. Field .. 28.1 Oil Corp. reported. today net in- Jin the imetter of the petiti Eee 7 dag sects ERR pom, SSS Hoan tanaey is: funday | Am Ges @ ai. 38 Marts "i 333 on New Models | come tor the quarter ended |i denn Martin Stevens: minor: Cause | "Sua mon "Lake Rd. oper eo: Dee ve-cco- LOM May ....... \ya.%0 | North Dakota Pontiacs 218-30 washed: | Am 6 Gee’: ati Mead Gp 333 e March 31 of $6,071,490, equal me as beloved Inusband. of Mrs Virginie Bey cesses 18% Bop lees pcm gh aE 475; new stock |Am Red... 114 Mid Cont Pet 0.3 Demand ‘for power brakes this) 56 cents a common share This perenis of sala eh = Katherine 'P. Mtonbecht. Reber Bent 32:: : at Gee cana | Rem te, ah rena aioe |Am Grete: 33 Mensano | Waterford Lists April jo: is double that reported in| compared with $6,130,942, or 55 | Court slleging that the present where- c dene [Mervin B Beei, eecee SRS MOV wns aee ry : = . = ° . . . ; ‘c . aro Sc le meteroeas OU Whites __ Am Ot Pa | 01 eter Pe... Mal Buildi : | 1953, according to Ward's Auto-| cents a common share, in the poy yl Ey BA, Ay on William J” Partelie, “Robert L May .... 96% July re Am Tob ...... 61g Motorola .... 336 ilding Licenses at 92, | motive Reports | same period last year violated 9 law of the state and that Se ond Antheer G. Be FOE ince OA |... Poultry Anes Wm C.. ba Murray cp. i8| Worth $644 The trade’ publication sai | — said chud should be placed under the) Wednesday. May ID at 3 0. m : : Bae poasrer Co .~ 303 ,500 publication said power! new yoRrK (INS) — Ameri Min the spame ef Te te oft Gel oe 5 Puneral 2 U. S. District Judges Bone Ai toapr“g At Geeruasc’ Has Ret Deity" Ma! WATERFORD TOWNS HIP—| on 16.3 ter cont of aad enc | ee ee ee = ie thatthe Snearing on said. petition | SStrine" Inlrmen tm ander Named for Michigan te. Detrot for No 1 quality poultry | Avec Mig... $ Net Sul * $14 | April home building permits nearly | ductio oot >| Soeenes ot teams te the Sty ‘of Pontiog tm’ sald County, on the| {4,28 the Donelson-Johas Funeral tate sats eset: light type | Bed tims 34 Met Thee a7 | a uction as against 8.6 per cent in| quarter ended March 31 of lsth ‘day ‘of May AD. 1964 et nine| Nome. Masonic arave service AMNUNGTON @ — President| Wan Bs Teens apse peels | Bea Soe ty Senet «t/a ase ined Bs Mars | ae | $907,682, equal to 43 cents a |iivey Semmtagcs™ io aspear ‘pores:| “one 5a Eisenhower today nominated two ; i a SO ee is¢| the township, according to Liocyd| From January through March,| ™m™on share. This compared st catd beastng. beloved infant sons of George new federal district judges for | *7"' “poneties. $¥-5's Ihe 21-34 Boving Airp $1 Mert & West 405 | Anderson, township supervisor. | installations totaled 232,735, com-| Wan S0%0S.247, or 48 cents a BA ay A Re a - yp Ag = . ee. of a cont. Cel a ww... Thy CUO ------ $1.5) 33 garages at $21,385 and 37 for Serene “Division.” Onkinnd. a a Py Regt — Ay — ; Orest Britain (pound) OSs, |CUVMF .. 64 aadio Cp... 33] remodeling and , * + 4 Bn the matter of the petition, concers- won of Joe and Nettie Willams. SCRAP st aay ater: [Sears nd teats | ee wawcoes News in Brief Pals Connect Youth |S nr cnn runs nomen] Ext anaes Bi IRON | fk fad See oe ee Sate oF | | OUT | Feen soe eee rome semen] Ecce ges fers tures a a ot Pak et a cont Bet | Sete Ct --- HR) eparaer””.. gta) | Commercial permits were given| Jet Manni, of 45 Lincoin Ave. + | “pSttac favang tsn sues ms ts won| Sera med Ste ene (franc) .28% of @ cent, unchanged. ~ | Col Gas .. 565 es don (kane | for a grocery store, a store build- told Michigan State Police of the to roce Br siieging that wher vis Puneral Home this aft- many eee eS Sh | oe ee. 43.5 geovill Mf 33.3| ing and adi ine | P ' a) ry ea in of the parents of the said minor child efnesn ot 3 p.m. Enterment im Holland (guilder) 26.43, un- | Coo OB 7 ge OE an addition to a bowling ontiac Post yesterday that his is unknown and the said child has violat- Cab BS Cupstery. Tape om | changed naire) tevsudey 330, u- Son Pe pris 10} Sere Rowd. 62.2 | Alley totaling an estimated cost of | 12-foot rowboat was stolen from| Junior Ray, 20, of 4% Baldwin| chad shoula be placed ‘under the juris Devs Funeral Home changed” grecen (rene) 183k un gent Gee .... @3 tence A haere \the public fishing site at Deer Ave., was arrested over the week- | “tion of this = eee oan Reortond (irene) (tres! Coat Ou sony Sinclair OU... 4 | Other permits included two for | Lake in Independence Township end in connection with the April | of Michigan.” you ‘are of ie eas Card of Thanks 1 7s wane Corn Pa... Bou Bee... #1 | remodeling and additions to com-| Saturday. A chain, used to tie the | 30 breakin of the Lakeside Grocery {het tne Peering on sald petite il ot | WE SHALL WEVER FORGET THE a _E., Braet Tiree i." Curtiss We a3 Soe Ry §3.7| mercial buildings and three for ga- boat to a tree, had been cut, | at 6891 Williams Lake Rd., Water- oye my in County, on the 18th day mony kind expressions of sympe- ef @ cent. a. _ Rehep 4 wieete sf3| rage and breezeway combinations. | Manni said. ‘ford Township. : y AD. 1954, at nine o'clock im the a on ee oe Coe (bolivear) 30.63, unchanged. Dow Chem ..__ 363 = ai: ae Total its for ¢ sum lu friend’s in jail and | He was implicated by Sylvan od to appear, yeoenalty ot sate hessmng. Seuvement of ou son. aut bre be- ic Ci Bast air i... "2 Std OU Ind. 813] beted 170 with an Or ior gy valng | bail, Ph. PE 5-8201. C. A. Mitchell, M. Kelly, 17, of 140 Marian Ave.,| service herect, this summons and notice | the Nev Reuneth' Metchions ad ash, igarettes Stolen poem Eee ... $12 gtd Ol Ohio ot} | at $754,023. or Ph. MA 5-4031, Guy Carter. _and Harry L. Pate, 19, of 164 Dres- a ott curred Wy pene oS ee H -Te siasarens nd About $30 in cash and 25 cartons | Engr May: 43 Sut Pap. a2 | ro tay. or cst tm Watertoss, | °°, AVC. beth of whom have ai-| SS de reaties trans newspaper prised | Orval Jhon Family of cigarettes valued at $48 were|Sne sone = Svitt,e co... $$3| Jewish Congregations, | Drayiat, Pitts of oi matat area, | ready waived examination of ,the | "Witness. the Honorable Arthur | In Memoriam 2 taken Sunday night in a breakin| Preept Sui ars Tes & 723 k be Ricthurdeny | wet, Wnt Bees Real Rotate, OR | barges. The two are in the Onk-| Mosre. Judge of said Court, mn (hs Cly| IN LOVING MEMORY OF o8CA at a Baldwin avenue grocery store. | 20" Hise. 188 Thomp Pa... 1 to Mark Israel's Birthday | 3-718 Ady. men pple panini lala a 184 run, - Mey ie cated ewe? — ae lee ae ui ee Pontiac Jewish congregations 2 your triend’s ta fall amd necde|Pate's brother, Lyle 1, 20, of 12 A true copy pon guage at brave The memories are wels, , George Varion, emtry | Gen ‘318 | will meet at Congregation B'nai | bell, Ph. PE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell, | — é ro Re wg ee Death heartache was made through a rear door. |Gen Te"... [03 Odutecos =. se4| israel at 8:15 tonight to mark the |OF Ph. MA §-4081, Guy | E. Farnam, Revel Oak, is in the Deputy Trmete, Resteter.| That nothing cou, heal. Gen ¢Time 90.4 Ue Cereese.... 723| sixth anni of the of | county jail for investigation of re- May 10, Some may forget you now Gen T & Rub 33 Pac. ...1332 cond — | ceiving property stolen during the is Se Se Siete M2 Ba bn ft) Herne Unknown Man Dies ==" € the SerantAnt Cr eoMaRaT anion | Re, nenee hee ine FOR Geodrich . 9.8 United Gp... %3| The guest speaker at the com- n nown an les GSOLOGICAL SURVEY DIVISION 7 _misced ve By ‘ Geotyenr _. .. a3 au Pret.” 51.2| bined meeting of the Hadassah and * Bicycle Ride ° Rotice te ren mn hereby 02 required by a ad who Gime Ry Pt’ std ‘Y @ aw... 338| Jewish Welfare Federation will be of Crash In juries icycle Rider Injured sch sof erie ets of Macagn,| bared Se Mey Eide. gute INSURANCE Gul Gl). $04 Demon... say] Rabel Robert Syme, of Temple ‘in Crash on Telegraph |2spied.sn¢ promaigntes thereunder that | _Orviie_Lale_ Rose Lee ; follaca #384 BB Ret: $5 | Israel, Vocal music by Rebecca} BERKLEY — An unidentified| ot Weils'tm the city of Lansing Michi | Homestk 40.4 Walgreen... %3\Kerr W | Robert E. Spencer, 22, of De- ls in the city of Lansing, Michi- Tee Heever who passed away Houd Mersh 186 Waukesha M.. 133 est, accompanied by|/man was fatally injured when troit, was taken to Mt. Carmel | first [sg ae a, A, ee a agent act laaaaa will be part of — by a car at 12-Mile road Hospital with injuries suffered © aS | fA Upon thle worth to ream = 7 TBR ERR fh sn enter cay Ser whn ls he seh ar we] Sra cee aed | SOS og a . ot! i : be . See Call i 403 Woolworts.: 44| Man Found Dead mark as the only possible means ign of him, on| permit ‘to aril a well tor gas in the] and ‘Baby Brother, movavi or tnt Paper | T14 Yale & Tow 403 of identi Telegraph near Thirteen Mile | "winam J. Morriss, 10 i Fie 3 - < bane . Int & Tei 165 Young #2 & W 202 _— fying the man. roads, according to Michigan State | nue. nd Park agg ot yy qusentees OS cnet Ma nard J Johns Man ._65 Yngst Sh & T 42.4 X LaFave of 3154 Bessie, Au-| Driver of the car, Weisley Sea-| Police of the the Kart Baughman et al No. 1 in the onnson sae ieee burn Heights, was found dead in| brook of 22305 Lapeer Rd.. aide ee ee cqsuer of the southeast one quarter (%4)| 129 AUBURN PEBSITD General Insurance NEW YORK — Compiled by the Asso-| the bedroom of his home this | Orion, told police the pedestrian + one on Tele-| sist Lyce fowncnip, Cakiand’ Cousty: ~~ Funeral Direct 4 807 Bonk — 1s) se | Morning, according to Oakland | walked directly in front of his car tiated oh he ye _— wt Comm. Nat'l Bonk || tndget Waite Us, steens | County Sheriff's Deputies. A shot-| The man was dead on admittance | MeMillen, 4, of 285 Telcgraph | Sanne ee iae St Svwe| Donel John Se Phone. FE 4-4523 Noon Mon “ygae 0? eb 1239 | Bun was found in the room. to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in| Rd., Birmingham. Spencer ro ao a ee oneison-/j0O Ss i Pa ye ers ge Pa go, oS eR S| ep ooo . ' ‘ n le : rT, Stevens i ey hed Leeebdnnndi gid det et Livestock and 36 year ida fet tal end arty ee canta oday. wc} SS tee, Aves Taneing ihe) eens ’ r 1984 we _— tH 18 34 1086 DETROIT LIVESTOCK - | weighing between 145 and 150. pita’. GERALD E. EDDY ~ ) prompt SWEATERS 1983 low 1302 735 $05 995 Market not estaviiahed ‘undertone, west M . Dated. May 6 we " vn | Voorhees-Sivle ) 9 DETROIT STOCKS cnaghter wiser on yearling Tun; about Coun Death ‘Man nt to Prison —_—____~~"* FUNERAL HOME Pp i Cc a4 ° U P nd aw > 25 per cent receipts cows; slaughter S | STATE OF MICHIGAN Ambulance Service. Plane or Motor 4 a Pigures after decimal points are eighths | Steere and yearlings opening, uneven: ie She . for B kj J 9 TOEOLOGLCAL SURVEY DIVISION rE oe fusbeer* on oa aan vance To whom Cemetery Lo Miathas am SKIRTS ieee 0 | Seer oe ee tse | OXFORD — Service or. Mrs. reakin Jan. i ka ery Lots Gerity- ear tps 25 3 fully ; two or three ai Act 326 of the Public Acts of Michigan.) OR SALE: CEMETERY LOT. se + . Kingston Products ..., 27 27 27 | stockers and offered, early sales Katherine Vance. 81, of 48 Hovey; William C. Donnelly, 22, of 3303} 1937. *.amended. and the Regulations foe ERY or. 4 P 4 Masco Screw sicegttteee® 2.7 a4 27 etanty; few > fed steers 28.80; St., will be at 2 p. m. Wednes- | Ravena, Royal Oak was sentenced on gg fle cromuignie thereunder Mount Park. rr fas. ry Midwest Abrast +1O@r Orre choice prime steers . iu . CHAPEL 3 GRAVE LOTS. x | 9 \ te Wie cs.sccisccae 6 8 iy yea ©52.40-25.00; several lots choice | ay at Mabley Chapel, with burial | ‘to 1% to 15 years today by Cir- eetene “bar a "of Lansing. Pee matin. gate, Li 9-108 + ; . ‘ Wan ects’ «=* CE if. bal utunty end. commercial agar pore por eeips in Flint. | cuit “te phir L. Doty for astern Standard Time ‘The hearing t onavea we SY Y ; cows § : cannets cutters y today at home after | breaking and entering in the night- purpose ing evidence and White ms ° : : $11.00-13.00; early sales utility and com: an iliness of several days. me. pow lg gE H, eters 4 \ Driver Hits Parked Car and ase nacok ecives & 75. ee :, na Donnelly pleaded guilty April 28| %, well fer ‘geo tm the Dungee Formation | TS of in price ON DSS. ‘ to Avert Head-on Crash Bm ly ey about FERND | to entering Radio Temple, a'church |. William J. Morris, 10 Highland Ave-| 5 . aM Mieagyt ode ‘bead’ prime’venlers wp te | ah a — Service for in Berkkley, last Jan. 9. He also|the'C M spencer Wo. 1 in the center BOX REPLIES . Zelda M. Jackson, 32, of | $27. : early bulk mostly choice veslers |’ . Anderson, 61, of 30167 | ad itted , - o be rd r No. = — 4 _221 Auburn Ave... Phone FE 4-3431 | 167 Oncida Ra, was treated at| S200, few cull and wily atouna sineo| Palmer Ave.. was scheduled for a $200 theft trem the church Gerins Section Sev township 1 ‘north. ranee "| ‘at 10 toda VP ACALLALALALLALL Pontiac General Hospital for knee down. ... — 1 p.m. today at Spaulding and Son | an earlier breakin. er ieee tae Get ee tlend County | a.m. v Bheep—Baladie | Slaughter lambs cuts suffered when the car in| opening slow; early sales with last | Funeral Home, with burial in Aca- A companion, Norman T. Brisch quarter coction, end "1380, fect from es ee which she was riding struck a| Sect mostiy choice and’ prime 102, 1 | Ga. Park Cemetery. He died sud-/22, of 28309 Franklin Rd., Bir-|ine,°0i!,20 025, ttt from the eas ne hee — = parked car early today on Oneida. | Ser lems, No. 1 skins, t to‘ar- y Thursday. _mingham, pleaded ty to ed g. - p e t wing boxes: Her husband, Edwin B. Jackson, | thorn’ lambs $94.00; load good. and Fred Fassnacht |same charge April Mt ansd will be| Stee Seeman entrar Drenan, Fours afd teed the driver, told Pontiac Police he | S2otct, 181) 280% op'tuil cull to choles RIDGE — Service | Smtenced later today. West’ Michigan Avenue, Lansing! Michi: 30, 35, 45, 46, 56, 64, 68, at the wrong, side of the ae ae ae for Fred Fasmecht. $9, of 20 Oak-| 64,4, ogni = soor,,| | | a fEmnge_ uvestore Spe ee all age Bt Sa at nts Tour Capitol, Dated: May 6, 1954. on hs wee ly - ’ burial End S of “+h de » i, e lower; de 7 putehers; |in White M Buildi STATE OP i oy Chapel, Memorial Park oe age —i = the (Office Help Wanted Male 6 Ie0.30 a, aa Thursday at) Thr rade eo fifth | ise niceslang Desim matter ot ADVERTISING 28 50- 280- the Sta Notice is hereby given, that on the most sows under 600 William H. Clark pop in Lansing last Suh aay of October 953 © petition was MANAGER es 90 lover: Net ee aaa pegs “~“—"y a 4 of state buildings * ady | Commissioner tor the County of Oakiand sek'y and ston, heady to 8 |65, of S. Tecan og -|. A chartered bus took the group, Felocating along « highway of Birdsiand a y; cows steady; bulls |p. m. Tuesday at Kinsey Funeral | Goje — » Florence | ing filed with the Honorable NEWS balls strong te Home, with burial in Oakview on. Whitfield teacher, and sev- Arthur. hloore. ules of Probate. EWs 7106-28.00; with | Detroit Bn y in a| tars. Jenee Hutreslte, of Postieg * That nation _ PRE 1. pho State College student ‘high choice and | Thieves Get $1 in Stamps |lege campus during the aft | .-f—} 19.88 The Auburn Heights School at Students visited the college erated sees inte. (260 W seum, where Miss Mary Elisworth, end eters TES 12 ebster, was entered over the | formerly of Pontiac, a m ee ase Apel bpeseedanged anedage a staff member explained the ex : postage stamps, &c- | hibits ; ° : . ambe | cording to Mrs. Eva Yarger ag nas ed wet |cipal. One office door was pried! First foreign salute to American 80 ibe fall |open, Mrs.‘Yarger said, but it is soverignty was fired in 1 wsotakins 7 not known how the building was/the tiny Dutch colony down. entered. ‘Nothing else was missed. | Eustatius in the West Indies. 2 * ’ ne cd — ~ ro a a ee ee ae vee —.e ae Ss CU _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 _ CARNIVAL | ee ee a ee _ Wtd. Contract Mtgs. 32 = s . REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCE PREFERRED i JENERA! HOU! - +5 GEN i ? 4 i | 5 To Sie ae * oon shorthand e = ASE DINER Beeds waitresses, day and night shifts. Interview or call pm. PE 17-7143 pereseee a tartan, sage cm | MIDDLE Aaa gtean nea oe | quire Permanent employ-| _ fore 2. ment and future, Apply or | PART TIME WAITRESS. MINIT "NICHOLS FOSS SE res AND WAIT- PACKING CO. rest_tor_mughts _OR 18357. 1 Morton 8t.. Bay City, Michigan TOOLMAKER TOOLMAKER Must have minimum of 10 years ex : SALESMEN. ARE A NATION- with openings in Stenographers MUST BE EXPERIENCED APPLY Pontiac Motor Division after 3) Ww i faz; indie ; : TEE Poundations, vasement floors, Savewars, and cheap z weeds and brush BOE ones, Syne rubbish hauling. FE CAWNS RARED SEEDED FER- tilized and . 3-0be.. ay : rE foc ULING asad 3p, m. . VICE STATION Work “OF ANY KIND. PART . @®, to Il p. m. Ref- FE 3. RECREA. ATTICS. - close in porches. x 12 years experience in_ super ma 2 00 atom man. Ph FE 3-223 and call for Jewell Be' ; references st BS a liver. WasHINGS TRON tains, end linens Work Wtd. Female 11 — Ponape OAkiand wo CONTRACTOR FOR sid Cc. Alterations and custom building | OR 3-2578. as Sy winding. 218 E. Pike EXCAVATING 4 8 Gomee and a sgrenee. EAVESTROUGHING oat SEWER CLEANING éuks Serv. PE 42013 MON {xo. ULLY cleaners. Lake Orton. MY 2-643! 20x20 $750.00 Complete with overhead doors. window and cement work. FHA Terms OR 3-2276. GUARANTEED ROOFS, ALL kinds. Est. 1916. J. A. Hugus, 353 N Cass. FE 2-3021. PFE 2-8948. nae ey me 23-2721. ~~ HOUSE RAISING _ tithe Pe eee eee ene 138 eat LOOK!! HOME OWNERS ALUMINUM ROLL-UP AWNINGS HEAVY ALUMINUM DOORS $39 STORM WINDOWS (ALL SIZES EXCEPT PICTURE ‘ $15.98 rv PAINTING ! Work free estimates rE COMPLETE ‘ ’ & clean- be e. CASH : OR GOMPLETE vice. wall washing, 9 INTERIOR DECORA ; are next. Call OR }3-6876, Mr. Gidcumb. : Painting and Decorating Wall — paper rich Mason Thom: FE 4000 PAINTING 23 years ei Roe service. 92004, & x estimate FE 23-4137 AINTING. PAPERING & removed Charlies White Oa 09-3007 { PAPER ~ Wall Washing & Painting SRPURNIENED APY OR WOORE ; mone H.C. Newing re oer DCL ADO OE EPETETES | pe cil SBE sas <——-Bervert_Hell,_B_ 9978. Photos & Accessories 21 FAMILY ALBUMS ~ SPECIAL = 12.5. ae 3 <7. T Service CoARATRRS 2ST 20 MITCHELL'S TV 100 8 PE 2-287) | $——Unli ental Agency = PONTIAC PRESS EM PLOYEE SEEKS 1 OR 2 ROOM FUR J APART- MENT iN CITY. C FE 2-181, “ after 3 p.m. '; i i] ye eee A, JOHNSON, Realtor FE 4-2533 1704 S. Telegraph Rd... $| Seer Sp Lote and Detroit Buyers W: We . sell, K. G. Hempstead, Realtor 103 E. Huron &t. PE 40204 _ PE 32-1317 LISTINGS WANTED Properties and homes needed for E We 5 rine eS in LISTINGS WANTE ac immediate sale. Red Horse |;# REALTORS FE 4-2252 MAHAN HAS BUYERS YOU WANT ee cmene as = your certainly TT vesre of oat Fou Ee tate dealings in We } for a Help Wanted Male 6 by Dick Turner | Garden Plowing 116A. Lost & Found 24 Wi state Pa a WANTED A SALESMAN EXPERI- GARDENS PLOWED Ww << m UICK CASH FOR | — Ea oy Opa ee ie | MR ges bed tak Pe ear ron Spee monks Gaoae pe tiat - Ser of Pence, vet sea, GARDEN PLOWINT” ANG_TOHT | Tata ; Sroomraacr RE : 15 BOYS Sam, Setween 6 and ¢ Fe steer © 3 Rees crt gs Send a aX | Nicholie & Harger Co, | 1018 Tewgrem, cpely’ unines "you have ©. wide Ean at “Aibom Menay FE iat’ YOUNG PARTEEET_CHAR. | SyniDiaTe Cua VOR YOUR | Toncernet" tangs down payments re peag 8 gutre pore xe | background tn Te Sail Saf oe Fiseine—vano—caverina,| Witsteds” AS re sci’ ns | tans, conurect ov evutty tm your | Sre°scarcs, Une, rou , wor! ', I. fe," a Taare pres “Dis ‘could be” the dase me” (Nhe trucking. EM | ee -SOLLIE wEWARD For | K. L. Templeton, Realtor DORRIS & SO ae OS car melling y_ you looking for. Wind, YARD information or return. No ques-| 2339 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 44563 | REALTO CO-OP iB necessary. trickine of all Kinds PE| tions. PE 43600 TO GET THE MOST FOR YOUR | 152_W. Huron rn oul bee beset s analy ee “Tana copiract Renter ardes | WHE NEED, UISTINOG.O8,T Unues Hf you are interested to, wor’ ment postion wags we move & arden work, FE +31 at | STREET PHONE OR 33133 ot. Ph. PE 2-418 : ROY KNAI iF, Realtor 2 IAN = Y - =: - A A : rE branch. Must be willing to work. PE_2-6633. SCIENTIFIC MASSAGE. 7 eM VINNEY BERT FALKNER = + not nesceaney 1 nore Tea ee "esi “ Funds al 800 sommeree Ra. “ ° s Office Circulation Dept. large corporation. earning oppor ___Laundry Service 18| Notices & Personals 25) Con snent finished gr sem aa ie Pontiac Press {ie Oegand ‘Ave, 16-0. my to FOR FAMILY LAUNDRY SERY.| ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING finished houses. Also for rs | Rent Apts. Furnished 33 « p. m. Ask for Mr O. C. Ver $2,,, 70. Laundry, FE ner 2 om 3-0340 and ask for Ted wie eet We ee ae” | eee . 1 CLEAN LARGE ROOM AND WANTED ay te Pestine, ena ene fled, Gafinished. Ponties | ANYONE on| Francis E. “Bud” Miller | uuebenewe,sduie_1_Rern, UTo AN_ PREFERABLY , ; 32-8101. regarding on Frances r, Realtor = #15.00 8 “feck poaraniee o leg Experience bap set Landscaping 18-A Bees Sammma Bt San Diego, Call DOING BUSINESS AS STONE ble Adulte on b. ‘ee fh. Paddock Sepa intgs| Seaiennines Memes seacrir ag Pox og ge | er bwaserresouut uet [3° ft PO’ wea st eur oc CEES Eng 2 rson -| CLEAN YOUR < = “ya : AB DRIVERS._NIGHTS, FULL | Owen's 14) 5 Saginaw St Cited. ‘MUleerry #1161 in: |Npholstery’ with WHIFF Sham- 5% MORTGAGES = 8 7 WORK: ~ tee ee ee se ex.| 2 MEN WANTED SesuriFUI— SLUEOAss KORE | P20, Restores beauty of original low paRMs OR SUBURBAN. from |? DOME ANTS itra : ee sy| See ek ee ail Ee re venve | sais Sut ter rave | “BD. CHAR ts | son eae We oe é LL AND PART | Dersoa at st :| SOLD WAVES. $10 AND UP. nae a a1 . Lab __person at 1 idock Com wn patina and m Equitadie Soc’ 1T17_8. Telegrapd om 23-3358. yr ‘" ~ nica tielp Wanted Female 7 “nee es ow shudieieleinens Dorothy's FES: aenee eT a = 7 ROOM FURNISHED. CLOSE IN. pray A og am. = ge gia dm gig 8 wlio 2 de 8 douvered. Li tae an Hi-Fi Fiescquarters $200,000 7 ROOMS. PRIVATE BA AND Ai ene magnate cases ete | _PE batt on ul tate CAND ECAPING. CLEAN UP| “enti bet pres, Sound semen: | At our dtponal purchase ave| Enetibiwasd workers, engineers, execs. etc.| PE 50027 0. MI 44036. - sery ce._= alin or seasoned land contracts for | jRooM MODERN. PRIVATE EN- Many benefits, fare paid if bired. | ExyPERIENCED WOMAN 3 TO @ SPRAYING A, UM AND DEAN our clients. See me before trance garage, gas heat. Clean For free information write Dept | yrs. fo: general house work and Bruit trees and sh lawn Birminghe e.. S35 ok. 465 FOR 80S _coupl _ Jessie. form. Serv., 1025 Broad, New- sine “ wien ail electrical . inwn eu na tree temnaning. OL w your — ha! MAHAN: 7 We Adults ealy. Newly decor . J. *. > ee : : =e. - P _= ie BP Box 551 , and new furnished. at EXPERIENCED _ DRIVER Lerty po wh on "PED baa oy ae ae = sad | there's one club I dread working a game with, it's Moving & Trucking 19 : KN APP SHOES REALTY CO LTORS rare aiweeas In edvence. Aonly Gooner. a ' _trom 2’ 6:30 pm. PE 1-408). | the Indians!” AA-1 MOVING & TRUCKING OR ve ia DATE m Evenings end Sundays = aa ei Be allin Ear aan tec Et se . rien eee. ‘rates: PE ¢-G180 anytime. | May T ee te bh | Fn_Fp 2.070 Say gopertanty. pies. Call FE C e em mes pies Cote It Rarer ts Wana. Secatiaa Rd bare By Be BE sponsible for, ear, cents couscer | Wanted Real Estate 32A ee =~ - |WHITE WOMAN WISHES DAY 8. Q. SNY FLOOR LAYING. Reasonable rates, es Sh, Be 1 i Piisest cnploracck Pees EE ALERT, EPERIENCED COUPLE. gigane ed "talthing "Pheee PE) — DUMP PRD PRIVATE DETECTIVE GERVICE | co L. Seales, Wealor FE 3001 14701. enildres. Mave, our ea. Good Building Service 12/ SMALL CONTRACTOR WITH WELL | FILL DIRT "UACK DIRT, ROAD eax | _CASH FOR YOUR ticard te gy By vit aichigan og SB Be organised crew would like oppor.) gravel concrete, revel marc? | esata with every vine. Pest | HOME OR EQUITY special PREE TRIAL PLAN a ment Service, 143 Wayne, Pontiac | ATTENTION: COMPLETE RE- get Neal a ES ae at Meuling rubbish, Fe 31768. safe and scientific. PE 4-4131.- | 1 you have a home or equity you a Lent OPPORTUNITY Fon | moitine, ©, mederiune service. | —°5F WacLino” OF Atl KINDS WET. r #5 | “ish each. Menit ta. "We nave , f° man or woman to cali on farmers| {tlic | rooms. an 8 usiness Service 13) “sonable FE wax linoleum. Use Glaxo plastic| cash buyer and in many cases Dep as. ta w ; omen = Oakland county. Many’ mak- apartment alterations custom ee THCINERATORS CLEANED. a purchase y ourselves, " , building. FHA. financing FE | ADDITIONS, REPAIRING. AND/ Ashes & rubbish hauled Clean InNvITA . providing eee RATORS | required. rhe Mr, SHARP 190 +5470. - decorating. Ray Carpenter. EM up. PE 46134 Sean sonia ae warrant x at. oon TRUCK OPERA Nationsity known aillinery mer: | FEED ORES FOR conten: | 1 FLOOR LAYING AND GAND-|—>!20)__ CIGHT HAULING ASHES AND | —___OR 2-0923 or OR 34663 ___ | GPE a treet.” Pontiac: FE WANTED chandising organization wens | sioneer to run in evening on 100| 1% Gooraatees wetmeee | att Ry ORS rubbish hauled. Reasonable MY/ Wd. Child. to Board 26| _+-6492 Open Evenings. To Se poets pro = a = fT AND HEAVY TRUCKINO. PMD, STANCE, MOVING, | Root hue weeeit"previces sli | grees utriEST Man POR | mercial and euenta WASHING MACHINES | [Riftuk"bodel We Sages [CHRISTIAN ROME. Exrma CASH iis poets pees | eset wy ese ts, | fg leigh soe inde | Moron atrecaniom ge] REMAN | Oe Peuceg RMR AND | cehces”goanpine WOME IN 4 future, > Ma ‘Ee ke Sour GAULING Ga = J Sellen ca "feat "round Apply personnel office. mice Write or phone Clyde O.| Peat aoe MA} PHONE FE4-2569 | CloNT “WAULINO CHEAP. TE] Wid tousehold Goods 27 24 HOURS Soo Sete! | ie SeivERS POLAND FART | Lane Mich, Cire, age, sue of | 2, BASEMENTS OR TOOTNOS. | Tr wakes OF FOUNTAIN Pune | OOET, HAULING ODD JOBS.) — For your equity tm your tay-overs, | time. “Apniy 8 tA ey ~~ alleen bee Mh PE Sool, "| "repaired by factory a FURNITURE NEEDED| . heme or farm. Call ue on = +|5o YOu Wisi YOU HAD MONEY ASPHALT PAVING omnes, y Co, 17 W. ae seat work. Call any time FE top dollar wilt eay outright “— Bee pa Pong “aes " ? Cash | _ rence St. 35. Soa ~ sell tt for you. B. 6. Community deal. We mean business! are doing ©W.|ice Tree reMoval. tame) O’DELL CARTAGE sale. Ph. OR 3-2717. : ming. Free estimates. PE 27188; | Local Long, Distance Moving us Tr on a EDW. M. STOUT Li Hh ge 56808 Oho ponreac TTR. ~ St. Ph. FE S-816 SEEM CEMENT WORE. | coveung corvicc, Detveweye end ee Sa dame | ferntrere ‘vapern, cach welling. | am PE 2.2008. rking areas. Pree estimates. | tRGCK'NO AND HAULING BR PE 4-1881. CASH FOR YOUR LAYING. REASONABLE 23-1621, bish anytime FE WANTED TO BUY ALL TYPES OF| JIOMEOR EQUITY : APPLIANCE SERVICE et tt It you he K AND CEMENT bone No job pes ggybence ——— . Trucks for Rent OF AT cae ee aonpilviond wish teal we an Geatecele pant, ot types of small appliances TINS EQUIrh ENT WANTED FURNITURE| berengse te property ouresives ERICK, SUOCK AND CEE en TRENCHING | * ™ 1% Tom Stakes If you bave anything for warrant an sale. our bid before you de- A&B TREN XN tas Gene est gale and wes. promst cour Cameron H. Clark. i Hes Pea te oat | ected Tractor Co._| “LES Sales ta _ | Ze RER TAPP SPICE 8 +e ‘Mason work. FB 6-968. Industrial Tractor Co. L_& S Sales Co. GR : os | on SRE : Fiaae Tmere eee | amr receeene og aie eons | CORRS"POpaTTERS BORER | aane(St FS5" ft acer ew Hey. Dre BLOCK LAYING, BRICK, STONE. = OF MASONRY | CARPENTER WORK ALTERA- $2848 PE 22006 Cottages, Homes, Lote Estates fp ce. Cad ee ee mor we | aSacere pnzaing—JOTs | ssecaere' snot wr i | Sohtur Gite Sih Owens | funay wort werome | ee Muncenenenee 2) | hams ney —~WEED A SETTER JOST Vacations. Apply at ence wae Se. he oe te bummer. by fob er bourty rate. | BUILDINGS SMOOTHED. FULLY roe me FGRAVEL, | COTTON DRESSES WANTED FOR Weceaward S76 Rings More “erm ssremrement? Te 3 nee | SEEERIERCED BEAOTY QPERE | Olesen Bitag, pene ms | | CINDER BLOCK: COE’S TRENCHING | Se She Sin FS 210) | Seti —wamueee| LITT oy &3 o Mo 0 - 7 E Fae a a * San mig Sy ae SERVICE Large van to serve you, Smith 3, en large income home. FE HELP) HELP! CARPENTRY WORK, NEW AND THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 — PE 2-414, “For Rent Rooms 37 af ~~. and = . OFFERS itt atten Pe ef | Highland” twin boas, Euchen privienes of ¢ seem sister heme with Et Gret eees| | Ree genes eet situated on tx teste: $1, . SOUTHERN 200 cash or $9,500 with Sey ne | FOR j months in ad- Searanee, Onn eee — G.I, Bungalow _ For AL scaped Sexi20 foot fenced business person, large front mas- lot. attractive 2 bedroom 2 ecelllealonlide BE <= TO— trance WEST SIDE. Phone a with “oll heat. “third "bed. CLEAN, FRONT ROOM. Owner leaving state. sit, Orete cuiyense. on to Huron 608, torme. Cigut NOUNEKEEPING | ROOM. Income—Paved Street Men, Frigidaire. 102 3 apartments consisting of St. 4 rooms end lavatory CARGE CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM : i, with kitche wileges. Close in. ments and full beth on sec- PE 5-1606 sheet =. - ond. room third floor, now income Nice ROOM POR Wa. of $180 per ~ Pull P.O No drinkers PE 5 pocoment, of best % NICELY PURNISHE i ated close to peta fap Be istration building and bus PLEASANT ROOM FOR OENTLE- line. 613,768, terms, an. Private entrance. West side . 4s home. 30 Mark @ PE sate. | Pine Lake Privileges VT FAMIL LIGHT HOU6E- Unusually attractive 3 bed- ie we soem Comet pene ast CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM ake, Living room with nat- it PENsivE ot ed perch shen, on fleor ; room e- a bedrooms and beth up. Pull business of Write basement, GE oil heat. rec- ndoM FOR EMPLOYED LADY a rek dead ak Gee kitchen privileges, . paved street. $15,150, terms. ROO RENT 5 MIN. WAL 50 Acres |. Pontiacs Plant. Ga Located on paved way ag and fertilised and teady 20 miles porth of 185 Wolfe st. in scenic country- ROOM . BUSINESS side with 1650 feet frontage, woman. teacher or w desir- 3 bedroom modern home Loses’ 3718 Libesinahire. with basement, stoker fur- s 5 = if sil if : pigte rie? st a a | Be. ies located | ff — <4 SLEEPING ROOM FOR BUSINESS ving, ae 4oes. BUSIN fron” Pontiac. Living room SLEEPING ROOMS FOR WEN. al = a a - double and single. 2 blocks from yeom. ful basement, bare PO. No drinkers. % Union &t 24x30 Many large pines and +1187. cvecgrosns, @ fruit trees z WEST sie. 4.500 down evailadie. 40337. tor woe. wen at uscrane | ROY Annett, Inc. 4 Wages Evenings and Sunday 1-4 Rooms With Board 38 \@ family apt beuse with 4 extra F . Separate meters Som: SON ARD FOR 4 tare. owner consider trade. ingle le y plus ‘erence distance of Mo | of down ca-ment. $11,000 down. 2 : 5 3 5 E F 2 Purniture e close to lake. Only $5000 down. Sota Ye oa sons of couple Nurses are this income ee down. otel Rooms 20) * chament ong. kacsied ox Par ~~ SAR ARAB ARS oe ——~ tiae BY DAY OR HOTEL AUBURIN . et ee rf akg) 7 — 9 noe 464 Auvurn Mh. PE 2-9239 |2 bedroom house. Basement, oil HOTEL ROOSF FIT | pict gntece cttsten conn, rose Snes Sowcee atte Tees] "past ae $-8128 ¢ begreom home WHR 2 complete 40) 2% car ee ved street. SON AR ne RAE er mnere This is 9 the month. ROOM IN CARIBOU INN. | Guy 1980 dows Shown by opps store, M.. 5-5046. ADAMS REALTY CO. 382 Auburn Ave. FE +339) BE SURE TO WATCH RENT OR LEASE S 4 eae OUR AD titer” Trost. Phone ms FOR THE . “ ; ” Rent Office Space 41 Unex ted ? . $6,195 IN 3 WEEKS WALLPAPER REMOVERS, SAND ers, rug a nw. ture. ‘FE 42571 nant REALTY COMPANY A HOME. OF YOUR 2 W. HUROX OWN ‘ Absolutely Near Waterford High NICHOLIE AND HARGER CO. 2 Ww. Ph. FE 66183 . Re eR aw peneted on <~ - | 2 apts. Located im Lake Orion with | Kampsen FE 4-0528 377 8. T -& . & Buna. Realtor $11,500 Good 6 room modern on West side. Choice paved eae Pa car ‘ 4 jo. Det aes as ni : Ek i L. H. BROWN, Realtor W. Huron $1 F of Auburn Cg eo aa paved street. A buy at $7,960. i pe gy Sar ® brane adit Many more choose from. Drive out to our and look over our s. Parking CAMERON H. €LARK PE 4-62 epevetire Real Matte. GAYLORD CHARLES ear ppg Rg gE BES i Hil iF? ati fit 5B i i if It’s Fresh as a New Bonnet a oo ° vw - i" 4) = a ° Fit 4 : ; ; DS ss a if, ; i i eye if : i ff mL ww. GATEWAYS to HAPPINESS T’S SPIC AND | if Hi | i oti é ini i g ef ING STATE. a mi “Eistta ; ‘ Open Eves. ‘til 9. Sun. 10-4 1073 W. Huron NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH POST OFFICE HOUSE FOR SALE $700.60 DOWN. 7 ~ = By owner, Phone e ivieges. = SLICE OF HAM a For Sale Houses 43 PPBPBOBLP OOO HOUSE IN PONTIAC. 4 2 LOTS. pies ee . For Sale Houses 43 LAKE HOME $2 boo evening Sarat cudets. “Geeceiew. eiees coum 9-3850. on terge, Garage kad cate lot. INCOME $10,000 ee tae BRICK VENEER. 4 apts. 3 ger SYLVAN LAKE mee Mcem ct Bee ea | sr bunguige., ot heat. gare. 6 RM. MODERN. Corner le 3 lets. 00 dows. ta. st Orchard Lt & ohmsen ave| JOSEPH F. REISZ PAUL M. JONES, REAL ESTA a PAUL M. . TATE | PE 20280 Eve. MI 44419 - ——— LAKE ORION eg Oe Me ohnson | Si B= WALTER GREEN TOR LAKE ORION Immediate Possession NT Pully furnished and ready you peg fronds ‘tnto Clean cut home with breeseway Four nice rooms end beth. Front zaps. 8 Setesees. h enc r leav- ving reom. ep Ogg | and will sacrifice for - ent. Ges sOUTH Five room moderna meat, stoker 1% car ge- | p Paoaoe AY, LAKE ORION. rage. and gilassed-in front porch a Located on x T ROOM : Full price only $6,850 with terms basement. 345 car ehie East Sure’ vid 3 bares Five room modern with base | — ment. furnace, and i's cér By , 6 UP AND 7 DOWN oe a eee = , et — ¥ _ Extra ag | room. vy imeome car ‘ust —" price 69.500 I oa — a cent v a nd 6 etous ity A. JOHNSON, Realtor | fhhen', Ry Seme"? Recreation 1704 oa Mice a gg Ay 1704S.” elegraph_ Rd _| Sgcorates. immaculately clean, JACK 5 ment oniv +439) rT GND _garege OR LOVELAND re 3s rE +168) 2189 Cass Lake Ré.. Keego Harbor MI] ] ] ‘R Veterans KINZLER | sassereesomzec: whieh will elim. the additiona! Donelson Park New 7 family enjoy with its ‘Gali un tor “Aetals. —e and lake privileges F . “B a Mi full size rooms (3 bed- rancis E ud iller rooms), bath and at- R ) tached 1% car garage. Del- eaitor co ot and redwood DOING BUSINESS AS STONE storms and screens in- os RoR © aathen* 17 Seminole Hills MACEDAY LAKE * oan 6 aoe bedroom year around home. a condition modern. Has natural fire- we teclyte ike. ney Bricea ‘at’ cule $5080 $1380 stairs. . Owner mov- FRANKLIN RD. CE Fy Mie $16,900 fn. excellent 5 room modern G1 Resale arene in verz, tice colores ai 1 vecroom punesiow — pu CUCKLER REALTY weatheree storms one 8 es FE 1410 re"tale Meio Cee ee earest About $2,150 down, mo. pey searere | MILLER WEST SUBURBAN Meee near mew. Wetertera | atte, Full Descmont Pull bath. stairway to at A bog, Sue be sold on ton ieee | “Gr BAD Ww iT oath. Pull basement. OU neat and Can be sold John Kinzler, Realtor Storms screens. to GI's with low down pay- m 70 ™ pat 43525 ent. our " “open «Eves = : e| 2 ME A bath Co-operative Real Esta ~ Full basement Near Pontiac Motor. A good buy for veterans DOING BUSIN ASB STONE . -~ . REALTY ” 2 KNUDSEN] Frees Bisa ae Realtor ; WEST SUBURBAN g fo 8 p.m. Daily; Sunt to 8 Humphries | rai sss, a i s2| Setssorsevan go" fenced, kitehen 1 Ww 1 Bare Bee aires | Bt Perak =| Ret te Tear wwe).| SYLVAN LAKE . Ey eg kt Sele es| STATS eee porch, 3 car garage. 3 bo “with wuly $2300 dows, move | BRICK TERRACE _ 34085) i hr Condition, Onrane. 3 weeks Dor | y 4.4 NEAR ST. MICHAELS, | UMPATIOS | | WEST—BRICK RANCH| S sered street: ofbet*Tarme™ plastered wails. el teal, weiy ne er ee ane te 6 room —~ + food condition room w *, yer. basement on paved street terms. spect! mate WM. H. KNUDSEN [corse 3 orem ORE sore E 28 te i E ae a8 lps re 7} is Hi i : : i i i fi sa¥sks i * _ BEST DEED Cookiion. titusted on 8 vere Prices G li se WEST SIDE i if it you are We invite you to becom bors with the fine people NI cong Drayton Open 9 to 9 Bun. 1 to § hg = RR Fa M Ste eat ee ATKINS § ROOM LAKEFRONT. SUCHY Realty. FE 43142 2339 ORCHARD LAKE RD. OUR NEW LOCATION WHITE LAKE strawberries and . Give us @ call on this. It's really nice. K. L, Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Rd. FE ¢4563 Office Open Eves. Red Horse FE 2-9179 SYLVAN CITY ye sie Pontiac 3-396 iv. 3 ROOM LOG CABIN AND UTILI- an = y = , ‘Lake hd “6 ~ ses e a — AND LOT $895. = Dx... | ~ month, access seven ~ Seated fohing ond swtmening 15 ACRES lakes, fisherman's and hunter's peradise. Townline Wilds. 4 miles | 15 acres, mostly sandy loam, roill- east of Harrison. See Art Beck on round, some woods. A scenic rty. Lee Swal) Realt b site. 63.000. Lake Oven Sundays. To Buy—To Sell—To ie near by of acres of | YOU BUY IT—WE'LL INSURE IT deer eae in Clare County Mich EM 3-2615. good Giroux & For “ale Lots Hicks B Huron Street Bye. F& 32-1317 Woods. HOLMES-BARTRAM Case Waterford A bdesutitul with some trees without close neighbors. On s geod road 5 Acres, $15€ Down ~ ONE ACRE TRACTS — Excellent soil and better living.” [Hi BROWN, Realtor 1362_W. Huron FE 24810 SEMINOLE HILLS Two 50 ft. adjoining lots. City . Water, curd. fr end "Bible S20, iy “lore CHERRYLAND no a dl FLOYD KENT, Realtor ™% W. Lawrence Open Eves. FE 5-106 Next to Consumers Power i 3 ft. lot a. gS FR The One to See for the Best Selection L. €. LADD HOMESITES of All Types Low Price But Large as $600 with $60 down. Acre Only $100 Down A square acre with a large Lid tree on & good road. to Pontiac. 2 Acres—$70 Down count. Just far enough out setting. bub and noise Juke bealr shane trees. Only $700 with down. 4 Acres Wooded you look! ay 2am Sot site z : i U fe bet ‘tnd 1" H 4 of it 3 i f gt MAHAN 5 ACRES 1% miles N. of Clarkston in @ section this 16521200 ft. offered for the first time of shess $685 «down. 11 ACRES—VACANT . school to 13th grade). $3.960 kindergarten Terms. |Giroux & Hicks Eves. 8—Sunday 1-5 Os Di Hey “Drayten’ Plaine John K. Irwin wi% WN. Saginaw st. 2-003 : ate ? FO ™ W. Lewrence Open Eves. FE 4-166 Next to Consumers Power BARBER SHOP. 71 E 8ST. $1200. 'eaving the state. reason for selling. _for_seiling BUSY DIXIE HIWAY iy , frontage. JOSEPH F. REISZ 53% W. Huron &t. Eve. MI 44419 WEST HURON 5° ft. business — of Telegraph Rood, P Ideal jf for investment or home business. All for only $9,750 big Agee! down, Libera) FLOYD KENT, Realtor 4 Ww. ae FE 56105 Next to Consumers Power _part ‘Inguire 343 , Business Opportunities 51 AUTOMATIC SELF SERVE LAUNDRY AND AUTOMATIC LAUN- DRY. SUPPLIES WHOLESALE LOCHAVEN RD. FRONTAGE, 2% |~ lot. By | ; FUNNY BUSINESS ‘ : BG, oe momen by Hershberger “How's chances for a sandwich, lady?” Business Opportunities 51 full price if you can fo Teasonable te FE +1582 STATEWIDE, FLOWERS—GIFTS including inventory lease. Re. No. 853 CABINS—HOME $18,000 with i o. 666 . Broker FE 60e7Ts Gulf Super Seryice Main highway station for lease. i i FE et z DAIRY E either anys WHOLESALE ee Re TO BUY A BUSINESS 9 WARD E. PARTRIDGE OF NATIONAL BUSINESS HOUSE IN ‘AL CITIES COAST-TO-COAST H i E : 2339 ORCHARD LAKE RD. OUR NEW LOCATION RESTAURANT Kai if r 3 3 S 3 g ig : eft : ohne Money to Loan 53 (State Licensed Lenders) GET CASH QUICKLY Up to $500 eacs, Bring r title Most deals ‘closed tm 30 minutes. Loans also made on fur- Biture. Signature and other se curities AKLAND LOAN CO. FE 2-9206 203 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG LOANS to $900 = $28 to $500 Community Loan Co, 30 E. Lawrence FE 2-7131 Need Money? estment | Is as sear as ‘our telephone. Just FE 5.8121 Without for You Today, 30.900 FAMILIES IN -PONTI ui i b SS its $100 OUICKLY 6: “6 LOAN CORPORATION 69 'W. Huron Street -_|. . 3 oe $29 "$500 “ee Money to Loan 53 ( TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOANS $35 TO $500 LIVESTOCK HOU. Goops Ph FP chester OL 6071" WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 We can a with = poe protems. You ran ¢ $500 and repay ix smal *-oathly pay- ments . Telephone us or call at our office. STATE FINANCE CO. 702 Pontiac State Bank FE 4-1574 Mortgage Loans 54 LOW INTEREST . Jniimited funds of single ftamt- dwelling; canceled * borrow- See H. eke Bee G. PETERSON _ RUPE va Path For Sate Housetrailers 55 BEDROOM. . By own- Trail- ALL METAL 33 FT. 2 Clean re equipment installed TRAILER EXCHANGE 60 S. Telecraph Rd. Open Fve: and *unday pm. BABY GEM. ALL cr] . 8 . 9006, factory. “GENESEE SALES 2101 Dixie Highway. _—*FE_ 23-8786 UITY IN 1952, 28 FOOT ROYAL. ike Lol May be on pres- ent * EM _pire 3-°978_or EMpire 35145. _ Americ °: G WEST- Priced rig buy and save our rental pur- demonstrators us before = more. Ask it chase on used trailer. GENESEE SALES 2101 Dixie Highway. FE 2-0796 Oren Eve+ a m. OXFORD TRAILER SALES 7; have 6 used trailers iT e sell op renta. olan fir.t servea to 3 come Pontiac Chief MOBILE HOMES unr a @ leugth. Op te 5 Auto Accessories 57 AUTO GLASS Ss vingstone oR aeite TE Se as) Pata, etait ned For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 ___ Wanted Used Cars 59 THE HIGH DOLLAR used We gosgtthomt oftre ie gue le H, 46896 WTD. J c A SCRAP y Eves. after 5:30 and Sundays call FE L For Sale Used Cars 61 CGuar- anteed Good Cars ‘$2 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR $1,005 "$2 DODGE 4 DOOR, GYROMATIC $1,295 ‘$1 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR $795 ‘81 DODGE 2 DOOR $899 ‘80 PONTIAC 8 4 DOOR $796 "80 PONTIAC 8 CLUB COUPE $845 ‘% DODGE $795 "$1 PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN $125 HERE ARE THREE OUR GOOD TRUCK BUYS Oe DOCG, TON cis ccsvicsccss $205 “48 Chev. ‘ys ton Cab . & Chassis ......... eedeccece $296 ‘4& Dodge “4 ton Cab @ Chmeste .......:0°+c0ccc. ORS Riemenschneiver Bros, DODGE- PLYMOUTH 232 S. Saginaw St. Phone FE 2-9131 BARGAINS 15 Beautiful New Car Trade-ins 2 Dr., 4 Dr., Bel Air Sport Coupes — 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S FINEST wont SE Fea "48 CADILLAC “62” Eo oti ne — 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! art.” HAROLD ’48 Austin 2 dr...... ’52 Buick Super Riviera... sss 53 Ford 4 dr. ...0. 52 Buick 2 dr. ..... $1 Ford Vic. ....... ’53 Ford ’50 Pontiac Chieftain DeLuxe 2 dr. ... 53 Merc, 4 dr. ....- Specials! ‘| '47 Lincoln 2 dr.,... '48 Ford Club Coupe. .288 49 Kaiser 4 dr...... ‘48 Chrysler 4 dr.... 51 Henry J 2 dr.... "40 Ford 2 dr........ "41 Plym, 4 dr....... 48 Dodge 2 dr...... 49 Buick 2'dr..-. <<< ’50 Ford C-8, 2 dr... "46 Chev, Coupe .... 48 DeSoto 4 dr..... 464 From Came “Truth is simple—requ “For the Best In el $2 Plym. 2 dr, ...+<. ’49 Cadillac 4 dr. .... Ranch Wagon... 47 Chrysler 4 dr...... ’47 Chev. Club Coupe. .199 Harold Fo TWO LOC S. Woodward Birmingham Athens Solon iring neither study nor. RNER FORD Wheels And Deals” BUYS TU .$284) SO Nash 2 dr.....+-.$299 49 Ford C-8, 2 Of.s< o .299 1,300 49 Ford C-8, 4 Ticcese .299 1,150 | ’52 Ford Ranch . 738 WEEE 550ces .. 129 . 973| °51 Kaiser Traveler...444 1,013} °51 Plymouth All Metal . 782 Station Wagon....599 - $3 Chev. Dix. 4 dr...1,199 1,599! 50 Stude. 4 dr........399 53 Plym. 2 dr.......1,099 . 540 1,550 Convertibles! '47 Buick Conv, ....-$244 SO Ford Conv. ...+.++723 .$299| '51 Chev. Conv. ......799 51 Buick Conv. ......999 $2 Ford Conv. .....1,199 me ae Trucks ’51 Ford 1% ton panel $644 ’52 Ford 4 ton pickup 679 . 299 +41 Ford % ton pickup 99 - 199) *49 Ford 1% ton pickup 388 --199 '50 Ford % ton 9 Express ...cccoss ’45 Ford % ton pickup 299 *51 Ford 4 ton pickup 544 ££ - 39 Turner rd ATIONS: Woodward & 13 Mile Road Loox = THE 310 SION For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 Trade your used car and save $$$5 at Clarkston 1953 Chevrolets | Mocuipeed, with reac, heater end | Executives’ Cars mitinmwas ~ Seine Trades 1952 elud cw ¢ e-ins te ase SeaaenS pat | siecane “= oe, fens Gove A eau Sport Coupes & 1946 Ford four door, $148. Convertibles Clarkston Low AS MOTOR SALES $ Q5 og EERE. aol = luxe club coupe heat- . New Car Trade-ins CM ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S il Chevrolet 2 door a FINEST Chevrolets 14 Beautiful New Car Trade-ins LOW AS $695 et hte” 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS| mee See omer ~ repute FINEST Stig,—— THE PONTIAC PRESS, 1 MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61) For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 4 Just the Facts, Mam, Just The Facts!” That What You Get At OLIVER’S USED CAR LOT ‘SO BUICK - Radio, Heater, Dynaflow $795 ‘$0 PONTIAC Deluxe. Radio & Heater $745 ‘51 FORD Radio & Heater $895 ‘49 BUICK Radio & Heater $495 ‘49 CHEV. Deluxe. Radio & Heater $445 ‘49 NASH 4 Door Sedan $345 ‘48 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE Radio, Heater & Hydramatic $445 ‘48 CHEV. CLUB COUPE Radio & Heater $379 ‘49 PONTIAC _4 Dr., Radio & Heater ‘47 PONTIAC DOWN. Bright $1 OLDS. 2 dr. Yes! it is an “88,” Hydramatic. Nice gray finish. $995 "52 OLDS, “98” Holiday. Power steering, power brakes, automatic head- light dimmers, Hydramtic, radio & heater. $1895 51 PLYM. Sedan. Rich blue finish, radio, heater and seat covers. $745 '52 FORD Custom “8,” 4 dr. Radio, heater, white- walls and clean two tone paint, $1195 $2 OLDS “88,” 2dr. At- tractive light green finish. Just try it—you’'ll buy it. $1595 52 OLDS. “98,” 4 dr. Can't be beat for looks and con- dition. Light blue finish. $1795 51 BUICK Super Riviera 2 dr, Two tone paint, whitewalls, Dynaflow, ra- dio, heater & tinted glass. $1195 On These Spot Ba ’*52 PONTIAC “8” Con- vertible. Fire engine red! Hydramatic, radio and heater. $1495 51 PONTIAC Chieftain “8," 4 dr. Dark green fin- ish, Hydramatic drive. $995 52 OLDS. Super Holiday. Two tone paint, heater & Hydramatic. $1795 51 BUICK 4 dr. The pop- ular Special Model fin. ished in dark blue and has whitewall tires. $1095 52 STUDE. Hardtop. Tinted glass, radio, heater & automatic transmission, $1195 52 PONTIAC 4dr. Light green finish, Clean from bumper to bumper. White- walls. $1395 ‘$1 CHEV, Deluxe 2 dr. Two tone paint and Pow- erglide. $845 radio , (Spot |PRICES rgains 53 CADILLAC Convert- ible. This yellow beauty is something to see! $3750 ’53 OLDS. “88,” 2 dr. se- dan. Radio, heater, Hydra- matic and power brakes. $2195 53 OLDS. 4 dr. A beauty in the famous “98” Series. Nice gray finish. $2395 ’53 FORD V-8, 2 dr, Light blue finish, radio, heater & washable interior trim. $1195 50 BUICK 4 dr, Dyna- flow, radio, heater and whitewall tires. $795 "0 MERCURY Club Coupe. Rich tan paint job, radio & heater. $695 *50 OLDS. Super “88,” 4 dr. Nice light green fin- ish, Clean inside and out. adillac OWEN: .+Used Car Corral ’51 Buick Sedan. Radio Be HONE iccennes $795 49 Nash 2 dr. ...... $395 50 DeSoto Sedan. Radio & heater . $49 eee eeeee SO Pontiac 2 dr., radio & heater ’46 Pontiac 4 dr., radio eeeeeeee & heater ........ 5 ’S1 Ford 2 dr., radio & heater ........ $595 50 Chevrolet 2 dr., radio & heater $745 ’52 Ford 4 dr., radio, heater & whitewall tires $1,095 ee '$2 Ford 2 dr., radio & heater ’$2 Ford 2 dr., radio & heater ’S2 Ford 4 dr., radio, heater & overdrive ... .$1,195 50 Ford 2 dr., radio, heater & whitewall tires $745 | 4 50 Mercury Club Coupe. Radio, heater & eeeree eeeeee overdrive ....... $795 '$3 Ford 2 dr., radio & heater ...... $1,395 ’5O0 Ford 4 dr., radio & heater ........ $795 $3 Ford Country Sedan. Radio & heater. .$1,795 '|'$2 Ford Country Sedan. | Radio, heater and overdrive $1,495 | Radio, heater and overdrive $1,045) PONTIA Good ~ "Not-a Across fro Buy Your Ca 1952 Pontiac $1245 Reefs a MAY IS “SA All Used Ca “SAFE F 1950 Stude. $695 4+DOOR WITH eit LIGHT ‘OREEN. PAINT i a AND CLEAN INSIDE AND RADIO AND HEATER. 1951 Ford $1095 A CLEAN AND SHARP VICTORIA MODEL anne TONE GREY) AND HEATER | RADIO AND FORDOMATIC DRIVE PONTIA C RETAI will Used Name, But a m Post Office On Mt, C r From & Deale 1949 Chevrolet $695 ayes Is A SHA OF A Can! 1S SMART be . HAB RADIO AND TER FETY - CHECK rs At Pontiac TY CHE olr Your Protecti!on 1953 Ford $1895 THE POPULAR RANCH MODEL AND ITS THROUGHOUT er RKELING OREEN FINISH. DIO, HEAT- ER AND PORDOMATIC DRIVE 1954 Pontiacs WAGON RADIO, HEATE: LIKE New | WALLS & HYDRAMATIC, L STORE Cars Policy” : 4 lemens St. r You Know! 1949 Ford . $395 USTOM SEDAN RA- AND HEATER WELL TH THE GOOD LOW “Month Retail Store CKED" 1951 Pontiac $1195 DELUXE CATALINA ODEL ware: 1950 Dodge $795 Save! YES. YOU'LL GET ae ak 8) LATEST AND BEST AT A GOOD - DISCOUNT ane Fac- TORY OFFICIALS’ Fac tory Bra 63 Mt. Ci\lemens at Mill | we 0 IN AND TRY THIS | pe gpg te. TYPE OF A) CaR GooD LOW THIs GOOD ITs OUR USUAL HIGH C RETAI L STORE mech >} Street OWENS RELIABLE TRUCKS TO DO YOUR JOB ’S1 FORD F-8 Tractor, 10 00x20 Tires, Air Brakes ‘52 FORD F-6, 2 ton dump '51 CHEV. 1% ton stake ‘51 CHEV, % ton pickup 51 GMC % ton pickup ‘50 FORD %.ton panel 8 cylinder ‘47 FORD % ton panel 8 cylinder ’48 FORD Dump 3-5 yard ‘45 FORD % ton stake "50 GMC % ton pickup ‘49 GMC % ton pickup '48 FORD 1% ton Cab and Chassis 'SO INT'L % ton pickup ’47 INT’L Dump 3-5 yard 49 FORD ¥, ton stake 8 cylinder 51 FORD Vanette 12 ft. '50 FORD 1; ton pickup ‘52 FORD F-6 tractor Cab-Over-Engine ‘SL INT'L % ton pickup SO FORD F-6 Dump 3-5 yard ’50 CHEV. Tractor Cab-Over-Engine "A-] Buys” New Ca '50 Ford Club Coupe, Ra- : CY 2 Dr., Radio & Heat Used Cars New Cars dio, heater and , $345 “ Orchard Lk. at Cass 280 S. Saginaw whitewall tires. ..$795 Ph. rE 3-7117 a - . 7 53 Ford 2 dr., radio OWENS ‘48 CHEV ——— ae, BEA & heater ...... $1,395 2 Dr. . 46 Dodge 4 Dr. ..... $150) Your Ford Dealer Radio & Heater $295 | For Sale Used Cars 61) For Sale Used Cars 61! RBPBLP LAPD DD Fer Sale Used Cars 61 147 S. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4101 '46 Ford Club Coupe $295 50 Chevrolet 4 dr., For Sale Used Cars _61| For Sate Used Cars 61| For Sale Used Cars 61 “hedramatie,| wht walle, fully | door reais: arena radio very clean. FE 2-478 excellent cond 'A7 CHEV. SED. a ; LAR & WeSte? savas coe GOS teuipment sat capetign. ee = “ogy Hake CONVERT, NICE NO A-] A-] $265 Handeow Soest RY Economical $ p.m. isa PONTIAC. 2 DOOR, RADIO “WEED TRUCKS FRA CTORE : ° 1 JEROME Transportation Not a “Rough Rider” in “et vyiae eee som Moron ® Gray Radio. : AUBURN MOTOR SALES qusom woTOR 9ALee FE29101 | == mechaeter Ford Dealer igo Cons Sot) 1950 PONTIAC | drat, INT ONEY | / ’ FULL} your ehoice. $700 nd heater. Clean $146. 312 W. That’s the Number 53 PRICE A one owner 2 door sedan with to Call for a "46 Hudson Sed. seeeees $65 CY maert ey retie, eater on sey aa PONTIAC 8 DOWN | ; Motor Sales 47 Kaiser Sed. ....... 75 oth Nylon ~ eh ° Demonstration) —3seg2pestbeave FORD __|-oPackard Sed. ..1..'195 is te aes tues | wow eae view tres | eK ER Drive on, FE see AND "47 Chev, 2 dr. .....++- 95 1 FEC nenets_ or phone Radio and heater Overdrive. . ‘GF POOR Rap, AND MEAT. . 50 Hudson Sed. ..... 295 COW — oO 150 More pooh ip elles Cele We'll Be Pleased to Show | "i Very cian te tawt = |[ T NICOL NG | 3! Henry J -eeeseees 395 KJ | inet PORTING CHIEFTAINs/ New Car Trade-ins $2724 A MONTH You Any of Our Good SOOO a ¢ DOOR EXCELLENT 48 Dodge Sed. ...... 195 | dramatic, front & rear speaxer.| ALL BARGAINS! * : Used Cars, 6:30. on. 3000 after 49 Ford 2 dr 295 _Your Ford Dealer low — perfect condition. \ Phone Us Now! ‘° x Factory "49 Pont. 2 a _— 395 147 S. Saginaw St. Bloomfield Hills.” a eel MICHIGAN’S Keller-Koch \ conditioned ‘moter , — Phone FE 5-4101 a ated FINEST YSLER-PLYMOUTH DEA a ee , L Offici l ' Cars 50 Mercury ibe PONTIAC STATION WAGON. THE B10 PAVED Woodward ot 12% Mule Rd. ; LIVER “ Worn OVERNAUL cus Club Coupe ...... 495 Soon of Ws Pie. FE 35106 | wot Gam aot tino” nos — SES BEETS rn |1050 Lincoln Capt four OPO™ 20° 95] SORTA] See see Y EEL PURRTATON \ ‘a % ; n ; NTIAC 53. a ies) ’ , Motor Sales — door, four way ry elec- 150 More meat Socks Le MY S260) | Sine FES = toon mile (6 Hudson Clean sen ee, ™ Seg ay — \ MIKE tric windows, power New Car Trade-ins 53 Buick convertibie | 1964 CATALINA 21 Plymouth ee onintie . 210 Orchard Lake Ave. Po TOP TRADER steering. -ALL BARGAINS! ooo ay PONTIAC CATALINA gE 6 '47 Ford % Ton Panel (Cornet of Williams) | Yerumic and MIKES is the piace $2750 $2 Nash Like New. ive 4 door OR Fez $95, Fult Price ~ FE2-9101 - one 8 — & Se hm - ~ " ‘b) ang “48 Nash | 1953 wnits VAERO EAOLE HARD ; ssPtisg,. See . MICHIGAN'S 82 L ae Se |. “47 Chev. ned. Damneery } F “IN Three ‘51 Chevies Down Braid Motor Sales. Cass : - 5 ’ LARRY »FINEST "$1 ana ('50 buick’ _at W Pike St_ FE 2-0186 $2905 Full Price s THE BiO PAVED LOT ‘48 buick convertible : $295, ; JEROME _ | woowwanb aso is Mite noan| SipPontiee” °°" 1ent Ponting comveribie tn | DOWN! eo ee eS) 5) ciey_5h Toe Poel RCOLN 'S AL | 33 Ford like nee dramatic drive. radio and erase AY $795, Full Price Rochester ee Dealer —- papees, Calle cite Flenty of other: nice care. heater. white wall tires. PONTIAC’S ONLY ‘FOR a real estate seen ing on ad PONTIAC Exclusive Truck Dealer | ‘51 Chev. Sed. Delivery GOO TO Rs og PAULSON Economy Used Cars, 22 Auburn a —— Popular Streaminer four deer. $695 Full Price . N. . RA- e , EERSTE Seite se] Sil) EERE WILSON GMC | woe tert NO MONEY DOWN . . , . Full Pri (resemsieste og cre, roeimng rete ws Community Motor Sales vas oe Woodward ; ania nee 1954 FORD country squmre | he and lres, Radio.) , BAST BLVD. AT PIKE ST. | 80 N Main ‘8: nenester!) — ller-Koch uo SO Chev. 1 Ton. Pickup A real deauty very low po +o *@ OLDS 8 “ig PONTIAC CATA: | OF 24211 Open “tl 10 0. m. C1ller-NOC CHEVROLET SEDAN DELIVERY, $495, Full Price er steering” Pordomatic a a oon (CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER | 1948, shot a" paint transmission white sidewall | Gy pLYMOUTH 7 DOOR” aPE- LDS iio DELUXE 7 DOOR. W@W PONTIAC. RADIO AND HEAT-| Woodward st 13% Mile Ra Pee bette = . ‘y tires. — A — gial deluxe. $375. Phone FE) - 2 oa Best offer takes. bacot : FORK. 1. mie T FR UCKS 25 More Trucks or sei oudright. Call Mr. | 21287. = oe navactte To Choose From Sealer Pesan TO | “engatton. ? new Uren. MY 20673. COME —_ FOR aie end ear eccecn | Clark Sone os capectty ALL BARGAINS! et Pontiac “8 2 DR. GOOD ose on pneumatic tires. io Pontiac, ua Ra. AS, and transportation Will soarines, 2amn 7108 FE 44676 “ir OR, 14.600 C "EM" See & Waldon Rds ORD6129. | “mace seis. PE eeo36. 122 Mi | 1048 INTERNATIONAL re soar MICHIGAN’S _Clemens panei truc USED CARS te Sout “wage er | si Sol < =a 00a. ™ ae at” FORTIAC ins DELUKE CATA. |S, "Otcranc. ‘n'oo mien Special “Taree ,Gond condition, 308 8 nee | ‘ i Stee. Braid Mot CM aherp.” Fowl want nl on | ee ee raLana, | i048 OM PANEL — GOOD CONDI: wal tires, 2 ‘tone paint. — Ses wie ni GARAGE wie sant lad $1905. MY 20781. tion. 3900 Baldwin. : Huron Motor Sales wer Radio kt Meter Steen | Sa CONVERTIBLE | “condition, FE tue. “ina "Foere aigerenes be Lar Jerome wen aren Fase | Beste Mstay stan e ‘ct Sate | Eee ee Se he Oe] Rochesecr Ford Deal — Sa het peer tae ochester For aler Rains kr ay | Yin ke un eas ee | FEES meee P| “752 WILLLYS SEDAN | ; SUPER 2 DR. W'Pike St. FE 1 Seen. sell. 446 “hia Ave. ii PONTIAC. EXTRA CLEAN Radio, heater sad and overdrive. Spot- K heater =. ee 4560 Elis Le Ra. ters finish end. tires ave TRU tot Caan oo aoa eee 53 OLDS. SUPER 88 wa a ee llama Redie, Beater and Hydramatic, pot: | 80, “And she’ over payments, Pickups 150 More - 095 : oa eRe eB = 150 More Stakes New Car Trade-ins ~ ; $2. BLACK PONTIAC 4 DOOR DE- iNew Car Trade-ins Tractors ALL BARGAINS! © | SP Bee tee See | __ 150 More i Sli i eleciererat F-l thru F-8 ~ Fou ‘es SUPER ous FINEST 1951 Ford F-6 12 ft. stake Only $295 eae ore woo SEER GOMER SF pony as low as $795. 59° eeeeter FIN “e a WOODWARD AND & Pacts fader. Radio. LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer . PH. OL 107 FOR MORE THAN 30 JARS A Community Motor Sales } PA SS Fant Ban “es we } Se uoNEY DowN™ Jacobson’s S | SEE aoe ere fee nS ne | “he mitenge, O08 Call after | ROS MLO” ans $e ier ‘ * ” Boles Auto Sales | PACEARD 1280 OR BT Or BO eee. Ne re ene THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 | « ’ For Sale Livestock : Swaps 69/| Sale Household Goods 71 MODEST MAIDENS By Jay Aian | For For Sale Miscellaneous 72| For Sale MisceNaneous 72, Sand, Gravel & Dirt 79) _ ee nd ; aswED LIVESTOCK OF Por os Mag ote LAwN MOW-| House Paint... .Gal. $1.95) I! “ LIONEL & AMERICAN ee nie te eee guns —_— Lo AND By Hy die op ie :| tractor with 32” a | HIGH GLOSS ENAMEL, GAL. $2.95 PLYER-TRAINS Stall showers complete with fau-| trucking. Sie Lake Building a bar: 4 plow; 24° | ALUMINUM PAINT. GAL... .$2.50 - AUTHORIZED FA ¥ SERVICE| cets and curtain $68.00 value Supplies, OR 3-1534. Mogens er Pinas” power driv- | RUBBER PAINT, GAL. $3.50 and genuine factory parts $34.45. These are slightly marred. | ~— Unies Lake Rd. en jawn mower and sulky; reg. | PLASTIC ER 39e Free test on tastesy analzece Michigan Fluorescent. 33 Or-| Wood, Coal & Fuel 80/ merce $568, will sell for 9450 Complete. 12x12 LIN ea | Taskers 63 W. Huron |__ehard Lake Ave ~ v~~ | WELSH LI We handle equipped power and VINOFLOOR ____ Phone FE S4zei | —cnaed Las : ~ me week Si piss Le S. bn hand mowers, also Lawn Boy ro- poe 4 i aw TILE... ide LAWN FENCING TALBOTT LUMBER - ao ~ | i tie. Delivered. PE|_ Pp. ™. cnarpensd, 62.80. Barnes “ware: 4% ft. Wall Tile. .....10c ——— Dave in stock 42 one ware “plumbing BPS paint sep = SaY sLAS WOOD” 955 amy OLD, RIDING HORSE, ware, 742 W. Huron St. y | Byers, 141 W. Huron. PE 4-3064 ed & woven fenc Shop around to hy ents, sheet; @ cord or 3 for $10. Pe «ton, 2 ND 7 —vernes es aoob HOLLYWOOD BED, sTUDIO and ‘then get ag os bt gill. hen and used bdrick.| anytime. 30", gentle, 7016 Lake yh RR ge re aroattanta, | mugncgnerroorina teo'Pix| Plants, Trees, Shrubs 80A | -M arr na kien N| CHROME (SET (YEt- Doty} "oes" lee PE $200 eae ake CLEANED & DE-|4 BLACK HILL SPRUCE FOR nee A “= EquitY 1 IN 6 low), $25.; Restokraft Orthopedic y Col- WE DAB ERCLASS —— pig now ren tiress and springs 10 year We Give Holden's Red Stamps Uvered PE 17-9252 you, eho White. Berwag FRYERS FOR SALE. 680 SCOTT Mugho, A and | Lake Road. FE 2-0366. 110 per month. for 1953 Olds| guar we WYeRs DEEP-WELL PUMP As | USED REFRIG s6TOVES. PUR | orsde Pine PAE BOATS : fg Ags owing | aoe at A-WAY BED » = aE. sembly. A coal hot water heater maces oli bur--rs blowers. etc. —, <. irae Native “hede GOSLINGS, Tic. James WATCH. FOR TASKOT CO. * per month. Phone FE | tress. New, never used. FE 2-1272 Gere 4 ae = Court my eat and Air Condition = Bia voue own. ery, 600 Tindall Rd. Davisburg a [ ra _. | : ‘ er . 1” West Huron and : — G a 1953 Rehomg tresssr weed coup 3 | MEDICINE CABINETS WITH TWO | USED SHEETING LUMBER PH.| Blech Ra” att Commerce a ane five PRY ‘ a“. Daze MA Oe Eves. and eu ft me fr ouple h fn , r seed miles 140 W Rd. MA Eat_3-2000. WILL SWAP 12," MAHOGANY | _ ™onths, $250. 12 8. Ca | wae vane sien Lovers | cee Coating’ rinke et once, fuss. Ware =m! ) ; SaTRLLO LAKE ORION, MY |" ccoincs Tab'e model TV in ex- | KEROSENE COO STOVE HE. | ewmplete $14.95. These are fac- URED, ELECTRIC_MOTORS_\s meer ee utente Piandeve gl gy By - - : oi gg Pi reenie | xe wuone: Tana “TANK TYPE VACUUM a, ae Cokes Ge ane electric ar ges ranges at low | _!-6161 ee pee boca FE R table for «# wnee =a inate TANK TYPE VAC cen cha e ve ome gat sr weet tare ven FE Cae | geoeee ie area EERE Nang | Re tt een | ett ap ten cet | eae PORT . | TINOLEUM, 9x12, $3.58 oan Bg a USE OUR TOOLS DO YOUR OWN | Gsily. ft Mile and vcept 3 WHITE BOCK PULLETS Ba INLAND LAKES BOATS AND LINOLEU 9x12, $3. CLINTON ENOiNes plumbing, wiriny repairing. Com-| $™) ‘0 ¢ p.m. except, Sundey: |" risabeth " oon paive | WiLL, EXCHANGE Ge TERR Reo $4.95 house paint. 62.50, gal. ke ina sccepted and cosy bank mae te. en fees | wee ange Sale Farm Produce 87 NTT inoleum : | tye ELIVER 2 PE 26122 PART TIME POR BUILDING | —— SAN Supply. W. Montcalm. FE | aia ROOTS, 0 VARIETIES nan MATERIAL. BOX 1, PONTIAC MAY SPECIALS KELLY’S HARDWARE BP tances Tet thre wed. | DGrgiant named for $3, others at | FOR YOUR TOMATO AND. GAR. EMONSTRATING PRESS. ate PRA aie cs _@ to 6:30 Closer_every Thurs | § sian .* den plants. also flower . B CRAFT | UNLOADING SALE | 3904 Auburn at Adams. FE 2-0611| Used Elec. Range... 636| 205, ,up- 0.000 0 yt FE a agner Oreeahouse a ote STAR “4@ FORD: WILL TRADE FOR) Save up te 60° on a)l new furni- Auburn Heights x. , A.) Range -_ $80.05) Hardy early blooming Mums 4 for Gregory : ‘win. Oe IO, S| your equity im ‘64 model ve) ture an. appliances | MISCELLANEOUS MATERIAL | sweets RADIO & APPLIANCES | & ny eg A a Bg RY Teper. Those ol Fon “ts oor. Hoereia ger crea Lee bathtubs. sinks, fixtures, | 422_W._ Huron PE ¢-1133| Sitond Knobloch Nurvery. BMeta-| 335 W, Bilverbell ous fine custom ar DODGE. CLUB COUPE SWAP | Rcaaee ceca "* > 33998 | miscellaneous lumber salvage | VAN AN BRAKE DRUM| mors. A Sins ‘seh Go Pino Lake’ end. ose difference PE ¢21s1 take | Kpartment cise gus slove "828 | | Menday through Saturday’ Huten:| feat’ sserj 22 Five} $900 takes. GwaeT ONIONS, TOMATO AND | _tatoes. Milton Miller. OA 94318. - wise 2 Lote On EIRNET ne RD. WILL | Deustc Seer weility cobtnet $13.85 inson's Traller Sales 4615 Dinie vacvtM G CLEANER WITH AT. Fa shen pate. et ee a ae ‘bene Waltos | Double door utility cabinet v . of garden plants. Corner PLACE swap for late model car. FE | Cicse out on 4 electric ranges, 3 wy RT ) LATHAM RASPBERRY Opdyke 58126 ask for Chuck | NEW AND USED —_—— —— -- IMPROVED LATHAM BA —e. fey Ged SQUTTY IN "83 TNTERNWA-| EXirosm' sods and chest of draw. | Furniture. r-irigeratore, potted WOLVERINE plants. ec. $8 per hundred. | CAR LOADS OF CERTIFIED ee eee e 8 bottled ohnston . \ gars Gret'hih penis nterma).| have,you Balance sine wid Or) MOSSY 4 ry | Sed, clecirie, eaters gree. sad west grornee of, aeymigur, bene | Cochran Lake Grin, MYSeun ; hard Lake Rd ; e es ke rs Gxinoard motor rere" Bac > For Seis Clothin 70 | FURNITURE CO. “If Junior should create an emergency, there are the ¢edins, —ssh. JExcuaxor ae . Sale Farm Equipment 88 OS ag Or x Ls Gacinaw PE 2-552) Numbers to call!” | PETROQ HEAT SERVICE CO. PLANT NOW ~~ ~ 048 Bag Se ee. Se Phd ALLIS CHALMERS CORN PLANT I SS Naw sUrTS SLIGHTLY BOILED | Mop po 4 ee rorte. | _Oven evenings & Sundays P.M LAKESIDE NURSERY —— a ie mer e ~ A. one Piece Canoes : $320.00 nd $25.00 | Sere, iobles cpinet. deck. “Cheap. | Sale Ho old | For Sale Misce! oo 72° * emma ‘ n Evenings ~ rn we pe fountains 00 an 5 a" —_———— AUNT EVEN ORT ENT NOW $45.00 and Two . YOURSELF” utility; NATION ALLY ADVERTISED | j woe ae nani Chest |? PIECE PASTEL GREEN DAVEN- | CHINA AND GLASS WARE BRIC- a TaN ge s CAST IRON WHITE ENAMEL |“ EveRnon's ali] Sunday. Earl 6 Co., sise Kits will do that outdoor| BRANDS VALUED UP TO $85 00 | . | bed Walnut finish 1| Port and chair, yellow figured, a-brec. some oid lamps. clocks. | Plumbing and Heating Supplies | bathtub and stool. $15. FE 2-4104 Save dig your ows We have alll 30 et Milferd Ré.. : piente table top, “Class-in-fiber-| MAKE UP THIS UNUSUAL Or. ca sain poreniite Mecuaey sabe. | — barrel-back chair 115 State corving cet, garden of cometery | Dequindre ot 30-Mile Rd. Open! _ after 6 p Ane oe = a Phone Milford 4- or trial ! 5558 u er is A COBSE. WER e -4235 - ; vit AT A “ALTERATIONS FREE! | 7s 60600 afer >> 7 PIECE WALNUT DINING ROOM | ‘emp. picture or pane! ma iding. | Oi MEATER 7 SERVICE MAN | MOWER. ue walle on es oe j — Sundays. ue ~ BOLENS GARDEN TRACTORS BOAT CO. Os ae Dow AL! M: AY BARG AIN- D. AY S set $40. 66 8S. Paddock St seal gg gg Rd ag extra menor. Always have | 4 wheel trailer chassis $50 7 ga a , M. 5 We ee TILLERS 32650 Northwestern Hwy. protic s Vowntown | Bedroom sultes, bed, chest, double | $x12 AXMINISTER RUG. 21 CHAR-| (,,) various oth toms 36 | va pane ane water ; eaters, 2 kitchen sinks 618 aSUTRRY PLANTS STATE is- +4; HWY = Sraateten ta. si ae Store Only | Gresser, limed oak, cherry. te _lotte Ctelrment Place between Schoo! | that really ee p. 8 or he | sen “ ~— — ae 4 a ted FE 61973). Mrs Alice Brae Ee - Pr : MAfair 6-6158 : : ene eee — on 8s . PIECE PUMED OAK DINING | __Street_gnd_ Fairgrove _ lke mew. Uoaestehie con install | 2437 eictirecn’ ne. of B Web —" “" ——Tr’s HERE Sail baMne ethan ee oTnES ——s.. CU | natural bamboo shades vaby|CASH CASH CASH) desde compeny time or Sun-| ton Bivd ee “FRAWBER® ¥ Pry NTS 2 CARLOAD a i ey ye yn ee) ee $1295| Scales “lov of books, “Iiee Cree Por anything you nave of watwe. | eee is PT ROW BOAT 635. ROYAL Me es af Mr ™ ee 2 Ft ee shoes, Layettes cheap Mrs, Ken- Living | ream cuties, eaagtignels ond Wa koe tana sure | 7 Michigan —— “Overhead Garage Doors sereg wt {air conduion $18. FE atts OA 8.2035 | Latest type from and top open: Rosebush. OA 6- OOM BU) Mart. “Md Lake Orion MY 2-1631. | Standard st Hable 1 TRIMMING AND REMOV- Lage ca! out and ~ => Loe aanen COATS AND SUITS, LIKE | g.{P tnnerspring mattress or box) Consisting of buffet. china cabi- | ——— a FORNITURE eer 3 One Secter? votes “May | #8 X27 BASEMENT WITH 8UB TREE NG Eg am milk cooler, any make, any con- We have a 25| . new, size rE , Les Le. sess ras,... $3795 ea.| Bet. table and 7 chairs. Reason- rE we give you @ free estimate on flooring on s 62'x162° lot. Located | 264” Oy rs dition. If your cooler ts getting apie 001 Middlebelt Read. Bir- +788 | on Cresent Drive. of Mt. Clemens as old here is your chance to save bd . MAN'S sows 3. r * s27.95 pow $186.95 me replacing your present doors men, OR é for 10 per 15 per suit, size 38; man's blue gabar- beds, complete... .964.50| _“neham. ev CINCINNATI P LANER | with steel overneaa | 8t__91800 total price 3-ores. rE E y. Open day and sight siz and Se pay. dine suit, 2 pr. pants, size 36.| Chests, 4 and § drawer, walnuts |? | oo take _ DINING “ROOM SUITE. Ra BERRY DOOR CO | Sale Musicat Goods 73 days & wees. SHOR HOOKS Both, A-i condition. $10 each | oF eee AV TON jana -007.56 r oe IEEE TiViNG ROOM og | 3. ©. Paddock ye 3-008) | = TREES AND ws pin gy Boag rE _3-2005. y, NN. __ Phone Detrolt, SLocum 1-408 ‘4 Clemens and Armada Phone New PLACE QUANTITY OF USED CLOTHING. S suite. $55. 4019 Metorway Drive, OUR ACCORDIONS. FACTORY PRICES, EVERGREENS | 3065 Orchard Lake Ra, Keego| after § CE MENT f£ BLOCKS _ finest quality. All sizes and colors. Haven Pioneer 06300. at Pine PE 23-5200 FE 23-8792, Sar : — ned mma Degim.| Shrubs grass seed. Ww we Gab ye s-snea | 2 FORMALS. G awp Bice | Pr e''s-s011 or re som |? CU FT - SERYEL G8 Bi REFRIO. | a mediate:y delivered. 96 Sheffield | NEW LOW PRICES pore Inpeige cf ie be cover. J.C Seer ~ plow. disk. and mower. Call_after 4:30 PE 41488. MAHOGANY DINING LUITE. $55.| Geep well sink. Good condition. =, ie Bef — 3x¢'s, 2560 & 38's 863 per M | tunity. 7 Pral) cOtf W. Hurea) orn ‘bale ha” chased last summer. Used very —_______ Russell Lemon Sheathing loaris $70 per M. Basement Apt. little. MY 33007 or MY 34708 Sale Household Goods 71 71 Sweeper. $10. Two simks. $4 62 _MA 6 3900 CLOTHES Posts & STEEL <« He 7 HOOK, ‘y imo Utility Plywood. $4 sheet Pia — iinG AND REPain- Utica, Michigan REpubite 09-5041 after 6:30 or — ie ea . pans wave | HODERN © DINING ROOM SUITE fy Pow a Hit ear enrpine Lumber Co | Heme oubie hung windows with tng. ¢ Oscar Schmidt Ph. PE 3.5317 For Sale Pets 81 Fond —PEROU-ON TRACTOR ABOUT gts. ‘you, mers ~ on J elu num wee Tt strin SPINET PIANO RENTALS WIth ~~ with 14 inch double bottom plow BAGLE AUTO PARTS | can BE | 7 = oom AND ROLEYwoop For Sale Miscellaneous s 72 DEEP WHEL » POMP. MP. Con. | Ont Dele cer Gis. Coment 61.10 option to buy $10 monthly. Gal | AKC BLOND COCKER PUPPIES. 4| disk. mower, and power take off. WE 43585 . , af SI aceon ae |e plete with tank sed 80 ft of All our prices are reasonable. tagher’s FE ¢0566_ month. oe. a Rd. Py By AN, pat Huber < Williams FE | ABSOLUTE CLEARANCE _ obw mi RS UNIFORM SIZE BLACKETT’S yt ad S8 UATIC TV iy 3 Le ccs ne catinet. Le oe . tee Fo sepesoe sort: | ASPHALT TILE .... 3c] 38, Soxer poms, vere re beeyeles. Buile itd Supplies WEBER ORAND | PIANO. were} AQUAT a & SUPPLIES | ures AAs. EE al oP eae Te (SELES EC oe iby] PS ee eS wn ne S| ERE ER NE ae Ee Se Soy Se ae . Call after 6 p.m. x NEW FURNITURE Siesiie ‘Stas ‘ elimaved meee: ses! PLY Sale Store Equipment 77 BEAOLE PUPPIES. “lite OREER. te ee WAREHOUSE PRICES| 4"; it. Wall Tile... .10c| Buges uALLow-wn we WOOD | iinoei Cis women, cou | Sues sorvie reminds. MY Pte Rollaway > is complete — $16.95 Inside Outside Mouse Paint $1 4 gs! ee eee oe All Kinds, plain & decorative. Kitcn.| electric. ¢ totals, m fim- | Thoroughbred. excellent pete Bota, beds on ‘cn. ike new. #433, Terms, Morey | Wate dog. MA 63404. Plow. power take. off, 6 12.95 each gloss ste $3.79 gal. en cabinet Goors—drawers made Chub. 2280 Uni —_ —_— h . starter light — cox aaa $195 6x9 L. INOL. EUMS... ” Se McBride Hardware to Sontiac PLrwoop co He | oft merece = Lt ys ee, — =. ses ‘Damp ha raze 8. 2118 { .. size a «..«- 0664.96 | Ie LA TLE ene O Sundays 9-12 1488 Baldwin Ave FE 3-243 | Sales G , 78 cupped FE 3-007? . a Lake ha at John R. covered ..... ?. Counter Topping We ft W271 Auburn Ra iat Crooks) PIONEER UTILITY TRAILER 900. | Sporting ~ SABY PARAREET AND NEW 7 and used. service. Avis ot $1.88 4B) ttorotd's 40 S—Saginaw}— Se _SU¥_ SELL. TRADE BURR- | ae¥ SanaxeEve | Service. 1800 yee Rd FE Unfinished p nog ‘tables hess FE 25450 Free Delivery Free |? LAWN ge ao | PAINT pnt yg mca LENT Omen FE 24708. 373 & Telegraph th & FE Closed + SS ST a Kneehole desks maple or Double Red Stamps Today _ ‘Reel ¢ be, almost a oe | § oe aoe Seetien | meee | pr? a : K Veh A SE pied Bh gegen Nay ~ “ane ANG op CHANAKLs BEAMS 5-4287 | beneh Nice 3 bedroom suite. | rifice $65. _F Deere 3 section toaster. epetne o 900.00, pipe. reinforcing <-) basement _FE 71-0001 or FE 2-5585 SET REG . Por used farm Bad vedios tose ave GMS Sol Gee ee ed eee Do IT youRsELr | PATENTED ITEM AUTO ACCES. ne : : ment see Groman, “Ailte- lromting ] “ae 135 Branch across LUMBER sory outright or trade it . - : iARE GEN- Chalmers dealer, Holly, Mich ——_ makes one.se comp eR EF ist OF MATERIALS | Hag lig ome 4 lot. Write AND TOOLS. Cotten mattress... Sit bs SL wa WEECEINS — GARAGE PORCH — LIGHTS IN EARLY ~ HOUGHTEN’S on used & mt e American laptercs. oid lash - ex12 Weavs rugs ro) bidg $26 13 rug pe 95 | lton feet of good sound ber, ) coach and candle lantern FOR ly chrome Ginettes 837.95 up| brick. We deliver Union Bidg. OVERHEAD DOOR siso most complete selection of roy ' Bast paras cn th eee ane doors. plumbing sash. angie iron. AND CEVNENT EXTRA lights for every room in house at BEST BUYS!!! aw St. ar ast warehouse, Supoly Co. 3 w. Eight Mile HAGGERTY | terrific values Michigan Fivores- Geebace Lake next to Farmer's . corner Lake Rd. cent, 333 Orchard Lake Ave. — ae RET Gan ctv. to 6:00 Sunday 1) 60 to 3:00 | aed Late | M eral good, used | ie». Merrimac __|__ ASPHALT PAVING me ‘sees Ta sal tea pte ie rr = ie : eet ee See oe GAS RANGE. Durtveways and parking areas Cash | Salte D and BARGAINS Y dijon. 351 Pirst Ave, PE $4266. | “Gr terms. Pree estimaces O, & W.| EVERY GAT. & SUN. ONLY. Li | “we carry pumps to suit any. New Idea : : NEW OER- Asphalt Pavine Co. FE 2-2237 wipes SALE. GENER. well condition) \a&l TOP SAND. 7543 7 [% disk harrow le ater, . PE 4.7903. ~~ aTTRACTIVE COAL VALUES REHOUSE, 467 467 &. BAGINAW. 52 Gal. hot water heaters $78.50 dirt. acravel ful FE 54-4731 — — | a a -20 Farmall trac ‘; EBHIL GAR RANGES,” WATER PONTIAC. (Detroit Edisop approved) Sing | NEW DOG BOARDING KENNEL re ee see 8 5M stee! Dathtuds, less trim 931 4} TOP SOtL.. SLACK DIRT. | oven, Come out and see it. Also| Disk and barrows heaters 10 4 cent awa, Seuseehy oeeneeere eee pe FURNACES ienkT china leeatere j gore and fil) dirt. Lyle — Boxer tor sale, Le-Le-Ru Farmall troleu' ve oT , * factory guarantee less trim 43.99) =e Kennels Crooks a oe Sis: — BLAYLOCK ucts or round "ol sever. somata Sot | -i TOP GOiL, BLACK DIRT.| orth of Aubure, FE 1-432 We are rters tor~ Cosl & ing i — ae frms Call ay FILL, SAND. ORAVEL. SCHAEP-| S,nAcEETS OPALINES. CANA- M- Jona w Maytag washers, FE 45160 #1_ Orchard Lake Ave Sno: | _ Bao ™M ong * hes Oi dun. 10 te 2 | PRR. PE oie Pe y4300. ries, 1304 Mt Clemens, FE 44960,| Bean Case New Idea and Dum REFRIGERATOR 2 YEARS OLD. | BONDEX HYDRAULIC HEAVY | PIR txts, 10 FT. | Arnason lumbing Supply | #4 SOIL A | SAA eee : rials Cait after 700 PM | ALUMINUM ATION A ed 108 M13 Ble seuth of Ortonville | ee eT ACE’ DIRT AnD | 5 an tet Metrese, FB HOUGHTEN’S a w* Fe 101_Squirrel aa La > a 828 N. Main Rochest TON _ APT. = TTT pie s1¢° . eS ; ATION "CES | FOR SALE ALL MATERIAL IN PICNIC TABLES wet See 4 electric stove. like new. 835.00 ANCHOR FENCES r) in lot PARARESTS UREEDERS 175 sepmoeaToR_ELECTR(E |" Was Se emaene| Hi potion “HY | val Cate abe ‘ne KIN ECTRIC free estimates. Your one sToP bedroom suite with Vicious WELL TRAINED FO | p, cove, 3 ese - 4 . s : com Sg Mt RCA 15%" TV RADIO. PHONO, | fen Prucrcereat S03 Oreherd| con openhead steel drums s200| SAVE AT SURPLUS! PUREBRED TOY FOX TERRIER ORMICK IMPLEMENTS 2 tables m y cabinet. 121 e AVe. each. H P Sutton, 4750 Joslyn te ft registered. 223% BOLENS GARDEN TRACTORS Ascot. FE ¢ a — Rad 1.98 Beers | , ps best teed for & years, buy & bew a chairs, MY 3-4308. REPRIOERATOR. 7 CUBIC FT, 3-3 CUB, METAL PROP. RELI- BO AS Swe sorts or FE TTLE G a SS ~~~ | and depoatt Kenyon 1 = ART-WARNER REPRIOER- TRUCE COMO mORTR Pant | $90 Disie Mighwer.OR P9001. | 810% lead either way Pubes. | ie” table model TV saa ds | _*tor, $75. PR 2-7448. EK. T Outside antenna kits § 0.95 | STOV! some = PORTATION WALTON TV cane nie : PAID PE 22257 _tosivn Cr_Walter | SoriD RED MAPLE BUFFET. EX. > To Loe Angeles, Sap Diego, Priseo|C AS H FOR FURNITURE OR} cetient condition FE 5-2737. : ‘ tools. OR _3-2717. f. V. SET. BEDROOM SUITE.| Corner Cabinet +49 value for $27 ints. Diseontinged colors. Oak- Travel PE %-s83i etre to go now. CLOSEOUT SALE heap Dinins vet. ® oc. $50. FE| 34° base cabinet value $45 now | Sureche. recovered and revaired, and Fue! ard Paint 436 Orchard | Pitt SAND. AND GR‘VEL, DE PONTIAC DRIVE Away service Geed wringer washers....$19 50 up $2168 or FE 20630 se Cail or come in. ang et cur fees" SE sie. | Lat Pe #sis0 Ea aFam | vere Jim Poster. PE ¥-6oe3._ r refrigerators ...... up x : BRUSHES, er bereal.. prices Est ~| 10 STEEL CABLE $160.5 ee TAR Se a WX ~ VE +5199 or FE 2-0979 Used, Easy Spin-Dry seni es ay cae baa ‘se Myrtle. ie . oo = Tate. a AKC. Walnut +0696. De- motor ‘good condition ste. Pack: FERTILIERA FOR GARDERS OF cat " RONGIO cascccssesce = : Shopp e r achecanmmemmensiaes ~ — ard ¢ 4 ei or trailer. j . Swaps 69 All ttems ‘reconditioned @ Unpainted Furniture fasts GAs WATER WEATER AUTO 30| S10. ¥-0 65 cagine, comptete wih | tenn’ ° A NEW 2 PLOW PARM TRACTOR | —_Revs 98 Oakland FE 2-402) | Adult Rocker ....... eee Burmeister’s Coosumery. ESAS. | trace nisin. $18 Mowe beam Farm Top Soll or good 25-28 foot housetrailer.| CONSOLE RADIO IN GOOD CON- Gate Le Table, 35240” $14.95 accessories. Rules. FE 2-7900 $8.. White é sewing Bleck dirt. sand and ereyel, as scales. $19 ma- —— ; éntion 60. Call PE +4046 af- le erie strom OPEN * AM TO 8 P. M "HEADQUARTERS FOR LAWN | chine 535. dining room suite. AB APT STOVE | ier Pu. eVROUG SUNDAY 10 3 < $38. fruit or . ti) dirt. iS, ASSEM- Tr LL TRUCKING | RIBBON WINNERS | models, famous ix6 fir boards No.1 $110 per M — 3 Proven tops, all popular colors. Come Lee’s Sales & Service Legace sees BREE SS [citer oem ate See eB | mi oo era SER SO ee ent) Eahge Pant Oren | 3 Se one es os | ee cone cee SoUry, MC ROM ROGRE Fon |CouatnaTign wapro Guy PHS| "Pete ntron NS | a“R ype, Oe BES | es cere eee TE eae | Marte trailer and cash FE SOOM.” | ble and 9 chairs Wi, oad Gebers USED TRADE-IN 3x4 No 2 fir ve - te per a Co he Ge EXCHANOR YOUR CAND CON: | Seagrove Satertey. DEPARTMENT Rock Lath per bundle Se | chicks cheap. 2nd house east of erty) for ‘late ve sold aT POR PORNITURE — |Rocter i («é«ti«wOwWw 14.95| No. 2 oak florring $138 per o *737_Hamiin. Ws Via iMt, Model cor CASH POR FURNITURE = gall oe oie es | Com $16.95 |HOLL NGSHEAD VARIETY KITCHEN SRE AMEE AND, LAVATORY, DOUBLE LINED DRAW DRAPES |Devenport end chair... $330) NAR OYOELL, PAINTS cuenp Say eoverinn opt foe — oeats, coon "46 beautifully covered cornice boards | Ga. rs ""* gag 50 | '¢ YOU ARE A HOUSE oo. Phone 7-7843. Tete Feere irwekseiigers: to match» ta for | See "Sine room suite’ $088 Bory eTEn s | icasows RENTAL — TRADE | Senco taa hae wae |? Pe iret gh] AND AUS Ege Om EL gases cna mere, Sa |_ FE 23-0484. » Sure . met, pum: Mand and power lawn mowers. We | USED 3 PIECE SECTIONAL/ | ‘s EC NOMY “ , alaimeacodesiber can Fe ont give you the best trade-in sofa FE 2-188} THOMAS ECO) ‘ ’ MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT LIGHT CO vevvvvVVYYY,} How do you like Programs furnished by stations listed tm this column are subject te change without notice. a 4 ee our coffee ee car te | SAE Ae reer bd Se elo, | Sm Se wae, mee ene | EYE ihancn, tctent CELM, Bows Sperte 45—WEYE, News Wolfe 2 Sake Bee nencce WCAR, News, Ballads 1:08—WIR, Dick Burris — WAR. cacomarencone | ERE, | ror renee | TEGO WHYTE, Lee Suite WJBK. Rise and Shine 1:98—WIR, Road of Lite CKLW. Eddie . Goan, fem acer 7" wits. tore te a Neer flot! Warm! Cool! Iced! Black! With cream! With sugar! meet the increasing world demand. We don't know how soon ‘wer iy = ‘wae Tonge ll eg F, Soren, Bane _— A million different people would have a million different this will be. No ™ really knows. ; ; WCAR, "Earn Fret 8 a 1:18—WIR, Ma Perkins WCAR, Your Land answers. But probably they would all be thinking ... “I'd In the meantime, we have to keep on paying the going Lowell Thomas Gentil, Binge es Harmonics | ¢:05—WIR, Lowell Thomas enjoy my coffee more if it only cost me less.” price for the carefully selected green coffees that we must buy Ss a “WEYE. Mary’ Mebriae Seer Sakae Bevcemen for our blend in order to maintain the traditional uniformity JR, duck waste caw. Knowing enepnoagirs We can’t help but agree with that. ; . 1.20 IR, Quest Rowse Ba ve “Maxwell Tiger Tunes 1:00— WIR, Quest Rouse and high quality of Hills Bros. Coffee. wate Red Guaton cLW, a eee ‘Say Be tees Ue Sa Rites eres be But we do have te = about cofice quality and Never in the 76 years since our company started in busi- Wan, News Malleds icictishin: thal die WCAR, Warmup Time ‘ah sieeps, esi peney —_—, prices. Will you spere a couple of minuies to ness have we even considered lowering our standards .. . 1:15—WW4, Pram Pettay wars gq Foe CREW. News ° “giving a little less” just to sell at a lower price. That isn’t CaLW, pene $:30—WIR, Music Ball Wxrz, Winters rhs the : Geod : . : W. News, Buc nore of toon way we operate. coffee is the only thing that Hills "Wa Morgan ‘Beoty nm ey SSS. | SP Sie, A cup of good coffee! Bros. know how to live with. , Gabriel Heatter ware, s Bog A 2:13 w. Mason 1:43—WIR, EB Tae . . ty By Se p Rips peal SEs, Ons, Manse Pam There are three essential elements to a cup of good coffee. . Considering the price you have to pay for eny kind of # ventty | Weak teen zm, Geeke mid coffee today, coffee-quality becomes more important than My Poppet Chub hacia ieaee a ‘ews amd - +. aroma, flavor and strength. And it just so much ever. If you have used Hills Bros. Coffee, you know whet ana; Mine ae Beet tea caw. Peesy Lee CHL Minty “bpihae coffee with each cup of water to obtain the right balance of » we are talking about. If you haven't ~ there is a pleasant CxLW, 0:98 WIR, re SW, mutter eum O89), Prank sinstre all three qualities. ce qwalling pee ea ae oe Ae pty il RAYE. Ba McKenste *Fws one bee Some coffee roasters claim you can get 60—70—or more 0:20 IR, Talent Sevute Ww, SB WIR. Howse Party mae Gin aan cups from a pound of coffee. Of course you can. You-can Our new product coming wate, Gate tn 12:90 WIR, Arthur Oodtre CKLW. 8:45—WXYZ, J. Gregson get 100 cups if you don’t care how the coffee tastes, and are ; 3 8:20-WW3. Pepper Youns 9:00_WJR. Johnny Collar _ __satished-with.; Lrown-colored cup ef hot-water, ——--——--~ ~~~ -- — During the few- - have been 8:45—WKYZ, J. Oregeson Saw iy _S¥pe Getz WXYZ, Paul Winter ea. salushed with just a up ing-the-past: years;-many-people at- — 9:00—WIR, Lux Theater TBR, News, Murohy — oon } pews. men _ ; a ) eni s SN 5 Rac ba ee Nea pels a bc ar meager or llommnlicaice vvendcred why Hills Bros, didn't have a product of oe Bee “ws, Backsag “ee CRLW. Search Never inde approved by The Coffee Brewing Institute, Inc. (2 level this type. , Under Hes Gak Neve *4S—WW4, Crime & Cha'ders tablespoons of coffee to each 6-oz. cup of water). We could have offered you an Instant Coffee at any time the wxYz, : . {ae PERE git arn 4:18—WIR, wisere ot O64 | 1o:00_w, a — > al oulice le this way at home during the last 20 years. But we have continued our re ‘ee ens tt Ried a— Fan Ernie Bawards costs only about 3 cents a cup. And what ad i te search and development since 1934 beeause we were de- : rc b+ wr Brown ek: ioe American home gives -so , satisfection — te 00_-many termined that when we put our name on Instant Coffee it oun . Wean, Four tana 10:15—WIR, 1. Parsons - “tle a would combine real coffee-quality with coffee-convenience. such 0 ear, | BWW, Woman im Rouse Wita"ite of ee people — at little cost — as a cup of good coffee! Tre ts Balcony SASEES, Eeeree bees.) Gee. Qcorge cL ie Martin | Now, we can announce that before this year is out, you " (0:30— > ve. T. Suns ° . . ° . ee Fbewes weave i Bey See ah cs Coffee quality and coffee prices! sian geht g “tl ae nrtawecl ace a rae re Rows . pat Sty Pang = eKen ' din gr s she a n : ee of superior qualit y- GRLW, Enron, sports "ivviay Sasond Chane, Sea eet ioe Cal, Gogeeeeee The price you have to pay for coffee today concerns us In your — will not only look like coffee—but taste like 21:18WIR, Bod Reynolds ee SBIR, Reynolds, Mutte t1gee WIR. Rowe just as it does you. But the cost of green coffee is the largest — with "7 emus — It will “Take the work , WCAR, Balisds ‘ WEE. Rewe single factor in determining the price at which roasted coffee Ow Of wonder ee.”* It will guarantee you “Good of CKLW, Sports g P ” at zo hose = AS wy Uarenne. Jones ; ae a chai can be sold. And that cost is something over which we have Taste... No Work ... No Waste.”* Muste ; adie - Seno poy wry, stoste no control. There is no coffee grown in the Continental United The best th — fr CURSDAT MORNING — | 19:98-WIN, Helen Trent wwi. Marriage Pays (1:90-WIR, Music States. It all has to be imported at prices that have been e best there 1s in cotiee Pal Be Yawn : CRLW. Boy Bué Gaon; be Morphy wae aii established in a world-wide market. __ i has Ivasinaiaiocollee exclusively,” ond Gaackinv — : ; = : CSS ur 1 is ; * ~ y os p many state because ICC Chairman Escapes We believe (and certainly hope) that coffee C Cae > > ing of perfection in coffee-quality is our basic objec- oung Dems TAISE | ot his opposition to the Bricker Seri injury in Mishop prices will be lower when Brazil, the largest coffee- Hitic SRROS tive. That is why we can promise you that in both GOP SO fa Wil growing country, recovers from the crop damage LS e” BR kinds of Hills Bros. Coffee—our ground coffee in_——. ‘ Senator ley WASHINGTON —Col. John M | Walt Disney’s Daughter | Johnson, 72, chairman of the Inter brought about by frost last July, and when all the CO Fr cE vacuum-packed cans, and our new Instant Coffee ; MILWAUKEE @ — Sen. Alex] Wed to USC Grid Stor |" nae ee, a Latin American countries, from which most of our nu soon to come—Hills Bros. will always give you | ander Wiley (R-Wis), snubbed last Cant — outs te —_ tang riding green coffee comes, are again producing enough to ia Oe all the best there is in coffee. 4 week by Wisconsin's Young Repub- lat oar tom Salen overturned yesterday at nearby . licans, has received the unanimous Bethesda, Md. “ commendation of the Executive | Walt Disney, 20-year-old Diane, is) js 1.60 and Horace G. Smithy, F Board of the Young Democratic |honeymooning today with Ron/74 Washington real estate man, , | Clubs of Wisconsin, Miller, 21, former University of | who also was hurt, were returning e . . Wey, chairman, ot ‘tie Senate Southern. Califortia football end. {from s golfing outing. at Burning H : ~ = fa ise tren Pos | Tis Dros Uotree, mc. — by the Democrats for his| Al) Saints by-the-Sea Episcopal (Mavertisement) ° role in putting the St.|Church at nearby Montecito, | 2Wey RELIEF for 9 ) | Lawrence seaway through Con-| wise Disney was giver in mar , , : : | gress, : | Dry itch | : % riage by her father. ed tye voice vole at the viate|, Milet le employed ty Disney. “atures in dost men ‘ © Trademert-Copyright 184 by Hitt Bren, Callen, fmm of the Y: Republi- was a junior aives ; ta lanolin, é cans la Ae se but does not plan to continue her tne ts fry teat ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1954 SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. Sale! 3-in-1 " 5-Peand Mica Roofing Basement Sterm Sash Steel Basement Sash Pine Half Screens Reckwoe!l Batt Trim 210-L& Weight 23 1/3 09, ft Nails and tar included ..... Moe Pure Asphalt Base. 3.29 Bag Tin pe a en. wn 2.39 33-In. wide, 12-In. high .... 4-Ld, bag covers 20 Sq. Ft.- _ Installed Services NO MONEY DOWN ON F.H.A. Aluminum Siding mae ) $ INSTALLED AS LOW as_/ Monthly For ‘seiaty protection and increased value! This aluminum siding has baked-on enamel finish that ends painting problems . insulates to save on fuel bills, too! Guaranteed for 10 full years! Completely installed! WIND AND WEATHERPROOF 3-in-1 Shingles .. and it COMPLETELY INSTALLED BY SEARS EXPERTS! AS LOW AS D> FT sous all tabs cemented down, double- 210-lb. weight shingles give 97% double coverage, with lined valleys; it’s wind and weatherproof! Completely applied by experts! Building Materials—Perry St. Basement 9x9-Inch 2.39 ST een. 06! Es eee. 15! 2.29 West Pee 1.52 “an. 34) 1 ase ae 39.95 ES os een 15.75 ena 3S! SS 2.19 3.95 “SS mee 4.59 “BE sarerns 9.20 3.70 “ES eee... 15 SEES we .......7.75 1,09 “Sele 12.79 “RET. 3.69 © FINE QUALITY! © LOW PRICES! © SAVE AT SEARS! Applied heuer Siding NO MONEY DOWN ON F.H.A., AS LOW AS } ? DSS —— ‘ - Menthly Treat your home to a younger look! Homart asbestos siding resembles hand-split shingles, stays lovely with- out painting. Several colors. Materials and labor guaranteed. Ask for a free estimate, today! SGN eh , iy si : x. Saas ee & a — - : NUE Lay * PS ge | Peers aemmetaiess oe nN 1 | 7 Installed Box Guttering NO MONEY DOWN ON F.H.A. Month Cut from full weight heavily galvanized sheets, corefully formed straight and true to gauge and size. Pieces fit together tightly, slip connectors make them woter- -tight for yeors of service! Call for free estimate today! Plastic Lominate Fun to Install Yourself 23 It’s easy to apply this hard, long wearing aan lami- nate to table, sink tops, furniture and bathroom walls. Just wipe with o damp cloth and it’s sparkling clean. Lots. of colors! Save up to 20% on A bills! Add the protection. of re House combination windows to your home, All sizes! | New Folding Doors Space-Savers With Many Uses vet — 30.75 Homart folding doors a new way of eo § space! S$ frames have vinyl covering. 3-0 « 6-8 ~30-Gal. Gas Water Heater $10 Allowance on Old Heater 04” $11 DOWN Only a few dollars higher thon standard models, -but has finer controls, greater ; - Automatic fe safety pilot, adjustable 10 years. Thermopanel type external flue has greater heating crea! Brit was Specially Priced al at t Sears! Homart 54-Inch Ears Sinks © Regularly 89.95 © Only $7 Down It’s a Homart with 9” double-utility top ...ata low sale price! There's plenty of storage ‘space! Has the big basin for ample dish-washing room !—* oy Co geet spout faucet, splash back, easy-to- 10% off on all Steel Wall Back Medicine Cabinet Priced Lower at Sears! _ white = 6.95 Large 14x20-in. mirror in white enameled frame. Two shelves and biede drop for razor blades. Save! Homart Jet Pump Powerful Capacitor-Type Motor row Onty 114.95 Saves buying a new deep well pene if water level fails below -ft. Converts from shallow to deep well operation Changes Hard Water Inte “Rain-Solt” Water! stanton tral 7795 $19 DOWN Soft water is like magic, easier on hands, fabrics. Filters,-- softens, removes iron-from domestic - water supply in one operation! Steel tanks have double baked-on vinyl-coats for longer tank life! guaranieed 00g 105,000 ets tg Wicca 242.95 Go to sleep in cool comfort! Ex- clusive deep-pitched blades. 2 speeds for quick or continued comfort. Heavy-duty motor. Gleaming Homart Steel Bathroom Ensembles Deluxe Softener Stee Bath Outfit 119° ==" Homart oil boiler operates efficiently in any © 141.10 Value © All 3 Pieces Give your bathroom ‘‘Picture-Book” beauty -a new sparkling bright Homart-ensemble. Steel bathtub has a long-lasting vitreous” finish! Complete with washdown toilet and lavatory! Save now! fomanted 10 pee ae dace SEARS 1s North Saginaw St Heahist Ale Flees Fiberglas, 16x20-Inch Triple-Use Fi Fon Use Anywhere in Your Home 47. 95 Now Only | As As 79 ¢ An exhaust ‘fan, intake tn @ or Traps dust, dirt and pollen in floor circulator, whichever you heating, ven , air-condi- need. Lightweight, handle on tioning systems. Permits free top. 16-in. blades. . flow of air. Other sizes. $12 DOWN with —. forced hot water after instal Enjoy Your Full Share of Home Comiort! Homart Oil-Fired Boiler or steam Gonphiedy oratased bellen tested before ship. Canb Cente coveted og Plumbing and Pe ik St. Basement Phone FE 5-4171 | 9”