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= THE PO Details page two 4- —— =
1llth YEAR * * & *& ~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953—s2 PAGES INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE
$20 of Gre
Kidnaped Baby Safe, Well
:
Se Ra som i as
ed in Petos
Girl ls Arrested;
Parents Flying
to Pick Up Tot Sitter Claims She Took
Dick to Replace Her
Own Who Died
HUGO, Okla
5-months-old baby-boy gig-
gled and cooed today while
a 17-year-old former carni-
val strip teaser, who admit-
ted kidnaping the infant,
resolutely announced that
when he is grown “I'm going
to get him back.”
Mrs. Tommie Dene
Doughty, arrested about
midnight at:the Red River
valley farm home of her
father, was placed under
$20,000 bond at her arraign-
ment about six hours after
her arrest.
She did not enter a plea.
She was charged with kid-
maping Richard Lee Stammer
Friday night and taking him
from his Evansville, Ind. home i
east Oklahoma.
The child's parents, Richard!
Duane Stammer, 20, a sailor who
all the trip.
“I had some money when we |
left Evarisville and I bought what
he needed along the way. He
didn't cry at all . . . was just a
perfect baby.”
She told the commissioner after |
the arraignment:
“The mother can have her baby |
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) |
Baseball Keeps
Reserve Clause
i
(AP)—A |
WOMAN CHARGED WITH
a. m. bottle in Durant, Okla. this morning, five-month-old Richard
Lee Stammer gurgles unconcernedly. Missing from Evansville, Ind.,
since Friday night when the 17-year-old baby sitter disappeared with
him, the baby was found at a farm home near Bokchito, Okla., by
PBI agents last night. The girl, Mrs. Norma Jean Doughty, has
been arraigned on a kidnaping charge.
High Court Upholds ‘22:
Decision; Game tsn‘t’
Business
WASHINGTON \#—The Supreme |
Court today ruled professional base- |
ball is still only a sport and hence
laws.
Court’s decision was given on
three appeals attacking the much-
discussed player “reserve clause,”
keystone of organized baseball.
to overturn a 1972 unanimous
decision by Jtstice
Holmes “baseball is a sport,
nounced in a “per curiam” opin-
lon — that is, one not signed by
any member of the court.
Tt said the tribunal was uphold-
ing the Holmes’ decision of 1922
“so far as that decision deter-
mines that Congress had no inten-
tion of including the business of
baseball within the scope of the
federal anti-trust laws."
Today's ruling came less than
a month after the high court heard
three hours of arguments stretched
over two days.
Appeals were taken to the high
court by two former minor league
King Ibn Saud
Dies Following
Short Illness BEHREIN, Persian Gulf # —
Word reached this island that King
Ibn Saud of Sau® Arabia, the
thritis. He
this
birth date
a out for
him his kingdom of Saudi Arabia,
with six million subjects. American
| capital which tapped his country’s is not subject to federal anti-trust |v i
dollars a year. Victim and Kidnap Suspect
ar
KIDNAPING—Waiting for Ris 6
\Avea Accidents
Claim 2 Lives Ortonville Man Is Auto
"Dies of Crane Injuries
iff's deputies.
Clande Kirkham, 58, 0° 105 Eu-
elid Ave. died after a four-day
fight for life at Pontiac General
Hospital. He suffered severe head
of control about one-half mile north
of Featherstone road at 11:15 p.m.
DeLisle, who was unable to make
a statement at the time of the
accident, will be questioned by
sheriff's deputies after his release
from Pontiac General Hospital. He
was treated for a concussion and
is in good condition today, accord-
ing to the hospital.
Kirkham, a civil engineer, had
worked for the Pontiac Depart-
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Victim; DPW Foreman | 4
i
| them. The important thing is
the people know the facts. I think
Up to Grand Jury
WASHINGTON (AP )—
Democratic Chairman Ste-
phen A. Mitchell’s challenge
to the Eisenhower adminis- |
tration to lay before a grand |
est” toduy by Sen. McCar-
thy (R-Wis).
Atty. Gen. Brownell, who
“low politics” in saying that
Truman had promoted the
late Harry Dexter White in
the face of FBI reports that
White was a spy. Truman i espionage agents, such as White,
that doesn't Mean you can
Atty. Gen. Brownell performed a
tremendous public service.”
Truman has said White was fired
“as soon as we found out (he) was
White died in 1948, a week after
denying before the House Un-
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7)
Delay Action on Hubbard
LANSING ® — Gov. Williams
today delayed indefinitely any
action on a grand juror’s’petition
for the removal of Mayor Orville
E. Hubbard of Dearborn.
Community Is Issued Invitation to Visit
Public Schools During Education Week Teachers and parents’ groups
community to visit Pontiac’s 25
public schools as American Educa-
tion Week opened today.
Almost all schools have planned
special education week “open
house”’ festivities this week.
Pontiac Education Association
has planned a program of “re-
minders” to jog the city’s school
consciousness,
The education association - has
passed out special American Edu-
cation Week Seals to schools and
sent out letters to churches, serv-
ice. clubs, American Legion posts,
PTAs, Pontiac Junior and Senior
Chambers of Commerce and
Mayor Arthur J. Law. Window
greet
Parents of school students are
especially urged to discuss their
youngsters’ work with teachers
during open -house affairs. Teach-
ers will also welcome. parefits who
drop in during school hours this from 7 until 9 p. m. and Eastern
Junior High, 7:30 until 9 p. m.
Jefferson Junior High plans a
special program of music, short
talks and a one-act play to climax
its Wednesday night open house,
starting at 7 p. m.
Other Wednesday night festivi-
ties are at. Emerson School from 7
until 9; Qwen, 7:30 until 9; Whit-
field, 7:30 until 9:30 and Whittier,
hopes its parents will drop in be-
tween 10 a. m. and 3:30 p. m.
Wednesday.
Tharsday ms are
planned by Lincoln Junior High,
7:30 until 9 p. m.; Bagley, 7
eee ‘ eeretens
ee cer ee
TEeret rrr ee eee eee
7 until 9. Wever Junior High}.
ant Ads. ee ft, 28, 2, 98, 31 Women's Pages...... mM, Ii, 12, 4,
= \ until 8 p. ni.; Bailey, 7 until 8
Pp. m., followed by an open PTA
meeting; Crofoot, 7 until 9 p. m.
and Baldwin, 7 until 8:15.
Another Thursday night high-
light is-Central’s open house start-
ing at,7. Robert Martin, - ete-
mentary. education consultant from
Michigan Department of Public
Instruction, will speak in a special
program.
LeBaron School plans its open
house Thursday from 7. until
8 p. m.; McCarroll, 7 until. 9 p. m.;
McConnell. 7 until 9 p. m.; Willis,
7 ~mtit -8-30;—and Wilson; 7--until
9 p. m.
Wisner, which staged its open
house during its school festival
in October, and Webster School
are asking the public te drop
in during school hours any day
this week.
Longfellow, Malkim, Hawthorne
and Washington Junior High
Schools have delayed. their open
house _programs__ until Nov.
Hawthorne's will be part of a
regular PTA meeting at 2:30 p,
that day. Longfellow's door m.
will
open from 7:30 until 9:30 p, /m.;
and | 3 Psychiatrists Report | Mossadegh Aided on Way to Court Officer Reports :
CHARGED WITH TREASON—Former Iranian | he enters court in Tehran where a military tribunal
Dictator Mohammed Mossadegh is helped along as| is trying him on a charge of being a traitor. . ‘Passed here last Tuesday,
Another $10 Bill
Found in Detroit Tourist Camp Operator
identifies Kidnap Money
and Hands It to FBI
PETOSKEY (UP)—A $20 ;
bill from the missing Green-
‘lease kidnap ransom was
Chief of Police Philo Wake-
ford said today.
He said another $10 bill
also was passed in Detroit.
The bill here was received
by Mrs. Henry J. Krauser, a
part-time nurse at Little
Traverse Hospital who also
operates a small tourist
camp near here.
Wakeford said Mrs. Krau-
in last Tuesday and out of
curiosity checked its serial
number with the list of |
numbers of the missing |
ee a
authorit
Tt matched one of the “B” series
bills on the FBI list and she called
Offices Close
Climb to 93 Pct. of Goal
Psychopath Tag Awards Luncheon Planned ue i i f |
j
have turned in outstanding
service to the community
through the United Fund
and its agencies.
Tally sheets in United Fund
headquarters this morning showed
Decisions; Attorney to
Decide on Jury Request
ney, Harold W. Geddes of Detroit,
who was given 15 days to decide
whether to request a jury hearing |
on the doctors’ findings.
Ht a jury ie requested, it will
have power to gefuse commit-
ment of O'Brian to a mental in-
stitution. Otherwise the decision
is left up to the presiding judge.
If committment is refused, |
O'Brian will face a first degree |
murder charge in the death of
Mrs. Hallie O. Perkins, 55, of 76 |
W. Longfellow Ave. on Aug. 4.
_ .-However.. if the. judge_and_jury |
decides enough evidence has been
submitted to indicate that O'Brian | he will be turned over to a state |
were held on petition from
O’Brian’s wife.
O'Brian was captured Sept. 9
after attempting to attack a Pon-
tiac housewife. He later confessed |
the rape-slaying of Mrs. Perkins |
and another attack on a 16-year-
old girl.
Weather Forecast:
Generally Fair Mostly fair weather tonight and
is the forecast for the
U.S, Weather
8
Tuesday are predicted.
Sunday brought the mercury ris- | 52 on
.m. in downtown
| $34,000 more to pick up to reach
is a criminal sexual psychopath, |
34 tonight | to
a high of ,
snow was | Mich. Four persons were killed,
. the reading was | transferred to the Kaiser Willow
registered 41 rolled off assembly lines there last drive personnel have less than
their $487,200 goal.
The geographical division was so
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
Fire Breaks Out
in GM Division Small Blaze Is Quickly
Curbed in Hydramatic
Willow Run Plant
* DETROIT @®—A short-lived but
potentially dangerous fire disrupt-
ed operations at General -Motors’
hydramatic transmission division
last night. +
The blaze broke out in the heat ityite ghi fied
d fi
Ht : t i | i
|
I
f [
! | j
f tH i gtk ti E zEe
| Teachers Blushing
TUCSON, Ariz. ® —_.
treat department of the division's
recently leased quarters in the
Kaiser‘ Motor Corp. Willow Run
plant.
It was the second time in three
months that fire has struck the
GM hydramatic transmission
division.
Company officials said the fire
started near a number of cyanide
tanks in the heat treating depart-
ment. When streams of cold water
from the plant's fire-fighting equip-
ment poured on the tanks, they ex-
ploded, spreading flames through-
out much of the plant.
A GM spokesman said today that
sabotage ‘‘never entered into” the
picture.
A night force of 1,200 workers
was sent home, but company offi-
cials said the midnight shift re- | Sunday ported on schedule. car swerved out of control
One person was hospitalized for|on a vel roaa, ran into
treatment of smoke inhalation.
Three others received first-aid;
treatment for injuries suffered in
fighting the blaze. |
Less than three months ago, a
disastrous fire destroyed GM's
transmission pliant in — Livonia, +
Transmission production was
Run plant. The first transmissions
week, 21 Dead in State Mishaps
Over Ist Wintry Weekend By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
continued today for-at least four others, feared dr
in rough waters.
Abraham Lacrosse, 43, of Lincoln Park, was killed
Winter drove its way across the state this weekend
bringing wind-driven snow and rain to Michigan and the
surrounding lakes.-'There were at least 21 accidental
deaths, most of them tied to the weather.
Eighteen were killed in traffic accidents, one drowned,
one was shot while hunting and another died of burns.
John Joseph Jesky, 37, of Detroit-drowned in the St.
Clair River. His body was found Sunday, and the search ed drowned
ey
______ Buckingham, and the Grand Trunk
™~
zy
“Two
‘i | : ie | i sich 2 :
THE’ PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953! i bi
f
“aA
Birmingham to Consider!
~ Triangle, Pembroke Area
Water, Sewage Proposals From Our Birmingham Bureau jat the home of te Herbert Ward
BIRMINGHAM—Proposed agree-| ©" Yorkshire.‘ speaker from
ments for water, sanitary and | reg industries wit! show
storm sewage facilities are slated | ~~ 6 =|
for discussion tonight by the city| Albert H. Warner, manager of |
* commission. | the Bell Telephone Co. for the |
The first is the $200,000 agree-| area, will explain the new long
ment allowing the construction of | distance dialing system here at
the Pembroke school and develop- | tomerrow's noop, luncheon meet-
ment of the northeast section of ing of the Exchange Club. The
|
the city and adjoining Troy Town-| system will be inaugurated
ship land. | Nove %.
* * e |
—— = pay as a, The Rev. Arthur E. Glass of De-
troit will speak on ‘Jewish Cus-
toms of Bible Times” at a meeting
of the Baptist Fidelis Class at 8
tonight in the church parlors
Mrs. Orman Davison will lead
| devotions. Hostesses for the eve-
ning will be Mrs. Eddie A. Ren-
shaw, Mrs. J. C. Akerley and Mrs
Clint. Brisendine.
* * *
A repeat performance of the
playlet ‘Blue Willow’’ will be giv-
en by members of the Birmingham
Radio Workshop for members of
Adams School PTA at 8 tonight.
The play, produced by Mrs. Mon- |
zelle Clark, was broadcast over al
| | local station last week
Appearing in the cast will be |
Jeanne Beitel, Joan Briegie, |
dohn Germain, Glenna Scott, Jon |
Spoelstra, Mickey Stamp, Susan |
Steddard, Linda Talbot and Gary the Birmingham Beard of Educa-
tion, $18,961.
Water and storm” sewer connec-
tions will be handled through Troy
Township, and sanitary sewage
will flow through the Birmingham
system into the Southeastern Oak-
land County Sewage Disposal Dis-
trict.
Two other proposed agreements
concern the triangle of Troy Town-
ship land bounded by Adams Road, Railroad, owned by developer Ar-
thur Nechman.
Basically the proposed agree-
ment for the area below Derby
Read calls fer beginning of an-
sezation proceedings, by the
owner, and payment of cost of
Annual open house, when parents
adjourn to the various classrooms,
will follow. Room mothers will
serve refreshments |
* . s
Woman's Bible Class of First |
Methodist Church will meet for
luncheon at 12:45 p. m. tomorrow
at the home of Miss Mabel Whit-
tenberger of Purdy street. A busi-
ness meeting and sewing will fol-
low.
Double rates for sewage and wa-
ter facilities would be charged
urtil the areas were annexed. A
similar agreement for the northern
portion of the triangle includes that
5,000 square feet of land is pro-
vided for every -housing. unit.
The required area for singi¢ fam-
fly residences is 4,500 square feet
in the city. Developer Nechman |
had revealed tentative plans for
a 10¢-unit terrace in the northern
triangle, which was opposed by a
neighboring |
property owners asso-| Frew, D.
speaker at tonight's High Twelve
» ~ Club dinner at 6:30 at the Com- .
A Youth Night supper and pro-
gram, sponsored by the. Interme-
diate Methodist Youth Fellowship.
will begin at 6:45 tonight at the
church.
Ellen Davey evening group of
the church will meet at 8 tonight |
Art Objects to Go the degree of doctor of divinity
from Waynesburg College, Pa.
Kiwanis Club members will hon- |
of Troy Township district sc’ hools |
for the last 25 years, at a dinner |
Wednesday at the Community
House. The Troy Board of Educa- BLOOMFIELD -* HILLS Artists | tion recently announced that a and Potters of Vallauris,” an ex- planned. new junior high school
would be named in Baker's honor.
,| Wednesday also has been desig-
nated as Ladies Night and will be
an inter-club meeting.
s . .
Meeting at 10 a. m. tomorrow at
the Community House, the Ruth
Shain Class in International Af-
fairs will bring themselves up to
date on the current world situa-
tion, when members make reports. : sf | if &
a i | I i if &
i
will discuss three current topics,
“The Struggle at Panmunjom”
will be Miss Eva Vandenburg’s
| topic and ‘The Mess in Trieste”
| will be covered by Mrs. Roy Rob- |
inson. |
and sophisticated dolls outfitted in
brook, with entombment in White
Chapel Memorial Cemetery.
Investment manager for Bev-
erly Hills, Calif., Investment Co.,
»|he died Nov. 6 in San Gabriel, |
+ Calif.,.-after a long illness, He}
ye | will be at Bell Chapel of William
finery, | R. Hamilton Co, Thursday.
gowned in &@ ec taele Surviving are his widow. the,
former Lavonne Gruber; two chil- |
*| dren, James and Carolyn, and*his
mother, Mrs. Anna F, MacDonald.
* *« ®
Some of this week's events at |
the Community House are:
Mondey, Nov 8. 630 p.m High Twelve
gg chairman this year is Crud araner 1.30 °= Senior Activities: t aoa ‘ommunity House rd meeting
Urcan U. Woodhouse, Mrs Nov. 10 10 a.m. Ruth Shain esda
jemee S. Moon is in charge of | Pb tn Scccnat ou Affairs: 11 30 a.m. the doll committee. | Oakland County Instructional Consult-
The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mestiy fair — Car Club
bog om “age jay. Cool tenight. lew
Other “treasure and gift tables’’
will feature Christmas selections.
; ants’ luncheon. 12 noon-Exchenge Clud
luncheon, 3:30-5 p.m. Girl Scout Troop
363; Brown Troop Ad 676 6pm
Kiwanis Club dinner
7-8 pm Giri
Scout Troop 301 730 pm Master |
Painters 8-16 pm — Sports
10 “S am AAUW
noon-Lions Club
; 12:45 pm AAUW luncheon
3:30-5 pm Girl Scout Troop 362. 368:
‘ecen Treop meeting; 7-15 pm Ascen-
|} ston Lutheran Church dinner, 8 pm
Dupiicate Bridge. Rebekahs
Thursday, Nov 12 10 # m.-12 noon-
Moms Club Board meeting; 12 noon-Oak-
land County Schoo! Principals luncheon
27pm Birmingham Musicale; 330-5 p.m Teéay in Pontiac
Lowest temperature preceding 8 am |
7
At 8 am. Wind velocity 3 mph j
Girl Gcout Troop 378: 6:30-6 pm
wedhgronde see ie Ee A oe Buffet supper ‘by reservation.
Priday, Nov. 13° 10 a.m. Qirl Scout |
Area Council: 10°30 a.m.-3.30 p.m. Senior
Workshop: 8 p.m Quedrille Dance
Saturdas, Nov. 14: 7 pm. Horticultural!
Society
Spee eree
seenenes "Form Inter-City Firm_
GRAND RAPIDS Te for-
mation of the Trans-America |
ener. en Loe 38 | Estate Co. was announced
| day in Grand Rapids by toward
W. Campbell, Grand Rapids real ais ) Pontiac
fAs recorded downtown!
ve eaee »
Lowest temperature... ....... HH | estate dealer. The company will
uM nanan nnn Ee [ in intercity “trading in
Gas chety. houses and property, Righest and Lowest _T Temperateres This
Date in 81 Years
enw i= 13 College Seeks $75,000 | Senday's Temperatere Chart \ ee) Larsing 41 97, +KALAMAZOO im — Kalamazoo | te | 4 srerenceto * = Collége Monday opened a cam- s
nun Milwaukee $139 paign drive for $75,000 to balance |
2) on a iees $$ 22 its operating budget of $595,000. |
30 New York $$ «0
38 Phoenix st 53
2 Pittsburgh 48 30
me 8 @ Morse 41 % 83 Traverse 40 38! goal, | St
4 a | Okla., by U.
| was stunned
| baby and abductor had been
}to a child at Dallas
|two weeks later her husband took
‘it away and she never has seen
it since. The FBI Kidnaped Baby Boy
Recovered Safely. (Continued From. Page One)
until he’s grown and then I'm
going to-get him back."
A physician examined the child
and said he was in perfect physical
condition.
Mrs. Doughty is being taken
te the federal jail at Muskogee,
S. Deputy Marshal
W. A. White,
At Evansville, Mrs. Stammer
when told that her
found
“We can just be thankful he's
OK,” she said. “I was awfully
bitter against her, but not too bitter
James C. Ellsworth, agent in
charge of the FBI in Okahoma,
said Mrs. Doughty lost a child at
birth in June 1953, in Chicago. He
said she told agents she gave birth
in 195] but
identified the
father of the baby as Lamar Mitch-
ell.
At Gainesville, Tex., across the
Red River from Durant, B. R.
Doughty said he was seeking an
annuiment-of-their- marriage.
He said she had been married
previously and he had lived with
| her only three weeks:
Doughty, a taxi driver, told Gain
| ville Police Chief Louis Theobald
his wife is ‘‘sort of crazy’’ about
| babies and once tried to claim an-
other woman's infant as her own
in Dallas.
Mrs. Doughty was neatly dressed
in a gray print dress and bright
red coat at her arraignment. At
\first she was reticent but later
consentedto talk to an Associated
| Press newsman.
Two Lives Claimed
in Area Accidents (Continued From Page Ones
ment of Public Works from 1928
te 19653, except for five years
from 1935 te 1940 when he worked
for the state goveernment in De-
troit and Lansing.
During World War I he served!
with the 320th Field Artillery Bat-
talion. He was a past commander |
of Pontiac Post 1370, Veterans of |
| Foreign Wars, and a member of
the Loyal Order of Moose and the
ciety.
Kirkham was born in Farmers |
- burg, Ind., Oct. 14, 1895, and at-
tended the University of Minne-
sota.
He had been a Pontiac area
resident since 197%. In 1979 he
was married te Mildred Randall.
Surviving besides his widow are |
six daughters, Reva Kirkham ot | home
Los Angeles, Mrs. Oliver Koski of
Minneapolis, Mrs. Gerald DeLorge
of Detroit, Mrs. Harold Pleasant
of Pontiac, and Ida May and Ellen
Kirkham at home.
He is also survived by two sons,
Duane C. of Minneapolis and S. Sgt.
Virgil Kirkham of Selfridge Air
Force Base; two brothers, H. E.
Kirkham of Los Angeles and
Joseph V. of Denver; a sister,
Mrs. Maynard Gaskins of Farm-
ersburg, Ind.;
children
Service will be Wednesday from
the Stone Baptist Church at 2
p. m., with the Rev. Laurence
Dickens officiating. Burial will be
in Perry Mt. Park, with a military
graveside service by VFW Post
1370.
Workers Meet Today.
at Fund Luncheon (Continued From Page One)
close to its goal early today that
drive. personnel said it might ‘‘go
over” when cash and pledges
headquarters this morning
counted.
The division had reported $12.-
424-0n its $14,000 goal when the)
campaign office opened today.
Pontiac city had raised $8.002 on
a goal of $9,000; Pontiac Township,
$1.939 on a goal of $2.000; and
Waterford, $2,483 on its $3,000
quota. .
Commercial division workers
turned in about $16,000 Saturday
te beost their division's returns
te $89,730. including Waterford.
Division goal is $179,000.
Returns from the industrial di-
vision. already ‘‘over its goal Fri-
day with $336,729. stayed” un-
changed over the weekend
Also unchanged was the $15,000
;earmarked for Pontiac from De-|
United Foundation can- | troit
| vassing in Birmingham-Bloomfield- |
| Franklin area.
Local United Fund officials hope |
Pontiac will get some $22,000 as
its share of the area's gifts when |
all returns are in.
Baxter Slaying Slaying Trial
‘Opens Here Today The second-degree murder trial
of Gilbert Baxter, 22, who fatally
shot his wife Ellen, 19, on June 2;
opened today before Oakland Coun-
ty Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty.
Chief Assistant County Prose-
— George F. Taylor explained
the charge to the nine woman, |
three man jury, while defense at. |
torneys outlined their case te the+
jurors.
Baxter has maintained that he
Officials said an anonymous) shot his wife when a deer rifle dis- |
gift of $25.000 has been pledged | charged accidentallyafter an argu-| Kay's car crossed the center line | joined at the stomach, were born | Thomas H. Swiney, 25, of 380 Low-'
De Vries-Klomp- | lell St. da and three grand- | ““/; L | 2
B *
‘
A
FRENCH FASHION PLATE—Mrs. Frank R.
Pierce, left, and Mrs. Erling R. Landsnaes exhibit
some of the animals and dolls that will be decked
Tet in the tatest ‘tanttons of Freic
h couturieres at’ mingham.
(- eee
Pontiac Deaths
Mrs. Ben Allen
Mrs. Ben Allen, 78. of 307 High-
land Ave, died at her residence
Friday after an illness of three
months.
Mrs. Allen was born in Pulaski,
Tenn., in 1875, the daughter of
Anderson and Julia Black Aber-
nahty. She was married in Pontiac
in 1924 and was a member of the
Church_ of -God in Christ.
Surviving besides her husband
are two children, Robert Reynolds
and Mrs. Carrie Wright both of
Pontiac.
Also surviving are two brothers
and three sisters, Ed Abernathy,
Hattie Seay and Martha Black, all
of Pontiac, and Joe Abernathy and
Lillie Goodlow, both of Columbia,
Tenn. One grandchild also sur-
vives.
Funeral will be Wednesday at |
{2 p.m. from the Church of God in
Christ. Burial is to be in Oak Hill |
Cemetery, with the Elder Markem |
+ of che Church of God officiating or Stuart K. Baker, superintendent | Oakland County Engineering So Donald Lee Burnette
Donald Lee Burnette. infant son
jot Aaron and Edith Brewer Bur-
| nette of 76 W. Strathmore St., died
Sunday at his home.
He was born in Pontiac June 3. |
| 1953.
| Surviving besides his parents are |
8 brother and sister, Kenneth |
ering and Patricia Ann; both at-
| Funeral will be Tuesday at 2:30)
p.m. from the Farmer-Snover Fu-
neral Home. Burial will be in
Perry Mt. Park Cemetery with the
Rev. Paul Havens of the First
Methodist Church officiating.
Eli DeLeon
Eli DeLeon, 75, of 41 West End
St., died today at St. Joseph Mercy
Hospital after an illness of five
8.
He was born in Atascoso
'Tex.. on Feb. 12, 1877, the son of
Fli and Frances Sandova DeLeon
He married farolina Garsa_ in
| Gonzales, Tex.
Surviving: are three daughters
and one son, Mrs. Carolina Garcia,
Sarah DeLeon, Mrs. Esther Flores
}all of Pontiac and Frank of De-
| troit.
The body is at the Voorhees
Siple Funeral Home.
Miss Ethel McVean
Miss Ethel McVean, 67, of 6115
Avery St., Detroit, died Friday
after an illness of six months.
She was born in Pontiac in 1886
the daughter of John and Lillian
| Wilson McVean. Miss McVean was
a school‘ teacher im the Detroit
Public Schools.
Surviving 1s a sister, Miss Jean-
nie McVean of Detroit.
Funeral was today at Brace Fu-
neral Home, with burial in Oak
Hill Cemetery. The Rev. Mr. Saf-
ran, of-the First Methodist Church
| of Detroit, officated.
| Walter C. Overholt |
| Word has been received here of |
DR. IRENE G. PLACE
U-M Women’s Group
Schedules Speaker BIRMINGHAM — In a society
where more women work than
ever before, University of Michi-
gan Alumnae Association has
chosen Dr. Lrene Glazic Place, of
the University of Michigan to ad-
the annua! doll tea to be given tomorrow by St.
Anne Guild of St. James Episcopal Clurch in Bir-
|
, dress the group on “Where Wom-|
len Work.”
Dr. Place, assistant professor
in the School of Business Admin-
istration, will speak at the meet-
ing to be held at 8 p. m. tomorrow | open water belonged to Wells and
at the Bloomfield Village home ef -
Mrs. Robert A. Reid.
Nationally, this is membership
drive month for all University of
Michigan alumnae groups. All|
graduates,
friends of the university are in-
vited to attend the meeting, or join
the group.
Dog Causes Crash
‘Which Injures Man those who attended or |
A dog which ran in front of an!
auto on Maple road near Pontiac
trail was the cause of an auto
accident in which a Farmington
man was injured Sunday according
to Oakland County sheriff's depu-
ules,
| Chris Bundoff. 26. of 40141 12
Mile Rd., was admitted to Uni-
versity Hospital in Ann Arbor with
a fractured nose and face cuts.
His condition today is listed as
satisfactory.
Bundoff was riding with James
W. Herren, 21, of 359 S. Lake Dr.,
Walled Lake. Herren said he slam-
med on the brakes when he saw the
dog in his path, and his auto
skidded out of control.
Hurt in Auto Crash,
Woman Is Critical A Waterford Township woman,
injured Friday in an auto accident
at Airport and Dwight Rds., has
been put on the critical list at Pon- | | Waterford Township, which was |
tiac General Hospital.
Mrs. Eileen L. Irwin, 2%, of}
| 3886 Dwight St.. earlier was report-
‘the death of Walter C. Overholt of ed in fair condition. She suffered
Hemet, Calif., formerly of Pontiac.
Surviving are his widow. Bernice.
and two sons, Barry and Gary, all
of Califonria
Funeral and buruial will take
place there today
‘Head-on Collision |
Injures Four Sunday | A Drayton Plains man
| three members of a Hazel tes
| family were injured yesterday in in the backyard of her home last | | when the car driven south on Wood-
night by two men whe forced her! ward Sunday afternoon by Hen-
into the house and attempted f0 | derson failed to negotiate a turn
attack her, according to Pontiac | and hit a large sign. +a head-on crash on US-10 at Ken-
nett Road in Waterford Township,
according to Oakland County sher- |
iff's deputies.
Victor R. McKay, 21, of 2405
Georgeland Ave., Drayton Plains
wag treated at Pontiac General
Hospital for bruisés.
Mrs, Geraldine Towers, 35, of
1008 FE, Mahan, Hazel Park, was |
admitted to the hospital with a — dition today is good, the hos-
| pital reports.
Mrs. Towers’ husband, F.- Em-
mett, 35. and a daughter, Marcia,
2, were treated for bruises
Towers told deputies that Mc-
| if campaign workers reach their ment in their home at 87! S. Parke | in front of his own southbound! today to Mrs. S
| stra of the village of Oenkerk. | auto. second and third’degree burns over
'a third Of her body.
Her husband, Harry B..
ceived second degree burns 38, re- urday night. Shortly after boats | You are invited to visit our
|from Selfridge Field's Air Sea graph Department.
Rescue Service and the Coast
!
| mour
‘Weekend Accidents Hurt
to| Kingswood student from Flint re- |
hands, wrists and face when his.
‘car burned after the collision.
A son, Ke
concussion, was released from the
hospital yesterday.
Two Men Seize Girl
n Yard, Attempt Attack _ E. Walton Blva: Pontisc, received
An 1$year-old girl was seized ,
Police.
Detective William Hanger quoted
| the girl as saying she was seized
jwhen ‘che went outside to bring | When Car Leaves Road her pet dog into the house
men fled when an auto, making
a turn, drove into the driveway. |
Police said both men were de- | |car in which she was riding left
possible fractured jaw. Mer eon- | scribed as Negroes, about 23 years Dequindre road and struck a tree |
old, and 5 feet, 8 inches tall.
Siamese Twins Born
LEEUWARDEN, The Nether-
,lands — Siamese twin girts. _ walked into the side of a car Satur-
, who sustained a | day afternoon, according to police.
iship Satorday,
i
McCarthy Calls Dem {Challenge Dishonest (Continued From Page One)
Activities Committee
that he |had been a member of |
an ‘‘elit¢e’’ group in-the Communist '
apparatus. |
Brownell. had said Truman pro- |
moted White in 1946 from the post
of assistant Secretary of the Treas- |
ury to director of the International |
=p Monstary Fund despite two warn-
ings from the “BI.
Mitchell, terming the whole thing
“a political smokescreen,” said
that if someone took advantage of
Trumafi, such a person should be
prosecuted, and he continued: }
“Either someone took advantage
of Mr. Truman, or is it the sug-
gestion that the President was
furthering the interests of a for-
eign power ... or that he was
of a Communist activity?
“It has to be one or the other.”
Then, speaking of Brownell,
Mitchell suggested ‘‘let him go be-
fore a grand jury” with the evi-
dence and get its answer.
Burns Kill Greenville Tot
GREENVILLE Andrea
Rich, 3, of Greenville died Friday
night of burns suffered Friday
when her clothes caught fire while |
Mrs. Robert Rich. | she was playing with matches. |
She was the daughter of Mr. and.
| Panania is only about six air hours from Miami, according to
present flight schedules.
ENJOY
an exciting weekend
in Detroit!
S
Come to Detro® for a big weekend!
Plan to visit the Edison Institute ..,
Zoological Park . . . the museums.
Whatever your plans, the best
choice you can make is to say
STATLER! For comfort, conven-
ience and heart-of-town bocation,
there's no place like the Statier.
HOTEL STATLER becimg Greed Crrws * art
DETROIT
Believe Missing
Men Drowned Searchers Locate Body
in St. Clair River; Say 4
Still Lost
MT. CLEMENS, Mich. W —
State Police presumed today that
at teast four persons reported as
missing in the St, Clair River were
drowned.
But the grim search that yester-
day located the body of one, John
Joseph Jesky, 37. of Detroit. con-
tinued today on the cold, dreary
river.
Missing stil] were at least
three fishermen whose cabin
cruiser was found wrecked and
smashed by the riled waters,
and Walter Wells of Detroit, a
duck hunting companion of Jesky.
The missing fishermen were Leo
Renkowski, 38, and his son Je-|
rome, 17, of Detroit, and Phillip |
Price, 3, of Mt. Gemens |
State police. compiling infor-
mation brought by Coast Guard |
and Air Force boats, believed that |
two of the three boats found in
Jesky. |
The first, believed to be Wells’, |
was found Saturday by fisher-
men. This boat was anchored and
was described as an 1$foot duck |
boat. Inside were found a shot- |
gun and hunting equipment
It was found several miles
from the spot where the Coast
Guard recovered Jesky's body,
snared in lines from another
duck boat.
Both boats were found near Har-
sen's Island, Jesky’s near the south
shoals, the other believed to have
been Wells’ in the middle channel.
Mrs. Leo Renkowski reported
her husband and son missing Sat- Guard took up the search.
They failed to find the cabin
cruiser in the rough waters. Later. from.
Sunday, a plane from Selfridge
Field spotted the wreckage. A,
Coast Guard boat hurrying to the |
location stumbled on Jesky’s body.
Cari P. Peterson of Detroit was 18 E. Huron St.
the last to see the fishermen, ac- To hear and enjoy the true
high quality of tone from the medern phono-
oa Many makes, models and styles to choose Exclusive in Pontiac
An Outstanding Christmas Gift
Sensational
Radio-Phonograph
Cocktail Table - by
@ Avtematic 3-Speed Record
Chenger pleys all sizes and
providing up te 4% hours
music.
@ Cecktail Teable—full size: 34°
wide, 20'.° deep, 19°” high.
i-Fidelity Phono-
MUSIC, CO. FE 4-0566 +
cording to police.
Royal Oak Couple, Son
Injured in M59 Crash
A Royal Oak couple and their
son were injured Sunday in an
auto accident on M 59 in Water-
ford Township, «according to Oak-
land County sheriff's deputies.
Adolph R. Fraus, 49, of 208 N.
Alexander, his wife, Anne V., 48,
and their son Thomas A. 8, were
treated at Pontiac Genera] Hospital
for multiple bruises.
Fraus told deputies he could
not avoid a car, driven by Sey-
Karp, 39, of 6129 M 3B,; At last, a knife sharpener that is
of service ..
by making slicing. easier. wewevweeeveerrrrerrvrvevrrrrrrrwrrre,
' attempting to cross: the road.
98 Nerth
Saginaw
‘-wewrrervrey,Ty?. a i ed
16-Year-Old Girl, 2. Men |
© Won't Chip, Burr or
gives razor sharp edges in seconds .
PPP er TT @asy to use, gives years and years
+ » Saves work,
wevwvvvevvevuvevvVVVTVTVrrVrTrYrrrTreereeeTY
PEEVE OPP PY EOCP PSPC P PTY FPWU CFEC SYy
BIRMINGHAM — A 16-year-old |
ceived a broken right leg when she
in Be Pay Nancy Wagner was taken to St.
| Joseph Mercy Hospital. Driver of
| the car was Myrtle Ann Snedeker,
54, of 316 Arlington.
er B. Henderson, 30. of 229
chest injuries and John Sharp, 17,
|of 3883 Allen, Detroit, facial cuts
Rochester Girl Injured
Doris Bryant, 17. of 3070 Melvin.
Rochester, was injured when Ge | Compare the formula of strength
on fhe can,
@ gation?
Sealed Gallon Can south of Avon road in Avon Town- |
according to Oak-
land County sheriff's deputies
Miss Bryant was treated at Wood-
ruff's Clinic in Rochester for shock.;
and face cuts. She wag riding with |
al the time of the acci-|
dent, deputies said.
Full Price?
sions Sells Genuine
188 Proof-Methanol
Anti-Freeze
Sa RT:
nae RW
19¢
K@ BROTHERS
aS
eles i a i ee eh ear alias ee ws “t Se a ee neva NS (err RE RE A sa eS STR ey Deere ey Seen Sewn aE seers ee
‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, . MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9; 1953 | ida ges mencn SE T
The greatest length of South ee sta Taba se re 5 gt : ee ry ipsa:
American Academy | Ask Repeat of State Low | x tte National” Comet |. SIMMS. Is Aimee a tnt ae] ) QO Vials Wash. ar ce : ee ta. || Men and Women in Service || Offer, A acoca tm ensoamummnined! (go mg ode net pl Ashore in Florida Jak © bik Wee Wye Bie | Difers Fellowships DETROIT i — The Board. of | grins aed at}. -- OREN stopping juvenile delinquency,
; __ | t0 the American Academy in Rome | Men Sunday urged repeal of state} The type of boomerang which 3 2
But This Tiny glass . vials, apparently | Michigan Ave., was home recently Je | will be open to American students | laws banning Bible reading in pub- | returns to the thrower is believed TONITE pera
fetch Seok | dumped by a ship at sea, washed |... 19.4ay leave i aaa 4 ‘ ‘and artists for the school year | lic school classrooms. | ~~ to -have been used in ahcient U if 10 te (ae
Tells What You! up by the thousands along a 4 from the Navy. = i OA Fas ~ _ :
Avoid Dangers | and created a bit-of excitement | _ Seddon_recently « at is
Here's the truth! Piles (and such | “ti! they were found harmless. pehuind trem! 1 sect Aaa Aart P|
disorders as fistula, rectal or| Police, fearing they contained|the Electrician's $1250 . Pose ig heave
hts) can be dangerous | narcotics, endered the Benches! Mate School at tion from New York to Rome and | or not, depending on whether you barricaded and warned citizens to | ~ 05+ Lakes Ill. tea Fea
ST eats | ey es ala ee we hl . gp ag le a from this | Y@vy . ; ae
book; just write for it to Thornton | Cotics agents were notified re , | arene weve. ications must be received at |
& Minor Hospital, Suite 1114, 911] The scare ended when R. R.| Francisco Naval aes New York office be- | E. Linwood, Kansas City 9, Mo. | Kaufman, chemical expert em- Base. SEDDON cotton in Denver on Oct. 9. fore Jan. 1, 1954. Details of the |
. ee | program may be obtained from |
sooere Pvt. Kenneth About T5 per cent of the world’s | Executive Secretary, American Ac- |
4 ~ Ray Spencer, US-| passenger autos are in the United|ademy in Rome, 101 Park Ave.,|
55368454, v i sited | States. New York 17, N. Y.
his parents, Mr.
| Spencer. at 220) Why are So Many Sufferers from Pains of
Electric Shaver Owners? %| “Apparently old penicillin and} "4
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Union Sones — | pun a
——— - ation. The Rev. Mr. Jesse was
‘COMPARE! | Services, Banquet Mark A former classmate of Pastor
Rev. Otto Schultz’ Tenth | Martin Rummel, senior trus-
Year as Minister tee of the congregation, was Yes, we ask you to compare | eal io =
our AUTO INSURANCE RATES = A capacity audience attended) Jokm Jaeckel, senior =< Conaress Vote 2 Candidates on Each
Ticket Split—-Forces~in
Year's Final Contest
LOS ANGELES «#—Republicans
and Democrats, their forces split
and coverage! , the Grace Lutheran Church Sun-| Preseated s wateh and a sizable
: day w hen the congregation ob- purse te the guest. ‘ by two candidates on each ticket,
! Drive with the security of | served the 10th anniversary of the Also taking part in the program ;w » thelr compey today
coming of its pastor, the Rev. Otto Were the Rev. Theodore Wug- jin the 2éth District, where the
complete coverage every mile 'year’s final congressional contest G. Schultz gazer of the Lutheran Church of . command tional attention
you drive. Two morning services at 9 30| the Redeemer in Birmingham, the poms "= . ° Rev. George Kurz of St. James| ‘HOME’ FOR EISENHOWER ME MENTOES— | is being built by the Eisenhower Foundation, which | t Ww
and 1! a. m. were followed by a
Lutheran Church at Grosse Pointe, Nearing completion in Abilene, Kan., President | expects to open it to the public in 1954. On June| To the Republicans the race may
i (Advertisement) | Heary_kiling-whe-furnished-piano+ Eisenhower's-home town, is the museum that will | 4, 1952, the President laid the cornerstone for the| mean further jeopardy for their
H R N ICHOLI F j ASTHMA COUGHS music and Miss Maxine Schroeder, | house the Chief Executive's war trophies and me- | museum and later in the day opened his campaign | slim House majority. To the Demo»
| |
: © | organist for the banquet | mentoes, valued at a million dollars. The structure | for Republican presidential nomination. |crats the balloting may mean &
Colt “Bud” Doa't let dificult breathing, coughing = Special music was given by the | | crowning triumph for recent vic-
AGENCY and wheesing. due to recurring spasms of . Bronchial Asthma or simple Bronchitis | “Singshots,’’ a girls’ quartet from sale Paper Company of Grand | - | tories east of the Mississippi. There
er ae MENDAGG. Ueuslly quickly helps looses | Waterford High School. U. Samuel Silbar Dies | Rapids and former president of| In 1952, the United States for| |are now 218 Republicans and 215
icholie H. Delos “Bud” Nichole and remove thick. strangling mucus Thus | Roy E Woods, chairman of the| GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — U.|Inter-Ocean Paper Company of | the first time had fewer trucks | Democrats in the House of Rep» :
39 Mt. Clemens Se. Opposite Post Ofice Ph. FE 2-2326 me nee c= sleep Get MENDACO | CONgregation, acted as chairman} Samuel Silbar, 77, .former owner Chicago, died Sunday in Blodgett| in use than the rest of the world | resentatives.
under money back guarantee et druggists. (of the affair. of the Silbar and Company Whole- | Hospital combined. | The registrar of voters has fore-
OO —— eT —— ———— | east a 40 per cent ballot—perhaps
| 66,000 votes—in the special elec-
tion. In the district there are 81,691
registered Democrats and 15,289
, Republicans.
The seat was vacated iad a Re
| publican. _-
os @
The one who gets the highest
number of votes will win, even
'though his total may not represent
/a majority of the ballots cast.
Candidates are Glenard P. Lips-
'comb and John L. E. Collier, both
| Republican state assemblymen;
| and George Arnold, attorney, and
| Irving Markheim, veterans’ serv-
ice officer. The Republican party
trated on the theme that his elec-
tion will constitute a vote of
| confidence in the Eisenhower ad-
| ministration. Lipscomb, _an ace
countant in private life, was execu-
tive secretary of Richard Nixon's
vice presidential campaign.
s . .
Arnold, whose father, Thurman
Arnold, was assistant attorney gen
eral in the Roosevelt administra-
tion, is the son-in-law of columnist
Drew Pearson. He has the backing
of several labor organizations, as
well as his party’s support, and
he has campaigned in favor of tax
reduction, against a national sales
tax and against “Communist age
gression wherever it occurs.”
‘Philippine Voters
Why more than a million owners this year !2"'==:
Magsaysay wrapped up their free-
swinging campaigns tonight and
left it to the voters to decide to-
have chosen the Worth More FORD YS === Both sides claimed victory—the
incumbent Liberal party by 40,-
— 000 votes and the opposition Na-
- cionalista-Democratic party coali- d
tion by a million to 1% million
They have discovered first hand what the surveys show... |" ...-
: : ; BE o eg ee
Ford, with all its fine-car features, is worth more tnown Stee days ended ee ou ee
when you buy it, and worth more when you sell it! reapege gal ag eae
bg Dap and @ rally. a
Over A MILLION owners can’t be wrong! Ford is the one fire | soun'trraties From throughout Manila torch
lights flickered in the humid night
car_in_the low-price field. It-gives you the “Go,” the- style, |» parades.trom various dsticta __}
the comfort, and “build” of cars that sell for far more. And, prs /Surce sram’srened
which he has based his campaign,
it’s only natural that Ford keeps its value better, in resale, than am
any other car on the American Road. Check the features be- QUALITY
low for some of the“Worth More” reasons for the swing to Ford. TOOLS
by
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5 . MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1053... —
Farouk’s Yacht |'{falians Pause famed mnt ie’ |G@ES U.S. Top Medal|itineis Soldn wit Ask —|Fifteen' io Receive |weatuct_Zus, Pte New| 5, 3
nao 1 | tex tater iter scomtien for War Leadership | tase. m. oreo. wom! Speech Certificates | rite ot Dewitt White Howe. ° , * f i | by Egyptians {0 Honor Dead - commandude of te etvit | “WASHINGTON, (INS) — First| cent federal manufacturers’ excise| Graduation certificates. will_be (Advertisement) —___ thdvartivement a ~ CAIRO In the market-for af — : poles by Se Daten *_| Lieut. Edward R. Schowslter Jr., | oosen¢ hodgepodge aystem of |evening in the Oakland County ClO LOST 50 POUNDS = yacht? ____._..|_Nation Halts Work Ten| 1 report said the bloodshed in} an Armiy~infantryman from Me-j excise taxes.” Council Hall at 21% E. Lawrence =a ee eS: . Ex King-Farouk's-floating-plee-|—Minutes—to—Mouro: Six.‘ _disputéd “Adriatic” city “was | tairie,-La. wae awarded. the Con: }-"1,— radio speech—yesterday,| St. for completion of a six weeks : ast sure palace is up for sale, but £ caused hy riot squad tactics of Tie | Fmonat:Sedel-of-Honer-yesters Mason said he would introduce | course in public speaking and par et. es. tel
nobody can figure: a want} Killed in Trieste Riots | police, which were characterized |day. _ = when Congress recon-}liamentary procedure. | er — Army Secretary Robert venes in January proposing to levy| The classes were conducted by | to tw & ROME (#—Italians from Trieste | >Y extreme severity and the hasty 7%. such a tax on all manufactured| Waterford High School speech Rennel - Youn At 35 mS The cmnate ‘chip Mabroussa—it| 1. ts tne of the penimate laid | 72," Yeur™. vens said’ the 2year-old officer | wroduets except food and medicine, | teacher Alfred Hinckley and spon- means “Protected”—has been in The report charged the police | exhibited “unflinching courage, X-|and to repeal all federal excise | sored by the education committee| So many men and women whe are my weight was 209 tbe. I never felt | dry dock since Farouk's exile in | 2” their tools today in a 10 ee eae a traordinary heroism and inspira-| taxes except those on liquor and | of the Oakland County ClO Council ee ee ae Se eae Since onine Rerwel Beve
1962, It used to be an ordinary | minute “memorial” work stoppage | need advance warnings by Italian | S08 leadership” in action against | tobacco. “Recetving certificates will be: | SMS Dew ea oe one | Eril'end t con no hase er oe : royal yacht. luxurious to be sure, | for the six persons killed by police | officials or Italian pleas to ease |the enemy near Kumhwa, Korea, Kolemazoo Over T Albert Py Eller, William Morris, Ph Ee a sb io but nothing extra “special. Then | during Trieste rioting last week. | the situation. Two British officers ;Oct, 14, 1952. fele) r lop H. C. Newingham, Gladys Smith, ee ab SF des
Farouk gave it his extravagant} The suspension was called by all | Were named as being among those| Stevens declared that despite KALAMAZOO (UP) — Post-cam-{ Georgia L. Brown, Fred Lynch, } awl Flott, 3853 Sobieski St. Noto vielent sedseer. Rennal tp touch. three of Italy's big labor federa-|#* fault. three painful wounds, Schowalter | paign contributions nave carried| Dixie Anne McCleary and Lloyd| writes, “I find your groduct the best intended to being haw . ——
- 8 & ia Today’s work stoppage marked | continued to direct and encourage } the Kalamazoo-Community Chest | MeCleary, all of Pontiac, Others f Sage qvev_saed. ys, Soaks te tt net ploneed with the wear On his orders, the yacht under-| ‘ions, representing nearly the second consecutive day of calm | his men until the enemy was com- | drive $312,979 over its goal, drive| are Belivena Cwikiel and Lowell] the sem techie sung, Benne! for first bottle return it to the manutas- ‘ went several transformations — at | Italian workers. They said only | {oliowing the bloody riots that pletely routed during an attack | secretary John Jenkins reported| Green. of Milford; Georgina Reich- is i every doy. Whee turer for your money back. For
spay toy pings more than | essential public services continued ' swept Italy last week. upon an enemy strongpoint. today, ert, Walled Lake; Thomas J. Wil-| ! was discharged war | results get Rennel.
were installed. Suites, living rooms, St tae RES Be aU : a music room, ball room and sev-|f © —
eral studios all were furnished §
<
‘
with priceless works of art.
Even India's wealthiest maha-
raja would pause before shelling
out to buy the Mahroussa.
Some have suggested Egypt's |
President Naguib take over the
ship as a presidential yacht. But
it's far from likely the modest, i
austere President would even con- |
eee oe 1 | is TOPS | A plan to use the yacht for lux- |
ury- cruises by millionaires is un-
der study, but no decision has yet |
been made.
csaig aise | Repeat of a Sellout! Save $130 Today on an An accurate estimate of the
wealth Farouk left behind when ~ : he was exiled has yet to be made. |
pt It once was thought his estates |
in Egypt would amount to more |
than 28 million dollars, But later
me Dress Up Your Home Today...
avis
Everything for baby and the nursery at low (Wie
de
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government_figures show. Farouk's |
confiscated assets, including the | — Mahrdussa, may well run mre ———_
oan a ni aa Se, I Check These Main assets include: more than
35,000 acres of Egypt's best land; " ’ $562,520 worth of corporation Figures!
shares; two large palaces, a num- | (- a
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The government plans to sell
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_ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS’ Pontiac 12 Michigan rf
Published from. Parss Bullding much of it had to:be left over for
the second session. In addition
there has been a notable lack of
party unity on both foreign and Hanoww A. Prreernaia,
Comms © Cxrvece fHosace F. Bacors Roser. Basser
,—Mditor Advertising Manager Nat'l Adv. Mgr.
Butered at Post Office, Pontiac, Mich. 8s second Class matter
MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
—— —
The Associated Press ts entitled exclusively to the use
for republication of si! local news printed ip this newe-
paper, as well as all AP news dispatches.
Tws Powruc Press is delivered by earrier for 40 cents
@ week: where carrier service is not available, by mail tn
Oakland and adjoining counties it is $1200 a year, eise-
where m Michigan and si! other places tn the United
States $20.00 a year Al] mail subscriptions are peyabie
tn s¢vance. Phone Pontiac FE 2-8161. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OP C:IRCULATIONS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953
Asks Minimum Speed Law Representative MARSHALL of Allen is
only one of thousands of motorists who
believe slow poke drivers create neediess
traffic hazards.
But, unlike the others, he {s in
a position to do something about
them and has announced his in-
tention to introduce a bil! setting
a minimum speed for Michigan
highways.
While he isn't prepared yet to say
what that speed should be, it’s a safe
guess that he: will have at least the
moral support of countles$ fellow driv-
ers. The minimum speed idea isn't new.
For many months on some of the
Nation's busiest highways drivers ‘have
been ticketed for slowing up traffic.
Most anyone who has seen how
slow drivers irritate even the
most Careful motorist into taking
grave risks in passing them on a
two lane highway, will welcome
the MARSHALL proposal.
* * *
We believe such a law could promote
safety provided the minimum is set only
after careful study and if wisdom is
used in enforcement. It also seems to
us the time has arrived for the Legisla-
ture to consider establishing a maxi-
mum highway speed limit.
Unlimited speed is a major
cause of traffic fatalities. But the
fact that slow drivers also con-
tribute to the highway accident
death toll no longer should “be
ignored.
——
Warning But No Trend
A second look at November election
results suggests that neither Repub-
lican gloom nor Democratic glee is
wholly justified.
It is true that Republicans suffered
setbacks in New Jersey just as they did
in Wisconsin's Ninth District. It also
is_true that there is voter discontent
over taxes, drought relief and farm
price decline:
* * *
We think the voting should be
taken more as a warning to the
GOP than as a forecast of things
to come. In most cases Demo-
cratic successes can be written off
as normal with the races decided
mainly on local issues.
For example, it was normal for Demo-
crats to win mayoralty races in North-
ern cities. Yet in Virginia, where Re-
publicans never have elected a gover-
nor, the losing GOP candidate Trp
DaLTON ran a better race than any pre-
vious nominee of his party.
x * ~
Also in normatty Democratic ~
Cook County, Ill, Republicans
fared well, electing eight of 14
candidates for seats on the
bench. Even in New Jersey's sixth
district which never before had
sent a Democrat to Congress, the
———— —winner's_Margin w. (
votes and he campaigned on th
policies of his GOP predecessor.
Certainly local rather than national
issues contributed to the defeat of
Pau L. Troast for the New Jersey gov-
ernorship. Besides local corruption,
Troast’s Ietter urging clemency for the
extortionist Jory Fay was a factor,
—
Aside from the normal tendency for
the party in power to lose strength in
off year elections, other factors influ-
enced the results. Since the EIsENHOWER
Administration took office, it has been
busy reorganizing the Government and
eliminating waste. It’s most spectacular
achievement was the Korean truce, now
so clouded in uncertainty that it yielded
no election dividends.
* * *
While we believe the Adminis-
tration has made a good start
—in.developing its program, it un-
_doubtedly has suffered because so
Ne ~~ & domestic issues. .
Actually these elections may prove to
. be a blessing in disguise. They will be if
they convince party leaders of the
urgent need for greater unity and effort
to implement the program on which
President E1sENHOWER was elected.
Though American housewives take
canned foods for granted, they might be
surprised to learn of the great effort
being made in Europe to expand that
industry.
This was evident at the recent
International Postwar Luxuries
Exhibition in Cologne, Germany.
Exhibits from 38 Continental and
overseas countries. showed great
efforts to catch up with the Unit-
ed States in the art of preserving
toods.
* * *
Among the most interested visitors
housewives, who tradi-
tionally, have been slaves to pots, pans
and cook stoves. They were fascinated
by the displays of dehydrated, packaged
and canned goods
Meanwhile from Chicago comes news
of the latest development in our own
canning industry — the meal in a can,
including everything from soup to nuts.
Another step forward is an electronic
processing method which enables food
merchants to stock rare tropical fruits
with flavor virtually unimpaired.
* * *
Housewives here are quick to
take advantage of every new de-
velopment in food processing. But
probably few know that a French-
man gave the canning industry
its start. He was Francois APPERT
who invented the vacuum jar
used to help transport food for
NAPOLEON'S armies.
The Man About ‘Town
Smallest in Years
November Induction Call
in County at Low Ebb
Daftynition
Recreation: That fine art of getting ali tired
out on your own time.
The Pontiac City Draft Board is asked for only
10 men for its November army induction quota,
the smallest number in several years. The
out-county board having its headquarters here,
whose territory covers most of the remainder
of the county, has a quota of only 20. The induc-
tion date Is Nov. 24 were German
—_—_——_— —
Eleven of the remaining 96 sarvivors in
the Man About Town football contest were
eliminated in Saturday's game. Ten of them
predicted that Ohio State would win. and one
predicted a tie. Michigan State won by a
78-13 score, and the 79 who had picked them
te win will carry over to next Saturday's game
between Colorado and Nebraska.
A cock pheasant shot
Pontiac by a few miles west of
Heary Combs
had a pocket knife and other weight tied to its
leg. so it could hardly get off the ground
evidently been trapped by some inhuman hunter,
and got away.
On Nov. 14 between 10:37 and 1°12 o'clock in
the Pontiac area is a solar system occurrence that
happens only 13 times tn 100 years. The planet
Mercury then goes across the face of the sun.
According -te
Dr. A. K. Pierce *
of the McMath-Hulbert Observatory at Lake
Angelus, it wilt appear-only as a-det on the suns
surface, and can hardly be seen with the naked
eye. The last time Mercury did such a thing was
on Nov. 11, 1940, and it will happen only seven:
more times in this century.
Ar original copy of the New York Herald of
April 15, 1865, is owned by
Mrs. Jesse Sutherby io AS ees
' a . r —
. “ | 5 é ‘ \
? . es
a , a +
a alae Tn Me ~ ¥
odie. ER SEE
Sphicn ge 5 7S. s-
we i, pes crdeae gf
RSE 5: ddl 3 :
an give s ~*
Voice of the People THE PONTIAC, PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953
“Well, I Guess That About. Wraps It Up”.
“~~
w-1>—Ceae eeuma!
&
« blame should lie. .
Two Sergeants Want to Know Where This
Free Booze Issue Is Being Distributed (Letters will be condensed when neces-
aary because of lack of space Full name
address and telephone number of the
Writer must accompany letters but these
will mot be published if the writer so
requests umiese- the jetter ts criiscal im
ite nature)
We are two sergeants with about
24 vears service between us. We
wonder where this ‘free booze is-
sue’ is-taking place
When did Uncle Sam get so free
with the money? Is
that why they are trying to take
away the Commissary, so ‘these
recruits can have booze to make
demons out of them." while sea-
soned_men are resigning?
During World War Tl we cot
about 40 bottles of 3.2 beer per
man duriag 32 months everyeas
ee taxpayers’
Lawrence service em an island smaller
than Pontiac. Some men drank,
seme didn’t. Ne one twisted their
arms. Those who didn’t drink,
sold it te their comrades for $1
a bottle. (Cost 1° cents).
Where is all this taking place?
We could salt away some cash
if we knew. Every camp we have
seen conforms to local and stale
laws. If the soldier is not of the
prescribed age, he cannot buy
beer as his I. D. card carries
“bearer’s'’ photograph.
Look into what is being done
toward taking away the essential
benefits ofthe serviceman. —Then
we would need fewer replacements
and some of these unadulterated
suns could stay in their back yards
Astonished at Truman Claim where they could grow up to be
helpless
Deprived Sergeants
I learned recently that the arm,
in selling intoxicants to our young
people in all military schools and
camps Wegally. This practice is
so firmly entrenched that it will be
almost impossible to stop them
Furthermore, a bill is to come
before Congress to make this sale
legal. I am asking you to do-all
you can through your paper and
thus help all other loyal Ameri-
cans to stop the liquor forces from
viotating our taws,
C. HL Palmer
616 N W &th Street
Mine ral \W ells Te 1a
of Firing White; Facts Look Different
By DAVID LAWRENCE
WASHINGTON — Former Pres-
ident Truman should not have been
surprised when he read that At-
torney General Brownell accused
Inm of sending to the Senate the
nomination of the late Harry Dex-
fer White for a hich government
post, even though the Democratic
administration knew that reliable
witnesses had said that White was
a ‘Russian spy.”
* * e
For the famous FBI memoran-
dum, which not only accused
White and Hiss of being a part of
the Soviet spy ring in America,
but named a number of others in-
side our government, was dated
It had Nov. 25, 1945.
It was followed by another
memorandum on Feb. 4, 1946, two
days before the Senate confirmed
White, then an assistant secretary
of the treasury, to be US. execu-
tive director of the International
Monetary Fund
But the information was never
sent by the Truman administra-
tion to the Senate Banking and
Currency Committee which han-
died the nomination.
What is astonishing. however. is
that Truman claims now to have
“fired’’ White as soon as disloyalty
was discovered
But, as Attorney General Brown-
ell points out, when White resigned
as assistant secretary of the treas-
. ury on April 30, 1946, Truman sent
assassination. We say ‘‘original”’ because several
years ago a patent medicine company put out a
duplicate of that issue, but containing a big display
adv. for its product. Mrs. Sutherby’s copy does
not have that ad.
Whether it means anything or not,
; Ward Underhill
of Rochester reminds that this month has a Friday
the thirteenth. we of adviser to the secretary of
state, George Marshall. in the
spring of 1947 at the conference
of foreign ministers in Moscow.
The list of tafuential posts
held by the two assistants to
Harry White ts a long one, and it
is obvious that White and his
assistants had access to confi-
dential information, not only in
their own bureaus, but in other
parts of the American govern.
ment.
The first FBI memorandum of
which. Attorney General Brownell
speaks was made available to the
press on Aug. 24 last by the Senate
internal security subcommittee,
but its text has never been pub-
lished in most of the newspapers
of the country.
One. reason _is_that_the_press
associations missed the point of the
story when it was first released.
* ° »
But there seems no justification
for the failure of the press asso-
ciations afterward to carry the
sensational facts in the Senate
committee report when attention
was publicly called almost immé-
diately afterward, to the signifi-
cance of the FBI memorandum..
* *
Some newspapers did reprint it
subsequently in their Sunday sec-
tions, and some published it seri-
ally, but in most communitiés the
Senate report still has never seen
the light of day.
It weuld seem that Truman fornia, then a member of the
House Un-American Activities Com-
mittee, made a_ speech the
House in 1950, quoting one impor-
tant paragraph from the FBI
memorandum. which he said then in
was in Truman's hands
Many people do not know that
the FBI cannot prosecute anybody
unless higher authority in the
executive branch of the govern-
ment says so
Many people do not know also,
that an earlier FBI memorandum
on Alger Hiss was in the hands
of the executive officials of the
Democratic administration for
oranda of 1945 and 1946 were sub-
mitted.
Yet it was in 1948. when a House
committee exposed Alger Hiss,
that Truman called it ‘‘a red her-
ring."’ This ought to dispose of the
argument that “it can all be left
to the FBI.”
Anybody who has read the report
will wonder why it required a
speech by Attorney General Brown-
ell to direct the attention of the
country to these same facts about
the Communist conspiracy in our
government.
(Copyright 1953) =.
Calvin wants a simple for-
mula for making an interest~-
ing h. The dest one I
have seen ts described be-
low. F've used it in my 30 —.
of professional platform work,
oc have most of the other
orators whom I have met. It
fits high schoolers like Calvin,
as well as the clergy and all
business men.
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE
Case J-33T: Calvin G., aged 17,
is a high school senior.
“Dr. Crane, I'm taking a course
in public speaking.” he began.
“T know it will be very helpful
to me in_later life, but I am so
nervous that my hands shake and
_ 1 feel hot all over whenever the
time draws near for me to take
the platform.
“Besides, I find it hard te
remember what I want to say,
even though [ memorize my~-
talk, word fer word.
“So what advice can you give me
so | will be calm as a cucum-
ber?”
No talented platform artist is
Portraits
By JAMES J. METCALFE
How many friends do I have left
_ Of all the ones I had? .. .-
How many now still care for me?
. . How many make me glad?
Some friendships are like solid
trees . . . And some like shifting
sands . .. That slp between the
fingers when . , . The world is
shaking hands . I often wonder
to myself... Just. where the
Whenever
something comes about . . To
break the friendship tie . .. Have -
T neglected them or failed... To
do my equal part? .. . Or are
they inconsiderate . . . And care-
less with my heart? . . . I hope
the fault is not my own. . . For
I am so sincere . . . And every
friend is one I want... To be so
close and dear
Copyright
1953)
Baering Down
By ARTHUR (BUGS) BAER
International News Service
Doc Bush buzzes we're wronger
than left-handed buttons about our
atomic publicity.
He told the institute of power
pundits our flare for publicity
will ride us up mud creek with
the Tide out
Doc insists that military eges
should be laid without the back-
ground music of the proud cackle
And the hatching should be in
cubated in respectful ignorance
Doc was war-time director of re-
taliatory curiosity in the upper par-
entheses. And knows his stuff like
teacher looking in the back of the
book.
Doc, we now know that secrets
are harder to keep than a pet
whale in a drought.
How about the fission foundries
where they leaked like a paper
tin-cup at a picnic? How about
Washington where the alien agents
even stole carbon copies of weather
reports? How about Fort Mon-
mouth? A secret was just a mar-
ginal notation on Barnum and Bail-
ey's tattooed lady.
We catch some of those ear-
mongers in our: investigations.
But a lot of fleas will slip through
a garden rake.
For in many things we offend
all. If any man offend not in
word, the same is a perfect man,
and able also to bridle the whole
body.—James_3:2.
* 2* ®¢
The superior man is he who de-
velops in harmonious preportions
his moral, intellectual and physical
nature. This should be the end at
which men of all classes should
aim. and it is this only which con-
stitutes real greatness.—Jerrold. “moer.....
fessional performers are likewise
keyed up befere an important
address.
‘But you can avoid showing your
excessive nervousness if you will
hold your hands behind your back
at the start. Or clasp the edges
of the pedestal:
And if you have no pedestal in
front of you, but must hold your
notes or sheet music, then previ-
ously mount those pages on a card-
board background to avoid their
rattling unduly. ;
Another bit of clever strategy
is to hold the sheet of paper
with both hands and then pull
gently in opposite directions. This
will instantly make your hands
lose their tremor.
An ideal speech formula is this:
(1) Pick oat your text and gen-
eral topic for discussion. Suppose
it is “How to Carry on_Inter-
esting Conversation.”
(2) Then illustrate it with stories
that are relevant but which ad-
vance your central theme steadily
toward your climax.
Here you can insert personal ex-
amples. or mention some of the
cases which you have read in. this
psychology column that pertain to
your topic. a
(3) Then conclade your address
with a punchy terminal sentence
or two. This conclusion might
contain a repetition of your
speech title so the audience
knows you are neatly “wrapping
up” the idea.
If you can open and close your
talk with an appropriate quotahon
from some famous person. past
or present, that will add scholarly
richness or “oomph to your ad-
dress.
For example, suppose you were
to begin by quoting Benjamin
Franklin's comment: “As we must
account for every idle word
we must for every idle silence
Then you could go on to show t
failure to pay compliments i ao
.
deft formula is ideal
for a clergyman to use as his
sermon pattern, too. But it is
equally good for high schoolers
like Calvin.
Send for my bulletin “Pubtc
Platform Strategy.’ enclosing a
stamped return envelope, plus a
dime.
(Copyright. Nopkins Syndicate Ine )
————
From Our Files
15 Years Age
REPUBLICANS SWEEPING all
Oakland County offices; landslide
indicated.
GOLDEN GLOVES Tournament
date set for area; it is a long
awaited Sport classic.
MEMORIAL PL ANNED for
Amelia Earhart; scholarship fund
Dressler celebrate 62nd birthday.
CUBAN REBELS seek U. S. in-
tervention; bloody strife continues.
U. S. RECOGNITION of Russia
nears as Hull, Litvinoff iron dif-
ferences.
Every Wise Man After 50 Should Lessen
im a laudatory letter Of regret.” weald have become aware of the
and said “I am confident that in
your new position (U. S. executive
director of the International Mon-
etary Fund) you will add distine-
tion to your already distinguished
career.”’
* * ®*
White did not resign his subse-
quent post on the monetary fund,
nor was he fired. He died without
action being taken on the FBI re-
For testing out_a typewriter, you've long heard Port by the Truman administra-
‘of ‘The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog,”
and that other, ‘‘Now is the time for all good men
to come to the aid of their country.” But
Irma Wright,
five times type speed champion, now comes forth
with a new one that she says is tops for a good
workout for supple fingers: “A quick movement
of the enemy would jeopardize six gunboats.”
Verbal Orchids.to— Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Decker
of 1565 Naylor Street; fifty-fifth wedding an-
niversary.
Mrs. Rhoda Teasdale
of Oxford; eighty-eighth birthday.
Mrs. Paul Brangar
of Milford; eighty-third birthday. tion.
Although Harry White is dead,
twe of his principal assistants,
who are accused of playing an
+ important part in the Soviet es
pionage ring, are alive and have
Both refused recently to answer
questions on the ground of possi-
ble self-incrimination, claiming
the privilege of the 5th amend-
ment.
One of them even refused to
tell the Senate committee the list
of his assignments — the jobs he
held in the executive branch of the
government both here and abroad.
And one of these jobs was that importance of this FBI memo-
randum as early as 1945 when,
as the Senate subcommittee says.
it was distributed te him and
key officials of the government.
But if he didn’t himself see it
then, he might well have asked for
a copy of the FBI memorandum
when Rep. Richard Nixon of Cali-
By WILLIAM BRADY, ™.D.
Here the other day Mrs: John
Doe, who signed her real name
but not her address, said that.she
had weighed 228 pounds when she
was 12 years old, 300 pounds when
she was 35 years old.
Then she began reducing and lost
13% pounds but the lady did not
say how long it teek tolese 150
pounds nor what reducing regi-
men she followed, if any.
ancholic outlook, I'll send the pam:
they ask for it in writing (no clip- ping) and inclose ' self-
envelope. at Least the Amount-of Food-He Eats —
*
Tt was BT (béfore television) but
inferiority (when sober) UEHAE
(81.98 word for food), “and if he
Life as he aseend-
even inte the Child's
Diet.” : i
that is. We can go along aa iH ;
u
;
pais Mie es +\. pee ce = ~ ne * ed Bh ie a hi. ad = ab gene = » ates a= ‘ pete" f , - i F ‘ a ee 8, eg , . Fost lig Sata, ' pe 4. A,
Ae aod: a ; ; f er Bhcweemccarwce: ee ies : r Mera nn ‘ ener ‘ ; ouies a ee
7 ; : — Sn eS ae : 7 : hi } ~~ ses = — . — ASS : Bee 3 =. 5 f ———— 5 ee
an “MONDAY. NOVEMBER 6,15) |
— ~ ™~ " . ese ( ' * i J ? ,
+ eee -
, } . 5 =
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Copyright 1953, LicosTT @ MrEns Tosacco OS.
amit all
ween : Satie See” Te : A. : St f if *~ Snwegh a ng Sih co Fea Fs é Apes, Bow a = => Aaa a = soe a eee oi " ‘ eS Er ae + areata Te t FENN 1 Pk 2 2 ae = ——— ee on sane nee eer enmecer as r ; .
- ast : wea Ole Se za seen : adv ‘ ‘ sea neers _ 6 — . rae sae 1 : 2 ) eS ae f
, K | —_+———"FHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER. @, 19960 terre oe ] ‘ { = : 7 me ——— '
tAdvertiment) | Lakewood Farms Group Peterson. ‘Mrs. Harry Carlisle and) Two Granges to Meet C | Ls t Asks Rochester Play aA
More'Comfort Wearing Plans Christmas Party | arrangements for the affair. at Davisburg Tuesday | omp din
s F ALSE TEETH | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —/ A November and December! akland County Pamona Grange | . ‘ a
| Plans for a Christmas party for!candy setling project was the) will meet with Davisburg Grange | _ ' >| - olf |
Here is @ pleasant way to overcome Lakewood*Farms subdivision were &roup s decision for financing the | members Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at! ld ey US el YS edt P--- ©" feces ee ee inhied on upper ; Made’ when the women’s auxiliary | Party | Davisburg Methodist Church.
Sal lower plete, holét them “ =
-of 4akewood--Farms..met. recently | Also planned by the unit was the |. Keports from State Grange dele- that_they_feel.more comfortable Nc_a+ the home of Mrs, Nobel Smith | aiding mar needy family during | gates will be presented by Mr. and yummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling .
It’s altialine ‘non-acid! Does not sour of Glove road. the Yule season. December meet-{|Mrs. Albert Primas of* Brandon Checks plate odor jen! reat The party, scheduled for Dec. 20 ing has been scheduled for. Dec. | Grang:
will be at the home of Mrs. Homer 2 at Highland Manor. and Mrs. and Mrs
Wermuth of Rose Grange. Ge@ FPASTEETH today y drug store Burt
Kis time to buy an
ELECTRIC
CLOTHES 7 ° ° :
ee “~ a Pentac readent, (wo) Dayton. Arthur's pare = - Len town, Ohio served as best man weeks ago and Mrs. Arthur A. Irwin of T227
Pontiac City Commissioners tote t Arrowwood Dr., Westacres
Detroit, Joseph Stack of Pontiac Henry last week to carry a verbal ,
complaint at that time ‘ through Guests from Walled Lake, | and Willam Vaughan of Dayton
the proper channels."’ Detroit and Kitchener, Ont. at- A breakfast was given following
| ———______—_—_—_—— — tended the 10 a.m. ceremony | the ceremony at Dayton Country |
| tele. sein 7 which was held before an altar Club. An evening reception _was
‘ with white mums. alsovheld at the country club
| \ Nancy wore a white gown of Following a honeymoon = in
\ skinner satin. The fitted bodice | Miami Beach, Fla., the couple
was designed on princess lines will live at 9720 Lakeview, Walled
and buttoned down the back with| Lake.
tiny satin buttons as did the long The bridgroom was a student tn
sleeves which tapered over her. General Motors Institute where he
hands received his degree in mechanical
The full skirt was completed | engineering. The bride attended
a cathedral train. Her two-tiered | the University of Dayton
+ Waterford Police Chief | Sadi M
Outlines Plans for Force | aginaw an
Hunting Owner GREYHOUND BUSES DAILY tc WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —!
Frank VanAtta. new township po- °
of Suitcase Jacksonville, Fla. \lice chief, outlined plans for .the |
| | new police force here at a meeting | ,Grgomsmen were Thomas Hosea of |
WATERFORD — An honest Sag- County Deaths Mrs. Ira Clevenger
HOLLY — Service for Mrs. Ira
| (Mabel F.) Clevenger. 70. of 16491
| Fish Lake Rd., wilt be tormerrow at
- pm. at Seventh Day Adventist
Church here with burial in Lake
View Cemetery. She dicd sudden-
ly yesterday at her home
Arrangements are by
Funeral Home where she
until time for service.
Fred E. Squires
CLAWSON—Service for Fred E,
Squires, 60, of 285—Massoit Ave, Dryer
will be
- —~——+were this morning at the Spiller-
Gramer Funeral Home with burial
in Springport Cemetery. He died
Saturday at his home
He had lived here for 21 years
land was a World War I veteran of
the Canadian Army.
Edward L. Hurlburt
Service for Edward L. Hurlburt, }
coe your ELECTRIC DRYER DAVO DEALER
OME ROUND | Thursday of the Greater Waterford | Gee ariuriiie locking ‘icc the Gane 73, of Fair Haven, will be Werines-
way $2180 f08" $9925 |Tomnanip Businemens Asoc [AY Mar moing for the ower ay at 10 am. at St. Marys Par ~ | ton. | sweat shirt with “Waterford Vil- | ish at Anchorville with burial there. a | Other Low One-Way GREYHOUND feres| VanAlta reported that there lage School” across its front. A retired chief enginer for the
2 ey | would be seven policemen on the| 1 -, ;_ | Great Lakes Railroad, he died yes- - oe | Duluth. Mi $16.05—28.90° | In a letter to Ida Kent. princi- |
. Te sole : : force and three cars to begin the pal of the school, Charles A. Spen- | terday. ;
| Marttord, Conn.,,. $18.55—33.40 | new police protection for the cer said he found the suitcase and| 5UrViving besides his widow, Min-
Portiand, Me.,.,, $21.05—37.90 township \the sweat shirt on a read up nie are two daughters. Mrs. Lu-
| Torente. Ont..... $ 7.20—13.00' Next meeting will be in Decem- north. The bag had several oth- cille Gullette of Pontiac. and Mrs.
San Francisco, Calif. $48.25—86.85 ber for a Christmas party. The er articles of clothing in it Edna Gilbert of aie four
| tg Sevings on Round Trips—U.S. Tox extra | date will be set later Spencer said he made several “?"* Donald of Marine City. Ed-
Before you make your next trip awhere, ae —_——— inquiries along the road but could ward Ji and Miller of Fai Haven
get Greyhound’s low fare and SAVE! Plan Bazaar at Tro not locate the owner of the mys- | 274 Kenneth of Grand each 4
| y terious articles. He asked Miss &'anchildren and 11 great grand-
GREYHOUND TERMINAL TROY TOWNSHIP—Troy Meth- | Kent to ask-schoot children if one children
| 124 N. Perry st FE 4.2595 odist Church members will hold of their families lost the bag while ky =m
|their annual bazaar and turkey | traveling during the Labor Day | ALMONT — Service for Ivy iad Will, 71, of 703 North Main St. dinner Wednesday. The event will
‘begin at 2 p. m. | Spencer said the owner could | Will be 2 p. m. tomorrow in First iclaim the bag by identifying it Baptist Church with burial in Al-
. DON’T HIBERNATE PREPARE FOR WINTER NOW
.Y
Yes! Now is the time to comfortize your Home. Old
Man Winter is just around the corner. Don’t let him
catch you short. Let us help you do the hundred
and one things you would like to do this fall. It’s
so easy with an FHA modernization loan. Just ask
any Community National Bank officer and he will
gladly give you all the details and requirements for
making your home more-tivable.
It's best the Community National way
Jhe Commanity National Bank
of Pontiac, Michigan
With Branches at ,
N. PERRY at GLENWOOD W. HURON at TILDEN
Out of City. Branches
WALLED LAKE KEEGO HARBOR
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and its contents. His address is 419 ™OMt Cemetery. He died Satur-
| South Adams St., Saginaw. j day night ' | Lyman Burton Allen
= | LAKE ORION Service for . | at .
Congregational Guilds Lyman B. Allen, 76, of 122 W,
Will Meet This Week Warren. Detroit, will be at IT a.m,
tomorrow at Allen Funeral Home,
| ROCHESTER—Four meetings are | Lake Orion, with burial in East-
slated this week by guilds of First, lawn Cemetery. He died Saturday
Congregational Church ‘here at Receiving Hospital, Detroit
Friendly Guild will meet at 8, Surviving is his widow, Lillian,
| p.m. Wednesday with Mrs. Clinton |
| Smith. Lamplighters meets Thurs- | - pe °
|day.at the home of Mrs. Ciiff Begin Big Task ie Auken. NEW YORK (UP)—Most of the
Bethany Guild will also meet} 20.000 persons driven from their
Thursday at the church with Mrs.| homes by a violent two t + , ‘ ;> a4
eae
’ Mea Women Like to Make. Korot, Want 7% Market Them Profit itably
‘Needs Only Lipstick | pag = “One Reader Gives Her Rule of Thumb) A successful young business ex- |
ecutive declares firmly that “‘a! if Pp tti F P H di kJ t
cake of soap and a lipstick are all | jinn ee | Or U Ing air Ti ce on an IWOIr
the cosmetics a | working x sirl should | mould’ | struc tion n of a ) modern submarine. By ANNE, HEYWOOD of going into it professionally in hard at times to make ends meet. — : Sanaa nSnnnoannee : | Judging from my mail, a great} the future ' ““T would like to make aprons to BEAUTY SALON FEA | many women like to make aprons!| Mrs. C. 8. in New Jersey is sell.” she goes on, “but don't how to determine the proper “very dar om women| typical of the latt : Every day I hear from women] YPM atter group price. For each apron J use a yard
COLD WAVE ALL FOR who are doing it so successfully | She says: “I am_ that older | of g00ds—cotton print or denim
that they are making a profit; |woman that you write about. We|—with rickrack or cotton rug
end $ ana trom = are thinking = people, and ams yarn as fringe.
Hoircut a Later on, I will make others
Fluff Shampoo eS ‘a to with a=, — —: ae.
Lustre Rinse NOTHING MORE * ‘ss gueear sates vie my a _ Style Hairdress TO PAY y spreas. This always varies with the kind |
of community you live in, and
what the traffic will bear.” But
Mrs. R. G., in Maryland, who is
selling her aprons Successfully |
wives this rule of thumb.
“It jot down the total price of | Reg 15.00 ' see ORIMKING STRAWS sa . GA Feat the material, including trimming. ‘ . oR TME SHAE T ~ PLNERS Then I add 50 cents for the wear Luxurious a ARROW and tear‘on the machine, needles " CREME OIL | =— ~ PETE a! : pees i —_- odds and | > ends ren add a Miar lor m.
COLD WAVE Sweet- ia Ft gos time in making it. "|
NOVEMBER 73 Everythi: 6 you need for hair loveliness in @ complete pack
age. And it’s all yours at a very welcome reducticr 0
hurry and SAVE!
I make them rapidly, and this
FEATURE | Try It way really ine : nny inexpensive mate-
nals, made up, make an apron
Dart Game Uses Straws) ° #8 sx “My more expensive ma-
terials, such as fancy nylon and Hére is a game which was sent in a different way which would he
< ergandy ones run sometimes as in by Gary Levi of Milwaukee.| fun for other Try-Iteers to hear : . “
high has $1 | This is a game which will be fun’ about? ° le
' to play, and it is especially nice to — Check first to see what similar This is a dart game made of hear of original games. You see aprons sell for in the stores in
rm Gary iiade th drinking straws, toothpicks and a \ : ar é ; S$ ga » I Vo ommun! ours Th Pi-
I FE 2-0531 : = = seme floor target. Dart games are fun, = community = te -
’ 41 N. Sag Do you have a game which is} pet younger children should al. | 'e! be cheaper, or much, much
' . 4) . i i . oO j F fo thin \ i original with you? Perhaps you ways play them with someone = ™0Fre altractive l'ry ink up
have some game which you play) eider helping them. an individual touch. One reader }
= tells me of @ man’s apron which . a The darts are made by sticking Ase Sper 4 shadow box mirror ‘placed behind a| “motion pictures” at a party, ee s into the ¢ nd of «drinks My husband, like most men buffet setting has the effect of providing|
mg Straw. most straws will Onl) Ot asionally feels like dreaming | —————e — Sears {need -two- toothpicks, —but “use as- up a dish — sometimes-..indoors,
many as you need to make them metimes in our yard. He needed| Mary Margaret McBride Says: ~ Crepes Get Crepier fit tightly. . ,
Make -five or six darts so that * big, plain apron. long enough to In these days of bigger and
your whale fam can pay, Col pug ap and then, m|INAL Bradleys Untainted itis sts came a no the straws with different colots of | _ i i h surprise that even crepes are get-
crayons so that each player can red embroidery trim, I put the ting ‘‘crepier This new twist is .
tell which is his dart words: ‘Danger! Man cooking!’ by Fame Fawning People the result of a highly twisted yarn
You will now need a target for Everybody thought it was so at- - which makes possible a flattering ' the floor. Make this from a large | 'ractive that I kept getting orders It's never happened before and probably ‘it never will again, but range of crepes with more firm,
sheet of paper, and color it red [ now sell them through a local | I've just had a really lovely time at a Broadway first night. The | full bodied textures The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC
t . VA \ . y ” % ~ 2 le
whire and blue. Number the colors | 5tre reason was a woman named Mary Bradley a » and 10. Let each player t Another reader made aprons Mostly I loathe first nights because I feel so drab and unsure of
a turn for five times. The one ™!!) horoscope signs. One woman ;-myself-eamid+the sables and ermines_diamonds and emeralds. snobbery |
with the highest score is the w made very fancy cocktail aprons | eeee.--< . and arrogance that invariably accompany the
ner. of nylon with silver embroidery, “ presentation of a new play to New York's most BRAND Ny WI |
——_ --— —— which were almost part of a cos suphisticated audience | ”
a tume for formal wear at home They were all there, too—the men—and_ women
There is no ironclad rule for who have let a little success or money swell =] 1953 MODEL
pricing a homemade apron, but up like puff adders, critics with sharpened weapons
remember these three important Hollywood and society preening and posturing SEV ; points celebrity-hunters peeking and pestering It's the
very setup that always depresses me. But this
time there was Mary for an antidote
I went to school with Mary Quayle in Missouri
She came from Moberly. population 13,000, and
Figure the cost of material: add
a small sum. for year and tear |
on equipment, replacements, etc.;
add salary for your own time
Fully Automatic! Brand New!
FRIGIDAIRE Electric Range
7 b i-4——~_ | something individdal and umique | ~ Most of the giris at our ——— ae college
if 3-D_ movies are -suceessful, for which you ean eharge more- played the field when it came to®
Hollywood might consider making 4nd which will altract customers boys but Mary stuck to one beau, , think that the Middle West has one with a plot. Z (Copyright 1953) a tall, quiet-manneréd young man | something to do with it, but maybe
ee I'm prejudiced.
kee was a West Point cadet. His r aP New nals
‘afhe was Omar Bradley and when
they finished school. they got’ mar-| }
| Tied as they’d apparently known | Household Hygiene
| they would do since they were 14.| Vitgl to Fight Polio
| E fost track . for ane There is constant emphasis on ) and then was a ne mashed | potnd and ieckaad ted te: the importance of cleanliness =
‘ _& | ‘came one ‘of the most famous of | the fight against polio. This doesn’t |
| all the generals in the second mean just personal cleanliness | |
}
Give aprons a finishing touch = I from Paris ypulation 1,500 : MISS McBRIDE m |
= 5
APPLIANCE
STORES, INC
World War. Since then Mary | Health experts warn that ‘‘plenty aa : * * CREAMY— | {° 4) in 2) minutes! SMOOTH | and Omar have seen a a |of soap and water” are needed to, 379 S. SAGINAW
— KC / * : of the globe, met most keep the house clean—especially ACID-RESISTING Ne, DELICIOUS ! seeps: seem . evading: -_ bad “during the “polio season.” | OPEN FRIDAY THL 9 P.M.
LIFETIME honors heaped upon them, been $$$ Se
PORCELAIN ’ sought after and fawned upon. ’
HERES ALL YOu DO! FINISH INSIDE
SR IR
You'd certainly think by this}
| time Mary would be just another |
| blase cosmopolite in a first night }
audience. That's why it was so
| wonderful to see her. enjoying |
| herself as excitedly and eagerly
las if she'd just come _ from
Moberly for her first visit to the | Without taking lessons .
eee big city 1. Just toss Minute Pota-
toes into salted boiling wa-
ter. Do not cook.
2. Merely press potato
shreds into water with a
spoon and stir until water
absorbed. A friend was pointing out all the . “ ps
. ; sights—Frankie, Marlene, Georgie | Without knowing
3. Add butter and beat Jessel, a plutocratic playboy—and . NO MONEY DOWN about I minute. A small Mary was staring unashamed, so a note of music!
amount of milk may be
added, if desired. Quick asa
wink... thrilled she could hardly speak. |
She didn't feel drab or inferior
among the sables, emeralds and
preening
You could tell that she was
having such fun she wasn’t ©
What a range . . . what features you'll find
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you've got the creamiest,
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matic Timer, smooth! Serves 4. Try ‘em thinking of herself at all. I felt | = orgy
for dinner tonight. a glow of pride for Missouri as I | touches eno bey ot ©
watched and found myself say- pst ge
ing, “She hasn't changed a bit.” | one PeeeR of
For that matter, neither has | vour bef Pree | Dial Your Own Washday
| Omar Bradiey. produce oan, ; ; | ‘esonent
Weather With Automatic | I remember when he first came ONE FOOT resting
back from the war, sought-after | ae on ee
FRIGIDAIRE hero and multi-starred general. produces the right
Our radio station was startled to ee! —
| find the two Bradleys standing
| quietly and as a matter of course-|
in the line that was waiting to get |
| into my broadcast. It had never '
| A new product occurred to either of them to ask 5 75 sve ten he neo | for special favor You can play the Hammond MINUTE RICE It's just wonderful to me to find — -
Products of Generel Foods | two people whom no honors, no i
__ elevations ean spoil.. I like to d
Dependable. Frigidaire with built- Sy ey .
in Ozane lamp that dries a whole
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FREE DEMONSTRATION
IN YOUR HOME
GRINNELL’S 27 S. Saginaw St.
a This style requires a permanent if you’ do
not have naturally curly hair.
Call for an Appointment
Betty LeCornu’s Studio
“Professional Care Is Best jor the Hair”
306 Riker Bidg. FE 2-5221
Trek to Ohio | Game” in Columbus}
Attracts sportans
Over-Weekend.
Undergrads with ambitions to
enter the Vet Medicine School
are organized in the Pre-Vet | Membership Chairman Mrs. Edward
Markham of Josephine avenue (seated) and | McMiller of North Perry street. (center)
Lois McIntyre of South Jessie street (right),|when the group gathered Sunday for a
president of Gamma Psi Chapter of Beta| pledge tea at the home of Betty Bryan on
Sigma 1 Phi sorority, welcomed pledge Betty | Fairgrove avenue. fy Pia a 2 “tr 5 4
“ eee me Hh |
,
it MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953
Pentiac Preas Phete
Louise Limp became the bride Saturday evening when Joanne
| Louies Harrison” Flentke.
Club: Ray Dodigreen te vice | Th Rev. W. Glen Harris per-! president of group.
Billy Poirier of Birmingham is |
a newly initiated member of Delta | Joanne |r
Tau Delta fraternity. "er
The girls are swimming, as of | ©!/"p became
late. South Campbell copped the | . — Paar a | the bride of
last week, with the help of Patti! Robert H. yu Swaney, Birmingham sopho- | .
we. Patti personally accounted | Flentke
for 24 of South Campbell's 6.5) | ;
points Saturday in
Green Splash, feminine swim- | Birmingham.
ming henorary, recently elected .
a new slate of officers. Gary |The George J,
Megton, Pontiac senior, was
chosen social chairman. Limps of
Margaret Ireland is the Panhell | George H.
theme and decoration chairman. | .
She is a junior from Birmingham Flentkes of
pope i = pencil go — Evansvitte,
their fall term treasurer. Ind.
Bazaar Chairman The couple The Women’s Athlete Associa-| Birmingham tion, sponsor of the coed intra- |
_ mural program, has elected Donna | are the bride's
Puls, Birmingham senior; treas- = orer: parents and thé
Plans are under way for the an-
mal IFC-Panhellenic dance sched-
uled for Nov.
Mrs
chairman of the Dec. 3 bazaar
and dinner, when members of the
Ladies Guild of Grace Lutheran
Church met
church | for a cooperative luncheon. | bridegroom is
: . ‘the son of the 20 at Kellogg Center
Fred Zittle was named! 1 i// reside
Maryland.
Thursday at the
MRS. of | chose
‘Joanne Limp Wed in Birmingham Rite The First Presbyterian Church] formed the 7:30 ceremony. The
na ert AB ag setting | bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
George J. Limp of Birmingham,
a gown of ivory satin and
tulle trimmed with Alencon lace. |
An over-flounce in front |
ROBERT H. FLENTKE draped to a cathedral-length train
revealing an accordion-pleated |Dr. LaCore-
jat Dinner
4+—of -State-Hospital
‘Ptress for the évening and Grace i
é
Annual Event Held
by Employes Club ls Honored
Dr. Ivan A. LaCore, new medi-
cal superintendent of Pontiac
State Hospital, was honored at the
annual Employes Club dinner held
Saturday evening in the clubrooms
on the State Hospital Grounds.
Mrs. Clare Young was toastmis-
Clark’gave the invocation.
The welcoming address was
given by Eari Hudnell, club pres-
* Ident, and a brief history of the
club was presented by Mrs. Or-.
ben Wilkins.
Bartlett Wager, business execu-
tive, gave a brief summary of Dr.
LaCore’s career before assuming
his duties at Pontiac State Hos-
pital.
The superintendent was intro-
duced by Dr. John M.) Stevens
Jr., newly appointed assistant med- Before an altar decorated: with
palms and white chrysanthemums,
Mary Margaret Younce, daughter
of Mrs. Lucille M. Younce of West
New York avenue, became the
bride_of Nicholas-M.--Zdunie—at-a}— (Mary_Margaret_Y ounce. read was the-setting for a re
nuptial High Mass Saturday morn- |
ing in St. Vincent de Paul Church. |
The Joseph Zdunics of West Wal-
ton boulevard are his parents.
The bride's gown was fashioned
of Chantilly lace and nylon tulle
over satin, It was styled with a
basque bodice and long, tapering
sleeves cqming to points at the
wrists.
Tiny lace appliqued flowers em-
broidered red on net with sequins out-
ical superintendent. Dr. LaCore
spoke briefly on his impressions |
of the hospital and its- personnel.
He, in turn, introduced Mrs. La-
Core and their children, Van and
Serving on the committé@es for
the evening were Lyle Saum, Mrs
Harold Hudak, Mr. Wager, Ken-
tulle skirt. A satin heart-shaped
crown trimmed with seed pearis
held her” fingertip veil of illu.
sion.
Stephanotis surrounding an or-
chid formed her bouquet
Mrs, John Reiman of Farming- |
ton Was matron of -honor-in—en
ankle-length gown of iridescent
blue tafeta. She carried a muff of | ture
white chrysanthemums and blue
cornflowers
In similar attire were Mrs. Philip
Leighton of Detroit and Mrs.
John Carvey of Indianapolis. Ind.,
fon with matching accessories was,
worn by Mrs. Limp as she re-
ceived guests at Oakland Hills
* Country Club after the ceremony. |
. Mrs._Flentke chose a
crushed berry taffeta with match-
ing accessories.
Hadassah to Hear. ‘Songs Modern Palestinian
and American classics will be on
the program Tuesday evening when
the Pontiac Chapter of Hadassah
holds its Honor Roll and cultural
meeting at 8:30 in Congregational
B'nai Israel.
The program will be presented
by the women’s choral group of the
Music Study Chub of Detroit-under
the direction of Don Frohman.
Hadassah, the Women's Zionist
Organization of America, has as its
purpose social welfare, child res-
cue rehabilitation and vocational
education in Israel
Mrs. Herman Stenbuck, program
chairman, weloomes the public to
this program.
Seuuuuees sunuuee
folk songs
aa
PTA Activities
“ Bastern Junior Migh
American Education Week will be
observed at Eastern Junior High School
with #h open house Tuesday from 7 to
& pm.
UPHOLSTERING a 232 East Pike Street wtborne a FE 5-5042 ive board of the eae ae
Ha PTA wil) meet Tuseda
7:30 p.m. in the scheol.
BECAUSE we built it! BECAUSE we-sell direct!
YOU SAVE all the middle.man’s profits
10-day service on all mew or redone
pieces, at factory-to-you savings
easy terms . . phone for home€Stimates: _
am William wright two seventy orchard lake. avenue
ALL WORK GUARANTEED 5 YEARS’
PHONE FE 4.0556
Music Federation
Meets in Wyandotte
Delegates from Pontiac. Bir-
mingham, Rochester and Oxford |
gathered at the Presbyterian)
Church House in Wyandotte Thurs-
day for the Southeast District of
Michigan Federation of Music|
Clubs
Mrs. Ralph Curtis of Oxford was |
elected director; Mrs. E. T. Tor-
wick, vice director, and Mrs. |
Henry W. Axford, secretary-trea-
surer.
Delegates from Pontiac included
Mrs. Theodore E. Wiersema. Mrs
Gordon Woolcock, Mrs. W. F.
Maybury and Mrs. W. Henry Sink.
Attending _from Birmingham
were Mrs. J. WW. Roébertson
and Mrs. D. L. Tate, and from
Oxford, Mrs. Ralph Curtis and
Mrs. H. J. Brown
Rochester delegates were Mrs.
Axford, Mrs. Johnson Newell, Mrs.
Hazen Anderson, Mrs. Walter
Fauser and Mrs. Howard Wilsdn.
IMPORTED C eae r 5r
Short Sleeve Slipon
Long Sleeve Slipover
Cardigans ...
The finest, purest,
are brought from the far-off Himalaya
Mountains to make you the most
COVETED sweater.
shoulders, sleeves, are all full
fashioned. Select them today and enjoy
the utmost in sweoter beauty.
__ elkaas |Coming Events
Ladies Auxiliary to VFW. 1008 will
meet this evening at @ In the American
Legion Home om Auburn avenue
Typographical Auxiliary of Pontiac
will meet Tuesday at 730 with Mrs. Nile
McCaffery. 178 Norton Ave
Daughters of Pontiac 186 Sew Cir-
e will) meet with Mrs Thomas is,
71 SB. Johnson Ave.. Tuesday at 7:30 p.m
Maccabees Sewing Circle wilt —
Tuesday at 12:30 pm. for «
luncheon with Mrs. Pat Murthum, 353
Judson Bt.
Philathea Class of the Oakiand Ave-
nue United Presbyterian Church will
| meet Tuesday at 6 pm, for a coopera-
tive dinner, Husbands and friends
are invited
Happy Time Club of the Maccabees
will meet for s card perty Tweedey et
& p.m William Dimus, 236
&. Paddock St
Pes edad Goid Star Mothers, Ine.
Nine hcp a “Wittiation~ rites
he First Southern
35 OR Tuesday evening in
Misstonary Baptist per Sing
Wilson Ave.
Omega Mu Sigma sorority will meet
Twesday at & pm. in the home of Mrs.
J. PF. Scott, 2661 Old Orchard Dr.
Norwegian Ladies Aid will meet
Wednesday at 7.30 p.m. with Mrs. Erick
Pearson, 4904 Sherbourne gown of | neth Elmquist and Robert Hilliker.
Pictures Shown
at DAR Meeting
by Norman Roth A three-dimensional colored pic-
program entitied “Our
Cae was presented by Nor-
man Roth when members of Gen.
Richardson Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution, met
Thursday with Mrs. Maxwell L.
Shadiey of Ottawa drive
Featured on the program were
scenes of Hawaii, California, Ari-
zona and North Carolina.
Mrs. Lieyd D. Porter was chair-
man for the afternoon. Members
ef her committee include Mrs.
Porter Francis, Mrs. Eidon Gard-
ner, Mrs. E. V, Howlett and
Myrtle Hudson.
Others were Mrs. M. H. Lutt-
rell, Mrs. William Ormiston, Mrs.
Orrin Huntoon, Mrs. Allan Monroe
and Mrs. George Waller.
Mrs. Monroe and Blanche Avery |
presided at the tea table which
| ras centered with an arrangement
| of chrysanthemums, colored leaves
and fruit
Mrs. Gartner. approved schools
chairman, is preparing a box of
Christmas gifts for the children
at Tamassee, the DAR school for
mountain children in South Caro
lina.
MRS. VERNON L. ASHBY
Mrs. Ruby Vearey of Russell | street and Raymond Sad Hibbs of Bliss
street are announcing the marriage
of their daughter, Geneva Hibbs,
to Vernon L. Ashby, son of the
Lawson Ashbys of Mariva avenue,
Thursday in the Congregational
Church of Angola, Ind
nico,
Just Received Another Shipment!
Among the Most Precious Things You Will wr Own ummna
ASHMERES
light, soft cashmeres
The neck,
48 Nerth Saginaw eee omrrets ted
|
Kathy’ |
| held the fingertip veil of French
‘Tmultg and plumosa.
>
lets
MRS, NICHOLAS ZDUNIC Christmas
It’s Cold Outside!
Snow: Suits.
Pram Suits — Coat Sets
Cl
USE O
Gi f ts LAY-A-WAY¥
|limed the V-necktine and 4 row of
| dainty lace-covered buttons deco- |
rated the bodice from the neckline |
to the tip of the pointed waistline. |
+ ‘The billowing skirt of tulle, which |
was fashioned with lace applique |
panels down the front and back, |
ended in a full cathedral-length |
train. |
A Juliet cap of Jace and. satin!
silk illusion and she carried a
bouquet. of white fugi chrysanthe-
Barbara Ann Younce, the
bride's sister, was maid of honor.
She wore a gown of orchid petal
nylon with a fitted bedice or
reyal purple velvet and a brief
jacket.
Her bouget was a cascade ar
rangement of orchid fugi chrysan-
themums and button chrysanthe
mums with plumosa.
Mrs. Cari Smith wore a gown
of royal purple velvet with an em-
pire waistline and a portrait neck-
line for her duties as matron of
honor. Her bouquet was. composed
of orchid fugit 7 West Lawrence Street Beginning and Refresher Courses in
GREGG SHORTHAND
TYPEWRITING
ACCOUNTING Comptometer and Calculator and Other Courses
DAY, HALF-DAY and EVENING
(Approved for Veteran Training)
¥ ae a eee PR ae Pea
Phone FE 2-3551
Hours: Morning 8:30 -11:30-— Afternoon 12:00-~-2:38-—
Evening 6:30 - 9:00
VISITORS WELCOME
chrysanthemums | ||
} and ‘plumosa
Ann Zdunic and Patricia Zie Hinsid |
| were bridesmaids and their gowns
were fashioned like the honor ma-
trons. They carried bouquets of
fugi chry seuthomems and
| plumosa.
Wearing gowus designed as
minature replicas of the honor
maid’s were Zera Zdunic and
John Ernozik was best man
and the other attendants included
Donald Younce, Harold Beaubien
and George Preides.
For her daughter's wedding,
blue street-length taffeta dress with
| pink accessories and pink chrysan-
| themums
A wedding breakfast was
served at Fox and Hounds Inn,
and Subte Hall on — take
Custom Upholstering
21 Years’ Practical Experience
378 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-2857
o
SOFT GOING
plete fiexrbility
to toe
wonderful
Rar no
comtortable
RED!
BLACK!
| Mrs. Younce wore a delphinium | |
ze
i)
Y
te
i
by
«tt
ra
a
ap RRO TI
. . EASY GOING
LOW HEEL GALFSKINS BY
Vatiraliger
Easy walking with com-
and
foam cushioning from heel
Heel-hugging fit,
No-s 'p
no-pinch lasts!
fF attering but cornpiletely
BLUE!
BROWN!
a
=
AN ARTHUR'S
EXCLUSIVE
a
WHIRL OF |
FASHION =
35.00
LF
Lively lines for lively times. These Carlye
dresses take romantic turns North or South,
In silver, and know their way around town.
gold, red. Junior sizes.
Better Dresses—Merzranine
As Seen in McCalls
Your Best Shee lnvestment @
-~-10.93:.34
Shoe Salon— |” 4
conan eT ae
2 . \o , a ; oq | ; eat , i - - : — . A” . : at
MT SSS nee, ro SSS " — a3 —— : “fp Fa renee ' ~—T eos acca ae . | ce od ae : , . ‘ — - =
TWELVE | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953 |__|
RS 5 5 ny
Man Wants ,
= |Wedding Bid| *
-|for Fiancee — | amen Standard Sized Bed JF Ht embarrasses you—
~LEE’S - |/0K for Most People Meat Loaf
es le ee ee eee Is Colorful, = a Cleaners pe Reale org Me sargr Far 2 ®
Good Tasting} | ual specifications. One bedding firm
~~ — 47 North Perry St. even reports constructing a special R mtat
oe ; =
~FE-S=2683 fee tay chika ah area Mrs.-Herman Gall’s Asks. Bridegroom Across trom. Poatiac Hotel | gentleman. Recipe Gets Plenty for Permission to . . ; However, most people can get j i : Men's Sut ave B10 a good night’s sleep in . stand- of Compliments Bring Her
Men's Le and B anil att j ard bed, provided their mattréss
_ | and bedspring combination is level
Sports Shirts ......... .55¢ and resilient, and their pillow,
buoyant and fluffy,
Cal for Coreful Dan the Pontiac Laundry Man
Just Call for Pw Just Call for
Careful Dan, the Careful Dan, the By JANET ODELL
Pontiac Press Foed Editor
If you tike compliments from
your guests, serve them a meat
; loaf made the way Mrs. Herman
| Gall makes hers for company.
j It is -both colorful and tasty
\ Mrs. Gall keeps busy with her
family and home ¢aré.-Ah-active+
| worker in the Commerce PTA, she
spent many hours recently getting By EMILY POST .
A girl writes: “My fiance re-
ceived an invitation to the wed-
ding of a friend. Although I have
never met this friend, he knows
that we are engaged. However, I
was not sent an invitation.
“As my fiance would like very
much to go to the wedding, but
does not want to go without me,
he wrote and asked the bride-
eS
Pontiac Laundry Pontiac Laundry ready for their annual fair. She “8 ' th
; i : . groom if he might take. me to the
Man, FE 2-810] Man, FE 2-810] Sees pr nel nape es ie |is also a Sunday School teacher. wedding. Was this the proper thing
j oie nothing to worry whether-stinr—+ FANCY MEATLOAF to do?
er large, girl or matron. By Mrs. Herman Gall Ҥ think not, as it puis the
person asked on the spot.. He
cannot say other than yes when cr tion is down on the brow. Some ', cup tomato juice
EANING BARGAIN however, favor profile slant. The | maiice milk asked point blank. Will you ow
and pepper please give your opinion?
glitter of gold and sparkle of rhine- | Cracker crumbs to make o firm mixture
5 P< yR 1 I . ; a 7 Answer: It was not at all im- stones make evening hats a must ‘ ara: cook ei : ; : , : 7
S H | R S for this holiday season a ata ae oked' veus a ae | * proper to do what your fiance did,
Mix together the tomato juice | ~ “ |and I'm sure the bride will be CAREFUL DAN’S NOVEMBER | Mrs. FE. Y.—The new hat sit: | 4 \aige oblers -thenned
large egg
—— a _ . . . ° . . i 7 ‘THINGS TOCOME i bree ~and-milk.Add-all the other ingre- | This cleanser is made, it is claimed, ta work deep into | glad to invite you. | - -
c [earve con _ diants except the eggs and olives. the pores and to kill the bacteria causing many blemishes.| Dear Mrs. Post: My husband| Kiddies ae eta Cat Senin TA Sms Spread half the mixture into a | _ : and I have lived in this commun- | able, huggable cats! Mama meet CACC YS loa: | greased loaf pan ity only a short while. Just recent- | and Kitten Cuddles — made from
| Make two hollow trenches in the | ly we were invited to a large re-| same easy-crochet directions.
ception ‘given by a very Well-} yiama is 12 inches in knitting
known family in this community. | worsted; Cuddles, 8 inches in ply The hours were from 7 to 10.) 455 Crochet them for Christmas. We arrived about 8:30, passed | Send for Pattern 735 now!
| down the receiving line, had some | on ;
refreshments and left abour—9-+—Send23_cents_in_colns =
Guests were still streaming in so | Pattern—and 25 cents for each pat
we left without a word to our | tem for first-class mailing. Send
hosts. 'to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft
Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea
We have since been accused | ciation, New York 11, N.Y. Print
of extreme rudeness for leaving | )),inly pattern number, your name,
without saying goodnight to-eur > stress—and—zone: hosts and thanking them for in- _
Watch Hairline viting us. Will you please tell
me if we were wrong?
Answer: I see nothing improper} If your head is not well shaped,
in what you did. To have gone up| never have your hair cut in a
and said goodbye so short a time | smooth line at back. Broken lines after you had arrived would Bars ; ‘ _ is will
been conspicuously discourteous. | Created by waves or cur . thide the imperfection. Dear Mrs. Post: I work in an) =
office consisting of 10 people — ——
both men and women, some of
whom are married. I would like Parisian or
to invite them all to my wedding.
Italian Boy Cut- but the problem is what to do
about their wives and husbands
... Which ever you chose, you'll
need a basic Permanent to whom I have never met.
keep your short curls in place. Sport shirts carefully dry cleaned and expertly finished
for 49c. Take advantage of this cleaning bargain and
._§ _call Careful Dan today. ; meat mixture and lay end to end | 2 ers
| the hard-cooked eggs. Press over | Mant
| them the remaining meat mixture |
MAKE FRIENDS _| and finish shaping into meat loaf
form :
| For an added touch press
| stuffed olives in the top of the
| loaf in fancy pattern. Bake in a
350 oven for 1', hours. Baste
with additional tomate juice
white baking, tt-desired:-— 4
When the meat loaf is sliced,
|the green and red of the olives,
| together with the bright yellow |
}and white of the hardcooked eggs,
make a very pretty sight. Wait Promptness is a fundamental of for your guests’ compliments; good manners. But it is even more you'll get them. important in some situations than
We are the only cleaners in the community certified by
the Institute for Maintaining Dry Cleaning Standards!
PONTIAC LAUNDRY
& CAREFUL DRY CLEANERS FE 2-810] — Call — FE 2-8101 |:
fees
|
|
in others. One time you must not |
Victorian Patterns | be late is when you are going some : place with a group, when your Being Reproduced | tardiness will keep everyone else |
_The _ Metropolitan Museum of waiting. They will have plenty of |
New York has inspired many de-| time to think while they wait.
signers this year to reproduce fab- And what they will be thinking ric replicas of old Victorian print | ; ,
patterns. It seems such a shame | of you won't be complimentary.
that our ancestors couldn't benefit . :
from today's science. A Self-Evident Truth
All of these new materials. you| The great discovery of all brand-
see, are washable and can be} new housekeepers is as simple as
Can I send one invitation to
the office and invite them as an
ee
at sudsed in a wonderful invention | a law of nature: Soap and water American pattern cutting and de-| cascade of white chrysanthemums Fishers of by the letest modern equipment
signing, these young students think; and fvy. lan Ge Gad cae ca, ere they can keep their customers| In similar gowns as bridesmaids Clarkston are | strictly up-to-date
“Only as long as it takes us|
to get a picture airmailed."’ said
Miss Fassihi with a smile.
Mrs. Vance Feted
at Pink, Blue Party Mrs.
shower at the home of Jane Hur-
Delores and Elaine Tefend, Delores
Riley, Janet Fairbanks, Mrs. Clair
Hursey, Mrs. James Hursey, Mrs.
Floyd Waldo and Shirley Waldo.
Others were- Mrs._Michael-Cies-
lak; Mrs. Leland Laurence, Mrs.
Willis” Merriman, Mrs, Richard
Karns and Ruth Trudell.
To Sing Ballads AQUATIC can have the New Mrs. Floren singer
American “ballads weil te reat —— 4 & Seppites “Outer -Look”. ertt ot the macihay of Tesstay 57 WN. Milt Se. eee
Musicale to be held Tuesday at OB 46-2088 »> ° Mage} Grace Lutheran Fellow- |] Gs Gear of Pontiac Getel) with the Franklin Vance was honor-| }
ed Thursday with a pink and blue | were Mrs. O. J. Leitner, Mrs. R. L.
Leitner, Mrs. William
Mrs. Ronald Newcomb and Mrs.
Gerald Johnson.
Ordean Sandness was best man, MRS. ALLEN FISHER their parents. $. S. LORY.
AUTOMAT *°s.cs0. MURON AT VeLegnarn RD.
%—Nertd from
Big Pree | ee He _
Now at
© ANDRE'S the NEW
Complete
Permanent
Cold Wave
; and seating the guests were R. Le
NEW FORMFIT
“UNDER-LOOK”
The new Outer-Look stars the slender,
supple line—slim curves flowing smoothly
, Enchanting from rounded bust, to disciplined middle,
ITALIAN to leaner, longer hips. You feel so sure of
BOY Cut yourself in Formfit's Life Bra and Life Cirdle
—with the Under-Look you need to
capture today’s Outer-Look! Life Bra and
Life Girdle, working together, condition
your figure to Fashion's line with blissful
freedom and comfort. Choose from our
wide range. of-styles, fabrics, elastics
55m All tailored with that fabulous
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yoy Tel he MACHINE OR MACHINLESS a 2 Mew “1100”
You'll see it on the prettiest heads. As Wigh-Waleted Life Giedte
as it is flattering. You'll love its face-framing soft- ; ness, its casual curls. In leno elastie-with satin elastic front
and—back panels, $13.50, Other Life
re N. Saginaw Of course you The Bobette Shop
Theater Bids,
TOLE TRAY AND FOLDING STAND ~~
SQ”
vanes Will Reserve in Layaway! Tray alone is usually $11.95 .. . only a large quanti v
this summer mokes this posible . .
Heavy weight, hand painted baked on finish ..
every one is a different floral design . _ Wedgwood
green, Empire red and black background. Folding
tray stand and tray all par in shipping box...
ready to wrap and send , . , Order by mail or phone, 19x25 SIZE
HAND PAINTED
STAND INCLUDED
Queen Anne
TOLE TRAY
@ 17 by 20 size...
@ Floral patterns
@ $7.95 actual value
$H 9
So handy and useful and such a Ft:
lovely gift to receive or present
.. . wide choice of patterns and
tackground colors. Use it as a walt &
decoration as well as a tray .
ORDER EITHER SPECTAL BY
MAIL OR PHONE IF YOU CAN’T
COME IN.
Deposit Will Reserve
| No. Appointment Needed s Girdles from $8.95. Life Bras from $1.26. CHRISTMAS :
, Y,
Andre Beauty $alon| BOBETTE conser'snor MNO. To . 2nd Floér Pontiac Stete Bonk Bldg. Ph. FE 5-4490 7109 P.M. -24 W, HURON ST, FE 2-6921 |
harder than men earning an hon-
est living. Take the case of a 1934| MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP)—A)
St osep _ automobile being junked, . It had | | telephone pole is set right in|
ASPIRIN | no wheels, no seats, no hood; no}the middle of a county road |
pws a ee. Yet-somei near here..__ The road was+
m anotne
table lamp with 28-inch
shade, linen fabric finish.
Here's an exceptional bar-
gain at this low price.
Several base and shade
$ 5 _solor combinations to e choose from. ~
This twin moon planter with its
hand decoration and foliage in-
cluded was a headliner at the re-
cent lamp show in Chicago —
. you'll be thrilled when you see it.
You will have to see this
lomp to appreciate its hand
painted floral design and
22 karat gold leaf trim.
its shade too, Is hand fal-
ae ss : S * hme ee see Sd
* > ‘
«3 Ch PES > oe >
This smart new floor lamp with its
white shagtex shade that con-
trasts beoutifully with its block
~ shaft and brass base is an out-
standing valve ct...
14”;
Here’s an adjustable
pump handle type
bridge lamp that has
many uses. It’s practi-
cal, beautiful and in-
expensive.
_ s1 4°.
pba THESE ARE ONLY A +f
SAMPLE OF THE MANY NEW SEE THEM
LAMPS AND VALUES TO TODAY?!
CHOOSE FROM
'~-more-and more services!
A Hard Dollar. ~"Fiet's bedy-and pulled the old" car] gas Children Face Trouble you should have worried miore
“_— More at Home Than Out | while junior was at home until TOPEKA Kan. (UP} — Topeka h Ohio (AP)—|he reached four years of age. police believe thieves often ‘work! Better Drive Straight MADEVIEED, | me iways| Kuhli said children under
re likely to be in- -
ser ray "ene he wn feet wn ld, | accidents in the” ~than™ small?
Well, Ralph Kuhli of the | anywhere else.
(EPR Dan GHONS YOUR YOUNGSTER
x ~ SEE + aa “a ata _. § Ses j JA “Sh=
NG SEE OUR SELECTION OF~ ope ener aN repeat... VN h er V : ' CLOTHES FOR NEEDY—Four* youths who| other ‘out-county "aces collected the clothingT- : , %
helped collect five tons of clothing for the needy | and $460 for shipping fees on Halloween. Above ~~ : a P f,
; in Germany, Korea and Greece are shown readying | are (left té right) Nancy Werth, 1616 Maplewood | | ss, oe i i a 5
y ; the boxes for shipment to Chureh World Service,| Ave.; Janet Carlisle, 258 State St.; Dick Hathaway, , XN . - aie Sas
: ho geben SS - Kansas City, Mo., which will send them overseas. | 98 E. Iroquois Dr., and Bruce Bancroft, 2944 Edge- — he a, dren's Ben-Gay in Be See
ae i" pes a3 Youth znoups of 14 Pontiac area churches and two | field Dr. OR FAST R EF, rub inch mil version : &
pe eget! — ~ _f It's @ . relieving §&
ao oa FOR THE FALL SEASON ‘ | Hoback and Thomas W. Green | ' Sounds Kinda Feeble the blue peckaer i ntsins the same pat as been
' os eee Cortisone and ACTH of. the Clineh--Valley—Clinie, Ben-Gey- he soothing lanolin skin!
8 . : h a Hospitals, Richlands, Va. - | BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (UP)—/2™ agents, only the n't irritate sensitive as
: @ Our new stock of lamps will thrill you. There are deco- Used for Snake Bite They told of three children | When officers made a routine increased $0 it WO copyright 1051, 09 TH Leeming & 9
5 aes rative lamps . . . distinctive lamps .. . table lamps ) bitten by _polsonous snaked. ’inspection of the Brownsville ae d od | | CHICAGO (UP) —Cortisone Each recovered after cortisone jai) cel! of a prisoner listed as | “keg ... bridge lamps...study lamps...modern lamps . -anc- ACTH have proved of vatue-OX ACTH therapy, in addition poste ree 33 they found | euicx! CHILDREN’ S “Te mur
eb ... lamps for every need, all in the very latest colors in the treatment of snake bite Jn each case, the doctors|® hole had been made in the |
A report on three cases was a few hours, and recovery oc- | “Oh, I was just trying to make | _ ; ea ei iiiti‘(‘é‘éét poisoning, according. tO an said, the swelling, pain and | brick_wall__behind his_bed_|
and designs. article in the Journal of the high temperatures resulting| Deputy Sheriff Bill Gatiiff| epark a
American Medical Association. | from the bites subsided within asked what the hole was for.
made by Drs. _Willlam W. ‘curred within a few days. | bond,* Lee replied. FE Onremiat Bauete
Pa
Michigan hospitals are sroviding
ae =
Blue Cross- Blue Shield pay more
...for more hospital and medical
= oy « services ... for more people!
SURGICAL CARE
ONE IN EVERY THREE FAMILIES WiLL-FACE
: A HOSPITAL BILL THIS YEAR!
| ele ARE YOU PROTECTED?
: > Ix YOUR LIFETIME, you've seen public health-care tmproved
% beyond measure. Much of this medical progress is due to the
OXYGEN BED AND NURSING CARE increased services rendered by your community hospitals.
} Our hospitals were once thought of as places to go only
: G4 ces in acute emergencies. Today they represent the very founda-
X <=> tion of our community health protection!
’ ft / \ 4 \ - i"
] )\ se apes iq -
poe. & . This changing concept has increased hospital usage and
ele NX \ \\ 4 ae | \e| expanded the range of Aosfntal services. Naturally, these hoe-
\ pital services are costly! That's why your Blue Cross - Bine
—'| =. Shield protection against the expense of hospital bills is mare
important now than ever before.
In 14 years, Michigan Blue Cross - Eine Shicid heve paid out
over 300 million dollars im. subscriber benefits. With over
$ million members, Blue Cross - Blue Shield is ms Michigan's
est widely iiiad healthcare protection.
Whet BLUE CROSS does:
Blue Cross Comprehensive Group Hospital Plan covers a°
wide range of hospital services, for up to 120 days, in any
one of over 200 participating hospitals.
Wheat BLUE SHIELD does:
Blue Shield Medical-Surgical Plan_pays generous amounts
to your doctor for thousands of listed medical-sur gical
procedures and for his hospital visits to you im now
surgical cases.
How to Get BLUE CROSS - BLUE SHIELD:
No. physical examination is nec _ Ask your employer, —
or check your Farm Bureau. "Witte er: ‘call your i ——————
Blue Cross - Blue Shield office. X-RAY EMERGENCY SERVICE
~
a ahi to
“
ao BLUE, CROSS - BLUE SHTELD ,
3 Michigan Hospital Service - a: Medical—Serrice——....
RAN
rie dl
~ Your ticket to worry-free recovery! Ne red tape!
Blve Cross-Bive Shield pay hospital and dectors directly! Nees
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MO aA ATMO ATOLL. ’ > ’ ey "
George Burns
alls an an ro
sen ce.
-- Today's Television. Proarams==
=—==00
TV HIGHLIGHTS
6:30—(7}—Wild Bill . Hiekok.- Guy }-
Madison in Western film. (4)— “Camille”
with Michelle Mor-
gan, Arthur Franz...
16:00—(4)—Who Said That. “June | 3:30—(7)—"'Cowboy Colt.” (2)-—
5:00—WJIR, News
rr Serr a Traveler. “y}--SayVariety in Friends,
Three Rivers Man Dies; Best Pana. cea | why pO ma se
lor. R. Sligh 2s med
to Visit Schools NEW YORK (INS)—Charies R.
-
to Beat Senator | Condemn Ferguson for KALAMAZOO ae
(UP) — Thomas
, 20, died.at Bronson Hos-
of injuries he suffered | 94
last -Thursday. when his car struck
a utility pole.
Bread making is one-of the most
ancient of human arts.
Time off for Sports. Bill Flem-| Lockhart and White House cor-| —Turn toa Friend. Interests Are American ae — ht Best ———— _——
“dng. (2)—Telenews Ace. Ken guest . 4:30—(4)—"On Your Account.” . $14, by visiting schools and learn- terest ‘arme Prem . ae eee saapae
“ Cline. iT] Sere On. ~_— (2)}—Feature Theater. (7)—Em for Wedded Bliss me first-hand nora aoe he — In of F rs a
6:45—(4)—Man About Town. Bob| Sales variety comedy. Westmore. HOLLYWOOD — Absence is the major crisis” in education. LANSING @—In two moves, the
Maxwell; music. (2)—Weather-| News. (4)—News. 5:00—(4)—“‘Adventure Patrol.” (7) | best panacea for a happy mar- oa be oe Democratic State Central Commit-
man. Dr. Everett R. Phelps. ea yh — rage Sidney a = riage, points out George Burns, Grand Rapids furniture manufac-| ee yesterday showed its deter- ALL YOU HAVE TO PAY oa
—Famous Playhouse Toler Chan 5:15—(4)—“Gabby whose marriage to Gracie Allen is
Ne Burke im “Dear Amanda.”| (—Weathercast. (2) — Play. 5:39(4)—"Howdy Doody.” (2)—| one of the happiest in show busi | ‘er. emphasized that business and) mination to beat U. S. Sen. Homer TO “ROCKET” AWAY 15 : (4)—Football “flms. U. of M. a er non i “Sports."* ' nee. ee ee nn Sane 8 ee nee oe
e 11: 20—(4)—Plainclothesman ee ee es ieee: —_ = Son an ™ ~ an & re-election next year. 4 4 - Dor }+— "= — j “pf * : en ke eae re TUESDAY MORNING 5:45—(2)—Kartoons. (T)—Weather. RG poo aalog. ~ chimes “real — which, “he ae) The central committee adopted nn — meet ‘ ” 7:00—(4)—“"Today.” 1 a »jase facing ‘ a resolution condemning a ‘The Indian Giver. 8:00—(1)—""W. M. Kelly.” TUESDAY EVENING = who has been agreeing with George from kindergarten through gradu-| +... istentt
Date” = temo gc (4) — ” w-Detrolt Deadline.” @—"Kit altar by saying “Ido.” From coast to coast, he said. | tarmers.”' | Arthur Murray. Damone is = - Carson.” “cities are reporting overcrowded :
guest star with Arthur and Kath- | °45~-(2)—"News. » | €:15—(4)—""News.”” (D—"Sports.” | _ Burns explains that different | 1, rooms, deteriorating facilities} Assembling @ record : M 10:60—(4)—“Ding Dong School. careers, different interests and * Enroll-| em fer am tustrection = ryn Murray. (2)—News. Doug “Billy Graham.” (2 ge (1)—Agar Thea- and teachers. : oe m— y (2)— oven Gitizcont tanto aso haste ments in public schools, he pointed | party leaders broke them “arthur Godtfrey-* interesting te
7:45—(4)—News gee “Per 18:38—(4)—"Glamor Girl.” (D—| © oi ee tai are Soak Of-2P min | So tne Sang manawa a er: Cameron Swayze. (2)—Perry) “Wonderland.” t Republican | Como. Perry and Fontane Sis- | 11:¢9—(4)—“Hawkins Falls.” (1) | 1:00 — (4) — “Storybook. (T)— oe ey pe shildren. iacheak, tat & cae ok — ters with popular ballads. “Charm Kitchen.” Biff Baker. (2)—This is Show hos naar Naw marital . geen was alse the target. :
$:00—(7)—Sky King. Kirby Grant | 11:18—(4)—“The Bennetts.” (2)—| Business. , Burns _ Nothing, agree No § n of Break : as crime fighter. (4)—Name| Baird T:—(—" Mest the Artist.” ee ee ater poor pe bear fs 3 3 — — “Three Steps to | 7:30—(4) — Dinah Shore (7) — surprise and interest out opera campaign
comedy musical quiz Bure | Heaven.” (2)—"Strike It Rich.” | American Cavalcade. (2)—Doug bes the connubial state more than in Aircraft Strike — of $195,000, to” be raised~-by :
and Allen. GOOrge and Gracie ee eee rexcon’ |r:erO—Ngue. (2)—Jene Fro-|lile sccording to boeprint, betn| LOS ANGELES Negotiations prepa | Yow price depend: epes dhotee 4 hire business manager to con- TUESDAY AFTERNOON ; = 4 , eee Democratic State Convention | ena
tal ecuoneht, Bataces: ee co need i 7 © as oa a ce a an sircreft ledustrye. for next year was ordered held : Supesd end easananton Wess - 4:280(T)—Liberace. Pi im-| “12 Film. (2)—Valiant Lady. 8:00—(4)—Milton Berle. (7)—Mo- | unexpected little incidents that add | men bao ai ¥y a Cand Baaide dee 0 . a A
= 12: 15—"Love of Liles.” tion Picture Academy. (2)—Life | flavor and color. Dougias—but there Gov moy wary dightty & edjsting M,
Met soprano Patrice Munsel is | "stars on Seven.” (2)--"To- | 8:30—(2)—Jeweler Showcase. our lives according to a set pat- | 17-day-old strike that has virtually | leaders he would be ° to} . charges. Check our cosy terms .
guest_soloist. (2)-—-Talent Scouts. | sare Search 9:00—()—"Firesidé Theater.”-(T) | tern.” admits Gracie. “But we had | @ited-production-at-North Ameri. jcans if the . GINE ead libero! clhowonces All prices :
Godfrey with talent. 12:45—(2)—""Guiding Light.” —Room for Daddy. (2) Foreign |to give it up after a few days. It |©&" Aviation plants. an cee "ROCKET EN ——— hjet te chenge wthaat vetien:
—_ s < ‘
9:60—(7)—Notre Dame Games. 1:00—(4)—""Jean McBride Show.” | Intrigue. was all too cut and dried. aes Gas bee eee aad and unemployment compen- ; ie
Football films. (4)—Dennis Day. | (2)—"You're What You Eat.” |%:30—(4)—Circle Theater. (T)—| “We depend upon each other for — tte the (eation laweand-0- Sale. employ | Dennis plays host to Edie Can-| 4.35 (2)—“Bob M ABC Album. (2)—Suspense. | certain things, but at the same pre tsar rea rmary pig Hm ment practices bill. This wes 8 tor. (2)—I. Love Lucy. Lucy 1:38 — (4) — Good Cooking. (2)— 10:60—(4)—“Judge for for Yourself. time, we can work out individual |i.. and Fresno, Calif and Colum-| reference. to @ newspaper story
makes bet to tell the truth for | Garry Moore Show. — 4D" “Danger.” «= ww} Problems as they arise. = sd is ng 4 the: Republicans wilt try to make | ete orpsmosis DEALER eee hours. ira — "Strictly Female.” | 10:30—-(@)—“‘All Star Theater. = ter ws tobe | Fears of a in Williams “blush” by dong that ——-——— “7 :30—(4)—Robert Mongomery Pre- | 2:00—(2)—I'll That. (4)—| (7)—Name’s the Same. (2)—Fa- isn’t mecessary for us general tieup |
9 2: , Buy together all of the time. As aviation industry were eased sent. Brian Keith in “Weekend Telerama. vorite Story. _ 7 ther of tact, ~ & further yesterday when members The U. S. Census Bureau esti-
Pass” G. 1. tries to eacape from | 2:15—(7)-""News.” Oy ,, D—"Soupy's =a hee baat ee of the AFL International Associa-| mates that an American is born true self. (2)— Buttons. | 3:39 — (7) — “Theater.” (2) — ” (2)—“News. matter briet the aver-
Camels: “Houseparty.” 11:15—(4)—Weathe recast. (D—| be, we both appreciate each | 0" of Machinists turned down the | every mine seconds, on 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. Phen 78 42008 . : Te that latest offer of Lockheed but age. —— : 10:00—(7)—Boxing. International | 2:45—(4)—Nancy Dixon. Shamrock Theater. (2)—Go other much mere. for & continuation of negotiations | — — 2
James Parker. (2)—Studio One.| Big Payoff. 11:28—(4)—Startight Theater. | ach other as-often- as the- public | week Douglas workers represented = ; ; suspects, even though they are | the IAM at Santa Monica did the . , a:
' F ‘. teamed together on the same tele- | same thing and those at El Se- z
-- Today's Radio Programs -- site gorse ite Bum wn | nde vied 10 scar 4 company Allen Show.” George leaves his |ffer of a Scent hourly wage
| home at 9:30 every morning, goes | boost. :
PL — = — 1 - —p-- hh x 2 o-Ps —without—eetics___| to @ hotel to work turnished by stations listed in — this column jeer te change rr eas
we, oem CKLW, . (308) ww, (a5) WCAR, (1138) WXYZ, (177) =——-WJBE, (1490) "nthe ie yh t iol
the chores of running
—— SHE: Reve mem mento | SEE: SL (nel she chope, conte “WWJ, News by True ¢:45—WXYZ, News, Wolfe od TUESDAY EVENING care of the children. |
Cielo News, Sports | 7:60-WJR, Dick Burris WIOK, Welcod .90—W IR. News “Outside of cur
WJBK, Headless wach, tome, welte abt WIR. duck Yeiee Wer, , McKensis | explains, “our interests 5 C15 WIR. ¢ rat Quartet WJBK, News, Lenhart WXYZ, Leonard Stanley SF: Es. Eroctecs Wessemen | sted. :
CKLW, Eddie Chase "WXYE. Dict Ougood. — a+ aenanea ym ag hm ae “Even as far as the chi
oe 2.30—WWI, Listen, Live $-00—WIR. Road ef Life WXYZ, Lee Smith concerned,” he says, ‘‘we 4
ae eee WXYZ. Pret Woite WW News Muthotond CKLW..Bédia Chase___| out a feasible plan. i
WXYZ. McKenzie wie. ie we and Binge | Ceiw: fers #:30—WIR, Bod R of disciplining Sandra aid-Gracie- | ¢.48_WJR. Lowell Thomas WCAR, C WJBK. News, McLeod wee ee tales care of Ronnie , WWJ, Nations’ Business 2:48—WWwJ, News WCAR, News, Club 1139 YZ, : wel
SS epee aes : - ‘ek. te Pees ¢:45—WIR, Lowell Thomas even the rearing of the children ,
WWJ, 3 Bter Ext EIR, Jock, Wane CKLW, Waits Quest House has worked out without a hitch.’ WXYZ. Bil Stern Ww. Minute , ‘wwad Extra : CKLW. Pulton Lewis Jr WXY2, Dick 1:36—WJR, Dr. Malone wxYz. Stern y WJBK, Tom COL, Bown Tete Mary CKLW, " hb_wwd, Alex Dries vay pow CELW. Your Bey Bud WJBK, Tom George Heart Sufferers |
Show World $:15—WIR, Bud News, Chub 1130 Tas—WWs, Alex Deter M Ge
— = = WEYS, Pred Welle 1:45—WIR, Guiding Light CKLW, Hews ay t Help
12e-W I, Ponty geeeten | woe Seine naa | 286=WIR, Mra, Burton 138—W. Sreleton
Ste Lone aang | “WCAR, Memetecr WEYE, School Muste Mg From Marathon The STRATOND = 21" console with ie 8:45—WCAR, Radio Revival ee ee ae CRLW: Gabrish Beatter” PHILADELPHIA @ — Knowl. | ing Arab spokesman, will be HALOLIGHT. Hand-rubbed Mahog
wwe, One Man's Pamily 000—W IR. wee en WCAR, News, Club 1130 3: gh 3,5 are edge of the effects of exercise on| #2 opportunity to speak. He de-|] any or Blonde finish.
Renan alee g — wxyY Breakfast — 2:15—WJR, Perry Mason | CKLW, Three Suns Persons suffering from heart dis- | clined an invitation to appear with
aco ae es mss waam = _ WxYZ. Paul Winter #00 WIR People Punny | eases may be increased because | Edan. Easy Credit Terms
WXYZ, Your Land. Sine CAR. News, Rhythm | "2:38—WJR, Nora Drake _— Shore {of a 26-mile marathon run staged | CKLW. The Falcon |} WWJ Dial ve v2. 3 Oty Byline there terda t Kell 2 Heod
WJBK. Tom George 9:15-WJR, Mae Hawt Show) wxyz, Paul Winter CKLW, Hammer Man yes Vv. ogg Hospital
WWJ, Bob Maxwell CKLW. Your Boy Bud WJBK, News, George | The 30 distance runners com- 2 TV is your BEST BUY: 8:15—WXYZ, Sammy Kaye oa. ee ae hak cog |, WEAR. Sports $:15_WWJ. To Be An'ne@ | peting in the first annual Valley | President-Elect of MHA 5 REASONS WHY a
8:30—WJIR, Talent Grout 2:48—WJIR, Brighter Day WXYZ, Gammy Kaye Forge Marathon over Philadelphia) GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — An- amazing
WW). Voice 9:30—WJR, Mrs. Page WWJ, Ross Mulholland §:30—WJR, The Norths 9, Full-Depth Pictures with j, WXYZ, Band of the Day | WWJ, Bob Maxwell CKLW. Paula Stone Www. Berrie Cre streets and suburban roads drew Pattullo, director of hospi- has new PHOTO-
CKLW, CaLW, Kishen Chub WCAR, Club 1138 WY Band of the Day underwent a series of medical tals for the W. K. Kellogg Foun- 1, Sylvania Tv of all picture CREW. Counterepy | ee tan WAYR Bend of the De aes . definition :
8:45—WXYZ, Vandercook WWJ, Here's the Answer i ee WJBK, Tom George tests before and after the race. eg _ rig is new oa nee a ine photograph! :
9:00—WIR, Lux Theater Wane’ bese. — CELW. News, Piano Briets | $:45—WXYZ, Vandercook The tests will determine, their — = = Michigan tions like
Wws, Teieghene Hoyt WCAR, Temple Academy WCAR, News. bt 9:00—WJR, Johnny Doilar sponsors hope, the impact of Patullo was elected at the asso Pictures and sound Triple-Locked |
CKLW, Hour of tg 3:15—WJR. House Party WXYZ, Town Meeting tremendous exertion and syste- , |
oe W Wd. Raps ot Am Wath ta Tees wor WWJ, Road of Life CELW, News, Roth matic exercises of the heart and siation's 20th saneel soosicn SSS for greater stability. |
~ Rep Roundup | * CKLW, Momechats— ~}+—-_CELW,. ~ Bonn -Sosage— ris : -| epened-here- Sunday. = in pe cai easel a WJBK, N McLeod : 9:15—CKLW, Roth {: He will succeed the Rev, Wil- COM. _——
Wek. Larry Gente” News *WEY2, Paul Winter | ys von osm peeme |. X-PAy8 Were inchuded in the bat-| iam C. Perdew, §, Studio-Clear Sound for 10:06 WJR, Vaughn Monroe | 18:15—WCAR, Temple See fee laden’ WWJ, Swayze, Forvane tery of special examinations ad-|of Bronson Methodist Hospital, PLETE TV enjoyment!
Wart. News Wee, Seb Bape 3:45—WJR, Gal Sunday WIBK. Gentile Ends | ministered by technicians from | Kalamazoo, who, as previous pres-
CKLW, Edwards pAA Whtepersng Streets WW), Rignt to Happiness | . wave view the news| 7° ted with | jdent-elect, takes over office today. :
WCAR, Walled Lake Schools | 4.99 Wor. News . the Middie Atlantic Amateur Ath- . 19:,18—-WXYZ, Top of Tews 10:00-—WJR, Parsons ; Ww, Top This 10:45—WWJ, Break the Bank waits “be sadkanate : ww, letic Union |
WIBK. L. Gentile cxLw. Becuty Came. WIR Mowe as Chin: Geauk mevwre | cae Sygeamenin phyeiion ae an REMEMBER... —— : 10:30—WJR, Wiserd ons ——— 10:15—-WIR. Mich 000 A. D. “ oka + a WWJ, Wayne University 11:00—-WW4, Strike It Rich | ¢:25—WJR. Country Tunes Mischa Kottler U. 5S. Public Health Service and Y Ha oe = - { , __ WWJ, Stella Dallas | ‘ your , by Sevte- aie Smiw. kage Pair t Wak. Tuk Sports ] REZ To — Ot a pe reo ONLY $ LVANIA TV HAS LOLIGHT TV fer © wade-ta sew. .
10:45—WJR, Beulah wean. News, Music ‘Sai wikae beeen a — of Odds | 7 COME IN... A DEMONSTRATION WI » ow NO OBLIGATION : CRLW, “Quiet Sanctuary | 11:80-WJR, Make ‘Up Mina waar ee met WXYZ, Edwin C. mi The age of the entries ranged er wor oe
wale © with cones ber WCAR, Your Land. Mine CKLW, Girardin - | from 20-year-old Ralph Eilberg to ae Ww), News CKLW for Day 4:45—WWJ, Women in House | 10:45—WJR, Fields Trie 65-year-old Amos Kujala. oa, a ed _-*
sat ee | een = Mitchell's TV Sales and Servic CKLW, News, Bonds jews
| Ee eel = Il: pg a Bob Reynolds
WWJ, Norman Cloutier
WXYZ, Top of Town .WJBK, CKLW, Music
Trae wie ve, Loge’s Dance Party
cuLw, Phil With Mu WIBK,
—— WCAR,
TUESDAY MORNING
6:30—WJR, Farm Forum
' WWJ, Bob Maxwell
11:45—WJIR, Rosemary
ww, Chance
News, McLeod
12:06—WJR, Wendy, Werren
ww. —?
pt Ady Turn to Friend
‘Curt Massey
News, George
News
a%: gg «= Re Aunt Jenny.
wwi, oe
CKLW, News
WCaR, Moon Caller _ CKLW,
wwi, 5:15—WJR, Music Hall
WWJ, Front Page Parre!l
5:36—WWJ, Lorense Jones
__.WHYZ News WWJ, Plain Bil! as oe News
WXYZ, Wattrick. McKenzie WWJ, News
cue stn, =| Gaue move Ww M .
wax WIBK. News
THhIs=WIk; Bot Rerncide.......
WW, Town & Country
WXYZ, Top of Town
CKLW, Sports, Music
saad baie 11.30 f ‘
Blemishes! But First Line and
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PONTIAC, MICHIGAN "THE PONTIAC PRESS
— nen
A LITTLE SHAVER—Daddy isn’t going to be| keeps his shaving equipment. Though it seems a
pleased when he learns that three-year-old Michael | little early, the little shaver figures it’s never too
Collingridge of London has discovered where hej early to brush up on technique. e) on,
pe es
:
er ie
United Press Phete
4 Planes Lost
but Pilots Safe Head Winds Eat Up Gas
for Corsairs on Way to
Florida Base
MIAMI, Fla. @ Eight
Marine corps fighter pilots on a
1,100-mile flight from Puerto Rico | teesed
to Miami are back at their sta-
tion today but four of the planes
were lost.
Three of the F4U Corsair one-
seater planes were ditched at sea
and another was wrecked at near-
by Homestead yesterday after
strong headwinds ate up their fuel
H. White of. Murfreesboro, Tenn.,
Capt. William H. Johnson of Park-
ridge, Ill., and Lt. Forest Dawson
landed safely but the fifth, piloted
by Capt. Donaold Edwards of
Miami, came. in with its engine
dead, bounced on rough land and
slid into a canal. Edwards climbed
from the wreckage unscathed.
Pilots--who -landed-- safely were
Maj. Mervin B, Porter, Maj. Wil-
liam A. Shepherd, Lt. Thomas R.
Wiseman and Lt. Gordon W. Holm.
Eight Long Years
he plans to
States before Christ-
Conn.
Their home towns were not avail-
able, :
Scientists Measure Effect.
Think Polio Development
May Be Stopped by GG ATLANTA (®#—Gamma Globulin,
first used widely last summer in
an attempt to ward off the crip-
“We confidently expect that the
survey will give the first conclus- 23 epidemic areas,
said the survey is ex-
to: *| pected to:
1. Point to leads that might sug-
gest improved for
predicting polio epidemics in spe-
2. Provide some indication
whether it is possible “to set up
& program of mass immunization
with Gamma Globulin in a given
epidemic area in time to be ef-
fective.”
3. Determine the value of giving
GG to household and other con-
tacts of established polio cases.
To Open Stretch of New
Road in St. Clair County
LANSING (UP) — The State
Highway Department announced
#1
{
wat Red Prisoner Marked;
Gets 72 Hours in Water been a prisoner of the Russians,
at that time, for two years.
T had had one earlier encounter
‘with this same Russian officer, a
month before. On that eccasion, I
was awakened one night by «a
a Boys Club |
TEEPE? aide
226 Tots Receive
Vision Tests Here guard who told me I was wanted
at the “NKVD hut,” the secret
police headquarters in the camp.
The burly, mustached Russian
officer sat facing me across the
back of. a rough, wooden chair
when I walked into the room. One
weak lightbulb dangled from the
ceiling.
“Your name,” he demanded.
I told him.
“Where were you born?” was his
next question.
“In New York. United States of
America," I replied.
“You are a liar!” he shouted.
“You are not an American.”
“I am an American,” I re-
peated.
He rose from the chair and
rushed toward me. “You are a
Har!” He reared again, and
struck me in the face. He kept
pounding my face with bis hands
and fists until I fell back against
the wall.
through the door into the arms of
the waiting guard.
“Don’t ever,” were the officer’s
words, “‘lie to me like that
ended with my betrig
into the water cell. It was
For 24 hours the two of us shared
the water cell. and during all that
time I ignored him. Finally they
took him out and, shortly after, I
was brought out, too—my miser-
able prison clothes soaked, my skin
Again I was taken before the
Russian secret police officer.
“Do you confess you are a spy?”
he demanded.
“No,” I said.
Why hé tet me.go then I don’t
I went back to my barracks to
—
< ~ The Junior League of Birming-
tham, which has just concluded a
Rolay Oak Man Wins
Lay Leadership Citation
DETROIT (UP) — Ray W. Lab- bitt, of 1809 Sycamore, Royal Oak,
Managers of United Church Men.
The board awarded the citations
at a Saturday night dinner meet-
ing. United Church Men, a unit
of the National Council of Church-
es, was organized three years ago
and now claims a membership of
12,000,000.
the conference board of lay activi-
ties, Barnhart is chairman of the
United Church Men of Indiana.
You're Guilty! Next... _—
TABLE TOP ORATOR—Contender for mayor at| “Go to the polls and vote.” A major talking point
Pontiae Boys’ Club during the club’s first election, | on the young politicos” platforms were school marks | cjub’s
Leonard Sharp, 12, son of Mr. and Mra. Wayne | and other achieveménts. He lost to Dick Green by
Jones of 88 N. Sanford St., instructs members: | eight votes.
Pitching Horseshoes
aii, 23%} -
=
¥
—_
EJ
A]
AF EE
A
gentlemen
in the saddle with him, feeling
the wind in our thinning hair and
I the roar—of_the crowd in our fail-
|ing ears.
°
* *
In our book, Earl Sande. bless Elderly Gatfers. Happy
Over Sande’s Kadoodle ee
i i
f Hi |
ra
aH a i
i 2
a
5
S.J i;
i |
| TT
rf tf i
tit rfl 4
i Te Mik ‘ # :
4
E t | ! FE i R
eB i
Come to think of it, however,
the young man is merely follow-
ing in the footsteps of his remark-
able grandfather who, with his
own hand, used to pass out shiny
dimes to little girls and boys. his-balding-tittle-head,is-the big- + f ea Ses
irst Mayor —
Dick Green, 16,
Wins by 8 Votes Aldermen Also Named
by Youths in Group’s
Initial Contest
Pontiac Boys’ Club elected its
it Te | il Fs
;
f kits ? i
ili E
i |
‘g | : I
emotional well-being of the nation,
but I’m afraid it would only |
ing to men who are only doing |
what-they-think-is-right-__ | alyzed by B. Francis Acacia Fruit
i
‘ j zi
| f
! \ g
: Fe]
ad fi original tree, some
ings from it and had them
of the United States Forest Prod-
hard, dry shells an unappetizing
seeds. :
‘For the Record’
Maurice Zolotow, author of “No
Business Like Show Business.” pays
@ return visit to For the Record to
ee the page ed capese of the
rey-LaRosa tiff and tell why
the public iteeif is to blame.
* * *
We, who professionally live with
the stars—of—stage, screen and
television, and -
pleasantly conscious — that these
glamorous creatures are human
beings—with ali the frailties and at > >
crudeness, all the passions and sin-
fulness of the average man and
woman. * * .
It genuinely puzzles me why peo-
ple should imagine that just be-
Now, you'd” Wink that” after
; -
dom in 1944 he received the kind of
wild reception from audiences —
that would be enough to make any
mortal think he is a king.
fabulous saloon-keeper, ofice told
me:. “Babe Ruth drank at least
two bottles of whi every day—
and it didn't bart batting aver-
age one ‘pernt’,”
ee eet But to reveal these human weak- |
Nessess in our idols would con-
tradiet the delusion that they are |!
heroic, clean-living gods gnd so all
us, all the writers who func-
i —~
=
= ° i
il 4 z
z
2 :
3 i
i Ee I
i |
li Show-Business Folks Are Not Gods and They Make Mistakes, Too
And this is how a great number
i ? i3¢ F 3 gfe
i i vs i >
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the bureau since 1936.
NJOM uP
Red diplomats met secretly
which obviously interested
American negotiators.
_ break
| marks.”’
statement, but said
,ment."”
on what to talk about first
In past negotiahons,
level meetings
Existence of ‘‘blood prints.”
are patterns of the
field.
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| considerable
‘stirred up by a report that RAF
night fliers, bombing great blocks |
ij by aiming Bob Considine Says:
big War, the Tast one, that is,
consternation - was
of German cities, were told to
shoot at Luftwaffe interceptors not
- packe
The enemy could be seen better
ij at night by that method. the man-
ual said. We also heard these men
lived on a carrot diet.
Well, sir, all this remained a
the other day I attended a lunch.
LOSES POST — The removal of
| Miss Jane Hoey, above, as director
of the Bureau of Public Assistance
|was announced in Washington by ;
Secretary of Welfare Oveta Culp of his outstanding achievements } ‘
ols Wald. 47, professor of biol-
Miss-Hoey, 61, has headed |
Korean Peace Talk
Plan Meeting Held completely drys |P=. toda
on an agenda for planning a Ko-
rean peace conference and _ the
Communists offered a statement
Although the lower level meet-
ings are secret by agreement, U-S. |
delegate Kenneth Young told news- |
men he had taken a 10-minute
“to study carefully their re- ,
Young would not discuss the Red
“We hope we can get an agree
Monday's 1 hour and 45 minute
session was the second held by
staff officers after top-level diplo
| mats in 11 meetings couldn't agre«
tie Reda | from night blindness
|often have made their concessions
in lower level, closed-door sessions
rather than in the publicized high-
are almost as distinc*ive as finger-
prints, has been announced. They
migration of
colloidal particles in blood plasma
under the influence of an electric
— | what communism is
eon at which the Albert and
Mary Foundation awards for 1955
— beautiful miniatures of the
contributors to the
well-being of man. THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953
down th® barrels at |
ithem but by looking a bit to the |
very dark mystery to me until |
winged victory of Samothrace — |
| were given to a group of dis- |
| tinguished
One of the winners was =|
ogy, Harvard, “. . . in recognition
in” explaining. the chemistry of
vision In man.” |
Dr. Wald turned out to be a/|
quiet spoken man with a sénse
of story that indicates he
t a mar Ir} urn al
stance he ‘beictiy
wded history of
Man's first re- ISH) tee Fer
traced | the
ment Dlindne s
corded complaint about it is found
1 papyrus dating back to 1870
BC... and so is man’s first record-
ed ‘and still
the trouble- valid)
A papyrus dealing with the
complaints of womanhood listed
as a treatment for night blind- wo =
treatment of |
|
ness” . . . make her eat the |
liver of an ass, raw.” It was
another way of ordering vitamin |
A, Dr. Wald told us. ; vet
But it took a long time to identify
the relationship between vitamin |
A and night blindness. he went on
In 1917 the German U-boat block-
ade became so acute that Denmark
was denied f@ider for its cattle
Butter production fell off 90 per
cent. It was severely rationed
Almost instantly, Danish clinics |
were filled with children suffering
And so, in
the midst of a great war, medical
science comprehended that the suf-
| fering children were suffering only
because their systems had become
Gen. Dean Says U. S.
Should Not Woo POWs
WASHINGTON wW — Maj. Gen
Wilham Dean says the Korean
War seems to have given Ameri-
cans ‘‘a bigger comprehension of
(but) we still |
have a great deal to learn
Dean, who spent nearly
years in Communist
camps in Korea, said on an NBC
television program yesterday the |
United States should not seek to |
three
| persuade prisoners ‘ho have elect-
ed to stay with the Reds to return |
home.
“We should tell those individuals |
| what they can expect there but we |
| should not make an emotional ap- |
peal for their return,”’ he said. |
“If we have nothing to otter—let |
| them stay.” prisoner |
ceived through butter. :
But mainly he spoke of the eye
Cause of Night Blindness Long a Mystery to Man.
NEW YORK (INS)—During the | accustomed to vitamin A as re-|and its odd way of receiving light part needs to be aimed @t an_ob-
and gloom. One part of it takes ject obliquely, and is further com-
light better than another, another — a
Li
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LION. STORE'S —~
33rd ANNIVERSARY!
VETERAN DRIVER—Ralph Hartley Jr.,
tine years old, but he’s already driving his second car.
his father, kneels alongside the youth as he sits in his car, ready
United Prees Photo
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racing it will be limited strictly to the backyard.
o
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a prem reerret ~ “ jiniennanioeicekis emit irae ween Sete ee ee Ss py ! yes eee ene aera
:
ii ia (\ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9,-1953 nn ee eee ninth
AMA to Drop: Cigarette, | Mj ill Quit | Heard in a Pontiac Church Sunday AMA to Drop» Cigarette, |Mitchell Will Quit
CHICAGO @® — The American! @§ Dem Head by a7 A Chr istian M ust So Liv e
Medical Assn. will drop all cig-
Se a A gn ee, ene A |He Converts by Example Because You. Dedicate It. publications starting Jan. 1, 1954. | out as chairman of the Democratic! The Aev. David Mortensen, — because “a large number of physi-} 1. sional Committee” in plenty of | Pastor of the Marimont-Baptist— cians interviewed expressed their cas i ak for Ae Steven- | Church since February 1952,
disapproval” of such ads, |son for the party's 1956 presid “Your Gift to terity”
Although many brilliant men | ‘MTs party chairman — on| the subject of his sermon
| have had large brains, some out- | a CBS television program yester- | Sunday morning. The church
| Standing men have had very small | day, should be neutral among var-| Was dedicated in 1938.
| — ious aspirants for the nomination,| A summary of the Rev. Mr. and “I'll be partisan."’ Stevenson |
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cated to a certain definite
memory, the importance
of good design and indi-
9 Selected Mitchell for the post after | Mortensen’s sermon follows: vidual treatment cannot | on naa 1962 ‘dential “| Have you ever considered in | winning the 1952 presidential nomi-| your gitt to succeeding gener- over - emphasized, nation. | ations? , Countless numbers of new
| “ Mitchell said he intends to serve
Cl omac through next year’s campaign for| One of the many joys of
control of Congress, but that if| the Christian is the privilege
Good Time the Democrats want a new chair-| which is ours to se live our
Ruin 7 . man before then, ‘“‘Im awfully! lives that we will influence designs and carving sug-
gestions are available in
our files at all times to
supplement our display of OF THE
a wd wwMS! = feasy to get rid of.” | others, not only for good, but finished memorials we
$13.6 | for God and for glory. have on exhibit. We in-
Hits at Permanent, | KElisha’s life was character- Vite your visit at any time 'ized by miracles so that the most convenient to you
Large Investments people who lived in Elisha’s
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica #—Jose| Gay saw at least 13 mighty
Figueres, Costa Rica's new Amer- | Miracles.
| ican-educated President, has taken| As a church, we are thank- REV. DAVID MORTENSEN | A coll of Toms costs onty s dime. Be | ctrice and declared his opposition | ful to God that during recente = it's worth its weight io gold whea ae . wee w av 2 = 2 playing gol, heating of relasing over |'° “Permanent large-scale invest. | ks we have witnessed mod | enemy, Elisha spoke, saying, Office Hours
Daily 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. toS p.m Ee
and SHIRT LAUNDRY Mein Office and Plant—944 W. Huron FE 2-0231
s ment” in this banana-growing Cen- | €Tm miracles; men and women | ” -
7 NEIGHBORHOOD STORES TO SERVE You aid ledlnenice ne scl ace eon | tral American republic and boys and girls have been | "Thus oa. oo on —
a @) 2) ‘ (5) (6) | going to spoil your fen But Tams | Speaking at inaugural ceremo-| transformed by the power and | thority and delivered God's |
1536 Walten | 516 | 3005 188 N. 397 | mewtralize excess aad almost before it nies yesterday at the National! grace of God. aaa ae
: Unien | Bivd. & | Pontiac | Orchard | Johnson Orchard | Starts. Eat 1 of 2 Tums after meals of stadium, Figueres said such out God uses human instrumen- | = se.
3 Lake Sasha- | Trail Lake jal State{ Lake whenever over-indulgence causes dim | id, investments constitute “an talities in the accomplishment The message of the Bible ts Road ww | Road | ; Ave. pall — sone) - |economic occupation similar in of His purposes, the transfor- | gr —— ory rome
- some aspects to military occupa-| mation of human lives. Elisha’s y toe word 0 a LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED | t tion.” llife reveals a, three-fold secret | men's lives are changed to a & MARBLE CO Home of Careful Crystal Cleaning ~ = ‘of the life which can share in| life of worthwhileness. GRANITE . : | ; 2 When Napoleon invaded Portu-|this miraculous change, the| It is by seeing Christ tn our 269 Oakland Ave George E. Slonaker and Sons voms roe we wun gal in 1807, the government of the conversion of the non-Chris-/ lives and hearing the “Way of . ye *-
'eountry was moved to Brazil. — to a genuine Christian. | Life” explained by us that peo- | Phone FE 2-4800
a irae Elisha was a man of os experience the “New
spirit dependence. i SHOP BY | | If we are to have the privi-
The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC PHONE Elisha was a man of faith |lege of sharing in this change —— — and a man of prayer. We can-| we must possess a conviction g , (Mot influence others for Godjof Divine authority and. we No] >. :
_— the Lord Jesus Christ un-;must impart to others: God's | less we have become intimate- | Divine message of forgiveness
| ly acquainted with Him ‘as per-! and life. local °
sonal Saviour and Lord moving The Bible declares “Now Thirdly, Elisha was a man |
_abideth faith” and Elisha’s life, ° incorruptible integrity. = , was characterized by abiding| Elisha’s life was beyond re-}
| faith proach. After the miraculous |
= | healing of Naaman, the cap-|
} ome Word of God teaches, tain of Syria, Elisha refused |
@ effectual fervent prayer } the offered remuneration be- | of a righteous man availeth~ pa cause he knew al! of the honor,
‘ae peeee, Elisha utilised | resulting from the miracle, be- | .
longed to God
| If our supreme desire is to We can only share spiritual KLER STORAGE COMPANY jinfluence others for God, we values if our lives are charac- :
| must, like Elisha, be men and terized by uprightness, strict
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51 W. HURON ST. FE 4-1555
Lnnsateiennneeieeeeeemememmmneme nse Scientia eal
~ = : Soe es ee penta? 4 : ele 2 gee | . Par} es, =e . LS a oS We Se: ee a PSS = Gas 4. ah Fe @ ee
—s a a 1 seca ren Ea oy tt ree i ce tae gr 3 : os! “ # ee Re peices ba’
a ; Sei hal Lae = A \ “i aca : ea ae ! re ie i } re i. om
Se peseee stents — tres! x os hada nt ee kare? 3 — - oe ¥ r ~ “ : ¥ o-- sa Sealed rT md ’ a r
ee ee sees ; r- 7 —4 } 7 aieieeeell : Suaaicrata-wess a “ a ’ r =o 4 is
a y eae, arn _MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1053. | Pests ¥ a — =
i i 3 aa
i : i é 2 s r & " : c—-, =. oe es wiry edhe ‘
. i * he had fought.to a deadlock over “ - 7.2% Caen 2 ‘ ‘ eee ce oe a SER eet
fees to ee —w ‘ — S % eg zi : . ee big waa as
F toh : At both 1 Lt -sesigpeeconenininjeaiiiilies ake ete ee ee eae ae ee
' s court was not = ser te oe
| e:
en ¢ legally diastved the Maps (low: - ibe , om c_ L Land : er house of. Pastiomsent . ‘ail Who TEENAGE ee & : > Sew
of Court, Weeps, Rages, And at each, ‘he ‘used thet) e- ho Have 7 Drivers vont
Threatens Suicide ce at Iran's woes—that once =) Cén Teenagers Get Insurance?
‘ ! If the parents carry our insurance
x ; s om the car we can insure the
TEENAGERS . . . but tall us for
military tribunal to try him as a | Shah. Mike Daniels complete details. It is a NEW PLAN! ee
|| oet tt Raperted Resig Wel | LDAANTIEILS Agency Clad in hts customary pajamas. GTON Gen. George 845% W. Huron St. Ph. FE 4-7644
bl a
CLEANING [or comes 2, yeoman bey Years of research and _ {| after breakfasting Sunday with the |
experience back up our |! ins and queen of Greece in Chic- |
fine workmanship and || “Tne youngsters, children of-DMe. ALWAYS NEWS for SEWING
service. Phone for pick- || and Mrs. J. George Smith of Oswe- } }
go, came to Chicago with their
up today. parents to meet 36-year-old Queen |
Frederika who was unable to visit |
the Smith farm Saturday because
of a cold. King Paul, 51, spent three
hours touring the farm and eat-|
Tih ‘ing a fried chicken dinner pre- |
pared by Mrs. Smith. .
The Smith's eldest daughter, |
Nannette, 11, had wept Saturday |] peemmennen :
when she learned the vivacious | a
|queen was not with the king when
719 West Here iiey ese Gace Free || fo a in _ with the permanent finish Phone FE 4-1536 erika telephoned the- Smiths to] | :
| and expensive combed yarns ' Gen. Nasrollah
ee man of the
aim Tt was the .
ae _ ——— n’ aA r ppe
See oe on . 4 rer enc if :
i a wept, panted, pounded the table Oe Veta theres A. Mullenty,
| ay : af and gesticulated. Boag made fiery bres mortgage benher ond realtor. pest
| = Ep: a =
. : mes i -—- ey
| AWARD FOR DULLES—A three-year-old polio! recognition of the State Department's efforts in a
| vietim, identified only as “Bruce,” in Washington | filling its Community Chest quota. Dulles was
| presented Secretary of State John Foster Dulles | chairman of the departinent’s drive, which netted
16 GENEY DRY CLEANERS oil oldest children, Nannette, Cheryl,| Sunday afternoon for the West |} . — .
| KNOW YOUR Greek Queen a and Kent; 6: The Smith's baby| after midday civie celebration Pick-up and Delivery Service a
° iter, . remained at home. | sponsored federation ° y Pike eee Phone §-6107... '
CLEANER |! Asks Smiths _ The royal couple left Chicago |lenic organizations of Illinois. 13 Went Fie Sieast . ae
HE KNOWS to Breakfast )
DRY CHICAGO @ — Three young )
AY ee eet et
PLAN YOUR
GIFT SEWING ~
Living Room Furniture Week
Yes, it’s Living Room Furniture Week
at Miller’s
Extra Special Reductions this week on all Liv-
ing Room Suites — seperate Sofas — Sectional
Sofas — Lounge Chairs and Rockers.
You will find our Upholstered pieces are all of
better quality, style and construction. Seldom
if ever, sold at this weeks low-low prices.
Millers are known in Pontiac for Better Quality
and because of our location, and lower over-.
head, our prices are always lower — giving you
more quality for your money.
Terms Are Easily Arranged el pf
Coats Reduced
920 Real news! Racks crammed full of all wool,
smartly styled winter coats have heen re-priced.
Rich linings, some milium insulated, all wool =,
curl and boucle fabrics. Some zip-out styles. iA
Sizes 8-18.
Penney’s Second Floor -
Full Bolts of Fresh, Crisp Combed Organdy
in a Full Rainbow of Colors. Permanent
Finish. Washfast Colors. 38” Wide. a
Every Day Store Hours: 9:30 to 5:30—Friday to 9
* 144 OAKLAND AVE. \ (PREE DELIVERY Penny's Third Floor
Pontiac parochials “ended thetr
sort st py ra league season with a 13-6 tri-
Re LT STs} umph over Orehard Lake St. 7 2 PTT ue) Mary in Wisnég Memorial Sta-
Mary s 3 6 44 (46) dium, but 4th-place St. James
Mary JU! e@ @ @ 37. #2] proved te be the determining Weekend results — St. Michael 13, factor in the title race when the
» 8; : RO, 31: 8
Progectsh, fee nica, 1, ot. James, is Dales tied once-beaten St. Rita,
ee 13-13, By BILL MARTIN ; ..
bert erate St: Jamnes—sg are. Si. The tie game produced a 3-way |
4 ~
i
4
. uiWwe
ak ih raat ai aac a Sk aap Sal La \ Mero ieey Vy , cane oe
Y gh . : / Bs ie \ i aoe ne Fgh Rage BONO as RED fe . “ Pe
7 | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953 fo
mss One-Line’-Team —— i
Lindsay-Reibel-Howe Only Punch as
_ SUBURBAN CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Michael a big assist Sunday as
the Shamrocks won a share o! the
Suburban Catholic League's
football championship 1 1903
Remar mate nnn
By JACK SAYLOR
DETROIT — Throughout their
drive to the 1952 National Football
League championship, the Detroit
Lions gained reknown as a 2nd
half team.
They reverted to form in Satur-
day night's 17-7 victory over the
stubborn Baltimore Colts and were |
rewarded with a share of lst place
in Western=Division of the NFL
Sunday when the San Francisco
49ers knocked off the Los Angeles
Rams to throw the race into a
three-way tie. deadlock betweéi “Nitkes>-St=-Rite+——Shamogeks....
jand idle St. Benedict. This year
marks the Ist championship sea-
son in 12 years for Michael
Shamrocks won clear-cut titles in
early seven-point lead before a
chilly crowd of 46,508 at Briggs
Stadium, but gained a hailf-
time tie and outplayed the vis- the old West Side Second Division
setup in 1939 and 1941.
Coach Bob Mineweaser’s north-
siders. rolled up 241 yards on. the
ground against St. Mary, but
found the Orchard Lake ‘defense
extremely tough inside its own 25
| yard line. With the exception of a
| 43-yard scoring march in the final
| period, Mikes never penetrated St
Mary's 20
qcka... capitalized on @
blocked punt early in the 3rd quar-
ter for its 1st touchdown after a
scoreless Ist half. End Richard
Adams
| period. Baltimore's air arm, how-
lever, was well checked.
Alert secondary of the Lions pil-
fered five Colt passes, three by Shamrocks Grab Share of SCL Grid Title Mary’s John Kujda on the Eagiets’
28, and fell on the ball in the énd
zone. Conversion try failed. Carl
Lake pass late in the quarter to
start the Pontiac team on its only
scoring march.
Mikes marched 42 yards in
eight plays, and quarterback
Russ Shindorf sneaked over
from the one earty in the last
! the point-after.
St. Mary's only mafker came in
- Lions Win on 2nd Half Spurt = Christiansen’s 1st interception
(im the end zone) saved another
Colt TD late in the quarter.
Detroit, fortunate to salvage a
itors after intermission to take | Jack Christiansen. Chris also had | 7.7 paiftime tie, put on its only Ist
their 5th win in seven games.
A mammoth defensive line and
bull-dozing efforts of John Huzvar
provided Detroit with its principat
resistance, Huzvar, 6-4, 240-pound
refugee from the Philadelphia
| Eagles, grounded out nearly two-
| thirds of the Colts rushing yard
| age.
He totalled 107 yards (close to 6 | a 4th interception nullified.
Lion coach Buddy Parker start-| hefore the half. Bobby Layne’s |
ed Tom Dublinski at quarterback,
| but. the experiment was short
lived On the Ist series of downs
Dublinsk: fumbled and Baltumore s
Tom Keane recovered on the Lion
Huzvar led the Colts in and
Cari Tasetf scored trom the one. |
Liens spotted the Colts an {per carry), inctuding 62 in the lst; Buck McPhail added the point.
TROUBLE AHEAD—St. Michael fullback Wayne
Magnan finds the entire Orchard Lake Michael-St. Mary
teammates to the
Mary line converging on him as he is tackled by |St. Michael won, 13-6, to earn a share of the
end Tom Kalasz during Sunday afternoon's St. | Suburban Catholic League championship.
St. Peatiae Press Phete
(OL) contest here. Leading three
scene is tackle Ron Kokesh (54).
Terps Win, Baylor Beaten
Notre Dame Pass Defense Is Secret
to Success; Lattner Stars for Irish By BOB HOOBING | the final quarter, killing a Quaker
NEW YORK #—The bow! can-
didates who will face tough opposi-
tion Saturday would do well to
take the pass defense page from
Notre Dame's book.
* * ®
All America Johnny Lattner’s
outstanding performance enabled
the Irish to remain unbeaten after
a 28-20 battle with surprisingly
tough Penn.. Lattner returned a
kickoff 92 yards for one touchdown
and set-up two more. But it was
his. end zone pass ‘interception in
‘Czar’ for Professional Golf DETROIT #—Professional golf
is going to get a czar, sirnilar to
baseball's—if the PGA takes the
advice of fts advisory committee.
The Professional Golfers Assn.
Bowling Results - LAKELAND LADIES
we
wit
Ballard FI 73 9 Der-L Shp 317
Oxb-Keege 281% Strong Rink 13 87
Ubrick fre 0 42 Duteh @ Ed's 15 17
Compton Ins. 18 14 Cloverleaf 14°13
Brigg’s Spt 18 14 No. 12 14:18
Bamme!l's 8 14 Keege Cab 13 19
Joe's Gen 16 16 Keego Merch. 16
Ne. 13 1614 Ne. 1 9 @%
Ind. game series — A. Weimer, *16—
$47; team game series — Ubrick's, 164—
2121.
758 HOUSE
mS ; = Leekhart 418
Shamrock 23 8 Redgers 13 18
Castelo 19 12 Blee Star 13 19
Drewrys 1913 Yellew Cab 11
Pon Ree 19 13 Barnetis 2
Mendy 1718 Pettigrew am
LADIES
: Pts.
Camels - L 1
Tigers 2° Dee 13 |
Bors 4 Fexes 13
Bears 18 Welves 8)
Ind. game series — J. LaLene, 167
4%: team game — Bears, 561; series —
Tigers, 1590.
INS & OUTERS
Pts. Pts
Team Ne. 13 1) Team Ne. 8 ®
Teem Ne 6 14 Team Ne. 4 7
Team Ne. 8 12 Team Ne, ¢ 6
Teem Ne 1 1@ Team Ne. 7 r}
vy. game—B. Keller 219; series—M.
580; team game—Team Ne. 3 743;
Seriee—Team Ne. 1, Team Ne. 3 2002. . | The advisory committee’s rec-|
t. | level, of course under the control what the doctor orders for UCLA
taal Georgia Tech 4 down, half drive to score two minutes
|passes featured the push. Payoff
pitch was to Bob Hoernschmeyer
19 yards to the end zone. Doak
Walker converted
Story of the 2nd half was Layne's
passing, Ollie Cline’s running and
the great work of Hoernschmeyer.
Lions penetrated deep into Colt
jterritory four times, but the pon-
derous Baltimore line, held on all
except one occasion. Forming the
rugged barrier were Alex Agase
(220), Art Donovan (270), Sisto
Averno (240), Art Spinney (230),
Jim Winkler (255) and Barney
| Poole (250). ’
In the %rd_ period, ‘Detroit
marched to the five and settled
for a ityard field goal by
Walker. Baltimore held another
time on its two and again early
in the 4th period when Layne
fumbled at the one.
Lions finally scored again after
Hoerschmeyer set it up with a 37-
to Leon Hart for the tally
Cline made 61 yards in nine car-
ries for Detroit, while Hoernsch-
meyer picked up 53 in seven, plus
79 yards on four pass receptions.
Lions play at Green Bay and Chi-
cago before returning to Briggs
Stadium to meet the Packers
Thanksgiving morning.
t’ B
First é@oewns Relnwiere 9
Yards passing 138
Fetal net yar 38
Passes at ait 2
Passes completed wwete it
Passes intercepted by
Pumis ..
Penting average
ities
Own fumbles recovered
BALTIMORE
DETROIT
Teuchdowns—Detroit
Hart; Baltimere: Taseff
Conversions— Detreit
timere: McPhail
Field geal—Detreit; Walker.
Local, Ferndale
Dogs Win Trials Combined Event Held
Sunday for Beagles at
Sashabaw Ranch = z *
eeen en ee
7 6
3
Heernschmey er,
Smith of Pontiac, was 1st in the
13-inch class while Sylvan Shores
| Sailor, owned by John Chiera of
Ferndale, was ist among 18 en
tries among 1>inch dogs.
idrive, that assured Victory
| It's an old story for the country s
No. 1 team, which uses a skilled
pass lense aS a major weapon.
in its campaign for the national |
championship. |
* @*@ ®@
Irish quarterback Ralph Gugli- |
elmi threw a scoring pass on the |
first play after intercepting an
Oklahoma aerial to put Notre}
Dame safely ahead in a game it;
won 28-21.
Executive Committee will consider
;the recommendation later this
| week. President Horton Smith is
}on record as favoring a commis-
| Sioner of pro golf.
| ommendation _came__ shortly after |
it had elected Chicago's George 8. |
May as chairman to succeed co-_
median Bob Hope.
“Our committee,"" May said in
a statement, “strongly urges that |
one man be given the power. to |
| make and enforce all decisions in- |
‘volving PGA tournament players.
“Such a man would have author-
to handle all the details of the
and would work on the policy
of national PGA officials.”’
May is promoter of the World
and All-America tournaments at
Chicago’s Tam O'Shanter.
* * ?
May made it plain the proposed
commissioner would not ‘‘im-
| pinge’’ on any PGA executive pow-
Pace but pointed out that while the
decisions.
* *
Topping today’s PGA program is
the association's annual, 7
at which its “Golfer of the Year’ nated to enforce
*
=
award will go to Ben Hogan. A now has a traveling super- | ™
visory staff no one man is desig- | Jetty sreromet wieerta
against Alabama and Maryland
against Mississippi as the three
teams battle for bow! assignments.
: . * *
Ninth-ranked UCLA, idle last
| week, fights for a chance to tie
Stanford's Pacific Coast Confer-
ence leaders in the race for the
Rose Bowl while the Indians go
outside the PCC against San Jose
State. The Bruin problem is to
stop Washington's sophomore pass-
Sandy Lederman.
Georgia Tech, No. 6 prior to its! Grand Blane, and 4th to Eagle | West Virginia, remainded unbeat-
20-7 victory over Clemson, is being
mentioned frequently for the Sugar
or Cotton Bowl. It draws Alabama,
which has come up with a fine
passer in sophomore quarterback
Bart Starr.
Second - place Maryland, fresh
from a 274 conquest of George
Washington and almost a cinch
for the Orange Bowl under the re-
cent Atlantic Coast-Big Seven Con-
ference tieup, bumps into an im-
proving Mississippi team.
* * .
Oklahoma halfback Larry Grigg
batted away a pass at the Sooner
16 to stop a Missouri threat and
from there the nation’s No. 8 team
marched to the touchdown that
gave them a 147 triumph.
. LJ s
West Virginia, 12-7 eomeback
conqueror of Virginia Tech and
a bowl contender, meets South
Carolina with its potent Johnny
Gramling-to-Clyde Bennett battery.
Notre Dame plays North Caro
lina. Duke, No. 10, which was
fought to a scoreless standstill by
Navy, will be idle.
COOLEYETTES we
71:10 «Spencer's
21:10 Twin Pines
19 12 Strikers
nw aw
3:19
Te %
Ind. game — M. Merphy, 189; series—
B. Granke, 606; m game — Lepear’s,
Mel's, 719; rant apear’s, 2112.
Additional ‘Sports News
on Page 27 | Smnith’s Lakewood Snapper waw!-Baylor_takes
2nd in the 13-inch class followed
by Dearman’s Marjorie, owned
| by Jerry Rustem of Drayton,
and Kempler’s Molly, owned by
Larry Kempler of Pleasant
Ridge.
Reserve winner was Rustem's
Draytona Duchess. In the 15inch
| class, 2nd place went to Kenmore
| Pinewood, owned by David Less-
| man of Center Line, 3rd to High-
land Jean, owned by John Kerr of
Lake Mickey, owned by
Walters of Drayton.
Reserve winner was Chapman's
Pontiac Tiny, owned by Charles
Chapman of Pontiac. Judges for Adolph
First ‘D’ Cage
Loop Managers’
Session Tonight First Class D basketball mana-
ger’s meeting will be held at the
Pontiac Parks and Recreation’'s
office, 35 Hill Street, tonight at
7:3 o'clock.
are interested in entering a team
tin the “D’ league are urged to
attend this meeting.
an indication of the. possible num-
ber of teams likely to enter the
league, issue contract cards, ar-
practice periods and discuss
procedures of league opera-
McKinnon intercepted an Orchard}
10 minutes of the final quarter. |
yard sprint to the 29. On the 3rd |
eight yards
}
7
F—tt fj
Walker 2; Bal-|
Purpose of the meeting is to get | ST. MICHAEL
ENDS — Adams, J. Witheim.
TACKLES — Pruente, Smith, A Wt-
helper.
CENTERS — Schmidt. Fitegeraid.
BACKS — Shinderf, McKinmnen (Q).
: é Leeis _ ees.
(BM), Magnan (F).
ST MARY (OL)
Lasewsski,
Net yards rushing >...
Passes attempted
Passes completed . 1
Yards gained passing
Passes intercepted by
punts
Punting average
bles SE38eag
om
Own fumbies recovered
Nember ef penalties
| Yards lest penalties _....
| ST. MICHAEL ..........
| ST. MARY OL ..
} Teechdewns
Cougersions —
4Team
GHwwtweku rT
| ’
for Cotton Bow!
Baylor, Texas, Rice and |
SMU in Virtual Tie for
SW Conference Lead
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
DALLAS # — It'll be probably |
two weeks before the Cotton Bowl
Picks its visiting team but there's
no hurry about it anyway. The
Southwest Conference champion is
host and there’s such a tangle in
the championship race that it'll re- |
quire more time than that to clear
it up.
» . 2
As of now Baylor, Texas, Rice
and Southern Methodist are in a
virtual tie for the lead, each hav-
inglost a game. Eight games in-
volving those four teams remain
and they won't all be played until |
Nov, 28.
Leonard Green, chairman of the
Cotton Bowl selection committee,
said today that it might be two
| weeks before any team is ap-
| proached. However, Baylor, Texas,
|Rice and Southern Methodist are
being polled for their preferential
lists and by the end of the week,
the teams. that will be acceptable
will be known,
LJ ° .
Mississippi, Kentucky, Georgia
Tech, West Virginia, Auburn and
|eyed but they have some impor-
tant games coming up in the next
|two weeks.
| The Southwest Conference race
|ing Texas A&M 23-0 and Arkan-
| sas 47-0 respectively. Saturday Tex-
as plays Texas Christian at Aus-
tin, Rice meets Texas A&M at
Houston and Southern Methodist
engages Arkansas at Dallas, while
conference
strife for a game with Uni
of Houston of the Missouri Valley
Conference at Waco.
23 College Teams
Remain Undefeated NEW YORK ® — Twenty-three
college football elevens, among
them Notre Dame, Maryland and
en and untied today following a
| weekend which saw powerful Bay-
|lor and eleven other schools lose
their spotiess records.
The Amerieéiv league had 13 two-
hit games in 1949.
Scramble '
FeaturesRace = Wings Play
E
i
; E F
i b &
So-called ‘‘second line” of Alex
Delvecchio, Johnny Wilson and
Metro Prystai*is far behind with
only nine points. The “third line’
numbering five different players
who play at various times,
E
In fairness it must be pointed
out that Howe, Lindsay and Reibel
all the breaks im so far as
Glen “Skov”
haven't even picked up a point
yet.
It was the veteran Lindsay
who gave the Wings their nial
Freds Absorb
Worst Beating
of ‘53 Season Saturday Loss, 31-0,
Administered-by RO St...
Mary’s Eleven
Royal Oak St. Mary handed St.
Frederick's hapless Rams _ their
worst drubbing of the season, 31-0,
Saturday night in Wisner Me
morial Stadium.
The defeat, 6th in a row for the F 5 . _ r
rie |
and Tony—teswicik + Ties
33
yt With Leafs, Rangers
Detroit this season) and Be
Raleigh.
iil
LeBlanc is at left. FAR ENOUGH—St. Frederick halfback Mike Payette is stopped
by _an_unidentified Royal Oak St..Mary husky after « short gain in
Saturday night’s Ram-Irish game here.
Roya! Oak parochials won the game, 31-0. St. Mary tackle Frank
Lattner ‘Hot’
By FRANK LEAHY
| Notre Dame Coach Convalescing ND Coach
Sees Team Edge Penn
| =
And, conversely, our straight
ahead running game which has
tt certainty was good ta be back; been our bread and butter offense
on the sidelines in Philadelphia
Saturday although neither to date was pretty well bottled
the| up by Penn. The fact that Penn
weather nor the Penn players pro-| ¥&5 the first single wing team we
| vided much in the way of comfort | have faced this fall made thers
defense. for a convalescent. T
Freds, ended the Suburban Cath Game was less than four minutes |
olic League season. Rams play at °d when we knew that Penn was | formance against a fine Peon geared to take up where they left| team whose play was a sincere
off one year ago when they tied | tribute to a fine coaching job by
| Notre Dame. From that time until | George Munger. Avondale in their final game of
Joe Heap intercepted a Penn pass that much tougher to
I'm produd of our team's per
Illinois was the big news in the
down midway through the open- | with four minutes to go in the; Midwest as they hurdied their
right
Fr
teo--the 2nd
the
early in the game. However, a
holding penalty set the Freds back
to the Royal Oak 3% and ended
the thrust.
STATisTics r RO
ors peel eg ae | at Yards rushing........
Net yards rushing......... ibe 4 Passes attempted.......... i] 8
Passes completed: .. t] a
Yards gained passing....... i 5
Passes intercepted by...... a 3 Mi of punts.......,.. 3 7
e Pea. ee = _
Own tumbice recovered sce ‘ ‘
Yords lest 5 ceweueus, ° ST. FREDERICK......... eee ee
ST. MARY RO....... . 612 6 1S
Wagner, Cas- man, (2) period. Half- |
scored
Ba ‘of the ball game Eu- (final period Penn was never out} biggest obstacle enroute to _the
Rose Bow]. [lini still have to meet
| John Latter had one of his | “'sconsin and Northwestern but
Dame and if Was his return of
twe kickoffs and one put which
| kept as ahead ag Penn threat-
ened constantly.
It is interesting to note how the
| progress of a football season brings
| ost certain factors via scouting
reports which makes games much
closer than anticipated. For in-
stance, Saturday the Penn attack
featured the majority of type plays
which previous opponents had
worked successfully against us.
rederick best days running for Notre their win over Michigan ‘stamps
them as one of the nation's best
[and the team most likely to be
|
i seen in Pasadena on January. 1,
To coach Eddie Price of Texas
goes the top salute of the week
for his upset of Baylor. We
played Texas just last fall and
so Were not too surprised as
they have a fine team.
Now that they have hit their
stride they will be tough to beat
in that Southwestern Conference
race
Bates, Watkins
Big Ten Leaders CHICAGO W — Mickey Bates
ot Dlinois, who threatens to erase
by Red Grange, has jumped into
a tie with Ohio State’s Bob Watkins
for the Big Ten individual point-
making lead.
| Bates scored twice Saturday as
the Illini beat Michigan 19-3. This
gave him a total of 11 touchdowns
for 66 ‘points in Illinois’ seyen
games against conference and pon-
conference opponents. Bates is
NEW YORK—The race in the Ivy
Far West.
+ “ .
After all, the average
working to be a pro for
a doctor, - lawyer,
{ hold the close attention of the South, Midwest and Canadiafi League
to $25,0000 in his League may not
4 job on the side.
* Few Fans Know Status of Ivy League, Former Ruler
of College Grid; Writer Gives Cornell Title Edge By GRANTLAND RICE . that he is picking up from $20,600
first year out as a player, and a
Not so bad for a kid. an old school scoring record set | Bef"
just two TDs shy of Grange’s
mark
Scoring leaders
>: ae /
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Slenac, MSC . epossecnence.S 16 9
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whe wt
Madhat 23 6 (Jets mis
Stardust a Kamin 14 14
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a
Ind, game series — B, Cody, 178; 657;
pe See — Syecaetes, We
t I e 4 hd
i
ba “—-
t i
‘ ~alt-in the running. «
That's assuming Michigan |'
can dispose of Michigan
and Wisconsin gets by
in the Badger finale
Nev. 21
_Minnesota and Ohio State each
have dropped two Big Ten games
but still must be given a mathe-
matical chance—although a highly
improbable one—on the basis of
their 7-game conference schedules.
the combination ) All other teams play six Big Ten
and his terrific speed and drive But chances are the champion-
earried 20 yards fer the score. ship will be decided Saturday at
versions and also crossed the goal a:
line, but saw a penalty call his “We
——. | orks, Sh Bobby Watkins, from 15 yards Team No. 12 24 tt
out, and’ ‘Tom Hague, on a pass i bi
from Dave Leggett, were the Ohio : Bis
State“ scorers. Ohio State lost its B° oo Bit
last chance to get back into the Ga oune = We. game when the fast-charging MSC -
line broke up afield goal attempt
when MSC was ahead 14-13.
Munn believed his squad
WHEN THEY AND GO OUT
classic ME IN Li with Michigan bere | ,, Once the I co KE THIS... next Saturday. me, Oat mena cu tat ha SA LIKE THIS...
been able to a game
; H Wisconsin smashed the Wild-
Orioles Will Make (2c Se"statisyTmne’ YOU KNOW ° ee Badger Big Ten record to three
Pilot Decision Today |i. one Joss. __REPAIRED_AT 2
BALTIMORE (#—The Baltimore leer Pawan ling eg OLIVER MOTOR
Orioles will decide today whether | “Michigan State eliminated Ohio COLLISION SHOP
to keep Marty Marion as field| State from all but mathematical “Your Buick Dealer” °
FE 2-9101 | : quick 28 EEE
victories and two and lc ' °
forward with little relish to_re- Michigan in their Big © GUARANTEED
maining games with powerful Art Ehlers, Oriole general man- | Saturday, have won four and lost
_ Michigan State and arch foe Ohio ager; was to meet with Marion to | only one conference game. es
State. discuss the situation Be» so, the Spartans—consid-
: If Marty goes, the situation “a near cinch for the cham- .
I Michi drops either
ame, Selvethaes wi have test would develop into a Hornsby to | pionship in pre-season estimates— HUNTING CLOTHES
three league contests and the Marion to “Mr. X” triple play. |now can only hope that Mlinois
most in any season since 1937's Marion's contract with the old | somehow will -be tripped up by / Expertly Cleaned
33 recerd. That coach Bensie St, Louis Browns has a year to| either Wisconsin or Northwestern. | fF - t-— 4
Ueslerbaan’s _teamsweuld-drep run. The Oridlés have another year| In this case, the probability Sa and Waterproofed
one of the last twe appeared al- to pay on the old Brown's contract | would be that there would be either ' E
most a certainty. That it would }- held by Rogers Hornsby, Marion's | a 2-way or 3way tie for the title, Your treasured hunting clothes wilt
drop both seemed « fair possi- predecessor. with Illinois, Michigan State and receive the best of core by our
Predictions were--based the tact that Michigan wes = ATTENTION HUNTERS AND FISHERMEN = ag cong Today for
mendously keyed up team against : ree Pi and :. }
tho unbeaten "Mn. Wolverines Charles Chester Korean Boots = or os.
parece Eyfag flee: ] Cusrantesd to keep your fest worm at 35° below sero with GRESHAM
at this late date, appeared as & 2 Only one pair of thin socks. Sizes 6 to 13.
hae orion APSON CLEANERS ; P SPARTAN GETS FIVE—Michigan State half- ar Ww Wolverines had the it but Wsaptete
at a tie lake Comin back LeRoy Bolden (39) piles through the center| the Ist quarter of Saturday's game at Columbus. 89 Prall Cc. A. THOM 4-5825 97 Ocklend Ave. - FE 4-
of two quick breaks in the first| of the Ohio State line to the Bucks’ 37-yard-line in| Bolden gained five yards on the play. rall Street : _ Ph. FE 4-5 Sk sence nein
five minutes. Tackle Jim Balog aan
recovered an Illinois fumble on the )
Illini 15. Four - plays—lost_five F tba R | )
yards. Illinois took over and ran] 00 I esults e ie
only one play before J.C. Caro- COLLEGES |
line. f halft k ft bled Michigan State 4 Obie State
Michigan on the Illinois 31. Quar- wore it Kalamasee ?
_terback Lou Baldacci kicked a 35- | Tins so a.
yard field—goal for Michigan's | Otivet 6Perris Inst. * m
onl: points. Western Reserve 14 West. Mick. “
From tifere on it was lines) we STHER GAMES |
all the way. With Caroline step-|2 Si. oR see” ow!
ping off five and ten yards at a/| ‘ews 26 Purdue e| .
clip, lini went 76 yards in the | ssiebere S fae Gen "| —__—
Lek 7m aga Stoeaste riediey °
ichigan lanes |
we en tf ot Gon a sf eheoeen : :
ble on the Michigan four was re- | Sesresss i we
covered in the
Seve Neneh for a tmuchdven. | teat te Ohic Wesleyan 5 , : ‘
Bates-scored again in the third | Gmcm a i ° period on a four yard tackle run | ¢/;"* “ 3
to cap a Styard march in seven | Bely Creve ~ w. md j : —_- ¥
plays. r 6 Marvarée s - sat t
—— out with a 184 — ye — ~ pee ~ : a
; in carries, while Michi- Pennsy P “ “ a
a's best running efforts made = " > C./biate 4 ,
by halfback Tony Branoff was 27|W. vircinia tt Virginia Tock 3 ; ae
yards in seven tries. Columbia 2 ’
Quart Duncan McDonald fosn "state ™ Fercham "1 \ 7 =
tained drive thet went to the BCom: BS teStatne cot 18 linois six before expiring in the | Georgie Tech = : fourth period. Kentecty S "=
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ae Ga r Achievements in cassiinn chomieiry-tr step with the newest developments In automotive engineering —
brought te you by people who pioneered in the selective processing and blending of automotive fuels; Tune in “‘Who Said That?”’
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NBC-TV— Weekly
~ $4,400,000.
FENTY-FOUR
Howard Hoghes Sells | -~"
Movie Studio Stock || Judy Back CHICAGO @ — Howard Hughes, for Ist Film
industrialist..and movie producer, |
has sold out his holdings in RKO |
Theatres Corp. for more than
The sale of Hughes’ 929,000
shares of RKO stock to a group!
headed by David J. Greene, New
York investment counseler, was
announced here yesterday. The ,
price was $4.75 a share
“THE BAND WAGON In ‘Technicolor with
Cyd Charisse, and
n Fred Astaire
3 —ALSO— '
“SKY COMMANDO”
With Dan Duryea
~~ 80 68n 000008 =
f FABULOUS FOOD
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CLIIILI IA,
\
“Man From Alamo”
( her
| Marth For a variety of reasons,
the set has been closed wntil™ in 4 Years
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD — Judy Gar-
land is working in a movie for
the first time in four years. By
own admission, she's better
than ever
Miss Garland is acting in “A
Star Is Born."’ a remake of the
1937 fiim classic that starred
tranor.. and... bred
recently.
The first two weeks of shoot-
ing had to be scrapped when
Warner Brothers decided to
make it in Cinemascope instead
of the normal screen. Also, there
were reports of tantrums
But when f saw Judy on the
set, she was just as nice as
pie. She giggled her way
through a comedy scene in a
projection room and was jolly
with the crew.
She wore.a red dress and a
ready smile and seemed slimmed
down from her previous pound-
age. Still a little curvey, but
nicely so
“When she finished the scene,
she plumped down in her dres-
sing room and remarked that
thought she had improved
Her
Summer sie
in her four-vear absence
last film at MGM was‘
with Gene Kelly
“I think I've become much
better since then,"”’ she said can-
didly. “I know it sounds awful
to say, but | never really liked
myself on the screen before. But
now I go to the rushes and I
actually enjoy them. I even cry
a little at the sad scenes.
“The four years have done
me a lot of good. I got out and Stock
FROM
national star, Kathleen Hughes, has been on vacation for a week.! America in Chicago: The star is currently in “The Glass Web,” a
This, however, did not mean lolling on the sands (as above) for suspense thriller. BACK
well remen movie that is ,
\ Star bered by many people
Is Born” stil! plays regularly on
the TV circuit
i “No. I think were on safe
ground,”’ she remarked ‘We
are adding elements that the
first movie didn't have We have
songs in this one, and Cinema-
is improved. The first picture
two leads became top stars;
there were no scenes from their VACATION—Rapidly-rising
scope. In tome ways, the story |
had no scenes to show why the — Universal-Inter- |
Ist Nationalists
Leaving Burma |
| Chinese Withdrawing |
| to Formosa Head for:
Disarming Point
TACHILEK, Burma (® -- The
Kathleen. She attended the convention of the Theater Owners of
Circuit Court
Gives 261 Years P ress Search
to 18 in One Day for Youngsters
Eighteen persons were sentenced |
to a total of 261 years and WO days| . ..
or ae ree session All-Night Hunting Yields
Oaki. Coun reuit Court, fT
and another ae toe imprisoned No Clue to Lost Girl
for life. othe This is the highest volume of and Br .
maximum sentences ever handed; FRAMINGHAM. Mass. ® — Etf- US lust \Before Group
ar
Senator Kilgore Offers | Idea of Special Bonus
in Busy States
WASHINGTON ®— Sen. Kil-
ch? iI il
brit! ney
LESEE at
ets
suggested it might be possible to
‘put through a cost-of-living bonus”
for jugges in the larger states
| Tie small estate left by the
| late Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson
| is expected to lead to demands in
Congress next year for pensions,
European Trip Movies
to Be Shown Wednesday | lu Technicoler wit
Glenn Ford and met the people and sang be-
_. fore. live.audiences. It im- | the girl reaches the top. There first_batch of Chinese Nationalists
being evacuated to Formosa broke
through the Burmese jungte at 9
a. m. today to emerge onto the |
winding path leading to the dis- own pictures
“But our picture will show why
will be six musical numbers”
(by Harold Arlen and Ira Gersh- down in one court day for the past
several years, according to Pros-
ecutor Frederick C. Ziem.
Three persons received almost
one third the total, with maxi- | torts were redoubled today in the | |search for a young brother and) ROCHESTER — Motion pictures |
sister after a posse of more than | and slides of their recent trip to
100 failed to find any clue to their | Europe will be shown Wednesday |
whereabouts in an all-night flood-| at 8 p.m. by Miss Sara Van Hoosen
”
a ;
PA ; ae proved my timing, and my
—ALSO— voice is better, too. I think I
“Mission Korea’ \ leok better. I don’t have that
‘little girl’ look any more.”
I asked if she felt any trepi-
dation in doing a remahg of. a
GEE, FOLKS! - It doesn’t seem possible but calendars
dor’t lie — It’s time for us to say
goodbye! We would like to thank
everyone for their wonderful patron-
age during the past season.
WE WILL BE CLOSED
Sen ow
FIRST TIME IN THE PONTIAC AREA
AT REGULAR PRICES
LANCASTER - CLIFT FRORAH
KERR -
On Ou
Giant Scree
“BEAUTIFUL
BAVARIA” -
COLOR CARTOON
7 = OS ee eee —— ADDED SHORT SUBJECTS SINATRA
‘SONGS OF THE CAMPUS’
The University of Michigan
Men's Glee Club singing —
“ANCHORS AWEIGH”
“WHIFFENPOOF SONG”
“MAIL TO CALIFORNIA”
“NOTRE DAME VICTORY
“SIMPLE THING” MARCH” and Others
se
win’.
The picture is being pro
duced by her husband, Sid
Laft, and James Mason plays
the fading movie hero, former-
ly done by Fredric March.
Charles Bickford is the pro-
ducer, the Adolphe Menjou role.
and Jack Carson is the press
agent, which Lionel Stander did.
i. §udy added that the best re-
membered scenes have been
retained. These include the
actor's drunken spectacle at the
Academy Awards and the unfor-
gettable shot when he swims to
suicide into the surf at sunset
She had to dash off to lunch,
and T asked her future plans.
“I don't know yet,” she re-
marked in transit. “Ill either
hit the road, do another picture
or have a baby. I haven't decid-
ed which.”
‘Earth's Population
Now at 2.5 Billion NEW YORK ®—Two scientists
say the world now has 2% bil-
lion persons and that its popula-
tion should continue to grow before
stabilizing itself at about four bil-
lion.
PS
AT
|
| The scientists—W. S. Woytinsky
jand his wife, E. S. Woytinsky—
| said the earth's population had
| quadrupled in the past 300 years
and should reach the 342 billion |
mark by the start of the next cen- |
| ing, has 40 acres of pasture and _
| The couple reached their con- | | tury
clusions in a study financed joint-
ly by the Rockefeller Foundation
and the 20th Century fund, which
| made public part of their report
yesterday.
- | Aavertiooment)
PERTUSSIN has been
Prescribed by
ss. doctors for
bad coughs PERTUSSIN does more than re-
lieve local irritation! PERTUSSIN
works iniernally—loosens phlegm
Special Monthly
Rates
with in and out privileges
We Invite Your
Patronage HUBBARD
GARAGE 16 S. Perry S.
Outdoor Parking
t arming point a mile and a half
from here ears for second rder. | This group of 3 Was headed by| 7 = ogres ae
ler of the 193rd Division of the terms of 15 years each on break-
| 25th Chinese Army
| Eartier the chiefs of the three- ‘ing and entering charges, while)
two received similar sentences for |
| nation commission and the U. 8. | 2*med robbery and ne for unarmed |
| |
‘City Feller Goes ambassador in Bangkok, Maj. | joery.
Gon, wan Dooreas lied |r pornos cng me a aie ‘= | one day plus the presence of sev-
] ted for th The Nationalists bore aloft a lige alg accoun .
Testimony on Reds DETROIT Government
| witness John Lautner took the
stand in federal court for the
fifth day today as the conspiracy Burma and Indochina must unite
to fight Communists.” f
Scientific, Runs
Successful Farm eet ary leader LANCASTER, N. Y. (UP)—That | Continued his detailed explanation |
old adage that a “city feller can't | party acitvities during the 20
becx f has been defied |years he aided in the formation
by a. man whose philosophy of | of Communist policies in the United mum sentences of 40, 30, and 20: | lighted search
Objects of the wide search are
, ; Thomas Gilmore, 8, and his sister, | Maj. Gen. Li Kou-Hui, command-| Five others received maximum | aig 4 1 who di disappeared =
from their backyard yesterday | Public is invited. | Jones and Miss Alice Serrill in
Avon Park Pavilion.
The event is sponsored by the
Business Women's Club and the t
|
| worming | ( Aévertisoment) |
The search was centered through
the night around a lake and a| MAVE YOU TRIED THIS
pond about a mile from their home.
Floodlights were brought on
the scene by firefighters and po-
lice as local officials, neighbers
and volunteers combed the wood.
jnight vigil
her husband
Herodotus says that the ancient |
Egyptians
trial of six Michigan Communist | With their feet and their clay with
leaders went into its third week. | their hands She is separated from |
kneaded
their dough large colored portrait of General- — | ed area tm the hope of finding anes a anda wine . . the children asleep. combine three of the — ablets |
ner wit ue lettering in three W { C | } biet laxa — oe ‘Neiigen = Wermece. Thal acl | ness on mues The ~chitdren's mother is Mrs.! qiny te: le dients praised for English — which said Dora Gilmore, 42. who was re- | = highest medical author-
“The United States. Thailand. ported near collapse from the all-| ities for — of the lasattves in Olive Tab- all intestine.
from
help you feel just Ane. Olive Tab-
lets give more ‘natural-like’ move-
| ments, too! No purging! No griping! .
| to begin at 5:30 p.m. Mrs. William
farming has been based largely on
“labor-saving devices.”
Cedric F. Smallidge, of Lancas-
ter, was once owner of the Metal-
izing Service Co. of Buffalo! He
read a few farm journals and de- |
cided to take the plunge
Today, Smaljiidge owns 200
acres of farmiand, has 22 reg- |
istered Holstein cows and two
bulls. The farm is self-sustain- — 160 acres cropped with cats, |
wheat and hay.
And Smallidge operates the |
whole business alone.
One innovation was the use of
surplus rubber conveyor belting.
for the floors of the stalls. He said
straw bedding was pushed aside
by the cows and they ended up
sleeping on a concrete floor.
“IT save time. money. labor and
straw by bedding my cows on |
rubber,"’ he said
Rubber flooring also covers oth- |
ér parts of the fldor and makes
for—easier_cleaning, he said.
He also plans to use an endless
chafn of steel paddies to carry
waste 16 a spreader. Operated by
a _two-horsepower electric motor,
the chain will save time and en-
“We've thrown away our pitch-
forks and cut labor to a mini-
mum,” the modern farmer said.
| Christ Lutheran Church
ito Hold Fall Festival
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
Christ Lutheran Church will hold
church.
The event, under the sponsorship
of the Ladies Guild, is scheduled
Shappe is Chairman of the-dinner
committee.
| obtained by calling Mrs. Howard
Peterson. The church is located at | bonus pay and housing allowances,
Tickets forthe festival may be | States and Canada.
He is the first government
witness to take the stand against
the defendants Saul Wellman,
Mrs. Helen Winter, Ptilip
Schatz, Nat Ganley, William Al-
i See SRemeae owes eee 7
dr.
The six defendants are charged |
with violating the Smith Act by,
conspiring to teach and advocate |
the violent overthrow of the U. S.
government.
Committee to Study
Military Pay Scale WASHINGTON @ — The House’
Armed Services Committee has un-
dertaken a study of the adequacy
of pay scales in the military serv-
ices.
One facet of the situation which
it may examine is the increasing |
nruumber of in-recent tainment. Our next FLASH! Hi Folks: There's two very good pictures at
the STATE today and tomorrow, HIGH TREA-
SON; ROY BOULTINGS SPY THRILLER at
3:20 — 6:00 — 8 :33—IT:15 cracktes with
excitement. This with the DARK STREETS
OF CAIRO with SIGRID GURIE at 2:15—-
4:50—17:30 and 10:10 is really fine enter-
ROW & CRY THE BELOVED COUNTRY. Nov.
14 we bring you THE JOE LOUIS STORY,
first showing in Pontiac. Open daily 1:45 p.m.
till 1:00 a. m. Box Office open 1:45 till 1:30
p.m. 40c till 5. Nite 60, Kids 18c, attractions are PARK
resignations
years from the military academies
at West Point and Annapolis.
Chairman Short (R-Mo) of the
For avowed reasons of economy, TODAY thru TUESDAY |—
Congress in recent years has cut
down on such things as special 1:00-3 Shown At: 318-5 :23-7:41-10:01
post exchange services and medi-
cal benefits for military depend-
ents.
A convention airplane engine
rcotrtatns-about-6,000_separate
parts. -
MAGAZINES, TRICKS,
JOKES AND NOVELTIES
Piper's Magazine Outlet
35 Auburn Ave. FE 3-9869
Airport and Williams Lake Rds.
Call Now .; FE-2-6424
HUNTING CLOTHES
Father & Son Cleaners Plant end Office: 941 Joslyn Now! Walt Disney brings new
excitement to romance...!
Shown At: 2:46-4:51-1 :09-9:29 as t
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FE 2-6424
“ADULTS: MATINGE . . SOc EVES... 746 CHNLDREN-.; 48e- HE
— Volunteer Air
Unit 9606 wil
meet tonight at 7:30 in St. James— e
High School.
According to Lt. Harold Fisher,
the meeting will include a training
film and intelligence briefing.
AFRICA... flamin:
with adventure
and passion! ming
Hii
La ak dl
Prices: Mat. %5e—Eve. & Gen, Sb
Children ite
STRAND
TODAY & TUESDAY
Tas =>Musterole - — of ss
Bese, CORED oce+.-srenccee OO Fiwwere
eember $1.99%;
higher, December $1.48%. 1 R. :
were \e-4s higher, Decem! ; ings. No, 1, 2.25-2.%8 bu; ao
intosh, fancy, 4.00 bu: — - 2
—~ ~~ ee
“we WMNRwe ee
SB SSssss sc
Out NEw TREATMENT OF FERED FOR RELIES
or M4E4. CONGESTION
“OAS COLOS, Whrtn BAY CousE STEPTONS g
fe z
i ha net
3
th te Sl aaads
‘alf-bu. Turnip, No
topped, No.
s: Ci
lard. . 1 7-100 bu; curty, -
maine, No. 1, 1.00-i.50 |
COMPTOMETER taP)—Prices were paid
fob. Detrot for Me. I quatity five
oer? broilers or fryers under 4 Ibs
CHICAGO POULTRY
One Full Yeor Guerantee
Apartments,
cery Stores and Restaurants. Re.
aln out only three hours. No’
Rox Ex Company 1016 Post. 64 Gh Gidg FE ¢-S407 receipts 1.678 coops:
toes :
CHICAGO BUTTER
CHICAGO (AP)—Butter
ceipts 095.624; wholesale buying pric
pound higher 83
* 80 B 68.75; 8 C 64.75; cars:
AMBULANCE DETROIT EGOS 4
DETROIT ‘AP)—The following ‘tees
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iret recetvers for case lots
o s. (pete A. jumbo ¢2-
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U.B. grade B large 53.
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To buy... or to build, , . whatever your plans
for home ownership are ... we invite you to come
In ond talk it over with us. Our aim is to help
you finance a home: of your. own..
Result: Home ownership On a sound basis... at
lowest possible financing cost.
16 EAST LAWRENCE STR
See |. DETROIT @
NEW YORK ‘te Cars Market was a four-passenger | irregular movement of majo?) «,aventurer.” — —
oom Bullt_ on a i rp :
point lower to major fractions | body
higher. Trading was brisk in the Italy
beginning and then turned quiet| with DeSoto’s
as weekend orders were cleared. | engine.
higher with RKO Theaters a fe8-| sixteen-inch chrome-plated
ture wheels, somewhat larger Higher groups included the rail-| sondard,
roads, steels, chemieals, and) walis
utilities. Unchanged to lower were openings
Suinens were mixed. er . : : | new:.car offers a.means of
Railway, El sign, but that there
and Boeing the ’
New York Stocks
Air Redue i £- br} r eee eee
Alleg Lou -. 32.8 Kresge a Be DETROIT (UP) — Wholesale prices on
CR nee Kroger . oe @. the farmers
Ais Chal” SY tor dia “77: 383 | wos
Alum Co Ae af tes ee: m3 ‘Tava. bo: Am Airlin = tt Laka” aire «1. 97.1 | 600 bu; No 1. am Cen... 374 Loews ....... 11.4] 07 Spy, Am C & Pay 33.5 Lone © Gem ©. 28 | bu; apples. Am Cyan .. 483 Mack Trucks.. 15.1 | 2.00-3 ; Am Gas & Ei 32.3 Marsh Field .. 23.7 by yy Am Leco _14 Martin GI 15 | 3.00-23
[Am M & Fay 226 May D Sir .. 29.6 | fancy.
Am W Gas wT ¢ B57 7 Boe Am Rad . 13.7 Mid Comt Pot.. 43.41 EO. hig onsa ay
gm Gots -- OS ment Word ... bet] Ueem Beets, No 1, 18-00 dos bens
Am 8tl Fa 294 Mot Wheel.... 23.1 noe :
Am Tet @, Tel 154-5 Moeller Br...) ae0 | wandard variety. No 1, 05-100 bu
Anac Cop . 32.5 Murray Cp 1.7 oy
Anse Wa Che ~-0+ 8, | Not. 08-139 bu. Carrots, Ne Armour . . O12 Nat ° 1
Atchison. ... 92.4 Net Cash RB... 673 4 Atl Cst Line #1 —o *e - oe Countons:, No 1, 1.50-2.00
a eee SA See Gn cncos 48 | Gog bed: celery rest Bord sees 2: 82 By ae Bee's: 28 | Fennel. No 1, Balt & Onie:. 33° NY Cent...--. 38.8 | Teeth Bendis Avy .. 63.2 Nie --++ 276 Benguet . ... 1 Mort & West. -& ie
Beth ot) .... M1 & ay. oo Parmipe.
Bosing Aire .. $5 Nor Ota Pw .. 134 | curly, Bond Stre ... 131 Nerthw Airl 9.6 | toot, ‘tpt Qhio ou ...... sa. | Bat, i
|e Se ce nt P+ | 75~1.25
Briggs MI ... 366 Pen Am W Alr 87) YC) Gos Brist My ... 204 Param Pict... 96-7) os Ly Budd Co _|.. 114 Gey .... BS Coles & i. os Pee OO... BS Siena te ; |} Can Dry cs 238 Pa RR wees 19 cious, Ne 1, 78
a BE Rte Se ag | Be Capital Atrt 9.8 " No 1, 3.25-3.80 12-ib bskt Gane (2 T) ... 4 CREO o-oo BBE Cater Trae .. 47 Ril eee oe yore rity
Cheah Onie | se. Pile Mills 0 388] cord, ot. Tee1 00 bu Men... 52 Mee. ome, & *
Gries Ov 3 Qa : at wisi oo Pure Oil ......
Climas Mo .. 313 fad Gp ""!.. 331 bu Turnip. No 1. 15-133 bu a ge : ay Rem Rand 145 tuce and salad greens: Celery cad-
Or a.
Con <5: 408 Ree eer’: Skt | 1 eb-128 bu: endive. bleached. po .. - by | awe Met .... af “ : :
Can .. 872 Rey fen b ”” 424| Lettuee, head No 1. 3.00-4.00 3-dos; Iet- Ou 4. 4 om Lead.. 326| ‘wee. , No 1, 100-150 bu; lettuce,
Pa. 1. Seovill Mat... an | lel, No}, 1 00-180 soe 342 Sead RR.. 43 ‘
Mier at Ren St Ht Aire... Tl gimmons .. 383| CHICAGO Chem ... 363 Sinclair Oil... 33 active, mostly steady DuPont -. 4 Bocony Vac... 34 . te
Eagie Pich .. 106 Sou Pac... ro teetiy” | ag ‘ =: — Ry...... 428} 100 Y
Ei Auto L .- $3 or a. oe See on e > sows in El & Mus Im 15 gtd Of! Calif.. 50.6| 18.00-19.50; few over 500 Ib to 17.80;
Emer Red ... 113 gtd Of Ind... 68.1 /| clearance End = eo Fo] = NJ... = Salabie cattle 24.000: salable calves
Firestone |... 63. = iy | Preept Gul ., 465 Sr ae re. fairly active. mostly steady
Gen Elec ., S34 n -eoe 31.9) slow, te
Gen Pas ... $4 Tenae Co. ss: # veatore . ueeey:
Gen Mot |); 504 1 Pa. | mae Gen Ry Big . 274 frank Dear. 38.2 | above; most hotee
own Shoe .. 612 Tres W Alt... 13.8] 38.00; toad commertiat steets
Gen Tel .., 423 Transamer ... 26.4/| choice to low
Gen Time ., 27.2 Twent C Pox,. 17.4| good to low Gea T & Rub Fy} Underwood ... Sis commercial! cows
Gillette ....., s34 Un Carbide... 70.4 end cu Goer BF!) T1- Un Pat... - “eat Goodrich ., 124 Unit Air Lin... 33 | to ¢ Geodyesr ... 53.4 Unit Aire...., 4 | wtility 7. Grab Paige .. 1.3 United Cp... § Baladie @t Ne Ry Pt $0.6 Unit Fruit... 48.4) eretely
Ot West & .. 178 US Lines....., 144] strong Googhound c. 134 U8 Rud....... Bs ewes Ou .. 444 US Bmelt...., 39.4| 18.00- Holland FP ., 11.2 US Smelt Pr.. 85.5 | 20.00;
Hooker El ., 58. se oo He oe:
Med Mets. 11g Warn B pie 187 slaughter ewes 4 50-6 00. Ti Cent .... 72.46 West Un Tel 43.3 ,
mag 2 i} eet Be gt Merv... 3 White Mot 98.4] on traci
Niek ... 38.3 Wool 3.7} sei, sa
cd Ss foe ne 8.) Seen Jehas ‘Men. “eka Zenith . 28 oe eee
ro rece AVERAGES
se. | cated Pree me tens, | Masked Bandit Robs
C,| Net change..... —4 +.B cece uses i Seats ada Witiom Reoupes of $48 ned bandit up Willi
Wonk, agro a3 m3 ms ters Beaupre of 98 S. Merrimac St eos es on H-¥4 last night and escaped with $48
nigh... 18 ¢ 885 i163| after stepping from behind a build-
Kear ae2 ES M4 08) ing near 837 Baldwin Ave. and de-
1963 low..:...1312 667 $07 91.¢|manding money at gun point.
ESS.-MONDAY, NO aR ER AONE a ER tf
we
7 = e
Pee pene tec oO
according to Oakland County |"
psheriff's deputies. ic @ injured ~ weres—Jonn— J. Au
All
were admitted to Pontiac Gen-
eral Hospital and are in fair or
goed condition today.
Schang’s sons were treated for
multiple bruises.
A northbound car driven by
Lawrence Wurdarcki, 62, of 2790
Bald Eagle Rd., Ortonville, on
Pontiac Woman Treated
~+for-Cuts After Car Crash
“Mrs. Helen A. Barker, 38, of 14T
auto accident, while a passenger
in a car driven by her husband,
Charies V., 4.
4
‘s Grille at 176) Téwnship; 2
~y 1 marked ¢ the end «
the Druids, ancient
‘Mourning |
THE DAY AFTER a fire
enough to have one) re
Obviously, it's much bet-
ter to be insured. Call on
SR ge ree eee oo
re | and Ireland.
70 West Lawrence
Corner Cass
FE 2-9221
BUY YOUR KIWANIS ENTERT 2a
.
convenient. You'll '
And you will Gnd that your loan transaction is
ence. Phone, write, or just drop in. .
o. oe 5 tf
m. Novem
im Street, Walled
Nov. 6, 7, 8, 83 Provident Loan ee@eererenrereeevrewrqvaee
ee
Nov. 8, 10, 11, 1963
4
; . “¢
“W by Coraily?™ tet Youn rues. Every fon payee Alyy > +
like the fri , vei at truly a pleasamt experi- : eeee0
7 WEST LAWRENCE ST. 2-9249. Gerald Harvey, Manager « 1AC ¢ FEderal
Leone made to residents of ofl surrounding towns
eae
%
Ww s.
‘SALES REPRESENTATIVE for old expending firm
Experience Not Necessary
CALL FE 2-6219 — FE 2-2119
McClures $3.00: Idaho Rus. Minnesota-North Dakota
| ATTENTION! We Are Now Paying _
TOP PRICES For junk Care—Waste Paper
>
8
C2 ee |
we 135 Branch St. FE 4-9583.
CEERRSECRESEEESES
we will your cor com-
pletely! hecking rings,
pistons, rods, bearings, valves,
transmission, axle, brakes,
power, oil consumption, econ-
omy, steering and appeoronce.
*
———__
Any Make,
tg $2.00 We will gladly DIAGNOSE and ESTIMATE all needed
adjustments that could prevent any future breakdowns
or expensive repairs!
With FACTORY-TRAINED
JEROME &
OLDSMOBILER|
| py \\ j]
j
bab
HERE’S ANOTHER
WAY you SAVE. ee — your clothes.
-—— your family
— yourself
GET AN
AUTOMATIC
Gas CLOTHES DRYER
Dries Clothes |
ea
SO GENTLE
SO WELL
NO MORE HAUL-HANG-AND-PIN ROUTINE. With an
automatic Gas clothes dryer you can wash — rain or shine —
‘any day in the yeor, even at night! It saves time, work,and =.
clothes. See a demonstration of this marvelous new way to
-—dry dothes automatically at your Gas appliance decler’s.
BUY NOW _-
: and take advantage
of this
(Sas dries
ests 30 little bh rum
es f
~ Red Magazine
~ Sent
———Hies;-the-father—exclaimed whe -_.-+—torgotten—the—-“Fanks,!2 cd . eee) | ‘ ‘ < ( z i
a set ec, ——— *
.
+ — ; ‘ii oh
Note to Pacific Veterans:
New Zealand Still Glows .
to Family | AUCKLAND, NZ. (UP)—In case, once slept in @ green hillside cem-
| you other South Pacifie veterans etery near Auckland. Their bodies
Dorents Call |"° still wondering after all Hines | tare nome Semanved Sp Oter aeng
: Ps . ve ; — _. years, New Zealand is still “good |” , ;
Propaganda Publication | aury.” | But over the spot, Old Glory flies daily to let Americans know . | < : | .
‘Pack of Lies’ | The things you liked about it are) yom zealand still remembers. | still there—perhaps more so.
GREENSBORO, N.C. «® — The’) The food is still good and cheap. | Thé sun still sparkles on the
parents of a soldier who was a| the lush meadows and hills green- | bright blue of Auckland harbor
prisoner of war in Korea received|er than ever, and the girls still , which once teemed with American
a “er magazine fron the: Communists} pretty and-friendiy:——- ae
last week. ‘‘Just a bunch of filthy | And the New Zealanders hav-
New Zealand cruisers across the
he looked at it.
The magazine, postmarked Lon-, They greeted Vice President
don, Engtand, was delivered here Richard M. Nixon with all the en-
to Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Rol- thusiasm they showered on the
lins. It claims to be a souvenir | first Marines who landed to train
ot_“‘the good food and good times, here in 1H?
your ex-prisoner of war relative’ Nixon” a” Pactfic~veteran~him-
had while #-prisoner of the Chi-, self, never missed a chance on
nese People's Volunteers.” his recent visit to thank the New
* * @ | Zealanders for their hospitality to!
The Rollins’ only son, Charles, | the thousands of Americans who)!
23. a released POW, came home trained there or enjoyed leave from
last month and re-enlisted. Pacific campaigns
Young Rollins was indignant. He The land is prosperous and
phoned Greensboro Postmaster J. ! the cities growing. They leok
Tracy Moore “to see yi wes on | brighter and fresher with the
=< propaganda go throug © | drabness of wartime austerity be- mals You can still get a good steak
with eggs for about 80 cents,
American money, and drinks are
cheap.
But the pubs still close tight
at © p. mr After that~-you have
a hard time finding even a beer
unless you are registered in a
first-class hotel, where the pri-
vate lounges serve until 10 or 11.
No matter how modest your
hotel, you will still be awakened
| at 7 a. m. with the inevitable tea
j and pastry.
American cigarettes are just as
; scarce and as appreciated as ever McCarthy to Quiz '
~ parbor bend ary military. note. + senate—i j
Postmaster Moore said:
“If it contained lottery tickets |
or obscene pictures we could re-
move it from the mail. But we have |
no local autherity here to remove,
it from the mail even though it is
lies."
* 2 . j
He asked Rollins to turn it ever!
to postal authorities, however, for |
forwarding to Washington |
The 94page magazine was pub-
lished by the Chinese Peoples Com-
mitt®* for Wortd Peace, Peking,
China. It was sent to Rollins by
the Britain-China Friendship Assn,
228 Grays Inn Rd., London, W.C.1, |
England.
The magazine contains several |
dozen pictures of POWs apparently
having happy times in prison, eat-
ing Thanksgiving Day feasts every
day in the week, swimming and
playing games, and living in ‘a
typical POW camp on the shores
of the beautiful Yalu River. The
scene is pleasant and peaceful.’’
*. * *«
A mimeographed letter inside |
the front cover says, ‘Should you |
or your ex-prisoner of war relative |
wish to be kept in touch with de-
velopments in China, we should be
glad, on the payment of two dol-
, bind them.
still on the country t
Huge military warehouses built
hy the Americans now house man-
ufacturing plants around Auckland i
A big hospital known to thou
sands of servicemen as ‘‘Mob six.”
Navy Mobile Hospital No. 6. now |
houses a high school at Auckland
On the green flats at Paekaka-;
riki near Wellington, where thou- |
sands of Marines trained for |
Guadalcanal, only--the —eoncrete
foundations of an-old mess hall |
and the remains of a_ concrete |
reservoir stand as mementos of the
immense military encampments of |
10 years ago. Sheep graze around |
them and on the steep green hills |
above. }
Farther dows the road at Para- |
paraumu by the sea, passenger
and cargo planes drone peace-
fully in and out of the once
bristling military airport.
But Wellington, fondly remem- |
bers the Marines who crowded her |
pubs and courted her girls and |
often won their hearts
In St. John’s Cathedral hangs a!
Marine flag alongside the Stars
and Stripes as a constant mem- |
orial to the New Zealand-trained
Marines who died in keeping the
Japanese from threatening New
Zealand shores.
Hundreds of — American — dead
GE Plant Employes WASHINGTON. —Sen. McCar-
thy (R-Wis), extending to private ifirms doing secret government | -F
‘work his avowed hunt for subver-
| sives, plans hearings later this,
| week at the General Electric Co. |
| plant at Schenectady, N. Y
“Preliminary reports from the
| Staff indicate the situation may be
i rather bad there,” McCarthy toid |
Vessels. But today Only two trinit | hewsitien yesterday in annouwiciigt
the forthcoming hearings by the |
tee he heads.
| At Schenectady, GE said in
statement issued by A. C. Stevens
manager of relations and utilities
jat the plant there, that it ‘takes
\ great pains and goes to consider-
| able expense”’
| areas and materiats i
But, Stevens added, ‘‘the one!
pany itself does not, and cannot, |
grant ‘secret’ security clearances |
| to its.employes. That is the func- |
}tion of the government |
.
|Rank Equality |
FORT DEVANS, Mass. (UP) —|
You may never get back, but if| Staff Sgts. Charles and Douglas
But the marks of the war are | you do, you'll like it. And so will| Hail of Billerica, both on duty
he New Zealanders
GRANDMA | here, are father and son.
by Charles Kuhn
I BAKE ‘EM GINGERBREAD
iF THEY'RE FULL O’ PEP...
ann
BUT RIGHT NOW I'M MiGHTY ||
Sn 9 Steere 08) |
~~
pe oft =f
S446. 00
rH OT
A
ae a
Baz ‘ wy!
BG ’ ie ‘4
VA ;
- ie
P %
se |
by T. V. Hamlin
to safeguard secret [
! FRECKLES AND HIS.FRIENDS ie ;
. — 4, sa “s
| ioe, ©
x
WELL, STUDY
THAT! SOMEONE HAS TO WARN MR- CLEFT ABOUR. HS s
DONALD DUCK
OiREC TIONS AGAIN!
Bi sei kOe
SCORCHY SMITH
~ -'No Matter. What
4 Can help you
Ask for the Went Ad Dept. “Your Problem —
May Be A Quick Action
WANT AD
solve it.
DIAL FE 2-818)
te
1--HOPE THIS--
GASP-- HOLDS
UP/ GOT TO
GET BACK IN-
TO THE RACE’ 1--@0TTA (coven) BIX THIS-- BEFORE
“CHA
(COUGH I'VE GOT aS MUCH
OF WINNING
AS A SNOW-
BALL INA BLAST
FURNACE,’
by Jose Luis Salinas
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES — ;
|_| WESS une ma we oneR TIMES fT]
Lo
A 100
Ee
GWESS You CATCH
~HORSEPOW. ——_ - HUNT WHATS WRONG
S0cKs*.
THE FRONT 2 HOW FARE
MY BRAVE LEGIONS 4 iN THE CONQUEST OF
GAUL 2 — HAK-KAEF /
WARM IN THIS
GEX THAT NASTY LITTLE
THING OUT OF MY
a |
by Galbraith
I
would rather hear records!”
i ge ( pi Giff
: NOVEMBE
Ve PRET eae
Ot
in Sta
:
expected to let
‘ ley Fora — with Mrs. | Graham break the news.
Union as "3 we — ae ——
“A” tilt with 56 points, talon : cost him a me Graham Chance) But there was 4
‘3 the line was sophomore hand
Western NFL | "==." Sa Ss for that comeback
Mallat sows.sronet FL sn ee eae NEW. YORK 18 ---Kid Gavilan. ‘aot eee — al ae
| in 10 minutes*35.5 seconds. Jimmy Carter and Jimmy Car-| « ad } “a Twice he was the nation’s
| Feel Weight Of Ball — An im- the
_In = Trenton’s 104 points earned first | ruthers are favored to retain their winning trainer — in 190
: Se cece oe eer eee va Se 49ers Trip Rams Again, with 125. Don Pounds and |)? Stet bouing, programs of the , me
_ the weight of ball at the bottom of third
31-27; Cleveland Stays |2°™ Avery were
33
fifth and
d respectively, for Walled Lake. Mil-| Despite Gavilari's troubles a a eueid
__ Unbeaten in East ford was eighth in the division with | against Carmen Basilio in Septem- yes 3 ee a= anal aaa — —— a ncccaiaiieeee = ~~ ee —the- Cuban—Keed.is.an_85.}. cs Eee ’ . — a ead
NEW YORK @® — Unless they| Arbor (40), Lansing Everett (61) ee ig oan di meet San Francisco in a post-| and Napoleon (93). title defense of the year.
fe title ‘is Lat hagas bees Gavilan stopped Chack Davey erence ’
won't be cceing @er end_ Gordy Bullet in Head and ean 0 Syated ¢ —.
tau again ational Football i over Basilio other
——— it'll be just F ails to Stop bouts in 1963, ine 4 .
| eS
left to give San Francisco a 31-27 ; saint 2 oe victory ove. the Ram. The esl NEW YORK i — Less then|from the champ cirtier im the) Sad Sam Happy
left teams Detroit | C@ht months ; tariat:-2-cour-} yous : . pee ° ; i -
Lions locked in a 52 tie for the | S&° O06 — — neg This also will be Carter's 3rd/ BRANOFF GAINS SIX—Michigan halfback Tony = AP Wisepnete | f> = : Over Winning —~—llengebel
divisional lead. 4 eae oe oe cons with ajdefense in ‘33. He knocked out | Branoff (17) is away for six yards in the 1st quar-| to bring him down. On the ground is Wolveririe - Ki ke f USC
While the Western half’s big the wl io te Ms eee ee ee ter of Saturday’s game with Illinois at Champaign.| back Ted Kress. Final score was Illinois 19, | the ball out of the groove. ae ACK [OF 4
three feverishly were battling for ig gy gr igh A hpeesyoe le eae Gang. is | It was Illini back Mickey Bates (44) who raced in| Michigan 3. (See page 23 for game details.) Sat ae la an ouk - Tsagalakis’ Field Goal
Poowne’ continued “to power thee | bast in the National Horse Show | Spartanburg, SC. in thetr tite = ~—— }on the head pin, inviting Beats Stanford in Last mighty Jumping : _pin,_ = sisi all opposition, They beld|™. Madison Square Garden and|#> st Syadey. Australia, Fridey.| JY J C] b M t P d ® Note, in the sketch, the position 30 Seconds
wi pentie leed tn the cheeuit’s {Sti bas a chance to retain the| The network TV-fight schedule uDS us Trovide a Ap of the hand. Fingers are behind| LOS ANGELES @ — Sad Sam eastern conference today after yes. | 0P€® jumping title be won last | for the week: ——- and slightly to the right. was a happy man and kicking proof
terday's 3416 triumph over the | ¥¢#- Monday—heavyweights James J. Player Help for Orioles The hand is about to turn to the today that the day of the football
Pittsburgh Steelers, Lariat. te owned by Mr. and | Parker and Edgardo Romero, un- , . 4 right to apply hook turn. The specialist hasn't passed entirely
. 8 Mrs. George Di Peula of Batti. |be#te® Argentine, at Brooklyn's By GAYLE TALBOT ting with a collective average of Caring iS turn must be smooth, unhurried, to | from the gridiron.
In other gatnes yesterday, the more, bat for the past four | Pssterm Parkway. NEW YORK w—The Baltimore | 24, and it did not boast a regt- a full follow through for accuracy.| For Sam, last name Tsagalakis
Philadelphia roared to a| years, the onty human who has etnenday—Wilie Trey - Renfy | o sensense they will have lar who hit even close to .300. ‘ pronounced with the T silent, went
30-T win Over the New York Giants, | been on hie back le Linky Smith. | 5204Y rematch from - Ed Barrow_Discovered | 7 1E t into the game Saturday with less
the Washington Redskins came Washington (CBS). $500,000-plus to spend for players nudai £vents than a half minute remaining and with a fourth-quarter rush to down| “When I saw Lariat lying in| Friday—Bratton-Gavilan, welter | before they pay any income taxes, Bowling Results Wagner, Made Fieider N U d W plate kicked a perfect 38-yard’
the winless Chlcoge Cordinale 28.| 55 10S, ‘ligt of March it, I ee ae See Clenge ae and it will be extremely interest- i. Out of Hurler Ruth ow Under Way mete ont Gat gue Se Ente
Green Bay se bane an ‘would have killed the person who| Saturday—Pat Manzi of Syre rl Se aa | ne —— Manville "SS Demisets wate 34] PORT CHESTER, N. Y. ®—Ed at Pontiac Rink over Stanford.
—— have gotten ‘my hands on him.”| South Airics, British empire welter |‘ make a number of key per-| Been, 3 Brame g., is] Harrow, We man Si ae Fuuth | _ Two enmual events got under way mi ann” eget ean oe Smith said seriously. “I've never | champ, from Albany, N. Y., (ABC). | formers available to the infant) is sane ~ 3: fas game meaks| {from @ pitcher into an outfielder this weekend at the Pontiac Rolla-| |S). Seates carried hint
easant Contest | seen» more catous ting : orioles are| 2 te ome eat | and bull the New York Yankee | hum. atte Nay Gmane Semrias 8 Smith and the Di Paulas didn’t . . If it-has, and the Orioles are camehall . death | the on
. = , ae tc ive|f Gir Tops in improved sufficiently to come off =<" pa ongie,-S-o0m First race in a season-long series | ders, “I wag just hoping and.I
Approaching Finish | na‘te"3' nous ‘twas’ touch FE reece oem | aermans "5 dorsras "| Barrow, 85, bas been ina semi-| of speed events was held Saturday, | itched the T exeaity Ga
and go with blood transfusions and Hard Tops for everybody will make money and | sacl, a By A §|coma for two days. He ts not ex-| with Gerald Hamlin and Judy Wag-| yen before the referee signaled
Pontiac Press’ big pheasant] someone in the family watching | + there will be a revival of interest | Ind. same — M. Rave, 115; sertes —| pected to rally, a spokesman for) ner winning in Class A (12-13) a pela was good, the
oe an tea "hacen |someane 10 the family watching] “59 Prce Season _|in te league, which ha been bad-|ige?iger wm fm sinses | th united hospi sid, He entered | years) Richard Hamlin and Karen | fang tn Siemaral Collen ‘bd wittr the close of the state pheas-| put he came around,” Smith} Joy = he ee ee oouen Wa eens ——— pA Rg cancer, | Gullet taking honors in “B” (10-11) | sign from Sam. He jumped
Natl cen the following day | cominaed, ““and in about str weeks with the lion's share of the prizes Sot Hrtiniore ach br the bag show | Bosses oot masetton tet Si-S5-jeeeet- en balienis-ea: Lada hort so dnenaee air _—— . ar dca
to enter their birds po peepee A nae ge Parnes throng ln ls al ea Fe eae th Euler et 7 |E, aml aa vanes win| Sixteen area couples competed in| A SDiyearcld. 16hpeund Santer, Current leader in the contest is a , ” bullet remains in Lariat’s head. ~ the first dance contest of the sea- | Tasagalakis attsended Manual Arts
3-pound ll-ounce ringneck entered] ie he has been ai Sg a tion. Bevin piace sen NFL_STANDINGS . gone eee ot omg s. He = son Sunday evening, with Shirley | High School just a few blocks
by Edward Keith of 564 Oster Lariat has won 16 cham-| Awards were made Saturday National Football Davis and Richard Dalilberg of | from USC. He lettered fast nigg Teeneie petition, Pes little chance that the former St League Stand. | tired in 1946 as president.
eo fulltime Oakland © pionships. night at a Louis Browns can climb more than | ings, including games of Sunday, Clawson taking top honors. Five| year and gained the Sad Sam }
Be eligible ent rd With ony ome event left, Lariat —S ood by em a fotch or two at best, no matter | Nov. 8. Gi Skater T Pro more contests will be held on con- monicker as a place kicker. He
gine ae hen ht | is in 2nd place, tied with Riviera's =i agli poe wives Par, | DOW loyally their new home fans EASTERN CONFERENCE ity urns + | secutive Sundays, with the six win- | became even sadder this segam
to the Pontiac Press for weigh- = ‘| ty was held in Gingelivitie, | SVPDOT ore for another ‘miracle 9 6.9 te 18 8 ome rule it would limit his a ing and photographing. | Bernie Mann of Port Washington, Washington v0.3 3 tee ise Bighteet» yepr- ald Jacqueline |e ~~. | activities and perhaps give Mira ~
A650, U.-S bond will go to the) N.Y. Each hag 11 points. Black! | Tact ee oe ptaing. piled up| 8 8 ranseree 2 8 8 2S 1B BB owner, ont ak Uke Putian Ral ewiods wert éammed | Scat in the grandstand
winner, mith. weight only. consid. | WoOre. MS. Netteit¢ points. Pinat+the.2nd place finisher, Chuck Par-| Unless they are ven the de-| ies Cords. * 3.8.00 10 te! adium's leading competitive skat-| U9 the ‘Linden. (silver: : ered if Cw judging. test is scheduled for tomorrow, _ | tello of Rvochester, who had 710.|cent treatment they deserve, the/ > Woe T Pet. hia GF} ere, became professionat—this | morning: Phyllis. ———
Other leading drivers were Wayne | Orioles will go into camp some- foots 8 3 3 Tif #8 18) weekend with the announcement medal, dance); Diana Rigotti (sil- | ssstrest
DRATTON KINGS, QUEENS Bennett of Hazel Park (629), Carm | where next spring with one of the | Se" Francises.:: 5 2 6 “714 iss iss | that she will join the “Hippodrome | ver bar, dance); Nancy Tynan. | Panes, »::
Nebeay's 35 Ten Fine 13! sgwer Puc TS Ove rw. | Ragatz of Waterford (605) and Jim} slowest and weakest hitting sets of | Gree "Bay... ¢ ¢ lus jus tar] Of 1954" company Martha Rogers, Lynda Wright | Baten MeCandless 23 Fiab-a-Dubs 17 | Team Ne. 4 % Catry View 18 | Hasselle of Troy (567) athletes of modern record The | eee eibars se Misg Downer has been an active: (bronze medal, dance); Frank | Siege.
freye. 2 > et gy fy | Separate points were kept to| Browns stole only 17 bases last | peteet 17 Balt | member of the Rolladium Skating | Sonier, Richard Hall, Len Drake, |...
Lords 19 Deers 2 Puertas Sve 2 Peb 14; determine the leading cars. Own-| season and stretched only 26 hits; ,. Summer's RentLtS : Club since its organization in 1950, | Jo Ann Merrill, Janis Ellis, Sharon | petreis
— oo tay rey 24 3| ers of the top three were Chester, | into triples, both new American| Gree fey Resre 11 | Club presented her with a bouquet | Falk, Fred Coxen, Maxwell Wright, | T*r** , soup,
Indiv. game J. Jnkobowski 247; series) Team game orien — Outdoor .- Russ Dickman of Waterford and | League marks. Philadetphia a0 New ork 14 | 0f roses at the Rolladium Satur-| Dorene Pokorny, Carole White, | Meatrest
SS Se lon ~ “| Bennett. The club was a poor last in bat-| sen Frances 31 Les Angeles 27 | day night. ‘Tom Hollis (bronze bar, dance). -Detreit
T
Death Notices Florists-Flowers 3'¢ Wanted Male Help 5| Wanted Male Help 5 Wanted Male Help 5 Wanted Male Help 5| Wanted Female Help 6| Wanted Female Help 6
APER'S — FLOWERS LIES {| ATTENTION - TV EXPANSION WITH COMPLETE . ail a eure FR 2-317 BOX REP Se tae opening ae "eae tls Mv t be mechan OFFICE HELP a - N, |
~ Wil ines-| jes. National Coach Body Repair. ‘ AF ob Work Near Home |
ALLEN, NOVEMBER € 182 ADA) Ambulance Service 3-A At 10 am. today Wedvman ete ear Frere 0, 6 |e 25 BOYS ot tee wopiy| ‘This Christmas! beloved wife of Ben Alien; dear there were seplies at it wife can . drive and PINGETRRS ” marry, credit office, Georges- mother of Robert Reynolds and the Press office in ‘ee, Gees sartiog ery: RE | Appear ip person. Montcalm _Newports, 36 5. Saginaw. Mrs. Carrie Wright; dear sister HUNTOON ee Write Ne-| Bowling Coster 30 Rast Mont, Apply for i
Goodiow: Martha Bleck ast ‘Mat. Se tetewnag Somes IF YOUR HOURS PERMIT, You _°'8 Pals, New eran — We need 2 extra boys 16 to | — <= —| Becomes lofoik 3 te Seay. Puneral service will be Ambulance Service can supplement your earn FULL OR PART TIME MAN FOR 18 years of age to work one TYP Flessane working conditions.
held nesday, Nov. lith, at | : 12, 27, 38, Si, 37, 42, with afternoon and Ssturday bore vyaewum cleaner department tn D ’ afternoon caiy, Thursday. Nov. 12,| Good typist with experience im Feehan. |
the Church of Ged im Christ ot | FE 2-0189 46, 58, 60, 63, 64, 68, leading appliance store. Som. esign from 12:30 pm. im out mailing| insurance ged Fea) estate ‘pre- |
ficlating | fe Oak Bill | 7a 70, 71, 72, 76, 86, 98. ‘necessary, FE 22811 for in | E P —— | . pp ee Be — Jacobson’s
Cemetery. Mrs. Allen will ie in | ——— _—_—_—___~+-_—— _terview eppointment. =| ngineer | If you are interested in work-| went position. dependent ot Betes state et the William F. Davis Funeral Directors 4 FOREION EMPLOYMENT CON-| pinee rw BIRMINGHAM AREA | pg ta must apply in advance! on intliative and , ws :
Pune Home after 1:30 p. m. { WE CAN USE TWO MEN THAT) struction work If interested in|" ‘ENGaGen IN DESIGN wn on Monday or Tuesday to iK.G Hempstead, ealtor
Tuesday. | heave afternoons and Saturdays foreign projects with a, 4 MANUPACTURING OF MATERI- i bd
ee ral _ \ _ free and would ‘ike very pleasant |- write Foreign Service ®.| AL HANDLING DEVICES OsED guar Patan Le ;
| | Voorhees-Siple| —_ Bon mt, Metuchen ¥_3___- | ON STAMBING-PRESUES. ETC wR. Capemes 70 po wir | WAITR.88 FOR SODA POUNTADE BURNETTE. NOVEMBER 8, 1963. | w Male 1 5 1S Hides A WEEE WORTH A) SEEK COMPETENT DESION ~ py ip ead gral wort. Jotye.
Donald Lee, te W: Sirethmer. | FUNERAL HOME _ | __ Wanted Male Help 8 portend ss, 728), Tat Teen et] ROGTORETY. GArEbe Nhe Ge'| CIRCULATION apr. [pleasant
and Mré. Aaron L. Burnette; Gear | ambulance Service, Piane or Motor ; TOOL DESIGNERS eee ee oe WRITE BOX 11, PONTIAC)
erally Bg ng, doses ieee ae Amon” scuoo. goucation| Site's Derrestomatic Dept. | =
service will _be held Tuesday. Nov. Ideal workin, — eee => = pre | 364A, 173 W. Madison, Chicago. COMP OSTTOR WR LMODERN
10th, at 2:30 p. m. et ~ holidays, inrurance and ee LOOK plant Steady -worg. good wg OE — MALE ATTENDANT, AGE 21 TO
Riv. “Havens officiating Inter- Donelson-Johns M, C. Manufacturing Since nteciment Does your Joo pay you! B"Ofnce supply. 11 W. Lawrence | p small private pay- ~
ment in Perry Mt. Park Ceme- HOME 118 Indianwood Rd _— Lake Orico | . at least $110 per Week? T need Siscet Peatlee = { — Reogtet. Write Boz 208
tery. Donald will lig in state st | pesoNED POR FUNERALS" 4 qpeebenically | inclined mcm | MECHANIC WANTED TO PREPARE | Oe aw nid can the Parmer-Snover Puneral Home. THIS 18 NOT CANVASSING OR| thet have dependable transporte-| —P¢ inapect new cars. Man with Would. you the © poe Fer = —— so ca rr REAL ESTATE SALESMAN commission work. The hours are] tion. Report at 0 6 mw ne etn. ee | weet Tncome $35 to $64, oF s0Te
_ MOVEMBER §, 1951. EL Cemetery Lots 4A EXPERIENCED—LICENSED = td” mocsevelt Rotel: | _8. Saginaw St, Ponting. PES-4101.| Yoidn products to eonerarens nthe
Sener ot-sars—Ceretine~Gereie, +2 ORAVE oz, PERRY MOUNT| _ PROVEN SALES ABILITY . EXPERIENCED MAN ON FARM. Two Salesmen poe AB ig lg Sy WA a my
Mrs. Sarah DeLeon, Mrs. Esther | Park MA 669M 007 ~ t Decessery, 065 CAPABLE OF FARNING $200" opeaings Write Ravietah's Dept
Plores and Fran DeLeon. Funeral LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD N, “achester Rd. —— weekly. Prefer intangible back-|/ —— ,— ry Pe ey eee
arrangements will be announced 136 BE. Pike &t. BOYS TO SET PINS. MUST BE §Sfound Car necessary, Loce! 2 MEN WANTED
later by the Voorhees-Siple Pu- im YOU ARE INTERESTED IN| 15 yra. old. vicinity of Drayton) Company Ages 27 to $5. Complete, to train in the heating and air neral Home. securing —— + this nature) Pisins. apply in person. Dixie | ‘reining sales help. Commi~' conditioning ‘tusinesé. Good — in-
The Pontiac Press YOUNG MAN ED ee «Sen aed eg
rar taht || page meai ggeae) Poa Pt REAL ESTATE — sigue sat gigs Wine Cts ri - : ex ce : A ce N I x es
68; beloved hustend of Mrs. Mil. FOR WANT ADS tion von quality. apply Je oe nave pag Aa Se err sO OT CE —_—
Reva Kirkham, Mrs. Oliver DIAL FE 2-81 Huron, 9 a.m. men. Must own sutomobile and — work full or part time. You will Koski, Duane Kirkham, Mrs, 81 emi nashanad eases ee een be willing to work. We have the carn from, @0e to €506 © weet.
Gerald De Mrs, Harold PHARMACISTS WITH EXPERI- and the property, new) gxCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY Apply 10:30 a. m., 2 p. m. or
Picea ayn” ne | | From 8 am.to Spam. || {isiutnd sil sssigieat try Fiala nents eacbanee ee Grother of fl. B., Joseph ¥. Kirk- and "boas Wite Box 68 Pon- Sarntnge enemies nee. | _ Repitiy expanding Ouaccid | RT Obni e ga portation provided. Call
bam sn ee — = a _ She Press. MAHAN ‘mstitution will train 3 men Europe, 9.000 to 912.000 Travel GIR On MOUSEWOREL TAY.
Wednesday, Nov. 11th, at 2p. m| fod tmmediatety The | Pres A-1 MECHANIC, FOR cary 8 | eS, anne eee) pr sane ami Rat eter $r . PART TIME Sundays and holidays off OL
mao rl pons Sang th ood guarantee plus commissions. | i y : af : Po MB ~ 8
ferment in Pert. si Park Com-| | canes the barges tor usar | E32 E Saeaene Mara Tans ha, CANS %°8 ORCH) sons Went Huron street pnlpgelpenbell 5s" ps 5 | “feneral bousework in new Bome
ca iG, Keach, wa’ || Sr'ise svortmrmeer coms | [ost Deemern Ee AA's AuroMonuce can sgeuny. one "7D CuRrirune panes | Me” sch Wit re ae eee ba nntg Ses TSS erred cotacing | Eve Voges Rob Wer the V. FP. W. Mr. Kirkham will has been rendered vameiens STOCK BOY FULL TIME.| shift. See a > — BLOCKS, }-
and sea-Walls.
Eavestroughing ba! MeLatn |
— OR |
t. 38 between De-|
Reverse }
bay CARE POR CHILDREN. FE
25026.
: LICENSED, HOME FOR GIRLS OF
“Hie. time. care.
Share | Living Quarters 26 2%
TWIN SPRING AND MAT-
tress, FE 23-5388
WANTED FURNITURE It you have anything for sale
ONE OF PONTIACS LARGEST Set buyers, cash walting. FE
irr niin It
Entire home or odd lots. Get the
po | . wa outright or
tt for . B. ity
Bale. Ph. OR 3-2717.
Witt Pa
“
'“E 23717
WANTED TO BUY USED STORM
windows. Must be reasonabie. Ph.
PE 4-0806.
Wanted Money 2
WANTED TO BORROW #4500 POR
& years at 6 er ee
land contract or equity ta your
K. L. Templeton, Realtor 53% W. Huron
We have ready cash hi ‘Gel
contracts, Call now for eompiete
information. Prompt service guar-
Snteed on accepted properties. —
ir disposal to rehase new
— — Be gq ot coe fone
befor
po asx “por BOB. MAHAN.
MAHAN REALTY CO., REALTORS
0O-OPERATIVE MEMBERS
Open Evenings and Sundays
1078 W. Huron Ph. FE 3-026)
We have ready cash for Land
Contracts Call now for complete
information. Prompt service guar-
anteed « properties.
WM. A.
KENNEDY oe mi 8
Tw St. —_--—__?E.4-2560-
CASH for CONTRACTS] —
Se eS ie aes 4 ace
Realtor 1969 _W_ Guren Otr sess
ij i ; iis E
Hl
: tf g watt
; 3 vs ie i
CASH FOR YOUR _
LAND CONTRACT
Ralph B. ~
Peddling Your Property? Tt doesn't Our method of
Wtd. Miscellaneous 28)
Wid. Contract Mtge, 30/ >
DEMECEATS CA CASH FOR Your |
— { —
__Wanted Real Estate | 3 WE SELL
WE BUY
WE TRADE
n pF +e - ; 1 isn't
cabere <* hte ont | a A he
Mre. Burnes, PE2-0614 93 Mark.| "OT prepared to move im.
MON., TUES. & WED. COLD Carr wise ** oe $5.50 complete. Dorothy's.
on np Apren— tm —pare| dW. M. Stout, Realtor Nov. 9, 1963, I will not be re- Foe Gy flew Be
| ‘ed by any Es: my |” oR — Ia__B__B
Roy 637 «Lakeview,
t | Toe wep nS i FATIONS 94.56 : WE SELL MORE
tr} s. ser °
18.2. Buree + Sh Wtd. Children to Board 25 down payments ___. We Need List
DAY CARE. LICENSED HOME. aw _ Re eae revi
4
LISTINGS
WANTED
Need for Homes to Sell
Urgent at This Time
MANY
READY BUYERS
WM. A.
KENNEDY. Huron
st Saag mess.
We have buvrer that will ‘pay.
strable located home also buy-
ers for business and income
Lobe sta Call us for immediate
ROY KNAUF, Realtor 36% W. Huron FE 32-7421
Eve OA 63339
WILL BUY On-List YOUR LAKE
rty Purchasers waiting.
R. F. McKINNEY 8800 Commerce Rd.
Ph. Po: EM }33tt or
Univ 1-5788
We Need
Each Other!
—We Need Property
Listings!
—You Need to Sell!
lets bw ae | an mu-
tual i) be
FOR SURE RESULTS SEE
JOHN KINZLER
Open E un = * ves
Co-operative Realtors
DO YOU WANT | eT ne We wit! vuy oF sell home
or uity regardless ef
on, rice and termes are right.
. D. CHARLES
ho..se Le vate owner.
ae eee sie
BUYSELL
OR TRADE
Through
CLARK’S OFFICE
CAMERON H. CLARK
W. Huron 4000
WE WILL BUY
1) Equity in your home
(2) Equity tm land contracts o ae © pt home for cash,
CORT M. TIMBLER 1111 Josiyn
DEAL DIRECT, NO ecasaueuan,
cash for Gt. equities, give ad-
dress, price, equity & payment
hia te Pontiac Press Box No.
’
lake frent as high as $18,000 with
$5,000 down.
BRICK. WANTED
ig gh FE ag Ea
to sell a 3 bedroom
afl — “water Log
Open 8 to 8 ig a tence os conven: e
D1879 or OR }-1760
5660 Highwéy Waterford
PROPERTY WITH LIST, You
M Real Estate. FE Ceti H. Mye ;
Want to Sell?
BUYERS WAITING
WHITE . BROS. Co, ® 2°. tor Your Convenience
OR. 31872 os OR 3-1700
Watertord
Highway
NG ROOM, MAN
. Huron bus. |
Florence. FE 5-4897
FE 5-663:
ATTRACTIVE FRONT ROOM.
near bus Cail after 6 p. m.
rE ___sPE 4-682
Wanted TO BOY MODERN 4 '
“bea CASH 1 FOR SOUTTIES |
cash for your equity im any de- , SLEEPING Boge. in
tn the pi {
12,000 with $3.04 to $4,000 do
~| WILLIAMS OR MACEDAY LAKE
aA customer wants !
For Rent Rooms 32):
ROOM FOR GENTLEMAN, 199
| ATTRACTIVE SLEEPING ROOMS. | close in. eo 47 Henry 3
Bf
“IT got a buck that says you don't make your point!”
For Rent Rooms 32 lhe. on
3se9 SLEEPING ROOM FOR GENTLE- man. Close to bus. Mrs. Perry,
130° W. Howard.
SLEEPING ROOMS FOR GIRLS, good location. FE 4-371! after 4
PRIVATE
home. FE ¢ __ /
Wanted “ Rent 32A
2 CHILDREN WANT 2
bedroom unfur se Can y
3 months rent in advance.
be reasonable rent and néar
school. FE 56552.
WANTED APT. OR R HOUSE. 4 OR
$6 rooma, 3 year girh rE
UNF URN HED APARTMENT wanted by
Ask for Mr. Bromm.
GARAGE WANTED IN VicintTy
oF rs AND HEN pense
CALL FE ¢3 APT.
pity rj TO CLOCE
COUPLE AND ONE CHILD DE-;
sire 2 or more room unfur-
nished apt. er house. Vicinity of
Pontiac, up to $10000 per
_ month. Ph. Wayne 2962R.
WORKING COUPLE ‘Days
Would i
a. Call NO}
Responsible _ zee working voupie look
kindly nome o. ver oF
rental @ Birmingham. we
* twe “edroom house
et @ reasonable
y December 1. Our record
fires, explos- with
are seekin.
or
Goat “chert = APT. FOR Fann
7 cher or 78:
ton Piains., OR 34350 after 6 3. t et EE BEDROOM TNPURE.
pe fsa . or sooner.
Er ‘Snes days or TE 23-6629 eves
Hotel Rooms 32B ust | 3
3 VERY NICE SARPETED RMB. . factories and ° Rent Apt. Unfurnished 36
LARGE CARPETED oo
nearly completed. Living room
od ‘cture window, overiook-
ing L.
vanity, sliding clothes
other features found seu,
est homes. Lease $175
iy $e" gas heat included.
+
& BATH, NEW. ADULTS)
cay No drinkers. no pets. EM
ROOMS & BATH. WORKING couple rT 143 Baldwin, ;
pore Mag $1 Stout
§ ROOMS, MODERN AND NEWLY decorated. Employed couple. West
__ Bids. rE
2 ROOM “HEAT ‘PUR SnsKED. aPT.,
legen General Market, 468
—
RM. UNFURNISHED APT. adults only. Call FE 5-2234 after
pm
Rent | Houses Furnished 37
HO . FUR-
mished. Auburo Heights. FE
32-3097
RENT MODERN
«4 W. Columbia.
-3 BENORM HOUSES MODERN, SMALL HOME.
partir furnis : year
around, child welcome. Reference
6781 «& 6706 Elizabeth Lake Rd.
SMALL HOUSE, NOT MODERN,
room for 1 child, available until
_ June 1. OR pains.
™ 3047, “3 Fr. t HOUSETRAILER.
RANCH HOUSE, 2 BEDROOMS,
adults preferred. $90 month. ©
Cake _ Partly
Rent Houses Untuin. 38 OITA FRONT 2 BEDROOM.
furnished FE ¢190¢6
HOTEL ROOSEVELT - Newly decorated By week
Pa eee HOTEL AUBURIN —
L.
Sn tal Soe 464 pao "en PE 23-0230
Rooms With Board 32D
ROOM AND BOARD FOR DAY
worker, west side. FE ee.
Reat Apts. Furnshe Furnished 33
NICELY FURNISHED 3 ROOM
apt. Living room, bedroom. large
kitchen and bath. Lots of storage
space, private entrance. utilities
furnished, west side. Couple only.
Available Nov. 15. Reply Boz
Pontiac on Mose. Mutual 42382.
3 FURNISHED ROOMS. ADULTS
_ only. No ore FE 2-300.
2 ROOM ~ APT.,
eo. ‘of pt an
COMPLETELY N, Tea
hot water. O7, esi Cail between
9 a m. and 5 p.
2 ROOMS, WORKING GIRLs, 3 blocks: from “. references, $10
weekly. PE 2-0633 after 5:30.
LARGE 1 ROOM APT. 1 OR 32, __ stove & refrigerator PE 41319.
1 LARGE ROOM WITH KITCHEN- ette newly decorated, clowe to
_ fale Meek ei s186 eed, sche Auto
LAKE ORION oDisTRICT. 3
bedroom house apartm 1
modern _, with cutom atic heat by
couple who
au themselves home owners. Re-
a Nev. 8 References.
write for ent.
: a Mills, 625 Road.
3 RMs. arn “BATH. WORKING
3 pees. AND BATH. 04 Gher-
ne. OMAN BEAT. f, NEAR BUS,
{Tf you 3 ROOM HOUSE
__ PE 7-1532
4 ROOMS AND BATH, APPLY #47
Stanley St. after 5.30
SMALL MODERN HOUSE, COU-
ple only. PE 71-6187. :
4 RMS. AND BATH. NEW, COM- merce. +46. ,
7 RMS AND BATH, CLOSE TO
Baldwin Sehooi. Available Dec
_ lst, “E 26670.
2, ROOM novsE, - INQUIRE 208
“Voorte 6
NEW 3 BEDASOM BRICKS wire ear-port $125 «(ease ipee
__ Wiek, Sylvan Lake. FE ; tie. 4)
e Orion. Tile- bath, with | ;
| AUBURN
SUNDAY. 1-9 WEEK DAYS 3-6
2314 Middlebelt Rd. aoe Lake - § mile weet
Middlebelt to model.
pick live forever—
ig you. not in beautiful Syiven
i build your home.
__ THE LARGEST...
“NEW HOMES
FOR YOUR MONEY
these three bedroom, face brick
homes:
Spacious rooms, poured concrete,
sills, genu-
select oak
floors. interior mic tile bath, double sink with |
poards,
tachen fully insulated, «ts
pum storms and screens, paved
solid drive, gas automatic furnace
and bot water, 60 to 60 f\. front
age.
$14,650 Full Price
This home with 2 car brick ge-
Fage and breezeway . . .618,150.
Come out today and fud for
yourself the quality and auty
of these homes.
MAHAN REALTY CO, ‘REALTORS oT» r FE 2-0263 NEXT ‘DOOR TO YBRANCH | POST
EXCEPTIONALLY NICE, | ry “RMS
low down payment, must be wi
at Broker, MY¥rtle ence.
2-0940. or MAple 5-7894.
VACANT—$1,000 DOWN
Very ciean home with scueegee
on two. lakes, Payments $56 4
oh. pret — ‘ee |
LAWR WRENCE. w.
_HAVE US SELL YOUR HOME _
KE
home
Full baserent with stoker,
ear a with cement drive
Close to @ area and bus.
Oniy 88.960 terms.
= a —- —
wr e glassed re ih en Se = ~Cousiter the features offered ti
pine Kite. space
GAYLORD North End
4 room
block from
and : decorate eS ut. Publ
East Side 6 room and full beth, ar
ae Downtown Income
5 rooms and bath down, ¢ Ci.
tion
apartment will make pay-
ments. $13,650, terms.
5 Acres—Ranch Home
20 Acres
Spacious’ § bedroom
ideal for large
large living rooms,
end many other
Barn 36x54 and
house. Lecated
schools and within 19 ar
of Detroit in Rochester area.
000, terms.
Roy ee Inc. me schicken
futures, heat. electric
Seve by pl
tor. si000 "Sowa. “Call Ma’ S311,
CLEAN & CONVENIENT
This 2 rm. is as nice
as they come. 11x16 li room,
Nice Kitchen, room rooms,
full dry basement with gas heat. 14x20 garage, paved drive. $3,000
down,
sacs WILLIAMS oe! ‘
Estavitshed on first floor. '.
= ing room with fireplace
ONT Y $1,509 DOWN. Attractive 2 er as %y Block to
bedrm. home east of Clarkston. | ec aly
Modern kitchen, 18 ft. living | NEAR BALDWIN
rm., full bath, AC heat in| 3 nice s rooms with 3
full basement, I's car garage bath City sewer and water, 1
Over i ecre of land. Lake privi- car garage. $4,650 total.
leges too! Total price $8. CORT M, IMBLER
AST OF PONTIAC. Modern § rm. Daily ‘til 8 a to @
ae 17 ft living rm. modern !111 Josiya
kitchen, venetian blinds full
basement, alum screens
and storm sash.
ing center and bus stop | OT rid Je
nearby Large lot. 250 with
i THE “BIRD”
It's
Spotless!
~ Home & Cottages _ PBL LLL lm
bas Sif SPACE —— Now
— & Loan Bidg
LARGE, NEWLY DECORATED
office utilities Lge —
= er ‘ space. rd. |
cael ae IN DOWNTOWN oP. |
flee rm rE oa between
_? am.
For Rent Store e Space 38A 38A
STORE BUILDING ON ELIZABETH Lake Rd. ve 5-9876, STORE ON HURON WITH
lot. ase 7% Oakland
ve.
Goop FOR _ MANY SUstimesEs, s. Located corner Ptke anford.
_ Apply 444 E. Pike Fe 2-6549.
___Rent Bus. Prop. 38D
LAW RENCE BLDG.
HIGHLANDS BRICK
7 ig. SS
living room om fireplace,
cheery
tile kitchen, tile bath, hot
water heat, 2 car prvi
First offe 16,950.
Bateman & Kam semen 4
it 8. Re.
‘ and Sun.
You Can’t Put Your
“Dough” into a Better
Z and . small down pay-
ment wil! buy tt
Roger B. Henry li Main 8&1. OL 16111
Rochester, Michigan
TO REA e 18 THE * TO |
ge
4 room partly modern home.
4 BED-|
en
rooms, $11,000. Terms, FE 1%-7041.
Place a
Want Ad
Today!
have a want, let.a
Woe Ad fill it! To sell
or rent, hire or re-
| WALLED LAKE & VICINITY
LAKE LAND REALTY CO
924 Pontiac Trail, Walled La.
MA * 1554
S. Bloomfield Highlands 237 verre on ad Drive
Just — and stone
ranch 3 ‘ie baths, large setivition te foom pane ma-
RORABAUGH 302 Marlborough Dr. PE 2-9818
STOUT'S Best Buys
Today
LOVELY SUBURBAN
gel — with liv. po
large modern kitchen down;
2 rooms up finished in knotty
ine with oak floors making
trie Teally a 4 bedroom
pon ct basement with
HW and water sofiener, cornér jot nicely landse :
Aluminum | 5 me:
siding. You'll like -
tion & price. Call for ap-
pointment. Quick possession.
NEW RANCH end liv. rm., comb. den
large ati ace 2 nice bedrooms
vite price i
Edw, M. Stout, Realtor "| New, 5 rm modern home in
loc: rumpus AY ,
ne, 18 living rei} modern BM oe aS SIDE -
ee reetion | Pica on Bay Clay_Ave._ie- very ee basement wim res) unusual. It's an unusual value, heat. Extra tg 2 car garage. too at only $10,500. 6 rooms —
Lendecaped. 611.000 terme, } bedroe n and lava. , and
WEST SIDE. Good 3 foe] deta ce hee eel os Full bath, insulated, full base- jo onion: Excellent income ent with gas heat, 2 car ¢® | possibilities if your family ts gp with —o doors. Biack small. 2 car garage. This close-in
yard. “913.580, Fe reasonable terms. a od ge = oe
OLY om) DOWS. Bros a home = on your finished eaterior, 7 finshed interior. HERE ‘TIS ve mon: —complete_in-} A 3 bedroom home with 3. extra
~ terior, € rm. home for $3,906. for only $8,250 on easy, easy
FLOYD KEN Fog ee “ ‘ T, Realtor fromt porch and a full basement
4 W. Lawrence Eves. with a new gas furnace, Located
FE 54-6105. en a corner jot with a 1% car
__Next to Consumers Power — > mg a = nk
too late, see
YOU'LL LOOK
A LONG TIME an income tw
ment, see this unusual offer today,
$14,506 on terms.
WARD E. PARTRIDGE,
REALTOR FE 2-8316 43 W. Huron &t. Open Eve. 1 to 8
MODERN HOME, SALE OR trade. See ae! FE 71-6513. 3008
__ Simmons 7
$850 DOWN bath
large lot,
Wiring installed Ready good
riee.
5 RM. MODERN
DOWNTOWN INCOME pot month merece
Bence furaished “Tees Tliness foneae
cover ions FE)n , dagimaw o. Ph. FE 5-210 aca ;
cena aE TRL PO
for .
chaser to save =
balance of int interior 7,27 fang
*. attrac-
; = Jin WRIGHT, Realtor 222 8. Telegraph PE 5-0003 WEST SIDE : $750 DOWN -
srareomasmzhemmee sie |” $1,750 DOWN
Setgmesi, Skat nec giear | ~Bimabuth abe Ba, ay ines possession. , a am. i beth, utility. of furnace. Own quickly —see it! pf . co Ga ne be-
Bar, 000" ; CASH BARGAIN EXIBREE & GREGG
mead NM, Sat, Tel | Branch Ofte aot Oren Ue. Read
cone a ae “LAKE OAKLAND furnace le 4 Mod caentaned
you ag Par beat b= —y et me ow — pTinstored
‘ Fe pdmmediate Possession, Only
WEST SUBURBAN SNORT JOHNSON An 7 room e, All
oss, camal, with, cee FF - inet dues earage,
ton Lirchenettte » CUCKLER REALTY | auto oe" elec. HW. 2 N. facinew rE conn
Plastered, D inted nina PS, See
Bee tones Home 9 a ia Om. phe sine WEST Sylvan vara bed tro
ae | Seated+ fi oe 2° ciate 3 age Be = od a ai can a ji : 7
ra Se “ad
Sk | A TAVERN, HOTEL | ™ vt
BIG BEER
:-OUT ip i :
i! §
é
HH
flog i fF
&
-_ 6. sagan Soe hy” now, just phone ve ine.
NORTH END - 1
rete : |Humphries room, j
with Cl
Sib down, wens bother.
RAY O’NEIL, Realtor
Paine FE S108 of OR 31
wee ee 2 OE werent oo —— | oryzce or, aroma, suapigss “ SMALL RANCH TYPE | 92S Se7.______ vam home gn a = _| GILES REALTY CO. “It’s a fine-prevention radiator emblem—when you speed | orrices I
Sa a rea, | "Eke Hee, Se bao Sis| “ig Pamper Gent Sas |e w, aute°" we ser the dlr sign lights up and the wings start Mapping!” | cOasT-10-coast | RU] CK NER we a of Best offer, OR 35108 or FE refrigerator im total price | _ wire to, PE 26130 or OR 30478. | Fo “OEE ‘ piateeed there ‘a surpece foun WEST SIDE ot ohio at. Kg SR a “For Sate Acreage _43| World's Largest ary tube, gad 61. @ reem heme close te General Heo $875 DOWN $6150, FE 6-0615. 4 For Sale Houses «0 «2 W. Hurs Open Eve. PE 34316 FINANCE CO.
we ore. : . Aute ofl heat, breakfast nook + eee oe ee ee em RTILE ACRES _— aatitind . ee . Above W “9
Estate Ontord peek, ate of, Beck, becakiot nook | * curves te fhe wit bent pay-| 10 FERTILE : 4 ACRES ne ieee Walgreen's iw 9 eee
$1,500 DOWN Kept'bome. Priced atusis'erms| — NORTH SIDE _| 0a bedroom home “with one WEST SUBURBAN | 4 100i ensnce te hove your ova | be im tesmess feo. reanelt, New| For Sale Mowsetraiters 1 scree. 6 m, modern. Garage, PE 4000, 100 E. Fite St), oom modera with fireplace, cok | Decrm. and full bath down Large) NEAR ST. MICHAEL'S | We Bave, he pleasure of otter | fruit. berries and garden: also e| Sunoco station for lease st Oek- ~~
chicken coop, stream. v floors, full basement, furnace, pts : A. heat. Nicely| 2 bedroom home, full basement.| room bungalows that we have oP ny bg ig R..4 jana ihepresentalive gg eae ind lee a
1% sere, modern. 3 car | $a mater beater and garage | located with beautiful lawns and sash, screens! listed im sometime. All-modern-+-—treag Low an st4e doe , Ete a oh ke] Stan
met G YLORD wy yy ed trett and berries Pull} sorm desea’ Scar garage, Only | wh willy, large’ lot @Ttenioa, ‘gal hw DD wood 24079, Gun. eve. ma. Kes cette “Ws Cat be used tor bus. 96,950 with $1,450 down. price #10 180 000 down. fenced. beck one and. one L. C. LADD LUNCHROOM POR LEASE ALL| TRAILER EXCHANGE business. 9 t vert HAVE US SELL YOUR HOME : WEST SIDE ball car” garage, paved street 3496 Pontise Lk. Rd = t 4968 Cooley Lake - . ee ee Mel Ee gcc Be HAY OUT PERRY ST. | seanoom nome tes goed ves] tegen acu, eps | cooper Camaiate hag FE per) RZ UPS a Comey SAN $18,000. Plenty side : down nent. Let y ~ 3-2361 Pa Oneness ' oS omer “eee 2, W. Mure et FE S200 on Bact Galiowas at oe ern this ‘before ts too late. 30 ACRES | CLEARED, Rtng re i a eee
hers nser ee ison Set | a E-WOMAN REALTY Noses Hombieg ead, etiac viats room and woe in large hirne| Francis-E, “Bud” Miller | G Hempstead, Realtor | sé tt 7 ent cod" fireman 8 ine’ rumpus, ream. Auto privileges, Dowe Pat-| Sinise reeniae ae. Realtor tog bron treet | HHL.) a igor Renase. eit Sect Pest, auto, hot water. Puraished. | Huron-Elizabeth Lake Rd.| Qfiawr’'échmeider, #24, Ponting | war upstairs oe ve 46m = Eve. PE 21311 | 6 Wooded Acres — SS Soe 4 neil Poul Miller, 67%) Albany, Oak Section Frail Walled Lake OFEN SUN-| ready for more bedrms and bath Daily # to 6 p.m ~ ONE-STORY_HOME #, -ceutiful: building site—off the | wine und Siskey Takeout licensee Park ——————— _..._.-}.. Da -Phene-MA-41564,—_____} -# don't-know-of any +919 it AE heme. tai tate st ott a trail, quiet as the morth/ all tor only $10,008 down. You
RANCH HOME active axis &. NEAR EAST BLVD with 0 brick home | Comer pasion TYPE, GEML | boards tp Enches, for, 04.840. Good See ee tee SSS] cont mice on tele ene. Cal ter
Rew wim heqsesues One Sm divider bedrooms. Pic-| § room moders bungalow, of/ 2x46 for just $19,500 except «Boom Banc Orchard. basement convenient to bus, school! Ba gag eppointment te see
quire lanes ie Of eh, Peat | See cipsees hicatece pst sce | Sack Jeeoiey Gabe, porta cthostn : eae ee BAR & GROCERY orcas %S living room, forced | $00. tn -eneclleat neighborhood: | Lakeland Plerida, 1 floor 3 apart. | ,./AUL KERN, Realtor ““tawnence w | CARL W. BIRD, Realtor] iow we geual mit 10s
ai tee, Weeraowe parece ot| DONT BE LEFT OUT | ean sal stere‘Sel"se rele | Real Estate Since sie” |4 BEDROOM LAKE FRONT ye ete Ma anh BIS gy | $,Toom apts. included te the one
:| DON'T BE L poy TE NOMEDIATE With 2 bedroom and ove take-out ‘beet — will lecee to party nici ag ne . in| {gr Pontine property. J down, Delco oil heal, out, Business Property 44 a wet
F noo noone wage pggpes| fa ta ‘eNO Seas | rat Stowe cee eee es | ia yaaa Heal oct S| for fee, ees oe | MA Ua amin TOUR MOM | Ammen) Ra Es kPa ae tt DE | Patt ects | Ome cere | Rueetsnmmmenenesr income | S08 Oe eee aaa ea waa: Hs ™ eanll swore = ¥ aehan eaha Biisabeth ROS® McLAR b ent ‘Y SHIN- —_ .____. MY 34 —-
Full # rooms with unfinished ot, Linke prtviiges ONLY 61.900 dn, | Fe es CLRA. --9 andecaped fet SAil this for vesae. open vee. end Sun. ts, bangeloe conetsting of Knudsen STA E-WIDE Parkhurst Trailer Park
waits tal basement, gee beaten’! Nive YOUR gs | "Bast pas on,pared stro ding | giBUiee Tan SMe dows, | SOP reat Fed sestecewis | West Huron St. ———— sme] sem_Mgam‘aichentoms, Mem hot water heater. on pa street, ® Five with full n.
ctose to bus has storm sash| WP intsa this home for yourself, 2/ screens. 1 cars garage. Sereened| | sagem enatiew, ct wens | BLAME CARE AVE._0 Bie new of! e. ¢, heating plant, Rear pow Tologragh-ucse, chop ronniac at : Arrow.
ot” screens. Oltered ot 00.208.| bedsecms down wih expansion et | fret condition.| basement, furnace and Tune ¥ two good garage, 4. center ine & | Pontiac . : . ® Terme. tie gives room for a growing } tool > pam | [oe ego Blog wg ge Ty Pe = | gx t, SGine ee se et PE +160 rE oat
mencaiy HusTERS | SEER SEAS | rm [Ses S| SS ees | SSS eee Signa eb ghee RS ere et a wa A KNUDSEN [7 ht Sener is Wansterred and | "7 SatMA'N miwoon =| Sue dure nome, Meeps | Gdonoe nmi, snowen | squiry si ¢ ROOMS AND, Bas — ne PeeuRBaLTe small to, cot te iad ca tare lon keen | PE Oise; PE toten pes 6 to t| Sept and automatic best | prose PE $4101 of FE 284 | $15 per month 100 8. Merrimes. | § ROOM HOUSE, ve. yn cate Bre dame | TAVER™ F- Ban,
in Goad, weet covereae,,%; | BY OWNER ¢ RooM! FRAME. | Srawtfe “Eats “Lane. Call oe « Reena Sewn corms, | Sono suspen wogepon ow | 8 8 eee AS per cent "me mortgage and | fest nook. garage Price $13,000.| 31372. rete Fe * reom Se kaw = GATEWAYS to 8 room hg hy Ao chick- bj ay bad = : ~ and sm re Dr. fs
per moat. Home completel! met | SeVATE OWNER, WIL SELL O&| “BUD” NICHOLIE | Soud‘neke 3 “Spariments. Taree APPINESS oe ait rt Ee Fan eg San
6 Mi. West of Pontiac ce, Pap sae, Would. ine out of — REAL eerare __| [Sia Teal'sarase. Be cash Hi 2EO. MARBLE, Realtor | _ss sy: a he M1. e city or lake property, PE 4261 Andersonville Rd. Waterford sibillties Unlimited. Investment tor 1a sce land, 3 bedroom moders | 310@ CARROLL G. PORRITT >O00D VALUE __-_ Phone OT Side FOR LEASE ;
it water beater: Prastered wails.| immediate Possession CHARLES 26% West Huros FE 37126 | | wane. Mike's Dist. | Suburban Property 40-B| {ste garage, new _ cverhend ne vieieds, Obie. " aE
Herdwoe@ floors, 1 block from 3 bedrm. brick ranch homes with Eve. FE 23-6104 You'll wove this specious jeumt , _ah_9en0—ot Gantesé Ge 4 eae
school, Wo Dioct of bes ie Dori Sta es, sillece_t WHY PAY MORE! _Pecpereiits_Dael_ Etat ~ ae entrance to liv- cornet ef aspera Ave gud Are oi
cluded. This ts @ real buy at| vestibule. dimette. tile plas: | Just ite for thie beautiful home ing room, natural fireplace, stair- 2¢ Soe _Walton and 4 wn Pe 349116. $10,500. Terme tered walls. gas heat solid com | on Wesbrook. Compare this with way to foored attic, full base LADIE: nal
peves stresia, Bathing weechand| bu, &. > Bedrooms comb. living O f } meet Ti ct suse ete storms | ate Four life comes woo =| ET OYD KENT, Realtor $400 Monthly
F. C. Wood Co oat! priviiegs Pn. | fo ae ee ee eee a ee tore inte this very eutrec: 24 W. Lawrence FE $4¢% open eve, . *| Butiger 8 7m iis | heat ‘nice lot Tates substantial o2.n00 terms, of will take EL | five 2 bedroom brisk home, | to Consumers Power Spare Time
REALTOR re Tt iF , al o _ SAY irs GodD VALUE. ine, Senger’, tor cosy tt; | COMMERCIAL BUILDING, 305 6
1725 Wiliams Lake Ra. OR }1235/ _Sun_or call for appt Gme $1,000 DOWN ment By eid living ~ chores — 8. door Steel beams concrete 1. cent ‘Grade
a a nl a a = Bata) Gis ite ts eS = BUYS GALORE rage. On ¢ lots Ne. ‘and bus. $1,200 . 1946, ‘and. span house to help mide fe eee = car, references,
2 pedroem phe front b Perd _Siree, price gem Down i gy interested fo ® sm; d'roor and ath* Itedreorm bale Priced. ouiy Siede0 Site For Farm Prop. rr wine “hours .* a7. Be
: 9 room ts . south of = Bs my oy space for sorme — es —_ on" Price $13,080, Terma. Lane Ba. Paved street room. ~¢ and fer aed Roger B. Henry monthly of tet s Sian St Sons 2 Hammond | "8 stbivies | Se states orecrige | Geese obrds Near-Clarkston Sites” ego Tome erms.
. ' — il Mate &t. OL 10111] 4197 acres, grnctioatty all be,| Income Goapeamey.
_ a East Side 0. Bure PS. FE Tove inte. Murry ex this eae. rou Bev 17 WELL INSURE IT - Modern ‘heats, Je'rae’ fti| appkeation Write Bes 1, Pew | 5
TR fapitatat boven ts | prom meter none go tee | Ere PS Che re See | new , esate eae! Ee oe | ae Pre — so 5 ‘acres of land $6080, 62.000) TNS) “on eorner tot, Zoned < : We tert HE Bae cee N Shores Sub-division, for sale for 30 cows, toot Money to Leen “ 3 bedroom, sleeping porch. | Beautiful new 32 Tench! ‘kitchen, 2 bedrooms and } 4 » vwner 7 room ranch e silo and othe (State lenders)
Cosy meders 9 bedroom heme | ereee, 02.000 down Will handle. heme. modern Ritehen, | gath. Full price $6,800. for; REALTY CO, REALTORS 3 ° ~~ a OF dee eae they ree als.ece | P. D. Hammond, Realtor ao te Gown. bs = Open Evenings “tl 9 - Sunder S| = Mt Pine ”* J h K I F
Terma, oe en ee eo $5 Eve. Pa. OR 31908 or PE 2.2230 NEXT DOOR Bk Sale Lake Prop 4! O nA. I win | L OOk | © 1. Resale located on water —— Jearing Com . > > D —————— LOT. 168 FRONTAGE 1310 Since 1928 sun 3 Tee ES ee ay omy at Blackwood Nearing pletion . A. Nagra Sylvan Lake en tame. o, Vurcase Ce a rece. hh oe ee ee e
JAMES A. TAYLOR RD AREA HueAsere PARE perares Ov ee seeped sth shes careers sat | eye vas“ WROTAGEGN BEEP | Vera dee temaes” heaw Locati Realtor 121) Pontiac State Bidg. MILFO : SOCAL SG ERAT Doms Our New Location srait ie the petting of We imers | 00 Florence, off Mana R4.) lake| terms. New 1on Open Evenings FE 42844 | Large § rm. house Pull besoment | BROOEDALE RDO READY Fou| 1748. Te Ra. just south | Giningrm. sad modern kitchen dn. | Priv. on Osklang Lake. PE 4010s P. Ww Oman & SON | -« ¥e ~ | with basement garage, Locee nas | AND MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS. | of Bloomfielt _Shop. sand “bats up. Selecl | 4 BEDRM. LK. FRONT |. 2 _. Near General Hospital Deen staked out fore trailer OFFERED AT $13.108.00 FRA! DIT) YOU KNOW. oak so treNRE,,, eee, | tne DOWN—PUR > | For Sale Lang Contract 46 ys 5
i . Large, 0 room well conditioned | Cony Septic teat and well ory | Gs0R FINA oo You cam insurance your furniture basement with AC off beet, lomn-| oseted cena Tet, = . 25% OFF er home, carpeted, din . se. se on easy s , water softener. : = - ‘
full bosamsed, Gutomatic hogs and | as ES" bewake’ bor siiaee’ wah WM. A. for Sid. for 9 years, Most places | hesier,” garage and \sohtd “com | full Darement, home nas naturel | prand new ¢ room and ful peth| “nO MED TAPE
Sn Sh me | eT aC LK, FRONT Pa nexce me | Ss) tee ee Rees reece oe oo ReNNEDY RYT ORD ees care ee] ee | a at erg Baxter & I 5) ) 2 and bath. Pull bacement and large G rge 7 needs Write box 9
—_,, REAt Batare —__| Srerettust* aower‘end fou cas | _ Open ivgnngs' eal were agate oes | Giroux & Hicks), fone *ioceucewarsr| Livingstone || | wosiLe HOMES Washington Park move into this some 3007 _W.. St. PE 4-3909 ee St ee ee = OR 34701 ance—25 per cent di ‘ 4 W. Lawrence &t. PE 61539) 26 ft. to 45 ft. im length. Up to ——
icmreerete! Schaefer | KINZLER | greenies | Sit Seen S25 | So attire pros |* raraanstrncie i veme-| TEAGUE FINANCE CO.} OP oungstown”™ metal kitchen, din-}| = A. 4 : : - ph) —- 0" eI aclte | ~ beaith—-Ferme-erranged.-———— ee of - . Foung. 202 S. MAIN aR ie a
hol water, For your appointment | Office open from # tot. , eg My oe zn . ROCHESTER, MICH, | "* #3 poor | FE atin * oy PE C-is0l, ove. | Py po answer col PE +144 Lake Front Only $1.90 down. $80 penn John K. Irwin GREEN LAKE OFFICE Russell Young LOANS $35 TO 9000 Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales | “BUD” NICE _ a = Choice 7 room semi-bunga- Dorris REALTOR ON GREEN LAKE) REALTOR __ “BUD” NICHOLIE porches’ ‘wae hoot. To. in- Wo ure FE est 101% Nr Saginaw Btreet CREDGTE FOR ALL Lanne, | a7 ware sy oul BS — a ee A nee a oe wane cacuane. cor right for larger family. - | 9 BEDROOM HOME 60'x310° LOT BEDROOM RANCH HOME | 19 COMMERCE RD. EM 3-4417| Seasoned land contrect_ on Telegraph Road. is the lo- : Williams Lake privilege. ¢i¢.475_, Ni new, built for owner, well _ Line _From Detroit WO 57174 Balance i a pee
cation of this attractive five New Bungalow—Vacant | - £2.08, 00. Geo 1. Scales, Real. sinder block. plaster. | RoscCOMMON. MICH LOT stxi0s.| 15 ner’ cent. room bungalow, Wall-to-wail ROYAL OAK § rooms. 4 pe ga tor M, Sepimew PE 25011 | ed walls, aluminum fae se ey or ie te ieee carpeting and lovely rooms bath, 2 bedrooms down. | up, Well located at ed of _Eves, PE 6508 living room, ample; p). 1M mi, | ~*~ throughout. hi base- basem nt, suto, oil furneee, ex- elty, 2 bedrooms bath : Denutitul bathe automatic furnace; wer. 3% -RAY O’NEIL, Realtor ment with off alumin- e-Lent condition, $10,009 terms. and stairway to Income Special 143 ft. frontage on Cooley Lake| common Sorte s 7 wv oe a
uma 120x120. 92750 DOWN. $10,200. PULL attic. nice For Colored L 3,800 terms Lesa for __ building | s_ Ses ewe Pons FE 371103 +08 |
Priced to sell at 811.975, of Ritchen-diner. base- or Color cosh, by owner. FESO. | °UtN, CABIN. NEAR AU SABLE | Phone DE 2G of Otaage Bekah See, nent | set eeramie Wy bath, "moderg| pace aad” titre water | “Siuuat w"ecueett, tidal; S| — em mo ee | Ranting fahing, FE Die — ; Wr. Cogp Memper, Tax Ww. | bichon wi Gived tursate. ea: | Set trad cee tag Ment ——| bath. 2 Leh oor sam lensed. te | BROWN ~. For Sate Lots 42! cellent ition. oe ee 2 beth on ted floor, srranged tn 3 O H R : :
1600 DOWN. Cory § rooms & . . y $12,500 with substantial dn. | 9908 down, Lovely large two bed- AN T E
A HOME OF YOUR | Ee Stray eae see), et eee let tT Soarieseemaper tetaretie'| NEW LOCATION _| LET YOUR sesessss OWN = excellent condition inside | KL. Templeton, Realtor | 3 pe setm electric bot water.) vice ranch nome sites. Clore} WORK FOR YOU!
- down Pe = house” om ed % W. Buren PE 24033| Traned “You can save tots or tw Pontiac. new Waterford he
Gentleman Farming forced sir oll furnace. large let, | Well landscaped lot and 3 —TAKE ORIO i ee ee eee, toxise fh, wooded, $8 down, | “levge-end small. Nessonable dis- aes.
Roting fore Ameenvelient five | eye wreares drive. “Price 913,000 2 dedrooms. Basement. Furnace. eg A Ne Nt, ow to inve “call PE 3050 ead | HOME & AUTO LOAN | ii rt. mccoms moUsETRAILER.
Sodroome ont Sell bem, Pye tee] Vacant. ¢ ne metern, 3 East Side WALTER GREEN BER. MY 26631| sbout § miles from courthouse. | ssonise ft level $10 down Dety 00. a. 0 bd a a nar sino. | For Rent Trailer Space 51 foneut ¢ eere oes peraee best garage, nice lot. Wet Side| Dresericks - MoCennell YOUR CHOICE $2,200 down, Located on west side. | 9 l0ttit good location. easy to Sunday 1 to § p. m_ Berkeley : " aes:
About 20 fruit trees ry | meer eg Py - Se West of Pontiac. Lake .| “ast location.” Large 3 bedroom | “"iny Sreimane §50 down” ee Leste : PaRkpuper £4 F ae :
e"iswa snd shade tives tise CAMERON H. CLARK | fsore, ‘Fa Resemeot-new | Motern 2 bearoum bunetiow Sak) modern home wih gar beat) “" “ON STREAM 110.00 BALANCE, PAYABLE $00 |= =| Se
cee cmon! es | ee e| Sees, oe REE TOANG | Ta | OO ; ; PONTIAC REALTY CO. | 45.009 aown. iitte farm. 5 scree| sitf'sown is : _tale ‘Servies’ tbe FE Suse vo 52
North Off Oakland a cama once 708 | alo pte pe cen [| 3 bedroom’ med wm vane Sunes: L€. LADD Business Opportunities <7| |Community Loan Co. | A8® ACER Eves, TH 9 low, oil furn., moderntstic kitchen a zl WRECKINO PARTS ‘46 it
Bi im fase am ane | ee Tec | itis Etter eee | ~ COPEN | Sasi mitt ac Meson) SPORTS GOODS SHOP |0E Lawrence FE 27131 wazcuyg rom Fem cit bedrooms bath. Quick pos- carpeting levely N. PADDOCK AREA we ; car gar, with cement floor and |} LOTS BASEMENT DUO. WELL BUSY COMMUNITY ~~ $28 to $800 Now! —«||—s- 84, vibes, New mutters -and | $1 00 down. kitchen w $9,950 will buy this one. two NEW BRICK overhead doors, live stream, 27| in. Drayton Plains. Call after 4, $25 to $500 ow! tailpives, re bullt- generators, :
Dasement with fecreation bedroom home built in robes | 301 Pioneer. Open 2-6. New model | fruit trees oo “Country, Butlding "yon7t.” located | have been tsokin Servig®. 70" | wad trakemisstons. Mow ah aod —
_Mt. Clemens Rd. oom. o& beet, cocepeenety =| Gua Pa code ite Pe TH] Way® toNuntisiahed atte” forge | 695.000. Large a7 ft rice ranch | “OTucers at Opper straits. oid: | Baie street fully seulpped. | GET YOUR LOAN rings. | Four toome - storm sash = Lm bm! solid ret LAWR Ww. kitchen with breakfa.t nook, liv- beautiful Bloomfield doa etait end Lake Easy| ~%¢ellent stock, good _re- sx - Loute’s avTo “ae
acre lot, $2,500 with $1,200 down. drive, good garage, fenced G AYLORD ing room and dintog_ L. pares =e eas Noe eg oe —_ Terms. wrgnpeider. 024 Pontiae ‘ras. Bicycle repair base- on IN ONE VISIT oe OpRLAND, a
lot & exce surroundings corner picture windows, v . ice 3 . OPEN - . yd * : hee om —
Maceday Lake Front nome, te restricted locating, Con: street end drive, also Sriven take | Shy Jers? Woysce Selective | DATS. Prone MA 6-158 _ tor me | your wcLASS \—GLASS!
down.
up to 65 miles an hour . heavy.Sunday._traifice._He.
quoted Cochran as saying, ‘‘You
{never would have caught me if
you hadn't shot—that wasn't wey |
= | fair.”
With Cochran were Sue
~ | more, 25, a model, and Air Force |
5 | St Ralph S. Hodges, 24.
'
~ Muskegon Man Named
|to Head State De Molay
PPE GRa | BAY CITY (UP) — Willis An-_ SATEEN | crews, Muskegon, was elected?
| state master councilor of De Molay}
| Sunday at the organization's state
| meeting attended by some 750 dele- ie
379 S. SAGINAW
OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 P.M. Jerry James, Kalamazoo, was.
named deputy state master coun-
cilor and Richard Hubler, Ply- |
mouth, was elected state senior
councilor, %
i
) Fire Takes 3 Lives
in Kentucky Home Station, Tenn., a visitor, crawled | caped too. Left in the house were} LANSING # — The Prohibition | man Ralph C. March of Mendon : easy-to teare, about on his hands and knees, also | Terry Lynn, 7, Donna Fay, 4, and| Party's campaign for said petitions would be mailed out ne, om cian @ te FULTON, Ky. @® — Desperately : Tommy, 2. to keep a place on the 1954 Michi- | to party members. He blamed the |] S°°O> ai pentane EMA, visions las night for her cre th But ee ge pre ge Later firemen found three small | gan ballot is off to a bad start — | om ast night for c started w an verturned _oil | bodies—cuddied-together™ near a | but officials are liminary publicity and planning. STENOSPEED SCHOOL wilc dly blazing room. The lights had+heater—exploded, forced them Islcuedin, ae tous tae darren The party needs 14,464 signa- of smoke,
Troy Lee Poole, 18, of Harris
ae
a
“Pee |
=~
on.
Qe . “
% Now! You SAVE ‘30!
HOMART COL BATH ENSEMBLE
95 Terms
v Chrome Plated Fixture ov Regularly 239.95
Bring your bathroom up to date! This beautiful 3-piece
cast iron bathroom ensemble includes 5-foot porcelain
enameled tub, vitreous china lavatory and toilet. Chrome-
plated fixtures accent modern design. In sage green, spice
beige or blue . take your choice of these lovely colors
to bring beauty into your out-of-date bathroom. Hurry
in today—YOU will save $30 on this both ensemble during
Choice of 3 colors. Only at Sears!
Morti- | Homart Electric
Water Heater
50 Gal. Glass Lined Tank
Priced ] 3 4*”
Low
$14 DOWN
Lowest priced glass lined
electric water heater on the
Durable tank Neavy steel—can never rust
or corrode. Backed by Sears
10-year guarantee. Immer-
sion-type heating elements,
automatic thermostats. Buy
& =
if ave Y 4
ds
this great, great sale!
Galvanized inside and out-
—side-to-resist rust, corrosion
ice!
sulation keeps the
hotter longer.
thermostat keeps water at
Homart Gas
Water Heaters
Low Cost Operation
30-Gal.
Size
$8 DOWN
. . provides years of serv-
Heavy glass wool in-
water
Snap-action
and water returns
Anti-freezing — raise handle
to well.
: a Heavy cast iron. 3-in ground,
desired _temperature. 30 lished cylinder. 17- inches
gallon size. igh.
>
USE SEARS EASY
PAYMENT PLAN
On Smof hem Purcheses
Tetefing $20 or Mere oe
Ask Any Setespersen.
White Toilet Seats
Smooth Triple Enamel Finish
4.95 One-inch hardwood seat and
cover fits any standard bowl.
Chromium plated hinge. Dowel
construction last longer. Replace Now
i ¢ ae! Ce
« gst
sinth 94.50.
Big 250-gall. hour water
system with 17 gal galvanized
tank. Lifts water 22-it. vertical-
ly. Rugged split phase motor.
Homart 5A-in. Sink
Recessed Knee, Toe Room
A beauty to see, a pleasure to work at! Steel sink is
finished with Titanium porcelain enomel—resists fruit
Heavy steel cabinet.
Undersink storage. ind vegetable stain Easy-action drawer.
the “LaSalle”
Americas Smart
Eye Glasses!
ONE PRICE TO ALL. .S Here again—Nu- Vision _prese 1s a ~
| GUARANTEE!
Complete with
ame & Lenses
sensational Optical value! For one
__week only — we offer you these
beautiful first quality style glasses .
Your money will be re-
funded within 60 days if
yes are net completely with 1/10 Kt gold filted decora-
tion and in a choice of any 2-tone
satisfied = sinks reason! color combination for only $11 00!
Here are Ist quality frames and top
Quality lenses made to your
exact prescription |
NO SWITCHING! NO EXTRAS!
REPAIRS YOU CAN'T PAY MORE! Why pey more when you get the finest glasses
‘ta -Ameorice at this Guestagly low pelee!l Al own
mere—yours this week fer only $11.86—He Mere!
~ | NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY |! i FAST SERVICE
DISPENSING NU-VISION OPTICAL C © OPTICIANS
Rooms 2 and 3, 15 W. Lawrence St.
Open 9-5:30, — Fri. ‘ti 9 Phone FE 2-2895 se Soe
Add Beauty .. | and Convenience to Tour Kitchen
New Steel Sinks
9»
$7 DOWN
Homart 24-inch steel sink with large. bosin_ and sutility-
~ledge.All-steet-construction.—_Chrome-plated-brass-sink
strainer. Choice of right or left drainboard. Attractive
finish resists the effects of fruit and vegetable acids. Also Sold on Sears
Easy Payment Plan!
Plumbing Dept—Perry St. Basement
Homart Wind and Weatherproof Roofing!
DOWN
PAYMENT
MONTHS
FHA PLAN TO PAY
=F > axial 210-8, weight 3a
° tastalf double aed valleys
© Install Boston style ridge
New Homart Shingles gives your home a luxurious appearance .
protection that defies all wind and weather!
coverage of material.
by Sears! Roof installed within Choice of * © Installed on average 30:34 1
home.
@ Ne job too large or too small
@ Cements tabs down
<>
Applied with full doable
clear bright colors. Sold only
25 miles of Pontiac.
actanet ope meray ack SEARS 154, Sgn St. Pos FE S471
RBI OIMe
MATERIALS
oe : ie ait aa iat ware a nen
= : : ee Ee tan —_ Se ep _
= ' . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1958 / . — i
Says NazéS pene cet and the room wes ton |S7e: a teey Sod with Taco and A campaign “Kichot?* here over| ballot, it socks 16.000 to be safe.