a ; ee ee ; . i ee : ae 4 Soe, Oe ;? : : eee | j 9» ~~. The Weather : : @ wAT) a... ae i | : : i ® ; te i % - * =e eee a 4 - = We . F : 2 3 : oe llith YEAR: S 7% % * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1954 28 PAGE eT TRMMATIONAL NEWS SERVICE v0 e Ss THAW WOULD RELIEVE J west of the atomic energy center fce jam some seven miles long - AP Wirephete AM—Waters of the’ Yakima River surrounded this unincorporated community of Enterprise, two miles at Richland, Wash., yesterday. An which formed back of a railroad bridge forced eight families from’ their homes. State officials said nothing could be done but wait for a thaw to relieve the jam. Would Avoid GOP Split - — Bricker Says Compromise He'll Accept on Proposal WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen. Bricker (R-Ohio) said today a desire to keep the Republican party from being “torn apart” would lead him to accept a reasonable com- the President of nt. Eisenhower's newly stated Ohioan’s proposed amendment ke it impossible for the United States to y countries on defense matters, (2) strip his historical role as:the nation’s spokes- man, and (3) force American withdrawal from leadership : In a letter yesterday to Sen. Knowland of California, the GOP floor leader, Eisenhower said he subscribes fully t Z ; to the proposition that no | OK'd pn ge egerr en amen . | § the Constitution.” He would back an amendment - for NLRB Post. Dems on Senate Labor Committee Hit GOP's ‘Steamroller’ Tactics WASHINGTON (UP) — crats charge -_ d “st errs | One Boy Dies From Knife Cut in Street Fight: Youngster, 12, in Death of James Horton : basketball game ended last night in the stabbing death jof one of them. James Hortor., 12, died of a knife wound in the stom- Hospital. - Police held a 12-year-old '|5th grade classmate for in-|. vestigation of murder. Only last week school au- thorities banned all major high school athletics at night because of the icepick stabbing of Ross Deboskey, 17, star basketball player, after a night basketball — Deboskey was badly After last night's incident police said the accused boy admitfed he said, attacked him in an ar- gument that started during a reg- ularly scheduled night contest at Chaney Elementary School: Tue | EE rai alll] iy ilk Fel WASHINGTON (AP) — The Defense Department has decided to wash its hands of 21 American soldiers who | DETROIT (AP)—A street | . fight between two 12-year- | old boys after a grade school ach on arrival at Receiving | - BAD NEWS FOR COFFEE LOVERS—James W. O’Connor, presi- we * ar ‘Wirephote dent of the National Coffee Association, speaking to newsmen be- tween sips of the brew, said in New York price of coffee will rise another 10 cents unless consumption drops off sharply. He blames a drought in 1952 and frost in 1953 for the high price of green coffee from Brazil. Colles Prises Still * Rising With More Boosts Forecast ' By UNITED PRESS Coffee prices rose in @ steady spiral today with only scattered resistance from housewives and restaurateurs. In fact, retailers in many localities reported that sales age. ary. had increased recently as householders rushed to stock up on the beans neéded for America’s favorite hot bever- Experts warhed that the worst was yet to come with ibly hitting $1.25 a pound at ey said retailers still had not passed on to their customers the latest wholesale price raises. ; e end of Febru- At Council Bluffs, Ia., a tele- phone survey indicated coffee con- sumption 2 Big Coffee was becoming so+ a burpiare teers Union in Battle precious that at Chicago a £2,000 ad at $1 fotte, snd poles aid cok cigarettes asa. high form of loot. in Fruehauf Trailer Co. to Aid President. Names on Notes Being Checked in Mattson Case Steel Firm Executive Killed Sitting ot Desk in Detroit Office . DETROIT (AP) — Police today. were checking the inames of several women! § found in letters and notes| # inside the desk of John W. Mattson, 51, a steel com- pany executive who was mysteriously slain through an office window last. night. A 45-year-old married woman who admitted hav- ry Bagg friendly with the At Steel Co. executive was questioned and released. But at noon police still were holding a 51-year-old milkman who they said had vied for the womari’s affec- tions. They were checking his alibi. No charge had Retailers Flect New President Wayne Gabert to Head -Merchants Association; Other Officers Named it f a ‘s RYO Fe oH ‘fF pie | i E Ir E i WAYNE GABERT Accepts A Drawn by Reds) to Avoid Debate Delivers Stinging Reply to Commie at Big Four Parley in. Berlin BERLIN (AP) — Secre- tary of State Dulles today blasted Soviet Foreign Min- ister Molotov’s attack on the United States in the Berlin conference and re-. jected the Russian’s propos- : al for a big power confer- *: ence with Red China on “weeks in futile argument” about an agenda. In perhaps the most i} Ht | ul rte de Tell Tat s 3 é i 2 ! FLEE HF i Fir & < B35 3 ate url Denies Mrs. Cartrette teld how she ‘went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wright at 105 Judson St. to ask W : EE F fe 2 bg g iit EF > $350,000 bond issue for a sta- tion: at the Adams-Bowers site was Stapp Rejoins Cranbrook Staff Athletic Instructor Back After 2-Yeor Service in Marine Corps 8 tonight, Thurday night, with Mrs, Stiff, of Henrietta street. president, and J. J. , assistant secretary, fala Yumtnay te te nee ee . has been with i Three Hospitalized by Head-On Crash i iP rfit § i ‘ | E i SNOW AVALANCHE DID THIS—Making this|lanches. The cow was buried in a snow avalanche, cow comfortable is a difficult task for the citizens | and hay is packed around the animal to keep her of Blons, in Austria’s Walserthal “Death Valley,” groceries | so- named because of -its- ava seers: é eis 4 Bel Spe Opp eee ee ae warm until help arrives .to. pull bogsy out. Sa EEEEEEEEEEnEeEE ~ ae Oe ee ee Michigan ‘Senate Bill 1009, which state’s election laws, won ap- proval of the Michigan Associa- tion of County Clerk's commit- tees this weekend. Allen says a special committee of clerks and state senators, head- ii ij covered her face. Accused Gamblers Released on Bonds County Clerks Association Approves Voting Changes would rewrite and clarify the) turday | which Allen is a member, sug- \at Molotov Charges gested county clerks charge $1 for every corporation report filed. Allen pointed out that clerks’ of- fices now file businesses’ reports to the Michigan Corporations and Securities Commission free of charge. Lindbergh's Story Sells for Million Dulles Fires Back our business.” He | made yesterday by Bidault and Eden to give priorty- to _ Molotov’s agenda, Dulles _re- called, * * proposed 1, The convening of a five-power concerns us here and the sooner Pontiac Deaths. James E. Carey (Ed) Word has been received here of the death of James E. Carey Mon- day evening in Kalamazoo, where he resided. A former resident of Pontiac, Mr. Carey. is survived by his derson; a son, Samuel of Los An- geles, Calif., three daughters, Mrs, Lester Lyons of Pontiac, _ Mrs. Walter Eckalbar ‘Jr. of Seattle, Wash. and Mrs. Richard Swiat. of Kalamazoo. Funeral will be Thursday at 9| a. m. from St. Augustine Catholic ‘Church in Kalamazoo. Following the service the body will be brought to Pontiac for burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Percy H. Eggleston Percy H. Eggleston, 49, of 5753 Elizabeth Lake Rd. suffered a heart attack and died at 12:30 a.m. today-## Pontiac General Hospital. Born at Brainard, Minn., June 11, 1904, he was the son of Frede- Gerald and a sister, Mrs. Eva Eason in Oregon, ! Funeral will be Thursday at '2 p.m. from the Sparks-Griffin Fu- neral Home, the Rev. Wright Van Plew of the Waterford Community Church. officiating. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Students Boycott Tutors widow, the former Mayme Hen-| PANMUNJOM . (®—-Twenty-one ‘assured Americans dd i i 2‘ speech . . » People in office in the United States were put there by. those graphers. There was no indication they were ill at ease among fellow Americans, although some joked and laughed about “mike fright" when they faced radio and tele- vision microphones. F » 8 co - The Americans, 1 Briton and 325 Koreans marched jauntily from their isolated compound in the quiet buffer zone between the huge Red and Allied armies in Korea. Communist... newsmen also at- tended the conference in the Pan- tmunjom hut where the armistice | agreement was signed last sum-|' of 5 uf 21 Pro-Commie Gls Spout |Red Propaganda for Press Manager Willman from, a tatemen : : trom, a prepared siatement ver tO Preside at Panel ge ya in later individ-| Pontiac City Manager Walter K. : ual teberviows. spowind ed efe-/ rpc oo for the Communist command, They | during the sixth annual Manage- Saginaw N ews” ity.| Now Accepts Ads for Liquor SAGINAW (UP) — The Saginaw News, reversing its former policy, vertising. In. an editorial Monday,~ the Booth newspaper said it “has not and will never encourage young mer. : The extraordinary news confer- ence appeared designed to get the Optomet rist ie Silediie scenic caine anata ae SET ne a NR OE kg il 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 / LOOK | ONLY $400 Per $100 Before you decide on any auto financing s ( sedabil died Wosdarion rides iver, . “hidden” charges), and arrange terms in line _ . with your income. You can even include the _... eost of your car insurance premium in the loan, }r i fe 1 has decided to, accept liquor ad- | people and other non-drinkers to _.. THE + voslinia b PRES Ss, TUESDAY, JANUERY 26, 086 Second Trip Set fo Frid ind f Roseville Nominating P Petition ne Trip See tee eee od midis Halopter Filed by Mayor Law Blood Donors S Contr ibute SEATTLE (P)—Recovery-of the 100 Pints to Bloodmobile i Simms geigg he ee " jr Wednesday 8 County Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick on charges of forgery and ‘uttering and publishing. ~~ “Jackson was found guilty bya jury Jan, 19 of passing a bad check for $27 in a gas station on Forger, 19, Gets 2 Years Probation, Pays $250 Gerald Jackson, 19, of 22922 Me- Arthur, Van Dyke, was placed on two years probation and assessed body of Robert A. Chauvin of. $250 costs Monday by Oakland|Nine Mile Rd. at Dequindre. Prods ge egg eee Resell Mich., ngs crash = " IOS SES LTS as : ic ; d ne? petition for reelection to the city| Pontiac area residents donated victim, was reporte he Coast K commission from District 4. 100 pints of blood Monday as the | Beeted by patients le local hee | Guard yesterday. LAD D IES information. | DePauw said Reese, in a state- blood cells may wear out faster Latest Im roved Model ta : you do not feel stronger, peppier, p “Hh C af Parking Phone ment at the Oakland County Pros- Occupational earl we yer — - replace meme igh mete in . | ye Sethe D : on [reer Hy oe Pa or ae CLEARWATER, Fia. (UP) you suffer with thie nae uw Wey: ° ‘ soovmenn a mer § ss eR, . _ : bring back the bottle, and © rS - aidan hus # | (Ciette MM. Peettom: get back every cent you spent! Unequatied Fac ilities What Are the Costs of a Funeral . We feel that folks should be better basal in this regard, and so frequently publish such There are more than fifty items of service “and materials supplied. maintained. to provide these promptly, and with dignity and care, our facilities-is invited. ad Gracious Beauty oF Facilities must be Your inspection of Law has been a city. commis- sioner since 1942 and is serving his third team as mayor. He also operates a supermarket. here. One other petition for a city com- mission post from District 7 bas been filed by Victor L, Smothers, in Southern Michigan Prisen Mon- day by Oakland County Circuit Judge-.H. Russel Holland on a larceny by conversion’ charge. Harris pleaded guilty Jan. 12 to | selling a deep freeze_unit for $769 | while working for a Birmingham dealer and then cunverting _ the money to his own use. Accused Arsonist Faces i Arraignment in Pontiac Daniel M. Reese, Tl, of 9 Front St., was to be arraigned in Pon- i tiac Municipal Court today on an arson charge, according to Pontiac police. . Set. John Wilson and Det. John | Reese was evicted from 145 Pal- |mer in October, police said. The first steam locomotive built in America was credited to Puter Cooper in 1830. American Red Cross bloodmobile stopped at Pontiac Elks Temple for the first of this week's two visits "| here. Mrs. N. E.’ Durocher, Pontiac blood donor recruitment chairman | Decem for Oakland County Chapter, Am- “Our chapter offices are taking |- telephone appointments every day.” She pointed out that it ane a steady flow of blood to keep the Red Cros’ whole’ blood program going. While blood is good for only 21 days. Then it must be made into plasma, gamma globulin or other derivatives. Dr. E. W. Bauer of Hazel Park gram chairman, said recently that Oakland County had to fall back on other Ked Cross chap- ters to carry it through Decem- ber. Only 254 pints of bicad were donated here, while 377 were a registered filed suit here against the estate of one of her former pa- tients, charging the patient bit her on the arm when she tried-to in- ject a hypodermic. nurse, pitals. “January's ‘tom a lot better, though,” Dr. Bauer said, having 14 bloodmobile visits this | —— Lia Chauvin was ane of five men killed in the crash of the Coast “We're oer to only two in | the third to. be recovered, was ‘ | found at the scene of the crash. Guard craft near Port _ Angeles, Wash., last Thursday.~ His body, ate you “tee tired” too often? Nervous? Lack sormal pep? Then for your own sake, read about this ae-risk offer from Rybutol! Maybe you're like so many peo- ple who feel that vitamins ere great things—for the other guy— without realizing that the symp- toms listed above can indicate « serious shortage of two very im- portant vitamins; thiamin and riboflavin. Without realizing that simply by correcting a vi : deficiency, you may be able to go back to healthy, buoyant living once again You see, when you lack enough thiamin. and this is your trouble, Rybutol will help you. Amazing money-back offer. Yes, Rybutol may be your new chance Simms Bros, 96 N. Saginaw St ~ new sifength through Rybutol, riboflavin, your | for happy, healthy: living. But frankly, your symptoms may be due to other causes that require the attention of a physician. How can you tell? The Vitamin Cor- poation of America, makers of Rybutol, has always made it easy for you to find out if you can gain or whether you.should see a doc- tor. And you find out without risking a penny: Simply buy the $1.96 size. Take 3 Rybutol Gelucaps daily for 7 days. If after this one short week, Fair enough? Then start the 1-day Rybutol test today! Until you do, you may never know how really good you can feel! —~Main Floor ~The New 1954 Mercury Sun Vall We invite wae emma 5 | You iat a new, te ioctl d ssi it : found -¢ -on, no 0 other car— x Mer Around you~ etial: Sun Valley : fe styling, colors, ‘ever crafted liked dor Q aia valve V-8, plus secuiys _new ball-joint front suspension, for _ the easiest, most relaxed driving ~ you've ever known. - In back of you—Mercury's famous reputation for high trade-in value and record-breaking economy. : Se CCC ee rer rrr Tyr Tyrer | 648 Oklahoma 8t. The primary | erican Red Cross, says the blood- Zipper or Button F ront. election is March’ 1, moble will come to Pontiac again houl | you e . Friday. © Nurses Phony DeepFreeze Sale Hours at Friday’s visit te the gt aloe © Waitresses Gets Man Prison Term All Saints yarch, Pike and Williams streets, will rar ‘in 1 a ins 2 © Receptionists Robert L. Harris; 28, of 3014, be 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. © Hospital Aides |Menominee, Flint, was sentenced = osp to serve 18 months to five years| “We still need about-100 donors for Friday,” Mrs. Duroctier said. Ante e PSPSPS SCC e errr rrr Tee ere eee Teer ew ss. se Ladies’ Cotton — plin White Uniforms - © Designed for smart took and comfort for » *the ladies whose work requires the wearing > of a white uniform. Short sleeve styles with S zipper of button front. Sizes 10 to 20 and / WO >» 38 to 44, EE NORE er cr ¥ cet ‘NO IRONING NECESSARY’- - ‘Plisse Nylon Trim’ Ladies’ Panties Ladies “fine “PLISSE” parti ; i nylon trim. Longer wear- ing, better fitting and no ironing is necessary. Sizes 5-6-7. Choice of assorted colors. FULL ZIPPER FRONT Zipper opens at bottom and “sepa- rates completely . . . makes it as easy to slip into as a jacket. No hooks to: give bumpy appearance: Band © _ cup size. Sizes 34 to 42. BARGAIN BASEMENT : Prices Slashed on Sheets! Fine MUSLIN in Choice of 4 Colors "Cannon’ " Sheets First Quelity—72x99-Inch Se ig gli Sl cli lant ails Nii tl ici, Ni ll Radiata: Uinta dinlialin Raiden iains 81x99 tach Sheet “Teese. a $3.50 Value—16x24-Inch Foam Rubber an RE e a” Gives Gives wonder tui sleeping Sucking filed with save. ig $3.00. | First erred “CANNON” White Percale SHEETS MERCURY'S ENTIRELY NEW 161-HP ¥-8 engin es more ce ddincedinueeies low Slancurcer co" rerry seer Tree ee ee ee ee ee ~errrerwTjjT\ "Tt" r $2.69 4 S i i sty ao eae Fe i li ats Bee =: * I THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1054 saw in his whole lifetime. x. * .* When I was first asked to join your | the cast, I was careful to inquire what part I would play, oe sy . . 5 BUREAU OF oon SOCIAL AID (Old Age Assistance) Funeral Home ~ Burial Regulations Ae’ @ matter of public information, -~ are offering the following little- own fects regarding Assistance for burials: ..» The State of Michigan allows $100 towards burial services, « . » » Am additional $175 may be added by relatives or friends but in ne case can ‘the from the State and butions exceed $275 Please feel free to call on us for fur- ‘ther information or assitance regerd- j ‘ulations. Bocial Aid total amount outside contri- 79 Ave., Pontiac |) Bee ee eeeseeseesese : H television last year, fluttered. his eyelids and the camera caught it,’’ a director said. urchill| I promised on my honor not to breathe for five minutes before the last “scene until five minutes after it was over, but the director said: +. “We can’t take a chance. We've greasepaint and hair to look like King Richard, and we feel pretty sure it won't flutter its eyes.” . When I asked where that left me, he said: eee TEER a eee tea eee * * * “Most actors start their careers as an onstage silence. You can be a lord at the court. You don't say anything. You just stand there and look as sober ag an old English lord.”’ * a a I shared my debut with three other newcomers to the theater, two Borzol hounds named Nicholas and Lisa (a brother and sister act) Sittin i. fort. . Lisa was so nervous she had a stomach upset just before her en- trance. But then she straightened ~ like the game little trouper she “Good luck, kids," 1-whispered. They trotted out and came back a few minutes later, wagging their tails like veteran actors. your property insurance agent Department of this state. He must know how to help safeguard your property and your future. He is a specialist in protecting you financially against fire and casualty losses. v The strict licensing laws, in many states, Frank Andenen t' Everybody ~~ Can Fil His Shoes — masmen to's Migh degree of betinnss ond profeedenil Miaililigs. must be licensed by the Insurance ne Insure With Carrying This inchade the passing of It is true that no amount of education can guarantee good judgmen But your property insurance agent must have the best business ju to survive. In his highly competitive, personal service business, good judgment —judgment that serves his clients —is the lifeblood of his success. Pick a competent property insurance agent and you are sure of getting economical, profitable service. : He charges nothing to. make a careful check of your needs re Pontiac Association of Insurance Agents x ’ ee : Wilkinson as offstage noises. “We'll start you to the Department of Labor. - WILLINGLY TO JAIL—Pau! C. Fisher, 39-year-old pen manu- ~ | facturer, holding baby daughter Caroleen, and accompanied by his wife, Monique, arrives at the U. S. Marshal's office in Chicago to surrender. Fisher begins an indefinite jail sentence for refusal to obey a court order to show his employment and personnel records fe # “are you alive?” Quite a tribute to my acting, I thought. be all right if I wave goodby at the King's corpse when they carry me out? It'll make the scene look less somber.”’ “If you even so much as twitch your nose,” he hissed back, “the So I stood as still as a waiter bronze bust offstage. I must say up, then dropped me, exclaiming, | Just before the final death scene | '] whispered to an actor. “Will it. director will cut your heart sut | and put you in that coffin for| while they carried the’ made-up | ‘enced players. that bust. played the role of a corpse to the hilt. It couldn't have been much more dead-like. Later Evans threw a champagne party for the cast. As Southern Comfort didn't care for cham-| pagne, and Nicholas and Lisa were too young for it, I sipped their share and went home feeling bet- ter—feeling, in fact, more like an English lord than ever. Next week, “East Lynne.” While a total of 400 first moves are possible in.chess, only 22 are recognized as practical by experi- re effective = much more study it. He imagined. he saw a figure in the wood, took out his pocket-knife and began to whittle. Within a short while, he had-carved = * a 2 3 aged wood sculpture in flower arrange- ments, as wall brackets and deco- }rations, and as shelf and table ornaments. He uses adjustable blades, like a ‘surgical knife, which are very sharp, in most of his work, but sometimes a knife is not necessary and the wood can be tiled. to shape or sanded. He quite often uses contrasting get more fun out of life! wood to form the figure. But he uses his. knife to emphasize the shape of the figure and to give an assist to nature. He alse uses wood, dried weeds and flowers with his driftwood to make arrange- ments, Free admits he literally ' “stumbled” into the hobby, and points out: : pieces of driftwood.” tures, using all kinds of wood. He utilizes the natural contours of the popularity—good times. An Arthur Murray expert can quickly Start at Arthur Murray's now and : make you a better dancer... help you get more fun out of life by bringing iid “All you need is a little imagina- tion, a few simple tools and small -He has.used his pieces of drift- out your dormant personality. So come in or phone today! Arthur Murray Studios, Open daily 10 A.M.-10 P.M, seal Stipes od, Yy dence,” says Anita. Phillips. 25 E: Lawrence St. ARTHUR MURRAY'S Phone FE 2-0244 ‘Corner North Perry St. ~ Here's as _W. A. Pollock ‘Gilbride-Meiiahn Agency: H. W. Huttenlocher Agency | ‘Inc. Thatcher- Patterson-Wernet J. b. Von egener te A ee aN , _ makes in the flavor of wae the best ROH’S beer salesman| in Michigan Your first bottle of Stroh’s will tell you more about the = ~~ wonderful flavor of Stroh’s beer than we could tell you in a thousand words. Just pour it and taste it. Discover for | difference Fire-Brewing at 2000" ° THE PONTIAC. PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY kee tet to. Spree lehor over: manage Closed Theater ‘Suffers , Lewi IS Blasts” Gime H. ‘Alexander- Smith | $10,000 Water Damage ! Ike Nominee EVERETT, Mass. w — It cost Thieves Ave Thorough rererieetinan teen cesmee dh DALLAS, Tex. @—Olficials of a| a produce firm here got no joy from firm the fact that thieves took 19,900 MeCarthy Acts - fo End Boycott Vie Labor Ciiusitios end the Sen- owners of the closed Capitol The- ate, but a committee vote appeared | ater $10,000 for repaims and mop- walikely today, a ping up after-16 feet of water ran Democrats Hint Return ‘Head of Mine Workers unnoticed from. a broken-pipe for ‘ ‘ Democrats have indicated they se to -Red Investigations Calls Albert.C.. Beeson tear that Beeson might reflect the a days. a - — > water : < nies ee manag t point of view in board - from city for $79.35. mM ‘ ae niet a, ale De " Uaion aoe : of his e A the birds that be | Far er-Snover 2 Senate Demo- Lewis in his wire that Bee- mong can : quits chained “complete vindice- WASHINGTON @®—John L, Lew-| 7 “admits to a prejudical favori- taught to talk are the piping FUNERAL HOME gon, President Eisenhower's attitude toward labor | parrot, some species of jays, ma- inee for the National Labor which borders on hysterical malig- | ©@W, and even starlings. tions Board, as a “self-styled union- nancy, I protest the confirmation tion” today in their six months’ boycott of Sen, McCarthy's Sen- ate investigations subcommittee, wi. 160 W. Huron St. rE ‘2411 3 | M. Snover ¢ rrrrrerrirrrrrrriTrrririiiii ii till : | ted — the: The Wisconsin Republican an- : ot the self-styled union-buster Bee- ° e 8 « ounced yesterday he was making buster’ who “possesses an aston-| 2. + \ - e« ® a major ‘concession’ to the Demo- ishing bias’ against labor. Most recently, Beeson has been . ° ge e ome a ys them back to what) . Lewis, president of the United | ind relations vice president * e as nm gince last July an all- i “wired mbers ‘ood, Machinery and Chem- Republican subcommittee, Mine Wormers, << me or the Fo of San Jose, . The major point of dispute was of the Senate Labor Committee, cocemensintserrinnmmrater + t McCarthy's claim to sole authority | now considering the nomination:| ‘Thomas Young, English scien-| ° to hire and fire staff members, “It is inconceivable that any. tist, was a prodigy of the rarest | a claim which the Democrats said senator , . . who takes the time | type, At the age when most-chil-| e in-effect made the subcommittee | to read the record would in good | dren read Mother Goose rhymes, | ; a one-man operation, conscience unleash, with the power|he was absorbing foreign lan- | McCarthy said as recently as of government behind him, such | guages. At the age of 14, he could . 7 is tops "Jan. 8 that he was willing to “lean “|@ vaging protagonist of the ex-| write in 14 languages. @ over backward” to get the Demo- ploiters of labor in the nation.” Save Dollars... © «6 e ° " The Scotchman crats to return, but*that on the is- Meanwhile, the committee sched- Be Thrifty in e-.6_ @ Means Extra site of hiring and firing the staff uled a fourth meeting on the nom- January! Savings! “IT will be completely adamant— I will not sive on inch.” Sen. McClellan “(D-Arh), who had —Democrats*— from the subcommittee, said the | negotiated peace amounted to “complete ideation of the posi- tion we took.” McClellan told newsmen in Mc- in Tokyo, guarding them from any potential attack. ination of Beeson, a San Jose; Calif., businessman who would bring. the five-man board to full icine JET ¥IGH.—Twe U. 8. Air Feree bi Mesidaaiens ot ths Soon : *_ * @ Air Defense Force sweep over one of the many JADF radar sites Modern aircraft, and a vast radar and communication _| network, help airmen to keep a constant vigil over the islands, safe- If approved by the committee and then by the Senate, Beeson would be the third Eisenhower ap- pointee to take a seat on the NLRB —thus giving the administration Carthy’s presence he sees no rea- son why Democrats now should a clear majority. Beeson has told Imported GIANT “In Red, White, Pink and Salmon Also HYBRIDS BIRD FEEDING a> 1.99 on expensive looking “Trade Wind” _ the committee he would approach his duties without bias. During close questioning by com- mittee Democrats last Wednesday, Beeson said he thought the NLRB under former President Truman had administered the Taft-Hartley tions in Asia have improved since : " the Republican istration took office a year-ago.!*’ The author; of “South Pacific” not agree to serve on the subcom- mittee, adding: ‘This removes the | barrier.” “T agree,” said Senators Syming- ton (D-Mo) and Henry M. Jackson (D-Wash), the others who had quit. The three Democrats said they . would announce later today wheth- * er any or all of them would agree to return to the subcommittee, or ask that some Democratic succes- ‘Oklahoma Votes Today |Ne et cn Tupike Expansion |NeW Regime Aids Improved Relations OKLAHOMA. CITY (®—Oklaho- deci today in a gree ae Bn sage shitile TOKYO @—Author James Mich- to segrove a bcditen-deliar ot |“ S08 Mey Amecine rie road program that would connect with Kansas, Texas and Missouri. Submittéd tothe voters are two STATIONS TASKER’S 63 W.-Huron FE 5-6261 Matchstick Bamboo Draw Draperies @ @ © ®@® @%@ sor be named, McClellan had said | !etislative a ro ~ et com land “Voice of Asia” said he felt previously = other < assignments pore the —_ "toale eon relations ‘had improved because of Coll FE « Wait” —would-prevent-his-return. present : the visits of such_statesmen as) * Colt Today! 5 © Turnpike, which links Tulsa and Vice President Nixon and Secre- 4-2511! ” McCarthy told reporters he had | OMdahoma City. made comes becuse | ae i “ee + a = having a one-party subcommittee Police Chief Straley with such wide investigating pow- cs setigations subcommittee ANENGS Traffic Meet was created with virtually UM-| potiae Police Chief Herbert W. tary of State Dulles, as well as leading senators and representa- tives. “During the Democratic admin- istration I don’t recall one leader of the party who came to Korea and the Far East,"’ Michener told the “ Japan-America Society and the American of Com- ‘merce in Japan. @~» . EL _ Each panel is 24’ wide by 84” long in natural color! sirelty: i =“ipper front washable Jersey Print Dress @ Side hems of friple thickness to prevent | fraying are sewn! For Misses. Paes be ; .-+-Half Sizes sion , It looks like a Republican | 9m, out of tc e a of top — . i, ‘ A ticket matchstic hand in Japan! | Ohio Man Got More | thou i a ee Than He Bargained For |, Now that CLEVELAND a@—A restaurant nthe ticket Call FE 4-251] Today owner seeking a divorce testified | fee in any or Hurry in! Waite's Draperies—4th Floor Tia title rll yo soos cones pc “tection than our Blue Ribbon Policy. You can buy it on our pay- [a eee eee ee he a aot: * 2 Bote eh i Ky en 9 é : ee : * t "Boulevard, was State president. "TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1954 within their borders. > "Unless Senate opinion is directly: Opposite to that in the House, our Air -_«. ~ Force soon will have its own West Point e 2s Son, - bill to : L. Masters of Fremont. be eet g 000,000 hid ithe pereide £26. In its first year this committee, * oo Sethi aes establish-. working with co-operating ErOUpe,.. V4 ment of an Air Force academy has been able to place nearly Se 2 came up in the lower chamber, young doctors in rural communi- eee wat litle datate, Gent- ee ment was overwhelmingly in OS RN... eee gt favor of creating a school where For the benefit of communities anx- ° _ the Air Arm could train its offi- ious to get a resident physician, Dr. ea % | THE PONTIAC PRES ‘ TUESDA\ » 5 é 3 : : . es We the project was started when _ Mrs. DonwaLp E. Apams of West Walton © ee a Placing Country Doctors spielen ‘There is new hope for rural commu- __ unable to induce well trained young medical graduates to start practice OKs Air Academy “It comes from a report made to the Michigan Rural Health Conference at - Saginaw. Speaking forthe State medi-. cal society’s committee on rural medical oo service was its chairman, Dr. Brooker : cers under conditions comparable Masters listed inducements he said 4 to those in the Army and Navy | _ Would enable any rural area to solve its | academies. he doctor problem. 5 4 . kW ok _ A town must be the center of a FS There also is agreement that the , ‘airly large trading area having oo initial appropriation is sufficient only .* f¢W t no other doctors. It should = to make a start on the project. Repre- provide its doctor with a house sentatives believe that before it could. 8 800d as his neighbors enjoy __ing a site and finally left that decision —“linlc. ties to Air Secretary Tatporr. Before the. matter came up in the House there had been some agitation for use of Percy “school site. : * x * mate location will be where the come. iets tie ddineua (Te ome ______ Sarance of the maximum number The Man About Town of flying days a year. * a r : House ‘approval of this project is in They Love Eugenia complete harmony with the new con- ny t off the ground the cost would be . 24 it should be able to offer him at eons Sa0n.c0daien. "financial aid in the establishment _ |. "Phey-deeided, however, against choos- °f & well equipped hospital or cept that our Air Arm henceforth is to Baby Born in Tuberculosis be our first line of defense. We believe Sanatorium Is Lovely Child 2 the Senate not only should, but will — Daftynition without the night before. : z. aap Steg He - fae " p re P the . . Why Not ermanently? epercoiecte Meiateremn averyeeay 40k bx ae : : with age Michigan’s Conservation Commission ~~ “Eugenia,” has decided to continue for three — who weighed eight pounds when born there last months its policy of making public a Thursday. She is a perfectly normal baby in master list of gare law violators. tuberculosis of the bones, is on a frame, and -- This/decision was reached on the ad-_ been in after the assistant field administration been “Shlet ad urged the policy's abandon~ good health and proper development vice of newsmen present at the meeting Sordame with the sanatorium rules, the baby has names could be obtained from the courts The foxes are coming to town, according to . where trials are held and that the sav- Sak . Who lives near Galloway Lake, inside the Pontiac ing would make possible the employ- City limits. ee ee ' in the bright moonlight the other t, and ~ ment of another game warden. _-- ake Side here ties hove kiked shauna te is a es ; ee x * the brush on its shores, : ~—Newsmen pointed out, however, Celebrating thelr fifty-fifth wedding that convictions often occur in today are Z out of the way places. This makes Mr. and Mrs. Ray A. Brownell ‘records of them hard to obtain _ of Flint. Former mayor of that city for several pe years, and well known in its civic life, Mr. with the result that many viola- Oe an Wa milenee atteer cua, thar ak tions would escape publicity. - Davisburg. Se aOR It can be argued further that main- In their defiance of our winter weather, — ......._ fenance of the master list, started last Mrs. Charles Haynes _ ~ October, is a greater deterrent to viola- reports lilac bushes and maple and walnut trees a te , than an additi 1 game ton. budding in her yard at 37 Monterey Blvd. churches was the “While we applaud the commis- acs dies Re of the phrase, “To insure promptness.” eeenemnnims Oakland County. is owned by _ Mrs. Nettie Hall — ‘of the State pre- October, 1863 Clarence Culbertson * ~ fs a ae ; Former pastor at a number of Oakland County _ . Qur champion office researcher discovers that * the word “tip” originated from the first letters A substantial item in the historical records of _of 9861 Morgan Road, in the shape of a list of d four the Union soldiers called from the county in ‘ States that twin calves recently born to one of his _ Sion for extending the list for an- who died last week at his home on Eleven Mile. laws and the proper use of govern Cludes many a vital stimulus to Ploy Cis enroute Toe chas® JOHN DILLINGER midwest des- {YP¢. of insomnia is to eliminate mental funds to encourage Private sts of ii can hardly be pet new equen Immediately em perado and three outlaws are cap- Go Hesiing Sat mates hie woke Y It could = the rebuilding of move ee See Il-these_items are + : wart ___EMPLOY UP 33 per cent In addition to the advice - just America—a replacement of obs0- dends is from a den int of & plan to avoid Fon im Pontiac. 8000-workmen now on : - lete equipment, a renovation of nt vine Siaoany “hdieion tee ten They go mach fete. payrolls of big concerns. ch cule oc be ce buildings and homes on a scale Bet, pone of aq. ney are designed to give Ameri- ‘ 0 Years Ago thus stop its burning, a ‘ust. Saving the whole aystem of pri Cont! {re of unparalleled pros- Goy. FITZGERALD offers bill $0 he will thus Whether the present renijust - "ll castalian trem tho dae. prhy Cum Military apeniing 3, sate tahor relations in Mich- unui prod to-awsken at 9 or 4 ment in business, made necessary ret acca the future necessarily tapers off i°.” would ban et ff at 3 or the curtailment of defense pe ee ange rani and the citizens are permitted—as 10E. sitdown strikes. a.m. you are awake, don’t , reat mare’ the import It ig tt the beets of an et- 1 SPeal tet ane) eens, tvered et with ha fund mont ag much Fat, months more, t an % news now what's coming after mated $30,000,000 in tax reduc- prises that create more jobs. lenger John Henry Lewis, sched- way, as long as you lie abed. it Se Saket reget that’s (Copyright 15————«e:~CSCs«étdeed_ S00. : : —e Congress hag before it pro- percent te incentive ae SS Eee pega he geass posals which can lift the nation generally to * 2 : — ie 6 Cuckoo oa be enivere Ameren = CONStant Moisture Supply to Heated Air — - : A continuously sound and attrac- “a es . Tie india Deora a 3 we cate mat nese” Best Preventive and Aid to Winter Health ourlanee Sarit ap . By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Meron g Ths lag of artificial Seating: you omptey # eg g z * Kage International News Service ‘Always have had a warm spot in my. hot_water bottle for the letter . Only thing more under- ~ paid is a truffle hound with a choke. collar, S| A 8 sy, 4 5 Mew, ony years ng " Oy " mailmen sent me on wa = at : with Virgini Caffeine drinks also stimulate Just the Beard, Delilah! gar ae ery tet = semen we the , federate soldier. drinks od 1s That started more controversy Various organs of the body de - * the * > He Says Government Employes Who Give Sstecien tiie Wasi mine cr J2ep an, Thu tat peopl have whose Voice of the People . | 3 sienna otenoan Gx toe meee ach Russia Our Secrets Should Be Executed —— trem war voce pemiciun | ot rei oye nd tac Jones Hospital at Battle Creek as the Which promises rural areas that before . z _ Jong the doctor shortage will diminish. . This is the fact that the ranks of special- ists are filled to overflowing while those But it is probable that the ulti- - of general practitioners will be wide wai‘, he sondeaed whet necr- mist leaders, era, was shot. to help save and make our country rival paper he was sure it wasn't The Urinary bladder does lke address and telephone number of the Since 1936 9 of 11 cabinet minis- the great one it is. mine. Soon as I sensed it was writer must acco y letters but these : ie! him I clammed up. to go to the bathroom too often will not be publ if the writer so ters holding office at that time Samuel J. Garras ®%*noying during the til bl requests, unless the letter is crigical in : ~ That was 35 years ago and to day until the bladder its nature.) eee were shot; 5 out of 7 presidents 3209 Alco Drive : this day his discontent simmers learns the habit of protesting by A few employees of our govern- of the last Central Executive ee on the back-burners. pain sensations when it has only ment, who claim to be and pass as Cicinitilen ‘teak tins jones tate {THOUGRTS FOR Topay = 4 to 6 ounces of contents, citizens, at every opportunity fur- . there whose smart he Many young men and women are nish confidential information to the ** @ut of SS secretaries of the labour is im wisdom, and im lf he bad been we sae ee known embarrassed on dates because they Russian government. Communist party Central Orga- = knowledge, and in equity; yet to 110° Canons were switched Must excuse themselves several nization were liquidated by 4 man that hath laboured — ‘ These people are traitors and Set pot from gray to blue in 1885 for just times to visit the rest room. guilty of treason, Under our laws Shooting. These are but a few ex: therein shall he leave it for bis 101 I wasn't born until . amples 4 reason. I wasn’t Their bladders are now accus- they should be executed. When our portion. This also is vanity’ and 1886 so it couldn't have been mine. tomed to the 4 government takes steps to remove We have some little, incompe- & great evil—Eecl. 9:21. an to Geunce vol these traitors from their govern- tent men in our government, but ee : ume, To change this condition mental positions so called intellec- we have many capable, God-fear- | He who learns the rules of wis- Portraits they must grit their teeth during tual liberals set up a howl, claim- ing men who, at a great financial dom, without conforming to them By JAMES J. METCALFE the daytime until they compel ing that these people are being loss to themselves, have made the in his life, is like a man who la- ui S0\l 1 write shout today nelr_Diadders to hold 8 t 10 persecuted. great sacrifice and subjected them- bored in his fields, but did not And how precisely word it? cunces constertably, Recently one of the Comnim- selves to cruel and unfair criticism sow.—Saadi. * * “How often have I asked myself Actually, the human bladder can 4 ee ee +++ Or fram my readers heard it? ee ane) @ 4 aut, 3 «The world is filled with sub- think you. are hurting lke’s Tax Program Actually an Old One, js nd Tey never wl rn ot ety When 0 redele e ae . e epee out... Yet now wonder On cuaces, , t00, young folks are the Same System That Built America =". Bare is te write abou keyed up nervouy which mena WASHINGTON — Little by little citizen should pay some taxes, The new plan would permit tax iné tide « - - And that WneeiO rives more blood through the it will dawn on the American peo- however small. deductions for depreciation up to are tragedies. . . That bind our ‘idneys. The latter then filter out ple that what has just been pro- ee two-thirds of the value of a proper-. hearts together... But then again TT Wine. President in various s ' world yeu there is young drink posed by the in re a year im 1.1" the frat half of the lite of the world is calm... And there is 0) Sly, sa Go Son ihe two billiofy or more a year es messages to Congress may, if tat tee: ball 1 Demo the building or equipment. This ee eS ae ice cream parlors just as a nervous answer adopted, usher in the greatest era rats are acting already as ity. bo simple utlet, thus overloading their ays- of business expanion and employ- think’it is better politics for them It could mean an unparalleled Peel aus never ony soning tem ‘with additional fluids, ment the United States has ever to sponsor that idea. SS stimulus con- I merely turn my thoughts to Ag men like Nathan grow old- From Our Files program , ' up- Republican program in- ‘date equipment, When a com- 15 Years Age So the best antidote for Nathan's This calis for a revision of tax ut i i #. " phe Tack dni Str re tas, ete ‘in Tope time, the was 72. In a sense . Pn srg : 7 nt Het to cold same time was 82 per cent. That of ~ re to see ed : bods _ inter alr dries out are urging, for e "There is tubes irritable, causes ga | STERN, LH i fl > % THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ Jacoby on Canasta Red Three Rule | Most Stringent Readers Ask Questions on Freezing Pack and F Holding Penalty By OSWALD JACOBY For™the last few weeks I have discussed “red threes used in the game of \canhsta in this column. Now I can answer some of the questions on this subjéct that seem to come most frequently from my readers. Q--Are sou ever allowed to discard @ red three under any circumstances? A—Never, for any reason what- | asked | discarded red three | ever. I whether a freezes the pack. There is no answer to this question, because there is no such thing as discard- ing a red three, It's just like ask- ing whether pigs could fly if they had wings! ® game of samba my side had Q—Ia all six red threes but we didn't meld enough to get credit for them. Our oppo- am __ frequently nents _ but we sald that we didn't have — to subtract from our score —_was_the first hand of “Ghoaa w ¢ start the second hand parry “our side bt at tero score, or do we have to start with a score thet ip | even less thab sero? A—You have to start with a score that is less than zero. subtraction is made from your previous score no matter what that score happens to be. If your previous score. was big- ger thai the amount to be sub- tracted, you go forward with the balance’ if your previous score is smaller than the subtracted, you go forward with a minus score. Q—T had a red -ihree in my hand when the opponents melded out hey wanted to penalize me $00 points. I objected oo ~— — said we should be minus 1,000 The | " CATASTROPHE IN OREGON—This is the scene in a portion of Astoria, Ore., where a slip- slow slippage. disaster area by vicinity. Recent heavy saens walle dead for cha The district has been declared a the Red Cross. that IT hadn't seen it in my hand, an that they ees: — take my ae and forget penaity for it the What should = done “5 this situation when the game is « friendly one? A~—The full penalty of 500 points | situation, the offender has never really seen the red three in his ‘hand. If he saw it, he would put it-down on the table. The penalty is not intended to apply to a player who sees a red three and. deliberately holds it in [his hand. A player who delib- erately does that is behaving in an unethical manner, and the pen- alty for unethical conduct is some amount to be) form of social criticism rather than any deduction from the score. The penalty of 500 points applies only to a player who does the wrong thing by accident, as in the case | described. ping hillside has damaged some 30 homes in the Unnecessary Leap Kills Girl, Injures 4 BALTIMORE wm — A T- year-old neighbor girl was killed and a mother and three of her children were injured when they leaped house during a fire yesterday. A fourth child of Mrs. Morris escaped injury, while a fifth was carried unharmed from the houge by a fireman. floor apartment with the May | children. panicked when smoke |on the first floor filled | the ‘eallding, | Now On Display —The Finest Buy for’54 hi ew Star Chief Pontiac. from the third floor window of a) May leaped from the building but) The dead girl was SNirley Walk- | er, who was playing in the third) no reason for them to jump.” lt Couldn’t Get Dimmer stolen, report his house was on fire. today?" he asked. Oné of the well-preserved extinct |. The group apparently | ‘volcanoes in New Mexico is lo- | | only flatter myself that I Sse from a firé| cated near a large perpetual ice | will power and guts.” cave, west ot Albuquerque. ct ae A et The blaze was confined to the! first floor anid Battalion Fire Chief Irwin H. Walters said, ‘There was His Future Looks Bright, BALTIMORE @—When Edward | Daniel, 88, started for work yes- terday he found his car had been Less than‘ res hours later he was summoned from work with al By PHIL NEWSOM Yet in this conference, he will be, as he has been in the past, a mystery man. Especially will he be an unknown quantity because this is the first high level conference between Rus- sia and the West since the death of Stalin. -As President Eisenhower once put it, the West still does not know _whether the Kremlin actually is sporting a “new look” or the same old dress with a new hem- line. - Nor doés the West know pre- Tine-tip. Lenin calied him “the best fil- ing clerk. in Eussia.” Trotsky sald he was “mediocrity incar- nate," Winston Churchill describes him as “a man of outstandng ability and cold-blooded ruthlessness.”’ John Foster Dulles wrote of him: “ . . I have never seen such “What more can happen to me personal diplomatic skill at so high a degree of perfection as Mr. Mol- | otov's.”” Molotov says of himself: I An one _way or * another Molotov cisely Molotov’s place in } the new | TUESDAY, JANU ARY 26, 1954 3 |Molotov, Man of M ystery!| ‘Argue and Stall’ Teacher ‘has proved all of them right. ¥ Tt was he. who signed the non- ciaveedon pact with Hifler’s Ger- seemed to change the whole direc- tion of that policy but which in ‘appearance but not its goal. He also has made colossal er- rors. He the carly downfall of Yugoslavia’s Marshal reality changed only its outward | Tito and he did not bélieve the Korea. But filing clerk or most skilled diplomat he is a persistent foe to be feared and respected. In Russia, he rose from obscure rev- | olutionary to serve for 10 years as ‘United States would intervene in matic Water Beene little as $5.00 a meth No Dewn Payment! ~ Rust Elimination Caommaaee Guarenteed by Good Housekesping ‘Lindsay Automatic — Soft t Water) Service “OR "p9614 PHILLIPS BOYDELL PAINT 2I% of Buy It Now at ‘WE FEATURE: © Soft-Tone ©Semi-Tone © Gloss-Tone — Eng Created to close the gap between luxury and low cost aS a es ta That's a large statement—but it only takes a simple test to check it. Just take the Star Chief Pontiac for a drive . . . look for a model of to- day’s costliest car—and put the Star Chief next to it. . . Step out and compare dimensions for the first big sur- prise. That extra length that gives a fine car its long, silhouette and makes all the differ. ance. This is the most powerful eeiias ¢ ever ee nimble and alert in traffic ... wondrously smooth and _ galet. st sap:arielen: apeulle + way to enhance Pontiac's great > ana oe ability and driving economy as well. ee It's a lot of car, this splendid Star Chief—in fact, the most car its price ever purchased, And that price is eo . and qualified rig x e - LOOK AT PONTIAC'S SCORE FOR 1954 © Biggest Pontiac Ever Built—214 Inches Over-All Length _@ Magnificent New Beauty, Inside and Out = ‘e New Custom-Styled Interiors—New Exterior Colors oS © Most Powerful Pontiac Ever Built bade. : © New Roadability and Driving Base: oS _© New, Greatly increased Cross-Country Loggege Room f POWER BRAKING, Power Steering, Dual- Range Hydra-Matic Drive, Electric Win- dow Lifts, the exclusive Seat and special Air Conditioning are op- tional on virtually all models at extra cost. | PONTIAC COLOR-MATCHED INTERIORS offer fascinating new shades rics and leathers with new exterior colors ., fi shades of fine fab- we ge ee ‘ vevvnennennennennenn Bi ca cepeanchotoiscccocccceccoctoneseneeebes ” Grou p “to. Sponsor] } Nurse Scholarship) | Aid Hospital | Hotel Gathering oe 1 Atarmational |Dinner Held: lon. Monday | UL ON Pig ‘Decorative M otif at the International Dinner. of the Pontiac BuSiness and: Professional Women’s Club when the group met Monday evening in Hotel Waldron. * Colored slides of. Europe taken by Anny Koellner highlighted the meeting. Ann Gosner of the international relations committee introduced the speaker. Miss Koellner showed pic- tures of Berne, and Lake Geneva, Switzerland, mountain climbing near Jungrau and the Matter- horn, and the Italian Alps. The speaker pointed out that the advertising pillars at the ' an Oakland County girl entering an accredited nursing school of her choice. Funds over Officers Selected _by Merry Mixers - George McClanahan was elected president of Merry Mixers Dance Club which recently held an election dance at the CAI Build- ing in Waterford. His fellow officers. include Paul Bond and Hal Brown, board members. : New members welcomed into = club included the Bud Nelsons, Howard Bonds, the Leslie Fiteeeraids, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Winton, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Barrett and the Ernest Kluesners. Norval Parker conducted the election of officers, and guests included Mr. and Mrs. Carl Munn and Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne Webber. WIOOTT OM & by Experts Specializing In Cold Waves \ Latest Hair Styling yr BEAUTY SHOP \ 500 N. Perry St. FE 2-1264 % i222 22 20 ae, Ob hd ded ded |E.-J. Ziem of Oakland Avenue, party chair- - Counting tickets for the Pontiac White) Shrine card party to bé held Wednesday at | man, 8 p.m. in Roosevelt Temple on State Avenue Tilden Avenue. Cooley Lake Road, ticket chairman; Mrs.| od Mrs. Frank: L. Payne of South Mrs. Earl Ross is cochair- are (left to right) Mrs. Alfred Martini of | man with Mrs. Katherine Quick, Mrs. Victor Bodamer, Mrs. Russell Marion, Mrs. Wayre Seott and Mrs, Bernice Cover assisting. ‘useful because they keep: the tourist informed of coming events, At the business meeting an in- vitation to attend the Windsor BPW Club’s International Dinner on Wednesday was extended.- A GM Exeeutive Says Gals Call the Tune s=|Women Credited for Smart Car Styles By DOROTHY ROE AP Women’s Editor modi Desa 4 ra If anyone has ‘ari linge tate at evolu in design— doubts about the portent — their homes, cars or anything else. trial and general importance of women, he should havea few words with Harley J. Earl, vice president of General Motors. If it weren't for women, he says, everybody might still be driving plain black cars, with high seats, small windshields and maybe even gears that have to be shifted by hand. : > * * It's the little woman who has revolutionized. automobile design, |-. says Earl, who is in charge of styling. Women influence 75 per cent of all car purchages,..and when women go shopping for auto- mobiles they know what they want. “Right after World War Il we;— started to receive a lot more let- ters than ever before,” says Earl. “Today about 65 per cent of the letters are from women. They're very definite in their suggestions and criticisms, : * * * “Designers used to try to inter- pret the feminine taste as they felt it should be. But today a woman can almost write her own ticket. mother knows best.” and complaints. ~ ae = low the “Automobile designers are pam- ee ee ee ee en ewen ee poesoeeoens : CALLING CAR NO. 1. Go Immediately to 82 Elm Street and Pick Up Mrs. T.Nolde’s Dry Cleaning. We Have Awarded Her $5.00 Worth of . FREE DRY CLEANING THIS “WEEK! “OR FE your MICHIGAN'S FIRST RADIO DISPATCHED DRY CLEANERS AVAILABLE to the Pontiac Area .” dry cleaning pickup and delivery service . . . F a4 cleaning picked up or delivered within min- age ate time convenient to you! acess ws nee. } tomers have in. us. . . faith built on top quality dry cleaning and fast convenient service. LET ONE OF OUR MOBILE UNITS SERVE Jack B, Young are Mr. and Mrs. > 2¢ 8 Richard Cooke of Avalon drive. ‘Jack is the son of Mr. and Mrs. The couple is planning a J .19 wedding. in-Stone Baptist Church, .Auburn Heights. perihg the women, and that's to | customed ‘to, they squawk. But in the advantage of the men too. Men the end they usually decide that Today’s rainbow-hued cars, with It you change anything they're ac-| fingertip steering control, .comfort- oo able seats, smooth surfaces, foam rubber upholstery, automatic shift, -+- power brakes and air conditioning a are largely the result of suggestion order Monday when Pontiac Chap- * * When women wrote in that they snagged their nylons and scraped their shins getting in and out of cars, front seats were redesigned. Studies made with hidden cameras of women stepping in and out of ears, showed seats were so high = and threshold plates so wide that the girls were constantly striking the backs of their legs against the seat edge. This was eliminated by : Snpeing Sa otels 2% Seciee ant ‘oer moving the “cushions nearer . door. The carpet. also was made|W® Mrs. Marie Gix as chair New tinted glass windshields fol- feminine fashion | letter was read from an exchange student who. was a recent guest of the club, Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Norman Dyer, Mrs. Marjdrie Baker and Miss Koeliner. 5 Get Degrees in Ceremony of Pontiac OES Five received degrees of the ter 228, OES, met at the Masonic Temple on East. Lawrence street. Mr. and Mrs, Peter D. Larson dr.,. Mr, and Mrs. Eugene Red- mond and Mrs, John Blacker were those receiving the degrees. As- sisting with the initiatory work were Mr. and Mrs. Peter D. Lar- Among the 96 members and guests were visitors from various parts ef Michigan and Shelburn, Ind Refreshments were served fol- the meeting by Group Four Couple Married fous new decorator whoistery fab-|in Daryton, Ohio In a recent ceremony in Day- Floyd Sennen of Lake Angelus | on, General Motors now has a com-| East boulevard. The couple IN THIS NATIONAL . our mobile, radio dis- FOR YOUR 2.2421 . and in the faith our cus- hed ssenancnnnanscesnonsnnnnessooseonnnenecenessnnsnonnooeennannnnscecsensnsnneccencenenennnenesssegeeeetssnn Visit our Bedding Department. Miller's matires you maximum comfort at minimunt — ‘standard brands. MILLER’S 14 Oakland. Ave. | Serta planned months ahead for 2TH | y ANNIVERSARY SALE, devine ma \ street corners in Berlin prove |~ Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nord of - Ferry Avenue, and the bridegroom — is the son of Mrs. George D. J. Griffin of Chicago and the late ‘Dr. Griffin. MRS~ RICHARD-THOMAS- GRIFFIN} Catherine Nord Repeats Vows in St. Chrysanthemums. and greens banked the altar of St. Vincent de Paul Church Saturday~ morning ‘when Catherine Nord became the bride. of Richard Thomas Griffin. The ‘bride, daughter of the Paul Nords of Ferry avenue, wore a velvet redingote with a sweeping train. A billowing white tulle dress was worn underneath, cut velvet leaves trimmed with rhinestones decorating the bodice and skirt. F A tiara .of rhinestones and pearls held her fingertip veil and she-carried a cascade of stepi.a- notis gardenias and velvet rib- The Rev, Maurice Veryser per- formed the 10 o'clock coremony before 200 guests. Rita Nord assisted her sister as maid of honor in a gown of cocoa brown brocade with a mink- -|Barbara Hill Gives Hayride and Party Barbara Hill entertained friends after a hayride Saturday evening ee ae et Pere Howes Feneley, ‘Pat Reaum, Jerry Brew- er, Reta Mayer, Bob Casteel, Anna Lou Terry, Jim Smith, Gloria Ed- ler and Bill Rose. Initiation Conducted by Eagles Auxiliary with | — "ermine Pa Are Scolded |About Attire Stylist Don Loper Mourns the Loss of Glamor 5 NEW YORK @ — Some of the world’s worst-dressed women are to be found among Hollywood stars, says Don Loper, designer of clothes. houses and movie sets and once an internationally known dancer. “They go around in trousers and _| sweaters, or off-shoulder gowns," says this outspoken critic. “They haven't heard about the daytime dress.” a a & There are, of course, exceptions, hastens to add. Among these he lists Irene Dunne; Arlene Dahl, Claudette Colbert, Joan Crawford, Greer Garson, Lana Turner and Eleanor Parker. These stars, he concedes, always look like ladies, on or off the screen. Quite natural- ly, some are his customers, In New York for a breather be- for. journeying to London to open a men's and a women’s branch of his California fashion salons, Loper. was in a mood to get a few things off his chest. “Here in the East nobody would Vincent Rite Dr, Griffin, Seating the guests were Thomas Talbot, William Gardner and Dr. Eugene Marset, all of Chicago, and Dr, James | think of going down town in a swim Griffin of Madison, Wis, suit and shirt, but in Hollywood recepti it’s common practice. When the a pet st ages we stars get out to the Coast they blue suit with black accessories for | *t@tt going native in om the wedding trip out West. They will reside in Chicago where Rich- ard attends Loyola University. The bride is. q graduate of St. Therese ‘School of Nursing. “Take Hedy Lamarr, for. In- stance. After being known as one of the most. glamorous women in Vienna, as soon as she arrived in Hollywood she tock to peasant blouses and dirndis.”’ Loper bégan his designing career creating costumes for his dancing partner; Maxine Barrat, during way hit musicals. From there he - | went to Hollywood to dance with Ginger Rogers in “Lady in the Dark,” after which he was given a glamour in the off-screen activi- FE only , to Joseph Salfi_Jr., son a amount to spend, stick to ‘okee road. A May ‘Professor Will “Addiaes Bloomfield Garden Club Guest speaker for the Feb: 1 meeting of Bloomfielé Hills Branch, Women's National Farm and Garden Association, will be Prof. Shao Chang Lee. Prof. Lee, a professor of Chinese culture and head of the Depart- ment of Foreign Studies at Mich- , has had ex- their appearance in various Broad-; neni ee eae sal pet idaninhls cect . New Styles in Weddings Sweetly Coy 24] 28 ee Nuptial Ae 48 ls From Shiek-Like to Young and Shy NEW YORK (INS) — Stylists looked up statistics on iby zi i E FF 3 v ii fe Sgt.I.C. Rex Hefner, son of | Mr, and Mrs. ° Noah Hefner of Going str. eet, The bride-elect | is @ graduate of Grace Hospital . School of Nursing. No date has been set for the wedding. _ LOIS THURMAN A few wl Ardith A. Payne Becomes Bride of W. Robert Wood The United Missionary Church The altar was decorated with palms and vases of white glad- ioli, stock and pompons. The bridal gown was made of traditional satin fashioned with match the peplum on the skirt. The bride's fingertip veil of sa il- lusion was edged with the same lace and she carried a chapel bou- GOP Club Has Meeting and Tea at Hilton Home Mrs, Farin N. Hilton and Agnes Hilton of Cherokee road were co- a — —_ dhe _ Make on "Appointment Soon ppb Ns ta ert | the compliments of your friends will tell you . : heise poreppnmprhiecticat tal ago £ Rowena’s -| only jewelry was the bridegroom's -| gift of pearls, -| Shantung fashioned with a halter- type neckline ae a short »| jacket and an" rt of nylon tulle, She wore a matching headpiece ‘| costume with a corsage of cym- quet of white carnations in the center of which was a corsage of pink rosebuds which she wore later on the_honeymoon trip. Her Ellen Wood, the . bridegroom's a floor-length gown of agua nylon ot velvet and mitts of the same shade, Her Shalimar bouquet was composed of pink carnations and pink. roses, Performing the duties of best man was Eugene ‘R. Payne, the bride's brother. Harold F. Hall | and D. Jack moony seated the’ guests. Preceding the ceremony, Mrs. Dougias Shaw sang the bridal re- cital actompanied by James §. Wood, an uncle of the eeieagroese, at the organ, For the ceremony “the bride's mother wore a gown of navy blue lace and scalloped neckline and pearl trim. -She chose pink ac- cessories and complemented her Anniversary istry major at the college. * aria Plan. Party in Ohio The Shingledeckers Mark 25th Wedding With Friends- Mr, and Mrs. flomer Shingle- decker of Dakota drive will leave the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Neal Smith. Both couples will ob- serve their 2th wedding ~ anni- versary Friday, They were married in a double wedding Ceremony @ quarter century ago. * * *& . Mr. and Mrs, Peter J. Dunn of Lake Angelus were recent | guests at the Boca Ratan Club, Boca Ratan, Fila. al € ‘= Mr, and Mrs. George Mattison will celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary with an. open house | Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. in their home on Prospect street, = * David Scott of Lakeside drive left today for the family cabin, “Scottland,’’ in Cadillac to spend a few days before returning to his studies at the University of Mich- igan, +++ ~ Frank Crowell will receive a state secondary permanent cer- tifieate from Central Michigan College in Mount Pleasant at | the end of the semester Wednes- day, Receiving a similar certi- ficate will be Raymond Gram- beau. * * Friday for Marion? Ohio, to spend | BR SEER St Patricia Ann Young became the bride of George Lee’ Thomas Friday evening at Community ~ United Presbyterian Church. The- bride is ¥ the daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. Maurice E. Young of Drayton ~ Plains, and the — bridegroom's & parents are the 7 Luther Ae Thomases of Birmingham. “MRS. GEORGE TL. THOMAS : Patricia Ann Young. Wed in Presbyterian Service The Community United -Presby-{ terian Church at Drayton Plains a Wilma Louise Campbell, daugh- | ter of Mrs. and Mrs, John L. | Campbell of West Longfellow ave- | nue, has been listed on the honor | roll for the fall quarter at David | Lipscomb college in Nashville, | Tenn. Wilma is a sophomore chem- | Hampshire. Also on the list are Mae. Yale, Peter A. Coyle, Iva Armstrong, Doris M. Johnson, Ailene M. Scholtz, Naomi Todd - Twochel, Pear] G. Turo, Edith S, Northon bidium orchids. The bridegroom's mother wore “a mauve lace gown with 9 small hat of vari-colored flowers and orchids, Amaranth Has a corsage of brown cymbidium After the ceremony a reception | was held in the YWCA on Franklin | and Mildred H. Dodent, * * _Graduates trom Michigan State -|Gathering Is Held by Rebecca Circle Mrs, William Hotham gave devo- Children iren Love THIS: Cough Syrup! Give your quick. _reliet b all vd 0 . Pinex to loo Figen, Maasai tears /was the setting Friday evening when Patricia Ann Young became | the bride of George Lee Thomas. |Mr. and Mrs. Maurice E. Young, | formerly. of Pontiac, now of Dray- ton Plains, are the bride’s par-| ents, and the bridegroom is the | son of Mr. arid Mrs, Luther Thom- as of Birmingham. For the occasion the bride was gowned in a ballerina-length dress - of Chantilly lace and net. Her cloche headdress was embroidered | with seed pearis and held her) waistlength veil. She wore the | bridegroom's gift of pearls and) Donald Good wag best man, and seating the guests were Robert. Clark and Mr. Tironey; both of Birmingham, and William Brim. Mrs. Young Wore a navy shan- tung suit with a turquoise hat and corsage of rubrum lilies, Mrs. Thomas also wore navy with pink New Citizens Meet Thursday at. PHS.» 857 West Huron Street ‘ PICTURES ? BETTER Volume 3 CAT-O-GRAPHS | Wow y—~ MORE PICTURES -NEW FEATURE ne 5 * WIN $400 in PRIZES + wee CAT PICTURE CAPTION CONTEST =: Exclesive in the 1954 Edition -- Sy of the Cat Picture Annual = - e Compiled by the Packers of 3 LITTLE KITTENS AlLGiuh CAT FOOD ef so a i 0. Sox 1042, Boston 3, Man, N94 or. and 15 os. sizes | eustens 3 tacts ond 258 ter ty aay ; | CAT-O-GRAPHS, Vol. 3 [Please Print) SEND 25¢ iia : d 3 LABELS - (ether size) Adér | ory e% UR ee a hb an wad yee nt oT Ss ee * att = =} “oHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1054 NEA, Nee Actress Clarice Blackburn: “] find that I get. a very Blackburn quick response from the audience when | work in theater- just a little vanilla to the meringue | brings out, the flavor of the lemon. This filling neéds ted » separa 4, See vanilla And she feels that really to act, you must first understand Louisiana. “T learned about people and even dialects that way. My tiother and | stepfather were always buying a farm somewhere and rebuilding it from nothing to a sound property. “So, when it came time for me fo play the role of Addie, I was ready. I knew all a the lone- liness of farm life, the “bleakness of winter and the business of fill- ing oil lamps and cooking on 4 wood-burning stove.” Playing a small theater like this one (it seats about 250 per- sons) gives an actress @ feeling of real response from the audi- ence, Miss Blackburn says. | Mary Margaret McBride Says: Politics Would Be Fine: It Officials Could Rhyme The proposal of New York’s Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. that a code of ethics be established for public officials reminds me of something that Babette Deutsch, the poet, told me awhile back. “In happier days in China,” she said, “‘one of the requirements for a candidate » | was that he should be able to write Miss Deutsch didn't say what kind of poetry the candidate had to write nor whether there was a board to pass on the verse. Anyway, all that can come later. My immediate aim is just to get poetry ‘onto our official agenda. < For even though he~be.no Keats, any good poet is likely to possess imagination and vision. Certainly- every politician should have the same, though he for public office often doesn't: If a -poetsisn’t good with words, that's MISS McBRIDE his finish and it's the same with a politician, urfless of course he can play the banjo and sing cowboy songs. > + h | Because the audience is so near | to the set and so close to the actors, reaction is almost always immediate. “I can never “understand ‘an attress who says she has diffi- ‘culty crying in a certain :scene,” she explains. “It’s simple to do, once you've learned to play on your emotions much the same way that you learn to type or play the piano. It's a matter of pressing the right key at the right time.” 5 SINISE uv 1S: } : Gtatstet tints Eisiol. LN ES IeisiT etateh MILINIT) IAP Ir isiAlre - (RTATS Ale loraet lorr BOUOMO *So00Ru4 a AlMia IN[O [S| a3icis. by Seana Whale Not a stitch! Just a stroke of your iron — butterflies brighten your towels — dance across table- Jiffy! Tron onf Washable! Pat- tern 796 has 16 iron-on color trans- fers; 6 2%x4% to 34x4¥4, 10 14x inches. o* Poets are notoriously willing to starve and even die for their | ideals and it certainly wodld be all to the good if a few- holders of office felt the same way, poetry clause into our office- holder requirements and | achieved a corps of public ser- vants so fine that the very word If the poetry idea works, I have one or two other ancient “Chinese | customs to recommend to the 20th E F ' F z ef y celiere Fernale Employment | Hits All-Time Peak The: incomes of more than 10 is for it to become checked—full of no cooking. Along with her job as homemak- rated Jemon rind can) sweetened con- 5 tablespoons sugar Combine_ lemén juice and grat- ons yolks and stir until well blend- . Pour into cooled pié-shell. ae egg whites until they begin to form peaks. Add sugar, a ta- blespoon at a time, continuing to beat. This gradual adding of the sugar will prevent the meringue’s weeping."’ Add vanilla last of all. Bake 15-20 minutes in a slow oven, until meringue is nicely browned. How to Fix ‘Checked’ Furniture By HUBBARD COBB .. Lots of things can happen to the finish on furniture and one of them tiny little cracks. This condition is often due to just age or an inferior ish Sometimes it's caused by ap- plying the finish coat over an under | coat that did not have a chance to become hard. In any evént, you'll probably want to do something New Glues for Furniture Hold Chair Leg Securely Glue—a—loosened chair. leg to- day and the chances are good that the leg will be more secure than it was in the first place. War needs for unusual applica- tions brought about great improve- ments in adhesives of all kinds, and especially good ghies are wide- ly available, about it, If you have plenty of time and | enjoy this sort of thing, you can | ioe talimeiins nest sol oe 3 i Me te you ! Proportioned to fit—no altera- tion worries! Pattern 4629: Half sizes 14%, -| 16%, 184, 20%, 22%, 244g. Size 16% takes 4 yards 39-inch fabric. ’-This pattern easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- Says Age Is Purely, Simply a State of Mind RALEIGH, N. C. (INS)—Age is a state of mind. ist, Corinnee E She. maintained “Just becatise you're 51 or 52 years old doesn't mean i i pil Feri i Hi : : i 3 i 1 A: For a chair leg, use liquid hide giue, which not enly holds the leg that fits but also has good gap-filling qualities to keep in place the leg that’s a little too. small for the hole in the chair seat, Remove every trace of the old | giue and sandpaper the. wood clean. Test the fit of the leg and_ then A , by Hostess _ Condemned Guests Advised’ to Refuse Firmly, but - Politely eat or drink?” is the question put to me by this reader. been confronted with this problem from hostesses who think they are ih you will find that they will stop urging you | Dear Mrs. Pow Post: Please tell me | /@ ; what initials an engaged srl | | shoud: Gas “whem having her linens | i initials plus the initial of her fu- in the world is a narrow mind and a wide mouth. _ . coaxing you to have something to “On quite a few occasions I have | No!” in a sincere tone ot voice, I c a z) Private Party and Luncheon Rooms WALDRQN MOTEL COFFEE SHOP _ Downtown Location For Your . Convenience * 36 E. Pike St. | glues to set. 'Marriage License apply the glue with a brush to the leg and to the wood surface to which it is to be joined. But don't insert the leg immed- lately—results aré much better if | the glue dries slightly first, “Test it to see if it pulls away at a finger touch, as shown in the upper right sketch. Clamp the leg in PT and let the | glue dry thoroughly in a warm, not hot, place. Two to three hours are all that is needed for the best Applications — Raymond o. we 171 Sanderson Erma W. Batey, 488 N. Sagine John £. Reid, Royal Oak Cathryn I. Willer, Berkley Berton T. Langdon, 4845 _ Pontiac Trail Pruelia J. Welfley, Keego Barbor Robert H. Liley, Perndaie Mary .A.- Victor, Hazel Park Keith Pennington, Hazel Park Shirley L. Brunta, Berkley Charles C. Hol ingh Mary A. Pinnoy, Sadeanen Herbert Ds Truman, Royal Oak Estella M4. Webb, Berkley Ambros E. Heck, Holly Joan _F. Pearson, lolly ao. W. Durham, lwastetord EB. Taylor, Waterford Carrol Gates, 49 E. Tennyson Lucile Green, 142 Hudson ture name. “Thave been told that the latest marking is a combination of beth his and her first initial with the initial of her future name in the Answer: Tt is very unusual.to have linens marked with the man's first* initial, but there is no rule | against it if it pleases you, The conventional marking is a combi- nation of her maiden initials plus the initial of her future name. Dear Mrs. Post: If our baby is a boy he will be named for his fath- er. Ordinarily, this means he would be a junior, But in this case my husband was named for an uncle (hig father’s brother) and ‘so thé the baby would be the third living member of the family with the same name. Does this make him If or Ill, or may we still Answer: Correctly, your baby will be John Henry Smith Ill. If uncle should die, your husband would ‘be John Henry Smith and —MARY KING— SALON COLD WAVE Mark: King Cold Wave, Complete S658 William E. Prewitt, Berkley Jan. C. Marsham, Berkley Clare M; Carison, Royal Oak Charlotte A. Heim, Royal Oak Billy £. Grogan, ‘MT Auburn Mary A. Sadiak, Rochester Maurice B. Latulippa, Pernda: Marion C. Hausfeld, Ferndale Hollis A. Sanborn, Lake Orion Ann Dickerson, Lake Orion Robert A. thieson, Berkley Barbara A. ineee Perndale derry W. Maddox, 404 Janie Cross, 464° Auburn Alex T. Spencer, Beverly J. Hopp, Guy W. Groce, Troy Lorraine A. Collins. Perndale James H. Wright, Parmington Ruth WN. LaRue eae te ‘al Oak 16 W. Walton sok . . Greuner, FP ower m eha: ane Archdale, 611 Fourth Elaine G. Cox, $11 Fourth John T. Mauszall, Marie A. Benmude, Rebel Gan Norval J. Schlager, 26 ur Florence E. Jones, 1232 University pe ae baer - ie Richard §. Wallace, Roosevelt Hotel Norma J. Lambert, 130 pron James £ Dunaway, 464 Aubu Mary L. . Dunaway, aabern. James * Wat rkston Mary ” Hat ye 3 ‘Thompeon Roger Nancy i Brown, meow Weled cake sini came Wace Edna G. McKerracher, Farmington - "tance Wysgoski, 150 8. Edith Margaret A, Leach, 104 8. Astor Harve Steele, Hazel Park > Betty D. "nan Hazel Park Charies R. Carpenter, } 1 Mary Jessica V. Gorn, 111 ane Day Day Boker Gay, 174 La Della M- Graham Pn 288 Howard Me- Doran W. Delores Keelan, 4S Odis L.- Matlock, 233 East Virginia Matlock. 232 Bast Bind. ialy tees pane, eon SE Don O. Tu Lake Orion snk ootagean hiriey "A. Wolte, Milford’ John hye Lake Opal ©. Majors, 81 Orion no YORK _Feplacement of a "© PROMPT SER © LOWEST PRICES. We — sparen, rings, B ptiorsong earrings, pucks jaces a types of jewelry. We replace dio- monds, supply and reset all typediof #1 Re outs «date ‘aeeliy is also one of “GUARANTEED WORKMANSHIP. | PARTS USED! .e PROMPT SERVICE eg “ e@ LOWEST PRICES =—s | "Regardless of what ails your watch, Mark’ _ experience insures your rb erd sal Ra ore ~All Services Completely Guaranteed Located in Court House Block — DON stones, Remodeling our specialties, years ot : ishing of a case is on the premises. € =Ire pr THE PONTIAC P: PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1954 = Ma Pradconcs Walked pacer owen GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — Attor-|McMahon who died in mey_Sat Vion tiny “wus Sen 30)” ee | STORERS WORK BETTER NV GS S111 STOKER COAL SIBLEY COAL : AND SUPPLY CO. 140 N. CassAve. —_ FE 5.8163 =| Fleeced Parents |Indictment Says Model Agency Director Promised Good Jobs for Talented Tots ~ ‘NEW YORK i# — Walter’Thorn- ton, publisher of a models’ catalog, has been accused of fleecing proud parents: of some $600,000 in fees for publishing their children’s pho- tographs. Queens County Dist. Atty. T. Vincent Quinn said Thornton col- lected the money over the past three years from parents “under false representation that he would obtain lucrative model and TV em- ployment for their children.” “Thornton's technique lay in preying on the hopes and natural pride of parents in their me." Quin said, - * * * Parents were said to have paid him to print their children’s pic- tures in the catalog after being lated to big advertisers. An indictment by a Queens grand jury charged Thornton with - y PINKING SHEARS SINGER With Every. >. Sewing Machine ’ PORTABLE Purchased! RECONDITIONED ({j ELECT RIC Sewing Machine Call FE 2-7848 5 Year Guorantee © NEW SPEED CONTROL NEW SEW LIGHT CARRYING CASE BOBBIN WINDER Pay s $1.25 Wastiys_- Bewnlnwe Col . SEWING MACHINE SALES CO. Phone FE 2-7848 day at ‘his Park avenue office in Manhattan, taken to Queens for booking and then released in $2,- 500 bail. Quinn said the grand jury ac- tion followed “‘six months of in- tensive investigation inte’ Thorn- ton's agency after complaints from hundreds of parents in New York, New Jersey _and Connecticut.” * * * Ten others; present or former Thornton employes, also were named in the indictment on the same charges. . Philip Handelman, counsel fot Mr. Thornton will be completely vindicated.” Thornton, 50, once was a brick layer. Later he became a model, and in 1934 established a model agency. A ; “The Model Casting Directory,” a catalog of models featuring chil- Queens authorities said he charged parents from $40 to $65 each to publish their children’s pictures. The authorities said few if any ever got modeling jobs. yesterday appoint: McEvoy, 34, of 1415 Parker Ave., to the Detroit House of Correc- tions Commission. Mrs. McEvoy who died recently. told the publication would be circu- crank He Sey beeeeny sed de. Thornton, said, ‘“‘We are sure that | In 1950, Ke let the license of his | agency lapse and since then has. concentrated on publication of | Gets Detroit Appointment | DETROIT (INS) — Mayor Cob | ied Mrs. James | replaces Mrs. James Cummiskey, | March 15 Is Nester "Than You Think Which One of Three Forms Do You Use? If Income Is Over $5,000, the Long One} interest, expenses, etc. than 10% of gross income? Withholding Statement? dividends and interest? : If you answer “Yes” go aH question. motes (Third article explains HERE'S HOW TO TELL WHICH FORM TO USE IF YOUR INCOME WAS LESS. THAN $5000 (If you file a joint return, include wife's income and deductions) 1, Do you have ie | for con medical explain all about these deductions.) veer maines b "Ten' ston sighs have. You should file on Long Form 1040. If answer is “No” go to the next question. + __ 2. Did you have more than $100 income from YES NO dividends, interest or wages not shown on a i) oO If your answer is “Yes” go no further. You should file on Short Form 1040. If answer is “No” go to the next question. 3. Did you have any income besides wages, YES NO should file on Short Form 1040. If answer |= 4s “No” go to next question, Pes 4. Do you have any deductible travel expenses? YES NO (Fourth article explains travel deductions.) ie | If answer is “Yes” you should file on Form 1040. if you answer “No” "go to next 5. Are you the head of a household? head of a household.) If answer is “Yes” you should file on Short Form 1040. If answer is “No” use Form 1040A. Bos YES NO . which total more (Articles 8 and 9° Oo no further. You oo Little Sympathy If you qualify as the head of a a use Form 1040. There 7 is no way to take advantage of this tax break on Form 1040A. (Next; Youd Exemptions.) ‘Sick’ Red Gets Government. Contends Mrs. Winter's Ailment Is ‘Extreme Dramatics’ DETROIT (® — The government charged yesterday that Mrs. Helen A. Winter, one of six Michigan Communists on trial on Smith Act charges, had a case of “extreme Mrs. Winter was brought to court in an ambulance on court order, after an examination by a court- appointed physician showed she: who qualifies . as 0 0) By RICHARD A. MULLENS Article 2 The first article of the Tax) Primer told whether you are get ot the millions who has to file a tax return for 1953 by March 15. | This article takes up’ the next | question: which tax form should | you use? Just as for 1952, there are three | different types of returns—F orm | 1040A, Short: Form 1040 and Long article, It automatically tells you which return to use. 2. If your income is $5,000 or more, you must use Long Form ‘ital losses, This is explained more fill out the form printed with this | | BECAUSE OF SERVICE It is easy to understand why you should purchase a Piisilet: It is ste break given heads of households. If you weren't married during all of 1953, read page 4 of the official instructions for the rules as to whether, for tax purposes, Was not ‘Wo Ill to- attend the trial. Her entrance into court was on a stretcher, covered with @ flaming’ red blanket. Federal Judge Frank A. Picard took one look and said: “Get that, red flag-out of this ‘courtroom."’ The trial of the six Communists charged with conspiring to teach and advocate the violent over- throw of the government was re- cessed last week when Mrs, Win- ter reported she wag ill. It was the third time tha eee | ‘you qualify as a married person. In ali but a few cases, it is ad- | Vantageous for married couples to | | file a joint return. Here are the. | important exceptions:" - 1. If both husband and wife have large incomes and also large cap- fully in the eighth. article. 2. If your wife could be claimed | |two weeks. The first sickness vic- had held up the trial in the past | tim was Judge Picard. The second was Defense Attorney Ernest Good- Gek tothe os ieny weitens whe ec cael , in ~ department babe es called * Scare Meyastherelly meee} of Household” on page 4 of the Official instr uctions. Note that the “household” must be where you live-as well as the principal residence of the children or dependents for whom it is main- tained, You do not qualify as the head thrifty shoppers. woke bal Trim "$49 $139 Dyed 69 | - DOUBLE STAMP SPECIAL Large Group of Smart Casual DRESSES Extra Fine Quality PLISSE SLIPS Lie Run-Resistent Rayon Panties 14° DOUBLE STAMP SPECIAL “ANELETS * = DOUBLE STAMP SPECIAL j 2.99 First —— Size | oe _ 60-51 Spano, America’s best ‘buy. Chevrolet is the lowest priced of all popular : automobiles. It has beauty, economy, power, parkability. But why should you purchase your Chevrolet here? Because of service. It is a comfortable feeling to own a car or truck bought from an rganization that stands ala lies ic Pac hight with — a ee + reliable service. ° Our Service Department, open unt midnight; ie dedicated to protects 7 _ ing the investment of people who purchased Chevrolets here. | "It is because of service that Pontiac people come to us for their Oa cars ond trucks. TRUCKS $ and USED CARS. ecg 2 S. Saginaw St. Prioy sotl eeeccccccevccccccccecccocccescscoesooecess : DOUBLE STAMP SPECIAL oa ‘oo 2 ra AP aot ie 10 years ago when the women of ship decided to found a library. __ the “library ladies” have staffed the facility located _in the Community Activities Building on Williams By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE | WATERFORD—Community proj- ects can be operated on a volun- teer basis, survive the ravages of the years, fires, changing person- fel, and emerge highly successful 10 years later. _A case in point—the Waterford Community Library. Without tax support, minus either constitution or bylaws, li- brary supporters have given the boys and girls, as well as the library facilities because Township is rich in Hook interest. ‘The organization simply has nev- er gotten around to electing offi- cers. Mrs. 0. L. Siegman, one of the original promoters and guiding light throughout the library's exist- ence, says they always have had a treasurer or a secretary when they needed one. Calling themselves “‘library la- dies,” mothers of the township have taken turns on library duty. They have begged books from their neighbors, held. teas, bridge parties and bake sales to see their 13- book beginning library grow to “ over 4,000 volumes today. Books are housed in the Com- munity Activities Building on Williams Lake road. This has been the township’s unofficial li- brary since its inception, Space _for the library was given to the Area Girl Scouts to Meet Thursday in Birmingham Southern Oakland County Girl Scouts have invited all adult scouts to their fifth annual meeting Thurs- day in the Birmingham Commu- - nity House from 1:15 to 3:45 p.m. Mrs. Victor Marsh of Royal Oak, president, will conduct the meet- ing which will open with a flag ceremony. ten dele. gates representing the seven dis- officers and approve bylaws and a budget for the coming year. Adult scouts who have served five, ten, 15 or 20 years will be Mrs. Charles Tuller of Royal Oak. Mrs. A. H. Williams, Royal Oak, MOTHERS STAFF COMMUNITY LIBRARY— Four thousand volumes grew from a mere 13 over Waterford Town- Over the: years group by the CAI and it is staffed by volunteers, During the summer months they transport books, in cooperation with the township recreation pro- gram, to the playground areas of the district. Story hours are con- ducted by the library ladies and they have encouraged children's interest in books; . About seven years ago a fire de- stroyed the former CAI Building. The library went up in- flames. “We had to start from the begin- ning again. But the people of the township were so enthusiastic we Students Begin All-Day Classes Completion of School Adds Necessary Room to System MILFORD — About 400 students in the Huron Valley school system are now attending classes full days because of the completion of High- land Elementary School. " Until this week, the students had been going to school half days. Also, there was no cafeteria serv- ice in Milford or Highland be- cause that space was-needed for classrooms. . The changeover to full days took place Thursday, Friday and Saturday, It included 12° rooms of children, according to Supt. Harold Hansen. Different grades were split up into six sections to attend classes half days. Beginning today, full cafeteria service was expected to be pro- vided in both Bertha Baker School and Milford _High School, . with service starting next week for Highland students. Delayed by a shortage of steel ments, the completed school has 15 classrooms, a_ kindergarten room, band room, a large gym- nasium and auditorium, a library and two teachers’ rooms. A health room has also been installed and the rest of the build- ing is devoted to office and storage space, - A new oil furnace has also been installed to replace the old. heating plant which was inadequate for the new building, Hansen said. Bird Chapter, OES, |Plans Sewing Bee CLARKSTON — Beginning at 10 a.m. Thursday, a sewing bee. will be held at the home of Mrs. Ray Anthony on Barker street, Williams Sponsored by the Joseph C. Bird to all members of the organiza- tion. Articles sewed will be sold Those attending will bring sew- ie wn- | balance of the luncheon will be| § couldn't do anything else but launch a new library,” recalls Mrs. Siegman. © The progressive interest of the Waterford Village School Moth- er’s Club has been another in- centive for the library to keep on growing, Mrs. Siegman says. George Kimball, once head of the CAI, was another charter promoter of the idea, No dues are charged at the li-| brary where the list includes everything from books for the pre- kindergarten child. through the formal high school literature clas- sics. e An auxiliary group of the li- brary is the Great Books organiza- tion which meets every second Fri- day, Another is the Book Review group that-for about. seven years has reviewed the most contempo- rary fiction and non-fiction books. These groups are open to all in- terested women in the township, according to Mrs. Siegman. Crediting the state library of- fiee with giving invaluable aid last surnmer and some late ship-j- Chapter 294, OES, the bee is open ing materials and @ sandwich. The | ested area people are invited will be held in the CAI Building. “Mrs, Fannie Noonan, director of state aid to libraries, and Fran- cis Scannell, head of readers’ serv- ice,..will speak and tell of new li- that part of the event. Not even with the marvel.” ous new Sonotone ALL- transistor instrument. It costs less than many other all-transistor hearing ° aids. No $75.00 bargain this, but you cam own it on an easy ‘| “AVON TOWNSHIP — ‘|plorer Scouts of Post 60 | Scouts of Troop 114 have returned ifirm a week end winter camp-out speakers will begin at 2 p.m. for anyone interested in coming for fee |About Winter Camping | From Leader : les Ex- Boy | Second class scouts and tender- foots were instructed in winter camp life and field. work at the -Feamp-out by Frank Gronski, scout- master, assisted hy committeemen Virgil Foster, Don Evilsizer Sr. and Vernon Shurtz. - At a recent meeting of Stiles Cub Pack 114, awards were pre- sented by Cubmaster Den Kil- patrick. Arthur Earich, Gerald Tallman and Robert Anderson received the wolf badge, while bear badges went to David Gib- son, Thomas Goring, Gerald Tall- The lion badge and gold arrow was presented to David Earich. Den chiefs presented with gold braid were Larry Gronski, Michae’ | Laughlin, Louis Wetstone-and-Cart Lake Rd. All the books are donated. .Shown in the above picture helping two sixth graders select a book is Mrs. O. L. Siegman, 2832 Orangegrove, Waterford Township. .The two youngsters are, left to right: Robert Scott and Eileen Green, both enrolled in the CAI sixth grade room. Library Is Tribute to Volunteer Work Paulson. . Den. Chiefs Gronski, Laughlin and Wetstone also attended an all- day training course Saturday at Waterford High School with Cub- master Kilpatrick and Orval Sharp, assistant cubmaster. Ladies Aid Holds Meeting Society met in the parlors of Pil- grim Congregational Church Thurs- day for a work meeting. The next meeting will be Feb, I1. METAMORA — The Ladies Aid ha . - i ee a | Puch weigh heavily in the sentencing of George Albert O'Neil for contempt of court, according to circuit court officials. : Literary Club Holds ‘Gentlemen's Night MILFORD—“Gentlemen’s Night” was celebrated Saturday by the Monday Literary -Club when the men were the guests of members. Sixty-eight .attended a dinner at Hi-Land Manor in Highland for the annual event. : Dr. H. A. Miller entertained with magic tricks, and a large group from the Halsted School of the Dance in Detroit performed dur- ing thé evening. The affair ended with community singing. iz ver A baked ham dinner will be given by the Big ‘Beaver Methodist Church from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the church on. Rochester road, north of 16-Mile road. Proceeds will go toward church completion. Waterford Good Will Club meeting originally scheduled for Jan. 16 will be held Thurs- day at the home of Mrs, Alvin Austin of Pontiac. Hostesses for the meeting are Mrs. _Osear_ Virgin and Mrs. -W: Blak Lake Orion Women's Department of the Reorgan- ized Church of the Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints will hold a family-style baked ham dinner and bake sale at the ehurch, 531 E. Fiint, Thursday. Serving will be from 6 to 7 p.m. Proceeds will go toward church debt retirement. _ County Calendar spiracy trial in connection with the same eviction attempt. mo showed that he had been at the Stevens’ farm when Schreiber and others ejected the sheriff and a deputy. Yesterday, he was found guilty | by Judge Quinn for not revealing | that he had personal knowledge of the case when being ques- tioned as a potential juror in the Schreiber case, After being found guilty, O'Neil told the court he still did not be- lieve be had done anything wrong, that he had not lied to any ques- tion presented to him when the jury was being empaneled. . Judge Quinn took up his. offer to submit to a lie detector exami- nation and postponed sentencing until Monday, when results of Fri- day's test will be in. According to prosecutor George Lutz, if the lie detector substan- tiates O'Neil’s claim of no malice, Judge Quinn is likely to impose a lesser sentence. At the same time, Judge Quinn warned O'Neil that if he was con- cealing anything now it would be “much more serious.” Lutz said contempt of court car- ze Six at Rochester =< File for Council Testimony and photographs 3 John. Dahiman, Ralph Garner, 4 Incumbents Seek Re-election filed petitions for seats on the Village Council before the dead- “| Mine Saturday and will automatical- ly become nominees-for the March 8 election. Five terms on the council will expire this spring. Frank Rewold, council president, Elizabeth Mait- rott..Paul Hoffmeister and Sidney Q. Ennis; whose terms expire, will seek re-election, Councifman Kelth Crissmaan,. whose term also expires, will not seek re-election, Also filing petitions were John Dahiman, a former member of the council: and Ralph Garner. Hoffmeister is currently com- pleting the unexpired terms of Ward Foe who resigned last fall. Village Clerk. Lillian Easterle announced that Monday Feb. 8, will be the last day for registering for the election, Her office will 8 p.m, The Colossus of Rhodes, one of the ancient wonders of the world, was destroyed in an earthquake in 224 B, C. co — Six candidates be-open_that day from 8 a.m. to ‘METAMORA=Mrs, AF: Burn- finance, and devotions. Area Man in Society _ WATERFORD ‘TOWNSHIP —~ A new member of the Civil En- gineering Society at Tri-State Col- lege, Angola, Ind. ‘s William R. Allen, son of Ralpb £. Allen of 5986 Cooley Lake Rd. .- Mrs. Lewis Fishell, for Lifetime Careers Fre 18 to 35 enroll as 9 student M4 ache of Professional Narsing. You'll get a fine education, prepare fou en interesting career that offers secu- rity, an assured income and many op portunities for advancement. . nena - If you are under 55 enroll in a course of Practical Nursing. Here is your second chance ey a sg Bagarad in a proud profession, one keep at Gnancially independent. The opportunities for advancement are al most unlimited, : at your nearest hospital Published:as a public service by the Pontiac Press in co-operation with The Advertising Council improvement; Mrs. R. J. Gardner, - OPPORTUNITIES ries a maximum sentence of 30 days and-or $250 fine. | i DON F. DICKERSON GENERAL INSURANCE For Personal Service Call FE 2-5320 7 —s the world D ' payment plan. ‘. SONOTONE Hearing Service _ 357 N. Saginaw Pontiac y . You can aff SONOTONE No more messy dripping __ At last! ... a wine bottle that posi- _ * tively prevents dripping when you pour! You'll be amazed how the spe- Pat Pending ¢ é pless Bottle! Now you won't waste cially constructed top of ROMA's new bottle miraculously cuts off the wine-flow after each pouring — ends forever the nuisance and embarrass- ment of messy dripping. Only ROMA has the world’s first Dripless Bottle —the first major improvement in a the new Dripless Bottle, you don't. pour spots, too! No more stained doilies, tablecloths, table tops, or - clothing. Every time you pour ROMA the last drop stays in the bottle! De- ~ signed on a scientific principle never before applied in bottle-making, the _ “magic lip” of ROMA’s new bottle Jets you pour safely as you pour nat- oo a single drop of wonderful ROMA quality . . . made with patient skill _ from select California-grown grapes . «. Wines bottled at the winery to insure uniform bouquet and flavor. ‘Choose your favorite wine from the ROMA family of fine wines. Reason- able in price, remarkable in quality. And serve ROMA from now on in the world’s first Dripless Bottle! Be sure and ask for the Wine . , . wines of merit and superb . * Naser es 4 BE REISS © em a a nei at ig Se Siti eee -- Tal S Telovision Programs - - Channel 2~WJBK-TV : . Channel ¢—WW3J-TV - Channel 7-WAEETV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—-(7)—Detroit Deadline, Day's news. (4)—Time for Music, Jane Palmer sings. (2)—Kit Carson, “The Secret Sheriff,” film. 6:15—(7)—Sports Show, Don Wat- trick. 6;30—(7)—My Hero, Robert Cum- mings in ‘The Boat," film: com- édy, 44)—News, Weather, (2)— Telenews Ace, Ken Cline, Van Patrick. 6:435—(4)—Traffie Court, Judge Watts presides over re-creation of traffic cases. (2)—Sports, Ed Hayes. = 7:00-—- (7) —Biff Baker, “Golden Slippers"; Biff tracks erime in Cuba. (4)—Story -Book, ‘The Author of Independence.” (2)— This Is Show Business, Clifton Fadiman, George Kaufman co- hosts to show people, 7:15—(4)—Meet the Artist, filmed interviews. 7:30—(7)—Cavaleade of America, | Robert Strauss, Carl Benton Reid in “Man of Glass,” story of glass manufacturer. (4)—Dinah Shore, Popular Songs. (2)—News, Doug Edwards. 7:46--(4)—~News Caravan, Jon __,Cameron Swayze. (2)—Jane Fro- man, Jane sings against Monte Carlo- Setting. 8:00 =~ (7) — Colonel Flack, Alan Mowbry stars in comedy mys- tery. (4)—Bob Hope Show, Tony Martin, Zee“Zee Gabor, Les Brown, Cass Daley, guests. (2)— Life Is Worth Living, Bishop Ful- ton Sheen speaks on variety of subjects. ‘ 8:30—-(7)—Club Night at Arthur Murray's, Women's Achigvement Committee, guests (2)—Death Valley Days, girl wins suitor Away from _rival “Little Papesta,” a fire 9:00—(7)—Make Room for. Daddy, Danny tells young son to “get lost”’ and he does. (4)—Fireside Theater, Bryce Bennett in ‘The Uncrossed River.” young _poli- tician makes tense career de- cision. (2)—Foreign Intrigue, _ drama stars James “aT Hour, Helen Hayes, Dennis King in ‘Side by Side,” comedy of wile who mixes poli- ties with (4)--Cir- cle Theater, cue Old Man's Gold,” young thwarts gry adults. (2)—Suspense, Affair with a Ghost,” ar of intrigue in France in World War I 10:00—(4)—Judge -for Yourself, Fred Allen Host, guest panel tries to judge new songs. (2}— Danger, Rex Thompson in “Srendi Vashter,” child outwits relatives. % 10: 30—~(7)—Name's the Same, Rob- ert Q. Lewis host. (4)—All Star Theater, Herbert Marshall, Joan Caulfield in “Girl in the Park,” girl's strange habits upset com- placent doctor. (2) — Favorite Story, ‘The Face of Paris,” film drama. 11:00—(7)—Soupy’s On, Hamish Menzies ‘guest star. (4)—News, Paul Williams. (2)—News, Jack eta 11:15—(7)—Feature Film, Con- stance Cummings in “The Fore- man Went to France.” (4)—-Guild Theater, Fi, drama. (2)—Go-to- gether Theater, “I Met My Love Again,” feature film. WEDNESDAY MORNING 7:00—(4)—Today. 8:00—(7)—W. M. Kelly. 9:00~—(4)—Playschoel. (7)—Play- house 9:45—(2)—Brighter Day 10:00—(4)—Ding Dong School, (7) —Wixie’s Wonderland. (2)—As thur Godfrey. 10: 30—(4)—Hollywood. Breakfast. 11:00—(4)—Hawkins Falls. (7)— Charm Kitchen. 11:15—(4)—Three Steps to Heaven. 11:30—-(4)—The Bennetts. (2)—Strike It Rich. . 11:45—(4)—Follow Your Heart. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(4)—Bride and Groom. (7) ~Comics. ()—Valiant Lady. 12:15—(2)—-Love of Life. (4)— Ross Mulholland. 12: 30—(7)—News. (2)—Tomorrow’s Search. 12: 45—(2)—Guiding Light. 4) — Travel Unlimited. (7)—Stars on Seven. 1:00—(2)—You're What You Eat. (4)—Jean McBride. 1:15—(2)—Murphy Calling. a Moore Show, (4) An | 2:00—(2)—Double or Nothing. (7) —My Life, 2:30—(7)—Theater. (2) party. #:45—(4)—Naney Dixon. 3:00-(2)—Big Payoff. (4)—Kate Smith. _ 3:30—(7)—Film Serial. dies Day. 4:00—-(4)—Welcome Travelers. (7) Colt. — House- (2) “— La- ~Cowboy 4:30—-(4)—On Your Account. (2)— Feature Theater. (7)—-Ern West- more, §;00—(4)+Adv, Patrol. (7)—Auntie Dee. : 5:30—(4)—Howdy Doody. (2) — Kartoons, (7)—Charles Chaplin. 5:45—(7)—Weather. (2) — Sports. - WEDNESDAY EVENING ‘¢:00—(4)—Music— Time. {7)—De-| troit Deadline. ~ Twenty 6:15—(4)—News. (7)—Sports. 6:30—(4)—Sports, (7) — Superman. (2)—News. 6:45—(4)—-Man. About Town. (2)— Weatherman. (2) 7:00—(4)—Douglas Fairbanks. (7) City’s Heart. (2)-Carpet The- ater. ei; 7:30 — (4) — Eddie Fisher. (7)— Mark Saber. (2)—-Doug Edwards. 1:45—(4)—News. $:00—(4)—I Married Joan. (T)— Bowling Champs. (2)-—Godfrey and Friends. 8:30—(4)—My Little Margie. (7)— Theater. 9:00—(4)—Television Theater. (7) Club Polka. (2)—Strike It Rich. 9:30—(7)—On Your Way. (2)—T've Got a Secret. 10:00—(4)—This Is Your Life. Storytime. (2)—Motorama. 10:30—(4)—Theater. (7)—Man vs. ; Cohen 10: 45—(2)—Greatest Fights. 11:00-—-(4)—News. (7) — Soupy’s On, (2)—News. 11:15—(4)—Stock Car Champs. Film. @)—Packer Playhouse. (7) -- Today's: Radio Proarams - - Programs furnished by stations fisted tm this column are sub ject to change without notice wre, (760) CELW, (800) wws3, (980) WCAR, (1198) WXYZ, (1870) WIBK, (1480) WEDNESDAY MORNING ; BAY. Pre ee | "wee Pare, Hinson WJBK, Rise “ene Shine w 6:45 WKYZ, News, Wolfe CKLW, Toby David YZ, Dick CKLW, News, T. David WJBK, News, WCAR, News 8:15-WIR, Bud Gwest w wi WJBK, Qentile, Binge WCAR, Coffee, Clem Gentile Great Calier portrays, or vice versa. ‘Prayed for Part lif Done on TV Studies History, Asks Who Can Remember Theodore Roosevelt? By JACK GAVER’ UP Staff Correspondent NEW YORK (UP)—Television’s oldest Dagmar will be 12 years of age the next time you see her on your screen this comiing Friday night. That's Dagniar Hanson, of course, not the Dagmar no-last- name, who has the edge in cal- endar maturity. This Dagmar of the famous “Mama” program answers to the name of Robin Morgan when her tutor calls his class of one to order five afternoons a week and directs her attention to the traditional three R’s instead of TV's three R's sals. “T can’t think of any better way to spend my birthday than to per- form on the program,” said Rob- in, whose real age keeps pace with that. of the character she “It's the first time I've worked on my birthday. “Right now, the program is in - the year 1915. My, that’s a long time ago, isn’t it? But I really know quite a lot about that time. “You see, they try to make everything on the program aw- thentic, and I get so interested that I often go out and find books to read about things that have been mentioned on the programs. “I must say that this helps me with my history lessons. Do you remember Theodore Roosevelt?” The interviewer, being at the age-conscious “ae, eee im- munity behind the -Fifth Amend- ment. “Do you know that I actually prayed for the role of Dagmar?” asked the fair-haired child, whe re — rehearsals, rehearsals, rehear-7 ~ ill Be 12 Thi TAN Parking Lot Suit fo Be Continued Judge Hartrick Denies Condemnation Move Oakland County Circuit Judge ) George B, Hartrick Monday de- nied a motion to dismiss the city's suit for condemnation of property at 11-49 Parke St..and set Wednes- day as trial date forthe suit. The métion to dismiss —was-in- troduced by attorney William J. ~~ guit had been filed under the wrong f statute. Selection of a jury will tike place tomorrow, according to Judge Hartrick. the property so that it may -he used with adjoining city-owned ' lot. THIS “GOES ON ALL DAY LONG—Motosists probably love it, | | med by Gly Aeon? William A. but the gasoline price war in Kansas City, Mo., is keeping sign paint-! fwart last August. ers busy as they attempt to keep abreast of changing prices. Shortly after the 17.9 cents sign was made, prices dropped to a low of 15.9 cents Ber gallon. ‘Accused Murderer obviously was quite competent | ning. She had entertained soldi Asks Fy i i to supply her own answer. ke the age of three during World | amination Robert L. Reed, 27, of 47 Smith St.,, Detroit, demanded examina- “I was just a child at the time a i. I saw the movie, ‘I Remember! She became a model in New Mama.’ Right away 1 began wish- | York a short time later. At four} ing that they would put that story | She was the world’s youngest disk rice E. Finnegan. the part of the little girl. I really | York. A little later she was a reg- is stat Reed is accused of fatally shoot- did pray about it. Every night for | ular for several season’s on ra- a long time. »| dio’s “Juvenile Jury” show... “And do you know they finally All ,of this experience, fol- did turn it into a‘television pro-| lowed by the five years of “Ma- gram, and I ‘was one of those! ma,” hasn't made Robin biase called to audition for the part of | about show business. a Dagmar!” “I want nothing more than to | Miss Morgan, of course, got the | grow up with the ability to become | | St., Saturday during a house party | Held in Oakland County Jail appear for examination Feb. 3. In 1953, women voted for the | first time in Costa Rica. Motion to Dismiss City) Beer on the grounds that the city's | The city is seeking to condemn Prt | ing Helen Jackson, 28, of 3 Grant fi marked with one sives.”" The owner fore the fire was told them the re) ° ”" LJ = ® (Advertisement) lf You Have ~ whe fe iter? 7 P ec land for a 200-car metered parking — hn nee ae was | és. Ce Acts at once on = Child’s Cough on television and that I would get | jockey, on station WOR in New eared before Pontiac Judge Mau- Spasms dvetocoias’ Thousands of doctors have prescribed Pertussin without bail, Reed is scheduled to Pleasant-tasting PERTUSSIN not onl yemavee oe patent but | Bo harmful a job, but it was quite a struggle. | an actress,” said the girl who al- | “There were about a hundred ready is one. “I mean a real z girls auditioned for the part,” | grown-up dramatic actress.” 2 she recalled. “There was one } Assembie these yourself and save! elimination after another. 1 Wood that has been charred on | @ $26.56, Thane ese beaad new thought it would never end.” its outer surfaces often lasts much 2 n The calling of Robin to audition | longer than wood that has not/ > was no accident, nor was her win- | been so treated. i4 CHROME DINETTE SETS 4 chairs and table. ee 1964 models. Famous Come im, ook. compare and be convinced of these = MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT LIGHT CO, PE ee Longer, Lower, Lovelier ! ete Yili visser soc angel, ae loom gi Almost As Much SAVES YOU As You Spend! SAMPLE SAVING 1953 FORD VICTORIA | FORDOMATIC a NEW FOR. 2120.90 ‘Tongay, slender| DUCKS TEXAS NORTHER—“Neither snow nor rain-nor heat teacher and mother | nor gloom of night . . .” keep postmen from their e appointed rounds, | ' lof t the to | byt the winds of a Texas Blue Norther sent mailman H. M. Huett, describe Kathy’s illness and death. | of Ft. Worth, Tex., into a mail-distribution box until a truck could | She also testified that Tongay was| bring his mail load.| The frigid winter wind of the Lone Star State a good father and said she was! jo¢: parts of Texas blanketed with snow and plunged temperatures “very happy” with his efforts to aan diaaien setseh Katey (eet Or 27%. . ' o © oa, a5 SAMPLE. SAVING 1950 NASH ADr. BOOK PRICE..... 850.00 Turner’ S Price “444 44 ia 7% : — o H pers se Bulgarion Reds |e=ucermvesee= I Turner's Price’ 1899.00 : 1 — in 1951 when Bog oan Prod for Books peop —_ —. about Commu- | ] somouncement. they would sane ito Sway Children|,,, . es . $ 405 56 7 Sd Pea a srr &—ourrn | Waves Examination I =. you save * @20.90|. YOU SAVE : Bl" ater, the children made several | ™mists have opened « new drive +L , Z film shorts and appeared ins mo-| Wis the Tug, ona hearts ot On Breakin Charges : LIBERAL TERMS CAN FINANCE Pp Esther ® ss Asst. County Solicitor A.C. Dres-| They plan to do it through; A Commerce Township youth E children's books. .. inati ' ? FE 2-3711 fas ia toe ts ial orogens = SAMPLE SAVING . formed like automatons and said | picked up here report Communist | field Township. Justice Elmer c # Our information staff his motive was “pure selfish gain.”’ | bosses, in the saddle in that Balkan | Dieterle yesterday, and was bound io To > will be h to tell you * * * country for eight years, are calling over to. Oakland County Circuit PP) Jepeway conténded the state did | on every resource to push the cam-| Court fer appearance Jan. 2. s when the next city lines ff not prove that a dive was the | paign. David Carey, 17, of 1936 Paris, “bus leaves your neorest §}) cause of death. The country’s writers and artists| was unable to furnish $1,000 bond $ * corner Dr. Victor Calderin, who per-| are being prodded to get in line-| set by Dieterie and is being held “ 5 formed the autopsy on Kathy, said | The Ministry of Education and the in Oakland County Jail awaiting BOOK ere i 64.08 ; her body was a mass of bruises | Academy of Science are called on | arraignment. For Every ls and that the cause of death was|to “improve” the quality “and| He was arrested Friday by Oak- | a$ Sa peritonitis brought on by an in- quantity of children’s literature.|land County Sheriff's Detectives | Riding Need testinal rupture. He said a bad| The country's paper and chemical | Delos Anderson and Leo Hazen | iolen’ : t| industries are asked to provide | and accused of breaking into three | Use City Buses blow to the back or stomach could | better paper and ink for the new| homes in the Long Lake Area. ‘have caused the rupture. children’s. editions, According to Anderson, Carey Kathy died last May. She was| A lengthy decree, published in| admitted the breakins after his ar- $ 475 ry YOU. SAVE PONTIAG the second Tongay child to die a/ Bulgarian news journals, says flat-| rest. Most of the stolen property violent death. ‘Russell Jr. died in/ly children's books are in ‘‘bad| was recovered, ! Jr. CITY LIMES, taei2 0 Se ee re re rire wee | Sister recocts ot permanent LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS SAMPLE SAVING 1950 FORD TUDOR BOOK PRICE..... 610.00 Turner’s Price *555.99 you save °914.45 TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET’ orth Paddoc ed” but, most important, they| waving go as far back as 3,000 200 N x “fail to glorify Communist heroes | B.C., when Babylonian ladies had death hemor- rhage brought on by a head injury mn ! dadopethe and an inquest was held but no| and the Communist way of life.” their hair braided and treated with SAMPLE SAVING a —_ charges were Tiled. es ‘From now on, according to the! bitumen to preserve the curls. , wl EDU CED BY | iu ake ba PRICE... $810.00 | Turner’s Price $444.44 SAMPLE SAVING 1951 FORD jes a BOOK PRICE.....° . Turner’s Price® 777. 7 You SAVE ° 332.23 | Two WHOLE YEARS TO PAY N. : 95. Gini ir all | vou save 969.00 “SPEED | SAMPLE SAVING RADIO-PHONO 88 1952 PONTIAC : BOOK PRICE. re 51895. 00 Turner r’s Price 1444.44 you save * 450,56 ‘YOUR PRESENT CAR AS DOWN PAYMENT edo titel: me SAMPLE SAVING 1948 Chev. Station Wen. Book PRICE..... “000.00 Turner’s Price *333.33 you save 926.07 NO DOWN PAYMENT REQUIRED SAMPLE SAVING 1948 KAISER 4-Dr. a $450.00 | ‘Turner’ s Price *222.22 vou save "221,18 NOTHING DOWN SAMPLE SAVING 1946 PLYMOUTH 4-Dr. Book price..... “400. 00 Turner’s Price °222.22 ‘You SAVE TILT EASY TERMS—-NO DOWN PAYMENT VALUES GALORE" Se eee Se ery ow beeeig a wee eri eae as = Se Ne Wee ea ‘. eee? ee S ieee. eR pee eS St iy ote tke f eS ee Apr ay 4h gr ea ee Bee a x ‘ A, >» < z ” el“ fll ig Tk ‘uc ee THE PONTIAC PRESS. 2 "TUESDAY, JANUARY 26,1956 7 ee ae PONTIAG, | MIC CHIGAN, we : Se eae Count Cut Half for Chickenpox Measles in County Also a scl Sorina | 'Proffers Ideas More State Troopers Way Down Last Week, Asked by Men Meeting . Jan, 1, 1955, if OK'd in Says Dr. Monroe at Lansing April Election Only about half as many cases of LANSING @~Thé legislature got Pontiac City Commission tonight chickenpox and far fewer measles a load of safety recommendations is expected to consider a proposed city charter amendment to raise , the 10-mill limitation on munich pal property taxes to 12% mills om pi dan 1, 19%. . The city is presently collecting 13.80 mills, two of which are used pts the Michigan highway safety seminar last night but waited until this afternoon to see which mea- sures. should be given priority. Eighty-nine of the state's 131 lawmakers attended the seminar banquet last night and heard re- ports of seven committees which | had met all day on traffic prob-| lems. state police for highway patrols was extended by the public infor- mation committee te request 140 more troopers, E. C. Hayhow, Hillsdale publish- eases were found in Oakland County last week as the week be- fore. Oakland County Health Depart- ment’s weekly report, released by Dr. John D. Monroe, director, shows 173 new cases of measles, | compared with 258 the week be- _ fore. oe Seventy-two n new cases of chick | enpox were listed, as against MT the previous week. The mumps rate held steady last week and a slight increase in scarlet fever showed up. | er and committee chairman, The county health department a tis the gantatndan emahalt te A majority vote of the-clty eal | report, covering county state police could assimulate in torate is necessary to change the except Pontiac, reads as follows: | one year to City | “ ine ee Earlier, F, Granger Weil, Port Sn, | —. wi Week 16, 'b4 21, 53 Huron publisher and seminar chair- Ada R. Evans. The proposal Memsiens ss evscro en. M8 : 234 ite spit; appealed to the lachiatwre be included on the April 5 general meumonia «ail forms) nonpartisan support of traffic election ballot. Scarlet fever. ® i] ; ; Wentiac rress rnete : legislation. He said the seminar tae as esicclaned to aid the law.| NEW COMMANDER VIEWS AWARD—Lt. Circle. ‘The medal denotes 10 years meritorious| Commissioners are expected to mebela y oe makers, not “bludgeon” them. James G. McShane (left) yesterday assumed com- | service in the reserves. McShane comes from duty | present reward checks to James Seentat “| ; || The number of traffic deaths in| mand of the training center at Pontiac Naval Re- | with a division of the North Atlantic Treaty Organ- | Brown Jr., 18, of 37 Vinewood Ave. . - Meningitis type “sree e. ; ee Michigan this year is comparable, | serve Surface Division 9-104. He sueceeds Lt. C. J. | ization Command. Casserly will become executive | and Jack Seebaud, 48, of 27 Oriole ee eeerey he said, to the toll which would / Casserly, shown here awarding a medal to Radio- | officer of the USS Leonard E. Mason, a destroyer | pa for their part in the capture of romtine’s chiches pen ante — result if Richland—population 2.-| man First Class Luther C. Diaz of 185 Rustic ne along the Pacific coast. rape-slayer Donald V. O'Brian. down to nine’new cases last week, 000—were wiped out by a catas- Brown will receive $2,500 and See- Pontiac City Health Department | _ — —— _ Pontiac Press Phate | "| pea or—itevery—resident—of —— 3 reports showed, The city report.| 4 RARE PAIR—William N. Anderson, 15, of 35 Oneida Ra,, is| Bay City—5:,000—were injured in Nation a ] Gu ard Un its Hi ere Lit. HAs. 0g tt a : oe by rg i listed | one of aboyt five hamstery owners in the country ‘offering whité|q disaster. iC al ‘ Approval of the 1954 city bud- case's wee re. F , : . _ | hamsters for sale. The albinos were first bred in 1952, he says. Law enforcement officials and | pro- on Pe a ol a goer dis- | william has been conducting a profitable mail-order business in| trattic engineers were divided Seek to Str engthen Ranks posed figure is ae about . at wu bee Bo ne y re- hamsters since March, 1953. _The Pontiac High School sophomore| ever proposals for a speed limit Cun M and the 18T%h said lV $246,000 more than 1963. bud- , , ‘a says his business started by accident when male and female animals| of 65 miles an hour im the day- pany 2 Or dn Training h pistols, carbines Or 0 OF : ; eek End. | . ; ; ance (DS) (NGUS) of Pontiac's and the Garand rifle is also under- ' . Past Jan. Jan.| given him had so many offspring he sold the young ones to prevent| time and 55 at night, Michigan National Guard are far |taken by the led Engineer's estimates for capital Chickenpox vis. esses $4 18| overerewding the Anderson home. fer chats and sheriffs argued | below their authorized strength, ac- | by Ist Lt. A. J. Largent. Production of New Sets | improvements scheduled include: sade deviavte strongly it, © | cording to reports from the "s . Two-inch paving on Center oa Gp Sas | ie eeaite conte rtd] Seanegserag um Oe "| | Te et Orden mae] Continues ot Slow Pace | tz a = it flatly. The engineers favored re-| (., 14 of the 125th Infantry Regi- | warrants, sccording to command-| Due to High Costs werk on frets Cottage to Osiun, taining the’ present law which re-| ment is allowed 121 men, five of- | ing officer Capt. Carl GC. Yarling Hamster Sales Encourage quires cars to'be kept under ©00-| ery “and. one Warrant officer | Jr, who says he hopes Ce wnite| Color television ceoetvere wil | SEeeige 0 8 UO J : ‘ . | while the Ordnance unit is autlior- | strength will be built up soon by ‘ : work baat win to ill Delegates generally favored in- ized 136 fi ond public in the near future, according | university: lls 201 lo. Aid) Youthful Animal Breeder |e te minimum aivng ag |2et BS men. five olficers and )new recruits || |i deh ‘W Hiriger, assistant | aun ceme on wet, S from 16 to 17 years. Schoolmen yore Classes in. drill, training, and | manager of the Pontise Chamber | “trant Pair in Immigration |i! 8 reer’, en rien tent ty the tanya © st’ iy rh wing te put Je Cu. |mcomns l crae |e nnn (tad a mig enter sone! Be Si ate. . | sehool driver training courses to recruited 20 men to bring its Se ee This prediction, Hirlinger said, | work business today,” sai year : be financed with a: $1 fee added| present strength to 92 men, three snupport group's Tues- | is based upon results of survey | Sseley- — ere ee een edt | William.N. Anderson of 35 Oneida) Wamslers are inexpensive 4 | to every $20 fine for a moving vio-| oftieers and -one warrant. The |day night training each week st |ot television manuiactirers by the} A resolution of public necessil x Me beer Rd. maintain, William says, He buys | tation, group meets each Monday night | 7:30. National Better Business Bureau | is bi ao, 8 al, is Beer ” He Was explaining bow’ gift of | vegetable teat trimmaingw: can @ 4 ® Otiter : recommendatiots under} at 7:30 in the Water Street Arm- Both anits attended a two- | With whcib the local chamber is/ on Bs a cc Corete, tes aun ee ine Save coe ene tee | Se Se pate Sompeend, We | On ory where the heavy weapons | weeks field encampment at | @Mfiliated. nia and curb, gutter and drainage a sulted in the formation of Ander-| porance diet Increases in number of the pre-| outht reviews ; of .mor- and | “Returns from the question- | on i = | cated somewhere in thé Ukraine. ein’s Hametery. the caledl their s, gg) Sout 37 state drivers’ teens ee ‘ Camp Grayling last August r a : hg = _—-_—_-_- Phe —wilt ~wes-—-drawn—by—Sam mi ; +-—-Wiltaat -werks--every night ef; 5 mm | woo high praise in_competition {naires clearly dem : de nonstrate B agley. ~ “Woycheshin, 5%, who. died TY fae sopra brwikwmskaT see Fecoilless rifles. — with other sections of the 46th ee pin Tuesday. < ¥ hamsters started shipping orders Legalization of chemical tests “fron Fist” Division. pectations color receivers proposed 2-inch blacktop pav- His brother, Tiotr, and his sister, | having litters. Their offspring had seller tee dliaee Duc’ for drunk drivers, including the Knif <.-<) 5 ai r ugk a a SS ee. = La ss testi oe irae paths eo pee te a S| Side ee ae alae aig tamer hip open Sap anni Meee ge age ge toe hie oe eee a i ¢* joo eet eee meng + al a aS es ag be Aare lng al" ie a i Ca % 3 “4 : i : | 4 e - fe ay rat Sie . nae 2 ~ i < 4 eo 4 2 ee — 4 4 * ‘ % * ee. ; : . ee eS eG : ; *, * Fe ® * “Se “ _ 2. | * f : a =o 7H, + \ ; 3s 7%, t “THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 26. 1954 f Le “see. toe ™y ea ‘ ™. eS > mi ~~ 2 ~t te >... ‘ eS ‘ 7 2 = Se mS ~ 4 moe Ze . > ; = i 4 oe ~< eé aa eo bg ¢ ae n : £ d ~ . : 2 os se ~ a Seu Boga Seattle, beaten only by Wichita” in its opening game, now has won 17 straight and ranks No. 11 the country. Joe Pehanick i Seattle scoring with 24 points. ‘in this 2nd quarter scene from Monday night's , € Class A.City Basketball League game at Pontiac| the Jewelers and Tom Spencer (2) of the Shack | "Sh the new sults were first worm. | keeper. Italo Petrelli of Italy, a| “™" Recreation. Separtmeal. sce High School gym. From the left are Russ Hester quintet. Shaw's won, 60-51. ltry and keep the records in the | Jet _ pilot, and. seaapadl aspirin pen two-fisted a guard won the right place, with a win. Benham and Bickford were sup-| . 5° : Australian tennis title back in 1 ‘ ’ posed to be the driver and brake-| #t 1:30 p.m. with various races in 1939 Entries Close Saturday agate Rigo agg PB, Wen em ho No 2'U. © tied in| Stones ty bechoy gemee at when Tony Tresert was an cight- . 7 - vty Lge ~~ the four-man championships. They | 3 P-m. Saturday night's portion of er t6 eed > Amaricen Dowie PWBA’ ] Cit B li T 0 tbe Sct that Pontiac bas the | claimed they were forced to leave| the aftair begins at 7 p.m. with Cup ace today im the 2nd round of s Annual City Bowling TOUrNey | mtr svc record and is viayine| CoC ctate they were unable to| ‘altVing for the iver hates |e Current chamalonthins 14, 14, at to Start March 6 at Hoc | ester Both clubs will start their usual | “Ss members of the American | at 13h pan, Seni Sree nat! | ous two-fisted stroke to throw Tra- | "Pontiac Woman's Bowling Asso-{ 30. Tourney is open to all women; Lawson ‘and June Kinney, and | bacups- crux Moone, who did net Benham left| finals are at 3 p.m. and the figure| Bromwich hit the lines with twist. ciation will ‘hold its 2ist annual | bowlers sanctioned by the PWBA.| Silevents winners Milired Mol 1,0 socond half, will be in at the | Doause he figured he 3:30: ing shots by swinging the racquet city tournament at the HINO) Ay defending champions are ex-| ‘ar (octasl), and’ Yasel, Clark jump tonight. His defen- | ¥*#t the No: 1 U. S. sted. a Oe eine eat | with both hands instead of the = Bomting Alleys la Rochesler statt-| 11a tp ia deena et'the | Pp). ~ __ | sive play is counted on to keep big Hing Club will skate an exhibition | usual one-hand grip as he pulled | Entries/ are now cen. for the| Tesh champion ts Sov's Food! |2eacd tonnt tie yar’ wwiuwa Fe at Mat ~—aaas ce Se'S mia Sede Sen! Cette Sy es | AS eee meet |e as, ae, ch Cg Wednesday lees me It’s Time Oull ' ther information at 363 Dover. road — — Card W Inesday In event of a thaw, x . _Night in Big 10 # if a28 if | F gs i 5 i pail Ps i SE Cae ~ Poe pe ig ees Focal point of Lewis' attack was Frick's statement. that there was a “definite understanding” in 1951 that All-Star receipts and World Series radio-TV cash go into a pension costs, commissioner's of- fice expenses and club income tax |eentral fund to be -applied for. he was going to have to look a long ways to find any who hadn't . | already left. Edwards walks wnto a school school in 1338. He is also on his __'THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1054 Phillies Seeking Cards’ Hemus PHILADELPHIA (UP) — Phila- @elphia Phillies, concerned over the possibility of young Ted Ka- By MURRAY ROSE MIAMI, Fla. @ — It's a long time between Jack Dempsey in Toledo in 1919 and Joey Maxim in 1954 but the old doc still is in there pitching. Kearns Already Talking Up} |Marciano-Mi axim Title Bout took the 11% be| in girth, “Ponting Press Photo ood #rmanial- is das tas Ge bikes cones dae this nice pike shows. Robert C. Ford, 388 Atwater street, Lake Orion pound, 8-footer with « tip-up. Fish measured 14 inches | Ferris Fain, ‘Ozark Ike’ Zernial Also Come to Terms Monday Manager Steve O'Neill io the | seven title fights puts Jack (Doc) on series TV money. zanski's loss to the armed forces; break a leg in the ring and I'll get a : . 6 d according to Lewis, the “‘detinite | have" offered” a~ package “deal in|~sucecesfully, too. Mov ne a'coo mea : -theagh -| Bernstein Yells |e. 3. uzzy) Bevasi,-2 Dodger — . ‘ ully, wing I'm going to beat that vice handled both sign- 3 understanding wes seg an effort to obtain shortstop Soll} | ple of “tigers” like Demipsey and |" T° 0S \eicht has peal te dw Lo Al : ee ; ) : Sn He caid. the ‘players, were| Hemus from the St. Louis car Meee mchlees fighter like Joey. | angle” that has been, worked out Girls’ lia Margin ou isl oak te oS eee ae | mailed copies of the agreement | dinals. — Sitates enh’ beatin: tl for this No. 3 performance of the Loss'to : | couldn't very well cut him 2 per “ but sever, were consulted. ons him into’ | two rivals, ‘ Missle Dribbles retained a slight ss'to Olla cent so I raised him 25 per cent.” Wes Sports| MILWAUKEE, Wis, (UP)—Fight And, looking straight at _— Phillies, it was learned, has ap- | Kearns in line for, the grand ¥ : ’ said Archie. “Will I knock him) .i, City ; manager Ike Bernstein yelled|he declared: ‘I'm Se er oe medal of persistence and sales- out? Tl try, but who knocks out| ionewe viay Mon yribblen non | “foul” today over the mote then he's worth.” — —— meee Maxim? I’m going to beat him, I'll soir 5th a ear ice eae Al Andrews giv: ‘ The husky outfielder came into town last night from his farm at s ? Boreville, Pa., near Reading, to ERS Wes the tennant daeeites 2 receive an award at the New York *COMPLETE Scien ae esse a & : 0, T for Joey comes up tomor-/ say t. ‘ 5 ‘ 3 row night in Miami Stadium with| - wien se — Racketéers, 21-8. weight Sevedhgpracooraes oe players to the Redbirds in ex- light\ heavyweight champion Ar- b Aide Pear change for the 29-year-old He | tN i he aioe dna | Jersey Aids Teenagers C LLISION a on kettes. In the night's other game, | ever saw,” sald Bernstein, An- ||, a di a part for the 3rd time in a row. CAMDEN, N, J. ® — Former Uni ed Skid Kids.| érews’ 1 zn Press Photographer's dinner. O'Neill believes the reac And if Joey and Doc get lucky | heavyweight champion Jersey Joe ~ pei edged "| ger of eet Bs a wal “the | “2 yo dodge a _ dollars SERVIC E might be willing to trade Hemus | don't be too surprised if Doc comes | Walcott has been placed in charge} Pat Smith led the Dribbles with | Feferee told them two points Pee “‘" faven't one OS oe because of their acquisition of Alex ja Neng! vagy ig one—a heavy-| of recreational activities for Cam-| 9 points. Kay Neldrett had 8 points | would Grammas, a highly-touted farm-| chidocaner dewey ici ,,| aen's teen-agers in a program de-| to pace the Dick & Wes team, while ol seven However, both Bavasi and Wal cinnati Redlegs’ system, O'Neill |i 4+ to Exzard Charles quency. ? for the victorious Unknowns.| Referee Dauber. Jaeger warned | club, were also ‘at the coer OEE post. to s. Peggy Barber a low blow in the 4th} “I suddenly got the notion we but round of the 12-round title match.| ought to sign him right then,” Olla rt EAST TOWN COLLISION. , had believes Grammas could team with) wy my killer will murder| Camden's director of public two of the Skid Kids’ total of 2nd-baseman Red Schoendienst to} Moore this time,” said Doc yester- | safety, E. George Arron, yesterday | eight os Olla's manager, Joe Azzarella, | O'Malley said later. provide the Cardinals with a - day, his blue eyes - twinkling.| named Walcott to the post of spe- nark & tees eve a 2 7/58” nothing wrong with the de- Four other major league regu- class double play combination. “When Joey gets that title back ‘cial investigator. BASmETTES 2!” 6 6 6 «| cision. and: looked forward to a lars also came to terms yesterday. pemeues..1 8 8 4¢—21| Feb. 15 fight against Chico Ve-) Ferris Fain, another broken- ‘Sacereeas. © 4 © é— 6) jar in Milwaukee. ' hand fighter liké Furillo,. took a SKID KIDS....; 8 it t= 8 He-~said- the Vejar t had not cut in salary from the Chicago UNKNOWNS.........¢6 2 3 @—121| been signed but was “all set up.” White Sox. The first baseman, who ? = Gus Zernial, the Philadelphia signed for a raise of about $7,000, : boosting his earnings for the com- am ing season tg about $32,000. Zernial PHILADELPHIA Local fa- | iF 4 } vans last year, i vorite Gil Turner and Frenchman | only to Al Rosen. Pierre Langlois are expected to * *« * The Philadelphia Phillies came terms with third baseman Willie Jones big ae Cubs an-'. nounced ing of pitcher The bout will not be- televised | Johnny Klippstein, who won 10 and lost ll a year ago. Merchants Pressed, but Win to Keep Cage Lead Report on 1 Me. “Sharp” in This Week's Issue on Pontiac High School | Sets New High Styles 77? + Pes Ee sy 7 Coils | | hy ey 3 pe eee yf asap gt”, woe, 1zAG0E T collected 9 . Beatie ite S$ wa Spts. HH points. Bob Walter had 21. for Mouny Wgutte 45 Poole Lember 1 6 ce. Clarkston Merchants received Waterford High Faculty tripped task. They downed Beattie Motors with 13, while Chuck Gillis had the . 43-37, to stay undefeated and in- | **™¢ number for the Lumbermen, Racal baka! nee” | Bowling Results LIFE reports on page 133° this week that all over the country in such stores as Paul’s-Stag Shop that the new High Styles are becoming more and $ |s TESTE is that . wp es. z Game was nip-and-tuck to the WEST HURON HOUSE more evident. “ «sin SGD things as the Mr, ' BY” Col- - Ps = straight ahend to keep the | qiI"yli, weer De Moat ‘eg lar, the Five Way Jacket, the Link Button Suit, Rogue [| rignt. Now the second step: Don't pronge te hovalgpet or yartiary Cin es Cee” Pants, Mammoth Cuff Links, Mr. “C” Shirts, the ji2| Stetch it Keep. it comfortably) povey Moore, with 12, and Ed | Wet sige 35 i Perry Fr Me 3 38 ; : 3 Fe t short so that, as sketch shows, the with 10, led the Seomres ee High Life 24 40 — Whip Tie, the Hipster Trousers, tho unknown to . 7 ponte toe gd Boo ee, hegpiice Dee Oi > egret. hihare 20, sérlee— ie a oe 7 | *~-—-many. adults... . are items of ci dol see: for. upper haf of the body to fall for-| Race, for nd place tightened. AUBURN MERCHANTS ; tae 3 " ward and a little downward, com-| Manny's dumped. Drayton Drug, | | w 4 WE ; Seckewtig Sb Seether pall” body a 2nd place tie and put themselves A. Mets. Mig. 90.98 Team Nee” te 0 There i ical High Styl di Lif only one game back "| Meh. Bet. Bas. 35.59 AL Freit Mane. ip a6 ere is no typical Mig er, according to Life. into a.crotiched position. No tip-|""D.s” newitt had 24 points for | ‘fesm sents, sore CAI tant, ease One High Styler is a star hockey player and the “nd he | Manny's including the game-win- | Gi’ ""perone ten hashy president of his senior class. According to Life’... he describes himself.as a conservative High Styler ... that is to say he would not necessarily wear the most extreme items. Siezes - a 2sekte And. to. re-assure Parents, Life also asserts ". . The boys who go for High Style carry them- selves taller and straighter, take better care of them- selves in such matters as fingernails and ears, and # ia 5 o es 2 _§ i -~ S.- 90 about proudly, even elately.”” PNA. ) "¢ | De OD ee et 5 by ‘Why Do | wear High Styles?”; one. High Styler | eee | | aime Life. reporters, . he | picked it out S33s2 BS88sr ae = J ‘wad SL. myself, because | love PTE tyle, oe mostly | guess, BECAUSE ALL OF THE OTHER GUYS We've been quoting Life's article on High | Style because it’s so typical of High Stylers everywhere, including Pontiac. The style pic- tured in the Life.article are but a few of these feature. Many items we stock were orgin- — ally designed by Paul, including the Whip ie , the Hipster Trousers, and the shortly-to- hin Line Trousers. my} ESC Se SE a nooks vantbenne se ETA ON EE 2 ese eto Cr Gee es aa ers ee ee ee ee eer og o ' vy \ . eo es ; x | : : - e le ‘ gee ee gee ee oh peers " \ LE 0 a NS y : 4 A ee A is Mit 2 pi WR yeti eae y or : moet = ne op Ss a | : | ree ety THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY; JANUARY’ 26, 1954 ber of the NCAA Eligibility Com- mittee, told the Courier-Journal that Kentucky had not asked an eligibility ruling on the three play- ers to his _knowlédge. Kentucky May ‘By BEN OLAN NEW YORK @® — Unless their unbeaten strings are unexpectedly snapped, Kentucky and Duquesne figure to stay in the foreground of the college basketball picture, Again this week, these powerful quintets dominate the weekly Asso- i Icats, Dukes § CONSISTENT SHOOTERS—K relied on balanced scoring this President marksmen find the range, Keego could | nessy. Each manages between 9-14 points per game. still be a strong factor in the Wayne-Oakland | Presidents play an important W-O game at home League race. vem the left are John Wassel, Lester | Tuesday against Northville, eego Harbor has). Fentics Press. Photo season, If these po a A EI Lloyd Law and Jerry O’Shaungh- Prep Games Limited By Mid -Year Exams r oe * i |Last Minute Toss ad Cage Houston 64-48 last night, collected éight 1st place votes while Western Kentucky 18-0) was rated ist_on seven ballots. Aggies‘now are 17-1. Notre Dame, with a 10-2 slate, remained-in the No. 6 spot. . Oklahoma City, victim of a 57-38 defeat by Wyoming Saturday night and a 79-64 lacing by Seattle last night dropped from ‘th-to. 9th, en- abling Holy Cross and Minnesota 11-2) each to move up a. notch. Crusaders 13-1) took over Tth while Minnesota, — 80-64 jast night, moved into | George Washington, at. 12-1, re- mained in 10th place. Seattle and La Salle made the most progress among the 2nd which trounced | gs; Parade ten teams, West Coast club moved from 16th. to lith while / La Salle, on the strength of itd 83-78 triumph over North Caro- lina State Saturday, climbed from 19th to 12th. Connecticut, undefeated in-_14) games, and Dayton (144) moved into a deadlock for 18th place. They. replaced Niagara and Iili- nois in the 2nd ten. The leading teams on a 10-9-8-7- 6-5-4-3-2-1 point basis first place | votes and won-lost records through Sunday in —: l—Kentecky (96) (12-8)... . 00s meeme (15) (15- °. pease 3— ma (1%) (12-1)..... , 4—(Tile) Boggy p= A&M (8) (17-1). .341 and est. Kentucky (7) hengae 4: Sal é~Netee Dense 3) (10-2)... .0 2. ss 288 t—Hely Cross (t) an aeeaeasenees 165 §——Min (11-2 season 1D a City “as "ie 2). oeeckens 185 10—George W 45) (12-1),.. 028 D N ithe (2) (NT-1), 115; 1 1l—#ea! 2—LaSalle (1) (15-2) 104; 18—Maryland (1) (18-4), ; 14—Lovisians Biate (11-2), a; i— (tie) California (14-2), 83; 16-—~(tle) 4 Wichita (16-2), 7; end Kansas (8-3), 79; t (14-0), 47, and Day- ten : (12-4), 43, Others receiving mere than 16 pelints: lows 39, Wyoming (1) 34, Richmond 29, Idaho (f). and Ne Louisville. (1) 27. Bradley 25, Colorado Ageies 23, Ore- on State and Rice 26, Vanderbilt 18, jagera 16, Gives Greeks Win A free throw by Tony Kazakos with 10 seconds remaining gave _\the Greek Orthodex Church a 35- 34 basketball victory over the YMCA Monday night in Intramur- al League play at the Pontiac “Y"’. In the other game, Apprentices routhed Oakland Avenue Presby- | terian, 42-14. Kazakos had two shots, missed the Ist, but made the 2nd. It nul- | lified a great’ individual effort by | the Y's Dick Mineweaser who bag- | points in leading the Apprentices’ | | triumph. |tucky basketball players apparent- l receive their degrees at the end Be Minus Top: Stars for NCAA Report ‘Says Graduate Students Ineligible for Year-End Tourney LEXINGTON, Ky: @—A news-| paper's report that three top Ken- | ly will be ineligible.for the NCAA Tournament started a flurry of ac- tion on the campus today. a ae & Athletic Director Bernie Shively said he would look into the matter immediately. In a story appearing in today’s Louisville Courier-Journal, staff | writer Larry Boeck said Cliff Ha-| gan, Frank Ramsey and Lou Tsioropoulos apparently are inel- igible for the tournament under an NCAA rule disqualifying grad- uate students. Tsioropoulos received his bach- elor of arts degree last August. Hagan, an All America center two years ago, and Ramsey expect to ged 22 of his teams 34 points. Sam Cosmas was’ high for the Greeks | with 9. Ray Densmore clicked for 20 | APPRENTICES.......8 16 9 15. — 4) OAK. AVE. PRES.....3 2 5 &— 14, GREEK | ORTH....... sun o9— 4% suasebe I’: 8 1 fa & Ty Cobb led the American league | in stolen bases six times; Honus | Wagner the National league five | times. | | ship. of the current seme: ster this month. | ** & ” ‘Thus, Kentucky, the nation’ s top ranked collegiate team, would be | deprived of the services of its one- ‘two-three scoring punch if it hopes 'to try for the national champion- Kentucky's one-year “suspension from basketball competition for overemphasizing the sport brought on the new difficulties, Although maintaining their playing eligibili- | ty in the Southeastern Conference, the players continued to progress academically. Oliver K. Cornwell of the Uni- “It is. my opinion that all three boys are ineligible for the NCAA championship tournament,"’ Corn- well told the paper. * *.* @ All Makes © Expert, Trained Technicians Bussard Electric Refrigerator - Washer . Repair Service © Prompt, Dependable Service ®@ All Work Guaranteed 84 Oakland Ave. — Free Parking Phone FE 2-6445 Member Oakland Co. Electronic-TV Service Association - versity of North Carolina, a mem- Pontiac Armory, Wed. Jan. 27, ae P. Me WRESTLING ‘DOUBLE MAIN EVENT — Austrolion Tog—2 Out of 3 Falls—114 Hr. Limit 1 First Time in Pontiac — a Brother Team a - Stam and Laddie Holleck, Northwoods, Can. Vs. Johnny “Dynamite” Gates and Steve Zold, of Windsor q Second Great Match—2 Out of 3 Falls, 1 Hour Limit i Klein, of Detroit, Vs. Mystery Man, Parts Unknown 7 @ Seats Reserved on Sate ms Griff’s apers Conte ae h Club, ye Lote, Saas i's Bar and i and) Mr, y Be ony at : the Armery, FE 4- : Kua Box Office Open Every Wed. at 4:00 P. M. Ringside Seats Reserved, $1.30 plus tax. General Admission $1.00 tox (at Bex Office y New FORD TRUCKS for TR FLL ECONOMY . Only Ford gives you these three essentials in lower-cost trucking! Y E i E E ; 4 i ! Ife i i k tf & i at if f: i s za ? 2 gz : 2 ai VOUR BRAKES MAY SAVE THEIR LIVES! t NEW Low-Friction engines! ‘igh-Compression, Overhead-Vaive, Doep-Block design! In all models! } « oe es ts ae ee | we a ee Se ay % Se we s se - s = e | Pere | oe el — ‘ : ~ : te % = : i ’ “4 ee - ae : ‘ 3 Le : ie se J Ree i PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 26,1954 : os +f s |Perjury Misfires, -.}"x se tid sg § |e -_ . ; is ® rf aryl : he {Lands Witness in Jail ws. gine WELCH, W, Va. A 20-year- Trooper J. N. Otto said Shortridge line cabeaie etidien to & maicnns{ ent Ne tomet NAON y a the assault to which he gave testi- well as sensible. And it would assault trial here Friday was in| ‘ory ot the tial, He sald he was ‘all that again, jail himself today. y| call you a miser if you hoarded |ted lying on the witness stand, oe Semem hem Be worse (SIDE GLANCES oS :. : A Serving. tre. 7, Reg. U. 8. Pat, OF by McEvoy and Strieber EE Er aTe _ 4c CD es | — at 4 ns & %| Mf your husband- found yoor | whole crowd swapping little red the demi-tasse that night, he'd be-| | come more coffee-conscious and| | co-operative too. No longer would he regard a}: weak, watery cup of java as| grounds for a divorce, nor act so}! surprised at the breakfast table if} ' you quietly fainted when he asked | | for a third refill. ‘And if enough people in enough communities set up. their own voluntary coffee-rationing sys- tems, the propa, value would bubble higher and higher, and give off a fragrant aroma that would drift south of the bor- +} -der-as-far-as- Brazil, Right to those coffee (planta- tions where a sudden freeze last July is the January alibi for that possible $1.20 a pound, By com- parison, the drop in demand would | ' soon make the summer freeze seem like a tropical heat wave. |Lonesomeheart Is Lonely | BURLINGTON, Vt. (®—Barbara sib Lonesomeheart Taylor has been q 7. mm U. & Pee. OFF. granted a divorce from Charles . Taylor on grounds they have lived “Could someone besides Marie fix my hair? She's always discussing apart for three years. world affairs, and I'm way behind on local news!” by Jose Luis Salinas A", P26 I'M TRYING TO ‘| CONFUSE My DOG LIKE HE AE EDDIE --- WHAT'S . , THs ALL ABOUT @ ~\ ;@ lass: WELL, VWELL, ER... ; WE DON'T N ey ESTO) a 5 re, (pA . y 2, Re pe e £ Ty 4 ‘ : ay L, / ~ NY at _ WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIE ND Webster-Roth WIZZ lamame inims eee ¢ SS * Sy) } i ; } a ru Po f lt é if hy THE PONTIAC eee TUESDAY, JANUARY 06, 1088 oe : Grains Slide : Slightly Lower - SCHICAGO uh ~~ Graing slipped _ quietly lower on the Board of Trade today with losses limited in most cases to small fractions. ; Disappointment over failure of any substantial export business to | *“V.°%, develop in wheat, lack of any in- centive for buying feed grains and the possibility of increased. coun- try offerings of cash soybeans com- bined to give the market an easier undertone. i, i . Wheat near the end of the first hour was % to 1% cents lower, March $2.13, corn unchanged to; @™* % lower, March $1.53%, oats un- changed to \% lower, March 80's, rye ™% lower to 1% higher, March $3.14% and lard five cents lower. to eight cents a hundred pounds higher, March. $16.75. Grain Prices ~ CHICAGO GRAIN Gecsec (A t--Oeening grein: Wheat «5 May ...ces. 254 Mar., » 2% iy esas 1.27% “Mar vee 23.19% Soybeans diy. os +» 206% Mar vou e ess 3.15 a coneeee 2.07% May ooccees- 3.15 rm |) Merrreeee 3.19% Mar ....s: « 159% Bep ....c.. 269% MAY caviss « 155% Mov . 2.40% P) MET EE TTS 56% La Sep .ncueee 1.62 Mar .. uss + 6.75 diy 6.7 M cf a6 war” DY neciass 11.85 eeneee? yene F a. Company Sells 99 Pct. of Issue $25 Million. Stock Sales | Made by Consumers Power JACKSON (#—A sale of Consum- ers Power Co, stock to common stockholders and employes so far has totaled $25,000,000, the company | c said today. Proceeds will finance a $63,-' 000,000 construction program for | 677,729 or 99.75 per cent of the 679,436 shares offered for sale ‘have been subscribed. The remaining 1,707 shares will be bought up by underwriters, the | company said. Consumers Power ered the new stock to com stockhold- ers on record Jan. 7 on a 1 to 10 basis at $36.75 a share. Cash Stimulates Thinking PITTSBURGH (INS) 4 Westing- plan, a minimum award of $5 is pede own 7 ean For Sale by Receiver— | Operating modern ce- | ment block plont and i builders’ supply com- | pany, located in Pontiac, 4 including) all buildings, = equipment and inventory | B on hand. " Addtess Inquiries to: —Box No.-32;,— cars 60 B 63.75; 88 C 63.7 | Beggs” tira a 1, an Wholesale | I MARKET ‘S| ~ Produce os Priya wey ptices on Le .50-bu; "i 3.75 bu; No 1, 3.50-3.26 bu; 7, North- ern Spy, fancy, 4.50 bu; Wet 00-2.50 bu; Apples, Steele's Red, No. 1, 2.60- etables: Sorts topped, No 1, 1.00- 193 uu; fancy, 1.26. dos behs. ee, standard varisiy, No 1, et: bu. Car. No 1, 1.35-1.76 bu. caper, doz behs; rots, topped, No 1, 3.00-3.50 — No 1, 3.60 erate; ates it : quash, bu. Turuip, topped, bard, % to % lower, March $1.24) No 1, 1.00-1.50 bu. a. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (Ay) —~the following prices were paid dozen f.o:b. Detroit first receivers or case lots of federal-state graded eggs White exgs—-U.8. grade A, jumbo 5s. 64, wid. avg. 60%; large 83-64, ute. ave 63%: medium 40-50, wtd. ay 0%; trade B, large Brown eges—- s. grade A, jumbo §7- He * ave. ee large “- 52, wid. ave. i; meds 48-40, wid. avg 4814; ok 45. 8. grade B, large 48. US grade C, ange 42. U6. checks 41-42, wtd. avg. 4149 CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO {AP)~-Butter steady; re- ceipts ne pie ; naente Seying prices unchanged to ; #3 -seere ‘RA and 02 A 6: oo 8 a 8 C 62.5; buying prices unc’ anaed to 1's cents | Stocks Holding | to Higher Points = — brought out a considerable number °| of large blocks. NEW ‘YORK u—Stocks worked their way upward today despite some show of irregularity, Gaing went to around a point | while losses. were held down to fractions, usually the omaller Va- riety, Brish trading at. the opening - Major. divisions higher or _gen- erally firm included steels, rub- bers, oils, coppers, chemicals, tex- tiles, tobaccos, aircrafts, and _util- ities, Rubbers were bid higher right from the start’ with ‘Goodrich standing out with a two-point gain, Among. higher ‘stocks were Re- tare Steel; Chrysler, Goodyear, U. 8. Rubber, Montgomery Ward, Boeing, American Telephone, An- aconda Copper, Phelps Dodge, Du Pont, General Electric, American Woolen, American Tobacco, Santa Fe, and Sinclair Oi). Yesterday the stock market was irregular, Just before the close a prove the list from its lows, ——_New-York- Stocks —-} Figures after decimal points are sighths rally led by steels helped to im- : Lodge Cale Calendar “News in Brief Mrs, Bernice > Washington, 22, af 20846 Wyoming, Ferndale, was placed on one year’s probation and assessed $100 costs Monday on a charge of violating the liquor Jaw by Oakland County Circuit Judge Geprge B, Hartrick. She was found “guilty by a jury Jan. 13 of selling liquor after hours at her heme last March. — A grocery store at 402 Central Aye. was broken into last night and a case of soda pop was stolen, according to Pontiac Police, The store, owned by Dominic Mandala- ri of 25 Oak St., Auburn Heights, was entered through a. broken win- dow. . Robert J: McManus of 21 Mon- roe &t. four hub caps were stolen from his car yesterday while it was parked in front of his home. ~ pleaded guilty to a when he pen Mor before Pontiac was sentenced to three days in jail and fined $75. William Case of 30 Bloomfield Tr. reported to Pontiac Police the theft of a hub cap from his auto yesterday while his car was parked in front of his home, Donald Caston, 17, Beachland, Waterford Township, was sentenced to Oakland County Jail for 10 days for — reckless driving by Bloomfield Hills Judge Alva J. Richardson. Gaston was unable to pay a $45 fine and # costs. Oxford Township Justice Fred F. be rag .* va ee Us. mediums # standards ¢urrent receipts Adams Exp.... 20 _ Kresge _-« 43.5; checks and dirties 41.5 Admiral. . 30 Kroger... 45.2 aed Air Reduc..... 34.5 LOF Gh » 43) CHICAGO POTATOES Aiea ch... 168 Ligg Mey. 683 €HICAGO (AP) —Potatoes: Arrivals. | Aitied Strs.... 30.2 Lockh Airc..., 29 new stock on track 6; supplies light; | aliis Chai...., 47.4 WB ees ae “4 demand moderate; market about steady; | glum Lid...., 42 | ne 8 Cem. 16.6 no carlot track sales; total U.8. ship- | slum Co Am.. 625° Mack Trucks. 13.7 ments -old and new stock for Friday | am Airlin......124 Marsh Field... 244) 104; Saturday 692; Sunday 6; old stock, | am Can....~. 373 Gi.... arrivals 251, on track 333; suppites mod- | am Car & Fdy 34.7 May D tr 20.4 erate; demand moderate; market about | a Cyan.. .., 46.7 Cp...... 3 steady; Colorado Red McClures 2.60-75; | am Gas & El.. 342 Mid Cont Pet. 67.3 Idabo Russets 340-45; bakers 405; Min- | am Loco . 124 Midi Bt Pd., 326 nesola-North Dakota Pontiacs 2.50. Am M & Pdy., 23.2 Monsan Ch.:., 641 Am N Gas..., 412 Mont Ward,.. 60.5 Poultry sang Me week Am Seating... ot = cenarvak i ae i Am stl - : ‘uel . = POULTRY - - Tel&Tel ..168.7 Murray Cp.... 20.5 DETROIT (AP)—The following prices Tob ..... 62.1 Nash Kelv.... 16.4 vere my per lb, f.0.b. Detroit, for Mo. — Cop _ HS Nat Bise w11 | ty live poultry up to 19 a.m: FMOUT ..se5s #4 Nat Cash R:.. 61.2 Hens, heavy type, 29-30; light ty ype. | Atchison ..... 98.4 Nat Dairy 65 21. Heavy type brotlers or fryers, = ~ Atl Ref ... 30.3 Mat Lead .. 0.1 | 4 ibs, — Rae 27; Barred Rocks 2 Atias Pdr ... 37.6 Mat sti... 48.6 | ‘aponeties 3/4-§ lbs 32 Geese 27 Aveo Mirg ... 5 Wat Thee...... 67) — 7 | + soe oT NY Centraj.... 21.3 CHICAGO POULTRY* $ & Ohte it Nis M Pw... 38.7) CHICAGO 'AP)—Live poultry steady | fe ay eg eS ee. SA to firm; receipts 1.427 coops; f.o.b. -pay- Boethg Airp $25 “? 58 ing prices eee te 3 pve higher; | Bohn Alum 218 144 heavy hens’ 28-3 ht hens 4-19; fry- Bond @trs 136 . a4 ers of broilers %- 27, old roosters 17-19; | Borden. ...... $43 sag ducklings pons Borg Warn ... 79.4 Packard...... 4 + & 4 2 * ry y . & Budd Co.../, 12 _ M. Livestock Bure Add lat 38-4 ‘alum & s. DETROIT LIVESTOCK Campb Wy...” 22.3 “a Hy | -DETROIT (AP) — Hoge—Galabie $00. Can Dry...,, 13 . 325 Market not established. Cdn Pac..... 244 oe 42.7 Cattle—Salable 700. Early sales slaugh- | Capital Ai ri. 05 . M6 ter classes fully steady; choice slaughter | Case (JT) 15,7 374 steers and yearlings around 1190 Ibs. | Cater Trac.... 49.3 . $6.2 down 23.00-25.00; part load prime steers Celanese ..... $3 . 70.1 erougd 1050 Ibs. 26.50; commercial to Chet & Ohio.. 35.1 puumen ..... 43 low choice steers largely 16.00-22.75; tew’| Ch & NW.... a? —— 85 canner to low commercial steers and pling OE em bee . 2 heifers 10.00-15.00: utility and commer- Climax Mo... 404 m2 elal cows 11.00-13.00; canmers and cUt- | Ginette pea |: M6 16.1 | ters €.50-11.50: heavy high yielding hel- | Gocg Cola. 1312 » 20.3 stein cutters to 123.00: most utility and Colg: Paim. rg 41.7 » 4 commercial bulls 13.00-15.00. Col Gas....... 132 . 564 Calves — Salable 200. Trade not fully | Gon Edis...... 43.2 - 44 estatlished: few sales cholce vealers Gon G-E...... 13 » 32.9 a at 32.00-33.00, but most offerings | Coney: -. 304 - 444 un Con P Pf 4% 1094 S08 +13 — Saiable 1,000. Early sales Cont Can..’. 64. ? ae, 205 lambs aroqnd steady; dec’ t case 9 Re eeenene pees GS © ‘wooled lambs .ardund 95 | Cont O1.,... STL Vor aa ibs. 21.70; ottier small and PG... .+.0e 2 Sood ++ 374 choice wooled lambs 20.00-21.80; cull to | Curtiss Wr.... 86 gon DRC «+s» ae chotce ewes steady, mainly $.00- -20.08.~ et Edis....+. 24 Sparks eo Doug Aire. 06. aren 47 Dow Chem.....35 Sperry vee 465 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK . cea aae 1 one Cat ox 4 : AP) je hogs 6,500; Eagie . Deces | 2. - _ | active: butchers and sows unevenly §0- | East = S: */ sot a bo 7.” br | © i100 T; choice 189-230 ib butchers El Auto L.... 43. Std Oil Ohio 36.5 theice 230 th down 27.00; 240-370 Ib Erie RR ““** So Suth = 327 {| 25.90-26.25; 280-320 Ib _24.75-25.50; cholce | Brie TN ----- Tt Beit Co .. 447 | | 2@%e -350/560 Mb 21.75-23.50 with some Pirestane - at Sylv Ei ae 333 |} choice light sows 23.75 or slightly 7 lpreept Sul .. 48.4 Texad * 90.7 W'paleble cattle 17,000; calves 400; [G08 Elec... 928 Tex O <3 slaughter steers and’ heifers £0 Gen Mills... 62.3 Timk 38.6 fully $0 higher; steers grading Gen Mot ,... 643 ‘Tran 13.7 and below mostly steady; -canner Gen Shoe ... 42.2 Tran . 26.8 cutter cows tely active; — Gen Teal ..... 45 Tren 71.3 to 25 higher; utility and commer Gen T & Rub 204 34 cows slow, steady; strong to 23 | Ginette ~ 412 Un 4 higher; vealers fully steady; « load of | Goebel Br... T1 ji pm og oo around 1075 Ib steers 31.80: | Goodrich . .. 642 23.3 bulk h-choice and prime steers 76.00- | Goodyear . .. 86.7 Aire . 3 29.00: two toads 29.50; bulk choice steers Grah Paige . 1.2, op wo. Sf 23.89-25.80: good to low-cholce 22.00- Gt No Ry Pr 49.5 Unit Prait “a 23.00; commercial te ale 16.30- | Gt West 6 .. 1.7 Im 42 19.50: a half load prime 1 > heifers ae ae 1 - 67 26-06: bulk good and choice heifers | ¢ OH +... 484- 318 = | 19.00-23.75; utility to low-good 12.50-|Homestk . ... 4.2: | . 3 © | 18.80; ptility and commercial cows 11.00- | Hi Hersh . 144 U 8 Steel..... 411 | | 13.80;/ canners and cutters 9.00-11.25; Mot ,.. 108 I : u | most utility and commercial bulls 13.60- | Tl) Cent. ... 064 6. _ | 18.00; commercial to choice vealers 19.00- | Inland Stl ..>44.2 ; 142 | | 30,00; few prime also 30.00; cull and aa _ | utility vealere 12.00-18.00. .| Interie i - a galable sheep 4000: “good ant ‘notes nt tary aE wooled si lambs around 150. 16 Mick... | down 19 90-40-75: choice and prime of | int Paper: $8.8 comparable welts 21.00-21.75; cull to | int Tel & ae low good lambs 17.00-19.50; mostly choice — > tall Kime ik"... $08 | elated DETROIT EDISON COMPANY COMMON STOCK ‘YIELDING °5.40% ‘Having paid dividends continuously since 1909, this stock offers an excellent: investment in a growing Michigan utili ty. Telephone: WOodward 2-2055 “FIRST OF Z MICHIGAN — asl pecs BUHL "BUILDING - _ DETROIT NEW YORK 511 Connatiantty N atl Bank Building heme FE 4-1568-9 CHICAGO. oe Products*..., ~ 3 ‘Abrasive’... :. 8 a» 15 Indust. Rails vu stocks Previous day....14498 62.7 664 1123.4 Week afo..... 486 6821 $6.4 1117 Month ago.. ...442@ 75 55.1 1073 Year ago...:.. +82. 822 B47 1143 1963-54 high....151.8 83.6 S65 116.3 1953 “an, aes ines ae ie 187 1062 loW.. 1 7 66.7 «(8te ee seeeeee 33 3.3 STOCK AVERAGES ~~ NEW YORK—Compiled by ~ Asso- | We eet Se 4 Stevens sentenced Elmer Riddle, 39, no address, to ten days in Oak- land County Jail and fined him | $125 with costs yesterday for driv- ing under the influence of liquor. Riddle wil} serve 70 days in jail if his fine is not paid. mere, Michigan State Police of the Pon- P@Per tiat Post yesterday that two wheels while it was parked near his home. Mrs, Kathleen Light, 34, of 20065 Hawthorne, Detroit, was fined $75 and $5 costs yesterday -|by Hazel Park Judge Robert C. Baldwin, Mrs, Light pleaded guilty to drunk driving. - Rummage Sale, Wed. Jan. 27, 10 to 12. Stevens Hall, Exchange St. —Ady. if your friend's in and needs bail, Ph: FE 6-5201/C. A. Mitchell. Real Estate Board Picks Broker Head ? Business Notes: | Officers Chosen. told Pontiac Police that} | Lingle, 53, of 360 N. ot 1395 * by Credit Union .GMIC Group Elects George Pudduck, Votes. 4.8 Pct. Dividend The board of directors of GMTC Employes Pontiac Federal Credit Union elected George Pudduck at the organization's 18th annual meeting Saturday. Taking office with him are Al- bert E.. Silk, vice president; Wil- B, Skosich, clerk. Credit Union members elected They also voted a 48 per cent di-| ‘PUDDUCK | vidend to be paid on 1953 earnings. Judge Maurice £.- Finnegan. tie} Maneck,; treasurer = manager;— reported that the Credit Union's assets as of Dec. 31, 1953, totaled $2,400,531 57. During the year, membership inereaséd — 1,137; assets. —rese $765,373.61; share savings were up $690,116.66 and loans outstanding jumped $895,746.80, Maneck said. The DuPont Co. has disclosed preliminary plans to build a plant facture of Neoprene, a synthetic rubber. The location adjoins the site, just north of Muskegon, of current construction by the Hooker Electro-Chemical Co. and another site at which the Union Carbide & Carbon Corp. will build. A new paper which provides mul- tiple copies of business forms with- |. out use of.carbon paper was an- today by the National Burroughs Man at Montague, Mich., for the manu- ’’ ,| able workers are jobless. | Navy Needs Men for Commissions’ in Medical Corps Programs are available for en- tomologists, bacteriologists and podiatrists leading to commissions as Ensign and Lieutenant (Junior Grade) in the Navy Medical Serv- ice Corps, according to Chief Alan | D. Simonson of the Pontiac -naval recruiting station, Applicants rmaust be graduates with a masters degree or doctor- ate science or philosophy in. en- tomology or bacteriology, or of @ four year course of study of chir- y. Those qualified should contact the Office of Nava] Officer Pro- curement, New Federal Building, Detroit, before Feb. 1 View Hopeful Over Jobless Detroit Put in Moderate. Labor Surplus Grouping | but March Is Eyed “WASHINGTON — Unemploy-~ ment is getting worse in Detroit | land five other Michnigién cities, a 7 Laber Department survey showed | today, but employers are “cau- tiously optimistic’’ that the down- trend will be halted by mid-March. The department's bureau of em- - ployment security said unemploy- | ment had increased in nearly all | of the 149 major labor market | areas from November to January. _ Detroit and Battle Creek were affecting 3 to 6 per cent of the work force. Both cities were previously list- ed as having a balanced labor. supply. Muskegon was changed from the “moderate” status to having “‘a substantial” labor surplus which means at least 6 per cent of avail- | Ionia, Belding and Greenville were also added to the listing with Muskegon. All four areas will de eligible to special bidding on gov- ernment contracts and to tax aid in erecting new plants and addi- tions. on Hoover Body Firm’s Vice President Named to Task Force on Budget, Accounting Pro-Commie POWs Army to Kick Out |“ The government considers their | unemployment problems ‘“seri- ous.”" ” . The new survey answers a complaint of CIO President Walter Reuther last week that the department worked too slow- ly on classifying labor areas. He said that Michigan Employ- , mn hi __ regl . THATCHER, PATTERSON & WERNET Pontiac's Oldest Insurance Agency” i Bank Bidg. Just pick up your phone ond coll vs for experienced: service on your investments. Your inquiries are welcome —by phone, by letter or in person, “ Investment Facilities 6 ot Your Pinger Ts amber New York Stock Exchange ond ether nding exchanges Detroit: 3rd Floor Ford Building. WO 2-5525 Pontiac: 616 Pontise State Bank Building —Fderal 4-2895 YOUR CAR? @. This may be your cor or it might be the other fellow-—but in any case . be sure you have liability and collision insurance. H.W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency H. W. Huttenlocker ats came eee. "Hands Tied? : Because You Lack oa 1)\ High School Diploma me £41551 You can get one at HOME in your spare time. If you are 16 or over and have left school, write for interesting free booklet—tells you how ! American School, P. O. Box 24, Kensington Branch, Detroit 24 Please send me Free Lessons and 55-Page Bulletin on Request! - Name Seeeesecbecdereesiveoseesveneeosun NM sa op08s = oe .... you can’t afford to take chances. Call us for rates wi savings. : SS a «eb Peeece veers teh encbes® eh ee POSS FF EES EEE OO ORES OS IO EEE OSS Ot ee ey 653 E. Oregon, will be 1: 30 p.m. “Thursday at Baird Funeral Home, with burial in Stiles Cemetery. ‘She died yesterday at home, Born at Waterloo, Ind., ‘she is | survived by ‘her husband, three sons, Glenn of Lapeer, Robert of. Whitmore Lake and Cleo of Fen- ton; a daughter, Mrs. Gertrude Boshaw of Lapeer; a sister, Mrs. Olive Craig of Denver, Colo.; and seven. grandchildren and four ‘great-grandchildren. ere, Wy Sete Fortune he A Wowan, ~ Monster Midway, by Willam.Gresham ; Non-Fiction ‘The Last Resorts, 4 eestent Amory | and the Nat af Things, B. Bulfinch's. 4 PO by Thomas Bul- _ How to Hely YourHusband Get Ahead, by Mrs. Dale’ Carnegie |Bridge Party to Aid “Scholarship Fund ROCHESTER—For the benefit of the scholarship fund of the Rochester branch of the National Farm and Garden Assn., Mrs. Mason A, Case is opening her home-today for a dessert: bridge. Forty women are expected te Orlando Ryan LAPEER—Service for ‘Orlando: Ryan, 78, of 642 Monroe St., will be 1:30. p.m, Friday at Baird Fu- neral Home,. with burial in Stiles Cemetery. He died last night in a Ftint hospital after an extended illness, .Surviving are his widow, Nora; two sisters, Mrs. Bela Sullivan and Mrs, Anna Teas of Detroit; and a brother, Gerald of Utica. Sunny Vale Auxiliary to Hear Talk on Missions WATERFORD CENTER — Mrs. attend. Mrs. “James D. Arcuré heads the party committee. She King Faisal If of Iraq and King Hussein I of Jordan are exactly wilt —be—assisted by _Mrs.—_Leon_} F, Robertson, Mrs. - Randolph Stricklarid, Mrs, Arnold P. Smith, \1Mrs. Henry McNalley and Mrs. Grover J. Taylor. Potluck Dinner to Climax Legion Auxiliary Contest ROCHESTER—Annual member- ship drive potluck supper of the Homer Wing American Legion Aux- iliary will be at 6:30 p.m, Wednes- day at the post hall. The losing team in the member- ship compétition will supply the CLARKSTON — Ann Barrows, daughter. of Mr. and Mrs. Wal- ter S. Barrows of 6100 Overlook Dr. has. been elected secretary-| A. Jewell, son of Mr. treasurer and range officer of the Rifle Club. at Tri-State College, An- gola, Ind. , reuient at ‘Romeo ROMEO—Cub Scout Pack ‘St of Romeo will stage a “showman” program tonight at its meeting in the high school auditorium, — Festivities will get under way t 7:30 p.m. with Scouts of each presenting their own individual acts, entertainment. monies, . mester tomorrow. semester graduates. ton, turn from overseas. | Sash IsF Featured will be a Spike yr ieee “kitchen band,” a puppet. show and a magic act. One-act plays | gress also will highlight the evening's - Philip Davidson, assistant Cub master, will act as master of cere- Six Local Students Completing College Six Oakland County area students | Will be among 117 who will be -re- ceiving degrees or certificates from Central Michigan: College at Mt. Pleasant “at the close of The official commencement ex- VL; Martin ef—Pontiac, recently | ercises—are scheduled _ for _mid- | returned from missionary work in the Caribbean Sea area, will be | guest speaker at the Women’s Missionary Auxiliary of Sunny Vale Chapel. meeting at 7 tonight. The meeting will be held at the Irwin Russell home, 101 Cristy St. A social hour will follow. Area Girl Is Elected _Area _ graduates will be “Mar. garet Tucker of Holly, Lonna For- rest-of Keego Harbor, LaNora Ma- son of Lapeer, Louise Leureuse of Utica, Anne Ruch of Farming- ton and Marion canes of Fen- Gan-Jewell. Engagement OXFORD — Mrs, Christian Gan announces the engagement of her daughter, Crystal, to Pvt-Murray Clyde Jewell of Oxford. The wed- ding will take place upon his re- JACKSON @ — id can oe board cut of 10 per cent in all The article ‘written by Citizen Patriot Editor Carl M. Saunders from the national capital says that top Eisenhower men in Con- are ready to sponsor. the ee mt tote bane Gt tas a lic-will wse the “bonus” thus pro- d to buy “refrigerators, TV sets, automobiles’ etc., by way of accelerating business. The Washington report says that “men-in the administration who should know", reported it unlike- ly that the White House would seriously oppose such a tax cut— provided the unemployment pic- ture darkens. Woman Gets 1-14. Years for Passing Bad Checks Dorothy Coe, 40, of 1425 Oak- -dale, Commerce, was. senteced to 1 to 14 years in Detroit House of - su, “commercial 1 the because he had been drinking. — School Head Talks Sigs wt “Mews ~"{MENDMENTS TO ‘THE ZONING ORDINANCE wnshi Waterford, Oakland mi he ut Slichies = ordains: The | * amendmen’ the Waterford | © gon: from ‘Residence <3 follow: vision and Monr Election Issues |S on ection SSUES ase onne itect thirty (30) aaye schoo! ‘building. WATERFORD—William Shunck,| “Made and. passed this 16th day of} superintendent of Wdterford | %ssusry 1954. fof @and’ on Fg «gi0.00 ee er ee) of the qubieee ‘Roed and i . between speenee as equa for the purposé o~ i@ e the three school jord becnervation “ iy = pula . ond an adaien to the high safety, LOUIS G. BARRY, Waterford Township Clerk. in 1 ear tt shall not be necesser to levy ail’ of such increase for = ? Area AAUW Branch Will Meet’ Thursday — Tru EON fathoncs, ae _— wa ase wnehip jarkston, a 4 bh of MANOED DORELER.” {preset for wale Sign DO) Township Cer } money necessary to ‘Township schools, will speak on F , under the terms of the issues to be decided in the Jan. 26, "S4| Ponbract, then any surplus taxing power school election when the village INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP Ro 4 nw ~ tana PTA meets at 8 p.m. Thursday. Sealed bids will be aceepted Pe Po iE tron 1:00 : r mm ew : Sue Smith of the township high | P.™. February 2, 1954. v4 the wnanip o'clock a.m. to 8:00 orelock 5 p.m. Bast- school. will be feat fh the of ee Oakiand County, Michi-/ ern standard Time. eatured the eve- for the following equipment. orrotion is further given, that the Board ning’s ~ _ Austiingy fire ai gating unit, mount- | of Education school district oe program. ry on agen. © Sepcoss estimated that six hundred thousand 1 ek. * pect Season on dollars (8600, amount of) rrowed for the; following: statement has been re- The Jan, 25, 26, 27, ceived from the County Treasurer as to FARMINGTON—Local branch of | versity Women will meet at 8 p.m, | County, —NOTICE 0 if 5 the American Association of Uni- or tere oe Cabin SPECIAL MEETING District, Oakland parks, County Treasurer is Micnigna. of ‘the County “at Oakland, Btate hereby given, that « special by certify that accord- Correction for passing a bad check by Oakland County Circuit Judge George ‘'B. Hattrick Monday. | ‘She pleaded guilty Jan, “ to passing a worthless $15 check in Pontiac last October and admitted passin gseveral others totaling ap- proximately $136, PTA Sees Indian Film WATERFORD TOWNSHIP “Ojibway Country” was the title ot the full-color movie shown at last week’s meeting of the Hudson Covert PTA by Howard Shelley, manager of the Oakland County Sportsmens Club. ‘| Paul Calkins, 23230 Power Rd. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Mrs. Clarence Stoll, chairman of | ga the arts committee, has planned oi the program, which will feature | day ot in~ the pet a therelect of the Clarkston | ing to _< yreenrn in my officé, as © Community School District, in the | Januazy 21, 1054, the total of all voted Lage “ Ookisnd, and Stats of Michi- | increases in the tax Buch Mpaitenes. < above be held elementary | the 15 mills Caney Bection 21 easel “bauiding In the Village of Clarks-|of Article X of t Michigan Con Constitu- Michigan, on Tuesday, the nd/| tion, affecting temsble property in the February, 1054, at %: 00 o'clock | Clarkston Community School District —in said County, is as follows: Robert Benjamin as guest speaker. AMENDMENT TO ORDINANCE NO. 1- an traveling an oulabiiched route, said | School cum of $5.00 bed year. ati ‘son, Tm or corpor on re- quires by this Ordi PO who chains 7 be eligible under this = section, shall file an affidavit, on le sworn to, in duplicate with the “Tow! Provided that: The fee for hawkers, Clarkston Community School peddlers, a Clarkston Community 8c —, pais been in existence for a “= Independence (now @ part of the ne 2 a 315.00 per year for a license; Dated: January 21, Ordinance. In the quent Dated: January 21, 1954 Local Voted Years Increase Unit Increases Effective Clarkston Community School 6 mills.. siseceecesseoees L082 thru : 1 mill. .ccccseeeecseeeeese L001 tity School 3 milld.....csccccccoeeess A002 thru i970 trict No. 1 of the Township . one vent, shall be rkston Community peo ool District) YS mills. .ccececccveseeeeee 069 thru 1068 CHARLES A. SPARKS, Oakland Cm er LLOYD M Chief pe Treasurer This notice is given by order of the Board of Henesiion #5 of one ras ore. | district. care ‘of the Board of Education of said School District. Jan, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 1054 TO CLASSIFICATIONS ANNOUNCEMENTS Card of Thanks ....coseesswers In Memoriam ....-c0srcwernsecee Flowers .....» eee Puneral DirectOrs «sicscercnsore Cemetery LOte 6. n+ cewenneveweere EMPLOYM..NT Help Wanted Male ..cs-scsceees 6 Help Wanted eee eocenscoses 9 Help Wanted . coccsosecsss 8 Instructions .,....++ cepabscsecass © Work Wanted “Male. .accevceeee 10 Work Wanted Female ......++++ SERVICES OFFERED _ Building Service .....sseresseres 12 oeteeone eee 3 Business Bervices . precrnee =f Be TAXOS ..ccnceene 4 Dressmaking & Tailoring eesboue 4 r service Pr Uj ** age ogee seeeeneee Lost & Found ....+..se-seersees 4 Notices & Personals «issseeees | BOX REPLIES _ At 10 a.m, today ope there were replies at ; | we the Press office in perience _Death Notices JAN. 26, 1954, PERCY and Mrs. Eva Eason. eral service will be heid vaare 106, 107, 110, 112, 116. iene Van Plew officiating. obtd Lag PS k A large owing boxes: ward weekly from start. t the foll id _onee appointment to be made at earning 5 yearly 10, 15, 17, 23, 24, 26, ward, The eapassion Of (iva P< anization has crew open- 28, 33, 34, 39, 46, 6, bo fa . To arrange confidential 88, 91,98, 99, 100, 102, interview phone A, W. Kocken- tite, Flint Tavern, Fiint, Mich. _REPRESENTATIVES financial institution has im Pontiac area, Must ear, be ready for train- ae¢ | MAN WITH Faint OR WALL- ee Nee Ee MAN tion qverator and attendant. Apply Lk. Rd Cemetery. FF _. . at ‘the Soarbe-Oiritien ¥ u're. making money but « ber; dear brother of James Mi- chael and Rickey Duane Gerber. WANTED 3861 Eliz mied ey your quest - owe ~. to the vortenity. abe Thorou~h trainine “in feild. t Lib: mission Car essential. gained on Ramat “prom You can ry as far as you want, ~ In Memoriam emory, To rieve that {t's gone seems. - 95) Like beg a se you more time itn orld only hope's meeting you Fondl. remembered addy, Mom, Stusrt and aren, > Bave references. Apply “jos. N. "yo ut A RARE SELLING ‘OPPORTUNITY you happy in ‘your work? Rie = . nest, Sastceraiey man 25 eral comm _Por interview phone FE 2-688. in. MANAGER FOR SERVICE ~ STA- ; tion, Write Pontiac Press Box 116. EXPERIENCED 8TA- sasive Wanted! } PIN! 35 YEARS FOR Pon- WANTED , ‘wtd. Child. bo Beara. esicensnuee 36 Wtd. Household Goods paren seed 2 ‘wid, eee <{esensnerey OS Money Wamted ......ssveerenere Wanted to Rent ..... sesessecene 29 ‘wd. Wd. Contracts, Mtgs. ....+++.- Wanted Real Estate. ...ccosc0--32A RENTALS OFFERED Rent Apts. Furnished qpenesscce SF |. Rent Apts. Unfurnished eenenee “4 Rent. Houses Purnished -...0«+: a4 For Rent Rooms . vesaustsecenes 37 - Rooms With Beard aenergereseee FH Convalescent Homes .......++- sa betwee eet ewans For Por aeaew ¥or Sale e6ees Coenen eeres -¢ Sale Business Property .......- Rent or Lease . Prop. eeneene Por Sale or SE... 08 = tO Business © UMities .cseecsee BT _ Bale Cay Be Be = ' Money Loan Sone teem beeee - Mortgage Loans as eeaaeteren dae S44 AUTOMOTIVE Por Sale Ho Housetratiers .....¢... 65 Rent Trailer Bpace ....20+- . 6 | Arbo Accessories ...cccccceveenns 87 Auto Bervice .....0;cseeesenesee 88 Wanted Used Cars ....0.-sarere 58 Wanted Used Trucks ..+00+s0s+« 69 ' Por Bale we. pesnsesuevere 61 Por Sale TRUCKS 2. 0+ cee wes 63 Bale Motor Scooters ..,.+se000«. 63 For Sale Motorcycies ........++, 64 Por Bicycles ....ssscessesee 85 Por ACCESPOTICS .. 1. 4e00eess = A Airplanes eet eer eeeneee : Transportation Offered ...00.+++ 68 Rd edt det el 69 ee z strteveres T eeeen onsen B Fuel oc secvewvee oes etna esos a wabdases sees TS =n Gon deer ee rtd a oor & Des Paste sumdee = ‘ ee eetsetecess TD ) Peta . eee (rams et eee en Li % Peet renters or MY a bey day. gg ne eae ke eeps Savings Bank, South "Lyon, LOVING MEMORY OF BEN- Lyons Help Wanted Male. 6|/ SLICE OF HAM Work ‘Wanted Female 11 ll COLORED LADY WANTS BABY- w WasuInas. TRONINGS. BABY SiT- ting, FE 5.5146 -| BABY fra ‘DONE i MY home. Converient for downtown __ shoppers. 1265. TRONINGS $3 BUSHEL FE 54-5028 ~~'BABY & SITTING ANYTIME, 4-2903 SOMPTOMETER “OPERATOR & _ Write desires full’ time work. rite box $8 Pontiac Press GENE Ba AL HOUSECLEANING. Day work -FE 2" Snatonbare rv TYPING. ‘SEC- __retarial Service. EM 3-2042. REGISTYFLF.FD PRACTICAL nurse for Bac My duty, MAytfair 63244 oF Business Services 13 RICAL “Dg eae | SEWER CLEANING... Sinks. Sunday Serv. Ph. PE 4-2012. PLASTERING NEW AND REPAIR. PE 17-0251. STEAM CLEANING Painting & Decoreting 20 20 PAINTING & DECORATING. TO. FE 7-696. K, E. Willhite || FAINTING AND “DECORATING, Fm» vesirame won cova ; _antee. in -writing, FE 43135. “Photos. & Accessories 21 21 All ¢ na Pont. mo Industrial Tractor Co. “Te 4-046) rE 4-1442 “UBURBAN 8EPTIC TANK cleaners, ithe oes. ae 42, ELECTRICA EXCAVATING ponaDmng, BULL dozing road bldg. Ph. FE 2.5422 EAVESTROUGHING | aca person, in cutficle t banking _trs, , GEneva #2211. jamin H. Blackburn who passed 3 years ago, January 20, REAL ESTATE The ty may change from our tremenious rttggen ved fads tre pen ger = day. gram e bart working sale —4 a, 000 per mente, lor ek 4 ser ys wile, eo Bi. fied high type salesm 3 Robert were Betty Jane 1 salary > tlac Press. YOUNG MAN UNDER . . TO AS- sist manufacturer’ ta . with sample case end Pieip drive. soon be capable driver and have Funeral Directors . Donelson-Johns EXPERIENCED DAIRY FARMER, references, Good wages and = -‘comiitions “good — ovenmnes, | , 835 Garner Rd., Milford, BI . Voorhees Sipe -FUNERAL HOME i oor The Pontiac Press FOR WANT- ADS DIAL FE 2.8181 From 8 a.m, to 5 p.m, NEW AND USED CAR BA’ man, Experience necessary, sveees and commission Gore and fr A insurance, |BRAID“MOTOR SALES ere Case at W. Pike 5t. PE 2-0186 é SALESMAN minim . best of back- . Weite to hours. holidays, Call} CALL. Blue NEEDED Journeymen é Millwrights _ Machine Repairmen WOOD PATTERN MAKERS ELECTRICIANS PIPE FITTERS Toolnakets: Wit EXCHANGE - Banas once Riker Fountain, Riker __Help Wanted Female 7 “DONE IN MY HOM; tac ares, Sacary and commis- per bushel. PE ‘aaa sched write “exper! ence and a * pac MA spentnetions to E Colburn, edaraiain REME DELING AND Best te tee ete Saleh. | 5 en eenere ore. Detroit 36 Fecfeation ‘room: dormers, addi OL. 1.0671, Mr. White. Part TIME i gg ce tions compleie apartment aiters- > SA MAN, EXPERI- “Winsiek Lik aah -_ ; enced in selling lumber and wane. | Oe ae ae LUBRICATING oe ER PIDGR LATING: supplies. rt B. Low-| Di ont i Cia oan Mtr G. SNYDER LA he Lumber Co. 1441 Baldwin Ave-| right party A sanding and finishing. Phone FE _tue. FE 24 a z. “Wait until you taste these potatoes.| Then you'll koow a - YOURS MEA own car} Help Wanted Female 7 why Buckley is vealed Nero!” work. Also chimneys. No job too and 3 twit ent anys. lerge oe tes am re : 35 al —-+ agp Apply in pply ate madame conee iar fespanaibe epee fo for FE 45044. or beams ean vacetion Ap- CAREER WOMAN . money, j i | sia _form: Accounting, Shorthand,. courses isiness aining | the Bu & Eyes. ~Enroil now. singss Institute a a 2 GAVE 10% ABINETS A Form.ca applied. AND CAR- FE GUARANTEED. ROOFS ce NEAT APPEARING MARRIED id Mag pa ae Burus, man 28, aveliable 353 re 23021. FE after p.m. weekends, FE have . a BLOCK AND CEMENT 5 ORE. Chisner seal Gabe Roth. tos Somers = Contracting Get our’ bid tov. OR 3-2716, ree aa GARAGES mopense 6770" STOPPERT & CECIL ae Oe be abe ru Emp Rg PLASTERING PE 5-066, FE 5-092 LEO LUSTIG PORTRAITS PRAMES - COPIES. Weddings. Formal & Candid. Lo He -a-4 Stadio 12 E. Pike. FR ~~ Television Service 22 HOME =e cue - 64 M ITCHELL’S © TY ast 100 N.-Saginaw Norris Radio & a REPAIR SHOP 540 Nevada St. GUARANTEED TV. REPAIR ANY make. FE ¢097)6 ANDY CON- _DON'S — “die @ TV sel service ~EAVESTROUGHING | Bryan PF. _moving. ACCOUNTING & TAX sunveck: _Edw, Hawley PE 2-2602 aioe TA & B B TRENCHING French PE 5-6973 arm air heating & sheet meta! _ EXPERT T°EE TRIMMING & RE FE 17-6622 “Bookkeeping & Taxes 14 Chiropodists nance MAURICE THOME, D 1203 Pontiac State Bank "ass FE 21071 Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 16 | 21361. Home cails . ment, ‘Edw. Hawiey. 18 W. Huron LAUNDRY... jac | =Laondty | ALTERATIONS. PICKUP AND Mivery if desited. PE ¢2017. a Income Tax Service — 9 BURTON z 16% E Huron sit. FE PE eae PE appoint ACCOUNTING & TAX AR ise Baw. Haw BENTAMIN'E BACKUS Lone & Trucking 19 19 FOR F PICKUP & deuivery we ist * yung at DAY NIGHT SUN TV. SERVICE. $3.50 ve 1206 FE 5-8300 || Typewriter Service 22A TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING MA- ehine iring Expert work, General f ply Cy... 7 W. Lawrence. _Mitchell’s 123 8 Saginaw St, st. Upholstering 23 LLP CUSTOM UPHOLSTERING Free, estimates Small repairs in your home A. ‘Yingling rE +8701, _ EA ARLES CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- 8144 Coole Leake Rd EM - p41. Free estimates CORNICES DRAPERIES, &LIP- covers, materials. Beadle, re §-1927, a AKERS OP CUSTOM BUILT —. upholstering. 348. Tele "Thomas Upholstering Phone FE 5-8888 a . | SLIP COVERS DRAPES & BED- _spreads Vour mat-rial id 5-6797, HAVE YOUR PURN finished and repaired. PE $1332, Lost & Found 4 BOARDER m ouut t seen whe: we io @ car, cerhies and . Pe “Ex ALLENG ~ white and liver English Poin’ oe co from.home Sunday. __ward. L.A. Taylor, PE 2- io LOst: SMAL*, BLACK FEMALE, short haired, rev ehin and_ chest. Name “Tippy.” FE 54470, Lost: SIAMES¥ CAT ON THEN: ken Rd., Rochester, OL 15563. LOST OR STRAYED —2 DOGS, one Beagle, female pup: one light maie, megyAX WHILE REDUCING Nervous? Can't eens sleep? Let a Sy: | Wanted Real Estate, 2A. aes _ WE BUY . WE TRADE. Mass. many ways to make deal th our ro oh our location is ad- a) estate ure fe Piles Edw. M. Stout, Realtor TM. Saginaw st FOR Quick “AND COURTEOUS a K. pte pres Realtor PE 40004 Eve OA: a _Ph, PE 6-165 | ven, PE DST - Rent Houses Fu Furnished 35 PE: PARTLY FURNISHED HOUSE month, must have deposit. "iM BUYERS! BUYERS! : For Rent Rooms 37/ ‘Rar Sele Heases “43 'LR.TRIPP ae 2 THE, PONTIAC FRESS/-TUBSDAY, JANUARY 26, 5 058 ie, Hershberger | ~ For Sale Houses 43| _ Hurhphries _ oe LER REALTY. Wie ane et oat” mr “a | niggas an al 5 > nce, Al tis 00,3 shaded seres.| Pe o-tai be ta BUY OF THE YEAR! ing this one. 000 a downtew Siteder’ jecsted RANCH HOME 20 2% “CRAWFORD | ute Sie a Pecioe aacee | |aeane geome ae a e and stores, good basement, 2 car tn wet’ Wels toma ae ' foom., g OR AGENCY ngs pee $2500 down. | scribe the besuty of this th ofl two — s gh ye ag sais one, so call. for ead ap , fireplaces and other Ral Gparke FR 61800 FE cise & nice one, OW —m—aa: ox 3 BEDROOM. jubtitehiSetint Pacivo.| | NEW!NEW! Sete Peete areas: CORT M IMBrER ett 3 | AUBURN "iticurs G ATEW AYS eur cs epsiad St ss dg nm ~ 4% per. cent at sein a ea "angeeaes| to panies ODAY. — GILES REALTY CO, | Reavrors |e W, Mure reyes , TE sais J. R. HILTZ 148% N. Saginaw St. iv PE 5-181 Eve FE 56438 : furniture. The 2 is off : 2 ef kes | gli Mgnt ay - — ‘ ¥ . iC UDDIF a i Be ar Wilt “Say entsroes "oe I PMfeny Cooking paivileges it @evired. FE Superb Eiken Home ‘ if living room, Pull ‘ins ots Thr ee B room t tor oes Be . Community We 7 pags iene 96 Mca, sreaM rami” binds she “viet ot bain down, Oak Ronty vests B k R bl er pur ww ont “RoeHiOn TF . Re ~= heat, very nice, PE 2-4376. secrica:” @arkter madlne: entrance storms and screcns, full ric amp.ers. 4 6.26" Lom, 8, BED burs 70 FOR Pgs, OR COUPLE. sarge, carpeted ae i room f Basement.” Pleats “of” Foon up. r ve ~ lag \ . 4 : u zN ANTIQUE Ay went incomes and larger |2 RMS, NEX1 TO YMCA sTEAM| Full dining room, too. 2 car Z a ee Oe Model Is ’ apartments sub- heat. yer" nice, FE 24376, _ attached b*etuura The 13x Z . in ar me Wow urban homes, farms & bet- “ R 338° site 4 OPEN _sbudip couch, misc t ain OLE M. 2 BLOCKS TO ry 4 i oe map co : PE 5-1332. or iding re in FE 6-026, omy es O i 4 . ‘Wtd, Miscellaneous 28 a Fon. "EADY: AUTOMATIC | HEAT cea ‘setton, na Zo - ump! ries . ERDAYS > * prone yeane apenas . Cal ws Bow ~| ood water, walking. PE 6-7406. pened. 718.000 worth it, CZ, Rambling Tye ONE f at 214 Miadiabels | Road. Go- out kitchen « ‘ots. ¢€ JEWELRY, CHINA, Aud list AY STEAM HEATED SLEEPING . . Zz aint Z Besides the living room; Orchard. Lake Road '% mile west; 100 yards from as - you? Byard’s Antiques. For « sale TOMORROW room, hot water. Close in, 64 ae * “a € vet en w ra adjoin- |. of Telegraph Road ro ett on| Deatabie va ue, 1611 John Kinzler, Real _Pine, Near Williams Lake o ing “breakfast nook “there are | Middlebelt to Rend, one 29} John Kinzler, Realtor ‘room home on one 3 basement with oil - ‘ Wanted to Rent 29] ie” w warn, Ore aoe ~_Rooms With Board 38 Stents Ser rage : 9 weer heater Attached garage. M AHAN North Side race elilent j ' t Wr IMMEDIATELY FURNISH petive. Realiors teat GLRAN QUIEN? BOOMS YOR]. jatset hate trbaees tae A. Sead Wosalion trary’ mene Conpeoms MS on sonise ie? Eastern de High for 4 adults, with hdl lng dg. _— GENTLEMAN 70- DHAKE ROOM. ~ att, ee Se OTF en Reon _— PE 2-240), erty. Purchasers . 2 us ors we Huron “Ph. FE 20263 - GLEAN. QUIET COUPLE WiTH 3 FP. MckINNE Twin beds, Phone FF 3-420 This Is It A : . NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH | Best Buy in Brick smali children urgently need 3 or Office 8800 Commerce Rd. GENTLEMAN BRE som: roximately 1 gore “gem ri Humphries POST OFICE — Eat side terrace Set 2 béedroom house or apt. Owner- Ph. Pontiac oe or oe, : eae ranch home built for* 44 ~ noe 2 bedroor and PB ag ship care, reasonable, suburba . Univ. eS GENTLEMAN: CLEAN HOME & ony... 3 bedrooms with 226 Deluxe executive home in the tus-|* ROOM HOUSE, PULL BASE The most economical _meceptable. FE 4.3935 * ” ai TRADE “on gana mgs. seer Pontiac & — iope appeal.’ Liv. 64ba5 ury class! Fascinating modern| fieut —_ gerhee, 3, geod, -, you cen ive in $2,000 down. H SCHOOL TEACHER AND es ore oe Se atsty alt fireplace and args’ picture Siza3 architecture! Handsome Norman | down payment. Immediate : aie dies tpcincanpruty| Geet, Me ceee ace | Mag AOMNE gf AUNORY.| | iow. fo Mime 2308] Se ee, es |_ oon ee eect ee =e : Se us, do feel gated. ROOM & BOARD. SINGLE BEDS. best.” 1 Overaised = tt ft of Sylvan Lake in select Syivan COOLEY LAKE Donelson Park DORRIS & SON goud meals, $6 East Howara d.car na garage. Cir- Bee ints te ate, Sates | Anew home, exceptionally well Your choce of @ great 3 beds REALTOR CO-OP BER | ROOMS, MEALS, close tn, TWIN CORE Crtve eee ie s oe oe x 20 | "built, convenient to beautifull fare comuth type home, 1 el ee pee pt A ee secfectloa “The fal price? tate walls trermopane LOOK | Cooly Lake dias living room, definitely warrant’ year mn spate cen” 3 Cash for Your Home m4 preferred, no driakers. of S terms avabable S cape. wimennlat ve TO CEILING — smart raised heartn | Eighen, 3 bedtooms. large closets| {ion Sizable landscaped Jot, a work. Private ‘bath and en: | We ave severa: buyers of smal row EW siNgce "8 Shown by appointment onty. TM Reg UB Pat. OF, ete fireplace. large adjoining gubdeck. | of by arting tasks. ond 6 wumbos tach f .tacage, Values that Mest rance preferred. Phone bom mes wa Ch 88 Aut EDS. a fect rooms and tile bat room Luz-aire ot} furnace, sm-| 8 9©8¢ for terma, 4-046 or write Box ie LMA M. ELWOOD lose in uburn. Leslie 7 Tripp; Realtor on road level, plus atached db! Mediate possession, $9,750, ter tiac Press, 514) Coes Bitzabeth Lake 4, | Convalescent Homes 38A ‘tawneee “Ok !N ‘ | garage, 2 bedrooms te bat and | “EMBR EE GG. (- FE 5-120 FE $3844 8 toatl ~ 22 W. Lawrence Street ay, okay! Now let's see you make a salt water breeze, 17 ft square recreation room -4 & GREGG NI SHO IE" ~ FE 56-8161 or FE 23-1306 or with fireplace on lake level, Ft 1 ~ - GREEN LAKE OF “OFFICE man a ier ACCOMMODATIONS - Open Evenings ai construction Priced at $39,500. one een aten bu elder enthemen on groun . ob ¥ appointment - UPUR 2, CHILDREN. 28 | aoe lOMgOREEN gLABE) cpg, | foo “echzean, Rent Nome a0 | — Matpral replace, gore dusees;| AND HARGER CO, aa permanent place. $3113. | Cottages, ‘Homes, Bote and Estates | Brite $16 Oak St. Rochester, NEW 4 ROOM iM ROUGE MODERN, For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43 ‘ Delaware Dr. a os t Business, oa) BLING’ copeeenesy fanished wita new fur- | ~~~ ww PRR RAAA RD OLA PE PALL _ Serres : LIE SONS en? stablis My ef oer mx NORMAN NP RICE . ave,“ nooM -§ AVAILABLE Fay miture, A deal for $7,500, ~ i {umpt 1r1eS HURON GARDENS 39 W. Huron St) Ph. FE S088 nish: RCE r €. TK . . * * 3 bath, close ‘in Good ee we tee ie kD, EM 8 Here leasant a 3 room ouse basement, 2 wares, i FE 2-0474 7 room modern with full basement DOWN BALANCE | @s. Write Box 30 Pontiac Press. : eat Home cnet a aa 6 Gall. only $3,960 with ic . 83 N. Telegray pi ‘ oi] alr conditioned heat, good high peonivenpetiggeien Ac Z . WE WILL BUY OR 23-8341. Se a Sree : a Tr 3M. Teegrome Oven Evenings lot win nb garage, Priced fa F eehe ten waster, & GE stoner, sires 3 roo () Equity in your home, eS ee we ee J and tive des siferenmae. Prine. (2) Equity in ‘eed conirects — MAple 64000 0000- GE 0. MAR BI E R It ” - “tan binds, ful! basement, hot TT COUPLE WITH 1 CHILD | DE- ot De Ze Seay Sg, oom. Hotel Rooms _ ~39| GE Es, KEaMOT SUPERB CONSTRUCTION ~ Weler gas’ heat, ‘3 iets wear | R- L. Templeton, Realtor ‘ tear toe! winston Hame® | CORT M. IMBLER mw | O28F Aree OR F268 BEST BUYS fe papenged te Sis Ram, inner | sepent 1 tock to bas. Out Bald | 10/2 S. Ruren 75 eee, TE Fe im 6 * - — a up oto one wis th Pa, Wayns| 1111 Joslyn PE 408M HOTEL ROOSEVELT TODAY low Vestibule euirance to eS Reet esg| SEMINOLE HILLS id - - - re ly doverated. By week. Also . = home one oe SUBURBAN $1,500 down all uttities in, C, O.-heat $8,725. Terms. . Picture window’ ts Eliches and | 91.000, ‘Cash te” mohigage. on eat fo an exceptional a K “<. T 1 Real couple cing on, 22 2 Auburn "Ave. : Seema, bath, electric water heat- auto. gas hot Py 2 living room overlocking lake. [ . empleton, Real tor Sompiiire: v7 puaii woomsar |— a Voll heat. foil ineuistion. “Lares Secne tne school, 2 brick stores, house & garage. 48 ao ADAMS REALTY $2,680 DOWN G, I RESALE OFF 63% W, Heron clean. Gas heat. 3 m. apt. Suit fot. ‘Some ing to Pull price #6406. Dob't rent Close in. Only $2,000. BRICK BUNGALOW 382 Auburn Ave. FE 43393 “JOSLYN. Neat 2 bedoom CASH POR LAND —Sourmicrs. able tor couple Lake Orin, MY For Sale Houses 43) fimacjiate Grr Anny RD, ae 2 family éuplex. Cement Bock] 3 rooms, 2 eedipbemen V sere | mee A le a sawel, Gt) Disle Buy. | ces sOwE “ - ~ home led trim, Breeze- Re Cl gon Giassed ‘im porch ; NEW 4 basement A heater. ao? ASH AVAILABLE * Pad pn eg 600 Rovio. oak to ed 2 eas mae. I} ‘OME, OSE-IN Pia, Sell or trade, es : eee Lame privileges on Move in, py het Prcted 2 nace. Oni ye aaa é wood Park. . ; 7 large room: ROSE MCLARTY bedroom near ba | are al) a. of contracts to jomuree po cheno WILL SHARE N : fenced yg ee room & full a basement | FE FR RAME BUNGALOW —_— hed ot plastered. walls, ae 5 farauihed ge. trent ae: with buyers waiting with; home with woman with | child in top drive. Price $14,900 with 2 room now oe, agenesis 6 rooms moden. 3 ’ etomatie™ C= air ofl furnace.| 2" edrooms Lge a ym cash. ‘It are interested in| - exchange for services, EM 3-5029./ « terms. ed for 613 month.’ SDE 2 FAMT\ CLOSE | pisst , automatic beat a * pred to) os T iota, "Os — "3.a940 or aentrect, | BASEMENT APARTMENT, WORK- OFFERS J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor |. fenced yara. at in Only $2,000 down P. W. Din-| S8¢ hot water Lote of shade. | pcy\7 EALTY asl a TO CTONE lo y ent) ine sounle, PE b2e06. ‘ 36% W. Huron St. Lee} , = | tte oS oe Craw ; PONTIAC R Sk carts | "Attrecttve 3. bedrooes “ STONE REALTY NICE 3 oa aie et - CHIL- Huron Gardens Eves, FE 2203) or FE $3137 $500 DOWN For Colored Fatnilies rawtord — dungalow built in 1961, Lot mn dose a 7 HOMO | YOUNG LAB FOR, yfFUDIO groom, fall bam bunenion:! CT RANCH HOMES | cote cosy 2 rooms, socate , ONLY 42.650 Down iad apts .. LAND CONTRACT ee. Se furnace, gas water heater. near South Biv'd East, full 28 ODERN. RARD-| REALTOR OPEN EVES.| buys this clean two bed- | 91.950 DUWN. Good value here, 4 we ne have severe] customers wait 2 i nooM APT. ADULTE, ‘won and eae [inchuded, Lol| Before yoo"Wuy be sure to see price $3,500. ween floors Geuaciys. Facoment, 2141 ‘Opdyke, FE 4-1540; FE 41549 room bungelow with a nice ene a... full ——— season ee erred. 3 ceapartan - thes trueted * — 4 ray ied itehen, race. front tracts, Call up now for eificient, | 2 ROOMS AND. BATE: ~ } homes” ‘Belgct oak home 20 ACRES Cae. GS Gown. - $950 DOWN |, odern bath, basement, mun , 2 hots, 96.480, eolirteous, and quick action. couple only, no drink-|[ ake P il tered wails.” tle@baths. mod rms.. in water’ heater, storm sash ; 3 e rivi eges . 5 Large 4 rm. Priced to sell quickly, 7 = N. Broadway. Wonderful and - M more to choose from. Drive ers, neat “Auburn the ' ‘air beat, > ——. a out * Immediate possession on this| ; Aj og P se With modern home 5 rooms . Water. and gas. On payed Monthi to office look over A. JOHNSON Simost Bow 8 toot, 3 ded-| subtree es-elssments wil & beth, 20x30 corn —_ te0 own. For | JIM WRIGHT, R Bateman pod Kampern Res- our Parking ot our Ree Rent Apts. Unfurnished Es) room aed pisstic tile bath | mga agg 8 ageh gyr te I i, cal) Mrs, Spears. Be ealtor ae Oe, "8. Ra, door. x 1704 S. Tel h Rd , SIE 6 ROOM Mi fas. Nery large Set) faa Doe start at Leouard. Pull ‘OTT 2 Steere = Sun, Co-op Member, CAMERON H. CLARK . J elegrap : gas, DOME, warace, . sild. Write nrgakingt ares. Decency) 81.60, monthly 063, tm | ries 96,960 with $3,000 down 170 W. Pike FE 45008; GI RESALE - ‘ss PHONE PE +6692 a shown . c oP ol ae Ba _ Siorms and screens, 3 lots cluding taxes insurance, per month NEW i BDRM_HOME IN ROY, Pg @¥~ home jocated pe W. Bae Eves. * $. HEAT, REPRIGERA terms. uM : ‘ z . . From c orn pa; . . There a large | % Co-oper we Real Estate | ! er ond stove, Seenenes.. Senate ¥ ve have been rejected op 8} 18 ACRES, VACANT meat FE- 2 Jiving soem with picture yindow. 6 RM. HOME . As our Os purchade new | Orion. MY 24604. - Lake! Clarkston Income . see us. You may quality for these. BY OWNER. 3 M MODERN | kitchen” Has eTactaeet win es | frrated, , comnet, gemmmorenes CLINTONVILLE OF seasonal contracts for) 4 s UPP 2 of 5 yooms and ” ._Saueet Coes. home. Aubure & gas hot water! house is modern with 2 bedroom home buflt 1951, Plas So, Res Sa? ath Siatial” | ecules. Fm 209, 8 te 8 cach all in goed condition, CAMERON H. CLARK ty ounce’ to, _Bediate possession FE 300. egy ee ed Picea “at ia. 2 cat| jf tedrae ivingran diningran | tered walls wired clectrie stove, ‘} % Seer gd Pom: po ggg oy 1962 Ww am eee 4 OXFORD 4 ROOMS AND BATH. forms. -* rice i ideal. epee tor = —) rahalagadets: M A AN | con® cs, w. Eves._| Edw. M. Stout, Realtor | Ente privtegss, Full basespet | H. C. Newingham, Broker | fet or gus station. call for par-| CARROLL G. PORRITT . Pyeee, as lot ; e. Situatea| GI No Down Payment | TN. Saginaw Pa FE $416| pith, furnace ‘And 2 lots: $4,975. arse ROOMS AND BATH WERT in - tion eo pat 8. teak bey Be seme | a West 8 REALTY afte Mh ALTORS adults, +0521 or E28, $13,500, terms ection. | Civilians low down pay me OA 6.2835. __ Phone PH Sheu, or FE cI Se COOPERA nr eBEnS __ eves, . a payments ss — . ss ~EX ; é Rew tecdern 3 end "i pedroom : ia CLUSIVE Ht HOME : wee pee one ie ~ 3 ROOMS COUPLE < ONLY New Brick Ranch finished, Ap-| 172 West ann Arbor, FE 6$821| HERE'S A GOOD ADDRESS You wil) enjoy this 3 bedrm. rangh hemes. eacellent a »-Cagh FOR YOUR | 7-RooMS 3 saTHc New 5 room 1% bath brick proximately #0 minutes from Pou-| ORTONVILLE-ONE MILE souTH| Uppet Straights Bird. 67 comfortable home. Saeed Sec’ siding. atin ‘bout an 4 LAND CONTRACT ; a Bo ; ig ‘WatvATE BATH, GAS home, bedrooms, marble|o » pawocus _ . wie wes| 22 highway 15 across from Bald two ae ranch heme pF | 3 bedrooms. 2 bemts. wails. ac off Ralph B. Garner® [a ROOMS, HEATED room, “extre bares. closet | # One lite Reverse chgs.| Folsom ranch sty'e nome Large |. BYi0g, Foom orefieaine ws sen 2800" down yt 8 Investwiente,, _EM soles’ oe ~space, all _ birch hen, living reom. plastered and painted - x 12 rec- cous ” Nationa: B | mone full basement with auto- DOUBLE “VALUES walls, hardwood floors, tile bath, , Lex 481 . MAIN FLOOR na You réally should ins Rochester sich, OL Ft6t, it 1-780 povicnll eal sere stove aad retriges- matic oil heat, attached 2 utility room, Imundry trays, oil ry rniaked. Couple only. | | Cf Plastered garage. Situ LAKE FRONT reed today. John K. I K. Irwin Wanted Real Estate 32A|.*” 7 it |. Skehusive Moomfield aign-|- Fes" yee from this Telegr ts ~ 2 ROOM BASEMENT, HEAT, Sou ara room tear Lotus Lake- Open : ; nani ee. 841 Auburn. : i . front home. eg mem : | 3 LARGE ROOMS. SECOND FLOOR | Pine Lake Front - | S0%4,s00" sits terms, ™ bong eee ta fo Nile path, $11.80 per week. PE Ee on / Suemertan 61 le FE 31004 WE SELL - vena} = st te fa s.rom] COUNTRY ESTATE CHSTYLE, | / $8,000 ROOM BUNGALOW - 35 A JOHNSON, Realtor FE 4-2533 “4704S. Telegraph Rd. “BUD” Nicholie _ REAL ESTATE For Sale Lake Property 44 LAKEFRONT. PRIVILEG! Cass Lake — Elizabeth Lake — Straits Lake From 40 ft. Middle to 3 acres. $200 . Belect your lot now, Plan yout home to suit that lot, : os Ww. NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH POST OFFICE For Sale Lake se he cn J 44 dil Sale Businesk Proper ty—49 Foperty 49 : eee: Ra. 40 by 200. ais Ww. ¥ Inquire “ieee Be Robert Carcaddan, Fidelity Phoenie ire ioeurance’Co.. Lar- . Florida, _For anon Farms oe 8 ~ ask for eCullough Francis t. “Bud’ Miller > Realtor : Josivn “FE 22-0253 pn nei Parking Space in Rear aot. for ante rhalance $3,650. Yat Discount $730. “CORT M IMBLER- : WITH Contract patenes “On Your Name Only Or Other. Plans Money for pon-oue bills, home Prey eer: smi need. ‘a foe for $35. ta 8800" In Phone FEderal’ 3-7181 GENERAL Corporation 69 West Huron St. aS PROMPT Let “Rie ly loans since 1906. Phon or comegin ¥y. Provident one ng ae. Ps anes oe “LOANS” $29 to $500 Community Loan Co. GOOD BUSINESS py ee ‘ON corner 8S. Tasmania, B building w 8 0 b: in Sew, anytim: ie. PE days FE 4-7998. eve-. iver | ul TO, close ESTATE 2's 42x66 tile block bul 20 north of Toledo, Lillie a ornate Admiti., ‘Peters- burg, Mich. PE site PE 438s Open 9 to 5 CASS | AT OAKLAND CP 3 02x350. A perfect gas station cor- - i RAMBLING RANCH | 22 used car lot “s bar, or just| | “OU May SO row SCHOOLHOUSE LAKE FRONT manufacturing, Across cor- s You'll say “time well “ ador-| ner f uarter million dollar $25-$500 : ing this immaculate e from| G.M.C, truck retail { e to be ‘ the vestibule hall. entrance; built Wilsons, el 4 ranged — as . a parking $21,500" on Bg — T ac | sss Srggnce nd waitiewall| WARD E, PARTRIDGE, | ~ + OOCLY deluxe ‘Youngstown. kitchen | REALTOR e-ahene Group {our bills. protect | vour adjoining the nook with 43 W. Huron mn iv payments Son tvedeeting ine wetct v iares | DIXIE FRONTAGE Fo bedrooms. with cedar ned closets, | gy "pr. PRONTAGe. Col DUXts , screens cet garage beat well flons Glader block building” 26230. BUCKNER . Th tee om pavement, Srcelient | ing goods, market or many = FINANCE CO. e its, lered at $29.500,) $8 750 with ae en cae Above Walgreen's 1 $10,000 down DUE TO ILLNESS CR AWEORD AGENCY CORNER 8: SAGINAW & ee ec fil Opaske PE 40611, PE Ee FROM x ‘Ba.. 40 by My hy "$25 to $500 Now! Rent-Lease ‘Bus Prop 49A 49A STORAGE, GARAGE Light Manufacturing 40x75x12 basement, 2- — 8x10 em doors, Fast a CP. Pangus ORTONVILLE 132 Business Opportunities 51 ELIZABETH ‘LAKE High and 4 Pine -sand beach, ideal location. -Lot S0x130 ft. Priced at $3,000, KENNEDY | = Open ‘prenings. ‘tis RETAIL ; we, ee. FE _4-3569/ 4 going ice cream businens that “Sale ‘Suburban Prop. 45A je an BO paennen: | “| One 40 by 50 e bidg., and. DRAYTON PLAINS | | one % by 50 manufectu 000 DOWN ss end’ ok priced ed - Giroux & Hicks 4395: Dikie Be, wee Plains The All Wanna Realty CRESCENT LAKE 5143 ePuntie an a For Sale Lots _ : HOMESITES - MACEDAY GAl RDENS oy “6 ei building ssa with easy : aELWOOD FARMS ; 0 ge level, at $00 with ory J INES, AIRPORT ; | Gasoline and © gh sae TALK RIGHT ‘AN 6 WHEN You WANT Ti TO BUY BUSINESS VARIETY. STORE Ps the heart of this busy shoppin enter, all ao ends and some evenings. Get the A GOING GROCERY . inventory down, ICE CREAM WHOLESALE & ee, MONEY =|WAITING with | 401 Community National Bank Bide Foon to Lean {State Ucensed Lenders) _53 peve the cash loan service vou “GET YOUR LOAN JN ONE VISIT See esa be bY_ as STenees OAKLAND LOAN CO. Need Money? = to *500 a5 por as vour telephone FE 0-812] payment olan. Home & Auto Loan Company Houre: § to 5° Saturday 9 to 1 WHEN YOU NEED $25 to ) $500 We can help vou peeae Brabloms You" "ay ee ene pav- us of call ext our office. es ¢ —— -| WARD E. PARTRIDGE ose Mat COAST-TO-COA AST World's Largest 43 W, Huron Open Eve. PE 2-8916 ~ PLEASANT LAKE _ ‘SERVICE __at corner ¢ 1,500 FEET OF SPA CE FOR SHOP, Ligh eee drr pen Se a Ete aiteilities, wp temic 6 “*_K G. HEMPSTEAD - 102 E. Huron “POR STORAGE : oN Sua BUSINESS: Drive-Ine be » 20x60, fi clean. West side. Close to pre town. FE 2-3431 FE 2-8668 after BUSY BEER STORE. $1,000 3 PL0s inv for sale at once, erage, Eliz, Rd, |. of Wittieins Lk. Ra. Fe «ea | TEAGUE FINANCE CO, 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. Ph. FE 41574 $25 "$500" UICK FRIENDLY SERVICE * €4 W. Lawrence St. at Cass Phone PE 4-1538 : Baxter & ‘Livingstone FINANCE CO 202 S. MAIN” ROCHESTER. MICH. 202, Pontiac St. Bk Bide @e 2.0006 Corne: i and o ' FINANCE CO. | Mortgage Laon . 54 LOW INTEREST Unlimited fund: or ore family —— Ba . _saneened “vt G. ‘PETERSON 1310 Foutiee Ay Bank Phone FE 5-8406 or Pe bgt For Sale Housetraiiérs 55 | Fo Pontiac Chief MOBILE HOMES 22 ft. to ¢5 ft. in length. Up to & years to pay. You can buy a Les Hutchinson $100 dows, er as low as Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales 4615 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains . Phone o 1201 Also Corner l1 Mile & prtwass Royal Oak ~MICH-ARROW ELC AR-RICHARDSON HOUSETRAILER, PARK- FURST TRAILER BARK. LOT __NO. D. 2, $350, FE THE BE: BEST BUYS . “aT OX- Ox- _ ford Trailer Sales. ” “THE BEST Buys ARE AT r Sales, Oxford Tr: "TRAILER REXCE {ANGE ANDERSON ROYAL, PRAIRIE Beg bate aeRvide a FE NANCING. ; 1% “1 Ce 50 eae i of a Nialieie auteis 60 S. Telegraph Open Evenings and ‘Sunday P.M. | See the New 1954 Stewarts Mere is avality, | quanti; , beauty _ And the “that will amaze Be tone “Oxlord ‘Trailer Sales’ rts & Accessories 1 mite South ‘ot ‘sks Orion, 3-24 PUBLIC LOAN| 130 E. Lawrence FE 2-713] FRIENDLY SERVICE| mea can: erence? Auto Service NESHAPT GRINDING IN THE —- cylinders rebored. Zuck Ma- chine Shop, 23 H "Wanted Used Care 59 “See M&M Motor Sales dollar on late —_ cars. 2627 aie Hwy. " THE HIGH DOLLAR for the high F ng used cars, We need m. Drive the extra mile, "Hy, VANWELT OR: 3-1355 “ Top Price for Your Car AVERILL'S 2020 DIXIE WHY. FE 2 FE FE 20678 a CARS FOR PARTS IGH DOLLAR MOTOR MART 121 E_ Montcalm, PE 42230 "500 CARS WANTED BAGLEY AUTO PARTS TOP (DOLLAR F POR | LATE “MODEL cars, Aubarn— Ave. | _ For Sale Used Cars. 61 "50 BUICK SUPER 52R sedan, radio, heater, Dynaflow, new tires, 25,- 000 miles, like new inside and out. It’s a beauty, don’t miss it. Huron Motor Sales 952 W. Huron sss“ PE 23-2641 BUICK ‘51 DELUXE, ¢ DR., PER- fect —, Low mileage. Con- PM . FE $162. iss2 RIVERIA SEDAN, —_ a heater good condition, _ $1725, EM 34422. BUICK “31, DELUXE, 4 DR. PER- fect dondition, Low mileage, Con- sider trade, FE 5-7642. 1953 BUICK SP©CIAL, PULLY equipped... W. W tiree ‘54 iieense, Wxteient it - ennaition One owner. Milford MU 42024. 141 BUICK 4 DR. SEDAN, GOOD condition $100, J. W. Wilson, 61 Whitfield PE 53285. 7 a Bi 42,000 MILES. “A-i _Shape. PE 5-3800 after 6. BUICK ” "40. D co iON | 8%. 7] E. Columbia, . * en . trance, . ’ . “| JACOBSON’S | | We-have "47 through ’51 Hudsons, Come see us for a new or used Hud- son. Your Hudson | Dealer “The best Cost no more than the ‘rest. See it and compare it, Parkhurst Trailer . ~~. =Sales 1840 Lapeer Rd. MY 2-46 r - Lake re a nou trailer ergs te __ Rent Trailer Space . 56) Gordon's Trailer Camp 3200 Eliz, / 52 CHEVROLET 2 door, big fresh air heater, shiny black without a mark, lo mileage. 5 MICHIGAN’S wets = ‘BIG PAVED Lor gee mg ye for $625, PR $-6004. . Ps _ 1s CHEVROLETS * Officials’ & Executives’ Cars New Car Trade-ins_ Big Selection of "Colors & Body Styles “ 2 Drs., 4 Drs., Convertib les As Low As 58 &/OWEN =| Used Car 6 i, a oe a "49 Ford Tudgr, radio and "| 48 Dodge sedan, radio & | — portation ... ’46 Pontiac Tudor, radio __For Sale Used Cars 61 Corral “Branded Specials” ~ It’s easy to pick the car you want at Cy Owens’ Each of these good buys are branded here and on the lot. - “Range Beauty” 53 Ford Tudor, radio, heater. Like new. .$1,495 “Fancy Filly” ‘53 Ferd Tudor, low mile- age, radio, heater $1,395 : “Ranger” 32 Ford Tudor, neat and clean, has radio & heater . oseebe® sa000e% “oe $1245 “High Flyer” "52 Ford Tudor. Here’s a real buy at,...... $1,145 “Western Pride” ‘51 Ford Tudor, clean car, radio & heater .... $895 “Honey Runner”. 52 Pontiac Tudor, a very sharp car severe $1095] Ree Fast Boy” ‘52 Ford convertible, radio, heater and Fordb-. atic ...... “Hale & Hearty” 50 Chevrolet sedan, radio} and heater ........ $695 “Little Darlin’” and heater .....3.. “M ustang”” $545 |. heater. seseteres <> “Bronco” ‘heater, good trans- $295 eeeeee “Pacer” & heater bisvcse sv Aas “Crowbait” 41 Chev. Tudor... .$49.95 “Old Faithful” *41 Pontiac élub coupe eee eerenae $49.95 Rope one of. ‘bees good values today. “GIVE to the March of Dimes” 50 Ford club coupe, radio | 5 |: : ‘USED CARS Will Your ‘Car Start. |Tomorrow?)}, ‘52 Chev. GRAY, 2 DOOR Radio & Heater Very Clean $1, 195 |'50 Buick DYNAFLOW 4 Dr., Radio & Heater Only $695 * ‘02 Stude. - CHAMPION , Radio & Heater $895 - ‘O2 Plym. CRANBROOK Very Clean, 4 Dr., Radio & Heater. $1,095 2 Dr. Transportation 42 Pontiac, clean....$145 "47 Line. cl. cpe....... 345 "42 Chev. 2 dr..,..... 75 "48 Ford 2 dr........ 395 . “GIVE to the * March of Dimes” JACK HAB CHEVROLET S. Saginaw at Cottage wees an FE — clean. is eh ~ Bloat SPOT Dodge 1951 Tudor Sedan Only $595 Full Price Of Course It’s JEROME - OLDS-CADILLAC Used Cars—Orchard Lake at Cass New ow Sern a" “i ist Fn FoR, Sat v8. 2 “on non sae tioty et Shell 53 MERCURYS ‘53 FORDS Tudors and ~ 4 Doors Demonstrators ay FACT TORY OFFICIAL CARS up to se00 Discount . C enact “RETAIL STORE GOODWILL USED CARS “Not a Name but a Policy ye CROSS PROM POST OFFICE . ON MT. CLEMENS ST. BUY YOUR USED CAR FROM A DEALER YOU KNOW _ 1946 AND 1947 FORDS _ PONTIACS CHEVROLETS SPECIAL! '52 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR SEDAN $895 1948 AND 1949 CHEVROLETS PONTIAC FORDS_ SPECIAL! _ "52 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE $2,295 "50, “SL AND *52 — AND A FEW ’S3s CHEVROLETS ° PLYMOUTHS PONTIACS FORDS DODGES OLDSMOBILES HARDTOPS SUBURBANS STATION WAGONS SPECIAL! 31 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN 4 DR. $995 SPECIAL!’ _ ‘49 FORD 4% TON PANEL $445 GIVE to the March of Dimes .. PONTIAC. RETAIL ‘STORE Factory Branch 63 Mt. Clemens at Mill Phone FE 3-7117 3 atic, 2 tone ar. FORD 1949 2 door Baap on Sgt ay : : ry nice. ve 23-7121, WE TRADE FOR LESS "83 Pontiac. deluxe @ 4 dr. .. $1,805 es feat, Sdene tke cata a eich: Gaper, ee - Anderson — Pontiac-Buick 7551 Auburn, Utica, Mich. mi iblic 2-3001 ‘st eet can im at ' home OA" S8an #, 7 DR REALLY files. Shell a. 50. on 0 FORD at condition. | semaases’ ~ = pon ars & Trucks. * a a. < 49 Mash os cchessestnraeres $105 ‘41-Plymouth ee ad 48 PIYWOUD ee peeberteees 408 4 “SL_Dodges Veep ensenecnes “008. 3 *a Piymouths ee) ‘GL Kaiser 2 dO0K.......000. 2008 Plymouth Suburban >> Degree O08 | ‘4 Chevrolet eT ad ‘48 Pontia: Hydramatic ..so5 408. 8) Ford 4 door ......ccscer» 9848 ‘gO Kaiser 4 door ..cryere+- $348 Ah DeSoto 4 door ....esree 9508 80 Mercury ovedrive ssc+s+ $306 QU Bale occ ccceeaeenes 108 , ON WOODWARD AND 13 ILE, ROAD. FE 6-130." Ask for fee. + | 51 Merc., Mercomatic, 4 2 "49 Buick super 2 dr. 49 Ford Cust. “88” 2 dr. 8 | 47 Pont. Chief. “8” sed. : 46 Ford super yw ae, uss iw: REVOLTING! = _ SIX Lone “& el Oli Join The March of Dimes RIEMENSCHNEIDER BROS. 232 S. Saginaw St. Ph. FE2-9131 ; FORD 7 DR. THIS” at 4% Gerkston a MEnco ms, fast overdrive eat] trade Phone Thal. OLive MERCURY ‘51. couré. ‘Pe, _¥u cise. $21 8 Be over ne 48 FRAZER SEDAN Cred reeins are a we pre range, . $95 MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG pave. Lor THE 52 NASH RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE - Custom Equipped ATTRACTIVE BLACK FINISH NEW SEAT CO PRICED TO SELL KIMBALL owt ‘Nash | Dealer | © OPEN 1 NiGiTs *$2 NASH RAMBLERS 4 Beauties To Choose From Station Wagon Hardtor . Convertible $895 MICHIGAN’S FINEST B ‘ight pot 53 Chev. Bel Air, Power- glide, power steering. 53 Olds. “88” sed. 30 Cadillac “62” cpe. '51 Cadillac “62” sed. '52 Buick spec. sed. ‘52 Pont. 2 dr. Chief, “8” 52 Chev. deluxe Tudor 51 Olds. “98” Custom sed, sed '51 Pont. Chieftain “8” sed, ‘51 Olds. super “88” Tudor 51 Chev. Bel Air cpe. | '50 Olds. super “88” sed. 50 Ford Cust. “8” Tudor ’50 Buick spec, sedan 30 Olds. “88” cl, cpe. ‘30 Chev. deluxe 2 dr, "49 Pont. Chief. “8” Tudor 49 Olds. “88” sed, 49 Chev, deluxe Tudor ‘47 Pont. “8” Tudor ~ 48 Chev. club coupe ’47 Ford convertible 46 Pont. Tudor sed. _ ‘THE PONTIA ~ 4dr. deluxe . Don't Get ~ Pushed :| ~ Around Get a- ‘ear that will start and keep going. See these buys at Oliver's today! _. No. 29 . 49 Buick super 4 door’....5....04.. $645 No, 326 *SO0 Pont. Chieftain “8” ~~. A dOOr oo... cece eens $795 _ No, 7 ~'52 Buick super Riviera “door gana $1,895 51 Buic ec, deluxe 2 door *e* 6 Pe ** $1,295 No, 330 49 Olds. “98” 4 drs ° hydramatic ........ 7 No. 342 49. Pont, Chieftain “8” deluxe 2 door . cesveee $745 51 Buick ante. deluxe 2 dr. Dynaflow. + fl, 595 *53 Pontiac, ‘super Catalina . 191 50 Plymouth a re . . No 50 Buick spec. 4 door .. zseree $795 52 Buick super Riviera 2 door . « $1,895 No 250 ‘49 Buick 4 = Dynaflow .......... $695 No, 278 50 Buick special 2 door .......:.+.+. $84 No. 287 49 Buick 2 dr., Dynaflow ......5..5 $695 GIVE to the March of Dimes OLIVER MOTOR SALES 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-910) "9 Nash R205 "51 Cadillac—A Baby rede of gan, No decent offer ee eee ene a . Ae] CONDITION. BELL “FE 44046. ‘s2,° 98. HOLIDAY G66D ya ootn. ow Mie rit 000. mes ra "Maer “#6 OLDS, 8 _ or trade, Condition, $1743. ‘$1 PLYMOUTH bay . New rubber, 32-1308 after 5 ina PLYMOUTH down, 19,000 — Sales, PE 2 ‘SH PL YMOUTH - mark. SEDAN . f "ere lla ie = ma MICHIGAN’S FINEST fg LoT CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13. MILE ROAD RUSS’ USED CAR LOT a 5 PLYMOUTH PB 5g 9 coupe, This wih R & ae qurecuonal es | Mich, “Tie Soe a fo. Lucky ~ Retail. ~ BUYERS OF ~~ Wholesale PRICED CARS IN > “a ~~ “5 DAYS We are continuing our. + wholesale drive with} these fine” reconditioned used cars. > igs ’46 Pontiac eodanetis 46 Buick Tudor® ’47 Olds clb, epe. 49 Pontiac clb. cpe, incoln Fordor ¢ ’52 Ford > All of these ca?Psare equipped with heate Most have radios and some are equipped with automatic shifts, The body and tires on all are up to par. Cash in on these bargains today. . NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY Pike St. Lot Cor. Pike & Cass PHONES FE 4-3885 FE 4-5114 FE 2-9167 PONTIAC noe a DR a © & 4H, $1,795. Your ‘# On “« MODEL wilt make « no “DELUXE. Other extras. FE 23-9306, " PONTIAC, 8. DELUX, 4 O% price si8ss., PIE 2: faviate ee STATION its i? ral he Baie ie spot 50 PONTIAC * “8” SEDAN A reaty peontil ~. Batis, no wd five good tires, $695 MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD meus PE Pa +-dr,, bydre- ites PONTIAC CATALIN 8 STAR Chief, big @ PONTIAC. 53, 8, custom. GATA- Radio, of ex oo: 5,000 miles. ai ies. on 408, 1953 Stude; Champ, hard- 2-tone, OD, WW, R [, My equity or older car and take over pay- ments, Call at FE 2-0725 betweerl 3:30 and 6:00. “ery, Bet tor Bae rE . LOOK "Gerken ha MYII11 a | ‘50 | For Sale Used Trucks “621 “TRUCKS - RECONDITION: ED. RIGHT : IN A SEPARATE SHOP (Cre Here's that handy extra ‘ \ for only —$i50 '50 CHEV. ¥4-TON PANEL Excellent condition, very attractive looking for our business. $650 MODEST Jennie E es ain Asdpic, tulsa . what t said? “iowa 1 tow i was golng {insult you until T heard | For Sale Used Trucks 62 ae F-5 dumping stake,” ft.), V-8 engine, new paint job, Here is a smooth running truck that will save any con- tractor the price of am. extra truck.~ See it to- day! This one won't last, long. $745 GIVE to the . March of Dimes THE THRIFTY TRUCKERS LOT JACK HAB CHEVROLET” S, Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-4546 a | "51 CHEVROLET % TON PICKU ber and good MICHIC. XN's . FINEST « THE BIG PAVED Lor WOODWARD AND 1) MILE ROAD ARD/AND 13 MILE A-1 USED TRUCKS "52 Ford F-6 tractor, mo- tor is NEW, excellent tires; 5th wheel, saddle tanks—ready to roll. ea 3 STUDEBAKER yy Fog hag om "See - MICHIGAN’S FINEST seeatwet |°51 Ford F-6 dump, a 5 ‘ pa Fasiness sereetecee SHS} base cab & chassis, ideal for dump or tractor. real worker, a real money - maker ss..sceies LIAS base, cab & brakes, 10:00 tires. | any business settee $1 Ford F-7 tractor — A ‘real beauty, plenty. ge seteeseterene § et 52 Ford tractor, rs C.0.E., good tires, $1,24 finisn, | '50 Dodge, se dum good: tires, = ton RA |49-GMC dums, very good | ‘condition, ready to go to work sence af #5295 48 Ford % for any teen Really clean, _ pod. "nigh, rub- ~|°52- Ford -F-6, short wheel | i#3 ‘51 Ford F-6, long wheel | ' chassis. '51. Ford F-8, full air am JEROME | FORD F-84 135” Tractor $895 ‘Sl FORD F-6 12 Ft;-Stake $995 LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer Ph. OL 1-971 “FOR MORE THAN 36 YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO BUY". ores EVENINGS Wihape. low Sire a pennant ‘4 FOR Siete EE —— “@ CHEVROLET DUMP TAKE _over payments, FE 44350, PONTIAEC’S ONLY Exelusive Truck Dealer WILSON GMC 809 S. Woodward 7 FE 4-4531 an An kt “For S Sale Motorcycles Rod Sr ue Lae oe Ne “eas PARTS BURSTS Hanixy '51 Ford panel, handy for | "Bren )~Rochester Ford Dealer ~ ] _SHOP SUBURBAN - | Sale Howselold Goods 71 - WAYNE GABERTS La “USED. TRADE-IN CLEARANCE Fr? ws 80 50 58 56 $8 wane » < CRED it BMS THOMAS Bere st F ENT URE co. 361.58. Saginaw BALE EASY & SAVE Where your qlee have more sense . Sales Co, The at the L. & & PE 22357 Seiya Cr. GAS CLOTHES DRYERS, 3 DAY “3 Go? ie bons. Phillb 4 chi Ave, FE‘ 20196. % AND ONE, #6. FE » AUTOMATIC WASHER. mat. EM 41-2440 ary ps SILVER, “CHINA ton NG AT A BIG At. ‘Wail Tile. * 8S Oe a7 it ‘WALs. o Me . Bonny Maia inlsid Vin: CxS LINOLEUMS. » $1.39 CONGOLEUM ..... woe 14l- W. Huron SEWINO “MACHINES, ALL MAKES. New, used, remain, We, e o. ‘hell's | Soe deed os EPRIGERATORS $25 a iKD Used auto. wash- ; Bove Automatic Norge ‘6. Men's suits and 42. pmmeers se a Wire 6 i wi pMACHKINE. Pine nso hd. OR 3-6 = Washer, like new, | table, lamp, ia- Gas and electric ranges... $00 Saker temotapeien mattresses $97; Beds, Taps. mM Sees. «: a n AYTON’S #1 90m Ore ortard Lk. Rd., ee 6D mame CEDAR LINED WARD- robe chert, wasut finish, Good *| easy ar IE 21785, oe ER WASHER. 1 spe _ best cies ae UT ~ BALE: ry Roys ased aay cL2 — 3 and gua: $39.50 wu Oakland. ‘Ave. — | REBUILT eT MAY TAO WASHER, MATTRESSES AND HOLLYWOOD beds, all cew you save, “i Sat. Hi'berg 52 Williams, FE AUTOMATIC ! WASHER, 5 YEARS Good condition, $50. 7 DROP LEAP DINETTE SETS, 1 coffee table, PE 2-0934, “ ‘¢ DRAWER CEDAR LINED WARD- yerators Used Ran- ‘Bees te see Osed ‘ou 4H.o- pe ied SHOP oF PONTIAC $t_W. Huron « FE 41585 2 face 1 a” pnooms Ss ‘SUITE. rE @vicx HEAT AND 5 Ligsaabe guarantee Pe rt ‘ omeyneetanes WASHER fee. FE e201, will sacri- mb coon ee TABLE. MAHOGANY 4 $80, Console server $15. _OR 3-9217. SPECIALS ~~ Table ~_ — nenes $25 Electric $15 3" ‘Admiral television asbaes $60 Drop leaf table ... ... ...... $5 Waterfall bedroen ovine i] Secretary desk seve $16 $25 $20 FLOOR: SAMPLE ne a 95 DuoTherm 6 ee, i - $1.50 6S est SRERGER WARNER | tu 5 WOLVERINE LUMBER & WRECKING CO 300 8, Paddock FE 2-07 ans en: ae. iain & decorative, Kitch- abinet doors—drawers made te graer PLYWOOD CO. INSULATION . STORM DOORS COMB: STORM SASH Awning Type Windows M. A. BENSON Closed | LAVATORIES USED HEATING _ EQUIPMENT © es $20.00 up 1 Lechinvar Oil bu ~ ONOLEUIE Oxi2, $3.55 ack ag house en re ia) Gas OPERATED STEAM BOILER, hacen Mian te te “7 me Radius ke seving you ° EM 53-4650" ” paate peers: & silk puffers, Good $9422, EM 3- 3996 » ets, ‘ : mowers, new sed. | OPEN 8 A.M. TO 8PM a Lams a es SUNDAY 10 TO 3 Ward Ave. 14 Mile a See | LUMBER |. 2. ; " : _ We take trade-ins. ~ ” TRANSISTOR BEARING | ais, ixt W, PINE Bann ahaead M, . tree femene antes stats , 2* rock wail ins CEMENT BLOCKS” 4x8 cedar siding tmmstintsly delivered. at Sheffield | Combinat, - 401 or FE 1275 ‘24's K. 0 aa tee i * Lenion - = Rock + $ ALL Gizes GAs “&_ ELECTRIC | Birch doors Pee heat and cook sete y¥ sute- 4x 8 : matic electric itien fur- naces and ay urnaces, caPbu- SHEET _ Fetors apd parts for of! parners, —— bottle gas piates and oe fittings for trailers and cabins. ~ $1.35 PETRO HEAT SERVICE CO 142 White~Pine per Mo... - 06 Associated with an “Exchange HARDW. “PL Open Evenings & “Bunday D IF-YOU ARE BUILDING A HOUSE pen m. '$ Bor Waren mEaTEns. % GAL | RYE QUT 20 RURMPRTERS os a aupeoree had use ot MATERIALS ison. Sonsumer lines ah e. tently Egon Ane broad Make Suse T's , ¢ gas heaters : at terrifie values. Michigan Burmeisters Plucresee;t 93 Orehasd Lake Ave . ~ aS GAL OPEN READ - STEEL Northern Lumber Co. dru to rning. rubbish. 81) $197 Coaley bake Rd eae 4380 6 dosiyn Ra. FE 5-6312 WE DELIVER DACH SH O'N D _ Bt with chtiaseer ‘OR 3.1258. Ortonville 130 Foe HOME AQUARIUM, TROPT- ea! fish and supple FE 41873. isé State s. Dogs Trained, Board 82 BOARDING, BATHING ping. 74 NL & CLIP. 7) PIECE DAVENPORT | suire, No, 3 oak flooring per M $96.50). ¢0 od. FE aa: : 4 om. mobair, good condition, in. |}Mabogany flush ec cee STL ET eng after 2 pm, 43 Dakota | Birch flush core sees PLUMBING aunts fet anak ger eT Se Cash & Carry Sale ED. MAPi#” BOX “a oer vee ° ie = pring & © fe Bambee. $35. _MI 4-6285. i beth. » ong ost. “samen 6 ft. steel bath R MODELS 0 HAVE SOLD MY HOME” AND | New fr Toilets $22.95 Pree. standing toilets, _ have to move this week and want Ie TRE B. ARG. AINS . $25.00 vo get rid of my furniture, FE 19x17 chin hesins, leas trim. $12.50 2-0043 : fomilation, per roll was | 3 am bs CE H EATERS gee ea gee me mene ASOT er & : =| MSA i TV, GOOD "CONDITION, | 4.83, sheet rock ee $i.oe ‘ Gas TO ; GOOD CONDITION. Bee us for yy em im sav j ! ee C8 ia 4 f Om ca anai | fA ft -F-*- phumb- | 75'000 BTU $108.16 __ 080, PEP E taantestals, ¥ MANOOARY abd Gree WIM- | cagD REPRIO. etOves, POR ARNASON “puiuentic grea. hate Seo] Geces, of puriere, hy ete. | M15 Ph. mages | , tae Oo tee We Daee KITCHEN CABINET SINKS, BEAU- Woes" er AL, $12. PE | ceinPoRCED CONCRETE SEPTIC | 'f0! 42° model. $05 value. se 0, 0 eter 6 ee OR ee Cignty martes te sat = ELECTS A-l COND. : seve mode Fe 3 top burners well. s0x".| AIR COMPRESSORS | fic vaines. Michigan Pi Cheap, 3315 , Scott lake, ELEC SEWER CLEANER, WALL- Orchard Lake Ave Ge eae nine at GAZE EF STEAMER, “SPACE FURNACES es an an Feasonable year factory guar Square Mi 4.5251, ™ oF GONE’ S RENTAL duets or found, of] or gas com —STe eel 1261 BALDWIN ¥ burners. F.HLA, terms. WAREHOUSE ri | Call Stan Garwood. “EM 3-2060. ‘CLEARANCE PLY WOOD JACKSON'S RENTAL Chain electric hammers, “Ger dram pump, FE oar. HEATING STOVE, 5 Rif, fire-brick lined. Holds 100 Ibs. coal, Used 3 mos Gives good, steady heat, $25 with of pipe. 1120 N. Woodward 2, oie. SACRIFICE A arpets dryer, *& misc. equipment. All you need for your own room. All re- ie. eT ELEC. SPANISH GUITAR & AMP. lent Will sell both 3-7008, ee eed APPLES CASE 300 Ee ae DRIVE WITH. OR A ; e < Clean everything faster... better with a TANK TYPE KENMORE You Receive Up to $20.00 in Credit Purchase Coupon Books | When You Buy a ‘Sewing Machine! Up to 510. 00 With Vecuums! you CAN afford a modern new sewing machine at Sears low price gn Includes $10 Coupon Book ” NEW ... NOT REBUILTS Ls b All ) Beautiful walnut fin- Phone } Soom, Roebuck, snd ce. ’ “iF ished hardwood cab- 4 naw St. : COUPON BOOK im |. 4net! A fine occasional “t gt : ie el ‘ WHEN YOU BUY | | table for your living " Free g Gentlemen: Please send me further : . room. Many other g information describing Sewing THIS styles available! HOME TRIAL oor a ae vee } KENMORE i Avambansedsnas ~ y-- in sebbeenect 4 U on ‘Mail This . ' ! ’ ° STREET 2... cc ceeeees PHONE .. 2000: . ff VACUUM Theresa Kenmore Pied st 238.25. eerie, Def TT Room | ee oe with Up to $20 Coupon Book Included!.. *" 6 tO as ee Sire USE SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN On Small them Purcheses Teteling $20 or More... Ask Any Salesperson. es $ 3 = « 2s | | $10 DOWN DELIVERS Unbelievable . . . but true! Sears shatters the price $36 on famous Kenmore for this sale! it’s fully automatic, it washes, rinses, spin dries a giant 9-Ib. load in minutes! Just set it and forget it! With powerful agitator action, T-rinses to get clothes sparkling clean. Regular. $244. 9. Reg. 264.95 tubers with Suds- Saver. . caves eae ee pitt 3 '» | DELIVERS , Kenmore Gas Dryer at a comparison-defying price! “The | automatic controls lets you select any drying temperature. Visi-Dial controls action . . . new Load-A-Door acts as a shelf! This low price includes installation by Consumers Power on their lines according to their schedule! Save now! NEW ELECTRIC DRYER Low Budget Price Includes Installation! Save! Reg. 159.95! $5 DOWN DELIVERS Shop the town, compare prices . . . you won't find another | quality like this Kenmore for | less! t's complete with auto- the wa timer that shuts off when «4 wash.is done! Visi-Matic, a -see the entire * ee it, buy it now f serve output”. Wood cabinet is artificial leather... _Gives_a-— sharp Buy Now—Save over °21! Silvertone table model TV Regularly Priced at 189. $5 DOWN DELIVERS Wait no longer to enjoy seeing your favorite stars on television at a 21.00 saving! - The Silvertone SRO chassis gives better reception even in remote areds because of its “‘re- covered. with mahogany colored 17in. picture, — with sdfety Saat Buy now . . . save more ot SAVE OVER $17 New Silvertone Model! Consolette 3-Speed Record Changer is 10.2" % DOWN Here it is! The smart’ new Reg. 44.95 39.88 Siverions gation ———— an % DOWN Tun RF radio stage brings Smartly designed cabinet has 7 greater serisitivity... The 8 easy Roto-sweep dial. peed aufomatic changer Best AM/EM plays all sizes, all speeds, i} és ae le opens er Save! Kitchen Radios Built-In Radionet Antenna Reg. 18.95 — 16.88 Ideal in f a home in any Se te ee ‘ieeen oh den. Dany esa oe a Priced for yr avinga! | in radionet more on thie easy fo tune slide sche ‘Thousands of uses Frown blauty.” Brown plastic. oes is Paz, ugha et ie North Séginaw St. | 2 ‘Phone FE 5-41 .