The Weather Tuesday: Details page two Thundershowers THE PONTIAC PRE —— GHAKE OVER Pag 112th YEAR . x *& & & & PONTIAC, M ICHIGAN, MONDAY, JUN E 14, 1954 —80 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 7° o School Expansion Up For Vote Today * 3 Die in Birmingham Fire; Lakes Claim 4 Mother,2 Sons | _ Smoke Victims as Home Burns |¢ Mrs. Maureen Couper, Boys Trapped on 2nd Floor by Flames The wife and two sons of a Detroit business executive were killed early today when flames swept their colonial-style home at 1189 Brookwood in the northwest part of Birmingham. Although Birmingham police placed an immediate shore-to-ship call to the cruise ship on which the executive, Thomas Couper, was sailing, he was not noti- fied of the tragedy until about eight hours later. Dead of suffocation are: Mrs. Maureen Couper, 40. Larry Couper, 14. Danny Couper, 12. Mrs. Couper’s father, Lawrence Cross, 62, of Phoenix, Ariz., a visi- tor in the house was rescued by firemen. He is reported in satis- factory condition in St. Joseph Mer. | cy Hospital, after suffering from shock and smoke inhalation. Fire Chief Vernon W. Griffith said the biaze started in the den, located on the first front of the two which was valued An electric clock in the den was stopped at 11:35 p.m. Another clock upstairs wag stopped at 12:4 a.m., leading Griffith to believe the fire had smoldered for some time be- fore bursting into flames. floor, at the - stery home, at $60 tome Where Mother and Two Sons Perished Ste len aad Tectia hedieeatiennl i > The bodies of Mrs. Couper and her older son were found on the | second floor bathroom floor. Au- thorities said they evidently had tried to go out a window which opened a few feet above the roof of the rear porch. The body of the youngest son was found on the floor of his bed- room, just above the den. So intense was the heat that aluminum storm windows and doors in the northeast corner of the house were melted. | A neighbor, Jack Laula of 1220 Brookwood, discovered the fire at 12:50 a.m. “I was just getting in bed when I | heard a noise coming from the | window. I got out of bed to see (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Judge Tries to Sell jc Bootlegger on Cell NASHVILLE, Tenn. #—Sessions Judge Herbert E. Moses was walk- ing toward the courthouse with a briefcase yesterday when a man approached him to buy whisky. “IT suggested the rest room on the sixth floor of the courthouse as the best place for the transac- tion and we started there,”’ the judge said. But his propsective customer | fled, Moses added, apparently | aware that the sixth floor houses! the county jail. Accidents Kill ny Over Weekend © Residents Ignore Storm, Michigan's hot and humid week- end as thousands of citizens sought relief at lakes and streams. jnear Berrien Springs, was struck | grees to 69 in 10 minutes. | from fatally injured near his home. | 92-year-old James Wood of Kala- | mazoo. He died Saturday night. | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) x pet BA Birmingham, in which a mother and two sons died early this morning | | when they were unable to reach fresh air as heavy smoke from a fire | Marting on the first floor engulfed them as they sle pt. Michigan Deaths Soar Flock. to Beaches, Parks as Heat-Sufferers Seek Relief - Saturday's severe thunderstorm failed to daunt resi- dents bent on seeking relief after a week of sweltering By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | heat. They hit lgcal beaches and parks in invasion-like | At least 16 persons drowned over | waves, rolling up new sedson attendance records for the | year. An estimated 75,000 were in area state parks yesterday, | clogging all Aighways far into the evening in the home- ward rush; according to — Police and Oakland County ion and four persons were killed sheriff's deputies. Park officials said sun-| day’s figures were tops sO far this year. The storm, which swept in at |4:40 p.m. Saturday with gusts of wind up to 65 miles per hour, White Will Quit, a ee pene as Young Goes In | Central’s Naw Leader | 1,067,273 Votes Ahead | One man died of heat prostra- dames Story, 8, son of Cari Story of St. Joseph, drowned Sunday in Lake Michigan off St. dose ph. Four-year-old William Koebel his bicycle Sunday and Michigan Bell Telephone and | Consumers Power Co, had 300 homes without service as a re- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) | ‘Arson Suspected The heat prostration victim was BANY, N. Y. (INS) — Rob- rt R. Young today won control | of the New York Central Railroad. | The formal announcement of th- Goodwin, 35, of Willow drowned Sunday while L. C. Run, in Bitter Proxy Fight | | | Carr Subs for M'Carthy, Backs ‘Blackmail’ Charge WASHINGTON (INS)—Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy’s chief investigator, Francis P. Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens said he would “take care” of Pvt. G. David Schine by assigning him to hunt subversion in Army Intelligence schools. Carr tbok the witness stand as the McCarthy-Army hearings entered their eighth and possibly final week. He was called as a temporary replacement for the Wis- consin senator, who was resting after a strenuous week- end speechmaking tour. The former FBI agent swo made by McCarthy and his chief counsel, Roy M. Cohn, end of his bitter proxy battle for control of the multi-billion dol- lar road — second largest in the gave these totals in White Lake Fire Arson is suspected in connection countrv- with a house fire at 9720 Elizabeth Lake Rd.. White Lake Township, Young group 3,407,512 according to Oakland County sher Management group 2,340,329 iff's deputies Young margin of victory was oan Mrs. Vernon Shepard, whose hus- 1,067,273 Wles _ enough Pd give Carr, testified today that) band owns the home. said she was hina canted eve df ihe. Ceriesl awakened early today by a car with snort pipes making a noise heard an explosion a short time later. followed by fire. she told Deputies Melvin Glover Al William White, president of the bert DeConinck Central who led the long fight Mark Ilton. Town: against Young, announced he will said there was a strong quit as head of the compeny management group contested 800, - 000 shares held by two Young supporters and hip fire chief odor of that Stevens and Army* Counselor John G. Adams used Schine as a “hostage” in a “blackmail” plot aimed at killing off a probe of al- leged Communist espionage in the Army radar center. Before Carr began testifying Chairman Kari E. Mundt (R-S.D.) made it plain that he is deter- mined to prevent new outbreaks of personal ‘‘feuding”’ such as the hot clash late last Friday be | tween Cohn and minority counsel! kerosene on the door mat and from The outgoing president in a a nearby gallon jug Firemen statement promised to cooperate in ‘ . oan . turning over the affairs of the g lames under control * re to the truth of charges >rought the flam tes og ae B after it had caused about $500 Central to Young. He said _. damage sili said “New York Central’, share- holders have registered inet” choice, We of course abide by the | In Today’s Press | Robert F. Kennedy. decision, We believe in democ- . . Rilly Rose 4 racy in industry as well as in Carr said that Stevens’ an- Sirminghem fs government, That is the Ameri- nouncement that he would not Comics _ tt can way; the way all of us want grant Schine a commission but | $277)" .\."",.. fi eG to preserve at all costs. +4 9 . = ee ee | ee | We tought rod ta for wit Army Intelligence schools was Markets *¢ | we sincerely believed — and still (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Poteeres ee a2 believe — to be the best inter- Theaters ~ a> | ests of the stockholders, of the pub- Gumen’s Town & Country, Tet Heres LSiblengee d frre uu. ta ot, =| lic and of the New York Central. Open every night ‘tt! @ o'clock Women's Pages ‘40, 1f, a2 «T have no regrets.” City Schoo Pontiae Press Phote® GUTTED BY FLAMES — This is the house at 1189 Brookwood, i | to succeed retiring Premier Jo- | last night on the political sit- Mendes-France Replaces Laniel Political Figures Doubt That He Can Achieve Majority in Assembly PARIS uw» — Pierre Mendes- France, who wants to negotiate | |with Ho Chi Minh to end the war in Indochina, agreed today to try Child Drowns; Boat Accident Kills Detroiter Bodies of Two Others Still Missing in Stoney and Cass Waters Two persons drowned in Oakland County over the weekend, one man was killed in a motorboat mishap, and a fourth person is believed Herman Baum, 28, of 2960 Lycaste, Detroit. Joseph Woodhall, 8, of larridge, Clarkston. ; ‘ of 19195 i : ALE i hl ; i z¢ i} Albert Schultz, 41, of 1711 E. Lake Dr., Walled Lake, op- erater of the motor beat, told Gordon told deputies that no one (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) to form France's 2th postwar | Cabinet. Many political figures doubted 'whether the 47-year-old economic jand financial expert could get a | majority in the divided National Assembly to go along with his pol. | icy, which calls for cutting down expenditures in Indochina and slowing down France's military buildup in Europe Mendes-France was nominated last night by President Rene Coty seph Laniel, defeated Saturday in a National Assembly confi- |Richard Nixon said dence vote. The President also accepted Laniel's resignation. Mendes-France is a leader of the Assembly's Radical Socialist | (moderate) bloc, which was cred- | ited with bringing down the Laniel government. Following normal procedure, he was the first person | called on to try to form a re-| placement Coty delayed accepting Laniel's | resignation for a day. It was be- lieved he did not want France to! be without a government over the | weekend in case sions were needed concerning In- dochina. Mendes - France's acceptance was announced a few minutes after he called on the President today at the” Elysee Palace (France's White House). He had conferred with Coty at length uation. The new Premier-designate now must consult various party leaders in an attempt to ray sufficient support to ensure his confirmation |' by the Assembly, He failed by 13 votes to gain confirmation as premier during last summer's 37- day government crisis. That crisis was finally resolved by the selec- tion of Laniel, who served just two weeks short of a year. Usmen’s Town & Country, Tel-Reres important deci- | Open every night ‘til 8 o'clock Nixon Looks Forward — |to Hearing’s Conclusion NEW YORK W—Vice President today he thought “it will be a good thing for the country’’ when the Army- McCarthy hearings are concluded. “The people, and I may add the Senate, ought to be directing their interest to more important busi- ness," he said. drowned in Stoney Lake,| « ge it heads for its ; roost at t airport. ~- = — - Oxford. pl -. —_—s Soo Bush Pilot Adds Pigeons to His Airways SAULT STE. MARIE w# — A Michigan bush pilot has found a way to combat emergencies that arise among the hunters and fish- ermen he flies to remote spots in the Canadian back country, Keith Messenger of Sault Ste. Marie is augmenting his Soo Air- ways with homing pigeons. When he sets a party down in isolated areas far from normal means of communication, Messen- ger leaves a cage of three homing pigeons. If an emergency turns up, a note is slipped into the leg band communications service put to good use. A party he had flown to Patter Lake, 6 miles north of the Sod, ran low on food. A yal POY carried the message to the air- port. And only three hours after it had-heen released, Messenger land- ed on the lake with the provisions. U.N. Offers Plan to Revive Korea Nearly 2 Billion in Aid Needed to Help Country Get Back on Its Feet UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. —A five-year plan to make South Ko- rea self-supporting by 1958 has been published by the United Na- tions. The cost of the program would be $1,990,000,000 of which $1,240,000,000 would have to come from the United States and the UN, Early Ballots Indicate Interest Running High Polls Stay Open Until 8; Taxes, Board Election Major Issues Officials of Pontiac Pub- lic Schools expected one of the heaviest Pontiac school election votes on record today as 380 voters cast ballots early this morning. “That's definitely a nent ier-than-usual early-morn ing vote for school elec- tions,” ng takes a sharp u in the — Font dangeary dog The plan calls Ytor an increase by 1958-59 of 81 per cent ‘in the gross national output above 1952-53 fig- ures. This would mean a 42 per cent jump over output in 1949-50, the year of the Communist inva- sion. The program also envisages a vast increase in exports, more trade with Japan, construction of 300,000 homes, fiscal and govern- mental reforms and a shift away from rice in the South Korean The school system is asking voters to let it levy taxes 6.25 mills over the 15 mill timit from 19566 unti}? 1967 and 8.75 mills over the limit from 1968-1964. Actually, the net tax increase would only be about 4.25 mills ($4.25 per $1,000 worth of assessed property) because two school taxes now being spread will end—one this year and another in 1957, The proposal would hold the total Pon- tiac school tax rate at about 18.45 mills from now through 1964. This would mean a tax bill about $13 diet. The plan was outlined in a 488- page report critical, in part, of | President Syngman Rhee's admin- istration. The report, offered as the groundwork for joint U.N.- Korean planning, was made public | Sunday night by the U.N. Korean | Reconstruction Agency. The report did not mention Rhee | personally but it recommended | “sweeping changes and improve- ments” in government policies, | particularly in “the efficiency and | integrity of Korean public admin- istration."’ | higher for the owner of a home | valued by the county ag $3,000. School board members say that unless the tax program passes, thé school system will soon have to start half-day sessions. Unless the program goes through, they say, there won't be enough clas¢rooms or enough teachers to keep youngsters in schoo! for a full day. The tax program, school offi- cials explain, would ease both sides of the school financial squeeze. It would build $9,000,000 worth (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Garage Smashed During High Wind 3 Th “aa ‘ Try hoe. DAMAGE — Winds clocked at 65 miles an hour in Saturday’ $ savage thunderstorm toppled this lr. McCarthy at big elm tree onto the garage at the home of Joseph | parked partly inside the garage, was undamaged. Pontiac Press Phew 300 Draper Ave. paid car, — | clecti on Polls Open Until 8 P.M. Ed / a nay rr re ae ee Birmingham From Our Birmingham Bureas BIRMINGHAM — Mostly routine business fills the agenda for to- night's City Commission meeting, with six hearings scheduled and further discussion to be held on the year’s sidewalk repair pro- gram, Assessments will be reviewed at hearings for both the light oil and the mat-and-seal road oil treat- ments. Other assessments to be reviewed include Torry paving north from Holland for 111 feet Cart Takes Stand, Backs McCarthy (Continued From Page One) made in the secretary's Penta- gen office last Oct. 2. The ex-G-man later told of al- leged efforts by Stevens and Adams to halt McCarthy's probe of sus- pected Red spies in the radar center at Fort Monmouth, N. J., and confirmed previous McCarthy- side testimony that the secretary said he would “have to resign’ if the investigation continued. Carr, in testifying about Stevens’ purported plans for Schine, said it wag his recollection that the secretary brought up the name of the former McCarthy committee also involved a socalled “biack- out order” relating to Fort Mon- mouth, and that Stevens telephoned Maj. Gen. Kirke B. Lawton, Mon- mouth commander, and told him to lift the order. Later in the conversation, Carr testified, Stevens brought up Schine’s name and said that ‘‘Mr. Schine was not going to receive a commission but he would take care of Mr. Schine to the advan- tage of Mr. Stevens and the Army by placing him in_ Intelligence Schools to observe and report to The senator and his counsel maintain there was no pressure lected to attend the eighth sum- AES ‘om and sewer construction on Bowers | street between Hunter and Adams. | Creation of a special assens- ment district to acquire the nec- essary right-of-way, and for pav- ing and fencing the vacated por- tion of Yankee South to the edge ef the Porritt property, also will be under discussion. If a manager's recommendation is approved, the question of the i sale of six lots in an area bounded |by E. Maple, Coolidge, Yorkshire jand St. Andrews will be voted on at the Aug. 3 election Despite soaring temperatures proper snow removal methods for the coming winter will be under | consideration, as will stricter en- forcement of an ordinance which | prohibits dumping dirt, leaves and other debris on streets or vacant lots. } * * * A recognition program honoring | graduating seniors will follow to-| |night's final summer Youth Night | |supper at the First Methodist | Church. The picnic supper will be- gin at 6:30. Slides taken of the young people during the past year | will be shown. . . * Taking a breathing spell, Ki- wants Club members have planned no program for tomer. row's dinner meeting at 6:30 p-m. at the Community House. > . . Four staff members of two Cran- brook institutions have been se- | mer session of the National Train- ing Laboratory in Group Develop- ment to be held at the Gould Academy, Bethel, Maine, from June 2 to July 10. The Reverends Perry R. Wil- liams and William Norvell of Christ Church Cranbrook, Marion ‘E. Goodale, headmistress of Kings- wood School, and her assistant, Grace Fry, will join delegates from al] over the country in a three-week study of social changes and human relations. . , * ¢ « Circles I, IT and V of the Con- gregational Church have 12.30 p.m meetings scheduled for tomorrow. Circle I will meet with Mrs. Wil- liam Rigley at her home on Bed- ford road, while Circle II will travel to the Union Lake summer home of Mrs. F. W. Donaldson Mrs. Walter Weitzel will be hos- tess for Circle V at her Pierce street residence . * . A basiness meeting will follow temerrow's noon luncheon of the . mission Accidental Deaths Schedules Six Hearings, Hit21inMichigan |... Sidewalk Repair Debate : Owe | | (Continued From Page One) swimming in Ford Lake ne Ypsilanti, : of Detroit drowned Sunday while swimming in Cass Lake near Pontiac. Fugene Walsh, 2, of Willow Run, reported missing and pre- sumed to have drowned Sunday while swimming in Murray Lake. Herman Baum, 28 was His body has not been recovered. Joseph Woodhall, 8, of Clark- ston, drowned Sunday in Square Lake, a mile southwest of Pon- tiac, while on a tamily picnic. Harold Schaub, 16, of Sutton’s Bay, drowned Sunday in Lake Lee- lanau Channel while on a swim- ming party Gerald Jones. a 14-year-old Flint youth, drowned Sunday while fish- ing alone from a small boat on Lake Fenton, 10 miles southwest of Flint blevea-year-old Kenneth Mick, of Davison, was killed Sunday when struck by a car on Mtl two miles east of Flint. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 14, 1954 MAYOR GETS X-RAY — Pontiac Mayor William W. Donaldson bw Die in Home Blaze a | (Contmued From Page One) what it was.and saw the house in flames he said He the and ran across to the Couper home He broke the kitchen door, but was | immediately repelled by smoke and flames. Then he went to the rear of the house to the covered porch. He picked up a lawn chair and |} smashed a window, but was again | stopped by the heat and smoke. Meantime, he said, he kept shouting to wake up the people in the house. called fire department who also tried to enter the house Seconds later, Patrolmen Joseph Buckles and Robert Rowe ar- rived. They broke a second floor storm window in Cross’ room, but | were unable to break through a | screen. | Firemen who soon arrived, put a ‘ladder up to the window and a fireman slashed the screen to reach Cross. Griffith quoted Cross as saying he woke up and realized the house His shouts attracted neighbors, | bie | om Mother and 2 Sons | = was on fire. He opened his bed- , . hte: room door, he said, but then |drowned Sunday while swimming Benjamin Sadler, 45, of Orton- | showed up with Mrs. Donaldson for an X-ray as two chest X-ray vans ville, was killed Sunday in a two | started checking the Pontiac public for tuberculosis this week. One | car collision at an intersection of | of the units is taking free chest photos at Oakland County Courthouse, Green road, a mile south of Good-| }1uron and Saginaw streets, this week while another tours the city rich : , making neighborhood stops. Hours are noon until 8 p.m. today through Edwin Wickert. 18, of Clare, | Thursday and 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. Friday in the Tobacco River in Clare County Mrs. R. M. Bautel Nerman Erb, 13, of Detroit, was killed Sunday when he was was ited Sanday shen be ee Succumbs at Age 69 while swimming in Walled Lake. | Mrs. R. M. (Mary L.) Bautel, Ralph Laduke, 15, of Grand 69 of 200 Liberty St. died at her Rapids, drowned Saturday while | esidence yesterday after a one- swimming in Hoag Lake, 20 miles | yeer itt : of Hastings in Barry Coun- ae ns in St. on ? Aug. 24, 1883, the daughter of Wil- Robert Taylor, 27. of Detroit. | liam end Mery BD H ‘She drowned Saturday night in Little | ried Mr. Bautel in St. Johns Pleasant Lake, eight miles east of in March 1909. Jackson, while boating with two | Mrs. Bautel. who came here companions from Lansing, was a drapery de- signer at Moll's interior furnish- ings. Surviving are two sisters and two brothers, Robert and Frank ° Heuer, both of St. Johns, Mrs. trots Reage Fark. Anna Downham of Lansing and Christopher Zidell, a %year-old| Mrs. Emma Keisling of Laings- Kalamazoo boy, drowned Sunday | burg. in Pickerel Lake, two miles north- Funeral will be Wednesday at east of Vicksburg, when he stepped | 1 p.m. from the Voorhees-Siple into a hole while wading near the | Funeral Home with burial in Mount shore | Rest Cemetery, St. Johns. Dr. Mil- A seven-bour search Saturday by | ton H. Bank of the Central Metho- | dist Church will officiate a sheriff's posse and State Police. | Luther H. Kelley Eight-year-old Judy Beirne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pat- rick Beirne of Detroit, drowned Sunday in Brennan Pool at De- REP. GEORGE DONDERO St. Lawrence Plan Subject for Speech A‘ talk on Americanism and the |slammed it shut when he saw the |smoke and flames. Efforts to reach Couper, a vice president of the L. A. Young Spring & Wire Co., Detroit, were ham- pered when crew members of the SS Tadoussac reportedly refused to awaken the ship's captain. Couper was finally notified about 8:30 a.m. The ship was scheduled to dock in Montreal at 1 p. m. the city’s single station and were called to extinguish an automobile alarm was turned in. The entire first floor of the nine- room house was gutted and the second floor was damaged by smoke Griffith estimated the house and furnishings at $60,000 and said dam- age would probably total about $50,000. wy Try SIMMS to: Your BEST Possible PICTURES Birmingham volunteers manned | old Jesse Villa, of Lansing, was found in the Grand River at Lyons, eight miles east of Ionia A special Donald Hyde, 21, of Kalamazoo. problems, being beld today through | and his brother, Lawrence, 30, of Exchange Club, to be held at the Community House, * . * juvenile | course on aided by a State Police airplane, | ended when the body of 3'y-year- Luther Herbert Kelley, 67. of | effect of the St. Lawrence Seaway | Wolverine, formerly of Pontiac, | on Oakland County wil] be deliv- died Saturday at Dearborn Vet-| ered Wednesday at a 6:30 p.m. erans Hospital. dinner meeting in the Elks Temple, HY AND PRINTING G, Born in Genesee County Dec. 24, | on their part and that suggestions Friday at Michigan State College, about Schine's special treatment | came from the Army heads Carr told of a Nov. 6 luncheon in Stevens’ Pentagon office, dur- ing which, he said. the secretary | asked how long the Fort Mon- | mouth probe public hearings would last, and McCarthy, according to} Carr, said about six weeks The witness continued secretary became very upset — at least he appeared very upset. He said that if they lasted that long he would have to resign. that he had been in office 10 months and that the public wouldn't stand why he hadn't taken action Carr said that earlier. on Oct ® Adams had begun ‘‘suggesting" that McCarthy let the Army do its qwn investigating at Fort Mon mouth, but that the senator would not “‘buy that’ because he main tained that the Army had failed to act on evidence of subversives in the radar laboratory, Tots Clothing Store in Riker Building A shop dealing exclusively jn children's: clothes and toys has moved into the Riker Building store formerly operated by Fritzi Stoddard. The Margaret Ann Shop in the quarters at 37 W. Huron St. is owned by Mrs, Edward Van Tassel of 51 E. Iroquois Rd. and Mrs Thomas Carson of Toledo. It has been redecorated and light blue dominates its color scheme The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cleudy, warm and rather bamid tonight Seattered thundershowers tenight 65 te 64 High Teesday 96 te 84. Sestherly winds i¢ te 15 miles an bear becoming south te southwest 17 te 20 Teesday. Tedey im Pentiac — temperature preceding 8 am : Wind velocity @ mph ®un sets Monday at 810 pm Sun rises Tuesday at 4 55 am Moon Monday at 655 pm Moon sets Tuesday at 353 am Downtown Tempers tures © B. B..cpecece OO 11am 4 FO. B..cosecre- 70 12 m e6 8a. m..... 7% i 9.m.. 66 WO. GBiccccees' 7 OD. i vcccsces $1 Sanday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature ue 71 Lowest temperature sc 51 Meen temperature 61 Weather—PFair Highest and Lewest Temperateres This Date in 81 Years 63 im 1963 43 im 1946 Sunday's Temperateres Chart Ai 96 50 Los Angeles 65 57 Dattimore 95 67 Marquette Te 8&6 Bismerck oe 62 Miami 67. 677 Brownsville 61 78 Milwaukee oo «676 Co@iiiac 08 60 New Orteans 69 14 01 68 New York 8 61 Denver 87 55 ahe 6 673 8 64 Pittsburgh 85 Port 97 72 St Louis 96 73} od 01 66 8 Francisco 64 52 Jaekromville @© 72 Treverse City 91 61 os 6¢) Tampa oi . ‘ under. | will have Birmingham's Police Lt. Henry Timm in attendance. Timm | heads the juvenile division of the | police departmen? here 7 . ° Newly elected officers of the Men's Club of Kirk in the Ilills Church to be installed June 28 are’ Alexander Clark, presicent; | | “The Philip Jojes, first vice president: | (Continued From | Alvin Rezelman. secretary, Charles treasurer and Kenneth | | Youel, program chairman | Cooper | Others are Lyon Robbins. wel coming committee: C. T Arm brust, organization committee; | Reginald | Kay, dinner committee: and Rob- lert Graham and William Rentsch, |membership committee. * * James Walton, owner of Walton's Jewelry at 14 W. Maple has an nounced the opening of popular and classical record department at the rear of his building. Walton said he also will carry regular and high fidelity record players * oa ° leo Davidson ' Service and burial for Leo Da vidson 7, of 5740 Sussex will be held at 2 pm. tomorrow at Man- istee. Tle died suddenly at his residence Finday Arrangements are by Bell Chapel of the Wiliam R Hamilton Co Survivors include his widow, Ag nes; a son, John R. at home and a brother, Earl of Detroit School Expansion | Up for Vote Today (Continued From Page One) of new classrooms — enough to contain growing enrollment expect- éd to hit 23.000 in the next 1@ years, compared with today's 16, 000 students. Schoo} men say the tax in crease also would raise enough “operating” money te make up the deficits in day-to-day run. ning costs. Pontiac schools face a $725,000 deficit by July, 1955. Voters also will decide today | ‘which two of six candidates will | be named to the Board of Educa- | | tion. Seeking election are Mrs. Paw | | A. (Matlyn) Brown, Dr. Walter 'L. Godsell, Mrs. Harry (Lola B)| King, Dr. Leonard F. Klausmeyer, Paul J. Simmons and Everett C_| Spurlock. A seventh candidate, Ed. | ward P. Barrett, withdrew from the race too late to remove his Smith, Boy Scouts: Alan | Allegan, drowned Friday night) ig96 he was the son of Frank and George A. Dondero. while swimming in Miller Lake, | \fary Mudge Kelley. He served in near Otsego SS ried Hazel Warner in Pontiac. Mr. Kelley was last employed as Oakland Area Lakes a Pontiac city mail carrier and was a member of the Metropolitan C| = F lj Qlub and Letter Carrers Assn. aim our ives | Surviving besides his widow are Page One) was visible for 1.000 yards autopsy showed that Erb died al- most instantly from a hemorrhage resulting from wounds to his arm and side Marks on Erb's head indicate he was wearing a diving mask, which was recovered from the lake. Oakland County Prosecutor s office is investigating to see if Schultz was negligent West Bloomfield Police and Fire- men, along with Michigan State Police, are still searching for the body of Herman Baum. who went bevond his depth in Cass Lake vesterday afternoon. troit and Clinton and Warner Hardy An of Pontiac. as well as one daugh- ‘ter, Mrs. Beth Wright of Pontiac One sister, Mrs. Mabel Rouleau of Mount Clemens; eight grandchil dren and one great-grandchild also survive. Service will Funeral Home Tuesday at 1 pm Burial will be in Grace Lawn Cemetery, Flint he Mrs. Lovis Nocera Mrs. Louis (Margaret! Nocera 76, of New Castle, Pa . died at St Joseph Mercy Hospital here Sun day after an illness of two days She died while visiting her daugh- ter, Mrs. Mary Pollina Mrs. Nocera was born in Italy ' on May 29, 1878, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Davino. Surviving are six sons and three daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Panzer- © 4 ella of Buffalo, N. Y., Mrs. Pollina, Mrs. Annabelle Catarcio, Andrew, Anthony and Albert, all of New Castle :Henry of Reno, Nev.. Jo- seph of F) Monte, Calif.. and Victor . of St. Joseph The body is at the Pursley Fu- { neral Home and will be taken this evening to the William DeCarbo Funeral Home in New Castle for service and burial Women On Probation for Local Burglary Three Pontiac women placed on three years probation and each assessed $100 costs today | by Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty | tor the nighttime breaking and en- Democrat Files i] ° ° tering of a S. Sanford street res- in Fourth District ew tse so Mrs. Charlotte M. Gunther, 27, of 77 Douglas St-; Mrs. Holsworth, 21, and Miss Claudine DONALD L. SWANSON Nominating petitions for the post of state representative from the World War I. and in 1927 he mar- pected to attend, including about | Americanism Committee three sons. Wayne Danburn of De- | from Pursley | wert | } | Temperature this morning at 8 | was 75, which rose to 88 at 1 p.m | tomorrow. Scattered thundershow- ‘ers are expected Tuesday Martha | ,the warmest in the Pontiac area — i 114 Orchard Lake Ave, by Rep. ef ‘ 4 4 4 . 4 4 A 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 More than 400 persons are ex- SUPER-SIZE 4 - 4 80 persons who have received their | citizenship in Oakland County nce > last June. The dinner is part of | 4 a program initiated by the Elks’ } 4 headed | 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Prints All Standard Rolls One Low Price Bring your fil to Simms faster service .. sharper prints... greater savings. by Lynn D. Allen Obtain Brief Respite From Heat at Parks (Continued From Page One) sult of lightning-struck trans- formers, and trees dragging down 98 N. —Main Floor | | | ; | | | | | | ’ | fire nine minutes after the Couper | ra $A ED New Policeman Hired BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — George Wrobel, 32, of Milford, has ‘been added“to the Police Depart- Police Chief Clark ment here, man had preyiously been an ex- perimental driver for GMC truck and Coach at the Milford Proving Grounds, and a DSR bus driver. |New LOWER PRICED Ice Cream Scoop * Exactly as Pictured 39°. A dy item in any kiteMien idea! for serv- ing mashed potatees and cottage cheese ag well as for ice cream. Made of Styrene with @ nickel plated steel ejector. Easy to use—easy to clean SIMMS TOM KENT Michigan Lions, holding their an-— nual state convention at Grand Rapids, Sunday afternoon elected | BROTHERS Tom Kent, secretary of the Pontiac ind Floor Lions Club, deputy district goveér- ans ee cease aED nor for region 2 of the state NO IRONING! WORK TROUSERS CREASE BAS THEY DRY! with “SNAP-LOCK” [24 |, We ne wevble te keep the men-totks end siochs weerng gels in the family cnap end $169 ; fresh. Slip “Enap-tock” Creasers inte love KIDDIES’ SIZE |) 3 PAIR $] 49 a N. Saginaw St. —2ad Floor a = SSS SEs ——— a For Fathers Day Gifts—For Yourself! Keep Valuable Papers Safe! 12'2x10'2x5'2—All Metal File Chests Complete With Lock G Key a 37 = a it r \ Hew i" OM Hada TE Nip Buy tor Pather or your- hii iP L self keep your valu- mini able paper; safe end handy All metal baked on enamel carrying handle, hinged top. Al- phabetical and classified file dividers. md SIM MSS. ee ‘ —E ae ee Special Purchase—Record Low Price! 88- 50 Foot Length. . $1.77 All plastec—flexible—ideal for watering hard-to-get-at-places in lawn or garden. Hardware Dept—2nad Floor power lines, | | Traffic was rerouted at Tele- graph and James K_ Boulevard as a Detroit Edison Co sion wire sputtered there The storm, despite its tornado- like approach. had its lighter side to some residents. A full grown maple, neatly split by lightning came to the aid of Mr. and Mrs Robert Flicker, of 37 N. Merrimac They had just painted their front porch, and were looking | for a suitable barricade. The | tree obliged, dropping directly | | across the path leading to the | porch, Joseph P. McCarthy is glad his wife didn't have time to pull the family car all the way into the garage as the dark clouds raced | jin. A large elm crashed through the back of the garage, doing mi- |}nor damage to the car which was jonly partially inside Indicating the heat which drove people to seek relief is the amount of water pumped this past week Tt totaled 103.931.8352 gallons, 600.000 high ten- year Was the consumption fast ' Thursday of 18,596,653 gallons. The U. S Weather Bureau pre- dicts partly cloudy. warm = and rather humid weather tonight and Saturday's 92-degree high was 4th District were ‘filed today by Donald L Swansdn, 33. a Demo- crat. : Swanson, of 24068 Pennsylvania Dr., Southfield Township. is a spe- cial education teacher in Detroit, is Carter, 18. were found guilty by a) this year and came within two de- jury June 2 grees of the all-time high for June They were accused by police of | 12 established in 18M. | breaking into the restaurant and | Altwough cooler weather was stealing gum and candy. They; forecast for Sunday, the mer- claimed that three boys ran from cury rose to 88 degrees. the restaurant as they drove past PONTIAC HEADQUARTERS for ALUMINUM — Combination Doors and Windows Let us protect your home from the summer bugs and winter cold This Offer e more than the same week last E k= xpires High point in pumping this June 19th $ 49° COMPLETELY INSTALLED GRILL OPTIONAL name from already-printed ballots. | married and has four children Pontiac voters sharing in| A Navy veteran of World War II balloting to determine whether Oak- with South Pacific duty. Swanson | land County should set up a county- | is also past-president of Washing- | wide system for educating handi-!ton Heights Civic Assn.: a mem- capped children. Two ballots on this ber of Townsite Community Church fssue are being handed out at the and officer on its board: president polls: one to decide whether the of the Wolverine -Investment Club county should adopt a Michigan and executive board member of the | law that lets it set up the special Detroit Federation of Teachers | program and another to decide The {th District was recently whether to levy a half-mill tax formed by reapportionment and | (30 cents per $1,000 worth of as- will elect its first representative | Sessed property) to pay for it. | this November, are The temperature has climbed past the 85-degree mark on each of the past six days. This year’s first day was last Thursday. and .they investigated to see what the toys had been doing. Police confiscated quantities of gum and candy plus a chisel and pillowcase ce aaa Tuna Prices Decline Has Talk With Wilson SONCYO ai = Froare: tule 2 | LONDON Ut—Minister of Supply ported to the United States has ‘Duncan Sandys returned today been reduced in price from $440 |from the United States after con- to $360 q ton to meet a seasonal ferences with U. S. Secretary of price decline in the United States Defense Charlies E. Wilson on prob- ‘domestic market, Kyodo News Ser- -lems of guided missiles. , vice said_today, FREE ESTIMATES AND DEMONSTRATION IN YOUR HOME — NO OBLIGATION! 213 Voorheis Rd. DROP INTO OUR FACTORY BRANCH OFFICE. SEE OUR DISPLAY. KREUGER MFG. CO. After 6 Call EM 3-3264 bs Phone FE 4-8819 A ‘ i ‘« Gree;. has announced .The patrol- , Fire Damages — Plastics Buildi Sy a ER ere AE a ___ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JUNF. 15, 1934 ‘Charles Baggett Claims Bride ~ County Deaths ; | BERKLEY rattan | Barbara Wiseman Is Wed picked him from a | masked persons. He was* Saturday with kidnap placed under’ $50,000 bond. RJ . Kidnap Ransom a } | s ® a arate j ‘be said for Mrs. Pauline Luhel- ¢ vk O ° C Believed Buried American Legion Elects , ier 't atime ato i 1 Lake Orion Ceremony Cah ees , - | Reval er sleet = LAKE ORION — Before an altar, Serving as maid of honor was | | ee ai - icors } Two Fire Departments — Funeral a ce decorated with palms. candelabra’ Miss Charlotte VanderWall °of | Baffled for Two Days, ae icles siege ee Control Blaze That Springs, followed by Requiem Mass *%¢ Sprays of spring flowers, Bar- Rockford, Ill. Bridesmaids were) Police Continue Search meeting of Tri-County Post in Mountains |} 507, American Legion bara Adelle Wiseman became the Mrs. Lawrence Baggett, Mrs No. Cost $15,000 pokagd rt gens Cress, est bride of Charles Herman Baggett | Charles Hawn, Miss Dorothy Errer Tee ; burial y Cross Saturday in a ceremony in Lake and Mrs. Kenrieth Campbell. Flow- : . es the ne ™ commander, oth. | Orion Methodist Church jer girl was Trudy Ann Wiseman.| PHOENIX, Ariz. w — Daniel ¢t officers are Joseph Dann Jr, SOUTH LYON — F , tery: caused by lightning Selene ale Mrs. Luhellier died Saturday at) Barbara is the d ter of Mrs | Serving his brother as best man J. Marsin, 41, charged with kid- Semor vice commander; Phili P| augh r Ushers Inaping the wife of a wealthy in- | Olsowy, adjutant; Arthur Little, fi-| partially destroyed a storage room| the home of her daughter, Mrs! nic, wy Wiseman of 4% Bellevue Was Lawrence Baggett | and the printing department Sun-|J@ne Hennessy of 2993 Kenmore Gad the late Mr. Wiseman. Charies*+ were Walter Baggett, also a broth- dustriahst for $75,000, sat silently | nance officer; Mike Rusnak, ser | day at V. W. Busch Manufacturing | Rd. 7 parents are Mr. and Mrs. Charies er of the bridegroom: Richard |in jail while officers resumed a Se4nt-at-arms; Stanley Martinek, | Co., two and a half miles south; Also surviving are four other! } | Wiseman, a brother of the bride; Oil and Gas Burners Oil and Gas Furnace Oil and Gas Boilers Ts Oil Water Heaters TIVREN 4 , A / ne fSileomals \ «AS OL ir wt “hi 73 S. Parke St. FE 4-1504 of here Loss to the building and con- tents, covered by insurance, was| Mrs. Georgina Kenyon of Royal | estimated between $10,000 and $15,.| Oak, Mrs. Ann Mania of Harbor | 000 The company, located on Rush- ton road, manufactures plastics and is owned by James D. Hatch. The fire was discovered Sunday morning when a passerby, Edwin Nugent, saw smoke. Firemen said the fire had apparently been smoul- . Baggett of 498 Atwater Nearly. 350 guests attended the daughters, Mrs. C. P. Hamill at Ceremony. Mrs. Thomas Huhn of Berkley, | Springs, and Mrs, Myron Palmater | ot Hillman; three sons, George ' | Schraffenberger and Arthur Lu- | hellier of Royal Oak Township, | and Frank Luhellier of Cross Vil- lage, 27 grardchildren and | fingertip illusion veil with a lace jcap of seed pearis and iridescent at her hands. It also featured lace basque bodice, a fell train and a beuffant skirt over satin. The bride wore a hand - rolled John Nowels of Rochester and Ron- ald Bumpstead of Pontiac. A reception was held at the church house immediately follew- ing the ceremony. The couple left for a honeymoon at Niagara Falig and New York City, with oe eel ree Ber See | search today for the missing ran-| historian, and James Karr. ar som money. } lain, Somewhere in the Superstition Mountains, police believed, were hidden the marked bills paid for Mrs. Evelyn Ann Smith's release by her husband Herbert The rocky, cactus-strewn foot- hills were combed by a small force of officers. They worked doggedly, | moving smal! boulders, brush and GOLD j Barbara is a graduate of Mary- buried. alee dirt in the belief the loot had been | dering overnight. CLAWSON — Funeral service for | sequins, and a single strand of Wood Academy at Grand Rapids. Fire departments from Brighton and South Lyon fought the biaze. Lightning also caused minor fires in two nearby homes, according to firemen wood Ave., will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Schnaidt Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with burial in, Oakview Cemetery. He died Satur- | Leonard S. Balis, 58, of 229 N. By- | | pearis, a gift of the bridegroom. Traditional Rites Two days of hunting failed to Highland Park J College Pees . — = turn up any clue. The search today Mercy Hospital School of Nursi lat ‘Grayling. The bridegroom, a | W@5 extended into abandoned mine | graduate of Lake Orion High | Shafts. | School, attended Michigan State | Police also were hunting a rifle, | College and is now employed as as- |@ Pistol and a pair of binoculars IS WHERE YOU FIND IT! And Gold is what you find when you order Dependable Gee Deep- Mined Coal at our Low Summer Prices. Now you Save upto... ‘12 Fuel Oil Users... Be sure of getting better quality Gee Fortified Fuel Oil -. » Sign your fuel oil contrect ee et On ed ee Held by Seniors at Walled Lake three sons, Charies B. of Birming- ham, Boyd M. of Royal Oak, and WALLED LAKE — Seniors here Mount Vernon, Lake Orion. Friday held their traditional Swing- e A.3.C. Robert D., USN; two daugh- ters, Mrs. Cari Hanson of Berkley, Ore Mrs. Cordon Auterson of San Out exercises for underclassmen Bookmobile Schedules and parents es Wearing their caps and gowns Four Summer Visits Garden Club scholarship to Mich- Mrs. Emily B. for the first time, the graduating | itions late Wednesday, she said, students moved the juniors into| ROMEO — A bookmobile trailer |oniy one masked kidnaper was. sistant manager of a Rochester , Which the Smiths said they had lumber company. |seen the kidnaper use. The newlyweds will reside at 812| There were other unanswered | questions. Mrs. Smith said she had | overheard a second man after be- |ing locked in the trunk of her car. |She said he discussed killing her. | |When she arrived at the Supersti- | Scholarship Winner to MSC Announced MILFORD—David Longfield has been named recipient of a Milford Teke 2 vacation from werry ... De & new. Diel Fiderel 5-8181 teday fer eur summer Pill-Up delivery plan. ®NO MONEY ¢6 MONTHS DOWN TO PAY FEder GEE COAL CO. | | LAKE STREET mers _———— a el E NEW and USED REFRIGERATORS FOR ONE OF THE BEST MY 3-371] DEALS IN TOWN CALL SHICK’S APPLIANCE 331 South Broedwey Leke Orion iene Bake. Cillogt ULAPEER — Funeral service tor ' ckmobile tr The choice was announced this . Emily B. Henderson, 77, ei : | will visit three outlying sc’ is in! wi . week by Mrs. H. C. Barnett, state |315 Mason, will be held at 2 p.m. Sa ieeconies ck sonia oe | the Romeo district during summer with her * ¢ « | education chairman, who reviewed | Tuesday at the Biard Funeral | monies. vacation, it has been announced. Investigating officers, who had ail information sent in by appli-|Home, with burial in Mount Hope Narration and shite depicting the The bookmobile will make four | hidden along the road to the payoff cants. Cemetery. She died at her home te ap mea followed One a the | Visits all on Tuesdays: Tomorrow, | spot to which Smith had been or- | To win the award, David was | Saturday | iota sas - oh was | June 15; July 6; Jaly 27, and Aug- dered, asked openly why Smith required to be in the upper third| Mrs. Henderson, who was born | fee emote ot ule a aa ust 17. The time and place for the | drove his wife back to Phoenix of his class, and agreed to special-|in England and came to Lapeer | sneden _ ple i varie visits are Thorington School, 9:30 | without stopping to report that she ize in horticulture, floriculture, ag-| after World War I, leaves no sur- poe ts ou me uv */to 11 a.m.; Washington School, | was safe. | riculture or any allied field. He | Vivors. wart i Seerd santa: a.m. to 2 p.m. and Davis; That delayed the search for the | has selected animal husbandry. Johan D. Coulter jan aa "the ‘pestowing of a School, 2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. abductor by more than two hours, Funds for the scholarship were; LAPEER — Funeral service for! wW. L. Awards to the eight seniors jone officer said. raised through a recent public | John D. Coulter, 69, of 296 Oriole | who had earned at least 70 activity| Was Benito’s Interpreter Marsin, seized near a ranch card party. St., will be held Tuesday at 2) selnte : ; |house four hours after Mrs. Smith | p.m, at the Muir Brothers Funeral | whe oe Vt. a gt =; | was released ey ee an i i i iss Tgio, wi as lived ‘not taken to lor identification | Clarenceville High Set sma eg ae pdm hes | Metamora Farm Bureau here many years, once was official | until the next afternoon for Senior Night Ritual after a long illness, ‘to Picnic Wednesda English interpreter for Benito; At that time, it was learned, he CLARENCEVILLE . Surviving besides his widow, | Y Mussolini. She escaped from Fas | was taken to her home to be jden- | LLE—Senior Night | searthe, are three eons, Lieyd and| METAMORA — At the home of | cist Raly ia 1987 tified several hours before she will be observed at Garenceville | terry of Flint, and John D Jr.|Mr. and Mrs. Harry Whittaker | LS High School Tuesday evening, with | J . . Wednesda = the Met the seniors presenting their own |” the Marines; four step i sons, | y evening, amora | y |Harold Thick of Flint, Kenneth |Community Farm Bureau will hold program. Honor awards also will | Thick of Lapeer, Eari Pittinger in| its annual picnic | J the Army, and Robert Pittinger at| Following the picnic, movies of | ii ta oa oe ee ve | home: two step - daughters, Mrs. last year’s Tournament of Roses | agwell of Siichigee ‘Stake Calege, [opt oe ee ee en . ~ |Of Lapeer; three brothers, William |A business meeting also will be | as guest speaker. The Rev. Bisie | 3 Lapeer, and Earl and held. | eet al Bias Lenin Methodist | mint: a sister, Mrs, Bertha Em-|— — = = sting of Flint, and eight - epee ? sae . children. my gs ; ; VFW Auxiliary Council | Benjamin A. : _ i ORTONVILLE—Funeral service Chooses: ews (Oiticers | ee ae a HOW AMERICA 1S CHANGING New officers were chosen recent- | 293 Granger Rd., will be held at ly by the Oakland County Council | 2 p.m. Wednesday at the C. F.Sher- F "oe, of VFW Auxiliary, They include: | man Funeral Home, with grave- 4 : Martha A. LaMonde, president: | side service conducted by the Ma- Emma Momber, senior vice presi-| sonic Order at Ortonville Ceme- dent; Ardith Atkinson, junior vice! tery. president; Bessie Garneau, secre- Mr. Sabler died Sunday as the tary; Margaret Ballard, treasurer: | result of an auto accident near Frances Previtt, conductress; | Goodrich. He was past master of Marge Zander, assistant conduct-! Ortonville F & AM 339 ress, and Lillian Pollock, Verma Surviving besides his widow, Barton and Jackie Gillow, trustees. | Ciara, are two stepdaughters, Mrs. ee | Allyn Burt and Margery at home; ’ his father, Ellery of Pontiac: two Waterford Center Pupils brothers, J. Sabler of Rochester, to Attend Picnic Tuesday _and Ernest of Ortonville and a WATERFORD TOWN SHES =| Oe: yer at Waterford Center School students | : are looking forward to Tuesday's | Joseph B. Woodhall | big. school picnic. CLARKSTON — Service for Jo , Games are planned for the fore-,seph B. Woodhall, 8year-old son ; noon, with the picnic scheduled|of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin A. Vv for noon. Sponsoring the event, | Wocdhall, 583 Clarridge Rd. will | which will be held on the school | be held at Bailey Newhouse Funer- grounds. is the Waterford Center| al Home at Sault Ste. Marie. He PTA Surprise entertainment is died suddenly Sunday. scheduled for the afternoon. Room| Arrangements here are by Purs- mothers will serve as hostesses.- | ley Funeral Home. so | Surviving besides his parents are Paper Drive Chairman Gag wee a oe — Says Thanks to Aides —— WATERFORD CENTER — Mrs | Natural Number Edward Keith, neighborhood chair-| STORRS, Conn. (UP) — Even man for the Waterford Center Girl |the most absent-minded professor scouts’ paper drive. today ex- would have no trouble remember pressed her thanks to all who as- ing the telephone number of Albert | sisted in the collections FE. Waugh, provost of the Univer- Money from the sale will be /sity of Connecticut. The number. used for purchasing uniforms and | 9-2844. can be gotten by dialing books for Troops 118 and 119. |W-A-U-G-H An important link of service in this area... e + ee eee Your life insurance funds have helped sence thousands of miles of Americas thrift sparks Americas record growth Te your thrift and foresight, you, All told, America’s 90 million policyholders are as a life insurance policyholder, have adding $5,000,000,000 to the funds behind their helped bring about the most amazing period life insurance each year. Until these funds are of material growth in American history! returned to them, or to their families, as bene- fits, this money is put to work in almost every Life insurance funds--in addition to pro- phase of our economy. . viding family protection—are playing an important part in our great expansion. Here's how life insurance money—the indi- vidual accumulations of thrifty peaple —it help- ing America grow. It is helping finance the factories, research To the needs of our fellowmon... we dedicate ourselves facilities, machinery and equipment which pro- duce most of the things you use. Among these are the natural gas lines which bring the gas into your kitchen... the power | plant which supplies your electricity .. . the mile upon mile of superhighways on which you drive ... the planes in which you fly... the railroad . e * trai hich you ride. sl as lenin nia dae So you see, your life insurance dollars benefit you in two ways: (1) they provide for the finan- cial security of you and your family, (2) they help provide the capital needed to make America a better place to live in. ' a Institute of Life Insurance , Central Source of Information about. Life Insurance 488 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 22, N. Y. ' at 4 This life insurance money also provides funds for new homes . . . housing developments . . . new schools . . . new stores .. . and other new buildings. Tparks-(Briftinty, Fumeral Home Sam Benson Says: FATHER’S DAY Is Sundey, June 20th Give Ded « Pair of WORSTE © SHARKSKINS © CORDS $8.87 ALTERATIONS FREE! SAM BENSON 20 SOUTH PERRY Brive Dewe—FREE Parking tm the Bubbaréd Garage Open Tentte oad Every Nite 18 89 FP. M. FOR INSURANCE | SERVICE See or Call Maynard Johnson 807 Comm. Nat'l Bank Phone FE 4-4523 McCarthy Eyes Hearing Report Disputes Mundt Hope That Findings Can Be pert if the ge -neral were running | Compiled Just Once SIOUX FALLS, S. D. uw—Sen McCarthy. (R-Wis) says he doesn't see how only a single report can) come from the subcommittee con- ducting the hearing into his hassle with the Army. “Every vote on every important fice spokesman said today that question that has arisen so far has been along party lines and | ex- pect that formula will hold when the final report is made,” he told | a newsman after his talk here to tome 1,700 veterans yesterday His comment came after he was shown newspaper stories quoting Sen. Mundt (R-SD), subcommittee chairman, that he hoped findings could be embraced in one report. cm > - McCarthy told the annual con- vention of the South Dakota Amer- by name, it Was an obvious reter- | lence to Harold E. Stassen, director British Documents | ican Legion to ask every candidate | running this fall, either Republican or Democrat Washington and work to stop the indecent blood trade between | American allies and the enemy.” “The head of the foreign aid division came home recently and said we have won a great victory,” McCarthy said. “‘We were told that we are going to continue to give U. S. dollars to allies, and in re- turn allow these allies to ship in- dustrial goods to the enemy. . . ‘In other words, they are going ‘to take your dollars and ship the sinews of strength to the enemy, | dollars that are directly fashioning bullets which may well cause death | for some of the young men in this audience."’ Although he did not mention him Where Does Your Money Go?... i? YOU KNOW WHEN YOU PAY BY CHECK Your cancelled checks are re- ceipts for bills paid—a complete record of how much you paid— to whom — for what — makes budgeting easy. Plenty of convenience too—why waste time and effort paying bills by cash? Open your check- ing account today. rhe at ol ee ~~ If - # F ral _ Rh s m Jhe Community National Bank of Pontiac, Michigan Where Thousands Save Millions With Branches at N. PERRY at GLENWOOD Out of City Branches WALLED LAKE DIRECTORS Rebert R. Eldred Alfred C. Girard Genfor Vice-President President and Cheirmen Community Natione! of the Board. Comm. Bank of Pontiac Net’) Bank of Pontiac Irving B. Babcock ‘t, Besroorm Motore Credit r Levis 4. Cole t & Cole Oil Company Harold F. Fitaegerald Publisher, President, The Pontiac Press A R. Gianey tne Harry M. Pryale President, Baldvin W. Russell Eames Eames & Brown Rubdver Ce Alfred R. Glancey, Jr. W. HURON at TILDEN KEEGO HARBOR Harold E. Howlett Attorney, Howlett. Hartman & Beier Howard W. Huttenlocher MH W = Huttenlocher Agency Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 5 | explained that secret and confiden- “if he's going to tia} documents were carried by = |‘ of the Foreign Operations Adminig- tration, the subject of other recent} criticism by McCarthy McCarthy's off-the-cuff speech here came after he told the Wis- lconsin Republican convention § in "Milwaukee Saturday that President | Eisenhower would have his sup-| for office today. Stolen; Recovered LONDON (INS) — A foreign of- four sealed bags containing British diplomatic documents were stolen yesterday and later recovered from the Regent Cana} in North Lon- don. He said no secret or confiden- tia) matter was involved in the theft for which three men were arrested A truck driver who picked up the bags at the airport for delivery at the foreign office stopped at his home for a cup of tea, and) his truck was stolen. | The foreign office spokesman | , Queen's messengers in diplomatic bags while other documents such as those stolen were sent by air to London in sealed bags. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE % | HOOKED — Many an angier | would probably prefer to throw | away the fish and keep this bait. Judy Center, of Rainbow Springs, Fia., sitting on a large fish hook, | demonstrates the feminine way of | luring a catch whether it's above | or below = water. | The boy's father 14, 1954 — Psychiatric Tests Set for Youth of 11 CHICAGO «® — Psychiatric tests | were scheduled today for a whisky - drinking, cigarette-smok- ‘ing 11-year-old boy after an in- quest into deaths of seven persons im a tenement fire started by a |discarded match. Nine other persons were injured in the fire Friday night. Marion Gregory, who first told police two men wearing baseball caps set the fire with gasoline in a stairwell rubbish heap, demon- strated Saturday to police how a match he flipped into the stair- well after lighting the cigarette started the blaze. Lewis was locked up after telling his son, “Tell them nothing.’’ Police inves- tigators quoted the father as say- jing he allowed Yarion to drink |whisky and bought the child cig- | aretes. (Advertisement) Nights Unbearable * « Itching Skin? elie beyond belief for fiery. ener hen with epecially medicat rich t= lenelin. TRADE-IN Shade in by 9:00 A. M. Out by 5:00 P. M. SAME DAY SERVICE Bring Your Old Shades In—Save 25% ~ GET NEW JOANNA WESTERN MILLS CUSTOM-MADE WINDOW Your Old Window Shades SHADES Buy Direct from the Factery—Save the Difference! WOODMAN'S SHADE and BLIND MANUFACTURING CO. 921 Orcherd Leke Rood FE 4-7323 The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac Famous Brands at Lowest Prices! SPEED Wringer A full fomily luxe features “= celain tub with low price. Phone 51 W. Huron St. SPECIAL SALE! oA Giant Deluxe © Reg. Price $139.95——Now Only .... 7 i size 95 © washer with many de : _ All-por- With ~ large Oa safety wringer — High * vane agitator gives you thorough | yet panes * wash—Mechanism sealed in steel for years of +? trouble-free service—Buy yours now at this low, After the Sale Exclusive Service Beautiful New 1954 Enterprise Gas Range venience... 23 i BE Sree QUEEN Washers ees ae Open Daily 9 a wee little price. ; Unheard-of-Values at Our New Low Price $1 49%... Installed and Fully Guaranteed This quality-built range fits the smallest kitchen and makes more room in a big kitchen without sacrificing a single utility feature or con- It gives you full cooking capacity in a width of 30-inches . a big oven for roasting and boking plus all big range features at Has automatic heat control, top cooking lamp, deluxe chrome hardware and famous look-in oven door. DUO-THERM 52 Gallen Electric WATER HEATER $10 Dewn Compares with Heaters Selling | fer $154.95! Fully Approved by The Detroit Edison Co. FREE WIRING On Edison Lines of PONTIAC in Set ¥ hy : : e Rania tho Ge Be Se = Sige ¢ esata, = sy yc a ee ee to 5:30—Fridays 9 to 9 (Except Service Dept.) ly clean clothes © exclusive fe Pa oar r Ret i Ree ee ee Giant family size tub, with Roller Water Remover. choice of more than 6,000,000 homemakers. ~ Now is the time to buy it at our new low price. Ma i ne LONG t EASY TERMS -4- 90 ) Days Same as Cash --- Lowest Carrying Charges coon HOUSEKEEPI NO MONEY DOWN When You Trade In .Your Old Appliances! A Price as Famous as the Washer = MAYTAG Wringer Washer © a 29° The Gyrafoam washing action means spotless- It’s the FE 4-1555 ie a SS Sees. CO lt ee aac santo” - i in.” sn — a : ee i ase al . 4 ioe Fe B } is ‘ ® x | < THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 14,1956 REE_ 1 , e e ® : turbine age ap l | News in Brief (School Elect : saseaas - | Wheat Easier, | MARKETS |Mart Uncertain | ECtiON || Not Practical Yet et ee | ® Produce . . om ioe cre Oakland eee ® | t P ad St k C every “type of power plant’ had . Others Hold ng pncegce About Direction County sheriff's deputies that his Petitions Voided el-rowere OC QT’ |! vcen tried cut tor eutosnohiles ani | DETROIT - “ i be | sco mw Ng | eee sisson cee ee | | to Be Shown June 16 |[cine tar neve been seruly CHICAGO w — é NEW YORK «—The stock mar- : ai 0 | . | aoe iad aaee, Apples. Nactners oy. fancy. |) moved irregularly today with| Five cartons of cigarettes and) Cand Disqualified By DELOS SMITH such the engine won't “blow up,” | “ballenged. ‘ the rest of the grain market held) § to's Red, fancy, 6.00 bu; No 14 $0- two boxes of candy valued at $11; for Filing After Deadii firm in quiet dealings on the board | 300 vu. sireweerries, Mo. b 608-6 00 16 prices showing email thenges 18/ —o. ressrted stein in 0 breakin iling r IN@ | United Press Sclence Editer | it is easy to maintain, and it is 5 5 . 4 of trade today. See ee "Wie seco toy —s Saturdgy night at the Kum Bak} in Romeo NEW YORK (UP) — The first | controlled by the conventional ac- 3 Injured in Crash ; July soybeans jumped a few! 4. Beet Me Lt Set Te Gen contrast with the unusually heavy ee ee ROMEO—Petitions of Edward A. jet-powered stock model passen-|celerator pedal of the piston en- T | hR i cents at times, again reflecting | ot. Spee", 04 o Gauntiower, | decline early last week followed| 18. “Sica = rear window. Jacob, former school board presi. 8°" Car will be displayed next | gine. on elegrap oad : short based Ne a a5 3.08 be Chives, No 1, 1.00-| by a partial recovery at the end dent who was seeking reelection week. (5) The exhaust gases diffuse covering on movement 1 35 os behe Ranirent 1, 180-1.13 | of the week D. Maines ef snes ; of cash soybeans out of Chicago. | > Me 1, 3.50 des bens. Onions, Edward > 22, for a second time, were disqualified | However the most authoritative | rapidty, because they're hot. | Three persons were injured yes. ; : green, No 1. 90-78 dos bche Parsley. | Price changes either way usually | ajcott, Waterford Township, plead- today because they were filed aft-| word from automotive scientific , terday when one auto drove in : , Nba Decent ue Ke T° 150-435 s6-t> eae. Ragiones, i ae were well within a point limit. | oq guilty to reckless driving before er the deadline : yee earch ae the piston-type When the engine is at idle speed, {front of another at Franklin and : Agriculture Department w | te-2 radishes, white. | Trading i ' ; . . } 100 million bushels more grain stor-| Ne. ‘i 00-128. don bebe Sao. | New York. oa coun Se a Petsmart daroanagn Helmar G. Board Secretary Joseph C. Jelsch | engine isn't going to be replaced| Ye! cam stand close to the ex a ue dare as to Oak- age space. Sethouss, Wot 326-360 Bib bene Fer: | block of 25,000 shares up % at Saturday and was Of |i, a letter to Jacob said the peti-| on streets and highways any time haust without being uncomfor- y puties. Wheat near the end of the first | aip. Ne i, 1.95-1.60 des vehs ne | 23% shortly before the start ot| Gered to Mey oO et ee tions were received “too late to | soon. progr y ata iy Aig ong wth Once oe hours was % to ‘2 lower, July; , Lettuce and salad ¢ Endive. be cost or spend 30 days | be honored." Jet power can be used for pas- so high, gases | Harvey Ave. was trea RS %, core % to % higher, July ba," Uattue, heeds Me f.,00.1 80 9-dan ease Gel coos aad ae fine was not immediately paid. "Deadline fer filing petitions senger cars and trucks, but so far| contain ne carbon monoxide. - ae — oe: $1.56, oats % to % higher, July] jssiees, Bed, Bo ft, 1.75-238 ou: Ne | tory to the forces of Robert R.| pajeves stole soft drinks and| was at 4 p.m, Saturday. research engineers have been un- (6) The gas turbine engine in| cuts Mrs. sg erage Few Fing Tl %, rye unchanged to ‘% lower, | 1. 61.00-1.50 bu. , trol able to give it decided practical | ine pus 1.500 at awn, Detroit, was treat Oreens: Spinach, No 1, %8-1.00 bu | Young in a proxy fight for control | jotato chips Friday night after Petitions éf three other candi- weighs over 1.309 pounds | 1 tu 9 fractured arm, and her — ag artim agel Cepdage. No 1. 178" May of the railroad. breaking into the refreshment | dates to seek the two positions on een, Ce eee oe. we than the ieee it ae daughter, Susan, 9. was treated higher, . jo. ps jo. 1, 16- progress t t : are lard 17 cents lower to 7 cents a| bu Sorrel, No 1. 100-138 Turnip, Nous Verh Stocks stand at — Speedway inthe board in the election July 12) 1144 in adapting it for automotive partys gece to SS ae for face and arm bruises. hundred pounds higher, July $15.95. seohi.ean.'988 ona snes - White Lake Township. were accepted. wit be Law. |" third that of the piston engine, Mrs. asad = eee . . cmc BUTTER AND BGG8 . : Tamarack,| Seeking reelection passenge . Grain Prices 9 try Buttes waft; | Air Redue “"". #81 Kennecott”. :: 6g. | A building af Camp Tamaseet | rence W. Rickett, present board| Chrysler has put an expert. | But fuel Cee in ou’ | 23, of 8144 Northlawn, Detroit, driv- ceipts 2.464.178; wholesale prices | alieg L Sti... 33.3 : se.1| Groveland Township, was president, whose term expires. Oth-| mental gas turbine engine inte a | very high, although the engineers ing south on Telegraph. Moore told = ot A Ohh, 00 B66. 86 C 800; care so | Allied Gh... OF Kresge : | over the weekend, but nothing was ©” naidates will be Dr. etock model Plymouth and will | suggested ways of reducing it-| doice that Randolph, driving west CHICAGO (AP)—Opening grain: 45: chu - Allis Chal 88.6 -. $23) reported missing. |G. Renwick, local dentist, and Wal-| show It off when it dedicates its And there is no way to brake the | 0. Franklin pulled in front of his Wheat Soybeans =| ; 32.319; whole-| Alum Lid .. 064 Lib McN&L.. 08 : . , with the engine . Zaly «+: +225 LBM July. aM. 272 | sale buying prises unc : UB. ‘| Alum Co am. 6 Lige & [at sell im Waterford. ter Sewell of Washington. new proving grounds at Chelsea, | jet engine car > lear. EOE Sep ..,.--. 287 | 6069.0 per cent A's 34 34: Am Can. .... @1 h Aire... 338! Te buy oF Mich., June 16. — : pod out a¢- - 38 | Mediums 30.6: US. standards 30.5: cur-| am Cyan |. 486 . ee 14.$ Drayton Plains or Clarkston area, Clair Boldt, whose term also Ralph A. Richardson, of the "Cora Soni ne ne Mee *. 268%, | TERE receipts 28.5; dirties 27.5; checks 26. pm te o .. 92 Meck "Trecka:. 184 ee, ee expires, did not file for reelec- Meanwhile, General Motors en- och eee on a eae Rare: edie cet oe Bep oo... 150% July 16.08 . sn Bp ra.. 8) pee oe - Ri — etl ten. gineesr made “a progress report” might @p | the four lea cereal crops Dee (11...) 1M Bep 16.20 Livestock ead eT » le: ; te “the beginning of the gas | the world. . 5 ; . : Osmun’s Town & Country, Tel- president on their jet reaearch ~ am alg ars Beg aS DETROIT LeYESTOCR Am geet! 343 Monsen ch'.. e83| Huron Shopping Center, Pontiac's sal tc een prior to met) They have Ree: eee tore ou DETROIT | (AP)—Hogs—Balabie Am SU Pa 39 Mont Ward - 625 tinest store for gentlemen who turbine engines installed in a stock , Dee 0% July ‘148 [No eorly undertone around 25/ am Tel & Tel 165.7 Mot Wheel ... 23.2 year when he was defeated for ve me 1 | cents oF ; good Am Tob... “i Aorela . -.. 33 | prefer the finer things Open) os tion model bus and in a cigar-shaped — cotiecasisns Set. around, # per] Anse Sh c. He met’ Rn®.. 933| S707 mips © Dm Planty of , designed car which car -EXCLUSIVE FRANCHISE ® * cent receipts cows, 500 stockers and feed-| Armour ... oo Se ee *.:: 3 * ries little more than the driver . Business Briefs Sud “helleie: mastst’ epening glow, SAL AN Coe Line. tena’ ot fond... #85! if your friend’s tm jail and needs Turkey and Pakistan and the engine. Reporting to a cents to mostly $0 cents lower for good] All Refin ... 34 Net 1) pail, Ph. PE 86-6901. ©. A. Mitchell, technical meeting of the Society Joseph A. Anderson, general |‘ prime fed sigue end Remere: sore | Giles Fer... Os FF Cpotrel. B or Ph MA 5-4031. Guy Carter. ° of Automotive Engineers, they dis- FOR TOP GRADE SALES EXECUTIVE manager of the AC Spark Plug | sales bulls; stockers and feeders steady, | Balt & 229 Nia M Pw... 20. Plan A ance ‘ Division of General Motors, an- | most serly sales choles te low rime fod eee ee ee i oe, ————— a ie th-With aluminum radiation 7 nounced today the appointment asst, "astern A S| a, es a Ieee pal ef penta at wavings of | ANKARA, Turkey u — Turkey shields, they've licked the heat Nationally known manufacturer, of one of the fin- of Robert S. Johanson as public | 19° 931.00 early sales commercial um 3 EG S| bp - tht seeing ig te and Pakistan plan to launch mil-| Kopiem. Although the gas tur. oe in this t th relations director for the divi- = $17.00-20.00; ae ee Bend ore .... Be a. 7 open every night till 9, free park-| itary talks immediately to put bines operate at 1,500 degrees est products of its kind in this ountry, through sion. Johanson has been on the | few heary'Wolseine #1000: canners and | Brig cult. #3 Perum" pet 3h] | ing at the Hubbard Garage next | more teeth in their (Fahrenheit) the temperature in expansion of its facilities, is in a position to open public relations staff of General | cnistts Qed Zeeriinge Ste at gai: a 33 Penney (JC)... % | to my store. —Adv.| A communique issued yesterday the engine compares this top-flight territory for a hard hitting sales ex- re gselige Pagg age eergrd nm g ae adld —f ed at the conchusion of talks here be-| with those in the compartment ecutive, preferably with an established rating the late Mr. M. W. Gotthelf of vat . Capital Atri... 93 Phelps D..... 38.3 tween Pakistan Premier Moham- housing a diesel truck or bus en- ’ . Flint. aq lalves—alable aa ears eons eas ak Fae ae a t Ima H rt med Ali and Turkish Premier Ad- . ac han un sane See cena eee i | cease sea BT GUTOMTVQIT TULL | ren stenderes said te too netons| $30,000 to $50,000 Annual Potential for the of Pontiac, has joined Northwest | choice ¥ $21.00-24.00, few high| Ches & Ohio 343 Ei clas De. ot would make their pact more ef- With a silencer on the “in- Orient Airlines in Detroit as a | Sholce imfis oe-b0.00, cull and | Citice Serv agp. Pullman... Bt fective by “searching the possibil-| take” but not om the exhaust, man chosen. + sales representative. Duffield is | utility s6.00-18 00. No early saies, | Goce Cole. 1yeg Reale Cp 213 ar Crash ities and determining the extent| the noise te about the same as . the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. | ,.2spe mostly shorn sloughter famosa, | CoM Polm ..:. 23 Rem Rand... 317 of defense cooperation in case of| that of a diese! bus engine. Add We are just as particular as you and will gladly Duffield, of 3920 Pontiac Rd. He —_——- Con Bais”. gag Reve Mot... 684 nonprovoked attack coming from| an exhaust silencer, and it will hange referenc Your investment of $5,000- attended Michigan State College ger a ® Con Pw p 488 a gt aot bee is James Sexton Suffers the von country =| . $10,000 fully wrolesied We will assist the ‘right ti : 4 AGO (AP) — 8 r Scorill ‘- . ’ uly ; the Marsh Steel Corp. in Dene fosiow oat pers aswell gn sows gens cent gan Se sears “Rew” | Concussion in Collision “The communique said experts of| (2) — : ecm snd at\H mon financially for expansion. Write, giving full e ’ "wee @hell Oll...... . nations’ staffs between = —__ | sreral leads) chetee Net ana Gora F ce we Sinclair Of... rf at Saginaw, Pike eas teen talks omc lr ‘o a.00 to 35.000 revolutions per min- sable including phone number: Box 16, Pon- conditioned service 310 ® down porte Det Edis ..... 3.4 Socony Vac... establish defense plans, exchanges | Ute, there is no “‘syroscopic effect tioc Press. wad lsanvion perk. began tacts 3o-F10 Ib 22,752.00; few, loads choice Pees Aire: 8 Boe Ry... $$] Patrolman James B. Sexton, 21, | <¢ information, and plans for filling | because the gasifier and powder : Fordson Major Diesel Tractors | 360-3) is" 90383 , helen some. i090 Pa per ne abt is reported in good condition at! the two countries’ arms and am-| turbines alloys will withstand high | made by Ford Motor Co. of Eng- | 3 ,17-73:028, some, lighter weights 30.80 | Bags Tih HE ore Oi esis. a2¢| Pontiac General Hospital with a| munition needs. tergperatures, its forgings are land are being established in 32 | gaiebie cattle 23,000. caives $00: setts | Traute t . 502 Si Ot Ind... $831 brain concussion sustained when = OL - bee grt basis lower: hotles steady to 00 lower: cows co Oe ™. 3) od de Ohic.. 38 | the police car he was driving col- sales manager’ of Ford Motor to weak tree “ows” ayerege pe mee | Ens Tee 22 jes SutB, P80."-- $93) lided with another auto at Saginaw ' ts oo; | B2-Cell-O.... 71 priv 2h Pd.... 38 . Caan ee tn Imolement De | ey oe Serna matics (Peco ht Ree | tod Pie Ma, emdey merning. ° ° Poe cone ap ut RR Siem HL ete tl china de Ret A Canning is Hard Wor tablish the surgically cisen ot. | S253: segners and ‘cutrs We e0-1480: | Gen Fur a Frenaunet WE tor — eee ta t y clean at- utility oO | Gen T & Rud 323 Pac.......198 |to the pavement : mosphere required for proper | ™3* pg Nag pees p wer Br +3 oon ph ; ? which smashed the cruiser against parts weed in injectors and fuel | desemer mets ond shes nysdy THA | Gccdrich . . 88 United | tila Getdiey cick an ta mictowent ° | "RE a cert | San SS ae Soe, 8 (Ro cre etn t you can FREEZE with ease Nationa! distribution center for | 15.00: choice 96-399, I» No Sted aces [Ot Be Meet. 06 U8 tines... }$,| Patrolman Wayne Long, -riding U you ° Fordson Major Diesel parts is 30-8.50 Greyhound |. 193 U 8 emeli.’.. s07| with Sexton, said they were cross- C) in Birmingham, near Detroit Ouk Oa 87, 0 8 Oued... $33! ing Saginaw when a northbound ; where direct ship connections C 6 d Romesh: at Ease PN “traveling at high speed’’ col- wih te Fort Pane a Doge: |COllege Graduates isin, #1 FAK. }/ cr wayne o nen eed ct ets compare— a ears: insure —_ Intase'atr Sta Waite A.Bet-- 38] en by Patricia Killiam, 23, of 11 . delivery, parts are 25 [ 5 d n - $123 Wes ++ © Ave., oad. chipped to the pare depos ve |29 Local Students — |iizia >. Bt gi 1] tne" car" owned “ty Doulas ing established by distributors to eee ale ‘a ae 201 Oli St, a ingure fast service to the Ford | Graduated Saturday from Mich- | int Paper’ $1$ Zatith Ras 7 ge | VOUS. 27, Of 201 Oliver St. Tractor dealers igan State Normal College at Ypsi- | int Tela Twi | 174 pounted. Miss Killiaan was released | ¥ lanti were 25 students from Oak- | STOCK AVERAGES | pending further investigation, said , Se Oe oo "They included Marian Louise Kil | Compiled by the Acceeteted Pree Seat ace rt came Ga 12 STEees FOR CANNING | ONLY 6 FOR FREEZING eral nager t ew . juded Marian Louise Kil- Central Railroad, hes been pro- |patrick of Rochester; Constance | Ket change. an ~.. ia ee eee | moted to general manager-line | Lorraine Agnew, Elizabeth Cas- | Soon joday.....1814 91 bg@ 1235) loi | east, with headquarters in Syra- | tiglione and Maxine Eleanor Hart-| Week ago |... 1703 920 605 122.4/ Unemployment Cc ims 1 1 cuse, N. Y. Ernest C. Johnsap, | land of Milford; John —_ Year age ccs. lass ma Ls 1647, Climb 633 in One Week L\ general superintendent at Cleve- | Harrower and Maureen Ellen - | 1684 High ......1708 93.1 60.5 125.7! \ land, will replace Laskoske. uel of Davisburg, and George A.| 184 tem cg Te HC Ee) aime incrensed by 2 ; 3 : Grisdale Jr., Gerald Alfred Guten-| 1953 Low |"'''.1902 135 508 5 | 633 this week, according to Luther | named as executive in charge of | of Royal Oak. | (Hornblower & Weeks) olfice of the Michigan Employment ‘ Chrysler Corp's, sales activities. Others are Mrs. Josephine I. | P'sures after decimal "ies : Pll, tend bead Commission. | L. L. Colbert, Chrysler president, | Doty and Donald Lewis Frownfelt- pelewsn ore gsees ne 34 Claims this week totaled 2,854 4 1 4 \ said the promotion was part of |er of Holly; a Lou pole Gerkty- chiga ee ‘ti as against 2,271 last week. Initial ' Chrysler's intensified sales de- | and Anne Foley of Fenton; David | Kingston ohedllhe 36 claims this wek were 957, com- 5 , velopment program. Howard Souel and Donna Violet | midwest Abrasives... ”” 37’ pared with 424 during the previous 5 | Rowe of Ferndale; Carol Elizabeth | Rudy Mie’. ...... 13 {2/ seven-day period. Continued claims 1 Pive Oakland County men have | Germain of Berkley; LaRoy Ciif-| ‘Mo sale, bid and assed. increased from 1,796 last week 6 | 6 Place in freezer been selected to participate in | ton Blum of Orchard Lake; Mrs. a to 1,897 this week, Olson said. , the American Society of Body | Giadys E. McMeans of Orton- NEW ‘YORK (AP) — Foreign exchenge Engineers Convention scheduled | ville, and Mrs. Mae Granger Bourke retes follow Great Britain in dellers, Detroiter Found Dead ] for Oct. 27-29 in Detroit. and Roselyn Hattie Francis of Ox-| cansdien dotter in New York open | 7 ] Shirrell C. Richey and Russell | for. | fete Us ca up i orem lin Bloomfield Township S. Knecht of Huntington Woods | Richard Eugene Miller of South | Europe. Great Britain ipound) 6261 HOT WEATHER NOTE will work on the program, while Lyon; Anita Ruth Casellucci and yt 1/8 ts cont: doy get Harley Suiter, 39, of 2618 Cort- Py | ; Jack Lane of Birmingham, will | Joyce Elaine Kohlhagen of Ro- futures 914332 wp 132 of a cant, — ee gerne | None of these operations head publicity. meo; Mrs. Helen Mae Corneil of | cent” Beigium (franc! 260% up 007/18 ge way . | ; Clarence E. Wittmer of Royal |imiay City and Betty June Bur-| of s cent. Prance (franc: 26% of «| field Township, yesterday. 9 requires heat. Oak is in charge of exhibits | ges. of Brown City. po ret agemry TP gg a a County Deputy Coroner \ 4 sand G. Max Haviland, also of land, petider) 30.44. unchanged. puely Dr. uk Cain ane | val Oak, will direct art and ° ° ° ‘ ‘ ; - | dead by asphyxiat: soedor Driver Blinded by Lights, | *t:0:;"% se eee yriserana death was suicide. According to 10 ; ; 3 Hospitalized by Crash | cent Denmark (krone) 14 40, Prevette, § you lI love an Latin America: Argentine (free) 7.34.| car's exhaust into the auto. The A. E. Mallett Takes Three persons were injured on Mesics $02, unchanged Venseuela ten. | Ody Was found by James J. Wil- " State Eagles Post ay" night yoke onoaning var cen eae tong ong dolar 11.0, vn. Ra eee SR Aerange on chsives | lights blinded a Milford motorist | causing him to overrun a curve B i S | Albert E. Mallett, life member | and turn over. to Oak-| DUSINesS Survey and past president of Pontiac|iand County sheriff's deputies. | Paci, eta toed wae, omresvere Mes. vy Fa! Brrilding Permits, Values Tyee Eagles, was installed as inside terson, 19 of 3787 Highland, Mil- g ‘ guard at the conclusion of the state ford, treated at Pontiac General yy , Son Bandy Lamang nn | Hota! for trates: amie Pave! UT Over April ‘54, May ‘53 Ocean acon of evel Ca son, 30, of Dearborn, admitted ‘ wrence Bogeman with a back sprain and bruises, The number of building permits and valuation of new dwelling | was installed as third vice presi-| and his wife, Dorothy, 2. admit- permits gained over April of this year and May of 1953, according to . pages Beverty Van ricer ted with a rig a the Pontiac Press’ business survey for May. Freezing foods, instead of canning, azel Park * | cuts and bruises. attersons With totals more than April ‘of this year but less than for the. ' | ee St eet ce sapertad in 820d condition | same period last year were bank clearings, valuation of building | ceca saren cooler, A Freezer is wonder emeng Xt., secretary today. Harry Patterson, 22, hus-/ permits issued and water consumption other ways too. Foods hold ir fresh local group. ; jaced | PAB4 of Beverly and driver of the Less than the previous month but still gaining over May 1953 \ Tr ee ne hate The number ot families on weltare was higher in May in both the mins ond minerals. With a variety of home M city county t t ‘wo periods which it was compared. ‘ | athe tate order, succeeding Jenn 2-Year-Old Hit by Cor gmove frosen feeds on hand, mecl planming's easier Miner of the host Lansing Aerie. | Reported Critical Today a in every way—entertaining is less of a task. e Two-year-old Rickey Fugoa, son Peccory” parrens rran, R a _Gren and grandchildren. whe Devt EC r-eoA-w w. Free: _ port, np Flowers 5) gaan To 31 ORLY THON: sands = open r = SCHAFER'S FLOWERS Pescomvah ete All trades. 33 AUSURN VE 23-3173 inte bor, gp ors office workers, en- ete. Many hired eers, eCncess.. FUNERAL HOME Cemetery L ots Donelson-Johns NERAL HOME “DERIONE, ) FOR FUNERALS” Voorhees-Sivle Ambulance Bervice Plane or Motor FE 3-8978 information write Dept tional eel, hewart. —-- Berv, 1034 Broa ewark EXPERIENCED TROCe RIVER for Pontiac and vicinit a knowledge of ag igh Re tlac Press, fleations am. — Farm Placement Specialist | Starting Salary $137.45 bi weekly Must meet the following qualifice- tion requirements 1-PFour years of experience in agriculture or @ related activit 5 Oraduation from high mieten (Note: At least two years of At 10 a.m. today there were replies at the Press office in the following boxes: 26, 65, Gi, 64, 74, 77, 86, 87, 91, 96, 100, 102, 103, 108, 111, 119. "ERRY MOUNT PARK CEME such experience shail have been tery tots 6 graves. Section one * subsequent te graduation Phone FE rom\ high scheel) or ——— 2-0 jon from college with specialize . id” agriculture "| @ related fie BOX REPLIES Not over y Michigan Em — oukt Com mission, ayne St Pontiac, Michigan ; FARM WORK. TEMPORAKY. MAN or husky hi school boy Ea- ole OL 2-135 perience. desiravie FOUR TOP NOTCH REAL EB ES —— needed. t now! This tte ses Call FE ror ty for apo, REAL ESTATE SALESMAN OR lady to work in PonUac area Phone Ortonville. 50R} for ap- potntment SATURDAY BARBER WANTED. 3 OW. Pike é ~~ NEED A BETTER JOB? Would ov consider $485 per month The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS Dixie who is being held on a con DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m, All errors should be re. ported intfmediately The Press @ssumes no respon- sibility for errors other than to cance! the charges for that portion of the first insertion of the ad- vertisement which has been rendered valueless through the error, When cancelia- ti@ms are made be sure to get your ‘kill numbers “ No adjustments will be civen without It Closing time for advertise- ments containing type sires larger than regular agate type is 12 o'clock noon the day previous to publication Transient Want Ads mar be canceled up to ® 30 the dav of publication Was ar- CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 1 Day 3 Davs 6 Davs 2 $125 $1 68 6252 4 1 60 312 456 b) 200 3 60 540 e 20 432 60 7 280 5 04 75 a 320 6 75 8 64 ® 3 60 6« 672 Birmingham Office Ph. Midwest 4-0844 379 Hamilton >| im Oakland County, i micrometer with advancement? I need } men those inter- ested tn permanent employment only, write P O. doz Pon- tiac, Micn a RELIABLE SINGLE MAN FOR dairy and general farming. 355 Letts Rd 6', miles N. of Roches- er Afe your top earnings $100? Could you enjoy a larger income? Are you willing to work for it? 1 salesman to direct a large group of saleswomen in thts area 25-40 with car For interview write Box 58 Repre- sentative will be im area to inter- view applicants MAN WANTED FOR RIDING STA- bie. Morey's Golf and Riding Club, | 2280 Union Lake Rd off Com- merce Rd. “SQUIRT BEVERAGE ROUTE available with purchase of truck Average earnings 6125 week Flanders 1-9265 after 6 evenings floors, drives a specialty Rea- Tangibie— Intangible $150 WEEKLY With an opportunity for advance and = vernier Stock picker and packer gauge at 2500 E Police said the equipment was ored in yards of the housing proj- | ect near Baldwin avenue. Help ' Wanted Male mt ADVERTISING BOOK MATCHES SELL Big dally mium commission plug HURRICANE fan makes tt EASY| Corporation Earning opportunities to sell all businese our Qiamour| 863 50 to aoaiee to start. commis- Girls, Hillbillies Scenics ali} .sion Car heinful Apply 158 Oak. sizes, all colors. featuring UNION! ‘and Ave 10-00 8 m, to 4:00 pm | LABEL 1954 7322 8 | APPLIANCE _ Greenwood, Chi icago, SALESMEN plete our sales force 6) OOO Oe FULL OR PART TIME pre- lan _of ARVIN Radio or MASTER OUTFIT WANTED FREE, SUPERIOR MATCH CO | Lt s30 am tos pm _ 2 BRICK LAYERS WILLIAMS | Lake School. 2525 Airport Rd i corner of Hatchery Rd eoees “MAN THAT UNDER- $| stands bullding screens for my home. H P Sutton MY 32-6432 he ATER SOFTENER SALESMEN. New Revolutionary Completely automatic plus conversion unit for ala softener. 158 N. Telegraph Wan d is Men To staff our Pontiac factory branch Mist be willing to work, adaptable to learning and healthy Experience not nece«sary. This !s & permanen rosition with a large BARBER WITH OWN equipment. Hotel Roosevelt Wr! still need 2 sharp men to com- See Mr waNTED Green a ie} wade Men. EXPERIENCED Tues Wed. 10 bag &™ PRODUCT ENGINEER DESIGNING ABILITY Es. SENTIAL, GRADUATE Ter ERRED, ., FROORES: ~ ATTENT ION COMPANY ANUPACTUR. Men. here is your golden op SIaET RS tunity, chance of @ lifetime offer ND ASSEMBLIES § FOR Act now. Limited number needed AUTOMOTIVE. RE- Sinall tnves z sch LATED INDUSTRIES. all in tment required. Those IDEAL WORKING COND who would work for less than TION FAID OUR A ROE $10 an hour do not reply. Write AND OTHER ADVANTA- Pontiac Press Box 62 GES REPLIES, CONFI. BARBER 1316 8 WOODWARD DEN Ave. Harmony Barber Shop AIPLY : GARBER CHRISTIAN. STEADY, ™,.L, MARAE. PERSONNEL Good for °00 week Bali AMERICAN FOROING AND _lard’s 838 Baldwin MY SOCKET PANY RBER WANTED STEADY FAM. PONTIAC. MICHIGAN Pag Shop, 714 W. Huron FEDERAL 2-01%4 IP FOR TEENAGERS: The bike, toys, books and|~ > other things you've out- grown are turned into cash through Classified ads! Ask Mother to call er NQW. 2 MEN WANTED person _” WW Oot PRESSER Experienced Apply Cleaners. Haynes & Birmingham. MI at Winter” Help Wanted Male 6 EXPERT YOUNG MAN FOR RESPONSIBLE A de TIC BALARY PROORES- seet ingens, OR 3-4208 or K a s : advancement in office of large ‘ts ays nel m4 LOOm SANDING LAYING. FIN. Press Box 61 ving age, educ®igg a RTMENT *2-1519 aod experlence, R MANAGER. ey vEAn. FLOOR LA ING a No AND Help Wanted Female 7 yYeans With MA ie fimishing ae By tons ee. * = il lac Btn a YOUR, EXPERT |PLOOR SANDING 4a the gg a ge WILL BE RECOONIZED | —*Pecisty, Cart Bills PE 29700. of car mgoosery. For inter- FURNACES NED yiy prone, FE Sen3 between! §=— APPLY WAITE’S ee ; e € AMBITIOUS WOMEN TER Tie ve cnoIcE oF DOORS to be y trained as « 4175 Dixie Hwy. FASHION SHOW Instructions , DIRECTOR beginners. Lessons given at your GARAGES . v , home soid 14x20 SARAH COVENTRY | _siaes ot _OR 30320 : INC. repoeag, fagaame, mewig,| Sep, ree, tp la Poor seeking neat . Terms "776 ; Sppearing women of good'cha'uc-|— Work Wanted Male 10|/ENERAL pen gee llll akon § ge ig sesite to ce yarl| wie wa FE +2700. o or Al 7. wi e fs Sete chest | Aydt OS EOE OLGA? PE SS ign ee 1-1 CARPENTRY AND TILE WORK HOUSE RAISINO ATTENTION LADIES ACETYLENE AND ARC WELD- OAbient _0-3008 B new opportunity for Avon representatives * income. For Apply | Maple Rd weekdays | To train mn the heating atr nme wan business. yet : tty | vd i jormation oon 4 Margaret on re no enswer cal) F , giving Yan | Basy SITTER WANTED, 3 CHIL dren, housework, home Sal wages. Call after 4 pm 2-0600. | BRIDAL CONSULTANT gent young matron, INTELLI- eer for special tien @s con- sultant to brides-to-be. One who desires the riunity of earn an immediate income of as muc! as $70. in ; hours, 4 to 8 pm Greate im selling. of e public is helpful Fine ad- se- vancement unity for Si. Chicego 1. Ti | BEAUTICIAN TO MANAGE OR | rent beauty shop. Experienced Also 3 room apt. avananen. 14) Auburn Ave. BRAUTY _ Salary CHECKER fet must CURB GIRLS Salhge gegr r TED’S __ Woodward at Square Lake Rd. EXPERIENCED LADY FOR Do. = help Small family. Live 5¥%_ days No ooking, no laun- ary ag ee required FE 2-0045 before § p. m. EXPERIENCED Ai ALTERATION LA- for fuil time empicyment. Ap ashion ps person. Bloomfield F: ob a _________— | EXPERIENCED WAITRESS 021 W. RETAIL OR OUTSIDE SALESMAN , Huron around | EXPERIENC ED WOMAN WANTS do laundry. Ellen, FE #1218. GENERAL HOUSEWORK. LIVE IN Small house with ae Excel- _lent_ wages. FE 54-3228 GIRL TO LIVE IN. PRIVATE rocm. Must ltke children. Chris- tian home _ Lincoln 40161 GIRL AS MOTHER'S HELPER |3 BO’ White. Live in. Private room 5% days. Christian home. MI 45762 } GIRL ‘WANTS BABY SITTING IN Pontiac, OR 3-0536 OIRL — LEARN OPERATION or machine and for gen- eral ef work. Must be (a tion ndorw ation ° _ Box 100 ot 40, with Death Notices (“““ _by Dick Turner| _ Help Wanted Female 7 mannncinvirtithoand , Beek eat ctr’ gs? Sthare ie BAUTEL, JUNE 13, 1064, MARY L.. p Sec ae, Hele Wented__® ever rs ne m en ates cavisn Cal be. neue Weineseny. ~— a oth gp tg Fe ro for @ business ca Dr. Milton H. Bank officiating on, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m #-0001. VANTED SEVE “one thy ey ete tes . 66 W. Huron. WANTED TO and 33 M flat bed trailers to got of Cape Mich Contact Bre Timots "Phone 1141 START AN EXECUTIVE CAREER IN RETAILING TODAY! America’s largest nation- wide department store organization needs fu- ture executives in adver- tising, display, merchan- dising, sales manage- ment, operations, con- trol, credit and account- ing, and personnel man- agement. 1 Bay! TRAINING PROGRAM ON-THE-JOB- AND CONFER- ENCE, rney man welder. New or ‘ey AY now. Reasonable. PE 3700). ___ CARPENTER WORK WANTED new and , FE 44210, NTER IN DRY CLEANING be experience. FE __3-2883. LIGHT HAULING, TE _ FE 5-1972 service MAN WANTS WORK OF ANY kind. No car. FE 23-0278. Building Service 12\_ F Be& J TRENCHING field th} and water \ lines. 3-160 GARPENTERY. BLOCK AND CE $2.50 yd enn Work. $- 1958. CEMENT WORK _ ORiando 36195 oF atair 5-024). floors. drives @ speciality. Rea- 23-2340. Jensen. FE Be jou te small Phove LAWNMOW ROBERT H CHAPIN PLUMBING and Phone FE 53479. /S, /NMOWERS Accurately “pees Sor 4-0708. ___ ne PE ue khne =. = ae Call Me If You Need: . n pt. a D & M BUILDING SERVICE Free mates on your Sat or ete call OR E i. ORAGLING & FULL [) work all Kinds, New eq tt operators. FE ment MY EAVES TROUGHING Installed oy meee HOFF. Myers FE EAVES yl ou <—_e xt eae Mctane equipped _L. A +oue, 4 plone gg me SS s* son. _ Ph. rk 4 — FANCY STONE : —— a pecialt Brick work Estimates f 4. HOME OWNERS ALUMINUM ROLL-UP AND ERGLAS A MEAVY¥ ALUMINUM DOORS STOR winpowd (ALL SIZES EXCEPT PICTURE) 615.98 }.4OM FACTORY TO YOU ORDER NOW AND NATU- fire- of MASON ALTERAT.ONS & RE EM 34879. PAINTING WANTED FE 5-6838 JOB PL. ASTERING Ms small. rE 1-41 . Paddock. FE 3-1204. ratwrino: ~ixmpe ~ AND ~ OUT. Free VETERAN wr FaaLY WANTS Good painter FE 5-7138 ae a AN rE AEE 908. WHITE WOMAN — : old 1 re YOuNO Mas MAN ear PART TIME rE siete. Work Wid. Female 11 CURTAINS WASHED AND stretched. and also wash _Sonable. Experienced. HOUSEWIVES AND WOMEN bd re- do pleasant work at home Weaving). no experience needed. no selling involved. Earn $200 TOO PART FD ORT “ORDER cook. ND MOW Pp. +bos ‘or Pe t LIGHT $35 Sper week, BM MI 41888. RETAIL OR OUTSIDE SALES you —— —— Income? Are you willing work for it? 1 \aleswoman to ewes a le group of sales. tn is area er 30, with car. For interviews write Box 60. Representative will be in area to erview apolicants. Zoula you enjoy 's LADY WANTS DAY wa 20637. MEMEOORAPHING” TYPING RESTAURANT WORK 339 8. SAG- _inaw_ Twins Restaurgnt. SHORT ORDER OOK AND waitresses wanted. 714 Weedware| Avenue, Pontiac. STENOOR FOR GENERAL OFFICE MUST TAKE SHORT-HAND, WRITE PONTIAC PRESS BOX 66 STENOORAPHER FOR REAL ES | tate office or part time. See Mr. Brewer. Roosevelt Hotel. WANTED WOMEN FOR OFFICE work. Ovly those desiring steady employment Credit Bureau. Perry St. WOMEN FOR GENERA i ROUSE aia work cool room ing, Kansas City 6 Mo WANTED “EXPERIENCED Watt. fess. Apply in Tson between 1 and 5 p.m. je Dutch Treat 3285 Orchard Labe Rd. Keego SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL OG men: We have fust added a Box a er to our line. e—. a seoshd — =e or. Ages to : ar necessary.) — would as Complete trainin ‘ome leads. ae eweck cae nae of 4 LIGHT) par maid ‘ommissions pal at once, °o EXPE draw ‘advance or salary. Call| 11 and © years old until sept. | EA PEN tence (WOMAN WANTS & _FE_5-5771 for appointment. 5 days, go home nights e ——— me modern home 6 blocks north of te do day work cleaning FE |SINGt E MAN Va DAIRY Fisher Body, FE 42164 81219. arm tua SIRL D WA LADY FOR LIGHT HOUSE WORK/QIRL 14 YEARS OLD WANTS TRACTOR AND IMPLEMENT and care of baby. 5 days @ week. ba — vicinity of Wil | Ford Motor Division has open- a i Per 7. Box 5¢|—#ms_Lake. +8303. ings for journeyman electricians — | _$10 Reply Porttac Press, xinG GIRL. 18. on ie WA receiving inspector ¢ 25-35, one | MAID, EXPERIENCED. COO work year expericnce. ability to use and general housework Live __Sevtime ealy. Pe 21033 HOUSECLEANING AND 1 PAINT. FE 5-s002. ing, 510 Ken 'worth. F sap? yr SLEANING DA DAYS. $i HR. _FE +i mous DONE IN HOME $3_a bushei. FE 5-7119. WORK. FE secretarial | service. 3 EM _3-2842.— PART TIME 8 SECRETARIAL AND qualified er Available after TEACHER WITH TYP- = experieoce desires office or _ pairs A! kinds MASON & WORK, FREE estimate. Our work Sasa |b A. J. Webste: & Son OR 3-9402 PLUMBING AND PEATING HS Com & Son. FE ¢3767. OR &. 6. SNYDER FLOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing. Phone FE PLASTERING NEW & REP FE 2-2336 EVENINGS REMODELING GARAGES AND MODERNIZATION FREE ESTIMATES - TERMS STOPPERT & CECIL Plains 4380 Dixie Hwy Drayton _|QR_3-7721, 'f no answer OR 3-2420. Business Services 13 tl AcE ASPHALT PAVING & PENE- tration Service. Asphalt driveways. Rr aie Tee estimates A-1 PLASTERING New and repair FE 1-6678 ALL MAKES OF REFRIGERATORS WASHING MACHINES TRONERS & MOTORS REPAIRED PHONE FE 4-2569 Walton's $1 N. Parke ALL KINDS OF RUBBISH. HAUL. ed. FE 46887. LOOMFTELD WALL CLEANERS me — Windows cleaned. Ph APPLIANCE SERVICE We service all rakes of refriger- ators wasier radios cleaners and all types o' smal! appliances ROY'S 9 Ave ALL MA OF rOUNTAIN NS repaired by factory tra! men at our } c& Oftice Supply Co, 17 W. Law rence St. Phone PE 3-0 A & B TRENCHING — yo water lines, field tile. Business Services _ 13 references. : Chimney Work ceptionist work Cail 1 PE 5-1888 after 5. whe Fe soit wants summer 1-444i or write P. “O oo ne "or ines ees ochester. WASHINGS AND WOMEN Di ORS” WANTED) _ wp )_and delivery. OR 3-7040. by largest hom: ent s! od ¥ Bere, exer WOR: peny tn field. rience Cone LS ad 4 ouired by olny city No. * See civic clube @ in Sdvance| WOMAN WANTS bar WORK. #7 Suarenmed’ aseue plus excell ol _day prs carfare. FE 5-2510 reentage and bonuses. Write T WASHinos, SOFT WATER USED eCamish, suite 522, ae Butld- wlan Wishes DAY WORK FE 80770 ~~ Building Service 12 5-073 Warm air h sheet metal -ARPENTER| Floor Maintenance Work rubber a’ ; | aire Be leact + re Vesa For in- now fore the rush, clean, gles iid, build new chim- hevs. Specialize in installing gas ; also clean repair reaorse furnaces, boilers, by com: z: Rellanie Purnace mn rE 8-3701. COE’S TRENCHING SERVICE Foundation footings. _fields and water =n ACE TREE REMCV _t Free Barn mio ag Raa SULLDOZING. EXCAVATING AND dump truck service FE 44417. EXPERT & moval Ph. FE $-6593 or OR 3-2000. EXPERT TREE TRIMMING & RE —merg | septic tank eee AL SEWER CLEANING Sinks Sunday Serv. Ph. FE 42012 EAVES TROUGHING Bryan F French rE and a Quality work. rr 241 « rewir*'ng 218 og e¢ «i! wor’ f teed. and & seep tad, Livers LAWN t tel ened br » "se. 33006. 1385 ST Dressmaking, Tailoring 16> "=? en cae eee J Maished. Pentiee ISHED AN DRIED FE 3-034 FISHELL & — % PIECES WAS —_- SERVICE. GRADER, es AND DUMP truck * work. ; CAWNMOWING. REASONABLE Moving & Trucking 19 MOVING & TRUCKING OR iNCINERATORS Ashes & rubbish +51. Ciont tt HAULING. 2 YARDS oo go 3 caesar” service, OR 3-0619. LIGHT HAULING AND _ ages Gelivered. FE + $3 8 ——- Tractor Co. REDUCED RATES | Van to serve vou. Smith 4-486 INTERI'R And Painting and oe PE 150 TEMATES, sore INTERIOR | EXTERIOR Patwr- RNISHED APARTMENT eis Reas. ovrices. Ez. ATE Reasonable. FE 23-5221 or PERHANGING aND FE ¢217:, NTINO RESIDENTIAL. COM. a de Oba 'N WANT WALL W pointing OR_3-2284. all Washing & giclee Gerbert Hall FE ‘|WALLPAPERING AND senna | © 1 Call for estimate. FE 4-0255. Photos & Accessories 21 Call FE 64008 after ___ Television Service 22 DAY, NOHT TV SERVICE omen Tv REPAIR ANY | Wed, Transportation 31 37e\ornt. WISHES RIDE and Williams mr “er ® Between 8 _ Typewriter Service ee ZA TYPEWRITERS AND A ADDING a. Expert Wid. Contracts, Mtgs, 32 ATTENTION! We ys Office now open, teous efficient service m the past years. LUGrothy Snyc Snyder Lavender neo Wo Huron oe Yo ma-ertal. PE 56-6797 “hegeesmeet Rear bis i 3 es!