Wee Paes » ‘== THE PONTIAC PREM Showers and Thunderstorms | OV Details Page 2 118th one * * *& *& & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 2 22, 1955—80 PAGES | TANTERNA TIONAL Ais SERVICE Death Toll Clin Flint Mother Is Assailant Falls Unrest Rips North Africa; 800 Dead Over Weekend Wil sue CASABLANCA, Morocco (P—Grim French troops and | St ock Dividend Pretty Divorcee Felled. Foireign Legionnaires chased rebel bands in the Moroccan | by Pistol Shots on Road | hills today as the official death toll from bloody weekend | rioting across French North Africa neared the 800 mark. Quick action restored a semblance of order in Algeria, A pretty, 27-year-old| | where most casualties occurred, but violence continued in Morocco'as French foot troops supported by tanks and jet planes fought back at the terrorists. In a desperate bid to re-+ in Suicide Try; Held in Hospital Near Holly Flint. divorcee and mother of three was shot to death early yesterday near Holly by a friend of her former husband. She wasidentifiedas Mrs. Rita M. Cummings by Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies. Her assailant, Ray Goff, 32, a Flint factory worker, shot himself in the head as he stood beside the car in which the woman had been riding. Her escort, Dean Worges, 24, also of Flint, fled when Goff said he was going to kill Mrs. Cum- mings, deputies-stated. Goff, a police prisoner at Pon- tiac General Hospital, was being questioned today. His condition was reported as good. Officers said Goff pumped four shots from a 22-caliber automatic pistol into Mrs. Cummings’ head. Werges, a married man with one child, said he and Mrs, Cum- mings had stopped at a Flint bar where they ran iffo Goff. Mrs, Cummings pointed out Goff, de- scribing him as “a good ‘friend of her ex-husband.” She ‘was divorced from Bert Cum- mings, a Flint motorcycle dealer, last year. She was awarded cus- tody of their three children, Kage = 5, Bert Jr., 2, and Thomas, ecu stated he noticed a car following them as they left the bar and headed south on the Dixie Highway. He then turned west on M87 and drove “two or three miles.” , When he attempted to turn around in a driveway, Goff, follow- ing without lights, blotked his way, Worges told officers. “He got out of his car and or- dered me out and said something about making sure Mrs. Cummings ex-husband got custody of their children,"’ Worges related. *‘I was about 10 feet from the car when I saw flashes from his gun." ; Deputies found Mrs. Cummings sprawled across the front seat of the ear, Goff was lying beside the auto. Worges’ wife, Irene, said she had | intended to divorce her husband. They have one child and are expecting another. He was being held as a withess. Sheriff Frank Irons said Goff left a suicide note at his mother's home, The father of four, Goff had been despondent over his fail- ure to win back his second wife from whom he was divorced two months ago. Cause of Plast Report Expected Statement From Owner of Demolished Home to Cap Investigation Final determination of the cause Co, officials, Mets, Asst. Fire i} a bing in Flooded State ys Slain store peace to’ France’s shattered North African | holdings, Premier Edgar | Faure, Foreign Minister | Antoine Pinay and other top French figures hastened to the French resort of Aix le Bains today for a week of talks with Moroccan leaders. Their aim is a plan for granting more self-rule to the protectorate. The officia) death count for the weekend blood bath in Morocco and Algeria totaled more than 764, with the figures still climbing. Ex- perienced observers believed the toll would reach 1,000. Early today the count stood at more than 210 dead in Morocco— 90 European civilians, 20 French and native troops and more than 100 Moreccan rebels, The listed toll was 485 terrorists and 69 French dead in the Constantine area of neighboring Algeria, where the nationalists launched profit trom the Mereccan unrest, In Paris, the Paris-Presse, one of the French capital's best edited | nonpolitical newspapers, said that 1,341 Europeans and Arabs were killed in the rioting. It listed 836 killed ahd 222 wounded in Algeria. Its figures for Morocco were 505 dead and 230 wounded. Despite the widespread violence, U.S. air bases in Morocco appar- ently escaped unscathed over the weekend, Most of the large cities in Mo- rocco and Algeria were silent un- der a tight curfew. — |Healthy Baby Boy Born ito Actress Pier Angeli HOLLYWOOD «w—Pier Angeli has given birth to the baby she almost lost because of an accident aboard an airplane. It’s an & pound, 13-ounce boy. Mother and son. were reported in fine condi- tion. Miss Angeli, wife of singer Vic Damone, fractured her pelvis when she fell in an airliner which was approaching Palm Springs, Calif., last February. She had been con- fined to her home since the “| accident. In Midst of Hot Spell Forecast Predicts Snow HICKORY, .N.C, ®—A housewife returned from vacation, picked up the Hickory Daily Record and saw a forecast of immediate and dras- tic relief from the heat. - The area was to be relieved with a two-inch snowstorm, The ig eo eos a Record sub- scriber had requested an issue published last January. The carrier boy dropped it at the wrong house, Snaps Hot Spell ‘early today cracked Pontiac's “‘lat- \est heat wave, which hit its peak a mass attack in an effort to |- Cold Air Mass Mercury Hits 100 Mark Sunday but 30 Degrees Overnight Cool air moving in from the west with 100-degree temperatures Sun- day afternoon. Partly cloudy and cooler is the | forecast for this afternoon and fair | and pleasant is the prediction for tomorrow. Today’s high will be in the mid-80s and tonight's low in the mid-60s. The mercury is not expected to climb above 85 to Drops. Stockholders to Get 1 Share for Every Three They Now Hold A one-for-three stock dividend proposal will be| presented to Pontiac State | Bank stockholders at a spe- cial meeting Sept. 19. At a noon meeting today, the bank’s board of eee ors voted to ask stockhold- | ers’ approval of a plan ae issue one additional share | of stock for each three cur- | | rently held. $400,000, said Milo J. Cross, bank | president. In addition, surplus also | will be increased to $400,000 from | $300,000 under the proposal, he | said. - “The move will give us capital funds in excess of one million do- | lars,”, Cross stated. j said the action, which has | State Banking Dept. approval, | was made possible through prof- its accumulated over the bank's 16 year existence. Originated | morrow. The downtown Pontiac mer- eury hit the century mark short- ly before 2 p. m. and stayed there until just after 4 p.m., when it dipped te 99 degrees. Unusually low humidity read- ings, some as low as 20 per cent, and a 10 m.p.h. breeze made the heat bearable. It was the 28th day of 90-degree or higher temperatures recorded in Pontiac during July and August and was the sixth day of a heat wave which began Tuesday. 90-DEGREE DROP RECORDED Although temperatures continued to decline moderately all through the night after the afternoon's high, a more dramatic cooling came between 6:30 and 7 a.m. when the mercufy dropped five _| points to the 70-degree level. Thundershowers which accom. panied the unexpected western cool wave peppered 5/100ths of an inch of rain down on arid Oakland County soll. ‘Weather Bureau forecasters, who had predicted no end to the heat until Wednesday, had been look- ing for cooler air moving down from Canada as the potential hot- spell breaker. Also reporting 100-degree tem- peratures yesterday were Detroit, Saginaw and Escanaba. Battle Creek, Traverse City and Alpena had 99; Saginaw and Willow Run 98, and Jackson, Grand Rapids arid Flint 97. = In Detroit, one déath “was blamed on the heat and two oth- ers resulted from heart attacks provoked by the heat. Typhoon Near Formosa TOKYO ®—Typhoon Iris, the lith tropical storm of the year in the Pacific, was spotted bearing down on Formosa today, 288 mile¢ away. Eisenhower —Champion of Peace = Bleserd meet. and the and trust among all nations is needed Are The Editor's Note: This is the first. of five articles by noted INS writer Bob D. ho Man “Honesty to Win the fight for world peace.” By BOB CONSIDINE Dwight David Eisenhower devoted himself for nearly ‘lt score of years to the ora science of destruction. eon, W: with $300,000 capital in 1945, the | bank now has total assets of | more than $25,000,000. | The promrem of the beak dartag | - | its 10 years of operation has made | this action possible,"" said Cross. “Tt is also being done to keep pace | \with the growth of banking and business in the community." There are currently 30,000 shares of Pontiac State Bank stock out- standing, Cross said. Par value is $10 and market value is $23-24, The bank paid a 60-cent dividend in 1954 and 45 cents in each of the four preceding years. The institution has 190 stockhold- ers, Of whom all but one or two live in the immediate area, Cross noted. It serves 30,000 accounts at its | main office in downtown Pontiac and branches in Drayton Plains and Auburn Heights. Final Bonanzagram May Win You $1,100 Bonanzagram No. 25, appear- ing today on page 11, is the last of the series for this popular puz- ale. Putsle number 23, for which the answer appeared last Fri- day, is worth $900 for a winner; number 24, published last week and for which answers will be , accepted until tomorrow | after- noon, will be worth $1,000 if no one wins on No, 23. If neither 23 or 24 produces a winner, the new and final puzzle starting to- day will be worth $1,100. If no perfect answers are sub- mitted, the next nearest will be declared winner. Se, puzzle fans, hold your claim checks until the winner is declared. It might be Eastern Floods Leave Havoc | in Wake ro FLOOD'S HAVOC—Freight cars, bent rails, splin | tered lumber, house furnishings and other debris lie Purpose of the plan is to increase }in a jumbled heap Sunday at Waterbury, Conn., as | common capital from $300,000 to | flood waters recede, Much of the wreckage shown | CHANGE OF ADDRESS — An apartment house | a |above is from destroyed New York, New Haven and | Hartford Railroad bridge which crossed stream sev- eral yards to left of picture. 130 Missing as Fatalities Near 200 Mark Stunned Communities Face Rehabilitation in Uncertain Future By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A staggering job of re- habilitation faced flood- wrecked communities of the Northeast today as stunned survivors found the death toll steadily mounting toward the 200 mark. The known dead already numbered 188. As addition- al victims were discovered, it appeared the final count would go well above this figure. Pennsylvania and Connecticut, the states hardest hit, estimated a total of as many as 130 persons still missing. The latest count since the beginning of the floods last Thursday was: Pennsylvania, 93; Connecticut, 88; Massachusetts, 13; Rhode Island, 1; New Jersey, ‘| 6; New York, 4; Virginia, 3. As the rampaging streams and rivers receded to normal levels, astonished citizens surveyed the heart-breaking devastation. It was Local Red Cross Gets Funds for Flood Areas » | . Py ® ae | ) AP Wirephotes once located on River Street in Waterbury, Conn., | from its former site after flood waters of the ram- and housing 16 families lies crushed and broken at! paging Naugatuck River receded. Tower in back- the intersection of River and Bank Streets, a block | ground is that of American Brass Co. plant. Two Local Boy Scout Delegates Busy at Annual Jamboree in Ontario Camp Special te the Pontiac Press NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, Ont. | —Tired feet and sparkling eyes | most quickly describes Pontiac's | two delegates to the eighth world | Lowes his Thunderbird Patrol won jamboree of Boy Scouts being held here. Dennis Jenks, of 101% Dwight CARRIES FLAG St., and Larry DeMilner, of 3704 | Lincolnshire, Waterford Township, | tor the Govenor-General of Can- representing Clinton Valley Boy Scout Council, arrived here at “tent city” Friday, along with 10,- 000 other scouts. Larry was put to work imme- diately, He was elected patrol leader for seven other Scouts. This meant he had to boss the job of setting up tents, organiz- you. ing cooking facilities and super- | | vising the many duties required ada, Vincent Massey, Larry-said: for the nine-day encampment. “T carried the biggest American when visitors stop in at his site, —_ in the parade, and was it uickly and proud! nts to vy.” — “good heandeeniies greed Meanwhile, Dennis, a member of the Pontiac Patrol, has eagerly taken up the jamboree’s most pop- ular pastime — swapping of em- blems, uniforms and about any- thing. He's got his eye on a Scotch scout uniform, with kilts, which he hopes to eventually make his own—“even if I have to trade off my tent and everything I for the neatest campsite in his troop. In Saturday's opening ceremony In Today’ s Press County News ........... 8, % a Editorials i. @ | rome ft) BE ACO ROOOOOE 20, Dennis algo has been busy get- Theaters .-..........0---- 18 =| ting a first day cover issue of a TV and Radio Programs....29 | new stamp commemorating the Wilson Earl ......... .....%9 | world jamboree by the Canadian Women's Pages ....13, 14, 15 | government, problems of peace. cry of millions for a relief The Big War. tory as a man who t ied to front, in U, N the man brought som SIN “ial Geneva he reached an SERIOUS REPARTEE keep blowing. more clearly the © from war jitters than he heard either the barks of his West Point iistructors or the — decisions of his civilian superiors in Dwight Eisenhower r promises to be remembered in his- make peace as stimulating a condition - war. In NATO, on the frozen Korean . and at the. highest levels’ of leadership, new td the age-old search unparalleled pedk. You, in turn, would get our Listen” the enld tn bebie Kaneas Engiish to soviet | Premier en “if there is H-bomb ar remember winds blow from West to East, not got the meaning through his inter- Bd repied: dust, that is true. But Peace-Makers For They Shall an hower, nearing 65, = plunged full force into the e has “True,” Eisenhower agreed. “There would be - nothing left of us. Your country and mine, But most of the world below the equator would remain un- touched: South America, Africa, Australia, New Zealand...” He named other friends of freedom. For a time Bulganin could find no answer. When hé| did he repeated what the Russians found themselves | saying many times at Geneva, in the-face of Eisen-' hower’s open-handed dealing: “We must find a solution .. . We must find a solution.” This exc e took place ‘at a buffet table in the Palais des Na aos after a day’s formal meeting. But even in the formal sessions Eisenhower continually hacked Fin Bag seg verter eee of he codon gobbledegook. e ulganin, re script, t, assailed NATO as ‘ “unfriendly Unfriendly!” ” Eisenhower repeated, bristling. | LISTEN, MAC... We leaned across the big sqlinre table afid taced the Russians with the attitude of @ man so sure of the co- and French so vast that only the estimates of the damage made, but these ran to billions, Homes were wrecked or com- pletely gone, Factories were dam- Health hazards were a major problem. Flood survivors in most places were ordered to boil drink- ing water, Emergency antityphoid serums were flown into isolated communities by helicopter. Dry ice was an emergency item and supplies were commandeered to refrigerate vital food supplies where regular refrigerators were still without electric power, ture with their regular jobs gone, at least temporarily. __ Some buildings that first ap- peared to have survived the floods _(Comttnned og Fuge 2, Cal. © Pontiac Man Burns to Death Ernest Metz, 49, Caught in Boarding House Fire Caused by Cigarette 7 i i c to the President Eisenhower's | wi. | * * pel - The President will interrupt his | work and play vacation then for about 36 hours to fly back East. uf fi J | Dulles, stay overnight atthe White House, then go on to Philadelphia Wednesday fo address the Ameri- can Bar Assn. convention. 7 * . After the speech he will return | to Washington to pick up Mrs, te Denver by plane, Wednesday evening arriving | ver early last night from a five- | ¢ day rest at the Rocky Mountain, ranch of his old friend Aksel Niel- | sen. He motored the 70 miles from | State Accidents Fraser, Colo., on the western slope | -of the Continental Divide, through | very heavy Sunday traffie in hours and 15 minutes. # * a He was accompaniedby. his year-old grandson David, who also | vacationed at the Fraser ranch, On | Take 27 Lives A A A CM VS We +4 AA Wo Ve Ta a Ae AWA aes a : Ww 4 re Aw ; eee fer her \ Eisent a »| PLAN ANNUAL PICNIC TUESDAY — Members Mrs. Doris Carter, nad then trevel boek | of the Psychiatric Aide Association of Pontiac State | Plains; Robert H. Larson, 155 W. Pike St., and Mrs. oo ee | Hokpital get set for the annual picnic sponsored by | Mary Hatcher, 2200 Pompey St. (left t6 right). The employed by the The President got back to Den- | the group for the benefit of the patients Making sure picnic scheduled for 5 p. m. will be held on the hos- | Grand ; hat everything is in order for Tuesday's affair are | pital grounds. 7 Million-More “in Group Form ~ NEW YORK — Seven million | . +420 | more persons obtained group life: | 18 Traffic Fatalities insurance policies in 1954, bringing | Head List of Deaths the total to 47,000,000. The amount Buy Insurance’ - ‘THR PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUG Pontiac Deaths -|Mrs. Luciba Cummings | Mrs. Luciba Rosella Bigger Cummings, 88, of 2 Park Pl.. died at 7:30 p.m. last night at her home after an illness of three months. Born at Cheboygan County, June 4, 1867 she was the daughter of | Haryey and Liza Jane Blackmer Buchanan. She came to Pontiac from Flint nine years ago. _ Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Cordelia Loucks of Pontiac, Mrs. Ida Holbrook of Wannipeg, Canada; five sons, Alexander of Pontiac, Ruben and Otto of Lewis- ton, Benjamin of Hazel Park and Alvin of Flint. Also surviving are thirty-five grandchildren, 82 great- grandchildren -and 14 great-great- grandchildren. , a ° The body is at the Pursley Fu- neral Home. Arrangements will be announced later. -“] Earl Finch | «Earl Finch, 64, of 2211 Silver Lake Rd., died in Pontiac General Hospital Saturday after an illness of two monttis. Born in Milan June 26, 1891, he was the ‘son Fred ‘and Mary ' Briggs Finch. He married Nina Beltz in Pontiac in Peatise Prem Photo | 1922. ee * | Mr. Finch had g 4083. Olmstead St., Drayton | lived in Pentioc OF Trunk . Western Railroad. Besides his widow and mother he is survived by three daughters | and three sons, Mrs. Orvella Pratt ef Flint, Mrs. Mary Shaw of Dray- ‘ton Plains, Fred, Edward, Mrs. |Maw Edwards of Pontiac and Jack | /at home, and 11 grandchildren. | Also surviving are a brother and ‘two sisters, Elmér and Mrs. Jes- Korgans Return Injured Airman Pilot of Downed Plane, | Murray of Stockbridge. Dead Captain to Cross Funeral will be at 11 a.m. Tues- | Agricultural School, | The party of farmers, educators was * | Moscow radio said toddy that |the Soviet government greatly UST 22,1955 ~ The Day in Birmingham Urge Exchange More Soviet - American Visits Needed, Returning Agriculturalists Say BERLIN ®—The U.S. farm del- egation to the Soviet Union head- | ed homeward today advocating | more such exchanges of visits between Americans and Russians. | * * * “They have the most to gain by exchanges now, but later we might gain considerably,” said the leader of the group, Dean W. V. Lam- 'bert of the University of Nebraska 'and newsmen arrived in Berlin by plane yesterday after a month's /tour of Soviet farmlands in Russia, ‘the Ukraine and Siberia. They split | up here, some remaining in Berlin |for a few days, some flying home directly and others stopping in jother West European cities. ] H * * * Another of the group, Ferris S. | | Owen, of Newark, Ohio, said the Russian peasant has only the bare necessities of life — a ‘roof over his head and enough clothing and simple food. But “they all felt they have it better now than ever be- fore,"’ he added. e * 8 | The farmers said everywhere.’ they ‘went “‘the simple Russian | friendly." Dr, William E. | | Reed, dean of the Agricultural and | Technical College at Greensboro, | W.C., said the average . Russian | “has no conception of capitalism." He thinks there are a few rich! people in the United States, but | | that the rest of Americans live in. | poverty, he said. Me * | appreciated the visitors’ criticisms | of its agricultural methods. equipment to construct Birming- “dent Expect City to Award Rink Contract Tonight BIRMINGHAM—A contract for Other items on the agenda refrigeration and some mechanical - = clude the possibility of installing telephone booths on Parking Lot No. 1 and the replacement of drink- ing fountains in Shain Park and on the South Side of Maple, opposite Baldwin Avenue, 2 Hearings scheduled include a review of assessments for paving a portion of Cummings Street and extending the East Maple ham's Ice Skating Rink is expect- ed to be awarded at tonight's City Commission meeting. However, financial snags must first be overcome inasmuch as costs are exceeding the $125,000 bond issue passed for this purpose. A sprucing-up ot the grounds around the Municipal building, Shain Park and Baldwin Library will be given consideration, with | Avenue sewer between Wood- a Manager’s request that $1,500 | ward and Brownell, be appropriated to secure the * * @ services of Wilcox and Laird, Equipment for Camp Oakland architects. Suggestions | wil) be , oo wa _ : purchased from the pro- ceeds of tomorrow’s 8:15 p.m, benefit performance of ‘The Re- markable Mr. Pennypacker,” at The commission room may also | be given a physical shot in the Will-O-Way Playhouse. arm when lawmakers hear a re-| Zonta Club members have se- port from City Engineer L. -Rr; cured permission to take over the Gare on, his investigation into a| Playhouse for the evening, to fur- public address system for the ther their summer project. Tickets room. will be available at the door. i i | * * * TO PRESENT PLANS Plans for sewer construction on | the east side » g& Southfield, to serve | property between Lincoln and Four- teen Mile road will be presented to commissioners, as will one for a| Southfield water main from Southlawn to Lincoln. Insurance Veteran Dies in Lathrup Nelson H. Kimberly, 58, presi- Mrs. Alvin G. Schack Service for Mrs, Alvin G. (Ella Pravel) Schack, 62, a former Birmingham resident, will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Manley *y Funeral Home, with bur- Oakland Hills Cemetery. died Thursday in Pomona, Calif., where she had moved two years ago. Survivors include two daughters and a son, Mrs. John’ H. Wright of | Hollywood, Fia., and Mrs. E. D, Howard and Robert A. Schack, both of Pomona; three brothers, of the Michigan “Mutual Woy "prrccl of LaGranee Ill” Liability Co., died Sunday at his | Leonard Pravel of Chicago: one | ; home, 18160 Coral Gables, Lathrup sister, Mrs, Martha Malnofski of Village. ; } eras He was a veteran of the insur- | Detront end three gre ——— ance field in Detroit, having been | with Michigan Mutual 38 years. | Surviving are his wife, Jane | Schrader Kimberly; four sons, Wil- | 'liam, John, Richard and Donald; | two daughters, Mrs. Beverly Baily Over Weekend at whose home the President and | David are staying. She is{ Mrs. | Eisenhower's mother. ' Bisenhower was ruddy with Str- burn ard appeared to be well of a week ago. rested ' ua City Bus Depot r. ® | Eighteen persons were killed in Re rts rea in traffic accidents. There were four 7 | drownings and five persons died ‘ Bur gla rs T ak e $3. 800 in miscellaneous mishaps. : 7 ¢ | A week ago 30 persons were ‘From Sa fe During | killed in traffic accidents, a record Nighttime Entry BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Blistering teniperatures reaching 100 degress in parts of the state drove thousands to the highways and beaches if search of relief over the weekend but the acciden- tal death toll vas well below that | for any weekend this year. In Detroit where the mereury rose to 100 Sanday heat prostra- tion caused three deaths. Police sald. they died in their homes, They were identified as Frank F. Radzivon, 58; William Scott, 56; and Mrs. Ellen Foltz, 55. A Detroit man was killed in @ two-car traffic accident on U.S.-25 near Findlay; Ohio. He was identi- ‘fied as James Luke, 42, of 2747 | Blain St. i TRAFFIC FATALITIES WERE: Pontiac police detectives are in- vestigating an early morning breakin of the Greyhound Bus Ter- minal at 124 N. Perry St. which netted thieves $3,800 in cash According to Detective Olin E Hoffman, the money was taken from’ the ticket office safe some- time between midnight and 5:45 a.m, today. Hoffman said no signs of force- abla entry were found. of group protection rose 20 billion) Truce Line Tomorrow . dollars to nearly 100 billion Included in the 1954 additions SEOUL w—Air was the largest sngle group ever insured—1,700,000 Federal Govern- H. Baumpas, of Jackson, Miss., is ment employes covered, by act of scheduled to recross the line to Congress, for 6.7 billion dollars in| freedom tomorrow after six days life insurance, . Force Lt Guy : - as a prisoner of the Communists. Even without the Government- : ee e employe policies, the 1954 Pur. | The injured airman“ will be chases of new group life Ineurence | turned back to the United Nations excluding credit insurance, which | Command at a point abo +9 wiles covers borrowers, totaled 7.7 dil- | east of Kumwha. on the~Central ose sports alruime wos Korean Front, not far from Where sroup life insurance ) covers shear half the nation’s work -foree, his plane was shot down by Red with protection averaging nearly : $3,000 a worker He will accompany the body of : , Army Capt, Charles W. Brown, of Welcome Ready ss: "Sna a O- gn Lape as a result of for Red Visitors the crash, the Conymunists claim. | Bumpas suffered a possible skull | fracture. Agriculture Department Program Set for Soviet Farmers Ending Tour The Army will have a big heli- jcopter and a doctor standing by to meet him. : * * * The Communists yesterday told | Maj. Gen. Harlan C. Parks, senior Allied delegate to the joint Mili- tary Armistice Commission, that Bumpas appeared to be in good | | WASHINGTON uw — A full-scale i;welcome at the Agriculture De- jday from the Huntoon Funeral Home with the Rev. James Luther | officiating. Burial will be in the Ottawa Park Cemetery. Fred Johnson Fred Johnson, 69, of 577 South Jessie St., died Saturday after a ten day illness. Born in Alabaster, Michigan, on | May 17, 1886, he was the son of | Gustaf and Anna Nelson Johnson. | He married Esther Leaske in Pon- | tiac in May, 1918. | He had been a resident ef the antiaircraft fire last Wednesday. | city for 45 years and was an em. | * * | is | | ploye of the G.M.C. Truck plant \where he worked in the frame | dept. { | Surviving besides his widow are ja daughter, Mrs. Helen (Stait) | Lloyd of Pontiac and William G. | Johnson- of Pontiac and three grandchildren. Also surviving are | two sisters and. two brothers, Mrs. |Mable Scobie of Saginaw, Mrs. |Marie Johnson of Bay City, |Charles. Johnson of Detroit and | John Johnson of Pontiac. | Funeral will be at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home ; with the Rev. Charles Race offi- ' ciating in the absence of the Rev. E. Hazard. Burial will be in the Death Toll Mounts in Flooded States | (Continued From Page One) | | were found so weakened that they born i jhad to be condemned. | In Torrington, Conn., once a 'thriving industrial city of 28,000, | | dozens of stores were smashed and | factories put out of order. Bridges | | were gone and vital supplies were | ‘flown in by helicopters using a | schoolyard for an emergency land- | jing field. The flood took three lives there ,and left many others homeless. | Emergency aid stations were set | up to house and feed the victims. | | Normal life was. brought to a | standstill in Putnam, Conn., where | floods and uncontrollable magne- | 6. | sium fires had combined to wreck | the town. : | “Were done. This valley is | dead,” “a .veteran textile worker | commented to an Associated Press |reporter who managed to get to curred near Stroudsburg, Pa., where Brodhead Creek swept over | and Janet Kimberly; two brothers, the stricken community. The worst single tragedy oc- | a summer vacation camp and car- | Theodore and Bert, and two sis- | ters, Mrs. Laura Prosser and Miss — 2 h Kimberly, both of, Youngstown, O., where he was, Service will be at 3 pm. | Wednesday in Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., 820 E. | Maple, Birmingham. Tamale Peddler Killed Over Sale Site Rights | DETROIT @— Two hot tamale | peddlers fought with knives over | the rights to a street corner Sun. | day. One was fatally stabbed, the | other seriously hurt. The fight was between Henry Wright, 59, and Herman Wallace, Police said Wallace stabbed | Wright in the chest with a paring | knife. Wright was dead on arrival | at Receiving Hospital. Wallace was | stabbed with a boning knife. He | was held at the hospital as a| police prisoner. : | During part of the Revolutionary war, the famous Liberty bell was | hidden in a church in Allentown. 95 Both For *12 Matching Wedding Bands, handsomely tailored bands in 14K ve teweilry Departmen: GEORGE'S: SNEWPORT'S | INSURANCE. Is Our Business ) THATCHER PATTERSON & WERNET Community National FE 2-9224 ried away 40 persons, mostly Ticket agent, Gerald Jones of | 27 Oakland Ave.. told detectives. he discovered the opened -safe | when he opened the office at 5:45 | a.m. He notified police and Man- | ager W. O. Waidelich of 63 Spo- | kane Dr. : | | Success—After 2 Tries EVANSTON, Ill. w—Mark Max. | well, an amateur chemist, had ¢rab grass trouble last month. He brewed up a potion that got rid of it—and turned his lawn a mottled | green and yellow in the process. | Undaunted, he returned to his test | thbes, made another brew and | dyed the grass back to its original green. * . . Buses Rolling Again ‘WASHINGTON (®—Buses and ‘gireetcars rolled again through Washington streets today as AFL. Thomas H. Kroll, 42, Rte. 1, New | partment was ready today for-12 Era, and Herbert Boyles, 70, Stony Soviet farm chiefs who have just Lake, Sunday, in Newaygo County. | completed a six-weeks tour of: Roy Naegele, 67, Rte. 2, Ithaca, American farms Saturday near Evart; Mrs, Ada M. A luncheon and a series of con- Doher, 30. Detroit, Sunday, near ferences with departmental chiefs Port Austin; Gus Rausch Jr., 29,| on administration, -ceenenfts and Bellaire, Sunday in Antrim Coun- planning, livestock, wheat , corn ty; John F. Wine, 20, Ann Arbor. arid farm machinery also were ar- Sunday, near Elk Rapids; John W. ranged. Top officials left the full Keely, 23, Lennon, Sunday, near day’ open to talk over whatever Swartz Creek: Floyd Chapel, 39, matters the Russians cared to Huron bring up. Ellington, ‘Saturday, in . County. Ten members of the delegation Mrs, Flora Ledford, 68, Grand — arrived by plane last night from Rapids, Friday, near Grand Les Angeles and were joined by two others whom they had left in Chicago ecurlier in the week, They were met at the airport by representatives of the State and Agriculture departments and of the Soviet Embassy. Rapids; Sophie W. Schafsnit, 74, Mount Morris, Friday, in Flint; Harold Knapp, 63, Detroit, Satur- day in Detroit. ‘ Charles Sutton, 60, Detroit, Sat-| urday in Detroit, Gerald K. Bul- | transit workers returned to their jbbs after a 52-day strike, The walkout was settled early yester- day when the city granted Capital lard, 39, Muskegon, Saturday near Muskegon; Arthur C. Monette 25, and Ronald H. Yokeum, 21, both of | Deerton, Saturday, near Mar- quette; Hollis Burgess, 16, Brown | City, Saturday, near Sandusky, | The Russians will remain here tomorrow, visiting the Agriculture Department's research center at nearby Beltsville, Md., and other condition Oak- Hill Cemetery, * * Parks flushed with anger as he Jack Tunnell talked about the incident in the de. . militarized zone. LJ . Jack Tunnell, 34, of Aurora, Mo., . « died here yesterday after an ill- The Communists charged . the |N¢ss of five weeks. plane was spying on their installa-| Wife had been visiting an aunt, tions. Parks said all evidence | Mrs. Tunnell, of 365 N. Perry St. pointed. to the conclusion that) Born in Aurora, Mo., July 20, Bumpas was hopelessly lost. | 1921, he was the son of Ray and | Nell McDonald Tunnell. He mar- |vied Fern Stewart in Harrison, | Ark. Royal Family Barbecue Marks Meg's Birthday ‘ mother are a daughter and son, | BALLATER, Scotland «—Brit- * lain's royal family got ready fa adage age en pose hg esed ger barbecue a 200-pound side of beef California. |today as a postscript to Princess ~ / | Margaret's 25th birthday. The an- a ata ‘ae ae “eae niversary itself passed yesterday | ¢mith Funeral Home. . with the world no wiser as to her _ fomantic intentions : * The festivity on the spacious Mrs. Lester -Ge Wilbur lawns of Balmoral Castle normally | Rosary service ‘for Mrs. Lester would have taken place on Mar-|¢ (joan Delia) Wilbur 38 a 0 He and his | Surviving besides his widow and | _to reach safety without major | tragedy. : | | refuge. The women and children, Nine persons | survived to tell of the horror when | the flash flood collapsed a building | in which the campers had sought | others wefe dead or. LJ We should be glad to send missing. Brodhead Creek, fed by torren- tial rains and the collapse of | mountain dams, rose 25 to 30 feet | within 15 minutes, It devastated parts of Stroudsburg, a Pocono Mountain resort center. Forttinately, most other camps in the flood areas were above the | torrents, or the campers were able | are coy and hard to snare.” Shorthand, Typewriting, The first repair efforts went to restore utilities and open roads into the flooded distri¢ts, By yes- terday many places at last had electricity and gas again and, tele- phone circuits were opened. Drink- AN issue of Reader's Digest on “That Amazing Secretarial Shortage” This article states that, “despite vacations, pensions, coffee breaks, free lunches, and a fat pay envelope, good secretaries BEGINNING and REFRESHER COURSES in Gregg and Calculator and Other Courses . DAY, HALF-DAY AND EVENING | VETER. you an article taken from an Accounting, Comptometer APPROVED ‘ing water was still a general ‘problem, however. Soe Most railroads were operating through the flood sections but in Re Grsinublpsiluly 7 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac Phone FE 2-3551 © For a copy of the above article and our new Bulletin phone, call or return this ad. garet's birthday, but her sister Queen Elizabeth II kept the points’ of interest, They also will be luncheon guests of the National elder | -Pingree Ave. will be tonight’ at) 8 p.m. in Voorhees Funeral Home. Funeral will be Tuesday at 9 a.m. | many cases had to skirt hard-hit | cities and avoid weakened or washed out bridges. -In western Massachusetts scores | Transit Co. fare increases to off- set a 15cent hourly wage boost | for drivers and mechanics. -The Weather PONTIAC VICINITY — Scattered | shewers and thundersterms this mern- | thandershowers, shift- y this afterneen and nerth to northeast tonight. i Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 6 am. At & &.m.: Wind velocity 1 mph.) Di : Southwest. Bin ‘bets y at 7:23 p.m : tises. T: y at 6:47 a.m. i = seta y at 9:28 p.m | k Tises Tueeday at 12:11 p.m. | if 2 " i | CMe 1 U1 OM. ..... a?) aa g Dhivsn chr acess am. F 1 pm ni 70 : \ OM... Feiss i) bos etiae ' cs) | Sibehee oe | nawecangees heen) - be in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Mrs, Wilbur died Friday at 3:25 and Miss Elsbeth. Blanchard, 20, Press Club before leaving late sabbath quief in the tradition of Adrian, Sunday near Blissfield. Tuesday. _ . her late father. — DROWNED WERE: 4 2 James Roemer, 2, South Bend, ; ey roe * Ind., Sunday,.in Magician Lake in Cass County; Peter Pstragowski, 61, Detroit, Sunday, in Big Bear River, near Algonac; Edward Rob-— St. Clair Shores, in Strawberry, Lake in Livingsjon-¢ounty.. IN OTHER ACCIDENTS: | Russell. Baird, 52, Detroit, was | electrocuted Sunday. near his Al-— gonac County cottage. UE Brenda Ann McLemore, 3, Flint, | suffocated Sunday when a balloon | she was blowing up exploded and. ‘a piece lodged in her throat. Bernard Davis, 54, Flint, was killéd Saturday if a fall downstairs in. Flint. : Ernest Metz, 49, Pontiac, died Sunday in a rooming house fire. Connie Clark, 4, Detroit, Sunday of burns from a rubbish fire in the backyard of her home. ino Ram Exports st ed in Africa ‘p.m. in Pontiac General Hospital: Boy Scout Murder Suspect Released MUSKEGON uF — State Police Capt. Leroy Hunt said a man held for questioning in the slaying of ably will be released this after- noon. * * * The man was cleared today by did not answer her description of ‘a motorist she saw talking with ,“a boy like Peter’ on July 5, the date he vanished from Camp Wa- baningo. Prosecutor Robert A. “waugh said the man will be. re- in St. Michael Church. Burial will | -| 12-year-old Peter Gorham prob- Mrs. Elsie Ferrill, who said he | Cava- =. ‘of highways were still blocked. Two communities, Charlton and | Southbridge, could be reached only } by boat or helicopter. Southbridge 'was still without gas, water or | power, | Flood reports were relayed to | President Eisenhower, on vacation in Colorado. He was “highly grati- | fied” over the rescue work and aid the armed forces were able to render, dent as disaster areas and entitled aid areas, New Jersey, New York and Massa- | chusetts last night but.added no | new flood threats. States designated by the Presi-| It isn’t necessary to forego the advantages of Brace- Smith Service because of price. Its cost can be kept well within a very limited St. Ignatius at 9 a.m. Wednesday, _ day. + THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1955 * He By Sk “ < ah a ; Po " Mees mf Chrysler has offered to meet a layoff pay plan granted production workers by Ford and GM, but has refused to extend it to cover some 6,000 office workers represented by the UAW, County Deaths ROCHESTER will be held at 8 p.m. tonight at the William R. Potere Funeral Home for Henrietta C. Murray, 60, of 323 Pine street. Requiem Mass will be at St. Ignatius Church in with burial in St. Ignatius Ceme- tery. Miss Murray died Sunday. She is survived by a brother, Albert D., of St. Ignatius; two sis- ters, Mrs. Anna O'Neil and Blanche Murray, both of St. Ignatius. Ernest Bridge ROCHESTER — Service for Ern- est Bridge, 73, of 19461 Troy PI., Detroit, will be held at Spaulding & Son Funeral Home, Ferndale, at 11 a.m. Tuesday, with private bur- ial. Mr. Bridge died at his home Saturday and ngements are being made by the William R. Potere Home, Rochester. He is. survived by two daughters, Mrs. Doris Kelley of Detroit and Mrs. Florence Kerr, of Rochester; two sons, Ernest L. of Detroit and William Bridge of Rochester; 10 grandchildren, and one great- grandchild. Neil William Dowling LAKE ORION—Service for Neil William Dowling, 64, of 1015 Baid- win, Rd., will be held at 2 p.m Tuesday from Allen's ‘Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Graveside service will be conducted by Orion Lodge 46, F&AM. Mr. Dowling died Satur- He leaves two brothers, John and Frank of Lake Orion; and a’ nephew, Franklin of Bloomfield Hills, Arthur J. Hibbler ORION TOWNSHIP — Service for Arthur J. Hibbler, 53, of 3140 Clarkston Rd., Orion Township, will be held at 2:30 p.m. Wednes- day i ‘Coach Calls 56 Gridders. ito Open Marlette Drills | MARLETTE — Marlette High | School Coach “Chub"’ Brenner has | | announced that 56 prospective grid- ‘ders have been sent letters for | participation in opening drills to be held at the school Aug. 29. | Physical examinations will be! given at the school at 8 p.m. to- merrow, Athletes should bring in- | — fee and cards properly | gned by parents. school gym at 8 p.m. Wednesday. | Nitrogen for Fertilizér | Derived From Coal Coke WHEELING, W. Va.—Some ni-| tregen for fertilizer is derived | from coal. In the process of pro- | ducing coke for use in steel man- ufacturing, ammonia is given off, in the gases that leave the coke oven. : This ammonia is captured and usually processed into ammonium | sulfate, commonly called by-prod- | uct sulfate of ammonia, from) which commercial fertilizer is | Equipment is to be issued in the |]. of Ranchipur,” last week. Rain Report Ups| MARKETS | Stock Market | “svt Sect 2 WD (Late Morning Quotations; le) : * > Admiral ..... 21.8 Jacobs! .i..... 8.8 : ° ; - fos wetion 39.7 Johns Man .. 4 | : ® Le: . Produce — : * L ; | Allied “Ghem" 288-4 Jones nos Sea a es In rain ; , a int X fd | | Es cpaters’ i imp cls). eat | . = IT, Aug. 19 (AP) — Today's Alum “Ltd ...102 | Kresge, eo . . ia rice report “from the Detroit Union| Fea ee ge Se 24 ' nolesale fruit a: prices: Can ..... 40.2° Lib MoN & L. 16.2 CHICAGO W—A weather map! Appice: bushels ue ane Os. i: w.|. NEW YORK w — The Stock Am Cyan .,:. S01 Lise & My... 03 : ; :, : am : . which showed a surprising amount | Vy N.W | Gr . oot 0; ues | Market was mixed today. in early |4™ SMe"! $82 [ese 23.3 Ithys 2 25. tair 2.50; ! A of rain in central and southern | a4"" 1 $0- 2.75 : Am Motors... 03 Lone 8 Chem 50.4 Avocados: Calif’ fiat cones 120 2.90, | dealings with quiet trading. : Am N Gas ... 645 Lor rae Illinois, and also some moisture in 14s 340, lds 3.00; See's ’ am Mews... 383 Martin, |. adjoining states, caused selling in| “Biueverries- Mich 13 pt fats: per pt| Gains ran from fractions to oe fed... Be tee te... B corn and soybeans on the Board | f°, 23:25 cents jumbo erte 21-263 bout a point and losses were|4™ AM! yids) Merck ‘tice 38 uy? tee coon (|S Quulifiower: “Golo WGA ert @ dos | mostly in fractions. ae SD 7 ~~ ay ae io , ‘ mak Ch... 4. Soybeans were hardest hit, | Sch hg UP ge ey yey er Trading was fairly active at (45% O°, 6° Sea Moe Se Ri dropping around four cents at * 30 — ae Peceak S80 teed the opening because of the ac- araee OS “ be ee eee = one time, linois the largest sey- | » 75. lee 300; Calif 4.00-4.25, cumulation of weekend orders, | arms cx. 2, Murray Op 343 bean preducer and some grale- |, Hencdews: Western flat certs €-#¢/ them simmered down to the lel. | Atchison 131.2 Net Bloc... 414 Sp parsed fo weney cheat | ieireri, SU eae, | gn kits | sprety pece that bee provetied /icee Tae te Ret Say | crop prospects late last week. | IMCs’ srade ‘tir .00-3.00; Canada WGA | Fecently, Bendix Av... 474 Nat Lead <0. 17 | = § losses extended oe ee ee ee pees | Antions Telephone, which sold | pety Steel |. 1442 N¥ Central. 4b | aia cents, Dealings were BC. | meg fair 200-394, Golo. yellows large ex-rights to subscribe to a new Reems Air H | = aed 6 ve. % 00-2 28; a 60-2. ; ho yel- | issue debentures, opened on a 427 : a Ww io lores 3.50; Ee cise Giebe. ced block ot 2.200 % eh 179 and ae gs aa 216 a eae at be heat eased in sympathy with | (so: en whites 250-278. few 225: lock of 2,200 up % a Bris My ..... 30.2 Ohio Oil 32.5 corn and soybeans. The liquida-| | Peaches: Mich. bushels. Us ichavem, | later extended this gain. American Budd Co. ': 302 Owens I Gi 1143 tion“in this grain early last week | 3275; ‘Pair Haven 2 280hrdlu —,:xa%e% | Cyanimid gained a point at 58 % | Burroughs. 20.3 we Ro oe ae had been checked when corn and ae page i mune on 3,000, Camp Soup .. oH Panh Epi 6 soybeans rallied on the weather. | % bu bekts UB. No. 1 Tr ema 8 up U.S. Steel was off 's, Bethlehem (can pac 1.033) Penney Sc Sha This liquidation was renewed to-| G2 "No' Metaras’ 2) up 828-650; cat, (UP % and Republic Gown %.| Aphal Air! 33, Pe cae oe By | day. Rye eased with wheat while | lugs Hales 603 & larger 3.25, 658 & | General Motors was off \%, Chrys-| seco, at.) tea pepe, Cole --- a oats were down with corn. — Se er bu pskts Beli type! ler % and Studebaker-Packard 14, | Ches & Qhio $27 Phelps D .... 99.7 | Wheat near the end of the first | ™stium to large 2.00 =) | | Anaconda was off % and Kenne- |Ciise Sve | $23 prllee yo RT hour was 1's to 1% lower, Septem- a unless olterwise stated. Calif long | cott off % while New York Central | Clerk Raulp . 00 Phill Fes ber $1.91%; corn 2 to 2% lower, — Bae Ss — Lago 10 6 | and Pennsylvania were both off 4. |Coca Cola |. 1124 Proct & @....1004 September $1.26; oats % to 1% low. | £00 mostly 3.45-3.18, reds 2.80-2.75; Mich | Dow Chemical, Union Carbide and ete a te Pullman “ er, September 56%; rye 1% to 1% EN 45-100 mae, "9011-00, veund DuPont were all up while Standard Col On 16 H RCA eae 3 ; oo ——— *Birawberiee Sant. 12 pt tiate, tew| Oil (NJ) was off a fraction. | Gon “aie: $04 Repub au ase “a 2% to lower, September $2.22%4, | 3-75, few lower. ~ STOCK AVERAGES |Consum Pow . 40.3 Re* Sr and lard 12 to 18 cents a hundred} “**T® Se eee NEW YORK. Aug. 22—Compiled by the, = jm a Dey Te “5 as pounds lower, September 10.97. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS ee a ee (oes ee work ave... BSI : cancaco, Au 22 iAP) — Buiter aor Indust beet Cal Stocks — Ot : S . Jos Lead. 60.1 Grain Prices | prices unchanged to. % higher: #3 ‘score | Noon Mon ..... 2379 1913 738 1110 |Curtie Wr’ .. 43 woorene ee as AA $175; wy ee bo 4.5; 6 C} Prev. day 238.2 1316 4.1 1713 Deere ...,,. 3 Sears Roeb 06.2 CHICAGO GRAIN 52.5; cars 90 B 88: 89 C 53.5. Week ago ...... 2397 1303. 143 1716 / Det Bais... 36.9 Sears Ro $0.1 HICAGO, Al 22 (AP) —Opening firm; receipts 9.402; wholesa! onth ago 247.4 135 SS 1770 Dis C Beag .. 46 Sinclair saa. S AGO, ug ‘ vey t prices unchanged to 4 higher; | Year ago . 180.3 1001 64.8 133.9 | Doug Altre - O92 Boe ae eWhe sits SU | Bie mlnee soe mediome 420. aang: 14968 Weer ccc Be Heb Gee Les DempOn™ cgthg Sou Pec ences. O12 Bop scccese:8 BB MBS cc csascs J AIM | eras ba ateting aan ‘U8. = : hie ted vrens Sou Ry ..... 93 pee ee OU ay ee 6340 | orde 26: girties 26; checks 36.8; current | 1994 bish .... wud He O83 M80 | Bees tee’... ote Bid Brand. 308 May .......01.01 Bep pareor? sTocns $i Auto Lite . 484 gtd Oil Calif” 6 red t No Ry... 414 sens , y —— os a two car accident After Bathtub Accident Grevhound |) 187 py : st ; unday night at Doris and Feath-| ; Quit Ot... 8. OS Rubber 444) DETROIT w — Chrysler Corp. |erstone Rds. in Pontiac Township.| SANTA MONICA, Calif. (INS)— | Rares Mis Te. Steel... ‘ 16 | and the CIO United Auto Workers! She was a passenger in a car | Actress Lana Turner, who hurt | Hooker: yA Waseca’ aa | went back. to the bérgaihing table | driven by Martin Simonis, 1076] 19| herself in a bathtub fall in Aca-|josa"net ™ Att West Un fei.. 308 today, with union negotiators hold-| Mile Rd., Utica. The second car pulco eight days ago, is under. | Inspir Co}... 604 Weste ABE... 274. ing overwhelming authorization to! was driven by Arnold Dale Haga-| going a general checkup in St.|{nt Bus Mch eas. Woete, am ce. ha call a strike if necessary to SUP-| done, 23, of 2908 Harvey ave.| John’s Hospital. | 8 ys a port contract demands, Hagadone told Oakland County! ‘he blonde screen beauty en- | Int Paper 1063 Young gh T 1 The current Chrysler-UAW con- Sheriff's deputies that he was tered the hospital yesterday. Her {nt Tala Tel S74 Zemit® Rad... | tract expires Aug. 31. The UAW a a ee peat one | injuries are known to include a| =o | reached agreements with Ford not see the Simonis vehicle | brain concussion and a cut back. | * and General motors in June. | until it was too late to avoid the | She hkd been under treatment at | Cottonseed Sales Rise Negotiations with American Mo- | *ccident. Simonis said it was too home, with nurses attending her! WASHINGTON—Sales of Ameri- tors Corp. are in recess until Aug. bond for him to stop to avoid the around the clock. can cottonseed oil abroad reached 30, three days before a contract | “ollision. Her injuries kept her from start-| a record high of 574,000,000 pounds extension expires. jing her new picture, “The Rains! in 194, more than seven times the 1953 export total. chain store field. ment program. and if you have $2,500 Box 26, Pontiac Press. vestors over 880.00 appraised valuation. history. obtain outside opportunity. y * fF z i fe £ 28 file E : [ i el is : q : claar dtooaall will mo doubt agree that as this has become about the most sound LAND CONTRACT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY 6% land contracts on Flint Area Property: During the next six months, ! will have available to in- 1 $400,000 worth of 6% land contracts on new, each contract is $6,100 payable at $61.00 per month. These homes have a bank mortgage appraisal value, established by a licensed appraiser, of $5,250.00 The cost of the contract to you is $4,. , $1,220.00 {bonus to you) less than the contract balance, and $370.00 less than the When this contract ig paid in full it will have earned $2,379.00 in interest, This amount, together with your borius' (or discount) of $1,220.00, means that your original investment of $4,880.00 earned a total of $3,599.00 — a nearly unbelievable increase in capital of about-74%—an overall return of $8,479.00. Where can this be equaled? Any person or company buying one of these contracts will be furnished the following items: 1. A credit report from the Retailer's Credit Bureau on the per- son buying the home. Ly 2. An up-to-date abstract of title showing clear title and tax 3. A warranty deed and assignment of contract. We recommend that you have your attorney examine all papers. {f you have never purchased LAND CONTRACTS FOR INVESTMENTS before, we will gladly have an ‘agent call to answer your questions and explain the value and simplicity in obtaining one or of these sound contracts, at no obligation to you. Make an investigation; there will be no pressure sales talk, only an explanation of the tacts. If, you have bought contracts before you will recognize the fairness of the offer made here and i Country, and especially the Flint area, continues to develop, land investment. Partial proof of: this statement is the millions of dollars worth of land contracts purchased in Flint each year by people from all walks of life, How- ever the building in Flint has now become so tremendous that it is going to become necessary investment money. Therefore WE are now offering the people of Pontiac the above $500,000 worth of these contracts sold by myself in Flint each year fer the past several years. 4 WE BACK THESE CONTRACTS WITH OUR EXPERIENCE AND INTEGRITY / Attention, Attorneys and Brokers ---A _ iif one of your clients purchases me NET INCOME OPPORTUNITY Well established company, now entering a National Sales and Manufacturing Progra qualifidd party ownership of sensational amuse- ment devices, now operating under franchise in Michigan with some of America’s leaders in the This is a safe, dependable, established business which presents an opportunity to secure a VERY HIGH INCOME ...an ALL CASH business re- quiring little management as all details have been arranged ... checks for earnings mailed monthly . ... very favorable tax situation ... ideal retire- If you are interested in exceptionally high income available, you are invited to write giving your address and telephone number, for full details to m homes. mg fee will be paid to you empties mnt 7 m, will assign to to $12,500 immediately The balance due on fi, to Slows Planes ~ _ News in Brief ¢ To buy or sell in Waterford, Drayton or Clarkston area see White Bros. Real Estate.- OR 38-7118. Adv If your friend's in jail and needs bail, Ph. FE 5-404 or MA 5-4081 : : AV. | June Stack Victor in Parks Net Test PITTSBURGH W — Michigan's | 18-year-old June Stack is the new. queen of national public parks tennis players. The Hamtramck girl won the women's championship by dethron- | ing Mrs. Mary Arnold Prentiss of | Blue Jay, Calif,, 5-7, 6-2, 64 yes-. terday in the 29th annual National i Public Parks Tennis tournament. Clyde Hippenstiel of San Ber- | nardino, Calif., won the men’s title | for the 3rd straight year, defeating | Ben Sobieraj of St. Louis, Mo, Miss Stack blew a 53 lead in| the lst set- but was in control thereafter with a brilliant display of forehand driving. Rotating Chute Eases Drop, VAN NUYS, Calif.—A parachute | that rotates like a windmill to! increase its stability in supply | drops or to slow planes in flight has been developed by a Van Nuys firm, The company says one of its chutes " weighing 4 pounds can) stabilize and prevent tumbling, of | a falling object weighing as much as 3 tons. A chute 10 feet in dive brakes on a 10-ton airplane, | the company says. A low friction swivei permits | the chute to spin from 1,500 to, 3,000 times a minute, giving the chute its extra “drag.” | Scholarly Students 1 CHEBOYGAN i — The Univer- || sity of higan’s famed fresh- || water biological station at Douglas | Lake has a distinguished faculty- student setup. Almost all of the 98 students have one or more degrees. There| are 15 professors from seven uni- | versities, All 17 scientific research- | ers are Ph. D. men, Department Plans’ Executive Menu for Red Farmers WASHINGTON. (—The Depart- ment of Agriculture brought out its best menu—-similar to one served President Eisenhower — for its luncheon’ today honoring. 12 visiting Russian farm delegates. Eisenhower, where the Agriculture Department has an experimental farm. The idea was to let the President taste some of the foods the department has had a hand in developing over | the years, There was, for from the “lean type" hogs the de- partment has developed. They give more lean prok, the kind many Americans like. And then there were Charleston Gray Watermelons to top off the luncheon as dessert, At the mo- ment they are the pride and joy of the department, which describes them as “gray-green, but deep red inside, with black seeds and sweet, juicy meat with fine texture.!' Struck by Car; . - - Boy Hospitalized ~ - A two-year-old Pontiac boy was reported in fair condition this morn. ing at Pontiac general Hospital | with possible head injuries after he was struck by a car Saturday night on Elizabeth Lake Rd. The child, Gerald R. Ogg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ogg of 8333 Elizabeth Lake Rd., was struck by a car driven by James H. LaFauntaine, 45, of Detroit. LaFauntaine told Oakland Coun- ty Sheriff deputies that he was go- | diameter could tke the place of '"® over a hill crest on the road when he saw the child standing in the. road, No Contract Gregory Oil Co. Necessary FUEL OIL Call Today 94 East Walton Bivd. Phone FE 5-6141 soon after his in- | auguration, dined at Beltsville, Md | instance, ham | Calumet Threat Ends Steel Union Strike HOUGHTON «~The threat of Calumet & Hecla Ine, to liquidate mining operations in Upper Mich- igan’s copper country was ended today .with settlement of an 111- day strike agains the company’s | Calumet division, th verapists. 5 ine ~ =) i. ae BRANCH SALES and SERVICE 09 Ponting State Rank Bldg Striking ClO United Steelwork- ers voted 1,120 to 189 yesterday te accept a new company offer. A company spokesman said i smelter operations were scheduled to resume today. Normal produc- tion at the division's five copper mines was expected within three weeks. The strike, which idled 2,200 COCKROACHES One Full Year Guerentee From Houses, Gro- cery Stores and Restaurdnts.. Re- mein out only three hours. —No signs used Rox Ex Company 104s Pont Gt fe, Hidg. FR 40407 workers, was called May 2. - eed ‘Take at take th ip. oe abs at ff Get a Vacation luggage '20 to ‘500 Loan from HFC Now—today—you can get extra cash from HFC for all your vacation needs! Train or plane fore Car repairs Bus fare New clothing Any geod reason without endorsers > Vacation Loans are made You Get = ee nee extra fast. One-day sery- { Paymts |/pavyerts | paymts | Paywets ice. It's easy to meet $ 50 S 5.00 % 9.24 HFC requirements, 100 |§ 6.678 7.20] 9.98] 1839] Make no gf oer for 200 | 13.10 | 14.21] 19.77 | 36.59] 30 days. So don’t you 300 | 19.65 | 21.20 | 29.55 | 54.78 | miss out! Let yourself see | 31.39 | 34.16 | 48.09 | 90.02 with a Vacation Loan Honsehold's charge ts the monthly rate of 3% on thad port of @ balance. sot excondeng B10, 14 % om that part of « balance in axcans of BIO, bud wot excomdeng $)00, and ty % on any remarader t. friendly, depend- able HFC! y a Phone or come in today! GjpHOUSEHOLD FINANCE 3% South Saginaw St., The Kay Bldg., 2nd Floor PHONE: FEderal 4-0535 Loans made to residents of mearhy towhs ‘Unexpected company headed your way? A Llama Theagee wil dave the day! 1. Open your freezer. 2. Select from a variety of foods. 8. Preparation’s no problem— _ 4, In minutes a complete meal is ready toservel gern \ : = ¢+ - eg W ‘a THE E PONTIAC PRESS, .MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1955 webs 3 Es a are ehilly ] * — 3 | ia y \ ieee ie] Sita @ 1, lenge) @ Welkers @ Crutches 14 o-2e2? 30 4-007 MICHIGAN FIRST AID _Jnvallé Needs — Sickroom Supplies 1621 S$. 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