™ wi THE PONTIAC PRESS sme Sunday—Hot. e,e (Details, Page 2.) Edition lllth YEAR xx PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 —28 PAGES A NTERNATIONAL NEWS GERVICE Te Warn of Grass Fires as Heat Wave Continues City PW Freed Last Night May Be War's Ist Prisoner Martin Strahan Taken on Ist Day of Land Action Tells Newsmen of March to Seoul, Pyongyang Following Capture A Pontiac. soldier, re- leased by the Reds last night, believes he was the first American military man captured in the Ko- rean war He is M. Sgt. Martin A. Strahan Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William Larson of 566 Lenox Ave. A veteran of major bat- tles in World War II, Strahan was captured the afternoon of Tuly 5, 1950, just four days after the first grourd forces landed in Korea. This was just 10 hours after the first clash between American and North Korean ground troops near Osan. He was a member of Co. B, 21st Regiment, 24th Di- vision, and has been held at Red prison camp No. 3 in Northern Korea. As Martin climbed down from a Russian truck at Panmunjom last night, according to news wire re- ports, he told newsmen at Freedom Gate belieyed he was the first American taken prisoner by the North Koreans, He said the North Koreans took the first group of captives to Seoul and then marched them north to Pyongyan where more prisoners were picked up. “We had GIs and civilians by then,’’ Strahan said. ‘‘there were Russian, American, French, Brit- ish, Turkish, German and Irish civilians with us. We even had four French nuns along.” Strahan said the prisoners were turned over on Oct. 31, 1950 to the ‘Korean Gestapo’’, headed by the | notorious North Korean sadist} known as ‘The Tiger.” Strahan told the now familiar (Continued on Page 3, Col. 2) Second Ship of Ps ls Docking Today SAN FRANCISCO w—The_sec- ond shipload of U. S. veterans of Communist prison camps home- docks here this afternoon. The transport Gen. William F. Hase is expected to dock at 3:30 p.m. (5:30 p.m. EST) with 437 Americans freed by the Commu- nists in the Korean War prisoner exchange at Panmunjom. Their trip from Korea has taken about two weeks. All 437 are expected to be free to return to their homes across the nation within a few hours after landing. [War s First POW Now Free SGT. MARTIN A. STRAHAN JR. — = ae My be tester * Volunteer Workers Swarm: fo Flint Disaster Project FLINT (UP) — More than 800 professional building tradesmen and 2,800 volunteers turned out today for the “world’s biggest building bee” as this city of 275,000 home-building marathon. The first home to take shape was that of the Fetchik family. Within an hour after three aerial’ bombs sounded the work'! call, the frame of the one- story home was up, rafters were in place, and 14 men were nailing on the siding. The goal was 111 new houses for | those left homeless when a. tor- | nado swept through the Beecher | district last June 8, killing 116 | persons, Mayor Donald Reigle called for 5,000 volunteers, saying ‘‘we need anyone who can swing a hammer or carry a brick.” Some of the homes flattened by afterward but many families still are living with relafives or in | makeshift shelters. | Reigle said ‘‘at least 50,000 man- hours of work will be needed today and Sunday”’ to repair the devas- tation. “We have nearly 300,000 people living in Flint,”’ he said. ‘‘We could put every one of them to work if they’d just show up — but of course we can’t expect a miracle like that.’’ Volunteers came from as far away as Ohio and Indiana. The ; Mennonites of Indiana had a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) ROKs Ask American Site for Conference on Peace UNITED NATION, N. Y. (AP)—South Korea was re- ported today advocating San Francisco or Honolulu as the site of the Korean peace conference. An alternate choice would be a city in Latin America, perhaps Rio de Janeiro. This development came as U. N. delegates waited for the twister were rebuilt shortly | | son, 38, and Sidney Steinberg, 38—| time the scheduled appearance as| with patrolman Vincent Langan, | fled New York in the summer of | a witness of Philip L. Cole, deputy! also figured in the probe. After | | 1951. | Communist reaction to the General Assembly decision yesterday that its side would be made up of U. N. coun- tries which sent troops to Korea, plus South Korea. The Soviet Union is to be* invited if the Communist side desires it. The U._N. hopes that Red China, North Korea and the Soviet Union will be the Communist represent- atives. Some sources here pointed out, however, that the Reds have the right to invite other countries besides the Soviet Union. These sources speculated they might undertake to enlarge their side to meet the U. N. represer.tatives nation for nation. As the special Korean session of the Assembly adjourned yesterday, UL, N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold sent its decisions regarding the peace parley to Red China and North Korea. 7— The U. N. agreement to limit its representation to nations that fought under its flag in Korea rep- resented a triumph for the United States which had pushed this plan. Many U. N. members had urged the inclusion of India but the New Delhi government bowed out at the last moment and the American proposal won approval 43-5. No date has been set yet for the conference but under terms of the Korean armistice it should convene before Oct. 28. The United States, which bore chief responsibility for the unified command in the Korean fighting, was asked to consult the interested nations as to the time and place for the meeting. started rebuilding a tornado-devastated suburb. The workers swarmed through the Beecher metropoli- tan district at 8 a.m. (EST) for the start of the two-day a a | | ! FBI Seeks 7th Red Conspirator Car at Mountain Cabin | of Arrested Fugitives | Now Being Traced | SAN FRANCISCO W—FBI agents said they expect to make at least | one more arrest in the wake of. Thursday night’s dramatic capture | | of two fugitive leaders in a remote | | mountain cabin. The two—Robert George Thomp- | Three other persons were ar- rested at the cabin near Yosem- ite Park and a fourth was ar- rested Friday after tracing a car found at the hideaway. A second car was discovered at the cabin and the owner of this car is now being sought by au- thorities, said William Whelan, FBI agent in charge here. Thompson has been sent to Alca- traz Prison in San Francisco Bay to begin serving a three-year pris- on term to which he originally’ was sentenced July 2, 1951. He was one of 11 top Commu- nist leaders convicted in New 4 York of conspiring to advocate the violent overthrow of the U.S government. He mow faces the additional charge of unlawful flight to avoid imprisonment — punishable by as much as five additional years. ‘WAC’ Turns Out Blond, Not Blonde INCHON, Korea )—The exciting rumor swept through this reception center that an American WAC was coming back from Communist imprisonment. True enough, the blond hair of a returned prisoner stepping off an ambulance today came down to the shoulders. But the freed prisoner turned out to be Pfc, Wayne Johnson of Beaver Dam, Ohio. He went at once to a barber shop, got his hair cut and kept the shorn locks. “Tm saving this hair,’’ he ex- plained, ‘‘because my father told me I'd be bald by the time I’ was 74a\* Senator Charges Printing Office Has Game Ring | McCarthy Claims Books Are Being Operated by Government Employes WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) charged today an organ- ized gambling ring is oper- ating in. the government printing office (GPO) and poses a grave threat to na- tional security. The head of the GPO, public printer Raymond C. Blattenberger, promptly agreed that gambling ac- tivities “have a lot to do with the security of our department.” Blattenberger then an- nounced that any printing office employe who “hides behind the Fifth Amend- ment” will be suspended. His announcement drew a round of applafse from the audience at a hearing conducted by the Sen- | ate’s permanent A number of witnesses at other hearings by the subcommittee have refused to answer questions | on the ground that answers might) Bronx for questioning in| Reds to Return tend to incriminate them. The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution gives a witness the right to refuse to answer such questions. Blattenberger made his state- ment after a surprise witness, Carl J. Lundmark, refused to tell McCarthy whether he operates a’ gambling book at the huge govern- ment printing plant or whether he netted $25,000 from this operation | last year. The subcommittee has been in-| vestigating charges that some em- ployes of the printing office are Communists and may have carried off confidential documents. McCarthy, man subcommittee, or a different track today, how- ever, contending that gambling in the GPO could cause employes to get so deeply into debt that they might be easy prey “tor foreign agents. sitting as a one- The change sidetracked for a + investigations | 4 committee headed by McCarthy. | COOL SPOT IN NEW YORK—Lucy, Big Customer Beats the Heat ~ a Siamese | temperatures which reached 95 Friday. New Yorkers elephant, romps in pool in her enclosure in Central | sweltered in the heat wave which struck most of the |Park Zoo in New York as she sought relief from | Lation. + D AP Wirepheote ing a | shooter.’ Quiz Suspect in Slaying 19.900 Persons of New York Union Chief NEW YORK (AP)—Detectives investigating the slay- | ing of a Bronx union leader today picked up for question- | former $2,000-a-month Yonkers Raceway “trouble | Bronx District Attorney George B. De Luca said the, See GM Show Science and Research Display Ends Sunday After 4-Day Stay Relief Unlikely Before Tuesday in Pontiac Area Demands for Water Set Near Capacity Total for Pumps Friday TODAY'S TEMPERATURES ¢€ a: m:.... w 68 104. Mm:.....- 87 18. Mosc. ot Il a. m.......91 8 a. m.. 73° #12 m. voures 9 4; M:....: 8L ol pp. m...2c. 95 Blistering heat coupled with a 22-day drouth brought an urgent appeal to Pontiac residents today to prevent “dangerous grass fires” by guarding rubbish fires closely. The plea came as the mercury reached a record 96 degrees today and sent temperatures over the 90 mark for the fifth consecu- tive day. Today’s 96 is two degrees higher than the old record for this day estab- lished in 1872. And the U.S. Weather Bureau predicted no letup in the furnace-like heat in ,the Midwest and East for | several rrore days. A high of 97 degrees is forecast for the Pontiac area Sunday, two degrees above yesterday's 95. No rain is in sight. As Pontiac sweltered under the heat wave, Philadelphia counted a to" of 13 deaths in yesterday's 'man, Lawrence (Lar) Lynch, was taken into custody at | headed off | his Hopewell Junction, N. Y.. home. He was brought to the* the fatal shooting yester- day of Thomas F. Lewis, 35, president of Local 32-E, | AFL Building Service Em- ployes Union. The killer, former convict Ed- | ward (Snakes) Ryan, 46, was shot dead in a running gunfight with a policeman a few minutes after | Lewis was slain. Police expressed | belief Ryan was a hired gunman. The office announced that Lynch, also a former convict, Bronx district attorhey’s lost his race- | Way job last spring at the insis- | tence of Lewis. | Assistant District Attorne y |George Tilzer- said that an auto- mobile with license plates traced to Lynch had been seen at about the time of the shooting near the | apartment house where Lewis was | shot. |! A mystery car, which crept along near Ryan as he shot it out ‘Criminal’ PWs Won't Halt Repatriation | of Prisoners PANMUNJOM Ww — The munists said today they would re- turn all Allied prisoners wanting | repatriation. including all those the | General “Motors Parade of Pro- | gress started the second half of | lits four-day st2v in Pontiac as : opened today’s shows at 2 p.m. The big collection of scientific | Germ Warfare Charge | High School show site. Com- | Reds sentenced to jail for offenses | | allegedly committed during ) tivity. The Reds also told the joint pris- sion that ‘‘more than 300 Koreans and more than 20 non-Koreans”’ | are refusing to be repatriated. The Reds continued: “Owing to the fact that the | operation of repatriation is still cap- | | extibite, films and stage demon- | strations will close Sunday night with a final stage show starting at 9 p.m. at the Washington Junior Parade officials say some 19,900 local persons already have turned out to view the GM show, which points up the role that science, engineering and re- search have played in the na- . | tion's development. A performance staged early Friday afternoon for ! was! special | | youngsters of Pontiac Boys’ Club, ;oner of war Repatriation Commis- | | (See picture on page 21) Oakland County 4-H Club, Boy | Scouts, Girl Scouts, Pontiac YMCA } | going on, our side shall continue | to persuade them to be repa- triated. performances | stage show at 2, p.m., ‘and Oakland County Children’s | Home. Saturday‘s schedule includes six , of the 40-minute | 3, 4, 7, 8 and 9| leaving a two-hour intermis- | |sion between 5 and 7 p.m. for dinner. A full eight shows will be given Sunday, however, running once each hour starting at 2 p.m. “Therefore. there still will be (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) | starting and stopping at frequent! changes in this number.’ intervals during the gun battle, the} At the port of Inchon, a repa- automobile raced away when Ryan | tiated Brooklyn, N. Y., man} Husband Killed; | was killed. | Pic. John J. McNeill, said he had The car registration was traced been told that 22 Americans’ and | to Mrs. Margaret Howell of | One British. soldier’ were among Wife Questione Police Report Woman Admits Firing Shot; Jealousy Motive 39 Scarborough Cartrette, of 259} Judson St., was shot to death short- | ly before noon today. His wife, Lucy, admitted | shooting at her husband with a .32 1” wb, | automatic, but said she didn’t know he was dead, according to Capt. Clark M. Wheaton, chief of Pontiac | detectives Capt. Wheaton said the wife in- dicated jealousy was the motive | for the shooting. The shooting took place at 105 Judson, home of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wright. The Wrights and | Allen Locke, of 99 Judson, were in | the kitchen when Mrs. Cartrette | arrived looking for her husband. He was asleep in a first floor bed- room. The three men were friends, according to police. Mrs. Cartrette is reported to have asked her husband for his keys and check. He gave them to her and she departed. She returned a few minutes later and went into the bedroom. One shot was heard by the trio in the kitchen. Cartrette staggered into the living room and a second shot struck him in the chest. Mrs. Cartrette will make a statement before Oakland County Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem to- day, said Wheaton. Ceel, Air Cenditieoned,. Hair Cuts. Hills, E. Huron, below phone bidg. Ridgefield, N. J. |. Three New York detectives and | two from Ridgefield kept an all- | night vigil at Mrs. Howell's home, ; watching for the car. Mrs. Howell |said her husband, William, was an unemployed dock worker and went to New York in the car yes- terday to get an assistance check. | Neither Howell nor the car had} lem up by morning. Tilzer said ‘‘Lar’’ Lynch was a friend of Mrs. Howell's husband William, who had been employed at the Yonkers Raceway. Lewis had organized about 1,200 of the| Yonkers track employes some | three years ago. ‘Motion for New Trial for Mahoney Filed Motion. seeking a new trial far | Pete Mahoney, now serving a pris- on term at Jackson in the 1944 Aristicrat Club holdup here. was filed in Oakland County Circuit Court today. The motion is sched- uled to come before Judge George B. Hartrick Sept. 11. Mahoney’s attorney, Howard Bond, points out that only two witnesses positively linked Ma- honey with the crime. These were Henry Luks and Sam Abromovitz, both out of prison on parole at the time. The defense questions the creditability of their testimony. Mahoney also was under investi- gation in the Senafor Warren G. Hooper murder at the time, al- though his conspiracy conviction in State Supreme Court decision. this case was later erased by a| those either refusing or reluctant to be released. McNeill said he understood that ‘song, Red assembly point near Pan- munjom, to be turned over to the neutral nations Repatriation Com- mission. This. is the group| organized to handle the machinery of deciding custody of such men. | The Red promise to repatriate | all prisoners asking to be re- turned was in reply to a question from United Nations officials on that point. Numerous prisoners had _ been | | sentenced at the time of the truce | signing to prison for such alleged | crimes as “instigating against the | | Peace’ ‘ and ‘‘waging fare the 23 are expected soon at Kae-| | | Mary Faulk Takes Lead in Women’s Amateur PROVIDENCE, R. I. m — Georgia’s Mary Lena Faulk slashed her way to a 6 up lead over Polly Riley of Fort Worth today in the first 18 holes of the final round for the U.S. Women's amateur golf Championship. scorching weather. Another hot-spot, Chicago, report- ed a record 97 Friday. The appeal to use ‘‘extreme caution’’ when burning rubbish came from Capt. Sydney Owen of the Pontiac Fire Department. He said the fire department has been summoned to about 50 grass fires in the past three weeks, some of which would have caused property damage had they not been checked immediately. Capt. Owen urged residents to call the fire department before burning off weeds, leaves or rub- bish. “If the areas where the fires are planned threaten property.” said Capt. Owen, ‘‘the resident will be urged not to start the fires without proper supervision. “The grass is tinder-dry and is a potential hazard. Careless rub- bish and trash fires could start a general grass fire which would en- danger property.” Meanwhile, Pontiac Police re- port that most residents are ob- serving the sprinkling ban be- tween 8 a.m. and 9 p.m. and that few warnings against illegal springling were issued yester- day. City Manager Walter K. Willman | said sprinkling will be permitted Sunday, but the restrictions will go back into effect Monday. A record water pumpage for August was recorded yesterday when 17 city wells pumped 20, 060 gallons, only about 2,000,000 gallons below peak capacity. Joseph Gable, acting city water superintendent, said pressure was about 65 pounds today, only about five pounds below normal. Beaches and recreation area in Oakland County prepared for rec- ord crowds over the weekend. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Reds to Evi ct Berliners Seeking American Food’ BERLIN (UP)—The Communists threatened today to Reds insisted on the men serving American food. The Communist Party newspaper, Neues Deutschland, their terms before being freed. | ] Delays Channel Swim | DOVER, England (UP) germ war-| evict from their homes any resident of the Soviet sector ‘At first, reports were the| of the city who accepts an “Eisenhower package” of free reported that “house committees” on East Berlin’s Stalin Allee had recommended eviction of apartment-dwellers | storm whipped the English Chan-| Who collect American food in West Berlin. Stalin Allee is Florence Chadwick, of San Diego, Cal., that she would be able to start her attempt to swim it both ways non-stop before next mid- week In Today's Press Birmingham Baeilding News Cherch News Cemics . feels County News David Lawrence BOO ORO CIC OCLs.) Dr. George Crane Editertals Emily Pest | Markets | Patterns } Sperts oe | Theaters .. ime 6 TV & Radice Precrams . Want Ads a3, 74 Wemen'’s Pages or eeeeusereenecuse { |ports circulated that construction nel today and dimmed the hope of! a large Red housing project. + Neues Deutschland also reported that a meeting of East Berlin electrical work- ers demanded thataw ~- er who accepted a_ food parcel be evicted. ‘‘The provocateur -vas handed over to the state police,’’ the news- paper said. Red guards along Stalin Allee, where the violent June 17 anti- Communist riots began, were doubled today. The action was taken when re- workers on the project planned a “hunger march” into West Berlin over the weekend to obtain Ameri- can food parcels. Reports reaching West Berlin said heavy guards of People’s Po- lice remained on duty in the project throughout the night. Party officials circulated among the workmen today warn- ing them against any attempt to cross into the American, British or French sectors of the city. The Communist Party paper re- vealed that 500 building workers on the big project had been arrest- ed by Communist leaders. TWO ee Birmingham PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1958 Plan Chief Suggests Neighbor Units Help Shape (Prom Our Birmingham Bureau) Planning Director Robert S. Boatman said yesterday he would propose to the Plan Board estab- lishment of a system of neighbor- hood councils to work with the board in shaping Birmingham’s | future development. | Research was started in July 1952, he explained, on a series of studies to obtain material for use by city officials and the public in solving problems posed by South- eastern Oakland County's rapid expansion. “People make or break plan- ning,” he said. “If projects aren’t understood by persons carrying them out their value is hurt considerably. ‘A neighborhood council could explain proposals to its own unit, then pass back reactions to the Plan Board, thus coordinating the whole system.” A report has been written on the city’s major street systems, Boat- man said, which could tie in with the council idea by indicating main traffic arteries for use as local | unit boundaries. A study into the influence of surrounding areas on Birming- ham shows such things as growth of an industrial corridor east of the city which should create demand for more hous- ing here. A relative value study outlin- ing areas costing more to main- tain than they return in taxes would aid in marking limits of neighborhood units and shed light on possible corrective measures. The completed reports and others being done should help in making decisions on the many current rezoning requests, the plan director pointed out. The current zoning ordinance was passed in 1937, Boatman ex- plained, saying revisions of the ordinance might result after all data is complete and officials | and bill the owner, if the resident) W/i|liqm S Edwards | 21 years. She is survived by &| started and some houses needed ; ; , . . have considered it. does not comply with state law a : oe | son, William E. of Pontiac. only paint or other finishing Neen le to lake nd in the Pontiac Press - «= & which requires removal within 10| William S. Edwards, 25. of 800! Funeral will be Monday at 2\ touches to make them ready for ays leading es an An official-looking ‘‘summons’”’ attached to a car asking the owner | In asking that residents clean | >. Home. Burial will be in Grand ba to appear at a local car agency| out and burn any cut elm in | Friday. Lawn Cemetery in Detroit. Homeowners calling for help | weather lisited a low of from 67 to trade in her car for a neW) their wood piles, since the bark | Born July 20, 1928 in Beach will provide all the materials to 71 degrees tonight. Yesterday’s one, prompted a Romeo resident Creek, Ky., he was the son of necessary and several Flint lum- low was 67. to write city commissioners this week, expressing the opinion that nis use of such a form is in very poor taste and a discredit to your community.” Police Chief Ralph Moxley said the firm had been contacted once before and had discontinued use of the “summons” notice. Commissioners directed him to speak to the agency again. They added that Moxley should show the dealer the complaint, to point out that the notices might be Board Ideas location for a projected new high school building. * * * A further report will be made by City Engineer L. R. Gare, com- missioners decided this week, be- fore final action is taken on grad- ing two stagnant water-filled lots} in Sheffield Estates and Pembrook Manor Association. Owners had not complied with a city request to fill the lots, but the commission asked Gare to talk to owners agath. The city manager had recom- mended that the city do the job, billing the property owners, but commissioners felt that an esti- mated cost should be given before this is done. Robert Kenning, DPW superin- tendent, said this week that com- pletion of the city’s road oiling program is anticipated by the end of September. Both light oiling programs have been completed, and of the numbers 1 and 2 two-year pro- gram, only nine streets remain to be done. Rework of the 1952 two-year guaranteed streets is approximate- ly 70 per cent complete, Kenning stated, and 8 per cent of the 1949 five-year guaranteed streets are finished. * * * Rotary Club will hold its regular noon meeting Monday at the First Baptist Church. No program has been planned. * * * One more case this week of a Dutch Elm diseased tree brings | the city’s total to 14, compared to one case last year. The latest one was found at 1724 Yorkshire, City Forester William Lebold said yesterday, and added that there are two more just out- side the city. Twelve more sam- ples are being analyzed at the Michigan State laboratories. All diseased trees have been re- moved, he said, without the city resorting to its new ordinance, per- mitting removal of Dutch Elm diseased trees on private property days. beetle which spreads the disease breeds in cut or decaying elm wood, think some people realized the seriousness of keeping cut branches cleaned up. “That is one of the very impor- tant phases of a control program,” he said, ‘‘and one the people can | help us out on.” He asked that his office be noti- fied if any resident notices a col- lection of elm branches someone has left. * * Lebold said he _ didn’t | & Science, Bloomfield Hills. ASTRONOMICAL INSTRUMENTS—Quadrant (upper left), celestial | sphere, astrolabe (lower left) and travelers’ sun dial, the predecessor of today’s wrist watch, are on exhibition at Cranbrook Institute of THE Sept. 5 Date Set for Bond Signing -$1.8 Million to Finance Construction of Oakland Garbage Incinerator BIRMINGHAM — Signing of $1,800,000 in bonds issued to fin- ance construction of the South- eastern Oakland County Garbage and Rubbish Authority's incinera- tor is expected to occur Sept. 5. In Chicago, according to Authori- ty Secretary Ashton J, Berst. par and four and one-quarter per cent interest by a syndicate of 15 Chicago brokers, Berst ex- plained. Troy Township’s entrance in- to the 1l-member group will not be acted on, he said, until] the bond sale is completed and pres- ent contract negotiations with the other members settled, A 4-acre site near John R and 12% Mile Road has been desig- nated for the incinerator, which is scheduled for completion by Jan. 1955. Swarms of Helpers Build Flint Houses (Continued From Page One) Pontiac Deaths Harry Brooks | Funeral for Harry Brooks, 66, of 10772 Bogie Lake Rd., Milford, will be Monday at 9:30 A, M. from St. Patrick Catholic Church at White Lake. Rosary service will | be Sunday at 8 p. m. in the Brace Funeral Home. Surviving, besides his widow, Elnora, are a son, Walter; a sis- ter and one brother, Marie and | Joseph, all of Dayton. | Mr. Brooks died Thursday in| St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. |W. Huron St. in Ann Arbor, died | | suddenly at his home at 7 a.m. | Mrs. William S. Edwards Sr. of | Pontiac. He was a graduate of | Pontiac High School and attending | | the University of Michigan. He was a member of the Coast | Guard from Feb. 27, 1946 to April | 19, 1947. . Besides his widow, the former | Nancy McClellan, whom he mar- | ried in Lakeland, Fla., June 22, 11951, and his mother, he is sur-| vived by a daughter, Sarah at) home. | Funeral will be Sunday at 2 p.m from the Voorheis-Siple Chapel. crew here early this week and another returned today. About 30 towns in Michigan were rep- resented. The Red Cross, women’s organ- izations and those who didn't feel they could handle a tool circulated among the workmen with a donated supply of 20,000 cups of coffee and 100 dozen doughnuts. Eight-hun- dred gallons of orangeade kept throats from getting parched. Women in coveralls and blue jeans helped out, most of them taking on the lighter jobs of paint- ing and trimming. But among them were seven professional carpenters and two plumbers. The foundations for new homes in the Beecher district were com- pleted before the building bee Luther W. and May Viola Knight Smith. She was born in Pontiac June 8 this year and died at 9:25 p. m. Friday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Mrs. Amelia B. Swailes After an illness of two months, Mrs. Amelia Bryan Swailes, 80, of 2871 Sunderland St. in Water- ford Township, died at her home at 10 p. m. Friday. Born in England July 16, 1873, she was the widow of Edward H. Swailes whom she married in| Detroit April 7, 1923. Mrs. Swailes was a registered nurse and had resided in Pontiac p. m. from the Kirkby Funeral) occupancy Mrs. Kathryn A. Yocum After a prolonged illness, Mrs. Kathryn Yocum, 37, of 2055 Knoll- wood Dr., died at Henry Ford Hospital at 12:20 p. m. Friday. es for the workers, complete with Born in Isabella County, May, @ refrigerator truck to keep the 19, 1916, she was the daughter of , food fresh. the late Herman Liechti and Mrs | General Motors Corp., the area's Charles Bolen of Flint. largest employer, urged its work- She came to Pontiac in 1933 and ers to donate their spare time was a supervisor at Pontiac State/| during the weekend to the building Hospital six years. bee. GM opened a relief fund Besides her husband, Leonard with a $100,000 donation the day Yocum and her mother and step- atter ‘the ‘twister’ struck. ber and building supply firms have offered them dscqunts. Restaurants and bakeries in Flint offered 10,000 free box lunch- The bonds were purchased at| GPO Gambling Ring (Continued From Page One) public printer and GPO security contending that GPO failed to fire several employes after receiving reports from the FBI identifying them as Reds. He has called the security setup at the government's big printing plant ‘‘fantastic’’ and said his subcommittee has obtained testi- mony under oath that a person identified as a Red had access in the GPO to ‘‘secret material hav- ing to do with the A-bomb and the H-bomb.” Cole told a news conference y . last week he believes there has JOHN C. JAMIESON Pontiac Motor Picks Assistant Sales Head been no leakage of secrets from the printing office and nothing lax about the handling of loyalty cases. The Mediterranean cockroach usually lives outdoors, entering houses at night. 10,218 Allied Prisoners Now Returned by Reds PANMUNJOM W—The Commu- nists have returned 10,218 Allied prisoners, including 2,567 Ameri- cans, as of today—the 25th day of the great Korean War prisoner exchange. The Reds originally promised to return 12,763 Allied soldiers — 3,313 of them Americans—but last week they said the figure would be in- creased because it did not. list soldiers captured in the last days of the war. Mayfield’s No-Hit Job Gives GM Tourney Win LANSING (®—Bob Mayfield, a young Korean War veteran, hurled a no-hitter last night, as Pontiac's GM Truck and Coach division, de- feated Flint Herrlick’s, 60, in the opening round of the state major softball tournament. In another first round game, Midland Dow defeated Hazel Park Merchants, 6-1, The promotion of John C. Jamie- son to assistant general sales manager of Pontiac Motor Division was announced today by H. E. Crawford, general sales manager. Jamieson, who joined Pontiac in 1934 after 11 years in retail dealerships, will take charge of || sales operations in the western half of the nation. He was a district manager and assistant zone manager in Denver for Pontiac; business management manager in Chicago and assistant zone manager in Dallas before be- coming Dallas zone manager in 1945. In 1950 he became Midwest regional manager and held that post until last November when he was named Pacific regional man- ager. Jamieson, a native of Edinburg, N. D., succeeds Dan O’Madigan Jr. who resigned to head O'Madi- vin Pontiac, Inc., in St. Louis 0. ‘ Warning Is Issued on City Grass Fires (Continued From Page One) Traffic already was reported slight- world thru resorts Look at the 'Rose-colored glasses with BILLY ROSE in “PITCHING HORSESHOES” It’s the talk of the town! Starts Monday, Aug. 31 The forecast for continued hot No relief from the sizzling weather is expected until Tues- day or Wednesday. Temperatures were above nor- mal almost everywhere east of the | Continental Divide. But in the! lower Rio Grande Valley, gripped ! by a drouth a month ago, flooding | streams drove almost 500 persons from their homes. In the northern states cloudiness, accompanied by showers and a few thunderstorms, stretched from | the Great Lakes westward. But the Garnet M. Sperks The confidence you place in us is deeply appreciated. Sp arks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME Giens B Griffis doing more harm than good. Attending the thirty-sixth annual | Burial will be in Perry Mount Park| father, she: is survived by two |. . ; rains failed to move into the swel-|] Ph. FE2-sta 2houghtful Service” 4 wimams st eee asta convention of the Michigan | Cemetery. sons, John and Gerald at home. | Driver Pleads Guilty tering states further south. Earl Roy of Birmingham eect eer tron —— ._ | Also surviving are four brothers} BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Plead- deliver tomorrow morning's ser: |. a sday will be the local club's Mrs. Anna Vesta Fleming | and two sisters, Robert, Elizabeth | ing guilty when he appeared before} ° e mon at Embury Methodist Church. The Rev. and Mrs. Reg- inald Becker are vacationing. president and vice president, Mar- vin Kauffman and Clifford Wright, ' | | Funeral for Mrs. Anna Vesta) | Fleming, 90. of 23 Lorraine Ct..,| and Jack Liechti of Flint, Richard Liechti in the U. S. Navy in Cali- fornia, Charlene and James Bolen Judge A. J. Richardson on a reckless driving charge yesterday, * * * and other representatives. | will be Sunday at 8 p. m. In ( Fl jpeve R. Rojas, 26, of 775 Port- “Builders of Good Citizenship” Five general sessions will be | Sparks-Griffin Chapel. Burial will ° Brena will be Mond t°2:30 land, Pontiac, was fined $60 or 25 is the theme of Civitan Interna-| held and election of 1954 district | be in Crestline, Ohio. She died! a Monday at 2:30) days in jail. tional, well known men’s service club. A new club has been formed in Birmingham. officers will conclude the meet- ings. Charles P. Taft, brother of the | Friday. Mrs. Fleming. who had resided in Pontiac more than 30 years, was p.m. from the Dudley H. Moore Funeral Home in Auburn Heights. The Rev. Gerald Rapelji of Or- | | He failed to pay the fine. The first morning duty of cus- | ONLY ONE chard Lake Community Church will | todians at Blarney Castle is to born in New Brighton, Pa.. Aug officiate and burial will be in White | scrub the lipstick off the Blarney | Application for a charter was | late Sen. Robert Taft, will speak 1863. She was a member of the made this week by over 25 business | on ‘‘Applying Christianity in Daily men attending the initial meeting. | Living.” He is an internationally | Presbyterian Church. i. nape iM morial Cemetery. ae | i | Sponsored by the Pontiac club, | renowned lay church leader. ' | Surviving is a sister, Mrs.) | A Western Grizzard, one of the in-| * * * Andrew king of Pontiac; three} | 4 ternational representatives has| With temperatures soaring. the | nieces and one nephew. helped in the organization. City Commission this week had | ee di * Hugh McGuckin, of Harold | the cooling task of approving Pur-’ Mrs. Mary M. Lewis Turner, Inc., was elected presi- chase of Birmingham's winter | dent protem and Bernard Bogue | rock salt supply. Service for Mrs. Mary M. Lewis to will serve as temporary sec- retary-treasurer. McGuckin said Civitan plans to participate in worthy community projects, as all the service clubs do. Another meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Monday at the American Legion Hall and McGuckin asked those interested in joining to con- tact him. Charter night, he said, will be the last week in Septem- ber, and the International presi- dent will make the presentation. * * * Bloomfield Hills School Board this week moved to obtain a $20,000 insured title policy to safe- guard ownership of a 21-acre site bound by Exeter, Andover and Long Lake Roads. The area was | donated by the George Estate as The Weather | Commfssioners approved City | Manager Donald C. Egbert’s rec- | | ommendation that the salt be | purchased from the Morton Salt | Co. at a cost.of $7.70 per ton. | | | Egbert estimated the city’s pur- | chase at 400/tons of $3,080. | * * * | Sister Mary Agota | Agota, 74, of the St. Elizabeth | Home, will be Sunday at the home at 8 p.m. Prayer service will be Monday at 9:30 a.m. at the home jand Requiem Mass will be at 10 ia.m. at St. Hugo of the Hills |Church. Burial will be Holy Sep- tulchre Cemetery. She died Friday after a short illness. |10 years, she was a member of | the Daughters of Divine Charity | for 51 years. ' Rosary service for Sister Mary | In residence here for the past | | of 1407 E. Park Pl. in Ann Arbor, | and a Pontiac resident until three | years ago, will be Monday at S |p.m. from the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Bur- ial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The body is at the Hun- | | toon Funeral Home. Surviving Mrs. Lewis, who died Thursday, are five sons and two daughters, Marvin R. of Dearborn, Rayden K. of Birmingham, Russcll A. and Archie D. of Detroit, Robert C. of Oxford, Mrs. James Bartlett of Grand Rapids and Mrs | Grace Reigel of Ann Arbor Also surviving are two sisters and a brother, Mrs. B. G. Collins and Mrs. George Lankshear of Detroit and Fred C, Curran of Monroe. Sandra Kay Smith Funeral for Sandra Kay Smith; Members of Carpeniers Local 998 Family Picnic Sunday Aug. 30 at THE HOMESTEAD South Shore of Lower Straits Lake Follow the Arrows to the Homestead Park Prizes—Games—Free Refreshments—Fun for All—Activities Start at 11:00 A. M. BRING YOUR LUNCH Admission by Working Card or Book | She will be removed from Man-| of 207 State St. will be Monday | eaameaeen PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Fale, and Hey Baily Funeral Home late today.{ at 2 p. m. from the DeWitt C. — = Mio ice mec wander. ish, 93 to 93. ’| There are no survivors. | Davis Funeral Home. The Rev. Mr. Lawrence Dickens of Stone Today in Pentiac Lowest, temperature preceeding 8am. 67 At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 3 mp be Di- rection—Southwest. Sun sets Saturday at 611 pn Bun rises Sunday at 5:55 a.m Moon sets Sunday at 1:14 am Moon rises Saturday at 934 pm — Friday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown! Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather—Hot. One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather—Hot. Highest and Lowest Temperature This Date ears in 80 Y 94 in 1873 44 in 1934 Census figures show that there fare 105 to 106 males born in the |U.S. each year for every 100 fe- | males, Baptist Church will officiate and, burial will be ir White Chapel Me- morial Cemetery. | Sandra is the infant daughter of You Are Cordially Invited to Attend Another Roast Beef Dinner Served Family Style FOR SPORTSMEN Yes, come out and shop around in our new modern store. We’ve boats at bargain prices. Outboard motors to match .. . and fishing tackle, guns and gear... take a few Genera. Motors | Thrilling exhibits of scientific won- derment presented in Super Futur- liners plus the thrilling Science Stageshow under the giant Silver Aerodome * Biggest exposition of its FREE ADMISSION! kind in the world * Not an automo- bile show* Nothing to buy * Bring the family to the big Science Show of Shows the whole town’s talking about * Don’t miss it. Downtown Temperatures fs Pvnvsvess ss ive. ” 91 All You Can Eat | minutes, stop in our big: parking BB. M.rcece 73 1p. m.....e.-- 95 . : . . ; | lot d fill y j : Bima abe LP Sponsored by OUR LADY OF THE LAKES, Hot and fill your sporting” goods rrlduy's Temperature Chart located on Dixie Highway, in Waterford. Sunday, a | OES, cots Alpena gs 70" Los Angeles 78 38 Aug. 30th. From 1 to 6 P.M. SL } YB AUG HK . Cadillac 91 52 ee eueee. 95 66 ic ‘ 4 J J s ® r] Rad 2H Hee ADULTS $1.50 CHILDREN 75c ARB. SHOP Washington Junior High School Athletic Field, Pontiac Deron My rittaturen $5 62) PS: Visit the Model Home—Open from 9 A. M. for | 2:00 P. M. to 10:00 P. M. Grind R'pds & 62 8 Francivco 7! 39/1 your inspection — See the Dream Home of TODAY! | 60 Oakiied. Avene Kansas City 96 76 Trv'se City 94 71! | ° THE PON'TLAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 195: AHKKM Name Principal in Waterford Frances Dawson Gets Post at Hudson Covert School in Township WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Mrs. Frances Dawson of 171 Ascot Rd., Elizabeth Lake Estates, has been named principal of Hudson Covert School, according to William Schunck, Waterford Township school superintendent. Prior to her appointment, Mrs. Dawson had been an English in-| structor at Waterford Township High School. She received her* bachelor of arts degree from Eastern State Teachers College, Oklahoma, and did graduate work at Oklahoma | A. and M. College. She taught in elementary and high schools in Oklahoma and Ken- tucky before entering the Water- ford Township school system seven years ago. Mrs. Dawson succeeds Roy A. | Larmee, recently named principal of Waterford Township High School. REV. A. J. 8AUGHEY | Pontiac PW Believed First War Prisoner story of “The Tiger’ killing a lieutenant because some of the men Cecil C. Mills FERNDALE — Service for Cecil (Continued From Page One) i Mills, 71, of 512 W. Hazelhurst Ave., will be at 1 p.m. Monday from Spaulding & Sons Funeral Home with burial in Evergreen Deaths in Nearby Communities | badly wounded to do anything but | lie there after the North Koreans on the ‘‘death march’ were sick. Sgt. Strahan said he saw the ‘Tiger’ kill the lieutenant. “One of the men in the lieuten- ant’s group was too weak to keep up with the march,” he said. ‘‘The ‘Tiger’ put his gun to the lieuten- ant’s head and pulled the trigger. Through interpreters ‘The Tiger’ said he had shot the lieutenant as Cemetery, Detroit. He died Thurs- day at Mainke Hospital, Hazel Park. Elder Smith ROCHESTER—Service is pend- | ing at William R. Potere Funeral | Home for Elder Smith, 78, of Rochester. He died last night at Wayne County General Hospital. Born in England, he was an : accountant with a Detroit pattern an example and that ‘next time I company for 40 years. He has no will shoot 10.’ ”’ | survivors here. Stranhan, a section sergeant for | Tarraiee Sadana one of the 13 sections in the march, BERKLEY — Prayer service toe | said he spesiriaar ties talk e oa Lorraine Sedano, 2-year-old daugh- geants of eight other sections an ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sedano Danner, 66, of Rehse Park near here, was to be at 2 p. m. today from Schwartzkoff-Milliken Fu- neral Home with burial in Utica Cemetery. He was found dead at his home yesterday. Mrs. Carrie B. Lowes ALMONT—Service for Mrs. Car- rie B. Lowes, 81, of 202 Branch St., will be Sunday at 2:30 p.m. from Muir Brothers Funeral Home with burial in Almont Cemetery. She was found dead Thursday in the basement of her home. August Cooklin LAPEER — Service for August Cooklin, 68, of Metamora, will be Sunday at 2 p.m. from Muir Broth- ers Funeral Home with burial in Ellington Cemetery, Caro. He died Thursday. Mrs. Madeline Allegrina UTICA—Service for Mrs. Alviro -onfi . . (Madeline) Allegrina, 39, of 8896 el Ea Aieme CC is Oe of 2882 Greenfield Rd., was to be Magen” will i. Twenty-four shot to death by at 1 p.m. today at Sullivan & Son p.m. from Schwartzkoff-Milliken Funeral Home, Royal Oak. Bless- ing was at 1:30 p.m. at Our Lady of LaSalette Church with burial in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. She died Thursday at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital, Pontiac. Emanuel Bashakes ROYAL OAK—Service for Eman.- | uel Bashakes. 67, of 722 S. West) St., will be at 3 p.m. Monday from | St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox) Church, Detroit, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. He died “The Tiger” or his underlings. Forty-nine dead of exposure, starvation, or lack of medical care. Several more were put in a Ko-| rean hut and left to die there of freezing and starvation. “These men were too sick or nailed them inside,’’ he said. Some of the sergeants estimated that up to 90 men were shot in cold blood during the march. Stranham’s mother and step- father heard the welcome news of his release last night as press wire services rushed names of the latest freed prisoners to this country, Herbert G. Luttenbacher Th¢ announcement was doubly| CLAWSON—Service for Herbert | welcome as the 33-year-old soldier |. Luttenbacher, 71, of 39 Custer | had been reported killed in action’ st will be at 11 a.m. Monday| soon after his disappearance. _| from Kinsey Funérgl Home, Royal Later a revised communication | Oak, with burial in Oakview Ceme- | from the Defense Department|tery te died Thursday at Ard- | placed him on the missing list.! jore Hospital Ferndale Not until recently was his name a ; found on a Red prisoner of war William L. Slater list. His first letter was dated June 7, 1952. Only three letters were received during the long period of his imprisonment. In one letter he said of his phys- ical condition: ‘‘My general health Hospital. Arrangements are by Kinsey Funeral Home. Surviving besides Bertha, are two sons, Louis of Royal Oak; and two brothers. his widow, | John and; five sisters ice for William L. Slater, 59, of 28286 John R Rd., will be at 1:30 p.m. Monday from Schnaidt Fu- neral Home, Royal Oak, with bur- | ial in Oakview Cemetery. He died | Funeral Home with burial in Utica Cemetery. She died suddenly at her home Friday. James Bonner UTICA—Service for James: Bon- ner, 84, of 8585 Pacton Dr., will be Monday at 3:30 p.m. from|Q Boyer. Schwartzkoff-Milliken Funera Home with burial in Utica Ceme- tery. He died Friday after a long} tuesday, Mrs. Boyer will discuss illness. asiCar Rams Tree An Inkster housewife,. her eight- month-old daughter and another passenger were admitted to Pon- Suaaest Petition | for Bingo Vote Attorneys Explain Law Must Be Changed for Legal Gambling DRAYTON PLAINS — Two at- | torneys told the Charitable Bingo | ,and Raffle Association Thursday }that the first step in restoring such games is to change Michi- |gan’s law to legalize games of | chance. | ; The association, which seeks | to give charitable organizations | the right legally to sponsor bingo games and raffles, met at Water- ford Township Community Activi- ties Building. ‘tonday at 2/ Pioneer Foundation | | Friday at Highland Park General 2 Women, Baby Hurt: | troit | been with the society in this capa- tiac General Hospital late Friday | when their car skidded off the road and struck a tree Reported in ‘‘fair’’ condition are Mrs. Albert Muller, 26, of 290 Ar- lington St., injured” eye, bruised ankle and knee; | and | ner, at Mt. Clemens ——~ daughter, Oniela,, fractured right | rib and other possible internal of 375 Fairwood Dr., West Dear- born, fractured pelvis and bruises. Mrs Muller told State Police of Pontiac Post that her car skidded into a tree at West Maple and At the recent annual assembly, jis’ as good as can be expected | Friday. He had lived here for 35 | Wixom roads. the Rev. A. J. Baughey was re-| turned to the Evangelistic Taber-| nacle, 60 Tilden St., for the 14th! year. lelephone Strike: ension Eases 1-Day Walkouts End! in East but Southwest, | Midwest Hold Out WASHINGTON wW— Tension! eased today in Washington, D. C., Maryland and West Virginia as telephone workers ended a one-day | walkout, but some _ 60,000 Bell system employes in the Midwest and Sounthwest remained on strike. The Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. and its striking workers in Missouri were admonished by Gov. Phil M. Donnelly to get together at once to end what he called an “intolerable” situation. The walk- | out of about 53.000 employes in Southwestern’s six-state area 1s now sn tenth day, | - Its 7,000 In Indiana, where some | phone workers were off the job, there were reports! of five more cable cutting incidents in three cities. An Indianapolis judge | ordered picketing restricted | there as an aftermath to a pick- | et-line fracas Thursday night. Strikers in Washington-Maryland | West Virginia and the Midwest | states were all members of the| Communications Workers of Amer- | ica, CIO. The union is negotiating | with Bell system firms covering a total of about 130.000 workers. | with the union asking boosts of $2 to $3 and the companies re- | portedly offering raises from $1.50 | to $2.90. Tea Set for Sunday KEEGO HARBOR—Mrs: Homer | Van Horn, 2415 Hester Ct., will entertain the local Business and! Professional Women’s Club at a! tea Sunday between 3 and 5 p.m. Mrs. Lylla Ross will assist,as co- | hostess. Australia is erecting a heavy wire fence 135 miles long at a cost of $130,000 to keep emus out of wheat lands. : ; re-enlisting. He served with occu- under existing circumstances.” A brother, Ray, 23, is with the United States forces in Korea and had written his parents that he would try to meet Martin at | Judy VanDam Freedom Village. ROYAL OAK — Judy VanDam, | When the pair met, theyshook | seven-year-old daughter of Mr. and | hands and patted shoulders. | Mrs- William VanDam of 1211) Sgt. Strahan enlisted in the army | Smith Ave., died Friday in an Oak- | in 1942 and went overseas, serving |land County hospital. Service and | in France and Germany, and sur-| burial will be Monday in Mus- | vived the hectic Battle of the Bulge | kegon. | He was home at Christmas time | in 1945 and worked at Fisher Body | Division for three months before years ‘and was employed as a} |Clawson patrolman for 23 years, | before retiring. He was a veteran of World War T. Pete Sannipoti ROYAL OAK — Service for Pete | | Sannipoli, 27, of 3031 Bamlet Ave., | j will be 10 a.m. Monday from | Schnaidt Funeral Home with bur- | | ial in White Chapel Memorial Park | pation forces in Japan before being assigned to duty in Korea. Mrs. Larson said she never fully | ~ accepted the early report of her Cemetery. He died Thursday. son's death. “I'm a doubting Thom- | Surviving’ are his parents, Mr. as,"’ she said last night, “but of ; and Mrs. Roger Sannipoli of Royal course did not dare holdout too |Oak;. a sister, Mrs. Harry Pick- much hope over the long months.” ah and a brother, Alfred of Royal Doubts and anxiety for sons in the service are well knowh to this mother of five boys and two girls. Four of her sons (including Martin) served in World War II and the fifth is still in Korea. William Lewis CLARKSTON — Service for Wil- liam ‘‘Herbert’ Lewis, 76, of De- | be at 2 p.m. Monday from Hun- | toon Funeral Home, Pontiac, with BISHOP HAAS The 64-year-old Beshop of the! Grand Rapids Diocese, Rev. Francis J. known attack. He was natronally ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Serv- | injuries; and Delores Stratton, 22,| be among 19 receiving practical | | their vear-long course. } | |} nese the Most} Haas died early | troit, formerly of Clarkston, will| todav in Grand Rapids of a heart) as a sociologist, author and labor burial in Lakeview Cemetery . = a ave Patrick 2 Ys} conciliator Her Oinee SONS tars Patrick, 30. Clarkston. He died yesterday. a Edwin “8 and Ralph, 26. Mrs. Amelia Grumelot Drunken drivers caused acci- Thy Communists released thei : re ; f . . HOWELIL — Service for Mis. dents which killed 54 people and 10,.000th prisoner last might Adaline vA ,; . lot 69 r +1106 Bel 1932 do tf a) : , | ’ clg } Jidase i. nadinon to ihe Amerivans, the olph (Amelia) Grumelot, 69, will | injurec in Belgium in ) Ko. be at Il am NEC) VOL EY Sacevegl 2 Sema a as Reds turned loose 250 South reans, three turks and two Aus- trailians in the 25th day of *Opera- tion Big Switch.” Schnackenburg Funeral Home with | burial in Lakeview Cemetery. She |died at her home near here yjyes- The Allies, in turn, repatriated | 'erday. oe 2.400 Communist prisoners Cecil Youngs | If the Communists continue ree DRYDEN — Service for Cecil leasing prisoners at thé present; Youngs, 49, formerly of Dryden, ' rate. the last man will walkjis pending at Muir Brothers Fu- through freedom gate next Fri-|;neral Home. Imlay City. He died day Friday at Clare Hospital. Surviving besides his Nellie, is a daughter Mrs. Iyn Grosskopf of Capac. Byron E. Danner UTICA — Service for Byron EF widow, He probably will be Major Gen, Mari- William F. Dean, their highest- ranking captwe. | Prisoners returning to freedom | Friday reported that Dean was | SHOP TONIGHT ‘til 9 P.M. Park Free Hubbard Carage SAM BENSON 20 S. Perry St. being held at nearby Kaesong. It was believed that Dean asked to | be repatriated last in a gesture | toward prisoners of lesser rank. } Chief Pontiac Speedway County Calendar | Stock Car Races Waterford Members of Our Lady of the Lakes Church at Waterford will hold their third roast beef supper Sunday from 1 o 6 pm. at the church. The public !s ver invited Thomas Thomas Community Association has 8 cheduled a cafeteria chicken supper u e noon een Tuesday at the Community Hail. Serv- e s s ing will start at 5 30 pm by J. Lee Voorheis James ‘Cheerful Jim: Snow was 8 whom children loved and adults reflected his contagiously its seams. It burned. came up smiling Only material again his wife ran away with a competitor study photography,’ and squeezed ou said hopefully. No word of rec the old lilt in One of his Sco his wife Jim technique and M. E. STIPLE VOORHEES-SIPLE 268 N. PERRY ST. for his bubbling cheerfulness “His work Was pure artistry and his business burst He wagged his tron grey head do. A crippling disease immobilized him: his son was killed in action; The pain subsided, his cheerful smile returned; he sat up, walked. business came fn a trickle, then a flood. Faith in | his God and himself was a living, swelling torrent; taught a Sunday School class and lead a Scout troop. man has a right to be trips the shutter 100 LAPS of Racing on Oakland County's Only HALF MILE TRACK A Full Program of Stoc photographer happy smile Dash — Heats — Pursuit — Semi-Final and 20 Lap Feature i SPECIAL EVENT k Car Racing, Trophy VOORHEES we'll do it 20 LAP FEATURE RACE “Sure,”” he lied, -‘she’s going to t a smile, “She'll come back.” he certainly. No word of self-pity. rimination. “I'll do it again,” he said with | voice. He reopened his studio; his Time Trials—1:30 PARK FREE uts) on vacation saw and talked to brought her home, happier than a She had developed a new while Jim works for expression she A great and cheerfu] team. FUNERAL HOME PHONE FE 2-8378 FREE it eee cal 7 , OLD MODEL STOCK CARS — CHILDREN GEN. ADMISSION 386 NORTH LAKE ANGELUS ROAD Between Baldwin Ave. and Joslyn Road CHIEF PONTIAC SPEEDWAY Races—2:30 $1.20 incl. tax 'Van Fleet Impressed Mrs. Curran P. Boyer | Attorneys Harvey Lodge and Anthony Renne suggested the as- sociation raise funds to print ref- | erendum petitions urging the re- Will Hold Luncheon Guest speaker at the annual meeting of the Oakland County Pioneer and Veteran's Historical | Foundation will be Mrs. Curran | |of chance and push their circula- tion throughout Michigan. Association chairman Robert White said he would contact the city of Jackson, which, he said reportedly has had petitions print- ed, and report at the association's meeting next Thursday at 8 p. m. at the Community Activities Build- ing. Following the Juncheon which will be held at the Wisner Home the work of an historical society } and its contribution to the com- ane Derailed Freight Train Injures 4 Workmen FLINT .# — Three diesel engine of the De- she has, Executive secretary Historical Societys city since 1949 units and 10 cars were derailed as . , : R kcar “hae: sal L She also is president of the| an O-car Chesapeake & Ohio Ohio State University Alumnae} freight train hit an open switch in Council : , the northern outskirts of Flint yes- terday. Four men loading a car with scrap on a sidetrack were in- | Jured, but none seriously | Jesse M. Dean of Saginaw was the engineer, but neither he nor } any trainmen were hurt. Oakland Women to Get Diplomas peal of the law banning games|} an a ——— ee, —_— —_— PONTIAC M-59 SPEEDWAY Eight Miles Out West Huron LLOYD SHUART. SATURDAY =. 7:00 Manager First Race 8:30 Feature: Clown Race... The funniest, craziest .. . daffiest thing you have ever seen at a Speedway Track! different . . this and other races. SUNDAY General Admission 31.20 Time Trials Something really new and . come on cut Saturday Night and enjoy 5:30 First Race 7:00 Reserve Seats 31.50 50 Lap State Championship Race SUNDAY, Se pt. 6th EM 3-2361 Sponsored by Land-O-Lakes Racing Association Dr. B. R. Berman Optometrist Phone FE 4-7071 ATTENTION! Plant Employees! If you are in need of industria! safety glasses we are on the recommended list to fill your needs. Optical Department 17 N. Saginaw St. Two Oakland County women will | nurses’ diplomas tomorrow at graduation exercises at St. Joseph| Mercy Hospital, Mt. Clemens. The graduates, Miss Barbara) Trudell of 8 Hovey St., Oxford, | and Miss Patricia Devereaux of 3308 Auburn, Auburn Heights, com- pleted 608 hours of study during Highlight of the 4 p. m. exer- cises will be an address by E. G. Siegfried. MD. who will also present the diplomas. TAIPEH, Formosa \«™— Gen James A. Van Fleet, former U. S. | 8th Army commander, said today | his visit to Formosa impressed him with the ‘‘tremendous capa- bility’’ of Chiang Kai-Shek’s Chi- Nationalist forces. Gen. Van Fleet, who flew to Hong Kong at the end of a two- day visit, added, however, “I'd be very pleased to have them better equipped.”’ Scots, LAWN SEED Top quality, ‘perennial grass seed, 99.91% weed-free. You need less of Scotts for fall planting becouse of | the millions ‘of sure growing seeds Lin each packoge. fuel service. 1 Ib - $1.85 5 Ibs- $8.95 | SM SPECIAL" motes serviceable lown in’ full sun of shode with ordinary cord, 1 Ib - $1.35 5 Ibs - $6.65 TURF BUILDER Grass Food Provides lostihg nourishment.needed.. to restore lawn health and color. 25 Ibs - $2.50 feeds 2500 sq ft 10,000 sq ft - $7.85 4 y 5 ScXM SPREADERS Deliver Scotts of economico! rotes, e@ssure results from seeding, feeding er weed contro!. Rubber tires. $7.95 ond $12.85 @® .°* Géod for. Yoyr Dog— Easy on Your Purse REGAL DOG RATION 5 Lbs. .... .50 25 Lbs. ....1.95 REGAL —We Deliter— 28 Jackson St. © Ph. FE 2-049! | FEED & SUPPLY CO. 5 7 PHONE FEdcrol ) LAKE STREET Sr” 5-81 GEE COAL CO. NOW 00x 10 ces FOR BETTER QUALITY METERED For 28 years the Gee Coal Company have been serving the people of Pontiac and Oakland County with the finest quality, deep-mined coal obtainable. Since the Fall of 1925, we have made hundreds of friends and customers... many of whom have since converted their heating plants to oil... These same people have requested that we, too, modernize our business and add oil to our quality During the past year we have searched for a fuel oil that we could readily recommend, to our custome®s. . jquality fuel oil of the highest grade ... and now that we have secured the fuel oil we feel is beyond all doubt, a better quality, we are ready to serve every home heated with oil. We have secured the most modern, metered trucks, and recommend Gee Fuel Oi! as the best obtainable ... We will welcome an opportunity of serving you and assure you of the same courteous service which has made Gee Coal Com- pany one of the largest in Michigan. Just dial FEderal 5-8181 and we shall dispatch a metered truck to your home with fuel oil that will more than please you. §] FOUR t THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontise 12, Michigan Reg. U.B. Patent Office Dally Except Sunday Published from Tus Powrmc Purses Building Harotp A. Prrzceaais, Publisher Comwnap N. Cuvutcu Hosace FP. Baosrs Rosestt Basser? Editor Advertising Manager Wat’l Adv. Mgr. Entered at Post Office, Pontiac, Mich. as second class matter MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS —_H, Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all local news printed in this cews- paper, as well as all AP news dispatches. Tus Powriuc Parss is delivered by carrier for 40 cents & week; where carrier service is not available, by mail in Oakland and adjoining counties it is $12.00 a year; else- where in Michigan and all other places tn the United tes $2000 a year. All mail subscriptions are payable Phone Pontiac FE 2-8181. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 Report Urges Freer Trade Top news on the politico-economic front is the receipt by President E1sEN- HOWER of the Douglas report. In it Lewis W. Douatas, former Am- bassador to Great Britain, outlines his conclusions after a study of U. S. trade relations with the free world, made at the request of the President. Outstanding among those con- clusions is Douatas’ belief that U. S. trade “will remain precari- ous and fragile’ unless our for- eign trade policy is liberalized. This led him to urge the Presi- dent to announce promptly that this country is determined to work “toward a progressive, vig- ordus and consistent relaxation of our restrictive foreign trade legislation.” * * * At one point the report stressed what we frequently have argued in these col- umns. The United States long ago became the world’s greatest creditor Nation. It no longer can pursue the protectionist policies of a debtor Nation and hope to escape discrimination against American products in inter- national markets. President EISENHOWER has turned the report over for study by the new com- mission on U. S. foreign economic policy. In a letter to Chairman CLaAR- ENCE E. RANDALL he commended it as a real contribution to thinking in the field of dollar-sterling relationships. * * * It is no secret that how the commission reacts to the report is all important to the Eisenhower trade-not-aid policy. If it backs Mr. Douglas’ conclusions, the Ad- ministration will have a much better chance of persuading GOP protectionists to go along with a more liberal trade policy. This we believe essential to free world economic stability and our own national self-interest. Cut in VA Costs Sought An encouraging sign is the EISEN- HOWER Administration's decision that the time has come to stop building vet- erans’ hospitals. As a result Congress will be asked to re-examine the whole question of vet- erans care in the next session. Special attention will be called to the problem of free hospitalization for veterans with non-service connected ailments. * * * According to Budget Director DopcE the 130,000 beds in veter- ans’ hospitals now built or build- ing are all that can be run efficiently under one manage--— ment. He added that 30,000 more beds would be needed if present benefits are continued. Our 20,000,000 veterans constitute 40 per cent of our adult male population. The present cost of these unrestricted benefits now runs to $500,000,000 a year. To guarantee the growing army of vet- erans the same benefits, $700,000,000 a year would be needed by 1975. - x * x Under laws going back to 1924 vet- erans with non-service connected ail- ments can get free care providing hospital beds are available and if they say they cannot afford private treat- ment. That this so called pauper’s oath has been abused by veter- ans well able to pay is common knowledge. The result is that two-thirds of all VA_ hospital beds are occupied by patients suffering from ailments in no way connected with their military service. * * x The prospect is that the percentage of veterans in the population will con- tinue to grow. Without corrective action the country would be forced into social- ized medicine through the back door. The Administration won’t be able to win reforms without a hard fight. Last year the House Appropriations Committee wrote new restrictions on free hospital care into the VA appropriations bill. But some veteran groups protested loudly and the restric- tions were eliminated on the House floor. i i * * _ No one wants to reduce the care given veterans whose ailments are due to their service. They should get the best available treatment as a matter of right. But the time is long past when Congress is justified in permitting “freeloaders” to monopolize two-thirds of VA hospital facilities. Women are highly valued by the men of a certain African tribe who have established the exchange rate of eight cows for one woman. The People’s Business Controller Quits Legislators, Steadman Both Happy at Departure By JAMES 0. A. CROWE LANSING ()—Deep sighs of relief were heard in all quarters, with the possible exceptior. of the executive office, when Robert F. Steadman resigned this week as state controller. One of the biggest sighs came from Steadman himself. He has wanted out from under almost since the day he left his professorship at Wayne University on Jan. 1, 1949. A very nice guy personally, a devoted family man, and unquestionably an authority of inter- national reputation on governmental finance, Steadman just wasn’t fitted for the rough and tumble of Michigan politics. He has been reinstated as professor of public education at the University and has already begun some of his duties on a part time basis. He will officially wind up his $12,000 a year state job Sept. 30. Gov. Williams has always been devoted to Steadman, and the feeling is mutual. So, the zovernor and his staff generally are sorry to see Steadman go. They credit him wit: much hard work and a dogged admiration of Williams and his policies. Williams made public a letter accepting Stead- man’s resignation in which he said Steadman had welded the Department of Administration into ‘‘a strong right arm.’’ The governor added that Steadman’s share in forming administration policy ‘‘has been a strong point.” But this adulation was totally lacking legislative circles. The sighs of relief from that quarter were afening. Steadman just didn’t have what it takes to get along with legislators and the ubiquitous ‘‘prac- tical politician.” “lis deficiency in this connection is hard to pin down, but it might be summed up in that Steadman acted too much like a teacher. His long pedagogical career had worked on him as it does on many another teacher. Many years of having students sitting open-mouthed, accepting every statement as gospel is bound to make a person think he is unalterably right in everything. But the legislators instantly bristled to ‘this attitude when Steadman first stepped on the scene. And ever since, Steadman has irritated the lawmakers further on an average of once a week. Of course, he started out with a whopping disadvantage. He was an appointee of Deimo- cratic Williams, and automatically in the minds of the Republican legislators, a jerk. But many other of Williams appointees have rither overcome this disadvantage to get along well with the legislature or at least have not lost ground in the legislative esteem. Steadman, on the other hand has been steadily getting himself even more disliked than ever, impossible as that might have seemed at first. It even reached the point in the last session that some of thé Democratic legislators were grumbling at Steadman’s sometimes haughty, sometimes patronizing and sometimes antagonistic attitude. ‘ e s . The legislators took all kinds of counter measures against Steadman. Among these was the famous resolution of last spring rejecting the governor’s budgets Steadman was responsible for, it called for more expenditures than the state expected to collect. The resolution was based on an attorney general’s opinion that .uch a budget was illegal. The resolutien had no practical effect except as a public slap at Steadman. The lawmakers took away Steadman’s power to allocate space to state agencies in the new Stevens T. Mason building, they forced him to submit the most meticulous details of the budget ever de- manded and they forced him to put his capital outlay budgets on a long-term basis instead of yearly. Finally, apparently, Steadman has had enough. He wanted to pull out’ two and a half years ago at the end of Williams’ first term, but Williams talked him out of it. Now he has made it. He is returning to the sheltered classroom, and he gives every evidence of being relieved and deeply grateful to be doing so. . The legislators, relieved as they dre in the first few days, will probably mellow toward Steadman as they begin te look back dis- passionately. They are going to realize that there has been no breath of scandal in the purchasing division and salvage divisions, at one time a constant source of trouble. And they are also going to wake up to the fact that the building, budget and accounting divisions, always well-run and unquestionably honest, have maintained a high standard of efficiency, even «under sometimes severe legislative harrassment. % * “ad ee GE Ks 9 mao 4 haa ae SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 _ > ae ee . — WITHOUT THE BIBLE ———————— 2 ig . °*THY WORD IS TRUTH _ AWW ITT OSS ‘* ‘True Pool of Reflection Voice of the People ‘A Mother Who Knows’ Says Speed Is the Causeof Many Deaths, Useless Heartaches (Letters will be con“ensed when neces- sary because of lack ot space Ful) name. address and telephone oumber of the writer must accompany letters out these wil) not be published !f the writer so requests, unless the letter is critica) ip ite nature.) Somehow I seem to have missed the letter written by Cannon Ball, but I have read several quotes from it. One of them was that specd does not harm anyone Several years ago our son and his girl friend were killed by a driver who thought the sam> thing! They were asked to go for a drive by a boy who thought more of speed than he did the safety of the young people in his car. If you have to speed, do it alone! Don't ever tell me speed doesn't kill, for I know it does. The driver was going fast and when he put on the brakes he skidded into a truck parked on the opposite side of the road. Don't let it be you. Mr. Days of All Faiths Cannon Ball. who causes the heartaches of useless deaths. Until it happens to one of your loved ones you cannot know the heartache. A Mother Who Knows Says We Don’t Need Our U. S. State Department The American people voted last November for a complete change, but what is happening in Washing- ton and what impends there makes it more imperative than ever to ask whether the country has a tepublican administration in any- thing but name. There is slight hope that Ameri- cans will get a break, as Senator McCarthy cannot do the house- cleaning all by himself. The U.S. Treasury needs more money, Look what we could save by doing away with the U.S. State Department. We don't need it; Eng- land takes good care of those things for us. Will not the: defeat of Chancellor Adenauer in the German elections of Sept. 6 mean that the U. S. State Department has lost the last remnant of prestige in Europe and that the American people have lost all the billions they have dished out for that Truman-Acheson-Mar- shall conceived, non-existing ‘‘Eu- ropean’’ NATO Army? Kurt Mertig. Chairman German-American Republican League 317 East Mth Street New York THOUGHTS FOR TODAY For the iniquity of his cove- tousness was I wroth, and smote him: I hid me, and was wroth, and he went on forwardly in the way of his heart.—lIsaiah 57:17. * * * To the covetous man life is a nightmare, and God lets him wres- tle with it as best he may. —Henry Ward Beecher Boston Clergy Banished Anne Hutchinson From State When She Criticized Them By Canon Howard V, Harper, D.D. Those who fight tyranny often turn out to be tyrants themselves. Something like that was the case in the Massachusetts Colony where the Puritans, who had left Europe in order to be free, soon developed the most strait-laced dictatorship this country has ever seen. Aug. 30 is the anniversary of the banishment from Massachu- setts of Anne Hutchinson, who had the reckless courage to speak out against the despotic authority of the Boston clergy. At 34 Anne had come from England to the new Colony, and she did not like what she found there. Not being able to get a hearing from the church lead- ers, she organized weekly meet- ings of the women of Boston. She commented with intelligence and insight on the previous Sun- day’s sermons, missing no chance to point out that the clergy were autocrats. She was a brilliant woman, with a mind that perceived the dif- ference between real Christianity and petty, legalistic regulations of the Puritans. Although her campaign divided the populace into factions, the clerical party won out easily. In 1637, Anne was tried by the opposition and expelled from Massachusetts, The charge Aunt Het - ‘Women have got more pride. A woman with an ornery hasband keeps on tryin’ to be somebody, but a man with an ornery wile, just gives up. against her was “traducing the clergy.” She went to Long Island where, in 1643, she was killed by Indians. In the eastern section of London there is a church called St. Giles Cripplesgate, When it was built,it was at the edge of town, beside a special city gate for cripples. It was the custom in those days to build any church dedicated to St.sGiles where lame people might reach it without having to struggle through congested streets. St. Giles is the patron saint of cripples, and there is a legend that tells how he came to have this relationship with the physi- cally handicapped. . He lived alone in a cave in France. His one companion was a doe, which came daily to the cave and allowed the hermit to milk her, This milk was his only food. One day the doe came dashing frantically into the cave, hotly pursued by a hunter. An arrow, intended for the animal, struck Giles in the thigh. The hunter turned out to be the king, who was distressed by what he had done and offered him medical at- tention. Giles declined to be healed be- cause, he said, his lameness would help him understand others who were aflicted. The famous legend of the Wan- dering Jew, condemned to live and roam the earth until the Day of Judgment, does not have its origin in the Bible. ; It comes from a pamphlet of un- known authorship circulated in Germany early in the 17th Century. It stated that there had been in Hamburg 50 years before a Jew named Ahasuerus, who had stated that he was ‘‘eternal.”’ The story was that because of an insult to Jesus this man was un- der a sentence of perpetual wan- dering. From this purely imaginative writing have come many stories poems and even paintings. They represent in a symbolic way the homeless wanderings of the Jew- ish nation, even though it is not literally true. The most popular version of the legend tells that Jesus, on His way to the Crucifixion, stopped for a moment to rest before the shop of Ahasuerus. The frightened shop- keeper said to Him, “Go! Why dost thou tarry?’ and the Lord is said to have replied “I go, but thou shalt tarry till I come.” It is a story that fits neither the character of the hospitable Jewish people nor of the gentle, understanding Nazarene. In some accounts Ahasuerus con- stantly puts himself in danger, hop- ing for death to release him from his sentence. In others he goes about doing good, in an effort to expiate his guilt. Case Records of-a Psychologist Contests Can Increase Attendance in Church When the teen-age attend- ance at all ghurches in your ‘own can be boosted from 38.5 per cent to 72 per. cent, that is news! Notice Supt. Alezan- der’s unique challenge to youth. Then see if you can’t inject some of this same wholesome, competitive spirit into your own church activi- ties. Contests do for churches what advertising does for de- partment stores. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case H-372: Gerald Alexander is the very ingenious Superintendent of Schools at Greensburg, Indiana. Last fall he asked 40 of his teachers to take inventory on Mon- day morning as to -how many of their children had attended Sun- day school the day before. Then they also inquired how many had attended their Catholic Mass or Protestant preaching serv- ices on that Sunday. The following Monday, the teachers made a second analysis, and then Supt. Alexander aver- aged these two. He found that 35.1 per cent of the boys and 41.8 per cent of the girls had gone to church services in their Catholic or Protestant de- nominations. The combined aver- age was 38.5 per cent. Incidentally, the corresponding figures for Sunday school were 55.4 per cent for boys and 66.3 per cent for girls. Then Supt. Alexander announced Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Summer’s Visit Summer is a visitor... Who, seems to stay and stay... And then before we realize it... Her smile has slipped away . . . When she is here the days are long... And bright with every pleasure .. - Although at times they seem to stretch . . . Until they're hard to measure .. . But suddenly the sun goes down ... And stars come out too soon... And ever earlier the earth ... Is greeted by the moon . . And then we sort of stop to think . . . And maybe even worry . . . And wish our happy visitor ... Were not in such a hurry .. . Summer is a visitor . . . We all appreciate . . . But somehow never quite enough... Until it is too late. (Copyright 1953) Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS" BAER (International News Service) We'll say one thing about the controlled national debt. fluctuating between incredible and astonishing. We never thought there was so much money in the world. There isn't. The economic engineers say there is no more to fear than being on a wharf with the tide out. We are borrowing from ourselves. So is everyone else. For the nucleus of a mental nudge let's ask one question. When a man owes money to him- self has he got it? Let's reduce it to the least un- common denominator. If a hen lays an egg on a sloping roof does it raise the omelet-power of the incubator? Or even more simple. When vou send a cabbage leaf by a rabbit — what price nibbles? They gossip me that only Barney Baruch understands it. Are we betting Fort Knox against a park bench? In 1939 the blanket limit was $45,000,000,000 of the realm. Be- fore that Franklin Delano had held it down by making dollar bills smaller. It's’ to his high schoolers that a me- morial electric organ had been of- fered by the John F. prize fund, if the students would either maintain an average church at- tendance of 75 per cent for four consecutive Sundays, or at least 70 per cent for five straight Sun- days. The student council accepted the challenge and -picked the month of November for their contest. Sunday school attendance could not be substituted for church attendance in winning the prize. Remembering that their average -church attendance had been 38.5 per cent on the preliminary Octo- ber survey, now notice how this contest zoomed their presence in church. Novi, 9 cc cacc cts 65.05 per cent Nov. 16 ...........12.96 per cent NOV. 23) sentcctees 71.54 per cent NOW, 30) ss cree 71.02 per cent Dec. 7 .........65- 80.00 per cent So the students won the $2,600 Hammond electric organ for their high school by a 5-week average of 72.9 per cent, which is marve- lous! “Dr. Crane,’’ said Supt. Alex- ander, “I am a consistent reader of your newspaper column, and fully appreciate its wonderful influence for good. “So I am passing along these data to you. We called the project ‘A Challenge to Youth.’ “IT had also tried the same idea at Crawfordsville and Washington, Indiana, schools while located there.”’ Well, Supt. Alexander, I salute you for this stimulating experi- ment. It shows how the public schools can help the churches. It also proves how contests will ‘‘pep up’’ churches! (Vary the nature of contests, but keep them going permanently.) It suggests, too, that the clergy- men will be encouraged to ‘‘pep up” their brand of oratory, and make dramatic, narrative sermons to hold the attention of teen-agers. For even though you teachers have delivered a ready-made au- dience to the clerics, they can't expect to keep them coming after the end of the contest unless their platform addresses prove so inter- esting that the teen-agers want to attend thereafter. And that Goddard prize for the schools, deserves emulation else- where. It has not only furnished this beautiful organ, but has made possible prizes of $50 for oratory and essay writing and other com- mendable school activities. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper. enclosing a long 3 cent stamped, addressed envelope and a dime to cover printing and typing costs when vou send for one of his psychological charts.) (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate Inc ) From Our Files 15 Years Ago FOUR INSURGENT Spanis.. warships destroy government ship; 26 killed. FRENCH TROOPS preparing Hitler visits forts; world tension mounting. SECOND CANAL plan rejected; more Panama locks favored. 20 Years Ago CLINTON RIVER receives an- nual cleaning as trucks haul away trash- HALF DOZEN Civil war veter- ans gather for ‘‘Boys of the 22nd” reunion. ‘Finger Nails as Ridged as Washboard’ So Brady Advises Calcium, Vitamin D By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. THE MAIL BOX Finger Nails My finger natls are as ridged as the washboard I used in the dim past. I asked my family doctor and he just shrugged. (V. P.) Answer—One cause is hypochro- mic anemia (iron deficiency ane- mia). Another is lifelong calcium, vitamin D and riboflavin defi- ciency. Send stamped self-ad- dressed envelope and ask for pam- phlet on The Gray Sickness (hypo- chromic anemia) and pamphlet Young Folks and Old Folks. Snow Water Municipal water here is 99.6 pure snow water, very soft, fine to drink, but, as I understand it, too pure—that is, it doesn't supply the minerals needed for good health... (Mrs. B. H.) Answer — If the water has a sat- isfactory taste and is not polluted (by health department standard) it makes no difference whether it contains little or much mineral matter. You get the minerals from food, not from water, particularly milk, cheese, eggs, greens, beans, peas, nuts, peanuts, wheat, lean meat. Egg White Friends eat only the yolk and throw away the white of egg, claiming the white has no food value. (J. W. McW.) Answer—The protein (albumen) of egg white is complete, tKat is, contains all of the amino-acids re- t quired for human nutrition. It is fully equal to any lean meat, fowl. fish or other nitrogenous (protein) food in that respect. It is the richest food. source of pure riboflavin (vitamin B2). ’ Cream ef Tartar Friend takes -cream of tartar detly, thinks it is a cure for arthritis. Is there any basis for this? I enjoy excellent health, thanks to following your teach- ings. (A. F. L.) Answer—Cream of tartar (potas- sium bitartrate) is a mild diuretic (increases flow of urine). No basis for your friend’s idea. Algebra One who intends so study medicine should have two years of algebra in high school for the same reason that one should have two years of Latin in high school to become a scholar. (C. H.) Answer—I still don’t see why a prospective physician should waste any time on algebra. But then, there’s the barber who used to cut my hair—long ago, of course —and boast of his skill at his trade although he couldn’t read. He insisted that no barber who could read had anything on him. Rash Husband has rash on his leg doctors can't seem to heal. it is a fungus. What pamphlet on dermatophytosis itch)? (Mrs. 8. H.) Answer—Any reader who asks for it in writing (no clipping, please) and provides stamped, self- addressed envelope may have the the say your (foot which They pamphlet on Dermaphytosis (other- wise called athlete's foot, foot itch, - ringworm, fungus iniection). Such fungus in fection may affect any part of the skin. Characteristic signs are itching, cracking, mace- cation. It is contagious. Stage Fright Your help for stage fright and ex- amination jitters was a complete success and amazed me .. . incidentally it occurs to me that your teachings allay . , many fears and worries (hs ) Unfortunately the cure you advocate for examination jitters does not help my problem... (R. 8.) Answer—lI do not advocate a cure for anything. On written request, if you inclose stamped, self-addressed envelope. I'll send a pamphlet on Stage Fright and Examination Jttters which tells how many poor geeks have beaten them. Rheumatis Helped Writing to tell you what a wonderful relief I knees an over five years. "ee In two months I was Practically cured, and now I do all my own housework again... (Mrs. R. P. L.) Answer—Thank you. On written request any reader who provides stamped, self-addressed envelope may have the pamphlet which put Mrs. R. P. L. in fine fettle. It is called Calcium and Rheumatiz. Signed letters, not more than one page or 100 words long, pertaining to personal health and hygiene, will be answered by Dr. Brady tf a stamped self addressed envelope is enclosed (Copyright 1953) Tomas THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 29. 1953 FIVE FATHERS OF FLIGHT — The Wright Brothers (6) "ar it 1 t Qi zs +f ae tIo~ By Wade Jones and Ralph Lane American marker. out. Someone painted the They Cleared That Up SALINA, Utah (R—A road sign outside Salina used to read ‘“‘wel- come fellow travelers.” But now it’s a 100 per cent “fellow” . “Reliable INSURANCE Protection” Wm. W. Donaldson Pontiac 14, Michigan Res. FE 5-6424 Phones: Office FE Agency 714 Community National Bank Building 2-9673 os th. per Z a4 You sign a contract that you haven’t read care- fully ... accept a verbal guarantee... or pay for a job before it’s completed. And you find you are OVER the BARREL. when you try to get what you thought you were buying. To Te ot Lon Le oh ed SPREE? get to he EPO Ppgee Mey. RA SORE Ca dea em oe BS AL. €, _ opin AIS ts Side Be ees ee fades Re AS ee os i ir protect yourself — ALWAYS withhold your ‘sj money until you are sure of getting what you ‘3 paid for. o BETTER BUSINESS BOARD of the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce Waldron Hotel Bldg. Phone FE 5-6148 a ey yay kent ga we : word i serge >. 8 “ eas eS a: " : « ete ae Re Re ae pe eS! BS ek ich eh el ae eB te a Math Mae AEG dae mt Reds Return i) Hard Noncoms Sergeants Isolated to Allow Agents to Work on Their Men PANMUNJOM (#—Tough Amer- f/ican sefgeants who were separated -| Doubles Since Library Bequest Man’‘s 1896 Will NEW YORK (# — A 19th century merchant’s wish to save youth from bad influences will result in erection of a 2% million dollar public library in midtown Manhat- tan. The merchant, Ezekiel J. Don- nell, died in 1896, An Irish immi- grant, he made a fortune in the *2 | from their men in North Korean | prison camps because of their | fund for his wife and daughter and com-| on their death the residual estate i | outspoken resistance ‘to munism began coming home today. see Among the 145 Americans freed = | today at Panmunjom were 36 non- mer {commissioned officers from the #3 | sergeants’ compound at Camp 3, #: = | Chongsong, North Korea. "|| M.Sgt. James C. Goelzer, 37, of =} |New Albany, Ind., who was cap- * ?| tured six days after U. S. ground #2" | troops went into action in Korea wea |in July, 1950, said: * * * “‘As long as the sergeants were 's allowed to stay with their men, 7 | the Communists had no success :|4 Turks, 5 Filipinos, 3 French and | ‘13 South Africans, a total of 400 ; | men. Returning prisoners said almost, all the American captives except sergeants from Camp 4 — a special | A sergeants’ camp — and officers | »«, | from Camp 2 have been repatriat- | ti led They said the Camp 4 sergeants and the officers were waiting at Kaesong, last stop on the way to freedom. No one has seen Maj. Gen. William Dean along the route to freedom. The commander of the U. S. 2th Division was captured in July, 1950. Be eek ee fg < MORE SS OR Bess, New power developments at Ni- agara Falls will operate at night and in the off season to cut the flow over the falls to about one- fourth of the normal volume, but i, <4 | will permit almost full flow when sightseers are likely to be present. SAVE Time and Money GOING TO BUY A HOUSE? GOING TO BUY A HOME? HOLDING A LAND CONTRACT THAT YOU'D LIKE TO SELL? If any of these three questions are on your mind . then THE PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN is the place for you! We ‘Are Proud of Our Fast, Efficient Service! Lome In and Talk It Over! PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 407 MAIN STREET ROCHESTER 16 E. LAWRENCE ST. PONTIAC s | 4 | The Reds promised to return 110 | Mexican Movie Star *ocz| more Americans Sunday, as well | -=-# | as 250 South Koreans, 25 British, | cotton business. He left a trust | was to go to the New York Public Library. * > . Mrs. Donnell died in 1899 and her | daughter in 1924. Relatives con- | | tested the daughter's will and, aft- ;er a legal battle, $1,691,759 was stipulated for the library. * * * Subsequent litigation and liqui- dation of assets took many more years. Now, with interest, the li- brary fund amounts to $2,427,000. Library officials signed a build- ing fund contract yesterday, call- ing for a four-story building. Is Delayed at Border SAN ANTONIO, Tex. {#—Miro- | slava, the raven-haired Czech-born | Mexican movie star, was detained | nearly 15 hours by the U. S. Immi- | Z gration Service here yesterday. After an informal hearing be- fore David Carter, Immigration Service hearing officer, at the Fed- eral Bidg., she was permitted to go | on to New York. | Member Of Federal Deposit s00tbt Cet The Ability to Prove You Paid can be important indeed if the records of the store or utility office are incomplete and you have mislaid your receipt. When you make a practice of settling accounts by check on the Pontiac State Bank, your cancelled check, which is re- turned to you is, in itself, complete protec- tion. Moreover, since we make permanent photographic re cord s of all checks handled, you'll enjoy this additional safe- guard. All this, plus the saving in time and steps which checking account service brings will make an account here in- creasingly valuable to you. COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE BRANCHES DRAYTON PLAINS AUBURN HEIGHTS 2” Current rate paid on sav- ings accounts. * Savings added until the 10th of the month earn from the Ist of the month. * Any amount opens an account. * Insured to $10,000 by Fed- eral Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. * and you stop moisture damage. A dehumidifier’s thirst is enormous from damp air every 24 hours. Electric dehumidifiers are compact — They plug in, just like a floor lamp. Get an Electric Air Dr ier It’s no joke —the way rust can wreck a furnace and other costly metal equipment found in a basement. But there is a modern answer to this old problem. Dry out basement air with an electric dehumidifier It removes as much as 3 gallons of water easily moved from one trouble spot to anothen (Dehumidifier) Med ol dren ere under 25” high; weigh wader 80 peunds. SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 Part-Time for Storage in High Style By ELIZABETH HILLYER | mahogany, some pieces with If the storage furniture in the | greige lacquer fronts. The dress- house is just what it was as ing table unit su be indween years ago, it’s time for a checkup. ; cabinets with brass cleat and Ceuld be that's why the house- keeping chores seem heavier now| can be lifted out, has jewelry lob Suggestion: Running Beauty Care Service for Shut-ins Crippled Woman Offers Idea to Benefit All Parties By ANNP HEYWOOD Most women know that the part-time job is the perfect answer to many dilemmas, financial, social and emotional, and it is wonderful to see the way women will help each other in finding these part-time jobs. My readers, for instance, have been very helpful in suggesting part- time activities which might interest other women. + One woman writes from Balti- Pj k S | more to inquire why someone doesn't start a beauty service for IC ty es | shut-ins. t F| tt r She says that she herself has O a c to use crutches and cannot go Your Figure Hair and. Makeup Can Also Minimize ine wears her hair short, which ; means that it is necessary to have Budges, Thinness | it trimmed rather often. first step is to start doing some-| appointments for a regular num- thing about your face and figure | ber of shut-in customers. instead of just fretting about your) * This, 1 think, is her to get out to her hairdresser, though she likes to be weil- groomed. are ‘pleasing plump”’ or ‘‘as thin| Other shut-ins she knows would as a rail’ you can still look and| welcome a service that had a feel good. well-trained hair-dresser and man- Because it is easy to care for, | For your own well being the/icurist who would make regular an ex- —not enough places to put things. | Think of every piece of storage furniture as a labor-saving device. If it's the right size and spaced for what it’s to hold—and the full quota in the house adds up to enough room—clutter is~ banished, there's little picking up and straightening to do and it's so easy to find things, articles are kept safe and in order and thus need less care. Even ironing time is shortened for clothing and table linen stay unwrinkled in space especially | planned for them, instead of in | the scramble of drawers that are | too wide and too deep. One of the best things designers | have done in the past several years | sign and also to serve as drawer | @S full blouses and gathered skirts. is to provide well-organized storage space so that small. living quarters become roomy And this well-organized storage space comes in handsome pack- ages, as the latest furniture com- ing up for fall again proves. Enormous variety of pieces and the ways they are engineered drawer and. compartment « wise make it possible to fit any room and all kinds of possessions—and all this efficiency is housed in beau- tiful furniture. not only in contem- porary straight-lined style, but also in traditional adaptations that lose | nothing in line as they usefulness. The distinguished cherry cre- denza at lower right has the elegance of a marble top and brass legs and hardware, but its interior shows exact planning of every inch with three sliding trays and a leaf behind the tambour section, three top draw- ers and adjustable shelves. Two silver files are part of its equipment, The credenza was de- signed by J. Stuart Clingman, Small drawers catch the eye of fashion, and one of the handsomest cabinets of this type to be shown this fall is in cherry with’ brass | pulls at lower left. Dale Ford designed it from the inspiration of an old shoelace cab- inet, Contomporary chests and cab- inets in every size and a variety of finishes are designed by Harvey Probber. Sketched is a new grouping in YOU SAVE... In the long run when your carpets are cleaned by our pro- fessional methods. DOMESTIC 9x12 RUGS Small charge for sizing TF New Way RUG and CARPET CLEANERS 42 Wisner Street FE 2-7132 anywhere alone. It is difficult for HOLLYWOOD (INS) — If you| She says that she ‘and many too-many or too-few pounds. trays and a compartment resis- gain in; , *49> tant to cosmetic stain. | The small cabinet at top center points out the new importance of small pieces, to fit narrow wall areas, space under windows, etc. Milo Baughman gives many of his cabinets colored drawer or door fronts and wrought iron legs. is the increasingly popular type | which can be used anywhere, in the | living room, dining room or bed- | room, In walnut, designed by Gio Ponti, |it is an example of the distin- guished furniture designed in Italy | and now made in this country, and | has raised panels to form a_ de- pulls, } | Manner | MAKE FRIENDS Mrs. Brown was entertaining her sewing circle with tales of her newly-married daughter’s run-ins with her mother-in-law. She had an interested audience, all right. But it’s a pity she doesn’t know that it's poor taste for a mother to broadcast the personal problems 'of her children. The drawer chest at upper right | Consult with your physician before taking any drastic steps to gain or lose weight. However, if your plumpness is caused by nothing more than passion for cake, cream pies or chocolate bon bons, try cutting down on eating these extras. On the other hand, if you are such a fussy eater that you aren't get- ting enough food, try to acquire a taste for weight-building menus. Choosing flattering styles of clothes is one of the most signifi- cant factors in distracting from your figure faults. A woman or girl with too many pounds should never wear bunchy clothes, such | hese only exaggerate plump- | ness. Tailored clothes are better because they are cut to give an appearance of neatness, which is so important to a heavy person. Also to be avoided are de- signs in cut, fabric or color that | add width, such as _ horizontal | stripes, contrasting belts, or con- trasting blouse or skirt colors. cellent idea, and one which any beauty operator might consider. | It could become a full-time job | if you wanted that. On the other hand, if the beauty operator were married and had children, she could still keep up her experience, on a_ part-time basis, and make excellent pin money by starting this kind of service. My grateful thanks to the thoughtful reader who sent me this good suggestion. If any of you see in your own life things which might give ano- ther woman an idea for a part- time service, won't you please let me know? (Copyright 1953) | Thin women, of course, should avoid skin-tight clothes and add | | fullness to their figures by wearing | gathered or pleated skirts and} full, “‘blousy’’ tops. Bright colored belts or colorful horizontal trim also can help to add to the illusion | of more poundage. The most importat means of all plumpness or thinness is to make your face as attractive as possible. This means acquiring a becoming hair style and making-up your face | to perfection. A round, full face should not have hair combed in fussy curls close to the face. Hair that is combed back slickly or in soft waves helps create the all-impor- Her audience listens to her, but { doesn't admire her. | | | [THINGS 1 COME by Gee] | | | [ow TO vusT ALLA ST AMO H. LE ee YOu? — A NEW AT 7 } ya SAM TO DO EXACTLY THAT. WGK | ! ‘ Eyebrows can be extended beyond | tant neat appearance for a full | figure. This neatness should be car- ried down to your face with a smooth complexion finish, neat- ly arched eyebrows, and lips that have been made up with a lip brush so that the lip line is smooth and not at all feathery. A thin face should have soft! waves combed around the face, | the outer corner of the eyes to add facial width, and eyelashes should be made up carefully, A smooth, almost negligible ap- | plication of rouge, applied over the | cheek bones and diminished! into| the hair line, can help give full-| ness to a thin face. = THE BEAUTY THAT The beauty of Dirilyte tableware is unique. These knives, forks and spoons are the gay, lovely color of gold all through — for Dirilyte is made of solid metal || — a wonderful modern alloy of heirloom quality. This metal and the fine craftsmanship will make every piece you buy a lifetime treasure. Yet Dirilyte is amazingly moderate. Buy your basic service from us now, and add other pieces from month to month, or year to year. CONNOLLY’S 16 W. Huron St. MHREGISTERED JEWELER NZ’ 1s AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY | 72 a by, Cauna Wher Bottle-caps covered with crochet, joined for hot-plate mats. doilies. | which help make it appear fuller. | Match a set in 2 or 3 colors. Pro- | tect your table. Hot-plate mats covered bottle caps. from _crochet- Pattern 772: 7x15 inches. Send 25 cents in coins for this) pattern—add 5 cents for each’pat- ; Send | |}to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft | tern for first-class mailing. Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, your name, address and zone. | The king of Sweden is required to be a member of the Lutheran Church. - -_ - - WEEK | Enroll NOW for Fall Term | Tues. Sept. 8 (Night School Sept. 10) DAY, HALF-DAY OR EVENING * Higher Accounting % Business Administra- tion | % Executive Secretarial * Typewriting * Gregg Shorthand %& Machine Shorthand | % Speedwriting ¥% Comptometer * Calculator THE BUSINESS INSTITUTE 1 West Lawrence St. Phone Pontiac FE 2-355! VETERAN APPROVED | ' you'll ‘and roomy enough for your j Take your beauty back to school in this |lated leather in wide variety of colors, this new travelette fitted with beauty essentials beauty box is priced to fit your budget. pretties. Simu- | ‘Girl Should Juggle Two Boy Friends for Dating Variety and Change of Pace By ELIZABETH WOODWARD | ‘Dear Miss Woodward: Ive broken up (because he wanted to) hausted! This upping and downing, offing and onning has me almost “But he keeps telling me that I'm the nicest girl he’s ever gone self I shouldn't want to bother with him any more. “But there it is. I hke him. I can't forget him. “This other boy I've been dat- like to like him — but I can't while my first love is still on my mind. I'm plenty mixed up — but can you help me?” In any dilemma you're torn be- tween two courses of action, There are pros and cons for both sides, equally strong and weighty, You're in the middle, between two boys. You feel you must make a decisive choice of one or tHe other. I don't. Your tempestuous love sounds ‘exciting and fun. It’s here one surprise and wonder. Why not be lights at your| | door? The other love sounds placid and reliable, exciting in a com- fortable, peaceful sort of way. Steady, satisfyingly, constant. Must you choose between them, when you can have them both? Sparks fly often in your tempera- mental love affair because you aren't really mentally congenial — just physically attracted to each other. All is calm and serene with your other boy friend because you can be friends without being vio- | lently disturbed when you're to- gether. } You needn't choose one or the | other. You can have both — | just see to it that you aren't tied down to either in a! going-steady, exclusive dating a | rangement. Like both of your boy friends | at the same time. Quiver over| one, and calm down with the other. | The variety and change of pace will do you good! “Dear Miss Woodward: My brother’s best friend ts now in service and he wants to write to me. I’ve seen him many times and he has asked me to go on dates with him, but I’m rather shy where boys are concerned, so I refused even though I real. | ly wanted to go. “Would it be all right if I wrote to him? Somehow I have the im- pression that writing to boys just isn't very nice. Should he write first or should I?” He should write first — but the way you turned down his dates might have made him feel you just weren’t interested at all. So why not pour out. your shyness to your brother — with whom you aren't a bit shy — and get him to put in a good word for you? Tell him you really did want | | Te Learn the Merle Norman Way to a Levely Complerion Call FE 2-4010 for FREE Demonstration and Makeup 405 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. and made up again (because I| don’t want to write first. Ask wanted to) so often that I'm ex-| worn out. | with — and I keep telling my- | ing lately is so nice and Id | ! to date his friend, but you were | seared. Confess that you would | US€ of the address you have and lw t ther’ | like to write to him, but you paw a letter to your ‘pyother's He's the one who is away — him please to pass along that | _ : mews to bin: bait 100d, aud bed who craves mail. He made it clear | he liked you, wanted to date you j oe . 5 ’ | Mf it wangies a letter out of him. | wanted to write to you. so heave Since this is a dilemma, there's; ho! If you aren't too shy. j—_ | 6-5 —L3anSs ‘OBay Dv) | j =a oe Try It week and gone the next. Full " Cover Knife With Sheath | Hexagon doily 12 inches; oblong is | around when it f | It seems that all boys want to| There are times when it almost own a knife. Here at camp we| seems necessary to use a hunting a — that a boy must pe knife, but talk this over with your oo on oa me, | parents ahd do what they think 1 and this must be a pocket knife. | , = jis best. There is a rule that all IF smooth neck, outsize good woodsmen use — all knives arm SS .), , must be covered. i~ ‘ If you use a pocket knife your problem is solved, but here is a sheath for your hunting knife. You can use old inner tube for the material. Lay your knife down on some paper and draw around it to make a pattern. Allow a half inch or more for lacing. After you have made the front piece, lay it down and make an extra piece at the top for the belt loops, and also include enough ma- terial for fringe along one side. Make your pattern in rubber and punch holes along the sides with a paper punch. Be sure that these holes match, so that the shoestring lacing will go in and out evenly. Cut your fringe and belt loops, and hang it on your belt. ‘e ) PETUNIA! Its Kinder to My tired Feet And helps to Keep My temper sweet / Shoulders visible, upper arms invisi- ble makes the most of a good throat end is the big hit for fall cocktoil and dinner dress. Avoid strapless. Mrs. O. A.—'The strapless bodice has not alweys been kind to many who wore it. The reappearance of | sleeves, anywhere from little caps | or extended shoulders or full | length, is flattering and gives a/| more ‘‘dressed’’ (not dressed-up) look. Answers te Previews Pussie ~imlelt] [clale oo i] Aleit lA PlOIN}) [Ale Srtetcroters o mo it | @ic|U|m@|mpmAlslolc!: Alc ‘lo wt eivte Te hate! thought, Petunia! o Ale 7 Lee tjelor Several soft scatter rugs alel lALAelols s[a\n or pads in the places where AnNlaAlols A Stetote airinialel you sand makes house- vio UINI@iAleli e wor a | oo CIAIrisf iL o SRPOe: ?. 7 tole} (eieisis} sce | | another way out. That is to make | Send Bids to Everyone in Family All Relatives Ought to Receive Nuptial Invitations By EMILY POST A letter says: ‘‘I understand you say it is a compliment to send distant relatives and friends wed- ding invitations, both to church and the reception, even though they could not be present. “I’m still puzzled about this and reluctant to. follow your advice for my daughter’s wedding. Won't this sending of an invitation put them in the position of having to send gifts, whereas an announcement would not?” Answer: It is a requirement of relationship te send wedding in- vitations to all members of both his and her families. An in- vitation to a distant relative er friend means ‘“‘We want you to be with us if possible!” An announcement means “A wedding has taken place to which you were not invited.’’ It is more your relationship than the result of an invitation that requires the sending of a wedding gift, anyway. Dear Mrs. Post: I am leaving soon on my vacation which I plan to spend traveling. I would like to send postcards to some of my of- fice associates, most of them men and some of them married. Because I'm an unmarried wom- an, do you think I should send these to Mr. and Mrs. even though I don’t know the wives? Answer: Sending cards to your office associates alone and ad- dressing them to the office will be best. The messages on them should, of course, be very im- personal. Dear Mrs. Post: What happens to the lemon in my teacup? If I leave it in the tea, it becomes too strongly flavored with the lemon and .1 don’t care for too much lemon. ‘ I do like a little. But I've been | told once the lemon is in the cup | there is no chance to remove it to | the side of the saucer. Why not? Answer: Because it is a rather sloppy maneuver to fish it out and lay it on the saucer. Furthermore, it is not as a rule necessary. If you don’t press out any of the juice with your tea- spoon, there cannot be very much lemon flavor. All Children Spill Food: Be Prepared Just because your little child spills at the table is no reason he should be a social outcast. In the interest of keeping small youngsters in the family group, it is wise not to feed them separate- ly. But how to reconcile the inevit- able spilling with the niceties of adult dining? Here are some meal- time suggestions. 1. Be realistic about upset gias- ; $es and missed mouths by having the table for informal family din- ners in the kitchen surfaced with material that is easily wiped and will not stain. | This will save laundry bills | and temper, and Junior will be- come a member in good standing in the family unit early in life. 2. You will have patience to help your youngest learn to feed himself if the meals you plan do not require constant jumping up to watch the range or refill plates. Cultivate the simple but nourishing meal. 3. Have the child's chair at a suitable height so that he can reach both his plate and the table easily. This will save those ‘‘ex- tra" spillings. 4. A linoleum or tiled kitchen | floor wipes up in -seconds with a |damp mop, so that if the milk , OF mashed prunes go tumbling |down, no harm is done. By no | means have a rug in the room where youngsters eat. | 5. If a meal is too long, chil- | dren become restiess, and begin | to roughhouse. Arrange it so that | youngsters may be excused while adults linger over coffee. 6. Too hurried a meal is not good, either. Be sure that dinner , has a leisurely air, no matter | how brief the time at the table. | This encourages happiness in the | group and good digestion, and also helps to insure juvenile coopera- Check Trimmings When making washable clothes | at home, be sure that all trim- | mings, such as braid, fringe, ruf- fles and buttons are washable too, —_— THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 SEVEN Wedding Bells Peal Out in Pontiac Area Churches MRS. bd + A wedding trip to Portage Point is planned by Nancy Ann Wells and James Robert Osborn, who were married this afternoon in Kirk in the of Lansing are their parents. JAMES R. OSBORN Nancy A. Wells Becomes Bride of James R. Osborn After a honeymoon trip to Port- age Point on Lake Michigan, Mr. and Mrs. James R. Osborn plan to make their home in Marinette, Wis. The former Nancy Ann Wells, daughter‘ of Mr. and Mrs- Dale Wells of Lakeview avenue, Orchard Laké and James Robert Osborn, were married this afternoon at Kirk in the Hills. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Osborn of Lansing. Dr, William P. Lemon officiat- ed at the 2 o’clock ceremony, before 200 guests. As she came down the aisle on her father’s arm, the bride was wearing a gown of chantilly lace and nylon tulle over satin. The} dress was styled with a lace bo- dice, long sleeves, and _ illusion neckline. The floor-length tulle skirt was trimmed with panels of lace, and a pearl-trimmed lace cap held her fingertip veil. She wore the bride-| , groom's gift of pearls and carried a cascade of white orchids and stephanotis. Linda Wells was her sister’s maid of honor in a ballerina- length dress of aqua shantung with shrug jacket and beaded bodice. A cascade of garnet roses and ivy formed her bou- quet. Bridesmaids, Marie Riley of Grand Rapids, Helen Osborn of Lansing, the bridegroom's sister; and Mrs. Donn McGuigan of De- troit, wore pale yellow dresses similar to the honor maids, and they carried similar bouquets. Robert Osterberg came from Lansing to be best man at the wedding. Arthur Zill of Lansing, Eugene Bonofiglo, also of Lansing, William Kish of Princeton, Minn. PTA Board Plans Work’ Views Film Mrs. Clare Hubbell was hostess | at her home on Wayne street) Thursday evening when the execu: | tive board of the Williams Lake | School PTA met for pre-term or- | ganization. Members approved for chair- manship of the standing commit- tees were Mrs. Harold Gustafson, program; Mrs. George Hedding. membership; Mr. and Mrs. Glen Byington, hospitality; Mr. and Mrs. Harold McAllister, budget and fi- nance, and Mrs. George Stout, publicity. Mrs. Harold Wilson, social; Mrs. Harold Pattison, publications; Mrs. Earl Dell, room mother; Roscoe Goddard, safety and Mrs. Frank Sparker, adult education are other committee heads. Mrs. James Green is delegate to the county council. Bridal Shower Fetes Miss Allin Friends gathered at the home of Mrs. Cecil Martin of Euclid street to honor bride-elect Juanita Allin with a miscellaneous bridal show- er Tuesday evening. Mrs. Elvin Pearce was co-hostess. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Allin of Corwin court, Juanita will speak her vows Oct. 3 with Chandler Knutsen, son of Mrs. H zel Knutsen of Windsor and the late Oscar Knutsen. Guests included Mrs. Raymond Jergovich, Mrs. Edsel Matthews, Mrs. David Grubb, Rosie Anast, Ruth Woodworth and Martha Breckenridge. Mrs. Charles VanNest, Mrs. Ralph Kerney, Mrs. Floyd Jones, Mrs. Manley Drake and Elsie Al- lin completed the list. ito Ralph Wilcox. of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wilcox of and Walker Mayhew of Cleveland, O. seated the guests. For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs. Wells wore a dress of gray silk organza with ruby accessor- jes and a ruby glamellia cor- sage. Mrs. Osborn chose mauve silk organza with ruby accessor- | les and a purple-tipped white orchid. After a reception at Rotunda Inn, the bride changed to her traveling costume, a dress of beige faille and velvet with black ac- cessories and the orchid from her | bouquet. | James and his bride are grad- uates of Michigan State College, where she was a membe rof Sigma Kappa sorority, and he was affili- ated with Kappa Sigma fraternity. SARA MAE BROWN The Gerald N. Browns of Peach street are announcing the engage- ment of their daughter, Sara Mae, Ralph is the son West End avenue. { An imported white Chantilly lace gown designed with an off-shoulder yoke was worn by Mary Sue Cloo- nan when she spoke. her vows with William J. Dean Jr. this morning at St. Vincent de Paul Church. The yoke of the gown was distin- guished with matching lace ap- pliqued with sequins, and the long fitted sleeves ended at points over the wrists. The bride’s voluminous skirt, accented by a self-lace ruffle, formed the hemline which ex- tended into a cathedral-length train. An imported finger-tip vell of illusion fell from a lace Juliet cap which was outlined with seed pearis and sequins. Mary Sue carried a graceful lace fan which had been bought Hills. in Rome by a family friend. The The Dale Wells | fan tormed the background for a bouquet of white roses, swain- of Orchard sonia, ivy and a white orchid. Lake and the A necklace of a tiny diamond and drop pearls, an heirloom in the R. D . Barnes Cloonan family, completed the bridal ensemble. groom are the S. J. Cloonan Jrs. of Cherokee road and the William J. Deans of Ottawa drive. The 300 guests heard the nup- tial mass sung by the Rev. Mau- rice Veryser. Bishop A. M. Zaleski read the 10 o’clock mar- riage service. Preceding Mary Sue to the altar were Delores Geisler as maid of honor and Mary Jo Pauli as junior bridesmaid. Bridesmaids were Sue McDougall, Mary Andary of Sault Ste. Marie, Ann Perkins and Patricia Dean, a cousin of the bridegroom. The_ bridesmaids’ iridescent gowns in gray, beige, mauve and pink respectively were designed identically to the honor maid’s blue dress. the strapless taffeta gowns of ballerina-length which featured jeweled necklines, fitted bodices and bouffant skirts. Their head- | pieces were composed of ivy and a rubrum lily and they carried cas- cades of lilies and ivy. The junior bridesmaid’s cos- tume was a white floor-length nylon dot dress worn over white taffeta. It was accented with a crushed blue velvet sash. Her headpiece was of ivy and feath- ered delphinium. Charles R. Dean performed the duties of best man for his nephew while S. James Cloonan. the bride’s brother: aug DeMartino of Can- | field, N. J.; Robert O’Laughlin of | Toledo, Ohio, and Emil Bouckaert seated the guests. Jackie Cuyler sang the bridal recital. For her daughter’s wedding Mrs. Cloonan chose a gray-blue taffeta | dress with which she wore a rose hat and a glamelia corsage. Mrs. Dean’s choice was a rose taffeta | dress with navy accessories and a glamelia corsage. A breakfast was held immedi- ately after the ceremony at Ro- , tunda Inn where the reception also was held. The new Mrs. Dean changed to a navy shantung costume dress with | matching jacket and navy acces- sories. She vore the orchid from her bridal bouquet. Following a Northern Michigan | honeymoon, the couple will live at| Watkins Lake. Mary Sue attended Marygrove College and her husband is attend- ing the University of Detroit. About Birmingham Elinor Paton Touring Italy BIRMINGHAM — Elinor Paton, | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Paton of Drury Lane is traveling in France, Switzerland and Italy. | She will return about the middle of September. Mr. and Mrs. William C. Shaugh- nessv have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Agnes, to Don J. Stoddard, son of Mr. and} Mrs. Francis Stoddard of Detroit. The announcement was made at a family dinner Aug. 22 in the | Shaughnessy home. Also entertain- | ing for the couple were Mr. and! Mrs. William Tornow of Grosse | Pointe. Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Reed | with their daughter Peggy Ann | and son, Tim, will leave for New | York next week. Peggy Ann, Smith College junior, will sail for Paris early in September for her junior term studies there. Mrs. V. C. McWhorter of Mor- gantown, W. Va. and Topsfield, Mass. left Wednesday after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Fry. In her honor Mrs. Norman Clarke and Mrs. George A. Beecher en- tertained at luncheons. Mrs. A. S. McCall entertained at luncheon on Wednesday at Orchard Lake Country Club. Mrs. David U. Thomas and her sons have returned from a visit in East Aurora, N. Y. with Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Letchworth at their summer home. Lt. and Mrs. Harold Englander and their son, Mark, are visiting Mrs. Englander’s mother, Mrs. George A. Beecher of Greenwood Ave. The Englanders are en route | station at Great Lakes Naval Base. | ,Jane MacQueen whose marriage , Myron E. Snyder were Mr. and from San Diego, Calif. to their new Mr. and Mrs. Martin L. Butze! | are spending ten days at Charle- Voix. * * * Mrs. Donald Maunders will give the spinster dinner next Thursday evening for her sister, Barbara to Charles R. McCulloch will take place Sept. 12. On Sept. 9 Mrs. George Earle and Mrs. Philip Roach will give /a luncheon for Barbara at the ,Women’s City Club and Mr. and | |Mrs. Fred Henricks will give the | rehearsal dinner Sept. 11 at Pine! 4 Lake Country Club. * * * Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Allen Martini of Van Nys, Calif. and their two sons. * * * Junior girl sailors will give their final luncheon Sept. 5 at Orchard Lake Country Club. Senior sponsor for the girls is Mrs. William J. Lambert. Attending the luncheon will be Marjorie Rickard, Ruth and Sally Hubbard, Marjorie McCaul, Carol Green, Mary Slater, Leila and Bebe Blakeman, Penny Pierce and Susan Ketchum. Mrs. Kari Richard of Lone Pine road, Bloomfield Hills was host- ess at a luncheon in her home on Tuesday. Marynell Anderson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Anderson of Bloomfield Hills, has gone to New York to meet Patty Eden. The girls will look for an apartment and plan Parents of the bride and bride-~ Shrug jackets were worn over+— | brother as best man, and another | miniature orchids, for her daught- to spend the winter there. Mary Cloonan Weds William J. ‘Dean Jr. Today at St. Vincent de Paul Church MRS. WILLIAM J, DEAN JR. ‘Pontiac Man Claims Bride at Ceremony | The First Baptist Church of ' Lakeland, Fla. was tHe setting Fri- day evening when Jdck A. McCurry | claimed Linwood Coker for his. bride. Jack is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. McCurry of Mar- quette street, | Cokers of Lakeland are the bride's parents. Linwood was dressed in a gown | of organdy over white satin, Em- broidery edged the neckline and ; sleeves of the fitted bodice and | the back flounce which extended into a train. Hand clipped embroidery ap- pliqued with pearls trimmed the bodice, skirt and train. A tiara | of pearis hela her silk illusion | veil, and she carried valley lilies surrounding a white orchid on a fan of tulle and ‘lace. Louree Coker attended her sis- ter aS maid of honor in a dress of pink embroidered organdy over satin, with a draped bodice and | matching stole. Freda Walton and Jean Puritt, both of Lakeland, and the bridegroom's sister, Janet Mc- | of Auburn, Ala. a cousin of the | | bride, were the other attendants. Their dresses were pink lilac organdy over lilac taffeta, The | honor maid's bouquet was a fan of purple lilac net with deep rose | colored rainbow asters. Pink lilac | fans with purple rainbow asters were carried by the bridesmaids. Patricia Barton of Sylacuga, Ala. was flower girl in a dress similar to the bride’s in pink. Lynn Douthit of Rome, Ga. was the ring bearer for his cousin. William McCurry attended his | brother, Robert McCurry, seated the guests with Phillip Clements of Auburndale, Fla., Coker Barton of Sylacuga, Ala., and Huel White of Columbus, Ga. Mrs. Coker wore sage green net over satin, trimmed with irides- cent bugle beads and pearls, and | a corsage of talisman Yroses and) er's wedding. Mrs.. McCurry chose beige lace with a corsage of pink roses and bronze miniature orchids. After a reception in the church parlors, Linwood changed to a ark gold suit with brown acces- sories and the orchid from her and the Fred M.. eee in Florida bouquet for the wedding trip to | Miami and the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia. They will live in Pon- | | tac. MRS. JACK A. McCURRY Recently Feted at Shower Elizabeth Ann Michaels, bride- elect of A 2-c Gordon F. Wyrick 'Jr. was honored Wednesday even- ing at a miscellaneous bridal show- er given by Mrs. William Kellogg at her home on Oneida road. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Michaels of Lewis street and Mrs. John Redick of Auburn avenue and Gordon F. Wyrick of Montroyal avenue are' his parents. Guests included Jean Eiter, Mrs. Glen Morey, Pat Steck. Mary Salfi, Mrs. Ronald Flemming, Donna Menz, Mrs. Harold McDonough, Mrs. Charles Lauinger and Mrs. Redick. Coming Events Mrs. Guy E. Meixsell of Seneca street will be hostess om Tuesday evening to the Past Noble Grands of Pontiac Rebek- ab Lodge, 450 The Monday meeting of the 1939-1940 Proficiency Club of OES has been post- poned until next month Mothers Club of the Boys’ Club of Pontiac will meet Tuesday at 7:30 at | the Boys’ Club on E. Pike St Doris Belle Moore Weds Edgar J. Seyb The Southfield United Presby- terian Church was the setting Sat- urday afternoon when Doris Belle Moore became the bride of Edgar J. Seyb Jr., of Oak Park. Doris is the daughtey of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. Moore of Birming- ham, and the senior Edgar J. Moores of Pretty Prairie, Kan. are the bridegroom’s parents. The Rev. Harvey M. Luce per- formed the 4 o'clock ceremony. The bride was dressed in a ballerina-length gown of white linen and lace over taffeta: A short veil and white rose cas- cade bouquet completed her en- semble. Elizabeth Moore of Detroit, was her sister's only attendant. Her of Oak Park gown was ballerina-length in pea- cock blue sheer nylon shantung. She wore a matching lattice hat and carried a cascade of pink roses. Robert Seyb of Pretty Prairie, Kan. was his brother’s attendant. For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs. Moore chose a navy blue dress with matching accessories and a corsage of pink carnations. Mrs. Seyb wore a marine blue dress with black accessories and a pink carnation corsage. After a reception in the church parlors, the bride changed to a gray suit with navy accessories for the wedding trip to northern Michigan. On their return, the couple will live in Oak Park. [Many to Bid Mrs. ‘Smith Bon Voyage Friends, Relatives to Gather Tonight at Collier Home A host of friends and relatives will gather this evening at the home of the Floyd Colliers on East Beverly avenue to bid farewell to the Colliers’ daughter and grand- daughter, Mrs. Ray Richard Smith and Connie. They will leave Tuesday, -and after stops in London, Paris and Frankfort, will join Mr. Smith in Karlaruhe, Germany. They plan to spend the next two years there in Germany where Mr. Smith is stationed with the U.S. Army. An open house Sunday afternoon will give other friends of the fam- ily a chance to say their good- byes. . * * Dr. and Mrs. Palmer E. Sutton | of Royal Oak are entertaining with a buffet supper this evening from + 4 until 6 for Mary Moore and Walter Denison who will speak their vows at 8 o'clock in the First Methodist church of Royal Oak. Members of the immediate fam- ilies and out of town guests are expected at the Sutton home. s * * Mrs. Vivan Tubbs of Tubbs road returned recently from a three-week trip to Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks, Banff, and Lake Louise. * * * drive will receive a master of the University of Cincinnati today during the summer commence- ment. Mr. Laukonis received his B.S. degree from the University of De- troit. 3 s * s The Raymond Dearys of Wood- low drive on Watkins Lake are | Spending the day in Detroit. Mr. ary will be best man when his rote, Frederick speaks his vows | with Bernice J. Sass of Detroit. Gloria E. Walker Weds Roy Lewis Gloria E. Walker became the bride of Roy Edward Lewis Aug. 15 in the home of the Rev. Fred R. Tiffany on Elizabeth Lake road. She is the daughter of Mrs. Arthur Rock of Joslyn avenue, the Roy B. Lewises of South Marshall street are his parents. |in First Presbyterian Church were | A. Deeter. Joseph V. Laukonis of Locklin | |the United Presbyterian Church science degree from the Graduate | read the 3 o'clock rite. School of Arts and Sciences of | ; gown in ballerina length with a * s s To reside on Oneida road are Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Deeter who were married this afternoon in First Presbyterian Church. She is the former Joan Louise Dennis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Branton E. Dennis of East Kennett road. Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Deeter of Chippewa road are his parents. MRS. DONALD A, DEETER | Joan Louise Dennis Wed in First Presbyterian Rite Exchanging vows this afternoon Joan Louise Dennis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Branton E. Dennis of East Kennett road, and Donald The Rev. Andrew Creswell of The bridal gown with its scal- loped neckline, fitted bodice and bouffant skirt was fashioned of Chantilly lace and nylon tulle over satin. A headpiece ot shirred nylon and | seed pearls held a two-tiered veil and the bride wore a single. strand of pearls, a gift of the bridegroom. She carried white rose bouquet | céntered with a white orchid. | Bettie Bergsrtom as maid of hon- or wore a pastil pink nylon tulle pink nylon jacket. Her bouquet was | composed of Bermuda red gladioli | and carnations. She wore a head- | piece of pink nylon net covered with white forget-me-nots. | Donald, who is the son of Mr. | and Mrs. Howard A. Deeter of | Chippewa road asked his brother, | Howard of Omaha Neb.¢ to attend Mrs. Dennis chose a toast col- ored lace cocktail-length dress. Her flowers of pink gardenias set off the brown accessories. Mrs. Deeter wore a champagne colored embroidered satin cocktail dress with black velvet acces- sories and pink rose buds. A pink shantung suit with brown velvet accessories was chosen by the bride for the wedding trip to Canada. The reception was held in the church parlors immediately following the ceremony. Donald is graduate of Michigan State College where he is a mem- ber of Theta Chi fraternity. The, newlyweds will live on Oneida road. Ladies Aid Unit Holds Meeting The Ladies Aid Society of the Oakland Avenue United Presby- terian Church met Thursday at the church for sewing and making | plans for the fall season. A school girl luncheon was served at noon with Mrs. Ada Mortenson and Mrs. Charles Row- ston as hostesses. him as best man. Seating the Color Note: guests were James G. Aldrich and John H. Gibson of East Lansing. For her daughter's wedding, Camel tones are important for campus wear in separates and in coats, aa Ly ook~- Boys and Girls! lm Buster Brown | Always lock aie forme and lige ‘th in the shoes yeu buy! 10:30 A. M. Come onin... hands with his dog Tige. style for you! 35 N. SAGINAW ST. HERE in PERSON With His DOG TIGE MONDAY, August 31st to 3:30 P. M. With FREE GIFTS for You! see Buster Brown. . Buster will be showing all the smart new styles in back-to-school shoes. He'll find a Air Conditioned Comfort! Pauli’s Shoe Store . shake EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 . 7 aoe cesses = (Churches Rush Crowds Force Church Offers cmacnol™ | Relief to Greece Bishop's Flight Economic Aid The, Common cere. gee ™-1| Shipments of Supplies Three Clerics Beaten Will Advise Members Geo. L. Garver. Pastor pa 7521513 Ji Reach Quake Victims 24 | by Communist Mobs in on Business Problems; St. Trinity Lutheran Church Missouri Synod Rev. Ralph C. Claus Auburn Avenue at Jessie Ist SERVICE 8:15 A. M. 2nd SERVICE 11:00 A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 AM, ST. MATTHEW'S LUTHERAN CHURCH a ittee — ALLED o. . ewien Sasie MA 4-1575 10:00 A. M. ‘aaaeay Scheel and Adult le Study 8:30 and 11:15 A. M. Wershtp Service Hours After Disaster Relief supplies for victims of Greek earthquakes have been speeded to the disaster area by Church World Service, the first shipments arriving at the scene within 24 hours after news of the castrophe was received. The shocks Jeveled entire towns and cities in the Ionian Islands, leaving an estimated 118,000 per- sons homeless with 600 others list- ed as dead and some 10,000 in- jured. Regardless of ancestry, the American people are reported to be donating generously to the current need. HILL Sunday School Morning Worship - REV Parsonage: 145 Owege Drive ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN CHURCH CARL. NELSON, B. D., Paster (National Lutheran Council) Phene FE 64-5404 GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Glendale and S. Genesee Service for Aug. 23, 30, and Sept. 6, Temporary Changed to: SUNDAY SCHOOL, 10 A. M. WORSHIP, 10 A.M. Regular Services Will Be Resumed Sept. 13! SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 A. M. WORSHIP 9:30 - 11 A. M. = ENTREE MOLE OG LEENA LP Be ” “A Changeless Christ for a Changing World” be — 2 ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH The Church of the Lutheran Hour & JOSLYN AT FOURTH STREET 3 9:30 A. Sunday School — George Ber sg Pastor 10:45 A. M. Morning Service Phone FE 5-0404 Watch “This is the Life” Sunday, J 30 P. M.—WJBK-TV CIEL sas EES. Wi pi RRR EL Sit ee |The SALVATION ARMY ) SUNDAY SCHOOL ... | HOLINESS MEETING .. EVANGELISTIC MEETING Officer in Charge Captain Vernon Vie No Y. P. Meeting Until Further Notice oe 29 W. Lawrence Street ..9:45 A. M. 11:00 A. M. eer eee eee ewewe MIDWEEK PRAYER Thursday 7:30 P. M. a BIBLE Books of RE-BINDING All Types Rebound CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 67 Oakland Ave. FE 2-1721 You Dr. L. L. Marien Hear Dr. Are Invited to the TEMPLE 505 Auburn Ave. A Great Non-Denominational Work No Leader But Christ 7:45 P. M.—A Great Evangelistic Service L. L. Marion, Pastor-Director in a Sermon that you will never forget! “THE HANDWRITING OF GOD NOW ON THE WALL OF TIME” Starting FALL REVIVAL Sept. 9th with Evangelist and Mrs. J. R. MacMurray known throughout America for their music! A Friendly Place to Worship! & Ride Rees Hear Rev. - || The Mystery Sunda ‘ Last Sunday EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH T Road at elegraph Evening Evangelistic Service 7:30 P. M. Tom Malone A Bible message on the second coming of Christ! When will Millions be taken out of this world to heaven? What is Heaven's pass-word? Don’t fail to hear this prophetical sermon. School Attendance Radio Revival of the Ages + nn ete an 8:45 Daily Orchard Lake Av: REV. IVOL I. CURTIS Former Pastor to Give Sermon at All Saints Former minister at All Saints Episcopal Church, the Rev. Ivol L Curtis, will preach at the 11 a.m. service Sunday. The Rev. Mr. Curtis, who re- signed from the local church in December, 1952, to accept a call to a Los Angeles church, is on vacation here. A coffee hour will follow the service so that friends may greet the Curtises. New Hope Church Sets Old-Time Barbecue Tonight an “Old Southern bar- becue”’ will be given at the home of Mrs. Allen Nichols, 20 Beaudette St., under the auspices of New Hope Baptist Church, Dr. S. C. Burt, former pastor of First Salem Baptist Church in Battle Creek will be guest speaker at the church at 3:30 p. m. Sunday in the observance of Wom- en’s Day. At 8 p. m. the Rev. James R. Fleming, associate pastor at Macedonia Baptist Church will speak, and the choir of that church will sing. FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N. Perry Street Rev. Wesley Wibley, Minister 9:45a.m. Sunday School 11:00a.m. Worship Sermon: “The Glorious Church of Jesus Christ” 7:45 p.m. Message by the Pastor— “The Heavenly Calling” 745 Tuesday Worship :45 p.m. Thursday, C. A. Service ~ ‘ ~ ‘ Visit the “Church of the Old Fashioned Gospel” Yugoslavia (By Religious News Service) BELGRADE — One Roman Catholic and two Serbian Ortho- dox prelates fled from their dio- | == ceses in Bosnia after having been threatened by Communist mobs. Borba, Belgrade Communist organ, said the 75-year-old Met- ropolitan Nektarije Krulj of Sara- jevo, a high Serbian Orthodox of- ficial, had been rescued unharmed by police from a mob of 1,000 persons who demonstrated against him near Tuzla. But Church sources said the Metropolitan had been dragged from a parish house and beaten with clubs and fists. He was re- ported suffering from _ serious bruises and his right ankle was said to be so swollen he could not walk. Metropolitan Krulj fled to Bel- grade. The Belgrade press also said that Bishop Carlo Celik, Apostolic Administrator of Banja Luka, and Orthodox Bishop Vasili Kostic of Banja Luka had been driven out of their dioceses. Mobs demonstrated against Bis- hop Celik at Ljubija and Prijedor, two small town in his diocese, it was said. At Prijedor, said Borba, “only the intervention of police saved him from being assaulted.”’ Church Groups Prepare for Partial Federation ANDOVER, Mass. — A council of 18 ministers and laymen pre- pared Tuesday to administer a partial federation of the Univer- salist Church of America and the American Unitarian Society. Meeting in the first joint con- BISHOP AND. PLANE—The Rt. Rev. William J. Gordon Jr., Bishop of Alaska, stands beside his airplane, “The Blue Box,” contributed by the women of the Episcopal Church through their United Thank Offering. Year round Bishop Gordon travels to the 47 Episcopal mission and parish stations, holding regular services in the smaller missions which have no residing minister, and confirming and baptizing in the larger missions and parishes. Each station is visited at least once a year. Seven months out of the year the plane travels on skis, as pictured above. During the warm weather when the snow thaws, wheels ference of the churches the 800 delegates voted recently in separate denominational meetings to site! the departments of religious edu- | cations, publications and public relations. The 18-member joint council was given the name “Council of Lib- eral Churches (Universal-Uni- tarian).’’ Local Man Fills in for Absent Minister In the absence. of the pastor, the Rev. Paul R. Ha- vens, Arthur Nor-} ¥ ris, Pontiac busi- , on . s t - day at First Meth- odist Church. $e: The Rev. Mr. Havens will re turn for service Sept. 6. NORRIS Detroiter to Speak at Missionary Church Annual Women's Day will be ob- | served Sunday at Providence Mis- | sionary Baptist Church, 311 Bagley | St. Guest speaker at the 11 a. m.| and 7:30 p. m. services will be| Miss Claudia Knight of Detroit. | W. Huron at Mark 9:30 a.m. Prayer BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH SUNDAY SERVICES 11:00 a.m. Church School Wednesday at 7:30 p: m. BIBLE WORKSHOP FOR ALL ACES Fred Robert Tiffany, Paster 10:00 a. m. Worship y-wwvevwevwe. The Church of Christ 210 Hughes Street 10 A.M. Bible School 6 P.M. Evening Service 11 A.M. Sunday Worship R. L. WIGGINS. Minister @ Garver Fino! GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH | 249 Baldwin Avenue | Sunday School ..... 10:00 A. M. | Morning Service .... 11:00 A. M. Sunday Eve Service .. Christian Endeavor ... Wed. Evening Prayer .. 7:30 P. M. Rev. @: Garner, Paster & Gampton, Ubotr Directe: 7:30 P.M. |. 6:00 P. M. FIRST CHURCH OF GOD 25 East Blvd., South of Lookeut Drive General Offices—Andersen, Ind. "Sustaining Faith” 7:30 p. m. Evening Service. Sunday School 9:45 a. m. Sunday 10:45 a. m. “Sate Investment’ Rev. Grover C. Johnson Pastor H. T. Starkey First Southern Missionary BAPTIST CHURCH 365 East Wilson Ave. Sunday School ...-..... 9:45 A.M. Worship .... oe. eee 11:00 A. M. B. TU. . cncenree ee err.» 6:30 P.M, Worship ............. 7:30 P.M Wed. Prayer Meeting ... 7:30 P.M Phone FE 4-9633 HUBBS QUARTETTE “Member: of Southern Baptist Convention” order’s provincial. |8 State Priests Named | |Francis J. are substituted for the skis. The Week Several worldwide church bodies have been making plans to hold their next international meetings in the United States. The decision to hold the 1957 plenary assembly of the Lutheran World Federation in the U. S. was made at Trondheim, Norway, by th® organization’s executive com- mittee. The committee also approved a recommendation by the federa- tion’s department of theology that Lutheran delegates to the Air-Cooled Church fo Open in Chicago (By Religious News Service) CHICAGO — A new $3,600,000 air-conditioned Roman Catholic church in the heart of Chicago's famous Loop will be dedicated to the service of travelers and the business district’s workers on La- bor Day (Sept. 7) by Samuel Car- dinal Stritch. The first church building erected in the Loop in nearly 30 years, it will replace St. Peter's church, several blocks south of the Loop, | The old church, | built in 1865. which has had no regular resident congregation for a number of years, had become familiarly known to Chicagoans as ‘‘the Old Dutch Cleanser’ for the number of confessions heard in it. New St. Peter’s is on the site of ithe old La Salle Theater, a Chi- | of cago landmark purchased in 1951 by the Franciscan Fathers. Its cornerstone was laid the same} year by the Very Rev. Eligius | Weir, O. F. M., of St. Louis, the} Prelates by Pope Pius GRAND RAPIDS W — Eight} Western Michigan Catholic priests | have been elevated to the rank of | |domestic prelate and two have! been named papal chamberlain by | Pope Pius XII, the Most Rev. Haas, bishop of the Grand Rapids Diocese announced | today. Domestic prelate rank carries with it the title of Right Rev. Monsignor. Those so designated are Monsignors Anthony P. Arsulowicz, James A. Bryant, Arthur F. Bukowski, John A. Maksymowski, William J. Mur- | phy, Joseph E. Shaw, Raymond Jd. Sweeney, all of Grand Rap- ids, and William FE. Fraser, Muskegon. | Priests named papal chamber- | Jain are Very Rev. Monsignors | Louis J. Verreau and Joseph C. Walen, both of Grand Rapids. The late Rep. Joseph R. Bryson (D., S.C.) made a hobby of col- lecting Bibles and other spiritual books. His collection numbered more than 12,000 volumes. The Whole Bible for the Whole World | | | The Christian and Missionary Alliance Church 178 Green Street (Near Orchard Lake Ave.) Rev. G J Bersche Pastor Sunday School 9:45 A. M. Morning Worship 11 A. M. “THE CHANGELESS ela bd For a CHANGING WORL Alliance Youth Fellowship 6:15 P.M. Evangelistic Service BIBLE SCHOOL AND COLLEGE STUDENTS in Charge 7:30 P.M | wheels will be activated early in 1 (U, | here. ‘Says Polish Captain in Religion World Council’s second assembly next year gather for a _ short briefing session in or near Chi- cago prior to the opening of that meeting. When the World Evangelical Fel- lowship closed its international conference at Clarens, Switzerland, delegates decided to hold the next worldwide session in the U. S. in 1956. No specific date or city was set. But the W. E. F. will sponsor three regional conferences, in Asia, South America and Europe, before the 1956 meeting. The W. E. F. was formed in August, 1951, at an international convention of Evangelicals at Woudschoten, Holland. A highlight of the World Council's second assembly next year will be an outdoor worship service that is expected to attract more than 60,000 persons. Although virtually all assembly May Loan Money (By Religious News Service) SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — Laurel Heights Methodist Church here now has a committee designed to help solve for its members problems in the realm of business and in- dustry. Believed to be an innovation in The idea is that any one with a business or professional problem with economic aspects, can seek, in confidence if desired, the ad- vice of a business and profes- sional group. After some one requests the com- mittee’s counsel and a preliminary conference is held, Mr: Zachry said, the individual problem will be referred to a specially selected panel to evaluate the situation in more detail and plan further steps. Such procedure in the past might have helped despondent or dis- tressed persons over difficulties and even averted personal tragedy, the chairman added. Mr. Zachry pointed out that the group plausibly might be help- ful to persons who normally would hesitate to seek aid. Yet, he ad- ded, the program might insure jobs and buying power that could sessions will be held on the campus Northwesf®rn University | Evanston, the outdoor service Pe the opening of the conference will | | be held in Soldier Field, Chicago. Officials of the United States Conference for the World Council, the American affiliate, expect 600 delegates from the World Council’s 160 communions in 46 countries to attend the Assem- bly. In addtion, there will be 150 consultants, 120 youth consultants, and 600 accredited visitors, as well as fraternal delegates, observers and members of the press. : Theme of the 1954 assembly will be “Christ—the Hope of the} World.’’ Sub-themes will deal with Faith and Order— in Christ and Our Disunity as Churches”; Evangelism — ‘The Mission of the Church to Those Outside Her Life’; Social Prob- lems—‘'The Responsible Society in a World Perspective’; Internation- al Affairs — ‘‘Christians in the Struggle for World Community’; | Inter-group Relations “The |Church amid Racial and Ethnic Tensions,” and the laity — ‘‘The Christian and His Vocation.” Mobile Chapel to Serve Kentucky Communities (By Religious News Service) NEW YORK — A chapel-on- September by the Presbyterian S. A.) Board of National Missions. The unit will serve the religious needs of mushrooming defense communities near Padu- cah, Ky., the board announced The trailer will seat a congre- gation of 40 adults or nearly 60 children. It will be equipped with a lectern, portable organ, sound motion picture and film strip pro- jector, loudspeaker, record player, Bibles, hymnals, and folding chairs and tables. People’s Spirit Firm, (By Religious News Service) LONDON — A Polish sea captain who left his ship to seek asylum in England, said here that the Com- munists had failed to break the religious spirit of the Polish people. Churches are ‘‘constantly crowd- ed’’ on Sundays, said Capt. Jan Cwiklinski. Capt. - Cwiklinski sought refuge | here when his ship, the Batory, | arrived on its last trip to Britain. |The ship left for’ Poland under command of a subordinate officer. The captain said Stalin’s death had not changed the situation in Poland. ‘Peril, intolerance and suspicion” still prevail, he added. Oakland Ave. United Presbyterian Church Andrew S. Creswell, D. D., Minister Hubert C. Stewart, Assistant 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship “THE PEARL OF DAYS” 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship “FAREWELL” 11:20 a.m. Bible School 6:00 p.m. Youth Services a Rev. V. E. Rensterry, District Sunday School 10 a. m. HOWARD C. ARTZ, Paster FREE METHODIST CHURCH — 87 Lafayette St., QUARTERLY MEETING SERVICE Saturday, 7:30 p. m. — Sunday 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. 2 Blocks West of Sears Supt., Speaker at All Services Classes for Every Age. BURTELLA GREEN, &. &. Supt. ‘Our Oneness | keep many others off charity rolls. Jewish Council Criticizes Byrnes’ U.N. Appointment (By Religious News Service) ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Min- nesota Jewish Council has wired a protest to President Eisenhower against his appointment of Gov. James F. Byrnes of South Caro- lina to the United Nations delega- tion. “In these days of struggle for the minds of people all over the | world, we hope that you will not | make us vulnerable to Communist attack by appointing a man of Gov. Byrnes’ attitude on human rights to such an important posi- tion,’’ the wire said. Rural Church Leaders Meet in Switzerland (By Religious News Service) NEW YORK—Twenty-one Amer- ican Protestant leaders in rural church work joined leaders in that field from three other con- tinents at a world seminar in Bos- sey, near Geneva, Switzerland, | Aug. 24-28 on problems of the | Church and rural life. | The seminar was sponsored joint- ly by the World Council of Churches’ Ecumenical Institute and the Na- -tional (U.S.A.) Council of Churches department of town and country church. Major topics considered by the gathering were: The rural setting of today as a human problem; the responsibility of the churéh towards rural life, and a critical review of the various approaches in meet- ing the present rural situation. 131 Catholic Prelates Persecuted in Red Zones (By Religious News Service) ROME—One hundred and thirty-one Roman Catholic cardinals, archbishops and bishops tn Iron Curtain coun- tries have been imprisoned or otherwise prevented from carrying out their ecclesiasti- cal functions, the © Vatican Press Office announced here. Of the prelates listed, 39 are in prison, 41 are “impeded” in their worship, 38 expelled, five exiled, four detained in un- known places, three deported and one “confined.” Communist China headed the list, with 74 prelates im- prisoned, expelled or “im- peded.” It was followed by Romania with 13, Czecho- clovakia, 9; Russia, 8; Poland, 7, Lithuania, 6, Yugoslavia, 5; Hungary, 3; Latvia and Korea, 2 each, and Bulgaria and Danzig, 1 each. Announce Gideon Gifts (By Religious News Service) ternational distributed more. than 2,250,000 Bibles and Testaments during the past year, t D. J. DePree of Zeeland, » told 1,000 delegates assembled here for the organization’s 54th annual convention, Of this number, he said, all but about 300,000 were given out a armed forces induction centers, hotels, hospitals and other public places in the U. S. SEATTLE, Wash. — Gideons In-| j CALVIN R. HOBART Bethany to Hold Training Session Church's Teaching Staff to Attend Meeting, See Film Tuesday Night A training institute for the teach- ing staff of the Sunday School at Bethany Baptist Church will be held Tuesday evening in Bethany Baptist Church, according to the general superintendent, Calvin R. Hobart. Following a dessert fellowship period at 7:30, new teachers and department heads will be intro- duced by J. Fred Gibson, director of teacher procurement. Department heads will include Mrs. Glendon Moon, cradle roll; Mrs. William Shirley, nurs- ery; Mrs. Howard Hess, begin- ners; Mrs. Jasper Warden, pri- ; Mrs. Lillian Hilton, junior; Pepper, junior high; Mrs. Frank Marsh, senior high, and Calvin Hobart, adult. Further discussion of duties for the proposed director of Christian education post will be led by An- drew Pepper, chairman of the board of education. The program will close with the showing of a motion picture en- titled ‘“‘The Timeless Message in Temporal Setting.’’ This will be followed by a brief consecration service led by the pastor, the Rev. Fred R. Tiffany. Attend Men’s Retreat Attending the Men's Retreat at Lake Louise this weekend from Bethany Baptist Church will be Maynard Johnson, Ivan H. Long, Andrew Pepper and Glenford Havi- land. Apostolic Church of Christ 458 Central Services at 7:30 Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday Rev. L. A. Parent. Pastor Ph. FE 5-8361 or OL 2-4751 PONTIAC UNITY CENTER 71% N. Saginaw St. Midweek Service Thursday, 8 P. M. Sunday 1l A. M Affiliated With Onity Center Schoo: First Social Brethren " Church of Pontiac 316 Baldwin Ave. Rev. Joe Rose, P. Asst., Rev. | ponds soknuae FE 4-1656 SERVICES: Sunday School Preac Eveni and Sunday N Midweek Prayer FIVE POINTS COMMUNITY CHURCH Sunday Scheel 16 a, m. Mern. Wer. 11:15 . m. Eve. Gervice..7:30 p.m. Rev. Gordon C. Lindsay, Pastor (t Collier Road Church Collier Road at Collier Court $.$.10 a.m. Y.P. Sun. 6:30 p.m. Sun. Services 11 a.m., 7:45 p.m. Prayer Meeting Wed. 7:30 p.m. L. B. PA Y. Pastor Lapeer Broadcast Thur. 3:30 p.m. ST EREE METHODIST CHURCH 10:00 A. M. Sunday School 11:00 A. M.—Worship 7:30 P.M. —Evensong and Sermon “AND BUILD Harold J. LeVesconte. preaching FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Cer. E. Huren and Mt. Clemens at Mill 8t., (Opposite Post Office) Church Worship and Church School at 10:30 A. M. Pontiac / AN ALTAR” Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister 4 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 Catholics to Give Lutherans Lift Denied Public Parochial Students to Share New Bus (By Religious News Service) CLEVELAND, 0. Roman Catholic and Lutheran parochial pupils in East Carlisle, O., will ride together to school this fall in a bus purchased by St. Mary Parish, Elyria, it was disclosed here by the Catholic Universe Bulletin. The parochial school pupils were barred from public buses by an Past Carlisle School Board deci- sion last June. Affected by the decision were =122 St. Mary pupils and five pu- pils who attend St. John Lutheran school in Elyria. “The only thing we could do after the* school board decision was to buy a bus,” said Msgr. William L. Newton, St. Mary pastor and dean of the Lorain Deanery. ‘‘We decid- ed to carry the Lutheran children, too, because there are only five of them and because their school is just a half-block from ours.” The Rev. P. M. Schroeter, St. ‘John principal, said the Lutheran parish was leaving it up to East] %= Carlisle Lutheran families to work out transportation arrangements with St. Mary. The East Carlisle school-bus controversy saw the = school board change its mind on the issue three times in 13 months. With the merging in July of the East Carlisle school district with three others to form a new district, the issue became pretty much a dead one. The other three districts now merged with East Carlisle are not next to Elyria and its parochial schools. For that reason the new district board has not been asked to pro- vide public bus transportation for Catholic or Lutheran pupils. Alma College Head to Speak Here Sunday Dr. Stanley J. Harker, president of Alma College, will speak at First Presbyterian Church Sunday. Students’ of Alma College and their fathers will be ushers at this morning service. They are Floyd and John Salow, William and Nor- man Nesbitt, Roy and John Ward, and Henry and James Amell. CHURCH OF CHRIST 1196 Jeslyon Avense Matt. 16-18—IJ Cor. 3:11 I Cor. 11:25—One Cup Matt. 26:27 1 Cor. 10:17—One Loai— I Cor. 11:23 1 Cor. 14:31—Non-Sunday Worship Every Lord’s Day Heb. 10:25—Acts 20:7 Morning 11:00 A.M. Evening Service, 7:30 P.M. Brother Pau) Deems 7175 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Rides, |. .¢ REV. HUBERT STEWART Minister to Return After Long Illness After many months of ill health, Dr. Andrew S. Creswell, pastor of Oakland Avenue United Presby- terian Church, is sufficiently re- covered to take complete charge of the church and its services starting Sept. 1. The Rev. Hubert Stewart, who has been in charge of the church during. the interim, will enter Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia this fall to com- plete his preparation for the min- istry. He studied previously at Bob | Jones University. 200,000 Attend 1953 Conferences at Winona Lake (By Religious News Service) WINONA LAKE, Ind. — More than 200,000 persons attended con- ferences this season on the grounds of the Winona Lake Christian Assembly here, it was reported at the annual meeting of the as- sembly’s board of directors. The report said $75,000 had been Bethel Evangelical and Reformed Church Rev. M G. Oesterie FE 5-1792 Auburn at Mariva Sunday School . .9:45 a.m. Divine Worship 11:00 a. m. nel Calvary 3 . Assembly Church © |'1517 Joslyn (Full Gospel) ° > Sunday School : ROTM AGO : . Wership Service .;.. V1-a. m. + Service ....... ? 7:45 p.m. Tuesday nisl Bible : Study .7:45 p.m. * Young People ‘Thursday ..7:45 p.m. 3 F. Fred Peter. Pasto: » SEO coer tots cee ae Sunday School 10 A. M. M. Morse. Supt. @ Bring the Entire Family (Free Bus Lue »" EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE 60 Tilden at W. Huron Preaching 11 A.M. & 7:30 P.M. Youth Groups 6:30 P. M. Radio CKLW, 7:30 — WCAR, 8 am A. |. Baughey, Pastor = == CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Sunday Schoo! ... NM e’Cleck | Sunday Service . 1) e’Cleek | SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY: “CHRIST JESUS” Wednesday Evening [estimenial Meeting at 8:00 o'Cleck i FREE READING ROOM 8 EAST LAWRENCE 8ST. Open Weekdays: 11 te & Fridays Until 9 P.M. First Church of Christ Scientist Lawrence sad William Sts. 5 ee cares spent during the past year to im- prove the grounds and erect new buildings. The latter include a 21- unit model which the board voted to name McKee Courts in memory | of Arthur W. McKee, aReernbly!| executive manager for the past | 11 years who died in June. The directors also announced | that a 150-seat chapel will be put! up on the conference grounds at a cost of $10,000 by *! Brothers of Chicago, and present- ed to the assembly. Afternoon Program Features Missionary Guest speaker at 3:30 p.m. Sun- day in Trinity Baptist Church will be Miss Claudia Knight of Detroit. This program is a part of the spe- cial services planned for Sunday, which is Annual Missionary Day at the church. Miss Knight has done extensive study and travel in the missionary field and is a graduate of the Na- stional Baptist Training School at Nashville, Tenn. “Keeper of the Spring” is the missionary topic to which the Rev. Richard H. Dixon Jr. will address himself and the Mission- ary Chorus will furnish special mud. At 7:30 p.m. the Missionary | Youth Department will present a pageant under the, direction of Mrs. Verda Billings. Knights Ask Change in U. S. Allegiance Oath | lirtous News Service) Sunday Sermonette THE ‘RESTAURANT The cashier’s corner of any restaurant-reveals the American con-. cern forAhe sick, the underprivileged az young. You have finished your lunch, and ag you pay the cashier you notice a sign fastened to the cash register urging you to give a pint of blood to the Red Cross. The cashier Nands you your change, and a con- tainer on the counter invites you to drop some in to help a children’s fresh air fund. You go to the cigarette-vending machine and your eye is caught by a sign saying the machine is not to be used by any- the Trinity | He charged that the opinions of | **some’’ Communists, who hold that one under twenty-one years of age. rant cashier's desk bears witness. The simple act of paying for a meal and buying a smoke has re- vealed our society’s conviction that the underage, the weak, and the aiflicted are to be protected and helped. This conviction originates in our religion. Religion affirms that the strong are to bear the burdens of the weak, the needy are to be helped, and the feeble are to be defended, and the downtrodden are to e raised up. And taking hold of the popular imagination, this religious | idea has become woven into our institutions and laws— as the restau- | Protestant Study Asked by Peron Commission to Decide Whether Missionaries Endanger Defense BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — President Peron’s government Wednesday named a commission to investigate the question of whether Protestant missionaries in Argentina endanger national de- fense along the frontiers and in special security zones. man Catholicism is the official state religion in Argentina, but the government has created few ob-| stacles to major Protestant mis- sions in the past. The latest pub- lished census showed: fewer than 311,000 Protestants among the | country’s 17 million inhabitants. | Religious circles here believe the decree creating the investigating commission is aimed particularly lat missions of smaller non-Catho- lic groups, such as the Mormons, Seventh Day Adventists and Jeho- vah’s Witnesses. It was apparently | not aimed at the larger Protestant groups. The investigation will be directed by the Foreign Ministry, which is| also in charge of culture and re- | ligion in the country. The National Defense Ministry will have a rep- | resentative on the commission, | |which must submit a report within | 120 days. | Under the authorizing decree, the commission may recommend | ‘outright suppression of any mis- sions it considers undesirable. It also may suggest means for keep- | ing complete control of all mis- | sionary activities along the borders | with other countries and in areas | considered important to national | security. The investigating body | | | | } 11 some Protestant mission schools to | rural or agricultural schools. The commission is directed to | study the best means of increasing Roman Catholic missions, especial- ly among the Argentine Indians. St. Benedict Totals $150,167 for Project A total of $150,167.00 was report- ' |ed in the St. Benedict Parish Ex- | pansion Fund Campaign. of the | west Pontiac parish last week |The goal has been successfully | oversubscribed with many gilts still outstanding. The Rev. Richard W. | pastor, expressed his all the workers. The campaign was organized to | finance a new 12 room _ school plus a 10 cell convent which will be constructed on the property ad- | jacent to the present church. The | ground will be broken late this | fall. Themas, | thanks to} Godless Soviet Society Reaffirms Opposition LONDON The Communist Party has “always been irrecon- cilably opposed to religion, always fought it in a decisive manner and will continue to do so,”’ a spokes- said in a Moscow Radio domestic | broadcast heard here. religion ‘‘does no harm,”’ are ‘‘en- | urely and utterly false.”’ “Religion propagates the prin- | ciples of the bourgeois moral code which is alien to Commu- nist morals and the Soviet com- munity,” the speaker said. ‘‘Re- | ligion diverts men from the strug- | creedal man for the Soviet Atheist Society | ~ A. D. | Church Speaker to Tell of Gideon's Efforts Guest speaker at Oakland Park Methodist Church Sunday will be A. D. Stimer. He will tell of the work of the Gideons in this country and in 62 countries outside of the United States and Canada. Stimer has been associated with the work of this Christian business men’s organization for many years. STIMER Three Religions ‘Have Fair Booth | and Joint Display SYRACUSE, N. Y. — Protestant, 'Roman Catholic and Jewish wom- en of this area are sponsoring, for the third successive year, an inter- religious exhibit at the New York State Fair to be held | |here Aug. 31 to Sept. 7. The success of the exhibit in the past two years has brought in- also may recommend converting | quiries from all over the country, including letters from church wom- len in at least five states expressing a wish to initiate a similar project at their own state fairs. At the fair here, a Protestant, a Plans to Enter | HOWARD SHORT Divinity School Local Insurance Official Starts Harvard Course NINE Loneliness Seen as Big Problem Priest Says Churches Should Act to Combat Tavern Meetings CHICAGO (UP) — America has a “terrible need for lonely hearts bureaus,” according to a Roman Catholic priest. The priest, the Rev. Edward Dowling of St. Louis, added it’s up to the churches to do something about it. 7 “Probably the majer social problem of the country is the meeting of a man and woman,” he said at a summer school for Catholic action. The problem is resolved by tav- erns right now, he said. Church organizations could give the meeting ‘‘a moral safety and degree of dignity that no other agency can provide."’ He suggested that church ‘‘dat- ing bureaus” screen applicants through questionnaires, inter- views and references. | { A clergyman should provide the This Fall Leaving his position as person- | nel manager of Hardware Mutual | Insurance Co., Howard Short of 1358 Linville, Watkins Lake, will enter Harvard Divinity School this fall. Mr. Short, who has been a local pastor at Central Methodist Church here, has served on the official board and been superintendent of the Sunday School for the past two years. The Rev. Chester R. Allen, superintendent of the Worcester District of the Methodist Church in Massachusetts, has armounced the appointment of Mr. Short as supply pastor of First Methodist Church in Westboro as of Sept. 15. Mr. Short is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Short of Flint and a graduate of Michigan State Col- lege. He is married and has twa children. Say Churches Fail fo Interest Worker (By R CHICAGO — Churches cago ave not geared to the and interests of the working man, it was reported by a majority of 143. seminarians who concluded a tg:ous News Service) in Chi- needs ‘summer of unannounced visits to | Protestant services here. Catholic and a Jewish woman will | be in constant attendance at each of two tables in the booth to dis- | tribute literature on their respec- | tive faiths. Rev. Johnson Will Represent Region The Rev. Grover C. Johnson, 10 East Blvd., is one of 95 regional representatives of the Church of the na- in God who will meet at tional offices of the church Anderson, Ind., Sept. 8-10. The group will chart plans for raising $1,100,000 for the World ‘Service fund of the church. The amount is to he raised by June 30, 1954, and will be used principally for home and foreign missions, Christian edu- cation, and ministers’ aid and pensions. When regional representatives return from Anderson they will call upon all the pastors of the church in their area and personally discuss the fund with them. Mr. Johnson is pastor of the First Church of God here. Community United Presbyterian Church Drayton Plains, Mich. W.' J. Teeuwissen Jr., Pastor 9:45 a.m. Bible School 11:00 a.m. Worship Service 5:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship the words ‘‘under God”’ gle against the enemies of Com- . ; Las and the performance of | Wednesday: raver ain iia Si PAUL, Minn. — Addition of | religious rites diverts people from at 7:30 p.m. in the oath | their Communist tasks.” of allegiance to the flag was urged | here by the Knights of Columbus in a resolution adopted at closing | sessions of its national convention. Here’s how the pledge would) read with the proposed change: “I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it stands, one nation under God, in- divisible, with liberty and justice for all.’ Such a change, the Knights said, would recognize that all authority comes from God and that all rights extend from a Divine source. 347 N. Saginaw St. 10:00 a.m.—Bible School 7:30 p.m.—Evening Service 7 CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH Charles D. Race, Minister Ph. FE 4-0239 11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship :30 p.m.—Prayer and Bible Study THE EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCHES BALDWIN AVE. Baldwin at Homes Rev. H. E. Ryan. Minister CALVARY Paddock at Prospect Rev. Bingaman. Minister A. M. .M.: “ t “The Art of Prayer sade rl P. M. P.M.: “This Man “Daniel's Decision” Began to Build” Sunday School....... 9:45 a.m. Youth Fellowship ....6:30 p. m. Morning Worship ...11:00 a.m. Evening Worship .. .7:30 p. m. The theological students from 10| seminaries, 13 denominations, and} five nations. were enrolled in the} 1953 Ministers-in-Industry project of the: Presbyterian Institute of In- dustrial Relations. i} The men worked in factories and | months | steel mills for several without being identified as ‘‘preachers.’’ They visited various churches on Sundays to see how services appealed to the average wage-earner. Three nights a week they attended classes in McCor- mick Theological Seminary In making final oral reports to Dr. Marshall L. Scott. program di- rector, most of the students said Chicago churches were messing the boat. “If I were a working man I would rather have stayed home and read the papers than listen to those sermons,’ said one student. | moral references, the Rev. Dow- lling said, and a mature woman ishould judge the ‘‘social qualities | and looks’’ of the candidate. | He added that church societies | have done good work helping lone- | ly persons to meet in London, Dub- lin and Brussels. | | Methodist bishop Donald H. Tip- | pett of San Francisco has been | made a chief of the Bambuli and Balanga clans in a remote part of | the pygmy country of Africa's Bel- gian Congo. First Progressive Spiritualist Church 16 Chase Street SUNDAY SERVICE: 7:30 P.M. Evening Service Rev Ada Watson, of Det., Speaker Mid-Week Meeting, Wed., 7:30 P.M. All Saints Episcopal Church i Williams Street at West Pike The Rev. C George Widdistela Rector Res. Waldo R Hunt Rev. Williem C. Hemm Rev. Weré Clabuesch SUNDAY SERVICES 8:00 A. M.—Holy Communion 9:30 A. M.—Holy Communion 11:00 A. M.—Worship and-Sermon by the Rev. Ivol |. Curtis St. Andrew's Chapel 4386 Dixie Highway Building Atr Conattioned 8:00 A. M.—Holy Communion 10.30 A. M.—Worship and Sermon by the Rev. Ward A. Clabuesch Nursery for 2 to 1T-year-old Children ‘ . . St. Mary’‘s-in-the-Hills of Lake Orion and Oxford Joslyn Ra. and Greenshield Rd (Nina Scripps Schoo)) 6:00 A M.—Holy Communion 11:00 A.M.—Worship and Sermon by A. Fletcher Plant PARKDALE NAZARENE Parkdale and Hollywood, One Block West of Baldwin SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45A.M. N.Y.P.S.6:4 °.M. PREACHING SERVICES 10:45 A. M. AND 7:30 P. M. BIBLE STUDY, WEDNESDAY 7:30 P. M. Rev. Wayne E. Welton. Minister—FE 2-6928 FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Sunday School at 10:00 A. M. Morning Worship 11:00 A. M. Rev. DeVault will preside at morning service. “FOUR BIBLE BIRDS.” Evening Service 7:00 p. m. Monday Night Choir Practice, 7:30 p. m. Rev. L. Shafer, Minister FE 2-4368 wees “We Welcome You!’ 10:00—Sunday School: Interesting classes for all 11:00—Morning Worship: “The Bible, God’s Word to Man” 7:30—Evening Service “The Christ of the Bible” THE UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 135 Prospect Street Rev. George D. Murphy, Pastor CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whittemore St. 7:30 P.M.—Guest Speakers Rev. M. Clark, Mrs. Koch 7:30 P.M. Sun ] Message Bearers: H. J. Drake. Wed. Silver Tea, Lake Christian Church Morning Service 9.00 4 M Elizabeth | Sunday Schoo) 10:00 A M Young People's Gervice 630 P M anae FIRST CHURCH.« THE ‘NAZARENE | Sun. School 9:45 A. M. N.Y.P.S. 6:30 P. M. 60 State Ave. Morning Service—11:00 A. M. “REALISM and IDEALISM” t Evening Service—7:30 P. M. i “THE UTTERMOST FARTHING” | ' K. A. Hutchinson, Pastor W. Huron at Wayne St. Church School; 9:45 P. M. | Morning Worship: 11 A.M. Guest Minister Dr. John Stanley Harker “One Day at a Time” William H. Marbach, Paster _f 183 & Winding Charlies OD Race. | — —\ —!S === FAST HURON AT 2 FIRST » | | PRESBYTERIAN curt || Central Metho odist Rev. Milten BH. Bank, D. D., Minister Rev. John W. Mulder, Asso. Minister 9:45 a. m—Sunday School 10:45 a. m.—Morning Worship “It’s Up to You” Rev. John W. Mulder, preaching CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN Town Hall, E. Pike St. Service Sunday, 8:00 P.M Rev. John Bevsey of Detroit. Speaker Ne Laber Day Stnday Service, Sept. 6th Juanita Parris, Rev. Pastor “THE HERALD OF FRUTH WXY7—Each San. 1:00 to 1:30 F. M. 7:30 P M. Sanday Evening Service CHURCH OF CHRIST East Pike at Tasmania—Phone FE 2.6269 Yeung Peopie’s Meeting ~ WALTER E& RANKES Minieter v:50 AM Sunday Bible Schoo! 1.30 P M Wednesday Eve. Service 10:50 A M. Sunday Worsbip Friday, 7:00 P M WESLEYAN 10:00 Sun. School 11:00 Worship 67 NORTH LYNN STREET Rev. C. D. Frivss Pastor METHODIST Ww. Y. P. S. 6:45 Evangelistic 7:30 Howard Odgen. Music Director ZION NAZARENE 239 East Pike Street SERVICES THAT INSPIRE 6:30 P. M.—N.Y.P.S 7:30 P. M.—Evangelistic Serv. 10:00 A. M.—Sunday School 11:00 A. M.—Worship Rev. W. E. Varian, Pastor Late S$ Revival Rev. J. H. Feller Everyone Invited to Sunday Sch Preaching Services E. C. SWANSON, Minister ummer Services * Tues., Sept. 1-13 in the PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH Baldwin at Fairmount Services Nightly, 7:30 Hear Rev. J. H. Felter Dynamic Interesting Bible Preacher .- Special Singing— Each Service ool .., 10:00 A.M. ROY OVERBAUGH, 8. 8. Supt. South Saginaw at Judson First Methodist Organized on the Donelson Farm tn 1828 Rev. Paul R. Havens Mrs. Jean Putnam Minister Choir Director 10:00 A.M. Sermon—Mr. A. L. Norris Guest Speaker 11:15 A.M. Church School—Classes for all ages. Wednesday—7:30 P. M. — Prayer Meet- ing and Bible Study. Why Not Invite Your Summer Guests to Church? aa aaa a a ee so The Oldest Baptist Sunday School 4 in Michigan m 1837—1953 Featuring This Week “3 JOY PHILATHEA Attendance > CLASS Last Sunday AD) we arate 955 ( Morning 10:45 A. M. Worship 10:45 a m “THE SIN OF INGRATITUDE” Dr. H. H. Savage. Speaking This Service Will Be Broadcast ot 11:00 A. M. Over CKLW 7:30 F.M. “THE FEAST OF ' PENTECOST” Evening Dr. H. H. Savage. Speaking yee = FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH @ @ Savece Pastor veeeeerr _TEN THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 Sunday Specials! Roast Round of Beef............ Baked Virginia Ham.............. 75¢ Roast Tom Turkey with Cranberry Sauce Baked Swiss Steak with Mashed Potatoes ere eee ee einer eee ees Kosher Style Corned Beef with Potato Salad LES HUTCHINSON CAFETERIA 4541 Dixie Hwy. Gene Shaw, Mor. Sunday Menu SPECIAL DINNERS 1. Complete Dinner Roast Beef \ Swiss steak HEIDELBERG 1727 S. Telegraph Road Roast Turkey 9 OLD Cocktails, Wines, Beer ARLENE WENDELL = DAHL: COREY. —_N YAMAICA é. RUM ~ Color by TECHNICOLOR LAURA ELLIOT Writtes ter the Screee apd Dwected by is AY ae ee re 43 ; a) 1 N sn ye J GREAT WESTERN! JOHN WAYNE CLAIRE TREVOR WALTER PIGEON ROY ROGERS and GABBY HAYES $ MIDNIGHT OWL SHOW! 3 BRING THE FOR A NIGHT OF FUN Mummy’s Tomb with Teheran Bey “Don’t Miss | )} This Thriller” = » Army OKs Film ‘Here to Eternity,’ Navy Bans It WASHINGTON (®—The Army thinks it’s all right for its soliers to see the movie “From Here to Eternity,” a hard-boiled account of barracks life. But the Navy has banned it from the screens it controls as the Army. The Air Force, which works with the Army in reviewing pictures, also has approved the film for showing on its screens. All services have banned another movie, ‘“The Moon is Blue,’’ which the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency put on its condemned list. In this connection service spokes- men said it was standing policy to reject any movie that offended a racial or religious group. Haymes Digs Up Argentina Treaty LOS ANGELES (®—A copy of an 1855 treaty between the United States and crooner Dick Haymes’ native Argentina, injected into his deportation proceedings, may get him an indefinite postponement of the case. The government is trying to de- port the singer’on the ground that he became ineligible for citizen- ship by claiming exemption from military service as an alien during World War II. His lawyers quoted the 1855 trea- ty as guaranteeing the rights of citizens of Argentina and the United States in each others’ coun- try. The§ said it exempted citizens of the two nations from all com- pulsory military service in the other. ROKs Jail Four Spies Posing as Refugees SEOUL ® — South Korea's na- tional police said today they have arrested four North Korean agents since the armistice. Assistant Director Kim Chang Hung said the Red agents infil- trated into South Korea posing as “derogatory to a sister service’’—| ' —_— _— / ¥ _ 4 4 ™~ « — a Pe] - me P) 4 a +, il < PARTYING—Joan Benny, a senior at Stanford, and | after Damones recent return from the ‘Army. daughter of comedian Jack Benny, and singer Vic | singer's name has aften been linked romantically | Damone are pictured partying together in Hollywood | with Joan's. United Press Phote The Hard Rain in Texas Halts Drought Relief reporter of the Kingsville Record | yesterday called the Kleberg| County Farm Cooperative at Ri-| cardo, south of here, to ask i there was any rain in the area. | A voice on the other end of the line sputtered and replied: “It's raining so blankety-blank hard right now we can’t unload the government drought relief feed civilian refugees. that just came in.” ' Railway Conductors KINGSVILLE, Tex, (R-A Plan Strike Action CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa “»—The Order of Railway Conductors, seeking more pay for its 35,000 members, has announced it will begin a strike on some railroads at 6 (local standard time) Sept. 10 The strike action was announced in Chicago yesterday by an aide of T. O. Hughes, ORC president, FAMILY | At Regular Prices THE THE MOUNTAIN, Pr Qt EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN T, THE DESERT, THE Showing Times: 7:30 & 10:15 Two Complete Showings Staring ROBERT — RRONDA YAN FLEMING: LUNDIGAN POLAROID VIEWERS OPTIONAL I5e WiLLIAY ADDED EXTRA SUNDAY NIGHT ONLY 2 Color Cartoons Se Ee a cae == _ i: : See the thrilling BIRD BALLET } OF THE AIR! ee WALT DISNEY Se Y HATE! LOVE! GREED! JEALOUSY take on HUGE DRAMATIC PROPORTIONS with the thrill of 3-D realism .the wonder of 3-D Stereophonic sound...the marvel of 3-D color by TECHNICOLOR ~~ & TRUE-LIFE ADVENTURE Y MVE asstels Print (ANY . presents by TECHNICOLOR I i and confirmed by an ORC spokes- man here. In Washington, a spokesman for the National Mediation Board said the present dispute is an unsettled demand dating back to 1949 for the graduated pay rate. Community Theaters Birmingham Gat., Tues.: “By the Light of the Silvery Moon,” Doris Day, Gordon Mac- Rae; ‘Desert Legion,” Alan Ladd, Richard Conte. ; Starts Wed.: “Gangaree,” Arlene Dah), Pernando Lamas; “Ma and Pa Kettle on Vacation,” Marjorie Main, Percy Kil- bride. Bleomfield Sat.: “Split Becond,” Stephen McNally. Alexis Smith; “The Vanquished,’ Johne Payne, Colleen Gray. Sun., Sat.: “Young Bess.” Granger, Jean Simmons; “Remains to be Seen,”’ Van Johnson, June Allyson. Hills-Rechester Bat.: “Cow Country,”” Edmun« O'- Brien. Helen Westcott; “F.B.1. Girl,” Caesar Romero, Audrey Totter. Sun., Mon.: “The Farmer Takes a Wife,” color, Betty Grable, Dale Robert- son. Tues., Thurs: “The Desert Rats.” James Mason, Richard Burton .. “Hiawatha,” color. Vincent Yvette Dugay; “The Hitch . Edmund O’Brien, Frank Love- Helly Sat.: “The Turning Point.” William Holden, Alexis Smith; ‘‘The Lion and the Horse,” Steve Cochran Sun., Tues.: “Jamaica Run,” Milland, Arlene Dahl. Thurs., Sat.: ‘The Band Wagon,"’ Fred Astaire, Cyd Charisse. Keege Gat.: “Beast from 20,000 Fathoms.” Paul Christian, Paula Raymond; ‘It Stewart Ray Happens Eve Thursday,” Loretta Young, John Forsythe. Sun. es.: “Girl Who Had Every- thing Elisabeth Taylor, Fernando “Pony Express,” Technicolor, Chariton Heston, Rhonda Fleming. Thurs., Sat.: “Outpost in Malaya,” Claudette Colbert, Jack Hawkins: “The 49th Man,” John Ireland, Richard Den- ning. Lake - Walled Lake Bat.: “Outpost in Malaya” Claudette Colbert, Jack Hawkins; “Split Second,” Stephen McNally, Alexis Smith. Sun., Tues.: “Take Meto Town,” Tech- micolor, Ann Sheridan, Sterling Hay- den; “Great Sioux Uprising.”’ Techni- color, Jeff Chandler, Faith Domergue. Wed., Thurs.: “Member of the Wed- ding,”” Julie Harris, Brandon DeWilde; “Bavage Mutiny,"’ Johnny Weismuller. Pri. Sat.: “Farmer Takes a Wife,” Technicolor, Betty Grable, Dale Robert- son; “Siren of Bagdad,’’ Technicolor, Paul Henreid. Milford Sat.: ‘Jamaica Run,” Technicolor, Ray Milland, Arlene Dahl. Sun., Tues.: “By the Light of the Silvery Moon,” Technicolor, Doris Day, Gordon MacRae. Thurs., Sat.: “Beast from 20.000 Fathoms,” Paul Christian, Paula Ray- mond Gunman Turns Snooty at $50 and Walks Off DETROIT wW—Sam Ruffin and police are still puzzled today. Here's why. A man walked into Ruffin's real estate office yesterday, dragged a pistol from a brief case and stalked up to Ruffin. Thinking it a holdup, Ruffin took $50 from the cash drawer and laid it on his desk. The gunman didn't take it. He squinted at Ruffin and said: “You're not the man I want.” Then the gunman tucked his gun back in the brief case, ran out and jumped in a waiting car. SUN.—MON.—TUES. “PONY EXPRESS” and “COLUMN SOUTH” LAST TIME TONIGHT “BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS” and 5 “IT HAPPENS EVERY RR THURSDAY” Fox and Woodward at Long Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills Phone Birmingham MI 4-4800 NOW SERVING LUNCHES From 12 Noon as Well as Dinners from 5:30 Hounds ee Kiddies Play- Ground 'wwwevvuww* rvVvVVVVY rwwwevvvvveYVY* eb bp bet te et rvwvwvvv-C-VYVvVTY-* VwvvViVvVVVVVVY oo) ‘havo ¥ E-IN. EON ‘Er mafie ee ee ee «" teow ws 6 f - ywwwvvevvvvueYWVY* ee bb bt be ryvuvvuVVYVWVVwYWTY*™ wae rT err TT ee 'wwwvww* i i vwvwvuvvvueYWTY* AAA DA > 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 fy by bn by bo by bo bo bo bn ha ho Lo hi ha hi hi ha hi hi La hi hi hh La hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi Li hi hi hi hi hi i Li hi hi hi hh Li hi hd .— ell —- Mh Lh Me Ma Mi Mi Mi Mi Mn Mine’ rwrrrreVeVeaeTeS 4 Thake Enlotoinmest! since its famed hit “An American In Paris’'! HEAR! 14 OIETZ- SCHWARTZ song hits from 6 Broedway shows! M-G-M's GREATEST . TECHNICOLOR MUSICAL °° Specteculer drame told in song we ~ X ew) ie) ae + b . 3 : tthe > SEE! “THE GIRL HUNT and dance of gangsters end thew gorgeous dolls! Near’: FRED “SA, Gy GHARISSE ned ot OSCAR LEVANT ” NANETTE FABRAY JACK BUCHANAN Na 4 KSA R i THE WEST 7 GAVE HIM never let him forget it! Lig! T @ PLUS @ ASECOND THRILLER @ fr ~ ¥ ONIGHT-LATE SHOW ELEVEN Belgium reports 92,724 accidents in 1952. Baa aa a. N New Lake Theater \ AIR CONDITIONED 420 Pontaic Trail “TAKE ME TO TOWN” \ im Technicolor with \ traffic Pontiac Theaters OAKLAND Sat., Wed.: ‘The Stranger Wore a Gun,” 3D, Randolph Scott, Claire Trevor. Thurs., Sat.: “‘Ambush at Toma- hawk Gap,”’ Technicolor, John Ho- diak, John Derek; ‘That Man from Tangier,’’ Nils Asther. WALLED LAKE 1 Led “THE GREAT SIOUX ta It is estimated that since the white men first. settled in the United States about twice as much Tee r with Jeff Chandler LAST TIMES TONIGHT “SPLIT SECOND” and “OUTPOST IN MALAYA” Baa aaa. WOO MO OA OME toe original forests of the country, SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY PLUS “PONY EXPRESS” In Technicolor Chariton Heston and Jan Sterling LAST TIMES TONIGHT “Beast From 20,000 Fathoms” & “It Happens Every Thurs.” WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE IN Cor. Williams Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 6:45 @ @ SATURDAY e e MA THE RAILROAD PLUS ee sm8 > ——2nd FEATURE i ' " x A RAY MIDDLETON - BILL SHIRLEY =) MELT, MURIEL LAWRENCE 4 Seven mcivet ee SUN. & MON. @ © with HY CHARLES LAUGHTON Ma’ SIR CEDRIC HARDWICKE } THOMAS MITCHELL “=~ MAUREEN O'HARA Vv EDMOND O'BRIEN ALAN MARSHAL » WALTER HAMPDEN KATHARINE ALEXANDER Produced by Directed by PANDRO $. BERMAN + WILLIAM DIETERLE TEN TIMES A THOUSAND THRILLS! Mighty Spectacle! THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 ~e — GAMBLING LADY—Claire Trevor, who won an academy award for her brilliant characterization of Edward G. Robinson's girl friend in “Key Largo,” gets her man in Columbia's new 3-D production, a ‘The Stranger Wore a Gun.” Miss Trevor, a gambler on the Mississippi river boats, moves west and wins Randolph Scott, a footloose adventurer. ‘Stranger’ starts today at the Oakland. Legit Theater Snatches Cue From 3D Ear . you love laugh- ter, if you love kids, if you love love, this is for you! It's the best (and most hilari- ous) job ever done on bringing up grownups! ae wm RICHARD AUDREY WIDMARK -DRU: TOTTER with GEORGE WINSLOW (the kid with the foghorn voice!) JOANNE TONITE—Last Complete Show Starts at 10 P. M. asp ‘ . Warner = B 4 ; 2ae ee SUN. & MON. @@ ON THE GIANT FULL STAGE FUTURAMIC SCREEN! CoiorR BY Wy LECHNICOLOR AGAINST TREASON, TREACHERY AND _ NAVAJO. ARROW... THE U.S. CAVALRY aa RIDES! om i ROBERT STERLING RAY COLLINS i neeteve PALMER LEE | JOAN EVANS ATA ne 22 AOE | CE ON OUR REGULAR swept across the buming sands from El Alamein to Tobruk to g Suez and on to the Seo...... |, RICHARD ROBERT 2 | BURTON NEWTON se3sez and JAMES MASON o- romme Two Detroit Youths in Auto Accident Blinded by oncoming headlights while driving on Middlebelt road at Lone Pine road in West Bloom- field Township Thursday night, a Detroit youth lost control of his auto and overturned, seriously in- juring a passenger. Barant Van Emery, 17. of 8917 Petosky St., told Oakland County sheriff's deputies he lost control of his car after running onto the shoulder of the road and then) veering across the highway into! a ditch. He was treated at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital where his passenger, William G. Elliot, 18, of 161 Cali- fornia St., Highland Park, was ad- mitted with a concussion, fractured collarbone and chest bruises. El- liot is reported ip ‘‘good’’ condi- tion today. New Pilot Discouraged After Second Crash LUKE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. v—Second Lt. Don A. McMillian, a student pilot from Ketchikan, Alaska, crash-landed his F84 Thun.- | derjet in a cotton field. Minutes later, an Air Force helicopter arrived to pick him up. The helicopter developed mechan- ical trouble in takeoff. It crashed from five feet in the air. “TI should have stayed home in By BOB THOMAS The living theater is the origi- nal 3D, of course, but it is also some film innovations. swamped with requests to see the sets. Most of the hopefuls are turned away in disappointment. Only those with exceptional pull are allowed to get beyond the studio gates. Warners seems to be going all-out in discouraging visitors. The reception room is equipped with a booth of darkened glass. A scarcely visible studio police- man sits behind the glass and receives requests via a two-way microphone. It’s something like visiting day at San Quentin. This may be testimony of the state of the union. Folks predict- ed that Jane Powell's career would dive after she broke up her marriage and started dating Gene Nelson, with whom she co- starred in a movie. Apparently her career isn’t suffering. The latest popularity poll of motion picture magazine shows that Jane has zoomed to No. 1 position. Built Over Rail Lines WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va. (UP) — A Ford Motor Co. executive said the cost of modern highway construction might be sharply reduced by building ex-, pressways over or alongside ex- isting railroads. The proposal was laid before the National Project Adequate Roads Committee, a group working for better highways, by George J. Crimmins, director of dealer rela- tions and business management for the Ford Co. He noted that big cities are now encountering ‘‘fantastic costs’’— |running up to $8,000,000 per mile | — in constructing expressways to | ease traffic congestion. Building expressways above railroad tracks, he said, would have ‘‘numerous advantages’’ both in cutting costs and from the bed.’’ said Lt. McMillian. standpoint of good city planning. EAGLE LAST TIMES TODAY! Jett Chandler Brod Crawford in in “The Creat “Scandal : Sioux Uprising’ Sheet” - Starts SUNDAY RICHARD BURTON & @ ROBERT NEWTON fs i fete Dougie + Jere Tastabe JES aoc JAMES MASON es ROMMEL PRODUCED BY ae wi ROBERT L. JACKS - ROBERT WISE - RICHARD x “i: = Boer, nN BY MURPHY “DESERT RATS’ STARTS 1:05 — 4:10 — 7:10 — 10:15 ALSO — THIS EXCITING CO-FEATURE! TRAPPED IN THE ARCTIC’S ICY CLAWS! WAYNE > MORRIS a) « . - Anes iS eal “ARCTIC FLASH” STARTS AT 2:45 — 5:50 — 8:50 Advocates Highways to breaking into Jones Hardware at 2520 Airport Rd, Waterford Township. Gets 5-15 Years Term for Nighttime Entry A 5 to 15-year prison sentence was imposed on Kenneth Deneen, 28, of a local hotel, by Oakland County Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick Friday on a charge of breaking and entering in the night | time. Get a Good USED TV ot HAMPTON TV 286 State St. $10-$15 Down — $5 -er Wk. Deneen pleaded guilty Aug. 25 i PHONE FEDERAL 2-485! co >OAKLAND: MODERNLY AIR-CONDITIONED THRU TODAY | wits RANDOLPH SCOTT THAN EVER THE STRANGER WORE A GUN ciaine TREVOR =m Joan Weldon: George Macready - Alfonso Bedoya ADDED , \» 3-D “SPOOKS” with 3-STOOGES § ‘CARTOON @ LATE WORLD NEWS rwwvevuvvuvvuvvuvuvuvuvuvuvuvwuvurv=wvw*" RECULAR ADMISSION PRICES: Adults: Week-Day Matinee... .50¢ Nights and Sunday...... 74¢ Children, Anytime...... 18c Plus 15¢ for Polaroid Viewers—Save 15e—The Viewers Beleng te Yeu. Retain Them fer Future 3-D Attractions! SinAang \c" “THEATRE - PHONE FE. 5-6211 — NOW PLAYING THRU TUESDAY—— ry yA" Ce DA DAILEY ANNE BANCROFT THE aa — TSLAND of YWIOLENCE ~where the Mediterranean ran red with terror! Richard GREENE + Paula RAYMOND Sunday Doors Open 12:45 P. M. ” == TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 Astrologer Wrong on Either Grimm or Dressen By BEN PHLEGAR .-Associated Press Sports Writer. . Charlie Grimm better check with Charlie Dressen on which astrologer he reads. If he doesn’t, the stars may get the National League pennant race all confused. Milwaukee Charlie celebrated his 55th birthday yesterday and his horoscope, as compiled by one New York stargazer, claims his present frustration is only tempo- rary and that everything will be okay in two weeks. Grimm, who hasn’t conceded anything to the Brooklyn Charlie even though his club trails Dres- sen’s club by 9% games, might in- terpret this prediction as meaning Lions Convert Mistakes Into Brilliant Defensive Play | Exhibition Contest, Played Friday in Dallas, Before 37,000 Fans DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — Detroit Lions scored in every period while romping to an easy 38-7 victory over the New York Giants before the eyes of 37,000 Texans last night. The defending champions of the National Football League converted breaks and Giant mistakes into a rout. The victory was the game triumph for the Detroit powerhouse. Defensively speaking, the 1952 pro champs held the im a brilliant display of pass intercep- tions and hard tackling. It wasn’t until the final quarter that the New York team managed to squeeze out a Giants in check touchdown. This came as a Walker. LaStarza Sees Title Bout Going Full Distance Cocky Challenger Says He'll Try to KO Rocky in Sept. 24 Battle GREENWOOD LAKE, N. Y. (UP) —Will the Rocky Marciano-Ro- land La Starza,-heavyweight title fight go the distance? Challenger La Starza said today their Sept. 24th bout would last its full 15 rounds ‘“‘if Marciano can keep from getting knocked out."’ He declared, ‘I won't get belted out. But I hope to put him away, I would have knock- ed him out when we fought in 1950 if the bout had been scheduled for 12 or 15 rounds instead of 10. Rocky was weak- ening fast in the 10th. Two more rounds, and I would have stopped him.” Despite LaStarza’s confidence, the odds are 444 to 1 that 29-year- old Marciano beats the 26-year- old challenger. Did Roland consider that price an over-lay? The ex-collegian in the white sports shirt, tan slacks and white beebop cap, replied, ‘‘the odds | mean nothing to me. I’ve been chasing him for three years for a return bout because I thought I beat him the first time, And now I've finally got the fight. That’s! what is important.’ Broad-shouldered Roland added emphatically: “‘it’s only natural the world champion should be favored, even though we were at even money for our first fight. But I know I'm a better all-around man| than Rocky is. 1 got more speed, agility, skill and probably stamina. Hle’s superior only in punch.” State Archery Shoot + The defensive unit Bishop to Hurl Slated for Sunday State Archery championships | will be held Sunday at the Pontiac Lake Recreation Area range. Morning rounds start at 9:30 a.m and afternoon session at 1:30 p.m. Registration is_at 8 a.m, Con- testants, which include several na- tional title-holders, will shoot 28 | targets both in the morning and afternoon. Three 28-target ranges will be in operation. Dinner and business meeting is set for 6 p.m, at the Community Activities building in Waterford. Mrs. Neal Wins Title Mrs. T. F. Neal of Birming- ham won her first women’s club championship at Orchard Lake Country Club Friday morning by defeating defending champion Mrs. R. E. Leahy of Detroit, 3 and 1, in the final round. Finals were played over an We hole | route. Breaks, Giant a 38-7 Rout Highlights second straight exhibition result of a fumble by Doak held the Giants in their own half of the field practically all night.;The New Yorkers reached the Detroit 11 on one drive, but the big Lion line centered around Bingaman, Mc- Graw and Prchlik stopped the pro- ceedings right there. Coach Buddy Parker relied on Jim Hardy and Tom Dublinski to quarterback the Lion attack. They each flipped a touchdown pass to end Cloyce Box. Ollie Cline, Gene Gedman and Byron Bailey accounted for three more Detroit TDs. And Walker added a field goal for good measure. ‘ Lions converted a Giant fumble on the first exchange of downs into a 7-pointer. Lew Carpenter recovered for Detroit on the Giant 23. Bobby Hoernschemeyer carried three times to the six. Then Hardy lateraled to Cline, who scampered across for the tally. the Braves are still alive and the Dodgers are due for a fall. The big hitch is that Dressen has a birthday coming up Sept. 20, soon enough that his horoscope at the moment is the same as Grimm’s. And Brooklyn Charlie’s “slight frustration” presently is the fact his Dodgers are so close and yet so far from clinching their second straight pennant. If every- thing clears up for him, too, in the next two weeks, as the astrol- oger suggests, it could only mean the Dodgers would be in. Both clubs won last night. The Braves beat the New York Giants 3-1 with Warren Spahn win- Chicago White Sox who also bowed 4-3 to Boston. St. Louis defeated Philadelphia 83 and Washington thumped Detroit 7-4. The Yanks lead by 9%. The Cardinals rallied after in the sixth and the Tribe got the winning tally in the seventh when Bobby Avila singled, stole second and scored on .a double by Bill Glynn. Boston’s victory over Chicago was only the fifth for the Red Sox FLYING TACKLE STOPS ROTE—Kyle Rote, New York Giants’ halfback, tries to go end in the third period of Friday night’s game with the Detroit Lions at Dallas, Tex., only to be stopped rookie linebacker tackle and under around his right AP Wirephote after picking up a yard on a flying tackle by Lion Lewis Carpenter. Missing on the the tackler is Joe Schmidt, also of the Lions. Lions trampled the Giants, 38-7. Pat Harder converted for the | first of five successful tries for | the extra point. A few minutes later the Detroit squad counted again after Jack | Christiansen intercepted a pass. On the next play Hardy threw to Box for a touchdown that covered 50 yards. Giants’ defense stiffened in the second quarter and the Lions were forced to settle for Walker’s 3 pointer. However, two more interceptions by Don Doll and Yale Lary set the stage for Gedman and Bailey in the third period. After Walker’s fumble in the fourth quarter, Giants scored on an 8-yard pass from Don Gottlob to Dick Christiansen, But the Lions |” came right back to score their final TD after Christiansen grabbed off another Giant pass. Dublinski hit Leon Hart and Box for a pair of 20-yard strikes and the touchdown. First Qualifier Opens Ortonville Bid in ABC Tourney Today, at Royal Oak Manager Herman Bishop of Or- tonville, ace of a fine six-man pitching staff,~ will open the American Baseball Congress tournament bid by the Pontiac city champions tonight at Royal Oak Memorial Park at 8 p.m. Ortonville meets Mt. Clemens, runnerup in the Southern Oak- land County league, in the first of a best-of-three series for the right to compete in the ABC test at Battle Creek. Teams play Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at Wisner Field in Pontiac. A third game, if necessary, will be Monday night at Royal Oak. Bishop has announced that he’ll stick to his regular lineup which includes Bob Studt, ~ss; Fletcher Davis, 2b; Lee Swindell, 3b; Ernie Zubalick, 1f; Walt Honchell, 1b: Al Barkeley, rf; Gene Cox, cf; Jim Berg, c, and himself. | utes of the game. Rams Butt Way to 27-9 Victory Coast Pros’ Running | Attack Too Much for| Cleveland Eleven LOS ANGELES —Los Angeles Rams_ whipped _ the Cleveland | Browns, 27-9, tonight, chalking | up their second straight exhibition | football victory over a National League team. The Rams, displaying an eye- catching running attack starring | fullback Tank Younger and | rookie halfback Brad Myers, | scored three touchdowns. Ben Agajanian picked two field goals. A crowd of 56,517 saw the game. | Los Angeles’ defense held Cleve- land punchless until Otto Graham | led his mates 57 yards in nine| plays to score late in the third| period. Harry Jagade scored from the l-yard mark. | Norman Van Brocklin’s S-yard | | pass to end Tommy Fears started | Ram scoring in the first five min- | Rams marched | 80 yards in six plays, Elroy Hirsch scoring the second touchdown. | Rookie Myers, from Bucknell, | ran 40 yards for the 3rd Ram| touchdown. Cleveland trapped Ram V. T. Smith for a safety in the | final quarter. but It’s a Husky One Ray Thompson, Hazel Park resi- | dent, vacationing at Cranberry | Lake, Friday morning landed only | one fish in an early trip on the lake. But the one he did get was) a husky large-mouth bass that | weighed 5 pounds 5 ounces. It was | taken on a crazy-crawler plug. Lands Only One Fish, . | | NW Retains Alumni EVANSTON, Ill—Five of North- western’s seven-man footbal]1| coaching staff are former Wildcat | stars—Bob Voigts, John Kovatch, | Don Heap, Waldo Fisher and Alex | Sarkisian. | Seeks By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK (®—Ordinarily one must accept with great reserve any bold new plan to transfer the seat of the boxing industry from the big population centers of the East and Midwest out to the wide open spaces, but here comes a man who sounds as though he means business, * * His name is Herman (Turk) | Prujan, and he says he intends to turn Las Vegas into this nation’s boxing capital, adding to its estab- lished fame as a gambling and cultural center. We have not had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Pru- dan, bui the fact that he hag signed R Barney Ross as his matchmaker counts heavily in his favor. We admired Barney as a very fine fighter and champion from the day he came out of Chicago until the night at Madison Square Garden Bow] when Henry Arm- strong gave him a final terrible beating for the welterweight title. We, along with many others, ad- mired him much more later on when he fought and conquered an even tougher foe. So if Barney’s in on it we'll have to string along. ‘‘We are planning,’’ wires Prujan “‘to stage two world’s champion- ships in Las Vegas this winter. We are endeavoring to arrange either a lightweight or welter- weight title bout for November. g Spot | For a January date we have just wired Al Weill, manager of Rocky Marciano, an offer of $250,000 with the usual champion’s percentage plus television rights for Rocky to defend against an outstanding opponent, providing of course that he beats Roland LaStarza. “The fabulous city of Las Vegas will support. such attractions as well, if not better, than any other spot in the country.”’ To which Ross adds: “He, (Prujan), is a tremendous person and capable of putting over anything. He has unlimited finan- cial support and will be a great addition to the boxing game, a throwback to the days of Tex | Stmmens, Phil. Stumbling Tigers Again on Brink of 8th Place Abyss By JOE FALLS } DETROIT w—Detroit Tigers. ap- | parently dizzy from the giddy | heights of seventh place, are on, the verge of toppling back into the cellar. Only a game and a half sep- arates them from last-place St. Louis Browns. And the Tigers have nobody but themselves to blame for the situation. Detroiters have dropped six straight games. Washington whipped them, 7-4, Friday night. A week ago this time the Tigers didn't give the Brownies a sec- ond thought. They had other things on their minds—catching the sixth-place Athletics. But now it looks as_ though they're going to have the fight of | their lives holding off the Browns, | who just swept a three-game series from the A's. Tigers, oddly enough, may have a chance to not only shake the Browns, but pass the A’s. They'll entertain the Philadelphians in a crucial, if you'll pardon the expres- sion, five-game series starting Sun- day. ‘A sweep could put Detroit in good position. Friday night they submitted, rather,meekly, to Walt Masterson's eight-hitter. Bob Nieman and Ray Boone were the only Tigers to solve the | Washington righthander. Each whacked him for a two-run homer but it wasn’t nearly enough to off- set the Senators’ 14-hit attack, led | by Mickey Vernon. Vernon had 2 singles and a homer. WASHINGTON DETROIT ABRH ‘ABRH Yost, 3b 5 1 3 Keenn, s@ &§ @ @ Runis, ss & 1 2 Pesky, % § @ 1 Vern., 1b 5 3 3 Boone, 3 4 2 3 Jen., rf 4 1 1 Delsng., ef 4 0 @ Coan, if 5 1 1 Niemn., ff 3 1 2 Busby, cf 5 @© 2 Souchk, rf 4 @ 1 Terwil., 2b 4 © @ Priddy, 1b 4 @ 1 Fitsgrid., ec 4 © 1 Bucha, ec 3e@686 Mastsn., p 4 © 1 Hatfield, @ee 41714 Garver, p 1 @ 6 Scarbor, p 0 @ @ Mullin 106 06 Herbert, p 1 @ 1 Batts, 1 e980 Mullin fouled out fer Scarborough in Sth. Hatfield walked for Bucha in th. Batts popped eut for Herbert in ¥th. WASHINGTON 201 640 000—7 DETROIT eo0 200 e20—4i E-Rennels, Masterson, Yost, Kuenn, Boone, RBI-Vernen %, Jenson, Coan 2, Busby, Fitsgeraid, Nieman 2%, Boone 2. 2B-Fitzgerald, Boone. HE-Vernen, Nie- man, Boone. 8SB-Busby. DP-Fitsgerald- Kuenn-Priddy. LOB-Wash- Detroit 6. BB-Mastersen 1, 80-Mastersen 3, Garver 5, Herbert 1. HO-Garver Herber’ 4-4. 1-4 W- ¢: Terwilliger; ingten 4, Garver 1. Scarbereugh 1, 10-4'3, Scarborough @-?s, R&ER-Masterson 4-1, Garver Masterson (9-11). L-Garver (8-10), Rommel, Berry, Hurley, Flaherty, 2:09. A-18,308. TIGER LEADERS (By the Associated Press) BATTING—Keenn, .300. RUNS—Boene, 75. HITS—Kuenn, 166. DOUBLES—Kuenn, 25 TRIPLES—Boone, 8. HOME RUNS—Boene, 24 RUNS BATTED IN—Beene, 485. PITCHING—Aber, 3-3, .500. STRIKEOUTS—Gray, 104. Major League Averages ° © American League TEAM BATTING Pet. rd New York 279 Washington 261 Cleveland 267 Hip 239 Bosten 243) «=Philadelphia 753 Detroit 262 «St. Leuis 258 INDIVIDUAL Pct. Pct. Williams, Bes 500 Bauer, NY 308 Snyder, Wash 359 Philley, Phil 307 Vernen, Wash 327 Mitchell, Clev 307 Rosen, Olev 322 Seucheck, Det 307 Minese, Chi 318 Mantle, NY 306 Lenhardt, StL 317 Renna, NY 306 Bollweg, NY 316 Geedman, Bes +05 Westlake. Clev 315 Easter, Clev 205 Carey, NY 309 «=Busby, Wash 304 Pitchers in 120 or according to carned inning game. wie. RA laces RG (Ge nnoncnodcce 140 «68 «63.25 RAO OR e sireeeivlelerereia pias eta 18 2 2.4 Ereeks,. Stb-CRl os cveseesss 17 6 2.664 Ferd; NY Ga sescesrccce 1S) BS fate McDermett, Bos ........... “4 R 2.98 Gareta, ClO isisewcesenss rm 7 3.04 Malwa eo ae ele vis cre ares 12 6 S38 Parnel, B66. ..5stiwssevesees: 17. 7% «3.23 Mastersen, Wash .......... 8 11 3.27 Fornietes, CRA ..2.sccccecss, ® 5 3.33 WAGON, ON 6kskccawcnnscuss 11 5 3.39 Derteh; CR Vc ccscccccec 10 6 3.44 . National TEAM BATTING Pet. Pet. Breoklyn 234 Milwaukee 244 New York 274 =«=6(Cinectnnati 759 St. Leuls 273 Chicago 259 Philadelphia 767 «Pittsburgh 43 TEAM FIELDING Pet. . Pet. Breeklyn ona New York 976 Cincinnati ona =P ittsburgh 974 Milwaukee 979 Philadelphia 97 St. Lewis 978 Chicage 965 Pitchers in 120 or according to earned inning game Spabm, WE ....cceccssseas Reberts, Phil Wilhelm, NY Burdette, Mil 2.83 Gemes, 3.08 veenweeneenns 11 11 3.8 TEAM FIELDING Pct. Pet Chicage 980 Cleveland 978 New York 986 Detreit 77 Philadelphia 978 Besten 977 Washington 978 St. Leuls e72 BATTING Pet. Pet. McDeougald, NY 303 Beene, C-Det 283 Kuenn, Det 302 «Mullin, Det 275 Weedling, N¥ 301 Lund, Det 257 Beyd, Chi 301 Hatfield, Det 247 Lollar, Chi 3060 «=6Drepe, Det 738 Pesky, Det 788 «6Priddy, Det 227 Delsing, Det 785 Hitcheeck, Det 211 Nieman, Det 784 «©Bucha, Det 709 Batts, Det 784 Kaline, Det 167 more innings rated run averages per 9- wee ERA Mudeon; Mee 5. iiiisisvcewes 5 & 3.353 Lemon, Clevo. occ eee eens 17. «13 «3.54 Btobds, Weak iisicciissaes 9 7 3.54 Pellet, GW sivassevenes 7 @ 3.464 Shes, Waeh 2.0 cccneaveses 11S 0 Porterfield; Waae cisccccces 16 10 8.75 Wrets -GUeU 6xsiescsvenceexs 14 «610 «3.99 Relinel, PON ..iascevscisens 11 12 3.92 Prieané; FRM waccscccessces 7 #7 3.92 WEOeCE, Wet) vccceccccccesicccits 8 11 4.34 Garver, Det sisccceveasscs.. 9 9 4.39 i) A eee re 7 #13 4.44 League INDIVIDUAL BATTING Pet. Pet. Denlap, StL Schn'dst, StL Irvin. NY Ashburn, Phil Robinsen. Brk Klussewski, Cin Furille. Brk Burgess, Phil Baumhelts. Mathews, Mil Pafke, Mil Cex, Brk 305 Thempsen, NY %6% Andersen, St L 368 Hofman, NY 301 Snider, Brk more innings rated run average per 9- = ™ bd] $0 p0 $0 90 90 90 po I3RSL58> | | | Aussie Netters Seek Revenge in U. S. Singles Rosewall Has Toughest Match; Meets Bartzen in First Round FOREST HILLS, N.Y. W—Aus- tralia’s young tennis stars, who were thwarted at Wimbledon, open their assault on the United States national tennis championship to- day. Ken Rosewall,.a slender, black- haired strategist, runs headlong into what looks as the toughest match on the first day of the 10-day tournament on the’ grass courts of the West Side Tennis Club. He faces Bernard Bartzen of San Angelo, Texas, a dangerous ~ left-hander, back on the tourna- ment trail after an Army hitch. Bartzen’s game has shown signs of regaining the form it had when he was a junior star. Rosewall’s 18 - year-old buddy, Lewis Hoad, will be able to give vocal support since he isn’t slated until Sunday. Vic Seixas of Philadelphia, the man who turned back the Aussies at Wimbledon in June, is top- seeded among the Americans. He meets Morton Stern of Philadelphia today. Americans seeded behind Seixas in order are Tony Trabert, Gard- nar Mulloy, Art Larsen, Hamilton Richardson, Straight Clark, Budge Patty and Tom Brown. Defending champion Maureen Connolly dominates the women's entry. She's won it twice in a row and is aiming to become the first girl ever to hold four major world titles in the same year. She already has the Australian, British and French. Russians Lead Weightlifting Soviet Team Holds 16-5 Margin in World Trials at Stockholm STOCKHOLM (®—Russians have scored 16 points to five for the United States in the world weight- lifting championships. Middleweight and light heavy- | weight contests were on tonight's | agenda with three Americans and | the same number of Russians tak-; (40 teams). | been given by Fred Zoellin. ing the floor. Thomas Kono of Oakland, Calif., and Dave Sheppard of Los Angeles are the U.S. entries in the middleweight division against Russia’s J. V. Duganov. Stanley Stancyzk of Miami, Fla., who saw Pete George of Akron, O., better his world record in the lightweight class last night, | matches his strength against two Russians in the light heavyweight competition. Russians jumped out in front by winning the bantamweight and featherweight ‘classes, in which no Americans were entered. Pin Loop Meets Independent Ladie's Bowling League will hold its first meeting of the season Wednesday, Sept. 2, at 8 p.m. at the West Side Recre- ation. All captains are requested to have lineups ready and all members are asked to be present. Invaluable Help! CHICAGO w—Where would the Boston Red Sox be if they’d had Ted Williams in the lineup all season? : That's obviously anybody’s guess but the guess of the Red Sox mana- ‘ger, Lou Boudreau, is that they'd be “right at the top.” “If you'd asked me that in April or May, I'd have said Ted would have guaranteed us the first divi- sion, — third of fourth place’’ said Lou. “Now, when you me, I'd have to say that we'd be right at the top. I don’t mean the pen- nant necessarily. But I do mean we'd be giving the Yankees a much closer fight than the White Sox are right now.” Second-place Sox are 944 games | back of the leading Yanks. Boudreau made the observation last night after the Red Sox re- corded one of their rare victories over Chicago — winning 43 for their fifth triumph in 18 games with the White Sox. Why would he say now that Williams could mean a Red Sox spot ‘‘at the top” if he wouldn't have said it last spring? “Simply because I never expect- Leahy Blasts New Grid Rules Says College Football Is Playing Into Hands of Professionals WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (UP) — The college football controversy which was ‘‘straightened’’ out last winter may be stirred anew today by’ Coach Frank Leahy’s denunci- ation of the ‘‘old days type of foot- ball” in store for the coming season. The Notre Dame coach, speak- ing at a luncheon held Friday in connection with the Little League baseball championship, said, “We are playing directly into the hands of the professionals and we had better do something about ie “Under the old rule, we gave more boys opportunity to play for a longer period of time,” he said. “It looks now like we are going back to the old days when the coach would empty the bench in| the last few minutes just to give some of the boys a chance to make their letters.” Obviously nettled at the change in the rules which bans the whole- sale substitution of players, Leahy said, ‘‘When deterioration sets in on college playing standards, the people are going to spend their money to see the pros play in- stead.” Memorial Event Named in Honor of Jock Inkster Pine Lake Country Club mem- | bers will engage in a new golf event that will become an annual affair, starting in 1954. The new test is the Jock Inkster Memorial | Best Ball Medal Sept. 11-12-13. Inkster, veteran Pine Lake pro, died a year ago. He was succeed- ed by Henry Ransom. Already 80 members are entered A fine big trophy has The affair is on a handicap basis, and is over a 36-hole route. A ‘‘stag’’ banquet is planned for Play Tourney, the night of the first day’s com- | petition, and takes place in the clubhouse. Ex-Tiger Is Speaker at Softball Banquet Former Detroit Tiger outfield star Gerald (Gee) Walker will be the principal speaker at the Water- ford Township Recreation depart- ment’s’ men's. softball] banquet, Thursday, Sept. 3, at 7 p.m. in the Community Activities building. Tickets are on sale at Drayton Drug and at the CAI. Playoff doubleheader is slated Monday night with Drug meeting Dixie Rec- reation at 7 p. m. Survivor plays Dick & Wes Sports at 8: 30. Extra game, if necessary, will be Tues- day at 8:30 p. m.: Lou Says Ted Would Have Put Sox on Top (ed our kids to do as well as they have. They’ve surprised me. All those youngsters—Tom Umphlett, Jim Piersall, Sam White, Milt Boll- ing — simply have come through much better than anyone could expect.”’ Boudreau, whose Red Sox are in fourth place 15 games off the Yankee pace, said ‘‘the runs Wil- liams would have batted in’’ would have been the difference. Hopes of Miss Faulk Rest on Borrowed Clubs Georgia Star and Polly Riley Move Into Finals of Women’s Tourney By HUGH FULLERTON JR. PROVIDENCE, R. I. Ww If Mary Lena Faulk only had her own golf clubs, she might have made a shambles of the 1953 U. S., Women’s Amateur championship. As it is, she’s rated no worse | than a toss-up against Polly Riley in today’s 36-hole final for the starts at 8:30 a. m. (EST). All through this tournament, the lean, jut-jawed Thomasville, Ga., girl has been playing with a set of irons borrowed from pro Peggy Kirk, and a once- discarded set of woods and put- ter. And through the five rounds she scored better than anyone in the tournament. After losing to Philomena Gar- vey in the semi-finals of the Brit- ish Amateur championship last June, Mary Lena shipped her clubs home by boat. She's still waiting for them. The new ones almost failed her Friday in her semi-final match against 16-year-old Margaret (Wif- fi) Smith of Mexico. Against Miss Riley, a muscular five-footer whom she has met on three other occasions, Miss Faulk won't be able to afford a letdown. Polly, who has come through the hardest quarter of the draw, had another rough match Friday against Mrs, Philip J. Cudone of Montclair, N. J., but pulled it out on the 19th green after _atch- ing up at the 16th, Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE WwW iL Pet. GB New YOrk ceeseces secs 8 41 635 — CRICSGO@) oc cscs cerns: 76 «51 4.598) = (8's ClOVOIAMG) i5546 2 «6s essis 73 S53 «STM 12 Beeston .cccccescccecee. at ST bee 15 Washington § .......... 63 66 488 23'9 Philadelphia .......... 51 76 403 Bits Detrele osc cesweueces 45 81 .357 40 St. Leuls ............ 5 84 849 41'S TODAY’S GAMES, PITCHERS New York at Cleveland, 1 na Kraly (0-0) or Reynolds (10-6) vs. Lemen (17-13); Besten at Chicage, 1:30 p.m.—Parnell (17-7) ws. Johnson (1-3); Washington at Detroit, 2 p.m.—Porter- field (16-10) ws. Hoeft (8-11). (Only games) FRIDAY’S RESULTS Washington 7 Detroit 4 Cleveland 3 New York 2 Beston 4 Chicage x St. Louis & Philadelphia 3 SUNDAY'S GAMES New York at Chicago (2), 1:30 p.m: Bosten at Cleveland (2), 12:30 p.m: Philadelphia at Detroit (2), 1:30 p.m.: Washington at St. Louis (2). 1:30 p.m. MONDAY’'S SCHEDULE Beston at Cleveland, 7:15 p.m.; adelohia at Detroit (2), 6:30 pm} Washingten at St. Louis, 8:30 p.m (Only games). NATIONAL LEAGUE wie Pet. GB Brooklyn ........... 87 40) 1685 PMilwatkee G..66.0605 7k 50 #09 = 9'G | Philadelohia ......... Tt SA BSH 16 | St. Lewis ............ 69 54 .B52 17 | New Werk 2250000000 KA 47 «.48R 27'S | Cimelamatl o. sscicccess 5A 7G 444 RA Chicage eer err 4R TR RI RK'G | Pi-tsbureh 41 92 .3AR 49 | TODAY'S GAMES. PITCHERS {| Cincinnati at Broekivn. 12:30 p.m— | Ractewski (8-3) or Kelly (1-1) ve. | Podres (8-4): Milwaukee at New York, 1°:30 p.m.—Rardette (18-2) vs. Gomes 11-7): St. Leuls at Pittsburgh, 12:3 wn. | m.—Mivell (11-8) ws. Face (8-5): Chi- ' cago st Philadelmbia, 12:39 om —Min- | mer (8-14) ws. Pabert« (91-1), FRIDAY'S RESUUTS Milwaukee R New York 1 | Rreeklyn 9 Cinecinnatl bel Philadelnhia 5 Chieagce LJ St. Leuls 18) Pittshorch b STUNDAY’'S GAMFS Milwaukee at Pittsburgh (2), 12 neent St. Lents at FRreokivn, 1:05 p.m.: Chi- | ene at New Vork. (%), 1:05 o.m.: Cin- cinnati sf Philsdetnhia (2) 19:65 p.m. | MONDAV’'S SCHEPULE St. Leuls st Rroakivn, 7 p.m: Cin- | cinnatt at Philadelmhia (9). 5 v.m.t Chicaro at New York, 12:30 p.m, | (Only games), | Juniors Have Banquet | Banquet was held Thursday at | Community Activities in Waterford | for 35 members of the Waterford Township Junior Softball League. Board members, sponsors and players were among those present. | Recreation Department Director |Thomas Belton was master of /ceremonies. Playoff trophy was |won by Keego Hardware. Team ‘members were awarded medals, Bennie Eyes Baldacci Locating Quarterback Appears UM's Biggest Job as Opening of Drills Nears ANN ARBOR ® — Michigan will start playing ‘‘find the quarter- back"’ Wednesday, with the open- ing of fall “football drills. And that will be the main job confronting Coach Bennie Ooster- baan for 21 practice days leading up to the start of the 1953 cam- paign against University of Wash- ington here Sept. 26. Michigan coach has 73 varsity candidates in a group that con- tains 23 lettermen. But there Flint, Mich., junior, is the only letterman quarterback. And de- spite a keen passing ability, he has seen little actual game ac- tion. It appears Oosterbaan has put his chief hope in Louis Baldacci, 205-pound sophomore. Baldacci has shown up well in spring drills and will be given every chance at signal-calling. Elsewhere, Michigan is pretty well fixed with Ted Kress, Detroit senior, and Tony Branoff, Flint sophomore, bringing proven experi- ence to both halfbacks, and Dick Balzhiser at fullback. With emphasis on players who can handle offense and defense, * such experienced performers as ends Gene Knutson and Tad Stan- ford are expected to make a good showing. A pair of fine tackles, Art Walk- er and Ron Geyer, will bulwark a line that includes guards Ron Wil- liams and converted center, Dick O'Shaughnessy. Dean Ludwig, veteran, is slated for first crack at the center job vacated by O'Shaughnessy. Michigan’s coach has reserved Tuesday for photographers and newsmen. But the next day, the squad will jump into the thick of practice with two-a-day drills the order for 21 gruelling days. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGOST 29, 1953 tag To Meet Expansion: County-Wide School Building Under Way By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE Several million dollars worth of school building is now under construction and on the draft boards for Oakland county school districts. To meet the ever increasing student enrollments from kinder- garten through 12th grade, dis- tricts are approving bond issues to provide their children with adequate educational facilities. Birmingham, with a $3,400,- 000 school building program under way, will have additions to many of Its present buildings and two new elementary schools this year. Torry school, on the east side of Birmingham, has an addition now under construction which includes 10 classrooms, a library, activity room and multi-purpose room. Self-contained classrooms are featured in this building which was designed by Swanson Associ- ates of Bloomfield Hills and awarded a blue ribbon for ex- cellence of school design two years ago. This was presented by the American Association of Architects. Swansons have also drawn the plans for the addition. Pontiac’s new Hawthorne School will be ready for Sep- tember opening. Bids were awarded for this 12 classroom modern building on Oct. 23, 1952 to Ward W. Ross of Pontiac. Architects were Schley * s \e » Bina cng enn na and Ward. This building cost $404,609. Waterford Township — school district has completed $2,100,000 worth of school building in the past few years. Bids for a new junior high school will be opened Sept. 8 and this structure is to be located on Cass Lake road overlooking M-59. It will be fi- nanced by a recently approved $1,350,000 bond issue. Two jun- ior high school sites were also purchased with this sum. Waterford’s Stringham school has a new two-room addition ready for next month’s school opening. Using interior wainscoting of cement-enameled cinder block and directional glass block on one uppper wall, asphalt tile floors have been installed. An- other feature of these rooms is the complete wall expanses of storage and cabinet areas. Bundy Construction Co. of Pontiac did the building. The Holly school district has been carrying on a new building program with a new elementary school, an elementary addition and a high school addition under- way. The new Holly elementary has 13 self-contained class- rooms with each room being entered from a covered porch running along the entire build- ing. } Designed by Walter T. Anicka of Ann Arbor, this building cost $282,000 and besides classrooms s 6 s me . a % Sis pe TORRY’S STEEL GIRDERS—Etched against the sky, steel girders of the new addition to Torry School, Birmingham, are ready for the rest of school construction process. Ten classrooms, a library, activity room and a multi-purpose room plus @ west end kindergarten are being added to this school which won a blue ribbon for excellence of design two years ago. Swanson Associates of Bloomfield Hills are the architects. Birmingham High School Building Design Praised Birmingham’s high school was singled out as one of the nation’s outstanding examples of con- temporary building design this week by Progressive Architec- ture, a national architectural magazine. Devoting ten pages to pic- tures and text, the secondary school is reviewed. from the standpoint of the school’s aser — the principal, the -teachers, the students and the all-im- portant custodian. Designed by m Swanson Associ- ates of Bloom- field Hills, the Birmingham High school is ap plauded by this My select group - of architectural au- thorities as an “excellent exam- ..4. ple of = school- ,..:4 building design allowing for eco- nomical future expansion.’’ Their selection of materials was also commended. J. Robert F. Swan- son heads this firm. Ross A. Wagner, principal of the high school, endorses the school after over a year’s opera- tion, as ‘‘more conducive to pleasant school experiences than that of most schools,” and adds “that it is a building which has achieved beauty and function without expenditure of unneces- sary sums of money.”’ Teachers praise the roomy and light classrooms; students find its simplicity and the de- signer’s use of color in their favor and also acclaim the sound-proofing, lighting and the modern furniture. Custodians, performing a vital personne] role in the operation of a school, report that it is easy to heat and clean. At the corner of Cranbrook and Lincoln roads in Birming- ham, this building is rapidly be- coming the center of a growing residential area. Built to accommodate 1,200, a student body of 1,500 is an- ticipated, and, when plans are completed, the school will house 1,300 students. Flexibility of this campus-type school plan provides expansion possibilities without depriving the original plan of any of its utility or beauty. has a multi-purpose room, kitch- en, office, teachers room and also a health facility. Inside doors running from room to room allow for passing of classes when weather pro- hibits using the exterior porch. At Davisburg, also part of the Holly district, nine new classrooms have been added. a multi-purpose room and of- fices were included and they follow the design of the Holly elementary. This cost $211,000. A new shop facility has been constructed on the high school site which also provides rooms for music, biology and agricul- ture. This cost $92,000. * ¢ s * SELF-CONTAINED CLASSROOMS—Designed by Walter T. Anicka of Ann Arbor, this one-story contemporary school building will provide 13 class- rooms, a multi-purpose room, kitchen, office space as well as teachers and health rooms. Gas heat s s * ‘s s at oe en me a “lar °- WATERFORD’S BUS GARAGE — Transporting 6,000 students per day during the regular school year, Waterford Township school district recently added a bus garage to its building facilities, Lo- cated on M-59, this building provides garage space NEW ROOMS GO UP—Torry school, located in the center of a rapidly expanding residential area on the east side of Birmingham is in the process of getting a ten-room addition. Self-contained classroom designs feature a brick exterior with ee ae, OO 5 eth eee ay with the split system employing radiant heat in the floors and supplemental heat in a window system is installed in this new school unit. Ellis Construc- tion Co. of Detroit is doing the building which will be completed some time this fall. s » Ld s for bus maintentance, and storage area for the school district. By handling their own maintenance, school districts report considerable savings in an- nual budgets. ‘- =e =. ! fee Eee 0 gf ee at. -bes. Pe Tan] ors and some brick interior used. To cost $412,265, this that will do just that. school will have a multi-purpose room to serve the surrounding community as well as the regular school program. 4 . ats OS A og > dee “6 : ‘ ini aN Meeteisnete a: LER RLOE LE ies Fe ean gs pet SNS Ce EN ox PONTIAC’S HAWTHORNE — Ready for September school opening is Pontiac’s new Hawthorne school. Leser Stanley wiill serve as principal of this school which has 12 classrooms and will serve about 384 children. Built at a cost of $404,609, : Pn) NEW HOLLY ELEMENTARY—From the roof of the new Holly elementary school in Holly, in- dividual entrance doors to eaca classroom are visible. A self-contained school classroom designed building, this new school will have each grade enter a % ee Hawthorne fs a modern designed building of brick and cinder block. Schley and Ward of Pontiac were the architects and it was constructed by Ward W. Ross. En- trance to this school is from Walton Boulevard. \ from an exterior covered cement porch. Class- rooms have their own corridor area before enter~ ing the classroom proper. This serves as a work area and gives additional educational possibilities for a school program. es ¢ 8 ¢ € «@ ae +s ne nf “ Ph ani? 5 edt iorg Sah ag ae ‘ atts et oe “ih - STRINGHAM ADDITION—A two room addition to Stringham school in Waterford Township provides more classroom for this growin, school district. Featuring directional glass block on the upper portion of the window walls, the wainscoting is in the new cement-enameled cinder block. Reported to be about one-third the cost of glazed tile, this finish on cinde: block is smooth with a marble ef- fect in green and white. Asphalt tile floors are used throughout this building. Clarkston School Lobby Is Library School systems have so in- Newer building designs point to fact that architects are keep- this In mind when pianning interi areas Clarkstos Elementary school has achieved this by using the lobby of its new school for a library. It is used, too, as a meeting place for com- munity activities. Lobbies, only in use during com- ing and going periods of the day, can be used for the extracurricular activities that require more than classroom space. The obvious answer, and an economic necessity—is the multi- Purpose area. A list of activities must be taken into co- eB August Johnson +... — » 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 | besa PRO aE AMINA A it tt in a ah Sahel er a i ; Sad Offers exclusive home sites in Bloomfield Township, Vaughn School District, over- looking lake or golf course. Lots $1,600 and up. Buy now, and we'll help you with all building arrangements. Call at branch office, Franklyn Road at Hickory Grove | Road for further information. Open 2 to 8 p. m. Phone FE 5-3781 or FE 4-2533 CLLEGE IG ELL IEE, REGO O RL LEE LEN. IEEE LABEL AP AA et PR De ak poe Haulaway Shop to Get Addition City Issues Permits for 23 New and Repair Construction Jobs A $262,643 permit for construc- tion of an addition to GMC’s haul- away building at 741 Glenwood Ave. was one of 23 permits issued by the city’s building department this week. Edward L. Heathman obtained a permit for construction of a $9,000 home at 1149 Cherrylawn Dr. and a permit for an $8,500 home to be built at 577 Arthur St. was issued L. H. Johnson. Other permits include: Build boiler gg gl Arcadia Ct, H. Pardee, $2. Build garage, 131 EB. Iroquois, North- Building Co., $1,200. 650 E. Mansfield, @. - cin’ andcinane Co., $600. Se , 532% Wayne Bt, . oe wilen $2,000 Build addition, 53 Oak Hill, Henry E. Leinenger, Build garage, 57 Lehigh St., Mrs. L. C. Gustafson, $500. Repair home, 258 N. Saginaw, George Roby, $500. Build garage, 642 E. Mansfield, Ellis Ellis | 5 0. porch, 402 8. Saginaw, Builders, $650. Build garage, 631 EB. Columbia, Bob's Building Service, Build garage, 1275 Cherrylawn, c. F. Gideumb, $500. Re-side rtm 506 Fourth, Ambas- sador Insulation, $560 Build garage, pert, Build garage, 88 Prall, G. Construction Co., $885. Build garage, 881 Robinwood, G. ane| W. Construction, Build garage, 494 E. ‘Kennett, Bernard 1105 ‘Dover, John Btop- and W A. Gieberger, 3500. Re-side dwelling, 28 E. Cornell, M Stein. $500. Build addition, 1117 Meadowlawn, Mrs. Liston Wilson, $500 Build well pit, A. Fredman, $500 Repair fire damage. 108 N. Saginaw, J. 279 +E Bivda South, Forest Roofing and Lumber Com- | pany. $3,000 Home Incinerators Rise in Popularity Higher living standards bring- ing higher labor costs and higher taxes are making garbage removal a problem for householders as well as for municipalities. In several places the scavenger and the tewn dump sem to be going the way | of the grind organ man and his monkey. Pigs may solve the problem of kitchen leavings for the farmer, but in residential areas where pig home incinerators are eonile more popular. Stain Removal Easy Grease stains can be removed from wallpaper by making a paste of a good quality spot remover and French chalk. Let the paste dry on the grease spot, then brush off with a clean cloth. In 1950, the U.S. government held some rural land in 1,796 of the 3.096 counties of the country. Floor Laying, Sanding, Finishing MILLER BROS. 16 Years Service in Pontiac Call FE 5-3162 ranean home is re Tile Reception Holl large place. nestl t Studie Living Reom | 21 x 38 feet with Exceptionally Lerge , Log-Burning Fireplace i Sun Parlor, Tile Floor Dining Room, 16 x 21 ft. Tile Kitchen, 15 x 19 f#; Butier’s Pantry, Breakfast Room and Bar Room Five te Seven Bedrooms on the lake. square foot main house than average family: with connecting baths, roomy. bath and dining room. Four-Cer Garage Approximately 1000 f Feet ef Shore Line indicates. A60 WEST MAPLE AVENUE _— ON LAKE ANGELUS The continental atmosphere of this authentic Mediter- ated lavishly in its interior. It's a in the complete privacy of its own acreage and the approximately thousand-foot frontage From the Italian tile baths to the eight hundred living room, all selected with generous disregard for economy. The as ample accommodations for the larger bedrooms, are well proportioned and Servants’ quarters include three bedrooms, Lake Angelus is one of Oakland County's most attractive and exclusive residential areas and just a few minutes beyond Bloomfield. This home is one of the finest on this lake of fine homes. $57,500, it's a lot easier to own than its description Call for complete information: Midwest 4-1222 of JOrdan 4-5800 GEORGE E. MARKLEY, nc. eal Eetate e BIRMINGHAM j- peweaee 3 an tere. ian the appointments were or bedroom suites, Priced at MICHIGAN eature to the border of any . The bodies are cut out tf solid stock or outdoor playwood. | The legs are dowels available at | your local lumber yard. Or cur- tain rods may be used. If you do not have a power jig saw, your neighborhood woodwork- ing hobbyist can saw out the fig- ures while you wait. Then just follow the painting guide on the pattern which will give a strik- ingly realistic effect against the green of turf or shrubbery. Price of flamingo Pattern 394 is 25 cents. Patterns available in packets at $1 each are lawn and garden figures, homestead im- provements, lawn and garden fur- niture. | Write to Workshop, Pontiac Daily Wax Coat Acts to Protect Top But Self-Polishing One, | Has Too Much Water | for Hardwood The rings left on a wood table | | top by moist glasses are an ex- ample of what water will do in a short time to anv wood surface. That is why it is so important to avoid the use of water in any form on wood floors. If water is spilled on a wood floor the water should be wiped up immediately and the floor dried. If allowed to remain it will produce an unsightly white spot which is almost impossible to remove without sanding and re- finishing. Soap and water scrubbing ruins | the finish and will eventually make be. | the surface splintery and cause warping and buckling of the wood. Floors can be kept really clean and the finish like new with a waterless cleaner with a heavy | wax base. This cleaning and waxing at the | same time not only cuts floor care time in half, but protects the floor’s original beauty better than any other method. The wax deposit keeps dust and dirt on the surface where it can be removed easily and quick- ly by a cloth or cotton dust mop. Although self-polishing waxes are wonderful time savers in the kitch- en and bath, they should never be used on hardwood because they are about 80 per cent water and | this water is just as injurious to jwood as water from any other | source. | Nutshells, Fruit Pits Used in Furniture WASHINGTON — The furniture you buy may be made with nut shells and fruit pits. Shells and pits are not the latest decorating item. | But the Department of Agricul- ture says finely ground nut shells and fruit pies make excellent filler material for use in the manufac- ture of molded plastics. In addi- tion, fine grit from nut shells or fruit pits can carry the dry pig- ments used to color wood furni- ture. BUILDERS’ SPECIALTIES Tenn. Ledge Rock Briar Hill Stone Belden Face Brick || Common Brick Metal Culverts Cement Culverts Glass Block Hot Lime Outdoor Fireplaces Heatalator Fireplaces Area Walls Silica Sand Calcium Chloride Cement and Mortar Slip Seal Sewer Pipe Septic Tanks SIBLEY COAL & SUPPLY CO. 140 N. Cass Ave. FE 5-8163 for Payments Installment Maximum Should Be 25 Per Cent of Income CHICAGO (INS)—Buying home furnishings can take a big bite out of the average family income | lars worth of government guar- | anteed mortgages—and may want THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 'Figure Budget U.S. May Unload Mortgage Loans to Lower Debt The federal government is in the mortgage business, too. The Federal National Mortgage Association holds 2% billion dol- to get rid of them to help the U. S. treasury out of its cash- shortage debt-limit dilemma. That might upset the market for new | mortgages. Seme three million World War | unless the budget is planned ahead of time to handle installment pay- | | ments. According to Dr. Thomas W. Rogers, executive vice-president of the American Finance Conference, a few ‘‘safety rules’ for buying on time payments can save finan- cial confusion and prevent unex- pected strain on future income. Twenty-five per cent of income for installment buying is maxi- | loans. Mosi of the Korean Vet- GUN 4 BELUTIFOL i_anHOME We have many now avail- able in every price range. mum for the average family, but Call this figure includes only future meron ROY ANNETT, Inc. Before payments are considered, safety rules include a one-third | down payment on any expensive item. Payments should not extend more than 24 months. These safety rules apply to the | average family of every age braek- | et, research shows, since young childless families face heavier | debts for initial furnishings and appliances; families with children buy replacement items and new furnishings for addtional rooms. | REALTOR t% £. Heres St. Phene FE 3-7193 Open Eves. and Sen. 1-5 FP. M. We Help Finance Dewn Payments Lumber SASH & DOORS BLDRS’ SUPPLIES BUILDERS’ HDWE. PAINTS Broker Willis M. BREWER ®Listings wanted © Buy and Sell Contracts © Will trade contracts for Ranch Type Home Complete Real Estate Services DICKIE Lumber Co. 2495 Orchard Lake Rd. Phone FE 4-3538 Roosevelt Hotel Offices for Rent FE 4-518) Reems 114-115-116 Al Ll, Ml Ml An tl, Mn, Ml, Al Mn thle, Mn, Mle Mlle, Ml Ml Ml, Ml, Mi Ml Mn Mi Mi Mi Mle Mn. 4 q $ CALL BypHDoW FIRST} q> “—= > > When You Need Steel—New or Used § d 4> @ Angles—Channels—Beams 4> 4> @ Reinforcing Bors 4> 4> @ Basement Posts q> > d @ Plates ; : Pi ——We Cut to Size 3 > FE 4.9582 } 4 ‘ 135 Branch St. Across from American Forging and Socket 4 rTrTVwrVvvVvVVVVVvVvVvVvVvVvVvvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvY? Il veterans have taken out home | Housing Administration. It's been seven fat years—for the builders and for the lenders, ave been insured by the Federal| with the help of the government. is A END Lpepehe@a CEILINGS Low-Cost Johns-Manville GLAZECOAT CEILING PANELS can be applied in | one day right over old plaster send cracked or ugly ceilings with attractive, pre-decorated Johns-Manville Glazecoat Ceil- ing Panels. They give you a strong rigid ceiling with a pleas- ing panel effect. Applied right over old ceilings. No nails show. Cost low. Beautiful Ivory Glaze- coat finish. See us for samples and free estimate. JOHRS MANVILLE YM | mur opucts | STOP DUST with , ‘Dow-Flake”’ Calcium Chloride | The F. J. POOLE CO. Plenty of Off-Street Parking {47-165 Oakland Avenue FE 4-1594 2426 St. Joseph Street A Subdivision of New Brick Homes. s 40° x 26'8” Brick with Stone Trim +: Full Tile Bath with Shower | > Three Large Bedrooms | sc Garbage Disposal | yy Gas Fired Incinerator | +>% Tiled Vestibule ; See You _ 75 W. Huron St. 3 Bedroom Bricks in Beautiful Sylvan Manor West of Telegraph to Middlebelt Rd., Consider the following features—then agree with us “Theyre Tops In Value at only 319.990 +: Spacious Kitchen with Tile Features — == 2 SL OORT IE AE PR IEE | “Open Sunday 12 to 7 Drive out Orchard Lake Rd. Va mile turn left to ““O’Neil’s’’ Open signs. + Paved Rear Patio 3 “Pickled” Woodwork s Select Oak Floors s+ Gas Heat s+ Solid Paved Driveway + 80 Foot Wide Lots > Ventilating Fan | So many, many exceptional Features to make this “YOUR” ideal home! Sunday RAY O'NEIL, Realtor FE 3-7103 FE 5-0690 Johns-Manville' BUILDING MATERIALS =i =< —— —— — THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 JOHNS - MANVILLE PRODUCTS SUPPLIED Attic Flats Rents Are UP Costs Are DOWN jee $25 per me. You can be absolutely sure this flat wil] return $2 rent for every dollar of cost. We actually have families who will contract to pay the entire price of remodeling in return for the flat. You furnish the space — the tenant provides the payments — we supply the mén, the materials and the money! In many cases the new rent not only pays the conversion cost, it retires the old mortgage as well. About 4 or 5 years rent usually covers alk your costs, and leaves you with a lifetime of payment-free monthly income. Get our low sum- mer prices. No Money Down—Payments Enclosed Porch Profit or Pleasure only $20 per mo. For living or sagt space, why not use your porch all year round instead of the few summer months? Usually, enclosing an open poreh proves a valuable, low-cost investment ause you cn atake full advntaage of existin construction. You can: make it part of a pa | Flat or even rent it separately. The income will sure come in handy. No Money Down—Payments start Nov. @ Looking for a winner? Look upstairs, down- stairs, all around the house. Look for Rent Remodeling, — then bet your bottom dollar. It’s today’s biggest money winner. It’s timely, — it’s smart. Five will get you ten and you just can’t lose. Bargain Basement just waiting to pay off only S30) par we. Whether it’s a Flat or just sleeping rooms—there’s no place like your basement. You'll never get a better bargain because the cheapest part of your house to convert is your basement. We do a wonderful job of planning and financing as well as building. What’s more we'll even do your renting. No Money Down—Payments start 1954 Look what’s happened to rents and renters. How can you leave your attic empty,—your basement idle or those extra rooms unused. Some deserving family would gladly pay you far more than you realize for a homey flat. Don’t miss a terrific bet,—Rent Remodeling! Dormers Pay for room renting only $8 per mo. Rooms we built in one attic rent- ed for $10 a week. The owner paid $30 a month to remodel space that rented for $120! An- other family just used the space themselves for newly wed chil- dren. Where you cannot install a flat you can rent rooms. This pays even more. Your house won't look like a flat because we know how to design good looking dormers. No Money Down—Payments Begin Nov. Additions for an all-purpose unit only $30 per me. Extending the story-and-a-half style of house is en- tirely practical because it is so easy to make the new addition seem part.of the original construction. Clever planning provides space for a bath-room and ward- robe-type closet in this new bedroom unit. Most every home can have an extra Flat by adding an extra bedroom and bath. You'll love the extra income. No Money Down—Payments start Nov. SPLIT APARTMENTS—A “DAILY DOUBLE.” Many homes and apartments are ideally arranged for cen- version. In most cases, it is very economical to pro- vide a combination living-dining room, two bedrooms, bathroom and kitchenette. Porches become bedrooms, halls become kitchenettes. new bays provide more light and space, closets become baths. It’s easy to make 2 or 3 small flats out of one big apartment or several unused rooms. No money down $18. mo. Payments start Nov. Sensational Introductory Offer NEW ALUMINUM SIDING FAMOUS “REYNOLDS” and “ALCOA” , 800 Sq. Ft. LABOR 7 Installation by Trained Mechanics ¥ 100% Perfection Assured ¢7 Lifetime Guarantee v NEVER Paint Again ¢ Fire Resistant v¥ Wont-Chip or Crack v¥ Won’t-Peel or Blister ¥ Won’t-Fade or Loosen 499 South Saginaw and MATERIAL $ FHA TERMS Up To 7 Yrs. To Pay GENERAL CONTRACTORS . Insulation 13. Canepy . 1. Attic Reem 2. Basement Reem 3. Perch Rebuilt ...... 4. Restyled Frent Entrance 5. Add «a Fireplace . 6. Gutters, Dewnspeants. and Flashing . & Renew Cracked Walls .... 9. Windew Repla 10. Shutters. we 11. Bay Windows ........... 1%. Picture Windews ........ Extra Bath 14. Pewder Roem or 15. Replace Old Bath Fixtures 16. Autematic Water vecrcten ed, MET C OO Te 17. Basement Shewer 18 Autematic Dishwashers .. 19. Garbage Disposal Units.. Construction and Building shake-type 800 Sq. Ft. LABOR and MATERIAL APPLIED FHA Terms Take 7 Years to Pay Phone FEderal 3-718 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. DAILY and SUNDAY ——_ Fifty Easy Ways to a “Better Home” Per Mo. Per Me. Per Mo. ceeceess CFR.08 26. Built-In Cooking Tep 35. Damppreofing ..... veve0 ESS ee aleieeniels 16.00 and Oven ................ $12.0 36. Black Tep Drives ........ 10.00 30.00 21. Ventilating Fans— Kitchen 37. Chain Line Fences and 24.00 end Altie ..5...1.6 coee 6.00 GOCGR sac kanescesey es oe 12.00 26.00 22. Lighted Medicine 38. Roef Ventilators . -» 4,00 Cablmets iii sesicscccesecs 2.00 39. Combination Sterm and . 6.00 23. Closet Fronts a BOLGOR) ce cec tes css sooo 20.00 6.00 Built-In Wardrobes . 10.00 40. Jalousie Windows ..... .. 28.00 8.00 24. Exciting, New Kitchen 41. Ornamental Iron Ralls ... 6.00 10.00 [ 34.00 42. Metal Canopies .......... 14.00 . 2,00 75. Plastic Wall Tile ....... 6.00 43. Plastered Arches ........ 4.00 14.00 26. Ceramic Wall Tile. Counter 44. Weed Paneled Recreation 8.00 Teps and Fleers ......... 12.00 MOON is kkisitesisescescs 0% 4.00 27. New Fleer Coverings .... 8.00 ° 45. Heating Conversions— 00 28. Formica Counter Tops ... 6.00 ON 00 GOO ciiiccciscceus 18.00 29. Breakfast Bars .......... 10.06 48, Painting and Decorating 22.00 30. Inside Stairs ........04:. 10.00 47. Correct Faulty Wiring ... 18.00 neve begeeee 18.00 31. Cement Stoeps— 48. Automatic Washers Cencrete Floors ......... 18.00 and Mryers .............. 16.00 tiscces OO 32. Overhead Garage Doors .. 10.00 49. Tuckpointing and Building am oeie oo 4 pl gee Roofing .....12.00 COOBUIBE Ceciiccsccscesacss 24: \ xterier Sidewall 5O. Stucce Repairs .....-cess ‘ Coveritigs) (\.cscesccccsces 30.00 . = Company PHONE FE 3-7181 SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 — Nothing Finer Built! JANITROL HEATING EQUIPMENT Call for FREE Heating Survey and Estimate Today OTTO A. TRZOS CO. 3103 Orchard Lake Road , Keego Harbor FE 2-0278 S A Gal. Given away... this 4” nylon brush! Yours af ne charge when yeu bey 4 gal- leas of Acme Quality Exterior House Paint Here’s a great value for you. This top- pure-nylon bristle paint brush free at no extra cost with the purchase of of Acme Quality House Mame Quality House Paint (New Ere). Available in | outside white end regu- lar colors. quality, Paint. Coat Outside (New ey is avai in’a wide range of colors. It’s especiall made to protect your house i ? cold or wet weather. Resists smoke, fume and mildew .. . is self-cleaning and a cinch to apply . . . a national favorite for over 65 years. Acme Quality One Coat Outside White comes in white only. Don’t miss out! Our brush supply won’t ew Era), or Acme ity One White. Quality Worth at least $4.50 anywhere, it’s a full 4” wide to make that painting job you're planning go faster. As for Acme Quality ior House Paints . well, re real values by in outside white or against hot, last long. Come to our store now; order 4 lors gallons of Acme Quality House Paint in in Most White or in the color you prefer . . . and Co take home the brush with our compliments. Keego Hardware Warehouse Elmer Boadway—Ralph Shell Proprietors 20 Osmun St. FE 2-6506 | Communities Are Urged : to Concentrate on Industry Local zoning boards and subdivision developers who confine their attention to protecting residential areas may be doing a disservice to their communities, according to Land Institute, Washington, D. C. Walter S. Schmidt of the Urban Schmidt is chairman of the Institute's industrial council. “Even designed exclusively for high-in- come families require convenient shopping districts and every com- munity, regardless of the average income level, needs appropriate commercial and industrial estab- lishments to help share the tax burden and provide convenient places of employment,” he said. “Industry need not be an ob- jectionable land use. It is a de- sirable and necessary use. Com- munities should zone for indus- try, not against it. “In many communities where | any kind of manufacturing estab- lishment has been excluded by zoning regulations, home owners are finding the tax burden rising beyond their’ means. “After making a study of San Mateo County, Calif., a fine resi- dential community south of San Francisco, the industrial council advised civic leaders to zone a| considerable acreage of available land for commercial and industrial use so as to protect it from resi- dential encroachment which might deprive the area of any hope of | challenge to one’s abiilty as a diversified land use. “There is no reason why prop- erly selected and regulated light manufacturing and commercial establishments can not exist side by side with attractive housing developments, provided they are carefully designed. Nuisances such as objectionable FUEL SAVINGS UP TO 50% OWNERS REPORT OIL HEAT BOILERS — FURNACES GENERAL @ ELECTRIC Terms Available HARNECK HEATING 2615 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 2-2530 HAAN ft NAVAL ALAA A hl ih ogame AAA A ii fait itt ff | 1 mT 25 : Fé, | _ OIL FIRED - “NO DOWN BOILERS Pontiac Store 371 Voorheis CONVERSION | RE PReccgunh ” OIL anenenenyr “e* 7 3 FPGAS : Rd. iL - DISCOUNT ” to All-G.M. Employees on General Motors Delco Heat Products—For a Limited Time Only at O’Brien Heating and Supply. BUY NOW AND SAVE! WATER HEATERS PAYMENT —— 36 MONTHS TO ~ CONDITIONAIR FURNACES OIL AMIN AE ee TE O'BRIEN HEATING sipri, Authorized Oakland County Distributor Drayton Plains Store 4696 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9501 Lele Hi? those residential areas+ odors, smoke, noise, congestion 3 and unsightliness can be avoided | with proper planning and super- iron. Wooden Cellar Partitions Save Ordinary Pine Lumber Suitable for Separating 78 POPULAR FENCES vision cation and public safety.” Basement Play Room Excifing One’s Imagination Can Run Riot in Decor Plan | for Fun Space | decorator, it is a basement recrea- tion room, Given several drab walls, tiny | and too-high windows, and a gen- eral air of gloom, what’s a woman to do to create a charming room? It's wise to start with an idea. Sit in the middle of the floor on a nail keg and let your imagination go to work. Will the room be nautical? Rustic? Spanish? Rancho? Gay Nineties? F. Scott Fitzgerald era, or befitting the John Held dr. period? Anything .goes, so long as you like it and it won't be a burden to keep in trim. There are several basic prin- ciples to follow: Give the room color; make it easy to keep clean; let there be light; and be sure the furnishings can ‘‘take it.’ One sure way to serve both the color and cleanliness rules is to use material like tile wherever it naturally fits in, such as on the floor, benches, snack table or bar, and the little adjoining bath. We can't urge an extra bath too strongly. Just . bowl, toilet, a tiled shower stali will do, and what a boon to games-happy youngsters! There is a wide; variety of natural and man-made materials for both upholstery and draper- jes, and these both wear well and clean well with little effort. If the windows are, as -we hint- |ed, ’way up there, let the draperies |extend at either side and below | to give the illusion of greater size | and depth. Install fluorescent lighting. It’s ‘easy on the pocketbook and really | illuminates the room. Remember, there is nothing wrong with natural woods in furni- ture, nor with versatile wrought Both require very little up- keep. One way to dispose of attic- cluttering heirlooms is to drag ation room for decorative effects. Great Grandpa, in his gilt frame, would look right well in a Gay Nineties background. i i i ih Camphor, Lime Help Combat Dampness Dampness in closets often can be combatted with a cheesecloth bag of camphor hung in the closet. For dampness in a basement a large open box of fresh lime often does the job. The lime is changed as soon as it becomes air-slaked. “In view of the high cost of providing needed municipal ser- vices, any residential community which does not receive a substan- tial percentage of its tax revenues from non-residential uses either must tax its home owners at a prohibitive rate or else fail to maintain proper standards of edu- | If ever anything presented a them down to the basement recre- | Coal Bin, Furnace Ordinary lumber is usually used for basement partitions at con- siderable savings in cost. PAT TERN 386 An attractive well-built fence is again becoming a popular feature of the modern home. Just as we | all want our house to be different | or furnace room No. 4 common from all the others in the neigh- borhood so do we like to have an individual style of fence. The pattern sketched above con- | tains 18 different styles with gates to match. They not only vary in| design but also in cost of mate- rial and labor. Send for the pat- tern and select the fence and gate that harmonizes with your home and its surroundings. Retail lumber dealers usually have Cutting diagrams are given on | Wide selection available in panel- the pattern for each design with,| "8 stock. directions for erecting. Ask for | | Pattern 386. The price is 25 cents | Roughen Concrete Before Repairing | postpaid. Add 2 cents for first) | Class mail or 5 cents for air mail | which saves several days. All or- |ders mailed the day received. To patch concrete or to repair |cracks, roughen the old surface |and clean off all loose particles. Use a cold chisel to open a crack Write to Workshop, Pontiac Daily sufficiently so the new mortar can Press. lag packed in. The under part of 'the crack should be cut at least as | wide as the opening in the surface | to allow the patch to lock. walls. A laundry or workroom may look better with No. 3 Common boards run to pattern and finished with shellac, varnish or lacquer. For a recreation room or party room, you'll want a better finish. ' ‘Floor Covering Usually Stays; Watch Choice Select your flooring with oare. Slip covers and draperies can | be changed easily and without major expense, but your flooring will be around for a long time. With the current emphasis on vent it from absorbing water from prevent crumbling. polishing floors, it’s a good idea to examine closely the wide range of hard-surface flooring available. In addition to the many beauti- ful woods, you'll find a variety of lovely colors and patterns in rubber and asphalt tile, linoleum brick, concrete, cork and vinyl plastic. The luster of such surfaces can be accentuated by scatter rugs strategically placed throughout the house Select patterns that reflect your personality. Hard-surfaced floors also make housekeeping easier. An occasion- al, waxing and a daily dusting with |an untreated mop will keep them | gleaming and well protected. Plywood Is Useful in Home Carpentry Thinking of doing some remodel- ing inside your home? If so, don’t overlook the advantage found in plywood which is strong, light-| weight, economical and attractive. Plywood wall paneling, faced, with an attractive hardwood ve-| neer, will add warmth and beauty to any room. It can be selected | from a variety of woods to blend tastefully with your furnishings. | The veneer is tough and resis- | tant to ordinary damage. It’s easy to maintain, too. An occasional waxing will bring out the beauty of the grain and impart a mellow, sheen to the entire room. WHO'S YOUR ROOFER? We Do All Kinds of @ ROOFING @ ROOF REPAIRS @ ROOF COATING Phene FE 2-307) 853 N. Cass Established 1918 Get Am Estimate Withest Obdligstion HUGUS-MARSH ROOFING & INSULATION CO. INSTALL ARMSTRONG'S AUTOMATIC OIL HEATING Armstrong's oew automatic of}- fired heating unit ts designed to save space while giving maximum efficiency. Can be converted te gas at any time Ink Spots Disappear With Skimmed Milk Ink stains often can be removed | from carpets with skimmed milk. | Ink removers used for writing | paper are bleaches. Ink stains on wallpaper often re- spond to a half-and-half mixture |of hydrogen peroxide and house- ' hold ammonia. j WAYNE Beating and Alr Conditioning Ce rE 4-108 OLive %-621) 89? Oreharé Lake 6273 N. Main Rech : Get Our Price! pine boards are acceptable for | | | | Moisten the old concrete to pre- | the patch. Keep the patch damp | for several days to cure it well and | Good Roofing Mixture Fixes Up Old Shingles A wood shingle roof that has too many leaks for individual patching can be made to last several years longer by coating it with a good roofing compound of asphalt and asbestos fibers. Nail down all loose shingles first and split, flatten and nail curled shingles. The compound successfully fills holes and cracks. Let us show you how much imore we oo | build into your garage for a completed For partitioning off a coal bin) jy price! CALL TODAY! Single Car-‘n'-Half Double NG .....00. DARING . ey soocuim st WEWANG 2 bine Fesaestt feck. Outside House Paint 65 CHOICE of WHITE or GREEN Dutch Boy *6".. BROWN BROS. 4 North Saginaw St. FE 2-4242 Windows can be kept sliding | easily in freezing weather by rub- bing the grooves with a cloth | dipped in paraffin. a If Your Furnace is 11 G-E OIL “ATOMIZATION” CAN SAVE YOU FUEL DOLLARS! _ GAS PAY “ye ~~ es GAS * et AND EAM A RA oil. Droplets burn from outside in —leaving unburned “core” which forms black carbon. Re- sult! Wasted fuel; soot, and oil smell. Ordinary method of bernia PS: SPER: OIL FURNACE © For warm air heating systems SBR: Ae GIO DP yu? et, ee Years Old — Or More... a GE complete method —shatters each drop of oil into millions of particles. Each particle burns com- pletely. Result! Fuel sav- ings and a cleaner home. # Heating and Sheet Metal Contractor 351 N. Paddock Street oe oe Call FE 5-6973 for FREE Home Heating Survey ee ee FE 5-6973 ‘ 4 Before You Order Your GARAGE Be Sure to Get Our Price and Specifications "ASPHALT PAVING Driveways Parking Areas FE 2-1211 FREE ESTIMATES . . . Our representotive will call at your convenience — no obligation. G & W Construction Co. 2010 Dixie Hwy. et Kennett Rd. uWeawecr Pontiac, Mich. A > ee SEVEN'TEEN Rubber tile should be polished only with special wax made for this floor covering. Grease and oil disintegrates rubber. Congratulations Thelma Elwood Electrical Work by REX 6. ROSE Electrical Contractor Residential and Commercial Wiring 1780 Revere OR lando 3-7056 Home Driers Cut Wash-Day Minutes The sale of clothes dryers is booming. New owners are the best “boost- ers’ of this modern boon to housewives, as they find that it is at least fifteen times as fast as the clothesline and that it eliminates all the drudgery associated with outdoor drying, besides. Saves money too, as fewer washable clothes and household white goods are required, with a clothes dryer to restore everything to use quickly. It takes only 15 minutes to damp-dry and 30 min- utes to fluff-dry clothes, cutting |down ‘‘wash-day’’ to little more | than an‘hour, from start to fin- ish. THELMA 545 S. Telegraph OUR SINCERE CONGRATULATIONS and BEST WISHES to BOICE BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES ELWOOD FE 5-8186 The F. J. Best Wishes to Thelma M. Elwood | In Her New Office All Lumber and Hardware Supplied by 151 OAKLAND AVE. | | | | | | Poole Co. | Thelma On Your New 436 Orchard Lake Ave. Congratulations INSIDE AND OUTSIDE PAINT FURNISHED BY Oakland Fuel & Paint Co. Elwood Office Building FE 5-6150 ALL-WOMEN REALTOR’S OFFICE—Mrs. Thelma | homelike offices. As part of a five-room home plan Elwood of 5143 Cass Elizabeth road provides the |that can be converted if no longer needed as an woman’s touch from her main office on down through | office, this reception room is a large contemporary her entire staff. Employing only women sales |living room in turquoise and chartreuse with a brick personnel, Mrs. Elwood has just A woman is a “natural’’ for selling real estate says Thelma Elwood of 5143 Cass Elizabeth Rd., Waterford Township. Reportedly the only all-woman firm in the state of Michigan, Mrs. Elwood’s staff of eight full- time and three part-time sales persons are all homemakers. “Who should know any more about a house than a woman who operates it?’’ queries Mrs. El- wood when people question the absence of the male on her staff, The real estate business beck- oned Mrs. Elwood for the first time in 1941. “I was appalled to find that families with children were having so much difficulty finding a place to live, We started the Cass Eliza- beth apartments four miles west of Pontiac in that year to help provide this type of country living for family groups and thus began my interest in real estate," she, recalls. Today Mrs. Elwood trains her own saleswomen, She has en- rolled in several of the real es- tate science courses herself and takes the knowhow back to her own staff. Believing that a _ firm's is most often the office, Mrs. Elwood has just completed a color- Congratulations ‘Loose Mortar Joints Can Admit Moisture Inspect exterior walls for signs first | contact with the potential customer THELMA ELWOOD, On Completion of Her New Building and We're Also Proud of the Expert Plumbing Installation. H. H. Smart Division Oakland Ave. FE 4.4567 Lawrence Fleischman, Inc. ‘of weather wear and tear. If your outer walls are masonry check for jcracks, loose mortar joints, or broken bricks and blocks that can |admit moisture. | Look for efflorescence, the whit- lish blotches that indicate moisture |in the wall. | If yours is a frame house, check | the siding for split, loose or de- | cayed boards. Paint blisters usually |mean moisture in the wood. |can be destroyed by moisture in | walls, nails can rust and structural | timbers can rot. | The value of fibrous insulation | opened her new | fireplace. All-Woman Team Is Basis Heating P tor Successful Realty Firm ful and homelike business head- quarters on Cass Elizabeth. The exterior not only boasts of a contemporary home design, but the reception room is a large turquoise and chartreuse living room with brick fireplace. Bright chintz draperies and comfortable leather - upholstered furnishings provide the customer with ..n atmosphere conducive to buying. Even the love bird in his spar- kling white cage adds a friendly and homelike touch. Handling all types of listings from lake homes to farm property, Mrs. Elwood frankly admits that farms are a. little more difficult for the woman to sell with ques- tions on soil tests and land con- tours. Specialization is each sales- woman's goal on Mrs, Elwood’s staff. “One woman wants to learn all she can about lake property; an- other studies the suburban home and still another has gone into all phases of business property,”’ she said. Mrs. Elwood is a member of the Pontiac Real Estate Association, the Michigan and the National As- | sociations. Insect Damage Checks Save Home Repairs Subterranean termites make mil- lions of dollars of home repairs necessary every year. Check foundation walls regular- ly to see that no wood is in contact with the ground and that no twig- like clay tubes have been built up from the ground either on the inside or outside of foundations. Keep all cracks in foundations re- paired. The subterranean termite needs a constant supply of moisture from the ground. Breaking that connection is a big step in pre- venting termite damage. Carson City was made the capi- tal city of Nevada in 1861, and | today is the nation’s smallest cap- |ital in population. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 Expanded Metal Right’ at Home Lacework Designs Now Protects and Beautifies Screens, Table Tops Expanded metal, a prime factor in the reinforcing of highways and building construction a half-century ago, has moved into the home to provide unhackneyed ‘‘high-style’’ notes. The lacy-patterned mesh-effect currently employed for screens, for tops of coffee tables — even for trays — traces its origin to John F. Golding, American man- ufacturer in England 50 years ago. Brought to this contry, the metal attained decorative beauty through the use of speeralfvéd machinery and has been given a multiplicity of uses far beyond and away from its original employment in con- struction. The current interest in expanded metal in the home, manufacturers point out, is part of the ‘trend to- ward lightness and airiness .+ doors. Literally possessing the ‘‘strength of iron’, the seeming lightness ants Major Utility Many Old Furnaces Are Replaced in Homes More Antiquated Don’t feel that you are an ex- ception if you need a new heating plant. Far more heating plants are in- stalled every year in older houses than are ordered in the biggest building booms for new houses. Aside from natural tear, antiquated heating plants be- come economic liabilities. So many improvements have been made in this field, increas- ing efficiency and lower fuel consumption, that older heating plants eventually become expen- sive luxuries to maintain. Of all the oil burners manufac- tured and sold last year, 62.7 per cent went into older houses as re- placements. The proportion of gas burners for central heating that went into older houses was 67.9 per cent. And still it was a year in which the building industry set a record with more than 1,300,000 new homes built. . This is natural, when you real- ize that your home is just one among 45,875,000 single family, fully detached dwellings, counted by the Census Bureau. The Coleman Heafing Institute of Wichita, Kans., figures that 28,535,000 of those ‘homes are 20 years or more old and are heat- ed with equipment that is equally as old. This takes into account annual installations of new heating plants and allows for one per cent of all dwellings becoming uninhabitable | or demolished each year. Nothing seems to last forever. | Expensive, but Nice | For its size, a bathroom is one | of the most expensive rooms in a:| house. That’s why, nationally, one | out of every three houses has no! bathroom. Yet money spent on a} bathroom is the most rewarding of | all in long-term satisfaction. ty 3 ’ ¥ 994 BX be . soe ie : ave é THELMA M. ELWOOD FERN O'DELL y: , a 4 F a MARJORIE RANDALL THELMA M. ELWOOD realtor A\NNoUNCES THE OPENING OF HER NEW OFFICE 2143 Cass Elizabeth Road FE 5-1284 FE 4-3844 his home. the most time in the home. chase of a home. Who knows her wishes better than another woman? why Thelma E]wood’s staff of experienced salesladies consistently offer the real estate customer faster service and more satisfaction in the purchase or sale of Introducing Our All-Women Staff: One of the most unique and outstanding features of Thelma M. Elwood’s Real Estate Office is the fact that the salesforce is entirely feminine. Our customers benefit from this distinct advantage; in most families it is the woman who spends Her wishes should be considered first in the pur- That’s iw eR ag: nica aes o— i 5 FM i Non ey yy ee F ~ : ~~ » ETHEL MASLONICK Ey ec a a ANN STAFFORD + ae LOIS BONNEAU wear and| 'of expanded metal makes it adaptable for many refreshingly attractive furniture pieces. Painted Walt Cleaning Done in 3 Easy Steps Painted walls can be cleaned by dusting with soft cloths, soft hair wall brush, or lambs wool brush. Wash with heavy suds of mild soap | flakes, from top down. Rinse with fresh supplies of clean warm water and sponge. Wipe dry. Flush—All Sizes peeSPECIAL BUYS==™ 2-6 & Under $9775 Mahogany Have Wide Selection of BIRCH DOORS MERCER FLUSH DOOR SALES 256 Wellsboro Walled Lake MArket 4-2222 Commercial and Industrial Wiring Specialists | Electrical Contracting | Fluorescent Lighting | BALLARD i ELECTRIC 543 S. Paddock St. FEderal 4-4201 Pontiac, Mich. [ poors | Add to the Value of Your Home . .. and add to your family’s enjoyment, by finishing your attic, recreation room or add- ing a room. It will cost less than you think, and you will be more than repaid in the added value of your home. Be Comfortable Save on Fuel This Winter! INSULATE == We have all types of insulation and will gladly advise the type suitable for your needs. We Will Gladly Estimate Your Remodeling Costs! BURKE LUMBER CO. Drayton Plains on the Dixie ORlando 3-1211 Complete Basement Waterproofing BLOCK BUILDINGS WEATHERPROOFED RELIABLE WATERPROOFING CO. 24 Whitfield Phone FE 4-0777 All Work Guaranteed—Free Estiates White Pine COMBINATION — poors Bronze Screen Wire 4 or 8 Lite Storm Sash 2'-6"x6'-8” 3] 80 Ea. 2'-8"'x6'/-8/ 3] §*° Ea. 3'-0"'x6'-8" 3] 933 Ea. - ---- Three-bedroom brick, with two baths, garage. The large living room 14'4”x23’, is entered by a vestibule. There is a separate dining room and kitchen with birch cabinets, Formica counter tops, divided sink and garbage disposal. The living room has a fireplace and large windows, that make the most of the picturesque view. | Charming New Ranch Home ---On Scenic Franklin Road Located 44 Mile South of West Long Lake Road, 3; Mile North of Lone Pine Road, at 4275 Franklin Road. Looking out upon beautiful hills and orchards, this modern home, just completed, offers one of the finest views of the surrounding country- side. Conveniently located in the Vaughan School district with school bus facilities—'4, mile from Kirk-in-the-Hills. full basement and a two-car Beautifully decorated interior, completely finished exterior. Aluminum storms and screens included; landscaping and lawn completed. $15,500 down; excellent mortgage and terms. Open Saturday and Sunday, | to 6 p.m., and any time by appointment. HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY CORPORATION Branch Office. W. Long Lake at Telegraph Roads Phone Midwest 4-7422 Detroit Office 4th Floor, Washington Blvd. Bldg. Phone WOodward 3-4816 __ EIGHTEEN Chimney soot can be kept down by sprinkling saltpeter on a fire once a month. Soap, Starch, Salt Helps Remove Mildew Te Buy or Sell Real Estate, see: BATEMAN and KAMPSEN REALTY COMPANY 329 East Pike Street FE 4-0528 strong laundry soap, covered with powdered starch and salt and ex- posed to the sun. Soaking with sour milk for sev- eral hours and then exposure to the sun without rinsing is another remedy. “Ask About the MARTIN-SENOUR MONARCH TWO-PRODUCT SYSTEM The primer for Sealing, hiding and priming. The Finish Coat for protection Dependable Protection Lasting Beauty Proved Economy Stop in and See the New Colors in Exterior Senour Paints Albert B. Lowrie Lumber Co. Baldwin Ave, at Walton Blvd. FE 2-9104 and Interior Martin Mildew can be removed with! , Chimney Climb Requires Safety Scaffold Can Be Built If Repairs Necessary on All Sides | Attaching a television mast to |a chimney, or making any repairs } around a chimney, calls for extra safety precautions. If the work is confined to one side of the chimney, safety hooks attached to a ladder to secure it over the ridge of the roof may suffice. Hf masonry work is required | on all sides of the chimney, a ' simple safety scaffold can be built, | A quick way to adapt a ladder to roof use is to screw or bolt pieces of 2x4s near the top end of the ladder at right angles, or at the angle of the roof pitch. These should be attached far enough from the end of the lad- der to allow space for braces. A working ‘scaffold can be built | out of 1x8 lumber hook over the ridge with braces similar to those | used on the ladder. | One board extends down the roof ibs each side of the chimney and | they are joined by cross members | se rving as steps above and be- low the chimney. KEASEY ELECTRIC Electrical Contractor Appliance—Fixtures Drayten Plains Mich. Phone OR 3-2601-OR 3-1483 4494 Dixie Highway ASPHALT PAVEMENTS FOR PARKING AREA! MA 5-460]. Phone MA 5-4601 A fast economical way to solve the insistent demand for off street parking. Call Ann Arbor Construction for free estimate. Phone Ann Arbor Construction Co. ‘ THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29. 1953 LSPS aa ~ TL. | hb TT THI ‘ , | | | | erent ST =n . and counter effect in a bathroom. In this bath, the decorator | achieved dramatic effect by limiting the colors to | | two and by using the same shade and pattern of | but Keep Scheme Simple | i > ’ the > : . | Don't overlook the bathroom in | No decorating scheme is com- | | plete unless that room has_re- your fall decorating plans OPEN Daily and Sunday 2-7 Located in Beautiful HURON A Controlled Residential —wwwvrvvvvvvyvvvvvvwvvvvvvvvvvvvVvvVeeVee eee eevee Subdivision WOODS Attractive 3-Bedroom Home Nearing Completion Large Living Room — Natural Fireplace Completely Modern DIRECTIONS: Out Commerce Road, right at Union La Overlooks west side of Moery’s Golf Course. Lots Available Adjoining 800 acre recreational area. improved roads, public utilities, lake large sites and low taxes. _future home! 593 North wvvvvvvvrvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvrvVvVvVv Birmingham Good schools, privileges, An ideal location for your FRANK C. NEWELL W oodward Pho ceed the same careful attention as the living room or the bedrooms. | } | | | Peeling paint, a poorly chosen eeonthnent of towels or just gen- eral shabbiness in. a bathroom can iinpression created by other parts of the home. Check bathroom walls = and floors first of all. It is long- range economy to replace worn or water-damaged finishes with a permanent material such as tile, which is moisture-proof and colorfast. Tile comes in more than 200 shudes of basic colors, so that a wide choice of color schemes can | be made Use only one or two colors in the tilework if your bathroom is small. And insist that the caps and trim pieces be the same shade, rather than black, for black trim introduces an_ addi- | tional color unnecessarily. Gray and white are two of the most popular tile colors today, since towels and shower curtains of practically any hue will go with them Avoid bunal shower curtain de- signs, and too much pattern, Often a plain colored curtain that match- es the shade | best’ selection. Too much design in the show- turn ke Road and follow signs. READY MIXED Tile Comes in 200 Shades dining room | destroy in a minute the favorable | of the wall tile is the | . jon it. Linoleum Washing Linoleum that is manufactured with a lacquered finish can be waxed, but waxed linoleum can- not be lacquered. In washing lino- We Have ‘em 6-Inch MALL SAW BLADES Incorporated Crafts 53% Union St. FE 4-5139 leum use only mild soap and as little water as possible. GVO VV VV VV VV VN Largest New Home = for Your Money! MODEL HOME 2314 Middlebelt Rd. Open | to 9 P.M. DIRECTIONS: Orchard Lake Read Middlebelt Read. Watch fer Signs. Mahan Realty Co. Realtor-Builder bea dead ORR beaebeadbaabat 1075 West Huron FE 2-0263 Next te Branch Post Office TILE DOES IT — Too many colors give a “busy’’| waterproof tile both for the floor and for the wall top-dressing color comes from the tile of the other three walls. table above it. Second a * * * er curtain will make a= small bath seem busy. In a bathroom with pastel tile, towels of different colors for each | color Conversely color, with it ltowels of different colors for each | member of the famity — just be sure that each has his own towel | rack Extra racks can be attached to the door, wash basin, over the tiled wain- scot, or if need be over the tile | itself. | If your bathroom already has | too many colors in its finishes, re- | peat one shade for walls over the tilework and the ceiling. Then use a second as the shade for’ towels and accessories. Absorb Paint Odor With Ice in Dishpan Odor of fresh paint in a room can be absorbed with a cake of ice in a dishpan or a pail .of cold water in the’ room, changing the water hourly. An old method of killing the odor in freshly papered rooms 1s to place red hot coals in an iron !container and strew juniper ber- ries on the coals. The room 1s closed for 12 hours, then ventilated. Chromium plating is usually very thin. Never use scouring powder Warm water and mild soap will keep it clean. | flannel. Build it with EONERE ROCK @ SAND @ GRAVEL READY -MIXED CONCRETE Add years Cf life to your barn wih CONCRETE LOWER WALLS! The lower half goes first, but it need’nt condem your born if you reploce it with CONCRETE walls. The cost ts mod- erate for the odded years of life and usefulness it will give ANY AMOUNT, LARGE or SMALL BOICE BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES Member of Detroit and Michigan Concrete Block Association Complete Line of © BRICK 545 South Telegraph Road ne MI 4-0065 * BLOCKS Builders’ Supplies © CONCRETE Phone FE 5-8186 make an excellent contrast. | if the tile is a strong | try towels in pastel shades ! Don't feel that you must have to the side of the , Polish with soft | 922 Pontiac Drive “Nu-Cast” Prefabricated CEMENT STEPS Standard size, 2 treads, 3-ft. steps sq Complete, ready to install yourself! All Other Sizes Available Tru-Bilt Block Co. FE 4-9531 er trip to the moon, you'll take lots of clothing and other personal belongings with you. And it should come home with you. To be safe, better see us for a low cost Personal Effects policy before you leave. But it may not! | Weekend Safari. . .- Austin-Norvell Insurance Agency, Inc. 70 W. Lewrence St. Corner Cass FE 2-9221 bill on eVety gallon. <€ Fa s | PONTIAC PURE HOUSE PAINT SAVE NOW—What better if time than right now to do that outside painting, when you can save a cool dollar ee eee Reg. $5.95 Quality Walnut Lake Hardware Walnut Lake Road Bulman Hardware 3509 Elizabeth Lake Road McKibbon & Child’s 1 Unten Lake Road Knapp's Hardware Walled Lake For Your Convenience PONTIAC PURE OUTSIDE WHITE Will Be Available at the Following Friendly Dealers: Gingell Bros. Gingellville Houghton Wallpaper, Drayten Plains Metamora Elevator Metamora Mick. Paint 17-19 S. Perry St. FONTIAC PAINT MFG. CO. - FE 5-6184 as = #«iO- THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 NINETEEN Hardware — including hinges,|be replaced with solid brass or locks, handles — that rusts should | bronze. a dazzling WHITE... that stays bright! casts thDhi ardsman. SELF-CLEANING | HOUSE PAINT You can always tell Guardsman WHITE — It gives you the WHITEST — brightest home im the block — a. brilliant, sparkling WHITE that’s self-cleaning to help it keep bright for years. Guardsman ‘House Paints are made from the finest pigments money can buy — lead, zinc and titanium! And that means a tougher film, better hiding powers, more brilliance and extra years of weather resistance! Yes, better paint is your best buy, and your best buy is Guardsman! ‘5” DONALDSON LUMBER CO. 270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-8381 VWWiITH BETTER PAINT All materials furnished includ- ing 8 x 7 steel door No Money Down Up to 3 Years to Pay ORTONVILLE LUMBER CO. Ortonville, Mich. OPEN SUNDAYS 10-2. Phone Ortonville 59 To BUY or SELL In Waterford, Clarkston, Drayton = Plains and Sur- perenne sounding Territory WHITE BROS. 5660 Dixie Hwy. Waterford REAL ESTATE OR 3-1872 HY) == In the Privacy of Your | Own Backyard Just get a “HANCOCK SKELE- > TON UNIT” which comes com- plete with cooking and fire- ~ - grates, draft doors, hot-plate, > ete, and build the masonry aa —— around it as simple or elaborate 3 as you like, using our detailed plans. Motorized Barbecue Spits—Baking Ovens Steak Broilers And Other Accessories Available Hancock Outdoor Fireplace units have been in use for over 15 years by both private owners and park departments throughout the country and have given wonderful satisfaction. SEND 10¢ today for Plans “HOW TO BUILD YOUR OUTDOOR FIREPLACE,” containing detailed working drawings with other helpful information—or come in and let us show you our various units ne cooking accessories for the outdoor chef. ~ Hi . Models Priced From 19° HANCOCK IRON WORKS 52 W. Pike Street Pontiac, Mich. Sandpaper With Grain of Wood Working Across Piece Will Only Tear Fibers, Leaves Job Rough By HUBBARD COBB We never realized just how bad things really were. Last week a man sat down and told us that most people don’t know how to breathe. Yesterday another guy told us that most people don't know how to use sandpaper. We don’t agree with the first guy about breathing but we do feel that the character and his sandpaper do have a few good points. This boy tells us the sandpaper is just like any other cutting tool such as a chisel or saw and like these tools it does a lot better when worked with the grain of the wood than against it. Most people, it seems, don’t seem to understand this point. They take a piece of sandpaper and use it like a dishcloth work- ing in 10 different directions all at the same time. This can pro- duce a good many results but none of them will particularly smooth. When you sandpaper in the di- rection of the wood grain you will not only find it more easy buat the sandpaper will do a quicker and smoother job. When you sandpaper across the wood grain the sandpaper just makes the surface more rough by tearing up the wood fibers. This is particularly true of the final sanding operation. Another thing our boy told us is to be sure to wrap the sandpaper around a‘block of wood or & patented sandpaper holder to un- sure getting nice square edges. If you just hold the sandpaper in your hand the edges of the" work are almost sure to come out slight- ly rounded. Synthetic Cloth Requires Care in Laundering The new synthetic fibers from which pratically everything is be- ing manufactured today require extra care in laundering, the Gas Appliance Manufacturers Associa- tion cautions. GAMA’s water heater manufac- turers, who conduct exhaustive ex- periments on all new ‘‘wonder”’ fabrics as fast as they appear on the market, suggest that you use lukewarm water and mild soap and avoid rubbing, wringing and artificial heat, for best results. To make ‘sure that the water is just right, set the temperature adjustment dial found on all mod- ern gas water heaters at 90 to 105 degrees, GAMA advises. With so many mixed fibers in use, the most important laundering rule is to look for the label and follow the manufacturer’s instructions. In the absence of any label, ‘go easy” and treat any ‘‘strange”’ washable fabric as you would the most delicate and fragile bit of fine lace. Paint Your Awnings With Thin Solution . Awnings can be painted when they fade. Ordinary house paint is thinned with one quart of turpentine to the gallon. Paint should go through the cloth. Another method: dissolve a fourth-pound of beeswax and one pound of zinc oxide in turpen- tine, adding a teaspoon of soft soap solution. Rub into the fabric, scrape off surplus dry and then paint. Have Experienced, Trained Men VACUUM CLEAN YOUR FURNACE GAS FURNACES by Mueller Clima-tro) MOERY’S OIL BURNER 2212 Maddy Lane, Keego—FE 2-4970 BLACKWOOD. SCHAEFER Complete Real Estate FE 2-4638 975 BALDWIN. BANISH RUSTY WATER MICROMET @ Micromet prevents rusty water @ Micromet controls corrosion (rust) @ Micromet prevents lime scale @ Micromet helps maintain water softener capacity @ Micromet saves you money @ Micromet is packed in three convenient sizes ant. a ss You'll appreciate Micromet If you have your own well... be- cause Micromet keeps water clear, sparkling, appetizing . . . and not only keeps sinks and tubs free of red stains, but saves your linens from becoming stained from RED, RUSTY WATER. SEE US FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS! F. J. TEMPLE & SONS 462 N. PERRY ST. Use Our Convenient Payment Plan! FE 2-7055 TEENAGERS—One of the simplest ways to keep track to teenagers is to provide them with a place to entertain. A backyard patio with plenty of room for jitterbugging is an ideal solution, especially if it is floodlighted like the one pictured above. Notice how light from indoors supplements the floodlighting under the eaves. Outdoor light- ing specialists point out that a pair of 150-watt projector spotlights in out-door-type sockets will generously light an average size patio. For party effects try a pair of color reflector lamps in pink and blue white. Be sure these bulbs are used in protected areas, however. Early Coloni al Furniture Made for Small Rooms Perhaps you think the problem of small rooms is a new one! De- spite the fact that many new homes have small rooms with compact floor plans, this is not a new problem. If you have ever looked at some of the original Colonial houses in New England or browsed through some of the old homes of Philadel- Wood Windows Offer Variety With Modern Design, They Fit Functionally Into All Homes The old fashioned window with its lace curtain was mighty good for peeking out of—better than today’s picture window. But other- wise its functional design has been greatly improved. Modern wood windows offer all the sturdy durability of those of yesteryear but they also have the advantage of modern design and engineering feature. Windows are styled and placed today to admit more sunlight and air, to give better space plan- ning and provide for good ar- rangement of furniture. Their function may be to give privacy in some rooms or to “go all out- doors’”’ in the other rooms. If they are of wood, there are still other performance features. Wood sash is a natural insulator and assists in keeping the house warm in winter and cool in sum- mer. Associated with this property —the slowness with which wood transmits house heat to the out- side in winter—is the fact that wood sash and frames are relative- ly free from sweating and con- densation which deface paint and trim and can damage draperies, wall covering and floor. Today’s wood windows have simplified operation and effective weather stripping, representing many new types of product de- sign. Yet, builders and home own- ers feel especially friendly to wood sash because of one of the oldest recognized advantages of the ma- terial—its workability. phia or any other city for that matter, you will find that these homemakers faced the same prob- lems. . There may not have been pic- ture windows, or compact L shaped living room dining room arrangements to tax the ingenuity, but the small square rooms presented similar prob- lems in room arrangement for the Colonial homemaker. That is why Early American furniture fits so perfectly into to- day’s homes, combining the charm of the past with the practicality of the present. To make American Traditional even more adaptable to present day needs, there have been added modern adaptations of the old de- signs that should fill the home- maker’s every need for informal living. Imaginé the warm knotty pine wood, the informal styling of the Woodbury panel’ headboard with its carved poster, combined with the modern idea of a convertible sofa-bed. There you have the American Traditional sleep sofa, designed to preserve the Early American styl- ing and still add that extra guest bed when needed. Deep soft bol- sters make the sleep sofa a com- fortable seat. Bolsters remove to form a single bed 32 inches wide and 76 inches long. In bedroom furniture, there has been added a-utility headboard bed that provides storage space. This headboard has an open gallery with two spacious shelves and two shallow drawers. The gallery across the headboard is boldly carved in keeping with Early American styl- ing. Most of the other designs in the collection come from another period, from another day, to grace the modern home. The pleasing captain’s chair, origi- nally used on shipboard with a wide angle leg spread and rugged construction, is as suitable to to- day’s home as it was suited for its original use. The butterfly drop-leaf table, a Colonia] adaptation of the English styled gateleg table, is also an adaptable piece of furniture for modern living. Eye Loose Hinges Zinc roof gutters and flashing | no paint. This is the metal used found on some older houses require | for galvanizing iron. lf Doors Sticking Examine all doors and windows, screens and storm sash. Loose hinges can cause doors to bind. Sticking doors can loosen wood- work and cause accidents. Windows that stick often result in broken panes when force is applied to open or close them. Broken putty around window panes can allow beating rains to leak through or cause sash to rot. Inspect the paint on frames and sash especially where exposed to BLACK TOP @ DRIVEWAYS © PARKING AREAS FREE ESTIMATES—EASY TERMS G & ASPHALT PAVING CO. the weather. Keep spaces around window and door frames tightly calked to exclude dampnes and cold. Paint prolongs the life of screens, eRELQoT® Ne ° Electrical Contractor @ WIRING @ FIXTURES @ POWER INSTALLATION See Our Complete Line of FIXTURES and WIRING SUPPLIES 845 W. Huron FE 2-3924 or FE 4-6405 REFRIGERATION - SERVICE All Types—All Makes Commercial and Residential DAY OR NIGHT SERVICE Frigidaire Commercial Dealer MASON REFRIGERATION FE 2-6400 461 Elizabeth Lake Road 2010 Dixie Hwy. FE 2-2227 A STEP IN BEAUTY.... C a Nya vor wewr cou our eee vrew- Sen Cure No Sections to be Forced apart by Frost or Settling. Eliminates waiting— slipping—costly upkeep. Sizes to Meet Your Needs! Up te 21 Sq. Ft. of Platform Space FREE ESTIMATES We Deliver Anywhere! Concrete Step Co. 5368 Dixie Highway Ph. OR 3-7715 hills. to subdivision 1090 Lone. Pine. Rd... LONE PINE VILLAGE = There are still several choice home sites available in this exclusive development of 64 acres of gentle rolling An exclusive subdivision devoted to the construction of three and four bedroom homes with all modern con- veniences from $25,000 up. Our plans or yours. Just a few minutes from downtown Pontiac, entrance Telegraph Road or 234 miles west of Woodward. Fully completed models open SUNDAY Noon to8 P.M. DAILY 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. STYLE-RITE HOMES, INC. from Lone Pine Road, 400 feet east of MI .4-0023 .and. MI .6-0533 “ese @# @ @ @ 3 * Road (US-24), onfemporary ke 657 Stal lowbrook Watch for signs. Visit Beautiful DEVON HILLS SUBDIVISION Open Daily and Sunday 2:00 to 8:00 P. M. KINZLER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Custom Contemporary and Ranch Homes 670 West Huron Street LUMBER and BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES FURNISHED by THE F. J. POOLE CO.—PONTIAC Drive Located three blocks north of Long Lake Road, just East off Telegraph IVING @ Three @ Thermopane Bedrooms Window Walls © Mengel @ Finished Royalwood Tih Cabinets wo-Car Garage ®@ Studio Living @ Storage Room Room @ L-Shaped Living- @ 32 Foot Dining Area Overhang @ Separate @ Lots Average Activities Room 120 Ft. by 250 Ft. @ Exterior—Brick and Cedar Shingles @ Each Home Architecturally Planned for Community @ No Substitute for the Finest in Workman- ship and Quality Materials Priced From *20, 900” $6500 Down Payments $115.00 Includes Taxes and Insurance at 5% Interest FE 5-3109 or FE 4-3525 aa ONE OU OP Seti (_ ie a —_ _ REDE — _ _—_ ae OO THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 enta, mauve and turquoise the new House Centipede Sleek Furniture Fabrics|™ TIME 1S RIGHT...PRICE IS RIGHT! ic the time - F. J. Poole Co. 151 Oakland Lonely Creature The hundred-legger, or house centipede, feeds on other insects and therefore can be beneficial. Only their appearance is obnox- jous, especially to women. These insects breed in dark places, so that a thorough clean- ing of cellar corners often is enough to get rid of them. They rarely infest a house in any numbers. Killing them indi- vidually is an adequate control. FE 4-1594 +o do it with FIR PLYWOOD ANY around-the-house build- ing job is easier with fir ply- wood. Big, light, wood panels are simple to handle—save time and work. Now’s the time to get the jobs done—anything from simple shelf to complete attic or basement remodeling. Cee your lureber dealer today He has NEW PLANS for you Get Yours at... M. A. Benson 549 N. Saginaw FE 4-2521 Big, light. strong panels of fir plywood make anything 4asier to build! Get your plywood here— for building .. remodeling .,. homecraft projects. nave lots of plywood ' We new fir plans — for built- ins, outdoor storage units, boats, farm buildings, furniture. Booklets on remodel- ing, too! Corwin Lumber 117 S. Cass FE 2-8386 THE TIME TO PLAN YOUR DRIVEWAY is NOW! Save Future Expense and Trouble by Building NOW! Phone MAple 5-4601 for Free Estimate! ANN ARBOR CONSTRUCTION CO. CLARKSTON 1 Asphalt SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY Shi i A Story ae AY ] ~ REGULAR 215-1B. HEAVY ASPHALT SHINGLES Extra protection against weather and fire! True cut 3-in-] makes them easy to lay yourself. You see this quality advertised $7.95 so buy now and save! BUY NOW! TERMS ARRANGED! Co.nbination Doors 2°6'x6’x8” first qual- ity doors. Select kiln dried doors. Storm window and_= screen pane! included 2” Insulation Fibreglass or roll or batts. Rockwool, 4% 5: "Sueune 110 Here's Another Buy! $ 2.9 5 Ea. 500 Foot Rolls of If you are building a home, drive out to ROLL FELT Burmeister’s and save up to $500 on all materials BURMEISTER’S ORTHE LUMBER COMPANY Wholesale or Retail 8197 Cooley Lake Road EM 3-4650 and EM 3-3996 Open Sundays 10 ‘til 2—Weekdays 8 to 8 Men's Tie Rack Simple to Build Ensemble, Attractively Painted, Fits on Door of Clothes Closet A home craftsman finds it easy to make the handy necktie rack sketched here for the back of a closet door. He can exercise in- genuity by adding branches to the four necktie ladders illustrated and by painting them to correspond with the color of ties. For the average size panel door, four of the ladders can be spaced evenly. Each is 3’ wide. The ladders are simply pieces of hardboard, 3/16’’ or %"’ tempered pressed wood, into which are sawn 1”’ kerfs. The kerfs may be made with a dado saw or by cutting two close kerfs with a small-bladed key- hole saw and then chipping out the one end with a small chisel. Screw the ladders, after the front edges have been ‘‘eased’’ with a sandblock or file, to two wooden crosspieces extending across the door from stile to stile. Immediately above the top crosspiece, fasten a small wooden shelf fronted by a narrow strip of hardboard so that bow ties won't fall off when the door is shut. A dime store mirror may be mounted on one side of the door to suit the height of the man with all the neckties. The ensemble may be painted or enameled attractively, using a primer and then one or two finish coats. It would be simple to add an additional tie ladder on each side. Crumpled newspapers polish windows, mirrors, nickel plating. Builders Race to Pace Stork America Has Near 50 Million Houses; Sales to Continue Good NEW YORK (®— Seven fat years for home builders have seen about eight million housing units added to the nation’s total. Some in the real estate building are now openly talking pf slower days to come. But others refuse to believe that the seven fat years, .pince the big boom started in 194f.will. be fol- lowed by seven lean* as in the biblical tale of Joseph in Egypt. They say that around 700,000 new homes will be needed each year to take c of new family formations. hide pectiane another 300,000 will be needed to replace old houses beyond renovation. It the mortgage market hajds up, the next few years shouldn’t be too lean, The highly active stork is the home builder's best friend. The National Association of Home builders notes today that the pop- ulation of the United States has just rounded out the 160 million figure. Next month it expects the eighth millionth new house to be started. That will give the nation some 530 million housing units, or about one for each three persons. Back in 1940 the nation’s 131} million persons were housed in 35 million units, or almost 4 to a unit. And then more than half were renters. Now more than half are owners — if you wink at the mortgages on some 10 million homes. The mortgage market may hold the key to which wins the race in the next year of so, the home builders or the stork. ‘‘Banks have become very tight when it comes to credits for builders,’’ complains David Picket, president of the Gotham Construc- tion Corp. of New York. He fears a building recession the last quar- ter of this year and into next, if the money market doesn't ease. The market is tight because mortgages must compete with a big supply of government and private securities in getting mon- ey from investors. Total savings are catching up, however. Last year savings were officially placed at 12% billion dol- lars, This year the mutual savings banks, savings and loan association commercial banks and life insur- ance companies all report gains. Floors should be cleaned with soft dust mops. A stiff brush may scratch a polished surface. Strong soap can damage floor finish and stain the wood. Too much wax or oil dulls a finish. What’s happened to the shape of furniture dictates what’s gone Develop Small Patterns the new sheepskins. Wide variety of colors here with charcoal, mag- NEW Seal Kite on in upholstery fabrics. As furniture became more sleek and lighter scaled it became evi- dent that the rough, shaggy tex- tures — once so popular — were too overpowering for this type of furniture. Result: today’s upholstery fab- rics are hard and fiat; their crispness enhances rather than detracts from the furniture. Pat- terns, too, are veering towards the smaller scale although there is a sudden revival of the over- scaled plaids. Checks, polka dots and stripes are seen frequently in the smaller scaled versions. The big story in upholstery fab- rics is color. Caution has been thrown to the winds as daring, electric tones make their debut on, every type of furniture. High decorator sources started it but it took less time than it does o say ‘‘watermelon pink’’ for the more commercial houses to em- brace this new swing to brilliant tones and startling combinations. Pink and its many varieties is high on the list. Bright turquoise | is taking the place of many greens. | Black warp threads tone down Phone FE 2-412) FUEL OIL TANKS Pontiac Welding and Machine Works 64 WN. Parke St. BUILD ot REMODEL “MIDWEST SUPPLY 9 North Telegraph Near Haren FE 4-2575 Ext. 6 Eves. Sun.: FE 5-3942 ;Sharp whites and crisp yellow | greens. What were once thought | of as wild color combines are now accepted: flaming red with burnt orange; brigh grape, black, lemon | and red; nasturtium, henna and | a bright turquoise. Metallic threads are being used more subtly — they no longer spark right out of the fabric. Other upholstery fabric high- | lights: jacquard friezes going more | modern . . .dimensioned quality, | achieved through weave, in pile | fabrics. - . tweeds going much flatter . . . more white grounds make the head colors bounce out |... new silk look in many fabrics influenced by the Orient leather more popular, especially Plumber's Friend Will Clear Most ° Sluggish Drains Most sluggish drains can be cleared by using a_plumber’s friend. This is a common tool con- sisting of a rubber suction ‘cup at the end of a short handle. 'der the trap, remove the clean- | out plug and fish out the obstruc- tion with a wire. Kitchen sink traps clog through the hardening of grease. Boiling water often will clear it. More persistent clogging calls for opening the trap, or the use of chemicals. Caustic potash, or potash lye in boiling water will dissolve grease to a'‘soft soap and wash it away. Patent.drain chemicals are sold in grocery stores. Use care, however, since they can cause severe burns and des- | troy clothing. Never use caustic soda. It solidi- | fies the grease. Many Coats of Wax Combat Tile Whitening Only repeated applications of | wax will insulate some types of asphalt tile against whitening as | they age. The most marked color devia- | | tions in such tiles are noted in | |the lighter shades, particularly light blues and greens. Only pure | synthetic detergents should be used in cleaning such floors. Blend-Hir Heating and Ventilating SYSTEM Easily installed in any home, old or new. No tearing out walls or ripping up floors. No expensive remodeling or alterations. You can enjoy this new, healthful Blend-Air comfort in your home now —with the system that only uses a 31/2 inch Heat Tube! GOODWILL Automatic Heating Company 385 Telegraph Rd. FE 2-7849 One Coat FLAT PAINT For Nearest Dealer's Name, Call West Detroit Glass of Pontiac FE deral 2-8397 If this fails, place a bucket un- | CUSTOM MADE VENETIAN You Owe It to Yourself to Shop at sok PONTIAG FLOOR COVERINGS |: L. R. TAYLOR, Owner— 379 Orchard Lake Avenue Compare Our Quality! Compare Our Prices! BLINDS AND WINDOW SHADES FE 2-2353 age ey Se is ik SN ee RS ED GOES se : - Bee ee | aS: H. H. STANTON 103 State St. Plumbing Sales and Service FE 5-1683 Amanecan Standard COLORED BATHROOM FIXTURES Immediate Delivery Painting % Protects wood and metal through summer expansion and winter contraction. Colors stay new-looking longer, under adverse weather con- ditions. It’s easy to apply. | | | | *5” GALLON in 5's White or Colors. Oakland Fuel 436 Orchard Lake Ave. It's Perfect Weather HOUSE PAINT White & Paint Co. Ph. FE 5-6150 cellent drainage. library 34’x22’. FOR SALE “APPLE LANE FARM” Located at northeast corner Franklin and Lone Pine Roads (G. D. Pope Estate) This beautifully landscaped estate, built of granite blocks, is located in a low tax area, and is an excellent buy for a private residence, church, private school, or club. Located on a high elevation, with views of the surrounding countryside, it is in a secluded, non-commercial area, with ex- The main building has First floor: 9 rooms, 2 fireplaces, 2 coat rooms, and 2 extra large porches. Extra large living room and a Second floor: 11 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2 showers, fireplace and sleeping porches. Also included are 2 smaller houses, garages with liv- ing quarters, workshop and several outbuildings. Available for immediate occupancy and at a reasonable price. Will selt 10 or more acres with buildings. Afternoon, | to 6, or shown by appointment. _ Call Francis H. Phelps, President i HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY CORPORATION | Midwest 4-5101 or WO 3-4816 | pers s pase oo ge oe er ee eee Open Sat., and Sun, { 4 all THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 TWENTY-ONE Izalco, a volcano near the ‘coast of E] Salvador erupts so regularly that sailors call it the ‘lighthouse of the Pacific.” Ancient Pictures Grace Tables in Modern Room ATLANTA (INS)—Atlanta deco- rators are finding a place for the “old look’? in modern decor. Bowls and pitchers from pre- plumbing days find their way into modern living rooms, being used as planters or wired for lamps. Are You. Building or Remodeling ? See Us for Your Glass Needs! PLATE GLASS THERMOPANE MANTEL MIRRORS DOOR MIRRORS — PATTERNED -GLASS SLIDING GLASS DOORS Delicate silhouettes and flower prints from the ‘Ladies’ Books” of a few years back are also fitted into the 1953 decor. This is particularly easy when the decor theme is Early Ameri- can, But even in more modern schemes, grandmother’s bone china can be prominently displayed on the coffee table. Seek to End Tire Strike CLEVELAND (# — Union and company officials planned further talks today in an effort to end a three-day strike of 25,500 Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. workers. KALAMAZOO CONVERSION OIL BURNER @ Easy to install in your furnace —in just one day! ®@ Automatic, care-free operas tion! @ Provides clean, even economs ical oil heat! Call For FREE Furnace Inspection Wm. Lechner FE 2-1821 Pontiac’s Original Glass Firm Estab. 1900 PONTIAC GLASS CO. 23 W. Lawrence St. Phone FE 5-6441 STORE HOURS: Daily 8-5:30, Sat. 8-12:30 27 N. Cass Ave. A LAMAZOO ROCK LATH—Plain and Foil PLASTER—Cement--Sanded--Structolite LIME—lIvory--Grand Prize GAUGING—Quick--Slow AGGREGATES—Greggco--Zono MORTAR BOXES—PLASTER TOOLS—HODS MORTAR BOARD STAND ADJUSTABLE STEEL TRESTLES * Order Your Coal Now! * KAISER COAL & SUPPLY CO 5 > | Modern Kitchen Means Top Rent Up-to-Date Room Will Bring Extra Dividends on Leased Property Better kitchens mean better in- come from rental properties. The person who cinches the lease-— and usually is willing to pay a little more if the space is up to date — is the homemaker. And the first room to impress her favorably or unfavorably is the place where she spends so many hours a week — the kitchen. The Tile Council of America ad- vises that kitchen remodeling is not prohibitive in cost, especially if the existing walls lend them- selves to the adhesive method of clay tile installation. With this re- cently approved procedure clay tile, so attractive to housewives because it requires no upkeep and cleans easily, may be set directly on the walls as they are, in a great majority of cases. This elim- inates the services of a plasterer and reconstruction work, effecting savings in time and money. Here are some further tips on modernizing older kitchens so that they will bring in larger rentals: Install as many automatic ap- pliances as possible, including a dishwasher if possible. Be sure the architect specifies plenty of work counters and drain- boards in material like clay tile that resists water and staining. If the existing kitchen is except- ionally large, use the extra space for storage. If the kitchen is unusually small, install cupboards in every area possible, remembering that the space beneath the sink is ideal for many uses. : | If the view is attractive, install a large window over the sink. Women “go for’’ this feature. Cut down kitchen footwork for the tenant by installing appli- ances in a U-shaped pattern when possible, with the sink at the base of the U. Clean Sediment From Boiler Before Winter If a steam or hot water boiler | This will minimize rust. needs draining because of an ac-| cumulation of sediment, the best | time to do it is in the fall at the, beginning of the heating season. | Fresh water causes rust because | of the air 1t contains. Water that | 3 00-3.50 bu; Wealthy, No. 1, 3.00-3.50 bu; | has been heated repeatedly is freed |of air and thereby loses it cor- rosive effect on iron. Therefore, it’s a good policy never to drain a boiler unless a real sediment problem develops. In the spring only enough fresh water should be added to fill the boiler. When water is added to make up for losses, the drain valve at the bottom of the boiler may be opened a few times to flush out any sediment. Then the value is closed as soon as the water runs | clear. Outdoor Furniture Needs Fall Cleaning Clean the outdoor furniture he- fore you bring it back into the | house this fall. But do the clean- ing outside. All pillows, pads, chair seats | should be washed if at all pos- sible. 702 S. Paddock Street Phone FE 4-355 2) Vatspar WHITE HOUSE PAINT The Whitest WHITE! e Easy to use. Starts white..: stays white for years e Complete hiding gives more coverage per gallon WHERE COLOR IS DESIRED VALSPAR BODY COLORS 1% $58 GAL. touch of smartness ELLIS COLORS easo0 eSmart, modern tints... won't crack, chip, peel nor fade. True Valspar Quality for that odded YVALSPAR Trim & TR after s e Keep their gloss and color through season Keego Hardware No. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 2-3766 Keego Harbor, Michigan scrubbed with a brush, foam rub- ber can be sudsed, and plastic cushions and webbing need wiping with a damp cloth. The furniture itself, whether wrought iron, rattan or redwood, should be wiped clean. Rattan can be washed, and it should get a coat of liquid wax after washing. A coat of shellac will spruce up rattan also; red- wood takes a special stain, and wrought iron and steel should be painted. ‘Consumers’ Earnings Up for 12-Month Period | Earnings of ‘Consumers Power |for the 12 months ended July 3}. 1953, were $2.80 per share on 6,794,362 shares of common stock | outstanding at the end of the period earnings of $2.70 on 6,176,693 shares outstanding July 31, 1952. Net income after preferred divi- dends for the 12 months ended July 31, 1953 12 months ended July 31, 1952. Fighting giraffes swing their an effort to knock each other off balance. They also can deliver Exterior Birch Doors 831 Oakland Avenue Duck or canvas can be ! was $19,049,931 as. compared with $16,703,042 for the | | long necks like baseball bats in. | | heavy blows with their hoofs. before reaching full growth. | enne SPECIAL GUESTS — Some of viewed General Motors Parade of a special performance yesterday are shown looking gat? aed! Pontiac Press Phote at the model car exhibit. The youths are members of various Pontiac area organizations. the youths who Progress here at Local Markets Produce Farmer to Consumer Beets, DUNCD ..cccsccccece ° 10 SOO Wiese aice Spaononcnne ° 25 Auckelberries, quart . .60 Green peppers, 3 for .10 Cucumbers. 6 for ..... 25 Corn, dozen ......09 50 Tomatoes, quart ..... 25 Der Merk —§ ,..cccccccceses 50 per bushel .........00 2 00 | Si..u,% vesaos. quart . 20 Radishes. bunch ..... 10 Store cceeee 25 Carrots, DUNCD ....cceesee 10 SILO learn eeeseese ecvcee 23 Onions buneh ......-. -10 2 for 25 Potatoes, bushel 225 ’ “an 15 Apples, bushel ..,..00--+-06 175 to 230 ry UNCD .rcccccceces Egg. dozen ....eses jooncne 65, 70 and 80 Pevpers. bushel myeterera 3 00 were Carnations, dozen ......+6 1.00 Geraniums, dozen ......+6 Gladiolis, bunch .....seseee> 38 and 50 Wholesale DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT (UP) — Wholesale prices on public farmers’ markets: Fruits: Apples. Duthcess, No. 1, 2.25- 2.75 bu; McIntosh fancy, 450 bu. No 1 Wolf River, No. 1, 2.25-2.75 bu. Canta- loupes, fancy, 2.50 bu; No. 1, 1.50-2 00 bu Blueberries, No. 1, 3.25-3.75 12-pt case. Grapes, No. 1, 1.00-1.25 pk bskt. Peaches, Haven, No. 1, 2.25-3.00 bu; peaches, early variety, No. 1, 2 50- . Bears, Bart- lett. No. 1, 2.25-2.75 ; pears, Clapps Pavorite, No. 1, 2.25-2.75 bu. Plums, Burbank, No. 1, 3 50-400 half-bu. Water- melons, No. 1, 1.75-2.25 bu. 1, .75-.90 -3.80 bu; beans, green, round, No -3.00 bu; beans, wax, No. 1. 2.00- : beans, Kentucky Wonder, No. 1, bu: beans, Lima, fancy, 400 bu, 3.78 bu. Cabbage, standard vari- o. 1, .15-1.00 bu. cabbage, curly, 1, 1.00-1.50 bu; cabbage, red, No. }, 00-1.50 bu: cabbage, sprouts, No 1, .90- 25 bu. Carrots, No. 1, .$5-.75 doz bens, arrois. topped. No. 1, 1.$0-2.00 bu. Cauli- Celery, No behs. bag. Cucumbers. slicers, No. 1, bu: cucumbers, dill size, No. 1, 3.00-3.50 bu: cucumbers, pickle size, No. 1. 4.25- 4.75 bu. Dill, No. 1, .75-100 doz bchs Eggplant, No. 1, 125-150 bu; eggplant, long type. No. 1, 1.00-1.50 bu Kohlrabi No. 1, 1.00-1.50 dog behs. Leeks, No 1, 1.25-1.78 doz behs. Okra. No. 1, 259-3 00 Onions, dry No. 1, 1.25-1.50 - onions, green, fancy, .85 doz 1, .60--80 doz behs;, onions, No. 1, .15 per Ib Parsley. curly, No. 1, .80-.78 doz behs; parsley root, No. 1, .75-.85 doz bchs eye, No. 1, 3.25-375 bu Peppers, cay- No. 1, .75-1.25 pk bskt; peppers. hot, No. 1. 1 §0-1.75 bu: peppers pimento No. 1, 200-250 half-bu; peppers. sweet, No. 1. 178-225 bu. Potatoes. new. No 1, 75-90 50-Jb bag: potatoes, No. 1, -. 1.80 ¥00-lb. Radishes. white, No. 1 100 doz bchs: radishes, fancy, 1.00 doz behs: No. 1. .70-.90 doz behs. Bquash, Acorn, No. 1. 1.50-2.90 42 bu; squash, But- ternut. No. 1, 1.50-2.00 bu: squash. "ell- cious, No. 1, 1.50-2 bu; squash, Italian, fancy. 200 ‘2 bu: No. 1, 100-150 bu squash, Summer, No. 1, .75-1.25 ‘2 bu Tomatoes. No. 1, .40-.60 pk bskt; toma- toes, outdoor, fancy, 2.00 % bu: No 1 ' Turnip. fancy, 1.60 doz , 99-125 doz behs; turnip topped. No. 1. 1.50-1.75 bu. Greens: Cabbage. No 1 Collard, No. 1, 1.090-1.50 bu. Kale. No 1, 1.00-1.50 bu. Mustard, No. 1 1.00-1 50 bu. Spinach. No. 1, 1.25-1.50 bu Lettuce and saad greens: Celery cad- bage. No. 1, 200-280 bu. Endive. No 1, 1.25-1.75 bu: endive. bleached. No. 1. 250- 275 bu. Escarole. No. 1, 125-150 bu escarole, bleached. No, 1. 250-2.75 bu Lettuce, Butter, No 1. 250-300 bu: let- tuce. head, No. 1. 3 50-4.00 3 doz: Lettuce head No. 1. 125-175 bu lettuce leaf No 1. 225-2.75 bu Romaine, No 1.25-1.50 bu Poultry DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) —Live poultry paid per pound fob. Detroit for N quality Heavy hens 25-27: light type broflers or frvers under 4 pounds No other prices offered CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—Live poultry Barely steady to weak; receipts 390 coops: [6.5 paving prices unchanged except 8& cent a pound lower on frvers or broilers. heavy hens 238-26: light hens 22-24, fryers or broilers 31-33, old roosters 18- 20; ducklings 26 Dairy cattle normally are bred BEECH and PECAN Hardwood Flooring Utility Grade 5] 15” Per M $33.00 + Chetee of Lites Always Service — All Ways DIXIE LUMBER CO., Inc. FE 2-0224 Broccoli, fancy, 2.50 half-bu; No. 1, | Peas. Black | 1.00-1.25 bu | lt Lodge Calendar Regular meet Nuclear Defense Slash Proposed Sen. Flanders Urges, No. 503 O. E. 8 velt Temple | Monday, Aug. 31, 8:00 p. m. Svea Pfahlert, Sec. —Adv. News in Brief Jack Swartzbaugh, 19, of 5440 Pine Knob Rd., Clarkston, was | many of its customers, owner Da- ing Areme Chapter | vid H. Gee announced today. Fuel Continue Probe on McCarthy Special Offer to GM Workers who are laid off or who ere working short hours. $10 Down Will Buy a Good Used Car with payments adjusted to fit your weekly income. A Fine Selection of Low Priced Models to Choose From PRE-WAR CARS. $50 to $125 Investigate Finances but Drop Senator’s Charge of Shakedown WASHINGTON (UP)—The Jus- tice Department pursued its in- vestigation of Sen. Joseph R. Mc- Carthy’s finances today but|] ‘4g HUDSONS....$95 te $195 dropped an inquiry into his charges |] ‘48 KAISER ..... ve eee $195 of a $150,000 diplomatic shakedown. || ‘50 PLYMOUTH ..... ‘Seas Attorney General Herbert|} /5! HENRY J. .......-- Brownell Jr.. said the statute of ‘a7 CHEVROLET ...... Pet limitations barred any legal ac-|| 48 PONTIAC ...... «+ $445 San on McCarthy's charee that || 28 NASH ......... 1 $395 . ~ ‘46 CHEV. CL. CPE......$350 some State Department employes shook down a friendly foreign power during the Truman admin- | istration. | But the State Department an- nounced that it was launching an investigation of its own and would make its findings public as soon as possible. The diplo- mats allegedly took the money im 1947 for services which Mc- Carthy said the country was ‘‘en- titled to anyway.” Meanwhile, Brownell said the de- partment is continuing its study of the report of a Senate election sub- committee which last year made a long investigation of McCarthy's finances. The report made no recommend- dations, but raised questions about McCarthy’s handling of funds con- tributed ‘‘for his fight against Communism.” Adds Fuel Oil Service Gee Coal Company at 91 Lake St. has added fuel oi] delivery to its services for the convenience of Auburn Motor Sales 559 Auburn Avenue & Pike at E. Bivd FE $-3290 Z SPECIAL SERVICES TO GARAGES Moters Rebuilt Cracked Biecks Crankshaft Grinding Cyttn ders Rebered Bearings Rebabbitted Cylinder Heads Regreend Brake Drums Greuné oil delivery will begin immediate- ly, according to Gee. Americans used about 824 pounds of milk per person in 1939 and 695 pounds in 1952. Cut in Future Spending, Balanced Budget WASHINGTON \® — Sen. Flan- | bound over to Oakland County Cir- cuit Court .yesterday when he waived examination on a stolen | ders (R-Vt.) proposed today that | auto charge before Municipal Judge | President Eisenhower and other top | Maurice E. Finnegan. He posted government policy makers con- $500 bond pending arraignment sider cutting billions of dollars | cept 4. from future programs for hydro- | gen-atomic weapons, defense and foreign aid. Thieves broke into the home of | John Ryan of 599 Luther St. last | Armed Services Committee, sug- | $50, according to Pontiac Police. gested that the United States may | ; | {f your friend’s in jail and needs before long have on hand such a | pail. Ph OR 3-7110 C A Mitchell. supply of nuclear wea ons that | further production might pass the | See the new Philco 30” electric range. $249.95. Hampton Electric, | ‘‘point of diminishing returns.” 286 State. —Adv. s carry out Republican campaign IN N F d pledges of a balanced budget | 0 ew Vl ence and even tax reductions. H lf p kj C The budget bureau Thursday, in | q S er Ins ase a new revenue and spending esti- | mate, said outlays for foreign aid But savings from a cutback, he | said, might make it possible to | | After sifting over 3,000 tips re- ported to Pontiac Police in the decline. Flanders’ proposal with views expressed chief of detectives, said today the by some /to a standstill 1’ | other members of Congress of both | of evidence."’ Although Pontiac and State Po-| parties, especially since Russia | | published a claim to have mas- \jice are still assigned to the slay- | tered the technical basis for the jing case, Wheaton said, ‘‘we are H-bomb. | Rep. Paterson (R-Conn), a mem- | ber of the Senate-House Atomic | | Energy Committee, said Thurs- | | day the United States should make | | an all-out effort to discover a pos- | right back from where we start | sible weapon mightier than the hydrogen bomb. | show-ups and were released after | the 16-year-old girl failed to iden- tify any of them as the attacker. tory pace.” ordinating the investigation, ‘‘we're CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO ‘(AP)—Hogs declined sharply } this week after advancing the week be- ‘fore to the highest August levels in five | years The cattle market was highly | irregular and sheep were lower Butcher hogs steadied after sharp earl; declines and after Wednesday showed little change Sows showed some late Treated for Injuries Eecitaaret ofan twee! 85 Auto Rams Car Butchers were $1.00 to $2.50 lower and | sows 50 cents to $1.25 lower | | Cattle receipts were up nearly 10 or cent and were nearly as great as (the | week ended April 25 when 50.000 head were offered—the heaviest receipts since jneck injuries at St. Joseph Mercy Augus. 1946 Choice and prime heavier ‘ , | steers and heifers were strong to $100 | two-car accident’ at W. South} higher, lighter weights steady to $1.00 | Blvd. and Motor St. | lower ' Live lamb trade on heavy receipts | Melbourne D. Griffin, 21, of 19 | ee prices down. Losses ranged (©) Hovey St., with whom Miss Ver- | Salable hogs 200. total 2.000; compared | ville was a passenger, told Pontiac | Barrows and gilts extremely week ago lbs and uneven, butchers around 210 . heavier 100-180 lower, weights around|avoid crashing into another car | | 200 Ibs and under 1.75-2.50 lower: sows | _ urn i t | 50 to 1.25 lower, most decline on weighs making a left t nr fron of | under 360 Ibs ; him On the close 210-260 Ib butchers sold Walter E Moore. 31, of 74 mainly at 2500-2535. while 180-200 Ib weights brought 2300-2475 and 160-180 lbs 21.00-23.50. Choice sows 400 Ibs and | lighter closed at 21.50-23.25. a f.w under }300 lbs bringing slightly more. while 400- 1550 Ibs brought 1975-21 50 Salable cattle 200, tota] not given: com- pared week ago: Choice and prime s'errs and heifers weighing 950 Ibs and heavier still strong to 100 higher than late last | . week after being as much as 200 higher, government is studying plans to early. Choice lighter weights steady to| 100 lower: steers and heifers grading | | good and below mostly 1 00-2.00 oa | Safety Corps by 20.000 to 40,000 cows mostly 1.00-150 lower an e . general market at a new low since at) men next year, Deputy leas! 1946: bulls 1.00-1.50 lower; vealers | Minister steady to 100 lower slaughter calves 100-300 lower: stockers and feeders | fully 1.00 lower and outlet very narrow the decline: five loads hieh prime 1225-1275 Ib fed steers 29.00-2950 bulk choice and ovrime fed steers and vrar- | | lings weighing 950 Ibe uD 25.00-28 50 several loads prime 1489-1620 Ib beeves 26.25-27.50, feedlot mates of prime 1569 Ib beevet on Tuesday at 2750 weighted 1577 lbs on Wednesday and brought 26 75 several loads choice to prime 1500-1600 | Tb beeves 2450-2550. many loads choice } 950-1150 Ib steers fed grain on srass jthe Griffin car, /avoid the acccident. | day. TV REPAIRS Work Guarcnteed! HAMPTON TV 286 State St. GE 4-2525 2500-2600. however. good to sverage | chotee steers and yearlings closed at ———— = = | 18.00-25.50: choice and prime heifers HAVE YOU ENOUCH INSURANCE? 21 50-27.00, several loads prime around 1000 Ib heifers 2680-27.00 but choice 875 I> weights late as low as 21.50; utility and commercial cows closed at 850-12 00) with very little above 1150. late sales canners and cutters 6.50-9.00, mostly 700-850: late sales utility and commer- cial bulls 10.80-14.50. few head early reached 16.00: few prime vealers 22.00 commercial to choice 14.00-21.00. cull and utility largely 8.00-13.00, medium to choice 250-425 Ib slaughter calves late 11.00-14 00 Mother Ruled Unfit James A. TAYLO MT. CLEMENS w— A Probate 1210 | Court jury yesterday found a 37- FE 4.2544 | year-old woman, accused of stag- ing wild weekend parties in her home for teenagers, to be an unfit mother. | | | | Flanders, a member of the night and took a billfold containing | ; 2-9111 4 , ‘ TOILETS : ° ° 4 > $ Clese ceppled. $59.00 value... > Pontiac Piston > $19.96. Also daree pes ef > 4 . 5 lavatories, bathtubs and shewer ¢ : 3 "hie ICAN FLUORESCENT 3 Se nies Co. 4 H 4 393 Orchard Lake Ave. $ Complete Machine Shop saat > Pe Pt edt Ahn pdt tint 102 S. Saginaw Sn entlii MIMEOGRAPHING | PHOTO OFFSET PRINTING — LETTERS—BULLETINS—EULED FORMS — POSTAL CARDS — LEGAL FORMS — PRICE LISTS PONTIAC LETTER SHOP 710-712 West Huron Street Phone FE 2-9921 crs Thatcher, Patterson & Wernet Pontiac’s Oldest Insurance Agency 609 Community National Bank B id. FE 2-92%4 ; slaying of Mrs. Hallie Perkins, 55, | | but should reach their peak during | and the attack on a teenager Aug. | ; | the current fiscal year, and then|}5 Captain Clark M. Wheaton, | contrasted | investigation has practically come | “because of lack) ‘unable to progress at a satisfac- | ‘After questioning 47 persons,”’ | said Detective John DePauw, co-| ed.” So far 21 persons appeared in | Marian Verville, 18, of 96 Auburn | Ave., was treated for arm and | Hospital early today following a} Police he made a sudden stop to} Florida St., driving an auto behind | told police he | |was unable to stop in time to| TOKYO — The Japanese, increase the 110,000-man National | Prime | Taketora Ogata said to- | Anderson AGENCY 4012 E. Pike St. RENT Lester Betsy Ross Spinet A Beautiful Piano with a Magnificent Tone $10 Monthly $20 Delivers GALLAGHER wuste co. 18 E. Huron St. OPEN TONIGHT ‘til 9 SUNDAY ‘til 4 P.M. Sale! Sale! Men’‘s DRESS PANTS REDUCED! | GOODMAN'S Dept. Store | | = Sees Hy pa 2 OFA ee eo! 1 8-2 1 Block North of Wilson Ave. FE 2-2784 516 to 520 S. Saginaw St. I a emneatinnee, eee a > ‘TWENTY-TWO Nations Plan to Save Falls Will Cut Erosion Rate by Upstream Diversion of Water at Night WASHINGTON — The United States and Canadian governments plan new aid for Niagara Falls in its fight for survival with na- ture. Increased diversion of water upstream from the Falls and in- stallation ef a control structure in the Niagara River a mile above the Canadia1 Horseshoe Falls are the latest engineering schemes devised by the two nations to ‘prevent the spectacle from grad- ually crumbling away. In the last 100 years Niagara’s twin cataracts have preceded 300 feet and the retreat continues at the rate of one to four feet an- nually, says the National Geo- graphic Society. If the erosion continued uncheck- ed. American Falls would be a bone-dry cliff in 2,000 years, and in another 20,000 years there would be nothing but 35-mile rapids from Buffalo to Fort Niagara. With more water diverted to hy- droelectric use, the Falls will be slowed down at night and in the off-season to 50,000 cubic feet per second, only a fourth of their normal flow. During spring and summer months, the daytime flow will be maintained at 100,000 cu- bic feet for the benefit of the 3,000,000 annual visitors. The lip over which the water tumbles is a hard limestone ledge 12 feet thick. Beneath it are layers of shale, limestone, red medina and sandstone. The ~ churning waters from the upper river wear away the soft strata and produce the overhanging lip of hard limestone, from which huge pieces break at intervals. On June 25, 1850, a slice of famous Table Rock on the Cana- dian side broke away and tumbled into the gorge. There were breaks in 1853, 1877, 1889, and half a dozen since. Some 900 feet of the Canadian Horseshoe Falls have worn away since a French mis- sionary, Father Louis Hennepin, first came upon the Falls on the morning of December 6, 1678. Abraham Lincoln was nearly 40 years old when the first known picture of him was taken. Hal Boyle Says: Strange Creature... Man! Kills Others, NEW YORK (#—Nothing brings out the best in men like trouble. That is what is wrong with man- kind—these curious, upright crea- tures who so often find death while séeking peace by fighting wars. When times are worse, they are at their best. It’s been like that since gentlemen first adjusted their differences with stone hammers against each others skulls. And now entire civilizations are able to destroy each other at a blow, as individual did to individual long ago. How prog- ress does improve the breed! As one of the. world’s eldest teenagers—’teen 40 and the grave —I am accustomed to the fact that life sometimes deals the bot- tom card you don’t want from the top of the deck. It doesn’t fit in your hand. Worse, it doesn’t fit in your dreams. But you have to play it or get out of the game. To me, and I don’t criticize those who have a different idea or even choose a midnight exit, it has al- ways been more fun to stay in the game and trade an old disappoint- ment for a new card. But why do we as a species of life have to stack the deck against ourselves so often? We never get more true joy than we do from one another, and one destroyed in anger is one less to share a pleasure with. When Cain killed Abel he not only lost a brother. He set a precedent that diminished a small world, a world no larger yet for all the growth and passions of the centuries. All the money and all the land on earth cannot give you the fun that people give you. Can a bought acre make you laugh? Can a $100 bill? * * *¢ At 42 I would mortgage myself to a bank for many years if by that way I could rent back for even a moment the companionship alive again of a few flesh-vanished-spirit- remembered friends who died, for one reason or other, in this deadly business of living. Who has known loss, and doesn’t feel that way? Well, yearning may carpenter many an impossible dream—what castles it does build in our minds! —But in the winter of our heart it does not change the weather Then Weeps U. S. Weather Bureau, even by a long range forecast. But as toil exercises the mus- cles of our bodies so does trou- ble stretch our minds, We grow by loss as well as by gain. Sometimes we become higher as life erodes the altitude of our ego away. So many people can look at the human race—priests, philosophers, businessmen and scientists, social or otherwise—and come up with a ready answer. And the world still reels through wrong toward what, we hope, is right. But the only pattern human- kind has achieved is that of father and mother and child—the trinity of existence that rules both mouse and man. And wolves. What a thing man is — depth without height, height without depth! One foot in the hell he makes himself, and does little to THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 change, and the other foot unhap- py except on Mt. Everest. You give a fellow a fair place of peace and he’ll go to war to get is in it. . Master speculator, universal dunce, laughter of animals, pitiful prisoner of himself, time, space, and that fourth dimension — God what ’a restless thing man is! He can change everything on earth except himself, make fivers run backward, tear down moun- tains with a molehill mind. But he cannot call back one of his kind who is gone. Some one of these days the in- sects may get together and spray the human race with DDT. Cer- tainly it is their moral turn. SIDE GLANCES by Galbraith “She’s baking another cake we endure or that predicted by the for her sergeant friend from Korea—trying thhe same trick on him that worked on you!” THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert OD YOu GET ANY FREE TIPS 2 | eo-29 N 2 DONALD DUCK as CL wows TN Be me ag tuy o NOO CAN FIND OUT F WHAT SARICE KAS ID SHELL. BE KRERE IS A FEY MINDOTES $ WOUR SOUPED-OP SELF HUH ? YOU WIODIN 2 OR A RUNAWAY MIND! WENT . LUMBER TRUCKIGAS GH SWEEPIN' OFF TH'P TANK Be TH’ FIRE'S UP TH’ VALLEY ¢ raw R 1953 by MEA Bervies. ina T. M. Reg U. & Pat Off. Rv Walt Disney Ld NO SUBSTITUTES ON THE BLUE PLATE SPECIAL SIR! WELL, FOR AN YJ OLD Cu. MER... BOARDING HOUSE | ‘INSTEAD OF BEANS... FRENCH FRIES, AND... ‘ ¥ OUT OUR WAY HAPPENED TO BE PUTTING THIS SUCCULENT CATFISH TURNOVER ON THE TABLE, AND IT'S TOO MUCH FOR, CaWwlnjn MZ CATFISH TURN- B DID HE SAY TOO EGAD MISTER ER — WHAT LA OVER 2 HM! €4MUCH FER ONE f 1 TANKS, 8055S! H PERSON Z DiS DIS vi CAME TO ae ay apliedl I'M RUNGRY £3 MIGHT BE TOO OW OTHE p ASKING A HANDOUT WHEN Sarg EA MUCH FER TEN Tpeeuies wee BUFFALO'S Mr YES--AND YOU USUALLY JUST TOSS THEM ON WHY GIT SO EXCITED AN’ THE NEAREST CHAIR! WORKED UP OVER NOTHIN’ ? Y WHEN SOU GET FASTIDIOUS IM JUST GOIN’ TO HANG MY } ALL OF A SUDDEN, L } COAT AN’ HAT UPAN’ THEN ( GET SUSPICIOUS! TLL TLL COME BACK AN’ HELP GIVE YOU TWO MIN- “ WITH TH DISHES! GOSH. MA, h UTES TO GET BACK y} YOURE ALWAYS TELLIN’ ME HERE! Uj, TO HANG MY THINGS UR Y AIN'TCHAS - Y JY eta. fn — Y > ++ Z, Poy 1 GY TAY =: . ; — eee. - qT l= ~ aay hy, =o ae NA |__- Sam — . a x | : | . les l= 7 | —, ee : 4j ——— 2 —— SS ~ > ; : Ge OSYO A ay” i WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY oe De mn FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS ) } 8.29 . wig. Be ie Up, IN| Oh — N57 Hgow® Sb NANCY FABULOUS Just a sec! 1 wap Luck FISHING TODAY--- —a LOOK WHAT I BROUGHT WITH Me? BT Cape. 1953 OH, OH +--+ HERE COMES THAT FRIENDLY DOG — OH, BOY--- JUST GOT ‘EM OFF IN TIME SALA My bl Come ono, Rang | WEEKS PASS. THEN, AFTER PROPUSE THANKS 70 OSCQ FRANCOIS PALETTE RETURNS TO PARIS WITH MANY SPACE CADET ZL KETCHES ANO PAINTINGS OF THE GREAT WEST... YOU'LL HAVE TO TAKE Discoverine THE RIGHT-HAND TUNNEL, THE ANCIENT CORBETT, AND I'LL TAKE THE LEFT/IF THAT BIG DUMB VENUSIAN IS IN HERE, WE'LL FIND HIM NOW / 4 FIRST WELL GIVE HIM A BLAST By RADIO, ROG / .. ASTRO! THIS IS TOM Py AND ROGER CALLING/IF oP YOU'RE IN THIS CAVE, LET US KNOW--// ~ u 7 Mn DF De *]ee relere) ‘co ==3 | x4 fd!) TRUMPING YOUR PARTNER’S ACE TO CAPTURE HIM! Webster-Roth PLEASE DONT LET eM MAKE A NUISANCE OF HIMSELF, BUT HE 1S SO WTERESTED y IN THE GAME. ONE CLUB TH KIO SURE LOVES TO KIBITZ— COMES BY IT NATURALLY- Two HEARTS SO OUR MEN WANTED TO BE READY by Charles Kuhn JU0O RUGS ? GRANOMA, TH’ KIDS SAID THANKS FELLERS... YEAH, YOU KNOW WHAT 1 MEAN / THESE LITTLE .. THAT TRIP AN® PILE YA UP IN A CORNER // COPk ame ceed PRA TURES Pre OTR Teme Beet ReRER TED TWENTY-THREE wett'swrerncet — lfaly Confers WASHINGTON # — Chairman e Hendrickson (R-NJ) said today a Over Trieste a Senate judiciary subcommittee : will probably start its nationwide THE Mitchell fo Head Mozzoe POW | Legion Flows Gets Welcomed Dem Banquet >utJsmt There Into St. Louis isn't home yet, but he already Kelly Quits as Leader |)... teen welcomed. Meetings Start Monday; investigation of juvenile delin-|, Pella Is Worried That of $100-a-Plate Party Monroe's gnly Korean prisoner of Selective Service Chief j oeney with hearings on some oe Tito May Try to Settle ° city, but is not overlooking sm to. Raise Funds war failed to arrive and didn't) Reports Today. narra " Issue by Force | make yesterday's civic reception | = town problems. CHICAGO (#—The main job of | for him, which went off just as| ST. LOUIS (®~ The welcome i Chih, : s es aT gre” % h, Hendrickson said in an interview! ROME () — Premier Giuseppe “SS; directing plans for the Democratic | if he'd been there mat is out for some 35,000 Ameri-| Ban :. ae ¥ . ewes thee hay ti _ |he expects the committee to! Pella called his defense minister fund raising dinner in Chicago on| 4 Albe J Davis said|°@" Legionnaires already stream- a tend . 0 Nichsrsy, tet, nynes T3hy . |launch public hearings about Nov. | and army chief of staff into urgent Sept. 14 has been taken aver by}. yor ht ic dat th a < wo ing into St. Louis for sessions prior} —“*,.* . “or never be ie ae gen had | WASHINGTON W—Idleness from’ quetion staff. — me | Fridays, Eleanor, a slim curva-| After exhausting her opportuni- Sie by icecline Wi ike ia The 78-year-old statistician and | The $150.000,000 borrowing will} de seh y sne “ee SUS-'labor strikes declined to. three’ . . ceous, 124-pound beauty with long! ties in Baltimore, she came to’ ance underwiters who had issued (One-time Prohibition party presi- be done by selling debentures, )pe re ang a not say WhY Hinion man-days in Juy:as com- Eleanor, whose cryptic title | blonde locks and blue eyes, works New York and landed a job at policies on the Flying Enter. ' dential candidate told his Gravity | which will be paid off in 1961. | sign | pared with 3%4 million in June. is ‘production assistant,” noted, 155 hours a week, sometines over | CBS-TV as editorial researcher and | prise, . ‘Research Foundation one practical | The interest rate and the price of ae The Labor Department, in re-) for instance. that the script of | 6 | assistant to the producer on “We ia for a. eeuvity insulator wodid | the debentures will be announced Blind Cartoonist’s Wife | porting this today, said that “Her Last Adventure,” called for | 1 a ioely through her own inia-| Take Your Word.” The Italian salvage ship Rostro be lightening the packs soldiers | later, when GMAC amends the) ‘idleness in both June and July, ® hairbrush strewn with blonde | registration statement it filed with | ! Undergoes Eye Surgery | was considerably below the same strands. Without bothering the | the SEC today. | NEW YORK (P_The wife of au-; Months last year when the nation. Prep department, she collected the nightly brushed remnants of tive, she has a finger, directly or! Then she held the same_posi- steamed out of Ostend today, back have to carry. indirectly, in every phase of the tion on the radio show, “The !0 the hulk about 40 miles off; “The ultimate goal would be | production from the first day of Nation's Nightmare,’ which won a Falmouth, England, where it sank | totally enclosed pressurized atr- | thor-cartoonist James Thurber yes- | wide steel strike was in effect. . b ‘ed lock |planning a show till broadcast | Peabody Award. under Carlsen in Januray, 1952. planes. The partial reduction of Chicago Hot Town ‘terday underwent an operation for. There were 700 strikes in July SL lah ca | time. “ety wdcic — ; ; the weight of these would revolu- a detached retina of the left eve. involving 410,000 workers. At rehearsals of ‘All Hallow's! She's the joint shadow of both 5 y advice fo newcomers is Pakistan Appoints Envo tionize their use both in war and y _ CHICAGO (m—Chicago, si//l\IN8| The surgery was described as suc- ‘Eve,"’ Manulis was worried about, Manulis and director Robert Mulli- ion be afraid to start at the Pp y peace.”’ in a current heat wave. has been cessful, Greek Isle Hit Again three straying moppet actors. Fl-' gan ) venom. ' KARACHI, Pakistan “® — The| Babson established the research a rather hot spot all summer long.) Thurber, who is nearly totally eanor took over promptly as baby- | . . | “If you really want to work in| Pakistan government announced | foundation here several years ago \ She's the program's contact for more than 20 different de- partments and dozens of indivi- | Weather Bureau records show’! j blind himself, said his wife. Helen,| ATHENS, Greece ‘(®—Three new | sitter and taught them as well a, |TV take the job that is offered Friday the appointment of Syed/|to further scientific studies of the that vesterday was the 3lst day | was resting comfortably and would | tremors, accompanied by gales) tune Hank Sylvern had composed to you and learn everything that ,Amjad Ali as Pakistan's new am-' earth's gravitational pull. this summer that the mercury. had} remain about two weeks at the| and heavy rains, caused heavy! for the show. ausi ‘you can. The experience that you | bassador to the United States. He | soared to 90 degrees or higher. The! hospital. the Eve Institute of the | damage last night on the earth-| She gave English lessons on the | - gain — patience and knowledge — | succeeds Mohammad Ali, who be-, Although clumsy in appearance, normal number of 90 degree days Calumbia Presbyterian Medical | quake-devastated Ionian island of} sct to the French actress Nicole! Eleanor was born in Baltimore all adds up in the end. It's im-|came the country’s prime minister an armadillo can run with astonish- w Chicago is 12 @ year. Center. . ) Kefailinia. | Stephane so her TV debut would and was graduated from Notre portant not to waste time.” jin April. . | jing speed when frightened. Death Notices in Demonia | Funera!) Directors 4 IN-LOVING MEMORY OF ED- | ward Earl Thrasher who passed | | | | | eR itat Balms oe Voorhees-Siple| ooo | MAN FOR covmatine IN | CURB | JEWELRY Wanted Male Help 5 5| Wanted Male Help 5 Wanted Mate Help 5! Wanted Male Help S| Wanted Female Help 6) Wanted Female Help 6 eee | en ne | A ~ | | | | Getting Paid for. : : oe . SEE IOE pass who . STORE Wioee aacatien ‘ante y abel aes : USED CAR | Engineering Your Ability? | of tg elec: mathematice oF GIRLS Is looking for an intelli- BPD OO « BROOKS AUGUST 27. 1953. HAR- rv, 10772 Bogte Lake Rd., Milford Mic! age 66: beloved husband of Mrs Elnora Brooks; dear and family IN LOVING MEMQRY OF CARL- FUNFRAL HOME —" = — ; ton Utley who passed away Aug. Service Plane or Motor Kelaful z brother of Marie and Joseph: | 39 1933 and Carl Utley who, ambulance u nelpful Advise | ; 7 ares mons of Rl ie ie me | passed away Aug. 29, 1946 Se | SALE MAN | | | ace. ork Gone. pay we Biche erie Must be 18. Apply in! = gent girl for office of the Rosary Wi t A silent thought, A secret tear 4 | | . : ; ae Sunday evening at the Brace! Keeps their memory, ever dear Brace kiuneral Home RECORDS We recognize ability and} 105 Puntiac Daily Press . work. Must be able to Funeral Home. Funeral Uservic€ -Motner, wife and family Pstad 1888 ___Otstingnisnen Servite tee | ; : : ee | ' oe A ly Mr. Agree ene, eae church: _ ‘We need a volume pro-!- pay well for it (potential éxaptureda wep. coop un TED nA AW IEW EL ERS, . t & a : c at = | a vm -1- < eh L : ID | White Lake. shop ga ees | Card of Thanks s 2 Donelson: Johns! ducer to round out our CLERK earnings $10,000-$15,000 ) hoa € tobs Union FE 2-7086 aficr Woodware at Square Loke Ra a wo Saginaw. ' land Park Cemetery tr, Brooks | ~~~~ aie ae at . og - . 7 “1 epy Tv : - » will Me in state at the Brace! we wisH TO EXTEND OUR FUNERAL HOME | force. Plenty of traffic. Two men are needed here:, MEAT APPEARING “MTDODLE. | CLERK-TYPIST - — saLesi.py WANTED TO 8 { Faperet ‘Home “| heartfelt thanks and appreciation! “DESIGNED FOR FUNFRAT | Liberal commissions. We O ‘| aged man wth car to work in| BIRMINGHAM LADIES SPORTSWEAR AND . | ne fur new Ford car| estabushed service territory with | National farm equipment finance| CFESSORIES. PERMANENT . : | dealer. Top earnings no lay-offs Co has opening for girl to do tvyp-| TION ONLY FXPERIENC sales: one for-new Tord) FE 2-281) for snterview appoint | ing & keep sales record Must be; NEEI) APPLY IN_ PE to our friepds and neighbors for) EDWARDS. AUGUST 28. 1953, WIL- | their acts of kinuness, messages | are a well-established ™ { sympathy and beautiful floral!) » * eo: - = { 7 Ham S*: 800 W. Huron St., Ann ped , 4 * { and cfte ll emplov- ment neat typist & accurate with, BURTON'S. 75 N SAGINAW. { z fferings received during our re- § Iirm an era pio) aaa z ate . Arbor, Mich., age 25; beloved hus a & : 5 eg T Luc [ke sales figures Call Mr Armstrong 9 a.m WOMA N V\ band of Mrs. Nancy McClellan) cent Bereavement in the oe mu ' ' ment benefits Write Or ractor | __ Wanted Female Help 6! w 5 om ‘or appointment MI- dren 2 i hd eet, Edwards beloved son of | Mrs | our Rhos’ Mercere’ eee ea BOX. REPLIES {' pontiac Press Box 12 I oul get aroun hospital Annan | 458008 dag week Forbush. Middle Straits Lake EM William S Edwards. Sr ear fa- | = oe = . ’ ‘ SS 10) -. oO : ’ 5 é earborn Motors Cre ‘orp 3-3076 ther of Sarah Edwards Funeral} family | i D} 1a} f | . ae seein) = Ao LADY WANTZD WAITRESS FULL OR| service will be held Sunday. Aug.| WE WISH TO EXTEND OUR} ' | 1Vv1S10n O | ization and surgical and NO NIGHTS OR SUNDAYS | part time 2960 Orchard Lake. ook all GIRL FOR a 30th at 2 p. m at Wopeheersrip Pai ee and Pagoda At 10 a.m today i medical benetits paid Va- Apply oe ens Drive Inn ment Funeral Home. Interment in Perry o our many friends & neighbors . . | | : , | = : 4 -pv SIL NISHER. EXPERIENCED | ; , Mt Park Cemetery Mr Edwards | Fisher Body Cushion room & | there were replies at , | . = } cations and anrple floor MACHUS BAKERY wood waxes, steady work Apply | SHIE ‘ 1 t the Voorhees- Detroit City Ice & Fuel Co. for A 1 ' Wanted! | I 160 W Maple. Birmingham ! Brown cleaners 1794 W Maple . . rite ao bah catch Mynerat! | the revs office inf) | ese | FORD MOTOR’ tine Se P| no ance, gomnisee, lsat = . . 5 . ¢ = . App ou in person Mountealm i vv y 2s cashiering an Yping necessary, _ ie eee mes, Sune ee ee hel pal the following boxes: ' | Bovine Center 30 East Mont l 921 W Huron bad lg MIDDI EAGED HOUSE- Company benefits. 40 hrs. 6% FLEMING AUGUST 28. 1953. ANNA | ses hie a ee Blanche | 1 | caim &t ‘ COMPANY | \ ou 1] be wot king with aE a a ae ee | nye an ood Wacer Phone Dray. rtd Te cea Bee ae aca Ves Lorraine Court, age 90.) Millmine son chard. pf : ; \ , 2 ; ; a ier Bt Men ANdiEw . i 8, 14, 15. 17, 18, '97, j | Bovs,. 16 or older. not go-| congenial co-operative _FE 5-7649 ton Plains. OR 3-0834 bard King. 3 nieces and one nephes | Floris?s -Flowers 3/9 29, 52, 56, 89, 82, 84, RR | any back to school wish: | | cu-workers Lee OR 0357 COR, & MATE ee Pas pT SALESLADY, WANTED, TO, SELE also survive. Funeial service. will | a | en hide Miia , i | ‘ $ OT, | 5 : s n7 pho an. | he , be held Sunday evenime at 8 p.m, | AAAATT OO em | 101, 102, 195, 115. > | y dav work yark 4: se ’ CLERKS _ 10 S. Saginaw CFFSORIFS-—-PFRMANENT POBE- | at the Sparks-Griffin Chapel PLORISTS—PLOWERS ing day work as par eu 2500 East Maple Kd. “a ait k over! Permanenm clerical positions at Gen-| MIDDLFAGED WOMAN TO stay | TION. ONLY EXPERIENCED ! ) | ; Come am at talk . Interment in Crestline. Ohjo Miss | 123 AUBURN PE 23-3173 i | attendants Apply Riker B ( t tl ie eying No typing et with ne aed children for 1} TONS Se diane BUR- Fleming will Me in state at the; ~~ ; eS Pa c ' irminglam your uture now with © $214 per month Apply to wees FE 2-0877 _ 7 _Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home | Rrabulance Servite Crane aidiclecviie, Neonat on + Poster at 40 W Pike St | SHOE SALESMAN - PREFER OR 3-1297 | Box 106 Pontiac Press , : aes asses Msc an hour Mid-| Do You Need a Home : i ermer | =a | - | 2579 Dixie H'way UNDE ; SAG tos W ' erry M M sewis) will d YOUNG MEN. 18 TO 28 FREE experienced, but will train quali 25 ; R oN UNDER 35 7 Ne will give a woman or gir!, ee ee Pe nunca pas! ; an "to travel U8 with national or, fie’ man Sec Mr Watson. Simm's | NAPCO DiLROI INC (A. We Hicks Goan oe WOMEN AGE 130 TO 60 white or colored. a permanent neral Home | The Pontiac Press yo ganization Excellent earnings av Bro. 98 J Saginaw _ | CHEVROLET MiCHANIC WITH keepink. Box 20. Pontiac Press; Wilting to work as combination| home in iovely Huntington Woods =< — — | -Ele t | erage $80 weekly Immediate cash | wois, Good job for right man !,app 1 Test - “* | waitress and daily store clerk section (11 Mile Rd and Wood- LEWIS, AUGUST 28 1953. WIL- | | ) CIrIClans Blt meee on wareetars | DS [BY CHOY Nail odie ae ‘ek fuene nalesgivin ieee, Sale rine Mad oe ‘ole. Se Res al nee acre is iUS§ 4 53 - ; no necessary Mr rawford : s yrs or part ime Mus e reliable. ! vot , 1 s ham ‘Herbert.’ 2262 Taylor St., | FOR WANT ADS | | Hout Heotevell B te Wace Dell PRESSMAN FOR LETTER PRESS| of age or older Neisner Bros Cuil PE Aoias before SA. o> Be auaig eTeee’ Nousewore 5 Detroit. Michigan, age 76, beloved | ; Journevmen Only | not phone PARTS sop. top eave, = Nott 42 N. caginaw ew ChERE = EEENOORAEN. Pe ae ae ee a | DIAL FE 2.8181 | EXP. MECHANIC Mtienle experience preterred. Call pe W% :°N.| HOUSEWORK, Accuracy cssential. Interesting AE CI eee ae —_ MA 6-514] tor appointment. Davi- per _ week. Must have Yefer- Miss Stenographer: work and pleasant working condi- and Lee Lewis. Funeral service Auto Inr Garage. Auburn Height ’ nee ' ences, FE 495 P &§ aiilibeaneld Manda AURUst CIstl { E 8 tos ; APPLY 4 SMe ABI iG SpRANTU SEY aoa Fzintine = 30034 12 Mile : c 77 MAYBE THE tions Send mr details to Bow , ee a a coo ‘rom & a.m. to 5 p.m? -E SELL ; . Farmington Steno her-Tvpi | “THE a ia at 2p m. at the Huntoon Funeral! — For honest, hard workine man, a otenographer- ivpist | . ar. : ; oa - z —— Home with Rev. Robt. M. Atkins 1 | FISHE 25 to 50 with old progressive | BOYS WANTED ; BIRMINGHAM | GRASS TS GREENER! | FFFICIENT AND EXPERIENCED officiating Interment in Lake- = : | eile. ' “ar \ Nat! ir yIN oe . J save . girl wanted for secretarial work, ating All errors snvuuld pe re highly rated Campany Advance. | 1) th. folowine cepartments ona arm Equipment financ- | Is typist. Good opportunity to yiew Cemetery, Clarkston. Mr. orleal) immediately ribs ment tor the right man Thorough | ,, = | S kR ine concern Shorthand & typing . , | advance ta expandin Phir M Tewis will ite in state at the Hun- ress assumes no see ; training in field Liberal com. Volume Ford Dealer needs toc oom required 5 day week. call Mr Maxve vou would like a job much) edvanve li exp g firm. 1 toon Funeral Hoine Binivmtonaeerare pier then | mission Car essential For ap b] t " ad Service Station | pupeniks 9am. to 5p. m for better than your own After all | wood Bo uke Orion. Indies ~ _ t : 4 re ; pointment cal) FE 26889 be capable man (8) yead | = | pointment MI 4-5800 why nov? a _ _ SMITH, AUGUST 28, 1959. SANDRA! § that portion of tre fret ot OENERAL MOTORS CORP. ot ee tee ee art department. Must Display Necces Gui wan r ee ee eee Kav, 207 State Ave beloved a sertion of the advertisement PONTIAC PLANT TOO! ROOM LATHE OPERATOR P ‘ f ; Positions oatfer full “ime em ployv- WAITRESSES PULL TIME AND| or one i dims 5 Pee at tps a eee ms cals atiw an . : daughter of Luther Wo and Wuich has oveen rendered 909 BALDWIN AVE Must be experienced Wohilfeil Dee have a good record and! ment and .pportunity tare art time at Scribbs Drive tn MR rl el p [ | EXPERIENCE DISHWASHER May Viola Smith, Gear sister of valueless through (Me error 1 Ei.gineering 2274 S Telegraph | i tefl trading leading 0 eset | Polv in person £ for mornings Must work Sunday, Ronald Lee Smith. Funeral ery | When cancellations are made ¢ | PONTIAC MICHIGAN “SINGLE “AN ON FARM | bea producer. Excellent | mene atate ine boy< who are am. |SALESLADIES - FOR _ CHIT LET TE nTIneTtelicalsneiecod Spel in person Frank & Esther’ the wilh be held Monda\ Aur. | be sure to get vour ‘kill | FE * °230 salarv and incentive lan | bttou and willing to learn Also | dren's Wear and ladies’ lingerie | hours are good you'll work with Auburn Ave — 3st at 2 p om. at the DeWitt C. meets No , adjustments | P & J SEL-UP MAN AND OPERA. | serene P | offer many. employee benefits Gepts See Mr Watson. Simm’'s congenial people. be right down-| FIRST CLASS COOK, NO HOLY- Davis Funeral Home with Rev, @ elven without it ; | sor Turret ‘athe operators. Too! | Write Pontiac Press Box) NNEI OFFICE Bros. 98 \ Saginaw town, get group insurance and| days, nights or Sundays. Twin Lawrence Dickens officiating In- Closing tme tor adver. $ | MEN WANTED FOR WAREHOUSE | makers Industrial Facilities, 391) 99 | Sears, “Roebuck & Co. | YOUNG LADIES, 18 TO 28. FREE. His ERP yecRtore ReseSOLSEE) S88, Ba. Oe ee We Bec dee CE Spe work. Apply Monday 730 am.) E. Wilson | ==. | low 1, Saginaw | to travel U § with national or. | ny | EXPERIENCED WAITRESS FOR Sandra Is at the DeWitt C. Davis sizes larger than regular _Coca ‘‘ola Bottling, 79 N Cass MiDULEAGEN MAN Wlln SOME ert Excellent earnings, If this grass looks greener WHY | “Hoping shit. Apply in persen, Funeral Home agate t ts 12 lock SOME not step by for a closer look ene . 5 ee — ‘es ype is to ociock noon z : : re house ec | SHORT “ORDER COOK. (BROILER ane $80 weekly. immediate poy ; Frank & Esther's, 577 Auburn , the day crevious to publica- Credit Manager teen house experience. House | man}. § nights a week Room op- mia foe expenses. Ex Anv dav will do: tuct ack for Miss; aye SWAILES. AUGUST 28, 1953. AME- tion for large. Pontiac Furniture store. Sesan a aan pelidae ged > MAN 2540 FOR SHIPPING-RE | tonal. Mrs Rennard Farming- ence bot necessary. Mr. Crawford,| [ockman. Advertising Dept. Pon- | AN, ve eo beloved mother of Wile Ey oe ee too Write civing caperinwre, OS.|MAN WANTED TO WORK IN| fing. dept Small = atheal el Rat wee | tae Press Must type, file ete chem vi1~ : 6 rite wiv experience, ref- TREE TRIMMER z.-ULBERRY , : : iam *r mailed, Une. bervice dav Cee Cuerton = erences and salary desired. Write; store Must have chauffeurs li- alee tolgg! ‘A =o fie pe bi x Se an L OR Yw ~ | a.m to 7 p.m state age and pha Averaged tr angg fo teeter [ea a _ Market a *seginew. Poultry | Feceiving, handling, and schedule ah *WASHER JICKIE'S TEXA. | Litsewers, Meee N pg CERERAL | | LADY FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK | : i experience. Write Daily Press Box at 2 p.m. at the Kirkby Funeral CASH WANT AD RATES S Sy S\N —— tn¢ of raw riaterials Handling, co 200 8. Telegraph | good wages. pvt. rm & bath. MA end sare of children oo Home! ieee Grand Lane || urs pae's Ores bors || moment SALESMAN UNUSUAL packtoe "ana, snppine of folie’ | expgnigNCED WASHING MA- | 52402 | Aner e ery. 1 . 8 w 3 - Will le in state at the Kirkby |) 2 9225 $168 $2.52 f| terested in selling women's better OPPORTUNITY Bon write ‘Posting’ Date Prec | chine cepalr man, Steady wort, (EXP WAITRESS FROM 12/70 6 VcASHIERS W7D CHAIN, STORE, Clerical Positi Panere! Home oo ae 125 2.43 3 60 fashion footwear ip leading ap- Sa ee both write Pontiac Defly Press| top wages, vacation with pay | P= Glenview Grill S77 N.| experience only. NR phone calls | erical Position = : 4 1 60 312 4.56 pa:el store Permanent opening fy ing education work! arise furnisn references. Call erry, Call in person. Good pay. Apply ‘Tom's Market,| Nea yoing woman between 18 afd. 5 2 00 3 60 5.40 work near home, Good draw| Nationa household goods moving} "PC pay experience, Refs. family | 5 g413 for appointment WANTED MIDDLEAGED WOMAN.| #88 Orchard Lake Rd | 2> Year> age with pleasing YOCUM. AUGUST 28. 1953, KATH- 6 240 4.32 e482) acainst top commission § day! Company wishes to contact mid-|—‘tatus_and hysical cond. MEN FOR INSTALLING AND| care of children, Room & board. | HWASHER -— NIGHT SHIFT al beapog lie for ull time position. ryn Arlene 2055 Knollwood 8t., | 7 2 80 504 1.56 | week and paid vacation. Apply | dle- red gentleman with a sales| EXPERIENCED BORMATIC. OP- servicing, of], gas heating equip- Wages. Call FE | DIS A her | Typing necessary. Position offersi age 37. beloved wife of Leonard | " 20 5.75 8 64 Jacobson’s. Maple at Bates, Bir-| background Successful candidate erator on Excelo Rochester ment Experience not necessary, | GENERAL NOMMraGnE 5 DAYS, MI ¢-0000 |\many emplovee benefits. ‘ Yocum, dear daughter of Mr. and 9 3 60 6 48 972 mingham. MI 4-6900 } will be thoroughly trained and Gear Works OL 1-9891. 4483 Orion will train. Must be reliable, call 2 nights or stay. 10 Mile Wood- | DEPENDABLE WOMAN _ FOR) APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE Mrs. Charles Bolen; dear mother | — —— will menue uci gre) Seo _Rd. Rochester - - Mr. Moery, MI 43014 wa section. $30. LI 6-2234. light housework and care of chil-| of John and Gerald Yocum. dear i i ic ’ nce. ‘4.oup insurance & other | LATHE OPERATORS, AND APPLY!" ~_.. A..s, After a E dren, 1 to 6 m. 5 days wk. sister of Robert Liechti. Elizabeth Birmingham Office Owe BURNER MAN benefits. wor details of this un- in person. cea only. Exp, Auto Mechanics OT ease eee ee FE ¢0743 wotere 2:30 p. m. Se . Roebuck & Co.: Jack and Richard Liechti. Char- | Pee copPortunity, write us brief-| DANIELS MANUFACTURING | Top earnings for men. See| ‘store Write Pontiac Press Box 96 |WTD. WOMAN TO CARE FOR 2 eee lene and James Bolen. Funeral Ph. Midwest 4-0844 experiencea o: bu « service and yee QUIT | PERSONNEL 2577 Orachard Lake Ave Mr. Grover, Ladd Motor Sales, | (pieaGED WOMAN oR | boys for few days. 103 8. Pad- service Will be held Monday, Aug | .nstallatio’ man preferably with wa .GER MARRIED MAN PREFERABLY. | Studebaker dealer. 451 8. Saginaw. “housekeeping fc see cigers ome. dock FE §-4025 = tist at 2:30 p m. at the Dudley) . Timken ofl burner experience . . Jo . Don't apply unless willing to work | PRESSED FOR MONEY? WE . —— ~| a ; 5 moore a are eon padobitabled 379 Hamilton qeer ae steady ‘o> for the. GREY\ AN. LINES, INC.! wee 7a) _ sid # brand new map $70.00 for | - ne ve — SHOE SAL ESMAN _ Stenographer-Typist MUSE Ceanee arelie | elt 57 WEST GRAND AVENUE BOOKKEEPER TO WORK ON 19 first hour's work. Interested’ Wanted! Salesgirl — For all ladies shoe store, good | National Farm Equipment financing fficiating itermer in ite | ' . CHICAGO 10 ILLINOIS part time basis. Familiar with Ph. FE 45172 |Full time, small dept. store. must; opportunity for person desiring @ concern. Shorthand & ‘typing re- ee hee ‘“ Lg se ge Set | payrolls & government reports. | ©=XPERIENCED WOOL PRESSER.| be experienced. Ph EM 3-3912 | steady position with top wages.| quired. 6 day week ene er ; ae e udley Moore . CARPENTER CREW FOR FINISH. | AFFILIATED WITH GREYHOUND e ab’c to type file & other of-| ull time. top wages excellent’ R & DEPARMENT STORE, 5 dav week Apply at once LG, — ® am. to 5 p.m. inera me. it tng colonial in Birmingham. MI LINES | fice work Write Pontiac Press working condition. Berg Clean-| Corner Cooley Lake Rd and Union Haig Shoe Sotre. 163 W. Maple tment. MI 46808. 2. 60117 Box 95. ers MA 5-3521. | Lake Road | Birmingham. | arborn Motors Credit Corp. - - ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 ai ) Moving & Trucking 12 WAITRESS WANTED —- MOSH- fer’s Restaurant. N, Main, _ Rochester. OL 60071. ACCEPTING APPLIC. NS FOR must be over 21 and able to do ing. Arthur Mur- _ra E. Lawrence 8t. GENERAL OFFICE WO - Shorthand and typing nec : A~wly Miss Antigone. = _Newports. _ WTD WOMAN FOR GENERAL Mean live in. Good wages. ~ SALESWOMEN fo sei Jadies ready to wear, salary plus commission. vacations with pay * aay wk. Apply in orreon. Osmun sah FOR) MOUSE WORE SUNDAY and holidays off. OL 2-4881 or OL GIRL TO TRAIN FOR GENERAL office work, no experience neces- sary, must be able to type. Call MA 63141 for appointment. Davi- son Printing Co., 30034 12 Mile Rd., Farmington "FEMALE HELP. MUST apply in rson. Prince Laundry s Cleaners. 5 Glaspie. ts fora, Mich. BEAUT: OPERATOR sito OR part time. call MI 4-5988 ~ Help Wanted “yg EXPERIENCED FRUIT PICKERS wanted. Cal) after 8 p. m MT 4.264000 WANTED OLD FASHION CABINET maker, to make cupboards in home. H. P. Sutton, _ FE 5 5-8312. COOK MUST BE EXPERI- enced, Oth:r help employed in home. Lapeer 467XM. MEN AND WOMEN WANTED or «ull time to canvass house neaoe with fast moving items be sold on credit. Earn up to $156 per week. Apply Liberal Store. 6 orate Saginaw L ESTATE GALESMAN WANTED AT ONCE P. W. DINNAN & SON no 8. _—ae FE 4-2577 ‘ & 4-2578 PERSONAL evER VIEW WILL not obligate you but will show that one who qualifies may earn over $8,000 a year Men or women. | 4712, De- ‘ Write P. O. Box No. troit 34 Instructions QRADTATE PIANO TEACHER.— Pupils enroll now. $1: a lesson, Mr.. Myers, 86 Starr st. _ TAP DANCING CLASSES_ BILL Clifford. Registgation Sat, — 12th, Jackie Js Studios, 214 8. Telegraph, LEARN BARBERING! | Write for free bulletin. Flint in stitute of yaa ee 118% ~ Water 8t.. Flint. ACCORDIONS LOANED FREE TP beginners. wessons given at your home by experienced teacher. OR 3-9466 ~ “Work Wanted Male 9 TELEVISION SER¥. MAN. BENCH work, 3 years exp. in own busi- ness. OA 8-2841 CEMENT AND ‘BLOCK “WORK, reasonable. FE 5-564 RELIABLE wiehies “MAN, JOB shop experience, must have 58-84 hours a week Midwest 6-1669. BOY 13 WANTS SMALL ODD JOBS. FE 4-8724 PAINTING WANTED BY ELDER- ly man, garages and smal! homes. FE 5-6838 7 MARRIED MAN IN EARLY 30's experienced in production plan- ping, production material control. Purchase follow up, shipping and Peceiving desires employment. Write Pontiac Press Box 77. EXP. PUNCH PRESS OPERATOR & set-up man cesires full time work. OA 8-3336 CARPENTER AND JOBBER. Framing, Ee or commer- cial. Call LAWN WORK AND DIGGING. basement «leaning, light hauling. FE 43264000 CARPENTER WORK WANTED, new and repair. Cabinets a speci- sity. FE 44210 : 3 KOREAN VETS. HONEST AND willing, ‘4esire any kind of work after 2p. m FE 5-8512 or FE 40330, TRUCK DRIV-R OR ANY OTHER kina or work. FE 5-1247. . CABINET MAKER & CARPENTER. Kitchens a specialty. FE 2-2532._ CARPENTER WORK WANTED. part time only. OR 43-2276 or EM 3-5624, Work Wanted ted Female 9A LADY WANTS TO CARE FOR children & live in, 6 days week. FE. 5-7989. ; COLORED WOMAN WANTS IRON- ing or ee days a week. Call after 5 T1797. RELIABLE WOMAN WANTS steady day work. cleaning or laundry, $7 & car fare. FE 2-7424. PART TIME OFFICK, OR SALES work between child's school hours, 9 to 3:30, exp. MI 42678. WASHINGS & ee pol WANT- ed. Good work FE 4 WOMAN WANTS TO Ce FOR children tn my home. OR 3-9527. COLORED DESIRES MON., TUES.. and Thurs, day work. ‘37. plus fare FE 47749 after 6 | WOMAN WANS WASHINGS & tronings done in my home. Work guaranteed. FE 2-7775. MIMEOGRAPHING, TYPING, themes, dissertations, secretarial ‘work. EM 3-5197 WTD. CARE OF 1 OR 2 ered and do light housework. MA ¢18 EXP. COLORED GIRL ride housework or caring for children by the da~ or week FE 4-9419 ~ WASHINGS & IRONINGS ~ - FE 4-943 ENVELOPE THAN EARNEL STEN- _ gils cut and typing done. FE 5-1272 Laundry Service FOR FAMILY LAUNDRY SERV. | ice er Pontiac Laundry, FE ; Lice CUR1.INS, PLAIN OR ruffled. beautifully finished. Pon- Laundry. Phone FE 2-8101. Painting-Decorating 11 11A | INTERIOR DFCORATING. — EX- terior on Expert mechanics. FE 5-9756 HOME DECORATING COMPANY specializing in rémoving = wall- ‘paver & painting over plastered | walls No job too smal! or contact in person at 180 Wa- basso. Walled Lake WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING, | painting. OR J-2284 PAINTING AND Paper removed. FE 4-6918. WALLPAPERING AND PAINTING Call for est. FE 4-0258 INTERIOR #* EXTERIOR EaINT tng FE 76596 E 5-0242 DECORATING. free estimates. a Pe Eaap reasonable rates cal) -O759 O’DELL CARTAGE Local and Long ce Moving Phone FE 5-6806 TOR SERVICE, LIGHT ANL HEAVY “TRUCKING | Rubbish hauled FE 2-0603. SUDDFN SERVICE, ASHES R avs. | bish and light trucking. FE _ Garden Plowing 12A WTD. PLOWING, DISCING, DRAG- ging, leveling, ‘nay & weed mow- _ ing. Jaycox, PE 4-9997. GARDEN AND YARD PLOWING, discing, leveling. Any place, any time, prompt service. All power ft equip, 'PE 4. 3371. 13 Business Service TREE TRIMMING & RE- | moval. Ph. FE 5-6593 or OR 3-2000. | APPLIANCE SERVICES | We service all makes of refriger- ators, washers, radios, cleaners, and all types of smal) appliances. | ROY’'S. 96 Oakland Ave. FE 2-4021 | WTD. BRICK, BLOCK AND STONE FE 2-2936. work Call eves BEACH CLEANING _ EM 3-2088 ~ STEAM CLEANING Ali types of steam cleaning done. Pontiac Farm and Industria] Trac- wef _Co_ FE 4-0461: FE 4-1442 Sales FE A&B TRENCHING | wang? water lines, field tile. FE 5-181) & service. 736 W. Huron. 5-4622. TREE TRIMMING & REMOVAL. Free estimate FE 4-8805. FE. _7-8628. PLASTERING | FE 5-0626, FE 5-0925 Leo Lustig PREE ESTIMATES ON EAVES- MACHINES SHARPENED MANLEY LEACH — 10 BAGLEY ACE TREE SERVICE. REMOVAL. _Pree est. PE 2-7188, OR 3-2304, | OHN’S TRENCHING ~ 28, water lines, and septic _ and-drain tile lines, FE 71-8643. HOUSE RAISING, MOVING, block & brick work of all kinds, _ cement work. FE 5-0424. TRENCHING eee Tile Cc. — CONSTRUCTION 3-7156 after 6 wULEBOSnC FREE BSTIMATES. Prompt aba R. Dunn. 41925 or FE 4 PUASERING Db D. MEYERS. EM 3-8830 EXPERT REFRIGERATION | ice, all makes, 2-1427. EXPERT TREE ‘ TRIMMING | & RE- moving. FE 7-6822. SUBURBAN SEPTIC TANK CLEAN- ers, Lake Orion. MY 2-2 2842, ELECTRICAL SEWER CLEANING Sinks Sun. Service. Ph. FE 4-2013. ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE, RE- rewinding. 218 E. _ . Ph. FE 4-3981 EXCAVATING, GRADING, BULL- dozing. road bidg. Ph FE 23-5422. ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by factory trained men at our store. Genera) Printing & Office Supply Co., 17 W. Law- Tenoe St. Phone PE 3-0135. EAVESTROUGH | New repairs, cleaning. Novak Co. FE 5-073. . ~ EAVESTROUGHING | Bryan P._ French FE 5-6973 Warm air heating & sheet metal, SAWS.SHARPENED. 27 W. PRINCE- cae 23-6382 eves. and week- en BLOOMFIELD WALL CL ‘Walls and Windows Ph, FE 2-1631 Landscaping 13A BEAUTIFUL BLUE GRASS SOD, cut extra thick 35c yard deliv- ered. White's, FE 5-3140. CUSTOM MOWING: LIGHT, MED- jum, heavy power equipment, quality work. General landscap- ing. Ask for Ted at FE 4-0461. ROTO TILLING Garden and lawn work. FE 2-5631 CRANE’S LANDSCAPE SERVICE. Compiete lawn building and main- SERV- reasonable. FE CLEANERS. Cleaned. tenance. FE 71-8333 FE 5-5386 SODDING — SEEDING -- TREE planting, complete landscaping. FE 4-1196. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING— seeding, sodding. grading, load- __ing, excavating. 50477 Upholstering 13C | — DRAPER: covers, materials. 81927 ; CUSTOM FURNITURE UPHOLSTERING WAHL UPHOLSTERING SERVICE PREE EST. _ PHONE. FE 41959 | SLIP. COVERS, DRAPES & BED- _ spreacs. Your material, FE 5-5797. CUSTOM FURNITURE UPHOL- | Stering. Est. free. Don Eakle. EM Iz8, SLIP- Beadle. FE | Marais 1 | R 3-2183 | | | _DON'S Radio & TV Service. auanens “OF CUSTOM BUILT! furniture; upNolstering. 34 South: Telegraph. Thomas Upholstering Phone FE 5-8888 | FURN. REFINISHING, REPAIR. | Antiques a specialty. FE. 4-0554 Television Service 14A HOME SERVICE CALLS — $3.50 DAY OR NIGHT MITCHELL'S TV | 109 N. Saginaw PE 2-2871 | DAY, NIGHT-SUN. TV SERVICE, $3.50. FE 5-1296, FE 5-8390. M. P. STRAKA M. D. M. TV SERVICE. APTER 6 D. m. call fE 5-6727. FOX TV. & PADIO SERV. SERV. call $3.50. Cor. Hatcnery & Air-| _ port Rd. OR3-1647, FE 17-7598. GUARANTEED TV REPAIR; ANY © make. FE4-9736. ANDY CON- Building Service 15 COMPETE LINE OF MASONRY, cement © carpenter work, brick block laying. EM 3-8061. : | PAINTING. INSIDE & GUI FREE| TERRAZZO RUBBER. CERAMIC | __estimates. | FF 2-4137 Painting & Wall Washing, Pree Estimates Reas. Wall Washing & Free estimates. PAPERING, PAINJING, WALL washing Paver removed. FE 2- _ 9192 FE 47790. — - PAINTING, A-1 WORK, ~ GUARAN. teed. FE 2-4315. er ee PAINTING. REP. FE 5-45 Moving & Trucking 12 Painting MAN WITH % TON TRUCK WANTS _work. Call any time. FE 4-8421. ~ SMITH MOVING Van or Pickup Service. FE 4-4864. HAULING OF ANY KIND. REA- sonable. FE 2-6857. Trucks for Rent and Dump Trucks Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. __ FE 4-0461—PFE | 4-1442 VOLLMAR MOVING AND S8TOR- age. Large vans anywhere in United States. Quick service. FE 5-8562. 341 N. Perry. TRUCKING PROMPTLY DONE. PE 52674 . VE” WITH 3 TON TAKE TRUCK want hauling. E 4-4088 D&D in co. Pick - i a and delivery service. Mov- king of al) kinds. 34508 or FE 438158 | FE 2-2706| CEMENT . WORK, | _ tile, flagstone. residential BUILDER. Commercia! P.H.A. terms. PE 2-2671. and ALL KINDS | floors, driveways, atc. Jensen FE 2-2340 FE 5-2311' BLOCK. BRICK. CEMENT WORK | & fireplaces FE 2-2468 FIREPLACES, STONE WORK, | fireplace repair. FE 5-3026 after 6 BRICK, BLOCK AND CEMENT work. Also chimneys. No job too large or oe Guaranteed _ work. — ROOFING All types new & old. Free esti- mates Joy Pennebaker, FE 4-0612 QUALTY ROUGH CARPENTER crew available We specialize in contemporary & ranch.homes. FE __ 53109, SMITH & LIMINGA Carpenter contractors. Get our bid too. OR 3-2276 or EM 3-5624 FLOOR SANDING. LAYING, FIN. oe 491 Central FE EAVESTROUGHING Coal, of] & gas burners. McLain Sheet Metal. FE 4-5051. CEMENT WORK, BASEMENT floors. driveways, steps. Nothin too large or too small. Free esti- mation OR p-0791 or FE 42-7361. MASON & CEMENT WORK:\ FREE estimates, our work guaranteed. OR 3-9402 A. J. Webster & Son. CEMENT WORK BLOCKS porches, fireplaces and sea-wal!s 3-4879. 4 PLUMBING AND HEATING. fi. 8. Compton @& Son. FE 4-3767, FE 2-5440,00 UARANTEED ROOFS, ALL kinds. Est. 1916. J. A. Rugus, 352 N. Cass, PE 2-3021, FE 23-8946. troughing. repairing, cleaning. OR 3-9593 . : SAWS, LAWNMOWERS | .gectlip>le for _ parties. PY Nee tect ores nt WHE Gog - a “He wants his good conduct ribbon!”’ Building Service 15 COMPLETE LINE OF MASONRY. brick. block & stone FE 5-3004. CARPENTRY WORK — ALTERA- tions, modernization, repairs. tile, recreation rms. roofing, siding. OL 32-1221. MILLER BROTHERS, FLOOR LAY- ing, sanding @& finishing. 16 years service in Pontiac. FE 5-3162 Custom Built Cabinets Ln as Free Estimates OR Soe “REMODELING AND modernizing service. Attic rooms, recreation rooms, dormers, addi- tions complete spartment altere- tions, custom building. F. H. A. financing. } 4-5470. GENERAL BUILDING REPAIR. peter stone & cement work. FE saat “ROCK PILLING PATCH ring. FE io and pilaste R. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING sanding «ind f g. Phone 14530 “ FLOOR LAYING, SANDING AND finishing. 16 years experience, Modern quipment. John Taylor, Phone FE 4-0424. PLUMBING HEATING REPAIRS, IO J. EK. Wernet. FE 2-784 CEMENT WORK RES. . AND comm., free estimates. Raymond Commins. FE 4-9 9366. JO8. FLEMING, FLOOR LAYING, sanding. Oe 155 Edison. 4405. Ph, FE SOURED CONCRETE BASE- ments Why -build with blocks? Get our bid woo! Or 3-7184. SMALL CONTRACTOR WITH well organized crew would like opportunity to bid rough in jobs, projects or otherwise. MA 41741 or contact in person at 180 Wa- basso Walled Lake. PLASTERING, PATCH PLASTER- ing. FE 2-8997. CARPENTER & CABINET MAKER wishes new and remodel work. FE 40720 CARPENTRY, “BLOCK, CEMENT work. etc. FE 60782 PLASTERING AND __ contracting. FE 17-6678 _> Builders’ Supplies PP ADAMS REALTY CO. Interested in aluminum storm win- dows & doors? Contact us & one bl our representatives will call for a demonstration of the fies Eagle Picher window. No _ obligation. guaranteed by __Good Housekeeping FE 4- 3393. __Typewriting Service 17 PATCHING 16 TYPEWRITERS “AND ADDING MA- chine repairing. Expert work. Genera) Printing and Office Sup- ply Ca.. 7 W. Lawrence. TYPEWRITERS RENTED Mitchell's, 123. N Saginaw St. — Dressmaking-Tailcring 18 18 TAILORING SUITS & COATS, RE- modeling, & alterations, Edna _ Warner, FE 2-2634. 0 - Chiropodists 20 MAURICE THOME. D 8. 1203 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 71. ‘PhotosAccessories 20A HAPPIEST ®AMILY MEMORIES in family portraits LoPatin Studio FE 47391 21 Lost and Found tN Nat at Nt at et LOST-BEAGLE PUPPY VICINI- tv of Commerce. EM 3-3430. Re- ward ee a LOST —- VICINITY E WALTON Blvd. white, yellowcand grey half grown female cat Rather long hair. Reward FE 44639. LOST pup, 8 months old FE 2-9945 Notices and Personals 22 AND AFTER THIS) DATE Aug. 29. 1953. I am not respon- sible for any debts. contracted other than by myself. Margaret Walters, 164 Liberty, -Pontiac, bag ND AFTER THIS DATE AUG pie 1953 I will mot be _ respon- sible for any debts contracted | by anyone other than. myself Bernard C Deighton, 732 Cart- + wright, Pontiac, Michigan FOR BETTER CLEANING ON BROWN CHESEPEAKE | 424 Marian i ‘TO | | | | | | gleaming use Fina! eep colors Foam, rug and upholstery cleaner aite’s Notions. e PONY RIDES 2561 “CROOKS RD % mile N of Auburn; also avail- picnics, schoo] and churen ‘festivals. FE 5-3979. SCHOOL GIRLS COLD WAVE. $5 50 complete Dorothy's, 500 N. Perry FE 2-'244 1 | BLOCK MACHINE AT uburn Heights will be sold for storage, t& not called for within 30 days. FE 17-8672 | SUMMER SPECIAL! $650 Dorothy's, 500 N. Perry. FE 2-1244 for appointment. COLD WAVE | | 100 WEDDING INVITATIONS $6.50. | Printed napkins, 3 day service. _ Sutherland Studios. 18 W KNAPP SHOES FE 5-6720. STREAMLINE YOUR MID- 8EC- ‘fon Reducett FE 48862 HORSEBACK RIDING INSTRUC- tions, i only. moonlight rides. FE 46196, SHUT-INS HAVE YOUR EYES examined at home. Dr. Harold __ Bussey, Optometrist. PE 4-5211. _ SCIENTIFIC SWEDISH MASSAGE _____73_ELM |8._ FE 4-2851. ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly advisor, contact Mrs. Vernon Vie, Ph. FE 2-8734. Con- _ fidential. The Salvation Army. DAINTY MAID FOR SUPPLIFS, Mrs. Burnes. FE 2-8814. 93 Mark. Wtd. Children to Board 25 EXCELLENT CARE IN LICENSED _ home. | FE 48085. Share Living Quarters 26 WANT TO SHARE A 5 RM. FLAT near General Hosp. with em- loyed lady. Exc. opportunity for Ene right person. FE 22-9696. SHARE 3 ROOM APT. WITH male 22 Bliss. gue es Wtd. Household Goods 27 BUNK BEDS Must be clean and in good con- dition PHONE FF. 5-4505 LET US BUY IT OR AUCTION IT for you. OA 8-2681, ‘ Huron | Wtd. Household Goods 27 | NOTICE — IF YOU WANT TO GET | the high dollar fer your iurni-' ture, we either buy it or auction | it for you. Call L & 8 Sales Co., FE 7-0783. WANTED TO BUY ALL TYPES of furniture. Ph. FE 2-5523. FURNITURE NEEDED Entire nome or odd lots. Get the top dollar. Will buy outright or sell it for you. B. B. Community Sales. Ph. OR 3-2717. Open 8 to ® for Your Convenience Pest eS Fe 6660 Dixie Waterford ana oed (alee fo) 8) bome W of Pontiac or 8 to Royal Oak. Nag aad $2, dn. ° ie Your r Property? oak ab method so “naalitied pros: time and money. Peek, REALTY CO., REALTORS 1075 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-0263 NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH ___ POSTOFFICE OUR 3 BEDROOM HOME, $750 4 BEDROOMS Buyer tel! oy up down ment will to sah 00 for home. my Quick yh Edw. M. Stout, Realtor ~ | Open Eve. Till 8:30 TT N. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 5-8165 WTD, 2 ACRES NEAR PONTIAC or Rochester nan pay up to! | __ $500 cash FE 4-7474 For Rent Rooms 3. 32 OPPO Pst ™ { PVT ENTRANCE Washin | in. $7. telephone privileges. Close FE 27-0727 before 89 p. m ONE SLEEPING ROOM FIRST floor, One block from town. 70'a Auburn Ave. FE 41844. Wed. Transportation 27A GIRL WANTS RIDE FROM . Dublin School near Oxford to Pon- tiac. Working bours 8:30 to 5:30 EM _3-3867__ RIDE WTD. FROM 6860 ORCHARD Lake Rd. to Grand Circus Park. Days MA 6-2092. Eves. RIDE FROM PERRY ‘PARK AT 5:30 a. m. to Rochester 5 or 6 days a wk. OL 6-1441, OL 6-0071 Wanted Money 29 29 | WANTED TO BOROW $1600 on 2nd mortgage on lake property. _EM 35207, 0 Wtd.. Miscellaneous 28 PPP PBPAPD DDD DLP DPD Po WTD. TO BUY GOOD LARGE SIZE coal furnace with blower. Must just iike new. H, P. Sutton, §-8312. a5 FUEL OIL TANK WITH OR without leaks. OR 3-1663 SNOWSIJITS, LARGE SIZE WOM- en's suits, men’s suits and odd trousers. Thrift Shop. 192 S. Sag- inaw. MA 5-4499. FIREPLACE SCREEN & ANDIRON __ Also bedroom chair. FE_ 5-0185. Wtd. Contract Mtgs. 30 $1,000,000.00 5% for new low-cost, easier, safer loans on farms and better homes from ‘2 acre with 100 ft. front- age. No appraisal or closing fee. CHARLES REALTORS 22'2 W. Huron FE 4-0521 “After 6 FE 4-6862 of FE 5-! 5-8891 IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR land contrace or equity in your home. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 53% W. Huron FE 2-6223 CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT Ralph B. GARNER Investments National Bank Bld OL 2-761) Rochester. Mich. WE HAVE $200,000 At our disposa] to purchase new or seasoned land contracts for our clients. See me before you sell. ASK FOR BOB MAHAN. MAHAN -REALTY CO., REALTORS CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS Open Evenings and Sundays 1075 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-0263 441% Mortgages mt ial 4 310 Pontiac Sank Bldg FE 5-6772 Wanted Real Estate 31 WE WANT TO WORK We want action for our lives ly salésmen and we want td OL 1-7801 give you action on the sale of your properties. We can sell anything, anywhere at anytime. Homes, farms, bus. opp. commercial properties, land contracts. If we can't sell them we will buy them ourselves. Call now and have a salesman at your place in 30 minutes. “GET RICH QUICK,” CALL Edw. M. Stout, Realtor Open Eve, Till 8:3 77 N. Saginaw St. Ph. TEs. 8165 WE HAVE BUYRS FOR GOOD. farm properties. Any location, also need small homes, able down paymens with reason- ROY KNAUF, Realtor 2644 W FE 2-7421 Eve “OA 8-3339 Johnson The big dane, is now in his new modern up to date office an. needs all types of listings. Just phose and a friendly sales- man wil! call and help you with your real estate problems. We are still selling 95 per cent of our listings A. JOHNSON, Realtor Ph. FE 4-2533 Our New Location 1704 8. Telegraph Rd, Bloomfield Fashion Shop WILL BUY OR LIST YOUR LAKE property. Purchasers waiting. R. F. McKINNEY Office 8800 Commerce 8t. Phone Pontiac EM 3-3-1] oF Univ 1-5798 ACTION We sell for some of the People in town Why not have us sell for you? No deal too big or t smal). CASH FOR YO EQUITY JIM DICK WRIGHT-VALUET 222 8. Rien PE 5-0693 Trade or Sell We specialize in trades. We made several] satisfactory trades in 1952. Large down payments are scarce. Trades are made to satisfy all parties concerned. Call us. Do not fee] obligated. DORRIS & SON PE 4-1557 WE BUY—SELL & TRADE WANTED: 4.5. OR 6 ROOM HOMES with 1 to 10 acres, also homes in smartest city or om a lake. Cash buyers waiting. Call immediately for quick sale PAUL M. JONES, REAL ESTATE 832 W. Huron FE 4-3 just south of | NICE, CLEAN ROOM. BREAK- fast optional. Close in. FE 65-0774. SLEEPING erty ‘PRIVATE EN- trance. 174 CLEAN *BLEEPING RM. Paddock. 5-4025 ROOM a 2, NEAR BUS LINE. __FE 5-7233. | LGE. SLEEPING RM. FOR 2 MEN preferred, pvt. entrance. 399 Fer. ry. FE CLOSE IN ROOM. MAN OR LADY. | $5 FE 4-2583. BUSINESS GIRLS TO SHARE A | ae room with twin beds. Everythin furnished. Use of living room é| kitchcn. Laundry oy 5 min: from downtown, FE 2-370 SLEEPING ROOM FOR CLEAN | sober gentleman, downtown, 25, Judson. FE 42845. after 4. 2 RCOMS FOR WORKING COUPLE FE 2-6039 _ | SLEEPING | “ROOM FOR 2 MEN. | RM. 103 “s. 3 N’CE: RMS. FOR TEACHERS. FE 2-9002.__ / _ 1 LARGE PARTLY FURN. ROOM | with kitchen and bath privileges. | Private entrance. Middle aged couple preferred. 743 St. Clair. FE 2-9919. _ _ - SLEEPING ROOM ON 637 CEN- tral ave, near Yellow Cab Fac- | tory. _ : _ - | COME TO OUR HOUSE FOR) _ clean, cool rooms. FE 40554. | CLEAN ROOM 2 BLOCKS TO _town, FE ee Wanted to Rent 32A COUPLE WITH 2 CHILDREN | would like 4 or 5 rm. furn. house, oe to school. Good reference. | 3 MICH. ADULTS DESIRE 2 Bie | room house unfurnished. Will take very good care. FE 2-8844. EMPLOYED COUPLE DESIRE 3 or 4 room unfurnished west side apt. Pontiac Press Box No. 321 SCUTHERN FAMILY NEED 4 RM furc. or partly furn, apt. 2 chil- dren, 11 & 13 FE 2-i747. DIVORCED MOTHER WITH 3 small children would like furn or unfurn. apt. or trailer. Reas Close in. FE 5-8297 QUIET CHRISTIAN WORKING couple wish unfurn. apt. West End preferred. Call FE 2-4288. 6 OR 7 RM. UNFURN. MODERN house for a family of 6. Close to Pontiac. FE ¢1913. REFINE AND ARTISTIC GEN- tlemen wants 2 or 3 rooms. Only need stove and refrigerator, Call mornings & evenings FE 5-2869 Pontiac, WANTED FURNISHED OR UN- furmisaed house wiil do minor repairs. FE 5-6006 4 OR 5S ROOM HOUSE FOR A coiored family with one child. Box 23 " a | WANTED UNFURN. APT, FLAT or home, 2 bedrms., no children, no pets. Desirable ‘neighborhood. Call) Washington, Mich, Stillwell) 1-2711, or write to FURNAE EX- CHANGE, 56130 VanDyke St, Washington, Mich. FAMILY OF 5 DESIRES 4 OR 5 rms furn. No smal) children. FE 4-5948 RESPECTABLE YOUNG WOMAN | desires furn, 1 or 2 rm. apt. Near Pont., ref. Pontiac Daily Press | Box No. 27. BUSINESS MAN AND FAMILY would like 3 or 4 bedrm. home. Furn. or unfurn., good references. Will lease, OR BLOOMFIELD HILLS TEACHER, | wife and baby desire apt. or small | house unfurn. Call MI 4-1303. | YOUNG MINISTER, WIFE AND | child desire 5 or 6 rm apt. or bouse in or near Pontiac. Rent _feasonable. Ph. FE 4-7450 Hotei Rooms 32B HOTEL AUBURIN Rooms by Day or Week Also 1 or 2 Room Apaftments Cooking and refrigeration unit 464 Auburp Ph. FE 2-9239 Rooms With Board 32D RM. & BOARD IN NICE HOME, | men. 741 Owego | ROOM & BOARD GOOD MEALS. _ Single beds. FE 2-7633. _ . | PLEASE CALL FE 2-3853 for rm & board, Night shift only. 38 Matthews | ROOM & BOARD FOR ELDERLY lady or map. Curtis Rest Home FE 5-0040. |MAN. TO SHARE LARGE ROOM. | twih beds, west side, breakfast __ if desired FE 2-3429 Rent Apts. Furnished 35 2 RMS ent ile stg al UTILI- ties, Adults. FE 2- 2-266 | 2 LARGE ROOMS, PRIVATE . EN: | trance. adults only, FE 4-4625 after 5. Out Baldwin 2 children under schoo' age welcome Gas heat Gas & lights not furn, $20 week. FE. 5-1453. . 2 RM. ADULTS ONLY. 80 Lafay- ; ette St. - _ 7 | NEW 3 ROOM APT FURN. OR unf. Utilities furn. $25 wk. Apply 8240 Highland Rd ; 2 SPACIOUS RMS. WITH KITCH- enette & bath, strictly pvt. adults. il ROOMS. PAST CITY LIMITS FE 27120000 SMALL MOD. APT. PVT. BATH. Ground entrance. Adults. 976 Myrtle. 2 LGE. FURN. RMS., WALKING distance to town, adults only. OR 3-707T. FURN APT. FOR RENT CLOS to town, adult only. 55 Douglas. 2 ROOMS & BATH. PVT. ENTR. Near High School. FE 47182. CLEAN 2 RM. APT... LARGE kitchen, cabinet sink, refrigerator. entrance, adults only. 36 Florence. 2 ROOMS. CLOSE IN. CLEAN, quiet men. FE 45837. FOR COUPLE OR 2 EM girls. Adults only. 290 ‘ad- dock. 2 ROOM FURN, APT. ADULTS only. FE 4-7122 3 RMS AND BATH, bE yal FLAT, Commerce Village. 23 FT. HOU tie jas & water. FE) 7-8672, Call after 6 32 RM. ~FURN. APT, ADULTS, no drinkers, 61 Seneca, FE 2-3398. | 9 MI. | Rent Houses Unfurn. _Wanted Real Estate 31| ent Apts. Furnished 35 Sale Houses . 40 NEWLY " Want to Sell? | “eestor Pen 3.men. aio = Lv probiagge gr os _—— BUYERS WAITING LOVELY 1 a *s EDROOM. © you have or your! bath & entr. 3 blocks from High DAILY 3-9 P.M. Clarkston. or Waterford (call wi | Mary. pb, comers erriat BS CONDAY 1.9 PML 2 yi iiataaea No drinkers. FE WHITE BROS. J RMS. & BATH, cae . RE 2314 MIDDLEBELT ROAD erences. No children. FE | * 4¢-9838. MODERN 3 & 4 ROOMS, ADULTS only. 73 Brabb, Oxford, Mich. OA 83668. ONE LARGE ROOM & KITCHEN- etre, Furnished, Steam Heat. On Pontiac Lake 8186 Highland Rd. _ Pontiac, Mich FURN UPPER 3 Rooms AND bath. FE 5-1560 after 6. EFFI CY, VERY ATTRAC- tive. Large combination liv. room & kitchen-bath-steamheat-rollaway bed. 1] or 2 adults. $65 per month 3490 Airport Rd. Corner of Wil- _ ams Lk. Rd § RMS. & BATH, FURN.. ADULTS Sie” Gicmene floor; $25 wk. 200 mens SMALL EFFICIENCY APTS ON Pontiac Lake, available Sept. 14 R & K Cabins Bay. OR 2740 2 RMS. & BATH, PVT. ENTRANCE main floor. 2 men» 16 Florence, after 4. 2 ROOMS & BATH, FIRST FLOOR, 1 child welcome, no drinkers, Gingeliville. 5-19: 2 CLEAN ROOMS, HEAT. LIGHTS New washer, built-in sink. as. fr 41363. 76 So. Jessie before 2:38. 2 RM. FURN. APT. ADULTS only. See caretaker in rear of aw “Bteinbaugh ct. FOR MARRIED COUPLE OR ed, 26° Orchard Lk 3 RMS. TSOnn: COUPLE ONLY. __ 6225 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 5-3249. > RMS. FURNISHED APT. 124 8. Johnson. _ 2 RMS. NICELY FURN. eotrance. Over Foot clinic. 157 W Huron. FE_ or FE 4-7241 SMALL APT FOR | 1 OR 2 CLEAN $75. PVT. Directions: Orchard Lake Road “% mile west of Telegraph Road to Middlebelt Road — turn left to model. SEE THE LARGEST NEW HOMES FOR YOUR MONEY FOR THOSE WHO DESIRE GRACIOUS LIVING NOTE THESE FEATURES: Spacious, eye-appealing rooms. FULL BASEMENT — POURED CONCRETE Genuine stone sills. PLASTERED WALLS Select oak floors. INTERIOR SLAB DOORS Ceramic tile bath. DOUBLE SINK — TILE DRAIN BOARD 3 BEDROOM. FACE BRICK HOME, cabinets. fellows. FE 2-60 4 ROOM APT TOR WORKING | couple, refrig. & stove newly dec- orated, no drinkers. FE 3-7223 MODERN 3 RM. & BATH, COUPLE only, nr Fisher ody. Inquire 109 Dresden Rent Apt. Unfurnished 36 3 & BATH STEAM HEATED APT, newly decorated, 2nd floor Oak- land & Clark. Adults only. $55 References. Phone FE 5-8822 after 6 pm- 3 RMS, & BATH, MIDDLEAGE | couple. FE 7-0194. _4 ROOMS & BATH UPPER APT For quiet couple. Heat furn. Near bus stop on 8. Marshall FE __2-2088. 2 RM. CLOSE — housekeeping. FE 2-588 Rent Houses Furnistied 37 OD DBBB OOOO Elizabeth Lake Lovely modern nicely furnished 2 bedroom home References. $125. monthly. Available» after Sept 7. DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER REALTOR 3140 W. Huron FE 2-4411 | 27 FT. SPARTAN 1947 HOUSE- trailer. Call between 5 30 & 10 30 Pp. m or Sat. & Sun EM 3-2736 AT 14 MI. COMPLETELY FURN., re-dec $22 wk. Two adults only head Required, 832 S. By wood | avamane SEPT 8 TO JUNE | 15, 3 nicely furnished 2 bedroom modern homes $60 monthly Baldwin to Clarkston Rd. right to Joslyn, left to 626 Lawson Lake Orion, (Detroit Vermont 60171. 4 RMS.. ADULTS. NO DRINKERS, ref. Call all day Sat. week days, 82 E. Corne!l 9 RM. HOUSE ern conveniences 2-6483, Detroit GARAGE HOUSE FURN. $110 PON- tiac Lake Rd - COMPLETELY FURN LOG CABIN 2 bdrm. lease for 10 mos apply 1903 Walkins Lake Rd MODERN 6 RM. FURN. HOUSE 2 blocks from down town. $135; @ month 28 Feneley Ct, call _7 oclock Sat. p. m. PURN DUPLEX, Florida. Rented year around. Jj yrs. old. $13,500 terms. MA 5.6091, after 6 MODERN 6 RM home west of Pontiac until June, 1954. Waterford school district Well furn. $100 monthly. EM 3-4665 2 BDRM. MODERN. Bept. 5 to May 5 31 Crescent Lake FE 5-7468 MOBILE HOME. 22 FT. 6 FT. refrigerator, bath, automatic heat. See Taylor, front apt. by 2 pm. 2 blocks E. of Baldwin on Walton LEASE, COOLEY LAKE FRONT, Sept. 12 to May 12, adults, small baby. FE 2-6515 eves. FROM PONTIAC, LOVELY lakefront home, rms, auto. heat firepiace, completely mod., beautifully furn., adults, $100 per mo Sept. 15 to May 15. 3-524, TO RESPONSIBLE ADULTS ONLY, 2 bedrm. home, gas heat, double garage, within mile circle, $125) per month with lease. 54 N. John- son Ave FE 5-8533. Phone VAliey . ADULTS Cristy— | FURN HOUSE. CHILDREN WEL- comed. Call Romeo 2360 COTTAGES FOR RENT. SEPT through June 15. Winter rates, includes utilities, furn. Reserva- tions taken now Tru Rustic Cabins, (468 8 Broadway, Lake | Orion, Mich. MY 2-9171 AVAILABLE SEPT. 1, WHITE}! Lake front, 2 bedrooms, oil heat. | eveery convenience Clean & at-| tractive, lease only, references 3405 Detroit St. out M.59 to Or- mond, also 3 rooms & bath KEEGO, MODERN UP TO DATE 5 & 6 room homes. 2066 Willow Beach. FE 7-7505 AUTO. OIL HEAT, 3 BDRMS from Sept, to June 1. 4656 Lake- | _ View Dr., Woodhull Lake. - Rent Lake Prop. 376 1 WEEK MORE OF VACATION? Beautiful home on Cass Lake for rent for 1 week, Aug. 30 to Labor Day. $75. FE 4-5382. WATKINS LAKE | Lakefront §$ room cottage com- pletely furnished, boat. dock, good swimming, good everything for summer Available thru Labor Day. per week eee FE. 2-2065 oF OR 3-2216 living SUMMER COTTAGE FOR RENT 8wimmin Boat Fishin week. Lake Orion. MY 2 NEW MODERN CABINS ON .THE hg oa R P7140 week. R&E Cab- HOUSE FOR RENT. home. year around, front. 2508 Tasmin Rd. Williams Lake 8M. HOME & GAR. $35.00 OWNER. PO Box 535. City. For Rent Store Space 38A FOR LEASE — EXCEL-}| LENT DOWNTOWN LOCATION. _ _ FE 2-6820 - Rent Office Space 38C OFFICE SPACE OVER 69 W. Huron. FE 2-8620 OF! JUST DECORATED. MODERN OFFICE _downtown location. FE 2-7221. For Sale Houses 40 S RM _ RANCH TYPE. SEMI- finish ed, good location. Sacrifice for .ash or large down payment. FE 40880. BY OWNER. CUTE 2 BEDRM. bungalow, full basement. 2'2 lots Lake privileges call after 6 pm. _ FE 5-3890. ee IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, 5 rooms & tile bath, gas heat modern kitchen, good cond., very reasonable. Owner. FE 5-0704. "RM. MODERN HOUSE, down. balance $2200. 97 W. gate. RANCH HOMES, SHELL — rough plumbing and wiring, tl Ri DOWN PAY- . 924 Trail “Walled Lake OPEN DAYS. Phone MA 4-1554 Col- IN. FOR — LIGHT FOR RENT MOD.- | utility, | LAKELAND. | LAKEFRONT | EM | fishing, | $75 | $45 26. | 38 on Water-| DINING 8PACE Built-in benches. IN KITCHEN i} | FULLY INSULATED Paved solid drive. COMB. ALUMINUM S8TORMS & | BCREENS Recreation space in basement plus pine panelled laundry HOT WATER One year guarantee. written PONTIAC SCHOOL SYSTEM $14 4.650 Complete On lots with 60 to 80 {t. frontage. | way and 2 car brick garage — $18,150. MAHAN REALTY CO., REALTORS 1075 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-0263 NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH POST OFFICE ROOM RANCH TYPE HOME, uncinished, on 100x150 ft. lot. Lake Oasland, coe A Low _ down pay ment. HAYDEN | §& room west suburban home, lake privileges, shady lot, a good buy at $1750. down. fireplace, full basement, for farm & after 4). 6 room .nodern:; close to school & bus, large lot 7950. terms This home With attached breeze-| Custom-made, knotty pine kitchen | | | | | | | newly decorated, | ; 5 room modern: north suburban, | 1 acre} of land Only $10,500 or will trade | ~ | 6 roon modern on paved street, | newly decorated &A painted venient location, $1750 down. 7. & | 26° W. Huron St Fves. FE 171-7906 _ BRICK OR FRAME | 2 or 3 bedrooms. built on your lot. intertor uni'nished, low as $450 dow. Come and see models. HAKOLD GOODELL 3200 Rochester Rd OL 6-0831. LAKE ORION 3 room housc, garage, 20x20 2 floor shop. lot 90x110, good resi- dence or business. Vacant. $600 ‘DOWN, $60 mo., garage, lot 120x110. 2 bedrms., $1090 DOWN. cozy modern home, : picture windows, large corner ot LEONARD $1250 down. 6 rooms, garage. large lot, near school, WALTER R 66 Park Blvd. «M24» MY Roses Are Red And so will your landlord's face when you tell him you bought a | home of your own. In fact, be a landlord yourself with our:-2 fam- | ilv income. Close to town. 3 bed- rooms. Large living room, dining ;} room & kitchen. full bath in each, Full basement. 2 new oil naces. 2 car purage Large lot, landscaped. $17,000 with s $1,500 DOWN 2 bedroom modern kitchen & full bah garden soll & low taxes. miss this one at only $6 950 CRAWFORD AGENCY | REALTOR OPEN EVES. | 2141 Opdyke FE 4-6617, FE 41549! “BROWN $750 Down 5 room bungalow Lake privileges r pe. { only $3.889."’ 2-5831 Don't Living room, | Lots of good | 75 bath. ‘Full Price | $8.950 dandy lake Bungalow with at-| tached garage and breereway, {ul! | basement, oil furnace, 3 lots | “Make us an offer on the down payment.” $7.850 large 6 room home with 1 bedroom Ist floor and two bed- | | new siding, | rooms & bath up, “good location,’ terms. $2500 down 3 bedroom home on Second = street Nice condition, | large shaded lot. oil automatic furnace "Priced at only §8.750." Out-town owner & must sell at once $30.000 Beautiful and well deisgned |; ranch brick bungalow in Bloom- field Highlands bedrooms Two fireplaces nace. large breezeway car garage ‘Brand new.” a wonderful home. Shown by ap- pointment. mw | Open Sunday 10 am -4p LL. H. BROWN, Re altor 1362 W Huron Ph. FE 2-4810 | Member Co-op Real Estate Exch. 6 RM BUNGALOW. 300 FOURTH near Pontiac Motor. Full price | $6950. $1,000 down Immediate possession, 1] FE 4-3798. ~| HIGHLAND - COMPLETELY “MOD- ern new home Ready in two weeks Kitchen living foom. 2 bedrooms, full bath, full base- ment, oi] heat, elecric hot water heater fully insulated Good schools, open for inspection. $9,750 $2,000 down. Easy terms on bal- | ance Office closed Sundays. J. F Stevens, broker. Ph. Milford 46571 OPEN SUNDAY. 2 and 3 | BEDROOM , | Ranch Home Pees on exterior only, 1's miles west of airport corner of M-59 and Williams Lk. Rd. $450 down a alt’ tp lot. Prices range from IF. ic) Wood Co. | 1725 Willams Lake Rd. OR 3-1235 Office Open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Basement and oil fur- | con- | HAYDEN, Realtor’ FE 5-2264 For Sale Houses 40 L.R. TRIPP Cherokee Road Brick ranch home. 2 bed- rooms, panell den, sun- room, nice kitchen w r. nook, with stall shower also tile powder room all on ground floor. with Rec. room. Attached garage and many other extras. t us show you this ideal home today. Oakwood Manor Brand new custom built brick .anch home in this beautiful location. Consists of six rooms and 2 tile baths on one floor. Anderson win- Sale Houses 4a A HOME OF YOUR OWN West Side Brick Truly a lovely home with all of the appointments that you've been wanting. Vestibule, siseable sun room, arge li room with fireplace and bookshelves, full dining room, neat hen and breakfast nook, downstairs lava- tory Wall to wall c ting, also stairway and hall. ree bed- rooms and full tile bath up. Sun deck. Good basement, gas fired steam heat, laundry — fruit room. Double brick ga: , Excel- lent fenced rear ya af real kiddies Dred Siege A real family home. Gladly shown anytime by apointment. 3 Mi. West of Town + dows, Formica counter tops. and natural birch trim. Full | divided basement with Rec. | apace. 82 Gal. auto water heater and oil A. C. Heat. | 2 car attached garage. Large acre site with shade Make an appointment to see this lovely home today! West Side 5 Bedroom Ilome New itn 1951. 8 room brick — 3 bedrooms and two full baths down. Two bedrooms up. Natural fireplace, full basement. oi] heat, 2 car attached brick garage. Will consider trade for good city property. Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 22 W. Lawrence Street en Eve. FE 5-6161 or FE ¢ __ CLOSE TO PONTIAC 3 apt. income. Separate heating, baths & entrances, several fruit trees, outside fireplace garage. 2 apt. furn. comple large lots on pavement. water on side & back. Ideal set up. Good payment dowr. terms $1,250 Down A grand little Lome with tre bedrooms and full bath. Livin room and sizeable kitchen. G utility room with automatic wa- te heater. Gas floor furnace. Storm sashes and screens. And a finc. neat landscaped yard. Excellent ueighborhood Call for an appointment to see this prop- erty it your convenience. Full price $7,250. Brand New West Suburban Brand new two bedroom home, Beautiful oak floors, full tile bath, excellent kitchen with inlaid lin= oleum floor an¢ cabinet top. Good sized closet space, sizeable utility room — automatic water heater. An acre of e land. $2,500 down and Immediate pos- eession, Watkins Lake Area Lovely white frame home with three (3) bedrooms and full cer- amic tile bath. Carpeted living and dining rooms. Screened sum- mer porch, Tiled recreation room, East side. 2 room house, stool, as. electric. oil heater & drums aved street. $4250, terms. ROSE MCLARTY FE 2-2162 LESS THAN RENT | $39 @ month including taxes and | insurance 2 bedrm. modern home. aluminum storms & screens. $1500 | down. bedroom modern, $45 month, reas. down payment. som: horx dwn, Modern 2 bedrms. living GAS AUTOMATIC FURNACE AND | rm., dining space, full bath. Kitch- en, “utility, bardwood floors, plas- o.“Batg — venetian blinds. 1919 M-15 eonstruction | Pa. Ortonvitie 132 reverse charges. YOU WILL FALL IN LOVE WITH this ranch type 2 bedrm. home. overlooking Wolverine Lake. Liv- ing rm. 18x13. Spotless kitchen, ceramic tile bath. Large utility | 16x20 ga- | with Tage. automatic dryer. $3500 to G. I, HAVE CLOSTROPHOBIA? Then this 5 acre farm is the answer 3 bedrms, full basement. Living rm. 19xll. 2 car garage, fruit, berries, grapes. $2700 down. Mortgage. YOU WILL WONDER WHY you! one | didn't find this 3 bedrm. before. Lovely shaded lot ee Large screen porch. Living 30x13. Big kitchen, half Gioce ‘from Williams Lake. Only $8200, NEED QUICK POSSESSION? We have ? vacant homes, 1 in good north end sub., other in exc. west side ub. $2,250 & $2,500 down. CORT M. IMBLER 1111 Joslyn FE 409524 BIRMINGHAM — MODERN 5 RM. bath, garage. furn, $450. Tele- Vision $8,500 half down. Shown by appointment Sickness reason for selling Milford — 7 room modern with 10 | lots. $6,300 full price. Terms. Wixom Small house, 10 acres. $3,150 full price OTHER GOOD eure CARL A. ALGR Phone Walled Lake, Market 41444, CHARLES ° SHIRLEY ST. 6 RM MODERN. HOT AIR HEAT gas, hot water. convenient to stores, schools and bus. Only $7,200 —$1.8650 down RANCH HOME CALIFORNIA STYLE. ACROSS R.-AD FROM LAKE. 2 car ga- rage large iot, lake privileges. This very attractive ame is a Tare bargain. See at only $7,160. Reasonable sown ayment B. D. CHARLES, Realtor a WH Ph FE 40521 Eves FE <7145 or FE. 2-1704 ‘NEIL West Side— 13x20 foot liv- ing room in this 6 room modern 3 master size bed- _ rooms, family dining. large kjtcnen, separate breakfast fiook. Basement oi] furnace, 2 car garage. A buy at $11,- - 500 Terms too $1950 down. Sure! Its a large 4 bedroom family home, on paved street, One bedroom down, 3 and bath up. Gas furnace. Garage. Hurry on ‘his one. $500.00 down. New 2 Bed- room bungalow. Needs in- terior -inishing. Total price $4.250 RAY O’NEIL, SSS W. Huron pen 9-9 Phone FE 13-7103 or FE. 50690 Membcr Co-op Exchange | 5 ROOM FARTLY MODERN “WITH | or without furniture. About 2 min pte Beene of GMC plant 2 arge down payment. FE 48203 ‘after 5:30 evening. DONELSON PARK MODEL BRICK HOME Winter or summer, Donel-| son Park 1s a playground anderest haven for young and ‘old alike. It is our obligation to our children to provide for their fu- ture. neighbors alltend to mold their lives, It’s a fact that this civic minded| subdivision with its pro- tective association, ad- joining picnic park has more to‘offer in comfort- able living than any sur- rounding area. Why not, make your home in this finest west side location ? We invite your. inspection Sunday from 1-7 p.m. at 2991 Edgefield Dr., cor- ner of Noyle. To reach property—drive out M-59 (W, Huron St.) to Voor- heis Rd. and turn 2 blocks to Edgefield, then left to property. WM. A. KENNEDY EALTOR FE 4-3569 WHIT® OR COLORED Corner lot on Orchard Lake Ave. on bus !ine close to stores and schcol, 2 car fer 3 ee a income Call after 4 alld laa thru Fri, FE ¢- The home life, en-| vironment, schooling and, Oil-heat. Wonderfully conditioned. Landscaped lot ~— 175x136. Car an a half garage Immediate | possession. Priced at $13,950 with $3,950 down. Call now to see this | fine nroperty, | Ottawa Hills Grand white frame colontal with landscaped lot. double garage, Three bedrooms and bath up. Vestibule, fireplace. downstairs lavatory, full basement. A fine property. $16,500. Five room frame home full bath 2 bedrooms, large kitchen, live ing room , oil heat, automatie LAND CONTRACTS | BOUGHT AND SOLD Be sure to get our cash offer. Reasonable discounts. No hidden charges. We need FIFTY land contracts with $2,000 to $5,000 balance. (Doing Business as) NICHOLIE AND HARGER CO, A G NICHOLIE & SON 83 N. Huron St a sty 5-8183 Open 8:30 ‘til oy BEDROOM, WEST sick HOME. $7,500 with $2,000 down. FE 5-7217. MIDDLE STRAITS LK. 3 bedroom home frame, clean, built in 1948. Painted white. Liv- ing room, dining room, modern kitchen. 3 pc. bath. Large lot. Near Union Lake School, fine condition. $9,500, $2,500 down. EMBREE & GREGG EM 53-4393 and EM 3-3251 Main Office 1565 Union Lake Road Branch Ofiice 4305 Green Lk Road GILES - NEW HOME, $1,350 DN, Be sure to see this new home all ready to move into. Consists of 2 bedrooms, liv ing room. kitchen and an 8x10 utility. Be sure you check this before your buy | Good west side location just ‘3 block from City bus. An amazingly low price of only $7350. SHELL HOME Only $722 down and $35 per month for this shell home. The partitions are in and the well is drilled. Located on @& pavement in a desir- able location. Call for fur- ther information. SPENCE ST, Large family home with 2 bedrooms on the Ist floor and 3 on the 2nd. Located in the best of districts. Also includes a 2 car garage and - fenced back yard, & many, many other attractive fea- tures. Do not fail to inspect this property TODAY. GILES REALTY CO. Realtor 82 W. Huron open 9 till 9 4 RMS., FULL BATH 2 BEDRMS. Auto oil furnace and hot water, Screened front parch. 1's capr garage. 2 wooded lots with lake priv. $1600 down. $33 per month. Includes taxes and Ins. at ¢ per cent interest Balance $4 _Em _3-5737. $*800 AVAILABLE $7,500. Reasonable down payment. Clean 6 room home. move in at CARL ANDREWS 310 NORTH ST, HOLLY 17-6161 as —— sl Johnson ELM STREET SPECIAL Lots of room in this all modern 3 bdrm. home. This is priced to sell with good terms. Located close to schools & bus. Hurry & call. Eves. after 6, call Mrs, Snyder, OR 3-1975. FE 5-6176 FACTS, NOT FICTION 4 rm. modern home, room, oak floors, 2 large bdrms., oil furnace & full basement. Situated on lot | 75x150, Just 1 block from stores, Call Mr Inman, FE 5-514] days, | eves. after 6, FE 4-3473 COZY | 3 rm. home on E. Walton Blvd, | with gstool, water, & electricity. Only block from bus & 3 blocks | from Weber school. Full price | Only $3450 with $760 down. Eves, after 6, call Mr. Joll, FE 17-6610, A. JOHNSON, Realtor Phone FE 4-2533 Our New Location 1704 ; Telegraph Rd., just south of — Bloomfield _ Fashion Shop ~OPEN | SUNDAY 2-5 1215 WAGNER ST. Its a doli house inside «. out. Can peted living room has fireplace, custon wardrobe closets through. qui. Oil fired radiant heat. 70x120 lot landscaped to perferion. $10,- 70 Terms. Telegraph Rd. 2 block south of Orchard Lake to Wagner, Follow signs. 6319 WILSON » room ran h home with breeseway & grrage. Tile bath oil heat, built in ‘51 Bri:rhill stone front, aluminum siding 180x150 parcel. Owner leaving state: Ld pret fice. M-59 to Airport Rd i west block. "yalce Ch 3670 INDIAN LAKE RD. It's -ecluded & private. 1% story bome with cozy den down. 2 over- sized bdrms. & batn up. Stone fireplace, 33 ft. glassed porch with 11x15 living plastered walls. | exc view of the lake. Ot] heat, garage, & 12 acres inc. 500 ft. of lake frontage. M-24 1 mile nortr of Lake Orion Indias — Ra east 2 miles. Follow 38 Bateman & Kampsen "| 320 E Pike st, FE <0 Co-op Member, Open Eve ‘til a ec ce ee cat ——~ — : | THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 TWENTY-FIVE . For Sale Houses 40 Sale Houses 40 Sale Houses #”)| CARNIVAL by Dick Turner For Sale Houses 40 For Sale Houses 40 Sale Lake Prop 41| For Sale Parm Prop. 45 LAKE FRONT ” air & home to enjoy Coatpact ics Attractive N SILVER LAKE FRONT 7 FURN. LAKEFRONT 8% ACRES home. Co This home satisfy your long- ae Completely furn, 2 . en, built in stove refriger- 3 Bedroom Home ing for large com room. oe rm. " q-rm. farm home ator. Attractive living rm. . z . Down stairs there is an extre Lu ern lassed in porch. attractive and quiet country tae Ag Bd ene full Nearing Completion OFFERS abo.) kitchen oor Ah st water, deck & boat. _ rm on ist " e ae F : ° eae . . -» \ge., basement, beach level. Recrea- t eating space. dining room and SUN 1 P.M TO 4 P.M. $8950 with terms kitchen. 32 x P ft. basement tion and fieeplec oe. of best. ga- ieee oe Seay pope ploal Auburn Heights Area lav. 3 ms and tile bath up. . , barn. Good school, Tage, excellent safe y beach. | le . : 4 front 2 y bus to Lake Orion School. Lot 50x170 ft $18,000. Terms. ; 4 room & bath and utility cereuae wp God dean wie Sa eet ete po eee Goa ae ant EXCELLENT BEACH Good lake nearby. $14,- xy COMMERCE LAKE FRONT. OPEN coms, Gas redions best, Lat curpessed view of the lake A! toca gm pee le = voarguin cat with $00," $3.000 down. . = wi rec. Don't miss this. Beautiful cut Daily & Sun. 2-7 to schools. Good condition; pn . ant ean gas beat atures in this pg pd | —— completely Sina 130 ACRES stone construction. 3 bedrms. Also Cs pa Aes’ cent mortgage. $7550. pensive carpeting, fenced land- AE gees rae | Sleeps 8 has a garage, break- . f maid's quarters. Full basement , Loc = $3350 down. scaped “a mrmee | «Geach t home. Lg hneaod water, dock & boa Near Ortonville. Good clay loam ee een ata Soxee' and row posts, ore saded| Simdew. traverse “draperies, Gi & Hi ks sed tnt Aven ar Ons of cultivation s so attractive you’ your- ’ ’ ; , and in area o ere arm self looking for a hammock and | Huron Woods | Near St. Fred’s sturaction ar aie ge gle a mane, Teck ead | 1TOUX IC 110 acres tillable. &rm. home. a fish pole. Owner will scarifice at | All modern six room & eras utter Wim cavalene eas beat A gel a eee teeta, | 4380 Dixie Hway | Drayton Plains; = partly modern. Large barn with $26,000 Terms A Controlled Residential bath in good location, full at ec all a ear, puae ae loa OR 3-9701 20 stanchions additional BEAUTIFUL WEST ACRES = = basement with automatic bo price $16, — with shower, plenty m4 eoerest 7 — | storage barn. milk house, poul- Por gracious living with a large | Subdivision | oi] heat. Owner moving and terms. Call for your appointment| space, very modern era ee A | try house. Ideal farmer's farm, family. One acre nicely land- | ; must sell at reduced price | today. . breakfast bar ae ee a Rent Resort Prop. | 41 $19,500 with only $4,500 down. acaped One of the nicer homes. 3 (Lots Available) of $7875 with terms. SUBURBAN HOME forced air beat, oe tric | water) Ann ; Pegroome, bir Genditioned. Tile | adjomirg 900 cre recreational | Clark A Modernistic 2 bedroom cinder block | on 100x286 foot lot. Located at 780| MODERN COTTAGE | ON pox.) FLOYD KENT, Realtor cellent beach on Middle Straits re®_ £00 schools | improved | larkston Area home, all large rooms, for real| Slocum ust off 21 Mile Ra | tise Lk $50. wk. OR 37301 94 w. Lawrence FE 5-6108 Wonderful school facilities. $17.00 | foads. Public utilities, lake privi- 4 bedroom home situated living, automatic oil heat and ful-/| South boulevard) 1 block east of | For Sale Lots 42 | pen Eves (ert eeteumwe carare | arr anriceait anew fares” ga 2 eases 8 mee BS tee ie | ever eee | ee MEE 9, Conmumers. Power j ° ew ake = i : Ee Aad | home Direction: Out C | . . - , -< | 80 ACRES, 5 RM. MODERN HOME 18 acrenvgiin mili bome, Owner) PEM, DiFeHen | Gut Commerce prirleges, tad other fits peat and AGractive ‘home, Te! CAMERON H.CLARK | DRAYTON PLAINS | Malbarn near wis Suchy Realty, Tilliranch (hometiitietdlatods con: | and ae signs | Cverlooks west An unusual value at $15,000 from swimming beach. You can | Open Evenings ™ 100 x 150 | _ 290 Soutu St., Ortonville. struction Screen porches over- eo rev's Golf Course with $3,000 down. be the owner for the price of 1362 gg Co rr r ane well "stocked fi sine exe | FRANK NEWELL | Near Metamora #20 per month eee a bean ona $ ROOM PARTLY MODERN” wirk Excellent ee “i ceed . For Sale Land Contract 46 vin with fireplace 5 5 pcg . : iF | ou buy it tomorrow or without furniture. About 2 | 9 N. \’oodward | 50 acres well fenced with drainage Easy to drive your own NTR. le Kitchen, with dinette a Birr ingha. Pt. MI 4-0065 1650 ft. frontage on paved | DRAYTON PLAINS | rare ee of oe | well. On ay —. os | ee On Scat atur A bm family. You'll be proud of “the! ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES highway 20 miles north of | Really neat home. nice lot, 80x120 yment. FE 45223 r 6:30, , CY, county only, recreation room with a beauti- 28x31 house under construction Pontiac in scenic rolling ; Comprising large living rm. 2 _ evening _ ATRING: L AKE "AREA an ful bar Full basement. with sok. | room for 2 more bed rooms pleat fag pA ee bedrooms. full bath. kitchen with 110 x 150 LAND CONTRACT ON 3 er heat. Everything rl immact- | ree yin seals kitchen and Une aa eker fase tae eating space and utility rm. See | bedroom bungalow: near car gara ent se | inette, 1 - Orchards end Rovas: 45 wires | Plenty of wardrobe space” Cedar nace. 30x60 basement barn thie tentenkt tere ciel | $695 Elizabeth Lake Balanc ow- out Dixie Highway near Davis- chr lake veliges. Full with 14 stanchions and cote) , hi to, Pontiac m @ good neigh- ing $5,480. at $54.80 per mo. burg $17,000 or best offer . Pho: ak Se Gilf pene drinking cups, milk house Beeb ars Lente 6 per cent int. will discount hear WATKING LAKE _ ae OPEN DAILY ord. chicken house. tool shed & A $1,000 DOWN aoe ta mt, s lines Some wooded | $1,000. Cost to you $4,390 One acre beautifully landscaped other ings. School bus Low as Lots of fruit trees Exceptionally 4531 CASS-ELIZ. RD. | by door, $15,400 with $5800 ee Sas co Ce kee | tecalad Ge keene avecme eset 4 ACRES” W OODED | R: Y O’NEIL, Realtor cl constructed brick home. 2/ This nearly cew. privately buflt : | $80 Dixie Highway Waterford. | Utica. Automatic hot water, full’ .) W104 road Heavily wooded with | ™ uron Open 9-9 da ‘ ranch type Home has all the| F | bath, no basement, corner lot. | Poene FE 3-7103 or OR 3-1648 pene: inished attic’ Living rm | convenience of modern living. | CRESCENT LAKE £,RooMms AND| good construction, asbestos | ach pee Dag gg uke OR 3-7956 replace cut stone cture La > , asement. ing, combina- , ri enty © vacy Windows, unusual amount of stor- jauntog ‘and construction etas | Open Saturday & Sunday > tion storm windows. aa extra lot allel oo ke ‘ed er eae La ground ready for gardening. Low | Member beige Exchange nes space throughout. Divided corner ey, p.m. __ 5674 Aylesbury FE 2-1169_ | Ss $170 10 ACR ES $1,800 DISCOUNT asement A good value at $25,000 | lot with ‘ake priv A quick sale) 7 4 ©. & Pat. ow | LAKE FRONT HOME i ff Your terms. | desired. We invite your i: Bloomfield Brick Ranch = 30 per -ent off on new 4@ rm. | 1 MEA Servins, tre. | Six lovely rooms, two baths fire- Oniy 1 left. Good soil for fruit or and bath bungalow. $4200 to han- 4 acres. Te eraté pst 3 bed- | eae : —~ ae place, 70 ft. on lake a basement Serres $2.100 with $210 down. die. Write Pontiac Press Box 74. acres. Immaculate home = Russell A. Nott. Realtor Offering the ultimate in at ground level with recreation ~ LADD ee in Knotty pine, full basement. 2/170 W Pike "FE 4-5908_ er cea a Lon oil aim coediienes beat, anes Lk Business Upportunities 47 car garage Chicken house Tool | BY¥-OWNEH 4 -RME BATH Stmosphere, | this | beautiful | Could you stretch this from 74 to 74? My husband made lous living ee i weeut fl Corner "Cea, cake ie, Bre 20207| ~ , 1 3 ” hed \ ‘01 Seas tantince a ae Good | ane garag~ oll heat Large ee tot | ranch type home is situ.) &@ hole in one! Sondaw. 2 to 8 pm i on el cue ein 4286 Dixie H wy ‘ Drayton Plains | 1 , ! R 30010 after 5. ated on a_ lot 200x300 in a . V oO - ow. To price 879, OR 3-2361 GREEN LAKE ROAD ee ys |. = | = exclusive Bloomfield High- | 1 LOT LE IN THE WATER- artri e t eons aS PY home. anise ROCHE STER ‘ands. Some of the features ry y at : DANDY BUNGALOW |? ford a Taka Wales Subdivision Coe States, Coes et nes (owe, im Ferndale, 8 rms. & include @ tile stall shower For Sale Houses 40 Foe Sale Houses 40 New California WASHER & DRYER 5 sae porch overlooking the hae Pleac: bath, like new--$13,900. Term. bath, mahogany paneled sun | ~~~ eee ft orreeeeeeeeeeess@>omw@rwr—w'”—™ Contemporary Ranch Homes Rich wall-to-wall carpeting spa- CORNER OF ESTEN AND EM HE “BIRD TO SEE | ant kitchen. snack bar Tile bath.| 2Family,. 6 rms. & bath dn. 4 room, cozy den, 2 natural yage FRONT HOME. 5 RMS. & . in Beautiful Devon Hills cious lovely rooms throughout, ‘ d } i a TALK T THE RIGHT MAN WHEN ‘hen, | a na Gi Skee Gk Dak’ Gt fireplaces, f haasivent . rT R 8 plastered walls, 7 large closets merson. 2 building lots in resi-| you WANT TO BUY A BUSINESS italia Beautiful land- wesawara $18,000 gar. Sex Omwith i recreation room een ~~ roe $5,800, $3,500 cae Scar oe ee ens heat, sewer and water. loi dential area. City water. Call , scape ots on lagoon leading . | equity. ; ) t ’ MU 9-2124 ’ Brk. Ranch home, Livernols o area 16x30, gas baseboard | - = : 00x200, price $9,375, terms. : a ; , aivectly Cass CAKE jake | "paint creek. 4 landscaped meres, | radiant heat, and Crosley| BY OWNER — VACANT NEW 2 WINES AND ARE MP ABT SMALL GRILL, $800 DN. SL Wks Kor your beat New Bind $35,000 ‘| kitchen. $36,000 with terms bedroom home lived in about a BECOMING ONE OF THE OPEN SUNDAY 1-8 D 1 P k | $1200. full price. Average $1,000 Poeee Panton bale ecek ‘oceka, | MEK. SLR. cm @ nerves; i500: Inte @. Directions: Approziméiely 'a| Je0i wood Hoos, picture window | East cide MOST POPULAR HOMES eS | ; eo Weems On eee ( : mile sou °. it ose oors, cture window sede 2 th ite 100x150 with city | ut it's a busy e 8 us ; ya eh ta ar nt hae Bstate Home ta Binney Creek, 847,- | Hospital, turn rt. off Wood-| 4 full basement. $10,000. Down| Nearly new ranch type home MODELS. HAVE BAND 7 DORRIS & SON or ~ wel © $1650. 7 | fight for man and wife operation Wisleu, Select Oak “fests. Lame | Bae. eae ward Avenue to 170 N.| Dayment $4,000. Outside city limits consisting of 6 rms. and batb ROOMS WITH ATTACHED CO-OP MEMBER REALTOR | Rent only $30 per mo. Take if bed . : S¢ | Town & Country H { : Berkshire. Watch for ‘‘open’’ off Joslyn. Inquire at 628 N. Perry full base't, and 1% car garage. 752 W. Huron FE 4-1575 EP ary | over today. rm, double closets cheerful ountry Home Sites. In { evenings & weekends H 1 lete with 2 CAR GARAGES. SIZE 70x Lakewood Farms kitchen with cupboards galore. |. dustrial & Business Properties. signs. - . eee et) Ci an carpet 25. LOTS AVERAGE 110x CRESCENT LAKE ’ ’ , Uuiity rm. with Lux Air turnace-| MAX HARTWIO | LES HOPKINS . @ ea taslio Bene eae pet aaa e duuay Ciceen aed 720 A FEW CHOICE SITES =| 4S : semen cook bankas. loons | A VILLAGE TAVERN 60 ft. om canal. 1 block from ex- 2-9521 407 Main 8t. OL 32-0321 : rm. family home, 4 rooms, STILL AVAILABLE. OR overn 4 bedrm. furn. home liv- he Y ; cellent beach $11,500 Terms, | __ Office Open Sunday 1-5 p.m. Oy nnett Inc.| tie vath up. ¢ rms & 1% batn| bath. An appointment over the CAN DUPLICATE ON ing rm, 15x27, lot 80x318 Renting west—only $850! MOD. APARTMENT } ELIZABETH LAKE | FOR SALE HOUSES FROM 4 TO down, attached garage, full base- eee ents a that memes YOUR LOT. MODERATELY unit in rear at $40 per month. . Without @ doubt. the _nestest, Opmer moving Pirie Hacial,|"WPae alee a wae at ORS | oka Wings and Sicdiy Va | Rie, Mabatped atatie aah pear taa eee || rarars toe here | eae Sen ee | Coctoh cote Saree Cea e. Insulate and incomes Real bargains. P. | — . A ergroun . BLKS V GA- ever ere Doing aro - Ratural firepiace Wonderful loca-| W. Dinan & Sop 1108. “Saginaw. I HAVE A GOOD § ROOM HOUSE | sprinklers, fruit trees, paved road, Elizabeth Lake BLES TEA) ROOM AND EAST SUBURBAN re ee ear ac bane 000 per year ons straight bar = , aterford | a eego ll bath. ) base- se ool. Tea argain. JU8T E. OF TELEGRAPH no e shuffieboa: s the schools $7.250 with $1.750 down,| BY OWNER. 192 EB. RUNDELL ment, Ot! furnace. I will take | _$5.000 down, terms. FE 2-4366 One of the finest properties in ROAD.) Quonset home, full basement, nice section — but hurry, sites are) ont The beautiful apatmaat is | WHY PAY Large lot. Near 2° schools. 5 be OaWiand County. Over 100 feet arden, 2 lots. Priced selling at Elizabeth Lake and Attractive 2 bedroom ;anch home| Tooms & den. Gas furnace. Im-| $750 Gown, to. pany - willing & “4 { BEDROOMS — | $2500 DOWN ~ of frontage on the lake. Home FOU ARE Ae, Oe OUR jm te lane. Voorheis Rds! A peg eg tie a : | mediate . ° rms., lst floor, 1 up. Hardwood 13° 10 : TICkKT ED > ¥ , at Crescent Lake. Well constructed ; nee te_possession. FE: 5-653]. + _orate, FE 463060 Moors. plastered walis, glassed b ue. qnciu or rod : Scenen: OTHER NEW _ RANCH CUCKLER. REALTY for only $14,000 on terms. 4 pou _— and wiring. Lots front porch. Full basement with birch as ly a faut agg HOMES NOW UNDER CON- Eves FE 2-8902 FE 17-8119 CARL W BIRD, Realtor oO cture windows. Corner _ e recreation rm. R | or : E stool & shower. 67 Glenwood. STRUCTION AND SOME } * "et LAKE. PRONTAGE Ol | ICG 43675. sania sr cies many other NEARING COMPLETION, | 08 © Saginaw). FE M8) | pe advil Sate ee FE 5. {503 ESTABLISHED CAFE. Beautiful lake 3 U-shape: 4 RM. HOUSE > & a ACRE.” 875 features Call us now. era Fong Fee ails Saie, Exc. Real Est. 40A | 7 LOTS, ~~ §0x150, UNFINISHED AND 10 ROOM HOME q ranch home. 20824 t living ae | pereaw VILLAGE _ Meadow Ave. FE2-1347) con cave uo \ basement. Near Oakland Lk. FE Your roomers eat in the busy well Beatolater replace. Dining rma wonderful buy-5 rooms 2 bed- BARRY WM. H. KNUDSEN 3450 Long Lake Rd. at Pine WILL SELL OR TRADE 7 LGE. | _ 288) after equipped restaurant that's well ve- rooms, complete! Brel - Lake rms, gas heat, natural fireplace, Pot a preggers gare ae ae 23 side and ou ide,” new floors. and = Sues eer tecmn Or r Lakefront home on 50x150 ft. lot 510 Pontiac State. Bank Bidg. tae Jem es Bind, PO err River oes a ue: wd te chee _ SQUIRREL | RD. SUB. fase Rin aad te eat , : a e 1 : : ans ’ & landscaped | gr ground. wet gracious Bel Harman’ ie teak ee TLnER Ramis ah 1% ie South Shore of Pleasant Lake x Fed. ¢4516. fe" Wenonah Dr. Ottews verted to icome fr email fares - n pe bro Gers, and good in the 10 rooms all for just $2,300 ~ Giktana ie FRONT lake. Full price $9,500 with terms baths ‘e ib Shi piel $5,400, total price with ‘3 Hom & .s 25320-23288 Hi! . id eee rome, 30 mile radius, roads. Office 201 E. Walton Blvd. —you absolutely can't at it, Good sandy beach. This charming | Wil fer Minas thle ala omes Cottages 170 Cherokee Ra, Seminole nion’ Lake preferred, owner. | O'. 6-2606. Woodward 1-1215. 66x35 ft. "ranch, home has 2 bed. a neg tere 7 Nay fer further informs- Apt. big. located tn the center of WALLED LAKE Cottages Hills ee BARGAIN ‘Ss. SUPER MAR T | rooms i ree room . n . 1 ; } KE | ee” wed “Large gy with |” a-l condition. iine reset ane, : . ns ries, of Wixom. Has 5 com- TAERIDAND MELT ©O John Kinzler, Realtor Sale Lake Prop 41) we nave 3 large 80x320 ft. lots BRICK BLDG. 40x104 with fireplace. 11% baths. Radiant | kitchen 12x14, plenty of cupboards. Bateman & Kampsen aaa Beowe 9400 foi) nth Le 924 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lr An _~ ae left in Sunnydale Gardens Sub| The fine estate, stock, fix- heat. 16x20 ft. living rm. Auto| full basement. lot 1232160. Call; 339 EL Pike St. FE ¢0528| come Only” $12,800 with $3,000 MA 41554 . ore ree | No. 2'at only 698 each on paved caret OS OL ee ee ee matic oil furnace. Beautifully| for ap appointment today. Co-op. Member’— Open Eve. "til_8| down, Wonderful invest ee | — : __ road “Only $10 Down and $10) just $37,500 on terms. We believe landscaped lot. Sees Boat house. — vestment. Per Mo" Our next ssubdivision e building alone is about wo ae re Pur.t} 8,000. Terms. | 5 ROOM BUNGALOW “DR AYTON PL AINS New 3 bedroom ranch type ‘home aun Oe City a tee oie a OPEN HOUSE! Siete Cae we pes Weal & tremécacas caies tha | Lot 175x300 es ning’ oak Teor hi 1 basen iy Immediate Possession 40x24, beaut.ful floor plan on 100 RMS CTvING RM YR REDRMs. erage ten Oat Pos ee + ‘ u asemen . ‘ . . . yr e lo v se or eac - | dog home. 24 f. living rm. Cheer:| 2 blk. to buses and stores, priced | year old riedern ranch home ft. lot in Pleasant Lake area. This| CAR TO WAL D Cass Lake—Vacant due to the high cost of and ful kitchen. Breezeway to 1'2 car} for quick sale. $6,000 and terms. : cmon per cent completed | DI . EAK- = Extra quality 3 other expenses. “Act now and} WARD F PARTRIDGE garage. Full basement with fur- bedrooms with plenty of closet am can be purchased as is or FAST BAR. TILE BATH WITH ine y year old save $200." | nace. Nicely landscaped yard space Modern bath. Very nice a@rrangements can be made to COLORED PIXTURES 2 CAR redtee ee He ee N R OFFICE OF NATIONAL BUSINESS with’ picket fence. Only $9,500. Russell You living room. Very large, modern| have builder .omplete. Only $4,000| GARAGE STORMS & SCREENS. 638 Beverly itchen 1x18 ‘porel,’ 3 het. I.. H. BROWN, Realtor | Broxers CLEARING HOUSE Te TOWER STRAITS LAKE AG tact Aicmats ts ase et CLO8E TO CITY SCHOOL, 1 sooms and ‘bath’ Tiled Lae has oe Ph, FE F408 | OPPIERS Th _ PRINCE AL. Cree yt SCHOOL B fe) - ee ’ Attractive 2 bedroom ranch home EE oa des car attached garage. $1.950 down. | We have other property in Walled| TAKE PRIVILEGES. $2,000 DOWN Jos 4 Sedeccli isms iat! ‘Geet well tar poser eee” y COAST- TO-COAST 412 W. Huron FF 4 4525 $2,000 DOWN | Off Joslyn, a roo m boat well for power boats. DOWN ene ag ae Tee liviow: On mn Eves ‘till 9 Sun ‘till 5 L. LADD co lai moms FRCRRE RBG ie Pe Soe, is all newly decorated, has tile Lot enclosed with cyclone $25 W ld’ | board space. cat tarase” rm. < . suse Docks Le, Wed proved. _ beth. tile kiichen and many ak fence. Shallow sand beach 2 se) 6 acre lots on rosd near Or S argest Corner Cass Lake Rd FE 2-0207 IMMEDIA ~ = 7 esirable features. acan ou or children. Price $15,800 oslyn. Good land—fine building eet |. HERE IT Is! ease We ee |, GARRETT BARRY (| ar tearine wile @ rcose col] mn oom ante with $5,000 down. Don't’ be sites. eae A ae | | @ place you have hoped to 2361 r bath, automatic gas furnace, and _ . } e as s one is Ds. Pp Or quick 6&le. THELMA M. are Advertised for “sale” Fea. | 9480100 DOWN — 3 R- House 1% | a ny ,BROKER hot water heater, 2 car garage. A BEAUTY | Eve. & Sun, Mr. Meiser, VALUET Real Estate .}..F# 2-808 or FE 4-5435. eral 2 rooms with oak floors.” Car garage % acre, full price Hr jan rontiae Trail at Maple | $8400 terms FE 4-5288. A lovely home with a nice yard | ; m2 8. } 8. Telegraph FE 56-0603 W D, fo aimee Delco oil | $2750.00 $300.00 down 1 acre, 4 ak ho = Cari MA 41333 or Has automatic heat and many Brick Take Front LOTS FOR SALE “BEAT THE HEAT” ALTOR | ae, iy mranged cule S100 ‘down 6 nS hea vodene, ®# ROOM MODERN HOUSE, EAST MIDDLEBELT ROAD Hietten thet is exceptionally large New a eon built ca waterway ia Shas Laue’ olin; = She ta ie coatiourd , Iv arranged — big : : side, $5500 « i New 3 bedroom brick with natural d ni : ’ ®& modern air iD $140 Gale weianuetn Ra cea as kite ce full bath, basement, quick pos- _terms. MA 5-4831. resi and nice. ranch home -— in setting of lots 50° wide $678; 40° for $505 building ‘and handling of PE 5-1284; FE 43844, Open 9 to _1| po tern kitchen 15x13. Total price | session Income—Beautiful wood- > -eInr replace All carpeting. draperies. towering trees. 6 well plan- lo Pont : ? one y $9950 with $2500 down Neat; oq | “ EAST SIDE and storm windows included, Will mr >i Also 9 lots in Pon! America’s most popular products To B S a} ot with, 24R houses com- $800 DOWN ned rms. 2'y baths, covered N BRADWAY COMPANY airy pf 1s THE © spine 20 Ae as a pin ready to move into. | letely furnished, 1 block to Lotus ge iy ates fos com ately BERS) 10K OME AR! EY OE BEM, auroom Paseo O% needs acme! bbdgek aitepleres, Feces: 1100 Majestic an ee Ra. nr. Orchard of the. sti aad, coerellcs - —= P ‘ f . i Ms and close ; \ : . Te oily char H! ' | fmmediate Possession | GEO. M ARBLE, Realtor to downtown Glassed in porch K. 1. Templeton, Realtor work done sal and this and fix | rificed’ to makelithis one lof — Ro. Fae 2.0440 D we've = eat ens | One of the finest 6% room homes @361 Andersonviile Rd aria SAG EBtOrS, VIGO WKH. Serme, | 355 W. Hiron FE 2-6223| $3,000 7° ——— ite tet wore aud coe ORCHARD VALE 8UBD DIVIBION | worth plenty and you can own ~ on Pontiac Lake — strictly high : Lovely fruit trees, al) the property and all, for less than grade construction with 200 ft | iemad — ch —_— CARROLL G. PORRITT SEMINOI E HII LS GEORGE R. IRWIN, BROKER ee wetlinn eon torn 2, ott frontage by 212 to wnat it would cost to start and ae ee a 2 car sarane WHY RENT? | 26% W. Huron FE 2-7124 wJdv ath be sd oe 269 Baldwin Ave and Wormer Lakes. Eve. & &, ke Far {oa 14 mile — ape! pss song Clr is Best Buys lated and On aware ee ale by have listed * home especially | _ Co-operat've Real Estate Exch gpacitas “reseed vine —_ __Phone FE 5-0101 or FE 2-8544 _ Bun FE 2-0829. may a = “Ra oo @ year-ro operation. (1150). gain at $13,950. $4500 down. ' esigned to meet the demand of| \{ : 4 TAS with fireplace. Cozy den Tv |5 ROOM RANCH TYPE HOME. | ’ : ’ br owner, save real estate fee. ow ’ ” Tod those who want pquality home MACEDAY GARDENS foom. Full dining. room. This| Unfinished, on 100x150 ft. lot Watkins Lake—Vacant FE 272416 —_ wanes’ a LL IT BE’ > Styling! - Foi : ; ed modern} modern kitchen has stainless steel; Leke Oakland. restricted sub. Low | 3 bed LOTS OF LOTS LAKE PRIV- rewrys - ay j Contemporary Styling! low interest.-Four lovely rooms} hme, tile bath, Lot 100x200] double compartment sink Large | down payment. FE 5-462 Route” Pal bacemeht: Di picepa at Upper Straits, Middle| Small town tavern is really busy | Modernistic exterior — many un- | ath, close to school, bus| storms -— and screens. Owner lay porch with arat ~ 4 7 La EASY| 8nd the bar doesn't ne e PMECUTIVES | Usual. features in this smart, 8nd haa o> ates Large pices hi consider trade on larger anes” io eeccmeet aun. “rotlet. WILLIAMS LAKE RD. Lotce costal ee Gyerick TERMS. 6 Bay ty 924. Pontiac town! The town needs the bar! PAR aS d ‘, ; i sick | room, wo bedrooms, ch- : . : ; : . It's the only comple th L ——, ita story“ home Brick | gn °and bath. A. spacious base-) DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER Oil tired heat Three good sized AMO LL - IN ing Watkins Lake. Priced at Trail, Walled Lake, OPEN SUN-| 28 OLS) 2 gceniar gock. Faet COLONIAL in the studio living room 2 bed-| ™ent houses the automatic gas | REALTOR For tte einen Ateteen, bare hea | rte. cee diioe Tt & beth, nice see OO tb DAYS_Phone_ MA ¢- 40 miles from Pontiac on « main 2 - s. er } ; ~ ’ 4 ene — aheo ee pee plus very jarge main eer 1oEOs Gow, Will take, thle proce il iio _FE 2-4411 built in vanity. Lots” of closet S tedime, kiahea & ainete com: EM 3.5861 . ne ene FU ' ote lt ae aneane Oe Own- oF executive a tre- rumpus room enerous us | i EAUT ing a SAO 8 (hee Paneling. slack ARG tie vetent | With monthly payments of $52|2 BEDRM_ COTTAGE. SITTING family Tae fit id ereetene Tike bined, bath with shower. Oi! heat- . 3 B I L ers in their late 60's and “‘hubby’’ home. The home. contains the -f.tractiveness throughout including insurance, taxes, and/ m.. lovely kitchen. Utility rm.| dition. All carpets included Seal weve’ ae tied - bare yada Sylvan Lake Village recently | left hospital. Must sell. | @ .arge living room. dinin Pleasing 1'2 acre wooded jud: | ee rese of only ‘73 per cent. lea weeks po F , ccess to Huntoon Lake riced F fi f 2 LOTS, 105x279, CORNER .OF ith $14, down and you { foom, kitchen with separate ed setting — west just outside, | Total price only $9950. Pirst time 500 with $5,000" an. fake a of ae: wie oe canes. bungalow. lovely MARLINGTON AND WOOD 6T. °,couldn’t “replace the building for dinette eres. 4 bedrooms For a treat — see it! : KG. Hempstead, Realtor Lake Orion Village appointment today, — WEST SIDE tile bath. 2 picture windows. _FE5-2490. 00 ____ | “Waat much money. on u a up. e in- » . : ’ . marble sills, carpeting. Rear BEAUTIFUL CORNER | 100x c | hie bees by an ; ' 102 E. Huron Street . As eatin hee | PAUT. A. KERN. Realtor Modern 5 rm. home near lower rch. Attached garage. Fine 200. Fieldway and Hiceory Drive. ator and has FE 48284 Eve. FE 2-1317 electric stove. refri t . Sylvan Lake. ‘Just off Voorheis Rd | asement — gas heat and Forrest Lake Estates. acrifice = wall to wall carpeting® and Dp TIES: a RMS. ~& BATH. Orca hen hea i? gerator, oil 31 Oakland Ave FE 2-9200 Large livingrm.. diningrm., 2 bed- finished recreation room. 2 at $2,000, $1,020 down. MI- 6-0191. traverse drapes. Full base- 4-865 Mehta ana ter. Paruy modein ‘Real Estate Since 1910" rms., kitehen & bath. Bsmt. with | nicely landscaped lots. Pri- FAVE SEVERAL LOTS "NEAR REAL ESTATE SERVICE INC, { ment with furnace and hot | Co-operative Realtors Fixchange | =— _| Down a water). $1500 00) : _ oil heat, auto. water heater, laun- | vate sand beach nearby. Longfellow Bchool, $350 and up PONTIAC STATE BANE BLDG. water. “A beautiful parcel | 83 N Telegraph iy OODHUL IL LAKE | Open Sun. 1 to 5 p me | Stubs gerece. water froot lot. | Cty, bus "Ee ae About $4. tos sown. aloo come tp Worth end | Ponuiac Office J. Landmesser, Mer. Ss ol te . 20474 Open Evenings; = Modern lake front 3 bed o. _— Ee ceili OWE 25 off Walton Bivd es 5 : ’ ° 5 : a oad Hiswaae Yeas 5 ROOMS FRAME HOUSF SEXI-| room year around home $1.750 Down HeNehs Fee WILLIS M B ee aa ear, Catholic Church and Reno! modern, 1 acre ground. out“build- | with fireplace, lye. screened- tae eon neat, clean 2 bed- | JOHN K. IRWIN) ] Ki ] Realtor Roosevelt Hotel PB ¢-518) ie citlectilis wentmble” xery s - 9999 Oorpiikes, | Pi Lene vom bi 0 wii HN vase- | ' s 5 Shown by appointment ing: fruit tree 29225 Greening, in fron: porch, Infra-ray at ‘Oil Heat . a vase | Jo in InZier, Eves & Sun. soon for lease in beautiful, long please. Sails iat, ene py Sarcry < ey water. Dining toon. vu 8 rea | REACTOR "8. EO ae till ye 43s established Class C Tavern. Main <1: \=C sandy beac and a host 0 . a n Eves. till 9 , XN WEST SIDE FE 4-0564 other features. Full price ample kitchen, Full price $7250. | Phone FE 2.4031) Fre, OR 3.1333 Co-operative Realtors Exchange _ _ DRAYTON WOODS ee guickly, "Write references end aa . : | A REAL FAMILY HOME $13,650. Terms . . . | New 4 room and utility all = ERLE Se eee oe me ia -|> AKE FRONT Ranch homesites. Some beautifully experience to Tavern Owner, Box sson DN ON \ iu home outside city. 5 rooms .. . oe. \ ashington Park | Pu eos A EeOy for : Ee . a | PIN: Ie ie wooded. $495 i 32. Pontiac Press. QA : st floor, 2 bed : sec: ‘ SSTER 2 h et ese: 1 ed- = | =| Le home wi ac a 1 F Cosv and cute + room | floor “excelent auenen, replace: | eguuint gcryom i wise | goacloure anh upstairs’ “hut foe tapos ate? Bp LARGE FAMILY HOME | tree, rear areamd more ores | HOLMES-BARTRAM [FOR LEASE: NEW ome that ts VACANT and 2 car garage, 2 block Neat ane BEY . : aN | Cupboard space. &x : ‘+ beautiful shade trees, 4392 Di Fe | you can move in right to- This se Hes ag des: irable arenenly. fag a OTAKinMmL, lathe iiic nor ates aril cath dua | recess _ sera hot wa: Den waie Whesa ike BouEiE full Se aeet Veugian School; bus OR 3-1950; pel OR 3-8001 MODERN SG 25 x 5. Ive i ath, | er he j ‘ = panes ar a Road. “Newly painted Rus: INCOME, PROPERTY, GOOD DIS. odes Go aaa tick kitchen, venetian blinds: ‘steel room’ with ‘picture window: ie an as ti Ra PE TT 180 Pipe othe ny y Fg ge 70. 4464 DIXIE HWY., ming water inside. You can TRICT , Irepiace, car attache } casement windows At * at 1¥ Near Cass, Dodge park. seen Sree. ee r homesite tn Waterford Hill Es- NEXT TO 5 TO $1 00 bring your deposit with you | @ large rooms vath Ist floor. 2 Sr aga and 10 acres of land | $3000.00 d only Take Cass, Elizabeth Lake CASEV ILLE MICH. | é c ° \ | ‘ J th a lovely’scenic v Own, be sure you see ’ r > ’ . tates. Convenient terms. ar- on this one. |~ Fooms apt., bath, also 2 sleeping Full price $29.30 Terms ut TODAY+ ! een Piiledas oe Pg NEW HOME 150’ frontage on Saginaw ranged. For information ca OR STORE, D RAYT Oo N } OXFORD | willvseil quick a “just $9-900, full | it | Sou‘ susday, NO 8° = | SUBURBAN BUNGALOW — Take) © BAY coe pariy mocers cab. | ne — PLAINS. GEORGE ‘ us u ef < > S ‘ , privfleges ~ attractive 2 bed- this new partly modern ca - Sh, ’ , FAMILY HOME chitin , | J: AMES A. TAYLOR | “ vray Delos | (; . 5 , room pee utomatic ofl heat, in located on a large wooded ~~ For ! Sale Acreage 43 BARNARD OWNER a . , room home eih a peiae cat 1210 npoatlne ‘Btate Bldg, FE. 42544 BUD NICHOLIE ALES REA -TY CO. automatic hot water” utuity $9 600. $4950 fea For Upon * : . nie men Comceine room for more bedrooms, good Opes Evenings __Co-op Member | 4g te cee ae DAD ESOS | 83, Ke oo FE sis TERMS. ment see below. “ACREAGE BARGAINS OR 3-6801. rvoms and bath with 1 bed- eee etl earn aah0G lots, an ROOM & BATH, NICE LOCA-, | we Mr. Peterson FE 5-7206 $1.6 m™N - % GIN > AY 140 acres ber aad pl BESS: at! 12x20 Fr HAMBURGER R, SOFT room on the first floor and IDEAL LOCATION — tion. Reasonable. OR 3.7514 | NEW 7 ROOM MO 1625 DOWN SAGINAW B: $5040 with $1000 4 drink, and ice cream stand. At 2 bood sized-bedrms: on the A better 6 room home in excel- on M15 Suchy Real Estate. 390 Large 3 bedrm. gias#®d porch . . Modern lake front log sum- Walled Lake in wonderful geen anv Basement with Gas fur- lent condition, 3 ;bedrooms. cer | South Ortonville complete bath, ofl furnace, large mer estate located on pro- 56 acres ‘or beautiful home site, for year-round business with sli na-e and gas hot water 1 loors last d | lot West ce t Fisher's Quick REALTOR | tected side of Sand Point priced at $5600 with $1000 down. alteration. Total price only $1 00 Reuse! | Hetines wee | Partridge GATEWAYS to a oy omuiesMa is stese| Basia! Bp fe Beit ie Ae rive. Require $3500 down ' persia te 2 ‘a ginaw Street 5 acres 120 ft. on M15, $2000 with s ot. Ask for Car er migot possibly trade for Siet ad. 500 ewe Fhe’ ie h i O. PON’ rl. KC RE Al ied PE 5-6181 FE 4- 0334 | yore tiredines ole eereaica $50) down. _1333 or MA 4-1403. ee a 3 bedroom home near | tar be peeun ot ome| 18 THE “BIRD’ TO SEE | | 737 Baldwin Fe 5-8275| ____—s EVE. SUN FE2-6587 in front porch, and s large BUY, TO SELL. REALTOR Pontiac. an r Ie 4-9584 yay . | EQUITY 4 ROOMS & BATH. FE tract of land. Wonderful er ae Is THE ‘BIRD’ to see. oe . + 2 HIM 4 COZY ROOMS Lene . _ | 32-6551. 108 South Maramack. By spot for bathing. boating. EQUIPPED © GRILL WITR HANDSOME on STOMERS PARKING CUTE < Taye YOU'LT. LIKE THIS | owner | fishing. and hunting. Excel- cays 9 to 9 for Your Conventence Pande modern house, Located $495 DOWN | EN EVE & SUN P.M TE. AS CAN BE HEMEAMLY Lociran cca | lent safe beach for children R 3-1872 or OR 3-1769 across from large high school. 1 $495 : | re This) lineatianditattract(veul dite to guete wad Sarocksal acho | For appointment see below. $660 Dixie Highway—Waterford acre of good fertile soil. Close to Silenther'sell ar itis now | ( + y OR | pone il woken ate he wear ee) | eee block off Bala. c EITHER OF THESE PROP- 5 ACRES NEAR sO retghte 2001 ero Ovaries or Will wall Wi [ : 0 } u'll agree it’s the best buy | win Ave on 2 corner lots, 6 ful! NY | “4 5 5 mile ° uburn He or wil) finish it to any de- 4 | youve ever sen It's complete- sized rooms and baih, “with 3 UN. 2-6 P.M , ' CBNTACTING THE TAY. Rockhaven. DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER gree that you want. The ! ly modern except a basement bedrooms. full basement. storms! DRAYTON WOODS. Attractive 3 1600 HONEVSUCELE DRIVE | LOR COTTAGE AT_ 9882 % ACRES ON PAVEMENT $25 00 EAL home contains 4 rooms plus 136 W Pike St although it has an under floor and screens paved street. 2 car , WESTACRES ‘ ; bathroom and “tility room | Co-operative Realtors Exchange automatic oil furnace. 2 bedrooms arage, offered at $8200, $1,625 bedrm home 20 ft. living rm. | LAKESIDE DR.. BAYPORT down, $10 month. Q 3140 W. Huron ____ FE 24411 It ts located east of town | utility. room, screened porch, at- | own. SEE IT TODAY. | ~T itch swith Brenetans oe i's | Out Commerce Road to Elder, left THROUGH: a See KEY. 16 6 an oo FE +2677 HOTEL near Crooks and South Blvd. tached garage and lake privileges | | Bate fail Waaseenk Ge on | Honeysuckle | ce aes APEC: re 42978 - NORTHERN MICHIOAN Large 60 ft. lot. Outside on Middle Straits Lk. Located just | iy ° | ] ‘ — rooms, aths, of oors, construction ‘“‘green cedar | in ft. off Green Lake Rd ‘See P LAKE FRONT { vice Lites cae ie athe | We invite you to inspect this fine JAMES A. TAYL OR 7342 ai opel ari ke Rd. aeee Se on oo. Located in shakes. ' this one quick, it's priced at only | ontiac Lake, 4 room and bath . 5% room, 3 bedroom home in : a) f a ake ea unting &@ ishing area | - on terms or 10 per cent; home oe bedrooms. oil heat, | ae i | or alr oi condition featuring a Estate — Insurance ry , HOUSE AND 10 ACRES. Postion “e. tade. poms ME De ness > . 4 ess for cash storms a screens. lot 35x75’. soe | ‘lv room. gas heat. one he d 250 cash ac rad Edw. M. Stout. Realtor DONALDSON PARK — Rambling | | Offered at $6350, $1575 down ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES. New| cre landscaped corner lot, shade 1210" Pontiac State eee Prey Ac! | eo ate N. of DORRIS & SON . 71 N. Saginaw Street 1\2 story bungalow with breezwav | COMFORT. STYLE | ished. 3rd bedem. Seléct oak | Sn shrubbery blacktop street. ee Soop. Member! geythour Lk Rd } / Ph FE S816: and attached garage on lot 68 1135 ~ ton ae et | OU BOY ED WELL Weer ee | iii, ted bern, modere Eitchen tee ke sine ca an Geek HUNTOON LAKE - CORNER Lot t—«é‘; TRS WW Huron, PE 41557, FE 4-2161 —----—— : : : j | a fered at $15.975 $6,500 dow 4 BOOM HOUSE LOW DOWN. tte wens Ge tee Lk. FRONT COLONIAL | NSURI combination storms and screens. 4 PINE HOME IN A BEAUTI. ,RESTRICTED SUBDIVISION FE 2. WILL SUB LEASE DAIRY BAR sepaent, (x 220i jeer kitchen with dining “space,, After @ hard day there couldn t | MAHA enced-in back yard. privileges | FUL SUBDIVISION | 3 lots on this lake front betwe ae = Pros ty a4 | "2 LL SUB LEASE DAIRY Bar - . NEIGH. 7 1 Bice. bath. — stat t ie | e a nicer place to come to than ac 4 5, BIRMINGHAM CHARMING Bee ce ee ee oi has 2 wonderful ving rooms. And/ = REALTY CO REALTORS | including taves and 4 per cent “roulbUY tr Wei Instne 17 WHITE BROS INDUSTRIAL BLDG. | 2A Ge Gs it near Beulah, Bust- “7; . orced air heat, to. s Ww e en or en ain “y | ‘ 4 . te on near \. “ ae Bae a tav7 heater Priced ‘right Whh terme | & lot. you'll favor the unique | op aa” Weccice Fee niece interest, Call tonight. | 2 . 10 miles .rom Pontiac on Gr ness is there! Sell or trade for ine rooms, den and Ia : guest house that has even another | ae we Hans ft) 9 -Sunday 19) Open ® to 9 tor Your Convenience! Trunk R. R., 2 acres, 5000 sq. ft smal! home here. MA 5-6001, after Kare ae wis whee ce SELL OR TRADE -— 20 acre farm ig living room with a fireplace. | V7 55k To BRANCH blag te ime ot pee seen’ Seg ANCL lM ol cement block. 7 yrs. old, 2 load-) _€ p.m. — re ae Habe -— room modern house, large barn, This very attractive home ‘ts so re) ult in 1950. A-l condition 3 REALTY AS REALTORS Dixie Highway Waterford _ docks, one enclosed. For quick | 7-, , ie g ge. e : diate oc tt h well built and has « d OFFI _ bedrms. large living rm., fyll L RM E UIPMENT cupancy, wonderful netghbors.; road ae er garage. 2640 on| things about it that You'll) want ~ bath with tiled features, full CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS 3 BEDROOM YEAR AROUND COT- ., Terms to suit. 618.000. Clare FA 9 reasonable. Midwest 41449 dividing. ie mead sag | to stay at home a” the time ADAMS basement with off heat and tad Evenings ‘til @ — Sunday 1-9] tage, $0 ft lakefront. Cedar Island Bedding Manufacturing Co, SALES AND SERVICE ges aw ed on good road, \Therets overianvacre onl thie close fireplace, attractive breeseway 1078 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-0263 LE., $1 for my equity. By Clarkston. ___ | Ome cf the very best money makers / tae $10 $00. full price Will Pon. | in lake with @ sandy beach, a and activities rm. with fire- BERT DOW ty PeAnch owner. EM + 3eM. 7 For Sale Farm Pro 45 es ae er mcd a = or trade for wood 6 ‘roots aor eo Picturesque trees and a WILI TR ADE Latta eecuee acar _ sarage —-__ POST_ OFFICE 2 mode GARE PR Hirnishedars er Sate Farm Free. New hee gprs goer ocation you'll say is the h test = é . overhe oors oolvent Tm omes, fu e ’ ern city opne. ear dpe ap fied il ere yume icone. © down. 1 tc Coee awnings. Well landscaped. $16,- ft. on lake Orion, stone terrace, @> ACRES chises 1952 gross business was $1,500 DOWN’ — 3 bedronm 1 foor| Me, Webster and Washington Jr.| pletely furn. newly | carpeted 850, terms. See re gat age ee ree: | OS Pavement, 16 miles trom Fon-) erst ieee ie ot a O Sund 3 6 bungalow ‘nice kitchen and liv- ioe in i city, Ericed et only| (serge Pte cty pi heat. Will) past sIDE INCOME $10 500% ca “Mae per th a one: tae PT ot al cost “wil oe $25°000 "to, "$30,000. av . @ wi down We be- rade for sma ouse or con- 4famil , . : cost wi , pen aiiaay 2 We Mevaiary, roorg for tik aa Knee lieve this Bee to be “avout half| sider reasonable down payment. brick income. Each has 3 bed- PAUL M JONES RFAL ESTATE| 110 BS. Sagipaw. PE 4-2577| Fixtu-es and equipment the buyer 505 E Mansfield ~ Ancther ment, furnace, auto. gas water! Sourcell’ a favor and: make an 382 Aub F Units, individual’ besemente and NORTH END Sey ete Se 0 ARES 7 SODUCHIVE Lai Tallent \ocetica with very’ Treason: . heater. s yourself a favor and make an Auburn Ave E 4-3393 nits. individu asements and 4 ‘ LEAVING CITY. MUST SELL! 180 ARES cellent location w very reason- non 1 Ye A mL and baa. 40856 MY eee stores/ appointment now to see it. ee ota s. All| Let the other man help you pay | your sround lakefront home Nat. * eee home. ee atte rg Mig se ery hon op- s in- rt ' Y u ge, stone fireplace. Livin m unity uy & come rag oogm fa 8 a $2,000 DOWN — 5 rooms and bath. “BUILDER’S CHOICE” la] ] } I ] lO] id come, See this at only’ $19,500, modern, Ge oa ae = cet 2131 Kingstone Rd” 316000 Cash cn morigaté yore Business at cost inventory. Terms “wT . s oa! oors, plastered walls. good a ‘ . | . room ontiac and too's avail_ble Real- qua. with @ complete -wall of incalion’ lps: & 2A, HOME UNFIN. | FLOYD KENT. Real ~ 3 Fig Quaville. Ph. 2382. YAUF rule, i eunboerdie nepar. 0 school and bus j\. S00 we ealtor OFF OSLY? GRASS LAKE-NEW CABIN ON ROY KNA Realtor ate dinette 2 bedrooms. Tile $2,500 DOWN > At the north edge of the city $1.500 DOWN | 24 W. Lawrence FE 5-6105 open eves! a beautiful A Sea home all large lot, center resort area. ad- 2 kus. rat pie an “7 | 26% W Huron "FE 23-7421 Bath complete basement — 2 family tncome,| just off Walton, you can own, 1580 BENVENUE, CITY OF SYL-| Next to Consumers Power . joining State forest Good hunting.| ear pus line y. 8S. Eve. OA 8-3339 ‘ a Pacaee Space in the pleted ene igbeaeal : aed ie this 2'2 acres and a 4 room| van Village. 5 rooms and bath) “C4 R hH cxemene nd honk” reece i a iear skeels north of Glad-| _ Francis. MA 4 screen ron r h - y vw o L . unfinished attle for 2 more pore ome for only $6,300. Home needs semi-bungalow. new gas furnace yurdan anc ome wn. $25 per geno oarmed ox oo a or GULF SUPER SERVICE rooms. 3 and bath up. basement, gas/ some finishing. Basement has 4| large landscaped lot 50x250 with! Large living room with stone ater softener, large} month Jerry You'll be pleasantly lot. Priced to move. Call us today. surprised to see such a nice Francis E. “Bud” Miller furnace and water heater, a _ Mich. Ph. or 799-W- rage $9,500 full price. Income $65 nice rooms pow lived in by own-| fenced rear vans. mult eae pan fireplace, sunroom, dining room, aos Mata Mes yee tage By tage B hed Call RAY O’NEIL, Realtor Exchange ers. Raise most of you liv- garage in basement. eed only $11,500. FHA. monthly plus owners apartment.| ing here in the cimmes. Biren session. For quick aus $10°5¢ 300 2 large bedrooms sewing room, GREEN 1 LAKE CE OFFICE AVAILABLE L. H. Cott Oil Co, PE 20173. We . OPEN SUN 10AM. TO¢-PM at rear of property. with $1,500 down to responsible tion room & e, hobby Realtor (ON GREEN have « real ral opportunity fo: for you. ‘PM. party. Lngd & M5 room. A real buy Member Co-operative Realtors POR ALL LAKES” 80 acres, lovely clean building, DAIRY BAR A’ AND ¢ GRILL. . i } MI. Pontiac CAMERON HT CLARK | WARD E. PARTRIDGE, river through property. Reason:| west Daily 9 to 8 Sunday | to Phone FE’ 3-1103 or OR Pies REALTOR REALTOR FE 2-8316 Paul DI mene (HOLM TES: . s- BARTRAM douiys a \RL J. ANDREN Member Co-op, Exchange 1362 W. Huron FE 46492 43 W. Huron 8t, FE 5-7741 FE 5-4714 Eves. OR 3-8001 Cus Parking Space ip Rear HOLLY 1.6161 | ! pape 2 ate 5p. m. CARL J. ANDREWS nee __ TWENTY-SIX [== | =o THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 Business Opportunities 47 | RESTAUR'’NT FOR SALE WITH business location. MODERN BEAUTY SHOP, 2 OPER: Cooii. BEAUTY SHOP DOING. GOOD business, Retiring. FE 4-342. For lease—Grocery store with all fixtures in. Exc, location. FE 2-6820. YOUR BUSINESS DAIRY Pecans ae iL Bp y uipped, all modern fix- with going business, show- returns. enjoyed village trade, 4 year lease at $80.90 per mo. Full price. in- cluding inventory. $6500, $2000 i i SEASON JUST MAHAN. co., REALTORS FE 2-0263 RESTAURANT FOR SALE. DOING an excellent business. EM 3-9166 Cal anytime except Thurs. _ 49 Money to Loan (State Licensed Lenders’ MONEY WAITING You May Borrow $25-$500 Today Group your. bills, protect your credit, low monthly payments BUCKNER FINANCE CO. Above Walgreen's FE 4-0541 CORNER N. SAGINAW & HURON 8103500 FURNITURE. AUTOMOBILES BAXTER. & — LIVINGSTONE FINANCE CO. W Huron 8t. PE 4-1538 | SEE USJVHEN | 53's YOU NEED MONEY co $25 to $500. | CAN HELP YOU IF YOU NEED MONEY FOR SUMMER NEEDS, BUY A CAR OR REPAIR | - A CAR, PAY OFF OLD BILLS, | OR ANY OTHER PURPOSE. YOU CAN GET UP TO $500 | WITHOUT ENDORSER AND RE-)| PAY IN SMALL MONTHLY PAY-} MENTS. ALL YOU NEED DO IS PHONE OR CALL AT OUR OFFICE. STATE FINANCE CO, Ph. FE 4-1574 716 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. $25 to $500 Now! Here ts the cash loan service you have been looking for \ GET YOUR LOAN | IN ONE VISIT | On 46° to '52 mode! cars. Bring’ your title. Let us, finance your ear or consolidate, present bills and reduce your monthly pay-' ments by as much as 43. Loans) made on furniture, signature, other securities. Up to 18 months to repay | OA\KL AND-LOAN CO. | 2u2 Pontiac St. Bk. Bldg. FE 2-9206 __ Corner Saginaw and Lawrnece — ~ -4tge 0 MORTGAGES | Paul S| Kartz 131° Pent Bk Bldg FE 5-8406 CASH FAST! Ge 410 to $500 quickly on car, fur niture or no e We've been making | friendly oans since 1906. Phone | 0. come in today Provident Loan | and Savin society, 7 West Law- ren-e St Pontiac FE 2-9429 PEAGUE FINANCE CO., 200"% S,. MAIN ROCHESTER. MICIT. LOANS $25 TO $500 AUTOS LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS hal Rochester, OL 6-0711 ‘CASH UP TO $500 | to finance your auto or other] purchases. to re-finance for low- | er payments: pay bills: sickness or other worthy Purposes | Prompt, Friendly Service IS YOURS AT ALL TIMES Our business 1s assisting individ- uals and families with ‘their money problems Let us help you. | Phone FE 5-8121. Write or call HOME & AUTO LOAN | COMPANY 407 COMM NAT'L BANK BLDG Leslie Fleisher Manager Berkeley Voss, President Hours 9 to 5 ; Sat. 9 to ye LOANS | Community Loan oe 30 E. Lawrence Fle 2-713] PRIENDLY SERVICE ' For) Sale Housetraslers = Pontiac Chief | MOBILE HOMES 26 ft. to 45 ft im length. Up to § years to pay You can buy a Les Hutchinson re- conditioned trailer as low as $100 down. : \ Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales 4615 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains Phone OR 3-1201 Also Corner 11 Mile & Woodward, Royal Oak LI 5-2810 SEE THE FAMOUS © TRAVELO TRAILER Get the facts about trailers. years trailer experience 451 S. Telegraph Rd. PE 5-175) 1947 GLIDZR HOUSETRAILER, 23 exc. cond. $1050 950 Francis St. | Rochester. Drive 2 blocks north | _ of 8. Blvd. on Livernois. Parkhurst Trailer Court and Sales s Bee the Michigan Arrow with bunk beds and tub, 26’ Elcar witr tub. 22’ Richardson Vacationer, also several! demonstrators and good | used trailers 25 “| FF Ho STOOL | 2101 Dixie Hwy. 1540 Lapeer Rd. | Lake Orion, MY 2-4611. \ Lik) new, FE 2-5832 For Sale Mousetraiiers 50| FUNNY BUSINESS 20 FT. GOooD traveler. Excellent . Bleeps 4 $800 cash. Or m on eon : Pontiac Lake Rd. . water tank, al) modern. 1320 Scott Lake Rd. 17 PT. . GOOD FOR HUNT- tn ey fishing, FE- 4 after 4 p.m $250 HOMEMADE HOUSETRAILER, 21 ft long. PE_ SUK 21 FT <7 PALACE _ CPE 5-724. "53 i gg pe oy 14 POOT all aluminum. $900 cash. OA Bios. : POLDING OTILITY. TRAILER. 16x20, can be moved your | own ‘ot Inquire Burt "prailer. Ct.. 229 E. Walton Blvd. AMERICAN ~ - aah AL - WEST. | ENTAL Ge thee A nice ijine pry trailers to from with the best of Be sur- and see Genesee before | you buy your next mobile home. GENE SEETSABES | FE 2-8786 | NEW GENERALS, STEWARTS, eek > ~~ 4; OR % DOWN. 5 PER CENT BANK a WE NOW HAVE SEVERAL GOOD | : USED PAYMENTS, BALANCE LIKE} | RENT. OXFORD TRAILER | + SALES PARTS & ACCESSORIES 8. ‘of Lake Orion 277 HOUSETRAILER, LOW DOWN payment. 693 Cedariawn. it for his daddy!”’ “I'd like one of these for Junior—and a hammer to go with by Hershberger For Sale Used Cars 55 For Sale Used Cars 55 For Sale Used Cars 55 For. Sale Used Cars 85 66 S. Perry The New Lot OF CENTRAL a MERCURY ’48 BUICK SEDAN Needs .ight repairs. Today Only $395 46 CHEV. SEDAN Radio, neater, pew tires. A swell tamily car Only $95 Down TAKIN’ A TRIP? Buy this clean | 46 MERCURY SED. | That's just dying to save you | money Only $95 Down CREAM PUFF Cruise along, relax, and enjoy in this clean as 'S1 BUICK SUPER RIV. | Only 24,000 miles See it. Drive it.. a ll buy ‘t TOP QUALITY | For a ptt a family, a com- | plete’ y equip 32 L INCOLN SED. ‘here is no better car on the road Your own car down SUPER-MAN’S CAR a La him - Whizz - You re| | 4 PLYMOUTH SED. AN] life ANDERSON _HOUSETRAILER | with heated floor, side room, shower, hot & cold water, heavy | For Sale Used Cars 55 gage oil tank, oil filter, This) AWW Wnnnn~ARnARARWWRnnnnnnn trailer is clean & like new Lo- | ated at Frank's Trailer Park, change Shown by appointment Parkhurst Trail Court and Sales now sltowing New Moon completely Pontiac Lake or see Trailer Ex:| | SPECIAL! 48 Stude. Champion Radio, heater original finish, new . brakes, good tires furnished apt. homes —| $295 31, 36, 41 it, Long term ’46 Lincoln Cl, Cpe bank rates. 1540 Lapeer}! . Radio, heater. overdrive, original Rd., Lake Orion, MY throughout ie 2-4611. $295 $100-8200 DOWN. GOOD TRAILERS, | : renta) plans, move in immediate- , 46 Hudson Cl. Cpe. ly. Same rent. | Radio, heater. original black fin- RAILER EXCHANGE | ish Mcense No HX 49 26. 60 8 Telegraph Open Eves | $195 TRAILER EXCHANGE | peat at Mc sett "47 Olds. Sedanette 8K . ROYAL A } . i ke 3 vedrooms, 14 16 40 Te, Seer Lec (REEER ial Dice 50 floor plans, all kinds of equip- $795 ment. furniture, roof coatings, ye) paints. touraids, helper springs & | complete line of other trailer | ’ re. , parts and accessories.’ 48 Ply mouth Sedan VISIT OUR STORE Radio. heater, original finish, runs 60 South Telegraph | ‘ood — looks good. License No. | Open Evenings and Sunday p. m | EG 59177 . 1948 BREMAN, 27 FT EXCELLENT $395 cond No 39, Huron Trailer Park. | For Rent Trailer Space 51. ’41 Ford 2 Dr. BBA eee ee . . . . Origir 1 | PARKHURST LAKE “TRAILFR net val fin sh court. Sewer & water MY 2-4611 $195 TRAILER SPACE FOR REN1 Gordon's Trailer Camp, 3300 Eliz \JICHIG AN’S Lk d. . Ss lain ee oe FINEST Auto Accessories 52. THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD BUICK ‘49; PONTIAC ‘51. OR 3.1747 FOUR 600x16 Like new, a: AUTO PARTS, New—Rebutlt—Used 1ST’ LINE TIRES | Yelivered, OR 3- | BUICK. 1940 COUPE, $225. 770 E. | Walton Blvd 52 BUICK ROADMASTER CON- a || | véertible | : : Sharp. $2,800. 141 Mill! Open Evenings & Sunday | . St Ortonville Ph. Ort. 61, : - | 1947 BUICK. R & H, ALL NEW Discount to All GM tires, bargain, perfect cond. 65 > x shes Lafayette _ r Employes .. LATE ‘48 BUICK, 1 OWNER. $500. MOTOR MART OR 3-2392 ee 21 FE. Moncalm FF 4-8239 BUICK. 52. 2 DR. SEDAN, FULLY | NEW PARTS & ACCESSORIES eC nes wae Ties ORG new WHITE WALL MARVSL ear Mares beautiful white walls on CADILLAC 1951 COUPE Low | x care tire complete with brush, | Pee Excellent condition. FE | > SCHR AM AUTO PARTS! 2539 Dixie, Hwy. OR 3-2105 AUTO PARTS New — Rebuilt — Used OPEN EVES. AND SUN Discount to all GM Employees Peterson 1952 Henry J 2 Dr. 1951 Henry iz 2 De. 1951 Kaiser 2 Dr. . 4 ; 1947 '48, ‘49 F Hollerback Auto Parts | $87 43 (3 craze 340 Baldwin - 7 _FE 3- -9477 | 1946, '47 Ford WRECKING FOR PARTS. ‘46 CARS | 1949 Chevrolet panel. and up Buicks, Fords, Chevrolets, | 3776 AUBURN AVE. FE 4-4092 DeSotos, Oldsmobiles, Pontiacs. , and others. New mufflers and} CAD. ‘47 CONV. WSW TIRES tailpipes, rebuilt generators,; R & H $975 also Pont. Cata- Starters, Carburators. fuel pumps lina. MA 5-917] coring New and used - M G. - 52 JusT RETURNED ie fom Europe ow mileage. Per- LOUTE’S AUTO PARTS \ fect condition. Geo. Irwin, 13140 lathe eer ei | M 59. Milford CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE Gi ey oe ii me car. cylinders rebored. Zuck Ma- | se chine Snop, 23 Hood. Ph. FE | 2-2563 You'll Do Better . GLASS!—GLASS! We specialize in new safety auto- glass. Installed while you wait With your insurance all you need | {1s vour signature. All work guar- anteed Hub Auto Parts ‘Co: JEROME O1,DS-CADILLAC ALL MAKES OF CARS PAYMENT PLAN BRAID MOTOR SALES 30 Years Fair Dealing Cass at West Pike St. Phone FE 2-0186 ; CHEVIE, ‘52, 2 DR, R. AND H. 122 Oakland Ave Ph FE 4-7066’ Ford ‘49 2-dr. R&H. 208 Mohawk c CHEVIE 51 2 DR. 12,000 MI. $995 Auto Servic € eee 53 "52 Chevie dr. Powerglide & REPAIRS, BUMPING & ee ail aceess #1 495.2490 seal 3 | ‘47. CHEV. GOOD CONDITION. FREE ESTIMATE Fleetline | Style, $500. Ph. FE |- 44-5781, atter 4:30. 32 CHEVIE Styline detove ’ dr. Bargain priced. Several others tp choose from WE BUY SELL. OR TRADE West Side Used Cars FOR COMPLETE | 923 “7. Huron . FE 4-2188 S ee eo ‘52 POWERGLIDE. COLL ISION E RV ICE & H. 2-dr. 15,000 miles. $1.475. | Bumping. painting, refinishing re . Saginaw. FE 5-7835 ee CHEV. 1953 RED CONVERT. A-1 Oliver Motor Sales cond FE 4-6526, Colljsion Service Dept — 36 W Pike St. Phene FE. 2-9101 WwW Wanted Used Cars 54 Ee aie) | Wonderful Buy FAIR & SQUARE Cash tor Your Car 1942 Chrysler Windsor four door, one owner car. 49,000 ACTUAL Pointe Motor Sales mil Radto, heater, tip-top shift. = : : . Iight blue finish, good tires. - 171 S. Saginaw Bee eae terior in really new condition. If | WANTED J JUNK & CHEAP CARS you are looking for a dependable. FE 3-9467 - (yt 2-2666 Inexpensive automobile stop in and MARKET : see this one TEX, CALIF —— . Top Price for Your Car NPLATE R-KOCIT, INC. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER 4 es st AVFRILL e. 2020 DIXIE H'WY 78. W FE 2-987 FE 4-6396 | wig? sa lal li ‘ | WANTED | 6 TO '52 MODELS BE SURE TO! GET OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU SELL YOUR CAR VAN- CALI, FE 42780 WELT 4540 DIXIE HIGHWAY anc make me prove OR 3-1355 I can save you money rOP $$ FOR CLEAN CARS OF on a Used Car al! Kinds 2 Auburn FE 4-2131 CHEVROLET 1952 4 DR, 2 2 ~ CARS WANTFD FOR PARTS ne blue less than 10,000 miles, E Montca'm FE 4.8230) “ ae laa geo washers, back- Sores ied nts If tio Ss s 500 CARS WANTED | $1450 "eacn. william J. Repphus BAGLEY AUTO PARTS, 121 Leonard, Mich. after 7 p. m | CHEVROLET. | | | t | | 1 | | ‘51 SEDAN DELIV- | Top dollar paid for wrecked &'> ery. Low mileage one owner. junk cars Free ete Pere $800. OR 3-0595 ] SY Be TE Jatt Or EE 43385) | CHEVE. “14 CLUB, CPE. NO WTD WRECKED & JUNK CARS! payment. : pow __FE 3-9477 340 Baldwin Ave. “See M&M Motor Sales for top dollar on late model cars 2627 Dixie Hwy R 3-1603 | WE NEED 1949 TO ‘53 USED CARS | _ LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES | DODGE-PLYMOUTH M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. MY 2-2611 CHEVROLET. 52, 4 DR. DLX., 2 tone blue, white wall tires, heat- er, 9000 miles, $1500. FE = 22-9400. for out of town buyers Huron Motor Sales 952 W. Huron. Phone ee ee | REPOSSESSION VIRGINIA BUYER Pays TOP | arge oumber dollat for clean ‘47 to ‘49 Fords | Ticed to sell Pontiacs Chevrolets & Buicks | 203 S. Saginaw Motor Mart 121 E..Montcalm. | WTD SCRAP OR CHEAP CARS | CHEVIE, "49. 4 DOOR, EXC. COND. OR 3-1663 $795. 921 Mt. Clemens. FE 3- 9830. PARTY FIOM OUT OF erate | RavE BEL-AIR ‘53, 2 DR., wants clean late model car Al) |* owner see v te ‘or armed forces. _ cash Appr-ciate + eall) MI 4-6898. For Sale Used Cars 55 "50 CHEV ROLET COUPE. R. & H. shi ~< | WSW, low mileage, clean, priced for quick sale Call after 5:30 Pp. m. FE 5-4648. LINCOLN-MERCURY | CHEVE MAROON, 4 DR., $325, 46 IS THE BUY fair cond L 2-390 JACK HODGE IS THE GUY | CHEVIE ‘52. 4 DR. as “DE- Salesman of new and used cars | luxe Powerglide, all extras. Low CENTRAL LINCOLN MERCURY | mileage. MI 4 41467. ¢ 4 0 W PIKE ST | CHEV. ‘39 2 DR.. GOOD RU Cass . W. Pike St ng cond Polis 1510 Hiller Rd. Bus FE -916 Res. FE 2-0841 call after 4. : 1950 BUICK. ees 4 DOOR. | CROSLEY te “SPORT CAR. ‘49 motor, Good cond. MI 49890, s I | DODGE ‘41 2 DR., FLUID DRIVE. “10771. This is a super dandy fully For Sale Used Cars 55, equipped car Your car down | ——_—eeeeaeaeaeeeeeee5ceseeesee eee | See this today | | TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL | | "41 CHEVROLET, $92.00 PO C tor top tor’ NTIAC tor tor tot ALLOWANCES | RETAIL | 66 S. Perry St. STORE i PERRY ST. LOT. GOODWILL | CENTRAL LINCOLN MERCURY | FORD ‘46, GOOD MOTOR AND tires. EM 3-2385. | USED CARS |Piat jt tarot undercoat, spotlight, side mirroe, pt uphols Original ownér | “Not a Name but a Policy”| rorp MopEL A. 4 DR. CHOPPED | | Beautiful cond. $210. 2015 Cass, ACROSS wrnom POST OFFICE | Lake Rd = CLEMENS ST. 31 FORD BUY YOUR USED CAR Country Squire FROM A DEALER | mss Ld Pe ) YOU KNOW Huron Motor Sales 952 W. Huron FE 2.2641 FORD ‘48. ROLLED OVER. MECH- anically good. $100. MA 41789. 1946 AND 1947 PONTIACS wats bree, Medio @ MaclET: DODGES _ $1295.00 OA 3-2501 __ FORDS MICHIGAN’S CNS |e thee THE BIG PAVED LOT WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD 1948 and 1949 CHEVROLETS 51 Chevrolet PONTIACS Mn allaty (ites At water oelet Ure PLYMOUTHS fee — and out, license No. NASH $695 - 48 Chevrolet a d ‘ s CHEVROLETS ’51 Chevrolet PLYMOURES |" ceeyehen ocnneg dunt PONTIACS license No OR | FORDS 9099 DODGES ’*51 Chev. Sed Del. HARD TOPS Like new inside and out. License MERCURYS Me ee OF $695 NASH — "49 Chevrolet 14 ton panel, motor reconditioned in our own modern shop, tires and pair’ like new license No. 5380) $495 50 Chevrolet SPECIAL! 50 PLYMOUTH | $795 | Radio, heater, ' Radio heater. beautiful dark green MICHIGAN’S | FINEST | THE BIG PAVED Lor ‘| CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD | | 51 Stude Champ. Sed. Radio, heater, overdrive. beautiful grey-blie finish, excellent tires | and motor. License No. CX 75 33 95 * '$9 Packard Sedan A really beautiful car with 2 tone adio heater. License 52 Chev. 2 Dr. Deluxe Big factory heater, clean uphol- stery, beautiful two tone black and | gr ev. excellent t'res and motor License No ES 8644. $1,295 49 Ford Club Coupe original blue finish without @ scratch. good tires and motor License No. DP 04 69 $495 | ’°52 Nash Rambler Conv. Green finish, tires and top like new. license No EK 61 40. Radio, heater and overdrive. $1,195 °51 Nash Rambler Conv. A rea'llv .eautiful little car, equipved with radio and heater. besutiful Desert Tan finish with black top License No. EA 85 05 $995 , a: ted | 49 Chev. Deluxe Sedan Radio, heater spotless black fin- isb and clean interior License No EU 05-38 . Bhs, hr eal ’51 Chevrolet 2 Dr Loaded with extras, 2 tone finish without a mark or scratch, excel- lent tires and motor, License No. 86 '0 $895 51 Plymouth 2 Dr. Sed. No. D be] like new. License $895 100 MORE TO CIIOOSE FROM AT MICHIGAN'S FINEST | THE RIG PAVED ae finixh 81 27. N THE CORNER DWARD AND 13 ILE FROAD NASH ‘47 AMBASSADOR, cLeee | inside & out. FE 5-7090. 140 OLDS BERIES 90 ec cane Very good condition. R&H i FE 2-4024 OL 8 ‘49 88 CONVERT., CLEAN, | white wall tires, yellow, new top. _ $975. OR 3-8449. w Oldsmobile A very nice 194/ Oldsmobile 8. four door, radio, heater, 2 tone | green finish, good tires In ex- cellent mechanical condition Must be seen to be appreciated. $545 Easy finan. terms can be ar- ranged. KELLER-KOCH, INC. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER 47 3. Woodward, Birmingham MI 6-1200 49 STAT. WAGON. | E 5-4685. PLYMOUTH | R&H mivdonee 1953 DEX. ORAN- brook clb. cpe. 5,000 miles Pert. | cond Deli.ered for $2,160 Sacri fice for $1,700. FE 2-7346 | PLYMOUTH SUBURBANS, $897 & | up. See these sharp clean good ruaning family cars LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES DODGE-PLYMOUTH A-24 at Buckhorn Le MY 2-2611 PLYMOUTH 37 DR GOOD __ condition. $75. rE 5-2959 REPOSSESSIONS — Can Be Bought for Balance Due ‘49 Ford station wagon ‘49 Ford ickup ‘46 Ford pickup ‘4% Ford 2 dar. "48 Olds 4 dr ‘47Olds 2 dr. % ton panel, spotless body ditioned motor, 5 excellent tires. recon- License No. 5928 CN SD9D PO] UTI A( "40 Plymouth Sed. Del. | Origina) black finish, good tires and motor. Ncense No. 39-05-CP RETAIL $195 50 Ford V-8 1, ton panel, reconditioned motor, | STORE good tires, aew paint,license No 8591 CN __ $595 - Factory Branch 63 Mt. Clemens at Mill 48 G.ML.C. 4, ton panel with good solid ead and «res, license No. 50-44-CP $295 Phone FE 3-7117 CROSLEY STATION WAGON ‘50, | exc. cond. Good paint, heater & tires Used as second car. Call MI 4-4102. 20 MORE | TO CHOOSE FROM LL BARGAINS __ Theap FE A L CHEVROLET 1941, CLUB CPE, needs litt.e motor repair $65. .Cor. Orchard Lake & Johnson. 1953 DESOTO DEMONSTRATOR, low mileage, radio, heater, fabu- MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT lous power steering, tremendous savings, Ca:l Mr. McNellis. MI JON THE coe ree ROKD #7811 WA. Caltrider, Inc., 912 | WOODWARD AND | S Woodward Birm — . FORD ‘40, CUSTOM 4 DR (OVER: | > ive , excellen co! | ‘41. DODGE, REBUILT MOTOR.! G, inal owner, Ma-| $150, also °38 Ford, $150. Call goto eine © = = FRAZER, 41. WHITE SIDEWALLS | H Take over payments. | SMART BUYERS FE ‘S7219 — > 47 KAISER IN FAIR CONDITI CHOOSE _ 2925 Chevrolet, FE 4-102. SAFETY CHECKED | KAIsER ‘47 R & H, DIRECTION- USED CARS al signals. Ke clean cond. | “50 HUDSON CLEAN, |, LOW MILE- age. PE 4-5158 1949 Plymouth, spec. dix. clb. cpe For a real buy, you will have Le see and drive this car. Cheap. FE 5-6522 | | ' | 1951 P Oh friar ranbrook, clb. cpe. | ling for $1075 L 1950 Studebaker Land Cruiser 4dr. arry jerome WSW tires. R & H. Mechani-| . cally tops. Selling for 718. Rochester Ford Dealer 1946 Plymouth spec. new seat covers, reconditioned, good tires, Sell- ing for $485. e Custom clb cpe. Has) . with spotlight. cal has new motor, mechani- | cally ood. selling for $475. \ larkston MOTOR SALES CHRYSLER ~- PLYMOUTH Clarkston, Mich. Ph. MA 5-2921 Open 8:30 a.m o 8 p.m. Dally DODGE ‘49 cn CPE. R&H, suto. trans $927. LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES DODGE-PLYMOUTH ‘00 his | | FORD Custom Tudor Eight Cylinder Radio & Heater $895 M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. MY 2-2611 FORD ‘46. GOOD MOTOR & Pony ie ates Larry Jerome FORD ‘41, GOOD COND. $225. MAIN STREET AT THE BRIDGE Ortonville 127F 13. FORD, 1949 DLX. WITH OVER-| ‘FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A iis OR -_ >-OTTS. after 5 _P.m. GOOD PLACE TO BUY” i939 FORD NEW MOTOR. EM OPEN EVENINGS yous. LINCOLN 1953, Cosmo. cpe., fully equipped, ~ JACOBSON ~ MOTOR SALES FE’ 0188 miles, 36 8. Genesee. Your Hudson Dealer | "51 MERCURY. 1 OWNER, BLAC x. __FE2-8359/ 3.05 w FORD, ‘46, GOOD MOTOR, TIRES, speaker, seat. covers, and reasonable 2882 Crooks Rd. - . 350 Auburn FORD 1951 V-8 GOOD CONDITION. 3935 Baldwin. FE 4-0887. 58 W. Pike at Cass Y, ‘46. NEW MOTOR, 4 dr. 2 new WSW tires. Good body. FE 2-0589 FORD CL. ie ue “A-1 | COND... . 56% O'Riley. $150 cash wi uy ue uity, | MERCUR or _ leaving for service. MI “142. R& g ad anal, spot 46 FORD 2 DR. R.H. BEST OF- lights. OR 3-6133. aT Olds 2 dr. ‘47 Plymbuth 4 dr ‘4 Nash 2 dr ‘49 Mercury clb spe ee ca at NICHOLS AUTO SALES 7 203 S. Saginaw _ ‘| PLYMOUTH BELVIDERE. 1953 private owner, low mileage $150 | ad take over payments. EM 3-| 5211 PLYMOUT "53 CRANBROOK club cpe., black & gray, fully “EARL R. MILLIMAN A FORD DEALER OVER 31 YEARS SHOP On Our Lot SUNDAY - | for Monday's and Tuesday's | Specials ! | Prices Will Be On Cars | for Your Convenience "46 Ford ‘8’ Deluxe | 4 Door Sedan | One of those good ones. Radio | & heater $395 | | 48 Olds 2 Dr. Sedan Very clean, mechanically O K Looks and runs good | $695 ’SO Ford Custom 2 Door Sedan Radio, heater new tires special for you Only $850 ’52 Ford 2 Dr. Sedan Actual mileage 13,000 miles <- former owners name on request. $1,395 ’49 Ford 2 Dr. Sedan Spotlite radio, beater snd Over- drive $495 ’50 Mercury 2 Dr. Sedan Good motor Body a little rough. 5495 EARL R. MILLIMAN 147 S. SAGINAW Open From 8 a.m.-9 p.m. A real | fer over $300. FE 5-3590. MERCURY 33. LIKE | NEW, USED FORD, 1947, DLX. 32 DR., A-1} as demo. Only 3.000 miles. Priced cond., healer. EM 34391. + for quick sale MY 3-3400. See and No. 170 50 BUICK SPEC. DEL 1950 DESOTO CUSTOM FORDOR Down Payment $345 drive this one owner car with gyromatic shift. radio. heat- er, ceat covers and other extras. Liberal trade-in allowance on your old car | Brand new DeSotu V-8 coupe for- | dor, hardtop. and convertible al) special prices. DOWN 1950 PONTIAC 4 DR. 8 71,000 miles, RAH | ij io5s.::. $275 1952 CHEVROEBET 2 DR. Powerglide. 28.000 miles....... $395 1951 DESOTO 4 DR | Loaded with extras ......... $445 | 1949 FORD FORDOR 8 Radio, heater etc ceeeeien « S108 | 1952 PLYMOUTH CONV Hardtop 8.000 miles “| 1951, SIUNEBAKER LAND. Cruiger all the extras ss 1949 PLYMOUTH DELUXE 2 door one owner ... co Se ual 1952 PLYMOUTH CLUB Coupe, 14,000 miles $445 | 1949 PLYMOYTH CLUB COUPE ‘ Radio and heater | 1950 PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN * Radio and heater $295 1948 CHRYSLER 4 DR. | Many extras... .. cscencess $195 Hl | 1940 DODGE TUDOR | Full Price +. $165 1940 PLYMOUTH 4 DR. Badio. heater, 2 brand H new tires nee seoe $149] CHRYSLER OWNERS IN PONTIAC AREA We are equipped to serv- ice your car Factory § trained mechanics and genuine Chrysier parts. BRAID | MOTOR SALES — DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer 30 Years Fair Dealing Cass at W Pike FE 2- 3186 | | PLYMOUTH ‘50 EXC COND Must sacrifice. Would trade for pickup vr panel. FE 5-1704. me MOUTH, ‘51 SUBURBAN. 14.: miles & H Exc. cond $1205 Terms OL 23-0266 betweer 5°30 w@ 6:30 p m PLYMOUTH °'53 4 DR CRAN- ook, a al Must sacri ce. MI 6 PLYMOUTH oe o CLEAR R & H. _FE 5-72 TRADE FOR LESS ‘32 Buick super 4 dr. 51 Pont. dix. 8 4 dr. 50 Plymouth conv. 30 Ford conv. cpe. ‘49 Buick sta. wag. 50 Buick super 2 dr. 47 Olds 8 4 dr. Anderson Pontiac-Buick 7551 Auburn, Utica, Mich. | Ph. Collect. Witical 3001 PONTIAC. 52, 8 DLX., 2 DR. stundard fully equipped, shift 10-000 miles, best offer _OR 3-0290 1941, 2 DR. SEDAN, motor good cond.. $100 1933 Ford truck motor in good cond _ $15. MU 927000 Ask Abou Our Finance Plan cpe. 53 Mercury 53 Willys 52, 50, °49, 46 Ford | 51 Kaiser, hydra, Olds| V- 8 engine. 51, 48, 47 Kaiser 1, °49. ’°48, ’47 Chevie °51, 49, ’42 Mercury 50, 49, 48, 47 Pontiac 51, 49. °48 Studebaker 50, 46 Dodge ECONOMY USED CARS 72 Auburo FE 4-213] PONTIAC 1953 CHIEFTAIN, HYDR tudor Dix. 2,500 miles WSW Like new FE 4-6940 after 5 30 pm | Better Buick BUYS | | No 190 ‘49 FORD 8 CUSTON $695 | "92 CHEV, DELL 2 DR. | One Owner-—14,000. Miles $1445 49 BUICK 2 Dik. One Ownet $305 No, i160 . 1048 BUICK 4 DR. | $695 No 99 49 BUICK SUP. $945 : 92 ‘48 BUICK SUPER 2 DR. $645 4.DR. | | $1145 | '48 BUICK TUDOR $675 | V3 DOWN—WE TRADE No Payments Until October 12th OLIVER'S 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-910} PONTIAC, CATALINA ‘50, ORIG- inal owner, 57 } Florence Ave. PONTIAC ‘39, 8 CYLINDER. BUS cpe. $85. 231 Osmun. PONTIAC ‘48, +DR., R&H, VERY _ good cond. FE 5-6065. PHONES: FE 64101-After 6 FE 56-3688 a ee eee ee ee ee ae 9 PONTIAC ‘4 ¢R. R&H. ad Pe 65-4688, - g , 11946 PONT? 8 '’46 DeSoto 2 Dr. .... Holden's Red STAMPS NOW GIVEN | WITH EVERY USED CAR PURCHASED AT j COMMUNITY MOTORS Todays. Top 10 - ‘00 BUICK Special 4 Dr. Radio, heater, equipped | with air cond. $145 ‘47 NASH 600 4 Dr., R&H 299 ‘48 CHRYSLER Windsor 4 Dr. R&I, Fluid Drive $795 00 BUICK Special 4 Dr. R&H, Dyna. $1145 ‘49 MERCURY Club Cpe., R&H $795 ‘48 OLDS 2 Dr., R&H, Hydra. $795 oe ay tae Dlx, 2 Dr. 1195 ‘92 PLYMOUTH 4 Dr., R&H $1295 00 CHRYSLER Royal 4 Dr., R&H $1395 ‘40 OLDS 2 Dr. $69 Good Selection of Used Trucks GMAC Terms All Cars Guaranteed COMMUNITY Motor Sales Inc. At he north end of town Oper every night ‘til 10 804 N. Main OI. 2-71214 ROCHESTER | | PONTIAC 6, ‘47, .ALL ACCESS., |r very clean. OR 3-0072., | PONTIAC. 1951 BLACK 4 DOOR, | chieftain dix. Hydramatic. $1300. 4701 Oixie Hway. Drayton Plains. PONTIAC 1951 6 STANDARD. 25 Dr Syncromesh Exc. cond. $1,198 | 76 Willard. FE 2-1546 | 2 DOOR DE- heater white side! -4» N Johnson after luxe’ radio, wall tires. 5:3. | PONTIAC 50 2 DR. 26 Clive TE 5-8693 | PONTIAC '48 4 DR. DLX., STREAM- | liner. Exc mechanical cond. FE | 71-9299 — 7 PONTIAC 53, HYDRA., CHIEF. 4 | d s tone blue. Foam rubber. | skirts, visor eas. discount. FE | 4-5683 8, HYDRA. Riemenschneider’s Offers: 7 Chev. 2335904445 "OL Henry J xexnecvee OUP ACK ani cleric ‘49 Dodge Sed. 50006 ‘46 Dodge Sed. ...... 46 Pont. Cl, Cpe. .... ’47 Chev. Coupe . ’50 Plym. Sed. ....... | "A? Olds. CONV, canaxe 725 Si Ply. Cl, Cpe. ..... ’47 Ford Sedan ...... 49 Stude. Sed. ..... ’Sl ash States. Sed... ME IN AND SEE THE MANY OTHER GOOD BUYS ON OUR LOT RIEMENSCHNEIDER BROS. Dodge Plymouth Dealer 232 «S. Saginaw St. FE 23-0131 PONTIAC '52 4 DR. 2 TONE BLUE, R&H, hyura. WSW tires fender skirts E-Z eye glass, loaded. $1,825. Call Romeo or can be seen at 244 Morton, Romeo. 1946 PONTIAC, STREAMLINER. Rur like a new car Very clean brakes. Pontiae streamliner. Good transportation. $95. 1947 Kaiser. Good transportation. 1 38 wt Te Mechanically per- Terms, if necessary. 4160 W. Walton For Sale Used Cars 55 O.K USED CARS Thrifty Throckmorton Says | Need a good used car, and bread on the table. You'll have dough for both, if you deal with Habel. TWO 48 Olds. Radio, heater, hydramatic. Clean automobiles. Only $545 ‘50 Dodge Heater and fluid Full value at— $845 ‘O2 Chev. ? ~ | 2 door. drive, Heater, 2-tone Can’t beat it— $1095 ‘Ol Plym. 2 door. Radio & heater. Priced low at— $995 A GOOD SELECTION OF ’42—’48 Automobiles From $75 up door. green. 34 Years of Customer Confidence THE WORKINGMAN’S LOT JACK HABEL CHEVROLET S. Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-4546 PONTIAC ‘50 2 DR. CHIEFTAIN, hydra., access. $1075. 375 First. _FE 2-3875. — _ PONTIAC. 1938, $150 CALL BE- tween 12 & 3 p. m., 170 Willard USED CARS KIMBALL / YOUR NASH DEALER | 256 8 Sag: FE 4-1545 | OPE N NIGHTS | PONTIAC 8, ‘52. CHIEFTAIN, 4 dr sedan. R & H, hydra. Other a Very clean. $1800. FE PONTIAC 1947, 8 DELUXE, 4 DR_ Baste heater, good condition. OR PONTIAC ‘47, CONVERT. $675. N. Cass Lk Rd. FE 17-9676. sis 1950 2 DR. CHIEFTAIN ree 1‘: Clean. Low mileage. FE eu een t need oD GLASSES to Bring Out the Beauty and: Performance of These Ask PHIL to ; Show You the 52 MERC. HARDTOP Custom built tt has radio heater. overdrive, backup lights. direec- tiona) signals) and white side- wells 51 MERCURY 4 DR. With radio and heater It has al] .he beauty of a new car. 48 OLDS Verv clean with radio heater, and white sidewalls. 50 PONTIAC 2 DR. Torpedo body has radio and heat er A very clean car. 50 HUDSON SUPER 6 Radio, heater, and new seat cov- ers. 51 FORD 2 DR. With radio, heater, and light blue \ CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY BALDWIN AVE. LOT 148 Baldwin Ave. One Block Couth of Fisher Body FE ¢7816 PONTIAC ‘48, 4 peri VERY 1951 SONTTiS § 6. DELUXE ~€DR. sedan, hydra. $1300. MI 4- 3267. ‘a ida py CONVT,, HYDRA. ‘s eater. Radio “pe Sa easel t+ —e ——————ee mit hian THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1953 TWENTY-SEVEN For Sale Used Cars 55 For Sale Trucks 56 Swaps 63 READY TO WORK USED TRUCKS LIFE'S TOO SHORT ‘$1 Pord F-5 Stake ......... $1295 ‘oe — Wheelbase si To spend all your money| @ Dodse 172° Wheelbase, ey repairing your old car. ‘80 Dodge 1 ton stake, dual, _ Come in and see these q Dodge i ton pickup 007°" smooth running, sleek! “ iow tf mw looking, mechanically | 2 Dodge 1 ton athe, New perfec cars. 42 Doige “4 ton, C&C.) 9 MANY OrmERe TO CHOOSE "46 FORD CONV. CPE. ; . : Bhinv black finish. new top, engine) RIEMENSCHNEIDER excellent condition, and good tires. Priced Right. BROS. "47 DODGE. 4 DR. SED. Radio inated, dazzling finish Dodge pool os ty aaa P] th “lymou ’48 FORD SED. D 1 Nn like finish, mins clean cor, Wi, Setar, ait dealer Priced To Go. 232 S. Saginaw 5t. FE 2-0131 | | 46 GMC LB, EQUIPPED | "49 STUDE. 2 DR. SED.| bulldozer Be boat, 8183 ae Radio, seater, hiny blue finish, | - _merce: Rd. EM 34896. FE 5-0625. engine good. famous Studebaker | PORD or Se cl ee tee | =rerny. Prices aed | Call King Bros, FE $0734 or FE. ’SO PONT. SEDANETTE a8 -_ Satie sadio nesters Vern: cmmall | comd., 8160 76 eRICKDP,, 900 ime, down payment. Get This. ©. ae TON CHEVIE. 56 WIL-| ’*S1 MERCURY SE Pontiac’s ONLY Exclusive 2 Radio, heater like new, engine very quiet overdrive. * finggh Dr away price Smal! down payme ‘Truck Dealer WILSON '52 FORD GMC CO. New car finish, 1adio, heater | Overdrive seat covers loaded | ~ With extras. Price to Move 1S. Woodward IF 4-4531 _ SALE TRUCKS CHEVIE ‘51, 1l'2 | tor, 4476 Motorway Drive | 1951 CHEVROLET WITH. BROWN. | light auxiliary & air Drakes, $995 1948 Ford F 7 with air, $495 In- ternational dump truck, $495. Choice of 50 other trucks at sim-| ilar bargains. Terms. Will trade Michigan Auction Mart Inc. M 24 & Indianwood Rd Lake Orion | ‘37 CHEVIE DUMP TRUCK, WILL 753 MERC, 2 DR. SED. High compression head, radio Bester Merco-Matic. Famous Mercury Quality and Economy. We are open from 8 a.m.! to 9 p.m. for vour con- | venience. CENTR AL | oe SOE 6a tt LINCOLN-MERCURY | Motor Scooters 58) MAIN LOT N & Pike at Cass FE 4-3885 | ers. 12 S Paddock. FE 4-4246. 1952 CUSHMAN HIGHLANDER MO- | . tor scooter, ood cond, many 9 courteous, well trained| access. $150. MI 43335. - salesmen to serve you. | HIZZER. POWERED SCHWINN, A-l Private party, good rubber, best of care, operating cond STUDEBAKER ' DR. = iy $105. FE 44932. rr, hydra. Very mee cond. Meat" full ‘51 CUSHMAN EAGLE, GOOD CON- ORION MOTOR SALES | dition. FE 5-6419. M-24 at Buckhora Lk. | ‘30 WHIZER gl GooD __condition. _FE 297 ‘é sways JEEP. 4 WH. _ 4660 Eliz Lk. Rd oa WILLYS JEEP STATION WA- __ gon, $450. 875 Scott Lake Rd For Sale Trucks HABEL OK USED TRUCKS DRIVE. For Sale Motorcycles 59 | 1950 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 56. exc. cond. Mutual 4-3482 2 CYL. 30% CU IN, INDIAN motorcyle engine. Government _ Surplus. Never run. $65. EM 3-8932 1948 INDIAN CHIEF MOTORCY- cle. New tires. New be'sery. Runs good $235. 40 Edwards. 5-65.52. 125, | FOR PARIS & SERVICE ON YOUR Harley Davidson, see Harley Davidson Sales Co. 372 8. Sagi- naw. ‘39 HARLEY. ‘48 MTR. GOOD! cond, Extras. $125. EM 3-5621 For Sale Bicycles 59A PPD LD LDL LD LDL IDL DD PB OP GIRLS STANDARD SIZE SCHWINN |! bike Used one nour. FE 4-4985 Boats & Accessories 60 a Hh Re INB ARD 156°, $350. bd Ad Andrews, ake rion. RECONDITIONED aa BOB COSTELLO Boats, Motors, Trailers RIGHT Lake Orion MY 3-7571 IN A HYDRA-PLANE. 22° HP EVIN. a l t . 19 N. SEPARATE SHOP _ Baith. -, Kaw BORh, © _ 25 H.P. JOHNSON ON 14 ft. Wolverine Super Deluxe mahogany runnabout. A well balanced fast combination. Both tn new condition with ‘48 Ford 8 14-TON PICKUP A good reliable truck, sol-' id as a rock, good rubber. |! Steering wheel and tarp. FE 2-2065 or OR 3-2216. 14 FT WOLVERINE —- ALMOST new 12 horse motor and trailer Specially priced FE 2-6260 East Pike and Tasmania ¢ FT. UTILITY RACING PRAM MA 41166. 10 PER CENT OFF ON ALL! boats, trailers, surf boards & skiis Owens Marine Supplies Lake Ave. 39606 Orchard 32-8020 APPROVED BOAT CUSHIONS $2 95 Sporting goods of all kinds. Star- craft ooats. Tee-nee Everything for the boat. OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 306 Orchard Lake Ave FE 2-8020 MERCURY OUTBOARD MOTORS. | Sales & Service Terms to suit ‘46 Ford 14-TON PANEL Many good miles lett in| you. Shorty Hoor's Piace, 3730 . : Orchard Lk. Rd. at Pine Lake. this one for the man with! FE 25260 21 PT. CABIN CRUISER, $400 SEE * small hudget at Frenchies Laiding, Cass Lake ing canoe, complete with mast & | $345 sail. Sacrifice value, MAyfair 6-2461 _ 14 FT. DLX. WOLVERINE BOAT | 22'2 HP ae Good J rn | cond. $375. FE 2-04 AUGUS L = 16 FT. COMET SAILBOAT. NYLON OFFERINGS | sails. Good cond. FE 2-9306 OF | MERCURY MOTORS, MOST MOD- | | els now — for immediate , NEW delivery. Term . HEVROLET GENESEE. SALES | G ; cL | 2101 Dixie Hwy. PE 2-8786 TRUCKS ama ad oye gy he Johnson 32 model V 45. Complete k f N _| except fly wheel and macneto Ta e your choice of Amer-) 9tS*Picen it. Pe 2-208 ica’s Choice, Our selec-| ~ Airplanes ~ 61 tion is big, but: money eee wan = 7 ae = { 48 8 E ALL METAL LUSCOMBF difference 1S small. ; Just relicénsed, $1575. Barbers, Pontiac Municipal | Transportation Otfered 62 THE THRIFTY PURN. VAN GOING haga wat load either way. FE 5-6806 | DRIVING TO SAN DIEGO CALIP Aug. 31. Wanted 2 or 3 to share expenses and driving Call Roose- LOT velt Hotel Room 410 Swaps 63 3 BEDRM WEST $9900 efQuity to Sain property. FE 35-7217 re GOODYEAR. 750x15 TIRES AND tubes Polaroid camera with flash HAB L | develops picture in 1 min- | ) ott on ineome Porn, light, ute e sell or trade for an\- ing can use FE 5.1100 after | §:30 sat or all day Sunday |OUR 3 BEDROOM HOME. $7500 terms or trade. $5500 equity on income property. FE 9-72.17 ‘41 FORD PICKUP. NEW MOTOR for . na!) housetrailer FE 2-3125 1072 LaSalle. Huron Gardens 28 FT ‘52 MODEL ELCAR HOUSF.- treler for equity in house. FE- 5-4749 S. Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-45346 FORD ‘46, % TON STAKE red EM 3-354 vi take over payments. _ EM_3-3543 1983 GMC TRUCK TRACTOR, “WILL WILL TAKE LATE MODEL CAR sacrifice All equipped. 4 extra bal ly for part down payment on large tires Air brakes. $2300 on terms.| family or income house, west ' *_OR 3-1523._ 2386 Silver Circle. | ide. FE.S-2136. WILL TRADE 1952 FORD, .4— DR. for ejuity in house, vacant prop- erty or housctrailer, FE ;2-7053 “7 Trustworthy 1953 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN ¢ DR. Trucks hydraulic, white Se pwalls, radio, aeater. Will trade for land con- ‘rect wi Lis M BREWER °5S2 Chevrolet 1-ton Panel! rooe-eit Hotel FE 45181 1, very clean, good | Eves. <. Sun. FE 2-8532 1 ton tires, low mileage. A Steal at $1,095 ’47 Ford Dump Good tires, box and motor A Good Deal at $495 52 Ford 2-ton Stake a. low mileage, good tires and | “A Steal -at-$1,3 EARL R. WILL TAKE ‘47 OR OLDER CAR om trade on ‘52 Plymouth Cran- brook, OR 3-7301 TRADE YOUR LAND “CONTRACT. smal] house, mortgage. equity, furniture. autos. for new or used | well known good housetrailers TRAILER EXCHANGE 60 8. Telegraph Open Eves. TRADE YOUR OLD REFRIGER- peril or anything of value on a ew Cros'evy Shelvador $199 terme. $2 per week. MY 3-2711 WILL TAKE ‘39, '40 OR ‘41 BUICK for '49 Ford. Take over payments. | 4 W. Walton. - SELL OR TRADE FOR CAR near Crescent and Eliz. Lk. Scott Lk. Rd | INERNATIONAL th 9] LOT 875 FYDRAUL- 147 8 Saginaw Open eves fe dump truck for John Deere oe bry ' err t= i's ° 1 one eo FT FT AINA TON. NEW MO-| USED CUSHMAN SCOOT- |! heavy duty bicycle, many extras. | Fi, trailers, 18 FT. OLDTOWN SPONSON SAIL- | SIDE HOME. | EXCHANGE YOUR LAND CON- tract (where you have sold erty) for late car & cag. H. J. mode] car VanWelt OR 3-1355. For Sale Clothing 64 3 MATERNITY DRESSES, SIZE 16, $10. FE 45736. 60 Belmont. CLOTHING, SIZE 2 TO 12, 1 St. Marys smowsuit, size 4% 4 dresses 5 and other misc. 42 Allen. FE 48556. 395 | BOY'S BPORT COAT. FXC. COND., size i415. FE 5-7816 GIRLS SUITS, DRESSES & SKIRTS _ Ste 1214. Exc. cond. FE 47101 _ Sale Musical Goods — 65 185. N. UPRIGHT PIANO $25. Perry, rear apt. - CONCERT SNARE ‘DRUM. "STAND & case; also Metronome. FE 2-1907. GRINNELL CONCERT GRAND UP- right, recentiv rebuilt and refin- ished SPINET PIANO RENTALS “WITH option to buy. $10 monthly. Gal- lagher’s. FE 4-0666. | ACCORDION 120 BASS EXCEL-| lent condition. Decorated for pro- fessional use. Sacrifice value. : MAytair 6-2461, : | Sale Household Goods 66 ARMSTRONG | PLASTIC VINOPLOR — ‘% PRICE | Wall Tile, rn, ft.......19¢ BONNY MAID INLAID TILB ..10@c 12 FT, GOLDSEAL CONGO. 4a Price ‘SYER'S, “V4 W. HURON | Pree Detivery—Free PE 4-3064 | BOTTLM GAS INSTALLATION. 1 | duy_ service. Gas at $9 per 100 lb Gas, appliances: b ate.s, Kenvon Fuelgas Co. 32491 — water hot plates a lights. 268 Dixie Hwy. OR WESTINGHOUSE STOVE, WORKS good, $18. MY 2-4921 BENDIX AUTO. WASHER: KEN- more table top gas range GE | refrigerator. All in good cond. FE 5- ne MODEL REFRIGERATOR, | kitchen table. complete living | Tm. suite, complete full size bed, floor lamps, gas plate, end tables chest of drawers, late model | | sweeper, chime mantel clock. FE 2-4376 BOTTLF GAS ] INSTALLATION, will. convert your | Sales & Service FE 2-4316 'EASY SPIN DRY WASHER. 2 } Yugs: occasional tables some | antiques; & misc. articles. FE §-7383 MAGIC-CHEF GAS STOVE, $80, 2 floor lamps. $10, 2 table lamps, $6 FE 46618 | ENGLISH CHESTNUT DINING room furniture. Reflectory exten- sion table. 4 newly upholstered chairs, ‘uffet. 171 8. Shirley FE §-2323 ELECTRO-MASTER STOVE $25 10161 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. EM 3-5438. tove, Skelgas | [MODEST MAIDENS = f ] oav ALAN-— “T’'m going to bake this pie if it kills you!” a-29 | } ; } CHROME DINETTE SETS. AS- semble these yourself and save. { Sale Household Goods 66 Sale Household Goods 66 Used Trade-in Dept. 4 chairs & table, $60.95 value, | Buffet... 2.0... .. eee eeeeees $9.95 $39.95 These are brand new 1953 | China cabinet sesiee eee Sarees 856.00 models. Famous make. All popu- | Lounge chair soeee. $14.95 lar colors. Come in, look, com-j| APt. size e'ectrie ‘stove. eeecee 40. pare, and ve convinced of these Table top gas range..... eee $39.95 | extraordinary bargains. Michigan | 6 pe. dinirg room ........... $49.9 Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake | 2 Pc living rm. ............- 329'95 | Ave { | bean Gees rag Ps aned | wn payment. Easy terms. | LINOLEUM, 9x12. .$3.95) WYMAN’S JACK'S LINOLEUM 183 N. | $4.95 outside paint, $2.50 QUALITY USED FURNITURE & appliances of al) kinds goes refrigerators $15 and up. anteed ip working order. Merchandise ‘terms or will trade. L 3345. Auburn Auburp Heights. sold on Sale anda Fridey a mile E, ri BEDS, SPRINGS & MATTRESS, | | like ew, Misc. _FE 2-7552. DUNCAN PHYFE DINING SUITE with drop leaf table, buffet, chairs. $150. Desk, $25. All like new. FE 4-3874. PERRY | Rd. 1] 18 W. Pike only HOLLYWOOD BEDS. MATTRESES, | and davenports—you SAVE' Hill- __berg. 52 Williams. FE 5-8633 USED TRADE-IN — DEP | 4 chrome kitchen chairs $1405 | Washer $19.95 ROCKO? ioe ote vt ce pecans « $19.95 | BOIS 2. «10+. | + agelcea cx $24 50 | 6 dining rm. cheire $24 50 Studio - .« $29 50 | Davenport & chair maple ,, $34 50 6 pe dining rm_ suite $49 50 MAN OTHER ITEMS CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS THOMAS ECONOMY | i | | ! BRIDGE LAMPS, 1 FLOOR| RADIO-PHONOGRAPH COMBINA- “T3 TURE C lamp, Duncan Phyte coffee table | tion, good cond , cheap. FE 5-3671 | FURNITURE CO. & end table. PE 46687. MOVING a ene 9 CU. PT CROSLEY SHELVADOR, | Steinway — Piano, 8750. SELLING BELOW WHOLESALE Good as new. $75. FE 44418. | magh desk. mens, She.) Asphalt TUG se«e 3'4c¢ washer, $45. meer lamp, $3: radio ad e098 ©) REFRIGERATORS LAST YEAR victrola, $5, mahg rocker, $5 10 cent linoleum tle ce Ge Perfect New Terrific value Mich, | Midwest: ¢0131. #12 Linoleum rugs 1. $1 96 et. 2 c ch- |} - - — a Jaid rempents ISc yd fgan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard ee OASTER okhoure. for | 3 4% ft Wall tile 15 Lake Ave on nahi EM - oo Sa $3.95 House paint $159 gal T T = : - -—— | $495 “cname} aint $195 ga) | NE W FURN NITURE USED APPLIANCES— TRADE INS | 12 ft Linoleums otk eit BARGAINS Refrigertiars ~ checked 0d 4, |larold's, 140 S. Sagimaw Hollywood bed frames. $895; bed Washers — Good shape .. $14.95 FE 12-5450 Free Delivery Free pillows, $2.95 pr.; cotton mat-); Electric Water Heater 14.95 | DOUBLE RED STAMPS TODAY tresses—all sizes, $12.95; inner-/| Electric Water Heater 66 gal. $79.50 Gre ELECTRIC STOVE. GOOD | oprine ee 95; Pere Ranges — Gas and Electric. cond. $35. Lincoln 44252 1 oe aviaece uanmiune Clean. Fron -. $1950] > et ECTRIC STOVES, SMALL AND small ¢crawer unfinished chests, h. | $895: metal. beds, $1295. coll! promom™ 1% 1, 16 inch. _ 3990, ‘large. FE 2-5125 | springs, $11.95: maple bunk beds, | seotors 1, & 16 HP $400 | ELECTRIC STOVE WHITE POR- $3695: sofa beds, $44.95; chrome | These are all ~ood buys and will celain tabletop, 40 in. Lots of ; sets. $4995. Everything for the give lot= of ervice storage space. Exc. cond. EM } home. Bank Furniture. 13 Auburn | THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING 3-2222 | Pear Saginaw. FE 47 | SHOP APT. SIZE ELECTRC STOVE, AND } | Of Pontiac | dining room. suite, very reas | WTD: FURNITURE, ODDS &| 51 W. Huron FE 4-1555 Call before 3 p m. FE 4-261! | _ ends; antique dishes. MY 23022} pr FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGER-| ELECTRIC RANGE, AUTOMATIC ~~ a $6. ALSO ONE $8 ator and apt. size electric range. | oven, deep well. clock, 41° long, | 46 Hillview Rd. out Auburn past | $50 45 Augusta 7——=( Opdyke e] oo WALTON TV Se ae | Store Equipment 66B | 10” Table model TV $29 7 tic teiesnies Pn AIRE, . LIGHT 12'4" Table model TV sig | ® CUBITT. FRIGIDAL new. 1103 | TYLER DOUBLE DUTY MEAT TV antenna kits. $995 La Salle, Huron Gardens. Case, meat grinder, and scales, Josiyn cr. Walton FE 2-2257 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE. Fe | and meat block. 254 8. Blvd W.. DINING RM. SUITE. LIKE NEw. |? | FE 2-6625 FE 47500. } 4165 | 14 NEW MATCHING GRAY _—s KROEHLER | | $65. PE BENDIX AUTOMATIC WASHER, like new. FF 4-3108 KROEHLER Ce lot ll GooD cond. $35. FE 4 CASH FOR pce witoKk OR! tools. Phone OR 3-2717 USED WASHERS, $35 & UP, USED elec, ranges .42 & up; used auto. JELVING RM, SUITE. 38 Whirlpool washer with guarantee. , R 8 MUNRO ELE 1¢ co 20 W. Lawrence St. FE 5-8431 | SHELLANE BOTTLED GAS HOT water beaters, apartment and full size ranges Leonard Electric Go;, } | lel W. Maple, Birmingham, Ph. FE! MI 43933 ANTIQUE EMPIRE MAHOGANY claw foot sofa, 2 chest drawers flint lock musket war 1812. Law- son folding davenport antique shelf clocks, otner early Ameri- can ttems. Moving Florida. Call | Sai. & Sun. 92899 Van Dyke near “4 Mile COLDSPOT REFRIG. GOOD CON- dition, reas. FE 4-5159 Used refrigerators, $35 up. Used TVs $35 up New Hot Point eiertric range, Tegular $329.95, $279.95 | New 30 electric range, $229 95 ‘or $189.95 reg Sveets Radio and Appi ss 422. W. Huron FE 4-1143 TARLE ad GAS STOVE, $39. FE 2-7354 | |3 PIECE BEDROOM SUITE, | ' champagne maple Almost new. 2 lounging chairs, sewin ma- chine, radio Rug & pad. 6x9 FE 4-5076 ‘6 FT. COLDSPOT, GOOD COND 4851 Payton. Watkins Lk 2 DOUBLE BEDS. COMPLETE, 2 rollaway single beds with pads & clean 50 S. Roselawn | WAYNE GABERT’S | FLOOR SAMPLE SALE $239.95 1953 Bendix auto dryer $189 $279 Norge auto. Washer with old washer $219 $189 95 3 wav 50 60. 80 gal. Toastmaster water heater $149 Bendix auto washer Like new. $69 | $152.45 Maytag square tub washior $137 | $129.95 Duo-Therm oil heater, 5 room capacity $109 $118 peedqueen washer, double wall, bow! shaped tub Norge refrigerator. 8 cubic ft, i very clean GE electric range Used Calrod burners. Oven timer $6 Miany others to choose from Up to 24 months to pay 121 N. Saginaw St. FE 5-6189 DUO-THERM CONSOLE OIL HEAT- west Orchard Lake Rd acta" ew . RUG & PAD. | Grayton. FE 5-0013. | 1 WASHER, 2 LAUNDRY TUBS, 1) Servel refrigerator. 339 8. Sag- inaw FE 3.0495. LEAVING’ CITY: for sale. 323 E. Blv APT. SIZE REFRIG.. ~ FURNITURE d. So $80 TABLE | & 4 chairs, $20; kitchen cabinet, | $10. 399 Ferry. | GAS STOVE, LIKE NEW. re | 4-8822. REBUILT WASHING MACHINES. 4-5169.— GOOD USED PUG. SIZE &xl0. Can be seen at 22 Dakota. |'WILL BUY BMALL RADIOS, working or not. FE 5-8755 |9-PC. SOLID MAHOGANY DINING room suite Good cond. Yosemite. Birmingham. 7 USED FRIGIDAIRE, GOOD COND. $50 Ironrite ironer. FE 4-4988. 9 PC. MAHOGANY DINING RM suite. excellent condition, $125. ToS Ridgedale, Birm. MI 4-6449 ' FINE PORTABLE RADIO $10. ONE | $50. was $55. FE 5-8759. | KITCHEN UPBOARD, SINGLE mattress, & ‘tables. FE 4-2400 'g PC DINING RM. SUITE. BEST quality, excellent cond Antique mahogany secretary with 3 large | drawers, Writing space and book shelves. Good cond. MI 4-4806. SMALL DEEP FREEZE. an new. $125. FE 2-5835 LAUNDERALL AUTO. WASHER, 350. FE ELECTRIC STOVE — WHITE porcelain finish, fair condition. 4 burners, oven. Phone FE 5-7206 PENINSULAR GAS RANGE <= Pair condition, $10. Phone FE 5-8822 |} USED REFRIGERATORS WITH! BATHROOM desks and ee J cabinets. 1 to Sunday. 4 4476 } lotorway Drive Sale Miscellaneous 68 —~ METAL | _ Sele Miscellaneous 68 | Sale Miscellaneous c For Sale Pets 71C Garage MINT ONLY 9609. FHA PREE EST:!: ATES. B' ILDING PPER - ORD T7a1 GEN. BLDGS EVENINGS CALL OR 32420 | ghd CHANNELS, BEA | pipe, reinforcing rods, basement posta, complete line of structural steel, mew and used. Typhoon Bteel Co. 135 Branch St. (across froms American Forging & Sock- | _ et). PE 4-956; ~ CLOTHES | eOS TS COMBINATION. DOORS PICKETS PLYWOOD * aM. A. Benson FIR 2x4's, 7 cenw L. ft zx6's & 2x8's, $05 M Knotty ine Leger ae $155 M Del. Com line of bldg. material | in: three aitferent grades BLACKETT’S Building Supplies 3161 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 8 MA 5-4391 ALL GIZFB GAS & ELECTRIC ~ heat and cook stoves, full auto- matic electric ignition oi] fur- | maces and floor furnaces, car-| buretors and parts for oi) burn- ers, bottle gas tanks, hot plates | and fittings for trailers and cab- PETRO HEAT SERVICE CO a with Trailer Exchange 60 S. Telegraph Open Evenings & Sundays PM WOLVERINE LUMBER WRECKIN » & 300 8. Paddock SPECI New reverse trap unit toilets ; pe.« bathrm } co FE 2-9784 | $22 95 comp W- . $150 fully ‘guaranteed 30 gal . hot water heaters... interior flush doors Trade) ne supplies sell for less sets, $65 ¥ $7 to $s | plumbing « builders | new and used We! | | | Anchor Fence | Erected by factory trained men. PHA app. no money down. Call! VE 5-4962, free estimates. HOLLINGSHEAD VA RIETY STORE miles vut Baldwin. Armstrong. floor cov and Mac-O-Lac _ paints. We sell for less LUMBER | BUILDERS SUPPLIES Plaster board 4x8x%, $1.48. Rocklath, 15'x48" bdi. Doors for your home or store. Trim ” mouldings, clear. white, pin paneling. | Knotty Pine and cedar Plywood, Plyscord Weldte Windows and Windowalls, Flooring, oak 4 Y. pine. Tog. redwood, red cedar, fir Lunber’ for al] your needs. Priced rightw Call Now, EMptre 3-5259 for Quality suiting Meseraie PAUL 7 LUMBER CO. | €120 Bogie Lake Ra. at Commerce | PROMPT DELIVERY ON BI.ACK | dirt, sand. — fii djry sia Ee Manure. FE 4-6640. DEEP & SHALLOW WELL PUMPS, | pew and rebutlt Sales & Service. Sprinkler systems installed Piumb supplies and fixtures Lloyd's ene: 32708 N. W_ High- | _ way. 6-2405 TALBOT Rock lath $1 a bundle; 4x8 sheet rock, $§0, No. 2 box Pine, $ll a hundred; No. 2 flooring and in- Sulation. 1025 Oakland. FE 4-2622 | BU ILDING SUPPLIES | 20, IN| HOT AIR FURNACE, FE. | Steel clothes line props $1.25 | |; 4 Hook steel clothes poles $6 50) URED AUTO. GAS FURNACE. FE | Package of Milk chutes $565 | _ 574 | } 15x12 2 lite basement sash $3 60 ' Steel utility sasn with guards | We ‘& H LU MBE R CO. | Btee! coal chute widows $7 60 en ft 8 Screens for 15x12 basement sash = Sato Pg Re wae Fri | HEATILATOR FIREPLACE UNITS 8 n from 10 ‘til 3 1g 1556 | | | | lf | ' motor and compressor, $950 ea Also 4 ft., needs cold control, $19 50 ; | -HAMPTON ELECTRIC 286 State PE 42525 54 INCH CABINET SINK WITH, faucet. $50.00. FE 40418 COMB. FRUIT PRESS. LARD & sairsage stuffer Like new. $20. FE 43864 TILE 10¢ Register grils for heatiators Basement alae wells or STEEL BASEMENT coL .UMNS | Joist angles 7° 20c ea 9" 25e ea. JOIST HANGERS ALL SIZES 5x7 tin flashing shingles Formed steel fireplace dampers 3n3x3-16 Steel angle iron Cast iron fireplace dampers formed stee] fieplace dampers Aluminum roof ventilators Stee] atic vents or louvres Triangle or '‘s circle attic vents METAL LATH & CORNER BEAD Cast fron sewer pipe strainer. CISTERN COVERS AND FRAMES Cast Iron manhole mngs & covers BLAYLOCK COAL & BUILDING baie a co 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 GARAGE 20x20 ready cut, $545 FE 4-2575 USES TO MOVE OR fee ie yt aah $15 Detroit, TRin- wor WATER HEATERS, 30 GAL.. Gas, new, approved on use on Elson & Consumer lines. $89.50 value at $49. Slightly marred. Also e'>¢ oil and bottle gas heaters at terrific values Michigan Fluor- escent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave sOIL pipes and fixtures, ani cas water heaters, oj] and coal furnaces, ee 4 and hot water boilerrs, oi] fire HEIGHTS SUP PL Y 2685 Perry St | Phone PE 4-543, 3 Overhead Gitsolioon Bonny Malad viny! tmlaid tile 9x9” | FLOOR SHOP 99 S. Saginaw &6t. PHILGAS RANGES’ INSTALLED for 30 day free trial. Phillips Petroleum Co 2625 Orchard Lake | Ave FE 2-9 195. BARG AINS- Odd davenport . $15 Refrigerator ......ceeveeee - $25 Oak dinette set os 00. tee SIP] Double doom. metal cabinet « $1395 & UP| New chest of drawers $6.95 & up Metal lLitchen stools : 1.95 Oakland Furniture er with blower $60 9x11 floral, rug & pad, tised 2 years $75 9x12} blue rug. $12 2 pr. green pat- tern drapes, $15 FE 47060 | BEDROOM FURNITURE, RUGS, ' buftet, davenport. wash machine FE 2-9986 or FE 5-2424 BEAUTIFUL CARPETING SCULP- tured. 54 sq yds, gray tone 2 other carpets drop leaf table sits 12° chairs china cabinet | beautiful davernport) oad chairs, | ba tables, large trunk every- ) thing like new. REASONABLE 5891 Walnut Lake Rd. 2 miles |” CLEARANCE SALE | 10 used refrigerator .... $49.50 up 10 used washers $22.50 up 1 used Ironrite .......... $129 10 used elec ranges -$19.50 up | 10 new breakfast sets .. $49.50 up Large assortment of new | B pen 2 ... $4.98 rn |» used 1% & 1-6 HP motors CLAYTON'S 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego | Harbor | PE 5-881 ; _PE 5-8974 FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION ON THE NECCHI : | Sewing Machine Sales Co. | 21 F& Water St _ PE 2-7848 BEDROOM SUITE, BEAUTIFUL 9 pe. dining room suite, drop leaf raple, marble top commode, book- cases, complete beds, drum table Shelvador refrig., gas stove, oil hot water heater, baby bed and chest, high chair. German sam- plier. Douglas chrome set, Wagon, walnut organ, marblie- top table, «esk. china cabinet, maple corner cupboard, cedar chest, bedding, dishes, washer, odds and ends, dinner bell and coal) stove. 708 W. Clarkston Ra., Lake Orion. Can be seen Sunday tea | We buy, sell and exchange 104 8. Saginaw FE 2-5523 ELECTRIC STOVE & REFRIG- erator. Good ondition. Phone FE $-3901. ~ SPECIAL HOLIDAY CLEARANCE SALE USED GAS AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES REFRIGERATORS | RANGES WATER HEATERS WASHERS DRYERS IRONERS ALL RECONDITIONED AND GUARANTEED ED TO SELL-EASY TERMS NSUMERS POWER COMPANY PR & see the only door with the bilizing arm. No more scuffed | side jams Easy to operate, fully | painted. Built to last the life of your ee No 1 & No. 2 doors! available in all sizes. Installation and remodeling service availabe. Call ive ig nd Y DOOR CO 370 $. Peodeck - FE 2-0203 OIL HOT lees HEATER. LIKE new. $45. MAple 5-4482. 148 Se HEATER. FE 5-5607 | _ after 5:3 AIR aS DOUGLAS FIR _ 2x6, 12). 14° and 16 ft 12¢ L. ft. 2x6 #18 & 20° l4e L Ft 2x8 12 & 14 ft. 16e¢ I Ft. 4. 12s to 168. 6c L ft. 1x6 roof boards M | 1x12 D48 shelving white pine. Lk. Haggerty Lumber Co. Mo ato Hwy. Walled Lake. Eves Lr 2-5069 1 BS OLD PORTABLE MOTOR- Paid $40, sell for $20. FE- AUTO. OIL FURNACE a2 250 GAL. tank, $125; play pen, $10, Welsh baby penn SL $15. teeter babe & toilet sea! 42483. CHAIN SAWS — NEW AND USED Hardie Garden and Orchard sprayers. Garden tractors — with | reverse gear. Rototillers, large and small. Power mowers — new and used, rotaries and ree) type. Millers Garden & Lawn Equipt., 1593 8. Woodward Ave. (north of 14 Mile Rd.). Birmingham, phone Midwest 4-6009. Time payments available. We take trade-ins. CLEAN MASON JARS, 50c DOZ. _FE 4-0049. RADIO TEST Fee UIP MENT. ah oh Pe ate 71-1664 after 6. AB ELECTRIC STOVE WITH 3 burners, used 4 years and in ex- cellent condition. Also Nesco elec. tric automatic roaster. See Stan- ley Gilbert. _ Northway Road, Near Keith and Commerce Rd. (West Acree). 12' ac automatic oi! | area ; Macept Faster Thanksgiving, Xmas | | "PORCH ENCLOSURES Al holidays. open from 10 ‘til 3| New ~~ TANDEM TRAILER, $178. rE | Sirolus mbes & Material Sales Co. NEW & USED LUMBER .... 234xz8 studs, 53c each 1x4 maple flooring, good quality. 1x8 sheathing Lge. assortment of used sash MICH. WHITE PINE, 2x6. 10c A FT. Open 8 to 5°30 except Sundays 5340 Highland (M-59: OR 3}- 7092 | FENCING Residential and commercia! apres br ex >ereinced men H. approved OR 3-1458. GRAHAM POST YARD 5445 Dixie Hwy AIR COMPRESSORS with pavement breakers and clay spades for rent: other equ.p CONE’S RENTAL. | 1251 Baldwin PE 2-0077 | { Plumbing Specials 3 P. BATA SET A QUALITY with TRIM 99 52. GALLON ELECTRIC WATER NEATE.:8. INSTALLED FREE | O'| EDISON LINES $95.00 | 4° SOIL PIPE $3.75 Open Sun. 10 am. to 2 pm. Friday night til 9 ARNASON PLUMBING _Ph Ortonville 130. We Deliver | CLOTHES POSTS SET IN cement, $16 pr. EM 3-5132. { BARGAINS DON'T WAIT, CALL NOW PRICED FOR QUICK SALE A million ft of good used lumber. | * 2x4's. 4c FT. OAK FLOORING, $5 PER 90 MEDBURY, CORNER JOHN R (1 block east of Woodward & 6 blocks south of Grand Blvd) | WE DELIVER | WARDROBE TRUNK $12 LAUN- dry tubs $12. 2 side-arm water heaters with pipes $10. each. _FE 43506. GOLF CLUBS. & | OUTBOARD MO. tor. FE 2-8517. DUO-THERM OIL HEATER WITH blower. Double well kitchen sink. with access. Sink is in excellent cond. FE 8&-8850 Screens and Storm Sections ood and Aluminum -~ yellow pages Nos. 100, 130, 194 WEEDON CO 1661 N. i eccuek Rd. FE 4-2807 | NEW AND USED LUMBER, FIN .| ish & unfinish. PE 4-5268 | FARM FRESH MEATS Beef ronst — ...scccssscceesss Beef Stew, 1D. ...c0c00. Wialeleisielelels ie Pork steak ...... iecseuwen eaves 58c Hot dogs secndcocnces GOO | sitealeiee Resse vee eee Pork sausage cone cteecesseees- G08 Patigh GOBOGGO ooc vccccs veccscee- 5c HOt GOUSAGOS ... cr cccccccccccenes 55¢ Ground beef ......0....0.- ercesdee Haare @aece ae e siete = Ice cream. ‘2 OPDYKE. MARKET” WALTON AT OPDYEE Open Sun FE 5-7941 OIL HOT WATER HEATER, LGB. capacity, _ cond. FE 43360. srOvER ¥ FILTER, $5 Telephone FE | 1488 maieein D TRinity 1-5918|_ Inside Flush Doors S@ masonite Nush do: * ft x6 ft 8 No ‘ 85.50 ea. 100 birch fush slightly damaged, 15 size $6 and up d Lake Ra., Jsi house of Walnut Lk. Rd. Call before 9 TOOLS 500 8. Rochester Rd. OL 23-0787 LION] EL L & AMERICAN YER-TRAINS TERUs. | A AUTHORIZED FACTORY Y SERVICE | BLACK (DIRT genuine parts Free test on 2 dae nl Tasker's, Pane” AUTHORIZED REO LAWN MOW- er service dealer. Pickup and de- liver. OR 3-0951. Sand, Gravel, Dirt Dirt 68A SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT. TOP_ soil. Kenneth Tuttle, FE 4-€108. | OR 3 YDS. OF MANURE. _ FE 1-7224. |i, 2, ¢ — GRADE, TOP SOIL, SAND, ss & fill dirt. W. Kelty. FE DIRT. FILL DIRT, TOP) sand and gravel. Vern Goy-, prod FE 3-0575 or PE 23-3148. | PREE - yu. L DIRT. COME AND | Sale Miscellancous 68] BEAGLES. REGISTERED. 2 = started : 2-2 — bos see their pedigreed. ce owa Sore atten Ra. at White Leke. IE & COCKER PUPS TO BI "ES away for a good home. FAWN MALE proxer. 26 MOS. old. Reas. PE 5-306. 2 REG. REDBONE FEMALES. 18 mos. and 2 yrs, One half Weimar- aner and if German short haired pointer st coon 6 years old. 1 r treeing walkers 5 mos 44788 Mile Re., Wal ake. SPRINGER SPANIEL 1 _ old. Wonderful with children. _ MI 40548. TE OR 3-6143 BURLAP POTATO “Sg ete 2) a 100 Ted's Inc. Woodward fi) SLACK DIRT — TOP BOT — FILL as. wed a DAYS FE V-145i, EVES. FE 57014 DAY BED AND PAD. SINGLE | ms mattress, Clean. FE 5-8747. CH TOP — Rypoot & GRAVEL ORDER NOW! HOLIDAY SEASON Speclauly havericig Gute Ge | ware To 10 porch aa pine cannon wine ELL Rl Tate ne Blom _ i ge PROMPT DELIVERY ON BLACK ot O MATERIALS aLEFT OVER. dirt, cand eravel, fill dirt, and rior manure. -6640. Pair of trench doors. Prehung | — ~ Top - im exterior frame, assortment of interior trim and m s. Bun- day i to 5 p. m. 4476 Motorway __Driv SSciLane COAL FURNACE Auto biower. Good cond. FE 5-8129. chairs. tint top | Modern blond table 34x60, wrought | iron legs. 2 extra leaves $100.00. Royal upright sweeper $9.50 Boys 26" bicycle $10 00 16° lawn mower $5.00 Ful! size bed spring $10.00 Antique settee $10.00 Football shoes, like new, size 12, Shores Dr. | - USED RUGS, TABLE LAMPS, 1 _ full sized bed, etc. FE 5-2674. THE ENCYCLOPEDIA ‘BRITAN- nica (Vo. 32). The new Funk & Wagnalls Encyclopedia, (vol 36). German Bible, 1734. 40 ft. 1% in pipe & pump well. MAyfair 6-3900. MYERS PUMPS Deep and shallow well $97.50 up. Plastic Pipe Youngstown Sinks ; Used Pumps KELLYS HARDWARE 3994 Auburn at Adams Auburp Heights, FE 2-88)1 ; TRADE ARCHERY SUPPLIES FOR ns. OR 3-2244. Carland’s Gun a across from Airport. CEMENT BLOCKS © mmediately delivered — 84 Bheffield. P. FE 28401 or FE 2-7275 Russell Lemon — ~ PLYWOOD | At cut rate tig Kitchen cabinet doors rl PON AC PLYWOOD O. FE 2-2543 USE OUR TOOLS, DO YOUR OWN , repairing. Com- supply 12, FE 2-7620 Fri, thru Wed. ® to 6:30 Closed every Thur LARGE DLX. EVANS OIL 8PACE heater Ef auto. controls. $75. 763 S. Winding. FE 5-620 Si BIKE, BLOND BOOKCASE, adio-phono comb. Boudoir male & curtain stretchers. OR 3-9788 THOR WASHING MACHINE $15 00. | FE 21515 BEST OFFERS Lovely maple crib comp. Girls 26° bike, varnished Kitchen tabie -- chairs, er desk, 2 photo reflectors FE 44 VENTILATING FANS FOR KITCH- ens, large selection of at exceptional MOVING door values Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake | Ave. - ‘ | SUMP PUMP, GE we ae $79 50 value, $41.50. Sli red. Michigan Orchard Lake Ave ei WITH 70 FT. <_s0e btly crate mar- luorescent, JET. FE. LAWN MOWER LIKE NEW ‘a horse motor. OR 3-1698 |; OPEN 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M. SUNDAY 10 TO 3 LUMBER 4x8 SHEET ROCK $1.35 PER SHEET 1x6, 1x10, 1x12 W. P, boards .86 thousand sq. ft 2x6 NO, 2 FIR "yl ser Eouxkt ax he | $118 er thousand 6q. ft. 215 ip shingles, all colors, $6.95 sqs. grade A birch doors $9.95 outside oo ny Paints $3.95 gal. HAR ARF — PL Mere NO OYD DELL PAIN IF YOU ARE BUILDING e HOUSE a. BURMEISTERS , P TO $500 ON ALL | MATERIALS Make sure its Burmeisters Northern Lumber Co. 8197 Cooley Lake Rd. WE DELIVER 70 Mile Radius With ® Trucks Serving | EM 35-4650 ELECTRIC RANGE, ROYAL TYPE- writer Girls bicycle Commun!- ae set. All in good cond. FE 7369 You a Pg ae TELEVISION. LIKE FE 4-2780. ivcake STEEL CABINET FUR- nace, blower « pomer al Ps good cond. OR 3-1405, after 5 WARDROBE st aes $13, BABY bug @& bassinette. $F Table pis ae Tadio $10 OR Wich GUN TYPE OIL FURNACE COM- pletely installed with all controls automatic humidifier, oi] tank by licensed contractor. Terms as low as $20 per month. Cal! Stan Gar- wood EM 3-2080. LOCKINVAR OIL 30 GAL. HOT water heat. oil drum & all pipe fittings. 4-5084. WARDROBE TRUNK, GOOD CON- _ dition $25. MI 4-3089 MOW MASTER ROTARY MOWERS AND LEAF MULCHERS LEE'S SALES & SERVICE $21 Mt. Clemens St sanding machines and. waxers for rent. We close Wed. afternoons. Barnes Hardware, 742 W. Huron. USED ELEC. REFRIGS. AND | elect, aoe machines. Quar- | anteed. $39. up. Roy's replace- ment, 96 Danlana Ave. JACKSON'S RENTAL Mixers, bammer, pave. aind clay breaker. Pipe dies, etc. FE 4-5240. 2 WHEEL TRAILER 4 “WHEEL | tandem. FE GAS Mfr oETEE WHIRL. | a Slightly marred in transit rrific Watue. Michigan Fluores- _ cent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave __ MEDICINE CABINETS. PLATE lass with fluorescent lights. $22.50 | A Thompson. 80 Perry EEP WELL JET PUMP AND tank 1.210 Joslyn near Columbia TIMPKINS AUTOMATIC OIL HOT water heater 40 gallon capacity. Kenmore heatrola. FE 2-6551. REV SATIN 1 LATEX PAINT. | ‘EASY WALNUT SHOWCASE SUITABLE for jeweiry, etc. locks. FE 45831. REI CON SEPTIC _tanks. Ph. OR 3-7686. ' TRENCHING | Footings & field tile FE 5&-8221. HEAT YOUR HOME Economically with H.C. Little fully auto. furn. & heaters. The one that lights itself & burns No. 1, 2, or 3 ofl. No messy low _ fire. Floor furnaces a lalty. Demonstrations daily $20 to $46 oan, old RH and for wick . 4-5090. peces. ofl burners, *, green plaid lawn um- | | 50. 32-5587, 2508 Sylvan. $39.50 value at $27.50. Also, chimes | 393 | Ness 3996 | complete with 280 | FE 3-0830 | SAND YOUR OWN FLOORS, FLOOR | chain saws, Skilsaw— stony DUCHESS SOIL Heavy black loam. Sandy loam. | _ State tested. FE 5-0477 __ | Prompt delivery on sand, . gravel } and fill dirt. Black and top soil. FE 5-1446 — GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP soul. George Frayer, FE 5-4831. TOPSON. SAND > GRAVEL. AND fil. PE 5-7850 or FE 4 ROAD GRAVEL, ae we ape, cement, gravel, fill sand. . Tanner Sand & Gravel. | BAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP _ soil, rock. FE 2-2817. FE 5-2452. BLACK DIRT State tested Fill Pema gravel. FE 4-017 | GRAVEL. | SAND. rn, DIRT AND Srl heavy top so 8 e** Sand and "Gravel. “On. 3-71 | BLACK DIRT FOR LAWNS_ "AND flowers, EM 3-8003 TOP SOIL PEAT HUMUS. SAND and zravel. J. King. FE 2-2650. —_ | ROAD GRAVEL, PARKING LOT) gravel and fill. aaa Sand & gravel. FE 4-6218 CINDER, “TOP SOIL, GRAVEL. PE 65-0551. sand and TOP SOLL, PROMPT DELIVERY. PE 17-7271 after 4. LOADING OUT FILL 6 AND. vel, “Adamson” 6335 aw, ‘Clarkston 2 YDS. BLACK DIRT. “TOP SOIL. peat or gravel deliv. FE 17-7224. TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, at moss, fill dirt, sand 4 gravel. PE | 4-0922. FILL SAND Band & gravel, top soft. dirt & manure. FE 4- w BAND AND GRAVEL, fill dirt, road gravel, trucking cement and mortar Pontiac ad __ Building Supplies. OR 3-1534. Sporting Goods 68B Art Lawson Gun Shop T GUN REPAIR stocks, sights, black | Rebluing, scopes and access. Every ca =e | @mmunition. New and used gun sale or trade. Shooters’ supplies, 6455 Dixie Highway MA 5-7926 | WANTED SHOT GUNS & DEER rifles. Manley Leach, 10 Bagley. R-SHELL GUN SHOP. BUY, sell, trade. 375 S. Telegraph . SELL OR TRADE 16 GAGE. BOLT action, shotgun, poly choke. Also Cartridges, 30-30, 30-06, 31-Jap _ FE +0604. ARCHERY Grimes — Hunting Bows, a discount | PHILIP'S, 79 NORTH SAGINAW SELLING OUT COMPLETE STOCK of Coe hunt and target bows at reduced prices. Hours @ to 8 _ Pm. $40 Scott Lk. Rd Wood, Coa Coal, Fuel 69A | WOOD $6.00 Stream Eze | quivers, arrows, at) ! | |\GOOD DRY SLAB cord. 3 pad $11.00 delivered. FE! 4-6588 — TRUCK SCRAP WOOD a, _ in _eity. _FE s= 3483. : Dees Trained, Boarded 71} -SHELL DOG AND CAT MO- { a dogs clipped. 375 8. Tele- | @reapn, | BOARDING, BATHING, & I ping. 704 N. Perry, FB 2-113. ~ Sale Farm Produce 71A WEALTHY APPLES FLEAnes beauty pears. Orchard at 691 N. Squirrel Rd. Auburn Heights SMALL PEACHES. PICK YOUR | (own this week end. MA 6-3892. BEAUTIFUL TREE RIPE PEACHES, Hale-Haven, $150 to $200 bu Pears, anes size $2.95 bu. Apples. U.S No 1 Duchess. $1.00 to $2.50 bu. Bring containers. ; Auburn Orchard Farm, M50 & Dequindre Rd Sale on Sun RED HAVEN PEACHES, Cor. potatoes. apples, cabbage, toma: | toes, 2773 Churchill d. Aub _ Hgts. ‘ | PEACHES — SAVE MONEY PICK your own. Bring containers. Wind- | ing Knoll Farm. 1215 Stoney Creek Rd. 1l'2 miles East of Adams Ra BARTLETT PEARS. §&1 25. BU. Pick your own. Mayfair 6-3889. BARTLETT PEARS, BRING BAS- kets. FE 5-0539 NOW PICKING. FANCY TREE ripe peaches. Priced for quick sale. George Rice, 777 E. Walton CLAPPS FAVORITE PEARS Spraved, tree run, $250 bu. 391 | Union Lk. Rd. EM 3-3887 plume. Storage Peaches, apples, pears, Waterford Hill Farms. Barn. 5941 Dixie Hwy. 3-0341. 7035 Pontiac Lk HYBRID SWEET CORN. NOW abe Tomatoes. Sept. ist. 5778 Hatchery Rd. OR 30072. PLUMS FOR CANNING EAT- ing. Holtz's Orchard. John R. Rd. south of Auburn. OL 2-1097. HI-BRED GOLDEN BANTAM cross sweet corn, fresh picked as | Grdered. $150 bu. Also green pep- pers, FE 4-4228, 775 Scott Lk. Rd. |HOME DRESSED BEEP & PORK. Opdyke Market. | PICKLING CUCUMBERS ON OR- der. MA 5-2628 PEACHES ARE NOW RIPE AT Suttons Orchard -324 N. Lake Angeius FE 5-1809 | WEALTHY APPLES NOW AVAIL 4391 | able at Muto Orchards. Baldwin Rd | PEACHES | High quality ‘fruit, drive in | see us. 800 Grange Hall Ortonville. | GOLDEN BANTAM SWEET C¢ CORN, | $1.50 pbu.; tomatoes, $2.00 bu: | _ pears $2.00 bu. 800 Oakland Ave APPLES. FINE FOR eating & cooking, $2.50 bu: and Rd. Wina- falls, $1.25 Pine Lk. Orchard. 1040 Coats Rd. Oxford of Baldwin). We deltver in 10, bu. lots. Call OA 8-2082 j HALE-HAVEN PEACHES. PICK ' your own if you wish Will — | orders & deliver in Pon | tr Lo at Rd. at Bald werd l\CA a PS FAVORITE CANNING | Whit- Clark. ! pears. strawberry apples. mer (Wompole) Orchards Ie ston, MA $-5431. CANNING TOMATOES. BRING own containers, 3660 Giddings Rd. FE 5-6660. PICK YOUR OWN PERFET Halehaven eet ey NOW for $1.49 bu. Ad y. Colonial Orchards, 5310. Mish Lake Rd., 1 west, ‘44 mile north of mile -71C _ Clyde, Por Sale Pets GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES NOW AVAILABLE FORJAN KENNELS OR _3-0265. TROPICAL FISH & a oe 49 Park 8t.. Oxford lo ____s« Open Ev \23 gta SPANIELS. 2 YR male, 2 r. -emale. Field & obed abbasso, tence 135 W Walted Lake. MA 4-1342 REG. Cae. BRITTANY SPANIEL PUP- 107 E. Berkshire Rd. FE SPECIAL PARAKEETS ast 30 160 8, Edith TROPICAL FISH 3848 Beachgrove PE 2-1548 AQUATIC GARDENS ~ TROPIC. FRESHLY PICKED rare. | CLAPP’S FAVORITE PEARS. OR | d (continuation | — SPRINGER SPANIELS AT SACRI- fice, Overstocked kennels. Puppies and grown stock. Boarding. FE 2-6019 AKC REGISTERED PARENTS, | English springer | puppies. Well marked. TROPICAL FISH FE ¢1873 BANCROFT KEN | REGIS- d k ELS with tered cocker puppies, children, bred for d@ lion from show type blood line, silver t goden red. & black. Healthy, wormed Mea MI +0208 or | | 196 State st. | ! | | oe 2 eines MONTH OLD ) EETTERS to good home. _ FE | BOARDING ALL Caicos wat _ Grubb _ Ra.. Highland. PEDIGREED COCKER SPANIEL pups. FE 4-1448. after 5. food. Since 1927. $84 eae | GERMAN ‘SHEPHERD PUPS. AKC registered. FE 5-0966. | THOROUGHBRED GERMAN SHEP- herd (Registered) Gentle. Phone FE 5-7504. P. | 1 = = = |) IRISH SETTER PUPPIES, CHAM- pion stock, AKC reg. MI_ 4-6535. REG BRITTANY SPANIEL. 5 YRS. old, must be good home. FE 23-7641 oe s& i? & | & & weekdays noon Sat Pitg PUPPIES. GOOD HUNT- eA eo $10. 9905 Pleasant Ridg -8613. ALE BOXER. AKC REG. 1% $50. FE 17-9355. | | | Bea ee POR SALE REGISTERED ENG- | lish Pointers 4% mos. old from roven gun dogs 6& males, 3 | "Fred Beucom, 5209 Li ncost. R. R. 1, Lapeer, Mi one 737W2 Lapeer. — BABY PARAKEETS. FE 2-3340. 791 Melrose. E ~ | ones AKC. me, $50. & $60. 14 RATS HA * r supplies. All Pet Shop. 6 5S _ Astor. FE 46433 | puppy to good home. FE TROPICAL FISH AND | ~PARA- : nears keets. 4154 Wenonah Lane Park No. 4, FE 5-0048. | 7 "For Sale Poultry 72 95 LAYING HENS, $35, _MA 5-3308. | for Sale Livestock 73 PPD DAP BPA A AL | LIVESTOCK. OF ALL KINDS. FOR- | rest Jones. MA 5-5 =n. | SPOTTED TRICK HORSE. Eee: ona Cheap. MApie 5-6731 | SADDLE HORSE | OL ae. _ 3 BULLS, ONE 2 OLD, TWO 4 months old. Mayfair 62655. REGISTERED OXFORD RAM, 5 years old. Heavy fleeced. Market 41695. Walled Lake. _ REG HAMPSHIRE SHEEP FOR breeding stock, MA 6-3560. : HEREFORD | 2 GoopD BULLS. | George A. Perry Clarkston. Maple _§-6731 CATTLE, ALL “KINDS FE .7-0058 | waitrED “SMALL CALVES, LIVE- _ stock, horses. Ph. MAple 5-6731. | Hay, Grain & Feed 75 —_—— WIRE BALED, SECOND CUTTING aifalfa hay and wheat straw. OA 8-3230, 3501 Thomas Rd., ord. | BALBO RYE $1.35 BU. 2 MILES E. of Oxford. Myers. OA _8-2120. | a. UP TO 1000 | BALES. No rain. First cutting. Call Maple $-2831. Clarkston STRAW, 30 CENTS PER BALE mit field. MA 6-2996. OATS. GOOD QU | clean. Call Maple 6-2831. Clark- ston | ABSOLUTELY CLOV- cord tied. First cutting, 75 = cord tied. First cutting, ents a bale. second cutting, $1 « tis. 3436 Seymore Lake Rd., rion ville WANTED CUSTOM. COMBINING ;__ and baling, Ph. MA §-3502. D CLEAN WHEAT STRAW 40 also fy mixed hay. $-3502 | WTD. STANDING HAY. CASE paid. MA 5-3502._ ‘Sale F Farm Equipment 76 | JUST PURCHASED 15 new great ' American corn. pickers etal rice $1,184—while they last. $495. | sed 1 row corn pickers. Choice of 3, $195, Used New Idea, 2 row, $195 Also corn bimders & cora choppers. Selection of blowers, Silo fillers. Michigan Auction Mart Inc. M-24 & Indianwood Rd Lake Orion, a Ford tractor with plow, new drag. new 2 row cultivator, off set disc, al] for $1,195. Michigan Auction Mart Inc M-24 & Indian wood Rd. Lake Orion ; USED MCCORMICE 10-20 TRAC- | tor with new tires tn very good condition, Priced at §350. Usec 1947 mode) Farmal! BN trae | tor with plow and mower and wer lft. In excellent shape. | riced at $895 »| Several good used Salley tractors and Roto-tillers. | n Tices start at $65 and up. We take trade-ins Credit terms Call FE 4-0734 or FE 4-1112 ’ KING BROS. Your I-H Dealer | Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke | *51 MASSEY HARRIS PONY TRAG- tor Shown after 6 p m. at 4172 Rural. '2 Mile S of Waterford light off Dixie Hwy. ee | BIG SALE New Holland Choppers with or with- out engine end blowers. This brand new equipment will be sol@ | at substantial savings to vou. This equipment has had ware | house protection all winter. BLACKETT, INC. YOUR