The Weather Wednesday: Details page two o Showers HE PONTIAC. PRESS 112th YEAR - x**x X \ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 6 1954 —28 PAGES oe “area a nfo eRe A] Persons ¥ Die in Michigan During Week Will Speak This Afternoon Merchant Dies Jackson Freedom Festival Awaits Arrival of Nixon JACKSON ()—Jackson's Free of Vice President Richard Nixon “under the oaks’’ celebration. Nixon was scheduled to arrive at Willow Run airport later today. He will be met by a host of dignitaries before beginning the journey to Jackson in a motorcade. He is scheduled to speak late this afternoon at the Jackson fairgrounds. An estimated 5,000 people gathered at the fairgrounds yesterday to hear Robert A. Vogeler, the American businessman sent to prison in Communist Hungary on a false espionage charge in 1950. set free 15 months later “I am sorry I had to be the American citizen had to be ransomed from a foreign power, said. all mankind and not pay tribute to Vogeler warned the crowd, ¢ first Republican Party convention held in Jackson July 6, and the 125th anniversary of the city, that the United States faces a most formidable foe in the Communists of the Soviet Union. “IT hope the day will soon come when we can demand justice for dom Festival awaited the arrival as the main speaker at today’s He was one-to set the precede nt that an * Vogeler tyrants.”’ elebrating the centennial of the 1854 STIER HERMAN F. “It is their plan.” he said, ‘‘to create and encourage confusion ® to disorganize, to divide and conquer, and they will not stop at anything | ) th (| | to accomplish that end, not even murder. Right now they are | Cd aims murdering thousands of freedom loving people behind the Iron and the Bamboo Curtains.” ® | Vogeler said that during his confinement he feared he was going Businessman | to go insane. | | Then, he said, his jailers literature to read. Vogeler said: *‘Because of that Bible I was a through twice arrested. aay I would be returned.”’ Going through the books and pamphiets, said, he discovered that someone had smuggled a Bible in to him. H. F. Sfier Dies at 61;. Was Former Manager | of Food Shop j brought him some Communist he | rble to retain my sanity. I read it It gave me the only comfort I had. had since I was! jerman F. Stier, 61, who headed It gave me the determination to live and hope that some the Homade Food Shop for 2% years, died at his residence at 7 Nevada Quake Injures Two and Jars 2 Western States FALLON, Nev. (UP)—An earthquake felt in a 150, 000. | | a.m today. He had been ill a year. Born in Vassar Feb. 19, 1893 he was the son of Frederick and Mary Dee Stier. He married Mary | Jansen in Detroit April 27, 1910 oe Stier was the first manager | of Homade Food Shop when it} came Pontiac as the Home | om Company in 1928. He held that position with the | to » to Swap 7 Gls for 3 Czechs | grabbed berg said they had no knowledge ' of the reported offer. Commies Offer U. S. Soldiers Seized | While Sightseeing Too Close to Border | BAERNAU, Germany (AP) — German border po- lice said today that Czech authorities have offered to trade seven U. S. soldiers they arrested Sunday for three members of a Czech labor gang who fled to the West over the weekend. Czech border police the Americans— six enlisted men and a cap- tain on leave—when they came too close to the bor- der while sightseeing. Hans Buettner, a district com- mander of the German border po- |lice, said the Czechs made their swap ‘offer at a border meeting with the Germans this morning. U_ 8. Army officials at Heidels- Buettner told newsmen he would have a second meeting with the — at the border near here ‘later today. “We have been told by can authorities not to make promises,”’ he said He said the three Czechs who fled | jacross are being held by the| | Germans in the Weiden area, near here. He said one was accused of |murder by the Czech police. He said four Czechs were pres- ent at the morning meeting. Ameri- any square-mile area of two western states toppled walls, broke two roads and several water mains and injured at least two persons here early today. At 4:14a.m. (PDT) (6:14 a.m. EST) the main shock struck, jolting this small farming community severely. It was followed by three aftershocks, and was felt | throughout western Nevada and northern California. _| exception of a few years when | he was with the steres in Flint “There may have been more in the vicinity but they must have tiac in 1939 and retired in Jan- been hiding,”’ he added. To Be Guest Abroad of F ormer Roomers SAILS FOR HOLLAND—Mrs. Pearl Pennell of 17599 Brewer Rd., Dundee, waves from the Holland-| of Pontiac, wary 1953. ‘Mr. Stier lived at Ave. in Sytvan Lake, and was a/ for the release of the seven Tihs! member of First Presbyterian | icans. They refused to reveal their | Church. | identities. Besides his widow he is sur-| Army authorities said: | and Saginaw. He returned to Pon- | U.S. authorities said earlier at | onee “We are | Two sleeping sailors at* the nearby Fallon Naval Air, Station were injured when metal lockers were toppled on top of their bunks. | vived by four daughters and a son, | Mrs. Louise Sarazen Qualifies take. strs “Leona Jubenvitle of De /troit, Mrs. Verna Hathaway of San | Midland and Herman M. of Pon.- | | tiae. in communication with the Coechs | Shaver of Williams | jand are trying to obtain the re- | | lease of the men."’ They would not elaborate. Diego, Calif., Mrs. Pauline Kelly of | The Army said a half-ton weap- ons carrier truck in which the men | had been driving was found aban- At Churchil] Public Hospital, at for British Open SOUTHPORT, England i —| Also surviving are three broth- | | doned late yesterday near the vil- tendants reported one sailor had Gene Sarazen, the 52-year-old golf-|ers, Ernest, Lewis and William, | suffered a broken leg and the other er-farmer from Germantown, N.Y., | 4ll_ of Lapeer. es d J lar. — : | The body is at the Donelson- a fractured foot shot a one-over-par 74 over the dif- 40. Funeral Home. The quake toppled walls of | ficult Royal Birkdale Course to- | downtown buildings, buckled at least two paved highways, cracked ceilings and walls, and emptied shelves. At least 25 buildings in the down- town area and dozens of residences were damaged. Sidewalks and pavements in the | west portion of the city were | cracked and in some places water was seeping upward from cracked mains. | Two. major dirt irrigation ca- | naJs were broken north and south | of the city. At least one field Was cov ered with 6 to 8 inches of waler, The Coleman Dam, a dirt-fill diversion dam op the nearby Car- son River, was knocked out by the quake. The impact caused the structure to crack and water pour- | ing through the breaks soon tore out the dam. Today Last Day for Registering in State Primary Today is the last day to regis- ter for the Aug. 3 primary elec- tion and Pontiac City Hall will stay open until 8 p.m. to register last- minute applicants. : Pontiac residents who have not voted in the past four years, who have moved to this city. recently or who have changed their address must register or correct their rec- ords. U. S. citizenship, six months resi- dence in Michigan and residence for 30 days prior to the election in the local governmental unit are registration requirements. o% Boy Hectrocuted by Worm-Catcher INDIANAPOLIS wW—a 2'4-year- old boy was killed Sunday by an electrical charge when he touched | a metal rod device used hy his father to catch fishing worms. The accident was not reported to police by the coroner until yesterday. The boy was William F. Lynch Jr. The rod, thrust into the ground, received 110 votes of elec- tricity from the house wiring cir- cuit. It is supposed to drive worms to the surface. | day to tie amateur- Frank Strana- ‘Centennial Celebration han of Toledo for second place in the qualifying rounds of the British Has 105-Year-Old Queen Open Golf Championship. SUSANVILLE, Calif. Ww — The! Sarazen's 74 at Birkdale followed | Lassen county ce ntennial celebra- his brilliant 67 at the Hillsdale | | tion has an honorary queen slightly Course yesterday for a 36-hole total | different from most: |of 141. Stranahan shot a 72 at} Mrs. Roxie Pencom, a full- Birkdale after a 69 at Hillsdale.. | hioonded Indian who was born in The two Americans were four) Lassen county and is 105 years | strokes behind Australia’s little | ojq. Norman von Nida, with many of | the late starters still out on the . two courses in the second qualify. ‘ke Returns to Capital ing round, WASHINGTON \#—President Ei- Von Nida, who toured Birkdale in| senhower returned to the White 70 in yesterday's strong wind, fol-| House today after a four day holi- lowed up with a 67 at Hillsdale for | day in _Maryland’ s Catoctin Moun- Bi wm Tt Will Rule Cherry Festival AP Wirepheote AT TRAVERSE CITY—Gail Marie Krahnke, 18, who will reign as queen of the National Cherry Festival opening Wednesday at Traverse City relaxes on a paddle board while swimming in Grand Traverse Bay. The annual festival continues through Friday. e lage of Weiden, about 15 miles | from the Czechoslovak border. A West German farmer in the area told the German police he the men yesterday. They asked where the border was and said they wanted to take a look at it. Court Upholds One-Man Jury Rejects Appeals of Two Sentenced for Contempt | in Gambling Probe LANSING ® — The State Su- preme Court today turned back two new challenges to the power of Michigan's unique one-man grand jury system. The court unanimously rejected appeals by Lee R. Murchison, a Detroit policeman, and John White, proprietor of a small hotel, who were sentenced to 60 days for con- tempt of court by Recorders Judge John J. O'Hara, a one-man grand juror investigating gambling in Detroit. The court said both men were properly convicted, In Murchison’s case, the is- sue was whether the grand juror could sentence a man for con- | tempt of court when he had per- jured himself before that same judge in the grand jury room. In White’s case, the issue was whether a witness could refuse to testify if his attorney were not in the grand jury room and whether a grand juror was disqualified from sitting as an examining mag- istrate in a case arising out of the grand jury, The court said in an opinion by Justice Emerson R. Boyles that a grand juror may use the con- tempt sentence against the wit- ness who ‘‘deliberately, knowingly and falsely testifies before a grand jury’’ and that he need not resort to the perjury prosecution. In Today's Ss Press saw Serintnghees woesielrielie sees %. pees : ComslGine.2....cscecess ceicre Oe Cates Moetlag.....2.5...5:.70....... 8 Comies ralsiwisiss sation eb. County News ei) David Lawrence , SIC HOO oro |. Be, George Crame................. © Editorials ..... (ae alan bag a we w 6 Mal Bayle waste Markets reel WOONOPED Sack ccc cee wa ehseves oe | BROTH 2... cc cce cc eregecvens 1", 1 Theaters peece-weeeaiy igs Oe TV-Radie ‘Programs ome. des ys Want Ads Women's Pages: ..cccsess: 13, 1, m ee a.” eS Oe Oe ee America liner, Westerdam, before ‘Mother’ Pennell Will Visit| GM ‘Boys’ in. Other Lands By LULA OGDEN A long-standing invitation will be accepted this sum- _mer by Mrs. Pear! Pennell, former Pontiac resident who now lives in Dundee, when she is guest of four former GM engineering students in their homeland. Through the years young men studying here from the General Motors Institute at Flint had roomed in her plans to visit sailing from |students who roomed at her Pontiac home while 222? Garland | Heidelberg that they were pressing | Hoboken, N. J., for Holland. Mrs. Pennell, peices 4, = here tS the GMC Institute, Flint. |hame on W. Iroquois road. They came from Europe, | Mt ff 2 oi Australia and South Ameriea. While here they became a*— Asks U.N. Admit part of the Pennell house- hold and everything was done to make them feel at home. Also, Mrs. Pennell) took it upon herself to help the youths learn as much | as possible about this coun-| try. In fact, she became ‘‘mother’’ to many of the boys and kept in con- | tact with them after they went back home. She is even known as ‘grandma’ to their children, Many of ‘‘our boys”’ as she calls them have urged her to “come over to see our country,”’ and sev- eral times dates were temporarily set, but did not materialize. This year the plan has worked out and from the time she lands in Europe she will be the guest of four of the “boys” in their homes, until the first of Septem- ber. She will visit Holland, Bel- gium, England and France. She sailed Saturday on the Wes- terdam and will return on the Nordham. Although ‘she will be entertained | by only four of the former room- ers, with: at least eight. : Mrs. Pennell says that even af- ter she moved to Dundee the boys | visit her and come over to say farewell when they return to their homelands. [Laughs Will Pep Up Your As only Alley Oop would put it— come clean with the rest of your family and let them read their favorite comics while vacationing! Phone FE 2-8181 and have the a she expects to see and visit | Commie China New Zealand Foreign Minister Sees Move as ‘Diplomatic Wedge’ AUCKLAND, New Zealand ww— | Foreign Minister T, Clifton, Webb |tonight urged the admission of |Communist China to the United | | | 1 Nations. New Zealand is linked | with the United States in the-Anzus pact and is a sponsor of the pro- jected Southeast Asian defense al- liance, Speaking in a parliamentary for- | eign affairs debate, Webb said the | Peiping government should: be_ brought into the international v ganization in an “endeavor drive a diplomatic wedge whine | Russia and Red China. Webb admitted he felt previous- | ly China should not be allowed in the U.N, until she worked her “way back inte the good graces of the free world.” But he said as a result of Chou En-lai's actions over Indochina ‘‘it would be hard to deny them en- y.” He did not elaborate. “China is a great nation, a force to be reckoned with in world af- fairs,"’ Webb declared, ‘‘together with Russia, the two countries oc- cupy an enormous slice of terri- tory and have nearly half of the world's population, “We must look at our policy in the fight against-communism and see it is in the-right direction. We should endeavor to drive a diplo- matic wedge between Russia and Red China and the first step would be its admission to the United Na- tions."’ The foreign minister. described the formation of a Southeast Asian alliance as extremely urgent, He said New Zealand and Australia could help to bring this about and also reconcile differences between Britain and America “upén whom our security so much depends.”” Osmen's \Town & Country, he gaa Open ‘every night "il 9 o'clock ‘him with a resuscitator. | AP Wirephote four GM _ engineering b Man Drowns at County Park Detroiter’s Body Found in Restricted Area tp a Kent Lake Alexander Mayweather, 33, of 1727. +~Virginia Park, Detroit, | drowned Sunday in Kent Lake at | Kensington Metropolitan Beach, Oakland County sheriff's deputies reported today. Jerome Gruber, 18, of Walled Lake, a lifeguard employed at the beach, said he recovered the body floating in 6 feet of water in a prohibited swimming area about a half mile northeast of the beach. The assistant superintendent of the beach, William L. Tait of Brighton, said Mayweather wan- dered off from a party at the beach and went swimming alone in the restricted area. Tait quoted members of the party as saying the victim was not an Dr. I. C. Prevette, Oakland Coun- ty deputy coroner, pronounced Mayweather dead after unsuccess- ful attempts were made to revive The body was taken to the Rich- ; ardson-Bird Funeral Home in Mil- ford where arrangements are pend- dict#a low of 56 to be 76 in the north and south, with the.normal ing at 55 in the north and 60 in Traffic Fatalities Hit Near-Record 33 for Holiday 348 Perish on Nation’s Highways, Well Below Estimated Toll By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A grim 47 deaths marked weekend. Michigan police counted a near-record 33 traffic fa- talities in the total figure, The record high for auto- mobile deaths, 38, was set during a summer weekend in 1950. Last year 17 persons died in Michigan’s Fourth of July traffic. The state’s high traffic toll contrasted with the na- tional figure of 348, well _ below the estimated casual- ties of 430 for the 78-hour holiday. Meanwhile, the 1954 death count soared past the 27 violent deaths which marred the 1953 holi- day. Besides the auto fatalities dur~ ing the recent weekend, eight per- sons drowned and six others were victims of miscellaneous accidents. The weekend fatalities included: Dominick Amante of Grand Rapids, who was killed -Monday in an auto accident on U. S. 130, || soutfi of Mancelona. Also killed in the accident was Robert Zale man, 32, of Grand Rapids, a com- panion of Amante. William Dreyer Sr., 79, of East Detroit, drowned Monday at Olsen Beach in St. Clair Shores. was fatally injured struck by a passing _| sitting on the shoulder of a a horse Monday when it fell on in a riding accident near 25, and Carl xby, 25, both of DeWitt, drowned y in the Grand River at Lansing when their speedboat him Lansing. Ronald Wardell, flipped over. Vern E. Noble, 45, of Laings- burg, was killed early Monday when his car ran off a county - (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Scattered Showers Expected Tomorrow Scattered showers are expected Wednesday in the Pontiac area. The U. S. Weather Bureau pre- 66 tonight and a high of 83 to 87 Wednesday. The mercury ranged from 62.to 73 yes terday. At 8 a.m. today the temperature ‘| Was 6 and at 7 pm. t was 1 downtown Pontiac. Temperatures will average 2 to 5 degrees below normal this week in this general area, the weather bureau said. The normal high will 82 in the low ing. south. Holiday Traffic Sets Record. » No Deaths, Few Injuries Occur on Roa ds in County — Death took a holiday on Oakland County highways over the long Independence Day weekend despite a-rec- ord volume of traffic. Authorities expressed amazement over the fact that the Pontiac Police and the Oakland County Sheriff's Department had to handle only 14 injury accidents. Sheriff's deputies said homeward-bound motorists Poe Telegraph road, Dixie highway, Woodward and ighland road Monday af-+ ternoon. Cars were. bumper- to-bumper at many inter- sections. The motofists were among the thousands of city dwellers who flocked to beaches and recreation areas in the county. Michigan’s Fourth of July * : Church, the Rev. n ~ Binningham of Willits St. would be necessary under the plan. Commissioners will also discuss a long-range improvement program for the city’s Springdale Park. along with immediate steps to im- prove sanitary disposal facilities there. Bids received for driveways A hearing will be held to create a special assessment district for construction of improvements on St. Andrews, Pembroke to Derby, where the street is being vacated. Lots 412, 413, 476 and 477 in Pembrook Manor subdivision would make up the special assess- ment district. . s Speaking at 8 p.m. tomorrow a meeting sponsored by the board of deacons of First Baptist Dr, G. Merrill Lenox will present an address en- titled, “We Christians Belong To- gether!” The public is invited to attend the open meeting, which will be held at the church. A question and answer period will follow the talk by Dr. Lenox, who is executive di- rector of the Detroit Council ‘of Churches * Dr. Lenox, who attended the first assembly of the World Coun- cll of Churches in Amsterdam, wil] be introduced by the Rev. Emil Kentz, paster of the church. The first assembly of the World Council of Churches to be held in this country will take place next month in Evanston, Ill. - . s * A visit to Cranbrook's Institute of Science is on the agenda as British Cooks Refuse to Buy High-Cost Meat LONDON «#—Housewives today began a battle against ‘the high price of Britain's new “freedom” tas wits oi se tdiediotsy got their stores but few bought | Cross —— for the prices to drop. Rationing ended at midnight Saturday and prices immediately went up, Prices were still up today with only a slight drop. One butch- er said: “Within a day or so the whole situation will be back to normal. Customers are already talking about boycotting meat and living on fieh and eggs.’ s . s At the big Smithfield Market butchers were buying at a few pence lower. Business definitely slackened, One large firm's manager said long view, we are selling at cost price until this crazy boom settles A central London butcher report- “some women come in, ask the : others with with stewing meat, It looks as if stew and dumplings will be the favorite hot meat this week." > s s i A northwest London butcher was selling steak for 91 cents a pound compared with last week's pre- > decontrol price of 49 cents. s . * The general view is that prices are bound to come down, But, as the secretary of the National Fed- eration of Meat Traders Assn. said, ‘‘at what level they will settle it is difficult to say. The Weather PONTIAC AND fae = wlll _ a tenight and ednesday cloudy ttered showers ot enester, Lee wae wight 36 Warmer Wednesdsy, we es. high. 9 Seutherty winds 5 te 1@/ hour tonight bereming south- see cote mtn wn mare ae Teday in “jm Pentiae = Lowest temperature preceding 8 am 8s ats o.m.- Wind velocity 10 mph. wee reeeee~ yo i ~ SeeesSses2%2 s2cstsaasez2 ogee Commission Will Consider Relocation at Woodward program. The tour will be made after lunch, with the morning spent working on crafts and playing of . * ¢ 6 Sara Strengell, professional ac- tress and dancer who last fall opened Birmingham's Teenage Theater, left for Europe last week where she will make a study of what is being done there for young- sters interested in the theater. She sald she intends to intre- duce any new children's tech- niques inte her classes when she returns in the fall. An enlarged fall program will include a new department im radie and televi- sien techniques and classes in rhythmic dancing. Miss Strengell, who taught last summer at Cranbrook Summer School of the Theater, said she would like to see the Teenage Theater become a youth theater and not just a school, so that this would become their own project. William W. Long Service for William W. Long, 75, of Milford, will be held at 1 p. m. Thursday from the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. He died at the residence of his daughter, Mrs. Jay Kpapp, in Ypsi- lanti, yesterday after a long ill- ness. Mr. Long formerly farmed near Birmingham for 30 years. Surviving besides his daughter are-sons,_C. Elmer of Pontiac, and R. Earl of Milford; and four grandchildren. \st-Aid Service ‘Worked Well Sheriff Hubbell Tells of Radio Ham Cars and Red Cross Help Oakland County Sheriff Clare L. Hubbell said today the new Ameri- can Red Cross highway first-aid service started _ this weekend teur Radio operators will help us again over Labor Day weekend,” Hubbell said. ‘‘Their on-the-spot first aid at accidents saved quite a few people a trip to the hospital." Radio hams kept nine of their ewn short-wave cars, carrying teams of Red Cross first-aiders, on the road from 4 until 10 p.m. Friday ana Monday. called said today. Firsi-ald teams reed several people for minor injuries. One Red Cross first-aid team stayed at Cass-Dodge Park 4 all weekend and treated one person for a foot injury, First-aid teams, stationed at Square Lake and Tele- graph roads and at M 59 at Airport road, treated people hurt in acci- dents Monday night; but a fourth team at Dixie Highway and M15 reported no accidents Monday. A Lake Orion Civil Alr Patrol plane turned out Monday to spot traffic jams and accidents and radio reports to the joint ama Pontiac Police radio operator Medford Pittman and a fadio ham took calls from sheriff's and ama- teur cars all weekend. James Abbott of Birmingham, radio club emergency coordinator. and Ralph Forman of Pontiac, Red Cross first aid chairman, super- vised the volunteer work. 2 Boys, 13, Arrested in Safecracking Try Two 13-year-old Pontiac boys are in custody of Oakland County juvenile authorities today after admitting an attempted safecrack- ing Thursday night at the Dixie Lumber Co. at 831 Oakland Ave.. Pontiac Police said. Det. Sgt. John A. DePauw said the pair also admitted five other breakins during questioning Sat- BB shot heles in the lumber company office windows ied police te believe youths were responsible for tie attempted safe job, DePauw said. A round- up of neighborhood youths netted Accident Story Corrected It was erroneously stated in an Waterford Township, pulled out of a driveway on Kennett road near Dixie highway and struck a car driven by Nelson E. Willis, 33, of 128 Edison St. A further check of ous a part of tomorrow's YMCA Da-Y/ ee — League hurlers have been selected AL'S PITCHING SELECTIONS—These American of the New York Yankees for the annual All-Star game set for Cleveland next Tuesday. Casey will manage the AL team. Top, from left: Bob Lemon, V é Cleveland; Bob Yankees, and Mike Garcia, Cleveland. Bottom, left to right: Bob Porterfield, Washington; Virgil Trucks, Chicago; Whitey Ford, Yankees, and Bob Keegan, Chicago. by Casey Stengel AP Wirephote Turley, Baltimore; Allie Reynolds, 33 Die in Michigan ‘Traffic Over Fourth (Continued From Page One) read near Ovid in Clinten County and rammed inte an abutment. Eddie Eskridge, 17, of Detroit, died Sunday of injuries suffered by an automobile. Ruth Sarasin, 17, of Gladstone, was killed Sunday when her car plowed into a utility pole near Gladstone. Herman Seitz, 56, of Tecumseh, died Sunday of injuries suffered Saturday afternoon when his car overturned in Tecumseh. Lee Williams, a SO0-year-old Detroit apartment house caretaker, died Sunday after being overcome by fumes from a leaking refrig- erator in his apartment. a family reunion was under way. Samuel Detorre, 37, of Royal Oak, was fatally injured Saturday when he was struck down by a bulldozer while working on an excavation project in Oak Park. An expectant mother, Mrs. Clara Morgan of Battle Creek, her sons Donald Jr., 7, Charles, 3, and Dwayne, 2, and a daughter, San- dra, 6, were killed Sunday night in a two-car collision on M37, 13 miles northwest of Battle Creek. Donald E. Lunger, 27, was killed Sunday morning when his car struck a bridge abutment on M32 in Montmorency County. Robert Deane, 27, of Baldwin, drowned Sunday while fishing in Lost Lake near Baldwin. Charies Moceri Jr., 12, of De- troit, drowned Sunday in Oakland County's Upper Pettibone Lake. Twenty-two-year-old Victor Marin and Ronald Manning, 21, were killed Sunday when their cars crashed head-on, three miles south of Sault Ste. Marie. Another head-on crash Sunday on U. S. 10, midway between Flint and Saginaw, claimed three lives. The victims, all of Flint, were Mrs. Henrietta Rex; her grand- daughter, Nancy Mizrock, 8; and Robert Stevenson, 38. . Marcos Garza, 73-year-old Mexi- can farmhand, was killed Sunday when he was struck by an auto- mobile on M99 at the southern out- skirts of Eaton Rapids. Mrs. Margaret Burchfield, 31, ef Eaton Rapids, was fatally injured Sunday when her car sud- denly went out of control on M50 twe miles east of Charlotte. Mrs. Odessa Bartus, 30. of Owosso, was killed Sunday when her car left the road and rammed into a tree, four miles south of Owosso. Thomas J. Navin, nephew of the late Frank J. Navin, former own- er of the Detroit Tigers, was killed Friday night, .one mile south of Flint. His car struck a_ utility pole. William’ Kiibalt, 37, ef -Benten+ Harbor, suffered fatal injuries Fri- | day night in a three-car crash near | Benton Harbor. Mrs. Bernard B. Lightcap, 66, of Dayton, Ohio, was killed Sat- urday in a two-car collision on M 43, 12 miles southwest of Hastings. Keith P. Campbell, 30, of Breck- ‘| inridge, was killed Friday night when his car was involved in a collision with a truck on U. S. 10, seven miles north of Flint. Nine-year-old James Besson, of Escanaba, was fatally injured Saturday a bicycle which collided with a truck, three ~| miles north of Escanaba. A plane crash Saturday near Jones, eight miles east of Cas- sopolis, claimed the lives of pilot Harvey Christner, 44, of Goshen, Ind., and his passenger, Irma Weaver, 19, of Gulliver, Mich, Walter O. McAnallen 43, of St. Lotiis, Mich., was killed Sunday in a two-car colision at the inter- section of M 46 and M 66, ir Montcalm County. killed late Sunday when a car in which he = & passenger failed | Friday night when he was struck | ¢ duct. John Taylor, 4, of Albion, was | to make a turn an embankment off «ibion road, five miles north of Concord. Charlies Dix, 44, of Manitou Beach, and his 9-year-old son, Michael, drowned Sunday at Devil's Lake, 18 miles northwest of Adrian, when their rowboat capsized while they were fishing. ision on U..S. north of Flint. Garreth Riddle Jr., 21 rie B. Ross, 45, and her husband, Willie, 48. Marquita Lieungh, 26, canaba, was killed Sunday night in a collision on U. S. 41 Delta County in the Upper Penin- sula;* City Commission Reviews Zoning Expect to Reconsider Subdivision Housing Units Tonight Pontiac City Commission tonight is expected to reconsider the plat of the Green and Sarko Subdivision where about 250 housing units are being built on East Montcalm street. Representatives of the firm and city planning officials week to discuss a question by City Engineer Lewis M. Wrenn that changes in the plat may violate the city zoning ordinance, A re- port of the meeting is scheduled tonight. Other expected action includes holding public hearings on inten- tion to construct curb, gutter, drainage and relatedgwork on Lin- den from James K to Smith and to West 10, on Smith from Joslyn Hopkins. Public hearings are planned on special assessment rolls for: Read-mix of] on Emerson from Balti- more to Pennsylvania. Sanitary sewers on Ariene from Perry to Pirst: Weadioon from Arlene to Puller; Mansfield from Arlene to Puller: Tenny- son from Arlene to Fuller: Beverly from Arlene to Puller; and First from Arlene to Puller Sanitary sewer and water main on Pleasantview from Hillsmont to the east line of lot 181 An engineer's cost estimate is expected for planned construction of combined sewer on Columbia from Barkell to 400 feet east. A public hearing is scheduled on intention to construct curb, gut- ter, drainage and related work on First from Highwood to Joslyn. A special assessment roll is slat- ed for planned laying of road-mix oil on Second from Joslyn to Ivy. Birmingham Violinist, 18, ls Soloist With Symphony year-old Sandra Berant, Birming- ham violinist, will be the soloist with the Detroit Symphony Orches- tra tonight at 8:15 in the music shell at the State Fair Grounds. Miss Bernat has won the Bir- mingham Talent Award, the Bir- | mingham musicale scholarship for | summer work, and the Kate Chase | scholarship given by the National | Federation of Music Clubs. She also has won a scholarship to the Eastman School of Music. Miss Bernat will play the Mozart A major concerto for violin and orchestra. Valter Poole will con- Snoring Means Husband Fond of His Wife (?) GLASGOW, Scotland #—If{ your husbands snore, ladies, it may be just a sign they're really fond of you. So says Dr. A. H. Douthwaite, a British physician who discussed-the irritating habit at a British Medical Assn. confdrence Douthwaite said snoring may be “based on race memory and that atavistically the male made the noise at night to keep marauders from the den.” Thus, he said, a wife kept awake by assorted grunts, groans, whist- | tes and snorts from her ever-lov- ing spouse ‘‘might be encouraged | regard snoring as a sign of deep affection.” and skicded into Three Flint residents were fa- tally injured Sunday in a head-on six miles The victims were ; Mrs. Car- of Es- in met last: BIRMINGHAM (INS)—Eighteen- Pontiac Deaths 'Mrs. James E. Bader | Mrs. James E. (Maude) Bader, 167, of 15 Baxter, died suddenly at her residence at 1:15 p.m. Mon- i day. Born in Covington, Ind., March 30, 1887, she was the daughter of George and Martha E. Myers Bybee. She married the late Mr. Bader in Rockville, Ind. He. died Dec. 25, 1950. Mrs. Bader came to Pontiac to live 25 years ago. a son, Mrs. Lee Harris and Ed- ward Bader of Drayton Plains, Mrs, Albert Peterson of Imlay City, Mrs. Robert Erb and Mrs. Leonard Peterson of Lansing, Mrs. Lawrence Beam and Mrs. Crowe of Pontiac. Also . surviving are a_ brother, Ralph Bybee of Hillsdale and a sister, Mrs. Ruby Weber of Rush- ville, both in Indiana, eight grand- dren. Cemetery Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Bennie Lee avis Funeral for Bennie Lee Davis, 37, of 359 Branch St, will be to- night at 7 p.m. from Providence Missionary Baptist Church. The Rev. T. Walter Harris, pastor of the church will officiate and burial j wil be Wednesday in Oak Hill Cemetery. Born in Helena, Ga., Sept. 21, 1916, he was the son of Robert and Lela Locke Davis. He mar- ried Rosia Bell Marbley at Mc- Rae, Ga., in 1939 and came to Pontiac that year. He was employed at the B and B Sewage Service Co. Besides his widow he is survived by a daughter, Rozella.at home. Mr. Davis was dead upon ad- mittancé to Pontiac General Hos- pital June 25. Mrs. Walter S. Sherwell Funeral for Mrs. Walter S. (Har- riet R.) Sherwell, 76, of 6470 Alden Dr. will be held Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. from the Farmer-Snover Fu- neral Home. The Rev. Fred R. Tif- fany, pastor of Bethany Baptist Church, will officiate. Mrs. Sher- well died “Sunday. New Water Well in Operation Here A second new city water well at Silver Lake began pumping over 700 gallons per minute into Pon- tiac’s water system today and coupled with a well started last week will increase the possible pumpage by over 2,000,000 gallons aily. With the last new well at Sil- ver Lake expected to start_produc- ing! another 1,000,000 gallons per day by early next week, City Water Superi Joseph W. Gable foresees no rationing of city water in the near future. The three new wells will give Pontiac a total of 22 capable of pumping over 26,000,000 gallons per day the superintendent stated. Three Injured in Crash at Orchard and Maple Mrs. Dorothy E. Ross 38, of 23353 Harding, Hazel Park, wds reported in good condition in Pon- tiac Genera] ‘Hospital this morn- ing suffering from cuts and a pos- sible concussion suffered in a two- car accident yesterday morning at Orchard Lake and W. Maple Rds. actording to Oakland County sher- iff's deputies. Mrs. Ross was riding with her husband, Harry C. Ross, 67, same address, who received head cuts when their car collided with one driven by Joseph L. -Hontz, 36, | of 6844 Mercer, Detroit. Another passenger in the Ross car, Frank |W. Farnwalt, 71, of 117 South Bivd., | Walled Lake, was treated for head | cuts, . . : A blue whale cénsumes as much as a ton of food a day. | THE PONTIAC ee ‘TU ESDAY., JULY cas Surviving are six daughters and | Burtis: children and four great-grandchil- | Fureral will be Thursday at 2} p.m. from the Church of Christ | outside Russia and will not return. on Tasmania Ave. of which she | Col. Felchlin will leave the Soviet was a member. The Rev. Walter | capital Thursday. Bankes, her pastor, will officiate | Berlin with Ambassador Charles and burial will be in Oak Hill| E The body is at the | month's leave. J 3Reds Ousted, | U.S. Reveals Kremlin Retaliates by Rejecting. 2 Americans on Espionage Charges WASHINGTON ®—Three Rus- sian diplomats — one of them at- tached to the Soviet delegation at the United Nations — have been thrown out of the United States charges of spying. The Russian government, the State Department claims, has now retaliated by making espionage charges against two members of the U.S. diplomatic mission at} | Moscow and forcing- their with- | drawal. The two Americaps are mili- tary officers, ag were the twe Russians ousted from the em- bassy here. The State Department declined to disclose any of the evidence against the Soviets, but Press Of- ficer Henry Suydam said, ‘‘We got the goods on them and out they went.” The incident which the State De- partment announced late yester- day, after months of silence on the | ouster of the alleged Russian spies, |had more than ordinary signifi- | cance because of the policy situa- | tion which is developing among | Russia and the Western Powers. The Kremlin has been making a big play for British and French | cooperation in an obvious effort to place heavy strains on the West- ern alliance. Every evidence of difficulty between Washington and Moscow coming at such a time car- ries the risk of widening Western differences by emphasizing differ- ing relations with the Soviet Union. The rwo Americans whom the Russians accused of having en- gaged in “espionage work" are Lt, Col. Howard L. Feichlin of New York City and Arlington, Va., who was assistant military attache at the Moscow Embassy, and Maj. Walter McKinney of Santa Cruz, Calif., the assistant air attache. The Soviets declared them “‘per- sona non grata’’ or unwelcome on July 3. The United States rejected the charge as ‘“baseless'’ in a note yesterday, but it informed Russia they would be withdrawn. Maj. McKinney is on vacation He will fly to Bohlen, who is going on a French Suspect Drug of Killing 12 PARIS —The French Ministry of Interior today suspended the sale and use of a new drug sus- pected of causing the death of 12 people in the last few days. The drug, made of assimilable tin and vitamin F. was sold in the form of pills to cure certin kinds of light infection. Autopsies showed that all 12 vic- tims—the latest a 12-year-old boy— died of poisoning only a few hours after taking the drug. Most of them were being treated for minor in- ’ fections. Government laboratories are conducting experiments to deter- mine the toxicity of the product. The sale of the drug bad been approved by French medical au- thorities following tests last Janu- manufactured since then, only about 100 had been sold. Livonia Resident Injured in Crash Redford Post State Police today continued efforts to piece together the story of an auto accident in which a 48-year-old Livonia man was critically injured. Reported in critical condition in University Hospital, Ann Arbor, is Scott Cannon, who suffered head and abdominal injuries in the crash at 10-Mile and Beck Ras, this morning. Earl R. Ezes, 38, of New Boston was the driver of the other car involved in the crash, according to police reports, Ezes was treated and released from a Northville hos- pital, There were no witnesses to the crash. : U. N. Official in England LONDON # — Mrs. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, president of the U.N. General Assembly, was re- ceived today by Queen Elizabeth Il. ary. Of 2,400 boxes of the drug’ during the past six months on |- | | Enjoy Our AIR COOLED Dining Room! Waldron Hotel Coffee Shop 36 E. Pike St. CHARLES GIBFORD Funeral for Charles Gibford, 79, of 206 Raeburn St. was held today from the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Following the service the body was taken to the Kistler Fu- neral Home at Hudson, Ind. for another service on Wednesday and burial. . Mr. Gibford served on the Pon- tiac City Commission for 10 years. He died suddenly Sunday in La- Hear Testimony by Mrs. Thorne Weeps on Stand When Son, and His Habits CHICAGO —The wealthy moth- er of Montgomery Ward Thorne pointed to the heavens today and declared she knows her son is ‘up there’ and that “I thank God for now I will always know where he is.” Mrs. Marion Thorne, clad in a black dress with white collar and cuffs, made the remark during an inquest hearing ifto the sudden death of her son June 29. He died after he revised his will sharply slashing his mother's share. Mrs. Thorne’s attorneys who ob- jected repeatedly to questions that were put to her by coroner Walter McCarron. McCarron asked her why 20-year- old Monty moved out of her 15- room Gold Coast district apart- ment to take a $75-a-month room nearby. She said he left because she re- fused to allow some of his com- panions into her home. “They were not the kind of boys I wanted him to be with,"’ she said. Her attorneys maintained that many of McCarron's questions went into the question of Monty's wills, while the coroner shot back that he was merely trying to learn the cause of the youth's sudden death. In his second will, Thorne left one half his nearly two-million-dollar estate to his sweetheart, Miss Mau- reen Ragen, 18, and one fourth to her mother, Aleen. He gave his mother a one-eighth share. His mother was the principal bene- ficiary in the first will he made two years ago. The coroner recalled earlier tes- timony by attorney Jay Stough, who represented Thorne in making the will revisions. The attor- ney said Thorne asked him to make a thorough investigation if any- thing happened that resulted in his death. “How would I know?” Mrs. Asked About Her Dead Pollution Down lin Silver Lake Beach Will Reopen If Second Check Proves Favorable Michigan Health Department lab- oratory reports showed today that Silver Lake is almost completely tree of sewage pollution. Oakland County Sanitarian Rus- sell H. Coltson said the samples taken by his staff and sent to the state laboratories last week showed the water “about normal for 4n inland lake.”’ If these samples come out well we'll reopen Silvercrest Beach. We'll run this second check some time this week."’ The health department's favor- able report climaxed sone two years of work by Oakland County Drain ioner Ralph A. Main, county health authorities and — Silver Lake families. A check two years ago showed about 30 homes arid other buildings crest Drain—a county storm drain that runs into the lake. Main said today that every one of those buildings has been dis- connected from the drain. “It was through the coopera. tion of Siivercrest families them- selves that the job was done,” he said, Main said Silver Lake has had a pollution problem for several years. Complaints of residents, he said, spurred a check by his office and the health department. Coltson's office checked the lake water two years ago, found it polluted beyond the danger point, and banned swimming at. Silvef- crest Beach. Main and the families whose paste water emptied into Silver- crest drain then started the job of changing over all sewage con- nections. Main said Galloway Lake and Keego Harbor's Dollar Lake are next on the list for a cleanup drive. “We hope the families in those places will give us the same co- operation as the Silvet Lake peo- ple,”’ he said. Fireworks Violation Costs Five $10 Each A Pontiac youth, one from Novi Township and three Detroit men paid $10 fines Monday after plead- ing guilty to illegally shooting off firecrackers at Walled Lake Park. The Pontiac youth, John D. Shedd, 18, of 604 Central Ave., appeared before West Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer C. Dieterle as did Larry G. Behrinds, 19, of 4892 Pontiac Lake Rd., Novi Township. The three Detroiters, all appear- ing before Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Stanaback, were Ar- thur Rike, John Hipley Jr., and Theadore McCrary. Sergeant Cole’s Father Dies Sunday in Detroit Sgt. Robert Cole, of Pontiac Po- lice Traffic and Accident Division, was notified of the death of his father, William Roy Cole, 62, of 18300 Ferguson, Detroit, Sunday morning. The body is at the Harvey A. Neeley Funeral home, 16540 Myers This plan is in effect every day of the week, every week of the year at Statler %& Ifone or more children under 14 occupy the same room with both parents, the regular two-person rate applies for the room. If one or more children under 14 occupy a room with only one parent, the one-person rate applies for the room. * If one of more children under 14 occupy a room without & parent—that is, if more than one room is needed for a family—the one-person rate applies for the second room. Bring the family for weekend of fun ot the Detroit Statler | © Reliable baby sinters SPECIAL STATLER FEATURES FOR TRAVELING FAMILIES - © Children’s menus ¢ Children's plates end silver * Balloons for the youngsters after meals * Formulas prepared © A basket of fresh fruit in every room occupied by childrens | © Radio in every room eee enemas © High cheirs end cribs | a | a i at i * sce —spe nats Se a SE E=yromnirpay ; = - ; a 4 K ~ 2 . Nt ; : ;: > + ae . THE PONTIAC PRESS. Te'ESDAY, JULY 6. 1954 rH ® + ae: _ te ectpnenrnneneepenenntisnyeneet sini: iacal a # 008 [ot aan . . . . i : . i ae MILLION HEAD Detroit Girl, Man Hurt =| Wived four stitches to close a} nando Cortes explored most of ‘ * é Red China Okay Ca ital Fy ts by Fi : “ wound on his left shoulder ‘| Mexico and muctr of the Southwest , Shop and Save at y Firecracker Prank , United States nearly a century be- — Peete Bite " . i , aX DEPROIT (INS) — An unknows Spanish conquistadors under Her-| fore thé Pilgrims landed. os ; "7 eae rqument ven M person exploded a firecracker in — - : a ' ee . 4 x the back yard of a Detroit resi- , ; ' ss ‘ ; erage 0 .. > * dence on Chene Street yesterday, ~ « ARTHRITIS SUFFERER =e B: ’ ae oe ‘ : amy \ rhe British Editorial Says >! ty: Senator to Face Series injuring a nine-year-old girl and a =%) ‘ ® ‘ Pisces U. S. Way Has Failed man. ~af *) Try ALPHA TABLETS. the new amazing treatment Until 10 p M = Tr R _. ’ ; of Flareups When He Neither Mary Ann Nasierowski =a | for Fyatridal — Sarrmapr sm ontains vitamins * . * y Kecognition .« "IT. 3 ‘|| Ret . nor 27-year-old Bernard Plachta wl | and mineral rich alfalia plus the best known pain oF urns From Holida it gaggle on | 1s eee ! re )) Geer: Sylow epee +. i — LONDON “\#_—T — | ‘an y = — en 7 od | \V—s heart beat No upset stomach. Satisfaction quar- Se oape ae eMC OU } “ma! infl . The independent | WASHINGTON «Ns, — Sen, | Parents, saw who tossed the fire- \ inteed or your mon®y cheertully refunddéd ’ NGS with today am — eo deplored | Joseph R McCarthy o(R-Wia) is cracker. \ = —— I practi Se ee wblppe yscchar 8 edge ss ay pera. Rae Gadi everyone roposal by Se : : : 7 Z ; . Mar , . ae _. . . (R-Calif) that the eiea mace |sis-apreine to yeturn fo Washington Py lig ng while Plachtn te 5 ai 100 for $2.49-——300 for $5.95 ‘6 to 10 p.m. and all dey Wednesday ne = cut off financial support of the | Sometime this week to deal with a : aa 9 a. m. until 6 p.m. ro | United Nations if Red China is $0 paertes of explosive issues that have 98 North tC Main admitted to membership. _ becomes dangerously heated since Another Shipment Saginaw AM $6. Floer C “On the whole, British opinion | || the close of the Army-McCarthy A : “\ looks at the problem of Peiping’s aR = hi ] Now in Stock! admission to the-United Nations! 4 fe ot tt ed | tere was nothing definite about New Mirecle Fertiliser : : A . 7 as one of law, net of meran —~ — the Wisconsin senator's arrival but ' , F Low , Big 50x50 Inches—Part Linen i Times said editoriall, , ) a Sas ae aR Es: A.Nexachedt| | [riends who had a “bunch” he has ' RX-15 EST PRICE WE'VE EVER Se aa Im | ‘ . 1945 “46 “47 “48 “49 SO ‘31 ‘32 "53 *s4 been “in or near’ Mexico also 4 , porte rs | ecloths “Recognition of one government guessed he wotdd return within i Plant Food ' : aS by another is usually seen here| PORK JACKPOT — Supplies of the next few days ' In Colorful Patterns € > # : 3 , as part ve the mechanics of diplo-| pork in butcher shops next fall No one knew for ‘certain or ' T = sa | macy, and not as a gesture of ap- | will be about 13 per cent higher’ was saying where McCarth meal tise 2S a aah ’ ij J y had , se a In the Same way the United than a year ago, because hog pro-| been during the two weeks he has | 4 ‘Ya Peuate oe 2| Inch Tall ‘vations is regarded as a forum duction is expected to go above | been away from the capital. ' $ Regular C for the peac®ful settlement of dis- | he ‘e News- | 2 25 voles aphis the 91 million mark. Above News-| There was little questi: t ‘ . . P rs, not as a club of kindred) chart shows number of hogs on | eve ; Dy saad . $1.09 Value ’ r spirits. ‘rar £ jever, that his arrival would be § 3-LB $ep75 i * * « | ent. elie aig ig to ts gated | punctuated by a series of political " Size... 3 K x ve r\ “This is not the same as urgin - heres was 51.9 mil | firecrackers, Here is what awaits ¥ that the admission of Communist lion in 1953, low was 34.5 million | the senator: a ' on *4" as et Bho’ QUALITY! China to the United. Nations would |" 1948. Data based on Agricul-| 1. A demand by four of the seven ' ouse pe He Sones eacssennand tae: oi be immediate. Many of the Ameri- ture Department survey. members of his investigations sub i meyiialne ——_ your plant — R = I ; 198 V 1 ’ ore on teen material al fires pre arguments against immediate | (ees for an immediate ' RX-Ib as directed, end if tn 9 egular $1. mene. —— admission are strongly based. The A “housecleaning’’ of its stafh_as a days your grass isnt growing - xe continuation of Chinese . help to U. S. Will Teach |result of information brought out ' caurested eon wan rege 0x0 Inc h Size (the) Vietminh has inevitably held ° in the Army-McCarthy investiga- gia aed us pute came, home rf consideration of Peiping’s can- Jet Flying to tion cue oe a Genuine CHENILLE idature. . 2. A request for a subcommittee C.0.D. orders Tonite and “But in any Asian settlement, | E-X-Jarp Air Aces meeting on his return to deal with ' (@ Wednesday HOT PADS . whether local and temporary or | the Pentagon's refusal to give se- [A AMS Dcetel chdntiie bet pede. 94m ; general and long term, the status|_CAMP MATUSHIMA, Japan ®— curity clear: ’ - All metal sled ¥ seg tangy Hom hy moog digg : status | ’ curity clearance to the investiga- 98 N. Sagi metal, enameled im red, ye ors, has hang-up loops. of Communist China cannet_be ig-| Former Japanese air aces—in UNi-| tore on the unit's staff ] . Saginaw —nd Floor tow-and white! Truly ‘king’-size SHHSHHHOSSSSHSSSSHSSSSSSESOSSSSSASSSSSESESEES nored. It can certainly not be ig- | form again — stood shoulder to} a peer 21" tall, 13° diameter Ideal 2 ; = nored simply by legislating against |Shoulder today with American) - A‘showdown fight by the for home, workshop, office, hos- it.”’ i . canst | iers who will teach them to fly| three Democrats on the group if MEDICAL TABLET DISCOVERY pital, etc Save frequent emptying * * « | jets. he attempts to resume hearings SAFE NEW Th Liberal News Chronicle de-; About 100 Japanese airmen stood) 08 &fy subject before these de- EASY WAY STOPS ALL scribed the Knowland proposal as at attention with U.S. Air Force) mands are complied with. 2472) WETTING! METAL one of many recent signs that the | men at ceremonies opening a new! MeCarthy indicated to newsmen - h ‘full tide of isolationism is rising in the Japanese air force flight school before he left for his vacation that Fast, Withest Ex ensive Beautifully Decorated ‘ 4 F United States . jhere. he will fight staff changes pro Devices Ends Em arrass- Boudoir Wastebaskel | Sabla Nad ls, + * * Daylight poured through hun- ‘ 2 ar ae : ou 0 r as e as e e ; ; posed by Sen. Charles E. Pottes ment, Saves | sundry .: After intense effort and unpre-} dreds of bullet holes in the big old |p : ; i$ ow First : . (R-Mich) and the three Democrat : j = cedented generosity,"’ the News imperial navy hangar, riddled by ,.. , ¢ End jorment, et jbarrase- Tonite and Wednesday : ; ’ ‘A ic subcommittee members. ment, nervous strain in Quality Chronicle said, *‘the Americans see Strafing U.S. Navy planes—a de- ee CHILDREN and ADULTS. Se e. s:mple i" For c wae, that the peace and stability they Cade ago California has 19 national forests mic ely eetheroad fre tage ar kann ° aires bail a 15x16-Inch ‘CANNON’ have sought to bring are still un-| Japan's new 6.000-man air force, four ng . alarms or apecial diets. Medici ‘ly proved ae a ee rere = = , our national parks. eight national] 7 ‘ tat thet day. realized. No clear way has opened. which came into existence only monuments e effective. Don't wait af ther fey $ No solutions are in sight. last Thursday, is equipped with 60 SIMM BROS. — 98 N. Saginaw Large 15 « 27 Inches “Now, in this American mood of light trainers and helicopters. But | 4 Vory ahservent towels with colorful , : : 2 Es striped. border Famous “Cannon” ¢c disappointment and disillusion, the the Japanese expect the United % first quality towels in packsge of 6 Regular British disposition to pursue a dit, ‘States to supply Sabre jets and |$ Simms Is Your Headquarters for BROTHERS ee ote Se Value ferent course—to try. out negotia- Other modern planes later this > — —_——-—— : ina amen Coleen sear ; Electric onaver “SPECIAL PURCHASE bitdig Mocs mat-tus Bia opposition—evokes resentment and| The first flight class of 16 former > inches. Has striped bor- c a cate cla haem. reproaches.”’ imperial captains, majors and ¢ ~ Irrezular | World F Male Gers First quality. : lieutenant colonels includes some $ Available for All Four Makes egulars of Ore amous ahe SSSSSHHSHSSSSHSHHOSSSHSOSESSSESSSESESESESESESSe -~— of: J 's leading Ze 4 ; : , Cannon Puts Hole wona’wa: nna"! “7 So % § @ Remington @ Schick © Sunbeam © Norelco ears issors © Hit on 7 a eat Among them are Kanshi Kish- @ oleetri Thesee ke tapn = tg pp ia é Cc so Ss ; i = : |kawa, credited with 19 American $ mtd aged Metered) Glad kenuine factory made replace: - : it and iss Rug in | 0 ac t planes, and Shigehisa Yamamoto. 3 nen parts. Check your needs from this Mist Because of minor finishing flaws. this famous maker of fine Regular t who claims 15 U.S. kills. '¢ emington Service Kit -... 60 scissors gave us @ special discount . Simms pass the . BOSTON —When Francis Le-| The graduates will "become — 3 Remington (8-U) Round Mead |. -.$2.50 - savings on to you mm the greatest sale of sheers 39c Value blanc's yacht Glee won-a race in structors for the Japanese air 2 Remington Shaver Cord -+- $1.00 and scissors in our entire history the South Boston Yacht Club's hol- force, which the United States $ —— beige ee | 59c Value, 22x44-inch 44c iday regatta yesterday, the judges’ hopes will be strong enough . to 2 Sry “Ss le Need Hp Random colors, firmly stitched cord boat fired a ‘small cannon in sal- guard this island nation from -$ Schick (V16) Soukte Head $5.00 washable fringe edges. Buy several ute—and the wad encasing the invasion. - 2 Schick Shaver Cord $1.00 r at this price! aang) Siege went right through $ Spore Shaver Head. ; $3.00 e Glee's sail. . > beam Cutter ‘Mode ) 4 ( ) .) > un er is RGM 35e Leblanc said the wad missed 3-Year-Old Tot Tries $ Sunbeam Cutter (Model S$) ra ae ava N FL O x : him oe two-man crew by 4 —— Cutter (Model W)..... 65¢ | inches and ‘“‘scared the life out of Hi U | y $ unbeam Comb and Cutter | us. We'll probably have to buy a iS nc e § evolver > (Models RGM... $1.50 Cotton or Satin , new sail.’’ 4 Sunbeam Comb and Cutter LADIES’ , He said the mishap occurred be. DETROIT (INS) — A three-year- > (Medel S) is. en $2.00 | cause the cannon had been pointed Old boy wandered into the bedroom Z srs Comb and Cutter , across the finish line instead of Of his policeman-uncle's Detroit > $ Poke eres ras away fr residence and noticed 4 .38 3 unboom Sharpening Compound 35¢ | away from it. i a. re- ¢ AC-DC | | volver on the dresser. > Mar. hess Acts x. nosey aries on | ; . re ; ‘ : 0 Converters : ‘ Bolshevik General Dies | jigicr ae and and Raymond % hye Schick Wall Holders. All Styles $1.50 For § Holley was found, lying on the 2 Steriklene—Cleanser and Sterilizer 60c MOSCOW \h—The Soviet army floor, by his parents and patrol- 54 Sunbeam Shaver Cord $1.95 newspaper Red Star today an- man Richard Katina, 25 > aaa mereadia rte g nounced the death of Trifom Ivan- A bullet had entered the boy's % {{@ ner. @isrs, 32 to ovich Shevaldin, a 66-year-old re- right.cheek and exited behind his 2 — i 30—A cad B cup tired lieutenant general and veter- right ear. He is in temporary se- ¢ BROTHERS an of the Revolution and World rious ition in Detroit's Mount |$ . > Dy aE : 9 eee eeoncene meoecesercon steer ee War IT . Carmel! Mercy Hospital. '% : . LADIES BOX STWLE - ——_—_—— ooo = = = Choose From Many Sty les Origine! Values ~ emi <. $1.90 te $2.10 @ Embroidery @ Sewing ‘ 4 r Ss e Ss ‘ @ Trimmers @ Pocket Dette! asia : @ Dressmokers § @ Etc. C in White and Colors Blades and tutting edges are perfect i but’ minor plating flaws make them : ; ‘2nds' and bring the prices way down + sa ae Cc } Now you can afford better shears than 52.95 Values : i you ever hoped ‘to own priced less * ; j than you ever expected to pay # Box tiyles with handles. Choice of assorted \ colors ifciuding whites end bdteck petent ia: leathers. B ow and save ® Original $2.50 to $3.15 Values 98° MYTTTTITITITITITITITITTT irri itil 6 to 8-Inch Dressmaker Shears ......._- _ Ladies Cool Main 98 North _Floot Hh al VY RC, BR sesinew 5 Po ee 8 AVS OVD we protHensh ee sernte : re wtnacrarnaecesaml Cotton Crepe or Broadcloth > a PAJAMAS +g $1.95 Value Pajamas have elastic 3] 69 ‘ waist, loose jacket and . eyelet trim. Sizes 34-40 $2.69 Pajamas... . $2.39 ; | | Let it talk! ‘ ! , os otary Here's a sports car that talks your language, why not bear what smooths a turn— laugh a little as _ . | it has to say? Be sure to make.a date to drive the new 1954 S levels out a hill And remember 4 3 * . ou can get service | Chevrolet Corvette. Come in or call us up. Bet service and parts from | any Chevrolet ‘dealer. So come in | Hf you'll give us a ring, we'll give. road yourself—hear it whisper on __ prepared to listen! These Corvettes : you. a mde in the already-famous _the straightaway—sigh gently as it do some tall talking’ ? Chevrolet Corvette. This isn’t a : drawing-board “dream car,” but a fully tested reality—the frst ail- CHEVROLET CORVETTE American sports car to reach pro- duttion. Take it out on the open ; Wednesday Only Make a date to drive iti price Get youre now. Amit 1 te each cus- tomer. i § oe MAP Th « ‘ , ’ . : . - ; xy ‘ . . : 7 e : . ‘ P —_ . . : x ‘ _ - ae ss eee Se a ae SS ee ae a Pe ae eS —e we FOUR hed. i oceeconseosapeotil POUR" 43rd YEAR Since 1911 he Bet in! VanW Past Lawrence St, “poccecsecccosocsocecososoossoocoosoosoosooecs They Complement Each Other... . to make the mory of the funeral a thing of beauty. fragrance and soit beauty of flowers, and the rich tones of our specially selected recordings combine to predominate the physical presence of each funeral service Thus beauty allays the harshness of the passing of a loved one—the most exalted pee for flowers and music 35¢ and 60c a MIL tittititcctiiiditin The ardent aficionado (bull ring fan) is shown local costume, a THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 r Wife Seeks Sanitation MINEOLA, N. Y. (4)—Referee Francis G. Hooley took under ad- 1 visement recently .a separation | suit in which a wife charged that in 12 years al coer taak 6 boli The hus- band is employed by the Depart- ment of Sanitation. , United Press Photo Mrs. Petrov Reveals Ist Mate Also Spied MELBOURNE, Australia WH — | Mrs. Evdokia Petrov told the Aus- tralian spy inquiry today her So- viet diplomat husband wasn't the first Red spy in her life. That was her first husband's profession also. The woman followed her second spouse, Vladimir Petrov, to the wit- ness box and began a recital of her own activities as a Soviet se- cret police agent in Australia. She gave her age as 39. Her first husband's career as a secret police agent, she said, had been cut short by his arrest and banishment to a labor camp in 1937. Petrov was third secretary of the Soviet Embassy in Canberra until he asked Australian officials for asylum in April, turned over a mass of embassy documents and said he headed a Soviet espion- age ring in Australia. Mrs. Petrov joined her husband in exile after Australian officials rescued her from Russian agents. Subsequently Russia broke diplo- matic relations with Australia over the case and Australia named a Senate Approves Three for State Mail Posts WASHINGTON w — The Senate Balloons Float Project Pontiac residents were victims of an “air raid” today when more than 1,000 balloons con- taining merchandise and cash certificates were released from begin its July Jamboree. All 14 stores in the center are participating in the month-long program which features a two- Faces Court-Martial in Formosa Charge sought political asylum in the United States faces court-martial if returned here and could be sen- tenced to death if found guilty of desertion, authorities said today. Military officials said they were waiting further information on the case of Capt. Hsuan Weil, who is in custody of U.S. Naval authorities in San Francisco pending deter- mination of his status. Hsuan was sent to the United States in 1952 for advanced train- HOLI “A Relaz . oa Lees ae ee ee way with smooth sureness! Take it easy . . driving Se why not go for Oldsmobile’s Holiday soon ++» it’s waiting for you et our showrsom now! ~~ x Options! ef entre cot 4 DAY |! A k ASKER'S Mt te ees el 72 Michigan. The 27-year-old officer was ar- Marie Hope, Lake Leelanau; Lyle| rested in Evanston, Ill, at the ’ Fw Sorum, Morley; Joseph H. Ben-| ment after the Nationalist govern- kert, Reed City ment charged him with desertion. J e Here's the Place to Go for your Your Dealer M2 NL wens FOR A RIDE IN A "ROCKET"! JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. Phone FE OLDSMOBILE 4-3566_ Southern Trip Offered Shoppers at Tel-Huron week, all-expense paid vacation for two at Miami, Fla. Winners of the trip will fly to Florida on the date of their choice via | Delta C&S Airlines. Tel-Huron Shopping Center to The trip includes reservations at a beach hotel, side trips around Miami, guided tours of the cit:, afd evening entertain- ment including concerts and aquachdes. Parking facilities at Tel-Huron, located at Telegraph road and W. Huron street, are being en- larged to accommodate 250 more autos. Two houses located near the shopping center have been moved and work is now under way to blacktop the land. When completed there will be room for 800 cars. The center opened for business early this year. A medieval knight and his steed might together carry as much as 200 pounds of metal. 8 U, S. Senators Offer Services to Blair Moody DETROIT — An offer by eight United States Senators, pledging their services to ailing former Sen. Blair Moody in his campaign bid fer the Democrat senatorial nomi- nation, will be accepted, Moody's campaign headquarters announced yesterday. In a joint telegram, Sens. Leh- man (DNY), Mansfield (D-Mont), Kennedy (D-Mass), Douglas (D- Ill), Jackson (D-Wash), Humphrey (D-Minn), Magnuson (D-Wash), and Monroney (D-Okla) said: “Please advise Blair how deeply concerned we are over the neces- sary interruption of his campaign. We will be glad to lend whatever help we can in outlining the Demo- cratic program to the Michigan voters and to fill his engagements which he might otherwise have to cancel. Please call on us and we will endeavor to assist to this end within the limits of the demands of our presence for Senate action.” Moody is expected to be dis- charged within a week from St. Jo First wireless signal was trans- mitted by Guglielmo Marconi in 1895 on his father’s estate at Pon- Discontinued Spring and Summer Styles DRESS SHOES “316% CASUAL SHOES ‘tow $122 DOWNTOWN 51 N. Seginew Open Friday Night ‘Til 9 p. m. tecchio, Italy. SRrencn SHRINER Two Fine Stores for the Man Who Prefers the Finest Annual Shoe Sale TOWN & COUNTRY Tel-Huron Center Open Every Night ‘Til 9 p. m. Pats Plumbing and Heating whoa Shown GMC 152-24 Series “Built in Pontiac by Pontiac People” engea ok ae rom. ~My 3 ao 4, Pes {B® a Oe cee) « 4 ~ F. J. TEMPLE & “Sons Located at 462 N. Perry St. For 27 years F. J. Temple and Sons have specialized in commercial con- tracting of plumbing and heating GMC TRUCKS SOLD and SERVICED by ON GMC CO. ‘77 East Huron = 809 S. Woodward ans FE 2-9203 FE 4-4531 of marriage her hus _ coed ae" > $$$ Eisenhower, arrived today f fight against communism Van Fleet_fley A Te Felice. purpose of his visit. report to Eisenhower, Van Fleet in Philippines, Studies Military Potential MANILA w—Gen. Jaanes A. Van | Fleet, personal envoy of President () : i , = Quality of Laws four-day fact-finding visit ait as p promised Philippines support in the | , Van Fleet conferred at -luncheon with President Ramon Magsaysay. | to discuss ‘the | It was re- ported, however, that he would) land (R-Calif) sai i , » the said today any fair make a thorough study of Philip- | ’ ed pines military capabilities for his | -PANTS-— $987 $487 S87 SAM BENSON 20 SOUTH PERRY 40 West Pike St. f % ~eaee | Knowland Cites | WASHINGTON uw — Sen. Know- | appraisal by the voters will credit the Republican-controlled Congress | with more accomplishments than any which operated urider recent Democratic presidents. Sen, ‘Sparkman (D-Ala) said in| a separate interview that whj | some important measures have) been approved or seem likely to be, he thinks the Republicans have ‘‘come up with nothing new.” With the July 4 holiday breather behind them. lawmakers . start | work today on the last lap of a session President Eisenhower has | said he is confident will produce a | constructive program. s * * Knowland, the Senate Republican leader, said he thinks the voters, who will decide on .party Control of the Senate and House at the polls in Novembet are going to be impressed by the quality of leg- islation, ‘rather than the quantity. “I have never believed the pub- lic was enthusiastic about having a great volume of legislation,’’ he said. ‘I think the people are more | interested in’the proper adminis-| tration of government and that is | what they are getting under the Republicans. “Any fair appraisal must be that this Congress has , enacted more bills of national importance than anything done in the last sev- eral presidential terms.”’ * * s He -said the program for the scheduled final four weeks of this session will be reviewed at a White House conference of congressional leaders with Eisenhower tomor- row. Sparkman, the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 1952, said | in support of his thesis that the) GOP has pi sed ‘‘nothing new”’ | that the groundwork for social se- | curity legislation which is expected | to get final approval before Con- | gress quits at the end of the month | was laid by studies under the Tru- | man administration. He chided the administration for what he called a ‘‘surrender’’ on . -er's proposal for a three-. year extension of the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, with au-— thority to lower tariffs further. The President later said he would settle for a one-year extension, without that additional authority, and would press for the broader pro- gram next year. The one-year ex- tension has now become law. Foiled by Trattic, He Gets Plane Crash Pictures TULSA, Okla. W—The Tulsa | World didn’t get a picture of a| Fourth of July traffic jam yes-| terday—it got a picture of a plane | crash instead. e The World said it sent commer- cial Howard Hopkins | aloft to get a picture of a traffic |jam. The ‘plane ran out of gas, and it crash-landed at the intersec- ition of U.S. 66 and State High- |way 33. | Hopkins walked away from the crash un- | ‘hurt. The big traffic jam the pho- | | tographer had been looking for all |day formed around the crashed | plane. | But Hopkins found, to his hor- | | ror, he had used his last film tak- ing pictures of the crash. and the pilot both | | And here’s more good news: We need used cars, 20 we'll give you the top trade-in allowance on your present ear. SEE YOUR NEAREST MERCURY DEALER CENTRAL-LINCOLN-MERCURY Sales, Inc. Phone FE 2-9167. - Believes Voters Will Credit GOP ~Congress | Pitching Horseshoes | There's Nothing Sillier Than Mice | Dangling Cigarettes From Lips By BILLY ROSE was floating over a Consolidated Three Mondays ago the American Cancer| smokestack and inhaling like crazy. Societyreleased a set of statistics which seem oo r 'to prove that, among men between the ages of Along about 11 a. m., however, my jims began trading punches with my jams. When the | 50 and 70, the death rate is 75 per cent higher switchboard operator got me a wrong number, for smokers than for non- smokers. I hollered my head off and she went home in My reaction to the medicos| hysterics. Cost: one box of chocolates and a who masterminded this warn-/| $5 raise. ing can be summed up in three; ‘That afternoon a cop suggested I move my small words: Who asked ‘em?| car away from a fireplug. I thanked him and made an impassioned speech about Cossacks The reason I'm touchy on the subject of smoking is &/ and the Police Department. Cost: two hours simple one: Statistics notwith- | Edison standing, I can’t stop smoking. The first thing I do in the morning, even before I’ve in- in court and a $25 fine. After dinner, my meemies screaming at each other in falsetto, I went te see a movie always been my conviction that the rodents got at the Rexy Theater. As I was leaving, a big broad-shouldered gent asked me the time. I teld him in no Peertain terms I had no intention of wearing out my watch for a total stranger. spected the plumbing, is to light a gasper and make like a dragon. When I've.chewed up the pack in my pocket, I mooch them from newsboys, steal them from off people’s desks and, if I weren't afraid someone might step on my thumb, I'd be tempted to even more desperate measures. Why can’t I step smoking? The answer is that I once tried to swear off and, if you like grim stories, I'll try to pull myself together and tell you about it... Wednesday morning I was ready to pack and | walk out on myself. “Stop sticking pins in your Four years ago, on the occasion of my 50th | ” T finall id.“ birthday, I decided to give up cigarettes and | than both an — ee thus prove to myself that I wasn’t flabby in the resolution department. This decision, I may add, was in no way prompted by those clinical statistics which show that tobacco causes cancer in- mice. It’s BILLY ROSE The man was nice about it—said my nerves must be on edge, and offered me a stick of gum. As I reached for it, he rammed it into a front tooth. I reached for a cigarette, and:a moment later, I was sending up smoke signals like a Navajo. Back again in the heaven above seven, I swore off swearing off .« . ‘ three nails inte my coffin every waking hour. My doctor, of course, takes a dim view of this, but he knows there's no point in arguing with me. As I've told him a dozen times, there are only what they deserved—there’s nothing sillier than a mouse with a cigarette dangling from its lips. But to get back to my no-smoking resolve. I said adieu to Milady Nicotine.at 10 o'clock on a Monday night, and around 10:30 I fell fast asleep, thanks to dogged determination and: three of those pills that if you take 19 of, you're dead. When I awoke next morning I felt fine. For eight delectable hours I had dreamed I cigarette habit: (1) To lock myself in a room with soft walls and have an orderly pour ice water on me every time I scream. (2) To have the doctor sew up my mouth. (Copyright, 1954) my mouth, wrapper and all. Cost: $40 to recap Since then, I've been hammering at least | | } | | | | | | | two sure-fire ways for me to break myself of the | ‘'THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 _ THE 2 - __ Truman Continues ‘Black Hand’ Terrorists _ gang to death today for political terrorism in French Morocco. Sentenced in Mor occo Eighteen other terrorists were sen- CASABLANCA, French Morocco | tenced to jail terms. (®—A military tribunal sentenced| The gang is a group of terrorists six members of the ‘“‘Black Hand” | who have been carrying on a cam- paign of assassination, assalts and than a year. Three of the Moroccans were sentenced to death in absentia. sabotage against the French and | pro-French Moroccans for more | ¢ ‘ The blood volume of whales is relatively greater, even in. propor- tion to size t Tee. to Make Progress KANSAS CITY @® — Harry S. | Truman continued to make pro-|— gress in recovering from his opera- tion but there: was no indication when he'll be able to leave the tal. “It's still too early to say how soon Mr. Truman will be leaving,” Robert E. Adams, acting adminis- trator at Research Hospital, said last night. *‘Visitors still are limit- ed, If they were not, there would be an almost constant line waiting to see him." The former President's gall blad- der and appendix were removed in an emergency operation June 20. SOCCER OSEEESCESESERSEOSSEEOOEEEEO Provident Loan Gerald Harvey, Manager « PONTIAC « FEderal is i ik i] LY ‘| ; { i | i’ | phone firse: Or, if more come in to Provident today! j | bs Pistols were first manufactured in the year 1515 at Pistoia, Italy. leans mode te residents of oll surrounding Better Care for Your Baby ... at Budget Prices . . . Wednesday Only! save 2.99 on Reg. 13.98 Infent’s -Bathinette qp°” save 1.31 on Reg. 2.98 deluxe... durable... thriftier ... better looking -Jumbo Garment Bags! ONLY yy Lyon rea 67 am k | me & , + WV H y 18 , Giant Size Holds 1 54” Up to 14 Garments! Long! Handsomely quilted front and cuff with matching color vinyl taffeta sides and top. Quick-sliding full length zip- pers. 3 hook frames... . heat. sealed non-rip grommets. Store those valu- oble garments in a safe place. . . free from danger of moths! Hurry in today for this savings . . . Choose from Chintz, Wine, Blue, and Green! * Quick-sliding full length sipper! save 2.99 on Reg. 7.98 double-duty spacious walnut finish Wardrobes 4° © Holds up to 25 garments! ® Use for storage or everyday use! For extra storage space . . . buy this richly styled... beautiful two-tone finish roomy wardrobe. . Sturdy wood framing with rich walnut finish. Single door . . size overall... 60x24x21 . . . also bottom stor- age area. Starve those moths today! Save now! - Waite’s Notions—Street Floor Now'you can give your baby the best of baths in this sturdy, long wearing Bathinette. Folds easily . . . fits in small space. Regulation size in soft pastel colors. Complete with hose. Hurry in today for this special savings! > \ save 1.11 on Infants’ Cotton Creepers! Reg. 1.98 Value . . . cotton knit . . « Santorized with plastic tined pant and gripper crotch. 6 mo-18- mo. Ass’td prints and e Stripes ., B87 eerreeereres save 10c on Infants’ Sleeveless Shirts! Reg. 39c Value . . . combed cotton knit with tape tabs and patented neck. 3 mo-2 yrs. All in white w.cccscocece save 99c on Infants’ Crib Blankets! Reg. 2.98 Value . . . in washable strap. sa atonal Sct! fitted bottle holders . .’. 1.99 in bs) colors eeeeeeteee save 23c on Contour Crib, Sheets! Reg. 1.00 Value . . . Sanforized in standard size .. . cellophane wrapped all in white. Hurry in to- 77° day for savings ...ceee save 2.99 on Reg. 8.89 fully collapsible . . . long-wearing . .. stroller... the best in fresh air ond sunshine .. . Folding Stroller Give your baby a ride in a smart yet practical stroller! Sturdy, lightweight’ f and longiasting! Take baby with you on those shopping trips—aelways safe and secure in this lightweight stroller. Choose yours today in navy e » « white or plaid. Shopping bag available at extra cost. Hurry In or Cell FE 4-2511 Todey! . Waite’s Infants—Second Floon- save 1.18 on Gauze Diapers! Reg. 3.95 Value . . . national brand, All boxed with lab testing approval. 20x 40 in blenched 2 77 e white seccoccsscences save 99c on Playard Pad! Reg. 3.95 Value . «= . national brand. save 99c on Infants’ Car Seats! or tie style . -. white only, Hurry in today for savings to you e . . slight TTS. weeneee save 46c on Infants’. Training Pants! Reg. 19c ea. Value .. . cotton knit with double crotch . . . Sanforized covered elastic waist 5 f .« Slights ters... ess or covering . . . regulation size with double stitching all in nursery 27° prints . . » and rich 1.99 Pastels wecvccecveese ¥ Reg. 2.98 Value. .-. sturdy construc- ‘ cotton with rayon satin binding ... cellophane wrapped. Rich tion. . . adjustable to any type astels 1.99 seat . . . with attractive 99 : repeeseeeees colored beads, blue only Meavar save oes + kets! save 99¢ on y Amp tiies “ 26x34 flannel Infants’ Car Beds eg. alue.,. nnel- ette receiving blanket . . . over- Reg. 7.98 Value... completely col~ locked stitched ends? uae seniliew cucman a sept... Choose f ‘td rich e cee tS arin 6.99 save 99c- on save 62c on Infants’ Gowns : Diaper Bag! ‘ Reg. 2.98 Value . .. fiberglas in- Reg. 1.19 Value . . . cotton knit with : sulated bag with adjustable shoulder long sleeves... Sanforized in gripper 5 Re tr ———+ $e J i | a tod ft —s ~ LY 6, 1954 \ hr 3 On Running to Uncle Most farmers will tell you that this year they’ve had either too much or too little rain. But there were probably no more surprised farmers in the country than those in Washtenaw County. They read in the paper that Governor WriuiaMs had included them in a four- county zone for which he had appealed ‘to Washington for “flood relief.” On in- formation from State Agriculture De- partment officials the Governor’s office asked for surplus commodities and emergency loans for some 150 farm fam- ilies. ; ° * * * Orson BEEMAN and Exaa Gace, supervisors of Lyndon and Sylvan townships in Washtenaw County, bluntly reported there was no flood damage in their areas. Both farmers, they said “everybody’s lost a little corn owing to too much rain, but that’s about all.” x »* * Someone slipped, of course. But the slip illustrates all too clearly the ten- dency of State officials to run to Uncle Sam the moment they hear about an “emergency.” One More Door Opened The people of Michigan have gained a second important victory in the never- ending effort to open the doors of all public bodies. The Board of Regents of - the University of Michigan have agreed to hold open meetings, with duly-ac- credited representatives of the press at- tending. * * * “The &étion-follows By about a year similar action by the State Board of Agriculture, which administers Mich- igan State College. Boards of both State educational institutions now will con- duct their affairs out in the open. The victory was gained by persistent effort of the Freedom of Information Committee of the Michigan Press Asso- ciation. But it is also to be credited-to a growing sense of responsibility to the -- public on the part of the two boards. ~ * * “It is gratifying indeed to the press to have the Regents open their meetings to news repre- sentatives,” said H. F. Bartey of the Adrian Daily Telegram, chair- man. of the committee. “Through the discussions leading up to the agreement, both the Regents and the press have come to under- stand each others’ purposes and problems, and I am confident we have reached a happy solution.” * x * Together, M.S.C. and U. of M-Spend _ the bulk of the State’s $50,000,000 plus annual budget for higher education. There is thus every reason fir the public ‘to- be informed of the detisions and actions of their governing boards. And it is gratifying that their meet- ing doors were opened by can, respon. sible discussion and mutual understand- ing and agreement. AShrine for Dr. Beaumont Atex Sr. -MarTiIn was 4 typical French-Canadian fur trapper who lived on Mackinac Island more _ BRaumown, medical officer at the Fort - Mackinac garrison. The young| Army _ 7 ae be “or Grease o + ae re “rely 3h i Voice of the People Future Generations Face Tremendous Job Preserving All Their Ancestors Acquired (Letters will be condensed when neces- sary beeause of lack of space. Pull name, address and te number of the writer must accompany letters but these will not be pub writer so t requests, unless the letter is ite nature.) We too often fail to realize the Besponsibilities that we, as a peo- ple of a free nation, have in respect to the security of matikind. It is evident that the United States will play an important role in world affairs in the future as she has in the past. It is also evident that the U. S. must stand strong “if she hopes to remian symbolic of free nations everywhere and resist oppression of democratic ideals by others effectively. It will be the job of the upcoming genérations to uphold what so many have fought to preserve. Their failure would result in the ultimate devastation of our highly cultural civilization and a terrific setback to man's constant struggle for survival. How can ‘they possibly know what it's like to across a critical in * bleedy battlefield and rumble over the bodies of Joe Smith or Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE There is the young executive .. . Who seldom has his say . . . But suddenly takes hold of things . . . To lead the only way . .. Who startles all the others and . . . Who wakes them from their dreams... And gives them new incentive with . . His merchandising schemes .. . He is the young executive . . . With salesmanship in mind . . .The most important salesman they... May ever hope to find . . . And as he makes his business mark .. . He more than earns his praise... And proves himself invaluable... With profit-making ways... They better bogst.the bonus that ., . They have in mind to give ... Whoever have this special kind. . . Of young executive. (Copyright 1954) John Doe, just average guys who didn't know what hit them. As horrible as it seemg they must have a full realization of the world that surrounds us and see for themselves what must be done. The outgoing generations must set good examples for the younger ones so that they will be able to cope with their problems as effect- ively as their ancesters have done. Their outlook must be unselfish and broadened with a_ certain amount of diplomatic aptitude and moral inclination. The fate of a world will lie on their shoulders ° and they must be ready. Let's hope they will be prepared to meet whatever situation they face with utmost capability and assurance. Duane Vogelsburg 2130 Beachmont Keego Harbor, Michigan Case Records of a Psychologist ‘Healthful to Shed Clothes,’ Say Nudists but Really Desire Exhibition of Selves . Nudist camps. are rather popular. And the nudists cite “health” as one reason, plus freedom from the restraints of clothing. But both of those erguments are unsoynd. They are simply rationalizations for the real reason cited below. Nudists may rave at my un- masking their secret motive, but here it ts: By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case L-360: Laverne G., aged 19. is a college sophomore. “Dr. Crane, I am to write a paper on nudist camps,’ she he- gan. “TI have never attended one, but I decided it might be interesting to use this as my theme: topic in Social Psychology. ' “So will you please give me some pointers about the health angle and any other relevant data concerning going around naked.” Nudists argue that it is health- ful to ‘shed their clothes. That is medically untrue. Why, it isn’t even healthful to lie on the beach 90 per cent naked with the modern abbrevi- ated bathing suits- For big doses of ultra violet ; are animals with fur to keep that bright sunlight away from the epidermis. Indeed, many species of- ani- mals don’t even come out by day, bur forage only after dark. Aunt Het what hell is like, but the worst torment I could imagine would be everiastin’ fam- ily treabie, s Thus, they get no direct sunlight at all. God figured we human beings would be’ smart enough to cover our bare skin with some protec- tive device, as cloth, and most humang have -done so since the beginning of time. But in recent years a fad has sprung up of boasting about tanned skin. People think it indicates rug- ged outdoor Jife and thus indirectly suggests abundant health. But a tan is an indictment of its owner medically speaking, for the body develops a tan only as a last resort to keep ‘out the ultra violet light. The latter doesn’t penetrate the tanned skin as readily as the clear skin. So our skin thus tries to make up for our mental de- ficiency in not using clothes. Another medical disadvantage of the nude body is its greater sus- ceptibility to flies, mosquitoes, ticks and scratches of various sorts. So don't be deluded by the sun- shine addicts! Shade is more healthful, even for the tuberculosis patients, too, “Well, anyway,”’ a nudist may protest, “‘it feels so pleasant to be free from the restrictions of Actually, nudists demonstrate a juvenile throwP&ck to the childish emotional state of exhibitionism. They want to show off in pub- ' | i { F ‘ 4 freedom from the restraints of clothing which motivates them. No, they want to disrobe and Many a toddler or even a _kin- dergartener delights in disrobing to surprise his companions and show off, or to protest indirectly against his mother's orders to the Nudists are actually correct, however, in saying that the naked body is not as salacious as the partially clothed figure. We psychologists will agree with them on that one item. For a flea- bitten torso with sagging abdomen word puzzle from having sat on the rough bark of a tree trunk too long, certainly doesn't add any “oomph.” If you nudists still want to be exhibitionists, .that’s your privi- lege, It's comparatively a free world yet in America, so suit your- selves. But you aren't fooling the psychologists. (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate Inc.) David Lawrence Says: Letting Red China in U.N. Means Bad Complications WASHINGTON — The big mys- tery in world affairs today is not that the British government wants to see Red China admitted into the United Nations, but why the ‘issue was raised at this time. There is nothing new in the Brit- ish or American positions. Every- body has known for some time that London favors the move and that Washington opposes it. cratic leader of the Senate reit- erating the American opposi- tion? ‘ It is no answer—as Rep. Mc- Cormack, Democratic party leader in the House of Representatives, expresses it—that Congress is tak- ing the “‘initiative’’ away from the executive branch of the govern- ment. To say this is to ignore the true situation, which is that the De- partment of State was gratified to have the Senate leaders pro- claim their views publicly. For the State Department could not, in the very nature of things, say anything except in the privacy ~ of diplomatic channels, and this wouldn't get very far toward sway- ing public opinion either here or abroad. Actually there wasn't much time’ given in_the Churchill-Eis- enhower conference to the dis- cussion of the problem of admit- ting Red China to the United Nations, It was mentioned only briefly and didn’t have the im- portance of even being made a topic on the agenda. What, then, was back of it all? The most plausible explanation may be derived from these two points: 1. The British position historic- ally is to play the role of ‘‘broker”’ between the two nations in con- flict with each other. Probably there isn't the flimsiest idea in London that the wishes of the United States with respect to keep- ing Red China out of the U.N. would be rejected by two-thirds of the members of the United Na- tions Assembly. But by sticking to the Red China friends of the Peiping regime. This could.mean a whole lot in East- West trade negotiations and other diplomatic moves and could even catise the Moscow government to make concessions to the British and French. = ag z g 3 tige would sink so low in the United States that the absence or presence of the United States delegates in the U.N. would be meaningless. of a treaty a “serap of paper,” ‘there is not much use worrying Y Fs a9 > . tL} z i —the United action of the United Nations. passed in February 1951 a sol- emn resolution declaring Red China Nothing has happened since to punish the aggressor. Because mili- ‘ tary forces were not permitted to accomplish that purpose, moral force alone remained the best i | i Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (International News Service) Whether you like it or lump it That’s for the birds. We hop into our jallopies and away we go. - The north and south and the east and west are divided by white lines. We whizzerate in gasolined tangents in an effort to run out of scenery. It's our way of celebrating and it beats walking. So once again we ask you to drive within the invisible lines of courtesy and good judgment. Don't become a statistic in a black book. Go easy on the old derrick-bait. Hobson's choice used to be the héss nearest the door. Now it's the jallopus closest to the finance com- pany. From Our Files 15 Years Ago WINSTON CHURCHILL'S popu- larity rise called warning to Ger- many that Britain will stand firm against aggression. THEODORE CARDINAL INNIT- ZER plans to continue inspection If One Doesn‘t ‘Come Back’ After Rest, It's High Time to See a Good Physician By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. There are no particular signs symptoms by which physician can recognize the early cardiovascular f attet inclined to indulge in physical éffort or exercise you formerly enjoyed. You become winded if you run even a few blocks. You are Personal diapmoste ent, will = aawered by Dr. OL es | (Copyright 1984) “BOOTY” AND THE BEAST—It salesgirls to fit this customer with a pair of suitable boots. elephant was given the special shoes for comfort while walking on city pavement. } Gérmany. The big fellow is _THE PONTIAC PRESS. takes two West Berlin, Germany, The with a circus performing in West Girl Still Unidentified HARTFORD, Conn, (UP) — To- day is the 10th anniversary of the worst disaster in the history of the circus — The day the clowns cried, More than 6,000 persons, mostly children, were under the main tent of Ringling Brothers & Bar- num and Bailey's circts when death and destruction struck A flicked cigarette set fire to a seam in the wall of the tent. Like a flash of lightning, it raced along the seam to the top of the center pole and mushroomed into flames. Within seconds, the entire top of the huge tent was afire. Burning canvas began dropping onto the heads of the terrified spectators. In the holocaust that followed, 169 persons were killed and an- other 682 injured. There was terror and panic — but also heroism and sacrifice * It was all over in about 10 minutes, The 550-foot tent, water- ed with paraffin and gaso- » went up like a torch, Those nearest the exits were fortunate. It was only—a—few feet to safety. Others, seated in the rear rows of bleacher seats, leap- ed to the ground and fought their way .out of the inferno, Children were dropped into the arms of res- cuers. The band struck up the ‘‘Dis- aster March,"’ which could barely be heard above the scfeams and sobs of the milling thousands, Aer- ialists descended from a high wire (Advertisement) New Way to Stop Bleeding Piles Without Surgery New York, N. Y.—(Special)s—Medical research has ‘developed a bharmiess, pieas- ant, quick-acting wonder drug called RECTORAL that is taken internally and goes right to the seat of the trouble. It does away with the old-fashioned messy, disagreeat sle-to use erie nents. tories, et that ve little or e Usually in fustVa few dave bleeding with Circus Disaster Recalled: 169 Killed, 682 Injured Throughout the and relatives walked between rows of cots, seeking their loved ones. One by one the bodies were claimed until orily one remained. It was that of a girl about seven. Except for what appeared a deep blush, caused by the scorching heat, she seemed asleep rather than dead. Police have tried for 10 years to learn the identity of the child who, for want of a name, they night, parents {for Mrs. Shafer SE Representative’s Wife Dies After 37 Years of BATTLE CREEK wp — A long, successful marriage partnership dition became critica] less than a month after returning home from Although her illness began bast fall, Mrs. Shafer continued at her husband's side and kept up her activities ar home. The coup- le, married 37 years, had no chil- dren. The representative and his wife met for the first time during the first world war when she was a telephone switchboard operator and he was reporting for the old Battle Creek Moon-Journal. They met at Ft. Custer — Camp TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 switchboard operator in Detroit. Ha-Peart,_born in Tioga County, Penn., May. 29, 1897, was brought to Michigan as a child by her par- ents, telephone operator were married Oct. 31, 1917 and Mrs, Shafer stayed with Michigan Bell until the Women's Congressional Club at Washington. She attended the First Burial services wil] be conducted at Memorial Cemetery. Besides her husband, Mrs. Shafer is survived by her mother, Mrs Guy Mack of Battle Creek, and a sister, Mrs. Glen Mills of Albion, Malik Returns to London LONDON «—Soviet Ambassador Jacob Malik flew back to London last nght after a 12-day visit to Moscow, 7 Pinder om nz ing with the U, S. Naval Reserve Squadron of Grosse Ile Naval Air Station. D. W. McBrien of Farmington, R. R. Rohrer of Pontiac, and J, L. took training at Cecil Field in Jacksonville, Florida. Operations for the two weeks were concen- Kidney Slow-Down Restless Nights When kidney function slows down, many folks complain of nagging backache, head- aches, dissiness and joss of pep and energy. Don't suffer reetjess nights with these dis- comforts @ reduced kidney function is get- ting you down—due to such common causes as stress and strain, over-exertion or ex sure to cold, Minor bladder irritations due to cold or wrahg diet may cause getting up nights or frequent passages. Don't neglect your kidneys if these condi. tions bother you. Try Doan's Pille—a mild diuretic. Used successfully by millions for »ver 60 years. It's amazing how many times Doan's give happy relief from these diseom- forte—help the | 6 milesof kidney tubes and fil tere flush out waste. Get Doan’s Pills today. Washington Congregational -Church in Battle 8 Shafer flew home the day after] Creek where funeral services will May Bring his wife went into the hospital be conducted at 3:30 p. m. (EST) Wednesday, * » | Custer in those” days — where 3 From County Finish ite ne ay a Pearl, Shafer's future bride, 2 Ww k N IT ee was bossing the installation of m4 ren Nova raining i wet rl Oakland County men have = Michigan -Bell Telephone equip-| _ *"Fee ment. She had previously been’ a just completed two weeks of train- SAFETY : . Lee of Milford were among the per- If the held a Safety De- Partnership The newspaper reporter and the | sonne| of Squadron V F-734 which posit vault, ei jointly or in his DEPOSIT . VAULTS" own name, it will be sealed until a representative of the County Clerk’s office can be in attendance when it ended yesterday with the death of 193¢ —. yore ae she on trated in th efields of ordnance 1s opened. We understand that the 79 OARLAND AVE, - promot o ¢ operator 1M | and maintenance in purpose pro- PONTIAC Mrs. Paul W. Shafer, wife of the _ Battle Creek and Kalamazoo. _ oun of all yan se Michigan Republican congressman. 4. ae . ~ ; Mrs. Shafer, 57, died of a lin-|_ Mrs. Shafer, a Grey Lady at Belgium js a little larger in area the assets found therein, and in- gering illness in Leila Hospital at| Battle Creek's Percy Jones Hos-| than Maryland. sures that if a Will is left, it will be Battle Creek. She entered the hos-| Pital during World War II, was a (Advertisement) filed, and the wishes of the de- pital last Thursday when her con-|™é€mber of the Eastern Star and ° ceased will be fulfilled. a The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac ROUND. called “Little Miss 1565." She lies buried in a cemetery not far from the scene of the tragedy, Several times a year— particularly at Christmas and on the anniversary of the fire—two detectives visit the cemetery and place flowers on her grave. The circus made out-of-court set- tlements of nearly $4,000, re- sulting from the disaster. The last of the cases was closed only about a year ago. Suicide Attempt Is Thwarted by Auto Accident DETROIT (INS) — A _ Detroit woman's attempt at suicide by drowning was thwarted early to- day by an auto accident. Mrs. Olvin Clark, 26, said she got in an argument with her hus- band and was going to the Detroit River to commit suicide, when the car she was driving went out of control, climbed a curb = and FRIGIDAIRE Automatic Washer —Sn ippliz TRADE IN YOUR OLD APPLIANCE — IT IS WORTH PLENTY NOW DURING THIS ROUND-UP! UP © General Electric ® Speed Queen ® Admiral e Frigidaire e ireerite ® Kelvinator ERE FAMOUS BRANDS @® Easy °@ Maytag RCA Victor @ E Re Bony = m lronrile nb A You Can SAVE Both Hot Water and Suds © Uses Only 18 Gallons of Water © Reuses Hot Water and © Controlled Filling Suds ® Reg. Price $273.95 al basina te iegates' ana, pe ‘how eave act and joined the clowns and | knocked wa a fence and came Now you can have the famous more is completely gone. It has been | Other performers and attendants] to rest against a building. . Frigidaire at this new low price * New Guarantee tested in thousands of cases without any | who tried to quiet the stampeding| A chin laceration and possible return of bleeding. even years alterwards crowd. Failing in this, they helped bring out the dead and injured at the risk of their own lives, Most of the dead were found piled against an iron chute which led from the animal wagons, through an exit, to a cage in the center ring. Against this blockade’ they were burned, trampled or suffocated. There were stairs leading around the chute, but these, too, were choked with bodies. = | RECTORAL can now be offeines without prescription at Simm® J-V; Hallman Drug; Luttrell Pharmacy; Thrifty; Glankster & Jones; Dun- seith; Cole's; Purtney'’s. Rule; Quali- ty; Keego Drug, Keego Harbor, Dray- ton Plains; Auburn Heights. One Full Yeer Guerantee Gro- From Houses, Apartments, internal injuries resulted from the smash-up. Mrs. Clark, who has no divers license, is held for observation in Receiving Hospital. Bandit Repeats Robbery, Steals $75 Second Time BALTIMORE ® — Pharmacist David Karlin reported to police that exactly the same thing hap- pened to him last night as last Friday: has made it the millions choice of Reg. $303. 95 e 269... with all the deluxe features that a ay id S gather. model ® Demonstrators ® Floor Models Two completely usable open ends —Handy-Do-All ironing points that go into every tuck, This is a truly deluxe 7.7 Cubic Ft. Refrigerator Imagine a 7.7 Cubic Foot Frigidaire at this new’ unheard of low ‘price. This is an offer you can’t afford to miss. See it ! 4 79° ruffle and cery Stores and Restaurants. Re- An y senalant A gunman walked into his drug- $ 95 — sail eaty Mee hours. ee up at the State Armory. Am- | store and robbed him of $75. More- —— bulances, delivery wagons—any- | Over, the bandit was the same Rox Ex Company thing on wheels—transported the | man, about 24 years old, dressed With Your Old 1014 Pent. St. Bk. Bidg. FE 4-94602 living to overcrowded hospitals, in a blue sports shirt and brown ‘ the dead to the morgue. pants. | ERPRISE CAN YOU QUALIFY iS FOR OUR NEW, LOWER BIG IN VALUE! te ” LOW IN PRICE! PREFERRED DRIVER” | Mitt 4 rene cage CALL—GET FULL $4 9095 AUTO INSURANCE? FACTS AND COSTS = _/ FOR YOUR CAR wn Your Sage : Famous Look-In Oven Research has proved that certain good drivers are less apt to have accidents than others. And because these “preferred drivers” run fewer risks we offer Convenient Cook Top Light : them lower auto insurance rates, as well as these other important MICHIGAN 30” Wide for Small Kitchens : In- MUTUAL ne’ benefits. . . WATER HEATER po Hac toga Finish In ° ves get e mos complete Proweuon money “n oe 9 5 Pay only os ; @ You are insu m a company with a 42 year old recor nnies a | . for prompt, fair payment of claims—nearly two hundred pe day! NO MONEY DOWN! million dollars paid in claims and dividends to date. $10 Down ay: . @ You share in cash dividend savings. f : @ You may use our pay-as-you-drive plan—spread your in- surance costs over many months, Act today! Shop () (0) ) t () [] SEKEF { 73 W. HURON ST.—FEDERAL 2-0141 : by “hi Phone i 3 Atoms cts Comomtin «a of PONTIAC | MICHIGAN MUTUAL LABILITY COMPANY * wi 5] WwW. Huron St. Open Daily 9 to 5: 30—F ridays 9 to 9 (Except Setul ice Dept.) ‘ Through its offlicte # writes Fire Insurancd ond Allied Lines - 12 VY * . ‘ r Cm : . ‘oo The Caine Mutiny He had decided that she was not et >: : mine. | too old to waste a year or two. teaiiote te pies ee plano to He might marry her, he might amuse the admiral ts not. But their relationship was too a Sih n he Warns of bis | valuable an “experience” to be . death, he asks for a quick / out short. May's letters were all — that could be desired: long, loving, CHAPTER cheery, and usually containing hardship soothed his His coding duties involved hours a day of drudgery in| marks were high, and the language cement vault underground, and |in her letters improved each month. con- > good news: She was enjoying College, though she felt like a grandmother, she said, among the freshmen. Her He avoided the girls and the reading newly arrived mail one liquor for a couple of weeks, but | sultry July afternoon. Flies buzzed then the admiral had another par- at the screens, though there was ty, and Willie got drunk, and soon | no attraction inside the room but he was back at the old round. | the smell of hot dry wood. Keefer Honolulu was full of easy pleas- |lolled on his side, naked except ures. | for white shorts, hix hairy stom- ti , _ | ach bulging over the waistband me Heeti paryorres pgm |“Ch—t on a bicycle!” he ex-| _Gounty _..._~ | Claimed, rising on one elbow again—Caine, ain't it?” “Yes,” said Willie, absorbed in a letter from May. “Well listen, boy, T think my | brother Tom is on that ship!" Willie glanced up in surprise. “T think it’s the Caine," said Keeler. “Never can make out my paep's doggone handwriting. Here, how do you read this?” Willie peered at the word indi- cated by Keefer’s thumb. ‘‘Caine all right." “Sure enough. They sent. him there from communications school. Whaddya know!” “Fine. It's a lucky break. It'll be like having a relative on board Does he like the ship?"’ “H--l, no. He wrote Pop it's the foulest bucket in the Navy — but that don't mean nothing,’ he add ed quickly, seeing Willie wince “H-l, don't take ahything Tom says too serious. Tom's queer as a + raped bill. The Caine's like it as - . * * It was the first of September when Willie and Keefer staggered into the BOQ at four in the morn- ing. full of hog meat and whisky which they hadeconsumed at a hilarious luau Next thing Willie knew, he was being shaken, and a strange voice wag whispering loudly, “Ketth? Keith? Are you Keith?” He opened his eyes. Day was just dawning. In the dim light he saw a short, swarthy ensign in shapeless frayed khakis standing over him. “Yes, I'm Keith.” “Yep. We're shoving off at 0800 to da some target towing. your gear together.” “Look, I'll be glad to report aboard, Paynter, but I'm. still attached to the officer pool here.” “No, you're not. That's all fixed. We've got a visual dispatch de- taching you. We've been waiting | for you a long time, Keith.” He said it pleasantly, did what I could. Missed you by a few hours back in May when you shoved off. They stuck me into the officer pool——" “H-1, I wouldn't blame you if ag never showed up,"’ said Payn- ane we leaving Pearl for good? “Why?’ , . “If we are I'll wake up Roland and say good-by.”’ “No. We're not leaving for good. At least not according to orders." . . ° * * ; The releawanivn lay on their cots, “What's the name of your ship! “Better come along. I'm Payn- | ter, from the Caine.’ “The Caine?’ Willie sat up “She's here?"’ Get | but Willie | felt obliged to defend himself. “I | Outside an BOQ in the chill ‘misty morning stood a small gray | Navy dump truck. ‘‘Not very clas: | sy,” said Paynter, ‘‘but that’s all I could get at five in the morn- ing. Pile in.’ At the head of steps leading down to the fleet landing the truck pulled up. Paynter honked. Three | sailors lying in a half - canopied | greasy gray boat alongside the | dock rose wearily and mounted the steps. They loaded Willie's gear into the boat while Paynter turned the truck in to a car pool a few yards down the road. The two officers | stepped into -the boat and sat on cracked black leather seats inside the canopy “All right, Meatball, shove off,’ said Paynter to the cox- swain, a fat sailor dressed in amazingly dirty rags, with a pure-white new hat tilted for- ward almost to his nose. A bell clanged in Willie's ear and he jumped. His head was no | more than an inch from the bell. | He shifted to another cushion. The | boat engineer started up the mo-) jtor, after several failures which | he commented on with filthy epi- thets delivered..in an ‘indifferent monotone. He was perhaps nineteen, small and gaunt, with a face blackened half by stubble and half by grease, and, covered with pimples. Long, - coarse black hair fell over his tiny squinting eyes. He was ad- dressed by the other sailors as “Horribte.“* Willie looked around at the boat The gray paint was blistering off |the wood, and ragged patches showed where new paint had been | daubed over old without scraping Two of the three portholes of the stead of glass. “Say, Paynter,”” he shouted ‘what duties do you suppese I'll get aboard ship?”’ he said, with a brief, happy smile, and closed them again. The gig rounded a point of Ford Island and headed into the western channel. At last they came along- side a limp chain ladder hanging over the side of a new destroyer, the outer ship of four in the re- pair berth. “Let's go,” said Paynter, ‘‘the |Caine's the one inboard of this. The men will bring your gear.” Willie went up the jingling lad- der, saluted the smart OOD of the destroyer, and crossed the deck. A tarry plank laid between | the ships over four feet of open water led to the Caine. He hung | back. Paynter mounted the board, | saying, ‘“This way.’ As he crossed, the Caine rolled and the plank wobbled violently. Paynter jumped off it to the Caine deck. It occurred to Willie that if Payn- | ter had fallen from the plank he would have been crushed between | the two ships. With this picture | bright in his mind. Willie set foot |on the plank and pranced across ‘like a circus acrobat. | Halfway, hanging ever the open water, he felt the plank heave | upward. He leaped for life, and landed on the Caine in the arms of the OOD, staggering him. “Ho! Don't be so eager,"’ the OOD. you're jumping into.” ‘Rabbitt, this is the long - Ensign Keith,”” said Paynter. “So I gathered,’’ Lieutenant (jg) Rabbitt shook Willie's hand. He was of middle size, with a narrow face and an air of rustic good hu- | mor. ‘‘Welcome aboard, Keith. Say, Paynter, this Ensign Harding showed up too, half an hour ago.” “All kinds of new blood,” said Paynter. The focus of Willie's mind wid- said lost | TRADE- VEN 29% Regordless of size or condition on Guaranteed First Quality CUSTOM BUILT Your choice of Tape and Slat Color—CASH & CARRY IN Your Old VENETIAN BLINDS SAVE ETIAN BLINDS | winpow SHADE TRADE-IN TOO! SAVE 25% See Fa ee ar sorte” TS Get New JOANNA WEST- ERN MILLS CUSTOM- MADE WINDOW SHADES. ___ DMAN’S | i SHADE & BLIND MFG. CO, Phone FE 4-7323 canopy had cardboard in them in ;~ ever the racket of the motor, | | Paynter opened his eyes. "Mine, “You don’t know what | THE PONTIAC PRESS, |ened beyond—the plank now -and 'took in the quarterdeck of the | Caine. It was a place of noise, dirt, bad smells, and thuglike strangers. e | Half = dozen sailors were clank- | img at the rusty deck with metal | serapers, Other sailors were | walking past, cursing under erates of cabbages on their backs. “Okay, Keith, you're logged aboard,” said Rabbitt. ‘“‘Paynt, will | you take him down to the exec?’ “Sure. Follow''me,. Keith.’ Paynter led Willie down a lad- der and through a dark stifling |passageway, ‘This is the half |deck."’ He opened a door. ‘This is the wardroom.' They passed through an untidy rectangular room as wide as the ship, mostly filled by a long table set with a stained cloth, silver boxes cereal, pitchers of milk. Magazines and books were scattered on the loung- ing chairs and black leather couch. Willie noted with horror several secret publications among comic- strip books, leg-art magazines, and frayed Esquires. Leading forward from the middie of the wardroom was a passageway of staterooms. Paynter entered. the first room on the right, | “Here's Keith, sir,” he said, pushing aside the curtain in the ' doorway. “Kelth, this is the ex- ecutive officer, Lieutenant Gor- ton,”’ | “Greetings, Keith. Where the hell you been?” said Lieutenant Gor- ton in a high voice, and swung mammoth thighs out of his bunk. He shook Willie's hand Paynter said, ‘‘Where do we put | him?"’ ““J-~-s, I don't know. I'm hungry | Are they bringing some fresh eggs off the beach?" Those eggs we |got in New Zealand will dissolve | your fillings by now.’ “Oh, here's the captain, maybe he has an idea,"’ said Paynter, looking off into the passageway. “Sir, Ensign Keith has reported aboard."’ “Collared him, did you? Nice work,’’ said a voice full of irony |and authority, and the captain of the Caine came to the doorway. ha- ked. In one hand he carried a cake of Lifebuey soap, in the other a lighted cigarette. He had a creased old . young face, blond hair, and a flabby white - bedy. “Welcome aboard, Keith!’’ “Thank you, sir.’ Willie felt an urge to salute, to bow, in some way to express reverence for su- preme authority, But he remem- of breakfast and ‘tray en the deck made of a | last hours of decay, manned by | beréd a regulation about not salut- ing a. superior when he was un- covered. And he had, fever seen a more uncovered superior than his commanding officer. Captain de Vries grinned at Wii- lie’'s diseomfiture, and scratched his -behind with the soap cake. “I hope you know. something about communications, Keith."’ “Yes, sir, That's what I’ve been doing for CincPae while — while waiting for the ship, sir.’’ “Good. Paynter, you're an as- sistant engineering officer again as * Paynter's goomy face was suffused with fleeting hap- piness. He sighed like a horse having a saddle taken off. ‘‘Got any idea, Captain, where we stash the new communicator ?"’ “Did Maryk put a bunk in the clipping shack?’’ “Yes, sir. That's where we've stuck the other new one, Harding.” “Well, tell Maryk to hang anoth- er bunk in there.” “Pretty damn crowded in that clip shack even for one, Captain,"’ said the exec, “War is a terrible thing. I've get to shower, before I curdie.” Captain de Vriess puffed his cig- arette, ground it out in an ash- three-inch shell, and walked off. “That's it,’’ he said.. ‘“Take him to the clip shack, Paynt."’ ‘Sir,’ said Willie, ‘I'm ready to get to work any time.” Gorton yawned, and. regarded Willie with amused eyes. ‘Don't burn out any bearings. Just mosey around the ship for a couple of days. Get used to it. It's goirig. to be your home for a long, long time Willie wandered around the Caine for a couple Of hojirs, poking his nose down ladders and hatchways apd into doorways: He was ig- nored by the sailors as though he were invisible, except when he faced one in a passageway. Then the sailor would flatten automat- ically against the bulkhead, as though to allow a big animal to pass. Willie's sight - seeing tour con- firmed his first impression. The Caine was a pile of junk ip the hoodlums, He drifted down to the ward- room. Overhead the metal scrap- ers pounded loudly. The long table was covered with green baize now, and the magazines and books had been shelved. The room was empty except for a very tall skinny colored boy in sweaty white undershirt and trous- TUESDAY, JULY the deck with a mop. “im: the | | before him. eyes bulging as though Willie had on the table and the Silex, an athletic supporter. brother Roland. We were mates in midshipmen's school. He's | here in Peart now at the BOQ.” | down here.’ down the coffee cup. ‘‘Come into | my room and tell me about your. | self. crisscrossed with pipes at the head | of the passageway. shaved and dressed, Willie de- | scribed his days at Furnald Hall | with Roland. 6, 1954; . ers, who was listiessly dabbing at new officer, = Keith,” said Willie. “Might I have a cup of coffee?"’ “Yassuh.” The sewart's mate put down the mop, and pol Bhan to a Silex on a metal bureau in the. corner. “What's -your name?" said Wil- lie. “Whittaker, suh, steward’s mate second. Cream and sugar, suh?” “Please.” Willie glanced around. The steward's mate set the coffee ae ae Se ee oe “How do you like it?” The Negro backed away, his whipped out a knife. ‘Bes’ ship in de whole Navy, suh.” He grabbed the mop and ran out aad, door, The clanking became louder: work party was starting to chip | paint. “The air in the wardroom | was growing hot and foul as the | sun rose higher. He laid his head “Hullo;’”’ said a voice, stumbled sleepily past him toward | dressed in nothing but | | It occurred to Willie that the | conventions ef modesty aboard | the Caine were simpler than | those among the Iroquois In- | dians, | “‘Keith,”’ he answered. “Fine. You work for me.” “You're Mr. Keefer?”’ “You. Willie said, “Sir, I know your! room- “are you |. Keith or Harding?” The speaker | laheeed the stuffy room. In shelves welded over the desk and along Keefer’s bunk were crammed vol- umes of poetry, fiction, and philos- ophy. “You've really ‘got the books,"’ said Willie. “Roland told-me you're a writ- er." “I was trying to be one before the war,” said Keefer, wiping lath- er off hig face with a wet ragged towel Get to do any writing now?” “Some, Now, gbout your du- ties — we'll make you custodian of registered pubs, of course there’li be coding—— The steward’s mate Whittaker in- serted his face through the dusty green curtain. ‘“‘Chadan,”’ he said, and withdrew. The mysterious word resurrected a figure [n the upper bunk; it rose, thrashed feebly, jumped to the deck, and com- menced dressing itself. “Chadan?" said Willie. “Chow down,. in steward patois —lunch,” said Keefer. ““‘The name of this vegetable with a face is Carmody, Carmody, this is the elu- sive Mr. Keith.” “Hello,” said Willie. “Um,” said the figure, gfdping for shoes in-the bottom of-a black closet. “Come along," said Keefer, “and +break™bread with the officers of the Caine. There is, no escape, Keith. And the bread itself isn't too terrible.” To Be Continued 32 Years Lost WEST HARTFORD, Conn. — (UP)—The night after his com- pany presented him with a $150 watch for 32 years service, burglars broke into the home of Andrew Hansen and stole it. “Better Things in a aa }DR. H. A. MILLER Optometrist 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 Sight” OMSL LLP LPP Closed Wednesday Afternoons wer € ‘Really? We'll have to get him | Keefer coolly put | Keefer lived in an iron cubicle | There were two bunks installed against the curving hull and a desk piled three feet high with beeks, pamphiets, wire baskets | publications in a scrambled heap, en top of which was a stack ef freshly laundered khakis, | socks, and underwear. There was | a prone naked figure in the upper | bunk, While the communications officer RECONDITIONED As An ELECTRIC PORTABLE Sewing Machine New Motor His eye rambled | SEW ...and... SAVE! New Sew Light i Carrying Case Bobbin Winder EVENINGS CALL FE 2-1048 SEWING MACHINE SALES Call FE 2-7848 ee | SAVE HUNDREDS DURING OUR DRIVE AND DEAL MONTH d 40 West Pike St. Don't miss the big telévision Sullivan. Sunday evening, 7:00 to 8:00 P.M. Station Ws8K, Channd 3 CENTRAL LINCOLN. MERCURY SALES, MERCURY . YOU CAN'T MATCH IT FOR THE MONEY hit, “TOAST OF THE TOWN” with Ed @ Drive test a 161-hp Mercury. ‘Check the big savings in economy, upkeep, and future trade-in value. Deal test a Mercury. Discover how our high- volume sales et us give you more. INC. Phone FE 2-9167 PONTIAC'S OLDEST INSURANCE AGENCY Insurance That's Really It’s Sec ure! Sure Because 609 Community Nat’! Bank Bldg. FE 2-9224 Vote Conducted Under Guards Balloting Irregularities - Bring Martial Law to 5 Oklahoma Counties OKLAHOMA CITY wW—An esti- mated 500,000 Oklahomans were voting today in the state's primary election, some of ‘them under the | watchful eye of National Guards- men assigned to assure an honest election. Democratic and Republican pri- maries are being held for the U.S. | Senate, governor, Congress, state | and local races. . . * Martial law was in effect in five eastern counties — Sequoyah, Adair, Cherokee, Leflore and Pitts- burg—and Gov. Johnston Murray has ordered ‘plainclothesmen to su- | pervise voting in some unidenti- fied Oklahoma county precincts. |Oklahoma County, the most popu- | lous area of the state, includes | | Oklahoma City. It will cast close | | to 100,000 votes, according to pre- | | election estimates. Myrray ordered martial law for | the five counties after charges were filed against 10 persons last | fashionable Ascot track in England to wear an eye-catching hat—a | jockey with mount at the rail. \ THE PONTIAC PRESS) TU oe a se: THE HORSY SET—Mprs. Netta Tudor is one of many women at Note the earrings. | am Mohammed fired the chief min- ESDAY, JUISY 6, '1954 East Pakistan Bans Communist Party DACCA, East Pakistan up —Fast Pakistan's new military* “govern ment has outlawed the Communist party as a danger to public peace. The Reds, who supported the re- gime of ousted Chief Minister Ab- dul Kasem Fazlul Huq, were ac- cused of inciting riot#in Aprg in me more than 500 persons were Maj. Gen. Iskander Mirza, theJ state's new governor, signed an order declaring the party and all its branches illegal in East Pak- istan. Following the April riots and statements by Fazlul Huq demand- ing provincial autonomy for east Pakistan, Governor General Ghul- ister and his government Gossip Is Outlawed STAFFORD SPRINGS, Conn. — (UP)—A woman's club here has one strict rule — gossiping is banned. The club has- only six members. pe slisappearance of a “lake” on the Disoyipearance of Lake on Mars Puzzles Japs TOKYO @ — Japanese astron- omers were puzzied today over the de 7 planet Mars, now making one of Tsuneo Saeki, a leading Japan- ese authority on Mars, said ober- vations made from the Osaka Elec- trical Science Hall failed to dis- close the landmark. It was clearly visible in 1939 un- der similar conditions, Saeki said. Son of Radio Star Dies; Plan Autopsy SANTA MONICA? Calif. uw» — An autopsy today is expected to déter- Where CREDIT cost less then 2¢ @ DR. SPENCER OATES, Optometrist 9.30-5.30 daily 9:30-.12:30 Wed. 9.30.8 13 NO. SAGINAW ST. (MD Fr; mine if the son of radio's Andy suffered a fatal kidney ailment | because of accidenta] poisoning John Joseph Correll, 7, suc-| cumbed yesterday after being hos- pitalized four days. He was the son of Charles J. Correll of the Amos 'n’ Andy show. ~ The coroner's office said the boy Insure With Agencies Of course it wasn’t your fault! Still, somebdy has to pay the : |week for voting irregularities, | Displaying This Emblem iF ? Guardsmen will be in uniform | P y & bills for damages and personal injury. Your Accident Insurance ; # Freak Ander j and will have authority to make | u 1c Ca t urses ive sagy Ves Crowters-Bowe MW. Mettontocher will do the trick—if you have any. If you haven't, why not Free Book ... Tells All | 2™¢*s. However, they will be un- see us for full details? it ene FC Anglemier-Strait Meynerd Johnsen Daniels Agene ' | armed. It is Oklahoma’ s first elec- P ] Di if S Ine. , oe neni, AG i Sells Nothing! | ivr iv." mer mani PEOPIe Diversified Service|} “=, — er Tl PATEL ENCY, | =e = W. A. Pollock a | ° aw although snide dred The idea of the public health] seven through nine of Pontiac — Wm. W. Donaldson — Wilkinson Insurance INC, | If you hear Bill) Murray, gained nationwide |""S€ as a person active only ta > health Senartene " Baker # Wansen Agency —- Our Own Personalized Service on Every Policy ; < erantine cas - city healt nt w = my | but don’t un- bagel pes ms ye ae at [a featantine cose ee) Wee oon ir sees jo twe nurses License, tne. sea vi gi al ga 504 Pontiac Bank Bidg. FE 56-8172 7 derstand, per- ard more than imes dur- | sis control is no longer accurate, Mrs. Burrell said. Nurses wnen- | ° haps you don't ing his term eo . | according to Mrs. Mary Burrell, | perienced in public health work ane aarerteement Sponsored by 4 | ing das Sen. Robert S. Kerr's bid for a | Supervisory nurse in the Pontiac | Must agree to take trajning work Pontiac Association of Insurance Agents i i U R E e BE U in é e | you'll learn from this re- | S¢cond term has produced the hot-| City Health Department. . eae with their regular duties if vealing 43-page booklet, | ‘st race of the campaign. ee | “While communicable disease ———! “Your Hearing and Your [| '"® him is former Gov. Roy | control is stil! part of our duties,” Health.” | Turner, who has criticized Kerr's Cv I | ; attendance record in the Senate | Mrs. Burrell explained, “we have 4 | Contains such facts as the | and expansion of his oit company | assumed responsibility in | many | . fetta = Juana cad atu: interests in foreign nations other fields."’ ‘ ; f a : ; ' ees Kerr and Turner, both former The five nurses working with 2 : on hearing; whether — : : ee. : urrel-have-been-active ina oe ae f , , : and have spent freely in the cam-| variety of health projects so far = @ ; 2 ‘3 — other revealing facts | Paign. Observers rate the race a this year pom. BH ‘ ns : And there's not a word in it tossup In the maternal and child health on : = ts ; about Sonotone or its amaz- Republicans have contests in the | field two parenthood courses have 7 ing a transistor hearin Senate and governor races that are been taught by ‘Miss Sara Bridson, aid 8 attracting interest. but the toal| R. N. Of special interest to ex- F 7 ' y GOP vote will probably not ex- pectant parents, the course will : + asap ¢ seskesen eas ceed 50,000 be offered again this fall Bd a Tan oe Staff nurses also make visits ;to parents’ homes both before SONOTONE Italian Commies and after the birth of a child. Visits ~ - are designed primarily to educate Hearing Service Protest Remark parents and give demonstrations of 357 N. Saginaw FE 2-1225 by Mrs. Luce | Proper health procedures. Pontiac | “On theae visits, littlg actual : ROME,: Italy w—The Commu- | nursing is done,” said Mrs, Bur- -nists aré needling Haly's govern- | reli, “because the Pontiac Vis- : ment again about something U.S iting Nurses Assn. can provide ¢ No Contract Ambassador Clare Boothe Luce is actual bedside care.” a supposed to have told newsmen in Si WEL 0 | America Families faced, with medical | | Red party boss Palmiro Togliatti | costs which they are unable to | told the Chamber of Deputies Mrs. | P@y are referred by the city nurses 4 | Luce, arriving in America recent-| to agencies whieh can help them. 'ly for a vacation. told reporters! Mrs. Burrell's staff has assisted Italy plans to intensify the “‘strug- | in the Well Child Clinic at Lake- Call Today gle against communism.” side were = ae sayy ° This. Togiiatti sald, seemed ta (CS © -08. =. re Gregory Oil Co. indicate the envoy has access | Ship of the Southwest Civic Assn. , 94 East Walton Blvd. || “even to secret plans of the gov. Some 385 examination, have YOU'LL ENJOY DREWRYS MORE... Phone FE 5-6141 ernment."’ He formally demanded | been given children 1 to 5 years : whether Premier Mario Scelba or old and residing in the project. ’ were going todo their legitimate Other activities this year in. YOU'LL ENJOY MORE DREWRYS... duty and protest’ to the U.S. gov- cluded helping with the Salk polio SERVICE ernment 7 tests in the city and running a Ci? ae ; Such . formal demand requires patch test for tuberculosis in stu-/| § 552 Zeke ' J All Makes. Work I! » reply by Scelba or Piccioni dents under 15 years old in n grades : h r Th t Ss : Cuaranteed Last winter a large group of ] : Communist and left-wing senators New Park on superior . PHONE asked, without success, that the | er PAUL. M = Mieeeesta 4 government declare Mrs. Luce un- inn, ) — a_i | F t 4.2 525 acceptable last winter. They) ‘has received a deed for 3,320 acres ~° j charged her with criticizing Italy to be used as a park in the lower : in a conference with ———— Manitou River valley on Lake. Su- -j Hi A M PTON newsmen. | perior’s North Shore, Conservation ‘ie i | Commissioner Chester Wilson says, . ELECTRIC COMPANY Warren G. Harding was the first | the property contains some of the . 825 W. Heres President of the United States to; wildest and most picturesque scen- . broadcast a.radio speech, in 1923. ery in the area. | ) No tull feelin Q eling Always full Havor / | LL — j With Drewrys, there's no limit to your enjoyment! Because ‘ > Gt Drewrys is the beer that’s Calorie-Controlled—the calorie ) content never varies. And Drewrys is brewed with high protein ingredients. Controlled every step of the way through Gar Pri an exclusive brewing method that makes it extra light. You ur Former Price 4 — , ee or a ee Ven ieee $20 - $25 * 18 can enjoy as much as you like with never a worry about a Make the Famous styled “TurTone wiaith Ne combine Crystal Price Now Only $8.98 ~ full feeling afterwards. Yet every drop of Drewrys retains all ie ou — popular See. Tee combats sturdy construction and safety the fine, hearty flavor you dream of—satisfying always! Drewrys One-Bottle features cabin t truly a wonderful buy at the ene low price of Prescription Sunglesses y = qweys $8.98. Supply is definitely, imbted! At Same Low Price! _ And right there is the one big difference in beers—yours Test T sy! 100 STYLES, SHAPES and COLORS . | iP NO tel est Today Price Includes Frames and to ‘enjoy in every bottle Drewrys — feeling— ee eee cae Geuicar Wael oe Waaaees Kee a ALWAYS full flavor! The man’s beer women love! Your very first bottle proves itt Coase « gold mount in various sha sr + aan Here is the finest beer you ever "ONE | PRICE! You JUST CAN'T PAY MORE! : _ a eer he other Lenses ground to your exact needs, of required. Your choice of styles, shapes or colors, : no matter what you may have at one same price to everybody. YOU SusT CAN'T paid for other beers! ! ne aus : , enonan ten os Tey R TODAY! ALL rye We alse fil Ocstists Ovettete Presertptions DUPLICATED Ae ' } ‘ Y t our - / UNION at ton presage febe®. preserip- RbrLaceD sce ) _ | | No Switching! Mo Extras! || | : | No Appointment a 3% $. SAGINAW ST. D. E E R ; ’ < ‘ ' Ce ts ee 74 . & Gat.—Open Prides Nights ‘9 0 P.M : : Poses: ft . Drewrys Lid., U.S.A. Inc., South Bend, Indione s } i mt ~ we OPTICIANS — Over © Buove Seed of Mie 8 7° te - ; va FOUNDED 1904 ‘7 A ¥ ; » 4 ” = = t og + ; + a . | 3." = ; ; . 1 d 1 | \ ‘ j j ‘: Ee “s é iy +e * : growing when grass is cut too short. He compares the situation who lost his great strength when Delilah cropped his hair Like Samson, Crider says, the grass will regain its strength and begin growing once more i i! 3 i 3 Ri, ih | ner of Brown City. No date has *| folks got their religious guidance ‘on School Plan IRENE SOROKA Mr. and Mrs. William Soroka of Dryden announce the engagement of their daughter, Lrene, to C. D. Wanner of Brown City, He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carmen Wan- been set for the wedding. MARIAN JEAN WELCH Mr. and Mrs. Mason J. Welch of Walled Lake announce the engage- | Marian | ment of their daughter, Jean, to Russell Curl, son of Mrs. Florence Curl of Walled Lake, No wedding date has been set., ROCHESTER — In the days be- fore Michigan was a state — and | before Rochester was a village — from circuit riders — ministers wha rode horseback to settlement towns. The circuit rider would stay for | several weeks, holding church serv- Livonia to Ballot Program in Farmington, Redford Townships Up for Vote July 19 CLARENCEVILLE — Voters in the school district which includes Farmington and Redford townships as well as the city of Livonia will be called to the polls July 19 to ballot on a $350,000 school building . Milage necessary for the pro- gram is estimated by school attor- neys to be six mills, spread over a period of 20 years, with hopes of paying off the bonds in 16 years. Unless additional class rooms are provided, half day sessions will be }.unavoidable by the 1955-56 school year, school officials have stated. Represents Circle 417 FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP Mrs. Lauretta Ozarzak, regent of Our Lady of Sorrows, Circle 417, represented the circle at the 1954 Convention of the Daughters of Isabella, held in Marquette re- cently. Deaths in Nearby Communities terday at St. Paul's Lutheran -| jorie; a son, Lyman vil- | brothers, Arthur, Cyril, id and Sale of $540,000 liam; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will M. Barnes of Royal Oak; two brothers, Roy of Royal Oak, and Milton of Ypsilanti; and two sis- ters, Mrs. Edith Osgood of Royal Oak and Mrs. Carrie Burnard, of Troy. Dwight L. Baird TROY TOWNSHIP — Funeral service Dwight L. Baird, 44, of 2190 E. teen Mile, was held at 2 p.m. today at the Spiller-Gramer Funeral Home, Clawson, with bur- ial in Forest Lawn Cemetery. He died Sunday at home. Surviving are his widow, Mar- t; four Eric, of Detroit; and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight G. Baird, of Detroit. in-Bonds Approved SOUTH LYON .— The Municipal Finance Commission in Lansing has notified the Board of Edueation of its approval of the sale and is- Observe 127th Anniversary of Congregational Church ices in whatever building was available, an destabljshing Sunday schools, On one such stay, in July of 1827, the Rev. Isaac W. Ruggles — together with 10 Rochester- area residents established Michigan's oldest Congregational ehurch, the First Congregational Church of Rochester. The 127th anniversary of founding of the church was com- memorated Sunday, with the Rev. John E, Yuells outlining the his- tory and future prospects of the eongregation. The 10 members of the original congregation have multiplied to 580. But growth was not constant. Between 1833 and 1837, the church nearly dissolved, By 1860, the church had but 60 members. *Dedication and permanen- cy came in July, 1877. Currently, the church is. com- templating expansion, with a new parsonage slated for construction on six acres of recently purchased land in the village's North Hill section. In addition, the building com- mittee ig now in the process of studying plans for a new church on the site, 500 Enrolled in Farmington Play Program FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP—An enrollment of 500 children in the township summer recreation pro- gram was announced today by di- rector Warren Piche. iche also revealed a change in the bus schedule. Stops now will be made at Park Hill and Orchard Lake Rd. and at the Norwest Trail- er Park at Pershing and Orchard Lake Rd The stops at 14-Mile and Or- chard Lake Rds. and-Barjow and Orchard Lake Rds. will be discon- tinued. Piche reported 150 youngsters were registered at Noble play- ground, 150 at William Grace and 250 at the city playground \Detroit Tour Arranged LAPEER — A trip to a Detroit radio station, newspaper and a visit to a Detroit Tiger ball game will be made by Lapeer County 4H Club members tomorrow, The group will leavé the post office here at 8:30 a.m. JANICE POWELL Mr. and Mrs, James T. Powell, of Huntington, Ind., have announced the engagement of their daugh- ter, Janice Ann, to Val Gene Younger, soy of Mr. and Mrs. David Younger, of Clarkston. No date has been set for the wedding. 8:30 a.m, today at Sullivan and Son Funeral Home. Requiem | suance of $540,000 in bonds for a Mass was at|9 a.m, today at} new high school. >———St. Mary's Church, and. burial wast" Bids for the sale of the bonds | in Mt. Olivet Cemetery. He died | wil! he opened July 19. Saturday at home. < A contract has been let for the en ee construction of the addition to the sa, two daughters, Mrs. Nicholas} New Hudson School, and work is D'Annunzio, of Detroit, and Ger-| under way. It is hoped that the oe St ane building will be ready by the open- Agnes Samuel, ; fie, Send) ee Oe Be. w of Big Beaver, ong SE teettaa nas bat Mrs. . Werbinski and Mrs. Cal- vin Losey of Clawson, and three brothers, John of Romeo, Frank and George of Big Beaver, and oe © Prompt, was said of 1205 * @ All Work yester- «i Bussard requiem mass Gears 84 Ookland Ave. He died ! w, Gladys; and 2 son, Wil- \ ~~! ndable Service Guaranteed Electric — Free Parking Phone FE .2-6445 p= \ _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1054” Five Missing in Small Boat Lake Huron in Vicinity of Drummond Island DETOUR — The Coast Guard to- day was to continue searching the Lake Huron area near Drummond Island for five persons, including two children, who have been miss- ing in a small open boat since yes- terday afternoon. Missing are: George Smick, 62, of Dearborn Township. Alfred Onnela, 41, ef Oak Park, his two children, Betty Onnela, 13, of Oak Park Larry Onnela, 6, of Oak Park, , and George Onnela, 56, of Drummond | Island. The five left the Onnela home on Big Shoal Bay, Drummond Island, at 1 p.m. yesterday in a 15-foot metal inboard beat. Mrs. Raymond Onnela speculated that they might have had engine trouble and put into a secluded harbor for the night ‘‘or they may have hit a shoal and capsized." Their wives reported them miss- ing last night when the boat failed to return. The men said they were going on a short trip and would re- turn to take their wives for a ride. Lake Huron was calm last night and early today. Coast Guard officials said a launch from Detour would be sent }oyt to aid in the search for the the five. One of 60 of the nation's workers are employed if hospitals. . Eight Girl Scouts to Tour Canada, United States 171 will turn to reality tomorrow when they leave on a trip through Quebec, Bar Harbor, Maine and Niagara Falls. + Main source of revenue. for the jaunt was the sale of peanuts through the ‘year. Mrs. Lee Aldinger and Mrs. Worth Mallory, the eight will travel by station wagon, sleeping in the open or visiting Scout camp sites in the United States and Canada. Making the journey will be Bon-4 nie Axford, Gail Crissman, Janet Maitrott, Pat Norman, Carol Hinze, | Joan Mason, Karen Fink and Bar- bara Ledford ——EE ‘Business Women Name Officers SOUTHEIELD TOWNSHIP Temporary officers and commit- tee chairmen were appointed at a recent meeting of the newly formed Southfield Township Business and Professional Women’s Club. Mrs. J. A. Blacklaw was named temporary chairman, while Mrs. Edna S. Milford was elected sec- retary and Mrs. Leeta Muir was elected treasurer. Heading the by- laws and education committees will be Mrs. Florence B. Grimes and Mary Lue Lake, respectively. Speakers at the meeting were Lawrence Fiferlik, who spoke on ba M. Dunlap, District 1 organiza- Sientists -believe that dinosaurs were the ancestors of birds. ROCHESTER — The vacation): dream of eight Girl Scouts of Troop | 4 Along with their two leaders, | j tion chairman, } MRS. JOSEPHINE LAWYER | Recently resigned as Oakland | County Home Demonstration agent, Mrs. Josephine H. Lawyer has accepted a position as Consumer ‘Information Agent in the Detroit area. She will promote better buy- ing and use of igan products. Mrs. Lawyer had Weld the Oakland County post since January, 1948. Previously she was a marketing specialist for the U. S. Department of Agriculture. New Officers Elected FARMINGTON TOWN SHIP — Newly elected officers of the Eight Mile Extension group are Mrs. Frank A. Platz, chairman; Mrs. Jay Clifford and Mrs. Della Thornton, vice chairman; Mrs. P. M. Dickinson, secretary, and Mrs. D. L. Russell, treasurer. County Births Castell announce the birth of a son, Robert Clayton, last Friday. Mr and Mrs. Arnold Palmateer of 311 South Lyon List FFA Winners 6 Firsts at MSC. Meet to Represent Michigan in National Contests SOUTH LYON — Deloy Dotson, Calvin Hopkins and James Walker, all of South Lyon, were awarded first place gold medals in dairy products during the annual com- petition of the 60 chapters of Fu- ture Farmers of America held at Michigan State College recently. The trio also will represent Mich- gan at the national contest at Wa- terloo, lowa, in October. | ‘The South Lyon chapter also won ‘gold medals in the dairy cattle contest and the poultry compet! | tion. Members of the winning team jwere Charles Rupp, Don Petten- gill, and Neil Jones. They will com- pete in the national contest at Kan- sas City, Mo., in October. James Atchison, Phil Elkow, Donald Heidt and Paul Geiger re- ceived gold ratings in dairy work, and James Lyke, Perry Root, and Donald Bowers won gold medals in live stock, County Calendar Metamersa the home of Mrs. Wayne Merwin tonight to celebrate the birthday of Mrs. William Skellenger Mrs. Coral Kingsbury will be hostess to the Munters Creek Social and Literary Club tomorrow. Mrs. Frank Conlen will be leader Thornville Community Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Jean Ferrier tomor- row. The meeting was originally sched- uled for the home of Mrs. Velma Ferrier | Themas Thomas Community Assn. will serve & beef and chicken cafeteria supper today, | beginning at 5:30 p.m, in the Com- ' munity Hall. The public is invited. Metamora Birthday Club will meet at | Rove Ook Gi, 18, Given Scholarship | ROYAL OAK — Rosemary Chinn, /18, is one of 11 Michigan girls, all |June high school graduates, who have been announced as winners jof 1954 Blue Cross nursing scholar- |ships of $300. | They took the honors in a contest with 388 girls from 183- different Michigan communities. The contest was conducted by the Michigan League for Nursing, a statewide recruiting organization of the nurs- ing profession. : A special scholarship committee of the League judged the compe- tition, naming the winners on the basis of the written application, | scholarship, reports of their high | school principal and their achieve- |}ment on a test . Shirley Scott, Louis Hadden Wed Recently ROCHESTER — St. Paul Method- ist Church was the scene of the recent wedding of Shirley Jean Scott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Odie Walker Scott of 2836 Gravel Ridge Rd., and Louis Carroll Had- den, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley | Hadden of 3500 26-Mile Rd., Wash- | ington. Mrs. Patricia Sackner served as | matron of honor, while Donald We- | ber was best man. Other attend- ants were Mary Ann Stouffer and Anita Mullikin, and Walter Geno | and Earl Skibowski. | Following the candlelight cere- | mony, a reception was held in the | Rochester Town Hall. | The newlyweds left on a two- week honeymoon trip to Northern | Michigan. , For a Cooler, Happy Summer . DRINK MILK Give the slip to summer slump Don't let heat and humidity rob you of your pep this sum- mer—drink Milk. The moment your lips touch that frosty, clear liquid, you'll begin to feel cooler. Milk's individual flavor, palatable and satisfying, really quenches thirst. Ice cold, it's perfect for hot day refreshment. Milk keeps you cooler longer Unlike sugar drinks, Milk contains a minimum of heat- producing canbohydrates. Scientific tests show that Milk gives you added energy and, at the same time, eases tension in your nervous system. Milk does both—refreshes and relaxes. Doctors recommend that people of all ages drink at least 3 glasses of milk every day, summer or winter. HOT and BOTHERED? MILK REFRESHES—RELAXES ‘A LARGE GLASS OF MIL ONLY bought by the quart K 5 Most of the pure, fresh milk consumed each day in Greater Detroit and environs is supplied by 11,000 members of the MICHIGAN MILK PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION 406 Stephenson Building, Detroit : ‘ x . 4 . THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 . _ RED STAMP Da Guatemalg Government 22 Women Pilots Land x WEDNESDAY Hopes to Get on Better at Knoxville; One Craft GEORGES-NEWPORTS | You can phone anywhere in the U.S. Terms With Neighbors Scratched in Texas | GUATEMALA wW — Guatemala’s KNOXVILLE, Tenn. w — Seven- new government has turned its teen more light planes with women back on the Communist world in : ; : . ad t get on bother term Gath pilots were ready to swarm across for less than '2 ~~ | ‘The colonels ssid Guatemala also * @¢ 8 | eed teddies | would rejoin the Organization of Twenty-two planes arrived at the © Sold Only With This ° Sold Only With This | Central American States (ODECA) Knoxville finish Sunday and yes- e r= ener Aad ay eo terday, and the rest spent the night COUPON 3 COUPON merican ( | = | United Nations. ane See Summer : SUNBACK | This was considered an appeal es to Arizona, One plane has been . ; = y * fool pciaarer vied rege ba - TOPS IN TURNIPS—John W. Ed. b of Overbrook, Kan., shows | 'scratched after a crash landing : Blankets 3 DRESSES To call most places it costs far less. Salvador—have served notice they |" Sant turnip which grew in his garden. _He claims no fertilizer | hear Amarillo, Tex. ~ a * For example will take up formal relations with eg used to grow the eight-pound turnip, the only oversize one in| The order of finishing doesn't) s ° § from Pontiac : | the five-day-old military regime. | ‘"€ Crop. | necessarily mean anything in this : The leftist Arbenz government | race, which is sponsored by the 4 dropped out of ODECA last year ° | Ninety-Nines, Inc., an organization 4 accusing the other members of ag- Hal Boyle Says: of licensed women pilots. ~ Choose from ° $3.99 seersuck- gressive intentions toward Guate- Each pilot or pair of pilots is whites ands ers. Misseg’ , YOU CAN mala, Six weeks before Castillo's T M h F d ] | flying against individual handicaps | plaids —- Shop @ large sizes. b CALL FOR ONLY anti - Communist revolution top- OO uc ree om uS | for the $2,000 in prizes. The win- corty. : Tepper $499 pled Arbenz from power, his gov- ners won't be known until the race | + + Conte AKRON Os ernment received a 10-million-dol- as Untenable as Too Little = = A and the arithmetic is com- 70x95 9° , . “ lar arms shipment from behind : | & Blankets P i . the Iron Curtain. NEW YORK }—The big problem, “A perpetual holiday is a good | ” ee @ WWEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiiiriiitiviitiiii tiie Monzon, who is titular head of | facing millions of Americans today working definition of hell’—| Miss Helen Dick and her co-pilot, | f Sold Only With This Sold Only With This _ CHICAGO ALBANY 65° 95° paring new places of confinement. | possible to the security and order! Clowns are not allowed to clown | stop SU ivgs LOS ANGELE $190 Monzon said 1,000 persons have | of their job’ ks 7 of office. in circuses in Communist - con-| None of the planes in Amarillo | § taken refuge in foreign embassies. trolled Hungary; instead, by Red and westward is expected to fin- t- The case of each of these will be Freedom is a great thing—no| order, they have to “recite in-| ish, but only the plane from Haw-| | ~ § i (Pls Federe! Ten) studied, he said, and no safe con-| doubt of if—but it has meant to! sructive verses.’ thorne has been scratched so far. | | ducts out of the country will be | them nothing in the last three days | foe . ‘granted for any persons wanted | but traffic jams, indigestion, sun- DN, ry: i il aa 2 Pe eae Be Va é TEETER | burn, crying children and mosquito ¢ is ¥ < _| .He said no request for safe con- bites. The only place they would | & Sold Only With This sar Gaue duct has been made by Arbenz, | like to go this morning, other than | # “ astex nerd These are station-to-station rates for the first who is in the Mexican Embassy. | to the office, is to a restful hospital he S OU P @) ri — . , . ._ ¢ * on a quiet street F ' three minutes, after 6 o'clock every night and The colonels announced they Others, however, have been| & Pedal all day Sunday. Don't wonder. Don't worry. Call today and be sure. its Western Hemispliere neighbors. Elfego Monzon and Carlos Cas- tilo Armas, top colonels in the ference yesterday their administra- tion would reverse the policy of the ousted government ex-Presi- dent Jacobo Arbenz Guzman and | would refuse to dea] with the So- 'viets or their Iron Curtain allies. the junta until it elects a perma- nent chief July 17, said yesterday the police have completely filled "the country’s jails with 2,000 Com- | Munists suspects and now are pre- would suspend the national land law, under which Arbenz cut up and redistributed large land hold ings, until a new constitution is drafted. They said, however, public “| oid 8 projects started under the old government will ,be continued and social gains consolidated. five-man junta, told a news con- the finish line here today in the eighth annual Powder Puff Derby. The 17 got as far as Chattan- | ooga, Tenn., by nightfall yesterday | : in the straggling daytime-only race which began in Long Beach, Calif., 1? Saturday with 9% pilots in 51 air- planes ; lf Et daily rut?" Some, worn out by the long holi- day weekend, are overwhelmingly anxious to return as quickly as spoiled by the ecstatic that went with the 168th anniver- sary of American Independence. They hate the idea of returning | to responsibility and yearn to run barefoot and kneedeep in Imerty | until the snow flies No matter what your attitude to- | is “How can I go back to the freedom | | | Bernard Shaw. all''—Old Testament. | Mrs, Bonnie Brown, both of Haw- thorne, Calif., walked away trom bs | a badly damaged plane yesterday | Ae | after they ran out of- fuel just | | short of their Amarillo refueling | “Miserable comforters are ye | Double Stamp Specials of 39c, 49c. Full Bolt .>. . First Quality & PRINTED PERCALE CLIP AND SAVE! * DOUBLE STAMPS, Too! MOI Sold Only With This TAKE UP TO 6 MONTHS TO PAY! Pushers INO MONEY DOWN] 2 Sold Only With This MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY : ; bbs geen WP peelagaiay SHORTS SLIPS Jews Proclaim. —y,Pe, vou will find som nn 19: vd POLOS | he following li ° __+ Tercentenary your holidayrwounded mind? ARTHUR MURRAY'S © Don’t let good times pass you by any longer. Come in to Arthur Murray's and let one of his ex- perts show you the shortcut to of Settlement NEW YORK (—The American | | Jewish Tercentenary, commemor- Ceremonies were held on the | steps of the congregation Shearith Israel, cendants of a small group of Span- ish refugee Jews who landed in 164 in New ‘Amsterdam, the old Dutch name for New York * s . od of the tercentenary between | Sept. 12, 1954, and May 29, 1955. | Three rabbis read the proclama- | tion, ot Orthodox, Conservative and Re- | form Jewish rabbinic and synago- gue bodies. The proclamation, addressed to the nation’s five million Jews, founded in 1730 by des- | The proclamation fixed the peri- | which was signed by leaders | cm . * “It is not good to have too much | liberty. It is not goed to have all | one wants''—Blaise Pascal, “Every vat must stand upon his own bottom’’'—John Bunyan. * i s “Every man for himself, | God for us all''—Cervantes. “Liberty in the lowest rank of | every nation is little more than the | choice of working or starving’'— Samuel Johnson. “If all the year was playing holi- days, to sport would be as tedious | as to work’’—Shakespeare. * * s “Nothing befalls any man which | he is not fitted to endure’—Marcus Aurelius. “Endure and persist; this pain will turn to your good by and by”’— Yes! Here's your chance to save as you sew. ideal for dresses and sportswear for now and back to school. « © Better Sport Denim. ....... yd. 39%¢ » COUPON Double Stamp Special! Reg. 1.99 Group of Smart POLOsS * eS ee s i " “4 no 9 CS ee GIRLS’ DRESSES Group of sun- $1.99 full--cut. 4 tor] Sold Only With This COUPON popularity. You'll find learning call the “t { the Ovid. backs Sizes 2 e $1.99 sheer the Arthur Murray Way is quick eon peace and Srosperity of| ‘Of all the ways of life but one— S HORTS |= to 6 : poles, summer and easy even for beginners. So .\ | our country and all its inhabitants | the path of duty—leads to happi- it Girls’ Panties ¢ tevequaers, come in now. Be all set for the “| | and to dedicate ourselves to the | 2¢88'"—Southey. - : = -3 13 waite Y gayest season ever. Studios open .-] | ideals of our faith within the free- 2 UL é for from 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. daily. «sll | dom of American democracy.” waren is no substitute for hard * sccnessoeveccoevecsosl cocensecpesenpacnune work’’—Thomas A. Edison. $ > _ Sold Only With This Sold Only With This 1 Da Let us go forth and resolutely a ARTHUR MURRAY Schoo of ncing Income Tax Cuts, Wage | dare with sweat of brow to toll our ¥ COUPON | Increases Needed — CIO | “tte day"—Milton. 4 , 25 E. Lawrence St. Ph. FE 2-0244 | WASHINGTON — Wage in- PU anig Toots hd = seariacer Gastins mak Wa aoe i POLOS SPORT , and income tax cuts, the 4 — : joicing spirit down to the eyer- possible. See them tomorrow and eo SHORTS SHIRTS Steel with hooks .... . $4.98 ea. ALL TYPES of FENCES Installed by Us or Materials Only! ARDMORE FENCE CO. Open Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sat., 8-6; Fri. 8-8; Sunday 9-1 ff 49 N. Parke Se. Phones FE 5-5572—Eve. & Sun. FE 2-4489 | — | give a lift ‘‘badly needed for a | yesterday the best way to halt | Foreign Ministry announced last | El Salvador recognized it Sunday. |CIO says, are what's needed to economy.”’ Citing Commerce Department figures showing the nation's — and galary income dropped fro | 202 billion dollars last August ra | 193 billion dollars in April, the CIO | publication Economic Outlook said Costa Rica Recognizes New Guatemala Regime | SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (»—The | night that the Costa Rican govern- ‘ment has recognized Guatemala’s new five-man military government. Costa Rica is the second coun- try. to recognize the new junta. << > 4 . —s< anny RED STAMP | WEDNESDAY AT BOTH THRIFTY DRUG STORES ‘ ‘ 1 . a . L 4 > oe wr haunting importunity of business? —Sabbathless Satan! ''—Charies Lamb. * * Ld] “Work is not a good. Then what is a good? The cofning of work?” —Seneca. “A life of pleasure is the most unpleasing life in the world.""— Oliver Goldsmith. save Sold Only With This TGR TR ia. Never Before Sold Less Than 10.99 Now You Buy Misses’, Large Size Chromspun NYLONS While 500 fast! Those smart iridescent 7 chromspun that are so much in demand be- | cause they're cool and lightweight (weigh & less than 2 ounces). Pink, blue, maize. Sizes 10 to 20; 14% to 24". Others 46 to 52. TITIIIiiiiiiiiiiiitiiity ad L © x ~ ° ¢ v Boxer shorts, stripes, solids, @ + Sccescoscocoes * fate sos Os 5 a shirts. +. polos, ae. |this “recession” is to put more Trunks CHAIN LINK WIRE.............. 30c per ft. J this, "recession isto (Put more me! vo 1 money Sun Suits Ay i ru $1.99 men’s no jron plisse eoeccceccossece Sold Only With This N scoecedseasunealat Aacavanevitemelinad Tee | Peeccccccccccccccoceesecocosece eccccccoes (5 Sold Only With This COUPON Ps ars ating the 300th anniversary of| “I tell you, liberty is the best of © Heavy White Toweling. .....7d. 50e Reg. 169. Big Misses’ large Jewish settlement in this country, |! things; never live ae the | — ; lection Sizes eng was proclaimed formally yester- :| node of a servile halter m2 ta 16 ~~ * | day. | William Wallace. Ladies Panties tae 3 __, THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 4, 195¢ mn Look | Outdoor Cookery to Be One Feature not looking for a drum to beat, Girls Prepare tor Camp If you have seen any little girls rubbing two sticks together, they're the opening of the annual day -} Your Hair Is Precious 4% |-- »«. Trust It Only | to Experts | PERMANENTS . . . $600 Singuee " Reckhcon teins Caran uenlieti ANNALIESE Beauty Shop 80', N. Saginaw FE 2-5600 Next te Baziey Market (Over Tasty Bakery) Open Evenings by Appointment © {Call for Careful Dan the Pontiac LaundryMan Fluff Dry Just Send Your Entire Family Wash The flat pieces will be returned all ironed. The | overnight under the stars, learn- Pontiac. This will be the second year day camp will be held on the Camp Fire Girls’ new property ‘east of Clarkston. The new site has been a real inspiration to the girls . . . registration doubled from year's enrollment of 70 to 140 girls | for this year. Three adult training sessions | have been held recently to in- | doctrinate the leaders to the rank of firemaker senior grade. They promise that great things are in store for the giris whe will learn to make stoves, ovens, fryers and deep wells from tin cans. The girls whe will cook cherry pies, spaghetti, biscuits on a stick or in an oven, ginger- bread, shish kabobs, and many other interesting feods over an open fire. Additional training will make the girls self-sufficient in the woods and will include nature identifica- tion and conservation. The older girls will enjoy an ing to cook bacon and eggs or paneakes and sausages a la lum- berman. These meals always wind up with learning to clean pots and wearing apparel and both towels will be fluff dried and folded. Very little left for you to do. Your Best Buy Is Fluff Dry PONTIAC LAUNDRY & CAREFUL DRY CLEANERS FE28/0l @@ Ac = FE 28/01 Short Summer Coolers Short, easy-to-manage hair styles to flatter your own individual beauty. , Hair Tinting Electric Manicures Open Thers. Eves. by App't FLORENCE HAUN, Owner FLORENCE’S BEAUTY SALON FE 5-2663 pans in water and sand as well as cleaning up scraps so they leave their camp cleaner than they found it. Camp Fire’s many friends around Pontiac have been busy all spring making g more en- jeyable place for camping. Civi- tan Club, the sponsoring organi- zation of Camp Fire, has made a wide beach of the lakefront. This beach will be covered with white sand to make it an eternal invitation for fun. The Kiwanis Club has _ built a second building near the water- front. These buildings are used for day camp supplies, indoor activi- ties and shelter for rainy weather. they're practicing the rustic meth- od of fire-lighting in preparation for camp of the Camp Fire Girls of fast} | % a FS abe 9 LOO Former Gov, Murray D. Van Wagoner of Birmingham takes moving pictures of his daughter, Ellen (center), aboard the SS Liberte at New York City. The Van W agoners Twelve Fashion Trends Will Determine Milady’s Autu oe Pr ae al mead he boarded ship to wish bon voyage to their daughter, who with two former classmates will tour through Europe until Nov. 1. By DOROTHY V. WHIPPLE, M.D. AP Newsfeatures Maybe we can discount the imaginative stories of lit- tle children, but how about the downright lies of a 10- bealiiedal At 10 a child should know the difference tween what's true and what isn’t. ~ Don't get upset if your youngster tells an occasional VEE & DEE MASSEURS “Your Health fe Our. Business” e ® Ulera-Violet © Vapor & Steam Cabinets ® Infra-Red, ete. 124 West Huren = eontrol and muscular epr- for men and women fer eppeintment, call: FE 5-5211 415 Pontiac Bank Bldg. Parking Space Available SINCE 1941 Moll 1666 S ¥, Mile South QUALITY DRAPERIES AND FLOOR COVERINGS OPEN MONDAY & FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 || FE 4-0516 LEES SPRINGLOOP is headline carpet news EXTRA value EXTRA luxery Lees spins special live action fib to get out of an embarrassing situation. You prob- ably do it yourself sometimes. But if he lies regularly and frequently, it’s time we looked into the reasons why he needs to lie. If a young- ster has lived in a reasonably good home where honesty is the way of life, he knows that lying is wrong. Probably he lies, not because he is naturally de- ceitful, not because he doesn’t care what you think, but because he feels he needs to lie to make life livable. All of a sudden Tom's Dad began to have doubts about some of the reports Tom was bringing home. . At first Dad put his doubts out of his mind. If Tom said he’d been made captain of the baseball team why, then he had, that’s all. But little by little Dad was forced to recognize that the A on the report card had been changed, that last Saturday morning was spent in a class for failing _ ¢ secon Boy’s Lies Due to Fear of Losing Parents’ Love students, instead of on the athletic field as Tom had ‘said. For many years Tom had been trying to live up to his Dad's high standards. Nothing mattered quite so much to the youngster as to be admired and loved by his Dad. To get this love he had to succeed, he had to be good —good at sports, good at schoolwork, good at every- thing he did. Lately he’d been falling down. He just couldn't keep up, and he couldn’t face his Dad with failure. “You mean the kid thinks we wouldn’t love him if he didn’t make the first string on the baseball team? He’s my boy. I love him no matter what success or failure he has.” “Maybe you'd better tell him.” Tom had wonderful parents. It wasn't hard for them to see why Tom was lying. They were holding him up to achievements that were beyond him and they’d made him feel that it was his achievements they loved, not the boy himself. With understanding, Mr. Williams talked to his boy. It took time and patience but slowly the anxiety faded away and Tom stopped lying. H | grenty settled down to B and C and he made the string on the team. Because Baby loves yarn of Tufton fibers that shed soil, then tufts this ex- |) clusive yarn into imported |) - jute, adds latex-backing. You 4+ get sturdy carpet with the im- portant feature you want in your home today: *% durable luxury that mini- | mizes crushing % engineered to shed soil % skid-proof, snag-proof * pre-shrunk, washable, and |) moth-proof % those heavenly clear Lees colors See luxury looking Spring- loop today. It's low priced at New Low Price 95 Sq. Yd. . Telegraph of Orchard Lake Rd. Beech-Nut introduces vs | Unpleasantness of Baby's Bed Is Overcome Any little illness will upset Baby’s sleep schedule. He's forced to stay in bed all of the time, and often the bed takes on an unplea- sant association because. he's known discomfort there, - To get him back into his sleep ‘ habits, try moving the bed to a dif- ferent part of the room or giving .| himr a new toy to take to bed with 4 ‘Costumes Are Deemed No. | Style Bloused-Top, Sack. Jacket and Middy Also Important Here are the things to look for when you go shopping for that new fali suit or dress. These are the outfits that you will find in your favorite specialty shop or depart- ment store, come fall. These are the top styles already ordered by your local buyers, and now in process of manufacture in New York's teeming garment cen- er. 1.—The bloused-top dress. This is ' the headline silhouette for fall, fol | lowing the corseted midriff look of | last season It’s an.easy, relaxed silhouette which gives you room to breathe, doesn't reveal every. bulge of figure, is easy te wear. You'll find it in all fabrics, usually teamed with a siim skirt. 2—The ‘‘blouson'’ suit or cos- tume. This has a bloused jacket which ends at the waistline with a belt, is worn with matching slim dress or skirt, comes in handsome tweeds and flannels, dark worsted and new blends of dacron, worsted and silk. 3—The sailor collar. This is a new and important note for fall, found on dresses, suits and coats, sometimes even in fur. 4—The sack jacket. This is a loose, boxy, short jacket which may be semi-fitted in front, loose in back | &=The barrel coat. This is rounded above, slightly tapered at the hemline, loose and com- fortabie, smartest when worn Slightly shorter than the skirt or dregs beneath. 6—The middy. This is the loose, | schoolgirl garmeht that has been |coming back to favor periodically |for two generations. A_ pullover with no waistline, worn with a slim |skirt, shown in high-color flannels jand jerseys, often with a sailor | collar. | %—The fow, open neckline for | dresses A flattering, feminine de- colletage achieved in many ways. | sometimes with low, flat or stand- away collars. 8—The fur-collared or fur-lined | suit. An old favorite newly populdr | for this fall. Often reversible. 9—The costume. This consists of wool dress and matching jac- ket or full-length coat, and is the most important single fashion of the season. Dress usually is low-necked, short-sleeved, sufficiently dress for after-five wear, permitting the wearer to go from office or shop- ping trip to cocktails and dinner, suitably dressed when he removes her jacket. 10—Combinations of satin and tweed. A top fall fashion. Some- times done with satin linings and weskits combined with tweed suits. Sometimes done by adding satin hat and blouse to a tweed suit. 11—The doll dress. This is the little-girl fashion so popular this summer, carried on for fall in dainty, lacy, white or pastel dance dresses. 12—Wide collars on coats, suits and blouses. COMING EVENTS Jennie E. Doyle Past Chiefs Club will theet at the home of Mrs. Clyde Lank- -ton, 7291 Ideal Ter.. Thursday at 8 pm Royal Neighbors of America wil] meet him. Thursday, 8 p.m. at Grotto Hall, West Pike street for the The Now Wor ilZeR SpINETTE ORGAN w home new size cereal packages Now you can get Beech-Nut Cereals in the new handier 4-02. package! Baby eats up all this smaller package of cereal while it’s still fresh-flavored and tempting. You can give Baby more variety, too... make mealtimes happier with a tasty change in flavor. Four delicious kinds, developed by nutrition experts to. help Baby grow strong and sturdy. And see how he relishes their delicate smoothness and fresh flavor!, . | foods, get at least two Beech-Nut Cereals in the new handier 4-o7z. size. You'll find they make mealtimes happier for Baby ...easier for-you! Every Beech-Nut Cereal, Strained and Junior Food you give your Baby is accepted by the Cofnecil on Foods and Nutrition of the Ameriean Medical Association. Beech-Nut Foods for Babies As soon-as the doctor, adyises sotid ge Babies love them...thrive on them! The Most Amazing ~“Orgen Since the “Mighty Wurlitzer” See it! Bear it! Play it! The sensational im YOUR HOME. Se easy te play... You can teach yourself. This new organ has been over 17 years in development and combines many features never before of- fered in an electric organ. No Installation—just Plug Into Any Outlet and Piay! STORM STUDIO 6151 S. Main Near Dixie Hwy. Clarkston, Mich. Phone MAple 5-205) — a to your home ... Up to 3 yeors to pay... Rental - Purchase plan only - $25.00 per mo. All money paid within 3 months may be applied on purchase of organ. Pee ee eee & ww ww oe os | . | STORM STUDIO, 6151 5. : Clarkston, Mich. a ; Please send me brochure of the » * } New Warlitser Spinette Organ. : i | gf NOMO oo. ee ecesecesenssseeees 1 ' | Q AOMr EEE cocci seescccccncteces a | ’ - 0 Cty ...se. Rene....Otabe.cg/ f J ' i. a oS {| - John Austin, 5, (left) and his brother Glenn, 4, agree that there’s never a dull mo- ment during a stay at the grandparents, home of their|Stuart Austin kee road. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. 3 : WER SOF Pontiac Press Pheote the Stuart Austins of Chero- Jr. of Gary, Ind. joan Roberts Calls Theni .Key to Success Singer Stresses Need for Te een F ans By DOROTHY ROE Associated Press Women's Editor. Know what makes a successful popular singer? Plenty of teen-age fans clubs. “No popular singer can get atong without them,” says Joan Roberts, star Of “Oklahoma!” and other musicals, who has just written the story of@her life in a new book, | “Never Alone.” * Joan, the wife of Dr. Donlon and mother of a T-year-old | son, John Jr., is concentrating | these days on singing for records + ¥ John J and TV. She recently signed a con- | tract to record eight platters a! year for a new company which plans a big distribution in Europe as well as America. She says: “Although I miss my audiences, I know that I can reach a far bigger group throfgh records and television than I ever did on the| stage.’ Right now Joan is busy building up her fan clubs, and is making | a personal appearance tour throughout the country. . s “In the final analysis. it's the | kids that put any singer over,” she says. ‘“‘These are the young- sters between 8 and 18 who make up the fan clubs. If they like you you're in. If not, you're finished. “It isn’t that they buy so many 2 ~ .-/ em MARY KING — SALON COLD WAVE MACHINELESS AND Mark King Cold Wave, Complete $632 Hair bleaching, . shampoos finger waves focak Manicuring. records. But they play your tunes on the juke boxes, and request them from disc jockeys. They whistle and sing them on the street | and all at once the song is a hit."’ Record companies realize the importance of the fan club audi- ence, says Joan, and arrange per- sonal appearance tours for their stars, provide fan club member- ships and autographed _ pictures, jand organize the thing on a busi- | Ness like basis. “Every successfu! singer in) the last 10\ years has had to have a carefully organized fan club pro- motion,’ says Joan. ‘‘Frank Sina- tra had the biggest and most ex- pensive campaign of anybody, and that’s why he became the idol of the wartime bobby-soxers.” Junior Naps Easily: After Noon Feeding Generally, its a good idea to give Baby his nap right after his noon meal. He's more willing to go to bed after he's eaten than he is if he's been allowed to re- turn to his play. - You might try getting him un- dressed and into his sleepers be- fore feeding him, since it will help to get him into the mood for sleep. Necktie Choice for Man ‘Must Match An organization dedicated to | keeping the U.S. male the world’s best dressed, has come forth with a few pdinters to aid both men and women shoppers faced with the di- | lemma of buying a graduation gift | for a Young man, or for any man on any day, for that matter. This group of style arbiters *| claims that a necktie is the most important single item in a man’s appearance. They say that not only does the right necktie enhance a man’s appearance but it can do the same thing for his personality that a new hat does for a womans personality. The fashion experts say that ties should always be coordinated with suits and shirts. So, if he wears blue, give him a | tie in any shade of red or blue. If ‘brown is his preference, Aan, | green or gold ties all contrast cor- rectly. Or if either charcoal, grey or black is his favorite suit shade, select a tie in a contrasting tone of the same color or choose a tie in pink, helio, blue or maroon. For sportswear, the new square and fringed end ties are very popular, Personality headed men don't wear red ties but prefer brown, green or blue. Blondes wear blue and red but no yellow. Brunettes stick to red, grey and yellow and tend to ~hy away from brown. The grey haired male leans toward réd as his color preference but actually cam wear almost any shade, The new blacks look good with any hair coloring. Here's a hint to keep in mind to insure the Ite of that necktie: After wearing, they should always be untied and hung up overnight to shed wrinkles. Dry clean them when necessary, but washing is not recommended unless specified on the tie tag. Naturally, the larger the num- ber of ties a man owns, the longer | they will last if properly rotated | On figured or patterned. ties, an easy method-for removing spots is to scratch them out. Spot remov- ers are not recommended for use on silk or solid color ties Loosens Glasses If ‘water glasses accidentally stick together rather than try to Red Cross @ PUMPS @ STRAPS @ OXFORDS BG JULY @ WOMEN’S SHOES e ODDS and ENDS TABLE . and too. force them apart, put the outer RECHT A bit of information has also/| glass in hot water and fill the in- gr irrsenee been unearthed by fashion councils| ner glass with cold water. This 152 N. P P FE 2-3053 which can be used as a guide in| will loosen the glasses and avoid rey buying a tie. They say that red | breakage. $3 % To ** Regularly Priced From $9.95 to $15.95 ..... pr. 2.00 Wedges @ COBBIES @ DESCO @ ORCHIOS Regularly $1.35 to 99 eproof Hosiery C 3 Pr. Box $275 $1.65 Up to Children’s Shoes 5 to 8 — 8'2 to 12 — 1212 to 3 40% on Sizes @ MEN’S SHOES @ WALK-OVER Special Back coRTuNE © $65 $] 23 $16.95 to @ PEDWIN te $2298 = @ FOOT PAL $895 20% On Most Summer Shoes Shop in Air-Conditioned Comfort - PAULI'S SHOE STORE Serving Pontiac for Over 75 Years 35 N. Saginaw St. lito Family Entertain} * Shearers Are Hosts Fullers California Visitors for a Month | Mr. and Mrs. Glenford Shibley and sons, Kevin and Chipper, of Minneapolis, Minn., have arrived at the home of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. John P. Shearer of Cherokee road, for a — 8 visit. * Arriving Monday by plane trom Castro Valley, Calif., to spend a month with her parents, the Roy C. Fullers of State Park boulevard. were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reug- nitz and son Steven oo oa » Mr. and Mrs. Wesley D. John- son of South Johnson avenue left Sunday for a two-week tour of California. They will stop at Les Angeles, San Diego, Torrance oor * Kirk Harold Hobolth of Mae Court has enrolled in the summer school of Wheaton College, Whea- ton, Til. He is taking the physical education program at Camp Honey Rock, Wis, . s Mr. ‘and Mrs. Ira E. Hindman Jr. of Churchville, N. Y., an- nounce the birth of a daughter, Jane E., June 24. Grandparents are the Charies Pettits of East Tennyson avenue and the Ira Hindmans of St. Petersburg, Fia. The infant's mother is the former Esther Pet- tit. s * s Receiving a master of arts de- gree recently at the commence- ment exercises of University of Denver was William Marshall Mc- Guire, He received his bachelor of science degree at Olivet College. By Panama Canal, the distance is about 50 miles, but it is 7873 miles around South America. b __ THE PONT! AC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY-6,-1954 NATALIE RICE ee The -engagement of Natalie Rice and Lt. Jere Peter Kemp. was announced at a buffet supper Saturday evening at the Birmingham home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin B. Rice. Urs. J. E. DeVault of Birmingham and Frank U. Aemp of Detrow are Jere’s parents. She attended Liggett School and Michigan State College from which her fiance also was graduated La Vonna Locke Speaks Vows in First Methodist Touring northern Michigan -fol- lowing their marriage Friday eve- ning in the First Methodist Church are Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Lash The bride is the former LaVonna Grace Locke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Russel] Locke of Glen- dale avenue. He is the son of Mrs. Walter Nelson of Keego Harbor. The bride approached the altar wearing a ballerina-length gown of tulle over taffeta. The gown was fashioned with scalloped lace peplum, matching jacket and long sleeves. Her fingertip veil was trimmed with seed pearis. She carried a cascade bouquet of white carnations and red roses. The bride's sister, Geraldine Locke, was maid of honor wearing a ballerina - length strapless gown of pink, identical to the bride's: She carried a bouquet of blue car- nations and her headpiece was of pink flowers. - Ward Lash of Keego Harbor was best man for his brother and Jay Creger and Joe Barkiewicz seated the guests Maxine Schroeder sang the bri- dal recital and now Ebey was or- ganist. Following a receotion in the church parlors, the new Mrs. Lash changed to a white dress with matching accessories The couple will reside in the Parkside Apartments. Short, Soft and Lovely! | Our “expert hair styling wil Ge wus bn ar a that will be pretty as @ picture. And - 80-0-0 easy to care for, too! Complete ponte Saas ROWENA'S scavry suor_ 62% N. Saginaw (ever Neumode’s) é | __AFINER loomfield PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR! Open tonight ‘til 9 —CHARGE ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE— 1662:S. Telegraply. Hair ...Dry and Lustreless After — the Long Weekend? LET US RESTORE ITS” NATURAL BEAUTY AND | LUSTRE TO LAST ALL Barbera Sluder = SUMMER . . . | BARBARA’S BEAUTY SALON S188 Cooley Lake R4. UNION LAKE EMpire 3-2723 eeniacael a Jacobson’s Is Your Headquerters For Edwards Children’s Shoes Money-Saving Special Purchase! GIRLS) COOL SUMMER SPORTSWEAR PARKING AREA FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE 2°? and 2%? oe | SEERSUCKERS - DENIMS - POPLINS - PLAYTONES - COMBINATIONS SHIRTS - SHORTS - PEDAL PUSHERS - MIDRIFFS - SKIRTS ONE and TWO-PIECE PLAYSUITS - SLACKS - OVERALLS Just'in time for this summer’s wearing! the rugged wear of summer vacationing . Hand-selected, unusually fine playtogs that toke .. yet need little care. Gold, pink, aqua or red seersucker shorts, midriffs, blouses, skirts, pedal pushers, slacks, playsuits. 2.49 each. Navy : poplin and woven tattersall combination shorts, pedo! pushers tottersall shirts. 2.49 each. Copen or maize Indian print no-iron playtone skirts or blouses. 2.99. Navy or copen plaid ‘n’ plain denim and gingham two-piece playsuits. 299. playsuits. Sizes 3 to 6x, 7 to 14 2.49. One-piece playtone \ c » A’ 2. ci £2 Poe a * ‘ge = ‘ , } PP ee ae ee ny a Ea pe Sel Page Pe ee eae Gea ee 5 Eee eer pe yee eg A eer ee IG f Dime eeke Dy i, ae ee ae i a yee ee Os ; : . . * Sg 7 Mig ied . . ! A Pay x : j : j ay Pe yh OO - 7 fy Ss Sane a Sa . , / of , ‘ 4 3 : - | ealize the Fact! 4 i. | Mary Margaret McBride Says: It Asked ‘How Are You’ RTEEN f __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY: 6,°1954 _ How Terrible to Be a D readful Bore and Never \ es e . « e. a First — Talk It Over Her Date’ Wants to Neck, + Hostesses Be Taught That It Is’ Impolite By EMILY POST A reader writes me: ‘You have said many times in your column that a hostess should not accept a prize in her own house. Will you please tell me if the same rule applies to a young child who is hostess at her party” “My daughter went to a birth day party recently and several games were played for which prizes were given. It so happened that the birthday child won several of the prizes, which she kept “When my danughter told me about this I was very much sur- aren't comfortablé—so you balk. him so much—but we just don’t get along together. The trouble is that he wants me to accept his terms and I don't want to “Is there any way | can explain to him that [ just don’t go in for the kind-of stuff he wants me to— and still keep him’ He means a lot to”“me, but I just can't keep up with him. So please help me.” It's quite possible to feel a ter- rifie attraction for a bey—and still net speak his language. But it's not possible to keep on going with him whea you have so many reservations. He wants to neck—you don't. He wants to go places where you prised because the hostess in question is a very polite person. Don’t you think, Mrs. Post, the mother was wrong in allowing her daughter to keep these prizes? 1 would very much like to know what you think about this.” If there were several prizes she might have been allowed to keep one. ~ But ordinarily the birthday child does not keep any prizes that she wins. The prize is given to the runner- up. The theory is to teach the child that a hostess does not play for prizes in her own house. Fur- thermore, the birthday child un- doubtedly has received many pres- ents already * ° * Dear Mrs. Post: A friend wrote that she was sending me a pres- ent. That was a month ago and the gift hasn't turned uf. Maybe she changed her mind or delayed in buying it, or maybe she did send it and wonders why I don't thank her. What should I do? Answer: Under the circum- stances you describe, I think you: can write to your friend te say that you are writing to her to let her know that if she sent you something. it must have been lost because you have not re- ceived it. s * * ‘ Dear Mrs. Post: When taking a girl out on a date. is it necessary for her host to provide her with cigarettes—that is, if she smokes a brand different from that which he smokes, or should she be ex- pected to provide her own? Answer: I do not think it too much to ask for him to supply her with the cigarette he knows she likes. Wash. Both Combs You probably remember to wash your home brush and comb each time you shampoo your hair. But don't forget to give your handbag comb the same consideration. — 3]: « . i A Stele i Pudding | @ READY To PREGZE mi # cure ee Choose gay, cotton prints. Embroi- dery is easy! 4% yards 39inch; bolero 1's yards. to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- \plete illustrated instructions. : pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West > 3. ee ey by -Lrnna Holams So cool for summer and so easy to sew you'll want more than one! Soft front yoke and curved neck- line spell figure flattery. Simple flared skirt accents tiny waistline. Misses’ sizes 12, 40. Size 16 dress Pattern 4744: 14, 16, 18, 20; Embroidery transfer ineluded. This pattern easy to use, simple Send 35 cents in coins for this Send 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. WINS 10 COME — n/m Laine SfIcKrs wownd (wh OO ‘a0 thaw) Z 7] FLE€ce Pot Cleaner and Scour Cloth enyihing as ‘geod " cause of the trouble yqu know awaits you at home There's nothing peaceful and hap- ‘py about a relationship that's so full of strain: At the risk of losing him, you'd be wise to talk things over with him If he’s reasonable and patient, he'll slow down his pace for your sake. If he likes you as vou are, he won't insist on terms that will change you. But if having his own way means more to. him than you do, the friendship wouldn't work out for long, anyway. * s . Dear Miss Woodward: Alt-last summer I went steady with Pat and never once let hini kits me. In the fall I decided I wanted to break up, since we were going to dif- ferent schools. But three weeks ago he came over, bringing two boys with him. “One of them, Danny, I liked right away. The next night they came back, and later in the week | Pat called and I told him | liked Danny. “That bit of news got te Danny and he called me. He said if I went out with him I would have to neck a little. “He's coming over next week and I don't know what to do. How shall I act? Should I Jet him neck? Do you think he just wants | to go out with me to see if he can beat Pat?" Danny has given you what he considers fair warning. But he | doesn't know you yet. He doesn't, while mother touches up her 1 ve: ‘8 | | } | ‘ Sporting their matching “Cute Tomata” | bathing suits, daughter watches attentively cell manicured. realize how unbending and stub- ngils with “Cute Tomata” nail brilliance. A matoes. stay fast lipstick is also available in this ripe and bright color, cued to the delectable warmed-in-the-sun red of garden fresh to- be. And so far, you've no reason born you can be when you want | to change your mind about neck: | Like a Shot in the Arm ing—even with Danny. | Be your own gay, light-hearted r self when he comes over. And put to work all the side-stepping Club Hobby By ANNE HEYWOOD “Our club had a very successful | program last fall,’’ a reader writes, | Show Starts | There ceramics, and excellent miniatures, was leather work, and and photographs, and baked goods | and flower arrangements and many | other things. We sold the products a good sum for the club treasury | “But that was only the start! | “You see, each of us had really | worked on our contributions, and jwhen we saw everybody. includ- ing the general public, admiring | and even buying them, it was like 'a shot in the arm. “I knew IT had never taken my cakes seriously before, but when I saw the attention they and made Does It Go Ping-g-g? let, “Why Neck?”, which I'm rushing off to you. You can talk, and ' laugh, sing and dance your way | 8" a great many interesting out of it. * ¥ things have developed from it thought it might start other club- one else who wants it. Just write} we are all women in our for- me, enclosing a stamped, self-ad- ties, and we had been concerned dressed envelope. with the fact that our children aa , would soon be leaving home. Then | eenagers “First of all, we decided te hold a hobby show. Each of us worked and worked on the thing : | we do best, and then each of Barbecues =. Mrs. Martin Wager | Gives Her Recipe, | for Meal on Bun Pontiac Press Food Editor If you have ever fed a gang of teenagers, you know what prodi- gious appetites they have, and barbecue. Mrs. Martin J. Wager. has a recipe for Cheese Barbecues that should be right up teenage alley. Do try them vocation and her avocation. She | is a church orgafist and gives piano lessons. She is also an active member of Tuesday Musi- Within the past two months in their immediate family; the Wa- gers helped celebrate two golden wedding anniversaries and their CHEESE BARBECUES By Mrs. Martin J. Wager : oo — eegger tiene gs rd- » ¢ 1 tablespoon minced _ By ELIZABETH HILLYER t 8 r P buat betes arar ed eas “ There can't be anything wrong 5, ccm sanauneed \emate néup with that wonderful new mattress, per. Mix together all ingredients. | fect comfort of a bed. What's below Spread on split buns or party rye it? bread slices. Broil until babely. | If the mattress isn't supported maneuvers described in my book. | My booklet is available to any-| women thinking. what would we do? Just L oe Ove us had an exhibit at the meet- By JANET ODELL how they love any kind of a Mrs. Wager considers music her cale and of the new PEO chapter. | own silver anniversary. 1 tablespoon minced onion Grind cheese in the food chop- | but it alone can’t assure the per- Makes enough for about two dozen | buns. ( firmly by a-good boxspring, it can’t 2 | Support you. Too often, the mat- Certain species of the trilobite, tress alone is new and the spring a fossil] ‘shell fish,"’ had in each of | saw its heyday years ago their compound eyes from 14.000 to” The bexspring may look right ACROSS 1 Radio actress, —— Chapmon 7 She has appeared in a —— series 13 Profits 14 Muse of astronomy 15 Man's name 16 Horizontal 39 Birds’ homes i 337 i au Sseestesn He + ; s z 4 LU) DOWN 1 Window giasé 2 English river 3 Sailors (coll) 4 Dimigutive of Timothy 6 Note in Gutdb's scale 6 Hirelings 7 Se 44 Unsorted wheaten meal (India) 46 Peruvian Indian 47 Hawaiian precipice 48 Winter vehicle 0 Roman bronze Sl Interest tab 9 Male 10 Grafted (her) 1! Expired 12Qiad En 19 Summer ‘Pry ‘ ‘! Pesters 22 Printing mistakes 25 Caverns iab) 26 Afresh 27. Pather (Fr) 29 Individuals 10 Leas? 1} Observes ? Happenings 18 Clamp 41 Bubtier 42 Norse explorer, 43 City in Nevada § Boundary 53 Compass point 23 Being borne Shops 64 Knock ” Boxspring May Look OK you look at it at all, and really be in far from good condition. Make sure it is right. .Remove the mattress and test the spring. Press down on it firmly, inch by inch, Listen for a metallic ‘‘ping- sound. As you know, spring coils are tied together, FE-ventually, the hemp tying them may break. Then a coil escapes, leans over and hits “another coil Ed Thus’ the sound vou hear is a serious warning. When one coil breaks loose. others do.too. be- cause the tying is continuous from one coil to another. This test may also point out that the ticking, which looks tight enough, is quite lodse. The felt which once covered the even upstanding spr®#k may now be packing down into the open coils. This softening of a boxspring causes what the bedding experts cal] “Shammocking.”’ The softer mattress can't help following the slumping spring, and thus the whole bed hammocks un- der your weight. Some people seem to think that if they hadn't been born the worki would have wanted te know why not Her Career’ got, I felt pretty proud. And the | same Was true of the other wom. en, * That was last fall, but already , some interesting things have hap- pened. One of the girls has a successful eeramics business now. I am a professional baker, mak- ing good pin money on my cakes, and some of the other girls are about to ‘turn pro,’ too “It seems to me that more wom- en could kill two birds with one stone this way. Instead of the usual plain raffle, why not give it ‘a vocational slant? After all, we need to make money for our clubs, but we also need to develop our own interests and skills, because we are all going to live a long time, and our children can't stay home forever, “There's something about’ public display that makes you feel pretty pleased with yourself. I always knew my cakes were good, but I never realized that other people would buy them. “If somebody had told me that I ought to bake at home profession- ally, I would have thought they were crazy. But when I saw what happened at our hobby show, it got me started fast!” Copyright, 1954 Baby's Individuality Needs Special Care Baby is as much of an individ- ual as every other member of your family. Even at birth, dif- ferences among infants can be detected by careful observers. So you'll have to study Baby himself | before applying infant care advice to him. For example, babies need to be fondled. They really thrive on affection. Just how much yours needs, only you can know. However, one thing is certain: Too much or too violent fondling | your fingers, to get a perfectly Bon't| smooth, soft look, all you need Be do is go over it with a cotton- is not good for any infaht. bounce Baby roughly in lay. gentle in showing your affection. | tipped stick. s | | lg _ for stucco is a cement paint or a _mate to read 90 per cent.” ' **A bore is the only thing in the ess. told me meditatively, and added bitterly, ‘‘though. on occa- sions I've had to revise my esti- world that no one will admit being.’ she continued with great assurance. ‘You. for instante, might confess to a crime if faced with evidence, but call vou a bore —even confront you with proof— '—and you'll deny it to the last breath.” It was a depressing kind of conversation, | thought, and I changed the subject. But I kept | thinking uneasily about the party- | ‘Right Paint Required for Stucco For Amateur Job, Best Bet Is Special | Cement Brand By HUBBARD COBB f you live in a stucco house | way out in the country and if you make sure that nothing about the house such as gutters, nail heads lor wood trim ever gets a chance | to stain the stueco, you may easily never have to worry about paint- ing. | | | | | The primary reason for painting stucco is to brighten it up or to conceal! dirt or discoloration Stucco can be painted with a regular oi] base exterior paint but you must be sure that the stucco is perfectly dry and completely free of cracks, even tiny little , hairline ones. The reason for all these pre- cautions is that if an oij base paint is applied and there is moisture in the stucce or mois- ture gets into it at some later date, the paint going on these damp areas is either never going to dry or it will dry and then blister and peel away, For the amateur, the best bet stucco masonry paint which won't be damaged by moisjure Before any paint is applied. cracks in the stucco should be patched with a prepared stucco patching compound. Simply cut out the crack so that the inside wider than the outside, dampen the sides and pack in the patching compound which has been mixed with water to a putty like consis- tency. You don't have to worry about those little hairline cracks as these will be filled up by the paint. is The next step is to give the surface a good brushing down. to / remove dust and surface dirt and any l0ose particles of stucco. Don't bruSh too hard, just enough to remove the dirt. If you use a cement paint, the surface should be damped before the paint is applied. : A garden ho8e with a spray at- tachment is good for this purpose. Don't, however, try using a ce- ment paint .on a warm day when there is a strong breeze for ‘this will cause the paint to dry too rapidly, and produce an inferior job. Best to do it on cool days or in the late afternoon or early eve- ning. If a synthetic stucco paint is used, then just be sure that it’s applied in dry weather. Blend Eye Shadow to apply discreetly as some women think. After blending it in with wean! SWEET Try It Idea for Autograph Shirt It is nice to hear from you teenagers and to know what you are doing, You boys send in ideas which are full of mechanical ideas. which are good and the girls seem to think up ways of making older clothing have a “new” look. Bunny Striar of Roxbury, Mass., sends this suggestion ih. An orig- inal Try It is on its way to her. What about it? Have you tried for your Try It drawing yet? Bunny says that she and her friends exchanged cotton name- tapes and sewed them on their | mark clothing. Start your collecs old. plain colored shirts, Corcect cAMP FRENDS ; tion now, ‘of wear in it. These name tapes - THe This a good idea for you to take to.camp, for all camp. clothing must, be marked. You boys can collect name tapes and ask moth- er-49 sew them on for you. Scatter them well, and then when your collection grows, you will-have your shirt well covered. This is a new kind of ‘autograph You will not want to take one ,of your best shirts for this, but ask mother to helff you slect one which still has a great deal to will wash well for they are jtences for ort | Eye shadow is not so difficult | ~ Should Not - : | : ~ Keep Prizes |SO What Should She Do? Do You Expound in Detail? = Children, Too, Must} “Dear aim Woodward.” T hhe| ure allowed te, so Sou fuss be , i ghee orem) Lala piece ate it. To make a long story short. after a week of concentrated study of the situation, I evolved this little self-help questionnaire, which | pass on for whatever it’s worth— not for you. necessarily, but to aid vou in understanding better the bores you meet 1. Do you insist on talking onl about subjects that interest you regardless of what other people think about them? 2, When another has the floor, do you leap to the limelight the instant he stops to take a breath? 3. Do you invariably top the oth- er fellow’s story? 4. Do you supply the word a friend gropes for and finish sen- slow talkers? 5. Do you over-use a pet expres- sion ad nauseum” 6. Are vou a stickler for detail in anecdotage, debating aloud wheth- er it was last year or this, Jan- uary or February, Wednesday or Thursday that it happened? 7. De you retell stories with complete disregard ef how many times your auditors have already heard them? 8 Do you, when someone po- litely asks, “How are you?” launch into a monologue that really tells him” 9 Do you pride yourself on being direct and. brutally frank with un solicited advice and criticism” 10. Would vou rather talk about yourself than anything el@? Well. of course, but do you insist: on doing it? Anybody who must honestly an- swer yes to any two of these questions (and maybe better get a friend to check you) is a third degree bore. Three to four yesses indicate a second-degree, or bor- derline bore. But five or more affirmatives mean a first degree, or crashing bore, and call for serious thought, particularly on the part of the help- ful friend. who won't be that long if he persists in such diagnosis. \ \ One hexagon (20 inches diagon- ally from point to point) — pine- apple design — makes a_ center- piece; two a scarf; ot inch cloth! €rochet pattern 874: A 26inch hekagon in No. 30 mercerized cot- ton; larger in knitting and crochet cotton, smaller in No-30 cotton. Send 25 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, your name, address and zone. seven a Use Clean Needles Knitting or crocheting will go faster with clean. needles. Whether they are made of bone, plastic, or steel, you can use hot soapsuds often to wash away the marks of Sticky or perspired fingers. PETUNIA! For notes and lists Of household chores, I love my Kitchen Blackboard doors / ty e =——— Just paint: your doo: — or cupboard doors — with blackboard paint, and what could be handier? on SHOP - Ree ° ’humouce few Way To Shrink . : Painful Piles Find Healing Substance That. Relieves Pain—Shrinks Hemorrhoids New York, N, yf (Special) —For the first time science has found a new ishing ability to shrink hemor- | Pect to run into a 21-year-old au- pir gendsoelig stop bleeding — with- | thor in the Virginia mountains— P ae sober yee pain waa talll re 10™minutes later know all leved promptly. And, while gently | about his mother’s shock relieving pain, actutl!—reduction : : wey (shrinkage) took place. | Something he'd done? Most amazing of all—results In the main lounge of a lodge in were so thorough that sufferers Shenandoah National Park, I'd made astonishing statements | asked at the f desk many like “Piles have ceased to be a | visitors th iy me : problem!” e park drew each year; The secret is a new healing sub- in pl Oe eel ey de stance (Bio-Dyne®) — discovery of andl ont right away. But he didn't | a world-famous research institute, leave Now this new healing substance i is offered in ointment form under i camtinees _ hesitated, and thea the name of Preparation H.* Ack n a soft Virginia voice blurted | out, “could T talk to you a min- ute about writing? My name’s | Gilenn Scott, and I started my | first book at 18.” | Like all authors, I'm forever | hearing about half«fiftished stories, plays or novels from students, sec- | Tetaries, internes in hospitals and loquacious taxi drivers. What's more, I enjoy shop talk | with anybody trying to write— | though I won't let a soul tell me “the plot’? because a hard-bitten literary lawyer once warned me for it at all drug stores —money back guarantee. “Trade Mark ( Advertifement , get born that way. But the tall, thin, good-looking | young man at the desk wasn’t | talking about any half-finished manuscript. “My first nevel,” | he rushed on, “was published in | May by Dutton, and my sec- | | one | | 4 f SAMA ff | BUILDING | MATERIALS “Really! What was it called?” | “Oh, you never heard of it,” he | |Said. “The big critics ignored it, | | but it did get some reviews." He | reached for his wallet and handed | lover two brief strips of newsprint. | ‘“*A Sound of Voices Dying’ " he said, ‘‘is the title, and it’s not one af those ‘southern novels’. It's | about this Virginia boy, Reid Car- | Fington, at Philips Whitehead Col- | lege—I'm from Smithfield, and I | went to Washington and Lee.” | From the clipping I gathered— | maybe incorrectly—that Reid Car- | | rington had fallen in love with two | | girls, one not ‘‘a nice woman.” ‘‘Mother was so shocked,’ my young Virginia fellow-author said, | . ~ wy vy F 1%, and over and over he returned to a. his mother’s disapproval and un- VA Lid bt A 1b/ 4, happiness over what he had writ- | |ten. ‘That's why I took this job | | in the park this summer.” | His second book had been | | turned down; now he was going | | inte the Army; could I give him any advice or pointers about the | werld of books? I couldn't judge his book myself, I said, but Dutton was a fine pub- | lishing house and must have ap.- | | proved of it highly. As for being | drafted, I reminded him of big | best-sellers based on the author's Army or Navy experiences, James Jones’ ‘‘From Here to Eternity,” Herman Wouk’'s ‘The Caine Mu- tiny,” Hemingway's “A Farewell to Arms." I comforted him about | rejection slips and what seemed his fast-vanishing years. Then I got down to it. ‘This may be heresy to mother- hood,” I said firmly, “‘but I say it to my own. sons whenever they show me a theme or story they write for school. Be a good, duti- ful son about every blessed thing in the world—except a manuscript. If you write to please your mother, you’re dead. Mothers may be angels but they can be the worst literary critics ever born.” I may have imagined it, but I thought a new light shone in young Glenn Scott’s eyes. I feel FUNERAL HOME 110 WESSEN ST. PHONE FE 3-7374 Ambulance Service et Any Hour Gaukler Storage ltalian Lepers Strike; ‘Demand Aid for Families BARI, Italy (—Lepers in a local hospital went on a 24-hour hunger and medicine strike yester- day, demanding government aid for their families. They said they would go on an- other, and perhaps make a mass | escape, unless a Senate commis- sion made haste in approving a bill \to provide the aid. Commenity & Bighways @ Ne. | ta Service @ No. 1 tp Your Ne. 1 on 0. Haeao Carefree Wedding Reception Homade Food Shop’s catering service for wedding receptions is complete in every detail—no work or worry for you—whether in your home or some other location let our experts help you plan the details—Phone FE 2-6242. . Delicious FRUIT PUNCH...~ “1° HOMADE _ WEDDING CAKES Designed, Baked and Decor- ated-by master bokers to your faste and color, harmonized rei to your Wedding. Moderately Jct priced. sea ie Dee , Is, ladles, es ENJOY A DELICIOUS MEAL IN.OUR AIR-COOLED’ | CAFETERIA AND LUNCH COUNTER. | C0) 0:00) exe SHOP Contiding Young Aut a , Tells’ Secrets By LAURA Z. HOBSON (By International News Servicey” LURAY, Va. (INS) — Secrets | from strangers come the way of healing substance with the aston- i travelers, but who'd ever ex- posers, mother isn't always a boy's | future plagiarism suits sometimes | Author to Stranger In the creative life of beginning writers, painters, sculptors or com- best friend, ora girl's. Neither are father, sister, brother, or as- sorted: cousins, uncles and aunts. , Some day we may all be reading books by Glenn Scott, and in the meantime, I hope Mrs. Scott Sr., will forgive me for inciting a pos- sible mutiny. -+odore C. Streibert of the U.S. In- formation Agency has told his men THE PONTIAC’PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 le . ® . Commie Imperialism | tion Agency,"’ he said, ‘‘to help make Sure inat people everywhere know with whom and with what they are dealing, before the con- spirators succeed in their evil de- signs for seizing power.” Is Only Imperialism’ WASHINGTON (#—Director The- to hit hard'on this theme: ‘Red imperialism” is the only imperial- ism on.the march in the world today Senate Group Starts Probing Army Education WASHINGTON — The Senate Internal Security subcommittee called witnesses today for ques- In a message to USIA’ 217 oper- ations posts in 76 countries, Strei- bert said yesterday the Commu- nists—who constantly raise the cry of “imperialism"’ against the Unit- ed States and others—have in fact “led country after country into the iron tentacles of Red colonialism.” “It is up to the U.S. Informa- ner (R-Ind) termed Communist ef- forts to use the Army education service to indoctrinate GIs in World War II. + tioning about what Chairman Jen- | Singapore U.S., Britain, France, Australia to Confer ~ * SINGAPORE W#—Miltary repre- rsentatives of the United States, |Britain, France and Australia opened a four-day conference here today. Their chief task was a thor- ough new assessment of the Allied defense position in Southeast Asia in the light of recent French with- | drawals in Indochina. | An American. spokesman de- scribed the talks ag “‘purely rou- tine,"’ terming them a- continua- tion of those held periodically over the last two years in Saigon and ¢ 105 N. SAGINAW ST. WALLPAPER 5c - 9c- 19¢-29¢ fs, — TRIMMED FREE — PAINT FOR EVERY PURPOSE! Unpeinted Furniture Glidden’s $ Satin zS BANKING HOURS: 10 to $— Den.” Tues., Thurs. 10 to 12 Wednesday 10 to 8 P. M. Fri. 9 to 12 Noon Saturday | Lh i MAIN OFFICE | SAGINAW at LARENCE Your Inet asiné Patronage Makes This Announcement Possible . . . ~ = of the y _ May We Have the Privilege of Serving You? Member Federal Deposit’ Insurance Corporation $10,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor Branches -- - AUBURN HEIGHTS — Dees id Een Y: fs - F 2 ie i. 2% ig = a oe “ht ce ao Wednesday, July 7th, 10a.m. to 8 p.m. The New... Larger Drayton Plains Branch Pontiac State Bank Tomorrow we open the door of our new, modern branch bank in Drayton Plains— a building designed to offer you, our custom- ers more efficient banking service — your increasing patronage has made this possible—We are proud of the confidence you have shown in us as we take another step forward toward our goal of giving Pontiac and Oakland Count Drive-In service also available. better Banking Service. MARK S. STEWART, Mgr. DRAYTON PLAINS 144-146 NORTH SAGINAW STREET | whe oe = s rae s = hey i _ SIXTEEN oe - _Toe “Adventures of Pignochio" | whose pen name was Carlo renzini. \Lo- Bob Considine Says: — TINE! “Wl pay she bill? | Wishing. wont do it. an WEC loan will! Let yourself go on that dreamed-of vacation with an _ HFC ,Vacation Loan! Thou- | sands ‘of men and women do! Borrow $20 up to $500. Up to 20 months to repay. No pay- ments for 30 days. Phone or stop in and ask about a one- day, Vacation Loan! MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS ia 12 6 Paymts Daymts Payemts lk $ 5.03 |$ 9.24 7.20 | 9.98 | 18.39 14.21 13.11 19.77 | 36.59 19.55 | 21.20 | 29.55 | 54.78 31.39 | 34.16 | 48.09 | 90.02 Menscheld’s charge is the monthby vate of 3% on pert of @ balances not exceeding $50. 244% es st 6 balews 4 cee of bud mot encoding 3.300, and %& % on omy remasnder. OUSEHOLD FINANCE —Coysoration of Pontiac —— 3% South Saginaw St. The Kay Bidg., 2nd Floor PHONE: FEderal 4-0535 20 paymts 8 6.65 Play now! Pay later! Fark > j Loans made to residents of nearby towns NEW YORK (INS)—The passing | j shi¢w— There wefé stories in that day’s paper about the beautiful movie | | star Laraine Day. She has scored another celluloid triumph in Duke Wayne's newest, “The High and the Mighty.” But she didn't want | to talk about it, except to say that | | Duke. is easy to work with and | | William Wellman is a fine director. I was driving her to New York | | from Dave Marx’ place in New | Jersey. | Hers was no Garbo act. The reason the beautiful star didn't want to talk about herself was that the radio was bringing an account of a baseball game between the Giants and Pirates. Her husband, name of Durocher, works for the Giants, as man- ager. They had won the first but now that they had a chance to gain a half game on the Dedgers, they were having infernal trouble winning the second. Matter of fact, they never did. | The beautiful girl sat there in the rear, immersed in the loneliness of an obsession. She complained, | deeply rather than in any shrewish way, that the hapless Pirates compelled to do great things whenever they play | | her husband's team. The score | see-sawed., seem She mourned the, aan a pitcher named Jansen, who, col- lapseg. a her nasband's side. | In- thes h’there was more or | Air-Conditioned ’ Farmer-Snover FUNBRAL HOME: Peel M. Snorer 160 W. Huron st re ziti 000000000000000000000000ONS0000e NS OSSESORCCR BURGLARIES Have: ‘Indreased! Mer The Pontiac Press carries sees “eHtich 2 aa alarming increase. Protect your “silver,. jewelry, farg™ and other valuables with a BLANKET” INSURANCE POLICY. Pi New ~ Call Us for Rates!’ You'll Be Pima How Low They Are! eteeceesesseesececese INSURE GAINST THEFT ¢ jA Call Us on Any Insurance Need! Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 102 E. Huron St. Ph. FE 4-8284 “ e * * + * * } diciary ‘subcommittedy, dy 9. vel } {ese €fubllation in our car when | } Criticizes Clark’. ‘ReportHits ice] ie ‘Refusal to Testify; Dem . Solon Dissents 4 ’ WASHINGTON w—A House, Jo cehigized “Iu ity rhe joi +f caey af sitid it had | report while he Wats atfbrney general. “The daciment -drew immediate fire from: Rep. Byron G. Rogers } (D-Colo), one, of the five subcom?|, jmittee members, who. said Chair. — Keating (R-NY) -pulled a ‘sneak play” by his ‘‘unwarranted political: release ... of his pro- posed libelous report.” Pee ale defended (Clark, an ap- @ former President Tru- of ihe report, in subcom- miftee or even considered by ‘the parent et rou The roa deatiner with the sub | committee's inquify last year into operations of the Justice Depart- }ment, said the investigators were troubled’? because some contro- iversial actions were traced back {FACTS EXPANDED POPULATION of Oakland County DEMANDS The Expanded Facilities of a NEW Court House What's Wrong With Present } Courthouse and Office Building? Too small now . Too noisy . No elevators . Occupying valuable business property Inadequate parking facilities . Remodeling expense not justified . Cannot accommodate many of the county offices ; What Advantages Will the New |, Courthouse and Office Building i Have if You Vote “Yes” August 3rd? 1, Large enough for the present a: pe area go as to allow for future or house all administrative de- parking space : 6. Administrative: offices concentrated 4 ‘for public convenience 7. Eliminete future renting costs You Can’t Expect to Conduct 20th Century Business. in Oakland County With ‘ : 19th Century Facilities! | VOTE AUGUST 3rd! yy, to Clark. Clark was attorney gen- eral in 19%-49 before going to the | Supreme Court. Keating said in an aécompanying | statement ‘that Clark's failure to} | testify was’ “unfortunate™ beeause “we were deprived of the benefit | of any light which might have been | shed by a former member of Pres- ident Truman's Cabinet |, Clark ‘could pot immediately, be | reached for’comment. But Rogers | called Keatings statement ‘“‘com-< ieee baseless and accused the | New: York Republican of violating \“we, were dZUuh%%—VBGKQJVB his own fair play code in making | the report public. * * | The 135-page printed report con- |tained no signatures of subcom- | mittee members in its major sec- | tions. At various points ‘‘Minority views"’ were contained under Rog- |ers’ name. Separate views were latso entered by two eongressmen | who were members of the full | committee but not the subgroup | “There “Was no-exptanation why | the report, transmitted to the par- /ent committee 11 months ago, has not yet been acted on there. Hollywood Stunt Man Dies After Shooting | LOS ANGELES w# — Philip FE. Ahim, 49, movie stunt man shot a week ago during a Hollywood party | after making derogatory remarks | | about Texas, died last night in| general hospital. The shooting took place duning a party at the home of oil heiress Barbara Clampitt. Charged with assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder was Ed Neely, 61,-of Texas.-He is the hus- band .of -the former Leah, Clam- Actress’ Reaction Shows Sincere Concern for Team | enormous | fog of silence. | Sphere, hdans, a her Oh n' *tterh ‘ Fagaopetie Gls ‘kinti® and ‘Wrtdr- ing ° a eyirans teci ne proofet wrongdoing by OW pinkie watery go in the first place THE PONTIAC PRESS, “Crooks Penny Pinching the Giants tied the score at 3-3, ] and animated talk—including talk of things beyond baseball; .-an | topic in itselt—when | Hank Thompson put the Giants ahead 6-3 with a home run. A pitcher named Grissom might have added another ran, | _but he would not slide into home | plate—the announcer said—and | : he was out. Mrs. ~ Durocher | looked off. “Why didn’t _he | slide?”’ she asked in a small It seemed an academic | question at the time. But net | long after that a disgruntied | former employe of her husband's team, one Gordon, hit a home run for Pittsburgh to put the ridiculous Pittsburgh team ahead 7-6, for keeps. volee, We tooled into New York in a} To break «it would | have seemed like a burst of boogle-woogie from the organist | during mass. But break it I did. “Does your husband bring a lost ball. game home with him at night?” I asked one of. the most | beautiful and talented actresses in | the world } “No,” she told) me, an exclusive understatement. | But loss home Laraine Day brought that What a fine fan of the | Giants is this girl who’ in another deservedly has so many se « '* - : 2 If you , fiappened to Czechostovakjans movie Sedo you'd know. by¢ villain in the Poe a $3 United Stages, eA files, called a “ mentary, showing actors’ inspersonating + ue Korean children,’ is dl ing in Czeehthfovalia. One* shows a Low Prices Floor sample, demonstrator, pre-owned tele-— vision sets! All fully guaranteed just like new sets! | Choose from 16”, 7, 20" and 7 oe sets Real finds, every one! Beautiful console and table model cabinets. Many more that arent shown — but many are one - of -a-kind. First’ come, first served Phone FEderal 3.7114 108 NOR TEs SAGINAW is America’s greatest buy! Drive a new Chrysler just once and you won't-wantto settle for anything less! For here you command the most powerful V-8 engine of all, and the one with by far the greatest safety-reserve . ..235 HP FirePower. Adding to your-new sense of personal power behind the wheel“is PowerF lite: matic no-clutch drive ever developed. fully-powered steering most auto- Plus and braking for the ‘safest, surest car control you can experience today, and the most consistent ‘road feel’! You won't be called upon to match the reeord performances this car set at Indian- apolis and Daytona Beach . . but you'll know you con/d! It’s the same car exactly, and a lot edsier to own than you might hare guessed. Now's the time to price and buy a wonderful new Chrysler. Your car will never be worth more in trade than it is today! and loot The power , of leadership pitt, sister of the hostess. After his arrest, he told officers | the shooting occurred after Ahim | “kidded"’ him about his Texas’ accent and made derogatory _re-| | marks about that state and Sen.’ | McCarthy (R-Wis): Neely i¢ free! on $10,000 -ail. : *- Centenarian Tells How dor Bagdazian of Freeport cele- | and had this advice on how to| live Tong: “Don't worry about! | things. It doesn’t do any good." Salt water from the oceans, being | heavier than fresh water, some- times travels far enough upstream | along river bottoms to contaminate city water drawn from the river. | SACRAMENTO, Calif. uw — Asa- | is yours in a beautiful CHRYSLER Now at Your Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer’s brated his 10\st birthday yesterday | CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES 32 S. Main St. CLARKSTON, MICHIGAN TALLEY MOTOR SALES, INC. 1001 North Main Set. ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN jin, ——__—_——— ——EMERTCA'S FOREMOST AUTHORITY ON GOOD EATING ~~ —— ee “Is a youngster’s birthday coming up soon at your house? Or is it your turn to treat the neighborhood children? Bake this ‘Circus Cake’ that looks like the real ‘big top’ itself! Don’t let its Yancy look fool you it’s really easy to make. And it’s just the thing for the circus season.” EASY TO MAKE. ( Aye ‘ ; ; Q tine TO BAKE: Follow easy directions on package for Duncan Hines i Yellow Cake. Bake it in two 8 or 9-inch layers. i r ; : : = ; TO FROST: You can make all the frosting in just one bowl. First, ‘ make a standard white butter frosting. (Use '!, cup butter or margarine, ' . 3 cups sifted powdered sugar, 3 tablespoons milk, and |!. teaspoons i ; vanilla.) Second, save out !, cup of this white frosting. Then make the rest chocolate: Add another 3 tablespoons milk. Stir in '% cup cocoa sifted with | cup sifted powdered sugar. Beat until smooth TO DECORATE: Spread about !, of the chocolate frosting between layers. Mark sides into even sections. Frost alternate sections with white frosting. ‘Then frost other sections, and top, with rest of choco late. Decorate with animal crackers, gumdrops, and top with bright blue pennant. ad + - Lighter. higher, stays moist longer—when you bake it with one of Duncan Hines Better because of Duncan Hines’ knowledge of food and recipes. Better because of his insistence on use of the finest ingredients. And better because you use your own fresh eggs! Duncan Hines says, “One of the secrets of fine baking is the use of strictly fresh eggs. No good cook would think of substituting dried eggs for fresh eggs in her prized recipes, and yet factory-dried powdered eggs are the only kind that can be put into a cake mix package. That’s why I ask you to add your own fresh eggs to my mixes.” Try all 4 of Duncan, Hines Cake Mixes: Yellow, White, Spice, and Devil's Food. CLIP OUT THIS PENNANT Fold on dotted line and glue to soda ] straw or toothpick. Stick it Delicious, too: his Buttermilk shad in top of your ots|Ue ghee . : . : ; : / = ; : . t } . i : a See” ns TILE PONATAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 61956 0 Give gers Split SOUTHPORT, England # — Jimmy Demaret of Kiamesha Lake, N.Y., shot a two-over-par 75 on the Royal Birkdale course to- day to qualify comfortably for the British Open Golf championship. Today's 36-39—% over the 6-837- yard, par 36-37—73 championship layout gave Demaret a %6-hole Saddler Wins, but Fails to Be Impressive Featherweight Champ Lacks Pre-Army Skill in Knockout NEW YORK w—Sandy Saddler, the featherweight champ, is still _ five or six fights away from his __pre-Army peak despite a knockout victory over game little Liby Manzo last night * . . The champ: showed only flashes of his old form in disposing of Manzo in 2:35 of the 10th round at St. Nicholas Arena but he didn't forget any of his rough stuff in close. Referee Al Berl. warned Sadler repeatedly for wrestling and once for a_ borderline left hook. i “TI thought he was iniproved on his last fight,"’ said Charlie John- ston, Saddier’s manager, ‘but he still isn't in shape. He hasn't got back his old sharpness. We're go ing to take our time.” * * * Saddler was quick to admit his own shortcomings. ‘I forgot a few things I knew before I went in the Army,” he said. ‘My legs felt fine but the reflexes aren't up to par yet. Maybe I'll be ready by Sep- tember. When I'm ready. I'll take anybody, Percy Bassett or any- body they want if I can get a good payday.”’ Manzo was Saddler's Mth knock- out victim in 148 pro fights. Al- though the 24-year-old haritone was cut around both eyes and needed seven stitches in the gash over the right eye, he gave the champ a good fight. Libby gave away Peach and height to the lanky champ al- though he outweighed Saddler 13§4% to 131% pounds in the non-} title bout. Saddler was 5% pounds over the class limit Saddler tagged Manzo with 4 left hook and then dropped him with a right uppercut in the 10th. Manzo got up at seven but col- lapsed in a neutral corner. Referee Al Berl ruled a knockout, not a TKO. Bill McNeece, a rough brawler from Central Islip, N. Y. earned an Aug. 23 Eastern Parkway date with Bobby Dykes by stopping Jackie LaBua on a TKO at the end of six rounds last night at the Parkway. Bad Arm Fails to Stop Snider Duke Boosts NL Mark to .375; Avila -Also Gains, in AL Race NEW YORK i®—A bruised elbow which sidelined him for three days failed to cool off Duke Snider anti the Brooklyn outfielder today held his largest lead of the season in the National League batting rave. Snider, a .336 hitter in 1953, col- lected nine hits in 19 trips last weék to raise his batting average seven points to .375. In the American League, Cleve- land's Bobby Avila increased his pacesetting margin over. runnerup Al Rosen to 30 points. Avila boasts a .333 slate and Rosen is at 323 MONDAY'S HOME RUNS Mantle. Noren 2 Yankees: wi son. Athietics; Jensen, Lepew 2. Red Sox ' Moryn, Snider. Gilliam, Dodgers; Williams Rhodes 2. Mays, Giants; Mathews 2. Cran- dall. Bruton, Braves: Hemus, Repulski Cardinals; Glynn Sn a Jablonski. Indians, Boone. Belardi..Kuenn. Tigers. Jackson 2 Cubs; Kluszewski. Landrith — Sievers, Senators, Jackson, White are total of 148, nine strokes behind the earty leader, Norman Von Nida of Australia, Demaret had a 73 in his Ist qualifying round over the easier Hillside Course yesterday, Von Nida, who equalled dale's record of 70 yesterday, a 67 at Hillside today for a qualifying total. Von Nida's first round feat yes terday was eclipsed this morning with Tony Harman, 23-year-old British professional, went around the difficult Birkdale course in 37-32—69 for a new record. His two-day total was 142. Harman wiped out the record set in 1935 by Alf Pagigham of Eng- land and equalled yesterday by Von Nida. John (Shamrock) McGonigle, the first day. leader with a record 65 at Hillside, had an 80 at Birkdale Birk shot 137 today. His total of 149 is certain to qualify The 100 low scorers and ties dn the 36-hole qualifying test, ending today. will engage in the three- day, 72-hote tournament starting to- morrow at Birkdale Demaret, after matching. par 36 on the front nine, shot birdies on the Iith and 12th holes. Hy ran into trouble en the 381-yard 15th, where he took six after driving into the rough and hit- ting his approach into a bunker. Ancient Gene Sarazen, greying links master from Germantown, N. Y.. smiled today before teeing off in the second qualifying round of the British Open golf champion ship and said: “IT am going to catch that little guy.” Squire Sayazen, who won this t Qualifies for Open same title back in 1932, astonished everyone yesterday by shooting a 67 over the Hillside course. The “little guy’ he referred to was 29- year-old John McGonigle, who led the big field with a 65. The field of 300 golfers reversed today, with those who played the first round at Hillside moving to Birkdale and vice versa. Both Sarazen and Irishman McGonigle will have their try at the tougher Birkdale layout. The testing where the will be played, holds no fears for Sarazen. This is his 12th British Open. Frank Stranahan of Toledo and Bobby Locke, the favorite from South Africa, each had a 69. Sarazen said his eight-dollar ‘put- ter, which he bought only two days ago, helped him. Birkdale (left), Tiger manager, SAVE ne FOR TIGERS — Fred Hutchinson, congratulates Zuverink (right) and Harvey Kuenn after the Tigers defeated the Cleveland Indians, 1-0, —- George in the 2nd game AP Wirephete ? of Monday's double header. Kuenn knocked a home run in the 11th inning too save a hitter for Zuverink. Bengals dropped the Ist game, 13-6. Off Florida Coast ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. #® — The master of a party fishing ves- sel told today of ‘‘the big one that got away'’—and fifty witnesses backed up his story. * * * Capt. J. B. Mathews, skipper of the Capt. Bae Strickland, and his crew fought a losing séven-hour battle with a 45-fobt whale shark in the Gulf of Mexico Sunday. “It was the biggest thing we've ever seen outside a plaster cast of a whale in the New York Museum of-Natural History,"’ said Karl Dronke of Newark, N.J., who was aboard with his wife and son, Karl Jr Mathews had spotted.a hugh whale shark in the fishing grounds 50 miles off John’s Pass a week earlier. He hooked the whale shark on a 370-pound test line then but the line snapped like a thread, Sunday, he was prepared with *fackle’’ that included a foot-long shark hook, three-foot chain leader and 500 feet of five-eighth manila line, This was double spliced into the anchor cable which was an inch thick, with the capstan as a “reel.” ’ The Capt. Bae Strickland made a dozen passes at the whale shark before Payne sank the hook into the big fish's lower jaw. “The crew played it like any other fish,’’ Dronke said. ‘‘Math- ews kept a tight Tine on him and Payne handled the capstan reel. They'd throw the boat in reverse now and then to take up slack, then shut off the engine and let the whale shark tow us Al Lopez Credits Bullpen for Success of Indians The Indians split with Detroit, winning the first 13-6 but losing the second 1-0 in 11 innings, and their lead over the Yankees was cut to 3% games. Still, the Cleve- land bullpen had a chance to shine. Art Houtteman, an ex-Tiger, re- placed a wobbling Dave Hoskins in the fourth inning of the opener and checked his former a gprarsige ed for his ninth win against only four losses. ‘That's why we're winning,” Lopez explained. ‘“‘Houtteman, Hal Newhouser, Don Mossi and Ron Narleski have been doing a wonder- ful job for us in the bullpen.” Lopez also had some complimen- tary words for his defense, which ‘The permed “wery much improved.” | In the last three vears, the Indi- ans finished second to the cham- pion Yankees and defensive weak- ness, as much as anything, was listed as the major shortcoming. “The whale shark didn't seem to bleed. At least it didn't attract any other sharks. “The party fishing boat Atlanta came alongside and took off those who'd had enough, -but we stayed. So did about 25 others.” Fishing Boat Skipper Battles Whale Shark for 7 Hours Before Rope Breaks The ship's log showed the whale shark towed it 18 miles during the seven hours the fight lasted. Then it gave a lunge, snapped the line and left. Mathews estimated it would weigh 15,000 to 20,000 pounds. Roualet, Callahan Win Weekend Races at PYC Pontiac Yacht Club held two races over the Independence Day weekend. Andy Roualet skippered “An-Ju"’ .to victory Sunday with the help of crew June Roualet and Phil Klintworth. . Jerry Callahan, assisted by Charles: and Ron Callahan won Monday's event in ‘‘Nautigal’’. A pot-luck dinner was held fol- lowing Monday's race League Leaders AMERICAN bF AGUFE BATTING - Avila, Cleveland. 353 Cleveland 323. Busby. Washington i) Minoso, Chicago, 316. Fox. Chicago, 31 RUNS—Minoso, Chicago, 65. Fox, Chi cago, 61, Yost. Washington, 60. Mantle New York, 39; Carresque!. Chicago. 53 RUNS BATTED IN—Minoso, Chicago, 64 Mantle, New York, 60; Doby, Cleveland and Berra. New York, 59; Rosen, Cleve- land, 58 HITS—Fox, Chicago. 162; Busby. Wash- ington. Miposs, Chicago, 93, Vernon, Avila, Cleveland, %6 ww Me- DOU on, 20. Dougald, New York, 17; ing, Boston and Carrasquel. Chicago, 15, Jensen, Bos- ten, Smith, eland, Kueun, Detroit and Berra, New 13 ork, 3 TRIPLES— Runnels, Washington, 12; Ver- non, Washington, 10, Minose, Chicago, 8 Tuttle, Detroit and antle, New York, 7 HOME RUNS -Mantle. New York. 17 Roser Deby, Cleveland. 15 Rosen, Cleveland Boone. Detrott and Zerniai. Philadelphia “4 STOLEN Minese, Chicage, 11, Busby. lcm 9, Chicage PI MING bASES—Jensen, Boston and Rivera, Chicago, 10, Fox and Michaels, (eight decision )}—Reynolds, NewYork, 31. 900, Stone, Washingten, 7-1. 875; Consuegra, Chicago, 10-2, 833; Kee- an, Chicago. il-J 7%. Morgan, New fork, 7-2, 778 STRIKEOUTS—Turley. Baltimore. 103: Trucks, Chicago,.77: Wynn, Cleveland, 73; Pierce, Chicago, 72: Hoeft, Detroit, 70. NAFIONAL mers NG—snider, Bruoklyn, Mueb onan York, 348; Bctioendienst Bt, Hamoer, Philadelphia and Louis, - 339; Robinson, Brookiyn, RUNS—Musial, dienst, = — oon, RUNS. atc, in—bbectas Bh owe. 79. Jablonski, 8t. Louis, 70; Snider, Brook- lyn. 63 es, Brookivn, 66; Kiuszewski, Cincinnats, ITS—Schoendienst, St. Louis, ;_ 8nt- der. Brook); 107, Muellet, Shag = and Bei., Cincinnati, 105; Jablonski, Louis, 103, DOUBLES —anider, paces Sol Cincinnati, 22; Aaron, Mi ——s and Jablonski eg nat Louls, 72; Schoen- i oe te = 2 Bell, Cincinnati, 3 Bell, Philadelphia and Schoendi 8; Brooklyn. ne New York andil Gilliam, Mays. New York and Moon, ag r HOME RUNS—Mays, New York and Musial, St. Louis, 2%, Saver, Chicago, 23; Kifizgewski. Cincinnett, 71; Hodges and Snider, Brooklyn. STOLEN BASES—Brvtor, Milwaukee, 17; Temple. Cincinnati, 11; Fondy, Chicago, 9; Moon. St Leute 8; Mathews, Milwaukee ° ‘ Antonelli New York ‘ PITCHING ‘eight New York, 12-2 fecisions Wilhelm 6-2, 800, Haddix. St Louis. 12-4, 730 Meyer a 642. 730. Grissom, New York, #3 7 STRIKEOU PS. Haddix. St. Louis, 94: ja. 93: Spahn, Milwau- ki : Er yy kiyn, 74; Antonelli. oe, rs ya, ; tone: New ¥ oe ey U.S. Netters Play in Sweden BASTAD, Sweden, July 5 # — Tony Trabert of Cincinnati and Budge Patty of Los Angeles ar- rived Monday from Wimbledon with Australia’s Ken Rosewall and Rex Hartwig ‘to participate in an inter- national tennis tournament. * * * The quartet automatically quali fied for the quarter-final round. Trabert will meet Sven Davidson, Swedish Davis Cupper, and Rose- wall will oppose Lennart Bergelin, another Swedish Cup star’ Davidson, Be rg e?lin, “Staffen Stockenberg and Torsten Johans- son have been named to the Swe- dish team which will meet the Bel- gian squad in the semifinals of, the European Zone Davis Cup tour- nament at this West Coast resort. July 11-13. Eight Sites Selected for Little League Series Cities in eight states have been selected as sites for regional play- offs in Little League baseball, it has been announced by national tournament director Albert E. Houghton, secretary - treasurer of Little League Baseball, Inc, Win- ners of regional honors will qualify for the annual Little League World Series, at Williamsport, Pa., Aug. 24-25-27. Pinpointed in the selec- .| tion were Albany, N. Y., Santa Monica, Calif., Joliet, Ill., Green- ville, N. C., Williamsport, Pa, Wo- burn, Mass., Salisbury Md. and Austin Texas. Stock Gar Feature '|Won by Bud Wright Bud. Wright won the 50-lap old model stock car race at Lake An- gelus Speedway Monday, while Tom Jackson and Dale Priést won dashes in hardtops and old model stocks, respectively. An &lap Powder Puff Derby was won hy, Nonie Zanoni. Races also were held Sunday with the hardtop feature of 25 laps won by Wil- liam Zanoni, while Zanoni and Don course, | championship proper | vs 4 Chicago at Detroit McCubbin won 4-car dashes. | | ‘Luverink Wins 11-Inning Tilt Over Cleveland Kuenn’s Homer Accounts for Only Run of Finale After Tribe Wins Ist By JOE FALLS DETROIT « — A big, strapping righthander sat restlessly in the Cleveland Indians’ bullpen through- out the entire 1951 season Not once was he given a start- ing assignment, not once did he win a game. He was used, as a matter of fact, only as a mop- up pitcher when all was lost. Those were dismal and disen- chanting days for George Zuverink, the blond giant from’ Holland, Mich. But they're all behind him now, and the 28-year-old righthand- er of the Detroit Tigers has had his revenge. Zaverink pitched astonishing three‘hit ball for 11 innings yes- terday and was rewarded with a victory over his old mates, the Indians, when Harvey Kuenn hammered a dramatic home run into the left field seats. It broke up a tense, scoreless duel and gave the Tigers a 1-0 win over Cleveland for an even split of their holiday doubleheader in Briggs stadium before 46,935, Cleveland won the opener 13-6 as Bill Glynn, connected for three straight home runs. But the 2nd game was the crucial one for the Indians it cost them a full game of their league lead. They had hoped to protect their 442 edge on the Yankees, but Zuverink and Kuenn spoiled their chances. Zuverink held the Indians hitless after the $th inning. Two walks in the 8th and another in the 9th put him in hot water, but he hauled himself free by twice start- ing double plays Only hits off him were a pair ot. singles by Bobby Avila, the league's leading batter, and a triple by George Strickland. who died on 3rd when Zuverink forced Jim Hegan into a ground out. It was Zuvvy’s 4th — and most impressive — win. Iy was not an easy victory. His mound opponent, Don Mossi, a 23-year-old rookie, also had al- lowed only three hits going into the lith. But Kuenn's homer — a %45-foot drive into the upper left field stands — brought Mos- si's downfall, only his Ist as a big leaguer. While the 2nd game was a mas- terpiece, the opener was a loosely played three-hour scramble in which Cleveland used two pitchers and Detroit six. Ned Garver, No. 1 on the hit parade, suffered his 5th loss “ramet! five aay 4 FIRST GAME Cleveland ......... 206 020 120-13 14 3 Detroit 000 360 621— 6 11 1 Hoskins, Houtteman, (4) and Naragon Hegan (6), Garver. Branca (3) Miller (4), Gray (5), Weitk (7), Mariowe (8) and House) W-—Houtteman. L—Qarver Home rune—Cleveland, Glynn (3). De- troit, Boone, Belardi . SECOND GAME CLEVELAND DETROIT ABH OA ABHOA Giynn, Ib 5 @ 8 1 Kuenn, ss 5 14 4 Avila, 2 4 2 2 «1 Tuttle, ef 4061 «0 Doby, cf 3 0 7 @Boone. 3b 3 0 1 2 . 3 3 @ 2 2Nieman, f 3 1 2 6 Wertz. rf 4 09 3 OLund & 1 0 0 © St'ckI'd.ss 4 1 1 2 Dropo, Ib 3 014 0 Westi'ke.if 4 0 4 @Kaline. rf 4 1 3 0 Hegan,c 3 © 4 1 Wilson, ¢ 2 0 6 © Mossi, p 3 0 © 1 Bolling, % 4 6 2 4 Zuverk.p 41 0 5 Totals 23 3x31 8 Totals 33 433 15 x—one out When winning run scored Cleveland 000 000 000 00—6 troit 000 000 G00 1—1 R-—Kuen E—None. RBI Kuenn 2B Nieman, Zuverink 3B—Strickland HR Kuenn S—Wiilson. Dropo DP ~— Bolling Kuenn and Dropo. Zuverink, Kuenn and Dropo. Zuverink. Bolling and -Dropo Left Cleveland 4. Detroit 5 BB - Mos Zaverink 4 SO—Mossi 5. Ziuverink 5 RK : Mossi 1-1. Zuverink 6-6 W- Ziver ink (43) L—WMossi ts-1) U—Grieve, Berry Urmont 2:18 A 46,935 Hur'ey. T Major League Results AMERICAN = AGUE Wo ao Pet Behind Cleveland New York ... on rr “3% Chicago 30) «(615 6 Detroit 4. A’ 19% Washington “4 86413 21% Baltimore ....... ™. 6% «295 «23 Philadelphia 29 *€ 3% 23 Boston 28 y 38423" TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Cleve'and .«night)— (9-6) vs. Wynn (96) non at New Yerk (night}—Brewer «44+ Ford (6-6) Coleman Trucks (10-5) vs Aber (1-2) adeiphia at Was shington (r lant (74> vs Stone (7-1) MONDAY'S RESULTS astrtie tt-BDetroit-¢4—r2nd nin New York 1. Philadel Chicago 3- papoose al Boston 14-1. ‘Washingt WED NESDAYS. SCHEDU LE Baltimore at Cleveland, 7°30 p mi. Boston at New York 1 pm Chicago at Detroit, 2 pm. (Only — schedaled) NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Led = Behind Phil Trice ney Teme ia 42 Rew York .......:..; 52 25 .675 - Brook] 48 «628 632 3% Philadelphia . 3% MM 528 «11s Milwaukee... . 3% 37 SO7 8613 Cincinnati oe soe) «(13% St. Louis % 44 461) 16's Chicago 27° 4% 37023 Pittsburgh 2 82 325 «(27 TODAY'S GAMES New York at _—— (night) — Magiie (7-4) vs Roe Pittsburgh at Pailedelphia (night)—Friend (34) vs Simmons (7-6) sige ber at Chicago—Conley (6-3) vs Pollet (4-4). Cincinnat! at 8st aor a Bacrewski (+5) vs eet (+ — RESULTS 0-3 ; teago 7 win game 10 s ee 8-10, St. Louis 6-4 WEDN ie SCHEDULE ew York Brooklyn, 7 pm Pittsburgh et St entiodeinte (2), Sand 7pm Miiwaukee at Chicago, pm Cincinnati at St. Louis, Milwau 8 pm. TIGER LEADERS By The Associated Press BATTING—House, 302 RUNS—Boone. 40 HITS—Kuenn, 83 13 IN—Boene, 40 PITCHING—Zuverink, 4-3, .571. STRIKEOUTS—Hoeft, 71. Zubalik Top Hitter Jets, GMC By BILL MARTIN Statistics released today by the ity Parks & Recreation Depart ment show why Pontiac Jets and General Motors are currently run- ning 1-2 in the City Class A Base- ball League race : aa 4 Players from those twe teams hold Il of the top If places in the individual batting average list and the Ist four places in pitch- ing performances. games through Ernie Zubalik of GMC leading batters with a .454 mark. He also has the mgst num ber of hits, 15, and has been at bat the most number ef times, 31. Eugene Cox and Don Russell both of the Jets, follow with and .414, respectively Three pitchers — Herman Bishop | and Marv Caswell of GMC and Jim Williams of the Jets — are still unbeaten. Bishop has won three games, while Caswell and Williams Figures covering June 26 show ‘A’ Baseball Statistics 428 | Re Dominate have taken two straight. Caswell and Russ Lothery of the Jets have the most strikeouts, 24. STANDINGS w iil GB Jets a 2 GMC =» O 3 ‘3 Oliver 6 3 1 Auburn eeere 4 #4 J‘a Jerome 4 6 4 cio 5 6 va Elks ‘ 1 9 7 BATTING AB H RBI Ave Zubalik omc 31 15 6 434 Cox, Jets 28 12 42 Russell, Jets 28 12) OS ale Jenkin Jets 3 9 6 $91 Cruz Aut 23 9 ; 301 Booker Jets 29 1! 9 371 Davis, Jets 26 9 4 od Swindell GMC 24 8 4 3st Parms. GMC 0 10 5 333 Beay, Jets 25 a 4 20 McClashen Aut 2 7 8 Pournier Ohfer 22 i } 18 Zittle GMC 26 8 1 308 iberts. GMC 20 6 3 0 > PITCHING H SOBB WI Bishop. GMC 21 6-3 Oo Caswell, GMC ee 8 24 12 2 | liliams, Jets : 9 5 1 2 0 othery Jets . 12 4 #6 3 1 Goldgworthy, Oliver 3 21 8 3 1 Hruska, CIO . 13 821 Payne, Jerome 5s 17 16 AL 2 1 Winners for N.S. Contests A 3-day celebration marked this year's Independence Day observ- ance at Oakland Park. A full pro- gram of games and contests was climaxed by a 30-minute fireworks | display Monday ight. Winners of the contests PEANUT SCRAMBLE by Richard Reddeman 4-6 year Won 16-8 year» »y Douglas Daniels (6-10 years Won by Bandra Mondy BOYS GIRLS FOOT RACE 25 YARDS 6-8 year Woo by Peugy Johnson (8-10 year Won by Donald Lennert, (10-+3~year Won by Sharon Munger = BOYS’ FOOT RACE. 50 YARDS 10 13 eersi- Won by Allan Nesbit and Allan Howse ‘tie: BOYS LEAP FROG RACE 7275 YARDS —Won by Pat Fiynn and Dick Kor GIRLS’ BUBBLE GUM CONTEST 10 13 yearsi)\—Won by Judy Thaxton BOYS’ BUBBLE GUM CONTEST (106 13 years)—Won by Philip Hadle GIRLS’ BOPTBAL! THROW IN CON TEST (13-16 years Won by ii Pea son BOYS SOFTBALL! THROWING CON TEST (13-16 year Won by Dice Kor GIRLS’ FOOT RACE 75 YARDS 13 16 years)—-Won by Jeanette Ba BOYS’ FOOT RACE 75 YARDS ‘13-16 years—Woa by Dick Kor: BOYS’ GIRLS CRACKER EATING (12-16 years:—Billy Tower WOMEN’S POOT RACE. 50 YARDS (16 25 years—Won by Jackie Thasher MEN'S FOOT? RACE. 75 YARDS— :16- 25 years) —Won by Billy Pairbrother WOMEN’S SHOE-KICKING CONTEST (over 21 years:-—Ardis Campeu WOMENS ROLLING PIN CONTEST POR DISTANCE over 21 years;—Won by Marie Pollina WOMEN'S ROLLINO PIN FOR ACCURACY ‘over 21 years thy Schertzer MEN'S SOFTBALI EST over 16 years WOMEN'S SOFTBALI CONTEST Dore THROWING CON fit Martin THROWING | CONTEST over 16 =years Gertrude Walsh ‘over 25 years Mrs Jona Agies HUSBAND CALLING CONTEST FOR LADIES. Violet Asplund BOG THROWING brother and Conant Holiday Crowds Down at Tracks Major League Baseball Attendance Slightly “P Over 1953 NEW YORK .uf—The attendance at major league baseball showed a slight jump over last Jwly 4, but both attendance and betting at the leading*tace tracks yesterday were under the 1953 holiday figures, an Associated Press survey revealed today. CONTEST -Fair- * * All July 4 baseball and racing programs were held yesterday be- cause the fourth fell on a Sunday this year. * * * The differences, however, were slight and they perhaps indicated a levelling off of interest in sports afteggthe fluctuations of the early post-war Vears Zaseball attendance totaled 200,- 94, compared to 196,050 last year. The programs at 10 tracks were witnessed by 325,845 spectators who wagered $18,974,002, compared to last vear's figures of 328,575 and $19,038,573, * * * Hollywood Park was tops in both attendance and betting. The Cali- fornia plant attracted 59,178 fans, a new record, who poured $3,660,- 261 through the mutuels. | Sal Maglie Puts Perfect Ebbets Mark on Line Giants Ace Defends League Lead Against Brooklyn ‘Cousins’ BROOKLYN “o—Sal Maglie, who never has lost Ebets Field, places this perfect pitching record on the line as the New York Giants and Brooklyn Dodgers re- new their first place battle tonight * * » The Dodgers, still smarting three straight losses to the Giants at the Polo Grounds last week, their trust in Preacher Roe, a game at over place the veteran southpaw . * * Even if the Dodgers take all three games tonight, tomorrow night and Thursday afternoon, they will still trail the Giants by a half game. The New Yorkers go into tonight's battle with a 3'2 game tead. The Giants have taken six of the nine gafmes played this sea- son by the interberough rivals. Maglie, who lost a_ shutout against Brooklyn last’ Tuesday night when Roy Campanella smashed a two-run homer with two out in the ninth to tie the score and send the game into overtime, hurled only three innings of score- less relief against Pittsburgh since. * . = He has a 7-4 record this season and has beaten the Brooks 20 times in 27 lifetime decisions. Roe (3-2) pitched last on June 27 against the St. Louis Cardinals Manager Walter Alston has an- nounced he plans to follow Roe with his two righthanded aces Don Newcombe will pitch tomor- row night and Cart Erskine will hurl Thursday. Leo Durocher, manager of: the Giants, has not named any pitchers outside of Maglie but he is expected to name big Jim Hearn and Ruben Gomez for the final two games. White Skies May Run in MRA Feature ‘NEW YORK ® — A decision is expected today whether White Skies, heir apparent to the 1954 sprint championship, will fly to Detroit for the $50,000 Michigan Mile Saturday . Meanwhile several of the horses he defeated in the $62.500 Carter Handicap yesterday*at Aqueduct — plus others — will be pointed for the $50,000 Brooklyn Handice which Closes out the Queens Coun ty Jockey Club’s summer meeting Saturday White Skies, owned by M. Wickham. defeated 12 others in the seven-furlong Carter, pack- ing his 133 pounds like a champion William The first major leaguer to hit three home runs in one game was Adrian C. (Pop) Anson of the Chi- cago Cubs in 1884. ap, . Birmingham 9 Keeps Position ~ in Legion Loop | Reds Quell Rally by Clawson to Win 6-5 Decision Monday Birmingham's Reds beat down a 9th inning rally by Clawson’s American Legion baseball team Monday to’take a 6-9 triumph at Clawson City Park Reds came from behind twice to take the fead with a 3-run rally in the 6th as Bill Watkinson hit a home run, and Kirk Flack doubled following 2 singles. Win- ning, run came in the 7th on a walk, Watkinson's single and an infield out. Trailing 63° Clawson pushed over a pair of runs in the 9th and had runners on 2nd and 3rd when Birmingham hurler . Larry Milford struck out the last batter. Milford chalked up his 4th victory against one loss, while Tom Raines lost his 4th in a row. Win boosted the Reds’ 18th Dis trict League lead to a full ame over Berkley. Reds and Berkley clash Wednesday at Birmingham and a Victory would clinch a zone tourney spot for the Reds ..000 203 100-8 11 4 010 020 002 5 8 2 d and Fiack, Raines and Noian Bird Family Proves Hazard on Golf Course Women's Tournament Coming Up, Something Must Be Done CORNING, N.Y. U—Frank C€a- nable: president of says something Birmingham Keds Clawson Miifor the Corning Country Club, has got to be done about the ‘mental hazard” on the 11th fairway LJ * * For two weeks a kildeer prover and her mate have’ been aggres sively guarding four unhatched eggs in their nest in the grass. Golfers have tried to play their shots so that the, could give the nest a detour. and somebody put up a brush barmner around th birds’ home But with the Ladies Finger Lakes golf tourney) coming up Wednesday, Canuble sass some- thing else must be done “IT may call a special session of the board of directors and let them thipk up something,’’ Canable said yesterday, Racing Mishap Kills Jockey SALEM. N.H. Uh — Death came to 19-year-old journeyman = Jockey Vernon Smith yesterday—when Greek Son, his. mount, fell with a broken leg in the morning half of a split racing program at Rock inghant Park. * = * Smith. from Conway Springs. Kan., died shortly after the muis- hap fream a fractured skull and intercranial hemorrhages at a nearby hospital. = > » The jockey, second leading win- ner at the current meeting with 24 victories compared to Tony De- Spiritor’s 51, was urging his mount into the lead at the last turn of the third race when the animal fell heavily; The fatality was the second among jockeys this vear-and only the second in New England racing history. Curtis Dav, 28, was killed | Feb. 6 at Rillito Park at Tucson Ariz - = Governor's Trot Friday Annual $10,000 Governor's Cup Trot will be held Friday night at Northvale Downs, It is one of the two major North- ville events of the season. Other is the $10,000 Michigan Pacing Derby to be held Friday, July 23 Marciano May Only Have ) More Title Bouts, NEW YORK—Rocky Marciano ed as saying that he wants only 2 more fights. This sounds reasonable. By that time he will have all the money he wants, or at least enough to get by with. Also by that time, against two pretty fair his features will have had their opponents, share of carving. Ld * * Rocky is not a good defensive fighter and he never will be against some opponent who can box. He is going to get chopped up and: the human face and head can take only so much of this without funny noises starting in the skull. * * * Still the lure of the extra dough is generally more than the champion can face without try- Gene Tunney is the only one You can imagine what Gene would have done to the Schmelings, Baers and Carneras of 'that~*period. But he was all in one piece and te all the. money he could ing once more. who retired unbeaten use. Joe Louis had to keep fighting to pay his taxes. has been quot- Or a million. much risk. ~» Writer Thinks He's Smart Enough to Quit Soon By GRANTLAND RICE The more Joe fought, the deeper he seemed to sink in Uncle Sam’s quicksands. His main customer was the Internal Revenue De- partment. Louis could get rid of money faster than anyone I ever saw. And not all of it was used up in taxes. I have an idea that Rocky Marciano will be a lot more like Tunney than like Louis. imagine Rocky tossing a half-million overboard. I can't He has found what a dollar means, even a modern dollar chopped down to around 48 cents. Or maybe less. Looking over the list of available opponents in sight, Marciano might stick around several years. He is just too tough for the field. He punches much teo hard and he is too im- pregnable to assault and battery. There is too much power in either fist. and too much granite in-his head or body to run But this toughness of bone and fiber won't last forever. its ruggedness as the years come along. think Marciano will run any risk of hanging around too long. It wilt begin to lose I don't } u v ui) € THE PONTIAC PRESS, TU ESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 Ph then SP AO tal a 4 Saeed a =e ke * ‘ © is 5 ee ee icge . ane ~ Stengel Names Harvey Kuenn to All-Star Team CHICAGO w—Casey Stengel of the New York Yankees, who will manage’ the American League team in the annual All-Star base- ball game at Cleveland July 13 named eight pitchers for the battle today. - . s ™ Only one, Whitey Ford of his own Yankees, is a lefthander. The others are Mike Garcia and Bob Lemon of Cleveland; Bob Keegan and ee Trucks of the Chicago White Sox; Bob Porter- field of Washington, Allie Rey- nolds of New York and Bob Turley of Baltimore. The American League released Stengel's @ioices along with the other players who, with the eight starters selected in a poll of fans, will represent the league. * * «* The eight American League starters, announced Sunday night, are Al Rosen, Cleveland, first base; Bobby Avila, Cleveland, sec- ond base; Ray Boone, Detroit, third base; Chico Carrasquel, Chi- cago, shortstop; Orestes Minoso, Chicago, left field; Mickey Mantle, New York, center field; Hank Bauer, New York, right field, and Yogi Berra, New York, catcher. Each of these eight top vote-get- ters must, according to the regula- tions governing the game, start and play a minimum of three} Outfielders—Larry Doby, innings. ” * * For possible use in later innings, Stengel chose the following players to round out his 25-man squad: Catcher — Sherman Lollar, Chi- cago. Infieldets—Ferris Fain, Chicago; Jim Finigan, Philadelphia; Nelson Fox, Chicago; George Kell, Chi- Ayulo Winner of 200-Mile Darlington Test Bob Scott Is Killed in Crash at South Carolina Track DARLINGTON, S.C., u—Searing speeds and 100-degree heat spurred Mapuel Ayulo, Los Angeles, Calif., race track veteran, to victory here yesterday in the third Darl- ington Raceway Big Car event that*was marred by a fatal acci- dent, * * « ; Ayulo. was pacing the field at 128 mph when Bob Scott, Gardena, Calif., turned oyer against the in- fiell fence and caused the caution flag to be run out for 15 laps, drop- ping the final speed to 123 mph. Scott, taken-to a Florence hospi- tal, died. He suffered a broken neck and other injuries. Relief driv- er Ernie McCoy went over the out- side rail earlier in the 200-mile grind, but was not burt seriously. The speeds turned up in trials were less than 10 miles an hour slower than at the Indianapolis track. The pace Ayulo was setting when the race was slowed .down by Scott's tragic accident was only about 3 mph off this year’s winning speed at the 2'2 mile Indiana track. s * * A crowd estimated at 15,000 was parched hy the blazing sun before the grind was finished. Exact -of- ficial speed was 122.993. Only 18 of the 30 starters were on the track when Ayulo finished his winning race Favored Sickle’s Image Beaten by 5-1 Outsider Favored Sickle’s Image, owned by Clarence Hartwick of Oxford, was upset by Rosemary B, a 51 outsider, in the 7th race at the De- troit Race Course yesterday. The Hartwick- mare, which has won more than $400,000 during her career, pressed thé pace most of the way but faltered going into the stretch and finished 3rd be- hind Rosemary B and Eternal Fro- lic Sports Calendar TODAY BASEBALL CLASS A—Auburn Merchants vs Pon- time Jets «Wisner, 5:30) CLASS D—Mets vs Rochester (Washing- ton, §.30); WNicholie Realty vs Doris Skating Rink (C-J south, 5.30) CLASS E—Rosebud Market vs Ponts (C-J north. 5:30) SOFTBALL CITY MEN'S8—Moose vs General Mo- tors: (Beaudette, 7); Drive-In Cleaners vs Stadium Inn (Beaudette, 8:30); Bir- mingham Riteway vs Forster Tool ‘North Side, 7); Milford Merchants vs C-V (North Bide, 8:30) WATERFORD TOWNSHIP=Dixie Rec- reation vs Dick & Wes: (Men's, 8:30); Day's Sanitary vs Drayton Drug (Junior, 6:30). Cass WEDNESDAY BASEBALL CLASS A—Ben Jerome vs CIO 504 (Wisner, 6:30). D—Ciarkston vs Griff's Grill (Washington, 5:30); Lytell-Colegrove vs Pontiac Police 4C-J sou 6:30). CLASS E—R Market vs Boys Club (C-J north, 5:30. CLASS F—Williams Lake Specs vs Bovs Club Americans (Washington, 9); Majes- tic vs Avondale (Washington, 11) KNOTHOLE —- Avondale vs Genera) south, 9); Vollmar's vs Tigers vs Whit- white Sox vs Motors (C-J Senators (C-J north, 9); field (C-J south, 11); Orioles (C-J north, 11) AMERICAN LEGION Berkiey at Bir mingham Reds, Birmingham Blues at Huron Valley Boys Club, both games at 6pm SOFTBALL CITY MEN'S — Generali Motors vs CIO 504 | Beaudette, 7': Birmingham Riteway vs Stadium Inn (Beaudette, 8:30). Moose vs Louie's Tavern ‘(North Side. 7) CITY GIRLS—GMC vs Gingellville ‘North Side, 8:30). WATERFORD TWP —Richardson Dairy vs Gidley (Men's, 8.30); Inter-Lake Bteel vs White Bros (Junior, 6:30). RACING ee at Pontiac M- Pes eg neetwny, trials at 7 p. m., races at 8 315-Hit Barrage By JOF REICHLER Associated Press Sportswriter Big league ball players celebrat- ed Independence Day with a home run barrage that rocked eight ball parks from dugout to bullpen and sent the harried, almost defense- less pitchers running to cover. The day of doubleheaders re- sounded with 35 home run biasts, only five short of the major league record for most homers in one day. A total of 315 hits were peppered about the parks as 75 pitchers were used. That's an average of 20 hits Major League Hitters Celebrate Holiday With Total of 35 Home Runs on Monday and more than four and a half pitchers a game . * . Only nine of the 32. starting pitchers went the distance with four of them turning in shutouts. * 7” ~ The Yankees trimmed the Phila- delphia Athletics twice 7-4 and 11-2 to win their first doubleheader in almost a year. They had split the last three twin bills in 1953 and their first 10 this season. Succes- sive homers by Joe Collins and Mickey Mantle and a run-scoring double by Gene Woodling provided featherweight bout at St. AP Wirephote SADDLER SOCKED—Sandy Saddler misses with a left as he takes a right to the jaw from Libby Manzo in the 5th round of their Nicholas Arena Monday night. feather champ, dropped Manzo for the count in the\ wa round. Saddler,. the Not many Oakland County sports fans, particularly those interested in harness racing realize the num- ber of home-owned entries that take -part in the daily events at North- ville Downs, now the scene of a good summer session, However, according to data supplied by track officials, there are more than a score of Oak- land County horses in Downs stables. And some are regu- larly up with the winners. About half are owned by Pon- tiac men. These include the four-horse stable owned by Henry Lobeck whose horses are: Pastime Hank, a four-year-old gelding; Pastime Judy, 6-year-old mare; Pastime Ellen, 6-year-old mare and Pas- time Clare, 6-year-old stallion. Others are Irene Giles’ Sidney Guy, 11-year-old gelding; Leo Metz’ Scotty Hal, 4year-old geld- ing; Charles Henry’s Peter Don- ald, 5- year-old gelding; Clinton- dale, 5-year-old stallion owned by Elmer Going; Ed Stout's Marcel- la Spencer, 6-year-old mare, and J. O. Shelton’s Fast Delivery, + year-old gelding. From other county communities are Perry Williams, Birmingham, with Doc Blake §-year-old gelding, Hillcrest Chimes. 8-year-old gelding and Lord Darniey 4-year-old gelding Joseph Everson, Birmingham, Wicked Widow, 4- year-old mare; Fred and Glen Harmer, Rochester, .Mont! Maiden 10-year-old mare; Harry and Clint Vreeland, Walled Lake, with Junior K., 4-year-old gelding; Alfred Lemais, Birmingham, 5-year-old elding, Teakwood King; J. Hoyt Wilson, alled Lake, Tommy M_., 6-year-old iding; Harold Hopkins, Rochester, ypsy, Counsel, 17-year-old stallion; Dr. Texas’ King Ranch Holding Pat Hand in Cup Handicap By BOB MYERS INGLEWOOD, Calif. @ — The King Ranch of Texas holds the pat hand in the coming $100,000 Holly- wood Gold Cup Handicap and Cal- ifornia’s Andrew Crevolin, the frenzied: Frenchman, is wondering whether to change race tracks. * * » Budy Hirsch, King Ranch train- er watched his two stakes horses, Rejected and High Scud, run one- two in the $55.150 American Handi- cap yesterday and Crevolin-saw his luck go to pot for the second straight racing day. * be * Crevolin’s*Imbros, the betting fa- vorite, finished ow in the Ameri- can Handicap, and two*days be- fore his little gray Kentucky Derby champion, Determine, ran third to Fault Free in a battle of 3-year- olds. —— SANDERS FOR TRAVIS bir al Crevolin ‘and his trainer, Willie Molter, huddle today to decide whether to stay here, send Deter- mine and Imbros east, or give the two a vacation, The time for the mile and one- eighth was 1.48, tying the track record. Attendance was 59,178, largest July 4 holiday crowd in the track's history and second high of the cur- rent meeting. 2 Dozen County Owners Race at Northville Downs Donald Somers. Birmingham, Oallant Scott. 3-year-old colt. R. Mrummond Birmingham. HiLos Victor, 10-year-old gelding. Bam Reeves, Birmingham Hill- crest Attorney, 10-year-old stallion Howard McAva of Davison has Russet Hail A. L. Baxter of Davison has Volo Prince Les Norman, with two horses Louls Kehoe with one round out the area owners at Northville D&W Knothole 9 Wins Exhibition Tilt Dick & Wes Knotholers of the Pontiac Recreation department league defeated Clarkston Monday, 5-1, in-an exhibition baseball game played as part of the July 4th celebration at Oakland Park. ‘Jerry Bunch and Allan Tunney shared the pitching for the D & W club and limited Clarkston to one hit, while striking out 8. Second baseman Dan Kimmel tame up with two brilliant fielding plays for Dick & Wes. Clarkston . Powell, Reynolds and Steimah; Bunch, Tunney and Hertal (Advertisement) Verlin W. Emanuel, 1175 S. Har- rison, Denver, Colorado, tikes to know what mileage he is getting from his gasoline. He reports, “‘I am saving approximately two gal- lons of gasoline in every tankful since changing to New Super Permalube Motor Oil.” The new oil reducés friction 80 much that engines just naturally run farther on less gas—especially in stop-and-go driving. Your Standerd Oil Dealer has nee Super Permalube. Drain and fill today with the oil that oo: tually pays for itself in gasoline savings. COMPLETE @6 Orchard Lake Ave COLLISION SERVICE EAST TOWN COLLISION Bear Equipment and Wheel Balancing Frame and Axle Straightening 35 Elizabeth St. Ph. FE 4-5941 the margin of victory in the open- er. Noren drove in five runs with his two homers in the nightcap. Bill Wilson hit-Philadelphia’s only hom- er. The Giants “and “Dodgers each swept a doubleheader to leave the National League - leading Giants still 3'2 lengths infront of Brook- lyn. The two rivals begin a three- game set at Ebbets Field tonfght Johnny Antonelli won his 12th geme with a three-hit 10-0 shutout} over the Philadelphia Phillies in the opener. Rhodes, subbing for Monte Irvin in left field, homered and doubled in the first game. He hit another homer and two singles in the second game and his homer came with two mates aboard to give the Giants an uphill 43 tri umph Milwaukee won two slugging matches from the St. Louis Cardi nals 8&6 and 10-4 ds each team banged four homers Cincinnati's Reds defeated Chi- cago 6-5 in the opener despite two homers by Jackson of the Cubs The Reds also took the nightcap 87 on Hobie Landrith's home run Boston and Washington divided a twin bill. . * * Boston won the first game 140 behind Willard Nixon's six;hitter as Lepcio batted fh five runs) with a triple and single, in adidtion to his grand slammer. Jack Jenson also homered for Boston. Washing- ton took the second 7-1 behind Chuck Stobb's) five-hitter. Sievers’ four-run wallop offset a 10 Red Sox lead provided by Lepcio's sec- ond homer. Only one homer was hit in the Chicago-Baltimore doublehead- er won by the White Sox 3-0 and 2-1. Billy Pierce hurled a four-hit shutout in his first complete game since May 19. The only homer in this’ action was hit by Ron Jack- son, a 20-year-old bonus player, subbing at first base for Chicago cago; Harvey Kuenn, Detroit Cleve- land; Jim Piersall, Boston, Ted Williams, Boston. * * @ Stengel is managing the Ameri- can League stars for the fifth straight year. ‘He presumably stacked a right- handed pitching deck because of the National League's rough lineup of righthanded batters, at least in the fans’ lineup. It includes Gran Hamner of Philadelphia, Ray Ja- blonski of St. Louis, Al Dark of New York, Jackie Robinson of Brooklyn and Roy Campanella of Brooklyn—all righthanders and all with the possible exception of Dark, long ball hitters Only lefthanded hitters in the National League's starting lineup are Ted Kluszewski of Cincinnati, Duke Snider of Brooklyn and Stan Musial of St. Louis. In naming Porterfield to his pitching staff, Stengel Was right- ing what many fans considered a seriou$ error in his 1953 selections Casey was subjected to great criti cism for net choosing Porterfield last year Ted Williams, the injupy-and ill- ness-plagued Boston star, will be making his ninth All-Star appear- ance. He holds a .407 batting av- erage for the series. Berra, Doby and Kell each have been in five of the games. * * * Other game personnel named by Stengel Coaches—Fred Hutchinson, De- troit, and Marty Marion, Chicago. Batting practice pitchers—Duane Pillette, Baltimore, and Alex Kell- ner, Philadelphia. Batting practice catcher — Bob Swift, Detroit. Trainer—Wally Bock, Cleveland By SAM SNEAD Keep Wrists Loose Pictured Revolta, a fine teaching pro (and quite a golf- er in his time). Here he empha- sizes the loosetiess of the wrists on the backswing and follow On is Johnny If you don't keep your wrists loose at those two points, it will be impossible for you to get through the snap into your swing that brings the clubhead into the ball at the right moment. Note how Johnny is letting his wrists (A) remain loose at the top of his backswing. But one thing's for sure—he's not letting go of his grip. Your grip niust remain firm. From this point he will pull his arms—and NOT his hands—down hard. The wrists and club will-take care of them- selves. in place of the injured Ferris Fain. Golfers Advised to Keep Wrists Loose in Swinging head will lash at the ball. The pull of the arms and the resulting swing produces the lash. I recom- mend you swing back and forth without stopping and eventually you will acquire the ‘‘feel’’ at the various points. Rhythm and con- tinuity of action are important in a good swing Dodgers Sign Prep Ace SANTA BARBARA, Calif, un Brooklyn Dodger scout Harold Phillips reported the\signing of Bul Arrellanes, 18, heavy hitting third haseman of Santa Barbara High School, for an undisclosed amount yesterday Arrellanes, with a .44 batting average, graduated from high school this year. He will report to the Dodger spring training camp at Vero Beach, Fla., next year. Dallas Group Wants Major: Loop Franchise- Help of Professional, Business, Civic Leaders of City ls Sought DALLAS # — The Dallas News said tonight a group of wealthy Dallas residents is interested in the possibility of purchasing a ma- jor league baseball franchise for this city The News said it was the most important effort in this direction that has been undertaken since speculation began months ago t Dallas might be a suitable locat for a big league team. * . * The group is small for the mo- ment but is composed of men who could finance such an investment, Bit! Rives, Sports Editor of the Dallas News, wrote. ‘This nucleus, however, wants to expand until it includes approximately 30 of the business, professional and civic leaders of Dallas. The interested parties do not want to enter into negotiations for the purchase of a franchise, unless they are certain that the residents of Dallas want a big league club here.” * * Ld Rives said one of the number had approached Dick Burnett owner of the Dallas club in the Texas League, to sound out his opinion Burnett reportedly told them he thought major league baseball would be a success here and that he would invest money in such 4 venture, provided it had the full support of the citizens and admin- istration, The talk of a major league club for Dallas was revived with the recent reports that the Philadel- phia Athletics were considering [| moving, ~ewrwrereeeeeeeeeeeeeeerererrerreerererererererrrrrrvrrrvrvrrvre,ye. ~~ 10: DOUBLE ~weerreerererrTTyY.yyyrTr,* If the rest of the swing is made as well as the backswing, the club- Vie Soucy ~wwreFrwns "=". * ae OPPPP POOP DD SESS EEE EE Eee wvewvvvwwevweveeererrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrrrs » es TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE For Your Old Tire on a New 6.70x15 Soucy’s Service 1211 North Perry St. At Madison Street FE 3-9557 ld ROYAL AIR RIDE 7.10x15 —-7.60x15 STAMPS hn ho i hi hi hi i i hh hl PIF FFF COTS T CT OTN NNT Louis Soucy a ~~? vwevwvevrrerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrvrrrrrvrvrvrvrrrrr most modern in the important chassis d years ahead, too. 130-h.p. V-8 Ford's new 130-h.p. Y-block V-8 is the only V-8 in the low-price field. And with low-friction design and deep-block construction, it’s the Ford’s trend-setting styling has set the pace for ; ¢ the industry. It is forward-looking styling that’s * out front today and will stay attractive for the ‘\,. industry. Ball-Joint Suspension Ball-Joint Front Suspension — is ing. And Ford is the only low-priced car that has it. Trend-setting styling A 7 - CY OWENS 147 South Saginaw St. Fors Gor Ir! _ others just want tit! / FORD OUTCLASSES EVERY 1954 COMPETITIVE CAR! Highest resale value _An‘analysis of used car sales statistics shows that recent-model Ford cara return a greater portion of their original cost than any competitive make of car. “ BUY WISELY! BUY FORD! BUY NOW Allowance For Your Old Tires Thorebred ist Quality- ist Line size List 600x16 $20.10 $12.65 650x16 $25.95 $16.45 670x15 $23.20 $14.45 710x15 $25.75 $16.15 760x15 $28.40 $16.95 DAYTON’S BIG 3 GUARANTEE. 1. Lifetime Factory Guarantee 2. Mile Guarantee 3. 2-Year Written Read Hazard all possible WIDE WH ALLS Brand New {sf Line Firsts Ps $16.95 iit $18.95 600-16 = 9.95 6.70-15 10,95 Pius Tax Exe, Recappable 680; capped’ with P i e remls Quelity Rubber on Re Ee ‘ol $8.88 am sim pete egnaaramaenenage ie comme THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 WATERFORD Sala.ee a, ROUND Wirei-eiciale I Feanch Accuse ‘Hungary of Trying to Incite Revolt TUNIS, Tunisia #—French offi- cials accused Communist - ruled Hungary, today of broadcasting radio appeals jn Arabic for an up- rising against the French in Tu- nisia. Officials said they had traced the three-times-daily broadcasts Geren Play by FRA 8 RENT beamed to the strifetorm North Af- |rican protectorate to a station in Budapest, the Hungarian capital. The broadcasts advise Tunisians not to negotiate with France, de- claring that “only fighting can bring the complete independence of Tunisia."" They are addressed to “nationalists and Communists." The soap industry uses almost | 1,500,000,000 pounds of fats and |oils from cattle, swine and sheep each year. By WILLIAM MILLER TAIPEH, Formosa (UP) — My ears are ringing from the noise. My eyes are smarting from the smoke. My head is whirling from the rice-wine toasts I drank, I am waddling, after a 13-course ban- quet, Jike one of the ducks they served. *T have just come from a Chinese wedding — ‘American style.’’ The guests began arriving ear- ly. After a few polite bows, they started plowing into the, steam- ing soups, ducks, chicken, fish, pork, shrimp, chestnuts »nd other dainties awaiting them. After a while, ag the chopsticks clicked, the bridal couple entered. Firecrackers started exploding. Bride and groom elbowed their way toward the Altar at the other WATCH For our Grand Opening Ad next week in the Pontiac Press! CROCKER’S CANDIES 857 W. Huron “American -Style’ Wedding Isn't at Chinese Marriage CANADA'S SAVAGE | ACADEMY AWARD 2éxncr | | ACADEMY AWARD 2éxncr | AWARD Weaner (BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR @| FRANK SINATRA Best Supporting Actor if DONNA REED Best Supporting Actress Best Director—Fred Zinneman Winner of Many Other Awards! The Boldest Book of Our Time! TUES. - WED. - THURS. . ENJOY MOVIES AS WEVER BEFORE! Alan LADD - - Shelley WINTERS CAMADAS SAVADE MOUMKAIN MPI VISION SCREEN Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. Voll hay: Vo a a dedcealt aT" ae - N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500 ("LAST TIMES TONIGHT - } all “FROM HERE To ETERNITY” TWO FIRST RUN HITS STEVE FORREST DEWEY MARTIN ee end of the room through billows of smoke while the guests tried to shout down the firecrackers. | Some of the guests’ dropped their chopsticks and took their places on seats in front of the altar. Others kept on eating. facing the altar, the ceremony started with speeches by the elder members of the respective fam- lies. The principal object of each speaker seemed to be to praise the other family and belittle his own family tree. The occasional loud report of fire crackers did not interrupt the cere- mony. Nor did the increasingly louder shouts of friends of the bridegroom who had been working on the rice wine at the rear of the hall. “It won't be long now,” one shouted The bride stood through it all unblinking, with the passive poise that only a Chinese woman has. The groom tugged at his collar and turned dirty looks’ back to ward his shouting friends. A young Chinese sitting beside Me -poked me in the ribs and pred above the din: “This is a modern Americap style wedding."’ . I looked around. But the only American-style things I saw were the bride’s gown and the groom's long-tailed full-dresg coat. I nod- ded in feeble agreement. Suddenty pandemonium broke As the bride “and “groom “stood 7” ae |Staid Londoners Nipped | e | by 47-Degree Cold Wave. turned up “perishing’’ cold today. and furs. ‘Housewives builf winter fires and put heavy sweaters on| schoolchildren. Central London had its coldest | July. night.in 14 years last night. | | The temperature dropped to 47 de- | grees and was still there at 8 a.m. LONDON w—British weather—_ one of life’s great uncertainties— | Shivering office workers left their | London homes wrapped in topcoats | TOTTI IPA L Lh hf New Lake Theater 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE . AIR CONDITIONED SUN.—MON.—TUES. ) “Executive Suite” \ starring Barbara Stanwyck, Jone Allyson, Walter Pidgees \ —ALSO— “Racing Blood” \ With Sit “Wititems Wawe wae ay Last Times TODAY! ! ! CLASSIC ae Guns "Bloom plays | Enjoy Cool — the unhappy Ophelia in Old Vie | Conditioned Comfort Company's production of ‘‘Ham- let’? at Kronberg Castle’ in Elsi- nore, Denmark, the play's locale. | | Japanese Defense Chief to Spend Month in U. S. TOKYO w—The chairman of |f Japan's newly created Joint Chiefs of Staff plans to spend a month in the United States inspecting U.S. military installations. Kyodo news service said today Lt. Gen. Keizo Hayashi wil leave early next month. ‘The. Japanese Joint Chiefs- took loose. The ceremony was ended, and the bride and groom started up the aisle. Firecrackers exploded around their feet. The guests yelled. A five-piece band broke out with “There's No Place Like i But the groom's ordea] was not over. Chinese custom required that he drink a toast in the burning white rice wine with every guest who was still able to toast him. ide drank lightly. But the -F | over July 1 when the nation’s new defense force came into™being. —T i the f ya? ART TONIGHT! Ky ully *‘Almost as good as an American wedding, eh?’’ my Chinese friend | asked. I agreed. , Mae West Tells Marilyn-to Win Over the Ladies By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD u®—Mae West has | | some advice for Marilyn Monroe: | you'd better win over the ladies, | baby. Miss West, still the epitome of sex, is a logical party to hand out advice. She made millions by muttering spicy comments. She can still command a top salary, |_* as she will when she opens at Las Vegas’ Sahara July 27. I won an audience with the fabulous star in her sixth-floor apartment near the heart of Holly- wood, The living room was un- believably garish. It was all done in white, with Louis XIV furniture trimmed in gold. On one wall was a nude painting of Miss West, for which she says she has refused $100,000. Atop the piano was her nude likeness in white marble. Be- side the statue were tintypes of her parents. * * Miss West's entrance was in character—she tered into the room in a flo negligee. She looked impressive. The record books indicate she’s around 60, but | she seems 20 years younger. Her figure is still plump and curve-| some, her skin smooth and her) chin singular. Marilyn Monroe. “I haven't seen her on the | screen,”’ Miss West said in her soft, nasal voice, ‘‘But folks tell I do, The walk, for instance. They tell me she walks the same way I the humorous things she ad mae know whether she them ‘herself or not. At , the ginny boys have done I asked her how she felt about. me she is using a lot of the things | The dish-it-out-devil- dogs HEAD HUNTERS 4 Starts At 11:00- GARY COOPER. in “BLOWING WILD”’ also “SKY COMMANDO” ") STARTS | ; TOMORROW a 8 12:10 - 3:25 6:40 - 10:00 2:10 - §:30 - 8:50 at our place Scribe Tavern and Restaurant BRINGS YOU THE STORY OF HOW | ROME FELL... for 3 Wonderful American Girls! Features At — 1:20 3:24 - 5:27 7:30 - 9:36 ag Oo ——ALWAYS COOL Doors Open Daily 10:45 A. M. every Fri.-Sat.- Sun. evening “Jim” : —— , » DANCING & | FR dust Like ENTERTAINMENT =| NOW Showing Thru Thar * al 7) Christmas § westere _— Popular numbers THE LOVE STORY BEHIND 1 la July” “| tee, by and Screen Star .” pring THE FAMELY FoR a “Chiel Red Bird” THE LOVE SONG THATS “ose cortrrammant 9 SWEEPING THE NATION! Sen weoe™ > Coins .” COLOR by DELUXE «in the wonder of 4-Track, High-Fidelity STEREOPHONIC SOUND! - CLIFTON WEBB - DOROTHY McGUIRE-JEAN PETERS LOUIS JOURDAN - MAGGIE McNAMARA «sosazs'san oe i) Yee Added: “FIRST PIANO 2 EE CinemaScope 3 OAKLAND: : MOOFRNLY AIR CONDITIONED wan LEE 1. O88 “MAME Von DOREN: BART and the MISS UNIVERSE BEAUTIES — FEATURES - 12:49 - 8:50 - 6:52 - 9:55 PLUS the studio, the way I did with Paramount? I paid off the mort- | gage on the place.” Miss West reflected on her own rise to fame and said she ‘‘broke records everywhere” because she didn’t alienate the female audi- never went after a married or took a man from another an,” she said. ‘I always trea oled other women with respect. That wag all part of my plan to keep the women in the audience happy.” "A pound of figs contains 1,500 calories. RUB j Keego Theater AIR CONDITIONED © MON.— TUES. puLy 5-6° 3 SAILORS AND A GIRL’ In Technicolor Jane Powell, MacRae —ALSO— DRAGONFLY SQUADRON Hodiak, ence. “You'll notice in my mee | T|* ~ 8:31 | STARTING THURSDAY “PLAYGIRL” G&G “BLACK HORSE CANYON” 2:73 - 5:25 PRATURES 11:74 - THE Sincina Trai r eA 4 M-G-M’s YOUTHFUL, ‘BEAUTIFUL MUSICAL! BiYTH: PURDOM John ERICSON - Louis CALHERN wth EDMUND GWENN - BETA vs JOHN - JOHN WILLIAMS - Mario LANZA SS NSSestsesnpeenesenaesil stants FRIDAY NEW inN Edmund (3:) 5. Z. “CUDDLES” SAKALL EVELYN VARDEN -» America WASHINGTON — Many Ameri- cans make their homes today on historic battlefields. In house or office, farmers, city workers and housewives go about everyday duties in the same places where great ‘issues were once settled by clashing armies. Some dwell, quite by chance, on ‘“‘fame's eternal camping-ground”’ in Boston, New ‘York City and Philadelphia where much of the Revolutionary War was fought, says the National Geographic So- siety. Some live in a heavily popu- lated southern suburb of Pitts- burgh. There along the Monon. gahela River on July 9, 1755, French and Indians routed the redcoats of General Braddock and young George Washington. But some Americans today, feel- ing a kinship with the past, plan their living around scenes that mark the illustrious deeds of sol- diers. President and. Mrs. Eisen- hower count themselves among these. The Eisenhowers bought a farm three miles southwest of Gettys- burg, Pa., in 1950, On hurried yisits the Chief Executive likes to relate how the battle tides rose and fell during those sunny, early July days in 1863 when Lee's Army of Northern Virginia ham- mered against the stout blue line of the Army of the Potomac alongt the low hills to the east. As the President notes, Pickett launched his fateful charge over a field a short distance north. Few cities have scen more battle than Fredericksburg, Va. On December 11, 1862, Federal troops locked with Confederates in sharp streer fighting. _Just_| So McLean, strife _weary,moved}—=‘‘He -haste't finished a letter for two days—every time he calls me for dictation he winds up waving his arms about trout and bass'’’ westward loomed the ominous ns Fought, Died _.on'Modern Home Sites - -Fapartment buildings. slopes of Marye’s Heights, dom- + nated-by Lee's infantry-and-ar- | tillery lined up row on row, Unbelievably the Union army rolied on — into withering fire and defeat. ' Now where the Northern army | massed for that headlong attack ; children. and parents inhabit new | | If one Virginia city saw more feats of arms than Fredericksburg it was Winchester, whose homes | throughout the war shook to the grim rymble of marching feet and | blasting guns. Today many build- ings stand as they did then, but there is hardly a more peaceful setting in the Old Dominion than apple-growing Winchester. At Chattanooga, Tenn., stylish residences now grace the top of Missionary Ridge where a Con- | federate army made a last stand | before retreating into Georgia. Be- low the western slope the Feder- als charged rifle pits. Unexpect- edly successful, they rushed to the crest without further orders. There they surprised Confederate artil- lery. Today the cannon stand just as fleeting hands left them on November 25, 1863, One gun on a lawn points directly into the front door of g modern house. One of ‘war's strange ironies sur- rounds an unwilling battlefield- dweller, Wilmer McLean. He lived on a farm near Manassas, Va., | in 1861. Around that farm swirled | waves of fighting men during the | | first battle of Bull Run, the war's | first big encounter. Next year his | farm was again engulfed when Lee | threw back Pope in the second! battle of Bull Run. ‘deep into Virginia. He bought a a red brick home — at Appomattox Court House. Once armies reached Wilmer McLean's house. But they fought no more. Tn the McLean me Lee and Grant ended the war, : Four states — Delaware, Neva- da, Vermont and Wyoming — each have two senators in congress, but Tree Embarks on Trip more | fhe |: : each of them is entitled to only one representative on a population basis. | slid onto the highway after heavy THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES WEST NEWBURY, Mass. (UP) —Motorists thought they were suf- fering from hallucinations when they spotted a 20-foot tree growing in the middle of Route 113 one{— morning, Upon closer examination they found the tree landed there when a section of the embankment rains. Oddly enough, the tree re- mained standing. SIDE GLANCES by Galbraith = THAT MEANS THEY'LL. BE ALONE IN THE ART STORE WITH THE PORTRAIT } LONG ALLEY OOP by T. V. Hamlin SNO DOUBT ABOUT THERE'LL BE No GOATS OR COWS ON THIS RAILROAD AS AS I'M PRESIDENT! SPUR UNE WILL BE A DIGNIFIED HA! MATS JusT Like A MAN!!! MONEY! MONBY!! MONEY!!! DOESN'T THE DGNITY OF THE HUMAN RACE iT 40'S TH VERY SAME CRITTER { FOUGHT .; oe 908 oy GEA Somes me f at tng 6 6 Om OH by Merrill Blosser >< S 62 wy Se wa. then Sor ts ours ‘ave \ TERRIPICL PLLA DEAS OST \OPF THE BERTEN TRACK! Owe THe | 1 CAN KEBP Wim TILL STORY! BY THE / MV NEXT STORY 16 ALL WAY, WY WAS HE A WORKED OUT—LISTEN! iN PRIGON by Charles Kuhn GEE, KIDDO, WHY DON’T You | SPEAK UP wml al aA BUT, GRANDMA, MY YAWANT PEOPLE T" WHAT YOU'RE TELLIN’ ‘EM... “Believe | ¢/ ThE COUNSELLOR AT The ovs pe THE WEEKLY LETTER VTA p-watrews, Ts isuT A PAO LETTER % YOUR mOTHER, eur «(Ts FRIeHTEULY tL) pee SPEced. wow SUPPOSE ‘You ‘ SAT Cowes AND LOOK UP ALL THose woros ms eed? CHeT roar xg - >. — - \ a ¢ WY “j,* » ‘ =e bh RN Game RZA0S Proor BOARDING HOUSE HAK-KAFF/’ HANE YOU LADS COMPLETED VACATION, PLANS 7, = T'M FAIRLY ITCHING FOR NEW VISTAS UM! PERHAPS ka ele Aa aoe *? 7-6 as => WANT TO GET RID OF LOOSE DANDRUFF ? sy GET WILDROOT " CREAMAOIL , CHARLIE «= * ° # Fn, rampeemme oN vy OUT OUR WAY DON'T TELL ME/ EVER HADDA feet “se ee corse neene sarees “ss { i z q Fp f Heyl ul motors, Aircrafts, chemicals, elec- by General Motors, Douglas Aircraft, United Aircraft, Radio Corp., General Electric, Du Pont, Railroad, and U. S. Gypsum | medium, 10 00-11 00 Wheat Scores Fair Advance CHICAGO « — Wheat drew ‘|enough early support from mills to score a fair sized advance on the Board of Trade today. Soy- beans also-firmed while feed grains registered scattered gains and losses. ; DETROIT (UP)—Wholesale prices on ’ markets reported by the .. seele’s red, fancy. 2.50-3.75 bu. strawberries 11:00 24° qt. case; strewber / 6 qt. case ; asparagus, No. 1, 1.00-1.50 green, No. 1, 5.00- ; x, No. 1, 6.25-6.75 bu. N , 0-80 doz. behs. Broccoli, y. 250 - . 1, 150-2.00 4% bu. Cabbage, red, Ne 1, 2.26-275 bu; cab- bage, No. 1. 60-100 bu: cabbage, sprouts, No. 1, 100-125 bu. Cauliflower, fancy, 32.50 bu; No 1, 150-700 bu Celer: No. 1, 3.00-4.00 crate; G@lery, No. 1. 16- | 1.25 hex. Cucumbers, No. 1, 6.00-7.00 bu. | Dill, No 1, .75-1.00 doz. behs Kohirabi, | No. 1. 100-150 bu Leeks. No. 1, 1.50 dos. behs Onions, green, No. 1, 70-00 | behs. Parsley, curly, No behs: parsiey, root, No. 1, .78- 16-85 Oe6, , 1.0- bag. 4.00-4.50 by. Radishes, red, , .0-% dos behs Squash, | Italian, No. 1, Italian, No}, basket; squash, summer, No. 1, 125-176 \ bu; squash, summer, No 1. 1 00-125 i basket. Tomatoes, hothouse, No 1 be. 3.00 8-lb. basket; tomatoes, outdoor, No, 3 14-lb. basket. Turnip, No. +; 4-06-4386 dos; beh Lettuce and salad greens: endive, No. | 1, 1.25-1.% bu. Escarole, No. 1, 1.26-1.78 bu. Lettuce, butter, No. 1, 200-225 bu; | lettuce head, No. 1, 2.50-3 00 3-dos crate; lettuce, head, No. 1, 1.00-1.25 bu; iet- . 36-66 bu Romaine, Greens ewe, No. 1, 75-100 bu ac No. 1. .75-1.00 bu. mustard, No 75-1.00 bu Sorrel, No. 1, 1.00-1 75 . 180-2.00 bu Swiss | . 126-190 bu. Turnip, No 16-100 bu 1300-1400 30-dos Eggs large case small, 6 00-9.00 CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO ‘AP)—Potatoes arrivals 348 on track 504 total US shipments for Priday 614; Saturday 318: @unday 37 a3} Monday 328, supplies moderate: demand New York Stocks Adams Ex 33.46 Jones & “4 Admiral . 212 Kelsey May 31.7 Air we 28.4 Kennecott . Aleg L atl 336 Kimb Clk 4 Allied Ch 624 Kresge 88 33.3 Allied Gtrse .. 46 Kroger “47 Allis Chal . 3 Glass a Alum Ltd 4 Lib MeN&L 96 Alum Am . 0.4 Lise & My 572 Am Airlin 136 Leckh Aire 341 Am Can 417 Loew's . 47 aa soy a: Lone 8 Cem 414 m Gas Am Loco A BG nde ee SO Am M @ Pay 2)! Marsh Field 294 Am ore ie Martin Gi 2 Am WN Gas .. 453 3 Am Rad 39.3 May D str... 313 Am Smelt 37 Mid Con Pei. ane Ag TelhTel 167.1 s6 Som eg” Am Tob 4 id 30.6 Am Woo > 20.5 a Bhar = Am Zine 2 got “od Anse 39.9 Motor #4 18.3 Anac W. 34 on Whee! 234 Armco Sti . 443 Motorola ..... 414 Armour & Co 06 [vostecaod Br .. 33 Assad Dry O 4 erie | Cp.... 32.3 . 1d et cosh Rl... 006 Be Sa tee RS met Dairy...) 15 Atlas r 44@ Nat Gyps..... 313 Aveo Mig . 47 Nat Lead... ... 5) Bald 94 Nat Gteel.. $26 Belt & Oh .. 23 Nat Thee. 13 Rendix Av o23 NY Alr Brk bt Benguet .. 7 NY Cent . 21 Beth Steet. 704 Nia M Pw... 30.3 Boeing Air 45.4 Norf & West.. 4 Bohn Alum .. 20.3 Yo Am Av 336 Bond Stre .. Be Yor Pac. “ Borden . .... 663 Nor Gte Pw 18 Borg Warn .. 626 Nwest Airiin ° a Mtg .. 39.2 hte Oll...... 62.7 My . 91.3 Oliver Cp:.... 11 Brun Balke .. 152 tis . ae Budd Co ... at —_ sey Burroughs. .. ar Calum & 95 Pen A W Alr 117 Wy 22.3 Panh EPL 5.6 Cen .-» 12.4 Caream Pict... 332 Capital Airl .. rk oir Seem T° Carrier Cp ... 88.2 Pepsi Cola... 154 a 16.1 Phe D 406 Tras .; 81.6 Phileo 36.3 Celanese . ... 26 Philip Mor 165 Cert-teed . .. 8 Phil Pet : 60.4 Ches & Oh . 48 Pil Millis... 45 chi & NW 11.1) pa tea “7 Chrysler . - 66 Prot & G e7 Cities Sve e635 Pulimen , ee Clark > oo - 467 Pure Oll....... 556 Climaz © to Cp _ wae Clwett Pea . 336 Rem Rand 18.3 Coca Cola ...117 Reo Motors... 27.1 Colg Palm .. 622 Bt... 1 Cet Gee ..... Me Reyn Met oe 9 Con Edis ... 62 Tod B.... #1 : Con GS... 7 RKO Pict...... 7 Consum Pw .. 4.2 pg .... 20 Cont Bak .... 32.4 gafeway St.... 46 Cont Can ... 102 gt Jos Lead... 39 Cont Mot ... 8.7 at Pap... 27.2 Cont Of .... 43 Gcovill Mf..... 20 Corn Pe ..... 41 Bead Al RR... 57.3 Croc Stl ....-344 Sears Roed... 85.7 Curtiss Drug.. 98 gheil Oil..... 46.3 Det Bdis _.... 33.3 gimmons ...... 36.2 Dis C Seag .. 301 ginciair O.... 40.7 Deus Aire ..; $39 Gocony Vee). a8 Du Pom. 1416 S$ Ry Sta | Bete F ...- 8S gparts W.... 46 Bast Air L 2346 Bperr 606 Bast Kod .... 60.1 of6 Srand 33.7 ee i 32 and on cal... 014 eg te 2S ote OM Ind... 116 3 yee bo - Re Faire Mor... 282 stevens JP... 28.3 Sul .. 616 Stew War . 4 Tre 7, Studebaker 18.6 Gen Bak s Suther Pap 436 Gen Elec | 475 Swift & Co.... 47 Gen Pés | 72.6 Syiv El Pa 30.1 Gen Mills ... @ —. = 94 “ Gen at) ex 8u a Gen | Big / 31% Thomp 0.8 Gen Refrac .. 22 Timk R Bear. 451 Gen Shoe $12 Tran W Air . 163 Gen Tel ..... 46 Transamer 4.2 Gen Time ... 94 Twent C Foz.. = Gillette . ..., ae Un Carbide 068 Goodrich , .. 67.1 Pac........338.4 Goodyear . .. 67 Unit Air Lin... 23.3 Grah Paige . 13 Unit Aire Bs BH Be Ry... BS ON Prat... o Greybouna 2 “4 U 8 Lines.... 15.7 on ..... 42 i hse 4 veane ae Hayes Mfg .. 47 ere Hersh Choe .. 04 U B Bteel..... 0.1 Holland F 264 U 8 Tob - 169 Homestk . 41 Warn B Pic... 165 mH Cent 47 W Va Pulp 312 Indust Ray .. 486 West Un Te! 412 Inland 8ti So, Weste A Bik-. 242 tnapir M2 Wests El 132 Int Harv 322 White Mot 335 Int Nick 425 Wilson & Co a4 tnt Paper 73.4 Wisc El Pw 705 Int Silver . 472 Woolworth 433 Int Tel 183 Yale & Tow 45.2 isl. Crk Coal 144 Young 8 & W 21 Jacobs . .... 7 Yngst Sh & T 453 Johns Man 76 «= Zenith, Red 70 DETROIT STOCKs (Hornblower & Weeks) Baldwin Rubber’ .. 44 D. & C. Navigation’ 13 joe ag er 2 Kingston Products* 24 “~ Masco Screw* . 26 Midwest. Abrasive* 55 Rudy. Mfg* 45 Wa: Screw* 14 14 sale; bid and asked A ship is launched stern or sideways, not bow first. The daily secretion of the Figures after decimal points are eighths High Low Noon 1 ~ — eww ee eaves first sali- vary glands is about one liter, or 1.056 quarts. | Gee: market | Whites $3.80-500. Round Reds $4 50 | Arizona Round Reds $4 40-65 woh Poultry CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO AP—Live poultry bare- ly steady; recenpts 1030 coops; fob ey tic prices unchanged: heavy hens 55-175; Nght hens 14-18; fryers or brotiers 24-28 old roosters 135-14; ca- ponettes 27-28 DETROIT POULTRY Dd AP Prices paid T pound fob Detroit for No. 1 quality live poultry up to 10a m Heavy hens 18-20 heavy broilers light type 15-17). or fryers (3-4 Iba.), whites 26-38, gray crosses 26',-28; Barred Rocks 29, light brotiers or ca- or pa (4%e-6% Ibs) 28-32; ducklings DETROIT EGGS DETROIT — AP ayes, fob Detroit, cases included. federal-state grades Whites —Grade A. Jumbo 50-66, weight- ed average Si‘). large 43-46, wid av. 45%; medium M-M, wtd. ev. 37. small 29. grade B. large 38-40. wtd. av. 39.\% Browns—Grade A, jumbo 417-84 wtd. Ov. 50's; large 50‘ :-44. wid. ev 43%: medium 33-37. wtd. av. 364%; small 28-29, wtd av. 29; grade B, large 39; qrede C4 large 24 7, Ae 21 Foreign Exchange KEW YORK (AP)—Foreign exchange rates follow (Great Britain in dollars, others in cents) jan dollar in New York market 2 102.71% USB Burope: Great Britain ‘pound) §2.61's, unchanged, Great Britain 30 day futures 2.81 27/32, unchanged, Great Britain 60 day futures 2.81 13/16, unchanged, Great Britain 96 dey futures 281 25°32. un- changed: Beigium (franc) 23.00%. up 00%» of a cent, France (franc: 28%. of a cent, open 732 per cent premuim or cents up 1,16 of a cent mark) 23.65. unchanged. Holland ‘guil- Ger) 26.44. up 02 of a cent: Italy ‘lira) 16% of a cent, unchanged Portugal escudo) 31.50, unchanged; Gweden (krone) unchanged; Switeeriend ‘franc’ ifree) 23.33%, unchanged; Denmark (krone) 1450, unchanged Latin America: Argentina (free) 724 nchanged: Brasil ‘free: 1.80. unchanged, Mexico 6.62, unchanged; Venezuela (boli- var) 30.03, unchanged Per East' Hong Kong dollar 17 60 STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press » 5 60 16 1 Indust Ratis Util. Stocks Previous day 1731 641 G8 1282 Week ago 1756 45 604 1283 Month ago 1664 888 S08 1225 Year ago...... 139097 889 627 108 1964 high...... 175.6 98.1 60.8 1283 1086 beW.: .0... 1430 Tle 88.4 108.0 1963 high...... 1818 036 86.8 1163 1963 low. 1302 735 65 005 Net change +10 +1 +1> +8 Noon, today.....1761 042 610 138.7 nan Climber Dies on Expedition KARACHI Pakistan (}—A mem- ber of an Italian expedition seeking to climb unconquered K2—Mt. Godwin Austen—the world's second highest peak, died of pneumonia June 21, reports reaching here to- day said. The climber was _ identified aS | Mario. Puchez. 36. a veteran moun- | taineer from Aosta, Italy. He was the fourth member of Italian ex- peditions to die in the Himalayas this year. Three members of a separate team trying to scale 23,- 399- Mt. Api were killed in the pa weeks. itches received yesterday the climbers on 28,250-foot K2 said their schedule had been dis- rupted by bad weather after they established a camp 21,200 feet up the slopes of the mountain. Gets 5 Years Probation for Typewriter Theft Five years’ probation and $200 costs were imposed on John S. George B. Hartrick for stealing three typewriters and a quantity of pens from a Birmingham print- ing company. Gajor, of 7001 Anthony St., Dear- born, pleaded guilty to larceny from a building June 21, admitting that he entered the building at 415 E. Frank St. through a broken window June 1. Leaders Meet Secretly TOKYO wW—The Communist. Pei- ping radio said tonight Red China's Premier Chou Enlai and Viet- minh rebel leader Ho Chi Minh have held a secret meeting some- ad on the China-Indochina bor- Sleep Aids Burglar HARTFORD, Conn . (UP) — James P. Brogan lost about every- except his sleep. He told ‘| police that while he was snoozing someone. swiped a $350 wristwatch and two valued at $400, all of which he was wearing. peer w . stronger California Long | Dec unchanged, Germany (West: ‘Deuteche 4 @| mercial cows 10.50-13 Gajor, 41, today by Circuit Judge a The early gains in wheat came ‘ despite fairly large receipts of cash grain, totaling 561 cars at Chicago. This represented a three-day ac- cumulation and obviously was no great surprise to the trade. Soy- beans were aided by early firm- ness in soybean meal. Wheat near the end of the first hoyr was 15% to 2% higher, July $1.98%,. % to ™% higher, July $1.58%, oats ‘4s lpwer to “% higher, July T1%, ryé 1% to 1% higher, September $1.05, soybeans un- changed to 3 cents higher, July $3.83 and lard 15 cents lower to 5 cents a hundred pounds higher, July $15.80. Grain Prices ; CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO AP—Opening grain Wheat Dec 108', July 197 March bility Sept 2.00 Soybeans — Dee 203% July 3.82", March 706°. Sept. . 2.79's May 203%, Nov. , 2% Corn Jan . 258% July 358 March 262 Sept. . 1 52's Lar 142%. July 18.78 Oats— Sept t 14.35 July. . Ti's Nov 12.78 Bept. . 70%, Dec 12.96 Dec “ T2°e Soy ou — March . 14', July . 13.78 Rye— Gent)... wn July. 190', March , 11.36 Sept. 103% . Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP:—Galabie hogs 6,000; general trade uneven; active on light weight butchers, otherwishe slow; butch- ers steady to 60 lower; mainly steady on weights 230 ib and lighter; sows 25-50 lower. choice 180-230 Ib butchers $24.50. 2525. latter price freely, a few choice No. | and 2's 190-210 Ib $25 40-25.50, 240- 270 Ib $22.76-34.25. choice No. 1 and 23's 240-250 Ib 924 50-2475! 280-330 lb butch- ers $20 50-22.50: choice 330-400 16 sows $1700-19.75. lighter weights $20.00-20.78; 425-600 Ib sows $1450-1700, clearance incomplete Balable cattie 8.000: calves 400; steers and heifers slow. steady to 50 lower mostly steady to 26 .off, cows slow: steady to 25 lower bulls et ' vealers prime $23.50-24.75. chiotce $18.50-23.25. a load of choice and prime mixed yearlings $24.60; good to high choice heifers $18 80-23.78; good to high choice heifer utility and commer- cial cows $10.00-1250, canners and eut- WASHINGTON w—The United States is beginning a reappraisal of its foreign policy Which may prove to be much more ‘‘agoniz- ing’’ than Secretary of State Dulles foresaw. “ Dulles was talking only about a reshaping of U.S. policies in Eur- ope when he served notice on France several months ago that this country might undertake an “agonizing reappraisal."’ But now Senate Republican Leader Know!- and of California has ‘raised a far more sweeping issue over the pos- sibility of United Nations mem- bership for Red China. The issue essentially is: At what point in its efforts to get along with allies should the United States decide the struggle is not worth the result, and strike out on its own? * Ld . What Knowland has proposed is that if United Nations members override America’s objections and bring Red China in one U.N. door, the United. States should walk out the other. - He has not claimed that this is an administration view. - Indica- tidhs are, in fact, that he would be opposed.in the State Depart- ment. But he has said that he would resign the majority leader- ship and crusade for his. proposal He has asserted, furthermore, that he is getting many expressions of popular support. While some members of Con- gress have aligned themselves with Knowland, others have declared that U. S. policy toward Red China should not be frozen, and that with- drawal] from the U.N. would be a grave error. : s s Ld The whole purpose of U.S, post war diplomacy has been to work with friendly nations in expecta- tion of greater security through collective strength. z . But in the past year the process has become increasingly difficult. France has persistently delayed action on a European defense treaty which would make West Germany independent and rearm it. It was to prod the French into action that Dulles spoke of a pos- sible: agonizing reappraisal. . Now the long-impending danger of a break with Britain over Red China is becoming much more acute. This, coupled with the prob- ability that France will recognize ters $8 .00-9.75. ee | age = sia bulls $13.50-1700, ¢« prime ve $16.60-20.00; cull to commercial grades $8 00-16 00 Salable sheep 500: general trade steady with Monday ofr Ley Boe week — lasses, most good me $20 00-23 06; cull to low pod chy. S77 : a deck of mostly good around 04 t» No. 1 skin old crop lambs and year- lings $1400; cull to choice shaughter ewes 64 50-5 50 DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT, July 6 — (AP) — (USDA) — ogs—salable 1,000 Market slow, early sales 180-220 Ib barrows and giits around 60 centa lower than last Thurs- day at 26.00 with chotee sorted 1 and 3 hot est rs. ** Sule 4 3,900. Market opening and yearlings, feeders in receipts; about 25 per cent receipts cows; high good to prime fed steers and yearlings fully steady with last week's close; lower. established, chotee and pri ‘s1.80- 23 00: early sales mostly good fed heif- ers 2000-2200; bulk utility and com- 00; canners and cutters 900-11.00: odd head utility and commercial bulls up te 16.56, some held higher; several loads good and choice stock calves and light yearlings 18.75- 2000-24 00-26.00; commercial e 3 pect yd few light culls down good == to 5.00. . Sheep—Salable 300. No early sales. Store Clerk Sought in Fund Shortage A Pontiac department store em- ploye is being sought today in con- nection with a shortage of $1,850 in company funds. “The loss was discovered this morning when Morris Simon, of Simms Bros., opened the com- pany’s safe and found a money bag stuffed with blank paper, cut to the size of U.S. currency. Charged with embezzlement in a warrant approved by Oakland County Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem is Charles A. Woodard, 22, of 685 First St., a camera depart- ment employe. 2 Detroiters Sentenced to Prison for Robbery Two Detroiters were sentenced to 2 to 10 years in Southern Michi- gan Prison at Jackson today by Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick for the armed robbery, of a Far- mington Township patent medicine 4 i] the Chi se Reds as part of an Indochina peace deal, has forced the issue of Red China's member- ship to the fore again. There is great opposition in the Eisenhower administration and in Congress to letting Communist China into the U.N. The question thus arises: What should the United States do about it if Allied nations force it anyway? The present answer to that ques- tion in the State Department, so far as it can be pinned down, is that the United States should stick with the U.N. and its allies what- ever happens. But Knowland, by giving an an- swer of an entirely opposite nature, posed the issue whether Red China policy may not mark the breaking debates on foreign policy to make it clear that- the choice of basic direction is limited to about four possibilities. Those are: 1. Preventive war — The Tru- man administration repudiated this ibility when it was widely the argument being that the West presumably holds an edge. But the idea is foreign to all U.S. tradi- tions. And the European nations are frightened to death of the whole idea of war and could not be counted on to provide any sup- port for such a policy. * » > 2. Western Hemisphere fortress —This concept was much talked about in the early debate prelim- inary to the 1952 election. The idea was that United States has ample power and resources for its own defense, that its allies are not too dependable anyway, and that if they cannot stand on their own feet Mthey cannot forever be propped up. This notion was disputed by those who contend that the United States is dependent on many vital raw materials from foreign sources and that it could not exist as the powerful nation it is without coop- eration of countries outside the many position in the world today but does not embrace all of them, Essen- tially it holds that Anterica’s best STOCKS — BONDS Consult us for first hand information in Stocks and Bonds We maintain a direct line to a member of all principal exchanges with up-to-the-minute quotations service available at all times. y National Bank C. J. Nephler Co. . Bidg. FE 2-911 + THE PONTIAC PRESS, “TUESDAY, JULY 6; 1954 . | Foreign Policy of U.S. ane Open to Searching Study Indochina Costs allies are-those on islands—Japan, the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand and Britain. By extension it would include stout. anti-Com- munist nations like Spain and South Korea—both peninsulas. It does not make provision, however, for a defense in the heart of Eu- rope based on either Germany or France. It is jn line with some speculation at the State Depart- U.S: 2Billion money, according to Pontiac Po- More Money Will “Be ; ~ Poured In This Year Unless War Ends WASHINGTON # — The United States has poured more than two billion dollars in-military and eco- ment that an alternative to a French-German reconciliation is a peripheral strategy, meaning a system based around the rim of Europe in places like Spain and Italy 4. Security through strength — This is the policy which the Tru man and Eisenhower administra- tions have both followed pends for its success on strong and reliable allies and on getting along with them. It has cost the United States many billions: of dol- lars in military and economic as- sistance and it is the policy which administration officials presently intend to pursue to the limit. Nevertheless, it is also the policy which would have to undergo the acid test of congressional and pub- lic support in any future great de- bate. And such a debate seems certain to develop by the end of the year if Britain, France and many other nations join with Rus- sia and various cold war neutrals to vote Red China into the U.N., and if France meanwhile persists in blocking the European Defense Community with Germany Petitions to Get Usual Study Opposing Groups Can Send Observers for Bingo Check LANSING (# Secretary of State Owen J. Cleary said today that petitions to put legalized bin- go on the ballot will not receive any unusual! scrutiny unless there are charges of rreaygerity . Cleary said he had directed State Elections Director Robert M. Mont- gomery ‘‘to make the usual study of the petitions, imposing neither more nar less critical appraisal than on other petitions which, by stature, are filed with the secre- tary of state.” “Unless we are presented with a substantial showing of irregu- larity, we will not go beyond the face of the petitions." Cleary's statement was an in- direct reply to demands by anti- bingo groups that the petitions be subjected to a careful check, He said the Michigan Council of Churches, which opposed legal- ized bingo and the Michigan As- sociation of Non-Profit Charitable Organizations which sponsored the petitions are free te send observ- ers to watch the petitions being . | checked. Cleary argued that the question of legalizing bingo “is a matter of public policy which should be determined by the vote of the citi- zens of Michigan’ if the initiatory petitions filed last week are valid. Britain, ; It de- | nomie aid into Indochina over the |past four years. | An additional billion dollars: is | tentatively scheduled to aid French and anti-Communist. Indochinese larmies in the year which began | July 1—unless a truce ends the | 74-year-old war- The biggest share of American _aid—about a billion in arms and economic supplies — moved into Indochina in the last fiscal year after the Eisenhower administra- tion decided to double American help in a determined effort to crush the Communist threat. * a | This increased flow of guns, | Piauce and military equipment ‘meant the United States was carry- ing 65 per cent of the bill for prose- cuting the war in the 12-month ppviloege The percentage would re- main the same in the forthcoming year, barring a truce or military collapse. Prior to the decision to boost the volume of aid, American assist- ance had averaged about 350 mil- lion dollars a year since 1951. This News in Brief Thieves broke into a filjing sta- tion at 208 N. Paddock St. -Monday and looted vending machines, tak- ing- an undetermined amount of David Ramsey of 370 W. South Bivd., reported to Pontiac Police that his car wash building at 81 S. Perry St., was broken into Monday night and about $10 worth of candy and eigars were taken The home of Mrs, Thomas Salis- bury, 582 Brooks Ave., was ran- sacked Monday, according to Pon- tiac Police. Missing was $5, taken from a bedroom. The thieyes en- tered with a passkey. Charles McCoy, 35, of 316 Syra- cuse, N. Y., pleaded guilty to drunk driving Saturday before Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Stana- back and paid a $100 fine Failing to pay a $100 fine Sat- urday when he pleaded guilty to drunk driving before Pontiac Mu- nicipal Judge Maurice E. Finne- gan, Robert Charles, 44, Detroit, was sentenced to 30 days in Oak- land County Jail. If your friend’s in jail and needs bail, Ph. FE 5-5201, C. A. Mitchell. Osmun’s Town & Country, Tei- Huron Shopping Center, Pontiac's finest store for gentlemen who prefer the finer things. Open every night ‘ti) 9 p m. Plenty of free parking . Adv Re-elect Clare Hubbell Sheriff, Republican. Vote August 3rd. Adv was about 30-35 per cent of the French government. Pontiac Mayor Flies to See Reserve Camp Pontiac Mayor William W. Don- aldson left from Detroit by plane today for Camp McCoy, Wis. where he will observe the Army reserve encampment there through Thurs- day as guest of the Sth Army. Donaldson said he would pay special attention to activities of Pontiac's 703rd Tank Battalion now training at Camp McCoy. Mayors lof other Michigan cities including the top Saginaw and Flint offi- cials will be present, Donaldson stated. Grammatical Dispatcher Corrects Cop’s Usage SAN FRANCISCO «®—The San Francisco police radio station not only has a captive audience but controls its speaking habits. — This exchange took place yes- terday when a patrol car was di- rected to the scene of an accident: ‘We are en rowt.” “En root,” corrected Yhe dis- | patcher. | ‘En root,"’ agreed the .car. ; Child Hit by Car Sandra D. McCants, 7. of 411 Branch St., was treated for cuts and bruises at Pontiac General Hospital Monday night when she was struck by an auto near her | home. Driver John Harris Jr., 27, of 26 Esther St., told Pontiac Po-| lice the child ran in front of his| car from behind parked autos. Buyer for Nationalist China Arrested on Theft Charge NEW YORK (AP) — A Chinese businessman was ar- rested here today in connection with the alleged theft .}of $810,000 in Chinese Nationalist funds intended for purchase of surplus war supplies. The mag, identified by Nationalist officials as Ku Chih Chang, 48, was said to have received the funds from -|former Nationalist Gen. Pang Tsu Mow, who fled to Mexico in 1951. : The general was accused | of embezzling some six mil- lion in Nationalist funds while in cHarge of the Chi- nese pial pe air force) office in Washington, D. C. Chang was arrested on a grand larceny charge at the request of Cha Chien Liang, Nationalist China's vice minister of justice. The vice minister said Chang had received three checks from the general, one for $716,000 and two for $300,000 each. Detectives who arrested Chang at the Hotel Wellington in Man- hattan said he denied any wrong- doing. and as saying he thought the money given him by the gen- eral was his own. Chang was quoted as saying the Nationalist government owed him more than one million dollars for property it had confiscated from him in China. The Nationalist vice minister said Chang came to this country in 1946 and that he and the gen- eral handled the purchase of war surplus materials for the Nation- alist forces. The vice minister, said Chang and the general schemed to juggle figures so as to leave huge amounts for themselves. Chang allegedly set up headquarters in a Philadelphia hotel. Not all of the $810,000 has been accounted for, the minister said. He added that he believed some has been deposited in a Swiss bank. A suit was filed in Los Angeles earlier this year by the Nationalist government, charging Chang with conspiracy to embezzle $810,000. Detectives said Chang came here three days ago and when National- ist officials got word of it they obtained aid of New York police in apprehending him. Gen. Mow now is in prison in Mexico awaiting the outcome of proceedings to him to Formosa to face’ embezzlement charges. COMMON STOCK YIE NEW YORK DETROIT EDISON COMPANY Having paid dividends continuously since. 1909, this stock offers an excellent investment in a growing Michigan utility. Telephone: WOocdward 2-2055 First or Mrcurcax Corporation Investment Bankers BUHL BUILDING — DETROIT 2 LDS MORE THAN 5% CHICAGO financial cost of the conflict to the |” Business Briefs | Consumers are spending an in- | creased amount of their income on housing, utilities, doctors, and transportation, according to a re- port by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago in its monthly review, “Business Conditions.” Outlays for these and other services during the first five months of 1954 have accounted for over 35 per cent of the total consumer expenditures. Last year saw a 5 billion dol- lar pickup in consumer spending for services and these expendi- tures should continue to gain. the bank says. said today that Pontiac Motor Division built 6,100 cars last week, compared with 6,225 in the previous week. GMC Truck and Coach Division's output last week stood at 1,240, as against 1,383 the week brofre, the De- troit publication added. President Zachary Taylor was the father-in-law of President Jef- ferson Davis of the Confederacy. The housefly is found wherever man has established himself. Ward's Automotive Reports | WAC to Hold Interviews. WAC Lt. Vivian M. Coffey, of the Detroit Army recruiting office, will be in Pontiac on Jul 8 at \1l+ a. m. to interview interested wom- en, according to M. Sgt. Paul J. Smith, in charge of the. local re- eruiting station at -5342.-WtHHturon St. | Atomic Development Mutua! Fund lac. Prospectus sent FREE en request LERCHEN co. Members New York Stock Exchange | WATLING, & 116 Pentiac State Bank Bidg.. Pentiac Phene FE 41-7895 Please send Prespectus: NAME) (oo 2s20.cc rs ee, ones rewee + ADDRESS 18 COBY .... 20 PRONE ...cc0e0-- CASTLES IN THE AIR... aren't subject to foreclosure, but houses on the ground mav be lost through sudden adversity. An inexpensive mortgage policy of the Sun Life Assurance Com- pany of Canada will free your home from any debt-remaining at vour death— Protect vour loved ones. home ... call me todav George E. | Wood | Agent 26', W. Huron n St.. Room I! FE 5-5631 - ~* car! H. W. Huttenlocher 318 Riker Bldg. ~ SN tect your personal effects as well as your H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency Vacation Time! Is the time to trovel—so before you go, cneck on your insurance .. . and don't forget we vgll pro- - Mex E, Kerns FE 4-155] Donald E. Honsen Res. FE 2-5513 Accident Insurance Automobile Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types 511 Community Nat’l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt Res. FE 5-3793 Fire Insurance Liability Insurance Life Insurance = Plate Glass Insurance WANTING. IT HAS B NOT TRIED.” “CHRISTIANITY HAS age N BEEN TRIED AND FOUND FOUND DIFFICULT AND —G. K. Chesterton Va RRIS & SON REALTORS CO-OP _w_ Waren MILLER & STON LISTINGS WANTED We have customers homes now covered by GI ae om get P hoe all your STONE REALTY CO. 183 ” air m. Daily: Sun. 1 Ta HAVE BUYERS FOR One or t either ‘cae or Two bedruwm modern home to Bu ron Gardens ares with basement wand serare Meith poveibities, At wast’ 6 rooms Call J. A. Taylor Realtor, PE 46-2544 WILL BUY On List YOUR LAKS . Purchasers RF McKINNEY pettee 8800 Commerce Rd. EM UN oon re. —*COMPLETELY SOLD OUT WE NEED LISTINGS KENNEDY new Exeuinas 2%: Johnson mat ® Soe ‘2..* we ey sold quick end cou! Office Open rv) A JOHNSON, Realtor | ~ FE 4-2533 _ 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. ~ LISTINGS WANTED my — = Ww ~| HL Cc. Newingham, roker _™i1 ~ MILLE RK r e STONE | CASH We cuarantee to > you a_i ahead ote REALTY Sort Daily: on ive im } Apts. Furnished 33 taker in basement. 2 ROOM . trance. 116 3 Howard . poo ~ Ey PE 31651 ve. ace Es between 4:00 a p.m. \2 ROOMS NEAR BODY. Men ef and clean linen. E_& 7 ROOMS Fur _— ae ees el ee ° 7 i 1 4 ; ee i Bes ie ee > - a: i a sas a i Als ~ ey “a a 4 cl 6 EP 3 a ; hii 5 aie : aioe inet ae _ St % . / ies “. = if i : 2 rs } 4 if _ : a: . HE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 5 sae ° _Hel Wanted Male Auiice OF HAM Landscaping 18A\- _ Notices & Personals 35 INDEX Death Notices |-."*? : 7 ~ TO EXPERIENCED, PRESSER ON DANS LANDSCAPE | SERVICE, bag Sg = a men's garmen poly Fox Clean- maintenanc BADER, JULY, me, MAUI, Wt eepenTeRCED URED ee Watt #TOWE—FOR | Pouse._'G. x . CLASSIFICATIONS “4 of re Edward Bader. Mrs Al: | car salesman to balance ouf sales Sar landscaping, Lincgin niehta. hag . | Gas oiber Stine homers Call i LANDSCAPE " AND.) any e 8 | : 5 . _ Leonard Peterson. Mrs. Lee Har- ition at Jerome Moter | , ertenine' Vi dag ane ES ou ANNOUNCEMENTS. ris and Mrs. Burtis Crowe; dear _ Sales” FE 60488 ms }| Seae ig De- - eee a = ange ——— kesh oo ried ~ OIL BUR? vE R MAN _ EM yeast * . wees r t aa of Thanks. ...........; 1 Pe wat thee ure mot . chr | rot usin open all year round tr : LAWNS —, bs j w ’ alter 1- | ne e : n Memoriam ............ 2] Gating interment’ in Osh Mill.| stellasion & service man by long on a nure CLEAN OP Flowers 3 Mrs. Bader will lie ‘in state at the | establishec firm working anette dn gepeaee wegen rged Got [| area Go nfl) elo TREE SPRAYING | ti ur n whic ov s Funeral Directors ence ena 4 _— phe will be ta taken to the! furaieh reler-novs and experience ss" unone. wee and shrubs. ¢€ chureh r mtias ress x Cemetery Lots 5 = “| SICKNESS MAKES AVAILABLE Moving & Trucking” | 19 DAVIS. JUNE - 25. 1954 BENNIE | southeast Livthgston and south. BODO LR OD EMPLOYMENT eck Me uana at (icon wate) © |lilpaeaee sed’ cecerteanies’ te || AAA MOVING & TRUCKING OR Davis, dear father of Rosella continue established service. Write og a ‘ete FE 19lse enylime Help Wanted Male 6 vis Puneral service will be/| or see Virgil! Warrum, 42 Barker 7" = Seed “HOD TRIE held this evening at 7 P M. at Rd.. Whitmore Lake, Tel. 5811, | aLL KINDS OF HAULING PICK Help Wanted Femal the Providence Baptist Church; or write Rawleigh's, Dept. MCG- | ° | up and delivery Cheap. FE LET Us BUY IT OR AUCTION IT Pp emale ..... 7] with ner Walter Marris offic: | _€04-303. Freeport. Ilinote. _ 5-064 + | _ tor you x a: “62681, Help Wanted 8 Wetheeday un Yih oe Oak Hill | TEACHER 4 4) ‘ roy : itty &: = a | ONS” OF” PONTIAC'S Aare fone gases d ; 5 Pi oo Instructions | 9 | See are aan pimmentt | Wi ee without car, so work all | | were vue eee SEDED SOeScouad squaas summer, { | LIGHT See AND D 1 t 'f , Eee £ ‘Taylor truck serivee Biack dirt and fill F URNITURE 2 NEEDI Work Wanted Male...... 10 9 N. Telegraph near Huron i , F FE 40200 Get the ie 10) SMERWELL, JULY «1964, MRS | FOOLMARERS: WANTED APPLY | Taha MA GLinG. Manne: _ fre i “ce, cca or Work Wanted Female 11 | Harriet R., 6470 Alden Dr, age 86 211 Central from 8 to 13 am. work, Reasonable, PO 2-664 veh ite ry er Bb Community : Ee ln, ear | eee LIGHT HAULING IMMEDIATE | sale on 33 mt t — + SERVICES OFFERED Mat the Permer-Snover Puneral . , service FE &79 WANTED, TO Fe Home with Rev. Fred Tiffany of- Tangible—Intangible }| LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. rn Building Service rb geri FE fescipaiy arren rueet $150 WEEKLY Rubbdtsh hauled PE 2-0603. WAN’ T ED FU URNI TURE eens ereees « y e armer-Snover ner | MOVING NI LIGHT TRUC KING Building Supplies WA — | ern Ww bay ust, edcee " Yards leveled and tree cutting i ce “want brome ome ; cee ee moines . = " : ee teous service and the high : j : TER. JULY 6. 1954. HERMAN r a roduct te our line. & ee ars : : Business Services ........ 13| "po" Garland Ave. Syiven | Ages 30 to " ing f Decessary. |. REDUCED RATES . “ ve vga CO. ees Village, age 61, beloved hus’ os — op a No | Large Van to serve you. Smt Ce ponwweeping & Taxes 1.14) of tie, hry, ©. ie, Ser Tub: | drew vadtaaes. oe ‘eatery’ CaS | oe eapeaticl ac ial | OUND Prfaattns boven” INCA P RINCESS — ertified us | Chiropodists cee eeeeueeeus 15| Leona Jubenville. Mrs Verna| _©& 877! for appointment | 3 2 TRUCKING AND HAULING BAL _ an authentic Inca by the Peruvian Foot § list . Reshvay, Mrs Pasko Kelly and U NION CARPENTE RS | r J -_ Any ap. FE 3-9296 Wid. Miccemaa ce =) . , , i F ialist ....... . 15A | wast Lewis sa willis, Stier Lh a alate custom job \ rE . a Trucks to Rent RRAAAAAL AAA ODRRAARALRAALS government, singer Yma Sumac . — a oh Ce — 9 $4438 | > Pies ; Dressmaking & Tailoring 16; M*. Stier ts at the Donelson- | Raed eee eae || = ; WANTED: FREE FILL DIRT. will soon make her debut in a} Garden Plowi 16 | Seeceants eal oe sfopectalel OMe take ——— trucks | Work Wanted Male 10° Building Service H2 Thro SRE CULPMENT: paige ag = eo — ree and Hollywood version of life of the nil A | later oe to transport @house trailers | ~ : “| ~ ‘y Ton Pickups oy Ton Stakes » ’ / mar Income Tax Service 17 through the United States Steady MAN WANTS WORK. HAS OWN PLUMBING AND PEATING H 8 mp Trucks Wanted to Rent Incas. The singer, who has an De Flow 2 work with good rate of pay For) truck 153 Dodge) to pull trailers. | Gaps | & son FE ¢376T OR | Pontiac Farm and —__} s==-~~ LASER La Servi ; wers _ further information contact Mor) we 48865. Jack Manze!! \ ts 3 room unusually wide vocal range, is of /#undry Service ......... 18 | ee as Bee eee ich on | MAN WITH GOOD REFERENCES PLASTERING NEW & ‘mera | Industrial Tractor Co, | Career girl wants 3r - royal blood ‘ord ; Landscaping 18A_ SCRAP ER's FLOWERS 3-0191 Drayton Plains, Mich OR | "desires dairy farm job OR 3-6410 | PF 2.2008 EVENIN 4046) — PE +1442 unfurnished. apt. nous§ roya. , according to Peruvian cians wa uae 3B AONURN FE 2-3173 WATER SOFTENER “SALESMEN | PLUMBING — WTD, REA i om aavoKe “FLOOR caving VET arta 2 Rea gle STAKE TRUCK referred, byAu y 1. Un- officials. Moving & Trucking ...... 19 | New Revolutionary Completely | _ sonable, FE 6-1016. ———— a "OT eee E , iol Funeral Directors 4 Sutomatic plus conversion unit for | PAINTING wate BY ELDER. _* — i. O'DEL a CART A AG | der $70 per mo. Stove | Painting. & Decorating ... mT | manuel er. 198 N. Telegraph ly A Soe | 10 PER CEN [iret an, tere Lutence Moving) x refrigerator included. | PAINTING AND” WALL WASH- areal Contracts Phone 4806. ‘ ' Photos & Accessories Joe h lew CARPENTERS. MUST ing. screens —fepetred FEY 5- 7008 | yonruaste canta of cine ter VOLLMAR MOVING AND STOR) Phone FE 4-7683.. : one son- ONNS | _ be union EM 34520, | PLASTERING JOR TOO | lowest cost plus 10 per cent LI age Agents tor N American Van | Physio-Therapy .. ona rare WANTED MANAGER FOR ARTI- small. FE 1-6 wt 5-0143 | Lines Large vans anywhere i crry ee AND FAMILY | PUNER 0 |= ~ - nit e cs service °o se) Un | Television Service ....... 22 _“DESIONE™) PUNERALS” | eve farm background, Apply, Work Wtd. Female 11) REMODELING $4562 M41 N Perry. furan. by July 18 PE 1-7650 | : “Typewriter Service .... 24; Voorhees-Siple | fast mia Fees“ conen woman wanra work APACE eamaMNres rena” | Painting & Decorating 20/1 Kiasia want ears | ’ = COLORED 7 1 WANTED: BARBER WITH OWN by day or week Excellent refer- | eTOP PERT & CECIL aie ing or not. PE 6-8183. FE 2-1436, | 10 Hit F if ench Upholstering 23) FUNERAL HOME | “equoment Nets Rowerelt. "™ tncen’ FE tian wae Dito Rey Dror Pin | “tay PTI. POPEIRANUGD | tat Pat cans | Ambulance Service Plane or Motor _ Hel Wanted ‘Female | COL ORED GIRL WISHES ANY | OR 37721 {f no answer OR 32420. 46018. rs . - Vi inh NOTICES ee eee Aisa ee Meaeds ick TebteTenTAtne, old | EXPERIENCED COLORED LADY | __ Building | Supplies p IZA Al PAINTING REASONABLE. en? {LANDLORDs Libtinos Notices & Personals 25 BOX REPLIES income. Pleasant work. Write Pon-| Would like housework Mon. Wed | 5-5006 | 42583 Confer on Cease-Fire . ° tia: Press Box 84 Fri. Also experien eg ironer. FE ane YOU TIRED OF LIVING IN Saecaee SERVICE. PAINTING | INTERN & WIFE, NO CHILDREN. | WANTED oda BAKERY SALES GIRL EXPERI- | p.derment or mromplete heme’ | “well washing paper ci e104.) desire furnished place near Poo- HANOI (INS) — The Communist | gh Rc oe Ew eed oe p EXPERIENCED | VETERINARIANS | Interest Bank references, UNI- | ee TET KON WALL | _Sateneiom 10 ictecom baal etc i s o i * 0 i : Vietminh rebels kept up steady | Wed. Children torBoard . % | there were replies at BAR MAID TO WORK EVENINGS atea. Excelent seh cone ole or pent Teel ee Bea: 3 at washing | paverhanging & clean UNFURNISHED HOUSE OR{| gown. pressure today against withdrawing | Wtd. Household Goods... 27) ne ne, office ind ur Ban - | er Business Services 15 Of TERMS’ Tupper OR S100 | Qigigne™ Poniet tee PN renc nion troops as the Red y, ie followin xes: | Bax MalD NIGHTS STEADY. < | nm oe INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR DEC- | © regime's confident regulators met | | Wid. Miscellaneous :..... 2 13, 14, 19 < 57, 67 200d _pay._Schoellers Ber M-60 ae es Se aladhia | ACE ASPHALT PAVING & PENE- orating, Work quaranteed rapire | Share Living Quarters 30 | ° ° , oo t Fr. tration Se e As it dri ae oa with French delegates. in cease- Money Wanted ........ 28a Yu, ve, 18 ma, a, 4, || Me cp Garg sre OE ERR MATES | Gptgge gies Pre sens TAL RIOR QM RETRIOR | RrIMED, LADY FO, MARE J fire discussions, é | Wanted to Rent o9 4 110, 112 wholesele distributor's office in night References. FE 5-5019 wh . : nat F ee ~ Wanted tO nent .......... « . - rural area near Pontiac. Also | ~ = - |ACE TREE REMOVAI TRIM. too hee or too sma ree es _box 78 Pontiac Press _ Vietminh troops were réported Share Liv some typing necessary Mi iecasy a po SoacnigrdagpengbchasA ca enna, ming Free estimates FE 2-788 mates __PE 3.1933 _Wtd. Transportation 31 ving Quarters ... 30 transportation. This is an excep- | PAINTING INSIDE & OUT. FREE! driving north through the deserted Wed. ‘ a tional opportunity for experienced | _of ‘SCHOOL DesInES BABY | ing’ Reasonable. A at SAND- | “estimates, PE 2-137 | IDERS TO, FISMER 6 Transportation ..... | person ive full information to HIGH SCHOOL l= : ‘ORATING. IN aioe OR R T aes (Wed. Contracts, Migs... 32) Cemetery Lots 8's TOR CIRTG ct ent noweewores TE REFRIGERATORS rie aad pu chelereates, treo, Body. 14:20 p.m. shin :* ze | ery Lots ( : WISHES ipa ha hag orate ‘ “RIDE OR SHARE DRIVING FROM The new Franco-Vietnamese | Wanted Real Estate... 32A | ~~~ CURB xIRLS | WOM SCHOOL STUDENT wisi WASHING MACHINES PANTING Tinted re aed |" Commerce area to and trom Pit def li | | SACRIFICE 4 GRAVE LOTS IN Night shift, must be over 18 Ex- baby sitting or light housekeep- | IRONERS ns motors PERHANGINO AND PAINTINO | _@ to 5 shift _EM 36280 ense lite is roughly 15 to 20 | Pom booq ay Man $200. Lot 80-C.| ‘erienced only. Apply im person.| ing. Sales experience MY 2-5671 REP E a pr : | ee i - 7 erthoorn bade | mens OFFERED TED'S bree servies. | ms 45°) PHONE "FE F4-2569 PAINTING RESIDENTIAL. COM | gupLoves NESIDING te ¢ a - | . } _ P Walton’ $1 N. Park ial & paper fe ON PONTIAC TRAIL. on y = Rent Apts. Furnished 33 Oi srccawara) as secere Lake Ra |PART TIME BABY SITTER | —*O"? ICE SE VICE + moved Charles White OA ©3807 NBAR SOUTH COMMERCE mma. | Rent Apts. U ! xu The Pontiac P | —Moodwerd ot squere tere Se er emsin be veel “APPLIANCE SERVICE | _or PE 307% ROAD, DESIRE TRANS | ; 's. Unfurnished ont tae e - all mak PORTATION "ROM WAL North of Hanoi, the French and | Rent Me = FOR W ANT pees Dining Room ak Day bin BABY siT- airs was = radion essere, | nesibentia. 8 ‘ae ws rie? PONTIAC, Vietminh representatives to the) ouses Furnished .. 35 | ting jo and al! ty ke ot ema oe es CTION ASS’ | bee df PONTI , WANTED. BABY SITTING BY | ROY'S 0 Oakland Ave J WILLAMS FE Le) ANS- cease-fire talks set up by agree- Rent Houses Unfurnished 36 DIAL FE 1 Waitress kind, elderly lady, 16 Hollywood ALL: MAKES OF cr OUNTAIN Few WOMEN WANT WALI eo eeaind rons ation Ne DI BY ments reached at th eGeneva Con- pont Lake Cottages 36A 2-8181 Night shift. must be over 18 Ez- wanes AP ROMINGS WANT: | Sepeirad by factory iraineg men | painting OR 3.0008 TLEASE SEND REPLIES a tenced only Pply in person ap 2 oO x alec ome Reha Rol poste 'For Rent Rooms 37 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m pense TED'S WOMAN WOULD | LIKE Begg pod Pane ge YE 3-0135 vaell ie all Wasting & Paint ing | | BEFORE = PH FE +8461 resterGe yt SE wt sition - of use cleanin, —— . Passe A & B TRENCHING | wALLPAPERING AND PAINTING | Oe oe ee san Rooms With Board Ar =) Pied he persone pps | Woodward at Square Lake Rd 16 YEAR Moe TE DESIRES Feadnga. water ifmes, field tile, Call for eee Wid. . Contracts, | Mtgs, 3 32 é | : ttin, EY i] WALL WASHLN Convalescent Homes .... 38A Press assumes no respon- | EXPERIENCED D CASHIER with _baby sitting F FF 5-906) ee | | WALL Ine An aMATe Gia vou roo Sominniaienie _Anecunced | thet <% 1 ae how 3018 mt, ears, S888! F| Eston regeer eu sa | BSeliding Service 12” BEACH CLEANING \“peten & Accesderles 21. =a “OF equity tm your change of disabled prisoners of | ‘tote! hoomg ......... ae for that po of the ost COOK, AND SHORT a | —— Si ae ee eee [eer kL Tt eennleton Realtor | war wil] get underway July 14. Rent Stores ,............. 40| 9 frst insertion of the ed- der cook. 577 Auburn PE 2-2463 A-1 Carpenter /_EM 320080 .. Templeton, : 4 vigd =? |} vertisement which has been § yiInDLEAGED CHRISTIAN UNEM-| py mogelire of ings, addy SLOOMPIELD WATT CLEANERS ee eect Studis, 13 | 23% Orchard Lake Rd PE +4063 | The Red radio said yesterday Rent Office Space ........ “41 enggicho . valueless — cumbered Veer | tions are made be sure to pay ae: |e A terms. References. : |- >| & land contract in of near mat mateo gem -_ For Rent Miscellaneous. 42 ca secr NE members” and neat in appearance "No oP EM 3-2302 Chi ne Work | Television | Service 22 | aga 7-800! st . —=— Must live im. S100 por me. 04 | GTTENTIOnN - COMPLETE RE 1) bf V SERVICE ee a Lod woeT POR YOUR agreed apes. | REAL ESTATE FOF. SALE j ““™™" — maintenance. FE 44946. No calls “Tita ey “modernizing service. Act now before the rush, clean | DAY te SOs Ty SERV | lant contract | Realtor Partridge Attic ruome recrea v The discussions, being held un- ere eisar ises cites wat vis AND “GENERAL | dormers additions oe" com plete as ‘Soeciaitse te = e gTRAgA m_ on ve sae = d ted |For Sale Houses ......... 3 ents containing type ei SE ecsenert Fine country home apartment alterations custoth gas chimneys, also clean repair | SUARANTEED TV REPAIR “ANY 5% MOR TGAGES or ply nthe? I ot Tru F Sale Lak Propert 4 reainagr as vemex ceen te Stay nights. Write Pontiac Press | bur ‘ding HA financing. FE nismleers furnaces. et Aa _Bow's Retio @ TV GON- 1’ FARMS n QoRURBAN. from | iron hut in t village ng | or sale e y | day previous to publication. Box 71 State salary _ +5470 fi |) peracce cane —_ pos ve) % ecre oF frontage, ne ; : : Vick ‘CALLS Gia north of Hanoi, are limited to For Sale P 4A -_ {| REFINED HOUSEKEEPER IN| BLOCK BASEMENTS GRICK VE. ate y HOME, gent Ec | csereiell ae cleat, fe military questions. | Rao ropety be canceled yee 6:0 ue than high wees: PE. "Saas. ‘after | brick sueeiacen. | "S308 “"° DEPENDABLE SEPTIC” =r, MI TCHE LL’s TV | B. D. CHA Li: S The main point of the confer. Suburban Property... 8A] Ey'Sbettin sean | OR EREG, BE, OAM |chanay Premet sevice, MT weg Pas FE poems Baepabl, Seti! bal Vis | s} FSS ing Ly - — = _¢ ence — marking out the ceasefire | For Sale Lots ...... oeee Me) Sam want AD sp ieek acid SPperece Get “Diner 114) BRICK, BLOCK AND sCEMENT | eet | earn? on atau THO & RE- _ Typewriter Service eae hs U; Ali m ‘ited $ posi orces— ines v vs y jew ~~ mova - or 2000 rie tg il ao ee eee ns “ 2 8128 «S168 62.82 ~ TEACHER sy % “re tk, bia | SLacTi vuTOR SERVICE AS bona tie ee Past Pp y Ww ee Sale F; 48 4 le 60 31388 wor: Rr A “3 Ge youv'*ng 218 ©. Pike| _seitchell's, 123, N. tor . eon’ Poe: Bee opsoate : & all . = = = courteous action. For tm mediate | til the delegates receive further in- * °F 5#e Ss. | 5 02000 (38 0 EA lee (ethon lear te) wer) B & )-TRENCHING — _ TYPEWRITERS AND Rey wx oot Pt pane ac Ue | structions from their governments. | Sale Business Property 49 ‘ 240 433 ous ee ae vet Ee tile and “er ~EAV ES TROUG HING } cela irt ect tates were te eRe a. , | elegraph near Hu tines 7640, Fu i n FE ae P ‘ N, Keaitor Since the talks were arranged. Rent, Lease Bus. Prop. 9A f # 33 $3 8% || warree WEEDS A LADY EXPE. SLOCK AnD ) CEMENT WORK, S407). French's eating & Sheet _DiT"Ge. 1H" Se ence “E 4.2533: the French Union Command has | en | — ; rienced in women's alterations | FE 1-021 or PE 1-001 Metal Upreletering 23 FE 4-2 been forced by military necessity For Sale or Exchange - 0} Birmingham Office || Sorning ‘conditions’ “Apply Per: | BLOCK PORATION on SEWER CLEANING - ee ore SS a 1600-square : _-sonnei Office. fifth floor . OR #1 ; 1 (OL) NG rt ee iehieiees ae Riv gp sara FINANCIAL [ ~ WANTED | BULLDOZING. GRADING, BASE- Sinks Sunday Sere. Ph. FE ¢2012| auto trim, nurture Sa ee Teh Pas Coeracte Hwy. mile zone of the Red River | | Ph. Midwest 4-0844 . wd woman for modern.| ment, digging, tree Sen oetcten | LAWNS SPRAYED POR WEEDS MAKLE CUSTUM UPHOLSTER- The French position is now a reia- Business Opportunities... 51. — ery ovr ee spe olde _ Sneha ere $3881 or Orton- | “aoa eeabgrane FE 20967 tags 61% 4 Cooley ate Ra. EM _CASH tively small one centering around | 52 | 379 Hamilton be good at bookkeeping, and typ- | gi11, UDO2I NO. EXCAVATING (LIGHT HAULING IMMEDIATE _* hon; eee Please state age and marital TING. | “service. FE 6-972 DRAPES, gLIPCOVERS ~ MATERL Lane coetaact Hanoi and its port Haiphong. Status. Geet salasy. All replies |0fiveway _made. FE 441 | LAWN WOWRie oaWa anak Beadie 61927. Co. inacaes to Loan ...... s0p2 00 held in strictest confidence. Please CARPENTER ‘ened by mect'ue. FE 23-3004. 1388 ronmrone ¢ REFINISHING AN- | Nicholie & Harger _t | “5 ly to Pontiac Press box 4 erations nd custom building. _ Highwood Blvd. _tiqu s §-7332 13) W Huron St Phone FE 5-#183 ’ |Mortgage Loans ........... | Fis mab et hd termed st —|! OR 32879 | : ; ; 8 @ spec | en . PLASTERING, - 6LIPCOVE AND BED- | _¢ WE HAVE Abe's Casket F lag |__Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted 8 CARPENTER WORK. ALTERA can muxton FE és “kproed: Yo. macerial PE 58797 | $200,000 ‘ rT 7 —_— SPP PPL LP — | W. LAWRENCE. | ee 2, rrthin ve oO rlington, | Wood, Coa’ Fuel ........ i ing. FE 4-2044. 0 ecm y oti paced a an ern _equipme . - BY ‘ a i Fci|| Get our er ore you WANTED ) UNION A alee cole sss. | phone _FE_o0tne 7 Mix® : TDNES TX}. | deat We. mean business! When the Lincoln funeral train | plants, Trees, Shrubs... 68 | | CARPENTER. Ww only. FE | _ ‘zen at jt feoctory ores 0 Tere cH FLOOR SANDING OLD. *LOORS A ~ TRANSIT Mii ED CONCRETE WEDNESDAY, _ Jt Nie! | | PRIV:TE L NS. 6 taity Carl Bills “FE 28789 te) NB 37) P.M. OR ANYONE M. STOUT arrived in Springfield and the | £9 | ties after 6 p correction tahering spec LEA . ? G VAN RORN & 8O 30, PLM, x | Fy cacket was removed, the flag | For Sale Pets a EARN tig om, TO. #1808 | Finst _free. Pontiac Press ey Box 26. SPECIAL 4:85 © eae 3-151) __F t — cialist 153A HAVING INFORMA- 7 8. Saginaw St nee one was handed to an unidentified | Dogs Trained. Boarded .. 70 aeees cepeiare oS s\-| Work Wanted Male 10 GENERA ene and cement earn ~~ eet pee | TION PLEASE {POR QUICK, “AND, OURTEOUS | Porn bd ’ | ice on Bia or suburban Springfield merchant. S. Linn . SE and profit shering ple plan. Unlimited Plaste.ing and tile wk. PE 42200 DR A A KANTER. FOOT SPF-/ ,P J{Q NID FR 2- 7016.) *&" pairs peep- SRCHA 5 opportunity for with ACCOUNTANT - BOOKKEEPER | — & list. 34 8 Saginaw St. FE erty, lls Beldier purchased the flag from | FARM MERCHANDIS work habits. A Apply 38 eH Els Lk | with diversified experience. Ma. GARAGE DOORS $08 L CoRE ROUS REWARD;| K, G G, ‘Hempstead, Realtor ~ the merchant for $10. Hay, Grain & Feed........ 71 Can oe handing ing large work loed. pay: pi a as * i te gt Dressmaking, x, Tailoring 1¢ 16 Lost. “Mal = RUST “ARD | WHITE | =. “102 B. Huron street ant With Beidler was his 80M, | poe sale Livestock ........72| ® PERIENCED WASH “. = Write P O Box 545 GUARARTEED ROOFS stk eaaeemets _ward EM 36258. = : Frank, who remembered the . 7 fen ecation with. ig Keego Harbor or Phone FE Kinds Est, vie. Ai 363 | ALTERATION MEWS POET ee icna 7O0Lead-(s3REEN LAKE OFFICE transaction and who, before his Wanted Livestock .......... Reply bor Pontiac Press. MA CARPENTRY AND TILE HOUSE MOVING | POLLY a AND | ALTERS ont re See Avon Inn. Re} {On HEDGING “POR” ni death, signed an affidavit that the | For Sale Poultry ........-74| oun Tor ROTCH REAL ESTATE SL ae _ equ ee aye seus. ae * Plowing 16A fist DiaMon WaT WATCH i Pn ones bag | : flag covered Lincoln's casket. The Sale Farm Produce ........ 75 ue ecoded. rabt cow) OT Bor. 18, wes 4 OX 6300 - den a | Uekeae Mi set aa affidavit was lost in a fire abou! 76 BOY 16 me ANY KIND OF Tiouse Raising & Moving att powef tet eQqurpMent. A N: | WOodward 67144 Rings Mere | 1940 when the home of Donald C. SSS |e rface plates and ng Be General building, excavating and| Garden eis Giestng. & level | Yer, Boston, Ball don. Diack ont T1| jurtace L JOB OF | grading PE 22721. ing. FE +337 ' YOU WANT Beidler, brother of Frank, burned | Auction Sales eee 8 parts. Steady | BOS UB ad arnced ascot nek aoe . ’ work C. Manufacturing Co. 5p. | 508 FLEMMING FLOOR LAY a7 day, June th in vicinity of MAHAN HAS YERS at Manhasset, N.Y. 118 wood Lk, Orton. | CA) . GA ing pwns & Spee S* Edt |- ies = A Pion ing i ga r ‘f& W- Huron. Answers The & by i¢foot flag. with 35| AUTOMOTIVE gy Wren CAR, PLY, © | cote a bane | ~| eva = ae tea E t t ttered and soiled, was ne : summer em ment. OR 3-1258. once “ COLORED BOXER. retrieved by Sale H lers ....78 ” oer | CARPENTER. CABINET, REMOD- rototitier pay ag | Seed Be retrieved by Donald Beidler trom | For ol agomsider bts per | ; NET, REMOD- or = ai FE. 30733. : menth need siding | the attic of the family home. He | Rent Trailer Space ........ pe a baal Coane. ae 3m, . ~ teasaey a 8 attempted its restoration =a Auto Accessories .......---80| mene Kooy dune Cy a te + A tama Pee en eicer rite ron FAMILY LAUNDRY 8 ervation, but it is seriously dam- ante Beri g1| 2: em. oF omy. Wl ore Wi x: weave ee Ww tee. Pa. Pontiae Laundry ew Clg ee Sones _ tow. Reasonasie. PE DTesi tack CURTAINS PLAT O8 RUF: Sale Motor Scooters ......82 - a HENAGERS alae tea “eeiras STOR™ WINDOWS Hos Seasuuny Rinne FO : - PE +4210. SIZES EXCEPT PICTURE) tent Een a DRIED - Elephants Tramp Farms |For Sale Motorcycles ......83 cP r ARAG t D- ae a or ru 12.8 W tase, PEDO, ian | For Sale Bicycles ........84| The bike, toys, books and| img remodeling. Call after ¢ p=. A KASHIOBWE, Kasenga, Belgian , toys, ‘cane ; —Two large herds of | Boats & Accessories ,.....85 . a é AE AND CARPEN.| ‘10M Pactont TO 00 Jar pp CHANDISE ee ee aeckid: wa other things you've out-| “ters kuers “pests re| ORDER NOW AND | STOR CC On wild elephants have. inv: For Sale Airplanes oo. _2-2633. SAVE w Kashiobwe area destroying _— Sranapartation tiered s7| grown are turned into! #4ND, Bids weed bash WORK. | enew Est NO_OBLIOATION | you advertise in aad tions and terrorizing natives. | ~ | Gry yell e Me Ruvbich hevied | ae a: sania fied) Appliances. turni- hing has been done Cars ..... iff + MASONRY WORK OF ALL KINDS. PP i ae a ou ew 788) cash through Classified soos wovind—WATSING. | _PE senaT ous a ke | ture. Musical instruménts phate er drive tha away. aap eoeiiaind | ads! Ask Mother to call| _of°at nn rEbaigt™™ To") Nate at nde steb-am =_anything! Dial FE or ress . LA JOB, R 8] Belgian Congo elephants are pro- . ; Teasonebie ete. work. St. For Sale Used Cars ».......91! FE2-8181 for an ad-writ-! Phompt service. BM 3-242. Webste: & Bon. tected by law from destruction. wo bedroom modern home, — suburban ar aes al eee "F no : $12 WE LY | “ Howes 43| _THE EK a ae 43 ; PON py eenvele UBURBA __ For ‘Sel TI A ise Serer cee oe “ 2 week scellent reodngs elder! = Houses PRES Bgonsees Ce es 4,0, ELLIOTT 43|¢ 188, TU TE rates. NER. ted._MA food, siditeenen ;ARN ESD s a U rag e, full MODERN w satel SON IVA . A Y, a ape : gneeme Ww Der a eescasion, So nas rane 5 ROOM nat, Maria .° I, JUEY 6 x sescbeking dei a mae ps eee) ve rn ae i, 1954 we ae ; pemege seat ~~ “BUIL ote) ie Nee om 7 by Dick —" ao THLrris |. ent Office FE 2023 $bedroon iD NOW EDWA privilege 5 Turne — = si to oe é RD B. es. 2 ig F Ele ODER re ath 800 Rob r ed Space ; 41 Couper eairen alte ol cunenele™ 8 ent THE LAK KEITH —_— or Sale H = - 7 =e se ee 1) Pie tats ts coe aoe | pases Ga! Fenleale ; usta, FE| tho. fo second ATION your tot. pad « 44 ng ein : | w ¥ For oa VER adult’ , “tees Saginaw § R N @_weico (o"013.000 _ane pull be hoo a f ith ‘lake privilege Ry Sale Hou ————- ERY NICE 3 Roh =| eres oe et at | rear mab isms, Sl ba ‘oii Be se wes _43| For Sale Ho gi sete vies Yes pox |” cores ac] BRI cDavis FAST SIDE a ee a a _oufeanom acne a E : — o pacto : | I DINO BU BU WHITTEM pts. U furt 2-$653 BR __OR_}-761 us 2 $1250 Beautiful 'Y. $7,950 OR . a6 v6 ished C1! ITIP- This ICK (7614 separ oo ns cost. ee ES £ inside and ae oak, soak 3 sT.. € ROOM M R 3 RMS 34 ot TOP L nis 3 year oe ‘saved © me han rge w es ving seway bination s large lOD- a a TOoTs WELCO! ~~ second . OCAT —_ — suburban water plea roo treet, la dy tered — poe onl Rage oa lovely grave | fi. —_ a a4 ree ae ae ‘end — i B,, YoupO we | mo. Exe Noor ION — luxe features home “Genie tet, ft base. | windows mastic lots F and large fen Par gaeor orange ee ee Sao het areas. ROOMS. B ein RENTAL a alae on FPL apni an bapuens a al se Pull marbl re i. og ee ms, | & I< bus flow as vate bath KITCHENETT a nent —— alll near| p bedrooms piel dor Vemong wood | $1, “Full peice bed noid grad esemen sn eieture regen ae ~~ AST SIDE | k a aeean pear feet eae een Site mreeeee| et cas “ jiieemaeie mts Se ee eae Ms. PRIV . child | w . Hur rtrid ry rice a. ation ex- aid * R is room VI N z priv —— ‘on Bt. e R a caly 9is F m ream laa loc se -sion AIT! 2 mod LLAG: a lot. ace ATE ShIGk F7OK F eal- a rvice with | te . ena arog S 7 car Pilger eee 3 beat 9 room a ROOM U . Close BATH-A pay K STORE BLI 32-8316. month ith pa 2.700 r and the r. 60 e. of] he ma! o bo: Fs vl K. shad schooi, ith sun EV- s and : === P m —,. n pleasant oo thie e. tenc tr porch, $8500. be nice bath Hea “UPSTAIRS _ ca: Wi leon a pron ee panenene voua at Giana . gas bea- . pr reaageer a ie cee erm income. , - eS ea re Soon | ; are Pie lease it “prefe 875 Ce ng tates and per ment only 000. “by a atheo CITY. _ is age cs yiet. ‘ne m Kate Owner Charming" and mer ser. nose. M cont “ - fe A )_ St. - : ® 4 ‘ ! r 8 : a “Fe tie , eT Mt Rag te ae ag | airoux & | | a SANITA j oS URCAN Bed | ry etl ae a a sare Se 2 cov: | oath wt pt reefers st Pas eri icks| RUD! nica iON NO Sc CANT room "3 lees (BEAUTY | ever _ 42 MONTH " i La ren eH 8 ep +4) |; = e 8 1 size } hi axe i lights and ADULTS wreace St Office — j— =F 7 Bunday ' | Real E NICHC Enclosed Tg weburbes am kitchen st Tie * pedrooms” all tie per plese insured ROOMS gas furn. _ Fo > | __ OR — pd | Mt. Cle state and IL Ik he 2 —— tt i. a bu e bee bie 30 gare th. Ao ce Cc. =e 2 awed mortgages © Take yngonts 4S RATE COU , Sle Hows | D SE ig OE in re 2 8 Oar talaga wi gee oa 5 1a Se PaReSon ct PLE |~ = 1 70x200.| vill DEL- R SS at mee Oe H ™ We have RT OF C : e138. moses’ M-1§ in 10-A | OME an FAST ™ ener De GR crarete ane MF . m t ; and land * OF Y | 26% taila. Bette % to es the Mod: is le nae = Ay ie OW F YOUR I gy Sop SU UBURBA —— oo. * ca age i190 ame, Ghee shoal er ined ly a ae VN. | Drayt ft bedroom uit 1963 N ______ Open } it > pedro joe ae) nes letel und 2 way. ODERN NEW Wet eee Plai | Su meat. a with 2 pen ‘Evenings on at ts ee TAL © ood | fish daa La basement. ) a BEDR |” lope you | | geneeeus EVE an neat. #3000 4 was een Ber ce era in the ——_ reh overlogking seats =a: hope sed dad & Hine se | CARROLL = ei cage «CORT M rieeoren heey Mose Soret rs Snid Ww an oo. CF nehidi hie oe cl j ‘ Jug uJ M. . pore . Onh es goog Biers eitn | Mate ane og ey rooms. | EAR Rabu | eeeee nes Hie cocby IMBLER HELMA M. E yi ewe, : oom bs ef) ’ t gh Eg Fat Wai tan ene Gan" neat kitchen ain | ane ARM C OLONIAL | rear epectin. EET | hed eeralive Real tal Ay eae re size FE 4304. Ew cep . a featu e prope t ight ge Only % 4) own. and mile are: ure cas read bed WIC ate E _— e Rd. ole eres pcr (AND b hen te ueneribed the rage pect thie £2 obo veal tank ee the HAL | fag bired brick, sihese” et ine aii. 00." Tosa HAS 3 Eachonge| 4 bot $450 aa isi ae .? 4 RMS. jults_only gd nl al Dig Riedy elow— hind: e today. ee room, 18x30). Homa \iguaee 0 sone were: m. slid. | 54 on Ware’ Once wa : Behool er hoi RMS UNFUR PE 2-0488 be Bob Castel” _ FE are ind- fe Ne resi fire rg ag ys ms. sch rere 9 i ae a aericE k. Open ry maar grocery on ‘regen togere, eerie Acres Soe organ ay | Rieck eSpace te | Mieeoacrincy nes 3S | rsgy to F tod” seataurest Rent H er_epe m6. aD Rak yan ae ried | emu stele Stunten’ ss 9 liberi seve in- - | see Bicol pend ees on Syiven furnace. mae modera.. BED- 10_ SELL uses Purnicite je | ‘ty to == © te eine Rent. locs cere sry ge — pte coger He | FOR exclusive su an . : » sf piece 1s THE LL REALTOR FREE urnished 33 ae range an ormation 9 | of esa ae e- Marve pnt bere cae wun canes You zg “A Bore Ea Equity oe 1 basement <. ce| West S TO 8EE 3 RENT I" EX 5 a ; ee down jac 7 north iia Petty : oo straight otta realize v- | Rus _pm. month. Jr. scoot Att uburban ton of CHANOE FOR * cals in Elisabeth Lake treme) | mes J.V aL easy - cjiate or; coreee Pree is an a ermine | sell You ‘ om as Pe weir ater : foo'x300" consist on 1 wom of front wake Esta' e| Dre easy term at ee ta ge of s wwe | 412 ern. TER: r 6 ath & nsists arge CARE noni — an. sitached “Sib {domellgher 9 : one rayton W a VALUE lr. Re 8. F sind oe no foil specializati ms, W. Huron REALTO ng esnes. —— > culation —_ Phos 4 rms = x a oone pent Fe & nus ik “wonderful pr $15 bong Sabie ~ kee ds a phe val arial a tea ter or Sale H ee zation—we ji _ Eves. "til 8 FE LLIS M. ee MOD- at tend pce aad = “etre ANCH TYPE HOME 41466 garage rk 2 os ‘a ao of — located . and Ave Estate cen FARM Ouses — l a in oe 44525 FE TH WER . ment fader rae storm water ¢ ¥ SOLE ETS- . rage. landscaped yal attac’ el | A cea sucopine taal eee: —_—_— asnenes $2,000 stipe T _& ia | »_"til_$) SHE erie oe Eves “v ior es sleet mia. - =) lake : ins Lak bedroom yard, $12 hed wiaare vhermen roof hl FOR __ MAple aph-l- Ie BE For Sa’ a F Li BRICK or EM Inco 5 Beets re ten tate rooms i) Sica | Patents “Ei ria wile sate ee Sate eae ‘Partri Lg eae eon ~ se tor. a - t cr blew ) e — OW" ul. CO! m 3 ROO. Pa -— wa ene | © 3 be ae me. serene | ‘meariy * greets murdy on: Rr waar) ROCA RAM EE penvelaarg a oftANC id. | LAKE > Yl _94 pwn. $00.50 of Borland. by —ieorag ne 2 bath, ’ See, 2 PURNIRHED, 3 "bedrcom home sestn Oeee= ona Uremendous "1°04 80 THREE ht og AT Sr aa | TYPE | Mandy RION INCOM 18 THE eC we D REALTY. CO ac ent return on ‘mone shows Bt. 3 ROOM its bal Ep | © East for $1980 t 8 AD an impr cose AB) thie Mb ore, Eig ai HON mares an) | aasre lecons is = oe SM ee tn other. 2 ear rage lh ie ts nished Low : ee a SS eum this 1 ed ARAGE LES % Real | ground fl Poggi ied | DE ; TO SEE A ° ar 3 and ER Av s wh arm trod s ILL ,. SE M & inco oor ith 6 fami! "LUX garage beth _ Pm Retere wE m on H next ich be ing 1 uction 1 BE ALE: ED WA © me $ for room y! A XE INC Y I 8 me n Chamberlain . call alter _F UR ea "100 “Stasement” 1008200 wen enekcs a nine Hving” nies Fi ore eran ‘ae ee AGES | at git ane Site Rahim room oe E wee A Pe YRTUN S + ‘Gear come. Owne: USE BA f & bed down aa any n that ure - Soon N FERAL PON _ 024 nd R EA ; _ Price plus | owntow. Bagina bath fe y locat INIT x1 f ranch room. r BAB i. ront at roo ter housew will ple LAW SAVINGS 4 Pontia ealt | WILLI ced low | in apts = tuclndes 8tr ‘ome mily ine ed. ow We Alum t lots type hi an. cae Y WE! Conv Oxbo hom r bed ite. Th charm yd “uae : as e Tra y Co. pao tang w)| fe and udes eet ne new pg te inum Seehaak riice 7 “Rent = Pes. sleep! °E — te Af Lake e. lake rm. th rooms. a ree mas A ax E 8T. PO EAST "$750 il Walled = LAKE IN ; need lot sleeping all fu ar $15,500 nd furnac Pull rnished 2 red atta brick nt locatio ouse §-3036 ing Owe 00.8 Eestere Fl goon Heal graeme tile bath- SERVES TH SOMTIAC. West ») DO\ Lake | i. ein een COME *; toes caus coe oD age lh : Wen ce. Kxcalh ment with — AC ou heat sh + saa s Unfur 10-3 $9,500 sement, High. tach innovat oN aleike EJECT HE RI N RE- ted Suburbe VN mediat pay this 2 | owner's per m en and ree rms ent bu corigae r cent catiek s- AVAIL mn. bedroo term garage. ed fons he BIDS NY OHT k rooms n cut te @ poss for it fami quarte 5 room 0. inco! fruit | STU y at e costs. dn, in s low ABLE 36 | Wonster Bats eee sk erica wan pin 'ane An at-— : OR To {tche Po docanend here ession self 1 y | d ts. Hi & me pl ot tn FFY cludin JULY 11l- a er Bchoo rick and term of 318.960 too ALL lak mn and ge il tainin Oniy m- ition emne in bath FB races close tinte 3 7 _ MY ideal 15TH rand 3 1 Dt fre fina The ——--—_— --—- e pri bath ing J $11,500 a exc vin, to bed h - eee “erm 9 moo | festa stingion Park nat gag | neti’ invitee yout G . ji vit ae <5, HG, satiate cr a.piee Mintagtae If ohn K. Irwi =a! ash k. m ur pric ase 8 su: e a . 7 motaneleaeagl poy ° ~eageong coy mp Pre hae : ATE -le VRIit P , aitaee en tare $4,000 with terms. a as waaeb: R In ae | BRIVIL EO 12 West ie J best, ed $14,400 tate AY ‘o-operat SHIT, a IONEE o on —— this one ea EALTOR bu of with Ss | 345— ive Re: | NEE 5 R toda 101! Sinc with earage on +_FE ein er for’ himeelt, large tyre be am HA to ey ae Alor | qq REAL Or Se AWF E wmatth Haat enae yee oe a) a cad psen PINE mee Fe me GYION) tara ant HHLANDS pean ie RD WiELTAM nv _M « ts ma SS 1 4 y A | lak ust r E 2-1 crete 5 A —_ really. THE S IO ves e. ANCE i m a fs, ee = ives NCY) LA LIAMS 804 ROOM UPLEX LA UY AN ~~ + Realtors " SMA LAK Free P | rms. and ba children’ m the es and ‘Sun 2141 Opd He af KEFR Leon Rd. ODEAN HOt ND tel“ SELL WILL ALI. FA E -ORIO arking | doses and tile ae erties lay- rE yke pestle | ONT q _Walled ey ACTS KE Altractiv BAY IT’S AMILY ,nleche modern bh N Suet ren Bape full b as 6 THIS 41540} A- nie ranch utiful 3 rie cs ma ar heal I ll eri can fering "yar Toome OREAT FOR BETTER ‘ts thHul m is 26 ront doo en ARW? OR ULTS __ ve Re Eves 1 mrpetghed s and {-| Be 80 ES | MoD fier # d nine on lar um. old “CIA stone x15 rt. Th Het ieised "* aa ea ve a a net PIS ag ae fs ae nt RES Ga bt cig’ R : Warwick at $100. »Ww.1 HARG 2 vilans— nge | 9000 aoe Street ated ea glassed be ee. this & room 1 room bath on TYPE. 4 - |WARD E rontecee tas gases aan full Baas: aeue kitchen bed- a Seis erect aia | meh Cm re pon ern Saw youll oe SAR | aioe ee ene cee ee ctRince| Sat. Shs Beg oats ke. Ph bas room wn BE , 50. B and I's cal | 4 ce cd $1 100 _TO 7 G Meatay (gaye pear cus se r and ba . CABING A cctiioeee VET! : FE 68 ement. ne CON- oni est 8 ac MO 3320 500 1.100 | 4 R ~1> iE | ay ™ ac b Rec lavato seme — 2 Goop y 36A\4 ti 8.30 183 immediate ou edie homes. HOME N go Bnd ae rt tae pts pe JODERN “ By 1 100 | 3 W. Huron 8t. FE 2-83 ha * parments ot Knits nooteane Hasta a ebepar Lake, Gaylord. Week YE Houses located Occu WATKINS | ITARM fe one folks wale So dhol lg Open Ev 16) 2. bea $tbue see ei | ufwil a crete a car with EAaTK O%, Woot or ment. too" termes Ha EAR AROUND Selcemen 'S Cohut rd aap 1 | and fined |S SON wie oN VALESC ioe dows. Let's! | Lake feed «ROO ru) yy noe pdr tally ee obs ees pay LAK onth. | 6-8400 rest 2 an loc mbi 3 west Hear th y ins ILEG TI 10 bed ENT 94 75 ee : ao 950 w scape jot ts ee. = ATTR ,. Realt Ml block: ated a. FE of ut 2 ulated Es nis ho: 5 HO 4 Po ndR | pump, Has eon se > block le _po with d. Fu beau- % Ko ACTIVE 3 RO y. _11_an s 80 on 4-31 he in roo 5 le m clos: IME ntia ea { nice z, ven: Thi: s to intm ter all pric yaar ee A Sn ee |e soar woes | Cat Si ate te A bata | eee MILLER &S itv Co, | ie ppg ely eens tos eve Witriass ia Y alvert ERN ] ween 2,500 ft 8 oll at all sent o for and | m x Lake. ake se Duy. lord, ’ ave mip . = COTT Fr AR TO dow = acreen: 8 tim wher ne abc ST e $1500 privile y neat 4 "Eh al im- TANI eh soueaies. AGE. ao ‘ine old KS] ive) WINSHIP N Hoy at $8. s. ituated es, but w keeps it ave NOR ONE Hu down ges oD water. {BRE $60 ver LAKE beés S PURN “ aoa N —| eee No Peat 733,| al‘ tere au 8 sen ats to rere! 4 seems, 2 TH EN ere Lotus Lake E&G | For the “FRONT ISHED per @ thed s room. | 0 To FORD — ul te ys es of retire sho s, 2 8.8) ranch ake sw ¢ 1568_Unien ake REG me fami! NT tage LA eek do Sather at me with You Buy-T rms. 13.500 w land F repeal Yo bedrso | gla house, ful bdtvision, . —M G hoe doles who w porch 4 eo AREFRONT = E a ent © pe is a Pel, BUY IT- Sel! | ith roller tat are aren fruit ms. Bath Gant ee ee basement 26x50 3-4393 or E wake Ra- atte foun’ look ® ants @ su > l eo ent T cor. 5 a Theat rue tt powder ull WEL an Trade rT, r- eighborhood ear shebir Fr & | sona’ at arage 2 fire | M 3-325 mcbigey = it! Thi no more es faa tar ti ort sa oa oe nite Be rnum. | smite are Eee soar ditties a Es | rae 5G | Bi a ee = rator . ers acaped wa fr Two uilt 1 m | SAST ce at an| erson R s do COM can Coun groves Agee ‘ust rb July 31 , elec- bu y. A ontag dec n 1951 saedore bene tn 3b “AST S | vill EALTOR 2250 loc wn = w affo: ty a .. 1 to to A to Aut Near S = Asoc lage oe orated, gry aig | ke | essen SIDE Phope e Rd, W ee ig 83.000 ra. Only pri = : po Os or =f ey oe Sonnet, spe acd Goh ae ae site| Steg Sah’ ya Oe enn ED rom || susie: Riad) Se ‘Sut ‘aoo® os peat, Theedtre weet ona 7 cose vaels ing PoP ec ak district ool, REAL nS nly $57 Moaahivupan iviy| 3 Ce eateonC eae Maint fall | BY PA ALIZED EAST a. (Amd you thi today a with _~ Sone bckve i a — grap pe «Mis ving ¢ Taro id Peed Pace he eee surance. ineludine’ payments AW rer. tH8 to _titomatic LMER. PE 2 1908 Phen ee s real bargain. = ve _EM r. 11 a r 3 bed room he 3| Cla betwe 6085 Orton and _ Real E LTOR A mort, es and S 48 seetta: | S ed nsion 2 Bed I n. 3-250 bd room on rkston en Dt era- } stat 8 rity $3000. yard and att: room | . Yeot. groan LEASE | stoner” heat Sens and in| nee tonvllg toad | OP e238 rons __| A JOUINSON, Realt ae ee SUBURBAN | mall F Saat ea earcee 4 _ ear ent n | “tt Reg | 90 A = Auta “Retere miles out Dinie, | | van possession. $8060, | lye cee = "hare Realt« Next (poor Cee 1704 a7 ke 4-2533 aia ial sown ‘De sold a $300 arm IVAN W ‘ BRO $9050 < a se Pasaee ayton Plain . Bee ye 2 ‘| a bx Teeeraph Nie Ra | SNE TREAT. toreis with “ached Down CH Phone OR ' WIT — —— ; ca penlareaenvice = “ cu bY oy teen pareees 3 i Open 3-1872 ° O w © 4% ! Fs ven Josi dutty~ CO. | wes gare rter hb i FE 5 9+ or O Near PTION T TO ty . ; oud, proximately 7 vanes-| + Jack L tate | siya feel eh | lend of Pontiac located eee ae 5-501 or F . © & Bun “opey ine - if e ‘s fe fe . Tastrict. brick Y Ca e to sc on large it a , re 00 Case " oveland | 2-0253 | on exterior are Home arial ceaeerire nau k 5- -2564 | Aloe Pot te rRowt BEE ciple rae, fn now 4 Icom | Say tate es Be LLER oN | Pa aEcilagg gure Bat emen x , tile| 2 r E ° hi oe che 24 ot FLOYD KENT, en Smee AG ae 2 ramiy. «| "omy ame’: eet ve can Ro Yothing D fo) ESS oe aavteoes Fe 20 open ee ee tac a Sa AS So eh urn Lights we em¥ ELERANS “gt Beth own | fees a MODER — hee em. included. MODER! — terms a irs Sedreee hace oe adel hice olen PROCE abet yer cae eae — — ee cechen Sie SDEAN ¢ ROOM. CLE Auburn Hei arm. home "immactiat aise features. ‘heme, with | morgen when wi coe aa mortgage ¢ wean pave a 3) bed | Yoo, would trade on Lot. Toone, by July. 2 Opea CLEAN. BOA New ights M Gee anaa mMaculate "con. aoa we a a Dackrge, Wiebei scaping oe nae Pinte GI! Po pire eicaeaee — a tae Syl a= Hodoedd: = aap = hie tae. Boat New modern anor roi etary Me ane condition, fest oft cI —— a Established 1 Ceol cigar installing store Led studding oan, with Complete van Village | OUTSTANDING room MODER: ; te auto! room. ranch t corne basem room work need rel NCOME- 916 F ments othe rm sesh or part mne S EST 8 as Peatier Le — peeerppae ak r lot, oak eal forms oe ee oe Road. penta hacadl rancis EF. Cane ie ae Sea | F. itions. Immed | Pireproo eee Avatia . Cort school. peat. 1% 00 terms cil” furnace, a ee ana —eoetger gy § ee ma | cis FE. “I rot details. C. W rien fesen a | en a © PAMiLy o fina! ‘eto Watkins I me | prin eth a Yee Tncome, til eS ERT | poems Realtor. Miller” - ood Go.) cre Tall wince Thee | iaitee i corner lot 5 to 9 s ; . LB rnis base hom vy f monthty BUS Cc B he ; ing ont ase ondit ull bat parate ‘* 3 ea Fro bedroom b ng al oa The hed—$1000 pea wiih baths, balance. to 8 aie \On sims ALTOR paivilecue ws rooms, gas rage 82 yin slakers Wann Geu. * ve room m nt Just east home Root at ave the furniture Do sell Extra d stoker full dry v0 Jos pm. d LTY STONE 3-1235 ms Lake A-l ges on arage ae 30 day 2 500 nes = ‘cut sare Si ei Peat irae work A comain sown perment Down | uncoun me ep ttt Priced ga dat: en, tte miakate Ref Me \\ mess, Zs Soe ego dob a mon. repla ir + exe car e 60x cee t Sak 0,500. to = a 5 Z , a | 1 ow onth. ees wise | Bog cr oe, Sa eri mee, ts | N REIOWTS Miller a , Wyathcing Teaketrant SE net Je - room room. hen reh, with pe. ba walls e fea ers e pri of th be isthed ern ho’ Attra nt Jy a is sec D INCO Pobetccey bath and th, hard charm Lak vileg ie st 2nd fl me ctive ho urit) M Lake. #40. per wee heat. aut te onan cel ae tae charm today" move. “ante ttt el Everyining, the S stone a ton | | Xow can | Rungeiow ons for rating ar Waren K. new. OR Make —-. New sopus oe w SD. at $8,500. ate oe elie fa to- as bath, Modern ine outh ae Ee Lhe Pomel help bi lent soi with west e-minute. saan ea a, Seats) Se “attirace'"S| "omer, Retreats | Banaras nd | B | BSS | pa eee core KE ee : 000, ¥. Js ke esire find er rt sacrif. now ee-sh: with 1 bas th S , __ing_room bea: room ne ft m hos xcel- FRO term fee e in tod: the on $10. se ice at $13, aded tom ement. | Unfin: U t front por fire atiful bea ent, red me eee eee eg wens «som “and an’ room EAST. SIDE serra Soy furnaces BUYS | = yaipee pone Sita cia Rm 3-2210 i ured more y- Ose 3 3d sur xcell ear ¥ u- a e. $12, all-y a: sure rri CLEA ‘oom “ 7 ilford A in ou ves to t in th m ue edrm. e ent nei Wood- 500. ear la and ies of N, s 37 ho ba Are 7 phete-tas cee ee t $2,000 e eit a eae he bric N ghborhood W Term e call all couple com, Y me i th and a to-list pie- rice 4 y ra. inds full b k ter- Oo . es . s. a lan oul nee Seeger hell brick CAMEROW W nen magine! A futi wre a hl beeen vitt:| thower RTH END STOP! LOO $2,900 Side NT B TDouBLE A toe ‘ so | ws vl -! q. beautifully. land: Comper _ wluron. e030 GILF Just oa Geer bas rant a beck yard. tice pene K! LIST , Down oA shingle tu A aad / D i SIN , sctlas bedroom rooms, Co-operative Ry Open 2 WIELES = = bath Repos med neighborhoc cae it trees. — & ———, oar ‘ EN A Cc heatin uibase MIDDLEA beer HOME Hod ‘2h o0 lavatory on ‘ear cI no _Real_ Estate Pate W. Huron REALTY CO bea eon alge at with Rig stony Can " line. weed ae i “wenderh — = ! aide nortes ty ‘e pas Papell fog plant oak fi ee wg pir N TO SHA! | — tcer an ba he z KS’ 2 | = en 8 ° Fr _ | MACE ome you at $8,950 we A at an living 10x26 ames pirerenl School. ae fon pear in ‘west of rior A ge Bo in bai Lace bath ARE age t ved steam up. FIREPR . TON | ee ttl » FE $-617 DAY L want. 3 room “EN room combina street Webdste $65 pe be eta on th, _ MA and E sre: 4 sal seg Bp memo Ye OOF RAN ARE } — ees AKE Pokaan can D tmea” full’ be tion 50’x150" shaded r month. Pavnen in ao shop | and barn trem | = *. ste: RANCH A — {| beac Magee Pok-escnad § — = rooms. et es ae bed- ho lot ed yments Agin noon . NICE RC erms garay steel w t- me tile we said HOME Tt won’ a | rye large xception 120 ft xe s furnace reens. — here breakf hen with stream on 4 andec DOR - N ROOM FOR M. ROOMS. R ae. a ee = } rock str fireproof bunga t last RR —| pri drm. ho shade aeny fi porpee Prac ‘Ausom Il basem Oil nook. fon ager re bear m room Too’ Realto RIS & MFO! echanic 5 , tt over an steel | Life- 3p low wit! long. Wh ie marily me Sanh fa or ne i tically atic ent. water. and — atts iihearean . dining 752 aa SON a FE near —s MAN. D Oy A wa Two ca No ex joist — 2 qiece bath h 2 bed tte fr 2 ula be summer fol bak: STO new. Ex water Tasteful! atic hot rooms, do kitchen .__ Huron Co-op M @umaye nt etation. DOWN- nn cell been oon garage’ tees as 38 depo: Lot 48 room ame. are year home th NE R cellent bene 2. hot . caslossd a 3 > Mem ) Tu : sel sit. x1 sa a ears : aan ® to E le. decorated A new ber | BAN SOOT. 2 BL rN, | Huron ett Inc eae ad tiled ne = ie Vaca - A Teal ‘new dt und New jue | Sostyn yay tnt CO. care te pAlb sown i floors and w bath un. FE. 557 EB. 3 BLOCKS TO Open E Ons | toma es ee ae haan NEAR = ma airicgea “rm. modern | NE un 1 to ace ce . {attached sb oak 2 a Fo | BY Own venings « FEdera —- ae teen ae ote LAKE OR oa. erat |. eer AR LAK FE s |SP be prepert Gas , blocks lg mead base room , 000, es K 2-0253 : party bes ga hea G ROO! ke = apo day 14 Fld cash An veeren © You and. pisce pain with bengniow. - LOYD KEN Expansion’ ee ORION — 20383 | ECIAL —§ sit of has always ha This 4 “COOKING PRIV Stee: Asie? 4° owns” = A ny buy this, F po si.000" in own payment. w_, Three 4 Lawrenc ENT, Real | ea "WALTER attic” Barn A "Goo =| — > 500 DOWN | _! mg, SOT price <= intrance on IVILEG! near Ni ocr? Ful per week N 2400 tase ae tac eet alto Pat wen le . of Roch- sli ~ H bus tone: B ERN. | SUBURBAN price, $15. = sd goat en ONE = Cheaeniere ener wes NEW 6 ui SFEN, REALTOR eran water. ‘Frome "with - cealie R. Trip S D a denis WN rented “aman. porting ene g Oy | PRaoREr ONT a lg tk Bon SAT ara Paned ster “tema aie NE IT Sw. un on w a ta w b : z by tay or we. $1,500 ed wurrounded. "with mai ma. berries and fo tend land. von pols ha _Ty “Pies Bird. st eee, | this’ property. Seren oa ion en A on FE tae DOWN for 3 bedroo Ser | GC 300. Quick nd ever. l= wraiere decorated. ‘Wit fet ween Sas SUCHY nome | = ent on 1 or FE N! _—— pred les th cave. Th Phetgs i thi E pos urge} F “will en 4 AL- P 5-8304 ge r ts °. Th ew s lov EO . ski oo ST] cee Py Ra 5 E _ : small eee qLanatellow ‘Schoo! ani os ore a nota "ith attached RGE RIR — | - cn | Ranch home DOWN Re ST. | THREE BEDR HIGH OU me. Verv' teat ‘and’ ican naechior | fast, oda trom i caged [PE Senet eA ear | N it] Enertor ‘unfinished Several mod eee | ee DROOM LAKE PRO SEARS” nis phen: y $4,000 eb 18 ft S00 ft excellent lake m Aven G weraiimod: | = 8 —— 82000 NT. CE : t last cant Pull enty of _ from the sand be ue Pi OOD od- | rtments s three barga!: ment and dow a $11,500 long. 1 tode u lots reom to front och | BOURIA Aa. FE? ione at 3200 ELL dition n in 3 reaan tile \eert martin I . ho WEsT y-| to pl of spac breath door. USES -2161 | Bri er HI | grag F wgenor pro sid good c m $6500 vel acre: On iihase.| ow A Poa me nea PIDEe nen ay e for th eo here sizes AND T 3 ck 6 roo ighla d | ne O' ster Road wate e and ‘and on- $185y 3 20 five s r City He 3 t bling. W home e children Ww. Pow INCOR te an nas ig ne OL 6-083) fu rt One autom roof N down fruit = room Hosp ractive ell bu is low . Huron. - Bima re) knott 8 nd bath | and ba OFF B. rnished ane atic hot ew? ‘or $3000 cash —— is and liv vent ital L 3» inside: iit, and : Fr A Full" pine down, — ga th ALDWI —- full ture cedroom ing Se ae minute and very fy LL tr beceeaeoe large Tage t mode bl e. 68 per window ia Bath asta atom | Fe or sat Ss zis| Hu et sate | remeron orien Sea oe cae Seat caeat hae | wn ved s th month | ts — cem ac a 7 lots and be | s ri ec 2 bloc you, is bom w m a nic ent d ar R $8 apt. used | I rit DE Teens. . Fig tet | aod as wl Just : rah “me rive. This Ost MCrARe ved | -ARG walial- Very PAUL A. wil) toe re imp} nes , ems tw he +. down oS FARM HOU rE ¢se O-voNNOR _ a ant Sours, Benut Neches “ore gs wat J ” ‘Oakland A KE RN, Re | teas NEW us Secckce hue aoe Sul | I" Lak Leceted at. Die USE ewes newly varished “loo gre tgs ee Pa ealtor oa an sbestos sid alll gt Onty | $1,500 uburbar T @ with a Phen ee t floors, Jn | tate 8! Hearncad ill in Pla ae pe 1 “ 8 il aan FE 7. MODER ate Since 19 Teom Ban yard land- west bun 5 a la fed. The 8m 7041. n 8 chee: ATIO! renee netian 8c stal ‘, Fr of ci galow roo! rge _ Th i Bed 500, de E AND N BUSINESS ba: blind reens. rs to bed- ull bas ity on cuted ,) 4 nr ln home ROOM EAST foo it. frontage. scan | Str «Recreation Figen space lip ca a large kitchen dining shits sale : DAILY Priced, te nge oe acoers, f #9280 "to Fa a anaes $1000 | — Move iota’ Priced sat the utility eRe feme ime, cm 209 inetd m v , ! u i ov ; Don only —— B94 arranged Gowan rikboni art Wow - 1 immaculate you of éctters a tt . 2 bie 318 sie Neto PRINCE rothy fig oriyact and term payment sil Newer ; aie het at rast suburban at = woeee, $6,000 ow _Feproduc- 2 —— DOWN “TON r ) H = th ate ec a quie m B 3140 W. Huron st com ven - um ,; case, ant hase one | throughout - Pull rea Beau TRA * GOOD hi tte CO Saree & Right D le pode ‘does 2 expansion Automatic Robey tiled floors ADE! TR 3200 Roch: ELL R rior PA re a open Sunday 24411 beautiful ‘tse ak es Sree te — vice _— vices oe ee a et BONS re, ie eat. Ss 4 4 = . a, Pig & - = > 4 J : 2 rx | { » \ = « THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAYy JULY 6, 1954 cae T 1 ied se ee co. 737 Baldwin FE 5-825 * AND LAKE PRIV- lots. Beautiful Walters nsibly restricted. Low ” payment. Easy terms. MY LOG CABIN ° Attractive lake front cabin lo- ile: of Pontiac e MEA Oxtord, Mich. LAKEFRONT LOTS ON CEDAR Is- land Lake. Ready for building Good beach. a SYLVAN LAKEFRONT . i e ranch style. Radiant heat lot Over 3,000 sq. ft. of wing area, 2 large a _— rm lass. Bode ree rooms. or, oaeees. Storm fenced. $45.- L Stee STRAITS LK. owner. down, LAKE ORION TE RONT 2 furnished ‘Bi te Other * fer baycr. ie frontage ca on lake. boats, 500. 4, peer, JONES, REAL ESTATE 432 W. Huron FE 43505 LEVEL WOODED LAKE FRONT lot, an Scotch Lake With vile- eee the on Union Lake Owner EM 34285. 20 ACRE _ Realty For Sale Resort Prop. 45 LAKE FRONT. SUCHY FE ¢3142. ~ CABIN AND 3 ACRES 0) jorthern N GOOD Mieh. Electricity roads. in. Cabin wirea Excellent deer hunting and trout fishing. $2750. Terms to sult. Call | n 31-7878. LAKEFRO ON BEAUTI- ful lake «* N Mich. 1 hrs. drive fren le SUMMER HOME LAKE FENTON. on lake sandy besch, oe 12310 Windsor . MAln 9-9535. Sale Suburban Prop. 45A A. — nog 9 dase North west at Middlebet, JOrdon ¢121. Mayfair 6 6-2503 6 ROOMS: 1 acre, double garage. ote side finished for offic : including heat, new oll uesa 4° «well, bed- — & bath do ereakenes nook and more. ELIZ. LK. PRIVILEGES NICE 2 BEDROOM BUNG Attached garage. Reasonable MANY LAKE LOTS —- Smal cottages available. Call Now. J. R. HILTZ REALTOR 1011 W. Huron St * 5-6181 Eves For Sale Lots 46 ATTENTION BUILDERS OR INVESTORS Grour of 44 lots Twin beach subdivision Middle Straits lake $5 500. Cxll Commerce EM 3-3655 BIG LOTS 100X200. a Auburo Rochester Rd. $205 Woodward 2-0700. Deotrit 2 ACRES Corner of Pe St. and Olddings Only $1956. down. Terms. Dorothy Snyder Lavender PE 2441! COLONIAL = 75188. GOOD ao scellent ranch type 5 S* gieo0' EAST BLOOMFIELD ee ee 200x300, beautiful — taxes. only $1400_ cas WOODWARD ESTATES: = paved street. sidewalks — $650.00 — dogo A cnaccag~gy build- fry St. Priced = just off ri LAKE FRONT: About 15 from Pontiac, 40x200. large un fact off pavement, only $1500 jenn K. Irwin [ames tt be pooch Nab Elizabeth Lake Estates wae vr “1804 # LARG? LOTS WITH PARK and teak ca es. —— from $380 to Contact A. H. om 293 Ascot or phone Just Look At CHEROKEE HILLS! Compare th- advantages of its elose-in country ‘location - ear bath Leake Rd. 1 mile W. Telegraph Rd.-—and select your site soon! CARL W. BIRD, Realtor National Community Bank Bidg FE 44211 Eves. FE 5-1392 HIGH CORNER LOT. 100 BY 200. Must sell. $2200 $1500 down. Lin- coln 6-5617. 06x160 FT. ON DEVORSETRE IN 8. Bloomfield Highlands. ed price for quick sale. FE patie. Lots of All Kinds, Sizes and ~ ee ae ~ Others idea! for exposed Teneine from $750 to Quer, 200 ote trom which to ROGER B. HENRY, Inc. 61 Matz GL, 1-9111 Rochester Michigan conus Guia bela anenras Ores. TIOLMES-BARTRAM WwW LA 5 i 026 pont “Fralj; Walled Lane, __ hte ak BASEMENT | 0x36 on Scott and Watkins om for fast sale at $1350. T ADJOINING LOTS CORNER $-0607. —_——— $25 DOWN place Ee & Sepia ed Horse FE 2-9179 _| HARDW4RE STORE WITH LIVING 46 BES WOOD?. CORNER LOT, $7 ». Cash or terms. PE btees * For Sale Acreage 47 DOPOD IPP PIP IPD DPI PIL APA 6 __ For Sale Lots Pe ACRES, WOODED ner Rd Ideas pulling ie sac ry raul iit JOKE E Oagr Ww —ttuiee eth ak So ACRES os 18200 down. Partially _plant- | ots ergreen. Also larger F ANGUS \ Ph 1. Ortonviile 132, reverse alge For Sale Farms 48 NNER NRL RNIN PRI le CAN YOU BEAT IT? idea Howth saa 40 minutes’ 23 stanchior ake ag bordel in exce len’ farm area —— hwy % meaaiet cattle, trac necessary farm pi ice $150 per acre — it all Phone tonight. . FLOYD KENT, Realtor 24 W. Lawrence FE 5-6105 open eves Next to Consumers Power A FINE 40 ACRES. ALL UNDER cultivation Barn & chicken house Included. Opposite #635 Pine Knob Rd 13 miies from Pontiac. Easy —— bere yy owners MA 6-2384 PARMS OF | aie SIZES SEVERAL lake fa‘os P W. Dinnan Sons. 66 W. Huron. Sale Business Property 49 ee een nnn BLOCK OF 5 STORES ON BUSY Main street pe ena apes inveat- “ment, $15.00 CORT M *IMBL ER sino gee FE 4-0634 : 8-—Sund 2 to 5 Ceaperatce” Real Estate e Exchange BY OWNER, 24X30 - EgINDER block buildine on iot 60x185 ixie Hwy. MAple 6-271! days. Aple 5- 43 ees LOCATED JUST OUTSIDE < oF city on one of main roads, Large conc. bldg containing in ell about 6000 = ft... 4 pumps Approa 4500 ft. of gardan space — 2 “epts. ov araeed also oe e ouse and acres oOo} land. Zoned M-1. Shows excel- lent tncome ‘call for fucther particulars John K. Irwin REALTOR Since 1925 1091's N Saginaw 8&t Phone FE 2-4031 Eve FE CITY CORNER 2-184 Valuable business corner located on one of Pontiac's main hwys 76x225 ft. Also good }-bedrm modern home on property § Sur- rounded by other bpreinchgs bidgs $16,000 with $5.000 do Floyd Kent, Realtor 24 W. Lawrence FE 5-6105 open eves ___Next to Consumers wer Rent-Lease Bus. Prop « 49 EXCELLENT LOCATION FOR smal} business or business & home together only 1 block from oe ger ig Jd R. Hiltz, Real- or Business Opportunities 51 51 - ADAMS A going restaurant in excellent | location $000 down, the full price } is only $2000 Located on. 8 Sagi- | naw. Ca, for appointment ADAMS REALTY CO. 382, Auburn _Ave FE 43393 BEAUTY SHOP ON MAIN STREET in Rochester OL 2-18931 after _§ pm z “BEAU TN OSHOPR Select Clientele Modern -2 story home & beauty shop-tombination. Lovely Apt All hew equipment. Exclusive area Business for * operators. $15,000 Terms JOSEPH F. REISZ 53", W Huron 8t FE 202% Eve MI 44419 CUSTOM DRAPSRY AND SLIP area. Istery could be profitably added Must be sold. I, health 2008 8 23 Kaw- _kawiin,. ‘Mich oe City 7-1245 DRY CLEANING AND LAUNDRY business for sale cheap FE 2-7505 _ Box No 34. Pontiac Press * FOR ANE YOU R PROFITABLI TOMORROW S Partridge 18 THE, “BIRD” TO SEE OVER $100 PER DAY gross itn thi. busy busy rerteer: ant west o Pontiac on ain highway Has attractive living quarters acacia Possible to oper- Qte curb sertice or truck stop as i} as inside service Busi- ness, fixtures. equipment and stock for only 85.900 with $3000 dn. Would trade for suburban home. NORTHERN CLASS “C” Located in Roscommon Co. on main state highway Building and fixtures all in excellent condition, has modern 4 rm living quarters plus 3 tourirt cabins. parking, seating for over guests. Takes only $13.000 to han- die—bdalance at 6 per eent int SUPER MARKET Beautifully equipped with modern fixtures ing ‘vell over $100,000 ern 40x60 gar corner brick building with lots of parking: This has alway been a Lusy store and ean easily do $156,000 gross See it withou fail It's one of the best in Pontiac. Just $7.500 on terms plus inventory WARD, E. PARTRIDGE one a TAN SURE rPCOAST- TO-COAST 4 World's Largest 6 43 W. Hurow Open Eve. FE 2-831 aa ERY Le toa ls cass eee license r and included. FE 5-0165_ quarters nea Lapeer, Mick. Will acce home in_ trade SUCHY REALTY rE “43142 iNCOMF. IF YU HAVE $3,000 investigate this 6 apt. (14 rooms) is os year. Will pay for ftse. in 8% yout oo netting large profit annually ouner’ by re ire and live a come. Owne- needs quick _ Write Por Pontiac “res. x 14 ~~ LIQUOR BAR Rocdiont Mote ey en. 8 nisned apt. Business & Fixtures, rk! area. No food. Ap- pros. SKeontn Gross. Owner JOSE PH F. REISZ Buron 8t oe w Eve. MI 44419 In- community Well equ ing, main highwa: ‘Carpeted 5 room apartment r occupy. 3 room rental, oe » neath auto- matic ‘ce house pa sales tax $200,000 1%3 $5. 4c $10. down plus inventory. Liquor will make ™ . Mr. ing. 2352. oR AU FOR LEASE sale located . EM_3-2651. RENT SELL ROOM BUS- iness' FE 4- RESTAURAMT AND DR VEIN 0 ON toute to Ickes. Doing Ae ness. Call _after 4, FE Pa TD RESTAURANT BY OWNER Stock & equipment. brick bulld- | $25 to $500 with fur-| Business‘ Opportunities 51 eee PPO Retirement Ingurance Money to Loan 53 ; (State Licensed a $25 TO GENERAL PUBLIC LOAN MODEST MAIDENS caged ale bar upland room al 62 W Huron PE atin masonry, building this ‘spot has fFEAGUE FINANCE CO. only had acer @ litte over a = sot aga oe gre = eT “ 202 N. MAIN ate r uy for | down on ROCHESTER, MICH. for more information on G1, ‘ —— TO 9500 For Sooo Little! Lav. s jOUSEBOLD At tn ul - ters above. located about 86 milky | £2 Rochester OL €4111,_Ob 1.070 borth, The gross is not too larg of the present owner's interest and implica- tions tin another business He will sacrifice for $8000 down on prop- erty and all Will consider trade of propert¥ ‘contracts or what have you? ie Phone for more formation en “No 508 STATE-WIDE Real Estate Service of Pontiac Pontiac Btate Bank Bidg John A, Landmesser, Broker FE 4-1582 FE 5-0078 8.DD AND 8 DM. SUPER MAR- ket. No competition. Fast gy debe community. Well equip bulld- irg. main highway. Ca 5 rpeted room apartment Owner occupy 3 ren! @ month, auto- matic ice house. Paid sales _ $200,000 1053 $5,000 $10, down plus —— Liquor per make ymeni Owner. Mr. Going, tiac OR 3-2352 TO BUY REALTOR TO SELL Partridge [8 THE “RIRD™ to see WATCHMAKERS ATTENTION 2 watch ak establishments business. Easy Watchmaker health. . FE 4-IN | OPPORTUNITY 146 EFFICIENCY UNIT MOTEL. 4 CABINS. BUMP SHOP AND areca DRIVE-IN RESTAU- On highway aman M-%. For ap pointment cal CRAWFORD (AGENCY) Realtor ail ae vb and Sun Open Eves __ FE_ Money to Luan 33 (Stete Licensed Lenders) LOANS 825 to $300 * Community Loan Co, 30 F=Lawrence FE 2-7131 Prienaly service “GET CASH QUICKLY Up to $500 leaving state for __ +-8406 16 to 1853 care Bring your title Most deals closed tp 30 minutes. aiso made. on furniture. Sigvature and of -r se s OAKLAND LOAN CO. FE 2-9906. 20? PONTIAC STATE BANK 81.D0 $29 " $900 | ce Quick, Friendly Service No red tate Baxter & Livingstone Finance Co FE 4-1538 64 W Lawrence * «et Case $25 to 8500 $25 to $500 Community Loan ey 30 E. Lawrence FE 2-7131 ~ MONEY WAITING You May Borrow $25-$500 Today oat ams a, repay at BUCKNER FIN ANCE Co. Above Walgreen PE 40541 CORNER N SAGINAW & HURON. PONTTIA> Also Dravtn Plains 4% ODixte Highwa: Acros: from P>-t Phone OR %122! rotect* your ronths to Priendlv “ervice WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 ur aa | oe pay- 2 or ca.) at our office. We can ner you # oroblem « = can and ip small mon ment- Telephone STATE FINANCE CQ. FE4-1874 ___102 Pontiac State Bank Ride Need Money? =e as nea. as cad telephone. Just ‘FE 5-81 8121 Home &« Auto Loan Company __Mortgage Loans LOW INTEREST , dwelling: — or Sem Micon 20 | H. G. PETERSON 1310 Pontiac State Bank Phone "Fit $5608 or "FE be MORTGAGES ATTENT °N BUILDERS & BRO 84 _ service. Russell H. Young Inc. 412 W_ Huron PE 44525 Swaps 55 PACKARD roiture, DODGE PICKUP ‘44 EXCHANE Your oop have care ae ite ke at model car HJ VanWeh Om 31356, 1356, EXCEPTIONAL ‘$2 PLYMOUTH Consider old- = car or trade. OR +71, EXCHANGE MEDIUM PRICED cars for b tots Piss $500 a. J. Van Welt OR 43-1355. FRONT ENTRANCE DOOR AND small buffet for % inch plywood, or se CR_ 3-0610. FOR | ‘BALE DR TRADE. 4 ROOM year around home on Tene. bt) miles from town Will take late mode: tar as down payment. FE 4-1278 a taeens ) possession HAVE PRESS CAMERA, ENLARO- er. HI-Pi amplifier metal exten- sion der ant boat and trail- OR F701 between 6 10 pm PIANO, PICNIC TABLE AND BOAT trailer for what have you. Phone OR 370020 TRADE IN YOUR — LAWN- mower op @ new Garden Aid tractor with as" Be power driv- en law- mower {2° cutter bar Reg. rd Reg. $265 now $150. One M 6 HP outboard motor, °e Hardware 1742 W. Huron St TRADE } yOUR "AND CONTRACT. houre soo equity or used gord Poteet wil FRAILER EXCHANOE 6 8. Telegraph Eves “* CHEVIE OOMP SELL OR trade. Phone **Y 3-5806_ WILL SWAP LAN CAND CONTRACT and cash for 1953 or 1954 mode} car Write Pontiae Daily Press O€ a4 INCH ADMIRAL CONSOLE. I) swap for emai! outhoard mo- tor or power mower. Cail OR 32-7810. 7 — Z ee WILL PAINT INSIDE OR OUT IN return for —~- room or bedroom furniture FE 4-046 193 PACKARD MAYFAIR. new Will take smalier . LIKE ear or _FE 42533 - For Sale Clothing 86 RAPER MANDMACHER. | WEATHERVANE. it 8 orm onc Was Bs a sell for $12. FE Sale Household Goods 57 OBA BBP PDL PDP PLD tt A. B. APARTMENT SIZE ELEC- Rebuilt electric Singer tric range rpebor sewing machine and cabe condition. 1525 Marylestone EM 34108 eee — __ APT ELECTRIC RANGE $30.95 G E. d@ishwasher. like new $80 95 Mayta vaaee Gas nae $1995 up. Several ereconditioned and ce. ref: “CRUMP E ELECTRIC” 465 AUbIrTD pat APARTMENT *~ ELECTRIC ie oa $2950 and up. Munro Electric. 1060 W. Huron ANTIQUES FURNITURE. AWN D. eee MY 13-4308 aBorr ANYTHING you WANT CAN BE FOUND AT L & New garden cultivators. 50 pig new tamps 63 50 lag used lamps, sizes) $3 new & used $5.95 up, bedroom suites, 6009 up: ‘tving room eutes $129" up; dining suites $1950 up Complete line of Seal Rt color tint Use our eass jay e-way plan. WE BUY SELL OR ADE COME & 2 ACRES OF PARKING, OPEN 8 TO 8 MON. THR: SAT. & 12 TO 6 SUN 45 Auburn 1 he tof conn Hgts. mile eas’ i PE 2.2066 een wae pong ple ir D repa: ; wer refused. FE No r +0314. BOTTLE GAS Installed tn your home for $22 77 complete. Kenyon Fuel-gas 5268 - Dixie Hwy. Box _aPRind AND KAPOK MAT- , good condition F PE 27176. sannour wr SUITE, MODERNISTIC design, limed oak, complete set, Assemble these than half BLUE FRIEZE DAVENPORT ORE AND chair. Extie large in dition 850. OR_ 3-4510. ont COMPLETE BEDROOM §& a Prench -style, satinwood, _ bed dresser, vanity, stool and chest, like new, includes springs and mattress. 859 Winding Dr. Elizabeth Lake Estates CASH FOR PURNITURE OR tools. Phone OR 3-2717. ge ft. late 7 Pay 14 oomth. ‘33711 DAVENPORT JE a =r GooD CROSLEY sgt VADOA. any Duncan and $19.50. tie: range washer $1650. buffet aes me roll away beds complete,’ $16.95, new cotton mattresses $11.95, new innerspring mattresses $19 95, Papin Pes racy table, B98 Bonk $4.95, library ta - say cote ogy — vg Por ope sore rors me oe" scar Tatas re sota 8. a a CASH PRUMPILLY $10.98, {ult beck en , ottomar jose tchen cabine r ag compan Pl first for a beds, springs, mattresses end lean ip 8 trio. W or everything for the home. Bank @ome in more pn thy Furniture. New location 42 Or- You'll like the friendly neighborly | ¢hard Lake Ave. next to Farmers way we do bDusiness here. .. _ Station. FE4-7841. Free PROVIDENT JOAN | ;"5c""Soncax_puvee“omning and Savings Gociety of Detroit range Like new. 1W a St. tiae ~ — a FOR SALE GUARANTEED ua i frigerators $30.95 up Wringer wa«mers $19.06 up inner washere $68.95 up acuum cleaners 6 Roy's 96 Oak and 9 PIECE MAHOGANY NING+ suite. Same as new. Youth bed Extra Fast — | rou sve ‘mscruc, nanoe LL BIZE ELECTRIC RA X _ General Electric. EM 3-2988, S : FOR GOOD USED APPLIANCES ervice. be sure to see our washers at 14.96 - at mF ir 1: peau You can guo—ceee quenty,| SOO. § BY ob Be. on signature. car, or furniture.|5; w. Huron rs sey worthwhile purpose. Up “o 435. Bott! stov Vesta tow. as e , 20 months to repay. 5 7 E. . — HOLD GOOD ELFCTRIC APT STOVE. | $50. 32 Henderson, FE 2-6464. FINANCE Corporation of Pontiac 3’) South Ba teh st. Re Bid 2nd floor ing. Hvirng quarters above Sun-| da a ment. MAYVILLE |GET THAT JOB BY READINO R 4101, May- elp Ads! Also order ville, ese Work Wanted ad bes reach employers direct! { * —— > +a ig ee oe ea de cee eens er WANT A GOOD JOB? Place a Work Wanted ad} in Pontiac Press to reach! os KERS FHA, GI or conventional. | land contract in trade. Will also oe, torcash Cali Mz Jobnscn_+ way ALAN Sale ‘Household Goods aoe! HOME OWNERS INTERESTED IN earning a” eutomatic washer or dryer by furnishing leads, call FE 5-206! iF IT's USED APPLIANCES YOU need-we ha the and th right prices KENMORE WASHER PERFECT _ Candition OR 3-8855 LINOLEU M, 9x12, $3.95 Outside and nie oy eal $1.95 _ Jack's Lino! I N. Perry MATTRESSES a anes beds. all aew. ‘You save, Closed on Sat Hilbere-42 Wilittams. -FE “03 7 —— PHIIGas RANOES WATER beaters 10 per cent down 65 monthiv _ ee Phill Pe ped Orchard Lake Ra caenicgaceraas LAST YEARS 1953 models, «ne of Americas best brands. perfect, new, guar- anteed for 5 years Buy & new refrigerator for @ little more than @ used machine Michigan Fluo rescent. #3 Orchard Lake Ave. RED WROUGHT IRON DAY BED. so CUW set. 650 $20 Wardrobe. $30 REFRIGERATOR $45. 16 in. WEST- inghouse T V_ $80. Piano 615, Simmons box springs never used $20, FE 5-2766 SPECIALS 2 pe Mohav living room suite = $30 Norge retrigerator 6190 Sellers kitchen cabinet $io Axminster rug 8 « 12 $12 5 pe. breakfast set $15 New cotton mattress New innerspring mattress vie 30 | New chrome set $39 New table lam 3s $3 95 | We buy. sell and exchange every- thing for th» home Oakland Furniture 1048 Saginaw FE 2-5523 iz" dig couch. smal) bar, swing set round oak tabie. 5 chairs, vacuum Dormeyer Mixer, Ken- Electric train, cleaner, more lroner torscooter, EM STUD:O BED, ODD BED &. DRESS er, desk chairs #X12 ru __Miscellaneous ftems STUDIO COUCH 2 PIECE ss ing room suite roll-away bed in- cluding _matrese 45 Earitmoor ae A MAYTAG. BALOON SMALL RADIOS. CLOCKS, BABY bed r sewing machine. 735 __ Purdy, F irmingham STOVES § BOUGHT. SOLD. » twemes one THREE QUARTER HOLLYWOOD | bed platform ker, Electrolux, __ desk, piano, $25. Each FE 30047 2 eine RADIOS ONE 86 AND 10 FE 5-8755. GskD_REFRIG . $20.05 & up. pada: UE " Fura RADIO & y APPLIANCE iM CLEANERS inoue vacuo belts nas. 056 Myrtle 7 COLDSPOT REFRIOERA- tor Excellent condition. Phone _ WE 21402. USED WASHER. ] WHEEL TRAIL- er. Che E 5-8542. —— Used Trade- in Dept. Guaranteed Washer $39 95 Table top gas range “$50 96 Oxl2 ie axminster rugs $14.95 Wood 5 pe. breakfast set $24 95 6 pe. walnut jr. dining-rm. $59 95 € pe. walnut dining room $79.50 2 pe poco room suite $29 95 Btudio, cou $29 96 Small down, papmeul free park- ing WYMAN’S _ ssid WP tke Only. USED ELECTROLUX. $25 == Oi USED ELECTRIC REFRIGER- ator s7* R Munro, 1060 W. Huron USE b TRADE- IN DEP ARTMENT tric range ... od breakfast set venport and chair SSSEESES CONVE REDIT TE THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. ____ 8 Bagi USED SERVEL Seg! oa $25. FE : VPbed nit Temas NS ee onvEna ae } STOVE. eXi2 Axni inste tug. $235 each. FE 86-0765 WAYNE GABERT’S _ Trade-in Specials Full size gas range. $39 00 Full size electric ‘range $49 90 Ma ie tke ew $49.00 Norge washer. $39 00 Easy spin 4 . t $78.00 Many other: to from. 121 L PE 54-6189 agine { __Up to 4 months to pay odd pata TV. $49.95 antenna * WALTON TV FE 2-2257 dosiyn ¢ Cr _Walton WAYNE GABERT'S Siero -in Sperals range $33 ae 7. Se OE Table mode! ‘1 ‘Al $50 Norge. Washe, A-1 : $30 New 7 cw ft sice Manv others to choose from 131 N. Saginaw 5-6189 Up_to 24 months | to pay FOR ad freeze. Used ra seep machine forenoon until | 53184, MAHOGANY, DINING | outh bed. “employers. house. 6es76 or FE 2-146. “Tm = looking — he thinks!” TELEVISION CONSOLE. STU- | 2 Ot 3.e01 other | a By Jay Aian house paint now $7.25 gal. Ave qty pis } WHITE ENAMEL TA AnLE KELLY'S:. HARDWARE) “To. were We. bea baeee aay Auburp Heights car battery wea 1 week, $10. yoot Auburr at Adams, FE 20813) FE 54765 2 - KITCHEN CABINET SINKS, BEAU- fi ‘| tiful 42 inch model $96.00 value WOLVERINE $5950 Stghtiy marred in transit,| LUMBER AND W NG CO. also several 54 in 8. Paddock 2-0784 models at terrific values Michi-| No. 3 oak -er M. $96.50 ao Pmereseta 3) (Orchard - so reas uM. an rd ake Ave ew Toilets .. aay KITCHEN CABINET SINK 34 IN. sage gr na ae Ue tH0 3 alse wall and’ base cabi-| WE, carry & full, line ia lumber, nets at terrific values These are mbing ders supplies. slightly transit marred. Michi: o I priced “right! ———— 393 Orchard Le ____ De It it Yourself 61 6l cack “SINKS 24X21 $29 05 ~~~ value $1295. Totlets $39.50 value ATT TENTION! 61906 Lavatories complete with ehrome mixing faucets $1495 Ex CTE eRe! ses These are factory marred Miehi- a6 14 ft 3c es. gan Fluorescent. 383 Orchard Lake | 06 ye aly ae on Ave. ha - ~~ — - ~ (ideal for you x tL. c LITTLE Of. FLOOR FUR: | ox6 “nonger ee en nace, 73,000 aa, U. Excellent con- sg Bice 7 tor joists or rafters.) dition. PE 5- LAVATORIES . COHPLEE. ~ WITH 2u4 (used éc ft. faucets 62450 value $1495 also | 2xéx8 new fir 6c ea. tolle's, bathtubs, shower stalls at terrific values These are crete | 1213 pine ooaras lavec ft. marred Michigan Fluerescent ae — PLY RE Sa _39} Orchard Lake Ave LATION a Ty a ese r roofing MBER Shingles. all colors o.91 per i eguare a emaenn cabaten Pipe cones teal eat brick and many Sale H ch s BUILDING SUPPLIES einer ¥ 1 too bumerous to men ous old Goods © 7 Gym Swings real value: Barbecue : tee. Scan ewan vin arte | Oe Baiwores, (ior SURPLUS LUMBER 3 8 ; In oe f. *. $5 Excellent Maytag washer, P Picnic. te tables 8 $24 ewe me fur. aves” roedahe gy dseer on 37002 37 inch gas range $25. Small ta niture by Geaben: ote __Oven 65:30 Excépt Sundays _fange $5 FE 5-448 plywood, $75 —— oats, SSeS GOOD DRY SLAB WOOD, 65.50 7 TABLE TOP Gas stoves 1| Sse!, Be. * Culvert Page 38 B t cord. 3 for 610 Delivered. PB white ohe ivory and green 87! Sewer crock & drain tile, Cetl- urmeis er’ Ss _4-6588 WwW. Beverly ing tile & plans 10c; insulation OPEN 8 A. M. TO 8 P. M. For Sale Pets 09 ® BY 12,RUG. ICE REFRIGERA- Last ye tla eee bes aod SUNDAY 10 TO 3 ~ Fe Sale Misc Haneous 00) ile Rrorted Toa sey, Loreen | = Do Tt Noursell” AKC 13" Beagle Flach. Eberie’ us lle and up ear eetroc “ ” : i s Bs Mensa bcsactncmsach abe qt ae tt or C0138, ane Best Buys | Bday a. aired WF Fd. & Be up to 20 ft. c, roo ¥, . 3s" EXHAUST FAN WITH AUTO peavae 6° to 12° wide; doors Mollow nifty. Fid. Ch. sired pups matic shutters $40.00. 1 Million) jarge assortment. window & win- for sale. Lonedaie Beagles, 1743 BTU etoker tn good condition. dow waile Plywood interior and Opdyke Rd. PE 5-1451__ $75 00 General Printing & Office exterior fir white pine birch Supply, 17 W. Lawrence St. Pon- Weldtex, wedgewood surfwood, | 48 Sheet Rock per sheet $1.17 x tia roofing and siding wood shakes. | 1x6 fir board No 1 $119 per M.| AKC registered Irish Set- 1 ‘¢ b. De now only $1650 sq.; quality mer-| 18 pine boards $69 00 se aa “A uminum ‘om oors chandise aij under gover for bet- tnt i Ana — 0 per M ter puppies, 9 weeks old,. COMPLETELY INSTALLED $4095) ter homes. rade ireh e. : 4175 Dixie Hey. OR 3-4101 Paul St. Cyr Lumber Co Oude o 2 ftir Te L494 ft reasonable. 12270 Big 9 ALway) Thode wines os ge eel Ra Tel now at| No. 2 oak Moorire | 1138 per M Lake Rd. MA 5- te : ? ombination is A million feet of sound — — lumber. Dora, plumbing. pach, | 30 GALLON OAs HEATERS | ssh sna ret at it~ flea Se en Ted ace pie | GK Thompson. b0'8. Perry ELL UATIC GARDENS MH ‘ton tase KEn wood Lees - weer IF YOU ARE BUILDING A HOUSE CAL FISH & _laaton_ 0286 or KEnwood $100 | LIONEL & AMERICAN] brive our to sunaErren s|, Trogts ve aes “pipe. retaforeing rods, seed |e Fe TPS uenvics| ATER BABY PARAKEET AND NEW posts. complete line of structure) | AUTHORIZED FACTORY BER AKE BURE IT's cage, 87. Call at E. a vanch it Pree test on factory "pnalyser Burmeister's calm 3 plecks trom Pi across BL from American Forging & Socket.) cote = oe ee eee = rege nse ao tone 4-058) | MEDICINE CABINETS ’ ; ANICUNM mh hl od Pd in mirror all metal cabinet 67 06 Northern Lumber» aC o- BEAGLE Pu : Puppies eae mn ANCHOR r FENCES | S.2's% Slightly marred. Also 8197 Cooley Lake Rd ——— ed. No money down large selection of medicine cebi- WE DEL IVER = sae Bid” i 5-4062 for free estimates nets with and withoug lights, new Redtus < samome Brrone YOU INVEST IN arpuonel tar eer Michigan Fluo. With 8 "tte Th $305, You | “akc al ee A ed a0 _teacent—24) Orchard Lake Ave iM 34650. + — OR 3-0400. 6 = Ss No down payment Small monthi Mow . MASTER ROTARY SELF | ——— oT waTE Puce - BLACK LABRADOR RETRIEVER. _payments 8 FE ¢ 387) Bry ‘led lawn mowers 6) ial ON ALL Ohivuamna 8 male. Champion stock. reg- a 50 Leaf muicher available Launds et $21.95 iptered MI | 64206 Blackett’: Ss Lee’s Sales & Service 100 nade oLiniaing TOP ee BABY PARAKEET | ANE AND WEW 021 Mt Clemens St PE 3-0630 | *_. - Eo = Ponu i t ‘awn mower| POR THE HO! ca ap OLEN- BU ta] t Hoover i Delta, Skiltool, biack & Decker, | broke, Keego Hertor FE + TLDING SUPPLIES ae | 2u4's. 2x6's. 2x8's $95 per M ; | take od Cable Miller's Pails and | PREE 3 enccihine’ Genres 06 por ad Metal Culvert—Hot Lime awer tools, saws, Grilis| old J inch utility plywood $4 50 Paheet Bibley Coal — 140 N Cans FOR BALE le pune windows with | No DOWN PAYMENT ON RE- an Sheoher¢, maie. Wonder x20 < air tight aluminum weatherstrip and balancer $15 90 We handle a complete line of build- IARDWARE SPECIALS $495 picnic stoves, now 63.95 Regular $éc pug bombs. now @Te sat ete of, plastic: gar wad. ‘s, $6.68. Regular $13. rubber tired wheel barrows, now 68 06 Cochrane firs’ grade house paint, $498 yal : Regular $6.29 gal. Devoe 1 coat - materials in or more Trades at reasonable prices an Piste — Clarkston BRIGGS-STRATT ON PowER, Mow. er used ¢ cycle FE 46 BATHROOM TURE Fix’ oe pines and fittings, eutomatic ott and gas water heater, of] and coal Pert pen and hot wa. ter HEIGHT’S "SUPPLY 2685 Perry St ee Phone PE 4-543) CASH CASH Lomas anvthing vou have of value a ExX- re 602 Mt. Clem- ! Mile MS8*Rane Beles hey SB CEMEN11 BLOCKS — Im prodigtety ,Geutrered. 69 ghetnels RR poe i piety CASH Se oe SOR TORE CHROME yy - SETS, AS semble these yourself and save 4 ehairs +.¢ $6995 value $3995 Thess are brand new 1954 paces Famour make Formica = see. i! popular colors. Come in. look, poles gs and be convinced of these ¢ bargeins Michigan Frevessenh, Orchard Lake Ave furnace. Complete ondition. $11 a6 rosea neta Bao “ign a is DR. aw” -TITE HITCHES The — = bo'ts to the frame. Pd E. Howland, _ 3245 Disie. © Highway, OR +1486. DAYTON —— | Pumps + $78.0 DuPont flat wall paint. “aie or interior semt- McBride Hardware Sundays 9-12 1927 Auburn Rd. (at Crooks) rE 92 ‘EVERY SAT -@ SUN ONLY, LP auidation sale. General Ware. house 467 8 Sacinaw, Pontiac | FOR SALE GOOD 1 STORY 5 room house, south end of town, to be moved M P. Sutton. MY « ¢ | FREE-SIANDINO TOILETS $17 ee | Wash bowls with <8 $11.95 21232 double sinks $10.96 Pac Irregulars SAVE PL SUPPLY 100 8 Saginaw PE 5-2100 FUEL OIL TANK 22 Bade: TALL | STEEL runnace type. burner, 100,000 by poms and vent. Deiiv poe _ $100" oF best offer PE 2-7688 __plete $35 §-1 4 HOOK STEEL CLOTHES LINK CTO poler mi. foule aiahe $10 98 Ready Mixed Cement. $115 Bag Wash Basin — Ready Mixed Mortar $115 Bag Toilets S10 8s Lvl Cement $1.15 Bag GAT , 80 S Perry Mortar Mix $1.10 Bag FANS, a via PANS. “WE HAVE | BLAYLOCK ~ oe mers ives sate at Pi | SoM & BUILDING SUPPLY CO valu an vores- 7 _ cent, a Take am (eee Lake Ave FE 31101 FACTORY. “ores Convertible shallow “well pymps With tank #05 50 Pump less‘ tank for Log lake wate: cr sprinkling _G_A_ Thompson, 80 8 Perry. G&MC OMPAN Y Screens recove and repaired. EASI-BUTLD. watt it yourself pat- — Small pieces of plywood for 5a PE 5-7835 2529 Opdyke Ra. GARAGE DOORS __ 2010 DIXIE HW GRADE A “PLUMBING G WARE. 32 21 double sinks $21.50. by 71 sink frames. GA. _Thompeon. 60 4 ‘Perry, Garage Doors Naser war or So CASH, SEPTIC TANKS built or overhauled motors 1 haa to pay Pontiac Piston Serv- 102 8 Seginaw | NOROE OAS STOVE “4 “BURNER, 15 years old” Nght clock spice containers on top. $15. FE _ +5396 _ ee NEW AND USED Furniture. refrigerators, pottied gas and al) kinds bottled gas, oi) and electric heaters, stoves and me omy for housetrailers end or terms. TRAILER EXCHANOR — HEAT SERVICE CO. PH Open _ Swestags” @ Sundays PM For Sale Miscellaneous 60 “GALVANIZED PIPE (2! rt. posal lee - ft AVE Mi ogee Ide ft PLUMB a sUPPEY 100 “6 ; _ 5-2100 ONE tt SET ae CALIL- fornie red wood storm doors and windows interlocking WIth copper screening 444 Thi 8t. off Jos- —ys._. PICNIC TABLE 7 FOOT. __ PE | PORCH Spee typessiter 'Corona) apt. ga. stove MA 63000 PIANO. PICNIC TABLE AND BOAT trailer for what have you. Phone OR_ 37202 Plywood All kinds plain & decorative Kitch- en cabinet doors— drawers made to order PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO 1488 Baldwin Ave. FE 2-2543 QUANTITY OF NEW PU RNITURE hardware jewelry. piembing: and hundreds of other Itmes aad - SMALL Dresser, eve ery Priday night 7 p.m. et aue- tion. : Michigan Auction Mart, Inc. M-24 Leke Orion REMINGTON ~ PORTA BLE ; TYPE- writer an! table sed about 6 _tinte., OR_ +7419 REINFORCED CUNCRETE perric _tanks. Ph, OR _3-7686. é ROOM | NORGE SPACE HEATER Fully eutomatic with or without blower 916 Oakland FE ¢7333 STORM WINDOWS. SCREENS AND oors and quaritity of rustic fence Cheap FE.2-5531 or FE 56634 SAVE ON PI! YWOOD WAR- wicks 2678 Orchard Lake Road. Reinforee. Concrete installed ff desired, 2-6472; evenings FE 8-0028. SHOWER ER STALLS 5 COMPLETE. ALLY's Plumbing and Heating Supp! Mequindre at 20-Mile _ Open | 4 days | ~ 'SUMMER PRICES ON 6x7 H S ae THR to 00 =| WH ) $94.85 teh Pande x00 od FE 2030 COLORED twin ings) §— $109.0 _ 100 rs “eine : FE 2100 BIKE, 70 TEEN AGE ae =. B _5-210 Omnis _ books. Reasonable FE ET,. FOLDING GARAGE rameent rica SL Serer UaY RADIATOR. | Pie : 24x24 yf endi Spelt 910 TOILETS. FR rs STANDING _ Oakland PE 473 wale x HOME OWNERS ALUM. AWN | Pim ane Heating y LACK, AND ) are price FE 46080. Dequ at far ag Road - Geet gad, everel. —M HEARING AIDS. $50 TO $200 AND | ~ wa we «6Aubere R4. FE SAVE! PARA yourself, rebuilt and | _ Pet FE 2-2544 or FE 4-3585 = _1%0 Bagley o& — aPECIAL = _OR_3-7566 after 3. Soc gg gore hg only $199 wi se i | ego of nid wey ae Lawiand Kennels var wis. * iT OROUGH “" _cherd Lk. Ave_ Pe $6130. | "Ay ro quae 51788. .TRY IT ONCE Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 usTOM _ "OA BIT, | 3 ACRES 42223 __For Sale Livestock mi FOR SALE SORREL _ Brown Road. after 6 p.m. | Fi et a before A Rd. M Mich, THORO' gilts, 2 to 4 mo. ., a A from. Also weed = +; My 8 i! miles Shiawasseg ‘County Hane. Season _Mackney es ANTE [2 ; i280 Outer ae na ofl ean meres. 5 YEAR die and bridle. between 8 am and 1 ES. Aang 1615 B, W tt + ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, _TUESDAY, IULY 6, -DAVEY’S LOCKER ~ SERVICE __ 1012 N. MAIN ST OL 3-711 Sale Farm Equipment 76 BARGAINS ~ BA L TRACTORS, MOWERS AND ALL SIZES j INS. CREDIT +071 "penis PB ¢112 KING BROS. YOUR I-H DEALER Paes ener RD AT Oren s ~ CLOSE-OUTS 3 ise ‘eieed * baler 1 Rew Mellasd 00 bar” EXCELLENT DEALS ON NEW 66 balers BLACKETT, INC. . YOUR FERGUSON DEALER OR 3-1208 we CHAIN BA Gales, service & rentals. MY 3-8808. TODAY'S S, BARGAINS et reconditioned t. ea. Plant Jr. tractors, and M Ward several lawn *HHOUGHTEN’S 628 NN. Main OL | 1-976) Rochester i¢ Fr. Wagon. SOLID RUBBER tires, $40. MAple 5.3006 AND Or. PE SEE US TODAY. WE NEED SOME TRADE INS. CALL FE 4074 OR FE ¢-1112 WE TAKE TRADE INS. CREDIT TERMS 074 PE 61112 KING BROS. YOUR I- “ DEALER ation, time ymen Miller's ye fen & Lawn Revipepent, 109) 6. Birmingham. Phone MI 4-009 SPECIALS SINGLE ROW CULTI- VATORS FOR FORD AND FERGUSON TRACTORS COM- PLETE WITH GAUGE WHEEL AND SHIELDS $113.50. ALSO SPRING TOOTH, SPIKE TOOTH AND TWO ROW CUL- TIVATORS. SEE THE NEW MASSEY HAR- RIS MOWER. UNIVER- SAL. HOOK-UP FOR MASSEY - HARRIS, FORD AND FERGUSON ae 7 : ect a 6 months. , sonst before 9 P.M: EXx.|' . MA i BRAID “MOTOR SALES 7” INDIAN ~ Trailer Exchange (Established Bi: SALES—SE RV 1CE— FINANCE Anderson, Roya!.-Champion, Prat- rie Schooner, Beemer, and cther new and used | it ARTS STORE Everything for the trailer from } wheels to roof, inside and vet. 68 elegraph Actoss from Tel-Huren Center Open Eves. and Gunday —- FT. HOUSETRAILER . geod conditien, $500 take over — or $1350 cash MY 80 27 Auto Accessories ATTENTION and tru'ks We have severa! late mode! low mileage used engines Transmission & rear axies | tetpes of body parts, trim & Used tires and tubes SCHRAM AUTO PARTS 2539 Diste Hwy FE 44533 AUTO GLASS We ae in safety auto glass a while you wait. ONE POUND. COFFEE ‘dy . customer with each door lass or windshield. Hub Auto Giese Co.. 122 Oakland Avenue. FE 4.7066 AUTO PARTS New— Rebuile— Used Por ali makes and models 20 per cent discount to all GM em- ployes Open 1 or week ~ HOLLERBACKS Auto Parts 40 Baldwin FE 3.0477 LOUIE'S AUTO PARTS Eves. 7 days a week Starter end generators $6 50 — springs $7 50 of ysed parts for ‘46 cars ves ae Ave Ph. FE 44513 ‘48 OLDSMOBILE 8 MOTOR, COM. piste with transmission. 635. MA nines S ee 1 INNER TUBE 760-15, driven but a few mijes, like new. or rE tral} 120 @ Joanson Ave Auto Service 81 REPAIRS. BUMPING & PAINTING FREE ESTIMATE ALL MAKES OF CARS PAYMENT Ptan— - NN rrr — + w pale: 4 oy Cass at West Pike St CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE car cy indere rebore{ Zuck Ma- Hood Ph FE _ 22863 - ——$— _Sale Motor Scooters 82 *. _— $56 DOWN 66 WERK & Used Cushman Scooters 2” . Paddock +46 “1 HARLEY 61. 9178 | OR 36842 ZUNDAPP | SCOOTERS, NORLD 8 most modern $1395 English — rE ere = ie ‘For Sale Motorcycles | & eee eee ee ee POR PARTS aX®D SERVICE OF = Rarier Dericenr see Harte Sailer Co TT) & Sagi Le bad a 0% TRACTORS. 7 FT, CUT. COM PLETE ENGINE REBUILDING $95.50 FOR FORD AND FER- GUSON TRACTORS. PONTIAC FARM AND INDUSTRIAL TRACTOR CO. . FE 40461 FE 4-1442 Sena g Snes | A Poosr Bresoeen Parts & Repairs For Prods Engines Dick’s Ar Cooled Engines in 8 FE 40320 Saginaw ulpment. tractors motors. Pontiac Farm Suppl candy aie 7 FE 4-140 EVANS EQUIP. 6507 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-8596 or MA 5-7878 Auction tion Sales 77 ~~ : ate! “pm, NAG any ieeqancten anywhere. OF: DAIRY AUCTION SALE. SATUR- dav. July 10th at 1:00 pm. 36 ead of dairy cattle at A E. Sharp Farm miles South of Grand Bianc on U.8. 10. 20 regis- pos cea 16 — Bojste ma, hiso some re mac achinery, con- of: Com! “1949". y New Idea Bell city toreader. I lara new, 1 corn Corn binder 1 corn Diaster s on - t- ler, auctioneer. Clio State Bank. clerk N ALL YOUR re, MY 32-1521. For Sale Housetrailers 78 Hutchinson's Trailer Sales Also A Wootware_ Oxford Trailer SALES bg 7 Great 4) HARLEY ¢ OR pasar 19352 Har! ty - Davidson be appreciated FE 2-8328: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 645 S. Télegraph. : ___For Sal Sale Bicycles 84 PLP PALL PPL BOYS ENGLISH BICYCLES made. $a0 95 Th slightly as marred Michigan a 383) «(Orchard «Lake ve GiRisS BICYCLE AND A BOYS We are wrecking 1949 to 1953 cars| _ Boats | & Accessories 85 Crneree PAP wu EpOw, =pow. OUR BOATS! ae ‘ye. 0m “WiakninOTOm Boat ¥ mee 8 T la bottom. eal for weler aie - onstrate. 215° Pare Harbor. FE & Teaepration Orel TRICK GOInG AN PART load either way $-6806. TRANSPORTATION bh PAID TO CAL ffornta. cars FE 4-513 PONTIAO ParAW ay SERVICE ~~ Wanted ed Used Cars 5 88 See M&M Motor Sales Por top aye on tate mode! cars 2627 Dimie Hwy ORR +160. THE HIGH DOLLAR pol ars high grade used cars dg eed a i you “4540 Dixie Hwy. VANWELT OR 3-1355 op Price for Your Car as 2020 DIXIE HWY FE 4.6696 ee > TONE K CARs. Miep Bate Cae _%3 Auburn - ~All CY” S RELIABLE TRUCKS TO-DO YOUR JOB i A-1 ‘53 FORD 1 ton Express 5,000 miles. 53 FORD F-600 3-5 yard Dump. S53 FORD F-900 Tractor. 10 00x20 tires, air and vacuum. $2 CHEV. % ton Panel. 'S2 FORD F-6 2 ton Dump. '32 FORD F-3 34 ton] Pickup. CHEV. ¥4 ton Pickup. ‘3 FORD F-8 Tractor. CHEV. % ton Pickup. INT'L % ton Pickup. motorcycle. Good as new A-1 condition. Access. 1_ owner. Must be seen to bicycle. Ons vars tricycle. 735 _ Purd rdy, Birmingham Boats & Accessories — 83} 12 FOOT | Will sell ALVIN DECK BOAT with 1° HP Johnson -cheap. FE +-0682 . 4645 Center Bt. w uli Lake _ ALUMACRAFT BOATS — NRUD PENN AN ATE ALL MARINE, ALL MICHIGAN PROPEL! LERS MOTO! AND RS. MARINE SALES AN‘) SERVICE ____ 423: 8. TELEGRAPH _ CENTURY BOATS AND BOAT- tratiers, ere Ee boats, portable docks. Inland Lakes Boat & Motor ‘Sales. FE 232-6122. CRIS-CRAFT 1948" 17 FOOT. IN- board Sucellent cenditien Can- Vass cover and trailer. $1,650 Can be seen. 12310 Windsor Beach, EVINRUDE MOTORS Chris-Craft boat kits. Tony's Marine Service phone number FE 8-0112 ELGIN 3h HP. 2 CYLINDER | outboatad motor good condition. 47 Thorpe St. FE 5-565 FOR SALE MOTOR CYCLES 8). ‘41 HARLEY 61. $175. Le OR | 3-6542 12 FT. META:, BOAT. OARS RS AND Evinrude 1‘ horse power motor. _OR _3-2063 14 FT. MOLDED PLYWOOD doar Martin sale best offer over Missouri St. corner PADDLE BOARD WITH PADDLES _ Vise hew Holds 2 people. FE ROTOTILLER R FRONT MOUNT for a Waru's r-trac, used once Make offer MAyfalr 6-2872. THOMPSON 12 PT 4 PASSENGER chrome fixtures. canvas cover. No trailer. $500. EM 3-5726 after 6:30 p. m. JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS. ng oe aluminum beats. — Ree Everything for see, wARien 306 Orchard Lake Ave. 2-8020 MERCURY Se MOTORS. Craft Xellow.,. Jacket boat, and boa trailer. 16 ae he Atwater motor: te hes (= oe. onan mem lor sale EM 39130 7 ae — aluminum _Lake Fenton Phone MAin 98-0635 | trailers New) ot Centinl . FORD '4.f0n Panel. FORD 12 ft. Vanette. ‘$1 GMC 34 ton Pickup. 50 FORD F-8 Tractor. sj ‘Sl 3 » For Sale Used Trucks 90 = FUNNY BUSINESS by Hershberger “T almost said yes when venerony: For Sale Used Trucks 90 PONTIAC’S ONLY Exclusive Truck Dealés WILSON GMC 80) S. Woodwiard FE 4-4531 ~ For r Sale Used Cars SPEAKS LOUDER THAN WORDS Come in and compare our deals We have close to 150 cars From “S4 “We arrange finance small~down payment Fi- nance balance ourselves Real es- “ol tate accepted on trade) YOUR EAL 18 OUR DEAL. No rea- — offer refused. Stop in ECONOMY USED ie MARKET 22_A PE ¢2131 burn Ave 1950 BUICK ~@ DR EXCELLENT an rood tires $500. FE a2 BUICK ‘50. SUPER RIVIERA, ALL deluxe equipment Top grain cow- hide upholstery. Dyna-flow Royal Master tires MA 63702 ‘44 BUICK TUDOR GOOD CON- dition $325 FE 54-5357 _ Riemenschneider’s Ist Choice USED CARS Come In And Get the Car Of Your Choice 1949 Cadillac Convertible. Hydra- matic U8. Royal master white- wall tires. Sharp 1952 Ford. Pordessotte 2 dr. $1,195 1952 Dedge QOvyromaric $1,196 1052 ‘Plymouth 2 dr $905 ‘somebody “offered me ‘a ‘job ©) < S Used Car Corral S51 FORD ..,...... $895] Tudor, Fordomatic-| radio, heater, whiteWalls. 1951 Piymouth Cl. Cpe- $605 1950 Dodge 4 dr. Gyromatic $695 1950 Chev 4 dr 545 ‘ Packard 2 dr. OD. . $505 “6 Pord 4 dr °30 FORD 3-5 yard. Dump RD 13 ton Palin| CHEV STUDE. up. FORD 2 ton Stake. i2 tt. GMC % ton Pickup. FORD !4 8 cylinder. FORD 1 ton Van. FORA 1% ton ‘Cab! and Chassis. '48 CHEV. 2 ton Cab and Chassis. "48 FORD 1% ton Stake. 47 DODGE %, ton Pick- up. | '47 INT'L 12 ft. Stake. ‘45 FORD 11% ton Stake. 1} FO 3 n 34 ten Pickup. | 34 ton Pick- ton Stake. They're "A-] Buys’ CY | OWENS Your Ford Dealer 147 S. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4101 ‘hl FORD ‘, TON PICK-UP er eee Good condition. ‘é1 INTERNATIONAL oe delivery condition. for camping hunting potinny st} _3-2080 1946 FORD 6 YD. DUMP P TRUCK. . FE 43900 . ae af- TRUCKS ‘49 FORD VY, Ton Pickup 1953 F-800 1952 F-3 Express 1952 F-6 Stake 1951 F-8 Dump LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer -| ‘53 RIVIE2a COUPE, 6000 MILES. “oe 7 Convertidle 6495 Riemenschneider Bros. Dodge- Plymouth 232 S. Saginaw St. Phone FE 2-9131 198 BUICK ROADMASTER CON- vertible. radio and hester, very ondition. Also 1947 Buick door sedan, reason- Private owner. Phone FE +0780 anvtime. BUICK. 1951 CONVERTIBLE, ood «p, bF Soodrich tubeless res, radio. heater tinted glass, sharp 4872 Elizabeth Lake Road BUICK | RIVIERA "1982. WHITE- wall tires Easy-Fye glass. Radio Heater Best offer 574 Madison FE 2-6810 Fully equipped $2450. FE 5-0850 ‘$3 BUICK SUPER RIVIERA. 321 Ave. Stop at 68 Oakland "$2 Ford. custom 6 2 door, sharp "1 Chev deluxe. 2 oer ‘50 Pontias & 7? "50 Mercury ° door $365 |. *@# Dodge Club Coupe, rebuilt | motor . $345 | “60 Plymouc* «special -_ coupe "48 Desoto custom 2 doo "48 Olds' 4 docr — People’s Auto Sales | 68 Oakland i FE 2-2351 | 1953 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE. | Yellow with green top Inside white and green beather. Wire wheels. wer steering. just like new. Will take .rade in. $3005. FE 37000 1951 62 SERIES 4 1845. This car is & with all acces- FE 48466 } CADILLAC, door sedah beauty complete sories. OR 3-1769 CHEVROLET BEL AIR HARD- top 1952. Price cut for quick . ~— my equity. 65 £. No Drive to Clarkston and save $$$ on a good used car 4th of July Special © Sale of Used Cars 1950 Hudson 2 dr Clean as-a pin Must be sold this w acrid Plymouth dr jeipped ith radio & heater 2 tone 1952 Piymouth Cranbrook dr. Dark blue finish. Radio. heater Meadowbrook 4 dr. pol A real special on — i. ht blue. Thie truck has Ley = of driving -A real buy this CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES CHRYSI. = si a Aad Clarkston, Mic MA 55141 ateag EG oh Dativ CHEVE. ‘4 DOOR VERY Hwy . NO money down. La ORION i SALES M-24 at Buckhorn Y 2261) Open ll 6 PM. GOOD REAL ESTATE BUYS are advertised in the Classified section! For that house, lot or income property you want, see the Want Ads ba Ng Fi ae \ pee eee Pon and| iL erate 2 dr. | Fer bale Used Used | Cars. —_— , 1950 Cael te. ly oNReE ! ad ime ° er mileage Bard, le “ and out. ‘rura signals, back-up © gute "ve 2-3006. ‘$3 CHEVin, LESS THAN cpa ¥ est. “ti 0 p. “1963 ~ CHEVROLET CONVER®T- bie. Sun gold. Radio, beater, we er glide. white side wal) Ures, Easy eye coe Autronic eye, rguards grill washers, turn ghts, Kleenex dispenser . porcelain- ized. floor mats. courtesy Jamps, 1 owner finance trade. Call i PE 3-7726 ‘SO CHEV. Btyle-line sedan, fully equipped. new paink mechanically "per [ec and guaranteed. See this we Road — = — yan SCHU STZ MOTORS INC, 912 W. Woodward Birmingham 1952 |, CHEVROLETS | FORMERLY taxi cabs 16) or uron. . ‘34 CHEV BEL DOOR Power-Olide. All Srecskeeton Must eacrific: 6+ Iv Bir- _mingham Bivd “Birmingham. ‘49 DESOTO 4 door sedan, radio, heater, fuid- drive, original black fimish and er regteet ~ “= as $145 -'49 FORD SPORT ROADSTER. ALL SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. #12 8 Woodward __ Birmingham ‘93 DESOTO Sedan Radio, heater, tip-toe Mift, original one-owner, low mileage A+ low as $145 down, payments a low as $200 per day. SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. . ‘51 | DESOTO. equipped with large factory Bert aod heater Reconditioned and ~ namelegmr ic . Mtl at $145 long payments SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. 912 8 _Woodward Birmingham Jacobson Pontiac’s Exclusive Hudson Dealer Cass at Pike — ___ FE 2-8389 1950 HUDSON RADIO AND HEAT- er Runs good. Only $150. 065 _ Oakland HOLIDAY SPECIALS _ tiac Convertible with every- bing radio, heater, Hydramatic “0 Chev. Convertible very clean. “47 tiac Convertible, —s a honey of a MIKE ISVAUT@ISALES 701 Oakland ‘58 HUDSON ..... $1195) sone — 190, cus couPE Hydramatic, radio and ool pre condition. Cheap. 494 heater. ~ Sa aa Sl CHEV. wee. $695 Tudor, radio, heater —and Power Ghde, mes eh. _ 2 shORDIee . $895 Radio and heater. Y ’SO MERC. ........ $595 : Tudor, radio and heat- er. a | ° ‘30, FORD Tudor. Radio and heater. 53 PONTIAC. Tudor, ra- dio, and heater. '§1 HUDSON Sedan, Ra- dio and heater. ’30 DODGE Tudor. Fluid drive, radio and heat- er. . $1 FORD. Radio, heater, atid whitewalls. "32 HUDSON Wasp. Tu- dor. Radio and heater. ’S2 FORD Tudor. Radio heater and overdrive. ’49 FORD Tudor. Radio and heater. ’SO KAISER Sedan. Ra- dio and heater. 51 DESOTO Sedan. Ra-) dio, heater and spot: } lights. ’°39 FORD Tudor. Radio.’ and heater. $2 FORD Tudor. Radio. and heater. '47 STUDE. Commander Tudor. Radio and) heater. 48 FORD Tundor. Radio and heater. 50 CHEV. Sedan. Radio} and heater. 50 NASII Tudor: States- man. Radio and heat- er. 48 KAISER Sedan. Ra- dio and heater. ‘$9 HUDSON Sedan. Ra- dio and heater. ’51 FORD Tudor. Radio, heater and whitewalls. ‘48 DODGE Sedan. Radio and heater. Not a “Rough Rider” in the lot. Conte in today and try out the car of your choice. CY Your Ford Dealer ~ 147. S. Saginaw _ Phone FE 5-4101 ‘48 CHEV. Aero Sedan radio, heater Paci fect motor and tires, LOOK! cash down, fust good credit We — bave @ clean, ‘47 Pontiac SCH CHUTZ MOTORS INC. NOW. | 912 8 Woodward "4 CREVIE, CORVERTIBUR. nn fifice equity, FE . Our Plan Is Ethical, Honest and True . IM48 Dodge An exceptionally sharp @reen. four door whitewal! tires, radio, heater, au- tomatic transmission, sun visor and unusually clean. tintérior. $27.24 a Month Keller-Koch CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER Woodward at 13 Mile Lincoln 6- dark- Almost new 410 FORD 48 ALSO 4 FORD. CLEAN and good _condition, 140 _ Marion ‘4 FORD CUSTOM. R&H, OVER- drive. like new ae Chev. club coupe R&H. extra "41. Club Coupe. R&H, cash. NORTH PONTIAC AUTO SALES 312 W_ MONTCALM FE 49151 FORD, MILES_ "1 TUDOR. 29.000 MILES Radio, heater, Overdrive Almost new whitewall tires FE 5-7647 _ after 6 pm- “Best in Wheels & Deals” Harold Turner Your FORD Dealer In Birmingham BANG GO PRICES! ‘52 Ford Custom 2 door over-drive. heater, radio turn-indicator, white side walls. $1 ‘$1 Ford,’ 8 custom 8 4 door, Pordomatic, radio, heater, turn- indicators, §735. "$1 Chev. 2 door, good running. very clean $665. ‘51 Ford 2 door, heater, a good ear $665 ‘51 Nash Statesman. 2 door, radio, heater, white side wall tires. Bed conv etsion. ‘30° Ford 8, 2 joor Good trans- portation $545 ‘50° Ford 8 custom elub coupe. dio. heater, turn imdicator and seat covers. ‘40° Plymouth 4 door Heater. clean car $305 ‘49 Ford. 4 door, 6 Good transporta- tion. $305 ‘40° Nash Ambassador, Good run- em Good tires. Bed conversion, Good tires, and Very “at ‘Chev, 4 door runs $295 All our’ pele cars SEI Warranty. 6 months or 6.000 miles in writing. Hugh Arms & 3 yrs South Lyon FORD, 1953. E in t count acta eluxe” equ Blue a Fordomatic, de- fe equipment. 10,500 miles. MA 702 LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer ‘30 FORD TUDOR $595 ‘ol FORD .. FORDOR $695 LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer ’ RTE BUY.” » 1954 tad 7 DOOR ore. =f THIS! Every Word Is True! 1951 FORD WAGON The three-seat Country Squire with good tires. excellent en- gine. green finish, perfect in- terior, radio and large heater, low mileage. $995 Keller-Koch CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH | Woodward at 13', Mile Rd Lincoin. 6-8410 chrome, leaded in, white wall _tires_and leather reats. EM 34827. 1951 FORD CONVERTIBLE RED. White wall tires egg Auburn Hejaghts ‘4 FORD “CUSTOM LINE —_ white walls, 3.000 mi. MI 63858. NASH RAMBLER. ‘ ible. Practically new. ald 2162 +2811 “SELECT LSED CARS — KIMBALL your! Nach “beater 65 W. LAWRENCE AT CASS CM 1951 OLDSMOBILE HOLIDAY Only Pontiac Drive. ae 3-tone metallic green with ivory visor and viewer, electric win- dows and seats leather trim, back up lights. directional sig: nals, mac price! ONLY $1195 Community Motor Sales Big Used Car Lot 804 N Main 8t. Rochester OL 20311 - Open ‘ti] 10 pm 48 OLDS CONVERT. $395 What its : 08 model, driv with bhydramatic RITCHIE MOTORS 477 Auburn Ave FE 2-503) 1949 OLDS | TUDOR, | RADIO HEAT- ‘er. hydramatic. Excellent me- chanical condition No rust. dio and heater. Will trade. il Scott Lake Rd - PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN I ioe | mission I need cash and older | ae Call Harris; MI 6-1200 8 till "30 PLYMOUTH $565 _ Yes-Sir you really save money. on this clean 2 door Has origina! black finist motor purr's like ad | kitten. RITCHIE’ MOTORS 477 Auburn Ave. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE GOODWILL USED CARS Ra } cael tod “NOT A NAME BUT. A POLICY” ye “e S31 BUICK SPECIAL 4 DOOR SEDAN WE VE CUT THIS PRICE ‘WAY Do D IT Is TYPICAL OF OUR SE E THEM 1 "54 BORD F-100.- PICKUP DIRECTIONAL SIGNALS DELUXE CA ? $1195 0 FORD EVEN THIS LOW PRICE You ARE. ASSURED OF or QUALI. AND HEATER AND ts READY TO GO. AND $395 50 DODGE BEAUTIFUL BLACK DAN, RADIO AND HEATER. HERE'S CAR AND A cE Ts ARD TO ug '53 PONTIACS RADIO. HEA poll ating ve. tee: Ta gxtnas. "$1695 up 49 BUICK Tan IPPED, RA- DIO, HEATER AN DYNAFLOW, MIGHTY SHARP LOOKIN DOOR SED. AN : $395 + "49 CHEV. THIS IS A HONEY OF A CAR, NOT JUST TR. ANSFORTATION. BUT A CAR WITH MANY GOOD MILES TO GO. $325 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Factory Branch 63 Mt. Clemens at Mill Phone FE 3-7117 , ~ ot WITH HEATER. | ! a extras, 275 Sac rifice. | 91| For Sale Used Cars 91 | For Sale Used Cars 91 —weeeeeoerrersneeeeeee i983 PLYMOUTH CRANBROOK Cow Miles. Dark ee to - Heater = ity Drive. New Car Oust Poebea Aero Hard- Top Maroon ae boat iy Radio - Heater & Over- = Baa Fordor. Maroon - and Grey maasciiealer & Power ‘$3. CONVERT- top. white wall tires, spot light. | radio. heater and erase: ~dtive,and—look atthe, | | 952 W. Huron | more could you ask for. | Phe tires. original finish. FE e1i | ‘31 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP. RA. |]. with powerflite automatic trans- | | FE 25031 | Steering. 1949 Pontiac Sedan Coupe $95.00 Dewan. 1948 Dodge Deluxe Tudor $85.60 Down. 1946 Hudson Fordor $25.00 Down 1946 Nash Sedan $2500 Down. 1946, Mercury Tudor $25.00 Down. BRA Motor Sales Soto - Plymouth Cas» at W Pike St. 2-0186 30 Years Fair Dealing | PLYMOUTH CRANBROOK, ‘52. club coupe, 1 sigtroate = Fp Radio, heater si =z _ 45175 all day Sunday ‘aaa ‘Monday. PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 1954. Green with white top. Wood weave and green interior A really beau- tiful car. Must bei due to transfer Call MI 46859 isso PLYMOUTH SAVOY WAGON. Blue. White side walls. radio and heater” $665 FE 40019 | test PLYMOUTH CAMBRIDGE 7 door. One owner. OR 3-8357 be- fore 3 pm ‘52 PLYMOUTH Club Coupe Beautiful forest green, spotiess interior, mechani- cally perfect and has factory ra- di> and heater Reconditioned and brags Only $145 down and months to y at bank rates SCHU TZ MOTORS INC. 912 8 Woodward Birmingham PLYMOUTH 54 4 DR_ SAVOY. _ Best offer over $1400. FE 5-3755. CM 1950 PONTIAC 8 cylinder deluxe 2-door sedan Sparkiin, jet black finish cquipped with deluxe radio and heater. visor a viewer, back- uo lights, directional signals Its A-l throughout. An out standing value for ONLY $695 For Sale Used Cars 91 /'52 PONTIAC nergy vom radio and heater, < Segeesee | —_— coat fes il be aa. spare mile. weer be spare re and duivea to be appreciated. Terms to fit your podaet. . SCHUTZ ig INC. 912 8 wastes = ae eee hvydramatic. power heater gern goon mf ances. save $800. 331 Voor- hies Rd CM 1952 PONTIAC Chieftain 4door se@an_ finished in metallic Sherwood green. Equipped with radio, heater, spot light, master grill and trunk guards. Excellent tires. It's like new ONLY $1145 Community Motor Sales Big Used Car Lot 804 N Main St Rochester. OL 32-6311 Open ‘til 10 p.m. ee *. 1952 PONTIAC 2 DR, DELUXE. Good condition Private owner. rE, 23-4263 1954 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN DE- luxe. Rea} Aner. EM_3-4187. 1941 PONTIA GaooD _heater_ bleep Reasonable. 1 TAYLOR CHEVROLET ‘52 Chevrolet 4 dr. ‘51 Olds 88 2 dr ‘51 Studebaker Champton. ¢@ 4r. ‘SO ha = coupe, ‘49 Olds = S ar \YLOR’S aT WALLED LAKE “SIN 1931" Phone Market +1561 West Side Used C Cars 923 W H8urep 2188 Our low evernew will) ‘ave you money on that car We have a wide variety od makes and models WE TRADE “U'Y AND SELL "PETERSON 1948 Kaiser ¢@ door sedan 6245. 948 Kaiser sedan $85 1951 a door ALES & SERVICE PE 4-4693 Community — Motor Sales Big Used Car Lot ena NN. Main Bt. Roc hester | OL 2-6311 Oren "tu 10 pm ‘$4 PONTIAC CUSTOM CATALINA. fully equipped FE 2-1610 “52 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN KAISER 3776 AUBURN AVE ‘940 PONTiAL 4 DOOR @ Mo- tor Body and tires in very good _ condition _FE 41458 ey ‘STUDE. - Stariiner Hardtop Beautiful 2 tone brown and ivory radio. heater, overdrive and whitewall Runs itke a charm See it pp a down, balance in 24 deluxe heater erTAIN «BSD ve Tit TZ MOTORS INC. glass 11000 miles This is o pty buy Huron Motor Sales _ _ FE 22641 1983 PONTIAC. 2 DR. DELUE gutomatic shift, many extras. MY 2-106) ' | { $12 8. Woodward Birmingham 1960 STUDEBAKER ¢DOOR, Sa dio heater. overdrive. All sro excelient shape Will sei] for $395. | Can be seen at 3098 W. Huron. 1948.....$345 PONTIAC STREAMLINER 8. R & WM. OTHER EXTRAS GOOD TRANSPORTATION * 1948 .....$345 MERCURY CLUB COUPE. ‘RADIO, HEATER, WHITE WALLS, SEAT COVERS. 1948.....$345 PONTIAC 8 STREAMLINER DLX TUDOR SEDAN COUPE CREAM AND BLUE 1947... . $295 OLDSMOBILE HYDRAMATIC 8 RADIO, HEATER, SEAT COVERS. RUNS GOOD. 1947..... $245 BLUE PONTIAC SEDAN CPE. R & H, SEAT COVERS, SPOT- ‘LIGHT. GOOD TIRES. 1947..... $195 FORD V8. RADIO, HEATER. GOOD RUNNING CAR AND A BARGAIN AT THE PRICE. 1947.....$195 POPULAR PONTIAC CLUB COUPE. JET BLACK. READY CHEAPIES —AT— JEROME'S These prices are good for 2 days only. July 6, and Wednesday, July 7. FOR YOU TO DRIVE HOME. - PHONE FE 8.0488 We have only listed our cheapies. We have 60 late model used cars from which to choose. JEROME'S BRIGHT SPOT Olds-Cadillac or Orchard Lake Rd. at Cass Ave. Tuesday, 1947.....$195 CHEVROLET THAT EVER POPULAR AFRO SEDAN. GREEN FINISH. 1947.....$195 ‘PONTIAC PORDOR SEDAN. JEY BLACK AND AN EXCEPTIONALLY FINE CAR. 1947.....$195 OLDSMOBILE HYDRAMATIC. RADIO HEATER OTHER EXTRAS REALLY SHARP 1948......$195 FORD. DARK GREEN. RADIO, HEATER, SEAT COVERS. SOUND BODY AND MOTOR. 1946.....$195 , PONTIAC, BLUE CLUB COUPE WITH RADIO AND HEATER. A REAL CLEAN CAR. 1940......$95 PONTIAC CLUB COUPE. HERE IS A REAL NICE CAR FOR THE MONEY WE ASK. 1941 ......$95 DESOTO FORDOR. NEW TIRES. GOOD MOTOR. HERE 18 A REAL BUY POR YOU. PHONE FE 8-0489 _ THE PONTI AC PRESS. Meg Marlowe Likes the TV Clayton Family a -- Today's Television Programs - - Channel t— WJBK-TY tt Channel 4— WWJ-TV (ONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS fame. (4) Captain Braddock. 6:00—(7)—Detroit Deadline. Bud mo Money,” servicemen = Lanker interviews guest. (4) | eeced by clip joints, (2) Favor- Time for Music. Jane Palmer | ite story. \ Adolphe Menjou tells another story. sings. (2) Adventures of Kit Carson, El Toro in “Outlaw |10:00—(7) Stage Seven. ‘First ~- Army.” | Mate,” starring Preston Foster, 6:15—(7) News Ace. (4) News. film draina. (4) Motor City Paul Williams. Fights Welterweight boxing | bout: Duke Harris vs Gene Par- 6:30—(7) Men of Tomorrow. Scouts | ker. (2) News. Jack: LeGoff. and Scouting. (4) World of Mr. | 10:15—(2) Weathervane. Charles Sweeney. Ruggles as drug store proprietor. (2) News Doug Edwards. | gore in “Beauty Queen.” | ne . , 6 ss—(4) News Caray an. John | hier pala Verduge ss | Cameron Swayze. (2) Summer Holiday. Betty Ann Grove, Merv '1:00—(7) Soupy’s On. Soupy |5 Griffin sings “Down on the| Sales with variety, guests. (4) Farm,” “‘Bushel and a Peck.”’ | News. Paul Williams. (2) Tele- -.00—(7) Colonel Flack Alan news Ace: \fowbray as Robin Hood crook | #1:15 — (7) Armchair Theater. finds fatal appeal in French| 5Pring Byington is ‘Arkansas foods and femmes. (4) Midwest-| Judge.” feature film. (4) Singin’ crn Hayride. Emcee Willie Thall, | Along. Music. (2) Featurette. ; Connie- Lou, Paul Arneld. (2) | 11:30—(4) Moods the Night. The Goldbeggs. Vacation adven-| Music. tures at Pincus Pines, with Ger- trude Berg. in WEDNESDAY MORNING | 7:00—(4)— maa) i Pane! Show Today. (2) Morning Me- . Guire, Fred Van Deventer, em- 8:06—(7)—Breakfast Club. cee Jay Jackson, Freddy Mar- | 9:¢9—(4)—Playschool. (7)—News tin, guest. (4) Arthur Murray| Wonderland. (2)—Garry M , ,9:30—(2)—Arthur Godfrey. Show. (2) Love Story. Drama to be announced. 10:00 — (4) — - Home. (7)—Charm Kitchen. (jreen-eyed monster makes | > Danny's wife see red, Danny | !:30—(2)—Strike It Rich. Thomas, ‘Jean Hagen star. (4) |11:00—-(4)—Bob Smith. (7)—Play- Fireside Theater. ‘The Seven| house. (2)—Valiant Lady. Graces.” Comedy about seven! * . : orphaned sisters. (2) Foreign | '' 1} —(2)—Love of sate Intrigue. Cloak and dagger in| 11:30—- (4) —Betty White. Europe, James Daly stars Tomorrow's Search. w—i7) Steel Hour Howard , 11:45—(2)—Guiding Light. Lindsay in ‘“‘Haven's End,"' ‘deals | . _ ; ; Sith) ait eacestor proud mayor WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON ilty candidate. (4) Top Plays of | 12:@0-(4)—Nancy Dixon. (7)—12 iM. Turn Back the Clock,”’| 0'Clock Comics. (2)—Bob Mur- estranged wife aids GI amnesia| phy. victim; stars Lorraine Day. | 32: 15—(4)—Three Steps to Heaven. Richard Conte. (2) Suspense. A detective is assigned to follow | !2:30—(7)—News. (4) — Ladies Edith Adams, Girl in Car 32,| First. (2)—Welcome Traveler. and $100,000 in stolen jewels. 12: 45—(7)—Stars on Seven. >: 30—(7) Twenty Questions. Florence Rinard, Bobby Sg w—(7) Make Room for Daddy. (2) — ¥ 0: 30—(7) My Hero. Robert Cum- 4:30 — (4) — Howdy Doody. (2)— (2) | Theater. | es 00—(4) Truth or Consequences. | £:60—(2)—Robert Q. Lewis. Jack Bailey hosts stunt quiz (2) 1:30—(2)—Houseparty Hanger. “The Gunman.” a GI) returns with a “Dear John" from | McBride. his girl, starring Ben Gazzara. '8:¢0—(4)—One Man's Family. 9:30—(7) Name's the Same. Rob- | —Big Payoff. (7)—My Life. ert Q. Lewis hosts namesake | 2:30—(4)—First Love. (2)—Featur- (4) — Jean) 11:00—(4)—News. | Channel 1— WXYZ-TV eite. (7)—Theater. | 2:45—(4)—Concerning Miss -Mar- | lowe. ' 3:00 — (4) — Hawkins Falls. (2)—— Brighter Day. | | 3:15—(4)—Bride and Groom. (2)—| Secret Storm. 3:30—(4)—Betty White. (2)—La-, dies Day., (7)—Air Base. 3:45—(7)—Cowboy Colt. | 4:00—(4)—Pinky Lee. | ie 45—(7)—Barnaby Bear. | 5:00 — (4) — Happy Hollow. (7)— | te ‘Serial Drama ls New on Air | Group Offers Actress | stationed in Wyoming and his WAF ‘sweetheart, stationed in Michigan, got married in strange surround. | ‘ings here Monday. | it The Clayton snagged their Symbol of All She Has Missed in Life NEW YORK family, in Concerning Miss Myer lowe, is very close to Meg Mar- | lowe, heroine of the new TV serial drama which premiered yesterday Miss Marlowe is a_ successful actress who longs for the security | of marriage and a family and the Claytons -are to her the symbol of everything she wants from life, and everything she feels she has © missed. Auntie Dee. (2)—Portia Faces) There are four Claytons, Dot Life. | and Harry, and their children, | ; . | Cindy and Tommy. The parts we No are played by two seasoned 5:30 — (2) — Bob Crosby. (4) — Adventure Patrol. (7) — Super- man. 5: 45—(2)—Sports. WEDNESDAY EVENING 6:00—(4)—Music Time. (7)—De- troit Deadline. (2)—Magician. ~ j 6:15—(4)—News. (7)—News. (2)— » Featurette. 6:30—(4)—Mr. Sweeney's World. (7)—Army Variety. 6:45—(4)—News. (2) — TV's Top Tunes. 1:00—(4)—I Married Joan. (7) — Soupy's Ranch. (2) — Godfrey. 1:30—(4)—My Little Margie. 8:00 — (4) — TV Theater. (7) — Jimmy Wakely. (2)—Strike It Rich. 8:30—(2)—I've Got a Secret. 9:00—(4)—This Is Your Life. Theater. (2)—Boxing. 9:30—(4)—Mr. District Attorney. (7)—Man vs. Crime. 9:45—(2)—Greatest Fights. (Q -+10:00—(4)—Harness—Raeing. (7—+ Club Polka. (2)—News. 10: 15—(2)—Weather. 10:30—(4)—Man About Town. Playhouse. (2)—Safety Eye. 10: 45—(4)—Baseball Hall. (7) — Soupy’s (1) On. (2)—News. (2) | 11:15—(4)—Adventure Special De- livery. (7)—Film. (2)—Wrestling. 11: 30—(4)—Moods in the Night. ‘ -- Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. rTV programs including The Robert (2)—News. - actors and two less-experienced, but altogether charming young: sters, Helen Shields has been cast as Dot Clayton, Miss Shields is well known in radio, television and on merable radio serials and many | Montgomery Show. Her Broadway credits include Uta Hagen in Streetcar Named Desire and Angel Street Married to actor ; Kemp, Miss Shields lives in Man- “hattan and celebrates her birth: day on St, Patrick's Day. John Gibson will portray fa talents, was born making three silent movies. He | stock for three years, and then into | radio. That was back in 1931. For the first seven years in ra- dio, he averaged at least one show Playhouse, and many others. Married to the former Alice De- 'shon of Philadelphia, Gibson lives her and their 12-year old san, John. | Patti Besworth bas been cast old Patti is a newcomer to tele- vision. A_ professional model, experience in summer stock as well, doing leads in Ah, Wilder- and Liliom at the Berkshire Playhouse in Massachusetts, Her actual television appearances up to now have been in live and filmed commercials. Eddie Brian will act WIR, (760) CKLW, «see ww, (856) WCAR, (1138) WXYZ, (1t78) WIBK, (1408) TONIGHT 11:30—WJR, Muste 12:06-WJR, W. Warren 5:15—WJR, Reynolds; Music 6 _WJIR. News WXYZ, News. Top of Town WWJ, Faye Elizabeth WCAR, Carousel WWJ. News CKLW, Phi! McKellar WXYZ—Curtain Call WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenale CKLW, News WJ BK, Don McLeod WCAR, News, Carousel WEDNESDAY MORNING 6.30—WJR, Agril'cit. Voice CKLW, To be announced WJBK, News. McLeod WCAR, News 5:30—WJR, Music Matinee Www, L. Jones WXYZ, Ed. McKensie 12:15—WJR, Aunt Jenny CKLW, Austin Grant WCAR. CKLW, Eddie Chase WJBK, Bob Murphy 6 15—WJR, Clark Quartet CKLW, Munn, David N'Day -Calier 5:45—WJR, C. Muzsey wWw4J, Bud Lynch WJBK. Rise and Shine WWJ, Marriage Pays WXYZ, Lee Smith WCAR, Coffee iz: eas ee Helen Trent —— CKLW. Eddie Chase WWJ, Ne AY EVENING WCAR, Talk Sports 6:45—WXYZ, News, Wolfe WXYZ—News, Crocker 6:00—WJR, Hainline CKLW, Guy Nuno CKLW, Your Boy Bud J, News 6:38—WJR, Reynolds, Racing| WCAR, ee WJBK, M Wai McKens. WWJ, Fran Pettay WXYZ, Bill Stern “4:00—WJR, Dale Marr cLeod WCAR, Harmony Hall WCAR, Magic Music ee gtk walle 12:45—WJR, J. White WCAR, News, Music WJBK, Horseman y . Pr ° WWJ Fran Harris =; Resdiow ters CKLW: Nunn; David WXYZ, Curtain Calle #:18—WIR, Clark Quartet oe WJBK, News CKLW. Ginger er: WWJ, Bud Lyn 6.15—WJR. Lowell Thomas WCAR. News, Coffee ger Rogers wx Lee Smits WXYZ, Music Show 706_WJR, Guest House 7:15—WJR, Music Hal) WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON WWJ. 3 Star Extra . 1:00—WJR, Road of Life 6:30—WJR, Bob Reynolds WXYZ, Red Skelton an Ga eae Ww, Hews _Muineiens WW, Fran Pettay CKLW. Pulton Lewis Charm me Stern WCAR, News, Music WIBK Gentile and Binge CALW. Hews, Devies we. Magic Muste WJBK, Tom George 7:45—WWJ, News om George nee CKLW, Toby David WCAR, News, Hall xYn 3 Lowell Thomas aie ve eree Pettay 8:00_WJR, Jack White 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins , yee Bob Maxwell CKLW, Bud Davies 7:00—WJR, Guest House 7:3%0—WJIR, Peter Hayes w Dick Osgood 2e— alon WWJ, Three Star WWJ, Morgan Beatty CKLW, News, T. David "WWI. Mulboilega WY, Bes WXYZ, Silver Eagle WJBK, News, Gentile WXYZ, Paul Winter W, Pulton Lewis CKLW, Gabriel Heatter WCAR, News W. Your Boy Bud WJBK, Tom WCAR, Tiger Tunes WCAR, News, Music 7 45—WJR, E. R. Murrow WWJ, One Man's Family CKLW. Eddie Fisher 8 06—WJR, People Punny WWJ, Happened to You WXYZ, Show .Stopper CKLW. Mickey Spillane WCAR, News, Music WXYZ, Show World §.36—WJR, Suspense WXYZ, V ndercook CKLW, Hich Adventure 8: 15—wJR. Bud — S3:30—w m Muste Hall CKLW, Gebriel Heatter 9:30—WJR, Mrs. Page fee. Cle CKLW. Dick 1:45—WJR, Guiding Light Powell WCAR, Warmup Time CKLW, Your Boy Bud 7:15—WW4J, Pran Pettay CKLW, Guy Nunn 7:38—WJR, P. L. Hayes WwW, News 2:00—WJR, Mrs. Burton . WXYZ, Lone Ranger - See the Lotest 8:45—WCAR, Radio Rev phd kyr aaa CKLW. Gabriel Heatter TV D 4! 9:00—WJR, News WCAR, Tiger Game 7:45—WJR, E. R. Murrow emonstrate WWJ, Minute Parade WJBK, Chicago vs Detroit WWJ, One Man's Family WXYZ, Breakfast Club | 9.145 wR, Pp. Mason CKLW. TBA Get @ Good top n) healaen : WXYZ, Paul Winter $:00—WJR, FBI WCAR, News, Rhythm WWJ. To Be Announced USED TV ; 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake nA oo Stoppers . 9:15—WJR, Kitchen Club Block ” Squad Room WoBR: : Tom wean cll os AE 8:45—WXYZ, Just Basy CKLW, Good Neighbor *WWws, Here's the Answer 8:15—-WXYZ, Show World Meera om, Johnny Dollar | 9:45_wWJR, Pete & Joe CKLW, Pegey Lee $.20_WJR, 21st. Precinet Dragnet CKLW, Tony Martin 3:00—WJR, Hi House To Be Announced Wxyz, Town Meeting CKLW, News, Roth 9 28—WJIR, Jack Carson WwW, John C. Swayze WXYZ, WCAR, Temple Academy 10:66—WJR, WWJ, To be announced WWJ, Welcome A. Godfrey My True Story 3:15—WJR, House WXYZ, Ed McKenzie CKLW, News, Davies wxrz, John Vandercook CKLW, Nightmare 8:45—WXYZ, Just Easy reveler Party CKLW, Search Never Ends CKLW, News, Homechat CKLW, Bud Davies 9:00—WJR, Crime iE wens WEAR, Reve Temple’ | 8.30 wiz: sammy Kove WXYZ, New —— WCAR, News, Temple 3:30—WWJ, P. Young y Kay ews WXYZ, Ed McKenzie WJBK, Tom George 10 08—WJIR, Tennessee Ernie Oe wae —_— : CKLW. Eddie Chase CKLW. News, Music : J . Whispering Streets : WW3. Fibber McGee CKLW' Mary Morgan ‘2—won ox On 0:00—-WIR, Jock Carson YZ, News WCAR, Song Parade Ww4, Rt. to Happiness ware Part Concerts CKLW. Prank Edwards WJBK, Houseparty 10:15—WJR, Music Metro. WCAR. 10:45—WWJ, Break the Bank WXYZ, Girl Marries 4:00—WJR, Listen Harmony Hall WXYZ, ee On WWJ, Backstage Wife CKLW, Author Meets Critic 10:00—WJR, Tennessee Ernie Harry Ashmore Lorene McK, wwi, WW4J, Heart of the News WXYZ, Headline Edition WXYZ, Top of Town 11:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WJBK, Sy CKLW, Frank Edwards CKLW, Freddie Martin WWJ, Strike It Rich WCAR, News, Carousel WJBK, House Party 16:30—WJR, Curtain Time ome Med 4:185—WJR, Music Hall 16:15-—-W Music Metropol. pet LP Stars. from Paris WJBK, News, McLeod WWJ, Stella Dallas Ww, = Date YZ, News, Top WCAR, News, Lady ' CKLW. Girardin 4:30—WWJ, Widder Brown 10:30—WJR, Believe, TBA 10:45—CKLW, Organatres S: WOAR Gane Pe = Se oad Eve.| WwJBK. Mcleod ae. Seas, Renemeaty WCAR, Ballads 11:00—WJR, News Ow ie 11:30—WJR, Make Op Mind | 4:45-wJR, Music, News 3, Sports, Top WXYZ, News WXYZ—Neighbor's Vot a ee eee CKLW. Kuren, Sports CKLW Gente Neig 8 Voice CKLW George Wright : ‘ A po CKLW. _ for Day 11:15—WJR, Bob Reynolds JBK. News WJBK. News, McLeod rgd og WWJ, Bruce Mayer ‘ ews, land CKL Manhat Music 11:15—WJR, Bop Reynolds . | 11:45—WJR, Rosemary Wattrick, McK. w. ‘ae WWJ, Mayer, ie oo WWJ, Second Chance CKL Eddie WXYz, T WXYZ—Byline WJBK, News, McLeod CKLW. Manhattan ae WJBK, Bob Murphy WCAR, News WXYZ, Ww, 11:38—WJIR, Music 3 CREW, Phil With Buste Bill Planned fo Halt Petition Forgeries HIGHLAND PARK; (INS)—State Rep. Richard L. Thomson of Highland. Park yesterday said he will introduce in the next legis- ‘lative session a bill designed to halt forgeries on nominating pe- titions, Thomson's actian came after it was revealed that Skid Row bums were being used to forge the names of registered voters on nominating petitions in, Wayne County. Thomson said the bill would au- thorize examination of signatures for all county, legislative and ju- dicial candidates throughout. the state. Under present Michigan law, the county clerk's office cannot go be- yond the face value of the signa- ture. The only requirements are a signature, address, and Gate the — was signed. Strong Earthquake Hits Reno-Carson City Area earthquake at 4:15 a.m, today. Bay area rumbling earthquake of magnitude at 12:29 p.m., day. No, damage, was reported, - RENO @®—Reno and nearby Car- son City were shaken by a strong The temblor was felt as far west as the San Francisco-Oakland The Eureka-Ferndale area of Northern. California experienced a slight yester- grown up on 8th Avenue in Brook- | lyn within walking distance of Eb- | bets Field. Eddie has only been actihg for a year and a half, but he has had considerable experience in that short time. Store Guard Arrested for Looting Employes COLUMBUS, Ohio #—Car! Lee Parker, a special duty policeman hired to guard 11 Columbus stores, is under arrest for looting them. Detectives said the 55-year-old employe of a private police service firm told them he stole merehan- dise over a seven-year period be- cause he ‘‘wanted to open a store of my own someday.” OPEN HOUSE EVERY EVENING 825 W. HURON 825 W. Huron. FE 4-2525 FENCES All Types FENCES © Immediate Erection © Steel © Weed ® Picket Free Estimates No Down Payment © Aluminum Awnings ® Aluminum Windows © Home Moderhization FE 8-0501 ‘Wed in Hurry ‘at Des Moines clerk at Selfridge Air Force Base | near as Cindy Clayton. Eighteen-year | 1S¥a-17V2 E. Lawrence “TUESDAY, JU ry 6, 19 Air Force Base at Cheyenne, 1 | their nuptials because each had | w day off and this city is half- at his home. riage license. the stage. She's played in innu-| judge Tom K. Murrow arrived at bench, compared with 5,762. the | ‘ . » » 19)" 5 ; the Municipal Building to do some ye a before. Of the 1953 total, 1,069 ; were committed to institutions— | work | honeymoon. Both were due back at Barefoot in Athens, understudy (| base by _ wim Dad Offers Reward fo Deep-Sea Divers Clayton. Gibson, an actor of many father in Oakland, | 4t Long Lake near Flint, watching Calif., and started his career by|@iV ers equipped with deep - sea equipment drag for the body of his disliked movies, and moved on to/ 50n who drowned June 13 | $500 reward to anyone who can every day for an entire year. He}- has played featured or principal from a speedboat capsized the boat roles on TV in more than 200 shows | in which he and a companion were including Date With Judy. Kraft}riding. Paralyzed with terror_and Hallmark Playhouse | unable to swim, she's had a great deal of acting | ness, Barretts of Wimpole Street | | appear as, Tommy Clayton. Nine-year-old Ed- | die would rather play baseball than | perhaps’ because he's | 58° DES MOINES uw — An airman The fact that | Wyo His bride, Airman Roberta Case, 9, Issaquah, Wash., is a supply ¢€ Mount Clemens, Mich, They met at the Cheyenne Base last December and decided to girl was transferred to Michigan. — , They selected Des Moines for | | « Way between their stations. , When they arrived. But a_police- | jobs |man got in touch with District | ~ ast year, according to the an- Court Clerk Michael H. Doyle Jr. |, Last years according to the He issued the mar- Fortunately District | | He married them. | The couple had to postpone the | | 5 a.m. today. FLINT (INS) = A grief-stric ken | today continued his vigil Ralph Jones, 39, offered a recover the body of Gerald Jones, 13 Gerald perished when the wash | Gerald sat with | his legs locked under the seat as the boat sank. Divers estimate the boat may be at Lake Success, Long Island selene) as dee P ak’ 15 feet. ls Now a Joke “Only Fatherly Lectures | tent. Judges say confinement often tsn-t | the answer articles from cties across the country various aspects of the problem are dis j ; nual report; | ile delinquents paraded before the about one sixth of those haled into court | have been sent away. And if the | judges could do more, Budding Criminals Get Here, n the first of three! ussed } By JAMES MOGLINCY New York Daily News Reporter NEW YORK #—The Children’s | studying the child's background | ket married, but since then the | Court of New York City has be- ‘ome a joke to budding criminals, | | a sore spot with policemen he c ity,| wer, a problem to citizens inter- | ested in youth welfare, and & con- | stant headache to such of its judges The marriage bureau was closed | as are genuinely interested in their 6,610 accused juven- If the cop on thé beat had his way, probably the whole lot would it's a safe bet half of the delinquents would have -been committed to the 27 in- stitutions at the court's disposal. “What's the use,”’ asks a cop, “of dragging a kid into children’s | court? You know the judge is only going to give him a slap on the) wrist and let him go. It burns me the way those judges mollycoddle | these young hoods."’ “What can we do””’ answers a. judge, ‘‘We can't lock up half the kids we'd like. There's no place to send them.” j The heart of the matter is a dif- | ference of opinion about what the | court should do. Theory-trained so- | erat werkers feel Ht should wean - delinquents from crime careers and nurse them back to becoming of some use to society, Cops feel it ought to punish children who | ‘are 14 and already repeat offend: | is | ers. The court's judges are some- where in between—some feel the delinquents should be patted on the back and asked to go- straight Court can be sure of at present | is that he is going to get more lec- | ture than effective discipline. This | * Salesmen does not dissuade tough teen-agers | from such peccadillos as house- } breaking and it does not persuade | polic e that there is much good in j arresting them a has committed an assault or an- other serious offense ed ment . | ishment = . = others feel they ought to be effec- ( 2 tively punished and made to go ; Airman and WAF Children § Court|"st =, ux seme acess 7 u one n a Capone carted a Children’s | * Announcers : was a legal holiday almost} in New York | Told of the cops’ criticism, pre-|I gong jetter and photo, give plans. (Editor's Note—There are many fac- | Siding Justice John Warren Hill, ex erences 7 ; ., 9 tors im. the slarming rise of juvenile } ft held d the b f : Airman Roland Van Camp, 24, delinquency. In New York, with eight | OO has held down the job for salary requtremen of Wood River, Ill, a military | millton population, one of the greatest | 20 years, says, “What they (the | les . ; : , . : is overcrowded courts and corrective ae jal. No phone calls please. policeman, is stationed at Warren | facilities Police amy judges are too len police) want is that a child who Interviews later. be remand- The cop looks at it as punish Address Replies to: MR. O. W. MYERS “We dont use remand as pun- Gerity Broadcasting Co. We use it only when it 98 indicated for the purpose of! 2982 Trest Rd. and attitude INSECT od REPELLENT STICK } | BITES } $100 recarun 39° 993 Mt. Clemens MUNTZ TV SERVICE Oakland County’s Only Factory Authorized Parts and Service for Muntz TV Servicing All Makes C&V TV. FE 4-1515 Pontiec “Specializing in wall washing and wallpaper cleaning. BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS FE 2-1631 ALL WORK GUARANTEED Other Bonds and Other Assets Deposits : Demand Time Lee U.S. Corerument] Reserve for Loan ~~ Other Liabilities eee ee wee Surplus United 8 forkgoing Irving B. Babcock President, Dearborn Motors Credit Corp. Louis H. Cole L. H. Cole Ot] Company W. Russell Eames Eames & Brown Community National Bank of PONTIAC Pontiac, Michigan STATEMENT OF CONDITION as of the close of business June 30, 1954 TOTAL RESOURCES LIABILI oe eee we woe Undivided Profits TOTAL LIABILITIES —..:.:-.--.:. _ State, County and Municipal Bonds ....... 7 12,653,851.42 Securities of the United States Government ... 32,273,609.69 44,927,461.11 _ 12,437,320.83 Securities ...... cece cece sees 109,903.78 Stock in Federal Reserve Bank ............ Loans and Discounts .... Real Estate Mortgages .,. Accrued Income Receivable Prepaid Expenses Bank Premises, Land and Buildings ...... Furniture and Equipment Real Estate Owned Other Than Bank Presiees eee ewr ee eee e reo ne ee ee eee ee een ne TOTAL DEPOSITS . wa eteeeeses Accrued Income Unearned . Reserve for Interest, Taxes, Etc. Reserve for Dividends Payable 7/1 /54 Reserve for Contingencies peor eeer eer ere reese oss so 8 Contingencies Capital Stock, Common Sooo ceeeeeeecees ee eee eee eee eeee tates Government Securities in’ the statement are pledged to secure Where Thousands Save Millions! . MEMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Rebert R. Eldred Senior Vice-President, Community National Bank of Pontiac Harold A. Fitzgerald Publisher, The Pontiac Press RESOURCES \ Cash on Hand and Due from Other Banks 105,000.00 9,500,512.83 8,896,911.29 18,397,424.12 335,451.14 57,340.96 Lae 818,584.11 85,234.59 68,000.00 971,818.70 oe 30,144.35 wae 77,3 TIES = 40,829,811.02 ee 29,715,104.73 “as 1,732,727.15 - 72,277,642.90 ae 596,786.67 oe - 290,759.15 cas 105,000.00 v3 107,003.73 san 241,699.36 348,703.09 15,000.00 5 1,500,000.00 2,000,000.00 237,973.18 3,737,973.18 eee ‘ . amount of $2,966,00000 Par Value, in the Federal and State Government. Deposits. Alfred C. Girard President and Chairman Harold E. Howlett Attorhey, of the Board, Communtty i —~pe Hartman & National Bank of Pont! Pa : o_o Howard W. Huttentocner , H. W. Huttenlocher Alfred R. Glancy Jr. Agency President, Harry M. Pryale A. R. Glancy, Ine. " Baldwin Rubber Co. a wing a nag YR tig i Wii ae» etna bint ee as: NOr EL. RECEIVE 25 Lbs. NV LTTTUCLUA TNA CUER LUCA CUUA ULC of SOAPTHETIC A 20 FOOD souPOn = c FOR 1‘ WITH THE — FOR ONLY T PURCHASE of ONE = = of aa FREEZERS = All UUUUUULTUUULULLTLUATUUL ELUTE NS. ae ~ . } i : e BEAUTIFUL — Paul Rose, 2 a, With the Pu rchase will probably give the French girls ’ 5 e of This Washer! plenty to yell about He was chosen the “Most Beautiful Athlete = in Paris.” The 5 foot 10 tall muscle- | man holds the winner's cup give ny to him after the contest. NATO Navies Set for Games t | e Ships, Aircraft to Join'} |: INCLUDES in Major Defense Test 25 LBS OF July 16-25 , WASHINGTON W—The Defense SOAPTHETIC Department announced today. a major maritime exercise will be a OT Includes Normal Installation ceca by the North Atlantic | ff ‘ 2 Jd WITH EXCLUSIVE SUDS SAVER d $10 DOWN 7 freaty Organization's Channel : Command July 16 25, \ This Kenmore automatic washes, rinses and spin dries your | Ships and aircraft of the NATO forces will be provided by Belgium France, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. They will include about 20 destroyers, escort vessels clothes in minutes instead of hours! Saves you time and work! | AND, for just Ic you receive a full 25-lb. can of Soapthetic! Includes normal installation. Appliance Dept.—Sears Main Floor and patrol craft and 45 minesweep- | ers, as well as some 30 naval ves- | = sels and auxiliaries making up | convoys, There will also be mer chant ships in the convoys | - The “attacking” forces will in TODAY clude submarines from the Neth SAVE $20 ; . ppd THIS erlands and the United Kingdom, . HAIR for Ic fast patrol boats of the Norwegian, | ctric United Kingdom and United States | SEARS Regular 179.95 Ele WITH the navies, and aircraft of the United PURCHASE of Kingdom and Allied air forces in EASY PAYMENT ORE the IRONER central Europe PLAN The convoys will be de dered | from ‘‘attack” by aircraft of the Plus Reg. 12.95 CHAIR United Kingdom Coastal Command . operating in conjunction with. the 95 surface escort. Surface and air | $5 DOWN . B th forces will work in close conjunc- | 0 delivers any major - Receive $20 Food Coupon for 1c with the Purchase of Coldspot 14.7 Cu. Ft. tion throughout the exercise, the | ; appliance priced en Sears set | 2 = for omsyectey es HOME FREEZER The defense of the convoys t Easy Payme _ against air attack will be provided | $10 DOWN Save work! Save $20 during = av by th ir defenses of Bel 4 j me! ve sina peilipes he tial delivers any major ; save a only! Kenmore lroner cuts eed Reg. 339.95 9 Dede _ “Gpplience priced, this sale only, Sener you sit in reloxe INCLUDES 6 Kingdom. ' over $200. ing time by 3 h biggest fort... lets you breeze throug i $20 FOOD ? , — coer ease and professional results! COUPON ‘i . d/ ONLY $10 DOWN ON SEARS EASY TERMS! | ~ ° th : - | Choir is posture designed to prevent back- | ache! Come in—save now! 4 —\\ This big, family-size beauty holds over 514 pounds of food... it quick-freezes and stores! Has Super- WA ‘ ny RS 4 ‘ «Wall construction, automatic lid light and many more FRLTALA Cwesvh\y ji featurest Including a $20 food coupon! Save! ‘40 F setesi HH Hf Hy | or Sessssssscssssessssssesssss : Your Old Washer eer SEAT | Regardless of Make \ be “< e : . : or Condition 9.4 CU. FT. MODEL with THERMO DEFROST | i > FORMERLY 95 | 299.95 v¥ YOU SAVE $50 v¥ $10 DOWN at SEARS Just push the button—the hard work of defrosting is done automatically! Big 9.4 cubic foot Coldspot features a giant 40 pound capacity freezer chest, full width Handibin, bonus storage space in door and many other outstanding features! See it now—save $50! ies Appliance Dept.—Main Floor . 4 \ y> 4 | | \ yi’ ee = | ak ~ , 0 toe ) S ; y N i , 7 +e > my, | ee " DE. X 1, ER SAVE *50! SAVE $50! Holds Up to 700-Lbs. of Food! Coldspot 20 Cu. Ft. _, WASHERS Brkt} | 11.3 Cubic Foot 9.4 Cubic Foot Food os ones as x» | {oe || COLDSPOT | COLDSPOT | neg. 43955 With $20 2QEBQP> | feos couren 439° s10 Down ¥ Formerly 339.95 LOWEST | | ed | ! TERMS cw 7 | age in 95 «TEST WASH WITHA eee. | ix 279 _ DEXTER EL 9 sto down at Seon Eat better for less ... with the store that never closes. EASY TERMS v $10 Down at Sears Beautiful porcelain enameled color tone interior has ? : 4} ’ . . . . Low as $i 25 a Week € A giant cavern of cold! Here Here are full-width Handi- 9 food sae Super-wall construction prevents : : is autoffiatic defrost, full- Bin, crisper, Servi-tray, new sweating. Price includes $20 food coupon! Save now! , 4 Ne ——— —— ~ width fruit and vegetable bin, ' eae rots eal le eo ro —s lide-ou ] t, Servi- and many other “extra” fea- 7 ; }: RO S Shelves! See taavel vom tures at $50 savings! Appliance Dept.—Sears Main Floor sg tr Salisfaclion puuaandeed ov your money back . Th 134 W, Saginaw St Phone FE 5-17