‘ Hale Boggs (D-La) as party The Weather Tuesday: Cloudy Details page two Be Se i, eh, Jes Sn we a. Cy a, “Sey YS eh, “ie am “ a -— 5 , : : ° , THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition bith YEAR Té xkkkex ASSOCIATED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 7c UNITED PRESS NEWS SERVICE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953—32 PAGES | Act Interpreted as Bid fo Keep South Pacified Stevenson, Truman on Hand as Party Meets in Chicago CHICAGO (AP )—The Democratic conference killed today a proposal for a 1954 party convention which had been bitterly op- posed by most of its south- ern members. Rep..Rayburn of Texas, the House minorify leader, announcec that a confer- ence committee unani- mously had approved a resolution opposing the: mid-term convention pro- posal and advocating con- tinued regional conferences before next year’s congres- Sional elections. The committee action came on a motion of Rep. members worked in a Series of discussion panels with former Gov. Adlai E. Ste- venson of Illinois flitting from meeting to meeting. Stevenson, the 1952 presidential nominee, quipped at a breakfast of state chairmen that he may not be a good politician but he is an obedient one. A He was demonstrating his obedi- ence by eating breakfast with three different party groups and sched- uling appearances at a series of luncheons, he said. Former President Turman be- gan a day of party conferences after a brisk early morning walk through Chicago's downtown dis: trict. The action disapproving the pro- posal for a 1954 party convention was interpreted widely as a move by leaders to avoid dissension with- in the ranks over.such issues as states rights and civil right which have brought open breaks in the party in the past. Sen. McClellan (D-Ark) said he regarded the decision as a ‘‘vic- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Weekend Toll Totals Sixteen Traffic, Freak Mishaps Claim Victims Across Michigan By The Associated Press A 4d year-old Bay City man, Louis Griffin, was killed and seven persons injured last night in. Bay City when a carload of teenagers smashed into the elderly man’s auto. It brought Michigan's week- end death toll in traffic accidents to 16. Gordon Perkins, 20, of William- | ston was fatally injured.in a freak aceident Saturday morning. He was sharpening a long-bladed knife on an electric grindstone when the | wheel shattered and drove the blade through his skull. The traffic victims included First Lt, Bernard Larkin, 24, of Wyandotte, who lost his lif early Sunday when his car’rammed a steel utility pole near his home. Andrew Fraser Jr., 23, of Grosse Pointe, died Saturday at Saratoga Hospital, Detroit, after a backing Greyhound bus hit him and crushed his chest. Angeline Crews, 41, of Grand Rapids, was killed Sunday morning when a car in which she was a (Continued on Page 8, Col. 6) Let the Winds Blow! When the cold winds blow next winter there’s one Want Ad reader who will be nice and warm because he bought a@ good gas heater through the Want Ads. Remember if you have anything to sell there are hundreds of pros- pective buyers reading the Want Ads every day. AUTOMATIC ~-JANITROL GAS furnace. Almost new. Will heat @ or 7 room house. PE 3-7223.* To Place Your Want Ad Just Dial FE 2-8181 » Ask for the Crowning ‘Tops’ in Beauty . « oe - fie si en . , United Press Photo MISS AMERICA — Evelyn Margaret Ay (Miss Pennsylvania) is crowned Miss America of 1954 at Atlantic City by last year's winner, Neva Jane Langley. Slightly Warmer Tuesday Mercury Dips Down to 39 tor New Low on Weekend Shivering Pontiac donned topcoats today after the mercury which set heat records slightly over a week ago sank to a new all-time low for Sunday and equaled an- other today. . The thermometer plunged to 39 degrees Sunday morn- ing—two degrees-under the all-time low for Sept. 13 recorded in 1902. > The, same_ temperature cles sess (5 Postal Branches Extend Hours in 1873. But a check with Oakland County Agricultural Extension Service Windows Open Longer at Huron Gardens and Perry Offices turned up no reports of frost dam- age to crops anywhere in the vi- cinity. And U.S. Weather Bureau pre- dicted that slightly warmer tem- peratures tonight and Tuesday might help thaw Pontiac residents chilled by the damp, windy week- end. Low tonight will be between 44 and 48 degrees, the official Hours at the Huron Gardens branch office and Pontiac Postal Station No. 1 at 526 N. Perry St., have been extended to provide forecast said, with a high Tues- | additional service, acting Post- day of 66 to 70. Light showers | master Leslie H. Dean announced are forecast for Tuesday after- | togay noon and evening. The mercury rose to 75 degrees Saturday before blustery winds dropped it to a low of 53° Satur- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Reds Accuse Polish Bishop, Priests, Nun WARSAW, Poland (® — Roman Catholic bishop of ‘Kielce, Czestaw Kaczmarek, three other Roman Catholic churchmen and a_ nun were scheduled to be tried today by the Warsaw Regional Military Court on charges of spying for ‘American imperialists’’ and the Vatican. An official announcement said the bishop was accused of or- ganizing an espionage and di- vertionist center in Kielce province, central Poland, of directing anti- state activities, of sabotaging eco- nomic plans of the Communist government, conspiring to bring capitalism back to Poland and carrying on black market activ- ities. . He. also was accused of cooper- | ating with the German occupation forces during World War II. Standing trial with him were the Rev. Jan Danilewicz, former treasurer of the-Kielce Curia; the Rev. Josef Dabrowski, the bishop's former chaplain; the Rev. Kwladyslaw Widlak, a former of- ficial of the Kielce Seminary, and Sister Waleria Niklewska. New hours at Station 1 are 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. Mondays through Thursdays; 10_,a. m. to 7:30 p. m. on Fridays and 10 a. m. to 4 |p. m. on Saturdays. Former hours were 10 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. on weekdays and 10 a. m. to noon on Saturdays. At Huron Gardens, new hours will be 8 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Mondays through Fridays. Satur- day hours will be 8 a. m. to noon. Hours at the Huron Gardens branch formerly were 8 aim. to 5 p. m., and 8 to noon on Satur- days Service has also been increased with the general delivery window at the main post office remaining open to 5 p. m. on Saturday. For- merly it closed at noon. Pontiac Press to Carry Leahy’s Football Series Frank Leahy, Notre Dame football coach and one of the country’s keenest gridiron ob- server's, will again write a twice-a-week column for the Pon- tiac Press this year. His column will appear on the sports pages each Monday and Friday throughout the football season. Leahy will discuss the top games of each week, with special emphasis on contests of national interest. First article of the series ap- pears on page 24 today. Refreshments and doer prises. Our annual open house, Tuesday, Wednes- day and Thursday, September 15, 16, and 17. Open evenings 7 until 8. Thomas Annual epen house Tuesday, Wednes- day and Thursday, September 15, 16, aand 17. Refreshments and door prises. ' Went Ad Department Open evenings 7 until 8. Thomas Econ- omy Furniture Co. 361 8. Saginaw Street. Economy Furniture Co., 361 8S. Saginaw Street. ; \ ¢ -shore to the stranded ship car- Three Boys, 14, Rescue Selves at Lake Superior Storm Rips Up Lake, Grounding _ Freighter; | Dredge Drifts Off . MARQUETTE (AP) —Three weary and wet boy campers waded ashore from Presque Island today after | being marooned for two. chilly nights during a Lake Superior storm. Their safe arrival put a happy ending to a fierce weekend storm that periled seamen and led to heroic rescues. The storm-trapped trio rescued themselves as boats were being readied to’ re- move them from the tiny island. Huddled in blankets, the 14-year- old boys were taken home—safe from the big blow that trapped nine Great Lakes sailors on a, dredge and stranded 32 others on a beached freighter over the week- | end. All the sailors were taken to Safety. The nine on the dredge Howard M. Jr. were taken aboard the Coast Guard cutter Mackinaw early Sunday 12 miles off Au Sable Point west of Whitefish Bay. They had been adrift in cold and stormy weather nearly 24 hours after the dredge broke away from its tug, the George Purvis, off Caribou Island. Six men on the dredge were pulled aboard the tug just before the break. Late Saturday the Coast Guard rescued 32 crewmen from the 530 foot ore freighter Maryland, beach- ed in shallow water: just 50 yards from shore nine miles east of here. Eleven of the sailors were picked up by a Coast Guard heli- copter from Traverse City, and a breeches buoy line shot from ried the others to safety. They were staying at Marquette awaitin® further orders. The stranded youngsters, Jack Johnson, David Lompre and Harry Kelly, all of Marquette, had wad- ed through hip-deep water to begin a camping trip: early Saturday be- fore the storm hit. After they reached the island just 800 feet from the mainland, a 50-mile-an-hour wind whipped up towering waves. It was impossible to wade back through the churning water, and the strip was too shallow for a power boat to attempt a rescue, Canvas - wrapped food parcels were dropped to the stranded youths yesterday from a private plane operated by Paul Miller, Marquette area construction con- tractor, State Constitution Day Set LANSING (UP) — Thursday will be ‘‘Constitution Day”’ in Michigan, a proclamation signed by Gov. G. Mennen Williams said today. "Heads Hotel Men ~ Dems Veto 1954 Convention U.N. Awaiting New Wrangle on Peace Talks U. S. Opposes Commie China’s Insistence on Korean Round-Table UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) — Tension built up again in the United Nations today as explosive new de- bate became a certainty in the wake of Communist China’s demands for a “round-table” Korean peace conference. spokesman for the United States at once em- | phatically rejected the| | H. V. HELDENBRAND New president of the Michigan A Hotel Association is Howard V. Heldenbrand, manager of Hotel | Waldron in Pontiac, He was ele- vated from first vice president to | Peiping proposals, made in | president at the association's week-|a long telegram yesterday end convention in Muskegon. from Chinese Premier-For- | { Other officers named were Ralph | _. — : sl sa ‘ce eee {eign Minister Chou En-lai Lorenz of Plymouth, first vice} | president; Harry E. Paulson, De- to U. N. Secretary Gen. Dag troit, second vice president, and | Hammarskjold. | David M. Kennedy of Iron Moun- | With the U.N. General Assembly | tain, treasurer : : : _... |opening tomorrow, delegates pre- | Paul gee tan Detroit retiring | pared for another oratorical battle president, will become chairman | over Chou's demands that Russia, of the executive board. |India, Burma, Pakistan and Indo- ;nesia be invited to the peace con- Police to Ask Warrants for Pair in Bar Slaying Held in Slaying Two | ocal Men Tell Their Part ‘in Chaney Death Pontiac Officers Holding Couple in Aug. 9 Early Morning Fatality Police said today two Pontiac men have admitted taking part in an Aug. 9 gunbattle which resulted in B\-the fatal shooting of part- time bartender Silas Cha- ney, 45, of 105 Center St. i. | Pontiac Detectives John CHARLES A. CUNNINGHAM Williams and John DePauw Held in connection with the slay- Said they will ask for a ing of Silas Chaney in the holdup murder warrant against of a bar Aug. 9, Charles A. Cun- Charles A. Cunningham, 22, ningham is expected to be formally charged with the crime later today. Of 265 Rockwell St. and an- Says ‘Req’ Gls vin Hardiman, 21, of 423 Now in Kaesong Highland A-e. Chaney was killed when a PWs Reported Waiting Transfer to Custody of masked gunman ambushed him and three other persons at 3 a. m. as they left the El Chico Bar, 374 Franklin Rd., after closing hours. As Chaney; his wife, Anna Mae Chaney; bar owner Mrs. Timotea Eskridge; and another bartender, Car Insurance cian Rates May Dip New Plan Would Mean Saving for About Half. of State’s Drivers (From AP & UP Dispatches) LANSING—About half of Michi- | gan’s motorists will pay less for} insurance on their cars as a re- sult of a new plan for classifying private automobiles, the State De- partment of Insurance said today. Insurance Commissioner Joseph | Navarre said the plan, which adds four new classifications, will be | used by all members of the Na- tional Bureau of Casualty Under- writers. Navarre said the new plan will mean reduced rates for motorists in low risk groups and an in- crease in rates for persons in the high risk group. Rates for persons in medium risk groups will remain un- changed, he: said. Under the previous system, a private car was classified accord- ing to the age of the operator and the use of the car. Under the new plan, classes of use are further subdivideec according to the de- gree of hazard resulting from busi- ness use or operation by persons under 25 years. The bureau said that at least 0 per cent of owners of private cars insured by its companies will save on‘insurance costs under | the new plan. } | Retired GMC Official Succumbs in Detroit DETROIT WW — Bayard D. | Kunkle, a director and retired vice president of General Motors Corp., died in a hospital here today after a brief illness. Born in Steelton, Pa., Oct. 30, 1882, Kunkle was graduated from Pennsylvania State College with | an electrical engineer degree in| 1908, and joined GM in 1925. Red China and North Korea be in- vited to send representatives to the U.N. Assembly ‘‘to discuss the question of enlarging the member- | ship of the political conference.” U. S. Asst. Secretary of State Robert Murphy voiced the American rejection, telling the American Association for the United Nations in a speech in New York that the American plan for a two-sided conference must be carried out. The As- sembly approved this plan 43-5 last month, Murphy said the U. S. govern- | ment “sees no reason whatever’’ for new Assembly debate on the conference makeup, or for inviting (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) To Question O'Brian in Gillespie Slaying In Donald V. O'Brian, 27, of 4 Lib- erty St., will face further ques- tioning by two Detroit detectives today in connection with the Jan. 2 rape-slaying of JoAnn Gillespie. He has denied connection with this crime to Oakland County Prose- cutor Fred C. Ziem. O'Brian, being held in Oakland County Jail on a first degree mur- der charge in the death of Mrs. Hallie O.-Perkins,. 55, will be ques- tioned by Sgt. Glenn Coller and De- tective Angus Mcfntyre. The 27-year-old gardener is to be examined in Pontiac Municipal Court Tuesday on Mrs. Perkins’ death. He was captured Wednesday when James Brown, 18, of 37 Vine- wood Ave. and Jack Seebald, 48, of 27 Oriole Rd. rushed to the aid of a woman being molested by O'Brian. Authorities said O'Brian has ad- mitted the fatal attack on Mrs. Perkins and. five other sex at- tacks, Explosion Kills 12 ~ LISBON ( — Twelve persons, including women and children, were killed today in an explosion at a fireworks factory in Villa Rea, a town in northern Portugal about 50 miles northeast of Porto lin Tras os Montes Province. Indians in Neutral Zone PANMUNJOM, Korea (UP) — An unofficial Communist spokes- man said today that some Ameri- |can prisoners who refuse to go | home are now in nearby Kaesong | awaiting transfer to the custody of |Indian troops in the neutral zone. He reported that others who had said they would remain with the | Communists already have been | repatriated. He said fellow soldiers | induced them to change their | minds and as the result they were among the prisoners freed in ‘‘op- | |eration big switch.’’ ) The spokesman was Wilfred | Burchett, Australian born corre- | spondent for the Paris Commu- nist newspaper L’Humanite. Burchett said he could not say how many Americans still refuse repatriation. It has been estimated that the number is between 20 and 30, out of a total of 300 to 400 Al- lied prisoners still in Red hands who refuse to return home. Burchett had said earlier today | that some of these United: Nations | prisoners had decided to go home j after all. Later he explained that dur- ing the big exchange of prison- ers some Americans got as far as nearby Kawsong, the Red repatriation center, and then wavered and decided to stay with the Communists. Commies Hint Indochina Truce Can Be Reached TOKYO (® — The Communist Peiping Radio hinted broadly to- day that a_ negotiated truce is possible in the long and bloody Indochina war. The demand for peace from peo- ple throughout the world ‘‘forced the American aggressors to stop the war in Korea,”’ the broadcast declared. ‘‘Their power can force the imperialists to abandon their arms in Vietnam.” The Chinese language broadcast heard here declared ‘‘the Vietnam people’s just struggle to defend | peace and win independence will ! be wholeheartedly supported by all Harold Mack of 316 Granet, Hazel Park, left the bar, the gunman brandished a gun and said, ‘‘This is a holdup.” Mack and the gunman ex- changed shots. During the gun- battle, Chaney was slain. DePauw and State Police Detec- tive Charles Leaf said Hardiman reported going to Cunningham's house where they obtained a .32 caliber automatic and a .38 re- volver. The officers quoted Cunningham as saying both he and Hardiman later went to the bar and hid be- hind the building until the four persons came out. “T was using the .32 automatic and was standing about 15 to 30 feet behind Babe (Hardiman) cov- ering him. Then I heard the shoot- ing.’’ Ballistics tests showed Chaney was killed with a .32, said DePauw. Cunningham admitted he fired his .32 twice as Chaney started running toward a waiting car, of- ficers said. “TI saw a man run from around the building when I shot,”’ said Cunningham. “I knew a man had (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Pedestrian Is Killed on Dixie Highway Lester Prue, a 55-year-old Her- mansville man, was killed Satur- day night when he walked into moving traffic at U. S. 10 and Silver Circle Dr., Oakland sher- iff's deputies said today. Mrs. Evelyn L. Parks, 44, of 8049 Haviland St., told deputies she was Unable to avoid Prue when he stepped between two moving cars in front of her car. Chief Assistant Oakland Coun- ty Prosecutor George F. Taylor, who took Mrs. Parks’ statement, released her after three witness- es verified her account. Prue was living at 6990 Ander- sonville Rd., Clarkston, while help- ing the Clare Bedding Manufactur- ing Co., of 4855 White Lake Rd., move its plant to Hermansville. He is survived by a wife and six grown children in: Hermans- | the peace-loving peoples of Asia.”’ ville. William N. O (Editor's Note: Associated Press Cor- respondent William N. Oatis, rested and restored to health after two years in a Communist prison cell in Czechoslo- rakia, has written the story of his ordeal.) By WILLIAM N. OATIS The first sign that I was in trouble came in August of 1950, two months after I went to Prague, Czechoslovakia, as a foreign cor- respondent. It happened at the world con- gress of the International Union of Students, held in a big trade exposition hall on the outskirts of Prague. The IUS had its secretariat in Prague and included member or- | ganizations of college students in 68 countries. The secretariat and most of the .member organiza- tions were Communist dominated, but some of the latter, notably in England, Scotland and Denmark, were not. My newsgathering routine con- sisted mostly of sitting in the of- fice and writing stories I selected from the official Czechoslovak News Agency and local news papers and radio, and occasion- atis, Foreign Correspondent, Tells Story ally going out and getting what I could from diplomats. The student congress gave me WILLIAM N. OATIS eee _ a chance to get something first hand—to cover a story with my own eyes and ears. The convention produced no world-shaking news. But I re- ported how delegates demonstrated for Soviet Prime Minister Stalin, while some Western delegations sat silent, and how an American speaker proclaimed, ‘‘In America, we will shout, ‘Hands off Korea!’ ”’ I later went down on the con- vention floor to talk to that speak- er and some other delegates seated i. there. The hall was well staffed with ushers, but none stopped me. I was in my office the next morning when a man telephoned asking if I knew where he coul find Russell Jones, the United Press chief in Prague. I said I could not, and inquired who was calling. The man said, “This is Jan.” I had heard about him. Jan Stransky had worked for the UP ‘ until shortly before I arrived in Prague. Then he had been picked Kn » up and sent} to a labor camp on the grounds he had planned to leave the country illegally. A few minutes after he had called, he walked into the office, a slight, boyish fellow with a live- ly manner, wearing khaki work clothes and-brown from the sun. He had a pass to spend Sunday in a town near the camp, and he had taken a chance and come by bus to Prague. I gathered that he expected to be freed before Christmas and wanted to talk to Jones about getting his job back. In Today's Press. Birmingham Comics Py Coumty News.it ,.cccwscsscccses 8, 9 David Lawrence Dr. Fo OU ne ee 27, 28, 29, 30, 31 Women's Pages......... 18, 19, 20, 21 Want Ads of His Arrest Since Jones could not be found, Stransky wrote a note for me to deliver next time I saw him. Stransky sat down and typed out something on some paper I gave him—a sheet of yellow foolscap. Without reading it, I put it in my pocket. When I met Jones at the stu- dent congress and gave him the note he grimly tore it. up and dropped it, piece by piece, on the floor. A little later I showed my pass to get into the convention hall. The usher grabbed it and rushed off. After some delay, a young man in glasses appeared. He was trembling with anger. He waved my pass, torn in two, and said it had been canceled. “You were not behaving as a journalist only and were work- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) You are invited te attend eur enneal open house, Tuesday, Wednesday and aie wh —— 18, 16, and 17. reshments an oor prizes. Open evenings 7 until 9. Thomas Economy Purniture Co., 361 6. Saginaw Street, .——_ TWO i ies in, a, a | fa Se Se: Fy, H earing on Vacating Alley, Rezoning Lot to Highlight Meeting in Birmingham From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM — Hearings on vacating an alley and reclassify- ing a lot west of Woodward be- tween Fourteen Mile and Bird will highlight tonight's City Commis- Sion meeting. Birmingham National Bank has requested the change as it plans to erect a branch there. The Plan Board had previously recommend- ed the changes, rezoning the lot from single family residence to parking district classification. In a meeting with the Plan Board, residents adjacent to the property had suggested minor revisions in the site plan, and a new one will be presented by the architect tonight. Another hearjng is scheduled on rezoning a lot on the same prop- erty from single family residence to business A. Standard Oil Com- Additional Birmingham a.nd Bloomfield Hills news on page 19. pany, which also plans to build there, has offered to exchange a portion of one of its lots for the city-owned. lot up for rezoning. The city has tentatively agreed to the exchange because. it will allow for. additional mght-of-way on Fourteen Mile when the* street is improved. The third hearing will be on rezoning from business A to single family residence, lots in' the Ruby “N” and Taliaferro Estates subdivisions. City of Royal Oak will submit its resolution asking the county to purchase and install rain gauges throughout Oakland County, and City Manager Donald C. Egbert will recommend the removal of will join with other service clubs here, participating in the annual men’s service clubs golf tourna- ment, Exchange Club is to be this year’s host. Golfers should report at 1 p.m. at Sunnybrook Golf Club, Seventeen Mile road between Mound and VanDyke. Rotary Club now holds the tro- phy which will go to the club whose four-man team holds the low score. A_ steak dinner will a * te gm Rte pet 6 = + . ee a 8 6 ¢ , New Korean Debate Looms Before U. N. (Continued From Page One) |the Red Chinese to the Assembly. "Bur generally felt question would break into the open delegates {soon after the body elects its olI- ficers and organizes for what is ;supposed to. be a_ three-month session. Qualified quarters said the Uni- ted States, father than risk having no peace conference at all, would withdraw its opposition to renewed debate. the | THE Chou's telegram said his gov- ernment ‘cannot: be satisfied” with the U.N. plan for a_two- sided conference and “expresses deep regret at it” be served at 7 p.m. * * * Kiwanis Club will have its first} meeting back at the Community | House at 6:30 tomorrow night. Following dinner, member Bruce 7 McDonald will show movies in Chou proposed South America and Peru, where | 1. That the conference be attend- he has visited ; ed by alk nations of the two warring , STs or | Ssides—the 16 U.N. Allies, Red Towbridge Guilds of the First; China, and North and South Korea; Presbyterian Church have sched-| 4nd by the five “neutrals.” uled 1 p.m. meetings for tomorrow.| 2. That the conference take the Susan Towbridge Guild will meet| form of a round-table but that de- at the home of Mrs, H. L. Breiten-|!Sions must obtain the unanimous stein pf Westview road, and the | 4&reement of both belligerent sides Elizabeth Towbridge Guild will |!" Korea. ; meet with Mrs. George Limp, of 3. That the conference settle Ko- Covington road. |rea’s future and then go on to * 8 other Far Eastern questions. The Coffee hours will replace the | United States has consistently usual monthly meetings of Quarton! Maintained that a Korean settle- School PTA until November, when | ™nt must be followed by a.general |an addition to the building will | Far East conference with a wider be completed. One of the topics | membership. under discussion will be an in-| ._* * novation of the new report card:| 4. That as soon as the composi- with a space for parents to check | Hon of the conference is settled if they would like a conference! ‘trough negotiation, the two bellig- Pentiac Press Pheto STEP RIGHT UP—Mrs. J. Hardesty Loud, Mrs. Garvin Bawdin, Jr., and Mrs. Richard C. VanDusen, rigged in county fair barkers’ costumes, are shown above distributing ‘‘flyers’’ for the League of Women Voters County Government Fair. The fair will be held from 10 a. m.-3:30 p. m. Saturday at Birmingham High School, Lincoln and Cranbrook. with their child's teacher. jerent sides in Korea consult and make arrangements for the place Afternoon kindergarten mothers and ume of the conference. will meet at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow, Room 101 meeting at the Pleasant St. home of Mrs. Bruce Roach, and Room 120 mothers with Mrs. J. P. Murphy, on Brookwood. * * * L. a group of bushes at Bonnie Brier ! south of Harmon. Birmingham will be notified’that it, along with Bloomfield Hills and Southfield and Bloomfield Town- ships are expected to make a report to the Water. Resources Commission by Nov. 1], on a solu- tion of pollution abatement of the Rouge’ River. Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley | will, request a leave of absence for Patrolman Philip J. Walker, so that he may take a police admini- | stration course at Michigan State | College. ” * * Sister Kenny Anniversary Club} members have announced that an open house will be held frem 2-9 p.m. tomorrow at the new Sister Kenny Polio Center opening in Farmington, The unit is being transferred from .the Oakland County Contagious Hospital im Pon- tiac. * * * Circles of the Women's Fel- lowship of the Congregational Church will hold meetings tomor- row, Circles I and II will meet at 12:30 p.m., Circle I at. the home of Mrs. Norman Strong. of Oakland avenue, and Circle II at the Beach road home of Mrs. Hlarold Barnes. Mrs. Robert Service, of Arling- ton road, will have Circle II] mem- bers at her home at 8 p.m. and Circle IV will also meet at 8:00, at the home of Mrs. Phillip Bart- lett, on Lauderdale. * * * 4 Resuming their 6:30 p.m. din- ner meetings at the Community House for the firSt time since July, High Twelve Club Members are expected to turn out in full! force tonight. Guest speaker will be Horace Carpenter, Jr, vice- president and general manager of Northland Center, Inc., where the new J. L. Hudson Co. branch will be. His talk is expected to ex- plain how the center will enhance, rather than detract. from, Bir- mingham business. * * * Birmingham Toastmasters Club will start its fall activities with a 6:45 p.m. dinner tomorrow at the Community House. President Houston Jones said meetings will be held there on Sept. 22 and 29, before moving back to the YMCA. William Andrews has_ worked out a program of regular and ed- ucational speeches, and the basic training course in speech-craft is again offered for business. men interested in improving public address techniques. Anyone inter- ested may contact Jones or the YMCA. * * * Lions Club has canceled its} meeting this week and_ instead The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY¥Y—Consider- able cloudiness and slightly warmer te- night and Tuesday. Occasionat light showers Tuesday afternoon and evening. Low tonight 44 to 48, high Tuesday 66 te 70. t Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 1 mpn.; direction northeast. Sun, sets Monday at 6:44 pm. 2 Sun rises Tuesday at 6:12 a.m. Moon sets Monday at 9:29 pm. Moon rises Tuesday at 1:36 p.m. Dewntown Temperatures on Westchester. regarding Charter Night, which is pointed head of the civic com-! | mittee, to cooperate with other Spicer will handle publicity. Cra- Moms Club will install new of- ficers as it meets at 8:00 tonight at ‘the First Baptist Church, for} its first fall meeting. Mrs. Felix_| Mayo of Pontiac, who is state chaplain, will conduct the instal- lation ceremonies. Mrs. Howard Estes and Mrs. Charles W. Mintling have already .in Slaying at Bar (Continued From Page One) a gun, so IT began firing,’’ he told DePauw and Williams. After the gunbattle, Cunningham ran across South boulevard and “Hardiman ran across Franklin been appointed delegates to attend! the annual Moms Club convention Oct. 15-17 in Saginaw. Alternates are Mrs. Bruce D, Streib and Mrs. | Leo Flynn. * * * First grade mothers will hold 10 a.m. meetings as follows: Room 105 at the home of Mrs. Thomas Griffith, on Suffield, Room 106 at} the Pleasant St. residence of Mrs. | David Mott. and Room 107 at the | home of Mrs. Richard Mansfield, * * * The new men’s service organiza- tion, Civitan, will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Community House, ‘to coordinate its program slated for Sept. 29.at Devon Gab- les. Car] Ingraham has been ap- organizations in the citv, and Ed mer Wilson and Jack Deo are heading the membership commit- tee. Business men fishing to join| the club are asked to contact Hugh McGuckin, Dems Turn Down Convention in 1954 (Continued From Page One) tory for the party,’’ however, rath- er than a victory for its Dixie members. ‘The less unnecessary friction we have, the better it will be for the party,’’ he siad. “A mid-term convention would be sure to produce that friction.’’ The 1954 convention proposal was made by Paul Butler, In- diana national committeeman, who told the conference commit- tee that he believed such a meet- ing would focus national attention on the Democrats which other. wise might be denied to them in the course of next year’s con- gressional campaign. The controversial so-called ‘'‘loy- alty oath’ subject cropped up at a meeting of state chairmen, but it Was temporarily sidetracked. L, Marion Gressette, South Caro- lina state chairman, recommended that the state chairmen go on rec- ord in favor of repealing the pledge adopted at last year's national con- vention. The pledge required delegates to use every honorable means to get the convention's nominees on state tickets under the Democratic Party heading. Gressette offered the moton, but withdrew it when State chair- man James A. Ronan of Illinois said that he didn’t believe the meeting should take any action on it because ‘‘this is just an informal gathering."’ Ronan was referring to the meet- road toward a drugstore,” said Police. According to their’ formal state- ments to police, both men said that they later met at Rockwell and Motor streets. “Then I took Babe,’’ continued Cunningham, ‘“‘to my _ mother’s home and bandaged his wound.” Hardiman told DePauw and Wil- liams that he had been nursing a bullet wound over the left knee, received-in the gun fight. Cunningham said he threw the .32 automatic into the Clinton River near the Bagley street bridge, fol- lowing the shooting. The .38, he said, was sold to an unidentified man. Williams said the .38 later was found on two men picked up on an assault charge. DePauw and Wil- liams, assigned to the shooting, said they held the gun, believing then it might be connected with Chaney's death. DePauw said that two hats found at the scene were identified as belonging to Cunningham and Hardiman. . Cunningham insisted that he “didn’t shoot to hit anyone, only to scare them. I didn’t know any- one was killed until the next morn- ing.”’ j He told police during the ques- tioning, that Hardiman confronted the group which left the bar. Witnesses at the time, aroused by the shooting, told poljce they saw a man running with an ap- parent limp. Dr. I. C. Prevette, deputy cor- oner, said, after examining Har- diman Thursday, that the leg wound was inflicted about five weeks ago. Hardiman, who first denied any part in the shooting last week, was arrested in a poolroom after Williams received an anonymous telephone tip. DePauw, Leaf and Williams said they obtained Hardiman’s con- fession following eight hours of questioning. DePauw said that police would drag the Clinton River today for the .32 automatic. ing through the conference hall,"’ he said. | I thought at once of how I had gone onto the convention floor and questioned the American that had talked about Korea, and of how unhappy he had seemed to see me. His speech, reported by the of- | ficial Czechoslovak News Agency }and by at least two American agencies, had caused him some |trouble back home. And now, I supposed, the young Communists | sunnihe the congress were punish- |ing me for sending ,the story. | The congress ended and I turned to other things. In Septem- | ber, Bedrich Runge, a press offi- cer, called me to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Runge was a tall, gray-haired man with vague blue eyes in a beefy face. On my previous visits, | he had received me cordially. This ltime his manner was stiff and Man Drives Auto Into Detroit River BIRMINGHAM — Police today were dragging the Detroit River for the body of a man whose car rammed through a riverside iron fence at Civic Center Park last night. Detroit police said the car was registered in the name of Robert Janisse, 23, of 592 Frank, Bir- mingham. Just before ramming his car into the river, witnesses said the man shouted ‘I'm going to Canada.” They said he pushed away a life preserver thrown to him by an on- looker and disappedred about 50 feet from shore. Janisse’s wife, Geneva, said her husband had left with the family car and had threatened to take his life. ; Detroit Couple Treated ‘Following Auto Collision BIRMINGHAM — A Detroit couple was treated for leg inju- ries at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Saturday following a collision at Fourteen Mile and Woodward. Mrs. Lois M, Beckett, 27, of 14010 Graydale, Detroit, suffered a brok- en right ankle,: and her husband, Kenneth, 29, an injured leg. —_ _=- strates 3-D be shapely gal in a sweater. —— Nothing demon- tter than a PESO EEE SEE EDL EERE EEE SESE DERE OEE EE OO FOE 88 8108 PAM mE] Ing of state chairmen, OG, Mosicccese: 46 Lip) Mcsescess sressette replied that he felt it sce 6 ee *7| would have been a “‘fine thing if Sunday in Pontiac this group would say that there;/Reduces interior (As recorded acne) was not going to be that distrust e Highest Roel anipssy ste atereierereieiers Dees 3. of the South we've had.”’ temperatures up _ to 25°. M te ture.. .....s.ss00es -. 30! “My motion w iti Weather—Partly cloudy. | being. i sa:tragele poenn Ge A Reconditions, preserves and as ~~ Year Age in Pontiac ” | sette added. “I will* withdraw it}water proo fs roofing Lowest temperature.......s.cscs0s4. 66 | —Feluctantly—I was hopeful.” | raterig| Mean temperature... .....ceceeeeees 785 al. Weather—Showers 98 In 1939 Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in &1 Years Sunday's Temperature ¢ hit 56 3 39 im 1873 Alpena 6 Kansas City 87 65 Bismarck 84 48 Lansing 58 635 Brownsville 88 72 Los Angeles 82 58 Cadillac 55 26 Memphis 83 57 Cineinnati 67 ‘43 Miami 87 Ft. Worth 92 64 Minneapolis 65 49 Denver 38 62 , 80 50 66 40 Phoenix 103 (71 Duluth 4 42 Bt. Lou 17 64 Gd. Ra 59 36 Frisco ™ 61 Houghton 48 30 8S. 8S. Marie 49 32 Jacksonville 82 70 Washington 68 50 s c Boycotting Is Urged CAIRO, Egypt W=The ‘‘under- mining”’ of French interests in Tu- _nisia, Morocco and Algeria was |urged today by Al Misri, one of {the Arab World's largest news- papers. It urged ‘‘the slamming of all doors, in every Arab, Oriental and Moslem country, against French culture, trade and other interests.” Cutting Tool W. Pike Corner Cass Reflects Heat of ¢ ~~ the Sun /_ Reducing ““Under-Roof”’ Temperatures 8 & Supplies FE- 2-0108 Plenty of Off Street Parking William Oatis Tells Story TwotoFace Warrants of Arrest by Communists (Continued From Page One) — cold. And he was not alone. There was a third party on hand — a mousy little mustached man. Runge failed to offer the usual handshake. Instead, he wived me jlo a little table. He told ime I would not be reaccredited when my permission to work as a cor- ; respondent expired Sept. 30. “This is not a measure di- rected against The Associated Press,”’ he said. “It is a meas- ure directed against you per- sonally.’’ “You cannot work in this coun- try unless you respect our laws.”’ I asked him to be specific. “You know very well the rea- son,’ he said, and I answered, “But I don't know the reason." I wrote a letter to Runge, re- ; questing permission to stay till a replacement could get in. Finally it was decided I would not be re- | accredited but that I could stay vate person.”’ I still did not know why my re- accréditation was being refused, but I had a hunch this had to do with the young Communists that had banished me from the student congress, and with the story about the American who spoke on Korea. About that time, I had a talk with Vaclav Korinek, general manager of the Czechoslovak News Agency, and asked him if he could tell me what was be- hind my trouble. And he spoke of the same story. Maybe that story did have some- thing to do with it—the whole thing is not clear yet. But the story was not the only thing involved. There was something else. And the people who told me about that were the secret police. (To Be Continued) Copyright 1953 and work temporarily as a ‘‘pri-| Re, of aoe, fen, Se od Pontiac Deaths Mrs. Edith Bass ’ Mrs. Edith Bass, 54, of 208 Wil- lard St. died at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital at 8:10 p.m, Sunday. Born at Ishpeming Jan. 2. 1899. ; was the daughter of Mr. and, Mrs. August Peterson. She came to Pontiac 33 years ago from there and married’ Joseph Bass at La- peer in 1935. She is survived by her husband. Funeral will be Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. from Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Minnie Berryman Mrs. Minnie, Berryman, 75, of 233. S, Johnson Ave. died at the home of her son, Clarence Novess , at Lake Oakland Saturday at 6 p.m. | She had been ill a year and fol- lowed her husband, Walter, in death by six days. Daughter of Thomas and Eliza- beth Rendell Sherston, she was born Nov. 11, 1877 in Canada and came to Pontiac 53 years ago. For many years she was an employe at Chase's Store. Besides her son she is survived by a daughter, Mrs, Blanche Hurd of Gagetown; four sisters, Mrs, Ellen Hallett, Mrs. Sarah Lagdon and Mrs. Lena Dandison, aH of West Bloomfield Township, Mrs. Anna Hamlin of Lake Oak- land and a brother, Winford Sherston of Sylvan Lake. Also surviving are four grand- children and seven great-grand- children. Funeral will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the Farmer-Snover Funeral Home. The Rev, Walter Teeuwis- sen Jr. of United Presbyterian Church, Drayton Plains will offici- ate and burial will be in Oak/'! Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Minnie Warner After an illness of four days, Mrs. Minnie Warner, 68, of 806 Menominee Rd. died at her resi- dence at 2:30 a.m. Sunday. Born in Tuscola County March 5, 1895, she was the daughter of Albert and Matilda Roswell Pierce. She married Stanley A, Warner | there May 24, 1904 and came to! Pontiac 11 years ago from Cass City. Mrs. Warner, who was a mem-| ber of First Church of Christ, Scientist here, also was a member | of Kedron OES Chapter at Caro’ and Rebekah Lodge at Cass City. Besides her husband she is sur- vived by three daughters, Mrs. Clarence Walsh of Utica, Mrs. | M. D. Orr of New York City and | Mrs, Waunetta Remington of Grand | Blanc; a son, Albert of Royal! Oak: two sisters, Mrs. Dora Way and Mrs. Maud Howk of can Also surviving are four grand- children and one great-grandchild. Funeral will be Tuesday at 11 a.m. from Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Vera Benham, reader at the local church, ;will officiate, | and burial will be in Sunset Hills Cemetery in Flint. First Snow Blankets New Hampshire Peak MOUNT WASHINGTON, N. H.! (UP) — The mile-high summit of | Mount Washington was frosted to- | day with the first snow of the sea-’ son. The temperature was 24 de- grees. x Cannon Mountain” also reported | a trace of snow. The flurries were confined to New England's high peaks. | | | slide easily over the floor. move because it sits on the floor spring. 144 OAKLAND AVE. MOVEABLE FRAME PROVIDES FOR EASY ADJUSTMENT OF BED It is much easier, to whip through the morning chores if the beds One of today’s favorite beds, the headboard bed, may be hard to But you can buy a frame to make it movable, @ frame that adds not an inch to the bed’s length or width. This trame can be attached to any headboard. It makes the head- board movable as well as the mattress and spring. | It floats the headboard legs slightly above the floor. The weight of the bed is evenly distributed and tne treme legs on casters fit i underneath where they can't be bumped into. You can change one headboard tor another with ease, and it is even possible to convert a twin bed to a.double bed, or a doub'e bed to a twin bed and use the same trame because the frame is adjustable to any bed size from single to double. MILLER FURNITURE . Closed Wednesday Afternoon Adjustable Hollywood Bed Frame September Savings | $ qe on six legs attached to the box- Free, Easy Parking | r agricultural agent. Mercury Dip to 39 Record for Sept. 13 (Continued From Page One) day evening. Temperature sank to to a high of 61 degrees later in| the day. . Rising from a low of 39 degrees today, the mercury reached 46 at 8 a.m. and stood at 57 degrees at 2 p.m. in downtown Pontiac. Showers which soaked the county Thursday, Friday and Saturday seemed to have re- lieved drought conditions accord- ing ‘to Edmond W. Alchin, county ‘Alchin said that except for a few fields of late potatoes, crops had been wet down in time to pre- vent extensive damage. Fields are in good condition for wheat plant- ing he said, and seeding-crops are recovering. Pontiac area escaped scrious damage from winds which lashed the area with gusts up to 50 miles per hour Saturday and Saturday night. Oakland County Road Commis- sion reported men spent ‘a few hours’’ Sunday cleaning up fallen branches from highways, but said no roads were reported blocked. Detroit Edison Co. said four cus- tomers lacked service temporarily Sunday when a falling: limb downed a primary line and one transform- er fuse blew out. Other parts of Michigan got a preview of wintry weather. Sub- freezing temperatures were re- ported at Cadillac, Pellston and Gladwin in the lower peninsula, while the mercury plunged below 32 degrees at several spots in the Upper Peninsula. Snow mixed with rain fell at Sault Ste. Marie. Flint and Sag- inaw were near freezing with lows of #4. - 2 oe et Former Champion Leads OKLAHOMA CITY, (® — Lean Charley Coe, the 1949 National Amateur golf champion and one of several favorites in the 53rd. ama- teur championship which started | 39 degrees Sunday, struggling back | today, got off to a flying start in his first round match when he shot the first nine holes in 33. That two-under-par nine put Coe five up on another Oklahoma City player, 24-year-old Glen Fowler, at the first turn. Par for the 6,852-yard Oklahoma City Golf and Country Club course is 35-36—71. SEE THE TIGERS PLAY THIS WEEKEND! it’s only a few minutes by conven- ient transportation from the Detroit Statler to Briggs Stadium, where the Detroit Tigers will be holding forth this weekend. Why not come -to Detroit for an inexpensive weekend of fun at the Statler and enjoy the games? HOTEL STATLER Facing Grand Circus Park DETROIT f clothes. GRESHAM 97 Oakland Avenue START THE FALL SEASON Freshly Cleaned Wardrobe Expert methods and careful hand- ling mean safe return of your fall thorough and beautiful cleaning Call FE 4-2579 Today for Free Pickup and Delivery! with a Send us your wardrobefor CLEANERS Phone FE 4-2579 The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac Famous Brands—Lowest Prices! NOW! New 1953 Whirkpoot | SPECIAL PRICED Whirlpool’ Electric DRYER Kn) 2 1, 5169”° 90 Days Same as Cash or Long, Easy Terms INSTALLED FREE ON EDISON LINES It’s the large-size deluxe. fwlly automatic dryer with tempered heat control and satin-smooth dryer drum, assured delicate fabrics. Hurry gone, they’re all gone! Whirlpool Automatic W ASHER 239.95 Allowance for Old Washer—40.00 s3go9p” @ Agiflow Water Action @ 7 Rinses remove every trace of soap and dirt. @ Flexible operation—any size load can be washed properly in the amount of water desired. Saves time, soap and water. @ Top loading —no stop- ping. Se GOOD HOUSERFEP! of PONTIAC safety for the most to save—when they’re pisoe® fet ee axon gu0e ist es WHEN YOU TRADE IN YOUR OLD WASHER NO MONEY DOWN Open Daily 9 to 5:30—Friday 9 to 9 51 W. Huron St. hone FE 4-1555 Noel ge| | | When Your Prescription Cleray Blasts | Commie Probe | Favorite Foods “Talk Back” to You? July Secret Draw Fire of Prominent | Church Leaders "NEW YORK PA congressional | report on alleged Communist activ- ities of some clergymen has drawn new criticism and denials from members of the ministry. TUMS Quickly Neutralize Excess Acid Nearly everyone has favorite foods that sometimes bring on heartburn, sourness and acid indigestion. But millions have found the answer is sim- ple as A-B-C. They just carry a handy roll of Tums in pocket or purse. Fat 1 or 2 Tums for swift. soothing relief. They can't over-alkalize—cant cause actd rebound. And they are FAST 'Gee | W itnesses—three of whom said | a roll of delicious TUMS today | they were former Communists and successful examples of Red. infil- tration of religion—were quoted as saying the Communists plotted to | The comments fell upon- the House’ un-American / Activities Committee, which last Friday, re- leased testimony taken at secret hearings in New York in July. the clergy. The three.ex-Reds are Manning Johnson, Bakjamin Git- low and Joseph Zack Kornfeder, all of New York. Among those named in the testi- mony as involved in such a plot were the Rev. Dr. Harry F. Ward, the Rev. John Haynes Holmes and the late Rabbis Stephen S. Wise} and Judah Magnes, Yesterday in New York prominent Jewish leaders — Dr. | Israel Goldstein, president of the | American Jewish Congress, and | Rabbi Maurice N. Eisendrath, president of the Union of Ameri- | can Hebrew Congregations — | | BEST BUY USED TV 339° Terms Available The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC 51 West Huron Street too | called “‘fanstastic’’ the testimony and concerning Rabbis Wise ee Magnes. DO YOU WANT Rabbis Goldstein and Eisendrath said in a joint statement that Rabbi | MORE MONEY? Wise for ‘half a century was “America’s foremost rabbi.”’ They , Train now for a good job added: rege ee |i “Men of all faiths and creeds } | looked to him as one.of the na- | Call o: Write | tion’s most dauntless afid effective | foes of injustice and corruption , where they appeared.”’ | ELECTRONICS |[|sheve they appeared” | tabbi Magnes, the statement | INSTITI ITE } said, ‘‘served with distinction .,. 21 Henry Street as (a) rabbi.” Detroit 1, Mich. WO 2-5661 | —-= in Television. Remain at your job while training. — 'New York Republican: sonra Shar Fosd Dealers Hit “at French Price Cuts The Saar \# —The Association of Saarland Food | | Dealers against | price cuts forced on them by the; Hearings | | French government's price reduc- tion campaigry. They complained that they have to bear the price losses themselves | |lavish and luxurious.” lhy | while French dealers can charge ; between France price cuts in France automatically | each and 458 smaller apartments | apply in the Saar. plant hundreds of followers among | spout two-thirds of » ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 14. Calls Bonn Housing SAARBRUECKEN, protested today them against taxes. Under and ARMADA — Enrollment of 926 the State Department for U. S. ol) a pupils in local schools was | ported last week by to boost Last vear's total was 82 low this year. Waters now the Antarctic whale catch. Supt. HL A. Kitson. Late enrollees are expected | the figure eve n higher. | , 94 be- supply world’s Try SIMMS tor Your BEST Possible PICTURES Bigger—Better—Brighter SUPER-SIZE Prints All Standard Rolls One Low Price Bring your ftilms to Simms tor .faSter service ... sharper prints ... greater savings. QIVKxGs —Main Floor 98 N. Saginaw (Advertisement) | Worry of ‘Opposes Sales Tax FALSE TEETH WASHINGTON «(®—Rep. Daniel! > Reed (R-NY) has served notice Slipping or Irritating? that if President Eisenhower pro- | Don't loose false | poses a national sales tax, he is | teeth slipping.’ dropping or wobbling ‘ready to resume his battle with the | when you eat. talk or laugh Just } sprinkle a little FASTEETH on vour | administration over tax policy. | plates. This pleasant powder gives a “A general sales tax will not be remarkable sense of added comfort and | security by holding plates more firmly approved by the Congress in the No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling . ; 2} ” ; ; It's alkaline ‘non-acid). Get FASTEETH as Session. Reed said in | at any drug store ‘statement Saturday, ‘I base this | , prediction on reports coming to| |me from members of the Ways | be embarrassed br ae i | }and Means Committee and other | he Sanda Pharmaceutical $s © 5 Registered Pharmacists their home districts.” © Savings 10% to 40% | He added: ’ \ t “As usual, the American people | : FR NG Be #} | control the situation.” | i | Treaty Power-Limiting | Bill Predicted for ‘54 WASHINGTON | membef® of the House: who are in eS ed (P—Sen. Lyndon |B. Johnson of Texas, the Demo-| cratic Senate leader. predicted yesterday that agreement will be| PRICES reached next year on a controver- sial- proposal by Sen. Bricker (R- Is the Ohio) to limit treaty powers. ONLY ih Bricker has contended a con- | 'f | stitutional amendment is needed D ] F 3 E R E N C ia to prevent possible future whittling away of basic American rights s IMAS.&.. through the negotiation of treaties. | President Eisenhower and Secre- tary of State Dulles have said that PHARMACY DEPT. i —Main Floor— Is Filled by Simms... | | LOWER! in its present form, Bricker’s amendment would hamper conduct of foreign affairs. ees > a J For Nursery and-Kindergarten Children | CHILDREN’S Sleeping Rug 22x44 Cc Inches | All purpose scatter ideal lated lain | f t rugs... e te use as sleeping rug in nursery room, Bath or kindergarten grades. Well or Hall. | made. firmly = stitched bright colors 98 North Domestics | Saginaw —Basement a Summs Sell ONLY the Very Best! YY ELASTIC SUPPORTS FOR MEN & WOMEN PRODUCTS OF BAUER & BLACK SUPPORTER BELTS ELASTIC STOCKINGS _Improve your pos- Inconspicuous under ture. Enjoy comifort- regular hose. Most able support. Many popular brand on exclusive style and the market comfort features. available in 2 styles. \ BRACER* ..........$3.95 $10.00 per pair BRACER ROYAL* .... $6.00 TENSOR ELASTIC SUPPORTERS Evesy man and BANDAGE boy who engages \ Gives cool im any sport comfortable suppod should wear « whenever as supporter. Six elastic bandage ix different styles. required 85¢ to $2.2 _ 2s ae SUSPENSORIES< '° 97° $1.20 to $2.45 ANKLETS & KNEECAPS Provides effective support for strained muscles of the Many men scy wearing a Suspensory helps relieve fatigue. BACK-TO-SCHOOL Gym Needs ry ’ of LS, . 3h 28 > By ) ‘) Boys’ Sanforized Whité om TRUNKS , 89 of. lo Sanforized pepperell fabric white color only, Boxer Sain trunks, for use in all school gym work COLORED CYM TRUNKS $1.69 COCCCCCCC OOOOH EEEESE®S “~~ Choice of Colors 36 to 46 Heavy Fleeced Cotton SWEAT SHIRTS Typ $ 39 Simms Popular sport sweat shirt in choice of White, Navy, Maize, Royal and Red colors. Heavy inner fleeced cotton 00000000000 0008088008 Boys’ White Sweat Sox 29° 40°. wool with nylon rein- forced heel G toe. Sizes 9- 13 0000000000008 88888888 3-Inch Waistband Athletic Supporter 69° Lightweight supporter in S-M-L size. Washable. eeeeeeoesseeeoeeeesesee es It's Simms for Savings! GYM SHOES Girls’ White Oxfords $1.98 Girls’ White Shoes. . $2.29 Boys’ 10 to 6 Shoes. $1.98 Boys’ 6/2 - 12 Shoes $2.29 Boys’ Heavy Duty Bask’all Shoes. $3.89 & $3.95 Choose from Pontiacs most complete selection at any price yOw wish to pay. d 98 N. Saginaw St. —Basement | | nounced by a House government the close economic ties! year, the Saar, | 926 Students in Pomade | Per unit. | a 3 ditterent styles: ankle or knee 7 models to allowing normal | choose from mobility. | 75¢ to $1.75 $1.50 each oS . 98 North’ 7V< Geo IM MSO Ree, BROTHERS - 7 4 . AS ‘Too Luxurious workers transferred to Bonn in 1951 when the West German capital | was moved there from Frankfurt. The committee conceded the pro- of German homes, but said the , construction should have been more modest, WASHINGTON (®—A 17 million |dallar U. S. housing project at |; Bonn, Germany, been de- | has The Yorubas were the most ad- “too | vanced tribe, socially and political- . when Europeans first went to | operations subcommitte as The subcommitteé, in its report ! | Saturday after hearings earlier this said five officials’ homes were erected at $115,000 to $227,000 Nigeria. Get a Good USED TV $10-$15 Down — $5 per Wk. et HAMPTON TV 286 State St. | —equipped with ham slicers and |champagne glasses—cost $26,000 The development was built by rwwwuwewvwewweweveevwvevevweeevrvrrwvrrwrvvvvvvvuv~uvwvww ws i i i hi hh bh hi i hi hi ho hi hn hi hh hh i ywwwve*™ i i i i i hi hi Li hi hi hi hi hh Simms Is Your Headquarters for Electric Shaver Paris Available for All Four Makes @ Remington @ Schick @ Sunbeam @ Norelco Simms make it possible for you to keep your electric shaver in top-notch working condition at all times with genuine factory-made replace- ment parts. Check your needs from this list rvvuvuvwvvwvvvvvvuvvVvVvVVvVVvVTVTVTVeVTVTVTTTeTreC i i i i Li i Ohi hihi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi i i ha hi i hi ha hi i i i hh hb hn he hn hi he tt hh hi tp th te tp tp ty if) : ; 1} rv~vvvvvVvvuVvVvVVeVuVVTVTYVTYVY?* i i i i i hi hi hi hi hi hh hi hi hn he hi i hn Remington Service Kit............ 60c Remington (8-U) Round Head..... $2.50 Remington (T-8) Flat Head....... $3.50 " Remington (60) Head.,.......... $4.50 Remington Shaver Cord........... $1.00 Remington Whisker Catcher....... 75¢ | Remington Wall Holder... ....... $1.95 Schick (3-M) Single Head ..... $3.00 Schick (V-15) Double Head ..... $5.00 Schick Shaver Cord Noreleo Shaver Head. ao Sunbeam Cutter (Models R & M)... Sunbeam Cutter (Model S) aeovetseeeee TVUVUUVUVUUCUCCUCUUCVCUCVCUCCCCCCCCCCCCC | Sunbeam Cutter (Model W)...... 65¢ | ; Sunbeam Comb and Cutter | a} \ (Models R&@M)... o4........ $1.50 Ct l/ Sunbeam Comb and Cutter | (Model $)....... a eee Sunbeam Comb and Cutter (Model W)........ $2.25 Sunbeam Sharpening Compound.... 35¢ AC-DC Inverters by Shavex....... $5.95 Kar-Shave Auto Converters ..... $9.95 Schick Wall Holders, All Styles $1.50 Steriklene—Cleanser and Sterilizer... 60c Sunbeam Shaver Cord........... $1.95 N rwvuwuvuvuvvvvvvvvvvvvVvVvVTYeVveVvVVVeVTVTtVTVTVeTVTVeTeeTTeeT i i hh hi hi hi hi hi i i hi Li hi hi hi hi ha hi i i hi hi i i i i hi eh te he he be i he Ny} verre! 98 N. Saginaw St. —Main Floor ry~vuvuvvvVvVvVVVvVVYTVveVvveVueVVvVVeTVTVVTVTTTVeVTVTTe. reer wvVvVVY i i i hi hi hi i hi Li Li hi i Li hi Li hi hi hi hi Li hi hi Li he i Li i a i i hd “It’s SIMMS - for Lowest Prices! It’s eee today’s BIG SPECIAL! Enamelware Extra Durable ‘FEDERAL’ sack CANNER cl ha Holds 7-Quart Jars Rich deep white-flecked blue porce- Now! Foning mas Easier... Faster... Batter, with the... lain surface ovér strong heavy SCORCH RESISTANT chip-resistant. Smooth bottom makes it easy to clean. Complete with jar rack. Has many other uses. 98 North Saginaw —Z2nd Floor steel, gives extra durability and Throw away your old smelly, cover and make life easier with the new, wonderful Magia Sili- cone Ironing Board Cover No more long weary hours of pushing an iron that seems to get heavier by aaney sat teak alk au ,» that s ironed. The MAGLA SILI. CONE IRONING BOARD COVER hes ® Scorch Resistant ® Color Fast ® Stain Proof © Time Saver © Fits all Standard Ironing Boards SIMMS.“ BROTHERS —2nd Floor a | ject avoided further requisitioning | fp _ 19 | In Napoleon's time, engineés# ut the cutting of the Suez Canal thought the Red Sea was 30 feet] between the two bodies of water higher than the Mediterranean, |.proved them wrong. | (Advertisement) (Advertisement) | Amazing New “Low Cost” Therapy for Pains of — ARTHRITIS - - - RHEUMATISM Fastest, Longest-Lasting Results Ever’ Known — Guaranteed to All Sufferers Or Money Back! Hailed by leading authorities after vast laboratory and clinical tests, PRUVO 1s safe, non-habit forming } and easy-to-take in convenient tab- At last let form. You can get all the won- medical science has discov- | ered an amazing new and better derful_ benefits of an amazing formula to stop the torturing pains PRUVO Therapy right in your own ; of arthritis and rheumatism. Unlike home | 50 m y re es § r temporary Sell ach eet Ga” ar! To be sure that every rheumatic | even $20. this sensational for- ‘ and arthritic sufferer in America | who needs PRUVO will have the | mula which has actually produced | jong lasting results in countless severe cases, is offered to rou under the name of PRUVO for onlv $1.50 Important to you is the fact that PRUVO is not just another pain re- lief Yet PRUVO stops pain amaz- nely fast. but in addition. it goes to work in the red. swollen. inflamed j Joints where arthritis does its worst | crippling damage Acting on your blessings of an amazing anti-arth- } ritic action. the PRUVO manufactur- | ers offer it at a price everyone can | easilf afford. and make you this 100% GUARANTEE PRUVO must , give vou the fastest results and the greatest, lengest - lasting impreve- ment yeu have ever known. or it ¢osts you net a penny: SQ no mat- ter what you have tried or how long you have suffered . ask your sore stiffened joints. PRUVO often Gruggist for PRUVO. You, like thou- REDUCES THE SWELLING ... RE- sands of ia Paap be enjoying a | y h y, active Hi again often | LAXES THE JOINT - and allows ater just . re dase thanks to |} you to m lay : nae cae ee PRUVO. Get PRUVO at Simms fmout crying out at every step Bres., 98 N. Saginaw St. Only $1.50 (— Tonite & Tuesday Only \ Special Buys in | SCHOOL SUPPLIES WOW! What-a-Pen RETRACTABLE—BALL POINT ‘Redipens’ Reeular $1.00 Value "| 39° 3 for $1.00 Bankers PRESS ... CLICK! It's Ready to Write PRESS'CLIP . . Gisappears » point ap proved | fie ore Ue CLEAN POINT ALWAYS Bese watern. INAVET NO CAP TO LOSE | PRICED. 50 Refill Cartridge We | | 10c Value—Box of 8 . 3x5—Metal | . e | Scribble : FILE BOX || Crayons ° All Colors : 29° } * e All metal i | Cc ®@ box with | ‘ 4 hinged cov- | @ er. Ideal for Package of 8 p all. school assorted col- e work, other q @ uses ‘| PENCILS—Famous Velvet Brand.......... | PLASTIC RULER—! foot | COMPASS—All metal, with pencil......... ea | | PENCIL BOX—telescope style | PENCIL CASE—zipper style | PENCIL SHARPENERS—plastic e | oer eee ee ese eoees Choice of 4 Styles School Bags 2 or 3 Ring Styles | Zipper Binders | eeeseeeeeeseeeeeeeeeoeeee Plaid and Plains, a. strap and zippers, 98> cnt ace 98< extra pockets. genes aes zip- | Compare Simms per, bi d ving low prices. to $1.95 zipper binders. to $3.95 | ..10¢ '| TYPING PAPER—per pad || ART PAPER—per pad.... f CRAYOLAS—box of 24 | SCHOOL SHEARS—safety type \} ORGANIZERS—loose leaf type .............. 10c PENCILS—5c value a. ° a BR wo a @® FILLER PAPER—2 or 3 ring © TABLETS—wide or, narrow © PENCILS—tred and blue © COMPOSITION Bed © LEADS—for mechani- y | cal Pencils © ERASER TIPS © PENCIL SHARPENER ® PROTRACTORS * . - . & e ~ = e * e e . | . e e | e e * * | * . e e . | Famous Lepage § 2- Rise Style 4 Box of 8 Paste or Glue: Binders Color Pencils |, * » 5S >: 495 =: 15° Needed for all types of id Hard canvas binders. > Hard wooden colo school work. Has other @ In blue only. Indes- @ pencils. 8 individual uses too. @ Ppensible for school. @ colors. .- bececceee $1.49 > ..10¢ PENCIL SHARPENER—desk style. PAINT BRUSH—water colors ... COMPOSITION BOOK—8 '2x10 .15¢ PAINT SET—10 water colors......... cece ee 29 SCRAP BOOK—heavy paper ............ conanee ERASER—art gum ..............005. .. 2. 10¢ S | W\XR © 6 6 @ 6 4 86 & Main J Shop Simms FIRST for Thermometers Genuine ‘Taylor’ ‘Taylor’ OUTDOOR WINDOW Thermometer With Bracket Genuine ‘Taylor’ WINDOW Thermometer $900 “Taylor” Indoor Wall Thermometer CANDY or DEEP FAT | =: Thermometer \=— (Left) $925 Genuine ‘Taylor’ ) ROAST MEAT Thermometer | (Right) $200 DESK or WALL Thermometer $125 ‘Tel-Tru’ CANDY-FAT Thermometer ROAST MEAT Thermometer ‘Tel-Tru’ OVEN. : $] 50 Thermometer ‘Tel-Tru’ DEEP FREEZE Thermometer Combination Humiguide Thermometer $925 Genuine “Taylor” Desk Thermometer Handsome, New $ 225 Combination ‘Taylor’ 3-Way ‘Baroguide’ aru oat Humidity, Guide $1450 SIMAS “&. $8 N. Saginaw St. —2nd Floor $300 |FOUR * THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1953 SERVICE € FRANKENMUTH ( A DANIELS LOW RATES 84512 W. Huron Phone FE 4-7644 Suspect in Lewis Slaying Surrenders NEW YORK \—Ex-convict Wil- liam Howell, suspected of driying | a getaway car in the mutder of labor leader Thomas F. Lewis on Aug. 28, surrendered to police early today. Howell, 35, of Ridgefield, N.J., was subjected to lengthy question- ing at Bronx police headquarters. Hours after his s r, police gave out no inkling of Howell’s story. He had been sought in many states for questioning since a car seen speeding away from the mur- der was traced to him. Some in- vestigators expressed fear he had | been slain to silence him and to solved Lewis murder. Lewis, 35, was shot down in his Bronx apartment house by Edward Ryan, 45, an ex-convict believed to have been hired for the murder. Ryan never had a chance to use the suspected getaway car and was man while fleeing. The New York Daily News said Howell surrendered on the pleas of his wife, Margaret, 30. ‘ Howell, the News said, denied involvement in the murder and said he fled because of his crimi- nal record, and hid out in New York City! American merchant ships get fewer cargoes homebound than they should because foreign freight forwarders who control the ship- ments send the goods by foreign vessels. protect these who ordered the un-| killed in a gun fight with a police Cupid Suffers When Beauty Enters Politics CHICAGO w—Attractive Rosa- lind ‘“‘Roz’’ Wiener, 22-year-old member of the Los Angeles City Council, is finding that political success can be hard on romance. The first woman on her home- town city council in 36 years, Roz is here from California to partici- pate on a panel discussion at the Democratic nation-wide pep rally. She will tell how she rang 4,500 doorbells in her campaign in which she beat eight opponents in the primary and won by 3,000 votes in the final. But the job of being a ‘‘city father’ calls for a 12-hour day. She said she gets to her office at about 8:30 a.m. She likes it, but— “I'm human, a woman, young, and I want to go out.” Roz said because of her work she once went a month without} going out on a date, ‘‘and I'm not used to that.” Thomas Edison Aide Taken by Death at 87 SAN FRANCISCO # — Cornelius E. Nestor, 87, who pioneered with Thomas A. Edison the development and sales of recording devices, died yesterday. Nestor went to work for the fam- ous inventor at the age of 12 at East Orange, N. J. He claimed he was the first to think of using wax cylinders to record music. Three ROK Officers Accused of Plotting SEOUL wW—South Korea's high- est military court announced today three high officers of the ROK army are being tried on charges of plotting to overthrow the govern- ment. The secret trial began last Mon-| day, The accused are Brig. Gen. Kim| Chong Pyung, former chief of the ROK army intelligence, Lt. Col. Kim Il Noh (alias Kim Bum Kil), Gen, Kim's father, and Col. Kim Wha San, chief of staff for the lst ROK Corps. Gen. Kim also is accused of em- bezzling about $22,000. The Madeira cockroach bears its | young alive. bn Freedom Plaque Goes to U. N. Fighting Men NEW YORK (®—The 1953 Free- dom House award will be present- ed collectively to United Nations soldiers who fought in Korea, the organization announced yesterday. A bronze plaque symbolizing the award will be given to U.N. Sec- retary General Dag Hammarskjold on Nov. 22. Ballet Troupe Begins Third American Tour NEW YORK (@—tThe Sadler's Wells ballet started its third U.S. tour last night, receiving a noisy and warm welcome in the refur- bished Metropolitan Opera House. The London company will play here several weeks and then visit \ 125 cities across the United States. yo Here are just Alexander Smith Artistic. . Aulsbrdok ‘Living Room Beautyrest Mattress Chromcraft Duo-Therm Heaters Extensole Tables General Electric Gibson Appliances Heywood-Wakefield Hoover Sweepers Kling Lane Cedar Chests La-Z-Boy Chairs Maytag Washers Mengel Mersman Tables RCA Victor Reinbrandt Lamps Restokraft Mattress Simmons Hide-a-Bed Spring Air Mattress Storkline Juvenile PY a few of the many famous Name Brands you'll see | (September 15.16 a —— Tuesday-Wednesday and Thursday Evenings tacguaint yma with fy NEW FURNITURE FASHIONS New and wonderful things have been arriving for weeks from America’s foremost manufacturers and they’re assembled now for your inspection in exciting dis- plays and arrangements. See the smartest in luxuriously liveable Modern designs, 18th Century arrangements, Colonial Maple... See new multi-purpose furniture ... See the latest marvels in home appliances! L) a ald ee Oe A A 2 ‘ e@ Fashion Tim nad I’@ SEE... its al 4 the cream of the crop from the M zk Furniture Shows held recently in Masterpieces ship! ——— - stunning Modern at best. We've brought back Chicago and New York. of craftsman- 8 =a a & ae : a8 Z *? - —= ” \ = = a aa - oa axmente, 7 8 Floors of Displayed Furniture, Appliances and Floor Coverings! 25 PRIZES ff GIVEN AWAY |! Here’s how you may win one of the grand prizes offered! Every adult person entering our store will be given a card, Simply write your name and address on the card and deposit it in the slot of the PRIZE BOX. That's all -you do! Nothing to buy . . . nothing to write but your name and address. What’s more . . not be present to win. All: winners will be notified immediately after the grand prize drawing. Register! You May Be a Lucky Winner! . you need ee ed Second Prize .. §exmnaage and Box Spring First Prize Gibson Refrigerator Spring Air Mattress FURNITURE CO. 361 South Saginaw Street 6 Bissell Sweepers THOMAS SEE... the newest in colors and fabrics! Great strides have been made in the de- velopment of wonderful tex- tures, patterns and colors. Breathtakingly lovely and so very many! SEE... the latest models in major appliances!‘ Thrill to the many improvements that the 1953 models display. See actual demonstraticns! Fa- mous name brands of the very best in home appliances. Wy) « @ ED) ne FREE GIFT 4, “22 FOR EVERY LADY =< we A special gift for every lady attending ( “ ,, our Open House. It’s absolutely Also 10 Munising “ &) free . . . no purchase Fly, ft’ Servers Open Every Night from 7 to 9 During Open House! x FASY PARKING * * od Thatcher Patterson & Wernet Pontiac’s Oldest Insurance Agency 609 Community National Bank Bldg. FE 2-9224 a Se le a bs OS eat ~ - x 6th POW Ship Docks at Frisco Fall Hair Fashion Leader- The Short Look— Keep It Neat witha... LANOLATED PERMANENT WAVE A “must” for good hair after summer sun! Save 5.50 on Our September Special! 3.90 Usdally 11.00 Includes: Lanolated Cold Wave, usually 8.50 Reconditioning Treatment, usually 2.50 Sun robs hair of essential oils. Revita- lize it with a lanolated permanent. SHORT HAIRSTYLING 1.50 Appointment Not Necessary FE 2-0531 41 N. Saginaw St. 377 Repatriates Begin Last Leg of Journey Homeward SAN FRANCISCO — Planes, trains, busses and autos sped hap- piness across the nation today. An- other shipload of repatriated prisoners of war had docked and 377 more soldiers were home. For most it was a quick trip through the processing lines and then home to the folks. For some it was a slight delay at Letterman General Hospital while their medi- | cat histories were checked. None would be long from the ;arms of his loved ones. * * * The Marine Phoenix, sixth of the freedom vessels, is a large impersonal thing. But its cargo yesterday was human happiness and heartbreak. Mrs. Ola Riddle of Richmond, Calif., met the ship. Not in hopes of seeing her husband; he had never been repatriated. But to learn something about him from an Army buddy coming home. The truth came quickly; brutal | in its impact, but merciful in the | gentle words of a friend, F * * * “He wandered out of the hut in | BLACK TOP @ DRIVEWAYS © PARKING AREAS FREE ESTIMATES—EASY TERMS G g ASPHALT PAVING CO. BIG TELEVISION SALE! See Generous Jim! HAMPTON'S 32:2 Open ‘til 9 P.M. Exe. Sat. the middle of winter. He was starving to death. We found him in the snow the next day and we buried him.” Thus did Mrs. Riddle learn that Sgt. Hoyle T. Riddle, 38, was dead. Cpl, Ralph W. Meier of White Lake, S.D., knew ‘‘something was up’’ when he read letters from his wife and mother shortly before leaving the ship. But it was a reporter who broke the news: Meier's wife had re- married, thinking him dead. * * * His wife Ava, only 15 when he married her shortly before enter- ing the Army, had married Herald Kapsch of Mitchell, S.D., last | March. That marriage was an- | nulled when she learned Meier was alive and a captive of the Reds. ‘Son of Chiang Kai-shek ‘Lands in San Francisco | SAN FRANCISCO — Lt. Gen. Chiang Chin-kuo, son of Nationalist Chinese President Chiang Kai-shek | and commander of the Nationalist | Air Force, arrived by plane early today. | Chiang will leave Wednesday “al Washington. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 Rita Gets Death Threat, Is Under Armed Guard LOS ANGELES w — Rita Hay- worth’s two young daughters are under armed guard at her home today after the film star’s attorney said Miss Hayworth received the second of two letters threatening death unless she returns to Prince Aly Khan. Included in the death threat was Yasmin, Rita's 24% year old daugh- ter by Aly. Rita’s attorney, Bartley Crum, who confirmed receipt of the two letters, said the armed guard was placed over Yasmin and her half- sister, Rebecca Welles, 8, daughter of Orson Welles, at Miss Hay- worth’s home here. FIVE * Dies During Vacation COLDWATER #—Henry G. Tur- ner, 50, Muncie, Ind., merchant, died Sunday of a heart attack at Union Lake while fishing. Turner was vacationing at the lake 16; miles northwest of here. | Get Your @ TRIP INSURANCE HERE! We Sell @ POLIO INSURANCE See or Call Maynard Johnson General Insurance 807 Comm. Nat'l Bank Phone FE 4-4523 MASQUERADE — It’s Lorraine, Dubonnet, dressed as a fluffy white rabbit, at the Marquis De Cueva’s ball, recently held at Biarritz, France. Miss Dubonnet . was one of 2;000 international society guests entertained by the marquis. 3 = Exclusively Ours Dr. Scholl’s Zino- ds not only re- eve pain in a jiffy...remove corns one of the fastest ways known to medical science — but also stop corns | before they can develop! Get a box today! | D! Scholls Zino-pads (Adertisement) AMAZING NEW PAZO ACTS TO RELIEVE PAIN OF SIMPLE PILES | presents POS YW y Sh Misses’ Sizes 12 to 20 and Half Sizes 1614 to 2414 NEW! from miseries of sim- STAINLESS! - piles—with new ROW SETTER azo*! Now im- TRAM EVER! roved! Stainless! etter than ever! Soothing Pazo acts to relieve pain, itch- ing instantly. Soothes inflamed tissues —lubricates dry, hardened parte— helps prareee sear —_ reduces @® RED elling. You get real maxing help. @ BLUE New Pazo won't cause unsig oul ®@ ORCHID Get new stainless, improved Pazo (in ae blue and white package). Get fast lef! Ask your own doctor about it. Suppository form or in tubes with per- forated pile pipe for easy application. All druggists have new stainless Pazo, *Pas Ointment and Suppositories® Nis te . fy RR Etat eet Dt peng inte ge ama engin, LER LN LOM NGM q ' 4 a 2 : 4 - 4 ¥ & 2 d ' : : 7 | : é i = F4 3 ! : 4 ) We're delighted to have you with us again ; e+ + not only to turn our youngsters over to 3 your capable hands but to place our services ; ; at your disposal in any way that will make x your work easier. Please call on us. . | 7 é An attractive cotton for carefree, casual comfort at 3 home or shopping. Elastic-shirred inserts at waist assure VIOREL LEN IEE SEO LEE EEE EE i a ait The Community National Bank of Pontiac ‘Michigan With Branches at N. PERRY at GLENWOOD W. HURON at TILDEN Out of City Branches WALLED LAKE KEEGO HARBOR DIRECTORS ‘Harold A. Fitzgerald Publisher Pontiac Press Irving A. Babcock Director and Consultant Aveo Manufacturing Co. Alfred C. Girard President Community National Bank of Pontiac Louis H. Cole L. H. Cole Oil Co. W. Russell Eames Eames and Brown Alfred R. Glancy, Jr. President A. B. Glancy incorporated Howard W. Huttenlocher - H. H. Huttenlocher Agency Harry J. Klingler Vice-President and Director General Motors Corp, 8 Member Federal Deposit Insurance. Corporation % LEE SEP RTE TR aS OO Ace BINT NT Bc 5 Rite President Universal Oil Seal perfect fit for any figure. pockets. ELLER EG BER OE NA RAO aE leh cee ae, Pincers Poca, Washes in a wink... irons easily, Hurry In or Call FE 4-2511! Waite's Cotton Shop—Third Floor is TOPS | Ye EAB BEN IK Rae Lye Be mrad i. Venate . Dainty ric-rac trim, handy REPEAT of a SELLOUT! r Save $20 on regularly 39.95 . 400-day Clocks 95 plus tax Imported From Germany's Black Forest NO MONEY DOWN! ®@ Glass domeenclosed ® Set it once a year @ 11% inches actual size A rare oppertunity to add this collectors’ piece to your home at a saving of $20. Imported from the Black Forest area where ‘generations of artists have been trained in clock craftsmanship. Golden polished bronze, in a bell dome, tested and ap- proved for accuracy. Set it once a year to mark sentimental cecasions . ... weddings, birthdays! Call FE 4-2511 today! PLACES YOUR CLOCK IN LAYAWAY ‘TIL CHRISTMAS Waite's Clocks—Street Floor a || 949 Harry M. Pryale President Baldwin Rubber Co. | 4 N. Wm. Peterson Executive Vice-President Community National Bank of Pontiac 24x36-In....1.98 Big 27x50 size heavy Cotton Rugs © New modern, short looped rugs © Safe non-skid backs Bedroom, living room, hallway cr bath. There’s no end to the versatility of these lush, heavy cotton rugs. Woven with thickly packed loops to form a firmer surface, they’re latex bocked for skid-insurance, colorfast for washability. 36x60-In... .5.98 i Waite's Rugs—Fifth Floor % Hunter Green Red Chartreuse Dusty Pink Flamingo Light Green Te * ————EEEEE— EEE —eEeeeEaOorrorrrrr . aaa SIX ‘as ee oS. ae ne = » —_ » © THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiae 12, Michigan Reg. U.S. Patent Office Dally Except Sunday Published trom Tus Powrmc Damy Press Building Hasotp A. Prrzogzatp, Publisher Cownad N. Crurcn Horacsz FP. Baovrs Roseer. Bassett Editor Advertising Manager Nat’] Adv. Mgr. Entered at Post Office, Pontiac, Mich. as second class matter MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associgted Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all local news printed tn this news- Paper, as well as al) AP news dis Tx2 Powric Prase is delivered by carrier for 40 cents & week; where carrier service is not available, by mai) in Oakland and adjoining counties it is $1200 a year; else- where in Michigan and a!) other places tn the United States $2000 a year. All mail subscriptions are payable in advance. Phone Pontiac FE 2-8181. MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS =_ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 Boys’ Program Expanded With a heavy early registration and an expanded program, Pontiac Boys Club is looking ahead to another busy and fruitful year. Among the innovations announced by Executive Director Wm11aAMm V. CouLa- cos is a plan to teach leadership and the fundamentals of government. The boys will campaign for the offices of mayor and aldermen. Those elected will supervise var- ious club activities. A feature of this plan will be weekly luncheon meetings wih the club director to discuss policies and improve- ments, . * * * - Also to be expanded is thé club’s ath- letic program with three varsity and 25 intramural basketball teams and 10 touch football teams of six boys each. That the club house on East Pike Street will be a busy place throughout the coming year was indicated by the early enrollment of 820 members. Pros- pects are that this total will be in- credsed to 1,100 by Christmas. * * * Direttor CouLacos and his aides are to be congratulated on the enlarged program. It will give more boys a chance to learn useful skills, fair play and the basic ideals of good citizenship. Reds Violating Truce Suspicion first voiced by Gen. Mark CuiarRK that the enemy is holding back many U.N. prisoners has been con- firmed by the action of the Allied Ar- mistice Commissioner. a Americans will cheer Maj. Gen. BLACKSHEAR’S demand that the enemy immediately release or ac- count for the 3,404 U.N. prisoners listed, including 944 Americans. But it would be a mistake to hope, that a mere demand will bring results? * * x Already Peiping radio has branded the list a complete fabrication and countered with a demand that U.N. return the 27,000 Red POWs released by SYNGMAN RHEE. No one knows, of course, how ac- curate the U.N. list is. Undoubtedly quite a few of the prisoners could have died. But the stories of repatriates and the Reds’ own radio reports.of captures leave no doubt that men are being held in violation of the truce agreement. x wk o* One of the mysteries is what the Reds could hope to gain by keeping hostages. Certainly they are badly mistaken if they believe this would help them win U.S. recognition and a-seat in the United,Nations. Nothing could do more to in e free world opinion against them. Russia, which talks so much of peace while doing everything to block it, may be the answer. Isn’t it reasonable to suspect the hostage idea may be a Russian maneuver to block any agree- ment between China and the West and to wreck the Korean peace conference? More Aid for France Washington dispatches indicate the strong probability that U.S. military aid to France soon may be increased in the hope of enabling our ally to end the bloody war in Indochina. At the same time it was revealed thet a secret request for such stepped up aid had the approval of the National Se- curity Council and is favored by Presi- dent EisrnHowWrr. The request is for several hundred millions in addition to the $400,000,000 already appropriated. * x * In seeking the additional funds the Laniel government outlined its new plan for combating Communists in. Southeastern Asia. These include dispatch of nine more battalions of French troops from Europe to reinforce the 350,000 French and loyal In- dochinese troops already under arms there. Also planned is further expansion of Viet Nam forces so they, Laos and Cam- bodian troops eventually can take over the defense of Indochina. To increase popular native support the French have pledged complete self government for the three Indochina states, * * * The National Security Council is the Government’s top policy making body. Available to it is the advice of our fore- most military experts. Its reeommenda- tion that the additional aid be granted means that every aspect of the situa- tion in Southeastern Asia has been re- examined. It also means that in the Coun- cil’s opinion the new grant would strengthen our position in the Far East. Moreover it would lighten the financial burden on France re- sulting from her eight year war against the Communists and thus increase France's ability to. bol- ster European defenses against the Reds. The Man About Town That ‘Fourth’ City Only One Reader Submittee Correct Answer to Question Daftynition Regret: What you'll have if you don’t get that football contest entry in on time. —_ Among the many answers received to the ‘fourth city’’ question propounded in this column several days ago. Hartung Francis of Birmingham was the only one correct in all respects. According to the 1953 World Almanac, London is the fourth city in the world, following New York, Moscow and Chicago. This is accord- ’ ing to the 1950 census on the cities themselves, and not including any ‘‘Greater’”’ figures. Cities of China and Japan are not considered, as no offi- cial figures on them are available.’ Unofficial estimates would make Shanghai and Tokyo con- tenders. First four in the United States are New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Los Angeles. First four in Michigan: Detroit, Grand Rapids, Flint and Saginaw. First four in Oakland County: Pontiac, Royal Oak, Ferndale and Hazel Park. The close of the Man About Town football contest is less than five days away. Right NOW is the time to make out your entry. It costs nothing, and every member of the family is eligible. Or don’t you want $300 in bonds? Check over that list of games and see that your entry reaches the Pontiac eee office by next Satur- day xoon. : _—_— The high cost of marrying gets another boost on Oct. 3. According to County Clerk Lynn D. Allen a marriage license will then cost $3. The present price is $2. ——_—_ Word comes from Otsego Lake that Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Kuhn are doing some expert pinochle playing. Frank was chief of the Pontiac Fire Department for “many years. After being on the job since most of us were young, Johnny Spehar , broke all sound records at Saginaw and Huron Streets crying the news that the Pontiac Press had an exclusive story on O’Brian’s confession. Johnny’s vocal cords maintain all their volume. Perhaps he should be in grand opera. Michigan’s first killing frost will soon be re- ported. We’re betting on Cadillac. That Pontiac man with the suggestive name, Jack Frost of 675 North Perry St. says it didn't help a bit in the recent hot spell. Publicity director for the Grand Lodge of the Knights of Pythias of Michigan is Harry H. Pattison of 5960 Pontiac Trail. Sent to her by.a Canadian friend, Mrs. Ruby Mackinder of Drayton Plains thinks this is worthy of serious contemplations: ‘‘If we spent more time in striv- ing and less time in complaining, life would have more gladness and life would have less sadness.’ “We don’t know; much about football, but we do need $300,” writes Norman Fulkerson of Farmington, who says he is sending in entries for every member of his family in the football contest. A Pontiac woman (name ‘deleted for obvious _ reasons) tells me that she sees many people | from our city playing bingo across the border in Windsor, where special bonus prizes are an added attraction. Manager of the Rochester-Utica recreation area, had a pair of unique camping families last week. They pitched their tents and everything went _ well until some dark clouds appeared. Then they tore everything down and went to a motel because they didn’t want to get their tents wet. | Verbal Orchids to— Mrs. Jennie Little of 40 Moreland Ave.; eightieth birthday. ae JOM, DID.) HEAR fs _ SOMETHING ? You Sure Did, Ma! Voice of the People Physician Notes Sterilization of Feeble Minded and Insane at Expense of State (Letters will be condensed when neces- sary because of lack of space. Full name, address and telephone number of the writer must accompany letters but these will not be published if the writer so requests, unless the letter is critical in its nature). During 1952 Michigan protected four of its insane and 72 of its feeble minded persons from trans- mitting their undesirable heredity to children. . By a foresighted law passed in 1913, such persons can be sterilized at state expense. This humane op- eration closes the small tubes through which pass the sperms in a man or the eggs of a woman. No organ is removed from the body and there is no alteration in sexual characteristics or desires. The patient can detect no resulting change except the desired one that children are not produced. Although some of the potential children might not inherit the in- sanity or mental deficiency, each would suffer from upbringing by a mentally abnormal parent. The 76 sterilizations of insane and feeble minded persons which Michigan reported in 1952 are one per 100,000 inhabitants. This exceeds that of 14 other states having sterilization laws. Some 27 states, more than half, provide this measure of preven- tive medicine at state expense. Clarence J. Gamble, M.D. 255 Adams Street. Milton, Massachusetts. Reader Urges More Severe Punishments I wonder if we do not need to go back to some of those old- time laws against crime? In “Colonial Records of Con- necticut 1726-1735, under a head- ing, ‘‘An act in addition to the law entitled an act against theft and ‘burglary,” I find: “Be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that if any person shall commit burglary, by breaking up any dwelling house or shop wherein goods, wares and merchandise are kept, or shall rob any person offending, for the first offense shall be branded on the forehead with the letter ‘‘B.’’ Also having one of his ears nailed to a post and cut off and be whipped on the naked body 15 stripes. “For the second offense, such person shall be branded as afore- said and have the other of his ears nailed and cut off and be whipped on the naked body 25 stripes. For the third offense, such person shall suffer death, as is provided in said act.” I gather from this law that such person would not commit four burglaries, anyway. James W. Clapp 154 South Johnson Lawrence Sees Both Wagner, T-H Acts Depriving Individuals of Civil Liberties By DAVID LAWRENCE WASHINGTON — Labor-union bosses have a serious decision ahead of them. . Are they going to try to ‘‘make something’ out of the resignation of Martin Durkin as secretary of labor? Will the radicals and so- called ‘‘liberals’’ in the Demo- cratic Party try to exploit the episode as their peppery remarks last week indicated? Or will the labor-union strat- gists strive in a_ conciliatory spirit to get some of their amendments to the Taft-Hartley Act through with a minimum of bitter feeling all around? The decision is important be- cause the fabor-union bosses can- not defend persuasively in a major debate today several of the amend- ments they seek. Such a debate would be educational. For it would reveal to the Ameri- can people what so few citizens ,know—namely, that the greatest loss of individual liberty suffered in the last 20 years in the Ameri- can republic has resulted from the political influence and authoritar- ian policies of big unions. One wonders when there will be a revival of true liberalism . in America so that an individual may recover this right to work and his freedom to negotiate em- ployment and wages for himself. He was deprived of these civil liberties under the Wagner Act and it unfortunately continues to be the case under the Taft-Hartley Act. When, as is sanctioned by the Aunt Het present law, a citizen is not al- lowed to retain his job unless he joins a union—even though he may have conscientious objections to such membership—the loss of liber- ty is far greater than could possi- bly be involved when a congres- sional committee asks a witness whether he is a Communist, * * * Yet in the hue and cry which emanates from certain pulpits, forums, and from meetings like that of the American Political Science Assaciation held here last week where alleged dangers to freedom are stressed, nothing is said about the concrete loss of civil rights to the worker already ex- perienced under existing law or about the civil rights certain to be lost if some of the amendments being demanded by the big labor unions are enacted, Not all the proposed amendments which Durkin tried to get accepted by the White House are restrictive of individual liberty as there are some of relatively little conse- quence included that are supposed to benefit employers. The important restrictions on the rights of individuals which the labor unions want can be stated as follows: . 1. Management in certain in- dustries—maritime, construction and amusement—would be de- prived of the right to hire whom they pleased. Employes would be furnished by a union monopoly to which. the worker and the public generally would pay tribute. To allow pre- hiring agreements in certain in- dustries and. break down the princi- ple of freedom of hiring is to sanction its breakdown eventually ‘in all industries. 2. Unions would have the right hereafter — whenever compulsory membership for the minority of individuals has been voted by a charge such employes at the simple behest of the unions or be- come involved in legal con- troversy. tions at the workbench carried out loyally without putting the supervisor at odds with his own union. Also it would subject him to risk of expulsion form the union and thus in most instances automati- cally losing him his job. 4. Compulsory unionization as a principle would be made absolute by federal law;°This would render invalid hereafter those provisions of state laws or state constitutions which in 11 states now forbid var- jous forms of the ‘‘closed shop,” sometimes called the ‘‘union shop.” This proposal woula go further - than the Wagner Act ever did in depriving the individual citizen of his right to refrain from joining a union. These are only a few of the delicate points involved and the more the issue is brought out in the open the better it will be for the workers who have no spokes- men nowadays as against the tyrannies of autocratic control where compulsory unionization has been introduced. (Copyright 1953) Case Records of a Psychologist Hysterectomy Shouldn't Affect Feminine Charm Alice is verging on a nervous breakdown because of her false notions concerning the female womb. So study this Case rec- ord and obtain the true facts. Most of the menopausal upsets in women are also due to the same erroneous notion that Alice has., By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE Case H-385: Alice G., aged 22, is very much worried. “Dr. Crane, I am almost a nervous wreck,” she began. ‘‘For I have gone to the doctor who says I must have my womb re- moved. “He says I have a fibroid tu- mor as big ag a grapefruit. But I am terrified. “I don’t know what people will think, for I always believed such tumors occurred only in married women, “And now how can I ever mar- ry? Oh, it is terrible! I feel that there is nothing to live for. “Don’t you think my doctor may have made a mistake?’ In case you ever are fearful that your physician is in error, you, can always consult a second doctor. But Alice’s physician is an ex- pert, so she is hoping against hope that he made a mistake. As a rule, I avoid strictly medi- cal problems in this column, but when patients like Alice are so Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Friendly World Where do I find the friends I have? . . . On buses, trains and planes ...I meet them in the sun- shine and... I greet them in the rain... Around the happy neigh- borhood . . . In theater’ or store . . Where they are seeking just as much... What I am looking for . .. I make my friends along the streets... Of cities far away . . And it is just as pleasant there . + TO pass the time of day...A lake resort, a little farm... Wherever I may be... I offer them my friendly hand ,. . And they give theirs to me... And so it seems the whole wide world... Down to its smallest part... Is hungry for the friendliness ... Of every human heart. (Copyright 1953) Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER _ (International News Service) Reports on the Commies trapped 8,000 feet up means they busted all altitude records for going under- ground. They were trapped by FBI un- dercover agents. Who wired Washington for more covers. It's colder than a society smile above timberline in the associated Sierras. Three Los Angelans were accused of harboring them. Any- thing’s a harbor on that coast. Advantage of a mountain hide- out was demonstrated by Shickel- gruber at the Waltzing Alps in * Bisselgrabben, You can see more people you don't like in all four directions. One of the Commos had a canta- loupe face that he tried to disguise by walking around with a folding toothbrush in his complexion. The other got fat. Which would only be a disguise in East Berlin, Uncle Ef The only man in town who ap- peared on the streets dressed in shorts this summer was stopped by Everett True who took him intg a near-by store and bought him a pair of oo wrought up, it is well to state the medical facts. For knowledge gives you a broader perspective. Then you are not so likely to magnify molehills until they look like mountains. Removal of the female uterus (womb) is thus a common surgi- cal event, Moreover, it is not limited to married women, Many young girls, as well as spinsters, de- velop fibroids, These are similar to large warts that look like cartilage. They may even grow as big as a watermelon. Fibroids usually prevent preg- nancy, anyway. If they become so uncomfortable because of their size that they make a woman miser- able, then, in such an event, it Is well to have the womb removed (hysterectomy), “‘But would I ever be able to function as a wife?’ Alice fear- fully asked, Yes, the removal of your uterus should have no. more significant effect on your ability to be a com- plete wife, than is the removal of your appendix, So you women must not get ' upset and become neurotic, Oh, it is true, you will not be able to bear babies thereafter. But I have already mentioned that a fibroid usually prevents that possibility even if your womb were not removed. Besides, you can adopt children and be just as devoted to them as to any flesh-and-blood offspring. Or foster-parent a Sunday school class, Whether you lose your womb by surgery or it stops its month- ly cycle because you have passed the age of about 45, should not upset you women, You can still function as wives until a ripe old age, The usual menopausal upsets are based on a false notion that the womb is a primary sex organ. It definitely is not. So get wise to the true medical facts and cheer up. Smile and be jolly wives or sweethearts, for a hysterectomy should not affect your feminine charm. A husband can’t tell in mari- tal relations whether his wife has a womb or not! So you neurotic wives can relax and banish your needless fears, Send for my bulletin ‘‘Meno- pausal Complexes,”’ enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. It offers further advice on this subject, (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate Inc.) From Our Files 15 Years Ago MANY SLAIN as 2,000 Sudetens battle Czechs; France reinforces army. SMALLEST LOCAL baby, weigh- ing 1 pound 10 ounces, born in Pontiac General Hospital. AMERICAN TRAVELERS are urged “unofficially and informally” to leave Europe. 20 Years Ago 16 SHOT IN rioting caused by coal code delay; quick OK ordered. NEW PREMIER of Spain elect- ed; 63-year-old Alejandro Lerroux. DICTATORSHIP MAY be solu- tion to critical situation in Cuba. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY And again, I will put my trust in him. And again, Behold I and the children which God hath given me.—Hebrews 2:13. * * * Father, perfect my trust; Let my spirit feel in death That her feet are firmly set On the rock of living faith! —Phoebe Cary. Everyday Refined Diet of Americans Deficient in 3 Vitamins and Minerals By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. The process of degeneration which we call arteriosclerosis or hardening of the arteries begins earlier in some persons, later in others according to the quality of the tubing inherited, as 19th century authorities conjectured. The degeneration is rapid in some persons, slow in others, ac- cording to the individual's nutri- and fourth generation, impressed No medical authority today gives that wicked notion credence. From what I can learn the con- census of physicians today is that arteriosclerosis is not an inherited defect or disease but that jt is a process of degeneration (breaking down, wearing out) which depends on the state of nutrition, not just for the past 6 months but from cradle to — no, say to breakfast this morning. If you are interested in degener- ation, in the physical or medical sense, Stedman’s medical diction- ary will give you a good definition: A retrogressive pathological change in cells or tissues in con: sequence of which the function- ing power is lost and the living substance converted into an inert mass. Say the muscle cells in the artery wall wear out, as cells normally ds ta ears dayror weeks of work, they are replaced, not by new muscle cells but by inelastic fi- brous or fatty material or the de- fect is patched with nature's plaster of Paris — calcium deposits. This degeneration process is not an abrupt or sharp breakdown. Neo physician can say, and no instrument or test available day can determine whe apparently healthy Le ‘ i aged 40 has attained the peak of his or her growth and develop- ment and has already begun to degenerate that is, to die. But the record of an individual’s physical] health kept in the files of the doctor who makes his periodic examinations may reveal a grad- ual decline which tells the doctor what kind of advice to give to postpone the cold gradations. In my opinion, inadequate daily intake of these essentials of good nutrition accounts for early de- generation and decline of a lot of Americans who don’t know how to live. Signed Pm pet Pig more then me poreseat health ond Nealon’ not to PP ease, diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. ong tf a stamped, self addressed envelope is etc (Copyright 1953) — i See a. A oe Oe ce eo en, ae SEVEN Of the wearers of glasses in the United Staees, 56.4 per cent are females and: 43.6 per -cent males. TV REPAIRS Work Guaranteed! HAMPTON TV 286 State St. FE 4-2525 Quick Relief for HEADACHE NEURALGIA Test STANBACK yourself... tab lets or powders .. . eqgainst any Peeparation you've ever used. Snap Bock on FULL ELS BEST BUY USED Ranges $1935 Terms Available The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC 51 West Huron Street DANGEROUS ... Free Book Tells What To Do: Usually Only If Neglected: Is fear of the truth making you neglect piles? Then get this book; ease the fear; make up for the neglect that is, usually, the real source of dangers in such ailments as piles, fistula, rectal and colon disorders. Address Thornton &, Minor Hospital, Suite 914, 911 E. Linwood, Kansas City 9, Mo. SINUS TABLETS Immediate relief of discumfurt due to sinus condition A real remed:. not tust a “pain killer” Bottle of 100 Tablets. $5.00 Otto’s Pharmacy Open Daily 10 a.m. to 1] p.m. Closed Sundays 141 E. Maple, eo aa Phone MI 4-2° PORTENDS OF FUTURE—One minute they are babies, and then all of a sudden they are little girls That's the way it seems to all parents, and as you leaf back through the pages of history when the Dionne quintuplets were babies, | those baby days, you'll find some in almost no time at all the five tiny infants you first saw come into the world in 1934 are standing around their fifth birthday cake. And as you :go back through portents of the future, too. For instance, you'll see Marie, the deeply religious and quietest of the quints, solemnly trying to capture the attitude of the Blessed Virgin as she stands before the image in the nursery creche. This fall Marie leaves her sisters for the first time, to enter the order of the Sisters of the Holy Sacrament at Quebec. RLO ©) BY NEA SERVICE, INC. And you'll see Yvonne stand- ing with brush in hand as if await- ing a nod from the critics for her somewhat swirly painting back in 1937. Now Yvonne is leaving, too, to study art at Notre Dame Con- gregation in Montreal. Seek Plebiscite in Free Trieste Western Big 3 Study -Htalian Plea as_ Tito Issues Warning By JAMES M. LONG ROME W® — The Western Big Three today studied an Italian plea for a free plebiscite in explosive Trieste and a blunt Yugoslav warn- ing “‘not to pour oil on the_fire.’’ Neither in Belgrade nor Rome was there much confidence that the latest settlement proposals by the raw-tempered neighbors had brought the seven-year-old quarrel over the strategic frontier territory any nearer a solution. But neither was there serious fear that the heightened dispute would lead to violence. Ps * * * In a speech here yesterday, Ita- lian Premier Giuseppe Pella called for a plebiscite in the entire Free Trieste territory to determine whether it eventually should be un- der Italian or Yugoslav control. At the same time he flatly re- jected Yugoslav President Tito’s proposal a week ago to internal- ize the port city of Trieste and give the surrounding rural territory to Yugoslavia. » > * At present, the northern part of the territory, including the port, is occupied by British and American troops. Italy assist< in its joint ad- ministration. The southern district —zone B—is occupied by Yugoslav troops. Tito, speaking yesterday to a crowd of 150,000 in the Adriatic cit of Split, warned the Italians they would “‘break their heads’’ against a stone wall of Yugoslav resistance if they attempted to seize Trieste by force. “All that I am asking from the Western World,’’ said Tito, ‘‘is not to pour oil on the fire.” * * . He charged that Italy had de- signs on his nation’s territory, and he voiced a ‘‘suspicion’’ that some Western elements, particularly in Britain, were scheming with the Italians against Yugoslavia. However, Tito denied rumors, which he charged Italy was spread- ing for “propaganda purposes,” that Yugoslavia is turning back toward Russia and away from its Western supporters, Flag Firm Opposes . Adding More Stars OAKE, Pa. (UP)—A company that would stand to gain consider- ably by any change in the design of the American Flag is opposed to adding stars for new states. Charles L. Campbell, vice presi- dent of the Dettra Flag Co., one of the largest flag-makers in the nation, said“the problem of stars has now reached the proportion of the problem with stripes back in 1818 when each of the seven new states was clamoring for its stripe. If the practice of adding stripes | for new states had been continued | then, he said, we would have an awkwardly designed flag today. “We think the time has e for Congress to freeze the in of the U.S. Flag in its present form,’’ Campbell said. “Tt is all right to say that we could add another star for Hawaii just bye rearranging the field to have seven rows of seven stars each,’’ Campbell said. ‘‘But where | do we go from there? After all, Alaska is also pushing for state- hood, and how do you arrange 50 stars?” ‘Furthermore, it’s not unreason- able that our other territories, Guam, Puerto Rico, Wake Island and the Virgin Islands, should some day seek statehood, and what happens to the Flag then?” State Bar Group Calls for End to Color Line LANSING ® — A committee of the State Bar of Michigan today called for an end to racial dis- crimination in employment and in public hospitals. The committee's recommenda- tion will be considered at the bar’s convention in Detroit Sept. 24. New York Primary to See Dem Contest By JAMES DEVLIN NEW YORK w®-—A bitter fight between two wings of the Demo- cratic party comes to a head in balloting tomorrow in New York City’s mayoral primary. Some of the scars inflicted in heated exchanges of the past few weeks give signs of remaining un- healed through the Nov. 3 general election. * * * Mayor Vincent R. Impellitteri, seeking the party nomination for another term, is backed by so- called conservative forces. Among them is James A. Farley, the former Democratic national chairman who broke with Presiden Franklin D. Roosevelt on the third term issue. > * * Opposing Impellitteri for the nomination is Manhattan Borough President Robert F. Wagner Jr., son of the late author of the Wag- ner Labor Relations Act, who is backed by the so-called New Deal wing. Wagner is supported by the pre- New Deal Americans for Demo- cratic Action and prominent New and Fair Dealers such as Sen. Herbert H. Lehman, Averell Harri- man, former foreign aid chief, and Rep. Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. we * Both For $1295 Matching Wedding Bands. handsomely tailore@ bands in 14K gold lewelry Department GEORGE'S INEWPORT’S) Yugoslav Pilot Seeks Refuge in Nearby Italy ROME (®—A 26-year-old Yugo- slav pilot was reported seeking political asylum in Italy today, after fleeing his Communist home- land in an American-built Thunder- bolt fighter, The Italian News Agency Ansa said the flier, who identified him- self as Lt. Nicolas Jakses of Jasenac, landed yesterday at Avi- ano in northern Italy, You pay It’s the highest-powered Special in Buick history. It’s 6-passenger roomy and luxuriously fitted. ht rides like a million, handles like a dream. Yet it’s yours for just a little more than the price of the “low-priced” cars. Better come in and see it now! -_ 7, sett Fult-Flow Oil Filter © Vocuum Pump Bemper Geerds, front ond rear Even the foctory-instolled extras you may wont ore bargains, sech asi *2-doer, 6-passenger Sedoa, Mode! 480, ilk d. Optioac! eqeip state end local tawes, H any, edditioncl. Prices moy vory slightly in odiel ming com monittes dee to shipping charges. All prices sebject to change without notice. ~ OLIVER MOTOR SALES 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 Pontiac, Mich. OPEN MON. NIGHTS to 9 21K12W—1954 as well as Fri. and Sat. Nights FEDERA _ All-new for ‘54! 21" MOTOROLA CONSOLE TV, NO MONEY DOWN Here it is at a price you'd never think possible! The brand-new 1954 Motorola with its big 21” double power picture that gives you greater picture clarity, greater contrast, greater enjoyment! Big 21” spher- ical tube is tilted downward to prevent glare, is focused permanently . » never needs adjustment! ‘Robot 82’ tuner has one-knob control for VHF and new UHF stations. Rich- walnut cabinet. Buy the new Motorola on easy credit at Federal’s! dept. stores 93 TERMS Full Year Warranty on All Parts Including Picture Tube SACINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. SAT., NICHTS TO 9 Services for Aged Nun Tuesday in Grand Rapids LAKE LEELANAU (UP) — Fu- neral services will be held in Mary- wood Chapel at Grand Rapids Tuesday morning at 9:30 for Sister Mary Rosina, 64, a member of the Dominican Sisters of Marywood for 43 years. Sister Rosina, formerly Anna Bleise, served the order in Lake Leelanau, Merrill, Saginaw, Mus- kegon and Traverse City. She died in St. Mary’s convent here Satur- day. BED WETTING STOPPED DOCTOR DEVELOPED AND APPROVED For Free Intormation Call or Write THE ENURTONE CO. . OPEN THURS., FRI REGISTER RECEIPTS. EXPIRES SEPT. START SAVING YOUR YELLOW DOLLS of all LANDS WITH EVERY $35.00 IN CASH OFFER 21st. NO LIMIT TO NUMBER; OF DOLLS YOU MAY GET ON ‘THIS OFFER! This Bonus Offer Good Only 4t— 59 S. SAGINAW & 398 AUBURN BY | ae ee 125 W. HURON & 536 N.PERRY OPEN THURS. ond FRI TIL 9 PLM. ) | | | SS ee ——— Flooded EIGHT bt a ea. en. i, ie led, a i THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 Dublin Maps Schedule WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Program plans for the coming year will be discussed when Dub- lin School PTA Executive Board meets tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the school. The group expects to com- plete its program schedule at, the session. Rankin Plans Tokyo Trip TAIPEH, Formosa B® — U. S. Ambassador Karl L. Rankin and Mrs. Rankin will fly to Tokyo to- morrow for a three-week vaca- tion, the American Embassy said today. Only FE 2-0652 You'll Want COMPLETE FUNERAL SERVICE | William F. Davis Funeral Home *- J the Best... ~ Garsemenl rom roor-scocken SEWER? ae ROOTO PIONEER PATENTED CHEMICAL DEVELOPED FOR THE PURPOSE OF C ees \ ii [em felepm :ikele dieme) 4.143) AND PREVENTING RECURRENCE @ CLEARING WASTE-CLOGGED DRAINS @ CURING SLUGGISH SEWERS @ KEEPING SEPTIC TANKS AND SEWERS FLOWING FREELY / The use of Rooto requires no digging or mechanical equip- ment. There's no muss. Four different sized packages are available—a proper package for each use listed above. ASK YOUR PLUMBER OR HARDWARE DEALER Roger Kyes in Bonn, Talks With Officials BONN, Germany ® — JU. S. Deputy Defense Secretary Roger M. Kyes discussed West Germany’s role in the defense of Europe today with German and American offi- | cials here. Kyes, on a 30-day inspection trip of American military units and in- | stallations in Europe, talked first with U. ‘S. High Commissioner James” B. Conant. Then he met with deputy .for- eign Minister Walter Hallstein | and former Gen, Adolf Heusinger, one of the top officals of the Na- | tional Defense Commission plan- |ning German rearmament within 'the projected six-nation European Army, | Kyes came here from Wiesbaden | where he conferred earlier with U.S. Air Force officals. His party | includes Frank C. Nash, assistant | secretary of defense for internal security»affairs; James H. Douglas, undersecretary of the Air Force, and Marine Gen. Graves B. Erskine (ret), assistant to the sec- retary of defense. Passenger Suffers Cuts as Auto Turns Over Jerry Turner, 24, of 185 N. Perry St., was treated for head cuts at Pontiac General Hospital yester- day after a car in which he was ricing rolled over on Kennett road north of U. S. 10, Oakland County sheriff's deputies said today. Floyd Emomns, 27, of 55 W. Hud- son, Royal Oak, told deputies he lost control of the car while rounding a curve. GET READY FOR . e CivelMore Heat from Every Drop of Oil @ Exclusive Duo-Therm Dual Chamber © Burner Burns Clean at Any Setting NTER Duo-THERM OIL HEATER GM Will Recall Men in 3 Months Expect Gear Operations to Be Rolling Again by Mid-December DETROIT (UP) — Seven-thou- sand General Motors workers idled by the fire at the Livonia transmis- sion plant should be back at work by mid-December, a union official predicts. President Michael Loverich of Local 735, CIO United Auto Work- ers, said he was informed that near-peak production of automatic transmissions at Willow Run should be reached by that time. GM leased approximately one- | third of the Willow Run plant from |Kaiser Motors Corp. to make hy- dra-matic transmissions after its own plant burned early in August. Loverich made his prediction at a meeting of the idled work- ers here Sunday at which time a resolution was passed urging Gov. G. Mennen Williams to put a moratorium on their debts un- til they are recalled to work. Williams promised to do ‘‘every- thing possible’ under state law. Meanwhile, he said, ‘‘I shall per- sonally urge these banks and loan companies to defer, insofar as possible, obligations owned by those made jobless by the fire.’’ Three in Family Hurt # When Auto Overturns BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Three members of one family were injured yesterday in an auto ac- cident on Golf drive near Tele- graph road. Police said their car hit a soft shoulder, hurtled 84 feet into a field, overturned twice and landed on its top. Treated and released for bruises from Pontiac General Hospital were the driver, Dessemer L. Coon, 38, of 3980 Arcadia Park, Pontiac; his wife, Charlotte, 36, aid a daughter, Margie, 18. Rochester ‘Lights’ 268 Bicycles on Ist Saturday ROCHESTER—Some 268 bicy- cles were taped in Rochester's ‘Light a Bike Day’’ Saturday ac- cording to Assistant Fire Chief H. B. Littell chairman. Additional tape has been order- ed and will be available in about three weeks. Village firemen and policemen were busy all day installing the reflecting tape on bikes as children lined up at the local fire house. Under the sponsorship of village firemen and policemen, the pro- gram is designed to make after- dark bicycle riding safer for child- ren and drivers. Couple Reported ‘Fair’ After Car Hits Tree A Pontiac couple are in ‘‘fair condition’’ today at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital after their car ran off Elizabeth Lake road at Airport Road yesterday and hit a tree, according to Oakland County she- riff's deputies . John E. Damon, 33, of 59 S. Parke St., is suffering from cuts and a_ fractured rib. His wife, Lavonia, 22, sustained a concus- sion, the hospita}-also reported. Damon told deputies he lost con- trol of his car while swerving to avoid an auto that pulled in front of him. MSC Professor Dies EAST LANSING ® — Dr. Rich- ard De Zeeuw, 73, retired botany professor at Michigan State Col- lege, died at his home here Sun- day after a long illness. County Calendar es Opening fall luncheon meeting of St Philip's Episcopal Church Guild has been scheduled for 12:30 p.m. tomorrow in the church untercroft. An Executive Board session has also been planned for 11:30 a.m Waterford Mrs. Ernest Stevens will be hostess for a meeting of the Birthday Club at her Williams Lake road home Wednes- day. A potluck dinner at noon will open the event. a ELECTRIC 4 OAvS Ss ; ‘6 » Detroit Edison Will Install Your Dryer FREE of Charge 108 NORTH SAGINAW Formerly $309.95 269" Phone FEderal 3-7114 State Accident Toll Hits 16 for Weekend (Continued From Page One) passenger hit a road barricade on M. 21 at Zeeland city limits. Ellsworth W. Stephens, 32, of Oxford, was killed Sunday morn- ing when his car collided with a pickup truck at Northwestern high- way and Middlebelt in Oakland County. Lester Prue, 55, of Hermans- ville, was kilied Saturday night when he tried to cross U. 8. 10 in heavy traffic three miles north of Pontiac. A Detroit woman, Mrs. Anas- tasia Schutzky, 53, was killed Sat- urday in a collision that involved three cars, a taxicab and a truck in east side Detroit. Claude Sampson, 56, of Decherd, Tenn., was injured fatally Friday night when a car hit him as he attempted to cross U. S. 24 south of Flat Rock. Six-year-old Shirley May Pulley was killed Friday night near her Battle Creek home when a car struck her as she led her 3-year- old brother across the street. Ed Drummer, 44, of South Haven, was killed late Saturday when his car went out of control on M. 140 and hit a tree near South Haven. Emma Carlson, 76, of Bellaire, was killed Saturday night when a car struck her near her home on M. 88. Frank Kushak, 38-year-old Cross Village woodworket, was killed Sunday when the car in which he was a passenger went out of control and hit a tree in Emmett County. Leona D. Griér, 42, of Clio, was killed Sunday night when her car and another crashed head-on on U. S. 10 three miles northwest of Midland. Dougias Jackson, 44, of Milan was killed Sunday night, seven miles north of Ypsilanti, when his car struck an oil truck. John Austin, 81, of Tecumseh, died Sunday of injuries suffered Saturday in a collision at a Tecum- seh intersection. ‘ SMALL Dozen in Carton Rax Brand BONITO FLAKES pyttessssee avel Only with Coupon 8 Your choice of Holl popular g brand regulars, 8 You must have - coupon, | pkg. g Per coupon. Hamilton Grade “A” COUNTRY FRESH Mon., Tues., Wed.— CIGARETTES 10°. DOMINO Pure Cane Ruby Bee Home-Kitchen STRAWBERRY PRESERVES Ga WJ 5 . LOPLE'S FANCY CRUSHED PINEAPPLE in heavy syrup KIDNEY No, 303 All Popular Brand White Delicious Armour’s CORNED BEEF 12 Oz. Can Pc Cc P=-@ =S4 4A SUTTEP-SAP Pid | Allen Funeral Home with graveside Deaths in Nearb Mrs. Mary Ann Harris SOUTH LYON—Service for Mrs. Clarence J. (Mary Ann) Harris, Tl, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at her home, 3112 Godfrey St., with burial in South Lyon Cemetery. | She died at home Saturday. Born ‘in Salem, she lived here since she was ten years old. Mrs. Minnie K, Hartley WASHINGTON—Service for Mrs. Charles (Minnie K.) Hartley, &, of Van Dyke Road, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Schwarzkoff-Millikin Funeral Home; Utica, with burial in Mt. Avon Cemetery, Rochester. She died Saturday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Alice Barth. Born in Canada, she lived here since the age of five. John E. Simpson FERNDALE — Service for John Edward Simpson, 77, of 220 Vester Ave., will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday from Wessles Funeral Home with burial in Oakview Cemetery. He died at his home Saturday. Surviving are his widow, Ellen; a son, Wilfred of Ferndale, and one grandchild. Joseph Hegel FERNDALE—Requiem Mass for Joseph Hegel, 76, of 530 W. Hazel- hurst, was sung this morning at St. James Church. Burial was to be in Mt. Olivet Cemetery. He died Friday at his home. Surviving are two sons, Stephen J. and Anthony J. of Detroit; two daughters, Mrs. Joseph Mina of Ferndale, and Mrs. Edward Gou- gan of Detroit; seven grandchil- dren and two great-grandchildren. Eric L. Burly ROYAL OAK — Memorial serv- ice for Eric L. Burley, 54, of 423 East Lincoln Ave., will be 8 p. m. today by Maple Leaf Post 84, Ca- nadian Legion, at the Legion Hall. Funeral service will be 2 p. m. tomorrow at Kinsey Funeral Home with burial in Glen Eden Memorial Park Cemetery. He died yesterday in Highland Park General Hospital. William T. Manley HUNTINGTON WOODS—Service for William T. Manley, seven-year- old son of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Manley of 13128 Vernon Rd., will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Schanidt burial in White Chapel Memorial Park Cemetery. He was a polio patenit at Herman Kiefer Hospital, Detrot, and died yesterday. Kenneth F. Sheldon LAKE ORION—Service for Ken- neth F. Sheldon, 39, of 481 Heights Rd., will be 2 p.m, tomorrow at military service -to be conducted by Charleton-Polan American Le- gion Post at East Lawn Cemetery. Born in Pontiac, he died sud- denly Saturday in Dearborn Vet- erans Hospital. He attended Hofty schools and Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with | y Communities Charleton-Polan Post, he served in the Medical Corps in World War II and was owner and manager of a dairy bar ifr Lake Orion. Surviving besides his widow, Tena, are one son, Gary at home; his father, LeRoy Sheldon of Holly; his mother, Mrs. Melissa Hunn of Oxford; two brothers, Lt. Cmdr. Vern Sheldon of Glenview, Ill. and Donald of Lake Orion; and three sisters, Mrs. Roland Atley of Holly and Mrs. Ida Miller and Mrs, Margeurite Cook, both of Oxford. County Health Consultant to Lead Group Discussion Dr. C. A. Neafie, health con- sultant, Oakland County Health Department, will be leader of a discussion section during Michigan State Medical Society's annual meeting Sept. 21-25 in Grand Rap- ids. Dr. Neafie’s section will discuss public health and preventive medi- cine Sept. 25. COCKROACHES One Full Year Guorantee From Houses, Apartments, Gro- cery Stores and Restaurants. Re- main out only three hours. No signs used. Rox Ex Company 1014 Pent. St Sk. Bidg. FE 46-9462 (Adertisement) ASTHMA COUGHS Don't let difficult breathing, coughing and wheezing, due to recurring spasms of Bronchial Asthma or simple Bronchitis ruin sleep and energy without trying MENDACO. Usually quickly helps loosen and remove thick, strangling mucus. Thus allays coughing and promotes freer breath- ing and sounder sieep. Get MENDACO under money back guarantee at druggists. LOOK! HUDSON HOUSEHOLD CO. Now Located at 390 Nelson FE 5-5552 BAYER ASPIRIN RELIEVES was a member of Holly Methodist Church, A past-commander of NEURITIC ; neuravcic PA | I See This Great Washer DOUBLE TUBS models are famous bowl shaped at WAYNE GABERT’S! PRICES START 24 Months to PAY WAYNE GABERT will allow you deliver a new Speed Queen today! 121 North Saginaw St. You do not need to put up with the old washer any longer! @ generous trade-in for it and Terms arranged on the balance. Come in. . . choose the New Speed Quen you want now! WAYNEGABERT “Your Electrical Appliance Specialist” Phone FE 5-6189 — a —. ae. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 195% MISS GWENDOLYN WELSH Williams Names Drayton Girl | to Youth Group DRAYTON PLAINS — Appoint- ment of Miss Gwendolyn Welsh, 22, to Michigan Youth Commis- - sion’s Advisory Council was made here recently by Gov. G. Men- nen Williams. A graduate of Waterford Town- ship High School, Miss Welsh, of 4530 Thirza Ct. is an employe of Fisher Body Division in Pontiac. She is the daughter of Mrs. Mil- dred Welsh. Her duties will include plan- ning programs and activities for the council. At present the group is promoting better auto training and traffic safety laws, along with striving to lower the voting age to 18. Three Men Assault, Rob Man of $375 HAZEL PARK — A 44Vear-old Hazel Park man reported to po- lice Saturday night that /he was beaten and robbed of $375 in a parking lot near a bar on Stephen- son Highway here. Vincent Ruskowski of 61 Shasta Ave., who was treated and re- leased at a local hospital, told po- lice he met three men in the bar and when he left at about 11:20 p.m., they followed and beat hin up. Waterford MOMS Set ‘White Elephant’ Auction WATERFORD—A ‘‘white elep- hant”’ auction will be held tomor- row night at 8 by the Waterford MOMS with proceeds going to help veterans confined in hospit- als. All persons having ‘‘white ele- | phants” are urged to take them | to the American Le gion home be- tween 1 and 4 p.m, tomorrow. Harry Whittaker to Head Metamora Farm Bureau METAMORA — Harry Whittaker was elected chairman of the Meta- mora Farm Bureau at its Sep tember meeting. Others elected were Donald Tra- vis, vice chairman; Mrs. Travis, secretary; Mrs. Truman Denby, discussion leader; Lee Fox, min- ute man; Mrs. Whittaker, women’s* committee member; Mrs. George Nunn, recreation and song leader; and Mrs. A. D. Buell, publicity. 11 Year School Veteran Transfers to Ypsilanti BROWN CITY — Oscar Johnson, coach and industrial arts instructor here for.11 years, has resigned to become industrial arts and critic teacher at the Lincoln Con- solidated School, Ypsilanti. The school is an affiliate of Michigan State Normal College. Charity Starts in Store - HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP) — Charity, instead of beginning at home, started at_a downtown de- partment store in this case. The result was 18 months in county prison and $40 fine for James Charity who passed worthless checks to obtain $245. DID YOU: KNOW? That you can park in a Downtown Heated Garage for as low as 29 Special Monthly _ Rates with in and out privileges We Invite Your Patronage HUBBARD GARAGE 16 S$. Perry Se. Outdoor Parking Home Demonstrators Plan Weekly Series of Rallies A series of rallies to begin this week have been setup by the Oak- land County Home Demonstration Executive Committee fof the vari- ous districts in this county. The rallies will open fall activ- ities for the home demonstration program for 1953-54, according to Huron Saddle Club Elects New Officers MILFORD — New officers were elected last week at a meeting of the huron Valley Saddle Club. Elected were Ross Eaton, presi- Mrs. Josephine Lawyer, home demonstration agent. They were planned through cooperative efforts of the two district chairmen and the local chairman of groups in Holly, Lake Orion, Milford, Oxford, Rochester, Royal Oak and Pon- tiac. Potluck lunches and entertain- ment by home _ demonstration groups are arranged for the rallies, according to Mrs. Lawyer. Mem- bers will meet other women in- terested in home demonstration work at these days of fun and fellowship. , Pontiac Lake PTA Picks Committee Heads PONTIAC LAKE — President Merle Lowe appointed chairman for four committees last week at the first meeting of Pontiac Lake PTA. The are Mrs. Francis Collon, program; Mrs. Lowe and Mrs. | William Penoza, membership; Mrs. Glen Nelsey, hospitality; and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taylor, publicity. ‘Hot Flashes’ Stopped ona etcacee o This week’s rally schedule: Pontiac District — tomorrow at noon in Dublin Community Center, Union Lake Road. Holly District—WedNesday at dent; Fay Titus, vice-president; Judy Titus, secretary; and Dr. J. Lawrence, treasurer. Frank Duke, former president, was elected to replace outgoing Board Member Paul Abany. 10:30 a. m. in Rose Center | Both Pinkham’s Compound and Tabiets are Town Hall. a meng orp a 7~ thousands of wense Rochester district — Friday | ®dded iron) : Cootiette Club Meets KEEGO HARBOR Club 135 met with Mrs. at 1 la. m. in the pavilion of | today. Get Avon Township Park. : The Royal Oak District will hold — Cootiette Louis Nichols of Portman Street last] its rally Sept. 30. The Milford Dis- It ects through 2 woman's week and authorized a gift for) trict rally will be Oct. 1, and the| iim \ on ts eee nae on JAE (heoe swfal “beatwaves” | Base 100 Hospital at Battle Creek Oxford district Oct. 2. PROVE IT YOURSELF! WER T PENNEY’S! Surface interest crepes are stealing the fashion scene! See Penney’s for MATELASSE CREPE — DRESSES (Ox ya oe ra ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! | Rayon and acetate with a puckered effect! (890 Chill-cool dark colors for wear CORDUROY CRAWLABOUTS 1.98 Pinwale corduroy, sturdy and washable, with embroidered padded knees, snap- apart crotch. Maize, blue, red, gray, for small, medium and large. “Growall” hem can be lengthened as child grows. KNIT VESTS 49° On and off in a jiffy— without pins or buttons to fuss with! The cleverly designed expansion shoulder does the trick. Short sleeves, single breasted, white, 1-6. “Estron Acetate Snowsuits for boys and girls! 90 Sizes 1-3 WARMLY QUILT LINED! HAND WASHABLE! WIND RESISTANT! WATER REPELLENT! © 50% wool knit cuffs ® easy entry zipper © with detachable mittens, bootees Built for full protection—styled to be extra pretty! Girls’ suits come in red, pink, yellow or mint. Boys’ suits are blue, yellow, mint or red. Wonderful _to find all this for just 7.90! INFANTS’ 3-PIECE 219 Soft cotton knit sleepers with long sleeves, at- tached feet . . in the convenient two-pants style with handy gripper fast- eners. Maize, blue, green, pink. Triple Thick TRAINING PANTS 3D ‘Combed cotton yarn, triple thickness crotch for greater absorbency. Double thickness body, elastic leg opening. Sizes 1-4. TO SHOP AT PENNEY’S! iT PAYS DRAWSTRING ! from now through fall! WARM COTTON @perfect for between-season-wear! _ COTTON KNIT CRIB BLANKETS @neat, slim lines! PENNEY’S, GOWNS @rhinestone sparkle! GAUZE DIAPERS 3 49 ie 3.29 J8¢ Ss ° Soft, fine combed cotton yarns | The safe, easy, sanitary way to | Soft, downy surface They fold and pin so easily! that are absorbent and quick | feed baby his formula and other keeps in heat—wards off cold! PROVE IT YOURSELF... Toa re os eaft ag butter! Pesta jas well as Kind to baby's | guide, Eight ounce bottle, die, LAC. freen., maize. white, blue stadia sina oot puintan:tisrhtAinrclessliessamigtte-+- 000 nepoee 4} ontinee 4 $s innniintrrnastbnntin~ datas ntin sp a weave. Double woven for. onire ings, White. tels ac” aiaee cap and nipple. Sach unit may be matching acetate satin binding. IT PAYS sie) ite) AT aT ae | absorbency. 21"x40"—one dozen. with pink or blue; infants’ size. ' purchased separately. | Washable. 36”x50”. . PENNEY’S SECOND FLOOR +} ® 4 ‘Ne Ne a ee ge Me ge rege RN, MR A OR, ke Ts a aa af es Ate a ae oS SE EY SN A ER eS WS S - © % . @ 7 Rae 8 Ss * 3 U 8 S38 $F ED TY XS... 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 HAVE YOU TRIED Surveys Show 1 Out Of 2 Children Fail To Get The Recommended Amounts Of Food-Energy For Normal Weight And Growth Gains. - Indust 7 Days Start Your Child. > Growing Again With Wonder Bread! The Bread That Helps Build Strong Bodies 8 Ways! Note How Wonder Bread Compares With Meat, Milk, Fish and Eggs—See Chart Children go for Wonder Bread because it’s Doubly Fresh! An average boy of 10 should gain about 6 pounds in one year. Which is at the rate of 14 pound per month; or less than 2 ounces each week. But any time your child fails to gain food-energy instead of growth. The result: Your child’s growth is stunted. Wonder Bread Helps Your Child , Grow Bigger and Stronger 8 Ways A.well-balanced ‘diet calls for meat, milk, eggs, fruit and both yellow and green-leafed vegetables. And carbohy- 8 ways—which is what they want to excel.in their favorite sports. Measure your child in the doorway. Make a pencil mark now. Then in 8 months and 6 months—watch the mark shoot up! Get Wonder Bread Today Wonder Bread is a wonderful food. Be- cause it helps build strong bodies 8 ways. ‘ And ‘Wonder Bread has a wonderful flavor. Because it is doubly fresh— puts her or him that far behind. drate food for energy. Like Wonder fresh when you buy it and fresh when Why Lack of Food-Energy Bread. : you eat it. ” Causes Weight and Growth Loss Because not only does Wonder Bread Get Wonder Bread fresh from your Carbohydrate and fat supply food- supply food-energy but protein.Study grocer today. And—start your child energy. Protein supplies the “building blocks” of growth. Now Nature cannot use carbohy- drate and fat alone for growth, but it can use protein for energy. Thus, when your child fails to get enough carbohydrate and fat food- energy, Nature uses the protein for the chart and see how Wonder Bread helps build bigger and stronger bodies 8 ways. ‘To encourage your child to eat a well-balanced diet and 8 slices of Wonder Bread each day, show him or her this ad. Because it shows how'any boy or girl can grow bigger and stronger growing again in just 7 days. Continental Company, Inc. * WONDER BREAD HELPS BUILD STRONG BODIES 8 WAYS! y Sa OF 2B GLICES A MEAL AND A BANDWICH DANY SUPPLY, 4 M008 AWAITS OWN CHOPPERS — Britt McDaniel, 4, of Valparaiso, Ind., smiles to show his upper and lower dentures. Until eight months ago, the youngster was on liquid diet, because a rare disease caused a rapid decay of his baby teeth. Now he’s able to eat hard foods, while waiting for his own set of permanent teeth, expected to arrive by his sixth birthday. Teeming India Finds an Outlet Andaman Isles in Bay of Bengal to Be Home for 20,000 Persons WASHINGTON — Teeming India has found an outlet for part of its overflow population—the tropical Andaman Islands, 700 miles south of Calcutta in the Bay of Bengal, Under a new five-year, $10,000,- 000 development plan, the Indian government hopes to settle 20,- 000 persons—some 4,000 agricul- tural families—on the fertile island chain that once served as a penal colony, the Natiohal Geographic Society says. Hindu refugees from Pakistan's East Bengal Province have first priority. Already more than 400 fam- flies have moved to the new settlement. Transportation, 10 acres of land, housing materials, seeds, and farming implements have been furnished free to each family. Thousands of acres of forest land have been cleared. Rice, sugar cane, corn, citrus fruits, tea and coffee are being cultivated. Apportioned to the Union of ‘India in the 1947 partition, the 204 Andaman Islands have an area of 2,508 square miles, slightly larger than the State of Delaware. The Indian government envis- fons thriving fisheries, cattle and poultry breeding, and furni- ture and shipbuilding industries in future years. The Andamans may also be de veloped as a vacation resort. Se- cluded coral bays with spacious , sandy beaches front coconut plan- tations. Beautiful lagoons provide natural harbors for sailing craft. The climate is warm but tempered by constant sea breezes. About 700 miles north of the equator and less than 300 miles west of the Malay Peninsula, the Andamans are in the heart of the monsoon belt, but, strangely enough, are rarely affected by cyclonic storms. Port Blair, one of southern Asia's finest harbors, is the An- daman capital. Site of a British settlement in 1789, the port was abandoned seven years later. In 1858, the Indian government established a penal colony at Blair, but in 1921 shipment of convicts from the mainiand was discontinued. The Japanese oc- cupied the islands for $4 years during World War II. In past centuries, sailors cross- ics of a south Asia pygmy race, 12 tribes of Andamanese roamed the island chain. Hunting fish and small game with bow and arrow, they spurned permanent settlements. Once num- bering in the thousands, less than 100 aborigines remain in the An- damans today. You'll Feel LOTS Better when wearing clothes cleaned and made like new again by Fox Dry Cleaning! 719 West Huron Phone FE 4-1536 : Come in... arrange for a Mortgage Loan... To buy... or to build , , , whatever your plans for home ownership are. . . we invite you to come in and talk it over with us. Our aim is to help you finance a home of your own. Result: Home ownership on a sound basis , .. at lowest possible financing cost. 16 EAST LAWRENCE STREET be | © ina “f 7 eare | A Mutual Savings & Home Loan Association ate] Buses Resume Suburban Runs Drivers Accept 15-Cent Hourly Wage Increase, Return to Work DETROIT (UP)—Intertown Sub- urban Lines buses were scheduled Bath Kills Aged Man to resume their regular runs today | between Detroit and dowrriver | Communities. | Striking drivers, members of the | AFL Streetcar and Bus Operators | Union, voted 148-21 Sunday night to accept a new company offer providing 15cent hourly pay in- | creases. | The drivers left some 40,000 commuters in the suburban areas without bus service when they walked off the job at noon Thurs- day to support pay demands. Intertown links Detroit with Wayne, Inkster, Dearborn, Garden City, Romulus, Wyandotte, New Boston, Taylor Township and Eloise. _A. C. Kelly, union president, said the agreement called for an 8-cent hourly increase retroactive to Aug. 1 when the old contract expired, an automatic 4cent increase when the drivers returned to work and payday of next year. . He said‘the raise upped the base pay of the 169 drivers to $86 for a 48-hour work week. DETROIT (UP)—Stanley Rozan- ski, 70, died Sunday of burns he suffered Sept. 3 while trying to take a bath in a convalescent home without the aid of an attendant. His coal bin is filled with Gee deep-mined better quality coal... | the truly economical fuel! the most for his money. . comfort for his family. ’ he has the facts to prove that he is right; Somparison has proved that we get more heat out of: Gee deep-mined coal than any other coal we have burned. Three ton of Gee coal will last as long, or longer, than four ton of . . $0 that makes it less expensive to burn. Gee deep-mined coal is cleaner coal, it burns cleaner, has very little ashes to haul out and leaves no soot stringers cheap, inferior coal . | “I’m mighty proud of Bill. , . he is always doing the right thing at the right time and:figures out every way in which he can get ’ . more quality at smaller cost, and more Here is how he has the coal situation figured out, and believe me, another 3-cent hike on the first! Umpire’s Ruling Causes 2 Riots at Men’s Prison | wasn't poor food or rough treat- | ment by guards that sent more | than 100 inmates on a riotous binge of destruction last night and today at the Maryland State Re- formatory for Males, “It was an umpire’s decision in a ball game,” said the flabber- gasted Supt. Henry R. Raymond. Sixty-three young prisoners, still seething over an official's call in an afternoon reformatory league baseball game, erupted into vio- lence at bedtime. Before being subdued by tear gas, fire hoses and Raymond's stern words, they wrecked furni- ture, shattered windows and HAGERSTO : —_ WN, Md. # aa ed breaking lights. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 smashed lighting fixtures in two recreation rooms of the western Maryland institution. Early today a second flareup occurred when a group of 40 pris- oners in a basement dormitory tried to barricade doors and start- James W. Curran, assistant su- perintendent of Maryland prisons, said the men had heard about the first riot and staged one of their own when lights were turned on all over the prison after the first riot was smashed. Authorities said about 40 guards were aided by 25 state troopers, city police and sheriff's deputies in putting down the first rebellion. They said no force was used to quell the second disturbance. The riot-provoking decision came in the semi-final playoffs of the reformatory league, causing one team to stalk off the field midway through the game. Model Plane Record Made by Youth-of 15 FAYETTEVILLE, N.C, ®—Fif- teen-year-old Sherman Holt of Rt. 3, Fayetteville, is the holder of the new world's endurance record for model airplanes. Holt flew his plane at the Granite Airport near here yesterday for 8 hours, 31 minutes 50 seconds. The old mark was 1 hour 35 minutes. Sherman refueled his plane every six to eight minutes using a plastic tube which ran alongside the con- trol wire, HARTFORD, Conn. (UP) — Pa- burner in the boiler room filled th place with dense smoke. Forty trons at a local movie were forced into the street when a defective oil minutes later, they returned to see the rest of the movie, ‘Trouble A Long The Way.” " to their loan at Provident Loan. They will here that effort is made to ft all details of their loan to their imdi- vidual weeds. The friendly manager takes into consideration size of loan, repaymen aA pores oa igre convenient “tor you. Friendly, neighborly service m you date most ahi ag pred oats per apa service. Write or come in today. Provident Loan and Savings Seciety of Detroit je cheerfully. Phone first for extra- 2nd FI., Lawrence Bidg. 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST., PONTIAC ~. FEderal 2-9249 Leens mode te residents of ell surrounding towns SEAN wn ag, Gee, deep-mined coal burns evenly, giving an abundance of | ) | ) in our furnace, | on cool days . heat in the coldest weather, yet holding a low, steady fire . . this makes furnace care much easier and the response to furnace controls is what pleases the busy housewife. ; | “Bill's the smartest man in town with Gee deep-mined, better quality coal.” get the best for less - - - get Gee deep-mined Coal >| | ——Dial FEdergl 5-8181 Today— PHONE FEderal 5-818] ee GEE COAL CO. , For Over 26 Y Pontiac's Leadir 91 LAKE STREET a” ; y .. . he keeps our coal bin filled | | | | | Coa! Dealer! painting Several colors. SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. Applied Asbestos Siding $ 291 Average 30x24x9 Home Treat your home to a younger look! siding resembles hand-split shingles, stays lovely without Materials and labor guaran- teed. Ask for free estimate. % ee ¥ + ~s : + . ire Sts Pe > Clear Ponderosa Pine } 2-LITE STORM SASH 28x55-in. Only 4! Enjoy a draftless home — save as much as 25% on fuel costs. 2 lite windows are expertly made from Ponderosa Pine and completely glazed. Treated to resist decay, warping and swelling. Buy yours now at Sears low prices! Available in other popular sizes at low cost! Redwood: Storm, Screen Combination WINDOWS 28x55-in. Only 137° Doubles as a storm window in win- ter, screen in summer! Oil treated glass panels and bronze wire genuine Redwood frame has two glass panels and bronze wire screen. They're easy to change from the inside of your home. Available in all popular sizes at propor- tionately low cost — at Sears! Aluminum Storm, Screen Combination WINDOWS 28x55-in. Only T 7? Here’s the finest in window beauty and protection. Light- weight aluminum never needs painting . . . can’t rust or warp. Two storm and screen ‘ panels are easy to change from inside your home! Buy yours now at this special low price at Sears! Other sizes priced low! Building Material Dept. Perry St. Basement Combination Aluminum Doors For Winter & Summer Use ‘ A | A As Low 49” IN * as = & Homart aluminum combi- nation doors keep insects out in summer!!! Keep heat in during the winter! Never-rust, warp or whip out of shape Piano-type hinges, strong extruded corner points. Fully ad- justable to any doorway. Many sizes available, EASY TERMS Homart asbestos Mica Insulation Free Flowing, Easy to Install cart, 1.39 Bes 17 Sq. Ft. Simply pour into openings in walls or attics. It’s very clean and effective. Covers 17 sq. it. 3 inches deep. Buy now! Plastic Sears 4-Star Feature, Now 44¢ Sq. Ft. Pillow top contour gives rich, deep look to each tile. Lasting marbleized colors! Easy to Just clean with damp rag. Other Tile s060C ae eee BG. tte ' it . Insulating Siding Insulates as Well as Decorates ose. 7.89 Homart insulating siding gives any home jyear-in, year-out beauty. Keeps warmth in home. Wood shingle design Cedar Shakes, 50 sq. ft,. .12.79 Rubber Cove B SAVE NOW! HOMART BUILDING MATERIAL HOMART. STORM WINDOWS L Yee : tg. "3 it Ghats cee ee | j Plasterboa d For New or Old Construction Ax8-Fl. 1.59 It's easy to make smooth, heau- tiful walls or ceilings level, hidden joints. Can be painted or papered. Ceiling Tile, sq. ft........10¢ “wt ase Periect for Baths, Kitchens 4-Ft. Section 98 i “Finishes off’ floor and wall tiling! Black molded rubber fits snugly to both wall and floor. Makes cleaning simple. Heavy Guttering Galvanized ... Resists Rust! 10-Ft. 2.39 No soldering needed. Pieces fit snugly, water-tight. Heavy 28 gauge hot dip zinc will with- Steel Garage Doors Easy, Noiseless Operation x7 Sie =U. 995 Homart 8x7-ft. door. Overhead type, requires only 2!/2-in. head room. Complete with all hard- ware. See it now—at Sears! 16x7 Garage Door......119.95 THESE “AS IS” ITEMS ON SALE AT OUR WAREHOUSE, 50 OSMUN STREET TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, 9:30 TO 5:30 P. M. ONLY! YOU'LL SAVE! 3 Cement Mixers Flush Interior Doors ‘ Insulation Board ROG. GI95 nous aseucs ‘5 Reg. 13.95 ........ eee ees Reg, 2.19 csavecivussis uss Door C i Fir Interior Doo E 1 Til Reo 12S a, | * ec a 3 hl 67 Reet etre. 198 Aluminum Comb. Door 16x7 Steet Garage Doors 95 Odd Size House 25% 0 ig. 48.95 x esinen as 24.95 to 34% Reg. 1:19.95... as lowe GS..65 25545 57 Windows “" and 3 5 % Off Pine Comb. Storm Door Da d Fir Doo Pine Basement Comb. Storm Sash Reg. 18.50... as lowas....... ; 119 Priced se low os ie eas ° i RO etes wae 3” oe eee er ee eee 2°? Flush Exterior Doors 1695 Fir 2-Panel Door 6 Door Canopies without Brackets 595 Reg. 34.95... aslowas........ Reg. 1250 ~~... . Reg. 9.95 2.0.0... 0... eee ee SORRY! NO PHONE ORDERS, NO C.0.D.’s AND NO REFUNDS—ALL SALES FINAL! Sniiifjaction guaranibed ov gous monty back” SENDS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 with - ne i i i i i i, ee ee ee A i “ee CHLOROPHYL TOOTH PASTE GIANT SIZE 69: LATHER Rapid Shave) AEROSOL]. Hal Boyle Says: A Lasting Peace Is Best War Memorial to Erect NEW YORK ® — The nature | of war is changing. In the old days wars often paid for themselves, particularly as far as the victors were concerned. They yielded a handsome profit in terms of loot- ing, land and ransom, as well as in glory. Today wars are fought on the installment plan. Win or lose, a nation gets its biggest bill after peace comes — not while the guns are flaming. It cost more to clean up the battlefields than it did to redden them. The expense .goes on for gen- erations. Starting certainly by the time of the Civil War, Amer- ica has found it more costly to pay off its later obligations of a war than it did to foot the bills for the actual fighting. In the final bookkeeping of any war one of the expense items is the memorials erected to com- memorate it. As people think less of war in terms of glory, their attitude toward best how to honor their heroes is changing. The old idea was to collect as big a sum of money as possible and put up as big a monument as possible, surmounted by a huge NO. 1 GRADE FURNACE oll ree PA Furnace PER GALLON Oil 2 - aie BF Rese “| be built to kéep alive the memory symbolic figure or a metal gen- eral rigid on a rampant metal horse. After both the Civil War and World War 1, communities tried to outdo each other in this re- spect. It was all done in the name of grateful patriotism. A few of these memorials were lovely, But many were sculptural atrocities at the time, and now — although they are the joyful perches of pi- geons — many residents regard them wryly as civic eyescores. Bat at best they were only something to look at. They had no human use. And are such passive hunks of metal and mar- ble really the best way to re- member the sacrifices of the fallen? | Many communities today don’t think so. The trend after Wrold War II was toward memorials that spelled an improvement and better ment of a way of life the local boys had died to preserve — a new athletic field, high school, aft gallery, library, bridge, or a civil hall plaque bearing the names of the honored dead. What better tribute can a town pay to the memory of its heroes than to build something to make it a better town? And what better monument could the American Fifth Army have than the one it erected to commemorate its deadly landing ten years ago on the beaches be- low Salerno — a nursery and wel- fare center for Italian children? What finer testimony of what' its victory there stands for? The men who fought there often felt they were in “The Forgotten War.’’ But the Italian people now have fresh cause to remember them gratefully for a long time. What kind of memorials will H. R. Nicholie 39 Mt. Clemens St. Opposite Post Office DRIVE FOR LESS--- SAVE MONEY WITH OUR FULL AUTO INSURANCE PROTECTION Everyene whe has our insurance will tell you it cests less. Let us preve te you it provides complete pretection and road service. Call Us Today! H. R. NICHOLIE AGENCY H. Delos “Bud” Nicholie Ph. FE 2-2326 LADIES 4 HOUR SHIRT SERVICE AT OUR MAIN OFFICE Leave ‘em-in the morning— Pick ‘em up in the evening! "wuwvvvwvvVwYWVY* Cash & Carry — 24-Hour Service 4 Hour Service at the Main Olfice At Any of Our 6 BRANCH STORES vwwwvvvvuvG* i i i i VISIT OUR NEWEST BRANCH, 397 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. Across the street from Thrifty Drug Store = HURON CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY poe ‘}of the scarifices of those who died ua ; in the Korean War? It is doubtful | E whether there will be many erect- | . . _ Ww 7 , seath ight after Sil vant S1Z FE 5-6159 ed in this country. But the funds fq Main Office and Plant—944 West Huron FE 2-9231. The Colgate “SY 3% OUNCE Gta”. = America will pour into Korea for 7 NEIGHBORHOOD STORES TO SERVE YOU! _— the rebuilding of that shattered (1) (2) (3) |) (5) land are the truest kind of re- 1536 Walton 516 3005 | 188 N. membrance — out of hate some- Union Blvd. & | Pontiac |Orchard | Johnson Orchard ' thing better. Lake Sasha- Trail Lake | at State Lake But the best war memorial is Road baw Road Ave. bw 8% owe resel, a lasting peace. And if a real| Locally Owned and Operated ae oe Fuel and Paint Co. peace could emerge from Korea, Home of Careful Crystal Cleaning x . the world will enjoy the noblest ee | 436 Orchard Lake Ave. memorial of its history. ‘a Be ae a a SUPPLY a 7 LASTS! * ELECTRIC DRYER DAYS .. new cleaner AP 5 Pe and bacteria oe ce SO ° PALMOLIVE F \ nderarm Odor Shaving Cream sor. 5 3 — U Ht Starke V li q | — 4-01. n, SAVE WORK SAVE TIME SAVE WORRY SAVE MONEY re hi Oey ase ine eoe3seeee8¢ @e JAR H : ddthes ts It. tal ti te Weather er? You'll ze i f Gives All- hard work—lifting, hang clothes .. . An electric dryer linens, clothing Protection Against Ammodent Tooth P wder sor. AJ ¢ lugging, bending, more time to check gives you perfect with an electric Perspirati Odor 7 stretching! With an on whether they’re rying weat dryer because wash- sniainee Vaseline Hair Tonic 2-01. 49 electric ave you dry. An electric the year ‘sround. ing and drying take . ee load it, flip a switch dryer saves all And for working only minutes. Dryer : and your wash dries this. You're free wives— your dryer -dried clothes stay . AMERICA’S FOREMOST FOOD RETAILER... SINCE 1859 savin teat os as Hd do other, more will by org as newer, brighter. 100 tablets only SOAS OOO > 250 te! °, reef et ate oh tote Large Size 47¢ New Lotion “oi 7° e ¢€ 7-02. 34-02. 60 lee. ¢ & . rerre* TRY EACH TYPE..- CREAM OR LOTION Just one brushing destroys most ~ decay- and odor-causing bacteria! eas large-47¢ 3 & P OCS SOR ORD RS OOO’ oe”, “e " f, OOO OR IO) Ammonicted GIANT 63¢ Look for this “Electric Dryer Days’’ symbol. The dealer dis- playing the sunny See Your “ELECTRIC DRYER DAYS” DEALER —_, CLOTHES DRYER ! DEPOT. CZ You'll love an electric clothes dryer. It simpli- “BEST” by 3 wamoe? VOTED no tested ° blue and gold seal fies so many chores. Its gentle action freshens, tof $ women W is a dryer special- + ou awe Lotion . ist. See him toda fluffs and softens clothes . . . tosses out Lustre-Creme in new © on ws wrinkles so that ironing’s easier. Get the whole Form against four keading ye |) Se story from your “Electric Dryer Days” dealer. Liquid and lotion shampoos! Sina ee STANDARD INSTALLATIONS WIRED WITHOUT CHARGE ON EDISON LINES: a a i FE a er ee ee LE ne Ts ee Se a eT ee ante eee i Ta a I HEINZ FOODS Strained Assorted Fruits and Vegetables: Baby Foods A= 3% ASSORTED CHOPPED—JUNIOR Foods... 3 = 43¢ PRE-COOKED, BABY Cereals... = 17c _ IN TOMATO AND CHEESE SAUCE Macaroni 2 ‘2 35c WHOLE SWEET ‘Pickles... . %* 49¢ VEGETABLE VARIETIES Soups... 2 27c Your Choice Freshlike Green Beans Cut or French Style ? | can 3 ik Cons | . | LIBBY’S VALUES TENDER, DELICIOUS, CU? Beets = 10° DEEP BROWN 14-02. 271 | Beans...2° 2/c CORNED Beef Hash ‘<* 31c FOR QUICK LUNCHES Potted Meat 2 x 2 /c GREEN GIANT GOLDEN WHOLE KERNEL CORN Niblets Mexicorn. . 2 19c GREAT BIG Fancy Peas 3 19c Boiling Beef - White Bass .. LIBBY’S FRESH FROZEN LUSCIOUS 2 2 35 — WANT TO PAMPER YOUR PURSE? ® — aera WITH VALUES!) oo Nees ees J. qhnnie cna tatieas i eabott va ae “SUPER-RIGHT” SMOKED SHANK PORTION “ SUPER- RIGHT” YOUNG, TENDER Bee! liver. 3% LEAN PLATE MEAT—"“SUPER-RIGHT” SMALL, LEAN 12: Spare Ribs.. = 59c FRESH, DRESSED, PAN READY “SUPER-RIGHT” LEAN, RINDLESS » 45c Sliced Bacon “. (9c THOMPSON SEEDLESS Grapes ....2-29 PUERTO® RICAN Sweet Yoms...........3 29: MICHIGAN U. S. NO. 1 Potatoes.............. 1029 CRISP FRESH 24 SIZE FRESH SOLID 48 SIZE HEADS Pascal Celery 17¢ Lettuce... .2 ~29c NEW CROP MICHIGAN YELLOW HONEY DEW—GIANT 8 SIZE Onions ....4=15c Melons..... » 49c a Strawberries 02.co25 A re GQe & LIBBY’S PLUMP, TENDER Garden Peas oe PKG. 17c 6 For 97 LIBBY’S FROZEN Pineapple 2 < 45c LIBBY’S FROZEN CONCENTRATED LIBBY’S PROZEN Orange Juice 2 :% 45c Squash." 6 ~=1.09 LIBBY’S FROZEN , LIBBY’S Peaches ..2 :% 45c Cauliflower 6:21.69 LIBBY’S TENDER FROZEN LIBBY’S FROZEN Spinach. . 6 «+ 1.09 Lima Beans 61.69 LIBBY’S FROZEN CONCENTRATED JANE PARKER IS YOUR BEST BREAD BUY Guaranteed Freshness . . ; Unsurpassed Flavor — tay Z potas “te . «i e <3 20-oz, STILL es, f q Loaf ONLY HU 37.08" Rss? BREE JANE PARKER ORANGE FLAVORED DANISH FILLED Chiffon Cake = 49 Nut Ring... ~ 29¢ Sure Good Margarine =: 1% eS & eet Ss FF 7° +e Y Ve © THIRTEEN _ NEW PACK! . Sliced or Halves 2 AY Lemonade 5 :z - Bbc FLORIDA DELICIOUS ORANGE Juice .....“%29c SPARKLE GELATIN Desserts 3:2 17c AGAR'’S SPICED | Lunch Meat 237 VAN CAMP'S Grated Tuna =z : 2de PILLSBURY'S ANGEL FOOD Cake Mix we B3e STOKELY’S FINEST FOODS FROM FRESH PLUMP TOMATOES Catsup i 19° UNPEELED HALVES Apricots . . .: 15c SELECTED, CUT WAXED Beans ....z21c CREAM STYLE GOLDEN BANTAM Corn .... 22%35c RICH, NOURISHING TOMATO Juice .....%%29c HORMEL FAVORITES DINTY MOORE Beef Stew. . <2 47 DELICIOUS HOT OR COLD m 2a Ae es es es « oe CAN WITH SEANS Chill vc , 2 B5e SWANSON Chicken Spread is 25° WITH .GRAVY—BONED CHICKEN Fricassee . or Ae WHITE AND DARK MEAT—BONED Turkey .... 2% 43¢ PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING dexo 3 2% 75c THE GRZAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COmPAnY Prices Effective Thru Tuesday, Sept. 15 ~ ae,CO See FOURTEEN ~~ , = 3s Se ¥ RS Sh UF (Advertisement) Wake Up To More Comfort Without Nagging Backache Nagging backache, loss of pep and energy, headaches and dizziness may be due to slow- down of kidney function. Doctors say good kidney function is very important to good ith. When some everyday condition, such as stress and strain, causes this important function to slow down, many folks suffernag- ging backache—feel miserable. Minor blad- der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may cause getting up nights or frequent passages. Don’t neglect your kidneys if these condi- tions bother you. Try Doan’s Pills—a mild diuretic. Used successfully by millions for over 50 years. It’s amazing how many times Doan’s give happy relief from these discom- forte—help the 15 milesof kidney tubes and fil- ters flush out waste. Get Doan's Pills today! McCarthy Committee Opens U. N. Hearings NEW YORK (#—Sen. Joseph Mc- Carthy (R-Wis) and his Senate in- vestigations subcommittee open hearings here today on ‘‘Commu- nists in the United Nations.” McCarthy, before leaving Wash- ington yesterday, said he expects to hear most of the 10 or 15 sched- uled witnesses behind closed doors. He said he also will examine testimony the U. S. government printing office has printed vast amounts of U.N. literature without any legal authority to do so. RENT Lester 18 E. Huron St. Betsy Ross Spinet A Beautiful Piano with 2 Magnificent Tone $1O Monthy $20 Deliver GALLAGHER music co. Friday ‘til 9 P.M. FE 4-0566 LESLIE H, DEAN Installed Saturday night as com- mander of Cook Nelson Post 20, American Legion, was Leslie H. Dean of 24 Close St., succeeding Joseph W. Gable. Dean acting Pontiac postmaster, is a veteran of World War I and a member of VFW Post 1008, the Metropoli- tan Club and the National Fed- eration of Post Office Clerks. meme SPECIAL ‘of Embezzler 4 Plush Home of Woman Accountant Being Sold to Recover Funds embezzling from a credit union. merly occupied by Mrs. Naomi Ringrose, 46. * * * for the embezzlement of funds from the Federal Credit Union of Social Security Workers in Balti- more. Yesterday more than 2,400 cur- ious citizens paid 25 cents a throw to gape about the $70,000 house with its exquisite collection of mirrors, furniture and decorations. Federal agents obtained title to the home, as well as a beauty parlor Mrs. Ringrose operated on the side, after her arrest last SHOE WEEK Sept. 14th-19th SELLING with a new look All sizes. These precious skins of Oriental £izards in Sport Rust and Gray are perfectly matched... . and: fashioned into styles for fall elegance. All width- _ Matching MAIN FLOOR SHOE DEPT. PVEVENT | You'd Expect To Pay $16.95 For This Quality... Bag $10.95 plus tox April. The beauty shop! was sold for $3,500. After the furnishings are auctioned, the house will be sold, too. . The house contained one room furnished in a Chinese motif, bright pink walls and delicate, shiny black cabinets and boxes. Another was done along Louis XVI lines, and still another in Victorian taste. STEERING SERVICE The Joha Been VISU- ALINER shows YOU whether your car needs steering service and helps US do a faster, more accurate job of correcting the trovbte. NO CHARGE FOR ANALYSIS WHEELS BALANCED _ EXPERTLY ~~ $2 ea.—Includes weights B. F. Goodrich BALTIMORE (®—The lavish fur- nishings of a meek-looking account- tant’s plush home were auctioned off today to help restore some of the $350,000 she was convicted of It was the second day of bargain- basement atmosphere at the big, North Charles St. dwelling for- | She is now serving five vears »* FF FF > es ‘* THE PONTIAC PRESS, SONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1953 Attach Furniture’. ~ * « | - iB He: “e ; « a. £ = ZF if J ~~ - t oe = i i iy : see fFerTrvmUrmwmhlUCCcrTrOlhUl UCU | 101st Annual County Fair Opens at Allegan Today ALLEGAN (UP)—Allegan Coun- ty’s 101st annual fair opened today. More than $30,000 in permiums and prizes were awaiting winners in the various livestock and farm exhibits and in other contests. The fair attracted 97,000 visitors last year. Tuesday will be Chil- dren's Day and many of the county schools will close down to permit students to attend the exhibits. Noted Holder of Titles Dies in Britain at 83 corn, 83, holder of numerous titles and governor of Northern Ireland from 1922-45, died yesterday. A member of the ancient Hamil- ton family, he held the dukedom of Chatelherault in France, as well as 13 titles in England, Scotland and Ireland. His heir is the marquess of Hamilton. The world’s oil tanker fleet has increased by leaps and bounds, according to the American Mer- chant Marine Institute. Today's fleet is 83 per cent larger than the 1939 tanker fleet. LONDON (#—The Duke of Aber- | TRAVERSE CITY (UP) — The mild-mannered professor is keep- ing a promise he made to his mother many years ago — by proxy. The professor, Dr. Earl J. Baker, one-time University of Minnesota instructor, told his mother when he was a boy that she was working too hard = and jone of his ambitions was to give her a real vacation. The mother, Mrs. Samuel Baker, raised nine children and helped out with the chores at the 120-acre farm operated” by her husband near Rockford, Il. “Doc’’ Baker couldn’t keep his promise. His mother died before he could make good on the yaca- tion. Now he is paying off the promise |‘*by proxy.” For the third straight year, Dr. Baker, who runs a modern, 50-acre summer resort near Tra- verse City, is going to play host to 25 Michigan mothers, most of them with big families. Every day will be ’’Mother's Back to School... With a Good Start! DRY CLEANING 111 'N. Perry Se. FE 2-012) That Rings the Bell! | Pick-Up and Delivery f Geney Dry Cleaners Pick-up and Delivery Service 12 West Pike Street 4 Phone FE 5-6107 hos e ' ia a 3 % P % rene et eat tii A — NEW TIME CENTER—The Royal Greenwich | coux, England, to get away from London’s smoke and Observatory, standard for world maps and chronom-; dirt. Adjustments are to be made to continue Green- eters, will move in 1954 to this castle at Hurstmon-/ wich as world’s prime meridian. Prot Keeps Old Promise to His Mother—by Proxy | | | ewer ne | AP) | Day” from next Thursday through Sunday. Everything will be ‘‘on the house.”” That includes food, lodgings, swimming, recreation and an entire assortment of pro- grams, generally denied a mother year in and year out. “If one of the mothers wants to stay in bed all day — or all of them — and have breakfast in bed, that’s her business. She can do anything she wants to do,” Dr. Baker said. The 2% mothers this year range | from the senior member of the | group, Mrs. Mary Mund, 42, of | Reed City, who has 14 children, | down to several in the ‘‘minority”’ | group who have only four or five. | It is the third year that Dr. | Baker is serving as host for mothers- who otherwise have no chance to leave the drudgery of every day life. The group is screened through the Chamber of Commerce at Tra- verse City. Many of the mothers leave their husbands in charge of their children, which this year will mean 157 children will be without ‘‘Mom”’ for the four-day vacation. Others leave them in the care of relatives and neigh- bors. Dr. Baker said today that he feels he is partially paying the promise he couldn't keep to his mother — “By doing the same thing to others’’ — and declared he will continue the project and make it an annual affair as long ‘‘as I am able."’ Roof-thatching is still a lively | trade in England and Wales. where today there are nearly 900 mas- ter thatchers. Properly laid, a thatched roof will last 15 to 25 years. SHINNER’S | GREATEST MEAT BARGAINS IN YEARS Fresh, Lean - GROUND c lb. BEEF ........-.0: Fill Your Freezer BEEF HIND QUARTERS LEG o’ VEAL ROAST. 2 N. Saginaw Round . Sirloin or Club’ 39: 29 AR PONTIAC’S FINE MARKET SIX Bl \ OR | VEAL BREAST STEW ....... ¢ Lb. CHOPS VEAL LOIN | 39 DAYS ‘MONDAY THRU SATURDAY! STEAKS Fresh, Country Dressed Stewing CHICKEN | Dp: 2 N. Saginaw Round Sirloin or Club BEEF CHUCK | ROAST ......... Load Your Deep Freezer BEEF FRONT | QUARTERS...... Lean Shoulder STEAK.. Convinced lke Broke Promise Meany Believes That Durkin Quit Because of President's Own Stand WASHINGTON \W—AFL Presi- dent George Meany says he is convinced Martin P. Durkin quit as secretary of labor because President Eisenhower personally repudiated an agreement with him. Durkin, when his resignation was announced last Wednesday. said the Eisenhower adminisuvation had broken an agreement with him on 19 proposed changes in the Talt- Hardey Law. He did not accuse Eisenhower personally, but said: “We beheved he had agreed to them.” - * * Meany told NBC-TV interviewers yesterday he was certain Durkin would not have quit in any dispute “with a White House clerk.’ Meany declined to say whong he would recommend as Durkin's suc. cessor; if he were asked. But he said the secretary of labor should be “‘sympathetic to labor,’ just as the secretaries of agriculture and commerce are sympathetic to farmers and business, respectively. Phil Pearl, AFL national infor- mation director, was asked during an NBC Radio interview yesterday about a possible successor to Dur- kin. “I can't think of anyone from labor who would accept the job,” he said. * * * One possibility mentioned over the weekend in Washington Repub- lican circles was Arthur S. Flem- ming, defense mobilizer Flemming is a Republican and former president of Ohio Wesleyan University. Durkin is a Democrat who sup- ported the Democratic presidential slate in last year’s election. He returned to his post as president of the AFL Plumbers Union. last Thursday. Most Republicans seemed to think his successor would be a Republican and probably not a union official. * * * Others mentioned included Wil- liam McFetridge of Chicago. head of the AFL International Common Laborers Union; Richard J. Grav of Washington, D.C.. president of the AFL Building and Construction Trades Union; Republican Gov. Alfred E. Driscoll of New Jersey, and Democratic Gov. Frank Lausche of Ohio. Teenage Hot-Rodders Smash 14 Cars Head-on SOMERVILLE, Mass. (®—Teen- age hot-rodders had a wild time yesterday crashing cars head-on into each other behind the Somer- ville Buick Co Company officials counted 14 14 cars smashed and estimated damage—ripped off fenders, shat- | tered headlights and twisted bump- ers—would total ‘‘at least $5.000."° They said the boys took advan- tage of the fact that mechanics had left keys in the ignition locks. Ou QUALITY MEATS FRIENDLY SERVICE EVERY DAY 33 29: 29 r Motto: LOW PRICES eo | =e a a « THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 __ Jack Benny ‘ | Tey et S- Todays Television Programs - - Television Star Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:30—(4)—‘‘Bob and Ray,”’ Com- edy .(7)—‘Liberace,’’ Piano im- pressions. (2)—News. Doug Ed- «wards. 6:45—(4)—'‘News Caravan,” John Cameron. Swayze. (2)—‘‘Perry Como,”’ Popular ballads. 7:00—(4)—‘‘Name the Tune,” Quiz with Red Benson, Harry . Salter. (7)—"'Mystery Film,” (To be announced). (2)—'*Burns and Allen,"’ George and Gracie Allen spend a night chasing imaginary burglers. 7:30—4)—"'V oi ce Roberta Peters, soprano sings “Dancing Doll,’’ by Poldini; ‘*Una Voco Poco Fa,” from “Barber of Seville.’ (7)— ‘'20th ‘Century Tales,”’ film drama to be announced. (2)—‘‘Talent Scouts,”’ Arthur Godfrey reviews talent. $:00—(4)—‘‘Juvenile Jury,’’ Jack Barry with proble m-solving youngsters. (7) — “Wrestling,” film. '(2)—"‘Racket Squad,’’ car dealer is victim in ‘Slightly Used Car.” 9:00—(7)—"‘Hot Rod Races;’’ Fred Wolf describes races: at Motor City Speedway. (2)— “Studio One Summer Theater,” Georgianne Johnson, Marlin Brooks, girl searches for police in “The Storm.” ; 9:30—(4)—"‘Who Said That,” Program.” _ » Quote quiz. ’ 10:00—(4)—*‘Traffic Court,’’ re- enactment of court cases with Judge Watts. (7)—"‘Stage Seven,’ Ian MacDonald in ‘’The Dear Departed,” drama of blackmail, murder and intrigue. (2)—'*News Roundup,”’ Jack La- Goff. 10:15—(4)—"‘Picture Parade,” films with Kirk Knight. (2)— ‘“Sports,’’ Ed Hayes. 10:30—(4)—""Man About Town,” Bob Maxwell with music. (7)— ‘Tales of the Hawk,”’ ‘‘Death of a Herd.’’ (2)—*‘Do you Know Sports,” panel sports quiz. 10: 45—(4)—‘‘Time Off For Sports” Bill Fleming. 11:00—(4)—‘‘News,”” Paul Wil- liams. (7)—‘‘Say There Neigh- bor,’”’ Betty Clooney sings. (2) —''Telenews Ace,”’ Ken Cline. 11:15—(4)—‘‘Weathercast.” (7) —| “Charlie Chan Playhouse,”’ Boris | Karloff in ‘‘Charlie Chan at the Opera.” feature, film. (2)—"'Film Theater,’ Paulette Goddard, Burgess Meredith in “On Our | Merry Way.:’ feature film. 11:30—(4)—‘“‘Winchell and Maho- ney.”” comedy and variety with | Paul Winchell, ventriloquist, | Jerry Mahoney. TUESDAY MORNING 8:00—(4)—Today. (7)=—W. Kelly 8:45—(2)—News 9:00—(4)—Playschool. (2) — Ar- thur Godfrey. (7) — Coffee 'n’ M. Cakes } 10:00—(4)—Hawkins Falls. (7) — - Playhouse. 10:15—(4)— The Bennets. (2) — Baird Puppets A 10:30—(4)—Steps to Heaven. (2)— Strike It Rich 10: 45—(4)—Follow Your Heart 11:00—(4)—G] amor Girl. (7) — Charm Kitchen. (2)—Bride and Groom’ 11:15—(2)—Love of Life 11:30—(4)—Movie Quiz (2) —To morrow Search 11:45—(4)—N ews. (2) — Guiding Light . 12:00—(4)—Ding Dong School. (7) —Comics. (2)—Murphy Calling 12:30—(4)—Cinderella. (7) Lanker Show. (2)—Gary Moore TUESDAY AFTERNOON 1:00—(4)—Jean McBride. (7)— Theater. (2)—I'll Buy That ~" 1:30—(4)—Cooking Show. (2)— Houseparty 2:00—(4)—Break the Bank. (2)— Big Payoff 2:15—(7)—Strictly Female. —News. (2)—Bob Crosby 2:45—(7)—Hoedown, News. 3:00—(4)—On Your Account. (7) Stars on Seven. (2)—Ladies Day $:30—(4)—U.N. Gen. Assembly 4:00—(4)—Atom Squad. (7)—Cow- boy. (2)—Theater 4:15—(4)—Gabby Hayes. 4:30—(4)—Howdy Doody 4:45—(7)—News 5:00—(14)—Willie Wonderful. (7)— Auntie Dee 5:15—'4)—Scotti Show. (2)—Car- toons 5:30—(4)—Adventure Patrol. (7) —Rootie Kazootie. (2)—Sports Spotlight 5:45—(7)—Cartoons. (2) — Lady Dooit TUESDAY EVENING 6:00—(4)—Music. (7)—Det. Dead- | line. (2)—Kit Carson 6:15—(4)—News. (7)—News 6:30—(4)—Eddy Arnold. (7)— Beulah. (2)—Doug Edwards: 6:45—(4)—News. (2)—Jane Fro- man 7:00—(4)—My Son Jeep. (7)—-Mo- tion Picture. (2)—Blind Date 7:30—(4)—Wonderful John Acton (2)—Jeweler’s Show Case 8:00—(4)—Fireside Theater (7)— Strange Fiction. (2)—Det. Police Dept. + 8:15—(7)—News $:30—(4)—Circle Theater. (7) — Wrestling. (2)—Suspense 9:00—(4)—M. R. A. Racing. (2) —Danger 9:30—(4)—Adlai Stevenson. (7)— Name’s the Same. (2)—The Un- expected . 10:00—(4)—Storybook. (7) — The- ater. (2)—News 10:15 — (4) — Life at 80. (2) — Sports 10:30—(2)—Into the Night 10:45—(4)—Time for Sports. 11:00—(4)—News. (7)—Say There. (2)—Telenews 11:15—(4)—Morey Show. Film. (2)—Theater (1) = 2:30—(4)—Welcome Traveler. (7) 11:30—(4)—Movie Date --Today's Radio Proarams - - Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. CKLW (800) WWJ, (850) WCAR (1130) WXYZ (1270) WJBK (1490) WIR (766) TONIGHT 6:00—WJR, News ‘ WWJ, News by True WXYZ, Wattrick-McKensie CKLW, News, Sports WJBK, Headless Horseman WCAR, News, Ballads 6:15—WWJ, Clark Quartet WWJ, Budd Lynch WXYZ, Lee Smith WCAR, Coffee With Clem Wj, 6:45—WXYZ, News, 7:00—WJR, Dick Burris WWJ, News . WXYZ, News, WCAR,. News, Clem WXYZ, Music WCAR, Noon Caller 12:30—WJR, Helen Trent w Cincerella-Weekend CKLW, Eddie; Chase WCAR, Talk Sports 6:30—WJR, Bob Reynolds wW4J, Racing WXYZ, McKenzie WCAR, Music 6:15—WJR, Lowell Thomas WW4J, Nation's Business 7:00—WJR, Guest House Ww, 3 Star Extra WXYZ, Bill Stern CKLW, Pulton Lewis Jr. George Dreier WJBK, T. 7:15—WJR, Alex WXYZ, Show World CKLW, Guy Nunn WJBK, Tiger Talks 4:30—WJR, Family Skeleton WWJ, Morgan Beatty WXYZ, Lone Ranger CKLW, Gabriel Heatter WJBK, Tiger Game 7:45—WJR, Ed. R. Murrow WWJ, One Man's Family CKLW, Perry Como $:00—WJR, Crime Classic WWJ. Railroad Hour WXYZ, Your Land; Mine CKLW, The Falcon 8:15—WXYZ, Geo. Harrison 8:30—WJR, Talent Scouts, WWJ, Voice’ Program WXYZ, Symphony CKLW, Fantasy Hall 9:00—WJR, Radio Theater : WWJ, Telephone Hour WXYZ, Paul Winter 7:15—WJR, Music Hall WXYZ. Dick Osgood 71:30—WWJ, Listen, Live WXYZ, Fred Wolfe WJBK, Gentile and Bingo 1:456—WWJ, News $:00—WJR, Jack White ‘ wry Minute Parade 8:15—WJR, Bud Guest xYZ, Fr olfe WCAR, Coffee With Clem 8:30—WJR, Music Hall — 8:45—WCAR, Radio Revival 9:00—WJR, News WWJ, News, Maxwell WXYZ Breakfast Club CKLW, Good Neighbor ‘WJBK, News, McLeoa WCAR News. Rhythm 9:15—WJR, Pioneer's Sons WWJ, Bob Maxwell CKLW, News, Crosby WJBK. News’ Don McLeod 9:30—WJR, Mrs. Page WWJ, Bob Maxwell CKLW. Kitchen Club 9:45—WJR, Pete and Joe WWJ. Here's the Answer CKLW. Billy Graham WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR. Temple Academy 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WWJ, Welcome Traveler WXYZ, My True Story 1:00—WJR, Road of Life WWJ, News, Mulholland WXYZ, Charm Time CKLW, News WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News, Club 1130 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins 1:30—WJR, Dr. WJBK, WCAR, 2:15—-WJR, Perry Mason News, News, Malone WXYZ, News, McLeod WJBK. Tom George 1:456—WJR, Guiding 2:00—WJR, Mrs. WWJ, News, Mulholland WXYZ Paul Winter Tom George Club 2:30—WJR, Nora 3:00—WJR, Hilltop House WWJ Life Beautiful CKLW, News, City George Rhythm 3:15—WJK, House Party WWJ. Road of Life WJBK. WCAR, Pau) Winter WCAR, Sports 2:45—WJK Brighter Day WWJ, Ross CKLW, Paula Btone WCAR, Club 1130 News, News, Burton Drake CKLW, News, Tob WJIBK. News. Gentile CKLW. News, Festival WCAR. News. Clem Mulholland : CKLW, News CKLW. Rep. Roundup ae cat ont moot WCAR Nows CKLW. Eddie Chase . ; 10:15—WCAK. Lemple WJBK, Don McLeod Ns ka 10:30—-WWJ, Bod Hope 3:45—WJK, Gal Bunday ; WXYZ, Whisper Strings WWJ Rt. to Happiness WXYZ, News CKLW, Edwards WJBK, Scores 10:15—WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, Fran Warren WJBK, L. Gentile wxyYz, 10:30—WJR, Wizard wxyYz. WWJ, Truman CKLW. WXYZ, Edwin Hill WJBK. 10:45—WJR, Guest Star CKLW. Homechats WJBK. News. McLeod WCAR. Hagmony Hall 10:46—WJR, Marriage Pays WXYZ, 11:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WWJ, Strike It Rich WCAR, News. Music 3:40—W WI Mary Morgan 4:00—WJR, News WWJ, Backstage Girl Marries WJBK News 4:15—WJR, Deland Curtain Call Ladies Pair News, George by & WWJ, Widder WXYZ. McKenzie Pepper Young WXYZ, Paul Winter WXYZ, Ed McKenzie WCAR, News. Ballads WWJ. Stella Dallas 4:30—WJR, Bandstand, Brown CKLW Cecil Brown WJBK Ed Murphy ‘ Wolfe CKLW. Your Boy Bud TUESDAY EVENING WCAR, Music 6:00—WJR, News WCAR. Club 1130 WWJ, News MeKenai Wolte 12:43—WJR, Jack White =a WXYZ, Talk ” WJBK, Headliess Horseman — WCAR, News, Ballads TUESDAY AFTERNOON 6:15—WJR, Clark Quartet WWJ, Budd Lynch WXYZ, Lee Smith CKLW, Eddie Chase WCAR, Sports 6:30—WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ, Race, Tunes WXYZ, Ed McKenzie WJBK, Ralph Binge WCAR, Henry Taylor 6:45—WJR, Lowell Thomas 7:00—WJR, Guest House Ww, Bill Stern CKLW, Pulton Lewis WJBK, Tom George wilsk—WWJ,. Alex Dreier WXYZ, Show World CKLW, News 7:30—WJR, Family Skeleton WWJ. Morgan Beatty WXYZ, Starr of Space CKLW, Gabriel Heatter 7:45—WJR. E. R. Murrow WWJ. One Man's Family CKLW, Three Suns 8:00—WJR,. People Punny WWJ, Eddie Fisher Light WXYZ, 3 City Byline CKLW, Hammer Man 8:15—WWJ, R. Clooney WXYZ, Bammy Kaye WJBK, Bob Murphy 8:30—WJR, The Norths WW4J, First Nighter WXYZ, Discovery CKLW, High Adventure WJBK, Bob Murphy 8:45—WXYZ, Vandercook 9:00—WJR, Johnny Dollar WWJ. Dragnet WXYZ, Town Meeting CKLW, Fight for Life WWJ, Cousin Willie 10:00—WJR, Parsons WWJ, Two For the Money WXYZ, News CKLW, Frank Edwards Show 9:30—WJR, Adlai Stevenson CKLW, State of the Nation 9:45—WXYZ, View the News 39 Years Old’ Actually Born in 1894; Has Been on Air Since About 1930 HOLLYWOOD — Jack Benny | was born 39 years ago in Chi- cago. He is the only 39-year- old man born in 1894. Wauke- gan, Ill. is his home town, but his mother was brought to a Chicago hospital for the great event. Practically In swaddling | clothes, he began taking violin lessons, and at an early age, he was locally considered a child prodigy on the fiddle. (This ts on the level.) While in school, he con- tinued to play at the Barri- son Theater and also doub- led in the high school or- chestra. When he was 16, he and one Cora Salisbury, a pianist in the pit of the Barrison Theater teamed up as a vaudeville duo. That was the beginning of Jack Benny’s career. Shortly after the outbreak of World War I, Jack enlisted in the Navy. This was the time when the Great Lakes Revue became its own fund raiser for Naval Relief. , Benny’s activity in the war was in grease paint; the Great Lakes Revue became an im- portant milestone in Jack’s career. Originally, Benny adopted the name of Ben K. Benny, but later changed it to Jack Benny while playing the fast talk, song and dance circuit. He met Mary Livingston, who was to be his wife, in Los An- geles, and in 1927 they were married. There followed a per- fod in Hollywood where Jack made several pictures, none of them sensations. Regardless of the fact that he was receiving a paycheck every week, Jack asked for his release, got it, and returned to Broadway. One of the first to try a new medium, Benny caught on fast. Radio was an up and coming thing, a new field to be ex- plored and conquered. It wasn’t long before peo- ple were hearing a voice say- ing, “Hello folks, this is Jack Benny. There will be a slight pause for everyone to say ‘who cares’.” He’s been on the air con- stantly ever since. Mary, his wife, who started out to do a bit part, ended up as a regular on his radio show. In 1950, Jack Benny started his television program. Judging by the tremendous success of the Waukegan wit in this new venture, we can ex- pect to be seeing a lot of the 39-year-old virtuosso, in the future. The Bennys have one child, Joan, and they live in Beverly Hills. Jack still practices on the violin, in fact the. fiddle has become the Benny trademark. As someone once said, “He must be very good to be able to play that bad.” Chicago Police Hold Flint Check Passer CHICAGO wW—An ex-convict and admitted fraudulent check passer | from Flint, and his woman com- paniOn were held today without charge following their arrest yes- terday. Police said that Robert Dale, 28, was seized with Miss Frances Get- chell, 30, also of Flint. They said from the Southern Michigan Prison. 10:15—WJR, Michigan 2000 AD WXYZ, Top of Town has admitted passing more than WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, Quiet Sanctuary \ 11:00—WJR, News WWJ, News WJBK, News CKLW, News 11:15—WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ, Norman Cloutier WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, Music 11:30—WJR, Believe WXYZ, Laura's Party CKLW, Phil With Music 11:15—CKLW, News 11:30—WJR, Make Up Mind badadel Phrase That Pays LW een for Day WXYZ. uble ot Nothing WJBK News 11:4 wJkh, mMosemary WWJ, Second Chance WJBK. News, McLeod 12:00—WJR, Vendy Warren WWJ, News, Hart WXYZ, Turn to Friend W. Curt Massey WJBK, News, George WCAR, News WJBK. Don McLeod 4:45—WWJ. Woman tn House CKLW, June Christy 10:30—WJR. Wizard of Odds $3,000 in fraudulent checks in sev- eral states. CKLW News 6:00—WJR. News WWJ. Plain Bill WXYZ Wattrick McKen. Preston McLeod CKLW, WJBK. WCAR 6:15—-WJR, Music Hall Sgt, News News WW4J, Adlai Stevenson WXYZ, Adlai Stevenson CKLW, Girardin 10:45—WJR, Fie'ds Trie WWJ, Stan Kenton WXYZ, Top of Town 11:00—WJR, News WWJ. Front Page Farrel) WWJ. News WCA WXYZ, News CAR. Ballads, Blues CKLW. News , 5:38 WWJ Lorenzo Jones WJBK, News the LaSalle Plaza Hotel here. is wanted by lation and forgery. Police quoted Dale as admitting passing a fraudulent $81 check at. Acting Capt. Al Bruns said Dale Mecosta County, Mich., authorities for parole vio- -_e © eee __FIFTEEN _ } WHAT!!!—Although Jack Benny seems to view the gorgeous | Marilyn Monroe with disinterest, the ‘‘old master’’ was anything but bored Sunday night when Marilyn made her TV debut on his show. Appearing as a guest star on the Jack Benny show’s opening program, Miss Monroe proved.herself an apt as well as attractive entertainer. U of M Sends List of Summer Local Graduates ANN ARBOR — Diplomas will be sent by mail to the University of Michigan's 915 summer gradu- ates. Those in this locality are: Pontiac: Wayne Thomas Good, Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy; Thomas Hawley Hire, Master of Arts; George Warren Hoyt, Master of Arts; Ann Watson McKinley, Master of Music. Rochester: John Charles Rose- mergy, Master of Arts. Royal Oak: Carole Evelyn Ejser- man, Master of Arts, Shirley Jane Gribble, Master of Arts, Blanche Genevieve Hannafin, Master of Arts, Kenneth Charles Hendershot, Master of Science in Engineering, James Robert Johnson, Master of Business Administration, Ruth-Ann Mary Keller, Bachelor of Arts in Education. Birmingham: Edward Behen Emery, Bachelor of Arts, Eliza- beth Madeleine Gellatly, Master of Arts, Ella Byrd McCain, Gellatly, Master of Arts, Ella Byrd McCain, Master of Arts in Library Science. . Bloomfield Hills: Diane Ruth Cooley, Bachelor of Arts; Farmington: Dorothy Ann How- ard Cox, Bachelor of Arts in Edu- cation, Edward Joseph Erskine, Master of Arts; Holly: William Walter Burke, | Bachelor of Business Administra- tion, Lucy A. Summers, Bachclor| gurgical treatments. This book of Science in Pharmacy; may prove of utmost importance in Huntington Woods: Sylvia Shep- hd life. No obligation, Address xcelsior Institute, Dept. £511, pard Mitchell, Master of Arts; Excelsior Springs. Missouri. Lake Orion: Marilyn E. Abbey Kamischke, Master of Arts; Pleasant Ridge: “John Howard Helper Jr., Master of Arts, Jane | Alice Robinson, Bachelor of Arts in Education. The Medical School did not have summer graduates. Graduates of the School of Natural Resources and the Law School will be an- nounced later because their ses- sions were scheduled to end later. | It is estimated that if all U.S. forests were in one plot they would cover an area equal to all states east of the Mississippi plus Kansas and Louisiana. PAST40 Troubled with GETTING UP NIGHTS Pains in BACK, HIPS, LEGS Tiredness, LOSS OF VIGOR If you are a vietim of these symp- toms then your troubles may be traced to Guadear Inflammation. Glandular Inflammation is a con- stitutiona] disease and medicines that give ternporary relief will not Temove the causes of your troubles. Neglect of Glandular Inflamma- tion often leads to premature senility, and incurable malignancy. The past year men from 1, communities have been successfully treated here at the Excelsior In- stitute. They have found soothing relief and a new zest in life. The Excelsior Institute, devoted to the treatment of diseases peculiar to older men by NON-SURGICAL Methods, has a New FREE BOOK that tells how these troubles may be corrected by proven Non BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL!! Like NEW again! Children’s Rubber or Leather SOLES "1.19 Small Sizes Only. Must Also Present This Coupon @ While-U-Wait © SHOE REPAIR ‘Good on Fiddle in Order to Be So Bad” Radio Scramble Slated in Wednesday AF Test WASHINGTON u® — Conelrad, short for ‘‘control of electro-mag- netic radiation,’’ gets its first na- tional test in Wednesday’s pre- dawn (1:30 to 4:30 a.m. local time) hours. Conelrad is a “planned confu- sion’’ approach to befuddling ene- my bombers which might try to follow radio broadcasting beams to American cities. In Wednesday's test, some 1,250 standard radio sta- tions will shift their frequencies and power while 20 Air Force bombers try their luck at finding | large cities with theoretical bomb | loads. | Comptometer Students Wanted to take short... inexpensive Comptometer Course; classes day or eve- ning. Starting salaries up te $250.00 per month... Many jobs available at all times. Classes start each week. COMPTOMETER SCHOOL 314 Hubbard Bidg. FE 2-1611 NEW STENOTYPE CLASS (Machine Sherthand) The demand for stenotypists at top pay far exceeds the supply! NEW SIMPLIFIED COURSE STARTS MONDAY, SEPT. 14, 6 P. M., PONTIAC Y.M.C.A. Pontiac’s only class authorized by the Stenotype Company and using official Stenotype texts Btenotype is the World's Fastest and Most Accurate System of Taking Dictation ~ Easy to Learn—Easy te Read—Easy te Write! (SAMPLE: U SHUD B ABL TO RED THES SHORT WORDS) (This was written with just aime strokes—a werd to a streke!) Stgnotypists are Employed as @zqnos, Secretaries and Court s by: General Motors, U. & Gov't, Pord Motor Co., Oakland County Prosecutor, etc. — Free Lifetime Placement Service! PHONE FE 5-6116 FOR INFORMATION OF VISIT CLASS At Least 100 MEN WANTED Immediately (18 to 55) ‘Who Want fo Get Into a Field PAYING THOUSANDS *100-*200 WEEKLY Train for Billion Dollar Television-Radio Industry as TV Installers, Radio-TV Repairmen, Studio Technicians OR Start a Real Growing Business of YOUR OWN! We Supply and Einance All Equipment Needed for Your Own Radio-TV Store!... Without Endorsers, Interest or Carrying Charges! You Also Benefit by Our AMAZING 30 DAY INCOME PLAN . . . plan is designed to train you, in spare time AT HOME to earn EXTRA CASH in as little as 30 days by making minor repairs and installations This leads to a full time career with good pay in studios, wifh manu- facturers dr as owner-operator of your own Radio-TV Shop using equipment WHICH WE FINANCE, WITHOUT ENDORSERS, wide open! and AC-DC radio. 2000 new TV staticns to be built in the U. S.! TV industry booming as never before! Take your pick of job or business opportunities now INTEREST OR CARR¥Y4NG CHARGES! Radio- Get in now! Send today for FREE illustrated booklet telling how you get 11 kits of TV and RADIO EQUIPMENT (except. tubes) enabling you to build and keep big TV receiver Booklet also gives you FREE FACTS on 30-Day Income.Plan and Radio-TV Business Plan. NO COST, NO OBLIGATION! * Free! Illustrated Booklet Free! + You can read this booklet in 30 minutes—yet it may. Thomas Jefferson spent 30 years TUESDAY MOURNING 6:30—WJR, Farm Forum WWJ, Bob Maxwell WJ. CKLW. CKLW, Sky King 12:15—WJR, Aunt Jenny 6:45—WJR, Curt Massey Ww Pran Harris WXYZ. News News WWJ. Doctor's Wife 11:15—WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ, Guest Stars buil modeli i ; ee ding and re ng his home 8th Army Moves Out of Korean University SEOUL W& — The buildings of Seoul National University, occupied for 27 months by 8th Army Head- quarters, will be returned to the university tomorrow, The shift of 8th Army Head- quarters to Yong San section of Seoul was completed today. Releasing the university build- ings, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, 8th Army commander, said, ‘‘The im- portance of all schools and particu- larly of .this university ih the rehabilitation of ,; Korea would be difficult to over-state. P Strike Threatens Tunis After Political Slaying TUNIS, Tunisa (®—Many shops closed and a merchants’ strike threatened today in this uneasy North African capital following the machinegun slaying of a leader of the nationalist neo-Destour move- ment. : The anti-French politican, 45- year-old Hedi Chaker, was found by police yesterday on a road near his home in Nabeul, He apparently had been shot and dumped from an automobile after being kid- naped, Complete with faucets and curtain. teries complete Py, STALL SHOWERS > . $69.50 terrifie value . . with faucets, $14.95. « « » $22.95. These are slightly factery marred. MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT 393 Orchard Lake Ave. . $31.45. Lava- Toilets, close coupled, $56.50 value ywwvuvuvvwvwvveYyT =, SOV VV CKLW, Manhattan Monticello. CHILDREN’S GLASSES FOR BETTER SIGHT rot 4 | | Frames ‘ Complete | : ®@ Many styles to choose from oS Bie © No appointment necessary | 3 § ® Made to your exact prescription tei. a PHONE FE 2-2895 oe Open Daily 9-5:30—Friday ‘til 9 YOU CAN'T No] specialist “J in local moving ea and Ne in long-distance moving, * AGaN packing, storage 9 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-924) in néed of a “‘break.”’ * | MAIL -COUPON TODAY ‘mess in Radio- Peo We et et et ee et eee ee a ep Mats sguron repay __| * [tv ( PORTUNITY” —— | Box’ 12, c/o Daily Press, Pontiac, Mich. I am ase Ea ray in a career, or my own busi- Service. Send me full information re- garding your BUSINESS PLAN, 30 DAY INCOME PLAN AND FREE ILLUSTRATED BOOKLET at once! I under- stand this places me under no obligatiou. — easily change the entire course of your life in 30 DAYS! This information is especially for YOU, the average guy It can mean more to you than facts in any book in any library in the U.S. Here’s information you MUST HAVE if you care anything at all about your future. Send coupon for free informatio and free booklet NOW! Absolutely no obligation! 7 -4 c ae. ¥ \- af ae Cae > te Sy a 4 _._ _pS>_lUCOlOlmlmlmltltCtCOeECtltltlté‘“‘éi‘i‘“ ho - eo mo , sr | ear ES ee Sy Te we Fe Cg eS Od ae es On ES Fe ee ee > ¥ . ¢ « J 7, = ww FF SS * * * = S F . > . i | THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1953 HAND-IN-HAND WITH QUALITY... ARM-IN-ARM WITH STYLE... / / the name / millions know! BY JOHNSON-CARPER ® / / - e ee re Me. in Fawn Mahogan Bookcase Bed and 8-Drawer Double Dresser "Ui if ot - *6 a i *3 4 | iil =< 5-Drawer Chest Deck Night Table 00 Fashion Trend — the name millions know — is manufactured by reliable | sag” Johnson-Carper, the firm that has built a national reputation for top quality | . consistent with reasonable price. It is designed by Edmond J. Spence, New - York’s master of beauty in modern furniture styling. You’ve seen Fashion Trend in leading magazines and on television — now see it at our store. | You’ve' Seen Joshon One of the things that contributes most to the beauty of modern furniture is distinctive hardware. That’s why we call your attention (above) to the stunning modern design hardware on this suite —a Fashion Trend exclusive. Bookcase Bed (footless) 50 ~“ | | , | , / PARK FREE Behind Our Store FINE FURNITURE 62-70 South Saginaw St. y ~ we think. a. THE PONTIAC PRESS —_ = = wy PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 In Our Generation? (This ts the first of a series of artle cles) appearing tn the Pontiac Press entitled ‘“Mars—Target for Tomorrow.” The series previews a forthcoming book by Dr. Wernher von Braun, head of the Army's quided missiles development “protect. on plane toy cmace trarel with- m our peneratron By JOHN GEIGER International News Service Science Writer NEW YORK — It lies red, re- mote. silent in the evening sky. — another world. earth's . brother planet, far across a gulf of un- speakable darkness and cold. This is Mars — man’s target for tomorrow It lies 50 million miles away, but not beyond reach of man's imagination. And perhaps not beyond reach of man himself: Man has already reached “acropause,”’ ‘hetwedn earth's bevond, and returned: Target for Tomorrow— Mars, Earths Brother Mars will reach 260 days and 50 | million miles later. And in the third stage, the space ships will be ‘‘moored’’ in an orbit around Mars, circling endlessly while special rocket ‘‘landing ships’’ carry men down to the Mar- tian surface. More than a year later, the rock- ets will carry the explorers back to their ships — still circling Mars — and, at the precise second de- termined, by astronomical naviga- tion, the long trip back will begin. The project will require six million tons of fuel, and several billion dollars. |‘‘coordinated might }technicians .. . The sky is no longer the himit. | Sicians, fhe neers, the twilight border | test pilots.’ atmosphere and) space. Pilotless. rockets have gone water, |expeditionary equipment, but yet It will need, von Braun says, the of scientists, astronomers, phy- enci- and mathematicians, physicists, chemists It will use up tons of rations, oxygen, instruments and Plans for a ‘space station,”’ an “the requirements for a_ large, artificial satellite circling the elaborate expedition to Mars are earth. already are on the drawing. no greater than those for a minor boards and in military budgets, That is today's target. * * ¥ Tomorrow's target, counting ‘‘to-} morrow” as our generation, or part children’s generation. is Mars. And “‘tomorrow’ may be closer than! Scientists — right now — believe we can thrust an expedition to Mars with chemical rocket fuels already in use, with space-ship de- signs already on the drawing, board, with knowledge already accumulated, and they are working on the project. | Blueprint for Trip in ‘Mars Project’ This is a blueprint for that jour- ney, drafted in minute detail by Dr. Wernher von Braun, creator of the German V-2, director of the! U. S. Army’s guided missiles de- velopment. project, one of the world’s foremost rocket engineers. ! He plots man’s course to Mark | pebble could snuff out his in the equation-packed, technical | pages of a forthcoming book called—with dramatic simplicity | —‘'The Mars Project.” military operation extending over a limited theater of war.” Fantastic? So was an atomic bomb — 10 years ago. So was a hydrogen bomb — two years ago. Von Braun and his fellow-scien- | tists are the first to admit that they don't have all the answers. | Man wasn't built to leave the earth and he faces hazards, some known, others only guessed at. Blood Could Boil im Space Travel Without protection, his blood wit | boil in space. There is no air — NO 4954 Miss atmosphere at all—and so he must take some with him. The sun's unfiltered heat may consume him; the cold shadows of space may freeze him solid. Ultraviolet rays may _ burn him; cosmic rays may blind him, or kill him with radiation sickness. A meteor the size of a an instant. Forces of aéceleration greater | than gravity’s pull will tug power- fully at his body: later, when the | His blueprint is rough but com-| force of earthly gravity is equaled | ve in | HEROES PRAISED — James F. | Vinewood Ave., whose flying tackle led to the arrest of Pontiac’s confessed rape-slayer Donald V. O'Brian | last week, receives official congrat lice Chief Herbert W. Straley on the part of the Pon- tiac Police Department. Brown a Brown, 18, of 37 | ' (third from left) ulations from Po- nd Jack Seebald > Pontiac Press Photo of 27 Oriole Rd., both received let- ters of commendation for their roles in the capture of O'Brian in a brief ceremony at police headquar- ters. At left is Mayor Arthur J. Law who thanked the pair on behalf of the people of Pontiac. Crowns Copped iCite 2 tor Role in Capture | | by Pennsylvania Beauty Titles Captured by 20-Year-Old Coed, and by Mother of 2 ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. uw — Pennsylvania had a corner on the | beauty market today, with lovelies from that state the winners of the and Mrs. America | crowns. As Evelyn Margaret Ay launched | a whirlwind tour today, her victory | Saturday night over 51 other beau- ties in the Miss America pageant seemed like a dream. * * * It was the same for Mrs. Erna | 29 | Snyder, chosen from among 32 other wedded beauties to wear the ; Mrs. America crown at Asbury ' Park last night. Miss Ay, who prefers to be called “Evvy,’’ has a week of television appearances and wardrobe fitting in New York to go through before of Contessed | An 18-year-old college freshman and a neighbor of his from West Pontiac have received an official | vote of thanks from Mayor Arthur | J. Law and the Pontiac Police De- | partment for their roles in the Summer's Heat Leaves Ettect Mill Pond On Breezes off Dawson Mill Pond jand the adjoining channel are | carrying the stench of decaying ‘vegetation this week, with water | areas down to about half their | normal size. The deepest part of the pond at the Beaudette Park dam now stands at about six feet which is | half its normal depth, according to | Joseph W. Gable, Pontiac's act- |}ing water superintendent. | As It flows in from Sylvan Lake the stream has been reduced Rape-Killer capture of Donald. V. O'Brian, confessed rape-slayer. They are James F. Brown, of 37 Vinewood Ave., and Jack Sce- bald, 27 Oriole Rd., who captured O'Brian and held him until police arrived after his-attempted, attack o nan Oriole Road woman last week. Attracted by the woman's screams, Brown rushed to the scene and tackled O'Brian as he attempted to flee. Moments later he was joined by Seebald and he pair sat on the attacker until police arrived. O'Brian later admitted to offic- ers the rape-slaying of Mrs. Hallie O. Perkins, 55, early in August and other sex attacks in Pontiac. A letter of commendation from Chief Straley read: “By apprehending this criminal you have saved other innocent persons from his vicious and de- testable attacks. “With cooperation of this type, such: worth citizens as plete down to the last ounce of) by his outward-bound acceleration, | fuel required, the design of rocket;he will. be weightless, perhaps | motors, the number of seconds for drifting aimlessly about in the con- | taking to the road. * * * -_ Her heart belongs to a naval of- | yourself render capable assist- ance te your police in combatting crime. from a channel normally about 10 feet wide to one 4 to 5 feet across moving sluggishly. acceleration thrusts and interplan- fines of his spherical cabin. etary coasting, the details of navi- gation for the long journey. _It explodes once and for all the pseudo scientific fietion fantasies! and the television serials of inter- ! planetary flight. This, says von Braun, is the real picture: : A single trip to Mars and back | will take nearly three years. It will be made — if at all — not by one space-ship, not by some “lonesome thermos bottle, escap- ing earth's gravity and drifting to-| wards Mars,”’ but by a flotilla of 10 space rockets. It will be accomplished -not by | “some heroic adventurer and his little band of bold adventurers” but by at least 70 men, specially picked and trained for years. Jaunt to Take Six Miltion Tons Fuel It will take place in three stages. All equipment, fuel and personnel | — and all the parts for constructing ' the 10 interplanetary space-rock- | ets — will be hauled by a fleet of: |earth, there is one unsolved ques- fany man is capable of remaining |in spiritual and bodily health. . .” ‘Can Modern Man? Against these hazards, he can | pit brain-power and_ scientific technique, and science has al- ready worked out partial answers to many of these problems. Because man has never left the tionmark, von Braun admits: ‘‘What we do not know is whether bodily distant from this earth for nearly three years and returning Columbus Made It; In other words, the Mars-bound man even When protected from radiation sickness, pressure sick- ness, heat sickness — may still be homesick. And with nothing to do but sit ficer trainee, and she sported a diamond engagement ring on the third finger of her left hand at her first press conference yesterday. The 20-year-old pageant winner, who hails from the small town of Ephrata, Pa., is a University of Pennsylvania coed. She got the ring a week ago from Carl Sempier of Verona, N, J., 22, an ex-football player now in a_navy officer train- ing school at Newport, R. I. * * * Evvy's surprised she was the victor, because she thinks she's too fat in places. She weighs.J32 and stands 5 feet 8 inches high. her bust-waist-hips measurements are 37, 24, and 36 inches. pearance fees, Miss America gets 1a .$5.000 scholarship and other awards worth another $5,000. There'll be an ironic touch to Mrs. America’s: appearance today and wait and watch the stars for at a fair in Reading in her home UM Night Start Here Classes Tuesday Investigator Has Unsung Position Robert C. Miller's Job Includes Variety of Important Duties By ROBERT -F,. MAHER A. little know facet of the Oak- land County Prosecutor’s admnnis- trative set-up is the job of chief investigator—held by Robert C. Miller of 963 Berwick Blvd. Appointed by former Prosecutor Clyde D, Underwood in July, 1951, Miller was reappointed by Prose- cutor Frederick C. Ziem when he was elected to office a year ago. Miller’s job is to investigate any complaints which require Courses Carry College Credit 4 Professors to Teach Psychology, Education, History, Sociology Four University of Michigan pro- fessors will come to Pontiac this fall to teach college courses in education, psychology, history and sociology. The afternoon and evening . ' courses — the first the lUniver-, sity has offered here for threé | vears —~will start Tuesday and | Wednesday in room 214 of Wash- | ington Junior High School, All courses, open to the public, carry two hours of college cred- it each, Weekly sessions will end ROBERT C. MILLER be_issued. In the case of a businessman's complaint that he has received a bad check, for instance, Miller investigates to determine if the check passer meant to defraud or if he was merely a victim of cir- cumstances. After his investigation he files a report with the prosecutor, com- plete with recommendations as to whether or not a warrant shoul be issued. : His investigations range from complaints of neighborhood dis- putes to murder. It’s his duty to get the background of each case and outline all his information for use by the prosecutor's office in trying a court case. His work is similar to that of a detective on a police force who checks every particular of a purported crime to establish enough evidence for successful prosecution. As a bonded deputy sheriff he has the power to make arrests on his own initiative or when re- quested to do so by~other county law enforcement agencies, On negligent homicide cases Mil- ler-often goes to the scene where he reconstructs and diagrams the accident for future reference. Ballistics tests, both micro- scopic and actual firing of weap- ons for matching purposes, are conducted by Miller on many of his assignments. checking before a warrant can #— in January. Would be students may pick up textbooks at class sessions and may enroll as late as the second session of each course. No late enrollment fee will be charged. “We've lined up top men to teach jp Pontiac,’’ Ardell A. Henry, University Extension Ser- vice supervisor for Michigan's Thumb area, said today. “The courses were chosen after a survey of Pontiac teach- ers and Oakland County school superintendents.”’ A course in teaching of read- ing, writing and spelling will start Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. with Prof. Irving H. Anderson, Ph: D., as instructor. . Tuesday, night will see the start of a_psychology course in person- ality development, with Prof. Mar- vin Brandwin, M.A., as instructor, The session will start at 7:15. Prof. Leonard U. Blumberg, A.M., will teach a sociology class State Hospital fo Graduate 14 Psychiatric Aides Will Receive Diplomas on Wednesday ; Graduation exercises Wednesday night will climax training of 14! Pontiac State Hospital psychiatric | | aides. | Dr. William H. Marbach, pastor | of First Presbyterian Church, will give the graduation address at 8 p.m. in the hospital chapel. Receiving diplomas vwill-be Lot- tie M. Blackshear, Elizabeth-Ann Brennan, Jennie Cretal, Orpha L. Fast, Onita N. Fields, Ruth. | jn family relationships starting Anna Hall, Ruth I, Jennings, | Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. A Wednes- Margaret R. Johnson. day night course in Michigan his- Other graduates are Marie! tory since 1837 will start Wednes- Marsh, Phyllis J. Martin, L. Oz-|day at 7:15 p. m._ with Prof, bun, Leona M. Sharp, Virginia | Eugene T. Peterson, Ph.D., as ins Wagar and Pearl E. Woodard. | Structor. tivale March in D”’ as the proces- sional, followed by an invocation {by Dr. Marbach and vocal solo, | ‘Where E’er You Walk,”’ by Royce | Lyndon Salatheil will play ‘‘Fes- _ . . : ‘Anti-Polio Injections Everett. A second solo, by Rovce | Wait 8,000 Children | ber now Thy-Creator,’’ by Everett | ST. CROIX, FALLS. Wis. i» — will follow Dr. Marbach's speech. | The State Board of Health arrang- eight months and 20 days, the ac-) state of Pennsylvania. Mrs. Snyder tual trip-time between planets, he had entered two beauty contests | may be bored, too. | there in the past, but the best she But Dr. von Braun cheerfully did was to finish as a runner-up. points out that we know more, now, ‘I didn’t expect to win,’’ she said about the problems of Martian after being given the crown last flight than Columbus. knew of the; night, ‘I still can’t believe it.”’ With the water's recession ¢om- plaints about the smell and swamp appearance of the area have in- creased, according to Gable. He said that the cause is the high rate of evaporation during this hot summer and the accompanying lack of rainfall. “Nature is the cause of the water's decline,”” he said, “for the city hss done nothing to lower the level of the Mill Pond.”’ There is a small leak at the dam, he said, but the leakage is no more than would overflow the mal. | leak in about two weeks, he said. | However, if the water level isn't |up, some water must be let into the Clinton River or it will start to dry up and smell throughout the city. Mayor Provides Table, Then Gets Cards Hint dam when the water level is nor- | | deer on their farm, ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (® — Mayor | Stanley I. Dale, strolling through “It is therefore a pleasure to commend you for your noteworthy and. courageous act which has earnéd you the admiration of all law-abiding citizens.”’ Brown, a graduate of St. Fred- erick’s High School, plans to enter Michigan State College this month. Deer, or‘Cow? Strange Animal 'Baffles Farmers | WEBBER, Kan. W — They've tagged it a ‘‘dow’ — but Tom Ful- |ton and his son T. H. Fulton, Besides $40,000 in personal ap-; Our crews will begin to fix the | Jewell County farmers don't know |for sure whether the new calf is) | what it looks like, half deer and | half calf. | The 80-pound animal found | frisking in‘a pasture, has fawn- like markings and is thin-legged though it otherwise resembles a' calf. | While the Fultons report seeing | livestock ex- perts at Kansas State College say they don't believe cows and deer inter-breed. When the vice squad of the local police department is working on narcotics or gambling cases that will ‘eventually come to trial in circuit court, Miller often works with them and complies statistics felons. Other duties include acting as probation officer for persons under Municipal Court jurisdiction; tak- ng suspects to Lansing or to the Redford State Police Post for lie detector tests; serving legal papers in criminal matters and screening complainants who appear at the rants. ; Another duty recently taken by Miller is that of handling com- plaints against dog owners who refused to purchase licenses for their pets. Complaints are made by Dr. F. R, Bates, Oakland County Animal Welfare Director, against pet own- |ers who refuse to cooperate with his office. Under state law it is the duty of the prosecutor's office to issue warrants and prosecute persons in that can be used in prosecuting the | prosecutor's office seeking war- | Dr. Max Steiner, hospital clini- | ed today for Wisconsin's first mass cal director, will present diplo- | inoculation of children with gamma mas, and Patricia L. Kiefer, | globulin, the anti-polio serum, to- R.N., instructor of psychiatric | morrow and Wednesday in Polk nursing, will present pins. Dr. | County. Marbach will give the benedic- | Fifteen doctors, 30 nurses .and tion, with “Grand Recessional,”’ | 290 volunteers will give_ ihjections played by Salthiel, closing the to about 8,000 youngsters between ceremony. | three months and 15 vears old. Some 62,000 cubic centimeters of gamma globulin allocated .by the | Office of Defense Mobilization has been received, and injection equip- ment was expected to reach this north Wisconsin town today fro%h the National Foundations for In- fantile Paralysis. Polk County has had 26 polio cases this year. The county has a population of around 25,000. A reception for graduates at the | administration building employes’ | lounge will follow graduation. Reveals Greenlanders Now Danish Citizens COPENHAGEN, Denmark # — Denmark resigned from the Unit- ed Nations committee on non- selfgoverning territories today, de- claring that Greenland — her only | colony — is now part of Danish | | state territory. troyed and two dozen watermelons | In a communication to U.N.| stolen from a fruit stand at Thir- Secretary GMENERAL Dag Ham-|teen Mile and Greenfield Rds. .merskjold, the Danish foreign min-| early Saturday morning, Oakland istry announced that under Den-|County sheriff's deputies said to- |} mark's new constitution, native; day. Owner Vincent Polallaccia Greenlanders are now enjoying | told deputies that fruit crates had the same rights as other Danish| been broken open and the con- Melons Stolen at Stand About $100 in produce was des- » ing a public serv- rocket ‘‘ferries'’’ to an orbit a , aie in thousand miles above earth.: Atlantic's perils in 1492. And Columbus made it. There — circling the earth at | (Next: Ferry-ride to the Future) 15,000 miles an hour like an ar- | x =” tificial moon — t mass of Blaze Hits Farm equipment will be sorted out amd-| cor nwaTER (UP) — Damage put together. ‘was estimated at $15,000 today in In the second stage, the 10 space a fire which destroyed a barn on ships (seven for: passengers, three the James C. Burton farm about for cargo) will blast off — aimed) three miles northwest of here Sun- not for Mars but for the point that! day. ' The 115-pound, 5 feet 434 inches- | tall mother of two boys also has |a year of personal appearances ahead of her as the Queen of mar- ried lovelies. — Mrs. Snyder, 24, has a 34-inch | bust, 23-inch waist and 34-inch hips. * * * Beauty alone isn’t enough in de- | termining a winner in the Mrs. America contest. Homemaking ‘ability was equally important. a park, was stopped by a spokes- man for an elderly group. The oldsters used the park for a sum- mertime clubroom, the man ex- plained, and would the mayor please provide a table for playing cards? The mayor did. Strolling again a few days later, His Honor was stopped once more. Would he provide some cards? The mayor did. States’ Sunny Dispute CONCORD, N. H. (UP) — The sun's first rays for the Americas in the morning hit Mt. Washing- | ton's 6,288-{t crest, state officials maintain. Neighboring Mafne_be- lieves the sun first strikes Mt. Katahdin but Mt. Washington is taller by several hundred feet. Rose Says Beminked Ladies of Leisure to Be Pitied, Not Pummeled By BILLY ROSE I have an angry letter on my home with built-in butlers and desk from a lady in Macon, Geor- knows how tO spend. -. wie, a ferasll @ioerwes It’s 7 a. m.\and, as Oscar Ham- ga, ae Be) merstein t put it, there’s a Ameriean ‘Housewife.’’ She. says the papers these days are devoting too much space to the antics of a small group of women — the idle wives of the very rich ™ — and suggests 13 would be perform- | bright goldén haze on the meadow ‘}and a hawk is making lazy circles in the sky. : Does. our heroine enjoy this sun- splotched spectacle? Rarely. As a rule, she doesn’t open her baby blues until noon, and by this time both the sun and her hangover are blazing like blow torches. ° : By 1 o'clock, the average house- acs... | wife has had her lunch, like as not ROSE off the ironing board..This, I'd like to emphasize, is a very practical ice if I were to = give these gals a at going over in my column. way to eat because when you drop Well, Mrs. A. A. H., there’s | something you know exactly where nothing I like better than to | it’s at — on the floor. break my typewriter over a de- | The rich man’s wife, on the Here~ again, the housewife has neurologist will tell you, our nervous systems tend to frazzle | when burdened with two many de- cisions. The. housewife’s problem is a simple one — shall she wear the blue gingham with the grease \| stains, or the green apron with the rip down the middle? The rich girl’s dilemma is a serious one. She has three or four chintz-lined closets to peer into, and from 10 to 100 outfits to choose from. Under similar conditions of mul- |but this is more easily said than more spending money than she'all the best of it bec@use, as any! done. | What in the name of Christian | Dior can she buy that she hasn't | already got two of? The hausfrau has no such prob- lem. She goes to the supermarket, prices a sirloin steak, and buys 'the codfish balls which are com- pact and easy to carry. No head- aches, no complexes, no traumas. Concerning matters of the heart, I'd like to point out that here, too, life is simpler for the housewife. She has to leok good for only one | guy — her- husband. The rich man’s wife, often as Her limousine-riding sister, how- ever, has little opportunity for ex- |ercise — outside of tipping door- men and bending her elbow at the fancier hash houses. Some times, of course, the idle wife of a rich man is downright jskinny, but it's generally because she worries so much about her husband — his bad health if his will is not in her favor, and his good health if it is.... To sum up, Mrs. A. A. H., I’m afraid I can’t go along with your request that I give these well- lacquered ladies a going over. It would be like beating a dead this category. Before joining the prosecutor's staff Miller was a member of the Pontiac Police Department. Theoretically he works a 40- hour week t Miller points out that he is on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week. “It's impossible to work a regu- hummingbird. Seriously, how can one feel any-, | thing but compassion for a set of women, whose biggest problem in| \life is whether to enamel their They, for instance, are apt to jing Revolting Red or Pink-eye shy away from the lady with too! pink? . tiple choice, even laboratory mice) yo¢ mst : | not, st please four or five men have been known to go mad—stark, | and, in what I understand is now staring mad. a buyers’ market, the available Around 3, after counting the . : ' | me . rooms in the house to make sure ™ n are getting plenty picky there are ‘none missing, Mrs. Up- per Bracket is ready to face the ar schedule,’’ Miller says, ‘‘and | quite a bit of my work is neces- freer done at night—but there's a definite compensation for the* | irregular hours: | “I like my job."* Circuit Court Starts ‘Jury Trials Tuesday September term of Oakland County Circuit Court opens today and 65 persons called for jury duty will begin hearing cases Tues- | day at 9:30 a.m. The term is scheduled to run until Dec, 7, with Frank L. Doty presiding judge. There are 113 criminal cases scheduled for trial during the term, including four murder, two arson, three for sale of narcotics, one pos- session of narcotics and five negli- gent homicide cases. Other cases cover crimes from possession of a switch blade knife to embezzlement. Back Into the Family citizens. | tents thrown on the ground. Stocks on Time: By RICHARD KLEINER NEW YORK (NEA) — For a small monthly payment, you may soon be able to buy some American industry. That grand old custom—easy terms—is about to invade the stock market. As of Oct. 1 or thereabouts, it'll be as easy to it is to buy a home freezer, tele- vision set or diamond ring. Easier, in fact, because there'll be no down payment. The installment plan is the lat- est in the New York Stock Ex- change’s bid for more stock ‘buy- ing by people who aren't rich executives. The Exchange, and particularly its president, Keith Funston, wants to get the middle class into the stock buying habit. And they, figure that this is one good way. It’s all stil] tenta- buy a share of common stock as | It's Easy to Be Capitalist on Monthly Payment Plan You go to a broker or bank, and work out your plan. Suppose you and the broker decide that Amalgamated Horseradish would be a good company to invest in. Every month, then, you buy $50 worth of their shares. Every month you get as many shares, or fractions thereof, as your $50 will buy at the moment. One month, AmalHorsrdsh may be selling for $60 a share, so your investment will buy only 56 of a share that month. Another month, perhaps the stock is selling for $40, so your regular payment buys 114 shares. Or you can split your invest- ment, and put $25 of your monthly $50 into AmalHorsrdsh and the other $25 into Consolidate. Mixed Pickles. The first time that your payments account for one full share of stock, you get a certifi- cate, similar to stock certificates serving head, but I wonder if other hand, must face the many, yorld. the be-minked ladies of leisure :| hazards of breakfast in bed, such | “Or much blubber. e you're so riled about aren’t’more | as, trying to swallow lying down, bounded on the north by Bergdorf te be pitied than pummeled. Let’s see if I can’t make my point by taking an average day in the life of a woman who, beca and wrastling with the silk sheets to find a misplaced kipper. ¢ At 2 o’clock, our heroine has to cope with another vexing of a “fortunate marriage’ has aj problem: what to wear? And what a pretty world it is— has to watch her weight. By the Goodman and on the south by Saks’ time she has tidied up the house, Fifth Avenue. As our heroine sets out to do her daily shopping, her impulse is a noble one — to share the wealth— burned up enough calories to heat an armory. There's another reason I hesi- | Swizzle Stick. When I was a wee laddie at my) his initials until he finally spent it fixed three meals, and scrubbed | mother’s knee, she taught me) by mistake. Thirty-five years later,| example, figure that you can lay|the home appliance stores, be ad- Junior behind the ears, she has | never to hija woman with a Mar-|his granddaughter, Esther Klein-| out $50 a month for stocks. (Inci- felder, received the same gnickel tini in her hand. Copyright 1963 BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP) — Albert credit. The poor man’s wife seldem tate to attack the Sisters of the Northrup, of Buffalo, once carried | You first decide how much you a nickel gn which he had carved as change. tive, of course, but details are being worked out. Basically, it’s the same idea as, the World Warr II plan for buying | war bonds. You don’t sign a con- tract or anything. You can stop | any time. You must pay cash; no! ordinary buyers get. Dividend payments would be distributed on the same fraction- al basis as your purchases. If you owned 1'4 shares of ConMix- Pick at the time a $1 per share dividend was declared, you’d get a check for $1.25. rather than how much) In case you think that this plan |can pay, buy. You might, for|is identical with that offered by | |} you want to | vised there is one big difference. dentally, $40 or $50 will probably | The Stock Exchange offers no free be the minimum.) home trial. Sr TTT ea a EOD REED BT SS OFT Re 7 RE a _ FIGHTEEN Bartholomeu Dias rounded the southern tip of Africa in 1488. WILLIAM K. COWIE Custom Upholstering 21 Years’ Practical Experience b Nad Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-2857 Meeting Conducted by District WSCS Mrs. Irl Williams of Dover road was hostess Friday to members of the Flint District WSCS of the Methodist Church. ; Assisting the hostess for the all- &|day meeting were Mrs. P. G. Latimore and Mrs. George Fisler. Following reports and discus- bd e : Children In your home? $ | sions, plans were completed for ° buy e | the fall meetings. Edith Parks, mis- md e $ |sionary from Africa, will speak on 4 i US. e | her work in Rhodesia at the Trin- bs $ | ity Methodist Church of Keego z SAFE! ® | Harbor on Tuesday. 2s Ne bottles to break ° The annual fall rally of the dis- °* @ No fear of trict will be held at the Lincoln : broken | Park Methodist Church of Flint glass . , . e | cept. 29. e @ No liquid to spill « e * @ Cleans toilet bowls % | About 115 billion pounds of milk . quickly : | were produced in the United States ®eeeeccevscesceseesesee@ | in 1952. ee a 3 + eRe Oe. Be 63 er: hy : * SHORTER--EASIER & 4 as 7. ma ie , Students have completed the course in 12 weeks * a4 or less of night school. Hd ‘ Call at Office or Phone FE 2-3551 = | : For Information . af aa FS 7 West Lawrence Street, Pontiac s Clip and Return This Ad For Details | ra ad @eee- Nasaa eoeeseee Poo eeeesrerereseens Adie seer eeeeeeeeoeeece . . oh Fu siz dat BE RS J my THE ITALIAN BOY LOOK a Ladies, : jn : Py ink: i you'll love this much-talked-about hairdo. With tiers of waves deftly cut and molded .. . latest word in hair fashion . . . adored by the style wise lady. The design is weather-resistant, waves and half-curls are cut into place and supported by a firm, all-over permanent. Styled at ‘Housewives THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 Who Want to Do Home Typing Work By ANNE age woman, judging from | typing to do at home. ‘Should Try Group Action HEYWOOD Next to writing stories and articles at home, the aver- my mail, dreams of getting | This is partly because in our day and age, almost every woman knows how to type, and partly, of course, because typing seems a logical thing that can be done while the toddlers are in the playpen or the baby is taking a nap. JUDY ROGERS Mr. and Mrs. John P, Rogers of Madison avenue are announc- ing the engagement of their daughter, Judy, to Ronald Jones. He is the son of Mrs. Heramina Jones of Bruce, Wis. No date has been set for the wedding. Class Tea Is Given for Mrs. Ward Sly Mrs. Earnest Wallace was hos- tess in her Menominee road home Sunday afternoon to members of ; the Third Philathea Class of the | First Baptist Church at a tea in | honor of Mrs. Ward Sly, the group Many times I have pointed out se | P it is very difficult work to obtain and the pay is very, very small. ‘ Straight typing of envelopes or manuscripts is rarely farmed out? and when it is, the fees are very nominal. Still the letters come in from irate young women who cannot see why they are not able to find this kind of work. Mrs. L. T. is typical. “It breaks my heart,” she said. “In our®‘Help Wanted’ pages in our local newspaper, they are screaming for fast typists and for girls who know how to type from a dictaphone. “Yet here I sit, having that skill to a large degree, but nobody will farm it out to me.” The many, many letters of this kind have brought me to one conclusion. Maybe the young mothers in any given city had better get together and organize a real campaign. An enterprising young woman could line up a lot of her friends | who want this kind of work, could enlist the aid of her local minister | perhaps, and start a campaign to talk the employers into letting all | correspondence, reports, etc., that | are neither top confidential noe | top rush be handled by young mothers at home. | One mother who had a car might pick up the material at their of- , vr F83s 83 Y v, e# Fv *f*VT '¥ ys =SCClUMelUGDhCUCCUCOTUMDUC“ CU toy 9 oe Showing off some ‘of the furs to be| modeled Tuesday evening at St. Benedict |t0" avenue (center) in a short jacket of i ¢ , . } os : oon Parish Hall are Mrs. J. K. Schachern of silver blue mink and Mrs. C. A. Carss of Miami road (left) in a five-eighths-length 'Tilden avenue in a striped beaver coat in a coat of leopard, Mrs. F. H. Secoy of Pres- | three-quarter-length. Ceremony Solemnized in Brooklyn Robert Merz and Bride Will ‘Live in St. Paul, Minn. of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fleer of Brooklyn, N. Y., became the bride of Robert A. Merz of St. Paul, Minn., Saturday in.,St. Peter Evangelical Lutheran Church of Brooklyn. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Merz of South Berkshire road are his par- ents. For the late afternoon cere- mony the bride chose a gown of ivory taffeta with a fitted bodice and bands of taffeta appliqued over the nylon tulle illusion yoke. The skirt was draped in panniers over the hips ending in a train. A veil of silk tulle was held by a cap of taffeta and seed pearls, and she carried a prayerbook with a cluster of roses and lilies-of-the- valley. As matron of honor, Mrs. Robert Fleer, sister-in-law of the bride, wore a waltz-length gown of emer- ald silk. organza appliqued with velvet roses. She carried a. cas- cade bouquet of white roses. Elizabeth Forsyth, Elinor Meyr 4 | and Jean Reincke, all of Brooklyn, OE wore gowns styled like the honor matron’s and carried bouquets of roses for their duties as brides- maids. Carolyn Nieber and Meredith Martin, flower girls, wore white organdy, Robert Endsworth, brother-in- law of the bridegroom, was best man. Other. attendants were Walter Nieber, George Martin and Kenneth Lieb of New York. Pontiac Press Photo St. Benedict Group Plans A coronation blue lace dress with a collar beaded in pearls and rhinestones was chosen by Mrs. Florence Ruth Fleer, daughter _ Fleer for her daughter's wedding. © I City. BETTY LeCORNU’S STUDIO $06 Riker Building FE 2-5221 |Suard Schultz, and her assistants, | _Mrs. Ira Davis and Helen Barnett, teacher, who is leaving: this month | fices, deliver it to several of the to make her home in Traverse | Young women, and return it when ; finished. Janice Pardee presided at the| If a good rsuasive letter tea table. Fhe new teacher, Mrs. | ? ty were drafted by whichever one had a skill for writing, it could be mailed to a large list of po- tential employers. 4 | I agree with Mrs. L. T. that it |is nerve-wracking to have your skill clamored for if you can go to were guests. Parisian or Italian Boy Cut }you are at home — and perhaps . which ever you choose, || desperately needing money. |Whitfield PTA ‘Opens Season A program for the year and the revised budget were presented by Mrs. Richard Stark, president of the Daniel Whitfield School PTA, when the first fall meeting was held Friday morning in the school library. No Appointment Necessary IMPERIAL — BEAUTY SALON 20 E. Pike 8t. FE 4-2878 Serving on committees are Mrs. Max Kerns, program; Mrs, Allen Carriger, membership; Mrs. Rob- ert Lazelle, finance; Mrs. Willard McRae, hospitality; Mrs. Glenn Yuille, publicity; Mrs. Joseph Gaydos, health; Mrs. Floyd Rouse. Have you tried this new Quick-Meal Miracle? Now creamiest mashed potatoes—make ’em in a jiffy! Pre-cooked Minute Potatoes turn to snowy, fluffy mashed potatoes right before your eyes. Just toss these tender shreds into salted boiling water, ad4 butter and beat. It’s as easy as that! And are they good! Minute Potatoes are chock- full of flavor, because they’re made from plump, firm Idaho potatoes. Try ’em today. If you don’t agree that Minute Potatoes are as good as mashed potatoes you make the old-fashioned way, send your box top, and a note telling why, to Minute Pota- toes, Box 263, Brooklyn 1, N.Y., and we'll refund your purchase price. civil defense, and Mrs. Arnold Paulsen, magazines. Mrs. Charles Coppersmith and Mrs. Fred Weist are room rep- resentatives; Mr. and Mrs. Martin Parker will handle music and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Estes; legis- lation. The first evening meeting will be Oct. 7 in the school gymnasium with Dr. Clinton Mumby as guest speaker. His topic will be ‘‘Be- havior Problems in Children.” ess office, but utterly unwanted if} you'll need a basic Permanent Maybe here, as in the field of ee I politics, the women should band | |together and make their voices | heard. from (Copyright.1953) Pontiac Press Phote Mink, beautiful mink! The wild mink coat shown by ‘Mrs. Carleton D. Wright (left) of Chippewa road and the ranch mink shown by Mrs. F. Howard Grady of Neome ‘drive are just two examples of the coats to be modeled when St. Benedict Rosary Altar Society holds its card party ‘and fashion show Tuesday evening in the church parish hall. % - Avoid Artificial Look} PTA Activities To avoid artifical look in tweez- McCarroll School : Executive board of McCarroll] School ing eyebrows, always pluck hairs | pra will _meet Monday. at 1:30 p.m. in ; | the school. from underside, never from outer | Owen Scheel PTA of Owen School will meet Wednes- brow. day at 2:30 tn the school. Pick penny-wise ( NO BOILING. ) MINUTE as POTATOES A new product from the makers of Minute Rice 14 North Saginaw by Formfit for Light, light control Mindful of your comfort—and your purse —Formfit’s soft, light, smoothing Skippies. No heavy bones. Nothing to pinch, poke or bind. Just a whisper of slimming control, a world of freedom! We've girdles and panties in your length —styles and elastics to suit you. Suds and dry in no time. Come pick yours! Skippies . . . for slimsters of all ages. Cirdies and Panties from 3.95 and up Skippies Foundations from 10.95 and up BOBETTE HOSIERY skippies SHOP FE 2-6921 & CORSET Thester Bidg. Fur Show Fall, fashions and furs all seem | to go together. Getting into the | swing of the fall season, St. Bene- dict Rosary Altar Society has planned a fashion show and card party under the general chairman- ship of Mrs. Wayne Miller. The event, which is planned around a fall theme, will be held Tucsday at 8 o'clock in the:church parish hall. Proceeds will go for altar linens for the church. Mrs. Sam Hoffman is cochair- *’ man for the event, and Mrs. Earl McHugh has charge of the ticket committee. Refreshments will be handled by Mrs. Margaret Hall and her The bridegroom's mother wore a copper beige taffeta net dress with beige accessories. After a reception in the Empire. Suite of the Warwick Hotel in New York, the bride changed to a gray flannel suit with black accessories for a trip through Canada. They | will make their home in St. Paul. Missionary Society ‘Plans Year's Work A work meeting and luncheon was held Thursday afternoon by mem- bers of the Women's Missionary Society of First Baptist Church. Plans were made for the work of the year. A trombone solo was presented by James Savage and a message was given by Mrs. Sav- committee, and Mrs. Earl Mc- Junkin’s’ committee is in charge of prizes. Mrs. Allan Neville is in charge of the tables, Mrs. Joseph McCar- thy, decorations, Mrs. James Clark tallies, and Mrs. Arthur Perrin, kitchen committee. ve ve Automatic Al-arms You are brushing your hair sufficiently each night if you keep age. The Savages are home from their missionary work in Venezu- ela. Mrs. George Kennedy, missionary from Belgian Congo, spoke and the prayer was offered by Mrs. R. C, Kennedy. Oil Eyelashes To thicken eyelashes or brows, brush every night with castor oil. Add a few drops of perfume if the odor bothers you. going until your arms are tired. ACROSS 1 Baked ‘ 2 Virginia —— n rr] e | 12 Winglike part | 13 Operation § solo | 14 Bread spread 4—on the sob z | 8 Fertilizer 15 Golf mound ry 16 Instructing 18 Not generous 20 Crude metal 21 Gender 30 Bigger 34 Made amends bad 39 Obtains 40 Weary 41 Important metal i 42 Worship 45 Piumed 49 Entertainment 53 Harem rooms 54 Contend 55 Decimal units 56 Smooth id 1 Head apparel 2 Toward the sheltered side 3 Whirlpool 4 Chalice 8 Ethical xclamation wood sprite 25 Nathan's nickname 42 Mine entrance 26 Fervor 43 Mince, as 27 Observant beets 28 Repose 44 Where dinner 29 Very (Pr.) 31 Weirder 33 Shield 38 Determine 40 Lock of hair 41 Taut is baked 46 Horse color 47 Ireland 48 Act 50 Sun Coll for Coreful Dan the Just Call for Careful Dan, the Pontiac Laundry Man, FE 2-810] CLEANING CAREFUL DAN’S SEPTEMBER SWEATERS 435 © Send your prettiest, loveliest sweaters, and they will be carefully dry cleaned and expertly finished to satisfy the most discriminating. Please call us today. Pontiac Laundry Man Just Call for Careful Dan, the Pontiac Laundry Man, FE 2-8101 BARGAIN We are the only cleaners in the Institute tor Maintaining the communify certified by Dry Cleaning Standards! * FE 2-8101 PONTIAC LAUNDRY & CAREFUL DRY CLEANERS — Call — FE 2-8101 OE OO = ° Riise ite.» See ee ce elie, Se, es ie i, NE, hl we . ee ee oo Autumn Newlyweds Will Reside in Georgia D. Hugh Connolly Claims His Bride in Southern Rite In Augusta, Ga., Saturday eve- ning, David Hugh Connolly, son of the Roy T. Connollys of West Iroquois road, took Nancy Burum Cumming for his bride. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Cumming of Au- gusta, Ga. For the 8 o'clock ceremony the bride wore a full-skirted gown of cream-colored satin with a long train. The fitted basque featured a portrait neckline of Rose Pointe lace embroidered with seed pearls and opalescent sequins. The Rose Pointe lace was echoed in the pointed sleeves of the dress and in her veil which had ‘been worn by her mother and her sister. She wore a string of pearls and carried an heirloom lace hand- kerchief. Three white orchids and _ tube- roses formed the bridal bouquet. Mrs. Thomas Riley of Augusta was her sister's matron, of honor. Bridesmaids were Jackie Cook, Mrs. Osburn Mackie and Mrs. Jack Cooper, all of Augusta, and Mrs. Larry Rowe of Hickory, N. C., Mrs. Frank Miller of Decatur, Ga., and Mrs. J. T. Sheppard of Kin- ston, N. C. Their gowns were of dull gold ° crushed + Bonnie J. Bray Becomes Bride of Bruce C. Brede Pakistan cloth with bodices and short . matching jackets. Gold chrysanthemums with ivy leaves and bronze and green ribbon formed ‘their bou- quets, and small ivy leaves and gold bands of material composed their headpieces. William H. Jones of Chicago best man, and seating the guests were Gerald Guinan Jr. of Pon- tiae, John R. Crockett of Maysville, Ky., Lt. Dungan R. Devereux, of Utica, N. Y., Lt. Richard F. Mar- tin of Syracuse, N. Y., Mr. Riley and the bride's brother, Joseph B. Cumming Jr. A gown of white chiffon with opalescent sequins embroidered on the molded basque was worn by the bride’s mother, and Mrs. Con- nolly chose delphinium blue chiffon and lace with a matching head- piece. After a lawn reception at the home of the bride's parents, the new Mrs. Connolly changed to a traveling dress of navy shantung with matching jacket and flamin- go accessories. The couple will reside in Augusta aiter a wedding trip through the | South. ( Nancy is a graduate of Wesleyan Ceservatory in Macon, Ga., and Hugh attended Olivet College and was graduated from Allegheny Col- lege in Pennsylvania. Betrothal Told at Dinner Party Mr. and Mrs. T. Curtis McKenzie of Lahser road, Birmingham, are | announcing the engagement of his daughter, Nancy Jane to Jerrold Armour Frost Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A¢ Frost of Cranbrook road, Birmingham. Nancy was graduated efrom the Academy, of the Sacred Heart, Grosse Pointe, Briarcliff Junior College and the University of Ari- zona. Jerry was graduated from Cornell University where he was affiliated with Sigma Nu fraternity. The engagement announcement was made Friday evening at a family dinner party at the Detroit | Coif Club. An autumn wedding is 5 planned. Fellowship Class Plans Fish Supper A fish supper is being planned by members of ‘he Fellowship Class of the Baldwin Avenue Evan- gelical United Brethren Church. The supper will be sometime in October, the members decided when they met Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walker on Beverly road. Mrs. Al- bert Lovse assisted the hostess. William Gaddes led devotions and Mrs. Herbert Ryan offered the - prayer. June Group Meets at Vasbinder Home Fall plans were discusséd when the June Group of the Presbyterian Charch met -with Mrs. Loenz Vas- binder of Spokane drive Friday. Mrs. Leo Donaldson and Mrs. John Bell assisted the hostess. Mrs. F. L. Vasbinder Sr. attended as a guest. ast, % MRS. DAVID H. CONNOLLY Baskets of gladioli and pompons in autumn shades, candelabra and palms decorated the United Pres- byterian Church Saturday evening as Bonnie Jean Bray became the bride of Bruce Charles Brede. Bonnie, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Bray of Orlando avenue, chose a full-length gown of ivory satin for her wedding dress. The fitted basque was accented with long pointed sleeves and heirloom Italian lace. The same lace covered her train. An open crown of satin held her ivory, illusion fingertip veil and she carried a bouquet of pink cymbid- ium orchids and ivy. She, wore the bridegroom's gift of an Italian cross. Gertrude Bray was her sister's ‘honor maid in a gown of bitterweet taffeta and nylon net. She carried 'a Carrolton bouquet of autumn- | colored pompons. Roberta Bray wore gold taffeta and net in her role of brides- maid, and she also carried a Carrolton bouquet of autumn- hued pompons. Frederic W. Brede Jr. was best man for his brother. They are Area Florists Aid 'With Flower Show Many Pontiac area florists took | part in the Better Home and Gar- den Club flower show presented | Friday evening in Roosevelt Tem- | ple. Musical entertainment for the affair was provided by a quartet | composed of Ann May Secan, Dinna | Milke, ‘Geanette Pierce and Anna | Marie Thomas, with Karen Hay- |den presenting a piano solo. 'Coming Events Women of the Moose will hold a special | meeting this evening at 8 o'clock in their hall on Mount Clemens street | Group One, OES, will meet at the home of Mrs. Samuel E. Smith, 2942 Old Or- | chard Dr., Tuesday at 8 p.m Happy Hour Club will meet with Mrs Manley Leach, 298 E. Pike St.. luesday at 1:30 p.m. to sew on cancer pads. Ladies Auxiliary to the Metropolitan Club Spirit Six will meet Tuesday eve- ning at 6:30 for a cooperative dinner at 5 8S. Perry St. Double 12 Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30 in the home of Mrs. Larry Stack, 225 Highgate. Pythian Sisters Sewing Club Will meet with Mrs. Clyde Lankton, 7291 Ideal Ter.. at 11 a.m. Wednesday for a cooperative luncheon and cancer pad sewing. Pine Lake Cemetery Association will {meet at the home of Mrs. Jean Hender- | son. 2300 W. Long Lake Rd., for a 12:30 cooperative luncheon Wednesday. Better Home and Garden Club ¥ill meet Thursday at the home of Mrs L, Slaybaugh, 47 Glenwood Ave:, at 11 am. for transportation to the home of Mrs. Pred Jackson of Mount Vernon. A cooperative luncheon will be served at 12:30. Annuals will be exhibited. Group Pour, OES, will meet Thursday for m cooperative noon luncheon at the home of Mrs. Maude Hooper, 6601 Cooley Lake Rd. Guild 10, All Saints Ep‘scopal Churen, will meet for dinner Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. with Mrs. Paul Salzman, 28 State Ave. ! pontiac PTA Council will meet Tuesday ata Sa at LeBaron School. Publicity chairmen, council delegates, principals and PTA presidents are invited to attend this program on publicity with & Pon- tiac press representative as guest speaker. For Beautifully Sculptured Curls ... Lovely Cold Wave Silver Oil Permanents. . FE 2-5600 804 N. Saginaw St. 6.50 ITALIAN BOY CUTS Also Eugene Fredericks—Helen Curtis dnd Realistic Permanents Annaliese Beauty Salon Next to Bazley Market (Over Tasty Bakery) | Vr. | Elisabeth Tosich, the sons of the senior Frederic W. Bredes of Dover road. Groomsmen were Richard Sutliff, Jack Main, Emil Blair of Ypsilanti and Wil- liam Streeter. | Carrying out the autumn theme, | the bride’s mother wore a street- length dress of peacock blue with | matching hat and beige acces-/| with matching mitts and feathered | hat. Her corsage was of: Gloria} sories. Her flowers were shell pink roses and carnations. Mrs. Brede wore slate blue silk shantung with winter white and navy accessories and a corsage of white glamellias. After a reception in the church, the new Mrs. Brede changed to a blue-gray suit with pink and black accessories for the wedding trip to Canada and New York. She wore the orchids from her bridal bouquet as a corsage. On their return the newlyweds | will reside on West Huron street. Bonnie is a graduate of the Uni | versity of Michigan School of Nurs- ing and Bruce attended General Motors Institute. Pair Goes on Eastern Honeymoon Joyce E. Amsden and Earl A. Barker Exchange Vows Before ‘an altar banked with white gladioli and palms, Joyce E. Amsden became the bride of Earl A. Barker Saturday evening in the First Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Dr. William H. Mar- bach performed the 7:30 o'clock service before 200 guests. Joyce, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Amsden of Dick avenue, chose Chantilly lace and net for her wedding gown. The dress was styled with a slight train falling from the hoop skirt. An illusion neckline high- lighted the bodice, and a match- ing headpiece held her fingertip veil. White roses and stephanotis on a satin Bible formed the bridal bouquet. Mrs. Thomas Drohn performed the duties of matron of honor in a waltz-length gown of turquoise blue net and lace with a matching ° headpiece. She carried.a bouquet of talisman roses. Bridesmaids Mrs. Ronald Cook and Dorothy Sutt were dressed in similar gowns and carried bou- quets of Gloria roses. Vickie Wilson wore a hoop- skirted dress of peach color for her duties as flower girl. She carried a miniature nosegay of Johanna Hill roses. Stanley C. Barker was-his broth- er’s best man. They~are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Barker of Menominee road. Seating the guests were Glenn Walton of Louisville, Ky., Robert Lyle of Birmingham and George Cram. Mrs. Amsden chose a gowy of old rose lace with a matching hat, black accessories and a, corsage of Johanna Hill roses for her daughter's wedding. Mrs. Barker wore peacock blue Chantilly lace roses. Dr. Cyril Barker, the bride- groom's uncle, who is carilloneur of Central Methodist Church in Lansing, played the organ for the ceremony, and Mrs. Barker sang the bridal recital. After a reception, in the church parlors, the bride changed to a suit of deep melon color’ with egg- shell accessories and a _ corsage from her bouquet for the trip to New England. On their return the }new Mr. and Mrs. Barker will re- side in Pontiac. Earl is a graduate of Lake For- pularity THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 ummer’s Po Honeymooning in the New England states are Mr. and Mrs. Earl A. Barker, who were married Saturday in the First Presbyterian Church. The bride, the former Joyce E. Amsden, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Amsden of Dick avenue. The Donald A. Barkers of Menominee road are the bridegroom's parents. MRS. EARL A. BARKER- — rr -*+ *« © oe FCUMNDGUCUUUY s NINETEEN * * * as the Season for ‘Weddings Brooke Bennett Claims Bride in Detroit Saturday At a candlelight ceremony Sat- urday in the Westlawn Methodist Church of Detroit, Suzanne Spen- cer, daughter of the Charles Spencers of Melvindale, became the bride of Brooke Bennett. The Joseph L. Bennetts of IIli- nois avenue are Brooke's parents. For the 4 o'clock rite the bride wore a gown of white satin in waltz: length with a _ bouffant skirt and long pointed sleeves. Her pleated § satin headpiece held a veil of white tulle and she carried white carnations with ivy for her bouquet. Jean Riley of Detroit was the maid of honor and Joan Stread- wick of Clawson was the brides- maid. They wore matehing waltz-length gowns of dusty pink silk taffeta and carried bouquets of pink. carnations. Donald Bennett was best man for his brother with Creighton Sher- man and Richard Stoeker of Cleve- land and Harlan Benjamin of Milan as ushers. - A coronation blue silk taffeta | dress with pink accessories was chosen by Mrs. Spencer for her | daughter's wedding. She comple- | mented her costume with a cor- | sage of pink glamellias. | Mrs. Bennett wore a dress of | sage of white popons and chrysan- themums. Aftere a reception in the church parlors, the bride changed to her traveling ensemble, a charcoal wool sheath dress and jacket with red accessories, for a trip to Can- ada. The newlyweds will return to their studies at Michigan State College where he is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity and she is affiliated with Delta Zeta. Fellowship to Hold Tuesday Luncheon Mrs. Arthur Salley of Drayton Plains and Mrs. Merrill O. Bates of Bloomfield Hills will assist Mrs. Millard W. Newcomb Tuesday afternoon when she gives a lunch- eon at her home in Pleasant Ridge. The cooperative luncheon is for all members of the Birmingham Unitarian Fellowship, and other interested persons. AQUATIC GARDENS Tropica! Fish & Supplies 57 N. Mill St. > FE 4-2853 (ip Gear ef Pentiae Getel) * ~ BIRMINGHAM — Ivory bridal satin fashioned the gown of Martha Caroline McIntyre, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henry McIntyre, when she was married Saturday evening in the Mayflower Congre- gational Church, Detroit, to Rich- ard Eugene Kolb. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. |John K. Kolb of Detroit. In the wedding dress, re-em- broidered Brussels lace formed a satin fold and the bouffant skirt ended in a circular train. A Juliet cap of Brussels lace held a fingertip veil, and the bouquet of fuji chrysanthemums and stephanotis was crescent shaped. Gloria De Wolfe was maid of honor and Mrs. Thomas Broderick lof Peoria, Ill., | Their frocks of mint |were ballerina length. They wore |mesh Juliet caps to match and |carried maroon glamellias. lest College where he was affiliated| Richard Koenig was best man with Phi Pi Epsilon fraternity. and ushers were Charles D. Mc- Millicent Tosich Wed in All Saints Rite Soon to live in Oxford, Ohio, | are Mr. and Mrs. William H. Loughran Jr., who were married Saturday afternoon in All Saints | Episcopal Church. The bride, the former Millicent is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Tosich of Joslyn avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Married Saturday afternoon in All Saints ‘Episcopal Churc ere Millicent E. Tosich, daughter of and Mrs. Daniel Tosich of Joslyn avenue, and William H. Loughran Jr. He is the son Loughrans of Miamisburg, Ohio. W. H. Loughran Sr. of Miamisburg, Ohio, are the bridegroom's par- ents. For the 4 o'clock ceremony the bride was dressed in white Chantilly lace over satin with a princess-style bodice fashioned with a sweetheart neckline. The floor-length skirt of scalloped lace fell in handkerchief panels over a skirt of nylon tulle. A cascade of white gardenias and | ivy centering a white orchid was |carried by the bride, who also carried a handkerchief of Rose | Pointe lace made from the lace 'of her mother’s wedding gown. A tiara of matching lace orna- mented with rhinestones and pearl orange blossoms held her veil, and she wore the bridegroom's gift of a single strand of pearls. Joy- Tosich wore a bittersweet gown of nylon tulle with butterfly lace panniers for her duties as honor maid for her sister. The strapless gown was covered with a matching lace jacket and she wore a tiara of ivy and baby chrysanthemums. Chrysanthemums shaded from bronze to gold formed her cres- cent bouquet. James Kertis of Cleveland, Ohio, was best man, and ushers were James Weldy Jr. of Birmingham and Clarence Sproull. A street-length frock of toast- colored lace was worn by the bride’s mother as she received guests in the Rose Kneale Room of Stevens Hall. Mrs. Loughran Sr. was dressed in gray dress of lace and crépe. Both mothers wore corsages of cymbidium orchids. For the wedding trip, the new Mrs. Loughran changed to a three- piece suit of black and white tweed with black accessories and the orchid from the ceremony. ‘5° AND ‘Open Wednesday All Day—Friday No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service PERMANENTS Start at COLD WAVE MACHINE OR MACHINELESS Including the Italian Boy Haircut E’S PERFECTED 7 510° INDIVIDUAL SET by MR. ANDRE til 9 P.M. 2nd Floor Pontiac State Bank Bidg.—Ph. FE 5-4490 SO |Martha McIntyre Speaks Vows in Detroit Church Intyre, DeForest McIntyre, Allen Louden and George McGill. Mrs. McIntyre wore a_ floor- length gown of forest green Chan- tilly lace with a small gold hat and yellow orchids. Mrs. Kolb wore rose net over taffeta with a matching velvet hat. A deep orchid was pinned to her purse. A reception was held in the Co- lonial Room of the church. For a yoke which was outlined with | the wedding trip to northern Mich- | igan the bride wore a dark red suit with a black hat. They will live in Grand Rapids. Couple to Wed September 25 | Announcing the engagement of was bridesmaid. their daughter, Norraine, to Aure- iridescent | \taffeta had portrait necklines and| McCarroll A. Terry of Watkins| lius M. Snyder are Mr. and Mrs. Lake der of Hospital road. The wedding |is planned Sept. 25 in First Meth- odist Church. : Group Gathers Mrs. Joseph Albrecht of Oge- maw road was hostess for the re- cent meeting of St. Mary Unit of St. Benedict Church. Mrs. Anton Bego and Mrs. Earl McJunkin as- sisted. Plans were made for a money- making project to be held in Octo- ber, and the next meeting was an- nounced for Oct. 8 at the Genesee avenue home of Mrs. Joseph Mos- ser. = He is the son of Mrs. Mary Snvy- | fy Wn ea yi Ah ng A Lang egg 8 Sif OO -——- > > ~~ htc 48 North Saginaw acony new tweed looks pure Scotch 1.6 ADIOS The elegant look of imported tweed, without the bulk. Softer, more resilient, here it's cut on casual lines for all hours, all ‘xcasions. The jacket is a waist-hugger .. . the skirt an easy, slim stem. The tailoring is Sacony-perfect, with inner-taped waistline, and lined skirt-back. Misses’ sizes. Pure wool. It’s a wonderful buv! —< 7 } f Spor ly Suit Salon—Main Floor ee : :" : 5 Sa SE WALK THROUGH FALL, inthe shoes that are amazingly flexible,cork cushioned heel to toe! 9.95 t 12.95 your pick from styles galore... on hi, mid-hi or mid-low heels . .. Blues, Browns, smooth calfskins or soft suede. Choose Blacks, Reds, Tans in the smartest styles with famed hugging fit. It’s a name you know values you'll love! Second Floor Saginaw St. ee ee * * _ TWENTY ce et ee, ee i 2 = = wT = iF FF eo New Yorkers Design Silver Jewelry to Solve Their Money Problems Discussions Tonight LEE’S Cleaners 47 North Perry . FE 5-2683 Across trom Pontiac Hotel Men's Suits ....... Ladies’ Plain Dresses Men's Pants and a ot Holle: In an effort to enable the citizen to better understand the work of the United Nations, the United | Nations Council of Pontiac is spon- soring a series of discussions, movies and exhibits in a 10-week session beginning this evening at 8 in the YWCA. | Those unable to attend this eve- | ning’s session are invited to enroll in one of the later classes. The women of the Nigerian Yo- ruba tribe dress their hair elab- Sports Shirts lore be orately and ornament their bodies. ZA FASHION SHOW 10 A. M. TUESDAY, SEPT. 15 A special trunk showing featuring the entire advanc _of suits, cocktai cruise wear. GRI to 5 P. M. e Zagri collection | ensembles and wer miles ing Canal is about 100) N. Council Opens| 4 rfist Tells Into Smart and Unique Accessories (AP Newsfeatures) Silver jewelry solved two differ- lent money problems for two dif- | ferent New York women. | When Natalie Blatt was stuck | with a statistical job, which she felt fenced her in, she turned to jewelry as a means of self ex- | pression. Hard work and study fol- | lowed. Today her output of silver | necklaces, earrings, bracelets plus her work as a Christmas card de- | signer support her. When Mrs. Ella Wolchonok | wanted a hobby that would pro- | duce pin money, she turned to the study of silver jewelry mak- ing at YWCA craft classes. Her husband, a mathematics professor* with a strong artistic bent, designed some unusual mod- ernistic pins for her. Came the day when Mrs, Wol- chonok was able to make lapel pins that are conversation pieces —'*Adam and Eve and the Snake,” ' “Jonah in the Whale,’’ a moder- nistic mask. Both Miss Blatt and Mrs, Wol- chonok will tell you that silver jewelry ‘making is no project for the lazy. It calls for hours of study and bench work. Here are Miss Blatt’s instruc- tions for making her scroll neck- lace (after you have practiced a while on simpler things): Assemble these materials: A 4x6 inch square of 18 gauge sterl- ing silver. Two feet of 16 gauge square silver wire. Fifteen inches of 20° gauge round wire. A small pointed brush (like a fine watercolor paint brush), A bottle of flux, a fluid used in soldering. A 3-inch square of silver solder, : | A tongue depresser from which you cut a strip a quarter of an | inch wide, tracing paper, carbon | paper, and a sharp-pointed pencil. | Buy a sulphuric acid: solution, one volumn acid to 16 ‘volumes water. Do not try to mix your own solution. Full strength sulphuric acid is is dangerous; it burns skin and clothing, and is hazardous tu eyes, skin or clothes. When work ing with it, do not dip anything into it with your fingers. Use brass tongs. ‘ You will need these tools: A | jeweler’'s saw with number one | jeweler's~ blade, a half-round file, ‘asbestos square, a mouth torch, > eed a Store Hours: Monday thru Saturday | AMY LINKER defines the suit ensemble in Miron’s 99.95 Salt Salon Street Level 9:30:-A. M. to 5:30 P.M, . €o-ordinated woolens The costume complete ,. . a curved box jacket of long-fibered Gemma, over a color-matched jersey blouse and flannel skirt. Red and milk chocolate. Sizes 10 to 16, MAPLE AT BATES, BIRMINGHAM » Use Your Charga-Plate How She Shapes Metal Dieting Wife ls Not Fair to Husband Refuses to Eat Out Because She Can't Accept All Foods By EMILY POST A wife writes: “I have re- peatedly refused invitations for lunches and dinners, and my husband who loves to go out is rebelling against this. But Iam dieting and always have felt that it was insulting to one’s Silver, pins . . . These are designs made by Mrs. Ella Wolchonok, who likes the modern look in jewelry. They are (left to right) Adam and Eve and the Snake, hostess to continually refuse dishes. “Don’t you think I am right, Mrs. Post, in not accepting these invitations when I can- r/ MAKE FRIENDS enue If a little bit is nice a whole lot is better does not apply to per- fume. perfume subtly, so it doesn’t an- nounce itself half way across the | the same train or bus to start put- ting up windows. A bottle of perfume should go a long, long way, it should not drive a POU 'A | 5s A woman of taste uses! # > room or cause those who ride on) ; One-Piece Nylon and Rayon Gabardine apreeeonoaee Nylon Pa and Rayon Gabardine. * 17.98 to 25.98 Boy’s 2-Piece Nylon and Rayon with Mouton Collar Jonah and the Whale, Fish Fossil and Modern Mask. steel wool, emery cloths, a hand drill and fine drill point. Add to that a jeweler’s pin — a wedge of wood about 342 inches wide, graduating from quarter inch thickness at one end to inch and a half thickness -at the other. The thin end is notched in a vee; the thick end driven into an opening in the edge of a table, leaving it 4'z to 5 inches long, and a firm narrow sur- face on which to saw silver. Now you are ready to begin your | | until they’ arc smooth. necklace. On tracing paper draw a scroll 3'2 long. Draw a similar small scroll pattern about inches | an inch long. Draw the same small scroll with a long swerving tail which will later be bent back to become the clasp. fh Lay a piece of carbon paper on the sterling silver square, place the scroll designs on top of it and trace two big scrolls, six small, So. not eat everything that is | proffered to me?” Answer: I think your hus- band is right. In the first place you are unfair to him and in the second, even though you are on a diet you certainly can eat some things, and guests are not required to eat everything proffered. Dear Mrs. Post: My husband and I have disagreed on this matter. He claims that when a woman walks through a sub- way gate or when entering or | leaving a building she never is | i | expected to hold the door for, ‘anyone following her—espe- | Cially if it happens to be a man. _.| I disagree and think it’s only w | polite for anyone to hold the _door at least until the person following can get hold of it. Answer: Going through a swinging door with someone Natalie Blatt at work on her silver scroll necklace. ones and the one with the tail.” | Lay the silver on the jeweler’s pin and with the jeweler’s saw cut out the designs, File the edges of the scrolls with a halfround file Take the 16 gauge square sil- ver wire and, using the half- round pliers, bend the wire into a scroll shape following a line down the center of the scroll to make a central ‘‘vein’’ for it. Snip this off at the end with the! pliers. Make. a wire ‘‘vein’’ like this for each scroll, except the one designed for the clasp. Now you are ready to solder. | }over the entire silver scroll to Lay a silver scroll on the asbes- tos square and a curved wire on top of it. Cut the sheet of silver | solder into very fine pieces. Dip the paintbrush in flux, pick | | up little pieces of solder on the | tip and lay them at close inter- vals along one side of the wire. Take the mouth torch and blow heat it. When the entire piece is hot, concentrate the power of the blow torch flame on the area along the wire. The solder will fuse and the wire will be soldered to the scroll MAKE YOUR JAMS AND JELLIES WITH CERTO PECTIN! a @ GOES FARTHER —You get 2 batches following immediately be- hind, you certainly would consider them and not let it slam against them, whether | | phuric acid bath, then wash them| ™4"f OF woman. in running water, Now they are Dear Mrs. Post: A discussion | ready to be linked. Wrap the 20 | arose in our group abeut say- | gauge round wire firmly around the'jng “Pleased to meet you,” | quarter inch strip of tongue de-| when introduced to someone. | presser; then slide it off. With the| I said that according to Emily saw blade cut across the top of | Post it was wrong and that this flat coil until it breaks into; “How do you do” was correct. | links. They'd like to know why it is | Lay the two big scrolls down) wrong to say you are pleased so they form a lyre shape. Put|/tg meet someone if you really | pencil dots for holes: at the right) ore pleased? In their opinion point for joining, With the hand) jt js much more friendly than drill and drill point make holes | «How do you do.” I couldn't | Repeat the process with all the scrolls except the clasp, Place all the scrolls in the sul- | at these points. ‘answer “why,” so will you! At the opposite ends of the large| please answer for me? scro}ls and each end of the small | Answer: The phrase scrolls drill similar holes. Drill a hole in the end of the clasp op- posite the tail. Place links through these holes and repeat the soldering process until all the scrolls are linked in a necklace. Insert one bigger round link at the end opposite “pleased to meet you” hap- pens to be a real taboo. How this came about I don’t know. To someone you have heard about, you may very well say, “I am so glad to meet you, Mary has told me so much the clasp and solder it. This is | #5out you,” or “It is wonderful to hold the clasp. meeting you,” or anything sim- ; ; ; ilar. To a perfect stranger, you Polish the piece with steel wool |say “How do you do.” and fine emery cloths. Then bend | back the tail of the clasp, using pliers. : | IF slim 5 #t.2in— Mutual Luncheon Held at Porter Home Members of the September-Octo- | ber group of the First Presby- terian Church gathered Friday for a co-operative luncheon at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Porter on Joslyn drive. Mrs. William Windiate, Mrs. Elaine Malone and Mrs. Verl Kline assisted the hostess and Mrs. Kline led devotions. Mrs. @ “FLAVOR-GUARDED” for richer, 14 from 1 bottle! fresher natural fruit flavor! @ EASIER! No dissolving . . . just pour liquid Certo (a notural fruit pectin | product) into fruit mixture! | @ FASTER! Tokes just 15 minutes ofter frvit's prepored! HOMEMADE JAMS AND JELLIES TASTE BEST— COST LESS! A Product of Generai Foods | | | |of the year’s work. Secretarial Group H. R. Fraser gave an outtine Meets for Dinner Mary Mazurek presented the in- vocation when members of the Secretaries Association met for dinner Wednesday evening at Hotel Waldron. Mrs. Hope Scott conducted the business meeting at which Elaine Meidlein was appointed tempo- rary secretary for the remainder of the year. The complicated seaming of the new dresses gives you a good figure needs with . . . REGULAR COURSES which Commercial Science Degrees, ACCELERATED TRAINING who wish to qualify. for emp sible time. Permanent, free employment Pontiac and Detroit. prepare for one of the many to fill. Name POORER EEE EH EHH HEHEHE HEED New Fall Term Starting Now Day, Half-day and Evening .,-.. BUSINESS COURSES exactly fitted to your training SPECIAL TRAINING for young men and women who expect to enter military service. Enroll now in either DAY or EVENING CLASSES and 7 West Lawrence Street Call in Person or Return This Ad for Details : APPROVED FOR VETERANS it Nature didn't. But let silhovette dominate with your perfect figure. Chteages Bon. Times Bradivete Mrs. T. I.—The new intricately constructed dresses should go far to give any woman a good figure. With your tiny person, great sim- plicity is still the best to reveal your perfect proportions and suits your size. You can wear the short- er hemline. Brush Off Excess After applying mascara, allow it to dry and tben brush away excess. If you are afraid to put bristles close to eye ball, you can use a pipe cleaner. lead to (B.C.S.) Bachelor of Diplomas, and Certificates. for mature men and women loyment in the shortest pos- [THINGS TO COME —_ by Genawui | service for all graduates in fine position we are unable Phone FE 2-3551 Address eee errr eee eee eee eeheeee 17.98 to 21.98 SCHOOL PENCIL GIVEN WITH EACH PURCHASE ichies.Baby INFANTS TO 10 YEARS 22 E. PIKE ST. PHONE FE 5-8415 PONTIAC, MICH — 7 G43 eB SORE, et || Save on This Special Purchase | of New Upholstering Fabrics others away. OD is PROF'S | 1/2 jele] Gay re) 43 AND LENDING LIBRARY 9 W. Lawrence FE 2-8432 Yes, ndw you can save on new manufacturer- {| to-you or re-covered furniture. 100° ny- lons, tweeds, mohairs, {| SPECIALLY’ PUR- CHASED. | | DAVENPORTS, re-covered cs low as $90 and ap CHAIRS, re-covered as low as $45 and up WILLIAM WRIGHT 270 Orchard Lake Road Established 1933 | m +b SS VW UW 100) CONNOLLY’S OFFER 1847 ROGERS BROS. America’s Finest Silverplate ave 2530 =A during September Silver Sale @ Priced to fit your budget! It’s your opportunity to ewn all the silverware you'll need . . « finest quality silverplate * heavily reinforced and finished with rare brilliance for lesting satisfaction. Select your pattern new! Seam September ct Special! oa Prevent Ternish Drawer Chest included with service “Your Complete Service includes: PEMEMBRANCE these most wented Serving Pieces 1 cold meat fork 1 gravy ladle 1 berry spoon 1 pastry server 1 round server Convenient Terms Arranged TERNALLY YOURS > t Choose from these 6 lovely petterns includ- ing the macnificent NEW HERITAGE! JEWELERS CERTIFIED GEMOLOGISTS 16 W. Huron St. Awe? “Oy \Y REGISTERED JEWELER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY eS ee ee ag TT ws. eT. ry @« wee a Ae. «8 ee Srey THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 BIRMINGHAM—AT 8:30 Satur- day evening in Christ Church Cran- brook, Valerie Lou Kallen, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs, Arvid E. Valerie Lou Kallen and Lt. Wilfred Leo By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor A delicious quick bread that will be welcome in lunch boxes is the So Slim, ~~ = UV hUCOUCUCUC > i A > i nasal A AL: LAR: Lhe Nin ics mmeainiiihi aie ah a mT a = Png Oe etl — TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOND DAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 Pittsburgh Firemen Like Rebuilt 1914 Wagons PITTSBURGH (AP)—Some | pretty old equipment is being! used to fight fires in Pitts- burgh these days. Leo Gill, director of automotive equip- ment found ald equipment stored away and decided to rebuild the old, fire engines, some purchased jin 1914. Adding engines here, new tires there and topping them off with fancy paint jobs, Gill | found he had some first class | fire trucks. Pittsburgh is ac- customed to paying out $20,000 or more for each new piece of firt equipment. Fire Chief Stephen Adley, pointing to a reconditioned rig which originally was pur- chased in 1914 said: “This is a better rig now 'than when it was brand new. Midland Business Man 'Dies of Heart Ailment MIDLAND w — Cecil Deremer, 63, well-known Midland business- 'man and pianist died Sunday at Midland Hospital of a heart ail- ment, Funeral serivces will be held to- WE BUY AND SELL USED MAGAZINES, TRICKS, JOKES AND NOVELTIES | morrow, with burial at Bay City. |Deremer -came to Midland in 11939 to manage a music store. More recently he had been an in- Margaret Truman May Be Planning Political Career CHICAGO w® — Indications are »}that the political bug is biting Margaret Truman. The attractive young daughter of former President Harry 8. Truman didn’t say ‘‘yes'’—nor did she say ‘‘no’’—when asked if she might run for office on her own. Margaret, her mother and dad, are much in the spotlight as Demo- crats open their two-day nation- wide pep rally in the hope of cap- turing Congress in 1954 and the presidency in 1956. Told there were rumors she might run for Congress, Margaret smilingly bantered:. ‘‘That so?” and she moved along shaking hands. Friends, Fans | Mourn Actor Lewis Stone Funeral to Be Held Wednesday at Hollywood Home HOLLYWOOD uw — Friends and fans today mourned the tragic passing of Lewis Stone, 73, the dignified veteran of stage and screen who collapsed and died Saturday night while chasing three teen-age prowlers outside his Holly- wood home. Private funeral services will be conducted at the actor’s home Wednesday morning. Mrs. Hazel Stone, widow of the white-haired actor who protrayed | surance salesman, and he and his | wife owned a woman's clothing ' store. Piper’s Magazine Outlet 35 Auburn Ave. FE 3-9869 . 7 * “Judge Hardy”’ in the movies, said Later at the request of reporters! por husband was watching tele- she detached herself from a crowd | vision when he heard prowlers out- and, on a hotel stairway landing, | side. He collapsed on a sidewalk Dixie Hwy, (US-10) 1 “Block North of Telsarask LUE / . | Q ® a FE 5-4500 ON THE VERY | TONIGHT -TUESDAY | LARGEST SCREEN IN THIS AREA! BRIGHTEST AND A GREAT STORY FERNANDO ARLENE PATRICIA LAMAS DAHL MEDINA OF THE cure CoLemsiA PICTURES ADULTS 70c BRING YOUR OWN 3-D GLASSES OR BUY THEM AT THE BOX OFFICE—15c PAIR —_ ——— _— NOW!!! Thru THURS, HELD OVER! ON THE GIANT FULL STAGE FUTURAMIC SCREEN! NOTE: “ROAD TO BALI” HAS NOT BEEN SHOWN IN THE CITY OF PONTIAC! | ROAD TOBALI Speman BY TECHNICOLOR CONVICT ON THE RUN: ® "ThE 8 yout SIANA ON OUR REGULAR SCREEN “CRY OF THE HUNTED” - ViTTORIO GASSMAN answered questions. Asked if she was personally in- The reporter persisted was she interested in holding political office herself. Margaret replied she had long-range TV and concert con- tracts. But, she added, she hoped to take part in next fall’s campaign. How? Well, that depends on how she can work in campaigning with her professional contracts. Another Girl Arrives for Tyrone Powers HOLLYWOOD — The Tyrone Powers now have a pair of daughters. The actor’s wife, the former inda Christian, gave birth to an 8-pound girl at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital yesterday. The Powers also have another daughter, Romina, 2. AIR-CONDITIONED 70.1 TONT ONO NON aX ON ON 10X80 “NEVER WAVE AT A WAC” With Rosalind Russell and Marie Wilson —ALSO— “COLUMN SOUTH” With Audi Murphy and Joan Evans PO 22 222d New Lake Theater 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE AIR-CONDIT TIONED “Never Wave ata WAC” With Rosalind Russell With Ann Baxter and \ Richard Conte Ware ae aw & \ \ \ N . \ while chasing the boys and died of a heart attack without regaining terested in politics, she replied: | consciousness. “I’m always interested in poli- sd EO tics.”’ Mrs. Stone said lawn furniture | had been thrown into their swim- ming pool and that there had been trouble of this kind before. Police took three boys, one 13 and the others 15, into custody and booked them on suspicion of malicious mis- chief. Later they were released to custody of their parents pending possible juvenile court action. Stone had been in show business more than 50 years. He was born in Worcester, Mass. | He served in the Spanish-American War and was a cavalry major and instructor in World War I. His ap- pearance in the Broadway stage play ‘‘Sidetracked’’ led to stardom and other hits in which he ap- peared included ‘‘The Girl of the Golden West’’ and ‘The Bird of Paradise.”’ In recent years Stone had cur- tailed his acting work but just a few weeks ago he completed a pic- . A : ture, ‘‘All the Brothers Were Val- K)||iant.”” His first picture, ‘‘Honor’s 1 Kease Theatre Altar,’”’ was in 1915. Other early films included ‘‘Scaramouche,”’ “Grand Hotel’’ Zenda.”’ In addition to his widow Stone is survived by two daughters, Bar- bara and Virginia. He had been married twice before. His first wife was the late Margaret Langham. He and his second wife, Florence Pryor, known as Florence Oakley on the stage, were divorced in 1939. and ‘‘Prisoner of Impromptu Strip Adds to Shriner’s Convention OKLAHOMA CITY (®—A pretty teen-age girl, apparently carried away -by frolicking in the streets as 12,000 Shriners gathered here for the central state Shrine con- vention, turned the downtown area upside down this weekend. Detectives said the girl got up and Marte ¥ Wilson \ = on a car and, as_ band-playing The Blue Shriners tooted and danced in the Gardenia” streets, proceeded to do an im- promptu strip. The girl slipped away and disappeared before po- lice could arrest her. 2150 Opdyke Road Blue Sky THE ATRE praAAs } Tonight! ON OUR BIG SCREEN! wvvv y-wuww* FIRST TIME...BIG STARS IM 3-D 3 D l iN E fd S l 0 iN ss POWARD HUGHES proscar: ROBERT MITCHUM LINDA DARNELL NEW MUSICAL with those “Si:.gin’ In The Rain” Stars! ’ TECHNICOLOR Songs! Dances! Joy! as a boy promises to get his girl’s picture on a LOOK magazine cover ! 3-D Viewers 15c, Bring Yours If You Have Them! @ @ PLUS °° ° THIS FEATURE @ @ —_we meee NCING AGAIN’ THEY'RE ROMAIN Moan THEY'RE © _. =e DONALD O'CONNOR t-DEBBE RENOLIS AP Wirepheote WHO ME? — Mrs. Erna Snyder, of Kutztown, Pa. stands open- mouthed as she is declared Mrs. America of 1953 at Asbury Park, N. J. With her are Mrs. Melvin Harper of Snow Hill, N. C. (Mrs. North Caro- lina) and Mrs. Janet McKeon of Elmont, N. Y. (Mrs. Greater New York City). (See story on page 17). Hotel here one weekend and then by-passed Hollywood to go to Las Vegas for an engagement. He scored heavily there too, aided, by an audience that felt like crying with him after losing their wads at the crap tables. His new act features a lot of rhythm songs plus his tent meet- Ray's Splash Really Only More Tears By JAMES BACON HOLLYWOOD \ — It’s just about a year ago that Johnny | ing histrionics. .Audiences, he Ray first came to Hollywood | Says, still want him to cry. to make the biggest splash since “Songs like ‘Cry’ and ‘Little the 1938 flood. White Cloud That Cried’ are Helped by Marion Davies’ still the top show stoppers,” famous party, the cryin’ crooner he avers. broke all attendance records be- fore or since at Ciro’s. And the figures are not press agent in- spired. I was there. Thus, it is puzzling why Ray by-passed Hollywood on his current trip west. He is quite bitter about it. “I may play here again but right now I don’t care if I never do. I thought I had made friends out’ here but the same people turned out to be my nastiest de- tractors. Man, I don’t know what I could have done to make enemies out here but I sure got He said he got the same re- action at the Palladium in Lon- don. “‘T hope I don’t seem immodest :: in saying so but those Bri- tish cats dug those crying songs the most.”’ Johnny maintains that his crying is not an act, that the “I sing the sad songs sad and the happy songs happy. No one ever tells me to sing them otherwise.” is lousy and laughs about his dis- them.”’ : He declined to name names but rexats ap pice. “ I sing the way I feels commented: “I guess I’m not thick-skinned enough to ignore what is said and printed about me.”’ Johnny denounced stories which. réflected on his moral Ex-Wife of Actor Wynn Injured in Car Crash songs affect him emotionally. “| He admits that as a singer, he HOLLIS, Okla. @ — Mrs. Betty | Prison Inmate Dies DETROIT —Clarence Renalds, 64-year-old House of Correction inmate, was found dead in his cell early Sunday. He was serving a 90-day sentence on a charge of assault and battery. Scientists Mull Speeding Spring Solar Experts Discuss. Delaying Winter Also | to Aid Crops MADISON, Wis. «—Scientists are planning to explore the possi- | bilities of chemically speeding springtime and delaying winter— as far as crops are concerned. This was made known Sunday at a conference of some of the world’s outstanding experts on solar ener- gy already available to agriculture —and also to tap a virtually wast- ed bounty of solar radiation as a means of supplying useful heat and power for homes and industry. The idea of the chemical ‘‘crop | season extension’ would be (1) to hasten the opening of planting sea- son a couple of weeks by spread- | ing chemicals on the snow or) frosted ground to promote melting, and (2) chemically treating the ground during growing season so as to absorb enough solar heat to delay Jack Frost’s attacks for an- | other couple of weeks at season’s end. Doors Open at 10:45 a.m. STRAND TODAY and TUESDAY AFRICA... flaming with adventure and passion! * * ® But scientists told reporters at a news conference in connection | with the meeting that, while the objective is one justifying intensive research, the problem will be to find chemicals that would trap the sun's energy—and release it un- der controllable conditions. * * » One scientist said the Russians claim to have achieved good suc- | cess in speeding springtime in the Soviet by spreading coal dust on the snow to trap rays of the sun. The conference of solar experts, including about 30 Americans, two Canadians and one scientist each from Australia, Israel, India, Italy | and South Africa, ends today. The need for research into} various conceivable uses for solar | energy was underlined at the news | conference by statements made by Palmer Putnam, Washington, D.C., an engineering consultant to the government. He asserted that if the present “‘increasing’’ rate of power demand continues—and un- der-privileged countries are devel- oped as envisioned by some authorities — the economically re-| coverable resources of regular fuels, such as coal, will give out in| about 70 years. On the same basis, | he added, the atomic. fuels, urani-| um and thorium, will last only 175 | years. | wan WALTER SLEZAK — ALSO — MERBERT J. YATES presents wrt # MALA POWE waa TALMAR - Enwano ARM Comfortably Cool aaa AIR CONDITIONED COOL PRICES: F AG |E 10: :30 MATINEE 35c rear EVENINGS 55c CHILDREN ALWAYS 18c Today and Tomorrow! =—SsSSS—— behavior and hinted that the gossip spread about him helped marriage to Marilyn Morrison to cause the breakup of his after seven months. “I’m real crazy about Marilyn yet and I’m sorry that our mar- riage didn’t work out. She used to hear all these stories about me from people I thought were my friends. I know she didn't want to believe them but I guess they upset her. They couldn't do otherwise. “But you got to work at a marriage to make it last in this crazy show business world and I never got a chance to work at it. “And then maybe I made some mistakes. I seldom drink except when I get real con- fused. Maybe that hurt some because I confuse easily.” His wife used to travel with him on the road but had tw give it up after a miscarriage. Johnny played the Del Mar Jane Wynn, divorced wife of movie actor Keenan Wynn, was enero rs injured yesterday when the auto- mobile in which she was riding | plunged into a ditch near here. She was en route to New York. Walter Scott Smith of Los An- geles, driver of the car, also was | injured. She received an interlocutory de- cree from the actor June 29. Her maiden name was Betty Jane But- ler. ‘Sleeping’ Party Guest Stabbed With Ice Pick WAGONER, Okla, #—Friends of Henry Casey thought he fell asleep at a weekend party and dragged him outside for a breath of fresh | air. Then dead. . Sheriff Noel Choate said Casey apparently had been stabbed in the neck with a sharp instrument, pre- sumably an ice pick. they discovered he was| | Pan: Mt Where § Me arad Ted PHONE FEDERAL 2 485) D 0 : 1) Tar Sat : OAKLAND: ly at 12:4 Jt eS a TRRARZ WATERFORD |Eral DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN Cor. Williams Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens . 6:30 e a ‘the be SONG story the LOVE story the BIG story «i of Ma JANE FROMAN DAVID WAYNE THELMA RITTER, _ LAST IMS TONITE Ida LUPINO. ‘ Robert RYAN » Her Life Depends € Upon. How Clever She Is With Ment! DIMENSION WARNER BROS HOUSE OF WAX CHA x AT . | FEA i AAE All the pageantry and gallantry: of the West's Indian Country! PUNY MADISON - FRANK LOVESOY va untesSrcx wesson PPP PPPDPPAP PPL LL ADDED ; BUGS BUNNY CARTOSH @ NEWS | ee ee “SCOUTMASTER” 4% PPP OOS SUNDAY: “Mexican Manhunt” raga Webb in tt i Or ee ie i a. = ee ee Hal Boyle Says: Kindergarten Good Place to Learn All About Women HOMETOWN, U. §. A. was one of those big times that| during dinner. try little men’s souls. For weeks Junior had bravely bragged to old Mrs. Kindly, the neighbor next door, ‘‘Well, I won't | be able to come over and plav | with you and Freckles so much | anymore. You know I'm starting in kinnergarden.” And Mrs. Kindly would say, ‘‘Oh, dear, we'll miss you so.” And Freckles, her cocker spaniel, would look sad, and Junior would trot back home feeling very, very, im- portant. But now it was D-Day, when kindergarten actually opened, and as H-Hour itself approached Junior didn’t feel important at all. He felt lonely and lost, and more of his courage oozed away each moment. “Please, Mami, I don’t want to go to school,’ he pleaded des- perately as his mother, Mrs. Frank Granber, helped him into his new suit. ‘Why not?” “What good will it do me?’ he asked. “I can’t even read or write.”’ But he rode, a stunned and stricken captive, with her to school. He was silent all the way and he remained silent-after meet- ing his new teacher. As she left, Mrs. Granber’s heart aimost broke at seeing her son standing there apart from the other children; forlorn and wist- ful When she returned a few hours later, however, she was met not by a small boy but a little man. Junior clambered confidently into the front seat, then turned and waved at a little red-haired girl running toward another car: “G’by, Elsie. See ya t’morrow.”’ ‘Who is Elsie, lambie?” asked Mrs. Granber. “She’s my sweetheart. And don’t call: me lambie.” “She’s your what?’’ “My sweetheart. Some _ boy pushed her, so I pushed him, so she said we must be sweethearts, as only sweethearts save each other from mean people. So I said I didn’t mind, and she put this ring on my finger and said I was to wear it forever an’ ever.” He held up a finger with a cigar band on it. “And did you meet any other nice little playmates?’’ asked | mother uncomfortably. | “Naw, just Elsie. Boy, you oughta see her play bean bag! She | beat everybody. C’mon, let’s get | home’’ — his accent sounded like his father’s — ‘‘I'm hungry.” | When they reached their house, they saw old Mrs. Kindly wait- ing on her front porch with a giass of milk and a peanut butter sandwich to welcome the young scholar. ' Junior threw Freckles a manly | pat, submitted to a kiss and gob- bled halfway through the sandwich before replying to Mrs. Kindly’s query as to how he had done his first day in school. “Swell,” he bragged. “I’m in the chicken tracks row awready. The ‘teacher had us all try to write the first letter of the alphra- bet — that’s ‘A’ — and when she saw mine she said, well, well, I guess I’d better put you in the chicken tracks row. Elsie’s in the chicken tracks row, too.”’ “Now isn’t that nice, dear,’ laughed Mrs. Kindly, squeezing him, ‘‘Why, in another year you'll both know all 26 letters of the alphabet, and be ready to go to college.” “Twenty-six letters in the al- phra-bet!”” said Junior, stunned. “And after kinner-garden me and Fisie will have to go to col- lege?” He became moodily silent and QUALITY | TOOLS @ Delta @ Atlas @ Porter-Cable Speedmatic @ DeWalt Saws -@Shopsmith GLENN WING POWER TOOLS 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD Five Mincks North of 14-Mile 4 Birmingham, MI 4-0444 Daily 8:00 te 6:00 Priday 8:00 te 8:00 uw — It{couldn’t be coaxed out of it later After he had | been put to bed, his mother heard sounds from his room and said, ‘Frank, go see what that child is up to.’’ Her husband opened the door, and saw Junior stuffing his cow- boy suit and toy gun in a small bag. Then Mrs. Granber heard the following conversation through the half-opened door: ‘What're you planning to do with the bag, son?’ ‘Take it to kinnergarden t’mor- row, Daddy.” “You don’t need a cowboy suit there. Now tell Daddy the truth, son.”’ ‘‘Promise you won't tell mama?” “Okay, I promise.”’ “Well, after school t’morrow me and Elsie are gonna run away and get married and go out West and be cowboys.” *‘Aren’t you rushing things a bit, son.’ ‘Well, gee, Daddy, when you and mama were sweethearts you didn’t have to go all the way through kinner-garden and learn the whole alphra-bet before you got married, did you?” “You got a point there, son. Your mother was still having trouble with the last five letters of the alphabet when she married me. But have you asked Elsie about this trip?’’ “I don’t have to. She says we're sweethearts, and she wants to be a cowboy, too. so—’”’ ‘“Hmmmmmmm.” “Daddy, can I borrow a dollar from you? Elsie might get hun- gry and want a san’wich.”’ “We-e-e-l-ll, I guess I can spare you a buck. Here it is. Now go on to sleep. Your bag is packed, good night, son. I'll turn out the light.” When her husband came out and closed the door behind him, Mrs. Granber demanded, ‘‘Have you gone stark crazy?—giving child, a mere baby, elope with?’’ “‘Oh, I think little Elsie Will give him a quick brushoff tomorrow,”’ said Frank tolerantly. money to that ; “But suppose she doesn’t. How can you tell what children will do?”’ “Well, even if she decides to go West with Junior I have an idea that you and Elsie’s mother will be right on hand to break up the trip—and probably the romance.”’ “But, Frank——” “Listen, you let Junior tote that bag to school tomorrow,”’ said her husband. ‘He'll learn more he needs to know about women in these two days than I did in 25 years. We sent him to kinder- garten to get an education, didn’t we. Well, let the boy learn.” NATO Officers Watch Turkish Army Practice ERZERUM, Turkey (— Tur- key’s 3rd army began its annual autumn maneuvers in this rugged region along the Soviets’ Caucas- ian border today. U. S. and Greek officers from NATO's Southeast Europe land command headquarters at Izmir have arrived as observers. Shoppers Get Bus Ride for 5 Cents on Coast SAN FRANCISCO W — The nickel came back into its own to- day. A Scent fare went into ef- fect for a 60-day trial period on shoppers’ special buses in down- town San Francisco in the non- rush 10 a. m. to 3:30 p. m. period. « Regular fare is 15 cents. nent o 4~ rv 2 Li % Fisk, BP esOaae's Wen Siew Ri ascii ta ait ee Eis. . . LIKES STATION—Ruby 7olaeos operates a ‘‘bug’’ at the Baltimore & Ohio station, Marysville, Ind., where she’s employed as railroad agent and telegraph operator. wage boost for 335 hourly rated Plant Work to Resume * |. nioyes. : New Volume Gives _ Facts on Government A new book on factual informa- tion about the United States gov- ernment is ‘‘Congress and the Constitution” by Col. Carl Miller. Col. Miller is a veteran guide, and lecturer at the capitol. He says he decided to write his book because ‘‘so many people know so little about their Con- gress, its organization and proce- dure, and I have been amazed by their questions.’’ In ‘‘Congress and the Constitution’’ he has answered these questions briefly and directly, and then given these answers a personal touch by interpolating a story or recital of historic facts just as he does when he is con- ducting a tour of the capitol. The three parts of the wark deal with the foundation of the govern- | ment, lawmaking under the Con- stitution, and administration of the laws and the states. The question and answer plan used in the book makes it easy reading. In addi- tion to general interest to citizens, it has a value as a reference work. The 162-page volume, released today, is published the Exposi- tion Press of New York. , Police Take Short Walk to Uncover Evidence ST. LOUIS W—Police, investiga- ting reports of a counterfeit cigar- ____ TWENTY-THREE ette tax stamp ring, didn’t have to look far for some.of the evidence. They reported yesterday some packs bearing phony city tax stamps were in vending machines at police headquarters. New York, N. Y. (Special) — For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to stop bleeding—without surgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another, “very striking improve- ment” was reported and verified by doctors’ observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all—this improvement was maintained in cases where doctors’ observations were continued over a period of many months In fact, results were so thor- ough that sufferers were able to | make such astonishing statements as “Piles have ceased to be a (Adertisement) Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Finds Healing Substance That Does Both— Relieves Pain—Shrinks Hemorrhoids problem!” And among these suf. ferers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- gents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne®) —the discovery of a world- famous research institution. Al- ready, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. Now this new healing substance is offered in ointment form for hemorrhoids under the name Preparation H.* The price is only 98¢ a tube including an appli- cator. The name to ask for is Preparation H—at all drug stores. And remember—if not entirely satisfied—your money will be re- funded promptly. “Trade Mark, COLDWATER ® — Full produc- tion will resume Tuesday at the} Midwest Foundry Co., strikebound four weeks. Members of the AFL International Moulders Union voted Sunday to accept an ¢ hourly | Fresh, Lean Ground Beef *S.D. meons Shin Dinord er. Write for free booklet * doesn’t ruin my , outdoor pleasures Learn how hundreds of thousands of users have found Siroil tends to remove psoriasis crusts and scales on outer layer of skin. Light applications help control recurring lesions. Siroil doesn’t stain clothing or bed linen. Offered on two weeks satisfaction or money refunded basis. 20 years of successful results. AT ALL DRUG STORES ——— SIROM LABORATORIES, INC, Dept, 186 santa momica CALF 29%. 78 NORTH SAGINAW ST. Lean, Blade-Cut Pork Chops Di. |! USE Hot Dogs 29i. 355i. Chuck Roast * Short Ribs 29i. BAZLEY , Sirloin, BETTER K Roued. th TRIM | V “None Higher” ° Grade 1, Does Blade Cut Lean, Beef Shoulder Cut Veal Steak Di. FRESH, LEAN Pig Hocks . 29i: Fe ere n nen e nnn ennn= | This Valuabl Coupon Entitles Sliced yj the Bearer to 2-Lb. 1 With Any Purchase Limit 1 Good Tuesday and Wednesday LIVER ele Reniententenlaenlealekanieniatababankarkerkerkeriedeietete ka Kakekedkadlekenkeaierkerkerkekerkedlankadlentententan BABY BEEF 19:. _ Move ahead with CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, : 40 West Pike St. MERCURY —get more for your money YOU'LL BE Qur Policy: ovick TuRN-ovER, LOW PROFITS. ACT FAST WHILE TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES ARE AT THEIR PEAK! WAY AHEAD WITH THE “SMART MONEY” MERCURY... THE CAR THAT KEEPS ITS VALUE! BE SURE WITH PROVEN ECONOMY, PROVEN V-8 PERFORMANCE, YEARS-AHEAD STYLING! INC. Phone FE 2-9167 ~ eof ee 2 oo O =e Oo @ 2 & «=~ & Oo oo Oe oe initiate dea i ee ee ee ee ee ee - TWENTY-FOUR y THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 U.S. Amateur Golf Test Starts Today By HUGH FULLERTON JR, OKLAHOMA CITY Ww —VJack Westland, a steel-blue eyed Wash- ingtonian who holds the distinction of being the oldest golfer ever to win the U.S. Amateur champion- ship and the only member of Con- gress ever to hold the title, doubts after this year. Westland, 47 when he won the championship at Seattle last year, will defend his title this week over the lengthy Oklahoma City Golf and Country Club course. He’ fig- he ever will try to win it again chance of repeating and it might be 199-1 in a field of 200 except ‘there are a few fellows out there I think I can beat.”’ * * * Westland, overlooked as a title threat in this tournament where ures he had about a 100 to 1] champions are a dime a dozen, is PASS PLAY—Jack Scarbath (18), Washington Red- | AP Wirephoto skin quarterback, looks for receiver on incompleted | Sunday. Lions won, 31-17. Closing in on Scarbath are pass play during National Football League exhibi- | Lions James Caine (88) and Thurman McGraw (73). tion game with the Detroit Lions in Buffalo, N. Y., Redskin Lyn nee (66) moves in for a block. confident that he can get through | at least a few rounds, possibly to the quarter finals. Ken Venturi, the youngest mem- ber of the 1953 U.S, Walker Cup team, is one of three or four young players tabbed as possible winners of the tournament. Also in the top quarter are 1949 champion Charlie Coe, the top amateur of the host course; former British amateur champion Harvie Ward of Atlanta, and Texan Joe Conrad, trying to show the Walker Cup selectors they made a mistake in leaving him off the international team, —~— Ward and Coe likely will meet in-the third round and Westland tabs the winner of that match as a probable’ finalist. His other Tigers Sweep Solidify 6th-P WASHINGTON ® — Twenty-five solid hits that added up to a twin victory over Washington fad the Detroit Tigers more solidly in sixth place in the American League standings today. They won the opener 10-4 by piling up an early nine-run lead Injuries Make Wolverine Grid Picture Grim Ludwig Out for Year; choice is Navy airman Gene Lit- tler of San Diego. * . s Straight shooting may be an important factor in deciding the 53rd national amateur champion- ship. The course is much wider and more open than Seattle, where the 1952 tournament was played, or the Walker Cup site, Kittansett, but there’s a lot of deep rough to catch hooked shots and a couple of ponds and a creek to catch stray shots. Littler meets Atlanta’s Tommy Barnes in the first round, The first quarter with Westland, Coe, Ward, Conrad, British Walker Cup Capt. Tony Duncan and a flock of other good players, is a tough one. Changes Outlook By FRANK LEAHY Notre Dame Coach From now until ‘‘Bowl Time”’ it will be my happy privilege to oc- cupy; this space each Monday and Friday to bring you opinions on the national football scene from a college coach's point of view. ~Prior to previewing the season in various sections of the country we would like to devote this column to a look at the 1953 collegiate sea- son in view of the major rules changes now in effect. In many respects these major changes will make football a considerably different game from the spectators point of view, and we would like to discuss it first from this angle. . There can be but little question | that the spectators will see a slow- | er brand of football on the college gridiron this fall. Many have ex- pressed a sincere desire that foot- Leahy Says New Grid Rule Will Slow Game Walker Is Below Par With Leg Ailment By JOHN F. MAYHEW ANN ARBOR #—Today was blue Monday in the Michigan football ' camp. With the opening game weeks away, coach Bennie Ooster- baan bemoaned a grim injury pic- t@e and a Saturday scrimmage he ball be returned to its old form even though it would slow down the game. It is true that football is but a game and perhaps not the place for two 2-Game Set, lace Standing that enabled Ned Garver to coast home with his 11th win of the year. Second victory came harder, but when the game was over the Tigers were up 64 and Steve Gromek had his seventh triumph. Seventh-place Philadelphia and eighth-place St. Louis split a doubleheader, so the Tigers gained on both. They now lead the Athletics by two and a half games and are six games out in front of the Browns. Matt Batts’ clutch double in the ninth inning of the nightcap drove in three runs to win for Gromek. The score was tied 3-3 when the Tiger catcher came to bat, and the bases were loaded on Jim Del- sing’s single, Bob Nieman’s double and a walk to Pat Mullin. Matt cleared them to give Detroit a three-run lead. Washington half of the ninth when doubles by Pete Runnels and Eddie Yost and a single by Gil Coan netted a run. But Ray Herbert came to Steve’s aid to save the game striking out Keith Thomas | and getting Jackie Jensen to ground into a force out. Just before the Tigers staged Vernon had unloaded a two-run termed “‘lousy.”’ a high degree of specialization and Injury - wise, Oosterbaan was efficiency, and I certainly don’t ’ know whether the change will be| Without Dean Ludwig, first-string to the fans liking. center from Marion, Ohio, now out From the standpoint of the play-| for the season. In addition, his No. ers the one platoon rule places| 1 tackle, Art Walker of South Hav- some definite limitations on boys en, presented a pessimistic picture. | of extremely high catibre. We have Ludwig, out since a week ago, never used the two platoon system| was under the close observation in its entirety but have certainly of University Hospital physicians favored it as it gave more boys a! until Saturday, when he was for- chance to play for a longer period] pidden further football after re-.: = alr porting headaches and _ dizzy Looking at the change through spells as the result of a neck the eyes of a college coach it makes injury. little difference. We can only work ; so many hours in each week on| Walker, who suffered a leg in- football — and if those hours must} jury during the summer, was not be spent trying to teach a young| recovering in keeping with the man twice as much as we did in| hopes of the Michigan coach. the past then we will do the best He was in the scrimmage for only a few minutes Saturday. Schedule Dates Keep Spartans, Irish Apart By ROBERT E. VOGES EAST LANSING w®—Scheduling difficulties—and that alone — pre- vented top teams Notre Dame and Michigan State from staging. a showdown football battle this fall. That’s according to MSC athletic director Ralph H, Young. Notre Dame, after a comeback climb, was named the number one team in the nation by sports- writers and broadcasters in a pre-season poll by the Associated Press. Irish nosed Michigan State, ranking team at the end of the 1952 season, back into second place. A lot of fans would like to.see these two positions decided by touchdowns rather than by bal- lots. A meeting between the Mid west rivals would be a selloyt in either stadium. Some folks have said that Michi- gan State, entering its first official year of Big Ten football, was quite satisfied to bypass the Irish for a season. That’s not so, declared Young. “We tried to arrange a date for this year,’’ said the MSC athletic director, ‘‘but we just couldn't find open Saturdays that coincided. “We had to play six Big Ten games this year and we had other commitments,’’ Young explained. “Notre Dame had part of its schedule booked too. So we just couldn’t get together,’’ he said. Michigan State and Notre Dame already have firm dates for a home-and home series for the next four years. And there exists an in- formal ‘‘gentlemen’s agreement’ | between the two scHools that they ; will keep on playing each other indefinitely. The football series between the two top teams in the nation is a long standing one, dating back to 1897. But Michigan State picked up its marbles and went home in 1921 when the Irish steamrollered the Spartans, 48-0. The series was resumed in 1948 when MSC was getting started on |its program of big, time football. | Notre ‘Dame won _the first year, 26-7, and in 1949 by a 34-21 score. In 1950, Michigan State won 36- 33, by the margin of a field goal. In 1951, the Spartans played prob- ably the most brilliant game of their history, scoring on the first play from scrimmage and power- ing to a 35-0 shutout. Last year, in a game decided by fumbles, it was Michigan State again by a 21-3 margin. Eastern Open Won by Mayer BALTIMORE (®—The wide open aspect of professional golf when such veteran stars as Ben Hogan, Llayd Mangrum and Sam Snead pick their spots was emphasized yesterday with the close of the! summer tourney circuit. Dick Mayer by taking the Eastern Open by a comfortable four strokes became the eighth golfer this year to win for the first time in pro competition. The $2,400 he won by shooting 279, nine strokes lower than Mount Pleasant’s par, Was nearly half his earnings all the rest of this year, Cottrell Cup Test ls Won by Forstrom Annual Dixie Cottrell Trophy tournament was held Sunday on| Bes the Brown road Rifle range of the Pontiac Rifle & Revolver Club. Competing against some of Oak- ’ land County's best shooters, George Forstrom shot 747 to win the ag- | gregate and the trophy. He placed | first in the pistol match and the 100-yard event. Second in the 50- | yard match. Robert Waggoner shot 743 to} place second-in the agregate. He was lst at 50 yards, at 200 yards, and at 300 yards. He tied for first on the bench rest and 50 meter matches. Cash Bond finished in 3rd place with an aggreate score of 740. Fourson Wins Trophy Don Fourson of Lincoln Park won the trophy at Partington's Pas- ture drag strip Sunday. August Varady of Birmingham set a new track record for motorcycles at 70.04 miles per hour. Races con- tinue each Sunday from 11 a. m. to 5 p.m. Practice Injuries Plague Teams on Eve of Season By BOB HOOBING NEW YORK (®—A broken foot, a shoulder separation and a chronic kidney condition have dimmed the outlook at Tennessee, California and Indiana in the latest outbreak of practice mishaps on the eve of the 1953 football season. * * * Tennessee's, Pat Oleksiak, rated No. 1 tailback of the Volunteer Baseball Results BASEBALL RESULTS By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE w L Pct. GB New York......... 94 845 8.676 aA Cleveland ...., 84 659 =«(58T Oe Chicage ..... eocese S32 Gh «678.14 Boston .......0005. 79 65 .549 1743 Washington ....... 72 #71 503 24 Detroit cweewweee: Oe a8 303 40 Philadelphia cooee BA Pri 375 4249 St. Lowis.......... 51 452 TODAY’S GAMES, PITCHERS | Cleveland at New York, 1:00 | Wynn (17-12) vs Ford (17-5); Chleage Tal Bos n, 1:00 p.m., Johnson (2-4) vs! Henry (4-4); Detroit at Washington | (night), 7:30 p.m., Branca (4-5) vs Stobbs (10-8), Only games scheduled. New York 6 Cleveland 8 | ton 7 Chicago 6) St. Louis 5-0 Philadelphia 2-2 Detroit 10-6 Washington 4-4 SATURDAY’S RESULTS New York 13 Detroit 4 Boston 7 St. Louis 6 ‘Chicage 6 Philadelphia 8 | Washington 4 Cleveland 3 TUESDAY’S GAMES Cleveland at New York, 1 p.m.; cn | cago at ten, 1 p.m. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE w L Pet. GB Brooklyn ......... 98 45 .685 san gear covecee, 86 SH .59T 124g coves cooee 73 638 563 19 Fhiladsiphis cesses 16 «66 =.585 0 214% New York... oo 6 78 ASB S2ty Cincinnati ........ 63 81 .438 354% Chhenge ...ccccces pod = — 38 Pittsburgh ........ 33 TODAY’s Gaians, PITCHERS Brooklyn at Chica, Moore (0-0) vs Kit delphia at St. (night), 8:60 p-m., Lindell (5-17) vs Mizell (13-8). games scheduled. SUNDAY’S RESULTS , Chicago 3 Breoklyn 2 St. Leuis o17 Philadelphia 3 Milwaukee 2-3 New York 1-7 Pittsburgh 5-6 Cincvinnati 4-8 SATURDAY’S RESULTS Chicago New York 1 Brooklyn & Milwaukee 2 Pittsburgh & St. Louis q Cincinnati; 3 Philadelpaia 2 TUESDAx’S GAMES Pittsburgh _ at Milwaukee (night), 9 p-m.; New York a at Cincinnati (night), 8 p.m.; Brooklyn at St. Louis (night), 8 p.m.; Philadelphia at Chicago, 1:30 Single-wing attack, got the broken foot in a scrimmage Saturday. Starting quarterback Sammy Williams suffered the shoulder dislocation the same day at Cali- fornia while Indiana’s captain and end, Bob Inserra, was forced to drop the game when it was dis- covered he had a chronic kidney condition. Wisconsin's defending Big Ten co-champions have only - slight hopes of utilizing quarterback Jim Haluska as the result of a summer broken leg incident. Halfback Paul Schwaiko ran into scholastic diffi- culties. Hard-luck halfback Har- land Carl has developed his .| plaguing knee trouble again as has co-Capt. Jerry Wuhrman, an end. * * * At West Point Earl Blaik lost his three best tacklers and two backs {on an already thin squad while injured fullback Fred Ataya re- mains a doubtful starter. Physicians have advised Michi- gan center Dean Ludwig to quit after a recent neck injury. , It’s Time Out! 5 " MM o hah wifl dN tng a ine” — sat 3 *“‘Now, let’s check the old record book, Fans . . . I think this game sets a record for a long contest!” Saginaw Bout to Pack Park Davey - Andrews Clash Is Expected to Attract 10,000 Fans SAGINAW (—Even the loser will be a winner tonight when Chuck Davey meets Al Andrews in a-10-round bout in Veteran's Memorial park, It’s hardly a ‘“‘stellar attrac- tion,’’ as they say, but promoter Hank Steinert expects a crowd of 10,000 to pour $45,000 into the til, making Mssrs. Davey and Andrews a pair of well- paid gentlemen, ° The figures are amazing be- cause: 1. Davey and Andrews are not | among the top-ranking welter- | weights, and | 2. This city, which is only 1-20th the size of Detroit, is not known as a boxing hotbed. So why the big mob? It seems to be a combination of three things: Davey, a fallen idol, is still box office magic in Michigan; a terrific. job of pro- moting, and a ban on TV. Openings for Keglers Lakeland Ladies Bowling League has openings for individual keglers and an additional team. Loop rolls on Wednesday nights at the Spill- wood Recreation in Keego Har- bor. Any bowlers interested should contact Bea Halsema at FEderal 7-7404. ia = lia at possible. ‘‘He just couldn't run well,’’ re- ported Oosterbaan. The Michigan coach said Walker would continue drills, but ‘‘would be under a handicap this season— if he plays.” Halfback Tony Branoff was also a Saturday casualty with a pinched neck nerve. However, it was re- garded as minor and he was ex- | pected to be back in action today. In the scrimmage, the Michigan| varsity stuttered to a 3 to 1 touch- down margin over the oppesition composed of second and third! stringers. Oosterbaan could find little good | Gaines Leads PMD Golfers at Davisburg Pontiac Motor Division golf team won the GMC _inter-plant golf tournament at Davisburg Goif Club Sunday with a 26-man total of 2108 strokes. Yellow Truck was second with 2196 followed by Fish- er Body with 2206. Joe Gaines of Pontiac Motor was the day's medalist with a 69. Mike Andonian of the Cab had 70 and Tom Balliet, also Pontiac Motor had 71. Wayne Beals of Pontiac had 73 | and Hilton Stults of Cab, 74, while | Harley Hyatt was low for Fish- er’s with 75. A picnic in Davis- | burg park followed the golfing. Plant golfing activities wind up Sunday with the annual Babcock Pontiac Country that saw the reserves hold the var- sity down with a 7-6 edge for most| of the rainy, Michigan Stadium. Smith, Green Lead in PAC Title Shoot Pontiac Archers’ Club held its field championship meet Sunday at the club range in the Pontiac Lake Recreation Area. Top honors were ‘taken by John M. Smith, who had 787 in the free style division of the Expert Bow- man ‘‘A’’ class, and L. G. Green, who posted a 690 in the instinctive Kazoo Still in Race for ABC Championship BATTLE CREEK ® — Four teams, including three-time cham- pions Kalamazoo, were still un- defeated today as the eastern) America’s Doubles Team Rated Below By WILL GRIMSLEY MONTREAL (®—United States Davis Cup forces routed Canada as expected in the American zone final over the weekend but came away with a king-sized problem on their hands. Can Tony Trabert and Vic Seix- as, perhaps the two top amateurs in the world at the moment,. form a doubles combination with a fair chance of winning a point from the Australians next December? Based on their performance against the Canadians, the answer seems to be ‘‘no.”’ Canada's Lorne Main and Paul Willey, beaten by the American tandem in Saturday’s doubles, both said they felt the U.S. would have to concede the doubles to the Aussies. Lawrence Baker, chairman of the U.S. Davis Cup selection com- mitte eand captain of the team on the Canadian venture, won't have too glowing a report to give his committee this week. “Tony and Vic didn’t play up to expectations,”” he said. ‘‘Doubles is definitely a problem. Both are strong, individualistic boys. Both want to come in and take the kill. As a result they don’t team well together but may be they can work NS Pin Loop Starts North Side Community Club’s bowling league opens tonight at 7 p. m. ‘at the Auburn Lanes in Auburn Heights, Several teams are in need of bowlers and any | Aussie Pair it out.” Trabert, the U.S. champion, and Seixas, the Wimbledon champion, won their singles assignments easi- ly over Henri Rochon and Main, respectively but lacked cohesion in topping Main and Willey, in the doubles. playoff of the American Baseball Congress tournament went into! section of the EBA class. round three. Other 1st-place winners: Kalamazoo, which won the crown FREE STYLE in 1949, 1950 and 1951, slipped past] Women BOWMEN — Hannah Hedges, defending champ New York 6-5 in| 501. a second-round game that drew! jUNnion BOYS — Jim Davis, 177 ae aad Bec 8 But the round's best pertormance| ARCHER, — ts Av ils a came in a night game when Bat-| 281. tle Creek, Mich., won its second WOMEN ARCHERS — Fle Dunlap, 223. game 12-2 over Baltimore on the A . one-hit pitching of Carl Angelo. | State Nines Stay in NABF’s Competition YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP) — Michigan’s four representatives were still in the running today in the National Amateur Baseball Federation tournament. While defending champion De- troit and Dearborn were idle Sun- day, Royal Oak defeated Louisville 7-2 and Fline rolled over Fort Wayne 10-1 to keep their unbeaten strings intact in the double-elimi- nation tourney. to report on the game-type affair) F cold afternoon in! homer in the eighth to tie the score. Three round-trippers, two by Ray Boone and one by Fred Hatfield, | highlighted the Tigers’ 15-hit at- | tack on Senator rookies Jim Pearce and Dean Stone. Boone's 22nd homer of the season came right after Hatfield's big |* blow in the fourth inning, and Ray added No. 23 the next time he came up, in the big Detroit sixth. Ralph Branca was named to go against Chuck Stobbs tonight in the final 1953 meeting of the Tigers {and Senators. ‘ (FIRST GAME) DETROIT WASHINGTON AB RH AB RH | Kuenn, ss 6 60 2 Yost, 3b 3 1 1 | Hatfield, 2b 4 2 1 Runnels, ss 5 I 2 Boone, 8b 3 2 2 Vernon, 1b 513 | Delsing, ef 4 2 2 Jensen, rf 3 @ 1 Kaline, cf 1 @ © Barmes, rf 1 0 6 | Nieman, i 2 © 2 Coan, If 400 | Lund, if 2 1 1 Busby, ef 4063 | propo, 1b S 1 1 Terwil'er, 2b 4 0 © Souchock, rf 5 1 2 Fitzger’ld, o 3 @ 1 Bucha, c¢ 40601 oo : : : acka, ¢ Garver, P ie Pearce, » 1006 Stone, p 2ee Vollmer 1¢@1 461015 37 412 Snyder ran for Fitzgerald in 7th. Vollmer doubled for Stone in %th. DETROIT .......----005> 010 260 001—10 WASHINGTON 000 002 200— 4 E—Pearce. RBi—Hatfield, Boone 3, Kuenn, Nieman, Souchock, Garver, Jen- | sen, Busby, Runnels, Vernon, Bucha. 2b | —Nieman, Jensen, Bucha, Vollmer, 3b— Souchock. HR—Hatfield, Boone 2. DP —Yost, Terwilliger and Vernon; Runnels, Terwilliger and Vernon; Boone, Hatfield _— Dropo. Left—Detroit 9, Washington & BB—Pearce 2, Garver 2, Stone 4. | $O—Garver 3, Stone 4. HO—Pearce 9 in 41§, Stone 6 in 443. R-ER—Garver 4-4, Pearce 7-6, Stone 3-3. WP—Pearce. | PB—Bucha. W—Garver (11-10). L— Pearce (0-1). U—Soar, Froese, Stevens ‘nd Summers. T—?2:18. (SECOND GAME) IT WASHINGTON iataiaeg a8 Sale Kuenn, ss 5 1 2, Yost, 3b 412 Hatfield, 2> 3 1 1 Snyder, ss 311 Boone, 3b 4 @ © Thomas 106006 Delsing, cf 4 1 2 Vernon, 1b 2 1 2 Nieman, If 4 1 2 Jensen, rf 5 68 Drepe, Ib 4 1 2 Vollmer, If 4 6 0 Souchock, rf 2 © @ Busby, cf 406606 Mullin @ 1 0 Roig, 2b 3 0 6 Lund, rf © © © Runnels eS | Batts, « 4 @.1 Grasso, @ 301 Gromek, p 3 @ © Barmes 1606 Herbert, p © @ @ Lane, p 200 Dixon, p 666 Coan i Bes 1 33 610 ™ "4 8 Mullin walked for Souchock in 9th, Runnels doubled for Roig in Sth. Barmes fouled out for Grasso in th. Coan singled for Dixon in 9th. Thomas struck out for Snyder in 9th. DETROIT WASHINGTON E—Snyder. RBI—Jensen, Delsing 2, Batts 8, Yost, Vernon 2. 2b—Snyder, Drope, Nieman, Batts, Yost. HR—Ver- non. S—Lane, Hatfield, Souchock, Gro- mek. Left—Detro 4, Washington 98. BB—Gromek 8, Dixon 1, Herbert 1. it) —Lane 2, Gromek 4, Herbert 1. HO — Gromek 8 in 814; Herbert 0 in 43; Lane 9 in 8 (none out in 9th); Dixen 1 in 1, R-ER—Gromek 4-4; Herbert 0-0; Lane 5-4; Dixon 1-1. HBP—Gromek (Vernon). PB—Grasso,. W—Gromek (7-8); L — Lane (1-4). U—Froese, Stevens, Sum- mers, Soar. T—1:58. A—8,157. Albion Is Rated Favorite to Retain MIAA Crown By The Associated Press There are three ‘‘A’’ teams in the MIAA football conference — Adrian, Albion and Alma—but one appears to have and A-1 chance of winning the title. That’s power-packed Albion, a big. favorite to retain its crown. With the Britons, it’s a case of the strong get stronger. Coach Del Anderson had a solid squad when practice started. Now, with the return of halfback Ira Guil- ford and end Cedric Dempsey, it’s stronger than ever. Writer Pays Tribute fo Korean Vet Jerry Coleman; Possible Loss of Carl Furillo May Hurt Dodgers GRANTLAND RICE NEW one ces Coleman, a fine taliedasey with the Yankees but an even greater fellow, goes to war twice and each time he comes back the Yankes are on top of the pack. s s s the top spot of National League Between Uncle Sam and the Yankees, Jerry has given everything he has to give. He has given far more for his country, which is only natural. The testimonial given him at the Yankee Stadium recently was the most deserved in baseball history. Jerry’s record includes over 110 flying missions in two wars, plus a wife and family, plus no sign of ‘a. squawk. The Dodgers, ordinary pitchin Furillo was hit se s s I talked te him in Florida the day before he left for his second mission. “Please don’t make my case any different.from other servicemen,” he sald. “Just forget about it.” He came back to ——————————— He arrived in time. to start traneleting the curious vocabulary of Casey Stengel, in frantic search of Furillo. After a winds. | ordinary pitching. The Dodgers have two weaknesses. Brooklyn Dodgers and Chuck Dressen had usurped the game. They were hailed as the best ball club in history, barring their pitching. Also barring the stupidity of Carl Furillo, their leading hitter, who has set out to make Leo Durocher far more popular than he haf ever been. s * as a great team, outside of g, have another weakness. They are the most jittery bunch I have seen in action. = . . on the hand by a ball waist high that he had backed away from and acted as if he| 5; was being beaned. Even the star Campanella falls on his face from balls not even close. The entire team has become jittery, much to Dressen’s disgust. The Yankees are not jittery. . . s First—just Second—the possible loss of montli’s layoff, how will he look? He may be a complete flop in place of a .344 hitter. Furillo can make a tremendous difference in this interested men should report at| ‘his fifth consecutive pennant and his fifth con-| next series. Here was probably the most stupid 6:30 p.m. to league president Bry- an French at the alleys. secutive World Series. , }NMmove ever made There was one difference Jerry found. .The/-without sense or ~ in baseball, for it was completely reason. Gromek got into trouble in the) * Wife Trouble Driving Nalon Out of Racing Duke’s Spouse Says His Occupation Gave Her Expensive Ulcer LOS ANGELES (#—Race driver Duke Nalon, 40, says he is quitting automobile racing because of ali- mony trouble. His wife, Cheri, 41, has ob- tained a separate maintenance decree and is now suing for di- vorce. She has asked Superior court to boost her support pay- ments from $150 a month to $400. Mrs. Nalon asserted that worry- ing over her husband's hazardous occupation gave her an ulcer that has cost her $5,500 in medical bills. “I've decided to end 20 years of racing because of this trouble,” said Nalon yesterday. He is an employe of the aircraft engine di- vision of an automobile company. He and Mrs: Nalon were married in 1945 and separated last year. Nalon came in llth at the In- dianapolis 500 mile race last Me- Irish 11 Voted y ‘Most Like to Succeed’ ‘Newspapermen Expect Notre Dame to Regain Top Ranking NEW YORK (®—Notre Dame will complete its climb back to the top of the national collegiate foot- ball rankings this year in the opin- ion of the 171 sportswriters and broadcasters participating in the Associated Press’ annual pre-sea- son poll. * * * The Irish, who reached the third rung of the standing in the final poll of 1952 after being shut out the two previous seasons, were voted by a wide margin as the team most likely to succeed. They received 84 first place votes and a total of 1,668 on the. basis of 10 for first, nine for second. Michigan State, 1952 champion, dropped back to second with 24 first place votes and a total of 1,305. Georgia Tech, runner-up to the Spartans last year, was placed at the top by the same number of voters and finished a close third with 1,128. * * * UCLA followed with 12 first and a total of 1,065 for a position two places higher *than in the 1952 final poll. Alabama rose from ninth to fifth with 966 points. Then with 672; Ohio State with 666, Southern California with 165, Maryland 143 and Duke with 86. Alabama received 18 first place votes, Oklahoma and Ohio State 3 each, Maryland 1 and Duke 2. Detroiter Registers 1st Major Racing Triumph DETROIT (UP)—Felix Brooks of Detroit won his first major racing event Sunday when he beat out 53 other pilots in the 250-mile stock car race at Mich- igan State Fair. The 28-year-old mechanic who races only as a hobby posted an average speed of 61.22 miles an hour around the one-mile oval League Leaders By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Vernon, Washingten, Rosen, Cleveland, .329; Mineose, Chicago, -312; Goodman, Bosten, .311; KUENN, DETROIT, .310, RUNS—Yost, Washington, 100; Rosen, Cleveland, ; Minese, Chicago, 9%; Vernon, Washington, 97; Mantle, New York, RUNS “BATTED IN—Rosen. ene. 135; Vernon, Washington, 109; BOON DETROIT, 104; — ig York, 102; Robinsen, Philadel, HITS—KUENN, Dereoir, 198; Ver- non, Washington, 1 Rosen, Cleveland, 183; Philley, Puitadeiphin. isi; Busby, bare Sy 169. -337; hia, ; New Yerk, 26; ee Cleveland, 25; BOONE, DETROIT, 23 k tig gg Tag eee, Chicage, 22; vera, cage, 21; Jensen, Washington, 17; ley, Philadelphia, 12; Busby, Washington, 11. PITCHIN pat, New York, 15-3, a hoadrt ge York, oab -773; Raschi. ew ork, ‘arnell, Beston, 19-8, .704; Sain, New ang Mg 13-6, 684. STRIKEOUTS—Pierce, Chicage, 178; Trucks, Chicage, 142; Wynn, Cleveland, 131; Gareia, Cleveland, 128; Parnell, Boston, 123. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING—Fu B 344; Schoendienst, St. Louis, 340; Irvin, New Yerk, .339; Meeller, New "York, -386; Snider, Breoklyn, .335. RUNS—Snider, Brooklyn, + Gilliam, Brooklyn, 119, Dark, New vent 116; Mu. ro St. Leuis, 113; Rebinsen, Breeklyn, RUNS BATTED IN — Campanella, Brooklyn, 138; Mathews, Milwaukee 126; Hodges, Brooklyn, 120; ia eee Breeklyn, 113. 118; Ennis, Philadelphia HITS—Ashbern, Philadelphia, 188; Snider, Breekiya, 186; Dark, New York, 178; Musial, & Louis, 176; Kiussewski, Cincinnati, 1. DOUBLES—Masial, * Leuis, Snider, Brooklyn and park New wou Furille, eoklyn, 36; Beli, Cincin- aot 35. TRIPLES — Gilliam, eg = be 16; Fondy, Chicage and Bruten, waukee, 12; Aghbern, Philadelphia and Hemus, St. Leuis, 9. HOME RUNS—Mathews, Milwaukee, 45; Campanella, se and Kiussew. ski, Constonat. ag Snider, Breeklyn, 38; Kiner STOLEN Sacks -Breten ten, Milwaukee, 25: Reese. Brooklyn, 20; Gilliam, Broek. lyn, 17; Rebinsen, Brooklyn, 16; Snider, Brookivn and Bernier, Pitisburgh, 14. PITCHING—Bardette, Milwaukee, 14-4, .778; Erskine, Breekiyn, 19-6, .769; Milwaukee, 26-7, .741; re a came Oklahoma, fourth last year, - UBLES—Vernon, hig yge 42;- Kell, 38; White, B rl Boston, KUENN per eg DE- TROIT and Jenseh, Washington, 31. TRIPLES—Rivera, Chicago, 14; Ver- non, Washington, 106; Piersall, Bosten and Philley, Philadelphia, 9: Fex and Minose, cago and BOONE, DE- TROIT, a EE I _THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 - Lions Trample Redskins BUFFALO w — Detroit's Na- tional Football League champion Lions boasted four exhibition wins today after a, 31-17 showing against the Washington Redskins on Sun- day. Displaying both power and skill when they were most needed, Lions drove to three second-half touchdowns that put the game away after Washington had managed a) 10-10 halftime tie. The victory avenged the only exhibition defeat suffered by the Lions ‘since Buddy Parker took Brooks Pilot Pleased With Black's Showing Joe Looks Good for) Six Innings; Dressen | to Scout Yanks CHICAGO (® — Manager Chuck Dressen*of the Brooklyn Dodgers, National League champions, said today he was ‘‘very, very pleased’”’ with the way pitcher Joe Black is now coming around after a disap- pointing slow start this season, * * « “T thought Black did a fine job yesterday in the first six innings against the Chicago Cubs,”’ he said. ‘IT may use him for a couple of innings today—sort of sharpen him up for the World Series. He’s big and can take all the work we can give him.” Black, making his third start of the season, turned in a two-hit, one walk chore in the first six frames. He yielded a lead-off bunt single to Frankie Baumholtz and pitched a double play ball to Eddie Miksis before Dee Fondy homered. After that, the big righthander retired 15 Cubs. in succession before walking Baumholtz with two out in the sixth. The cubs got to Black’s succes- sor, Jim Hughes for two runs and a 3-2 victory in 10 innings. Dressen said he will be in New York tomorrow to scout the Yankees. “I hope Cleveland beats them a couple,’’ he said. ‘‘They bear down a lot more when there’s something at stake, and it is easier to scout a team under those conditions.” 6-3 on amazing Johnny Mize’s over as coach. That was in 1951, when the ’Skins squeaked to a 10-7 win over Detroit. Parker’s men, who have tied ! once in their current exhibition schedule, wind it up Thursday when they go to Philadelphia to play’ Eagles in the annual Phila- delphia Inquirer charities game at Municipal Stadium. Lion rookies may be in for a good deal of action in that game, because’ Parker must trim_ his squad to the league limit Sept. 22 and he’s likely to want a last look at the youngsters under game con- ditions. But it was the seasoned stars who provided the necessary punch to carry Detroit through in yes- terday’s rainy battle. An 80-yard drive, featuring a Bobby Layne to Doak Walker pass and two good runs and a final crackover by Bob Hoernschemeyer gave the Lions their first score, just six minutes after the game Dick Alban intercepted a Layne | began. pass early in the second quarter and the Redskins were off to a tying score. They made it when Hugh Taylor caught,a 17-yard toss from Jack Scarbath. Field goals by Pat Harder for Detroit and Billy Dudley for Wash- ington finished the first-half scor- ing. In the second half Lions took over. Early in the third quarter, Detroit’s Jim Doran hit Scarbath as the young quarterback stepped back to pass. The ball bounced back toward the Washington goal, and Harley Sewell grabbed it and went into the end zone, rolling the last few yards. Walker capped a 65-yard drive later in the quarter for the third Lion touchdown, and Jim Martin set up the final Detroit score when he recovered a fumble by Charley Justice. Layne went over five plays later. Another Scarbath-to-Taylor pass accounted for the ’Skins other score, just before the final Detroit touchdown. Yanks Can Clinch Pennant by Beating Tribe Today By JOE REICHLER AP Sports Writer Today is V-Day for Manager Casey Stengel and his New York Yankees. V stands for five, the record number of consecutive pennants Stengel and his: Yankees are cer- tain of winning, a feat never ac- complished before by club or manager. * * * The world champions reduced their ‘‘magic number’’ to two by defeating the Cleveland Indians, pinch hit home run with two mates aboard in the eighth inning. The State KC Golf litle to Pontiac Wasik Paces Council 600 to Team Crown at}! Lansing LANSING (# — The 74 shot by triumph boosted the Yank lead over the Tribe to 12 games. * * * Two is the combination number of Yankee victories and-or Ina‘an defeats needed to gain New York’s fifth straight pennant. As the Yan- kees and Indians were to clash again this afternoon, a New York victory would eliminate the Tribe from any mathematical possibility of overtaking the Yankees. The Chicago White Sox officially faded out of the pennant race yes- terday losing 7-6 to the Red Sox in Boston. John Mize was the Yankee hero yesterday. The 40-year-old pinch hitter de luxe strode out of the dugout with runners: on first and second, one out in the eighth, the score tied at 3-3 and whacked Mike Garcia's first pitch into the right field stands for a three-run homer. It was his third pinch hit homer of the season, his fifth as a Yankee and the sixth of his long career. . Buying: SCRAP IRON and Greene Asks Limit on Televised Bouts MILWAUKEE (® — A proposal to limit nationally-televised fights to one a week was offered today by National Boxing commissioner Abe J. Greene in a speech pre- pared for delivery at the opening session of the National Boxing As- sociation convention here. Charging that ‘‘boxing giveth and TV taketh away,’’ Greene said the sport is confronted constantly by growing millions of new box- ing fans but a corresponding drop in the number of ticket-buying |- spectators. Television does not— but should—do much more to make up the financial loss to boxing. TWENTY-FIVE _ Diplomats Now Must Pay Fee to Fish in Yugoslavia BLED, Yugoslavia (AP)—It’s the diplomats — and not the fish—who are on the hook now in this summer resort center for foreign envoys in Yugo- slavia. DAYTON Bled’s lakes are teeming with trout. In years past, the au- thorities looked the other way when the diplomats in resi- dence here went fishing with- out a license. This year, how- ever, they must shell out 500 dinars ($1.66) per person per day for fishing privileges. And MARKET TIRE’S GIGANTIC BRAND NEW Fully Guaranteed o Seconds — No Tread Blemishes — No Rejects — No Sub-Standard Price Tires! / BUT BRAND NEW FULLY GUARANTEED FIRST LINE and PREMIUM DAYTON THOROUGHBRED TIRES! there’s a covey of wardens sto enforce the law. Montcalm Bowling Centre OPEN League Openings Still Avatiable FREE INSTRUCTION 3 P.M. te & P.M. 30 E. Montcalm. FE 5-222! —— ltl Y the U. S. LOOK at This UNCONDITIONAL Written Guarantee! +» + means that these tires are guaranteed unconditionally against all possible damage, such as cuts from glass, curbs, rocks or any other road hazard. Unconditionally means what it says! There are no exceptions. Guarantees are good anywhere in bottles, bolts, breaks, DAYTON’'S BIG 3 GUARANTEE: 1. Lifetime Factory Guorantee! 30,000 Mile Guarantee! 2-Year Written Road Hazard Guar- wn antee Against Hazards! All Possible Road Bernard Czuk of Kalamazoo won the individual championship of the state Knights of Columbus Golf; tournament which ended Sunday. The Pontiac Council No. 600 METAL Selling: Structural Steel I-Beams -- Channels Angles -- Etc. S. Allen & Son, Inc. 22 Congress St. FE 5-8142 Shaughnessy, Ragatz Double Race Winners Carm Ragatz and Chuck Shaugh- nessy were double winners in the Pontiac M-59 Speedway hardtop racing program Sunday night. Ragatz won the first heat and Shaughnessy was a victor ‘in the fourth heat and the 15lap’ semi- final. Bill Schultz beat Wayne Bennett and Marvin Main to the wire in the 25-lap feature event. Main, Cliff McKinney and Ed- die Chyz also were heat winners while Chuck Partello took the six- car trophy dash. Track officials announced that |! PREMIUM WHITE WALLS You Save “$10.45 13.30 ~ 11.70 13.25 42.80 ~ 14.15— FIRST LINE BLACK WALLS Sizes Price Ist‘ Tire | Price 2nd Tire | 6.00x16| $20.10 6.50x16) 24.95 | 15.95 6.70x15 } 3.95 T.10x15| 25.75 repeated as winners of the team title, which it won last year at Kalamazoo. Team title is decided by the best five scores turned in by members of each council. Among Sunday’s leading scores | were William Simpson, Flint, 77; John McLaughlin, Alma, 77; Ed Wasik, Pontiac, 77; Harold Mc- Cavana, Detroit, 77, and Charles Guzak, Flint, 78. \ Sizes | Price Ist Tire | Price 2nd Tire | “6.00x16 $29.40 | $18.95 6.50x16; 36.25 | 22.95 6.40x15) 30.65 | 18,95 6.70x15} 32.20 | 19.95. T.10x15} 35.75 | 22.95 (24,95 You Save effective this week, Sunday races ——___ = wit ieiswne stern win] | CONT PIQNEER FASHION! x16 7.60x15) 39.10 | 24.95 | 14.15. See at 3 oldie: Batatay Fae nvEst 8.00x15| 30.95 | 18.95 | 12.00 8.00x15) 43.05 | 26.95 | 16.10 races at 3 o'clock. Saturday rac- ing will continue at 8:30 p.m. Wings Open Drills for 1953-54 Season SAULT STE. MARIE (®—Det- roit Red Wings, a team with a mission, opened training today for the 1953-54 hockey season. Their goal: To make up for their miserable showing at the tail-end of last season. If you recall, Wings - breezed to their fifth straight National Hockey League title — then flapped in the playoffs, los- ing to Boston in the first round. The two big questions to be ans- wered are: 1. Who is going to play center between Ted Linsay and Gordie Howe? 2. Can goalie Terry Sawchuk bounce back after his sub-par performance in the playoffs? Rangers Win 22nd USE OUR MODERN LAY-A-WAY PLAN FOR YOUR HUNTING EQUIPMENT RIFLES — SHOTGUNS — SHELLS A SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS YOUR CHOICE! EASY TERMS SLAY BAUGH’S SPORT SHOP 630 Oakland Ave. Ph. FE 4-0824 Plus Fed. Excise Tax and Exchange FREE Complete Front End End Inspection ! Inspection! FALL FRONT (TEND SPECIAL! Complete Front End Alignment......... °7750 Plus Fed. | Excise » Tox ar and Exchange RIS PAL SHE { REE Complete Front Ist Quality ROADKINGS 6.00x16...... 310% 6.70x15..... 5% om TIRE COMPARISON CHART as printed by T. B.A. QUICK — DEPENDABLE — GUARANTEED COLLISION WORK at OLIVER ‘MOTOR includes . . . Caster, Camber and Tow-In All work done on our new Bean Visualiner with the latest modern equipment! | Pig ing Sueay to ace, the COLLISION SHOP Quality | Goodyear; Dayton |Firestone| U. U, os | Ivory Rangers’ polo team to ai VA 36 w. Pike St. FE 2-9101 Bice | Supreme | 16-7 victory over the Salem, O., Sreniam Double Ribbon : et U. S. Royal J * Club at I Polo Field. I See Robert Rector, Mgt. Eagle | thorn mpe | Master s at setup. five other Ranger tes Free panne on aD lee Li ~~ $§ ~ Champion Royal HEADQUARTERS for AUTO-LITE Batteries asses. It Ran- ine — Thorobd gers Zand victory in mats sD —— tees Large Discounts During This Sale! 2nd Line | Marathon | Road King | Champion doa s. ~ q ° Leag ue Leaders “—s—weerre 2 oO" COLLEGE ig tng Ag leona ® BUY ON BUDGET! @NO MONEY DOWN! By the Assecia Great Lakes Air 55 MeMaurray 13 Now is the time to buy your Morrie Harvey fs Salem, " Truvanized Suburbanite es ONE FULL YEAR TO PAY! - Clead (Minn.) 7 MUD & SNOWS ag een Minn. 6 Daketa State 7 icon 19 Daketa Mines 13 Abilene Ch * Sw Texas St 19 Stout Inst. wis.) Sul Ress 7 NFL EXHIBITIONS HERE’S WHAT WE DO: = as . wy ress ® Remove front wheels and ® Inspect brake drums. Check i 15S iaey- ereavacetctstaniters’s « Giants 10 Balt. Colts 6 inspect lining. and add brake fluid if a She, needed 8 AY © Adjust brake shoes to secure Ions 3) Redekine 17 © Inspect, clean and repack full contéct with drums. ardinals 14 49ers 14 (Tie) frent wheel bearings ® Carefully test brakes. RONT END ALIGNMENT .... TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED FOR ALL WORK FIRESTONE STORE SUNDAY'S STARS By the Associated Press BATTING — ergs Mise, Yankees diasted a Lage heme run with twe mates abeard break a 3-3 tie and | the Tanboce a 6-3 victery ever the Indians TIRE CO. 136 S. Saginaw St. A= til 9 Open Eves. FE 5-4503 pe Cheha de dd ded dh hd dada’ VAdttttteadtddt td Fite eave nit 2-4" victory 2 te 146 West Huron Street FEderal 2-9251 : : iti | SSAA AAA AAA AA A A ep c ¢ | vs - Brehm me erty - we ee —— stiri EL LOL LOL II OLE GOAL DLL LIE A: LL ALO AA A OLN MRD DS A My nln cee GS ns ee ee ee eee a ee a ‘ yA a __ TWENTY-SIX Exciting New Strip Ee ee ee Ce UUllCCOC*C*C“;*‘i ~" 'S 4 >| C 9-14 a 4) & # \4, NY A { ae } \ S, fas ~ 2 “a ~“ [ 3 aaap \\! } 2 NANCY By McEvovw and Striebe! ! By Ernie Rushmiller | ee CISCO KID -ERN/E aimee WHAT ARE YOU DOING, NANCY 2 CITY I DROPPED A DIME IN HL ps ‘ F+4 THE POOL AND I'M DRAINING By T. V. “LUU00 tt \o OIL 1 Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY I’, LG UH-ER-HERE IT tS. (4 SORRY | HAVE NO MoRe CASH ON ME BUT } DEPOSITED MOST OF IT AND JUMPS To CONCLUSIONS Caprigin, WER, Maw Yost Rertd Tatham ten. POF ao o> on ch oo ok oS >_> oe . +a em oO eee +r I HAVEN'T THE FAINTEST IDEA \. ORR WHAT HE'S Rains ABOUT! WHAT a | SMe e THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 OSs eee ee: se ee! ee, ef A Ce er TWENTY-SEVEN Cemetery, Mrs. Berryman will lie in state at the Farmer-Snover Puneral Home. WARNER, SEPTEMBER 13, 1953, Mrs. Minnie, 806 Menominee Rd., age 68: Beloved wife of Stanley A. Warner; dear mother of Mrs, Clarence Walsh, Mrs. M. D. Orr, Albert H. Warner and Mrs. Waunetta Remington: dear sister of Mrs. Dora Way and Mrs Maud | Howk. Puneral service will be held Tuesday, Sept. 15th at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Fu- neral Home with Reader Mrs, Vera Benham offictating. Inter- ment in Sunset Hills Cemetery, Flint. Michigan. Mrs. Warner is at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Florists-Flowers 3 PPBPPPE OPEL EO OP POLL LMA ALLL SCHAPER’S FLO 123 AUBURN _ Ambutance Service 3-A HUNTOON Ambulance Service FE 2-0189 79 Oakland Ave. WERS FE 2-3173 Tc Funeral Directors 4 Brace Funeral Home Estab. 1886 Distinguished Service Donelson-Johns PUNERAL HOME “DESIGNED FOR FUNERALS” Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service, Plane or Motor PE 2-8378 a = a a BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today 21, 27, 39, Al, 7, 73, 88, 91, a 'I8 $210 A WEEK WORTH A POST- ecard to you? Then rush card for special FREE TRIAL PLAN that sells amazing new automatic refrigerator defroster like ‘‘hot cakes." DeFROSTOMATIC. Dept. 86-A, 173 W. Madison, Chicago. WOULD LIKE TO HEAR FROM reliable man we can train to over- haul and install air conditioning and refrigeration equipment. Must be mechancially inclined and will- ing to study in spare fime. No tion. For information write at once giving name, address. age Utilities Inst., Box 13, Pontiac __ Press. WTD. FULL TIME MEN OR boys for grocery stock work. Good working conditions. Apply Wrigley Stores, 398 Auburn. Mr. Piche. NATIONAL FINANCE COMPANY has immediate opening for man age 24-30 to start as adjuster. Prefer men with college educa- tion or ulvalent. business ex- perience. Good salary with, Excellent chance for ad- vancement. Car and expenses fur- nished. Universal CIT edit Cor- __poration, FE 42638. Mr. Winters. EXPERIENCED TIRE CHANGER for full time job oe company benefits. oportuniry to advance. Commission on laa. Apply 9 am toop. m REAL ESTATE SALESMEN We need one more good sales- man jplenty of prospects and floor time Must Bob good car and be wil ORD. CRAWFO D AGENCY EVES FE 41549 REaL OPEN 2141 Opdyke FE 46617; AN 35 TO 40. MUST HAVE previous saies experience. Exc. opportunity. Permanent position. The Good Housekeeping Shop. _51 W. Muron. “WANT A CHANCE TO MAKE MONEY ?? Manv of our new men are makin well over $100 a week. WHA DO Y, DO? THEY SELL!! Men who have never s3!d before are -e : men who never KNEW tnrev coulda sell are. selling aking ,mony, ey ! Se if you have a car ean qualify, with ref- erences, write PONTIAC PRESS, BOXx ¢ OFFICE MANAGER STOCK trol, credit and collection experi- ence required. Usual company benefits, opportunity to advance. — . on sales. Apply 9 RP me Goodrich store, 111 col ORES . JANITOR, MUST HAVE Enrin-ering Co., Ctent _ MAple 5-5381 AUTO SALESMAN WANTED. AQG- gressive & ambitious salesman to sell the fast-moving Lincoln and Mercury e of cars. See Poster at w e St. SINGLE MAN ON FARM, MILE- ing exp. ecco bie N. Rochester Rd. MAN WTD. FOR LIGHT REPAIR wort in Pontiac . Keego Sales & Service. #3080 Orchard interference with present occupa- | io PONTIAC PLANT 900 BALDWIN AVE. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN WTD. YOUNG. MAN, 17 OR mu ar ne? Apply 1 rt. pply Dry Cleaners, 5 laspie, Oxford. EXPERIENCED WASHING MA- chine repair man. Steady work, top wages, vacation with pay. Must furnish references. Call FE 5-8413 for appointment. FULL TIME REAL’ ESTATE salesm in or lady.~ r cent lima Phone tent orton: ville WTD. FIRST CLASS TOOL die makers only. Top rates, plen- ty of overtime. Apply in person. 66 N. Park. WTD. BARBER. 2577 DIXIE HIGH- __way. FXP. DRIVER FOR DRY CLEAN- ing route Apply Walker’s Cleap- ers, Lake Orion. _ : EXPERIENCED DOMESTIC RE- frigeration & appliance service man. Excellent working _ Salary open. FE 2-6400. WANTED TOOL LATHE HAND must be experienced, Wobhlfeil- e Engineering. 2274 8. Tele- graph. Add It Up Good hard work plus a good product and organi-| zation equals good pay for you. We make no wild promises but we do say that if you will put forth some real effort your weekly pay will be very satisfying. If ‘you are an experienced auto- mobile salesman, come in and see us and learn about the many benefits| = and fine future we offer. Earl R, Milliman Co. WTD. BUMP & PAINT man: LOTS of work. — Vacation with pay. Chevrolet & Oids Garage, Northville. Ww. Libby, McNeil & Libby Canned opportunity for advance- ment, "must have desire for per- t 4 and ambition , AND|. Tuesday to Bert Falkner CIRCULATION DEPT. PONTIAC PRESS ACCOUNTANT, SEMI-SENIOR FOR public accounting firm. Submit written application giving details regarding training and qualifica- tfons. Berger & Wild, 23810 Wood- ward, Pleasant Ridge. BARBER WANTED IDEAL | WORK: . Park . WHITE MAN NOT ELIGIBLE FOR factory work for light job, also oak for part e work. FE Wanted! SETTERS in person, Moncalm Center. 30 East =e ghey BAB DRIVERS ON is, ont Ls ni also time. Ganant Lake irom ig 4 Hf 6 p.m, Boys, 16 or folder, not go- ing back to school, wish- ing day work as parking attendants. Apply Riker ee 9:30 to 10:30 & 2 to 4, 59 Wayne. estate salesman. Bateman & Kampsen Office Open Sunday 1-5 p. m. S. Telegraph, 2 bisske a Rd FE 4-052 of Orchard Co-op. mem ber Open Eve inl 8 2 GROOMS WANTED TO WORK in boerding stable. Elderly men referred - N. Adam CALIFORNIA ORGANIZA Hirt. MI Rd 6-0414. TION IN FOOD SUPPLIMENT FIELD NOW OPENING PONTIAC TERRI- TORY. BACKED BY FULL PAGE BRACES COMMISSION, BONUS, AND MEN SELECTED CAN ORGAN- Re THEIR OWN ATION GIVEN THOSE NOW EM- PLOYED. CALL COLLECT LIN COLN 40634. CAN YOU USE EXTRA Part time work INCOME? oe vaccum for service a lso sales priv- flege. PE 23-2811 WAREHOUSE MAN STEADY work, only. ard Electric 8. Saginaw. reference, apply in person Co, 175 GENERAL ALL AROUND HAND Y MAN CAPABLE OF DOING CAR- penters work for maintance de- Dartment. Excellent peered for the right man. Work stead Apply afternoon only. Pon’ teopathic Hospital, 32 Auburn. RELIABLE MAN OR WOMAN with car wanted to call on farm- County. Part or 4 — lay-offs. $10 to 825 a da oe tal Jitred "Bive gg FE ers in full time. Write. anes Company, Dept Fete eee = t MONEY Is EVERYWHERE DO YOU NEED SOME? New York firm, one = the largest needs 2 pate in Americ cialty one-call cnlesmen to han- a and radio Territory = Pontiac and lf you have a — pearance run, will and a car interview eS unlimited Jeads secured through fle pat wil A $150 PER WEEK DRAW CONTACT MEN } FOR R MED heavy tool die & production shop. Good commissfon and drawing ac- “count OL 1-3911 Houre 10 a. m. to 7 for interview statin or dishwashing, go home FE 32-3895. RECEPTIONIST | . DOCTO office lg a ae Se ~ Write SILK OR WOOL SPOTTER MUST uy and be experienced, apply to Mr. experience. Pontiac Press sox 107. McPeters. Pontiac aundry 540 EXPERIENCED GROCERY CASH- S ‘Teiegraph near Orchard Lake. fers. Full or part time. Apply HOTEL CLERK, NIGHT SHIFT Ma. No puss cals pelea wee not Sela eens | EXP. SALAD GIRL APPLY IN _ Hotel Ponnac. 50 N Perry _ | — Temple. 114 Orchard Wanted t emale Help” 6 WHITE WOMAN FOR LIGHT a eee ee housework and care of invalid. _FE 2-5893 after 5 __ DINING ROOM AVON PRODUCTS Has opening in good territories for WAITRESSES reliable, ambitious women Sub- stantial tncome. Write Mrs. Mar- Experiences necessary. Must be Sr a Fae 8t. Pon- over 18. Night shift. Apply in or call 1 for appt. person, No calls, please. | WoMAN TO CARE FOR CHIL- dren. More for home than wages. OA_&31T2 before 3 p. m. TED'S Woodward at Square Lk. Rd. PERMANENT POSITION W ibd energetic woman clean, oh TYPIST WHO CAN ASSIST BOOK-| pare simple dinners and _belp keeper. 4865 Higriand Rd. (M-59) some with 2 smal] children. Airway Products Inc. ly country home with every mod- WANTED CASHTER AND OFFICE | {7 convenience appliance girl, full time, steady work. Good - asant|2 WAITRESSES FOR SODA bohm el Md nner s — _ fountain and grill. 936 Joslyn. Store. 19 . Sa WOMan N FOR LIGHT HOUSE 5 WIT work and care of five year o TOO eepine exp. ae jx” nae boy. More for home than wages. cointing and x office. Exc.| Call after 6:30. PE 5-0688 work cond. & day wk. FE| EXPERIENCED W . 1 _ 42009 or appt. _ ee m. =f 8 p. m. shift. Apply TYPISTS ADORESS 1 ENVELOPES, wf, Bervon ‘Henview Grill, Foe antie ‘allied. ‘a ae A: warns. WANTED. ERI- ree ’ Knoxville, Tenn. - eee ONLY. RON oT. IN PER- _Ployed. $28. wive in. MI 41261. | Bloomfield Lanes, W Wodward and -. §& DAYS A week. Anderson Bakery, 124 West GRLS FOR GENERAL oe tne este m. MI) gssary, A to Pontiac Laundry. PIST ip AvarLasie.| $4, 5. Telearesh. Moar pe Mi a 4 be — — 3 c air condition office, 9 to 3:30. _ be reliable. Part etc Cearsern 5 "iecm Cae time. 4:30 9:30. Dixie Snack Birmingham. M Shop, M-15 “at US-10. Clarkston. EXPERIENCED W FOR | WOMAN FOR PART TIME LIGHT ste work. Joe's Spa- nousework for elderly couple. No ghetti House. FE 3- ¥ g or Call in person Ez w 3 | 29 Riker 8t. off cel _ m te 11 p m. Sundays off. | WHITE LADY FOR LIGHT HOUSE- in person, E. Walton work & care of children FE _Bhea” 71-0028 after 4. WHITE GIRL FOR Y FOR CIGAR DE wrk 4 of 2 SALESLAD ‘- 24100 between 5 & 9 p.m Rights. Excellent position for right GIRL. pe stairs work. Am time off. Must er. DRUG have Rau RE. Saginaw and La : . - | AMAZING ete wee Dan Cleneere Tie | mee caste cell ike magic f ures you sss! Bie line. Profits to laund:y with modern fin- seeertente on onan a it ent. Good return for Purse-.ite a ae ac- woman spare time. Work tion. CREA Cormak, own “ours. Must be experienced | _! 48 Chic are: “Pez Awomat Leas | FOUNTAIN WAI GIRL FOR COUNTER WORK &| "ODEGia FORNIGEED Cleaners 118 Ww. Burn. "| MACHUS BAKERY EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WTD.| _ 100 W. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM Ss men et In, 6235 Ra pm. 248 Leon Ra. Walled Lake. CFSSORIES—PFRMANENT POSI- ONLY EXP CED TION. NEED APPLY IN PERSON. BUR- __TON’S, 15 N. SAGINAW. EXP. SALESLADY AND CASHIER . Full time. R & M Dept. Store. EM 3-3912. 9 a m. and 3 p.m. . PART TIME FOUNTAIN & KITCH- en heip> White. 735 Baldwin. Apply __in_ person. WTD. LAUNDRY WORKER, WHITE Wurman. Must go hvme nights Call Miss Murphey, Kingswood Schooi, Cranbrook, MI ¢1 be- tween 8 a8. m & 4p. m. WIDOWER WITH 16 - YEAR - OLD daughter, wants middleaged wom- an for housekeeping. West side location. Give age and salary de sired. Box 73, Pontiac Press. Le es work. Living vi- ster. Salary and com- on. 4-7919 between 3 to 4 p.m. only. EXPERIENCED WAITR & ee helper for 8 p. m. to m. start about Sept. 20 “S77 Auburn. WID. WHITE WOMAN FO! FOR house on 1 iloor & 2 school age girls Close in. Prefer go home _ Rights. FE 2-871. HOUSEKEEPER MORE FOR home then wages No other wom- rE after EXPERIENCED WAITRES- ses and soda fountain women. Age % to 85. Days, afternoons, t*, and sw shifts Call —FE 20135 tefore 5 p.m. CREDIT MANAGER for large Pontiac furniture store. An exc. opportunity for right person. Write giving ag pen Teference and salary Write Box 109, Pontiac ln ea a ae EARN one 7 $3. ot our spare time eas- ant, dignified work. OR 3-7606 Luttrell Drug Store. 691 ut Lake. a fers. Full or part time in person at s Mat, 465 E. Pike St. between! HOU! STAY NIGHTS. family of 4. Ref. required. __4-3649. —_ WTD W WoOM- en Some to live in residence, etd — come aoe gy Wee iss . Kingswood 00! MI 41600 se m & 4 p. R ExP. ‘ eos = Local Markets |StocksRetreat | lodge Calendar lJ. §. to Prepare am roves. (Diving H 3 Persons Injured anadian Plans | . J. 10 FTEPare IVING FOTSes ular meeting of Pontiac er uccessIu ° Produce Hae nN 1WO-Lar Uras ' @ Chapter No. 228 O. E. 8. Monday, . S ee ders’ Tra ‘ | W [ a rop Wheat —_ |, Fermer to consumer” |Ind Straight Day |sz.«:2.n."2* === |New Death List |S? P |Highway SOW |r: ps we eas Beets, bunch ....cscoceee ; 10 Virginia Salathiel, Sec. —Adv. ROCHESTER, N. Y. (UP)—Use Pontiac General Hospital yester- eC) Serr Bhesees 23! NEW YORK The Stock of radar to trap speeders here has day for injuries received in a two- Pe kleberries. quart. |... “80 - oc ® ® ° ; 7 var . Pag ese pig ie nk on | & Green peppers 3 for... -10/Market declined on a broad front News in Br ief Seek to Determine Fate | been termed highly successful and] Bareback Riders Jump | car collision on Lapeer road south Board of Trade 1 | Cucumbers. 6 for ... 25 : . + os «| plans have been made to put radar * of East Walton boulevard, State liquidation influenced by fear that | Corn, dozen . ‘50 | today after a rally attempt failed. of 7,000 Gls Missing in 24-hour basis Into Ocean With Steeds Poli { tl A | Tomatoes. quart 23) Th a | : teams on a - ‘olice of the Pontiac Post said Canada may lower its wheat export; per peck 150! e market started lower, swung; Justice Merrill J. Renwick of . . . i 1 per bushel ..... 2.00 ahead. slightly, and then prices| south L _— tenced Korean Action The system has been in use| at Atlantic City oday. price because of a heavy surplus. bin 30 | . ; yon yesterday sentenc aig: ; - Coen also was lower, articularly {hook mr onary ‘10 gave way all around in a general . 7515 . , _ | since June 7, 1952. Police inspector ' A car driven by Wesley C. Shef- = ane canibie contract, because | Ste. Or etreat. Andrew Cottongim, 19, of 711%! WASHINGTON (UP) — The offi-| Albert O. Daniels said two squads} ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (UP)—| field, 43, of 3036 Lapeer Rd. turned ember contract, because | 3 for -......... ; ; : 4 of heavy receipts of 443 cars. Soy-| "star, Dunee 19) “Losses went to between 1 and 2| Butcher Rd., Brighton, to 30 days/cjal toll of American deaths in| presently operating 16 hours a day | An accomplished horsewoman whe in front of one driven by Clifton aie D ; ; . oe ° 2 , pita : os Beaks cere cle arergiy cf selling | Onions, buneh s.0.s. so. 10 | points at the outside ‘with only aj in Oakland County Jail, and fined | the Korean War will rise to more have Plage about one third—S5 ee OP ected we mal cere casa nae oad o. N. Orford Ra. influenced by expectations that the Potatoes, bushel 1.0.00... 2.25 | few key issues trading unchanged! him $100 with $25 court costs! than 30,000 in the months ahead |—°! the speeding arrests in ing expert w! ec g to police. They h t will start.on a large.scale | Gabbase, head ......-...+. 2 \or a shade higher. after Co leaded guilty t past six months and of these 99|a horse are giving exciting per- said Sheffield was turning into a ar VERS Wy vi g | Apples, bushel ....c.... sss 1.75 to 230 ter Cottongim pleaded guilty to/ as the defense department writes ; , f here daily in the famous lain ely this week. Celery, bunch: s.sc%.50e5s: Business was at a pace of around aivin ith chad 's| “dead” iis narnen of thew: per cent were convicted. ormances re y private ve. Near the end of the first hour| Ee#s. dozen .............. 65, 10 and 80 two million shares for the entire & wit a rev operator s oe 9 “Rochester is becoming the | high-diving horse show on the ocean| Sheffield was treated for chest wheat was %-1'% cents lower than| Peppers, bushel... +--+... nn aa license. sands now listed as missing in aC-} most speedometer - concious, |end of Steel Pier. injuries. Two passengers in Tiller's . Flowers , tion. rearviewmirror-concious ci ; car were treated for cuts. The the previous finish, September | carnations, doren .......... 100 New York Stocks Adeieat SY serie. | Pstare With thw vel ee el Meee oe termed in Olive Gelnau, 19, “an expert cnure Waites Gandy, 30. pf 36 eit $1.90'4: corn was down "2 to one! Geraniums) dozen 20202 1.00 tubes on terms. FE 2-5197. —Adv. 1 prisoner ex ge com- merica, is ceciared. horseback rider since her child- y, WH, L t, September $1.54%4, and oats} Pisdiols, bunch .:....... 35 and .50! Figures after decimal points are eighths 5 pleted, the services now will try| Police are enthusiastic about | hood in Oradell. N. J., and Marion! Rd., Romeo, and Norma Mortin- cent, September 4, Adams Exp .%>26 Kroger ..... If your friend’s in jail and needs im it i . , 37) alon, Highl were %:4 lower, September 7318 —_—_- cane 353 LOP Glass Soa Ph. OR3-7110 GA. Mitchell, | (0 determine the fate of some 7,000 | radar. They claim it is more ac-| Hackney, 19, swimming and diving | 80". 18, of 137'2 Avalon, Hig and an . 4 Lib McN & L 91] Dail, Ph. = . C. A. ; : ie : 3 wk : Soybeans were two to three ponte Wholesale Alr Reduc +5 as Ligg & Mey... 76.3 : Americans still missing. curate sal veo Judgement, has star here for the past several Park. lower, September $2.58!4, and lard SEIROKE PRODUCE Allied Ch ., 648 on ee ore Livestock In many cases their fate will reduced accidents caused by police years, taught their talents to each B with th < ed was 10 to 40 cents a hundred| peTRorr ‘UP: — Wholesale prices on| Allied Str8 «. 387 Tone s Cem... 273 never be determined definitely. But | Chasing speeders, has eliminated | othey after being selected for the} Researc! “ ue verlted fh A pounds higher, September $21.00. | ‘Mp, bubsc farmers’ market. = jt alum Ltd .. 43.4 Mack Trucks: or DETROIT LIVESTOCK . | military officials sadly admit that | Wear on police cars and has cre-| at by Lorena Carver, veteran| 2Ureomycin, has resulte bu; apples, Greenings. fancy,’ 3.50 bu, | lum Co Am. 454 grat “Gi'’ 134], DETROIT iAP) — Hogs - salable | ¢ { the missing the only | ted ‘‘speed conciousness” among | 4:, ; medicine believed to cure the CHICAGO GRAIN No 1s 30-200 bu: appies.’ Mcintosn,|4™ Alrlin ... 11.6 eal Ce ". 226 we ine en aeaee ee Bere eee oe net 8 rie ae th soe motorists diving horse trainer. African cattle plague known as au vey . famae ait : : Pa en Ki pies, | Am Car & Fd . 32.4 vrais “. | with last Thursday; sows steady to 2 nelusion can a ey are s . x eo ae Openite fle a ae og ty oe et ie Am tine Z ia iat a dad oti a a ue wa poy gilts dead us t y A’ squad of. three patrolmen and Twice a day, each girl rides | Rhodesian fever. The drug is ad- tna oS He Gh. a Am Gas wae - s. -50-25.25; severa ots . ae iniact j Bee ee Loess Mar vee. 118 | bu: ‘Gantatoupes. fancy, 330 bu. Noo 1, [Am Loco... 13.3 Motor Pd..... 3¢}| chotce 1 and 2 around 220 Ibs. to small a sergeant set up shop on any| one of three horses bareback | ministered by injection into the Mar. y9tte May ..... 1.204% | 1,75-3.00 bu. Grapes: No 1, 100-125 pk = _ di : a mies Ob 172 ep eab a ee ann yee ». Before declaring a missing | street where speeders are likely , While the steed plunges from a | animals’ veins. eee — skt. Peaches, E,berta, No 1, 300-3 90 | Am as .. b dune = : ° : ° ; , : ee a es Te = SOT REaNa cane | Ge peaches “Tw Hale. fancy. 5 $0 bu; |Am Rad 131 Nash Kelv... 27.4) over 260 ibs scarce; most sows under| Mam to be dead, the services |to show themselves. In a plain| ‘tower into a 12-foot deep tank of ‘CORN — NOV y.seeee 2.56'3 No 1, 350-400 bu; peaches, Fertile Hale, — Seating ob ue Nat Cash R... 833 Pe gt agi Oe eae chelés rine must make a detailed investiga- car, equipped with radar, one offi-| fresh water. noe 58 © 1, 350-400 bu Pears, Bartlett, fancy, m Smelt .... ve OO, - a : a ae an Mar ae : ae 3§0 bu: No 1. 250-3.00 bu; pears Secke!,|| Am Tel & Tel 153.3 ba pene oa oo sows 19.50-21.00 tion, piecing together all avail- | cer watches the rear view mirror When the horse hits the water, | Mar\...... 148's > May 2.57'4 | No 1. 175-225 bu Plums, Damson| No|Am Tob ..... 722 wy air Brk... 176] CATTLE — Salable 3.200. Slaughter| able scraps of information about | and a radar dial on the floor for F : 4 hil \ May 1.49% LARD— 1, 250-300 bu: plums. Prune, No 1. 200- | Anac Cop* -.-+ 305 Nv Central... 20 | steers and yearlings barely active, un- hat ha: ned to him. It will be ; : the girl quickly swims away while , OATS— Bep ....eeee S75 | 3180 Gerba, Wiatermeis, Ty 2, 200sees pa = C. 458 Nia M Pw... 252 even: high good to prime strong $0 cents = tial is the speed of approaching vehicles. | the horse ambles up a runway, out Ben aces 731 OCG cc's . 17.40 rmou tree N - ae igher than last Thursday: others a time-consuming oD, i i . } De heeecees 1% NOV weccece . 14.75 ‘ ayreaie sane 4 } a8 ron aeece oh port ahaa . pees a pte aoe strong; bulls : j nieve an ceatuctl vse of the pool. There, the steed poses MAP eeccesee 74% Dee ........ 13.75 | DENS, Deets, toppe 9 re ‘ u 4 N t . 13 mostly igher: stockers and feeders j a rma Cc vehicle : , May ettt! yin dan tests. 13.00 | Broecoll, fancy, 750° ta-bu; ‘No 1, 1 §0-2.U0 | Bald Lima .°).. a4 Nene P aia 124) Sees walk high aoad to peinie ted tans .The Army estimates it will be a and Fela. if by ranis 4 for a rubdown by Miss Carver. Jy stsssses @8% (SOYBEAN OJL— | te-bu. Beans. green. fai ven |e a Ohio oll... 50.6] 8nd yearlings 24.00-29.00; several loads | two years before it has officially Thee i y y O (0! ‘The act was a feature attraction g ou; eans, Treen omen, Oo 4. 07 . en eve - 1 : : las ay oe . a : rae Be fered round, No 1,- 2.50-3.00 bu; |] Benguet ..... 11 eager w Air Hi 39 $0: wciinereen Bie os Weekes cane determined the fate of all its miss- ° oe ahead who make the at Steel Pier from 1878 to 1946, Ss C} ‘ beans, Wax, No 1, 250-3.00 bu, .dDeans, | Beth Stl - 45.7 Param Pict... 25}| mercial and good steers 18.00-2300; most | ing in action, By the time the job arrest. when it was retired temporarily. | = Kentucky Wonder. No 1. 2.50-3 50 a Boeing Airp .. 38.5 Sarre aye. 33.2) Utiity and low commercial 12.50-1/.v0/ ; lete th K death toll A * DETROIT PO beans, Lima, fancy, 4.00 bu; No 1, 300-| Bond Strs .., 13 5 JC). 69 | MOst sales utility and commercial cows |S Complete the Korean death toll, Miss Carver, who discovered = S3'D DETROTT (AP —Prices paid per pound | 3.50 bu. Cabbage. s<\andard variety, NO| Borg Warn .. 65.4 p5o”pp ‘~'"" ygq| 10.50-13.00; few high comercial indi-| which now stands at 25,604 is ex-| Two Women Treated ood perf t t| ——, DOE ee inane nn, | tloeed $0 bus. cabbage, red No 4. '1.00-1.00 | SES? ME +> 3h4 pena Cola... 121| Viduals at 14.00; canners and cutters ted to top 20.000. iy take Reo pene Ne Heavy hens 26-27%: light hens 21-22: | bu; cabbage, sprouts, No 1 1-150 bu.| prise My. ++. 188 phelps D..... 29.1 mostly 9.00-31.00; bulk Giulty and com- pec 0 top WW. for Car-Crash Bruises 87 horses trained in Texas, revived | _ winilees oF fever over sfour tbe, 2 Nacuanes | GATTORS: NOU S875 On Pen sitower, | BUAG Co neve M4 ~ ERI, eee “27-1! good and choice stock steer ealves 19.00, | Unlike World War II, the services the act early this summer. Ww 1 ( opped, N¢ . - c 7 - , ; a hght type broilers or fryers 25; old roost- | Not. 295-3.00 doz. Celery, No 1, 3.50-4 ad Mad 30 a Phil Pet “80, fag eyes ra Salable.seo, Vealers active, will not be able to obtain the con-| Violet Anderson, 58, of 15335] The best performing horse {is} — ers 16; caponettes 40; young Neavy type | crate: } No 1, .90-1.00 doz bens. vere ils . Mills... 4y gher u ig 4 to ; ‘ Roselawn j and Ann : | hen turkeys 37; yourg Reavy type toms | Corn. sweet, No 1, 150-2 8-doz bag. Cu- Sanity ae | Pit Plate Gl... 463] prime 23.00-29.00; few high prime indi- clusive proof of uncovering the ~ l : Detroit, : Gus-| named Dimah. He makes the 43 + see Te ee aes gems [Ceca ce ee tae Case a). 156 Pullman » 36.4] viduals 30-00; most commercial and low man's body buried in enemy teri- | tinis, 37, of 7050 Williams Lake Rd. | foot dive, while the other horses Mh t yhites ens ze. g Sept. 15. meee BLOCK ACHINE AT uburn Heights will be sold fot storage, tf not called for within 30 da,s. | 8, FE 71-8672. SUMMER SPECIAL! COLD WAVE WAVE $6.50 Dorothy’s. 500 N. Perry FE 21244 for appointment. KNAPP SHOES FE 5-6720. HORSEBACK RIDING INSTRUC- ae. on,* only, moonlight rides. aeons HAVE YOUR Bor examined at Dr. Bussey, Optom Bogie people. The most bea club gga swimming ul picnic —o facilities in M before Jot. SCHOOL GIRLS COLD WAVE, $5.50. complete. Dorothy's, 500 N. Perry An ee SLICE OF HAM Notices and Personals 22 ON AND AFTER THIS DATE Sept. 12, 1953, I will not be re- sponsible for any debts con- tracted by anyone other than myself. Aaron Smith, 74 Jackson St. Pontiac, Mich. DAINTY MAID FOR §& SUPPLIES. Mrs. Burnes. FE 2-8814. 93 Mark. 100 WEDDING INVITATIONS $6.50. Printed napkins, 3 7 service, _ Sutherland Studios. 18 W Huron. Wtd. Children to Board 25 PRE-SCHOOL AGE. BY WEEE. Good home. Exc. care. OR 3-8539 WILL CARE FOR CHILDREN NOT under 2 yrs. in licensed home. FE 4-0417. GOOD LICENSED HOME FOR girls under 5 yrs. of age. Call MUtual 4-2710." Share Living Quarters 26 MIDDLEAGED GENTLEMAN WILL share beautiful 6 rm. home with young or middleaged couple. Wife to do housework and cooking. Close to St. Joseph Hosp. and G’" Truck. No drinkers. Ref- erences exchanged. FE 13 SHARE HOME WITH RELIABLE couple, one child welcomed. FE 4-1772 after 3:30 WIDOW WANTS TO SHARE HER home with couple for child care. 4-6572. FF A Oe SHARE MODERN HOME WITH coupl. pvt. entrance. Near Pon- tiac Plant. No drinkers Refer- _ ences required. FE 4-5846. WILL SHARE MY 6 RM. HOME wits employed widow lady or 2 _teachers FE 4-5635 _ SHARE APT TO MIDDLEAGED man or 2 buddies. FE 5-58 B36. Wtd. Household Goods 27 NOTICE — IF YOU WANT TO GET the high dollar for your :urni- ture, we either buy it or auction Yt for you. Call L & 8 Sales Co., _FE7-0783. _ FURNITURE NEEDED Entire home or odd lots. Get the top dollar. Wil) buy outright or sell 1t for you. B. B. Community: Sales, Ph. OR 2717 LET US BUY IT OR AUCTION IT _ for you, OA 8-2681, VANTED TO BUY ALL TYPES of furniture. Ph. FE 2-5523 Wtd. Transportation 27A RIDE FROM 6829 EIZABETH Lake Rd. to State Hospital 8 _to 5-daily. FE 2-0001 Eves. GIRL WANILS eiUeh rHEM Dublin School near Oxford to Pon- tiac. Working hours 8:30 to 5:30 EM 33867 ~ Wtd. Miscellaneous 28 repair FE 4 WTD. DOWN ites SLEEPING bags. FE 2-7760 WTD. TO BUY, QUANTITY oO OF open head steel drums with rims and tops. H. §. Sutton. FE 5-8312. Wy e047, 24 INCH BOY'S BIKE. FE _Wtd. Contract Mtgs. 30 i) CASH for CONTRACTS If you plan to sel] your land con- tract. phone us. e have plenty of funds at our disposal for con- tracts at reasonable discounts. Bring your abstract and land contract. Ask for Mr. Clark. CAMERON H. CLARK Realtor Open-Eves. 1362 W. Huron FE 4-6492 $1,000,000.00 5% for new low-cost, easier, safer loans on farms and better homes from 14% acre with 100 ft. front- age. No appraisal or closing fee. CHARLES REALTORS 2242 W. Huron FE 4-0521 After 6 FE 4-6862 _or FE E 5-889) YOUNG IMMEDIATE ACTION Let a. experienced man handle your contracts. We have buyers with cash waiting to buy con- tracts. Call FE 4-4525 and ask for Ted McCullough. Russell Young TOR PE 4-4525 __ Till 9, _Sunday till 5 4% M 41% Mortgages Single Modern Dwellings H. C. Peterson 310 Pontiac Sank Bldg FE 5-6772 IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR land contract or equity in your home. kK. L. Templeton, Realtor 53% W. Huron FE. 2-6223 WE HAVE $200,000 At our disposa] to purchase new or seasoned land contracts for a clients. See me Pople you ASK FOR BOB MAHAN REALTY oman’ REALTORS PERATIVE n Evenings and Sunda ono", Huron Ph. ae ep. PE 12-0263 CASH FOR YOUR ~ LAND CONTRACT Ralph B. GARN ER =< 1.7001 Wanted Real Exes 31 REAL 412 W. Huron St. Open Eves. oo Par] USED 16_IN. Pee BIKE. WILL | __Wanted Real Estate 31 Ree Johnson The big dane, new m an. Just ph is now in his odern up to date office needs all types of listings. ose and a friendly sales- man wil) cal! and help you with your real estate problems. We Gre still selling per cent of our listings A. JOHNSON, Realtor Ph. FE 4-2533 Our New Location 1704 S. Telegra Bloo: d., Just south of mfield Fashion Shop WE HAVE CLIENTS WHO WILL trade 1 north s basement, gas heat, rage, neighborhood for 2 family home separate heat. g ovely 5 room home in ection ‘of town with full 1's car ga- cement drive. excellent entrance, oil erage, good neighbrhood and pay difference. Call FE 4-4930 Realty ask for FE 2-0253 or FE 4-4930 Mr. Carroll Peddling Your Property ? It doesn't showing pects, and in neighbors ‘Don't worry with Lookers.’ sale. py . Our method of y to on qualified pros- saves you time and money, even the it's for many cases don't know Call us now. We need your prop- erty ——- We handle all details for 4 — closing uy — To Sell — To Trade You. BUY IT— MAHA REAL WELL INSURE IT N TY CO. REALTORS CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS Open Eve 1075 W. Huron NEXT WTD. 2 or Roc nings ‘th 9- Sunday 10-4 ACKES NEAR PONTIAC hester. il pay up to __ $500 cash FE 474 1. Good modern city home, fer one 2. Two ban home. 3. Modern acres. Must If you WE NEED pre- with GI mortgage. three bedroom subur- Must be modern. or home with about 80 be in Oakland County have any of the above- mentioned for sale please contact our effi you the L. H. 1362 W. Huron »} Member Co-Op Real Estate ce We will strive to give best service possible, BROWN, Realtor Ph. FE 2-4810 Exch LISTINGS WANTED Need for Homes to Sell Urgent at This Time MANY READY BUYERS KE 3087 W. Huro NNEDY Open Eves. Till 8 p. m. WE WANT TO WORK We want action for our live- ly salesmen and we want to give you action on the sale of your properties. We ran sell a nything, anywhere at anytime. Homes, farms, bus. Opp. commercial] properties, land contracts. If we can't sell them we will buy them ourselves. Call now and have a sale sman at your place in 30 minutes. “GET RICH QUICK,” Ed we qT7N. a ole st. CALL MM. Stout, Realtor m Eve. Till 8:3 Ph. TE 5-810 HAVE BUYERS FOR: 1. § o home with 2. S$ or 6 room G. I. r 6 room oa city $2,000 dow resale in or out of city. 3. 6 room modern good neighborhood. in city in 40 to 80 Med a near Pon- 4 tlac at 5. Larg suitable We can priced ce cash sale we er ane over your property a pl figure. you are willing to ash. 95,000 d e farm or vacant acreage for subdividing. . get you cash for homes up to $7,000. providing sacrifice for you are interested in a glad to look give you CAMERON H. CLARK Realtor. Co-op Member. 1362 W. pt a Huron St. CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY If you want immediate action and we will buy your equity. We will pay cash for small homes or equities’ Phone us for imme- diate action. We bain ag glad to look over your prope CAMERON fH. H. CLARK Realtor . Ev 1362 W. Huron oo" PE +6082 Want to Sell? BUYERS WAITING | WHITE BROS. eg ge LL Ph. OR 3-1872 5660 Dixie High } | | |2 TEACHERS DESIRE 3 | YOUNG MICH COUPLE WITH IN- {BOARD & RM. OR SLEEPING |3°RM. APT. LAKE ORION, ADULTS SMALL APT. SUITABL FOR working couple. No Idren. i Hulbert, 1 bik. off. beth __Rd. Oxbo er SMALL MODERN FURN. PLAT. __ Lake Orton: MY 3-3682 after 6. yy ROOMS, PVT BATH & ENTR. Co’ only. No drinkers.’ FE 3 BEDRM. FURN. APT., ieee ll oi] heat. Woodhull _3-6485. CY .. ON Lake, svatiahis, Ga 4 R_& EK Cabins Bay. OR L SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 e _ Wanted Real Estate 31 Rent Apts. Furnished 35 | For Sale Houses 40 Trade or Sell We specialize in trades We made several] satisfactory trades in 1952. Large down payments are scarce Trades are made to satisfy all arties concerned. Call us. Do not ee] obligated. DORRIS & SON REALTOR 752 W. Huron PE 4-1557 we BUY—SELL & TRADE 32 For 1 jr Rent Rooms 2 SLEEPING ROOMS ON FIRST and second floor. 1 block from town. FE 41844, after 6. ; SINGLE ROOM FOR MAN. — 179 S. JoNnson ; NICE CLEAN ROOM FOR EM- ployed lady. 135 Cadillac. — 2 SLEEPIN GROOMS ON FIRST & second floor, 1 block from town. FE 41844. after 6. - te * ATTENTION TEACHERS PROFES- | Box 108 og a _— sional people. 2 room studio apt, 7 RM BATH. NO in pvt. home, bus stop at door. FE COUPLE OR SINGLE. KITCHEN privileges. FE 2-1785. COMFORTABLE SLEEPING ROOM, ie hiyereng only, apply after 4 p.m. 35-9668 ROOM AND BATH. 2170 Pontiac Rd. 3 CLEAN. CLEAN MODERN home Double beds. $5 each. OA 8266 ee CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM 1 OR 2 men Kitchen priv. FE 5-3524. NICE RM. FOR EMPLOYED LADY kitchen and laundry priv. FE 5-8279 ; _ CLEAN RM., 2 BLOCKS TO TOWN. FE 5-8220 NICE SLEEPING ROOM. GENTLE- man. Day worker. Garage if ae- sired. 385 W. Huron before 7 2 ROOMS WITH 3 SINGLE BEDS. Private bath, cooking et raja Professional ‘ladies. FE 2-1455. ROOM IN CLEAN, PVT. HOME near Pontiac Motor. 211 Oliver St FOR MEN, JINGLE ROOM. CLOSE to bus. FE 5-7233 NICE PLEASANT ROOM 397 N. Johnson. FE 2-7033 ROOM FOR CLEAN YOUNG MAN, FE 4-2583. Widow's home : ROOM FOR RENT, BOARD IF desired. FE 5-9088, 105 Home St. GIRLS. ON BUS LINE PVT. BATH and entrance. FE 4284 SLEEPING ROOMS top nig Body and Pontiac Motors. 36 Tennyson. MAN TO SHARE COMFORTABLE room. West side. Twin beds. No _Grinkers. FE 2-3429. 2 BEDRMS. WITH KITCHEN PRIV. Auto oil heat and water. Near bus. W. side. 1080 Boston. _ SLEEPING ROOM FOR GENTLE- man. No drinkers. Close to bus. _ 130 W. Howard ee SLEEPING RMS. FOR’ CLEAN, sober men. 46 Mechanic. BUSINESS GIRL TO SHARE ROOM with twin beds. Everything | fur- nished. Use of living rm. and kitchen. Laundry facilities. 5 min- u&s from downtown. FE 2-3701. Wanted to Rent 32A WORKING MOTHER WISHES UN- furn house or apt 2 bedrooms preferred and close to town. Rea- sonable 381. YOUNG CLEAN COUPLE WITH baby and pet cat desire a nice 3 or @ rm. apt. Close in. FE _ 3-7265 __ cul : SUPERVISOR AND EMPLOYED wife desire 2? bedrm unfurn. apt. or fiat close to bus. Best of references FE 4-7476, after 6:30 Pm. _ i TEACHER, DAUGHTER. AND scnool age son desires furn. apt. or home West side preferred. FE 4-7406_ ; - 2 BEDRM. FURN. COTTAGE FOR Oc., and Nov. Call Lincoln 2-5995 CITY POLICEMAN, WIFE, 3 CHIL- dren desire unfurn. house in city _limits. Reas. rent. FE 2-6529. ROOM nicely furn. apt. FE 4-2819. fant desire small furn. house or 3 room apt. References. Box 8, _ Pontiac Press. YOUNG MINISTER & WIFE WITH 1 child desire 5 or 6 rm. unf. St. Clarkston. Fruit, berries, gar- apt. or house. Reasonable FE den plot. FE 2-3309 after 4 __ SH R — BRICK 5 ROOMS AND BATH. 1 otel Rooms car gatege - Walton. ee —~ A per mo, FE 5-1253. HOTEL AUBURIN Rooms by Day or Week 7 Also 1 or 2 Room Apartments Cooking and refrigeration unit 464 Auburp Ph. FE 23-9239 Rooms With Board 32D rm. Close to bus line. 624 Markle. 1 OR 2 MEN. NEAR PONTIAC Motor Day shift. FE 4-3761. FOR CLEAN East off of 8. ROOM & BOARD FOR MEN. 10 minuter walk from Pontiac Mo- tors 473 E. Mansfield. ROOM AND BOARD FOR 2 MEN. Day workers. Share room. Twin _beds. 60 State St. FE 49398. DAY WORKERS, 2€7 OSMUN FE 5-2719. ROOM AND BOARD. 2 MEN. DAY shift. Close to bus line and Yellow Truck & Coach. 163 Clifford Ave. BOARD AND ROOM FOR MEN, good food, close in. 85 Auburn. CLEAN MEN. CLEAN ROOMS FOR day & night workers to share. _No drunkards. FE 20318 ROOM AND BOARD FOR MEN, southern cooking. Day — FF. 5-3662. Walking distance Pon- _tiac Motor. oe 2 REFINED YOUNG MEN, PVT. Home. FE 2-9514. Rent ent Apts. Furnished 35 35 2 RM. PARTLY PUAN. APT. PVT. bath for couple. FE 2-0375 after 3.30 FOR QUIET COUPLE, NO DRINK- ers. FE 17-7630 3 LOVELY RMS.. FRIG. SINK, cabinets, adults, no drinkers, must be clean and quiet, close to town and 2 doors from bus. 387 N. Saginaw. WILL RENT OUR BEAUTIFUL furn. lakefront winterized 2 bed- room apt. to responsible parties. 3405 Detroit St., off Ormond Rd., __ White Lake. -8T. 2 RM BACHELOR APT. 1 BLOCK 8. of Fisher Body. 776 St. Clair. _ FE 4-8420. 2 RM. LOWER, | . PVT ENTR. adults, no drinkers. _FE 4-0644. 2 ROOM APT. PRV. ENTRANCE, 1 small child welcome. $18 per week. 3440 Baldwin, SMALL _ GARAGE APT., baby. FE 2-165 CLEAN 3 ane ROOMS AND bath, adults only references. 5420 Brunswick near Crescent Lake. 4 RM. AND BATH, OIL | HEAT, 4 MODERN ROOM GAS, LIGHT, 3 ROOMS,” PRIVATE SMLL PRIV. ENTR_ 2 ROOM AND BATH, WORKING 3 ROOM 2 2 ROM PARTLY FUR P Dinnan 3 FURN A kitchen & refri APT. 3 ROOM AND BATH, WHIT- LARGE 1 ROOM APT. IN LAKE Orion. MY 3-7183. 20 ACRE FARM. $10,500 full price. Realtor. Co-op Member — Eve's. 4-6492 YEAR AROUND MODERN LAKE | $5500. heat furn. references. Couple $95.00 per mo. 5:30 to 7:30. onl. TH Ww Huron. BATH & entrance, utilities furn. 164 W. Pike. ‘1 PERSON References. $5 deposit $10 wk. FE 2-0663. 325 ~ FURN. IN AUBURN FE 7-8816. —. Voorheis. Call eves. after 1. Heights. _ APTS & Son io. 8 Sag- raf © prs. 2 2 BEDRM. | AND _children, 342 | 2 CLEAN RMS. ADULTS._ 7 NOR- WITH chudren. No drinkers. FE 17-8331. MODERN APT. GROUND FLOOR. Priv. entr. & bath. Gas heat. _For working couple. 222 N. Cass. Rent Apt. Unfurnished 36 3 RMS. & BATH, INCLUDING utilities mi employed couple, Ref- erences. pa ot a 3 RM i 1 CHILD WELCOME, utilities furn OL 2-1885. _ 4 RM. AND BATH, HEAT, NO drinkers, MY 423460 $3 ROOM SECOND FLOOR APART- ment in best West side district. $9000 per mo. With heat fur- nished Adults only. References. Pontiac Press Box 1. 2 RM8., ‘PVT. BATH. wood. Adults only. 3 RMS., STOVE & REPRIG., LIGHT 890 ROBIN- heat and gas furn., adults. 13 __Pinegrove. — ee 4 MODERN ROOM GAS, LIGHT, heat furn, references = only. $95.00 per mo. 5:30 to 473 W Huron. Rent Houses Furnished 37 CLEAN 3 ROOMS. PVT. BATH & entrance, employed couple pre- ferred, adults only. 4878 Fenmore Crescent Lake. HOUSE FOR RENT. $110 PONTIAC Lake Ra SMALL COTTAGE. NEAT. LIGHTS and gas. MY 2-5552. Lake Orion. CABINS. BY THE WEEK. KAMP In OR 39316. FE 2-8081. 3 BEDRM. HOME ON LAKE, OIL circulator. Will lease from Sept. 15 to May 15. FE side EXECUTIVE TYPE, 4 BEDROOM, modern, electric kitchen, dish- washer, disposal, beautifully land- scaped. $125 Completely rnish- ed. Available t. to June 1. Corner Ryan & Bus Dr., Oakley Park, Commerce Lake one Mr. Limond, UN 76. _ FURN. HOUSE, CHILDREN WEL- come. Also furn. apt. Romeo 2360. 3 BEDROOM MODERN . 970 Round Lake Rd. Apply Sunday or call VE &- 4835. 4 ROOM AND BATH, OIL HEAT. $75 per mo. and deposit, adults preferred. garage. 54 Myra. LOVELY MODERN LAKE FRONT home on Square Lake, Lake Orion. To lease from SEpt. 15 Jun: 1. 75 mo. Reference ‘re- quired. and 2 months rent in _advance. Ph. Detroit VA _ 4-0923 Rent Lake Prop. 37B FURN. CABIN. SLEEPS. 6 MU Rent Houses L Unfurn. 38 NEW 6 RM HOUSE, ALL MOD- ern, 20 min. ride to Chrysler and Packard's new plant, between Washin and Romeo. 60200 Van Dyke ighway. Ph. Stillwell 1- 2752. TRAILER HOUSE. CHILDREN welcome. 9925 M-15. 3 miles N _of Clarkston. _ _ LARGE HOUSE, SUITABLE FOR church. Residence connected Parking space. $150 per month. FF 5-6116 ee 4 LARGE ROOMS & BATH. MAIN SMALL, NEAT, CLEAN MODERN house. Oil heat, suitable for cou- ple. $45 per month. Howard Loom- is. 10655 Dixie, corner of Holly Rd. TRAILER HOUSE. CHILDREN welcome. 9925 M-15. 3 mi. N. of Clarkston. _ Rent Office Space 38C OFFICE IN COMMUNITY NA- tional Bank Bidg., includes Phone __Snswering © service. _FE 2-71 \7 For Sale Houses | #0 CLARK HURON GARDENS. built in 1950, fully * avilatea oil heat, oak floors, modern kitche- en. 3 pe. bath, 2 porches, ample closet space, attached garage with stairway to floored attic, fenced yard, nicely landscaped, near school, city bus, stores and new shop) center. All floor cover- ings, living room rug, drapes, venetian blinds and We house auto. washer included. y $10, 500. Terms. ZONED COMMERCIAL NO. 1. Suit- able for home or business, plus income, lot 56 by over 200 feet deep. Now & 2 family income with 5 down and 4 up, 2 car garage. Sacrifice at $10,000 with $2,000. ~ down to close estate. Don't miss seein this one. L.R. TRIPP Oakwood Manor Brand new custom built brick ranch home in this beautiful location. Consists of 6 rooms & 2 tile baths on one floor. erson win- dows, formica counter and natural birch trim. u divided basement with rec. space. 82 1. auto. water heater and oi] AC. heat. 2 car attached garage. Large acre site with shade. Make an appointment to see this lovely home today! Cherokee Road Brick ranch home. 2 bed- rooms, paneled en. sun- room, nice kitchen with Br. novk, tile bath ith stall a shower also tile powder * room all on ground floor, Full basement with rec. room. Attached garage and many other extras. Let us show you this ideal home today, Seminole Hills Custom built brick! Spacious living room sun room. den, powder room, and kitchen with autc. dishwasher on the ground floor. 3 nice bed- rooms & tile bath up. Pan- eled rec. room with bar, kitchen and full bath in basement Many extras 2 car garage. Beautiful 70° lot. Let us show you this family home. . Leslie R. Tripp, Réaltor W. Lawrence Street Open Evenings _ FE 5-8161 or FE 4-4298 BY OWNER. ALMOST NEW HOME in Woodward Estates subdivis- jon, gas heat, oak floors. storm window & screen combinations. _FE 40758 after 5 179 Luther. For Sale Houses 40 FE 4-9584 CONVENIENCES AT YOUR DOOR $ room brick terrace, friendly neightorhoud Savings on your fuel bill with insulation and brick. Priced to sell at $7,500. West Side, BEAT THE LANDLORD $800 DN. This is vour way of banking monev by finish thie 4 room home plus Igx¥ nen with 2 room and bath, 2 RANCH TYPE IN FAVORABLE LOCATION Be pro.d to show your friends and relatives this 5 room 40x24 home. Basement that is super, carpeting, 3 biocks to a top grade rape See i man and make reasonable CARPENTERS ATTENTION $ Ranch type 2 bedrooms; very livable. Save money by finishing in your spare time 4 acres Just $5,500 fuil ; rice. Quick action gets this bargain. RVOM TO STRETCH ON ONE ACRE Neighbors too close! 5 room bun- galow. this well built, will soive your problem Convenient kitchen and glassed in porch. l's car garage. This is priced low. You will be contented here, FE 4-9584 CUSTOMER PARKING OPEN EVES. AND SUN. P. MN. Lawrence W. GAYLORD E. Pike St. Saopecuitve Realtogs Exchange 5 RMS. & BATH, FIREPLACE, dining rm. 2 car garage, paint- ed & tiled wer aved si reas, terms. FE ¢ or ti 4-1611 BIRMINGHAM — OWNER TRANS- ferred, 1% story 1950 veneer- brick, near school, excellent neigh- borhood, 2 rooms, large un- finished secoud floor, full bases ment copn*r plumbing, automatic ou heat, water softener, natural fireplace, porch, aluminum storms and screens, fenced yard, carpet- ing included, $18 500. 1678 Staniey Blvd., MI 4-1934. 3'4 ACRES 6 RM. HOUSE. BASE. ment, full bath. 3 mi to Clark- LAKE ORION Bdrm with bath down 2 bdrms | bath up Large living rm | Kitchen. Full basement. Gas heat | Garage. Exc location. $2600 dn to responsible party WALTER GREEN MY 2-583] | 7 ROOM MODERN HOME NEAR | Huron St.. 4 room lakefront in Orion — home __ furnished, lot 100x30 Drayton Plains. ag | nent? ‘TE 3142, ae South BIRMINGHAM — 2 large screened patio. unfinished 2nd floor, oil, refrigerator, gish- master, gas stove. outdoor grill, BEDRMS. ; landscaped, $11.800. Kurth eal _ Estate MI 4-767 6. $800 DOWN, Modern brick, 4 rms. and bath, lake privileges, $30 month Write __ Box 108, Pontiac Press LOG CABIN. 3 ROOMS AND UTIL- ity and shower. 7 acres. Some fruit trees, raspberries and straw- berries. Mrs Beach, 7160 Pon- _ tac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. 4 ROOM “FRAME HOUSE ON 12 lots, about 2 acres of land. Full price $3,500 Only $1,500 down. $30 monh 2742 Longview &t., off Auburn Rd. near Dequinure. __ Avon Township | ~~ WATKINS LAKE PONTIAC VACANT MOVE RIGHT IN! /560 Overto'. ~ermanent home with lake privilege-. 2 bedrooms, large living room natural fireplace. full basement ‘with automatic heat, dette me lot with oak trees. rice, $7,000 Contract terms or Pag A 4. offer or trade DEAL WITH DANIELS! WEbster 3-7045 10406 = Chicago, Detroit West Suburban Privileges on Williams 4 rm. cottage with large porch. Partly modern, water. lights, furnishings included. $4,800 cash. Lake, New, Nearly Completed Delightful 2° bedroom with full basement, spacious partly fin- ished upstairs ‘full es for 3rd. bedroom. ce ar Shake exterior, tile bath, oak floors, oil furnace, automatic hot wa- ter. Hurry and you can select youg own color scheme. Washington Park Brick front 2 bedroom home with unfinished upstairs. full base- ment, automatic hot water, gas heat. Full dining room, ‘‘Youngs- town” metal kitchen. steel case ment windows, venetian blinds. “ $3,000 down, be sure you see H. Delos “BUD” NICHOLIE Real Estate and Insurance 49 Mt. Clemens 8&t. FE 5-1201 _ Mr. Idson i 4-3156 $450 DOWN A dandy 2 bedroom bungalow with good sized rooms. Cedar shake on exterior. Studdings up for partition & chimney in. Im- mediate ssession. Good west suburban locations with lake privi- leges. . FRUIT FARM Lovely 3 bedroom all modern home with frontage on small private lake All kfMds-: of fruits and berries on this rolling 10 acre parcel. Located just a few miles of gee — pos- session, $5000 di F.C. Wood Co. ALTOR 1725 Williame I Lake Rd. OR £2235 Ofice Open 9 a.m -?" 8 pm. A HOME OF YOUR OWN CRESCENT LAKE. 5 room modern | bungalow. lake privileges, auto oil floor furnace, very cute inside. garage. nice lot all fenced. Only | $6,000 terms. | REAL BUY. Only $2,000 down. $6.- 800 full price. 5 room modern. close to Oe RARY LIVIN EV FE 4-5181 ractive modern h aS RAXCH WOME 109 0 Located in peautta Bicon oak THE LARGEST | *'"iroan ‘nome with modern kien: Youre with this new 4 bedroom Eve & Gun EM 3.4808 | on fixtures plus the ee dene = “ 4 4 zt 15 i - 4 : wi Lt a 5 $1200 DOWN bric tlie baneaiee: {ull ,, ft NEW HOMES FOR 7 full bath with Mat inatcan: tures inelade sirepines. Gate hers ~~ PARK: LARGE LOTS 50x “seers? inventory, ton soem 8b - m se- ’ - . ° . . ,»Brand new and ready for Lally] oll heat, two’ firepl ue YOUR MONEY Gemini an With gas heat land. Price 630, and 10 acres of as Page sewers and water, ex-| STRA year lnimediate occupancy cur uaiuae ete se & two} Large lot. Close te i per | $00, terms. small AoW Werinent $500 each —- M AIT LIQUOR BAR 2 utiful : 11 . rels @ | sc bs) a bi tua" th ietaiisgts | fame? Se me sel FOR T | BESS ee ia a COMM! AEE | MOP eveis taaty” beece. Seuss: | Mat besual | MiZveran SBrtecats nde este rooms and bath plus utli ; HOSE | INDIAN VILLAGE. Good | ak Gicarar nent Cinsiees | Biteed ok bight hon ker 200x300 | oP state paved hwy. & fee te en 1 ee Te Many othérs to choose from. F WHO DESIRE westside home |Full vem ne large screened-in front Se |. Seven Be Bey s2.coo, ow “AECe aie, ome ontec. ‘the sulat rf ully in- up. Visit rom . a full bas ; r garage —* ret on the lake and guiated This lutie beauty is | Pos. Oter our many Photo-listings GRACIOUS LIVING heat ‘i-car garage with overbead | PiaTake, | and large wooded | Colovial Hills 754188, good high Vicinity of hundreds of homes, We and is really wort eights ou'll save time. Conv stings t re. Attractively land ot, excellent ranch t ie ord S Opportunity plus. Doc ean : orth the ing right enient park- vard Black as : rs : ype site. cn ant eit oo money. See it today! & at our door cktop street. $13. JAMES A T AY estate it. Pricing real ve : NOTE THESE reasonabi- te ~ 4 AYI OR = st: J all on te ” > FEATURES: rns. R 27 iN ust off Oakland, quick sal rms for a he 1 L ae « : eal Estate —Insur, 31,100 for. both eons | e Get an appt. to $450 DOWN a H. BROWN, Realtor } BEDROOM, PACE BRI | SEMINOLE HILLS. Lar A sa Pontiac State Bldg. FE 4-2 right away see it TT) BE MO\ Merber Coot Ph 2-4310 CK HOME | tora custom built Se ke | a Evenings Co-op Member BA asee O RUS : | rial and -1 ma- | z A oD. : 12 BE MOVED ||P E Cnon Lake ? AEDROOM FACE BRICK HOME ery So Soames “cree | GATEWAYS to! JOHNK. IRWIN] fSASG6tp NINE . e re — Cty a = north of ie Poms inten auc et Cnion Lake PULL BASEMENT — PO | oe ie: sun-rm spaciaps St to acct S A “GOLD MINE” Dis doe oo tractive 2 bedroom ranch home CONCRETE URED) and tireplac ef large oe Phone nia. Nip Saeinaw Street | If you've traveled on the main high aks shaded lot Yeu tt ving room 12x | = aths on 2nd PPINESS | 2-4031 Eve. : ross the U8. : es fanrouytnis itiegol. houce | Extra’ Targe, “pearoom lrepiace! Genuine stone stile Tonite ct lant pace, Sars [LIVE IN “THE COUNTRY NEAR shops like unis, where the owner estigate room Timken rls pl at vase W recreatio rm. 3 Agger wir a on city on «@ targe restricted. Cpporanite ee &@ double INDIAXWOOI eee See aus | * EpreurniteSt WES | incomn <. payen ener homenity iar wateriora "Ril de: | {SCUTE Most of Your own mer. by1eN. : ) pasate Jan, scaped’ 2 ACRES. Chick (G2 Select eak flee: Ss @ beautiful home, su ere | INCOME — PAVED . ranged. nvenient terms ar- chandise. Any man Pig ag mer- COLONIAL = oare 2 apule trees Hieses Fe a rs. ] HA — fine homes Pes = inside city ao 3-7614 Por tnfcrmetion cal) OR | blend tools or who schon “meangs ~ se fail kinds. Ni _ . and . oom. 2 d vine | s- orkm e reac Saal rolling All for $16,700. i aaa spot ales —, INTERIOR SLAB DOORS possession worth it. 10-day! natural replace vais er | MARSHALL & OSMUN. §_ E. “cor iidin Rals tae be right ian 7] } | . | P . r remodeled jaod ond nicely we Klizabeth Lake A Service, tne. Ceramic tile bath. FURNISHED INCOME ar were Log up opie vente | caeiae Gace bee Next lot asuth | ae Livia Babe and moveries arn in good sha “i ul consider your home : , tance to d . Walking dis- blinds. { Month. Venetian ly graded. U ern. Paved, new-| retail. = wholesale and you are looking for pe it payment on this brand n as down Rea Ay. et DOUBLE SINK — { ants © downtown. Over $130 a a taean ull basement, oi] heat.| |g: UNiversity 1-3284. ne u. Also includes buildin : Giip teem", inci » | Eat hdaiow tees lo teat "Okay, okay’ But it's a Commie stunt—d sittin rue onan) oni icomt Tart | poche, Sed enrages Sie ner 2S sea ne | St ain sey, oie see this today! ture window ae 5 orn 8 &. pice | $e ta is brain-washin’!”” cWitede-taee. Ex i ed basement with ones bath. be eu and garden spot oo NOE have real estate, poe fetal Panny ys A tity : a — _ . Knott | 4 spi ur s. fu OFF AUBURN Warriord ‘Bcheo!, Onl ae For Sale Houses 40 | ————| cabinets. 7 ee See bus. Now at $14,500, terms, ‘| $5,000 or quick sata at $11.08. ” Gitte 9 sat ious, Mrebee eas, ee | t29'300 “and "youl ail for oaly . A te hool nly $10, | ann OS | . , rms. dow olen j P se reezewa Z estat Say the c $50 DOWN THELMA M. ELWO “e For Sale Homes 40) 207? 8 EEA | FLOYD KENT. Real | wanted. mn. Bverything you'vey Rebester Re. mean’ | 1802 N. | favesisey Ge a a price. ony tittle ¢ room b | -LM- M. ae . OD et ae B - . ealtor { For fcrine . ear Lakeville. | Terms in addition, water and electricity with 5143 Cass-Elizab | ullt-in benches, Open Evenin \ RANCH --. = | See Joh r information call or | lots) 1 1c city and 2 FE 5-1284: FE 43 eth Rd. 24 W. Lawrence es Av. —10 ACRES ont A Cypher, 152 Al ‘ . ‘ovulation aiding. Quick por $630 DOWN — | PULLY INSULATED Next to Consumers Power | With serch Fs LAKE ORION | 7cam aaa PAVEM ~ open rE. PARTRIDGE Session. Payment s- c : _ rooms, 4 bedroom | PAVEMENT. § E OF NATI iid Bayete much Tes | rome & uh lake oie mes | Rea Bem Paved wold ive i vein aan gen tone, | MAB 6 won | PFSES ee —— : _ diate possession. FE 4-1906. -| Nearly new with all the new ac. OPPERS —_— re ae ee Ofiered 7 ra AN & SON IN PRINCIPAL C z ELI SR 2 beg Ped) 9s . ALUMIN down. - 5. Sagina TITIES ELIZABETH LAKE eli oe AND 30'x40° CE- full | kitchen, and dining coon | . nis emma UM STORMS &| To B | __ Business P ne, COAST-TO- COAST FRONT . Churcli and Fenwer. Corner of | drive. stairway to heat om. | Suburbar : YOu uy~To Sell-To Trad siness Property 44 44 ‘ . \U. nner. Box 166 | rive. stairway RSC a an Recreation | BUY IT WE'L a L Just about the best 100 feet + RnOM Me Phone 2407 — Mar-| tic. Cant be beat, Poa ee : room modern 2 bedroom plus pine panelled dendty ent | BRAYTON AREA — 5 room , AN = se fooled PERRY TRIANGLE) 43 fOr Ss argest y frontage : MODERN aa 5 ome. Insulated : room. ome with attac ontage dn 3 . Hur lake ge on the HOUSE. 1 CAR COLORE Int ted, oi circu- breez tached streets. Su on; Open Ev joke with an excellent brick garage Needs repair. ($5200 ea DRED cen wit Lore cee | Gan SUC MATIC FURNACE ARD breesoway and garage. Bit- site lefee super market of pale EXC. ~OFPICE SPACE FE 2-36 rooms with powder ue __Mediately MA 5-483 ta sold im- plastered and pa ith tile bath 600, 70 down. ! scaped and fenced and- REALTY CO, paverient all Ss sewer, water, p with light houseke K he first floor plus 3. bed. Pee Nesinn gine oe, eae | aNeRC - a o 11x24 foot 1 tag CO-OP REALTORS } at onl in. Bargain priced| ve#e, upstairs, Se plus 3 bed- h ter, auto gas hot w v | «NCAT it i kr j | me year grit iving room, ful ERATIVE MEMB | aly $13,500 naw and corner of §& rooms and full bath on t HA eater, snd only $1000 down vee guarante ten onstruction bath. batement . full | Open Evenings "til oo WILILS Raebum. FE 21435. second Basement sen” dane ES oe | All modern 6 room . House in A-l* decboges ai Te Bs Huron 9-Sundays 1-9 Roosevelt Hoie ¥- —ae | KITCHEN FOR LEA = = ‘recreation Soom vane LINCOLN ST } Ot ients ‘ | gone = ign PONTIAC SCHOOL SYSTEM is eat b ii must see | ney oe OR TO BRANCH Eves & Sun. EM S808 | | cree D.xie Hwy.. wii » Includes Chri tac Jt - ncome on excell aril nd automatic 5 eal home, Pri — T OFFICE Ee ; | MODERNIZA aod other outside” equine 2 “AMILY PA : side location, 3 ent east | heat. Owner oi only $9,500 ced at : ’ SARAGE BLD Ww TION BUSIN YING EX f apt. completel mus moving and | ie Sal ; G. onderful o ESS, ment. Call us for = va RETURN on CELLENT urnished including stov pletely ust sell at reduced ale Lake Pro 41 For lease. ga intere pportunity f } a ] 9 a7 1 , Ce aS ed in h or man on this one. it will. price 1$10500) 5 a investment required refrigerator, oil h AB ciate of $7,875, terms. price 4.650 Comp! NEW FHA —~ ols Ae {t., 2 garage bidg. 16.000 sq Al ri ome impro am nd bath dow hi eat. close in. On lots ie HOMES — . 2 parking lots. 2 apt uminum win: vements, only Shown by appointment lo. Reasonable” garage Soxi00 month ‘and the full shee i, ees! | Crescent lake Est This h am ieee nyaeee Ducealows tet a ginate OR te TET tae | inquise 38 available about Oct 15. a FE Sven e fur. re mable down $13,790.00 ce is only ake Estate ome with ent vestibule ' rtonville 13F3 < Auburn Av : DDr . takes it Might paym§nt with terms Re s aa th attached breese- ntrance to pleasa _ appointment. 1 for BUS S SHELL PR Edward M. S acrea Might consider small cently redecorated and 1 y and 2 car brick room, 8 foot oe INESS FRONTAGE ODUCTS Fi M. Stc > eage or good excellent n| $18,150. garage — picture wind ——— come. 56 “AND IN-| 2 BAY 8T. 17K, Baaiias a tout, Es Ie down payment Werésuate = part Russell oung room selck wubnatior Bat Delure a with pl 2 Moderii\ Year-round. homes | Ave. by ms ge pe on Oskland oo pala yp ted 15,000 LARGE 5 BEDRM. HO 5-8165 ocation - Y oaks. floors, automatic’ © cupboards, of butlt-in one half do on} Double garage. Inco as buys new inven = M. HOUSE 1 AC ter heater, s sw RS 2 separate dinett PAUL M. JONES five-roo: ome has two| FE 2-8343. tory to open. able for 2 apts. Do . SUIT- RE . REALTOR sash , Screens, storm nice bedroo e, 832 W. REAL peeTATE m, 1 3-room apts. 3 b . . wnstai NCH ~ 12 W H : Fully insul sb ms, tile batt -Huron front and . aths, | RESTA SP S00 owe! Fayence: G0, PEAINS. “Bult 4980 Oak floors ets, amayoaie| | ae At, fee trees. fot 10x shower. complete basement, | Mit Rncty “pin mount) Sen| Sea cna wait Oat ers | “an euceliene Bones EM onvee : p.wsteres ; oors, LAK al enced, good 2 mat e; auto- rm., knott 4 . condition. e. _ Cat an 3-9166 LAMBERT SCHOOL 3 BOWS Wad te Resetent scone sid PRON HOME. 5 RMS. &| owe $10,000, s3°300 , 1075 Oe nen ee Chick soe water ite wl heat tensed,| iba. Ra becomes (inate | awe. aaa ym = Srcent Thurs. 2 pe in exc cond Plast | eas neat ; beeen automatic equity OR 3'0935 $5,800. $3,500 _ | NEXT DOOR 7 ai TE 7 -0263 FHA co down plus Screened pesto Re mr | tubs. steam heat. 4 PP mgt | APt. bla ore ARRY — painted walls, | stered | tractor ; car garage with : , low: | BRANCH . “ down payment : ’ ow handle. Owne s will the ated in the kitchen, nice arge pleasant $10 95 port. Good muck so! CLOSE Ae _; Business F | —=— POST OFFICE w Pri. 5 mi nt, terms to suit. r. FE 5-7233._ e village of Wix center of Bendinie lan utility ‘room with 950, reasonable down ba he LOSE LO PONTIAC rontage ! RANCH TYPE ee EST SIDE - 13 miles Pontiac. 3860 Athens | COMMERCI _- completed apts. om. Has 5 ‘ 1 é - rm WA : rT: livin: x20 foot Rd. Drayton Pl nad Chet he AL BUILDING oth and room for neat@aatuceati er, oi] forced air B. D. CHARLES ent $ apt «wcome Separate 6 room and 2 bath. bas TYPE BRICK @ room in this 6 _1-7489 lains. UNiversity with full basem 30 x 60 er. Shows $400 an- down replace. Only $1.5: : Oo | ptighborhood. up. Good | with srt basement AST oors, very n ing oak 15 For Sale F Pro WEST HURON STREET 382 AUBURN SS ee een downtown. Malking dis} down Sine 85 , furnace. | $2,500 |v IDE INCOME bath. New dacpaitie cane and x 150 - arm P. 45 Group ESS 7 . uire : er: n 2 your bills Attractive ae PROPERTY . | : 3 terms.| block behind wer.) Pioneer, (1 i Pla Or pao arm 3 fa ily = Ugg OR new ourene excel : $495 ee 5 RM. HOME & ned credit, low “monthly ake ee uated on rear of un peeks = rm apt. e Don't f at only $12.700. ent build site ear M-15. Woe . Ree ray eats s Jot which ie YDEN a oe rm apt. coe 2 rm. tol jen ail to see thi <; wax s with good! South 8t =m Realty, 290 i a feces . 4 . : — parate bsmt e erty. S$ prop- Lm Ll. asy drive your ow @ short distance to ni LESS THAN RENT hot air of S.. each has e oe road Dn WE HAVE e "barks id REAL + 4 urnace and n by count ‘, maintained panus OF ALL r parking. entry f eal 26, WH TOR $39 a month includin water heaters, 3 ca ew auto ' eee y | Some real bar L KINDS. Bae Mane aenE- peal \ : Eves PE 5 oast or mt 5.2264 © yiunance 2 bedrm coders Boma | terms, quick possession. sale i WM. H. KNUDSEN WAT KINS. LAKE AREA & Son. 110 8. Saginaw W. Dinnan a ase - ~<) -- ~ aay = +N 3-5 m e«torms . . . West Suburban $8,073 |), SYLVAN SHORES - sare me scenes StH) TC on, 10 Pongae Stave Bank. B 110 x 150 (9, ACRES, EXTRA GOOD SOIL FINANCE CO Two. HOMES fr s that neat 5 rv 3 bed aK ca; Vi. edroom modern. $45 N K _FE 4-4516, Ide =): ' use, bath, large barn,| ‘Ove Walgreen’ - Rinelonwalmon ‘oom edrm, ranch cy : dow ; month, reas. Eve. 2-3759-_ Spe S69 | other buildings ‘| co . PE 4-0541 $10,500 ost ap acre of ev ype Complete tr : nD payment . -5320 e) gs. Needs int RNER N. SA ideal! round th v ery detail. School paint. GINAW & hella a eae grey = hp b pera for. “tt. has ‘a fal door bar- enclosed rear rcare cat rm. dining space ruil bath ele 101'2 WY eerae porhood Nasy ane ee eee flowing. $16,500. 1 sie Bonn at . soos as : = out- i F 1 ces « Lonv ¥ = r Ent tad"nent isha rey fet; Had theiowe? garcetierty | clay ar-b-due, landscaped ‘archi. fered walis "veneter ath itchy Phone FE “Daal Eve. “FE. 2-1804 artrl IR | bee et sictaomn, Saft ASHE | Qrlonfine on As hen mes 494% MORTGAGES — men si n un } netia: own | . n . weirbuit 3 oom tame WiiSsee: > Seach foe that dee enous | ew Si i ae A a ee ee Is THE “BIR 4 ACRES WOODED For Sale Land Con nd TPA aay Pont BE Bldg FE me and investment Soiicaliblonefurihercdarane included rpets & drapes lie 132 reverse char | le. Lake 1! : “BIRD” TO SE On vay ; For Sal eo Ag. : urther details 531 30 day possession. FE- 5 RMS. & B ges. pletely rede 2 acres. Com- E 1 ed road Heavily wooded e Land Contract 4¢ 46 Z DRAYTON PLAI = _ch ATH, FURN., 9 N corated inside and o 4 , arge trees. Excell ed with NS te 2s urch St., Ortonvill ’ New oil furnace, 4 ut. COZY FR : plent ellent site.with a iG e. “i , bedrms. i y of r Five besutiful. spacious and gal pc es WEST SUBURBAN | D cacroned porch upstaire nikogers | CUTE AS ROOMS | na 3 Oe aetity ae ay Teoms, mifror-like ae Penile atthe dacthental ene en 1 3 oe double construct on ‘t Fail to to _Kitchen. $25 000. Terms. MA 41213. his neat and attractiv \ BE, $170 dome RES ng ow | alls, attach 2 livin downstairs ? ent, new furn : is just e little hom tered garage. L ed plas- iving room with natur lot, plenty of : ace, large @ little doll house and © | on automatic bot ee baa eat, Rel obawsti dining room, ful school. Only Me ar stofes & See Thi wal agree it's the best wey val va oA ge soil for fruit or L ‘tes bay a and suis: cee on a large cofeer: me nut bal. $35 monthly. th $2,150" rand i. OC has “ basemen wri: madern L 1 A HD Gown. ET YOUR $$SSHHSSHHH$ $000 3 g@ buy at T oe Zs { er lot. Feel new 3 ent, al ne Oe 3 bedroom Bone i or consider | heed nia Psat i further New 2 bedroom home, large liv exclusive. Waterford Lakes.” st ed + bedruos aetameie ol Corné — Pontiac Lk. os Ww ORK FOR “YOU! tll roe PE gad auto or other ae t assirec rm., moder on . ying s with ! ta ms, ut. r Cass Lak : re- DO STR oe Ad Il be under no oblig barcinen, © kitchen & bath, full Lake Be ‘are | priv. on Silver screened porch, witkenaa’” ara 4286 Dixie iw e Rd FE 2-0207 | ATTENTI er payments; Laren ny for low- RIS & << , oi} hot wat to check all th NE\W and lak d gara y Drayto ON CONTRACT pay bills; sickne: K School 2 hace. u ea A c ges 2 s av ° REALTO oe )\ basement. oil hot water furnace. ORE Log 40, eve HOMES Birnite Lx. Cee eees 08 Midd = Ca ee ee Buyers| °F other worthy purposes. “ OR | CO-OP MEMBER Kari ii rvpe. V . fore you buy. Bly aetee wae SLOPED LOT, 140 “pT X128 PT onSIX ROOM BUNGALOWS 7 eee 9 aah ial bead o- die 2 LOTS. BASEMENTS DUG. WELL sunita vet tba sieeaes AeGRy. Le td FF Pi rr Malet ha ype. Vacant $2.000_ down y $9,750 with| soo ae TYLED HOUSE. 26 FT ev eitas be ean ATOMS oie.| Quick. it's wriced See this one, ‘2;. Drayton Plains wins WELL, discount, new property Da Large Prompt, Friendly Servi WE BUY. SELL 1203s socated “north of Poni DOROTHY NYDER LAV ov (ft. Attached garage with Natio are the builders of thes on term 0 at only $7,000 | —S/ter_% ‘ 3-2056; lay, investigate toda ee ee I8 YOURS na = ot AND TRADE arent # miles, a real bu: REALTOR ENDER 8 IN xA4 or: basement 26 ft rrieen yea tate These are the ‘y cash r 10 per cent less 4-4525. Ask for Ted Mecutlo iy : AT ALL TIMES oo . room breezeway and 2140 W. Hur WALL WITH CENTER 2 much ave read and heard Wi lli 1 } L ue Our be CRESCENT LAKE garage ina very omer | | SOE 2" pag 3.s307 FON RM, FROM UTILITY RAL ant that antiouns atin pyro BRICK Pebbgereve s Lake Russell Y Gals Vand families with. Wel ~er a : large parcel of on a R GF BEAUIFUL } r a beautiful, spaciou ORIR coe ly DIN ce wooded lots with 1 money problem te eh : A : = Ut hom - and w “TI k s. Let a ES PATS Bgl deta ay acess aes anch Home BOARD” er ae ae cor ‘ie Badaet At a price well ah 2 ns mNIFIED LIVI NG | jal down. 418 bee en and pies M1 REALTOR oung Phone 5-812]. Write pea Attractive Suan oly will sacrifice for — DOORS A WITH BIRCh . t e enjoyable recreati +47 Spina 2 W. Huron St > . Sate “sae? Pek tae| Nerms Be ‘ture to io CORNER LOT * | .sna surtetan ree ones “ys ang ores tome an gs pause scrauee een | Fliz‘beth Lk Fellas Da SOAS iving room, dinin ms vestigate now i ated in Drayto H G RM. IS 1 y available ver you. 2 & to displea | Busin i CON , * and sun roo g room, kitchen . a paved n Plains on| 6x8 DININC 3x21 FT. WITH 2 On N. Pran y soon, locat- natural firepla §€ 1 acrejon b .| Business Upportuniti MPANY trie hot om New furnace, eles (3[L FS RE ciitatee. Bae tite berteen | one oe a san: Gi eked an pda carpeting, sunroom, Stra fen DiAckiOp. SUP Bid ‘Schon! Ss Upportunities 47 | 407 COMM. NAT'L BANK combination fogged garage, 1 “S REALTY CO dining rm. sel none ne ING OUT Se eee LOOK- Pprox. $2,150 ceen.” Pag Wa | oy eftictent heating system ‘add pass the door Leslie Fleisher ae arge landscaped | ows and . REALTOR . large bedrms., b rm. 2 VIEW UTIFUL ree. bedroom hom t. | au garage. Let us show F ( W LI y rkeley Voss, Presi mela hh Ba ute a ee ¥. Huron ree pear. Path and tie 6417 BOOM floor, approx. 81,680" all on one the living enjoyme Mite c . OO O QUOR BAR Hours @ to 5 — 500 offering at $1¢ Open 9 FE 56175 is th snack bar. Th HAS CERAMIC TIL ceptionall 650'down, ex- Wonderful hom nt and the .| Straight =t Sat. 9 tot _ till 9 a full basement ere AND FLUORESCENT E opally large and attracti can b @ investment that | 225,Williams Lake R of bar in the heart of SEE ‘OOM MOD. HOUSE. DOUBLE breezeway to » paneled FIXTURES LIGHT, %!%, foom bungalow ye e yours for only Office Ope ad. OR 3-1235 e state's f ef a US WHEN ; E. DO two car gara 3 . | Ave.! off on Seminole ou're goin 22,500. | — nilla.m. to5 townshi astest growin WM. A. Sees Ba ayment Tin a at a teat me Ree say _2 ARE $2,650 or Pk uren with approx. beaut tully eoareapen ana Bd P..m. Pontiac. inves” aaa from YOU NEED MONEY _ -0735 | Price? $13 xe features 3RD BEDROO CLOSETS. It's really a e 2 ACRES what time of the da erence “ | \ HOME FOR rh ; -900, $3,900 down The ver M IS 10x13. We. have pict so hurry to gem, folks, d he Ways find ay, you'll al- : ‘ AD od : : y best of materi “ti pictures and all inform make your telephone and| $25 to $25 dow : ul this spot busy O epee ae pea into this h als went on in our office—75 5- your appt. right D D own. Fertile land equipment less th y- All EVERYONE Giroux & Hick | thi s home Come and St 2 W. Huron away. rive out Joslyn and it’ an 2 years old| WE -V iL DUNE: s beautiful h ind Bee = Easy b yn to Brown Rd. s the best that m CAN HELP 3007 W. Huron oe Meo he =o OK 3-9 aprayton ae oe Pan AW day Bate cd gee | IP_YOU OWN AN:P.H NCOME, 10 ROOMS , TIM WRIGHT bar, formicn “tobiens” and back NEEDS, BUY A POR SUMMER ; ee ’ . l INKLEMAN ‘ WE ‘F.H.A. LOT B ~ J” * booth es, leatherett A CAR OR _____ Open Eves. ‘til FE 4-3569 SEMI-RANCH. West on W A WILL BUILD ATHS, PAVED 'S” 222 8. oths, etc. all f ette A CAR REPAIR 8 p. m. P with 1 acre | NEW ws alton t» Ironto N YOU A > AVEDiS Telegraph down. L or only $15,000 . PAY OFF OLD $750 DOWN” Only 81, me cewn everything. | STM. 4,0 HOUSE, ALL MOD- Sr coe: Hate Kgos on Wire PLETE: RE Sa hae 4y location close ate eS an WILLIAMS" CAE ped: Bide lie buy modern brick| You Can GET a. Novth of Pootiac, 4 room AINFORT CUB Cras. and -Wickacds ae as se * kaw Gown 3 Oo MODEL IN BIRMINGHAM FOR reems Bid bath lot 62x120. 7] ~~ each. Inquire, OR 3-6734. s WITHOUT at ae TO $508 room, exterior Hwished, fenhe ie with utility. “Only $6,050 pay | Dyke Pn Bos “uence cludes tnesn ard ea, ated pee INSPECTION floor, 3 rooms and on, the first) 4 eeuthind yauch bem: — BOWLING ALLEY MENTS, Ate MONTELY PAY- urself, $3150 , own y Stillwell cent ‘nt. 4 : per ate entranc p. Sep- anch homesit $8,000 . - Near Fishers, . \UBURN HEI ’ ell 1-2752, sf . # rooms. Full bath. O D ’ 6 room es. Owner occupt 120 ft., +2 block f e. Ux) Th Q DOWN oS Yo Dineaeeay grctt,? bet: GRAPSEEREREMC ars _CUTE.AND COZY | _feretg, foankay, 1 na Si) DORIS & SON | Srerin"tee RG Mote te | PBs oo gh mem? | ms omy Beat aang tn | OR A A Cow Genie r heater, complete b c ILDING on 1 a m modern, basem priv. Pull with lake | 752 W. Huro 1,250 ofl he come. New ; munity of 5,000. m{g. com- mediate possension. “et finished | into a nice aie ay eee Sir e. dew lots, Sie nae ata $5,955. EM 3-5737. bl FE 4-1557 =a to get cain at gh eae ete ELIZ. LAKE 2p). ppereee a heat PC 4 ACRE | : arms, trees. New e sized lot with 7 aon ta million, but | $6,000 PONTIAC REALTY CO. “8 Aiidore. "7A Avtow| rare cl INCOME IRWIN | SEM AB SST SM IPE WARD E * ee Hem patemehtA siel'ai/ Pate S06 Sie months we sezs_ VALUET Real Estate | stoner seats A nad beth dome: nace, By private party: SSE | REAL TO} PARTRIDGE ay Gan -Hlizabeth Ra "Bt "peanuta”” “Good” lease FINANCE CO r - 2228 T = stoker heat porch,| T )| FE 5- ‘ d . LIKE A FOUR LEAF | elegraph FE 5-0693,| ot. Asking alia ac .Two bedroo bungalow with auto. 43 W. Huron § R FE 2-8316] 3a,- 1284; FE +3844; Open 9 to 7 Ph. PE4-157%4 CLOVE ; 6R - SPE NCE TR ET Wilt oodian iof elosel aphan Gate a ee ee ST TG Fontise State Bank Bite as wares a =R 6 ROOM HOME see STREET Pee as veo ku nee Oakland Lake, $700 cash. OR WIDE ° _ at, if you i SIDE - ¥ - colonial, 18 to appreciat see these _ E ue yun aay orion gocd locas wien children in Webster of igh TEPC, nOved furnace, 3 car| “it oe oe WEARE ~ ) PONTIAC STATE BANK. oe " farsa been encalow ‘sat 3 car en nn ee eh be arranged, ss SMB hots of gogo onB UY, offering lots in a brand-new sub PE eisen "iLandmesser, Met = r ca ow * - 510 - garage, Lot 100x300~ good cet garden space owers, fruit and Bateman & Kamp LAKEF its of good living in this large Alm division. Some are 100x400. Here GROCE FE '5-0978 . Dus to Waterford school. | Stor eled basement, “gas a haat, meg ni A Sunday cess sen A side, Total price anly 4, “on transl On uinnas a bungalow home “Only $15 dow At Lah sivion Ceesin EER, WINE, GAS, QUICK, FRIENDLY SERVICE - | rms and creens, mode . - Telegraph 2 b nice lakefront on Lo’ and call thi , e. Hurry in bath. Geek vale only) month.” own and $15| ness, rs good year busi- NO RED TAPE OXBOW AREA en —nd decorating th rm kitch- __ of Chekara Lak locks ‘north | Has autom tus Lake. fte 3 won't last. Evenings Good re y will take lease. MA 6- y, $00. g throughout. $11,- Co-o} e Rd, FE 40528 t atic heat and hot wa.| ° 6. Call Mr. Joll. & Terms. ighborhood. L. H. B ™ se. MA 6-2586.__ : ene ou eer (Glare Cane an een eet Organ bate Ra FE ethan) | ict APMC, (and basement. A |6 om. modern, 'e ol: FE 12610, 2 bedroom bungalow. Built in “31. ) BeauT hee GULK SUPER SERVICE avrowosnes ae . e e 4 : ‘ ileges. There A cat he Lake priv- | ? $2,000 down. If yo ly $8,250,| Close to s bal extra large lot.| heat Now rooms. Oil circulator | BEAUTIFOL COR. ; a aa Besa periods when you oper- Gan | oc ae ee _ AIL ” INCOME coreg heone you sbpuld — >) ee | cee leeds some finishing tor | 200 Fieldwar QRNER LOT. i00x| b. 7 aE OB Gulf - Xx TE a lot, fr sunporch wo apartm ° see this d with lo . ced bt in uplicated at th orrest ckory Drive. |« ( O Co PE 2-017. uit trees, $11,500, bath each ents—5 rooms and w down payment. Quick & price of $4,600 e ask- a Lake Estates. S : have rea] 3. We d 2 . Sacrifice oe _opportunit | Com Kins _ nicely canleveoéad te corner lot, GEORGE R. IRW tg Evenings after 6 Call Francis E. “B 1d” : __8t $2,000. $1,020 down. MI 6-0191. CHEBOYGAM, 4 Ai nara for _you. LI V HAN Ya _N. Sagin Bastate se ice yard, 2 car arage, This. pro a 269 Baldwin A’ BROKER + OO EsT SIDE : . “Bud” Miller DRAYTON WOO a7 Hwy. 14% mi. ee aeueeta NE ANDSOME LOG FE 56181 FE a ene erty isi e , Tale prop _Phone FE 5-0101 venue 7 rm. all SIDE -Realtor + Ranch, be DS City. Good site f rom Mackinac HOME FE 27-6587 firoughout, attrectt ition lor FE 28544 | 1 car modern with basement, Member Co-o mn ee Some beautifull 26x36, also 23e3) more Reuse FINANCE CO AT : A 87 | terms. vely ‘priced Va garage. Close t pens perative Realtors vas 7) _ sam traffic, go by | 33 uron : KE gan MS ROAD jean Norman Lake | tty “family school, deat. for Exchange HOLM}S-BAR ; new tires; never ,been out- side of Pontiac. See any time “at 88 W. Mansfield across from }Fisher Body WE HAVE ADDED TO OUR ~ TRAVELO Mine, 29 tf Marlette trailer, all mod- ern, bircn intertér finish, priced under $3,000 Needham_ Trailer Bales 451 8S Telegraph Rd. FE 5-1751 18'2 FT, ALL ALUMINUM HOUSE- trailer like new, $1275. 3206 Shim- mons Rd FE 5-2092 - 195} 30 FT SPECIAL PONTIAC Chief Storm windows. Like new. Trade equity for car or cash. FE 5-3998 ° FT. ALUMINUM PRAIRIE Schooner, '49 new studio couch, bed and gas stove. dir. sig., elec- brakes. OR 3-7160. 2995 Barkman. PARK YOUR TRAILER WHERE you buy it. Have. that eXtra pro- tectior Drastic reductions on all trailers; New Moon, Elcar, Mich- fgan Arrow; Richardson. Also some good used tratlers. Park- hurst Court and Sales, 1540 La- per Rd. MY 2-4611, 1 mile North of Lake Orion TRAILER EXCHANGE ANDERSON PRAIRIE SCHOONER. 6BKYLINE, ROYAL AND OTHERS 1 & 2 bedrooms, 14 to 40 ft. over ' 60 floor plans, all kinds of equip- ment, furniture, roof coatings, paints touraids. helper springs & complete line of other trailer Parts and accessories VISIT OUR STORE 60 South Telegraph Open Evenings and Sunday p. m 23 27 FT. HOUSETRAILER. TERMS. 693 Cedarlawn, a ; NEW GENERALS, STEWARTS, IRONWOODS 8 INE & DE- TROITERS WE NANCE AT 1, OR. % DOWN, 5 PER CENT BANK RATES. } f SEVERAL pone USED- TRAILERS. LOW DOW PAYMENTS. BALANCE LIK : RENT OXFORD TRAILER SALES PARTS & ACCESSORIES New location 1488 S Lapeer Rd. 1M! S of Lake Orion 1948 BREMAN 27 FT. EXC. COND. Trailer 39, Huron Trailer Camp, $1600 AMERICAN - GENERAL - WEST- , WOOD - CONTINENTAL PALACE A nice :ine of trailers to choose from with the! best of terms. Be sure and see Genesee before you buy your next en gome GENESEE SALI 2101 Dixie Hwy. ## FE — SALE OR RENT, 24 PT. LINTZ- Craft housetrailer. MY 2-6014 after 4 $100-$200 DOWN. GOOD TRAILERS, IXIE HWY. Ps AVERILLS 2000 DIX Fi, Hoh rental pians, move ih immediate- ly. Same rent. TRAILER EXCHANGE 60 8 Telegraph Open Eves For Rent Trailer | Space 51 PARKHURST LAKE TRAILER court Sewer & water. MY 2- 4611, TRAILER SPACE FOR RENT. Gordon's Trailer Camp, 3300 Eliz. Lk. Rd. §2 Auto Accessories 52 ‘AUTO PARTS New — Rebuilt — Used OPEN EVES. AND SUN. Discount to all GM Employees Hollerback Auto Parts 340 Baldwin FE 3- 9477 H. HOT RODS! plywood finish in- |’ 54 $1 Wanted Used Cars PVT. PARTY WANTS CLEAN _ Packard. FE 4-7589. ee WTD. JUNK CARS & SCRAP IRON. FE 9582. Eves. after, 5:30 and Sundays cal) FE 5-4839 WTD: SCRAR OR CHEAP CARS. OR 3-1663 WTD WRECKED & JUNK CARS FE 3-9477 340 Baldwin Ave. PARTY FROM OUT OF STATE warts clean ‘1te model car. All cash Appreciate a call MI 4-6398. WANTED JUNK & CHEAP CARS. FE 3-9467 - FE 2-2666 TOP $$ FOR CLEAN CARS OF _ all kinds 2 Auburn. FE 4-2131. — ~ CARS WANTED | FOR PARTS E. Monte a fx 500 CARS WANTED ~ BAGLEY AUTO PARTS Top dollar Sa for wrecked & unk cars ee pickup. 170 Bag- ey St. FE 2-2544 or PE 4-3585. WE NEED 1949 TO '53 USED CARS for out of town buyers. Huron Motor Sales. 952 W. Huron. Phone FE 2-2641. VIRGINIA BUYER PAYS TOP dollar for clean ‘47 to ‘49 Pords Pontiacs, Chevrojets & Buicks. _ Motor Mart 121 E. Montcalm. _ FAIR & SQUARE — « Cash for Your Car Pointe Motor Sales __ 1/1 S. Saginaw. St. See M&M Motor Sales” for top dollar on late model cars 2627 _Dixte Hwy OR 3-1603 1 WANTED “4. TO "52 MODELS BE SURE TO 121 ; eho WELT 4540 DIXIE HIGHWAY OR 3-1355 For Sale Used Cars 55 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE , GOODWILL USED CARS “Not a Name but a Policy” aac FROM POST orrics MT CLEMENS S8T BUY YOUR USED CAR FROM A DEALER YOU KNOW , > 1946 AND 1947 PONTIACS FORDS OLDSMOBILES CHEVROLETS SPECIAL! 47 OLDS. $395 1948 and 1949 CHEVROLETS PONTIACS PLYMOUTHS “ASH | 50, 51 AND ’52 AND A FEW ’53s CHEVROLETS PLYMOUTHS PONTIACS FORDS DODGES . HARD TOPS MERCURYS NASH CONVERTIBLES SUBURBANS STATION WAGONS PICKUPS PANELS PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 5 Factory Brahch 63 Mt. Clemens at Mill Phone FE 3-7117 We have your blue glass and your dress up hub caps, caddie spin- pale oo? $12.95 set. Now is dress up Hub Auto Parts Co. 122, Oakland FE 4-7066 | WRECKING FOR F PARTS, ‘46 CARS and up Buicks, Fords, Chevrolets, DeSotos, Oldsmobiles, Pontiacs, and others. New mufflers and talpipes, rebuilt generators. starters, Carburators, fuel pumps and transmissions. New and used springs ' LOUTE’S AUTO PARTS 936 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4513 “NEW PARTS & ; ACCESSORIES WHITE WALL MARVEL Makes beautiful white walls on a black tire complete with brush, $2 89. SCHRAM AUTO PARTS 2539 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2105 ~ GLASSI—GLASS! ' We oe in new safety auto- bors Installed while you wait. ith your insurance all you need is your signature. All work guar- anteed = Hub Auto Parts Co. 172 Oakland Ave 4-7066 AUTO PARTS - New—Rebuilt—Used Open Evenings & Sunday Discount to All GM Employes MOTOR MART LE. Moncalm PE 4-8230 Auto Service 53 REPAIRS, BUMPING & PAINTIN why FREE ESTIMATE ALL MAKES OF CARS PAYMENT PLAN BRAID MOTOR SALES - 90 Years Pair Dealing 2 Cass at West Pike St. Phone FE 2-0186 GRANKSHAPT GRINDINO IN THE ear cylinders rebored. Zuck Ma- _ fase Shop. 23 Hood Ph FE 2 COLLISION SERVICE Bumping. painting. ne See Rector at Oliver Motor Sales 2-910 5 54 Collision ice 3 W Pike St Phone FF Wanted Used Cars Top Price for Youg Car BUICK, 1952, DR. SPECIAL. R & H. Clean. $1575. Can fi- nance. FE 2-7726, after 6:30 pm BUICK CON. TRTIBLE. 1951 LATE model. 1 owner. Very ¢ shape. Only .6,000 mi, Fully equipped. Clean $1695 for quick sale. Mo- bil gas station Cor, Waldo & W Huroa 1949 BUICK SUPER SEDANET — family second car, low mileage, excellent condition, equipment in- cludes radio, heater white wall tires, undercoat, Private owner. $825, MIdwest 4-4838. BUICK, 52, 2 DR. SEDAN, FULLY equipped with dyna... like new _ FE 5-3458 BUICK '51 4 DR. SPECIAL, DYNA., new tires $200 for equity. FE 2-7053 49-62 SERIES CADILLAC, EXCEL- Pay condition, $2,095. Phone EM BE 4 PROUD OWNER OF A F!. etwood 1947 Cadillac, very rea- sonable ».cice Excetient condition throughout, including good paint job, inter‘nr cxcellent, >ractically new tires motor in good condition. Must sacrifice. Moving out of town Must be seen and driven to be appreciated. OR 3-1486, 2760 Dixie 1 wy GRAY 1¥52 CADILLAC 62 SEDAN, power steering, window lift, de- luxe radio, heater, Easy-eye glass. _ Midwest 4-2050. CHEVROLET 1947, CLUB CPE.. radio, hester; $25 fu3ll_ price. _Cor. Orchar? Lake and Johnson. CORY ROLET. 1 1942 DLX. HEATER. CHEVIE “BELAIR, 1951. RADIO & heater. 610 E. Fourth 8st. FE 5 __ 4520, . see AVERILL'S sharp, low mileage, one- owner tars. The best deal in town. 2020 Dixie Hwy. FE 29878 or FE 4-6896 CHEVIE. ‘50 2-OR. DLX PLEET- __line. 123, Norton Ave CHEVIE. ‘522 DR. POWERGLIDE. t. & h., one piece windshield, 2 ‘tone gray. FE 2-5921, eves. FE 15-7835. CHEVIE. “46 ol 4 De | BEAUTIFUL c n NO DOWN P AYMENT LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES , DODGE—PLYMO M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. MY 2-2611 FUNN® BUSINESS “It's the only way I can going—he loafs so much!” 2 = = =e" ‘yt . |' Hig: by Hersh ices ae CLIT keep his self-winding watch For Sale Used Cars 5S Ask About Our! Finance Plan 53 Mercury 53 Willys ’52, '50, 49, '46 Ford 51 Kaiser, hydra, Olds V-8 engine. 51, 48, ’47 Kaiser 51, ’49, ’48, ’47 Chevie ’51, 49, ’42 Mercury 50, ’49, ’48, ’47 Pontiac 51, 49,048 Studebaker ’50, "46 Dodge ECONOMY USED CARS 72 Auburn _CE 42131 OLDS, 1940. COUPE; RADIO, _heater. "E 2-4024. ee CHEVE. ‘'51 2-DR. 17.000 MILES. Priced right! 921 Mt. Clemens. FE ;5-9830. CHEVIE «4 PESTS RAR, needs work EM 3-404 ‘47 CHEV. AERO ear ~ CLEAN, fiflly equipped; also 35 Dodge, _ good trans. a 5728 after 5 pm. MUST SACRIFICE "53 CHEVE: BEL-AIR, 4 DR. 1500 miles, R powerglide, accessories. Will trade. FE 2-5825. CHEVROLET, 1942, BLACK, 2 DR. 105 East Strathmore. CHEVIE ’41, 2 DR., ~~ TRADE FOR LESS 51 Buick Roadmaster 4 dr. ’51 Buick special 4 dr. ’50 Ford custom 8 4 dr. ’50 Buick super 2 dr. 30 Cheve dix. 2 dr. 30 Ford conv. $100. OR 4 *47 Cheve. 4 dr. Anderson Pontiac-Buick 7551 Auburn, Utica, Mich, Ph. Collect, Utica, 3001 CHEVROLET 1951 4DR. DLX. Good cond, hog Call after 5:30 PM.. FE 4-8263 CHEVROLET, 52, 4 DR. DLX., 2 tone blué, white wall tires, heat- er, 9000 miles, $1,500 FE 2-9400. CHRYSLER Demonstrator We have several low ee e dem- onstrators on hand at times. These cars carry new nar guaran- tees and can be bought with) tremendous savings. KELLER-KOCH, INC. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER 47 8. Woodward, Birmingham MI 6-1200 % 953 DESOTO DEMONSTRATOR, low mileage radio, heater, fabu- lous power steering, tremendous savings, Ca.!$Mr McNellis. MI 4-7811. W A. Caltrider, Inc., 912 ‘. Woodward S8irm September Clearance SALE Compare and Save NO. 170 '50 BUICK SPEC. DEL. $1095 '47 FORD SUPER DEL. TUDOR $445 NO._ 160 48 BUICK 4 DR. $545 : No. 99 49 BUICK SUP, 4 DR. $845 NO. 92 48 BUICK SUPER 2 DR. $545 | NO. 190 149 FORD 8 CUSTOM $645 No. 188 *52 CHEV. DEL. 2 DR. $1345 NO. 171 °’48 BUICK CONV. $745 |Y DOWN—We TRADE No Payments Until October 20th OLIVER'S 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 ‘| DODGE ‘52 4 DR. SEDAN, For Sale Used Cars 55 HABEL USED CARS If your cash is slightly low and you want to take it slow Buy a car that’s used, not new The Habel Lot’s the place for you ‘Dl Chev. STATION WAGON Green—Very Clean $1495 ‘50 Buick SPECIAL Dark Green, Radio & Heater $945 ‘00 Chev. 2 Door With Radio & Heater $845 ‘Sl Ford 2 DOOR “8” Fordomatic, Radio & Heater Clean $1195 TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS ‘47 Pont: aes "4% Kaiser .....eeeee ’46 Pont. . “42 Pont. ) | SOFA BED NEARLY NEW, NOT soiled, modern design; mahogany corner cupboard; drop leaf table and chairs: 7 piece bamboo set, on s. 0500 Commerce Rd. EM § PIECE CHROME DI SET. NETTE Excellent cond. OR 3-7724. CLOSING OUT PAINTS RUBBER BASE PAINT, GAL, $3.50 $4.95 Hi-gloss enamel, gal. $2.95 Armstr. plastic vinoflor % price 12 {t. Goldseal Congoleum, % price Bonny Maid Imnaid tile 1 4'2 {t. wall tile rm. ft, 0c . 19¢ SYER'S 141 W. Huron FE _4-3064 WAYNE GABERT’S _ FLOOR SAMPLE SALE Duothérm ot) heater. New floor sample. Reg $13995, Heats 5 rooms $239.95 Bendix electric dryer Flo.r demonstrator ee Motorola TV console — $130.98" ‘Toastmaster water heater, 3 way 50-60-80 gal. cap .... $140 $269 "5 new Crosley le range, fully auto. dix Sentine: TV console. tube Guar ) :r. Many others to choose from Up to 24 months to 1 121 N. Baginaw St FE ELECTROMASTER RANGE. cond. FE 5- 6341. DAVENPORT & CHAIR, GOOD cond., reasonable. FE 2-2166. 9x15 BLUE | REVERSIBLE | ~~ RUG & rubber to pad, m beige chann ae chair; striped —- style chair, 2 Panag wid table, tapestry Sed: Trimble Aluminum frame ‘New picture $89 5-6189 GOOD | MAYTAG WASHER, REBUILT & _ guaranteed. FE 4-6169. _ HANDLEY BROWN CONVERSION L $10. Green hen gas burner, $75. 2 pr. ga seat covers for ‘46 Pontiac sedan _b floor lamp. MI 42210. TFT. , KELVINATOR. REFRIGER- ator, good cond, OR 3-0611. 2 BURNER OIL pene “KEN- __more. Good cond. EM 3-4679. CASH FOR GURNITURE ~~ OR doors 6 pane, coach like new, $15. Wardrobe trunk, $8. Dubonnet twin bed, spreads, $10. B 4 springs, $8. All good cond. 117 Mohawk | PIECE ITALIAN DINING ROOM | set French bedroom complete. Chinese cabinet. Television. Hoo- ver vacuum. Washing machine. Tables, chairs. Extension. 40 ft. ladder. Exhaust fan. Many other ~ _ Pieces. FE 2-0963. DINING ROOM OUTFIT FOR sale, 7 pieces, dark wood. $60. Corner cabinet, $10. FE 3-09010, _ after 5 2. ELECTRIC STOVES — SMALL and iarge. FE 2-5125._ oe USED WASHERS, $15 UP. USED sweepers, $9.95 up. Used elec. ranges, $35 ond up. Used refrig #49 90 up. Cory apt. size dish- washer, $49.50. Used Philco radios, $19.50 up. Demonstrator Hotpoint sink and dishwasher comb., $320. COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR. $60. Innerspring mattress. $15. 50 N. Johnson. TWIN BED INNERSPRING MAT- tresses & springs, good cond. MI __ 4-8899. BEFORE YOU BUY a Sewing Machine See the Necchi or Elna Home Demonstrations With No Obligations. EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE Sewing Machine Sales Co. 21 E. Water FE 2-7848 APPLIANCES FOR RENT! Refrigerators, igor ty stoves and froners. per month. Phone Mr. arr nla WC 108. _ Saginaw. CHROME DINETTE SETS. AS- semble these yourself and oc $39.95. These are brand new 1965 colors. Come in, look, ocenpare, and be convinced of these ex- traordinary bargains. Michigan ladda 393 Orchard Lake ve Used Trade- In Dept. Ot) Heater . Apt. size electric Table top gas range China cabinet Loun hair: at BSSSASEBS Seen: aoe Pea re MAN’S 18 W. Pike only o- vr. NORGE REPRIGERA- rT, se e: ec exc. _cond. PE Solis. ahter 3.90. DINING RM. SUITE, 6 and china cabinet, cheap. FE "DINING RM. sviTe. FE 17-0583. MODERN BLONDE FURNITURE—- Cocktail table. glass top; dinette | table four chairs, pot Pag oh Laan field desk, boudoir chair, Midwest _ #8136 or "Midwest 41289. right; such Television rs Motors “% & _ $39. 1-6 H.P. at $4.00 THE GOOD USEREEPING SHOP | GENERAL gout. Fe. 45591. achine with new DESK, $35. ELECTRO- cams Ping poor tahoe MAple 5§-6531, __tools. Phone OR 3-2717 COMPLETE BED WITH DRAWS in the end. Spring mattress. 7260 Oggp M. A. Benson 549 N. Saginaw ALL SIZES GAS & ELECTRIC heat and cook stoves, ful] auto- matic electric ignition oil fur- maces and floor furnaces, car- buretors and parts for oi] burn- ers, bottle gas tanks, hot plates and fittings for trailers cab- PETRO HEAT SERVICE CO. Associated With Trailer Exchange 60 8. Telegraph Open Open Evenings & Sundays P.M. Anchor Fence FHA app. no. money down. Call FE 5-4962; free estimates, WOLVERINE -LUMBER__ ECKING G co. 300 8. fetes WE 2-0784 SPECIAL New reverse aid unit toilets pc. fix New fully guaranteed 30 gal. g@uto. hot water heaters .. New interior flush doors 95 oathrm ‘gets, comp w- $65 (3B grade) $7 to $8 Mull Une plumbing | ‘& builders supplies uew and used We sell for less. HOLLINGSHEAD VARIETY STORE 7 miles out Baldwin. Armstrong floor coverin and Mac-O-Lac __paints. We sell tor less. GARAGE Material for 14x20’ Garage All Fir $289 00 plus tax Overhea’ Door included HAGGERTY LUMBER CO., 1947 Haggerty Hy. Walled Lake MA 41084 Eves LI 2-5060. REV-MASONRY COATING MADE with latex for exterior and in- terior services of brick, concrete, asbestos siding, cement and cin- cer blocks. Choice of 9 colors Oakland Fuel & fre 436 Or- _ chard Lake, FE 5-615 20° STEEL AND 2%” a IRON furnace. Good cond., . coal _ Teas. FE 4-8898 GARAGE 20x"0 ready cut, $545. FE 4-2575. TWO 1710x185 WHITEWALL TIRES and tubes. Exc. coal stove. Com- plete. Outside toilet: OR 3-082). WARDROBE TRUNK, LIKE NEW: violin and washing machine. 161 Dwight Ave. dirt, sand, re a dirt, and _manure. FE 4-66 TALBOT lath, $1 a bundle; 4x8 sheet gay $1.50; No. 2 box pine, $11 a hundred; No. 2 flooring and in- C & H LUMBER CO. Open from 8 til 7 Mon. thru. Fri. Sat. open from 8 ‘til 5 ote : Open from 10 ‘til 3 holidays, open from 10 ‘til 3 Sree, eieue anksgiving, Xmas _ FE 2-6141 _ RUGS, BED, 2 OVER STUFFED chairs, ? culverts, bath tub, rub- bish barrels. one 3 burner tng _ plate, baby mattress. Surplus Lumber & Material Sales Co. NEW & USED LUMBER 2x4x8 studs, 53c each. 1x4 maple flooring, good quality. 1x8 sheathing. Lge. assortment of used sash. MICH. WHITE PINE, 226, 10c A FT. Open 8 to 5:30 except Sundays 5340 "Highland (M-59) OR 3-1092 HOUSES TO MOVE OR WRECK. ewe $15 Detroit, TRin- FENCING Residential and commercial erected br exereinced men F. H. A. approved. OR 3-1458 RAHAM POST YARD 5445 Dixie Hwy. ‘SAND YOUR OWN FLOORS, FLOOR sanding machines and waxers for rent. e close Wed. afternoons. Barnes Hardware, 742 W. Huron. Clement ELEC. REFRIGS. AND _ == | elect. washing machines. Quar- CONVERT YOUR CITY Gas anteed. $39.50 up. Roy’s replace- — 11 — ae = ment, 96 Oakland Ave on 2- cyclinder omple ‘ = line of appliances. Kenyon el- JACKSON'S RENTAL — gas Cb, 5268 Dixie TT ala Dray- _ton Plans. OR NEW FURNITURE BARGAINS _ wood bed frames. $8.95; bed ows, $2.95 pr.; cotton mat- (ressos—all sizes, $12.95.; inner- sp mattresses, $19.95; unfin- ish drop-leaf tables, $10.95; emall ¢drawer un ests $8 eS metal | beds, $12.98; reall $ 95; 8, AH as a beds, hee 7 chrome sets, $4995. Everything for the home. Bank Furniture. ot Auburn near Saginaw. FE 4-788 SPECIALS 8 pe. walnut dining rm. suite . $49 2 pe. living rm. suite ........ $29 Meade COUCH. ic. 5.) cess $29 Table top gas stove ........ $15 Storage chest .. sae $10 rincess dresser ........ $12 Cabinet base .. $12 Oakland Furniture We uy sell and ~— r 104 6. Saginaw _ 2 PC. LIVING a t toe as new. $60.; Simmons bed spring, $10.; size. FE 4 3 PC, SECTIONAL DAVENETTE. $15. 103 N. Roselawn 20 os gh Or WATER HEAT- $20, OR 31530. VAnErY a CHEST, TWIN spring & mattress, $35; poreeiain top table, $15. MA 56-5531. FIRESTONE WASHER. LIKE “NEW, _45. APpt. 308 454 Auburn. “~~ ELECTRIC RANGE, $40. FE 24742 END TABLES, LAMPS, BEDDIN cork 5-004) household furnish- | fines: 191. ' GAS CALSINATOR. NEVER USED. $75. MY 3-3209. Store Equipment 66B SRP PPB OOOO rae BLONDE 8 FT. MERCHANDISE show cases, table top. See Mr. Hodge, Federal Dept. Store, 91 N. Saginaw SCHAEFFER 15 CU. FT. DEEP freeze, $150. FE 3-9888. ie Equipment — 300 AMP. ARC WELDER: F) GRINDERS: stance Oxy CART; SAND PAPER: LEAD: ETC. COME AND SER It AT 69 LINCOLN APTER Mixers, chain saws, Skilsaw, elc. hammer, pave. aind clay breaker. Pipe dies, etc. PE 4-5240 AIR COMPRESSORS with pavement breakers and clay spades for rent; other aN a CONE’S RENTA 1251 Baldwin FE 2-0077 Plumbing Specials . Fg BATH 8ET A ee TRIM $99.50 32” "GALLON ELECTRIC WATER NTEATE.:8. INSTALLED FREE Or! EDISON LINES... $95.00 4° SOIL PIPE . $3.18 Open Blin dal 5s ae ae 2 p.m. ARNASON. ‘PL UMBING Ph. Ortonville 130. We Deliver UIL HOT WATER HEATER, LGE. __canacity, good cond FE 43369. BATHROOM ~ PIXTURES, SOIL pipes and fixtures, automatic oil Qn4 gas water heaters, ol] and Lar Bo rea ates and "HEIGHTS “SUPPLY 2685 7 &t. Phone FE B4-5432000 PE 4-2521 | Erected by factory trained men. | PROMPT DELIVERY ON BIACK| _Sulation, 1025 Oakland, FE 4-2622. | | COAL FURNACE SUN- | beam, Cheap. EM - /H CC. LITTLE UNDER _ FLOOR furnace $150. 1 yr. old. FE 7-601) USE OUK POOLS, DO YOUR OWN plumbing, wiring, repairing. Com- plete stock soil, sewer crock and ir tie Montcalm Builder's 8u ._ 156 W. Montcalm. FE- 64712, FE 2-7620 Fri.thru. Wed. + to 6:30 Closed every Thur. 22 IN. | 3-3995. USED REFRIG 'UR- naces, ¢.. — Pgs etc. Wayne H nema nace. 408 By faucets, $24.50 value, $14.95. Also toilets, bathtubs, shower stalls at terrific value. These are slightly crate marred. Michigan Fluores- cent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave. FIR 2x4's, 1 cenw L. ft 7x6's & 2x8's, 05 M. K: otty pine paneling, $155 M Del. Complete line of bidg. material In three different grades. BLACKETT’S Building Supplies 16) — a Clarkston 5-4391 HEATIN e STOVE. BROWN enamel jacket, new. OR 30126. GIRL’S STORM COAT. SIZE “792. 26 in. girl's bike. 2 lawn mowers. _ MAple 5-7896. LAD'ES DIAMOND, %_ CARAT ring. Pvt party. reas. FE 4400 SHALLOW WELL PUMP, ONE and pipes $80, perfect cond. MId- west 40040. ae TRENCHING Footings & field tile FE 6-8221. “HEAT YOUR HOME Economically with H.C. Little fully auto. furn. & heaters. The one that lights itself & burns No. 2, or 3 oil. No messy low pilot fire. Floor furnaces a specialty. Demonstrations daily $20 to $40 allowance for our old heater. No cash down, liberal terms. Associated With Trailer 60 8. Telegraph Open Evenings and Sundays P.M. MEDICINE CABINETS, PLATE las« with fluorescent lights. $22.50 A Thompson. Perry VENTILATING FANS FOR KITCH- ens, $3950 values at $2750. Also large selection of door chimes at exceptional values. Michigan Flu- | orescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave AUTHORIZED REO LAWN MOW- LAVATORIES, choclate at WITH) Paint ere & counter for sale. Meny,. many colors to ¢hoose from Our entire stock must go to make additional Prt for expansion for new a AP dn CLAYTON'S 3065 —, Lake Rd. Keego @ tr. FE 5-881! FE 5-8974 _Open 9 till 6. Pri. 9 to 9 LADY WILL SACRIFICE $200 CER- tified rfect diamond ring $125 _ cash. 2-1636. "ROOFING SPECIAL RED RLFND HEXAGON SHINGLES $5.50 PER 100 FT. THYSE HAVE 80 WRaP- PERS. SCREEN DOORS 30°°x87" w. pine door $6.95 32''x80"' w. pine door. $6 95 32''x80'xl¥e we OD., 95. SEWE DRAIN TILE & R PIPE. Sump crock with 2 openings for sand ge grease i ae size $4.40, 12° size $5.68 3B, size $13 32 CEMENT CULVERT PIPE Chioride for uusty roads $2.25 oag Ready Mix Cement 100 Ibs, $1.1 COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE . 3-7101 CAL FURNACE. COMPLETE. Reas. FE 17-0786. _!. CASH FOR SMALL RADIOS, working or not. FE 5-8755. LATHE, 14° SWING, 8 FT. BED. $400. Texaco Gas Station, Bald Eagle Lk., 2140 M-15, State Hwy. FUEL OIL HOT WATER HEATER a. 220 gal. tank, $60. Good cond. OR 3-8435. FLOOR FURNACE, ) SUITABLE ee 4 rooms Ortonville 37R4. 377 Mill St 2 WHEEL CATTLE TRAILER, - $25. MA + 4-2547. SUMP PUMP, GOOD SHAPE, $25. Coal and hot water heater; tank and fittings, like new, $20. FE nee OLF BENDIX | WASHER, $40. 5 G clubs and bag $15. PE4- -9957. SURREY WITH A FRINGE ON . pig $75. Antique cutter, $35. MI 7 CY CLONE FENCE — terials or complete jobs, F.H A. were. Free estimates. FE 4-6343 FLOOR SANDERS, -FURNACE cleaners, wallpaper steamers for rent. Oakland Fuel and ae 436 _ Orchard Lake. FE 5-6150 er service deaier. Pickup and de- liver. OR 3-0951 : CHAIN SAWS — NEW AND USED Hardie Garden and Orchard sprayers. Garden tractors — with reverse gear. Rototillers, large and small. Power mowers — new and used, rotaries and ree] type. Millers Garden & Lawn Equipt 1593 S. Woodward Ave. (north ot 14 Mile Rd.), Birmingham, phone Midwest 4- . Time payments available. We take trade-ins. GLIDDEN'S SPRED on WAR- wick supp.y. E 4-509 STOCKFI STOKER. ALL CON- trols Cheap. Call after 3:30. FE 4 (822. 30 GAL. TOLEDO OIL WATER heater One 275 gal. tank Brand new. $100 cash. EM _ 3-5227. OPEN 8 A.M. 1O 8 P.M. SUNDAY 10 TO 3 LUMBER 4x8 SHEET ROCK $1.35 PER SHEET 1x6, 1x10, 1x12 P. boards .86 thousand sq. ft 2x6 NO. 2 FIR - ® = 10° + 12° - 14° = 16" = 18° $118 er thousand sq_ ft. grade A birch doors. $9.95 outside Boydell paints ee 95 HARDWARE — PLUMBIN BOYDELL PAINTS IF YOU ARE BUILDING A HOUSE DRIVE OUT TO BURMEISTERS AND SAVE UP TO $500 ON ALL MATERIAT* ake sure its Burmeisters Northern Lumber-Co. 7 ley WE DEL MVER With o trecka ‘Serving You Tuc. ery 3.3996 EM 3-4650 Overhead Garage Deors Stop & see the ~“. door with the stubilizing arm o more scuffed side jams tit operate rg! painted Built last the e your ty e 1 & No. 2 ns availab) en” lana, Installation and remodeling service availabe Call for free estimates BERRY DOOR CO. 3% 8 Paddock FE 32-0203 DIAMOND WRISTWATCH, 2 DIA- mond rings. FE 40554. 30 GAL. FUEL OIL WATER HEAT- er and 5 rm. Duo-Therm oil cir- culator, FE 4-2163. 86 E. Yale, LUMBER BUILDERS SUPPLIES Plaster board 4x8x $1.45. Rocklath, 15°°248" bdl. Doors for your home or store. Trim 4& mouldings. clear white pine, Knotty pine and cedar panciing. Plywood, Plyscord Weldtex. Windows and . 4 aes Plooring. oak & Y. Biding. redwood. red v cedar. fir Y. pine. Lumber for all your needs. Priced -5259 right. “ee LUMBER CO. €120 Bogie Lake Rd. at Commerce 2 STACKS USED FLOORING, $30. Built-in —_ tub, $30. Some large work and overhead doors. FHA terms. OR 3-227 : 6 or EM 3-5624 ter, Take ym payments. FE- 71-6157. aft . 4:30 USED FURN CE & STOKER COM- a kt~| ai afters p.m. good cond. p.m 30° «GAL. Sor WATER TANK, outa. heater, kitchen sink, $12. INK, 87; RIGHT hand drainboard. Toilet, $8. Mid- 4-0040. for cottage. mes out oe ust sacrifice, mov- Panny OR 3-1488, 2760 AIR FURNACE, ,_g00d cond. OR 3-7170. “Bad” Nicholie Real Es- _ . 82 Hudson. FOR SALE: A NEW WORLD Btand Laval cream sep- a@rator and a Gem Dandy deluxe electric Good condition. er. Good $50. __after §:30. 7 __ SALE ON USED FURNACES - new burners — FHA financing. Stan Garwood. EM 3-2080. —_— ae Btokol cert 500 Ib. eapacit 5, ec y. _ $235. FE 2-77 Sclues wine 9 PT BY % IN] _ sun lamp: misc. , 30 GAL. Of. HOT WATER HEAT- er and 275 gal. storage tank. FE ROCK HOUNDS mineralites, mineral HOLLAND STOKER. USED 1 WIN. | windows, 2 Dutch doors, 2 PLYWOO ench windows. Large screen sections for porch. 2-0047, At cut = prises cabinet; SUNBEAM COAL FURNACE, doors Cheap. 1023 LaSalle. cegPONTIAC prec co. $1,000 TAKES ALL. BARRETT 1488 Baldwin 1 PE 2-254 heavy duty brake reliner. Van GARAGES = brake drum lathe. Black $506 complete with cement jonae a son al FALL SPECIAL ~ Wood combinaton door ... $18.25 33x15 wood combination basements, @ yellow pages 103, 130 and 194 me WEEDON CO. 1661 E. r, Telegraph Rd. FE ¢2807 USED OIL FURNACE, (ATER _ heater, exe. cond. AUTOMATIC _ ae ne furnace. 55,000 BTUs., $100. Call OA 63190. NORGE OIL HEAT- er, $25. Call after 4 p.m. 158 SPRING SPECIAL _ | Saxe combination door $18.25 33x15 wood combination easements, - Jellow imi 103, 130 and 194 WEEDON Co. 1661 E. Tele Rd. FE 42567 ALL STEEL 2 1 2 WHEEL TRAILER, KENMORE WARM MORNING heater. Like new. $75. MU 44067. REINFORCED tanks. Ph OR 3-7686. AIR DRIED DOUGLAS FIR 1¢ 2 16’ 10c lin. ft. 6 = - is 12c lin, ft 2x8 — rd “4 16c lin. ft. 2x4 to 6c lin. ft. 1x6 Root boards D48 4c lin, ft lx2 — WP. Shelving 12%ec lin. ft HAGGERTY LUMBER CO. Walled eos 947 Haggerty Hy. Ll rics) Nalanda ves. LI 2-506! | $150 one RING. TLE in pioeihem: 82 N. Johnson. FE 2-8453 §5-GAL. OIL DRUMS. Broadway, Lake Orion. 2-6131. - FOR SALE: 4 “GOOD INSIDE HOUSE doors; also quantity of windows. H. P. Sutton. _FE 5-8312 INISHED GLAZED ~PARTI- ney tile available for small rooms. Suitable for toilets and locker room partitions. Reas. -price, pickup and deliver. Schur- rer Construction Co., Pontiac Rd. FE 4-4561. NEW ~ FINISHED GLAZED PAR- 261 epee Call titions; tile available for small rooms, Suitable for toilets and locker room partitions. Reas. price, pickup and deliver. Schur- rer Cnstruction Co., Pontiac Rd. __FE 4-4561 “Sand, Gravel, el, Dirt 68A WANTED FILL DIRT, 20 LOADS, . at Upper Straits Lake : Venice 9-5605 or write E. __bion, Detroit 5, Mich. 4:1 TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, peet & fill dirt. Chap. FE 2-2650. TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, PEET moss, fill dirt, sand & gravel. FE 4-0922. Sure MIX OIRT TOP sOLL, Le . Load or delivered. FE 2-0412, & to 4:30 daily. FE 4-0959. sOIL, TO 7-737) after 4 TOP SOIL * sand, gravel, fill dirt. FE 4-8980. ROAD GRAVEL. DRIVEWAY cement. gravel, fill sand. = 4- 263. Temeet Sand & Gravel. 2 YDS. BLACK DIRT. TOP soIL, peat or manure. 1-7224. TOPSOIL, 8AND Soa AND fil. FE 5-7850 or FE ¢13 SAND. GRAVEL, FILL rE DiRT, TOP soil, Bagi ee FE 5-4631. BEST G P SOIL. BAND. Fen | ¥ ae W. Kelty. FE AMERIC PRODUCT STONE Pit aie T431; LER sa a -9453 ara, t coment gravel, pit ood OA aire. Loading daily 7:30 run, Mon. thru Sat. Call us for attractive prices. We deliver. BLACK DIRT. FILL DIRT. TOP rT sand and gravel. vere Goy- ette, FE 3-0575 or FE 2-31 delivery on sand, Sate Prompt dirt. Black and top soil. FES a RICH TOP BO P0603. & GRAVEL SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP ~ Kenneth Tuttle. FE 4-6108. BAND. GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP soil. rock. FE 2-2817. FE 6-245 BLACK DIRT FOR LAWNS a flowers BLACK Btate tested. Fill sand and gravel. Fe ean PILL Band & Ag FE 46640 soil, black __ dirt & manure. a ox | PROMPT | D Y ON 7 a sand, gravel, fill dirt. and ro manure. FE 4-66: 4 GRAVEL. ct sae. ND. FILE DIRT RT AND rich heavy . Sand | and Gravel. bn 3-7716 ROAD GRAVEL, PARKING LOT ravel fill. Wilkinson Sand Gravel. FE 4-6218. ) AND D GRAVEL, trucking Sporting Goods o8B 2 CAL. WALNUT HILL TARGET rifle and mahogany case. §75. 12X unertl scope, $75. FE 2-467, 2657 Woodbine Dr. ee SHOTGUNS, — & REVOLV- ers, $12.50 up. Will trade. Bur- _ Shell Gun Shop, 378 8. Telegraph. 35 REMINGTON GAME MASTER _ Practically new. OR 3-6151. 12 GAUGE REMINGTON AUTO- matic with Polly choke. 1 wall tent 7x9. 10232 abeth Lk. Rd., Oxbow _ HUNTING ARROWS $13 A DOZ. 9405 E. Commerce Art Lawson Gun Shop GUN = aaa "hee ORS OR coal Carland’s Gun from Airport. WANTED PROT GUNS AND DEER rifles. Manley Leach, 10 Bagley. HOT WATER Lene al . 30 — gas, new, approv use Bidson & ge ee lines 389.50 value at $49. tly marred. Al- so elec. oil ang bottle gas, heat- ers at rrific values. igan ae vane ve. SELLING BELOW WHOLESALE LINOLEUM AND TILE Ree. 10¢ Asphalt tile 3%c: $4.95-—9x12 lino 3 . reg. 4% ft. wall tile l5e; reg. 58 lin m rem- nants 75c yd.; 12 ft. -_— Be oleums 50 pet. — = Dutch + Cr Ay pa! linoleum Harold's, 140 S Saginaw Free _ Delive ed FE 26450 DOUBLE STAMPS TODAY terial. GE RANGE, GOOD on! OT, | Wood, Coal, Fuel 69A GOOD SLAB WOOD. 06 CORD OR 2 for $11. Del. FE 5-3086 after 4. GOOD DRY SLAB D $6.00 cord, 2 for $11.00 vered. FE 4-6588. SLAB WO WOOD. OR 36458 OR FE Planta, Trees, Shrubs 70 PLANT NOW saie of evergreens. iskeside - Nurser jursery Fall = | Dogs Trained, beaded 71 sell for $75, 10 cut diamonds set |. BARTLETT PEARS, PRUNE PLUMS, green gage plums, crabapples, grapes. apples. 1% mi. E. of Bald- win on Walton at roadside Sun- day. _ PEARS, YOU PICK, $1.50 BU. 3450 Lone Pine Rd.. Of Middlebelt. GRADED TOMATOES $1.00 BU., Delivered $1.50 bu. Ph. OA 8-2618. PEACHES FOR SALE PICK YOUR own. gd per bushel, 3356 Bald Mountain Rd. ee MILLER‘'8 ORCHARD — BART- lett, Pears; sprayed 6230 Orchard Lake. PEACHES ARE NOW RIPE AT Suttons Orchard 324 Lake _ Ange.ss FE $1809 ee YORKWIN SEED WHEAT. PLENTY of it. Leave order before we take price support. A. G. Howe & Sons, __ 5465 Oakwood Rd. STRAW 30c PER BALE, IN FIELD. MA 6-2996. ~ PEACHES High quality ‘ruit, drive in and see us 800 Grange Hal) Rd. _ Ortonville. Z . PEARS YOU PICK. $1.50 BU. 3 Lone Pine Rd. off Middlebelt. BARTLETT PEARS, CLEAN sprayed fruit. Bring own contain- ers. 28450 Haggerty Hwy. ‘« mile _ north of 12 Mile Rd., Farmington. BARTLETT PEARS, POPULAR VA- rieties of apples. Sprayed fruit. Kingsbury, 2330 Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion. MY 3-5703. TOMATOES Now ready for canning. Pick ‘em ourseiul $1. ting own containers. Adults only in field. Not Open this Sunday. 3660 Giddings Rd FE 5-6660 TOMATOES, $1.50 TO $2.00 BU; also peppers. FE 4-4228. 775 Scott _ Lake Rd TOMATOES. OR 3-8453 PLUMS FOR CANNING & EAT- ing. Holtz’s Orchard. John R. Rd., south: of Auburn. OL 2- 1097. : HOME "DRESSED BEEF & PORK. _Opdyke Market. APPLES, BARTLETT PEARS, Prune plums. Waterford Hill Farms. 5941 Dixie Hwy. ~ BOICE’S ORCHARD _ 5935 Cooley Lk. . lft off = 2. Bz ARTL. Du T 'p EARS GREEN GAGE PLUMS Open 9 a. m. to 8 p m TOMATOES. 202 LAKE ANGELUS Rd. FE 4-0627. For Sale Pets 71iG CBP eee HOUNDS FOR SALE: 2 RABBIT & 1 coon. 289 W. Wilson REG. ENGLISH SETTER. 8915 VAN Gordon (Union Lake village). EM 3-8531. AKC BEAGL&, FEMALE, 1'4 YRS. old, excellent stock. Call between $:30 & 7. FE 4-3443. ENGLISH SETTERS, 5 MOS. OLD, AKC registered, 2 males, 1 female, AKC REG. BEAGLE, IDEAL GUN dog, sale or trade. FE 4-9165. 2 REG. GERMAN POINTERS. 118 _E. Beverly. FE 4-0419. EXTRA NICE PART PERSIAN KIT- ten. FE 3-7257 TROPICAL FISH 186 State St. FE 4-1873 GUINEA PIGS, BIRD_ A: Pet Shop. 6@ S. Astor, 4-6433 FE one miw2 Lapeer. REG. GERMAN POINTER. 3 YRS. old. Ph. Southfield 3234 Melrose. level bushel basket. | “BUPPLIES. FOR SALE REGISTERED ENG- BABY PARAKEETS. FE 2-3340. 791 GOOD CLEAN WHEAT STRAW eo 8 bale aisc good mixed hay. | Leroy Calkins. FE 46588 YORKWIN SEED WHEAT. GROWN from certified seed. $2.35 bu. 688 E. Avon, Rochester. OL 6-2103. Sale ‘Farm Equipment | 76 USED BARGAINS CASE CORN BINDER, LIKE NEW JOHN DEERE PTO. BINDER CASE SILO FILLER GEHL SILO FILLER PAPEC SIO FILER FORAGE HARVESTERS, _B ERS, WAGON UNLOADERS. CASE COMBINES, t) . CASE FIELD TILLER PLOWS HARROWS, DISCS ! Houghten & Son, Ine. YOUR AUTHORIZED J. I CASH SALES AND SERVICE It Costs Less to Farm with Case’ Ph. OLive 1-761 Ph. Romeo 2522 1 15-IN. SEARS ROEBUCK HAM- ayoboy ill for sale. A-1 shape. MA 6 JOHN DEFRE POTATO DIGGER, _ George Miller, MA 53918. 2 ONLY WE HAVE 2 NEW HOLLANDS AUGER TYPE ENSILAGE BLOW- ERS TO SELL AT A BIG SAV- INGS TO YOU ALSO 2 USED CHOPPERS BLACKETT INC. YOUR laa hee DEALER 5454 Dixie Hwy. Waterford ELECTRIC gg $7.50. 22° ventilator fan laa Clip- _ master, $20. rE 4 4-99: _ WHEAT PLANTING ae E WILL BE HERE SOON. BE 8BAFE, PLACE YOUR ORDER FOR eg oe NOW (el 40734 or FE €1113 KIN ‘G BROS. Your I-H Dealer’ Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke NEARLY NEW McCORMICK CORN binder, with conveyor bundle car- rier ractor drawn. 561171 Dee quindre ee BOLENS 2'2 HORSE GARDEN tractor with all attachments, cost $560 2 7 Qgo, sacrifice for $200. MA 42547. tires and tubes, rims and wheels 2-650x16 implement tires an tubes, tubes and wheels. _ WE HAVE ON Sino SEVERAL GOOD USED TRACTORS. ONE $35 each. Tarry Farms, Rochester. SOME D USED —OLive 2-3779 __._| GARDEN LfRACTOR®S AND AKC REG. DACHSHUND ROTO-TILLERS FE 4-3425 1 eecteait ceceis TOY MANCHESTER T ER 1 ER 8. FE 407M or FE ¢1112 AKC, some champion’ sired, $50 up: also collie puppies. tA " KING BROS. Kennels, 6268 W. Mt. Morris Rd., _ Mt. Morris, Mich. Ph. 7-9500. Your I-H Dealer 2 AKC COCKER PUPS, 10 WKS} Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke | old, $25. MA 5-6298. i951 Ford tractor with plow, new drag, new 2 row cultivator, off set disc, all for $1,195. Michigan Auction Mart Inc. M-24 & Indian- __ wood Rd. Lake Orion. BIG SALE New Holland Choppers with or with- out engine cn blowers. This brand new equipment will be sold at substantial savings to you. This equipment has had ware house protection all winter. BLACKFTT, INC. YOUR wERGUSON DEALER lisn Pointers ti mos. old from rovep gun dogs 5 eng te 5454 Dixis Highway Waterford eee ee eel ece Mick, | MCCORMICK CORN BINDER WITH bundle carrier, good condition. 900 Coats Rd., Oxford, Mich. _ CORN CRIBS, CORN CRIBBING, new and used corn pickers, stock tanks; DAVIS MACHINERY, Ph, 45 Ortonville. __ Park No. @. FE 5-004 SPECIAL PARAKEETS $4.50. BEAUTIFUL JREG. ‘COLLIES, 4 MO. old and 1 ‘yr. colors. 4215 Pontiac Trail, chard Lake. FE 2-3450. 5-6951. 39 Ivy. BOXER FOR SALE. _ formation, phone FE 2-3497. DALMATIAN ©DOG, 9 old. FE 4-8904. NOW AVAIL . FORJAN KENNELS OR 3-0265. yr. old male English Guaranteed for pheasant & duck retriever, also 1% yr. old "Price. For good hunting. Reas. _FE 3-739. TROPICAL FISH & SUPPLIES Pincumbe’s. 49 Park 8t., Oxford. OA 82876 Eves. and Opalines, FE 4-6960. 1304 Mt. Clemens GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPs, “AKC reg. FE .»-0966. PEKINGESE PUPPIES. AKC REG. -Housebroken. F 17-7927. 2 MALE GERMAN SHEPHERD puppes 3 mo., Champion bred. FE 5-6452. AKC REG. BEAGLES, ALSO { English Pointer. FE 2-2468 SPRINGER SPANIELS AT 8S fice, Overstocked kennels. Puppies soeueew™ stock. Boarding. FE LEG. PARAKEETS, CANARIES, CAGES, food. Since 1927. 684 Oakland Ave. TROPICAL FISH ome DANE —suFP ins. . AKC PARAKEETS AND CANARIES, 2489 Aubura RD. NEAR Crooks FE- For Sale Poultry 72 10 LARGE FEEDER PIGS. 6310 _W. | ». Walled Lake. 2 YR. OLD SHETLAND PONY, ASors $125 30077 Van Dyke Utica 9 HEAD ROAN DURHAM FEED- __e? steers OL 6-2601. s0W Nat * ¥ ‘6 WKS. OLD PIGS FE is SADDLE HORSES WITH SAD- __ dies and bridies. 3085 Lapeer Ra. ABERDINE ANGUS HERD . SOME with calves by side; also oustanding "pedigree. Priced ping. 40M Perry, Pie $6113 591 Fourth, Closed Sun. FE 2-4025 old. Sables & tri- Or- PRICED FOR QUICK SALE. AKC registered male beagle pups, FE FOR _ IN- | = -MONTHS GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES VAILABLE OUTSTANDING WELL TRAINED 5 Pointer. ADORABLE BABY PARAKEET sACRI- GARDEN TRACTORS Rotary Mowers Service and Repair 1EE‘S SALES & FE 3-9830 921 Mt. Clemens ct. ONE MAN CHAIN SAWS NEW & USED Stop in for a ar ounaton. time per mene available. Miller's Gar- den & Lawn Equipment, Pag Sy 8. Woodward (nort oft 14 Mile Rd.), __ Birmingham. Ph. 4-6000. CHAIN SAWS, 16” a & 26" ue 50. Free demonstration. MY BOLENS GARDEN TRACTORS, 3 HP to 6 HP Ridemaster. Plows, cu'tivators, discs. sycle _ weed cutters. wheel weights, ers mowers & grater slades, Some used tractors & lawnmowe ers Special sale on new mowers. Evans Equipment, 6507 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-7878 JUST PURCH. American co pickers. Retail rice $1, Dist w fle they $495. sed 1 row corn pickers. oice of 3, $195 Used New Idea, 2 row, $195 D 15 new great . Also corn binders & corn choppers. Selection of blowers. Bilo fillers. Michigan Auction Mart Inc. M-24 & Indianwood Rd., Lake Orion. 77 _ Auction. Sales Soda hn W. E. BILL NAGY— ear t pe auction anywhere. Of- ice phone 636 Lapeer. ANTIQUE & FURNITURE ~ AUC- “tion Wed. Sept. 16, - m. 43 N. Washington St.. oxtord An- tique china, glass picture frames, square pine chests. spinnin wheel and reel, chair, cow ells, jugs. books, doilies, pillow shams, ee on ae also By i itchen,dining rm Vv rm, ‘ BEAGLE | did Beagle, Broke oa fab furniture, rm., furniture, rugs, bite and binds, AKC ree. Hac. | curtains, dishes, shop and Garcen 3-6840._ Will consider trade OR | Qe rey an arnold & : R. J. Hickmott, auctioneers Ph OA 8-2226, Oxford _ FARM AUCTION THURS. SEPT. 17, 1:30 p. m. at 3530 Robie Rd, of — or 4 mi, 3848 Beachgrove FE 2-1548 of — x" —< .. = c tra fine ols eifers, ~AQUATI GARD ENS 18 months old, 2 steers, 35 sheep, beh FISH & wa! =~ 1,000 bales of Alfalfa mixed hay, 87_N. MILL 8T E 4-: 2853 335 bu. oats, = Chrysler sedan, Lee eae —— —* reg. To be sure of the best, buy Cee Danes from a member of the mott, auctioneers Ph. A o2ize, reat Danes Club of Michigan _ Oxford. 315 Wattles Rd. Corn. of Squirrel) WED. SEPT. 16TH AT 1:30. 2M -+ Bloomfield Hills. miles north of Ortonville on _— milkers com can Shults ARAAA FS ARF AA AR AAAAAAALAA cooler. 10 m cai. ae 18 LAYING WHITE LEG HORN| Wagon, Ontario 1, AG? ston, _ hens, om 8 ar ol 2-605.) “Brop's Metamore, apenk. oer: FRYERS, LBS., $1. 9935) H. A Fritch, 0 . _M-15, 3 mi. N. of Clarkston. Ph OA 82814. For Sale Livestock 73 | *T_ ACTON (uel File norma & % mile erst of Armada at 13 HAMPSHIRE EWES AND 14| 23727 Dayton Rd. on Tues. Sept. lems. a0) Netley Rd., just off 3 oot a clock. a tod ymour . a . is HEAD OF REGISTERED HOL-|_™#n, Auctioneer. stein cows end heifers, fresh and AUCTION due this Ring's Best of Fee & RU y Rag Apple breeding. Call Dood) pags’ pepe ith, ek 1:20 Bm. ord, OA 8-294 at LE SMART SALE FARM, 17 moa Ol 3. STEIN HEIFER. 30 W. Tienken ester, ites) NOTE PLAN TO PLANE Ta gin G LARGE 3° YR, OLD HOLSTEIN LN Ste 1 sale will consist milk 2384 Dueck Lk. +| largely of 8, of vari- (a esi south of M-60). hUteal aie slses and varieties for mod = ern landsca . Poses ORRIEDALE eo gsi oe rly — e rams, au more * yearn 3-3855. ee Also, offered will be some present. Come, whether buy 2-—650x16 im lagen tires,’ 2601. 2— 1128 se LeTORE = TRACTOR» ee eee a ee THIRTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 . Akihito Visiting Shrines of U. S. Japdn’s Crown Prince Takes Philly Tour a Ex-American Tutor PHILADELPHIA (® — Japan's) Crown Prince Akihito, a shy, man- netly heir-apparent to the oldest crown in the world, set out to-| day on a tour of the historic shrine of American independence, guided | by the woman who first taught him the meaning of democracy. The short, slender Prince is spending three days in the birth- place of the United States as part of a world tour designed \to show | him the makeup of a worJd which | he knew seven years ago only by | hearsay. This is the Prince's first trip from his homeland. ny * * | Today the Prince visits a hous- ing project of the American, Friends’ Service Committee in| whick™he has expressed ~a_ parti- | cular interest. He.then will go to the grave of Benjamin Franklin, | Old Christ Church and the home of Betsy Ross. Later the Prince visits Indepen- | dence Hall and the Liberty Bell and the Declaration Room. At 19 the eldest sen of Emperor | Hirohito,. Akihito arrived here by plane last night after spending the weekend in Newport News, Va. At the airport to greet him was state- ly, soft-spoken Mrs. Elizabeth Gray Vining, a widowed author of children’s books who took oyer the ' Prince's education in 1946 and tutored him for four years. | * * * | Rudyard kipling’s statement | that ‘East is East and West is | West and ne‘er the twain shall | meet’? seemed out of focus when the plane landed last night. Mrs. Vining, dressed in dark blue | trimmed with aquamarine and a} fur neckpiece, strode to the ramp. | They clasped hands just as any two friends might who met after | a long separation. They turned to face the photo- graphers. The Prince’s face was somber until Mrs. Vining lightly remarked as a photographer called for another handclasp: | “But this the fourth hand | shake.” Off they went in a limousine to, Mrs. Vining’s small home in Mt. | Airy where the Prince dined on his | favorite meal of jellied chicken | soup, rice curry, and side dishes | Sentenced Gl Flees, | Likely to Red Zone — HEIDELBERG, Germany ww —| is U. S. Army Headquarters said to- day that Pvt. Norman M. Lowell , Jr., 23, of Somerville, Mass., jump: | ed from a military train-and pre- sumably fled into the Russian zone | as he was being taken to serve al guardhouse term in West Germany. The soldier, under a six-month sentence for exploding a smoke | bomb in a barracks prank in Ber- | lin, eluded his guards as the train | pulled out from a border check point at Helmstedt last Friday night. Army authorities said pina jumped through a window and dis- appeared into the darkness. He | was presumed ‘to have gone és the Soviet occupation zone, where several soldiers facing guardhouse | terms have fled in the past. | Royal Oak to Organize Air Warden Program | ROYAL OAK — Both men and | women are urged to attend a meet- ing tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the American Legion Hall to ofganize | an air raid warden service pro- | gram. Chief Warden David L. Miller will explain the two-year training program to meet emergency needs | for peace or wartime. Nevada, lation. PERSONAL protection For your resulting from a personal injury accident, Call or See BRUMMETT- LINCICOME, Hard to pronounce. but INC easy to settle with! 7 eral Insurance . 367 KE, Pike FE 4-0588 sixth largest state in | the Union, is the smallest in popu- | Plots Revenge From Jail Cell and Succeeds PHILADELPHIA — Willie F. Wiggans, 38, released Saturday morning after serving 11 days in that he pulled the alarm to sum-'3 Car Stowaways two thugs, Saturday, he started a| mon help when he was held up by determined search for the seis men, , He spotted one of them yesterday and called police who arrested 51- Lindsay, Lindsay year-old Harry ‘young Poles slipped through ithe comfortable | identify, checked their stories. The refugees told police Escape Iron Curtain OSLO, Norway W® — Three! the Iron Curtain by stowing away in seats of Soviet- hid in one of the cars destined for Norway. the county prison for pulling a fire admitted the holdup, police said. uit autos being exported to Nor-| The Oksywie docked here/late| knocked over some garbage cans,/§ 3149 W. Huron FE 4-5791 alarm, set out to geet retribution a| Later, police arrested Noah Haines way in the hold of the Polish Saturday and the young men came|knicked the corner of the home| | soon as he was released. at his home, after Lindsay named| freighter Oksywie, police reported ashore early yesterday and re | | behind his, and finally ground to| The Philadelphian had pleaded! Haines as his accomplice. today. ported to police. a _ halt, ee | The three, whom police did not asked for asylum and! were detained while authorities | Driver Made It Home: | Who Moved the Garage? | they | | sneaked aboard the 768-ton vessel in the Polish port of Gdynia and 41 Moskowich | garage, picket fence behind the garage, 14. : — PONTIAC’S OLDEST | TV SERVICE DEALER! — Authorized Facfory Service for 1S Different Manufacturers BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE ight booked Ralph Henry Fisher, | 7, for public drunkenness, Officers said he wheeled his-car | into his driveway, drove into his through the back, hit a| TULSA, Okla. ® — Police last} n 15 | ‘NO MONEY DOWN TAKE 36 MONTHS TO PAY UNDER F.H.A, PLAN! NX Wz b--A_ Zits.) HOMART HEAT FOR ALL TYPES OF HOMES Gas... Oil... Coal fired systems—oll com- pletely installed and financed ot Sears. Pay no money down. Up to 36 months to pay under INSTALLATION CAN BE ARRANGED & FOR AND FINANCED FOR ALL HOMART HEATING ‘EQUIPMENT! | "Homart Oil Tanks Install in Basement or Garage Holds 220 42.95 Gallons Be sure of plenty of reserve oil. for your heating plant with this vertical type fuel aa VL » epproved. ore 8 Dust-Stop F Filters Keeps Home Air Cleaner As Low As 89¢ Replace your old air filter with a new one trom Sears. Traps dust, dirt, and pollen, allows air to pass through. Comfort HOMART OIL FIRED BOILER cs 30 Homart oil boiler operates efficiently forced hot water or in any gravity, steam heating system. enclosed boiler is double-tested before Save. shipment. Enjoy Your Full Share of Home ALL TYPES OF HO Br eA ES 5h {EDS ores Get More Features for Less Money CONVERSION 2.21°° Down Includes All Materials for Standard Installation Convert your warm air, hot water or steam heating system to efficient Homart automatic oil heat. Designed for the new catalytically cracked fuel No. 1 and Vg h.p. motcr. Sears will help arrange installation, financ- ing. Se ON AnORO rte 95 Less Controls Completely Get Ready for Winter Now! EFFICIENT OIL FIRED FURNACE 339” NOW ONLY Econcmical, efficient oil-fired furnace with blower, filter and thermostat. In- cludes primary control, fan and limit controls. Ask for details now! Plumbing and Heating Dept.— Perry St. Basement Complete with Controls! Homart Automatic Oil Floor Furnaces ane (| This. Homart ‘furnace will keep the air in your home fresh and hedalthful—no dirt or odors! Call Sears now . Coll FE 5-4171. basements. before cold weather! ¥ Full 80,000 BTU Capacity E S ay Say ‘Goodbye’ to Washday Blues! Sturdily Constructed, Leakproof, Smoothly Finished HOMART LAUNDRY TUBS Priced Way Low 9° New modern Icok and-con- struction! Perfect com- panion to the automatic washer. Leakproof fiber- glass tub has anti-chip alu- minum rim. Sturdy white enameled outer cabinet! Storage area behind sliding panel door. Includes swing spout faucet. Connect to automatic washer on either side! he agence 7 { ne ee Bes Bes Be ; , ve 43 Ge Bes Your Bathroom Becomes a Beauty Room with This Pleasing Trio! Colored Steel Ensemble @ 3 Pieces Complete @ Save on Sears Low Price 179°” Make Your Purchases On Sears Easy Payment Plan (Usual Carrying Charge) @ Choice of 3 Eye-Pleasing Colors @ Smart Chrome-Plated Trim, Legs Budget-pleasing, 3-pc. Homart steel bath- room ensemble includes steel tub, finished -in easy-to-clean vitreous enamel and matching lavatory and toilet in vitreous china. COLORS: © Blue © Sage Green © Spice Beige 30 20° Size, Ref. 199.50 50 Reg. 50 He Money Down 239.50 With on FHA Controls Tere, Massive one-piece radiator especially designed for long Your bathroom needn't be dull and drab. Enjoy ad- Ideal for homes without heat travel!!! Assures maximum heat from the coal you vanced styling and stand-out quality now! Includes 5- burn. years. . . have a Homart installed Sialisfaction guatantitd ov your mousy back” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 Homart Heating Perfection for 5-Room Home! Coal Furnace Installation arranged for! Call today for information! Homart Bath Euserablos in Refreshing Colors Bath Ensembles | Guaranteed for 20 ft. cast iron tub, 18x22-in. davatory and toilet outfit. In Harmony House Spice Beige, Mint Green, Light Blue. FE See fe ee eee