42 Dead in Wake of Hu Both M‘Carthy, Stevens | Censured by Committee } The, Weather As Thursday—Showers. Pelien Count:- 39 ae Detalis Page Twe —*- ~ ate) PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1954—40 PAGES al a . t f kkkke — 7 NTIAC PRIRMGSVER PAGES ricane Car - cee armen: — — = = : ~~ } ‘Wreckage of Boats Piled on Martha's Vi rec age a : ed on = as Vineyard Docks New England Totes. Up 3 = Damage of $300 Million 112th YEAR 7% ee a a en et Cad i] Watkins Tough on Senator as Current Hearing Starts Second Day WASHINGTON (AP )—+ Senators who spent 36 tur- bulent days probing the McCarthy-Army row split last. night on whether Sen. McCatthy (R-Wis) was at fault, but all of them aimed barbs at Roy M. Cohn and two high Army officials. Republicans and Demo- crats diverged in parceling out responsibility in the controversy. Republicans absolved Mc- Carthy of improper con- duct but said he had been lax. as ; ’ The Republicans said Cohn was “unduly aggressive persis- tent” in behalf of a weal- 1 they called his unjustified efforts to win privileges for The verdicts of the investigating senators, officially released (Continued on Page 21, Col. 7) Hitler Started War 15 Years Ago Today FRANKFURT @®—Adolf Hitler started World War IT 15 years ago WASHINGTON (INS) — The newly-launched inves- tigation of misconduct charges against Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy moved into its second day today -with a king-size squabble already under way between McCar- thy and Sen. Arthur V. Watkins (R-Utah). . The Wisconsin Republi- can said he is asking Chair- man Watkins of the special Senate committee to reverse the ruling which bars Mc- Carthy from further check- ing into whether unfriendly remarks were made by an- other member of the group. At issue is a March 12 "| story in the Denver Post quoting Sen. Edwin C. John- son (D-Col) as saying Dem- ocratic leaders in Congress loathe McCarthy. Johnson is.vice chairman of the committee holding hearings on the question of whether McCarthy should be censured. of the opening session revolved about Johnson and the Denver Post story. and all members of the committee asking a reversal of Watkin's rul- “He's got to-go to the Senate.” McCarthy protested there “is mo way of appealing to the Sen- ate now because Mt is not in : Germany Hinted as NATO All U.S. May Push’ Bonn Killed EDC WASHINGTON (UP)—The Unit-+ ed States may ask its European Allies to align West Germany with the North Atlantic Treaty Organi- zation now that France has killed the ‘European army pian, officials disclosed today. They said they see no other answer to the German rearmament; @m at this stage. However,’ it is understood that President final decision on the explosive problem. : France. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles gave France an unprece- dented scolding Tuesday for killing the Eurpean Defense Community (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) re | “Several 25-24's were fired in the Now That France Has! early portion of the round. These of é : . : 4 abi J > . on. Capt. Alberto Guerrero and Col. Salvadore Roig both compiled per- fect rounds of 2% on their ist two tests in the 28-gauge event. Jaime Loyola, another member of the team, broke 24-24 at his half-way mark. included cards by George Morin of Fairchild, Wash., W. R. Schaef- fer of Bridgeport, Conn., Chet Fouche of Spokane, Wash., and Graham Steele of Ft. Sumner, New petitor. One 2-straight was fired by Frank Cabell df Jackson, Miss., to start his 28-gauge round. Entries in the national cham- pionships’ biggest feature, the high (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) In Today’s Press" . 3 Eadie Canter 2 Comics . 32 Céunty News rr | Réitertats . Ae it Eeity Post ........ asa Hal Boyle . it . ere EET: | Potterms . ........ is, 18 TT of beds Ce Service News ... expevag eee | one od ceeeceneccess oa, 2, 3, 31 Want Ads «++ 34, 35, 36, 37, 38 Women's Pages ..... Ms, 14, 17, 18, 19 T Widely syndicated columnist Mexico, the NSSA's ‘‘longest'’ com: | tomorrow 80 te 84. Helping Skeet Shooters : By H. GUY MOATS ed improved wind conditions to boost the percentage of hits in all eventS-of their tournament now undér way at | -| the Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club.- Indications of what was in store were seen in the early rounds fired by members-of the Puerto Riean police team Pointe Family Reported Sate in Maine Storm ROCKLAND, Maine @—The %- foot sloop Kafahdin, unreported in Hurricane Carol,_was—found—sefe today at Larry's Istand,-near the | thoroughfare between Vinalhaven | and North Haven. } Aboard the craft were Mr. and Mrs. John Hutchins of Grosse | Pointe, Mich., their sdf-Peter, 13, | their—deughter,— Wynne, 9. anit | Thomas Lytle, 4th, son of Mr. and | Mrs. Thomas Lytle, 3rd, of Grosse Pointe. } Mrs. Richard Krementz of Camden, mother of Mrs, Hutch- inson, was advised that the Ka- tahdin -had- been found by the | Coast Guard tug 64300, Hiitchinson, an official of the Hutchinson, chairman of the fi- | nance committee of Chrysler. The | younger Hutchinson is g member | of the Grosse Pointe Farms City | Council. | Wi pital BUILDINGS KNOCKED INTO driven up on the docks and bujidings knocked into the water in the , Menemsha section of Martha's howling hurricane. accompanied by fiercely. driving rain struck causing millions of dollars damage, New England, on City Hospi 2 on issuance of $3,000,000 in tign to Pontiac General Hos A second vote by city property owners will be cast Nov. AP Wirephete WATER—Boats were sunk, then ineyard, Mass., yesterday as a (Additional fal Expansion Screaming Storm Batters at Coast for 12 Hours; 3 Million People Lose Electricity ‘— BOSTON (UP) — At least 42 persons were known dead and property damage mounted to nearly $300,000,000 today in the wake of Hurricane Carol's 12-hour stampede along the heavily-populated northeastern seaboard. As the week-old storm blew itself out in eastern Can- ada, hurricane hunters investigated a new tropical dis- turbance east of Florida which may develop into the season's fourth hurricane, The new storm was moving northwest at 25 miles per hour, with winds up to 50 miles per hour, at a point about 750 miles east of Miami, Fla. Emergency. power crews from Pennsylvania, New Jer- sey and New York were rushed into New England to help restore electric service to an estimated 3,000,000 persons, Governors in all New? — oe England , states mobilized | National Guard, state and Offers to Buy local police and civil de- | Ae get fense workers to aid in the) gigantic job of clearing highways and _ protecting ae ed property from} Realtor Wants Site for oovers, Development as Big Housing Project An offer to buy Pontiac Muni- Disaster headquarters were set up in scores of coniiitinities to feed and shelter the homeless bonds to construct an addi- pital. An ordinancé given final approval by city commission- ers last night places the proposal_on the November gen- eral eléction ballot. The plan to issue tax- suppogied, general-obliga- .|tion bonds was originally yoted down April 5 when it failed to win the needed 60 per cent supporting vote, 031 favored it with 4,766 opposed. Citizens eligible -to vote on the MISTORIC CHURCH DAMAGED—A pile of rubble is all that is left | Westion include anyone in Pon- Old North Church, in Boston, from which Paul |#¢ paying city faxes, The hus- | that sent him on his famous ride. The | >and or wife of any taxpayer also | under the impact ef Hurricane Carol's | ©" vote, provided the person is a registered voter.. Those paying only special assessments are not | voters (81 per | $1,000 of assessed property valua- tien) tax-limit ticrease to back | & hospital bond issue and ne = vote is needed on ap- In the April balloting did appreve a + i-mill provat Of tax money to retire | the bonds. If voters accept the plan, enly | half of the 1 milt authorized would | be taxed, with the hospital paying | the other % mill from its income, according to City Manager Walter K. Willman. The tax rate would not be raised pver the 1953 figure of 13.80 mills | ($13.80 per $1,000 of valuation), iiiman states, because the hos- | ‘funds. would be substituted for tax ‘money now used for debt i retirement, but no longer needed after this year, Commissioners Floyd P.. Miles / (District 4) and Harry W. Lutz) (District 7) last night voiced op- position to the plan saying they | feet the county should carry part} (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) | ——— } | Boy’s Ist Robbery Case —Nobody Believed Him WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. «) — A little boy rushed in and told his} “somebody's robbing the | supermarket."’ “Aw, go on out and play,” they | scoffed, knowing how he loved to/ play cops and robbers. {- Chrysler Corp., is thé son of B. E.| Out he trudged, crestfallen. His | about 12:15 a.m first big case and nobody believed him. T. J, Hubbard, manager of the | marke, yesterday reported to po- | liee that a safe had been opened | the night before and $112 stolen. Showers Forecast With Mercury Rise Scattered showers late~ hesige and | and Thursday is the forecast for Pontiac and vicinity. The. U. S. Weather Bureau says it will be cloudy and warmer to- night with a low of 60 to 64, high Yesterday in downtown Pontiac the low wasi53 with a high of 73. This morning at 8:00 the tem- perature ‘stood at 58. By 1 p.m. it ‘had risen to 75... Industry brought to a = seatetal tl beonsing. The peo: | Earl: Wilson starts his colorful oe heen ioe om. a daily column about celebrities and- shan a Conan tie country people in,the public eye. Read to- is divided between East and West. day and everyday in the Pontiac: unarmed nation the + 2 op sana strategic cromsrands of Press: “It Happened Last Night, Pi lt waits, for sovereignty. by act tee x" ¥ ‘1 “t . ; * | Z Open & Country Store for Bhopping Center. p i That's the 20 CALLS And sold the first day! ONE SHALLOW WELL PUMP excellent condition, cheap. OF 3-8762 And there are still 19 people wanting to buy a pump. : kind —of—aectien you Soncrainte, veterine day that the dog “was let out the ee eee house for his usual ¢vening \walk | “The clean, ‘cout ‘eae ‘alone previously, no act YES “Sandy returned a féw minutes: : ; that he was hurt, He was quiet as usual, so we didn't think anything was the matter. . “We became suspicious, fl ' i i at eee 4r ‘Polio Strikes 3 in Birmingham, | BIRMINGHAM—Three new polio cases to eg The illness of a five year old boy | Torry. whichever is has not been positively diagnosed ther home, with fourth | as polio, Mrs, Gillette From Our Birmingham Burean (aims BIRMINGHAM—Supt. of Schools "earest ‘other five year old boy_and!a 32 year old mother of two children are non-paralytic cases Se Pontiac Deaths J. Richard Tatro Despite the temporary locations pupils will -be assigned to the reguiar teachers, with classroom | units kept intact when the move is | made into Pembroke. Parents also | will . notified of transportation | pPruv isionns diy of school next Tuesday “On this day class sizes are joudied, and if there are ; adjust- -" ments te be made these changes. can be érranged Tuesday after- noon so everything will be ready for_a full day of school on Wednes day.” ~ . Half-day sessions witli siart al } Word has been received here of At the same time, he an 9 a. m. Tuesday for all elemen. | the death of J. Richard Tatro of nounced that the new “Pem- | tary, pupils and Birmingham High | Tower, formerly of Pontiac, after broke School cannot possibly be ready for eccupancy by children | ‘ on Sept. 7, aceording to reports | from the contracter."" The com- : pletion date is still indefinite, School will open at 8:10. All will be dismissed by noon. 5 Scheoit began yesterday for be- tween 80 and 90 new teachers, who were welcomed at a reception and treland said. ; taken on # taur of the gommunit) He streseead the importance of as Today is the first-in ja three day & sistance from parents of Pem pre-school conferenée for all Tou h ] broke pupils. Some 450 children ers here. Some 30 eda ator heard | will be temporarily housed m four jh, keynote address given by Dr elementary schools because of the’ ailan Griffin. of Ohio University. delay. . }Ineluded in tonight's program wit! Primary chifdren’ assigned to pe panel discussion at 7 on Pembroke School will attend Ad- -What Can We Do to Build Public | — Se Support for Birmingham Schools."’ ° ° . Rained out at last week's Bir mingham Kiwanis Pelo Night at the Ivory Polo Field, 8 Mile read | Skeet Legionnaires ssc. sn 2 ot Shewt Shooter Reports an itiness of four years. Born in Pinconning, Dec. 2%, 1888, he was the son of Matilda Valade @hd Nelson Tatro. He mar- ried Catherine Welch in Onaway June 29. 1916 For 13° years Township treasurer Surviving are his widow and one daughter, Mrs “taaine Nim- moth of Detroit. “Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Walter Kowaleski of Pinconning, Mrs. Frank Merchant and Mrs. Frank Diener of Pontiac; three brothers, ‘Ernest of Mt. Pleasant, Leon and Arthur of Pontiac, he! was For esl Total Now Eight | re . ising this summer's total a - qa ession £ were reported today to * “~ytlte Health Nurse Anyce Gillette. | in _ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 3. 1954 Bodies of 800 on Way Home First Exchange of | Korean War Dead said, is ss ; es | PANMUNJOM um — The bodies Anclud iri’ | of 900-men kitied in the Korean} War, including £93 Americans, started home today in the first ex- change of soldiers who died and were buried in enemy territory. The 193 Americans were among | 200 Allied bodies which eight dark green Russian . built mortuary trucks delivered to the U.N. Com- ;mand in a green valley of the /neutral zone. The seven other bodies were not identified as to nationality, 8 @ U.S, Army trucks brought to the exchange point the bodies of 500 -toreans and 100 Chinese soldiers The exchange is expected to con- tinue more than a month, The Reds said they would turn Over the bodies of 151 Americans, 3 Britons, 33 Koreans and 13 bodies unidenti- fied as to nationality tomorrow. The Atties wilt detiver 600 more Communist bodies. The bodies received yesterday were taken by U.S. Army trucks southward into territory for solemn cerémonies in which G Maxwell D. Taylor, 8th Army cdéimmander, and 40 chaplains of different faiths took part. : K | Down have ruled out all possibilities ot, Camera Equipment Theft. n e &. repeat performance by the| Skeet shooter Merttn M. Evans weather man : jof Silver Springs, Md. told police Tickets purchased for the game yesterday that §750 worth of pho wilt instead be good for 8 tonight | tographic equipment had been when the Birmingham Aill-Stars|taken from-his room at the Ritz meet the Pontiac Chiefs. All pro- | Motel, 1000 S. Woodward. ceeds from the ticket sale will be| A’ partteipant in the National Return to. Convention Business After One of Longest Parades The bodies will be kept in a white quonset hut until Sept. 3, when they will be moved by train to Pusan and by ship to Kokura, Japan, Although the Communists sup- plied a list of names, none of the bodies will be identified untij after Tired but) used for the club's charitable, edu- | Skeet Shooting Assn. competition | being held at the Oakland County | | Spértamen's Club in Waterford Township, Evans said a 16-milli meter movie camera, a carrying case light meter and film were taken, WASHINGTON UP - still-eXuberant Legionnaires turned | cational and youth: work here “back to serious convention business Tickets may still be obtained at toddy. after staging one of the long- | the field and children accompanied est parades in the nation’s history. by. parents will be admitted at no Up for decision were a bushelful | charge. ot .resolutions _on—tinportant sub- | es « 6 jects—such as universal military! Despite seme doubt in the minds training, foreign policy and medi 4f commissioners at this week's cal treatment for veterans city commission meeting, City ; . ft. Manager Donald C. Egbert was in- structed to make. further negotia- tions with officials: of the SS Kresge Co.-and write a proposed lease, giving the city control over {the local company's I8-car park- Hurricane Lashes Seaboard, Killing 42 (Continued From Page One) and Martha's Vineyard were cut | off during the height of the storm and no word was available 18 And once again, on this third day of the American Legion's an nual get-together, some of the country's leading figures were on hand to address the country's tw verrTans organization . ee oe aT — the city would in president George Meany. who criti: | Aechmea) : —$————<_rsee ie Kaeeeer for. {stall- meters, thus providing a The baby costier Nahente Bay " eign policy, He detiared in pre- faster turnover in parking byY/ broke its mooring in Boston har- pared reniafks that Eisenhower |¢liminating a large percentage of {bor -heeled over at a 15-degree has told the country to stop think- | all-day parking | angle and got stuck in the med. A ing in. terms of world leadership—| The lawmakers questi one a) U.S. Navy aftack transport and al an attitude, Meany said, which whether this would be setting &| loaded ammunition barge broke | positive identification js made from Washington, This may take several months, Hospital Expansion Vote Is Approved (Continued From Page One) residents living outside the city are treated at the hospital. Miles voted to put the plan on the ballot, however, saying he thought the public could bést de- cide, Paes Mayor William W. Donaldson (District 3) has said the hospital is overcrowded and gétting more yo each month. He points out that out-county patients already pay a ten per cent added charge for hos- 193 Americans Included | — = aie y G ; ; oe * » f a ? “ ry px % f 2. q 4 : f 4 { » bi \ om, - \ : a, } a oe a S Ne % |Hitchhiker Robs {Sen, Maybank Dies |Musit Boxes Go Wind Condition ‘Birmingham Man of $300, Auto BIRMINGHAM—An_ unemployed Birmingham resident, the father (of 3 children, picked up a hitch- hiker in Detroit last night and was paid back by being robbed of $300 and: forced at gunpoint on a 45-| committees and was particularly min drive around the northwest ‘section of Detroit, = Elmer Miller, Suddenly in Sleep - (Continued From Pa One) in 1939-41, In private tife he was a cotion exporter. He was a member of the Sen %. of 1171 During his 13 years in the capi- bandit pulled the gun at ‘Pilgrim |'F Rained @ reputation for his and Southfield in ‘Detroit, forced | ility to put through the Senate him to give up his wallet the many varieties of fégislation roduced by the Banking Com- The money, left-from the sale of mise x a his home in Portiac, was what re mained after héhad paid bills in| Maybank was a staunch sup. Detroit. * porter of the tate President Southern senators he broke with the Truman: administration over civil rights. He veted also to override President Truman's veto an hour later by police. | The car, abandoned, was found | Dog's Tongue Cut,. Hunt for Sadist (Continued From Page One) | liberate, probably committed with | wife, Mrs. Mary Randolph Pelzer ' a razor or scissors Maybank. She was the widow of The veterinarian said they have | Rear Adm. Chaftes. P oka when not been able to get the pet to eat 1948. His first by himself yet, ‘‘not until he be- comes used ta learning anew meth- od we're tryihg to teach him How “The dog will always have a difficiut time eating or drinking. He was a descendant ef five 'former governors of the and state of South Carolina. they married in wife died in 1947 | Also surviving are one son. Bur- | net R. Jr., a Greenville, S. C., at- torney and ‘a member of the State House of Representatives, and two daughters, Mrs. William F. Prio-| A'ndeow , the two inches cut [ieay Jr. of Columbia and Miss — ! will affect his | Ftizabetti Maybank of Charleston. * v We : | Sandy is still reported in fair condition. But may be sent home in a few days, Dr. Soncrainte said, | _ because recovery there may be | fined $75 Tuesday. for illegal driv-, faster, _ ing. Attendants at the hopital have . — been feeding 5-year-old Sandy in.- | travenously. Water is being given him with an eye-dropper and 4 baby bottle Mrs. Martin J. Davis, represent- ing the animal leagye, said that information could be ‘forwarded to Post - Office Box No. 411, Pontiac. Tips will be kept annonymous upon request, she added, The $50 re- ward will be paid upon the con- viction of persons responsible for the _incident. John Law Has His Day OTTAWA (UP) — John Law was | Solel ,LINOLE UM Capt. Clark M. Wheaton, chief of Pontiac detectives, said today he has assigned the case to the best detectives on the force. ‘We'll apprehend the persons re- sponsible for such a detestable act, he said, Albion Given $12,000 ALBION W—The Snyder: Tool and Engineering Co. of Detroit has presented Albion’ College with a —e ‘ean lead onty into the blind alley precedent, but decided to consider | loose in Narragansett Bay but ran | pital care which would contribute | gift of $12,000. The money will be ? ot defeat.” any other similar proposition on its | aground with minor damage. |to money supplied by the hospital | added to the Sarah and Clarence | * e¢ 400" merit. They also felt the city; In Boston, historic Old North | ward retiring the bonds. ! Snyder Scholarship Fund, estab- . Veterans Administrator Harvey> should be guaranteed a specific | Church lost its steeple to the gusts./ The bonds would be paid off | !ished by the late Clarence Snyder, a \. Higley in another prepared ad sm from this sh any other jot. | The spirewhich flashed ‘the light | ever ® 30-year period through | founder of a Detroit engineering a dress, figured that the govern- “oe €¢ © |that sent Paul Revere on his fa | i985. The first tax levy. fer their | CO™MPany. ment's — — Las Holding their last oe = ar re War | payment would be in 1955. , Fan World ture veterans is climbing * frem the Community House. Lions | warn Concord and Lexington of t) : r rains Wor rate of 45 million dollars for each Ciyh members are spending this | approactr ot the British, topple into Willman has stated that the ex- my ‘rains Pehl anak morith the Korean emergency stay8 | anernoon and tonight at the | Salem Street. | tent of the hospital addition would WASHINGTON (UP) — During on the books home of Dr. A. L. McNaughton,| The tower of WRZ-TV, Reston, | Probably depend on the number of | 1953, more than 2,600 . foreign Higley said those who would curb 6 lives near Clarkston on Orton-| largest in New England, was |"0ms which could be built for nationals from 46 nations attended federal benefits ta veterans are ii. road A stcak roast and akeet| felled. Besten Garden lost a sec: ere . the U. S. Army service — in using this fact—that xine state of shooting will make up part of the! then ef Ite reef and at least twe | In the past. a 200-room wing has | the United States. The training emergency has never lekally been ities radio station towers were | been considered. but there is doubt | was mostly in use, maintenance -ieianiceial ——————— | knocked down, | | 200 rooms could be built with the | and repair of weapons and equip- ] ; | =a arguments a proposed sum ment. . : Many a blve-capped Legionnaire NATO Membershi _The Boston & Maine Railroad a a Daa ear wus 39¢ yd. | was still rubbing the sleep from p | canceled ~ trains between Bos-| | his eyes @s he burried to today s . | tow and Port and during the storm. : tt Ft. Wide 69c businese—a ew orant H ted fo Ge |The New Haven Railroad was) an ae the mamenoth 11 \y-hour Ni J rmany | orced to wancel service on its New | $200.00 $600.00 : = York-Boston run when its main, parade of — — ie his , (Continued From Page One) |;,., became flooded in parts of | Gen el ds Sarat on plan Never before had an Ameri: | Rhode Island and Connecticut NOt uine Plastic i ; ara tex Legion. C8" secretary of state talked 20 | The Harvard University Observa- = WALL _____tvet_of drum majoretes. 12810 sntty—in—pubtic—about an Eily's{ Wy SAN WS OTE GT Ha helgh naires, ladies” Auxiliary members , 7 and fun-poking 0-and-Sers The old action dy & major foreign policy | Was clocked ne miles per er 4 was 70.000 ae issue lat the core with gusts up to 125 es ; ae ee 1 “It fs a tragedy that in one| miles per hour. It was listed as- in 1947, 5 A Ff country nationalism, abetted by the worst hurricane to hit New | Washington Police Chief Robert Communism,-has asserted ifsel! so England since’ 1938. V. Murray, who hovered along the &* to endanger the whole of 1Me-tnile route in a helicopter, esti. Europe.” Dulles said. ~_ McCarthy Hear ing mated the number of watchers at) Before departing fer Manila i 750,000 to a million. He said it WAS | Tuesday night io draft a defense Washington's biggest crowd since treaty for Southeast Asia, Dulles the nation’s championship, two-day said the French degtruction of Starts Second Day parade at the end of the Civil War.! EDC means France “disassoci. | (Continued Prom’ Page One) ‘ * 5 | atten herself from a plan she the New ‘Englander asked in a Meeting Date Changed | conceived and also from her al- | Senates peech: ‘To what party does 1 0 lied partners. (McCarthy) belong? Is he a hid- ae Mae Sa mace of He said the fact that “one of the {den satellite of Pas Pemocratic ___ Sept. 2] a9 regularity scheduled.—-six-EDC countries” objected should | Party fo which bed — Commissioners approved the Pt, be allowed to kill European) 80 much material for quiet mirth?” change last night so they could , unity “projects This was before Flanders intro- attend the meeting of the Michigan| 1) 8 10004vord statement. Dulles | duced the resolution asking the Sen- Municipal League Sept. 21 through ‘#4 in-effect that,Germany will | ate to censure McCarthy. 21 in Detroit | be rearmed whether France likes| MeCarthy * attorney, Edward B . : | it or not; that steps will be taken | Williams, said he wanted to -know & 8. M....55+ my 88 lie m T? 7. Wisc scccc 33 1? noon 3) «Kenrad Adenauer. 8B. Mivcces.s B ip m 7% Ve “Site = 4 Diplomats. said no final plans A ad have been made for the NATO Teesday in Pontiac | meeting which would consider how mighest ‘fenperiae er": gy to rearm Germany—with or with- Lowest temperature .f....0.555 5+: -.8 out French approval. But they said ‘_ FA. Prevessss+s-++:6) | @ session about Oct, 1 in Europe is . é to seek severeignty for West Ger: The Weather | many, and that American foreign | PONTINAC AND VICINITY — Pertty | POlicies in Europe will be over- | cloudy and net se cool tenight. Seat. hauled Tootodar porte’ creeks” woe tee He hinted that aid to France will | with senttered showers or thendershew- be tapered off, and that American | et Winds weet te seeth. weet mph. becoming seethwest te south 16.15 miles Thereday. s Velay ta Featice ‘tar aa to call for a general U.S isolation is not the answer. On the action side, Dulles called for an emergency meeting of the 14-nation North Atlantic Treaty Council and quick talks with West German Chancellor at @ ea. m: Wind Velccity 18 mph Otrection Sun sete Wednesday at 106 pm, Ban rises Thursday at 6.58 o @. Meon sets Wednesday at 8:96 p. m. Moen rises Thursday ot [1°19 & m. _likely unless the foreign ‘ministers os | Meet in New York in advance or '.«@ -@uring the United Nations General 35 Assembly meeting Sept. 21. Dulles is not expected to return S Bee et Tere "| from Manila before-Sept. 15, : et bee If final_poliry decisions are made | in line with present administration thinking, Dulles will ask the other 13 NATO powers to consder full troop commitments in Furope may | ments attributed to Jehnson were be reduced. -But he did not ro cd bocaaeion to the inquiry, held that | the Senate appointed the special Lowest temperature preceding | s m_ withdrawal from Europe. He 8 ce o~_ feces Tibi Senate P v . if any. of the senators on the spe- cial committee “entered the case with a pre-disposition on cither side.” Ld] * * Watkins in ruling that the state . t ~ Sen. John J, Stennis (D-Miss) & committeeman, said he was ‘‘en tirely satisfied with Sen. Johnson's fairness and impartiality Stennis added: ‘Sen. Johnson's remarks were directed to the Flan ders speech which said McCarthy was becoming an ally @ the Dem- ocratic party. Sen, Johnson is one | of the |fairest, most careful meti I ever worked with.” 7 Johnson pointed out that he never said*he personally jeathed MeCar- thy. He added that his. remarks about the Flanders h per- tained to the question whether McCarthy should be removed as chairman of the Senate investiga- Hiens subcommittee =e 2 ° ° He said he took the position that this was a question to be handled by the Republican partyin the Senate o But McCarthy said he wants to Know™ if the Denver Post story was accurate and, he indicated, he ithe free Germans, — \ rill press this ‘relentlessly. $55.00 $125.00 amends Dull in a quartet of duets for $105.00 Bevel Edge Marbleized 21° Sq. Ft. $135.00 ra | ate's Banking and Appropriations ' active in the field of housing legis- tatton-- - aceon oe E Lincoln Ave. says the well-dressed |‘4l, the genial, ruddy-faced sena-, | own ingenuity | collectors’ Kems, Roosevelt, but like many other | | of the Taft-Hartley Act. | colony He ts survived by his second | pins on a turning cylinder pluck CASH SAVINGS! TERRIPC BAR Gain, , For the Long Labor Day Week-End! those with intentions matrimony. Each of the gem-studded wedding bands is in complete harmony with its accompanying | diamond engagement ring for double effectiveness. Prices include Federal tax A Charge or budget Hlustrations slightly enlarged “Pontiac's Oldest t ” 28 W. Huron ISt. miei “The Store Where Quality Counts” Jewelry Store” y~ COMPANY FE 2-7257 wt ‘ \e , ~ whe a A . >_> “ao | PAINT | | £& Syuppues © Sup Finish or ENAMEL REAL WHIT PENNY PAINT SALE FLAT WALL | HOUSE PAINT |. 5 AT AUBURN AVENUE Fauneuee bint Round and Round = for Ohio Expert ling Shooters (Contitfued Frém Page One)’ MASSILLON, _Qhio (UP)—Has your music box been sounding aly | over-all event. begam.t come in right recently’ today. , If it ‘iL. the.man to contaet i Among the prominent shooters s Glenn Heckert. He's a local already on the beatd are Alex jeweler With a national reputation Kerr, Beverly Hills, Calif.; all for know what is good for the| member, of the Pyerto Kico po- little of melody that once! Hee squad; the Leon Mandels of delighted Europe-and — pp Otrteage> Mr.-and- Mrs: ‘Fred Al- ‘ ford of Dallas, Tex,; Dr. Frank There's aq money in the work | 4 ‘Trucks, Birmingham, Ala. se Meckert’ regards it as bie | president of the NOSA; and Ed aveocation. He has to make his ; Docherty, Holyoke, Maas., who own tools, since it would pay ne one else to produce them. He also Yes dee. “7 has to rely a great deal on his : “ ; ie the repairs, Russ Marks of El Dorado Ark., themselves are |“! Won yesterday's 2-man sub- jsmall gauge title teaming with Lewis Gordon of Texarkana, Ark., He owns one of the best ¢ollec-' and J. FE. Williams of Washington, tions of music boxes knownm—and D. C., who won the sub-senior title all of them work. ; | yesterday-also are.entered. They range from. flog models! First stage of the over-all cham- with mahogany cases (original | pionship has been fired. price $350) to little modern ones} In the women’s division are Mrs. since manuals imported from Switzerland that! Mandel: Mrs Alford: Mrs. Igor cost Yrom $5 up | Bzas, Greenwich, Conn.; Mrs. mar -ththel Baleh; Tulsa,-Okla:, Mr« Musim boxes work by having Rosalie Baker, Bakersfield, Calif : . They Mrs. Theima Anguish, Pacomina, pein: a Sool Mrs. Ina Thomson, Cuca- 18808 before ae . | Monga Calif; Mrs. Florence phene | Schmidt, Hazel Park: Madeline Graph spelled their doom. |Forgue, Chicago; Nada Baxter, Heckert is a mémber of a na-| Palos Heights, [J.; Mrs. C. H. Mc- tional music box society that was | Dowell, Shreveport, La., and Mrs. formed after World War II with’Don Maxwell, of Odessa, Tex. headquarters in St. Louis. | ; _ | Ut. Krause Back on Duty Dulles Landsat Travis; TRAVIS AIR FORCE. BASE, lof Pontiac Police, returned to duty Calif. u—Secretary of State John today after a three month absence Foster Dulles paused here early | due to illness. Lt. Krause, a mem- today en route to an eight-nation | ber of the police force for 30 years, Southeast Asia Security Conference | recently underwent a throat oper- in Manila. ‘ation at Pontiac General Hospital. a — Oakland County's Largest Kentile Dealer Do-It-Yourself Genuine KENTILE , | 5 Dark Marble Colors TILE 54” Wide with Border Running Foot BER TILE ba 15° Il| | Enough Tite SH em fe ir 9398s 100% FREE ROLLER OR PAN REAR OF STORE = Detective Lt. Walfer Krause, 55. _ an - Féstival to Mark | Centennial Year Celebration. of Arrival | of First White Settlers | Set Sept. 10-12 The City of Auburn and Township of Williams will mark the 100th anniversary ef the arrival af the fared pet eaneet white seethere im + that area with a }day Centennial Cerlebratian, Sept. 10-12. Festivities at the city, lecated half way be tween Bay City and Midland, will include a parade, pageants, fire works and entertainment Gev. G. Mennen Wilhams_ has been invited to attend the opening at 8 p m. Friday, and crown the king ari@ queen at a Coronafion Ball Saturday will feature a parade, games, carnival, and afternoon and evening damcing. A stage-} presentation, “Spotlight on Youth,” wilt be given. Sunday, a water battle between two neighboring fire departments | will be staged, Saturday's activi- | ties, with the exception. of the | parede. will also be repeated. A giant fireworks display Sun day night will terminate the cen-| tenia] festival. Schoo! Registration Set for Avondale — AUBURN HEIGHTS - Registra. | tien dates for students of Avondale } schools have been announced as | Sept. 7 and 8 Avondale High School seniors | will register as 8 10 am. Sept. 7 with juniors scheduled for 1 p.m Sophomore's are expected 8:10 am. Sept. 8 and freshme at 1 p. m. Buses will begm regu lar rewtes for students at 7.30 a.m. | and 12.3 pm. on these days Junior high registration will also be split up on Sept. 7 and 8, with 7th grade set for 1:3 p.m 7, and 8th grade at 1:3 Sept. 8 Registration of all grade sthool students at the various schools will Sept p.m | palms be Tuesday, Sept. 7. Buses wil! start regular routes at 8:30 a.m Trial Begins for Man Accused of Loan Deal ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Tria! began in Detroit before Federal Judge Ralph M. Freeman yeste! day fer Fred B. Collier, rharged with making false financial state ments in seeking a $1,500,000 FHA loan Collier. Gganiee? oF a housing | cooperative here, Aug. 14, 1953 charge pleaded innocent to the two-count Nevada had the highest accident al death rate of the states in 1953 with 157.8 per 100.000 population By comparison New Jersey was the lowest _ wits a 42? ratw. Williams to Crown Queen ROMEO — Gov. G. Mennen Wii! liams will crown Karen Hoff e? . = _ banked w Dx MR. AND WES. FREDERICK WELIAS Bride's Home Is Setting of Wells-Throop Nuptials: OXFORD - Thome beforé ai candiclit altar | fingertip veil fell from a @ara of | Raseland Park Cemeteny. She In ith white wothy Jean he rT parents gladjoli and Throop was married Saturday evening to Fred erick E She wore a chapel Jength princess | gown With Chantilly Wells of Ro » bodice over anc lace : nylon net yal Oak 1 peplum oof . and injured, and partially broke the {al tof his faffer | of | Pontiac queen of the 1954 Romeo! Peach Festival during a ceremony to be held at 8:30 p. m in the Romeo High School auditor ium The 22nd annual Peach Festival opens with the Queen's Ball at! ginning at 2 p. m. Monday. This! judges 10 p—m.Priday~ Queen will receive the key to the | Sunday | sion of The fire and. explo undetermined origin aused estimated damage of $5.000 i roa of the tenants were injured Judith Biclines Wed to Theron B. Esckilsen CASS CITY—Judith Ann Dickin-— son and Theron B. Esckilsen spoke their nuptial vows Saturday In a double-ring candlelight ceremony at Mizpah United Missionary Charch The bride is the daughter of Mrs Ethel Dickinson of Cass City. The | Basil VanGilder is vice president | wife bridegroom is the sn of the Arthur TESckssens, als of Cass C City. Menday’s Laber Day ctiehra- tien, will begin with a children's parade, “America the Beautiful,’ the theme dt which is sched uled to begin at 16 a, m. Thousands are the ness sections giant floral led by the expected to wit be +parade On Saturday the {parade witl be divided into two! mounted di village during> welcoming ceremo-| vision of the Macomb County nies scheduled for 1:3 p. m the reviewing stand, F. St and Main Sts Clair | Saturday's activities also will include free ects at 2:30 and 5 Pp. m., an art exhibit from neon te 9 p. m., and a street dance at 9:38 p. m. Sunday's activities will begin with the arrival ol the Dawn Patrol between 7-9 a. m. at the Romeo Airport. In the afternoen a tby's coaster race will be conducted on West St. Clair street at 12:30 p.m The Romeo Council of Charch Women will present a’ concert of sacred music on the grounds of | the Congregational Church-at 5 ii p.m. with the colorful coronation | covesqeny closing the day |Farm Dairy 7350 Highland Rd. HOMOGENIZED NOW Ky en THE PONTIAC Credit Union Director ‘Leaves for Europe | WESTACRES—Albert a W Mar ble managing director of the Michigan Credit Union League Lada long-time resident of West * acres, leaves today by plane for a month's tour af Europe In Paris, Marble will attend | | thle International Cooperative Al jliance Congress. He will make | tstops at London. Glasgow, Zurich | and leading in Germany, Seandinavia, Holland and Betgium “Now, more than ever before | Marble says, ‘il imperative ithat eVeryune gain a world-wide | Perspective 71 feel tha. tour will ido much te*help me broad@n-.my j outlook, not only for my own per- sonal good but for the benefit ot | the credit: union movement “df | een IT am a part.” ' | cies is { The European tour is sponsored the Credit by Union National As Cotinty Deaths Mrs. Garland Allison BERKLEY—Serviece for Mrs} = Gasiand lv iremei oATilean oof MKS. EDWARD AKISTFOPER 047 Phillips Ave, was held at 1 ris O acer O Ss e| : _|pm. today at the Berkley Com K t pek-P V W Ar } satin with panelled net skirt. Her immunity Church, with burial in | orange blessoms and she carried} died Sunday a eascade arrangement of white Surviving besides her husband, | CLARKSTON Dorothy Loraine} and Mrs. bi | ‘arnations are two daughters, Gayle and) pacer and Edward Kristopek were | Cranberry | Crystal Gan. was maid of honor Valorie her parents, Mr. and ay wed in a morning ceremony Sat-| Mrs Louis The bridegroom, son of Edwin —-* — oa Royal Oe urday at’ Our Lady of the Lakes | Conn air z lene brother, and three sisters Church, Clarkston ents Wells of Munith, and Mrs. Mar Mrs. Mary Mest Bean | The bride is the daughter of Mr The bride garet Yenglin of Muncie, Indiana TROY TOWNSHIP — Service for | , was attended by James Henderson 80. of 1202 per a a = Teachers Back on Job Sawyer Funeral Home, Berkley | Pick Mrs. William Vann The horse classification— has here Monday, and elected officers | with burial in Roseland Park Cem . s — ; drawn the largest number of en ctor’ He died Monday for Pontiac UF Group a the coming fee) ore ynP- | ed were wesident tev tres from the county, with 14) Surviving besides his parents WATERFORD TOWNSHIP— Mrs ernie a irisaatdin <9 § residents from every sector plap- | (Pee his grandparents. Mr-—aed iytinjiam Vann has been appointed ae ag go Ss stom ning to show their animal |M Jot Dietrich of Southfield | ; , Pp rs un Die |tasePve as a member of the Pon- lot) and secretary-treasurer) — _Eavestax k will be judged ir? the | Township. and Mr. and Mrs_Ralob |)... area United Fund-Community |Rev Mrs. Eri mri it Gok Coliseum on Sept. 7, 8 and 9. The| Dp, Wolford Sr. of Detroit lChest Administrative Committce Casser champion livestock auction will be fe Arthur C. Witthopp a term of one year | = PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, ake the salin gown 1954 Exchanged in Clarkston. Paces af Rd~ and Mt tify was attired in a chan tilly lace over nylon tulle and slip. | fashioned’ wth a 'Berkle Fi of Rochester Clyde Throop if iL ivernbid Rd., will be he Id at 3 sol, polled standing cottar and tone | y ireman served as usher - Ip m Thursday at the Bel) Chapel in Cass City Area lace pomted steeves Following a reception for 40! of the William R. Hamillon Co CASS CITY The Deford School Her fingertip length veil of ilu | a «Injured i in Blaze guests at the Throop home. the | Birmingham with burial in Royal | th of Cans City will reopen Sept | sion fell from a queens crown of = wiyweds left for northern Mic ti- | Oak Cemetery She died at r 17 and wil) have as returning teach jseeded pearts and rhinestones BERKLEY—A 70-year-old volun. | ®4" They will Ee at om: Buk: | reeience Seema) = Jers Mrs. Bernard Freiberger. Mrs. | Sister of the bride, Delores Pa teer fireman is in “goed” condi-,“"* k St., Oxford : A resident of jhe area 70 years William Klea, and Hartiett Warner, | cer was maid-of henor, and Dee } thon today, Mt. Carmel Mercy E : she is survived by a ee Harold Gregg will be a new mem. | ora Pacer. tetee of the bride. was | Hospital officials say. after sus C " Wallace Fisher of Royal ber of the staff flower girl taining head injuries when he fell | ounty ntering ee ie fail of | Mrs. Sam Blades is teaching the John Kristopek, brother of the 20 feet inte a basement when a Ee { ;ers, John and Nelson Most. all of) yi ware School which opened | bridegroom. served as best man stairway collapsed during a fir: Many ontests at | Troy Township. | han 0) Mrs Keith Murphy re The couple left for Niagara Falls John T. Hannah Sr. of 3085 pc Ralph D. Welford Hi liurned Aug. 30 to her position as} and New fngland Tyler and his son Robert, of 3153 >U oming Fair SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP teacher In the Shabonna Schoot and “~ } Cumberland, a regular fireman The 16 classes of livestock and Service for Ralph D. Wolford [1 \Mrs. Carrol] Howarth has returned Pastors Elect Officers | were fighting a fire and blast in a|farm products at the Mic higan | i vfant son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph | fo her position as teacher in Owen j |four-family apartment at 3162.) State Fair, opening Sept. 3 for ten {D Wolford Jr. 36000 Southfield | dale Schoot CASS CITY ‘a Thumb area , . . " > ct t N “ie tor | Royal yesterday. days, are being bolstered by Rd. was held this morning at the Chur i = a pastors The son, who also fell, was un- entries from Oakland County met in the Church of Soe SS | held Sept. 8, at.1 pm } ROCHESTER — arthur C Witt- t sal was nominated for the post | basa 46, of 337 Woodward St. died | by the Waterford Township United | his home yesterday afternoon | Fund Advisory Board, , chairman ss several months illness. Born |W. J. Teeuwissen Jr. stated. Other | lin Bay City July 10, 1908, he had |members of the Waterford Town been associated with the Rochester | ship ‘ommittee are Edmund Win Clarion for the past 30 years \deler. Robert Beattie, Henry Mehi- | Mr. Wittkopp is survived by his | berg and Mrs Ric ‘hari Balmer ' Auxiliary Elects Officers AVON TOWNSHIP—Mrs_ Lloyd | Cariton has been elected president of the Women's Auxiliary of the Avondale Fire Department. Mrs L AND EXCLUSIVE FURNISHINGS FURNITURE APPLIANCES |] In the Heart ef Drayten Plains 3526 Sashabaw bAQD and Kristopek of Seymour bridegroom's par OR 3-1711 ‘Milford Garden ‘Club Schedules Elower Show |} MILFORD from 4:00 to | de n ¢ tub has held a~ concentrated show ir various public buildings, mompeut ithe five hemes to be toured; The gordec ts ‘be open to the peblic are: }irs. Gébrge Hubbell, 1200 S. Milferd road, Mre. Marry Laie,~ TS Bawson Rd., Mrs | A. 4, Petersea, 1440 8. Milford | read, Mre. Ralph Watkins, 125 wet at. and Rye. F. é. Pree, A ee ee An open homes | Mrs | flower show will be held Thursday 4.00 sponsored for | the firgt time by the Milford Gar- For the past six years the club for the | purpose.¢.-competition- among the mrbers.This year there is no and special flower ar- jrangements will be displayed: in Flower arrangements for the homes will be made by Mrs, Stew- art Walls, rs, “Harold Pennell, Melbourne Hewett, Mrs. Mary” Huntington, Mrs. George Hubbell, Mrs. W. J. Niseley, Mrs. Glenn Perry, Mrs. Elmer Switzer, Mrs. John Jackson, Mrs. Ear! Gardner, Mrs. LaVerne Ree and Mrs. Elmer Wolf i) — lasts longer because it does hot corrode, It has a resin base and is moisture-proof and unbreakable “"y Guaranteed DRAYT@N JEWELERS Watch Repair ™ A. J. DEXTROM, . 8 Peers Nerth of the Beak For Your Labor Day Weekend! @ MEN’S SHORT SI Green’s Men's Wear—Swes | Wonderful Bargains! .EEVE SHIRTS @ MEN’S SLACKS @ LADIES’ SHOES @ CHILDREN'S SHOES Dixie Highway DRAYTON PLAINS a a / J) "Smoked Hams Tender, Sweet-Smoked 4-6 Ib. Avg. ——— 48: Wrapped te retain “Hen Turkeys vert. «= 48° Round a 1. eee 8} Shank Half Hams sane" 59< all the natural Y/. _ Ground Beef ‘ats, 3m $1 stant poten MAN: wt Thuringer «uit 2 & 99 wh at ath | ‘Stock up new for the coming long THE PAUSE THAT REFRESHES Holiday weekend. Take on picnics. : 24 . Frozen Tuna Pie = 3°-*1 Swift Baby Meat~~2 “> 45° jg Gulf Kist Shrimp = :--37° Breast 0’ Chicken = «.- 35° 2 — Ripe Olives <= «--29° Beef Stew... ~~. .==31°5 Beef Hash “wc = =~29° Dried Beef. .—~. .»--33' @ Sweet Pickles = :--23' Modess... "= .. .2c« 99° Salad Dressing ==. +» 39° Banquet Chicken: °1.39 | Kroger — COFFE ws 89 I-Lb. French Brond 98¢ 3-Lbs. Spotlight $2.65 __ Fresh BEES on. . ox 35 wm | Luncheon Meat ««. «= 39° ew | Salad Dressing sm » 19°. |Birdseye nccient. nz 89° Potato Chips cz... 263° a Kroger Bread ttm i 15° ‘ Sweet Gorniz:x.12- 39° Ice Cream “sis = 79° - reserve the right to 7 Easy Monday Regular Sire Bars Bath Size Bers Easy te Use. Keeps Hands Soft Lipton's Vanilla Frestes Lipton's Chocolate Frostee Betty Janet Liquid Starch | Dial Soap Dial Soap | Armour Suds | Chiffon Flakes | Dessert Mix Dessert Mix Pop Corn or. 18¢ 2 27° Der 37¢ ‘re, 30C rae, SUC , Ze. ZTE =| - Dong 29C we. 20C Tetle Swift's “Ox” Swift's Switt' Swift's ‘All Purpose Regular Size 10c Off Offer! — | oH, Y | Peanut Butter | Peanut Butter Prem =| Pork Sausage | Angus Cloths |. Bab-O. =| —_, enverte | Tea Nie 39 | 57° W2aTe- | 't25Ie 35 | 2.025 | Uncle 7 Bags Swift's Owe Ne Sneery Dest Swift's Corned Swift's Switt’s States Beet en bs) wen 23¢ Swift’ning |jumbriteCleanser| Beef Hash [Corned Beef} Roast Beef | Sandwich Steaks Rice | wc. 63¢ cn ME | Rem 1% ‘sa 29 wage | BSsze. | USsze -| we 3ge ! a i780 “gaa M.to9P.M. Mon, thru Sat. . ! “er THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SERTEMBER 4, 1956 —_ ~ aot: ey : Polio Closes Schools — Bask | W _ ames —o Pa Austin- SOU aa tam | cist island's elementary schools | [ ef- ICAVEL |F speciats ror THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY OPEN FRIDAY EVENING ‘TIL 9 P.M, . Lawr losed her week jo + INSU RANC E rs a nheser long pootnk. athens > . —— 159. Four victims ‘have died. 5 rt Ing » i There are about 7,500 public li- " ; — i a braries in the U. S. Indian’ Woman Hopes | Se > to Keep Difficult Craft! T | Alive oe K- 0-SC HOOL | NASHVILLE,: Mich. Where. Leonard Tawney, an Ottawa In- dian from Newaygo, pessimistical- : 4 ly says Indian basket-weaving is a GENUINE dying art aoa Further, she believes much of “ENGLISH | the intricate handicraft artistry 7 will be gone forever when her generation dies. LIGHTWEIGHT | 0! ese, ‘cas tepee and educated at Mount Pleasant. .| 9 } IMPORTED ws BICYCLES —Ordinartty Tanne Keep their | FULL 70x80 SIZE! 5% WOOL! Le trade secrets but Nun Mee Ga, b Mrs. Tewney’s Indian name From One of America’s Largest —] whitch -means-“potnter” or “tw. fl Checked—assembled and } inc tims points, in constructing | Producers of Fine Quality Blankets! the decorative and sturdy bas- ready to ride! kets. Just imagine! All 3 of these It's doubtful, however, whether |[§ fine blankets at this low price! 30-DAY FREE CHECK uP she will gain many pupils, The biggest blanket bargain s = Here are some of the materials : fl 70" x 80” you've seen. Fu required for the work: Porcupine | size in 3 poputar colors. 5° quills, birch bark; herbs (for wool for added warmth! Bound color); black ash logs, an axe in 3" t and a capacity for long hours of = aren" ; hard work. . For an ordinary, 5-inch diameter CHOICE OF ROSE, ' ; basket, she says, the quills and BLUE OR GREEN ¢ “ birch bark are used. They form | : : — the -body of the basket and must | ; ! Wt } | Check These Features: © INCLUDED FREE! [jv sxisown ont share 1s 0 : © Adjustable Handlebars a 5” , the basket. ‘i 5 Adiuetas Vecotuilun $1.19 — 3” Chrome Bell and |" bs a 14th ANNIVERSARY SALE! EE —— S _——-” —\ ae Sse CREATES TBLANKEZVALUE | pave REFLECTOR q - © Hand Caliper Brak 7? ‘ha ~é Chrome Rime $2.29 Safety Cable Lock says Mrs. Tawney, are made 4 ° rept Tires _ © Genuine Sturmey Archer trom black ash. : Speed *Genuine English Impert—net a Centinental And this is where the work be- | Picea lay errr design, Built by England's Leading Manu- [) gins. w 4 © Fully Welded facturer—for ever 60 years. ~ After the ash poles are cut, they must be pounded with the blunt | | SCHWINN: Spitfire 26-inch BICYCLES ... $44.95 [ise tov ss tues ot | fibers then must be see-sawed Attractive Shade « Smart Base SIA 24-i $448 oss VE | | | COLUMBIA 24-inch BICYCLES........ $442) cis") pig aa ease ar Bags ........ ee up mre Horns ...-.. 5 .@8eup | (rrr and fom ent We ST DOWN! AN’ —_— cle Baskets ..... -43 up ometers Seen ee $5.50 up workbench. Dipping such baskets { Bicycle Lights ......$1.19up || Mirrors ............: SSe wp | Ue ine, coord hte: cays Non Mee EASY TERMS All for Only 4 Generator Sets ...... $6.95 Bicycle Locks ........:49e up | [| } , ion There's still another material - —_ f. MANY OTHER ACCESSORIES AND PARTS FOR BICYCLES |j =~." It grows only in ‘certain river f marshes and few untrained | , totem Reset Park iB | | — se George A. McMahon, Reve! Ost é : ~ Wesley R. Mats, Kalamasoo | | i | — | 7 Nancy C. Abbott, Keego Harbor Vernon P. Bailey, 2381 Dexter Edna J. Harison, Auburn Heights ‘ Réwin R. Koh, Towanda, Pe Marilyn J. Porter, Birmingham EASY TERMS @ EXCLUSIVE DUAL CHAMBER BURNER — (@ AUTOMATIC POWER-AIR BLOWER @ CHOKE OF TWO SIZES @ WAIST-HIGH CONTROL DIAL @ WASTE STOPPER AND HUMIDIFIER Edward D. Hoult, 4060 Arcedia Park drive Ruth M. Salo, Detroit Charles Wo Neidrett; €2 Marive heat over our floors thr home.. - Margaret H. Starner, “8 a V ieee how 20 sicalenieerneersecceted anal Oninre © nurses 17 Portiand =| nie wystom, pushes heat inte the rooms while pulls the cold alr ovt, = eee “Kédison TR. Keiser, New Hudson danice M, Cova, Novi i Paul J. Buestie, } Heien ©. Ballard, 0 SD teedeon Luxurious mahogany finish. New Exclusive Automatic Power-Air Fretertet 8 san "Slee _ Blower gives even forced warm-air heating, saves 1 out of 4 fuel , : | “was Faith gs ork dollars— (optional). Exclusive Duo-Therm Dua} Chamber Burner ~ PRICES RANGE - ff — Befsanti, Ferndale ig. gives more heat from every drop of oil. ¢ Big heat radiating doors. - - COLD i George Cordeira, 381 % Saginaw | Waist-high beat control dial. Automatic Draht Minder, Waste $ 95 ecbchions dan ninesenn and ovatus eines tay Mary C..Goodwin, $136 Oraves if Stopper. Humidifier. Add thermostat aed tend fire from your From continually waste heat out the chimney and on the ceiling! ponte pon ig - oe a ml | easy chair. William J~ Piecher, Harper Woods Joanne E. McOullough, Royal Oek Jimmie £. Shoun, al Allison IT'S HOUSE WARMING ene asteere | | TIME at WYMAN’‘S! csrset api Patenten M autonaric Manine M. Btyent, Roches ; TRADE-IN NOW! and get your beau- OIL fernece HEATER | Fg one, Bene Compare DUO-THERM performance, style, price! titul new DUO-THERM oil home Seethas Me Wisgere, Clewcon ~~] ; Easy Terms heater. New Beauty. Furniture Se William C, Pagel, Parmington Mattie &. Walker, Farmington sitszsx"' | DEPOSIT HOLDS YOUR HEATER! NEW ae ie the revelutionary. methed of FLOOR HEATING in. every room! ene SMALLEST. FREE You Can Use One Account | AID IN ZENITH’S PARKING _ for Purchases at Both ' ) __ HISTOR AT Our Stores ~ i x nearest Si ! egler Dealer ro a HOT DEMONSTRATION ? ‘ . a 5 Salts mo . t 2 ‘ atin 4 X —_—— a ai cle oak = oe Won Cloth .,. ccc cc eect ence * trom ia Fancy Nylon or Cotton SOCKS f ty: Checks, Piatds Or Diamonds Pair ft Cord U JTOy ROBES 95 By Stat %o Ma Zt E Weldon, or Knit Bol-Tuck a - | $7) 25 ~ | PAJAMAS... : Coat or Middy Style Sizes 13 to 18 trom .... BOYS’ DEPARTMENT = jake $ cj JR i Ore ° Daily 10:30 ‘til 9:00 ONLY! U | Sunday 10:00 to 3 = 6x7. 6x9. . $4.20 $5.40 10x12 12x15 $12.00 $18.00 8x9... $7.20 12x18 $21.60 8x10 . . $8.00 15x20 $30.00 Back-to-School! LEVI'S ...’wrorere $3.65 Peg-Bottom Pants $3.98 NSH ASA $2.95 6 $4.95 » DRESS PANTS — Free Alteration CAMPUS COATS! Boys’. Men’s ‘7.95. | 38 95° USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN FoR YOUR SCHOOL AND. HUNTING 1 NEEDS | Not one skier FLANNEL DRESS PANTS $10 55 ed. farming as his occupation All Wool Light Grey, Charcoal OOOO Big Business State Tourist aon Says Sport Hits. Total of 5 Million in ‘53 LANSING (UP) enjpoving grow ing Michigar i$ , in the state last winter the tourist Skiing which is popularity in WAS 1000 000) business council reported today Black ov Van A survey conducted for the council by Michigan State Col lege Bureau of Business Research shows skiing is “an important factor in the economic structure of the state's tourist industry” council secretary Robert J. Fur long reported average’ skier trip and $36.7 Furlong saia the spends $24.33 pet for skis Women enthusiasts almost equal and skiers of both sexes mostly ‘tong said =~. | About the only | shunning the sport are housewives and’ farmers the interviewed gave Boys’ Required Subjects FOR SCHOOL a Devid Copperfield Boys SLACKS — Untonditionally guaran teed Sires be to 32 wert 95 ee ee ee ee ee ay Dress SHIRTS Round Button Down ‘Gollars $ 93 Gabardine, corduroy, flannel! Sport Shirts 2.95 & 3.95 Insulated Strotojec =Boys JACKETS $ PONTIAC- UNION LAKE _ outfit, we were using and eased | first work groups | ° survey indicated - u of ahs ti T11F, PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, en those portions of us above water and our enthusiasm as well Dick and the boys s« rounged the beach for firewood and soon | had a respectable conflagration in | being Good sense called for sticking around the comfort of the fire, but doing anything sensible was so Completely out of character we dismissed the idea forthwith Instead, we tied on ai mon strous Hawaiian Wiggter, much | too heavy for the light spinning off the shingle into a patch of | rushes. An opening in the reeds looked fishy and we heaved out the plug, hanging the line on the tassels of a couple of rushes in ~~ process é “On the the lure swam in well enoygh until it came to the line-fouled reed. which it ee ehinibed. reached he tip, CHAMPION — Tor Von |) Zhepherd male owned by Williams Lake, is a. full- fledged retrieve It reached the second reed which \ siwnne rs the plub until it's awash tip was just Jackson; Pheasants at Idly watching the weird travel of the wiggle: were reminded of a small bird we once saw A pear in a welter of apray off such a rush once in Canada. And so it we was that we ‘were thinking of birds and Canada, instead of fish) | ANSING W—Pheasants in Mich- and Michigan, when the plug igan are at near record levels, a "stipped back into the water. At the gurvey by rural mail carriers has moment of contact -the largest | indicated bass we've seen anywhere in The conservation department re- some. thirty years of fishing for ported that the carriers, spotting : them surged half out of the water and smacked the plug |they make their regular rounds, | ty with 16.8 broods spotted per 10! world with 10,063 numbered snipes _Well, we just couldn't make the | saw 7.7 broods per carrier day|carrier days now entered on the Snipe Class G m Shoes transition from Canada to Mich- | this year. Department game experts are | International Racing Assn. rec- y igan fast enough and our delayed; This was slightty above tast peedicting that hunters will ex-| ords. A total of 317 new individual strike found nothing more solid! year and well over the 2.2 broods ‘than air. We won't say how big per 10 carrier days seen in 1947, the fish was, for fear of being ac-| during the low point in the pheas- claimed the greatest liar in the} ant cycle. decate. But we do know this | Surveys showed that the Thumb , We've caught enough S-pounders to| area again had the highest con- know what one looks like. This fish | centration of pheasants, although could have lunched on a 5Spound- | the count did not increase material- _er_and still had stomach rumbles |jy this year. Second highest con- from hunger centration was in the Ingham- There's a moral in this sad tale | Clinton-Eaton-Gratiot county group, Liebestraum Forrest A. placed best-of-breed and 3rd in the working group last, weekend at | the Ravenna Kennel Club.show at Kent, O the: number of men participants 4nd splashed back into the water, | number of show points to earn the rating. He previously went best- Canoe Race on Saturday at the Central Ohio Kennel Club, Columbus, O.;: 1 we—on—the—31-30 “o group—Fur—slowly bent under the weight of | dog at Huron Hills Kennel Club, An nArbor, and Oakland County | Kennel Club at Oak Park; best-of-opposite-sex at Jaxon Kennel Club, and best-of-winners at Saginaw Valley Kennel Club, Saginaw. Level, Survey Indicates pheasants during the summer as an SEPTEMBER 1}, 1954 oy a " sowie . eee —— ‘ > ' pe. an oe Local Sportsmen c i Ln | | : [ . ! Hope to Keep : Skeet Shoot Here , . = | Hope that the Oakland County : Ha eee | Sportsmen's Club near Waterford % ‘ : FA 1 , ‘ may; become the permanent home $19.95 hs l i | of. the National Skeet Shooting Dringer panie [Fn ry 3 ine Assn. championship tournaments : : Fwas woiced by Howard Shelley, ~ OTHER CARS, $24.95 VA\ CARS, $24.95 VALUE ’ ’ . club manager, before Pontiac Ki Fun: Trial Set Bi Cor f { wanians Tuesday noon $ in Ig n eS Such a move would merely be ; 95 following the lead of the nation’s be Area Owners Invited Is erman uge E ass tf Se f ] years tg el i chr _ x*, years they have. pe their cham- ALIGNMENT $7 95 VALUE to Attend Event for e Or D . pionships at Vandalia, Ohio | eee . ° + = Hunting Dogs By JACK PATTERSON _with which all fishermen are fa-) cruising around reail big trout » Milford, Oxford and For some years most of the ae S$ 95 Area Springet Spaniel owners’ “Woolgatherers” Shouldn t Go miliary but few observe: Fish | —trout im the 8- pound up league. | skeet championships have been . are invited tH join in a “fun” Fishing” might be a good fitle for "every cast out to the end We dack says the fish pay litte at. { Walled Lake Fishermen held —west of the Missisalpp! trial Sunday Sept “42 at Howard the following item At any rate could also mention a somewhat —_ cee eee tong Hold Top Spots crate, Jon ioe tae poem |) ee arms on Zz 0 Mesnard s Huntersfield) Kennels, woolgathering can take the blame broader aspect. of the same bout. in the mountain streams of New | fish poking out from under récky-| a the : Pd . sher in the few days ag i @ close at 3 p.m. the totems da ll over the N ‘ . GOODYEAR pearesen para tecied pai along with Dick, Hampshire. It tnvelves diving in |ledges, Jack asserts. Sounds like | (sept. 7). P- mg day ja ° =i | orth Ainerk an con SERVICE STORE a 7 hw: dogs H will give Patterson of Bir deep pools below waterfalis | fun but you don't get usin ‘the | + i be 3 | siewset $25.00 eanedl tt us Goon Wham " ating = don : with aqualung or snorkel and ter with anything that i | Entries wi taken from 8 nae hsp) Ue aL ; ae aurners! En epeertenity mingham. his sen y ng wa any zg ‘.- ins { te ament. that st . TT 30 Coss’ FE 5-6123 i Springer o PP : Rich nd a pase = Siok a aa oa ake: fa.m, to 3 p.m. today, tomorrow yirnament, that shooting will con- South to work their dogs under field een ; b jand Friday and from & a.m. to) tinue daily all week from 9 30 am — . — trial conditions — open all-age, Own No 1 BOY |noon, only, on Saturday. No entries | until 6 pm a eee a. sieoiindididinn novice and puppy. Pigeons will a pe will be taken Saturday afternoon,| jie explained that it was {m- be used, with expert ginners Ike @ good -day, Sunday or Monday . DSP: PRIS eS - %- Possible to ptubhsh a sehedule of = ~ overcast, wih a S and capable judges. ih rai Se The additional day for entries | the timé of each contestant’s ap- . Springer owners are titged to PATTERSON th. fish weren t! on Tuesday (8 a.m. tor3 p.m. pearance, since that depends on ; ARMY attend, whether they enter a dog having any. On the theory that only) aay wee perce mak the time of their registration HAVY or nos, te Uae et RA EteS | ney: hadn't indved! into the shal | iE Good catches wer the 100g which is sf matter of individual P with any orkanization. the club y hi i into the shal- | weekend to enter their fish + preference : extends a special invitation lows, we devoted most of the Current leaders in all three divi- ss 0 yg j i sions ‘ from out- 32 Ss. Saginaw St. 5 FE 2-0022 time to Working as far offshore j sions of the eentest are ; < ii B wader tops would permit. A few | side the city. They are Ex Huskie at t MIT half-hearted strikes re “de BASS—Bruce Reynolds, Milford SEATTLE up Appointment of W aterproot TARPAULINS Mildewproot ling ecomes be a d str rewarded this (6 pounds, 8 ounces} Fit Leanderson, captain of the Uni- x7? . atriy PIKE—James Sherrod, Oxford versity of Washington 1953 varsity . . . x * 1 A thin little rain began to damp (10 pounds, 13 ounces) crew, as freshman crew coach at BLUEGILL—Dick Roach, Walled Massachusetts. Institute of Tech- Lake 4 pound, 1-—ounces?} nology Wag announced today by Biggest fish—weight only con- MIT Head Coach Jess McMillin sidered—in each of the three |= ® groups will give {he top anglers a $50 U. S. Savings Bond apiece Entries are restricted to full- time Oakland County residents {summer residents are . inetigt- ble). Fish must be taken by hogk « and line in Oakland County waters. Fish should be brought to —the | Pontiac Press sports department | for weighing, measuring and photo- | | graphing. Where it is impossible re bring in an. entry immediately, |weight slips (signed by the weigh- ;er, a disinterested witness and the angler) must be provided. All fish so entered -must be weighed on approved, inspected scales Any fish, cleaned prior to en- ttry,-witt be exctuded t NIGHT WORKERS Morning House League WEST SIDE RECREATION 199 Orchard take Ave. First Place Gueranteed 400 y a 2-year-old German 2435 Maple Crest, today. Tor | 4 Porter of American Champion to complete the necessary (Based on an 18 League) League will be run on * a handicap basis. Afternoons, Evenings FE 4-0168 winners’ | OSCODA UW—The eighth, annual 4O-mile marathon Michigan eance - | race from Grayling to Oscoda will lbe held Saturday. and Sunday | Crews from Michigan, Ohio, Indi- N R qd ana and Illinois will race down the e€ar ecor Au Sable River starting Saturday ~| night and finishing Sunday after- noon. The event was won by Don- ald Feldhauser and Bernard Fow! where the population showed a.25/ er of Grayling Jast ‘year in 17 per cent jump. In third place were | pours. 33 minutes the Detroit area counties, where | iherteil per cent increase wa Record for Snipes Ottawa county had the highest NEW YORK #—There are now concentration of any single coun- | 39] chartered snipe fleets in the All Interested Bowlers: First Meeting Friday, Sept. 10th, 10:00 A. M. Gym Pants 99°.*1" ceed last year’s good bag of 1,- | 200,000 birds. But they do-not ex- | pect that the record bag of 1,400,« 000 in 1944 will be exceeded. craft have been entered this year in this one-design sailboat class The 15-foot craft was first designed in 1931 ‘475 Up , Gym Shirts 85° Up Michigan Outdoors | Untrained Dog Is Poor- Reflection on Owner +4 1 {00,000 |. | Mickie in people a his Kusaeeeliil Club of Michigan is just i. _ people. It is a great representative and prudent citizens of Michi- gan, banded together to make ownership of - their automobiles safer and better. And they make it pav to belong. They have provided themselves advantages, privileges and protection, fundamentally needed by every person who drives an auto- ( mobile, at a cost to cach equal to just about a half cup of coffee a day—$15 a year. AUTOMOBILE CLUB Wtchigan of TSA ub VISIT OR PHONE YOUR NEAREST OFFICE “By MORT NEFF (Tight rope attached to the collar. | The dog is allowed to run, then About one hundred -thousand | ag he nears the end of the rope dogs of various and assorted sizes the whistle is blown and a sharp | and breeds will cavort around the | pull on the tether tranmits the N general idéa' fields = foress of Michigan Di tonne should mever be come Od. That date marks followed by severe beatings. A the ope = iz the SMAI Rare dog is a sensitive creature fully, and upland bird able to discover your own moods seasons in this by a change in the tone of your state, and seems voice. Whippings are of - little to be the signal value. and may make the dog shy for the ge he of you for a long, — time: ~ Joosing ~ of : pack of canines eal Sweat Socks } 49: Pr. Sports Shop 16S. Cass FE’2- as DISTRIBUTOR of tion fits most of these dogs, and it's a shameful reflection upon | their owners and “masters.” This | writer strongly believes that the | pleasure of hunting is just about doubled by the presence of a good _ dog. NEFF Serve Staton Equine | fe Globe Hoists Any dog likes the praise that | * goes with his display of on @ ARO pissed ee @ Atlas Lathes and Saws @ Chicago Preumatic Tools @ Heinwerner Hydraulic Jacks | @ Proto Tools PONTIAC MOTOR PARTS “Parts Headquarters for the Doctor of Motors” Automotive Machine Shop Service and Rebabbitting Obviously the most step is to teach him when called. The call vocal, or by whistle. ers believe the easiest way to teach this is with a long, rather A Good Used Car? Phone FE 2-0106 E. F. ALSTON, Mgr FE 4-1496 63 N. Perry Street FE 2-9255 . Sj BRC MI 4. . RB. Witsen MI 4-s163 o +. i 84 K. L, Long FE 3-341? KS, Wasnon 06 $0008 | Rochester South Perry St. H.W. MeNalley OF ¢-7761 Virgil Keener Melly 3-481 “t and SAVE — 4 = = r anno Wu be ‘ i" - g ‘ i » . . P [3 * s ee Ree a4 _ - | THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPPRMBER 1, 1954 ar Soybeans Show [a MARKETS | Market Rallies ee ST 3 ff Some Strength . noms"... Affer Setback — -" i * Edison Appoints ’ Sales Assistant Herlcn B. Ritze Will > ublic armen markets reported by the ureau of Markets . CHICAGO W — Soybeans dis-| Pruits: Apples. No 1, 350-800 bu NEW YORK _ » stoc 9 apples, Greenings, No 1, 3 00-350 bu Y a the 1 ‘ played some hesitant strength on } apples, McIntosh, fancy, 500 bu: No 1. market rallied today after its | . the Board of Trade today but most | } 50-400 bu: apples. Wolf River. tangy. = cette . 4.00 bu; No 1, 300-326 bu Camteloupe Severe setback of yesterday. of the rest of the market hung | No 1, 225-2.75 bu. Grapes”No 1 100 > . . 9 : ° ° close to yesterday's ‘final prices. FE ae FEE.. eckioberrics oe Gains went to between 1 and 2! Begin Duties in Oakland u che: aven, fan j Buying~in beans stemmed in| ite ce ae Sakae be peaches, POints in many instanees and_a District Today F i i part from absence of deliveries of | | Galen "Funiie t are 3 rg Bae ig few pushed higher than that. Losses | s ‘ cash beans ail September paeei Eons : 5 bu Beats sugar. Ne.) 300-350 were sm: all and scattered, Lara Me Riter-today assumed — } tracts. That Month wag the strong. | bs, cr ae A = _— his new post as assistant district | nks, No: I} 2 ys Nessie * ; . ison | yo est and gained about three’ cents | Damson No. 1240-300 i bu Water The "pace of trading quicke ned | | ‘er of Detrait Edison's ‘ es manager m at one time, falling back later. weigher Lm: 2.50 bu. oe owhen- prices = — . ie ne ' he T y ela fans, green iat ° . off, akiand district, } Formosa wag scheduled to buy | 1 001 $6 Sak! areca. Kantecks Toe when the rise leveled | a — ~~ 20,000 tons of soybeans during the | Weeder Nei. 225-3 00 bu: beans, . | The rate was less than two mil- officials oO e day “ tound, Not. 200-250 bu; deans, Lim. | lion shares for the day. That com- utility firm sald y. No 1, 300-350 bu: beans, Roman, No 1. . , 2 50-350 bu: beans, wax. No 1280-350 pares with 2,640,000 shares chang Ritze, a native © =a Wheat near the end of the first | pu Beets, No. 1. 75-90 dog hehs: beets F ’ hour was unchanged to ‘4 higher, | topped. No 1, 100-125 bu * proceott, No ,N hands in yesterday's cee of Iron River, 4 2 2 . . r 4 . aie ,| 2._ 250-200 % bu Candace. No 1. 90- "market | comes to Pontiac = pega! 2-134, corn unchanged 1 28 bu: eabbage, curly, No 1. 100-1 $0 , : : to lower, September 5 u; cabbage. red No 1, 1 25-1 7§ bu; cab- Major divisions that were un- rom a position ’ sie S205 %. | ee earenit: No 1, 400-195 bu. Car- ie ‘ _ a oats were \ to higher, Septem-| rots. No 1, ?5‘as. nay a earrots, |. der fire yesterday by sellers were as power salés , 3 1 p Ee 1 topped. No ?. 100-135 » Caulifiower, y who » yf Ai cman ber 74g, rye % tol 2 higher, $ep- | v7 "s 50-360 dor Celery, Nol tte, | taVored today by bayers engineer at Edi. ~u tember $1.30%, soybeans 1, to! 250 erate: celery, No 1, 75-125 dos.| evidently felt that the shares had son's Detroit of >} S wey Corn, sweet: No 1, 75-100 6 dow Cu- reac -sold posi ~ © 4 i higher, September $3.05 and | cumbere dill sive, No 1, 275-398 ba j hed an over tion. | fier | ard unchanged to 18 cents a hun- cecumbers, pleklc. Ma 3. 4.00-4 80 pu. | Doing well were the aircrafts, A gradtiate of | dred und: arte Septe cucumbers. slicers No 1, 1 00-150 bu D ; ; tf S875 pounds higher. plember ast bs eg dos bene acount No 1. steels, motors, an railroads on|< - 5 . ae Bens on _ : Ra + the University of RITZE ‘ - nu: oe ar "E : " ; | = 1.00 px Cilgae ateen No 1, 68-90 dos | £00d activity, Also higher were the | _ AP Wirepheojo Mic “ee " ie cPanel : Grain Price bag Parsley. “curty, Wot th-b0 dos (U8, Coppers, chemicals, radio-tele- BEACHED—Two fishing draggers, the Fleetwing (eft) and the | eee Worl id W : 1 heeared as : z > * o ces behs: parsie oot, No 1, 75-90 dos. Peas, | Visions, rubbers, and the utilities State Sales Tax Mary J. Hayes (right) both of Ngw Bedford, high and dry on Crow -Billi a -(| ad ; ahi CHICAGO GRAIN btack eve 1 218-325 bu Penpers. | : a . : nN ; . i ; radar officer on an aircraft car- F CHICAGO (AP)—Opening grain cayenne No 1. 15-100: peppers. het Ne | Among higher stocks were Gen- ee ogee Island at Fairhaven, Mass., yesterday where hurricane Carol drove lar r ’ Wheat Soybeans a ge Ny ee ~— i |eral Dynamics, Lockheed, Boeing, on July Trade the vessels as it roared up the North Atlantic coast causing millions | ‘ | | - u oes, new, No = j " > fh _ | Ad : = | 180 59-Ib bag "sciniwee. new, No 1 | Montgomery Ward, Chrysler = of-dollars in damage. Building in center of island is tr insmitting | 0a oun in tate a: ; “nm the father _of two ’ } Jan ........ 378 IB eeet ge og een woes. “St | Youngstown Sheet & Tube, Ameri- Shows Increase Station for WNBIL of New Bedford ; _ eee: 5 | — : sons, Rife lives at 12005 Ward —____ | ¢ er ey | hehe: radiches white, fancy. 90 dor behs; |ean Telephone, Western Union, - ee Smee Se MAR Ql TTE of Three geol. [Ave Detroit Paty tenses 8M | RO ‘ pe =~ Peng gyre egg | Southern Railway, Santa Fe, and| LANSING W—For the first time “ .- joists in Michigan's Upper Pen-+ ; a aie lend of 12% , Pe a 16-78 Ng. 1, 150-290 bu. squash. Italian, No 1, toes Pent in many months the 3 per cent Dow Workers Given News in Brief alla vaxtenian anniiiiend thacdis | i" oe “ y ips pe = = eT; é Ke 00-1 80 'y bu; seuash, Hubbard. No t - ee . cents per shure o e pe 4 Oct 1450) ° ‘hie | Ur ‘ to . 109 bu squish, Summer, No 1, 18-128 | Michigan sales tax increased in : yy cal } t r ; ay % nee , tae ' bu Tomatoes outdnor No t 40°79 —New York Stocks 1 a : taura W. Perry, #, of tt Bag covery of what they calted a sect cumulative convertible preferred. | } Soybean Oi! . | 16-1 bekt Turnip No.1. T5128 des + ‘name Spay atake: Teeenie Com u foc ele St. pleaded yuulty to ulegal -entili lly important 10foot vein stock Way announced today by behs; turnip. topved. No 1, 150-1 7% bu. | gainirat McN & L 12 | . om - e i hii ae : . ic ; a i: aa - fies Lettuce and salad grrens Celery ab- | age ze List i My . OO tds tadatte Clarence Wo Lock said | vossession of betfing slips and paid of coal formed 1,500,000. 000 years ep Fale sasha ou“ = 7 “te ; Dee 1.0... 1128 bage No 1. 175-225 bu Endive, NO 1 Aleg L Stl ... 4 Love Aire £20 poday . | IDI. AND (2) The huge Dow), $15 fine Tur day when xhe ap ne fanufacturing fo. at Ro ‘ie Mari)!" ayaa | Legg oy Pc eps — eae al | Allted Ch . 894 Loew's 718) | ' i hehe Pant futon Mau 0 | ter.” Dividends will be payable” seerolre No ‘ ied . 5 orn 26 . ring = 4 ~ i ? i bu pinach,. No am Loc 186 wid stl Pd 16 . , . : ‘ . i - — sglttertons treet «nda 4 st bu Bwite Chard, Not.) Am M &,Pdy 251 Monsan Ch 834. the reversal of the trend was due |). included employes of Dow's, Watch accord ng to Pontiae Po lof the University of Wisconsin, and for Some Truck Owners held around 19 50-20.00. Okra, No J. 178-225 pk a es N Gas : a4 M pret oo | mainly to a vigorous sales cam: | sibsidiarics and those of dormestic Hee who discovered . seas ier Nie eae DRERIEe -oh, ae LANSING wW — A revision which Cuttle—Salable 350. gi hter cla . = . » ! ns ee ee . iy fF outine tro ive UVeTSity : steady; geod and choices slaughtac ‘ pes ante : a ae aenee be 2*¢ | paign by automobile dealers, | associated companies during a routme pa vard Universi , . |will reduce insurance rates for steers and mixed yearlings 18 50-23 75: DETROIT EGGS lca Bacal ses urray Cp 25 The new offering, the stath of its = tarrett said the diycovery ine nen-commercial owners of small ve! t Bis 413 5. . K . . , “ nd ‘ =) no high choice or prime offered earty DETROIT (AP) — Exes. fob Detrott. | am sul Pd 26 4 et pape R 85 Bales taxes on autemobdiirs to kind since 1948.0 wilt Be handled Poekan Tete peeee iene 's cates the existence of life on earth k hl . ved utility and commercial steers and heif- Cases included federal-state grades Am Tel & Tel 1701 ‘ Deis a 5 ; : ‘ K ite , breakin of the Hawthorne School : trucks @ndVflarmers was approved, . ge je: wtny and vemet ——— a. ree RTTys jumve ies Ppp aoe bo 68! Nat Gype 115, taled $3,501,600 compared to | in 4 payroll deduction plan, the |) 499 1 Televraph Kd. where toots | dering the PreCambrian era effective today, by State Insurance , u com) ave 55. Tar 5 wid 4 m Wo ] g i * . " . , ‘ “ yb : mercial cows 10 60-1260: mont conners ahmed he ea Seal Lue se - = ail o ett pet $3,768,000 a vn ago. " i “a spokesman said valued at $11 were stolen from the The men sald the eqal was Commistoner Jeseph A. Navarre, * eutters ; » few Hgbt can-/| 28 wid ave 27 rade B large 46-46 (A Cc . 3a4 ous treaths this year, auton . i ove ’ t » ‘ eC ’ - t . . ~ . oh hers €.06-7.00: utility « ectaneeratat | cea re ne = eraae B. large Anse - re Nat ime 3! h ) : ies He said employes will be pe boiler room. Police said thieves) fotmed in Pre-Cambrian roevks and Insurance companies were per bulls 11.50-18.00, odd head 1450 Browns —,QGrade A. fumbo 53-50. wtd j Armour & Co 5 pC "2 tales taves have been o » | mitted to subscribe for stock YUP entered through an unlocked wine Was found by stripping land ‘in a mitted to classify as private pas- Calves—Salable 100. Market not fully seu 1 t } ong NY Cent 202 . established : i “a a GH i ee ee hig Nia M Pw 311 | 000 to $500,000. to 10 per cent of their annual wage | gow in the basement heavily wooded section of Iron] senger autemobiles -all pick-ups, Sheep—Salable 200. No earl les . } 7. or tine _ Norf & West . 414 r have -cancellation or ' | delive . . — a Be sro = We. ave Pi B. large ‘ 1 Atl Cat Line __ ie Kosmas 444] The use tax collections in August | a e at the chee ‘ anes ition © Saccainat Waigatedl Vedas. te County delivery —— = panel — is - 7 ” Niet : Nor Pac 36 ig t : | 19 00-23 08; pone and commercial cows seo? supplies moderate, demand siow: Curtiss Wr . 336 pail are . 8 | 7 { One Inde “pends nt market here | w th cee Sa ~ +. Soret Se BRT cand emaee Ee marae uit “Smee my eT Pee eam BF Seer y, i] NEW YORK w—Sharp declines | Or | es Crawford-Dawe-Grove : pono we — eominercial’ vie tt bees : | Raters 370 Ruste §3.4h-1Th- Bebraska | orig ens a = Bt Jos Lead wa! in’ prices of coffee, cocoa and pork slashed Prices on all nationn | Capt. Hanger, who joined the gi, y t Round Reds $3175 Minneapolis Warbas | ! see at tteg Pop 297) . te o &\ brands of coffee to 89 cents last | ; rer, ea 14 80” geod to prime vealery 1" oe $2: 35-3.80 ei aoa meow Oat 291 | products — — t 7 | week depattment Sept. 1, 1924, also has s Insurance of All Kin ls ff Bale = i sa6 Seab Al RR 613) Bradstreet index of wholesale foe | a : f : ery tebe oak rear riser Poult zl A bog ~., 372 Shell O11 Me! prices this week to the lowest point| The majority of Pontiac-area | & 80". William Hanger, 28, with 716 Pontiac Stete Bank Bidg. Ph. FE 2- 9357 1¢ poner Mia OO gay Mr par mage oultry wl & Muse. 31 eS 426! since Dec. 1. 1983 | stores polled today indicated they | the Getective bureau ib steady; good to prime . | is | e 2 » 4005, . : ee eet . —— sere mamas ener . 8 spring lambs mainiy geod and choice DETROIT POULTRY 17 —seg Reis = Gs! The index registered $6.65, com- | would wait and see what whole. | fs Fras Tae tee hen cane Brine -20.00-| DETROIT AP) Prices ee 3 Bou Ry ...... $24! pared with $6.62 on Dec. 1. A week | Salers did before reducing prices | | é iow «# grades -\f ob Detroit fer No quality live oon +e) = c | 17.80; short —. deck choice and | pountriy up to 10 a.m a ae ‘*' 3331 ago the index was at $6.89 and a/| beyond last week's 10 cents. Most ee _ a “§ ot Oe oA 97 Std Ol Cal. 81) year ago this week $6.61, This| charge $1.15 for national brands. 2 z F Std ON Ind bd — i¢ cues S6t-.0s; few gheten beady wsigass | Stes tutes ST) Berra eee te | Onn Fer Ba ee Om BS sh | week's dectine of 3.5 per cent from | Alcohol | Ball t : Z ” 3 > 5 50. 30%; caponettes 4-5 iy Ibs. 33-35. Duck- | Gen Mills 662 Std Ol OM .. 8! a week ago was the sharpest since cohol issue on ° : lings 30-32 Gen Motors 735 Stevens JP a 19 Stew War 202) Feb. 10, ae 7 ; : “oa many Sees Meee: 2P ie meine 32.6 Studendk 9 173/ Commodities fallin g inc’ | HILLSDALE W—Hillsdale Coun- : oms - m rac s , Zoning Review Set Comment Market steady. Recetpts | Gen Tel 336 egy pn cee hams, bellies, lard, coffee. j ty voters will decide in the No- | , ‘ : moderate and ample to a feir demand Gen Tire -. 365 ; > lec » | Retail buyers are very price conscious Gillette €16 dll ada a | cottonseed oil, cocoa, eggs, pota- | [vember election whether the b White lak G and quality irregular” Turkeye_appest | Geoerich 7. ope TeX @ Bul. 884) toes, hogs and lambs. Higher were | county will allow the sale and | TA THE STUNNING NEW EFFICIENT soodric ece - ‘ . ~e’ y e roup mae et present price levels. Receipts | Goodyear .... 704 tLosaregy ee rey flour, corn, rye, oats, butter and manufacture of alc oholic bev | é WH | eens tn pear de and - average |Greah Paige -r 13 prean Ww Air 182 steers jerages. The Coynty Election Board _ ITE > TOWN weights ranging as high as 27 pounds at No Ry 3 5 . . Review of —s a | om toms and 12-14 pounds on heas Gt West 8 04 geent et wen aa The index represents the total | approved the issue upon a dry ae in effect in thet shi a GO POULTRY ol on” |. ane Sheen 34, cost at wholesale of one pound) group's showing of 3,748 petition | Ww elect In ownship in CHICA Gu al Un Carbide 94) é . é ‘ ods neral use. signatures. L's lieu of the drafting of the official | CHICAGO—AP Live poultry sbout | Meseh Cinta = Onte air Lis 246 each at 1 tex ds ins general ws 7 | signa ee | building code and its approval by | {'tc1 coops "198.033 ‘T tob paving Homesti {S| United Cp .. $4 enaes ins b 6 ee ‘ mit ru . — referendum is slated for the Sep- ala ee eas ne aes tronee | Meua Mer 4@ Un Gas Im, 8 tember meeting of the White Lake | . Township Civic Assn, at 8 p.m. . in the Town Hall today, Orville B, Thompson and Wil- liam J, Best, who head the asso- ciation’s zonin : 7 US Lines 162 and broilers 27-30, old romsters 135-14, | TI! Cent .., 4 oor KI gs | Inland Sth. $8.5..OS Rub - ver -3h6+ —— 3, _capopeties 20-31. . t Inspir Cop J us Bmelt o: : STOCK AVERAGES jint Harv , US Btrel pf 156 Compiled by the Associated Press Int Nick 461 17.56 Figures after decimal points are eighth: | Int % 158 «(15 eo | : ~ Upright Food Freeze a A Cih ange that FOREIGN EXCHANGE iia NEW YORK (AP)—Foreign pre : rates follow —— Britain in doilars, | _— im cents | : $25 anadian dollar in New York open t market 2 15-16 per cent premium or. “IZED LOANS 0 102.93% U8. cents off 3-32 of @ cent. | . Europe: Great Britain (pound) $2.80 | 9-16. up 1-16 of a cent: Great Britain i ’ : x 30 day futures 2506-16, up 1-16 of 2-1 @ Now you can enjoy all the benefits cent; Great Britain 60 day fututes | eran “ | 2809-16, up 1-16 of @ cent; Great | “of dealing. with the largest toan com- Britain 90 day futures 280 17-32, up 1-10 of s cent: Belgium (franc) 2.60%. | : pany in the U. S.—and still have the . - = gg Germany a Temeun | pleasure of being served by the same | = a . s a— _ — ES ind "guinder) 26 up 01 7 cont » : + agri Hom aie —who-have- bern 4 ! | ee . * 3 - —_ : ¥3 : Portugal ‘eseudo} 3.80, unchanged: so helpful im. [ne past. ; » . é : ” a ed Bh] Check these Beate services and | ST | Nero changed; Denmark (Krone) 14.50, un- changed ’ | use the one that is the best for you: | . | oxen’ Now you can PLAN, BUY, BAKE and COOK lead the dacdaion. : ae tt —? — 1 | Jacobs 2: j The association’, 20 member | Prev nay Shae me oo Pty ee pour RL 46 ° Y a bogrd of. directors have been work ST Bhs lEemteett’. i ne . . ing since February wif the town- ¢ $24 102.1, Xsesge 88 29 3 . es ship trustees on the zoning preb- | ei mel Ce ee 7 sae dati x tem, ¢ aH 183 LOF Glass 65.7 Zenith Rad Z anaes ta . ee Pravda Hails ‘Victory’ einreett ordeiie— indicts 136 in FHA Deals 5 \ MOSCOW w—Pravda exultantly | ures Sfter decimal whe ae Fr peti ot AIE — = oe Pr OV ent Loan proclaimed yesterd t *‘vic- | Baldwin Rubber* 1 14 146 | Justice partment announced to- E A eee | : tory”’ over EDC in ie aed h ‘Ae. hn Fonte, cary eee =i _ day that its crackdown on criminal and —— Society of Setrelt | - sembly must be exploited “‘to hin- | Kingston Products* ..... .... 3¢ 32 offenses in Federal Housing Ad- | is now j der the remilitarization of Borin eet siaedinn nn” eas -thinistrauan cases has resulted in| ’ (Western Germany) in any other | Ru@y Mte* rests s.: 40 42/ the indictment of 136 persons this | , : f Warne Bcrew" ene ee E l veer and in 1988. CE CO. orm” —— SS ; —— FINANCE CQO. ne { } ' worn | a os | ’ . . . unghanged? Brasil "vfreet TS 5 % Nationwide Banafiaal Credit Card— _. ; h d f ti | vepeneia ¢ peer se unchanged like carrying a spare pocketbook wherever you go. ® Single-visit | . a ea ft ] me. ; aoe ‘cage Sune Kase. ine 158 : Pick Your Own Payments loans (phone first). ® Lunch "NOTICE TO BIDDERS — sealed pro- 15 Mo. Pisa] 24 Mo. Pal hour service. # Budget counsel. | _+ dust think of the convegsence of shopping _Make every meol o happy treot . . . Freeze posal Gil be receired, by ine Board of 8100 | $831 | $583 | & Loans-by-mail. & Cash to ight in your home. Yes, like hoving © schoo! ood plenc bmches cheod, Cook... Telegraph Road “Pontiac Mid en 8. $300 24.53 17.08 finance a purchase ars that's never closed . . . — tor woe of “Sargela Ban” . eid eS . See a" "canes aoa | | | $$00 7.2 i ‘ idays, evenings, onytime .. . and‘it’s vantage in ou en 3 : Time. September 3. ise os ane wees . y i Poyments cover Leh Phone, write = visit us today. yours with this wonderful new Frigidoire these advantages many more with this and pine they will be -pabitely opened | SELF SERVE DRUGS 3% me. on bot. te $90. 211% me We like to say “Yes” to employed Food Freezer amazing freezer. Come in and see it today. e wats at Ge toe — a a0 39h ee S oe . . Nothing will bring you as much pleasure You'll be amozed when you learn how . “ail Tock ‘Batt alae ~ | - a —_ people—married me single. or save Z moch ‘om fe edd as much con. eoty it is to own and operote this efficient, . + Information, epee blanks aind spe- Come in and get acquainted with Loans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture, or Car venience to o busy homemaker dependoble Frigidaire. 3 it . 3 it . . \ . al cifteations may = ocis sogneet. | Sam... the Druggist who will ; & ; as to their con . e = * j ; aiken SX . The Board reserves the right to reject | | with all r needs. | 4 and fo accept the: proposais tnt, tn the | help you a | FINANCE CO. | at ‘a, BE MODERN ~ USE A FREEZER! Live Better. . : Cut Food im. terest and to the advantage of the Board | T - Provident Loan | ay Costs... SAVE WORK... SAVE FOOD... SAVE MONEY! of County Road Commissioners of the | | ond Sevings Society of Detroit t ‘a ‘ Sounty of Oakland. Michigan | « Lawrence Bidg., 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST. anncrconrtzomct | OWN MODERN DRUG STORE— Gerbid Harvey, Manager = PONTIAC © Federal 2-829 | oS el “COMPLETELY NEW FROM STEM TO STERN! | S'S "PCT Atria cn wreany mon | co NSUMERS POWER COM fad aRocs : D. LOMERSON ; \ 4 i = - ; , 7 % : . ess i. is _ N * { Nye Shee . : f ‘ : pee : : 7 . \ bY: : ‘ ; : aN } ; ; ; 4 > \ : ‘ \ : = ye ~y : * is , " A. i eshdl { To Inoculate Compmates | “way NOW SPOKANE, Wash. (UP) —The River and its sprawling long have been consid- = ar na Ay Phage gmavg of the Northwest, but how that de- velopment should be carried out | has been one of the region's major | headaches. The proposed Columbia Basin compact is designed to cure some of those headaches and provide a _basis for finding the cure for oth- ers, As planned, it Will be an agreement among the seven states Development ¢ of Northwest Youth, 23, Dies Hinges on Columbia River ing that the federal legislation be | amended to allow them to enter | the compact. | E. Whitaker Jr., HUNTSVILLE, Tex. of Lubbock, Tex., interest in the 219,492-square mife | ‘ in the electric chair, basin drainage area — 360 square | part of the state. The area also includes some 5, chamber at 12:02 smait corner of Wyoming, alt ; Montana west of the continental divide, and-most of Idaho, Wash- ington and Oregon ‘in Electric Chair for Slaying Girl wa— Walter | convicted of the Utah has the smallest te *rritoriat} 1%3-2murder of Joyce Fern White The former Air Force cadet en- | onal said: | miles in the extreme northwestern | tered the Huntsville Prison death * am., the first shock at 12 4 am. and| 590 square miles in Nevada, a| Was pronounced dead two minutes last With all signs of srw brava-|tion slaying of the pretty high do gone, the 23-year-old Connecti-| school senior Whitaker said he cut youth was calm but appeared | planned to marry. * —, a { THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1954 r dejected, a Téporter who witnessed the execution said. "T want to thlink everybody who | , has helped me in any way,” Whit- aker said as he was being strapped | into the electric chair. He hesitated and added: “Well, I guess that's about it.” ernor, balked * * received being good to me. Those were his is. Macomb ter in the January 1953 strangula- GOP Nominee Hits ‘Bickering’ i in State os ra py Rage: encatalr pow DETROIT W — Donald S. Leon, | men.” ard, Republican nominee for gov- he called “‘t ering, died early today Then he turned.to C.R. Shepherd, haggling wk ween ene in | prison superintendent of buildings, state government and said he was || the common good, we will build a i ready to provide ‘sound answers | ; i to tremendous problems.” “Capt. Shepherd, thank-you for) 7, @ campaign statement an- nouncing-a tour-of Jackson and Counties execution was the last chap- row. Leonard ae the problems: “Proper highways, adequate Pesce Bd stash ocean ‘U 7] <.. tstyation and = celgtion t tht an ene 4 ~dged -paciatibien india, transportation, nema er siete Rec icior hore trade and finance, com- third of -all “non-farm “ salary jobs in the United States; vom moe tine and | bined, another third: ares acip-re agama ~ dbs for Michigan working- “It's timé,” Said Leonard, “we had a ‘de something’ attitude in | the top administration of state | government. If we all get together and cooperate on programs for at what greater . Michigan.” Scientific tests have shown snakes to be entirely deaf. Thus, rattle, and the cobra cannot take | > his rhythm from the snake's charmer’s music, but from the swaying of the performers body. a GARAGES BRICK—FRAME—BLOCK Custom-built to meet your needs. Free Estimates. We can take about 25 more garages at these low prices. ELLIS Inc. FE 2-2671 2690 S$. Woodwerd It was 1950, however, before any meetings took place. After the first | session, the states sfaried machin- ery moving to authorizé the pact. | _ Washington, Idaho, Nevada and | Montana passed special legislation | authorizing permanent appointment | of-a negotiating Committee. Oregon started action through an existing state body. Wyoming and Utah a! ready had legislation -authorizing them fo name negotiators, On July 16, 1952, the federal governmentgranted permission to | Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washing} f ton and Wyoming to “enter a compact for the equitable dispo. | sition, allocation, diversion and ap- portionment of the waters of the | Columbia river and its tributar- ies.” __Neveda and Utah now are ast- Bob Kirk Band Billing Closes Casino for Season | Kirk and his orchestra (the | former Griff Williams band) will | play for dancing at Walled Lake | Casing Ballroom, Friday, Satur- day and Sunday. This will be the final dance’ en- gagement of the season at Walled | Lake. | PHILADELPHIA ®—The City | Harmony House SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. Modern Furniture— All Sale Priced! _Bed Set 198 $20 Down It's a sola, it's & bed! Me ttly tailored matching chair th gray or brown. Foam rubber séat and back! Choose yours now—Save . at Sears Vy lon Frieze Mark Tippler’s Tomb KAGOSHIMA, Japan (UP)—His- solved the torians at last have » 27x22x33-Inches . . , 24x20x36-Inches |. FURNI Studio Couch — Se — 69° 5.57, Down om Ba br ft ) 3 . Z Z| Mattress or Box Spring we J. I 352 coil-mattress-is-insulated-with sisal; 0 upholstered with felted cotton. Matching ’ @ wood frame box spring has hour gloss ! coils. Full or twin size. - yd oy de | 22.88 - J. Porcelain Top Kitchen Table, 40x25x30-Inches 12.88 , 28.88 K. Metal Utility Cabinet, 24212x63-Inches . , 34.88 L. Metal Cabinet Base, 30x25x36-Inches , 188s M. ‘Motal Utility Cabinet, 30xi1x63-Inches . . 24.88 , . 39. N. Steel Wardrobe, 67x30x20-Inches. . . . , . 27.88 18.88 ° 0. Steel Wardrobe. 66230:20-Inches | a7ee | 4-Otar COMBINATION 14.88 . P. Steel Wardrobe, 66x26x20-Inches . . . . . . 22.88 | Sears Harmony’ House Sears - O - Pedic Metal China Cabinet . . . 27.88 |] mattress and ee oe wie . 5.95 RB. Metal Utility Cabinet, 24x12x64-Inches . , . 19.88 ca tf sleeping. See it now! winter, Mattress or Box Spring 342-coit-mattress is insulated with sisat and many layers of felted cotton. Lus- trous, long-wearing rayon damask tick- ing. Matching spring! FOAM RUBBER. SET Foam-tatex mattress is 4 inches. thick, atergy-free, cool in summer, warm in Box spring engineered with higher coils for better sleeping! _ Full Size . eo ee . $88 set uy, . g wy, 5S aT A RS. S ; , m . 4 , LOW PRICE \ ~ nnerspring mattress studio cou can be use : ~ as a lounge or opened into a couch. In green 3-Pc. Solid Ma le ® or black print! Save more now! Furniture Dept. — Reg. 164.95 . . . Early American Bed, Dresser. Chest ry Second Floor « Now you can have the charm. of Cape Cod styling .., < ah ri co the warmth of rich solid maple... in a bedroom ae a wf _ suite from Sears that’s sale-priced to suit your budget. . > ; Ruddy-finished pieces have dove-tailed center-guided > ) > Twee oO! G Je ele 78d, drawers with ook interiors. See it—compare Sears > 2 >,’ low price! . a 4 Tailored in $ : GS < F { P a 9“) 153 Bookcase Bed | Gold or Grey > i ; $10 Down 4 nd Do ble D r Jackknilfe style button tulted sola bed... Features « ‘ a u resse spring-tilled seat and back, large storage compartment! * It's priced low—save! 2 $ sr = — (ee . PST oe 3 ; i — More of the same Cape Cod styling am? maple beauty! Have an up-to- . date suite with this popular bookcase ), bed, roomy, dresser and fawiess . mirror! At Sears! i 1 4 ASK ABOUT SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN a ~~ \ — ,) . : ; : ‘a s > geesvot 34% 88 | I — ? . Each Each | 5 ° 3.50 Down ' $4 Down ~ #e —_ : a £ a Caiiefaction pucrantted oo youn monay bach” SEAR,