ra Detalis page two 118th as * *& &* ° PONTIAC MICINGAN, } MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 —86 PAGES i - Pn aad * Two Union Locals Rati eM UAW Pad He “we “-* *,* x &* & * 4 Waterford Speedboat Pilot Dies in Crash ° Auto Accidents Result in Three Other Fatalities. Royal Oak Youngster Drowns in Lake Orion Saturday A 5l-year-old Waterford Township speedboat pilot was killed in the Detroit Memorial regatta Saturday while three other Oakland County persons died in weekend auto accidents and a fourth drowned. The dead are: Lloyd Maddock, of 2530 Silverside. Stanley Stasin, 53, of Mil- ford. Joseph Gora, 50, of Oak Park. Ira Garfunkle, 26, of Berkley. Mark R. McCollum, 2, of Royal Oak. Maddock, a building contractor, | died when his 135-cubic-inch racing | hydroplane stalled and was rammed at nearly 100 miles an hour by another entry in the De-| troit River race. His boat was rammed by one) driven by Harry Vogel, 49, of Dearborn. Vogel running behind Maddock and fighting for the lead, said he was unable to avoid the érash when Maddock's craft; the Holiday, stalled in front of him. SUFFERED BROKEN HIP Vogel suffered a broken hip when his boat ran over the top of Mad- dock's, ‘Lloyd started to stand up ‘and wave at me. I was too close. I had no chance to turn, and ran right over him,” Vogel related. ~ Maddock, ranked second na- tionally last year in the 135 class, Was commodore of the Oakland County Beat Club at Syivan Lake. He is survived by his wife, a son, Lioyd dr., and a married daugh- ter, Mrs, Betty Jane Begovich. Funeral service will be held | Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at Huntoen | Funeral Home, Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Stasin, a passenger in a car driv- en by James Johnson, 56, of Pon- tiac, was killed when Johnson's car collided with another at Tele- graph Rd. and Northwestern Hwy. Saturday night, INJURIES TREATED Theodore Stokes, 22, and Lee Baker, 23, both of Flint, occupants of the other car, were taken to Pontiac General Hospital where they were —— for minor in- juries, Gora was killed Saturday night in a 2-car crash near Detroit. Garfunkel died en route to Pon- “ " een THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 The governor, the first Demo- erat to be elected the state’s chief executive in 20 years. will greet the President at Skowhegan, home of Renublicay Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Meine. Muskie and Fi- senhower will attend a clambake at Mrs. Smith’s home. os o * J few hours later Eisenhower Will flv back to Washington, end- tng a six-day tour of northern New - and go to a late evening White House conference with Sec- retary of State Dulles on the shoot- hours yesterday and caught two salmon and a mess of trout in the Maealloway River at Little Boy | Falls. One of the salmon was an 1sincher weighing about two ALBERT E: MANOFSKY Manofsky Appointed to Engineering Post became effective June 15, has @ long record in the machine and tool designing field in Michigan. A native of Warren, Ohio, he has served as director of machine The trout averaged 10 to 12) inches, and Eisenhower, who re- portediy caught them ‘“‘fast and Fryeburg. ‘ efit aut 7 #8 f E been active & Ey i ker and Robert Fisher. Paulin Named Head of State Gas Group - MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) = ie? elected president of. the Michigan Gas Assn. today. . Paulin succeeds David H, Ger- hard, Pontiac division manager of Consumers Power Co. Elected with Paulin at the association's annual convention were: * William R. Cartyon, Lansing secretary-treasurer. New directors elected were William H. Huffmaster, general manager of Southeastern Michigan Gas Co., Port Huron; David Eck- _ man, operations vice president of Battle Creek Gas Co.. Battle Creek and John B. Simpson, general supervisor of gas operations for Consumers Power, Jackson. The Weather | Pe Bes | og! el, VIOUNTTY —Generally aon preceding ¢ om At @ O.m.: Wind velocity 3 to 4 m.p.h. Bun sets Pr} 213 pm. fee eae 6 ae ieee rises ae tat pm. J : omeatemenall SB. Miccscsen sf? rT) BM. cence. TT) sy tg Perri i re tonteeee HI piece aka DB. Gc csves. : G Eotews See eee ee es ene eres 3 SHEEP OHH E HEH ee lsvstguencocosseces, @ - 4 Dodd idl d delet ee ee i ene rt and tool designing for the E. A. Thompson Manufacturing Co., | Ferndale; as a machine designer troit, and ag senior designer the National Electric Welding Co., Bay City. Manofsky tives at 18514 Snow- ‘| den, Detroit, with his wife and four children, (Continued From Page One) Speedboat Driver Perishes in Crash tiac Genera] Hospital yesterday crushed under his accident injuries over the weekend ‘as countless motorists jammed county roads and highways. Admitted with injuries were: Michael Morarity, 72, of 97 Au- gusta St., whose condition was listed as poor by Pontiac Gen- eral attendants, He suffered a broken arm and leg in a 2-car collision yesterday at Scott Lake road and Wana- maker, State Police said. Two oth- ers in the car were treated for minor injuries. | SUFFERED CONCUSSION Earl Swift, 22, of Oxbow Lake, who suffered a concussion early Sunday morning when the car in which he was riding hit a parked auto, was reported in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General, An- other passenger was treated for _| minor injuries, according to Pon- tiae Police. Hangman Elusive Chap, Island Monarch Finds ”| Sunday after his sports rating car ‘accident in Detroit. head | Picycle collision on U.S. 127 near _| Oak. drowned Saturday in Lake ‘|was killed Saturday in a boat *|: Eighteen-month-old Robert Bran- Accidents Claim Din Michigan of Heaviest Weekend Death . Tolls of 1955 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS June's last weekend, which lured thousands to highways and water- Ways, took one of the year’s largest tolls in accidental deaths | tm Michigan. | Mishaps between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Sunday claimed 25 | lives, 20 of them in traffic. Three persons drowned, a speed ‘boat racer was killed on the De- | troit River. and a baby died in a | three-story fall Last weekend's accident toil was only 15. i s * | Ira Garfunkel, 26, of Berklgy, | died en route to a Pontiac hospital overturned and he was slammed against the inside of an ambulance that collided with an automobile. Jack Radolph, 14, a newspaper boy, was struck by a taxicab as he pedaled his bicycle across a Detroit intersection Sunday. Claus Jobinson, 75. of Flint, was killed Saturday night when struck by a car in Flint. MILFORD MAN VICTIM Stanley Stasin. 53, of Milford, was killed Saturday night in a two- Gordon C, Walsh, 31, of Grand | Rapids, was killed Sunday in an auto accident near Hudsonville. ALPENA PAIR KILLED Frank Giennie, 40, and Arthur Mayou, 35, both of Alpena, were killed Saturday in an auto acci- dent near Alpena. Daniel Frentz, 61, and his wife. Regina, 51, of Dearborn. were killed Friday night in an accident in suburban Detroit. a” e Joseph Gora, 530. of Oak Park, was killed Saturday in a two-car collision outside Detroit. Albert E. Teminis, 30, of Detroit. was killed Saturday in an auto - Cerry Doppenberg, 7. of Mus- kegon County, was killeq Friday night in an automobile crash. Delbert Shaw Jr. 8, of Port Huron, was killed Sunday when he walked into the side of a car two miles west of Port Huron. Sharon Boogart, 16. of Grand Rapids, was killed Sunday in a AUTO, BIKE COLLIDE Virgil Lee DeFay, 14, of Addison, was killed Sunday in an auto and his home. Violet M. Darling, 40. of Grand Rapids, was killed Sunday in an auto accident near Howard Citym Ld] s . . Joseph Konczodan, 61, of De- troit, was killed Sunday in a two car pileup on M19 near Memphis. Dan Churchill, 18, of Michigan City. Ind., drowned Saturday in Jordan Lake near Lake Odessa. Mark R. McCollum. 2, of Royal Orion. John Bendena, 38, of Detroit, drowned Friday night in the St. Clair River. Lloyd Maddock, 51, of Pontiac, ‘crash on the Detroit River during the running of the Detroit Memo- rial Regatta. ner was fatally injured Sunday when he fell 35 feet to the pave- ment from the third-floor family apartment in Detroit. An unhooked screen was blamed for the death. * * Edward G. Fox, 22, killed Ike Reportedly Favors Probing ‘Security Setup WASHINGTON (®—The Eisen- for Senate debate today with all signs pointing to overwhelming rs _ several weeks of apparent decided to the proposal. Up to nets President Hiosahower and Atty, Gen, Brownell have indi- cated they felt there was no need for such a study. i PERMANENTS The Day in Birmingham | Anti-Peron Leaders Commission to Consider freed by Argentina Change in Building Code; sx0s snes »srmin pera ele who hed Ay de- | BIRMINGHAM—An amengment | to the city building code allowing expanded usage of frame buildings in the business district will face city commissioners tonight. The amendment, which would al- ter present restrictions, is the sub- ject of an informal public hearing. The proposed change was written by the city attorney, and reviewed | by The Building Code Board of | Appeals. Oakiand County Drain Com- missioner Ralph A. Main has urged the city as one of the members slated te participate in the Evergreen Intercepter Sew. | er Preject, to take action guar. | antecing the payment ef engi- | This would insure the prepara: | tion @f final plans and specifica- | tions for the job, Main said. Up for stydy by the lawmakers is a request from the City of Li- vonia that Birmingham join it in asking the State Legislature and Senate to investigate the high prices of gasoline charged in Mich- oo compared to gas prices in io, A hearing on mat and seal read improvements in Gelfview Heights subdivision is scheduled. Streets included in the program are: Arden Lane, Hillside, Fair- way, and Golfview and Greenlawn Boulevards at Old Grace Hospital, Detroit aft- 60 years in Detroit, and was a dentist. Service will be in the Bell Chapel | of the William R, Hamilton Co. | Tuesday at 8 p.m. Interment will be in Rose Hill Cemetery, Chicago. * * @ Mrs. Elizabeth B, Holloway Mrs. Elizabeth B. Holloway, of 555 Merrill St., died Saturday at Harper Hospital after a prolonged illness, Bern in Ireland, Nov. 27, 1880, Mrs. Holloway lived in Birming- ham all her life. She was a mem- ber of St. James Episcopal Church. Surviving are one son, Homer | of Dixon, Tenn., and one sister, | Mrs. Jennie Griffith of Birming- ham, Service will be at the Beil Chapel | of the William R. Hamilton Com- pany Tuesday at 3 p.m. Inter- ment will be in Greenwood Ceme- Dr. Jay F. Pool Dr. Jay F. Pool, 86, of 55 Edson Ave., Highland Park, died Sunday | j { er a long illness. He bad lived Surviving are his wife Mabel | and one son, Dr. Edson K. Pool of Birmingham. | Service will be in the Bell} Tuesday at 1 p.m., under the aus- | pieces of Zion Lodge No. 1, F&AM. | Interment will be at Woodlawn | Mausoleum. tained since the June 16 revolt against. President Juan D. Peron’s regime. Four other party members were still held, Simultaneously, police at Eva Peron, in Buenos Aires province in eastern Argentina, announced the arrest of two persons identi- fied as Communists and two Radi- cal party members on charges of spreading rumors. The nature of | | | the rumors was not disclosed. * * * The Radical party jis (he main opposition group, holding 14 of the 166 seats in the Chamber of Depu- ties. All the other seats are held by Peronistas. 2 Yesterday, for the second Sun- day since the bloody revolt against the government, police furnished protection for thousands of Roman Catholics thronging churches in improvised altars in churches damaged during the revolt and prayed for victims ‘of the uprising. Blood Drive Today © Blood donors are being received Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co. | at Pontiac Elks Temple today un- til 8 p.m. Oakiand County Chapter of the American Red Cross urged city residents to give blood, which | is currently in short supply here. On the occasion of joint installa- tion ceremonies with Pontiac, Mt. Ciemens, Rochester and South Ma- comb County Soroptimist Clubs. | members of the local group wil! gather on June 30 at Devon Gables for a 7 p.m. dinner. Speaker-for the evening will be | Charies E. Irvin. He is assistant | professor of speech and of com- | munication skills at Michigan State College and writes for professional | journals of education. Taking the oath of office for the | Birmingham Club will be Mrs. Richard Dewey, president; Irene — Hanley and Lindo Moore, first | and second vice presidents, resp- tively; Mrs. Maxine Luscombe. corresponding secretary; Margaret Tewilliager, recording secretary | and Mrs. C. H. Schmidt, treasurer. | Boarg members are Mrs. Nan | Degan and Mrs. Ralph M. Dun- | ber. Mrs. Schmidt and Mrs. Ma- son Noble are delegates with Mrs. Rey M. Sorenson as alter. nate, Helen Larkin, local member and | governor of the mid-western a gion, will be the installing officer. | e | Frederick H. Morse | Frederick H. Morse, 166 W. Lin- coln Ave., died Sunday in Beau- mont Hospital, Royal Oak. after a long illness. He was born in Port Heron, April 13, 1880 and was a retired manager of the Royal Typewriter Co. for Michigan. Mr. Morse was a member of St. John's Episcopal Church, Detroit. Surviving are his wife Carolyn Morse; one son, Edson of Hudson, Ohio, and a daughter, Mrs. Don C, Miller of Birmingham, Germans Mob Rally fo Hear Graham NUERNBERG, Germany “@— American evangelist Billy Graham his largest revival meet- ing crowd in Germany last night— 65,000, according to police esti- mates. e . Ll About 9,000 U.S. servicemen and their families were in the audience at the former Nazi party rally grounds here, At the conclusion of Graham’s sermon, 6,000 persons — 1,200 Americans among them — stepped forward at his urging to make ‘‘decisiong for Christ." * e 2 He told a news conference here that he had been invited by the Manhattan, Protestant Council to ‘conduct a “Crusade for Christ” in New York City and will discuss the project with the when he returns to the next month. Graham could Individualized 6" Ne Appointment Necessery Individual Cutting and Styling by Oscar ARISTA This LOW PRICE for Swivel-Top Exactly es Pictured Modern biserk wrought tron TV stand withfull swivel-top for view- ing from any part of the room Tonite and Tuesday! TW STAND @ Heavy WROUGHT IRON @ Holds Any Size Set 44 Regular $5.95 Value SIMMS... This LOW PRICE While They Last! Famous CARHARTT Brand BLACK or TAN CHINO CLOTH | " Peg Pants /” $500 § 79 j¢ Quality | | Popular bottom pants in black or army § . tan colors. Ideal tor young men’s sports wear. SIMMS... ht and Tuesday SUPER-SPECIAL! he ‘ if »* P °F 5 —_— Exactly as Pictured — 8-Piece Snack Set @ 4 PLATES @ 4 CUPS Regular $1.49 ’ 7 Complete set of 8 pieces. Buy tor gifts and for yourself. ashtray, |!x6 inch size. Ideal for serving iniormal snacks. Cups and trays as pictured. Housewares 2nd Tr¢ys have three compart- | A MS BROTHERS ments, for snack, cup and AAAAAARARASARRRDASRRRAAD Fleor Canning is Hard Work... but you can FREEZE with ease! Let's compare— 12 STEPS FOR CANNING 1) Wash and hull berries 2 Prepare syrup ; 3 Sterilize jars Seas? 4 rontennven AE s Cover with boiling syrup mt 6 Remove air bubbles, adjst e- lid and seal ‘ al 7 Ploce in canner 8 Process for specified time iY 9 Remove from canner; J Cates” AC 10 Test for tight seal ; ; a 11 Lobel ond dote | fh 12 Arrange on shelves EBBCEB Freezing foods, instead of canning, ful in other ways, too. Foods hold their fresh, natural color and flavor. They keep their vita- mins and minerals. With a variety of home frozen foods on hand, meal planning 's easier - In every way—entertaining is less of a task. H hs _ BE MODERN— LIVE ELECTRICALLY + ONLY 6 FOR FREEZING Wash and hull berries Combine berries with sugar Place in container Close container Label and date — eo uw & &© WN Place in freezer HOT WEATHER NOTE None of these operations requires heat. you'll love an Ee.efacrRic Tejaat= mad -\-74~) aye Oe it Edison | Detro erage chee ne ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOND b. AY, JUNE 27, 1955 Transmission Plant fo Continue Striking DETROIT #p—Wildcat have voted for the second time to continue their walkout at General Motors’ transmission plant in sub- | urban Willow Run. Despite pleas of CIO United Auto Workers officials, urging them to strikers | | terday to continue. their -wpau- thorized strike.- And by a 514-367 vete, they ‘turned down the national agree- ment signed with General Mo- tors two weeks ago. The five-day strike has idled | 8,800 at the transmission plant. It) was spearheaded by some 100 tool | sharpeners dissatisfied with the nationa] contract. Other workers Probe Red-Tinged California Camps LOS ANGELES (IN) — Commu- nist-tinged summer camps in Cali- fornia come under the scrutiny of the House subcommittee on tun- American activities in Los Ange- les today. spend five days digging into the operations of Reds and Red sym- pathizers who reportedly use sum- mer camps to indoctrinate vaca- tioning school children. A secret nationwide investigation of the camps has been under way for two months, There reportedly are three such camps in Cali- fornia. he =a by Rep. Clyde Doyle: (D-Calif) will Loaded to Be Unloaded ANNAPOLIS, Md, (UP) — It's illegal for a. hunter in Maryland to carry ¢ hnaded gun whee he is ing a loaded firearm!’ Why Pay at Least 20% More? oars Me SAVINGS Is Only Half the Story! BEST POSSIBLE “loaded.” Gov. Theodore: R. wel Keldin recently signed into law a General Assembly bill forbidding an intoxicated -hunter from carry- For YOUR Shanelas Ease —SiMMs Ws. ¢ “en ane, s : refused to cross their picket lines. TRY NEW A 3man subcommittee headed il 10 P. M. for Tonite & Tuesday SPECIALS | 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Jumbo 20 Gallon return to work, more than 1,000 | - wildcatters voted nine to one yee ‘sz PRINTS @ ‘Electric ~ Eye’ T | Things YOU NEED for BABY oat SPECIAL LOW PRICES for Tonite and Tuesdey MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Children’s Cotton Knit Why Pay More Than Simms EVERYDAY LOW PRICE? ALL POPULAR BRANDS CIGARETTES PRINTING ANI ; + DEVELOPING C @ Only Genetne ef AS TMAN - REGULAR SIZE. a : Plus Ge Tox Dey SUFFERERS |E Fraining Pants Chebieate. és have Coptigs @ Deckled Edge» «Our $3.19 Quality 10 for @ Mesth & Moo e Pie ~ 4 BLINDING MIGRAINE-TYPE HEADACHES? | _— = $ 44 Pick up a cart =e . EXCRUCIATING FACIAL PAINS? | @ Prompt Service t ia coaral | ; ‘ brand cigarettes ES ace | _ Money-Back GUARANTEE | and save... e¥- ; it you.can tind better prints Galvenised Ruct-Mesistant anywhere in Pontiac at Sc to 7c. ee SIMAS."S BROT 4 iz Minimum HERS —Main Floor 2. WOO TABLETS *2.98 250 TABLETS *5.95 SIMMS.” NOW. Denene Con Afford This FINEST -{YY ALUMINUM GAUGE Waterless Cooking Ware e size, ample for average family. — fit cover, raised handles. eccceccoseuengaceestese Knit training pants with elastic top, band leg and double crotch style. White and pastels in sizes 2 ot 6. —o@-— Handy 7-Boitle Size Bottle Sterilizer Lift-Out Rock 29 With Cower Regular $2.70 value steriliz- er White enamel. Com- plete steriliza- King-Size. .$2.04 plus 6c tax SIMAS.S BROTHERS 98 N. Saginaw -- Main Floor ‘eeeseesosoeoeseooeees Bring us your tilms for s tast service. charges. {(@ 98 N. Saginaw Tia 4 —Main Floor . ~ : “ i — ~ SHCSCSHOHCHSESSCSESCHSCOSSHSCE S.wesges:? me gt err <0N.\\ Seen % Wy $1 Value R Tonite & Tues. 3 Foot Long With Shut-Off Durable PLASTIC Bristles Auto Wash Mop 5 to 6 Foot Lengths Draining HOSE tion ) 16 Famous brand (but we can't e $2.48 $ 88 ” Cc Lbs: advertise it), all FIRST qual- Val (9¢ . alue . ity. Heavy |0-gauge — al- Unbreakable—22x15 In. most double the weight of | Value The easy way to wash cars, - windows, etc. 3 foot long handle eliminates standing on ladder, chair, etc. Durable plastic bris- ordinary aluminumware Many have lock-on covers, all have bakelite (mon-burn) | handies. You MUST see it to appreciate this sensational value : Plastic TUB 979 | Easy to clean, & lightweight. plastic tub is * odoriess Chotce of For filling and nou | saat At camden tn tles will not harm finest sur- couplings all si a faces. cets. Limit 2 per customer. PYTTTTITITIV TTT os o-4 Zipper Top—Volcano Bottom Draft RUBBISH BURNER $1.98 Value SSCHOSSSSSSHSSSSHSSESEHSHSCSHSCHHOHCEEEEEE At Simms the ONLY Difference Is Our LOWER PRICES & HURRY ~- SUPPLY LIMITED! SIMAS. BROTHERS ® Savings of 10°, to 40°, © Freshest. Pure Drugs © Experienced Pharmacists ® Certainty of Satisfaction ind Floor $8 North Saginaw You SAVE colors eoee sesetscsescscsccscsccccssesecsoososscseces | nasteedians galusked win $78 “4 Complete Prescription Service vO 1 and ° carnet = paraion | ua 2 MORE i. | customer. ie e S : M MS... We can't possibly list ALL THE BARGAINS is ens and Tuesday Only SPECIALS <| . . her ’ | if th r e e 98 .N. Saginaw—Main Floor ay ie of the savings a: Add Storage Space and Save $5.07 Full 20x40 Inch WAAAAAAAARRARARADADAIS, EB Original 3 ALL STEEL — DOUBLE DOOR. 3. u x ne 3 $ : 3 : CANNON PLAID 54 : $2.75 to 1s | - , ° 2 $ $4.75 Values le | ° Bath Towels ) 3 > 11 inch griddies . . . 2 qf. sauce pans .., le $14.95 ° : > 4 3 qt. sauce pans... etc. Your choice— i+ iF i BB : ; | “> 4 buy for gifts or for yourself . le | aime Regul - 4 “ an ;@ | ° epular $ | Easy to Clean ENAMEL §)\8 | Limit 1 te . 6 C | 2 GROUP 2 Di P il \@ Customer 21 9c _, 2 Original S$ 8 8 taper rai ° °| Value q 2 Wear ‘em $4.95 to is 60222x10-Inch—Five Shelt Spaces °| — 34 Just Like $6 97 Val ‘ 99 e | An eae Se ame enamel finish. double doors @ | %9c Value-Mateching . ... 27° » 4 t- ie - ‘ahd 2 Ghearest eid Resale ° quired, “completa “Gcocmblod. Saly ones Toseday o | “AND TOWELS, lease 5 4 j Chicken Fryers . Combination s $2.79 Value e at 6 P. M. No phone or mail orders at this price. eo; lle Value-Matching 2 2 . l Pi 1 Cookers . . . Dutch Ovens . Lock- = . pants 5 : . WASH CLOTHS; 12x12” | actly as icturec Lid S$ Pans . . etc. All heavy . Won't stain or absorb odors. | sage | \O-gsuse wernt. i Acid resistant. Large capacity. ° {{@ °| Gay, colorful plaids in choice of 4 $1 POWERSCOPE | With sanitary cover e 9 . e rich modern colors. Genuine | | $5 45 Value—-8 Quart e@ . > —2nd Floor BROTHERS : | Cannon first quality. } ; ; POOOOOOOSEOOSEOSHSEOSESSLOOHOSESOSOOOOOSOOOEEOS FIRST OUALITY — EXTRA HEAVY 22x44 Inch | "Glasses Stock POTS. $9 88 cr

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FARMERS, REACH CITY folks | ancient Greece | through Classified ads in The Pon- ; built around a tiac Press! To: sell or buy, rent ‘¢r _ Here’s the Broadest American Automobile ~ Protection We've Ever Offered! H. R. Nicholie Cell “BUD” AGENCY R. B. Nicholie—H. Delos “Bud” Nicholie 49 Me. Clemens St. Opposite Post Office Ph. FE 5-120! ———— BUY BETTER—PAY LESS with a cash loan from HFC @ Buy at sale prices the things you need and want now, without waiting. | -@ Shop for the bargains, even where ' yeu don't have on account, ' @ Leons mede without endorsers. Easy- to-mee? requirements. One-day service. Ga, “iy,, ‘N @ouseHow Fn FINANCE ooh hi Cat The Kay Bidg., 2nd Fleer PHONE: FEderal 4-0535 . ‘Loens made to vevidents of nearby towns 4 | committee on clean comics would | fight to halt sale of publications Suggests Cut in Travel Need Better City Planning Offered as Answer to Traffic Problem CHICAGO #—QA city planning. engineer has suggested that l-way | Cities might solve their mass_ 'transportation problem is to re- move the need for so much travel. | Corwin R. Mocine, Oakland, | | Calif., engineer, said this might) | be accomplished in some cities by these steps: 1. Development of desirable residential areas near factories or other places where large numbers | |are employed 2. Development for business | and residential use of blighted | \lands on the perimeter of cities | downtown districts. 3. Better functional organisation | of cities through which factories | would be situated as close as pos- | sible to the supply of materials they process. Mocine said detailed — | must precede any such moves to | determine the exact transporta- tien needs of a community. In most cities, he said, the only critical transportation problem is during the peak rush hours. lf cities can find a way to re- duce this load, he said, they could extend the life of their existing facilities 30 to 4 years before replacement would be needed. Mocine spoke at a. press seminar “The Nation's Urban Trans- on portation Crisis,” sponsored by the Public Administration Clearing House. Representatives of newspapers in more —_ 20 cities attended. Stoge ‘Owner Collects, Burns Horror Comics PHILADELPHIA (UP) — Basil Merenda has this sign in a window of his South Philadelphia food market: ; “Free to every child: One col- of crime or horror.” He figured that while a local listed as objectionable, he'd get rid of those already in the posses- sion of neighborhood youngsters. He burns the comics turned in to ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 27. 1955 1 MAIN LINER — Giant swan made of artificial | Main River in Frankfurt, Germany, to savection an) | flowers and mounted on a river a3 ae down the Austrian foge r — | Corregidor Fortress Open MANILA—The “Rock” has now been opened to tourists. The “Rock” is Corregidor, the |famous island fortress in Manila Bay, and its opening has created a major attraction for visitors, | particularly for Americans who still remember the valiant five- month defense of Corregidor dur- ing World War II. Both Corregidor and Bataan | peninsula, scene of another heroic stand against the Japanese, were declared national shrines by the Philippine ment recently | and President Modesto Farolan of the Philippine Tourist and Travel | Assn. reports progress on a pro- gram to make them more readily available to visitors. Opening of these historic spots, Farolan said, will give impetus te a campaign to attract more tourists to the Philippines—a campaign based on the easing of travel restrictions and ilarge- scale improvements in the qual- ity of hotel accommodations. The Manila Hotel, for example, | Thomas University, to Tourists in Philippines ls being renovated and completely | air conditionéd, and improvements are being made in the hotels at Tagaytay in Baguio operated by the same company. RICH IN HISTORY In addition to Corregidor and Bataan, the Manila area offers @ number of historic and scenic at- tractions, including oid Spanish Churehes,. water buffalo pulling plows in fields alongside modern highways dnd the picturesque lake country of Tagaytay and moun- tain scenery of Baguio. The popular tourist spots in the capital are the Malacanan Palace where the president of the Philippines lives; Santo older even than Harvard, founded in 1611; the Spanish Walled City or In- tramures, now in ruins; Santiago, an old dungeon build by the Spaniards and used by the Japanese as a prison; and Manila'’s Sports Center—Rizal Stadium. A short drive out of ‘the city, TRI D THEM YET ?7—ONLY CHESTERFIELD IS Made the Modern way —with 4ec“nfhy New Electronic Miracle brings you Smoother, Cooler Smoking than was ever possible before! Fort in The Pontiac Press. To find good tenants fast, call FE 2-8181. THE EASY WAY OUT of. money- losing vacancies is Classified ads THE WINNER MRS. PAUL S. KANTZ 39 Mohewk Won a Gibson Refrigerator in the Gibson Contest Puzzle Game Other Winners Will Be Netified by Mail as Seon as Possible HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525_ Fr « Cum Ld Sacred Obligahan “ | over highways maintained to American standards, is the breeze- swept Tagaytay Ridge, overlook- ing beautiful Lake Taal. Along the way, at the church in Las Pinas is the only bamboo organ in| the world. Other interesting side trips out of Manila include visits to the Balara Filters, Pagsanjan Falls and Clark Air Force Base. By air, Baguio is only one hour from the city. Because of the cool temperatures Baguio enjoys during the warm months, it has become the summer capital of the isiands. North of there are | the rich rice terraces In Banaue where whole fields and farms have been carved out of the io mountainside. \s Manila means good eating, too. Besides the hot spicy foods of the Orient and Indonesia, a restaurant on Dewey Boulevard, Max's, fea- tures some of the best fried chicken this side of Nashville. 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Cy 95 3 % BIRMINGHAM Deaths Last Night LOCKSMITH SERVICE KEYS csscons LOCKS#-7=.2""" oe Survivors of Desert Trip Describe 3-Day Ordeal uw» — Murderous heat, sands and shivering nights were | a grim memory today for a SUr- | sree vivor of a desert jeep ride that. drifting | 5,000 yards.” heads with their shirts. ‘TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif.|"They tell us we walked about heir water ran out the next be The temperature hit 120 de- Bunker and Robertson lay | * — on © the desert and covered their. pon oO COSHOCTON. . (AP)~Chariles R. Prederickson, 19. Repubjican lead- er, manufact gr en a and head rt Works: onl. Carl Wolf, eeoouiire. win - TT, Geairnan and publisher BG Seott- Choate Publications, which publishes trade magazines “LIANCE, Neb—Guy R. Davia 63, Nebraska 4-H leader and pioneer in the movement. WAKEFIELD, Neb.—Prank Victor Tur- 48, weekly newspaper edi and her who invented an adjustable Ot paar claimed two lives. SAF See “It’s the worst thing I've been | through in 20 years gn-the desert," | said Chester Bunker, 67, local real Call Us — MI 47838 estate promoter. He recalled $20 N. Woodward Ave. (watching one man walk to his at Oakland death and another die of exposure on the blistering desert when their jeep broke down on an outing last Wednesday. Bunker, recovering in a hospital JOHN JONES—Your Locksmith | Bunker said, He died a few hours | a - metal casts and cuts “But Thompson got away from us and started running in circles," Davy Crockett Ignored . = _as Thief Picks Marilyn Thompson's body and the two, ROANOKE, Va. #—The folks at survivors prostrate on the shim- _a Roanoke theater don’t know who me! d la spotted ee 8: a Pom manning | stole their property Saturday night later. civilian plane. A helicopter | | but they're pretty sure it was (1) Bunker and Robertson to a Needles male and (2) no. child. THE ORGAN +s. 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PAT Get PASTEETH at any drug counter 'in Amazon Canyon, about 30 miles | here, told this story: hospital, They were later trans- The stolen proferty was a seven- | + '¢) s ferred to Twentynine Palms, which foot cardbeard picture of Marilyn | He and three others set out in is about 120 miles. east of Les Monroe, skirts a-flying, which had the jeep to inspect the Amazon Angeles. been set in the lobby to advertise | Valley area, which Bunker de- Both are recovering and Bunker her newest film. 'seribed as “ripe for development.’’ said he has learned one thing Nearby was an equally big pic- “After so many desert a fellow gets careless.” | They carried water but no food ‘for the half-day journey. The jeep sank in drifting sand | years on the ture of Davy Crockett, It was ig- ‘nored by the thief. east of here, and the aerentel broke, At nightfall, Calvert Wilson, 49, | prominent southern California | Democratic politician, set out on| tC" foot for the highway about 1 miles \ 1 . away. His sun-blackened eady was found by searchers two days later about five miles from the jeep, where he had died of Ch) and thirst. ie topes * * * Bunker; James Thompson, 75, | retired Joshua tree businessman: | and Lyle W. Robertson, 49, local ‘hardware store owner, remained | Closer to the jeep. “We figured we had more chance of being seen on Cadiz Dry Lake and we Lenel : Bunker said Probe He Hollywood Communist Activity LOS ANGELES ww — Another probe into alleged Communist activity in Hollywood and environs opens today before a three-man subcommittee of the House Un- American Activities Committee. LJ LJ a Rep. Clyde Doyle (D-Calif) is acting chairman of the group. About 4Q witnesses are expected to appear before the subcommittee in a five-day session, Counsel Frank Tavenner says. 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L'Origan © L’Aimant Emeraude © “Paris” fcorpli Waites w Be i 5 : th Water....2.00 |_' 9 Sait for cummer “\ - t . #2 aite’s eagle wnstalbe fore is a | o : / ; / LM dts Comet tes To : ‘ ‘ / \ “ eX {. ‘ } Y he ey ee, aut ¢ fi ' *\ os ey a, , aes at : : ry : x : ff 5 e : \ : THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27. 1955 * MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS ~ MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 Oakland Gets Gypped Oakland County is downright un- happy over Highway Commissioner _ CHARLES M. Z1eGLer’s list of road priori- We're practically ignored. What's wrong? ae a There are eighty-three counties in Michigan. In population, we're the second largest by six country miles. Neither Kent nor Genesee is even. close. Furthermore, we're the third largest county in square miles. > x ** _ Also, we’re probably the second largest i_in automotive traffic. And last, but far from least, we pay the second biggest gas tax. Yet, what happens? Ziegler awards us fourteen and a half million dollars out of one billion two hundred thirteen mil- lion. That is just about one per cent. Oakland has close to ten per cent of the State’s population. What's wrong? Outside of Wayne, we believe the traffic is heavier in Oakland County than it is anywhere else in the state. We have the population right here and’ in addition, we're one of the main ways to the north. * * * The Press has queried the Oakland County Road Commission. Lez Brooks has no explanation for the way Oakland has been treated. Perhaps Oakland has not been sufficiently well presented to the State officials, At any rate, Mr. Brooks indicates that he will press the raise st omer, and Senator Wi.11aM S§. Barc ‘asserts he is now gathering data to show State officials. gate- x * * Can it be possible Oakland has been skipped to help the toll road? Do State officials feel that if «Oakland. is by-passed, some of our overload will be cared for by © outside parties? — * * * Again we ask: “What’s wrong?” Clark Adams Named New Circuit Judge Appointment of CLarK J. ADAMs as Oakland County’s fourth Circuit Court Judge should meet with widespread approval. Certainly Gov. WILLIAMs’ choice of this well known and highly respected Waterford Township resident came as no surprise. 2 The fact that Judge Apams already had served as a justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, in addition to his years of service at Lansing in other State posts, made him a natural selec- tion for the fourth Circuit Judgeship. ‘Clark Adams qualifies for this post on all counts. Not only is he a lifelong Democrat, and a prac- ticing attorney of many years experience. He also is well and favorably known throughout Michigan as a result of his very considerable experience in State But one of his most important quali- fications is his fine ju mind and to sit as Heavyweight Division Reaching Lowest Point According to our own private and unassailable authorities, heavyweight prize fighting has fallen to an especially low and unhappy estate. Mr. Marciano is an unusually inept and bungling craftsman according to our soothsayer and is only atop the sour science because of a woeful dearth of opponents. * x * The fact that this Mr. Moore has been picked as the “most likely opponent” lends credence to our secret authority. Mr. Moore has reached the advanced age of 38, and fighting for the “cham- pionship”, at this fantastic milestone simply means there’s no one else around. The country side is barren. There are no prospects. ¥ * * * Had Mr. Moore at 38 entered the ring against Joe Louis, JAck ‘JOHNSON, Jim CorRBETT, JACK DEMPSEY, JIM JEFFRIES Or Many other champions when they were in their prime as MARCIANO is, Mr. Moore’s head would have been bounding around among the customers in the eighth or tenth rows no later than the third round. Whoever wins the dreary event in September will be a rosin curio—prob- ably the saddest champ of them all. The Man About Town Local Recollections Regarding Wilber Brucker, New Secretary of the Army Income: What it is almost as dif- ficult to live within as without. Recollections of prominent Pontiac Re- publicans about Wilber M. Brucker ~fargely center in his fight tn the Grand Rapids convention of 1940. In one of the noisiest, most turbulent, vehement and vin- dictive meetings in Michigan's. political his- tory, he, almost single handedly set out to wrest control of the big Wayne County dele- gation frem Edward Barnard ‘ who had brought them to the convention on a special train, At first, the Oakland County delegation, under the guidance of such prom- inent local men as the late . Rey Annétt, was inclined toward Barnard, fearirig patron- age reprisals. They were loath to string along with Brucker, who at the age of 36 had been elected governor in 1930, defeating William A. Comstock, the Democrat nominee, only to be beaten by him for the same office in the Roose- velt landslide of 1932. Brucker’s oratory won out, although the Wayne gang tried to hoot him. down, and even threw chairs at him. The Barnard bunch, completely licked, left the convention and returned home on what since has been known in political annals ‘as the “funeral train.” A phone call from Blanchard Morganson of Bloomfield Hills, who drives 40,000 miles a year, mostly in Southeastern Michigan, says the advance dope on the billion dollar proposed highway improvements in the state indicates that this area, which foots most of the bill, is not to get a square deal. “The Mackinaw bridge,” he says, “already has. plenty of feeders, without building 200 rhiles of wider highways that is sorely needed where the traffic is heaviest.” An Oakland County man, Harry O. Lang of Franklin, has been elected a director of Colgate University Alumni Corporation. He graduated from Colgate in 1944. MAT is in perfect agreement. with the sentiments expressed in a letter from “One With a Grain of Sense,” who wonders how low the 1Q standing can be of the promoters who think there's any- thing funny or entertaining tn the antics of Shriner, Gobel and Peepers and a few others who are cluttering up our TV sets. Twelve strawberries that fill a quart box, grown by Benedict Heckman of Pontiac Township, appear to. be the 1955 prize winners. ection Eating green peas from her garden since June 10, |. f , . Mrs. Harry Twining . of Drayton Plains, wonders if that isn’t an early record. a M.A. Currie on ~2 7° tO 4, He Se 2 Ue os Weee -. nm What Is So Rare as uf 2 wy, . * on ing a Fh te ding Oe POL ts nah ad rests - * : Md * Penh ae pe DISET. 2S RRR w Stats 5 gid ek he eS wey ‘ee ee \ ngs PE ie, a ¥ “ pte oiha etter. oj OERING a Day in June David Lawrence Says: U. S. Delays Attack News | to Let Dulles EN ROUTE FROM SAN FRAN. CISCO—There's a story going the rounds which tells far better than thousands .of words of speeches and diplomatic notes just why there is to be a four-power con- ference in Geneva next month, and maybe another conference later. and then another as the Western diplomats seek to keep peace in the world. * = * It's a story that was told in the presence of Sir Winston Churchill! and some members of the Presi- dent's cabinet as they chatted over the breakfast table when the dis- tinguished Briton last visited Washington as prime minister. It concerns some mythical Middle Eastern country, ruled by a shah and an unfortunate but ingenious prisoner who was discussing with hig fellow prisoners—al] about to be executed—some way by which he could escape having his head chopped off. “If 1 could onty get a reprieve fer a single year,” he said, “I would promise the Shah that in one year I would teach his fa- vorite bull to fly." “But.” said one of the other prisoners, ‘“‘the rest of us are to have a merciful death. It will all be over in an instant, while you—if you fai] to teach the bull to fly —will die a thousand deaths under torture. So better not try it.” LOT CAN HAPPEN “Oh, I don’t know about that,’ ~ replied the scheming prisoner. “Lots of things can happen in a year, In the first place, the Shah might die. In the second place, I might die. In the third place, the bull might die—and, perhaps who knows, maybe in a year’s time. I might just possibly teach that bull to fly.”’ : * ° Ld] Time, patience, forbearance, the mysterious workings of public opinion on both sides of the Iron Curtain, and a determined effort to postpone, to defer, to keep local frictions and climaxes from reach- ing the stage of open hostilities in a big war—these are all part of the techniques and efforts, volun- tary and involuntary, of Western diplomats nowadays to earn a reprieve of a year or more for the - world. Wars have come in the past as a consequence of what seems to be lecal incidents» No country wants to let such incidents, how- patience and restraint_in han- dling attacks on American citi- tens in airplanes, Now, in the last few days, when word came to the President that a Dulles could make his address fore the United Nations Assembly in San Francisco without having his words taken to mean some- thing in connection with the inci- dent which, of course, was not in- tended, as he had written the speech before he had any news about the airplane incident. Speak Mind tion in the Far Fast. But -the world will note that what might have been a dangerous turn of af- fairs has been averted by the speedy and adroit action of the Soviet governnient Molotov traveled eastward by, train, as did this correspondent... Maybe Molotov. who has made the_ journey both ways by train, will find that our good trains, with ex- cellent food and all the comforts that are so noticeably absent on the socalled best trains of Europe, are a symbol of America’s high standard of living which no Ameri- ean in his right mind would want to see disturbed by another war. The Seviet foreign minis- ter will discover perhaps that America's democracy and free- enterprise system have made possible the building up of the many wontderful cities he will have passed through on his trip, and dozens of other cities like them. * * Ld Maybe in the not-far-distant fu- ture the Russion people will come out of bondage. Maybe they will have performed the miracle—they may teach the “favorite bull” to fly. Then the world as a whole will have won a reprieve from the hor- rors of World War IIL. (Copyright 1955, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Voice of the People John Hillman Wa * 7 rns U. S. to Wake Up, | Not Be Taken In by Red ‘Friendliness’ Lettera wili Ge concensed wren eces sary because of ‘ack of *pace Ful name address ano teleorove uimbet of the writer must accompany -ellers out these wl! not be gublisiied u the writer so request: imies« the ‘etier is critical ir its -ature The great birthday celebration of this so wonderful set-up for peace, the U.N., has come and gone. According to reports every- one was very friendly, even Molo- tov. Could there be a reason for the friendliness of this wolf in sheep's clothing? Are we, the great U-S., ever waking up before it's too late. But of course we want peace at any price. For God and Country. dohn Hillman Clarkston - Reader Warns People to Fight for Freedom Our greatest danger comes from within, Too many people believe in fantastic socialist ideas. They be- lieve that the Government should take over and run business. This is only a stepping stone to Communism and dictatorship, That is where a few take over, live off the fat of the land and the great majority actually become slaves. As a strong nation of believers in the freedom of the individual and in free enterprise we can Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE (OUR STATION WAGON) Vacation trips are wonderful ... \With all the sights there are... Especially for the family .. . That has a brand new car... And that ts why we're happy with... Our station wagon new ... As we pre- pare to travel and ... To take . . This is our first experience . In station wagon style . . . And all the indications are... That it will be worth while ... There's so much room for lug- gage and... To stretch and rest our feet... And all of the uphol- stery ... Is beautiful and neat... And there is lots of extra space... For relatives and friends . . . Who want to share our junkets or .. . To visit on weekends. (Copyright 1955) inevery view . | coking Back 15 Years Ago RUMANIA MOBILIZES as Reds ask for Bessarabia. MecNARY WILL be Wilkie’s run- hing mate. 20 Years Ago COMPANION OF Detroit lawyer, Dickinson, sought in slaying. ENDURANCE FLIERS set new record at 53 hours. Case Records of a Psychologist take care of ourselves against the aggression of the dictators of slaves for one free man can take care of a hundred slaves. In unity there is strength but it must be the unity of free men, not slaves, We should not stand for So- cialistic and Communistic spies in our midst and actually holding government positions. They should «be shown no mercy for if they ob- tain power they will show none, W should not believe any of thei: fancy promises of security for all. We will only get security by work- ing for and earning it. Every true American must fight this danger that faces us. We must all awaken and fight for the American idea of freedom for Ralph 7. Route 4, Pontiac is i) Customer Protection Manufacturer Should Help Keep Products in Repair By MERRYLE 8. RUKEYSER INS Ecenomic Commentator The philosophy of scientific man- agement, guided by cost account- © ing, is to face up to realities, and not hide costs and problems by tucking them under the desk blotter. . * * Ld In this spirit, one of the difficult - problems, growing out of mass consumption of complicated com- fort goodg produced through quan- tity production techniques, is the problem of servicing. As machines become more complex in their en- gineering, servicing becomes more difficult, The use of experts fer servic- ing by upwards of 63,000,000 self- supporting Americans iw ren- dered difficult and expensive by rising minimum wage rates, high service charges, and heavy labor costs, growing out of contempo- rary tax and social trends, » As an offset to skyrocketing costs, the typical American ig de- veloping the “do it yourself” habit. And this refers not only to the hobby of making things for house- hold use, but also includes the less romantic role of servicing and maintaining old products made in factories. SATURATION POINT Recognizing that expensive serv- icing tends to create a saturation point, manufacturers have used their ingenuity to simplify installa- tion of durable household products through merely plugging in a con- nection in an electric outlet. | a e ’ But simple observation of the facts of life from coast to coast indicates that little business in the servicing end is having difficulty in keeping apace of the volume set by big manufacturing business. Bad Comic Books Don’t Harm Children If Parents Create a Happy Environment Judge Murhpy has “horse sense,” so he doesn't try to make a national scapegoat out of comic books. But many par- ents pass the buck for their own poor home psychology by ‘making a great fuss over comics. Even bad comics are. only a minor influence on chil- dren if their parents rate aver- age on the tests cited below. By DR. GEORGE W, CRANE Case 0-367: Judge Charles F. Murphy, of New York, has be- come the head of the Comics Magazine Assn., and his new job is to analyze comic books so that “bad ones can be weeded out. But Judge Murphy disagrees with those who think crime and horror comics have zoomed juve- nile delinquency, .“Long before comic books ..we. had young criminals,” says Judge Murphy. “Many factors contribute to delinquency, but in my opinion the greatest single cause is an unhappy home life. “A happy home is one where the child is brought up with proper religious training. One where the child is taught to honor his parents and to respect authority. ‘Being a parent is a 24-hour per day job. Some parents barely give it a 40-hour week!” BUCK PASSING Many parents nowadays are passing the buck. They blame comic books for their children’s delinquency instead of facing the facts. * * If father and mother play the game of marriage, as well as the have pointed out the same fact which Judge Murphy has so well expressed, namely, a good home mysteries! The parents of pre- vious generations often thought the dime novels about ‘Dead-Eye- Dick” and “Nick Carter’’ were a terrible influence on youth. They weren't. ® * * So it is wise to use more “horse sense’ in modern America and not get unduly excited about comics, even of the less desirable sort. Obviously, we psychologists _ prefer that children read good comics, but we doen't grow alarmed even about bad comics, And if the homes are broken up by divorce, drunkenness, etc., then why blame the comics when the children thereof become delin- quent. TESTS FOR PARENTS If you are good parents, you are You team up with the Boy Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, YMCA 0. matters, social etiquette, etc. For further marks of excellent parents, send for my 200-point “Tests for Good Parents,”’ enclos- ing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. Use them at P-T-A meetings and even let your children rate you thereon, as Mrs. Crane and I let our 5 youngsters rate us, for you will stay on your toes thereafter and be more than 40-hour per week parents, as Judge Murphy so ably suggests. when ior ome of his psychological (Copyright 1955) top management in manufactur. ing should take a fresh look at choice system, the customer is the kingpin, it would be more prudent in the long run for large companies to exert leadership in behalf of greater consideration for the cus- tomer than for extraneous matters, such as fixing re-sale prices. MAKER'S DUTY Whatever may be said for the economic soundness of fair trade laws, they are more controversial as to whether they are in the cus- tomer’s interest than is the mat- ter of prompt, efficient, and rea- sonable servicing of durable products. * ° * In the final competition for cus- tomér loyalty and support, the -manufacturer who stays with the customer all through the useful life of the product will win out. After the original sale has been completed, the manufacturer should not maintain a hands-off attitude and permit affiliated out- siders to exploit the customer. The fact is that big business has multiplied many fold the oppor- tunities for small businessmen. But it is time to look at the other side of the coin, and make sure that the litthe businessmen are ad- hering to high standards of ef- ficiency, economics and ethics in dealing with the joint customers. down on your friends. International tangles haven't a thing on the lining in the sleeves of last year’s spring topcoat. Field fires soon will be raging again, due to that burning desire folks have to clean things up. Give less thought to what people think of you and you'll have more time to think well oi them, THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Then said the lord of the vine- yard, What shall I do? 1 will send my beloved son: it may be they will reverence him whea they see him.—Luke 20:13, * * * Henceforth the Majesty of God revere; Fear him and you have nothi else to fear.—Fordyce. ° Take Doc Brady’s Advice and Sunburn " By DR. WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. Sunburn can be painful, disfig- It spoils Blonds are more sensitive to sunlight than brunets. So if your what, If your complexion is dark you may safely lengthen the dura- Lf in i i=} * * 2Fe5 Hl Gi in Comfort bows to shoulders for 10 min- utes, front of thighs for 5 min- utes, LAST TWO DAYS Fifth Day. Legs and arms 25 minutes, arms from elbows to thighs 15 minutes, back ten min- utes, front of chest 5 minutes, 2 * * Incidentally, it is absurd to ima- gine that anything you can apply . to the skin will promote tanning 2 2 g i g a é i > = : : 1 i q a +R od THE PONTIAC PRESS. - MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 Pitfalls Face West in Coming Big Four Talks. dangers “at the summit’?) WASHINGTON (INS)—The So- viet campaign to break of cripple the free world defensive alliance is expected to reach a peak at the “summit” meeting in Geneva on July 18. United States and Allied leaders anticipate that the over-all objec- tive of the Russiags in Geneva will be te creck the alliance which se of Soviet pressure. two-front Russian offensive. On one front they think the Reds will try to “choke the cat with cream” by offering enticing promises of security to any who The other front will be an echo of the tough line sounded in San Francisco last Wednesday by For- eign Minister V. M. Molotov, who demanded abandonment of all U.S. overseas bases, céssion of For- mosa to Red China and withdraw- al of all foreign troops from Ger- The Allied leaders anticipate aj} far has stood firm against all sorts many. Combined, the two fronts may be used to try to persuade West- ern peoples that they can have the goodies if they swallow the bitter pills first. Two Soviet weapons are the con- cept of neutrality and the real and terrible free world dread of the hydrogen bomb. U.S. officials said that the major propaganda effort of the Soviets teday is te make free world peoples believe that neu- trality offers the only hope for safety from the bomb. Right now West Gefmany and Yugoslavia are two iniportant So- viet targets. American experts be- lieve the campaign for neutrality of those countries is long-range. pegged for success five or ten years from now. They also believe the stakes are so high that the time is worth it to the Russians. NEUTRAL SHIFT The reasoning is that if West Germany goes neutral France and “|TItaly would almost certainly have to follow and then even Britain might be forced to fall in line. That would leave each mem- ber of the present alliance of free nations alone and ripe for picking by the Seviet colossus which would be unchallengeable militarily if the free world alli- ance was dissolved. A real nightmare for American leaders as they prepare for the meeting ‘‘at the summit” is this: If the Soviet Union agrees to rea- | sonable settlements of some cur- rent problems and appears to ease current tensions, how long will the people of the free world continue -/\to bear the tremendous defense DUNKLE DUNKS — There’s nothing like a shower to cool you off on a hot day — even if it happens to be a public fountain. So Judith Dunkle, of Arlington, Va., beats the heat in Washington,, D. C., vied = the ‘Dancing Waters” of the Carter Barron oe upen Taipei Residents Cool to Most Safety Plans TAIPEI (UP)—An American war movie, drawing capacity audiences to its seven daily showings in this Formosan capital, is far more pop- ular than the Nationalist Chinese government's attempts to thin out this densely populated city in case of Communist air raids. The government contends the city lacks enough underground bomb shelters to handle the ap- proximately 650,000 Taipei dwell- ers. Officials would like to see half the population dispersed to the countryside, but the man in the street has show. no interest. Taipei has more than doubled in size since 1949 when hundreds of thousands of Chinese fled here from the mainiand with Presi- dent Chiang Kai-shek's govern- ment. Official Nationalist fears that the Communist soon will bomb this’ provisional capital seem to bore the average resident. NO CURFEW “I'll start moving when the first | bomb falls,"’ one said. Taipei's paved streets are crowd- ed from morning until late night with pedicabs, a three-wheel bicy- cle with a seat for two passen- gers, and American automobiles purchased by taxi companies from workers who imported them duty- free. Unlike Seoul, Korea, another city within easy reach of Commu- nist bombers, Taipei has no cur- few laws shooing people into their houses at night. The restaurants, tea houses, seamy night clubs and the popu- lar pingpong rooms are supposed to close at midnight. Most do,. but if customers linger, managers make “proper arrangements” with the police to remain open. The Japanese, during their 50- year eccupation of Formosa, built Taipei into q modern city of brick and concrete buildings. Neon lights have been added, winking invitations in Chinese and English to spend money. Dancing is supposed to be out- lawed by the strigent austerity, program. But police tolerate danc- ing in clubs for foreigners, and Chinese couples flock to them in droves, BAD AREA A block of cheap, gaudy night clubs not far from the U. S. mili- tary assistance advisory group's headquarters are patronized large- ly by lonely American servicemen. U. S. servicemen and government Cat or Ciro's and dance with young hostesses squeezed into skin-tight Chinese dresses, i$1 at the legal exchange rate (about 50 cents black market) for | rate for one cup of tea, served at | the rate of one every 20 minutes | as part ef the transaction for a hostess About 3,000 Americans, inchud- | ing families, live in Formosa, probably 90 per cent of them in Taipei. Most of them work for the military assistance group of the state department. Their social life centers in the Officers" Club, the ornate Grand | Hotel and the Friends of China Club, where visiting foreign news- men live and work meet here are from upper-crust government and professional cir- cles. Many of them formerly were | residents of cosmopolitan Shang- hai. cour- | The prices are the equivalent of | one bottle of beer and $1.33 legal | | spending they now carry on: their shoulders? British Foreign Secretary Harold Macmillan recently warned in a New York speach that in the face |of the new Soviet approach ‘‘there will be great temptation to relax our efforts.’ He said: “IT beg of you to help us to pre- vent our folk from being deluded into these specious snares.” An American official said he expects the Russians to appeal | te West Europeans on three | points, They are: 1. Your alternative is neutrality or oblivion. 2. Neutralization means lower budgets, lower taxes and better living. HOW TU MARRY MILLIONAIRE ...is something we don’t ‘know anything about — but —you'll stay hitched a long time when you buy an O.K. Used Car from MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES 211 S$. SACINAW The Chinese most Americans | 3. Why would you heed to bear ewned on Americans, tow, he said, the cost of NATO or have Ameri-| with some hope of success. He can troops in your country if your | pointed out that until the Korean security is guaranteed by neU-|War began in 1950 the U.S. mili trality? tary budget was under 13 billion * * * " Arguments like those could be billion overnight. dollars but had to be jumped to 40 | idown from his: He Knows the Judge; | Man Fines Himself $10 TAMPA, Fla. @® — Damage was | insignificant, but Bob Johnson in- | sisted upon being charged with eareless driving when his car bumped into another. * Ea * In traffic court two days later, Municipal Judge Johnson stepped bench, pleaded | guilty to the charge, was fined | $10. Then he went back to work, | listening with sympathetic ear to _ other people's troubles. teeter 3 Bites Too Many | WINDSOR, Conn. (UP)—It was | positively the last straw for John Movchuk, dog warden. For the third time within a few weeks, the same collie bit him as he was It's the biggest TV value ever . . . and its yours at Federal’s for a limited time only! Imagine!) You get this big RCA Victor 21” console plus an automatic ‘45’ record player plus the Glenn Miller Vol. II Al- bum plus RCA’s Listener's Digest album . . . all for the price of the TV alone! Ned you pay even less when you trade in your old set at Federal’s! This big screen console features Aluminized ‘All-Clear’ picture tube for 212° greater picture contrast. illuminated *Easy-See” tuning dial, three-point ‘Personalized’ tone control and gleaming mahogany finish cabinet! t“raZ2rn \ (BD) 6 y @A real cen oven in this all-new feature pire space-saver ‘cause it’s only 30 in. wide @ ‘‘Infinitrol’” burners give you many cooking heats GI's buy black market American beer in clubs suth as the Black A real space-saver at a money-saving price. The giant 241 b-inch “Bal- anced Heat” oven provides over 4 cubic feet of space with uniform heat that insures perfect baking and roasting. “Infinitrol”-burners... another Norge “‘first” .. . give a wider selection of cooking heats, Burner and oven dials are within easy reach, Get the savings now! Price includes Daneery, Installation and Service NO MONEY DOWN wes £ 4 SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. Ni A f / a VISIT or CALL MICHIGAN FIRST AID on FRAL ue) jt stores oe ae ee " 4 : tps ae . yee y We Li ‘ % * THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUN NE 27, 1955 | Matening vials bands Bandas, ‘ME ; lewelry Departmen: NEWPORT'S Bobo Olson's handlers were in- dignant when the New York State :| Athletic Commission turned down their request that oxygen be ad Archie Moore. But, looking back on it, 't have done Bobo any good. ceil 2: 19 of the third round. A new name, goes up on the wall at the overseas press club's memorial press center her in New York—that of foreign correspond- ent John Graham Dowling, son of famed actor-producer Eddie Dow!- ing and Comedienne Ray Dooley. Young Dowling was killed enroute to the fighting in Buenos Aires. He was working against time,, for Time magazine. From Guadaleanal to New Guinea, to Leyte te France's war ministered to their man in his’ corner during the fight against | it | in Indo-China, Dowling was in the thick of things. Wars are eeded Oxygen in Ring, Not i in Corner the heart of South America, the! Paraguayan town of Pedro Juan. superbly coveréd in our press | Caballero and the Brazilian town | because men like Dowling get to the heart of a conflict and oth- ers follow the perilous trail. ‘A man who weathered the Nor- mandy landings, let us say, doesn't | want to bow out with a story | But they really form a single fron- _about the shortage of canned pea- | nuts in the PX. He wants to go as Jack Singer of International News Service did—with a blazing | eye-witness account of the sinking | of a Japanese aircraft carrier, or) he ‘wants to. say au revoir with 'a well-turned lead. HIS EXIT LINE coffee plantations but no roaming | reporter could have wished for a better exit line than the way he | began his last story: “On the fringe of nowhere in| | of Ponta Pora Doze in the green, . | Man.” Dowling leaves on a feature, about the boom in Paraguayan) rolling forests of the Amabay pla- teau, a broad, straight strip of ' grass between the red-roofed towns |marks the international border. tier community of bearded, mud- stained gauchos and Syrian mer- chants. Tens of thousands saw Edward Steichen’s collection of photographs f man frem the womb to the tomb, an exhibit at New York's , Museum of Modern Art which Capt. | Steichen called ‘‘The Family of Millions now are catching up with it through a phenomenal 197 page paper-bound beok of the same name, published for the Museum by the Maco Magazine corporation. : Jerry Mason, youthful president GIRLS’ GINGHAM DRESSES Early Shipment for School — ~ Spécially Priced $ _MEN’S SPORT SHIRTS reduced Rayon challis, wrink. led cotton, Dan River stripes, acetate pone gee, all short sleeves. 1" PENNEY’S THIRD FLOOR “REGULATED” COTTONS | REDUCED erease-resistant, prin Se ee ee BUTCHER WEAVE RAY. RAYON "REDUCED DOTTED SWISS REDUCED * (ummer shades, geod quality, ” wide . PERCALE PRINTS REDUCED DACRON SH op ef discentineed patterns | RS REDUCED washable, quick-drying, ne-iren fabric, 49" wide ..... DACRON COTTON LENO DOT REDUCED sheer, washable dress and blewse fabric, 47" wide ....... 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Chase Returning , i osa U—-Maj. Gen. ging from advance sales ‘the Sng can leaves pa home Family 6 of Man” will become aS! ang retirement tomowow after much a part of the family library serving as chief of the U.S, Mili- | a —— tary Assistance Advisory Group on | i. acne Formosa since its activation four of the company. once bought a| U.S. amateur photographers have! years ago. His successor is Maj. tomerrow i piece from Stei ichen while serving | about 34 million cameras. | Gen. George W. Smythe. money- mae arentes. See how much Shop in cool eir-conditioned comfort N f On NIGHT TO 9 ‘Mt Ps NW Great savings in women’s summer PLAYWEAR Terrific savings! Women’s cool BLOUSES © Shorts Colors galore! Cotton denim, chambray, ® Batiste All sanforized and vat-dyed! Sleeveless @Tee-Toppers twill shorts, 10-18. T-toppers with boat, ® Broadcloth styles, short sleeves, convertible neck- © Bros crew, pixie, Italian, V-necks. 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Enameled steel frame with | multi- oe saran seat and 9 on Sale. Big el THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 Wisconsin Scientist Fingerprints’ Weather MADISON, Wis. (UP)—A me- teorologist at the University of Wisconsin has announced tor “fingerprinting Judge Won't Take ‘But,’ eget ae agua gedaan Bob Squirrel’s Teeth =|: MINNEAPOLIS (UP)—Bruno V.| his hair with both hands while Berg was told either to get a/| his wife held the steering wheel. Berg told the traffic court judge his hair kept falling in his eyes. | ley Judge Tom Bergin told him. to . | get a crew cut and fined him $25. i. plans "weather, Prof. Reid Bryson said “Opera- tion Fingerprint” was begun to Nationally-known brands! BOYS’ SPORT SHIRTS @ Convertible standing collars TOTS’ PLAYTOGS | @ Seersucker overalls, longies @Cool, Sanforized fabrics C : @ Gay shorts, boys’ swim trunks 44. é Hey, Mom! Some are valued at more than : @ Playsuits, pedal pushers : twice this low price! 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Sub-teen’s black *- Lastex swimsuits 4.57 Bloomer style black Las- tex with white dotted pique insets, Sizes 10-14, 3.44 fT LE a Giant pre-holiday savings for you on these ice-cream cool summer fashions! SMART DRESSES @Linen-look rayons @ Easy-care nylons @Smart sheers | @Cottons and Orlions @Sunback styles @Sleek sheaths @Many others Summer-fresh dresses at a price so low you'll want several! Such airy fabrics as 4 lawn, pique and delicate sheers, All your : favorite colors: brown, gray, blue, lime, pink, turquoise, black, dainty Let the sun at your back in halter and me T WARREN FS. Abusive Calls THE POYTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 ° Flood Petitioner Procedure Called Off by Voter; Hardship on Family is Charged MADISON HEIGHTS—A recount of votes in the June 7 Madison Heights charter election, scheduled for 9 a.m. Saturday, didn’t come off. * * * Teddie R. Przybyiski, voter who two weeks ago petitioned for the Oakland County clerk asking for election of a new charter commis- County Deaths Mrs, James McKinley NEW HUDSON — Service for Mrs, James (Elizabeth Rose) Mc- Kinley of 30550 South Hill Rd., 65, will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Phillips Funeral Home, South Lyon. Burial will be in New eights Cancels Recount of Charter Ballot V otes Pentiac Press Phote ‘Peach Queen’ Contest Begins ‘Miss Romeo’ Selection Scheduled in H. S. Auditorium gin with the selection of ‘Miss Romeo.” at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Romeo High School auditorium “Miss Romeo" will compete for jthe tithe of “Michigan Peach Queen,"" August 9 with winners | from four other counties. The jpeach queen will reign over the annual peach festival, Romeo. Candidates in the Remeo” contest wil] be publicly interviewed before three out-of- Tomorrow | | ROMEO—The first phase of the! © Michigan Peach Festival will be- | in a contest to be staged | Sept. 3-5, in “Miss | town judges, Final decision will | | Rev. Cheney, 67, of Disco, Dies Long-Time Minister Expires in Hospital at Mount Clemens ALMONT — The Rev, Herbert H_ Cheney, 67, of Disco, a minister in the area for over half a cen- ‘tury, died Saturday in St. Joseph , Hospital, Mount Clemens, after a short illness. | Rev. Cheney had served as pas- tor at Disco for the past three ‘years and was pastor of Almont | Baptpist Church from 1931-1934. He was a past master of the Almont F&AM Lodge 51 and a | member of Utica OES, Surviving Rev. Cheney are a |son, Gordon, of Tuscola; three (left) of 9571 Bonnie Brier Rd. and Mrs. ‘Richard|-have been taking instruction on operating the Morgan of 9156 Buckingham Dr. check over the new | resuscitator. By its use, they expect to save lives. resuscitator that English Villas Subdivision had just from drowning in the southwest section of Pontiac be based on personality, poise, | beauty, and genera] appearance. Gerald McLean, local attorney, | ‘ ‘| daughters, Mrs. Katherine Horn, of Caseville; Mrs. Leona Van- ton Rd. demonstrates just how the lifesaving device | $450 already has works. The three are among some 24 women who $518 for the unit, purchased, while Mrs. George Roberts of 2019 Kings- Lake where the subdivision is located. Approximately | been collected toward the cost of and donations are mee cae in WASHINGTON (@®—By a deci- | quotas as a way of registering sive majority, the nation’s wheat | disapproval of the Eisenhower farmers have voted for tight con- | administration's flexible support . _ | program under which Benson can eed Cl DGD set price props on most basic crops return for a government-guaran-| at between 75 and 90 per cent of teed price averaging $1.81 a bush- parity, depending on the size of el. | apeties. * LJ Ld In doing so, the growers caused Under the program adopted Sat Secretary of Agriculture Benson urday, _growers will be -allotted 55 to lay aside a proposal that nd = tn tad by sre oe ex QFEONCHI Bares Premier Choice at considerably lower prices than would prevail otherwise, "| | Italian President Asks | Antonio Segni to Form . * Over 328,000 wheat farmers took part in an Agriculture Departmen referendum on the question Satur- day. By a 77% per cent majority, they voted to continue next year) marketing quotas designed to hold) Cabinet; OK Awaited wheat production at roughly 30 Re| cent below postwar peaks. This) powe uw—Antonio Segni, 6+ Seal somes ry Oe aoe | year-old farmer, scholar and left- | into effect on the 1956 crop. About of-center Christian Democrat, has one million wheat farmers were | until Thursday to accept or reject | eligible to vote in the referendum. | 4, invitation to try to become | The controls are Hudson Cemetery. Surviving besides her husband | James, are one daughter, Mrs. | Marguret Baker of Pontiac; = sisters, Mrs. ot Buschard ot Dimondale,” Mrs. Kenneth Wright of Flint; three brothers, Ralph Hambuger of Brighton, Fred of Fowlerville and Henry of Lansing. rs. Fred Burbank DRYDEN—Service for Mrs, Fred (Caroline) Burbank, 89, will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Dryden Methodist Church, with burial in Dryden Cemetery. Mrs, Burbank | — died Saturday afternoon, Her only survivors are nieces and nephews. Mrs, Frank Rice DRYDEN — Service for path Fret (Elizabeth) Rice. 75, wil 4 be at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in Pil- | grim Holiness Church, with burial | in Dryden Cemetery. Mrs. Rice died early Sunday morning in La- | peer Genera! Hospital. Surviving are six daughters, | Mrs. Margaret Turner of Caro, Mrs. Mary Ross of Seattle, Wash.., Mrs. Rena Hoest, Mrs. Eva From- wilder, and Mrs. Florence Garva. all of Detroit. and Helen Rice of Clio; three sons, Scott of Flint. | Bob of Detroit and Ted of Twin Falls, Idaho: eight grandchildren.’ and six great-grandchildren; one, brother, Clark Burnett tf Dryden and one sister, Eva Knickerbocker | of Memphis (Mich.) Mrs. Carrie D, Noble | MARLETTE—Service for Mrs. Carrie D. Noble, 79, was held this | afternoon from Marsh raise Home, with burial in Farmington Cemetery. She died Thursday at Caro. Surviving are four nephews. Ralph Noble of Farmington. Har- old Noble of Mariette, Charles No- ble of Applegate; and a niece, Martha Noble of Applegate. John R. Skidmore ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP _| Service for John R. Skidmore, 41, | of 1824 Greig, will be in the Hop- | croft Funeral Home, Hazel Park, at 9 a.m. Wednesday, and at 9:30 Commander of Royal Oak Town. ship’ Police Station, No. 2 having the force in 1944, Capt. Skidmore died Sunday at his home. by his wife, prevent the cemamibation ea still Italy's seventh postwar premier. more surplus storks of wheat. | He was asked last night by | President Giovanni Gronchi to see The heavy ne oe quotas !f he could line up a new govern- came as & to many farm Ment. Segni said he would inves- leaders because advance reports! tigate the situation further before from Various producing areas had | undertaking the task officially. indicated a closer vote. These re-| Following a procedure first used ports stressed farmer dissatisfac- in 1953 by the late Alcide de Gas- tion with sharp income reductions peri and former President Luigi resulting from already-imposed | Einaudi, Segni will talk with polit- cutbacks in wheat production. ical leaders and explore the possi- There had been speculation too | bilities for a mew Cabinet before that farmers would vote againgt | being formally charged by Gronchi = ae formation of a government. If he decides that his chances Chicago Officials Set P finding a group of ministers to work with him are slim and de- clines Gronchi's bid, the President ‘10 Welcome Molotov ':«seecett turn ttn var minister in the outgoing CHICAGO (INS)—Officials of six Cabinet of Mario Scetbe: Chicago institutions were ready to ° welcome Russian Foreign Minister As he lett the Preside ont tast | Vyacheslav M. Molotov who will Night, Segni said he hoped demo- | arrive in the city today. cratic parties would support him, The diplomat, en route home |2ndicating that, like Scelba, he from the United Nations’: 10th an- | Would seek a coalition of the cen- niversary commemorative session ‘eT Parties — Social Democrats, in San Francisco, was scheduled Liberals and possibly Republicans to arrive at the Chicago & North- | — to give the Christian Democrats western Station at noon aboard the ‘he marginal support they need in | Union Pacific streamliner City of | Parliament. San Francisco. Oe Molotov “yesterday said he Bowling Team to Form would like to see the sights in TROY TOWNSHIP — For local Chicago again. He had stopped | people who have indicated interest off in the city en route to San | in bowling this year, there will be Francieco. | a bowling meeting at the Big The officials of the six institu-| Beaver Methodist Church at 7:30 | tions waiting to host Molotov are! p.m. Wednesday. those at the’ Museum of Science | and Industry, Chicago Natural His- Club Week Starts |tory Museum, Chicago Academy of : Science, Art Institute, Adler Plan- Sanilac County Club Activities etarium and Shedd Aquarium. — Will begin at Michigan State Col- Molotov will arrive in New York teal Satiiges A were Np Cub rs w er e annua tomorrow and is booked ‘to sail Club Week, “June 28-July Ist. Wednesday on the oe Elizabe th. | No Contract Gregory Oil Co. | East Germans , Making Pullman for Mao BERLIN, (®—A West Berlin N. newspaper said today Communist East Germany is constructing a ecessary luxurious armored railroad car for Mao Tze-tung, President of Red China. . Der Abend said the gift —_ East German President Wilhelm | Call Today °* Pieck will be equipped with bullet | proof glass, two bedrooms, a bath, “oe aeere air conditioning, a telephone and | a radio get. \ IT’S THE Wheat Farmers Vote for Price Supports million acres for the next year’s wheat crop—the same as this year, but 30 million less than the peak. Farmers wil] be free of penalty, wheat grown on their individual shares of the allot- ment. The 1956 crop will be supported at 76 per cent of parity, or a national average of $1.81 a bushel under the new flexible price sup- port system. 824 per cent. or $2.06, for this year’s crop and $2.20 for last year’s crop, which was supported at 90 per cent of parity under the | now-junked high, rigid support system. s s e Had growers rejected the 1956 quotas. the support price would have dropped to 530 per cent of parity. or about 31.19 a bushel Parity is a standard for meas- uring farm prices declared by law to be fair to farmers in relation to their costs. allowed to sell, | will be master of ceremonies. En- tertainment will also be offered as part of the contest progrdm. City Man Demands Exam | on Charge of Forgery | Charged with forging a $25 check, Frank Durnen, 24, of 229 E. Walton Blvd., demanded exam- ination when he was arraigned Sat- |urday before Municipal Judge Ce- cil B. McCallum. Durnen, accused of passing the check in a downtown grocery store, was arrested Saturday by Pontiac Pohce. He was being held at the Oakland County Jail under $100 bond pending examination Wednes- day. i) This compares with | Britain Charges Athens Inciting Revolt in Cyprus LONDON, wW-—Britain protested to Greece today against an Athens radio broadcast which the Foreign Office said incited the people of Cyprus to revolt against British rule A British note delivered to the Foreign Ministry in Athens ac- cused the Greeks of breaking past promises that they would control | the broadcasts put out by the gov- ernment radio, 'and pointed sleeves were and her coronet secured a finger- FORM EVERY WEEK—ENROLL NOW ‘tip veil. She carried a_ colonial bouquet of white carnations and Individual end) Group, lnstruction stepharptis Demand tor Operators Continues Steadily - Martin of Pontiac and Pat Kibbe of Flint, counsins of the bride, 314 Hubbard Bidg. FE 2-1611 were bridesmaids, Return Coupon Beow for FREE Literatere. . . ° MOMe 2... cccecccccccccerenseceecsecesecscececnes: Phene. a e Clyde Jenkins of Pontiac was best man, while Robert Kibbe Jr., BOOP nc cccccccccccccessccuccceceees dsesasceslvecuccecsessscsesces Aconncoss ‘and Buddy Jenkins: both ot Lake Wagoner, of Tuscola. and Mrs. Nellie Price of Franklin; a broth- MR. & MRS. JOHN L, JENKINS |er. Claire, of North Branch, 10 grandchildren, and three great- grandchildren. J enkins-Kibbe Nuptials °2 "4. sea a sox | Brothers Funeral Home at 2 p.m. | Tuesday. with Dr. Ray E. Wilson, Solemnized in Evening ‘emis: wim be raye vibes * An evening wedding in the First Orion and Bob Sayre of Oxford Church. Detroit, officiating. Burial Baptist Church of Lake Orion re- 4cted as ushers. 'will be in the West Burlington cently united Dorice Ardine Kibbe, | ~ |Cemetery near Silverwood, with daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A reception immediately follow-| members of the Almont Masonic Kibbe of Lake Orion, and John | Snes covery (wan oak! 08) ee) ee in cerge ef grevestio . church. ‘service. Jenkins. son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde - Jenkins of Lake Orion. * * * The bride chose for the occasion a gown fashioned of Chantilly lace over bridal satin. The fitted bodice of lace COMPTOMETER Specializing in the Training of Comptometer Operators— NEW DAY AND EVENING CLASSES THE COMPTOMETER SCHOOL Mrs.- Bonnie Jenkins of Pontiac _ was matron ef honor and Sharon —_— | Come in—see the reasons Mercury gets rave reviews pe close-up look at Mercu ng. It's fresh, distinctive, s ke car. Make your own test, Feel Mercury's new suPER-TORQUE V-8 power (188 and 198 hp). Mercury for value. You 98 fine-car ww ew so no extra cost, eet one of you w ercury consisten its feld for pid value. . Compare Tom McCahill, Auto Editor, Mechanix Illustrated, says: A magnificent-handling car_the best- “looking Mercury | In history ul 1p ecreRTT TR ReaEE-agnenoe, , = re na . ¢ . ss he ¥ : - at = Se Z . ¥ oe: ae ee t 35 “ Tom McCahill, auto editor, reports: “The 1955 Mercury is a magnificent car and the Montclair (shown above) is the best-looking family car on the American market today.” s exclusive a by no dozens ou'll see _ CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, NG | The car the auto experts go for can be yours for the July 4th week-end—and at a big saving Our record-breaking sales permit us to give you Snoury wheat sone Cac R rent faa and really enjoy the long week-end coming up IT PAYS TO OWN A MERCURY Don't miss the big television bit, ED SULLIVAN'S “Toast of the Town.” Sunday evening, 1:00 te 8:00 Station WIJBK-TV, Channel 1, emember, too, oe start below 13 models in Why not check our offer me the Merrury Custom 2 door Sadiin Rist or factory retell prices os 0f iflystroted) ond of rampensnn ue re 2b167 | Ath ¥ Ce kes is , vine ®e@aehief#eee & ‘THE- PONTIAC PRESS, ‘MONDAY. JUNE if 1955 | _ ‘ j Be Smart, Look Sharp! Call Fox cleaner, newer | for fresher, | looking cleaning: FE 4-1536 719 W. Huren. BUILDING SERVICE STORES AND COMMERCIAL BUILDING FREE ESTIMATES LOWEST PRICES IN MICHIGAN COULSON CONSTRUCTION CO. 15% end 17% East Lewrence — Pontiec FE 5-7221 \ Silliman Fvans, Publisher, Dies Noted Newspaperman Called Key Political Figure in Tennessee | FORT WORTH, Tex. —Silli- man Evans, the Nashville Tennes- sean president-publisher who was called a key political figure, was | found dead in his bed yesterday, victim ata beast attack. The body will be flown to Nash- ville tonight after resting at a funeral -home here. Evans, 61, died in his sleep attending the funeral] of his old friend and former employer Amon G. Carter, publisher of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, whe died Thursday. The crusading son of a crusad- ing father, Evans rose from virtual obscurity to eminence in the news- paper world and a place of leader- ship not only in Tennessee politics but in the national Democratic party. He had suffered since World | |War I from a_ heart ailment, | | Which caused his discharge from j the Army. * Evans wag the son of the Rev. Columbus Asbury and Alice Silli- man Evans. It was from the father, friends said, that he aber | ably inherited his |The father. was an coed pron | bitionist. Evans, in his early days! with Carter’s Fort Worth news-: paper, uncoveréd the’ highway 'seandal of the Ferguson adminis-| | tration which resulted in the elec- | tion of Dan Moody as governor | Of Texas. | One of Evans’ first political | ' fights in Tennessee was against ' ‘Saturday night a few hours after, The newspaper under Evans‘ leadership also embarked on @& campaign for repeal of Ten- nessee’s poll tdx and battled ‘suc- Crump 1948—its first in 20 years—led a state political writer to describe place in Tennessee politics."’ In that campaign Evans supported Browning for governor, Rep. Estes Kefauver for the U.S, Senate and President Truman for re-election. * * * He started in the newspaper business ag a printer's devil (ap- DeLeon (Tex.) Press, not far from Joshua, Tex., where he was born April 2, 1894, eralship it became one of the Seductive Korean Claims 70 Women | /more than 70 women in 12 months. He is lanky, handsome Pak In | Soo, 25, who was dishonorably dis- | Be charged last August for being) 7 AWOL from the South Korean Ma- rine Corps. Six women 20 or 21 years old sue him charging false promises | of marriage. Pak denied that. “There was mutual consent,” women, Pak, whose trial is in recess, ‘told reporterg he used the routine on more than 70 women, mainly college girls. Introductory Special! New 085 EUREKA All that’s modern in ONE cleaner «--and you save °20 to *30 @ Dramatic beauty—exciting colors e No dust bag to empty—triple fitter” « Super power—20% more suction ¢ Amazing rug nozzle with floating brush oo © Easy action—Zip-Clip Swivel Top Reduced suction for cleaning drapes e Attach-O-Matic clip-on tools e 2 1 ‘ « Low price saves you $20 to $30 * B Rolle Eureka from room to room on rubber swivel wheels—won't mar floors. a Evans as occopying “the No. 1) © prentice) at the age of 12 on the! F_ When the bankrupt Nashville Tennessean was put up for sale |. in 1937, Evang scraped up the; = Money to buy it. Under his gen-| | South's most widely known dailies. | © SEOUL UA Korean Don Juan| |boasted today that he seduced) = he i told a courtroom jammed with! 7 “TONIGHT and TUESDAY SPECIALS... ie Our | 100,0 » pa j 74 No. Saginew St. 2 » We Give Holdes Stemps! More red hot bargains in time for the 4th of July and vocetion .... We are shooting the works to break all sales records—Even at these low prices you can “charge it.” Take 6 months to pay! . Save—Actual to 8.99 . ° NYLON DRESSES 3 Genuine DuPont Nylons. Dries in one hour. Included also are washable jersey and cot- tons. 10 to 20, 38 to #4. Sunback Dresses . . . $99 © ie: a Size 42x81 ai a From Our Regular 21.99 NYLON TOPPERS . ©”? , Toppers in beautiful new cclors. 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Officials Meet Today | to Discuss Further Wage Hike Demands PON Z Lee PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955, ‘Candidate Gets Zero; 'Vated for Opponent | GRANARD, Ireland w — John’ /McGovern, an independent candi- f date in Town Council elections ‘held over tne weekend, didn't get | +e “I voted for the other chop.” he said. ‘‘l thought it was the | decent thing to do,” sores tho conletetion tad aod GREENSBRO, omer co athe - haps his popularty was such that | Brosius leaves by plane today for almost everyone thought he would Iceland, as good # way as any win and no one bothered to vote to escape the hordes who want ‘| Would-Be ceelener Flees Job Applicants i been beseiged ever since N.c.. @-Henry | Brosius, a safety engineer, has . the Greensboro Daily News carried his want ad for high-paid aides to help buil@ Iceland air. bases for NATO countries, He finally het? to call on an employment agency to handle his dozens of applicants so PITTSBURGH ™—CIO U nited| Steelworkers officials — spurning | steel industry offers of 10 and 10%2-| cent hourly wage increases—meet | today with the union Wage Policy | Committee to chart future negotia- tions. | Inland Steel Co. submitted the 10%-cent offer yesterday. U.S. Corp.'s 10-cent offer was Thursday. The union promptly rejected each offer. The Wage Policy Committee undoubted ly will uphold the rejection, e e = : | Union President David J. Me- | Donald has notified % basic steel |companies and iron ‘ore mining | firms the union wants a substan-| tial wage increase. He has not. stated any specific figure ‘publicly. | He says the union will strike at) | midnight Thursday if an agree-| iment is not reached. | The union said it has received ino offer from any other company. | Most of the firms, however, us- Steel, the jually wait for U.S to reach | world's largest producer, | agreeme mt and adopt those terms as a pattern | U.S, Steel met with the union | Saturday for nearly three hours. | There was no indication the com- i pany made any move to improve lthe 10-cent offer * * * The union's demand for wage thikes affects 600,000 union mem- steel mills. They | now @arn an average of $2.33. an | hour. The wage talks are being con- ducted under a wage reopening. i clause in a two-year pact signed \jast year. The union cannot make | demands for a 2 te weer: i ‘Smithy Concedes to Automobile Age CHICAGO (—The automate | lage. has caught Op with Frank = J. Hauser, suburban Hinsdale's blacksmith, and the shop he has ‘operated for 4 years | Hauser, 74, announced yesterday | | he is hanging up his leather apron ‘for good and will spend his time | tilling his truck garden and travel- | ing. | Hinsdale’s horsey set kept him |in the horseshoeing business until | 188 and since then he has capi- | talized on the demand for wrought | iron gadgets.” The smithy Hauser took over in 1901 will be razed to make way. for an automobile parking lot. Here's a Church Won't Be Passed LOUISVILLE, Ky. ®—Sam Gat ford has a church and steeple but no people, The one-armed maintenance man built Pentecost Powerhouse himself although he isn't a preach- er and has no congregation. Ld . e Gafford, who mortgaged his home to pay for the $8.000 struc- ture, started the project more than two years ago because he wanted a church free of the influence of money, * * * Gafford said his church will be. “pure Pentecostal’ and that a preacher will be called in if at- tendance warrants it. There will be no collettions ex- | cept for special purposes, like a somebody who is in trou- Girl Found Dead ‘in Mental Hospital SPADRA, Calif. uy — Sheriff's ‘officers today investigated the | | strangling of a 10-year-old girl in| a children’s ward of the Pacific | State Hospital for-Mentaly Re-| tarded last Saturday night. A nurse found Linda Sue Kirk, | a patient since 1949, with shoe) laces tied around her throat. | Dr. George Tarjan, hospital med- ical director, said there are no adults in the ward and that the strangulation could not have been self-inflicted. Deputies ‘theorized | ‘that the girl may have been) — by another child in the, = 19| Laundry Special! = WHITE DRESS [SHIRTS «51.09 Where the Plate | a single vote—not even his. own. ‘for him. ito follow him for fat-salaried joba. he could‘ finish packing. = < oo oe ee oe ee ee ee ee ee ee ee es a ee ee ee ee ee ee 'This valuable coupon 2 POR <3 .) entitles the beorer to i te 2 tb. limit—Bozley's cone : and | YELLOW oe 'OLEO . with meat purchase Dla i Bp pe ee ee Bazley Lowers Prices on Pork Chops!! LOIN-END Lean Blade Cuts Lean Center Cuts Choice Center Cut So ge lee | oe BIGGEST MINIATURE — The world's largest globe, 29 feet in diameter, nears completion at the Babson . Institute in Wellesley, Mass. Made of 584 pieces of porce- lain enamel on steel, it shows the world's political and geographical aspects, using 21 colors Snowball Trade iicomes as Children Use Booze NEW ORLEANS «#—Business snowballing at the snowball stand Mrs. Paul Spurlock’s children set’ up outside her house. ROASTS CHOPS 49i. Several male customers were | wading into the icy confection and | Shoulder Cut * Tender Blade Cut Junedale Brand Lean Beef Several more were clamering for VE. AL ; service: ) CHUCK SMOKED SHORT Mrs. Spurlock went to investi- STEA gate. She found the children had K ROAST HAM RIBS disdained the conventional fruit a syrups and were spiking the snow- ‘ balls with two bottles of her best Cc Cc Cc liqueurs ” . The snowball business me ened ib. ’ lb. lb. lb. away after she rescued the re- ) maining half bottle OPEN TONIGHT! SHOP UNTIL 9 P. M. AT. LORD‘S WHERE YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD! s\ YOUR CHOICE FREE PAR ads: BUNK BED OUTFIT CHROME DINETTE JEWEL GAS RANGE of Any Extra Charge Complete with 2 beds, 2 mattresses, 2 springs and guard rail and ladder. Complete 5S-piece Extension table chrome chairs Full- size, deluxe large oven. set four quality, and When You Purchase Either o Living Room Suite Bedroom Suite for only Come in—take your pick of sccres ot wonderful suites at Lord’s. Chcice of new coverings, new colors, new styles. : FREE Air Conditioner FREE Power Lawn Mower TONIGHT and TUESDAY ON THIS. WESTINGHOUSE rus MODEL DFG 87 IF YOU HURRY! , $365.95 ° .$81.07 $288.88 A WEEK ‘TS ALL YOU NEED] YOU SAVE i a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE 27. 1055 served Pontidec patrons faithlully and dependably ice you desire. Open Ny Vv Thurs-Fri. E Sat. Eves. IT TAKES KNOWLEDGE -- SKILL and TOOLS to Repair Watches t 1 MR. PHIL ORENCIA At Myer’s your watch or jewelry —\ receive skilled workmanship and . thorough knowledge of precision Manager of our Repair De — : 5s i en , time pieces and precious metals me 14s or Pais } , } pa pcos ond jewels. Modern tools in these skilled hands restore the accuracy and trouble-free serv- TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Seeking Airman | | in 3 Slayings Serviceman Seen With Murder Victims; Car Also Missing DICKINSON, Tex. W—An_ all- points alert for a tall, young 190- pound airman officers believe may bave killed three persons here con- tinued today after a California lead proved no good. Inglewood, Calif., police last night discovered a car without | licenses plates which they thought could be one believed driven by the suspect. an Inglewood-owned vehicle. The airman, described as about '25, is wanted for questioning m the slayings of Mrs. Ruby C. Mc- | Pherson, 44; her son George Rich- ard McPherson, 12; and Mrs. Zola Norman, about 65, the mother of Mrs. McPherson. All were found shot to death Saturday night in the pine-shaded McPherson home near the traffic- heavy Houston-Galveston Gulf Freeway. Mrs, McPherson's 1953 automo- bile was missing, but police said IT'S NEW Bs Plus OUR MARTINIZING Pickup and Delivery Phone FE 5-6107 i IN DRY CLEANING PROCESS LINT FREE Dark Colors returned entirely line free regardless of fabric! MOTH GENEY CLEANERS 12 West Pike St. -Sam-Benson Says: MY STORE OPEN TONITE Till 9 P.M. SAM BENSON ai 20 S$. Perry Se. nothing apparently had been taken from the home, and Texas Ranger Johnny Klevenhagen said there was no evidence of a sex crime. Local and state police both said they could find no motive for the slayings, believed to have occurred |late Wednesday or early Thurs- y. Mrs. McPherson returned | phur, La., where her husband John | M. McPherson. Sr. and their elder an. oil well project. Two waitresses told investiga- tors that Mrs. McPherson ap- peared at a restaurant Wednesday night with an airman she intro- duced as a friend of her son. | Both waitresses said the airman ‘told them he was en route to Cali- npt say where in that state he lived. 14 Killed in Mine GELSENKIRCHEN, —Fourteen coa] miners were killed yesterday by air pressure from ‘an explosion 2,400 feet below the | surface in the Nordstern diggings ‘in the Ruhr. The blast occurred during dynamiting operations and |which the victims were _ working. IPS A PSYCHOLOGICAL FACT: PLEASURE Henk your dlaposition tocky ? FEELING SNAPPISH? That’s only human when . little irritations irk you. Cheer up! It’s a psycho- logical fact that pleasure helps your ‘disposition! That means everyday pleasures, like smoking for instance, are important. And, if you're a smoker, then your wise choice in cigarettes should be the most pleasure-giving cigarette. Camel, of course! ve SECC TOHEHCCROR ERE OOEe But it proved to be’ Wednesday afternoon’ from Sul-| gon John Jr., 22, were working on | fornia to visit his parents but did | Germany | ONE AMONG MANY—Helen Humphreys of Hollywood, sole female undergraduate among 1,072 men in the University of Southern Califor- nia’s School of Engineering, prepares solution for chemistry laboratory experiment in Los Angeles. |Congenial Congress May Lack Issues WASHINGTON «®—Sen. Mundt ‘(R-SD) said today Democrats in Congress are supporting so much of the Eisenhower program that “they may lack issues for next year’s elections.” * * oo 5 He said he has enjoyed ‘this very congenial session, and I'm not critical of Majority Leader Johns (D-Tex), He's my friend and ne ea! “But the Democrats have not created any major issues nor solid- ified any opposition groups to aid their presidential candidate next time, Mundt said in an interview. “Their presidential candidate will have to brew his own cam- paign issues,”’ Silver is 10.5 times. as heavy as i water. Bomber Crevinail Die [mt Heer ing HATO TRIER, members of a British bomber crew were killed yesterday when their plane collided with neuvers near here, The von be, hae et No nae with an American |! were released. Germany #® — Five ee ae ee in %, tee te YOU NEED you owe! bias convene. Epo men eod : fF geal Bay ay 5 one-trip loon Write of — in. * FINANCE CO. Pat (_Prevident Loan_) BUY WHAT PAY WHAT » Now yew can get up to $500 the sensible Beceficid way . stand on a unicycle on a three- foot- ~square platform atop me swaying pole. From his hospital bed, he said: “I feit the pole sway more ‘than | usual. I went to the center of the | pole but it kept swaying. I tried: to slide down the pole. When I) was about 10 feet down, the top 0 feet bent like a sapling.” The pole crashed into the crowd. and Hoger fell about 55 feet. His wife, who assists him, stood help- less on the ground holding a use- | less pull rope. Liberal Trade-in Allowance for Your Old Refrigerator There usually are two total eclip- | visible someplace on earth. ELECTRIC RANGE Regular $234.95 “179°: NO MONEY DOWN! 90 Days Same as Cash! Free Delivery! Free Service! Big 30-inch Oven Big 30-inch Storage Drawer Automatic Oven Timer Lift-Out Drip Pens Fast Heating Surfece Units ‘Phone ~ OB Open Tonite to 9 P.M. Don’t Miss the Savings You Now Get at Pontiac’s Oldest and Exclusive Appliance Store! 10 cu. ft.Refrigerator-Freezer NO MONEY DOWN! ! Giant Full-Width Freezer Handy Shelves in Door SAVE 55” =": NEW KELVINATOR } FREE SERVICE—90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! FREE DELIVERY! Low cot rams E% GOOD HOUSEKEEPIN Sl : Huron. Street Includes Free Delivery and Free Installation] 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! Slide Out Meat Tray Cold Clear-to-the-Floor Design Twin Sliding Crispers eee ee Ne th lh ies a oT of PONTIAC | 7 ell) aa aaa SY BISR tn iit ape lahCORRO Phy Nc a ) laugh at muggy days in our NO-W i LT shirts Tired of wearihg a damp, wilted shirt on hot, sticky days? Then enjoy a Pontiac Laundry NO-WILT shirt. It stays crisp, neat-looking all day long, even in the memos Pontiac Laundry’s exclusive pro- SSwitt ue your shirt “morning-tresh” from 9 to 9. moisture, resists stains and smudges, too, Yot does no not seal air holes or stiffen fabrics. Pon- ely oma washes it out and renews it with every Call Col Coral Dan” at FE 2-8101 today and laugh at muggy days in a fresh, neat NO-WILT shirt. By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS) — Young) Ndabaningi Sithole—born a pagan, bred in an African mud hut, nour- lished on witch doctor diets and destined to be an illiterate—walked in, wearing a neat navy suit and a shy smile, | | “How do you do?” warm, isn’t it? Thank Lord, it's warm.” This was the 34-year-old man from Southern Rhodesia who is every man's answer to the uni- versal plaint which goes, “You've got to have the breaks.” For Ndabaningi ‘the he said. the name none of the breaks at all—had nev- er seen a white man, a Car, -book until he was 10 years old— he is one of the bright- ministers ain U and today est apprentice U.S would ever read or write | telling his story in perfect English, “until | was 15. could do these things ‘Then while I was working as a! 'kitchen boy in Shabani fa mining. jletter from my cousin who was | HE WAS ASHAMED | #"This made me chagrined was five years my junior, and | iwas five years his seniog, yet he ‘could write and I could not even get educated." Ad * * ' For a boy who had spent the Stock-up for the big C.P.C. - or Yellow or Hamilton Grade “A” Fresh LARGE EGGS . PLUMS Shop Mon.- PEOPLE'S for these ‘BUDGET. BUYS coming up! Save on every item! SNO-WHITE BREAD BONITO gf FLAKES Pillsbury White Cake Mixes. ; 19° Lerge No. 212 Size HUNT'S Tues. - Wed. 4th of July week-end Fresh Baked Cho. ean Pillsbury Recipe Packed Flour °°1” Enriched —_ Sealtest Dole’s Hawaiian Pineapple Juice All Flavors JELL-O : MILK pkgs See 39° 39° * = * preva «0° Shop in our “Circus Room.” It is loaded with stacks of wonderful FOOD ALL PRICED AT ONLY 10° nde ' “It's r good | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOND first 12 years of his life wearing | loin cloths, herding cattle for an | illiterate father who was opposed | to education, this was a bold move. But he moved anyway, leaving | eight brothers and sisters, and heading for the Dadaya Mission nearby where he was taken sym- pathetically in hand by the Rev. Garfield Todd, sow Prime Min- ister of Southern Rhodesia. It was no breeze, this business of learning, even under friendly guidance, because Ndabaningi had Started late. ye Mission Nobody | knew | | town in Rhodesia) I received a! |five years my junior and I had to | ;get someone to read it to me.) He | |read. I decided to run away and He also had the problem of over- means ‘‘He Who Adventures’) had coming old superstitions and habits (“I used to believe that inhaling a the smoke from a burning goat's horn was what kept me healthy’) and he had to work at night in the dispensary his tuition of $1.90 a year to earn “It never occurred tu me that 1 BUT HE LEARNED " he said, | But with wholly concentrated ef- fort the boy was not only reading | and writing in less than five years, i JAY, JUNK , ice 1955 African Pastor Makes Own Breaks. in Life perhaps,” squared away, ‘‘but very useful.” | he was also capable of teaching , | iMiterates, at various small mis- eg schools around his little coun- “My wife thought, and I thought, (that there would be much racial | ‘discrimination here among a Here | ‘of white people, and that’ there = 2s ¢ would be no place to take refuge.” He also found time to be married /9. 813 people in 6. 608 square mile s and his shy smie| The six New England states have ABG CARTAGE Approved by Comparison Moving & Delivering Low Rates FE 2-4750 NO NEED TO HIDE “Tl have not had to look for a hiding place after all, he grinned. Ndabaningi is occasionally at smal] churches in New England and waiting for Sep- i ” tember, when he will enter the ee. te a cst pera Theological School and realized that this was Only part. | Feceive his bachelor of divinity de- time serving and I owed him |&ree in three years. mere than that." | Then he will go home to his So when Ndabaningi was 22, he | Wife, his four children and_ his took a course of Bible study and People, who still cling to the re- began preaching on Sundays at the ligion of the Amadlozi—meaning British Methodist Church. “departed spirits.” and now has four children: Sipi- kellelo, meaning ‘Perseverance’; Dilgindelela, “Find the Way"; Zi- bonele, ‘See It for Yourself,'’ and Sifio, ‘‘Wish.”’ “J thought I was serving my “They believe in a god. But The next 10 years were spent they reach him through making teaching, preaching, learning, and sacrifices to the departed spirits “trying to summon the courage ‘of tove@d ones, in the time of to come to America, where 1! trouble,” he says. a | knew | could really learn to preach! “When I return and try to teac h | well enough to convert my people them a new way, I think I | now preaching >> ...fast, friendly, courteous serv- ice, with repayments arranged to easily fit into your income and budget. For extra-fast sere- ice. phone and make arrange- ments in advance PHONE FE 4-1574 STATE Ne On your > SIGNATURE >» AUTOMOBILE ) FURNITURE HIGH PAY MENTS REDUCES FINANCE CO. 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. “but which I feared. be very useful. Not very popular FREE DELIVERY OPEN FRIDAY & b-¢=4AR Aldi SRE ERG aE SER ee eee EES) BE eee EES ORE 4 Bete NO PAYMENTS IF SICK or LAYED OFF 9-Pc. BEDROOM OUTFIT *139 00 SAVE $100! $2 Weekly! ALL THESE 9 PIECES! Includes: Double dresser — large clear . 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Clinton Engine Name Brand Fully Automatic WASHER DRYERS from $149 REFRIGERATORS -from 9x12 MOHAWK RUGS -@ NYLON ‘Su ® DURLON 21-INCH CBS @ CLEAR, LARGE - PICTURE 6-PIECE STARTER LOUNGE SOFA BED 2 END TABLES 1 COCKTAIL TABLE 2 LAMPS SPECIAL WHILE THEY LAST! DISCOUNT HOUSER SIMERCHANDISE SURPLUS eg FURNITURE— APPLIANCES 104 Weeks to Pay NO PAYMENTS IF SICK or LAYED OFF 17” POWER MOWER | TELEVISION SET NOW Up to 5 47* 187 5 OUTFIT ” 10" 79" || 10” OSCILLATING FANS Women’s. Sectionibus es ~. rs . —_____|Interview = 9 MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955. PAGES 15- a : J 27, 1 PAGES 15-17 Womeh Graduate Asks Emily Post for Pointers any pointers you can give me as to how to conduct myself being interviewed for a job.” shoes shined, hair neat. |;must be clean. When you aré | asked a question, don't break if | with your answer before your in terviewer has finished the ques tion. Don't be flippant or slangy. State your qualifications briefly and truthfully. Wait to be asked - te sit down and let your manner. be straightforward. Don't pretend to have e when you do not, but say instead that you will do your best to learn, Tell a clear straight story and make it short. The important point is not to be nervous. Don't imagine the man who is granting you an interview is an ogre. Remember employers are human beings, too. “Dear Mrs. Post: Do you think it kind to stand aside for a much | older woman to go first, or kinder? not to draw attention to the differs “4 | @&ce in our ages?” £3323: eecee i * 8 be oo Peta tom be to OOS a * 4 shee & . Pontiac Press Phetes by Joha Seater of the Occupational Therapy Department at the hospital. They were photographed with members of the program Mrs. Mason Case of Rochester (second from right) and | Mrs. William A. Hyland of Birmingham (right). : : i how much difference there is. y ional Fer of tie Pontiac Branch of | peers Among a were (tel to rig * Cactiledy you would vot toad wild ational Farm and Garden Association aid-| Mrs. Oscar Lundbeck of Chippewa road, | or one only a few years older than ing with the horticultural therapy program| Mrs. D. C. McKay of Franklin, Mrs. Stand-| you. But to stand aside for one who is of your mother’s generation Dr. James M. McHugh, psychiatrist at Pontiac State Hospital, was a speaker at the meeting of the horticultural | therapy group Friday at Devon Gables. Another speaker, Mrs. Eleanore McCurry OTR (second from left) is director Mrs. William H. Burlingame (left) organizer of the| Sanborn, Mrs. R.° horticultural therapy program at Pontiac State Hospital Walnut Lake. aa ae a a = oe << waned C. Banker and Mrs. H. C. Hall, all of They are members of the “Happy Garden- points out some important features for discussion at the| ers’ Club” which aids patients at the hospjtal in designing ’ Friday meeting of the group held at Devon Gables. Among | gardens. those participating in the discussions were Mrs. James R. Personal News in the Pontiac Area |ored Saturday evening at a mis- | Mahlon A. Benson of Seacehinn ‘avenue left early Sunday morning | Cleveland <= Ohio. in the | | Upper Peninsula for a week's va-| at the Pontiac street returned today from Glouces- ; ter County, Va. where he has been visiting his brothers and sis- ters. * 8 @ Coming from out of town to at- tend the wedding of Helen Cate and Richard Cor] at Bethany Bap- fist Church were Mr., and Mrs. Cliden Corl and the Ri¢hard Carl- sons of Elwell, the Burl Corls and ;for Happy Hanks Ranch, cation, He will then visit friends in northern Michigan. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Rosenthal of Beaumont, Texas are guests of the Archie Barnetts of Oneida road for 10 days. The Rosenthals were former residents on East Iro- quois road. The Rev. at Lee’s He is also visiting relatives, Mrs. Flickinger spoke Robert White and Mrs. E. A, Chris- | Unity Center re- cently, He and his wife left Sunday with their two sons, Chris and for the Unity Ministers’ Conference | Roger, were former residents of scheduled to speak. * Summit, Mo. where he is | Attending the closing luncheon and reunion for former teachers of the Neinas School in Detroit Thursday was Grace McVittie | | tian, of Chippewa road, The Clarks aos road. . * «*« @ Returning from a four day canoe trip down the Manistee River are Mr, and Mrs, James F, Nye, of Elsinore drive, the dames Jenkins of Wenonah drive at Pontiac State Hospital, attended the | begun at Pontiac State Hospital. Organized by Mrs. William H. Burlingame, the volunteers (all members of the Womefi’s National | Farm and Garden Association) | are sharing in the gratifying ex- perience such a program affords. These women take time to help others, and they are reaping re- wards for this service, Their re- wards come from the smiles of the patients from those who say, “My volunteer will be here to- day” . Their rewards also come from staff members such as Dr. James M.. McHugh who spoke to them Friday when they gathered at Devon Gables to evaluate the pro- gram. PRAISES VOLUNTEERS In his talk to the volunteers, Dr. McHugh said that there is no doubt but that the volunteer horti- cultural therapy program has been, and continues to be an ex- cellent adjunct - to the total thera- Party Fetes Bride-Elect Miss Upham Nancy Anne Upham, bride-elect of William A. Gordon, was hon- i | cellaneous bridal shower given by | | | riowsly ill mentally. cultural It was three years ago that the peutic program for the patients at, horticultural therapy program was Pontiac State Hospital. This meeting, he said is signi- | ficant in that a group of indi- | viduals from the community are meeting to decide how they | might improve their methods of assisting patients who are s¢- | “There is no question that horti- | therapy, working with plants of all kinds, is of value in a | given program for patients who | lare emotionally disturbed,”’ Dr. | McHugh Stated. A second accomplishment, the psychiatrist said, is the promotion of cooperation by members of a group. This, he said, is essential for the therapeutic suecess of anyone with | mental illness Paying tribute to the volun- teers, Dr. McHugh said a third accomplishment is the contact and identification by the patient of an interested member of the community. This more than anything else, the psychiatrist declared, points out the éssential fact that the com- munity is not against nor hostile toward mental illness. FIGURES SPEAK Stressing the importance of com- munity understanding, Dr. Me- | Mrs, Albert Games of Dover road. Oscar Fx Arthur Barnes. Nancy is the daugtiter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Upham of Ascot *kman and Mrs, Mrs, William A. Gordon of Dwight street. 5 Mrs. Upham and Mrs. Gordon presided at the refreshment table which was centered with a gar- | road and Bill is the son of Dr. and | Assisting the hostess were Mrs. | Hugh said that more than half of all hospital beds are for the men- | ish Sibley of Oriole road and Mrs. A. Floyd | workshop-meeting held at Devon Gables | Blakeslee of W West Iroquois road. Staff Members Explain | profit by further treatment — a) t. ao a Program Brightens Life at Hospital ing to note the improvement in patients participating in the pro- gram. There have heen several, she said, who have shown dramat- ic improvement. “This form of treatment,” Mrs. , “is often an open- ing wedge to enable patients to sustaining factor in maintaining | improved mental health in’ con- | junction with medical treatment.” —or older—could not cause annoy- ance. “Dear Mrs. Post: May brown and white shoes be worn with white flannel trousers and a blue coat at a wedding in the suburbs by the men in the wedding party?” Answer: All white shoes would be best taste at a wedding. Af other times, in the country, brown and white shoes are very smart with white or even gray flannel trousers and a blue or tweed coat. Shake Those Duds Shake clothes well before putting soiled clothes in washing machine or tub. = make the washing jo} + | easier. tally ill, and that one-seventh of | the budget of the State of Michigan | is devoted to mental illness In conclusion Dr, McHugh said that a fourth aspect is the reality | displayed by the volunteer—that | | individuals in the community do not reject the patient in a mental | hospital. ‘This program is an. intelligent understanding of mental | illness and an intelligent use of | community resources," he said. Also speaking at the meeting | was Mrs, Eleanore McCurry, di- | rector of the Occupational Ther- MR. and MRS. WA at Our Lady YNE EDWIN LONG Elaine L. Grennier Is Wed of the Lakes Mrs. Lulu Corl of Alina. * * ; de inte rsed with Le of South Jehnson avenue. | y 7 ; den bouquet, interspe Me | apy Department at Pontiac Still others were Albert Possner| Mrs, C. Henry Purdy, Mrs. eran en er ona arte. I. Jerome Fink | tiny colored parasols and flanked he Hospital A cascade bouquet of gardenias, ered carnations in the form of @ Jr.-of Pittsburgh, Pa., the Albert| Barney Habel, Mrs, Fritsi Stod- dad oe was ee ee a awa ¢ ; by white tapers. he deruaacd siber vélunizer carnations, stephanotis and ivy cross. > | Gre yer Seven ! me: ; = She susse 2 : Hi Possners_of Cranston, R. I, and| dard and Mrs. Harold DePuys * . ss 6 They took to the river at M37) The bride-elect chose the shower programs throughout the hospital “25 carried by Elaine Lillian) Mary Lou Kramp and Marjorié. Mr. and “irs. Joseph Callaghan of Providence, R. 1. * * * Eddie Vanderworp of Virginia have returned to their homes aft- er spending a week at the Henry Menard cottage, Point Nipigon. * * * Recent visitors of the Ed Wil- liams; of Woodland drive from Boston, Mass., were Mrs. C. S. Wil- liams and two children, Wendy and Barry. Others coming for a family gathering were Mr. and Mrs. James Williafnms and family of Jackson, the John Williams’ with | their children from Royal Oak, | the Frank Webster family of Syl- ‘|van Lake. and Mr. and Mrs. Mi- chael Taylor of Chicago. _* * © Visiting her parents in Marquette A houseguest of Mr. Whitfield of West road is John Clark of Bronxville, | Mac N. Y, and Mrs. | Iroquois ,and paddled 100 miles downstream to Stronach, near Lake Huron, Ld * % Jean and Janet Wasserberger | of Illinois road left last week for six weeks of summer school at Michigan State Normal College. Jean will receive a degree from the University of Michigan in elementary education and Janet is beginning her third year in saa pational therapy, * = * Erma Jean Livingstone, daugty ter of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Li ingstone of Berkshire road, left Friday for Walloon Lake. She will be the house guest of Kathleen threesome ‘will leave to spend six = at Hilltop Camp on Walloon Lake, as the occasion to .annoufice at- 'tendants for her August 20 wed- |ding. Mrs. Gordon L. Booker will | be matron of honor and Mrs. Harry Nicholls and Sheila Bridgford of Clarkston will be other attendants. Guests at the party were Mrs. Gordon Booker, Miss Bridgford, Mrs. Leonard Klausmeyer, Mrs. Harold Slankster, Mrs. Ben Bow- man and Mrs. Manley Young. Others were Mrs, Howard Grady, Mrs. Ray Kingsbury, Mrs. Melville Luttrell, Mrs. Peter Hoogerhyde, Mrs. Lynn Allen, Mrs. Harold King, Mrs, Harry Randall and _ Aaron Fox. Still others were Mrs. Eugene Willman, Mrs. Oswald Burke, Mrs, Install Guardian Forty members of Welcome Re- bekah Lodge 246 met in Malta Temple when Mrs. Martha Hudson Mrs. | and told of the made. Discussing the growth, Mrs, Mc- Curry said that it is heartwarm- progress being | descent sequins and pearls, Her | Grennier as she approached the, altar of Our Lady of the Lakes Church in Waterford to become the bride a Warne Edwin Long. * Ld The bride’s gown was fashioned of nylon ‘tulle over satin with criss- crossed bodice of tulle. A redingote of Chantilly lace with scalloped edge and traditionally long sleeves was alsqg worn by the bride. A four tiered shoulder veil of | | nylon net was secured by a scal- loped coronation crown of iri- only jewelry was q pair of tiny pearl earrings, The Rev. F. J. DeLanef per- and Mrs, Frank Grennier of Ma- riva street and Wayne is the son of Mrs. Earl Long of South Telegraph road and the late Mr. Long. Porter were bridesmaids wearing ensembles like the maid of honor’s in a shade of orchid. They carried cross shaped bouquets of deep pur ple feathered carnations, Wendell Doolin was best man. Seating the guests were Richard Carter and Curtis Grennier, broth- er of the bride, Wilson, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. | tyan. Royal, Mrs. Leon Forsyth, : accessories and an orchid corsage. 7 racis Giivoges rece |r, Raymond Samy. Mey De rn Sat ceca | bee ec a Ocak ax Vere Games and Diann Miller, Charleton Brown and Ralph Coin navy san by Mrs. Lang. Erma Jean's sister, Ann, will * * * bride’s grandmother, Mra, ‘join the girls July 1, when the Welcome Rebekahs ‘The bride is the daughter of Mr. | hae Houle of Little Falle, Minn., wag installed as inside guardian. ‘Mrs. Ray Lowe was appointed chairman of the district ment at the recent gathering, The social hour was in charge of Mrs. Orion Hettinger,, Mrs. Harry ATTEND BRIDE “Se Helen Coffer attended the bride ‘Coming Events Omega Mu Sigma Sorority will meet MIRIAM RUTH HEGLE MRS. ROBERT HERFERT. assign. ™ Receiving a B. S. degree in art | Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. for Brehe suppst g gaccetien from Wayne University | at Eerie Yacht 4 Clu on set be From Napoleon, . Ohio comes June 16 was Mrs. Robert (L. gy Mrs, Donate’ Reisen of Elaine). Herfert of Seminole ne- |Boyd, Mrs. Rose Johnson, Mrs, |Mrs.'Maurice A. Hegle, to Harold | with matching See ERE Pic ease irene Bowen and Mm. Olive Hunt | Roe. He the sn of Me. and] wore a net plete Alpha Alpha Sorority. ne. 1eY: ; ; Mrs, Cecil J. Rose of Euclid Ave.! the gown and carried oe : 4 A. 4 oe Shy Leo ‘ ‘ j ben ger \* ‘ i ¥ 1. SE ao) 2 a Mes ¥f , 7\ at : s ‘ 4 ee | \ , ‘\ ay : Ls THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE 27, 1955 90% N. Annaliese Beauty Shop Saginaw Nest te Hesley Market (Over Tasty pcos BY ANNE HEYWOOD L ruined my woman writes me, to turn it to my advantage.” * *¢ «* jin her late 40s, well on in years. |'MOTHER IS CHIPPER ‘she continued cheerfully, “bet FE 2-5600 there is just barely enough money | _to get by on. Mother is quite Open Evenings by Appointment a > This Week Repeat by Popular Really Want to Look Smart Through Summer Heat? Have YOUR NEW Casual PERMANENT WAVE at Jane Lee's 99 No Appointment Necessary, oD ane 41 N. Seginew St. WT od FE 2-053! Mezzanine Ogg’s PROMPT PICK-UP AND DELIVERY. PHONE FE 4-9593 Serving Pontiec and North Oakland County . home of finer cleaning FABRICS EANED NOW ALL CAN BE C TO Bt LINT-FREE Free of Lint and Stay LINT-FREE! Free of Static and Stay CLING-FREE! SHOCK-FREE! Ogg's Finer Cleaning NOW INCLUDES THIS ADDED SERVICE ' At No Added Cost. ‘All fabrics... from dark, soft finish woolens to new synthetic “‘“man-made-fibers’”’ can be dry-cleaned through the ‘Buckeye Clean-Charge” process. Febrics actually repel lint... even minute lint ‘and dirt particles. Colors and patterns remain bright» and fresh looking weeks longer! This is the cleaning combined with individual handling that makes Ogg’s finer cleaning so much better . . . so completely satis- factory to you... at regular cleaning prices, too! * 4 CASH AND CARRY STORES TO SERVE You: : 4481 Highland Road 430 Orchard Loke Ave. 376 Auburn Avenue 379 E. Pike Street NERS. LE “The do-it-yourself fad nearly is bedridden. home business" a | “but with a little careful thought I was able |. She goes on to say that she is lives at home and |takes care of her parents who are “The other children do chip in,” ‘healthy and chipper and does a/ could do at home, so that I could could keep an eye on them and still make a. little money. lot of the housework, but Father “I knew, years ago, that I would have to find something I “Since I’m pretty handy with | Honeymooning in the Smoky Mountains and Williamsburg, Va., are Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Walter Geiger who were married Friday. The bride is the former Nancy Ann Calhoun, daughter of the Eugene Calhouns of Spokane drive. He is the son of the Peter Geigers of West Walton boulevard. “MRS. Nancy A. |. Calhoun: Is Wed, sister of: the bride- RON {LD WALTER GEIGER Central ®Methodist Church was! Carol Geiger, ithe setting for the marriage of | sroom. le designs are unusual. my needle and I do like @ecorat- ing, I started making drapes and slipcovers to order. “Customers came steadly; some of them as a result of an occasional ad, others were recommended by friends. ORDERS FALL OFF “But several years ago, my or- ders began falling off. Many of my customers learned to make their own covers. The patterns are so good today and it is easy to get instructions. * SEE2= "She Changes Defeat Into Victory e = “For a while.” she continued, “I was terribly upset; we really idid need the money. But every- where I turned, people were do- ling their own work. Not only were ithey coverning the furniture, they | were also painting it! ; “And that’ gave me an_ idea. “Why not design a beautiful work smock, with big convenient pockets, but still attractive and becoming? Why not help people still look pretty while they take part in the do-it-yourself trend? “So I made some up, expert- menting as I went along. I gave a few samples to some of my neighbors. “If I say so myself.” she con- cluded, ‘‘my work smocks are ter- ribly attractive and they are sell- ing like hotcakes. “The prices are reasonable and And now ‘that several shops stock them for i me, with the demand. I'm making more | Fairway Golf Club Nancy Ann Calhoun and Ronald | They wore gowns of pale pink Wal Coins The bride is tt embroidered silk organza fash- , aster wereet- ne DENG al the ioned with long fitted bodices and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene pouffant skirts. Pink forget-me- Calhoun and the. parents are Mr. and Mrs Geiger of West Walton boulevard. | They wore seed peart neck- ° * bd | laces and carried semi-cascade The eight o'clock candlelight| bouquets of white carnations, de- ceremony was performed by Dr.| mure reses and ivy. Milton H. Bank in the presence! Peter Geiger came from | of 300 guests. ington, D.C. to attend his brother The bride's gown was fash. | @ best man and seating the toned of nylon tulle with over. | Suests were John Geiger of Pon- dress of Chantilly lace. She wore | Uac and Roy Midgley of Detroit. lace mitts and a cap ‘of the lace, A reception followed the Friday embroidered with pearis, secured | ceremony in the church parlors. her veil of nylon tulle. A cascade arrangement of white orchids, stephanotis and ivy was carried by the bride and she wore the bridegroom's gift of a single strand of pearis, Barbara Calhoun attended her sister as maid of honor, and brides- maids were Barbara Hunt and sheath dress of Her blue jacketed Chantilly. lace and taffeta. accessories were pink. | A navy silk organza over taffeta dress was worn by the bride- groom's mother with white acces- sories. Both mothers chose corsages of rapture roses. bridegroom's | nots were scattered over the tulle | Peter | headpieces which held their veils. | it’s all I can do to keep up money than I did in the past!” ss The obstacle which is one wom- an's defeat may be another's jack- pot (Copyright, 1955) ‘Brunch Party Held Wash- | The bride's mother wore a sky | | July meeting will be held at the | for Church Society Mrs. Howard Hall entertained the Ladies Aid Society of Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church recently at a brunch party in her home on Detroit drive. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Percy Blynn, Mrs. Charles Shear- | ‘er, Mrs. Ernal Lloyd and Mrs. Iva | Vanderkay. Nineteen members and two to protect their good clothes and | rather dry. Cool and cut in| isquares. Serve with whipped, cream. | | the Fairway Golf Club gathered | ‘guests attended the affair. Mrs. | |D. M. Keefer gave devotions. The ‘home of Mrs. Fred Johnson. MALING SHOES | Hat , 379 E. Pike Street Phone FE 4-9593 ie - pny Maling Shoes 50 NORTH SAGINAW STREET gold One Mondoy and Friday povpnsaee ‘ Honestly—Maling's are reducing brand new styles, and loads of ‘em—not just a few picked over old shoes! Honestly —you can't. miss finding something you'll like in your size! Honestly —you'll make amazing savings ot our terrific summer sale! So honestly—you must come! MALING SHOES formerly 2.99 to 6.99 ‘ee Every Color! Every Materiall Every Heel Height! - Not every size in every style! Pudding Is Made Rich With Dates Mrs. Guy Hackett’s: Treat Baked, Cooled | and Cut in Squares PERMANENTS The basis for every hair style... hold it in shape, easier, longer. - Short Curl: Permanents trom $6°° No Appointmest Necessary ° IMPERIAL Beauty Salon 26 & Pike St. FE ¢-2878 By JANET ODELL Pentiac Press Foed Editor Families with growing children usually include puddings in their list of favorite desserts. If yours is such a family, you may decide to add this Date Pudding to the list. Mrs. Guy Hackett, a member of the Westside Extension group shares this recipe with us today. She describes her pudding as “very rich, but delicious.” An active member of the Latics | Guild of her church, Mrs. Hackett dikes both indoor and outdoor | hobbies. She enjoys sewing and is | also fond of gardening. | DATE PUDDING By Mrs. Guy Hackett 1 cup dates, cut fine 4 } cup milk | l cup sugar | ‘4 cup outmeats, cut up | l‘y cup soft bread crumbs | 2 teaspoons baking powder | j Register NOW for Comptometer Calculator : eye Typewriting You can prepare for a good position by attending Full - Day, Half-day or Evening School FREE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE 2 eges, slightly beaten 1 teaspoon vanilla Mix all ingredients and stir until | bread crumbs have soaked up the milk. Pour into greased shallow pan, about 8x8 inches. Bake in a moderate oven until brown and | Has ‘Guest’ Day and Picnic | Forty members and guests of recently fo play golf at Pontiac Country Club. Following the morn- ing’s activities an outdoor picnic was held at the Motorway drive home of Mrs. Earj Stevenson. Card games and boating were enjoved during the afternoon, and the birthday of Mrs. George Miller was celebrated. Guests at the annual “Guest Day” were Mrs. Clinton Rich- | ards, Mrs, Russel] Hoyt, Mrs. William Bull, Mrs. Mabel Mil- ler and Mrs. Wade Dick. | Other guests were Mrs. Staniey | Savage, Mrs. Russell Murett, Mrs. Michael Frank, Mrs. Leslie) Hutchinson, Dorothy Baxter and Mrs. Sidney Baer. Mrs. John Shoemaker was chair. | man for the day, assisted by Mrs. Quirinus Breen. Mrs. Robert Brad- ley. Mrs. Adrian Keinpf, Mrs._ Stevenson, Mrs, Glen Hickson and The BUSINESS INSTITUTE 7 W. Lawrence St. Pontiac FE 2-3551 Veteran Approved! Mrs. Charles v. Barker. FEDERAL'S BUY NOW ON EASY CREDIT! Inner panel flattens tummy Correctly fitted by Fed- etal’s expert corsetiereg, ~loncotton power. mesh by FORTUNA — THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE “hs 1955 21 Years of Practical Experience! 378 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-2857 Po gether he gets teased about me and 4th of SPECIALS Shorts and Halter Sets—- “ Sea § 8 ea Each. . a | 4 Blouses av... 98 Boys’ and Gifts’ Sun $ Suits... Beys’ Shorts—Cot- ton Gabardine, im Q8%,, up Boys’ Shirts — ‘ylon or $4.6 ‘otton.. up I know he doesn't like it. If it doesn’t stop he'll stop liking me and being seen with me. He'll just avoid me and I don’t want that. “If anyone teases me I either ignore it or give back a bright remark, but I don’t know what to do about someone teasing him. Please help me ‘cause I don't want te lose him.” ‘ Answer: flecting barbs that come your way. ee ae aoe ae seem to know how-to cope with > Obviously, you can't pretend ft isn't going on and convince him to ignore it. He has his own. ears and his own reactions. But you can come to his rescue with some bright remarks that will take the sting out of the teasing and earn his undying gratitude. Twist their cracks back at them to take the pressure off Davy Crockett (Gauche §¢ Style) Shirts 1° eee eeneere him. Remeve him gently from the scene of action with some clucking talk that will make him feel you're in accord with him about their brainless persecution, But add just enough comment to make it clear that you don’t take it seriously. What Specie! favers — Specie! attention and the food — oh Boy, whet a hit at... . a Hit! : | that. i You've no trouble de- | You admit that you either pretend | If you'll show him how to react to teasing, he may learn to defend himself. He should leve you for »I wasn't oited steady I no harm in going with him. saw “Dear -Miss Woodward: I like him very much and considered him my boy friend until lately. But a short time ago another boy invited me to a dance, and since | for not being quicker with his bid, Girl Can Help Her Beau Ward Off Teasing ' with am apology for all the hurt you unwittingly caused him? It will give you a chance to talk things over. ‘Answer: His nose was very much out of joint because of that dance. He ..was disappointed in himself jealous because you went with someone else, and dissatisfied over the evening he had for himself. But be paid you back, and you're even, though he may have too much pride to admit it. Se, why not come to his rescue he wouldn't stay mad. humbly tell him you've been pun- Bethany Baptist Church Saturday marriage of Helen Deloraine Cate and Richard L. Corl. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Cate of West Huron street and Mr. and Mrs. Cliden Corl of Elwell are the bridegroom's parents. MRS. RICHARD L. CORL ‘Newlyweds Motor South Following Church Rite | Motoring through the south to fashioned after the dresses of the was the setting| evening for the | . Robert W. Wright claimed Marlyn bride Saturday evening at First Congregational Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ward Sherman of Cheltingham drive and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Edward Wright of Lakeview avenue. ae i BMS DAE MRS. ROBERT W. WRIGHT Robert Wright Saturday You can say you're sorry he's ; cross, you miss him, and you wish | | If you) | Sherman as his \ — Marlyn Sherman Weds ‘ 48 NN. Saginaw Se. } sa ‘iil 5 — Ant CRACKER SPECIAL For a Bang-Up 4th of July ; ‘Nationally Advertised GIRLS’ 1 to 14 Only SWIM SUITS - 7.95 Velue 3.99 Cotton print swim suits—a famous brand. Bloomer or ballerina styles. Or if you prefer... “S sleek smooth lastex. Many colors. TTL &: Young Folk Shop—Lower Level IT COSTS LESS THAN YOU THINK! The exact style, color and fabric of your choice will give a new look to your urniture and cost less thon you think. a. o Y WE UPHOLSTER WITH NEW 1 FOAM RUBBER william wright Furniture Makers G Upholsterers “all work guaranteed for S$ years” Houston, Texas where they will | other attendants, with wide pink make their home are Mr. and Mrs. | sash. She wore a headband of Remand Se © | white daisies and pink roses and A gown of imported organdy, the newlyweds left for a honey- over taffeta was worn by Marlyn’ moon in Miami, Fla., and Cuba Sherman Saturday evening for her | the bride was wearing a beige The bride is the former Helen marriage to Robert wt Wright. | linen ensemble with cocoa and Family Nights Monday and Tuesday Woodward at Air-Conditioned for Your Comfort Square Lake Road A $12.00 Value . oo $74 MILLER’S—144 OAKLAND AVE. Deloraine Cate, daughter of Mr. of Mr. and Mrs. Cliden Corl of Elwell. | The Rev. Fred R. Tiffany per: formed the seven o'clock wed- ding ceremony Saturday evening at Bethany Baptist Church. The | altar was decorated with palms, candelabra and beauty vases of | white delphinium, pompons and giadioli. | A gown of Chantilly lace and nylon tulle over satin was worn | bodice was° fashioned with long was trimmed with seed pearls and iridescent sequins. The bouffant skirt was inserted in back with shirred nylon tulle which blended into the chapel | length train. |WEARS PEARLS A cap embellished with seed pearls and iridescent sequins se- cured her fingertip veil of illusion. |She wore a single strand of pearls |and carried.a cascade arrangement by Helen for her marriage. The pointed sleeves and the neckline | carried a nosegay Of the same | flowers. Howard Cate, brother of the bride, guests were James Maxwell of Chi- cago, I!., Paul Jankovsky and Thomas Cate, brother of the bride, who was a junior usher. A reception was held following | the ceremony in. the church par- lors, Mrs, Cate wore a pink linen and lace dress with pink and white accessories, White roses and feathered car- ‘nations formed her bouquet. Mrs. Corl chose a light blue dress with white accessories and a corsage of white roses and feathered car- lnations for her son's wedding. When the couple Jeft on their wedding trip the bride was wearing a beige textured silk suit with matching hat and coffee frost ac- cessories. She wore the white cor-. sage from her bridal bouquet. - The new Mrs. Corl is a grad- uate of Michigan State Normal Cotiege where she Was a member ot Kappa Mu Delta sorority. Leareretciediad stearate ates and Mrs. Howard L. Cate of West | Huron Street. Richard is the son | was best man. Seating the She is ad of Mr. and. Mrs. Ward Sherman of Chelting-| ham drive and Robert is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Edward Wright of Lakeview avenue. Embroidered organdy medal. | lions and seed pearts trimmed © the neckline of the bridal gown. The bouffant skirt extended inte — a cathedral length train. _ An organdy headpiece trimmed with medallions and seed pearls. secured her veil. She carried a white prayer book with a white | orchid and stephanotis. WEARS DEEP PURPLE Virginia Sherman attended her sister as maid of honor, wearing a deep purple dress of organdy with orchid velvet accents and short white coves: * ® Nancy Tremper, Nancy Dickin- son and Mrs, Ralph Grubb ‘were other attendants wearing orchid. organdy gowns with purple velvet | accents and short white gloves. The bridal gown and those worn by the attendants were designed | and made by the bride's mother. | | of white roses, feathered carna-| Motors Institute of Technology Virginia carried a nosegay of | Adjustable Steel Hollywood || tions and stephanotis. and was a member of Phi Tau | light pink roses and shattered — Mrs. Nett Ricketts was matron Alpha fraternity. carnations. The other attendants’ | BED ot bases and Gretchen Peerete of | "06 stationed in Houston with | beaqecte were ef-o deeper shed | Detroit and Jean Ford of Flint the U. S, Air Force of pink roses and shattered car- | on large 2-in. easy rolling casters These strong metal bed frames may be attached where they can’t be bumped into. , You can change one headboard for another with ease—or convert your frame from twin size to full size in a matter of minutes. Price does not include headboard, but does in- clude bracket to fasten headboard to frame. Our 19th Year of 4 Where Xs FREE! This bed frame with pur- chase of Serta-Restokraft 209 coil mattress and matching box spring. Regular $90.00 outfit for only. ote! $15.05. Limited time offer “Regular $12.95. Headboards, SPECIAL THIS WEE! $9.95. Choice of Colors. ~ Open Monday — Friday Evenings - Closed Wednesday Afternoon Greater Value. Giving! _MMULER, FURNITURE | nee. meg college roommates of the bride, were bridesmaids. Gail Beesley ot Royal Oak, cousin of the bride was a junior bridesmaid. They wore organdy dresses with varigated pink embroidered flow- ers and wide pink sashes which ‘featured large butterfly bows in the back.“ | The matron of honor wore a dark rose headpiece and shoes and the bridesmaids wore pearl trimmed headpieces. Their cor- Mrs. Carl Shindorf Heads VFW Auxiliary A dinner meeting was enjoyed by members of the Past Presi- dents’ Club of Cook-Nelson Amer- ican Legion Auxiliary when they !gathered at the American Legion ‘home on Auburn avenue. Mrs. Carl Keller’ and Mrs. Leo Mineweaser were co-hostesses for the dinner. George Crisman was best man ‘and seating the guests were Floyd Reynolds, Ted Jackson and Jo- seph —— . | * * | Mrs. shore wore a cocktail | length gown of blue silk organza | with matching accessories and a corsage of pink rosettes with touches of white. Mrs. Wright chose a cocktail , iength gown of pink lace with matching accessories. 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Em- 14 Nofth hide St. tj i for in a strapless bra Life Confidential Strapless Bra No. 296 —embroidered cotton with elasticized marquisette back for freedom, 352A to 38C. $5.00 trong sages of roses and feathered car-| Mrs Cari Shindort was elected| sage: was composed of garnet | Stro nations matched their gowns. president at the recent meeting yo with white touches, i Steel Bed Easy Terms The junior bridesmaid wore a | and Mrs. Gladys Williams was| A reception followed the cere-_ Frame Only 7 Available white organdy dress over pink, elected secretary-treasurer. mony at Roosevelt Temple. When | f Strapless Bra oa ODU Nena wis It floats the legs slightly above the ecklines are low—s Salas are bare, now that floor. The weight of the bed is evenly distributed Are MAGN (NT PERMANENTS : and the frame legs on casters fit underneath summer's here! Here’s the uplift you've been hoping ... thanks to the light, light foam-rubber-padded under-bust that lifts you higher, gives you firmer support. Cups are underscored with wire for really secure allure. Wash these bras as often today for all your summer needs! Bone TE. HOSIERY and CORSET sea «Ph ee eS as you please... they won't shrink or lose their fabulous fit even after countless sudsings. Choose ~ ormfit PEATION lets you sleep in comfort! About two-fifths of U.S. hospital Hal Boyle Says: beds are occupied by mental pa- | - Dial} tients and these do not include| riet.' * at her. ior die. sand, and— | * s |/ All of a sudden Oswald and | Harriet were plumped into a dark- ened case. They felt movement, hear the dull plod of feet in NEW YORK (®—Once upon a 'time there were two little mice, | land. one was named Oswald—and ihe whispered to the other, ‘“Har- * When he called her name she heard it like the tinkling summons of a three - syllabeled bell. “Har- riet,, he called; and she ran to the wire restraint of her labora- tory cage. Across a small space she could see Oswald, running up and down his wire cage and stick- ing his eager pink muzle through She thought modestly, bur still excited, that in all her born days she had never seen a mouse wit quite such gay whiskers. Her heart | | rose and fell as Oswald's whiskers | | diti, She felt she must brush them | s h THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 27. 1955 people—a father, mother and two| and the mice had been put there children — sitting wide-eyed andj for a purpose, but neither dum- silent on a sofa. imies nor mice knew why. The two mice ran from them! “Oh, Harriet,” sighed her bell- with quaking hearts and hid under| toned lover, “‘let us dance like a chair. , ponies again.” “Are they human?” asked Har-| Her smal] warm paw crept back riet. ‘They don't move.” again into his paw. But just as “They can't be human,” replied) they were ready to dance again of them — and not one is com-| boom outside. The windows splin- plaining." tered around them, the ceiling sf. 8 feaved in. Beams crashed down. Actually, the four family figures | Falling plaster raised a dust. TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: JUNIOR EDITORS Oswald, “because there are four | together there was a sudden dull | room, and saw four gangling were clothing store dummies. They! Harriet and Oswal@ sewrried out-, They had geiger counters to test miushroon | side. A tremendous grew in the sky above them Swiftly behind the clearing atomic cloud moved in two circling hawks, ‘Terrified in a falling Harriet left the broken shelter of the comfortable house and ran out- side. Oswald ran after her. One hawk peeled off and dived as he engulfed her she cried weakly “Oswald! Oswald." And ' then the second hawk hit Oswald and the last sound she heard was him calling “Harriet! My Har- riet.” Then the tinkling ceased. Above them the mushroom cloud sprawled higher in lazy power e . = As it blew away the human engineers moved in to see what had happened to the test house. ' s, Not A-Bomb Spell Doom for Mice HtehySkin Rash | Zemo, a doctor's formula, prom relieves itching of surface skin _ the shattered dummies in the ecaeene, prickly “heat, athlete's foot, home, but none that could plumb ine wd plese eae and 80 aids for the fate of Oswald taster healing and clearing. Buy Ey oF me : Strength Zemo for stubborn Cases, ” } the sky and Harriet, Moral: Beware of hawks. — ee world, | 5 ~PpAY CUT? It yeu are unable to pay your payments, debts or bills when due, see MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS and arrange fer payments yee can afferd, regardless ef hew much er how many you ewe, NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED 8s ‘Let 9 years of credit co gq experience assist you.” Hours: Daily 9 to §: Wed & Sat. 9 to 1: Evenings by Appt. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 4143 South Saginaw Se. FE 8-0456 Above Oskiand Theater THE MOTHS FLY IN— . od 5 amet eI, @ Get heavenly relief from hot sun- burn—in as little as 3 seconds! Medicated Noxzema soothes, cools, helps héal even the most severe sun- burn cases —and it's greaseless, doesn't stain clothes! That's why over 25,000,000 sunburn sufferers have already used Noxzema! Remember First Aid Hospitals at most famous American beaches rely on Noxzema for sunburn! 45¢, 70¢, and $1.25, plus tax. > ae rapa aS A miracie—light dawned—they saw each other again left alone in a strange house on a strange i floor. They scurried to a corner as mice do, and looked around. t = s * Why this was heaven. Food scat- tered around an no traps to worry about. The two lttle mice ran to / | ward each other. ' “Harriet! cmed Oswald, and each syllable was a bell tone. “] ll bet you can't gallop like a pony.’ ‘Oh, yes I can,’ ‘she answered, + blushing. And with no other word i she held out her tiny paw, and he } took her paw in his paw, and | around and around they pranced | s s * | > THE MOTHS FLY OUT— THE HOLE STAYS IN—NO DOUBT! THAT IS UNLESS YOU HAVE YOUR FUR AND WOOLENS STORED IN THE SPACIOUS VAULTS OF THE HURON CLEANERS WE INVITE YOU TO VISIT OUR 2 LARGE REFRIGERATED STORAGE VAULTS AND SEE NOW INEXPENSIVE GOOD STORACE REALLY IS FURS AS LOW AS $4.00—WOOLENS 75c | like miniature ponies. You W. Huron at ‘Tilden, * we a Here are three, reasons why it pays to have a checking account: (1) You automatically have a legal receipt (your cancelled check) proving you have paid the bill. (2) You have indisputable record of payments made that are tax-deductible under the new Federal Income Tax law ... very important to every taxpayer. (3) Your clear record of expenses is a tremendous aid in budgeting living costs and saving money. Open Your Account With Personal Checks CHECKS IMPRINTED With YOUR NAME... FREE of CHARGE While You Wait! COMMUNITY NATIONAL BRANCHES at "OUT of TOWN BRANCHES 3 a Have a Receipt ... Automatically! Perry at Glenwood | Keego Harbor Corporation Oy > a fe | | Still Active at 93 STEPS TOWARD LIBERTY—1 Beston Tea Party : Many people who lived in the American colonies about 1% years + | ago were angry with the British gavernment. It had passed laws the ' colonists thought were unfair. These laws taxed the people and put British troops among them. | The British policies hurt colonia] business and the colonists were resent- | ful. The best known thing the colonists did to show the British how they felt was the Boston Tea Party. ness trouble. So it sent shiploads of tea to the colonies. Even after pay- ing the required tax the company sold its tea at lower prices than the tea merchants in the colonies could sell theirs. Some of the resentful colonists decided upon a daring plan. They dressed themselves up like Indians and carried tomahawks. They rowed out to the English ships in Boston Harbor and went on board. Then they 1773. : Up and down the coast the colonists got rid of the British tea or doing this. Before too long the Revolutionary War was being fought, the war in which the colonies won their Independence from England. This is the first picture and story in a week's series. Color each fathers’ steps toward freedom. Tomorrow: Patrick Henry's ‘Give me liberty’’ speech. | oldest active automobile dealer. | Held has sold the same make | of car heré since 1913. He was - - named president of a bank here G.’ Held, 93, still active in his; ene een automobile agency here, is be-| The Suez Canal was opened Nov. lieved by friends to be the nation’s! 17, 1869, ° ‘Oldest Auto Dealer This is how it happened: The British tea company was having busi- - emptied 342 chests of tea in the bay. The raid took place on Dec. 16, | refused to use it. The British passed laws to punish the colonists for one as you like, clip. out, and save as your own history of our fore-| All Garments Insured! STORE HOURS: TO MAKE IT MORE CONVENIENT FOR OUR CUSTOMERS THE HURON CLEANER’S MAIN OFFICE WILL BE OPEN 7 a.m. ‘TIL 8 p.m, Sta-Nu Is FREE PARKING Will Pay Parking Meter in Lake Orion and Oxford Exclusive in Pontiac and Suburbs at HURON DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY Main Office and Plant: 944 West Huron FE 2-0231 | 11 Neighborhood Stores to Serve You 1536 Union Lake Rd.. Opposite Giroux 4313 W. Walton Blvd. at Sashabaw 516 Pontiac Trail, Next to Coffee Cup, bear alled Lake 3005 Orchard Lake at Light, Keego Harbor 188 N. Johnson at State i 731 North Perry st Jostyn 2297 Auburn Rd., Opposite Pontiac State Bank 14 Main St., Clarkston 310 Main Street, Milford 59 $. Broadway at Front, Lake Orion REE COASTER WAGON Filled with SOAP Zz full ¢ - with oa A Full ears Supply of Famous Seap Absolutely Free of Extra’ _ All for Only... ik ied New “55 Speed Queen Washer hos inum, tangle-proof, adjust- able pressure wringer. Full guarantee. No ‘Money Down +o be aetiliee MAPLE BEDROOM GROUP Lage dresser, chest and bed . ; , beau- tifully finished in warm satin smooth © maple PLUS 2 boudoir lamps included. 7 < Handy Rollaway Bed and Mattress Heavy-duty steel frame, opens and closes with a minimum effort. Sagless spring, baked aluminum finish. Mattress de- ; Going on Vacation? - Let the / ‘- ° Press Follow — Call FE 2-8181 ~—' aes: *) THE PONTIAC PRESS - ° Read This New Serial Daily PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JUNE 27,' 1955 : NINETEEN & Red Korean Air Buildup Violates Armistice Rules SEOUL w — Communist North Korea has built up an air force of 580 planes — part jets — im vislation cf the ermistice agreement, the Republic of Korea charged today. The government said the North Korean Reds have three divisions of MIG15 jets, a fighter-bomber force, 15 air bases in operation and two more under construction. is SOK sialeasaia uinmaaad Get aewes to tee Nar Kasean’ car force pilots who fled the Communists last week. * * * The Communist Korean ait force now has 500 pilots and 25,000 men — with more being trained in Red China by Russian advisers and more ee ne ee ee ee eee ‘tion and no air bases that could be used for warplanes. The armistice forbids any stepup in forces over those in being on July 27, 1953 — the armistice date. The two pilots, Capt. Lee Un Yong and Lt: Lee Eun Sung, fled from North Korea June 21 and landed their Russian-built Yak fighter at Seoul Airport. They were taken into custody by the ROK government. Today's statement was the first official account of the information they gave. The government release said the two gave these details: 1, The North Korean air force has three air divisions of MIG15 jets, each with 92 planes, and a fighter-bomber force and other planes to bring it to the 580 total. a i * * 2. tes shart Speen! aranG cuce chutes yo Ge taliae ee bee At.the tiene of the semalation Nerth Keres hed ne air force ia egare- rebailt into. a 600,000-man = organized inte 60 divisions in nine sep- arate corps. At present, 21 divisions are at the front. * * * 3. During the Korean War, both Russian and Chinese Communist pilots flew from Manchuria and not from North Korea. Russian pilots then flew as far as south of the Taedong River, which flows past Pyongyang. - «= % 4. North Korean pilots are ae et et Oe ee Be | advisers in groups of from 40 to 80. Each man flies 150 hours in pro- "| Peller engine planes and 300 hours in jets during the training coufse. es * < ‘These ave GU ceae Chinas thaw Herth Uascde Gouden troops in North Korea, but the pilots did not know the exact number. * * * 6. North Korean policy is to always say that the Allies are attacking or coma to attack the North but, actually, the Nerth Koreans ‘are planning an offensive — not a defensive.” Incidents in the demilitarized zone are played up as Allied violations and North Korean planes have orders to fire on Allied pianes. * * 7. Little actual reconstruction has been done in North Korea, except for transport and industry vital to war. There are still no streetcars in Pyongyang, the capital, and citizens are told they don't need them “because all will have automobiles.” Some Russian buses have been imported. * * 8. New motorized artillery has been brought in trom Russia. The two North Korean fliers, the government release said, “want to become ROK citizens." The men were questioned by Dr. Hong Kee Karl, director of the ROK office of public information. e Py CHIP OFF OLD BLOCK — “Freddie the Tramp” wields the make-up stick as he helps his son, Fred Yockers Jr., 7, with his clown face. Young Fred will spend the summer vacation from school learning to be a clown like his dad, who entertains at Steeple- chase park at New York’s Coney Island. By JOHN H, MARTIN (INS Foreign Director) Who's ahead in air power—the United States or Soviet Russia? The reason for this stormy con- troversy in Washington and else- where is that air power is now the key to American military superiority over the U.S.S.R., if 5 Americans have that superior- ty. * - * A few years aga the key was possession of atomic and hydrogen bombs. But if Moscow has those bombs in quantity now, ag it ap- parently has, then a new key is involved. This is the capacity of planes to deliver the bomb and of planes to intercept enemy craft carrying the bomb. Nobody knows just what Rus- sia has, but the comments of man of the United Aircraft Cor- poration, are very interesting— and — although he stresses there can be no relaxa- tien, er place for “beastful opti- mism” eon America’s part. Rentschler, a veteran of 30 years in the aircraft power plant field, recalled to a news group the other United Press Phote Imported Foodstuffs Rising in Value; Now Pegged at. $3.25 Billion Per Year WASHINGTON (INS)—Since ‘ e turn of the century, the value of foodstuffs brought into the United States each year has increased from 250 million dollars to more than three billion 250 mffilions. Despite this 1,200 per cent jump, foodstuffs have represented a fair- ly constant proportion of total U. S. imports, increasing over the period from 24 per cent to 31 _2r cent. Only since World War fi! has the annual average value of im- ported foods exceeded one billion dollars, but there has been a — increase during the dec- ertee is way out in front as the leading food import, outpacing sugar—the second place item—by more than three to one in value. Nearly three billion pounds of coffee, valued at one and one-half billion dollars, are brought in every year. Brazil furnishes 43 per cent and Colombia 28 per cent, but Mexico, Salvador and Guatemala also are considered principal countries of supply. CUBAN SUGAR About four million tons of sugar are bought arinually at a cost of 500 million dollars. Three-fourths of it comes from Cuba and the remainder of it from the Philip- pines. Tropical goods net commer- elally grown in the United States make up more than half of all food imports. Principally, these are coffee, cocoa, bananas, tea and black pepper. Foreign sources also supply the United States with 60 to 80 per cert? of her olives, olive oil and lobster, 40 per cent of the tuna and 25 per cent of the shrimp. 30 PER CENT These two categories—plus im- ports cf whisky, pork, oats, beef, barley, cheese and wines — com- prise 90 per cent of the value of all foodstuffs bought from other countries, Imports of food also grown in this country are mainly of special varieties available only from for- eign sources. Italien wines, Red China to Execute _ Nine ‘Chiang Agents’ Commodity groups as propor- tions of total food imports rank as follows: Meat products, 6 per cent; c-'ry products, .9 per cent; fish, shell- fish and products, 5.9; grains, fod- day the hubbub raised by some during the Korean War about the superiority of the Soviet MIG-15 fighter, MIG WAS GOOD Yet “our experience in Korea,” he said, “proved that the Russian | ders and feeds, 6.4; vegetables and MIG-15 fighter was good, but not preparations, 1.7; fruits and prepa- rations, 4.4; edible nuts and prep- as good as our own North Ameri- arations, 1.7: cocoa, coffee, tea ead oh — the combat and spices, 53.5; sugar and related “This products, 14.5; beverages, 4.8; and| «i. tn far better position than it others, .2. was in World War II. , But it doesn’t seem to register. | steadily — The Pontiac Press has taken a cross section of public opinion on what might be done to reduce the accident toll, especially on summer weekends when pleasure driving is at its peak. Here is what the man (and woman) on the street think: .¢————— Mrs, Carl duengel, 2140 Roch- ester Road: “If we could make. more people stay home over the weekends it would relieve some of the traffic hazards, but of practical. If the public could be a little and stay a rea- sonable distance they are follow- ing I think that would be helpful. Mrs. cuagi Paying more at- téntion to weather and highway conditions would also help.” * “I think that a crackdown by po- lice and stiffer fines that ado make people realize —* we mean busine 8 8 ees I think we should © put more police | ‘Teollisions by driving cars up against concrete walls at various speeds, Our tests show that a head-on collision at 25 miles an Fire Strikes Home Near North Branch of Lewis Lake at Rd., about three orth Branch. : younger Lake blaze PRESSing Questions: What Might Be Done to Reduce Accidents? This week's ‘PRESSing Question’ is a matter of life and death. Most people are vaguely aware of having read somewhere that highway accidents take more lives and cost more money than wars. course that is im-| | educated to drive| , slower | ' behind the cars| 5 ‘| the motoring’ public. They are .| the right-of-way, ». frames, is the big thing. I think we are unmatched today and for ten years ahead. But naturally we cannot relax, : “I think that in Russia the thing that may catch up with them is lack of background, par- ticularly on engines. We've been U.S. Adds Two ‘Refugee Ships Gerety Urges Citizens to Sponsor Displaced Persons Transportation And the accident rate keeps rising Mrs, Elaine Malone, 29 Lib- erty St.: “If people were not in such a big hurry and would regard the —— there would’t be so). = many traffic ac- , cidents. Fast hs Sematen ting two trans-Atlantic into service to bring 12,000 immi- grants to the U.S. this year. The department’s new deputy ‘refugee administrator. Pierce J. ‘is the major cause of the great many acci- dents we have to- day. A little common sense would go a long = for Pogo Stick — mandate for reform is never for- ie , a JHE. PONTIAC PRESS. a AY, JUNE 27, 1955 | - , 9 Navy Undersea Chicagoan Grateful |Sttacg“scn Mae's". For Principle’s Soke fiser sci ME Masied| anil as tm The Ponee Plans Attacked — ell, Had not bone ; aed ee found, jena said,| WATERBURY, Conn. (UP) —/| she wasn’t carrying any money/ Press. That's where Pontiackers “Sen. Byrd ‘Questions Building of Obsolete Ie leg might have been shortened | Told by a pair of armed bandits | but balked because of the “prin- | look when in need of service and Submarines for Fleet ee to Scr upulous Cop or Walat would have taced an} to hand over her money, Mrs. Max | ciple of the thing.” repairs, Phone FE 2-818], $ z ‘ CHICAGO W—A dirty three- ‘ace | ; piece of bone found 100 feet from 9Q Ships i in Antwerp an accident scene may enable | Harold Walat, 19, to recover com- Tied Up by Walkout pletely from a serious leg injury | ANTWERP, Belgium w—Twelve in- a —nerrer truck collision. thousand Antwerp dockers went on ‘ policeman teat a bone and | strike this morning. Ninety ships o it.was taken to a hospital along | are affected. 3 with Walat. Doctors identified it | The dockers demanded revised | as a fragment of the youth's left | unemployment indemnities and aj =) tibia, cleaned it and replaced it | Pay increase. They want an extra; @— in his leg. 40 francs (80 cents) a shift, to) 7 _** bring the wage for a seven-hour Today, five days after the acci- day to 257 franes (5.14). .: ib I oh WASHINGTON, W—Sen. Byrd (D-Ya) amnounced today he will ask that top naval officials be) called soon to explain why the Navy still is building conventional submarines and not going all-out on atomic-powered undersea craft.. B ed the officials cat Tincmm ar reanL pr phan] pp Era ease G M Electrical Contracting Company Ann, Armed Services Committee. | Phine Griffin looks familiar, then | . . He said he was disappointed the | You're a Grace Kelly fan. The re- | Commercial and Industrial 32-billion-dollar defen leently discovered British actress | i . : = maney Sill) bears a definite resemblance to) . CUSTOM HOMES ; funds for only five new |America’s 1954 Academy Award. Coll Us Anytime atomic submarines while aos pro- | winner, and movie-makers in Lon- viding for four of the conventional don hope she becomes as good an| Phone FEdere! 2-3080 You work hard type. The bill has been passed by | . +ress . - Ane both the House and Senate, but |" 1472 Baldwin Avenue Pontiec, Michigan in somewhat different forms which Edwin must te attsed ‘Los Angeles Strike tec Pwe FESRASAS Rew Pe OF aE The Navy already has one atom- . le sub, the Nautius, afoat. A sec-/ Grounds Thousands — =< Groton, LOS ANGELES w—The Los for your $$$$ so make them work hard for you return. Save part of each pay check each week at PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS! 7 6 « Angeles Transit Lines strike, af- STORE £3 _ Sen. Jackson hapa ee fecting about a million riders, HOURS Cf) ) > -) ? jy) [group and the Senate Howe Atom, moved Into its second week and CPAYLGLULY le Energy Committee, predicted | -verincreasing tratfic problems in DOWNTOWN in a separate interview that Russia the downtown area, _ STORE @) p E N soon will be launching atomic- a Tar drive submarines of her own. Federal conciliater Harry Mal- Open Monday Fill your tank now . — siggested the Russians leom called company and AFL and Friday = y already have completed some | union representatives into session ti 9 PLM for next winter! Pay erat of that advanced fe and! with only slight hope of progress. ent . |prise disclose in numbers. | He said he would welcome “any! HBG UMN on our convenient - (p c « e. _ | ideas to get the show back on the road." 7 oom RATE ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $10,000 STORE budget plan! We enid Russia already bas more The transit lines’ offer of a 12- Open Thurs., ‘til 9 Pp conventional submarines than the | ; ; cent hourly raise within two years Fri. and Sot United States and is concentrating was defeated by unjon vote last | ‘it 9 P.M. largely in that field. | Frida y. Some 2,300 bus and street- Jackson said he has the img (car operators are involved in eel r¢ vated Navy is reluctant to pro-| | dispute. They want a 20-cent boost ae) “It's the Bame old story,’ he from the previous $1.91 per hour. said. “The admirals wanted to . cA Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Association 4 16 E. Lawrence Se. 407 Main - Rochester I om ; aeons, Cid bar Sees No Fast Act Fat Action - Who's showing its. . ’ heels to the 2 on Social Sectuity high-priced cars? The Motoramic Chevrolet! The other low-vriced — Chairman Byrd (D-Va) that the ° - «cars aren't even in sist on full hearings. : 5. the running! & *. g i ; 3 we #\y-.and youre gone! IT’S EXCITEMENT ON WHEELS! The light turns green . . . you nudge the accelerator ever so gently . . . and you're gone! That's the way it is in the Motoramic Chevrolet. When your toe says “Let’s go,” a hoodful of high- compression horsepower explodes into action, sweeping you away from traffic tangles, making short work of steep hills, putting a new kind of fun in your driving life! RECORD-SMASHING ACTIONI That’s what you get with Chevrolet's new “Turbo-Fire V8"! In the recent NASCAR*®* stock car competition at Daytona Beach, Chevrolet showed its heels to all other low-priced cars. In the one-mile straightaway run, the first two cars—and six of the first ten— were Chevrolets! And in acceleration runs from a standing start against all comers, Chevrolet beat all other low- priced cars—and every high-priced car except one! | Chevrolet's two new “Blue-Flame” sixes have plenty of sizzle, too. In fact, they’re the highest powered sixes in the low-price field!” TREAT YOURSELF TO ADVENTURE Come in and drive the car that is making 1955 famous! That’s the only way you'll discover all the e&citing rea- The Bel Air Sport Coupe. You'll find your favorite model sons why Chevrolet's stealing the thun- emong Chevrolet's complete |ine of Fisher Body beauties. | _— der from the high-priced cars! *National Association for Stock Cor Auto Racing. tee J 4 } ee > sewn ts Sgend bene eo... =} Ss = ze g ; ; a i i} i SAVE ‘100 on brand-new 1955 TNE REFRIGERATOR | “FREEZERS! | pias giant trede-ia chevene "100K what you get in a 55 NORGE Oe a es | © Aitgnetee &trewer te Con | © Sy Pomiy 12 ss. se : _ ite Se , Bd sate VE ee 7 STEALING THE THUNDER FROM THE HIGH-PRICED CARS! =" bs seen ene eee 3 MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES, INC. : _ 28 Mil Sond 211 § Senne Be Ee Fas ay Og Ponto, Michigan Sie |t w - —— ! z = — Hot Rod Courtes _ re. After a teenager pushed a/ ance through the courtesy of the . DES MOINES (UP) — Young | couple's stalled car, he handed | Knights of the Road Hot Rod hot rod” drivers are trying to | them a card reading: “Dedicated | Club.” build up a reputation for courtesy to safety. You have received assist- | GALLAGHER'S SUMMER ACCORDION SCHOOL Now Forming for a Limited Number of. Students TO PLAY THE QUICK, EASY WAY No Obligation to Purchase’ Free One Hour Band Weekly Free Accordion While Learning Hear Our Band in Action*—Drop in Any Monday or Tuesday Night! Private Half-Hour Lessons—$2.00 Attention Churches, Schools, Lodges, Service Clubs, etc., etc. etc., our band will play for your organization upon request— Call Jack Stevenson for an appointment. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 18 E. Huron St. open Mon.-Fri. Night 19 «=9 Phone FE 4-0566 | The old span of the Southern | Excellent desk chair for . home or office Attractive for corner are rangement. : : 4 +i * P THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 Fee Gwornaw fa * THE FEARLESS, SWASHBUCKLING SWORDFISH Wh We SEEMS TO HARBOR ay A PARTICULAR GRUDGE \ u\ AGAINST WHALES, \E WHICH HE ATTACKS j * =2 OUT OF SHEER BRAVADO. © Copyright 1955 Wak Disney Productions b * - _~ ~ 5 .. es - —— 3 ~~ : Distrabuted by King Features Syndicate. Railroad was moved a short dis- | tance downriver to the new piers | lon a steel beam placed between | old and new piers after the bridge | was swung open. Rollers were | placed under it and the bridge was freed from its old base.. After rolling it to the new center pier, the workers swung it into position.) Drawbridge Span Rolls Cigars Pre-Smoked Into New Location MOUNT CARMEL, Ill. (UP) — Construction workers ‘‘rolled’” a ‘railroad drawbridge to new piers |across the Wabash river here re- | cently. before being sold. Baumritter chair that fits EVERYWHERE SALE PRICE $7 Only $1.00 Dowr A terrific buy no motter how you look at it. Easy to move about all purpose chair , . . deep, wide and comfortable. Box spring seat and well padded back. Washable plastic cov- ering. Jet black tubular steel legs, arms and frame @ Upholstered Padded Back @ Heavy Spring Seat @ Sturdy Tubular Steel Legs and Arms ®@ Rubber-Tipped Feet @ Washable Plastic Cover @ Choice of Colors @ Light in Weight YEARS OF SERVICE ¢ Plenty of FREE PARKING EASY FURNITURE CO. 361 South Saginaw Street CREDIT dur tous True Life Adventures BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (UP) — A |drugstore here has about $200 worth of cigars that were smoked : A short circuit developed in a humidifier at the | store's tobacco counter, causing a small blaze. ‘ 7.15 8-20 be ie 14\%3.261 46-52 Bs 3 Others 7.98 to 17.98 Just in time for the Holiday weekend @ ahead and the warm months to follow. @ Solids and patterns, in cool washable pima cottons, ginghams and Bembergs. Men’s Slacks So Wonderful to Wear 100% DACRON | Extra wrinkle resi¥- tl tance .'. . shed wrink- es overnight. Extra press retention . . . hold their press = even in the rain. _ Extra easy care... : ~~ sponge spots right off, “fe S| S de Sizes 30-46 Park Free Rear of Store While Shopping I rrve PONTIAC PRESS, MOND. AY, JU NE - 27 , 1953 ' ith SF barat ea, ‘Pontiac, Michigon Phone FE 5-0738 | phasized the tenuous relationship | | interview, Soviet leaders may well _ Adenauer: East Germany; offer him Soviet- Senator Say Soviet ‘Holds Al Cards = the United States, and he ‘Bonanzagram’ WASHINGTON in—Sen. field (D-Mont) said- today ae So-| He said administration foreign | policy leaders have ‘‘overem- that now exists between West Ger- | men” viet Union ‘holds all the real) China are treed. | jeards" in next month's discus- . sions with the West on Germany.| In a speach here last ans-, at.any international meeting until all Americans held by Communist night, Knowland said “the Chinese Com- | |}munists should be told that we | cific, all Americans. military and) | will not permit them to use our civilians, in an attempt to extort gain many and Western Europe and hypnotized themselves that this re- lationship will continue indefinite- ly,” s * * If Russia really wants a neutral, reunified Germany, he said in an disclose at the Big Four summit conference an intent to advance these “attractive’’ propositions to) West German Chancellor Konrad Invite him to ‘take over’ Soviet controlled territory now held by Czechoslovakia McCandless. 11 N. Perry felp! felp! Help! WANTED , *MECHANICS *BUMPERS *PAINTERS — *PARTS MEN silt | Ask for Mr. MA EWS- HARGREAVES, Inc. | will demand the United States give Sudetenland, both of which Ger- many once controlled; and hold}. out a guarantee of trade conces- sions. * > s Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, Mansfield said, served notice in his San Francisco speech two days ago that Russian leaders up its air base system in Europe) and Africa when the Big Four talks begin at Geneva July I8. ‘This is the most significant por- tion of Molotov’s speech,’ Mans- field said. Senate Republican Leader Know- land of California, meanwhile, de- ) 34 Mill Street Phone FE 5-416) manded that the United States re- fuse to discuss Far East tensions GOTHAM’S GAL — Barbara Wilkin holds her crown in New York after being chosen over 23 other Broadway actresses as Queen of New York City 1955 Sum- mer Festival. added: “Both the United States and the | U.N. should make jt clear that before any discussions are entered | into relative to tensions in the Pa- who are being illegally held should be freed.” * * Ld In his only direct reference to the Geneva conference, Knowland | said that in his judgment “there | is nothing to foreclose our repre-| sentatives .. . to raise any or all problems and issues of existing | tensions.” He did not explain how the United States could raise is- sues distasteful to Russia while refusing to discuss any Far Fast ern issues The United States, Britain and | France were reported prepared to discuss Far Eastern probiems provided Russia brings them to the conference table. All Bedrooms of Future to Have Adjoining Baths SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UR) — The 'day is not too far off when the average home will have a bath with each bedroom, according to Arthur F. Weiskopf, president of the Illinois Master Plumbers Asan. ~ Weiskop: said 70 per cent of all American homes are now more | than 20 years old, and most of | them have only one bath. “A single bath is now considered inadequate where two or more persons live under one roof,"’ he said. 00 og ° as; ur eb'y DON'T DELAY . ..« sign up for Moratue! ... get your tank filled to the top, now. Ask your Marathon mon about our deferred payment pion. We will protect you against price rises ond agree to give you the benefit of any ‘price reduction. Your price will be our lowest price in effect in your community between June 25 and August 31, 1951. Enjoy warmth without worry, next winter. With Marafuel in your tank, you can depend on comfortable, uniform heat from the first chilly morning, right on through the coldest winter. Marafuel burns with a clean, hot, even flame that tends to reduce carbon and soot, assures the most economical, efhicient operation in your oil furnace, um “be Boe do 4° tbe Half-empty _ in summer > time invite condensation and scaling ° ot cut efficiency, lead te real trouble and expense Soe No. 2 Heating Oil .. . refined especially for efficient, , economical operation in your oil-burning furnace = Here Is No. 17 r Have Fun! Win $100! “Bonanzagram” is an exciting new puzzle in which the Pontiac ‘Press offers both fun and a $100 cash prize. BUT before you try your hand at “Bonanzagram’’ be sure and read the rules at the bottom of this page. Solution will appear in the Press July 8. CLAIM CHECK Below {s a duplicate of the “Bonanza gram” entry you send tn to contest headquarters. It ts ESSENTIAL that you till tf in ana sove it until the correct sclut.cn to “Bonanzagram™ No. 17 is published Friday, July 8. Unless you do so. you will be unable to collect the prize tf! you should send in a winning solution. Check the rules below tor turther details. md Sead a te we SEE SIN Bonanzagram No. 17 Joan and Bill were way ahead o! everyone else in the annual August Treasure Hunt. Alter many adventures, they reached the place where the last clue was supposed to be hidder—a curving beach, empty under the midnight moon On the high hair where the lifeguard usually perched { na iOUNnG the piece of paper they sought. Lil the other clues, it was very tricky, with many of the letters left out to make it harder Atter a good deal of argument, they managed to fill in the missing ‘etters and succeeded in finding the treasure an decipher the clues and flot the you, too way to the treasure? ree IT'S HIGH TLE YOU MADE IT THE __IFTY CLUES SHOULD HAVE FO_LED |. YOU BUT THIS ONE WILL BLK you |. T_9 LOOK AT THE __RACK ON THE AND IT WILL POINT THE WAY __ADE THROUGH DEEP __UNNING __ATER ] YOU CAN'T MISS JLJNDING LAE fF LANDMARKS ARE WHITE __OCKS HOUSE [ WITH EL__S AND A__PLE TREES HIGH _FOGE BRIDE PATH A__ONG e__JSHES THE HIDING PLACE IS MA__KED BY THICK __JNES WATCH FOR STEEP UMP AND __OLLOW YOU MAY NEED To CUT STE__$ TO REACH IT GO RIGHT TO BRI lee, Wt NEAR BEARS CALF OON'T _YMBLE OR YOU MAY IMPORTANT: Save This Claim Check Until Solution ts Published! e Ts wee Tif YOU MADE IT THE w/FTY CLUES SHOULD HAVE FO_|LED YOU BUT THIS ONE WILL BLK You T9 LOOK AT THE __RACK ON THE AND IT WILL POINT THE WAY ADE THROUGH DEEP __UNNING __ATER YOU CAN'T MISS JUJNDING LA__£ LANOMARKS ARE WHITE __OCKS HOUSE WITH ELS AND A_ PLE TREES HIGH w_f0GE BRIDLE PATH A__ONG = JSHES THE HIDING PLACE IS MA__KED BY THICK __JNES WATCH FOR STEEP UMP AND __OLLOW YOU MAY NEED TO CUT STE_S TO REACH IT GO RIGHT TO BRIL_K W_LL NEAR BEARS CA_E DONT =_J/MBLE OR YOU MAY CLASH PLUM__ INTO IT Name .......ccccccccceccce Address......... oe eee Oe ww we City Phone (J Check here tf you would like the Press delivered to your homel “ee eee ’ SSS Se SS SSS SBS SSS SSBF SSBF BBB BSB eee 2S ’ How To Play ‘Bonanzagram’ Solve the “Bonansagram” by filling tn all the missing letters. as indicated by the underscores. in the mesecae inser! only one letter above each underscore Many clues to the missing letters are Indden in the story o: anecdote accompanving the massage Ttself and in @ tew ‘cases. the contestant’s ceneral knowledge should provide the All missing letters must be correctly inserted to win a Bonansagram prize. Punctuation will not be considered in iudqing @ correct answer tilled in the When oroperly ‘Bonanza- ‘gram will spel! out a clear message that will conform in every way with the clues. In many cases it will seem that more than one word would be the correct one. That's part of the fun! You should weigh the clues and select the BEST possible word in each case. How to Submit Entries 1. After solution is completed, “Bonanse- gram” should be clipped and pasted to @ two-cent postcard with your name and address. 2. Entries will be received at the Pontiac O-nee office 48 W Huron St. until 5 wo m. Tuesday. Tuly 5. Mail entries must be naatrearke+ hetore midniqht Tuesday. Tuly § for Bonangagram No. 17. Address “Ronansagram, ¥, Pontiac Press. Pontiac. The entrant must work out and keep duplicate solution as a@ claim check. When the solution is oublished in the Press.. he should compare his “claim check” with the published solution. and. YW hie claim check ts identical, he ‘should call in verson with his claim check at the Press office. 48 W. Huron St. before 5 3. Entries be-mailed In enve but contestant's name and n of ouzzle must be printed in upper left cor- ner of address side of envelope. 4. Copies of the Press need not be pur: chased to enter. Facsimiles made by hand and corresponding as closely as possible te the original ‘seqram” printed ih the Press will be accepted but cre limited one to @ family. pposer iar a duplicator or other unofficial mechunica) reproduc- -' tion is forbidden. How to Collect the Prize on the poo following publica- "About Eligibility, Information, Etc. 1. Anyone {s- eligible tor em contest excep? ~ members of their families. the “Bonanza- Sastowes at ao — Goce Unctae ts an cnsteve's taasanate} FSSC SSSCSSCSSSCSSSSSSSSSS SS SSH ese Sees eeseusesessseroeresrH een - agen Rapa ‘ ; J ? SSS SS462 Se SSS SSS anananananananaan Lewseaeseeenunaneene THE PONTIAC PRESS. , MONDAY. JUNE 27, 1955 Cannon Employed in Aircraft Tests SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP)—A 20- mm cannon is being used by the Convair division of General Dy- namics Corp. to test the effect of rain on supersonic aircraft, Convair said that various metals and shapes are tested under con- ‘role rain conditions, The com- pany said some materials survive only a few seconds at high speeds in rain. A special nose on the cannon allows materials being tested to be fired through the rain for 34 of a second, -Speeds can be controlied wp te 1,900 miles per hour, or Mach 2.5, On the rear of each piece of test material is a tracer element which burns during the test. This ignites a black power charge just after the material has passed through the rain and re- leases a small parachute. This low- ers the tested material undamaged about 1,500 feet from the firing point. History Lecture Slated » ANN ARBOR w — F. Bald, Clever the University of Michigan will discuss “Romance in Michigan History” July 5. His public lec- ture is part of a summer session program embracing a variety of assistant director of the | Michigan historical collections at | THE BERRYS rasa NOW THERE MAT I CAN 0O 7 JUST RELAX | A MINUTE... 7 (LL THINK OF “4 SOMETHING. heatow . By Carl Grubert LONDON (INS) — The apron is moving steadily from the maid to the married male in Britain today. Earls and bishops, judges and business executives, government officials and professional men are helping with the housework as the of Britons. - Less than a quarter of a century 'ago there were over 1,500,000 | servants, resident and daily, Britain. Today there are only a little over 400,000, In the years preceding the last World War some half a million households had nearly 750,000 servants living under their roofs. subjects all relating to Michigan. Today less than 186,000 house- worsening servant problem) numbers have declined in less than changes the way of life of millions | 95 years trom 750,000 to about | in | holds share the nation's remain- ing 200,000 resident domestic servants, and the vast majority are one-servant households, The position in regard to domes- tic servants who work on a daily basis is strikingly similar. Their War, heavy taxation, social rev- olution and full employment have | been responsible for this trans- formation in the British domestic scene, The overwhelming majority of domestic servants in Britain have always been women. The war-car- ried them into factories and of- fices and the regular hours, good working conditions, camaraderie and independence they enjoyed have made them reluctant to return to domestic service. TAXES HEAVY At the same time heavy taxa- tion forced many of Britain's aris- tocrats and country gentry to close down parts of the big man- | sions which took up to 20 servants | to keep going. Today only about | 3,000 households have three or) more servants, The under parlormaid, the up- | stairs maid and the pantry girl have virtually disappeared because | simultaneously with the closing of | Servants Getting Scarcer in ‘Britain Since Last War A generation ago women servants fell into nearly three dozen categories, Today there only half a dozen grades, ranging from cook-housekeeper and gen- eral maid to mother’s help and daily woman. The categories for male servants have also | dwindied.. A footman is a rarity today. Households employing male servants in 1955 have either a butler or a houseman whose duties are legion. A Although fewer Britons can alf- for domestic servants the demand still greatly exceeds the supply. Advertisements for cooks mother’s | mansion wings more and more helps and daily women continue Britons have been moving into| to appear regularly in the daily | press and periodicals. flats. Deathly Impression Milwaukee mechanic gave a few | MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP) — A} Half the Banks | in Michigan Yes, Michigan Life Insurance Company can give you a good “local reference.” You see, among the many types of insurance we write is that which pro- tects many local banks and their customers. What's more, the local Michigan Life agent is your neighbor— he's there when you need him. Michigan's Largest Old-Line Legal Reserve Stock “Life Insurance Company MICHIGAN LIFE INSURANCE CO. HOME Ask your bank about us, then call our agent. He's a good man to know. Lecally by FE 2-552! OFFICE: DETROIT, MICH \ ‘ OPEN TONIGHT, TUES., WED., THURS. TIL 9 P.M. et Final4Da AS Represented MICHAEL E. DANIELS 845% W. 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Folding Cots ‘ TOYS. . As Lew As YANKEE STORE! Fa Pa THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUN ¢ E 27. 1955 Vole fo Continue {London Dock Strike ers voted today to continue their six-week docks walkout ‘to the bitter end. The action was taken at a Lon- don mass meeting after strikers from northern ports put picket | lines at the major piers here. The dockers’ strike of 18,500! workers in Britain has tied up. jnearly 200 ships and millions of | dollars in vital exports and im- ports. It has split the ranks of the union on strike. One bright spot in the British labor picture was the weekend set- tlement of the ?7-day-old unoffi- cial seamen’s strike in Liverpool and.Southampton. It had cost the | shipping companies more than 544 | million dollars and inconvenienced | more than 15,000 transatlantic pas- gengers at the height of the tourist | season. Vaudeville Showman Dies in Paris at 52 PARIS u—Borrah Minnevitch, 52, leader of the Harmonica Ras- cals who played in vaudeville theaters throughout the United States, died yesterday of a cere- bral hemmorrhage at the Ameri- can hospital in suburban Neuilly. Minnevitch was stricken while driving with his wife, the former Lucille Little Taylor. He had been living in. Paris since 1947, produc- ing films and operating a night club, His daughter Lydia lives in Les Angeles, Calif. DSR Driver Robbed by Two Armed Bandits DETROIT (INS) — Two armed bandits robbed a DSR driver last night and left him bound and | gagged but the man struggled to his feet in time -to catch the license number of the getaway | car. The driver, William Battenfield, | 28, of Detroit, told police he was sitting in his bus at the end of the line when the pair boarded the bus and paid fares. When the men saw the bus was empty one pulled out a nickel plated revolver and demanded the fares and bus tickets. Battenfield Mourn O'Hare WY Fave the bandits $30 in fares and waessseoa* men bound him with his belt and a length of clothesline. >. i’ pate: oe “SS | one told him, “but you don't fool us— | we know you're going around that same | Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Block North of Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4500 J __ NOW SHOWING 7 It’s Terrific! Color CinemaScope! SSS SS SASS ASS SAS SSS SDSS IT’S A MARTINELLI’S PIZZA PIE ON THE CUR We are very proud to serve that tantil- Martinelli’s Junior Pizza Pie on the Curb. Drive in for a delicious treat. Lanches and Dinner. — . SSSA SS SS SS SSH ad f” a IN and RESTAURANT |7 DAYS A WEEK—HOURS ARE: pooner, aA LLLLLL ILLS SL LL SILL LS LLL LLL SS huh ‘of Jobless Pay Law | Wilson’ S. - Going to Miss | Athens’ Sidewalk Cafes. By EARL WILSON ATHENS, Grééce, Not Ohio—Maybe it's the rube in me, but I wish America could have sidewalk cafes where I could sit with my coffee watching the world passing by — where people would | stop by and give me news. * * * I was sitting here at Zonar’s cafe—across the street from a famous Athen’s landmark—the Socony-Vacuum Bldg.—when up stepped Atty. Sig Moisseiff of N. Y. “How's Bernie Kamber?” he asked, re- ferring to the N.Y. publicist who did such a colossal job for the picture “Marty.” “I mentioned that Bernie had just put our son on a Pan-Am plane to join us in Rome. Then Mrs. Moisseiff toid us a story—about a Hollywood star. “and I “We were in a bus,” she sald, said, ‘Oh, there's the Acropolis!’ “And this star said, ‘Is that one of the big hotels? “What do the Greek girls look like?” | I asked a native before I started looking around. * * * * “Irene Pappas,” he answered: That’s pretty good — as she’s now getting a Hollywood buildup, though, like most Greek girls, her build doesn't need a buildup. “Do they have television here?” I inquired. “Don't mention that word!” snorted a New York uptown boy, Bill Lambros, of 20th Century-Fox pictures. ‘ x *«* * * “I don’t think Spyros Skouras’—the big boss of the com- pany, who was born here and is the idol of ail ambitious Greeks—“would let them have television in Greece!” “What does the wine taste like in Greece?” I inquired. “Like turpentine,” I was told. It has resin in it and the morning after you notice that you have resin in your head. * * * * Some foreigners got Honey Bear Warren's name mixed up this trip and called her Honey Bun. | Leo (Pancho) Carrillo told me this yoyage that some of his TV kid fans have gotten wise to him. “We like you Pancho,” se | ] COLUMN-IST rock all the time!” * * * * THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Eva Gabor cancelled ont of a play opening in Chicago so she wouldn't con- flict with, sister Magda’s show opening there the same night ... Johnnie Ray want to join Elia Kazan’s Actor's Studio, Georgianna Carhart, the sprightly eldster of “Life Begins at 80,” is hos- pitalized: pmeumonis ... The Jack Palances are expecting in December Walt Disney's next TV project is a live-action movie about a boy and a butler ... Pretty Milly Vitale gets co- star billing wtih Bob Hope in her first American film, “The Seven Little Foys”. * * * * Author Marion Hargrove was a week- end dog-sitter for eight pups at Fire Is- land ...“What Makes Sammy Run?” has been sold to an independent movie company ... Marion Brando's pulling a switch, ordering ten Ivy League-type suits .. . Lionel Hampton's after Benny Goodman to tour Israel wtih him. * * * * TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Jan Murray heard of a government agency head who got married. He appointed a com- mittee of best men. That's earl, brother. (Copyright 1955, Post-Hall Syndicate, Ine.) GOP Asks Revision planes, buses and cars, and came from every state in the nation, addition to Alaska, Canada and | Hawaii. The delegates packed Public Hall | LANSING —Michigan Repub- licans have taken the lead in pro- posing amendment of the State. Unemployment Compensation Law dahl, pastor of Mount Olivet Lu- theran Church in Minneapolis, was the main speaker. iber guilty of slaying Mary Jolene , against the onslaught of every top 'Friess last August. ‘Clyde L. Deeds dissented in a with Ohio j ‘Driver Goes Berserk After Getting Ticket | DETROIT (INS)—A felonious as- | sault warrant is to be sought 7, Gabor's all-male guests at her Girl's Killer Loses Appeal on Verdict TOLEDO, Ohio uw» — Bernard in Lawr ence | Hollywood Headlines Schreiber, 18-year-old conv icted | killer of a Sylvania, Ohio, high | By DOROTHY MANNERS a | (While Louella O. Parsons is om vacea- schoel girl, today lost another tion her column will be written by round in his fight to save himself Poret*y Manners). from the electric chair. HOLLYWOOD (INS)—The prize By a 2-1 decision, the Sixth Dis- biography of the season ‘Gertrude : Lawrence as “Mrs. A’ goes to trict Court of Appeals affirmed the Paramount and producer Jack judgment of a common pleas court Rose and director Mel Shavelson 3-judge panel which fiund Schrei-' should batten down the hatches actress in the. business wanting to play the fascinating Gertie. Already in second spot on the national list o { non-fiction best sellers, Richard Aldrich’s beauti- | fully told story about his late wife as a great Judges Amos L. Conn and Lehr Fess upheld the conviction. Judge 5-page opinion in which he said that judicial ‘investigation by com- mon pleas court to determine Schreiber’s sanity did not comply law culation. The British magazine, | Woman, paid the highest price put | Schreiber’s execution was first Gown by a London magazine to | ‘Scramble Seen for Lead star and a_ great! can Bancroft. woman, has had enormous cir- | tor Richard Brooks informs | Hollywood _in shorts: Gary Crog. | by, 22-years ld Saturday, celebrat. ed his birthday in Las Vegas siting ringside listening to the other sing- ers. It's his last vacation before hig radio shew starts July. 3. Biography for, guess who? No, Bautzer. ‘Ginger Rogers and Jacques not. Greg set for June 1 but was postponed reprint. it. until Aug. 1 to permit an appeal | His attorneys said today they will Aldrich, now attached to the /carry the case to the Ohio Su-, American embassy in Madrid, | |preme Court. | and recently remarried, isn’t telling the price agent Fanny | Holtzmann received from Para- mount,—but you can bet it was | pul-eaty! | Feel kinda’ mean revealing Zsa against Norman Thomas of De- troit, who actording to police yes- (surprise, surprise') ‘‘ten most eli- gible men in Los Angeles’ party at |terday went berserk and tried to the Cocoanut Grove Tuesday night, run down 1 of 2 patrolmen who issued him a parking ticket. —so all right, I'm mean The lucky gentlemen are: Di- Patrolman Jack Duggan, 24. rector Nick Ray, TV director Al- | said he had just finished ticketing | jan Reisner millionaire-builder Hal | the car when Thomas slipped be- | Hayes, architect John Lindsay, so- | hind the wheel and‘ roared the ‘cialite Alfredo de la Vega, com- vehicle into him. Duggan’s part- poser Nacio Herb Brown, clubmen ner, Raymond Maternowski, 24,|Thomas Ingersoll and Edward seized Thomas but the angry driver | Bosbyshell, hotelman Hernando | | broke free and slugged the prone | Courtright, designer Jacques Han- Duggan. ison, and a “surprise” vacant cor | 3-2683 Cor. Williams Leke-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 7:25 || LAST TIMES TONIGHT WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GRACE KELLY "72" Great Story of the Stagel BING CROSBY in | last night for a twilight service, | at which Dr. Reuben K. Young-| HOLDEN ACADEMY AWARD Wirenedt 1959 The Little KIDNAPPERS to make it fit the new wage plan negotiated between the CIO United Auto Workers and Ford and Gen- | eral Motors. The Republican State Central Committee Saturday formally re- i , Whatever changes are necessary quested the Legislature to enact to make the auto industry con- tracts meaningful. Senator Edward Hutchinson | R-Fennville) told the committee that the contract provisions for supplemental unemployment ben- efits would not go inte effect -In Drive Theater changes when it meets next Jan- | wary. He said Michigan law now for- | bids payment of state unemploy- | ment compensation to an _ idle worker who receives from other | | sources more than 50 per cent of | his idleness benefits. This, Hutch- inson said, apparently would rob some men of the full benefits of the wage contracts. 11,000 in Cleveland for Kiwanis Convention CLEVELAND (INS)—More than 71,000 delegates and their wives were on hand today at the. first full session of Kiwanis ,Interna- | tional’s 40th annual convention in Cleveland. The Kiwanians began converging on the city over the weekend. They arrived by nine special trains, a chartered ship, an assortment of 2150 OPDYKE ROAD Open at 7:00 P. M. Show at 8:15 P. M. FREE PLAYGROUND PHONE FE 4-4611 o-Night! 2 FIRST-RUN FEATURES New Policy—See Them First at the Blue Sky! TWO GUYS FROM ANNAPOLIS! Across bettle-slashed seas end jet-blasted skies they waged @ private war with ne querter asked! Bergerac were with the Deana Marting at the Mecambo, Ginger looking alj of sixteen and very, Anne Bancroft, coming up fast very slim again. (Beauty hint— as a dramatic actress, ends an | She no smokee, no drinkee). MoM —~—s palin ogra for | The social Ray Hommes were » right giri to y the jan : ain e i. ot Tasite ond | are. ae to read in a eee Granger in “The Last \jcomunnies s copy from Istanbul Hunt.”’ ; (not Louella’s) that he ‘ran into With only six months of the year | he Hommes in the lobby of the gone, Anne has scored in “New |8tanbul-Hilton Hotel.”. Said Ray, York Confidential’ and ‘Last | “We haven't been any closer to Frontier.’ An Italian by birth, she Istanbul than the lobby of the recently changed her name from | Beverly Hills.” | Anne Italiano to the more Ameri-| But the piece de resistance of Incidentally, direc-| the evening was Tallulah Bank- me head, in lounging pajamas, (?) that Anne Bancroft's mother is a taking over for Joe E. Lewis on full- blooded Cherokee. ‘the bandstand! Ovoooh, Tallulah! OF t u iT nl | Bite ae 00 rom & PHONE FEDERAL 2 _ Thru Thursday! The Wicked and the Bold Share a Thousend Delights—in @ Land Where Love Knows No Lawi SON OF SINBAD DALE ROBERTSON - SALLY FORREST CYR- VINCENT PRICE - magi BLANCHARD TECHNICOLOR LL Irs v7 FEATURES AT: 1:35 - 3 138 - Stile - 7:44 - 9:50 SE ADDED: NOVELTY @ _CARTOON @ NEWS —"CHIEF CRAZY HORSE” in CINEMASCOPE Strand, CAME FROM \ BENEATH THE SEA, Cooled for Your Comfort og ¥ 6. % - “Ne 4 ee (bts wf: wir ATOM BRAIN om ANGELA STEVENS STARTS WALT DISNEY'S “DAVY CROCKETT, SATURDAY KING of the WILD FRONTIER” ee C-0-0-L - | doors 0 Sm | Eaqic_ its COMFORT | rec e331 ‘ima ve seas 2-FIRST RUN HiTS-2-NOW SHOWING THE ROCK EM- SOCK ‘EM BLOOD ano GUTS KILLERS RAMPAGE ! CSIPIIT TIA os Ne New Lake Theater te ST EVEN S \ counrsyem S| MP, r. a a qi v m, ‘ THE PONTIAC: PRESS. MONDAY. JUNE. 27, 1955 -Burkemo Waltzes to 0 ANN ARBOR ~— Wally Burkemo, showing the form that brought him the PGA crown two years ago, came from 5th place at the half- tad cae to win the Michigan pen { tournament yesterday. The Detroit pro added rounds of 70 and 67 to a pair of l-under par TI's for a 279 total. He was seven shots ahead of his nearest rival, Max Evans, unattached Utica pro. Burkemo made his fine stand mp led the first two rounds with 67-7., skidded to 77-74, and. tied Bob In- man .-for fourth at 289. Another notch back at 290 were Chuck Kocsis, Tom Talkington, and 1951 champ John Barnum of Grand | Rapids. Defending champion Horton Smith had a 291. PGA champion Chick , pre-tourney fa- Harbert verite and four-time winner, never broke par with a 294 total. “This was a big lift after what | happened in San Francisco,” Bur- kemo said yesterday referring to the National Open. a “I was hooking off the tee real bad in the National Open. So I made a change in my grip Mon- day, sliding my left hand around to the right. All of a sudden I started driving real good here," he said. Pete Cooper of Knollwood, just AINSWORTH TROPHY WINNER — n Title by Pontiac Press Phete | Bobby Motch accepts the Ains- | | place Sunday afternoon at the Detroit Horse Show. A. A. Clark escorted & 6-3 thumping in a Michigan even one cibcdes back of Dietz after Friday's play, filed 74-76 Sunday to finish 9th on a 291 total. Emerick rw Among those from the area who failed to qualify for Sunday's 36- hole windup (with their scores on the Ist 36) were: Amateurs Mike Andonian (76-79), Lioyd Syron Stroke (81-75), and Bob Whiting (79-78); Leo Conroy (73-78); Bob Waara (80-81); Tommy Shannon (79-83); Wally Lasky (83-80); amateur But-, ler Cooper (86-80) and Earl Roy (89-82). ANN ARBOR (#—Here are the 20 low scores in the Michigan Open: Wally Bukemo.,........ Max Evans.............. dim Barfield. Bo 13-14-08. 10— 286 ce 61-11-T7-74—289 Talk ington 15-10-12-73—200 *Chuck Kocsis T1-13-15- Ti — 296 John Barnum 71-68 -16-15—290 Cooper . 68-73-14-76—291 Ben' Lula. . 16-10-15- 10—391 cee T1-T3-14-15—201 .. + 73-15-71 -T3—292 vee TL-T1- 16-15—203 . 13-14-73- 15-294 | 70-71-75-80—296 | 69-73-14-10—206 eeeaier TT-71-71-78—297 .. 4-14-T1-18— 297 Horton Smith. *Joe Grace. Kirk 6mith. Chick Harbert Chick Rutan. 3Obac Larry Tomasino........ *Dick Whiting Gib Gellers... 5 i*Denotes amateur). Middlecoff's Hot 63 Western Open by 2 Shots | the Open) told me I'd be forgotten PORTLAND, Ore. ®—Dr. Cary Middlecoff headed for his Mem- phis, Tenn,, home today for a three-week rest after pocketing the | $2,400 top money in the 52nd an- nual Western Open here. The golfing dentist came from behind with a dramatic 29-34—63 | in the final round Sunday to over- take Mike Souchak, husky Dur- ham, N.C., pro, who had led him by four strokes after 54 holes. Middlecoff, at 272, was 16 strokes under par for the four-day, 72-hole event. Middlecoff, a Mississippi Univer- sity alumnus playing out of Kia- Coachers Win Pair in State Baseball Loop Keating, Hruska Pitch Weekend Victories Over Dearborn Nine General Motors handed Dearborn worth Memorial Trophy, emblematic of the Green Hunter champion- | Mrs. Campbell to the ceremony. The winning horse pictured above is State Baseball League game Sun- | ship, from Mrs. Bruce oan of Bloomfield Hills. Presentation took | Thou Swell, owned ” Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Motch of Keene, Va. Dennehy Tops Show Honors Charles Dennehy of Lake Forest, | Illinois, riding Black Watch, com- pleted a sweep of major honors as the 38th annual Detroit Horse Show ended’ Sunday at the Bloom- field Open Hunt Club in Bloom- field Hills. Dennehy, 24-year-old member of the 1952 U.S. Olympic Eques- , trian team, won the grand jump- er championship on accumulated triumphs in the Midwest U.S.E.T. challenge trophy, the F.E.I1. “big jumping” event, the Pro- fessional Horsemen's Association Trophy, and the knotk-down-and- out sweepstakes. Six other championships were | horses, Altrheister and the chane) both of Bloomfield Hills, won the claimed in Sunday's final events and winners were crowned in three $1,000 stake classes and two $500) stakes. * * Red Bird, owned by Mrs. August A. Busch Jr., of St. Louis, won the $1,000 working hunter _ stake; Pike’s Peak, owned by the Fox Covert Farm of near-by Oxford, won the $1,000 hunter stake; and Golden Chance, owned and ridden by Bertram R. Firestone of War- renton, Virginia, captured the $1,000 jumper stake after a jump- off against a pair of Dennehy’s pion Black Watch. Spanish Fleet, and Virginia, won the $300 green work- ing hunter stake, and Motch horse, Thou Swell, stake. Victoria Buchen of Grand Rap- ids, atop Lively Sal, took the junior hunter championship. She also won the Joan Coulson Me- morial trophy for working hunters and the hunter appointments class. Supreme Lady, owned by Patti | Bugas, and ridden by sister Jani, Rochester Club Slips by Clawson to Take Over Slim Lead in 18th District Legion Junior Loop AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL ianTH Ga che LEAGUE wh *Roehester we 4 Berkie 32 “Waterford 21 waded Valley 13 Birmingham 42 Clawson 6 *played tie. game Rochester held a slim lead in the 18th District American Legion junior. baseball league following Sunday's action in the Oakland County circuit which also saw Wa- terford dump Birmingham from Major Leagues AMERICAN LEAGUE L Pct Behind New York 24 = 467 4 Chicago 4 «63603 Cleveland . 7 Sa6 6 Detroit . 31 530 10 Boston . 4) «B41 Kansas City......+- 27 4000: «403 18% Washington ...... 4 42 358 21% Baltimore ........-- 06 2a TODAY'S SCHEDULE No games scheduled. SUNDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 6-4, Weemanoies 4-12 game 10 ipnings ansas City 6, Sag a 2: (ist Detroit 4, Washington 0. New York. 3, _ owe 2. 8, 3. canon City a. 3 10 innings, eal because es ul can 6 cay Kansas City at feted. 12:30 p.m. t Washington (2), 6:30. ( juled). NATIONAL ——T Pet. Behind Brook ocsens SO 38 . chenae a. seceeees 39 392) SOB ID Milwaukee. a3? 31 ee New York...c.c56.--32 1 478 17%) Cincinnati se eecon st uM «ATT OTM : Eats.» 0sen-- -30 ba - 2 iladelphia daied < : Pittsburgh .....:.-. am 43 «64318 62% TODAY'S SCHEDULE x poata.re : kee 4, Brooklyn. 6. aetl 1 5-8. «4 7-5, in 10 innings for its 3rd win in | Duncan whiffed 19 batters. Te the lead and Berkley win its 3rd| _ straight game. Rochester slipped by Clawson, | \4 games, while Waterford spilled Birmingham, 51. The Waterford record is 2-1 and the Ist and 2nd place- teams have played a tie against each other. Birmingham stands at 4-2 now, just a half-gaine aliead of Berk- ley, which dropped its Ist 2 games by forfeit, but has come along fast. Huron Valley bowed to Berkley Sunday in the 9th in- ning, 7-6. k ‘Herb Duncan pitched 3-hit ball for Berkley, but still was trailing 6-5 until his mates came up with a Birmingham. He pitched a Shit- Doubles bv Kruskie and Leroy gave Waterford a 2-0 lead in the 2nd. Each team talled in the 5th, but the winners put it away with 2 runs’in the 7th on a walk, Kruskie’s double, an error and Jack Swinde- man’s single. Clawson wiped out a 4,1 Roches- ter lead in their ¢ and the teams went into the 10th inning ied, 5-5, but Jack McDaniels settled the issue for Rochester by belting a2-run homer. Bill Henderson was 2-run rally in the last of the 9th to make “Berkley Day"’ a success. Weachter and Costello homered for the winners, while Roger Vor- heis hit one for the Boys Club. Jerry Kruskie was the pace- setter in Waterford’s 3-1 win over tagged for 12 hits, but was the winner. Rochester .,..... 040 000 100 2—-7T 8 1 Clawson ........ 010 120 010 6-5 12 5 Henderson ‘and Norquis; Brysenski and Molenchoewski H.V. Boys Club..... 100 410 600-6 3.3 Berkley 020 102-7 4 4 — ‘and Brasher: Duncan and Gird, Weeriord sm BRELORS & 020 010 200-5 7 2 Birmingham 000 010 000i 5 1 ryexie ead King: O’Connor, Hower and Trample Pontiac Club London's Old Timers gained sweet revenge on the Pontiac Old Timers with a 13-4 victory at Lon- don Saturday afternoon in an In- ternational Olid Timers League con- . Pontiac defeated them here dozen hits off Don Stone, including ‘homer by Coleman in the 6th inning. Pontiac. collected eight hits, two of them contributed ¢ by catcher White. Stone and White: “Metro and. Pitsboreh. Pirates have eight — Bob Friend, Going to West Point Football and baseball star Pete Dawkins of Cranbrook School has U. S. Military Academy at West Point, N. “Y. A Royal Oak boy, Dawkins will report to the ‘Point July: 5. * * * baseball team this season, played “ist base and batted .339. In foot- ball jast fall, he was one bi owned by Mr. | ter, struck out 10. and collected | 2 doubles and a single at the plate. | Nicholas and Ran Beedle’s single. ensen, Boston | Detret and proved New Yor'! PITCHING Cranbrook’s Dawkins received an appointment to the | 5rss Dawkins captained the Crane | | jumor jumper championship — in addition to the Junior F.E.I. “big | Mrs. J. Dean Rucker of Grosse another | took honors in the $500 green hunter, Pointe was the winner of the regular hunter championship aft- er taking Ist place in the open hunters and middie and heavy- weight hunters. Mrs. Sallie J. Sexton of Gran- ville, Ohio, with John P., won the regular working hunter title. Thou Swell, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Motch, claimed the giant Anisworth Memoria] trophy with his victory in the green hunter class. Another Motch horse, Span- ish Fleet, took the green working hunter crown. A record audience of 15,000 at- | tended Sunday's wind-up. During _the four days of the show a total of 42.500 spectators viewed the pro- ceedings, according to Charies E. Carey, vice-president in charge of admissions ame Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE Se ne Ch Detro Smith, : . Cavelana! 209 RUNS—Méntle. New York. 63: Smith. Cleveland. 60; Kaline. Detroit, 54: Geod- man, Boston and Tuttle, Detroit, 49. RUNS BATTED IN—Jensen, —< 35; Mantle and Berra, New York, 51; Kaline Detroit, 50: Del, a HITS—Kaline, land, 93: Fox, Chicago 92; Kuenn 74 igan. Kansas New York, 7% DOUBLES—Finigan. Kansas City, White, Bo 17; Smith, Cleveland, Goodman, sall, Boston, Fox, Chicago and Power, Kansas City, 14 TRIPLES—Kaline Detroit and Mantie, New York. 6; Fox Chicago, wae aad Kan- eas City and Carey New York, 5. HOME RUNS—Martle. New York. 18: Zernial, Kansas City. 16; Jensen, Boston, at Zauchin, Boston and Berra, New York, ‘STOLEN BASES—Rivera, Chicago, nme Chicago, 8: Smith, Clevelana 7. aline, oS on 4 ceciene Kaw stanty, New Yor. | amines Wynn, Cleve- jand, 10-2, 833; Donovan, Chicago, 9-2, Ford. New York. %3, 736; Byrd, and Consuegra, Sod Byrne. New York 3-2, 714 Cleveland, 120; TS Score, Turley. New York, 106; ——— eve- land, 65: Garcia Cieveland, 64; Sullivan, Boston and Pierce, pe 63. a Nat. = GUE BATTING at bats)—Ash- — Philadeiph ia “3 PR cco cle Toit, 9%; Smith, Cleve- Detroit, City cad. Mantle, 18; Busby, oe ar — Klussewst Campane! a Pine RUNS —S Snider, Brooklyn. 59: Mil Waukee, 56: Gilliam, Brooklyn ee Brooki Milwaukee, RUNS” BATTED in Suide Brooki 1; © 64; * Ropetwed ECE alate ee . St. Louts 4. HITS—Mueller, New Y¥: $2; Aaron, Mile : M 85; wires, 1 Bra ghirgabes DO Milwaukee Re- ps = Pm gas is Bruton, - hon lyn and Cinrinnati, 15. TRIPLES— oy 8) FPondy. pre mn fo ggg | ‘ork, 7; Baker, Ch Poilede ia, 6. a a in er, bg 3: gs Brook! tnd’ Moor Se eet 16; | day afternoon at Wisner Field to. | complete a weekend sweep of a Cuicland | | the 100 miles in 62:40.71, finishing | |; about 10 seconds ahead of Bob .| today were challenged by 'restimated the trip would take her double-header with the Dearborn | nine. The Dearborn, 43, Saturday night on the latter's diamond, GMC lashed out with a 13-hit attack yesterday in support of Dan Keating's 8-hit pitching. Twe singles and an in-between stelen base broke the scoring fice in the 3rd inning to pave the way for the Coachers’ five-run outburst | in the 6th. GMC batted around in the hefty inning, making six hits, all singles. In the meanwhile Keating was setting the opposition down with consistency. He struck out eight, walked six, and hit one, His poor- est inning was the 4th when three singles and a brace of errors net- ted Dearborn two runs. Jack Hruska hurled Saturday night's game at Dearborn, limiting the losers to five hits. Dearborn collected four of them in the Ist stanza when all of its three runs were made, GMC hacked away at the deficit |. until the score was 3-3 entering the 9th. “Boots” Krings singléed, moved to 2nd on a fielder’s choice, stole 3rd and scored, the winning run on catcher Al Barkeley’ s sin- gle. Dearborn .. aiee 1 GMC 001 005 0Ox--6 13 2 Sheridan, Olson and Clements; Keat- GMC 360 ~ 000 101—4 9 4 Dearborn on 000 000—3 5 3 gg aa and Clem- i ing and Barkeley. Hruska and ‘Berksicy, ents tery Bryan Victor ‘in Langhorne 100-Miler LANGHORNE, Pa. (® — Jimmy Bryan, Phoenix, Ariz., has cap- tured his second successive 100- mile National AAA Racing car championship. Bryan successfully defended his championship Sunday at the Lang- | football player, | ahead of him. | Rosburg each took away $1,300. | the swell Coachers nosed out | | announced next Monday. Wins mesha Lake, N.Y., tied the Port- land Golf Club course's 18-hole rec- ord as he clubbed out nine birdies. Souchak, an ex-Duke University battled hard to catch Middlecoff after he end the first nine holes in *4 to find that the dentist was one stroke | But the powerful Souchak’s ap- proaches and putts were not sharp enough. He finished with 34-35—69 for a total of 274. Gene Littler, Palm Springs, Calif., and Bob Rosburg, San Fran- cisco, tied for third at 275. Littler, an ex-National Amateur champion, came in with 33-34—67 for the round. Rosburg shot 36-32. Souchak won $1,300. Littler and Middlecoff's final-round score | tied a Portland» Golf Club course | | record set by Ben Hogan in 1945. and? equaled by Jim Ferrier in. 1946. The handsome Memphis pro. |launched his assault on the fast, straight 6,604 yard par-72 layout at the third hole. There, he got his. first birdie with a long approach shot and an 18-inch putt. At the end of nine he was six under par. That's when most of crowd estimated at 5.000 switched from other favorites such as Sam Snead and Souchak to Middlecoff's gallery and cheer him on He birdied three of the first eight | final holes. Then at the 18th, on |which he had suffered over- par | experiences in two earlier rounds, Middlecoff played it safe to get a| | par 5. | Middlecoff, who won the recent | < Masters at Augusta, Ga., sajd his next tournament will be at Mil- waukee, Wis., in three weeks. Snead disappointed his usual big gallery by taking a 74 to wind up in a tie with five others for 10th at 283. Fifth place and $1,000 went to = Boros, Mid Pines, N., with Kell Tops AL 3rd Base List CHICAGO (®—George Kell of the Chicago White Sox took the lead among American League third basemen today in the All-Star Baseball Poll. Kell passed Jim Finigan of the Kansas City Athletics by 11,715 votes. The balloting ends Friday | midnight and final returns will be. The contest js te determine the starting lineups for the 22nd an- nual All-Star game which will be ‘in Bout With Slade horne Speedway when he covered Sweikert, winner if the classic In- played at Milwaukee July 12. Jackson Seeks Revenge NEW YORK (INS) — Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson, eccentric Far Rockaway, N. Y., heavy- weight, guns for revenge tonight in a@ ten-rounder at St. Nicholas Arena against light heavyweight | J’ Jimmy Slade of New York City. Slade was the fighter who turned the Hurricane into a zephyr 14 months ago, upsetting the then 3rd ranked Jackson who was being | built up for a title shot with Rocky | ® Marciano. Tonight's bout will be | game as soon as possible." , and make investments. Weighs Money Offers NEW YORK @—Jack Fleck, a golfing nonentity until he won the U.S. Open a week ago, still was Weighing a bagful of money mak- ing offers today—but he’s sure of only one thing: He wants to get back to the tournament circuit, “I've had all sorts of financial offers,” he said as he took a breather between television ap- pearances. “I have had induce- | ments from factories, from shirt and hat manufacturers, and I even had a, proposition to invest in a table on wheels “But I want to stay in golf and I will. I want to get back to the The 32-year-old Davenport, Iowa, said he would like to play in as many tournaments as possible. “Right now, though.”’ he added, “I'm not quite sure what my sched- ule will be except the Professional Golfers Assn. Championship in De- troit starting July 20. The pro- moters in San Francisco (sité of next year and that I should retire But I'm Fleck ane Keep Playing Tourney Golf still young and physically fit, so rll continue playing.” “Was he nervous facing the old master, Hogan, in a playoff after ticing him at the end of the regula- hours sleep the night before the playoff and eight hours every night of the tournament. Otherwise, I don’t think I'd have made it.” What happened when President the day after he won the coveted crown: ? “I just had my breakfast and went off on a little sightseeing,” he related. “But when I returned I was told that I was a hard man ‘to find. That the President would professional, who beat Ben Hogan | in a playoff for the title after | shooting an 87 in a practice round, | like to talk to me. And so I was whisked off by the secret service. “The. President made me feel at home right away and 1 told him that my experience in meet- ing him coulc..'t happen anywhere except in the United States. I have been invited back to the White House on July 11. That's my, only set commitment.”’ Wimbledon Win Final Results for Horse Show SUNDAY WINNERS WORKING HUNTER STAKE won by Bird, Mrs Buseh Jr : GREEN HUNTER STAKE ($500) —won Ee) Swell, Mr. and Mrs. D. R otch CORINTHIAN HUNTERS (Brambies challenge ee aa ok by Count to (91.000) August A Ten, ope a JUNIOR cna TIONSHIP (Skip (elles poreniess memorial tro- oe by Lively Gal, Victoria ‘KNOCK- DOWN-AND-OUT SWEEP- STAKES—(Finais)—won by Velvet Las- sie, Mrs. Hubert R. Thomas. GREEN H CHAMPIONSHIP (Pinal—Ainsworth ¢: Lid ~ Thou Swell, Mr. and Mrs. Mote: JUNIOR JUMPER CHAMPIONSHIP— ——— won by Supreme Lady, Patti Bugas, Jani Bugas, riding; an | title by Lassie, _— arlick GREEN WORKING STAKE | ($500) —won be di ———- Pieet, Mr. end |Mrs DR itch. GREEN WORKING HUNTER CHAM PIONSHIP (final) — won by Spanish Pieet, r and Mrs. D. R. Motch: reserve title won by Richciaim, Mra. Robert C. Egan HUNT TEAMS (William F. Lambert | memorial trophy:—won by Chicago tena Hunt—Sequola, Miss Sally Yoeling: Apt Pupil, Miss Dorothy McLoud, Perforation, Miss Allison Rogers HUNTER STAKE $1,000)—won by ee Peak, Fox Covert Parm EGULAR HUNTER CHAMPIONSHIP - oon by Spanish Mint. Mrs. J. Dean Rucker JULAR WORKING HUNTER CHAM. PIONSHIP—(final)—Eiliott & Nichols sorectens trophy'—championship won by ohm P.. Mrs. Gallie J. Sexton; reserve | cena won by Apt Pupil, Cummings-Chi- sa -7 Corp. UMPER STAKE ($1,000) —won Golaen Chnance.-Bertran R. Firestone JUMPER CHAMPIONBSHIP—champion- | ship wen by Black Watch, Charles Den- -nehy. reserve title — by Velvet Lassie, Mr. and a Hube: HORSEMANSHIP id al and under)—won by Angelo Di- HORSEMANSHIP Pd Neate and under) ~ HORSEMANSHIP (13- rie years)—won by Jean Pikelde MODEL WESTERN —won by Vs Prin- cess, Frank STOCK SADDLE SEAT (AHSA. | naam classi—won by Sarah Gail, Jan Pora —won MODEL WESTERN byORS.. WORKING sig! dee HACKS— won ‘by i ‘aser =e ‘wood, Buy Ford, Joe De GREE N WORKING “HUNTER tin ACKS Spire be i Spanish Fieet, Mr. and Mrs. > pARaDe “Ci Ass—won by Doctor, Jubi- Phere —— rE L)—won oy Glory Be, CORINTHIAN ys memorial t HUNTERS (Mra, John B memor trophy)— won John P.. Salile J. Gexton, & HEAVNWEIGHT GREEN U won “by Thou Swell, Mr. and Mra. D. BR, Motch. RELAY JUMPING ide Fe by the Bloomfield Irishmen, no feults. aoe ee Tea m. won by Silverminer, Mrs. Ernst Mahier. Watch, — aoe Denne! LAD HUNTERS ( McCullough ecnrat cighey en " Understudy, Staniey Luke Parms. TRIPLE BAR Loar gape by Velvet Lassie, Mrs. Hubert Thomas LADIES’ WORKING HUNTERS (Biack- thorn hemmgatn ee — by Sequoia, Miss PALOMINO PAR. RADE CLA Rainbow's End, Dottie Ann LIGHTWEIGHT GREEN won by Star Double, Cummins-Chicago Corp sTOCK HORSE cH AMPIONSHIP | STAKE :$200)—won by Bandit King. | Ken Goggins KNOCK-DOWN-AND-OUT SWEEP. STAKES ‘Bi--won by Black Watch, a | Charlies Degnehy. Sports Calendar TODAY Baseball CLASS A—L.C. Anderson Jets vs Don Nicholie Real Estate (Wisner, 5:30). CLASS D—Dublin Cemmunity Center ve Briggs ‘Sporting Goods (C-J north, CLASS E—Cass Ponts vs Community Super Market (C-J south, 5:30): 8t George vs Boys Club (Washington, 8:30). Softball CITY MEN'S8—GMC vs Biemar Inn (Beaudette, 7): Elks 810 vs Shaw's Jew- elers (Beaudette, 8-30). Stadium Inn vs —— Fiying Octane (North Side, + telecast nationally by Du Mont. CITY GIRLS—Gingellville vs Avondale (North Side, 7) WATERFORD—Gidiley Fiectric vs Wa- terford Lions :Drayten, 8:39). Hawaii-California in 15 Days Twin-Hulled Sailing Craft of Ancient Design Challenging Orthodox Vessels SANTA MONICA, Calif, WH — | Orthodox ocean racing yachts the skipper of a strange, twin-hulled sailing craft of ancient Polynesian design that skimmed from Hawaii to California in q surprising 15 days. Before the Saturday night arriv- al of the Waikiki Surf. a craft patterned after those built hun- dreds of years ago by Pacific istand_ natives, the Coast Guard 2% days against the prevailing | winds. bd * Skipper Ernie Nowell, 33, a Honolulu hotelman, and the four | Lente other crew members sailed the gE | $20,000 boat, called a catamaran, here seeking to enter the trans- — a. ithe yachts anyway. . * *« «¢ etarting/.duly 4 - “We feel we can beat anything in the race,’ Nowell said, “Our ‘cat’ attains speeds of 25 to: W knots at times and we are sure that with favorable weather we can beat the best yachts in the race by many days." Nowell conceded there may be difficulty in having the catamaran accepted and assigned a handicap because the conventional stand- ards of weight and sail area would be hard to apply, But even if the Waikiki Surf isn't formally accept- ed for cotnpetition, Nowell: de-} clared, the ‘cat’ would race with The Waikiki Surf carries 1,500: square feet of sail. Designer Rudy Choy, 31, a crew member, said); she weighs only 1% tons, has a draft of just 20 inches and é actually sailed 3,000 miles looking | the water like a giant surf board. The two hulls are af covered with fiber glass. A plat- form ties them together. On it is a low cabin with a double bunk and below the deck are two double bunks, galley, lavatory and stor- age space. The craft has a 13-fodt beam, . - * * * “The distance across is 2,200 miles,” Nowell said, “but we for tavorable winds, We encount- by | medal | won, by. Might Move Trabert to Pros Tony Playing Well and Would Likely Listen to Money Offers ' @WIMBELDON, England —This could be a golden week for the globe-trotting Tony Trabert from Cincinnati, Ohio, as just ‘iee matches against a handful of the | world’s premier tennis artists sep- |arate him from a title which is | almost a prerequisite for turning . | professional, Last year a cluster of blisters on _ his racquet hand ended his chances | of pulling off the title. This year he’s feeling fine, no blisters bother | him and he's playing well enough | to win the Wimbiedon title. The ti- | te would surely lead to tempting offers to join the ranks of the play-for-pay boys. Trabert, who so far hasn't lost a set in the three matches he's played, has said often he wouldn't look down his nose at any offer. If Trabert does win, he'll help keep alive a postwar Wimbledon tradition — each year since the tournament restarted in 1946, there's been a new name on the | tithe cup. * * * Jaroslav Drobny, the Czech who turned Egyptian and now lives in Britain, is the current titleholder. He wanted to turn professional back in 1951, but he didn't even make the quarter-finals that year. Since the war three men: who won the Wimbledon have gone on and turned pro. Yvon Petra of France, winner in 1946 did it. So did Jack Kramer of the U.S., the following year, Last to do it was Frank Sedgeman, who won for Aus- tralia in 1952. Two winner—®Sob Falkenberg and Ted Schroeder — didn't come back. the next year to defend their titles. Budge Patty, the Los Angeles artist who lives in Paris, Dick Savitt, Orange, N. J., and Vic Seixas, Philadelphia, all came back, but couldn't make the grade the next time. : * 2. Patty and Drobny are trying again this year. Seixas tried, but was knocked out in the second round last week by Gil Shea of Los Angeles. Brooks Victor in Race Feature Takes 50-Lap Event at Speedway as Fair ‘Misses Chance Felix Brooks won the 50-lap fea- - ture race of Sunday's old model stock car racing program at the Pontiac Speedway. He covered the distance in 19 minutes, 59.94 sec- onds. i | g ti il i i Fair also posted the fying time in a fast ( els) 20.09 seconds, z 2 ‘ ie : : rT ie Eisenhower was looking for him Li - THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1935 STEER GET OUR FRONT END ALIGNMENT Special ! We Will 1, Adjust camber 2. 3 4. Adjust coster Adjust toe-in Check brakes and shock absorbers Inflate tires to proper pressure 5. Proper inflation of aff times te s mighty important factor ia easy steering, easy riding, long ear and tire fife, Special Price *6°° 147 | S. SACINAW ST. | Williams Left at Home With Frick Pleased Aching Bock With Response~ tc, "ws it ome Ho 19 Questions ing back, was left home today as the Boston Red Sox. flew to Pittsburgh for an exhibition gan-e | Prolonged Games Seem to Be Major Gripe About Big League Baseball | tonight with the Pirates. The big slugger, who missed | the Red Sox four-game series with | the Chicago White Sox, said he is hopeful of returning to the lineup in Washington tomorrow. t Trainer Jack Fadd*.: said Wilk) NEW YORK «®—Commissioner liams felt better after Feat treat- Ford Frick is extremely pleased ments yesterday, and added: “| with the response his office. is get- anticipate him playing Tuesday ting to questionnaires inviting the country’s fans and sports writers to tell him bow baseball can. be Jewelers Upset =~ i | “We are getting a fine response | from every quarter,’’ he said to- ® | day, ‘‘and from what I've seen I otor S ine | think there are going to be some big surprises when fhe final re- | sult is talled. I believe the club | General Motors produced the OWners will profit from it.” prime upset of the city league . he softball season Sunday night at Without elaborating on the sur- Beaudette Park by blanking Shaw's prises in store, he seemed to " Jewelers, 1-0, make it clear as he went along On the rebound after thre} that he was hearing a great deal straight losses, the Coachers about the length of today’s big ‘pushed across a lone tally in the league games. Or perhaps it was 4th inning. and made it stick to)| only that we drew him out on the | hand Shaw’s its lst setback of the subject, it being this long-suffer- year. | ing critic’s pet peeve. | “Of course they are runnig too | s Grant | aunt reer lidee paar | long," he said -“Everybody must Grant taking over in the 6th (know | stanza to get Hall out of a jam. | Hall received credit fer the vic- | tory. Clell (Matt) Morse went the | distance for Shaw's. | Both teams managed to garner only five hits, but the Coachers made one of theirs count, Fay | Douglas reached ist on an error, took 2nd on a sacrifice, reached 3rd on another miscue and scored | Jerry Dennis. ' In other games last night, the | Knights of Columbus nosed out Ashland Flying Octane, 54, also at Beaudette, Giles Realty spanked Shaw's gigis, 11-1, at North Side | Park, and defeated Gingellville, 7, on a forfeit. GMC ..,..2.......... 000 100 6-1 8 6 Shaw's. : 000 000 0—0 § 2 ——- Grant and J. Dennis; Morse sad Be apscerccccnc ccs OO o—5 11 2 | Ashland : .. 000 14 43 |. Mihay. Petroff and Racine, Beers and | Burmetster Shaw's . eo oO16e—1 3 6 | Giles 710 201 s—11 12 1 Jackson, Ohrasher and Pollina; Bender | end Leanier. the clincher on a safety by catcher t by this time, What you | say about the managers slowing | things down with ail their pitching | changes is true, but the pitchers ‘and batters are just as guilty Too many pitchers won't come in lthere with that ball, which is what ‘they're out there to do, and |the batters keep stepping out of the box just as the pitchers finally start their delivery. * * s a “If I had any say about the | playing rules, which I don't, I think I would make it so that a batter steps out at his own peril | once he takes his stance. If a | strike came over after he stepped out, that's what it would be. “I think we've lost something in having the bullpens clear out in the country the way they are in most parks now, It seems to take a pitcher an hour to walk in. Most bullpens used to be close to the stands where vou could watch them warming up, and I always liked that." day a 5-pound, BS NEW LEADER — Bass division of the Pontiac Press “Big Fish | Derby” has a new leader. Jim Shivas (above) landed his 5 pound 12, ounce large-mouth in Reed- Lake. pound 9 ounce specimen. Shivas lives at 7600: Honeysuckle road, Walled | Lake. Walled Lake Angler Takes Lead in Fishing Contest Young Charles Knechtel'’s lead- ership in the bass division of the annual Pontiac Press "Big Fish Derby” :-was short-lived. Knechtel, who showed his catch Thursday, held the lead one day. Jim Shivas, 7600 Honeysuckle, Walled Lake, route 5, reported to the Press sports department Fri- 12-ounce large- mouth bass to become the new leader. Shivas nabbed the big speci- men last week im Reed Lake while fishing with William Mce- Cool, his next-door neighbor. He | employed a spinning red and hula popper bait, The fish was 22 inches long, Another Oakland County youth entered a bass Friday, but found out he was shy of the mark. Don Gibbs, 2332 Fordham, Keego Har- bor, turned in a large-mouth weigh- ing 5 pounds, 5 ounces. igers Look West After Sunday Split Purdue's Campbell Wins College, Title KNOXVILLE, ‘Tenn, ®—Purdue University’s Joe Campbell, play- |ing “the finest golf of my life.” 'won the National Collegiate Golf even after the first 18 Saturday. Campbell, a 19-Year-old from An- derson, Ind., took a one-up lead on™ to four-up on the. 28th, dropped the 33rd to a birdie 3, and halved > the Mth with a par 4 to close out * the match. 8 Mee Chicago, + KC, Cleveland hg 2 on Road Jaunt Win Opener but Drop Nightcap in Sunday’s Detroit ended a four-game series | oi with the Nats yesterday, splitting + |a double-header 6-4 and 412, The! to Briggs Stadium. j Ferris Fain’s pinch single 5 | saved the Tigers in the er. open It displaced Charles Knechtel’s 5| ie cingied with owe oat ix the | 9th inning, scoring Reno Bertola and giving Detroit a 4-4 tie. Detroit then pushed across two runs in the 10th off loser Dean | Stone as Al Kaline walked, Jack | eupe and Ray Boone singled | PS Bubba Phillips hit a sacrifice y. The 16-year-old Gibbs caught the | fish in a private lake near Upper | Straits. He was angling with his! father, Clyde Gibbs, and a cous- | in, Doug Hallett of Farmington. s * e The Pontiac Press “Big Fish Derby” awards $50 U. S. Savings Bonds to Oakland County fisher- men landing the heaviest catch in bass, pike, and bluegill divisions. Contest ends Labor Day. Rangers in Squeaker The Ivory Rangers scored a 7-6 victory over the Lew Smith All- | Stars Sunday at Ivory Polo field when Jackie Stefani rammed in a goal with only 45 seconds left to play. Stefani scored 3 goals for the Rangers, who haven't been beaten on the grass field in. ve ‘ games. _ half of the 9th im the opener | Paseee 2 » 7 Sunoco stations, decorated as above, are ready to Refining Facilities, as this, keep Sun Oil Company cael ne ae serve you with New cause Sun is years HERE NOW! A NEW ADVANCED GASOLINE By Su a noco. Drive in for high-test premium qual MORE KNOCK-FREE POWER > FOR EVERY MAKE OF CAR There's a difference in New Advanced Blue Sunoco ...and a reason for the difference Available now! From the advanced refining facilities of Sun Oil Company comes a new advanced gasoline that delivers more knock-free power for modern high- compression engines—ready now for next year’s cars. Yes, there's a difference in New Advanced Blue Sunoco, and a reason for the difference. First, be- of the industry in catalytic refining facilities. Second, because Sun’s one-grade ' gasoline policy saves on tanks, trucks, pumps. ..sav- ings that are reinvested in research and new facilities. Try New Blue Sunoco in your own car. _ Make your own 10-gallon test—and see. We oe : IT'S HERE ity at regular price. NEW BLUE SUNOCO ” Philedelphie 3, Pe. HIGH-TEST... PREMIUM QUALITY... STILL AT REGULAR GAS, PRICE NEW ADVANCED America’s Greatest Gasoline Value RADIO NEWS “Sunoco 3-Ster Extre* 6:45 P.M, Mon, to Fri, NEC Unbeaten Al Aber who followed starter Ned Garver and Babe Bir- | rier in the 9th won his 4th game. | In the 2nd game. Washington rapped out 12 hits. Eight of them were good: for extra bases. The victory snapped a nine-game losing streak for the Senators. Roy Sievers hit a pair of triples scoring two runs each time. Har- i'mon Killebrew rapped a two-run |homer and Jose Valdivielso sup- plied two doubles. Detroit used four pitchers after pulling Frank Lary in‘the 4th in a futile attempt to check the National onslaught. Lary was marked with the loss. Maury McDermott went the dis- tance for the Senators to chalk up his 6th win. He was nicked. for 10 hits including a triple and two singles by Bill Tuttle. ‘Double’ With Nats Meessuring . | WASHINGTON (®—The Detroit Johansen ' Tigers looked westward to Chi- ap a cago today and to sterner stuff 9 7 'than the ‘Tth-place Washington | Cutters end tale ao | Nationals. , nightcap defeat was Detroit's only | ee loss of the series. It left them Permanent Magnet with a 57 won-lost mark on the Chucks —__.. Eastern leg of their long road frip: . (4 | They'll meet. Chicago, Kansas compe ont oe and Cleveland before they return Ground Flat Steck There was one out in the last , and the Senators were holding a 4-3 lead when their 3rd baseman Bob Kline fumbled Bubba Phil- lips’ bunt. Phillips was forced by Red Wilsen, but Harry Malm- berg walked and Fain batted for Ned Garver. He singled in | pinch-runner Bertoia. Jim Small, running for Fain in the 9th, stumbled over 3rd_ base and injured his right ankle. Pre- liminary examination disclosed no bones broken in the rookie bonus player's ankle. DETROIT AB Kuenn,ss Tuttlecf Kaline rf J.Phillips.1b Torgeson, 1b WASHINGTON ABR Sch'aker,rf Oravetz Paula,rf Runnels 2b Vernon.!b Courtney,¢ Groth, cf Stevers if Kil brew Jb - McDermott Kline J» Vald'elso,ss Stone.p Boone Jb B.Phillips,it Wilson.s Bertola House. Maimvd’¢. 2b > in Small Hatfield Birrer er.D Aber.p Totals 37 Oravets forced fm Tth 1 6 0 2 1 0 0 0 LJ o LJ J 6 oe Or Ree es SSOS— Ww Swe 2Gee =e a) ©CQ@2S GOMER HW HOHK eH COR H 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 LJ 6 0 ! 3 1 0 0 ® 6 8 Totals 38 64:10 Stone for Schooumaker ? rwe flied out for Killebrew in | Pain singled for Garver in %h Bertoia ran for Wilson in 9th Snell ran for Pain in @h Hitfleld ran fer Smal? in Detroit : Washington . Kvoenn Groth 2, Ceurtney berg. Pain Boone, Phillips. IJB—Runnels. Vernon, S—Wilson Groth. Sp—Courtney ips. ©P—Kuenn, Malmberg and J.. ; Stone, Runnels and Vernon; J. Phillips. Left—Detroit t Sth ‘ 201 Killebrew, KI 2, B ne Garver Phillips Summers. ( : Detroit ........... 100 200 100— 410 6 Washington ....... 002 630 02x—12 1? 1 Lary, Zuverink (4), Poytack (4), Birrer (5), Aber (8) and House, Wilson, (5); McDermott and Courtney. ry. ' Home run—Washington, Killebrew, OK Q00 ~~ ww—-ook Championship Sunday, defeating) ,;, Pigg ecl Bgenes BUNS Johnny Garrett of Rice 3 and 2. jensen. Siephena, Zeuchinn Med Bees: The 36-hole match was spread over two days with the players all le 6; Mor- Sic tl rf ari . ards, They'll M > Highest Ro - et Your GVirements arvery Adenters (fh Cutting Tools & Supplies Industrial Supply Distributors PLENTY OF OFF STREET PARKING W. Pike, Corner Cass FE 2-0108 You Don't Have to Be a Cannibal to Get Fed Up With People A NEW MERCURY omy $395 00 o, BOB FROST, INC. Michigan's Festest Growing Lincoln-Mercury Dealer 850 S$. Weedward, Birmingham JO 6-3933 Mi 6-2200 QUALITY TOOLS ATLAS @ CLAUSING @ DELTA SHOPSMITH @ DeWALT PORTER-CABLE © SKIL BROWN-SHARPE @ MILWAUKEE RENTALS GLENN WING POWER FOOLS 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD AVE. Five Blocks North of 14-Mile Rood BIRMINGHAM MI 4-0444 Sone eiaeieenameteiememeers T DAILY 8 te 6:00 — FRI. 8 to 8:00 AKES RELINED seta Be RE era “ ame of SPECIAL } Ford, Chevrolet, Ply- COMPLETE JOB ~ mouth ... complete = | A? 5 brake relining. - First ; Quality. Pully Guaran- p teed. muevummamemerinsiaee Set Labor * COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE * MARKET TIRE CO. 77 W. Huron St, Open “9 to 9” FE 8-0424 Bs SS eS 5 _ go for the new LIVE taste... go GOEBEL BREWING CO, DETROIT Thought... ah, : “ Doi eit iri area ee % i THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27. 1955. Cardinal Duo Battling for Rooki Honors victory over Jim Wilson of Balti- The Associated Press If St. Louis outfielder Bill Vir- don doesn't win the National League rookie-of-the-year award, his teammate, pitcher Luis Arroyo, will, Anyway, it’s almost a cinch to be in the Cardinal family. Virdon was the whole show Sun- day as the Cardinals swept both ends of a doybleheader for the first time this year, walloping the new York Giants 9-2 and 7-2, The be- spectacled center fielder batted in six runs with a single, two doubles, a triple and home run to boost his average to .324, * * * Saturday night, Arroyo whipped the Giants for his ninth victory against two losses (both by one-run | margins), The Puerto Rican south- paw leads all National League hur!- ers with a brilliant 2.01 earned- run average, _* * 2 The sudden collapse of Chi- cago's Bob Speake ang the de- mise of Ken Boyer (another Car- dinal}, strengthens the claim of Virdon and Arroyo. Speake, the early season sensation, has slumped to .254 and Boyer is hit- ting .240. A couple of American League rookies—New York's Elston How- ard and Cleveland’s Herb Score boosted their stock as the Yan- kees increased their first-place lead 40 three games with a split | against the Indians. Howard sin- gled and scored the insurance run as the Yankees shut out the In-| dians 24 behind Whitey. Ford's, itter in the nightcap. Early |. Wynn furnished the Indians with their only victory in the four-game set-with a nifty three-hit 5-0 per- formance in the opener. * e * Seore worked five relief innings | in the nightcap and pitched bril- liantly. He permitted only one hit, walked two and struck out nine in five innings to boost his strikeout lead to 120, * « The Yankees picked up a full game on the runner-up Chicago White Sox who saw their five-game winning streak go up in smoke by losing two games to Boston 5-2| and 82. The third place Indians remained six games behind New York. = * * Kansas City handed Baltimore its sixth and seventh straight de- feats with 1-0 and 5-2 triumphs. Washington snapped its nine-game losing streak with a smashing 12-4 victory over Detroit after the, Tigers had come from behind to win the opener 6-4 in 10 innings. The Breoklyn Dodgers’ huge first place lead in the National League | *** was cut slightly when Milwaukee | shut them out 4-0 behind Bob Buhl's | five-hitter .The runner-up Chicago Cubs advanced to within 12% games of the Brooks, splitting their doubleheader with Pittsburgh. * s * Cincinnati climbed to within one percentage point of the fourth- place Giants, knocking off the Phil- adelphia Phillies twice 16-5 and 5-0. The Cardinals moved past the Phillies into sixth place, only ‘a against two losses with his three game and a half out of the first division as Harvey Haddix turned in his fifth success and rookie Lar- ry Jackson his third. Wynn, sidelined the first three weeks of the season because of sickness, notched his 10th triumph hitter against the Yankees. Ralph Kiner’s 10th homer of the season and his first at Yankee Stadium, was all he needed. Kiner now has 361 homers which ties him with Joe DiMaggio for sixth place among the all-time home run lead- * * « The Red Sox advanced to with- in a game of the fourth place Ti- gers with their two triumphs over Chricago. Willard Nixon won his own game in the opener with a bases-loaded double in the eighth that broke up a 2-2 dead- lock, Jackie Jensen took charge in the second game, driving in three runs with his 15th homer and two singles. Southpaw Alex Kellner turned in a brilliant one-hitter and drove in the only run in the Athletics’ 1-0 - a | ial Pontiac Press Phete STATE OPEN CHAMPION — Here's the new Michigan Open cham- pion. Franklin Hills’ Wally Burkemo fired a 70-67—137, plus his pre- vious 142 (279 final) total to grab his 2nd state open crown Sunday at Washtenaw Country Club. Runnerup was Max Evans with 286, seven strokes behind. Sowell Shatters Half- Mile Mark ‘Howell Winner BOULDER, Colo (UP) — Pitts- burgh’s Arnie Sowell, only 20, can run the half-mile faster than any} other American, but he had to. run one uNder the world’s record at a mile above sea level to prove it. The young Pittsburgh Univer- sity junior, despite the fact that the Air Force's Parry O’Brien was the only double winner, car- ried off high individual honors at the National AAU track and field championships here Satur- day, Sowell ran the 880-yard race so fast he attracted four also-rans over with him in faster times than had ever been clocked in an AAU meet, Sowell himself ran the distance in 1:47.6, a full second under the official world record held jointly by Mal Whitfield of the United States and Gunnar Nielsen = Den- mark. Sowell made it clear that he was the best half-miler in the United States when Lonnie Spurrier of the Air Force, who has an unofficial 1:47.5 to his credit, ran fifth. of Feature in Taylor Benefit Benny Howell of Pontiac won the 30-lap feature race of the Tommy Taylor benefit racing program at the Gay-Day Speedway Sunday. Chuck Partello was 2nd and Dorris Sanders 3rd, as Howell won his ist featufe of the season. Carm Ragatz of Waterford took the 25-lap semi-final and pursuit victors were Howell and Bill Salisbury. Winness of heat races were Ragatz, Jerry Lafner, Ed Lang, Cliff McKinney and Par. tello. The track qualifying record was bettered twice Sunday. Rusty Kelly turned in a 21.95 single lap, but Ken Schon regained the record with a 21.80 clocking. First place money in each event went to Tay- lor, the starter who was seriously injured at the track earlier this year. 2 DUAL EXHAUSTS I” We Stock a Complete Line of ED-EL-BROCK and OFFENHAUSER SPEED EQUIPMENT! We Carry a Complete Line of Hollywood Accessories, Wholesale and Retail! Motor Mart (21-123 E. Monten and up | 301; | Beverly Hanson, Fargo, N. D., | 302; Mary Lena Faulk, Thomas- Patty Is5-Time Champion in West Tourney Miss Berg Cards 292 to Beat Crocker, Suggs by 2 Strokes MADISON, Wis. uh—Patty Berg | outclassed a fine field yesterday | | to become the Women’s Western | Open golf tournament's Ist five- | time champion. | On the final day of the t3-nete | grind of medal play which be- | gan Thursday, Miss Berg carded | & par 73 for a total of 292. She | finished two strokes ahead of a pair of other pros, Fay Crocker | | of Uruguay and Louise Suggs of | Sea Island, Ga., who also sought her Sth crown, Miss Berg won $1,000. The run- nersup each took away $650 by splitting 2nd and 3rd place money. | Miss Berg, representing the St. | Andrews, Ill., club, began the final | 18 holes over the Maple Bluff | course with a 54-hole total of 219, | one shot ahead of the field. As usual, she was straight and | long off the tees and had nine single-putt greens and five birdies. She succeeds Betty Jameson of San Antonio, Tex., who finished | 14th among the pros with 311, good | for $100. Wiffi Smith of St. Clair, Mich., led the amateurs with 305. Other scores, all pro: Mickey Wright, La Jolla, Calif., 297; Mar- | lene Bauer, Sarasota, Fla., 299; Betsy Rawls, Spartansburg, ‘Ss. Cc. Betty Hicks, Chicago, 301; ville, Ga., 303. | for today and Tuesday are as fol- Solunar Tables By JOHN ALDEN KNIGHT According to the solunar tables, | calculated for this area by John Alden Knight, best fishing times | lows: AM PM. Minor ay "eg Minor Major 11:44 5:36 . 6 00 Tuesday AM M. Minor Major Minor Ma lor | 12.38 645 | : Correct power, speed, and gearing for effortless clean- ing and polishing. Ball and pin 1 bevel gears provide Ressrve Powsr for lasting service. Distributed by AUTO ELECTRIC SHOP, INC. 367 S. Seginew Tel. FE 2-9129 QUICK — DEPENDABLE — GUARANTEED COLLISION hos Collision Shop 36 W. Pike Se. FE 2-9101 See Robert Rectar. Mgr. tor Free Estimates on All Makes of Cars Ne (tstance Teo Great (within reasen) ee = $12.00 Value — Get Here’s What We Do: Inspect Freat Wheel Bearings. inspect Grease Seals. J 2 cum 3 4 F) 6 Auto Parts} SIOTTIIOL IDLE IIIIIII ITIL SS S e ig w. ‘Huron St. . PIPPI PP o Oooo eC L aL ee WHEEL ALIGNMENT AND BALANCE THE TWO FRONT WHEELS— $9795, Firestone BRAKE SPECIAL $ Remove Front Wheels and In- and Repack Check and Add Brake Fluid if FIRESTONE STORE § sa aaa ahah ht ahaha Work. Guaranteed A $3.50 Value lo ANY CAR FE 2-9251. News es a arpret more. SAI Status of Long . Spanish Yacht Race Uncertain SEBASTIAN, Spain #— What's happening in the Havana- | the only yacht to state its position. San Sebastian yacht race? Well, now, the Ticonderoga, America's entry in the 4,200-mile grind, might be -ahead and then again she might not. * * however, that the silence of Spain's ; Mare Nostrum might be a trick - ST Ne entries, : F * *¢ ¢- The Argentine Gaucho also {ts j Silent, ‘but she bas been having The escorting frigate reported,' radio. trouble, ~ * The Spanish escort vessel re- ported today the Ticonderga was ONLY G MORE DAYS TO SAVE TERMS AVAILABLE HURRY - HURRY Low AS 75¢ A WEEK So MUCH Tire at co LOW a Price SALE Firestone MOTOR KING BATTERY Firestone CHAMPIONS Drive In Comfort _ with a C-O-O-L CUSHION Hanger ® Detachable Reg. $2.69 © Holds Up to 12 Garments 29 Reg. $1.75 — SALE ——: — — 5) o> SUPER SIZE 6.00-16 SALE ] ? 95 PRICED Pive Tex—Exchonge 0 Your Old Tire ts Recappeble Champions 670-18 1475 Plus Tax—Exchange if Your Old Tire Is prance | AMAZING OFFER ON TUBELESS TIRES! Bring your present car up-to-date re- & gordiess of year & or make...without changing wheels or rims. We'll buy all the unused mileage ~ in your present mA tires when you 7 trade for NEW Firestone De Luxe Champion Tubeless. lied on Sound Tire Bodies er Your Own Tires 2 tor 1545 i SACRE SIR RE, Firestone STORES DRAPER’S SHELL |SERVICE 2805 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor. ALBU SHELL SERVICE 27775 Halstead Rd., Farmington 146 W. Huron St. 140 N. Saginaw St. LEO and JOE’S SUPER SERVICE $272 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains. | SERVICE hes FE 2-925] FE 5-2620 HAGEN’S SHELL ROCHESTER SHELL SERVICE . 205 $. Main, Rochester, : 510 West Meuron 7 ‘TAYLOR ORTONVILLE TIRE and . CHEVROLET SALES. . BATTERY SERVICE - salon cas 102 Granger Rd., Ortonville. ) ROCHETTE SHELL S. Woodward at ee h JACQUIN SHELL 4520 Highland Road, (2 ae * TWENTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE. 27, 1955_ |NICK HALIDAY Te ae WOULDN'T THAT | er EIGHT ) Bitton dos 2 HOF SCIENTIFIC GENIUS THE STREET DEPARTMENT? “The serviee said the sour cherry prospects were damaged by the May 9 freeze. The indleated crop in the north- western area is more than %, tong larger than last year but sti @ fourth smaller than the prespects are better than in the fringe areas, the service said. The central-western counties ex- pect about (he same crop as last year. : \ The service dgid the harvest is expected to start by June 30 in southwestern Michigan, a week to 10 days earlier than\ usual. HEY, I THOUGHT \OH, HE'S IN TH’ WAR ow ALL THE YOUNG }100..MERCHANT /” ..PROBABLY BE “ih MEN WERE OFF / MARINE! HE’S { ON HIS WAY BACK } P70 war! CAPTAIN OF A \ OTH’ FRONT IN ie TWO ( TAUNTS (a ~ \ T'll tell you how it happened if you promise not to laugh — BOARDING HOUSE . WE ~ A YOU'RE Ae EAST dS , | : QUS THAT E LGOT Tr eee i DECORATE [A 4A TIP ON TODAY ~~ Zh w ANT YOU WITH BY THE TIME HE 7G RROF THAT DECANTER 1A WREATH }7:60T AROUND THE | wl OF A HOME STRETCH “THE ya ee iC 5, ( BROCCOLI) | WAS SUBDIVIDED } aBaehone ae wm CLYDE -1\ INTO APARTMENT ONLY WITH te Ye SITES / : By Ernie Bushmiller 147.“ Hou \ Py * “ast 7 one | ‘md | Be eo Beeury || WHAT ARE vou \* MPIRE | _— un THAT AUT — UMPIR . NG. qo CX oneYy Lc VN Hees Os Se, Oe OPERATOR GOING TO.BE 3 a | BE_A FIREMAN WHEN YOU GET y— (> = , WHEN I GROW UP SSN), g wv » FA Vy | 33 Y, } ya aT Ay uu t . eC y G 4 ) % %* : HA ~~ ‘ } Cunt; 2, 0 of A 8 —— e =i } ‘tugs YI , ~— & A, H) { o/h b= | 0 ‘0 , ! fy >= ’ PN USHA LA Eee yuae-2% = RRR ni D . a 1 WS CAPTAIN EASY By Lesle Teraer — 2a iz ih Mi LOOK.PAL..YOU'RE IN THE WAY, ANING THAT-MIS. YOU'RE BLUFFING! mM (Sut HE L TIA WARNING You “Sg AND YOU KNOW TOO MUCH . TWE! YOUVE BEEN DO YOU THINK fl a 5-27 { DID SOLVE AGASYoeP pelren. ABOUT US NOW... 5 EXPOSED TO A DANGEROUS TAKE YOUR O86 by RES Servion, te. 7. Mh. Reg, GS. Put On. ONE, ANYWAY = j KEEP AWAY FROM THAT ( i BE TOO LATS F Mvecen pOnD bemenel GIVE ME A CHANCE TO CON- OUT OUR WAY VINCE YOU,OR—— ALREADY! BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES AWE WG | woody You = [fee ]\S BAREW | AGREE .YOUR F 1M HAROW WwW THE : iz HOLDING = | MASESTY , THAT MOOD FOR tl . WIS OWN! 7 PRINCE WILLIAM : A LETTER FORE | -——] 1S CARRYING HIS You eR NAL Y HAMLET BIT TOO || . Copr. 1958 by NEA Service, Ine. T.M. Reg. U. SF GRANDMA a (HURRY, RUN. | /GOLLY, WHY DO WE NEED | ae AN’ GET YOUR | | THESE'T’ GO FOR A WALK = | IN TH’ COUNTRY, GRANDMA? 6-27 TRWILLIams La V & Pet OF “seet hEA ; LIFE'S LONGEST MINUTE - WELL, WE'LL LEAVE TH' TOY GUNS HOME, BUT... hd *I SAW ONE OUTRUN A A 200- mca By John Morris NOW SHE WANTS : You'll Find ) : OPPORTUNITIES e Every Day in the Pontiac Press Wont Ad Section Refreshing eget sdvertage oe me ony wor ; . ae tne probleme : - To Place Your : \ WANT AD A an d so DIAL FE 2-818) inexpe nsive : "E accidentally atopped a steak on her foot .... but it was frozen” > Se : se i fe ‘| \ SG * ts THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 Doldrums Fade as Wheat Jumps} CHICAGO (AP)—Doldrums dis- appeared on the Board of Trade today in the wake of Saturday's wheat grower referendum. Trad- ing was the most active in weeks. Wheat jumped nearly four cents higher on some contracts Soybeans started higher on initial strength in soyoil and meal, then settled back to around steady with Friday’s closes. Lard lost ground with the lower prices set in the live hog market. Once ac- cumulated orders were absorbed, some deliveries of wheat fell back a couple of cents in evening up ad- vance lines. * s Wheat near the end of the first hour was 14 to 2% cents higher, July $2.00!3; corn was % to 1! higher, July $1.42%; oats were % to 44 higher, July 65%, and rye was unchanged to % higher, July $1.04%. Soybeans were 14 lower to % higher, July $2.43%4, and lard was 15 to 23 cents a hundred pounds lower, July $11.82. CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, June 27 (AP) — Opening grain Wheat Oats July... .eeee 200% July . 5 66 Sep ........ 3.04 Sep .... 66 ccccves SOO% Ooe ....- .e% Mar ....-.., 204% Mar oe - 70% May coos LOT Rye duly .. ves 108% July cooee 143% Beep coos 1.07 Sep ano LH Dee oi sccs: 11) Dec 133% Mar 118 Mar oe 1.36% Lard July 1197 Sep 12 3 Less than 20 per cent of all American workmen employed in manufacturing industries are in plants that have more than 2,500 | on their payrolls. CASH IN ON YOUR FORD DEALERS SALE BB vcicsoere J CY OWENS 147 8. Saginaw FE 5-4101 Your Watch © Adjusted ¢ 4° © Cleaned © Regulated Expansion Watch Bands S95 Georges-Newports Jewelry Dept Special! "NEISNER’S: Shoe Repair Department INSURANCE Is Our Business THATCHER PATTERSON G& WERNET 609 a aa Bank Bidg. 2-9224 | MARKETS | Produce pga PRODUCE ‘ DETROIT. June 37 (UP) — Wholesale rices of no i grade om the AT por armers’ markets as reported the Bureau of Markets: Pruits: Apgice, Northern Spy, 3.25-3.75 bu; Steele's Red, 2.78-3.25 bu. Cherries, sweet, tas 16-qt case; sour, 5.00-6.06 Ves peri Lentaniog: A » _1.25-1.78 dos ‘be Beets, Aspetiqus, 1 28- Beans, — round, 3.50-400 bu; green, on. 28-2.%5 bu; wax vind bu. Brocesli, 100-150 bu * Carrots, 135 3.00 dos. behs. Cucumbers, be! Squash. summer, pk; itelies. 1.50-1.75 %-bu. To- matoes, hothouse, 450-5.00 14-Ib bskt; outéoes. 4.00-4.50 pk bskt. Turnips, 1.60- 128 doz behe moe ck Cabbage, 190-1.50 bu. Collard, 150 bu r . 50 bu Lettuce Bibb, 75-100 pk head, -3 78 3-doz crate; head t 86-175 bu; 85-100 bu. Romaine, 15- ue bu. CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO June’ 27 (AP)—Potatoes: arrivals 348: om track 603; total US. ; shipments Saturday 341, Saturday 406 and Sunday 52, supplies moderate, demand moderate and market steady with firm undertone for best whites. Carlot track sales: California long whites $3.60, fair to generally good condition $3.40-3 50. bakers $4.35, round reds $3.50-3 75; Arizona round reds §3.10- unwashed Poultry DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, June 27 (AP)—Prices paid prime heavy heifers held above 24.00; most good to high choice heifers 19.00- 22.50; utility and commercial cows 11 00- 14.00; canners and cutters 9.00-12.00 utility and commercial bulls 15.06- 16.50: and chaince vealers 19.00-24.00; a few prime also 24.00; cull to commercial grades 11.00-19 06; = load of medium 800 Ib feeding steers 18. 25. Salable sheep 1.000. market generally steady on all classes; good and ehioce spring lambs 80-90 Tb 22.00-23 00: cull to good spring lambs 16 00-17 50; three decks good and cheice shorn lambs No. 1 pelts | 18,28: cull to choice slaughter ewes 3.50- hed 00 Glenda Borknord Pion: Wedding in August WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—Mr. and Mrs. Raymond :L. Burkhardt have announced the engagement of their daughter, Glenda, to Richard Oldenburg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis F. Oldenburg of Highland. An August wedding is planned by the couple. HOME HUNTING? See the Clas- sified ads in The Pontiac Press to save time, energy, travel-costs. 380: North Caroling round whites $4 25° FOR SERVICE 807 INSURANCE. Maynard Johnson See or Call General Insurance } } j 1 Bank fF S45e8) ‘Community Nat epaye Prices Mixed NEW YORK #® — Share prices were mixed in early trading in the stock market today, Generally, the steels, motors, and electrical equipments were lower and other groups irregular, Turn- over was on the light side. Ten ‘thousand shares of Butler Brothers traded at 3% up %. Standard Oil (NJ) advanced a point at 129 on 3,000 shares. Bethiehem Steel opened off more than a point but recovered some of the loss, Three-thousand Royal Dutch changed hands at 79% up %. Ra- dio Corp. dipped 3.8 to 51% on 1,700 shares. Two-thousand U. 8. Steel traded eff ‘% at 50%, Bul- lard advanced % to 3544 on 1,200 shares, Higher were. American News, Kennecott, Socony Mobil and Cal- lahan Zinc. Lower were Reming- ton Rand, General Electric, and International Telephone. On Friday, the market dectined | moderately, with the Associated | Press average of 60 stocks closing | at 172.50,‘ just 30 cents below the record high. New York Stocks BURN MORTGAGE — Sunday, members of St. Trinity Lutheran to right: Larry Hannewald, Pastor William Dick. Ralph C. Cause, Richard Schwab, STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK, June 27 — Compiled by The Associated Press. 0 15 15 60 Indust Rails Util Stocks —.6 1 ik! 2 Net change.... : oF : => Noon, today 2766 138.1 73.2 172 Prev. day ...,. 237.2 1389 3.1 172.5 Week ago ..... 234.7 1365 135 171.2 Month ago o- 223.5 1345 723 164.9 Year ago +. 175.0 95.1 60.3 1282 1955 high ., 237.2 139.1 735 172.8 lo 31 114.9 7.2 146.8 1984 high 211.9 123.0 683 155.2 1654 low ...... 143.4 778 56.4 108.0 fa te STOCKS | J. Nephitr, Co.) Pigures atea? decimal points are etghths | High w ae “| Baldwin Rubber ....... i73 17.2 Gerity-Michigan® ..,. 3 34 asco ca aseecess 27 33 Rudy Ns gotten 3100 3.3 wissicie ee Ll 1.3 ison Arrested for California Thefts HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. (INS)—Howard Jay @ernard, 30, held in connection with a kidnap car theft and armed robbery in Roseville, Mich., last February, today faced arraignment in Cali- fornia Federal Court for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. | Trombley, yesterday, is being taken from the Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac, to Riverside Mortuary, Mt. Ver- non, N. Y.. where service and bur- ial will be held. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs, George Garfunkel. Mrs. Mary Trombley UTICA—Services for Mrs. Mary 74, who died Friday night at the home of her son, Jo- {seph Trombley, St. Clair Shores, will be at 9 a.m. Tuesday from the Schwarzkoff-Milliken Funeral Home and at 9:30 a.m. at the St. Lawrence Catholic Church, Utica. Burial will be in St. Peter Ceme- tery, Mount Clemens. Rosary will be recited at 8:30 this evening at the funeral home. Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Rieck of Utica; her son, Joseph. St. Clair Shores; three sis- ters, Mrs. Lena Burger. of Carson- ville, Mrs.. Louise Lord, of Port Huron. and Mrs. Ida Cook, of Peck; five grandchildren and six great- grandchildren. Plan June Party be swimming and other recreation, with Vesped. service at 5 p.m. Music for Patients WALLED LAKE—Russ Carlisle | on Nov. 27, 1880. the son of- Solo- | ary Alliance will be the Rev. W. G. | lion —— r pound feb Detroit for No 1 quality | ‘Late Morning Quotations) Church on Ayburn Ave. gathered to mark a fina] victory in the building ve poultry up to a.m ; 2 : | Heavy hens 28, light hens 20: “heavy | Adame Ee .... c — ban es, | of their church. Participating in the burning of the mortgage were, left brotiers or fryers (2%-3% tbs': Whites | ai, meduc .... 36 Jones & L.... 416 30-32, gray crosses 31-32, Barred Rocks Alleg L 8t "$64 Kelsey May.. * 345 : | 33: capomettes (4 tb aver) 34 18 Ibs aver) lied Ch 1183 Kennecott” ...1173 A . 30-29 veeder hen turkeys 32. breeder | giited Strs.... 59 Kimd Cik..... 661 Justice Douglas ) Allis Chal .... 73.5 Kresge 68 29.1 | . Market quiet with light receipts ample. 6 s | undertone steady on Rena barely seedy | em Ant"... {Se Oa: 8 Urges Optimism ryers and ca nee g Pp | ponette fim alin 77 31 p Ee 193 Sextus Johnson CHICAGO POULTRY Am Cyan... 616 Lockh Airc.... 49 (R di Sextus Johnson, 64, of 494 N Am Ges & El 445 4 Hegaraing sia ene: eee oe ae tie poultry Am M & Péy 316 poet Ga Ls! Johnson Ave., died today after a | 183 coope, 44.621 Ibs): £0. paving prices | Am wots... bry Lorillard 3}4| TOKYO -U-S, Supreme Court | year’s illness. i dower to 1 hither heavy hens 34-28; |se d 287 Mack Trk ./ 31.6 He w born in Wilcox, P light hems 175-19 brotiers or fryers 29. | Am Rad $24 Marsh Fieldy.. 366) Justice William O. Douglas, em- as yo 31, Old roosters 12-12$ capaneties 34-36 4m gti Pa 333 Martin Gl... 373 Aug. 26, 1890, the son of Joannes ee | am Tel & Ter 1925 MSI eg ott | barking on a tour that will include and Telda Johnson | DETROIT FGGS | Am Tob- 84 i . raGs : Mid gyi Pd 4 ~=Soviet Russia, said- today Ameri- DETROIT June 27 (AP)—Exes fod | Anad'Gop 283 Mongén Ch...141 = He attended schools In Sweden, | Detroit. cases included, federal state | anae W & C604 Ment Werd o cans should be optimistic about! ang came here from Wilcox nine grades i tor 3 : Whites—Grade A jumbo 51-53 weighted armen ace c aA nore neo! 2 ; Asia. years ago. He was a member of average S1's, large 43-47 wtd avg. 45, | otorola ‘ 7 f medium 41-42 wtd avg 41% small 32- | Seed Dry © .. 333 asueller Br... 364 The picture is much more) the Merchant Marine during 39 wid eve 33 o— B large cy | Atl Refin 391 ereny ©? tee rete} cheerful than we often get reading| Werld War I and was last em- | rowns—GOraede umbo 48-56 wid. ave e o. : ( | 49, large 43-45 wtd avg 43's, medium | Avec Mig |... 64 Nat Cash A. a American newspapers," he told the| Ployed at Fisher Body. | 41, smal! 32: grade B area +o. grade C | Bald Lima 44 at 9 Janie Ja -America Soci ** Asi i | | lerse 33-34 wid avg Balt & Oh |... 486 Net Gyps . 492 pan rica Society. “Asia has Surviving are a sister and broth- Seanalhte Gied! ove 15 i mut .... 4 fer feewecons fe Ca) LS long way in the 10 years! er, Mrs. Joseph C. Quatty of Or- ‘ommercially graded ndix Av * 3 s tee hd Whites—QGrade A extra large 4!'»-32, | Benguet ...... 12 Nat Thea - 113 since World War II. tonville, and Earle Johnson _ of | large Rapes 42, medium 37-38 grade B | se — ofa phd rod Wot a In an interview, he suggested | Drayton Plains. iarge : ng r en A ' A “| Browns—-Orade A extra larse 42-43 | Bohp atom ca] pp Noel ys that as part of an Asian settlement, The body is at the Brace-Smith } large 39')-414:, medium 37 rade B jon rs or ee : . | ? inet ee rey Ree tRette. at) a permanent Chinese teat onthe | Funeral Home ee org Warn.... vor : Nes unc i i Bri Mf 213) Nws 44) . | CWICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS Rist My. le De on’. 32 \ to Some other Asian nation. ‘Edward J. MacDonald Stas sets serena - Butter aes ir ae Oliver Sg . wal s e e | steady receipts o wholesale bi urroughs oO ni Gl. .1244 | tng pr'-es unchanged 93 score Ans 75 Calem & 13 Pas A w hes . 194! He said the seat -held by Na-| Edward J MacDonald, 74, of 158 | 927 A 8478 90 B 845: 88 C 525. cars’ Campbd Wy 373 Panh EPL... 136 B88: oc 835 : cas Oy 163 Hold AER tionalist China could rotate or be! Alice St., died here yesterday after ‘ Rens em reeetpts is 673s prnolesale Cte Pee 38 Parke De... a) assigned to India, Pakistan or 2s | a lengthy illness: uying rices o ower aree . Pp R . whites 60-699 per cent A's 37 mixed, Carrier Cp... 561 Pepsi Cola.... 235) pan—if and when.the latter is ad- He was born in Ontario, Canada, a: careers =. oe standards ey on a 240 as Pheips D 86.3 mitted. es ; ehecks 31, current recet er Trac..., § 1 - 435 : es | Celanese. 341 Pullip. Sar 4 |, He said the West should reach | man and Elizabeth Patterson Mac- | livestock | Cert-teed ey Pail | Pet - EN) ‘an amicable political settlement’’| Donald. He married Ethel Home | Chee & On : S43 Broctlas 97.3 With Red China ‘“‘leading to event-| in Ishpeming in 1908. | au DETROIT LIVESTOCK | Chrysler a yale” : Wer | ual recognition by the United Na- He came here from Soo 46 years einBTROIT. June $7 (AP)—Hoge rel Cites Ore cs et Rem Rend... oat | Cone ago and was last employed in the | nd arket no estabiishe soe | Se astteae reek . Cluctt pea. 1: «2a Reo Melging «- 135) Douglas plans to enter Russia | Service dept., at General Motors | | Cattle—Salable 3000 Largely a Gola Pann. lsy Reyn Met. -10¢ | from Iran and stay there six, Truck and Coach. | slaughter steer and heifer rum: about 25 Rey Tod B. 4 a per cent receipt cows. run includes asl Ard 3 RKO Picty.. 94) weeks. s « 6 Surviving are two daughters and | around 180 stockers and feede's: siaugh- Consym Pw. 47 Beck Spe ©. Be ,a son, Mrs. John Braid and Harold | ter steers and yearlings opening slow f 0 Safeway SO “ , , ; steady to 25 cents lower. imited outlet pss , oe “ ra 4 Bt Jos Lead... 534 I have been trying for five MacDonald both of Pontiac and for weighks over 1.180 Ib: heifers slow. Cont Bak 33.6 8t Re ee . are years to get in just to see it.’ he, Mrs. George Neikirk of Berklely. | | weak: cows unevenly 50-78 cents lower. Cont C1 824 Scovil | bulls about steady; stockers and feed- Cont Mant 19@ Seab at RR... m3 | sald. Other survivors are a eeother| jers about steady, shout 2 loads high Cont Ot . & Sears Roeb... | f j illic choice fed steers early 2375 most Copner Rng 49.3 ®hel!l Oil...... e477) He leaves tomorrow for Manila | and two sisters, William MacDon. | sales good and cholee fed steers 2000-| Corn Pd $f) Sineees sce route to Calcutta, India, where| ald and Mrs. Florence Peffers| 23.00; some vtility and ood steers Cruc Bt! .. #467 Sinclair Sele 1700-1900: bulk utility and low com-/| Curtiss Wr 194 Socony Voc... 50.7 | he will lecture 10 days before pro-| both of the Soo and Anne MacDon- | mercial cows 1200-13 75: few high com | Bis Eas 33 foe tee 23 ceeding to Russia. ald of Detroit. mercial cows up to 15.00 or above. can- * ag a 2 ou Fiacsicewe ~ : ’ ners and cvters unevenly 1000-1200; | Doug Airc ., 67 Sperry 89 Funeral will be Wednesday at 3 come mixed cutter and utility cows | Pet Soon oat oe corp) Peas D th p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral 12 light weight canners down to 9 00 tee . Fi ee early sales ueinty ana poner bulls | Fagie P ..» 36 Std Of] Ind.... 534 ounty ea § Home. Burial will be in White 1400-17.00: early sales good and chotce| East Air L.... 56 Std Ol] NJ....128.2 : around 426-836 Ib stockers and feeders | rl Kod. SF id Ol OB -::: Ray N. Parker of the First Church of Christ Scien- 21 00 . eee A . 3 A Calree—Salable 480 carly sales vealers| Emer Rad.” 184 gtude-Pack ... 101| FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP —| tist, officiating. ul ste u e ¢ ully e > | listied: high choice and prime veelers | | bsorlena ae otter es ee Service for Roy N. Parker, 40. of | | very searce: early sales good and low | pPairh Mor” ‘ . 2 i , choice 1900-25.00; some utility end | rresione. i oe ae eee le 1505 Parker Rd.. will be held at | Debra Ann Rae | commercial 1400-1900; few culls 4OWD | Preeport Sul... 868 Tex G Bul... 4431/2 P-M. Wednesday from Farming- ae oeoee labie 300. No early saies [Sen mee tos Sew Ale 4H ton” Methodist Church. Burial will! Service for Debra Ann Rae, 20- 4 " ae q ran ee y asa Ble... $4.1 Transamer 453, be in Oakwood Cemetery under | Months-old daughter of Mr. ‘and | CHICAGO LIVESTOCK 1Gen Motars.. 1081 Ondntwg °°: 284 | the direction of Thayer Funeral | Mrs. Lyle L. Rae of 75 Tregent. onic a a 2. St ee tf 468 Un Carttas. .-1092 | Home. will be held at 12 noon Tuesday e = en 4 n ac... : 7 $0 lower on all weights butchers and | Gen $6.4 Unit air Lin. 061| Mr. Parker, a lifetime resident | in the Farmer Snover Funeral eee “ani aamona | Gen Tire...... 2 Ot dire, «Gg | 0f the township, died Friday at Home, with the Rev. E. C. Swan- butchers mainly an illette 2 in Cp... . ; % above om mixed choice No. 1 and #8 un- | G | Gillette 12 it Pruit .... $9.4 Lusk, Wyoming, after being struck a os. Partat will be in | der 220 &, a deck choice No. 1's Goebel Br... 16° - 36 j i awa " L 21 28; most, 230-270, Te 1900-20 00; a few | Goodrich ce 606 USLines ....: 293 | by lightning. ae ark Cem oad ; 280-300 Ib 18.00-19.00; a few lots mostly | war oes s23a US = $} Surviving are his widow, Ellen; oe ra, who was in Twooele, choice No. 3's 325-380 Ib 1650-1750; a onne sige. So. .. hi tah. Oct s Geck choice No. 3's around 425 Ib at |Gt No Ry... 424 US Smelt pf...6s |a daughter, Diana as home; his i Petia it 1953, died Saturday 14.73; most sows under 400 Ib 14 78-17.%8: |oe weet 8.... 331 = ater aaa father, James D. Parker; three | in Pontiac General Hospital after 1 : | Gre nd ... 18.6 cecal ooeoe8 fp ta a8 15; Be up |Gull oll..//) ga6 US Tob ...... 191| brothers, S. William of Farming- four weeks of illness. | | *© eee I a ou (se 13 28 cal an Mayes Mi... 78 — ase ‘ton, the Rev. Dean W. of Vassar,/ She is survived by her parents jalable catt salable calves ers. IOC. 0'6 @ 4 : | yearlings and steers average good and | Holland F.... 15 Warn B Pic 30.3 | the Rev. J. Douglas of Detroit: | and her grandparents, Mr. and better u pto around 1,190 Ib fairly ac- | Homestk .... 394 W Va Pulp 45.1 and two sisters, Mrs. Alice Ed- Mrs. George W. Rae of Auburn | tive, steady: comparable grade over 1.100 Hooker El..... 440 West Un Tel 25.4, E Heights low good and below all weights steady | Houd-Her .,,. 135 Westg A Bk .. 287!) wards and Mrs. Edith Stone, both ae Ib steers siow steady to weak: steers | Ul Cent ... 6TH Westg Fi 687 {F to $0 higher: heifers steady; early trade , ieene Pa ... 4 we et é 414 0 armington. : Ri h d S ith ows -steady to 25 lower: bulls and niand 8t 794 ison ° ; | vealers (ully steady; stockers and feeders | fete ies enor 73 seh EI Tes A 3 ss Ira Garfunkel Jnicnar mi | | id 1,190 Ib, In arv a ooiwor z a} . . = = , 7 j leeace ceamitoas {oads prime. 1.050-1.400 [int Nick 71.4 Young 8 & Wzi3! BERKLEY—Ira Garfunkel, 25,| After an illness of about 6) |b steers 2450: most choice and prime | Int Paper...111 = Young Sh & T 826) of 1176 West Blvd., Berkley, who| months, Richard Smith, 81, died | steers 2150-2490, commercial to low | Int Tel & Tei.. 27.4 (nt Bus Mach 422 ~ cs ' : staid s s Bee e choice steers 17 .50-21.25; a few loads was killed in a sports car crash/in Grants Pass, Ore., General Hospital at 7:30 Saturday morn- ing. Smith (Little Dickie) born in ‘Beptember, 1874, was a former Pontiac resident. While living in Pontiac he was employed for a number of vears by O. J. Beau- dette and Fisher Body. His wife died some years ago. He is survived by two children: Mrs. Louis C. Matz of Grants | Pass, Oregon, and Rev. George R. Smith of Oxford. Mr. Smith is also survived by 7 grandchildren. The funeral was held today, with burial at Granite Hill Cemetery in Grants Pass. tint Chester R. Rydman Chester Robert Rydman, 61, of | 23 Myrtle Court, died Saturday at his home after six months of ill- ness. . Born Aug. 28, 1893, in Toledo, Ohio, he was the son of Edward W. and Mary McDoogle Rydman. Mr. Rydman came to Pontiac 15 years ago and was a member of St. Vin- cent de Paul Church here. A ser- geant in World War I, he was last and Hugh Rydman of Toledo and Edward of . (Mich.) Service will be Sold at 9:30 a.m. in St. Vincent de Paul mah, idirectors of the Higbie Manufac- | payable Oct. 3, to stockholders of | | j REV. W. G. WESTON Guest speaker each evening this | meeting of Christian and Mission- | Weston. The services are being | held at 7 p.m. The tent is located | at the site where the new church | will be built, N. _ Cass Lake Rd. | at M59. Lodge Calendar To all members of Pontiac Aerie #1230 P.O. E. Please be notified that the Ladies’ Auxiliary will serve dinner to our paid up mem- | bers Sunday, June 26th, at 2 p. m in the Pathers Day. News in Brief Richard C. Fitzpatrick, 21, of 124 y Day Ave., pleaded not guilty | to driving under the influence of A. E. Mallett, secre- —Ad | liquor today before West Bloom- | ‘field Township Justice Willis D. reel Examination was set for July 7 James Waddell, of 162 E. Pike St., reported that his red and white | bicycle was stolen from the front yard of his home sometime Satur- | day night or Sunday morning, Pon- | ‘Canadian Parts Firm tiac Police said. Four tires and tubes valueg at $60 were taken from his car while | it was parked at his home, Lester | Wright, of 803 Oakland Ave., told | | Pontiac Police Saturday. Home rummage sale Tues., June | 10:00 am. 93 E. Huron —Adv if your friend's in jail and needs | bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031. : —Adv. To buy or sell in Waterford, Drayton Plains or Clarkston area see White Bros. Real Estate. OR 3-7118. ‘ —Adv. Dividend Payments Given by Higbie ROCHESTER — The board of turing Company declared a quar- terly 15c cash dividend plus a 10c per share year-end extra on the $1.00 common stock of the corpora- tion. The dividend is payable Aug. 1 to stockholders of record July 15, 1955. At the same meeting, the board also declared the regular quarterly dividend of 12'2 cents per share on the 5 per cent preferred stock, record September 15, 1955. The Board also approved a half million dollar plant expansion pro- gram for the company’s Avon Tube Division at Rochester, this program to be completed within the next year. It is not expected that any additional borrowing will be required for this program. County | Calendar Wate Calvary epeit Satonton ship meting will B.. Sie: x) Tuesday im the 870 Center Bt, Mr. i Mrq: Charles ae will be hosts Gospel Fellowship Class of Waterford Community Church at bust- ing and picnic supper Tuesday i be found to encourage appointees | service, noting that ‘“‘during the| | fense secretariats has ranged from | , 16 months for under and assistant Hoover Urges Law Revisions Claims Policy Makers, Should Be Permitted | | to Keep Stockholdings WASHINGTON U—The Hoover | Commission recommends changing | the law which requires policy-mak- ing government officials to divest | themselves of corporation stock- holdings. * Ca * This was one of a set of recom: | mendations in a report yesterday | setting forth ideas for improve- | ments in Defense Department ad- | ministration and business methods | |—improvements which the com- | week, except Saturday, at the tent | mision said could result in annual | savings of as much ag two bil- | Ld 2 The group ‘ eaated by ex-Presi- dent Herbert Hoover also consid- ered some of the department's jot ther a * One of them i the difficulty in | Pee high-salaried business ex- | ecutives to -take comparatively low-salaried government jobs and at the same time to dispose of | stock in their companies. That @as | a decision Charles FE. Wilson. | | present secretary of defense and Aerie Home in honor of | former General Motors Corp. pres- ident, had to make when he came to the Pentagon. ® * * The commission said ways must to remain longer in government past decade, the average length of service of members of the de- | secretaries, to 22 months for sec- retaries.’’ It recommended higher salaries as one way. Lyon, Inc., Buys Out Controlling interest in the Cana- dian Motor Lamp Co., Ltd., was purchased by Lyon, Inc., at the | final meeting of the old board ot directors held in the company of- fices in Windsor. Ont., last week. according to an announcement by | George A. Lyon Jr.. president of | the purchasing company. = Ld oT New board members include: George A. Lyon Jr., of Birming- ham, elected chairman of the board: Harry J. Warner, re-elected president; Robert M. Hodgson. also of Birminghary. vice presi- dent, and Nixon T. Berry, of To- ronto, Canadian counsel for Lyon. s e Retiring are Robert T. Herte- gen. of Grosse Pointe. former chairman of the board: James Ar- mer. of Toronto, former vice presi- dent; and Leonard O. Zick of Kala- mazoo, a former board member. * * * The Canadian Motor Lamp Co., Ltd., with offices and plant in Windsor, Ont., manufactures auto- mobile head lamps, Lyon wheel covers, hub caps and die castings. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Por addition to the Oakland County Board of Education Building located st 1035 North Telegraph Road. Pontiac, Michigan. The Board of Auditors ot Oakland County Michigan will receive Sealed bids for the above mentioned addition unt! 10 a.m astern Standard Time, on July Sth, 1955 = Proposais' wii) be received and pub- itely read aloud at the o— County Board of Auditors Office, 5 No. 1 Lafayette Street, Ponties. Michigan ehanical shall include ail trades. atiatactory” pert eomaaeee labor tad mate- sa rial a the full amount of the tnd the ¥. W. Dodge: Plans and > Since vow Mr and Mr to furnish | Chapel. / i state at the Huntecn Punera om: ANDOCE. CK. JUNE 9% 2530 Silverside, Mrs officiating Mount Park. Mr | moses will He in state at the Fu- _heral Home : PoReER pune vibes, ROY W |, DRBRA ANN, beloved infant daughter, of rie Leon and Daisy Rae. be he'd at 12 noon Tuesday, June from the Parmer-Anover Puneral Home with Rev. BC. officd=tine ——) im Ot. _tewa Park —_ RYDMAN, JON® 25. 1036, CH Robert, 23 Myrtle Ct.. 1; beloved husband of Mrs Gertrude Rvdman dear tether of Mrs. Corwin Brendt. Mrs. LaMar Ty- ack and James Rydre brother of Emmett, Edward Rvdman will be held Tuesday, June 28. at 930 am. st Bt. Vincent de jl wd Church with Mauri Vervaer officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Military serv- fee at graveside. Recitation of the Rosary will be this evening ,et 8 o'clo-® at the Parmer-Snover Funeral | Home * Card of Thanks ae. aa WE wish TO . TPANE OUR f~ende petehberg ant retetives, Pastor Anderson yf Christ Luth- eran Church. Donaldson-Johns Fu- neral Home the staff In Memoriam 2 ae IN LOVING MEMORY OF balers lard Hall who wgeeet a" 4 years ago today June A light is from our household a "voles fg vacant tn our home, Which never can be filled Some may think you sre Badly missed grandchildren IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR dear sister. Edith Chidester. — passed away one vear aco day Tt ts lonesome here without vou, And sad and wearv the way: Life has r- the same, were sone away Ras an end Mr. tN LOV Chidester, who passed away June a7, 1 ‘ . 1954. Do not ask me {ff I miss her, 1 see Her smiling face. For she left me —o- eer thing por neighbors. for ibe! eaoae' fc ‘during the tliness =| deat wife, vee Gerard. Special anks to Fal Rademacher for his cases words. Roy Gerard The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS _DIAL FE 2-8181 trom 8 a.m, to § p.m. All errors should be rted immediately. the error. tions are made be sure to your “kilt: nae ‘No edjuctments will be given without tt. rit 23535 we ye _THE PONTIAC | PRESS, “MONDAY, JU VE 27, 1955 CeaeneaE FUNERAL HOME Ambulance er Motor Monuments 4A BUY DIRECT AND 8AVE Granite & Marbie cnet Rebert J. & oars E oe , 268 _Oakiand Help Wanted Male 6 aemetant ope’ FOR sons - work for a good man EM 43-3160 from 6 to 8 eves. MIDWEST JOBS FOR’ MEN Semi-skilled ™ achinist $343 P'umbers cocvene. $400 vournevmen, al} Woes aecuencs $ss3 College Grad. serene, 64600 Bales Bap ...... ses esee $300 OPEN SATURDAY TILL 2 Ft: "Midwest Employment. 106 Pontiac State Bank Bide. PE_5-9227 PORTER FOR NEW CAR SHOW room. Keller Koch. 479 8. Wood- ward. Birmingham. PARKING ATTENDANTS. DAY K AY WOR! 16 and over Must be good driv- ers. Apply 5®@ Wayne. ogg od lots and soe S high taduate, Character and sent € advancement —_— hag Fees 6t. betwen 3 p.m ‘aos you ae ane Fane: "ACCOUNT ADJUSTER Excellent opportunity for advance- ment with a national automobile finance company Must be a hich schoo! empio references ac- couse Castes Lanne oe oar with ood for 8 per cent. $900 Hatchery Rd. Bakery Route Salesmen YOU WANT STEADY EMPLOY- ESTAS z GooD Ly rr. VACATIONS AT IBAKERY AGENCY TO 10 AM. OR 6 OR NE FE 24617 DURING THESE HOURS. MILLS BAKERY Cleaner and Spotter New air conditioned Btr- or Cleaners. 1 8. Wood- 5 1 OR COU AN. — cal). M1 4-4435 aft- er 4. GaRPENTERS MUST BE UNION. 45568 CRANE OPERATOR. PE }-7179 Comb, Bumper & Painter Good pay po Oe! 666 8. Woodward, a7 +3410 €xi - EXPERIENCED WOOL , PRESSER. boss Walkers Cleaners, Lk EXPENtERCED BUMPER cues painter, car collision Auto Body Service. iss Grenane Lake. - La! 2001 you with a panel — ery car With expenses valid. tomers are served once paths 3 weeks. Our semi-trailer delivers weekly load direct to your home If vou are married age 24 to @ Shoe foes with good Romig relerence ay ow Atnut ‘Paibo_ Betton DESIONERS Leal and ed engineers ....... t $450 sachiee ' $400 $780 8288 $283 sachin: qneraic -¥odo pattern maker nelle Woot working instructor Filling statior att rvaiel = whe ae “BOND. 73 *MPLOY MENT B-1 BIKE R BLDG, ee ee PE 4 EXPERIENCED AUTO. MECHAN- ie for new and used cars ont pe cane e Pm Cark- ner Stedebaker “BS. Wood. ward, MI 43410 EXPERIENCED RETAIL GRO cery manager or aasistant for small super ~ vig bi Write Pon ttee Press ox EXPERIENCED ata “AND tune-up .nan for day shift Also service station attendant w ex- perience a night shift. Good —*alary. | EXPERIENCED “4 SIDING INSTALLERS Must Mav. own equipment and car. Aoply butldine material deot Sears, Roebuck & Co. — we b4_N._ SAGINAW EXPERIENCED 6B R. erences required inece Sisters _ Market, 608 W. FARM WORK, SnaroaakY FOR coe OL. 1-6455 between 6 and FORD S SALESMAN Oxterd Ford Dealer needs 2 ar- eressive ee for small salea “rrew Best Onk ‘County See Gordon Jeffrey Oxford Ford Sales Inc. Oakland County’ . busiest Ford Dealer 1¢-' N Washington. Ox- Mich, OA 8-252 FARM WORK, TEMPORAR oof 3 pm. OL. 1-6456 between 6 GRINDER | Fy; AND. SURFACE Shep. vertime gy be = pe rienced. Orchard Lake at 1 ta 6-020), Ana I A MAN % TO x © 1% POR be nosh a hen vard office, BG “DON'T PASS UP MONEY! Sell. unneeded deal- Part Time Salesman ord Dealer tm Oxford. Michieen. eed part Oxtord Ford Sales Inc. busiest Pord shington, ust lent references. Apply 108 Wayne St. 3} to ¢ pm. only if you are _ Seeking ermanent employment SERVICE MANAGER FOR TIRE store Experte oniv Good Dav excellent coportunity for ad- vancement. Apolv in nerson oniv ™_W. Huron Market Tire Co SINGLE EXPERIENCED FARM han¢t by month “ast t 2460 pate ne chesier. Te0 RFACE grinding Ws 8 form tools. — ertime. eee Orchard tase at 13 le _Rd. MA 65223 EXPERIENCED WITH — dry clea: enly, with without truck. commis- oe Pather and Son ae $41 Joslyn. SALESMEN ESTATE To Buy-To Sel YOU BUY IT-WE" MAHAN REALTY co. REALTORS te Exchange -To Trade INSURE [T fears, Roebuck and Co. in several ualified men who are to re Excellent § starting aye and com = = se Snfy *20ntd etadects” Car APPLY IN PERSON Sears, Roebuck & ualified to one “W083 Orchard Lake Rd WANTED EXPERIENCED COOK herrea cafeteria. FE 32-6111. of : WANTED: MARRIED MAN FOR general work on modern farm near Pontiac Steady job for ex rienced -—_ hand, Good wages: odern hous premises for email family" appt ly 309 National Bidg.. Pon’ FE 44720 of & 7304. 3) WANTED |: FULL AND PART TIME -Help for Service Station. APPLY TELEGRAPH - MAPLE SERVICE 6515 Telegraph. Help Wanted Female 7 Ae OU> WOMEN To roughly trained as a ad prt jrector, Sarah entry Inc. We are seeking neat and oleasant appearing women of wood cha Pull or bart time Experience not neces- sary No investment required For interview appt's. Phone FE 4-6189. ASSISTANT TO CASHIER TO work on account. receivable and navroil| Expertence nreferable but bot necessary Must be high school graduate between 25 and 36 yrs of age Please give full information and state marital status when replying. Apply Pon- tac Press, Box 76 AUTO~ BILLER : $s Comptomete vee e241 Ewitechboard typist .. ...... $250 Bkke some typing ....,....... $260 Secretary no exp veesns- $900 Receptionist. no exp. . $260 Practical nurse $2 Xaleswomen exp. $174 (penne agen Ae are = rey au BOND E MPL “OYME Ny B-1 RIKER BLDG. BEAUTY. OPERATOR. EXPERT enced. Pull or part-time. Im- ea meee Salon, 20 E. Pike $350 co ot EMPLOYMES B-1 RIKER BLDG. PE 44469 MACKNIAC ISLAND Duncan Mines Tea room Pastry cook =O salary. room and —meals__ 8. = MI 4-635: CAREER GIRLS Executive Secretary _. rivate —— “v siieakioeues Assistant 1 Hookheeve ? api’ tenis OPEN SATU RD. AY TILL 2 P.M. Midwest Employment 40% Pontiac State “ank Bide cons OTR es VER. a CASHIERS Fat ime aa . cashiers ays ‘GEORGES-NEWPORTS % MS. Saginaw ah Cov- CURB GIRL—DAYS- Help Wanted Female 7) Help Wanted | Female 7. PP ae 3 aa “wo. EN TO srry. Bir- Wood- nt. 8. ae air conditioned m Cleaners 1 ws Birm COOK Hours 12 to @ om. Experience eri}! also salad women Morevy's Golf and Coun- try Club. 2280 Union Lake Rd. “CUSTOMER SERVICE WORK Por + 2 to Business spportunity. “Plesibie hgure per- Oppo y jexid rs per manent income. FE 2-2750 after _5 p.m. Day ere FOR ‘ORKING couple 3 i Gen trans- e cae wonees DR \- sn be capertonsed: between 21 te 3© years of age, steady posi- tion, salary. com mis- sion, chance for sdvancement. _Georges-New Wports, | 14N Saginaw DEALERS & DEMONSTRATORS bebop te — Dutechmaid wear- 7" 4 rel Geed commission. _PH. DUnkirk 1-3204. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS ing Aft dish washer. 62] W Huron. EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER tee and waitress sights. OR EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. DAY an¢ —_— please do phone Call persen vewler's Pine Pecasn 2831 Opdyke corner of Walon Rd_ EXPERIENCT" “Wa Martinell*s ol empag ebay ‘138 _Woodward. Birm MI 6-485 TXPERIENCED WAITRESS verson, Gave's Grill, Boaw! id win. | AP. e738 FULL TIME CASHIER Must furnish excellent references delivere: bw our regular route fce an exclusive territory with ~ soggy glue apely Porters > Avon cosmetics im the inity of eo Lapeer, Mich. B parvEns. STeIBY ~ DAY fo her to suit if quall- hift. Company ovaid Apply rd Lake, 3 to 6 bahar wits A p.m. ty edt) learn ete ge er own ™ e over aan and Spotter colorist job. when finished hain Pontiac Press Box 12. WTD WOMAN TO LIVE IN. Must have references. FE 2-8111, Ext. 630 before 5 Mrs. Wilson, WANT MORE MONEY? __ pane working hours arranged fit your schedule. Permits. saretaei up to Car necessary; ing and equipment. or deliveries between 8 and WOMEN Experienced teiencone — best dea’ ‘= the state. Apply be- _—— 10-12 aN Telegraph WHITE WOMAN TO CLEAN OF- 8 beddock Apply in person, 339 ‘iin FULL AND } PART time MarryQo-Round Restarant. _No phone calls 107 N. Saginaw. WOMAN TO CARE FOR INVALID, room anc beard and some Wages. R.Y 33771 8 Help Wanted OL LOL OL tal LE CASE WORKER, cusses oF accredited schoo) of social work. family or psychiatric field pre- ferred tor non-secta = famitv service agency ry schedule $3800 to $5500 depending on training and experience Stan- dard personne: practices Write Pontiac Press, B06 EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERA- tor (Male er female) for. Bir- min — Emiie’s Salon, 1020 N. _Hun' MI 47716 reaicED COOK ANS- portetion formance SL erg 241 Aubu Rd WTD . a AGED CO COUPLE Wife to cook in boarding house | Husband mrv work out Call 319 laying FE 21334 or FE ¢67 GABINET MAKER AND ate ter Kiteens © specialty rE Por full wed Lege time ao. bg _#3n ty person iy Priend) y ar me ~ YF. ee pee ii ‘ _34 W Hurod? COMP SHINGLING Gsivers Spar eaet aa boone | § LADIES TO WORK IN CREW | New or old wort Cal! OR 320mg | _D. E_ Cook. FE €4136._— a = to re vents CARPENTER AND CABINET cEM ‘ee N1 is WORE vee HOO ORS. ud ou call on housewives urives etc ea ee es) a get first order which is then| WS aew and repelr DOB Mur) jean FE 2-2340 dock. FE _2 786) CaDY OR GIRL FOR TELE- phone survey work. Days. At studto. No experience neccessary. See Mr Clark Kendaie'’s 14 8 _Saginaw : CADY FOR HOUSE WORK. GO home nites Steady 4686 ind Ave, Woodhull Lk. Take Sash- Aovly 349 Juds MIDDLEAGED | Fe CARE FOR 3 children while mother works, 6 davs a Week, call FE 23-0030 after 6pm NEEDED STENOGRAPHERS -AND. COMBINATION COMPTOMETER - OPERATORS ; AND TYPISTS MUST BE EXPERIENCED APPLY PONTIAC MTR. DIV, PERSONNEL DEPT, GLENWOOD AVE. PONTIAC, MICH. an White age 4 to 55. Days. Anply Pontiac Presa, Box 111 PaRT TIME WAITRESS CHIEP _Pontiac, FE 3-0874 or FE 4-787, 2 CLEANING LADIES OF GER- man descent Good pav steady vear around joo References re- guired. Must have own trans- pereaes Call EM 3-8342 between r GEN- : or part time. Ap loomfield Hosp. 2100 Woodward between 10 am. and Sit kK FINISHER hale air conditioned pinnt ward. Bi Cleaners. 1233 8. W Birmingham ie TIME CAN BE TURNED into ‘dollars through service to Avon customers For information FE 4-4508 Bir- ood eall eps ECRETARY al LAW OFFICE FOR Maken T POSITION Had gE PROFICIENT IN TYP! ay Srortpae AND NO PRE. ‘et ICE EXPER!- “ce ne QUIRED. CALL PAT- ERSON ATTERSON & BAR- ETT. FE 5-6133 TALL-OLOW CHRISTMAS CARDS $52 50 on 50 boxes newest ootee seneation Bieeest line Cards Stationery Novelties, Cash : * $10 te 160 NU! proval, Imorints PREE ~get sensational 81 Gift FREE CREATIVE, 4401 Cermak. Dept Ti4-0, Chicage TED'S NEEDS CURB GIRLS APPLY IN PERSON 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. TED'S woomwanD at omens ‘LR RD. WAITRESS . NURSFS AIDE OR STRONG WOM | dry exp Can supply references Write Pontiac Press Box No lly MAN {WITH DUMP TPUCK DE- 2-5807 _Sires work, FB PLUMBING WORK WANTED Reasonabie FR 51016 PLASTERING PATCHING. CE _ment work IR 3-4837 a1 INDUSTRIONS “REI IABLE ¢ COL- lege bove desire «summer emplov- ment W ! do anything Paintine, ‘Landscaping et- Give us a call fue” OL 2-683! er OL WANTED COLLEGE MONEY. 17 year old colored boy degires work , of any kind part time from 12 until FE 51633) WINDOW WASHING AND | _mowing. FE_ 42657 or FE Work Wanted Female 1 | BABY SITTING AND LIGHT housework for 15 Year old girl. ¥ ang Nelson. $12 a week. LAWN 5-8050 of Jes Go home nights FE }7504 EXPERIENCED WHITE LADY ipa housecleaning by hour. 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASH- FE Shae and cleaning. 70233. Or GIRL 15 s WANTS SUMMER JOB in city. FE 2-6833. HIGH SCHOOL GIRL DESIRES tvping throwwh vacatio. Can _#ive references. FE 2-28) HIGH SCHOOL GIRL FOR TYP- ing _and shorthand, MA 5-6452 HIGH SCHOOL GIRL | DESIRES. . babysitting and light housekeep- Ing Live in or otherwise. Ref- _erences FE S673 002 = | HIGH SCHOOL GIRt WANTS | summer job FE 2-2388 | TRONINGS Exc he - ENT ONE ; dav service FE 3 t4aq ; j {RONINGS $3 SuRNEL FE | __9-8002 se TRONINGS GOOD WORK FIN. _isbeo | day FE 5-0093 LADY WISHES DAY WORK. GOOD restaurant, own transportation. _FE 50518 Live In) child, MIMECORAPHING T Tver ING. GEO SEC retarial service RELIABLE HIGH SOON GIRL Ta part time employment. FE WANTED POSITION AS HOUSE- keeper Ref. Phone Holly - MEI rose 71-6881 WALL WASHING , OTHER WORK. Neat. FE 54-3608 after 6 Building Service AIR COMPRESSOR, GENERATOR, power trowel mixer sanders, plumbing tools tools. Grave) and sand » Sun. KSONS RENTAL 62 Ww. Mamcaie FE A-1 CEMENT WORK LLOYD MONROE FE 4-6866 ALL TYPES MASONARY WORK Fireplaces brick work, plastic stile a Pore “epee Free estimates On 3-4 A * : Masonrv Crew Available for badement and cement work _Licensed contractor. FE 5-059. (1 CARPENTER REPAIRS “aN alterations uick service 3-2057 eves “hough ‘ana Auth. EM Seon ALFERAT ION om He ee hi LADY DESIRES ff HOUSEWORK, MA 6-6544. CARPENTER REPAIRS AND AL- 45249 Hee Serer Cleaned . Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners CARNIVAL | a J ‘ by Dick Turner “Oh, yes, my stuff has been selling! Just last month I sold my automobile, and this month my watch and radio!” NN Saginaw 3IRL FOR FULL TIME WORK | ——— in credit office Apnivy in verson . to Mrs Metzger at the Instructions 9 oe : jw =e ea cas s ‘ 2 LION STORE [ORIVING LESSONS. DAYS EVE- } Building Service J ‘ nip and Sundays ntiac Driv- $1 8 Sagir-+ st _ere, Trawwing PE 2-4887 BRICK | BLOCK | STONEWORK P ry anest qguaiit- Wo at reason Orrt FOR ¢ GENERAL L orvict Work Wanted Male 10 able orices Sorciguss! on heatile- some now aed - ee tor ‘eplaces eOTT Keeping Prefer with car 3ULLDOZING BASEMENTS DUO. A-1 CARPENTRY I!.A8STIC AND etlerahio experience. Viciaity. of _floor tile a specialty FE 5-8934 oe pera ners grading, EM 60, BOY 15 WANTS STEADY JoB 2330. Cal) after 4 p.m. ELDERLY LADY TO CARE 1 FOR day: uring vacation. _FE _*-6400 pppoe era KLINE LICENSED cWwr ¢ re _children. 2408 Mann CEMENT WORK AND BL ocK inal rineting | citing siete 108 3-1026 eee het service Weather- CONCRETE BROKEN BY HOUR | men, We quarante vou 00 ger ELESTRICA | WIRTHO AnD PAC. of 0 Free estimates ay. plus $4 om every order rv @maintenanre cons starting with the third order surray FE Aas? CEMENT ig OUR sreciaL TY Work Mon ab Fri — Us GOVT JOBS' MEN wom. oO Fs, Dasements EM 34870 Pam to 4 Ea fro co. Ghar hich as 61360 ween |CEMEMNI WORK _ RESIDENTIAL $40 to bs week oessible. Work Thousands of ‘obs oven NOW! and commercial free estim | will be in Pontiac and surround-| p-ivetience usuajiy. unnecessary | 2&¥monu Commens FE ¢#. ing te Mr. Hesse.) BREE informstidr on jobs. sal- | BLOCK, BRICK. CEMENT WORK x heat Pane Fie STAY WORT aries, details. Write TODAY! lin-| and fireplace FE 2-2468 kin 3.) a ig re colin Training Service Pekin CHIMNE' re “WORK OFFIC CEMENT WORK Expert chimney specialists Clean- | GENERAL = oe * CEM ENT W ORK ing repairing rebuilding and | — Bookkeeping experience hel ations basement floors, built new et brick re- | State experience and lary de- driveways, sidewalks and cheap pairing New liners ‘or gas chim- | sired) Apply Frens labor, MY 20702. Call anytime. neys FE 5-370 ee —tis ___ | EXP GARDENER GREENHOUSE | CUsroOM BUILDING F HA FT | HOUSEKEEPER. FULL TIME.| of matritenance map wants work.| nanc.og Modernizing FE ¢-5470 | erate size home in Birming-| FE 2-T240 _ _ _|ELECTRICAL WIRING LE ham Father and 2 sons Call) HAND DIGGING. LIGHT HAUL-| censed Ed Murray FE 28687. | _ eves or weekend, M1¢0162, inz Cut laree eras: weeds and EXCAV ATING HOUSEKEEPER WHITE BE- bushes Wort shrubbery and flow- | a - U bs tween 30 and 84 Monday er_ beds FE ¢3284 nope and trenching. FE through =f Live in or go home nights ust have own trans FI coR SANDING: LAYING. FIN, Cali_after 7 p.m. MAytair 6-3561 «oi Central FE —— OE MAN NOW TAKING SALES ne CxYING ; - OPEN course at ichigan State LOOR LAYIN ANDING A iriwone joes | aaa heploetata would like position as sales- _fimisning. Bud Bills FE +, +3021. EXPERIENCE [NN FOUNTAIN man Well qualified with Fi OOR SANDING OLD FLOORS A OPERATION. APPLY IN PER ot on ha ee Lin- specialty Carl Bills FE 2-5789 son. fe CL GUARANTE®*§D ROOFS ALL kinds Est 1916 J A Hueus 153 TED'S _N_Cass, FE 23021. FE 28006 — Woodward at Square Lake Rd & ePOSITION WANTED BY MAR. 708, FUEMING | FLOOR. cel UADY FOR HOUSE WORK ried man 28 vears of age with | wn PE 24405, | home beta Ind Ave, | “te” ¥e experience im all ohases | —— 4 7 | Woodhull re Ae zed Ave. | of “poe = eperation Have | Ly aks a LAYING | SANDING AND i errte oa® fee Vears as super- | mishing vears experience | _Need right ‘te codhull Lk visor Asq bave hospital launm- | Mocern eautpment Guar work Free estimates John Taylor OR 1616 MODERNIZE With Ueensed bullder Discounts durine June -) July All tvpes of carpenter work Roofine storm windows All of alterations § Violations Insured workmes D ry M BUILDING a 2-82: rE @ASON & CEMEN1 WORK FREE Our work OR beeed PLASTERING NEW AND REPAIR. _REPAIR SPECIALTY OR_ 3-9639 G 8NYDER FLOOR LAYING sanding and finishine Phone 502 ~ Building Supplies 12A STOKM SASH Alum. Combe windows $13 6 : $31 80 Alum. Comb. basem $5.00 CEE W EEDON 1661 8. Telegraph Rd. FE_ 42508 ___ Business Services 13 ~~ oo AL RUNYON Specialist in 2 im well drilling and repair Puma. sales. instal lation and service on all makes. _OL 6-2603 or OR A & RB TRE NC THING | Footine water tile Field tile FE i 9081 ALL. MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS repaved By factory trained men a: our ore Genere) ee & | OR 5-S380 Ciltice Supply Co . _Tence St Tence_&t. Phone PI FE. 3 APPLIANCE SERVICE ators. washers radio cleaners, end all types of small appliances. ROY 'S. 06 Oak-and Ave FE 2-402! PLASTERING PE 5.0626. FE 5-0925. Leo eo Lustig Furnitur- Refinishing 16A eta’ REPAIRING frre fy ha A SPE _cialty uF ___Uarden Plowing WER ren. plowing. Giseing? leveling and also _manure. FE GARDEN PLOWING DISCING rading . icttv of Pontiac Air- _port rr 71-9086 A-1 GARDEN PLOWING cde eee EDMUNDS SON OR 53-5289 or re 86-1427 LAWN GRADING AND sORNe __mentai 3, FE $-63. ceases Service “1s we oe Caen ee LACE CURTAINS, PLAIN OR RUP. fied. beautifully finished. Pontiac _laundry Phone PE 23-6101 ‘POR FAMILY LAUNDRY SERV- Ph. Pontiac Laundry. FE ____ Landscaping gz 18°A BULLDOZI NE GRADING and back fining OL 32-5702. BULLDOZINO eee 4 Ba CUSTOM TREF SERVICE ¢ut- ting. pruning tast service chain saw FE 4508) , GRADING AND YARD LEVELING. FE 54-3542 | | - LANDSCAPING SERVICE _ __Top_ sail and grading. FE DANS LANDSCAPING SERVICE Compiete iawn maintenance and cleanup (® 23-8712. ROTO TILLING SPRAYING Mosquito contro! shade _snrubs O W_ Scott, OL yaoi Moving & Trucking 19] MOVING AND TRUCKING. articles hau) i Some discarded Free FE 46-0786 AA-\ MOVING. TRUCKING, PTICK- up and delivery service at reasonable ates PE 4-18603 _anytime, 2 4 BC. CARTAGE CO _Moving & pickup FE _ 2-4750__ ~ BEDFORD MOVING~ Local _& Leng _Distance—VE 32-8787 DUMP UCK SERVICE. BLACK dirt and fil: dirt Gand r' erav- _el. 8-0877. HAULING OF Fgobt _sonable FE oer HA ares none PE 5-76. KIND REA. CHEAP- aie AND -HEAVY TRUCKING. Rubbish hauled) Top soil, sand, _dirt_and gravel, FE 2-060. LIGHT HAULING FF ©7947 AFT- er 4 om INCINERATORS CLEANED. ASH er rubbish hauled. Clean up. FE. 4-514 ~O'DELL CARTAGE: Lota! end Long ‘Moving. Phone FE REDUCED RATES Large van to serve vou Smith Mov PE 44064 UDDEN SERVICE A RUB bish and light trucking FE 46079 TRUCKING AND HAWLING RUB- bish at any time after 2 p.m. and y FE 39296. Trucks to Rent TRUCKS TRACTORS AND IPMENT ~ % Ton Picky 1% [en State and mp Trucks Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. #25 8 WOODWARD Oven Daily Including Sundava FE 4.046) - 4+ 1442 LIGHT IANLING . OND iOBS Cheap FE 7-917) Painting & Decorating 20 A-! PAINTING. PAPERING M FE +6364 ason Thompson, 4-1 VECURATING — PAINTING and wal] papering Call for est) mate FE 4-0266. i PAINTING. (INTERIOR & EX- terior 10 per cent dise for ao _Free est. po obligation. FE 2-163) ORY WALL : MACHINE cae estimate tod too amall FE 54628. 24 hour servi: No results, no charge; ‘chemicaity treated at no extra cost PE 8-1317 EXPLOSIVES - CONTRACTING. ALL ee Ric MOTOR SERVICE RE pyres, & eee oo 28 E F URNACE WORK We are soecialists Call us before SS ee new furnaces We are istributors or — We rine end. vam save vy dollars. Also el aa and AND AN sha: . iach ud LJ PERT T eget | iia & RE- moval §-6583 or OR [ 3.2000. i Guaranteed. Free est. FE 4-0206. BUSINESS. CARDS. ‘¢. $3.55 PER /| 4-1 PAINTING PAPERHANGINO. ~thousand, FE 5-7346 emee| remov Estimates, FE BFACH CLEANING " ‘EXTERIOR PAINTING. FRAME, Beaches installed cleaned block masonery brick cleaning. noe [M_3-2088. 1) yrs. experience. LI 23-0100 LOOMPTELD WALL CLEANERS Flall’s Wall Washing © Painting roa ens = 51346 Reasonable FE 2-2706 1AL FEATURING 1 dav service Reaa OUTSIDE PAINTING PAPER Pe oi, taster and repairing. Wtd. Transportation 31 Upholstering 23 LOADERS THOMAS OPH a 4 8. TELEGRAPH FE 54-8088 SLIPCOVERS DORA & BED spreads. Your material. PE §-5707. . §L rials Beadle ‘ UpacrsTEn Rd. EM 4 ing #174 Coolev Lake 3.2641 Pree estimate Lost « ¢ Found PON LOST: BROWN, white Be _ber_ 738. 34 acenan AND Male License num- itd pet. OL 2-6980. LOST: BLUE-GREY PARAKEET. white head Invalid's pet. Vicim ity of Dubiin School area. Re- ward. FE 50065 LOST: BLACK boo! ~ LOOSE LEAP on — burn Marshal) and Bivd Reward. Gniveceie +1618 Lost WHITE | AND BLACK PURSE with traveler's checks bank book and $170 cash Snapshot of 2 men and @ little dor in color Liberal _reward. PE 2-087). LOST PRESCRIPTION ORDER In downtown Pontiac, FE 2-4602 LOST OR STOLEN CHILD'S PET, all white kitten, male, 1 blue eye and 1 green eye Reward. © questions asked. _ 35-4065. LosT: BROWN POX TERRIER. _License 1328 Reward FE 23313. LOST BLACK AND GOLD GLASS- es. Reward FE 2-1062 after 5 30 LOST: LADIES | WHITE PURSE containing valuable papers and kevs. Vicinity of Yankee Store ed. 6183 Monrovia, Drayton Plains, BILLFOLD WITH valuable papers and money be- tween Waite’s and Eaton's. Re- ward offered. MY 3-2754. Lost: WOMAN'S WHITE & NAVY paedbar viethitvy Edison weed LOST DACHSHUND, BROWN, wearing choke collar. $5 reward. FE _ 44900 Lost MAN'S BULOVA WRIST watch with gray strap. Gradua- Mon present this year EM _ 3-8008. Lost YOUR PET? Rive one a home? FE 54-0200. Michigan Animal Rescue League. _Hobbics & Supplies 24A axe ‘SCRABBLS SETS. $3. PAINT by oumber sets $169 up (frames to fit) BACKENSTOSE 15 East Lawrence FE 2-1414. WE BUY RADE. repair cameras ana ohoto equip @ent. Wholesale and retail deal ors for smear reithored “BAD Whoie sale finishers ADDOCE cies SERVICE 1055 W Huron. aN ~ Notices & Personals 25 ead Aerotred Knapp Shoes i have purchased the records of Knapp Shoe customers from the former Arthur Sweet OR 3-1592. AAA PRIVATE DETECTIVES DOMESTIC CRIMINAL, COMM'L 30 yrs. exp. Bonded. FE 5-620) ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING @ tr =v, adviser contact Mrs. Vernon Pnhooe FE Ba) Confid ential The Saivae Army. arr fase re eon Ley 10, Printed napkins—fast service. NOW'S THE TIME. REMOVE IF SO, LET US Give You 1 Place to Pay| Ease Your Mind Restore Credit WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 41% South Saginaw St FE 80456 —___Above Oakland Theater. ‘REDUCE | Are vou overweight? Trea? Con stipated? Trv our safe scientific quick method Individual nutri __ttona! _orogrems Call FE 44131 | STAINLESS STEEL TABLEWARE “Nothing ike it Guaranteed 50 be tem ‘or & Spt tere ns phone _Wtd. Child. to Board 2% caILonEs Loven rane _for_ FE 3-17 DAY CARE FOR CHILDREN IN Heensed home FE .2-2086 or 262 ARED Raeburn. GIRL 3} TO 6 YRS. OLD? COUN-. try woe lar, onc? yard, excellent care. MA ects CARE FOR CHILD days. Licensed home. FE 5-9575 Wtd. Household Goods 27. LET 0s any T on auction 'T for you Oa %2681. FURNITURE NEEDED Entire home Eat odd jiots Get the | top dollar Will Pie | outright of | sell it for rou Community Sale. Phone OR 3-2717 WANTED TO BNY ALL TYPES of furniture Ph. FE 2-$523. WANTED FURNITURE ' vou have anything S SALES CO. ‘COUNTY'3 LA FURNITURE BUYER. FE 2-2866 _ furniture buyers. Cash’ wetting. juve as! 4 7188 yers. wa! i 4- Wtd. Miscellaneous 28 SARAAORA AR RARARARALRS ARAN GIRLS 4” BIKE IN GOOD CON. _dition. FE a PLAYER ‘PIANO N ei of GOOD CON. WI LL BY. SORNITURG AND ise « ends FE 40786. Wanted to Rent 29 RPI ORI RS Oe ON R EN ci “FORCE OFFICER DESIRES INTERIOR “PAINTING, REASON A- ble. 50 per cent down. Name [ae ete No interest added. FE 7346, “PAINTING, PAPERHANGING CLEANED Sou WERT Bate SARE WOMEN WANT WALL W painting OR $328 or OR Toast Painting & Wall Washing Free estimates. FE 5-2211. FAINTING AND. WALL WASHING, _chean FE 5-8723 ____ Physiotherapy 21A PRA NE AD eta Television Service 22 Weert he Pr 8 ganic ® JT m house. . ae we ena lease. FE 1, = eg fontiec Press Box 26. BEDROOM HOUSE OR LOWER apartment “in Rochester. have smal) child. OL 6-2791, ONAL MAN Di ES Sota, Pelle Pte Sons, SEEKING CLEAN COTTAGE ON LA UST ROU Tag. “6 Sou wink AKE > CARE oF RE ABLY PRICED. oat “Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 32 ‘At our dts en sity Hes at ie es De - E COLD WAVE SPECIAL scuae “Do- & RMAN F_ RICE _rothy’s, 500 N. Perry, FE 23-1244 | 170 COMMERCE RD EM 34412 DAINTY MAID FOR SUPPLIES. | _WOodward 57744 Rings here Mre Burnes FE 32-4814 93 Mark t . sig ong “ * = _arger homes for smaller, city KN. AP pP SHOES reoperty for suburban or farms, R Elewerth omes for incomes, large down | 5648S Bantora FE 54-6720 vest begi he phy plapes ede yews ON AND APTER Tis pDaTe.| *Uti? Trades made to sotisty al} May 2. 1955, t will pot Mer ce ee Call us, no ob sponsible or aeny ebts con- tracted by any other than myself DORRIS & SON Joseph D Freer 22 N. Merrimac | REALTORS CO-OP MEM St. Pontiac, Mich 152 W_ Huron PE 4-1557 106 W rAlolaarsat ar INVITATIONS. #1 0 “Wanted Real Estate 32A that grim with Fina-Foam rue sale, can be sold if you call ead 1_ubbolaterv cleaner Waites | 8d" cen. sattices ef is cual: fled gras: Will pey cash for Y ( 7C UT equities small mes. Pp A | R LEY. BROKER FE 7 FE 41157 ape wan RIDE TO WORK at a.m. from Vicinity of Voor- near and Huron te Hunter Blvd. and Woodward Birm FE 32-0386. Cash Waiting Por contracts cal) or see Mr. Johnsem personally for quick. courteous action ‘A. JOHNSON, Realtor. 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 ~ FAST ACTION! Tf you have the contract — we have the ready money Clark Real Estate hone PE 4-6492. Ask for Mr. Clark 5% - MOR TGAGES ON FARMS OR SUBURBAN from 'y acre with 100 foot frontage. No oD. or closing fees. CHARLES secisel: Society 1717 & Telegraph FE 4 4-0521, Eve F PE ag 1 LAND CONTRACTS 4540 Dinle Hwy CASH FOR H J Vanwelt, OR 3.1335 RAVE $200,000 J to purchase new or contracts for our sell seasoned la: cients See me before you ASK FOR BOB MAHA ~To 8ELL To Bu To Insure YOU BUY IT- WE’ LL INSURE. It :| MAHAN REALTY CO. REALTORS Co-operative Rea] Estate Exchange Spen co and Sundavs Huro: Ph. FE | MOST FOR YOUR Realtor Partridge Huron y contract, ts the “bird” to see 43 _ St. Phone FE 32-8316 IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR ane contract er equity im your Orn Kk. [. Eempleton, Realtor 3330_ Orchard Lake Rd. FE 4-4563 WE ARE BUYING AND SELLING land contracts—TODAY! Cali us now for the best and highest of- fer of value, quick cash settie- ment. Nicholie & Harger Co. 33.°+«W. Huron PE 5-8183 CASH For «mali equities ou have “what we Want we- Wath be at your door withtym 24 bours with cash for your equity Call aow and tel) us what you have. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor T7 N Saginaw St Ph FE 54-8163 Oper Eve ‘tii 8:30 GREEN LAKE OFFICE ON GREEN LAKE) “HEADOTRS FOR ALL LAKES" PA PPP PPI OEP LISTINGS WANTED No matter what you have for Johnson ‘HAS DONE IT AGAIN! That's right folks We have sold over 90 per cent of our listings | and are desperately itn need of all types of property to seil. For quick and courteous action, call A. JOHNS@N, Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 Office Open 98 PEDDLING YOUR PROPERTY? IT DOESN'T PAY Our method of showing only to qualified pros saves you time and money “Don't worry with lookers” Call us now. We heed farms, Inke, and residential properties: We maaaie all details for financing and closing. To Buy—To Sell—To Trade You’ BU IT—WE'LL INSURE [IT MAHAN Go-operatine, ent Sense Seangs FE 2-0263 Open Eves. "til @; = 10-4 1075 W. Hur NEXT DOOR TO (BRANCH POST O LET US SELL YOUR HOME WE have buvers Waiting if vou want ua for vour oume we can get) —— G A_ financing, we) bas seii or trade a full torce | ot six experienced salesmen to | BATH. FE 4-3212 oe J ROOM APT CLOSE IN. WHIT- te 1ore St Private entrance & 2 Couple only Write Pontiac Préss box 96 3 LARGE ROOMS ; AND BATH. Newly decorated Couple only. PE §-4032 3 ~ LARGE ROOMS § BATH COU CcoU- _pie only Call before 2 OR 3-6321. R NEW. LARGE. ~ 3 Adults. References FE 2 al- rs $30 pm. or anytime Sat. and rf] 3 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH. Recon“ floor couvle only $80 _ber_ month FE ? 366. _ 3 ROOMS PRIVATE ENTRANCE anc bath West side Gas heat. FE 4-8140 or FE 2-0946 3 ROOMS AND BATH “PRIVATE Ay entrance . Child welcome. FE _ 50's - ROOMS PARTLY | FURN | NO children Private entrance 861 Stout 5 ROOMS __ AND. ~ BATH. . LAKE Orion MY_ 2-195 BEAUTIFUL FU Se 5 y 5 RM. year round. Pine Lake. Adults. _FE 2866200; Doe FURNISHED 3 ROOM APT. 111 —_N_Telegraod LOVELY LAKE FRONT, 3 ROOM, clean, modern year around apt. Private entrance and oi} heat. Couple only, OR 3- 5082 STUDIO APT ATTRACTIVE WITH kitchenette orivate bath en- trance telephone Discriminate adult only $15 ws, FE_5-3588, SMALL Bs BACHELOR APT entrance a’ utitities Near Crooke _burn. PE 53071) Rent Apt. Unfurnished 34 1 34 3 ROOMS, NEW. PRIVATE BATH and entrance. 245@ Disie Hwy. FE 23-6456 PRI- Garace & Au- 3 ROOM APT FOR RENT. 904 Stanley 4 ROOMS AND BATH. AUTO Matic gas heat, automatic hot water FE 4¢-0177 § ROOM MODERN UPPER APT. ~ Close to town eas heat. 73 8. Parke St “$ ROOMS Call FE 3-034] ARCADIA CT 3 rooms — bath. Adults only $5 k we TEMPSTE AD 102 s Maree FE 48284 AVAILABLE JULY 15 LOVELY 3 room apt No children FE 23-6303. DEL RIO APTS. 281 Oakland 3 rooms 6 bath, stove and utilities furnished. Couple only. «~ FIRST FLOOR 2? AND” BATH Mes Frigidaire stove F ON 8. Saginaw NEAR WILSON Ave Nice clean 3 _ apt Utilities | furnished. FE ise! SECOND FLOOR. 3 ROOMS AND oat. Clore in. PE 32-6663 or FE Ly UPPER DUPLEX COUPLE ONLY. _#2 8 Marshall WOLVERIYF APTS. 3 rooms e — 3) — per- "KG. HEMPSTEAD 103 E Huron sss (PE 4-024 Rent Houses Furnished 35 & ROOM HOME ON LAKEFRONT Automatic heat not water. ca- = Walled Lake area MA “BEDROOM HOME FROM JUNE 29 to July Sth. Private lake privi- FE iiss Good references required. SEeaaa HOUSE CHILDREN e. Romeo PL ‘PARTLY radian ¢ y 2 ROOM sir 1556 Williams ane Rd. EM _ 35333. MODERN FURN FPURN. on tas FOR — nt Lad Lakeview *woodtuil Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 LONE RENNIN ENERO NEW } BEDROOM BRICK RANCH hone for lease. Lake cent ds both U and Long Le § ROOM RANCH HOME WITH Ee ot] furnace, ready about _ FE 9370. Rent | Lake Property 36A cortacr FOR aeet aT HIG- _@ing Lake, FE 2-297 PROM AUG 1 14th TO TS DAY: a beautiful, 3 bedroom heme on Cass Lake. Completely modern, safe beach, boat; $100 weekly. 4-5382 Rent Lake Property 36A CLEAN 8LEEPING ROOM FOR _lady_ or gentleman. Lin Lincoln n_ St. CLEAN ROOM AT MIDDLE aI aloe a, errace ie Straits a aicaaee ‘of children _M ike Ross, Central Lake. Mich. LAKEFRONT COTTAGES ON Lake oy rosary Lyles Landing. en. ee Phone —= LAKEFRONT APT. ETELY furn. boat and nice beach, EM _ 3474 MODERN LAKEFRONT tage. Boat Waterford 835 bie for season OR 3-844] _P.m CoT- er afier MODERN COTTAG IES AT saukee Lake near Cadillac. “MA eee new LARGE CABIN FUR- ished Good beach. Lewiston. Mich PR S138 QUIET CLE ax. MODERN LIVING Late.”10 unit is, Band "balcec™ n. good a units nf fish: fax Couae Baron TEE LAKE. sLEsre 6. OR 34970 WHI ‘ELA E- Clean cottage, Every cotivenience. rent. ming Be Saciey cae a ern, jocks ing 2 Bedrooms Wk. Mo. Season. : £58 E Lake Dr. MA 4-1778 after 8 p.m ___For Rent Rooms 37 NEED A~-FINANCE- FIXER? Order Classified ads to sell, rent, find a good job. FE 2-8181 is “the Want Ad number! ‘ i ¥ 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 Rooms With Board 38 WR oe ee =~ ae | Ne PLACE POR, 2 OR 3. CLOSE IN. 2 3. eee ROO ROOM ASR BOARD TOR MEN Convalescent Homes 38A BOA mae fos ELDERLY LICENSED home has w---nevy for bed or le rates. . patient nas 2 Ortonville, Mich. r} PINE iG HOME VaA- +3044, _cancies, OR Wrp. ELDERLY LADY. BED patient, MA bare APY. = Hotel Rooms 39 HOTEL ROOSEVELT Rooms $10 me a $15 up. AUI nace. k to St. Mikes Church, Pau! M. oe Real Es- tate. saw Ht Ph. PE 4-3505, uron. A owe of Your Own WEST SUBURBAN Near Union Lake. Semi a 2 bedroom frame home, fenced yard. Complete wines while 7 live here—not too to do. Vor apy possesgion. “Low price and term $100 DOWN East rel Sg Lengfeliow School. 22x49 shell house. Completed ex- . terior aaa Partition studdin, inside. Large lot. Makes rooms. Also good story and half frame that would more bedrooms up. Rent Stores —40 NEAR FISHER noDY . ve room ungalow convenient BLDG. AVAILABLE to school, bus and stores. ONLY ¥ ter « barber $6700 «with 61.000 down. store, GF, peau shop, Will you CANNOT BEAT THIS te = a OR cw alt Almost finished. West suburban WILT LEASE STORE BPACE| Wit, besements> cams ey, or any part of. Have! terior Insulation, interior walls Lemheis aoe of Genel ak for | electric. rough plum bing * already rv. Barnes. or) in. Best terms possible. E Z Mi EAST sT SIDE ho ellaneou: room frame home-2 bed- = For Rent Misc s s 42 rooms nepal basement see —_ e. near stern Jr. eee Tm somes Ol oe High. New low price with $2,500 lake near Holiv. _Molly. _ MElrose_1- — GARAGE 7 x FOR __Shop of storage | “20 N. ONE WAY COAST TO COAST RENT HERE LEAVE THERE Open and Closed Trailers- F. E Howland 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR_}-1456 _ TRUCK RENTAL | SERVICE 184 _Adburn Ave. Phone FE 5-8960. For Sale Houses 43 {EAT 2 BEDROOM HOUSE ON large corner lot $6,000. Will take car or vacant | ment. Balance one ret Ra. R viisa. ‘6 to 8 EAST BORNELL as =< pay- Good jocation, near Baldwin Large 7 room house full base- ment. of] water furnace rooms and kitchenette apt. 2nd oor Large double garage with 4 rooms and $00 eninge. PONTIAC REALTY 737 Baldwin _FE_ 54-8276 we wit BUILD ON YOUR LOT bedroom shell house $110 down 845 see our model For addi- information contact Red Horse 5019 Cass Elis, Rd 4-22352_ or FE 2-170 EQUITY “To GI MORTGAGE FOR 2? bedroom Unfinished attic full basement automatic cas hert. living room and hal! in living reom and kitehe, water softener. fences in back vard. storms and | ecteens) Many ther extras eet monthly 202 Russel! @ ROOM MODERN HOUSE. BY owner ful; basemen. vas fur- mace. corner lot good olace for fncome or large ‘amily Can be seen mornin« only 244 N Johs- son, $0800 2 BEDROOMS. G $2700 down, Balance at 4 per cent $54 per month includes taxes and Insurance, 121 W__ Sheffield INCOME 4 APTS. GAS HEAT Good _ cond. and focation per month ‘ncome Bv owner FE | _2-1236 after 6 pr LAKE ORION - $2000 DOWN | 2 bedrooms. large Iiving room fireplace, bath Dasement oll heat, beac WALTER GREEN _ M-* opposite R.R. Depot For Colored Famihes Beautiful 2 vedroom wv fint Zenith TV table mode! 39 Here ts « lovely 5 vom, = 240 ft. on pavement. 600 (1. deep. a W. Lancence FE 5-610 | business. location on main ment. late mode! sedan deliv- old sast hitch D.vis hizhloaded | VER VACUUM LIKE NEW. Motorola TV 16 in console 540 — = ply This a an soda “an Carnsnas = en Eves ro eo Can be seea mornings | ery FE 3317s and biade. ? lone e in aie 3 HOOVER evncvee Gear “ay | Meny others ‘er choose from. tt rents — —- — Nest t ‘onsumers Power _only 244 N_ Johnson = {t double dis ul trade for =| . asy Terms. . ‘month the vear with WILLIAMS HOMESITES ° . RESTAURANT SUITABLE FOR) Sale Land Contracts 52 late model vick up and cash bashes 056 Myrtle. Huron Gar 121 N- Saginaw FE 53-6189 auto, nes beat end eas hot o'r 120 ' with 3 drive-in. Must sell immediately. | ~~~. PL #1798 ZELVINATOR 1a CU FT DEEP | USED RECONDITONED | = Se privileres on Elisabet and Cass | 11 ACRES @ ROOM HOME. 100 | Low price et $3500 $1500 d0W0. | 19 pen CENT DISCOUNT AND. AVE) 2000) WORTH 7OP "WOOD | ERUVIN AT at casa. 1 Gear old: (6 cu. Me porcelain trig. $49 50 Sad shower. Priced vo sell 90200 Lakes or Pleasap: Lake in West ee ant. 34950 Broker, FE | —“* - pares ay ee oe ee Cs | For good used car PE 25863, | OAkland 3-2177 cick - 4 . soom Two Priced from r 8DM_ LICENSE STOCK you $4320 Secured by new | ‘KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR. about $3.000 down. = lovely home has furt been " —— Syne t Will lease build-| bungalow with full basement, ex-| LARGE TRADE IN ALLOWANCE KELVINATOR RE (3 cu. ft. Crosley $39.50 DD’ ] mpleted. Here fa an interest- a $25 OW N 8O ACRES ae $21 we puyke. . cateat west suburban location. on your old power or hand mower | Good Condition $45. FE 5-1810. PEA co oo, re pon ? ne oe “uakusae weit $ oo ares Ripe sl GROCERY STORE ON PONTIAC| Phone FE 57293 or OR 3-2937. satyidg nvr eiser gl — LAWN FURNITURE, a/rc) wer. |e “ hehe cs ae Gew g viding ‘orner parcel. Lake Beer and wine license. 5 h. |G. BE. dryer owen, $60.50 4286 is Piains | Said o an was Red H Nike scout 312.840, terma Sol - RAY O'NEIL. Real $150. will accept light 3 -| $20 FE 4-807 -Oven ve Pienty of storage O Se ‘ Sa : Year round business. od eS +, dvealtor motor in trade Lawn mowers | Pent size bed $19.95 pyer) spate. Charming veg Chg room with, r 2 900 year Equipment ? yrs. and Huron, Open 9 - 9 therpened $250. Barnes Hardware. | LIVING ROOM SUITE CLEAN. | Trundie beds, sew. maple or eorner f! inute 8019 Cass Ele 122 ACRE Ss eee. = eS ar Loved Atlas FE +1183 or FE §-729a FE 35-0101 _Excelient condition. FE om limed oak 50 Levecr Rd. or 234 Varge todos ul 4 i Demo y ___ PE #2252 ur FE Saun West of Pontiac All good ing 6990 Pontiae ee Ra. west | Co-operative Real Estate Exchange | syn wew ws House tRart.| Lord's Specials . Sealey innerspring mattress, throughout & a Mos $ 5] CLAYTON'S er 209 foot of water frontage | room. | Attached Fen oe Tuulty | CAKE ORION. APPROX 2001400 jere Oa Gen mee eece 15.000 cars pass daily. FP. Loomis. | cost $4760 Located in good west Call FE 5-441 | Mida-Bed from $13995 ...... 0B) «Furniture, Apphances Te a) rf < Jas 7 . e — < Sitge Tessas © 15 pinche eset ot drilled nearby. $18,500, one; ts SOM LICENSE bungalow with full basement |S ROOM COTTAGE. CAKE ORION Used gas i rd’ $2 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. job, so you need shady ere lake privileges! or write PO. Box 217, Lake erm: Grossing over $100,000 a year we LE AW WITH? , . FE sasit OR FE 5-0074 can find plenty tw play.| Tight across | strest. ee | SON “ENT Be. Stock and fixtures. 5 room newly iF. C. Wood Co. | 8 IN TABLE 8 ¢) Furniture and Appliances, —, . —— : fun. from 2. eeyiient, Poet Cann stiraste wor suspr |) F1OVD) KENT. Realtor | Gecorated apartment. Terms. PE, aie eee lS Sip cise aren oe FE ones ¢ cu SED RECONDITIONED Home has large bedrms., big Re. Turn tert on Groans Geeve. division Lots tor tmmediate bulld- | 24 W. Lawrence FE 5-6105 open eves 5-348. \ Corer Willams Lake Rosa & lato 6 Ca s er : p w| Where Wriglev's Need To Bei dcw it Pricisaire bends paneied ii ing sites for multiple commercial _Neat_to Consumers Power aaa LE RESTAURANT. Well on 3-12 5 Office Oven 95, SALE OR TRADE EQUITY IN “34 lécu ft x $40 50 we alhencr “and ere h re ‘HOLMES-BARTRAM | *¢ 'sustrial use. 10 ACKES Ideal set up for drive) “After 9 call OR +260 Ford convertbie FE ¢4160 af: | LINOLEUM AND PAINT SALE. | 3 Cu f% Apel | -- a3") waity — Lovely Kitchen ‘w ; & 5 lvan ’ ee ust sell immediately. $5500 $3000 DIScoUNT ~ | _!? RAT REMOVAI. SALE Easy Spin Orv --., $69 50 : 4392 Dixie Hwy. With ? homes. Large home with a Terms. re) 000 with TRADE YOUR LAND CONT t inside b + Frigidaire elec ranee $69.50 & World of birch cupboards. This OR 13-1960 Eves. OR oe y t room. 1‘, story farm with & bbe abil las Seca Balance furniture. appliances or auto. for Outside Sect vocete oul , G E auto washer. ...... $00.50 home is in —s condition I DOUBLE YEAR AROUND 2383 ORCHARD LAKE RD. bedrooms — — for 2 a 2 GROCERIES-BEER -WINE. Ellz®-| Gue $20,500 Pavable $225 monthly | new or used good housetrailers Jacks, 183 N Perry near Sears |G. E.Prver ..... - $60.50 session. ‘Priced’ st $21,860° with = a =f FE 344i Yitee edd es Hitchen, “Said vi a cans an prcanery, Goad arose hell breoklagert ballin mapohg Sede ||P Dheriaee "EXCHA open Eves. | PIECE WALNUT DINING ROOM tinar wn ue take a : : : cach to @ mortgage. Pps ov. pw | SILVER CK FRONT. S0xi30_ $3500. | oom with Room for expansion. L000 | qSsocn austnss . suite. Excelient | condition. “FE | \imed oak “p80 WILLIAMS LAKE “tive pose. vase coemga tane,| ome is ee ea tered i ue and cement ain Smei| Terms. te Ud ney.» sees gd eat a AS eae <_FE Sealy innerspring mottreag. ce Stiver L course : * pete new : - 160 ft. from Saginaw Bay. lake 81.500. Drackes Woods, 100x250.. home 2 bedrooms, kitchen, RESTAURANT. Well equipped. Busy cvcle. 1945 or up Call between MAPLE x te wee ifecrrdl Blue Mona! 949.50 room with Copper y s, living r fut bath anid sho 1pm MY 21893. $30. Vanity and be: t Sofa = ig treble “Sed ree greet beater ven a sctled appre x fe ph por ing éistence from Pentioc. $5850. Money to (ices 53) Sap WEPTONE OUTBOARD MO- a0 “Call. ‘after € 50 pm. FE Prieta o tester ae read move tnto. Can be Lawr en4 fence Call LI 5-010 ROYAL OAK Boatiae ity Vienite vee to sell 7 (State Licensed Lendert) | tor without prop, for power lawn ee een + veneo” ae = for” $6,400" with “email | _Call-MT 13) or FE emus — Waterford-Drayton as = ° GROCERIES-MEATS. Neighborhood ~~ | mower MAyfair 63023 Roos REFRIGERATOR | GOOD | payment 190150 ft building Ree Very 80 ACRE F ARM store. Building 20° 2 100° approx |WILL SWAP CASH REGISTER condition $45 Table on and | cL AYTON’S , _ Otter-Sylvan Lakes nice neighborhood. Close to bus Includes a 7 room Colonial home| Full basement. Owner must re for light panel truck. FE 2-2706. | _* chatrs $20 FE_ | ; WATERFORD Qnty desireni tien and arv| and schools. Low as tee with | with 2 lovely bedrooms Full! tire. 614.000. Terme WILL TRADE 95° PLYMOU TH 4 Ox12 LINO RUGS. $298 Furniture, Appliances | q " 80 fake privileges. foets air ou ie este Gee oe] Sievens)l arms al “wioue fireplace feratea rs | RAREL IN ROAD Greece ries ( ASH Sach lor tows (Gar meat (cclbouse (35 sanovetu ee ee keoes Warhee hi x n= : . | Meats Excellent beer and wine > FE 8-143! et ee gor ; PE 3-881 r FE 58074 Soe, clasps" Vacant andtteedy to | Were "tn" ooeorann = wriced | eeuttal busing ‘vies. enian | inree Hoan) ving, foam Tier Atte Hnucmess “Alco ‘om pro Se : Soe Sree yee ee move into. $12,000 with $2.600 trom 8975! Bnd stores On sood read Cline tn farm ts a@ bedroom guest home| ¢fty one 6 room house with small . _ For Sale Clothing 56 vin INLAID TITE % PRICE OLD von down and $90 per mo. Pantlacuniceh cea Gases oan or tennant house with living| apartment. Another 5 room house bor You Today RUBBER BASE PAINT Gat $) 56 \ Tit ER WASH CARL W. BIRD, Realtor) cow "© Roush Gad boca! are otmeied cn| Las terms ccremged. Call ts"| . IRL'S FIVE PIECE SUIT. SIZE ST ERS 210) 0 6 BORON Em eoeee 7c 2 ba end ~ * a a ituale Ayla, erms - | * rad bs CE 7 DE, F. C Wood Co $6) Community Nationa! Bank Bide. Clarkston-Orion Acres approx vi nets. mostly ‘awn & y { Up to $500 2 FE 2276) between 1 and reas Goon | BR Ee MAIR ES = | cee FE ae 1631000 ft for beautiful ame: many shade trees There ts an : pm : LIE Corner Willlams Lake Rd. & Mse |PONTIAC LAKEFRONT. 4 ROOM ite in the country. Por ern sremerd - rover 300 fruit trees J C H AY N During Miners. layoffs short work — NEW AND USED FURNITURE LO S OR 31235 Office cottage. FE 46008 after 5 pm. living with slightly rolling land.| 35 acres of tillable land. 12 acres - : eek you can depend on con ¢ hold Goods 37, “is2 portable electric saw. $ SOFTER SKIN Afte 7 — Priced to sel] for $1830 with §200| of Woods mostiv red and white R To Sale Household Goods | 1220 Baldwin Ave ; down oek Priced at only $27,000. 87.800 | s¢ F Wwaiton Blvd FE 80) siderate’ treatment gical cesta alas pa SATIS WAgIT | We _CaD how you now It’s possible Forest Lake Shores ” ‘Bercy eres — NO PAYMENTS WHILE | ALL minus or mew anp useD | “or Cs Megpenoiiigr aA ale Matching c 1airs, | “viectrie. range, slight damage, IM W RIGH - $2000 down Also other cottages. unns arms rE | . SAS , dinettes, $2995 up; lounge ehair. | nralia any drawer $159 05 RnB least Electric ° J, Le Bees Liddell Real Est 100x150 ft. parcels 4 mi north a R FARMS aes ACREAGE — | OPPORTUNITY | $695. occasional eocker, $6 95 | anogan) we | tose W Huron . Ay 2100e ea state Pontiac city limits Hight - INANCE | hall tree $185 3 ne sectional | st. $5 65 | soar cee ese aa LE. Oskiand Ave t. $50. 5: 1p. USED RE Cau aetinage OR 31111, FE 40003 : = a les USED TV $2993 UP. Ge-susraure_ heal Betate event! Milford MU ee 49278 | stricted area. Planned for better EE Here is vaiue for a nea - reyes $245 apt. gas stove. $9.50 | frigerators $4995 up Sweet's SECLUDED LOG HOME. 5 ACREs| '!ving Hurry on these! Low as COUNTRY ESTATE le oe per) ee oor, PONTIA Comegrent oe Berke chests satiated fue ure NESCO OVEN MAPLE CHAIR Redio * Appitances 422 W Huron SHINING IEW on private lake near Rochester $906 With $100 down 128 ACRES ts starts fe felon i sour chance | EASY “TERMS ton Se RAY Picnic set Mise ftems FE 53931 _FE 413 aa - pease ase fh = t "Dow: LADD’ I An opportunity to have the best | for city business location Cor-| DRAYTON PLAINS #013 Oixie PL MAHAGONY DIii:NG SUITE le Mi tla 60 Ontv $1.500 moves vou into 9 | Ddesement. oi} furnace bath. z ’ nec. at onlv $275 pe, acre A barn ner on main hvv $25.000 Hienway OF 3-122) lrREr PARKING AND DELIVERY | sivuminam bassinette bathinette For Sa sce meous svarkling 3 bedroom bunealow.| dle =. = he cabin. Only : : t+ handle 32 head of dairy t rranced WALLED LAKE: 230 Barnston : URE ¢ shoo-fiv. FE 5 all on one floor..with a ‘s acre | _$!4. 4286 Disie Hwy Drayton Plains) cates sito eriba. anf naekio | sas a acs —'Next to Bank: MA 41584 FORLERTY BAN FURMIIU rE ee a FORNTURE Aye Tv. 3. 5 lot near Pd whoa This home has OR 3-2361--Open Sundays sheds. chicke: house, } car ga- ~ , "TCA PT bp —— =A i. fene 3496 Pont Et or LOANS. $25 TO $500 WE BUY. SELL AND EXCHANGE |29 PER ‘ # PER CENT ssmall radios portables and sheliue st hous “chen et aan, TO BE SOLD rc sewn rare. A beautiful nodern term | FlLOYD KEN i. cas peel pit J @ ORCHARD LAKE AVE. ov” "SF radn combination. ', and laundry tubs. tast vossession” ‘No _ 4 Lapeer Rd_ or M24 house with field stone firenlace tm | 26 W Lawconce FR 65106 cues sv88 | rence, YE 4153 NEAR SAGINAW Cotton mattresses. all sizes. $11.98./ + hp induction repulsion motors. . tne Itving room natural brick Next to Consumers Power 7188 Innerspring mattresses, al) sizes,| Dalby TV service FE 4-0802 closing costs. Tf you are at all interested in a FE 47609 firen'ace in dining oo 1. base- peGaaceooo a GROCERY, Ee <8 31995." The; . piace in the country with 1'» $400 ment with recreation «nace. auto | stock equipment & SDM license. eed ANTIQUE vicTORI 1AN eS Renaeay beds. _ complete $17.95, Sprosere HERCULES | ST pina R. J. VALUET, Realtor | seres. a fine home tm nertect | bua oa ft. lot, Dray- pins | oll "heag deen well Jet | FE 90107. or Less Sinet sm Omereg retingrnioe, Bunk beds complete. $44.96. trois. OR 3-4401 before 3. kland Ave PE 5-0002/ 9 car garaze and space for « ‘ $25. OR 3-0162 4967 Dixie Hwy., | Sofa 8. 5 4 rS elp acre private lake and 95. on Ss ELECTRIC TrooLs ame tive Real Estate Exchange | horse or two, call immediately. Dorothy Snyder Lavender many case exclusive catures that LOOK ~WITH QUICK x — ope meer Soon conee $04.50. at wholesale es “e all, ; - We bave ft. It's going to 3140 W Huron must be seen to ve apprecia Well located Tavern & Lunch. SERV] > APT UaIVERsaL RARGE. NEW. | hetroom suites, $49.50 up. GENERAL WAREHOUSE CO., WEST B MFIELD to $4000 “awn “wit! handle. |___PE_2-4411 °. ICE? picts com, RB Munro |Davenport beds ful] innerspring| 2288 Dixie Bwy PARE PREE! : ves. Mr Perry, MA 65-3631. i Fully equipped and ready to « Electric. i 4 bedroom—oll heat—2 car ga- For Sale Acreage 47 mattresses. 610 ce AIR COMPRESSORS, JACK HAM- rage — immediate posse across the street from Lake~onlv $2000 to handle JIM WRIGHT, Realtor 345 Oakland A FE 54-0441 Co-operative I hae _Estate Exchange boasession — Walnut On Today's Market This Suburban Rancher ts a ood hee Only 2 vears old, it has 3 automatic heat and hot water, storma and screens larga sine uo it will take ‘t wait. 2: Bedroom Suburban Near Ortonville dust off M5, fa on one wi cai carveted it Ving room, for Your appoint- "BUD" NICHOLIE Call us today ment, PAUL A. ERT Realtor when Wwe can bedroom structed? On a te 4 of the best Oakland County rerth of Pontiac 31 Oakland Ay FE 3-9200 “Real Estate Since isle" WHY PAY RENT FOR A SUMMER COTTAGE Fear round canal With access ad satin $1500 dow you a 2 doubie con- offer fishing lakes in About 10 miles Full — only LLIS M. BREWER N. Parke PR 45141 FE 6-Tie4 BM _3-4808 FE 4-5078 WILLIAMS LAKE, 6 LARGE rooms, 1 floor, 1! — all over beaut 1% attach areas: beautifu 4 landscaped, at beach Kk. Price 616, Owner Oniende >: 3-2055. homes located at jean, Excellent Drive. Bay Lake Fronts On ° Saginaw Bay Three moderr lake front summer and fishing Only 0@ Cail J Port, Michican, Bav Port. Mich- gro pee bathing real estate and im 49 ML. Clemens St. FE 5-1201 Eves. r. KE 43156 O 5 Z WHITE Cottage Cad 16 Ave +1 Oana mets hich lot with . Pail sil orice #1 $7. soos with terms. PAUL A. KERN, Realtor FE 232-9200 Estate Since ity na ‘ For Sale Resort Prop, 44A LAKE feet of front- p) lavatory. et ont MANISTEE -_ tices, gui Fa ches ON BALDWIN ? about APPA PAR APP APP ABOUT 2% acaEe NEAR SASHA- baw Rd. in Sunshine Acres, Lake rivileges $1500. ROSE. eLa ARTY 2 ACRES AVAILABLE | Lake Often Oniv ‘sy mile i Clarksten Rd Excellent location } for subdividing Call J. A. Taylor | _Realter PE 425440 ; I o ACRES 2 ACRES OF HAY, ON Silverbell Rd. 4 lots, 440x120 ft FE 47M5 2 FERTILE ACRES Just off pavement north of Clark- ton Nice building site on quiet country roau, Full orice, #1100 eash GIROUX & FRANKS Stelvio REAL ESTATE 4395 Dixte OR 3-9701 Oven until | ioe. 1 to 5 pm. ied ACRE LOT WITH lixi7 Ga- bets with well, $1,300, 3317 Geena ween eo and Sashe- AVE 1 miles north of Poritiac. @ miles west of Lake Orion: Idea] for sub- division or factory site. Irvin Du- —pler._! Oake Orion, MY 23-1221. 10 ACRES Here is a nice 10 acre parcel with & year around stream across the rear of the property. 33021320 Priced at $4200 with $800 fn. 20 ACRES 4 long 20 acre parcel, of hard- wood timber with are tm = t paved road. Tree red and white oan. ne oryrand maple, —— to sell at Terms “30 4 ACRES A co a acre oe 1320x1320. Rolling. and Mos it is clear aht for poo Nl Selling for $23,400 with terms availabie. | aac acfe parce! about 4 | clty limits. iacttal From ts 150x860 Pee a TO Seg leo | Sel otream y, Priced at $1750" ‘with LADD S, fee ‘975 Bal win FE 4-4203 Co-operativs Real Estate Exchange IR. HILTZ FE $-6181 REAL ESTATE OPEN 9-9 LOCATED OVMLAND COUNTY $4 acres fine fertie farm land Larce house barn and all good extra buildings House is pletely modern with ural fireplace, oak oil steam furnace. and \s ar- ranged for two families, Lo- of cated in the heart of the farming section for this area, is is one of the Rest buvs offered. Fdw. M. Stout, Realtor Ti N. Sacinew PH. FE 5-6165 Over Eves ‘tii 8:30 . 12:00-4:00 40 ACRES Good land Just off White Leake Terms Rd. Unbelievable orice of $3500 Dorothy Snyder Lavender 3240 W Huron FE 24 8) ACRE FARM Well located on 2 main roads tn real farming we 4 bedroom a er oO cond Pric. ition. ie MEAG REAL ESTATE Oxford Miche rs 8-3122 04 ACRES ON Eas terms, GT Close to Yake wSINNAN & SON 66 W. Huron_ St. if ACRES. 4 ROOM HOME, 100 cles a oossie 94.956 duce eaity : Rent-Lease Bus Prop 49A good |43 W. Huron St, Open Eve. 7. to ® Partridge If THE ‘BIRD’ TO SEF TODAY S SPECIALS Then Home & Auto ts the place to come. Most loans made on your first visit phone for cash to $500 on your auto, furniture or signature and a reparment plan suited to vour needs Friendly courteous service aWails vou Le-lie Fleisher Man- ager. Berkies Voss President Ph FES 8021 HIGHLY PROFITABLE GIFT and party food store. Really a show place. $7,500 dn. plug stock. AAA MOTEL on one of Micht- Home & Auto Loan Company Hours: 9 to 5: Saturday ® to 4 ans busiest highways. scheme yo! = ment - bust- $32,000 ould trade for ‘aan. 1 & RECREATION HA matin street in town. $3, pees 3 NICELY FURNISHED COT- TAGES with income of $150 per week. $18,000 full price. Terms. BUSBY MAIN qreest ORIEL now operating per Comtersaie ae Rapier $3, d00 CALL NOW ON THESE RTU THROUGHOUT MICHIGAN WARD E. PARTRIDGE REALTOR FE 2-8316 i gil Saper- -Market peel an ee gurover “Ps.00 A arg with a ip of over tM = cent Leg al e3- doen ‘plus set ust a Good Buy tees een Sauer ram eee Sry cleaning prct-up station, $10,000 down. STATE-WIDE GET CASH QUICKLY Up to $500 1946 to 1953 cars. — = Eicon Most" ‘deals — minute Loans also made “an cunare’ Signatures and securities. Oakland Loan Co. FE 2-9206 202 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG » LOANS” LOANS Extra Fast HOUSEHOLD FINANCE ASPHALT eT ILE resins TILE ox 9x12 linoleum rugs, $3.05. Paint... $1.49 Gal | Iron ng boards $2.95. WALL. LINOLEUM seaes.. .. 442 | Wood rockers, $7.95. 6 ft Linoleums 19¢ Camp cots, Inlaid Linoleum Tie | Unfinished chests of drawers $7 95 VINYL ASBESTOS ‘TI! E l2e Gas stoves, electric stoves, refrig- 9 Ft Tincteums= 60 Per Cent Off erators , : / TERMS 01 VAWAY. Harold's Paint & Lino | ERS dsOn's PORMTURE | | 1408 mae inne st | Formerly Bank Furniture A 21.3N MUNTZ TV MAHOG 42 ORCHARD LAKE AVE | rat console a old. $60 ‘MI Next Tio RE arm erie [ean eiation 852 ORLEY f DEEP TREETE SMALL at laren SIZ ELECTRIC RANGE.| S2¢,. & ? =” Also. coal hot sto heater with Take. 3803 Jackson Rd. White 30 gai tank a NUMBER OF SMALL RADIOS oes TAP aly htel STOVE IN ery sood cond — $50. Call and portables. FE 5-8758, le tae ABOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT 2 CAN BE rete AT L & 8.| 14" ADMIRAL COMBINATION, End tables, $1.98 ba oy new 79.95. case head board beds, complete, WALTON TV toh tefrigerators, $25 up; range: sh — Bg rt beds at. ar Walton, Cor, Jostyn eee yy 8 radios. iN CON- : new brome dinette sets 5 pe. wee a R Munro ed0 95 up: chests, = : weet: $5) Evectrie 10 Huron, up m siites up: T hving fate suites re up, din- NEW 9 SFY LREPRIGERATORS 18 in of tame suites. $19.50 up. Many | New g ft. refrigerators in crate. USE OUR EASY PAYMENT oe pectic Coach Ca. nay a ay eA 4615 Dixie Hwy We eee seyinne “come Drayton Plains. Mich. out a round, Petal fe al etcor ta Se eet free partang < 3 acres Of | REBUILT MAYTAG AND EASY OPEN SAILY “e re ® Spindrier washing machines. + rc ble 12 ; s ¢ ai __ Guaranteed. FE 4-5169_— . mi, eas : ECE BED Pontiao or 1 mi, east of Auburn one Re aus like i eights on m Rd, M 875: 7 piece dining suite, $35. —— excellent. FE 5-2766 5 BUFFET. CHAIRS, | °TOVES 80UG! LD & Ex. Leaves, pads ight finis ~ Fe fee Turners it. Clem- pon —— ROOM SUITE. co E Walnut dining .oom suite. 6 or.| joaster. mine. items. 820% Moral drapes Green @xi2_ rug. | Salle. after 6 pm. Misc items Reasonable. 601 N.| SLEEPMAKER CHAIR BED. $35. Perry, FE 8-1187, FE_2 BRAND = SPECIAL PRICES ON RAND BIG SALE ON NEW NEW \NTERNATIONAL | HAR: AND USED . MODEL $310.20 FT. MODEL FURNITURE XING BROS New cotton mattre 8.95 = . Sew innersoringe CREDIT ‘Chrome breakfast je ge couch . davenport s Cedar — mers, power trowels, chain saws, “CONES RENTALS 1251 Baldwin FE 3-007? AWNINGS Tarpaulins all standard | stock 15°%: ' PONTIAC TENT & AWNING CO. 400 lang Ave "AT Ble s SAVINGS Good ‘straicht ased tumber 2x4— 2x6—2x8—2x12 ‘ust arrved a car of. Rita and sizes in New tlush doors $0 up. Windows made to your order. R-ck wool insu) e. Lary imix concrete mortar, pe oan 8 Fe meng and many other ing ‘ Plumbers le e tb. ve one . — oney om your SURPLUS’ LUMBER & Matert Co. $340 Highland Rd, (MS0) OR ANCHOR FENCES - $e ee down. FHA 6-7 Ss | DOGS CATS BOARDED DOGS BLOWE : hk = _tor $64 7600 Elizabeth Lake Ra ee POWERGLIDES SEPTIC TANKS — ales s Musical Goods — 62 trained Burr-Snell V8 8 Tele |...) NEW. © ERCHANDISE COpen Even a Sun PM. |i PT ALUMA CRAFT BOAT & ae ; F] OOR SHOP Reintorced concrete. PE 21440 graph. | “CLOSE OUl v RIC ES”, ze Opens Eves ah een 2! —— trailer 1456 Big Beaver Rd Bir- ~ For Sale Used Cars 91 ( hoice ot Colors comes " 2 seginee wt STALL SHOWERS — COMPL ETE UPRIGHT PIANO 825 IMPORTED ~ | Groune wee Holland "+ Auto ‘Accessories 80 ee MPERDLINER CENTER le Stick ; OR oe ona All One Owner . 5 Sagine with faueet 4 t $60 {| _ se J | wine or more ——- 8 R NA- 7 use : : L&RO CHAIN FALL LIKE NEW terrific values. 633 33, Levaseries| Se ncal AMPLIFIER 325° MY | __ Hay, Grain & Feed a 69 5 oer \ (elaceu Service deck and wheel 1954 super 10 flow Radio and neater. original Beautiful Automobiles $25, and @ frdraulic car jack complete with gleaming chrome _2-$261 ~ bls KEE TYP INC. Auto Glass Servic HP motor 36140 miles per hour Lemar ne lrem) very) ame Any eid : - . $25 OA 8-3245 faucets $1495 Toflets $3950 value| PIANO TONING AND REPAIR. | ABOUT ACRES o00D STAND- PERGUSON When vou need tt! Have you tried | 2 hours on motor $250 8 ft 3, SS POMR ewroter 15 to Choose From ° “LAWN MOWERS SHARPENE $1995 These are factory seconds | Ing. Oscar Senmidt. FE 25217 | ‘ow alfalfa 2 mt west of Pon- ree zl : our service? Glass installed while point Hvdrontane whee! and throt- Wood t oD i D- — SHAWNEE BLaCKHAWKS vou. w pellicha honored ward a Mile FE 21311 Michigan Fluorescent. 393 Or-| PLAYER PIANO RECONDI. | tiac FE ¢4311 or eves PE 5-1392 PARTS A: ) SERVICE bn cae aucrinassa bree aes + ee $50 «Call after 5 om ‘Lincoin §-1100 Low as LAROE Leo TRUNK REA. | ard Leake Ave |sthoned. «$100 J Quitmever OL | CORN 350-400 BU 60 CENTS - GRARD RIVER of coffee to a customer with each | ig gp Boat IND BUICK ‘$3 ¢ DR. SPECIAL GOOD _sonabie EM 3 25036 _or OL _2-5301___ Se pee ae cond oe PARMINOT door glass or windshield installed |'*, TT BOAT. INBOARD MOTOR. | condition, 306 Oneide. : ———— | FRO WHEEL TraiLen, sree WEBBER —PIAROUA WTR 0 | eee ene ELD | cerminston 2043 or KEnwood 540 Open Saturday Until 4 cluded. “First $450 takes, VE| 50 BUICK SUPER. 9408. DYNA. wheeis. 1 Cali PES 0 . ‘coo J i ass Ci . , : good box. 965 R 3-8313. ie we Ss Pe —— while baling or will deliver Also | ing; § ft. mower horse drawn; | 199 oanend aure ar PE 41008 | —°°o8!.__Detroit pec Pest pac — Pee tone “s ale Offic Easkueet G2 _Straw, oats & corn, A _8-2179. base ved delivery hay rake. OA 5 HP FLERE oe GooD car ‘ann Nak res. Any oid Pull orice STORM WINDOWS & SCREENS. ec qu en |ALPALFA HAY WIRE BALE, $15. 00! en oth to Et AND CARRY 1 Vickogaie 33216. Two 3214. FE ohiwea tac ~~ | ase while Dealing. 4301 Josiyn BL ENe \OARDEN TRACTOR 8. ee er a begat 9 Wer MOLDED PLYWOOD #350 biepbohabed & is ae MAKE OUR. OWN TERMS | 42070 AWER LETTER SIZE FILE! _ : y .| OR 3-831 : Coder % Serr me STOP copimets Sep apr re || L KINDS OF HAY. STRAW, wlth Le Dh moro woes ® 3 fos CHRIS CR arbor 7K SAVE SA SAVE Biren flush doors, $798 up > ce chairs, eac etaf office | oats. corn Phone MA 5-0666 J i SET 630 X 16 TIRES & TUBES 5 CRAFT. CUSTOM i7 Lew r Lea — cee rock wool bag. $168 Lome ons See ree ee ome | Sas ne | CUsroM COMBINING WITH SELP REEL GARDEN AND LAWN | like new Also a set of 21 in.| (Sper eae equloped. tm: | ote ato on ae Bort Delay See Oey Oak fi Pontiac Coach Co. | Sropelie« combine Make arrange | Toot, JERI CYCLE Bars. | _!97 8. Jehnson ____ | SHOTWELL-BRACE R everything. Any old car do White “mine, utility beards, tee | "° * J ACUBSUN Grayise Piss ite | WANTED. C ay HAY BAL:| MENT FOR RENT aa ATTENTION! 20 Bagiee — and a per e month ™ Roofing No, 210 cal : F rayton Plains. Mich C - 0 ‘CHE VROL. Winoce."at agetien “anes | Sov ctu ‘uey © CNCHMENT | —— Drevin Prams i ee bneEa tr, ony | Mie Set, tte | Te Seat FE Bem SERRE SA Pire & edar ‘tanelin aaa = as ale ore quipment O4 ry ACRES OP ALFALFA TIM. 7 Dinie Hwy _ MA 58-7878 cara and trucks ® have several EVI -R a > \ Oo re | ; Lincoin & 1100 . Pivwood olan & decorative : ; othy clover and brome. in field.| SALE OF LAWN MOWERS AND [#te mode! low mileage used en. VINRUDFE MOTORS | sutcx ~ 1980: suPER. 4 DOOR evrole Seiat sce tie ok a LIEGE STOKM SASH | CASE HAY BALER $100 BERT, Wil cut Scripps Rd MY 3-4681 |” garden tractors used a» demon. $ine* Tramamission and 1°81 woverre and Feather-Craft | Dvnaflow Radio. heater de- | r Paul 8§ Cyr Lumber C Aluminum comodington windows Langdon 4845 Pontiac Trail i@ ACRES OF ALFALFA AND strators and floor models Many | starters generators and vortace | id Tow and Drumman Canoes froster. Eas Eve glass. Back uo Oakland County's Fastest Sime Gente tans el Commerce 89d doors LOW LOW orice!!!) ELECTRIC POP COOLER GOOD! clover 1740 Clyde Rd Mil | never used at special discounts | con Ve patent aed was || ckicldl wats (ie ie eee Growing Dealer ae) Ey | 4 ¥ ve LJ ow nes an 5 . mo ren : oe _Wighiand Ro C8 etl SE ® | ACRES standing” HAY ALSO, Eclipse Lark 18" Ree! t¢pe lawn. | S¢ TRAM AUTO PART 5) Term ; | Huron Motor Sales | DEE Mtr. at M15; apie 640m _ MOWERS | exeatino =atoe a Mave | PT ,HUSSMAN MEAT Cot baled “aMfelta ia be twid GR | MOver cedar price $1066 sale | Bm Dixie Rey —_—__EE 4-4533 | 0 8 Telearenb Boat Pr 30039 SLWAve 4 G000 salechon CaewaCt eT tae Ca ORE FAIRBANKS AND MORSE. 24 IN. oo 8 sere end 2x8" soo eh ee 01) James 34572,_4690_Mayves Mse at Muford Rd. Pheas Mil| ai Ave ameter. Recently ever eon ss ra Wira_con. sal ae URC c CARS| Oaeni 9° R MOWER, acre lots Say — > ‘ord 47842. Open nights and Sun-| hauled Body needs work. $125. ase rs ? SF tr EY | ey nog Ra) Sete a Saad Sealed J ese Gud | ad Co eet CE Mi 0408.” i ALOMINGM RUNABOUT WITH! MOTOR SALES _| ‘Radio eater,{ow mileage, as nN. z om AL a ee : 5 © EARN ERG AND 28 TN Be | aoe aa ee ree oot agit | OUNS-BUY eELL. trae |CmEstNUT etattion cotr | Sale Farm Equipment 76) DUAL ExmAber STSTEMS: HOt7| seilgat” condition’ Must be. seen /082_W, Buren re aaea|. “Wetewend anh Men LAWN Q n. SULKYS R need. Fa Maniey I Leach, 10 Bagiey AL oid. Exe. breeding. MA STOP! LOOK! oe —_ eee eeeertes for all FE 2.2 1963 1963 SUPER | RARDTOE BUICE in 51100 ALL. 12 OTHER MODELS RO- BLACKETT’S TWO WHEEL CAMPING TRATIy | _ 62730. dl ei! > Hent condition PE +2606 __ "55 Chev. Bel Aire TARY AND REEL TYPE Deas she _er_with top OR 3-0162 «|| CHESTNUT CELDINO SHETLAND | word tractors 1 HOLLERBACK'S AUTO Abed eR PF, EVANS EQUIP. “2a SUSTEIES "rifle with Sagi oe: wlan | tod loader laree tren, 7 | = CHnat VHU a , nies Mercury Outboard ~ Guar anteed Rome sot $1705 saw empemt. : 8161 Dixie Aw Clarkst e with new scop Mower plows Itlvato aa | 6507_Dixie Hwy AUS | made aided MA Ss) COENGLISH SADDLE. $25. | HOLSTEIN- FRESH ATO CALF | soring tooth harrow cuti-packer | py ane Motors SHARP USFD CARS HURON MOTOR , " MOTOR SWAY CHEAP — 8TFEL BASEMENT SASH FE, 48070 cows 4 broad sow } Yorkshire grain drill corn ntanter Price, Be sped noe wars on Lag Genuine [arts O - PE 24731 __ REPAINTED SAVE % PER CENT GUN” BOATS” MOTORS BUY. | _DOs!_2380 Wattles East of John R | #140 eo P| tite Sew Gree wo nee care, : “ en SALES WEY AnD 6 eed PIRNITURE Wee 18 2 Lite $350 08 sell. trade, Burrshell. 318 8. Tele- @ SADD E HORSES AR PACK | giept. aia cannEN TRACTOR Open Saturday Until 4 Sales & Service Glenn S 925 W Huron PE 226461 Pc ° ape . I 1 4 | '. beatin Tar cont stones soo wa . CUAL & Miore Sonpe 1 CO" “Saad Ga vet & Dirt 66 Pauly GUREAKEY COW 5 Tre | tt? horse. $75 PE 5-6466 122 Gubised Ave OL ASS OE 4-7066 OT ea eT MOTOR SALES eee wa aateg and 7 * t+ = o = } 'e et he i by “i — Cttaen Tecan etrener® 94 Gt Orchard Leke Ave, PE 37101! _ gies we ieee ene peas Tee ee oO oes aa Mapai , TOHNson Seareotes mMoToRS 24 8 _Saxinaw st a enm| Lot ee Fs ue 7 FEM + t pen Evening ays a Wee | UR THWes) HEVRU: THAITER excham HANOR Pe 23200 | SEaMONs) sTUDIO Pee eon | ©) TOrsot. FILL DIRT. SAND Waa Gantie th —— tye hours epee eestor git’ ptarters ana eenerators $650, OF n's cruisers Starcraft boats BUICK 1954 SPECIAL 9 DR. 7500 Desecsss at io Ue vas Le PUMPS 1 outside door FE 42195. _end_gravel EM 3- aa and bridle $175. FE 2-8605.| 22990 Ten ‘s Mule Birmingham mews (opciese ee cr ce eee Foren al hee Be oae wt in ol w low prices an ana | 2) 5 nttOe, sor vik iLL DIRT. |$fRAWRERRY ROAN MARE. =| “an mromiad Lana Sold ae PPLI a ackson ite | 1952 CONVERTIBLE CHEV, 6630 Regular sits 1-9 bp shallow well crushed stone sand and esravel| Part arabian. Gentle with chil- Auction Sales 77 | a onkin, sos OHNE 3 sa “ye Ae FE ya020 ee —cesh_or_twwede i. O8 33500. fot i tank now 3198. Sav e M one at Earl Howard, PE 48403. ‘Gren. MI 4-012 ee 86_ Oakland Ave Ph. FE 44513 = * GOATS in SID ma fo | 982, BUICK 2 DR $10 DOWN See en eee oe Fy [Marcas at Hae ats REOKE, | WHITE RIDING MARE OR SacE|AUCLON, GYERY_wepwmapar | _ For Sale Tikes S0-A| "2% spure,isin gat hice | Sound pwmgten, * Chevrolet 81s BURMEISTER’S Seese asee root FE Conai, | OFa_itade for cattle MY 20505.) F'ochester — “me le Farm. ~~~ ~~ _Netr “Crescent ‘Take an UICK ‘$1 RIVIERA 4 DR. RADIO. KELLY’S HARDWARE i TOP sou, NE | Avs oe a | ane “from. All sizes 0, @ 0. service. | UFansportation Offered 87) Mester, Dyne. Whitewsils. Like Avshire cow Holstein bull. | ANTIQUES —& FURNISHINGS AT| from All sites. 10. & O. Service. po new Eve 4) Beaches oc ics 394 Auburn at Adams. Auburn MBER san raved, fi Auction Wed - June 29th. 1.00 Opd Hetg .ts 2 8811 Pr ili? of FB bags Gomnain MB) TB AND BANOS TESTED| 0's Sap Jackson wt Late Orion | —Auburn st Opdyke. TRICK GOING NORTH. Pant | A"emore_ PE + Lennox ws" PORWA in ATTENTION = 660_ Giddings Rd. FE _ 5-6660. 4 Dieces of niatorts American Auty Service 8l toad etthe? wae onra = noone = a= RA br = Can Oll conversion burner and We deliver 1. 2. 3 vards or more ere les ROR ANNAN | OMAN RIDER TO zt -pbooqinh! walls, back up Soe tower, PE 45008. 800 000 crushed stone washed sand. erav- For Sale 2 Poultry 74) ate sletehbelis coin collection. | REPAIRS. BUMPING & PAINTING ¥ We pike windshield washers. 120 Dem t eo ' ‘ droo lea! table needlepoint chair Mort tg th ttl etal —or_Ymsa_ Arizona TE 46104, 5-O444 Ons ra ors . LAVATORIES, COMPLETE Sasa eee | - captain chair: haireloth chairs PREE- ESTIMATE | CADILLA ; Fi Poot Sale G R_ Stuart FE 4-6584 : : Wanted Used Cars Ty CATE 49. FLEETWOOD. ‘ toliets. bathtubs. shower stalls at) G7" lumber now foing ee Snore Gulteta s weeks aie teat | cities, laws furniture wood lathe. ALL MAKES OF CARS seas Anvmnn | premium tires, att deture accense! C)fficiqls Cars ’ s We . t . a Lake Ave i Vl RB: IRMPFI~ i ks — “ . ac able Julv §& Make our reser- bower lawn mower erinder mo-| ,, AYMENT PL. HIGH §$ CHEAP & SCRAP CARS | te Will accept best offer EM ONE 2 IN ~ORAVITY CAST IRON | OUR pric FR ARF NUL ONLY oA et Les vase Ais | vation now Downs Poultry Farm tors murzie eee eS and BRA wit MOTE ee . ALES pay or_eve FE 12-2666 ; ane — ee C C ee He Tae Toe OT eee Bite i eh om rele Bone reas, TF | Sat re ane rs PHONE TE ae ME fiedd beat aR | 32 \DIETAC Conv. | Courtesy Cars lete cE 2-37 6 = r sree ean 2 A ~ 30 Years i aln re es A 2° ADMORAT TV TAKE OVER ' YARDS 10 SFRVB yor | Sd GHIckMetL, Giclee: GL Case at Wert Pike St For mien grade useq cere owe, A real shero car Hvdramatic = ~- and Hickmott = auctioneer A. = need them Drive the extr fen ow steering new noremium Bei Air Door Sedans = Sayments FE 50811 4x8 Sheet Rock C & C $1353 BLACK DIRT. TOP SOIL. PEAT Sale Farm Produce 75 _ 2226 or OA 82159 Oxford onal: erinwess) Te it ath pay vou well Waar Dinte | ree i eonuriesrss aA Pe . Hardton Soert Coupes 4x4 masonite sheet 409, all eraded Fill dirt ail kinds of <= a . | For Sale Housetrailers a ching Shoo a Hoel Pione PE wy cq as HOUGHTON & SON a; sail atocatt x8 @td. w pine bds per M 98900, crave. and sand FE 35-4750 | |GARDEN PLANTS FLOWERS|... OS H VANWELI Yo : Doo: Sedans LYW 1xl2 std w pine bds per M. $8900) BLACK DIRT TOP S8sOIL FILL and vegetables of all kinds Even =e . i" UF ERIENDEY CLDSMOSIte inl Shey ed ese tod. spue teats Ban’ decing: Sma Dine Hey ak pues Pere MOBILE _ Sale Motor ‘Scooters 82 MOST HAVE CAR a pe eS See STANDARD. TRANSMISSIONS : oe and = septic nks Su i 3 2 ARR ARRAS CC LS ain Rochester OL 1-076) || § ? NS 8 De in. fir pT per sheet ..... 85.78 LD. Cee) Sand and Gravel. Days FE 3-91: CHERRIES. PICK | YOUR O OWN. a = ——— | OVERDRIVES POWERGLIDE fir — -oseese $3.05 | 1x4 etd. flooring, M.,..813000| Eves, FE 4-1072. Bring container: Wainut Glen 1954 CUSHMAN EAGLE” scoor- Any model or makes. Clean. Top PRv! ren Good geese bar of reual VIDSON 125. G0OD COMMUNITY DOWN WHEN TRYING To BUY | Cir lon overhead, lncation et Trailer Sal Soll pipe § ft E8308 le ucas ot cravell AN Tend llioe acl CHERRIES —@ SPRAY PRUITE. | ers. Good selection. Buy or rental | 52 HARLEY DAVIDSON 125. GOOD A CAR BECAUSE OF SHORT! Uits terrifi- savings to be vassed ralier ales Com ahem doors trem: see, $2095) Sea 740) ; _25 cents a qt. FE 2-72400 pian _condition PE 4-584 : EMPLOYMENT NO CREDIT,| 7 '¢ vou 4618 Dix'e Awe Dravton Platns : ie eons. lige Je So CoailttnG STACK DIRT AND PILL ena SEBAG) REED AND we win ve ee seers oe 2 HARLEY Goce CONDITION. | MOTORS WE HEVE A OOOD | SELECTION | SAVE SAVE SAVE 8. eatin tat ans si - t re. lo i | i" 4 one a Ninven’ welders. one. Tt; | ¥ DC Colored hath ent all Mitines & Se kaa fe went Ra Russell Port | you on used traliers, | 1948 a HAGE YS DAVIDSON. MODFI 3N : oH ‘tan BUY POR : a outboard motor FE| Sat medicine cab $150 08 | Lake MApie 57608 FARMALL SUPER C, 4 MONTHS Oxfor?® Trailer Sales 144 “sacelect cmere pees tice, aN Main, Rochester THAT Ves CAN BUY FOR Don't Delay — Act Today 9-867" = [) sas hit avis hiehioade \ 8 LAKE N N TILL I9 PM a % PLYSCORE NEW ¢ FT. ee et ea Prepared top soils mixed asd sade 2 tans itm vow 8 Ee en eee Part Ot ee cee tOLive 30011 WEEKLY. PA PAYMENTS OF, AS $5 50. sheet. %4 in. sanded ‘ar iP YOU ARE BUILDING A HousE to your. specifications Rdeedbe TCA est offer. 1 Mile South of Lore - on M-24) _ wy 2-2611_ till: 9.00 pm “Ss M &M M t 7 Sa Te wood 4 ft fs. 05. Tile. BTER ye sp -| _ ©1738 _ MY a Fan 34s ee M: otor Sales. oe gs green or beach. i8e square ino 6 pe Hu ph a P -sand ] lo LIGHT SWEET CHERRIES. 50 eee Davi Fe tor top doliar on late model cars | - No Co-Signers! A ana soe On ALL eat-sand or clay loam ALUMINUM 1952 er MADE herryiawn ft fe Mise «birch Deed ars oe : ATERIALS dex: $15 Seat Montmorency pies. OR | 99 ft Spotless manv extras. must FOR’ Ps PARTS AND SERVICE ON 2627 Dixie Hwy OR 33-1603 « hard x . Mane Re IT's as you desire. per . ea z seen to appreciate $1600 Eves H I SCRAP CARs OR CHEAP CARS : ic iv Ch ] eet. tiac Coach CO load delivered. FE 44207 MORTMORENCY CHERRIES. __LI 5-7476, Royal Oak . a paviicca Srogd mag agree OR _3-4611 Immediate Delivery! evro et oats Dixie Hwy. : * “ : * Bring cantainers. 581 Brooke. EXCHANGE ! EQUITY IN FUR- _naw _|WTD. JUNK CARS & SCRAP 3 See Clesst! 4 ve sore) FE 10245 19 sds. $12) FE Used and new John Bean : 5 or any old car ( M SUPPLE we SALES CO Harmakers-“ihe real bay money T i] S ] a. a a pk 7 07308, ik j DISC EXCELLENT CON. ROAD GRAVEL TANET OAleS _ cosretio’s Bon ‘han ae ‘bah SH RI veeT cae PLACE A ans righ Guestcsothdlimadiben Exriigt *r* com ame Pree | oo: ing, uey, Dyan Pai | Sula | Reade, — WASHED SAND AND onavEt. ne SP ree Punt “J : Idea mos to recover a loss.-Dial FE %o DU e 4 ss sath = Hy Digi, fe ek he wi ee eee ag wr i ae oon “Une SS YOU'LL FALL net THE PONTIAC ER Ss. MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 channel Mercure engine. 223 Whittemore FORD i955 arm? side walla, peggy gore fulty equipped — only bi . §no- shoe white, tan . A beauty FE 2-024 - OR ee 1 after 5. lus E. 5 rat er heater ve. or af old car sont Credit checked ed . 4 DOOR an dheater radio GOOD CLEAN 1650 FORD CLUB eouve Gravy $495. 6 Roseberry correr W & Scenic Hwy Prank lich. ‘*] FORD CONVERT. $666. PLAME red. white well tires, specia! Any old car down. THWEST CHEVROLET Woodward oh hs Mile eee be 3 . ve wee i Stanley Ave. : — ets. PE 64300 @ over pay- ao FORD COUPE, HARDTOP - fall race stock to the eve engine evare wheels tires and parts __ $230 FE +7419 1954 FORD CUSTOMLINE TUDOR 8 CYLINDER $1395 ‘LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer “Pon MORE THA ots YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO. BUTT 53 FORD RAN WAGON V-2, No, heater PMatic, 16. oe m S Bt. new LAKE. ‘ORION MOTOR SALES 24 at Buc Lake __MY * soe ti 6:0 pm iv? FORD CONVERTIBLE #10 down and assume payments. 464 8 Woodward. Birmingham, _ , FORD COUPE $125. FE 33442. 1 Oakiand Ave Ppt % MODEL-A CONVERTED __roadster. _ $65. FE 2-3826, Our Fourth of July ae ’ ] se Specials '54 Pontiac 2 dr.... Bs) 53 Packard .....,. $1295 "53 Dodge V-8 4 dr.. .$1095 53 Plymouth 4 dr.. .,.$895 ’S3 Dodge 6 cyl. 4 dr. $995 *S2 De Soto V-8 4 dr. $995] iss *52 Dodge Hardtop. .$1095 $2 Plymouth 2 dr... .$695 *S1 Nash. 4 dr. .......$395 S| Hudson «...0....$395 "30 Dodges (2)... .$295 up| 50 Chevrolet ....... $395 *50 Ford. Convertible $395 "SD Pontige ...:..... $350) 30 Nash Ambassador $400) 49 Plymouth 2 dr... .$295 “9 De Soto .sss005<. $295 48 Dodge 4 dr.......$150 Riemen- schneider 232 S. SAGINAW ST. Open ‘til & pan. FE 2-9131 IN LOVE $2,195 "h4 ers Contars hardtop A REAL BHARPIE| ‘$695 "30 Pontiac Catalina. THIS CAR lg FOR YOU! $1,145 "82 Oldemobie ? dr MECHANICAL LY PERFECT! $1.395 i et Catalina A BEAUTI- ae . $1,695 "$4 Pontiac 2. drs, and drs TAKE YOUR PICK TRON A BTOCK OF A ARB "63 Ford. Victorta $1,195 ‘t} Packard 4 dr REAL SHARP! po ‘@ Mercury station weoon REAL Be ot OTHE ..8 HOOSE COMMUNITY MOTORS THE PLA WHERE YOU CAN Det SNO and ‘et black white wall Gree plus gas sone over drive. Many more ) er PL _ For Sale Used Cars 91 For Sale Used Cars _# Pb Teta PS A ‘real, Bob Frost, Inc, 850 alas WOODWARD. ae JOrdan 6-3933 “KELLER OPE Until 10 pm Osear’s Motor Sales 185 Oakland entire of Sanderson. We ioaee cur own, plenty of used ears to choose from. Os- car and Al to serve you Phone FE 5-1439 ~PLYMOUTHS 549 dr. oc csees ee $1095} 'S34dr...... ven e e $895 | 82 Wagon ).---.-7 52 Club Coupe ...... *S1 Club Coupe ......3: SO4 dr. .....-.. wee 293 49 Convertible ..... $195] '48 Convertible ..... $145 DODGES S3V8 4dr. ........ $1095 "536 Hydrive .....,.$945 "S24 dr. on... wes 9695 "504 dr. ccc. ee ee SSIS "502 dr. wc. cece ens S45 | | DE SOTOS 1054 Firedome V8 Coub Coupe fac- tory officials car. Beautiful 2 tene blue and is equipped with. pewer windows and power steer- | ine Custen interior snd many | ether factory accessories Can not be told from a pew car Must be seen to appreciated 1051 Custom 4 dr Two to select | from Fully eaulpeed Your choice ter oniv ; $695 WE FINANCE — ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY KELLER KOCH CHRYSLER- wal Sa DEALER Birmingham Liberty #-4565 Used Car Deoartment 13% Mile Rd and Wood ward (Opposite the BIG BOY @ | FRAZER | oooD eounrtiow $100 3134 Bessie, Auburn Hts Hort ROD > NO = AND . SPARE parts or will eel] any part nee oo track cam. J*% bore by bo stroke FE 2-088] after ope _ ee 1951 KAISER @ 1 ? DR. slo pows and assume oavments 464 _Woedward Birmingham DELUXE. DARK . low mileage NTERNATIONAL SCHOOL BUS. condition arg! price PE 41782 or FE 4-144 a LINCOLN. 1989 COSMOPOLITIAN bard tep coupe Radio, hester. white wali ar Automatic trans- mision. $1708. Bob Frost, Inc, “B50 S ay \WOODW. ARD. BIRMINGHAM MI 6 4Ordan_ 6-933 $4 MERCOMATIC 4 DR. PER. fect shape $1725 Will finance. _ WE 41545 ask for Prady MERCURY MONTEREY HARD top. Like new Loaded Reason- able 107 Mt. Clemens, __ MEREURY 196% MONTEREY 4 | door Radio. heater, Mero-O-Mat. te "hae walls, A real family | ear Bob | Frost, Inc PEO > BON Ri BIRMINGHAM MI_6-2200 _JOrdan 63073 1M | MERCURY 7 DR e045 MERC Matic radio eater white Birmingham. “2 NASH RAMBLER STATION wavon 15900 miles extras OR +204 ‘33 NASH RAMR'ER - HARDTOP _Hydramatic FE —— 61 NASH SEDAN <4. guaranteo: and alte Neme vour own terma nO Woodward Agate ET we a » e 19527 OLDS a8 37 DR $10 DOWN and assume payments 464 __Weodward, Birmingham 5 pm fa HOLIDAY | ramatio, eee er atee pow tone white ‘wall tires. Like oew NOR CHEVROLET Woodward at 13 Mn Line in S-11000 ‘0 OLDS 8 SEDAN 9495. NEW pant new rites hydro. radio and heater, Sha arp NORTHWEST CHEVROLET Woodward at 13 Mile Limeoin 6-1100_ ips6 “OLDS a® RADIO hydramatic pesctttal ¢ondition ir oie and | AUBURN MOTUR SALES Enst Bivd at East Pike | ‘33 “OLDS SUPER aA SEDAN 81405 | Blue and white fydrametiec. ra dio and veater full power can't | tell from uvew NORTHWEST CHEVROLET Woodward at 13 Mile Lincoin 61100 He OLDSMOBILE 08 SEDAN $605 Hydramatic radio and heater any old eee down Credit checked by phon NORTHWEST CHEVROLET Woodward at 13 Mile _ —_ EAneoin $1100 61 OLDS SUPER 8 SONVERT. $75 Hvdramatiaq radio .d heat- ert white wai tires Robin's Ece blue original paint and top like new Al sew iiftera Quiet as a mouse NORTHWES1 CHEVROLET PUL L Y equinved HEATER 1951 4) PLYMOUTH ~~ EXCELLENT cond original owner FE 5-2675 $82 PONTIAC SEDAN $95 newe tt & nas tt deer and $3940 per month NORTHWEST CHFVROI = Wondward ef 13) Mil Lincoin $1160 $5 STARCHIEF CUSTOM 4 DR sedan hvdramatic accessories except power equip | ment t_ FE 5-364 after 5 PONTIAC’S 1955 Demonstraters and officials ars BIG SELECTION MIi< 4-1933. Ask for Ray West 1954 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF Sie alina Fully equioored. 6990 miles | Sharp 17 S Jessie after 3 He _pm A! 1 day Sunday 90 PONTIAC. SEDAN 74 black white wall res radio and anv old heater vdramatie *: car down NORTHWEST CHEVRO! ET Woodward at Mile _ Lincoin 5-1106 PONTIAC GOOD CONDI | tien OR 14-3319 between 4 36 | and 7 | 98° PONTIAC «4 DR DFTUXE | all access 1150 UR_}1806_ $1 PONTIAC CATALINA 8775 Hvdramatic. radio and heater white wall tires biue and ivory NORTHWEST CHEVROLET — Woodward ef 13 Mile Lincoin 61100) ‘S) PONTIAC SEDAN 9666 HY dramatic radio pod Any o'4 ear down and bat dy po month NORTHWEST CHE Woodward at 13 mee Lingoin 54-1100 1954 PONTIAC 4 DR. CHIEFTAIN Detuse. low mileage bvdramatic tadio & nester 120 8 Ardmore FE 47201 ie = =60 PONTIAC -—~CONVERTIBI F Best offer Fully equipped, per _fect shape FE 5-300 after $ 30 1980 PONTIAC . CONVERTIBL ¥: Good shape For sale or trace OR_3-2807 1946 PONTIAC 4 DR 8&8 GOOD condition FE 2-3434 ; i982 PONTIAC 2 °°? DELUXE $16 down ind assume varment< _ 464 8 Woodward Birmingham - TAYLOR'S GOOD USED CARS 1964 Chevrolet 2 dr. with radio heater and Power Giide Low down payment end long easy terms. 1953 Chevrolet Bel Air Sport Coupe Sun Geld and Ivory Radio, heat er spotlighM and white walls Reai sharp. Just your old car down Radio. heater Well equipped and long 1951 Olt, 98 4 adr and Hydramatic Your old car easy terms down 1950 Bulck Special with reais. — r and Dynafiow 85 00d Also many ether transportation specials for oniy $5 down. TAYLOR’S At mooted Lake “gine 1431" Phone SMArKet @-156) ‘tb 2 PONTIAC ¢ CATALINA HYDRA “Reale. heater good condition. FE #8 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE RA- dio and heater hydromatic Good condition Will finance FE ¢2245 | SAVE $700 1988 Pontiacs officials’ cara 6e- Any old car | full tine of : | 5 yor | | lection of body styles and colors M1 41930, ask for Rusa or Tom. 163" PONTIAC CUSTOM CATA- 4 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE Black, Mydramatic MY_3-5161 $1 PONTIAC a00D CONDITION ant r ie amt oe 1963 Rae OELUXE crete ray nS oka: "33 PONTIAC SEDAN s1t7s Midrenatio radio ‘eater white wall arse Anv olf car @o08n cy month NO" Tiwesr Cc bof VROLET Woodward at 13 Mile Lincoln $-1106 1955 PONTIAC Special faint Dual antennas trade, MI #7743 oa, a PONTIAC “CATALINA WITH eater hetramatic§ Verv Cie AUBURN MOTOR SALES East Blvd at East Pike Continental kit Full vower iest PONTIAC 2 OR RADIO. heater hvdramatic directional stenals visor - san w mileage Very UTURN cron SALES Ea-t Bivd, st Bast Pike SELLING OUT 88 Studebakers All = models. demos and new cars below cost G) sel inside of 1 week Any car HOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS CARKNER STUDEBAKER MI 43410 Birmingham SL Studebaker Land Cruiser V8 HYDRAMATIC, DIRECTION. AL SIGNALS, AND HEATER. IN VERY so See a FE 48030 4PM OR WRITE PONTIAC PRESS BOX NO. ‘$1 STUDEBAKER CLUB COUPE. Like new, auto trans V-8 $395. HOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS CARKNER STUDEBAKER MI 4.3410 _ Birmingham Woodward at '° “ile _Lincoin 5.1100 60 OLDS CONVERTIBLE TARE over payments, OR 42463 1952 PACKARD ? DR and assume payments Woodward. Birmingham, 1954 PLYMOUTH CLUA “GEDAN ceca Heater. Signals. etc 6.000 miles only, 1 owner, As new. $1250 Can arrange finance FE 45175 after 6pm ofr all day an, “$10 DOWN | | 4640=«8 a {CYMaetH Co CONVERTIBLE $044 New : white wall cobs = gneve re red “5 or any “hot fo FST CHEVROLET eee at 5 ine Lincotn 5-1100 1982 4 DOOR CRANBROOK PLYM- outh 48.000 miles New tires. $475 Fis, 4-6109. 198? PLYMOUTH SEDAN 310 down and assume navmerits 464 8, Woodward Birmingham, . _ 183 PLYMOTTH «4 DR. GOOD ition §=$845 «FE 81431, 340 _Baidwin Ave, 3 PL yMouTn ate AN. 877 at neater waite ree iy fs “t eat nb I a hd Sud A, Mon. 698, cat sary nod coe 6) my H CRAN aranng : poe. say ie . GOOD | 52 WILLYS $498 RADIO AND heater plus — swe overdrive Ane ge car dow THWEST © HRY cL &Y Wonivare at Ly Mile Lincoin §-1106 i962 WILL“ STATION WAGON “10 down and asatime navments #64 8, Woodward Birmingham, _ West Side Used Cars 33 i custom 8 ° dr. Forde $1 Mercury sedan Overdrive 1 dr Pav erelide. 52 Pivmouth sedan 51 Studebaker commander 8 sedan 50 Pontie deluxe © club coune 48 Pontiac deluxe @ sedan We have several “$6 ¢° cars. West Side Used Cars 923_W. Hoon PE 4-2185 Guaranteed USED CARS. 1953 Chevrolet 2 dr. 50 1951 Ford deluxe 9 dr. 4S. 1962 Piymow heb eve tes9 oS 4 dé ™ Ste * dt _/ CLARKSTON : Mad bs IR SALES ph onrn OE, geet, agora i LIKE A REAL CAR C CONVERTIBLE — will, . OLIVER. BUICK CHEV. OLIVER BUICK BUICK SALE SALE 1954 1951 BUICK, CHEV. $1895 $495 1953 1953 BUICK CHEV. $1095 $895 1952 1954 “BUICK CHEV. $795 $1195 1950-1950 BUICK | CHEV. $395 $295 OLIVER OLIVER | BUICK BUICK 210 Orchard Take Ave 210 Orchard take FE 2-9161 FE 2-0101 Ate and many .other extras BARGAIN? - Lots of wt 6s e Want Ads! Don't Let Your Car Be a DUD n the 4th —You'll Get a Real ~ BANG Out of a "Goodwill Used Car” From the Retail Store! 54 Chevrolet 52 Hudson Bel Air Hardtop, Radio. heater, Hornet with radio, heater, Hy- and white walls. A beauty. dramatic and 2 tone paint. ’ $1595 $895 "34 Pontiac 53 Chevrolet Star Chief Convertibie Radio Q¢r with radio heater and heater and Hydramatie direction signals Goed runner. $1895 $105 *S4 Pontiac 2 dr Chieftain Dix radio, heat- er and 12,000 miles. "SL Buick Super Hardtop. Radio. heater, direction signals and 2 tone. $1595 $895 : "53 Pontiac "52 Chevrolet — Catalina Coupe with radto. 2dr. Detuxe. Radio, heater, nesiet, Hydramatic and white Power Glide ahd direction sigs. wees: €1505 $695 _ pa 5 51) Buick SI Lincoln Super Qtr sedan with radio. 4dr sedan with radio heater neater and a 2 tone finish like new . wee C75 $595 $795 5.3 Pontiac 4dr sedan. A real black beauty that comes equipped with radio and heater. $1195 "51 Pontiac 4dr. 29000 miles. Radio. heater, and Hydramatic. Like new.‘ $795 53 Dodge 53 Pontiac Coronet 4dr. Radio, heater, 2 2dr. with radio. heater, and tone paint and white walls. Hydramatte. Sharp. $1095 $1295 $3 Pontiac SEP outh: : : sl Plym uth Convertible with radio, heater 4dr sedan with radio and heat- ’ et. Here ts a real nice car. el —— $495 $1495 100 More Cars to Choose From PONTIAC RETAIL IE | “Goodwill Used: ‘Gore! 6s wer, ‘CLEMENS st. “ream » | Cc I Bright Spot OFFERS SAVINGS TO YOU g0 EXTRA CLEAN CARS! 1950 Packard Dix. 4 Dr. Ultra.............. S444 1950 Ferd Dix. 8 Tudor, R&H.... $399 1980 Chry. Bik. Dix. 4 Dr.. RAH............ $499 1956 Olls G84 Dr, Hydra. RAH 2.......-- $499 1951 Ford 8 Dix. 2 Dr., R&H...... Loe eeeee $499 1951 Chev. Dix. 4 Dr. lieat. & P’G........ $599 1951 Dixlge Corenet Cl Cpe. R&I).....- .. $399 1951 Pont, Chief 8 Dix 4° Rr. Hydra ..... $666 19OSl Olds O8 Hardtop, Tivdra............. SHV 1951 Mercury Custom 4 Dr. Mer-co....... $699 LOSL De Soto Custom 4 Dr. Gyro........... $366 1951 Olds 98 Sedan, Fine Car............... $799 SPECIALS 1953 Chev. Bel Nir Hardtop. Extras........$1244 1983 Olds Super && Sedan, Fine Car..... vy 1953 Ply. Cran, 4 Door, Clean......... . S44 Always Good Transportation Cars at Lowest Prices Meet Your Next Car At the Bright Spot’ JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC Cass at Orchard Lake lp E 8-0488 FE8-0488 /JOrdan 4-6266 CHEAPIES A-1 BUYS '46 Ford 2 dr. ......$89 54 Chev. 4dr... .$1144 a ones + ae -- $89. '54 Ford Country Sedan 0 Tlys Clb Cpe SEP ss Nash 4 dr "47 Mercury 4 dr... .$89 ba see o ws 40 Dedge @dr.....g144 > ford) 2 dt. 2=2-e "49 Mercury 4dr...$144 ‘52 Stude. Cl. Cpe. $544 "48 Hudson 4 dr. ...$89 © °S1 Ford Cl. Cpe.. .$399 ’52 Ford R. Wgn. $899 51 Stude. 4 dr.... .$144 °S3 Chev. Bel Air $1199 47 Pont. Sed. Cpe... $89 5 , 42 Ford Coupe ....$44 '53 Merc. Sedan. .$1099 4A D> ae Ay i ae ao “ pa 52 Plymouth 2 dr. $544 46 Chev. 4dr....... says SL Nash Sedan ...$399- "49 Ford Sta Wyn S89 52 Mere. 4dr. ....$7¥9 oe parser 4 ae SS '§3 Ford 2 dr......$699 eid) Sed. se Seatac Sede 49 Olds 88 4dr....$199 52 Willys S. Wn. $544 ’51 Kaiser 2 dr.... .$299 Convertibles 53 Ford Victoria $1044 GiGhew! Conve $1099 a Dodge Aides eye? 'S1 Ford Conv. ... $599 St Huds'n Hornet $399 ’S2 Ford Conv ... . $899 "51 Merc. Cl. Cpe.. .$499 S4 Ford Conv... . $159 $3 Ford Conv... $10). TRUCKS ’SO Ford 34 t. exp. $399 54 Ford '4 ¢. pick. $799 ’SO Ford 13 t. panel $209 “41 Ford 13 t. pick. $99 82 Chev. Div. 2 dr. $544 "SO Buick 2 dr.... .$209 ctiGhev. 2idi.- 23. $699 *S4 Stud. Cl. Cpe. $1199 51 Chrysler 4 dr.. 4499 33 Plymouth Sed. $544 39 Cad. (like new) $299 “50 Chev. S. Wn. $599 "$2 Nash 2 dr...... $599 *s2 Pont. Dlx. 2 dr. $699 '53 Chrysler 4 dr.. $999 "34 PIV. Sav. 2 dr. $1099 "53 Packard 4 dr. $1044 $999 $999 $999 “1984 Ford Tudor Heater and Perfect Condition $260 down & $29.73 mo. FORD-O-MATIC SERVICE SPECIAL 1. Dram old oi! 2. Pull ot! pan & clean, 3 Adjust prop- erly. bands 4. Replace ol pan and mstall fresh oil. 5. Road test car and,” adjust throttle link, age for smooth pet- formance. or A Vital Maintenance Syrrice Your old car down and ecoce mre Otl bee tenes slightly higher pay’ts. or $13.95 Inciudes Labgr and O1l Harold Turner, Ford 2 BIG LOTS 464 S. Woodward 1314 Mile Rd. at Woodward Midwest 4-7500 Liberty 9-4000 Liberty 9-4UU1 Low Bank Rates—No Down Payment $10 down and slightly lugher payments. Low. Immediate “Spot” Delivery —_ ee -— ———_ _ CY OWENS “Your FORD Dealer” fe) USED GARS JULY and AUGUST Low Prices Right Now! ALL USED CARS MUST GO! ° 1955 Ford Victoria 1955 Chev. Conv., 1955 Ford Conv., sharp 1954 Ford Conv.. 9000 miles 1954 Mercury Sun Valley 1954 (hev O84 Ford Custom 8. 2 door The Following at Wholesale Prices like new . Sport: Coupe 1950 Pont. 4 door sedan ......... saan e ss SOOO 1952 Nash 4 door sedan «2... ces -5.0csscn2. SOS 1952 Studebaker hardtop ............. ee ee) 1952 Chev, 4 door ...... Joie Sem fae Se eerie oad 1950 (Vocd B!cx= Zidenr 25). - eee pense LOSI Bord 4"doer sedan 2.02) eo $445 1982 Mercury sport colipe ........::.2.. ». S850 {9Si Plymouth 4 doot 4.2.2.6... «<5.2-6< +. 000 1949 Cadillac 4 door ...... cc cece cece ee ee SOYS 1953 Plymouth 4 door 4.0.05. 0050002 0000+ S685 1951 Mercury club coupe ........eeeeeee eee $S9S Low Down Payments! Best Terms! —O— Transportation Specials From $50 Up! ‘Come in or Call. “CY OWENS" , FES4101 =’ | FE5-3588 " Openi@AiMite9 PM. OUT THEY GO! BUST! BOOM(| BANG! Take Advantage of This Lowest Margin of Profit Deal! Any Profit Is All Profit ~~ Stock No. 147) 1953 Henry § 2.22206 ee can ree ene. S441 1941 1949 Chevrolet Convertible ...........- S351 1681 1948 Buick Convertible ............... $141 111401949 Hudson 4:dr-. +. ee eee SSL | 753 1951 Mercury Sedan .....<..+...-..+--$32l 1741 1951 Kaiser 4 dr. ............. io scew en $191 1288 1953 Chevrolet 4 dr. ............ oes uel 1725 1946 Pontiac 2 dr. ............006- ... $101 1a@9 195%) Hudson 4 dr. ...-....-..... we. $211 1602 1950 Merctiry 2 dt. <.06-cecn ss eesnwsc $291 1455 195) Studehaker V8 .-........-..--.-. $201 1915 1947 Cadillac 4 dr. ............ ga uee vee $321 19231950 (Buicki4 dre ane Sail 1539 1951 Chevrolet 2 dr. ................. S541 1221 1949 Chevrolet 4 dr. ............222.. $261 1876 1953 Pontiac Catalina ................- $1341 1697 1951 Olds 98 4 dr. ............00.006. $781 1896 1949 Olds Club Coupe ................- $291 1080 1950 Chevrolet 4 dr. ....5.6.65..5....- $541 1742 1947 Pontiac 2 ‘dr. ..................-- $161 12748 1946 Chevrolet Club Coupe ............$151 1504 1542 1493 1951 Plymouth (Ue Goo SqUCGpHSemocoe. aed 1983 Chevrolet Taxi cc .ccc cscs s00+ Sl 1951 Hudson Club Coupe ..............$40l “We Price:’em Low = Sell ‘em Fast” MATTHEWS | HARGREAVES anh CHEV ROLET DEALER _FE 44546 THE PON NTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 -s. \ 4 Sallivan Marks 7th. Show Holding Own in Ratings Veteran Newsman Still Among Top TV MCs After Long Tenure By WAYNE OLIVER EW helper @® — Even for tele- vision, in which the exceptional is commonplace, Ed Sullivan comes phenomenal In the past 52 weeks he has out- scored every one of NBC’s Sunday night spectaculars and topped all but three comedy hour telecasts, Stoneface, and even now Is spar- ing with hig smiles. Starting in the early 30's as a master of ceremonies for benefit shows, he branched into vaudeville | and also had his own radio show, which he did in additiog to a daily newspaper column, HE STARTED MANY Among those first put on the air by Sullivan, on his radio show, was one Jack Benny, who later became perhaps radio's greatest alltime star and now is among TV's elite. There were many oth- ers—some already famous and some then unknown — including nniversary of Toast’ -- Today's Radio Piectomte > -- Frerame furnished by stations fisted tm thie columa are subject’ to change withest setics Win, (ten CRLW, we ww, (ane WOAR, (1190) warz, (ie) WIBR, (i408 — (466) . TONIGHT CKLW, Van Buren 9:45—WJR, Lazy Ranch news fica 4:90--WIR, News WPON, News CKLW, Neighbor weak News News. p45 10:15—WWJ, News ee ewa, Sports CKLW, Leroy 0: apigiyrs Arthur Godtrey i: WIR Ma reve reins WEYZ, Top of Town McBride, Peale WXYZ, ul Winter WPON. See & Orville ware, My True Story CKLW, Sammy Kaye 10:38—WJIR, Dance Orch, CELW. echats WCAR, mda | & Thomas wxyY World WPON. Art Van Damme 100—WJR, Guest House wave Star Extra CKELW, XYZ. show 8:45—WXYZ, — 9:00—WJR, Rose. Clooney WWJ. Telephone Hr. xY Volce *:18—WJR, Bina Crosby 0:20—WIR, Amos ‘n’ Andy WWJ) MeVey, Jane Night in “Rich Party. “ SNS Pa woh nee Cameron Swayze. (2) Julius La'- Kid." . Gr ife. 9: 7 ee gil “Definitely something for the ae Sou Sones Stk ao pe ae “ rs o reat a 2:00—(7) Stars on Seven. (4) Ted) der, of Marquette, former Mar- | kids, Something, if it can be loans aes - oe, oe cont go to oe in| Mack's Matinee. (2) Big Payoff. | quette County Republican chair. | es. 2 ; \ done legitimately and is not 01 | a department store and talk Eari 2:9%(9) Toby David Show. a man, and Donald Strong, of phony, that will touch the emo- tiens of the people. “Something = :00—(7) TV Readers Digest. Com- munist attorney flees to West in into helping them make their sales quota. William Bishop. Greatest Gift. (2) Bob Crosby. Kalanvazoo, executive of a print- | ing firm which specializes in | that’s completely topical—cur- | disgust over methods East Ger- | eas ASS James Dun. 2:45—(4) Concerning Miss Mar-! paiiots and election materials. rently in the as Ms- | man rulers use to send innocent | Star. t - ane uuseum. Mis-| lowe. the Repeilivan Comcel Comiak rion Marlowe after had been a ee inc: Gn sion of Foo."’ “Gloria Swansot. Cent i fired from the Godfrey show. cae Gama’ ‘Garie| Stars.” 3:00—(7) Heartthrob Theater, (9) | tee, heeding the pleas of State “Introductions of ple in the 7 —— noe Tuesday Matinee. (4) Hawkins | Chairman John Feikens to ‘‘get it wollensa, “had to hace Ge a ce Dollar | 11:00—(7) Soupy's On. Variety! Fang (2) Brighter Day. settled,” agreed to meet July 9 to . ” ne ont Lao = with Soupy Sales. (9) Gooa elect a successor to David W. Ken- dience come to feel over the months and years that they. al- ways can tune in without being offended, without seeing or. papel anything that’s in bad “T hardly know Godfrey,” says Sullivan. ‘I’ve seen him only about twice in the seven years I've been with CBS, How can you feud with somebody you don't know?” Sullivan says he booked the ex- Godfreyites because the public _ was interested in them Sullivan and his wife Sylvia live in a Park Ave. hotel apartment where Sullivan also makes his of- | fice. They have one daughter. |+,39 (7). Voice Program. Mimi, ; er Arar Robert Eaton was -stabbed June Betty. married to Navy Lt. Robert) p.n7¢1! soprano, and Robert TUESDAY MORNING ‘Green Funeral Slated | 18 in a row with another prisoner. | | . Precht Jr.. and an infant grand-| pounseville, tenor, sing duets, 7:00 — (4) Today. (2) Morning | Doctors at the prison removed | 3 Famous son, Robert. from “Oklahoma.” Romeo et; Show LANSING — Funeral service | Eaton’s spleen, damaged by the N D el Juliet” and Spanish song. (2) 9:96—(7)—Todd Purse Show. (4) | Will be held tomorrow for Price H. eaten oe oe = was jf Norge uxe Talent Scouts. Arthur Godfrey| Romper Room. (2) Ga -e, Green, chairman of the Michigan | Tushed to Detroit where the me- . N ehr u Repeats host to new talent. Final show. < m arry Moore. | ate Legislative Board, Brother- | chanical kidney was utilized. ” Time a Five Principles of Coexistence VIENNA, (®—Indian Prime Min- ister Nehru saw the sights of Vien- na today as he continued his Eu- an tour. Albrehet and films of his ‘‘Hud- . mee ._* * son Bay Adventure.”’ (9) Abbot Full 9-Lb. Capacity Thousands of Austrians lined; and Costello Show. “Car the road to cheer the Asian leader) Trouble.” comedy. (4) Robert on his arrival yesterday from War-| wiontgomery Presents. “‘Tow- saw aboard a special Soviet plane. Nehru leaves the Austrian cap- ital late tonight for Salzburg to preside at a conference there of Indian diplomatic envoys in Eu- ae: e « @# Nehru and Polish Premier Josef Cyrankiewicz issued a joint state- ment last night reaffirming the five principles of peaceful coex- istence which the Indian Prime of the Indian's visit to the Séviet of the Frightened Lady.” (4) Wide* World. Dave -Garroway eonducts viewers on tour of United States and Mexico and Canada with views of New York, San Farncisco and points be- tween. Scenes from ‘Julius Caesar” at Canada's Stratford, Comedian Cantinflas in Mexican bull ring, Jam session in Wash- ington, Water spectacle from Long Island. (2)' George Burns and Gracie Allen Py Gracie gives George wrong directions on how to get to neighborhood barbecue party and the neigh- bors give him a bad time. $:00—(7) Wrestling. Films. (2) I Love Lucy. Ricky and Lucy are trapped for 24 hours in pair of ancient handcuffs. Lucille Ball, Desi Arnaz star in final show. Neighbor Theater. Victor Ma- ture, Alan Ladd in Caution.” (4) News. Paul Wil- liams. (2) News. Jac LeGoff. 11:15—(7) Armchair Theater. War- ner Oland in “Charlie Chan at the Race Track.” (4) Little Show. Frank Thomas, Sr., E. G. Marshall in “Public Relations.” (2) Miss Fair Weather. Bette Wright. 11:20—Nightwatch Theater. John Wayne, Thomas Mitchell it. “Long Voyage Home.” “Captain | 11:30—Tonight. Steve Allen host, from Holtywood. §:30—(2) Arthur Godfrey. 0:00—(7) Wixie’s Wonderland. (4) . Home. 10:30—(2) Strike It Rich. $:15—(4) First Love. 3:30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. 3:43—(4) Modern Romance. dall, of Jackson, as GOP national | committeeman. Kendall has been waiting to re-; i | Sign for six months, since he was 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Take a Look, Puppets. (4) Pinky | Show. (2) Robt. Q. Lewis. | 4:30—(9) Howdy Doody. (2) Wel- come Travelers. 4:45—(7) Ricky the Clown. 5:00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Justice Colt. (4) Rocky Jones, Space Rangers. (2) Sagebrush Shorty. 6:30—(7) Laurel & Hardy. (4) Ten- nessee Ernie hood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen. Green, 62, died Sat- urday. The funeral will be held at 1 p.m. in the. Estes-Leadiey Fu- neral Home. Burial will be at Elm Lawn Cemetery in Bay City. appointed counsel to the Treasury Department. \Knifed Convict Dies Despite Medical Help DETROIT (INS)—A 25-year-old Jackson Prison inmate died in De- troit’s Receiving Hospital today after having been kept. alive since last Thursday with the ald of an artificial kidney. Eaton was serving a 6 months to/ 5 year sentence for car theft. Prison officials said his assailant who was not identified, will be tried for murder in Jackson County Circuit Court. 8:30—(7) Holiday Horizons. John head,”" story of young boy who has a crush on his country school teacher. Charles Drake, Dierdra Oowen star. (2 Ethel and Albert. Domestic comedy. 9:00—Boxing. Heavyweight bout: Tommy (Hurricape) Jackson vs. Jimmy Slade. (2) Studio One Summer Theater, Mike Wallace, Hildy Parks in “For the De- fense."" About young lawyer who goes against public opinion to defend accused killer. 9:30—(7) Hot Rod Races. Frea Wolf describes races from Motor City Speedway. (4) Secret File Union: MEN WANTED Redio & Television. You to Remain Telly Exrploved While, Training. wicecshnc™ WO2-566I ELECTRONICS | INSTITUTE 5. mod Season Comets Allow eodward (Donovan 4 = Nerth of Fox Tasets ‘* a donieres. -n wenn eens wees: WOME. -seevereasnnseere + : eebeed 8 Oty. bc iade * evicex 11:00—(7) Story Studio. (4) Ding Happy Thought ...: ve rere ry ° SPECIAL S 149* 2 YEARS TO PAY! Line” AUTOMATIC | DRYER * See the complete line of new 1955 Norge Gas or Elec- tric Dryers today at terrific money sav- ing prices. You will always-do better at Wayne Gabert’s, Model AG700 © Gas Dryer $179.95 SHOP TONIGHT. patie PM. ge oe | | THE PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1955 ee Cause Trial Confusion | PALO ALTO, Calif. (INS)—J. RB. , Managing editor of the | Now’s the Time to Save on Mildew-Resistant p07] SE PAINT QSa8T Friday Nights WNLB A, bd * * Wiggins said the press should | tg wok netocieny eamverve tint i? do not require or stro! ? lights Regularly 4.98, Now i : He pointed out: “As long as UTC the only cameras judges ever | see, at the non-legal publle fune- 9 9 , are large : : } r a £ en GALLON oe | camera age. | White Trim Paint" — . ae) el) IN 2-GALLON CAN Master-Mixed Non-Staining Horne. CoAT iT Americans, who never otherwise . USE PAIN Gallon Can 7.49 . One GALLON - HQ 190 For shutters, sills. fence we. i Wont turn chalky and wash away. Resist streakin g caused Choose Master-Mixed House Paint °Y ‘sy cls and get extra protection against color im fading mildew. Self-cleaning . . . has been notably true of the Presi- Stays white longer. Two coats give Salad pecme aaah = five years or more protection! In Wiggins declared that the] | Purchase totaling $20 or more sparkling white. Use it on primed rele te Danae wood, metal or masonry. Choice of 12 fade-resisting colors available at - : i 4 ne ae ea oe wi oR a ca | Mildew Proof, Fume-Proof—One coat hides even black 1-Coat Paint Sale & can be made on Sears Easy Payment Plan! additional cost. | @ Regularly 5.85 Gal. ’ 15 cuiking rpovt?,—siéLaddeer rr _Dispensable , Economical | Suma = @ You Save 70c Per Cal. Gallon mpound Jacks Paint Pots | \ Drop Cloth 0 . | | utside Undercoat - Qt. 98¢ 6.75 Pair 19¢ 98 Quality Master-Mixed Primer IN ° GALLON CANS Knife grade used for glazing sash, caulking ront or back of cracks; also for 4 ladder. Adjusts setting sink ae e& to tilt Heavy pers in all court cases. eee 2 drains, toilet oo ] steel, more sate- Detroit Stop Wanted | SAVE 2.51 on BRUSH SET by Airline Company |) = 99 * *4 Holds extension lank. Use on Here is a white paint that stays white all the time! It Wax impregnat- ; ed, heavy krin- White. Gal. 4.49 penne its whiteness as it continues to give real protec- kled Kraft paper tion. This Master-Mixed paint applies smoothly with no Seal d, masor ive : to catch spat- fea} sos even ccioe Gixes brush marks; mildew proof; fume proof. Saves labor. Sold ters. Size 9x12- gloss, makes it last longer, ad- only by Sears so come in and see it today and take ad- foot. Durable. here better, go on easier. vantage of these savings. eeeeenenet OE eee cees WASHINGTON W — Allegheny || :2r3tiriiiiiiessies| Regular Airlines has asked the Civil Aero- |}; 3:2225°::; Bisssstsest! (30 Set nautics Board for authority to/}:322:2::233! THe . e > aeeee serve Detroit, Cincinnati and’a |: saeees: steseseees Vises brushes; (in and Zin. series of other cities. *s nylon, z-in. pure bristle. Among routes Allegheny pro- Storage rack, brush comb posed were: and cleaner. Six pieces; big gn ~~ ‘ } savings. a Wood Turpentine Raw Linseed Oil Metal Roof Paint Floor Enamel Snowhite Enamel Perfect for Thinning Paint Canned Oil at Bulk Price Ideal for Gutters, Sheds For Wood. Linoleum: Cement Dirt Wipes Off in a Wink Cincinnati to Detroit via Day- ton, Lima and Toledo. Pittsburgh to Detroit via Youngstown, Akron, Cleveland and Toledo. Galion Can * Northwest — which al- sheathed 1.09 Gellon Can 2.49 Quart Can 1.15 Gallen Can 4.49 Quart Can 2.19 : Steam distil turpentine at a Improved with 10%, heat- ¢ ith . li eit ready serves t on some low bulk price. Thins paint, oil. Dries scssler, me teases cone yy Leman Can ae Resist acid, alcohol, hot water, Siliconized for extra hardness. . Resists dirt, se. W le cieans brushes and hands. Buy film than pure linseed oil. Pre- painted over. Red, green. Gal- lossy finish Long wearing wim c date acts Drise over. ! now and save more! secyes brushes. lon does up to 700 sq. ft colors indoors or out. night. White only. flights, asked the CAB for permis- sion to extend its system into Flor- ida and for permission to serve Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Phila- by George M. Labash, %, of Ferndale, who escaped injury. Set Speech Discussion ANN ARBOR ® — “Speech Communication in Business and Industry” will be discussed at the University. of Michigan Monday and Tuesday. Representatives from’ management, sales, person- nel and training divisions of business are expected at the fourth annual conference. 7: delphia without restrictions on SIT Seal : ¢ ~—y between Detroit and New Red | Bio ance emer ner t NO MONEY | iil DOWN Two Hurt as 3 Cars if | voce wh atesams Collide on Golf Drive dil BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — = oh ee Treated at Pontiac General Hospi- =| : tal for injuries received in a Px three-car accident Saturday a : ae, pe ‘ ae were drivers of two of the autos, | he ae atiiss a Said —— ay Rdeceage ls 5 tg oem Fiberglas Panels Basement Window Combination Doors Goer = of Berkley. . Many Uses Inside and Out Removable Storms, Screens Made of Durable Pine Police said Valenti was travel- . ayire Telegraph road when he passed = 14.95 nie in. 2.39 Reg. 21.95 12.95 ing east on Golf Drive, east of perfect for awnings, canopies, ee = S ere fee — ' Peck seasoned another car, striking Mrs. Mercer's partitions. Easy to install with num screen Siens| BES 33x23 in. panel. Deorila teade 4c oun on westbound auto headon. ore want household 4scls.. Green, yellow. alighily higher. sup anne = i ready to paint or pact threw her car into one driven |] Gray blue, white. Alum, Basement Window. ..5.95 Only size available... 3-0 6-8 Installed on Average 30x24x9-Ft. Home i, Aly : [ee = 00" Of Serna / Forming Safety Group A , . : z e . . ono oe ee OTP, a Maas aes a . $ | sphalt Tile Plastic Wall Tile Hidden Stairs - ) - . V gehindnipimrg Winery Marbleized Black or Brown Sears 4-Star Feature, Now ) Regularly Priced at 59.95 Fully Guaranteed for 10 Years talities, Calhoun County is orga- "x9" 5¢ Ea. Only 40¢ Sq. Ft. Now Only 49.95 You'll glow with pride when you see your home beautified nizing a traffic safety organiza- Pill ; ; . with Homart Asbestos Siding. Fad istan 1 ts ow top contour gives rich, Sate, pact stai anh g- © resistant . . . colors ool = Sabon ea oan at — vale Spinone floors. ie past oo to —- — Lasting hidden “abone peak aes oe ay Ses and clear. Never needs painting... never any business, ve : ern can't wear off, goes clear marbleized colors! ytoclean §pring-bal t ro upkeep. : and court representatives has been through tile. with damp. cloth, pounds ences oe 5 ue a a Asphalt Plastic Cement .......4.20 Gal. Others........29.92 and 36.95 ° Building Materials—Perry St. Basement towns and six cities i remenneresce om 62°00 ee <) ‘NO MONEY DOWN ON F.HLA. na were incorporated in Ilinois in 1855. The cities were Decatur, | sist ||| “Dane 10 Ming fobe ,Regulty Plena SOM Cent Rese Modes tenom Man ne, _3-in-I Shingles Galvanized Gutters Reg: one: 64.95 Ox7 tt, 49.95 neg. 1395) 12.5 seg. 2.89 3.29 man 22 ) Highly Rust Resistant Pe Mixes ahything. Does big mixing 5 Oe tet ie ail i . Cut from full Wpight heavily galvanized prime sheet. True to ced... ewl ect against snow, tain, sun. Dependable economical roofing : zed prime sheet. True 3 ade “ge omen pion — ag — Need Saty och Easy to install yourself. 49 in. for roole with as little as l-in’ Have a handsome roof plus eae ce oa eae ~i ey ven gene no soldering. Will stay water- . m sist. © overhead clearance. Includes Wide. Baked on red, green or rise per foot. 100%, double cov- ‘lonq:-lasting weather protec-_ ee ai thin. low. Gaaee vice years of rainy weather. Excellent : . = 2 hardware, lock. : blue: enamel! Hnish. erage. 50 eq. ft... ' tion. Choi¢e of many . ¥ Aus 16’x7’, Rog. 119.95... . 10995 Others. ....scsecnys 950 up 45 Lb. Mica Roofing,......2.19 Rooting Neils, pound...,,.20¢ 10-Ft. Rainpipe .................... 1,99 4 ' A ff t 2 ions from ....... 59.95 r309:98 — — Ld ay portlige rior ad ae ‘< me ~ if’ Site r) eee = te vos €