Se eee acces te di a rl viagra TA gage rae, _— a ee a £ — _ noes "another three time winner of the The Weather Continued Hot, Showers Details page two obs sheenteec: ee nS vee (a ey en ae ere ' Sf i y f x THE poe PR. t ee he abe ees cc ened -113th YEAR * & & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1955—40 PAGES: Appointments Made for 3 x *« * * * < * * * * * GM Announces Three-for-One Stock Split + Commissioner Patterson Quiits; Elect Rowston Harold B. Euler Named to City Hospital Board; Treasurer Announced Two key city posts were filled and an announce- ment of the filling of a! third was- made at last night's City Commission meeting. Following the not-unex-|_ pected resignation of Com- missioner Harcourt S. Patterson, the Commission unanimously elected Philip E. Rowston, 34-year-old at- torney to the District 2 seat. Harold B. Euler, 50, was appointed by the Commis- sion to the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees. He replaces William F. May- bury, who retired July 1 after serving as chairman sinc® the board’s inception three years ago. At the same time, Finance DI- rector Oscar Eckman announced appointment of Walter A. Giddings, 51, to the post of city treasurer. Giddings assumes the post filled for the last five years by Murray M. Ashbaugh, who of- ficially retired July 2, his 0th birthday. The Commission re-appointed Mrs. B. B: Roush, hospital beard secretary, for a four-year term on the board. Mrs. Roush has served on the board since it was established on July 1, 1953. Rowston, married and the fa- ther of two young daughters op- posed Patterson in the April 1953 the See story on 1 Patterson’ s rsig- nation, page 2. election. “Admitted to the . State Bar of Michigan in December 1953, he lives at 24 Utica Rd. He was formerly court clerk for Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick and earned his law-degree at the Detroit College of Law night school, Euler, an estate management ex- pert, recently retired as chairman of the Oakland County Red Cross Chapter after serving two years. He is a Red Cross director and also holds directorships in the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) ‘Appointed PHILIP E. ROWSTON New City Commissioner WALTER A. CIDDINGS Named City Treasurer HAROLD B. EULER Joins Hospital Board Nelson, Furgol Trailing English in British Open ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (#—Syd Scott, an English professional, shot a three-under-par 69 today to take the early lead in the first round of the British Qpen golf championship. ith about one-fifth of the field of 94 qualifiers in, Scott had a one-stroke lead over two. other English entries, Henry Cotton and Cecil Denny. times winner of the championship, Cotton, three- shot a sizzling 33 on the bac k nine of the par 36-36— 2 Old Course. First qualifers to finish, Byron Nelson of Roanoke, Tex., had a round of 38-34—72 after he had almost been disqualified for practicing on the course. — Nelson was asked to swing at a few balls so photographers could get pictures of his fluid swing. He dropped a half dozen near the first tee, but before he hit any, an official of; the Royal and An- cient club, which conducts the tournament, came out and warned him he might be charged with violating the rule ag&inst practic- ing on the course, Bobby Locke of South Africa, British Open, came in with a first round of 39-35 — 74, Scott's 69 continued the low scoring spree that marked the qualifying rounds over two St. Andrews courses, Nelson: was bothered by erratic j approaching and putting on the front nine. “q.was playing Well off the tees | "he said, “but I with sone of of five American+¢— He Knew the Worst CHARLOTTE, N.C. @® — Hot weather scene here: Man walking down the street wih a room thermometer sticking out of his back Rocket. Cool 88 Today Bringing Relief From Hot Spell - Look Out Thursday— Temperatures to Return to 90 Region Torrid temperature will leave Pontiac in a swelter tomorrow, but forecasters report a “cool” 88 degrees for today. Some scattered afternoon or evening thundershowers are possible today and Thursday, but area citizens will continue to be par- boiled, according to U. S. Weather Bureau fore- cast. Temperatures are expect- ed to be in the high 90s tomorrow. Actually the city is well off, compared to the far southwest, where the situation is really hot. A high of 107 was chalked up in Tucson, Ariz., and readings of over 100 were recorded in some sections of the East. Tuesday's “low” temperature in downtown Pontiac was 74 de- grees. The low tonight is ex- pected to be comfortable, be- tween 66-70. At 4 p.m. yesterday, the-mercury dicaped So 36 clare sovertag ta ad 90's most of the afternoon, when high winds and a few scattered showers hit the area. The temperature then climbed to 87 about 6 p.m. If the mercury hits 90 today, it will mark the fifth straight day of 90-degree weather here. City Manager Walter K, Wiill- man has not called for water restrictions yet, but if the heat wave continues the city may be ferced to ration water Usage, Until the swelter diminishes, citi- zens must shift for themselves in finding relief from the heatg One man living on the city’s north side finds his ‘‘cooler’’ meth- od works nicely: Don swimming togs, climb into the backyard ham- mock and turn the lawn sprinkler on full force—in your direction. Tot Scalds to Death When Mother Trips A two-months-old Oak Park girl, Rita Freeman, died of scald burns yesterday suffered when her mother, Mary Jo, tripped on the family’s pet cat and spilled water from a bottle sterilizer. The accident was at the John Freeman home, 10060 Troy. Rita was in her highchair. She died 45 minutes after being admitted to. Children's Hospital in Detroit with burns over 85 per cent of her body. Nebraska Tax Official Says Somebody Goofed LINCOLN, Neb. —State Tax Commissioner Fred Herrington was telling the State Board of Equalization yesterday about “quirks” in county tax assessment returns this year. With a wry smile, he said Grant County—in the heart of Nebraska's Fanch country—listed no milk cows no corn and no wheat on its farms Alligator Safari in Bloomfield Township — The cry of ‘Alligator-Ho” resound- ed through the city room of the Pon- tlac _— yesterday, as straws were drawn to see who would investigate pl veported alligator in Lower Long Statt poemnars Al Lowman and won (or lost), and a to poe the Bloomfield aa. : Armed with two trusty cameras, a couple of stout oars and a length of rope, we pushed off into the shallow chanel, bordered by jungle-like trees and brush, Our job: Find the long-snouted, many-toothed native of tropic wa- ters, get him to pose for several pictures and, if possible, capture the unfriendly beast, (The latter was our own idea.) We began by exploring gingerly along the shoreline of the lagoon as passers-by watched from Kirk- way drive where it crosses near Kirk-in-the-Hills church. We chose to ignore the sugges- tions from other staff members that We troll for the monster with our big toes over the stern, er don swim fins and meet him in his own element, The lagoon, bordering the front and side lawn of the Singleton's fashionable Bloomfield Township home, is choked with water plants, neighbors and husband was fre- ceived with some doubt. spotted * ‘something’ swimming in the same area, “We rushed toward the shore- line—when we were about 50 yards away, it submerged.” Mrs. Single- ton related, “I didn't get a chance to look the thing in the eye, but if that wasn't an alligator, then I don’t know what it was,” she said. Louisiana,” said Mrs. Singleton, a native of the deep south, “and I'd judge by his head that the body would be six or seven feet long.” Despite Mrs, Singleton’s sincere account and strong belief in what she saw, your reporter and photog- rapher found nothing. The still waters of the lagoon, which juts westward from Long Lake about 500 yards, remained unruffled except for the quiet dip of oars and the occasional splash of.a spent flash bulb. How would an alligator of this size get into a northern lake? Truman to Visit State LANSING «—Former President Harry S. Truman will be the principal speaker at the 1955 Mackinac Island Democratic Con- ference Monday, Aug. 29, the and ranches on assessment He promised to look into it. | Democratic State Central Commit- tee announced today. Could it have been brought here as a baby, deposited in the I-t:e, and managed to survive cold win- ters buried in the mud? Frank G. McInnis, director of si Aa "GATOR BAIT? NOT ME! — safety. Big Game Hunting Scribes Stalk Lake Denizen Royal Oak, says it's not- likely. “Alligators, natives of the a cannot stand our winters,” * They can live here very well the Detroit Zoological Park in! in summer, feeding on fish, ALLIGATOR ‘HUNT — Pontiac Press Reporter Al | 6-foot alligator reportedly seen Lowman peers intently into the foreboding waters | failed to show — mosquitoes of Lower Long Lake yesterday searching for the | hungry! meat scraps, frogs ang some vegetation, Mclinnis explained. Meat scraps Hirsch and Low- man. hereby request duty at their regular police and city hall beats, pronto! ~é Ne (ner *S there. The alligator | | 4 ¥? “4 a Pontiac Prévs Photos me Game Hunter Lowman takes no chances while hunting Lower Long Lake's alligator. The rope is for ‘Pike Authority Will Act Fairly,’ Higgins Asserts Former State Senator George N Higgins, Republican of Ferndale said yeaterday the Michigan Turn- pike Authority will attempt to sell the project to the cities along the proposed Flat Rock-Biiy. City route, Higgins recently was appoint- ed a member of the authority by Gov. G, Mennen Williams, Higgins declared the toll road will be built “because it is badly needed.” He added, “But we won't act arbitarily. Even rea- sonable objection to the route will be heard and acted upon.” another new appointee of the Au- thority. . Carl H, Smith of Bay City is). City Given Citation for Accident Record The city of Pontiac has been “| awarded a special citation by the American Automobile Assn. for its 1954. pedestrian accident record. The award is for cities in the 50,000-100,000 pépulation category. News of the citation was given to the City Commission last night by City Manager Walter K. Willman, via a letter from AAA headquar- ters. Special commendation was giv- en to Lt. Joseph Koren, head of the Police Department's traffic and safety bureau. A plaque will be presented to the city by the Auto- mobile Club of Michigan. During the year the city had 108 pedestrian accidents, and only one pedestrian fatality. Social Security ‘Expansion Seen WASHINGTON ete Ways reported near-final agreement to- day on a three-point plan to ex- pand social security payments— 2. Allowing payments after age 50, instead of 65, to disabled work- ers covered by the system. 3. \Continuing benefits for dis- abled children past the age of 18. Toe pay for_this, the informants: said, a social security tax increase necessary to keep the social secu- rity fund from running in the red. When the tax hike would take ef- fect remained to be decided, but Jan, 1, 1957, was regarded as the most likely date, The probable method of doing this would be to advance to Jan. 1, 1957, the date on which social se- curity taxes are set to go up from the present 2 per cent to 244 per cent =o by both worker one em- efiect in * 1960, with ‘erthoen. in- ereases at five-year intervals thereafter, Copper Strike Goes On DENVER (A strike by an estimated 30.000 workers against three major copper producers con- tinued today with national negotia- tions broken off for the present. U.S. Housewife Finds Soviets Purposefully Affable ferent for Russians than for Bel- gians, Britons or any other visitors to the United States, * * * Next, I found myself with Nikita Khrushchev (chief of the Soviet (Editor's Note: An sous f i wife got an unusual closeup of level Soviet team now a = enone © In the wee, bere dtspa’ gg hy ns Edttaniiiey” of Kremlin leaders.) preaches and putts,” - mier of the Soviet Union, whose tace stares down from nearly every building in Moscow in giant size. “How do you do?” he said, But unlike those their champagne glasses and looked at me. Then I realized I was the one to make the toast. MOMENT OF FEAR My spine tingled and I feared because of pagerpiaaing (regu- lations).” I tried to explain Americans don't consider fingerprinting degrading, that I had been fingerprinted and so had my husband and children. I said that we Americans consider it a form of personal security. I told him the law was no dif- psec egg and I hoped there Pp ia many more chess team ny sanetings gd Today's ress i aia . County News ceedeeehenerrter athe ‘We all to that. Then Mal} pajtorials ........000006 00000 enkov said: “But it is up to you.”| sports ....... SO ean I, blazed back: “No, it is Up tO} heaters ........!...-:00+ wa el y oe can os sav oil 39 -Maienioy, said sertonsty: “Ws | Wilson, Bart . oe can't, come to the Ute \Wemen’s Pages ...5.. Ws thru 19 Pr itt - t “That could be,” he said. Then he waved his hand in a sweeping gesture and added, “All right, you remove your dollar curtain, then,” and laughed gaily. stock and Meang Committee Democrats wh \Shareholders Must OK Plan at Fall Meeting Savings - Stock Buying Proposal Drawn Up for Salaried Employes NEW YORK #® — Dk rectors of General Corp. have anndéunced plans for a~ three-for-one ; subject to stock- ment came yesterday after- noon after the New York Stock Exchange had closed for the day. Even without news of the split, GM stock had risen $3.75 a share dur- ing the day, closing at + $113.37. On the West Coast, where news of the split arrived shortly before exchanges closed, GM prices jumped to $118.75 a share in San Francisco and $121 in Los Angeles, Piet. fant for Dixon-Yates of 0.9 per cent was found to be}. hower’s —*" electric power. its own tba agg. the death imnetl for for the controver- sial project which Eisenhower or+ Ole ae ne eas aie Soe “ "Bes Tactics - of Half Billion in Aid for Allied Armies __ WASHINGTON ® — Sen. Mans- field (D-Mont) accused the Eisen- hower administration today of “in- eredible shenanigans” in connec- tion with the foreign military aid program. * Saying he will seek a thorough investigation by Congress, Mans- _ field said the Defense Department on a single day had obligated for spending—a bookkeeping transac- tion—more than half a billion dol- jars in past foreign aid appropria- tions not yet spent. He said this oecurred June 30, the last day of the 1955 fiscal year. There was no immediate com- ment from the Defense Depart- ment. Both the House and Senate wrote into the new foreign aid authoriza- tion bill a restriction to forbid the ‘administration from carrying over into this fiscal year, which started July 1, more than 200 million dol- lars of aid money voted in past for specific military items to be bought in the future—has the legal effect of spending the money even though it may not actually be paid out for months or even years. The practice of deadline spend- ing by government agencies, us- Pontiac « Deaths William A. Brooks i gj (anperer a: tht Se ™, ¥ “$ ‘ a ae : tures BR. These renene Co See a Pa Tes heneess 32 m@.....-, eonee 87 ( Micvesoesss. 14 SB Mins ccccs: a8 5 DR. Micsccvses 78 rar eeeneneer \ E commen . : ‘Teteday tn Pen : recorded downtown! “. Nemiperature totes 1A Sere eee ee Teer 83.5 4 ~ One Year Age in Pontiac bedehe tases nes * sheeneepecer eres 60 pipe eraeaelene 65.5 ct im os "Hits Deadline Spending | we wee bg ce sty - ie ‘ ‘DAVY’ DRAWS BEAD — Youthful Davy Crockett | Danny Singleton, 5, of Bloomfield Township demon- | his mother, Mrs. William Singleton, say they sighted strates how he'll deal with the alligator. he and in the lagoon of Lower Long Lake near their home. Pontiac Press Photo BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Step one of a projected five-point expansion program will take voters to the polls on Monday, where a pro- posed $800,000 bond issue will be put to the test. Residents in the 23-square-mile school district have already re- ceived results of a six-month survey conducted by the Michigan State College Bureau of Research and Service, in the form of a 63> ‘page booklet. This outlines the five steps and recommends an immediate pro- gram, which constitutes step one. The bond issue, increasing school taxes by less than one mill, would allow for acquisition of six elementary school sites, four elementary and two junior high, as a safeguard against pre- dicted population growth. An estimated $150,000 would be ex- pended for this purpose, NEW BUILDING One of the elementary sites, on the east side of Woodward avenue, would be put into immediate serv- ice, with construction of an ap- proximate $275,000 structure, com- plete with kindergarten, all- purpose room and offices, and GM Announces 3-for-1 Stock Split (Continued From Page One) before, The last was a two-for-one split on Oct. 21, 1950. The first split was in 1920 when it gave 10 shares for 1..Four years later the company issued 1 share for 4 in a reverse split. Then in 1927 it split 2 for 1 and in 1929 gave 2% shares for 1. Since the end of World War Il General Motors has carried out a vigorous expansion program and by the end of this year will have spent four billion dollars on new plant space and equipment in the Uniteg States and Canada. GM President Harlow H. Curtice and | has said the company’s expansion “is a measure of our faith in our éountry, and will enable the com- pany to continue to make its full contribution to q strong and ex- panding national economy.” GM already manufactures more "| than half the cars produced in this that 1 year with sales totaling 10 billion dol- In addition to the stock split, the special stockholders meeting will be asked to approve a recently amounced revision in pension plans for employes receiving hour- ly wages, STOCK, SAVINGS PLAN Also to be submitted for stock- holder approval at the Sept, 23 meeting is a savings and stock purchase plan for some 100,000 m.|salaried GM employes in the United States. ‘| The plan, approved by the directors yesterday, would run for successive periods of five years each, Employes would be allowed to invest up to 10 per cent of their salary, and for every dollar they invested the company would con- tribute another 50 cents. The employe contribution would be invested half im government saving bonds: and half in GM ‘| stock, All ofthe company contribu- tion would go into GM stock. includes a retirement . thrift plan in which salaried émployes would participate on the same basis as in the sayings plan 36,600 Cross Bridge: PORT HURON wW—A record 36,- 600 ears crossed the Blue Water “Bridge between the | $4,300 herve States ahd DAY ween the the ear's previous ae Hoon School Bonds lo Be Decided on Monday designed with future expansion in | mind. Relating to existing buildings, the bond issue would provide a $156,000 five-classroom addition for Wing Lake School, alleviat- ing overcrowded conditions there, Also included would be con- struction of a kindergarten and conversion of a small class- room inte a library. Vaughan School, which in the past has housed kindergarteners through twelfth graders, would be converted into an elementary school, ending with the sixth grade. | night, Merrill O, Bates was elected .| the city as his reasons, Commis- The stock purchase program also | Renovation would cost between $35,000 and $50,000. IMPROVEMENTS The new $1,500,000 high school, still under construction following passage of a $1,750,000 bond issue in the fall of 1953, would be de- veloped with drainage, landscaping and other equipment. for between $100,000 and $180,000. Looking ahead in the. long- range planning program, step two would begin in 1958 if ap- addition to the one proposed in the current bond issue, Classrooms, an auditorium and a swimming pool would be added | to the high school. Subsequent steps would come in | 1962, 1966 and 1970, adding an- | other elementary school, two junior high schools and additions to several existing plants, as needed. Figures show that public school enrollment in the district has doubled in the past three years, standing at 1.158 in January. By 1970, it is estimated that enroll- ment will be 4,550. BLOOMFIELD HILLS—At a spe- cial reorganization meeting last president of the school board..Re- elected treasurer was David W. Lee, with Douglas L. Jocelyn as secretary. Completing the five-man board are two new members, Karl E. Students Attend | MSU Course in Journalism ‘holding street vendors to a nar- New v Ortnane Restricts Selling Law Governing Street Vendors Is Passed by ‘City Commissioners A “straight - jacket’ ordinance row line was passed by the City Commission last night. The new regulation replaces one banning street sales of ice cream and other commodities which was declared illegal by the Oakland County Circuit Court, Under the new law, licensees must pay a $100 yearly fee or $10 per day. They may not ob- struct any street, alley, sidewalk or driveway in making a sale, Neither may they stay in any one spot for more than five min- utes, nor may they hawk their wares in front of, or at the side of any property against the wish or desire of the property owner or occupant. Vendors may not enter private property without the express con- sent of the owner and they may not park their vehicles within 500 feet of any school building while classes are in session. They cannot park within 50 feet of an intersection nor on those portions of street on which a public park abuts. Selling of ice cream or ices from pushcarts or bicycles is pro- hibited ‘“‘as a necessary police measure for the prevention of traf- fic accidents and personal] injuries Thirteen high school students from the Oakland County area, including one from Pontiac, have | returned from a special two-week journalism course at Michigan | State University. Members of the Department of | Journalism gave individual train- ing and lectures on news writing, feature writing, photography, art, layout and printing. Attending the confgrence were Susan Herrick, Birmingham: Pa- tricia Barr, Judith Carol Dixon, | and Quintin A. Kennedy, Hazel | Park; Janet Langdon, Milford; Mi- chael Marcus, Oak Park; Vicky J. Micu, Pontiac; and Madelyne L. Bacon, Woodrow Donovan, Ruth} Sappington, Robert E. Smelser, Joan Tanner and Sylvia E, Uhrick, Walled Lake. This was the eighth consecutive summer that the course was of- fered to high school youths, Strayed Boy Scout Object of Search MUSKEGON \ — Police and about 200 Boy Scouts searched to- day for Peter- Gorham, 12, of Evanston,. Ill., who disappeared from a Boy Scout hike at Duck Lake.- The youngster was a member of an Evanston Boy Scout troop at Camp Wabaningo. Fellow scouts said he wandered ahead of his group and disappeared about one- half mile from their camp on the lake's north shore. The camp is located about 12 miles north of Muskegon. Search- ers described the area where Peter last was seen a8 a swampy marsh. The boy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Gorham, arrived at the camp early today and are awaiting word in the search. Donald Boulton, camp director, said the boy was wearing dunga- rees and a T-shirt and was carry- ing a sleeping pack when last seen. He carried no food or water, Boulton said. Peter had been at the camp 10 Scott and Robert Hoffman, days. Giving the “pressure of profes- sional and personal matters” plus the fact he is soon moving out of sioner Harcourt S. Patterson (Dis- trict 2) last night resigned from the City ———e In his aeecones ciamatiog! Pa terson listed six points, ‘‘which, I believe, would contribute to con- tinted progress and betterment of our city.” A seventh point per- tained to matters in his district and was made as an advisory for his successor. The ‘Commission immediately named Philip E, Rowston, 34, to fill out Patterson’s unexpired term which runs through next April, Patterson was serving his first term, His first point commended ‘‘a very efficnet group of leaders” in the city government and urged a continuance of “better public re- lations and to training personnel to replace those in key positions who leave us by retirement, by death or. other means.’ Second, he called for a revival of the Charter Study Committee) to revise the city charger, which | “in somie repsects, has become obsolete and Ph, ne of change.” Ite eipesiaity Selibed out the $5 weekly wage given the’ commis- sioners who operate a Bie cor- poration” with an assessed valua- tion of $215,000,000 and an annual budget po re i hecete rag Press of Business Listed as Cause of Resignation tion, he said, “has made little apparent progress in some time.” Fourthly, Patterson a salaried person might be hired to change the Planning Cortimission’s duties from rezoning to actual plan- ning for the future growth of the city. Fifth on the list was a plea for al fire protection for District ” “There is no adequate fire fight- ing facility in District 2, although the city owns land at the corner of South Genesee and West Huron Sts. which was purchased many years ago for use ag a fire station site.’’ Sixth was a recommendation that a monument or marker be erected at the new City Hall “with an inscription showing the name of the lecation to be ‘Mack Square’ and giving some histor. jeal background . , , and = haps giving a briet biographi sketch of Col. Stephen Mae” for whom it was named, The seventh point covered a re- ‘taining wall along the aley behind | the Te-Huron Shopping Center, a! drainage seer aong Gendae and Menominee roads and additiqnal recreational facilities. in District 2. Patterson had announced in early spring that he would resign be- cause moving out of the city would disqualify him for office. ‘The pressure of professional and per- sonal matters” was added. in his letter of resignation, — The resignation was effective im- mediately, Rowston, of 24, Utica Rd.,/an attorney who Pat- int three calls see\ an “expe: dir’ to an inj -~ hh eneral "Wiophel. 3 na terson in the April, 34 election., will take office Monday night, when on the streets...’ Sales may be only from “refrigerated trucks: of {modern design.” It is unlawful to vend meat, | poultry or fish on the streets. The ordinance also provides that | cal crisis. (es sale of fruits, vegetables or wrapped frozen ice cream bars or frozen ices are subject to Health Dept. inspection. The new measure passed by a 6-1 vote, with Commissioner Floyd P. Miles (District 5) voting against | it. He has expressed himself pre- | viously as being for complete out- | lawing of street sales. Study Seizure of D.C. Transit other perishable food stuffs or. j afternoon to present the names of |his Cabinet ministers, They will | MRS. B. B. ROUSH Re-appointed to the Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital Board of Trustees for a four-year term last night was Mrs, B.,..B. Roush, of 28 Utica Rd. Mrs. Roush, who serves as board secretary, was appointed to a| three-year term when the seven- | member board was established in July, 1952. The three-year term of William F. Maybury, 110 E. Iroquois Rd., also expired, but Maybury declined re-appointment. He served as chairman three years. Italians Form New Cabinet Segni Accepts Premier Post to Supervise Pro-Western Group ROME «(®—Christian Democrat Antonio Segni formed Western coalition Cabinet ° today, ending Italy's two-weeks-old_politi- A lawyer, teacher and land re- form expert, Segni called on Presi- a pro, | The Day in Birmingham > BIRMINGHAM—Although a pro- posed race track at 11 Mile Rd., and John R is several miles from Birmingham, the City Commission last night went on — opposing the move. A communication was received from the Michigan Racing Com- mission outlining the plan, but the local commission took action after hearing the effects the track would produce in Birmingham, traffic-wise. Planning Tectmician Herbert Herzberg pointed out that al- ready congested Maple Ave., Is the only east-west true artery between Long Lake and 14 Mile Rd., which would carry horse racing fans to the new track location from this vicinity. In other action, ship in efforts to protect resi- dences at the cify’s eastern-most limits at Coolidge Rd. Commissioners proposed _ that Troy land between the Walker Gravel Pit and Coolidge, running north from east Maple, be zoned single-family. They favor the same toning for the gravel pit, but Trey prop- erty just east of the pit was re- cently zoned for light industrial use. A Fruehauf office building is planned for the location. Lawmakers also named Car\_In- graham, local attorney; to a three- year-term 6n the Planning Board, and then went into a closed huddle to discuss appointment of a sec- of James Spencer and William Brown eed July | L An overtaie oe is scheduled | for tomorrow \evening by young- sters taking part in the YMCA | dent Giovanni Gronchi early this take office tonight. The new government must still win approval of both houses of the Italian Parliament. Segni announced acceptance of | the premiership last night. The| scholarly, 64-year-old Christian own party, the Social Democrats and Liberals, and would have the support of the Republicans. Ex-Premier Mario Scelba ruled | Italy for the past 16 months with to Take Over System in Strike Deadlock WASHINGTON W —s Set SEES / SUPER SPECIALS!! 78 North Saginaw St. itu 39, PAN-REDI FRYERS... 49: WITH MEAT eceenle , THIS VALUABLE COUPON | ENTITLES THE BEARER 1 TO A 1-L8. LIMIT FRESH oop First Mortgage Loans Properties sold on Contracts F. H. A. Title 1 Home Modernization Loans on Savings Accounts Real Estate in Judgment _ Stock in Federal Home Loan Bank U. S. Government Bond Land, Office Equipment and Leasehold -Improvement—Less Depreciation Savings Accounts Advances from Home Loan Bank Loans in Process Other Liabilities Specific Reserves General Reserves Surplus R. C. Cummings James Clarkson 16 East Lawrence Street Pontiac, Michigan ! Bazley’s Thursday ee eC ec ey eenee ee ey ey eee wenn Ce ee) ee oe ee sevens CC ey Ce Ce ec eee ee ee | eC ee a er rr ry M. A. Benson .............0. 0 ccc cece eee i ee ee | DIRECTORS Divers Offered Monitor Reward $1,000 Will Be Given) Person Locating © Civil War Ironclad Ship WASHINGTON « — A $1,000 reward awaits the person who locates the ironclad Union Civil War ship, the Monitor. Raynor T. McMullen of Dundee, Mich., who made the offer, says the ship foundered off Cape Hatteras, N.C., Dec. 31, 1862 about 25 miles southwest of the Hatteras Light at latitude 34 de- grees 55 minutes and longitude 75 degrees 32 minutes. With the Monitor and its Con- federate counterpart, the Merri- mac, a new era of naval history The reign of wooden battle ships ended on March 9, 1862, when the two ships fought to a draw in Hampton reads off Nor- folk. McMullen,- a retired rural dail carrier turned historian, has or- ganized the Monitor Historical Society. Several Navy admirals and captains are sponsors. He made his offer on the con- dition that the finder agrees to turn the vessel over to the society. OPTIMISTIC McMullen is optimistic about the chances. A statement issued by the society said: “Even though the Monitor has rested on the ocean bottom almost eight inches thick with beams of live oak which are water resistant. McMullen believes it te be resting on sand down 100 or more feet. The Society plans to establish the Monitor, if it gets it, as a national shrine : “Just where the ship will be — has not been determined,” announcement read _ confi- ets: Although the United States uses more electric power than any other country, its per capital use is less than that of either Norway |or Canada. STATEMENT of CONDITION PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION June 30, 1955 eee eh eee eee eee meee oe ee eee eee eeeeneeenens ee ee ee ee) ee ee | eC ee ec | ee ee e ) a LIABILITIES Ce i ) oe eee eee een eo nese eone ore ee eee men eewnneeene “e#eee 38,582.12 Clark’J. Adams . R. Clare Cummings Mahlon A. Benson W. Russell Eames Conrad N. Church John Q. Waddell Louis H. Cole George K. Zimmerman (Honorary Director) = _ Chauncey H. Hutchins 407 Main Rochester, Michigan Marie M. Sorenson; | heed Fle ‘Michigan City, Ind. And that's warning upon them and they slow down. Marine Married Whether He Knows It or Not PORTSMOUTH, Ohio iM — Whether or not Marine Walter Shets knows it, he’s still mar- ried, Judge J. E. Kinnison of Jackson County yesterday vacated the di- vorce granted last week to Sheets’ wife Nancy Ann after the judge said he learned Sheets was going to remarry her. . * * * Sheets re-enlisted in the Marine Corps at Cincinnati last week. He told the recruiger he was eligible for a secord hitch because his ons had left him with only three dependents — his children, ages 3, 2, and 6 months. The Marines woulg not let him join with four dependents. Court attaches said the judge vacated the divorce on grounds it was obtained fraudulently. That left the divorce still pending and Sheets still are Sheets had worked for the Ports- mouth Times, His wife obtained a divorce on grounds of cruelty. Court attaches were wondefing whether the Marines now would discharge Sheets because of fraudulent enlistment. They point- ed out, however, Sheets thought he was divorced when he re- $5,870,369.74 470,224.05 39,112.51 63,768.88 2,733.91 130,000.00 124,976.26 432,072.77 234,135.64 88,435.43 $7,455,229.19 $5,802,231.67 1,000,000.00 159,294.80 2,145.81 14,897.94 476,658.97 { ,. President . Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer $7,455,229.19 Street EYE-CATCHER, LIFESAVER — Drivers do a double-take when they see the weird lettering of the “Z"’ and the “‘N” in this sign, near just fine, because it impresses the Dems Might Symia- Ike's Major Plans WASHINGTON (® — Democratic promises of support appeared to- day to herald early aproval by Congress of some of the major elements of President Eisenhow- er’s legislative program. But at least four or five of the bills on which Eisenhower has said he wants action may be stymied. s * * Sen. Clements of Kentucky, the acting Democratic leader, prom- ised yesterday that his party will push for early Senate action on a House-passed military reserves bill regarded as generally satis- factory to the Pentagon. * * Sen. Knowland of California, the GOP leader, said Eisenhower re- iterated at a luncheon yesterday “his great interest” in passage of adequate reserve legislation. An atom-powered cargo ship and high- way and housing aid were also dis- cussed, he said, ‘|in 70 feet of Lake Michigan water ‘|deep sea diver. Deep Sea Diver to Salvage Ship in Lake Michigan MILWAUKEE, Wis, uw — Sal- vaging an ocean-going ship sunk will be undertaken this summer by Max Gene Nohl, professional If he succeeds, he can make a fortune; if he fails, it won't cost him a dime. The prize is the Dutch Oranje line . freighter, Prins Willem V, which sank off Milwaukee last Oct. 14. The 28 foot motorship was valued by insurers at $1,250,000, The 750 tons of general cargo the Willem. was carrying was ‘valued at $750,000. Nohl has a contract with the United States Army engineers which calls for removal of the sunken ship or its demolition, SNohl will be paid $50,000 for the | job: The title of the ship was | turned over to him by the engi- neers. Nohl said he plans to raise | the Willem by sealing the four hatches with special covers; then pumping air into the vessel until it becomes buoyant, Under the contract he has 180 days to salvage or destroy the Willem. Try inhalation therapy with the e easy to use— vapor ley, ‘into the affected area. Let us tell you about the welcome rehef thousands weers are finding with AsthmaNefrin after other means had failed. $8 N. Saginew—Main Floor comes a great AMAZING NEVER “MADE-UP”’ a made-up look! HI-FI FLUID. MAKE-uP f> in six high fidelity skin tones 98 North Seginew iN NEW HIGH FIDELITY SKIN TONES NEVER POSSIBLE BEFORE MAX FACTOR’S | FLUID MAKE-UP Hi-Fi MAKES YOU LOOK EXQUISITE... UNDER THE MOST GLARING LIGHT! It's based on an altogether new color concept originally developed by Max Factor to solve the trying make-up problems of color TV. You'll love its sheer mat-satin texture — the way new Hi-Fi fluid make-up smooths on easily, softens your skin delicately, stays on with never CITW'K3 out of color TV research new make-up EVEN ue BROTHERS messy epray, NO-ROACH ic 0 effec odorless coating kills these ponte, and stays apes engi pol oper ed ppd Ag F SIMAS te wee! 8 on. 89¢ {® BROTHERS $1.69; qt. $2.98. Disney's “DAVY CROCKET rr Now at STRAND Theater — LAST TIMES Today-Thurs., & Fri. Exactly as Pictured Wy, Davy Crockett Tent at Set Barktan heavy viny! plastic tent in big 42:x 54 x 84 inches — big as a real army puptent. Big Davy Crockett emblem on both sides. Waterproof, mildewproof. 2 poles, 6 pegs, rope included. 2. 89 Davy Crockett STRAW HATS—Sizes $-M- ee ae . Davy Crockett T-SHIRTS—Sizes 4 to 12 Davy Crockett - , COONSKIN HATS—S-M-L Davy Crockett JACKET or JEANS—4 to 12 = ......... Davy Crockett KIDS’ JEANS—Sizes 2 to 7 ........... - Davy Crockett KIDS” SPORT SHIRT—2 to 7 eee eee Devy Crockett WINDOW DRAPES—per peir eee eee Davy Crockett GUN—HOLSTER—BADGE—ell for ee Davy Crockett CAP RIFLE—shoots caps Ce ee ee ee er ie | Crockett Davy JACK-KNIFE—camp style Davy Crockett FLASHLIGHT—for night . SANFORIZED COTTON PLISSE Ladies Slips Fine combed cotton plises slips by LOOM. _CRAFT. Four-gore, fitted top, eyelet trim top, adjustable straps. White only in broken size range. MAS."8 see ewe {@ THERS FIRST QUALITY Regular $1.49 Value oe . ape ea tet eal panel L-XL. Nationally Famous ‘LOVABLE’ Ladies BRAS Simms Price 32-42B, 34-42C. No limit. 98 North nsvorty stores @ OOD, hacen 2h 32- 3a-364 I" ae Famous ‘REAL-FORM’ . LADIES’ GIRDLES Brief-Girdle or Panty Style $2.00 Value a aianitin hod lastex with | front “yas: Guaranteed non - run. Choice of styles in sizes S-M- - THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 6. 1955 THE BERRYS ? 7 By Carl Grubert Since 1911 oe wir c. DAVIS Funenal Home: 44 STATE AVE. PHONE Feder! 24732 OAmSbR, THE ORDER CF DE GOH pp — ao seca gene ae a eer nora | ARTHRITIS? | THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE, RIGHT a a Cry: ___| HERE IN MICHIGAN, MANY. OF WHOM HAVE SUF- FERED FROM ARTHRITIS OR RHEUMATISM FOR MANY e . Quality YEARS, HAVE RECEIVED THE RESULTS THEY DREAMED NN et baiiee Intelligence Experts _ Hit Optimism Guna eo a r ‘ “yy “Modern Furnitu e By JOHN. SCALI imaginative maneuver to block | crisis may be solved by the end of | Moscow during recent national ‘tesotr, To Lag agape al Tag og aaa sige = Sofas, Sectionals, Chairs, Tables tor J. M. Roberts . | what eee niost — Ger- this year by the apparently suc- ice Oe ewe maces “CRIPPLING EFFECTS OF AWFUL ARTHRITIS AND _ ey ee Some top rank intelligence ex- ae ‘ ae ; . 4 cessful campaign to put some 72) Ply lig i zi = ~atohvoe RHEUMATISM, IF YOUR CASE IS OF LONG STAND- 4, perts are aghast at the big rise! ere is.no solid evidence what. these are not advance Prototypes ig OR JUST STARTING, O-JIB-WA BITTERS IS THE 7 aie lin optimism in Washington over ever. they say, that the Russians, Mullion new acres under the plow." put actual production models, wos SUCCESSFUL MEDICINE YOU CAN BUY. PROY- 4 One of Michigan's Largest Selections | prospects for some kind of a de val ate hurting because their indus- Russian spokesmen have been’ meaning that factories have al | gy pesutts FoR OVER 40 YEARS BY OVER A MILLION A, } of Fine Carpets. Tackless Installation. with Russia ending the cold war. | trial machine and farm output has’ ballyhooing this feat during the | adv been tooled up to produce PEOPLE RIGHT HERE IN MICHIGAN ALONE. These officials, who have been | Started to collapse. past year, claimmg that two-thirds them WS Store Hours: Mom, Tues. Wed. 9:30 om. fill MM carefully following Soviet develop-| On the contrary, they feel there of the new plantings will produce | With this evidence before them. > N AT ALL DRUG STORES IN MICHIGAN 6:00 p.m. Thurs. Fri., Set, 9:20 a.m. till 9:00 om ments for years, believe it is dan- | '§ good reason for believing Russia | food during this erep season these intelligence experts are now ; gerous nonsense to expect the | has successfully expanded produc-| Further, Russia obviousty has trying to curb the more enthust- | _—" Russians to accept the kind of | 80M in these fields in the past two} succeeded in turning out new jet|astic and optimistic government | au0G terms that are necessary to ease | Ys and that output will improve | fighters, jet bombers and impres- | officials who believe the Russians | East-West tensions. . | from now on with less money and sive amounts of new ground weap- in some way may have got religion | odern In their view, neither the Geneva | effort. - _ | ons in recent months. These have | and will behave like good boys | . “summit’’ conference this month For example, Russia's farm: been displayed to foreigners in| from now on, CARPET & FURNITURE CO. se eet eg ta loner | ee Bonk see WV ~) i/ OCK FROM TELEG level will succeed in removing the : Maat ST /, BLOCK FRC ae Lo threat ot war from the internation- | AN. ASN. A>. “Ls. ALS. “LS. aX : a 22s. 2S. AS. AN. 7. tle al horizon, é ; S ' . = What particularly baffles these > 4 pospeneenaanenunansnenemneston . : ae | observers is the current outpouring - . vem of stories picturing Russia as so ) 9 weak internally that it. has no \°, | PA Y CUT e alternative but to make sweeping : concessions to the west in the near \ future. iS be if you are anabie to pay your payments, debts of bills when dwe, This theory, now being discussed b See ager Segre Correa: perece tometer oenme fi Il eaacieaags Rammare) aercanar’l \ me “SS NO. SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED nee ee ‘ ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED and tear) prea en e o \ en So far behind that the Kremlin ss - 7 , , n » “Let 9 years of credit counseling experience assist you.” | wants a two or three year truce Mouse: Daily 9 to $: Wed 6 Sat. 3 to 1: E ings by Appt in order to catch up with the West. z Sm a ° ° oragaee! td foaans Intelligence experts believe any : MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS such theory is a pipe dream. 41\2 South Saginaw St. FE 8-0456 Above Oakland Theater Russia's current sweet talk, they believe, represents a new, more | The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC 4 Pontiac's Oldest and Largest Exclusive Appliance Store @ General Electric Refrigerator SAVE $60°° MODEL LB- 92 sake arte ee Regular $25995 : ar sain ee 7 ~~ J" = north.) Mr. and Mrs. C. Victor Koch Ruth Cummings are spending the and Peter Booth were at the War- summer traveling in ~ Europe, ern Michigan wedding trip the new ae Mrs. Patterson was wearing a tan "en S. Booth cottage. Mr. and! They left the last week in June. ‘ro WED AUG. 20 strapless dress with matching bo- | Mrs. Booth are in California, ~ > wi ak their | ~ yicaren . ; lero jacket, They will make their) qoME FROM WEST Cootein Rocien tanuchterlot ite delabra decorated | the . ee | reception was held at the Temple Saturday evening WHEN ji ienic Hall on Mariva avenue. | Norma Jean Pomeroy and Dayton | The bride’s mother wore a blue F. Patterson exchanged nuptial | dress with a pink orchid corsage. vows. The Rev. Lola Marion per- | A tan-colored orchid was the choice formed the 8 o'clock ceremony °% the bridegroom's mother who before 150 guests. ¢ *# The bride is the daughter of Mrs, Clarence Pomeroy of South East boulevard and the bridegroom. is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dayton F. Patterson of North-East boule- vard. | The bride’s gown was fashioned of lace over white satin in bal- Jerina length. A pearl cap se- cured her fingertip veil and she wore the bridegroom's gift of a strand of pearlis..-The bridal bouquet Was, composed of white roses and fily-of-the-valley cen- tered with q white orchid cor- sage, : Barbara Sue Pomeroy was maid of honor. wearing an orchid bal lerina-length dress of lace over satin, * * * Bridesmaids were Peggy Pom-’ ‘ eroy wearing aqua; Sandra Pom- eroy, pink; Pat McCarthy, yel- ~ Jow, and Helen Patterson, green. Each attendant carried a bouquet ~ of yellow and white — California daigies. A BRIDEGROOM = ~ John Patterson gerved as best man. Seating the guests wére Dick ye Be ed PP ve MR, AND! MRS.'D. &. © : ; home on North East boulevard. Norma Jean Pomeroy became the bride of Dayton F. Patterson Saturday erening at Christian Temple. She is the daughter of Mrs. Clarence Pomeroy of South East ‘boulevard, son of the Dayton F. Pattersons of North East en boulevard, ‘ ‘PATTERSON. | and he is the’ Mare T | Tuesday after going out to their iranch in Wyoming with Mrs. Pat- | ten and several members of their family. Mrs. Patten and the boys | will stay until September. og * * 1 The ehildren of Mr. and Mrs. | | Clifford B. West are widely sep- | i arated this summer. Their daugh- | Patten arrived home | iter, Jill Shallcross, is spending a | jfew weeks. with her aunt, Mrs. ‘Beekman Pool, at her summer | home in Dublin, N. H. | | John is spending the summer at | | Lost Trail Camp in Wyoming and | Mike has driven East and will! /spend the month of July visiting land driving in his new car. SHOWER PLANNED Mrs. David C. Clark and her |mother, Mrs. Jervis B. Webb, will | be hostesSes at a luncheon and | linen shower Tuesday for . bride- elect Ann McDonald. Ann will be married Ag. 5 to Harry Aubrey Toulmin, Jr, of Mobile, Ala. On July 20 Ann’s cousin, Mrs. Edward W, Hellier Jr., willfgive a ‘tea in her home on Half Moon drive. } * a * i Mr. and William /T.. Gossett Mts. { have pod ot ftom’ New York f f ¥ 1 ty sista Mass. | and Mrs. Arthur’ V. Roehm of Franklin, will’ be married Aug. 20 to Victor Guy White of Detroit. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor G. White. A reception will be given at Bloomfield Hills Coumtry Club. Ethe! Roehm will be her sis- ter’s maid of honor and Peggy Fisher of Grosse Pointe and Jo- anne Sproull of Birmingham will be bridesmaids, Norman Kessler will be vest man. Mrs’ Jamie Martin and Mrs. Lee Bertling are among those planning to entertain for Miss Roehm. * * * Defense Secretary and Mrs. C. E. Wilson, who spent a week at their home, ‘Longmeadow,’ on West Long Lake road, have gone up to their lodge at Walloon Lake where Mrs, Wilson will stay for modst of the summer. Members of their family will be with them at several different times. HOSTS AT SUPPER Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop. Conrad of Franklin were hosts at a sup- per party Monday eyening for itheir ‘houseguests, -Mr.’ and Mrs, E. A. Conrad of Pride's Crossing, ’ ‘ ' ‘ f : We a _ Ponting Prose Photo Mary, Williamsburg. They ere guests of Dr. Helen Dodson (right) of Lake Ange Shores. Dr. Dodson is an assistant profi ‘ of astronomy of the University of Michig and an gstronomer at jhe Me Enjoying the swimming, boating and pic- nicking at Lake Angelus are two Virginia visitors, Mrs. Gary E. Pannell. (left) and Dorothea Wyatt. Mrs. Pannell is president of Sweet Briar College, Sweet. Briar ‘and Miss Wyatt is professor of history and dean ' | f y j fw, i Observatory, Lake ' % ' ss id ‘ eth Joli i J : 3 Ny of Henee at the College of William a * ] 4 * faa. Sehfant *: “y a = abe le he eS THE PONTI AC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, EE cc _@Lingerie @ Ceraniics Infants’ Specialty Shop © Gift Shop FE. 2-3220 ’ 918 West Huron custom-made PERMANENTS You'll be amazed when you the hidden beauty in your hair looms to life with one of our very own custom permanents. Individuai Hair Styles ¢ Created Just for You by Tony and Carl New Hair-Drying Comfort! Relax and enjoy new hair-drying comfort with our “Beautaire” air- conditioned hair-dryer . like the sun and breeze on a summer G# FE 3-7186 SSSOHOSHSSSSSE LE SesoSeSrEESESeSECOSSEOOSeTOSS SSeS SOSCSCHSHSSSSHSSSSSSSSSSSSEHSSHSHSESEHHSSOOEOEEE IF smart year ‘round cover-up— Ae /e@ Glamorous fur forms a protective shoulder covering for day ond eve- ning, against oir conditioning and zero weather. More summer days being alleviated by air condition- ing—in theatres, restaurants and. in homes. The stole answers the need to cover up thin, bare fash- jons and when the stole is fur, it) is luxurious. and more, the heat of and | Andee “Where Service and Quality Are Supreme” A Staff of Highly Trained Hair Stylists to Serve You. HAIRCUTS $1.50 and $2.00 Shampoo and Hair Styling, $2 - $2.50 inc. Rinse Open Wednesday. All Day Friday ‘til 9 P.M. No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service! Andre Beauty 2nd Floor—Pontiac State Bank Bidg. INTRODUCES THE 3 MOST MAGNIFICENT PERMANENTS $750) 51 ()""- An Complete with Cutting and Styling DESIGNED TO TOP THE NEW PARIS SLEEK CREATIONS . . . SMOOTH, ae CSalon Phone FE 5-4490 Phone FE 3-9386 LOOK AT THESE PRICE TAGS SINGER Has PUT ON FLOOR MODELS DEMONSTRATORS USED SEWING MACHINES Yes, they’re low, there's a limited supply and they won't last long. Take advan- tage of this sale on various makes of used machines, reconditioned by the AND evenings is *. °A Trade Mark of THE SINGER MFG. COMPANT EASY BUDGET TERMS FOR TOPS IN TY—See SINGER 4-Star Playhouse On sole ot these _ Pontiae—102 N. Saginaw ‘atidcaat De W. Mople | _ SINGER SEWING CENTERS SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO. FE 2-0811 MI 4-0050 Fy / By ELIZABETH WOODWARD It's grim to sit on. the beach with your family while you watch in the water. It's tough to, hear vacationing boys and girls cavort the girls all talking about going to the dance while you clam up because you haven't a date. * * * Hugging the sidelines when everybody your age is in there having a terrific time is no way to spend your vacation. When your only excuse is the fact of a steady beau you left behind you at home. Yet, many of you consider new boys off-limits because of your loyalty to a trusty-true. You are afraid ef partying, playing around, partnering up with a vacation acquaintance, It wouldn't be fair, you think. So your holiday away is a dud. Here's a girl who is very skepti- cal of her vacation prospects. I suspect she'd rather stay home. | And all because of her steady beau, who's going to spoil the fun | though he’s far away. She writes: ‘Dear .Miss Woodward: Two | vears ago on my summer vacation I met a very attractive fellow and we've been corresponding with each other ever since. “A year and a half ago I started going steady with the most won- derful guy. And therein is my problem. “We're going back to the same place for our vacation and my friend writes that he’ll be there at the same time and thinks we should date every night. “Should I two-time my boy | friend by going with this fellow, | or should I remain true to my steady?" | Answer: Your two lads know | nothing about each other, I | suspect. Were you to announce to your steady beau that there was another boy eagerly awaiting your arrival at this vacation place, he'd have a fit. Were you to write to your friend | and tell him things are different | now because of your home-dating | arrangements, disappointed. So, don’t say any- | thing to either of them. Just talk | cold turkey to yourself. Tell yourself that your mem- ories of your friend are pleasant | enough but you've both changed | in twe years and may nat like Many Enjoying ‘Vacation Fun’ The YWCA on Franklin boule- vard is the scene of much activity. Under the guidance of Jane Mal- | | lory, teenage director, the ‘“Vaca- | Crafts, dramatics, cooking, sew- ~ | ing. swimming, movies and hikes are some of the activities which | keep the girls busy. { A surprise trip or special fea- | ture is planned for each week with a trip to the zoo next on the | agenda. _Assisting _jn the activities are | each other too much on roma Vacation fun with him. He can Tell yourself that your friend | help you get around right off the is staking an early claim to you | bat so that you have no lonesome _ because he wants to be sure of | sidelines sitting. having a good time’ with some- * ¢ & one he’s sure of. He can help you meet other Tell yourself .also that you | | people. With other friends, your | needn’t be with him too much needn't get yourself too involved! gine So romance won't make with him—but you can have casual ' things complicated. Don’t Let Home Beau Ruin Holiday w “When you're in the swing of \/come part of the crowd and not | things, you'll find other things to | do with other people, He'll be- | the hevo,. of the plot. He'll make | time-off from. steady-going pleas- | ant—without disrupting ‘your cme} tional balance. | (Copyright im) he’d be mightily | a 5 c . i ie : cde bs a % tal Manica Ann Benson (left) and Rose | Marie Tripp find a way to “beat the heat” | | tion Fun’’ program will .be en-| poe throughout the month = | July. | Lois Moore of Birmingham and Irene Comps and Betty Comps. There are still a few vacancies in some of the groups which are | , open to any girl from 10 to 14 fashion fad is to wear something years of age. The YWCA is a Red | | with a revrocee -_ Reather Sere. | With turquoise jewelry, turquoise The big beach cloche of straw | Colored accessories, sweaters and | serves the same purpose as a. entire dresses or suits. this new hood or a towel: it provides cov- | shade is suitable for blondes or ;er-up. Made of lightweight straw | brunettes and goes perfectly with | in brilliant colors. a suntan. STAPP'S Shoe Not just a “Sale” but and growing girls’ fine GROUP 1. GROUP 2. GROUP 3. ‘GROUP 4. | \ | / | shoes for the family! MID-SUMMER our stock of discontinued and seasonal styles. W. Huron Street Store Now Open Thurs, -- Fri.. Park FREE in Merchants’ .Lot Beside the-Theater! Sale Fee “ -~ NR ie | the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Benson’ during these torrid days. They just turned | | of Tilden avenue, and Rose Marie’s parents on on the sprinkler and and hopped in, Monica is | are the George Tripps also of Tilden avenue. IT urquoise Tint in Vogue| PARIS (INS)—The latest Paris our ‘honest-to-goodness’ twice a year Sale to clear Includes children’s, boys’ 99 $2.99 $3.99 SA 99 -- Sat. Evenings to 9 Includes straps, play sandals, from children’s size 5. to growing girls’ size 7. Also some growing girls’ summer HES. oc ccccese- VALUES TO $4.95 > Discontinued’ styles in growing girls’ and misses’ dress and school shoes. VALUES TO $7.95 Child’s and misses’ dress shoes in pastel pink and blue and simulated lizard and alligator, Sizes 812-3. , e , Boys’ mesh vamp oxfords and blue suede and leather combination ox- fords.........VALUES TO $10.45 JUVENILE BOOTERY 28 E. Lawrence Street AI I A I: am ee W. Huron St. FE 4-5158 Excellent Service ~for BUFFETS —- RECEPTIONS TEAS — DINNERS DISTINCTIVE INVITATIONS ‘or Showers —- Teas — Parties NAPKINS Designed for ® BON VOYAGE ® BRIDAL SHOWERS @ FORMAL TEAS a HOURS: i 4 | ( Mon. thru . »”) Thurs. gi 1 to ® P.M, 2 Km pri. 1 to 8:30 Sat. 10:00 to 5:00 ludy Reynolds’ Fiittle Cowrtiny and (Byidal SO Pontiac Press Phete | Beauty Clinic by Edythe McCulloch MADAM YOUR FEET Hot humid days of July make the pedicure a necessity. The procedure is simple and a little practice will make you quite adept. . Get a comfortable position with both back and foot braced firmly. Remove old polish. File nails with emery board, straight across. Never file or cut into corners. Buff nails with powder or paste. Soak foot in warm soapy water for 5 minutes Apply oil to cuticle. Never use remover. Push cuticle back gen- tly with orangewood stick. Don't use meta] pusher. Now scrub toes thoroughly to remove all traces of nail cream and dry carefully. To separate toes for easy application of enamel use a trick of the Revlon Salon. Roll a sheet of cleansing tissue diagonally and weaves in and out between toes. Apply 2 coats of polish plus topcoat allowing each coat to dry before apply- ing next one. Phone Edythe McCulloch Beauty Shop. FE 2-7431. 608 Pontiac Bank Bidg. Dier, Patou, Chanel, De Given- ‘chy all sponsor the turquoise shade, and turquoise colored cos- | tume jewelry is most popular | with chic Parisiennes. Turquoise | beads mixed with pearts, or tur- | | | quoise clips circled in rhinestones look elegant with practically any | clothes. White. gray or black clothes are equally smart with turquoise eol- | ored accessories. Roger Model has | designed a briefcase-shaped hand- | bag and matching gloves made ol | fine suede leather with a turquoise | and white printed pattern. | BUSINES: MENS LUNCHES convenient downtown location! WALDRON Hotel COFFEE SHOP 36 E. Pike St. . 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City ; wee ene e een ween ee een ewe ne ee eee 53-10 , ded IN AIR-COOL COMFORT @ Luncheons @ Dinners Coffee Waldron ‘sro» eCONNIE RICCI | The engagemen tand approach- ing marriage of Connie Ricci ‘to | Raiph D. Armstrong is announced | jt e by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. | Harold Ricci of Boston, Mass. Ralph's parents are the Ralph H. _Armstrongs of South East boule- } vard. The couple will be married /Sunday in Hyde Park Methodist Church, Boston, Will 1-0-Way | Rocks With Laughter | ‘Man Who Came to. Dinner’ to Continue | for Two Weeks | By JANET ODELL | Will-O-Way audiences laughed | last week. They'll be howling for | the next two weeks, if Tuesday's opening night was any indication. bd od % | “'The Man. Who Came to Dinner,” first produced in 1939, has become a perennial favorite of American theatergoers. This fast-moving | comedy by George S. Kaufman and | Moss Hart finds an appreciative | audience wherever it is played. | Many people have thought for | years that the character of Sheri- | dan Whiteside was based on Al- exander Wollcott, the famous lecturer, critic and radio per- sonality. Although Burton Wright cannot approach Mr. Wollcott in size, he does an admirable job of being = disagreeable person. Self-willed, egotistical, domineer- | | ing. tactless — he's all this and ‘more. But he has the ability to, project a more gentle-an@ humane | | side of his personality when he has | dealings with the two young people in the play. He is not above threat- | ening blackmail to insure their getting their heart's desires. PLAYS GIRL FRIDAY Maggie O'Hara turns her usual ;competent performance as White- | jside's Girl Friday. Playing the | role of Maggie Cutler, she is by turns sophisticated, brittle and just | a girl in-love. * ? td] The cast is enormous, with many | familiar faces appearing. Televi- sion and radio fans will be pleased to recognize some of their favorite personalities like Sonny Eliot, Kemal Kasem and Michael Keith You'll give out with several different kinds of laughter as the play progresses, It will be a nervous, spine - tingling kind whenever the slightly insane Harriet Stanley (Susan Becker) | appears, We'd like to see Miss | Becker in a “normal” role sometime. | You'll shriek when Kemal | Kasem, as Professor Metz, shows | up with his cockroaches. He's | faintly reminiscent of Groucho) Marx. cd * You'll laugh with delight when Robert Bryson plays his all-too brief scene. Hs versatility as an actor is wonderful to watch. CATCH IN THE. VOICE You'll laugh with a catch in your voice when the juvenile choir sings | a caro! in the Christmas Eve | scene. The littlest one on the right | i end is most appealing. The Merrill. | Sikorski and Turner families all} contributed children to the oc- casion. ® * * | _ Patricia Van Dopinck turns in a | | stunning performance as the sexy | Lorraine the ability to wear clothes with | a flair may not make an actress. | but they please the audience. Add dramatic ability te. that—the result | is Patricia. | With such a targe cast, it's impossible te mention each by name. It’s sufficient to say they were well chosen, they all do | an admirable job, and the whole thing’s great fun. Don't forget—Will-O-Way is air- conditioned; it was the most com- 96 E. Pike St. fortable place we'd been all day. Come in, write “How to Make Your ‘ Wedding Go Smoothly”’ booklet. There is no charge. amaiente or phone fér this Sheldon. Good looks and |}. STARTING TOMORROW MORNING at 10 Drastic reductions on coats, suits, dresses, shoes, etc. Choose fine fashion clothes at 33% to 50% off Final Clearance! All Wool Spring COATS Now $30 Were 49.95 Save Were 45.00 Now $20 VW, Were 39.95 Now $18 and More Beautiful pastel colors of grey, blue, beige, aqua, coral, solid tweeds, each 100% colors and wool. Final Clearance! Were 36.95 - Now $18- Were 29.95 Now $14 _ Were 24.95 Now $12 _ Were 19.95 Now $10 Tweed and solid colors including washable nylons. _ All Wool Spring TOPPERS Save 4. and More Final Clearance! All Wool Spring SUITS Were 59.95 Now $36 Tweeds Were 49.95 Now $30 Navys Were 39.95 Now $25 Colors Final Clearance! Glenhaven Rayon SUITS" Were 25.00 Now $17 Were 22.95 Now $15 Were 19.95 Now $10 Bet All Sizes e Sorry! no exchanges ‘7 $1] $75 | 2” $16” | g* no refunds noc.o.d.’s Values to 2495 Values to 3495 All sal 7 | sah he Nylons, SCIEREME, Se icIey [AGL Cotton and silks, ensembles, dressy final solids, casuals, sunbacks. Sizes 9 to _ 15, 10 to 20, 1412 COTTON DRESSES to choose from. to 22/2. Hundreds BETTER DRESSES and afternoon. 2-piece dresses, jacket dresses. Juniors’, Misses’, half sizes. Charge Yes, use your charge account for all your purchases Semi-Annual QHQ)E CLEA R ANGE att sotes Finat Formerly to 24.95 OVER 1800 PAIRS OF Famous FASHION SHOES .) 4’ to a 2” DeLiso Debs. . Rhythm Step . . Andrew Geller... Carmelettes . . . Sandler . Joyce, and Others SAVINGS 20% to 50% Cotton Skirts Were to 1095 $ 4” 6” ‘Beautiful cotton skirts with wide full skirts. Hundreds to choose Save a a io) On Millinery Values to 10.95 Swim Suits Specially Priced - ‘9 One group of famous make eal suits at special thas for this — Pearce Floral Company from. BEGG y *e event. ss Onfogre Lake ‘Axe, Kua FE 2-0127 | ; | mS re N. HAINAW ( ae! “ eines 1s tm ii te Ne ul — — a oe { Fb } 3, ao a fh Aaite Keg = erneee oc. ou mel Bcf \ F - / . i . rf : i f / bray Se faa ae: i ee eee ee ee Wy e THE, PONTIAC PRESS, _WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1955. wih Pa ee ey ee Brairy Injunction Stymies: Madison Heights Election Charter sai Reconvenes Board of Supervisors Prevented From Fixing New Voting Date | MADISON HEIGHTS—Mrs, Vir- ginia Solberg, acting mayor of the city of Madison Heights, re- convened the old Madison Heights Charter Commission in her home last night. The Madison Citizens League, which has opposed a majority of the commissioners in bucking a proposed charger, had threatened to get a court injunction forbid- ding meeting of the old charter group, but decided against it. The league had submitted pe- titions to the Oakland County. |. Board_of Supervisors, asking for a new charter commission — tion, In the meantime, Joe J. Nosko, citizen and strong supporter of the old charter commission, asked an injunction yesterday seeking to pre- vent the board of supervisors from setting a date for a new charter commission election, * * * Harry Young, attorney for the Madison Heights charter commis- | sion, stated this morning that a temporary injunction had been granted. A hearing will be held Monday in Circuit Court, Pontiac. Sharon Shoults, Richard Powell Exchange Vows THOMAS — Sharon Ann Shoults became the bride of Richard Har-| ley Powell in a recent evening ceremony performed in the home of the bride. Some 40 guests at- tended the. wedding. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Guelph C. Shoults of Thomas, and Sister's matron of honor and the | pastor of Bethany Mennonite he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis | Powell of Lapeer. The-bride wore a pink nylon street leiigth dress with white accessories. A‘versage of white carnations and stephanotis com- pleted her costume. Serving as maid of honor was the, bride's sister, Mrs, Robert Las- sen of Metamora. Richard Angel-| lar of Lapeer was best man. Approximately 125 attended the reception at the Thomas Commun- ity Hall, a ae * For their wedding trip, the new Mr. and Mrs, Powell toured north- ern Michigan. They will live at 3908 Hunt Rd., Lapeer. — Charter Commission Rules on Permits SOUTHFIELD — At the recent Charter Commission meeting it was decided that building permits will not be issued by the building department until a statement of actual existence of sufficient water supply has been received by the department from the well driller, not the builder. Also discussed at the meeting was the plan for ten “no dump- ing” signs which will be posted at an approximate cost of $50 in areas now being used for illegal dumping of rubbish. An ordinance prohibits dumping anywhere — in the township. Churchman Leads Study Institute at Southfield SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — Rev. Harold Thompson, pastor of | the local Reformed Presbyterian Church, has been elected preside nt of the Southfield Ministerial As-| sociation, The Rev. Gerald Fisher, pastor of the Magnolia E.U.B. Church Was named seeretary and the Rev. John Rose of the Community Church Congregational, treasurer. The Christian Education Insti- tute which is sponsored by this group will be held early this fall at the United Presbyterian Church. It will be open to all church teach- ers and leaders. Ex-Patients Picnic Set ORTONVILLE — Myrtle Jesse of Goodrich became the bride of | Loran L. Hamilton in a tandle- Lutheran Church of South Hadley, before a gathering of 150 guests. Myrtle is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, William Cunningham of | Goodrich. Loran's parents are the B,. L. Hamiltons of Ortonville. floor-length gown of Chantilly lace over white satin and she carried a’ bouquet of red rose- buds. Her fingertip-length veil was se- cured by a double crown of seed) pearls and sequins, and she wore | a silver cross, a gift of the bride- groom. Mrs. Arnold Seelbinder was her | bridegroom's attendants were | Louis Williams, Thomas Slattery, | County Deaths Charles L, Bruce Sr, OXFORD — Service for Charles | L. Bruce Sr., 71, formerly of Pon- | tiac, will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. from the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac, with bur- ial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. | Bruce died Monday after a year's illness. She approached the altar in a | ‘Spencer took j and MR. AND MRS. L. L. HAMILTON Jesse-Hamilton Nuptials Spoken at South Hadley Kenneth Jesse, brother of the bride, and James Palshan. | The newlyweds will tour the | light ceremony recently in Christ | West Coast on their wedding trip. | | They will live in Ortonville until! | the fall, when they will live-in | East Lansing where Loran is a ‘student at Michigan State college. Jean M. Wittrig, ‘Charles Spencer ‘Marry at Imlay_ IMLAY CITY was flanked by Tiffany baskets of white gladioli and candelabra as Jean |/Marie Wittrig and Charles P. their recent mar- riage vows. The bride's father, | Church, officiated, assisted by the Rev. Leo Burch, Methodist pastor. Jean Marie's parents are Rev. Mrs. Paul Wittrig of Imlay | City and Charles is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Levi Spencer, also of | Imlay City. Miriam Wittrig, sister of the bride, was-maid of honor, and bridesmaids were Mrs. Donald | Rév. Thomas A> St. Patrick Catholic Church, an- threefold expansion fund campaign to raise a minimum of $75,000 will begin Sunday at — The altar of | | First Methodist Church here St. Patrick Fund Starts Sunday . New School, Convent, Church Repairs Planned in Ex Program " WHITE nounced a 3 p.m, convent, John V, McCarthy and Associ- ates of Detroit, fund-raisers, are supervising the drive. Marshall Morse, chairman of the memo- rial gifts committee, said to date $20,300 has been received. the drive. Solemn Opening of the afternoon, Mrs. John Parsons Dies in Clarkston CLARKSTON — Mrs, (Gladys Mande) Parsons, 61, for- mer Ferndale School Board mem- ber and teacher, in her home at 9165 Evee Rd., -| after a long illness. Mrs. Parsons, a resident of Oak- land county for the past 37 years, was born July 1, 1894, in Lynn, Mass. She was the daughter of James C. MacLay. She attended Boston Uni- | versity and was married to John H. Parsons April 27, 1917, in Lynn. Mrs, Parsons was a member of the Clarkston Methodist Church and a member of Sigma Kappa Sorority, She is survived by her husband and two daughters, Mrs. Muriel Crossman of Pontiac and Mrs. Grace Huff of Akron, Ohio; a son, Rithard H., of Pontiac, and one sister, Mrs. Ruth E, Coen of | Indianapolis, Ind. Service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Sparks-Griffin Wittrig and Esther Showalter, of Goshen, Ind. Glenn Spencer was his brother's best man and the ushers were Surviving-are three sons and a|James Spencer, also a brother, and daughter, Edwin Thomas, Keffheth and Mrs. Grace son all of Pontiac, and Charles L. include a sister, Mrs, Mary. Mitch- ell of Arizona and seven grand- children, Mrs, William E, Oakes DRAYTON PLAINS — Requiem Mass for Mrs. William E, (Flora J.) Oakes, 79, of 4085 Solvay St., will be held at 10 a.m, Thursday from Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, with burial in Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Saginaw. Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Coates Funeral Home, Mrs. Oakes died Tuesday. She leaves three sons, Kenneth F. of Drayton Plains, Irving E. of Birmingham, William L, of Den- ver, Colo.; one sister, Mrs, Wil- liam Green, and a brother, Ed- ward Egloff, both of Saginaw; sev- en grandchildren and eight great- grandchildren Ural M. Upchurch Paul | Donald Wittrig and Robert Wittrig, Albert-| brothers of the bride. Immediately afterward the cou- Jr.. of Rochester, Other survivors | Ple received 180 guests in the church parlors. Later they left for a wedding trip in Canada. The couple plans to live at 172 Ban- croft St., Imlay City, upon return- | ing. New K. of C. Group Will Be Instituted WALLED LAKE — The new Knights of Columbus Council No. 4064, organized under the direc- tion of District Deputy John A. | Fisher, will be instituted Sunday. State and local dignitaries of the order, including State Deputy Wal- ter H. Graveline, will be present. The charter members of the new council will attend mass and re- ceive Holy Communion at St. Wil- liam Church. Following a break- AUBURN HEIGHTS — Rosary! fast, ritualistic exercises of the service will be held at 9:15 p.m. | order will commence at the Pon- tonight at Dudley H. Moore Fu-| tiac Knights of Columbus club- Chapel, Pontiac, with the Rev. Walter Teeuwissen Jr. officiating. Burial will be in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Nancy Hallett, Thomas Bath Wed Saturday WEST BLOOMFTELD — Nancy Thomas Bath ceremony, Saturday, performed in the Community Baptist Church. Nancy is the daughter of Mrs. C. Hallett of West Maple road, and his parents are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Bath of Detroit. The bride wore a deep tone aqua; linen suit with white ac- cessories, and completed her out- fit with a pink and white corsage. Farmington was matron of honor, and Donald Bath served as his brother’s best man. was held at Devon Gables, with an evening reception-at the home of the bride's mately 60 guests were present. The newlyweds are touring north- E TOWNSHIP—The ison, pastor of The program includes church en- langement, a new school and a new Approximately 231 men attended the first training meeting Tuesday, when plans were approved to open All parishioners and friends of the parish are invited to attend the general phase of the program on Sunday Davisburg Sees. Mobile CD Unit. 27-Foot Trailer Serves as Control Center for Mobilization DAVISBURG—Visitors to Davis- burg Park recently got a chance to see the official -civil defense mo- bile unit in action. Robert Haslock, civil defense director of Springfield, examined the 27-foot trailer which is a key control center for mobili- zation of emergency facilities in Detroit. The trailer was donated by Chrysler Corp. * * * The mobile communication /anit is maintained by Chrysler as a public service project. The unit is completely self contained and ARLO DAViS Ortonville Rotary Installs Arlo Davis independent of outside power ve . : supply. ORTONVILLE — Arlo Davis was installed as president of the Or- The unit contains two short- tonville Rotary Club at the eighth Judge elected wave radio receivers, two trans- mitters, four walkie talkies and a public address system with four trumpet speakers on the roof. annual banquet June 21. George B. Hartrick was district governor. Davis had been vice president John H. The station is designed for two man-operation, one working and one’ standing by in case of emergency. However it is possible for one man alone to manipulate the controls. During the past months the unit has taken part in defense drills as part of a short-wave network olf and program chairman of the club during the past year. He also served as a member of the board of directors and represented the club at the international golden jubilee. He is owner of Davis Machinery Co. died early today ang Beatrice Payson) Jean Hallett became the bride of Mrs. Connie Wissert Kennedy, of Following the ceremony a dinner County’s beaches. Actually, she’s newest in French beach suits, designer's answer to the new edict = the revealing ‘‘Bikini.” “The Brigantine.’ ties Seomere Detroit. SWIMMIN’S FINE!—Except for the bathing suit, the young woman , in this picture might well be walking the shoreline of one of Oakland | from Paris and she's wearing the The suit is a Paris by French fashion authorities ban- WALLED LAKE — Barbara Helene Chaplow and John James Gilbert were married Saturday qorning in Our Lady of Refuge Church. Approximately 300 guests | were present. Barbara is the pee of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Chaplow of Walled Lake. John’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gilbert of Walled Lake. The bride wore a floor-length gown of lace and net over satin. A queen's crown secured her veil and she carried a white pearl prayerbook with a white orchid and streamers. the bride's attendants. Corrinne Grissom of Walled Lake was flow- er girl. Beatrice Hallett and the late Fred wo The bridegroom's were Russell Gilbert of Walled Township and Monte Smith of Walled Lake, A reception was held at the Westacres Clubhouse. Barbara Chaplow Speaks Vows With John Gilbert Madonna Grissom of Walled) Lake, Jean Chaplow of Utica and | in an afternoon | Patti Smith of Walled Lake were attendants | Lake, Glenn Rehbine of Southfield will tour ‘northern Michigan | Wisconsin on their wedding trip. | They will make their home in| | Clawson. | Southfield Kiwanians . ie Hear of Convention SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The local Kiwanis Club will meet to- night at 6:45 p.m. at the Southfield Methodist Church hall to hear re- ports from Thomas H. Myers, president, and Don A. Cameron, secretary, on the recent interna- tional convention ih Cleveland. Myers was during the convention, ~ -- Guest Pulpit Scheduled for Waterford Church WATERFORD — The Rev. ford Community Church Sunday pastor,.is vacationing. On’ July 17, the Rev. George | — vice president of Grand | will be guest speaker. The new Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert | Patrolman | the township hall. a sergeant-at-arms | Ken | Tunstra from Aetna Bible School | will deliver the sermon at Water- | at 11 a.m. Rev. Wright Van Plew, | Rapids School of Bible and Music, | Almont School Appoints ‘Two to Teacher Posts ALMONT—Added to the faculty of Almont Community Schools are Barbara Nowak of Erie, Pa., and | William Martin of Onekama. Miss Nowak, who will teach com | mercial subjects this fall, received | her B.S. degree from the Villa OAK TOWNSHIP |Maria College of Erie. Mr. Mar- Dolphus Christenbery | tin received his degree from Cen- has been given his job back on the | tral’ Michigan College and will Royal Oak Township Police force. | teach the seventh grade over 150 radio amateurs strateg- ically located throughout five coun- Royal Oak Returns Policeman to Duty ROYAL The three-man Civil Service | - SHOES ;:. FAMILY Board reinstated Christenbery with retroactive pay at a final hearing held last night in the basement of | Orthepedic Shoe Specialist FAMILY STORE STORES 4444 Pivie, Drayten Plains 1340 Union Lake Rd., Union Lake Christenbery and Patrolman |Paul H. Myatt were ousted May | |24 by the township board and | Myatt has since been reinstated. for Hot Weetsct a fawrocl) DRINK at the AUBURN BAR BEER—WINE—LIQUOR 378 Auburn Avenue Beer and Wine to Go WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY ORIVE IN Cor. Williams Lake-Airport Roads — Box Office Opens 7:15 P. M WEDNESDAY ; Me ts 2 Hoy +m mother. Approxi- Upchurch, 44, of 2770 Churchill Rd., who died Monday in St. | Mercy Hospital. }olic Church at,10 a.m. Thursday | with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. | Surviving besides his Hazel; are two daughters, Mrs. Virginia Spry of Avon Township, Phyllis at home; his stepfather, Ira Woodall of Peoria, Ill.; three brothers and two sisters, John of Covington, Ky., Harold of Pon- tiac, Robert of Dearborn, Mrs. Frederick Ziem of Pontiac and Mrs. Harmon Doan of Williams Lake, and one grandchild. Lois I. Lamphier ROCHESTER — Funeral serv- | ices for Lois Irene Lamphier, 32, of ,710 Ludlow St., will be held Friday at 3 p.m. from St. Paul! FOUR TOWNS — The Patients) Methodist Church with bao in. Homecoming Picnic of the Oak- | land County Tuberqulosis Mt. Avon Cemetery. The Sana-|is at the Pixley Funeral ses widow. | » neral Home here, for Ural Marvin | house. Assisting in the organization } Joseph | were Edvard Paige, Thomas Ol- Requiem Mass | cen | will be held in Sacred Heart Cath- | Pilon Jr. A. A. Pilson Sr. and A. A. All knights in the met- | ropolitan area are invited. Farmington Girl Scouts Spend Week at Park FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — Mrs. Betty Thornton, Mrs. Bar- bara Santo, Mrs. Margaret Hart and Mrs. Virginia Williams were advisers to members of Girl Scout Troop 174 during their week-long camping trip at the Kensington Recreation Area along the Huron River. Mrs. Charles Damm, park bota- nist, conducted a nature hike: for the 20 members of the troop, as a highlight of the week. Family Supper ay torium is slated for July 10 at) She died early this morning in at New Hudson Church 1 p.m. Sponsored by the Patients! Pontiac the picnic will in| Benefit Assn., clude all ex-patients, gram. Surviving are her parents, Lloyd who will, jand Louise Lamphier, and three return for the annual lawn pro- ‘brothers, Allan and Ward of | Rochester, and Howard of Detroit. | Ceremony Unites Couple| ‘CLIFFORD—Ernestine Rae Van . (Conant and Daniel Allen Adamic were married at a recent morning ceremony in SS. Péter and Paul's Catholic Church, of North Branch. Ernestine’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Harold Van Conant, of Clif- and he is the son of Mr. Serving as maid of honor was Joann Rapic, of North Branch, and bridesmaids were Marilyn Willis, of Snover, and Lorraine Adamic, of North Branch. Best man was William Adamic, the bridegroom's brother, and ush- ers were John Adamic, of Silver- North. Branch. A breakfast followed the cere- mony and a reception was held at at 8 p.m. at Shay Lake Park. After a wedding tour of north- |ern Michigan, the newlyweds will \reside in Clifford, ‘ ‘ | é wood, and Norman Adamic, lo i | NEW HUDSON—The New Hud- son Methodist Church will hold family night this evening, featur- ing ioe cooperative supper at 6:30 my and Mrs. Ora Renwick and Mrs. Oral Stubbs are committee chairmen. Waterford Picnic, WATERFORD — Mr. and ‘Mrs. Arthur Davis will host a_picnic- dinner, Thursday at 12:30 p.m. for the Waterford Ladies Auxiliary of the Waterford Community Church. ern Michigan. Clarenceville Considers Ball Field Lighting CLARECEVILLE — Equipment and installation bids offered at the recent meeting of the local school board, covering the athletic field lighting project, will be considered during a special meeting of the board Thursday evening. Equipment includes 8 specially treated wooden » Con- trol panel, cable and 80 light bulbs of 1,500 watts each. The awarded contract will be paid from money collected through a community-wide fund raising campaign, which has been under way since early spring. Also to be considered will be bids for the grading of the field. Funds for this gradihg will be allocated by the board. County E Births A son, Ter Dougiae. was — to Mr. and Mrs. "Tne Erickso' Announcing the the wrth, “of @ daughter, mona, are Mr. and Mrs. rry. jenton Mr. and Mrs. _ Mat ew = announce the birth of « 1 Bryan. A daughter, Patricia Ann, was born to Mr, eg at William Diectiin. Mr, Mrs. Hints announce the birth. a” ® daughter, Marlene Jean. Announcing the bare s a abe Witness Angela May, are Mr. ew Judy tee, was born to Mr. & Saeie. . rd Teal. Mr. and Mrs. ‘bos Herbert announce the birth of a son, Randall David. AIR-COND! BICMAR INN ) ALL NEW SANDWICH BAR : Biemar on KOSHER CORNED BEEF 94 w: theron Dining Guide Fine, tasty take oct. PIZZA PIE A Treat tor the Whole Family 15 VARIETIES TO SELECT FROM Mattes feeds prepared fer you to Joe’s Famous Spaghetti House 1088 Weet Meran Bt. FR 8-7398 Open 6 P.M.-8 A.M.—Sen. 3-12 P.M.—Closed Mon, GOOD FOOD — FRIENDLY SERVICE Catering to Banquets and Private Parties PURE FOOD ® Breakfasts — Luncheons Across Yrom 253 Seath te — RESTAURANT and BAR — Dinners ‘Jerome Motor Sales wunday Lauwta as = Closed * BEER — WINE — LIQUOR EAT IN YOUR CAR A sandwich & coke Amalt&hotdog A full meal is good at § [ EL=-MAR DRIVE-IN « Dixe Hwy. at Silver Lake Road Scribs DRIVE-IN 130 S. Telegraph FOR BUSINESSM “Jack Deckers FAMILY Dick & Jim tnvite Fou to oie z {Dance Dancing — Fri., Set., Sun. 6-9 EN’S LUNCHEONS US-10 4 Miles North ot Pontiac DINNERS At Reasonable Rates & THURS. > Mn Leable, | oon ( wid mod he ; MOM Ake, ; ye » Que, “maniod | SHIRLEY BOOTH ROBERT RYAN HA WALLIS Be oe MRS. LESLIE _ SO Oe Elizab ath Lake wAKE TT Yields ‘Bows. (izzttie i ar ‘ oy —_- ee a pamper te Kho y tery } Nearly 300 sharpshooters, includ in four, divisions — A, %4 per cent] wi classify all contenders. A| Birmingham Gun Club is about PR gg Te ranel Jr of Birmingham, Bad Pontiac. Man Takes 3 ritory dusing these times. if you ing defending champion Ned Lilly | 4nd over; B, 91 per cent and under | $2,300 purse will be added. Pr&c-|three~ miles northeast of Walled | possible 100 (19 yardsi; L. F. Loucks of | i wish to find the best sport that | ef Stanton, are expected for ‘the | 94; C, 88 per cent and under 91; | tice traps will be open Thursday | Lake in Commerce Township on bo ig biel pt eT aaa lawrence Pounder; Fish Contest | each day has to offer, Wiaieapies and D, below 88 per cent, at 1p.m. Friday's shooting starts| Richardson Road near Hagyerty. John T. J { Birmingh ; ° ° . . | 1955 Michigan State Trap Cham-| ATA rules will weak ern the event | at 3 a.m.; while Saturday al Winners were crowned ea two | the non-handicap, {6-yard shoot. 96 “out Still Wide Open Major periods begin at the Himes, pionships Friday, Saturday and | and a committee appointed by the | | Sunda action is scheduled at | divisions at the BGC’s Independ. | Her» Cutting and: Pred Ford. both of . | Some a Ser ee Soe ee | Sunday at the Birmingham Gun | ygich; y . : ve | Birmingham, tied for and with 95; Otto me half or two hours thereafter, _Mi- Cub. : fichigan Trapshooting Association | 10 a.m. . | ence Day Shoot.last Sunday. Novek of Dearborn hit 93 for 3rd.” | If rainbow trout were eligible for | nor periods are of somewhat short. |. entry in the Pontiac Press ‘Big | er duration. Fish Derby,’’ Eugene Gross, 355 and . Canada will contest for | Mt. Clemens, Pontiac, would be off A.M, P.M. [ | comes an ar bare wale Je e by S ri n Jo W Ee U e to a flying start for honors. Min. Maj. Min, Maj. | dropped myn . 1c" er Vv e . . . A . : an ’ ’ | American Trapshooting Associa- | Gross landed a three-pound rain- | Wednesdsy ... 6:50 12:35 7:05 12:55 Marksmen from. several states ee ‘ Thursdayt*.... 7:35 -1:20 7:50 40 7 ’ a tion, Competition will be in the bow early Monday morning along | priday ..... tis 3:00 830 @20\ back. The ‘eat was thoruoghly 200 singles, 100 doubles and 100 the north shore of Elizabeth Lake. |Saturday ..... ao Se oe dead. ; handicaps. By JACK PATTERSON {made quite a study of the prob- Big hatches continue and ‘the dry | frustration depending, upon how | The fish measured 18‘ inches in oeerrds 77" 10:20 6:05 10:40 4:30 oT i sj le y man e: ve his hands elective the fish choose at | leneth ¢ 3.Binches : Tues . 12:08 | 4:50 11:98 6:15 | \ Lilly, a . ily ee |. These hot days, coming along as | lem. ek s fly man can have his hands full | selective the fish choose to be. at} length and 13‘ inches in girth. oe ve be ty oe 0 3 é03 | Santee Erases Record catching fish or convulsed wth | the moment. a nen = de EES ie : ° shooter, captured all three events For lots of bluegills and plenty | ———~ : — Pel = . ee = ae ‘ ; in Texas — His Own : last year, scoring a perfect 200 of bass, though the latter run . $0 ee , ta pena wale vee = Jersey $ Garden State Wes Santee of Kansas brok oe in the singles. He won the Ohio | the Jake fisher- « | smallish, White Lake is the spot, ca a The Gardenia for two-year-old . =o nC ple State shoot in June, which man, particularly * | according to Mel Ferrar of Mel's cemage le ereaseiehe, musta See fillies will be fae a Garden State own U. 8. mile ae OS moves him te 25 yards in the | the diurnal varie- Bait and Tackle Shop. bow later. Another Pontiac eee; Oct. 2 It is , anion | “hen he van the distance in 4:00.5 — handicap competition this week- | ty. Oxygen loss is ler, Teny Geodeke, 9063 E. Wal | or whe Garden State s week| in tho Teme sulegl Gil Gide end. Lilly has been named to | apt to be rapid in From Jack Pflug, Birming- ton Bivd., was fishing with Gross. later to ee Core ee held thi one tin on April 2 - - A F a : ater. : e is 3 Jimmy Robinson’s Sports Afield | the shallows and % ham we learn that Square Lake Race is still wide-open in the aiid = Be pes a A losnnad Aue os S058 All-America team for the past | fish, even as thee in addition to serving as host derby, now in its 3rd week. Jim several years, and we, seek cool- for rainbows has some very large perch, which may still be Shivers of Walled Lake leads the u : er, re. salubri- bass division with a five-pound : Two other outstanding marks-) ©: More 8a , = : | yore ee | within reach of the wader. 12-ounce largemouth and Ray Reed £2 heads the bluegill class with a 17- | ounce specimen: Both Shivers and Reed have been | closely challenged, but as yet not | U Pp TO * men expected for the state meet | 0US Strata rather surpassed. There are still no en- | they do, one upon another, have a cumulative effect, mostly bad, on ed are Chauncey Huber from Tiffin, than gasp around Ohio, past president of the ATA, |i the orrible 3 Waterford, has a spot where limit and Maynard Henry of Los| ©: PATTE catches are a matter of a few : 3 ee . ATTERSON |. Angeles, ATA’s current prexy. The current rule minutes. Unfortunately Don keeps Contestants will vie for honors |0f thumb, then, is to fish deep—j the jocation a well-guarded secret, ee how deep a matter of experimen- | but he might tell ¥OU. Speaking of perch, Don White, tries in .the northern pike cate- R tation—but deep enough at any | * * 8 gory, making that race in particu- + ON anger Hockey Player _[rate to get below the superheated| Just in case anyone thinks it’s er siertice wiitattale Stars on Links Too surface layer. The night fisher-} just plain too hot to catch a fish eee ae man, of course, has more latitude’! regardless’ consider the results | we ue hockey player for, and can continue to work the! 7-year-old Richard Isgrigg, son of the New York Rangers, qualified; sh: ; ) after dark hen | the Willi: cries. 2 2 ay | OUSIGEN oye Sprain cee Weed en are surli i as ( -| evening at Lake Angelus—a 2'2 golf events in 1954. one of the Bass. particularly, seem eager to pound “bass, no less » few pro athletes who qualify inj make slashing forays into — the | more than one field Ewalt's 1 Biggest Bluegill Is Just Another ‘Miss’ Dave Ewalt, head of the city Department of Parks and Recrea- tion, is a frustrated angler. “It’s plumb tough on a fisher- man when he lands the biggest bluegill he’s ever taken, only to find it a bare ounce too small to qualify for the Pontiac Press While the lake fisherman is suffering under the blistering afternoon sun, his fellow pisca- tor on_northern trout streams is enjoying some splendid, though admittedly hot and mosquitoey ~ fishing. shallows after minnows as soon as the sun hits the trees N ogee * | 2 Sacrifice for Irvin | dust at dusk the flyrodder can Monte Irvin went through 124| do the year’s mightiest mischief games in the season of-1953 without) en panfish with a small surface bein "ing na Eged with | a _Sacrifice hit.| popper, fished with a minimum ~ — of action on a long, fairly fine leader. Bluegills, reckbass, call- TOP QUALITY! “Fine and far off’ is the motto sar water, but now and Bi A Co ee 4 2 0 Pen-Chrome coes, even perch and bass will | pee Rg pie 3 ¢. fism Derby ——— S FE 3 3 en Q % | ee ere : aves accents the come up from a_ remarkable like a wooly worm, for example, | depth to smack a popper. We i) pay off well. For big browns | a : in 3 Fishing at Voorheis Lake during | pi its cae rang al " _in the daytime a white marabou — SUMMER FUN — Michigan is expected to see a record number | = Rgiion sl Auli ommapeain saps mee . . streamer is still as good a bet as of fishermen on her lakes and streams this simmer and this lucky k as ahs brow dessord OV ll ver re For big catches of calicoes, Her- | any for the guy who isn't so pure angler, an early Ba SSNS of this zany army, has the look of a| an sid als fats rape a ; s bert Lawrence, 69 W. Longfellow, | he feels he must eschew anything man forgetting work and the cares of a complicated world while busy | es - pr = pe io ne ay ‘ : i. : suggests flies, of most any pattern) which sinks | with a thrashing 10 inches of trout. It’s a scene that will be re-enacted a share staal dae leadership ” 25 Pine Street with a fly-rod pork rind attached.| Night fishing fo. big browns thousands of times throughout the state as Michigan takes ‘‘time off"’ : ; | Or just the pork rind and maybe | isn't bad, these warm nights, and for some much aieeded relaxation. Ras Ke Ryle Logs ge nteregeren| Ve Block North of Pontiac Press — a small pearl spinner. Calicoes| here again the mapabou streamer, ay Keller took a <-inch pike ° ep ' a: - Ly : - nei | just can't resist either combina-| but this time a black one, will do ie See ee bass, besides the SS SEE aoe = | F prt t * se ao : a Saeae TrTTITIil. tt rotunal 6 [peace Ee = eis aes me ee be = = _ —_ | Pollution Menace | “We had a lot of fun, anyway, |@™ FA 3 | and that bluegill was fine eating," | Ml _ CTORY a | | * . * y Sports Guild __|Groza’s Too Tops NFL | Michigan Still Must \°""=™= oh , Lou Groza, tackle for the Cleve- | . a REBUILT rj Rodeo to Help | land Browns, has been high scorer | ° h S Drayton Woman Wins “) d a ‘ » N g tball League | t t St le: a | Underprivileged tine seas and has scored en Fight to Save Streams _| sitver toke even = am A ;one touchdown, His scores have | By MORT NEFF | still too many without this essen- Mrs. John McCallum of Drayton ~ NEW a The 6th annual Sports Guild/come on field goals and SE) The streams and rivers of the we to good health and good liv- | piains was the winner of Tues- rr) s Junior Championship Rodeo and after touchdowns. | nation have undergone a tremen- ne: day’s medal play in the Women’s . MOTORS a Western Horse Show will be held | a dous change in the past half cen- | pairs 12, parma oeaoe with | Silver Lake Golf League. Mrs. A HEN | Sunday ae at the Haze] Park | _ Sports Calendar . . . tury. Fifty years teens rapraadh million people | ee shot a low net score New — Pricel | . > race trac ui ago there was lit- | "@V& Sewe ems, an “) 0 o Down Payment Detroit's Mayor Albert E. Cobo. | TODAY Ga poltuiioa! and these abe as a population of | Mrs. Earl Weber of wares lt INSTALLED -IN New Car | 2 in a proclamation has dec lared | . Baseball the clear-running | million discharge inadequately | won the blind hole event with aig k. Chevrolet, Hudson, Dodge, Ford, the day “Sports Guild Rodeo Day." | CLASS A—Auburn Merchants vs. Elks | treated sewage directly into our) seven on the par five %h hole. . ONE DAY! pores Pontiac, "38 te ‘47, DeSote, ay ‘Sports G . 3 123 Wisner, $-30) waters were filled | ©. ‘ | ; , , Chrysler and Plymouth : 4 A parade will be held Saturday! crass p— Dublin Comm unity Center | e with fish. Today | rivers | Mrs. Warren Weber, also of Water- | a at 9 a.m. with all seers ces pe Swecer Gian one Bin Rent \ teeming popula-| ete neem is cape en- —— ——— hes aight A Free Towing—No Block Deposit a e on its itinerary during the y | Beautty shop. ic-3 wut 2 0): Bt tious (are! concen. | canecred by such neglect—anc in- |. -Following eekly gx ay on | ' + long affair. | oecrs t trated along wa- |sofar as sports fishing is con-| Tuesday, July 19, a et will be ry . irene i Mrs. Grant |& A 2nd parade is scheduled at | AMERICAN LEGION—Berkley at Birm- | terways. for water | Ce™ned thousands of miles of po- | held at the home o as a the Hazel Park City Hall at 1 poeple Walley "ners Chone cnnpaneee is vital to big in- | tentially fine water are ruined. | McDonald on Clintonville road near is 401 S. Saginaw i Phone FE seat . (Rieepresy p.m. Sunday, ending in front of | *! 6 P= ae 7 acest There is little excuse for such | Oakland Lake. TTIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iil) | hea i Hi . qo | Seftha A mt + Sry. z = a |_ Wood Stain rece J i i} the oe at the Hazel Park | City wen-s—stsdium Ino vs. Shaws| MORT NEFF Today big city sa Ph a ri pererpeagl | | ee * "K. i Je € raudett f s” $ f “Ke ) 8 , aw o \ : |K wae c iipexwares "5 o ‘ome wel sewage is a growing problem, = oe IY = tv of any size True. a Governor G. Mennen Williams. poate! 6 ‘North Side, 7): Chuck & Louies | in too many instances the “prob- | “ a, < . ua : bast it. na bul a - et rs ’s U ‘Nort syste sts py — b astride an Arabian horse, will head | Biarke’ 0," Mine's Used Cars (Nor lem” is being dumped directly | ea | a om Sank wee sublic | 13 smart colors the parade to the track. The Oak- | WATERFORD MEN 8 2 Richardson linto our rivers. Game fish cz = ~_ y the advantages to Pt s | | land County Sheriff's Posse, De- | D8!" ara: ers een TiS Fae | . 4 recreational we health and added recreational fa- | ‘| EULA DE TOLER troit Police. Mounted. Drill seat | nie Evel ord Lions va Sylvan | not sury ive—and recreational use | cilities more than offset the cost. | S (2) terin immer ‘a @7 ur MABINETE. FUSNITI A Plymouth tee Co. pipe band, THURSDAY a tre saa for swimming if®out “Here in Michigan too many / tS», KS “ of the question. ae . | and the Swinging H Square Dance | Baseball | cities, large and small, are still team are among those in the pa- per Rm ene vs LC Andersoms~ Qut of a total population of 160 | without proper sewage disposal | rade. | CLags D — Mets ws. Clarkston| million two-thirds live in cities, | systems. If you live in one of | ml mm ] Bring out the natural beauty 5 ; = | aioe is pone Se “Dans A tiga iaedocneeli Oe apart — of — = our aves! teen ee sinvales a plan he oe | the show, which 1s open to te p (Washington 0 : _; terways. A good many of these | rect this evil. Michigan is truly a i of new or resanded wood with ii. Proceeds will send 200 under- | |e eee eth 5S | cities have good sewage treat- | ‘Water Wonderland.” Let's make our famous Pen-chrome Wood | privileged children to summer ep tA8S F Bove Club. vs City Janitor! ment plants . . . but there are | sure it's clean water! fil Finishes. Easy and inexpensive | camp at Brighton this year. North Side Indians (Washington. | iy, | area a i | ' | L< to use. Many new stain colors. SSS oe ee gt” perth one Aeed TAL: Ui | f / The clear finish coat dries to | Kansas Star’s Double vs. Orioles «C-J north oy. Athletics vs ; yf / a satiny, woxed-like finish. tone cc weet ye ee | ~- ‘Sets Conference Mark So | | . c 1 on * r Mike's = e i Al Frame’s mile and two-mile lone con. wpecessae “Prankiin j é PA LALL double for Kansas in the Big Sev- | Products stds al ae lennere Ca ~~ L ts 3U tim er, HOUSE of COLOR en outdoor mect was the swiftest Weal Opdyke North” Side Syn Bicnae compiled in conference history i es a shland Flying Octane ‘North . - 1028 W. Huron His asercre — rie Fs op ~ w ATERFORD | MEN'S—Drrayton Drug f wus au lo insurance i with a 6.5 mile an at ! % Ww rr in Good By Richardson S | FE 8.0428 ,2 et ltwoile. Bary swrevions 830 ( \ DRIVE A SAFE CAR ON VACATION! CNT LSS 9 | Drive in for Free | a Pa : P resent rates on compreherisive fire a Brake Inspection — || r pr ; , _ Pp . theft insurance are now reduced about 12% We can’s control the weather — but these new Cord We_are an official from the low 1954 rates. : Suits minimize itl The smooth, cool fabric weighs Brake rene Station. And our rates on Medical Payments insurance next to nothing — yet it has the built-in stamina to are now reduced about 15% from our low rates resist wrinkling and look neat all day. Trim narrow- of 1954, look styling is as modern as the laboratory-born AND MORE SAVINGS fabric. In handsome dark colors, these modern Rate of savings returned to our insured Club Cords turn off the heat... neatly! : members on presently expiring policies is 25° , aT 1 greater than a year ago. BR AKE RELINE SPECI AL This lower cost graphically illustrates our constant effort to voluntarily. provide members the best pro- FORD or CHEVROLET $12 95 tection we know how to give at the lowest cost we \. eoeceteseecs 6 know how to offer. = Other Make Cars at Special Prices ; ssid Aut nar pale and Factory Bonded Shoes $2 extra nier-imsuranee Exchange are Attorneys-in-fact: Ralph Thomas Fibre or Plastte, All « Charles L. Wilson Roy M. Hood | Seat 1954 seat covers, Robert G. Jamieson, General Manager | : ; : while they tast. j Fibre == $5 | Cover 1 at Automobile Clab of Michigan complete, 7 Sal 2 Off - "VISIT OR PHONE YOUR NEAREST OFFICE , Open Open only ...... e F. ALSTON, Mgr. FE 4-1496 P d Fri M P N. Perry Street FE 2-9255 || Mon. an rt. e 9 on. and Fri, 4 - * ; 1. Taft, PE e809 R. A. Walker, FE 3-6210 Nights Nights | ac _ LL. Long. FE $-7212 KE. G. Tynan, FE 4-289t : ' 4 . B. Borns Virgit Keener, ‘ ‘ cl t. -. Op got —— Us 613 FE 5137 _ W. MeNalipy, OLive 2-374) — (Holly) MElrose 7-745! ' (2 ou — : : : 1 370 S. Saginaw st. "Economy Furni > ee | PONTIAC UNION LAKE il LJ ie Fi WERT, | Gre gezes 4 mperial png $28 for, on a sete © a vi oe Packard an said. bode . perial Ste t coor AN ae ae ri son ~ a is ios Ma | t rif a 2 FPHESDS. Shori peoos on inforrned deat | rke REG occ vol Btn nh iB led by ng Plans eg in 8 peat aeoay | and Hud- . M a a WLUNESI Biggest Fi 2 of Three fr based on factory Lge arche ae ARKE Cael pe and DETRO tig —— 5 Ahe sermo DEROWE 1 ETS || a ‘ae 6, 1905 Automotive New . Lodge C " ANCAG | es sr ly 8 (AP) We Prost wae, Ree S tee eld ee ge Laien Pagel Betrott-unton te AP) —tuberat a a | Mpraiops caae — epeciat comm ndar dealing Boag Reg: thi ermine termsal "and yeestanes | Pad ob 1 : . ng: k mar 5 for ger cuinel wholeate 8 : 7 : biggést model approac Lodge ‘No communication M . today in . | perenne generate 9 are Sion H | ‘ tory, tw hing | ZY io. 21, F. Pon embers E early | 2c Us. 500d que wholesale . fachirers of the eet boy nf 7 to conduc & AM ting | StOC®, Ea of the one 356, Da fey. 2h ined maak a | have st — Ford big three mi ee ae wi et funeral ee, | ena hange and New York one 2 ain 3 toe Sereey 00. ion = scare with bon: on —_* ue e aes Lodg ing ae to match fo * sobamad iis 30-600 “a oe parents U. 3} F aared Pri 3 “The form: us a ‘ : . . lIrwi ze littl rs on G uy in a 4 80-$.59. 2s 6 | F &. ice R e bon’ mance thi plans n W. e early si enera 2 and sell-| f rots: W eoaa! seh ‘al to atimulte nal year Ne P —Ady.| _. The ly success. | Motors = p Raye wpe win | Sas 6,80-6.50, to Cos Leading U ses sa dpnniy Levey pear designed ws In Brie , on! image as oe Gait “ washed, bunches tly Spiral S. ‘ord di r out in an to John f three- . closed . y ; Corn: Cr . erte, Pasea! 1 bb a . ~~ oS =< opancton Lak i gained tor-ono spt anncuneed @ “cucu ee Jee 1 2-2% dosen By SAM than ta 1 is : e ; ied 33 it. The 3 ‘umbe 3.06-3.25.. 5 NEW DA : Poveda ty Sea percaere pare nsrrel a — stock: had Canada, Cot Sar ‘fie YORK WSON ler ts las moi yesterda 5 fine afi allea | 0" ninth ‘on t ad | 3.00-3.18:, Ce secon Soon = tion “—Prosperi Co t w r guilt the mos! be 3.78; lif 2 , : = look production rp. wee e y to y aft ahd $15 » WwW ta da. tthe pepoetnpiog yy rs 6. st is k—and | © drivi er | 15}; wen West ctiv y ushroom| soda antes | pay wg : ove start, much ity and mais for J scheduli id nee of li ing und ne plead t up to Coast e issue qts. 60 3: he 3 doz. 25. . Prospe’ alike “Many =~ ng high | Oren Toned r. He coos the a Du Po 1, the price ona: 0 pints 22%er.38 one and welcom rity is an at the critical fepravolg Ca Stanaback. ship poo before shares ey which) cen milla hers = med, ester an Mich. But many nee guest accepted : : wr. They r bonus newhat : elmar stock, reneral s 21 milli msdhnie ay large, large 4 south. hidin ancy the this mo . : based on say the plans this Evite? pleadi G. 3,500 pene Vey oe a a Seren ct ae taggin behind prospe see infla ™ e padin: ) shares 01 i 00-2. 78. ‘ . tion ‘ ay : rs Sect Sane tne coy ne Po aye orate oan ea oe ttn paper's aa | sales 5 to lished _ Joe B ce of Li drivin Ch yesterd. nts at canes 1. hites 3.5 sacks nds, ri with irts, s — iin were 6 months in paid Brewer liquor T Elo “hrysler oj ay gain 94914. 8 doz a Mich. 3.50-3.75 us| boom , rising nh prosperi “ , s me ow at a when H a $75 fin ) ba i of ues- f 7.000 pened tod: ied 10% Pieced! ilm bag carton: round ing de labor ty's . of main dealers ecord pac e aD e a Milford trad shares ay on deg jcans inca Hoty one ond Ww mand, costs ‘ : taining.’ eet copabie Towalip Jas cael $25 costs. ac ecively are % at os Eee aie 1, abe 200 Pilg eave kee -_ onanzag Automotive = | le ustice Geo Commet S- | w roughout ¢ around tha and Tomatoes Ohio 8 # Puerto this year—as n ri Pr ram” i z= ) tor Porat ales poi _Mr Fra Chow roe Feldman. east ot that pie | ene ceca matialy painted Mare re iarnld teks oe av exitin 2 ‘ae 1 of sales e pl tha ay Ave drev . tent Ss got the li steels, of as; W bu. bskts 1.75 lb. ¢ ib. bask dustri in th up by dra- your h : f g n : 6 | de from $25 provided an t so ” told P we of on at hi jon's sh is Is and ean: ctnmeinen 4.00 * ainsi an ets stries. e auto the se bo and un and ew s . ; ery 3 to $1 bo- | ‘ast _ ni meone ontial gig) Airera igher =e pre eer! er mn arkaneas The and ttle- tto : at “‘B a puzzi i , : of quot over a ce 00 fo: t nigh entered c Poli rafts w price ot at- 90, lo rl es BYE nsas | thi e que: steel m ; ~6pon $100 ein > : rtai r each | PU t and hi ice | 28 the were qui s. ng Ci 3 Ib 1.15- this j stion in- of thi : anza: c whi Me a; of from in percen rse, Si took $° er ho : y we quiet! reys 17 steel ee mein |i is the is: I 1S ; agra ry ash : ch th | 3 reury -enta: mad She “ $20 f me were fai re yest y lag -26 lb .5O- 20-3: m | in reshuf low . page m be priz e P : : $250 for fo Nigel ghee oe * fay « airly Lanai teeceds So, prosperi fling much : | page. Soluti su e. BUT onti | = 5 for | 9° rough e ent er steady. ” Railroads DETR DETRO! : empl ty bet of the of utio rea T be ac i The Lincoln from $7 ,| coor whil an unl ry was : ds | eos Off gap 8 aes j loyer—and wore shares n will nd re fo E Plym retail d 5 toi yard —— she wa locked fro - New qracea | os pel lied . ust mean hi how aaaperie C it ap : ad th re you are pores a acters | ae ae a ot | earl Mold Stocks eae nena Poa one? pliissiy aia wil IM c pear in the ~ rules at the Ag * ‘ ' 45 ral rn va, 1h u = . S -Feapectve ide bonuses 0 wernt a, Teche a as Boae Sara see pe | dl a every-| Below ts 1 CHECK oJ Ely Ue . m $5 ste ied 8 mn Is el bhe- ms — Gra 2%; . OVE. 4. . ne: ° } “The | to $100| Ba pce anna ey Allis gue at Isl cre Coal". 38 wid. ora wade A evade Tia. emai chavs | ogg hang a gram” a duplicat = 7 Division,” Aran for Ch man ane — Cloth —Adv. —_ tid ti Jones Man oat CODER Gutta wire und on traders re nected = Zhe nanza ! adds, “‘is utomotiv rysier . Resale ap A nl axan Airline... 74, repre tn a2 874 32. avg. = 41: 3914-40 Stock and prices a Plas! obvious- fill ers. | send in nanza- r 7 every simply e N 297 ntiques, | Am oe ert Releey Bayes - 43:3 ; grade C trade: as in stee: it in tis ESS to unit a flat ews Oakland. es pide Jee oo xine ch: ooo CHIC up pri rs ha a sure - = ENTI cont 0 fxm at ret betwen HER ERES wat Eis a oe Bel lta ana up pices of ace in tie | published d eave # ontl AL tht you 5 ° : > none 30. , eae 5 6- m jail .l am N Gi Pay -; - & vanes ‘ prices 1.468. 660 5 iAP EGG As ‘profit’ indus ished nanz e 0 5 $0 for a New Yorker te nse aie an vente ar. il 8 oe ape ser |mean nasi raw ndusies| metrale se No. 18 is ues - Ww a Wi - s m Be hg Es 3.5. 8; co ying me: industri m ’ , ' . : | ie ees ome eee Bea coe om ere ae pie ou ae Gees om od : an sj : cent pre- m T ‘Tei 182 4 Lone ve. 46.2 | 36.5; 8 60-69. unch 8 16,322; OB | f actori ucti will utio ! co. u se in ere W , provide a a ae - ieee Ear a3 30':" mediums rend cent A oe iaree stg eae eas im ay ee a Aa oe rea ala isin After ee annual pad chead of ev . er with sei ra ey . 16 Marti ee ie rvehecks 29; current’ 1: mixed ret ore lik e down (i e tim 8. @ rul pl ny ad gust T eryone : a rvi g rmeo 8 c . 60 Martin, : | ' ; curren ndard xed tail cos Le ely, ' n (in w e es be ig ace wh ventu reasu ; mo = oe 8 MeGraw we Re re gid —e recubis 3 the isk of eds thove Po the low’ tx be hidden ~ ied ch a Te . FO Atl cat aed Merck 3 Le poultry nd AaB) =Prh ae risk tha manage factories the mid Pied ve wes 80 he Atl RB Line 63 Mer 67.6 | bro! y he yu t for cee t pr t cus’ men nigh ng be pposed The (In UBD Aveo Mfg $63 Mole Hon 8 oo ray ne 38. ght t3 leo | aaa, fo ice hik tome: t faces the | t moon. ach to 4 Coun City a IVIDIN Balt rei . 35 reali, o .55.2 bas 4 fryers be as m. qual- hole wa: es, and rote may bal : ifeguard On the h . empty ond 2 ig, rr i Oakiand Pontiac) G pendix, Ar io.. at Motor Ward ‘ise breeder tom ee Booey “Between Jem slazesd begga alk he piece of usually ene chair ea (M 2 acre’ nd offe — hee 3 Motor bal . 4 ae nen mre hen pete spr) and thi e end of re shaky other cl paper th ed, the re of the E. 4) and Walton is a boring Air. $8 Motorola 8 anocseeene 7. Ree oe Sl aae is year World War penn it “rs y found e E WwW Te oO parce hn Alum 22 Murra “Mal oe er ieiecni cen etpts 0 0. | ri in the stee the Wa of the | was ought Lapee . ¥2 of alton Bl r less, | 1 of la Bord Sirs 38a Murray S 3s oe pe fo os: aoe aun Sen se e steel base w J etters | very . Lik : j Se ie . y {t trick e the Welf t Road the N.E vd., de located nd con- Bore War 32 Nat Cast > 1. 3t3| fryers from Jas ‘w intel ae pa | O04 © Moral teed industry ° a a@ good 4 ait cut to y, with are S , City EE % oa scribed on La ech llgh sal es «Nat Cash R tryers _ dem omen platoons ang | Dav ents a s'for a have fill eal. of a make it mony and wh: helter B of Pont Sec. } as “Th peer fj Bru 2 Mig... 82 Net Dairy 435 sueeuieran rans packings 4 lower =e risen n hour. S total of one the mi Tgument harder. A sf withi ich bui uildin iac,” e . 15, lyin at part Brun ‘Bat ae ut Wak Loca 3 t 26 = — of ao Pe tel pri ve india issing } _ they m . Alter - - n 6 Iding wi gw xcept g we sa 3 1 Naat Tb 3 | cmrcaco. = eback 84 mes t ces cas g the etters anaged $ be fi month: g will hich ing th st ot Burrow ID ois 4.6 wY Cc ea 8 po TCAGO. IAGO a ton. 00, for 1 ae the = treasu: and hej to 7 ‘or cast s bt be the Co e Ani parrenge eats Lol Or ultry abot Jul POULTR' Now ~ " a see clues re. C succee ; 25% n the removed unt nimal | em te a ie ee we | Lenortory cabo dor apd TRY wa * * iT see and pl an yo ded i * down. or as.al event of fro’ y rese Camp soup. 387 ean AG 33.2 receipts. Sanaoale sl anes CERES ges are goi ] Se ea SES eece ot the uu, too, d ” a paym . -alternat a sa m the Tves egy -.. 397 & am ‘Av. 58.7 38.956 Ib in coo on. com hens ay—tive | Pri as 15 ce! going eA EOE === wort eee : $74,000.00 Pa ae niet Greely sole shall uy HE eRe se aes a oa ox ar cents an hou et dit acre —_— -sss7—= he‘veorire? 4 .00. os wane score t aay cot Carrier an 2 oat Owens me 24 hena 18-18, broilers thems 36 snensnged Beene Net ey fens . TILE ‘ RES acoorcs 4 m n sis: voweel fd Sr tr) Bao) 122. apm tontoetl 28.5: produ wl FTY YOU MA — va 0 = . Bs ice eal BIDDING cash bid semiannual Shes a Shi ig ate ‘ae tor fryers 38-2; old aie, — sper a —s may ' you esi SHOULD DE IT THE ah 8 —— seevesveeen se such ly indicat not be sub INSTRU! eceptable hice Bt an a2 Parke fol Re Livestock esl: go wu t wages + To THIS ON! HAVE , 4 IT's Sa secccum | a ic aa whether anitted ao CTIONS Chime Mo 84 — eo “5 LapETROIT duly If le present at this tim and |g. LOOK AT E WILL B FO_LED |e HIGH TI ai eee4 | ce sages a a Sank = nares tees eas teog 00 a3 Prosi Cola 94, | lowe fester July uvesrers really = and Hloba acted e is|§ ——_/NO IT THE LK i a! FTY Leaf you a com check y mark spectiv r specif sis, a pee) fag ae pre a. Cat eid pa Me OErBOy: here lieve ‘0 leade . WIL! ee RACK YOU fs CLUES § MADE ee | compaay ai bie um proepecive purchasers tha ond shat | SL a Ea “Bl catalan acetate eve that good tn TG | becsoee ee ae aes ome on Te Bt * n : ‘oO a Pp : . : wl ue 5 iz 1985, “in Sangh ot 5% poe Be oecty a | Some ba 283 Pri Mor! 2! “3 strong “tinuanier — At eens ing ne noe met cee acter are |! you geri Min WAY oo To THIS ONE wi HAVE FO_LED s i pe al bi Y Dimi a a Wiighe a $1 oo week’ : gen m ui wit CAN al —_fDE . LOOK The Ookla | Flor Commitee Mar Bid pve must a Sven" a) nee 3 So cos er demand in the equipment spend | aieaisont io MONG “LA Le reas poe LL BLK You t ; ene Cos SA epee ethene ac ff! Sent ont at SRLS Se £717) gtockers and. €; cows s smalee yoorling n't ha e year aa create tne AR NG LA WiLL oa ACK 5° a] to leu ca rese nty Board Pontia m of nesda Nenay gfe 3t2 Rca Ot ers! Sues peop pore 9 ere yearling grant ve bee s ahead t- 10) E WH LA }@] THROUG POINT ON TH p& ; ¢, Michi the y, Jul ag 10 oe a7 | bale oeea seus | secar tbs unos s/t as b n wi » the ets ITE a H TH ER | cath eas bid 1 rves the ri of Superv ichigan County Ot 13, J) eure Dll... 88 REA reese oF | 23.50: ——— spats hilly doe ws) they di ig wa Ling ni y{e AND —PCKS DE! EG WAY EES BE toc eneei ayaa || Bree Bf Be ils eer gee aaa: nee As | 0 one oe ewe ee want the is i than ee ee Dis Sais roses BAL Rey Drug... v1 willicy and eitere 14.00-18 09 cers 30.00- nn down on now - as 4 5S ! PAT ES HIGH | 4 LANDMARKS S ND! ER t , t of er bi y ca any b iS e:.. 3 R ae oa han soe eee rs 19 : some cial P Tr > Can THE H 4% ARE NG OAKLAND C¢ the county. fer bid submited on though eae 8, eee fea eat or hand rises. trom, coough ~ ven Nes ae eta oy MH Els WHITE plist 1 co ; e such b on a ter _ at 3583 pt low ot -- Sa rea meary poate bv¢ poets = round Ss en brin getting to 8d em MP NES s Pt) WE AND A, Hous N (TY BOAR fon aterm HE an tte od Seth hn Bt | Moe Seema mostly es [aoey inflation ‘that. hit ing out I AND WATCH FOR eo fii DGE BR PLE TRE eft ; ‘io. 1 D OF t qe + deed - at a. RR... by pice ras : that hits nother H TO CUT ST _ PLLOW STEEP f i __USHES IDE PA: ES HIGH T : Ales! barton AUDITO Eher had 143 sinmane sea | stand oe inavria 140 ery- |p SGHT ts vou MAY yey THE HIDING TH A_ONG ‘ Tnchignn’ RS te ae 3 pret se, Se, uy sendy apie | ae tee CS THICK a! ae ' Faire Mor -... 495 Sou My Mob... 588 otal ened eT eae os — fully [exe | 1] Aw w IT GO + t/MP INES WA 1S MA__KED 8 = ae access 43 ylesess os) a f00-18. fer prime 28 2400 ree H CON'y awl NEAR .'] To ee TCH FOR : L — | Frew wana. Std Brand. 1 a ray Bendy et Ds H Coma/ASH PLUM TO oa sears |: CUT ST PLOW YOU seep ft ET ee st On tnd BO) Sts ents are, acai lo ' "INTO vou may {1 RIGHT F_$ TO may Neco ff nr Aa ie ee Rot mt Soa E tga W yU ee oneal | eae eRL_K W, pre Teo ft ect tr . 826 one Pack. Deed ——_ bs 20.00; Wal mz: DON'T NEAR ) Tel 5S. Su ack... 28 y slaugh : 3 i | INSURAN fe Be 2 Be ne SEE] cincaco ws : ghrp | | Sane ae 22: 12 Ten eek cratety bows 11,000; gene parcel gst ; y pee 2 cas id. a) utehe! active to. P) — a’ ly on ti t crept | | he COVERA cE ee e ioe ees mene counter the he, Board of Trade + IMP i ~ N\ B GE Gt N eS E Lert nD. $3 several. 180-230. higher: & ery, uneven: sure he hea did not de |§ O - ae £ YOU oe t 7 Oy tran w AG + ad water — rhe nono fel ma ‘OWS soot ee vy hedging en- |! A a -o ava WATC R Greyhound 123 Twent mer er aera deck 3038-2090 No. ie 28-30 3; G . in early pres- : N | . : & " -~ . ; a 2 “21.00; a s 23; ains tradi CRAWF ORD Sy H DOG aes ae ts ile a trae nae one rations coe - Save T | ‘ N RE WIT pie dy 1a Be ee epene etn | towh Sede ore hi ame : : H — Pepe 303 — Aire in 48 pone Elgaag *y rere 240 Ib more though w cereal: t U : $ Clai t siete 8 J - ae oe t poe ole Bean Sor1k.00; a. a ‘few 200- t as s ntil im C 2 A cee ) 716 wien 2% DAVE - Bee ge 8 BiB ae Sit oa sree caee Hel werent, art Sol hee dd - : inden S wsesee OM 8 Li By Pi gago ed Seite” dos ib. | ti - De 1d t, al-|@ utio k 8 ress. coors a ‘ State NCE OF A Lad GR Ing. Mand... 4494 . os Steet end Fy 400: slaughter ~— ; pmo ney ve in alings a rowers L n is Publi a Ci cess wees ' 4 a Ba LL Ins’ dj Stl oes 55 us~ ubber .. 87. to moder steers une sa . wheat ther less y == li ty eee =) 4 nk Bidg KINDS inepir Gop". $8 Van Re ee tii to ‘in highe ert uneven, ut genera Whea cecenis thin ta ====0 shed! teeee opgosc : Ph. FE 2 it ie thai Bin. 4 Sot ae teh $1.99 ey " eangeses - D Check h -+++ Phone meg i a . = te st U: "90.7 load x rong: ‘costly 99: oO! . = ere or : , ——— 8357 = aot ay Wests ee 3. ante — roccline Years sieeey: scar corn to % be the first sancen r) Press deli if you DOCG - ; : = on _ Shoe cer wane El . -e. 28 few Proarg of 1 1190 = slow .00-2.00 uly $1.43: unchanged gher, “| see vered to would like 4 — oe a Wilson “60. at 3 | teers de. prime steer * cera 28 fod pleat Am 4 eile 0 eecees -to your hom the! ., +++ 65.6 Ye ook in in sae cee ete rodeied July 3 Ht higher, a eeaeeeen | t nith Rad T 42 on bates coon ds me prime er to 1% 02%; to % | nn ~ Sa = N64 24.50: Lagan! mercial — het py good and lard 2 highe : soybeans % Sols a aeene ' A 4| Ie socas'o0: fends ‘pete he rea 2 r, Ipl the “Bon _ le of P ! down ae | er he eve ga goods 0 pounds | to 20 Fated en the mi Jonansagram” aad Size, 26 OWS 13.00: tt chot eife wer, a ‘ a, ment. acres rope 9.00- 11.50. ut ght ce net rs , Jul hundred lette by |. former rty : 7 0-18 8: “13.78: tity was oe out a ly $12.05 ER . re, as tn filling tn LOCATI (e) ly of Laven: yeerliin bray poversaped weammercia grain ICAGO, =— GRA’ : “i clues otter “eee pollens by all am’ : Part of N: ir Develop- i ng eers 20. ae : yo oe Mae a each . Insert = “ : Rares of the NLE. % of eS See ae message tte SS tnecs ane bs we Pesetecticn wl must on M-59 mg a . Rative prime cn teats on sed: - 6% contestent sa and, eccomp: hidden reset oo will Meal wl correctly TYPE: — Hel . block by RE ity te se eee ‘and ‘thee: ecnccee) Lae will wading correct ras tty the When ° correct « ead peor aoa y es a ights. west - tot an food 00 mandred choles 1.93 bd an ote that the let the gram” will answer. is 1206 busin and ye Racor papiher gae : utd e » The should will tilled aeeeremeoets * ee an se geeks a) fencecton ol ble ta — wil conor to every ta, the “Benen a A ocr ad which Auburn 7 300-800 ehotee sla nee ond 12.33 ov age the me hve — ouy ath Ge 6 th ¥ re information is P h may be Ra - pend 3d and Fr 11.48 win. * probe the uid be p toga th the eco’ a as geaek bo conied | esired, cal ° clegnfs TOCK A kB " { and !yv correct more than emount ofthe be scaled bids a gal Pontiac arr tany gy — ank B. Stea 1 Ae How to S = ee “zeieh the a made _ == —— = jy prev. Prem Compaed A : rns gram” — ts to Submi possible oer je able to submitted east 8% panied Week, ago.” Indust Ratte Unt ufomak —_ @ two-cont be Joeman t . wp wee oan secreat checks the sorigy logs = ate ites Unit steel er address. post Bonanza- tri in eeagigt y #7 of the Board ae ek: Bie Beste CLEVELAN , Vie See ee i the pinion ducation reserv —_— fee Bish ee las Bo tg3 | Stearn D 5 2. Ente wen vow nian and 2. Entries best ‘on bore serves ue is $ : "— a TIME interest Board of Soe S ee [a2 tae na us HF pagensio nora pioneer Frank Ate rd te be rece! puzzle maa © mailed in AN the Educa that, D 3 f 178 | was di a B. uesd . 48 Ww wed ner of must be name D PLA ach j j an, S34 1089 = ed automob' sctpelkes 4 = address printed and Bids c ool. m will Fi OT 4 108. last nobil vy 1 heat the Pontiae but 1, will E: pares esas sTOC ¢|__ In 1900 nigh le Jul 2. St. ra side in . 1965 In the 2 after decime = he t. H oe caeeores noe Copies so eel mae = In Bai 5 eastanel oa Motor organ e “Bon for entries Sp chased Pr left The Ban at 8: oar a emo e t Car ized beionlloonge yy midn must Les the Pre cote school, 1438 W. Fp dl toe Gerity Michigan” High Lo he firm Co. and the Stearns oGch. wom Beat omar eo ee need hy Aa ety Siac fern aa| cr rs vid years later ee ce te bere ts. 4% Rd. conéale? me ae Anauiags ee y* 33 by which ine @ Press will hand cad ano 9 High Wayne a castes, 33 a ba Charl had with ee ae as : ete a 2 8 was es been or a fami of Pontiac me Serer sere a1 Let os Knight known BS Knight pro- 7 - ly. en On in 3 Scséuaed? 4] Stear ia cena The ow Se limited Edw Ch x asked. 13 A arns le! Stearn: entran' to duplicator ee T rysler-UAW +3 holders a poder prtag - When th obvien ae. ect mpeter: For Schools DETRO ew C at 3 ce will | stock- tear Se peace p or Additional Chrys ~ ontract = = 5 o—— oubliched gel i am — eld Thursda pepo ity compar ag lag I A er C N his the in the te Monday : RAY nf : . uto Work ‘orp. and OL Pow y eall claim publish ne hie “el ta wis solution. follow! ee MON N Contact / ap cae caus cio United i. er Plant D necro pool pe roan ae | enoeen cunaet ool ot publica- u mete P highly } oe a ae ption pLUDINGTON oomed ott tie date he should a ae ~ & R ks bega th sé contract steam m-—A . Heron check at the Monday Press a Seer te : Deedee ales” between the U damentiog pio comer that 1 About ake ware void on haemo, resume pon aregeser coe = ee eee . Aayene be Eligibili _—~ sy oid onan te, come coher 3 een ae ee oes ty, Informa nar workers are covered und io Mego and th Hae] ‘we va ono = ". e tion, : ag PR plant in the D living ta ot of the ‘ Ete. war loyes and | inion iry qu meons wi winning | kel and w ‘ Owne . ewered eetion os to : be. : pac hairs bcos satenas Chrys GRAND r Succum = mere hres ee ae enue cary fom aus a) ve saree bs 3. The Ps pe Se = cae -31, nt siaanu a single ith, to the be 8. of but cts e | Detey te reas: o— will an- The entries. there is s expire Regge imo Stenry cond Press at scam th Park cocsteed, than as the right arena ct rake re ee Sin . winner . the next the a . ns untae at mane be final \ i ; $100. ‘c $20 bonus te ‘ort the 7 We Nabi rules. indicates : | Ss ‘Sdaed to es te reach ts accepted | els anaee reserves me , — cectinvs the on te ; peti at tts \