Ge 7 . . : ‘ ; . : a The Weather BN | . se ON -PRESS | 112th YEAR | * * * & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954—44 PAGES ““INTERRATIONAL AEWS SERVER All 45 Patients R French, Reds Sign Armistice, Split Viet Nam - 13 Million People Fall to Commies; Cambodia | and Laos Stay Free | GENEVA (AP) — France| made peace with her Com-| munist enemies in Indo- china just before dawn to- day and a new Iron Curtain | clanked down on 13 million persons in north Viet Nam. Gen. Georges Delteil of |! France and Gen. Ta Quang Buu of the Vietminh rebels | « signed armistice agreements covering Viet Nam and Laos just 3 hours and 50 minutes| : , after the Tuesdav midnight deadline French Premier Pierre Mendes-France had set for peace or his resigna- tion. A truce for the third Indochina state, Cambodia, was signed later today. Cambodia signed with the Viet- minh at 12:42 p.m. Representa- tives of all parties to the Indo china conference gathered for the ceremony, including Lt. Col. John E. Dwan of the U.S. Army. Nihek Tioulong, commander in chief of Cambodian forces, signed for Cam- bodia and Gen. Ta Quang Buu for | the Vietminh. But the big event had come nine hours earlier in the signing ef the agreement on Viet Nam and Laos. The simple signing ceremony, under a blaze of photographers’ lights i. the farmer home of the League of Nations, called a halt to an eight-year war in which 92,000 soldiers of the French Unign expeditionary corps died or disap It also laid . tion across the 42-mile waist of Viet Nam, Indochina's largest, richest and most populous state, about at the 17th Parallel of lati- tude. Communist leader Ho Chi Minh will take over the destinies of the residents north of the line. The 10 million Vietnamese below the partition will live under the pro-Western regime of chief of state Bao Dai. All - Vietnamese elections, not earlier than one year from today and not later than two years, are supposed to reunite the divided country. But Western officials here genérally conceded the ‘‘tempora- ry” partition tine probably will be- come.a political and ideological frontier like those which split Ger- many and Korea. Civilians on either side of the partition line will have one year to move to the other side if they desire. The French have the next 300 days to move out of the big northern cities of Hanoi and Hai- phong. Until that day next May (Continued on Page 38, Col. 4) Dems Demand Voice in Hiring Insist on Helping Pick Roy Cohn’s Successor on Committee WASHINGTON —Sen. Jackson (D-Wash) said today the Demo- crats “will insist’ on a voice in choosing a successor to Roy M. Cohn as chief counsel of the Sen- ate Investigations subcommittee. Chairman McCarthy (R - Wis) yesterday accepted Cohn’s resig- nation with avowed reluctance. He algp switched Donald A. Surine, another subcommittee aide, to his own office payroll. He did so as a subcommittee majority com- prised of the Dernocrats and Sen. Potter (R-Mich) was pushing a showdown move to fire them. Bloomfield Hospital- at Woodward Tells of Spree Charles Woodard, 22, Goes to Police; Spent Employer’s $1,800 A Pontiac man, who said he squandered $1,852 of his employ- er’s money on a two-week spree | of “fancy living.” surrendered to | police yesterday with only $4 in | his billfold. Charles A. Woodard Jr., 22, of | 685 First St., told Assistant Prose- cutor Farrell E. Roberts that he gave himself up “to take What is coming to me.” He spun a tale of high living in New Orleans, Les Angeles, Las Vegas and Salt Lake City after watking inte the Pontiac Police Station at 2:16 p.m. Woodard admitted stuffing blank paper in a money bag July 3 which he turned into Simms Brothers, Inc., as the day’s re- ceipts. Arraigned before Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan yes- terday on a charge of embezzle- ment, Woodard waived examina- tion and was returned to Oakland County Jail when unable to post $1,000 bond. He will be arraigned in Circuit Court Monday He told Roberts he took a bus to New Orleans after driving from Pontiac to Detroit-and leaving his car in a garage there. Woodard told of living high with trips to the best restaurants and dance halls. Woodard said he failed to give any cash to his wife, Dolores, 21. The couple has two children and Dolores is expecting another child soon. ' Woodard was discharged from the Army in 1950 with a heart conditien after serving a year-and- a-half. He had worked at Simms about‘a year and was in liné for promotion to assistant manager of the camera department, Woodard told Roberts: McCarthy confirmed officially that is was Surine and Lavenia to whom the Defense Department has refused to grant security clearance to handle secret documents. He said this was the reason the sub- committee, with his consent, had held up Lavenia's confirmation. Usmep's eTown & Country, Tel-Heren ‘Oped every night "ti § p.m. ATTENDANTS RESCUE PATIENTS — All 45 patients in the Ave. and Square Lake Rd. were removed to safety of the lawn within 10 minutes after fire was Theft Suspect Most Patients We Most patients at Bloomfield Hos- pital said today they didn't know there was a fire until they were carried out on the lawn. But Wm. H. Schollenberger, a patient on the first floor, said he has an idea of how it started. “A man outside my window was burning off paint with a torch high up near the roof,” Schollenberger said, “I saw him rush down and climb back up there with a pail of water. Then I knew something must be wrong.”’ Schollenberger said that several people shortly afterwards came in to carry him out. | Patients Franklin Weiss, Edward Lynch and several others with rooms on the first floor of the hos- pital said they wondered why they were being carried out into the yard. From there they saw the building was on fire. They said they lay outside for several minutes before the fire en- gints came. : Sammy Hyams, Pontiac's top U.S. Defense and Savings Bond Salesman, said he, too, was un- aware the hospital was afire. “A nurse came in,” he said, “and sald te me, ‘Don't get frightened—we're moving you to Pontiac Area Cool Tonight, Tomorrow The Pontiac area wil! have fair and cooler weather tonight and Thursday, according to the U. S. Weather Bureau. — A low of 58 to 62 is forecast for tonight. The high Thursday will be 82 to 86. In downtown Pontiac yesterday, temperatures ranged from 67 to 89. Today the reading at 8 a.m. was 64, rising to 75 at 2 p.m. Grant, Lee Don Uniforms but of the Same Army AUGUSTA, Ga, ® — Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant a back in uniform, This time, though they are privates — and on the same side. : The two. men have reported for duty at the Southeastern Signal School at nearby Camp Gordon. smoke Pours From Blazing Bloomfield be Hospital another hospital.’ She and twe men picked me up, bed and all, and carried me out on the lawn. Hyams has been a patient at Bloomfield for about one year. Clinton McGee was taken to Pon- tiac General Hospital. He was unhurt and reported in good condi- tion. McGee, 78, is a Pontiac at- torney Taken to St. Joseph's Mercy Hos- pital were Schollenberger, Hyams, Weiss and Lyfch, and William D'Arcy of Ferndale; John Young, ‘Walled Lake; Mrs. Mary Gray; Mrs. Lura Smith, Birmingham; and Peter Zogaros. All were un- hurt. . The pajama-ciad patients ar- rive at St. Joseph's Mercy Hos- pital minus possessions and the hospital is trying to contact their Ike Speaks Out About TVA, and Commies WASHINGTON wW — President Eisenhower said today anybody who accuses him of trying to de- stroy the Tennessee Valley Authori- ty-is in error—to put it as mildly as possible. The administration's attitude to ward TVA has come under hot de- bate in the Senate, revolving about an Eisenhower-endorsed proposal for a new private power source in the Tennessee Valley. The President spoke out on the controversy at a news conference largely devoted to the Indochina settlement reached at Geneva. In the course of this discussion he said he does not believe the Com- munists are willing to risk an all- out war with the free world. As for his legislative program in general, Eisenhower said he thinks it is coming along in good shape although Congress is not giving him everything he asked for \ U.S. Halts Deliveries WASHINGTON (UP)—The Unit- ed States has halted deliveries of military equipment to Indochina, the Defense Department announced today. Pontiac Press Phetes by Eddie Vanderworp discovered there this morning, Burning building is shown above, patients on the lawn in the lower picture. re Unaware of Fire Until Nurses Arrived to Move Them families te make ' arrangements as to where they should stay. The nine patients evacuated to St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital have beet placed in a big room in the hospital emergency ward, the wom- en separated. from the men by a portable screen. Several of the patients who crowded the emergency ward seemed cheerful about the change. of scene. Schollenberger, however, was worried about losing his glasses. “Can't see a thing without ‘em,” he said. House to Gamble With Postal Raise WASHINGTON (® — In an all- or-nothing gamble, House leaders today called up a double-barrelled bill to raise both postage rates and the pay of postal workers. GOP leaders made no predic- tions on the outcome, but Demo- ' §8 - 6 ae com wero Karelia ynepionecmtstan sire 7 ‘}man's blowtorch. _ | evacuation. Some patients didn’t $60,000 Damage Caused by Fire on Woodward Attendants Act Quickly at Bloomfield Hospital to Remove Occupants ospital All 45 patients at Bloom- | were evacuated in about 10 minutes this morning when flames swept the roof of the 2'2-story frame building. Nine of the patients, re- moved while lying on their beds, were shuttled to St, Joseph Mercy Hospital by eight ambulances. Another was taken to Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital. Fifteen St. Joseph nurses helped the 32 hospital staff members care for patients routed by the fire believed to have started from a work- Some 50 spectators aided firemen from seven depart- ments battle the flames fanned by a stiff easterly wind. The fire was brought under con- trol in about an hour. Damage was estimated at $60,000. Clyde Marshbanks, hospital di- rector, credited his staff's train- ing in fire safety for the speedy know there was a fire until at- tendants carried them outdoors. i field Hospital near Pentiac| —_ Death Is Sudden BLAIR MOODY Ex-U.S. Senator lung Ailment Causes - Sudden Death Following Pneumonia Attack ANN ARBOR (UP)— Michigan began a formal 30-day mourning period to- day for former U. 8. Sen.. Blair Moody who died un- expectedly Tuesday after- noon at the age of 52. Flags flew at half mast in this quiet university town ~ Social Security Boost Gets Nod Senate Committee OKs Increased Payments, More Taxes WASHINGTON #® — An increase of at least $5 a month in all social security payments moved a step nearer reality today as the result of Senate Finance Committee ap- proval of the administration's big social security bill. Chairman Millikin (R-Colo) of a fF i iF ie eee ‘at i: fi tii F 7 pre ; A hospita] handyman, Roosevelt Head, 45, of Detroit, said he was painting the building, but denied that he was using a blowtorch. Before calling firemen, however, Mrs. Walter Wiseheart of 3268 evacuate the remaining patieats. One of the patients, William H. saw him rush down the ladder and climb back up with a pail of water. I knew something was wrong.” Mrs, Margaret Daniels, another registered nurse, said she was asleep in the third floor nurses’ quarters when “something instinc- tively told me to wake up.” “I'd gotten off duty at 2 a.m - (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) A Warning From U.S.! GENEVA (®—The United States warned the signatories of the In- dochina ‘armistice agreements to- cratic Leader Rayburn of Texas; declared the one-package measure | “‘will be beaten.” day—that it would view ‘with grave concern” any revival of ag- gression violating the agreements. '|Britain Shivers Scholienberger, said he noticed | +and Gov. G. Menren Wil- liams, who appointed Moody to succeed the late Sen, Arthur Vandenberg in 1951, said he would issue an offi- ' cial mourning proclamation when he arrives here later i it i Hi vi E FUCA piggtbey & This Summer as U.S. Roasts . LONDON (® — Britons are sleeping under blankets this sum- mer. Plenty of blankets. While America roasts, pretty young things in England are wear- ing autumn coats. Many a manly chest is encased in a woolen sweater. Landladies of seaside guest houses are going broke f want of business. : Seen in a suburban street out- | side London on a day the ther- mometers hit 111 in Kansas: An 8-year-old girl out for a stroll, bundied up in a woolen scarf and mittens, Most of the season it’s been cold, cloudy and rainy, The number of clear, warm days could.be counted on the fingérs of one hand. Day- time temperatures have been mostly in the low 60s. Once the thermometer slumped to 46. Once it shot up — to 75. But that was persuaded him to stay in the cam- paign. “It was to have been released » by rf rf i ; 2 | i é just a teaser. At night the read- ings have been in the low 50s. Research Report Cites Need for a New Courthouse Civic Research Inc., an independ- ent fact-finding organization, this week issued a bulletin citing the need for a new Oakland County Courthouse. The research organization, which is located at 503 Community Na- tional Bank Building devotes its report to material designed to ac- quaint voters with the proposal. Electors in. the county will be asked to pass on a $4,500,000 bond issue for a new courthouse at the Aug. 3 election. : : The report calls attention to “inadequate space” in the pres- ent courthouse at Huron and Saginaw Sts, and says that re- modeling it and the county office building at 1 Lafayette St. wouldn’{ be practical, The county, whose offices are divided between the Huron-Sag- inaw courthouse, built in 1904; the courthouse annex, built in 1885; and the former Masonic Temple on Lafayette St., is asking voters to provide a new. building. On the Aug. 3 ballot will be two 1. A $4,500,000 bond issue to raise funds for the building. 2. A 20-year tax of 50 cents on each $1,000 worth of property, as In Today's Press Milly Rese Font . Maa 2 Bed Constsine. .....ccccccese-scccs 2 CORD GPNURNT. «occa rntiscxbenesvens ® © PY oo eg ccacocecagcosers * I acme fel bade CEODONT ICOCURHEETOCUIOCe J | eet, Ml ae ae ICO 6 Or, oon Wo SECBOOanOOOEReCOn $ ee - Ma mm Peeeras . ..gceesis. 1 TV-Redie Pregrams.....-../. « Want Ads.......... 34, 30, 40, 41, 42 omen’s Pages. ...ccccsss Mu ” f As valued by the county, to pay off the bonds. Only property owners van vote on the bond issue. All voters can pass on the 50-cent tax. A simple majority of votes cast will carry each proposal. The Civie Research bulletin says the 334-acre county “service cen- ter" on Telegraph and West Boule- vard, where the néw courthouse would be built, is easily reached cient county ‘government, the letin says. A central heating alfeady operating, could be for the new building, meaning er construction cost. dH i EUiEDELT i ri | . i ~ ee a ee ee aa i a a ¢ : rae Pe — = . a 4k: RN io): ae ot ¢ ca * t | Birmin | | a FER ii Hf? 2] z ; i ; 4 J fi ie pli Ft 4 4 » 2 of £ lifs4 i 4 Me zi i | ai i lh apeth i 7 . 738 1644 3 ight. | American scene.” gm =Ssess8ss822% , win Lions Club the system, Former-U.S. Senator.|- == Blair Moody Dies (Continued From Page One) the 1962 elections, sald in Wash- ington he was “shocked.” “T had no idea he was that ill,” Potter said. ‘It certainly is @ loss not only to his party but also to our state.” Williams, who made plans to come here shortly after learning of Moody’s death, said the former Washington politica) writer “gave unselfishly of his talent and de- voted himself to public service all his life, both as a newspaperman and as a public servant .. ; it can trily be said of him that he |died doing his best to serve his Williams passed over many po- litical figures to appoint Moody to succeed Vandenberg on April 23, 1951. Moody, who was chief Washing- ton correspondent of the Detroit ' Fi I [ r E Hl Fai 3 — 3 a year Providence, then joined the sports staff of the Detroit. News. He soon ment in 1933, he helped the tate U. S. Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy formulate a debt-refund- ing program. Murphy then was mayor of Detroit! During World War II, Moody became a front-line war corre- spondent for the News, covering allied actions in Africa, Italy and other parts of Europe. He was a nephew of William E. Scripps, publisher of the Detroit News. Shortly after Moody's death, the hospital performed an autopsy and issued the following statement: “The post-mortem examination reveals extensive chronic virus “the most virulous and extensive case of pneumonia we have seen survive since the advent of anti- In Washington, Ferguson told the Senate he heard the news of Moody's death ‘‘with deep sorrow." He said he knew every other mem- ber of the Senate received the news the same way. State Democratic Chairman Neil Staebler termed Moody a “great man and a great senator’ who was “fearless” in expressing him- self on major issues. “He believed so deeply that the people should know the truth that his death was due, in part. to the tremendous effort he was mak- ing to bring the truth to the citi- zens of Michigan,” Staebler said. “Every Democrat will mourn his passing. CIO President Walter P. Reuther said today the death of Moody was a “tragedy to the state and to the nation.” “I feel deeply the loss of a friend,”’ Reuther said in a state- ment released at CIO United Auto Workers Union headquarters here. “We in. the tabor movement, along with countless others with whom we share our hopes for a better world, feel the loss of an intelligent, articulate and gallant champion of the cause of freedom, social justice and brotherhood.” August Scholle, president of the Michigan CIO Council; said Moody will be “sorely missed from the Scholle said Moody had ‘“‘dis- “| tinguished himself as the staunch supporter of liberal causes and had established in the U. S, Senate an enviable record of champion- ing legislation to benefit all the people.” Hockey ‘Unknown’ = \Gets Red Wing Job DETROIT # — Jim Skinner, an i ES 5 Hi af whe ‘Tpuisery basis 2,600,000 additional sis Shed WH were ¥4 a Suffield, Birmingham (second from left) vice president of the Michigan | 1. Reserve Officers Assn., joined top rariking officials of the organiza-. South Carolina. tion last week to discuss reserve forces activities with President THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESD 7 AY, JULY 21, 1954 LaBarge, of Missouri, USNR, (eft) and Col. Strom Thurmond of ( Senate Committee OKs Security. Bill (Continued From Page One) per cent levy each on employers and employes would go from $3,600 to $4,200, effective next dan. 1. Thus the tax for any- one making $4,200 or more would be $84 next year as against $72 im 1964. Coverage—Includes on a volun- tary basis about 3% million state |and local goverriment workers and 000 ministers, and on a com- farm hands, 250,000 domestic work- ers, 100,000 industrial home werk- ers and 5,000 persons in the fish- ing industry. The Senate committee voted to eliminate coverage for 3,600,000 farm operators, 500,000 profession- al people and 150,000 federal gov- ernment workers, all of whom thé President asked be brought under the program. All these were included in the House bill except 150.000 doctors among the professionals. The committee also accepted the administration's plans for future tax rates. These cal) for the taxes to level off in 1975 at 4 per cent each for the employer and em- ploye. 6 per cent for self-employed persons Ward Group to Discuss Traffic Control Problems The Ward Subdivision Assn, of Bloomfield Township will meet to- night at 8 p.m. in Bloomfield Town- trol problems according to S. R. Teeter, presi- dent. Moody's Death Bolsters GOP Congressional Grip _ By JACK 1 GREEN LANSING # — Blair Moody's death may have strengthened the threat to the political future of U. 8S. Sen. Homer Ferguson (R- Mich). Pontiac Deaths | Mrs. James Rockwell After a prolonged illness, Mrs. James (Josephine) Rockwell, 76, of 22 N. Shirley Ave. died at her residence Tuesday morning. Born in Owosso June 4, 1878 was the daughter of Henry Clough and the widow of Mr. Rockwell whom she married here in 1901. She had resided in Pontiac since that time. Surviving are two sons, Byron of St. Clair Shores and Amos of Pontiac. Funeral will be Friday at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home. The Rev. Charles Roub, assistant minister at Marimount Baptist Church, will. officiate and burial will be in Oak Hill Ceme- tery. 25-Carat Pearl Found Pontiac City Affairs Pontiac City Commission last night agreed to place proposals on the November election ballot for a city charter amendment which, if approved, would slightly increase city employe pension benefits. The proposals were submitted by the Retirement System Trustees. They include a change in the basic pension rate from $100 to $120 per month and provision whereby a retired employe's dependents would continue to receive benefits after his death. Commissioners said the pro- posals may be changed before they are finally placed on the ballot. City Manager Walter K. Willman said the changes would cost the city about $30,000 more per year. A majority vote of city electors balloting would be required to in- corporate the changes in the city charter In other action, City Attorney William A. Ewart approved the va- lidity of a notice of intention to circulate petitions aimed at get- ting a public vote on the Sunday banning of furniture sales which was submitted to the commission by attorney George A. Cram. Cram, whe represents the Lerdes Furniture and Appliance. Co. at 125 W. Huron St, now has through July 29 to obtain some 1,400 signatures of local voters necessary to get a public vote, . If the necessary signatures are filed a special election would be held within 90 days with a majority vote necessary to approve the or-, dinance. If the signatures are not obtained the ordinance will be- come law on July 30. Proposal on Pension Rise to Be on November Ballot brought against peddlers selling perishable foods in the city in vio- lation of the ordinance until the law's validity could be established. City Attorney William A. Ewart was instructed to report on the matter next week. An engineer's cost estimate of $41,244 was received for planned construction of combined sewer in Second from Ivy to Laurel, Laurel from Second to Third and- Third from Jestyn to Highwood. The south 530 feet of lot 6 as- sessor’s plat 88 was leased to Don R. MacDonald L Assessor's plat'}.1 was approved subject to completing an agree- ment with the Sherwood Builders for installation of necessary pub- lic improvements. Approval of the plat of Cheryl Gardens and the re-plat of Linda Vista Subdivision was deferred for more study, Special assessment confirmed for: Two-inch biacktop paving on mania from Pike to Maines, Michigan trom ‘Paddock te E. Boulevard and Lois from Roselawn to E. Boulevard Curb, gutter ahd drainage on E. Ten- fyson from Baldwin to University and Harrison from Franklin to Bagley A resolution was approved waiv- ing use of gatekeepers at polling places during the Aug, 3 primary and special elections. Public hearings were conducted and special assessment rolls or- dered prepared for July 27 on planned: Grading. graveling and culvert con- struction on Highwood from Sheffield to Princeton, Princeton from Highwood te. the e@st line of Glenwood Estates and Laurel from Sheffield to Princeton Sanitary sewer on the north side of Perry from Arlene to Madison. Commissioners accepted an invi- tation from the Pontiac Housing Commission to an informal dinner Aug. 12. A request by Carry was referred to the city manager for improve- ment of the sidewalk on Chandler rods were Tas- Authorised the city te prepare special assessment roll for construc- spec assessment sewer on Columbia from Bartell te 400 feet east Oe Deferred confirmation of «8 special Assessment roll for spreading road-mix of] on Second from Josiyn te Ivy. Referred back to the City Plan Com- Because — despite their confi- dence in public statements—Mich- igan Republican leaders have been || expressing private concern—about Ferguson's re-election. I¢ is known im the state capl- tal thag word was passed re- ,cently te Ferguson to get back heme quickly and mend his fenc- es. He was told that he faced. a stiff fight from Moody, the en- ergetic former U, S. Senator and Democrat whe was booted out of the Senate in 19523 by Re- publican Charlies W. Potter, Michigan's politically potent jun- lor senator. , One high Republican said only a few hours before Moody died yesterday that Ferguson's stock had been slipping badly in recent months and that the silver haired senior senator from Michigan would need to “campaign like Now death has removed that threat — and left Ferguson facing a man who is not so well known outside of Detroit, Patrick V. Mc Namara, an AFL official and form- er Detroit City Councilman. | i £ ee 2 ; had been elevated at once to the favorite son ranking and that Wil- liams would have no part of any move to put a last minute candi- date in the primary race against McNamara. Under state law, the Democrat- ie State Central Committee could select a candidate to for Moody. Local election officials could then be required to pro- vide stickers and to paste ‘the name of the new candidate over Moody's name on the already printed bal- fots. But a high-placed adminis- tration official said Williams would have none of that scheme. He noted that McNamar, al- lived move by a group of Dem- ecratic senators in other states te come into Michigan in Moody's behalf during the primary con- test, “There is no animosity in the party toward McNamara,” this spokesman said, ‘he is well liked and we'll go down the line for him." _. The spokesman conceded there were some “hotheads’ in the Democratic Party who were anx- fous to trot out another candidate to replace Moody, but he said Wil- liams would not stand for that and Williams usually had his way in party decisions. GTW Commuters to Pay More Aug. 1 Cost of the ten-ride ticket on the Grand Trunk Western Rail- road's commuter trains between Pontiac and Detroit will be raised from $5 to $5.75 on Aug 1, the local ticket office announced to- day. Fares, in general, will be boost- ed 15 per cent, with the increase and Detroit will go from $2.55 to $2.95. The Interstate Commerce Com- mission said Tuesday was the last | ®*"* day to protest the increase in Washington. Without protests, the fare increase takes effect auto- matically, o — 4 '45 Patients Saved Leonard Relates Political Views Oakland Republicans Hear Arguments for Revised Government, state government necessary. “It is foolhardy for a candidate on one hand to promise to reduce taxes and on the other to expand public services-’ “Tl deo my wtmos te keep the lowest possible taxes consist- ent with the operation of a sound and efficient state government Leonard adressed the group at a garden—party at the home of Mrs. John Livingstone of Berkshire road, Bloomfield Highlands. The former state police commis- | sioner and Detroit police commis- |sioner told his audience that it's becoming more obvious that to promote a prosperous economy for everyone — labor, farmers, small businessmen and industry, that a Republican governor should be chosen to work in close harmony with the predominantly Republican legislature. in Hospital Blaze (Continued From Page One) and as far as I know I was the only person sleeping up there. As I opened the door I heard a crack- ling noise and clouds of smoke pouring over me.” “I either jumped or fell down the first flight of stairs and then ran down another flight to the ground floor. When I arrived there I began helping with the evacua- tion. Everything worked smoothly and it didn't take us long to ¢om- plete the evacuation.” Mrs. Daniels said the staff had had a fire drill only 10 days ago and attributed the drill with preventifig any unnecessary panic, Firemen from Pontiac, Birming- ham and Bloomfield and West Bloomfield, Troy, Waterford and Pontiac Townships answered the call. Max W. Wells, assistant Pontiac ‘aaby chief, said witnesses told him they saw someone burning off | paint with a blowtorch. He said this might have caused the fire. Two nuns from St. "Joseph Mercy Hospital, Sister Mary Niceta and Sister Mary Janice. head of the maternity ward and the student nursing.program, respectively, were driving past the hospitat when they saw flames. ; “We decided they probably needed help,” said Sister Niceta,. “se we stopped and called the hospital (St. Joseph's) for nurses and ambulances.” About a dozen were lying on the hospital grounds on theif beds as firemen plied water on the flames from air ladders. Nurses stood by to care for the sick. , Many of the patients didn’t know The Smallest, Lightest | HEARING AID IN ZENITH’S HISTORY! As ul as some aids at twice its size. Comfort! Convenience! . Operates for just a," 7 at the hospital was afire until they were, removed. Qne. of them, Sammy Hyams, prominent Pontiac businessman, sali a nurse came in, told him not to be frightened and then two men_carried him — bed and all — from the hospital, - Claude Hutchons, 41, of 312 How- ard McNeill St., working in a filling station across from the hospital, said he rushed to the scene im- mediately after flames began to spurt from the forward section of the roof. “I saw a man working there with what I thought was a biow- torch. Then I heard someone inside yell for help to carry the patients out of the building. Hutchons, who weighs 197 pounds, said he carried 15 patients out of the building by himself. The patients were still in their beds while being carried out by Hutchon who returned, and aided staff mem- bers in carrying out most of the hospital material. Hutchons said the workman was still on the ladder fhen he ran to the hospital. Marshbanks said the hospital is an osteopathic” institution owned by Marshbanks, Inc. It was used in the treatment of alcoholics for a year before last October when it was taken over by Marshbanks. A landmark for more than a half century, the building original- ly was the residence of the Col- lier family. It was converted into a convalescent rest home in the late 1940s. Marshbanks said nearly all the surgical, medical and general equipment was salvaged. A crowd quickly collected at the scene, snarling traffic for about $5 minutes. State Police, Oakland County sheriff's deputies, and officers from Bioomfield Hills, Bloomfield secretary as she described people groups and organizations who ral- lied to the aid of patients and firefighters and hospital workers who battled the blaze. She said the Pontiac National Guard supplied men and field stoves to supply coffee for the pa- tients and firemen. The Homade Food Shop furnished sandwiches and Pontiac Motor Division con- tributed 300 sandwiches and 10 gal- lons of coffee. The Red Cross jis supplying five nurses aides to help St. Joseph Mercy attendants care for the pa- tients taken there. Harrelson Condemns Defacing of Signs Leaun Harrelson. state represen- tative from Pontiac, and candi- .| date for renomination on the Dem- ocratie ticket, today joined his op- ponent, Leslie Hudson in condemn- Monday night. “T think ‘such practice is highly un-American.” Harrelson said. “and I hope we will have no more ot it. Whoever was responsible for’ this act certainly was misguided and has done no one any good All supporters of any candidates should keep away from such tac- tics “I am glad that there are at least two candidates for most nom- inations on the tickets Aug. 3. This reflects a healthy interest in government and gives voters an opportunity to make a choice.” Celebration Comes Early HOLLYWOOD «® — Comedian George Burns got a black eye when the cork from a- champagne bottle popped at a New Year's Eve. party yesterday. He and wife Gracie Allen were posing for New Year's scenes at the Columbia Broadcasting -Studios. Among the mammals only the Echidna and the Duck Billed Platy- pus lay eggs. JOHN A. RACE Funeral for John A. Race, 69, known building contractor and former “city commissioner, will be Thursday at 11 a.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home. The well Rev. William E. Hake, assistant pastor at First Bapfist Church of which he was a member, will of- ficiate and burial will be in the Washington cemetery at Carson- ville. The body is at the residence. Mr. Race, who died Tuesday morning after a prolonged illness, is survived by his widow, the former Eva Mable Rowe whom he married in 1909; four daugh- ters, Mrs. Alfred Short of Port Huron, Mrs. Harold Wagg of Pon- tiac, Mrs. Murray Osborn of De- troit and Mrs. Eldon Powley of Lake. Orion. and 11. grandchildren. Board of Education «|Has $30,000 Extra BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Finding $30,000 left over from last year’s budget, the Bloomfield Hills Board of Education Monday night reyised its current budget to include the unexpected funds. : The money will be used to hire four additional teachers and con- struct four additiona] temporary dlassrooms at Bloomfield Hills School on, Vaughn road. In other business, the board agreed that no tuition students would be accepted for the al- ready overcrowded elementary grades, but did vote te permit two students te attend high school beginning in the fall. The school will cooperate with a Wayne University program in per- mitting instructors who have left teaching to observe and practice teaching in the system before again taking up teaching posts. Supt. of Scheols Eugene L. John- son was authorized to negotiate for sale of the Tuscarora school- house and property. Friday Deadline | in Miss Pontiac Beauty Contest The ‘Miss Pontiac” beauty ‘con- test being sponsored by Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce will |hold its elimination contest Satur- day at 9 p.m. at Tel - Huron Shopping Center All entries must be taken to or mailed to the chamber of com- merce officé in Hotel Waldron by 8 p.m. Friday. according to Rich- ard Mineweaser. member of the contest- committee. Final judging will take place at the center, Telegraph road and W. Huron street, at 9 p.m. July | 31. Mineweaser said. The contest is being sponsored by the chamber in conjunction with the Tel-Huron Center’s “July Jam- Driller Fined $20 TRAVERSE CITY (UP)—Nor- man A. Nevinger, 17. was fined $20 Tuesday when he pleaded guilty to drilling holes in a boat owned by a neighbor because the neighbor waterskied close to him while he was netting minnows. extra cost . fae yment plan avaliable FRED WM. PAULI CO. 28 West Heren FE 2-7257 Jf ad ONLY $10 A MONTH FOR | ANEW ROYAL PORTABLE FORECAST Fair and lovelier ee (Advertisement) PONTIAC.BEAUTY FEATURES Published for Consolidated Cosmetics, [nc., distributors of specialized beauty aids VOL. 2 NO.1_ c . \ o fd aN ‘ ry / 7: Cro Ye. ? Oy, ia = _THE PONYJIAC PRESS, (Advertisement) (Advertisement) WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 (Advertioement) UidverWscmeaty PONTIAC, MICH., JULY 2f, 1954 fo Smooth Them Into Glamorous Accents «nr 8 br 6 ° t For Your Smile ! “Crow 's-Feet,” heretofore presumed to be an outrageous trick of Nature, may be the result of neglect. It is assumed that the most common cause of these youth-stealing lines is skin dryness, for li dryness is even partially overcome, “crow's-feet” become less noticeable and a more youthful look blooms in the face. By the new and simple process of properly handling dry skin (described below) the younger woman can help herself to iron out her “crow's feet” and make them, in fact, glamorous accents for her smile. The older woman, too, by reducing her skin dryness, can soften the appearance of her “crow s-feet,” thereby defeating her age to a pleasing extent. Understand Your ‘‘Crow’s-Feet’’ and Dry Skin Then You Can Help Them Skin dryness is caused, obviously, by an insufficiency of natural lubricants. And Nature has a hard time making enough of these essential lubricants to keep up with the rate at which dry atmosphere, improper cleansing and exposure take them away from your skin. “Crow’s-Feet” then deepen and deepen. So you must ask these, questions: How can I correct this deficiency so as to make sure that my skin will have enough of these vital substances? How can. I help it to overcome its dryness? How can I help it to become mor normally supple, soft and smooth, so my “crow’s-feet” wil show less than they do now? These questions have always been difficult to answer, until the discovery of Lanolin Plus Liquid, but now, because of Lanolin Plus Liquid, millions of women have younger-looking skins than they had prior to their use of it Why Lenolin Plus LIQUID Does Such Wonders for Your Skin Lanolin Plus Liquid is not just lanolin. Instead, it 1s lanolin with a plus — a wonderful plus with a rich content of cholesterols, esters and other lubricants, joined by a patented process with other ingredients to give an unusual Penetrating action. Consequently, Lanolin Plus Liquid 1s able to supply your skin with more than enough lvbricants, including cholesterols and esters, to make up for those lost to improper cleansing, dry atmosphere and exposure. Only $1.00 plus tax at all cosmetic counters. GIVE YOURSELF THIS HOME FACIAL TONIGHT— See a Difference Next Morning Foo gs 1. Hold a hot washcloth to your face—par- + | ticularly around your eyes—for a few sec- : onds to open the pores. Notice how re- i freshed and relaxed your face feels. 2. Warm your bottle of Lanolin Plus Liguid .j under the hot water tap. Gently massage | j Lanolin Plus Liguid into your face and | sa = around your ‘eyes until your skin begins ell to tingle. After a few minutes, wipe your { . = face petal fresh and find it smoother. j 3. Massage a few more drops of Lanolin Plue Liguid into your skin with emphasas around your eyes before retiring. Its gen- . tle, penetrating action will work while you | sleep ... and you'll awaken next morning : to find a new softness--and elasticity | t “crows'-feet” beginning to fade There is no question about it. Lanolin ' Plus Liquid will do wonders for YOUR skin. | In fact you could spend $1,000 and not get | : more beauty benefit than you get from a | ; *. $1° bottle of Lanolin Plus Liguid. Get é =; started tonight. Give yourself a Lanolin | wis "ag Plus Home facial. Check your “crow’'s-feet” - & Fi NOW! SEE and FEEL the difference to- morrow morning. YOU WILL! (*Plus tax) Sees aa ee ee name ———— a You'll Suddenly Have Grown an Entirely New and Flawless Skin! Seem to You will be startled when you see yourself — your they see YOU — and oh, how envious they will be! And now comes a truly NEW tliquid make-up that will do for you exactly what you want done. + friends wil be-startied when — LANOLIN PLUS LIQUID | MAKE-UP really covers the sins of your skin. Those tiny | lines and imperfections you so thoroughly hate, vanish from sight. So amazing is the covering power of this heav- enly liquid, you could, if you wished, use a shade lighter than your own skin and still have a perfect new-skin look. But it does two more beauty wonders for you 1. It instantly imparts a. kind of youth-giving radi- ance that is-completely new. | now you can ‘erase’ dark circles— shadows and blemishes with— WERE 1S THE “MIRACLE” you've been Dearing about ... the secret sub- tance Max Factor created to hide lines, shadows, blemishes from the merciless scrutiny of motion picture and television cameras, Now, this ‘very product used day in, day out by the beauties of the glamour indus- tries, is available to you in a form as eimple to use as a lipstick. A PEW STROKES OF ERACE and swiftly, effectively, imperfections can disap- pear from it. You don’t change your favorite way of applying your —-, For ERace ie not @ cos- metic. You apply Erace before put- fing on your regular make-up, BVERY WOMAN [5 FACED at one time or another, with one of the problems ‘Race was to overcome. "There are teen-age blemishes. There @re the dark ugly circles put under the jiest eyes by the passing years, loss of sleep of temporary physical indisposition. The answer to these and dozens of other prob- Ipms is Erace! PROVE IT FOR YOURSELF... in your own home and at neo expense to you! yn Erace to a shadow under just ene eve. Then look in the mirror and pare the two sides of your face. me will. be thfilled at the startling SIMMS BROTHERS — MAIN F comparison. You either have te agree that here is the answer te dark cir- cles, lines, blemishes . . . er your ' money will be refunded! ERACE comes in 6 blending tones, Fair, Natural, Medium, Deep Natu- ral, Tan, Deep Tan, one of which will match your coloring perfectly. So ret this wonder-working “cover-up” oday ... yours complete with im | ms YOR — COSMETICS Fae Roe at We a ee ) 000000 0000600000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 000800 ee eee neeneenseeceeceees 59¢ CREME RINSE Combination OFFER... o) E se shampoo and 59c creme rinse REGULARLY $59 i | , LIMITED TIME ONLY SIMAS 98 North Saginaw 5t - {(@ BROTHERS ~ © Special Atomizer . get the new “Lock” Atomizer @ with your favorite COTY TOILET WATER. Won't e e ‘ © Special Price...COTY TOILET WATER complete with new “Lock” Atomizer and travel container! That is because its five Shades are the. living colors of your skin. They alive. The living shade most flattering to you is easy to find, too, as you will discover when you see them all. 2. LANOLIN PLUS LIQUID MAKE-UP containing pure Lanolin in a very effective form, helps to soften and smooth your skin évery min- ute you wear it. Imagine a make-up that not only gives you the ap- pearance of having instantly grown a new, flawless and younger-looking skin, but that also makes yur skin, softer feeling and smoother looking. $1 plus tax at all cos- metic counters. Indeed, there is nothing in all the world like Lanolin Plus Liquid Make-Up. Softer Han Than This Entirely new kind of lotion does wonders tor your hends, Lanolin Plus Hand Lotion actually MAKES your nan ds smoother by making them actually softer. Amply rich in lano- lin (yet not greasy at all), Lanolin Plus Hand Lotion performs its miracles by sup- plying an abundance of pene- trating, lubricating choles- terols and esters to your hands. Results are unbeliev- able, until you see them your- | self. Then, when you find he can’t leave your hands alone, you'll KNOW how truly won- derful Lanolin Plus Hand Lotion really is. $1 plus tax at all cosmetic counters. Appli- ecator pump free of extra charge is very handy. No cap to take off the bottle and put back. on. | This New Liquid He Ever Held Before Cleanser Sottens as It Cleanses The fresh, clean feel of your skin after its first cleansing with this creamy liquid will make you promise yourself that | you'll never again bother with other cleansing methods. For | Lanolin Plus Liquid Cleanser, richly endowed with lanolin and its rich base of esters and cholesterols, penetrates your skin and softens as it cleanses. Lanolin Plus Liquid Cleanser is compotnded so that there are no harsh drying effect. Instead, it offers the wonderful lubricating influence of Lanolin itself that combats drying conditions due to lack of natural oils. There's a good reason why lanolin is so Beneficial to your skin. It is almost identical to the natural oils of human skin. So when Nature's own lubricants are so closely duplicated, it's no wonder that your skin responds quickly and eagerly. LANOLIN PLUS LIQUID CLEANSER should be a “must” in your daily skin care. It’s amazingly effective ... delightfully refreshing . and so economical! Only one dollar plus tax at all cosmetic counters. Totally New Kind of Shampoo Not only a perfect cleanser, but a beauty treatment for your hair, too. Fills your = hair with millions of- dancing highlights —— and puts new spring in your curls, at the =~ same time making your hair not only — beautifully manageable, but softer and more silken to the touch. Lanolin Plus Shampoo is $1 ‘no tax) at all cosmetic counters. | derful softening ac Be a Smoothie All Over From Top to Toe and Feel Better Dressed (Your Girdle Slips on Easier, too) Every square inch of you will feel silky-smooth when you caress yourself with this lanolin-rich body lotion — after your bath. Lanolin Plus Body Lotion imparts a soft- ness and exquisite loveliness that is new. You'll begin by slipping into your girdle with more ease and the feeling of luxury that follows somehow makes your clothes seem smarter than before. The large 12-ounce bottle of Lan- olin Plus Body Lotion is only $1.50 plus tax at all cosmetic counters. Between Shampoos Keep Your Hair Shining negea = Date tonight? No time for a shampoo? Brush a few drops of Lanolin Pius for the Hair through your crowning ble glory and look more than lovely. Its lanolin a&rtien,too, of course, does wonders for your hair. Before or after shampoo, it makes and keeps your hair gleaming and more easily manageable than you ever believed it could be, re- gardiess of how much ex- posure it has had to sun, wind or too much dry at- | mosphere. Men find it a won- derful grooming aid, . too. Lanolin Plus for the hair is | $f at ail cosmetic counters. Good News For You Now you have a cleansing cream that replenishes your skin with a new supply of cholesterols and esters each time you use it. But this won- ret be is not at expense 4 thoroughness. Lanolin Plus Cleansing Cream for Dry Skin seems to dig out every tiny speck of dirt. So, if you have a dry skin and you®prefer a cleansing cream, this one will give you immediate and beautiful results: Lanolin Plus Cleansing Cream for Dry Skin is $1 plus tax at all cos- metic counters. Special Size . . . take your choice of eight COTY e classics in thi¥ generous bottle, Each one, a world: famous fragrance beloved for years! leak, spill or evaporate! 98 N. Saginaw St. NEW “LOCK” ATOMIZER given with Your Fatorite — COTY Toilet Water Fatorite Fragrances— . | GREAT VALUE —LORIGAN © MUSE W, Lath! ' L'AIMANT © METEOR © . |) EMERAUDE © A SUMA ‘ . ° L PARIS-@ STYX Ultra-modern . . . completely _ different. Wear it to shake I'5 Ounce Size uuh Atomizer- COSMETIC DEPT, your world a little! $150 t Stick Cologne . . $1.00 * Perfume .. ..$15.00 — Toilet Water Jif ta BROTHERS : —Main Floor Vy : SHeeeeesessessseeseegeeseseeesesesesesesseeseseee MAIN FLOOR “Dane Fragrance Windfall 4 Ounce TABU Cologne and Four Purse Flacons of DANA Perfumes: - $6.50 VALUE $3.75 The fragrance value of the year! The cologne... and the 4 perfumes—TABU, 20 Carats, Emir and Plastine ., for the price of the cologne alone. (Plus tax.) | == 7 te ” a *; * a al J . = & = “a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21. 1954 ee ) | . insula Development Bureau, the | fs ; - i a a ag ORE e* 2 CY . Upper Peninswa | ru isa cr sca. [Fisher Reveals ee cs to Be Appraised | wate te 35 commanttice tn t 470 8 m anyon Maa ee a me” tis he fi. eon Z Fe 4 eo ce La gies | nd FITS like this; n ee te ee, ae Faded eae Ab yee 4 the peninsula. Se + jas Industrial_Site+ Tres at hee ea ow Model Winners: LANSING #—~Michigan’s Upper | accumulate information on in 4 & ofa’, ‘ vay. Sheed ty 2 be eS eS ee : ’ Be - Seeeer ears . Peninsula will be appraised by ex- | @ustrial possibilities of the area to . . AP emai te : ee, eae perts this week as a place for the a industries in| Illinois and Washington eo trete- , oe ie _ [nation's industry to locate. Ung in ppey Peninsula. Bo Get . Scholarshi ae cae Ade OS a: sities nce bod gn! an aa Mipip Ten experienced industrial real- A report on the jAdustrial possi- _ ps oe th A Me s Pi sed tors from southern Michigan will mate Dagan aly pale ‘ee for Top Model Designs fly to Marquette Thursday to start cation firms throughout the nlf®on| DETROIT (UP) — Top prizes] | a four-day survey of the entire) 214 to about 4,000 manufacturers. | in the annual Fisher Body Cratts- peninsula. man’s Guild model car contest went After a meeting with the board Argentina has 140 daily news-| Tuesday night to James C. Fry of of-directors of the Upper Pen- | papers. Clinton, Ill., and Gary Graham of ; ———— | Bellingham, Wash. s Both received $4,000 scholar- ships for winning in their divisions in the contest, sponsored—by—the+ Fi Fisher Body Div. of General Mo tors Corp. Fry's model was judged | best in the junior division and SS All. Women’s. Summer Shoes L Reduced! SA Tweedie Summer Shoes . yo, oan . g 95 Reg. $15.95 TO | Graham's in the senior division. | Other winners: ; we ' i Presne, “. Vitality Summer Shoes wet ton Valley, Pa., fourth, $1,000. WA WASHINGTON w — A House-| }* ¥ = Senate conference committee prob- é == ably will drop out of President Ei-| ‘ = = senhower's big tax revision pro- = (a= gram a proposal to cut taxes on in- ® =F wFe : come earned by United States cor- ¥ Todd's Shoe Store oy At ropa Ss ’ Fd Well-posted sources said today == such a decision might help clear . the way for a compromise on the 20 W. Huron ime = ; | touchy political issue of how much . ° High Quelty— * | to cut income taxes on dividends STEN kil = _breceived by stockholders at a popular price Predict Drop-Out of Cut in Foreign Profits Tax ‘ ted gic. te vA ys, | N een | ; : Mt mw eg . =. = , - + +o 2 ‘aan > is a e od > LF s ' . ‘ 4 ‘ , a 4 Ps + ain i — — 5 : ‘ ¥ > ‘ a in Size! in Value! in Quality! SLIM, TRIM LEVI’S will give you that low-waisted, long-legged outdoor look preferred by men of action for over a century! STRONG, RUGGED LEVI'S will give you more ns Wee Corus wear than any other blue jeans made. Cut from the heaviest denim leomed — reinforced with Copper a Gana aaa das lage) | elec aes so strongly you get a new pair Om THE BACK POCKET ae they rip! BETTER BUY LEVI'S — there's no finer value ip e ev ge ernvavenan ve yen ee. pares overalls today than LEVI'S—the original cowboy nee en eee nee blue jeans from the Far West! On.) OY LEW! sreeles ® On OFF CE Bem rRAR CS Buy Your LEVY'S at Pontiac’s Largest Exclusive Men’s Store! |. HUB CLOTHIERS 18-20 North Saginaw St. with all these features! | Get [ F V S At Joe’s Army-Navy | | TL. Surplus Store , Shee oa Those Just North of State Theater e Full-width Chill | 9 Drawer | Buy Your Levi S$ at... * Golden finished all- GOODMAN’S DEPT. STORE lumi Shel 4 arurninam oneves 520 S. Saginaw, Block North of Wilson ¢ Butter Compartment | ° Frozen Juice Can. | MEN’S Get Your LEVI'S at Boys’ in Holder in Freezer || | Better Clothes | Quality Luggage » Tall bottle space ; for Less! . at Lower Prices! 158 N. SAGINAW ST. ; ° Egg Server in Door ee ee ° Meat Tender for 7 - : , re storing fresh meats LADY Nellie db and ¢ Removable half-shelf LEVI'S 3507 Elizobeth Loke Rd. GIRLS’ © Meter-Miser with | 7 1 Block West of Huron LEVIS 5-Year Warranty Get You r | LESKY PWT | | in Pontiac BROTHERS | ot... 98 N. Saginaw St. Clothing—Basement . Seginew St. Where You Get Your Money’s Worth! Cee LEVI'S | , for the entire family ot... ; 51 S. Saginaw St. ee Georgetown is the chief British Guiana. pert of EVERY EVENING See the Lotest TV Demonstrated! II| used Tv ||| HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. 825 W. HURON | Get « Good 825 W. Huren. FE 4-2525 Dogs and Masters Face Longer Life Through Science CHICAGO (UP) — Dogs, like their masters, can look forward to longer, healthier lives because’ of medical science, according to the American Veterinary Medical As- sociation. The longevity of pets has been increased as much as 50 per cent in many instances, association spokesmen said. “Puppies surviving their first year now have a good chance of tiving to be 11 or 12 years old,” a ‘spokesman said. “Ten years ago their life expectancy was seven or eight years.” = Distemper vaccine is helping to control one of the greatest canine killers, the association said, and an improved rabies vaccine now is available. “Research on heart cconditions, intestifial ‘diseases and new ad- Wafices in pet surgery all help to- day's dogs live longer,’’ the asso- ciation said, Sulfas and antibiotics, too, have helped control many pet diseases, it added. NEW LIQUID TOILET BOWL CLEANER with THE MIRACLE DETERGENT SNO-BOL QUICK AND EASY TO USE—NO WAITING! The ONLY liquid . y atans » atans COPPER Pine-Scented Bathroom Cleaner with These Features — FORET BOWLS INSTANTLY >” OPENS DRAINS yp REMOVES EUST SPOTS > SAVES NOWSEWoRK GLASS, EARTHENWARE, AND THE Cleans! Deodorizes! Suds! GET SNO-BOL TODAY— AT ALL LEADING GROCERS By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Staff. Correspondent The Communists have every rea< son to be pleased with the course of events in Southeast Asia right now, But in Southwest Asia, things are going well for the West. It is interesting also to note that whilé Communist China is the hig winner in Southeast Asia, So- viet Russia is the loser in South- west Asia. The Kremlin has shown that | it ts seriously concerned over developments in Iran, Turkey and Pakistan. These three important Moslem countries extend from the Mediter- ranean, Black and Caspian seas to the Himalaya Mountains. Tur key and Iran border directly on the Soviet Union. Turkey and Pakistan have en- tered a treaty of mutual defense against Communist aggression Both are aligned with the United States and its allies _ Russia protested against the Tur- key-Pakistan treaty and against the alignment of both countries with the West. On July 8, Russia warned Iran sharply against joining ‘the ag- gressive military bloc which ts being created in the Near and Middie Fast on the basis .of the Turkish-Pakistani military alli- ” | ance. Iran just as sharply rejected the Russian protest. It said it would be ready to join any regional military pact which might safe- guard its independence and terri torial integrity The Iranian government has said repeatedly that it does not want to join the Western § alliance against Communist § aggression. But it did not say “positively.” Buying: SCRAP IRON and METAL Selling: Structural Steel I-Beams -- Channels Angles -- Etc. S. Allen & Son, Inc. Open Monday Thre Friday 8 te 6 Closed Saturdays 1:00 P.M 22 Congress St. FE 5-8142 (Advertisement) Now Many Wear | FALSE TEETH With Little Worry Eat, talk, laugh oF sneeze without fear of insecure false teeth dropp! | slipping or wobbling. FAS hoids plates firmer and more com- fortably. This pleasant powder has no ummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Boesn't cause nausea. It's alkaline (non-acid). Checks “plate odor” (denture breath). Get FASTEETH at any drug counter. * res —~— |Doesn’t Like the Dark THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 | Soviet. Russia Big Loser Middle East It seems certain that an agtee- ment ending the three-year dis- pute over Iran's nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Com- pany’s assets will be signed soon. This will end a recurrent crisis which has hurt the West and helped the Kremlin, because it stirs up trouble. Turkey and Pakistan have made it known that they would like to | extend their own pact to include other countries. The Kremlin | seems to think that Iran may be | one of them. That remains to be seen after | the signature of an oil agreement. | It will be up to Shah Mohammed | Riza Pahlevi and Prime Minister | Fazlollah Zahedi to decide whether | to re-align their policy and brave | the wrath of Iran's Nationalist ex- ‘tremists as well as the Kremlin by joining the Western alliance. The Shah ts friendly to the West, Zahedi ts bitterly antt- Communist bat he was long re- garded as anti- British also. Whether he stil} is or not, at least he has taken the lead on Iran's part in the negotiations te settle the ofl dispute. Little has been published about Zahedi since, last August, he led the Royalist coup which overthrew anti-British, anti-Western Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh A lot of things have happened in the last year. Zahedi may feel now that Iran is not in a posi- tion to be neutral as between West and East Fireworks Firm Dead After Blasts CHESTERTOWN, Md. «7 — The main industry of this town of 2.000, shattered by a series of powder blasts last Friday, is dead Eleven were killed and more | than 40 injured. Now survivors among the Kent Manufacturing Co.'s 300 employes face unem- ployment Philip G. Wilmer, company pres ident, said yesterday: ‘There will be no operations in Kent County.”’ | Kent manufactures fireworks Red Poland, E.. Germany | Sign Trade Agreement | VIENNA, Austria #®—Communist Poland has concluded a trade agreement with East Germany, Radio Warsaw reported last night. | { | Poland will export coal in ex- change for East German chemi- cals, machinery and factory equip- ment, the broadcast said | MARINELAND, Fla, (UP) — Personnel in the research labora- tory of Marine Studios here no- ticed that the bottle holding their drinking water had turned a bright green. They threw a typewriter cover over the bottle to keep off the sun. It stopped the growth of algae which was giving the bottle its peculiar clor. Comfortable 3-hour parking at the new Kg City Parking Lot... , Parke and Pike St.!_ Only 5c per hour! SERRE ee: ee ee ais , RR OP Ry eres: “e oo $1 Weekly! WL | Heavy duty drill set with 14" drill, stain finish, drill saw; geared Jacobs chuck and key. Removable side handle, 6- piece. adapter set, molded rubber disc. Polishing bonnet, set of 7 carbon steel drills, horizontal bench stand, buffing wheel, wire b rush, 6 assorted sandpaper discs. 2 mounted stones, drum sander, 2 drum sander sleeves, instruction pamphlet, wallboard keyed for each item. ‘Hurry in today and save at | this low price! . | Waite’s Power Tools—Air Conditioned Downstairs Store OU can see for yourself the gay and gorgeous styling that’s sure to be the fresh note next year, too. And you can easily learn that here is power a-plenty—the highest V8 power, Series for Series, in the annals of Buick history. But what you can never know, till you try it yourself, is the feel of a Buick in motion. It’s a ride as precision-soft and firm as only coiled steel can make it. Yes, coil springs on all four wheels. And a full-length torque-tube drive for true tracking. And a massive X-braced frame for solid steadiness. And specially cali- brated shock absorbers, V- braced struts, 4 | WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM wide-rim wheels, 2 unique front-end. geometry—plus a host of other better- ments too numerous to mention. You feel the result of this advanced engineering every mile you drive — ia what is literally and figuratively a Million Dollar Ride. You feel it in the superb and buoyant cradling. You feel it in the serene level- ness of your going over ruts and ridges. You feel it in the precise snubbing of jars and jounces. You feel it in a new kind of steadiness, handling ease, curve control. Only thing for you to do, we believe, is to come try this miracle of motion — and we'll be glad to oblige. That way you'll also learn frsthand about the style, the power, and the value that have made Buick such a best-selling success this year. For Buick today is ont- selling all other cars in America except twe ST ER oe te of the so-called ‘‘low-price three.’’ (Smart tip: With Buick such a beautiful buy this year, think what a winner it's bound to be at trade-in time! Come s@ us this week!) OLIVER MOTOR SALES: 210 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-9101 Pontiac, Michigan B Play Skyrider Gym > 99 $1 Weekly! Now you can own your own safe private playground all summer long! Buy your children a safe—long lasting—sturdy gym with non-tilt seats, 1,200 Ib. test chain. Ball bearing hangers all in weather resistant finish also plated bolts and hardware. 7 ft. clearance for roomy spacing of swings and sky ride. Get your children one today while they, last! Waite’s Outdoor Toys—Air Conditioned Fifth Floor $1 Down! a —_ / “~ | . . : FAL og Pre, Hae PR 2-818) MEMBER OF AUDIT SUREAN OF CIRCULATIONS WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 Ike to Continue Fight President Ersennowrr has made it clear that he intends to continue his fight for the health reinsurance pro- gram defeated in the House last week. Besides pledging that effort, the Pres- ident has sent to Congress a request for $35,356,000 supplemental appropriation for the Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare. If granted, this would provide $25,000,000 for a Federal health reinsurance service. * * * | When the House voted 238 to | 134 to send the original measure back to committee, the Adminis- tration suffered a major setback. Seventy-five Republicans teamed with 162 Democrats and one Inde- pendent to recommit the bill. Fourteen Democrats and 120 Re- publicans opposed recommittal. * x * This bill was the heart of the Eisen- increased by premiums paid by thé in- suring compaines, 75 per cent of any “abnormal” losses they suffered would be repaid. , ~ * * Undoubtedly conflicting views and pressures killed the bill for this session. Much of the objec- tion to it came from those who called it a step toward socialized medicine. Others said it didn’t go far enough. Also, some Democrats may have voted against it so they could cite, during the campaign, the Administration's failure to put its health program into effect. At any rate it is good news that the President is standing by his guns and will press for favorable action in the next session. Alfred Leggett Smith Pontiac lost a faithful public servant and a devout churchman when death called ALrrep Leccett SMITH. Mr. Smiru became widely known in his posts of City and State building in- spector. When he retired from. the former office July 31, 1951, he had served the people of Pontiac fon 14 years. * * * Born here on August 6, 1881, he had lived most of his 72 years in this city. A graduate of Pontiac High School, he obtained his professional education at the University of Michigan and the Michigan College of Mining and Tech- ogy. Besides his business interests, which included mining engineer- ing and technical work for local industries, Mr. Smitu’s chief in- terest was All Saints Episcopal ‘Church. Several times a mem- ber of its rotating vestry, he de- 8 of the church after it was de- stroyed by fire a few years ago. * * * A.rrep Leccett SMITH will be missed by a host of friends and acquaintances who will remember him as one who served his community.and church with unfailing devotion. Wise Counsel for Senate There was urgent need for the sound advice on flexible farm price supports Homar Fercuson gave the Senate the other day. : It is true that the House majority recently approved the all important "Ome reason is the action of the ‘ - Senate Agricrture Committee which has voted eight to seven for continuation of basic \crop supports at 90 per cent of parity, This vote came despite the fact that under the flexible plan sup- ports for basic crops would not fal: below 82.5 per cent. Michigan's senior Senator made the important, point that continuation of surplus-breeding 90 per cent parity would be economic folly. It would be comparable, he said, to continuation of war material production at Korean War rates. * x * “In my own state of Michigan,” he told the Senate, “the industrial cutback has “been quite severe. Still, no one seriously suggested we continue the production of © military equipment we do not need. We have to make the tran- sition (from high rigid supports) sometime. The longer we wait the more difficult it will become.” * * * There is no place in a peace time economy for rigid 90 per cent price sup- port. That was a war time measure designed to stimulate urgently needed all out food production. The tax-eating, price-depressing surpluses thus created are the strongest arguments for adop- tion of flexible supports. The Senate should reverse the action of its Agriculture Committee. — ——————E—E————EE Anoruer thing this country needs is a veranda on each house. In the good old days when the wife got angry with hubby in the house, instead of going off and getting drunk, he went out on the veranda and sat and sulked. Mepicat science can explain almost anything in its field except why a nurse’s hands run a constant subnormal temperature of about 65 degrees F. The Man About Town. Touring the County Republican Candidates for Governor Smiling Upon Us Daffynition Adam: The only man whose wife never compared him to other men she might have married. As the Aug. 3 primary election approaches, hardly a day passes that at least one of the four candidates for the Republican nomina- tion for governor, {s not touring Oakland County. It apparently is the hot spot of the campaign. Just after his talk at Holly Monday, Owen J. Cleary was asked for his personal opinion about each of his three opponents, and replied, “I'll cover that in one sentence, They're all good men.” “ Our county's vote on this office in the 1952 primary was: Leonard, 27,891; Alger, 23,198; Vandenberg, 12,448. « Out at the Bloomfield Hills Country Club I am informed by Manager Chick Bangs that In a few days . Mixologist Alex. Hat will complete 38 consecutive years in that capacity. % Speaking of Michigan's much publicized murder trial, George A. Cram asserts that this is a Small world. . A letter just received from Mrs. Alfretta Waters of Bloomfield Hills commends this column for its item about political candidates defac- ing the roadsides with their signs. She con- cludes, “I also am contacting the members of my club, suggesting that we all vote against them.” If you wonder about the traffic on THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ee hd w La = eet Been 2 ote: * wt a> > SK JULY 21, 1954 > Oe aan ork - FORO. RE OT Not-So-Sunny Exposure Voice of the People Ordinances for Posting of Election Signs Should Be Enforced on All Candidates (Letters will be condensed when neces- sary because of iack of space. Full name, address and telephone number of the writer must sccompany letters but these will not be pubitshed if the writer so requests. unless the letter ts critical tp ite mature) It is against the City and County Ordinances to post election signs on city or county property and right of ways. Why is it that some candidates for city and county offices can break the law and get away with it? Their signs are not taken down by the officials while other candidates try to stay within the law. Why don’t 6ur city and county officials enforce these ordinances or don't they apply to the candi- dates who can get away with it? Harry Tibbetts 5580 Rowley Drayton Plains Read Some Good Pointers Now on Phone Manners The telephone is a very useful instrument for both information and pleasure. How much satis- faction is derived from conversing with distant friends and relatives and carrying out our business ven- tures from time to time! . Perhaps we might become some- what careless occasionally in the use of a party line for extended Visitation while another may be waiting patiently to use the line in an emergency. It would seem that this would be a rather ideal instrument on which to practice the Golden Rule. Also you should speak directly You don’t know what they may be doing, so do not stop ringing too quickly. Give it one or two more rings or they may just hear a dial tone when they answer. Ciaud McCallum Press Coverage of Twins Is Rated as Excellent Job The Press did a wonderful thing with that picture and story of the abandoned twins. And the number of people who applied for them shows the heart of America is stil! pretty big. Twin ‘Small’ Jury Made Error Says a Clarkston Reader I think the ‘Small’ jury made a mistake. He should have been freed completely! Clarkston Reader Non-Taxpayers Are Nil, Declares Charles Knouse After an exhaustive study of the number of people who don't pay taxes, I find in round numbers its Charlies Knouse THOUGHT FOR TODAY The Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy of the Lord in that day: and in how many things he ministered unto me at God is a being who gives every- thing but punishment in over meas- ure.—Henry Ward Beecher. Case Records of a Psychologist Dog Owners Should Be Glad to Give Pets Protection Via Anti-Rabies Inoculations Many people dislike “com- pulsion” even as regards the vaccination of school children against smallpoz or of dogs against rabies. But such medi- cal :protection .{s .s0 .helpful - that many cities now tnsist on compulsory anti-rabies shots for all dogs. Here are the facts. _ By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case L-363: Coralie G., aged 20, has a beautiful collie dog which is now almost a vear old. “Dr, Crane, there is a great deal of agitation in my community about having all dogs given anti-rabies shots,”’ she began. - “I understand that ft {fs com- pulsory in many other cities. But do you think it is necessary “I keep my dog in our yard, which has a high fence around it. Besides, wouldn't the shots harm my dog?” Medical “shots” have almost banished some of the worst ‘‘kil- ler” diseases of children. is now Thus, smallpox 1 th L Pe, almost al . Pe use of penicillin and the sulfas, have now been spread to animals, too, thus lengthening their life span. Remember, too, that dogs can contract rabies without leaving their own backyard, for a rabid squirrel may bite them. To give you the facts on this matter of rabies, I had a conver- sation with Dr. A, C, Merrick, fa- mous Chicago Veterinarian, who maintains a targe hospital for various small animals, such as ‘ dog will either be dead or dying of rabies within those 14 days. cent you are in the 35 per cent, you must be vaccinated or make your will! For without vac- cination, rabies leads to death. (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate, Inc s James Marlowe Says: U.S. Must Be Prepared Ao Fight -- or Let Asia Go WASHINGTON #® — The Com- munists have won a clear-cut vic- tory in Indochina. It can't Ke minimized. The French let them have half of Viet Nam. Now the United States faces one of the most important decisions in its history. It is this: Will this country, to keep the rest: of Indochina and Southeast Asia out of Communist hands, be willing to fight if the Communists move any further? Or will the United States just sit back and express pious hopes that the Southeast Asians won't submit to communism? * * * There is talk — until it becomes a reality it will remain talk — that this country will try to form a Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) to defend the rest of In- ‘dochina and Southeast Asia against any further Communist advance. It remains to be seen (A) wheth- er the United States can get allies to go along with this plan and ‘B) whether Congress, where there has been mich divided opinion, will take action which could lead to military involvement someday. There was so much national un- happiness over the Korean War and the cost, and so much national relief and joy when the Commu- nists agreed to a truce there, that there has been no national enthu- siasm for getting involved all over again in Asian fighting. . * * The Communists knew of this Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (International News Service) Democratic shillsters still insist the Republicans aren't doing a thing the Democrats hadn't planned. That's long distance dreaming with an option. | If it’s true it could be the reason the Republicans are be- _ ing investigated. We know the Democrats booby- trapped the corridors of Congress with unfinished business and alpha- betical bids. The Democrats built castles in the air and the Republicans are carrying the hod. This’ approximates the happy business of getting rich by renting rowboats in a storm at sea. That one-man dynasty Frank- lin Delano Roosevelt figured out more schemes than a hop- head bivouacking on the elbow. There's nothing more beautiful than indoor sky writing with rose-colored fumes. The abbreviations on 10.000 glass -edoors are archived in the dream wing of the Library of Congress. The results of 20 years of un- supervised Olympics in a play- pen are as far-reaching as Bi- kini. vibrations. The seven union cards of Hercules are merely an apprenticeship to the eighth labor of stopping a merry-go- round in the middle of a tune. Tt’s natural in occupational haz- ards that some legislation should slop over into the next adminis- tration. The man who plants the tree doesn’t get the fruit. Other- wise Congress would meet in a super-market armed with spray guns and insecticides. If the Democrats want to lay claim to the aftermath of the in- credible that's okay with us. There are some capers still to be in- vestigated. My advice to the Democratic spiel-bunkers is to pianissimo this argument “in the pre-dated cam- paigns. They shot off the rockets paras blame the Republicans for the ati feeling. Knowihg, they May. ‘have gambled that this country wouldn't go to the rescue of the French in Indochina if the Reds stepped up the pressure on the French. If they did bet on that, they won. They will probably sit quietly for a while now. They can afford to. ean sit back and watch what. the Western Allies, particularly the United States, are willing to do about agreeing to draw a line in - Avia beyond which they won't let ’ the Communists move without massive war. If the West fails to reach agree- ment — and any such agreement wouldn't be worth much unless the Southeast Asians were willing to be a party to it — it will be like a go-ahead light for the Commu- nists, If there is agreement, they can still move without open ag- gression across a frontier. *. * * They can use economic pres- sure to subvert the Southeast Asians, plus the usual political pressure and subversion, If that fails, they can start open revolt by local Communists as they did in Indochina. But the United States has reached a point where it is going to have to be willing to fight in Asia or stop talking so tough about what les in store for the Commu- nists if they move one more inch. There's been some tough talk in the past year by members of President Eisenhower's adminis- tration but when the crisis came. the United States stayed out of Indochina. This fact can hardly be lost upon the millions of Southeast Asians. * *« 6 Nor can this fact: The United States’ held aloof from the arm- stice just agreed to at Geneva, in which the French let the Commu. nists take over millions of Indo- - chinese. The United States wouldn't approve, but it didn’t do anything to stop it. .Both the Truman administra- tion, for years, and the Eisenhow- er administration, for the past 1% months, had time to look at the Indochina war and sce what was happening: that the French were losing. Both insisted the French would win. Neither administration made an effort, so far as is publicly known, to form a Southeast Asia alliance to rescue the French if they got into crisis. s s s When the crisis did come, Sec- retary of State Dulles rushed to Furope to get ‘‘united action."’ The British balked, at least then. The United States stood back. The French, left alone, sought an armistice. Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Wherever you vacation dear .. . I wish you all the best... . I hope you will enjoy yourself . . . And get a lot of rest ... I wish that I could be with you... the oceanside . . .\High on a moun- tain, by a lake .\. . Or anywhere you hide... But vacation time this year Is the same as yours ... And sa it seems we are compelled . . . To take our separate tours ... I wish you well, and yet I hope . . . By every moon and sun... You find no better image of . . . Your one and onlv one... For I'l) be lonely and I will . . . Be waiting at the door . .- To tell your heart a thousand times ..« I love you more and more. (Copyright 1964) From Our Files national income with industrial ad- vance. 20 Years Age DEATHS REACH 188 in record heat wave sweeping the nation. CONVICT CLAIMS Lindberg baby abduction was plot to free Al Capone. Tetany in Infants,ls Hard to Diagnose; ns Also Are Susceptible Elderly Perso By WILLIAM BRADY, M, D. our highways, just _rememberthat there are 75 per cent more cars on them than there were 15 years ago— and very few more highways. After being in business for many years, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Cocking who operate a mink farm on Baldwin Road, say that the mink coat scandals have not materially affected the demand for the fur, although at first there was a letup. That long time booster for the Detroit Tigers, : _é Percival Mahoney of Birmingham, phones that we should all love them as long as they can occasionaHy clip a Yankee winning streak, regardless of their-other shortcomings. Verbal Orchids to— Mrs. H. D. Leonard of 124 Henry Clay Ave.; ninety-fifth birthday. Charles A. Highfield. — of 29 Riker St.; ninetieth birthday. = Thomas J. Mulvey yg Pine Grove Ave.; eighty-fourth birth- ~ . children. Diptheria is likewise an infrequent disease, due to- our widespread inoculation of infants. America requires compulsory vaccination of school children be- cause our scientific evidence shows that such “‘shots’’ are one of mod- ern medicine's greatest boons to mankind ' And such health aids, plus the Aunt Het dogs, cats, birds, etc.” “Dr. Crane, here in our subur- ban city of Riverside, there has been compulsory anti-rabies jnoc- ulating of dogs for the past 16 years,"’ Dr, Merrick told me. “And there hasn't been a single case of rabies in our city in all that time. “Yet many cases have been re ported in the neighboring suburbs of Brookfieid, Lyons and Berwyn. “Here at my own hospital for : Back in the halcyon days, one ward in the county hospital was occupied by babies exclusively — born of illegitimate parents, many of them beautiful babies that any one could not help loving. Bi a hil 3 * z 2 county hospital babies’ ward. To the best of my recollection there were only a few cases of Tickets or only a few cases diag- nosed during my 20 months of internship in the county hospital. —and the toutine treatment for rickets was a spoonful or two of cod liver oil every day. Unlike scurvy, the manifesta- tions and the cure of which are night, cramps that are painful enough to make the victim groan or cry out. pamphiet Adult Tetany. All the standard medical text- books I have seen make a mys- tery of tetany, One gets a vague notion or no 3 fault of parathyroid tion might be responsible — and this has keep the “authorities” on _a wild goose chase ever since. take of calcium and vitamin D. Signed letters, not more than one pase or words r mte | ‘Household Inventory Is Home Budget Aid CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP) ventory of househdld goods can help in budget planning for replace- | ments and provide a record for in- surance claims, The school's home| economics ex- | tension service suggests that items should be listed roém by room. — The! The original cost and the a Thr University of Illinois says an ‘in-| each item should be jotted dona” false alarm saw f firemen tong ies THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 Alarmists. Caught BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (UP) — a false alarm saw & fireman long Wild horses were once nearly Chief Jerome C. Barrett was driv- Jas numerous on the -American| ing past the box and thought the plains as buffalo. boys were acting suspciously. He before they were ready. Asst. Fire |" | aoneied —— on them Cleveland. Voters Lose right ert broke lee call” hea . on Detached Stub Deal try can equal the total production RR en eee ee eee ai be — ba 8 In an hour and one quarter the | year's instruction booklet for present day American steel indus-| mary election booth workers read: “Remove stub ‘A’ and deposit stub The Board of Blections clerk aes Pree Ray C. Miller, who admitted “some Sevillian we : voters might not like that,” said CLEVELAND, 0. (UP) — This | it cost $260 to mail out, post cards | After mailing a postcard to Exving |. pri- | to all 13,000 recipients of the book | Pruy" while visiting Seville, Spain, to' correct the instruction to read: W. Sheffield Cowles arrived home ‘Remove stub ‘A’ and deposit in from mark for an entire year in 1860.'in the proper voter.” the proper stub box.” ps : is suMMER! SHOP IW CHALLENGE SALE!) ...With prices that prove your dollar buys more at Federal’s! ER T sepERAL'S cool AIR- GOWDITIONED CO Women’s shoe sale! 2.88 Handsome casuals in camel, tan and brown combination leather. 4 to 9. Save now! Top value! Women's anklets! 4 pairs for Guaranteed, triple-roll, sin- gle cuff! Sizes 844 to 11. Unbeatable values! Women's swim sults Drastically reduced! Not all sizes in all styles! Lastex. Unequaled value! Women's blouses Sanforized cottons, fine crepes. Save! 32-44 in group. jumors ’ Save as never before! Women’s cottons Shop and compare! Favor- ite styles, fabrics! All sizes. Values that beat all! C Girls’ play shorts Stripes, checks, plaids, solids in washable cotton. 7-14 Big bargain scoop! High quality, low price! Cottons, Plisses! 3-6x; 7-12. Federal value scoop! Women's handbags SLIPS & PETTI Boxes, pouches, shoulder l ge . —— lisse slips, 34 ATE Cotton megs in poe calf! Save! a Glamorous 60-gaug®, ieee ee tome shadow panel, S.-M. , lone from America mae SHORTY an tery mill! Coosamet tring de bad i eee i ton erope gore eee Unbelievable valves! 44 weet ee eae SHORTY PAJAMAS — Rayon Women's dresses teed og we Bl 1s. » Meer! Pesta chades. ML. Seve! Sun stole styles denier. Limited quantities some at slips! All sizes. Sensational values! c Unequaled value! SEE Hen's underwear Lowest price ever! Shorts, 30-44 Briefs, T- shirts, SML. A-shirts, 36-46. Guaranteed & years! Plastic garden hose 50-foot nose that won't peel or crack. Brass couplings! . , 21x32 baby loop rugs base Ragcser We beck. Su spon towels 7, big 20x40 Cannon All-steel folding style. Every ted quantities. Slightly irregulan one an exceptional value! with luxuri thirsty double terry loopenk, a4 . Sensationa riced loops that rs Federal’s has pared the _— eel teel brid . eee § g heck to er ne ‘tdttne r hig value in bene fo bee Jebel hardwood . i ling decorator colors! rel at ay striped canvas se and back e For porch, a or yard! Still two months of w (i) enjo these out- ° west et Lied New jewelry priced c , LL ITEMS to defy comparison! UANTITIES LIMITED OW A Q Earrings clips, plas, brews SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NICHTS TO FEDERAL Jeol, stores ntnaf THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 nd Goins, Marridell Harden ale f lite zee HH the Millington Grange, were select- ed Cinderella and alternate res- pectively at a recent Grange gath- ering. Approximately 100 subordin- 7350 Highland Rd. - PASTEURIZED 35° =. HOMOGENIZED wow Of° cine Guaranteed DRAYTON JEWELERS Watch Repair 4 4. DEXTROM, Prep. 8 Deore North of the Bonk EXCLUSIVE FURNISHINGS [oo eran te the Geart of Orayten Platine 3526 Gashabaw OR 3-171) A Good Used Car? commun? MOTORS Rochester and SAVE — MR. AND MRS. ROBERT A. DOAN June Devitt, Robert Doan AUBURN HEIGHTS — June Ber- nice Devitt became the bride of Robert Arthur Doan, Saturday, at the United Presbyterian Church in Auburn Heights The bride-elect, daughter of Mr. Branch wore an ice blue satin floor length gown with a finger-tip veil, and carried a white bouquet cen- tered with pink rose buds The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D. Doan of 3083 Bessie St. in Auburn Heights. MY¥s. Janette Rose of Watkins Southfield Club Federation Holds Election Meeting SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The Southfield Federation association met Monday evening at the High School, with about 50 members present. : Howard Palmer was appointed chairman of the committee, com- posed of one representative of each member-organization. Lawrence Fiferlik, the new presi- dent, was aided by other newly elected officers, vice president Eu- gene Swem, secretary Carlos Dan- ville and treasurer Urban Hart. Needed a Drink FLINT (UP) — It was quite a task for burglars to remove a money-less 500-pound safe from the home of Alfonse Van Walleg There were four pletely in vain. help them drown their disappoint- ment. Farewell Party Given NEW HUDSON and Mrs. C. J. Barger of North | Wed in Church Ceremony Lake and Mrs. Betty Johnston of Milford attended the bride. Best man was Preston Clark of Pontiac, Jack Hartman and Ray-| Farm mond Barger, both of Royal Oak, served as ushers. Rev. J. Harvey McCann offici- | ated at the ceremony and a re- ception was held afterwards in the church parlors. Following a tour of Upper Michigan, the newlyweds will re- side in Auburn Heights. For trav- eling Mrs. Doan wore a4 blue specked sult with three-quarter sleeves with white accessories. Mrs. Barger wore a blue lace dress with white accessories and the mother of the groom, a rose lace dress with white accessories Seek Clue to Killing in Blanket Analysis AVON TOWNSHIP — The pink blanket of an unidentified baby | girl, found beaten to death Mon- day in Avon township, has been sent to State Police of the Romeo Post to Lansing for analysis. No further clues in the murder have been uncovered, however. Apparently killed shortly after birth, the child's body was discov- ered by Richard Ponke, 30, of 1081 Hamlin Bd. The little girl, found in 9 corner of a reofiess shack, had been | struck ever the right ear. Dr. Isaac D. Prevette. Deputy hem. But their labor wasn't com- | Oakland County coroner, said the child had been dead approxi- bottles of whiskey in the safe to! mately 4 hours. 44 at Hall Reunion: WATERFORD TOWNSHIP— The Webb Hall family held the Annabelle | annua] Hall reunion Sunday at the Bowers was honored with a fare-| home of Mr. and Mrs. George W. bers of the Extension Club in the home of Mrs, Charles Kidd. Miss Bowers plans to teach in Japan | well paxty.recently.given.by.mem-} Hall of Cass-Elizabeth road. Forty- two members and two guests were present. An election of officers was also held. Wheat Growers to Vote Friday Use of Quota ' Program Will Be Determined; 7 Polling Places Listed Wheat growers of Oakland Coun- ty will vofe for or against mar- keting quotas for the 1955 crop, Friday at seven polling places open to voters, The referendum will determine whether or not the quota progra’ how in effect will continue next year, according to County Agri- cultural Agertt Ed Alchin. Two thirds of those who vote must ap- prove quotas before they can be put into operation. A producer is eligible to vote if he will have more than 15 acres of wheat on his farm for harvest in 19565, ~ The voting places in the county will be open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. The Oxford Co-op Elevator will serve Oxford and Addison town- ships as a polling place, and the Oakland Township Hal] wil] be open for voters in Goodison and Orion townships. Other places are Independence, Brandon, and Grove- land townships in the Grange Hall, Ortonville; and the Holly, Spring- field, and Rose townships at the and Garden Eimpiments Co., Holly. Also on the list are the High- land, Milford, and White Lake townships at the Highland Pro- ducers’ elevator in Highland, and the Commerce, Lyon and Novi townships at the Lyon township hall, New Hudson. All other townships. not listed, will vote at the Oakland County ASC office, Hubbard Building on Perry street, Pontiac. Mayor Foresees Change if Police Quota Isn't Filled HAZEL PARK Mayor Zig- mund J. Niparko warned today of a change in the Hazel Park Civil Service Board unless specified ac- tion is taken to fill the quota of the police department by Aug. 1. Unless policy changes are made, and the department shortage recti- fied, the mayor stated that the council will fire the board. The reorganization of the police department this spring made that section short three men. The board has delayed action pending court decision of status of officers de- | tnoted following reorganization ‘MOMS Elect Delegates to National Convention GALLOWAY LAKE — Moms of America, Unit 21, met to elect dele- gates to their national convention Monday. The convention will be held in October in Detroit. Delegates are Mrs, Lee Shackel- ford, 93 Ardmore road and Mrs. George Scheppelmann of 1265 Mt. | Clemens, Mrs. William Craven ot 2032 Joy Road and Mrs. William Becker of 1842 Commonwealth were elected alternates. Farmers to Answer Census Questions WASHINGTON — Census-tak ers will be beating paths to the doorsteps of Michigan’s farmers this fall. And as usual, they will | DRY CLEANING with a | “Dapper Difference” TRIP AHOY! Remem- ber that cleaned clothes go better. 4 Phone OR 3-7362. FE 4-6171 DRAYTON HOM * “The Friendly Store” HAPPYTOWN CRIB SPECIAL! — Oe FOR fad ONLY! é @ Feathertouch Drop Side @ Adjustable (for he @ Stenderd Size 28x52” You Will Enjoy Shopping At E FURNISHINGS OR 3-2300 jhave a questionnaire as long as your arm There will be about 100 ques- tions concerning the farm, and the questioners will be calling on farm- ers in all states, not just Michi- gan. It will be the 16th time since 1340 that the Census Bureau has taken a census of agriculture. The bureau, however, has kept separate farm statistics only since 1850. At that time, the enumerators reported the nation had 1,449,000 farms, containing 293,600,000 acres of land. Each farm, in 1850, was responsible for feeding eight of the nation’s 23,200,000 people, This year, the Census Bureau will probably find that every farm is responsible for feeding more peo- ple than ever before. But in other respects, the numbers may be smaller than they were in 1950, when ‘the last census of agricul- ture was taken, That is because the number of farms reached a peak in 1935— when the depression trad driven the city jobless bark to the farm —and hag been declining in the many years of industrial expan- sion since then. But the job this year will be many times as big as it was in 1850. In 1950, the Census Bureau counted 5,382,000 farms, more than three times as many as a century before. Acreage had increased in a cen- |tury by about four times, to 1,158.- 600,000 acres. And each farm in 1950 fed 342 as many people as a century before — 28 of the na- tion’s 151,100,000 population in 1950. In 1935, the nation had 6,812,350 farms, about a third more than in 1950, Farms in 1935 enclosed 1,054.- 000,003 acres and each farm was responsible for feeding 18 of the nation’s 127,300,000 persons. The Census Bureau is not ex- pecting to find any big changes in U, S. farming since 1950. This year, the farm census will seek as usual to determine the fasic facts of U. S. agriculture — number of farms, acreage, farm population, crops~grown, size of farm, type and length of tenure, ownership, livestock, irrigation, conservation practices, mortgage debt and farm value, and spending on farms for such things as labor, machine hire, food, fertilizers, gasoline and oil. But the answers fo some ques- tions may indicate that in the past few years tife on the farm has become tess tonely and in- corporates more of the frills of city life that have long lured farm people off the land, These will be questions dealing with television sets, food freezers. piped running water and other such refinements that have bulked larg- er on the farm in the past few years. @ McGregor @ W. L. Dixie Highway For the Latest in Sportswear @ Interwoven Hose _ Nationally Famous Shoes @ Crosby Square @ Story Book GREEN’S @ VanHeusen Douglas MEN’S WEAR Dreyton Plains > Soe bas ee elie. oe CATHERYN M, SULLIVAN Mrs. Bernice Sullivan of 2329 Pine Lake Ave., Keego Harbor, has announced the engagement of her daughter, Catheryn to Olen W. Hunter, son of Mrs. Pauline Hunter, also of Keego Harbor. A September wedding is planned. Name President of School Board Other Officers Elected at a Special Meeting in Romeo ROMEO—George McKeough was elected president of the Romeo Board of Education at a special meeting held yesterday evening. He had served as treasurer during the past year. The election of officers followed the swearing in of Dr. Ralph G. Renwick as member of the board for a 3-year term. Walter Sewell, victorious with Renwick in the July 12 election, had been sworn in during a previous meeting. doseph C. Jelsch was re-elect! | ed secretary of the boar¢ and | Dr. Renwick, treasurer. | ' The school board agreed to change the regular meeting date to the second Thursday in every | month. The Romeo Saving Bank | was designated as the official de- pository of school funds for the coming year. Bids on a new 60-passenger bus were opened and the contract was awarded to Community Motor Sales, Rochester. A motion was made to provide bus transportation for parochial students for the next school year. | Superintendent T. C. Filppula was authorized to advertise for | bids on new furniture for the new | elementary school additions and for certain rooms in the North | grade school and the W ashington | School. He was then granted the author- ity to make the purchase after consultation with board president and secretary. A teacher of Eng- Jish and. French_and__a_ biology, teacher, all for secondary schools, were tendered contracts, to begin teaching this fall. Lunch Wagon Feeds Cows, Saves Grass GRAND RAPIDS ® — The lunch wagon comes around to the cows on the Russell Hansen farm near Scottville in Mason County. No tramping around-in the pasture for these super-contented milkers. Hansen and his father, Charles, don’t believe it pays to let their dairy cows forage for food. For one thing, the Hansens say, cows trample and spoil pasture. The Hansen bovine chuck wagon ts a homemade rack affair, with folding sides, which they haul ow te the pasture, fill with chopped green feed and haul back to the barnyard. The cattle feed right from the rack, The Hansens figure they get from one-third to one-half more eaten green feed per acre from their pasture this way, and a great. deal more milk per acre of grass. Exkperiments at agricultural sta- tions with barnyard pasturing seem to bear out the Hansens' conten- tion that it is a profitable ven- ture. ° | Roseville Mants Killed — When Car Strikes Pole LAPEER—William John Demp- sey Sr., 33, of 23067 Schram St., Roseville, was killed last night when his car struck a telephone pole near M-53 five miles south of Imlay City. Lapeer County Sheriff's officials said he apparently lost control of his car. He was alone at the time. County Calendar WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Mr. and Mre J. L. Bustin will = honored at a ht wove the Covert ureh. The yin fa slated Zemo Great For lichy Skin Rash Zeme, & doctor's formula, promptly relieves itching of surface skin rashes, eczema, prickly heat, athlete's feot. Zemo stops scratching and 86 aids faster healing and cleariug. Buy Extra Strength Zemo for stubborn cases. {Deaths in Nearby Communities Mre. Walter Hogle, DRYDEN — Funeral service for Mrs. Walter Hogie, 70, of South Mill St., will be Thursday at 2 p.m. from her residence, Burial will be in Dryden Cemetery. Mrs. Hogle died Monday evening at her home. Her husband is the only survivor. Dorothy H, Crawford ARMADA — Funeral service for Dorothy Hulett Crawford, 40, of 3601 Gladwin Ave., Detroit, was held today under the auspices of an OES organization and Arma- da Chapter 261, OES, Burial was in Willow Grove Cemetery. Miss Crawiord died suddenly Sunday. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Nellie M. Hulett, and a sister. Muriel, both of Detroit, and a brother, Samuel of Dearborn. Linda Tiich ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Pray- er service for Linda Tilch, 6 year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tilch of 29123 Tawas, will be 10:30 a. m. Thursday from the Hopcroft Funeral Home, Hazel Park. A re- quiem Mass will be sung at 11! a.m. Thursday from St. Dennis Church. Linda died of injuries re- ceived when she fell from her tricycle Monday evening. Surviving besides the parents are Full House TIVERTON, R. I. (UP) — Mrs Charlies DeMello, 40, has given birth to her 23rd child — a five- pound, 1l-ounce girl. Mrs. DeMello and her 51-year-old farmer-hus- band now have 17 living children —11 girls, six boys. They live in a $ix-room house. Stamp meters can stamp up to! 300 letters per minute. two sisters and a brother, Mar- John Tilch of Gaylord, and Mrs. William Schneider of Milwaukee, Wis., also survivie. $400 Worth of Golf Supplies Taken in Theft SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The Northview Driving Range, on the Northwestern highway was broken into early Tuesday. The thieves es- caped with about $400. worth of golfing supplies. It is believed entry was made through .a window, by persons fa- miliar with the interior of the building. Orion Rotarians View Golf-Teaching Movies LAKE ORION — Rotary Club members of Lake Orion were spec- tators this week in part of a na- tiona) program designed to shorten the learning period for playing golf. Attending the program of movies were Ron Allen, Charles Starrs, Dr. H. J. Brown, Stewart Austin, Clem Kreiger and Ham Creig. Former Keego Harbor Resident Wed in Texas KEEGO HARBOR—In a candle- light ceremony in Houston, Tex., Jackelee Anthonise became the bride of Dr. James M. Parks Jr., | Saturday. The bride and her parents Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Anthonise are former residents of Keego Harbor. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Parks of Topeka, Kan. New Type of Vandalism SIOUX FALLS, S. D. (UP)—Po- lice searched here for a new type of auto vandal. Robert C. Schmidt _| said someobody soaked the uphol- stery of his car with gas. When Schmidt lighted. a cigarette the fumes ignited for a second and nearly caused a flash fire. EE Your Watch tases $450 Expansion Watch Bands Ladies’ - Men's Special 3] 8 Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. PILES SHRUNK without surgery! IN CASE AFTER CASE PAIN STOPPED oyrnk Ol ee REMEDY THAT'S : ABSOLUTELY | ¢ties Of simple STAINLESS | Piles. get new Stainless Pazo. Acts to relieve pain, itching in- stantly. Soothes inflamed tissues, helps y eveat cracking, reduce poop Pips surgery! For fast relief get new Stainless Pazo. Look for word “Stainless” on box. Sup- positories or Ointment, at iagheall gists. Regular Pazo® av ailable too SAVE DURING THE FLOOR SHOP'S 5 Guaranteed All First All Fresh Stock! 9x9xe” Black C and fe EA Brown — You Free mediate Service!. 99 S. SAGINAW AT AUBURN AVE. G KENTILE Open a Night ‘til 9 P. M. For Those Who Prefer Profes- sional Installations We Offer Estimates and Im- Quality— We loan ‘The Floor Shop ST. Nh lll tettttetettete tbetebebetetete ttt tt | | | the tools! VINYL 42” Counter Top DEALER you * ” * * . = * . * Free Parking = Rear of Store & ad Police Without Lead on Indiana Murder. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. ®—Police were left without a good lead to- day after they ruled out a taxi- cab driver's identification in their search for the killer of 18-year- old Dorothy Poore. The driver, Wesley B. Rivin, had picked a photograph from hun- dreds at the police identification bu- reau and said it was the “‘woman- crazy’’ man he drove to the Clay- pool Hotel Thursday. * ° s Irvin's fare gave his name as O'Shea. The last occupant of the room in which the Clinton High School graduate’s body was found Sunday registered as Jack O'Shea. Police picked up the man, whose picture Irvin and two hotel em- ployes identified, but they released him after questioning when they learned he had been out of town. Montana Candidates for Senate Picked HELENA, Mont. ® — Veteran .Sen. James E. Murray and Rep. Wesley A. D’Ewart, a 10-year member of the House, will battle for a U.S. Senate seat in Mon- tana’s general election next No- vember. Murray, a 78-year-old Democrat and the Senate's sixth - ranking member, and D’Ewart, senior Re- publican on the House Interior and Insular, Affairs Committee, held lopsided leads for their respective party nominations in primary elec- tion returns early today. D’Ewart paced Robert Yellow- tail, Crow Indian leader making his third bid for a House seat, 30,752 to 6,264 in returns from 668 precincts. &, ° THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, By Herman Wouk Synopsis: Willie Keith is a naval officer on board @ dirty, old, con- verted minesweeper, the He is a college man, and he left & girl behind him in New York, Wynn. Ghe has different standards than his, hence he is Caine and he seems to be a queer duck. CHAPTER 19 In the wardroom one evening the officers were bolting dinner greedily, impatient for dessert. The steward's mates served the ice cream at last with smiling pomp. Each dish was heaped over with rosy strawberries. The first round was gobbled up, and there were cries for more. Queeg suddenly came into the wardroom, in his bathrobe. The talk and Ipughter stopped, and in silence the officers stodd one by one. ‘Don’t get up,” the cap- tain said amiably. “Who am I te thank for the strawberries? Whittaker just brought me a dish.’ Maryk said, ‘‘We got them from Ulithi, ‘sir.’’ . “Well done, very well dorl®. How much have we got?” “A gallon, sir.’’ “A whole gallon? Fine. I'd like to see some more of this enter- prise around here.” After an evening of rare good pier than he had been for a long time. Shake, shake, shake . . . ‘‘What now?’ he murmured, opening his eyes in the darkness. Jorgensen stood over him. “I've got no watch—” “Meeting of all the officers in -the wardroom, right away,” Caine. — fellowship Willie went to bed hap- | The Caine Mutiny | Jorgensen said. Willi€é peered at his watch, “J——s Ch—-t, it’s three o'clock in the morning. What's the meet- ing about?” “Strawberries,” said Jorgensen. In the wardroom the officers sat around the table in various Stages of undress, hair mussed, faces creased with Queeg was at the head of the table, slouched in his purple robe, glowering Straight ahead at noth- ing “All present now, sir,’’ said Jor- gensen, in the quiet unctuous tone of an undertaker. Queeg made ‘no response. Roll, roll, went the steel balls The door opened, and Whit- taker, the chief- officer's steward, came in, carrying a tin can. When he set it on the table Willie saw that it brimmed with sand. “You're sure that's a gallon can, now,” spoke Queeg “Yes, ‘suh. Lard can, suh. Got it offen Ochiltree, suh, in de gal- ley——”’ “Very well. Pencil and paper, please,” said the captain to no body. Jorgensen sprang up and offered Queeg his pen and pocket notebook. ‘‘Mr. Maryk, how many helpings of ice cream did you have this evening?"’ Queeg polled all the officers, noting down their answers. ‘‘Now, Whittaker,. did your men have any strawberries”’’ “Yes, suh. One helpin’ each. Mr Jorgensen, he said okay, suh.” “Very well, Whittaker. That's three more. And I had four."’ The More Clothes Capacity Than Many Other Copyright captain’ murmured to himself, adding the total. “New—dole into that soup tureen an amount of sand equal to the amount of strawberries you put om one dish of ice cream."’ When Whittaker had finished the captain. said, ‘‘Gentlemen, ten sleepiness. + minutes before I called this meet- ing, I-sent down for some ice cream and strawberries. Whit- taker brought me the ice cream and said ‘They ain't no mo’ straw- berries.’ “Has any of you gentletnen an explanation of the missing quart of strawberries?" The officers glanced covertly at each other: none spoke. “‘Kay."’ The captain rose. “You are all appointed a board of investigation as of now, with Maryk as chairman, to find out what happened to-the straw- | berries."’ “You mean in sir?’’ said Maryk. “I sald now, Mr. Maryk. Now, according to my watch, is not the. morning, but forty-seven minutes past three. If you get no results by eight . o'clock this morning I shall solve the mys- tery myself. When the captain was gone Maryk began a weary cross-ex- amination of Whittaker and the other steward’s mates. The story, painfully extracted from them, was that the container, when lock- ed away for the night at eleven- thirty had contained some straw- berries—they didn't know how many, Whittaker had been called by the morning, | the OOD at three in the morning }to bring: the captain another sun- dae, and had found the container jempty. The officers badgered the Negroes until dawn. without up- setting this account. Maryk | wearily dismissed the stewards at | last. | “i's a dead end,’’ said the exec. “Maybe they ate the stuff up. We'll never know.” * ¢ @ The wardroom telephone buzzer rang promptly at eight o'clock; it was Queeg, summoning Keefer and Maryk to his room. Queeg was at his desk, dressed in fresh clothes, his puffy face shayed and powdered. Maryk handed the captain the {nvestiga- tion report headed: Strawberries, disappearance of — Report of board of investiga. tion. Queeg, rolling the balis, read the two typewritten sheets carefully. He shoved them away with the back of his hand. “Un- satisfactory.” “Sorry, Captain. The boys may be lying, but it's a dead end. The story hangs together—"’ “Did. it occur to you that some- [One on the ship might have a | duplicate key to the icebox?” “No, sir.’ “Well, why didn't it?’ Maryk stammered. ‘‘Why — well, the thing is, sir, I bought that lock myself, There were only two keys. I have one, Whittaker has the other —”’ “How about the possibility that some one stole Whittaker’s key, when he was asicep, and made himself a duplicate — did you look into that?“ “No, sir —" “Well, why didn't you?” " “Sir, I guess there are an in-§ | finite number of remote possibili- j ties, but there wasn't time to go into all of them last night —" __ | “All we have to do now,”’ Queeg 'went on enthusiastically, “is find 1954 ee — out which bright boys on the Caine has made himself a duplicate key to the. wardroom icebox. Always good to keep ‘em guessing.”” He grinned. “Pretty tough, you think hey? Well, here's what we're going to one. We're going to collect every single key aboard ship, tagged with the name of the owner, “Step two. We're going to make an intensive search of the ship and a personal search of every- body to be sure we've got all the keys. “Step three. We test all the keys on the wardroom padiock. The one that opens it, well, the tag on it gives you the name the guilty party.” Keefer and Maryk were dum- founded. The captain glanced at their faces and said, ‘‘Well, any questions? Or do you agree that that’s the way to go about it?” “Sir, do you realize there may. be a couple of thousand keys on the ship?” said Maryk. “What if there are five thousand? Sort ‘em out, it'll take maybe an hour, and you'll only have a few hundred that could possibly fit the padiock, You can check one a second, sixty a minute, that's one thousand eight hundred keys in half an hour. Anything bothering you, Keefer?"’ Keefer glanced sidewise at Queeg, then threw a wink at the exec and shook his head. ‘I don't know how it can hurt to try it, Steve.” “Captain, you said a personal search of all hands,"’ Maryk said. ‘That means stripping the mea —’’ *‘We're in a warm climate. no- body'll catch cold," said Queeg with a giggle. “I shall personally direct the search tomorrow.” The two officers went out, and _jin silence descended the lad- ia to the wardroom. That night Maryk wrote a long do. It’s three simple steps. Step | i bi necessary, either by placing him under arrest or on the sick list; but such action shall never be taken higher authority, except when ref- erence to such higher authority is undoubtedly impracticable because of the delay involved or for other clearly obvious reason ,, .” To be continued. Fast, Reliable Service A small adjustment may put your pen in perfect condition. Our pen man is fatrory trained on ai) makes of pen. 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Famous 13- £9q Ape! t Ate ta AN OR 7 A Treat that’s hard to beat. aN Light, flutty, delicious serv- ee «ed with ice cream or sliced , Freestone Pesta | cack Regular price ....... 7 Freestone Peaches: roy A! Party Loaf ###... = 35: Pork & Beans. Su — 25° Salad Dressing «ie... « 39! Deviled Ham ww. 2. 2% 23° Peanut Butter sci, 3 x» 1.00 Vienna Sausage wt. . . «=~ 19° Corned Beef Hash i 4 «=.= 1.00 Potted Meat eit ales a 2s ~2? —_ Semen Ga 3 33 CPE. Lk. Lae 9 gest ‘a joo OES a as eee Monday = thru a Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. YG W Sitrue e Vs o Price Sale Sale | | Facial Tissue | Twe 400-et. bexes of Sitrue LE facial tissue banded together. A real value. Kroger Tub es at ' hove ™ Se ae Butter S sss Real Country 1 39 | Butter Flaver! Packed Churn- Fresh! : 4 Waldorf Tissue... 40 35) -\ Softweve Tissue jn. 2 «27° EF Scotties Hanes ona 200-01. Qe ar ScotTowels . . wv” 2 wt rots 39! 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JULY 21, 1954 Fresh Dressed Genuine Rock + Stewing | | Year's Lowest Price! These ae aoe fw om en. eee Lb. | Ground Beef === mA 14S | Vein-X Shrimp====~5:3.99 Vf’ Veal Roast” | SA Shoulder Cut / , I ¢ 7 I wo Veal Breast oe vant sys * 14° Leg 0’ Veal... tar, | 8 53° Veal Chops . iriver. 559° Veal Hearts . . warwyzr . 1. 29° Veal Steak... civ... +99' Sliced Bacon. . “za. . 14 79° Boneless Veal irc. . . «59° Large Bologna. . ux". . .» 43! i} Fer better. “tasting of demand I] "*e flavor and tenderness of Kroger’s Tenderay Beef! U.S. GRADED "COMMERCIAL" STANDARD CUT Good nourishing beef at a money-saving Kroger price IDENTIFIED WITH THE YELLOW AND BLACK LABEl Here is good nourishing beef at Kroger low prices. It is U.S. “Commercial” —eentaine all the fod values of higher grade beef, has less marbling of fat. identify “Commercial” grade beef with the Yellow and Black label. U.S. Graded “Commercial” BLADE CUT Standard Cut “Commercial” Lean and Meaty Ground Fresh Daily Sirloin Steak... ...+63° Stewing Beef......+59° Hamburger. .+~. .3+ 1.09 SAGINAW U.S. GOVT. GRADED “CHOICE” KROGER-CUT. Tenderay BEEF | Tender lO Times out of (0 | IDENTIFIED WITH THE BLUE AND WHITE LABEL Here Is the world’s tenderest fresh beef! Because the Kroger Tenderay methed makes the finest U.S. Choice Grade Beef tender without ageing — without less ef flaver and _ Julees. Ne other beef se fresh can be se tender, It is Kroger-Cut to give you more meat— . less bone, less waste. » Kroger-Gut Tendera; Beef sold In Kroger Stores. pie : : ~ j 3 ‘ nN | eos ijt ‘ 2 ect : = - — a4 f “n : a . . | | ' 4 - 7 ° se ] | g pe Pe: ‘ —s Ma | iF i 3 ™ a 1 7 = P NG be ‘ * ot int dg Ss . ae e', , | S ee eS. | ‘ . 7 RS 4 2 _ * J | } j ’ ; ti 7" ' nail ~ , i i . Fr | 8 . 5 | a f tlie as : eigh | 5 | ai tus 3 ae } a itr + 1 ' | ; ; us. Gov't Graded “holes” K + t T de Hl : iz roger-Gut Tenderay Kroger-Cut i) | “ TENDERAY BEEF || | E is identified |! | . " i ‘ - - i oe . n i s ae * | | ML 7 with the Blue and SSS | White label! : == ==] TENDERAY English Gut or © ; | Round Bone tu .. 5g + Vd ] Frese ae po THE PONTIAC PRESS; WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 ane ‘al ¥ ! . * only 32 of age!) the Ad ti itical problem is |f i Facts Not The Theories prebtens at puoalation :tassinnn r ‘hs tases tosurd the hagucat _ ,! more ; states. There are good arguments | SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY OPEN FRIDAY EVENING UNTIL 9 P.M. E ~ Basic Freedom. of Food| Mm ereemert tutu: on |r: nto ow tae cially has endorsed birth control, | Andharag was formed last year to | Ee oly \ , : ° , - j - i and the first five-year plan calis |} ¢mbrace areas in which the popu ~ a Most Important to. Indians Yor the teaching of planned-parent- lation spoke the same language. % ™ i ne Je hood information. But for reasons | Moves are under way for a Kan- — * a hy ROBERT W. BROWN good crops in other grains. India | o¢ religion, philosophical outlook, | 4da-speaking state, and one for ; : { = News Service) cows than any other ignorance and poverty, the pro- the same language, Telegu and Gu- ‘ : \ air-conditioned waiting room of t ; ere e ee - Train Takes With the opening of the new Pon- tiac Motor tour train more’ than 5,000 people from all over the Recreation Program: Setting Good Record Some 721,600 attendances have been recorded at 19 playgrounds during the first four weeks of the 194 summer recreation program sponsored. by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department. Leonard T. Buzz, activities sup- ervisor, said 500 playgrounders at- recent Elks carnival ‘while 200 others journeyed to the an Royal Oak zoo. ee A playground newspaper, “Smoke Signal," is being publish- ed for the second year, said Buzz. Each playground has its own staff contributing to the paper, with TOUR AT EASE—The tour train carries many visitors through the huge assembly plants at the Pontiac Motors Co, Crew members Vincent Repshifska and Ted Goemaere ‘operate the battery driven Tours are scheduled for 9:30 and 1:30 daily. FDR Jr. Proud of Efforts -lfor Slum Clearance Project NEW YORK (#)—Rep. Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. says he is proud of his efforts to get stim clearance projects for New York City _| and has made no personal profit from them. ‘The Democratic-Liberal Party congressman issued q statement on the matter yesterday after the New York World-Telegram and ae Sun linked him with the projects, which the paper said are under congressional investigation. The paper Ee TRE NR INR Hib a oe + “GE EE ae Se ee ee a oe te Seay t AWAIT TOUR—Visitors from all over the world meet in the new the Pontiac Motor Co., before embarking on @ tour through the vast stamping and assembly plants. 3 1 * _ ad 5,000 Guests| on Tour of Pontiac Motor j tioned waiting rooni built for their convenience. The battery-driven train p.m. daily throughout the summer * => . dy 7 lg a ee ed Walter Deacon registers three guests from India. So tar thig year the tour has drawn over 5,000 people from this country and abroad. | train while Walter Deacon, in the rear of the train, speaks to the passengers through public address speakers located in each . said no evidence of fraud was PARIS (UP)—Why didn’t France Why couldn’t a world power, backed by more than $2,500,000,000 in American aid, beat a rebel Com- munist army that started with numerical inferiority and poor arms? his hair cropped short. 10 years the investi- up scores of blind nd Too little and too late ‘sums it up, French military experts said into the struggle. Millions pre- ferred to sit on the fence until it became clear which side would win, Frem the, military viewpoint, ac- saw too late that classical ,Euro- pean warfare tactics must be adapted to large-scale fluid guer- rilla fighting, without fixed front lines. Until recent tightening of French lines, the 260,000-man Fregch expeditionary corps was spread over a territory as big as Texas—i'4 times larger than France. Everything the French wanted to keep had to be guarded day and night. Areas they controlled by day belonged to the Communists after dark. Peasants who toiled big operation, word of it generally’ leaked to the enemy. An example was “Operation Atlante’ which before: The Reds simply melted away into the jungles, Hy | { HELE ; Hi Hy i HF a ; Hey | x E E at i “| Fl | gf z i i i i i i fi i sa pouring in increasing now running at an estimated 6,000 tons a month. The Vietminh | crals E soldier who fought five years ago casyalities’ with a musket could now com- | Never has mand columns of Molotov trucks, | been able 10-barrelied “Statin Organ” [china has rocket-launchers, big guns and | world’s 120-mm mortars, or radar-con- trolled anti-aircraft artillery. */ listened: The Chinese sent in advisers. When They trained rebel in camps} te a across the Chinese , | “at At the cease-fire, the rebels were| ‘t's de the massed close around Hanoi ready} And when for the coup de grace in the north. | State John china was not Politically, according to Paris in large measure due to govern- Pence~ade” SI ee ee ed ee ne eae | thay ieee France still was battered weak from World War seemed more important to established at bome than ‘war halfway around the world. The war was unpopular. ticians tried to sweep it under the b iie gE z j ne ~ 4 . : fy cn ‘ ° f . . om ‘ ‘ . = _____ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 —. | t-4 y oe’ ‘ n , : } i . ‘ pe Me |Gossip Trap Snares the Menfolkj\w. oni ux Will-O-Wa a : ar u : By CYNTMIA LOWRY business, (b) golf scores and (c) superior fashion that gossip isn’t | of Birmingham Filled With Associated Press Writer stag jokes unfit for shellike ears. | @ nice thing to indulge in, announce the |. h There’s a lovely little myth,| Whenever their believing spouses aie deaf agrm ps rol engagement of aug ter + maintained all better ! i Shek Aunties away eet ee ee gossip?” ts, 1 understand, a their daughter, “You Can't ‘Take It mand foesip, liké sewing, is women's) from circumstantial evidence —| Side Hema With You Depicts . ‘ , cations. t eo : : | Busy, career-minded, notime-| ™ “aditional male response had} 1 1.4 jong the suspicion “Catlin HI Zany Family -for-nonsense-men have for-years| bee? to listen keenly but with a! of many on the distalf side tha eg By DONNA ANDERSON been able to preserve the illusion | bored expression and at its con-| the apparently disdaintul male| ; 20% of ame oeeppianew | that when they get together for] clusion—never in midstream, mind | is at ‘least as big a gossip as any | the George B. ~ ae — conferences, the talk is of (a)! you-to remark in a lordly and| of the opposite sex. ; Catlins of at the West Long Lake road straw- : — 2 It has long been the innermost} Franklin hat theater for the next two weeks : — conviction of most working women She i " The Will-O-Way aggregation has R ’.¢@ that those jolly convocations ne senrer packed snakes, xylophones, corn- rt n around the water cooler aren't en-| @t Michigan. flakes and “‘innotent” quotations : : tirely devoted to bowling scores| State Collegé | trom Trotsky into the apple barn : apd last night's television jokes.| here she is a i ; | HAIR CUTTING Well, girls and boys, I don't) ~~ jo oe — eves : . ¢ = pate —— are gtd Pings of ™ | mew thought toward ulcer preven- z a our : ; ion. i 4 and STYLING by but with a little ex plotting “He eerie over the fourth play of the | which would have done credi s 7 TONY and CARL Sherlock Holmes, Joe Friday,| member of secanier ieeie”| Was’ esas | Mike Barnett and Martin Kane in| Chi Psi at tho welbtmewn Micon Hart | nN / Pa pee A concert, we have managed to _— | yeur tacts) : . Cornell George 5. Kaufma, play, “You | % / contours trap the season's limit of office Uni . Can’t Take It With You,” which | Nite. 2 gossips, and to nobody's sur- niversity i will run through Aug. 1 NEW HAIR DRYING COMFORT wie, the bag was entirely male.| here he is a ee | “Toe tat of cat member to 0 oes Like the sun and the breeze of : The bait qvailable to us was a penEOr ws long one, Burton Wright, who held | 4 of Seger’ Dey! er pth da perhaps ees aes JOANNA TAIT ° up his side of “The Four ‘Poster | > . BEAUTAIRE . a go ae owner a ~~ ; 80 ee few yeegele-udghnan | - ver ‘ ‘ : secret con ed it to ° as income-tax ‘ : Air-Conditioned Hair Dryer three persons, all of whom were Miracle Drugs Increase pa, expounding a philosophy on * - under instructions of secrecy. | . . . a ‘ how to be happy, though crazy he} S Mx t was one: the other wo were! Life Span Of AMeEricans {104 «tne veorie when to have ar . 4 presumably non-gossipy gentle- babies. oo 04 men. Then the owner of the secret| In a period of less than 20 years, contributed greatly to the reduc-| Robert Bryson is there too, blow [ , and I staked out the office, waiting a smalj group of ‘‘miracle’’ drugs| tion that has taken place in deaths| ing up firecrackers and Ce Riker Bidg. FE 3-7186 for the werd to leek out. has helped add months and even/ trom infectious disease. with erector sets, aided by a new- Reer of Lobby * = . Exactly 24 hours after the| years to the life expectancy of Millions of people of all ages comer, Dave Lewis. ~ . ° marked message had been stra-] Americans, according ‘to the In-| 1. sive today who ts an cartier Other favorites adding to the we S| — mune | tegically confided, it was being | titute of Life Insurance medical era would have sec- |C™fusion are Elizabeth Phelan. Le “4 * £ $ m whispered enthusiastically around| Although the first antibiotic drug,| cumbed te pneumonia, the dis- first lady of the area's stage, and AB. AA cf the water cooler and tn the coat | penicillin, was introduced only | eases of childhood or some other | Bettie Tot! whe spenie mest of vf me {s: closets: Official confirmation of | dozen years ago and the first sulfa| infections disease which these pirouettes eet & suspected situation had been re- drug less than 18 years ago, these new drugs can now control. Alay Ngee hrs get a : ‘ oiiacnel ; two kinds of miracle drugs have —_ ce and eke 2 ola Peiay 2 ‘ | tered, are useful with infectious is Bt Stinks on : : oe | diseases which affect people of all Prcseng am pop geese ee As ages but helpless against the non-| », 4, nappy are Larry Jehnten, ib ae infectious diseases which are more Freak Dowes, Red Schaffer, Ken $ ao ee likely to afflict older people. neth Kresel, Helen Raytis, Treeea oy, Deaths from the 1 rious of these, heart disease and Frances ae _ ncer, have thus continued almost ; unchecked during a period when| oor tunteted cml George © Scott, in his usual - many children and younger people formance, and Gerry Sullivan ap- | have been nearly conquered. proach dripping minks. diamonds : t The result has been that years | ang Wall street *) have been added to the life expec-| If an ice man comes to your et ad | | tancy of children and young people | house and stays, and if you start ToS . | but a smaller improvement in the | writing plays because a typewriter oie Thursday -- Friday --.Saturday jee rsect te me mer cae oo ee 8 es | Death rates from infectious dis-| to being like the Sycamores. wi) Pre sease have been declining for at) anyway, they are happy — z | AMPS | least 50 years and undoubtedly maybe it's because “grandpa” Mc isd fel ete ae ing with things . - discovered. The decline would not ODDS and ENDS covered: Te Gein Tod | sing te gong fiw ght Drastic Reductions you, Sir.” Will-O-Way has another treat in | $A 95 s(Qss $1“ 88 the old favorite, 'Gooduye, "My Ss — ~_ Fancy,” with Minnie Jo Curtis in Rd: - a the lead. This offering will play ‘ through Aug. 15 excluding Mon- “a ~* days. = * . ViOBIN P | CTU RES Mee k® | Luncheon Fetes | While They Last Mrs. Downer ~ . Mrs. J. R. Howell was hostess = : in her Allison street home Tues- ~ Regular $595 Pictures 2 for $300 day afternoon for a luncheon in : O8 with exercise. rs. ner, Regular $995 Pictures Now $595 |< Sse canoes |r i iat Pe ‘ah Large $159 Pictures Now $788 | === ggg len ge wie lg ooee 7 eye | Please Include 360 Parest Pestege | Thorp, Mrs. Edward Sutton, Mrs ” ond 3% Mich. Seles Tox James Glover, Mrs. Lester Span- ith fast cme ‘ Final Clearance on Outdoor | NATURAL berg, Bis. Howard Folrioee, Sire bet cy Beate aud ‘ Picnic and Barbecue Equipment eet vee ee oy Mee HEALTH FOODS [id= zs", u x ek hawk; = Perma Hues .............00-- $2.95 58 Wayne FE 4-4601 were rs. Richard Koontz and 1 he? Ele Chef Grills ......... Pov eee $4.95 a a * : Granite Barbecue Ware Plates | en ave ee || |p end Cups Set 939511 Neumode | }f =i ap ogi Fiber Ice Buckets ...........-. $3.95 rc Sepa rept ee” Skotch Grills .......6..-. 05. . $3.95 HOSIERY yo SS SS _4-Piece Barbecue Set .... ...-. $3.95 ae Barbecue Tongs, Hamburger | oe ke Grill, Forks, Turners, Spoons. .. $1.29 4 , Plastex—Picnic Set Jumbo. .4.. .$5.95 _ |I] Barb-O-Que Set Plates ......... $3.95 | |i] Basket Broiler, Reg. Price $2.95, j , Now ....0.c cee eee ee eee $1.95 "Ill Odd Baskets, Up to $12.95. . Now $3.95 Country Tweeds Petite Size Odds and Ends of Chi na ‘ prior bare CASHMERE WRAP || 2 Off ; ie ae J. 53-Piece Set in Beautiful | | ms § # 7 from our collection Dogwood sao009g8u0000C Anoc $19.95 Vv “oD col § A As, of precious fiber coats {|| 16-Piece Starter Set in Roseanna, iy ais cigs || : . Reg. $6.95 ........Now Only $3.95 | ee wooee of —, ating eoedlonpel 16-Piece Starter Set Country Lane as cashmere . +» luxury- y ; : | . Ejininger, of the fine underhair of the Him- Modern, Reg. $12.95, Now Only:$ : > | alayan cashmere goat. Beige, nude or char- 42-Piece Starter Set Country Lane Pee, are ee be coal blue, durably mothproofed with Mitin. and Country Modern .......$19.95 ah ges A ee ee are 7 238. $135 53-Piece Set Forsythia, a, ‘ng . .- Reg. $24.95. .,.. .Now Only $14.95 OPEN sy — OPEN & — a " _ Miisses’ sizes 8 to 18, special order FRIDAYS ww {- FRIDAYS |; , at no extra charge ~ UNG - ~~ 7-7 UNTIC > a ; | “ : ae 9PM. 9 P.M. Specially priced for this sale! Cool and comfort- ‘a Be Ts § Miah Ava a: USE YOUR CHARGA-PLATE AT JACOBSON'S| e 24 W. Huron St. able in complexion tones most becoming to an ] oo ‘ - ; ry . 7 : ; f . 5 ‘ Bits | | | 2 es ie Nicely -2'[3| . \ fy ee EE i ae a it 7 PSS ariel. i | 7]. 7 sik. e ay sl UK HO Ht } By ANITA COLBY Before you begin this first day of my 4-week beauty course, just let me say that I do not expect you to spend 24 hours @ day on your beauty course. know that like millions of American ou = have to get — your ss0n le the baby is asleep, do your streteh! exercises while the coffee’s percolating, shampoo your hair do your s or exercise: aol tg reises the last thing at Make yourself a daily schedule aha if you will scrupulously follow it through the four weets of this course, get rid of all your bad habits and replace them with good ones for these 28 da ys wit ook like—act like—feel (Mord Clean-Up Week Ready? Let's go—begin with your face. Clean, lubricate and stimu- late your skin, every day, every single day, two or three times. Make your beauty routine con- stant, regular. We are going to “peel down” and discover your true and lovely skin—skin like a baby’s, It’s there. It just wants out. If you can get your skin thor- oughly, pore-deep clean—and feed .it from inside with thoroughly beauty-clean foods—it will renew itself all the time. Equipment Simple 1. Clean hands. Fanatically clean. Never touch your face ex- cept with hospital-clean hands. 2. A pure, bland soap. Not neces- | sarily expensive—no special per- | fumes or chemicals or added at- | tractions. Just pure. 3. Soft water. Especially for dry skins, because hard water is dry- ing. To soften,- boil and let settle. Or use a sprinkling of household borax or tincture of benzoin in a bowl of water. Girls who live in the rainwater- elstern country are lucky. They don’t have to save it in a’ barrel like Scariett O'Hara. Don’t use bath salts for the face. | They’re softening, yes—but not meant for daily facial use. 4. A set of clean, soft, fluffy washcloths, and towels, Your own Rinse eloths in hof, hot water be- fore using. No complexion brushes. Some‘ dermatologists advise only the fingertip cushions to massage soap into face. So, whether finger- tips or cloth, go softly. Always dry face well. Know Skin Type Your skin will lie somewhere be- tween the extremes of very oily and very dry. You may have such a well-bal- anced output of oil that you can really be classified as normal, but most “normal” skins are actually a combination—oily here, dry there. Learn your skin type. its needs and how to treat it. Normal—You have no special problem, so spend your first week in deep cleaning. Wash your face | morning and night with mild bland times, last with and chin. and gently soap-massage soap and luke- cool water, or un- to clean and open these pores New warm water. Massage lather into skin in cir- cular, upward, a til you can feel every last trace of soap gone. If you are a combination—oily | around nose and chin, dry on | proceed as above Very_ oily—You can test for oil by laying clean tissue on your nose. If it shows a greasy. opaque : * jy ne eee Fe | / ANITA COLBY smudge, oily somewhat. First thing this week, however— A steam bath to open pores, a bowl of hottest water, your head over same, and a towel like a tent over both. Keep running in more hot water—in the warm fumes you can feel your face ‘“‘open up.” Then with a -seft cloth, rich lather and warm water, mas- sage face and neck, always in upward, outward, circular mo- tion. Repeat around nose and Ee ae chin, but tread lightly around eyes. Rinse twice in warm, twice in cool water. Do this twice a day—if possible, three times. Very dry—Y our skin feels tight, is always flaking a litle, looks dull and lifeless. This very dry skin will wrinkle early if it isn't given help—all over 25 take note!. By the time you reach 40 your skin will lose 20 per cent of its oils. So you wash your face with soap, too, for true cleansing. but only once a day. Either night or morning - Use a bland soap and lukewarm water—never hot or cold; this skin can't stand drastic degrees or changes in temperature. Mas- sage neck and face in circular, outward, upward motion, then rinse four or five times in clean, lukewarm water, Be sure, be extra sure you get the last suspicion of soap out of your skin. Dry gently, but very thoroughly, This skin needs to make oil—water left on it does not help. Never skip—never miss' Do your soap-and-water cleansing every | day. Your face tells the first story of | **you"’ to the world. Take care it | doesn't tell an ugly story. People look at your face first js but right on the heels of that first impression comes the second painced under the glaze .. 5281 Dixie Hwy. outward motion. cheeks and forehead, first use spot, you're very oily—if a slight ia the moder decorator trend , Featuring the smartest of color combinations .. . cinnamon brown on rich beige... in a clever free-form design ... Vernon's BARKWOOD is unequaled as the dinnerware to accent YOUR modern dining room. | Vernonware is guaranteed for 25 years against crazing or crackling. The lovely BARKWOOD pattern is hand- - will not fade, mar or wash off, in dishwasher or with years of use. 16-piece Starter Sef... only $1095 BASIC SERVICE FOR 4 Also complete open stock DIXIE POTTERY (Near Waterford) For Your-Conventence Open Datly & Sun. 10.a.m to9 p.m a OR 3-1894 Rinse three washcloth steaming hot. on nose Now — we slash prices even lower! Every opera, sling and > sandal in the group is a F new-this-season style, a rare "= buy! Hi, mid, little and, flat heels. Patent, white calf, and more! beige, red, blue, specs, pastels. All sizes but not in every style b Women’s Shoes IN FINAL DRASTIC REDUCTIONS regular to 10.95 7. Shoe Salon—Merranine Floor 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 21, 1954. ens . ; Your Beauty Begins With Radiant, Baby-like Skin.and Graceful Postu ee ee ee re ew Oe Lr SS. re ee a. -_ wv pe baie Tt esa, one we ee, eR Bg Your Posture properly and keeping them bai-, Stand with feet This is your foundation anced, one above the other. parallel, toes On this block your aim is to There is a new, and tomy mind) ga, up your blocks, little gir!— | pointing straight your a mighty sensible, trend among good First thing. hang a weighted string|a head. Throw aoe — piysical citture schools—to wit: | gown the center of the longest mir- | your weight for- Heul in hard Americans have’ been rere ror you have. ward, to the"balls! , end walch te ie the bend, twist, grunt “setting up Your aim is to get this ‘‘plumb-jof the feet — a mirror, You Sauve ne ele type of exercise. line” to bisect your body—through | forward stance Keep right on pulling upward, ; a If we could:just dearn and keep— imiddle of head, ear lobe, and run-|that makes your with the crown of your head, se : . keep every minute—correct pos- | | ning straight through the six main | legs form a right the straight line of your spine — ture. that would be the finest physi- |Jom@ts — shoulder joint, elbow, | angle with the is continued straight on up = cal culturing we could do wrist, hip. knee, ankle floor. through the top of your skull. 7 . Work in your bare skin, so you Begin a straight If you sag or droop hele, the Pel You can learn to do this, Va | oa) watch muscles at work, be-|body line with seven neck vertebrae will drop the going to tell you about it... jtween two mirrors if you can|your feet. So — weight of the head forward and . “Animal graye” can be acquired, | manage that your weight's for- make you a nice double chin. Hold and kept. leng after you've given| Now — start -with vour ° feet, | ward —your body your neck long and high, your up basketball. It begins always—|the basis and beginning of good | feels poised there, o~ chin level. ‘with carrying the body masses ! posture | lifted, alert. (Continued Tomorrow) ‘ et a ae . ae “mgt ~~ } * Pep, fr Bes + Bee EES Es. ? Fs YS seem BET I ER SUITS: » SHIR TS <<" Were to Were to Were to 29.95 $39.95 $69.95 Were to $ Were $2.95 $295 . oy stl S18 524. New, slim, dressy, or syas Limited Quantity O74: Limited Quantity Every one is suitable to wear the year ‘round All in tailored jackets. Slim to flared skirts. 100° wool fabrics including many with new surface interest. Navy, colors stels ; Sizes 3 to 8 9 Y . ; ‘ Pos ’ Pg Sizes 4 and 6 checks, novelties. Juniors and misses sizes. hy Lower Floor Lower Floor Suit Salon — Second Floor a ® Suse, Py : ~ oF ETS JOP ewer es + ‘wre’ es oa 4 2. a ad 2 2 ‘ oe = a . y ah FS 3 te At Seat BEvs? & « ES a A . é adh. ie STARTING TOMORROW THURSDAY, 9:30 A.M... . CLEARANCE and SALE! | s ‘ REDUCED to'|, and MORE FOR VACATIONS AND SUMMER! ‘BUDGET DRESS) DON’T MISS THESE BARGAINS! SUMMER FASHIONS .. . FINE BLOUSES: RESORT FASHIONS .. . BUTTER DRESSES : Regularly § ve Wwerento $ Regularly $ oo y $1695 Sold to & wl. 10.98... $3.98 26s: t Were to b, : Ne Regularly Sqid to $12.98 Regularly Sold to $5.98 .... Were to 4 , $39.95 | _ | Regularly ; 5 Were to bs | ee $ | Sold to $49.95........ ; = c 3 : . 6 @ 6-0 6 « $8.98 .... $14.98 ... Taken from our regular stock of cottons, Cottons, sheer rayons, and spun rayons. Dressy rayon crepes, knits, jerseys, both one and two stripes and solids. Junior, . Cotton, nylon. Sleeveless or short sleeve Con- and casual styles. Prints, piece dressy and tailored styles. Dark, light women’s sizes 4 vertible or scoop neck. White, pastels, prints, Perfect to wear now and into fall. stripes or solid colors Sizes 32 to 38 and prints. Junior, misses’, misses’ sizes. - Also formals ~ Blouses — Main Floor t Budget Dresses — Second Floor ; Better Dresses — Second Floor ke a se ————— . oe ee Re . Fe BS ali ac ts el dle. She 2 te Rae Saal ‘ $ ‘eae he se r4 fre Tait as = =§KIRTS=eBET TER COATS «= ~MILLINERY Regularly - “ BB ae s $10.95, “4 7 Sold to — $ 8.95, $ 6.95 on eee $5.28 . Were to $ Were & Regularly 3 $49.95... - : $16.95, $ $ , $15 00 sold to 3 * $12.95..... ee $7.98 . : Were te Were : $69.95...2 2... . $65.00 § | Cottons, rayon spuns, rayon faille. Slim, flared , and pleated style. White ground prints. Navy, $50.00, ‘ black and summer colors. Sizes 22 to 28. Were to § $45.00 was 4 Skirts — Main Floor $89.95 7 Millinery Salon — Second Floor A si An: ell” 2G li rei es Ree. » i ERNE. 9 BP A . = ’ 100°4 wool fabrics, nylon, rayon faille. Full seven , “ a length, three quarter, shorty and topper. New , aa aaa collar, cuffs, and pocket treatments. Beau- tifully lined. Navy, and pastel colorg. Junior, misses’ and. women’s sizes. SKIRTS F "Regularly to $6.95 , — oO a ie Cotton prints, crease resistant DRESSES Regularly se 95 Coat Salon — Second Floor poreetely: Air- Cooled - spuns in red, navy, aqua. Sizes & 8 to 14. Skirts — Lower Level i i 4 ry ‘ a Peet | 48 NORTH SAGINAW STREET a j , e f _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 bl ba . 25 ~ Sage: ‘ ‘ “s ; 4 i ‘ eT Ul OC 7% . ¢ « or loomfield | ASHION SHOP r 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. ‘f eee , 4 amy Door! OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL — OALE! famous make Park ot Our Front Among the hosts for the garden party Tuesday were the junior Ben Jeromes of Ottawa drive. Mrs. Jerome (right) and Mrs. Livingstone were busy with details of the “i The John Livingstones of Berkshire road |the- Republican gubernatorial nomination, were hosts at a reception and garden party | Shown greeting Mr. Leonard ( left) is Mr. honoring Donald Leonard who is seeking | Livingstone. Good Budgeting | something you can live with, a . e e ‘ workable plan. : . Having a budget doesn't mean | im Su iTS * Gets Marriage , rushing around with a dollar sign | Ww , - e ° flitter in your eye looking for the Launched Right ‘lowest price tag. Learn how to} | judge values in different types of | merchandise and buy the best | quality possible in floor covering, | furniture or equipment which you can use through a lifetime. Getting married is like forming a corporation that will pay divi- dends in happiness if it is properly managed. Sure a budget is a nui- sance to begin with but it won't take you long to-find it's a god- send. Advice to brides suggests that you start out on a businesslike basis. Sit down with your husband- to-be and add up your expenses. Then see how this fits your in come. Experience will show you where you have to cut, where you really have to add, but even- tually after a little trial and. error arithmetic, you'll arrive at Were 12.95 Were 16.95 ‘Were 19.95 8 10 12 Wonderful Selection! Lastex! Failtes! Prints! Women of Moose Listen to Reports Reports on publicity, child care, Mooseheart, officers and homeniak- ing were made by various com- ‘mittee heads when Women of the Moose met recently in Moose Tem- ple, Future activities will include a garden breakfast on August 15 from 9 a. m, to ft p. m. at the Mont- calm street home of Mrs. F. B. Huston. Aug. 2 is the date for the next meeting famous make summer poplin and White Stagg Ut Foshion ... go to your head ... with the easy, casual look 5 fom $5.00 | Permanents CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP Playwear vn nCALUIES BEAUTY SHOP, from $479 $329 $4i5 All Colors! All Sizes! Washable! Dusters ' : My _ -_- CCE Sizes 10 to 18 “Sy ae - e (2 Off | Beautiful New Summer Bags Hats dik ns ih AE LL = 5 Navys! Blacks! } Gloves $] 25 Famous Make Jersey Dresses $339.35 39. SQ Were 5.95 and 7.95 Straws! Black Patents! hundreds of beautiful . es > Formerly Sold Up to 29.95 12516 Pastels and Navys! Briefs and Regulars, 10 to 20! ‘Summer Dresses Juniors 9 to 15 Misses 10 to 20 ALL SALES FINAL! NO RETURNS! ~ PRINTS! Flair for wash 'n’ wear . with NO IRON care \ we Summer blessings... light, cool cotton Plisse... 80 pretty and practical! A dream to wear and heaven to care for because it presents no pressing problems. ‘ Modern print, styled with ladder stitched pique. Also in solid colored Playtone®; a no-iron cotton. Sizes 10 to 20 ’ é SWIRLS ore mattoneity adeortiond = J 98 Regularly $7.95... Now “a marriage of their son, James Chur- chill Zeder Jr., and Barbara Bayne of Grosse Pointe. The wedding will take place July 29. * *" “Ping” Wright is visiting her father, Washburne Wright, for sev- eral weeks, A classmate of hers at Old- fields School in Glencoe, Md., Christine Smith of Wilmington, Del., is visiting her uncle and ming parties and picnics here and in Metamora, _ * ¢ @ Another young visitor is Sheila Darne!! of Pasaden, Ala., whois spending the summer with her W. L. Bone of Topeka, Kan., has just returned to her home after a fortnights’ visit here, and last week the Lees were also hosts to Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Hewitt of Hart- ford, Conn. -_Mr. Hewitt {Is headmaster of s s s Mr, and Mrs. Elmer Sylvester have as their guest Mrs. Libby Pulsifer of Rochester, N.Y. In another week their daughter, Mrs. William T. Beresford, will come for a visit from her home in Hyannis, Mass., to be followed a week later by her husband. Mr. Beresford is at Otis Air For Base on Cape Cod. ; * * ® with’ Mrs. Travers Carman, She will go from there up to Blue Hills, Maine, to spend a few days with her sister, Mrs. William H. Gerhauser of Cleveland, at_her summer home there. . * * ning in their home on East Long Lake road. > ? * Mr. and Mrs. R. Jamison Wil- liams Will go over to Grimby, Ont., this weekend to greet Mrs. Wil- liams’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ken- | Shorts Pedal Pushers Halters AFINER | $ | , | H | 30 Were 2.95 Were 5.50 Were 1.95 oomfie . Ss . Tashion sHoP Vr. Leonard’s family was introduced to | Peatuse : $ 19 $ 65 $ 35 — | those attending Tuesday's affair. Photo- | youngsters, Barbara, 8, Eddie, 4, and T | graphed with Mrs. Leonard are their three | Donnie, 10. , | : Special Purchase! Zeders Will Host Rehearsal Dinner ° ’ e pecial Furchase: Preceding Son's Marriage on July 29 . e ~ ° BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Mr.{ Kingswood School for Boys in neth Culpan, who are here from Jackets Tail-shirts Skirts and Mrs. James C. Zeder will be a and ie o Hewitt Syane, Australia ssiting another PLISSE! PLAYTONE! hosts at the rehearsal dinner next | 4 Cera es cn conte to . earl Were 6.95 Were 4.95 . Were 5.95 Wednesday evening preceding the sey ftiggemahhg ee geal "They Sin = ‘me home with the Williams’ Sunday for a visit in Birmingham where they have many friends. * ¢ ®@ Mr. and Mrs. Walter O. Briggs Jr. will have as their guest for the next fortnight Mrs. Brigg’s mother, Mrs. Basil Manly of Wash- ington, D.C. Mrs. Manly is ex- pected Sunday. * * s Mrs. C. E. Wilson, who is at . . , Mrs. Henry S. Booth will leave | the Wilson lodge at Walloon Lake Nylon Print r All Summer Summer eae greg eypegs oe Saturday morning for New York| for the summer, has her daugh- « are attending many gay swim. | Where she will spend a few days| ‘ef, Mrs, Philip J. Hoyle, and small Jan of Delray Beach, Fia., as guests for several weeks, *‘* « Virginia Beresford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, James E. Beresford, is traveling in Europe this sum- mer. She has been visiting a Swiss Whites! Posteis! Were 2.95 uncle and aunt, the David Walker | Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gordon are | {amily with a daughter of her age,” é . | Lees. Mrs. Lee's mother, Mrs.| Planning a hox ‘supper for a | and she will have a bicycle trip Lounder Quickly! : Pastels! Whites! ‘ group of. friends Saturday eve- | through France before returning home. * © *« Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Gillette of Rochester will give a_ supper party Saturday evening for Mr. and Mrs. Willard Dickerson who are moving to Rochester. ‘ July Clearance Time at Nellies SAVE 20% — 50% Cotton Skirts -- Dresses -- Blouses Swim Wear -- Sportswear -- Play Shoes . GOOD SELECTION FOR ALL SIZES NO LAYAWAYS Nellie.s ALL SALES FINAL 3507 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 1 Block West of Huron Pontiec, Michigan Patient Goes Home Richard L. Johnson, son of Dr. Touring _ pulsvoad c Spa of Iii- northern home alter e ae eae eee Michigan are Osteopathic Hospital. Martha Jean Van Keuren . and Robert Birmingham Thorne who TRAVEL were married SERVICE |) 20." evening in We'll Plan Your Towr Free! 9! First Baptist Phone Mt 4-5711 Church. Tickets, Reservations She is the to Anywhere daughter of 379 Hamilton, Birmingham the Wayne Grace Plummer Reilly |) Van Keurens of Dunning | road and he is 3" the son of the - Robert Thornes of Rochester. MR. and MRS. Martha Jean ‘Wed in First | Martha Jean Van Keuren be Ladies’ COSMETIC $8,435 CASES ... up in a@ ceremony performed Satur- | Church. She is the daughter of Mr. and “Ladies’ WEEKEND | Mrs. Wayne Van Keuren of Dun- CAR See | ning road and he is the son of PACKS ... G., | ine reat and he i, the oom EN’S 2-5 "19%, The Rev. Howard Schoot of. ficlated at the 8 o'clock mony before 150 guests. Baskets of white gladioli and candelabra decorated the altar as the bride approached wearing a floor - length gown fashioned with a lace bodice over satin, an illu- sion neckline and long sleeves. The skirt was of nylon net over satin and was trimmed with lace insertions which started at the Men's © PANION Zs Suttialing and Delivery Free KIMMINS LEATHER GOODS 14 W. Berea FE 2-262@ | waist and ended in points halfway \ down the skirt. Her headpiece of "|white lace trimmed with pearis Th : secured her fingertip veil. ompso She carried white carnations and P ns ivy centered with a white orchid SPECIAL and fastened on a white Bible. HIGH POTENCY Shirley Wahi of Auburn Heights was maid of honor wearing an aqua ballerina - length gown of lace and net with a matching lace jacket. She carried a colo- nial bouquet of pink carnations. Other attendants were Chloe Mitchell and Mrs. Bruce Andress of Drayton Plains wearing gowns similar to the maid of honor's in yellow with a colonial bouquet of white and rose carnations and an orchid with a colonial bouquet of yellow carnations, respectively. The attendants’ headpieces matched their bouquets. Larry Thorne, the bridegroom's brother from Rochester, served as best man and Clyde Schinke of B-COMPLEX VITAMINS CHILDREN end ADULTS 100 TABLETS... $2.00 NATURAL HEALTH FOODS 58 Wayne FE 4-406! Summer Clearance of All Summer All ii telethon COTTON ae SKIRTS 2 OFF! A Good Assortment of Styles, Colors and Sizes . $$$ @ All Other Sportswear Consisting of : SHORTS PEDAL PUSHERS HALTERS SEPARATES, Etc. VI OFF! SPECIAL CLEARANCE. of. 2 Bali — Formfit — Goddess strapless. Black, white, Hosiery and Corset Shop BRASSIERES Discontinued numbers, 1 tearose and black. Sizes i of f ! $2-A to 48-D. 14 North Saginaw Strand Theater Bldg. BOBETTE came the bride of Robert Thorne | brother - in .- day evening in the First Baptist | . . ot | Baptist Rite | Religious | | Re ochester ie ma “ne Sa in | Recordings groom, seated the guests | Ari pregame bine sc. —Featuring— State WCTU Trains Leaders Michigan WCTU leadership train- ing school will be held today through Friday at Bay View. The school will be directed by Mrs. Bessie C. Hurd of. Fenton, state WCTU president. . Mrs. L. G. Rowley of Pontiac, the national temperance organiza- tion's’ director of visual education, will be one of the speakers. Her topic will be “Need for Narcotic Education.” ’ Friday at the school will be ob- served as Frances Willard Day, in honor of the late and famous WCTU president who is credited with perfecting the group's organi- zation and inaugurating many of its objectives. Use Narrow Ribbon When wrapping a gift, you can obtain a_ distinctive effect by using two or three narrow ribbons in*strips_ instead of one wide rib- bon. ROBERT THORNE Van Keuren PONTIAC PRESS, ‘DNESDAY- JULY 21, 1954 cessories and a corsage of ye leap a ery drecs with The Blackwood Bros. Quartet 50 Different Recordings From Which to Choose a wedding trip to northern Michi- gan. Upon their return they will reside on Cadillac avenue. Blackwood Bros. were recently featured on a National TV Program. Hear Them Today! Fiberglas Curtains Dress Up Bathroom Fluffy cafe curtains made of fib- ergias are a bit unusual and very dressy for a bathroom window. This idea is practical because the | fast-drying qualities of fiberglas | make it resistant to shower splash- es and bathtub steam. Crispness is retained simply by washing the curtains often in thick soapsuds, rinsing, and hanging them smoothly to dry. CHRISTIAN | LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakiand FE 4-9591 Final Reductions our greatest July Shoe Sale Greater Selections ! Greater Values ! Formerly to $19.95 ... Now Vig DeLiso Debs . . . Rhythm Step Carmelette ...Sandler _ Dalsini ... Deb... Kickerinos An outstanding selection of our famous, quality footwear now offered at sharp reductions! Shoes for summer and year- ‘round wear... dressy... tailored or casual types. A full range of colors, combinations, fabrics and heel heights! ALL SALES FINAL! SWEEPING REDUCTIONS . . . TREMENDOUS VALUES .. . FRESH NEW ARRIVALS... Park in the New || City Owned Lot 5 Cents Per Hour values to $19.95 @ Jacket dresses ! , | @ Stole dresses! @ Sunbacks ! @ Sheer cottons! @ Everglaze chambrays ! Juniors 9-15 -- Misses 12-20 Half Sizes 14'/2-22!/2 Shop in cool comfort! Use your charge account! SRE AN MOP SiN SOROS. 150 Glenhaven Summer Suits Were $22.95 4 3” Whites, Pastels and Dark Colors! Juniors’ 9 to 15 Misses’ 12 to 20 Women’s 1442-2212 | "White Stag” | ENTIRE STOCK OF PLAYWEAR lS NATIONALLY = 30% OFF | “sranos Were to $16.95 NOW 10 Were t o$19.95 12 Beautiful Colors! Wonderful Styles! Little Boy Shorts Clamdiggers Calf Skinners ... Bras Jackets ... Blouses j THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 t > Many people pey of « Gen- Optometrists—Jewelers REDMOND’S FE 2-3612 81 N. Saginaw St. _ {Learn Art each & Oneery ¥ render 2 Strawberry BUY 3 OR MORE » Bhech Chery a. AND SAVE! of Packing Correctly Tricks Will Make Traveling Neater and Easier Packing is half art, half tech nique. Here are a few tricks they suggest to speed you on your way: Prevent spills from cosmetics and toiletries. Even though the case may have a waterproof lining and you use plastic fittings, guard against leaks by wrapping each bottle or jar in household alumi- num foil — good idea. for wash- cloths, too. The brief bag does double duty. Friend tiusband can pack shirts and a change of linen ip the cen- ter compartment of his brief bag if it is provided with an expand- able gusset and “‘shelf” which keep the section open. Stuff sox and hankies inside neckband, ties im a fiat tie fold which has a pecket for tie bar, cufflinks. Wrap shoes to prevent soiling clothes, Use special shoe bags, plastic film or old sox so that colored shoe polish won't rub off on garments; pack shoes so that they will be at the bottom of the suitcase when it is carried. Roll, don’t fold. Use accordion- gathered tissue paper to pad every fold you make; it adds no weight, takes up no more space—yet guar- antees a band-box look when you unpack, . Pack immediate needs on top. Fresh blouse, hose, gloves are easy to locate if you want to fresh-up with a quick change en route, A small fitted case will hold all cos- metic articles plus accessories if you can’t get at the rest of your luggage. 4 Add Shelves, Prevent Breakage —! Revamp China Cupboard By ELIZABETH HILLYER Don't be fooled by their open- faced, innocent look. Badly spaced china cupboards are plotting de- struction. If cups teeter atop each other, and small plates stack on big ones, there are bound to be crashes that break up the set. More shelves often solve the problem, but they need not be in an extra cupboard. They can be shelves that are added to the same cupboard, to make better use of the same space. The added shelves may be full cupbeard width, te separate dishes that fit together badly or to make a place for items for which there hasn't been room. Or, the new shelves may be nylon strings $7.95 Value! 0.99 — 119 North Saginaw Street —— as SSCHOHOSSSSSSSSSSSSSHOSSSSSSSSOSSSSSSSSSOSSESESEEEEE = SUMMER CLEARANCE ALL WOOD UKULELE With patent pegs and BARITONE UKES $30 UP CALBI MUSIC CO. Pontiac's Locally Owned Home of Conn Instruments and Baldwin Pianos and Organs FE 5-8222 nmin 28 W. Huron St. ~ O company A —«< FE 2-7257 -| half-shelves, to hold shallow pieces part-way up and leave space for tall glasses or tall stacks of match- ing plates. Redesign your own shelf spacing to fit your own dishes and giass- ware. The effort will be saved many times over by easier reach- ing and putting away. The avoidance of china break- age will more than pay for the cost of the shelves. Church officials believe that Ship Meeting House in Hingham, Mass., built in 1681, is the oldest building in the United States which has been used continuously for public wor- ship, - Wadd OGM WWW ie iT! Rigs! ICRC Jes ILI ‘}a much more valid idea of what they like to do — and what they | Pie. Sidetracked by Well-Meaning Advice ¥ Young People Can. Choose Future Careers Wisely | ¥ Mature Vision May Become Clouded By ANNE HEYWOOD. Frequently, young people have‘ want for a lifework, than when they are older and well-meaning advice has clouded their vision. This has bécome increasingly apparent to me in dealing with people in their late 20s or 30s. who hate their work and eventual- ly must go about the difficult proc- ess of changing it. - When the right field of work is finally decided upon, the one they’ love and at which they will be successful, they frequent- ly say: “You know, it’s funny, but I dreamed of doing just this when I was 15.” Ann Silver is a perfect exam- As a girl in high school in Har- risburg, Pa., she knew she wanted to be a newspaper writer. She was on the school paper and, in addition, she covered all school news for the local paper. “But,” she told me, ‘‘my family thought it was terrible for a gir! to enter newspaper work, and they wanted me to be a lawyer. “So, because I knew they loved me and meant well, I did. But I kept getting newspaper Jebs on the side, summers and Sue cofeet cap cca 1(70 Try It Make Camp When we have talks about picnics we always mention taking things along which do not need to be prepared at home. This saves much time for mother and gives her a chance to enjoy picnics, too. Here is another idea for you. How ‘would you like to make your own popcorn over a fire right out-of-doors? Popcorn is al- ways fun to make and eat, and here is a popper which can be made in a few minutes. ACROSS 1 What baby | wears at meals 4 Where baby sleeps 8 Babys dog's name 12 Girl baby's name 1} Where baby stays most 14 Baby's best frien 15 Legal matters 16 Listiess 18 More - 30 Standards of perfection 33 Dawdlers M Car hotels 35 What baby makes 36 Measures of land 37 Diving birds 39 Repulsive 40 Prayer ending 41 Middle (prefix) 42 Plant pore =) 45 Turned outward 4@ Land stake 51 Anger 52 Arabian gulf 53 Otherwise . 54 Contend 55 Promise 56 Suffixes 57 Pinish DOWN 1 Btable 2 Notion 3 Baby baskets 4 Fetter 5 Heavy cord 6 Turkish in 7 Wager 8 Scent 9 Despise 10 Persian prince 11 Agreement 17 Coiffure 19 Roman armentes 23 Blood vessels 35 Aroma Iranians 26 Put forth 42 Famous 27 ing Trish 28 Russian city playright, 20 Essential B. -—— being 43 Commotion 31 Peruvian 44,Hebrew animals measure 33 Glandular #4 Extensive organ 47 Ireland 8 Genuflects 48 Act 40 Improve 80 Golf mound Soles wit puenty oF “eo” ~ ie ee ARCHKING Keds have deep-cut, herringbone soles: they're flexible, fast and tough. Duo-life Counter, Scientific Foot - Fitting Last... the Shockproof Arch Cushion and Cushioned Insole. Little Boy sizes and Big Brother sizes. ~ STAPP'S JUVENILE BOOTERY 28 E. Lawrence St. FAMILY SHOE STORE 928 W. Huron wht A te PAWeAL Weed GAReuel “paoueseed dAPDUW ee ae ee WEA Lod $&cTon —F OF tres ~ WY fire Popper best done by taking a section of log and putting the side of the can over it, then put the holes in by driving a nail through the tin with a hammer. Put holes in the top, too. Make a large hole in each sidé for a green branch to go through, fit the lid, and it is ready for use. Hungry? You can put a bit of grease in the bottom of the can and then hold the popper filled with corn over the campfire. Shake it from time to tithe. This will be a popu- lar tool. Shape Is Clue to the Message of Road Signs By CAROL LANE Women’s Travel Authority Do you believe in signs? Not Portents or prophecies—but high- way signs. You should believe in them because they are “‘signs of life’ for every motorist. Highway signs help make driv- ing safe in three ways: 1, They state the law, 2. They help you prepare for potential dan- ger and 3. they aid you in mak- ing caution and courtesy keynotes of your traffic etiquette. The shape of a highway sign such, ang my, heart was in it all the time. “Finally I passed the bar exam and got my one-year clerkship over; then I fell in love and got married, “I tried to like law, I honestly did, but I missed the writing ter- ribly. It seemed foolish, though, to throw away all that training. “Then a friend who had a pub- lic relations office asked me to come in and help with his con- tact work and writing his _re- leases. I grabbed it, and said goodbye to law for once and for all.” If you have teenagers in your l\life, do urge them to listen to their own inner voices when. it comes to deciding on’ their life- work. Each one of them has some special interest, some special tal- ent, and only by following that will they find happiness, success suffer through all the jobs he gets. Copyright, 1954 Mrs. Drexel WHY DO YOU PREFER BLUE BONNET? ae ote, wee MPs. David Anthong Drerel of Southern Pines, NC, is known among her friends as a charm- ing and distinguished hostess. “Frankly, we serve smooth- spreading BLUE BONNET regue larly in our home because every- body loves its sunny-eweet flavor! BLue BONNET improves the taste of all foods, whether used as a table spread—or in cooking. For - Flavor, Nutrition and Economy, I recommend BLuE Bonnet!” gives you the key to its messag These are the five basic sign Shapes and the meaning of each: 1. Eight-sided signs always mean STOP—not ‘“‘slow down” or “proceed with caution.” So be safe and stop until the way is clear. 2. Oblong signs give specific rules, speed limits, turning and passing prohibitions, etc. 3. Diamond-shaped signs warn of unusual or dangerous condi- tions on the road ahead. When you see a diamond-shaped sign, slow down and stay alert. 4. Round signs warn of rail- road highway intersections ahead. Slow down and be ready to stop if necessary. 5. The crossbuck marks the lo- cation of a railroad-highway in- tersection. Be sure all the tracks ' | are clear before crossing. Remember that the shape of a sign is your clue to things to come and you'll drive with more assurance. New York State had 168.442 peo- ple over 65 years old in 1870 and has an estimated 1,450,000 today. Beauty Clinic By Edythe McCulloch That Baby Fine Hair If you have baby fine hair, you will agree that summer is not your best time of the year. You know too well what a hot, humid day will do to your curls. We have learned that, careful styling —_ Powe fom —o permanen oes help to give this kind of hair body and curl. This‘extra fine hair is the only type we do not advise brushing. Brushing is for this hair, but,not for hair- style. This hair should be held in place af night with bobbies and covered with a net or veil when out in the wind for once it is allowed to become — ot disarranged it will not go bac in place until it has.been reset. In some cases it is advisable to let this hair- grow in order to create a style where the ends can be securely anch- Phone Edythe McCulloch Beauty a FEderal. 2-7431, 605 Pontiac State Bldg o include: Auditing (Sherwood & Culey) Comptometer 7 West Lawrence Name Some of the FUNDAMENTAL SUBJECTS which are helpful to Institute students in securing sitions and winning promotions Call in Person or Return this Ad for Bulletin Serer eeeee SOHO HEM ECERO THEE RETOHE HEE eee eeene COCO er eeeereee VETERAN APPROVED Phone FE 2-3551 Address + > \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, Li ea - f 1954 Cool Lime Sherbet Is Delicacy Mrs. Albright Has Easy-to-Fix Recipe for Frosty Dessert By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Lime Sherbet is such a cooling dessert for hot days. Irene Al- bright has an excellent recipe for this delicious frozen delicacy. She says she likes best to serve it with chocolate cake. Many Pontiac people know Mrs. Albright as the principal of Bald- win School. This pleasant woman has a nimber of other irons in the fire also. With her teenage son she enjoys golf. Membership in Delta Kappa Gamma, the FEx- change Club and the Junior Women’s Club fills other hours of her leisure time. LIME SHERBET By Mrs. Irene Albright 1 package lime gelatine : 1 cup hot water 1% cups suger Juice and rind of 1 quert milk Dissolve gelatin in hot water Add sugar, lemon rind and _ juice. | Freeze to mushy consistency. Beat hard and add the quart of milk. | Freeze again. Makes 10-12 serv-| ings. 3 lemons Boil Tomatoes First To save time inipreparation, dip ripe tomatoes for salads in boiling water for about one minute, chill in the refrigerator, and peel when you're ready to use them, FINE Deserves Good |, Workmanship | and Materials When You Reupholster Chairs Re-Upholstered $3500 As Low As Call Today and Save on Manufacturer- to-You Prices! » william wright Furniture Makers and Upholsterers “all work guaranteed 5 yrs.” 270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0558 Big and little sister like matching dresses in bright solid | chambray with novelty embroidered clock-and-watch pocket | design for the bodice. Riviera stripes in many colors form the full skirt and sleeves. Crisp white collar is removable for easy laundering. Recent Births Below are recent births reported to Pontiac City Health. Depart- ment. The father’s name is given for each child. Boys R. C McGee, 312 Hughes Thomas Wade, Walled Lake Prederick C. Blome. Romeo Harry L. Bock, Waterford Joe F. Cameron, Pontia William R. Genette. Milford Baward Ll. Prokes. Roval Oak Emanuel Maroos, 496 N Twp Johnson Frederick A. Stileski, 239 Voorheis Joe C* Benhett Oak Park James H Henge muchie w Bloom field Leonard P. Leigh. Avon Roy BE. Bryant, Avon William T. Pahr, Waterford Twp Dominic J. Klint, 98 Whittemore Roy E. Lewis, 177 8S. Marshall Rochard N. Little, 245 Ypsilanti William H. Oliver, W mfield Leonard G. Barker, 987. Berwick Darwin G Kettering. Birmingham Fioyd V King. 1389 Giddings Rd Donald P. Young, Birmingham Ralph EB. Piaskowski. Roya) Oak Billy J. Sterritt, Ortonville Charles D. Solomon, Waterford Kenneth L White, Keego Harbor Arthur J. Wooters, Rochester Fred T. Knowal, Highland Donald R. Bowen, Drayton Platns Jack O. Garner. Waterford Twp George A Harmon, 85 Pinegrove Elmo I. Ivey. 136 Oakland Robert PF. Chrichton, Roch Norman [. DeHaven. Pontiac Twp Kenneth L. Engler, 303 8 Anderson Russell F. Bunker, Bloomfield Jack HM Mansell, Waterford Twp. Jimmy Rodriquez, 146 EB. Pike Gtris Willie-Long. 376 Howard MeNei!! Donald E. Norris, Waterford Twp. George L. Pickering, Orion Gladstone B. Billington, White Lake Truman Anderson, 21'. 8S Saginaw Loren E. Cote, Farmington Gerald A. Dibble, Detroit Ronald V. Fraleigh. Royal Oak Paul V. Raczka, 180 W Wilson Kenneth Lalone. Lake Orion Calvin L. Brown, 501 Wesbrock Richard A. Cassidy. White Lake Trinidad J. Martinez, Orion Roy A. Bebee. Bloomfield Douglas J. Miller, Warren Albert Secunda Jr. Walled Lake Rudolph M. Sustarich, Birmingham William ©. Walsh, 306 Prospect John C. Hod Charles N. Nichols, 628 Richard L. Martin. Royal Oak Frank A. Phelps, Commerce David Allums, 483 Montane Simmie Winzer, 30 Jacokes Myron B. Ells. Birmingham Charies M_ Perrer, E. Lansing | Jesse D. Medien 701 Second Twins Johnnie E. Moore, Independence (boy, irl) James R. Gileyre, 407 MW. Perry (twin boys) (Advertisement) DRY, SWEET UNDERARMS | (Advertisement) CAN HAVE DAYS! a iene ees | Ea | Get so Rub it in—rub perspiration evt! No other deodorant gives you Arrid’s exclusive ia ction. Aftid is America's jargest selling deodorafit. So don't be half-safe. Be soma Be Use Arrid with Perstop to be sure. Use this New Vanishing Cream Deodorant with PERSTOP Daily. Keeps Underarms Dry and Odorless—Saves Clothes from Stains This summer you can get a new kind of pro tection from perspiration and odor—rubbed- im protection. Arrid now contains magic new PERSTOP. Rub it in—rub perspiration and odor out. Used daily it is actually 114 times as effective as any other leading deodorant in keeping your underarms dry, sweet and mois- ture-free. Safe for normal skin and fabrics. ft, creamy Artid with-PERSTOP today. = = = 4 | 5 + | 3 | 3 = = * a | 4523 | 14%—24% by -Lnna Ledows Half-sizers! Cool off in this bright and breezy style. It’s sew- simple — no side opening! Just un- button the shoulders — slip it on 1-2-3 quick! Make several in a jiffy in cool, tubbable cottons. Cut to fit the short, fuller figure—no alteration problems. Pattern 4523: Half sizes 14%, 1642, 18%, 204s, 22's, 24%. Size 1642 takes 4% yards 33-inch. This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern — add 5 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Department, 243-West 17th St., New York, New York. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. A consulting physician is a doc- ter who is called in to share the blame. 7 West Lawrence ‘h” PARISIAN BEAUTY SHOP Over Old Prof's Book Store So Wonderful for Summer! SHORT, COOL °’n’ SMART Cutting & Styling by Oscar! LANOLIN ENRICHED OPEN WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & FRIDAY EVENINGS by APPT. No Appointment Necessary! FE 2-4959 f Fish Killed by Alkaline in Concrete Check Your Pool With Litmus Paper Before Stocking It By HUBBARD COBB Here is the sad story of a man who wanted a garden pool so he went to work and dug a big hole and lined it with concrete and ended up with a pretty fair-look- ing pool. . He filled it with water and then sat back to enjoy life, but he didn't get much enjoyment because the pool was taken over by a bunch of mosquitoes He found out, however, that the way to get rid of the mos- quitoes was to put some fish in the pool. He bought’ some. fish, dumped them in the pool, but they didn’t live long. Now his problem is whether or not to buy more fish, drain the pool and give up the idea, or just get used to the mosquitoes The reason the fish didn't last long was because of the strong alkaline that you find in fresh concrete This will disappear in time’ but you can hasten things considerably | by filling the pool, allowing the | water to stand for a few days and then draining. It will also help if the inside of the pool is coated with sodium silicate. You can find cut whether a concrete pool is safe for fish by testing it with litmus paper which you can buy at drug- stores. Place pink litmus paper in the water. If the paper turns blue, the water is not safe for fish. If the paper remains pink then it's okay. If the paper turns blue, drain the pool, refill and repeat this process at weekly intervals until the paper remains pink. Keep Hats Secured If the grippers of your new shal- low hat do not secure it sufficiently against spring breezes, slip bobby pins through them. To prevent the pins from peeping out, use the dolis’ size ones you can buy at toy counters. . Fourteen glorious full-cojor Hi- lacs in heavenly lavender and green — no embroidery, just iron | them on aprons, towels, blouses, | pillowcases, sheets, curtains, ta- | blecloths, napkins! So effective, so easy — washable, too! Wonderful for gifts! Send now! Pattern 717: Transfer of 14 color motifs from 2',x9 inches to 1'3x2 inches. Washable! Send 25 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for Ilst-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft Dept., P. O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, New York. Print plainly, pattern number, your name, address and zone. | | | with the vacation route marked in Travel ing Can Be Fun for Chi Idrery Sensible planning before tion-time will make traveling with the children easier for mom and the other adults in the car. Aside from planning the wardrobe, itine- rary and frequent stops, here are a few suggestions to keep in mind: Use separate luggage. Infants’ garments should be packed sepa- rately, with immediate needs on top for easy access, Tots enter into the spirit of the vacation when they are allowed to fill their own suitcases — even if mother finds them packed with unmatched shoes and toys, she can rearrange the selection later | There are inexpensive sets of miniature luggage designed ex- pressiy for children which in- clude little train cases, overnight bags and hatboxes; many are decorated with favorite cartoon, fairytale and television charac- ters. | Give older childrén responsibili- ties. Allowing a boy or girl to be keeper of the extra key case (should father misplace his) gives the child a feeling of importance Junior riavigators will be thrilled to have custody of the map case heavy crayon for easy following Provide extra comforts. Refresh- | | ments are best kept in one of the new ‘feed bag’ containers which | | fasten over the backrest of the {| seat; food and liquids are kept at | |! 5390 - 5400 Dixie Hwy. El| iott's vee eS | By Elliott - - Ta Put New Life in Your Living Room Only Elliott Can Give Your Old Furniture-- © Such superb modern styling! © Such glowing beauty! © That sound experienced craftsmanship! ®@ Such solid — made to live in comfort! — ‘ SPRUCE UP YOUR LIVING ROOM TODAY WITH REBUILT — REFINISHED — REUPHOL- STERED Furniture by Elliott! | Open Evenings by Appointment an even temperature, never get spread out all over the car. Tea consumption in England av- erages 11 pounds per person each year, 718 West Huron Street © jewelry ® China FLORA-MAE intents’ Specialty Shop FE 2-3220 ® Lingerie ® Linens Enroliments Available in Write, phone or call in PHONE FED PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S&. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Peal for Free Day or Evening Classes. let. RAL 4-235 > 4 seh. Na aan — as Oe COLD MACHINE or New Mobile *“Multi-Curi” Shampoo and Mid-Summer Specials! 515° Permanents ... 510 $1252 Permanents »- $ 8 Including Any Style-Cut Open Wednesday All Day— Friday ‘til 9 P. M. NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED! ° IMMEDIATE SERVICE! eauty CSalon WAVE §$ MACHINELESS Cutting Haircut .... Set $150 $175 2nd Floor Pontiae State Benk Bidg.—Ph. FE 5-4490 July Clearance! Save Now on Summer Clothes SKIRTS BLOUSES JEWELRY PLAYWEAR TOPPERS DRESSES SWIMWEAR SHORTS SEPARATES COATS All Sales Final—No Layaways S 9 Telegraph at Huron Open Every Night ‘til 9 — Saturday ‘til.6:30 — Sunday 2 to § Park Free in Rear ree ee s! é THE PONTIAC PRESS, = EDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 | Killed in Holdup Aitempt, Detective Was Overdue OKLAHO. \ CITY (@® — The widow of Detective Bennie Cravatt, killed while stopping an aftempted hotdup last week, disclosed today he was given up for dead with a rare ailment 13 years ago. Mrs. Cravatt said her husband was one of a few victims to survive Hodgkins disease. SINUS < {| SUFFERERS New Mino tablets to be taken internally offer fast relief from the Prints All Standard Rolls One Low Price your films to imme faster service... sharper prints... greater savings. SIMMS 98 N. Saginaew —Main Floor if miseries of sinus block- |} age and sinus drainage. 4 1 $ | sts, “98 |] 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor a aN HORNETS * WASPS: JETS PRODUCTS OF AMERICAN Motors SEE YOUR NEAREST HUDSON DEALER Bob Considine Says: Young Jim Feels America Should Take NEW York (INS)}—One of the great problems facing this coun- try is how to win friends and influence people overseas. We spend millions each year in this pursuit. Some feel we're doing real good in this line. Some think we're preposterously inept. Heard and watched a member of the dissent side on Ann Gillts Slocum's ‘‘Comment’” show on NBC Monday night. Talented young fellow named Jim Robinson. Robinson, fresh back from Indo- china, struck a realistic vein. He said “The Communists are on the vietory march in Asia. The Communists’ ultimate goal is te conquer all the Far East. They say so and they’re in the process of doing it. The Communist op- eration in Asia is pure and sim. ple totalitarian aggression. But it's disguised under ‘‘national’’ movements, “reform” move- ments and such slogans as ‘Asia for the Asians.”’ “Right now,"’ Robinson contin- ued, “the Communists are winning vast stretches of territory and mil- lions of people in the Far East. They're doing this easily and rap- idjy. Why is this happening? Simply because there's no one willing or, if willing, able to go all out and stop them. “The price of our constant ap peasement to communism in the Orient is beyond immediate calcu- latian, but this is what's happen- they have the proof the West isn’t willing to face a showdown—not willing to use force to stop force. So these countries are in the proc- ess of their agonizing reappraisal of the situation. “Already many of these coun- tries are frantically trying to achieve the role of neutralism. Many are casting secret feelers toward the Peiping regime. These nations want to see if a dea) can be made—a deal whereby they might be able to co-exist with the Communists—or if it might be pos- sible to retain some sort of na tional sovereignty if and when all Asia goes Red.” Robinson on the peace proposals: “Look what's happetiing in North Viet Nam. Yeu have A NEW, EASIE TO SHOP AND SAVE cy. & Shop for RS ad LD - oe aa 3 {1g = 4 eo: HOME. brings t SMART savings this big IT’S BIG! IT'S NEW! . ITS EXCITING! Eerie seis cscnee Come in or Call Today for Your | Is ft fashions, apparel . . te eS ees arte aetna. fe, Sula corre "at pos coe s= FREE Library Catalog Spiegel's “ad America's most designers spread their beiore Soak duabes ine cuery meat yr a Please Act Now! The Demand Equipment? Tools? 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Prompt. courteous servicé on | refunds and exchanges | _° $PIEGEL CATALOG ORDER DESK 405. N. SAGINAW: STREET FE 2024) | Over in Asia seem to be joining in the nefari- ous act of handing these people over to the Reds. What example does this serve to the rest of Asia? What would you think if you were an Asian? . . Let's take an example of | how the Communists operate in| the field and how the U.S. oper- | ates. We will pick an unnamed | Asian nation yet free. We want this country as an ally. The Reds want it as a satellite. We pick-a nice university graduate — clean cut, intelligent, honest, with a realization that -his job is to inform the people how nice democracy is and how bad communism is. But this man has never been to Asia, doesn't know the language. “He arrives and moves into al lovely home, has servants, a car | and chauffeur and an air condi- tioned office. Our man zealously goes to work putting out slick pa- per pamphlets about how nice | America is and what rats the Com- munists are. Good stuff for read- ers in Kansas City. but remote to the man in the street in Asia. ‘New comes the Commaiunist equivalent. First, he is an Asian. He speaks the local language, he lives with the people, he is one | of them. But he also ts highly 7 | things bothering Mr. Wong. And, | of course, adds his very cleverly planted seeds of revolt... a distorted picture. “Either we now move in and | take over much of the control of | Asia or the Communists will. It is | as brutally simple as that. If we're | not willing or able to do this theny the Communists surely will rule | all Asia in the years to come.” Well said, Jim Robinson. Puzzled Indiana Women| Gets 2nd Note With $50 EVANSVILLE, Ind. w — Mrs Trumon Wood, 53, has received a second note containing $50 and she | doesn't know what it's all about. She said she got the first $50 a'| year ago with an anonymous note | saying the writer had taken some change from her purse “when we | were very young.” The latest note, she said, states that the writer wants to repay the money — about $200. “No one owes me that much,” she said. “I wish they'd stop it.” | | U.S. Receives Thanks HEIDELBERG, Germany «» —| | West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer has thanked the US. Army in a letter for ‘‘an exem- plary performance” jf rescue work in _the recent Bavarian floods Advertisement Quick Relief from Pile Irritation 4 years ago a Buffalo druggist |created an ointment to relieve itching smarting piles. It brought such quick, cooling, soothing, as- tringent relief that its fame spread across the land making Peterson‘s Ointment a favorite in thousands of homes. Ask your druggist today for 45c box or Tic applicator tube Peterson's Ointment delights or money back. CITIES SERVICE NEW Sct) PREMIUM “PRESCRIPTION ! 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CAN 23¢ Strawberries A mo 839 wer Sn 3 FOO 180 ee a ee Ae Fruit Cocktail GOL CAN 1% 0 0 0 OD ror 93¢ FORIDA GOLD 6OL. CAN 18¢ © © © Orange Juice 7 roe 1,00 Crisco... ~~. cn 35 Gh 93¢ Wesson Oil... . oc 75 tsi 39c_ Instant Fels Soap... . .”ne" 30c Waxed Paper «om cum = 2 out 37 Niagra Starch ‘Shon. . . . ‘xo 19¢ Lemon Juice Suns. . . ‘tat 37¢ Sta Flo Starch =~ . . . oo. 23¢ Facial Tissue “oti?” . . 2 cree 39¢ LIPTON TEA] Robinhood Flour eee | 5 ute A9e “ie 37¢ opm rom” O1C Breeze ia". 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'tin 25¢ Gigarettes "Trouse sit . om 1,99 Baby Foods Sti OF. 39¢ Daily Dog Food......... : ot 49 Charcoal “Suinom ww ee ee tao 25¢ Vegetable Soup CAMPBELL'S cans 256 Prepared Spaghetti -xc: “cans 27€ Ann Page Beans 2 vaneres, , , 2 ‘SOX 25e Kool Aid ‘Simmer pans 2.5. 6 mos. 25¢ Cleansing Tissues ““Wine . . 2 oF 200 39¢ AMERICA’S FAVORITE... for FIMER, FLAVOR! In-the-bean AaP Coffee is Custom Ground before your eyes just right for your coffeemaker . . to give you all the favor you pay for. No factory-packed coffee can possibly give you as much fine, fresh flavor. And no coffce, regard- less of price, can possibly give you more good cups per pound! Enjoy it today! YOUR EIGHT O°CLOCK CHOICE Fh nd Pat tad BAG RED CIRCLE 1.19 Vigorous ond Winey 348. BAG BOKAR . $3.51 DELICIOUS . «. & HOT OR ICED! THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1956 cu 39e. BEFORE DOING THE WEEKEND MARKETING, IT’S A SMART IDEA TO... | LOOK at the PRICES. IN A&P’s ADS! “SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY Chuck Roasts COMPLETELY CLEANED, WHOLE O8 CUT-UP Fresh Fryers +» 53c Beltsville Turkeys ° "2. AVERAGE . Beef Roast um on monn cm .. % 49% Rib Roast yn cur mass ans... * 59 Ground Beef . . . ovananreso msn 39¢ leg 0’ Veal “dacou .... % 53¢ Veal Shoulder Roast ...... uu. 3% ee a ere “SUPER-RIGHT” MILD, MELLOW, SHANK PORTION Smoked Hams = 57¢ Spore Ribs Sit‘... .. bBe Skinless rOrooN Maat.» ADE Luncheon aa ae m6. Liver Sausage “thou 2... a Ske Sliced Bacon Win tancy . 2... um 67¢ Allgood Bacon »<#0 ce ee eee me. S3¢ A& P’s FISH AND SEA FOOD BUYS! Medium Shrimp . . eee ec ee & 5M Fresh Whitefish ~ ror , , , , we 55¢ Fantail Shrimp ‘Az3! Lee ee ‘xo 5% Halibut Steaks "ows... i 43¢ Fish Sticks MD tet es ‘xa 49 IONA BRAND—YOUR CHOICE—CUT GREEN BEANS OR ALP BRAND SLICED OR HALVES, FREESTONE ‘1. Peaches... . 3 Gis 1.00 Fruit Cocktail ne . 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AT HALF PRICE Pie Crust Mix Tewnhoose Crackers mau - & We Bisquick srry coo =| |. me Cake Mixes rxuseuer . 3 es. 1,00 dexo Shortening rif" 3 hn 77e Black Pepper -ics cece e's tm 198 43c - $URBGOOD Margarine. .2 Gelatin Desserts “M°%ETAVO 4 mes. 25¢ Salad Dressing = rot Me 47e Kraft Dimmer 2.2... 2 mos. 3le Honey Grahams “trite” ... . sax Yukon Beverages ‘tivo . . 3 200F BUOY ChEsTMONT Ice Cream we” — me QT. 49 “qveam ino variety €1W. € NEAPOLUTAN wOal 79g | lee Cream on VANILLA. soa SLICE-PAK Orange Sherbet i RO-USABLE PLASTIC CARTON st, DO . Silverbrook Butter % som . , Ched-0-Bit ““"txtess"toon Swiss Cheese “tious... Pinconning Cheese cour eee Sharp Chedder HAT —aneT os Cottage Cheese run on cove . = Ras 5 5 6 BE reese Me ee July 24 Cuper Markets x > , is THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 x “HEYOR misses... che shops at ‘HITS THE BARGAIN BULLS-EYE EVERY TIME HORTHWOOD MARKETS | New Pack: Sas ~=MAXWELL HOUSE DEL MONTE ime insran an 38388 SHOP Fancy Early Garden Sugar ic is s ife re | 3 F E E ORCHARD LAKE ROAD and Save form WED. i | BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH JULY 21 thru TUES. OPEN P.M. | DAILY 9 AM. "Til 9 TALL | ae | y 3 A.M. TIL P.M. SUGAR een CANS tite Super Value! We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities LIBBY'S DEL MONTE Fancy Pure Fancy Cream Style Golden TOMATO JUICE GIANT | 46 OZ. 25: - ‘ CAN jy LARGE 6 Oz. JAR eR ce ts e #5 * Me 1 Se s os eee VAN CAMP'S LIPTON TEA BAGS Teeoees reed PORK & BEANS | [pieey '6~'° TALL NB fee 2 1 LB. 2 ys LADY | CANS PRUNE JUICE HUNT'S Tomato QUART 2 5< CATSUP 2 = 24 | |— orn Bartlett Pears GULF-KIST tin Qa % H R i aa P VEGETABLE JUICE VEGEMATO 5 OZ. ¢ Small 12 OZ. ¢€ CAN Size CAN 10 PLANTER’S ' CAMPFIRE | orm«wnxes | GOGKTAIL PEANUTS .. “< 33° Flutty White GRAPETTE | sine sanes swer ” MARSHMALLOWS wwonerrs | SANDWICH PICKLES . . 227 29° | =), ORANGETTE | 1 POUND BOX £ FRUITETTE PLAVOR-KIST 4-IN-1 PACK 25: } soz.cans | SALTINE CRACKERS . . sox 2 FOR wi page FORMULA ; | 29 DOG FOOD . aver ae 29: U.S. No.1 Sebago— All Purpose a! ‘en tong - anes sf f= ‘ Bargain Buy! BREAST-0-CHICKEN CHUNK PACK MERIAL OR GREENFIELD Ready fo Eat Mild Sugar Cured. SP \ SMCS. Short Shank Means More Meat! - ‘LEAN TENDER DELICIOUS RESH HAM gz» ROAST TOM'S Low PRICE! U. $. QUALITY BEEF STANDING RIB ROAST FRESH CULTIVATED MICHIGAN Blueberries “ 29: SHANK a Sunkist | vender 8 rer Seald Sweet = 4 BUTTER ‘ica N 4 / swoourms 5 9: Orange Juice reame res i: 1 LB. PRINT ie on CANS FRESH AND wn PRESSEL'S Te AS PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK 2 m 49: GROUN Skinless . CREAM CHEESE | SHARP gael BEEF RING or LARG 3 OZ. PKGS. CHEESE Join the Birds Ey . LBS. 69¢ 4 e : lu * — BOLocnA JQ NG Ss) 2 D5e) ice wa srt 50% Cello Wrapped! li la 8 OZ. FRENCH FRIES—I0 02. CHOPPED BROCCOLI 10.0z. Peas—{2 oz. Whippe . 102, SPINAGH—12 02, SQUASH ° D mes 3] c PARKAY MARGARINE . G29 teeters et Ms . THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4 & 21, 1954 C'MON OUT and JOIN the FUN at ain tines ; Stores: HELP US SELECT Pa “MISS PONTIAC” -@> orn 41NE8 Sponsored by the PONTIAC JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE =: and Stey et one of the fabulous THE TEL- HURON SHOPPING CENTER MIAMI BEACH Hotels. Sighe- seeing .. . Swimming . . . two To qualify for entry, girls must be between 18 to 23 yéars meals a ‘dey end meny other of age, high school graduates or students, and all those vacation wonders are yours— under 21 must have their parents’ consent. et no cost to you! Only unmarried girls who have resided in the Ponti iac area for at least one year are eli igible to compete. - Contestants for the title will be judged on the basis of poise, Personality, character, beauty, talent ‘a eee See ee 2 Se Sees eee eee eee eee ' t Enter Your : OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK: Favorite Now! ‘ For the “MISS PONTIAC” CONTEST NAME ......................... : ‘ADDRESS ...................... AGE 0 eee. : HPHONE eee All Entries Must Be In Neo Later Than Saturday, July 24th at 12 e'Cleck Neon. _Appticetion blenks iit” should be sent to the Pon- Np tiec Junior Chamber of ‘ - ,- ety DRUG Lhe ~ &, AAA “—s YOU ALWAYS SAVE_AT ham’s STORES SALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY 25cSACCHARIN Tablets | 400 ere Wp GRAIN - SAVE! ONLY... . 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WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, ee ee 8-Year Indochina War By The Assoc lated’ Press Sept 191—Gen.: De Lattre| Nov 1952 — Freneh troops March 6, 196—France recog-| went to Washington to ask for spe-| evacuated Son La, a major garri- nized Moscow - trained Ho Chi|cial U.S. aid, aid that eventually | son town in northwest Viet Nam Minh's Vietminh regime at Hanoi, Pmounted to about three billioh| near border “of Laos, a sister of established after Japanese with: | dollars. 2 | drawal from Indochina at the end | 4 Yo | of, Indochina | of of World War IL Nov. 19, 1951—A_ Erehch offen | April 14, 1953 \—Vietminh’ forces |!!! sive captured Hloa Binh, an im 9° ~” - ~~, 5 it Mth ster tien) mained a a aa dard se Viet Nam in the Ass6tiated States | monument.on Highway -41, very po ee 1954 ” ea Wisconsin Highway ign Marks Middle MILWAUKEE, Wis; (UP) — A north the Oconto-Marinette © County , bears the legend that it stands | Been“ place in a roadside sail with picnic tables and signs direct- ing attention to it. The bronze tablet on a granite boulder shows half a globe ‘with stars pointing out the exact loca- tion of the monument, and an ex- plantory text. 1 Dec. 19, 1946—The Vietminh rose |, | portant Black River port 35 mies marched into Laos in a brief of- | /US* halfway between the North U.N, Official to Address. against the French garrison at fensive called off May 6 without | Pole and the Equator : : . Hanoi three months after Ho Chi southwest of Prggpnd rie explanation, but perhaps on Mos-| !t was recently moved ATONE | te, Club L h father-in-law of actress Rita Hay- ' Minh returned from a futile Paris Jan. WW, 19%2—Gea, De altre cow's orders in view of a Sov iet | the highway from a clump of ce ry v uncneon | worth ; mission seeking greater jadepend. | ded ue cancer, Hoa Binh “4° | peace offensive Current, at that) idars where it had stood several John K. Minnoch of Chicago, al : r ence. The war was on evacuated one month later, / time a at since its erection by the late | me ‘mber of the speakers’ research | f June 5, 148—France set up An * * Frank Noyes, Marinette publisher. | committee for thé United Nations. | _Name Pakiston Mission nam's ex-E-mperor, Bao Dai, as May 8, 1953 Gen. Henri Na: | Noyes also had one built on High- oon speak ‘on “Laugh and Live’! WASHINGTON @®—The Defense chiel- of state of Viet Nam. and }vare, new French commander in} ¥4a) 41 between —Coleman—and+tomorrow—ar the weekly” TUnCheOn 2 j agreed to recognize Vietnamese in Prison Swept work everyday around the house | anc urge you to try it, especially i! rm ccc | Beautiful Formica Dinettes Available in Chrome or Wrought Tron Tables made to order, and patterns chrome is triple-plated, Department ammounced today; the — Indochina asked reinforcements, | | Lena meeting of the Pontiac Rotary in Oop of * military assist- idependence within the French proposed a buildup in native Viet The Highway 41 monument has | in » the Hotel Waldron, j ance advisory group in Pakistan, Union ~ bs |namese troops and new mobile . ——— — | Dee 30, 199—Communist forces | U DI eMIC tactics against the rebels. in China reached the Indochinese | Jan. 1, 1944—Vietminh strength- | border and Ho Chi Minh got a ened positions for big assault on | — nee _ - vital supply channel from that Influenza Faces 2,000 | dien Bien Phu, a major Frene h| wrthern *hbor. . ° fort ; long t ee Communist Suspects in|) Utrss Seng road to northern | oS Join the Big TEL-HURON Feb. 7. 1990—The United States Guatemala Jail Feb. 7, 1954—Vietminh laune hed | Great Britain and Belgium recog | nized the Bao Dai regime GUATEMALA UP--An influensa attack on Dien Bien Phu. When that symbol of the French war ef- | JULY JAMBOREE 2™: | Sept. 18. 1950—Newty equipped | epidemic swept the central police | for in Indochina finally fell May | Vietminh forces won their first) prison today threatening 7.000 7 the French will to victory | oes with these specially purchased bergeine—just as: | major vietory at Deng Khe, nerth- | Communist suspegts. packed there stumped time for your Vacation Needs! least of Hanoi near the Red Chi- | like sardines April 26, 1954—The Geneva con- | said scores of have the flu said to be and 20 situation was Police authorities the prisoners already About 100 others | nese border Dec. 7, 1950—The French eH Meee ted carbettt s 8 bs Junenal Pome fh heing sea out in Korea, with » state | Even though there has been con- ment, warned: iy the Korea Information Service, | replied, “spindles. and mining | buraing feet. Get Ice. -Mint today, i 44 STATE AVE. unable to resolve tata & peace. “What is | stant controversy, Wood feels there| “‘The lessons of the past are too | Inc., financed by the Korean gov- oo ceeke Bee sald . . Ake today in South Kores. in_terms | has been achievement. He cites | recent and too well remembered | ernment, diplomats in Seoul con-| ‘‘Ano’ m e, Fal ° : PHONE Feder! 2 4132 the first of three articles ‘depicting the | afiti-inflation controls. and an|by our people. Therefore we op-| sider its ediorials the official gov- | “was buying consumer goods from se a ee controvefsial recovery program agreement i ‘ “proposats-that™any—cor-} ernment Imes Although the editor: | Japan’ at higher prices” than they eo ane sence Korea on how the aid y is to| siderable portion of reconstruction | als are not read by many Koreans, | could buy them elsewhere. For ex- y “RT EUNSO! be spent. . funds be expended in Japan.” because they are in English, there| ample, they bought bituminous f : ' ted Nations Command and head of | jointly at the head. Once Paik and | relatively higher in price, than the | President Syngman Rhee. He says | ter beds from being scraped bare. handsomely tailored bands | eve ith smitiime | the United States’ Foreign Opera-| Wood have initialed a project it|Mmuch more efficient and better| Americans should remember one in 14K yellow gold. ; : tions Administration in Korea. goes to Washington for final ap-| quality American and European | million Koreans were killed during hie. Sen I lry Department During the next four years he is | proval. FOA looks over the items | Products.” Wood has insisted there | the war, with five million left des- | IMMA.MCAAMaa— i aia ic BACKENSTOSE aay ae et SAVE 530 OR MORE! bd ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT OBLIGATION CALL NOW FE 2.9143 | FOR FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION! AD ELECTRIC PORTABLE SEWING MACHINE Completely reconditioned. _ Parts by Vac & Sewing Machine Supply Co. AS LITTLE as $1.25 WEEMLY Written 5 YEAR G o NEW POWER-PACKED MOTOR “eo MEW S-SPite 160T Conran * eae eee eee wee nenaae © NEW SIONT-SAVER SEW LIGHT UARANTEE CARRYING CASE arog A N "VAC & ‘SEWING MACHINE SUPPLY CO. 379 S. Saginaw St Open Tuesday and Friday ‘tii 9 P.M. LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES . CALL NOW SEOUL #®—Ciinton Tyler Wood has the job of giving away a bil- lion dollars. At times he. finds it-a difficult task. Wood is 34 and holds twin jobs— economic coordinator for the Uni- expected to coordinate several aid programs intended to lift Korea from war's rubble and stand her on her own feet. To give away a billion dollars in a country ravaged by three years of war would seem &s easy as passing out ice cream cones on the Fourth of July. But Wood is under constant fire from the peo- ple he is trying to help. There have been four therns in ins side since he came here last August and began to organize his staff of 19 to administer the FOA program: * . - 1. Korean insistence that Wood and his staff go home and ‘‘sim- plify matters’’ by merely giving the money to Korean government leaders to spend, 2. Opposition to accepting even as gifts any articles manufactured in Japan, 3. A whispering campaign by Korean government employes that American aid money is being was- ted by members of Wood's staff. 4. An editorial campaign in a Floor : # Covering : ‘ New beauty for your floors Sculptured Leaf BROADLOOM Choose From Grey, Green or Beige A perfect choice for modern living—this sculptured leaf pattern will grace your living room with perfect charm and bring new beauty to your home! Made in a con- in- sures long wear — = all wool in 12 foot found - wire struction that am 2 WR. —— Bre —y © SGR95 | Sq. Yd. EAI iE SE OI yi Afteg four months’ talks, former Prime Minister Paik Too Chin agreed -that_America—-would—have a say in how its money would be spent. The formula was four in the creation of a combined eco- nomic board, with Paik and Wood needed and lists countries where certain items are considered good buys. Korea doesn't mind where the articles are purchased — outside Japan. When etl first items for Wood tried to = that some U.S._ officials- considered. Japanese purchases a means of helping both countries. The official Korean newspaper objected that Japanese goods “‘are inferior in quality, and be no boycott of Japanese goods. The “Korean Republic's’ editor- ials critical of the aid program are written by Americans—Wil- liam Glenn, a former University of Southern California jour- is a whispering campaign going against America. —-. ¢_<«. Paik, Wood's opposite number on the economic board, made a success of banking before he was drafted into the government by coal from Japan at $14 per ton while we could have bought the __., 4. aue.coal from Formosa at $9.”’ In 1766 Rhode Island enacted laws for the “preservation of the oyster” to keep the coastal oys- titute “The volume of American aid is not sufficient to carry out both rehabilitation and meeting the war deficit,’ he adds. ‘‘We need more American aid, and we don't Want BOOK STORE Pe Lawrence $! Both For °12°° Matching Wedding Bands, GEORGE’S NEWPORT’S lf they’re fresher... they haven't been ae CALIFORNIA Vine-Ripened HONEYDEWS 39° Red Ripe - Sugar Sweet proadioorn: , CALIFORNIA Mere. Aeros \ CALIFORNIA Santa Resa a0 5 Floor... 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TEA MEAT WATER MAID RICE “sesr* 15" WHITE — CHOCOLATE ot sie Fad ia ie” by % 2 a a et : Se" | MMT ee | ey aa mit, QS Facerice ime S33 - | enn nee ee HAZEL LEE wc... COOKIES “i= 25° ja ie : FLAVOR-KIST “sxc. COOKIES (249° KELLOGG’S VARIETY PACKAGE .,.°, 35° DON DE or QUAKER PUFFED RICE teat 2.4: KELLOGG’S RICE KRISPIES 27, | WHITE HOUSE GOLD MEDAL WHEATIES Ine. 23: , KELLOGG’S ,%%%, FLAKES Ieee 25° QUAKER PUFFED WHEAT 1k? pat KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES — t=" 27" 9 9 c Choice of RALSTON RICE or WHEAT CHEX , ny. 19° Grinds ALL YOUNG ROCKS Stewing Chickens KRAFT’S PARKAY Fy C cur UP 3 9: me Dee ompletely Cleaned a ‘t Nn MARGARINE Ib. = Lb, Cane 31° GROUND BEEF 9 ™iscctmivgen ite" 39s PETERS’ -.In Quarters ~ Sugar Cured Crear Cheese 227 PORK LOIN ROAST Fine 7.Rib Cat u. 49° Hickory Smoked BONELESS . PORK SAUSAGE “i,m 6 SKINLESS FRANKS .tzevecr, oso AAMS WISCONSIN — PORK STEAKS _sertredzittnnpt tie Biscuits = 225‘ Faney Rindless SHRIMP Fes bee fee Butter ee” 59% SWHISS percu FILtets Fgh lat Butter watten 65 ESE uteersacn cH EES ARNOLD'S SUGAR CURED Starlac = me 5 Quam 3%. Slices -uinicat 0s. Phe. 29: Cotrage Cheese ‘= 23 Sliced 5 Lean Streaked ‘: Cottage Cheese ‘s:* BACON "You can bet that when Dore Spurs Mae Into Training Will Be Star | schaty “tans trewiig "Tea and ' Sympathy” (announcement of the By EMILY BELSER Settling down to an easy chair of Brunettes purchase by MGM was made to- ORIVE-IN THEAT ER coguecghains doe ae eee ae eee. By DOROTHY MANNERS | day) that Deborah Kerr will. be in (While Louella Parsons ts on vacation | the role she created on Broadway. West, still a glamor gal at the ripe | Miss West doesn't believe in such| = her column will be written by Dorothy ‘The English actress is now in age of 60, is toning up like a prize. setting-hen pastimes. She's still Cor Williams Loke-Airport Resdi == Box Office Open 7:30 P.M. || fighter for her nightclub debut in. telling the boys 2 “erere - ites | London Preparing for “End of the N Las Vegas next week. | “C'm up an' see me sometime.” | © ¥ Pic palv hea (INS)—LOP writes Aftfair,”’ =r she gst ED Weighing in at a shapely 120/— and thinking of leading mea-ja@ pom ao: a the L.5.A., see WwW ESDAY and THURSDAY POURS Was Wakes with the ber. |terms of Marion Brando, several “Mary Anita and Richard Sale| for at least four = * * were lunching at Ambassadeurs Cafe and told me that they have| Before Linda Christian co-stars tied up with Jane Russeil and Bob/ with her old man, Tyrone Power, Waterfield’s independent company | in “The Stalk,”’ she'll do ‘‘Foxfire’’ to produce ‘Gentlemen Marry pe with Jef — and Jane Rus- ettes’ in nershi Jane will! sell at U-L ie dered thie sichre when it! Linda likes the role of the half- gets started in London and on the | Indian half-Mexican nurse in the continent in September. Anya Seton story, and she’s get- “Jane excites gf@at curiosity in| Ung packed to take off with ‘pe London. Reporters who have in- | company for two oF —— weeks terviewed me ask almost as many | location at Kingman, Ariz. questions about her as they do} Arizona's having a location boom. about Marilyn Monroe—and that’s | ““Oklahoma' is also shooting plenty.” | there * eee ee A bells, skips a mean rope and per- | decades her junior. ™ AG se ambulates 10 miles a day carrying! Mae, who will parade with 20 a five-pound weight in each hand. | handsome hunks of men at her “The weights help my posture | Stage show at the Sahara hotel, and tone up my muscles,” she does not look a single hour over confessed. the age of % WOT HEADS. WHO TERRORIZE AND TAKE OVER A TOWN! | In addition to al) these gyninas “You gotta be health-minded. And ties, the platinum-bionde Fe if you're health-minded you can Marion BRANDO fatale gets worked over daily by | look any way you want to look.” that “STRETTCAR” at a grim-faced masseuse and indul- | '* her advice ges in setting-up exercises, — at The writer of “Diamond Li,” an age when most women are | “She Done Him Wrong,” “Sex” cer : = |} and other noteworthy dramas, waltzed inte her white and gold living room garbed in the usual costume — a satin and lace neg- ligee. eerste Producer of ‘'Foxfire” is Aaron Rosenberg, and Joe Pevney is di- . * Marie McDonald is keeping her reservations at the Surf Rider | } i, ae recting. Starts SATURDAY! Through the French doors was! kee ——— ; Hotel in Honolulu twe more an ironing board incongruously set Sere “gar cea wey epee IAsbsAsssds up for business. It was difficult to TH AT Picture! connect the white-and-gold actress with such a practical instrument THAT Dance ! of endeavor New Lake Theater that she is living very quietly, spending most of her time with the children on the beach. 420 Pontiac Trail \ WALLED LAKE It's also generally whispered AIR CONDITIONED ) , Mar ph | around that when Marnie ‘re '® On Our Wide Miracle Gerees \ About that time a photographer | ~~. “came up" to see Mae and posed ; her appropriately beside a nude | marble statue of herself done by a woman sculptor. P She is averse to being sculptured | or painted in the raw by anyone | other than the female of the spe- she will go through with the divorce she’s started several times from | Wed., One Day Only \Y | “MINE WITH THE IRON poor” shoe executive Harry Karl Marie is in legal troubles in yuh nikal Avion —ALso— “BORN TO THE SADDLE” \ Beverly Hills for driving under the | influence of drugs. Harry paid a} oe fine of $250 last week on a charge \ With se pr “That nude painting over the of attempting to hit two photog- ead Dose ye mantle,” she said, nodding to- raphers with his car after he called hh he che heude ward a seductive Renoir-like en- deavor, ‘“‘was done by a woman, teo.”* Her age doesn't prevent Mae from ‘‘appreciating” all types of JANE RUSSELL “I keep changing my men, hon- THE ey,” she said. Miss West is the gal, you'll re- FRENCH member, who dreamed up such slo- gans as “What a man,”’ “You can be y r ° ia /) Bring the Family Vt like Christmae In July Tete or ntertainment Treat! | Starts FRIDAY: Jean Crawford in—" JOHNNY GUITAR” Also: Joan Leslie in “FLIGHT NURSE” T Ot Buttorficld Dheatreo PHONE moeea 2 4H! » OAKLAN MOOFRNLY 218 CONDITIONED pees LINE Se —s A had,” and ‘‘It's not the men in my 5 3 eC) life, it's the life in my men.” 6 Now Showing «6 « Thru Thursday! Fe TECHNICOL SS She also still believes diamonds » ; “ye ths Place! are a girl's best friend. And aed TREASURE!—Inspired by all the news out of Egypt, Vera-Elien Original Sim... Drawing Them Like » Magnet . . decides to dig in her native Pacific sands and see what happens. a ee EDMUND GRAINGER > | conviction has nothing to do with Marilyn Monroe. Though she found no mummies or the like, Vera did find a custom- —_ —_ __.__ ___.__.- SSE : am | tailored string of pearls thoughtfully planted there by an MGM | Prop man. On loan-out to Paramount presently, Vera-Ellen is reported Ere ¢ AIR CONDITIONED | to be cast opposite Fred Astaaire in forthcoming Metro musical. 7 EAT MORE LU NCH _ . Takes you beyond the land of the Black Sand! 921 W. Huron Se. Next te Huron Theatre : Divers Start to Raise plane was discovered by under- ; | ater fish FIRST TIME ___ EVERY DAY LOW PRICES ‘Crashed U.S. Bomber Sr water et ot feet Fish & Chips, Salad, . 50° Pork Chops. Salad, 80! | ROME w&—Divers went to work OUR GIANT SCREEN! IN PONTIAC! eines oe wanted a Bread & Butter today to raise the hulk of an Half Fried Chicken American bomber which crashed Salad, Bread and Butter.... 1.10 in the sea just off Rome’s most | popular beach at Ostia during 0 = ——— SSS — | World War II. : The wreckage of the four engine BIG JAM SESSION! Bo sizconoitioneo if 9 Oo | a 7 0 TUNE TOPPERS wie 222 | Today Thru Sot. GENE MAGA Tenor Sax — MANNY’S "sar" WED. & THURS. W. Huron at Elizabeth Lake Rd. RETURN ENGAGEMENT “YOU CAN’T BEAT MANNY’S FOR FUN” ASS Nor EVIL y TECHNICOLOR DAILY AT 12:48 See The “Dream Tin hae 858. Cars of Tomorrow’—In “GOING PLACES” 32,45 See the Academy Award PONTIAC « ‘*3i tee Di. : Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500 \ TONIGHT! \ a HELD OVER! Giant Screen the Best Actress Award for “ROMAN HOLIDAY” the picture that was PLEASURE-HAUNTS OF GUROPE IN it TECHNICOLORI ACTUARY FAMED WITH THE WHALING PLEET IN THE ICY ANTARCTIC! JEFE CHANDLER also honored with ALAN LADD and the awards for peer BLACK or Twe AND WHITE YEAR PICTURE GREGORY PECK - HEPBURN «William Wyler’s ns « wo EDDIE ALBERT Cyeduced snd Ovrected by WILLIAM WT Ol Sereengiay by (0% Mek ti Lan WON TER JON DeGnTon - ba HELEN DEUTSCH “stantsat” RICHARD BROOKS JOE PASTERNAK PLUS THIS FEATURE. - Gaery be tee Mek eter ote: - A Paremoun! Pokey a. LEO GENN. =: aKING SHOW Sevunte y ETAAD RABAT at FRU WENT + oy yay tps, stad fn te > “Tha Rat Rome” + Pratmet by RVING ALLEN st ALBERT 2 BROCCOLI ~ tiara’ ty TERENCE: YORG ALSO- rs A WARWICK PRODUCTION PPPPPPP PPP AHA PAA Abd d oe ddg gd ra ra a a aa aaa a aaa Ll la ta te tte tte Me te tt te he te te te tp te te pi ip pp i a ii i i hl lh i hn be be te be te be ip bp bb fn tn pp nin nn te, wwe THe emer ~ Pare y coma soe —Waginte Gilmare - Mary Bet Hughes - Micheles Brothers mney raaaaaunt PT UR p Game Sense Qwerted by ROCHE MATE Piatmres by WRIA | ARON i“ MUSIC WITH THAT sl it 7 ene ealiclapeiyre | LADD GLENN MILLER MAGIC! AG OS ee Ag SUN. — “Paratrooper” att | MAN wr WALLED LAKE ' 4 4 AN THE $ PARK FEATURES—11:00-1:40 SADDLE ; ges America's POW?! . neti hand —— 3 a ¥ Tuesdoy—Th HUN ! ; ve 1 ptr de arr ‘Ne a Bes a! ey, ; S| WILLIAM NOLDEN - DON TAYLOR i et. ve Bower i Sem * RIDES 0 a| Betas hes Asc 3 Lynn Bari - Carole Landis - Cesar Romero \ > sraranthaionotndrryehtirgapenitic « FREE PARKING * Dd ; i qe > > td vie sana’ % A ‘le : A ( ) ” { *\ ‘ hy a 4 | , (~ 1] eee eee eee a» “ _Nw BESEREREEES That just got a laugh, but | / = a ar a ame | with my sights on the target of CLA ALZALAA a really new experience, I ham- h » bj * at i aa ‘om + ms bd ° . =: . : . = : ___ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 - Nationally . ctice ground | street yell ‘‘wo fe 7 am subpoena powers, also will attempt Reommncea ¥/COLumnnist Is Only Woman] fice tec es SO Se sams man eee —_ I wouldn’t vouch for my passen- | some 90-millimeter backfire right licited funds are being diverted to By LAURA Z. HOBSON FORT RILEY, Kansas (INS)— I just drove a brand new Pat- “I said “drove a tank,” not ton tank, the $200,000 M48, weigh- | ing 48 tons, equipped with one 50 Caliber machine-gun, -two—30-cali- bers, and mounting a 90-millimeter | cannon. |, drove in a tank.” and I'm so | Set up, I could spit bullets. The idea hit me like a burst of gunfire. We were to have just a demonstration ride, first my boys and then 1, in charge of Lt, Col. Robert J. Bennett, ot Mt. Gilead, Obio, command. er of the tank battalion of the 10th Infantry Division. Col. Bennett was with the 6th Armored Division in Europe from D-Day to victory, and— thus‘ can take anything. But. when I sud- denly said, ‘‘Colonel, could you possibly let me drive it?’ he did a big double tage. He got a quick glance from one | of the crew, Sgt. Loren Lorentzen, of Hebron, Maine, also a combat pocsnceuenese ER «op Open Every Day! Banquet Room to Have Driven M48 Tank 5 2 Phone: veteran, with the 4th Armored OR 3-1907 OR 3-9303 }ed, ‘I'm a good driver, honestly.’’ sald, ‘‘Well, maybe.” Which sounded like uncondition- |} al surrender. But first came the | demonstration ride, with Pvt. Bur- bon Skipper of Meridian, Miss., driving, Col. Bennett at the peri- scope, the sergeant riding out- side, and me in the gunner’s seat. Bowled over by the motion, the ammunition racks and other lethal | marvels in cozy reach, I still was | housewife enough to admire the | | spotless black and white interior | of that killer — and the crew! | mered away until Col. Bennett GOOD FRIENDS MEET © GEER loved it when I said so. ® WINE Part of the time [ stood on the loader’s seat, head and shoul- © CHOICE | ders stuck out through the round LIQUORS hatch, to watch our crazy charge ®@ DELICIOUS across earth, ditches and holes COCKTAILS. big enough to drop a lecomo- tive into. Then came the return trip — |and Col. Bennett's lovely decision. I got a briefing on driving the) grey giant, did acrobatics to slide | down from the turret into the driv- | er s,bucket seat below, and ‘‘prac- tuced’’ im neutral. The new Patton tanks have auto- matic shifts, but I needed the strength of ten just to slide the lever into low, release the foot brake and push down on the gas pedal — each looking as, big as a breadbox, I took the squared “wheel”— LIBERTY COCKTAIL LOUNGE 85 North Saginaw Gut tf 4.4 ff | As persuasively as possible, I add- | aie Dining IN AND AROUND PONTIAC Good Food — Friendly Service Catering to Banquets and Private Parties PU RE FOOD RESTAURANT end BAR © Breakfasts — Luncheons — Dinners 953 Seuth Saginaw—Across from Jerome Meter Sales Open 5:30 4M. te & A. M.—Clesed Sunday BEER — WINE — LIQUOR — — “The TOMAHAWK” - »» Readhouse Style Dinners . . . ™ FEATURING: Chicken — Spare Ribs — Shrimp Our Specialty: FILET MIGNON . . . $2.90 Compiete Mondcy Reservations Available for Parties or Banquets Auburn Road (Under New Management) FE 3-9119 DRIVE-IN Test Past Cay irport RESTAURANT 6225 Highland Rd. Serving Dinners and Snacks in Our Dinin Room or in Your Car * ITALIAN SPAGHETTI * i * % Fried Chicken *Featuring* + na Gere *% Pork Choplettes Home Cooking Like Mother Used to Make! Home Made Bread and Pastries FRANK & ESTHER’S °s" is” 577 Auburn LOG CABIN Closed Sun. & Mon. Near East Bivd. , Dick & Jim attp=. Invite yeu te DINE & DANCE FRI. - SAT. - SUN. Chief Red Bird end His Band Steaks - Chops Beer - Liquer DRIVE-IN 130 S. Telegraph a JACK, SADIE and JACK JR. Still Serving Those , WONDERFUL MEALS JACK O’ HEARTS BAR ‘N GRILL 2528 Dixie Hwy. “HOME OF FAMOUS SALADS” MALONE'S ite Baldwin RESTAURANT “ “onico!= Super-Thick Malts, 30¢ Hot Dogs, 20c Pork Bar-B-Que, 35¢ @pen 7 Days « Werk! Bee Mana gement y & P. M.-12:80 A. M. Henry’s Bloomfield Inn 11 A. M.-12:30 A.M. * Open 4 p. m. to 2 a. m. Daily except Sunday. DELICIOUS FOODS ‘CHOICE WINES AND LiQuGrS —FAMILY STYLE DINNERS— SPORTSMAN INN On US-10—At Waterford, Mich. Phone OR 3-9325 and heard what sounded like the voice of doom, “Sir,” said Sgt. Lorentzen behind me to Col. Bennett, “I disconnected one gas tank, just in case. That way I can cut the ignition faster.” 1 gulped. released a white lever to raise the bucket seat {ill my eyes cleared the steel casing so I could see, and stepped on the gas. We were off! — First, drove that blessed 48- ton tank in a straight line. Then I tried a weaving motion: it re sponded in perfect side - te-side jerks. Then the straightaway again, and finally a tight U-turn for the homeward journey. By this time, after’ acres of | gers. This steel monster obeyed me’ like a well-trained pup; I saw .a clearing ahead, made straight for it, atid if 1 de say so, parked that M48 as if a park- ing meter was waiting for: my dime, ‘ More acrobatics as I hoisted myself — with the, help of good right arms — up dnd out, and as I jumped down to the hood of a wailing jeep and then to terra fir- ma, I was grateful to the whole U. S. Army ‘You're the only woman alive,” said Col. Bennett, “‘who's ever driv- en the new Patton tank."’ : “In the whole U. 8.?” I cried. “In the whole world,” said the colone!, Just let any cabbie on a city Mant vc DIAL COMMUNITY ALWARD'S DAVEY'S MARKET oe ee SOAP stops odor before it starts between the eyes! New York fo Probe Red Camp Influence ae Ei ee a full-scale investigation and -pub- lic expose of Communist summer camps in New York state. The lawmakers, acting swiftly on Gov. Thomas E. Dewey's re- quest for an immediate probe, they are undertaking “summer*ses- }sion subversion” to which young boys and girls allegedly are being said inquiry to uncover “‘insidiously subjected.” VAL-U- . The probe, backed up by full : , Bring This Coupon WORTH 10c AT YOUR WAY STORE on Beech Nut Coffee -officials to be Communist-tainted. The state holds. mortgages on ‘poison’ the minds of youngsters ostensibly building their bodies and character.” - At least 23 of the camps which tens of thousands of boys and girls are attending are believed by state pmagiesrtgnesiers meena 1 Probers Want Senate to Pick Up Hearing Tab , WASHINGTON # — The Senate Investigations sulbcommittee has asked the Senate to reimburse it for the $24,604.67 it spent to run the McCarthy-Army hearings, Sen. Mundt (R-SD), who presid- ed at the inquiry, introduced a res- olution asking for reimbursement ) ; : te’ : of yesterday. The Favorite Summer Dessert —Stock Up at This Price!. Chickens... be 3 This Valuable Coupon Entitles the Htoa Ith. Limit, Fresh g =. oe: ‘REMUS — : sBUTTER .. ee With Any Peschese © 1. een nenecesenenssasnnsnaseaseend Beech-Nut Coffee CELERY 19: _ Sliced. Bacon ‘49 12 Ox. Peter Pan PEANUT BUTTER | Crunchy or Smooth Get Instant Maxwell House Coffee at Your VAL-U-WAY STORES Swanson Frozen Chicken Pies We Reserve the Right te Limit Quantities! MARKET 339 Witeoxr 1012 Main St. 270) gtigsbeth «8990 Pontiac. Rochester Rochester Leke Read Lake Raad 3286 Auburn Ave. rs Lake Auburn Heights 7321 Commerce Road = 113 ~ Sth &. 220'S. Telegraph —«"Reehonter Read Se NS en ne ae ee ny ae wee mew ] . By TOM BRANAGAN CHICAGO @~The College All- Star football squad, its roster night, begins train- last Panne wits the hh 13 charity game with the Gridders Prep won the National Kootball League title two years in a row. * 28 ® The Lions beat a simil@r group of All-Stars 24-10 in last year's llth victory in the series, which -|to cope. with. THeans thie Lidiis Will have to play total of 5] stars from colleges throughout the country Will ‘report to Head Coach Jim Tatum of Maryland at Purdue University. They will have three full weeks to gear themselves for the anmial Soldier Field battle with the Lions, a veteran-packed club that has this year observes its 20th anni- versary. The coliégians have won siX games and two ended in ties. - The pros undoubtedly will be favored to repeat as victors in the coming game—their experience, individually and as a unit, figuring to give the college boys too much However, the All-Stars will have the advantage of playing under the limited substitution rule—which both ways, offensively and defen- sively. a practice they normally shun. The colleges, after a post- World War II fling. with the so- called ‘Two Platoon’ football practiced by the pros, have revert- ed to the old two-way game. Thi§ issue caused some contro- versy a few weeks ago with Buddy e __=_THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 for Battle With Lions Parker, the Lions’ coach, corning out strongly against subjecting his boys to the rigors of playing both offense and defense when they aren't used to it. : : + * * He was overruled after a con- ference between NFL Commission- er Bert Bell and Arch Ward, Sports Editor of the Chicago Tribune, whieh sponsors the annual grid show * . * Members of the All-Star squad have been appointed over the last Foxy Casey Stirs Up By JOE REICHLER NEW YORK w—Casey Stengel is @s crazy as a fox... and twice as sly. Talking to newspapermen before last night’s game with Chicago, the shrewd New York Yankee manager spied Whitey Ford, his ace southpaw, sitting within ear- shot of his gravel-voice “You want to know who is the best lefthander in the league’"’ he asked. ‘That feller (Billy) Pierce with the White Sox. He's better than my feller. Sure I picked my feller to pitch the All-Star game. But that was only because the oth- er feller had just recovered from a sore arm. But the other feller is better.” . ~ Ford undoubtedly heard every word uttered by Casey, but he said nothing. A few moments later he arose and began throwing warmup pitches. About two and a half hours later, Ford walked off the field with a neat eight-hitter, after pitch- ing the Yankees to a 4-1 victory over Chicago that kept the Yan kees hot on the heels of the Cleve land Indians Reached in the clubhouse later, | Ford declined to take issue with | Stengel. He admitted he was de- termined to show his manager that he was a pretty good pitcher, too, The 24-year-old ex-serviceman turned in one of his best efforts of the year. He struck out five and walked only two as he. posted his ninth victory over the White Sox since he entered the league in 1950 He has lost only once to them -It was Whitey’s fourth straight strong performance after a poor UPHILL WORK—On the new bicycle track at Vancouver. B. C. for daily workouts for the coming Dominion Games. are (from left) AP Wirephote Colin Dickinson of New Zealand, 1.000 meter champ: John Vanwy« of South Rhodesia. sprint champion; Lionel Cox of Australia 1.000 meter Olympic champion and Australian champion, arid Tommy Sharedelon of South Africa. “roadwork” on the track. The riders do about 60 miles a day TV Boxing Fans to See Jackson Again _ IBC Planning Return Bout Between Slade, ‘Hurricane’ By PAT ROBINSON NEW YORK (INS) — Although Jimmy Slade showed him up for the paluka he is and Nino Valdes stiffened him in two heats, TV ad- dicts have not seen the last of Hurricane Jackson. Believe it or not, the Interna- tional Boxing Club. already is planning a return bout between Major League Results AMERICAN LEAGUE Iiphis » & 3 TOPAT'’S GAMES at New York, 1 p.m—Trucks « > ve. Wiesler (3-1) Cleveland a yston, 1 9.m —Houtteman (5) vs Brewer (6-5). Baltimore at ¥ ashington, 7:30 p m.—Turley (7-10) vs Stone (7-3) Detroit at Philadelphia. 7 pm —Zuverink (4) v* Dixon (2-5) TUESDAY'S RESULTS 124, Philadelphia 6-3 ‘ashington 8 1 Boston § (ieinning tie— Slade and Jackson, or. they may put him in with Roland La Starza. As one official put it: “Why not? Sure, the gauy's a paluka and he can't fight a lick but what of it? The TV fans will stand still for anything. Didn’t they even make a hero of Chuck Davey? So why shouldn't we continue to collect all that nice TV cabbage with Jackson?’ What about Valdes? Well, the big Cuban certainly proved that with no handcuffs on him, he can certainly handle a Jackson But could he handle a Rocky Marciano” Valdes is now shouting for. the first crack at Marciano but he won't get it. Marciano will take Ezzard Charles again in Septem- ber and probably take him fast this next time. a That leaves Valdes available for a nice date with Marciano in Miami next February And what are Valdes’ chances of licking Marciano? Just about what. yours would be. 'Bill’s on the Beam! spring. His record, which once was 2-4, is now 9-6. . “I was all mixed up early this year,’’ Whitey explained. ‘‘My con- trol was off, my curve ball wasn't doing a thing and I seemed to be a Wi going from bad to worse. I finally lost all confidence in myself and if it wasn't for Jim Turner (Yan- kee coach), I might be sitting in the~ bullpen now or pitching for Kansas City. He straightened me out ” several weeks. The final two, haif- backs Paul Cameron and Bill Stits of UCLA, were named last night. Tatum will have the following greats of the 1953 college season available for duty against the Loins: ENDS—Don Dohoney, Michigan State; Bill Fenton, Iowa; Gary Knafelc, Colorado; John Carson, Georgia; Cariton Massey, Texas; Bob Mischak, Army; Ken Hall, North Texas State; Dick Deitrick, Pittsburgh; Hosea Sims, Mar- quette; Sam Morley, Stanford. TACKLES—Art Hunter, Notre Dame; George Jacoby, Ohio State, Harry Jagielski, Indiana; Ed Meadows, Duke; Charles Doud, UCLA; Stan Jones and Bob Mor- gan, Maryland; Melvin Brown, Oklahoma; Dean Chambers, Wash- ington; Matham Gressette, Clem- son. GUARDS — Menil Mavraides, Notre Dame; Crawford Mims, Mississippi; George Timberlake, Southern California; Morgan Wil- liams, Texas Christian; Bob Hant- la, Kansas; Jerry Clem, Southern Methodist; Phil Branch, Texas. CENTERS—Kim Schrader, Notre Dame;‘ Jerry Hildenberg, lowa; Ed Beatty, Mississippi; Bill McHenry, Washington & Lee. QUARTERBACKS -; Zeke Brat- kowski, Georgia; Bob Garrett, Stanford; Lamar McHan, Arkan, sas; Cotton Davidsofi, Baylor; Vince Dooley, Auburn. HALFBACKS — Johnny Lattner Notre Dame; Paul Cameron, UCLA; Veryl Switzer, Kansas State; _ Bobby Cavezos, Texas Tech.; Bill Stits, UCLA; Dick Noland and Chester Hanulak, Maryland; Jerry Norton, Southern Methodist; Gene Filipski, Villa- nova. FULLBACKS — Neil Worden, Worden, Notre Dame; Stan Wal- lace, Iinois; Bucky McElroy, Mis- sissippi Southern; Ralph Fenton, Maryland;~Tommy Allman, West Virginia; Rick Casares, Florida. * * * Assisting Tatum with the coach- ing will be Bud Wilkinson, Okla- homa; Chuck Taylor, Stanford; Bob Voigts, Northwestern; Stu Holcomb, Purdue, and Forrest Evashevski, Iowa. Favored Entries Advance in Penn State Net Test Coss Is Only Casualty Among Seeded Players in Tournament PHILADELPHIA UW—Top-seeded players entered the quarter-finals today of the 55th annual Pennsy!l- vania State Men's Grass Court tennis championships at Merion Cricket Club in suburban Haver- ford | Only break in the-seeded ranks came yesterday when Tim Coss Eastern Intercollegiate champion | from Swarthmore and Washington, | D.C., eliminated seventh seeded | Jack Frost, San Francisco, 6-4 | + | . Today's’ pairings pit top-seeded Vie Seixas, the nation’s No. 2 Player and defending champ against Don Lesch, Los Angeles Seixas breezed to victory 60, 6-2 over Fred McNair of Baltimore yesterday . Second-seeded Art Larsen of San Leandro, Calif, meets Don Flye, Tacoma, Wash. Larsen played two matches yesterday to catch up with the field. The former US champion whipped Dick Heary,. Merion, 64, 63. and Richard Gains, Edgartown. Mass., 6-3, 6-3. Straight Clark. third-seeded from Pasadena, Calif, defeated William Tully, New York State champion, 6-2. 6-2 yesterday and meets Bil] Quillian, Seattle, in to- day's roynd. Fourth-seeded Ham Richardson meets Fred Hagist of San Francisco. Other matches today pit fifth- seeded Hal Burrows, Charlottes- ville. Va.. against Jerry De Witt of San Francisco; sixth-seeded Gil Shea against Allen Morris of At- lanta. Ga: and eighth-seeded Fd- died Moylan, Trenton, N. J. against igre Masterson of Washington, De ‘Honor’ Caddies Get Jobs at State’s Open At this week's conference of caddy superintendents and caddy- masters of the DDGA, it was de- cided to send squads of 15. “‘honor”’ caddies from each of the district clubs to Lakepointe for the Michi- gan Open. Play in the state's big tourney at Lakepointe begins a week from Thursday, ends Sunday of that week. Special rates and cash mileage for trips to and from the Open will be provided the boys, says Pat Brazil, Orchard Lake caddymaster. Grawings for players will be made July 27 at Lakepointe. 4 Bill Graham, general profes- sional at the Bloomfieid Hills Country club hasn't played as much golf as usual this year but his last three efforts were three successive 69's. That’s staying on the beam for an oc- casional participant. ICE WATER IS WONDERFUL STUFF—National League umpire Frank Dascoli, sweltering back of the plate in 110 degree field heat at Crosley Field, said: “Ice water, it's wonderful."’ While fans look on in the background, won, 2-1. ‘9 . AP Wirepbote Frank douses his head and neck with an ice water soaked towel in the 9th inning of yesterday's 13-inning Reds-Giants game. _ Giants Motors 9 Gains Adds Half-Game Edge, by 6-4 Victory Over Milford Merchants League-leading General Motors took a half-game lead over idle Stadium Inn in City Men's Softball League standings last night, win- ning its 13th victory in 15 starts, 6-4, over Milford Merchants. Coachers overcame a 3-2 defi- cit in the Sth inning, when three runs crossed the plate on two hits, a walk and an error. GMC added an insurance run in the 6th when Jenkins singled, ad- vanced on an error and came in on a fielder’s choice play, ‘Birmingham Riteway kept alive its hopes for a tie for the cham- pionship by edging CIO, 2-1. Win- ning run came in the last of the 7th inning, when Charles Reynolds doubled and was driven in Jerry Wedge's single. omc . : ane -. 001 1310-6 7 1 Milford ...... 102 001 0—4 7 3 Wheeler and Pocctolla; Dudsinski and Reed cio .. Aree. 100 000 O—-1 8 1 Birmingham bor 000 001 1-2 6 2 Wright and 6tilweil, Walker and Kothe. : The forest area of Canada is approximately 1,220,405 square miles, by | é District's Ca - |Tourney Pla in League Play Joan By H. GUY MOATS the of the summer vacation, to give caddies of the Detroit District Golf Associ- Instituted at start Round Robin Caddie league has proved immensely popular. This is the word from Pat Brazil, caddy- master at Orchard Lake Country Club and ‘‘father'’ of the league. “We have a doten teams play- fing each week in this league,” Pat reports. ‘‘There are six on the West and the same number League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING— Noren. New York. 358: Avila. Cleveland, : inoso, icago 324; Rosen. Cleveland. 318: Busby. Washington and Mantle, New York, 315 RUNS—Minoso, Chicago, 75. Mantle. New York, 70; Fus, Chicago and Yost, ‘Wasb- ington, 65: Avila. Cleveland. 64 \ RUNS BAITED IN—Minoso, Chicago and Rosen, Cleveland. 72: Mantle. New York, 70: Berra, New York, 69; Doby, Cleveland, 4 HITS—Fox. Chicago, 117; Busby. Wash- ington. 112; Mmoro. Chicago, 111; Avila, Cleveland. 163, Vernon, Washington DOUBLES—Vernon, Washington, 71 Dougaid. New York. 18; Bolling and sall, Boston and Avila. Cleveland, 1 TRIPLES — Runnels, Washington. 13: Vernon, Washington. (2: “Minoso, Chicago, pe: Tuttle, Detroit and Mantle, New York. HOME RUNS—Mantle New York. 19: Doby and Rosen, Cleveland. 16; Sievers, Washington, 15; Minoso, Chicago, ie, Detroit, zareal. Philadelphia and Vernon, on. STOLEN BASES—Jensen, Boston. 13; Minoso and Rivera. Chic , 12. Busby, Washin ®; Fox and Michaels, Chi- 100 Me- Pier- ‘Hot’ Yanks Still Trail By BEN PHLEGAR Associated Press Sportswriter What does a feller have to do tc get into first place in this league? Casey Stengel didn't ask it in so many words but it certainly wo'ld be an appropriate question | y for the resident genius of th« w York Yankees. * > * . Stengel is running the hottest ball club in the American League. Only 3% games off the pace on July 1, the Yankees have won 17 out of 19 games since then. ~ * * And they still aren't on top. Last night they came within .one putout of reaching their objective. The Yanks fought off third place Chicago handily, winning 41.. The [buge scoreboard in Yankee Stadi- um -showed Boston leading Cleve- land 5-3 after eight innings. But in the ninth inning at Boston Al Smith coaxed Willard Nixon for a walk with two out and Bobby Avila drilled his second home run of the contest to tie the score. Indians Keep AL Lead by 4 Percentage Points as They Tie Bosox in 16 Innings games beginning Friday night. While the American League race was tightning, the National League became more lopsided with the| 7s New York Giants stretching their advantage over Brooklyn to seven games, their longest lead of the That's the way it stayed through | yéar. seven more innings as it wound up a 55 tie after 16 innings with the league curfew~ forcing a halt. So, by four percentage points, the Indians stayed in first place. It missed being an exact tie be- cause the Yankees have played two more games than Cleveland. winning one more and losing one more. ° * * r The issue may be settled tem- porarily this weekend when Cleve. land invades New York for three a ry ° . s The Giants won a_ 13 inning struggle in Cincinnati 2-1 and Brooklyn lost in 10 innings at Chi-. cago 3-2. St. Louis defeated Phila- detphia 4-2 in the only other Na- tional League action. Other results in the American League included.a 9-1 triumph by Washington over Baltimore and two’ more defeats for the Phila- delphia Athletics, their 9th and 10th in a row, this time to Detroit 12-0 and 43. “ie | Sere Milwaukee, York, 16-1, “1, 875; C€ Morgan. New ork, 8-3, “ STRIKEOUTS—Turley, Baltimore. 108; Trucks, Chicago, 92; Wynn. Cleveland. 65; —— Chicago, 8&2: Coleman, Baitimore, NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTIN ider, Brooklyn, 359; Muel- ie, New York, 34%; Musial, &t.Louls, 4 St Louis and Beil, Cincinnati, 337, RUNS—Musial, st Louis, 77; Mays, New York and Schoendienst, St.Louis, 75; Snider, Cirvcinnats, 69. ITCHING—Reynolds, New Peller, Cleveland, 7 909; suegra, Chic , 12-3, 200. York 7.2. 718; Lovet. New New York, 33; o and ustal, St Louis, 27; 0 ; Te outs, io’ Methewh, Milwae- kee and Jablonski, St.Louis, 7 - PTITCHING— Anioneili. New Yorks, 14-2, 873; Meyer brooklyn, 7-2. 778; Wilhelm, New York, #3, ; _ Maddix, —— 14-4, .700; Grissom and Magiie, New York 4 6m a STRIKEOUTS — haddiz, &t Louis, Roberts. Philedeiphia 163; Antonelli. New ddies Enjoy in Own Loop | on the East division roster, rep- resenting 1° private clubs.” Pat explained that the teams play weekly on a 4ball-best ball and the schedule includes give all a chance to play. Season 5 Sports Pages in Today’s Pontiac Press ends in August. All boys must be regularly listed caddies, under 18 years of age. Current leaders are Oakland Hills for the West (42) and Frank- lin Hills East (3-1). Match points are based on both 9 and 18 hole cards and for individual match wins. A match has a total of 27 points. Orchard Lake plays Tam O'Shanter today, with the OL team including Jack Reynolds. No. 1, Jack Brown No.-2. Ed MecWest, No. 3, Larry Hollister, No. 4, Lloyd Sappington No. 5 and a new lad, Roger Steel of Detroit. No. 6. All but Steel are Pontiac area boys Rest of the league standings: WEST EAST Pine Lake 3-1 Western 3-1 Tam O'Shanter 2-2 Birmingham 2-2 Orchard Lake 2-3 Plum ollow 1-1 Bmfteld Hills 1-3 Red Run 1-3 Knollwood . 6-3 Porest Lake 0-3 , | 1954. Big Stuff for Juniors y BILL MARTIN Two no - hitters featured yester- day's 8game City Junior Baseball League card. Neither game went the regulation seven innings. A Class F contest was called Reds’ Tebbetts Top Choice for Pilot of Year Has Done Sensationa Job at Cincinnati By GAYLE TALBOT |Birdie Tebbetts is going, should be little difficulty in elect- With the National race entering its second half, the Redlegs has turned in a job little -} short of sensational. A year ago at this time the Red- legs, with almost exactly the same talent, were floundering in the sec- ond division under that hard task- master Rogers Hornsby. They nev- er attained the 500 mark under the Rajah, and they were destined to wind up a bedraggled sixth, 37 games off the top. * 6 Today the slugging Westerners, goaded and smartly directed by their new manager. are battling tooth and nail for third place be- hind the Giants and Brooklyn and. on their current form. must be conceded at least an _ outside ‘chance of pulling one of the biggest upsets of recent baseball! history. Few experts-gave the club a hope of finishing any higher than it did last season. Third place would represent a genuine triumph for the popular Birdie. Ld . Probably the only one not great- ly surprised by the way the Red- legs are staying in there and slug- ging with the leaders, despite their uncertain pitching, ts Teb- betts himself. The stocky ex- catcher who took over after a single year of minor league man- agerial experience at Indianapolis never ceased to swear stoutly in the spring that he was going to climb over some clubs — “and I don't give a d—n which ones they are.” Robinson Puts Finger on Black Marketeers PARIS (UP) — Police today said former world middleweight box- ing champion Sugar Ray Robinson was the finger man in the arrest of two black market operators. Robinson, starring in a Paris mu- sical revue. told police he bought $700 on the black market from the men and did not find he had been fleeced until a bank teller told him the bills were counterfeit. The boxer-dancer spotted the op- erators again and informed police The operators were identified as Waclaw Souhrada, 32, of Prague. and Isidore (Zizzi) Ben Ali, 33, an Algerian. Publinx Champ Plays in National Amateur DALLAS «® — Champion of the National Public Links Golf tourna- ment will play in the ‘National Amateur Tournament at Detroit Aug. 23-28. Gene Andrews of Pacific Pali- sades, Calif.. and Jack Zimmer- man of Dayton, O.. clash for the title today. USGA rules make the semi-fi- nalists of this tournament eligible to take part in sectional qualifying rounds for the Amateur and the champion goes to that tournament without qualifying Planning a Drive? Hampshire border, reads Hampshire, don't forget Florida's Silver Springs, near Oca- la.”" Ocala is only 1,700 miles away. Two More No-Hit Tilts ‘Mark City Loop Play after only two innings when Boys’ Club Americans piled up a 21-1 margin over St. George. Jim Skin- ner held the losers hitless, struck out six and walked one. Winners EW Y c ue — At the rate| loop’s National Division, a Ge "¢ there | the Red Sox a 16-3. shellacking. ing the Manager of the Year for| !" League | game. freshman pilot of the Cincinnati | Gr'fts had 11 hits, including a home run by Dave Simmons. “The other no - hitter was turned in by Tom Sellost and Darrell Thorpe who combined to blank the Tigers as Avondale won a 19-0 verdict in the Knothole loop. The two pitchers together fanned 11 batters before the game was called at the end of four frames. Second tie - game of the sta- son was recorded in Class D, when Griff’s Gril! and Don Nich- olie Realty battled to a 2-2 stand- off in nine innings. Each team collected six safeties. Three 2-hit performances were turned in, with Rochester's Don Robertson beating Clarkston ? - 1 in Class D, Williams Lake’s John Keating and John Studt sharing honors in a 32 win over Boys’ Former Tiger Catcher | Yankees 21-2 in another Knothole Club Nationals in Class F and GMC’s Dave Abel’s beating the | contest | | Lytell - Colegrove won its oth | consecutive victory in Class Ek, | beating Boys’ Club, 4-2. Onoles, | 2nd - place team in the Knothole handed | White Sox forfeited to Senators another Knothole National CLASS D . 000 000 200-2°4 1 Nicholie 000 200 000-2 6 4 Paterson and McLarty Jones and | Gary ! Rochester 000 010 1-2 2 3 Clarkston 000 001 6-1 2 3 Robertson and Eoans, Yahnke and Johnson CLASS E L-C - 611 2000 4 4 ® Boys’ Cut 001 000 1-2 8 4 Butier and Conley Nester and Kind CLASS F |Wms Lake 000 120 2-8 7 1 BC Nationais 100 091 O-2 2.4 Keating. Stuct and Sheitner, Jones nd Osle Bt On rege 16 1 68 BC Americans 14 7--21 11 1 YORK, Me. (UP) — A sign here,| An All-America football player that you are leaving delightful New | probably was best know Nicholas, Savas Harding and Savas, Skinner and Gidcumd. Johnson KNOTHOLE Avondale 19 Tigers 0 GMC 21. Yankeés 2 Orioles 16, Red Sox *Seriators 7, White Bor 6 *Porfeit Jets Increase City Loop Lead by Beating Cl0 Now 2 Full Games in 2 Front After 10-4 Win on Tuesday Pontiac Jets moved two full games ahead of 2nd-place General Motors in City Class A Basebail League standings yesterday, beat- ing 6th-place CIO. 10-4. dets pounded two CIO pitchers for 11 hits, including a 2-run homer by Don Kussell and doub- les by Russell, Eugene Cox and Judge Booker. League Teaters traited the Un- jonmen 43 after three innings, but broke lodse for four runs in the 4th and added three more in the 6th to win easily. Jets starter Octave LeDuff gave way to Russ Lothery, who re- ceived credit for the victory, mn the 4th. Lothery held the Umion nine scoreless the rest of the wavy, fanned four and walked none i Jets 102 403 6 10 1! clo 017 000 6 LeDuff. Lothery and Johnson Rouse and Osika 1 ‘os Leonara, Remember? — ~~ Te ee 7 just north of the Maine - New| in his day. he later returned to “Now;coach at his alma mfter. He n for his to see | prodigious punting abihty. His identity will be found on today's final sport page. SAN DIEGO, Calif. ‘“#—Tennis champion Maureen .Connolly—ser- jously injured when thrown against ;|a moving cement truck while rid- ing her horse-—rested in a hospital here today. “Little Mo’s” injuries—a broken 42] and severely cut right leg—will ‘Baousn | Prevent her from defending her U.S. Singles title at Forest Hills, ;|N.Y., Aug. 28. She has won the title the last three years. * * . Dr. Bruce Kimball who operated on her leg shortly after the acci- +dent yesterday said the fibula or small bone below the knee was fractured and that some muscles were torn but not severed. She was in surgery more than three hours. * * ° Her leg was put in a cast and $2; Erskine, Brooklyn and Spah.! Dr, Kimball aid she would be ; hospitalized at least a week. He said, however, that the injury would not permanently cripple her. He ordered her not to touch a tennis racquet for a month, and perhaps longer. Miss Connolly was under drugs last night and will not learn the extent of her injuries until today. She suspected the worst, however, and her last words before, entering surgery were: “How long will it ‘be?"’ The 19-year-old tennis queen was riding her thoroughbred Colonel Merry Boy yesterday, accompa- nied by two girl companions, when Valley Polo Grounds. Before entering surgery, ‘‘Little .| Mo” told Nelson Fisher, San Diego Unton. sportswriter and Close the accident occurred near Mission’ Tennis Champion Maureen Connolly Is § Injured When Horse Throws Her Against Truck eriously ~ “We wene riding along Friar’s Road. We stopped our horses ag the truck approached. “Colonel Merry Bo shi : ee the fuck My ee an cau tween m . y horse and the * ¢ @ Mrs. Kathryn F. Walker, a nurse, stopped at the accident scene and applied a tourniquet to Miss Connolly's leg to check the loss of blood. * * “Littl® Mo's” first reaction after the accident was to inquire after Colonel Merry Boy. Colonel Merry Boy, “Little Mo's” foace is heart, was given to her through’ Public subscription after she came home from her triumphant tennis tours two years ago, Tigers Sweep Twin Bill to Hold Fourth S PHILADELPHIA WwW — nen Tigers found their teeth last night to sweep a twi-night doubleheader from the Philadelphia Athletics and tighten their slim hold on 4th place. Bengals scored nine runs in the Ist_inning of the Ist game and added three more in the last three innings to give Steve Gro mek a 120 shutout. Win was num- * ber 11 for Gromek who has dropped nine starts. ‘Philadelphia made it tougher for Ned Garver in the 2nd game, bowing 43. Detroit collected three runs in the 8th inning to give Garver his*7th win of the year as against six defeats. Harvey Kuenn paced the nine run upsurge in the opener. He THE PQNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, singled olf starter Alex Kellner to opep the inning, scored a run, and then came back to hit a grand-slam home run off-reliefer John Gray. Gray finished © the game for the Athletics. Kellner who left after getting one man out and aHowing four runs in the Ist inning, was charged with his 9th loss of the year. a got off to a 3-1 call in the 2nd game before Bill Tuttle blasted a two-run homer in the 8th inning off Arnold Portocarrero. Jim Delsing doubled follgwing Tuttle's round tripper, moved to 3rd on a long fly by Ray Boone and scored the winning run on another fly by Wayne Belardi. ~ Manager Fred Hutchinson was ejected from the Ist game after disputing a play at Ist base with umpire Ed Hurley. Umpire Bill ‘Grieve ousted Tiger coach Bob Swift in the tnd game when Swift disputed another play at Ist base. The two wins put Detroit a game-and-a-half ahead of the Bos- ton Red Sox in the battie for 4th place. Boston and Cleveland played to a 55 16inning deadlock last night. Detroit's Ward Faces British Import Tonight — Yolande Pompey Makes First U.S. Appearance in Chicago CHICAGO W—Yolande Pompey, considered by many experts as probably the best all-around fight- er in the British Empire, makes his first United States appearance tonight against busy Moses Ward of Detroit. Pompey, a 25-year-old West In- dian from Trinidad, is a 5-2 favor- ite to beat his free swinging oppo- nent in the battle to be televised nationally at 9 p.m. EST. (CBS). . . - Pompey owns both the Empire middleweight and light heavy- weight championships, although he has. fought only 30 professional fights—losing one and scoring 20 knockouts. * * = The Trinidad hopeful is ranked fifth among the light heavyweight challengers but is expected to con- centrate on the middleweight bracket in this countre if success- ful against Ward. The Detroiter is a rugged swing- er with a windmill-type attack and has 11 knockouts to his credit in winning 18 of 25 bouts Pompey’s most impressive vic- tory was over the late Dave Sands, the Australian champion who held a decision over Bobo Olson, the current middleweight titleholder. He fought. a draw with Jimmy Slade, recent winner over Tommy “Hurricane’’ Jackson, and then beat Slade in a rematch. Skinner Expected to Become Wings’ Pilot DETROIT w& — Unknown Jim Skinner is expected to step into one of hockey’s biggest jobs today | al) —coach of the Detroit Red Wings. The 37-year-old Skinner, former coach in the Red Wing farm sys- tem, is the choice of genera] man- ager Jack Adams. The coaching vacancy was cre- ated when Tommy Ivan, who led the Red Wings to six straight Na- tional Hockey League champion- ships, left to become general man- ager of the Chicago Black Hawks. ecth Sports Calendar TODAY BASEBALL CLASS A—Auburp Merchants vs Oliver (Wisner, 5:30)... CLASS D—Mets vs Doris (Washington. 5 30); Clarkston vs rn (Columbia-Josiyn south, 8:°0 CLASS F—Cass Ponts vs Rosebud (Co- umbia-Joslyn south, 5:30). AMERICAN LEGION — Birm Rives at Birmingham Reds; Huron at Clawson. SOFTBALL MEN'S—C-V ve Forster (Beau- det TY 3 dette, fas Louie's vs Drive-in iNorth: side, 8:30) G "= Avondale vs Giles, (Northside, 7) WATERFORD—Gidiey vs Drug (Men's, 8 30, Drayton); White Bros. vs Day's Sanitary renter 6 Ras Drayton). RACING Rardtops at Pontiac M-5® aaa time trials at 7, racing at 8.30 GOLF Michigan Open qualifying” round at Forest Lake am alley THURSDAY BASEBALL CLASS A—GMC vs CIO (Wisner, 5.30). CLASS D-—-Nicholie vs Police (Wash., 530), Griffs vs Rochester (Columbie- ~ Joslyn, north, 6:30) S88 E—Boys’ Club vs Rosebud (Co- lumbia-Joslyn south, 6:30). CLA —t. George ve Avondale (Wash. 8): Boys Club American vs Boys Ciub National (Wash., 11). KNOTHOL E—Yankees vs Indians (Co- GMC vs Tigers jumbia-Joslyn south, 98); 7 ) ‘Columbia-Joslyn south SOFTBALL sles MEN’S—CIO vs Moose (North- side, 7) CITY GIRLS'’—Gingellville Gmc (Northside, 8:30) MEN'S EXHIBITION—6Ghaw's vs Austin OU of Wayne (Beaudette, 7); Shaw's vs Unistrut_ of tte gd (Beaudette 8:30). WA W vs Dixie ‘Men's, Williame Lake vs Del's Drayton, 8:30); \Litele. Drayton, 6:30) vs Because he is a tool and die.maker in a big automobile Willfam K. Meyers, 1006 Borton Ave., Essexville, Michigan, is naturally interested in how to improve his car’s performance, Not long ago he switched to New Super Perma- {ube Motor Oil. He finds that this extraordinary new oil cuts engine drag and fric- jon so much “it saves me 3 gal- tons af gas in every tankful! Change over to New Super Permalube Motor Oil at your Standard Oil Dealér's and start Whistle-Signals Blamed by Gray for Loss to NY | PHILADELPHIA u — Ted Gray, | Tiger lefty, blamed a shrill whistle ‘for his 8-0 loss against ‘the New York Yankees Monday. He explained that Jim Turner, Yankee coach, whistled to the New York batters as a tip-off on what | type of pitch Gray was throwing’ Gray explained: “Turner kept his eyes glued on me all during the game. He watch- ed every motion I made. “In the 8rd inning I heard a shrill whistle from the Yankee bench just before I pitched to Mickey Mantie and he hit a good curve right out of the park. “In the 6th I heard the whistle again and it seemed to come every time I was ready to throw a curve. ‘Turner noticed something I was doing and was passing along the information to the hitters." Gronik Feels Puts Lowry Out in First Round in Detroit Then Sheds Tears DETROIT W—Allie Gronik, 14912 Detroit, broke down and.cried aft- er knocking out Pat Lowry, 147%, Toledo, at 1:48 of the first round of their scheduled 10-round bout at the Motor City Speedway last night. Gronik said he felt bad about knocking out Lowry particularly since Lowry had scored two re- cent wins in welterweight bouts. Gronik, the Michigan welter- weight champ, dropped Lowry twice for counts of nine with a right to the jaw. The third time he knocked Lowry half out of the ring and Referee Bob Watson did- not even bother to count. The fight was televised region- ally. Minor Club's Head Sues Radio Station RICHMOND, Va. (®—The owner of the Richmond Virginians has filed a $65,000 breach of contract suit against a local radio station, charging the station failed to live up to an agreement to broadcast all home and away games of the International League team. Harry C. Seibold, the club owner, 4ays in the suit entered in Hust- ings Court, Part 2, he suffered minimum damages of $50,000 be- cause Station WLEE, operated by the Lee Broadcasting Cor., did not carry accounts of all official sched- uled games played up to July 2. WLEE has not been broadcast- Swedes Lead Belgians in Davis Cup Series BAASTAD, Sweden .w—Sweden needed only one victory in the remaining two singles matches today to knock Belgium, the de- fending European Zone champion, out of the Davis Cup competition. The Swedes took a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five series yesterday by Bad Over Kayo | cocked, ready to deliver that pow- er later on. But happened to his downswing at the 1954 she You goin” oe. pot George Zuverink wilt hurl for the Tigers tonight when the Ben- gals close out the three-game series with the Athletics. He has a 44 record (TRIP: sag AN a ag an Vane ~ . . — =e HIGH SPEED MIDGETS—Powered by outboard motors, these unique surf-riding craft seem to be | high-speed surfboards prior to entering the annual Dick | Gold Coast Marathon Handicap Motor Boat Race, McGinley (left) and Alan Rosendahl try out their | which runs from Miami to Palm Beach and back. a combination of water-ski and speedboat. ~~ - United Frees Photo Picture Shows Position of Hands, Club During Swing By SAM SNEAD Pictures Tell Tale Because a class A golfer's swing is so fast, it is hard to learn any- thing from just watching him play. I believe today’s illustration can do a golfer seeking instruction much more good. This picture shows the position of the hands and club at various points of the swing. For the most part the positions drawn are ex- cellent. In the solid outline his | hands (A) are high, with his right hand completely under the shaft. His left arm (B) is prac- tically straight, as.it should be. | The dotted lines at the first stage of downswing still depict good form. His wrists: -are stilf something has winning the doubles. Sven David- son and Torsten Johansson whipped Philipe Washer and Kluszsewski, Reds; Kuenn, Souchock. | i ichan Tuttle, Tigers, Sievers, Senators | Jackie Brichant, 6-3. 68, 36, 97. Maestri, Athletics; Avila 2, Rosen, Doby. 6-3. Indians: Lepcio, Red Sox. TUESDAY'S HOMERS How te Cut Your Tire Bill ‘4! Even though the tread of your tire is starting to wear smooth, you can get thousands and thousands more safe miles of service at small cost with our guaranteed, factory method re- caps. . Recaps Save You Money Bring your’ worn tires into our shop. We will apply a new tread of fresh, live, long-wear- ing rubber guaranteed to de- liver thousands upor? thousands of miles, and you save ‘2 the cost you would pay for a new tire. WE Loan You 2 Tire Free while yours is being recapped. Drive in—save money. / 25 Pine St. 1 Block North of Pontioe Press — eee Toughened with long-wearing Cold Rubber FULLY GUARANTEED ‘wrrrvervevuvevTwve?T _erreeerrrwrrvrerre TIRE CO. FE 4-2505 ph ! | hip-level position. Can you spot what's wrong? The club, instead of being par- allel to the ground at this oop should be much more upright. fact, the shaft should be sree should be just beginning to uncock. 14th perpendicular to the ground, be-| New York Giants, won his cause this is where the wrists| game, beating Cincinnati 2-1 in 13 Yesterday's Stars HITTING—Bobby Avila, Cleve- land Indians, hit two home runs, his second one with one on and two out in the ninth saved the Indians from defeat in a 55 16 inning tie at Boston. PITCHING— Johnny Antonelli, innings. ; FIRST GAME DETROIT PHILADELPHIA HOA ABH OA ao — 5 y s 3 : 5 = t>4 263 ‘ultle, c > 2 3 @ Dem'trisas 3 1 1 6 Niemen, If 0 © @ @ Dem'trias 3 1.1 6 Well if you are, better get ieee for a trip eLund, rf : 6 2 © Pingan.Jd 41 #1 «4 3b 11 1 6 Renna, rf 3 6 6 6 he sta rs Bertoja. 3b 1 6 @ 1 Wilson, cf 3 @ 2 @ fore you rt it. 2 Drege, ib 5 1 € @ Boliweg.ib 3 0 8 8 3 ‘chock, if 2 1 0 © Power, if 41 6 0 rou can buy uto Clab mem- ; an rt 2 0 5 © Astrotn. e 42 7 @ You know } y t A a son.c 4 2 5 © Keliner, 9 6 6 6 1 . cura, Bolling. 2> 3 1 3 2 Gray. » 26 33 bershi advantages, rivileges and pro Gremet, p40 © ® blimmer-1 0 6 04 P P de ‘eta: 41377 &§ Totas zu Inw gas roa ide stores, @—Grounded eut for Nieman tm Ist tection at stations or b—Struck out for Gray m 9th Detroit 900 000 162—12 en route. —_ 7 eee e606 o00— @ venn uttle, Nieman, Boone. Dro- = po 2. Souchock. R. Wilson 2, Bolling And almost everyone knows that these . rg E—Bollweg R Wilson, RBI—Tut ° : tle, Dropo 2. Boiling 3, Gromek, Kuenn not tri unless 4 — 78—Kuenn, Tuttle, Bolling HR days you are fixed for a P | venn, Seuchock S—Nieman, ale ember DP—Kuenn. Bolling and Drope; Jacobs, vou travel as an AAA m . Detmaestri and Bol AP ¢ Kueon and Dro = po. Ciray Jacobs a: Bollweg Finigan * Jacebe and Bahweg Lett—Decot @ Pen. Membership for twelve months only $15, eadeiphia 9 BB—Grometk 2. Kellner 3. Gray 4 aa Gromek 2, Gray 5 HO—Gromek 7 wm 9 Kellner 3 tm 2-8 Grey 16 i 81-3 R-ER—Kellmer 7-4. Gray 5 about the price of half a cup 'of coffee 5, Gro oe . mek 0-@ HBP—By Gromek (Bollweg, De- a day. Phone or visit Club office. There's maestri) W--Gromek (11-9) L-— Kellner (5 ¢ lo) 6U — urle irieve a0n ma Te ee Paes a man there waiting to propose you as a uae Usb Soy DETROIT NILADELPOIA member. ABHOA ABHOA Kuenn,. 6 3 | 4 2 Jacobs 4 1 1 «1 Fwttlo.ct 4 2 3 2 Limmer ib 3 @ 5 6 *. ising.lf 4 1 6 © Power, if 4 6 5 @ cas Boone Yo 3 1 4 | Renna rf 3 6 2 1 oO MO B S U Relardi Ib 2 0 8 | Wilson ef 42 6 6 AUT ILE u Huuse,c 3 @ 6 2 FinganJb 3 2 © 1 Kaline.rf 46 1 6 Desf tri es 4312 Bolling.2> 2 © © 1 Rob'son, c 3 0 7 6 aDropo 1 6 © © bBollweg 1 60 06 6 < Bertoia.2> 1 6 1 @ Porterop 3 1 6 6 Garver, p 4 1.0 2 X Tetals 31 67 1! Tetals 33 997 5 ®—Struck out for Bolling im 7th b—Filied out for Robertson i Mh VISIT OR PHONE YOUR NEAREST OFFICE FE 4-1496 Detroit Philadetphia R—Kuenn, Tuttle. Delsing 010 00 a90—4 0) 200 coos Boone, Lim- ¥. F. ALSTON, Mgr. mer, Wilson, DeMaestri E—Limmer, Ren- na, Bolling RBI—House. DeMaestri 2 63 N. Perry Street : FE 2-9255 Finigan Tuttle 2. Belard! 28—Delsing PC. Brown MI 4-004 C. BR. Witsen MT 4-508 NR—DeMacstri. Tuttle &-Pinigen SF JG. Moffat OR 83-2818 Neriyn Schoof MY 2-4661 House, Belardi DP—Tuttle Belardi a R Lt. Tet FE 2-a019 3 G. Tynae FE 4-2801 Renna. DeMeestri and Jacobs Left—De Kt FE 8-741 A * FE 2-acee troit 5. Philadelphia 5 BB—Garver 2 a | $ ee + Portocarrero 3° SO—Oarver 4 Partocer M. W. MeNalley OF 28-7741 Viegt Keener Molly 1-4531 rero 6 R-ER Garver 33. Portocarrero 43 W—Garver (74) L—Portocarrero (6-9) U —Huriey oe Papperelia T 3 2% 6A-4 Ument . ED WILLIAMS Ama af.. wy Coming Next Week News zing Watch For It an Ad wpe pore diks ‘S “TIRES ARE OUR BUSINESS” 1f You Want a Deal on Refrigerators — — TV Sets - Electric Washers or Lawn Equipment — WE CAN’T HELP YOU— OU. NEED TIRES FY Be BUSINESS THAT'S OUR GENERAL TIRE “Goes a Long Way to Make F riends” We Welcome Time Payment Accounts S. SAGINAW ST. Just North of Wilson Ave. ED WILLIAMS ~~ : ™ a saving gas today. Boer eceseemen manners et EEE ST . 5 Michigan Outdoors Method Is Oftered for Thinning Deer ‘Herds By MORT NEFF : the nation, appeared before the At the recent annual convention at the MUCC meeting of- the Michigan United Conserva-| With @ control idea well worth tion Clubs the question of another | consideration. antleriess deer season came Up/ RwhI's idea calls for the predeter- @ before the cau-/ mined selection of the areas need- cus, with a strong | ing “thinning.” Then right around > undercurrent | Phanksgiving Day the sale of deer ; : licenses would be suspended for against wide the year (after an estimated 400.-. og spread curtail-| 000 had been sold), and deer huni- * ment of the deer|ers would stand by while the state Nev- | made-a_ceremony of spinning a i wes wheel bearing the numbers from y 0 to 9. Let us assume the number Se generally agreed) § came up. Then, all hunters whose + that some sectors of Michigan still license ended in that number would be privileged to go to the specially selected sector to hunt “any deer,’’ with or without ant- lers Theoretically this could put about 40,000 hunters, or 10 per cent, into that area. If more were required the wheel could be spun again! A close estimate could be made }of the tofal number of hunters, and a second estimate of their suc- cess ratio. Thus we.might harvest NEFF contain too many deer for the amount of food available. It fol- lows that stronger hunting pressure will be required in those areas. With the prospect of limited shooting of antleriess deer in these selected areas the Conservation Department must find a way to place a definite number of hunt- ers within the limits during the special season Game Division. Chief Harry [very close to the exact number Ruhi, regarded as one of the {our game experts call for, in the tep game meenagemsent men in _foverpopulated area . . +. “| sigh Water Ski School at the} wimming, Skiin Free s 9, 9g | beach on Lake St. Clair. Instructions Being Given Free swimming instruction is be- ing given approximately 300 per is sons each week by the Metropoli- In addition to those enrolled in the daily “Learn to Swim" pro gram, given from 10:30 a.m. to 12 noon, about 35 are working toward tan Beach Water Safety Patro! and| Advance registration ‘ts required about 30 persons are taught to|American Red Cross certificates water ski each week in the Dick| for the lessons Installed In One Day AND NEW!!! eee NEW LOW PRICE NO DOWN PAYMENT NEW CAR GUARANTEE )- Buick, Chevrolet, Hudson, Dodge, Ferd, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, '38 to ‘47 DeSete, Chrysler and Piymouth. Free Towing—No Block Deposit Motor Exchange Co. MOTORS FACTORY REBUILT Game Licenses Sales Hit Peak All Previous Records | Toppled Last Year in Michigan LANSING w — Michigan broke all previous records last year for the sale of bunting and fishing licenses The state conservation depart- ment said sale for all types of licenses exceeded 2,370,000. The previous record was 2,312,- 879 in 1952-53. Biggest increase was in small game hunting li- censes. Last year 724,400 were sold, compared to 671,828 in 1952- 63. ; Only decrease was in the sale of resident and non-resident deer hunting licenses. These fell off about 10,000 from the record 465.343 sold in 1952-53—the year of the first special any-deer season. Wood Ducks May Become Protected LANSING u™—Duck hunters may not be able to shoot wood ducks this fall The state conservation depart- ment said the Mississippi flyways council recently voted to protect wood duck this year. The recom- mendation must be accepted by federal agencies. The department said the council reporjed wood duck were becoming scarce in the central range—lIlli- nois, Missouri, Arkansas and West- ern Tennessee and Kentucky. The population is holding up fairly well in the northern range, which in- cludes Michigan Indiana has 730 high school basketball squads although only about 165 schools compete in foot- 401 S. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 3-7432 - ball, 250 in baseball THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JU LY 21, 1954 r 500 Youngsters Take Part in Fishing ‘Rodeo ‘State Hopes “Hunkies’ Will \Be Established LANSING UW — Hope that Hun- | gardan partridge may become es- | tablished in the Eastern Upper Pen- | insula has been raised by the | State conservation department, * * * The agency said that a pair of adults with 17 or 18 young birds was seen last week about 10 miles south of Sault Ste. Marie, and that another: adult pair with 15 young was spotted near Rudyard. The department released about 40 of the birds, obtained in a wild- life exchange with Ontario, in the Eastern Peninsula early this year. More Turkeys fo Be Released State Plans to Bolster an Earlier Planting in Allegan Forest LANSING uW—State conservation department plans to release 150 young wild turkeys in Michigan forests — some of which haven't seen wild turkeys for generations in the Allegan State Forest to bolster an earlier planting there. The location of the other releases has not been determined, but will be in the Southern Penin- sula. The time is set for late August, The birds were raiséd at the Mason game farm from eggs ob- tained in Pennsylvania. The re- leases are part of a determined effort to restore wild turkeys to Michigan 7 * Of the original release of 50 adults in the Allegan forest, three are known to have died or been killed. But three hens have been seen this summer with broods of poults, Wheel Balance FREE ROYAL “8” 670x15 “18.67 710x15 20.63 760x15 “22.99 800x15.. . *24.68 (exchange) Excise Tax Included 14.95 “17.62 670x15 T10x15 760x15 20.20 800x15 . . °23.19 (exchange) Excise Tax Included ‘ae 370 South di We're Having a THREE RING CIRCUS THIS WEEK ONLY! on Every Tire Purchased ! _wees Across From Economy Furniture Every Tire U. ROYAL MASTER © Extra Safety ® Extra Miles © Streamlined Beauty ® Special Trade-in Allowance FREE Balancing on The department said it plans | to release some 12-week-old birds | MESS 0’ FISH—Thal’s one big Edgefield, More Than 50 Awards Go to M Angling Champs Second Annual Affair Takes Place Thursday at Beaudette Park Beauc Pond will { Ap Park's Dawson Mill Mecca Thursday lette be the for some 00 young disciples of Izaak Waltor They will convene at a spét along the banks of the pond to compete for more than 30 |awards, in a contest of many angles. starting at 9am and con- ng at noor The fishing ‘rodeo’ is the sec- ond annual affair of its kind, under direction of the city parks and recreation department, the Ome em « ae mess of fish the ja 24*y-pound king. Mr. Bancroft is 2nd fro: Janior Chamber of Commerce party shown above took on a recent Florida seas | left and Bruce is at far mght. Others in the part and the national organization of trip off Daytona Beach. A Pontiac man and his|were Capt. Red Wharton of the fishing boa wrtice Fiskieg im The latter son, Winston Bancroft and Bruce Bancroft, 2944] Gaywind, Mc. and Mrs. Long Sullivan of Atlanta (a eivex IG cough “6s geetinr: CTE contributed heavily to the total of 18/and W. R. Mathews of Atlanta. Mr. Bancroft | fits Javcees provide funds for king mackere?. and 9 unto: peace got tt the biggest. oes tall as for\the Young Doors Corp. Novi Pother pri 7 yl) cnlbee ’ es : { playground age e elit ears There t ‘hall horse “IS e O - oe tfert 1 engaged in ja, grounds , ¢ 1 g af ' st own ‘ iette Park —_ id al * ' ‘ txt ‘ for * hav By JACK PATTERSON | a thorough caning the other eve- , bang up their rods until Septem . be Wee eh Gr Fishing 1s generally good| ning and produced one bluegill. ber and thereby fall victim te ,),,..,. y nd-the largest 1 her 4 throughout this area but inclined! yee evenings on either side of | serious error. Midsummer trout of {)n) eCIMENS to be spotty in some lakes. On a ‘given evening, for example, bluegills and bass will go crazy over surface lures — § flies and poppers — and the next evening under apparently identi- cal circumstances not a fish will : show. But pa- j tience pays off PATTERSON i and fishermen who put plenty of time into the process are getting nice strings of both bass and panfish. * s * We have come to the rather hesi- tant conclusion that there are few fish in Elizabeth Lake. Spent a couple evenings last week on that lake trying out a new spinning reel and apart from some rather splendid specimens of aquatic growth that came to net we had little to show for our efforts. There is a strong inference that Elizabeth has suddenly , anatecountably be- come completely fishless. Hank Gaukler, Ross Thompson and Chuck Wood gave Maceday the one in question provided good | fishing is fishing at its best. fishing. True. it’s very hard to catch-big OCSC Arranges Date West Bloomfield's Nifty | trout a the daytime " meu ; mer. But Its not Impossible. Long ther, wi robably k Thatcher 10 probably knows as |! fine leaders, wispy flies, perhaps for Annual Outing much about Middle Straits Lake | on the order of spiders, or maybe fishing as anyone has noted the| a grasshopper, real or Michigan Oxkland C Sportsmen 8 same state of affairs in that lake.| hopper variety cast into the grass) (yh hold its annual picme Generally good but spotty enough | ® the bank and then jerked into Aug Affair is-open to the pub- to be discouraging to the occa-| the water, are tricks worth eked lis, and no ad will be sional angler “Nifty’’ points out | But whatever stratagems one | Charged though. that the steady. every day | ©M00ses to ee the low, cle ; Festivitics iding frge enter- fisherman is doing pretty well. | waters of mid-summer are made fminment. willvcet ander wey al | to order for the fly fisherman, be , snd 7 huded with & ; oor ndw i »* CONnc Uae itn | On the sorties iro the bigger | ihe wet or be he dry. fireworks display that evemng lakes — Hubbard, Mullett, Burt. | oa ee coe \ Lloyd Siblev is chairman of the Black and Houghton are all pro- Howard Hite, Lake Angelus, who icn ntertainment mitt ic < t e A IT } enor ee viding fine fishing, end Crystal|is responsible for the stocking of | P'™ “ iia Lake, near Beulah is turning out} rainbow trout in that lake con- 7) aa some nice lake trout to persistent | fesses that he has considerable | ‘Top ate Power trollers. difficulty returning them to captiv- p h Our Grand Marais observer, Ken | ity ny ae es recing & * ° * | heavy money winner, had a total Strickland, reports that the take of lake trout in that area of Lake Sunperior is very slow to date. which gives rise to the suspicion. at least, that sea lampreys are beginning to make their unwhole- some presence known in those wa- ters. Even the commercial fisher- men are doing poorly on lakers. We made some rather exagger- | of $252,929 before being re tired in ated claims to Howard the other | 1951. night on our prowess at catching rainbows under difficult situations. On the chance that we might be | called to task and asked to fish or cut bait. as the saying -gées.| we'd welcome any useful sugges- | tions from our long-suffering read | ers. By this time of the year many troug fishermen are inclined to | / | } 7 ia MOTOR OVERHAUL No Money Down | Now . .. with the cooperation of day night Your Lecal Independent 2 OD © Carageman Just as the Governor's Cup Trot attracted the best field in the! ° ° stake's history, the same is ture Pontiac Piston. of the Derby ‘according to Racing ! Downs Prepares for Rich Pacing Derby Entering the final two weeks | of its 39 night meeting. Northville | Downs officials are busy making | plans for the second of their rich | stakes—the $10.000 Michigan Pac- | ling Derby—scheduled for this Fri- | Easy Pay! MECHANICAL REPAIRS — — — OR OTHER Purchased! ' sett 158 AKE SPECIAL! Pontiac $1722 FREE Every Tire Purchased! “It Pays to Know Your Tire Dealer” DON R. MacDONALD, Inc. U. S. Tire Distributors for 31 Sy Saginaw St. FE 5-6) Wheel Balance on 36 or 7| TIRES Drep in end ask us about our Credit Plan FE 2-9111 Secretary Johnny Jenuine. Gover- nor Williams, absent from the Trot, | will present the cup Friday night. | None of the 14 spedsters, nomi- nated for the event last April. has Service Co. 102 S. Seginaw St. FREE PARKING IN REAR —Fentiac ress Phete SPINNING OUTFIT @ Shekespeare Spinning Outfit @ Shakespeare Spin Line (100 yards) @ Deluxe 2-Piece Glass COMPLETE OUTFIT. a J @ Shakespeare Spinning Booklet Hy-Score Pellet Rifle (.177 cal.) . PHILIP’S 79 North Seginaw St. susuunueuusuucuncnncsaucccuunaan HEFTY PERCH — One of the season's heftiest yellow perch, tak- en from an Oakland county lake, lis that (above) landed a few days : ° ° ago by Cliff Fiebelkorn. Roches- White-Tail Squirrels (er.It was 13 inches long, Recent reports that many white- | weighed a pound and a half. Size tailed fox squirrels had been noted | can be judged by comparison with in southern Michigan areas, has | spinning outfit. Cliff also got a 16’, brought the comment from ob-| inch largemouth Monday servers in this area that there are | night, at the same spot where he similar animals here | took the big perch. It weighed tuo * ¢ 8s pounds One observer told The Pontiac Press that several of the oddly marked squirrels have been around Rundell street for some time. Source of the. off-coloration has not been determined, say conser- vation men. been withdrawn and Jenuine ex- | pects a field of 10 or more to face | the starter. Rod bass osc es eeee LUGGAGE, SPORTING GOODS Franchise Sold ¢ Gheap When the Yankees, then the Highlanders. joined the Americ an league, they paid only $18,000 for their franchise. » DRESS BETTER FOR LESS! Men's 6 | Boys’ Short Boys’ All Metal sente. Short Sleeve MEN'S Sleeve Short Sleeve FOOT Ae — Sport Shirts POPLIN T SHIRTS Sport Shirts nee sie | HATS [ent ay sie | LOCKERS] OXFORDS Sioa Reg. $1.59 ML Size 8-18 | Plywood Frames Assorted Colors 634-712 Assorted Colors Assorted Colors $ 95 ; Size 6-12 1 | 139 | 97° | "149 | 6°? "|+395- MEN’S Use Our Layaway 156 Wy. Seginew S¢. CAPS 6%4-71, DAVE’S (Next to Sears) 49‘. Stanky Makes Public Apology, Promises to Reform ‘23 ST. LOUIS ¥ — Eddie Stanky under suspension and a fine for | his action in a forfeitey game Sunday, has bounced back with a public apology and a promise to reform. Warren Giles, National League} ee | president, day suspension and $100 fine to |puis Cardinal manager handed down a five-| the St. yesterday after he held a hear-| stalling in the game Sunday. ‘Those _events led _ Umpire Babe Phils took the opener 11-10 in the | own Ss cae mg here on the free-for. ~al| and | 10th. vo} 2 ee A lot. of people say ‘Eddie panna told | _ hewsmen later he | Stanky won't do it.” the Redbird Test in Equipoise Mile CHICAGO (—Harry N. Eads’ Sir Mango, winner of six consecu- tive starts, faces the toughest competition of his career as the sensational California-owned thor- oughbred, Imbros, and 13 other Stars line up against him today in the $61,100 Equipoise Mile at Arlington Park. The race commemorates the | 3 | 1 REV. JOHN RAKOCZY Recently appointed gthletic di- rector at Orchard Lake St. Mary High School was Rev. John Rakoczy (above), a former star |late Soldier’ athlete at the school. As a mem- ber of the 1944 Eaglets’ basketbal! team, he set a single-game scoring | mark of X4 points and scored 396 | points in the 22-game season. He also was a basebal] standout, bat- tng .440 for four years. Rev Rakoczy will coach basketball and | director duties. Daw baseball in addition to his athletic = son brilliant. 1:34 2-5 mile run by Equipoise in 1932. The mark set by C. V. Whitney’s famed ‘‘Choco- has stood up as Arlington's record against the challenges of virtually every out- standing runner since then A field of 15 starters would mean a take of $38,000 to the winner. Sir Mango, assigned jockey Dave | Erb and topweight of 127 pounds, was the overnight favorite at 2-1 with Imbros expected to be about 5-2 Imbros,* Andrew J. Crevolin’s great handicap runner, is making | |his first Chicago start in the | Equipoise and will come out of the No. 2 slot. Practically every horse in the field is a stakes winner Main contenders include Mrs. Ada L. Rice's Pet Bully, Dixiana's Sub Fleet and the Hasty House Farm entry of Mister | Black and Ruhe, in last summer's Equipoise. Keith Wins Eighth Straight for D & W Pitcher Harland ‘‘Fat’ Keith won his 8th straight victory of the season last night, as league-lead- ing Dick & Wes blanked Richard- son's Dairy, 50, in Waterford Township Men's Softball League play. Keith struck out nine and gave up five hits. Victory, Dick & Wes’ 12th A 14 starts, moved the lead- ers 342 games ahead of 2nd-place Dixie Recreation, Inter-Lakes Steel forfeited its Junior League game to Drayton Drug tel pony ME 71 000 000 0-—@ 56 Keith and ‘s "Keith Richardson end Lamberton. “WITH GREATEST, OF EASE” — Sonja Seitz of Nurenmerg, aP wipasis Sir Mango Faces Tough who edged out’ Sub: Fleet §/ will be Germany, “flies” gracefully through the air in a stag-jump at San Francisco’s Winterland as she rehearses for the fall opening of the 1955 Ice Follies. She will be featured with her partner, Franz Lojchinger of Munich, in an acrobatic skating number in bright peasant costume. Newcomers to America, they have worked together for six years. THE PONTIAC PRESS, W EDNESDAY, JULY | Pinelli Phils a 9-0 forfeit victory in the/hurt St, second half of the twin bill. The tionally, Louis fans, baseball na- to give the Philadelphia Hrealized he has embarrassed and the Cardinals and his 2 ORE pa eee a tee oe a nage ee . Teg eee ero se. > | Pp S Nese apres gg ae ogee eco } ] —Pentise Freee Fhete LEADER—New leader in the bass division of the Pontiac Press’ Big Fish Dreby is the 6pound largemouth held above by Edward C Jenks of 207 Church street, Ortonville. Jenks used a jitterbug to land the big bronzeback yesterday morning at Little Green Lake. It replaces the 5-pound 9-ounce smallmouth entered by Almon Austin of Pontiac. Celebrities Tourney | six planes, COLUMBUS, O. 'and Shannon on. July 25 umbus Celebrities Golf Tourna- ment, wihch annually attracts some of the biggest names in | (INS)—The Col- ot its kind,” he added. ee cee October. Major Cyril Hall, manager of the | at Columbus Aug. 16) sssem ister ‘yeeting. turn. leaving London, Paris “This will be the greatest airlift | | sports and the entertainment world, | staged again Aug. 16 The Columbus Country Club board lof trustees set the date late Tues- | |day and expressed hope that such personalities as Dizzy Dean, Perry Como, Fred Waring and Eddie Fisher will once again be| lured to the benefit tourney. The event is staged to raise funds for college scholarships which are awarded to the winners of the National Caddie Tournament sched- | uled for the following day 3 Days Only Thurs., Fri., Sat. Shekespecre Auto FLY REEL »,, 1954 pilot said of his. promise .‘'How-)is no~ evidence that Manager ever, I consider this challenge the |Stanky issued specific instructions biggest of my baseball career, I| to -delay the game, the tactics will win.” employed in the game were pal- Giles also punished St. Louis|Ppably designed to delay the catcher- Sal Yvars and Philadel- | ganie, " Giles’ ruling said. phia first baseman Earl Toreg >>) son, Their boxing in the top | He added the whole thing could the fifth inning of the game led| have been avoided. The Cardinals pay? ee seen sei an w {and umpires thought league rules Gay suspension afi tH son two days. All suspensions prohibited turning on lights for a Sunday game which started after 6 p.m. With the Redbirds behind 8-1, the stalling was an attempt started last night . > . Philadelphia) Manager Terry Moore, in the middle of the home io be son nip Short of the plate battle, drew no penalty after 1 & telling Giles he was trying to re- Not so, said Giles, under a new store peace when Stanky tackled | eague rule the lights could have » < P ed on, a wee havent liked | Stanky said his wife and friends RAS : . ~.. |had been telling him that being each other since Eddie fired Ter lm player and manager was dif. ry as a coach two years ago | Pena Giles also upheld the for felt! «When I played baseball, it was ruling, based on stalling by Stanky | | win, no matter how you win, just and Cardinal players | win,’ he said. “When I became a “The manager of a club must | manager, I continu@d to think and be held responsible for the con-j|act_ as a player. Sometimes I duct of his team and, while there | betieve this was a |_ detriment. MOSCOW, July 20 A-—. Avery Brundage of Chicago, president of the International Olympic Commit- tee, said Russia has “given every - indication” it will go to Australia to compete in the 1956 Olympics at Melbourne, “T'll put the question to them di- rectly before I leave,” he said. Since the Soviets broke off dip- | lomatic relations with Australia in April, there has been some ques tion whether they'd participate in the next Olympics, “Russian success in internation- al sports competition in the last | Balt ? »» | Washington two years has been phenomenal, am. | My Lh Home run— Weshingien, Major League Line Linescores Sousa T This e > (ie ining,” pled He a3 pe het ae Avila (2), Resen, Deby Bewtn, Lape. he said. ‘The whole world is curi- ous about it and I am here to try to find out how they are doing it.” |... ort ™ rent AE ss " } Brundage is in .Moscow on an Cucmnet .. 000 O18 O00 Gee extended trip through the Soviet iadena ane Westrum, Katt (8): Union, along with other officers. of oni (i) and ome a the committee and various inter- — national sports federations, They | Brooklyn 100 600 t3 * j pieses —.. 110050 we 1 were honored guests : yesterday, (10. innings) — a a ‘The Day of Soviet Athletes” when toa. +d . Ae l im, celebrations were held at Moscow's — = . ” r -| Philadelphia ........ wi—-3 Dynamo Stadium and in other cit Philadelphia 0008 3 8 } ies. onstanty (8) end * * . Haddix, Staley (9) and __ Brundage calied © the Dynamo 1F you NEED NEW, TIRE BUY NOW SAVE Fire No-Trade-In Firestone SLASHES PRICES ON ALL PASSENGER CAR TIRES - DURING GIGANTIC JULY TIRE SALE STANDARD Buy Ist Tire at Regular Get Second Tire for Only . . . stone 7 6.00-16 Price of $13.15 I shouldn't have wanted 40 mien SS z ge seamae me ty E Se circuit blows after walloping one in each game of yesterday's twin- bill against Baltimore. For Williams, who missed a FLY LINE month of the campaign because of ! a fractured collarbone, the homers Double $ 95 were the 38th and 349th of his Toper Major league carce1 $9.50 Velue Aga Khan Flying | Horses | to America to Be Sold LONDON W — The manager of the Aga Khan's stud in Ireland said today he is sending 36 horses to the United States to be auc- | The Sports Shop Formerly Mec Rogers 16 S$. Cass FE cs = ARMY uaVY SURPLUS 32 S. Saginaw St. FE 2-0022 W aterproot TARPAULINS Mildewpreot 7 i H { j j | JOE'S Ss CIP 5x7. $3.50 9x12 $10.80 > 6x7 ...$4.20 10x12 $12.00 Ay 6x9 .. $5.40 12x15 $18.00 * 8x9 .. $7.20 12x18 $21.60 8x10. $8.00 20x30 $30.00 .@ Globe Hoists Ne Champion Air @ Proto Tools ~ 84 South Perry St. DISTRIBUTOR of Service Station Equipment @ Bink’s Spray Equipment @ ARO Lubrication Equipment @ Atlas Lathes and Saws @ Heinwerner Hydraulic Jacks @ Chicago Pneumatic Tools Automotive Machine Shop Service and Rebabbitting “Parts Headquarters for the Doctor of Motors” PONTIAC MOTOR PARTS Compressors Phone FE 2-0106 PLASTIC PLAY POOLS Not Seconds or Irregulars All First Quality SALE . REG. | Price | size | price $9.95 '60x60x9” | $6.35 $9.95 $9.95 54” Diam. $6.00 $11.95, 95 54” Diam. ‘$7.50 | Lifetime Guerontee on $7.50 Pool Play Pool with Double Rubberized Conves Bottom — Stee! Frame — Shower Spray — Metal Seats — $17.95 Value SALE PRICE $11.95 DIVING LUNGS — 549° For Underwater Swimming CHILDREN’S TEPEE TENTS Was $5.95 ..vs.+... SALE PRICE $3.95 Brand New One-Man Rubber Life Raft. $27.50 JOE'S suv SURPLUS NAVY 32 S. Saginaw FE 2-0022 WE RENT TENTS... $7 2.7, ; — | Silent S$ 95 | Ted Williams Gains | Teu-Act on Home Run Leaders | Model 1837 | BOSTON u®—Don’t look now but || $11 Velue Ted Williams is steadily “the Américan Eeague home leaders. Shakespeere HDH The Red Sox’ thumper has 12 | ! 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SAGINAW FE 4-3553 _BEASK SRDS WALLS—O1889 SBOYERD _ tire** omy [ i oe 600-16 | $2040 |-$10.20° 600.16 | $25.28 | $12.49° 670-15 | 22460 11.30° 670-15 wre 13.08° 640-18 21.58 10.78° 640-15 | 2640 13.20° 7.10-18 25.08 12.53° 7.10-18 3070 18.38° 690-16 28.40 12.70° 650-16 a0 740-18 17.40 13.70° 740-18 ars 8.00.15 30.10 18.66° 900.18 620-15 | 2140 | 18.70" sos | a 70.80" "Phe ten ond pour twe reeappable tires ** Plus Tom E STOR 146W. HURON = FE 2.9251 -. 4 _ THIRTY-FOUR 4 THE,PRONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 _ New Attendance Mark Seen for National PGA Officials Look for 50,000 to See 7-Day Show Snead Top Attraction, but Sam Still Nurses Stiff Neck By HUGH FULLERTON JR. ST. PAUL, Minn. ® — If the weather, golfing ‘“‘form'’ and Sam Snead's stiff neck all react proper- ly, a new golf attendance record may come out of the 36th PGA championship, starting today on the tiny, park-like Keller Course. | On the basis of advance ticket sales and enthusiasm shown by St. Paul fans for previous tournaments at Keller, PGA offi- / cialg already have predicted an attendance of about 50,000 for the | seven-day run of the show But pro | | | | ‘Driver, Owner Ban Placed on +- DETROIT, July 21 —Driver Jack Ackerman of New Castle, | Ind., and K. B. Rohrs of Napoleon, Ohio, owner of Hi-Lo’s Apollo, were ruled off all United States harness tracks Tuesday Their suspension re- mainder the year was an- nounced by Judge Loyle German and State Steward Malcolm Line- han after an investigation of an alleged ‘“‘fix’’ at the Northville Downs track. - Ackerman was charged with attempting to ‘“‘throw”’ the eighth | race on Monday night's program | at the track. He was driving Hi- Lo's Apollo Rohrs was charged with betting on another horse in the same race | The horse also was suspended for | the remainder of 1954. for the of ee ee eee ‘ | to be good enough to qualify | 75-Man Field Tees. | Off in Open Trial An estimated 75-man field teed off this morning at Forest Lake | Country Club in the qualifying | round for the Michigan Open next week at Lakepoint Country Club. | A card of 78 over tag par 72) he wore glasses. Among the golfers entered in the qualifying was Blaine Eynon, For- est Lake member who recently fired a 67 over his home ‘course. Other top entries included Tommy Tyson, Franklin Hills assistant pro, Jack Gervin, assistant at Birming- ham CC, and Ezra McElmurry, Western assistant. Dom DiMaggio, Red Sox star fielder, was once turned down by a baseball league scout because /, Room Air Conditioner The “hottest” buy in cool, cool comfort For— CASEMENT WINDOW Compere and you'll choose VICTOR: 3-dimensional no draft cooling © Complete pollen, dirt, dust removal Extra big, easy-to-change filter Smart, new fashion styling Extra quiet, extra eco- wd ne Trinidad , J nomica! ail the doubtful elements will have | U. S. Netters Seek. ¥ 7 a Epcctlin pian Sulton to work out in just the right way. | to Sweep Zone Test a ‘& Ecce ci, : >. | $ 00 controls , * 8 * | own re , I @ Exhausts, dehumidifies, : rd of 53.000 was | ' eT OF SPAIN. Tr SO YOU DIDN’T BELIEVE IT?—Here's picture proof of last | ies ips — satiated See shen | \ tho United wt Pg ae week's big fish story from Bimini Island. The 20,000-pound whale | ° 5 Year Warranty pro- set in upse on 19 : States e i ok Oe - ae : ’ pionship at Detroit's Plum Hollow | semifinal round of the North Amer- | > caught” by the fishing cruiser Alberta, in shown Being hoisted 374 H_ P. Motor tection Qlub. This could turn out to be another just like that—with the fa- vorites going out in droves during the first two rounds of match play. But some rain at the right time and a sudden improvement in Snead’s painfully stiff neck could make it an entirely different kind of show. The sun-baked Keller Course, | stretched out to the absolute limit| at 6,652 yards, would become two) or three strokes harder if softened | by rain. | e time PGA cham * . Snead, a three | pion who is very popular here fig- | ures to be one of the biggest draw ing cards in the field of 135 top playing and ‘‘club” professionals But after shooting a 63 in practice | a few days ago, Snead again was | afflicted by the painfully stiff neck which has bothered him all sum- mer. * * ~ | Instead of practicing yesterday, Sammy consulted the University of Minnesota trainer and then sought osteopathic treatment. He really was hurting and was fearful of some sort of an injury to a spinal disc, but said he intended to play if possible. Along with Snead, four past PGA champions, including defender Wally Burkemo, and three U. 8. Open titleholders were in the field 7 AP Wirephete ARCHERY CHAMPION — Ann Marston, of Wyandotte, won the women's free-style évent of the ninth annual Field Archery Tourna- ment at Newbury; N. H. Ann, 15, was last year’s girl champion, and elected this year to shoot in the woman's division despite her age. She is shown eating an orange she split with an arrow during a prac- tice session. - ° jean Zone Davis Cup competition, sought to make a clean sweep over the British West Indies today The U.S. team cleared its first hurdle in its attempt to regain the Davis Cup by winning the first two singles on Wednesday and the doubles on Thursday. out of the water by a crane after the Alberta towed it to shore. ‘Ace at Forest Lake |ews, 57, of 1328 Denwood, Dear- born, guest of A. A. Arjay. He First hole-in-one since the organ- | aced the No. 4 hole with a six iron ization of the new Forest Lake | shot. Has been playing golf four Country Club was scored yester- | years. The ace helped him to a day. Lucky golfer was C. L. Math- | 95 card for the 18-hole round. See the VICTOR Air Conditioner TODAY! EAMES and BROWN 55 East Pike St. Phone FE 3-7195 It's Time Out! scheduled to start play today at 8 am. (Central Standard Time). 7. . . The championship roster also in- cludes Vie Ghezzi, Chandler Har- per and Jimmy Turnesa, winners of the PGA title in 1941, 1950 and 1952; Ed Furgol, the lame-armed . G | aS 4 a ‘ \ if é wy nan ; | 2 ne |. ; ‘ 4 |e oe si 4 ¥, en) ~ 5 Be /, ' a We) b Age - y ‘Mies ROY, : «8 Spall CI os i = => > A i - SS = V Sal wa fe: ~ p LYS “For the last time, Kids go 7 away!" TONIGHT! — HOT ROD RACES Open champion who'd like to be 8:30 P. M. — in 1948 to take both titles in one A Full Progrom Plus year, and former Open champions Demolition Duel Cary Middlecoff and Lew Wor- - sham. PONTIAC M-59 SPEEDWAY Trinidad Team Lost on Way to Empire Games VANCOUVER ™ — Lost British Empire Games team ‘General Chairman Stanley V. Smith, surrounded by top games officials and the police band, was at the station to greet the eight- member Trinidad team today. One One report was that the athletes became lost and missed their train at Port Arthur. Other reports were that they have been left on the prairies, Games and railway officials op- ened an immediate search for the missing Trinidad people. Today’s Identity A star halfback, today’s per- sonality gained All-America rec- ognition at the University of Michigan in 1922, then returned te Ann Arbor to coach the Wol- verines from 1929 to 1937. He's Harry Kipke. (3 Miles West ef Airpert) STMGRUT < " Johnoon Outboard Motors Teenee Boot Trailers Everything for the Boat OWEN’S MARINE SUPPLIES 894 Orcharé Late Ave. FE 2t-s070 Plymouth $19.95 Value! Brake Reline Special! Ford, Chevrolet, 1m 9595 ee Qe Pay as Little as $1.25 a Week $ 4” Black and BIG SAVINGS / Get sale prices on both ite Sidewalls ! BLACKWALL Regular Get 2nd WHITEWALL Regular Get 2nd TIRE ne-trade-in | tire for TIRE no- trade-in | tire for OTHER CARS, $24.95 VALUE SUE [price Ist iret] OMLY SUE [price Ist tit] ONLY $129 6.00 x 16] $14.95 |§ 8.88*| [6.00x 16] $18.30 |$10.88* Now 16 -) 6.70x15| 16.95 | 9.88*| 16.70x15! 20.75 | 11.88* 6.50x 16] 20.15 | 11.88*| 16.50x 16] 24.70 | 14.28° GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 30 8. Cass FE 5-6123 BURLEY MOTORS 144 8. Center MU 4-5755 Highia RE Los MASTERS K. F. SALES & SERVICE * Plus tax and two recappable tires ¢ Plus tex ROY PULVER 25 Pine St. Pontiac JEROME MOTOR SALES FE 4-3566 280 8. Saginaw Pontiae HOUGHTEN SONS FE 4-2505 Here, by far, is your best tire deal! During our big Goodyear Sale you save plenty on these high quality Marathons, made with Goodyear’s ex- clusive 3-T Rayon Cord. New improved. tread means longer life and more mileage. Sturdy rib design provides safer, sure traction. They're miles ahead of any tire et or near their regular prices —a sensational value at these special prices. Stop now and save! / v4 YY, , lg” Cores your deal | Buy one high quality Marathon 6.00x!16 tire for regular no- trade-in price of %14°°-you get second tire for only Pil —_——_ plus tax and two recappable tires ONLY ‘175 A WEEK FOR TWO TIRES! Don’t wait... your old tires make the down payment! 150 Center MU 4-6572 446 Ave. 9260 Cooley Lake Rd Potitiac, Mich. FE 3-965? Milford, Mich. EM 3-9157 COOK'S SMELL SERVICE MANSFIELD SERVICE OWEN’S SERVICE 2955 Highland MU 4-5085 701 S. Saginaw St. 2295 Auburn Ave. FE 64-1620 Milford . Pontiac, Mich. FE 3-9269 RFD, Pontiac, Mich. STURDEVANT SERVICE SPORTSMEN’S SERVICE LEE & BYERS SERVICE 126 Main 8t. OL 6-9861 S28 N. OL 1-9761 250 North Perry FE 3-9547 910 Joslyn Ave. . ian) Tenet Sn om wa Hochester Pon Mich. FE 3-9402 canner » Mich. DRAYTON SHELL SERVICE CRAWFORD SERVICE CY OWENS ; KEEGO SALES & SERVICE oe 4310 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-981 | 2705 Orchard Lake 1467S. Saginaw FE 5-401 Keege Harbor, Mich. 400 8. Broadway. MY Drayton Plains Keego Harbor FE 2-8549 . Pontiae FE 2-884 Free: a iT 2-00e —o SS eS ee Le | hl ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 4 ° Ne one yr a ee ee eat Sar ee. ie es Ps > Sie ye ey a oe ee aes hae e? 2 eS ee ack Rw Lee ae os % c ‘ »§ a ae: ee hi! ot o* en bo a ; ~ te vee ot +. £8 fy Pin the we 7 at nce Neti thm. at lin lyn cent lll A lt ey oyment in some areas has fallen off, we still have 20 million more jobs than we had in 1939. And nine times more Americans are in the $5000-plus income bracket than in 1941! 2, MORE MONEY — In spite of inflation and higher prices, the American people have over twice as much spending power now as they had in 1940. . MORE SAVINGS — Individual savings in America rose from $68.5 billion in 1940 to about $250 billion in 1953. - 4, MORE FARM OUTPUT — 52% more per man-hour than we had in 1940 — and this in spite of a net shift of almost six million away from farms It’s astonishing but true — 11,000 new babies arrive in the U. 8. every day of the week! Our population is growing so fast that every month we add enough people to populate a Richmond, Va., or a Tulsa, Okla. At this rate, we'll have about 180 million people by 1960. This is a very healthy thing for America — and for you. It means an - ever-increasing demand for every kind of consumer goods. Not just 1. MORE JOBS — Even though empl for cribs and baby bonnets — but for everything that people eat, since that year! see 5. — Locve fom oe ana orep ivr’ get paid a —a LJ . . ° . . t rtatio: a ; to Our soaring population is just one of the many big changes taking Eroby ant en J a n business sports, place in America today - changes that open up new opportunities for us all. Here are a few of these changes: 6, MORE ATOMIC POWER — Sooner or later, atomic energy will run our THE PONTIAC PRESS | ® mr RR es RE POR Ry oS Ape ctiacis daaboncasdian What do 11,000 new customers a on ~ mean to your business? —— ——+— % ‘ ¥ : % sua * trains, heat our homes and li ¢ our cities. This — plus advances ts electronics — can usher in a fabulous new era for America. 7, MORE DEMAND — Right now there is a $500 billion backlog of demands - * for goods and services to build roads, schools, hospitals, and factories. (For example, we have to nearly double our school in the next few years.) Filling these demands will create more more ‘ spending power, more industrial opportunities. You are bound to profit from all these changes — whether you're a busi- arent © homsnwilo, on iedcatzial worker, a farmer, or a salaried em oyee, : Barring @ major war, America’s future never held greater promiée, The better you know America, the better the future looks! - - - . : al } THIRTY-SIX __ aca ea leat _*-THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, Hal Boyle Says: Country Life { * Bdtter’s Mote: Last week Hal Boyle, By W. 8. STEWART Let a friend of mine_ explain why: “We have the finest air condi- winding trai] to steal a few mo- ments alone. s = * “The boring neighbors don't drop - over any more® We have an un- written understanding about our lot lines—dting from the day hts .| water BOARDING HOUSE — Sounds Fine Minus the Tittering Pine cat slapped a curious paw into the hide of our sleeping dog. : “Our days aren't spent looking at four walls. There's too much open space in northern Michigan’s wonderland —- too many beauties of the Lord—to waste the hours getting into each. other's way. : **We take hikes; we sail the roll- ing waters. We trol! slowly through the still pools, hauling in many tasty samples for the frying pan. . * . “And we swim. Oh, how we “| swim, A cool dive deep into the crystal clear freshness of sweet spring water is much more to our dreams than a hasty wash in a tub of lukewarm chlorine-reeking H20. “We sleep the nights of pure physical exhaustion. No neighbors . | come stumbling home minutes be- fore dawn offering a harmonious rendition of ‘Let Me Call—’. The .| clash of gears, roar of V8 horses and scream of burning rubber don't disturb our reveries. “Famished from the fun of out- doors, we eat unbelievable quan- tities of picnits, brunches and in- betweens. But the wife finds it’s not the same old tiring grind. Our every-man-for-himself rule gets the family meals cooked and the “The moon sliding softly from under the tittering pines ‘soon bathes the scene in golden charm like a giant candle. Flickering fires around the shore fade away as if ashamed of their own effort in the face of her glory. A bass breaks the stillness with a somer- sault high above the water. Anoth- er ballets its way across the waves in answer, Somewhere a. foon makés hig presence knowh. The night lives on. “You can have your man-made luxuries. Nature is still so far ahead there is no match in com- parison. “The best place to spend the summer is in the country.” That's exactly what the said—honest, Hal. * * * Editer’s Note: Weill, Boyle, now what have you gto to say in favor of the city? Boyte’s Note: Not a word. Mr. Stewart's friend hag sold me on everything except those ‘“‘tittering pines.” No pine trees really titter. They either murmur—or break out man into wild, needle-pointed! laughter often emit a series of cold dry chuckles—and very un- nerving they are, too. Too Real to Be Real— Real Teeth Win Bet MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP) George. Bolfn stopped at the clinic at the plant where he works the After the examination, one nurse said, ‘I told you so,”’ and handed the other a $1 bill. “She said that your teeth were too perfect to be real,’’ one nurse explained. ‘‘I bet that they were real. I wor” Paperhangers on Floor STAFFORD SPRINGS, Conn. — (UP) — State police had the job of pulling the rug from under two door-to-door salesmen who ped- died ‘“‘linoleum"” which was found to be tarpaper covered with wall paper. SIDE GLANGES by Galbraith 7 tee U6 Pee OF Gupr. 1984 by WEA Gervten, ne 7-2! “Yes, it fits perfectly, but you'd better take it in—I'll probably lose a couple of inches worrying about how I'm going to pay for it!” I'VE BEEN STANDING ON My TOES FOR FIVE HOURS by Ernie Bushmiller DIXIE DUGAN ° im a " RE'S THATOLO MANILA EL Cece rose Chewing does it ‘Get a happy little lift. Chew Wrighey's Spearmint Gum You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Daily Press. Wont Ad Section Take edvantage of this easy way to solve all your buving end selling oroblems. To Place Your WANT AD DIAL FE 2-8181 by Charlies Kahn , freshens your taste brightens your day! WRIGLEY’ SPFARMINT MEWING GUM ce% oO ° ° —_— . @ gr 2-9 =Seener S71) _—— — , rT me’ —_") =) —_— ] x e. - é Ae oO * ‘ gh * ey ‘ “<= Or ta 7 or > aa See + ve te ETS } e 4 sy is Ls * * ”. Te ‘ig. # Py % ALLEY OOP — JULY. 21, 1954 = CAPTAIN EASY CISCO KID _ FT * Pi ( -— s ° “ye YEAA .BOT |] THROUER YOU WE FOOD BiS/] COMETIME .MRS. RUGGLES, 1 aia? YOU SHOULD |] CLARIGSE - PERHAPS FAR SIMPLY MUST 1 UST CANT STOP T BE VERY MORE \MPORTANT REMEMBER TO TELL = TERA, TWIRKIRNG 3 ABOUT OF FOOND HIMSENY & NO = NOU ° LES! MONSIEUR PALLET- QOTE A. Bt RUGS 4 0OR eo = 7-al by Jose Luis Salinas AMIGO!... YOU ARE NOT) GRACIAS, PANCHO. gage AS OumB AST .. AND NOW LETS HE WANTED THAT HOVGRE THOUGHT! GET ON WITH OUR TO HAVE THE CAUSE WITH BUSINESS. THE SPECIAL SHOES. | $ 4 f > \ om —= = =. e q by Cari Grubert ?-ad THINK THAT by Merrill Blosser TELEPHONE, MASTER LARD, TAKE YOuR TIME, OLD BEAN !/ [LL HOLD UP THE BUILDING FOR You! ir U ree ={ AT THIS 1 , att of a ab —,__ OUT OUR WAY oS LIFE’S BRIGHTEST MOMENTS Webster-Roth WD TH HALS—D CLIMBA . e. . “ ’ \S ie 4, , fs ’ three F ~. * 4 ‘a ¥ 4 se st a'/’ @ “| %3.9 , p iV f ‘ < rivet ‘ ’ ’ , oS , ae PS 1 Oe ‘ ; LP ’ @ yee We me Ae " . ° oP ® ke Wye ns ' ‘ an Ar yt u7,\ . , e* 8 . * ’ ' li 4 )' yy " " od | / ia vif Al ) Pw " r ° f; wW y ‘) M 7 Lo fy VA, Wa IVA THE CRACK-UP ‘| . Fall Ten C f =f Produce ‘reo : DETROIT PRODICE | en S DETROIT (UP)—Wholesale prices on | : 2 bublic farmers’: markets Teported by | CHICAGO . ‘ne Bureau of Markets jt. - oe sew Crop sex Pruits Apples, Transparent. No 1 NEW YORK «® — The stock beans fell 10 cents, the daily limit } 250-4 50 bu Raspberries. black. Ne i on the Board n- }6 66-650 24-pt ease. raspberries, red | Market swung higher today after | ~ ard of Trade today and | No. 1 650-700 24-pt case * la hesitant start all other cereals turned weak fo] Vecetabies’ Beans green. flat. No 2. | . lowing unexpectedly. wide-spread | 7°9/3,08 ,DU beans. green, round, No| In the early afternoon. prices and hee : a 1 300-325 tu beans, wax, No 1 25 were up between 1 and 2? points : VY rains overnight 4735 bu; Beats, No 1, 65-80 doz bchs ' be h frac — Corn tumbled as t i we opped. No 1. 125-1.73 bu Broceoll,| at the best with fractional losses a nuch as eight | tancy 250 's bu: No. 1, 1.80-3.00 % bu dotting the list | cents, the daily limit, in some new Fapbage. No 1 125-1.66 bu; Cabbage ~ . Pe ig red. No 200-225 bu; Cabbage, > ; c ace | crop futures at the opening, but sprouts. No 1. 100-150 bu. “Carsete “Mo | Business was brisk at a pace this grain rallied slightly from its 1 oe dor bchs, carrots, topped, No 1, around two and a half million, lows. It stil remained far under celery Me bess a ae crafe: | shares for the day. That compares the prey } N - as corn. with 2,580.000 shares traded ves- | ous Close © 1, 280-300 Sdez Cucumbers. hot- = : ' aded | - . he No 1 125-175 dos: Cucumbers ~viay x ee “ There ,wasn't any rally at all in| cui size No |. 600 bu herve Me 1 $25.| terday with the market lower new crop soybeans, which re- pas bu - cee! aa 1, 15-1 00 gos Good earnings reports continued mained offered at 10 cents down lea Leeks No. 1 so dun ig Sy to bolster thé market, and there Onion green) = No 1, 60-90 = doa | ~d to be a revival of buy In contra ot - Echslll Parsissil cusic’ NowlL 7 sscee) asa | SEDO ae € of bu) =. he action of [eee Parsley, iis No.1 i585 doa} ing interest all down the line everything else, duly soybeans bens. Peas, No 1. 3 00-3.50-bu Peppers. | held firm. They gained as much | eae we . — 350 a basket Steels we me iH ate er, . ot, o be t peck asket ota- 7 1 rs adio - PleY }- as ning cents at one time, but toes, new, No 1, 238-250 50-tb bag with the wipes ra te : ! lost this upturn later. Trading in $ 25-450 100-1b bag = Radishes, red | SIONS, tobaccos. building mate- a ancy 100 doz bchs No 1 - ir tures, ¢ ines, all duly deliveries ends today [75 doz bens; Radishes white. fancy rials, sited at pictures, airlines, and and urgent short covering de- 100 doz vehs; No. 1, 60-18 dos behs | many oils and railroads. , Rhubarb outdoor, No 1, 60-175 do . veloped early in July beans, behs. Squash, Ttattan. fancy, 1 25-1 $0 a ae a Tex- , % bu; No ft 13-125 pk basket: Squash.| ag (Co altimore lo, Ameri- Wheat near the end : 2 s - ; of the first | summer, fancy, 128-150 % bu: No 1, é Iss : hour was 1 to 15 75-1.00 pk basket. Tomatoes, not-| Can Telephone, U. S. Steel, Good- 8 lower, July], me TRAIN FLATTENS TRUCK—Tangled k ll tha one ’ : Ouse, No 1, 4.50-5.50 14-Jb basket; toma- | year, Boeing, Radio Corp., Liggett , >, —Tang wreckage is all that was $2 06 a e 3 ay, > : cores ~ * } . . 5 ’ ’ July pe eo wee a “eb No 1. 300-3 so teib basket mae & Myers, Loew’s,. and American | !eft of a soft-drink truck rammed by a train yesterday afternoon on ae a, Cals 2 lo 2%y lower. lnc 1. 44-135 dee Seba: Tasaig. toneed irlines Grand Trunk Western Railroad tracks at West Huron street near July 74; rye 2 to 2!2 lower. July|No 1. 180-200 be MIPS. au 7 , S10 ache " P : Lettuce and selad greens: Endive, No Lower were Mack Trucks. In-} Cass avenue. The iruck driver; Harold B. Waiter of Waterford ~~ 1&s_ SOYDEANS .. 24. £0 cents 71, 100-T25 bu: Endive, bleached. No. 1. Ao po | Township, leaped to safety moments before the crash 1H Nort! t lower, July $416. and lard 3&/225-3.00 bu. Escarole. No 1, 1.25-150| ternationa arvester, ‘Northeas . cents lower to 5 cepts a bund i bu, Fscarole. bleached, No. ! 250-3 00 | Capital. General Electric” and Saa-+ Mervin Keiss of Durand, fireman for the ratiwa¢..ix cleaning , UERIDOM + tees atu utter 7 2 P I " > " ~ > ei “oy . . . oy’ pounds higher. July $16 Ca nos : bg ri ‘ee 3 ay ta ke off bottles of pop pushed onto the engine's ‘‘cowcatcher by the impact erate: Lettuce, head N 1, 100-1 25 bu PS * Ps ° e ° fettuce feaf. No 1 00 bu Romaine N : No. 1100-125 bu ew York Stocks Grain Prices oh L001 I Ope r in e i ru k d o 5 > Musta 4 s Eap es & I 46 CHICAGO GRAIN ard. No | eee a mo S es C No 1 1225-178 bu Sorrel, No 1 Adimral 4 Ke lse Ha CHICAGO (AP Opening grair 150 bu Spinach, N 1 150-200 ou | aw) Redu Kennecot ga} Wheat Mar 26', | Swiss Chard. No. 1 128-150 bu. Turnip. j Atieg 4 Ori tz Kimb Clk 714 D bal 06S ybee Ne 1 108-1 $0 be pAliee ‘ch a8 Kreme as 01 Q) Lea Ss to a et ned an cng sent 425 ee ooo | Allied Cha 46 6 reese aaa Ss Tr1ver 4 e Te ae = Allis Chal 667 LOF Glas $7 war 212:, %? C DETROIT #GGSs a uw me ete ; . Mav ze0:, Nov 7 DETROIT (tAP)—Rggs. for De Aes ie ate ay er a Harold B. Walter, 55, of Waterford Township, leaped Corn ' Fibs es included fed tate grades A Airli 145 ‘ : 7 : A te Mar See erties ee A ane tT ua cela ne 36 leews ' ig3| 0 Safety moments before a freight train rammed his Sep ° 136 : “ | od 61 tar $2'3-55. wtd ave |am Cya 496 ; 7 : nee 82 1690 | Sea, medium 43-47, wid evg 46. smalilam Ges @ mi sve Lore 8.cem 3 | truck stalled on a downtown Pontiac railroad crossing Mar 155 = ; | 27-32wtd ave 30. grade B. large 48. /Am Loco 17 Mack .Trk 201 | vest : oats Ort 1450 | fe qralnevasira 7 '| yesterday afternoon. Iv SG LS tee Ss agra reas A. jumbo 55-60. wtd = Motors. 111 re pany ~~ bong oa sak : l ; . elie Ll ing Sevbesm Ou | aia se large 50-54. wid erg S3%; we-[Am Red 182 May D mr 312| 2he truck, loaded with bottles of soft drinks, was ripped ee es tela 1250 | alum 41-66 wed avg 46. omall 92: grade |Am Smelt 313 ung copa $32| apart and scattered 75 feet along the tracks. Damage MQr veces 1 B. large 44-47 wtd avg 46 grade m St! 27 Mid st) Pa 32 é : Rye Oct 12:15 large 29-34 wtd avg 30. peewees 23 Am Tel & Tel 173 Monsan Ch e034!) w ti t d 000 H k : P ats 116. Ove 18 | Ceecks 0M sib eve Bt Am Tob 567 Mont Wat er | Was estimated at $4, by F. H. Baker, vice president of Dee 118', Mar 1215 ee Am Woolen 312 Motor Wheel 234 tl j j mal Ring 2 ne Coca Co t . CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGs eke tae rag Motorola 44 Coca Cola Bottling =. Pontiac, which dispatched 5 p B ild CHICAGO (AP) — Butter steady: re-|Anac Wa&C 2 Mueller Br 234 the truck. ecipts 12560646 wholesale buying prices | A:imco 8ti 492 = oo re quare 0 BUI | unchanged; 93 score AA 968. 62 A S63 | Armour & Co 96 Nat Bisc | 47 | Walter, who resides at 98 / 99 B 54 89 C 80, cars 90 B 845 A sd Dry G 47 wat Del ar y 700 000 Plant mc a endy: receipes tes. (CLD dies De Mal Gyms, 83 , Calvert, was driving the, 225 about . y ceipts ' s “i i e ° ew ’ | wholesale b ayine prices cescegee ee bs - aa rode bo rogate aa Public Relations Man |truck to Waterford Town- | ‘arge 46-47 U mediums 70 stan tlas dr aa. Z e7] | DETROIT uw — Square D Co.,| arcs 355 current receipts 3@ dirties Avene te 1 por Page Ke ‘ship to turn it over to 23 $ ecks - r NY Cent "7 nae announced yesterday , Laan | me" OY ie Pe yo¢) James R. Adams, president of another driver when the ~onstruct a $70,000 plant at Se- CHICAGO POTATOES . . Norf & West 406) Mac Manus : construc a s7 pla ; | Bencix Ay eo ae fac Manus, John & Adams, Inc., vehicle stalled on the Grand crucus, N. J. Square D is a major CHICAGO (AP) —Potatoes arrivals | Bengue 11 & = ; » 4 - 183, on treck 396: total US. shipments | Burroughs 202 Nor Pac M t y announced the appointment | reunk Western Railroad manufacturer of electrical eQUIP:4 499-4 suppiies moderate. demand moder-| Boeing Atr $16 Nor Sta Pw 183 ~ ¢ ket hit bout steady.|Bohn Alun 214 Nwst Alrlin 107/o0f Arthur C. Scheifle as director | d switches mop hal Mead deel) Crt oH Iisini ‘37 Ohte On | tracks on W. Huron street ment an reds slightly weaker California Long| Bond Strs 137 = 4c] bl : . -ed_ fast A tier c 197|0f public relations for the agency. | | The company, announcer @St | Whites 94 45-5.05 Texas round = reds | Borden ; 684 pais cet sra/ just west of Cass avenue Saturday it was abandoning plans | $f $9-¢ (9° 1¢ahe end Oregon round reds | Briggs Mig 19 ¢ Oita Ti Gl 924 | LOng associated with advertising | H h nen be : . oe P : Packard 3 | d bi lat Detroit je was unhurt when jumped for a new $750,000 plant in nearby Brun Balke 1s ;and public relations in roit, : Budd Co 423 Pan A W Atr 41) | "1 Royal Oak because of ‘‘labor Poult Beth Steel 704 Panh EPL 78 |Scheifle recently operated his | {rom the truck. No one else was trouble.’ But a spokesman said kd a eae se a De 111] own agency. Prior to-that he was |!" the vehicle t y both the Secaucus and Royal DETROIT POULTRY Can Dry 13} Penney JC 862 ; ‘ — . decided upon some |, DETROIT ‘AP)—Prices paid per pound | Can Par 263 Pa RR 1¢2]}an account executive with Grant| Harry Gregory of Durand, train ak plants were dec pon s fob Detrott for No 1 quality live peul- | Cepital Atri 104 Pepst Cole 18 cum@nekee! aahd) the arate us time ago and there was no con-|try up to 10 am . | Carrier Cp ) a D « =| Advertising. | ’ t h s 20-23 light type 16-15 Case JT 1464 ileo tT ; ; nection between abandonment at | meer) ene 208) eles de hoary |Cater vree lee Philip Mor “ As executive secretary of the leaving town at about 10 miles , . 7 re y (3-4 1 h 27-29 | Celanes 214 Phil Pet 39 7 . » | Royal Oak and decision to go Rede 28 jbaeig phccogs rs marred lcen ™m PS 236 Pit Plate GO seal Huron Clinton Metropolitan Author. | an hour. Engineer Joseph Stiff, ahead at Secaucus Rocks 29 Caponettes 13'2-5'2 Ibs) 32.34 | Cert-teed 18 Prect & G a42/| ity, Scheifle promoted the St. Clair| gisg of Durand, said he saw the Detroit employes of Square D. Turkeys, young heavy type hens 35 36 | Chis s on 382 Pelimen . 3| Metropolitan Beach and Kensington truck when the train was ¢0 feet : a 2) arent ‘ ak + members of the independent united CHICAGO POULTRY | Chrvaier ae mee es. | ae I alg gai a ne “8S | from the crossing and “I didn't electrical workers, have been On| cwicaGo ‘AP)—Live poultry steady. | Clark Bquip 476 Res Moters 271 | aclve in the development o CX- | nave a chante te stop.”” strike since June 15. to support | recetpts 81 coops: fob paying ery Climax Mo $1.2 Repub st! 59s | pressways and parkways with ig s - unchanged to higher, heavy hens 16- Cluett Pea 361 Reyn Met 744 bile Club of Mich Hi Automobile traffic and a north- demands for a 15-cent hourly wage | ent hens 14-15: fryers or brotiers 24-!Colg Palm 7 Rev Tob B 33 ¢| Automobile Club of Michigan. His increase and other benefits. The | 7 °!¢ roosters 135-14. caponettes 27-30. | Col Gas 141° RKO Pict 65/civic activities included the pro- | bound passenger train were halted company has filed unfair labor < con Ok *: qarccar es 4s 5| Motion of aviation in its earlier | for about 30 minutes while work- practice charges against UE local Livestock care rtets Pt -o4 ad — . bat days; traffic safety, and the WAC rie oir ge Pong from the f . we : , acks. Little mage was done 957 and two of its officers, and has Cont Bak 22 «scovill Mf .. 291) recruiting drive during the War. ’ . —J DETROIT LIVESTOCK Cont Can 726 Sead Al RR 892 - o the according = sued the union for $210,000 dam-| pgrrorr (AP)—The Detroit livestock | Cont Mot 10 aaage-iesb—17-90= In his.new post. Scheifle will head 4o the train, on to the crew. j ages-charging breach of contract e : — be} 6 Shell Oi! 4s |the agency’s public relations de-| Baker said the load of Cokes was ’ ‘| Mogs—Salable 225 No early sales Corn Simmons ... 36 ori , .| a total bos Cattle—Salable 300. Small fresh re-| Curtiss Wr. 114 ginciair 6... 02|Partment working with the com-| 4 t . clepts mostly cows: narrow outlet for Les am = Secony Vae .. 407|pany's major accounts. slaughter steers and yearlings, about Rou Pac 406 a = County Deaths steady. cows little more action._ DOUs Airc 81-8 — seny—ty w76 . |Death Hits Coincidentally a5 ulls very siow wea. stockers an parks 7 intro slow ge ‘can pina aned Du Pont 135.3 Seer . a B i e Briefs a ~ August Rohiman and choice fed steers and yearlings mpg nel L .. 7) Std Brand 146 U in CLEVELAND ®, — Alfred Goetz, - 7 > as r ° ” ROYAL OAK—Funeral arrange- | 26-2400: most utility and com-/ 2a) rig en Std Ol Cal .. 60 . 42, staff musician at radio station merctal cows 900-1150: canners and Std O11 Ind 1% 7 f Clev ~ ments for August Rohlman, 72. of | cutters mostly 1700-950: part load good Hy 6 Most oe Std Ot! NJ 843 Don Williams of eland, WTAM, collapsed and died yester- 26571 John R. Rd.. are—pending | #7ound 850 Ib fleshy feeders 1950 “tb oe 127 Std O11 Oh 373] regional director of the Small | day after completing a tuba solo . springers steady at 2300 other|Gen Bak -.... 97 S¥ift & Co . 477] office is now handling collections stopped at the time grandfathér vis offerings unsold Gen Elec 436 Sy!lv E) Pa 39 . ; 1 ‘ ied. = tear rg steak ‘a ennai alo Gaal pas mas Terese Ce *. and information on disaster acer & a red of Ferndale; two daugh- CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Gen Mille ... 65.4 TU.) “pa t34| Previously gran a rviced ay 5 Gen Motors . 706 . in thi During World War I, many Brit- ters, Mrs. Evelyn South of Hazel} CHICAGO ‘AP:—saiabie hogs 7.000 Ps Timk R Bear. 467/| jn this area by the Reconstruc- ing , bd fa ae < mod en Refrac ™“ ue - ° . ? - - Park and Mrs. Virginia Friskey of | \\eniy steady to 25 wicnee ‘aitheugh top| Gem Tel .... 349 Tree W Ar .. 176) 10. pinance Corp. The Small | ish troops were infected with an- Royal Oak township 25 lower: most sales 180-230 ib butchers | Ge® Time 792 ‘Twent C Pox. 211! Business Administration office is | thrax, believed carried on shaving ) $22 25-23.00 with several loads and jots| Ge" Tire 37 Underwd =... 282 EP : brushes imported from Japan { : choice Not and 2°s 190-218 tb $23.15. | Qillette | - 8 on Carbide |. #34/ located in Room 248 Ferguson | brushes import ox Chrysler Productiontis*s2icowte eee es ees) Buling, TR ast Mth 8 ers $18.50-18.00. choice 330-400 Ib sows| Grah Paige 13 onit ai 627 ; io. #16 00-18 se mostly $16.25 and above | Ot No Ry 3 arth =) Cleveland, Oh wit ehter weights $18 75-1925 or es Unit Pruit 494 — Scheduled to Halt hee Ao larger lots 425-600 Ib — Leak Un Gas Im 371 John P. Bennett, research di- | ows - 8 Li . 6 - Salah! ecattie 14.000: calves 500: steers | Hayes Mf 47 oa — 37| vector of Bull Dog Electric, has : and heiferi derately acti ly | Hersh Choe an4 send : dh mo ely active: generally US Smelt 4 i DETROIT (INS — Chrysler teady to 25 lower; instances off 50 on| Holland F 141 U8 Steel ne eee 2 —— eceaien one | : . ._| 00d tow choice grades; cows about | Momestk 68 Us Bt “156 Michigan apter e r Corporation spokesmen today an steady; bulls weak to 25 lower: vealers| Hooker EF! #04 ach 2 ome Marketi polee for 1954-55. nounced that all Detroit area pas- | about sip with late Tuesday. few lbads| Houd Her 183 Van Raal 294 can Fay ing oF “ 2 : prime -1,325 ib steers $25.75-2625:| 11 Cent 495 wal ' He wi assist incent H. senger car and truck production of | bin’ crime ‘steers, $35 0002s $e: many | tnlend ati .. eee ware 3 ae raw Chrysler wil] have halted by noon, loads mixed choice and prime $24 o0- Inspir Cop 288 W Va Puip ue Bergmann, D. P. Brother ‘o. ’ : -| 24.75: goog and choice steers $19.50-|Interiak Ir -.. 147 i ; ; ite, unless there is a last minute set-| 5; 75 a few loads high choice and prime| int Harv 14 basil Be 2 vice president; Helen M. Whit tlement of the strike by Dodge eters 52) and. 633.78: several loads Int Nick 431 Weste FI 492 | White Field Service, secretary, | : . . e ve ; most g and | tnt it main local 3, UAW-CIO. choice heifers $18.50-23.00: utility and|imt move. Her Wilson ry ae ae ste. moeethones ts | The strike, which already pas { carter 4 S010, wtllne’ assirommn: | iat Tel & Tel 22 Woslworth.” @a2| trolt News; treasurer. | y ion A Tarr ~jJohns Man 146 Ynest 8h & T 507 SN en erence atten {sanieetlg kab 22 pond and “chet fenitn Raa ee , employes ) : : : ane . x unl the dis- | S7ater, 83¢.8¢-16.60 STOCK AVERAGES - son out of work unless ie § Salabie sheep 1.000 .spring lambs about | _ = d steady: slaughter sheep slow: steady to Compiied by The Associated Press pute is settled. weak: good to prime spring lambs $19 59 3 18 18 60 wre . . The walkout began two days 21.50: a small lot chotce and Bly Net chance Indust sree beh iearig § tf i l | | . $22.00; cull to low good lambs $12 00- ar e 0 1S | H on Noon. today 1745 966 629 1296 age when Dodge main workers $3.00:4 ail te chotce slaughter ewes | previous dey... 1743 O65 628 1295 left their jobs to protes; the fir- jeek ago 1763 980 624 1306] The Intrafax machine—Western tri nes Month ago 1717 942 600 126 , , ing of two trim employes. Group to Give Opera Year ago 1380 868 824 1073] Union's recent development in com- Ore 1984 high 1771. 983 629 1310 ; ae : Only. 10,000 persons were direct- ' ; rete pede pone 1439 778 884 1089} Munications will be available for lv invelved in the strike, but others} INTERLOCHEN (UP) — Inter- ise) . Bish eee ° 151 8 58456 : i ; installation in industry and other - ° 2 a ‘ - were forced to go home, when | lochen's national music camp. will ; enterprises Aug. 1, said J. ¥. aad! “ Oe ee New Soybeans 7 truckers, also members of local 3, refused to transport material between plants. The international union has not sanctioned the strike and Chrys- ler officials charge it is unauthor- ized. The international has made no statement. Before the thermometer was in- vented, physicians measured the MARKETS Market Swings present the first of three world premiers of chamber operas to- night. The production, -‘‘Deelia,"’ will be presented by three singers and two pianos under the direc- tion of Barrie Hill, former opera star. The opera is a Boccaccio tale set to music, Hill said. A home recently opened as a museum by the Denison Society, Inc., in Mystic, Conn. has been occupied since 1717 by 11 genera- degree of bodily heat with their hands. tions of the Denison family. Crawford-Dawe-Grove Insurance of All Kinds 716 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Ph. FE 2-8357 DON’T LET FIRE DESTROY YOUR LIFE SAVINGS ! INSURE WITH... DETROIT STOCKS (Hernblewer & Weeks) Figures after decimal points are eighths High Low Noon Raldwin Rubber* 13.3 16 D & C. Navigation* 134 «#14 Gerity-Michigan 22 25 Kingston Products* > By 24 Masco Screw* 26 27 Midwest Abrasive* 54 & Rudy Mfg* 45 46 Warne Screw* 13 14 *No sale, bid and asked Foreign Exchange NEW YORK (AP)—Poreign exchange rates follow (Great Britain in dollars, others tn cents) Canadian dollar im New York be market 2% per cent premium or 102.73 U_ 8. cents. up ‘% of @ cent. Europe: Great Britain ‘pound) 62.81 13/16, off 1/32 of a cent; Great Britain 3%© day futures 2.81 13/16, off 1/32 of a Britain 60 day futures a cent; Great ares 2.81 13/16, off Belgium franc) 2.00%, 1/16 of a cent; France (franc' % of a cent, —— Germany (Western) (Deutsche mark) 23.86, un- changed. Aoliand iguilder) 26.43, up 00% of a cent; Italy ‘lire: 16% of @ cent. anchanged Portugal ‘escudo’ 3.50 unchan : Sweden ‘kroha: 19.4. un . Switzerland § ifranc) free) “ ° amehanged, Denmark ‘krone! 14.50. anche Latin America Argentina ‘free 17.24 anchanged; Brazil free») 1.75. un- changed. Mexico 8.02. unchanged; Vene- suela (bolivar) 30.63, anchen: Par East: Hone Kong doller 17.60, un- changed : The Lucin cutoff, across Great | Sait Lake in Utah, is the longest railroad bridge in the United States, 12 miles. NN ‘ >. eaiammihee tien amneaaaiatmaomes aieked 2 ___THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 eae ea 4 The residents of Greenland are attempting. to grow trees in some ru ve sheltered locations on the island. — | 217,174,490,» ee. LOANS /n a hurr for things you need and want ne ri at x 2 <— "a “$20 te $500 Easy-to-meet requirements. Loans in a hurry, on signature, car or furniture e Up to 20 months to repay GzHOUSEHOLD FINANCE Coysoration of Pontiae———— 3% South Saginew Si: The Kay Bidg., 2nd Floor PHONE: Federal 4.0535 Loons made te residents of nearby towns 36, drowned yesterday in the Detroit River left their boat to swim and seemed tempt failed. tor vehicles in the world tiac Lodge, No. 21, F. & A. M. Thursday, July ' funeral services for brother John Race. Lodge opens at 10:30 a. m. Robert C. Burnes, W. M. WV ASHINGTON-tP=The attorney] Lodge Calendar Special communication of Pon- 22nd, to conduct —Adv. News in Brief Frank J. Malinowski, 41, of Ham. tramck, paid a $35 fine and $15 costs after he pleaded guilty to reckless driving Tuesday before Avon Township Justice Luther C. Green If your friend's in jail and needs bail. Ph. FE 5-5201. C. A Mitchell. Re-elect Clare Hubbell Sheriff, Republican. Vote August 3rd. Adv. Diamond Rings, 2% off. Georges - Newports, Jewelry Dept. Opposed Power Grab Complete & Frame * ist QUALITY LENSES! * FULLY GUARANTEED | * SHOP US and COMPARE | * FAST SERVICE ° FROM YOUR PRESCRIPTION ! * NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Sun Classes only $11.00 jeeded—Only $1.00 More Bifecals & WN Repairs and Special Frames at Savings Safety Glasses at Savings NU-VISION OPTICAL CO. uz" for Burton C. Bovard said today Bovard and another government housing official lost their jobs be- ealise they Opposed an attempted power grab by housing adminis- trator Albert M. Cole. River Claims Swimmer DETROIT w Wilson Price, of suburban River Rouge, A companion said Price to get into difficulty. A rescue at- There are about 8) million mo- You can phone anywhere in the U.S. for less than ‘2 ~~ Slattery, Pontiac manager Western Union office. A facsimile sysfem leased to cus- tumers for speeding intra-company communications in ‘‘picture’’ form between departments, offices and buildings, Intrafax systems already are in use by several groups in Pontiac. Slattery explained that this unit has qa sending and receiving limit of about eight miles. However, he atded, the company’s ‘‘Letter-Fax”’ and ‘‘High-Speed-Fax’’ have a longer range with new develop- ments underway. The three ma- chines will be standard equipment in most Western Union offices in the near future, he said. Red Education Lagging TOKYO W—A Japanese teacher who returned today from a Red- sponsored peace conference in | Stockholm and a trip through Rus- sia said education in the Soviet Union is ‘20 years behind educa- tion in Japan.” : __The national fag. of Great Brit. ain is @ symetrical pattern of the crosses of St. Andrew, St. George and St, Patrick. for | We Pay 2% On Savings ITS THE MODERN, CONVENIENT WAY to SAVE! ' Hundreds, yes, thousands are saving by mail with us these days! They are making deposits withdrawals and transfers without even setting foot in the bank! You, too, will find it a great convenience to bank by mail. Just drop in and ask for the necessary forms PONTIAC FEDERAL A Moteal Savings & Home Loon Association A Mutual Savings & Home Loan Association ~~" TS EAST LAWRENCE STREET and envelopes. To call most places it costs far less. For example, from PONTIAC: A RRR YOU CAN CALL CANTON MILWAUKEE SEATTLE BALTIMORE 85¢ (Plus Federal Tax), These are station-to-station rates for the first three minutes, after 6 o'clock every night and all day Sunday. Don’t wonder, Don't worry. Call today and be sure. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY i ae HIRTY-EIGHT ¢ ° THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ‘ of Waterford Chief Hi fttteg] Bree 58 ise : z B 4 proposal allocalions..onthe.per-; centage of applications on hand | balanced by the percentage of gas’ Plans for 25,000 Consumers Power Co. Is Seeking Approval of Proposed Addition LANSING ® — Plans to allo The utility is seeking commission approval of the proposed addition. proposed allocation: The company said it based ‘its space heating customers in the Herringshaw said the utility will have 56.8 billion cubic feet of gas available this year for sale to its customers compared with 51 bil- lion cubic feet actually sold during the 1953-M heating season. Consumers also is seeking per- mission to connect large indus- trial and commercial gas users without commission approval and to connect year-around air condi- tioning units without a commission permit. $450 in Jewelry Stolen From Southfield Home Thieves netted an estimated $450 in jewelry in a breakin at the home of Edward Lafnear of 25870 wrist watch. The thieves, who entered by cutting a rear door screen and breaking the glass, also took a small savings bank containing $6, -beafnear said — |French, Reds Sign Indochinese Truce e £5 F Fr FF 8 ! | ae a side of the line. planned of which it disapproves. ests of its people. “We have been they had been taken.” s s * along with the truce. after that. ing-out of the armistice ments. Wrong G. Washington ae ie ee = 92 Pg gs Tt DURANGO, Colo. (UP) — An unidentified parking violator put a $100 bill before Judge Erwin De A total of 61,704 applications have been received for gas heating serv- ice, Gud A. Mulligan, Consumers vice-president, reported. TOWELL, Mass. (UP)—They re | thinking of hanging a sign reading “George Washington slept here” on the door of one of the cells at police headquarters. A soldier booked as George Washington Ducker spent the night there re- cently. Pitching Horseshoes s ish man hanging around who out about as far as a nose can stand without cantilevers. sion, and up until last summer he enjoyed the patronage of a good, steady clientele. Curi- ously enough, his five-inch nose , was an asset to his business. Horseplayers, a superstitious lot, liked to rub it for luck be- . fore placing theimbets. It also made them feel good to get off bi a wisecrack bookie’s expense. Such 4s, “Good old Beakie. He’s the only man in town s who can smoke: a cigar under line they filched from Bugs Baer.) There was one thing about the bookie which hi#® customers never, suspected—his secret : By BILLY ROSE On a certain Broadway corner, at almost any hour between noon and sun-up, there’s a small- a mosquito off his nose, no matter what. He’s known as Beakie because his -nose is his outstanding feature, and “outstanding” is the right word for Beakie’s nose because it stands Beakie is a bookie by profes- ; ‘Beakie’ Is a Bookie With a Nose +> total disagreement. rhand-at-the>start jon’s best troops. * * Minister, Georges Bidault, to the Reds. , 2 fy © pape Seep aan tO T1IS DUSINESS” Here he was wouldn’t brush ance. were removed, ful Ty. As -he had a shower.” (A/ fully. girls, a British explained his himself—full ly detective. 4 lite. “How's tricks the bookie. i 3 s p g Bi | itt iL a g i g and I'd have to go back to looking like Copyright 1954 told that the job of kewpie- dolling his smeller wouki cost $2,000. The bookie handed over the money, plus a 1936 profile picture of Senor Power for the medico’s guid- And a week later, when the bandages darned if Beakie didn’t look like an undernourished edition of the beauti- expected, the change in his social status was immediate—he had more , girls than hé knew what te do with. To his addled amazement, however, his financial status took a disastrous drop. : Steady customers who had once rubbed his ;|/mose and kidded him for kicks began to give him the go-by. "| failed to recognize him. Mostly, it seemed, they ind | Were doing business with a rival bookie, a 300- Tpound tub of lard who couldn't put his pants, on without help. Beakie thought the situation over very care- It was obvious that without his old proboscis he was the Folies Bergere without In some cases, they even movie without Alec Guinness. Se he went back to the plastic surgeon, plight, and asked the doc to - build him a new nose like his old nose. This time the photographs he passed over were of face and profile—which had been cribbed from the police files by a friend- I ran into Beakie last night on 47th Street, and his nose was again a magnificent thing to behold—five fulsome inches, the last three con- structed of an extruded plastic similar to bake- 2” I asked. “Like always,” said “Business is fine,-but I ain’t made time with a girl in seven weeks.” “There's a rumor around Lindy’s,” I said, “that if a mosquito squatted on your nose you'd let it enjoy a full five-course dinner.” . “The rumor is pretty near right,” said Beakie. “The doc told me that if I ever knocked the end » he couldn’t build it up couldn't afford.” p——— oa = — Preugiyg sett ar fire in a month or resign. was to settle for Europe. of the strategic Red s s By maki stop the M. from Charlies zealgserrs Ha at [ from Brethauer Fest from Borage -Selen “f° fen - ~“B:Bherrtit (Continued From Page One) they will hold an enclave in the pock ets south of the partition line. Then they must pull out for the north. Netther side may bring in troops 4 or war material, and no new mili- tary bases can be set up on either | Signifying disapproval of the par- titioning, the-++: S government had decided not to join in the general *| declaration which the other con- ference delegations were to issue later today taking note of the agreement terms. Instead, the United States a separate declaration, noting the terms with which it agrees but ignoring officially those Vietnamese Foreign Minister Tran Van Do declared in an inter- view yesterday that the big pow- ers were splitting his country in violation of the wishes and inter- ed,”” he said, “‘with a fait accompli. We were not consulted and were in- formed of the decisions only after But the military weakness of Do's government and its depend- ence on the West for economic and military backing made it certain the Vietnamese regime would go The agreements must be sent to the French and Vietminh high com- manders in Indochina for counter- signing. They will become effective A three-nation neutral armistice commission, headed by India and including Canada and Communist Poland, will supervise the carry- agree- All prisoners of war and civilian 4internees are to be liberated with- in 30 days, and each side pledged to help transfer residents who wished to move to the other zone. This clause fulfilled one American demand that no one must be forced to live under a Communist regime. The signing was the climax of peace negotiations which began here 2 i sions on Korea bogged down in The Communists held the upper of the -tndochira 7 conference. The day before if opened they captured the. northern Indochina fortress of Dien Bien Phu, winning the biggest battle of the war and killing or capturing more than 10,000 of the French Un- The French defeat later cause? the fall of the government of Pre- mier Joseph Laniel, whose —— fought hard against surrendering Mendes-France then took over, warned France that she could no longer be a power in Europe and Asia both and that her only hope As the diplomats talked in Ge neva, the military situation deteri- orated rapidly for the French-in Indochina. In recent weeks their troops drew in toward Hanoi and Haiphong, abandoning about half River Delta. . good his promise to ting Mendes-France has greatly strengthened his posi- tion at home and can launch his further program: to conclude the stalled discussion of France's role in West European defense plans. to work out a program for economic recovery; and to solve the problem of Nationalist unrest in French Tu- Find Chief’s Stolen Car, Plastered With Tickets ' WILMINGTON, N. C. w&) — Po- licewoman Julia Pearson asked the sergeant if it wouldn't be a idea 4 | | { _SULY 21, 1954 x ij Marriage License Applications: Phillip M. Button, Ortonville Alice A. Phelps, Lapeer Louls J. Beers, Hazel Pare. Bessie F. Spence, Park csoy.rae Fras Devere W. Scott, Oxford Pae L. Beardsiee, Oxtord jenn Ketth, 16 Rosshire y lL. Himstedt, Detroit Richard A.i\DeMuyt, Key West. Fis. Gloria J. chewits, Royal Osk - Donald G, Johnson, Ferndele @heila A. Mitchell, Ferndale : William R. Garrod, Livenis Nanty L. Fraser, Walled Lake Bernard J. DeFillipl, Ferndaic Deriene C. Humber, Royal Oak ] i } | } Death Notices — RACE, JULY 20, 1954. JOHN AL- bert, 125 Summit, age 68, beloved of Mrs. Eva Mable Race; Belov: father of Mrs. Alfred Short, Mrs. Murray Osborn, Mrs. Harold Wagg and Mrs. Eldon Powley. Puneral will be held Thursday, July 22, at 11 a.m from the Huntoon Punerel Home with Rev. William EB. Hakes of- fictating. Interment at Washing- ton Cemetery, Cargonville. Mic Mason: Grave Service oy Pr & A. M. No. 71. Mr. Race will lie im state at his home, 125 Summit until Friday when he will be taken to the Huntoon nine, 22 WN. Shirley, age 16; loved mother of Byron Rock- well and A Rockwell. Fu- nera!l will be held Friday, July 23,-at 1:30 p.m. from the Hun- toon Funeral Home with “Rev. Charlies Roub officiating. In terment at Oak Hill Cemetery. the ane plpa SS by untoon nere me Robert H. Rose, Walled Lake Ines . Se Walled Lake Flowers 3 LO nnn - George H. Timpf, Detroit SCHAFER'S PLO Barbara A. Hor a 1611 Woodland 123 avsuun ~ — 217 Kenneth &. Betts, Perndsie Funeral Directors 4 Dorothy A. Devidson, Ferndale | Pau) Richmond, 40 Moreland eae omens ' Donelson-Johns Charies M. Gheidon, Royal Qak Vivien M. Devid, Flint Walter Wolfe, 121 Starr Pearl M. Measei, 65 Pine Gamuel H. Arndt. Frankfort. Ind. Mildred &. White, Roya! Oak | | | Oscar Yarbrough Jr. Roys! Oek Twp | Kathie P. Taylor, Royal Oak Twp. Raymond £. Orerait. Detroit Theima R. Melintyre, Wixom Jack V. Young Lake Orten Joyce L. Cook, 3228 Avalon William solo Marilyn L Grigley, Birmingham Ralph Nelson, Ferndale Mary H. Spencer, Ferndale Donald B aes = 204 Hospits! r Virginia L. ockett, Ypsilanti John Cullen, Mase! Park Dorethy M. Armbruster, Haesel Pe John FH. Walker, Pleasant Ridge Mary V. Pitsgerald, Detroit K h EB. Puchs, 1623 Seward Ma L. Gevette, 79 Lincoln Vieter W osebille Overton, R Alice M. VerLee, 815 Glendesle Bugene C Folk, 3386 dale M. Pendleton, Camp Carson rk Devon Thelma A. Bchitnk, 3384 Devondale Kenneth E Rakestraw, Detroit Marie BE. Murphy, Royel Oak Prederick W. Seita#. Leake Orion Elisabeth A. Braidwood, Lake Orion Buddy P Biock. 7235 Elizabeth Lake Genieve L. Rogers, 7235 Elizabeth Lake Ire D. Powell, Rochester Jean Gutheriand, Rochester - Gerald J Griffin, Perndsie Mildred L. Leshy, Perndale Carl L. Cole, Lake Orion Derothy L. Nank, Lake Orion Vernon O Lanier, §7 Whittemore Mary L. Tison, 57 Whittemore Bast! D. Vaden Ft. Knox, Ky. ~ Audrey W. Conn, Haze] Park Harry O Marie L. Carrigan, Richard L. Zortman, Royal Osk Elia L. Bradley, Royal Oak Percy R. Price, Ferndale Martha L. Thos, Ferndsie Walter Markiewics, Ferndale Hilda L. Cummins, Ferndsie Duane M. Clark. Birmingham Vivian M. Davis, Southfield Raymond E. Goins. Clarkston MeCallum, Hazel Park dale Marridel} Harden, Auburn Heights , James A. Schuh. Detroit Piorine R. Henrick, Detroit Gerald D. Griffin, Perndale Geraidine GO. Hall, Royal Oak Billy & 6 ler Carpenter, Pop Anthea J, Whitehorn, 2900 Newberry “PE Ciee Royal Orr “warren Tt ’ Arvilla McDonnell, Haze] Park Donald E Waeck Milwaukee, Wis. Janet A. Milla, Birminghem ‘Palrick O Hawley. Farmingion Jane Schulte, Detroit Archiell J. Roy Jr. 11 Kimbell Betty L. Rendieman, 65 Peggy Menry A. Bortor Birmingham Julia A. Bers, Birmingham Roneld A. Hilton, Detroft Qwendolyn Yarbrough, Detroit Bernard M. Lombard, Farmington Elisabeth A. Bellanger, Farmington Calvin P. Garner, Milford Shirley F. Davidson, Milford: Amos Johnson, 402 6. Saginaw Nettie M. Boyd, 402 6. Saginaw Richard C. Woodham. 85 Virginia Joyce M. Kinser, 167 Seminole Kar! L. Thiellesen, Royal Oak Noreen B. Wilcox, Royal Oak Cary J. Stantor, Ferndale Bue E. Johnson, Ferndsie Warren FE. Jackson. 318 Chandler Evelyn E. Roth, 3871 Joslyn Grover EF. Miller. New Hudson Rosemary Minton, South Lyon John OQ. Brewer, 81 N. Saginaw Patricia KE. Reaume, 38 Biaine John C. Collins, 3338 Rock Maven *“Juit Abarnathy, Roahester Dearborn Girl, 9, } Drowned in Cass overt A_ THSMe JF Rochester Martha J. VanKeuren, 3821 Dunning | | ’ A 9 .~ year - old Dearborn Town- ship girl drowned in Cass Lake Tuesday afternoon when she slipped from an inflated inner tube. State Police of the Pontiac Efforts to recover the body, near Cass - Dodge Park 4, have been unsuccessful. . The victim, daughter of Mrs. Delores White of 3996 Edgewood was on a picnic with her family and friends . She set out the lake on the inner tube about 4 p.m. and, according in at to State ..Police Cpl. Emmett Brad- ley. apparently became frightened when she drifted into deep water. Drinking in the Home Blamed for Delinquency BAY VIEW (UP) — Drinking in the home was blamed today for half of America’s juvenile delin- quency by Mrs. Glenn G. -Hays, Evanston, Ml., president of the National Women’s Christian Tem- $ | 20400 «(Weel | | i | PUNERAL HOME “DESIONE') FOR FUNERALS” Voorhees-Siple - FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Plane or Motor PE 2-a37" : 5 _. Cemetery Lots _ HITE CHAPEL <~ CHOICE to. cation 6 graves $280 3 for $150. {I 2-216% ; 4 GRAVE GAKLAND HILLS MF- morial Gaftiens Cemetery lots in Masonic Garden EM 3-5214 after ~ ? BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m.” today, there were replies at the Press office in the following boxes: 6, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 22, 42, 54, 57, 68, 61, 62, 63, 80, 99, 116, 118. ee The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m, . All errors should be re ported immediately The Press assumes no respon sibuity for errors other first insertion vertisement which has been . rendered valueless through the error. When canceila tions are made be sure to get your “kill numbers.” No adjustments wil! be cives Without it. Closing time for adverttse- ments containing type sizes larger than regular agate type ts 12 o'clock noon the dav previous to publication. Transient Want Ads mev be canceled up to 6:30 the dav of publication. CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 1 Dav 3 Dave 6 Dave 3 $1 29 61 6 $2 52 ‘ 1 60 3.12 4% 5 2.00 360 $4 J 2.40 432 ea ? 2 80 5 04 736 a 3.20 575" #64 ® 36o 6a 972 Birmingham Office Ph. Midwest 4-0844 _379 Hamilton J Help Wanted Male 6 AN OLD TCY FIRM WILL TRAIN 2 Pontiae women too demonstrate toys, September 15th through De- cember ¢th. Women must have ear and work 5 nights a week We furnish sample kit of 987 toys, deliver and collect. The Toy Chest. 182388 Wyoming Detroit 20. AUTOMOBILE SALESMAN. + perienced or otherwise. State full qualifications in letter. Write Pon _tac ss, Box 100 4 BILLION DOLLAR LIFE IN- surnace Co. i« enlarwing its = Pontiac area. Four in the very unusual opportunities are interested available for men vertisement Reviies confidential. w or call: O. E. LaBarge, 566 ww _AyYe. Mich. _}--_- Prore 45. 4-1 BUMP AND PAINT MAN. 23 _ Auburn. BUMP AND PAINT MAN WITH own facilities. Call FE 2-9101 and ask for Mr. Humphries. CHECKER, FAMILIAR WITH ood to check CANVASSERS TO CONTACT present usere of our products for service and replacement sales. « earnings to start $80 a week Car neces FE 2-281) for inter- MACHINIST WANTED Skilled all) round tool room ma- chinist preferable with special machine nevnae | experience and leading ability. Near Birmingham. Call Midwest ¢7373. Mr. Ciem- os, = CARPENTERS WANTED. UNION job. First class men only, FE 2-7986 after 6 p.m. BISHWASHER AND for restaurant, ts. Transpor- tation essential e Zinevyards, Franklin R++ at estern. FLanders 1-¥10 ——i EXPERIEN ER, Inquire drive in cleaners. 1208 N. rry. EXPANDING IN LARGE CITIES from 80 to 140 wholesale units. Opening tn city of Pontiac if you can maintain headcuarters and learn to train sales force. Offer opportunity for good earnings. Experienced company man _ will assist vow im getting started. We supply amole merchandise. Write for interview, Rawieigh's, Whise Dept.. MCG-69A-W. rt, m1 TIR A E SALESMAN Steady employment. Good for experienced men. Ask *arri for Mr a LEWIS FURNITURE +0443. 136 Pike St. ' LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD RE. AN ’ NEED A SECRETARY? Phone FE 2-818], place a ' Help Wanted ad in Pon- tia¢ Press| | ‘ et < ‘ Help Wanted Male 6 . $325 STARTING SALARY Plus commission and bonus for established resident, 26 to 40, to corpo: no —— Married, ambitious. ca- pable y. Piease give brief assuming responsibitit persona) history. sre strictly confidential. _Write Bontis a MAN WITH CAR, APPLY 8 W Buren. = Telegraph near to W. MAN WANTED Expanding organization, Severa) openings available. Good pay and future to the right man. Apply rson only. 78 N. Paddock st Pontise: ich | PART TIME We have ap opening * for &@ man now reg- ularly employed to work wit earrier boys afternoons from 2:30 to 5:30 p. m. and Saturdays from 8 to 5 p.m. 2 This is mostly out side work and E car is pecessary. ou ersoa to m PART AND FULL TIME SALES man to se! the fastest movin. home appliance m town. F 5-5031 SALESMAN-EXPERIENCED — 25 to 35. High School graduate. Good selling record. full time sition The Good Housekeeping p. 50 W. Huron.«FE_¢-1555 TOOL MAKER FOR PRECISION air craft experimenta) parts. Must have expe e on close toler- ance work. Steady work, paid holidays & vacation MC. Manu- facturing Co., 118 Indianwood Rd. _ Lake Orion : 3” open top Tandem trailers to haul from Columbua, Ohio West. Good rates. Contract: Pre-Fab Transit Co.. Farmer City. I!linoits. Ph. 2141 Columbus. Ohio. _Ph. KLondike 4641 WATCHMAKE®. STEADY MAN. Capable of taking ful) charge. FE 4-8406 Ca WANTED — TERMINA ral large common carrier gent. tactful clean cut prefer college education Desire to grow with com * Q0 experience nec- essary atione!) concern located in Birmingham area Very pieas- —. 8 conditions § Lincoln +7 WANTED: MECHANK With Ford ex DAWSON INCO _lLeke Orion Help Wanted Female 7 ADVISER Ambitious woman over forty to @ssist sung Women in accumu- lating linens for their trousseau and DAVE rience MY 2264) P available only through our a inted representa- tives. Congenial work for woman who meets people easily and who Reeds above average income. Ap- Piicant must be seeking a dig- Bified, permanent connection with advancement. and have a car No canvassing interview -Write to Trousseau Linen Outfit- ters. Inc. 187 N Balle St Chicago 1 TMiltnois BEAUTY OPERATOR EXCEL lent opportunit; for experienced opera‘or in well established atr conditioned salon 271 W = _bie, Birmingham. MI 42466 BOOKKEEPER, TYPIST OFFICE in Birmingham, builder Inter- ested in someone booms 3 for per- ust 16. Write PO. Box $1. Bir- mingham. stating qualifications. age and one number. DINNER | COOK WITH SHORT OR- OR 39357 DISHWASHER FOR. WEEKENDS FE 5-8060 EXPERIENCED WAITRESS FOR restaurant and liquor bar Night AE Closed Sundays. 013 Baldwin ve EXPERIENCED WOMAN FOR cooking ani taundry Righest wages Repiy Box 66 Pontiac Press ELDERLY LADY WISHES TO share her home with another elderly lady Share food and fuel expenses 64 N Main Milford. MUtual ¢549. FREE $1 BOX OF 21 GORGEOUS Christmas Cards to show how quick ani easy you can make 00 or more showing our un- usual values Other Assortments on approval hame - imprinted samples FREE Payne G GENERAL CTEANING. IRONING —— 738 GIRL OR WOMAN PART TIME. Doctor's office permanent. 4 to 6 m 4 davs @ week Box 25 _ Pontiac Press : HOUSFEKEEPER TAKE FULL home. tothing be good on telephone and fond of children Stay nights Permanent position for right party $25 week. Thurs and ‘ri. off. Cal) collect. _Metamora 33F4 RAVE OPENINGS FOR RFEAI Fistate Salesiady lots of property to sell M-nber rative pre Estate Exchange. Ca!) LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD 1 ESTATE & INSURANCE » EDUCATIONAL SURVEY Mature young lady for dignified steady year around outside posi- tion in and around Ponttac. Guaranteed $40 per 5 day week start. car necessary. Substantial bonus, group tnsurance and other fringe benefits. Good opportunity for advancement with- in 30 days. HERALD reat Help Wanted Female 7 SHORT ORDER COOK Experienced. Frank & Esther +, _577_ Auburn Ave. : . Sportswear Saleswomen tt ye both sal- Permanent position pe ary and commission y. ter thap average working hours. ARTHUR'S Pleasant OR 37148, oe WANTED BEAUTY OPERATOR. downtown, Rochester. Call OL GziT!_ after ¢ p.m. _ WHITE WOMAN 4 TO 55 YEARS. to do housework help care for sick wife. Live in. OL 2-7557. WAITE'S — START AN EXECUTIVE CAREER IN RETAILING TODAY! America’s largest nation- wide department store organization needs fut- ture executives in ad- vertising, display, man- agement, Operations, control, credit and ac- counting, and personne! management. 1 YEAR TRAINIAG PROWRAM (ON-THE-JOB- AND CONFER- ENCE). py ages SALARY PROORES- REQUIRE AT LEAST 3 YEARS LLEGE OR EQUIVALENT EX- PER BE AN ASSISTANT DEPARTMENT MANAGER IN 1! YEAR A DEPARTMENT MANAGER IN 3 YEARS WITH PROVEN ABILI- i. IF YOU ARE PRESENTLY IN RE- TAILING. YOUR EXPERIENCE WILL BE RECOONIZED. APPLY WAITE’S PERSONNEL __YIPTH FLOOR ___ WANTED EXPERIENCED WATT. ress Night shift No other need _®pply_ Phone FE 3-088 Help Wanted 8 RED RASPBERRY PICKERS Wednesdays. Fridave. for vourself er for me A) Johnston northwest cor- — Sashabew anéd Seymour LE. RASPBERRY PICKERS BOYS and girs not under 14 vears. _Call after 8 PM. FE 44039 SALES HELP We need 2 additional salesmen for our appliance department Must be sharp and r. Green, pe ° Tuesday end Wednesday. 16 am to noon Wattes Department RA Rea Estate P Ww «6 W. Ruron, Instructions 9 ACCORDIONS 1.“4NED FREE TO Deginners. “Lessons given at vour home Acerrd ~m also all sizes @t factory oricee OR 13-9468 __ Work Wanted Male 10 4-1 CARPENTRY AND TILE work Ca, FE BRICK AND STONE WORK WANT- ed. Fireplace. FE 58-6975. BOYS WANT ANY KIN " work $100 per hour OR Gary BOY \¢ WANTS FARM WORK. FE BLOCK AND CEMENT WORK. _Reasonable FE 40427 TEMES K _ yosstations easement floors , oS. Lire nls and cheap CARPENTER GARAGES, REMOD- eling. repairing, FE 10714 CABINET WORK. GARAGE BUILD- g rem after _FE yy ae om COLLEGE STUDENT DESTRESS _Summer .mployment. OR 3-9289 CONCRETE BROKEN WITH AIR a Ca) for estimate. FE CARPENTER WORK WANTED _Rew and it, FE 44210, CARPENTER WORK. ROUGH AND _finish FE €1530 CARPENTER WORK WANTED. _ Part time only OR 3-2376. CABINET Mag AND CARPEN- at__2 _-pecialte__Fy—_—____— EXPERIENCED STATION ATTEN- dant tire changer. truck driver or farm. FE 4-9837 HANDYMAN NO MISSION TOO difficult — no sacrifice too great. _ FE 5-2113 after 4 HAND Targé-crass, LANDSCAPING. SEPTIC TANES coed drain and odd jobs. EM MIDDLEAGED MAN DESIRES stesctvy work of any kind. FEx- perienced in farm'ng and fan!- tor work FE 5-0463 PAPER HANGING AND BAINT- ing bv experienced man’ All work quarenteed. : Charies Sioan EM 4979 PAINTING WANTED BY ELDER- lv man. FE 5-6838 REPAIR ALL KINDS OF NT- ture. very reasonaMy Will pick tt-up. PE 2-2625 PLUMBING WORK WTD. REA- plonable. PE _5-1016. _ Work Wtd. Female 11 BABY SITTER WANTS WORK IW the vicinity of Elizabeth Lake Es- bid You are neat like to meet ax ate Tora fon, not @ pastime cal) Mr. Powers for —s FE 54-0181 be- tween 9°30 & 11 am. Please. no _ details over one. LEAR }. FO ? Avon Products has a unique portunity for women to care 6 income. Call FE 2-7081 be- fore 10 am or efter 7 p.m tomn with tid . mityv fo children _ Cookin Write Box 61 Pontiac Press. ‘i AN BE : * housekeeper, would like home to _ealery, be more a wl ~~ SALESLADY Experienced Salary plus commis p's ‘Onedt Clothing an eT i ig } tod ienilinte e tates. FE 5 DG = - worse. ee ran a CHRISTIAN GTRL is WANTS work. Fw 20188 Sloe COMPTOMETE® AND BUR Troughs operatot dest COLORED GIRL DESIRES WORK. _5 days a week. Call FE 5§-4080 CHILD CARE AND nted by mother with 2 vear old da day Me pater. Call Thurs- EXPERIENCED Es generat office work and-or oo _tionist, references. FE 5-9602. CADY WISHES DAY WORE ; ore. by day or week. FE Se ae peer =} “yr ae ee wé ee + proves tm tor 4 odes Waseda ae de® . : 5S fe ak ae, Werk Wid Female 1 a > Lt day STAY 1 _ Ex time WITH Dre: WASHINGS fired mother es ee asmaking ed pos AND . | DRESSM g, Tailori ase spat dg moatd wave BS | aieeeariee aa ~S Notices ny : ceaabee t WANT- ALTER AND AL &pP TE P vs Sosa ee ROSTHOS —"s “ves NS AN ee AAA nals = ONTI. A : WANTED — Se ee) ee Ga 5-7082, D DRESSMAK. iteeage, combine » 25 Wid. Co i cP PRESS, y ho NT jarden Plowian T6A nt y _FE sae? ae Plowin tation ) PIECE racts V een enrrmrnnnrnmmnnnrnnn> eee tee Heol Bin | “Wandcorgewiet g 16A ae Benet cms ee EDNESDAY p e << ‘ Al t woman wand "PE spose Pick ~ cling. FE 633%, discing, IPME ¥ uli On WO aad oon ae-g fears $200,000 E OF # a JU LY 21, d ge inv ISHES UP | and Normae advis. AN NE or @isposal , 95 _am alia “WO Gard MUNDS - ob otial ie. e@. conte EVING ou! seasoned to 4 ane ine RE CARING | FE yen Plowin 2 Dee tel _The ls Mrs. cell. ASK F | —y ont tew ace < Buildin; 0 pm. to 6 FE 1-653) ing ond _Bulldoeing ing cur nl USED CLaTniN arey ' . ASK FOR ee belore for . , : . —— | a 8 sale HI ou M you i ATTENTION . & Service 5) a Laundry R 3-6651 Son dines sete ran ri}: BOY IT—WE'LL “ua Convalescent a — se e $750 TR na light trucking. FE re. Ph — UT . MS. y: FE USES 4N sary Tre. o ~ shop a dw cap be pe r heater a _OR_3-2276 rs. ement UCKIN truckin RUB- WAN Fe 32-3523. he Ph. @shi . CLEAN n aND OR 3-6. napor- or se and ¢ ell con- vyment - as FLOOR . At and _dish. Oo AND FE 5- . TED LISTI rE _ehard con AN, ished and APAR za3 | of parate erage used at Ts Moderate down —— er Anytim HAUL! E 6-503 5-81 veni cou co unfu TME L | shade ly} Se Ci r; - me Moardnat an Cort a Saree ee age eta, URNITURE ROBEL riNCS SWatten |i oe oupie.| Fe tie fariabed Tote wer | red $4 Uo | Fuawnes cam te ae ee eee a — FLOOR Centre) ‘--@) ap ARTA tapas cecrioe “an ything fe ay. Saalapen a rages APT Aone CE AGENCY” Op pee fel — ines my Aged all basem } rom r REA ye URN. FI GEN RY . mm. red bed roo! { ee 00. PE ent. Ol t tom feahins | 10 SANDING " cecunstnnne tw ae, GE L& pricy i cay the high GREEN LA Fe esms | 3 ee Gannea baien ™ Rewiy DECORA cLaRK ste fn dition Throughout Casement" pucd " plas |B Sa iON sre esis 3 Oceu | Antod —panes AND Mov nes | OAKL SS ey ROE RO ¢_ FE 46-2084 Ww SIDE m RATE oo peo || peed te est Sid : —| Baidw pan £ FLO FE Seen Pelee lagerntay 1. — ie AND veel co ALES CO. (ON ee OFFICE Beet ROOMS a s. _FE 5-1) — TED 5S ROOM. ' School. 0120 Compinted —_— ae) on Cotus cy Lath glo cous | uiteee Pred yN. American Vao ee eee Cottages, 3 FOR. JAKE) TR ‘ and FURNISHED NICE) 3 p=. aijtio-n | astro ELISABETH vate auell aon cn pO tredlig = Mere + blocks, ere Sie uty Cas OLD ®LO +8562 . ywhere E Since 1 OOMS e + - +i 2 mode bu + c iN rating =. OENERA seinon: rz Sirs. A = N = service FE ~Wid, Miscellaneo URE BUYER. ws sh otitakE (sod Bstales Pecos 4 Fah Daag Bone Fe) te 6 rooms “ NEW “Boat ome te can ee acre of “ecaied 0° strathmore _Plaste. e NO R ck a la 70 COMMERCE LA RI ERE —eke:_in_basem Ivd.. | teen — beth, *LN beach en! a bee west ar sone ee oe EPAIR. st neous 28 Detwers cz. aR — oo 40619. som 8 {AME room z RA tile wk. nt work. TR Oo WAN S aane — as eo tu 143 Case- ELW peel og , = kinds NTEE FE ¢ UCES ent TED 1 prams | WV ee oon 35-4013 | 3 RMS. WO FE APT. SMALI r | FE 6-284 Case-Elisabeth Lak OOD room, _ Large Ne Cae PE D ROO +7290. | % mR VCES TRACTO MUST BE READ 1AHA! megs _ Reve MS. W 26161. MALI HOUSE FE ¢ | chou eee living ‘ass. vee: A. Fs AL Tes Pil ecvipM RS hag led ats R l¢ FT N "tL a ‘ORKIN — — to Mi = Open _o Gere pile ie commen ining HO 2-302. L a ENT — BOA AS” Bl iF 300 Ne Saginaw. | sen private LES W. ® rage. Alum vement. to unfin- of USE FE 353 oe _ BLE. CALI UY ERS! LIGHT Sagina L. SHA week New! beach Or | $250 to 9] cereen : i Pu equipped MOVI Pont Ton Stak WTD a CALL @ demand RS | adul HOUSEKE ¥. RE w Detroit y decor ane | DOWN sac s Owne num sto: rnace. ¥ er tal oe tiac je teu ee TO BUY FR Goes i eascetaae 3 ts. 204 Flo EPING ROO ATKINS te ta wll cela Bgl — ae een wme end HOUSE Young. FE 48650 Indu arm and a Ce FROM PRIVATE your lis pon a + snoode Chose a Roca. | _ Ons & LAKE FR ese i ace ecg py cegy Dine down. Resscnsble 7 RAIsI $-8450 strial T ri Targa fd b FaIvats ia «2 tates | _ple. FE ican Bl. Poe or vps ONT, 2 BED- , views we ote b10ee. oroth bie Ho OA 28-3660 NG FE ¢0 racto Ue" ois for st like ord tud 17 oa = ill cottatad 7 FU §-2585 N, 7i FT 5. F eround BED- wn, 3 $1960. hy Snyd use Ratsi Pai n_- Ee r Co. same oe aa p sf bed aprenll y do} @ RNISHE FOR COU-| ¢ HOUSETRI home, | %0 rsonville Ra and 3140 er La ‘Genera atsin ntin +1442 WTD_ . P acca, us es Oecteey ia Our —— D ROOMS. N 4 grt ay vi ALE » | out. down Rd., Wate stool on wir vender 1 > g&M — | g & Dec a ac sane that ey aoe rigerator. Washing Nic J RIN TR a a rtord uron ny _ Stadin uildin oving | a or ‘ord, lon Y GOO; ~ henaion al will tine wasencen re r. Pri mach CELY | —*-2 rT week RAIL. ‘$500- urn, $3150 rnished 3 BED Jos. sc. FE my acta g 4&1 PAINTI ating 20 body g ¥b 1D CHE tne le all ) be ssvres b ge if pec vale ine & Fi — m ee ke Ev — psoralen 3 Pull house ROO rE >“ PLEM tung apd pe N: first dump t eel ba VE OR to Ust Pics Rimage cot hates us line. esser entrance tl Re Rad. art 9800 ville. room oe has Cedar M il ing Aga rates FIOOR LAY. Sebi tems" PAPER MY. tae ae nase ee aur vee Cal ane- 7 LARGO 38 _Coil 1 block f Rent Houses L after| ac down 1 acre lated. shake ranch _son. Ph « fint zoe . Batt ANGINO WAI Shree, men H. ust be e property us tode apt OE ROOMs. wood -oon ses Unf — Oran large 2 | tered breesew ooan MASON io. 4 Paleri oats NTED F mame i °° 7] wee geek ALSO 2 ROO urn. rion Pohang wea, ml oe walls herds Pcooan ~~ No) 2 t TO B ton o° ey —To Se © plant entranc "y ROO M HO re. 36) 007 wn, 3 bed - ™ bath aeawand | tee _pairs ALTER Ee) Worn gues: NTERI ae te UY. Goon | Tre Seu taeoe crated FE 640 ¢, pee Emory USE P GE room pen co Meera. "Sm MA irs at Hoge EM >on. ves S eand aaa tc ce. oe Pay eS EU treune 7 ROO TE este aficr's g Pen | cree ole Cede ‘O. N neue | Sn vot on MIS in uy ie Sn ee EM sas =o eto tree esti cash | WA =" AP gutton.” FS A ORS ce) >t “ i PORMISHED —A ater TO = aa” ths ee MARB LE, R a ‘ os ke lms nd webcen WORK | fei ™ 7 ene | iat be too. MY 5 noo ie 3 “APT. 1 Ex Rooms. Cx a1_ANDERSONVIL ealtor| “"™ shop. tor beauty pi rainene 5 oa Asst soure NA REASONABL am mapas aaeeee she REALTY cout e a Fe re Family eeket ia Dac. | on torteeste SON $450 DO ete. $2300 Com A ETE w t mbe co. fy ROOM 00 ! dan rm 8 32 : ae moray PEDO aTR | ere biter pain yihni ainte poor ag | ngous AUT won| Syne ye) ee na ee ice PLASTE ee eascuad.e paver ¢! AINTING |‘ to tear LL HOU FE 2- Evch. > LTs ONLY. _ 31765 cor gies MoD ytair 6.2903 a or ae § ‘acres TERING NEW on | COMPLETE Se wectee | apeae a ats Cpa Oves Eves 0263 ROOMS “AND TY ve RENT OR set ao aah, OR c“PANoUr. ee. pictute ‘wie: - a ee AINTING. poset ees NT MIXER. v | NEXT on See fos. OR 3-0034 ) BATH. MODE ENT OR GEIL BRAND N "OR Pn, Orton i = eae oe | Bay dagheP etateceace Te | Sed shape Fit ren wire] or ee we | a aay S| mm one Ba ay om ron 138. Reverse Charges Sa Fe AE | ee renmraaes, caat FF Wanted te Rent 3 wt fae 5 us, AROE_ CLEAN | EW MODERN 4 Rox ee B a o REMO vu | Barerinae ete oof Pai ELDER oRent 29 TION ON YOUR I 2 LAROE CL ae EAN PRI wi 1 Bo tN. 4 ROOMS COU: ate! nN “PREES AND DELING tide and AND. tae aan FREE| ‘,° or ¢ paid ed w | Scales YOUR LisTind etary Agree LEAN ROOMS. =o euaLL uoted Poe references 20 OFFERS an t ~ ov | i . . . . ‘ TREE. EStivates- TERD aanimates one TING. IN. pees ers ae unfurnished house LISTIN — ohare #23 80 0 tectities.. pag TU. tll ne FOR COUPLE. 1 | Drayton Plai (See a Be ee nce wanszo |; ee ee te Wert 5 Gr arr & CECIL 1, ari lords, Gualied es immediate eae NTED late are fet Retain | WALLED NRE mre] uve, a4 seem Cota bee : ILL ao ene b, 188E can L a i as payment. Gz cost Bag | or ps afl 9. wits SOMMERCTAL Stiewane of ped CRANB Estate Ses children. | VATE Ei TE Rent Lake sere ooeee Satara inde.) Willi Buildin io ‘per cent. fa painting MS. FE 30164 or $ ams Shey essary hong: | ee FE 4-2252 No eh 3 ROOM - c Property 36 \ rae leslenen. pedi Lake : 2 : 5 hild ABI . cute | aie ptben es aD FILES ee: 2, 2m ont or, haus opt we APAR x FO A| Near Sc b gute and MAN ore Sepglleg 124 wait ro aes Sg bells fut | RUBMELL MOTT Raa int APARTMENT J PvT_ER ed eal trans ei Po a in att =H AlN erwin EE se id | 170_W. ALN El te, ished. tain eat FOR RENT 1 weeps € "OR jocottes & beth oe Ages ° rooms, bea ve, 8TO) FALL WASHIN _ Grows 2654 ; Mrs Oc- Pike OTT, REA ) ie, 187 bd a Very EN. room: me : . €¢ room in . @ s ms rs one | Phot EEG PANTING oo nea tr Henge | CASH FOR QUIT FE rom i Soper eer bd er See at ee x ¥ ¢) 0: ate eri SEK w ee 8 2 stool. . on ia soniye and | rom s & Accessories mo tren ge. FOR EL. ecules in ORE UIT ies PP si s Ale —_ Ponce Tage wo Reed. bigch werk wirtag, coment Income [ie Is antl $600 SAL abie ated > medi now on _ ta & R : . $10, wired crabeam sree peck ara cerns Yo saa ar ar gest) ROY, a aa tat “nae a5 Rava pa | ‘tie berg pa wanes | arte | ane cette FOR SAL! ING CO TREASU = sea Veatipeeas | inc’ Press. Write een r KNA im- ONMAPANT je only neem, Lane pal BY Wi N alow p eodllagy ie pen inside SAL CR. DE EASUR uipme YOUNG ee Bor 20. lade NAU mished APARTMENT _afer 7 p- @ priv EEK OR leoty beg oa ane 5 and double = - ST ARBORN and ED PH nt. | le MICHIC x 20 w.k F, R hand for 4 bud TMENT ___ | Loc ler 7 p.m Heges. WEEK OR built ated 5 ; with bath bath “$ FE. hung w ANDARD E on OTOS [ees | arads GAN 8T/ uron , Realtor tend. and dies PUR- ) COTTA _ HOI" tng 0 all fle ecg ap room possibilities larg cud moons SIZE en cue Fernie elton! Lyon IC ARReTR TE ee aa «RO mecca nia “Ar pies » GE ON R en vrmoms JEibin me. | foes apt steam heat, : «J Busi 125 East frame. Ph «T3091. Studio. 12 room ho re reasona and 2 , St. IG IST IN . 23-7421 ROOM APT. 3784 Oak Er baie of Cle iver & room enack E Fang loeat. €;; fine m heat, ® aoe ce i oles aoe oa ponplr bed GS W vate entrance 64 LAKE re 690 week, pine inn bar, 2 bed. Property wu should oe ; = d B TANT. oR ntrance N FLOO eds sIMcO¢ week — tet - y toda paw ace s 1 SCIENTIFI Therapy 214 Share enings, We Bu ED. . OOM UP! & Aubu: _ Pri.| of fides! ¥ ONTAR peep. Pull 1 eg a feos, y! this iS esti del ; 2 “special 2 Foot IsH M A) Sees YS Quarters 3 he C. Slee or Trade aes Partly toda ay ~ ROOM pect rabeach Love “ ra | screens Aas k ; motes FE D108 st. ee ne arith 30 ——_"* gham, Brok BASEMENT [. ra. 43 Irwin seconds heer 2 OE secston, 1 immedi srace am “| ALL M 7188 ___ Televi re +5034 midd) Y 5 ROOM =| Ol __Marshell er | =e room Liour Ho side Ween en Di prpe aad ch Immediate: pow pse WwW k EFRIGERAT sion Service sv Wtd. owner ma) % ada) ae bun- Footin: TREX 1 W. lew Offie work you CONTRACT One or FOR Pam AND i inform Drive Tarwted on | a onthly s apart _ two y la wing veem pe 1 8, - “CHIN 3 ence. e SsuD contr pian t ACTS two. bearco: — So lad pa sor ation at Wood a income ment SS and ni . W. Huron +602 aa G _____ Upholsteri pe sear io yob o sell either ALL ARE BB mn bine pon Big yng lot iy reba (One an: Co-operatt ; t 5 cit m agent. KI a! LA e FE 4 3 Ta s, SLOOMPIELD.W, field tile, | CUS anaes 23 founts of tunds at ws. we hong Two bedru ver Smareen bome. COO! st ena aeeauey ot = i aepaton i tat & oe beth first “ficor- on y Snconeent $1300 neton a - ~J> z : on - 5 “Tava weer See 8 supeovers eapert aa Penine Realto one Steen tor siract and toa Garaen ee i? APA pee ENT F re sine sratanie io ae? apart TITTLE 00 | Huron room 0 DOWN : NDAB . me solostion ol. scock rigs, | 262 w eo ° tb basement or 1 or MEN = aa R sewly painted” ‘sbeuy eee Pa ibenscnped Ld): (oe aged close cleaning = ay Byatt Ean Fe 9 Huron RE income ment| tranc or 2 -NT bday hond Roo SSeise. eee 0s am heat tstand! OR Fa = Ay ee wes — oe c Tf GaKLE Central FE. 2-4: Bs | Open Ry with possi hag a men. P 1A behind an x 16.900. terms home. 12af4 ‘ivi oELL — beaut ra c F ut es possi on s lin bath riv ND J . erm Lot} & 12a ern & “Siar renee fre MY tog, ate Dome 4 FE 2-00 ton) “or Blake or Douse after 6.30pm «long ie on eiahea “private sae | Near St. M , Kitchen. 124i men a. at 196 Bast . See ae REE TRIMMING & DivENPORT. mae ATER ontr Cal J. a. Te 6 roome TARGE Ras ct a PE B07 6, sill ie leSt 5 rooms eciael garage. poultt oman m.ioxia| #1380 FURNISHE VES T - ac oo ECL Seer dit ultry -— ss Pile gpa = padi 4 RT: 954 98, ‘CH t yor Reaitor MYrtle : jentrance. Pai PRIV —. sep AND 1 SINGLE SI rE | teinpad 3 eeeare - geod e el pe e728 house, nic 2 car this aes payment D 2 fo CLEA —— y wor! AIR. $34. 7 QUICK a rE M 304 ab ATE r Ponti NGLE =a ms doen on- suburba cres of e law screened bed puts ae rest - protoctios aN | CRAPES as a eee one Pas VICK CAs FOS eases wat 7h y welcome, | CL a rN anes hagas cng basement end bath up 3 ee. rogers — hbk octal (Rac nt porch, Lot exis you in ELECTRICAL Wil on al LIPC s_ OR r- eee YO satel Se pag yg F 37 mace erm arin Aion ping Eee ies e is free- neigh Elizabeth tents, ree : at wintno~ Ee rE s. Bead OVE 3-6076 rms cond UR NI Py EAN hom RON . ar s er in W sell Tee- bort 150, a al SIDER. FORNITIIRE rr Apical) oi ar I ite or FE a a price & “tot as EU TNIBHED io N. PART- — FRONT RooM. QUIET ps Sac mee screen | | oe sterfor” "tow ite “room as only 948 weet B SS 303 a Sema einceric. ; i sa speciaty FE Qui it 8 Te ¢ immedicts sory rive beigh UPSTAIRS AN 6LEE Fi =| wt si3-| Pu pd < few bey, agen Re ee Soothe ban get uick us CHARLES. 1| ple only. 60 '1 sorheod, private ty EPING ROOMS __OEN- oo tees = _ EXPER ric. F Ra FE 5 AN- Quick Wi Tele LES, serv- e onl tran ri jemen. a A INDIA Pike or now. “EEESTAN VOTOR SERVICE FE = - eTHoM aS TP eee a | NICH Cash Settlement | ™R™’ a RICE | APART oct Retingd cow | ie Neri Ave FERTIL oy Annett Inc.| Foun mEDRGONE “ees S eran an PG Fei Mig. | NICHOLIE 1 eae Se | reese | By cements nnett Inc.| sae epee . row! SERV a APM NO : ~ A ~}> | or _ : c 3 “ION C orivat s FE 2 N n E id P* : room ba yout, room ea ye ee ee pCO lye ceaeey |e LT AE my a et tea en] Ee Sei Sas | Hea et et a mE 0 . 7 “ved EM 33311 Ra ' K ults s line . y 14 chins dir with fire- | newly im Furnace ST ROUGHING OST: SMALL aaaageaet tor "$2600 CHATTED} Fe $8189 RELIABLE: Nv. 1-378 wa ete adel in bitehen ys cabinets room, built a goers Det 3. Tle cag all make cinity ie of Peterddy Poop baa ban see: 6 per RTIGAGE Bide of small ‘PERSON WA He L STREFT. 2? Al FE. — . ROT = 11Op FE . rpc ear: eae riig | able terms 118 000, "ri al Picea he og in eae ad LE scak K Lost in ve nce paeroen| T 7 ig Eb Si at. ight 3 +8284 me rd SOF YOU cele a ao Nicely. \end- Stop st 138; East. reason- « & &b popsicle is ands iMMED te FE y Write cotta Two s and AND _B WwW sb CLEAN YOUR ee ely land 4+-058¢; SEWE ei eet | C08 ra” Reward, pame d ait g land 1ATE CASE . FE Pont ge out-| fe ROOMS rat Penta TAG oa * wk C ows JUR .- of eity 3 cearenns $17.500 or LA or £CTR Ls O8T: 3 ELI ¥ “Rhu — or R Press | wate Neat ELO * FF j Y ‘ * } h oa Q sinks Su R CLEA tures, ECTRI je 23405. K. L. equity YOUR LLED Ls oak Be bil PRE- LARG tawa I RAN t aia nday Se NING Beboot. Le iC LIGH a 2 your eee 8 HEDROOK. ope ~ ROO! A Jrive cH BU : tv. Ph Rec prone Drlod the T Fix- | 233 emp! 665-70 bitchen BED rance. 37_ MO grand b Ne NGALO FE ¢201 — Male 9 Ore pleton acim gee moo | MICE 7_ Allison UTSIDE _EN. every rick fa pleue aees ae iw ‘ 2 7 98 gach een Pontiac ‘olm | MI hard Lak . Realt __TOwnsend 20 8. hot water. . SINGLE __ . _EN- fortab convenien mily ho lot. We clean a Cost: PAIR OF ces val LLER & e_Ra or 8-3821, Pontie yoom for AN ale tee oe tata) ors coe: rooms. ta porn gl PAIR a. oe. coe grow PE 44563 alle se a ND_ DO _m Hh Sts very co ecntis lovel~ a tee - ‘Baldwin. EATS 33 GLASSES tract, and in "tor. land CASH Tat DONE | Rent Apts. Unfu PLEASANT? Y oe FE 26a oo W =e nitwction ‘and property garage a end” sa one tichen. at: WHITE GOOLE y. Ca 92-0349 and your con- a right IT rni s walk “A @ you. er de ty w i PE and abstrac land over 00 folk AGAIN 2 ROOM shed For u TED est Sut estrable car iiton GO lough ae ee con-| and ao poe ) 34 hotels ogg a MIN- A subu je fee | ein fetta eal illegal a Sse Sree ao * BPwAAEE, MEY weed PRIVATE aw Tuay” oly Pee San nebo ome ruizamern axe xsrarea | % Sa . ist b © osiyn REA = ‘end. cou propert need 8 8. Ri king laand E rooms. or hi “pullt we : ATES Midwest 46 morni son sto ps al y to sell, Por ? pridham Reego 1 . | ROOM FOR ‘ow. mor | pot oor vg bye] tractiy paleo tid cone vost: eg Reward \ m._Deil ee oe T ROO! Kee NISHED. _kitchen BUSINE _Huron —— oe o. large bea. | OU ns ME td === eg Ses {IL LI E Sun. 1 to 5. 3 Office onl: | VER Harbo jaie | SLE rivile: NESS LADY. aa acre lace evi ngalow ern efes this at. : ; One! y. ¥ Cu EPING es, FE 4-4 LADY _—— ened . full 4 ng| 2nd land situated y z go fiford Unlimi R & Ss § nm OF Be EAN a _men. woo 44323. ~| tures lot rrace, and ining | ot seal on 3 anda “Bette earls 8. The BAND- << funds f TONE A JOHNSO . cLos ginew “+ SLEF. 344 W ae. Ae, OR 2 @ erty’ Po ppgpace man large ivi Home has 2 Anchor oe room y eS LPOUD T 16-6821 Lead Sane Parte in you land con- F N. Realt ene IN APT. 3 ~ §-163 =PInO nae OlET at will ronderty ens wd fea- a reese bedre i oithh moar night. “Libera Xe Schaar wenn — chairnct or call FE 1704 S E 4-2533 or | frserstor eee SLEEPT i FOR TWO North S oo | ae ally iy 3 a ae 1 beral re 7 Fite rh. tor ig © FE 7044 S. T $75 . od condition TH NO ROO FE| Two ide ened Gayo ( block aly oe « Site EER at BEE oe SLONE Mec ee nd sett | Surerisa, ® ra no wnven | Yb SEP See laos wevere tet eae aos oto 8pm . REALTY WAN = aw Laer KENT "| Nite vce. Ene ee ate aur Fu oni as SELL - WE oe, ae. etate. “Pai to TO p.m. Daily: FE , T Lewrene NT, R Stet ee tae DOUBLE.| bor don gprs might gos TRADE . j ee tn PARAKEET GET 2-025. \ eal = FING E. ne m oO $ room pie gene pasa Shed contrast online acant West. si 7 RooM 4 ce FE 5.8106 seat i cation “FE is aner § Lh ST aia Pe Tt” Paar ash Realtors. RRIS & SON heat, 2 bungalow. a WILE THE FAR ~e aa owe @ Parrnace west side P u eng and Fe MBit erent hs a iris 30 SUITABLE. FOR Four (4 ghicen foot | 183_W. Meron. Co-op Member now meant all ble TY WHO PICKED Te ‘ pro - u _Spartment 20: Lake T FO EEPINO te in, , FE ) B re E 2262 ci ck f ron |- opert rb 4 ROOMS. rR} tows ROOM CLO! Near edr E 41557 . W “Clareston. Ra Lares O oe et ORT a che alas yee eo mode, _Srove lave. Close Fo Kear Eastern Jy High BUILD Elizabe 00 t 70 e : id ae vil ent t ’ beg ae ay, te a) 6S FARMS OR St! G : ing sites idental] 74 Bt. 870. CAND HEAT Saeed iwileges. 16 pre Nesement, garage High with fw OW ‘ seberh tae RENT um. Myre S301 circa or 100 ee | aah availa _ Ready + alleen aie ae saa Nor: eee ee oe a INT RAPIDLY) ~ Pt : eM A * dep rarence a uted TERE — forth Side ores we erase orm a eae D uftabie 2. KEN 4 ROME ARO BATH_OAS WEAT ults, will ce ‘ican oom, 250 with Chic ‘ : boards. through C bY pa ear di rn ; NED AND BA fur- Mae wane home m terme. priced at Pioneer Hi R lassified ads! g Un ne ogpen, Be REALTOR : LAROT. b, Lake Orion, ew pees Phi Hams ta BRICK Highlands oom $ | w enin ° ater W OOMS. OIL : posse and din . house tee pu n limited R : Doren til 8 Pe - eganemeeas HOT iene Wisi fa = wea ton. carane: ment or “apart : royals tend contracts ent Apts. F 13500| view ——". ith Board LAND “inp _ call FE 2-8181 { fa: For immediate ar urnished 33 Sean, *ertment RN TAKE - ROOM AND an 38 CONTRACTS. a ; A_JO batty a cigs Tow: _ ults. T — n ad-writ or, HNSO a pocess. | TOUR . MOOER el scan tae te er } e N Bod anc Ww . FE . Realtor ! ‘OPPER gorces peeterred. Ph be —— | 1704 4-2533 ) - aecetacinllty Roca sc en wr} =AND S. Tel fn Bu AND AND Poplar Wid she +S, Telegraph Rd. coal | Cerore, Wa etm a, weron_ a0 ae fer 5-818) coe fe lake and heet, ait colored we LA Cp Nl eye ges Wii 4 i D sctmediitlek, Loul elLanede ee ee 4 a 2 q THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 id ? } } / _- For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43) For Sale Houses 43 Bet a Bee 4 bedroom heme with } bedroom | _OLive 3-7326. pen er ce a living room down. sted , anted a site } ee og od rooms and semi-bath 4 Ge sts. Fe casa” ™ “malt balance a | Pea Re ote ogee toe CARROLL G. PORRITT Burdick 6t.. Oxford. Mich.. sales | asoment meesnion onal @ows vi ahh eoety 24% West Huron Pe _>ti9| mee_ter— : _parmost. vr 277 pine wine Income—Workshop 4 ROOM HOUSE — 4 LoTs oe s ra, venotia blinds Handy to GMC Twe fame tres with 6 Teeme Immotiove pecseosion Priced for pod enaubbers. trait trees. | §,Rer™ fom deeliing. full base’ | unit furnished Bringing in G10 | SS cacy terme, 66 Putnam ener Generous living and dining room,| Pf? Month gross. Large in 4p. m. BENJAMIN R. BACKUS 2 bedrooms and full beth, stoker| [eer with gas heat and lave aa heat, automatic bot water. Priced} Now or trim oT, wes Bee ses7| st $8980.00 for details call’ Mr street in. 6 ¥ roe Fa Rae Be FA tee) SS eo at | ee come “artri ge m GATEWAYS. to “BUD” NICHOLIE Twelve roome. 2 and beau- HAPPINESS Oe ESTATE SS ov ¥ Sylvan Lake Lane THE “BIRD’ TO SEE HAPPINESS 16M OPrmE Wren) Saree teihet| A WHITE CLOVE CHILD HAVEN | Bepee eT GtSttiel wed) BOSE i actaftasts | ian'hae’ welan ind © WALTERS LAKE! {he city on a well sh lot | bayment ced chen bn a on le ee — Ln and oe teas Built ip nelse and eerial gui Bang PAUL D. cued ee grees arage 1653, Kids need lots of reom . rege ne ee oe ree a. pl ayer pp pel fants at ce 4 oust tne door, Youn aod” the " price ‘ls only $ii.600 HAMMOND —_—o ee - love the ving ° Foom.. the epertiing 18 ft. kitchen K. G GHorpuced B Realtor |e Sing eve. ve sare EASY LIVIN’ pew stove. utility ren INCOME, CLOSE IN, REAL BUY.| in this cozy 4 room bungalow Sear either ciate | H Hoites-a cOrraees 50 ser bee 0 On ae sett ee, Sats ina pe ~, MORRON-EEOGR OO . Bes : t 1 AN peat NOME FOR Your ey es Land Re Realty ity Co. Be wi eal brice fuss 8200 ‘ 924 Pontiac Trafl Walled A GOOD BUY SS WOUBAy Fara sera . Baia BRICK STRAITS Lake nd Realty Co. A —— 5 room medera bun- ‘This west side ranch type hom 034 Pontisc at onan won: Lake. | ipl Lake petv 38 - offers 4\p rooms with 2 bedrooms Income if N I BEOR OM HOME, potas beech, New 00 gal storm sc . . * oil heat, breeseway Let = . saea —- PM sao = Bk payment a rguced, Pull pris oe elec dorms. Be r Pore i — A gy ty tenes cellent return on money, ? apts. : Enquire 1 y door Full price just $10.500 on | Sirate Cake ortered at be |S Sucr” “arttange 2 R : ~torms NEAT aND TIDY “MILL |WARD TF. PARTRIDGE CROOKS ROAD West Suburban | Realtor, FE 28316 LOT 45'x220° Sansistarae c4\ race | & STONE | 43 W Huror St. Open Eves 7 to @ a sr ly Ms gg More yng ‘Oat ase eee | taoulaled eet of materials 800 | Sireene and storm anah'at ose an | \WEST SUBURBAN [= “yan DOWN to - some i vata’ ot ‘Som | Call for a enpo.ntment today 4 rooms. 2 bedrooms. Tiled fu | West! Bide OWN va ‘yoy rs NEW “AnD | G I. panos yee a euiee Weaker. onl this new ranch type home 3 —— ranch (ype homes bx Puity —— © and Te = Sell—-To Trade You B tr WE'LL INSURE IT nine “FE 2-0263 EARTH! ON 2 ACRES Lake Privileges - 6 fots. excelent Aluminum orf brick siding tered walls. AC off heat As low Qs 10 per cent dn. including mort eege cost John K. Irwin REALTOR eo 102 101% WN w Street Phone FE 2-40"! Eve FE 23-1904 ~~ INCOMES Toes un oe wacemauk on 0 leas up, tub seme on e large lot 206 = 280 located near Utica Will sell or trade for emailier home. : — 2 reom and beth down end « 3 room apt ep New OW forced air heat and electric hot water . — Upper rente tr $65. and the prop- erty is commercial Invest today for .omerrow's profits | Two four room and two three room apte with seperate beths and —— entrances on loc weet lot sas00 dewn will handle. SCHRAM Bus bus North. home with furnace. A Wall to wall Liye to = ip room STONE REALTY CO. ® to 8 pm. daily; manted 5038 to 5 #18. Jostyn 32-0253 NICE ¢ BEDROOM, 5 ACRE FARM. | near ag + gs at 0180 M-15. all etsher heat rhubard 14x23, garage 24x24. shrubs, 1% eres of woods _800_cash or terms NEAR CROOKS RD with excellent kitchen. arog By te Ragga nice breeseway with eer 2 Sains a Tonite & Every Nite Older Home famtiy home for family. Living — Extra sement — giassed-In. and Ge heated rage — ce- oy Sp hy EB for only $8700 ‘erms can be Need a Little ~ Extra Income? 5 — ood ei owner here . to rent i e5 a fe & movers n home, close lacome ae y t ES tanen aren Stately ' co GILES REALTY CO. W. Huron PE 61 OPEN @ TILL 8 HOUSE FOR SALE OFF JOSLYN. FE se $6175 Humphries | “Gentleman's Estate.” ren Coss til 8 Bungalow — 2% Acres BY end tile bath 3 base- arage. and stone eo All ecar- peting includ Well located about 5 miles north of city Lake Front Strictly moderp 5 room bun- gaiow plus Ficri¢da room and large screened porch Full basement with extra lavatory and shower Oi) a ft tet — tah shade ‘aes Also 1 acre across pre” iat" ei er e ¥ Off. Baldwin near Fisher Body 6 rooms yp Fg rc 3 car Fao og t. nt room om eile po Ng oF cup- boa Has fireplace. ot! beat and clumtnum storms ‘and screens. e $11-850. terms. Eve Ph. OR 30008 10 ae Maa. = $6 300 JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 70 _ W. Huron St PE 43525 eee, ™. FE 2-0829 KNUDSEN South Berkshire mfleld area, iarge fomfiy on 1% s-res ee ri ac Sot SLE: Elizabeth Lake Estates Lotus LAKE LAKEFRONT, NEW My bedroom plastered wails. Oak 6 to 8 boars. Sila ath aice perimeter 800. FE 3662 j,Seareom, F a ae eee LAKE ORION go meng. mene oucnees 5 rooms Beth furnace Elec- ae gg gee ME A = het weter efront $2000 — wn. WALTER-OREEN-MY_2-s08t—}- stitclency Titchen _ tile —— eol- h er colost cak floors. lastered serge d walls 60 wide paved street, sidewalk, . : sewer. water Oil furnece Picturesque Lake Front tn the full basement, Con- Well located on a secluded A, eg i site erg Individually de- : eonter. Drive out signed 2 level ranch home. ron to Donelson 6 niece rooms % beth, School. rm tight i model paneled recreation m $12,450 ww . oe Le | apjeomeang on beat, Witew owner RAY O'NEIL, Realtor: 7m W. Pst, Phone FE } Le Co-operative Real! Estate mashes ange O'NEIL INDIAN VILLAGE — 14224 living room with natural firepiece in this § - room hame. located on wel! land- escaped corner lot with 1'%- ear gerage. Famil size dining room, modernized tttchen, bed- rooms and full beth: com- plete Dasement with all utilities Immediate — . $12, Terms, MODERN. HOUSING... £e- = —— to stores, — — ig vom ng cen ng Sey lastered mod. ern ie; plas’ ed walls; “ene Eich on tiled to ceiling. break- fast ber; full basement, gas fcraaee First offering. sea it today 68050 Terms too. $1500 DOWN — Good clean — side me. 12x17 din room ing kitchen down. 4 Ss and? full beth ap Newly decorated. Am- pie closet space. Basement. = Logg gas hot ppd Pull orice only ore, $1500 Cute bun- _ Painted walls, oak a OWNER TAKING A LOSS Outs ge You're right. 2 meena planar ol resume & qo 2 bedrooms hea tev’, Neate is| Sat eres po need den attached ear VACANT Soom Lake 4 Acres located Cuurehit ioed WM. H. KNUDSEN wider “to 6 ee aus. | - JOSEPH F. REISZ ? Soar Peaee o cal ' ; 4 , : peat tiene hart aie ['s wa bean we the Se hitiak sti diated aie on attic ment. Furnace Garage, Aluminum storm s and screens. Ownsr tranneferred, will sacrifice, $360° down, terms. Do S rothy s nyder Lavender 140 W Huron St FE 3441! RANCH HOME gerege, lake privileges, immedi- ate possession. V easy terms. IM WRIGHT, Realtor rative — Estate Ex Mang A PE bea 49 Rent Beater $395 Down New 2 Poggpteo ood starter home com- Tioor and hes well and Wil be ready in 3 dase Nice jot with lake e privileges on Williams Lake Pay- pecern es, wc a CaP TS Wh Beate Schl | Semte"ac "oe "por ec v ac ose - © to ent and only 2 block FE 5-5091 DOWN whic to cchec!. In this Listing we fee- | 30% W Huron Realtor Near geares & and Pise. Less than Williams Lake ture large living room. 2 nice Frves. Until 9 00 1 year oid. Three hog oe one 24233 any Fy choos. Lamage ~ Rpce- 8 and fied poretive_ Reet Sete Sar’ . oul beat, and and utility room. All nice sised cious Uhehee with more than | IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, 5YI- ll song ey rooms Complete on exterior only ample dinin- area base- van Lake, be for quick sale. Good lot with lake Ledshdgge 20 and ment with automatic of) furgace 5 large rooms glassed porc if you would, like « Le pared in| close to schools. stores. and bus and attached 1's car e| full basement. gas heat, neat and| orthern Michigan, cail line’ $386 down and monthly pay- owner of th's y owns @ clean. Double garage. fenced, ments of ee o' .@ very small private pz. Gate. Owner leaving city. IRWIN & ROSA Seance att, Et aL EaTaTE F. C. Wood C cear avegna hk t ™ jdwin Avenue . . oO. have to buy @ Boat. because it's | re oie FE > FE_2-2161 REALTOR rive of aly tthe ian 91.008 O O] NEW GI HOMES’ : . - — Lake Rd & day! —— = . eect. 3 bedrest raped twpe Crist P ST WILLIAMS | FON WETTER Howes Panterta oti sak oar pe ' - LAKEFRONT YOU'LL WANT ture windows marble sills, tile Mere ts a. beautiful 3 bedroom | The Wey to hie all modern ak ars eae neues Set, ranch Gye fone Tah et) ne iarane | MIDDLE STRAITS | BEST BUYS fhe retest Stags | em ene sar T st was LAKE beautiful stone 4 7, ton thi aaah ek gon a onh very good terms. sad around ome % block from ate TODAY full Pul: basement. Also on pleasant . / chower end lavatory = porvmsans | Agata felts, Bo cary to ove thts tre om. “Oats ‘with terms. Blue Sky Bungalow Tanya warece. Bret see try ok it wrath rtmeed _ pane IOI TT —— Tne to’ at land. You also hav’ privileges on Wil- HAYD Only @ $1000 down and you escaped. Full ae is $28, with onsmall fomuy — ae Bay . = mon tg this cory srne, Gob. her eeommnest Se) 9/om 2 OUR NEW LOATION | S.cetde"en Weer feruace: ca ¥ 1 ais totale wancans | 80-B— WALTON BLVD —4site, 2h SieeeP ca located i> Dravtqh Plains. Oil aca VE 6041 watch the movies free from furnace and electfic hot water OPEN EVES. _ ane comfortable chair) Newly decorated ted on nice nope, Catt 3 none Apron 3 piece bath. ex- lot 130 (: Payjhents only $57 pensive kitchen a BROS. including, taxes insurances. “Er Dope, Guba sent — large em ¢ OFFICE OREN 08 . Oh es hor § Sg Mond bao — ] A BRICK BEAUTY A. JOHNSON, Realtor om $1.500 DOWN en E 4- 2533 a ae = get the “buy” of a GC] 1704 S. Telegraph Rd: oo Hpi re Boag Pasnew east of town off 8 Bivd nr. Crooks road selling erea Here we offer a alares 5 and beth * rooms 12x13 utility room one e $1000 of! furnace. HARD TO FIND - Lar oe house situated on bie 50220 lots with lively stream end a)! kind« of frutt and berries and lake privileges on beautiful Mae ke. The home and- only $1500 LAKEFRONT EIND® feet of ee. lot with towerine - hai tamed ¥illows s fenced Tot. The waite frame home has e@ 13x24 living room with cobblestone fire- place, dining room. room ona bath down 3 bedroom The basement her & Timken ol furnace fortable screened ts now vacant I +eu_/een name vour-« wn terms. here. Fdw. M. Stout, Realtor @ ROOM 3 bedroom. tiv with k floors, netural @ and plas- tered walis. ful) tile beth. full basement with a ges heat. afd het water heater. screened fm poreh all this and Sylvan Lake Privileges too PIONEER HIOMLANDS 5 rooms with complete m ‘ta oot in comp! ¥ extra attic pertially finished, afuminem == screens. beautiful corner tot, all this and Sylvan Lake wrivileges too. | a eo dl VILLAGE —— home with full Russell Young REALTOR "reill FRE 445295 “12 W Syn; ‘ttt $ Open Eves. FIND IT IN THE WANT ADS! Yes, look in Classi- fied for a job, a place to live, a business — any- thing! 1 CARNIVAL by Dick Turner _F “You're right. Mr. Maloney' You certainly do have to be careful “eat = do in a canoe’ 43 For Sale Houses ALIZED HOMES ALMER. FE 21906 ee a SILVER CIRCLE Immediate possession. consider trade. WEST SUBURBAN ian ADAMS REALTY CO” 382 Auburn Ave SMART BUYS WING LAKE AREA Well built 6 room home. Situ- ated on an ap view from _the bos ag «4 Wid tons net Lake. Few init at a athe avatiad! L. ART: 0 with terms. * FRONT Attractive well-built 3 bedroom home. Hes full besement and automatic of] heat The rooms are speciou and attractive —- _ — all eat family ho: aaa” s 8 good 2 ear erage hear and 8 playhouse . af soo. ‘with CRAWFORD ANNOUNCING OUR NEW ADDRESS 53% W. Huron FE 4150 SMALL DOWN PAYMENTS $700 DOWN. Large 4 room house located east of Auburn Heights on @ big ints. Needs some fin- ishing inside. $50 monthly. $525 DOWN. Located west of has « living- SE -_t $129 DOWN on this quality 3 bedroom. starter home Mapa vol td 26x40. Interior peety com Rough wir- plum Ding. ies coed system wr ‘well Conveniently ted center Balance 860 per mo. sisee DOW B N new lake - privileges 1 room itchen 2 bedrooms ” bath, utility room with autometic oii fernace, electric water bo gg and ry trays gy come hw | @ floors. mt Pay- arose newly Ments $67.50 per EMBREE & GREGG 1565 Union Lake Rd. or EM EM 3-4303 ene Bee ott e Pao =: Bargain bed Hithes Pood th Sylvan Lake. to. LL, REALTOR ; Partridge 18 18 THE ‘BtRD: TO SEE "Rooms. FULL BATH. HARD. S80. ae evens} a ae a 5 5 AC CRES 8 Kenne! rooms gar moc cones, tea ae $16 py e@ on good rv goa gravel road. INCOME FA vor uae mae $51 — ae Pric- CEDAR ISLAND § room st Gouiee a oe CCC KL ER REALTY FE 44001 ea or se 5-312 or OR 3-6693 Fre 17-4143 TRIPP West—Huron Gardens $2800 down for this com- bea ae attractive. birch Paneling ~— Workable he pee oo im natural oe ‘Pu ins bed- snl tile beth, a nik clos - base Gasinator Good lot Exclusive District full Sylvan Lake City All Brick ~ $15,000 Let us show you thie 3 bedroom home av beh room ful Fake piviieges Terms LESLIE R. TRIPP, 2 Ww. Peeve or FE Eine *"** $800 DOWN Large 2 bedroom home 7 19x13 ving room, fenced lot 100x130 with lots of shade oe c 3 BED is Yes, on 3 acre -| “BUD” NICHOLIE 43 | For Sale Houses OO eee Templeton EAST SIDE 3 bedroom a pores street New oi) furnace. py gg car @. $9,700 with §2.500 wks Sipe 4 rooms and full beth, elso full Extra lot. On paved street — th exceptionsily low down [.. Templeton, Realtor 2338 Orehard Late 1 Rd. FE ¢4663 : Open Eves 1 DAY POSSESSION AND LOW i PAYMENT To qualified er on this mod- lf ern waterfroat bedroom bunge- | Keego Harbor loce- low tion. A full price. Jack Loveland 2189 Le Lake Rd., ee eles! | FE 2-4875 ©1661 V VACAN’ T 4 room terrace. ederp May nard Ct. $7500, aise own or | would consider WILLIS. ‘Mt a. FE 46-5181 Eves pine lake privileges ot] heat. e beth. ideal jot PE +0608, WEST SIDE, 2? BEE ROOM I PHA at 4", per cent YOUNG HAS DONE IT AGAIN! HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE Low As Daily & Sunday 12-9 209 PRINCETON COMPARE! *Lath & Plaster *Aluminum Windows *Ranch Roof *Fully Insulated 36,929 Russell Young REALTOR oe bf Reng tu ® 44525 6un. ‘ti 6 ker heat 115294 lot. Only sense total price $1500 DOW N Neat and clean 2 bedroom bunge- beater. Excellent shady lot. “CORT M. IMBLER 1111. Josiyn. 40524 Dally ‘ti) @-Sunday 2 to 6 Co-operative Real Eotate ‘canes 10 ACRE HILL ESTATE Four bedroom ‘Rochester Built in hills nea. Rochester. Built ter his own Pri $24,960, Very favorable desired J. A. Taylor! RALTOR ~ INGURARCE A, 100 Galen Ave. Eves. Free ey $1,000.00 DOWN -% ee Small needs some SS. has oii heat. some (stove. refrig¢.. Iv. rm “suite. bed. me- rent rm. sutte, chine dryer). For your @ Donaldson §-1201 or FE ¢3 REAL_ESTATE For Sale Lake Prop, 44 CASS LAKEFRONT ive 3 bedroom home, HMeatt- r lator fireplace, 2 baths. ‘ere ment. are , 8, KF shaded y t13.500 THELMA M. ELWOOD, id Sg pe ge e Ra. FE 5-124, FE eo 9 to 7 ~ ENJOY THE LAKE Big — = northwest of Water. ford 5 with lavetory. In- cludes furatture. 120 ft. lake front- gee. Samearee possession. $6250. PONTIAC REALTY CO. Resor Dendy lot on Lake slopine gradually to jake. DORRIS & SON _____- pp ens er, “aryer $7500, rest, leavinu state. Petitbone Le. for sale by owner a ment a hesuiae “and Aare Lot 66 s150 =60e8 Lakeview Drive. ford MU ¢7362 140 FT. BEAUTIFUL SAND BEACH $2500 Located within 10 miles of the mod- Mil- pon > ts beautiful and the | good * Giroux & ace: til %-Sunday 1-5 Drayton Plains , Open Eves eo Danie Hwy OR 30701 {ROOMS & BATH *. BASEMENT | Unfinished upstairs Lake priv! jeges on Lotus Lake Lots of ear By owner OR 3-433 af-| — _ter 4 Lig Se eee } ROOMS PARTLY MODERN Hardwood floors, beautiful win- dows full can on large lot By owner . $750 down. OR 3-1516 James K Blvd. You | wick to pote the ou ll be @ 20 6. Teles For Sale Resort Prop. 44A -; COTTAGES FOR for aggerty Rad.. Middle serene Lane. eir’s at UNiversity 1-0675. Detroit and MA | YEAR | AROUND Cort COTTAGE. BE- cause of death Cheap EM 3-3304 SALE quick -— Sale Suburban Prop. 45A A ME Well constructed ear old hou. jocated west of ford. Offers living roo room, wulility foom. full beth. Num- erous fruit trees. Price, $4060 with $1850 down. MEAGHER REAL ESTATE Oxford. Mich OA 86-3122 FOR RENT Cc “OR SELL 3 with modern home, Be- warn vues, end Romeo on Van | ital highwey. Ph. 8Tiliwell | For Sale Lots 4% ACREAGE SPECIAL Lovely one acre tracts close to school ~~ stores. Excel- soll a J ranch homes. $15 18 month. r i. BROWN. ealtor 1363 W. Huron FE 23-4810 BEAT the HEAT $50 Down These lake A blo lots in a good to and bus F. C, Wood Co. REALTOR Posy vine" er Ley woe 2 LOTS IN embers te tate Es _tates, Reasonable. ee. BIG LOTS 1 100 x oil Aubura & Koameckes Ré.. 6295 wOodward 2-9700. Detroit. . ¥%, TO 5 ACRE TRACTS $25 down. er Mani Bh Bs roed 3 nies Joulyn JIM w RIGHT. Realtor Co-opera'ive Real Estate Exchan 345 Oakland Ave ‘e rE eat access Located — FLORIDA | Lore . AT WINTER HA- ven Haines City. MY 3-3732. Just Look At | CHEROKEE HILLS! eountry Rd. 1 mile ; Rd.-—and select your CARL W. BIRD, Realtor 503 .ommunity National Bank Bidg. FE 442!) Kves. FE 6-1392 LOT 62x16) WITH BASEMENT 48x22. ated Easy monthly payments. FE 28742. LOTS OF ALL KINDS, SIZES AND DESCRIPTIONS Lows with bills, trees, lake front- age. Some ideatiy suited for tri- level home. Other ideal for ez- poses basements Prices ranging from $750 oe Over 200 lots ROGER B, HENRY, Inc. Main Rochester OL 1-111 FHA APPROVED log ranch home sites tn Dray- “OLMES-BARTRAM OR er Eve bse 5-201 $25 DOWN "VS sae | Be See Sets Red Horse FE 2-9179 _ a HOME SITES mg centers \ To Buy - YOu BUY. IT- For Sale Lots 46 Ame Pe tae OO x | TURE OP —" MACEDAY LAKE 50x250 ft. Bale sandy beech. shade trees. Good home site 64.000 terms. _| FLOYD KENT, Realtor | 24. W. Lawrence FE 5-6fte open ever. to Consumers Power Rd, 6206 Detroit | BiG LOTS 160 x 200 mr. Auburn & Rochester RK Woodward 2-9700 For. “Sale Acreage | e487) 413 ACRES—$50 DOWN! - 2 acres of clear land and 2', acres of beautiful woods Rich soi] and excellent hunting on your reser} pro} ow. Drive oul Seldwin 4 mii Waldon Road 1% miles and you oe *Btout’s"’ signs y 3 parcels left and one 6'y acre parce] with the same low down payment Edw. M. Stout, Realtor Ph. FE 65-8165 "th 6:30 id ACRES INDIANWOOD RD. _frontage Owner OAkiend 63777 5 ACRES WITHIN ¢ MILES OF | 5 he town Lots of road frontage. | 32-1333, > ACRE LOTS — Two 8 aci. parcels with good frontage on Dixie Hwy Located near Clarkston MEAGHER “REAL ESTATE Oxford, Mich Mr. Fielding MA §-2372 ee a § ACRES Near Springfield 185 ft her frontage. 1 ft deep Trout stream in rear. Good bidg. site 64.500. terms. FLOYD KENT, Realtor. 24 W. Lawrence FE 5-410 open eves | Nest to Consumers Power For Sale Farms 48 10 ACRES NEAR ORTONVILLE 5 rooms and bath. one floor er scaped lawn. 2 car garage. 10 — = soil, ro, fruit ber- rapes. Offered at $7,250 $1,880 ‘down YOUR CHANCE TO GET AHEAD. To Bell-—To Trade WE'LL INSURE IT MAHAN REALTY CO, REALTORS Co-operative Rea) Estate Exchange FEZ Open Eves. ‘tl 9. Sun 104 WwW. Huron NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH seal OFFICE 43 ACRES Sacrifice. Near Leonard 2acre epring-fed 24240 {| }-bedrm | | | | { { ' | full basemen: with of] heat. cer- | attached S4 4 ACRES gs-, 73 tillable acres tm this farm | located north Pontiac Mod- erm 6rm. brick home. kitchen ot] furnace. 5 @ f% barn with basement with acres of timber stanchions. milk bouse. other good outbuildings Quick pos- session. $186.006, terms. 8) ACRES Near Ortonville. &bdedrm home. ture 816.000 with #7 160 ACRES anand Howell! = and — persona crepe cluded. $16,000 pat $5,000 down. FLOYD KENT, Realtor “uw Let aga rE 5-6i08 open eves Next to Consumers Power PARMS OF quL 8 SEVERAL ee take fa:re WwW. Dinnen & Sone 66 W. Huron 10 ACRE PLOTS. $2,950. NOW UN- der ~-ultivation. A. Sale Business Property 49 MTioet puildity on lot O0x185 on Dixie Hwy MAple 271! days Aple 6443 eves. COM MERCIAL BUILDING __ _ Deautiful brand new mod- building. 40x100 is located o a Elizabeth Lake and near M 58. This building hes stee! decks and stee] trusses. Fully insulat- ed and built of id masonry with — front and planters BROS. Phone OR 3-1872 or OR goes Open ® to 8: Sun. 1 HOME & MANUFACTURING perverse modern six room home large car garage. also modern plant 30250 now rented for $150 eau ue Situated on 5 acres of on Rochester Road. All toned Stace cecrine Sel! for $25,000 or take modern home or income in trade DORR & SON. Realtors FE ¢1557 Fon RON STREET FRONTAGE A steal aye ; — ie as w. Wit sell alt rt. motel site eurectively, REA 3140 W Huron st PE 24411 Office Sunday Open 10 am ‘o 4 pm. Rent pions Bue Prep 4 FOR RENT. BUI'.DING. 22x60 ON eet one block from Buron TAL SURES BUILDIN "MALL BUsIN geo seere"caar_ eM — BUILDING | wir OAS heat. 54 Elizabeth. Orton. Business se Opportunities 61 51 A GOLD MINE! One of Elisabeth Lake's fam beaches. Opportunities ‘eniimited bong Only $18,000 down” THELMA-M. ELWOOD een t% te 07 t at Vin- 1 MYrtle 36311, CELI ENT LOCA. siness or buciness block R. Hite ' ! \ Terms. Dorothy Snyder Lavender} LTOR rE RT. ee A AL A CD Rusiness Opportunities $1 et te nt iain Grocery & Meat vat Market Located im fe ommunity, Oe Sustnens A real ber opportunity at Oil, renter? wu lease ig ae al we ine “TRE E & GREGG ‘wien Leake Road pi >490) or BM 3-3908 CULE SUPER SERVICE teare, modern, well located. a and ror 5 ea opportune to tn business . cases Cal! f° HM Cole Ot} Compaen re penn GROCERY STORE ~ WITH BBM. In new expancion area. 621 Op _avhe Drive-in. ‘Restaurant ECT TY. | « 30 CEMENT BLOCK BOUILD- water. Mase tase Ww op Fes Sty Ing Nicely equipped Including after m eota bar Large kitchen. 2 room Hving quarters 137 ft. frontage on matn highwey Bargain! 614, full price . %o quonset building 3 lots. Wired for heavy mechines, Hoists for manufacturing. Priced pone handle for quick sale $2500 wi AU 1 . JONES REAL ESTATE a32 W HURON FE 43903 |GROCERY NEAR LL AKE ON S500 roed. Livin earlete for couple. _Near_s school _ S\ta 8 1146. Partridge is THE “BIRD” TO SEE HIGHWAY TAVERN Located on County's busiest road. lot 100x200 ness on shoit hours easily increased bapa both tavern and beer and wine take out. Ouly $15 000 handles SOTHMING TO COMPLAIN ABOUT Valuable location all fixtures in * @ moneymak this drive-n good solid Bidz tiptop shape Wha er this ts meet to new big high school on mar road in the lake region Priced. for quick sale on easy terms. You cant beat this NEIGHBORHOOD MARKET in LJ wine take-ou' ness and a’! for only $17. price Terms World's S ‘Largest 43 W. Huron Open Eves FE 24316 - RES vers mee service 3 here 30355 after 8:00 Pt | Restaurant UEKI BUYS OPPORTUNITY ake Orion gas station. Well es- tee ‘shed business Has lube pit wash rack. complete inventory and equipment, plus a 2 bedroom home that has a neat. well land> scaped yard Good garden and fruit trees included tn this one. CRAWFORD ENCY) ANNOUNCING OUR NEW ADDRESS 53%, W. Huron ———$—=— =, Templeton RESTAURANT Pully equipped ready te do busi- ness. Owners must sell. Will sacri- — equity for $750 — —_— be d. 962 Ex — yaaa a ior ha ght Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake’ Rd. FE ¢4563 Open Eves N TAVERN A small spot in a town with one other tavern — po iiquor in area. Has nice room living quar- ters upstairs. brick building and located on main highway right tn town Can increase gross con- siderably by active operator Bus! . property and ail for $8 000 = ce for appointment to TOWN FUN WITH A FUTURE A small hote! ‘8 rooms) with a first class kitchen, dining room and liquor bar — top all this with over 200 foot of inland lake frontage and a lawn from the porch to water edge. A Won- derful deal a on young couple ell che and a Ad 7a Pos available No. 20 -STATE-WIDE Real Estate Service of Pontise — State Bank Bidg ~ohn A. Lapdmesser, agri FE +1382 8 |To BUY TO SELL, _ REALTOR Partridge IS THE “RIRTY’ tr coe WANTED SOMEONE $10,000 to invest in the pomagaesinapardeny 4 of a fast sell: item, someone dealing in manntactare of confectionary with extra 00 r You c make yourself $25. 4 mo. Route No Bangor Michigan. Phone Bangor WANT, GENERAL REPAIR MAN to = over garage Rent $50 a Ee asant Lake Service M_ 33471 Sale | Land Contracts 52 210.000 LAND CONTRACT. WILL give discount FE 44155 SEASONS LAND CONTRACT, $5900 balance. 825 per cent discount. R. J. VALUET, Realtor Co-operative Real 345 Oakland Ave. Money to Loan 83 mn Llete Licensed Lenders) CASH PROMPTLY Get $10 to $500 quickly om ear. peoples or note. We've FE 5-0603 and LOANS $25 TO $500 Baxter & Livingstone W. Lawrence St. +1538 GET CASH QUICKLY Up to $500 minutes. Loans made farnitare Sonatas ane cee on OAKLAND LOAN CO. | FE 2-9206 #2 PONTIAC 6TAT® BANK BLDG. BROKE? Sell things you don’t need through Class. ified ads! Phone FE ; 28181 for an ad-writer, % ‘ Estete Exchange Py F / od . re . ; F é * 2 ~ a | fir PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1956 — Money to Loan 53) | es Swa . ‘ . (State Lserset Lenders) ~ ps 55 Sale Household Goods 57| For Sale Miscellaneous 60 60! MODEST MAIDENS By Jay Alan Deo It Yourself 61 UTTY IN.4¢ ROOM HOUSE WITH |GARLAND @ RANGE, THROOM TOILET. ~e wary f M4 Pamees, chert foe OO: we Excelieat, coodiion Pi “Gram board set 738 of, formats wer : M : — $38. ai ©1500. sinks, uminum reel, ’ 4 OU. NEED FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR WHAT KENMORE AUTO. WASHER WITH | 2847 Washing m and spin CHURCH'S IN ave you. 3 good regulation suds-saver Kucelient condition.| 4'’es.- childs chiffe picnic FE 20333 tables and showcases, 1 2-wheel - $5. MI ¢ ai tavle, PB noem chest a: drawers i) en = to $500 ered Mae ally after 6:00 p.m | fARGE SIZE fre things net mentioned | SAVE! a | @00D rer, FOR | ir es ean, fed dee Poe sve Bi Dike: SPRAC. | tastall yourself. | rebuilt ae : . Reo, We can ne’p you with |_on house FE Sigg ” POymeD! LARGE NORGE DELUXE RE | power mower, #40. Call MA eT | rs and ca aad | 2 . problems. You ean oll fp begs ¥ NO “INTEREST. MODRN _HODSE a | frig. Used only few months, Need _after 700 pm | | BAGLEY 3 AUTO "PARTS and repay te email monthly pay.) il! trade’ for equity _room., OR 3620. ‘PE 22546 of PE +3588 neu aud ak cee | F farm EM 35115. after — = prc a ——— a oe ’ 10 ley & our LYMOU TH. 51 4 DOOR. GOOD ar Bl k tt ~~ PITTSBURGH AINTS | in : oe Wit tate cheaper té ear eM ie nea | a ac :-e % 4 = | 238 Dixie hwy. Corner Hatchery rd. S A | | core © 8 EF Yosilenti. FE) ranges ~ ol0.ss . motors ‘s & BUILDING SUPPLIES ayo Me os iE | TRADE YOUR AND CONTRACT kee ie Bh Se ee 2G’, 2n6's. Sue +... $08 ver M. only $1.86 with the purchase of 2 FINANCE CO | farailures sche erage, eaunty e on allie airwiedl...6400 guest | nly Mngt Ay iy: Pa . | well known Seanerretines care: OAK DINING ROOM SET: Ba gnats Ging wladeus ‘win _ehard Le. Ave. Phone FE 5-6150. FE 4-1574 TRAILER EXCHANGE buffet, formic top table. ¢ plastic) eir tight clusioum weathererie OsE OUR TOOLS DO YOUR OWN 103 Pontiar State Bank Bid SS. _Teleqresh Cyes_tiven. | severed Cheese. Ue” low. Lune | @e bande 6 on sig prmbtes. wires repeining. Com. —— | TRADE IN YOUR OLD Lawn ree PE 23000. | ng m2 someon tne of Sele. plete stock soil. sewer crock and - | new ; AE NTR Ne TT |e cea aaldil LA GAS Lele Ses inept | from, Se ae “ ‘ a fet Seay MA 6-$81) y through Wednesday 7421 : eee me Hardware. _ Jack’ °o Linsioues, ee ne Perry, 20 6:30. Cloned every Thu | ‘ e am - LA a2 £ —7in CONDITIONERS Gis Sale > WiLt TRADE (a PONTIAC "FOR | “New Furniture Specials am COMMLLYS |__ Sale Musical Goods _ 62 a or Ww : Sofe beds $39.50. inperspring mat Plumbing and Heating Supp! PIANO TUNING Extra Fa t Fa a = = tresses $10.95. Cotton mettres-| —— at 20-Mile Rd. Open bun. | Oscar Sohanies Pn "vEDsT. S PT KELVINATOR. A-1, ses $1105. Rollaway beds, com-| S878" 0 GRETSCH : | shape, $140 or swap, FE 2-0796 plete. $16.85. Maple bunk beds, 4 PRENCH DOORS. | Outta fe *@0 HAWALIAN S . 4‘, ROOM WEST SUBURBAN springs and mattresses, $59.95. MA 56-4386 a R_ 37305. f '. er V 1ce ae oa large lot. Will trade for ats sted bed tromes 76 bas asp I * © On RENT Witt OF RECISTERED SILVER BLOND PE } ome in Peatiee. land cop-| PO ‘. . pines and fittings redited | kin maie. 1 year old, FE. ven cun bomen aaa” en tract. or home rug =o was White qome and , water So on uae a, Prive Osiiagnera PE +0066. per ad 3 Seaas ave of wits Seasnranere. cms J. VAL UE ‘T, ” Realtor of arewera 06.08 up. M fin- = steam and bot wa. epinet planes. e010 end $08 with PARAKEE 1304 7 OvALINES CANAR, : Tsers for | Co-operative Real Estate Ex ished bedroom suites $50.90. Bank FIGH 8 year : Se sate te reeereeee Up “to | Hb Oakland Ave, FE sobs | Furniture, 43 Orchard Lake Ave.| HEIGHT’S SUPPLY _We cosa srenie® ose" DARAKEETS .... : ST" ey Must SE SELL AT ONCE, TV COM. Pr __For Sale Clothing __56 Excellent condition. FE phone "Put-sa33 ae Aheg Y many others. Oe | Sune HOUSEHOLD A LARGE SELECTION OF MEN'S Pear HOLLYWOOD arms. furniture, enough equip SMALL * RREINWAY_ PIANO LIKE PO a i Bew suits. . beds, al] new, you seve. Closed; ment for a emall bea chen. new Gallagher's. FINANCE $25 on Sat’ Hilbera. 62 Wiliams. PE| OR 3230. i! alee babies. fa ‘Subure BA. Some siightly soll $0633 CHROME FLUORESCENT FIx- 5 Corporation of lots All slses avallevle, omens | PIANO. PHILOO CABINET “RA | “tures, ideal for use over or ..| Teas wav ALAN Sale Sale Office Equipment 63) ~ REO as | Toor Saginaw 8 hag Bid downtown store only dio dining room furnace side medicine .ebinets, will - tren | FARAKERTO Witte ka¥@—ACL r Pitaerel costs _H4NDMACHER WEATHERVANE, with ‘Stouer, #13 rug. ¢. PE. 3-000 ernie your bathroom 4.9 value | — “Do you remember what it was I came shopping for?” a4 = 5 pees: a = a. , Dink Size Td, me ANE. | BHILOAS SUMMER “IAL Seeet ap Fiusrescent, 303 ees Beit oan ant "Tat et r " —— “Need M 9 | ac mth wii" catl tor si FE| S70 saving soeees Detuxe, Tap | Svevere Uae A re Chait id Wi ut Bide Arm eee Pm 230 ~ | ‘oo oneys: is weer er “Bota tor eninge te! CEMENI BLOCKS - | For Sale Miscellaneous 60 For Sale Miscellaneous 60 Char, 0d Wale Side Are | er “CANARTER € ig Household Goods 57 Pri cent down. Budget buying. | ‘mediately aeitvered 108 Gh re! ~~~~~~~~~ | Pile $21.00; | Stool 85 00 “eee | _ tood ect ee Wee as nea. as your telephone. Jus: ‘ips, Petroleum Co, 2635 Or. seo pp Le |LEATHER SHEEP TEP SKIN LINED THREE-PIECE BATH SETS lating File 81700; 4x6 Double | REGISTERED 25 LOdER POPPIES. APT ELECTRIC RANGE $39 95 hard Lake Rd. FE _ 23-0199. Ru on air force pants, size 36 & 36, $10 WHITE with fittings) 04.85 File @7 20. @x® Double File, $12 00 FE 60074 or FE /G E dishwasher. ike new $80 95 dion att WINDOW FAN. 16 INCH Cau Ss FURNITORE | each Size 42 all rubber wadders.| COLORED (witt fittings) $100.60 2 Linoleum Top Counters, $2000) ——————— _e_ "F Maytag washer $2905 | blades Used only 2 weeks. Also _______ | $15. Round oak table & 3 chairs, Peotors Beconds each: 1-) & © horter & Stand RABBITS ges $1995 wu alnu »kease, 128 x CAN As iwnine n ~§ FOOT. 8 meta at . l vis : en-O-Line Gas irae . Walnut beck 25x00. 2 Vas A $25 123 ft 1 boat & “sb SAVE PLUMBING 6UPPLY 100 division $5000 7 Fi Have 3 breed does, 2 cans Tal reconditioned and — "end sections. Call FE 47069" after| inches. Good condition. Resiee | cae motor $133. Call ok SS eee ee monet Pie kan one Ping 1 100 youse omy sell "ak cee. eute financing. refinanc: | igerators 5 pm eee wees able. FE 41653 TOILET SEATS 6706 VALUE 63.95 z ge 2 pargaek | Gene coe | ‘CRUMP ELECTR RIC TELEPHONE 7g 0ssIP BENCH | GCoAL STOVE. 16) PERRY 6T OMC OR CHEVIN TRUCK RADIO | Also complete line of all colors in Drawer Sus Document Pile, #12 50 Wei Deck Lake Rd. seer High- worthy purpose most loans are | 3463 Auburn Fe ¢3573| Se ee and serie! excellent condition: | Wood. plastic end pearl seats at). SScn' General Printing & Once | RABBITS FOR GALE 10 PINORES completed on vour first visit and as CONVERSI $25. FE ¢8711. extraordinary values Michigan & Ofice foe fow Oinuion | iveral seme |ART SIZK KELVINATOR. OR , , ag pr OE YAS FURNACE. | a DOORS | Piucrescont, 383 Orchard Lake | supply 11 _W_ Lawrence. ve +i. went vlan 3-6739 W AYNE GABERT’S - PY = Fog Lake Ave USED ee goa ve CONFERENCE TA APARTMENT GAS RANGE. $2 se 1 COMPLETE CARPENTERS BLADE pier tad Weed rae JIT LUMBER isi-Record, FE | OR }1565 after Ho & A ti weet Munrg Electric. 1060 W _ Trade-i in Specia oor oe _ — on exh ORBAT LAKES ALSOET LUMBER , THOROUGHBRED m - gas range...... — afte ee mber, doors, bard- A tatered - 1788. e ULO | ier eae -oas anor R | Uted Beay wesber 1208) ee: Gust sel 676.00 Midwest | 2010 DIXIB Dine wr ru ose pel oe age = Sale Store Equipment 64 WANTED: WOME POR burner $120.50 value 969 | Full cise — fi. 0) len : cUM. septic sump pumps. Thor . ful seven weeks old kittens. Loan Company) fcsitisg sat the Pittantnireesor, 92%) Deh Ee Hee ™ | Sistem, tar vt besptwnly. anew | 40D, PT, COMMERCIAL TYPE | g"tvmine, at. Perry. FB Y | ranges in electric and gas at ex. _o— refrigerator. DRAW-TITE HITCHES Fock, rock lath, ead brick.) & _ Idew) for res-| 4-073. : ; ° 21 Community Wetiona! Bank Bide treordinary values. Michigan Flu- foot Fe died BN gob RING AIDS. 080 TO $200, 028 Oskiand. Phone FB 4-262. | teurent, FE 20002, 113 Freakin | —\icg COLLIE — : Gaterday © to 3 escent 393 Orchard Lake Ave cela" Brot refrigerator, " el — that ba ag . Ae meg accessories Rules TOILETS CLOSE COUPLED, WEW- | —*!*4._ —— bred mother, 06.09 for ehetes. PE |APT SIZE GAS STOVE. LIKE we weniod Ses “Danie eee horny or ain VORNACE est design for modern bathroom |3 USED SHOW C CHEAP. : _hew. $60. FE 2-8050 after 5 p.m meh etot cu, 70.00 | = Gat 7. stn ORLY —— = 3108 Igpianwood te ee These Pao — Biy i Gop. Lin <« WEEKS OLD 7 —— | AUTOMATIC KENMORE WASHER fica et anti int nC TA- | Lieuidetion sale, General. Ware- | 57 1 LO¢_OTO0 ery STORE| latte selection of lavatories, bath- cela word. Pirpiagrem |" seagie “we ee | Bete barn — bee vend mode}. Good picture. Oniy| house, 467 8. Saginaw, Pontisc. ype Foggy a ‘Armstrong| ‘ubds end shower stalls, Michigan Sale Sporting Goods 65) _yer oid, 498, " oe | offer takes FE eins enn $50.98. _MI613900, FREE-STANDING TOILETS $117 09 fleor covering end Mac-O-Lac| Fluorescent. 383 Orchard Lake ” AG : ABOTT ANYT eae | RED PLASTIC ST? STREIT 610M UMBER | Wash bowls 1.95! paints Phone FE 1-746. Ave AAA, BALE SPORTING Goons: | Phone EM +4201. Phone FEdera! 3-7181 T ANYTHING YOU WANT |“ cnair. Good condition. FE ¢4773. | 91232 double “aks 10.08 ED THA FwO | USED ELECTRIO MOTORS, 0 &| Spalding. Wilson golf clubs bags, | 12) RABBITS AND BUILDING. Kew pardan aonieaseo. g Pag RING ETE SCTION DAVEN- eave PLUMaIN SUPPLY separate chrome, ticlisishh Hr | 14 Rp refrigeration, w E balls, carts save - = __- _FE $6 - On Your Name Only | tz, lamps 08 oo: weed mp! Poti chore | 00 8 Sein reinee| Semvicte Hes, These. are Tac: | sees see dca “Siesecome | Pulips WN. Geginae e |" wont a, Uae, crea norte | ' Up. refrigerators, 638 up; ranges, | SWEDISH-AMERICAW DININO - Th. PANS. PANS. PANS WE NAVE) _cent_303 Orchard Late Ave | o1_W_Murce | Gis But pSELE TRADE BURR | _Brench 616) Spring St } ig & cleo) 0h sp: TV sete| dle & ¢ cneire $40. Good lige gly terrific sel | 7 STEEL FUEL OL DRUMS wit WOLVERINE Shei!_FE $404 378 @ Telegraph | 2 REGISTERED GERMAN SHEP- 11.50 up radios up: Miller iece living room eulte. $65, re aaah neaenll Ceanard _, ate _ legs, FE_6-4633. _| LUMBER AND WRECKINO co. | WANTED UNS A DEER| ards 2 year okt Diack female chrome dineties $49.85: chests, — (6a MEDICINE CABINETS 5 LAROE 3 20| 300 6. ock 2-978 _Tifles Manley Leach. 10 Bagier. 1 free ae we 4 months biack pew -@ used $5.06 up: bedroom | ~~ “CIALS CLOTHES, POSTS. eTEEL. ¢ HOOK | MEDICINE Citmetal cabinet 8799 | No. oak fimorine er M. g05.90 outes | o4,te Fe Prem 78 6. Bee Money fer vacations. past sues, $409 up: ‘ving room SPECIALS Bio “iigniend ha, OR S1esg, | elue 62.90. Slightly marred Also | Useg shootin. ser M .. 918-00 MID SEASON SALE == due s. any worthy pur- suites $129 up; dining room | Studio couch . ....--++-+ 928 _ OR large selection of medicine cab-| New Toilets Spare: S. $18.06 Advertised Our Price | 3} YEAR OLD “MAE ARC REote- Goor credit ts al) suites. $19.50 up Complete line |? piece living room suite ..... $38 inets with and without lights new | iszi¢ levator ues 1 Mitchell Reei 620.75 91850) tered Boxer is See- Other amounts of Seal Rit- color tint yeaa Oda upholstered a chair Sadooor 15| DAYTON GHALLOW-WBLL JET) aiding triple door units all at with fitting 616.08 |1 Pflueger Ree! 650. 4090| FE 23-7631 wo 6500. w one day. Use our eaw Tg me A Waiput bedroom suite ....... 845) Pumps .....ceeceeee.seere- 978.08 exceptional bargains. Michigan | We carry « full tine im bumper, |! Whirlaway Reet 4.06 (18.50 oo GENERAL PUB ANYTHING COME OUT ® Guaries Rol op re ae Dupont oat fiat wall peiat..6.79 eal | Fivorescent, 283 Orchard Lake | pumbing end builders supplies. |! Merbult Mnateepeare Dogs Trained, Boarded 70) 32 phvna” Od Capect - N s eeereee 5 LIC SHOP 2 ACRES OF FREE |Table top ges range... sis ceerencseees: 02.1 gat | oat ee oan WHEELS, ee san tae Ben Me a cae 6 DiENCE LOAN COR PORATION PARKING OPEN 8 TO Odd vanity $12 oMcB ide H w MIX . p60x17; jawn AN HORMAN DR - tak Comperable discounts on all reels, house st 108 Caroline MOS. Tun’. Bar eu tOe Oakland Furniture ride Hardware complete, 2-600x16. 1 teen | ‘rial No, 333 First g600 cosh. take) Tus . : Bjcensed, professional re one 69 W. Huron Street SUN pean . Sundays 9-12 chaire, telding cogire. FESS) same Pleasast Late Servine, eS eet eee Hanes tioa_ on sum starting 148 Aubure R@. a Oper. undays HATCHING DIAMOND AND WED-| 397) 0 tae cane Wa, Witas Macher oo 1 mile east of Auburn gta. aQUARE TOP MAYTAG. BALOON ao Be (at Creoks? ding ring, colonial pattern. new.|3 WHEELED TRAILER, KEN-| —-°** —<'°_"°. bet tates dh w a FE 2. FE +5169. Take over payments FE ¢7378 more vacuum cleaner, play peo.| Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66 BREAKFAST SET. i430 aPt.|? 7 PINE RADIOS. ONE 66 AND so OaLLON OAs WMATERS 60 ~~ *FHWAC-O-LAC bassinet and teeter babe. FE) ~~~ ~~~ ~ electrie stove $1850. Studio $10.| one $10, FE $-8756. 3 GALLON GAs - 088. ~ aie a ATTENTION: WE DELIVER, 1. Car bed $195 Kitchen cabinet TABLE MODEL TV WITH INSIDE | % gsllce electric heaters $87.50. PENNY PAINT so FT, 6 INCH EYE BEAMS. | "2.3 yards of stone sand $9.95. Vanity 3 way mirror, $050 | gerial case. FE 2-5236.| _9. A. Thomp 00 8. Perry House paint, 1 gal 63.96 | 91.50 per ct Also 1,000 gal gaso- ond Gp oot Also trucking 5 500 Large electric range $20 96. Apt. | - IN GOOD | Studio Couch .. ............. $30.96 OPEN FRIDAY. NIT fen : sey, ag | Bee OD... Jos = 5-8609 Tole Also New pec ee eben SOA PEK. oh ——— en @ by 7 no. 3 000.00 up to 976.08 DING. 6x16, T a aie for your dock) : ROTTED MANURE BLACE int, ALL KINDS con deen DELUXE GAS STOVE. DRAPER. | best of Dramers—-......---- $8 See the new Berry Detroiter. OUT BUILDING, 6x16, TAR PAPER ce n.| feed. eravel. coment erevel. PE | WTD LIVESTOCK OF Al: Lakes. jes, studio couch, baby buggy, Guaranteed Washer ........- 38 Detroiter no. 1 8 by 7 roof, $10. 2775 Pontiac Rd. or | 236 one ; —— or ben 46640 Forest Jones. MA 5-5206, sold on rental plan, aw 928 to 9800 | stroller. bathinette, PE 3-7896. | rable Top Ges Resge a orine| Decor oof $y 1 ie Sa. we on >t 2 (Periect ter rafters) | GAND, GRAVEL AND PILL DIRT. For Sale Poultry 74 ‘P per geat up to @ * Community Loan Co, ELECTRIC RANGE, GOOD CONDI-| WYMAN’S 18 W. Pike only e giv ee estimates and do 13 A P tee well aeeeas =o fused _— waesieesisls fe ft. Grade A. FE 5-6354 or FE 6-0677 ~ —tion, $35. _FE_2-0673 _ WESTINGHOUSE TIC farage front remodeling. Free de- with 12 tank si sone ee | EDDED SLACK DIRT OR/ prvens. 3 AND ¢ LBS. cng) Porte and sccessories. 30 E. Lawrence ELECTROMASTER STOVE. VERY | washer. 7 Only | _tvery un h *rhompson, ‘00. 8. Perry 1213 pine boards pete | | ‘peat, separate or mized: top soll. | Walton Bivé, Drayton Pisine. | yon, Lake Orica, FE 2-7131 clean Cheap. Excellent condition. | $79.95, MI_6-1300. fi ae oe on FE 20200 Pav q : ywoop — PLY sand end gravel Jack : u afte: a OL D006. & Pc. WALNUT DINING ROOM OR SALES CO avement Breakers ccgnele Rh ones vet | OR 0 Sale Farm Produce 75| Mi. MY a service ELECTRIC STOVE. GOOD CON-| suite, FE $-6511, HEAT YOUR HOME Ges cement finisher, Sewer) Peomen fi $3.9 rob | SUNDBERO BOWERS, A-i PEAT | ~ 1950 TRAVELO ae dition, $30 FE 48967 a 2 = cleaners. Dist conveyors. Level | co = Sen resins 8; : elt ¢. Whoele- Mortgage Loans ~ 54 _°" teed WHITH PORTABLE SEWING MA-| Por less with ao HOC LITTLE Shingier, al) colors $7.87 per: square | humus delivered any tim ,~ | ELECTRIC CLOTHES DRYER. FA-| chine, Good condition. FE 2-6818.| fully guaranteed automatic floor Cast tron sinks. £3.00 en,| sale loading weekends only. John eee ee cent ice tent | Cunt ELECTRIC DRY-| utility room or basement, duct- ™CONE'S RENTAL t idea! octtages. Seehtt Me Mie aera LOW INTEREST marred, exceptional value. Michl |" or Late model. Only 685. MI) tvve furnace. ‘at re-| 1281 Baldwin FE 2-0077 te fittings, steel, brick and many | _ 6-081. = sik Ontimited funde or sinete tesien ake Ate ee eee — prices i Tignte ‘ae end | REINFORCED CORGHEYE SEPTIC ag eae wefan |i” Alga Pg Lg ee Be ane 5 cance ___________ | [ROOMS OF GOOD FURNITURE. _tanks. Ph OR 3-7686. Wasi -exNO. : pee RANGE NEWEST 36 Will trade simple you can install and serv- J BAND A GRA i medel| wih avery maw gee | ane 4 wil cee ri‘cene ice yourself, Hundred in use|? ROOM BUO-THERM OIL HEAT- ‘SURPLUS LUMBER cement and mortar, fi dirt rants for sale, Bring containers i “i G. PETERSON sible feature one — x12 LINOLEUM. $595 at - this area Demonstrations er. 30 gallon hot water heater, & MATERIAL SALES CO. Pontiac Lake Bulldina 433 Frakniin Ra. 5 1310 Pontiac State a sa famous name brands. et ped 9x12 LINOLEUM. -$3.95 daly PETROL ESAT SER oe _ Fetes eotvener. ences EM 3.8086, ir e"mieninnr raxceot Sundae Supplies ed GOOSEBERRIES A FE 5-8406 scratched om value $1 Reg. $4.5 House Paint . $1.95 ga Aces: ated with Trafler Exch P A 8-530 © av? | (00 LOADS OF BL ACK DIRT BER cnaphorriss, quad condten, Pacer ; Michigan Fluorescent. 303 Or-| RUBBER BASE PAINT .. $3.50 ral| 0 8. Telegraph. across from «i. |3 WHEELED TRAILER CHASSIS. : sonable. Cail after EM! ors SD Preakite. ; chard Lake Ave LEUM $¢.05| Huron center Oven eves and Sun.| 12 feet long new 7 60x18 tires. BURMEISTER _ seen " MORTGAGES FOR SALE GARANTEED RE | ARMSTRONG VINOPLOOR % price | _P. M Cont $108. tm 1980, weed twiee UR} joo LB STORER. 36 FUR aeey Manes wow : a rigerators on $39.95 up| BONNY _ TAD TILE te HOT WATER. CREAT ER 30 GAL.| only nent suming t foe e. Dt et ae ue an Ga oon. Ge Watton Eve, Dregne Attention Brokers Wringer wemers ..... $10 98 up| é% le File So | west 40800 weer. and connections, complete! Bed Sout cain Ra PIC PREM ' - : inner washers ...... $69.95 up| Syers. 141 W. Huron PE 43064 sumers lines 906.50 and $119.50 rest 40000 002 = a for wick sale, inquire at 380 8. & Builders acuum cleaners... $7.98 2 PIECE DAVENPORT, TABLES | values $49.50 ..nd 900.80. These | BOWER LAWN MOWER, REO. 7 = Mesheb -__ gyweelt aan ™ Farms, Romeo. e . bie t 96 Oak and rE lamp. and desk. FE 25008 or| «re warred. Also elec-| good condition. 045 MA 66332. Best Buys Ww Fuel 6 We F.H.A, PRIGIDAIRD AUTOMATIC WasH-| _FE_ 20074. _- tric, oil and bottled gas heaters “eee @ Ak TO 6 98. cod, Coal & 7\ RED nASPERRIBS CARE TORE | er. In perfect condition. $100.|3 PIECE WALN BEDROOM mecca A “Orchat SUNDAY 10 TO 3 nee Bey Sespen CONVENTIONAL - |atssont Present pores: | tr Rongo: fee BOE — Feao | fine xe Ply WOO _ | tag rere nen er tat ths [cara Bor sie, Oomenaee| | RASPBERRIES ‘| | MOBILE HOMES Se ‘ oo“ condition. Reasonable. FE §-8907. EM }-2178. . H.C aun ant kinds plain & decorative. Kitch-| 1x8 W pine boards sen 00 per M.| _4-8588. ince. ape Ba oO aed arD- tzoere to pay. GATELEO TABLE. MARBLE TOP |i BLONDE MAHOGA = | ee, te aTOR e_ cabinet doors drawers made |iris W. Fine boards $99 ber M.|” Plants, Trees, Shrubs 68 i,spsenn 00 ou can buy 0 Lee, Mutshinoss Personal Service ‘| yo SAW M $38. to order Grade A Biren Door 00.95 RASPBERRIES. PICK YOUR. OWN. as as coffee, table. Cherry lamp table. pe ah gee ag ot MYrtle 3-4501 PONTIAC PLYWOOD, CO... | trae wa, 2 fir Te per ft. 25e. qt. Beck of 263 E. Walton| $100 Sty sagen” Merry ifm | _ tn? tabie. 5, excellent JACKBON-CHURCH OIL FIRED | 18 Bald~ip_ave._ 2-2843 | Rock Lath -. per bundle 9se GLADIOLI,' Te A DOZEN, AT! Bivd. . - gaan H. Young. — 13 FOOT DEEP FREEZE KEl- furnace. suitable Church, smell] READY MIX CEMENT as BAG No. 9 oak Moorina ie per M_| the Garden Oasis road stand | AIGHARDSONS HWOCKLEBERRY | Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales — Huron St. ee furnace, suitable Church | ‘a:| READY MIX MORTAR $118 BAG| WP. Combination door $1398 | Om West Maple sear Walled | Marsh corner of M50 and Hospt- | sag piste ~*~ ee wea! til Sas | _PE_2-6330 after 8,30. For Sale Miscellaneous 60) ceient condition. M3 yee. WHITE CEMENT AND LIME. | Aluminum Comb, Doors from $34.85/ Lake ; tal Rd. Will be Wednesday aaa aa: GOOD ELEC STOVE. FULL SiZF. ~~ |g ccrIRN SINKS bai, $30 96 VAL. |® 68! c8n foundation coat....62.73) — HARDWARE PLUMEENO For Sale Pet GH) _ duly. dist. OR "D4 he Gunn $00 MY eat nen Bone ALW ATS Stee maine. | torsmate vets © gp ate BLAYLOCK Im vou ARE BUILDIN T sone Se nn RASPSERRIES SEAR: onlays. 300 -. sxe = mea’ s com . rome MEISTER’ v ev 9 LINCOLN OREASE GUNS anp | GAS AND SLScee aa Sale on tect cl need, sound | ‘airing saucets, $1600. These are fr Orchara Mee Ave. PE. 9-701 DRE UT TO iar ON ALL |4 KC. REGISTERED BEAGLE Malton piv’ one Coke machine cash or Used. Low oe $12 OR 32401. | umber Doors. plumbing. sesh.| factory marred | Michigan Tivo =| MATERIA ree ee FE 40027, Maikim. trade for, for articles of equal aioe. FUME? SAK DINING , oa, brick, Union Wrecks Co.. 31244) _reseent. 303 Orchard Lake Ave ~~ ROCK HOUNDS MARE SURE ITs , aeeee so7e he <4 RASP' r : Lona tory abie> aht Mile a . soa. " T pr. CHIEFTAIN PONTIAC se up to @ ft long. 4 ington 0368 of KEnwood 5-1600 Capechons, mingralen, meneret © | Burmeister S| _ off _Atrport_Ra. 3110 Joslyn Rd Re pe Radio. regular chairs and 2 host ~ LLOMINUM "COMB, DoORs, COMB. DOORS bing and yee oe aural” : A KC, REOWTERED BEAGLE ‘ Trade for we mee, chairs, All in excellent = = ’ Northern Lumber Co. , sired by field cham Em tees. — A Leg gee Also = Kemotetog TASKER’S be eagbene | Pal. _ ig fe- Sale Farm % oftes tables. . © W. Huron $-4261 m belt male Equipment Prone. PE 31708 “Seihgeog BUILDING SUPPLIES cape RECORDER WE DELIVER On 31089, oF SONY STEAM TABLE PER: | 6175 oym Bervecus |" aver 100 feed condiuon FE in tna : value; m 100 ° gue coffee maker, reasonable | ANGLES. CRAN carts 934 a * 19.98; | 272282. Lal, wih 8 “huwehe Serv : 3 OWNERS EARN A NEW ts. complete. iine Piente 100.8. Lown fur | STEEL SEPTIC TANK. 300 GAl- EM 3-4650 . 7 0: i olé-| pliances furniture and carpeting. el Oo. 138 Branch Oe iseroet wes Nor Grive:| SPALL ; FIBERGLAS DOOR CANOPIES or_car 5 Call PE 52001. ways: & pickets; | with and curtain 949.50 $39.95 ' fRONER, KENMORE. DELUXE Be crock & éroe ; Cel>| terrifie values. 033.33. Levatories : oats ¥, model. Used very itttle. Very AN Ing CF Wt complete with gleaming chrome =< | good buy. “MI ¢7807, PRA . No money down | 10%, : fe j ee co gat Senecte 61690 Toliete $39.00 vaine acct Weedon : . July Fe Furniture Clearance, _Ph_PE §-4962 for free estimates “p “wow a erates higan Pvorescent a OME EQ | ae step tablee $12.96 & up. | OE Se etvenet, = te nee Oh. WO & CG O13e: sue) Late Ave TEN ton 9. "Teie SELL SURPLUS FUR-| {amas Remoranct & nepal 13 of | perm ant spaner"maifSeianc | Spo" st "ang Miter, fot Tye tere NITURE for cash Maple walnut chests, finished, | — oarmente \aree sea used Maytag $189.96 value, sed - AL NOW _IN_EF- ‘through Classified ads, na oe nce tat COAL NO FECT. GOOD COAL idee : ih ie a inh + » CLAYTON'S © ‘over for be>| ALWAYS. Ph FE 2-8181 for an Furniture Appliances 1 seclrktase gt en Lumber Co Mf.- A. BENSON|" ? 6@ 8. Geahee Are, FE 54811 or PE 6-0074 FORTY,TWO deer Ee eee © Trailer ie _ Exchange FINANCE Champion, Bee mer, and many other new sed } and 2 sedroom ly tw «% ft. your ~ “Enotes, ubaee BO 1¢ ft. plywood boat a ee. Culy, p tege Ghd Yalow Jacket boat. Master- par} trailer £1432 vaive, Only GENESEE SALES 2101 Dixie Hwy. MERCURY OUTBOARD Boa _ Craft AL Pine tee Lake . t RUNABOUT “AND 23 6225 6. PemTs ia Motor Phone FE 60 & Teles 14 PT SOL BED NPLYWOSD BOAT Across from Tel-Huron Center oe wlepaie iin Leap Lena a mday P. M ' year o Yost ov ee presen a oer Merai |. #1100. Price 2168 Willow housetratier ‘pr fexceiient | —Beach._Keego Harbor et 1! NEW BOATS FOR SALE. eondition. : f i an a NEW i4 PT SWETITZER CRAFT Auto Accessories 80 “Ciiiom outboard runabout. Wind- | — —_ sontesia pod hangpheaoe ma own yment or Ne — used ip trade Des, FE 23-7117 Eve- Por all makes and models 2% per! mings after 6 OAkland 63314. Ed cent discount to all GM employe | _ Rossmen_ Qpen 17 s we | NEW i2 POOT ROW BOATS CKs | painted and caulked. $50 MAple Auto Parts ca sain | 1 _ BOATS FOR SALE. ;. CHEAP ATTENTION | _ 2060 Dente ey We to 1053 cars we Know otin and fy We have ‘Soverel late mest scommnete boating service ba pg TON BOAT WORKS inee Telegraph FE 20033 jams Eventnes and Sundey SCRAP OR cuner OR 3-411 ‘CARS. Top Price for Your Car oft 2020 DIXIE A) WANTED, TONE Cans.” = re | wer ive = Pr 1'21. Reliable garage 2 Ww. OW vd. across from WANTED Ji tesa ) BUICK SUPER « _Lowrie Lu: Lumber Co. door with radio, heater, “SPREE ESTIMATE MAKES OF CARS AM, AYMENT PLAN BRAID MOTOR SALES ae Fears Pa Pike o& CRANKSMAPr Orbaret “eas THE Perfect biue or clean Will vi Farm end Frese, Ee Must trade on pew Buick ton _ 1411 oF 3012 Wrp JUNK CARs AND SCRAP fron. FE 40662. Eves. after 6:30 and Sundays call FE 54-4430 YOUR CAR-WILL BRINO MORE cash at GLEN'S MOTOR SALES _vartety ears pess “wp our dollar consideration for clean, late model cars ‘ry today at 254 = St. You'll be glad you For Sale Used Trucks 90 t. “4-1” TRUCK BUYS CY OWENS 147 & Saginaw FE 6-510) ~ NEVER BEFORE!! _ UP TO “| Complete re _+ons, 2 ___ For Sale Bicycles 84 BOY'S AND = saad BIKE, $20 eoch, MY _2-4703____ SO¥s REBUILT - condition, $20. FE ¢¢001 oe FE) INCH BOY'S BI- minee Rd. 1 or 7 USED 3% INCH BICYCLE Good condition $20. Cali 3-7508. GIRLS BICY< CLE. FE 54776. “Boats & Actessories 85 AND A . 735 Te H. P. WISCONSIN AIR COOLED Marine engine with transmission. —_ ete Less than 1@ hours. zom Cafe, Wizom Mich MA STOCK! 5 OPEN TOP VAN BUYS -Pruehauf - Gramm - Trailmobdtie OTORS * -Vellow Jecket” For Sale Used Trucks 90 ‘® CHEVIE PICKUP TRUCK. F 5-1801. ‘$4 DODGE STAKE ~ __For Sale Used Cars 91 5,000 miles will sacrifice. 44@ Studebaker. % ton, reasonable. ECONOMY AUBURN Matthews- Hargreaves Chevrolet We have a fine selection ef good ued pickups, both 4 and % ton mod- els. Matthews- Hargreaves Chevrolet 210 S. Saginaw St. Fine Used Cars "51 Mercury 2dr. ra- = parts, t = , x. and “tubes. | MERCURY CRUISER, MASTER- ta dio & heater. Club | SSiRANA AUTOPARTS) Zee "ey See He al ela Coupe . sec... $1,095 Rwy PE_ 44533 | —_ = Si value Only 52 F qs ; AUTO GLASS 5. A real buy. , — 5 ‘or Station GENESEE SALES T : We, specialize tn safety, auto “ease | ner inte Hey TUC S | Wagon (Country ~ PRES. OND COFFEE. WANTED SMAHT SAILBOAT t+ . : ttt} 2 very Glass gr windshield, tub. Auto | t806 lini i d beautiful) car with | seed oe 22 Geklang Avenue f 8 an = \ PE 61006 io PARTS | Transportation n Of ered 87 T | radio, heater and WO APAL OP Se e . OSs por ksi, oy rrasaronranion rupee = LTACLOLS | Fordomatic ... $1495 + ola discount to all GM em poNTIAO DRIVEAWAY Service '*S3 Ford 2 dr. Cus- Oven 1 Gaze week raat S) Fe tomline & radio | PERSE Quine etek et] «== (1951 Ford F-8 j tomline ©. sor eaten SS "Wanted Used Ci ae 1952 Ford F-7 and heater ,..,-..$1,595 ~utles ‘sine oe, Davin fe | Se 1952 Ford F-8 52 Pontiac 2 dr pert, FE Sand reese | it as PEO 1953 Ford F-600 ‘Deluxe Chieftain 8. ON TIRE SHOP 600 650x16 | See M&M Motor Sales radio and heater .. .$1,295 Grund es beeen en eo eee | ee ton doilar on ‘ate model care “oe On DUMP, EQUIP. = — feeee. oe at pn = oe ie Yo “Tas apove | 53 Buick Super 4 dr. 4. wh PRIVATE PARTY Fiymoeo ance 2 tone blue, custom th) Np ! & Sons Lu Co. eave : ‘> pee 7 ww uron meer “LARRY interior . ........$2,295 ‘$32 Buick Super Riviera 2 dr., radio heater, Dy naflow, two tone green .. .$1,695 53 Chevrolet 2 dr. Deluxe, radio and neater ose SieoeD JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer “FOR Mon: Tan se YEARS A GooD PLACE TO BUY.” ’S$ Ford Sedan Delivery $1295 50% OFF\.# TRAILER } SO Pontiac 4dr, Chieftain Deluxe, radio and heater..$ 695 ‘S1 Kaiser 4 dr, very "52 Chevrolet % ton pickup, 4 speed trans. $795 . very MICE ....... $ 595 50 Chevrolet 4 dr. new engine. ..... $ 495 53 Dodge Station Wagon, Canary BUICK Yellow .........$1,595 210 Orchard Lake Ave. iP angie — FE 2-9101 and Dynaflow ..$595 up ’S] Pontiac 4 dr. Chieftain Deluxe, __ For Sale Used Cars 91 Shite walle azentow. Tedia heat radio, heater and of tke "nee Private ofese, be | low mileage .....$ 995 i FOR WY EQUFY IN W BU- | 'S “Same ss bre a ge lines radio, OEE, SORTER. TEOCR heater, one owner $1,095 equipped, pat sacrifics. Private | “ST Ford Convertibte, ae = oe) 193 noe ore radio suena, REM MOTOR anp| heater, seat cove gg Sg c Sess cuens gt Smnattion susan ol ’S2 Henry J, 2 dr.. SS Lockie R4., Once take) only 4.000 miles ..$ 895 ‘50 Ford 2 dr., fully equipped, very nice $ 695 PRICE THE PONTIAC PRESS, W. FUNNY BUSINESS | ““Phat's kids fer you! They always hafta do things | different!’’ | For For Sale Used Cars 91 For Ss Sale | Used Cars | BUICK 417 SUPER 2 DOOR. $175 CADILLAC 1953 4 DR. RADIO AND | . 674 Scott Lake R heater White sidewalls. FE $0319 SELL OR TRADE o ~ BUICK CON- | a CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE _Vertible FE BUICK 186: 4D, &.F doodrich tubeless sharp. 4872 Elizabeth Lake a a seo. pil MAyteir 63553. SPECIAL DYNAPLOW | p.m. After 6 pm —létus Drive Windiate Drive _ ‘48 BUICK, 4 DOOR. EXCELLENT 321 Orchard Lake 1950 PONTIAC Chieftain deluxe 4 Royal biue finish, Pe lO pa wits hvdramatic drive. vedic heate visor and viewer backur Nights, ete Excellent shape roughout 1951 PACKARD 200 deluxe series, 4 door pemee. Mist green, Excellent sha big car value and es smal) ‘cas rrice. $850 1953 a= SOTO wer brakes, heater, Transportation Specials NO_MONEY DOWN. JUST GOOD CREDIT! 1947, BUICK 32 door. Radio and heater. $295 3— 1947 DODGES Your choice. $245 1948 BUICK 2 door. Radio and heater. $395 146 CHEVROLET @ door $195. 149 PACKARD 4 door 1949 STUDEBAKER amet s bie door CONVERTIBLE. | #, radio, heater tinted giass, | BUICK 1983 RIVIERA SPECIAL | - waflow, all extras, white walls | al) OR 32708 after 5 0 pm CHEVROLET TWO TEN 5.000 miles radio and FE 45518 Call before 3 ne } series _beater ‘46 47 ‘ - 48 BUICKS | | 2 Dr., 4 Dr., All With Radio and Heater. Ready to go— Safety Checked 91. ' 1952 ee — Michigan’ «*’ Pinest Woodwa.¢ at 13 _ road. coln §-1100 = YOU HAVE A CREDIT RAT- If not let us help you es- - lish one You don't need money = eee Motor Sailes_ SS ‘© CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE '¥rule 23-2611 engine after ‘4 361 Stout &t pm ‘2 CHEVJE TWO TONE ¢ DOOR. @ good one. Must sel] this week a wilh sell _ cheap MA 65-5485 YOUR CAR AS DOWN PAYMENT wy 195' Ford 6 Tudor . $145 1951 Plymoyw Sedan ,.,...... $75 1950 DeSoto Sedan ......... $165 1960 Pivmouth Sedan $45 1950 Piymouth Club Coupe $125 1960 Studebaker -Tudor . $125 1949 Pontiac Sedan Coupe ..... $95 1948 Dodge Deluze Tudor ..... $45 1948 Piymouth Sedan ......... $85 1948 Pontiac Fordor ............ $85 1941 DeSoto Tudor ........... $65 1947 Kaiser Sedan ........... 45 1947 Pontiac Sedan Coupe ..... $40 1941 Pontiac Fordor .......... $60 1940 DeSoto Tudor $35 | 1946 Mercury Tudor w4S | DeSoto VF Sedan New Car Guarantee BRAID | MOTOR SALES ESOTO -- PLYMOUTH __ Cass at W. Pike Streets Mercury | 7 1953: $95 and up’ Monterey | OLIV BUICK 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 Open ‘til 10 P. M. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE GOODWILL USED CARS “NOT A NAME BUT A. POLICY °$3 PONTIACS arp UXE CHIEFTAINS 4 DOOR. ADIO =r AND HYDRA- Ma TIc L THE EXTRAS $1 5 up 49 DODGE A VERY NICE SEDAN, RADIO. HEATER AND TOW MILEAGE. CLEAN CAR POWER STEERING POWER BRAKES $1995 LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer Me. .ef PH. OL 1-071) ‘FOR MORE THAN 536 YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO BUY.” For Sale Used Cars 91 1939 FORD V-8 pom. RUNS good. 865. PE 3 1542 Quality and Quantity = a €2 COUPE 53 Caddy. 4 door, power steering "52 Gadiliaa, — miles, beautiful 3 Buick 2, 3 *Pords, Radio heater | 4 Willys verv clean Hudson and Por "00 Studebaker Cony erie ‘48 Ford Convertible We also have many other cars to choose from with smal] down pay- ment Rea) estate or contract ac- comted on trade. — ECON Y MARKET rE «an % Auburn Ave ee ee 1951 FORD V-@. OVERDRIVE, RA- Gio, heater, new tires — second ‘ear tp family. MI ¢ BLACK ‘50 FORD 2 Sone “6. IN good condition. Want someone to take Sd igo For informa- tion call FE 2-2206 or FE. 2-1347 FORD ‘41 GOOD CONDITION. FE 2-073. 19 FORD V8 BUS COUPE. one owner, ,ood —— $300 EM 3-5313. after 6 pm CHOPPED AND CHANNELED ‘33 FORD. 467 Raeburn FE 4-8469 “Best in Wheels & Deals” Harold Turner brad FORD Dealer _ Birmingham ‘# FORD af OR TAKE E OVER payments. 2015 Union Lake Rd. FORD ‘51 CUSTOM 8 SaROK. fadio,.. hea er overdrive. white _wail tires. 4 : FORD 4 $400 FF 17-0001 | Soe watnut Ra jacobaon Pontiac’s Exclusive Hudson Dealer Cass at Pike PE 2-8389 150-HUDSON $495 A very clean 2 door. Has over- trive, radio heater, Only one owner pay only $95 or any oid car down RITCHIE MOTORS 4i7_Auburn Ave. _at 13 Mile road Lincoln 5-1100. WILL TRADE MY EQUITY IN 1940 Nash Ambassador for ‘sy _penel EM 3242200 0° NASH RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE. 1953 Many extras. including hy- _Gramatic. FE 5-3057. 1952 OLDS SUPER 88 2 DOO sedan, be miease white tires very FE 2-657. __ clean. STOP—LOOK 1961 Plymouth hard top. a beauty, biack and yellow. Radio heater. peg tires. Oakland 68 Osi FE 2-2351 HI Y° ALL! We've come to town with cars at $20 down. Y'ALL COME! And see our '46-’51 models at prices you can afford at— $20 Down National Motor Sales 17) 8. Baginaw &t | 1951 MERCURY CLUB COUPE. RA- Gio heater excellent condition, MI 47 OLDS 2 TONE BLUE, CLEAN FE 5931 overdrive, +0427 ‘$1 - PLYMOUTH CAMBRIDOE— 4 door, one owner $685. OR }-8357 —_—— Say earl agon __For Sale Used Cars‘ 91 ence SS PONTIAC ine “excellent condition, , 19,000 — 113 Owego 42 PQNTIAC. RADIO. ~ HEATER. 5 good tire’ good engine erp ee — Call FE 5-3527 alte 40 pit c + DOOR { SEDAN inst PORTIA 4 New white _— tires, driv* only by one fam _FE E 5-660” F_ CATA. 54 P@NTIAC STAR CHIEF. CATA. lina. Low mileage, estras. -TUS. 36. PLYMOUTH COUPE. c. RUNS good MA 63900. ‘32 ~~ PONTIAC 9 DOOR : CHIEF- rift. 9075. after + ee ee at 2050 Pridham, Keego Harbor, PONTIAC 10 ©TARCHIEF CUS tom. 4 door sedan, _* OR 3-7104. PONTIAC ‘53 ? 3}? EQUIPPED. MAKE. offer skirts. ' iN c . feel Me! side walls. $379. OR 3-2001. ‘ ‘41 PONTIAC > SEDAN , COU PE “RA- dio_and heater FE. 5-900 1941 PONTIAC, 2 DOOR @6on condition Excellent tires ean, _ transportation car FE 53686. PONTIAC. 1953 PONTIAC” in deluxe four door, Tra ce weaker bydramatic power . twa tone paint. white tro ratis, dir nals cod back up lights. $1,595 Huron Motor Sales 952 W Huron FE 22641 UTH ate I OR. NEW iow als lent good Reasonabi e _MI “0008 oe $295 3514 JACK- ‘at PLYMOUTH | son MU 44382 - 1953. PONTIAC “CHIE FTAIN | door deluxe Radio, heater, Hydre- matic Like new Low mileage $1642 OR 13-1769 1952 PONTIAC 2 DOOR DEL UXE Chieftam Tracto & heater a ite walls. com ‘lete accessories “wr tom interior, sy ercmesh. g¢ 00 chrome. excetient condition. Prt vate owner. FE 2-882! . “1 PONTIAC 4 DOOR MU 8T B seen to be appreciated F’ FE ¢ 1446 ‘4 PONT STARCHIEF. 4 DOOR _sedan FE _5-0880 . _ 196) ‘PONTIAC 8 HYDRAMATIC 4 door fully equipped reasonable _offer _Lincoln_ (2-6784 Royal | Oak ‘52 PONTIAC Catalina radio and heater, Gen- eral Squeegee tires, puncture-proof tubes This ts an original 8 000 mite veauty. epare tire never used, must be seen and driven . ss 7 1-2) Terms to- fit SCHUTZ MOTORS INC.. 912 8 Woodward Birmingham Wei Sie Used Care 3 |W Our Fe 62188 Our tow overhew wil) are vou money op that foot used car. We have a wide variety of makes and models WE TRADE “I'¥ AND SELL JEEP WITH BLADE $250. Lasalle Huron Gardens PETERSON | 'S3 Katcer 4 door ivos Wilive Sedan 195) Katser. @ Goor eedan 1940 Kalser ¢@ door sedan $245. oe a sedan . $95 1951 Renrv door $245 KAISER SALES & SERVICE 377 AUBURN AVE FE 4-4692 TAYLOR CHEVROLET 53 Chevrolet 210 as door ‘90 Chevrolet °" doo 50 Pontiac 4 dese $0 Olds 2 door ‘31 Ford tudor 40 Chevrolet ‘2 tom pane! PAY LOR S AT WALLED LAKE “ SINCE. 183! ? Phone MArktet ¢1561 1073 CHEVROLETS, ‘52 FORMERLY taxicabs $400. 101 wo j._ Huron CHEVIE 1041 _comdiition, n Phone M CHRYSLER WIND 5 ; ‘SOR CLUB coupe. dark blue ‘34 power brakes, power steering dio, heater white walls tinted wlass ! need older car and cash, can arrange terms. Lincoln 6-1056 Ra- POD} RUNNING | ¥ 2-0408. wer fiite, | CHEV. 1951 4 DOOR, GREEN, HEATER PLY. 1950 2 DOOR, MAROON, CHEV. Matthews-Hargreaves Chevrolet:— BEAT COVERS. DIR SIGNALS. RADIO, HEATER & GOOD TIRES. $645 $525 1325 tT. RUNABOUT,_ REMOT. control, with trailer. $200. Wisom Cafe. izom, Mich. MA 4-0568__ hse sat SALES AND SERVICE _« ie 422 5. TELEGRA TS AND BOAT- aluminum boats. ble @ocks oe Boat & Motor ATS, | | an geo ready for water, $45. 12 ee er a _ Elizabeth La. a CA IN GOOD CONDITION, $00. OR 3-1722. i¢ PT. CENTURY RUNABOUT. 75 ef tor trailer included. FE 16 is FOOT. CRISS-CRAPT INBOARD Sota foot cruiser Call FE “EVINRUDE MOTORS 1953 Fruehauf, Big Cepecity All Aluminum Van. Single Axle, Curb- side and Pull Rear ors, ete than 500 miles! . 25% OFF TUST 4 TO GO 26° to 32’. Tandem Axle platform “| trailers. Vert. Supps. Air Brakes. | 10 00x20) Tires $900 UP 4400 MORE TO PICK - FROM All Types. Years, Lengths, Capacities, Prices! WALK OUT WITH Pree pair of $15 custom shoes with sat eriectrio “starting only To a ee ne meh Cet 0 detter trade-in on veut | BEATS THEM AL, $eb.0 TRADES. ge Electrie troi motor. used cIN Ra —KELLY'S HARDWARE! woriss Largest Toade an ie o Jsed Tra ere 3006 Auburn st Adams FE 2-881) FRUEHAUF TRAILER - CO! 4005 W Port St. Detroit 9. Mich urday, are 900 a.m. to 5:00 Sunday from 10:00 a. m. p.m. to °; 00 | WS ne 5-7400° SK FOR D. AN KRAUSE * CALL COLLECT! INTERNATIONAL PACKA delivery Gerd cond : Sunatie for camping hunting cabin EM aww 4 FORD. 1% TON TRUCK. POW- er take off, booster brakes, clean, $225 if | sold this week. MA 56-5485 ‘S FORD DUMP TRUCK. FE —5-606. WILSON GMC PONTIAC’S ONLY - Exclusive Truck Dealér 809 S. Woodward FE 4-4531 GREY FINISH oe HEATER s AND SEAT COVERS. i OWNER 1949......$295 MERCURY RADIO, HEATER, OVERDRIVE AND TWIN SPOTS. A GOOD RUNNING CAR. 1946... .. $195 fas STREAMLINER 8 SE- BLA! WITH OLIV BUICK DAN COUPE. JET RADIO. HEATER AND OTHER THIS. PRICE BUY AT! 210 Orchard Lake Ave. 1940 $95 FE 2-9101 PACKARD TUDOR. BLUE FIN- "th lo a ae ron atacne Open ‘til 10 pm. NEW TIRES, RADIO AND HEAT- ER. A TRUE VALUE Riemenschneider’s CTOIME S| ist Choice Daily Office Hours, eonnee gat | | | Bright Spot OLDS-CADILLAC USED CARS [Orchard Lk. Rd. at Cass ag hl toa PES Of Your Choice SEE LAGY $83 Dedees pean s006 3 SAVE MONEY 1949 Olds Convertible like new. 1947 Pontiac, 2 door. rea) transpor 1961 Custom 8 Ford. Fordomatic, NORTH PONTIAC "AUTO_SALES Stop and Look sSésesce s A BEAUTIFUL ‘SO duanocnnn 128° $398 CHRYSLER IMPERI-| 4) Sede “a on AL. RADIO, HEATER |: fer! Bio dump 000 ti ‘80 Dodee.' tor vickuy |. 8575 AND WHITE SIDE- WALL TIRES, AUTO- MATIC WINDOW LIFTS. JET BLACK. ONLY 24000 MILES. YOUR CAR IS DOWN PAYMENT. Riemenschneider Bros. Plymouth Phot PR 29131 Pontiae ted Buick Dealer 804 N. Main, Rochester OLive 2-9311 Open Till 10 P.M. NO MONEY DOWN! Our Plan Is Ethical, Honest and True '49 FORD Custom V-8. 2 door Beauttful finish. radio, heater cellent mechanica) condition, Gleaming whttewal) tires - truiy @ fine ear for - $36.80 a Month Keller-Koch CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER Woodward at 13% Mie Rd Lincoln 6-6410 1951 Chevrolet stneelal sCHUTZ "MOTORS ANC e129 OPEN “TIL 9 ~ M CADILLAC ‘33 SEDAN POWFR steering bargain rf cash MI CADILLAC, ‘30’ 4 DOOR. SHARP Will take 23-3300. C. Cc 33 a 4 ‘steering, white ; lifts. A fully CHRYSLER-PLY 49 PONTIAC | eae WITH RADIO. HEAT- ER AND HYDRAMATIC. $395 "49 CHEVROLET sTYL =e DELUXE 2 DOOR 8) HER BARGAIN FROM THE HOME OF GOOD- WILL een? $395 > PON TIAC RETAIL STORE Factory Branch . 63 Mt. Clemens at Mill Phone FE 3-7117 LOOK AT THI! Every Word Is True! ‘$3 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON A car that will fit nearly every GMC. 26° - 21° - 24° - 26°. Single 1946 PLYMOUTH $395 or Midwest 6 and = — Vac and Alr SO H udson 4 dr., 125 De Ls we 1200 = SAVE "$500 very nice car .....$ 395 ce ’54 FORD ety Prone M8 an ( ‘R ASH 147 PONTIAC — | "eaten Them "Dinecriowal | F294, condition Cail after 8. FE AND MORE, - Over 20 $145 sons $1,195 @ DESOTO TUDOR EXCELLENT ACT FAST! ; 819s Pag, Sor ade any others to choose from 530 STUDE. MIDSUMMER CLEARANCE SALE 64% CUT }1953......$1795) Transportation : Lanpcnoisen, 4.07 uss 5B Beier toc" Pitmouth, Re | E+ 4049-— Frere Gtngie—Axte—Stere FORDOR —BEDAN. | ~~ TRAS NEAT AND CLEAN CAR. ae = [ene Rack. 22 pj. Automatic Supps, CREAM gAXD GREEN. RADIO. ; Community $695 = ake Orior. Motor Sale MY rie rite, wats Specials Motor Sal : ance ienee meee NOW $200 | ferns Otor Sales |_| SO FORD | Sin irae, WAS $550 1950 . $595 All Ready to Go Inc AND HEATER “FORD AND ALSO "oe. Soin DO Oo oO ‘ . p. * 95 LOOK FORD TUDOR METALLIC a rized ai FORD VICTORIA, eee 194499 FORD Custom * 2 door. radio. heater. 2 TO CHOOSE FROM Huron Motor Sales 952 W. Huron FE 2-2641 FORD 32 2 ) 32 3 WINDOW COUPE. $125. ‘33 Por? window coupe, §50.; * on 38462 $3 FORDOMATIC custom f 6. S¥- an completely equip . $900 — Private owner. an 8-0684 Fordomatic, heater two tone. 11.000 miiee nine months old CHRYS!.ER-PL and heater, spotlight directiona! Owner 27 Jacokes off Lafayette _ before 6 DOWN! Our Plan Is°Ethical, “Honest and True 50 FORD Custom V-8 light erey finish radio, heater spotiess interior and excellen twhitewall tires. NO MONEY pow $42 a Month Keller-Koch YMOUTH DEALER Woodward at = — Ra. Lincoin 6-84 sienals and airfoem c $1 495 Keller-Koch Woodward at st Min ae Lincoin 6410 iam 232 S. Saginaw St. | ear, TODAY’S BES’ BUYS | in cars, furniture, real’ estate are in the Want Adst aee oan nero LINE TUDOR. | FORD CHEV. CHEV. BUICK FORD FE 4-4546 1953 CLUB COUPE, RADIO. HEATER & DIR. SIGNALS. 19$1 CUSTOM CLUB COUPE. RADIO, HEATER. GOOD RUBBER. 1958 4 DOOR, GREEN, GOOD TRANSPORTATION GUARANTEED | PONT. 1951 2 DOOR, RADIO, HEATER & HYDKAMATIC 1950 STATION WAGON, RADIO, 1980 ¢ DOOR, RADIO & HEATER. GOOD INSIDE AND OUT. 1980 2 DOOR SIX CYLINDER. BEAUTIFUL BLACK PAINT. MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES CHEVROLET 211-S. Saginaw at Cottage &¢. $795 $495 $795 2845 $725 $495 my Open. "til 9 p.m qe = | + Ls HE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDN ESD AY. JULY 21, 1954 Clifton Fadiman Builds Career From Words + Se | inadequate, however, and in 1927 ep Byrd, 65, Planning Antarctic Voyage - Cleveland #—Adm. Richard E. Byrd, now 65, said today he “is -- Today’ S Ween Programs --| Has New Quiz |Fadiman joined the publisht | m . pu ng | planning to return to the antarctic the Atlantic to the Pacific through " j hannel 2 WJBK- eee | house. Trader Horn was his first as soon as I can get together an beSieen = fe ~ TV ts Channel 4— WWJ.-TV tet Channel 1 — WXYZ- Tv, “Pp best-seller hunch and the partners | expedition.” @e « . ns? i | SLID me mec Sp soe —Z ; CTAK | made him editor in 1929. He told the Poultry and Egg Na-| Antaretica and South America via r TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS Commentary on fights and fight-| Bride F e VISION - 1 tonal ili = wer vee 6.0@—(4) Time for Music. Jane| ers. , , : Y Ce . a “ oe yr . 0-Yo Twirling Pickets D r sings. (2 urette. 2:00—.(2) Big .Payoff. (4) One . A pawen Doalaaae -ecereere We:00—(4) Harness Racing from| Man's Family.’ | Editor Writes on Every | pace St. Louis Streets - PONTIAC’S OLDEST er, Bev Beltaire, Bob C Northville Downs. (2) News, Topic From Cabbages } Z , Den. arring- Jack LeGoff. (7) Club - Polka. 2: 15— 4) Galden Window ST LOUIS in—A new style in . a ERVI E DEALER on sr > ocean a PS to Kings picketing appeared here yesterday. T ¥ S Cc 6 15—(4) ) News. Paul Williams. eel News Ace. (2) Featurette. 6:30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. Charles Ruggles as drug store | owner. (2) News. Doug Edwards Joknay Slagle -hosts: Jan August, | pianist; The McCormicks, vocal instrumental group. - | 10: 1% — i?) Weathe prman Everet} R Phelps Dr 2:30—14) First Tove 7 Theater. (2) Featurette. 2:45—(4) Miss Marlow 3:00 — (4) Hawkins Falls Brighter Day *fashioned a distinguished careet NEW YORK — Clifton Fadiman, moderator of television's new panel quiz show, What's in a Word”, has | | twirling yo-yos and bouncing rub- Instead of carrying the usual let- tered cardboard sign, 14 dis- charged employes of the Cobak Manufacturing Co. walked around BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE Authorised Factory Service for 15 Different Manufecturers 1) Soldier Parade. Top protes- "Maxeot wer aa i ace 3:15 — (2) Secret Storm out of words, printed and spoken. | ber balls 5109 'W. Have FE 4-579% . Maxwe 1 music. (2) Safety ; > : - sionals Frac ae Of the ATmY.| Eye. Detroit traffic errors on|3:30—(4) Betty White Show. (7) SS ee Xrlene Francis emcees. “Ronnie film. (7) Famous Play Airbase. (2) Ladies Day man became assistant editor of a Gaylord guest. “That's It Is.” fil ayhouse. . puls yeaap row andtgoues.hinbhi How It Is,” film drama. | 3:45—(7) Cowboy Colt. publishing house, and two years la- | 6. 45—(4) News Caravan. John 10:45—(4} Baseball Hall of Fame. Cameron Swayze. (2) TV Top Sports film. } : idly acquired a reputation in lit- | Tunes. Ray Anthony and Band 4:30—(4)—Howdy Doody. (2)—On | ‘ Yerary circles as one of the coun play popular tunes, Kitty Kallen, | 11:@0—-(4) News. Paul Williams. Your Account. — WORD MASTER—Clifton Fadi- try's leading editors guest. (2) Telenews Ace. (7) Soupy’s man, considered in literary cir-| —~ > 00—(4) I Married Joan. Joan en- rolls in art school to help Jim win his Federal judgeship: stars ‘oan Davis, Jim Backus. (2) 9:45—(2) Chuck Davey’s Corner. On. Soupy Sales with saxophonist Charlie Parker, guest. 11:15—‘4). Adventure Special De- livery. ‘‘He’s Gone Away,” little 4:00—(4) Pinky Lée. 4:45—(7) Barnaby Bear 6:00—(4) Happy Hollow. (7) Auntie Dee. (2) Portia’ Faces] Life | Red eon Revue. Liberace, known episode in life of La- | 8: 15—(2) Seeking Heart ; - peccable judgment brought him oe Mary Kaye Trio guests on new! fayette (2) Wrestling. (7) ‘“Arm- _ : a formidable following. | show (7) Soupy’s Ranch chair Theater. Phil Regan | ay pees age a Boy, 13, Rescued Tor the 1 haee , “Frontier Agent’ with Johnny! ‘‘Flight at Midnight.”’ feature | Tecey ane Yeraies 527 -Sporie. = ne nn ica irae a ie al : sasy on 4% sub jec rom cab ‘lack Brown,‘feature film film e | 8: 45—(2) Kartoons ‘After 7-Hour Stay aaee + ‘on have brightened | 7: 90—(4) My Little Margie. Mar-|11:38—(4) Moods in the Night. | THURSDAY EVENING lf L : the pages of another magazine \ ria | gie takes ‘“‘monkey-sitting’” job| Music @:00—(4) Music Time. (7) Det in 10 Foot Hole vy ima monthly column Party | ; o earn $50, stars Gale Storm, . , HOPEWELL JUNCTION, NY./ of One ’ ‘sae - oe pcan THURSDAY MORNING — (2) vamp Anderson. ® — David Ronk now knows better| He has recently added to his | Here s Admiral 8 sensational 1:00—(4) Today. (2) M 6:15—(4) News. (7) News. than most other 13-year-olds just|™any other careers a brand-new new “Personal Portable! s:00 — ( Television Theater. | ** - (2) Morning Show. | ¢. 594) Dr. Sweeney. (7) Lone| how nice it is to be able to walk | One which he calls “platform read- Compact book-size cabinet “Knight in a — Suit,” | 8:00—(7) Breakfast Club. Ranger. (2) News. around above ground oplpidercarng to audiences many of —only 4% Ibs. Plays in- deals with — equating | 5:90—(4) Playschool. (1)—Wixde. €:45—(4) News. He learned this yesterday when ns bbeone saagelyesl secs — stantly—without warm-up on pressure living against ro- ( N . _—s he spent seven hours half buried eerers 5 mantic ideals, stars Valarie} ‘2) Garry Moore. 7:00—(4) You Bet Your Life. 4 | 0+ ihe bottom of a 10 foot hole He| He is also vice president of Fadi- AC/DC or batteries. Rich Cossart. (2) Strike It Rich. War- |9:30—(2) Arthur Godfrey. Cisco Kid. (2) What's in a Word. | was trapped there while helping to a suger ns coanaed in ss, ims — New Civil ren io host; “ Jimmie 10:60—(4) Home. (7) Charm Kitch- | 7:30—(4) Justice. (7) Melody | dig a well in a farmhouse cellar wala P elense rae ng Wakeley Show. mm en Time. (2) Playhouse: sé dk A native New Yorker, Fadi. rugged case won Pp, Mar “Oklahoma Blues."’. . Feature : . “ ’ Rescuers did their best to prop| man was busy at an early age, or peel. Ebon Maroon film. 10:30—(2) Strike It Rich set) Drngnet. <2) FV Gost up sides of the hole to prevent a| jerking sodas in his father’s drug G Bei % ~ 8:30—(2) I've Got a Secret. Garry |11:¢0—(4). Bob White Show (7) Pro. Theater acer further cave-in that could have! store, Work im a ship chandier's LD inchihons ‘ge, st de “Moore host; panel quiz. Playhouse (2) Valiant Lady ~~ th - @27T completely buried the boy. Hpsid shop, running errands all over : , . ° - ig Town. placed a barrel around David for| the city, hopping around as an 9:00—(4) Tiflis Is Your Life. Ralph | 11:15—(2) Love of Life. 9:00—(4) The Marriage. (2) Tell- | added protection. office boy for a steamship com- Edwards re-creates life of Col. 11:30—(4) Travel Unlimited. (2)| tale Club Still there was always danger of] pany and assisting his brother, Ruby Bradley, Army Nurse and | “7. i Search ~ | 9-39-04) Liberace. (7) Hot Rods. | further collapse, and at one point| Edwin, rum a newspaper in For- veteran of Corregidor, a re-run ™ , ° (2) “I Led Three Lives.” David wept in fear as additional! est Hills followed. By the time e °) IBC Boxing. Middleweight | 11:45—(2) Guiding Light * ; oe -: dirt poured down into the hole. he was 16, Fadiman was a con- hoxing bout; Moses Ward vs te:68—(4) Michigan aa Most of the time. however, his| tributor te magazines. Yolande Pompey. (7) Royal THURSDAY AFTERNOON Didbabe spirits were high. He joked with) 41. career at Columbia Univer- Playhouse. “Unwritten Column,” | 12:00—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (2) | 1@:15—(2) Weather rescuers, read comic books and sity included writing, sorting mail film drama. Bob Murphy. 10:30—(4) Traffic Court. (7) Janet | drew pictures. For lunch he had! i,"s peanch post office, assisting A. Wine Dean. (2) Mr. McNutley sandwiches and ate in the university library, reviewing 9:30—(4) Mr. District Attorney. | 12:15—(4) Three Steps to Heaven * 8 ) ’ 10:45—(4) Philip Hart : , books for The Nation. taking maga- “Lover's Lane,” robberies send | 1». 59_(7) News. (4) Ladies First.| . , Under: the direction of @ state| 1, subscriptions, editing an un- D.A chase for three crim-| ~ - | 11:00—(4) News. (7) Soupy’s On. | highway engineer, rescue workers ae FE a (2) Welcome Travelers. : _, | dergraduate publication and work- tnals. (7) Man Against Crime. * (2) News. dug a trench down to the level ing in an amusement park. e Ralph Bellamy in ‘Death on the | 12:45—(7) Stars on Seven 11:15—(4) Everybody Sing. (7) | Where David was buried and freed Phi Beta Kappa honors were Diamond.” | 1:00—(2) Double or Nothing. Theater. (2) Featurette. al pi etgillirnd vahurt except) Fadiman’s upon graduation in 1925 AALS Houseparty. (4) Jean Mc- |11:30—(4) Moods in the Night. ~ ees Then he taught English for two -- Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations Usted tm this column are subject to change withoet notice ee 190 Wan, (780) CKLW, (800) Ww, «sse) boheme haces alias tet wren, (1%) __ | onetime mental patient was seized last night for the lover's lane slay- : : CKLW, Ceci] Brown TONIGHT 16 _-WEYE. Pred Wolfe —— — nnaes WJBK. Bob Murphy ing of bri gti py dng aie he _ ——— reportedly had been dating secret-| ee eS *ew) Be Masel RoW. ° ZREREDAL-EEEXING— Ty for two years paella Waterice, MeKena WXYZ, Pred Wolfe WCaR, WDag Caller a Tigh = The suspect, Anthony Stefanish, WJBK Horsemen CKLW. News, David . |e 0 W IR, Helen ‘Trent Ways Wattrtek, McKens. | was charged with murdering pretty WCAR, News, coe oa WXYZ, News, Muste brunette Doris Bogart. He told_po- C1S_WIR, Clark Quartet ww nh \WJ, Bud Lyne W. 6:45—WXYZ, News Guy Nuns WCAR, Harmony icles to be one of the country's leading editors, is -mederater—of television's new panel = quiz, 1 |What's In A Word?” Ex-Mental Patient Seized in Slaying JOLIET, Tl. @ — A 43-year-old BRK Baw setae Hal 6:15—WJR, Clark Quartet Bod lice she was shot to death Saturday night by three masked men who ter became editor-in-chief. He .rap- ; ~ In 1933, Fadiman was engaged te. review books for the New ‘Yorker tiigitine. In the decade that his name appeared as hook reviewer, his lucid style and im. years at the Ethical Culture High School and joined the People's In- stitute, where literary § classics were his subject until 1933. 108 NORTH Lecturing on the subject proved SAGINAW it ww L CKLW. Bette Chase WCAR, Coffee 12:45_WIR J. White WXY2, Lee Smite stopped his car on a country road. = 7:06—WJR, Dale Marr WWJ, Serenade CKLW, Eddie He said he drove her body T CA WIR, Ded Reynolds | Wrra Once, Welle CRLW guger Rese ee ee around the countryside for . two WXYZ. Bil Beers CKLW. Guy Nunn, David | .WCAR, Warm-up Time Sas ea ey Reciag /tiays without notifying the police WCAR, Magic Muste WJBK, News. Shine — WXYZ, Bill Stern “because they railroaded me once WJBK, Headless Horseman WCAR News | THURSDAY AFTERNOON bat ay Po sige before."” when he was sent to a 7 Hal) € (s_WIR, Lowen Themes | "El R artes 1:00—WIR, Road of Life mental institution. : ‘ WXYZ, Music Show 7:30—WWJ, Listen, Live 6:46—WJIR, L. Thomas WXYZ, Thursday's Musie Miss Bogart's body was found 7 06—WJR, Guest House WXYZ, Osgood, Wolfe CKLW, News, Bud *. couse early yesterday sprawling out -of : WEYZ Red Sueton Coun’ Gentile & mange WJBK, nana Ww? eer the door of Stefanich's cm parked) ) CKLW, Pulton Lewis A ee wae, eee 7 WXY2, Red Mqrpmee in a lover's lane near a Joliet area WJBK, Baseball 1:45—WWJ, News ? , WCAR, News, Musie CKLW, Toby David tcmee ace tec wn JBK. Headless Horseman | cemetery. She had been missing * o 7:185—WWJ, Pran Pettay 8:00—WJR, Jack White since Saturday night, a. rm CKLW, Guy Nuna WJ, Bob Maxwell "CREW, Your Boy Bue TIS WWJ, Pree Pettay - _ = ia s —-—t—Seee-—_1 San Dick Os: eee WEYZ—Pout-winter , Guy Nunp = . : WWJ, News. bells Latent) Leech 7:30—WJR, Peter L. ‘ 1 Meee WJBK. News, Gentile 1:45—WJIR, Guiding Light ww. 3 Beatty t's CKLW., Gabriel Heatter Myton! nin CKLW Dick Powell WXYZ, Silver Eagle 8:15—WJR, Bud Guest oo _ Mrs. Burtes KLW. Gabriel Heatter 7 4S—_WJR, Collingwood WXYZ, Fred Woife awe) ees is WJBK. Tom George WWJ. One Men's Pemily WCAR, Coffee With Clem CKLW, News Bud 743—WJR. B& R. Murrow CKLW, Ip the Mood 8:30—WJR, Musie Sai) WJBK, Tom George WWJ, 1 Man's Family 5.00_WJR, FBI : ~ WCAR, News, Harmony CKLW. Eddie er bE News Game 8:45—WCAR, Radio Rev. 2:15—WJR, Perry Mason 8:00—WJR, Meet Millie Stopper 9:00—WJR, Wm. Sheehan : WWJ, Roy Rogers CKLW. Room Gra), atinese Padade 2:30—WJR, Nora Drane ware. ~ WGAR, News, Music WXYZ, Breakfast Club WOAn: Gpante” CKLW, Official Detective t est uron treet WXYZ, Ghow World CKLW, News, WJBK, News, George WJBK, News, Mur 2:45—WJR, Brighter Dey WCAR, News, Ballads . gona Ee en Spen a Milli ‘andercook WCAR, News, Rhythm WW4J, Footlight Favorites $:15—WXYZ, Ghow World QUALITY & :15—WJR, Kitehen Club CKLW. Peggy Lee mxrn Jona. ¥ 0:15 WIR, Kiteen Chul w =e #:30-WJR. Summer Sympb. (Half Block West of Telegraph) 3:00— WIR, op House Six Shooter 9:30—WJR, Mre. Paige WXYZ, Vandercook S—WETR Jet Bee Tae gong Sage mit wee bene Saw ones Fighters ©6 BEAUTIFUL :00-—WIR, Crime Photos. i ar ViS—WIR, Pew and Jos WEYE. Bo McKensie bh oe ae COLORS wxra Feasamyy HElrig ae ee henge od $:15—WJR, House Party "cata nak eae 0:20—WIR, Jack Corson aLw, Ses Eee CKLW. Henry; Roth @ MODERNIZED and ites packeee: lara |S FINE CARPETS. and Hu Poul Whiteman ..| ward My 1rue Story CKLW Sadie Chase 9:15-CKLW, Rotn STREAMLINED ’ IP an JBK, Scores, Patrick cages aeen teen iMrpag bas waK aes Sunday 020 WIR Joes Carson @ GIVES YOU “DEAD . , 19:00—WJR, Tennessee Ernie | WCAR, News, pie WWJ. Right to Happin WRYZ, ” om) k URNITURE WW2, Pivver MeGes . | 10:16 WCAR, Temple 4:00—WJR, Music Haji, Wfat.| CKLW Sounding Board AIR” INSULATION CKLW. Prank | :e:26-WW4, Bod Hope WWJ, Beckstage Wife 10:00—WJR, Tennessee Eraie : . WXY2, Wattrick, McK. WJBK, Larry Gentile WXYZ, Whispering Streete CKLW. Eddie Chase wav, Need ag oe 16-18—WIR, Muste Bs WIBK, Don McLeod W. ¥. Edwards Free Estimate Will ie ae amie cence wee man | teak Lary Gente FREE PARKING IN | OWN WXYZ, ot- Town 10:46—WWJ, Break the Bank 4:18 WIR, M Music Hall mane Amaze You at Its CKLW. Date WXYZ Girt Marries, eae 19:18 WIR, Quest Star . 10:38-—-WJR, Proudly .7e Hall ; xY! of Town wd, ways ve coptel [ues —wam, arin » tection ton m3, wisi Grove | SAUD Tee LOW COST! LOT NEXT TO STO CKLW, Rey Girerdin yw, Strike Tt Rick wien We.se—WJR, cutny & mot , © = 11:00—WJR, News warn Florida, U8. 4:40— WIR. Music, Nowe wws, or eudly a : WW, News Wann, News, Mcleod WWJ, Woman in House Ray Oirerdi : ve a WCAR. News, Gongs CKLW George Wright wxvd—News Complete Line of: Ce ee ; WJBK., Larry Gentile 11:18—WXYS Ever since Bve Lind i 10:48—CKLW. Organaires * Wind os ¥ 11: 15S—WJR, Bob 11:30—WJK, Make Up Ming WXYZ. Wattrick-McK 11:60 WIR. News % Colored Slabs for Paties Pa WW), News SE SSUES woe | ey Mme tee fare | Saw: Rie | RTE NS top * Coment e TORE HOURS: 130 WIR, susie SS WI6K "sews * Comont Blocks S YZ, 11:4o— WJM, tosemary 6:18—WJR, Reynolds. Muste Chimney Caps e ; WwW. Phil ith Musie WWJ, Second Chance WCAR. Carousel Thal ~ Bon Reynolds * Precast Sills ; : qupncesT woanme WXYB, City Gyline 6:30—WJR, Music Matinee wx. Top of Town : Monday—Tuesday Wednesday—9 :30 Until 6 P. M. (eas evittacarte | enw, wenay werres | CRLW. “edaie Chase 1e_ wom, susie FHA and VA Thursday—Friday—Saturday—9:30 Until 9 P. M. | toa WXY2, Curtain Calle 6:46 WIR, Curt Massey Wave ‘Reve —— WIBK. Nechation ne eee eee — Approved * Ruth Decatur of Reading, the Real Archibald Clancy | Ruth. Pectin a vealied for SERVICE OPEN EVERY Interrupts Coftee Break |-Archibaid Clancy,” a man ap- All Mekes. Werk wit i - asked “Is some- Cuaranteed a ) wp — Each proached her and CAMBRIDGE, Mass one looking for me?” SATURDAYS ode 7 é day at the Middlesex registry of deeds a call goes out over thie public address system: ‘‘Paging Archibatd Glancy.’———+ No one. however, is really look- ing for Archibald Clancy. That's a code call meaning that employes Begin Alliance Parley ATHENS. Greece ® — Foreign Minister Stephan Stephanopoulos PHONE FE 4-2525 HAMPTON ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 W. Huren DIXIE és." 5421 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains | Phone OR 3-2345 | —_ ARPET & FURNITUR SERVING YOU WITH A ’ —_—_ — —_ 4 ¥ FORTY-FOUR. | ree Se Te _._ _THE-PONTFAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 _. ee = Measles Cases Sunshine Commuter _ Ge cae Le ee sacs fi! Barber good, careful haircut takes about Limp Becomes Useful , “ : Eee > AUGUSTA, Me, (UP) — Here is| Maine wag killed this past winter! PORTLAND, Me. (UP) — Ches- NEW HAVEN, Conn. .(UP)—Ac- —" ne 7 cy, inc. more proof that some wood ducks | * Orange Lake, Fla. ter W. Farr, hanging up his clip-| University of Arizona at Tucson,| cused of being a~ burglar (seen, y ron Austin Norvell goes INSURANCE 2 > . oe have a habit: of the wealthy — pers after 530 agers of barbering, | established in 1890, on ground do-/running from a store; Charles Or “4 spending the summer in Mai Salesmen drive their cars the | doesn’t think ch of men in his | nated by the town’s leading gam-| Starr protested he had a knee ail- : : r ne | greatest number of average miles| trade who “rush through a hair-|blers, was, constructed before the ment. After shuffling job around 70 W. Lawrence : > ‘ and the winter in Florida. The | each year, in comparison with the | cut in eight or nine minutes.” Ac-| state -of—Arizona had any high} a courtroom to show the judge, _— pn Served Chicken Pox, Whooping | Maine Fish and Game ‘Depart-! record of other occupational grups:' cording to Farr, retiring at 75, ‘a! schools. | he was acquitted. Cough Also Show Signs ae a of Decline fewer cases of chickenpox and County last week, the county 5: Ayan PU, Serarimneas 2, report showed | Figures released by Dr. John D. Monroe, county health director, listed 17 new cases of measles for the week ending July 17, compared to 35 cases the week before. The county’s mumps rate held steady at 2 cases — the same as the previous week, but-a few more cases of scariet fever and rabies » ing the county except Pon- tiac reads as follows: Wee ng - an Past July July FP Bs Week 10, 18 J “ —e e , " abi 3 ccaiiaieaiieiees: _ Diphtheria Pi sesaee i; rs he ae $ ; ij al Pneumonia ( lorms) ) e e saa 2 Poliomyolitis . -e 6 ; . | eae Ve z Scariet oes = SearsOPedic Mattress 5 i ss tee MM Harmony House Exclusive $6 Des © wee beereseeees wh Diarrhea . .. ccomee 1 ‘4 7 Ls nog AOI neste ; : : Permaweld coils help ensure h aPpy sleeping Pretty tan and Pay Only $13 Down Mononucleosis . vee 1 e LY) tyrquoise pattern on mattress. Full and twin sizes Pontiac City Health Department || Matching Box Spring....................... 59.95 reported only a handful of city peo- . a : — t Ne ple came down with any “‘catch- ing” diseases last week. The city report, also released by Dr. Monroe, lists no new cases of whooping cough, Rubella (German measles), rabies or polio. Only two cases of chicken pox and three cases of measles were listed on the “ity tally, which follows in full: d7 Includes 6-Drawer Double Dresser! v7 And Matching 54-In. Bookcase Bed! Trim, modern bedroom set in lustrous walnut finish. Double dresser has polished brass pulls: sleek beveled plate glass mirror; dove-tailed and dustproof drawers. 54-in. book case bed Bh wt apare 8 gives you ample room for books, radio or clock. Week 16. 18 27 3B . 3 sees | =e Te Measies SUITES: 3 7 ° . ~— ° “$ e Matching Pan - a rae ee © serveccesccses ove & 2 . «. Phaast ..65:°°*” Tew ay : | Foam Latex Bedding 88 @ Matching Chest $66 Sl ceecsee o e 2 . j . @ awntenees a 180-Coil Foundation <9 Dawn © Matching Dresse a ° . Self vent 1 ng 4//,-in-. foam latex mattre ‘ tuftless aaa Purchases Totaling ~ ilati /y- m x mattress with smooth tuft! Two-Way Radio Speeds surface for extra sleeping comfort. Sturdy cotton cover, cloth han- $20 Or More Can Be Made On ° dles. Foundation adds extra height and support, 54-in Furniture Dept. Factory Truck Hauling . Second Floor S NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.—(UP) . Two-way short-way radios in com- pany trucks have speeded intra- plant operations 50 per cent at the + Bell Aircraft Corp. here. The radio system has eliminated problems in distribution and tim- : ing of pickups and deliveries at | manufacturing, engineering and | administrative locations scattered over Bell's %-acre facility. Super- visors and foremen in distant sec- \q : ; , a _ 7 a > a — = 4 | tions of the plant can converse on y nus. oe 4 Bring the warmth ond charm $ 7 2 ; 30-Inch 88 | — the dispatcher when neces- , $ solid maple, or quaint Colonial Size . : : styling to your home. . . at sav- q a : Eventually the radios will be tied || Modern Sofa and Chair 169 Refactor, table Gene 16 me venue 1 3.50 into the company’s modern fire ings! 10 sav \ Down department for civil defense. Rich Frieze Cover 28 x 56 - inches. Four chairs to vime fasy Terms match. Duxbury maple finish. $5 DOWN seaweed | | The olive tree grows slowly and Attractively styled Harmony House set with rich frieze cover in ’ 39-1 h 95 2 seidom.-reaches-a-height of more{4—jicrmony- Seawn—Gray;-6 Mint—Green-—-or-red_- \ ne than 30 feet. colors. Softly padded springs, sturdy hardwood frame i) Size ‘ 2.50 ; e é e od . Down eres >; = | New Hi Base eta | Rocker-Chair 4 ryan 95 | - -Inc Smart Limed Oak Finish vy, Size 4 | ae $4 Down Need an extra bed for your home . . . here’s a rollaway bed that opens and folds easily that will give you many nights of sleeping iS —! 3995 oe B\ \ Pa $3 Down < comfort. Buy now and take advantage of ~ his low price! Heavy angle } Looks like a chair, yet gives you ' y ang “4 ‘ e ° Of os et 4 all the comfort of a rocker: Sturdy SALE! Unfinished Furniture tron frome with woven steel >. te Be ee “<| hard vd fr d ft] j- - > springs. z - . ee, ae? te Ae ardwood frame and softly pa 26 ad ~e SB ma. : Pe —asa pismium col springs Seo te Rh: ee ee r Frege? | ioe go aes] ced premium coil springs Ses 5-Drawer Chest Double Dresser ; eee es, Pe hee j this distinctively styled rocker to- ’ USE SEARS EASY ero Gee Oe I day, check its features and buy 88 88 . wae x4 a a - 2.50 2.50 . ; PAYM ibeitiies Hees tise it at Sears where you can save! < - ° = YMENT PLAN Dow Down . Purchases Totaling Smoothly sanded, ready to Here is 8 roomy drawers for = 7 $20 Or Mor be finished 30-in. wide. ~~ ‘storage. Smoothly sanded. ; : two floor lamp styles . . . _ Swing-arm or upright =a 3 » SAVE Ly = q 3.10! Reg. 19.98 Harmony House floor lamps Pattctaa k bik. Ets RAS a New Hi-Riser Beds 39° Two in the Space of One $9 Down An excellent answer to space and budget. limitctions!-A fongster hi-riser bed with 140-coil, 79-in. top mattress and !14-coil, 74-in ~bottom mattress. Sturdy angle and tubular steel frame } eee a eae | 88 Paiat. concrete or mle >, Choice metal, i of outside : . ) with this tough, durable Floor = ¢ Bright 3-way Lighting! It covers old Coolie style shade with brass- plated base and center rod... ee | aa . three Byrn oP ped = ee : | JE . _— a : Wrougnt iron. -in. shade, made-to-measure verti-stripe ° yeu ewes, | aluminum awning Honeysuckle Cribs 39” headquarters! . ngs We carry @ — Boneh Add Verti-Stripe aluminum awnings tom and read . = or or Sears exclusive folding Air-Fold HPT Now -4 Plastic Teething Rails $4 Down Good hardwood construction—double drop sides with toe-touch etal aluminum awni your home side release. 3-D decals — pete ball decoration. Easy-moving e Cloth om ngs to . meee UNDER FHA casters. Sturdy end post. Natural or white colors * Fibergles for beauty, year ‘round protection! ~ Innerspring Crib Mottress...........'.........7.88 Lamp Dept.—Second Floor igi Awning Dept—Main Floor ” to0 your monty back SENDS 1X4 N. Saginaw Street Phone FE 5-4171 4 ‘ : ;