* ‘Met ae - - if The Weather Partly Cloudy, Het Details page two ® x is wr we er @ ~ ae. Soe ase mo Oe . i ce x + = eee FEN Ee & y ie wh THE G : x : yd ae csr ert oe as 43 4 @ ‘ 4 aur o ONTIAC PRES fe 113th YEAR kkkkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, mes ‘THURSDAY, AUGUS ST 4, 1955 09 PAGE ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS PHOTOS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Heat Wave May End This Weekend * * x * * -Sovie ~Bulganin Calls Ike's Proposal ‘Unrealistic But Praises Job Done at Geneva Big 4 Meet, Offers Own Plan MOSCOW (7) — Premier | Bulganin today turned) down as “unrealistic” Pres-| * x * x * * * Good Time to Dream of a White Christmas ident Eisenhower's plan for) ¢ © a swap of military blue-| prints and mutual air in- spection of each other's territories. Deputies to the Supreme Soviet Parliament assem- bled in the Great Kremlin hall burst into laughter when Bulganin said the real effect of the President’s pro- posal would. not be consid- erable because “both coun- | tries have limitless terri-| tories on which one could) hide anything.” The President offered at the, Geneva summit conference on July | 21 to pinpoint American —| establishments and let them come | under the eyes of Russian aerial | inspection teams in return for re- ciprocal action by the Russians. The President said he made the proposal to convince every- The Soviet premier’s rejection of the Eisenhower plan came near the end of his 95-minute report to | the Soviet people on the Geneva | armored car, shot a conference. He spoke to a special | session of 1,500 deputies to the) Supreme Soviet. GENEVA EASED TENSION He made three main points about the conference: patting an end to the cold war. He pledged the U.S.8.R. would . work to end the cold war. - He said all four powers dis- played a desire at Geneva to end ——--~¢ COOL THOUGHT — A psychological attempt to beat the heat is¢——— | made by Hennepin ( Minn.) County Sheriff Frank Sramek as he adorn his office wall with a holly wreath and sign telling the days un * * * * x x * t Rejects Mi itary Inspection Plan fl Airmen Freed Emotion “by Reds Leave - China for Home Fliers in’ Good Health, (ase After 30 Months as Commie Prisoners HONG KONG (?—Eleven | U.S. airmen happily crossed the Hong Kong border to | freedom today in good phys- | ‘ical shape and mental spirit | lafter 2'2 years’ captivity in |Communist China. | Five and a half hours jafter their release, the 11 | left in two plush Air Force | transports for Manila. From | there they will be flown to | Tokyo and the U. S. West Coast for reunion with their families. Col. John Knox Arnold Jr., 41, Silver Spring, Md., their leader, bitterly told a press conference, “Peiping is not entitled to a god damn thing’ in now releasing the 11 B29 crew members. Communist China convicted AP Wirephote | Christmas, when it is usually a bit cooler than present seicperekeen’| (Dee cool thoughts the sign is supposed to engender, the sheriff still Gun Battle Nets Ea 2 Brink Bandits Fase Working Third €E Afte se ton Oe Pontiac Area Employment Guard in Buffalo Turnpike Survey in Area Finished | MTA Head Is Convinced Is Best Possible them as sples last November, | They had been held since their plane was shot down Jan. 12, | 1953, in the Korean War, Arnold declared his B23 was shot|U, S. airmen released in Hong, | COL. sottn kK. ARNOLD JR. Emotion grips released flier, Col. John K. Arnold Jr., 41, of, Silver Springs, Md., one of the 11| “down 35. to 40 miles south of the! ‘Kong today by Chinese Commu- | Yalu River China border while on | nists as he started to talk into a | Toll Road Route Here @ leaflet dropping mission over microphone in response to a ques- Nortty Korea. All crewmen bailed | tion as to how he felt. He tumed. out and were captured in_ North | }away and Titimbled: ‘I simply BUFFALO, guard made off with $160,000 in race- track receipts last night. Two were captured after a gun battle. The | loot was recovered, The bandits, clad in silk-stocking masks and armed with a sub- N.Y. @ — Three) ‘Shows Increase Over 34) Despite a moderate employment decline in the past |armed men ambushed a Brink's) 30 days, there are currently 5,900 more persons working | Tumpike Authority yesterday com- | and/in the Pontiac area than there were-a year ago, the | Pleted a block-by-block survey of | | Pontiac office of the Michigan Employment Security Commission reported today. The area's largest industry—motor vehicles—has on its payrolls 3,700 more employes than a. year ago, said | Pontiac to the south Oakland County line and said he is con- | best possible. The chairman of the Michigan directly to deny Communist Chi- | the proposed toll road route from vineed the general layout is the | | Korea, he said in -his first Chance | a's assertion the plane intruded |" Page 2.) into China, IN GOOD CONDITION | Two medical checks after they. crossed the border bridge to free- }dom today showed all in “fairly « good condition,” three doctors re- in German Mine | | can't say how I feel.” (See acs | 41 Feared Dead | | Brink's, machinegun, broke into the James H. Dudley, office manager. Inc., garage and vault) Employment currently stands at 80,800 in the area before the car arrived-with almost north from 14-Mile road, 800 less than during the $498,000 in receipts from the Fort | : previous 30-day period, Dudley said. Erie race track. just across the A continuation of the _ liagara Ri ada. Three | Bee's: rir eareran the | Slight downward trend is HeahhPirecter truck. Favors Shorts : iforeseen through mid-Sep- Two of the holdup men were |tember, the manager captured a half hour later after | stated. He estimated the George N. Higgins, of Ferndale, | said, “‘I'm willing to listen to any suggestions | needed before the present: route } will disrupt individual homes and communities the least while still meeting traffic demands,”’ Higgins stated his group will meet Aug. 15 with Detroit Mayor | | Albert E. Cobo to “listen to any but feel only a few) minor engineering changes are ported. Maj. William H. Baumer, 32, of Lewisburg, Pa., when the plane was shot down. He later suffered frost bite. Elated in their freedom, was on crutches. He said his left leg was wounded | the fliers refused to look back into. the Red China, Arnold gianced over his shoul- der and said, “That is all. I | don't want te look back any | 44 Others Injured as Fire, Explosion Rock Ruhr Valley Coal Pit GELSENKIRCHEN, Germany (| — Forty-one German coal miners | were believed dead today in a fire ‘and explosion which rocked the} "See Cold Front Arriving in Area by Friday Night Electrical Storm Hits Region Yesterday, Fails to Bring Relief : 8 a. m. 7 lla. m. ol . 9 a. m..,.. 83 Noon a: 10 a. m.....88 1 p m.,...95 The thermometer regis- tered in the 90s today for ithe sixth straight day, but the weather bureau held | out hope of relief this week- — lend, Scattered electrical storms 'in the northwest section of 'Oakland County left some | homes without utility serv- ‘ice. A rash of minor traffic | accidents were attributed to the driving rain. One storm death was recorded | in-the state | The temperature was expected to hit the 90s again tomorrow, but a cold front moving through the western plain states may bring re- lief from the heat tomorrow night. | Cooling breezes should end the heat wave by Saturday or Sunday, | the weather bureau stated. | The immediate local forecast | was for partly cloudy and con. tinued hot and humid through to- merrow with widely seattered thundershowers mostly in the afternoon and evening. Tonight's low was predicted at 72-76, : The mercury in downtown Pon- | tiae climbed from 79 at: 8 p.m, today to 95 at 1 p.m. BOY IS KILLED Dean Richards, &, of Laingsburg, was struck by lightning and killed yesterday while playing alone on the grounds of that Shiawassee County Community's school, - Storm damage in this area was | confined to power line breaks due |" lightning. A traffic light at Dixie Hwy. and | andersoovil Rd. in Waterford | Was off from 3:55 p.m, to 4:45 ;p.m. A minor traffic tie-up oc- |eurred until Waterford: Township police arrived. The Detroit Edison Co, reported [Pree 150 persons without service | from .two to three hours in Wa- terford Township. Seattered serv- ice shut-offs occurred in White ' Lake, Springfield, Commerce,. Rose, Independence and Orion | Townships plus Pontiac city. Wires were down In Waterford at 4049 Walton Bivd. and at Hedge and Edgeton Rds. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. re- the cold war. “I thought I was a dead man,” | Referring to Eisenhower's plan as-a step toward disarmament, Bulganin said: “We must pay tribute to his ef- forts for a settlement of this ques- tlon, but the real effect could be considerable and we said in un- | official talk at Geneva that both | countries have limitless territories on which one could hide any- thing.” Bulganin said the Soviet plan for arms inspection ang control published in Lendon May 10, and repeated by him at the Geneva conference, was “more realistic.” Bulganin said he agreed with (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) said Eugene Clohessy, 27, the | wounded guard. “Saw ‘em and pulled my .38 but | before I could fire a shot the guy | with the tommy gun got me in) the shoulder.” | Clohessy was reported in good | condition at Emergency Hospital | today with a chest wound. * * * The bandits were identified by police as Anthony Pettinato, 39, Baltimore, and Sylvester neon, the Bronx, Chicago+125 Years Old CHICAGO (®—Today is Cheago’s birthday, the 125th anniversary of the nation’s second largest city. an U-bleck running gua battle. (figure will drop by another for Men on Job | 500 in the six weeks’ period. Unemployment: at.. mid-July i) “estimated at 2,900, up 300 in the} past month but 3,100: less than al |year ago, Dudley said. ‘The un- employed now make up 3.3 per cent of the total labor force com- pared with 3 per cent in June and | 7.1 per cent in July, 1954. “Increases in the number of unemployed refiect some de- creases in employment, continu- ing immigration and the en- trance into the laber market of school graduates and summer. ; time job seekers,” Dudley said. Unemployment compensation ac- tivity continued at a very low level, reaching the lowest — in two years last week. LINCOLN, Neb. w—City Health| "8ssestons the mayor has about Director James T. Googe says the | neal’ time has come wheh ‘“‘we should | . break American tradition.” | Once the turnpike's construction How? By making it acceptable is started, the chairman declared, | to wear walking shorts to work. |" ‘Tm going to insist that it be Dr. Googe said last night, “Many finished as near the 2-year. mark | men, including myself, change in- | as possible." Previous estimates | to shorts upon arrival home from | | placed construction time at three work. But we don’t wear them on years. the job because they aren’t ac-| The authority will meet Monday | ceptable. What it takes is for 30 | in Lansing with the State Highway | or 40 men in a town to band to-| Department in an attempt to agree | gether and lead the parade.” le a coordination of plans. High- way Commissioner Charles M. | te | Zeigler has asserted he will push | $4 Million Meters | construction of a& north-south free- NEW YORK —The city's 26,213 | way fo run through Oakland which parking meters registered a total would make a toll road imprac- revenue of +438 568,268 in 1954. ‘ tical. | more.” Another said, “I can’t, | Dalbusch workings in this Ruhr | ported about 600 phones out. The the reute through the Detroit | . . city. 1 iJ won't look back. | Another 44 miners were injured, | Emotion so choked Arnold when | some of them seriously. he was called before television =< inewsreel cameras at Hong Kong's | Fire raging through the niine | halted rescue operations. Mine plush Jockey Club that he couldn’ | official % k i | speak. He turned away and mum- walang Foren « neiripacalipen, b “ } rou eel.” I simply can't say how I P 4 dead.” Hy In Today’ Ss Press | out, County NeW... 2... 60005.: The explosion followed a fire in| Editorials aosttiorboanode re the mine yesterday. Food News.......... La 41 _—_ a dt) BERERCARRAnCE 7 frru 30 : ~eape eron va.» +, 91X-Year-Old Drowns TV & Radio Programs. 59 DETROIT w—Six-year-old James Wilson, Eari.. -. 46 |H. Miles drowned yesterday while Women's Pages. veeieie's rm ‘thru 45 ‘wading in the Detroit River. Emancipator Heldenbrand Stri Wednesday’s Press announced that six hardy pioneers in Pontiac had agreed to wear sport shirts without neckties when the mercury reached 90, providing other a showed a willingness * Reason triumphs. Sanity prevails. (And that’s unusual when it comes to fashions— animal, vegetable or mineral.) to follow. * beginning of time. It was amazing. It. was unanimous. And it was “YES.” x .& Y hwide. This was a startling innovation, for the t.b.m. has been a silent, suffering victim of social edicts since the The response was immediate. Replies came in by telephone, telegraph, special > delivery, dog team, registered mail, cablegram, sky . writing, smoke signals and pony express. Yes, and late this morning an Egyptian hieroglyphist un- ' earthed an unmistakable ,“yes” chiseled on a Baby- lonian tablet. Verily, lis move is becoming world e * } P: ‘ * x * | | x * . This is the ‘same he has guttceal to 2 ‘toa of that neckt Which you favor? usually photographic record of social leadership; % 3 5 Howard V. Howard Van Antwerp Heldenbrand because of his un- physiognomy; because of his long “asm: eco dmaambamens Appended herewith are t bilitating effects of 90 sans necktie, x * These photos will be put }may Explain All. ' x * Yes, Washington and Li Business Men Everywhere. of pioneers to victory and ¥, eldcotanall Now rohit and tbe naa a ; _ ‘ Fred Haggard and ye solemn scrivener-publisher whe serves as historian, but without portfolio. — “———@ 6 pay on pg mga Businessmen, rally. Rescue teams had brought up 16 bodies before the fire drove them | ‘in underground vaults that from now when analysts s contention that marks this era, these significant pictures Drayton Plains-Lake Orion-Clark- | ston region was hardest hit. Serv- | ice was restored completely this | afternoon after crews worked all | night Consumers Power Co. reported }only one minor service break Pontiac Hospitals treated three (Continued on Page 2, Col, 4) ws | Only Bonanzagrams Offer Cash Award | The Press has been recéiving What's My Line puzzle answers | in the mail recently, The only puzzle for which we are offering a prize is Bonanzagram, What's My Line is for enjoyment only. es Blow for Freedom, Comfort _ wo likenesses of His Grace. One was taken after he had been enduring the de- plus temperature and its concomitant exhaustion. The. other was taken after | he had discarded Mankind’s Greatest Summertime Curse and was comfortably clad in a sport shirt, x * on micro-film and preserved rve posterity. Centuries dy the strife and global * * : ncoln will ultimately move _ over. Lincoln freed the slaves but Heldenbrand freed He led his stalwart band | success. His compatriots were Phil Monaghan, Abe Lapides, Bob Critchfield, Ww Ree eo eee the soorceet H ~ atin aia a tama aia, mealies — Report Claims Building Speed on Expressways Must Be Increused DETROIT (INS) — Detroit pressways will’ have to be built at three-and-a-half times the present ‘rate for the next 25 years to keep up with the expected traffic growth of that period. This is the basic conclusion of | a two-year study of Detroit area traffie patterns that wa¢ pre- Data Presented ex: | sented to Mayor Albert E. Cobo, State Highway Commissioner | Charles M. Ziegier and County | Highway Engineer Leroy C. Smith at a meeting yesterday. At least 216 miles of express. ways must be added in the next 25 years at cost of $1,056,000,000. Dr. J. Douglas Carroll, the director of the $750,000 original destination survey, said this would | barely keep up with traffic de- mands. indicated yesterday rat LL Released Airmen Sin the proposed Oakland-Hasting. | Fort-Vernor and Grand River) routes would receive highest priority. Mach of the program will | remain indefinite until Congress ' clarifies the future availability ot Federal funds to aid in the constraction. | At the same meeting, Mayor Cobo said a $20 million continued | construction on the Edsel Ford | and John Lodge expressways_ would run through next July. By that time, Cobo, Ziegler and “Smith hope that Congreés will have passed some form of high- ‘way program, Diaper-Clad Tot Stops City Traffic in2 A.M. Stroll DETROIT @—Screaming tires of veering cars, their brakes sudden. ly slammed to the foorboard, | brought Patrolman Arthur Lavigne and Bernard Hickey tearing up from blecks away at 2:45 a.m They veered and slammed their brakes down, too Right in the middle of busy | Twelfth Street sat 2-vear-old Deb. -orah Dunigan, clad only in a diaper and clutching a half-filled baby | bottle. Apparently it had been just toe hot and Deborah had decided to leave her apartment crib for a breath of cool air, without men. | tiening Mt to her sleeping par. | ents, She strolled a block be- fore sitting down. Lavigne and Hickey couldn't | find any houses in the neighbor. | hood with lights on. So Deborah | got a ride to headquarters, and | police settled back to await the) inevitable frenzied telephone call. | Tt came at 5:45 a.m., a moment | after Mrs, Nancy Dunigan got up) to Prepare breakfast for her fac- tory~worker husband. Ralph. She | rushed by cab to reclaim Deborah, | explaining: “Deborah sleeps in a room by herself, and I'm not surprised that she wanted to get some air. was 80 at midnight. figure how she unhooked the screen door.” ” Two Men Are len Are Named to Plan Commission | the sixth target. which was | the coast and, as I recall, about 35 Tt, But. 1 can't! SCT ee PEE Tg EP AR ORE Be "4 "ee | Sak ai meet Hie omting Mae \ ‘ . ! eu f JUST A TOY FOR A BOY — atory belongs to Charles Michael, place to —— ne hobby, — long Way to Usajima” This $50,000 observ- is astronomy. It's | Own Lyrics to ‘Tipperary’ HONG KONG (®—The 1 aurmen released from Red Chinese tivity had a song ready for their | freedom. One lyric, to the tune of “Tipperary’’: “It's a long way to Usajima (GI slang for United States), . “It's a long way to go . “It's a long way to Usajima, | | the sweetest land | know “To hell with People’s China. . . “It's a long way to Usajima, the cap- \land of the Golden Gate. “It's a long way, where I've got a date.“ Their new uniforms fitted the men loosely, Col. John Know Ar- nold said ruefully, “Once I was © fat.” He quickly added he feels “very well but somewhat | tired.” ; ' Air Force officers said the men had a combined accumulated pay of more than $70,000 Telling of the MIG fighter attack | which forced the 11 to bail cut of their flaming B29, Arnold told the news conference a] * i “1 don't know the exact spot. ; But we were on a routine leaflet | mission against six targets in Ko- rea.” Ile said they had to bail out at “near or 40 miles or more south of the Yula River,” He said he was picked up about 8 a.m. next morning by troops he new knew to be Chi- nese Reds. Each airman was captured individually. He reported the group was taken | across the Yula to Red China Jan. | 16 or 17, 1953—four or five days | after being shot down. He said he was held and treated Rejected by Bulganin. Ike's Inspection Plan (Continued From Page One) Eisenhower jit is necessary to fol- low a constructive and not a | negative line in world affairs, The. delegates applaude | Bulganin announced he and Com | munist party chief Nikita S | Khrushchev will visit Britain next | spring. They applauded again iwhen he announced French Pre- Waterford Township Supervisor | mier Edgar Faure has been invited | Lloyd Anderson and Portiac Town- | ship Supervisor Howard C. Deck- er have been named to the Oak- land County Plan Commission by | Supervisors’ Chairman Floyd An- dhews, They replace County Corporation unsel Harry J. Merritt and stant Civil Defense Director -ansford Bromley who resigned to | oe full time-to their other \ T to the Soviet nicer. * Bulganin conhcied. “We will now have to find ways sues. The foreign ministers will face difficult tasks but if discus- sions continue in the proper then they should be fruitful. Soviet Union will do everything in spirit uhes. The new appointees will attond their first meeting Aug. 10. Royal Birthday Date | LONDON «® — Queen Mother Elizabeth observed her 55th birth day today, its power to make the forthcoming October talks between the foreign ministers of the four powers suc- : * * * +--The deputies will debate Bulgan- in’s report tomorrow. They will also approve actions taken by the Cabinet and the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet in the pefiod since The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — cloudy and continued rather hes ta | hamid. through tomerrow with widely seattered. thundershowers mostly jn the afternoon and evenine. en —e — Paes pa 72-78 hgh to hear ight variable win tecuming south to southwest = Today in Pontiac ng lwest teMperature preceding & & m am: Wind velocity 15) m 30 Directions bd Precipitation 07 Sun sets Thursday at 7-48 pm fun rises Priday at 5:28 am “oon rises Thursday at 8 ae am arn Moon sets Priday at 1:26 a Downtown Tem Say grapes OB Mickeys 76 1D TF &. Mivsdeees..77 12 x seneaves 86. Misssces...9 ip. m Hy OB. Marsceves 108. M..605.5..08 Wednesday in Pontiac ‘Ae tecorded downtown) af gt Weather "Warm ._ Fain. Year ‘Ace ii in Pontiac Soviet between sessions, U.S. Ambassador ° Charles EF. = Bohlen — Eisenhower's interpreter at Geneva — listened intently to | Bulganin’s version of the Geneva | conference, The total U.S. mileage fo rail- road line in 1934 was. 221,000 com- | pared to 250.972 in 1995, when | to reselve several outstanding is- | the last meeting in February. The | Presidium acts for-the Supreme | as a days and then put in prison. said he never was -in a camp Last Sunday came the news ‘of being released. prisoner of war for four He | prison * *” “twas sitting in my cell alone.” | he said. He said he had spent 11 | ' months in a cell, but was advised | not to answer if he had been i! solitary confinement Arnold said they received Red Cross food parcels for the first | time Sunday although they knew, ‘from sources not identified, that | Red Cross packages had been at | Peiping lor at least two months. ‘Bald y Beans Bow | Benignly Before Barren Results ~ STOKE MANDEVILLE, iT a) Bad news for balcdies: The great hair-raising scheme under way at the hospital here appears to be proving a failure Its not official vet, but the 8 bald hopefuls experimenting with | the drug pyridyl carbinol report | England hair. bd ¥ * “We've just one or two new fuzz | | patches to show,” a hospital | | spokesman reported. “Otherwise, | I'm very much afraid it's been a! washout.’ The experiment was launched | last November after a Glasgow | doctor reported two oldsters on | his books sprouted a new fuzz aft- | jer taking the drug for artery trou- | ble His findings, medical press, reported in the) set off a nation- . | wide rush for the drug, despite of- | | ficial warnings it was unsafe to. use without foedecal _ Supervision. | Dr. P. DLN - ‘eon general | medical consultant at the hospital, | roped in the 80 local baildies for _the pilot experiment. They've been | jtaking four. pills daily, and their _scaps have been photographed ev- ery month, In a week or so the 80) men will parade before the cameras for the last time and a panel of doctors | will study the results. “It's going to be a big disap- 'pointment to thousands,” the hos- pital spokesman said. “But there we are—it was worth a try.” Expressway Project ‘Low Bidder Named equipped with a huge telescope with a 10-inch lens 16-year-old honor and a three-inch astrograph camera. Built in modern student. of Bucyrus, Ohio. His father built it on the, stone, the observatory houses. a chart room, photo- | family's 13-acre estate so Charles Would have a good: graphic laboratory and a library-study, _ Nii to Russia | atmosphere | would be out of the question. NIXON SUBSTITUTE | that Low ton - Brighton . expressway announced. today by Highway Department. Cc. A. Hull Co., Inc., ef Dry- den, was low with a $144,007 bid for a contract to build a bridge to carry Twelve Mile and Beck Roads over the expressway two miles northwest of Novi a short distance north of present U.S. 14, Completion date is June 15, 1956. | The expressway will start at | U.S. 23 just east of Brighton and extend 2144 miles to a connection _with the present divided highway on US. 16 east of Farmington inear Middle Belt Road. . Tt will | Feplace U.S. 16 between these two points. Total estimated cost is_ | $11,000,000. | , Private Syn “"'to Pipe Water aio Area dicate Plans the State | bidder for construction of | hauer, 22, of the Adams address, the first project in the Farming-| was tréated for a minor back in- was | jury. \ ike AFEA Head for 1957 Dr. James Is President ‘Give Research Awards EAST LANSING & —~Dr. H. Brooks James, head of the Agri- cultural Economies Department of | North Carolina State College, was named president-elect at the an- nual meeting of the American Farm Economic Association yes- terday at Michigan State Univer- sity. . He will take office for the 1957-58 term, Dy. Kart Brandt, associate di- rector of The Food Kesearch In- stitute of Stanford University, elected at the last annual meet: mg, took over as president for the 1955-56 term, | Elected as vice presidents were =! Dr. Lawrence Witt of MSU and Karl A. Fox of the President's “| Council of Economic Advisors of Washington, D. C. Lowell Hardin of Purdue was re-elected secre- tary-treasurer. Cash awards of $250 for out- standing research reports went to ” by Nixon Hinted Rex F. Daly of the U.S, Agricul- White House Sources tural Marketing Service, f Rule Out Possibility-tke yee ~ Sealine ot Feed | May Go Himself Similar awards for outstanding theses went to Dr. Roger C. Woodworth of the University of Georgia, Dr, Norman Zellver of The University of California and _Dr. Louls M. Goreaux, who studied at The University of Chi- cago and has since returned to France, WASHINGTON (INS) — —— close .to the White House believe | that Vice President Richard M. | Nixon may visit Russia if the of East-West- friend- ship continues, However, they ruled out the pos- siblity that President Eisenhower | of the year in the J of Farm might make a trip to the Kremlin Economics went to Harold Brei- himself aad pln U.S. Agricultural Mar- ~ | ice, The sources pointed out that | a public sfeaking canna leant Eisenhower's dual role of chief i: @ Re " ef state and head of government |‘ Martin of Ohio State. ties him closely to his job and |p¢ raises insoluble protocel prob- | | by lens. | North Carolina State and Kansas | Furthermore. such a visit by State tied for second place. the chief executive would call for similar visits to the capitals of Race With Police — ‘Brings Jail Term a Louisiana State team with | U. S. allies—and such a series of visits by the busy President | j j days t : andy ‘they've’ game ‘baccly) u uew | these objections applies to the days to ponder whether his 100- vice president who has gone on mile-an-hour race with police Tues- | many good-will visits as a repre- day night was worth while, Lester Kurkowski, of 4180 | Rochester Rd., who led Troy Township police on a 5-mile chase |on John R Road from 16 Mile | Road to Auburn Road, was sen- | tenced to 90 days in Oakland Coun- |ty Jail and assessed a $100 fine and $25 costs last night by Town- ship Justice Scott Belyea. Officers said Kurkowski's driv- —_- of Eisenhower. The | resident has warmly praised | Nixon for his handling of the as- signments. * Close associates of Nixon report that he is eager to undertake the | trip. Ambassador to Moscow | Charles E. Bohlen, an adviser to | Eisenhower at Geneva, is reported | to have counseled the President | er’s license had been revoked two the time is diplomatically | years ago by Detroit authorities ripe for och a gesture. | \for a 3-year-period. Heat Wave Relief Seen by Weekend (Continued From Page One) persons for heat prostration yester- | day. The Oakland County Sheriff's switchboard received a series of minor accident reports shortly aft- er the rain hit yesterday after. | noon, Two Avon Township were * | Pontiac Post Office | Still Setting Records New records continue to be set at the Pontiac Post Office. Accord- ing to figures released by Leslie H, Dean, ‘acting postmaster, mail receipts for July totaled $90,703.96 while 2,237,389 pieces of mail were processed, The receipt figure represents an | increase of $11,247 over July 1954 of U.S. Farm Economics;+ George | A $100 award for the best article The student debate on the topic. low-income farmers was won | A 21-year-old Troy Township ce- | However, it was noted. gone of ment mason will have the next 90 | -_ upswing of 176,947 pieces of The Day in: Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — An appeal is | being made to area residents to turn out for the Birmingham Com- munity Bloodmobile, which will be stationed at the First Methodist Church on West. Maple from 2 to '8 p.m. Monday. Appointments origin were to| have been made no later than last ; Monday. However, because so jmany vacationers have returned since the recruiting period, the time limit has been extended by the Oakland County Blood Advis- ory Board of the American Red Cross, sponsors of the drive. Mrs. 0. S, Koskinen, one of the | blood chairmen for the county said, “lt is se diffienlt te meet the |" county bleed Weeds at this time | ' of year, that this can't be ac- complished unless people ~do do make an effort.” Donors can be credited in the .\Community Blood Bank so that their donations given now will en- title Birmingham residents to blood in case of a future. need. Mrs. Koskinen said even “walk- in” appointments will be accept- ed on the day of the drive, but added that operations would be | speeded if they were made in ad- vance. | Local. residents who may be | called include Mrs. Koskinen of | Bloomfield Glens, Mrs. Leland | Rosemont of Devonshire road, or Mrs. Edward Lérchen of Gordon | | court, Birmingham blood chairman. | * s * While the city's water tanks have shown not much more than a normal demand for the | past several days, Fire Chief Park Smith said yesterday he sees no immediate rescinding of the city’s added sprinkling reg- ulations (no sprinkling between 9 a. m. and 6 p. m.) which took effect July 15. | “The demand in surrounding areas is just as heavy, and the water tables have not recovered to any great extent," he explained. ® ° ¢ Games scheduled to start the | YMCA Softball League plavoffs on Morday have been moved up | ta 6:30 tonieht Birmingham Merchants will play Birmingham | Natonal Bank at St. James Park. | with Michigan Bell Telephone and | Reeves Service vying at Booth Park. In court cases tried yesterday hefore Justice John J. Gafill, | Rocer Miller, 27, of 2080 McClure, | paid a $28 fine after pleading | | guilty to charges of speeding, vio- | lation of a traffic sienal and making an improper right turn. Pleading guilty to a charge of Area Woman Iniured in Three-Car Pileup Injured in a t-car pileun yester- | day on Rochester Road, Mrs. Bar- |bara Case, 22, of Rochester, was /reported in good condition today by | authorities at. St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. She was riding with her - hus- band, Charles, 24. when their car | was struck in the rear by one driven by Thurle V. Riggle,. 58, also of Rochester. _ Riggle told Oakland County Sheriff's deputies his car struck Case’s when a third auto, driven by Lucille—C. Hartwick, 39, of Rochester, struck him, driving him into the Case car. Case had stopped for a bus. injured when their auto careened into a ditch and overturned after its windshield wipers failed and the rain blinded them. Admitted to Pontiac General Hospital with a back injury was the driver, Viola Stuart, 40, of 2588 N. Adams Rd. Her condition was reported as good. Her passenger, Marilyn Ann Fiel- At 148 N. STILL The driver told-Cakland County Sheriff's deputies that the wipers failed as she started to pass an- control of the car, which swerved into a ditch on the left side of the Pontiac. The_.sterm_dropped temperature from 92 to 74 between 3 and 4 p.m. here. Manchester Man Hurt . When Auto Overturns Thrifty Drug Store BUSINESS AS USUAL All Debris Is Gone Friday and Saturday Super-S SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS: SPECIAL PURCHASE—All Higher Priced Ladies’ Play Shoes Saginaw St. DOING ial! Volvos to oo hd Choice of Colors pi Se } $, a ix, ies, crepe soles, flatties, etc. ‘John V. Hayes, 24, of Manches- ter, was admitted at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital after suffering & con- eeeeeesecovessessesesess Pepe ee ER ee SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS Urge Residents. Turn Out to Donate Blood Monday , Rennan if. Coereccesccccocccs | reckless driving was Robert Knight, 2%, of Rochester, who was fined $35, Jack Ott, 18, of Rochesier, was found guilty of illegal possession of an alcoholic beverage - and placed on eight months probation. | His sentence was suspended on | provision that his conduct is good and he enter the armed forces. * * * Mrs. John MacLennan Service for Mrs. John (Christine Grant) MacLennan of 656 Purdy St., will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Manley Bailey. Funeral Home, with burial in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak. She died {Wednesday on her ‘th birthday, {following a long illiness. Besides her husband. Mrs is survived by- one son, John G. of Birmingham: one , brother, Colin Grant of Pontiac; and three sisters living in Scot- Mac- land. Thief Gets Suit, $240 From Rhode Island Man Benjamin Piechocki of . Provi- |dence, R. I., reported to Pontiac Police that a suit containing $240 in ten dollar denominations ‘was stolen from his parked automobile | sometime yesterday. Piechocki told police that he had left his rented car windows par- | tially opened for ventilation while \it was parked at Pontiac Motors | lot, Says Tough Unions Hurt State Industry | ANN “ARBOR (P—A réepresenta- | tive of management said last night | that tough local unions had foreed | about 40 autometive parts manu- facturers to close up shop in Mich- | igan in the last five years—many of them relocating outside the state. Frank Rising, general manager | of the Automotive and Aviation Parts Manufacturers Assn., speak- | ing on a panel at the University of Michigan, said: “Harsh treatment by many union locals in Michigan may have kept some industry out of the state and forced others to move elsewhere even though they continue to deal with the same international union.”’ educational di- Brendon Sexton, | rector of the CIO United Auto , Worke rs, answered Rising, saying, “The only em»loyers who are “Gomplaining these days of unions ‘ foreing exorbitant demands on them are outside the state.” He cited Willys, American Mo- tors and Studebaker. rr Car Is Reported Stolen ‘in Auto AgencysBreakin Oakland County Sheriff's detec- tives today are investigating the theft af a new car taken during a breakin at an Ortonville auto agency Wednesday night. | The car, a 1955 red Ford Thun- derbird convertible, taken from the garage of the BANE Wilson | agency, according to officdys. Of ficers of the building at 968 M15 ‘were ransacked, employes said. (it's Nice to Be --Qur Customers M Cine nae \ eae ° acre $47 16 y sie 33mm Duopack COLOR Choice of SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS Special Prices on Famous KODAK FILM 8mm Movie Color Roll—$3.75 Value 8mm Magazine Film— “4 $6.95 value H 16mm Magazine Film— J 35mm Kedachrome 20 Exp., $3.25 Val. $4.95 value.. Z 528 Color Film— Regular $1.85 value Black and White. Choice of 620-120-127 Reg 40¢ and 45¢ Value Regular $1.98 Value 21... but Saving oney Is More ay $ 528 3 Le we $s 5” $949 = . ar "58 grasps 5 value mm Roll Color Fiim— 40 value.. Color Film—36 sue Film FILMS 620-120-127 KODAK BROWNIE 8mm Projector $69.50 Value S 4737 Pamous Kodak Brownie &mm projector with reverse and still action. Our low- est price yet. With Flash and Case $66.50 Value S 60 Easy to use yet a juxury camera with Cintar 13.5 lens. 1/300 speed: flash plugs into camera, © SCOOHHSHSSSSSSSHSSSSHSSSSS: bee eeeeece Choice S stereo Plastic Flash | $1.50 to $4 Values ‘Spear’ flash shields for pictures, Hard plastic, to fit any flash unit. flip-top sty and shallow sizes, of Styles—Top Grain Woods $6.45 to $7.50 Values Sequence or a Hsing in top grain wood f some afte inlaid . . ” some have room for viewers, — Specia} savings on all Fits All Flash Units—Any Size—Any Type safe flash Some with blue for color pictures. 5& to 7 inch, smal) 3-D STEREO lide Files -son files. Shields Check Our Prices on BINOCULARS © eS] G99 = Tes (od “lars bw By Dg eae 63" $48.87 ge gy abe a" $53.45 +a nner oe et eee pel eg ne Individual F Me Powerful Coated Lenses igo” weer att ay vor rte, saeray 4 S48 a a ge tg tga “ sina + | SPORT COATS 4 ae. We Pe ee ay eds ¥ N TWO FINE STORES * wie SAVE ON ... : $39.50 PHILLIP MORRIS ~ bil | se © pd i — Plus — $14.95 100% DACRON SLACKS $45 VALUE—BOTH FOR LA OORREES GEO DREGE EIT EE LEED si | budget price. ae SAVE ON .. $27.50 McGregor & Phoenix LIGHTWEIGHT _ SPORT | COATS | | Nice looking coats blended with Dacron to be — in weight yet longer weari a e fine selection to choose Hurry! 18°. A $14.95 YEAR-ROUND > 5 100% Dacron and All Wool || SLACKS 4 © Perfect for now... . and all : '. & year ‘round. A host of colors e and patterns. All sizes. Fine . quality slacks ot a thrifty- Long Sleeve DRESS SHIRTS good looking, too. Whites. ond ¢ SAVE ON... 6 = $3. 5 ARROW MESH tin every summer wardrobe. iy at | 2 51 North Saginaw robe . afford. Cool, its shape. The coolest suit you've ever worn. wonderful addition to your summer word. . at a new low price. SAVE ON $50.00 Phoenix and Martinelli Silk and Wool Smart looking, perfectly tailored. A fine quality suit at a price you can truly cornfortable. SAVE ON $55.00 Botany “500” Mohair -- Silk -- Wool. “TROPICAL SUITS A famous-name suit that you'll be proud & ; to wear everywhere . . ning breeze and quality made to hold ‘24 ‘4q° . cool as an eve- °3 800 Two Fine Stores to Serve You Better! - OPEN a We Trivite You: to Oren a Conable: | OSMUN’S CHARGE ACCOUNT Take 30-60-90 Days to os AT NO EXERA | CHAR 7. Tel-Huron Scat OPEN Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. ‘til 9 P.M. * ae} . & SAVEON... |. j ile °*e $5.00 FAMOUS-MAKE j ' $3.95 to $8.95 Better Quality © Summer Weight g Short Sleeve | 4 © Favorite short sleeve, knee fp ' SH ; R S x length styles . . or full lengths. . f 3 I : Cool, comfortable . . and look 4 a r entire stock has been re- | fot the low, low price. eS 4 5 = ed in price for this big sale F Se . & © event. Come in today... | - @ 8 » buy several. : S$ 89 E 5 O of © Pr. CORRE HS ea it a Ee a ; ~ $5.00 WEAR-EVERYWHERE $5.95 McGREGOR i _ Short Sleeve Unlined _ WHITE |; DENIM « » . ‘ SHIRTS || JACKETS | - |) Here is the shirt thot hos Rugged, good looking jackets | & ~ taken the nation by storm .. . that. have o hundred uses. © _ wear open at the neck as a Completely washable. ..and = | » comfortable sport shirt, or reduced to only . 4 wear. with a necktie as a hand- : « ; some looking dress shirt. We |pore. They are pee it, through | rates provided the merchants en- ; : ae il J bank and loan sharks,- ransom | roll their children in Communist- Street Cc hanges Names (te pay: ™ gan ave kidnapping of wealthy Chinese | supported schools. So Often-it's Confusing New Mosien Temi © ne ey: ten Hoge J on 7 seagees CAMBODIA AND LAOS ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (INS) | ports Nathan Thompson of Talla- aw y OLEN CLEMENTS tf world power. An estimated 400| Cambodia has adopted the neu-'—~In Albiiquerque there's a group | hassee, Fla., wrote in with a re- B ANGKOK. Thailand oh . students each month leave Singa- | tralism of India and Burma and is! of citizens who have trouble telling = oJ a mon oad arr Mex. OM ' i - bure form -“unist seizure of Southeast Asia is abd pr ned China to complete | friendty to the Chinese, Chinese of people where they live. |letter-— they get many such re- well under ‘way. ir educa — university age are permitted to; A sign on a curb identifies a) quests: “You seem to have the The Red Chinese are doing it MALAYA journey to China at will. Neighbor- | street_as Simms Court, but the | impression that New Mexico is a the easy way, through the schools, Less than 4,000 Communists gure- | ing Laos js populated mostly by | Post Office Department lists the | foreign country. Of course it is the wealth, the culture of 9.5 mil- rillas flit through the jungles, pin {mountain folk whose educational °7°4 ®$ Simms Ave. ee ee lion “overseas Chinese” in the ning down 250,000 British ‘and | standards are low. They are anti- | Jee lhene, “es Pay ces le traveling countries of Viet Nam, Laos, Cam- Malayan troops. Forty per cent |Communist and watch their Chinese | 44 last month traffic engineers Dere than ‘in rgia or Missle bodia, Thailand. Burma, Malaya, of Malaya is Chinese. They con- | population closely. installed a sign on the corner which | aad rR Singapore and Indonesia. In com- trol -vital tin mines and rubber’) South Viet Nam is tottering on the ‘@4s Anderson PI. S.E. (Advertisement) bined area, population and un- , plantations . verge of chaos. Under the terms of _A woman who lives on Simms) FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT developed wealth these nations The Chinese teader is Chen the Geneva agreement ending the Court or Simms Avenue or is it’ GET AMAZING RESULTS! rival the United States. Ping, who fought with the Brit. |Mdochinese War, an election will Anderson, says IN ONE HOUR, The Chinese scattered through ish against the Japanese. The {decide the future of the entire “It is very confusing. Especially | If not pleased with powerful, keratotytie this area are divided politically. British made him an officer of | COUtry.. Observers in the south be- when you have friends coming in | erer store. Fo. clemmhe oft Gir 4 Almost to a man all of then ‘feel the Order of the British Empire. | lieve that if the election were held from out of town and try to tell | — oe —_ tm ™ —— oo og loyalty and pride in China, which But Chen, now 35, went back Into |" the Communists would win. them where you live."’ Today at Simms Bros.” is controlled by the Communists. the jungle and was fighting the yam : enn Many of them have never been to British before they could deliver MICHIGAN'S NEWEST. MOST MODERN, LOW cosT China, but their children flock his medal. there each year by the thousands. . . The British say he is new in Subversive Chinese have in- Tetel non- se Thailand. The Thais say he is not . filtrated every country in South. Population 134,172,000 Wherever he ts. there is a price _ east Asia. They maintal: d s " ; s heac - : - direct small guerrilla bende’ hs Through o ner bent for business the (neni aes losing the For indiduals or Family Groups. Ages 3 Months Through #5 - Burma, northern Thailand, Lacs, nd hard work, Chinese hove emerged Malay guerrilla war. But they are Pay up to $15.00 per day for room and board plus trom 5 to 20 times the daily Serge ; en ee Malaya & @s the most powerful economic group making progress through subver- | room allowance of your plan to cover all items of hospital extra expense for Sitery Gasens = in Southeast Asie, Communist Chine sion. which a charge is made. NO specified AMOUNT for each item, amount de- military f have kept 250,- now is ettempting to cash in on this noe ’ ined by length of hospital st All benefit ded in th lie 000 British and Malayan troops Xv Sieuatloce chances INDONESIA ermi y length of hospital stay netits as provided in the policy. busy for seven years. Seen The Chinese problem is not asf Paid on an actual cost basis up to the limit of the plan ae Guerrilla bands. have only a I acute in Indonesia as elsewhere, SURGERY select No schedule of operations. With a few specified nuisance value. The real fight now but they have a good hold on the sandy Healog yout doctor determines what you will receive. is economic and educational. And pve s neat Sentars bar Paid Home, Hospital or Doctor's Office j rant. se are natural merchants an : : sae rary ———— H business men. , Chinese students MEDI A D TAR Pays Up to $100.00 When in the Hospital Area by area here is the picture Is ores to Red China to com- and No Surgery Is Performed today: | Plete their education at the rate - Paid shen wite is hospitalized plus an allowance for the ~SINGAPORE . BURMA MATERNIT doctor for normal birth or miscarriage. Doctor's allow- Communist influence in the There are only about 350,000 , ance doubled for Caesarian birth Chinese schools, unions and the Chinese in Burma. Rangoon. the Particulars Free—No Obligation—Fill In and Mail at Once! business world is terrific. Chinese capital, has more Chinese mer- " ‘ ZL students, young men of 20 to 2, chants than any other place dn Dc ecccceseneerssoenseeesesecececesceacese City eo ee ee ee | er 2 seneuaene have batted the government's ears sae Ja ol oe |), ce, ne down twice in the last 12 months. . : z. 001 1M h. They did it first in May 1954, when; This year, on pretense of help- { 12. Four persons were killed Economically, subversive Com- | Communist money. ‘DETROIT MUTUAL INS. Co. Detroit 1, ich Dept they rioted against military con-| ing striwing Chinese bus drivers, | among whom was American |munists are worming their way | Loans are made to Chinese 2631 Woodwerd, Room 220 . =a < aa en scription. students caused a riot on May ' newsman Gene Symonds. into the business world of Signa." merchants by these banks at low ahs RE iy tle Nk ES * LORENA LEAN ES iE Noe 5 heal 2 aw bi ES a SRO akan ae oe Si mae > eS ae men eee: ets naa. 7 . . - in Suits, Sportcoats, Slacks, Furnishings 4 SAVE ON $45.00 Phoenix Dacron Blend ; , SUITS — | : Handsome looking, lightweight, crease- f 2 resistant suits that you'll really enjoy | wearing. E SHOP IN ; - i » AIR-CONDITIONED - wande ON 33 0 Wash-'n-Wear r * * ! COMFORT IN atk atl Sdek + THER OF OUR CORD SUITS | f, Pe aes i incor aparece Rae eae dee afl FIR PAWTTAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AUGUST 4. 1955 Fe Re ta Pia Thay start them out flowersbright hs in permanently crisp Fairloom printed ginghams oe. © wrinkle-resistant REGULARLY PRICED at 79c @ wash and sun-fast Dress your little miss in Fairloom famous quality combed-gingham, one of the loveliest and most practical of the cottons. It's pre- shrunk (max. shrink. 1%); and crisp-looking, even after many washings. re noveieteta*ate’e’s*uteta’ ™..* VS y Na aes ee PO, eG lg ee + xs DISNEYLAND CASTLE — A fairyland castle fascinates little Am | dree Nerpel, 5, at the Disneyland project at Anaheim, Calif. The | 2. turreted castle, compléfe with moat and drawbridge, is the entrance w | Yard Goods Dept, Main Floor Girls’ Wool,Fleece 3-Pc. Coat Sets 4 Femtesyiand, « 17-millica-dollar project. > Small Fry i to Get Zoo of Their Own . SAN DIEGO, Calif. (INS)—San .. Diego's small fry will have a zoo of their very own when a San Diego Zoological Society project is en et peer * ' Leading architects, artists, child | | psychologists ‘and zoolegisis have 4 _Spent 18 months in intensive study | for the project which is designed especially for children up to 10 years of age. The Children's Zoo, to be bullt at a cost of $150,000, raised by youngster between four and eight ' years old with a number of the ex- hibits sponsored by industrial _con- cerns. Structures housing the animals, _ Which range from familiar birds | to barnyard animals to monkeys | of various species, will be of mod- ern design. SEA LIONS A specially constructed tank for sea lions will have windows placed in so the children CAD | acace animals cavort- | 7” : * * \ Among the novel exhibits wil) be one of parsol ants who eat only n San Diego! will present entertainment by animal performers. They include trained bird acts and monkeys behaving like humans plus demonstrations on how to handle animals, A big problem that has faced the | Zoo's officers and directors has been how to achieve the maxmum | entertainment value for the chil- | dren and at the same time | serve the well-being of the ani- mals. This will be solved, the otficials | feel, by utilizing lessons learned at | the San Diego Zoo, which has an international reputation for pro- | moting longer life among captive animals than any other zoo in the world, * . * | Tt was learned there that. ani- mals, like humans, must be treated with care and consideration if they are to remain healthy and con- tented. The zoo's officials believe that with proper care for the animals, | coupled with adequate supervision | |ot the youthful visitors, the Chil- | io Zoo will be a roaring. suc- | “The zoo will be strictly off- limits to adults unless a youngster con- descends and allows a mere poo up to accompany him, ‘Mighty Narrow Escape | Fairloom cottons printed and solid assorted / ago Regularly priced at 49c¢ yard. 29° _Choose from - assorted colors and patterns. It's becutifull FRIDAY ONLY! 100-Yd. Spool of THREAD 5 < Prin ercerised, Limit of 6 Visit Sears Complete sewing center $1 Holds 1 9% Raglan sleeved coat with smart wing collar; lined and inter- anes. Clip style hat, red, blue, x. LAY-AWAY SALE +1 Holds "til Oct. 1 shop now while selections are tiny creatures as they carry | roared around a corner at the | : . Pose petals. Children may see these| MINNEAPOLIS (# — A car | F about pieces of rose petals | | edge of downtown Minneapolis, hit | | above their heads fashion, in 2 constructed | | curb, hurtled end over end and | : of magnifying glass, |The three A miniature roundhouse thea. | Stepped out ter, seating about 200 children, _ teenage occupants. with only minor | __| injuries. Sam Benson Says: Three Part Harmony! UNIFORMS | y ASTONISHING OFFER! TWO-PIECE! 100% Dacron Crispaque EVER WHITE... : . COMPLETE OPAQUE ... ‘COOL AS A BREEZE . . WASHES IN A FLASH ... DRIES QUICKLY... NEVER NEEDS IRONING! UNIFORMS 4 pperebodme dake | ~as B To Choose From JACKET $2.91 To BLOUSE ee eee ; : tate Figure Flattering Askirt 6’ Three Part Harmony is a perfectly blended trio. The dresémaker tal- lored skirt is a superb match for either blouse, long or scars sleeve. Action back, concealed laundry- oP ni ets keep skirt and blouse securely anchored. Core in, try one on, owe All Summer Merchandise with the purchase of another dress at my regular low price! Values to $2.95 > Button hetnilne Usually 29¢ per Card Pin ae, Markers Marks Hem and Cutting Line Use Sears Revolving Charge 6 Months to shade Change ‘Wool and Cashmere 3-Pe. Coat Sets $1 Holds T 3% German Scissors Fine Imports, 34, to 7-in. . ote res 6 nesndence ‘ es i eee oe Colorful Poplin Lined Jackets 2% Biue, orange, red, green or core color choices, Gay cotton flannel print a Girls’ sizes 3 to 6 Only Washable Vinylite Jackets for Girls 3% White, pink or blue loaier style jacket. Washable fleeced knit cotton lining for added warmth. 12.95 Just oven onee Tots’ Wool and Cashmere Coat Set $l Holds 162 Aque, ted or ‘pink: color choices. 90°, wool! fleece, 10°, cashwnere. has fur collar, 2 to 4x. - 15% Wool Face Fleece Mites’ Set $1 Holds ] 0 Part nylon with 160% back. Hand embroidery on large scalloped ca collar. Mint, pink or blue. 12-24 mo. cotton All Wool Fleece 3-Pe. Coat Sets $1 Holds T 6” Fitted sty! le in 90° wool fleece, > cashmere Lined and in- terlined for warmth. 3 colors in 2 to 4x. Smart Wool Fleece Coat and Slacks $1 Holds 19% Pert swing to the four-gore back, all wool coat. Lined and esa of Bea blue and red t colors. Excellent selet «45 for $] new only 1,98 -srecgdicges Oy EN Beautiful buttons in season's No double work with this easy Beautiful nickel plated assort Smart as ean be in 90%, wool new designs and colors. Finest pin style marker. Sturdy metal ment of embroidery, bent, With cashmere fleece face. 100% quality for your smart suits base. Adjusts for hems 6 to 2l- straight handle scissors, shears | cotton back for strength. Tan or and dresses. inches. Buy. now—save! Precision ground blades. blue, 2x4x. Craftsman af gee Pinkers = ie, B34 AA \ his leat Mia i ck Bs ee Oa ae Now Only Durable, less steel — will tarnish. Bent all fabrics fro: = length, Save! Marshmallow Bors : baa Delicious Way to Energy wo. | 29¢1h tae «| 27 v3 gos toa Beihery iret eigp vena wa Sane f : rich gnack. < ree ng bag Vanilla — “cake ve gap marsh- matiow ond cocoanut + | Finest Quality Made 4” lightweight _ stain- handles close to surface cutting, Cuts from sheerest ny- lons to heaviest overcoating. Ball bearing joint gives per- manent set.. Comes in 6-inch Creme Sandwiches not rust or oR es Novel Motoreycle Marvel From West Germany 3.95" Runs, stops, ¢ clist di remounts, tides on! t Doss ae cles; figure 8's. Four gear combinations. 8-in. long. Hearthside Form Regular 12.98, 14-Section seve 10.99 Completely adjdstable. Low- ets for storage. Designdd to dress style. Streamlined base. Tu-tone cover. Save Now Fmeig ~ sor See =e te ote | “old today. | manufacture is demonstrated by | 3 r " gt é i i“ * ou « lies a ss , t “THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1955 oe ; 4 ipercer Eatery Stumped! by “Western Sandwich” By EARL WILSON COLORADO SPRINGS—What a shock! I could see Pike's Peak. But when I asked a waitress at “The Cottage” for a Western sandwich, she'd never. heard of it. Yet in every restaurant in New York City ... ; * * * * I felt sorry for Pike's Peak. You're already up so high here that the 14,000-foot peak seems not much loftier Gan the Pocones around §cranten and : Wilkes-Barre. Too bad they can’t give the peak a mountain-lift or some- thing. This is the uranium jumping-off ctoun- try. A Denver Post ad urged you to “trade © in your old Geiger counter on q new | model.” Leon Henderson, ex-OPA chief, now as- ~ : . vo : be . . wy sociated with Lowell Birrell of New York | Wee : i ao - : ' in uranium-hunting at Junction City, told : ; ; = — eee : ; me cheerfully: “We've hit ore and we're not even sell- ing stock . rohial Ethel Merman’ 8 husband, Bob Six, Con- ETHEL tinental Airlines prez, lent us a car (just a simple little Caddy) and we got caught in a flash flood. With water almost up to) the radiator. But Denver’ can smile at a flood— they need. it, | Up in the Denver Skychief room, I found Charles Laughton, | Elsa Lanchester, Cesar Romero, Producer Paul Gregory and Don Taylor. Their, plane to Los Angeles had been delayed. To kill time, Elsa Lanchester hit Pon Taylor in the kisser with a hunk of cake—the “pie-in-the-face” bit familiar to| vaudeville fans. “1Ts OUR Business? Save You Money) * * * x ‘Twas cool over in Kansas City. Only 103. Big NY realtor William Zeckendogysf was still amazed at a local nudist wedding he dropped in on, where Evelyn West. wore absolutely nothing. “I'm like the boy who saw a giraffe the first time,” he said. “I saw it, but I still don’t believe it.” * * * * I drove around LA a few days before coming to Colorado, After driving in Paris, I find the California drivers very | careful; in fact, ladies and gentlemen, What does Red Skelton | mean about them playing-“pedestriar’ polo?” | “| 3 os ge L kh Wh Y CG F Clark Gable and Kay Williams met Johnny Meyer in a} ee LAs ; 00 at ou et! Hollywood restaurant. “Hi, Johnny,” they said, before he_could, : , ‘tateoe ey, Sy Fat 62 he Double Dresser, -Big Mirror, Bookcase I saw beautiful Peggy Knudsen emoting with Jennifer ; * | ) : Se ‘ yy e ° Jones at 20th in “Good Morning, Miss Dove.” They were at te LA oA Bed, Innerspring Mattress, Box Spring “4 chums around NY and Hollywood a ee ty 2 . F ie. ww | Geeen years age . - . Bred together Bide 9° Fee . ” Ah ZB NOW READ THESE FEATURES! The suite is o A $219 VALUE - Job-hunted together .. . now act gem of modern beauty in elegont, rich, Silverhue together — and they're still good Pe Bee et ‘ ES és mahogany veneers, detailed with distinctive pic friends. ve 6 hoe dé ’ ; ~ ‘ture frame fronts, and accented by exaggerated Josh Logan Yold me at the Beverly gk TF ine oe ‘ . st wood and silver-finish pulls; the top quality mat- Hills pool he’s so happy Hollywoodiryg : . fy ~— tress set is built for luxurious comfort! 4 he doesn’t know about another B'way | . §6show. He and Renee Carroll, the wife of ._ ; ty a 4 -Broadway ticket broker Lou Schonceit, a hh ry y 9 ee i Se NO VMoney own. * THE MIDNIGHT EARL. a ‘ , 4 GGY KNUDSEN Dick Haymes still fears to leave the) . because he onJy beat half the deportation rap, so Princess sabes visit to Aga Khan is again stymied ... Frank Sinatra's signing a big 5-year NBC-TV deal... A woman fan asked Joe DiMaggio to get Johnny Mize's autograph for her, and Ae did. That's earl, brother. (Copyright ne. Post-Hall ——— Inc.) = | | $1,000 each. This division of the Coast Guard Marks | Treasury Department was found. (ed eight years before the Navy. | A65th Anniversary — | In 1798, the Coast Guard also | | became a fighting force and since NEW YORK Ww — The Coast | has played an important role in Guard, originally organized as an | all U.S. wars. antismuggling fleet, is 165 years! The importance of coal in cement | On Aug. 4, 1790, the first Con-| the fact that more than one-third gress authorized Alexander Hamil-/ the cost of a barrel of cement ton, secretary of the Treasury, to| goes to pay for the coal used in buy | and equip 10 vessels costing | its production. — JOE'S rH SURPLUS] ' 32S. Saginaw St. FE 2-0022 TARPAULINS 5x7 «.... $3.50 9x12 .. $10.80 6x7... $4.20 10x12 .. $12.00 6x9 .... $5.40 12x15 .. $18.00 8x9 ..,.$7.20 12x18 .. $21.60 8x10 .... $8.00 15x20 .. $30.00 WE ARE GIVING YOU THE WORKS FOR THE PRICE OF THE SUITE ALONE Save more than you ever dreamed of saving! This phenome- nal living room ensemble brings glamorous contemporary styling ond luxurious comfort for a fabulously low price! The gorgeous living room suite is.built with deep innerspring com- fort, and with the plastic-upholstered armchair, modern, cer- amic lamps, and limed oak tables form an ultra smart outfit. Standard U. S. Army UNIFORMS CHINO PANTS ......4.95 CHINO SHIRTS .... $3.95 Collar insignio— FATIGUE PANTS Shoulder PatcHes— FATIGUE SHIRTS emcee FOOT LOCKERS WITH TRAY — 2 KEYS Motal-Covered ....57.95 1 iS oh a pene } | 9x12’ ALL WOOL SLEEPING BAGS ............$13.95 i ois Aaa ae | AXMINSTER RUG BLANKETS ................ 4958 , AIR MATTRESSES ____. cc. oe CUSHION SOLE SOCKS SC a $ > 9 << T-SHIRTS . Bed Sak Head : — ep - — 9x12’ Rug Pad Free _ WE RENT TENTS {8 | 4 Duck: ne ta ie , : a 3./ / / 4 : weaves ot dollar savings, - =e JOE'S an SURPLUS|T “| BBCoD Cui ie = k "colors! Good t Save! 82S, Saginaw = (FE 2.0022 buys! i) RS SAF 2 apm ta NR > be ‘ } 4 wR “ THE PONTIAC PRE. SS, THURSDAY. AUGUS ST 4, 1955 fo \ TWENTY-FIVE Despite All Efforts Sawdust Pile Burns CAVE JUNCTION; Ore. (INS)— Coal seams that burn for years have a parallel in a smoking saw- dust pile near Cave Junction in southern Oregon. Spontaneous combustion ene ing from pressure started the fire in the sawdust pile, which covers an acre and ig 70 feet deep in. several places, A crew pumped water eal the Pile all day, but it | ® kent on burning Deneath the Science Enters go and fire experts ice on. building furniture to the scene and said the pr Do-It-Y ourself pings workshop - actical thing to do to cut a An additional of ep tone wooed & wal tee Trend Today “e ke’s is to edit a Sanen the fire under control; - PITTSBURGH. «INS) — The! published six times a year. The only other way to handle it, they said, would be to bulldoze : the sawdust out over square miles ting. the scientific treatment: of land to uncover the fire. A power t maker ab- The fire is expected to burn for lished the ae Begs sw at least 10. years, maybe 20. “4 " to help solve hobby- ists’ problertig in the workshop. “Scientist” Al Warkaske, pre- viously employed professionally as a cabinet maker, laboratory which serves as an in- 28181. popular do-it-yourself trend is get- The average 1955 car has 22.8 el&tric light bulbs compared to 19 general lighting lamps in a typical | U.S, home. reeset ete operates the | through Classified ads! Phone GRAND HAVEN w — Steve S. VEE Permanent frost extends at least 165 feet into the ground on Corn- wallis Island, 560 miles north of the Arctic Circle, JUNIOR EDITORS’ HOME 700— | A Tartle | TOMORROW: A Puppy if you want @ small pet that doesn’t require much space, a turtle | is your answer, __ | They are best as pets if_you have a ass to keep them outdoors. | It should be a sheltered spot, but one where there is some surishine. | They can be kept in terrariums in the house too, The little green | turtles usually sold in pet shops need careful attention if they are to live. | Althougl turtles can swim well, and spend much time in the | water, they must have a place to come out and dry off in the eumhine. Turtles don’t stand cold weather well. _A rectangular tank is a good turtle home. At one end should be | water, preferably in a separate dish that can be taken out and cleaned every day. At the other end put gravel and earth with growing plants. Never pajnt a turtle’s shell. It keeps him from growing and makes his shell soft. _ A healthy turtle that is well ahen care of will grow to be 10) or 12 inches long and will live for many years. Feed him daily chopped raw fish and beef and ver as well as worms, grubs, lettuce. He likes to drag his food under the water and eat it there. Be sure to remove all left-over food each day to keep the tank clean. _ Mount this picture on cardboard and color with crayons the way | 79s think (urties should look in a pond. | for Denver, 304 Bills Await White H id today the Attention of Ike Fey wil leave Friday, prob for his usual weekend at his Get- : WASHINGTON @® — President | Yspurg Pa, farm. date has been set for his departure | f Eisenhower had 304 bills before ‘him today, not counting many . ; passed in the final hours of Con- Something Fishy | grees which adjourned carly ''! SHERMAN, Tex. ®—The shet- He is expected to act on many iff's office arrested a Sherman | of these before leaving some time | for driving while drunk and final- | this month for about six weeks of | ly figured out what to do with all | rest and work at the summer | the fish he had. They were sent to | White House in Denver, No definite | the county jail kitchen, (juarantee these to be the finest * f if f } : -FRULY $100 VALUES rc 'WE WILL ALLOW You 100 2 exe ree, _NO Mone Y DOWN ALWAYS FIR idiiaiae — eens lien it At Penney’s only! The famoys wear! OUR | for this quality terry! for us . ma: | absorbent loops, with Wash ‘n’ Wear Dusters of Cotton Plisse Take your pick of bright-as- NATION-WIDE Fitted Sheets! Sanforized! for long, money-saving _The fitted style a big time-saver! These sheets fit over your mattress, stay smooth night and day, need no making up, no ironing. Keep their fit. PRICES EVI LARGE, SOLID COLOR CANNON BATH TOWELS | Made by the famous Cannon mills »» With hundreds of extra, sturdy selvages! A really top value ++. Only at Penney’s! Eight decorator foe To 18 by 28 nb. om Wan Pr ate ST QUALITY! Special! | The slips you'll need for fall— autumn prints, lots of brilliant pe now of hage savlens—60-denier solids! They’re completely care- : 4 : tricot, 4-gore cut for smooth fit, © Tree—jast toss in the wash ma- fig J f ie nylon, trimmed with lace and ; chine, don’t bother to iron. Pive- i leats. White or pink: sizes 32 ; button front, patch pockets. i “4 scat) Sizes 12 to 20. aa | j sala ae | | ae : ; j peporeres bs A —_—i s+ et my muslin. is 63 l full |e LOW tight-woven Cc 22 by 44 inches . Save ae Never-lron Nylon Tricot Slips Trulon Rayon Panels _ You Wash, Hang Up! That's all you have to do! These modern panels need no starch- ing, no stretching, and with per- manent washabie finish most women never iron them. Deep Special! Sew a complete wardrobe in cor- dury jumpers, skirts, dresses, slacks; sew in a wide, wonderful color range of fall foliage shades, vivids to deep tones, all machine washabie! y Washable Corduroy _, Play Togs for Tots Warm, rugged corduroy togs at _ big savings—just when you need them most! All full cut, sized ac- cording to weight. Snap-crotch crawlers, sizes % to 1%; bib- front smartalis, 2 to 4; boxer longies, 2 to 6. Machine Washable, 16 Rib Quality Corduroy Not remnants, but full aac Special! C SPECIAL! eeee oe i “THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4.1955 i eitine : leuene svepesal i keve the | ‘it cost 35 cents a day to feed . g 5 ubs Court International Coyrt of Justice de- Dog’ $ Life | Pretty Good | prisoners in the city jail, but costs GOP Sees Win . BUENOS AIRES (—Argentina/ cide who owns the Falkland Islands | HOUSTON, Tex. (® — -Harris | 60 cents a day to keep a ‘pooch | has announced it has rejected | and their dependencies, |County commissioners were, told |in the dog pound. | sia 7 - ; ~ TRUCK OWNERS and OPERATORS —__fromKenucky At ‘the LON ‘STORE } Bitter Democrat Fight| © T C f ; for Governor Splitting F EI | ‘Solid South’ Vote a | We Are Not In the Passenger Automobile Business leaiors Biro waned capa, in al ® ‘ ‘ | years today found the two major) | , | candidates for the Democratic gov- ; : f erhor'’s nomination in-a hard-driv-———— a 4 ing finish to a furious campaign i be ; Saturday, Kentucky Democrats iS | e ® * . will choose between former Base- We Are the Largest Exclusive GMC Dealer in Michigan ee eee THE OTHER DAY WE SOLD A NEW GMC TRUCK AND IN THE DEAL WE ACQUIRED THIS again, and former Appellate Judge SU M M ER g Bert T. Comys, making his first q 2 D0 A ° bid for stat¢wide elective office | with state gMministration bac fo | The winner will run in the Nov. COME IN AND 8 general election. Five of the ov. REGISTER AT OUR se ven Eye rnors have been Demo- | SALES Or FICE a / * * * | | But/ ithe Republicans are count- | : = d | ing n factional bitterness among | |. +4 | Dephocrats to put the first ce : 4 gqvernor in office since 1943, The ‘ * : térm is for four years. Fs V. Running for the Republican aes : , : ination in a relatively quiet can- b A paign are former U.S. Dist. Atty. | ‘ Kawin R a . = coerced by | _ ENTIRE STOCK Ambassador to~India John Sher- | man Cooper, former U.S. senator | Entire Stock of MEN'S HOBBY JEANS from Kentucky, and. James L and LEISURE SLACKS Clay, 43-year-old attorney. a Outcome of the Combs-Chandler | LA D i ES S U MM FE R Regular to $4.95 Arg ate: ae SIS ne abs le WE ARE GIVING IT AWAY - | cantest will have a bearing on the |‘ We are going to j / | political future of U.S. Sen. Earle $2 99 , | / /C. Clements,’ acting majority lead- | e a 4 ;er, and the makeup of this state's | ‘ 4 | de CA to the 1956 Es mocr a ' Cooccccccesosoosoors vt ; Give This Car Away Absolutel; FREE — a * * « | “VAN td of 4 y y le Tae pecan — A Pe | Junior .. . Misses . . Half Scseee DR qo (i i elec ule ESS SHIR ry 3 Saturday, August 13 at 1:00 P.M. ’ |} have an opponent face Clements | ‘) 5 On Our Used Truck Lot |in next year's primary. Thus the | Values to 17.98 | Chandler-Combs race represents a Come in and register at our Soles Offices at Oakland and Cass. There is no obigetiee —= angel okt aie | 7 8 | $2.99 7 ) . ' Regular $395 to buy. onything and you need not be present to win. No minors please. ..... \ewerner aad) Chandler, 165301 aveceecneceaececenen 1950 GMC HDCR-651 DIESEL TRACTOR— 1952 PONTIAC SEDAN DELIVERY — 8 |] #°vcrmor and 1939-45 U.S. senator. Each side predicted victory. MEN'S SUMMER Mi 141 inch wheelbase — 5 speed transmission cylinder engine — Deluxe — 3 speed trans- SS 3 4 — 2 speed axle — Straight air brakes — 5th mission—1!5 inch air ride tires.......$695 | Grand Haven to Vote PAJAMAS thes Sp eh tpg 1953 CHEVROLET 2 TON PICKUP.— De- |) GRAND HAVEN City Councit Regular $335 nd 3s “ Stock of 32.99 # matic transmission—1!5 inch tires... .$1395 | also will ballot on candidates for | |§ . 1951 GMC 12 TON PANEL— 16 inch tires— 1953 GMC 2 TON PANEL — Hydromatic || the nine posts on a charter study | secccccccvocoosooess | | 3 speed transmission — Direction lights — transmission —/ 16 inch tires — Direction | eeceai ar liae revieee wn A BOYS’ SHORT SLEEVE (©: | New brakes .........--000 eee ee eee $495 Sights oo. con foe oo 2 oe cess neaees $745 |) majority vote is required for pas- | | \ - SPORT SHIRTS |. J , Sage of each proposal. ‘ LA , | - : | ‘Tom Sawyer’, ‘Rob WI LS 0 N G M C C0 M AN etre : 1.96 " | GRAND HAVEN ®—The me- | 2 4 orial gifts ph of ip. Sa ees Shorts, ‘Halters 31.99 |= OAKLAND AT CASS Pees eral sesseninnssssossoees FE 2-9203 _. OPEN ae a s FE ASSL assem a] ilies $1.98 BOYS’ SUMMER =f highway improvement project. 1952 GMC PM-152—Forward contro! model with utility package delivery body — Hydro- ; ; : | had scheduled Sept. 27 for a) luxe cab — 3 speed transmission — Direction |} special election on a proposal to | lights—16 inch tires—Radio ......... $745 | modernize the city charter. Voters | Everything must be sold! We are moving to new and larger quar- ters! All present stock must be. liquidated at shocking low prices. | PAJAMAS |; T 0O Regular $2.98 : $1.99 GIRLS’ Entire Stock of Skirts-Blouse Sets Gl RLS’ : Values to $7.98 ; SWIM SUITS |e 2--~ Values to $8.98 _NYLON TOPPERS Regular and Sub Teens’ - Values to $17.98 2 $ ) «88 4 he Seeceevseoeesseecese ei Lodies’ ‘SHIP ‘N SHORE’ | od Sleeveless BLOUSES | ~ <= ° THE Rak SHOE STORE 1S MOVING! After 26 years in the oe, of the Pontiac State Bank Building we are mov- “~ At 12:10 ~ 3:30 ~ 6:40 ~ 10:00 —~ALSO—~ THEY'RE GOING TO KILL ME! You have to watch what they're doing to your wife... because there's a cold gun against your skull! But now you know you've got to do something...no matter what happens to you... or to anyone! COLMA MOTURES Presents || I THE NIGHT HOLDS TERROR |, 2wcezern bo WITHOUT BARS! wbity. Panne -eDWAkOS-casshVeTEs-ChUSS CHAIN ALSO «HAL BARTLETT ee . ? manta cect bring yon SHATTERING SUSPENSE! the Reader's Digest seesation! EL Sea banbam Ba COESTER ES GLASS TOMB At 11:00 = 2:50 - §:20- 840 [ halk Anthea as ee —EE—E—— i ee ee i AN gia SS i RS aS SB : 1 Two baby billy goats are the proud possession of the up and down around the barnyard, The family has named three Dunean children, Marilyn, Larry (center) and | the one week old pets “Heidi” and “Peter.” Mr, and Mrs. Michael. The frisky, little all-white goats love jumping|Gary Duncan of Reece road are the children’s parents, “Shep,” the brown and white collie, is resting after a| Olsen of Franklin road, Every morning at-6:30, winter romp with Ricky, (left to right) Mary, James and Judy| and summer, the three older children go for a@ bird walk Olsen. They are the children of Dr. and Mrs. Richard C. | accompanied by.their father, Dr. Olsen, an ornithologist. Club Objects to Smoker's Bad Taste By EMILY POST “1 belong to a discussion group | consisting of twelve women rang- ing im age from forty to the late sixties,” a reader tells me. “We meet once a month at a different) member's house. All but one of this | group ‘are nonsmokers. The one smoker always smokes at these meetings. I can see her doing this when the meeting is held at her house but when held in the houses of the nonsmokers I think she should refrain from smoking for the time being, “None of us question the right of any woman to smoke if she wants to, but we do question the good taste of smoking under the circumstances. What is your opinion?" Answer: Being myself a hon- smoker, I naturally sympathize | | | * $e RRS A “Dear Mrs. Post: In your opin- ion, is it necessary in order to be thought polite, to say thank you to the elevator operator when he lets you off at your floor? Would it make a difference if the elevator was in an apartment house or air office building?" Answer: I have never heard of anyone’s saying thank you to the of a busy elevator. Imag- north to the family cabin near Harrison. A student in the fifth grade at Central School, Pretty and pert are the pet pigeons be- .| longing to Dale Darling pictured above. The pigeons love to light on Dale’s head and shoulders. Besides his pets, he likes to go Dale is the son of Mrs. Mac Darling and the » late Mr. Darling of South Paddock street. — * THE PONTIAC PRESS ; sWVomen's Section; PAGES 1-45 i Sopspay. avcusr ated Senet Pentine Preas Photos Roger Burris (left) and David Adams spend many | cousins, are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon C. Burris of hours swimming, digging in the sand, playing in the water | Sylvester avenue and Mr. and Mrs, Donald E. Adams of and feeding their ducks at Silver Lake. The boys, who are' West Walton boulevard. Serco = $ ae al 2 ies 2 ¢ PRN arg Vacationing ‘Keeps City Folks Busy Area Families Take Jaunts to Cottages to Beat the Heat Mr Hilty and children, Patricia and Robert, have returned to their home on | Mansfield avenue following a week spent in Bluffton, Ohio, and Mrs. Monroe C | * * ~ | Vacationing this week at Lake Macatawa, near Holland, are Mr. jand Mrs. Fenton S. Weaver and i family of Clarkston. . 7 oa The Bradiry D. Scottie have returned te their home on North | Genesee avenue after spending the past week traveling in west- ern Michigan. . + ~ * Spending several weeks at the home of her parents, the C. F, Heymanns of Oneida road, is their ; There are five pages in today’s Women’s Section daughter, Beach. Frances Ann of Palm ” * cf Mrs. Turris McCully of St. Jo- seph street and Mrs. Ray Ward of North Genesee avenue are spending thig week at the Wards’ cottage on Otsego Lake. w * * Mr. and Mrs, Bradley L. Scott of Whitfield drive, Maceday lake, have as their houseguest, Mrs. Seott’s grandmother, Mrs. James _ oe Remington of Coral gables, a, Munching a cookie as he sits on the knee| from a cup and delights in swinging from of his master, Michael Pender, is “Samp- the clothes line. Michael is the son of Mr. son,” the pet of the household, The four| and Mrs. Michael J. Pender of Reece road. year old brown and white monkey. drinks | 7 * ” Md Mary Sullivan and Joan Kirst of Chicago will be houseguests of Mr. | and Mrs. William Sherwood of Ox- | ley drive this weekend. They will attend the wedding of Roberta Marie Weddle and Newton Henry McCandless Saturday evening at Oakland Park Methodist Chureh. Miss Kirst: will be one of the bridesmaids. * ae * Mrs. Wilma Dickinson and daughter, Nancy, of Mohawk road have returned to their home after spending a month in California and Hawaii. . 5 = * tJ Coming from Oak Park, Ml., to be present at the wedding of Roberta Marie Weddle and New- ton Henry McCandless Saturday are Mr. and Mrs, Theodore Or- ban. They will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Weddle of Oneida road, * * & Mr. and Mrs.: Nelson J, Davis and children, Marjorie and Chuck of Tucson, Ariz., formerly of Pon- tiac, are visiting for several days iat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O. Nouse of Elzabeth Lake Estates. * A * 5 Mr, and Mrs. William Archam- beau of Forest drive, Watkins Lake, are the proud parénts of a son, Robert William, born Tuesday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Mrs. |Archambeau is the former Ann Perkins, Grandparents are Mr, and Mrs. W. Charles Perkins of Dakota drive and Mrs. Leo Archambeau of Rosedale avenue. : keet. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Home After ot liam C. Pfahlert of Lakeland avenue, Sylvan oe — ‘oe aa Lake. {street following surgery in Henry Ford Hospital. - walk up and down. ‘Bucy also has a para- 1 Cinieol (Bucky) Piahlert is Paying with his pets—three brown bantam chickens. They eat from his. hand and like perching-on | his shoulder, Bucky says bantams are eas to train. it he holds out his arm they will WALKER IN 100% WOOL FLANNEL JERRY MANN OF CALIFORNIA . ae | 95 Your favorite slim style, with six low walking pleats, de- ' tailed with embroid- ered arrows. Won- derful choice of col- ors, you'll want least two: charcoal, groy, tan, char brown. Sizes 8 to 18, feat THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AUGUST 4, 1955 Styled for You. by an Outstanding California Maker A small deposit will reserve your selection until wanted As advertised in GLAMOUR 5D 49s NE TOUCH OF MAJESTY... R & K's look of the long torso boasts its own taffeta petticoat. In Mal: visco, belted or beltless, to take you beautifully ie fall, Sizes 10 to 18 Cedar Brown, Green or Spice : Your favorite designer brings you two fall fashion - hits — TRAIGHT and narrow... . in ne for figure flattering compliments. R & K's pure wool coatdress . . . underscored with rayon taffeta to keep its smooth, svelte look... accented with a tiny jewelled bow at eg convertible neckline. a As adverticad in MADEMOISELLE | The high point of the “Europe | 1956" show to be in progress Aug. 8 to Sept. 8 at the Little Gallery has achieved a solid European reputation for originality, for som- | ber beauty and for excellent cratfts- | _manship. For many years a friend \of Paul Klee and his Bauhaus | lived and worked in Paris, Lon- don, Munich, Haly and Greece. Recently he spent a year and a half in Mexico. This experience | | marked a turning point, a bios- | coming im his art life. The core | problem no longer is form in space | but light and forth in motion, The ico, the feeling of mysterious, sometimes even sinister movement are the background against which Spiller superimposes black caili- | graphic symbols, | The method is in the best sense | Abstraction, the result is primi- tive, daring, dramatic and sophis- | ticated, The emotions evoked and | invoked, are very powerful—in | shat, they are typical of ‘ “Europe | | | DANISH CERAMICS | cent Scandinavian show at the De-' fiv Still in his early forties, Spiller |. rich warm primitive colors of Mex: | troit Art Institute, Sve 08 he Supplementing and compliment. stoneware from exhibition. ing these are This is the tenth anniversary of the liberation, an anniversary onstrations or ‘ow holidays, * s --It—seems sess that so little attention is being paid to the an- niversary of the ending of the most devastating war in history, In part, at least, this is due to the fact that for the past ten years every- Walter Fiorell’s draped one has been too budy. giant earth brown velour dramatizes the designer’ s be. There was so much to be done, ‘not only the repair and rebuilding of the physical destruction but, lief that more hat is more) even more important, the rehabili- elegance and a better balance ‘tion of the spiritual and cul- for the slim silhouette in’ clothes. A brand-new clothesline can be Subtle pieces of ceramics from | softened and made more durable | Denmark as were seen in the re-| if it is boiled in soapy water for five minutes, tural damage. | Everyone knows of the twen- | tleth century renaissance in It- | aly but only those who have visited Europe regularly in very recent years is aware that the same. processes have been at work in Austria, in Holland, in ‘ | | PICNIC SPECIAL! Fri. and Set. Only THOMAS’ Hot Dog & Hamburg Buns Fiesta Fruit RUM CAKE Strewberry Rhuberb LATTICE TOP PIE... 78° | CHERRY APPLE CUPS G 1 Ae Thomas P 1 | 121 West Huron, Pa PARK FREE in R stry Shop FE 4-8163. R of STORE Germany and Denmark with re sults only slightly less specta- In architecture, furniture and decoration the artist-designer has become increasingly important and Teeners Fool | Nobody Trying to Look Older with a kind of indulgent amuse- ment when the teeners start pad- ding their age with fictitious years. They know it's al] too soon that the young ladies will start peeling the years off. To clean a discolored ‘waffle iron, ore) — wo wi PE SHOES FOR THE LOVELY For your smart new transition cottons. that look like Fall but feel like Surmmer, Carmelietes fashion a etulptured calf pump with. bright, white exclamation ~ GY’S 16 N. SAGINAW ST. points! TnseTah Gallery Features Oils is not’ nina! a building or car or coffee or only fune- is ; vomen look at teenagers ie Citer eames | plete illustrated instructions. i eer style—for comfortable, flattering fit, throughout the waiting period! Your favorite shirt-top, with choice of tailored or short puffed sleeves, Slim skirt below, cut-out to assure an even hemline. Pattern 4843: Misses’ maternity sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 2. Size 16 | shirt takes 2%, yards 33-inch fab- | tie; skirt takes 2 yards. This pattern easy to use, simple © s@w, is tested for fit. Has com- Send 35 cents-in coins for this | pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, ‘care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept.. 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. . Try Exercise to Loosen Up Stiff Joints Joints snap? Full of creaks and groans when you bend over? Nothing is more likely. And as for exercises—i fthe doctor doesn't say “no,” you probably feel “ugh” ja the thought. What do you do to keep your- | sett limber? Many mature women whe have the time do a lot of ” | wales. This is an excellent way to keep health in good trim. } But if you're a busy home- maker, you may feel you have no time for such nonsense. But look at the limbering you °F gi . i Fy fi a ul; = af 2 2 z F Z :- a $23 [i g Hg Hf i if “j iF Raa! To cut frosted cake without crumbling the icing, dip the knife — in hot water and _ dry before med | Using. { Lee . 39.90 MATTRESS WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY CRIB OVER $30.00 . @ aa - Come in and see our ts Infant complete selection of Needs ‘ BASSINETTES $ hog : Complete Line of Floor and Wall Tile You'll love this new maternity — hind them are haunting the mail- Write First i By ELIZABETH WOODWARD || never written to you before, per- | The one who goes away is sup. | haps he doesn’t know how to get | first. But some- | Started. So, write to him. times what a bey is supposed to do Tell him what's been going on and what he does are two entirely since he left. Ask sume interest- different things. Transplant some om yeas Anse what you're going to do next boys into new settings, surround] — = a them with new experiences and new acquaintances and they act as | though they’d broken all ties with the recent past. It's out! of sight, out of mind with them. cm * * posed to write ¢ It’s sheer laziness. They're busy reacting to new things, and they forget that the girls they left be- man It's not indifference, really. It's just that their minds are on other things. Se why net remind them? Why wait too long for them to write? Get busy with your own pen and paper. That's what this girl should de. “Dear Miss Woodward: My boy friend has gore away for the rest of the summer, and he asked me to write to him~while he’s away. | Should I wait until I hear from him, or can I write first?” What kind of letter- writer is he? Have you had any | experience with him before? Re- lable? Or very sketchy? If he’s Answer Vinyl Clay Eliminates | Messiness | Junior Can Show His Talent Without, Harm to Home | NEW YORK (NEA)—It takes a wise mother to know when to en- courage and when to discourage certain creative tendencies in a child. These tendencies can range from the artistic trend indicated in writ- ing on the bathroom walls to the, culinary talent displayed in mixing up a mass of cookies. Nearty all children show a marked tendency to create some- thinz or other. The mother who wants to save herself the most wear and tear will channel this inclination in the right direction. | Feature State r i Im And the right direction is one ; : that won't wreck the house ana joe Tipacon Meeting Tipacon chapter of the American and leave her a shattered heap. If your little darling loves to Business Women’s association met dabble an modeling clay. don’t | Wednesday evening at Hotel Wal- make discouraging nolses about it. d Aas onihey ine It’s true that some clays stain, “7O? *° mie! ea 2 meeting. hands, clothes, wallpaper and | woodwork. Hands and clothes can| Mrs. Walter Asher, vice presi- be scrubbed. And you'll just have dent, conducted the meeting, fol- to rise above the wallpaper and lowing which Ariene Newcombe if Boy: mind him that he asked you to write—and that it's new his turn. “Dear Miss Woodward: My boy Skip lightly ever friend recently moved away, but 1) | got his address from a friend. Rehearsing a scene from “The Old Gurshi of Detroit. | "aid” by Edith Wharton are (left to right) in St. Dunstan Playhouse, Cranbrook. Joanna Graves of Harper street, Marilyn young people are students in the Cranbrook McLintock of Cherokee road and Dick Summer Theatre. . 1) ; : showed the film “QOuitstate Michi gan.’ * . A ‘Chinese auction” planned by the ways committee the and means was enjoyed social hour during . - Ld Members are making plans to attend the National convention being held in St. Louis in October. Tie PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1935 Friend Asks for Letter week, and mail if. That will re- |suppese by now that he has found|he might have vanished into thin] ‘a new girl friend, and 1 don’t know whether I should write to him or! just forget about him. What do you think?” and tell hum that Answer: Write ;—things aren't quite the same with- | ir oe rae The play mM ill be staged The Tee Golf..Members Have Annual Picnic Mrs, James Vallins of Silverside drive, Silver Lake vA Tuesday at the annual team picnic hostess as of Tuesday Tee golf club. Holding low net score for a two hall hi-low foursome contest held in the morning were Mrs. Delbert Hammett and Mrs. John Talbot how he likes it where he is {Keep your letter on an even keel. | air for all the news you've -had of | Ask Give him since he’s been gone him news af his old pals if you know any. Tell him you miss him out him. But don’t pry, don't gush. Hel ansayer if unless he wants you to forget him! “Dear Miss Woodward: Round up some of his best | , school friends. Make a party of it. | It might start him coming into town often | (Copyright 1955 | » Easy to crochet this lovely cover Features Syndicate, Inc.) for ite swim by United ses any size TV set—in your favor- pineapple design! | Croehet pattern 891: 30 larger cotton, | for TV cover, 25 inches in No. cotton; smaller in No. 50; in’ mercerized bedspread fe | Four make a 3-ihch cloth. Send 25 cents in coins for this 84 | pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- j tern for first-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft | Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea It takes only a good figure to | Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print turn a sweater into an interesting | plainly your name, address with : | stick on your teeth”’ | The only thing taat approaches i. | | 1 Directions Train engineers, when passing| hand, she doesn’t know. how ‘each other on adjoining tracks, | — she ares jet cae SF rersal gestur indi-| Teenagers, who are just getting |have —— —- + ‘their cosmetic .habits under con- cate a ‘hot box” on the approach: |.) are particularly prone to this ing train. The engineer can't see sloppiness, ‘the trouble back on his own train, her It's unlikely but when he sees the other eM J) over be worked out. The gineer holding his nose, he knows supposedly cleveg “it's snowing what the problem is down south’ for the slip showing It has often oecurred to us that trouble is about as subtle as an it would be useful to have a yni- auto crash And any lipstick versa] signal for lipstick on the sional would be about as secret. jteeth. Nothing nore discon-| “about the most reasonable certing in company thas to have gambit is to suggest a trip to Someone blart out, You have lip-| the iadies’ reem and earnestly hape that the young lady in- volved will take a good look in that some signal is When this discomfort is to see a — the mirror. school stopped he said he'd call woman with lipstick on her And while there, you might me, but he hasn't yet. You see, teeth and to sit and wonder take a good look at yourself. She he lives seven miles out in the | ; what to do. One doesn't want) may have been wondering how to eountry and never comes in, FT | | te be tactiess, but on the other | tell. you miss him terribly. What can I —— | do?” Answer Give him sume reason fon mag mto town He did ut NEWLY NARROW every dex while school was open So be might come if you invited him to do something special at your house Call him and see af | i TWEED FE SEMBLES he wouldn't lke a picme and a Ranone whittles the wool tweed junior coat ensemble down to new slimness . .. combines a sleek « Straight skirt with a wool jersey blouse, and tops both with a reed-narrow slim-jim coat. Above: Brown or teal tweed three- some with trim linear lines Below Brown or grey nubby ‘ tweed ensemble with _ (> : smart button detail for = , \ s vertical punctuation. the woodwork. But if you don’t feel like being drastic,. there _#s a solution, one! that will allow you to clean up! on the artistic aftermath without crushing latent talent. There is, for instance, a brand- x new modeliig clay developed | from.a vinyl plastic. Its makers claim that it will stay clean, col- | orful and nontoxic no matter how long it's used. The job, therefore, of scrubbing both child and room after an art session is practically eliminated. It's the vinyl in this clay that gives it the advantage of staying pliable indefinitely. But if your youthful Rembrandt wants to pre- serve a masterpiece for posterity, ~you need only pop it into the oven | along with a load of biscuits. Take the art object out first,’ since it bakes into a permanent, | unbreakable object in a matter of | minutes and at a medium tempera- ture. Color, too, is permanent when | baked, As a matter of fact, the clay comes in packages of as- sorted colors so that little Wilbar can use one color or a color com- bination, And either way, you'll probably wish he hadn't. Consolation lies in the fact that while the 8S | may hot produce anything pleasan to the eye, it is clean,and neat. And no one can say you crushed out Wilbur’s one great talent. Pontiac Coin Club Elects 3 Members YMCA was the meeting place of the Pontiac Coin club when they met Tuesday evening. During the business ‘meeting three new members, Harry Gaber- diel of Oxford, Allan Tille- ma of Pontiac and Ronald Wojtkowski of Detroit were elected : to membership, ly, Price Sale Including famous label fash- fons, Formerly froma $8.95, Blouses Scoop necks, short or sleeve- less styles formerly from $6.95. DeCor Sho 48 Perry Street FE 2- (In Pontaic Hotel) SUMMER STORE HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9:30 TO 5:30 CLOSED SATURDAY 2 * = a ay — S FOUNDATIONS, PARKING LEVEL BALI-“HI” 4-WAY NYLON LACE BRA @ wear it strapless @ wear it with back-crossed straps @ wear it with wide-spaced straps © wear it as a halter One bra, four-ways to be worn, , . Bali's white odjustable-straps bra adapts itself to any neckline. ” Lightweight wires support gently from beneath; the new tender-touch riylon cord design holds the the cups in perfect shape. Sizes 32 to 38 6.00 yarn. zone, pattern number, size 4 Sizes 7 to 15. : . each ensemble 79,9 2-Hour Free Parking 5 ; Have Your Ticket Validated When You Meke a Purchase y at Jacobson’s 3 THE OVERBLOUSE DRESS... lithe and lean in worsted jersey fi 4 ‘ ‘ of ~~. : 4 ‘ + : . i = "= ; = ix = a — c ae LA : ry #2 — fh ri ‘ rr = x . I == _ s ; cee - GD i ZA is: 4 Autumn’s most ‘ important new : _ silhouette . . . the : . fa & dee : , smooth, sleek line ’ = of the torso-long , overblouse, r : s . sprinkled with ms - rhinestones at the ‘@ embroidered collar * and yoke. Blue ; with navy, spice with black, > ¥ powder blue with COAT SALON { . STREET LEVEL \ mink, gold with charcoal. Sizes 10 to 18. DRESS SALON STREET LEVEL : 29.95 he fe? mid | S \ 4 } u dCODSONS BIRMINGHAM — ; yy : : : ig ie OWE Ry es RE | 6 Ne ee oe Fe ey oe ee eS f Produce ag ri es qa ef a » 2 AP) « De- Prsaote t op aie : LW. Green: * 4.50-6.00, h Beauty ster x3 Rem: | NEW YORK The Stil Mar- isin thes » ket absorbed’ the shook of new ; 3%" 250; Mich open - i a'8-3.08 Dutch: or Rie Syn." ‘astricans 2%" credit_restrictions today with an Sakata fal | eel rere” 5.25 taloune, eens ma Ss, seney- Federal nied x 25; onev- ' of Pontiac and a Pontiac postal | deus: Western fat erte @-lts 3.1-425; | 2"nounced higher interest fates | employe for many years, died goal one enn cntaci it lends to its member Wednesday in St, Joseph Mercy | 5.25 ed and washed crty 48-4 ib| banks as a blow at more inflation. | ~ "Hospital. He had been in ill health | fim, sess, 50-400 ertne 3641. tum At the same time, New York com- for two years. . Giieee: Yoon pony erts 10-12s8/ mercial ‘banks boosted their Born here March 20, 1882 he was | >, WO4 cris ie ore a-2% dos: Mich. Se for top-rated loans to busi- = essie | 3.00; Calif. 450. he tof has A. and Jen | oe vce tn | Baker in Birmingham Oct. 2,198 |ionqews: wanern fiat eta eins] The Stock Market weathered a and was a member of the Baptist | Lettuce: iceberg type ary peck Caltt.| with ag, neler dine pried Church. etns 2 doz 7.30-8.35 1% doa ~ Bee. a price 7% dos 2.35-2.50; Canada 3| around 6 points, but the pressure Mr, Shafer entered the postal | ¢o* ao seh ey never got beyond normal bounds, aavey fone & he ond cee med. wisbe-300 00, ares 250-248; wees eS ee mail on North Saginaw street 2 rge 2 was reported on ‘ape without Iowa ¥. med if for 18 years, In 1923 he trans- fone Yaiows, oa tite se resorting to any of the customary ferred from carrying mail to in. | Yellows, mod. Ara speed-up devices when trading side as ivamee ot carriers, He sees Mich Sorte ae 80-10, 33 expands inordinately, retired Jan. 1, 1944. few low 6.00; 10 Ib Dante # 5 Sik ‘All divisions of the list were He was an active member and |!" 1-38. m lower, mostly by fractions to be- president for many years of the FE a Hh e Be. md Fag Ae tween 1 and 2 points, and after Metropolitan Club, past president | med. 4.00. xuwe * | the initial drop, a few leading of the — = war com: | , fume: ae cage pares ae staged a fecovery from mander rans Spanish | | Potatoes: sacks ry we | their lows, : : tea 3.00-3.75, American War, life member of! nosiy 340568; US" No te 3380336: Lodge 21 F&AM and Knights Tem. | 10 1 sacks 35-37 gents $-i0 Ib sacks tn New York Stocks lar. large 2.80-3.65 5-10 ib sacks in mast s in the U. §,| containare 1,782.00; "Aria. Reds 2.25- (Late Morning Quotations) a ot . on | eet, wae 2.50-3.00; “Mich. 60° Ib 1 22.4 Is! Crk Coal 26.1 Army in Panama from 1898 to| sacks Round’ Whites unwashed 15-05 | Samim! «3 St jacobs... .. 03 1903, Enlisting in the U. S. Marine | Semis: Va. J¢ te sncke Katahdine un- filed Chem ..1004 Johns Man ".. 8-4 Corps in October 1903 he served eadlanes: Mich. etna 24-30; 8 os film | {is chaimmers Ss blew Were” 334 until 1907, His foreign service in- toes: La. 80 I erte Porto | Alum Lid .....10)3 Kennecott » uae cluded Panama and Cuba yr ie at Us. Ane &m arti 183 Kresge, as, 307 td oe + ad Besides his widow he ts sur osrematens, ito bekte Canada 1 ern Am Cyan.:..°; 614 Lehn & P,, Ml vived by two daughters and three tm one'g e. a ce ont itt CHICAGO POTATOES Am Motors.... 06 4 sons, Mrs. Esther Schebel of Re- | Aun 9 (apiaPyretenn: Ar- |W Oee... 5 teka ans "ah seda, Calif., Gerald of Davisburg, jivals #2, ta tr ‘pple and total us i= Rese ee ve oe a3 ' % f pmen modera’ Ld s: ie Mrs. Marion Moore of Union nd moderate and market for whites | 4m Smelt sat Lorillard |... 21.7 Lake, Chester N. and Volney C. reds barely, steady to slightly am Te) & Te uu d& Nash 83.9 of Pontiac fon ‘white 9.96-2.68;"2dahe Oregon fir: | Am Vigeose 1) SO Mase, TH, +7 384 * wi onl T . artin, * * Funeral will be at 3 p.m. sear |¥ yeske Bh rng, be ee, Triumphs 2.65; Gass Ce — a, May D_ sir : oe) Armour & Co.. 144 Me D cvee day from Donelson-Johns Funeral yg CE ...... I og SE 9 toms, Tn Rea ala] Pouliy em gt Be a Bt arch wi ROIT POULTRY 9 0d ORS 71 Monsan Ch .. 41 | officiate and burial will follow in ,DETRON. "Aue (ary uae wt lt ae a sit Mont Ward ". $0 | Se Aanarionn Weta | Teaate ee ar ke tasks ae wean, | eae A7---= oh Meter, Wheel BEE Spanish American Veterans |neavy broilers or iryers (2-3% lbs.):| peth’ Steel ..1413 Mueller Br. 328 whi %, Grey Crosses 28-31, Barred boeing Air , 644 Murray Cp .. e . Rocks 31-32; caponettes (44-6 Ibs.) 34-| Bohn Alum 25.6 Nat Bis . ait News in Brief ween ha 30; young heavy type hen | Bond Stre as mat a R. 3 ° ir oe Market steady. Dealers taking im only | Borg Wasner 45.6 Nat ope -. $1.9 Wiepé Wobter, 06, of 20 &. San- | int detand end. che peovent surrey | Ble. MS Bes Hen ol gee | derece St. paifl $100 fine end |Ses"atacctLa rae |p eee BY Goel $4 - t . | Budd Co ...... Ma. : Bp he . me ST = to Catia eek aed CHICAGO POULTRY Calumet @ H.. 124 No Am Av. 607 me Salty vung Se OO, Aug. 3 (AP)—Live poultry | Compo Wy... 382 None Pas tine” 323 fore Orion Township Justice Hel es EG mips te rgd yesterday Can Ory ..-... 163 Sent Oi ne 3 * “s : £0). paying prices | Can Pac Mi mar G. Stanaback. un her. 1- | Copttal ari... 33.8 Quens TH ON 130 3: light hens 17.5-18.5; brotlers or fry- | Carrier Cp .. B ac AW Air: 196 Pentine Police received a report | oie teh sbeebs | Cae 167 Penn Ept.. T18| ter Trac... 51.4 ’ S06 yesterday from Frank Dunkel, 4401 ee Chea & Oblo.. $1.4 ag ee 14 Sedum Glenn, Drayton Plains, that DETROIT EGGS Sarreler ----- OF parte Be ..! 404 two wheel discs were removed | putts. case ineuden. tinal -: Bp Penney, 3c. 034 federal cent Cluett Pea 423 Pepsi . m4 from his car sometime between | eredes A large 50-83 weighted | Cole Palm .:': $32 Pfiser ....... a Tuesday afternoon and, Wednesday | average Sh meaivm 40° email 30, erede SY Gee 4... Be ae . 368 morning. B a= 43; peewees 24. Comw 84°’. 444 Philip Mor .. 40.7 Se 5 aati Fc Meee te A bicycle belonging to the son Commercially graded: Re es ot a... of Mrs, Joseph Spadafore of 345 W. | ,." 3-90, small 30 we M-4Tie, medi-| Gon P pt 483° 100 Broct & @ .1003 | / Iroquois Rd., was reported stolen| Browns—Grede A extra large 8, | Cont Can 8 peered 17 early Monday morning according | **** “ medium 38 Cont Ou Sceee os RCA “14 00 wd to Pogtiac Police. Value of the AGO BUTTER AND EGGS Curtiss Wr 197 Repub Stl ©. 436 bicycle was placed at $98. cnleage Aug. ¢ (AP) —Butter steady: . 46 Rex Drug ||) 04 Roast hotesaie buying riers Det Btw . aa pad = . S18. AS : ; After pleading guilty te reckless | 57% b 8. OC 82S. cars 00 B| Powe Aire... 68 Rock 8 - ae ae | go +» SLO Gefeway Bt .. 42.6 = Donald Glaspie, 23, of im Sn teceipts 8.72: Bast Tid At Jos Lena) see rchcraft, paid a $50 fine and/|buving prices unchanged tc \ ‘Sieher! ; Ar L.). 524 Byly BL Pd.) 48 10 08. taree © 8 r cent A's it Kod ™6 St Reg Pap.... 43 $10 costs. He appeared before | 42.5; mixed i: megieme al, US seca. | El aute Lite. 486 Scoville Mtg... 36 Waterford Township Justice Willis | ®'4* 33.5; dirtles 37.5; checks " current | Ei & Mus 3.7 Sead AI RR... 19.3 D. Leturgy —- | Brie fm’ cs. tot Seem Sane: 3 Ex-Cell-O "' 47.6 Simmons Green Thumb Florist has moved Livestock = . sy ‘ Binciatr O : a on? 4 and is now doing business at the DETROIT LIVESTOCK Mach ..50.2 Sou Pac 606 onl pine in Keego Harbor OIT, Aug. 3 (AP)—Hoge salsole | prevpet Sul. tlt ae wy... 02 nex! theater. Phone FE 4-0857, | 25°. No early sales. * 1ei gta Ono — Adv, ee mao P ciara Gen Dynem _” n oe Sen be: moe few sales good {ed steers 90.00-31 00, ee OU oe NY.-13t Rummage Sale; Youth’ Center, |chotce absent: some utility and com- en baile we P soda pay 4 Lake Orion, Priday and Saturday. | Mevcerng eer, thd, Delfers 13-00-1898: | Gen Motors 133. Stud Pack... 10 ney | eeeariy me "Sutu'sr where oma | Set ate, Re ete a. Rummage sale. Fri., Sth, 8-9, | feeder: Gen Time | Texas Co 1003 Bat. Oth 9 to 6. 240 Baldwin’ Aue Calves salable 13. No sarty traging. | Genehe ME REO Mu. 3 ee ony & Goebel 14 Timk R Bear .. $8.6) Goodrich 651 Tren W he a friebd's in jail and needs CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Geclvess ... 0 Fresca esl PE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031.| crmcaco, Aug. 3 {AP)—@elable hogs| OF#h Paige | 2.5 Twent Cen... 991 —Ady. | 6.900; market now fairty active and un-| Gt Ne Ry .... 414 Underwood 3° | eae het ehatecmar te aieigcs| Salar BE Gee rr butchers, instan ore on w te . n c = | Lake Orion, Priday and Setandsy, | at” #4 ae teehe aa eee | mete MES sd Ben AGUS Oe 'o i ay ea butchers 15.90-16 00: 1 deck: q| Motland F ... 14.3 Unit Fruit 4.3 —AGV. | ote mized No. 1 and 2s 300-990 Th 16.00; | Homestk - 399.2 Un Gas Cp .. 32 45 head mostly No, ls 206 ib at 16.25;| Hooker El ... 37.8 1 tm 21 7 F 54 head No. 2 and 3s hey also 16.25; | Moud Her ... 145 US Dubber .. 45.7 Strike Vote Scheduled a 93-head lot 321 I> at 15.25; 179. | M2 Cent 016 ‘14 f : Kelvi : iso tw 14 be-in8 1: T4060 th ‘11. 0-14.08: | Indust t Ray . es Saree ne oH mos’ wr ‘ . eee ater Plant axbeerameataene me |ewas Ot Sree By! GRAND RAPIDS ®—Union offi- | 600. above down to around 11.28. | Interlak Ir |. 29 Wests Bl... 65 : Int Bus Mach 412 White Mot |. 48.9 cials said workers at the American | s99; steers hich gesg and tatter fateiy (Int Mare. 38.1 Wilson ae 124 Motors Cor Kelv active, lower slow, steady to §0| Int Nick ..,. 787 Woolworth — 80.4 er Wvinator plant in higher: heifers or senrt active, steady to Int Paper ...106 ale & Tow . 68.2 strike Vote Peden’, Scheduled || 2° ivwer instances eran: cows ow. [int Shoe, ... 2, Youne 6 aw 2 nr v's low ¢ ual . tae pr rFiday cn contract tp- | ast ciety sen Testers we tet: | int felatel sas Seem Rea 118 clo United Auto Work local po gy ll gy mnt DETROIT STOCKS uto Workers local | ' ds pri 128 Ib st ic. J. Nephler Co.) 206 represents about 2,800 produc- Se beeke, ae a. foot 1108 bet Pigures after decimal points. are eighths tin workers at the Kelvinator | #4850" attncteut'‘e sw choc | Maitwin mapoar ....."™™ ‘ig “W) 12 and employes are schedled wp | ed betes Was eats hag at/ Kineton Presse) 3 12 and employes are scheduled. to ae ae ae, 8 vs rshadl weights 23.25: load lots Screw anos 34 be we heifer Midwe at Abrasive *! a2 82 cin a ching Daca Aug. 15. | mined. choice and prime aon bets | hee kane” ve i 3234 egotiations between American | heiters 19.00-22.00: utility and’ commer. | Wayne Screw 12 (13 Motofy and the union involve ony cove 118 13.80; caamate ane cut-| *No sale; bid ‘and asked. wages and pension issues, paid hol-| mercial bulis 1600-18.50: good and chet TOCK AVERAGES idays and vacations anda supple- vealers 18-00-29 00; a few prime at 7 oo. NEW YORE. Aug. 4—Compiled by’ the | cull to commercial 11.00-18.00; a load of | Associated Press. — layoff pay plan. = and choles 800 Ib feeding steers Net change... ie — =< = © —18 eanwhile, strikes _ involving itng - stock 20.35: two losd Indust. Rails Util. Gtock about 750 workers at the Jervis os 525 Ib thackery 13.60 a ° Noon today Oe we 1378 | Lt 8 “4 ero’ active, reviow: i} wo 48. J Corp. in suburban Granville, and | ,,Sslsbie she sendy 1 te 38 higher: year. | Week ago... 2088 1343 “18.8 1788 about 140 employes at Blackmer co adeent: | sleughter cheew steady: | Month ego...... oH 143 a4 133 i oO jambs > a: owe . . S Pump Co., roar peerage a ew cor aa a 21.78-22.28; cull 190s. hh hen sees MTG 108L RT Hed reported no immed: prospect of | to low good 10.00-1800, mainly an : yy 5 ccccpat 68.3 2| resumed negotiations. ve; cull to choice shora ewes 3.00. Rae high: eotese: ey = s fog ma Dees aa TOP LEVEL JOB — The level customer is measured by barber W. R. Tanner of | flat hair plane. Here, Tanner does his “‘level"” best to | Decatur, Ga.' He uses a carpenter's square to give | “Set loc Ratreuts, which Bice for perfectly even, cee ee eae eee | ae ay co. headedness of a| THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1955 give patrolman Jim Helms a top as flat as his cop's United Preas Phete : Deals Slacken From Fast Pace CHICAGO (~The advance in corn and soybeans ran into resis- tance on the board of trade today. Prices tilted lower despite the fact | the hot, dry weather continued | unabated. There was some profit-taking in these cereals after their sharp up- turn over the past several days; In addition, widely scattered showers were forecast for much of the Midwest.” Finally, a private crop | James G. Brady Pontiac Deaths Word has been received of the death in Florida of James G. Brady, a former Pontiac resident. Hig death occurred yesterday at his home in New Port Richey aft- er a long illness. He was 72, Mr. Brady came to Pontiac with his family in 1927 and was em- ployed at Pontiac Motor Divison. He retired and went to Florida to make his home in 1943. He is survived by his widow, Annie E., and three daughters, Mrs. Marion Mott, of New Port Richey; Mrs. Margaret Miller, of forecast indicated no serious dam- age to these crops as yet from the weather, The rest of the market also} tended lower, largely in sympathy with corn and soybeans, Dealings | | slackened from the quite fast pace | of the past several days, Wheat near the end of the first hour was % to 1% lower; Septem- ber $1.98%; corn 1% to 1% lower, September “$1.38; oats % to 1% lower, September 61%; rye % to 1 cent lower, September $1.01\; soyteans \2 to 1% lower, Septem- ber $2.304 and lard 3 to 5 cents a | hundred pounds lower, September | $10.57. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, Aug 4 (AP) — Openin, grain: a fda oe — P ooes 10% Sep cone 2% Dee 2.03% Dee cece .68 Mar oe 2.03% Mar , -as OM May see 1.00% May orvee 66% duly vee. LOO% — Rye Corn Sep ssoeee LOBM% Sep. wscee-s 139 Dee scocce.: £0 Dee L33Me Mar .oceee. 1.07% Mar 1.374, May ee 1.00% May 1.30% GMAC Registers Data With Securities Group - NEW YORK — General Motors Acceptance Corporation is filing to- day with the Securities and Lx- change Commission a registration. | statement covering $200 million of twenty-year debentures due 1975, according to Charles G. Stradella, president. The proceeds will provide ad- | ditional working c capital to help fi- nance its increa volume of bus- iness, It is expected that the pub- ‘lie offering will be made on August 17, 1955 by a nationwide group of underwriters; headed by Morgan Stanley and Co. Act to Keep Prices From Climbing _ WASHINGTON ®—The Eisen- ower administration reportedly pred on a policy of cutting .F z fee faa banks are expected to follow soon. | hasn't occurred since World War the federal reserve cities. That Il, Variations are based on 3 bank's appraisal of the money supply in its area. * * * A bank increases its legal re- | serves by borrowing from its reg: to businessmen, Member banks. recently have been borrowing as much as 600 million dollars a week from the reserve institutions, although the level dropped to 395 million dollars in the week ended July By making it more costly to borrow, the reserve banks hope to discourage what one official called “excesses” of borrowing — some- times for speculative purposes ~ without unduly tightening up credit | for legitimate business needs such as building up stocks for Christmas business, Officials have been concerned over the rapid rise in bank credit extended to consumers, The total expanded by about one billion dollars in the first half of this year, mostly in the form of installment Pontiac; and Mrs. Thelma Flem- ing, of Williams Lake. Burial will be at New Port Rich- ey. Mrs. Mark R. Fisher Jr. Service for Mrs. Mark R. (Amy P.) Fisher Jr. 28, of 755 Coolidge Rd., will be held at 11 a.m. at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs, Fisher died Tuesday at the | _ a brief illness. | parents when she was a small | | child, graduated from Pontiac High School and in nursing from Highland Park General Hospital. More recently she had served at Pontiac General Hospital. . She married Mr. Fisher here Aug. 14, 1948, Survivors besides her husband include one daughter, Janice M., at home; her parents, Mr. and ' Mrs. Hamilton E. Sellers of Pleas- | ant Ridge; three brothers, John B. | Sellers of Dunkirk, N. Y.; Robert | H. of Ann Arbor; Richard S. of | Pleasant Ridge; and two sisters, Mrs. John Elisworth of Royal Oak and Mrs, Orrin De Laud of Ypsi- lanti, The Fishers recently moved to their new home on Coolidge Rd. Clarence Hockey Clarence Hockey, 52, of. 413 Broadway, was dead upon admit- tance to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Wednesday at 3:50 p.m. Born at Merrill ‘April 24, ~~ he was the son of George and Alida Federspiel Hockey. He mar- ried Lorena Bastedo in Saginaw in December, 1930, He was a car- _| penter by trade. Besides his widow he ts survived f a % : ‘of the Metropolitan Club.Spirit 9 | Kretchen of Pontiac; ‘Mrs. Oliver Petersen University Hospital at Ann Arbor | |manuel Baptist Church of which | she was a member, She moved to Pontiac with her and burial will be in Ottawa Park | | Hope Cemetery here. ‘Billie Paul Spence ‘and a member of Our Lady of of Birmingham. Besides her husband she is sur- vived by a daughter, Mrs. Michael four sons, | Malcom J. in California, Clyde F. of Ionia, Arthur H. Jr. of Shep- | ardsville, Ill. and George E. at) home; 11 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. The body is at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Funeral | Steven 0. Home in Birmingham. Mrs. Oliver (Eleanor) Petersen, 37, of 765 Sterling Ave. died early today in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a prolonged illness. Born in Manistee March 7, 1918, she was the daughter of Thurston ard Edith Harquest Stolt. She came to Pontiac in 1934 and mar- | ried Mr. Petersen here in 1937. Besides her husband and mother she is survived by a son and two daughters, Kennith, Edith and De- loris, all at home. Also surviving is a brother, How ard of Pontiac. Funeral will be Saturday at 10: 30 | /a.m. from Huntoon Funeral Home, |Dr. Tom Malone, pastor of Em- will officiate | p; Cemetery. ‘Mrs. Kenzie G. Smith Mrs, Kenzie G. (Lucie E.) Smith, 71, 3020 Middlehelt Rd. died Wednesday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a brief illness. Born in Detroit March 23, 1874, dress for 30 years. | College of Sacred Heart in Windsor | Refuge Churclr at Orchard Lake. | She was past president of Country Side Improvement Association of West Bloomfield, a member of Na- tion and the League of Catholic Frances M, Haage Jr., ot West Bloomfield, Mrs. Marshall E. Kobe of Muskegon; a son, Kenzie A. of ‘Birmingham and nine . grandchil- dren, Funeral ‘will be Saturday at Chureh. Rosary service Friday at 8 p.m. in Bell Chapel of the Wil- liam R. Hamilton Funeral Home in Birmingham. Burial will be in Mt. —_— service for Billie Paul , two-year-old son of Willie Fs ficiate and burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. The baby died in St. Joseph 6:20 p.m. she had lived at the present ad- o Ch Mrs. Smith was & graduate of is tional Farm and Garden Associa- | 11 a.m. from Our Lady of Refuge | fn of in my office for be given al] persons in. heerd. Dated: August 3. 1066. W.0. 682. ADA R. EVANS, ci Notice ~of Special Assessment: Sidewalk and Related Work on Marquette Street. : Byrnes, , Maurice J. Croteau, Mre Seta yrnes, Albert F. Bell, R. Horsley, Velma Baynes, Gayle M. Coul- . Me le ccna rold reson perbons rested, take notice: That the roll of fogs Bponal ‘ial —— heretofore made by the City cost which aaion «decided paid and borne by spectal for the construction for sidewalk and public ction. Notice is also heretiy given — sed an: from Telegra) : | Pond, seeasor the the purpose of defraving that part of the the Commi , gutter, drain age and related work be Edna Avenue ph Road ‘Dewson Mill |. i now on file in So office for public inspection. Notice is also hereby given that the Commission and the Assessor of the ent, at which time and place opportunity will be nes all ited to ing heard. , les ADA R. EVANS, Notice of Intention to Construct: Curb, gutter, drainage and .re- lated work on Stanley Avenue from. Kinney to Kennett. You are hereby notified that at regular meeting of the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan held on curb, gutter, drainage and related work on Stanley Avente from Kinney Road to K oad at an estimated cost and related work on east ie ad = from WNelson street pub! is «@ Commission and bk mn. leo hereby given that the the . of the City of Pontiac, e Com. mission Chamber the City all in said City, om the Sth day of August A.D., 1959 at 6:00 o'clock p.m., to review said asenmment, at Roper time end place opportunity w: ven all persons interested to be heard ‘i | <9 are : saves 3. 195s, ADA R. EVANS, City Clerk. Aug. 4, 1065 Notice of Special Assessment: Curb, Gutter, Drainage and Relat. ed Work on Marshall Street. Edison | © is now on file in my “otties for inspect on file for public inspection. Tt ts further intended to construct said improvement in accordance with the plan, profile and estimate, and that the cost thereof shall be defrayed by special @asessment according to front- age and that sll of the lots and paree!s of land fronting upon either side ‘of Stanley Avenue from Kinney Road to Eesaese Road shall constitute the sne- jal assessment district to defray $9.- $37 12 of the estimated cost end ex- penses thereof and that $13,010.17 of the estimated cost and expenses thereof shall be paid from the Canite! Improve- ment Pund, and that $3955.01, the cost of Sewer Stubs shall be assessed aedinst the followine lots: Lots 172. thru 181 tnel; Lots 192, 186, 188, 189, 19¢, 207, 204, 204, 193 ae 198 incl. Assessor's Plat 101; 4% 302, 2 333 Assessor's Plat 144; Lots * thru 9 inel. To: Buerl B. Luscom’, Cuiftord W. Byene Viste i |Heights—one sewer stub per lot. Lot —. rue gj Po Dongs m, Carmel E. ag 2 ™ ar