Sunday. April .*>, Business Opportunities A REAL OPPORTI' NITY ATT Ql'li'K Excellent 23-room nimnirr hot.l Houghton l.*k«, Other huilni-m »nmc trade, term* DON’T PARS THI* UP KNAPP 24M W Grand Rlvd TY 4-0492 BARBKgIJK -Good hualn**.. lorilMi; air oondittonins induded, amall dotan pay ment 81OR Woodward. BEER GARDEN <’la»a C llr.ua. newly decorated; modern future*. 1t53.%2 Kaat Warren. BOWLING ALLEY Real moil*> maker Muat aell Alao one nearby town Won derful buy. Write Bo* A-BMV Detroit Time* CtAU "C" Beer Garden, factory dletrlct; axcellent buaineaa. earrtfue. 8484 Ruaaell. fcLEANING-TAILORfNG Well eetatiliehed ■am* location eleven year*. Mark ■. 127111 Appollne. COMBINATION* gnw.ry »tore and meat market with S room* and ti*tft. oil heat , SI,OOO More »tnck, ga* atove, heer cooler, ■eat grinder Complete a.tup readv to go taiw price- (ft 4.Vi. only* $1,690 < a*h, |Mi month Lake Hbore Realty Co . 2’>*it Ua*l Jeffereon, Kt Clair Rhgre* Ph»>ne Roaevlll* 0780 COMPLETE EQUIPMENT for golf driving range; reaaonable Atlantic 0510, At lantic 0217 DOWNTOWN r**tauran* for »ale; doing excellent hualn.**; ovin.r »acriflcing. 484 Gratiot KILLING STATION Pumping 14 otto gal lona monthly, holat. equipment and 40*45 garage; $3,000; »übj. Rank Vault Protsetlon , I FEDERAL COLLATERAL SOCIETY, Ik ; '■* HIT WASHINGTON ROI'I.P.VARn a I * Opp. Rook t adlllae Hotel Ho are * te *. p * MtaMlabed I*l4. M. J. I'nwere, Mar. , 0 W | BONDED LOAN Company Hither loan*; j diamond*, watehea, jewelry; unredeemed, '•areatnr 733 Mlc« 3rd FI., Lafav.tt. Bldg 149 Michigan, cor. Shelbv. G L. Hen, Up.. CADfllac 6363 11th FI. Natl Uk Bldg Woodward at Cadillac Sq ,J h. (••n*o4n. CAdtflac 0666 577 Peiwhecot Bldg . btn H. 135 We*t Fwt Su. h K Gndel. tdgr CHarry 3470 idrweM 14431 at Grand River, opp Ward* J. E. Kotk, Mp VErmoat 6-2000 9225 Grand River above Joy Road. A. A. Nem*. Vft TYlar 4-0900 9ihß Grand River, c tuner of Liver note. C. S. Brooke. Up HOgarth 41*00 j oW*< m 13253 Woodward Avenue, corner Waverly. P H Do >r*ww. Up TOwnaand $-6611 14131 W oodward Ave 2nd FI.. Terminal Arcade. C. K Horton, Up.. TOwnaand $-2434 fe<*—9 Odiee* l4446GraUot Ave . above Seven Mile Rd opp W arda. P A H tlhon, Up., AR.'tngtoeSlOO 15003 lefleraon Ave Eaat. corner tbckrtvin. C. P Sot 4. Mp I.Knoa 0455 W 92 Gratiot Ave. above Hat per. A. P. Pylmnd, Mp PI aaa 1181 Wee*—l Odiee* 7i07 Mulligan Avenue, corner Central. P. 1.. F-rdnirk. Mp Vlnewood 2 2450 P»wA*r. 13708 Michigan, block W. bchaefler Rd .C. H. Stater. Up.. OKegoa 6640 rr-—-jy «• s ioo I f ft A lf#t \ IMMEDIATELY ON l WflifA ) YOUR SIGNATURE I " m n/ SlO to S 3 00 I w IN ONE DAY | ON AUTO 0* PUINITURI Mm mm Jill l 111-IIT Majeeu. RUg.. U 4 n. Opp. CMy Call T (TTMUSSW. - MO Brewer. Mgr CA a" 11 M> * 4 Jo » fid- TT . 4 48SI , . E. R. W threat, M*r I <>t4t Jr». ( ui|Ml «*• ■ ■ Hrmka. .A; K.V)4 t bene Street, at Mllw aukrr I R I SS I 5 l .wAnwaa j 7tsorls Mgf FINANCE COMPANY Auto Loano NEED MONEY? EOT?: SEE IS TODAY! WE HAVE A EJ AN TO MEET YOUR MONEY PROM EM AUTOMOBILE LOANV e will make you a itrtight each loan on your automobile—ubt/r jou util! REFIN ANCING— Te will re-write your prr*ent balance into amatler monthly payment* and advance ca»h Ketidr*. PERSONAL LOANS—Available to perenni who are regularly employed or having t reaionably tteady income and a utitfactory credit record. LOW RATES— QUICK. COURTEOUS SERVICE REPAIR BILLS FINANCED UNION INVESTMENT CO. 23 rd l>«r NORTH 13*34 Woodward nenr OavlMa TO. »-7*M DOWNTOWN—**• PORT NT. W. AT WAVNE—CH. 7474 Beers S t* to I (W) P. M. Alt Offieee Cl'we Hatiirday at 1! M P. W. Downtown and Northwest Offices Open Evening* Until * *'Clerk BANK LOANS I Make Home Improvements—Now— 1 WITH AN F.H.A, MODERNIZATION LOAN i | S FF. YOUR CONTRACTOR AND RFQUFiT HIM TO j ARRANGE YOUR PAYMENTS THROUGH THE Industrial Nation al.B'ank WASMNOTON MOT) AT C.l AMO Rfft Comwarenr Iraorker - . 1 lANDOWH SMC I DETROIT SUN D A Y T 1 M E S (PHO\£ ( HLHRY SHOO) 'Talks to Spur I Warden Drive Spoking a now method to spur the regiMration of air raid war dens, civilian defense officials an nounced Saturday that speakers will be sent to any meeting of 50 or more persons who desire to en list as wardens. "The program U designed particularly to enliat club groii|M i or persona in any type of or ganisation," explained Glenn C. Richards, civilian defense co ordinator. At the present time applica ' lions for air raid wardens are be ! ing taken only at the CD office [in the Barium Hotel. A total of '27.500 persons have volunteered \ Approximately 60,000 are needed. [ Post cards were mailed Satur i day to 11.000 air raid volunteers 1 notifying them to report at pre [ liminary zone meetings to be held i next Tuesday through Friday at [ public schools. i The 11,000 persons will make up air raid warden training *ec-i tion No. 2, and 180 classes for their instruction will begin April 13 and 14. A total of 9.500 war-) dens are now* in training and have completed the first half of their j course. Money to Loan Small Loan Liconooo If paid in 6 monthly payments See other loan* nod payment plane in the table. You can get a loaa guickly an your note, car or furniture. No andoreera needed Na credit laqnrm are aaad* of fi iead* or relative*. Par menu include chargee at 2H% monthly on balance* of SIOO or tern and 2% monthly on any remainder. Nothing eiae to pay. To apply—phone, wnta ar rat a»oat convenient office. Money ready next day—or aooner if nanaamry. HOUSEHOLD FINANCE affenT""""" lAwfo Loano BUSINESS LOANS •—convenient ornrr.R—• NORTHWEST M’t l.lvemota, at Grand River HO. 7874 NORTHEAAT 134*1 Ora Mat. C’nr. Hleknry AR. !TU PRIVATE SALES FINANCED WENT tan I Arheefer, at Wlrhlean OR. ) 4.30 GETS POST ' !■ .fll jft S 1 iflV Photo by Int.national N.wa Photo* JAMES H. BCR NS Major General Burn*, newly named chief of army ordnance by President Roosevelt. He’s a lend-lease production ad visor, succeeds the retiring Maj. Gen. Charles N. Wesson. Michigan Hero Saves 37 After U-Boat Strikes Shipmate Credits Pal With Righting Lifeboat end Picking Up Victims CARO. Mich, April 4 —Credit for the saving of thr* lives of 37 | men from the shark infested waters of the Gulf Stream neah , Cuba was given 1o Hamid Sieland 31. of Caro, by his shipmate, Lewis Carpenter, 19. who arrived at the home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. William Carpenter. Thursdav. It was Sieland's. initiative by which an overturned lifeboat was righted, and the boat was used in picking up survivors of the Texan, drifting on bits of wreckage after the boat had been torpedoed, shelled and sunk by a German sub marine. The sinking occurred two t .weeks ago. Carpenter told the story' of the‘ sinking of the Texan in a matterj of fact way, hut he insisted that Sieland was the real hero. The life boat was the only one saved when the Texan? went down, and Sieland and eight men clung to it for sev eral hours during the night of the attack. Righted Lifeboat I Sieland told the others that In the morning they would attemp’! to right the boat. Several objected,! saying it could not be done. Sie iland insisted, and in the morning he dove beneath the boat to make ; sure that the oars and provisions were secure before the attempt was made. The boat was righted, bailed out and used to pick up other sur vivors. Others of the crew elected Sieland captain of the craft. Carpenter was not one of the men who spent the night on the overturned lifeboat. The Texan was struck by two torpedoes at about 8 o’clock in the evening. “I was below dorks when the rrafth fame," said Carpenter. “I followed a mess man, a former pugilist, to the main dork. When he reaehed the deck he went mad. ran to the stern and Jumped overboard Into the propellers. He was never seen again. “Another man went below to rescue a dog, and two others went after their tools. None was ever seen again. I ran to a life raft, but it had been shattered by splinters from the shells, so I dove into the sea and swam as rapidly as I rnuld from the sinking ship. After 100 feet 1 turned to look for the Texan. It was not in sight, and an in stant later the surface of the water was covered with oil ! released hy the explosion of the ship’s hollers. “Tha purser came alongsid*- and he and I clung to the three hoards for 14 hours until we were rescued hy Sieland and his crew in the lifeboat.” Flown to Miami The captain of the Texan In tended to go down with his ship,l Carpenter believes, hut he was knocked from the deck by a splin-j ter caused by the shelling, into the ocean where he was kept from drowning, although unconscious, by the second mate. Towards night they were picked tip by the crew of a fishing boat and landed at Neuvites. Cuba. The injured were given first aid. and all were sent to Havana, then by plane to Miami, Fla , and then to I New York. I Carpenter has not decided whether to return to another ship or not, hut Sieland remained in New York and expected to join another crew as a seaman. Sieland is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sieland of Caro. Quits Warfare Board Under Fire as Ex-Red | WASHINGTON. April 4 tUP». ' C. Hartley Grattan resigned to day from the economic warfare l board because of charges that he once belonged to a Communist front organization and that he criticized this country's foreign policy in a foreword he wrote for la German white paper in 1940, [ ZJravei an d Fleurs Carolinas Beckon Vacationers The Old AAA Traveler of Automobile Club of Michigan today leads us into the glories of Carolina gardens and on along the Gulf ('oast into Lou isiana and home via Natchez and its Pilgrimage. By THE OLD AAA TRAVELER I AST year the average motor- ist reared bark proudly and proclaimed he had covered 7,000 miles in his two weeks of vaca tion. This year he will be even prouder when he tells you he did his two weeks of vacation with less than 1.000 miles of driving. And there 11 be thou sands of Americans who won't drive the family car, but will travel by tram or bus. Right now the spring flowers of the Carolinas are beckoning, and while you can t make that pilgrimage within 1000 miles of driving, it is possible to see grand old Charleston and a few of the other highlights without piling up the mileage necessary to see New England or the Pa cific Coast. Right now Ihe Carolinas are magnificently beautiful, for the redhud is out . . . and the dog wood . . . rhododendron is show ing color . . .and blue violets as big as half-dollars are blooming. Back 4 Centuries The history of North Carolina goes back almost four centuries to 1584. when Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlow, commis sioned by Sir Walter Raleigh to explore America, landed off the coast. A year later a small colony was sent to form a permament settlement at Roanoke Island, but a year later they were forced to give up the attempt. In 1857 Raleigh dispatched another group under the leader ship of John White. In the group were 108 colonists, including 17 women. John White's daughter, Eleanor, and her husband. An anias Dare, were members of the party', and on Aug. 18. 1587, was bom Virginia Dare, first child of English parentage to be born on American soil. In North Carolina today Asheville is. of course, in the very heart of the “Land of the Sky.” one of the most famous society play places in America. 12,000-Acre Estate There is the 12.000-acre Bilt more estate, created at the end of the last century by George W. Vanderbilt, which, among other things, contains a mag nificent collection of paintings and objects of rare interest, in cluding the chess table Napoleon took with him to St. Helena, and the ceremonial robe of Cardinal Richelieu. If you love beauty, as most of u* do. you'll want to see Craggy Gardens, a 600-acre rhododen dron garden 6.000 feet up in the Ciaggy Mountains. One should swing over to Guilford County for a look-see at Guilford Courthouse Park, where on March 15. 1781, was fought one of the most impor tant battles of the Revolution ary War when Nathaniel Greene and Cornwallis hat tied. Twenty-two memorials have been erected at various points on the battlefield. In Dare County are the sand dunes where Orville and Wilbur Wright conquered the air on a blustery Dec. 17, 1903. On that day the Ohio brothers made four flights in their little air plane with a 12-horsepower motor. Finally Gets Wings The longest flight was 59 sec onds. hut It electrified the world. tor it meant that man finally had achieved wings. An im mense granite pylon, a flashing beacon at its peak, marks the spot where the Wrights flew. In South Carolina the first attempt at white colonization was made in 1652 when a group of French Huegenots landed at Port Royal, near present-day Reaufort, hut the settlement was abandoned within a year. But by 1670 the English had established a colony at Albe marle Point, on the Ashley River. Charleston, almost as appeal ing as Williamsburg or St. Au gustine. was first named Charles Towne in honor of Charles 11. and hy 1775 it had become one of the most important seaports of that time. Here the first Independent government established in America was set up hy the Pro vincial Congress in 1776. At Fort Moultrie, then called Fort Sullivan, was won the first de cisive victory of the revolution when, in 1776. strong British naval and land forces were re pulsed. ’Finest in World' Charleston is packed to Its very edges with points of in terest, from Intriguing old Pringle House to old St. Michael s Church, and from the Cathedral of St. John to Cab bage Row. the Cahhage Row which was the inspiration for ' Catfish Row’’ in ' Porgy and Bess.” Yosemite Offers Two Spring Sports EASTER FINDS Yoaemite Valley awakening from ita long winter sleep to welcome spring with all its color. Visitor* to the National Park now find they may enjoy two season sports While some are riding horse hack, bicycling or hiking in Yosemite Valley, others are en loving spring skiing on the slopes above. Art Museum Is Sarasota Attraction A UNIQUE attraction for Florida traveler*, who are patron* of the art* and lovera of beauty, is the spectacular city of Sarasota. Known to many Northerners who have visited the South by the “Florida Sun beam.” jointly operated by the New York Central, The South ern. and Seaboard Railwaya. Sarasota is 52 miles south of Tampa and is the center and art capital of the state and one of Ihe fastest growing cities in the South. 0 Sarasota is justly famed as the locale of the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art. The finest art museum in Florida, it is also one of the largest and richest in America, with treasures donated by the late John Ringling, which are variously valued from 20 to 40 million* of dollars. The main building is of Floren tine architecture, built around a garden courtyard with cloistered loggia, while the structure is supported by 81 ancient marble pillars surmounted by 76 life sise statue*. The 22 individual galleries are devoted to some 400 odd paint ing* and 300 tapestries, furni ture. curios and other works of art. The collection contains line originals by Rubens. Rembrandt. Raphael, Titian, Velasguez, El Greco and many others. Annual Play Day Throngs Expected ALAMOGORDO. N. M., April 4. The eighth annual Play Day on White Sands National Monu ment, 17 miles west of Alamo gordo, will bring together old sters and youngsters alike for a round of frolic, April 18, ac cording to the New Mexico State Tourist Bureau. An even greater attendance than last year's 5.000 is antici pated. with school children from several surrounding counties as special guests. This la a day of unrestricted play for the chil dren, who find few “don’t” to mar & full recreational prpgram. Features of the day’s program will include boys’ and girls* softball game*, with as many a* four contests going simul taneously; foot races, folk dance*, and a juvenile version of the famed Apache Devil Dance by a group of Indian youngsters. Miss Danaher Home for Easter MARY ELIZABETH DAN AHER arrived Thursday to spend the spring holidays with her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Danaher of Lake Shore road. Mrs. Hugh White Plans Holiday Trip MRS HUGH WHITE and her daughter Barbara are spending Faster at. the Farmington Coun try Club near Charlottes villa, T( TIE mi Vl* EEEIt A LOAN If you need additional cadi to tido yon#* self over, taka your problem to one of tke loaning institutions located in title city. Their business is to make cask loans to folks who need money for emergencies. You will find their service friendly and dependable. They have helped hundreds of men and women to end money worries. Leading loaning institutions advertise in the classified section of this paper. Turn to their advertisements now. See how you esn borrow end repey in convenient monthly instalments, TIMES WANT SBS PAGE 11 PART 4, Florida - j Festival Opened ST. PETERSBURG. Fla., April 4. PATRIOTIC fervor and the * holiday spirit were at high pitch in this tropical sanctuary today, a* crowds of vacationists from every state and from all part* of Florida milled up and down “America* Main Street” on the eve of the opening, early Sunday morning, of the city’a great spring celebration, the an nual “Festival of States.” Red, white and blue flags, banner* and pennants fluttered expectantly from every height as the symbol of the week's entertaiament, which reaches Its climax Friday afternoon with the procession of floats portray ing the resources and spirit of the American states. Heading tha parade of uni- - formed men, massed colors. 20 bands and floats will be Flor- J Ida's governor. Spessard L. Hoi- « land. who. with Mrs. Holland are to be official guesti of tha * dty. Churches Participate Thousands of worshippers from all religious denominations in the city will open the festival Sunday morning with a mam- moth outdoor Easter sunrise : service in Vinoy Park, on tha ; waterfront, with massed choirs from the various churches lead- < ing the congregation In singing Easter music. Headlining the week’s amuse ment, with performances every • night, will be the patriotic pro- ■ feasionai Broadway production i “Let’a Go America,” to be given in Waterfront Park Amphi-The ater, with stage settings and costumes in the national colors. An American beauty pageant, a traditional festival feature, is the annual Queens* Review Tues day. when representatives of the 48 states and Canada will parade before a vast audience and ft secret committee of judges in ft contest for queen of the festival. The contestants will appear in ft variety of costumes with the review offering a proseason por trayal of the latest summer styles. Identity of the chosen queen will be disclosed the foL lowing night at the brilliant coronation ball, when the mayor of St. Petersburg will place a golden crown on the head of the successful candidate. Sports Tournamontt Also on the crowded program of festival entertainment will be a score of sports tourna ments. ball games by the famous 75-year-old teams, the “Kids** and “Kuba,** an old time frolie and display of costumes worn between 1740 and 1940; the world** largest open air card party, with 1,000 tables, in Wa terfront Park; a track and held * championship meet, and annual children’s parade, featuring mini ature floats, pets and vehiclea. Defense bonds and stamps have been adopted as prizes for all contests on the festival program. War May End Dude Ranches SHERIDAN. Wyo. April 4. Pity the poor dude. He may soon be “plowed under** as part of the war program. A shortage of one material may force many ranches In Wyoming and Montana to cease “produc tion” of dudes and return to such earthly products as cattle and sheep. And the fly In the ointment fa the lowly horseshoe. The steel shortage may cut off the supply, except when the horses are used In vital industry.