Miss Press Golf Clinic: Pontiac Country Cltlb at 4 P. M» Four Professionals PartidpatinQ The Weather V.S.'Wtothw naiMs rwtnrt Fair and warmer (BOTita m 1) THE PONTIAC PR ESS Horn# Edition 118th YEAR ♦ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. TUESDAY. MAY 31, 1960—28 PAGES OHirno pRBsii nrvsnifATton* AsaocMTBO rasas 8 Attacks \ Business, Labor Russians Seek to Move Bases in Secret U.S. Calls Malinovsky Missile Threat a Try at Scaring Off Spies WASHINGTON UP)—The Soviet Union’s threat to attack any foreign airfield used by a plane flying over her territory was seen here today as part of a determined effort to keep secret her relocation of missile bases. American analysts of Soviet affairs said that is the significance a speech Monday by Marshal I^ion Malinovsky iit a Kremlin meeting of Communist workers. It follows similar warnings by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev against permitting use of the bases by spy planes. Malinovsky said lie has ordered rocket strikes at the base from which any piano takes off and violates air space of the Soviet Union or its Coimiinntst partners. “We do not know what the intruder plane may carry," he said in explaining the order. “It may well be a hydrogen bomb." The State Department had no immediate official comment. Sen. George. D. Aiken (R-Vt) said “It seems that the war party has come back into power" ui the Soviet Union. He contended that if the order followed to the letter, even an accidoital violation of Soviet air space could set off a nuclear war. Sen. Mike MansHeid (D-Mont) also said Malinovsky’s speech may have grave Implications, eomnienting “I would rather take his warning at face value that to andcrdstflBatB wlut he ' says.” Some State Department experts agreed, but th^ assessed the speech largely as an unusually blunt warning designed to scare allies who permit U.S. use of airfields in their countries. The Soviet Union lout Highway Deaths Near *58 Record Traffic ..................363 Boating ................. 47 Drowning................. 75 Miscellaneous ........... 84 Total ............... 569 Deaths on the highways in the waning hours of the three-day Memorial Day holiday Inched steadily upw^ towanl a figure the National Safety Council said today would mean a ghastly record. A council spokesman said only a halt in the pace could prevent this holiday’s final figures from exceeding the three-day holiday in when 371 traffic deaths were reported. One grim record already was set, this for aU types of aocl-denlal deatN In the country during the 78-hour period. The old record lor violent deaths attributed to the holiday observance was iM In 1M7. 'The categories listed were deaths In traffic, boadhg, by drowning and from mlsceUaneous causes. Before the holiday got underway, the council had estimated 375 persons wwilff die In Ififfic from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight Monday. The Associated Press conducted a survey lor comparative purposes during a 78-hour period with a weekend in mid>May. It . showed 330 persons died in traffic accidents. During the 1959 Memorial Day observance, which was two days, 310 persons died in traffic accidents. Michigan, with 17 dead, was among the top states in traffic deaths, but had only one^drowning in a boating accident. Fire claimed one life, and in the miscellaneous category was the death of an 18-month-old child who toiklled into an abandoned well. Rain-slicked roads added to the traffic dangers but cut down boating and similar sports. The toil was the heaviest in three years. Thirteen persons lost their Hves In a similar 78-hour Memorial holiday period in 1868. In 1968 there were' It deaths over a 54-hour hoHday. Michigan's worst Memorial Day weekend lor traffic deaths was in 1951 when 58 persons died over (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) 5 No Holiday Fafals I fi Oakland County I While the rest of the nation set grim death records for the Memorial Day holiday period, Oakland County came through with a "record" of Its own. ★ ★ ★ There were no traffic fatals or drowhlngs over the three-day weekend In Oakland. ★ ★ ★ ' ^ last year there were two traffic deaths and one | drowning recorded in a two-day' Memoftal Day week- | end. “The thanks should go to the motoslsts for practicing ^ safety and the weatherman for holding lake traffic ^ down,” said FT^nk W. Irons. ★ ★ ★ “The highway traffic never did get as heavy as we expected,” said Sgt. Lorenz Ahlirlm, commander of the Pontiac State PoUce Post. There were 17 killed In state traffic. sought to force abandonment ^ U.S. military bases surrounding her bbrders, and has stepped up the campaign since the downing of a U2 spy plane in the Soviet Union May 1,. These experts said Malinovsky’i (Continued on Page 2, 0)1. 4) ★ ★ ★ •Committee Gets 1)2 Inside Story Allen Dulles Presents Top Secret Statement to Senate Group WASHINGTON (* - The Senate Foreign Relations Cwnmittee, working behind heavily guarded Cloued doors, heard the inside story of thie U2 spy plane today from the county's number one espionage agent. Allen W. Dulles, director of die supersecret Centnd Intelligence Agency (CIA) read 8 long pre-, pared statement. But he provided no copiea-not even for the oom- Teacher lama C. Hook to Retire Sen i. William Fabright (D- Ark), ......................... It aoMy up to Dales whether aaythhif he said would be public. Fulbright promised to meet with newsmen at the luncheon recess, but said he did not know what he would be able to tell them-The committee is looking into foreign policy ImpUcatioos of the spy plane crash with its pilot deep inside Russia May 1. Aftw that incident Russia wrecked the May 16 an anti-Ainerican propaganda oairi- CARLTON MORRIS Pasternak Dies in His Sleep MOSCDW (API—Boris Pasternak, whose last years were filled with the political storm generated by his novel "Doctor Zhivago,” died in his sleep Monday night. He was 70. The noted poet, novelist and translator will be buried Thursday at the Russian Orthodox church in the village of Perdelinko, family said today. Pasternak was an Orthodox convert of Jewish orl^. the < country house at Pctdellnko, writers’ colony 80 milea from Stuns Backers; Leaves Bagwell Clear Sailing Claims State Industrial Heads Planning to Jam Through Income Tax LANSING I^WSen. Carlton H. Morris of Kalamazoo abruptly withdrew from the Republican race for governor today with a bitter attack on labor leaders and the “giants of business.’* His announcement was a political bombshell. The surprise move, stunning his supporters and campaign team, left Paul D. Bagwell, the 1958 GOP governor nominee, with a clear field to grab the nomination again unopposed, Morris dispatched a campaign aide to deliver his withdrawal announcement at the Capitol, then left.with his family tor the seclusion of a summer cottage on litUe West Lake in Van Burean County. The self-styled conservative led the RepubUcan battlo against the Income tox In Inst year’s record- death mask of the Nobel prise-tor’s craggy, braod- inmiilstog In daancy that a levy would pans “over my dead body.” In his infant campaign of 1960 he had promised to carry on the fight—and to roll back the influence of organized labor which he said had "stolen” much of government in Lansing from the people. ‘1 have worked my heart out to keep an income tax off the backs of the pe(^le of the State of Michi-■■ he said. "Unfortunately,’’ he added, “the leaders of giant business and the leaders of big labor unions and a I/rother were present. The brother, Alexander, confided to newsmen that Pasternak was converted before the Revolution of 1917. Pointing to the ’15th Centory village church, he said: “He was a deeply religious man and it was always his dream to be buried there.” Suffering from a heart ailment, lung cancer and stomach bleeding since May 1, he had been in jroma most of the time for sev- Hpi-pmfnrr, M o r r i era! days. A storm of Soviet criticism broke over Pasternak after he wjM named winner of the Nobel Price for nteratare In Ita. The award is given fw the en-jtire body of an author’s work, but (Continued on Page 2, (^1. 4) To Keep Her Memory Desk By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG As inementos go, the one lama C. Hook wants is pretty big. .It isn’t the kind of keepsake she can carry around with her for nostalgic remembrance of the 38 years she has taught Latin at Pontiac Central High Schopl. For close to four decades. Miss Hook has — as she puts it — “pounded” the same desk. She has changed classrooms - many times, moved up and down in the three-shHy school. But always the desk has remained with her. She decided to aak the Board of Edacation if she coaM Uke it with her whea nhe reUrea la imt. Miss Hook wrote to Glenn H. Griffin; one of her former perils whose daughter now is in one of her classes, to present her request to the Board. (Now President of the School Board, Griffin w«s "pretty good” a student, accor^ng to Miss Death Strikes Before Race SPEEDWAY TRAGEDY — FTantic fans tumble to the ground with a 30-foot aluminum tower at the start 6f Monday’s 500-mlle race at Indianapolis. Two were killed and 82 injured as AT the temporary stands buckled. Fans at tbe fenc^ in front of the structure scramble for while a photographer leaves his camera in effort to escape. Start Angry Probe of Scaffold Crash INDIANAPOLIS. Ind, (AP)—An angry group of officials started an investigation today into the slow-motiem crash of a home-made scaffold which-killed two men and injured 82 personti at shttl tawiJi most of the more than 200,000 beer despite pleas to assW persons watching the start of the i linked business and industrial lead-((]ontinued on Page 2, Col. 6) Miriani Vetoes Tax on Income Detroit Council to Act Late Today on Mayor's Negative Move of Monday’s 50fi-mile race. Coroner Roy B. Storm^ placed the Wame on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway management. He said for years the group has Ignored his protests against the makeshift towers which dot tbe track’s lafleM every Memorial day. Edwfn K. Steers, Indiana attorney general, said a rheok will be made to defemiiiie whether safety measures ran -be Imposed on the privately owned track. Fred H. Linder, 36, Indianapolis and WUiiam Craig, 37, Zionsville, Ind., died ol broken necks when 30-foot aluminum jammed with possibly as many as 130 persons, tipped as its spec-latoi^"TpnM TBTward TO' wattdi ~ the pre-race activities. Linder operated the leased scaffold, said William Shortridge, 4he victim’s father-in-law. Ga^ L. Maynard, Muskegon, said be watched “people falling and Jumping all over the place. The whole thing made me pretty sick.” DETROIT (* — Mayor Louis Miriani today vetoed a one per cent city of Detroit income tax. ★ ★ ★ The veto now goes to the Oty Council, which can override it with six votes. ne City Gouhcil originally voted 8-8 to levy.*the tax, effec- Donald A. Petty. 33, Detroit, said, "It looked like a bunch of n dolls. " A rescue worker, Nick Longworth of Fort Wayiio. described "the ashen looJq of death" on the face of a victim. The often deadly track proved safer than the spectator area. The race, won by Jim Rathmann of Miami, provided only one injury-producing crackup. Driver Eddie Russo. Kansas City, was reprated in critical condition but was pected to live. The accident went unnoticed by tive next. Jan. of Detroit and those who work in Detroit. ’The tax also would apply to net profits of firms which are located in Detroit or have brandies here. ★ ★ ★ Cbuncil voted the tax a week ago today. It must act on Mirianl’s. veto at a formal se» si6n scheduled late today. Public hearings by the council are scheduled to begin tomorrow g| 18:U nni. In Detroit’s aty-Connty BuUdiv. II it decides, after hearings, the Council still could alter the income tax, which has been attacked by both Detroit and suburban idents. Warm 80 Degrees Expected Tomorrow Tomorrow will be fair an warmer with the mercury reaching 80 (Degrees, the weatherman says. Fair and a low of.56 degrees is forecast for tonight. TREASURES MEMORIER^ -7 Latin teacher lama C. Hook c of her 38 yean at Pontiac Central High Sdxiol. summit conference and i«hewci^ amqi« bet boost valued assodattons with the scdiooL is the taught over the years.” desk she is sittii« on. She hated to with it and ariced tbe Board ^ (^ Education if she could take It with her. The Board consented. on Page 2. CM. 3) Mayor Miriani termed the tax 'unwarranted, of questionable l(t gality, unfair and impracticable” Ralnfsll win average % to Vi inch In shewer erally Thnrsdny and pcsttoly The Board’s feelingJOMJgunined up by WUiiam Anderson: “Anyone who has that much sentimental attachment to die PoiRtac school system Reserves it.' . “I thou^ the desk s something to -wmind me of sdwol.” she sai^ rtaming her fingers over its tiicks and serntdies. "I pounded it and had some reel nice associations with it. ‘Tve kept all my old classbooks, Too, and have a record of each of Mirimii’ the some 13.P00 students I’ve comb County mayors prepared to Fifty-seven wnpi the lowest re- in vetdng The mayor charged ihat "in 2S minutes last 'I^lesday’' tbe Council wrecked his two-year campaign to revenues from state action came as Ma- meet in RoseviUe Oty Hall to dis- Snver haired and^^ dressed in h cuss the DetzpU tax and possible of suburban counteibcfioo. Morning winds borthwesterly at 18 m.p.h. wilL become li^t var| able tonight and southerty at 8-15 miles Wecbiesday. From 10:15 a.m. yesterday until the same time today .2 of an inch of rain feU in dpwntown Pontiac. ■creamtog Injared who eoattoued munch fried chieken and drink The spectetari had rented at 15 and 810 on tbe setfo”’ mounted on a truck bed. way officials for many Y**” have yallowed private (Continued 00 Page 2, OoL 7> Sfraley'sPosf Safe for Awhile Henry Wins Third Stay While He Files App^ol With Supreme Court JAMES M. ROCHE Two Area Men Get Hiqh GM Executive Jobs High executive posts have been received by two area men in the General Motors Oorp., It was announced today by President John F. Gordon. ' _■ Jr t * James M. Roche. 425 Dunston Rd., Bloomfield Hills, has been named vice president in charge of distribution staff. Harold G. Warner. SOM SaoW-shoe CIrcie, Birmingham, takes kis place as general manager of Cadillac M(»tor Car Diviston. Roche succeeds William F. Huf-sta^r, who is retiring under tbe GM retirement program. A veteran of 33 years with the division, Roche Another prolonged period waiting was ahead for the city Today after two dty ers seeking to protect Chief He^ bert W. Straley’s job won a third stay in a ruling which threatens I Circuit Judge Frederick C. ithls morning granted one of tne commisfioners, Milton R. Henr^ lawyer, the stoy which could «w-celvMjiy block the city October from enforcing two ter amendments affecting Strawy and the ptdice department. This was the way Henry “ the judge's ruling—but not-O- gep^and GM vice presidetit sinoe Jan, L 1967. Im^ I sibly bavt------------ I an appeal •" by Ziero which »P-, held tbe pebHc ve«e en the tw* Ziem, howeverl said that the stay would be in effect June term of the Supreme Coim or possibly until the next or * term began in October. As long as the stay is in effect City Manager Walter K. WUh"*^ hands ai« tied on any po»^ steps he might take under the nr* aroendmenu to oust* StrateY- _ Henry snki he was planning » drive to Lan^ this sftemeyn^ file his etofan of with the Sitoteme Cbort. He sot delay in tccciving the trial ^ post from his first job as aniwurly paid worker on an aaaetnMy Itoe in 1927. cordii^ before 8 a.n\. in the ( town area. A| 2 p.m. was 73. RMUfll A* ajsmmj ^ (toys nftar the pMe vMe " prslesIhM the IWslitY T! s Md to Moi JoImi . .S8i& * Don't Miss Press Golf Clinic: Four Proiessionals Participating The Weather (DeUUe ea re(e t) THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition 118th YEAR ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 31, 19G0—28 PAGES Attacks Business, Labor Morris Quits Governor Race Death Strikes Before Race Russians Seek to Move Bases in Secret Highway Deaths Near *58 Record U.S. Calls Malinovsky Missile Threat a Try at Scaring Off Spies WASHINGTON (^The Soviet Union’s threat to attack any foreign airfield used by ,a pkhie flying over her territory was seen here today as part of a determined effort to keep secret her relocation of missile American analysts of Soviet affairs said that is the significance of a speech Monday by Marshal Rodion Malinovsky at a Kremlin meeting of Communist workers. It follows similar wami^ by Viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev against' permitting use of the bases by s^y planes. Malinovsky said he has ordered rocket strikes at the base from which any plane takes oft and violatet air space'of the Soviet Union or Its Comiiiiinist partners. *‘We do not know what the intruder plane may carry,” he said in explaining toe order. *‘It may well be a hydrogen bomb.” The State Department had no immediate official comment. Sen. Gefflpge ©7 Aikeft 4R-Vt> said "It seems that the war party has come back into power” in the .Soviet Union. He contended that if the order ^ followed to the letter, even an accidental violation of Soviet air space could set off i nuclear v Sen. Mike Mansfield (D Mont) also said Malinovsky’s speech may have grave implications, -commenting “I would rather take his wamlni; at face value that to underestimate what be says.” Some State Department experts agreed, but they assessed the speech largely as an unusually blunt warning designed to scare allies who permit U.S. use of fields in their countries. The Soviet Union long sought to force abandonment of U.S. military bases surrounding her borders, and has stepped up the campaign since toe downing of a U2 spy plane in the Soviet Union May 1. These experts said Malinovsky' ^Comltraed on Page2, CoI.-4) ★ ★ ★ Committee Gets U2 Inside Stonr Allen Dulles Presents Top Secret Statement to Senate Group WASHINGTON (ft - The Senate ForeTgn Relations Committee, working behind heavily guarded closed doors, heard the inside story of the U2 spy plane today from the county's number one espionage agent Allen W. Dulles, director of the supersecret Central InteKigenoe Agency (CIA) read a long pre-pkred statement. But he provided no copiea—not even for the committee members. It I anythteg ho said would be public. Fulbright promised to meet with newsmen at the luncheon recess, but said be did not know what be . would be able to tell them. The com^ttee is looking foreign .pcriicy implications of the spy plane crash with its pilot deep inside Russia May l. After that incident Russia wrecked the May 16 an anti-Amoloan prokmganda c paigii. Traffic ................363 Boating ............r., 47 Drowning................ 75 Miscellaneou8 .......... 84 Total .569 Deaths on the highways in the waning hours of the threc-day Memorial Day holiday inched steadily upwarf toward a figure the National i^fety Council said today would mean a ghastly record. A council spokesman said only a halt in the pace could prevent this holiday’s final figures from exceeding the three-day holiday in 1958 when 371 traffic deaths were reported. One grim record already was set, this for all types of accidental deaths in the country during the 78-hour p<>rh>d. The old record for violent deaths nttri' buted to the holiday observance was >04 in 1047. The categories listed were deaths In traffic, boating, by drowning and from miscellaneous causes. p.m. Friday until midnight Monday. The Associated Press conducted a survey lor comparative purposes during a 78-hour period with weekend in mid-May. It showed 330 persons died In traffic accidents. During the 1959 Memorial Day observance, which was two days, 310 persons died in trallic accidents. Michigan, with t? dead, was among the lop states in Before toe holiday got underway, the council had estimated 375 persons would die in traffic from 6 deaths, but had only one drowning in a boating accident. Fire claimed one life, and in the miscellaneous category was the death of an 18-month-old child who toddled into an abandoned well. Rain-slicked roads added to the traffic dangers .but cut down boating and similar sports. The toll was the heaviest In three years. Thirteen persans lost their lives In a similar 78-hour Memorial holiday period in I8S8. In . 1958 there were 12 deaths over a 54-hour holiday. Michigan’s worst Memorial Day weekend for traffic deaths was in 1951 when 58 persons died over (Continued pn Page "2, Col. 61 ” No Holiday Fatals in Oakland County I ^ While the rest of the nhtlon set grim death record* f k for the Memorial Day holiday period, Oakland County “■ came through with a "record” of its own. ★ ★ ★ I There were no traffic fatals or drownlngs over the H three-day weekend in Oakland. ‘‘ ★ ★ ★ Last year there were two traffic deaths and one ' drowning recorded in a ' end. Pointing to the 15th Century village church, he said: “He was deeply religious man and it was always his dream to be buried there.”_______________________ Suffering from a heart ailment, , X. , . i . i, ilung cancer and stomach bleed- " since May 1. he had been in «« « u«i^i 1-1— coma most of the time for sev- Stuns Backers; Leaves Bagivell Clear Sailing Heads Planning to Jamj Through Income Tax CARLTON MORRIS Pasternak Dies in His Sleep MOSCOW (AP)—Boris Pasternak. whose last years were filled with the political storm generated by his novel "Doctor Zhivago.” died in his sleep Monday night. He was 70. The noted poet, novelist and translator will be buried Thursday at the Russian Orthodox church LANSING (^—Sen. Carlton H. Morris of Kalamazoo abruptly withdrew from the Republican race for governor today with a bitter attack on labiir leaders and the “giants of business.” His announcement was a political bombshell. The surprise move, stun-, ning his supporters and campaign team, left Paul D. Bagwell, the 1958 GOP governor nominee, with clear field to grab the nomination again unopposed. Morris dispatched a cafnpaign aide to deliver his withdrawal announcement at the Capitol, then left with his family for the seclusion of family said today. Pasternak was an Orthodox convert ol Jewish origin. F«mUy mourners gathered on the lawn outside his small country house at Perdelinko, writers’ colony 20 miles from ■Mahchw. InsMe, artists mnde n death mask of the Nobel prise-winning writer’s craggy, brooding features. His wife, two sons and n >,rotber were pre The brother, Alexander, fided to newsmen that Pasternak converted before the Revolution ol 1917. i summer cottage on little in The viRage oTWrofeirnkornSis Co^ The self-styled conservative led the Republican battle against the income tax In last year’s record-long „ legislative seaston, after promising in Jaanry that such a levy would pass “over my dead body.” Ih his infant campaign of 1960 he had promised to carry on the fight—and to roil back .the influence of organized labor which he said had' "stolen” much of government in Landing from the people. 8PKKDWAY TRAGKDY — Frantic fans tumble to the ground with a 30-foot aluminum tower at the start of Monday’s 500-mile race at Indianapolis. 'TWo jjere W and K injured as AP Phatatsx the temporary stands buckled. Fans at the fence in front of the structure scramble for safety while a photographer leaves his camera in an effort to escape. Start Angry Probe of Scaffold Crash INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP)—An angry group of officials started an investigarion today into ttne slow-motion brash of a hoi|ne-made scaffold which killed two men and injured 82 persona at the start of Monday's 500-mile race. most of the more than 200,000 persons watching the start of the race. I imposed on the privately owned safety and the weatherman for holding lake traffic down,” said Frank W. Irons. ★ ★ ★ “The highway traffic never did get as heavy as we expected,” said Sgt. Lorenz Ahlgrlm, commander of the Poptiac State Police Post. There were 17 killed in state traffic. leral days. A storm of Soviet eritieism broke over Pasternak after he was named winner of the Nobel Prize for literature in 1958. "I have worked my heart out toj,Indiana altcrrney general, Ikeep an income tax off the backs! eheek will be ninde to deierniiiie 'of the people of the State of Michi-j whether safet.v measures ■— •-gan,” he said. “Unfortunately,” he added, “the leaders of giant business and Ibejeaders of big: labor unions ThfrM'Td' 1(ave a^^ s^^^ Incite tax adopted whether the people of Michigan want it or not.” Heretofore, Morris has not linked business and industrial lead-(Ontinued on Page 2, Col. 6) Several, witnesses eoniplained bitterly ol tans sitting near the tangled mass of pipes and sereamlng Injured who rontinued Coroner Roy B. Stormrf placed, n,„„p|, irfed ehieken and drink the blame on the Indianapolis Mo-i tor Speedway management. ^ He said for years the group has ignored his protests against | the makeshift towers which dot I the track's infleM every Me-J iitorial day. ICdwin K. Steers, j The award is given for the en-Uttire body of an author’s work, but ,,1 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Teacher lama C. Hook to Retire Miriani Vetoes lax on Income To Keep Her Memory Desk By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG As mementos go, toe one Ian C. Hook wants is pretty big. It isn’t the kind of keepsake she can carry around with her for nostalgic remembrance of the 38 years she h&s taught Latin at Pon-tiac Central High School. For close to four decades. Miss Hook has — as she puts “pounded” the same desk. She has changed classrooms ■ many timgs, moved up and down in the three-story school. But always the desk hag remained with her. DETROIT (P - Mayor Louis Miriani today vetoed a one per cent city of Detroit income tax. The veto now goes to the City Council, which can override it with six votes. She decided to ask the Board of Edncntlon If she could take it with her when she retires in ’TREASURKS MEMORIES — Utin teacher lama C. Hook treasures mementos of her 38 years tft Pontiac. Central High Sthooh* CJWef atooi« her most valued associations with the st^l is the desk shfe is sitting ob,.^ hated to with it and asked tke Board of IJducadon If she could take it with her. 'hie Board consented. Miss Hook wrote to Glenn H. Griffin, one of her former pupils whose daughter now is in one of her classes, to present her request to the Board. (Now President of the School Board, Griffin was “pretty good” as a student, according to Miss Hook.) The Board's feeling yras summed up by William Ander^: “Anyone who has that much sentimental attachment to the Pontiac school system deserves it. "I thought toe desk would be something to remind me of school,” she said, running hei^sfin-gers over its nicks and sci^tc^-:‘I pounded it and had some real nice a.ssociations with it. “I’ve kept all my old classSooks, too, and have aj Record of each of the some l3.oiW students I’ve taught ov?r the yea«.” Silver hairied and dresM in » (Gbptihued on Page 2, Col. 3) Fred H. Linder, 36. Indianapolis and William Craig, 37. Zionsville, IhT,'”3Ied or 'Ft^eTTTiecW “w^ 30-foot aluminum tower, jammed with possibly as many as 130 persons, tipped as its spectators leaned forward to watch the pre-race activities. Linder operated the leased scaffold, said William Shortridge, the victim's father-in-law. Gary L. Maynard, Muskegon, said hr watehed “people fal)in|; and Jumping all over the "plare. The whole thing made me pretty siek.” ’The spectators had rented seats at $5 and $10 on the scaffold, mounted on a truck bed. 3PMs-. - ' cording ]>efore 8 a.m!. 4p the dtiwn-{ TV* Jt Radio Programs town area. At 2 p.m. (he reading' WiiMn, Earl .*—.. *7 73.' « Women's Pag^s .....j 9;lt Maj. John Ekenhower Now Lieutenant Coloni^^‘ WASHINGTON (AP) — nA). John S, D. Elsenhower won temporary promotioa today to Uen- lim yresMent’s sm, who has been signing on the White Honor < stnft, was one M 35 mnjoro en nn Army promotien Hot. \ ■ly-■} 1.TW0 THf: PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. MAY 31, 1960 'Tie Dead Woman Service Set to Abortion Ring VMUSKEGON (UP!)-The body of ‘a woman who was found bound Iftnd and foot in the Muskegcn River was positively identified today as a central figure in the re-, .cent breakup of an alleged abortion ring. Prosecutor Han^ Knudsen said the dead wontati, who was dia-••WtVered upstream from Muskegon <1^ the Maple Island Bridge -*’rtday, was Mrs. Gloria E. Eng-Muskegon Heights Court on a charge of performing an abortion. Knudsen sad l^les, who was arrested April n, performed an abortion on Mrs. England at a Whitehall Motel. At the time of Sales’ arre.5t, Knudsen said records seized indicated a “large-scale” abortion set ixtra $50,000 :to Be Discussed Mrs. England, whose ex-husband I serving a term at Jackson Prison, dLsappeared from the home si«er in Muskegon Heights where she had been living on May 13th. The disappearance ported the next day knd/police investigated immediately because of her role in the abortion Knudsent said. President of S. D. Stolomon li 3760 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Waterford Township, Mr. Solomon died unexpectedly of a heart at-tact Friday at his home. He was ^ City Commission Must *'Decide Where to Place Expected Tax Cash An anticipated S-Vl.OOO extra in the budget, and equipment and Jumishings for the Pontiac FVub* * Ire Ubrary building will be • jects of discussion by the City '•Commission tonight. City Manager Walter K. Willman wants to make the $50,000 qyailable ‘ftr pay raises and seeks authority ^ advertise for bids for the library. tip for adoption Is an pniend-\toMt to tb* INO appropriation ordinance Mtting the IM.OOO iriio the contingetacy fund for the tiitie being. The extra money comes about as a result of an unanticipated increase in assessed valuations this - -year. The Commission has aiready promised jto coniI3cF"faises at mid-year if they are warranted and funds are available. A pay-scale study is under way for municipal employes. Willman has predicted the $50, 000, even if the Commission next • week %otcs to maintain the tax -rate for the third straight year ‘'at $13.27 and each $1,000 of as-sessied valuation. The Commission is expected to do this. Willman said there is no definite ^jtimate, as yet, of the cost of •.equipping and furnishing Uhe new "•Ubrary, which is scheduled for completion early this fall. Funds will come out of a $100,-000 budget Kem, which includes - «uoh auxiliary costs as architect’ lees. All bids will go to the Commission for approval, Willman said. , the prosecution of Earl W. Sales. - SI, of Flint, who is awaiting a 'Rearing in . Muskegon Mnnlcipal ^------------------------ Jews Mark Holidsty at Sundown Sales’ hearing has been twiee |H)stponed because^ authorities were unable lb find Mrs. England to subpoena her %§ a ^ witness. Authorltlqp have a Mwk^g^^ ItlM hav( meitt froAi hef ateut I Knudsen said. Mr. Solomon was one of the state's important road rontrac-tors. With his sons, Charles of Pontiac and Edward of l^nslng. he engaged in numerous multi-million dollar Jobs. His company lately has been involved In expressway construction |etyveen Detroit and Chicago and Salen, who clirrently is free on $5,000 bond, is now scheduled to have thte hearing June ,8. A tk.sk force of state, county and ioca^ipolice has been assigned • to find Mrs. Ellwand’s killer, ’ Knudsen. said. An- autopsy determined Mrs. En^nd died of multiple skull fractures, apparently beaten to death. Tw|ig{»iiy-three years ago, Mr. Sol-mon invented the ‘’’jetting process^’i a means to displace muck in road huildihg. He’became widely known tor this develi^pment eventually traveling to B^ziL>'tp supervise the .technique-during me building of roads throdgh the Bra^ zilian swampland.s. A native of Lebanon, Mr. Solomon came to, the United States was living in Lansing by the time he was 14. The Jewish holiday of Shavuos. known as ’Tfie Feast of Weeks,” begins at sundown today. Services will continue* thmiigh Thursday. Ordained in Scrip'ture as a time I give thanks for the beginning of the summer harvest, the day’s name is derived from the fact that it occurs seven weeks nfter Passover, the beginning of spring. , According to Jewish tradition, the revelation on Mt. Sinai took place on Shavuos. Hence, the festival is also designated as the birthday of the Ten Oommand- Since on the first Shavuos, the Israelites avowed the need for moral purpose in their living. Liberal Judaism has introduced the ceremony of Confirmation into its temples on this holiday. ShaMios is celebrated in synagogues with special prayers, songs, and sermons. In Jewish homes special delicacies are served on the holiday primarily swfieLLda'iy dishes, symbols of Hie delicioustiess of the mixture of learning and religious loyalty. ’Govemtnenf Wins 3 Suits -for Offshore Oil Rights WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court today decided the federal government is entitled to oil-rich submerged lands more than three geographic miles off • the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. ___ Justice Black also wrote a separate opinion in which he dissented in the cases of Louisiana, Miss^ppi and Alabama. He fa- ”H-^we_.are to rblax the .stan- It held that Texas is entitled to submerged lands off its coast to ..-..a, distance of three leagues, or about 10.35 land miles. -The court also decided that Florida is entitled to a three-ma-{jf-league belt of land under Ihe Gulf of Mexico on seaward from - .Jla coastline. MILLIONS INVOLVED Justice Harlan wrote the court’s nuun opinion on the case, a mat-1 ter of long controversy involving millions of dollars. ' Harlan, however, dissented aslclear as those of Texas.’ to the Florida decision. » IJF8TICE DEPT. MTT Justice Black wrote the court’s; Tlie Justice Department in a main decision in the Florida case. | suit filed in the Supreme Court •ored giving them the same treatment as Texas and Florida. Chief Justice Warren and Justice Clark disqualified themselves from the case. Justice Douglas dissented as to Texas. He said, however, that Florida’s claim was fully established by the standard that. he would fix for Texas to meet in decidtoK fidelands i.ssue. dard of proof lor the benefit of Texas,” Douglas said, ”we should do so for all these claimants. In that posture, the claims of each of the other Gulf states for Contractor Samuel D. Solomoiv Area Road Builder, Died in Lansing Service tor Samuel D, Solomon, Pontiac area road contractor, was held today in Lansing, where he 1 But the first-time the process was used was in the Pontiac area. Mr. Solomon used It to con-slniet M5t through tim marshland near Elisabeth La^hNwd In Waterford ^ownship. He began building roads in 1926 and one of his first jobs involved two of the original roads at the General Motors proving grounds in Milford. He turned to state roads in 1928 and for the next IQ years, was one of the largest road building contractors in both the lower and upper peninsulas. Retiring Teacher to Keep Her Desk (Continued From Page One) red flower print dress over a white long-sleeved blouse. Miss Hook’s blue eyes flashed laughingly as she recall^ the two generations of youngsters that have sat before her ;er the years. Among them were two Board presidents. Mayor Philip E. Row-ston, former mayor and acting no^tmaster William W. Donaldson and Circuit Judge Frederick C. Zieni. DEVOTED TO VOI NGSTER.S is well known for her devotion to youngsters. She takes I picnics and has often taken a group of her students to her cottage on Lake Huron, about 100 miles from here near Forest, Ontario. But. Miss Hook's plans tor the future arc as vigorous as her d^iys have been as a teacher. said, ’’but I won’t be bored. I’ll be on the go. I like to travel and plan to make my third trip to Europe soon, if Mr. Khrushchev will let me. going to \isit 14 countries, but Russia is not included. I’vegot some china to paint and I’ve got to spruce up the cottage t there's my mu.sic, and I like read.” Miss Hook has enjoyed teSching Latin because of its romantid historical background. ’’Tc.iching Latin shows how history repeats itself,” she said. think, that Romans had the whole world under their thumb and then It teaches us something today." City Planner Reports on Needs hr Parking CXIBALT ”M” MACHINE - The latest view of Pontiac General Hospital's Cobalt ”60” Teletherapy Unit ahows radiologist C. Robert WiU-liams adjusting the machine for a prospective patient. The radioactive rays are emitted from a cobalt bomb in the ’’head” of the machine (upper left). During treatment, the ’’head” swings around the patient several times in a 360-degree arc. The rays pass through the patient and strike the shield (lower right). Boris Pasternak Dies in His Sleep, Aged 70 Qontinued From Page One) the timing made it apparent that he was “being cited primarily for 'Doctor Zhivago,” a quiet but powerful indictment of Communist methods and a strong asser-individual dignity and Christian humanism. The book, written in 1948-53, as first printed by an Italian publisher. It rapidly became an international bestseller, but the Soviet regime has never permitted its publication in the Soviet Union. drew on the huge royalties his controversial novel amassed abroad, but he lived comfortably royalties from his widely performed translations of Shakespeare and other classics Russian. Top medical specialists Attended him in his final illness and although he had been expelled from the Writer’s Union, its mutual fund supplied necessary medicines and equipment. When he first heard he had een cited by the Swedish tiobel committee, Pasternak told report-the prize ’’fills me with great joy and also gives me greot moral support.” feviet officials looked prize as an affront to the Soviet government. The storm of disapproval extended from Soviet Pr^ mier Nikita Khrushchev down through the ranks of Soviet writ- ers. Pasternak was the son of Leonid Pasternak, famed painter and illustrator, and Rosa Kaufmen, concert pianist. Their. Moscow horpe was a gathering .place for writers, painters and musicians. Sent to Marburg University in Germany, Pasternak absorbed the great humanist traditions of the German universities of the era, After his return, he became, one of the avant garde of the fement-ing Moscow intellectual set. Surviving him are his wife, Zinaida Nikedaevna, whom he maiTied in 1930, and two sons, Evgenny, 33, by a former marriage, and Leonoid, 21. DEMANDED EXILE Pasternak was drummed out of the Union of Soviet Writers betrayer of the Socialist cause who had written “in the interests of fanning the cold war.” There "I will miss the-kids a lot.” she were dernands that he he^-oxileri quiet writer, who bad shunned politics, was deeply personal appeal to Khrushchev, he renounced the Nobel Prize and said he was “bound to Russia by birth, life and work” He. said leaving his country would be “tantamount-Ip death.” * ★ ★ After the furor^ Pasternal,^, treated into almost complete seclusion at his two-story home overlooking a rolling countryside. He kept busy writing poetry and translating classics. One (k the hits of, the Moscow stage is his translation of Schiller’s "Mary Stuart.” Pasternak apparently At Park Beer Party The W^b er ,.,l U S. We»tfc»r Bor«» K»Mr‘ PONTIAC AND VICINITT ntcht tnS Mitkcrlz S - 15 mllei against the Gulf states had asked jthat their submerged property be' declared confined to a thrcc-mi!c belt around the coastline. ’ But Texas, Louisiana. Florida, ._'tiy Mississippi and Alabama all in-Congress gave states ownership of offshore land as" far as their historic boundaries. They said they should be declared |ers of submerged lands ou far as 10 to 20 miles. Deputies Arrest 28 Youtlis^^’’”i[°^ I _ _ _______^ , . _4_AiorinetPanliacjiiattJhas, At I Wind velocity 10 r Direction: Norfhweet. «ra eeti TueedSy »t • PJ- wa;t^ making a report on their response. He hoped it would be beneficial in future parole considerations. 3,459 Civilians Hired by Government in April WASHINGTON (AP)-The government added 3.4S9 civilian workers to its payroll during April, Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va) reported today lor a total of 2,-518,215 civillan^,employes. Cuts of 2.259 in the number of workers employed by military agencies were more than offset by gains of 5,718 workers in dvil-agencies. Full name of Lafayette wasl The diaineter of Mars is 4,140| Can'# Marie Joaeph Paul Yves Rbch miles, about haU-the size of the| r Gilbert du Motier. ]earth. Regular Values to $2 eKh—buy both for price or I each of what you • DIODbRANTS—San, Arid, Mum, Fresh, etc. All types. • MIST PERFUME—Sprayr \ 'Magic Mist' Kents. ' • MIRRORS—Choice of boudoir or neck style. • DUSTING POWDER— 6our|Ois' Fiancee’ • CHARRERT SHAMPOO— Egg or Castile types. Your choice of anr the above e right to limit HAIR SPRAYS—Nestles, Winterset or Liquinets. RUBBLE BATHS—Charberts, 16-Oz., 2 fragrances. PERMANENTS—Bliss, Pin-Wae or Rands COLOGNES—Famous Bourjois 'FiarKee' CHARBERTS Fabulous Hand and Body Lotion, other eosmctlci BE North Regitlar Now... in Mifich Milo Shopping Goolor is. 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OQC 1.49 QQyhort time Boula.v was In ManKfield, during which he dined one evening with me, a ranking lawj'er, a New England buKlneas executive, n greenhouse operator, a radio station president and others, he left the impression of being a very serious-minded chap, well educated, very well read, unusually ronvermnt with world affairs, and very "If I am a fair judge of news-Dion, after 40 years’ service myself. Boulay is a dedicated reporter who very likely heard what Adlai had to say w ith ^complete understanding.” The Paris-Presse published the interview in detail, and NIhita Khruahehev read it before the Paris eonlerenee began. la fact, he paraphrased one of the qnota-tlona in a speech he dellve^ a few days later. ^ (Copyright I960) On this day in history: In 1819, American poet Walt Whitman vyas bom. In 1889, Johnstown, Pa., was hit by a disastrous flood, in the wrake of which more than 2,000 lives were lost. In 1902, the Boer War ended as Great Britain and South Alrica signed a treaty of peace. In 1907, a flotilla of taximeter cabs. • imported from Paris, arrived in New York, the first taxis to be seen in an American City. In 1910, the Union of South Africa wa.< founded ... welding together the two former Dutch republics of the Trawvaal and the Orange Free State/and two former British colonies. the Chpe of Good Hope and Natal. By dOHN C. METCALl'K g£T PILOT Humans 1o him are pitiful little ants....Crawling over the muddy mounds of earth . . . Oeatures with a sense of distarfee . . . Who plunge into ^ach oth^r ... At every turn of the road ... He fa the gallant Urdman . . . Who Has built a home of fluffy white clouds . . . Along the mifcy way ., . Here there' are no neighbors ... No barking traffic policemen . . . He . lives beyond the world . . . Where there are no alarm clocks , . . No tolling, bells ... He is the forest i-anger of the sky . . . And the shepherd of the stars ... To him the day is the sun . . . And night the moon . . . He is the bolt of lightning . . . With a pair of wings loaned to him by an angel. (Copyright 1*M) Smiles Oqe nuisance in betting at the race track is always tearing up ,vour tickets after the race is ofver. Stevenson at first denied that he gave the interview to the P a rJ s newspaperman, Robert Boulay, but (he next da.v he admitted it and said the French visitor at his home wasn’t very good with his English and doubtless misinterpreted what he aaid. The Senate reeently had a spirited debate over what was sup-|Nised to have been said by Stevenson in the same Interview. Dr. Brady’s Mailbag Osteopaths Are Skilled in Sacroilibc Matters Thouglrf for today: American ixx't Wait Whitman said that “Once fully enslaved, no nation, state, city of this earth, ever afterward resumes its liberty.” Funny how people hoard Bieir mom-y so they ran retire and be bored to death. It is expected that when the nation’s figures are all completed, Detroit will show the biggest decrease in the USA. Of course, Oakland maintains its position as second among Michigan’s 83 counties. And, Wayne, Here’s notice that, at the present rate, we hopb to go up a notch. • A marked decrease In the number of our birds is noted by Mrs. Joseph L. Bennett and others. Even the robins show a decrease. and some other birds that were quite common several yMrs ago, now are praeticaily uilknown here. What’s the reason? Some people blame it on cats. What do you think? Here’s personal congratulations to the General Motors Girls’ Club for its good judgment in having Arlene Newcotnbe for its president. I’ve known Arlene since she played with a rattle—and before she prattled so much. This correspondent published the Stevenson denials, but now is in receipt of a letter from Howard N. Fowler, managing editor of the Mansfield (Mass.) News, which throws new light on the controversy. He writes: "Robert Boulay was in the United Statq^ on a tour arranged by Mr. William Hadley Jr. of the Governmental Affairs Institute, Washington. As a former Mans-fieldian, Hadley is an acquaintance of mine-. He. asked if I would host Boulay for a few days to enable the visitor to get « little of the flavor of small-town American grass roots. I accepled. ‘ENGIJSH FLUENT’ "Be assured, Boulay doea^speak fluent English, although this was his first visit to the United States. He lived in my home four days, w:as introduced to., many of—my friends, and was found to be a most interesting and articulate fellow at a small dinner which I hosted. Dr. Joel E, Goldthwait described you do strain your sacroiliac ma-relaxation of strain of the sacro- nipulation by an .osteopath may be iliac joints way back in 1907. your best bet. That was the first I had heard • ■k * * of relaxation, sprain, strain, dis- sicncd letter, not more then one location, displacement or evpn-4l]p,--ws^r health aiid hygleDe. not ‘dlv shghtest motion eeee. dWgno.t.^ in the sacroiliac “ joints. In fact I was taught in medical school that no movement - • in these joints Cas6 Records of a Psychologist: was possible, ex- --------------------------------------------------- cept in a woman about to bear a child. sacroiliac' THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Then hear thou from heaven thy dwelling plare, and forgive, and render to each whoae heart thou knoweat, according to all his ways (for thou, thou only, know-Cht the hearts of the rbildren of men).—II Chron. StSO. The protectiem of God cannot, w ithoiit sacrilege, be invoked but Wnusc"‘MieiiifM. behalf 'of justice and right — (Copyright I9M)) Lajos Kossuth. One of the nicest packs of fun is loading suit cases for that ’oI vacation trip. ★ * ♦ Photos taken on vacation always remind ydb at where you wish you atUI were. "Father knows Best” is something that no one else in the family knows. tk ★ * tict a bunch of women together and they usually talk about who, why, when and wear. Dull Emotions Can Be Converted Michigan taxpayers have been very generous with their mpney for education and have footed the Increasing bills unaided. They deserve some relief. They deserve recognition for the splendid job they have done and are still doing. If you’d like to have your Pontiac Press follow you on your vacation, phclne FE Z-8181, and ask for Circulation. Winning first award in the jubilee esSay contest at St. Mary’s High School at Orchard Lake, Is James. Johnson, who wrote upon “A Repository of Allure.” He Is the son of "Almost iiislanU.v upon his arrival at Boston’s Logan. Atrficld, Boulay expreaaed grave concern over an interview he had with Adlai Stevenson. He repeated to me many times this roncern. “First, he was concerned because, in effect, Stevenson had said to Boulay, ‘This is off the record,’ and in the same interview commented, ’I’m not telling you anything I haven't said a thousand times before.* “The enclosed copy of our News has a brief reference to Boulay's concern. Boulay told several of Roper Warns Pollsters of Information Misuse Mr. and Mrs. Willard V. Johnson of 47^ Shoreview Drh^ Pontiac. The Country Parson V// Speaking at a public opinion research convention in Atlantic City, Elmo Ropxb, pioneer in the art of opinion polling, warns of a new and dangerous rote some fp o 111 i c a 1 pollsters are playing In the 1960 campaign. / Mr. Roper says thdt “leaking” ' of supposed findings has been used to ‘Cfrighten some people Into not running for office and . to try to| frighten otihers into Verbal Orchids to- V Mr. and Mrs. Oliver H. Castile of Blrnaingham; 54th wedding annlver-sary. George MiUlman of Drayton Plains; 82nd birthday: Horace Glassford of Waterford: 81st birthday. Mr. and Mr& William Vl^atson of Davlsburg: 54th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Becca Ginsberg of Walled Lake: 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Sperry of Metsmora; 52nd wedding anniversary^ joints are the DR. BRADV junctions, one on either side, of the sacrum or base of the spine with the ilium or wing of the innominate (hip, pelvic) bone on eitiier side. Prior to Goldthwalt’s elucidation of sacroiliac strain mflst victims were content to take a lot of fool medicine for lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism (the trick specialists had not yet discovered the hypnotic power of "arthritis”), use lively liniments, apply porou-S. plasters or go to Tepid Springs to have the ’ acid, waste matter or poison boiled out of their systems. That’.s what the bartender, barber or friendly cop advised. I have no positive knowledge to eonflrm this, but I believe 'osteopsthie physicians were manipulating what they called subluxation of the sacroiliac or slipped innominate (hip or pelvic bane) and, what’s more, giving many patients astonishingly quick relief long before Dr. Gold-thwait published bis paper on aacrolllac strain. Sometimes, said Dr. Goldthwait, the iliac bone has become slightly displaced, slipping forward. Replacement must be tried by hyperextension of the apine — the patient lies face ^wnward with diest and shoulders on Mie table, thighs and legs ori another. This allows the body to sag or hang, tending to pull the sacrum forward 1 ilium. I musi accojpd the osteopaths credit for their recognitkxi of motion it) the sacroiliac and their skill in relieving or eorreriing the trouble. If you go through the actions typical of love, you ioill soon experience love itself. For ardent behavior begets ardent feelings. If you are blue and unhappy, disconsolate avA friendless, then gir through the right motions and you’ll become happy, delighted with life, and possessed of many friends. “Vou said I should accept dates, even it I didn’t love the boy. You said I should pretend to be happy and gay, even though 1 didn’t feel that way deep down have a baby boy now, and I am the happiest woman in the worid. "I can’t understand why I ever was so foolish as to attempt to take my life and leave this beautiful world. "So I tried out your prescription. I went to movies and dances with him. He even got me a job with his company. He took me to lunch two or three times a week. By DR. GFX)RGE W. CRANE CASE &474; Maurine G., aged 26, is an aHraetive stenographer. "Dr. Crane, I was engaged to be r-wrried the autumn after J left college,” she said, "but my fiance was killed. “It left me so disconsolate. I felt no interest in anybody, not even my parents. "I thought I was ardently In love with my first iweetbeart, but BOW I feel even more In luVe with my husband. “Apparently you are quite right. Dr. (Fane, when you say that if "I *\Ve wont to church togotlior. Wo went swimming, and on picnics, on moonlit drives and to concerts. O POCTOI WET BLANKET? ' £ *‘I told my boy fi4end that I was tdraid I’d be a wet blanket, but he — said he’d take the chance. "Besides, be told me you said the quickest Way to change the condition of a wet blanket is to get out *ji the sunshine Instead «f hiding It away In n dark closet or damp basement. “Af your advice, I had forced ~DR. CRANE live. In fact, 1 drank poLsori, but! my parents got me to the hospital! in trine to save my life. "Then you may recall that I consulted you. Dr. Crane, and you made me promise to ,;^';.out your advice fQr<>six n)orthlk?/J ? * ■* f’' "You said if I went through the proper motiorfa, I woAld so<»i begin to |eel the corresponding emo- myself to laugh and be gay. 1 soon noticed that I didn’t have ^ to force It so much. "It wasn’t long until I even began to laugh again spontaneously. At first I felt F was being dishonorable in thus enjoying life after my fiance had died. we go through the proper motions, we shall soon experience the corresponding emotions. ”I deliberately forced myself to go through the motions of love and it wasn't long till they produced the emotion of love.” tions,: J am frank to confess 1 didn': believe .vou at that tinfe. “Whether church I upon how far be lives from the church — as how far from God.’’ Here's Ji Wt of simple advice for the protection of all sacro&i-acs; Never bend your back to lift anything off the floor or ground; squat down, keeping your back erect, and u-se your thighs to lift with. Finally, let me suggest tjiat if but I agreed. I'KYCHOIXKiY WORKH I tojd you of an aftractKe home town boy who had been very fond of me. before I went to eoi-lege. He still seemed to lodia me, and after my fiance was Icfllwl, this boy again began to qsk me lor dates. •! V / - ■;/ ■' “After a few weeks, my boy friend kissed me. Again I felt a^ little disloyal, but after a time, I returned his kisses. They felt nice. "Six months later, my boy friend was transferred to New York. -I actually shed tears when F bade him go^bye. ,, “And I felt so lonesome for him, thereafter, that I wrote him every day. When he was home again on vacation. I was so ovwjoyed. I clung to him and Confessed that I loved-him. We were married foon , afterwa^s. ACTIONS BEGET EMOTIONS “That was over a year ago. We 4 piintinc eoiU vbtD •' • psTcholpgleal cbuti ud^pi (OopyrigM IMS) ■ u mtuM .............. for rtp;«U- of all Uieal sow prinUd in inu ntwapaper a* wall at lU .SP onrt dlaoatchet. carrier for 45 eemi a wr-k: whero mail 1.1 Oakland. Ooneaee. U»ing-itjn. Uacoiiib. *.tn> and Wash-lenan Counttra It I11.N a rear; tiatahaia to MMlJan ah aU 'Uwr elacet ta tha Daltod Siat«t W ** n raar. dS mall tubikrlj-------— in.-adoaua ---------- Mlcldgan. Member i rlt ioni biM bat & SH THK l‘()NTIA( FHKSS. TUESDAY. MAY 31. I960 f' seven; Cbtton, tobacco, and fruits andl the three largest crops produced in vegetables are, In the order named. | the South. Time Id Start $aving_.with SafetqJICK! You wUI bo surpristd how regular livings will grow to bring you tho financial Ifidof ondonco you want. liboral oarningi aro added! Capitol Sayings & Loan Assn. Established 1890 75 W. Hnion St.. Pontiac FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OF BUILDING 973 Orchard Lake Rd. NO CASS NCtOfl! ____________ § tow BUDSn ui Othir U S. cm S1.9S no SI7SS . „mm, i»ieioosswio*sH»M«neuscj Mff’HIGARs FE 3-7936 GOLD & CREST Summer Order Lull Starts Early; Steel Mills Cooling Many Furnaces Gifts From Church Ring Bell With Candidates BILSTON, England (UPI) - PITTSBURGH fAP)-Steel mill furnaces are being taken out of operation in some parts o< the nation, putting thousands of steelworkers out « work. ^ Nationally, mills are producing at about 65 per cent o( capulty during the usual summer lull before orders start pouring in from new car manufacturers. But some steel centers have been hit extremely hard this sym-mer. 0 d u c t i o n in Birmingham, Ala., mills has been tapeiii^ for six weeks and is icheduled to drop to 66.7 per cent this week. U.S. Steel said its Fairleas Hills plant at Monisville, Pa., will be closed until June 5 because of a shortage of orders, idling about 490 maintenance and production workers. About 100 employes will remain oh the Job in the maintenance and shipping departments. President David J. McDonald of the United Steelworkers Union took note of layoffs at a recent union meeting. He said the industry has "to face up to a four-I day week or a 30-hour weejt." . Tito Youngstown, Ohio, section wiii be operating at only 22 per cent of capacity this week. This is the lowest rate in Youngstown since the depression dyys in the 1930s. Steelmen in the Youngstown area place the blame on a lack of orders for pipe, a big product in Youngstown mills, ud Urge backlogs of steel. An additional 4.000 workers are slated for layoffs En Youngstown this week. Thousands of of are scheduled to work ft hours. U.S. Steel has laid off many workers In the Pittsburgh region. Facilities have been idled at U.S. Steel’s Qairton. Pa., and Donora. Pa., works, and have been curtailed at its Edgar Thomson idant in Braddqck. Pa. U.S.-Steel won't say how many workers have been laid off, txit union sources estimate the number at 3,000 to 3.500. Sharon Steel is suspending iron and steel production for at least one wedk at its Rocmer works in Farrell, Pa. Youngstown Sheet Tube' i.s closing its Brier HiU works and cutting down on operations at its Campbell works. Prodoction in the Buffalo. N.Y., area is dowii to 69.9 per cent. I Holland and by train , to Moscow | Poland. Twenty passengers made across Holland, Germany aiM|the first trip. prayer books to eontlrmatlon eaiididales, SI. Leonard’s (Church of England) Chureh Sunday gave them alarm clocks — to make sure they wake up in time (or Sunday ser^iree. London to Moscow Roil Service Begun LONDON (UPD - The first direct London to Moscow train' service opened Sunday. j ’The journey pill lake about 60 houiS by' foat train to Haiwich. England, steamer to the hook of DR. HENRY A. Optometrist MILLER 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 ' ‘^Better Things in Sighl^’ Contact Lenses Open Friday Evenings — Closed Wed. Afternoons Nevw too strong. % Never 100 weak SP Ph*Uf*i MOKE CO.N'TROVERSV -Comdr^ Lionel “Buster'’ Crabb, British wartime frogman who disappeared four years ago on an 'underwater spying mission m Portsn)outh Harbor, is center of a new controversy. A book published in London today claims Crabb w'as captured by Russians and is now serving in the Russian navy. England says Crabb is dead and buried. Always just right! Marriage Licenses ______M. IHtot, IM kdlioil Donsld SIrekli, Troy, and B«Uy L. Ooode, Troy Ocrald O. Wmums. Ulirord, »Dd 1st: Martha I. Wilcox, 129........ Joseph P. Howard, Walled Lake, Bernice B. Sheppard, Walled Lake * Oerlch. ■“ ‘ ' LeVerne E. Collom. 71N Pontlec Lake -d, end Mary 8. Beall, 7130 Pontiac Uke Rd. Raymond B. Lewis, 1417 Helde J. Btevqulte. Clarkiton Stephen K. Rothman, Tombd, nd Dolores J. Surowlta, 447 W. troquoie Prank H. Raneom. Pirrotnston. and Edith P. Andrew!. Parmlnyton Richard I. Blue, Drayton Plains, end Edith A. Cuthrell, Lake Orion John P. Peden. Detroit, and Helen O. Heerne. Orchard Lakr Prank---------------- Itiley. Blrmlnchem, icn, Ypsllenti Maurice W. Spencer. Orion, and Htsel Budd. Oxf&rd Okvfd X Donald. BoutJitteld, and'Caro-lynn L. Johnaon, Southfield Jamaica’s supply of aluminum ore is expected to last another years. TAKE TO THE SUN IN EASY-LIVING COTTONS, SENSATIONALLY PRICED Sleeveless and sunback styles will be cool delights ail summer. Delightful, too, their easy-care manners. Just pop into your washing machine, tpuch-up ironing at most. Pick colors and patterns as gay as Ji^. Sizes 12 to 20; 14to 24Vg- Better hurry. At this price these will/go fast. Scoop up an armful. 88 Jemet T. Treutx. Farmington, an rlcla M. Hall. Parmington Vernell Everett. 3(4 Midway, and ly L. Butler. 93k Luther Richard B. Davenport. Orosee Pointe horet, and Barriette L. Robb.-Birmlng- Roy T. Bliss. Oxford, and Patrirla L •rg'er, Oxford Billie M. Byrd. Haxel Park, and Jud: I. VanHorn. Madison Heights Robert L. Shick. Berkley, and Joan \ ■......... Weldon N, Hendrickson. Midi sort fflghu. and Patricia O. MeUlsh. Madison Hariy E. Davidson, Philadelphia, Pa., nd Mary K Kinney. 9S Waldo Darrelld R. Crandall. 401 E. Beverly, nd Betty J. Cauabte. 3M Nelson —.. - Andreaason. Franklin, and FAMOUS CIGARETTES V ' You can light either endt Perry died t ..— ,, _Jed La— lerlch. 4S4 Auburn, and: I. 1970 Rood Rd. Donald . and Soho V. L Icillewald, Troy, and Nancy Get satis^ing flavor..» so friendly to your taste! No flat 'filtered-out"flavor! No dry“sTnoked-out"tasteJ I. 127 K ake 14 WesH Alvai 0 Sanderson, i » Mldwt S ' / u See how Pall Mali’s famous fength of fine, rich-tasting tobacco travels and gentles the smoke-makes it mild-but does not filter out that satisfying flavor! Outstanding..fand they are Mild.! • aite fta*u«V<%*N6Maaws%4«a»^ydsy-^i^^— umrmU/kmmf The majestic stature of the 1960 Cadillac somewhat belies the eagerness and agility with which the car drives and handles. The gentlest touch of hand and toe masters every movement of the Car^ and even parking is so simply accomplished that you end your journey rested and relaxed. If,you haven’t ycL tried it for yotirsdf, you ought to accept your dealer’s invitation to sample this remarkable adventure in motoring at your first opportunity. You’ll find it a most thrilling driving experience. VISIT YOUR WCAL AVTHORlZED'^/yac:jgMl/y DEALER JEROME MOTOR SAUE5 COMPANY ^ 276 280 S'. SAGINAW.STREET • PONTIAC, MICHIGAN.’ \, ' EIOHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 31. 1960 .•C. ’V3}JtV A f'- , y'tTsc '.I • ■*_;;; c. • ■ .-9 y I ,r Response . . T ■ 7 1* . _ > That's whot we want from the reoders of The Pontiac Press. We want them to resjx)nd to the news and features and advertising in our pages. These many letters received by Josephine Lowmoh ore a good example of the powerful stimulus which The Pontiqc Press creates among its readers. Thank you Miss Lowmon for contributing to our readership-cihd‘thank-you Mr. and Mrs. Reader for your corrtinu^ interesKand . . . response. .. 'f"-I ^ -V"' :• ,7. L?i;-: THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESnAV. MAY 31 Dear Abby Says: Grow Up! Take the Little Lady Home, Signed, Sealed and Delivered By ABIGAIL VAN BURKN* DEAR ABBY; I am probably too old to be aaking (or help with this problem, but maybe I need a o m e one to tell me to grow up. I am 28 and ■till make the m 1 g t a k e of i n ging my around (or my ViSipJiil f a m ily’g ap- “ proval. So far ABBY I haven’t, brought one girl home who could pasg Inspection. One they nicimamed "Toothpick” because she was rather thin. Another they called "Schnoz” because she had a prominent nose. The one I should have married was a, real peach, but she was a little plump, so they hung the name "Blimpy” on her. If they can't make fun of a girl's looks, they ridicule her nationality, family or job. I am no Rock Hudson myself. I'm just an ordinary guy with an ordinary job, so I don't see why my family thinks I should bring home a girl who is rich, beautiful and perfect. “NO ROCK " DEAR NO: You may be no "Rock” but you have rocks in your head if you bring home . another gin to pass inspection. Quietly make up your own mind. (You're old enough.) And bring home the little li e lady, livered. signed, sealed and delivei ★ ★ w DEAR ABBY:. My son is serving his milHary obligation and there is r possibility that very soon he, will be going oveiwas for a year or more. He has expressed h|g desire to marry a girl (she is 18) when he comes home on leave. He says they are very much in love. Tbeir plan is to gel mar^ ried so that his allotirfent will be increased. .She will work and live at home and save money for their future together, As a mother who loves her son, how should I advise them? .SOLDIER’S MOTHER DfcAR MOTHER; I would discourage a 19-year-old from marrying and leaving an 18-^ year-old bride behind. If it's "true love,” it will keep until his military obligation has been fulfilled. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: Kindly point out to "Annoyed Grandma" that she could not have attended weddings of ALL denominations if she says that the best man never walks down the aisle. In the Jewish faith, the best man DOES walk down the aisle, followed by the groom, who walks down between his mother and father. Hie bride also walks down the aisle, not with just her ttther, but with both parents. The significance behind this -being that it is a joy- to be shared by all concerned. If grandparents, and greatigrand-parents are living they, too, share the . honor of walking down the aisle. This ip«y not be in accordance with modem ■ proper procedure," but this tradition has beep around longer than the etiquette books. .Sincerely, MRS. E L. * ★ ♦ DEAR ABBY: What is a girl supposed to do when a creep asks her to all the school dances way ahead of time? .My mother won't let me go at all if I turn him down. But it isn’t fair to be forced to go with this cre^ or not at all. Is it absolutely a crime for a girl to turn dowai a date to a dance and then go with a doll who asks her later? BOBBI DI:AR BOBBI: Sorry, but once a girl turns down a date to a dance, she shouldn’t show up with ianother boy. That's. t{ie price of popularity. Womens Section Lying down on the job produces eye’catching results in a geometric study os Miami fashion models pose for a bird's eye view of the. latest styles in cabana clothes. Ryan at the Organ Recital at All S^ls Closes Fine Season. By MARY LOtJlSE IJNDQLIST Alexander Boggs Ryan pr^ scnted a varied oi^n recital Sunday evening at All Saints Episcopal Church. Mr. Ryan played with authority and skill, a fitting climax to a fine season. "Five Chorale Preludes” by Johannes Br^ms opened th^ program. The organist used very effective combinations on the organ to portray the always thrilling Brahms harmonies. The stately dignity of these preludes is satisfying to hear. ★ ★ ★ The "Suit du Premier Ton" by «ariy French composer Louis-Nicolas Oerambault followed. The different Voices of the organ carry the melody at various times, with the bass ■ and treble trumpet and comet stops producing a beautiful fullness at the toale. This pe- -riod of musfe i^as played with fine understAiiding by the organist. George Frederic Handel’s "Aria in F” was heard in a traasposition of the "Larghet-to e piano” of Alexander Guil-mant's Twelfth Piano Grosso. .High point of most organ recitals is a composition by Jo-, hann Sebastian Bach. No exception was Mr. Ryan's stoning interpretation of the P«w-sacaglia and Fugue in C Minor with its slow melody intro-‘Ruced by the pedal. 'Die pas- sacaglia, a slow dance in three-quarter time. is played in a minor key. The intricate fu-gal section which follows was played with clarity by the organist, with voices well defined. ★ ♦ ♦ Compositions by a pair of modem French composers concluded the recital. 'Hiough the works of both Olivier Messiaen and LoOls Vieroe contain dissonant chords, the subtle harmonies were pleasing to the ear. They were played with a variety of organ combinations producing a full ethereal effect. Sewing Circle Sets Luncheon The sewing circle of Welcome Rebekah Lodge No. 246 Will meet Thursday for a noon luncheon at the Lexington place home of Mrs, William ' FyW... ' ' ■ Mrs. Clarence Cavalier, noble grand, has announced an election of officers for the June 9 meeting. XHher items on the group's agenda are an 8 p.m. meeting x>f Past Nqble Grands Qub June 7 at the South Fnincis Street home of Mrs. John Hart-wick and' a rummftge sale from 9:30 a m. to,l.p.m. June II at the former iwation of the De CRUte& ,I^le(t. t wduld 1 e to know "If'(I would have been proper for me to go up to- other"'gueidir without being introduced, and start a conversation. Answer: You can't very well walk up to two strangers who are talking together unless they .speak directly to you. But you can quite properly start a conversation with either a man or woman who is seated, or standing, next to you. You must not, however, let It atgi on without response froni-your , listener. ★ Dear Mrs. Post*. While hav-.-ing dinner with n ^'friend,^ the other evening, (nit wa i t e f y' brought my co(ft4 before I X had quite finished eating (fie main course, astt, , As I wanted^tfle cfjffee with my dessert.M removed the' saucer from underneath -the . cup and put it on to|^ of thd* * cup in order tor keep the fee from 'getting*’Pord. E-was told that this .wqs ^d > rn«n-ners:”Was IT? • ■ > - —~ Answer: It was. You shdntd have told the waiter ypu .(lid not want your coffee until.ypiir dessert. * -k -k Dear Mrs. Post: Is It ever permissible for a woman toki go to a funeral without a hat? /To my mind any funeral, however small, is a formal service or ceremony since certain rites are follow^ and that a hat should properly be worn, even if the. serilce is not held in a church. Will you please tell me if I am ri^t? ' Answer: I could not agree with you more. A woman whose head is uncovered at a funeral would be shocking. Miscellaneous Shower Honors Miss Garrison Frances Garrison was honored Saturday evening at a miscellaneous show er ' hosted by Mrs. Wesley McCulloch and Mrs. James Traver at the Canterbury drive home of Mrs. Traver. ★ ★ ★ Daughter of the Everett K. Garrisons of Covert road, Watkins Lake, Miss Garrison will marry Richard Roberson -Jcrr^June 12,^ in Martha Mary Chapel, Greenfield Village. Her fiance is the son of the Richard Robersons of Dubach, La. ★ it " k Mrs. Kerry Keating of Mon-iw will be matron of honor. Local guests included Mrs. William Armstrong, Mrs. James Coon and daughter Loraine, Mrs. Forest Brown, Mrs. Earl MeJunkin, Diape and Ellen MeJunkin, Mrs. Albert Simpson, Mrs. Roy Ward, Mrs. Anton Bego and daughter Alice, and Mrs. Ray Timmons. Retired Teachers Planning Dinner The annual business meeting and cooperative dinner of the Pontiac and Vicinity Retired Teachers Qub will be Wednesday at 6 p. m. in the Recreation Room of the Adah Shelly Library. All retired teachers and June retirees are invited to attend. Members-^ are requested to bring their own table service and a dish to pass.' ^Concluding plans for a Saturday smorgasbord are members of Saint Frederick's Sthool Mother and Dad Club, Mrs. Robert Crottsdell, left, and Mrs. Joseph Spadafote, chflirman, conferrihg with the Rev. James . " " -■' - \ ■ nMahing iip^^ luf^'^ former students of-Retty Brotyn's. social danejn^ classes are committee mem-6^5 who 'arejfplanni'hg a gala reunion and reception in Mrs. Brown's hondr June 17 at Elks Temple. From left ate-Bmce Annm df^lvan Shore drive, Mrs. Robert IsgYigg of Menominee road. Donald 0. ^ew-man of Lakewood drive and^Mrs. William C. Rogers of West Iroquois road. . Music Group Meets TonighJ All Committee chairmen, patrons an^ active 'members of the Pontiac Symphony are being urged to attend the’ annual meeting of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra this evening at 7:30 at the West Iroquois road home of Mrs. B. B. Roush. % ♦' 'k An open.UiviUtion to attend is extended to any person interested in taking a more active role with the symphony. Public relations chairman Mrs. Jerome Mulligan, says, "An orchestra d e pi a n d s many workers. We need additional active patrons. " Schools to Renew Ties The Very Rev. R. S. G. Bradshaw, Vicar of Cran-bi-ook, Kent County. England, will give the baccaluareate service for Cranbrook and Kingswood School seniors in Christ Church Cranbrook, Sunday at 4 p.m. Rev. Bradshaw is on exchange in this country as priest - in - charge, St. John Church, Medina. N.Y. The six Cranbrook institutions in Bloomfield Hills are named for townlet in England where Rev. Bradshaw has been Vicar since 1947. Henry Wood Booth, father of founder .George G. Booth, emigrated to this country from the Kentish village more than a century ago. The name was then applied to the Bloomfield Have You Tried This? Tomatoes, Cheese Top Broiled Pizza Loaves By JANET ODEI^ Pontiac Press Home Ultor This Pizza Loaf can be served as an appetizer or as a snack during the evening. You'll need some unsliced French Vienna bread for it. Mrs. Jack Cooper, today's cook, is vice president of the Waterford JC Auxiliary. She likes to sew for her two daughters. ---------------- PIZZA U)AF By Mrs. Jack Oooper 1 iMl rr*nV> Vlenns bread, 11x4 InchM >4 pound (round beef '> cup seated Parntewn cheese homestead of George and Ellen Booth when they acquired the land in 1904. ★ W 4T Rev. Bradshaw's visit w\lJ not be the first exchange b^ tween the two areas. In 193,3 Headmaster C. Russell Scott of Cranbrook School In Kent visited Michigan's Cranbrook and presented it with a plaque, -a rgplica of the charter granted to,the first Cranbrook Scho•^^by Queenj,Eliza-•beth in the '16th century. Tpe school in England also >aa a plaque sent from ,CHw;;r(ibk School here, ' - i - Several local residebis and Cranbrook personnel! haye visited ,4he„- English townlet and have signed the guest book at Cranbrook School Bradshaw is a got school. He is 'also a governor of Cranbrook Secondai^ School for Bo^s and the Mary Sheafe Secondary School (or Girls. He serves as chairman of the managers of St. Dunstan's and Collier Green Primary Schools and is one of (hree honorary chaplains of the College of St. Nicholas of the Royal School of Church Music. Hospital to Honor Volunteer; ikfe> The Pontiac State 1 will honor Its volunteer workers Thursday at a 2 p.m. tea in the recreational therapy department of the hospital. Dr. Walter H. Obenauf, hospital superintendent will welcome some 500 workers. k k ' k . The Riev. Galen E. Hershey,. associate pastor of the First Presfiyterlan Church, has choseq for his topic. "Hun-drods of Helping Hands." ^ Hospital patients will enter- 'imj tain the volunteers with chorale ^ numbers and .piano selections. Patipnts functioning as messengers will also meet and givei :IU‘ voluiilwi s in tlie hos^ pital lobby apd guide the guests to the program area. k k t Ted A. Panaretos, hospital > community relations director and tea chairman names his planning committee: Dr. William- A. Defiker. Elizabeth Tiky.R. N., fl^rs. Eleanor Me- „ * Curry, Dorothy Roe, Grace * aark. Mia. Havjl Foltz, Ted Stein and Richar^Arthaud. Cut loaf lengthwise and spread both halves evenly with thh meat and other in-gredisnts mixed, together. ^ Broil 12 minutes about 5 inches from heat, or until meat is done. Remove fi-om -stove. -i Top meat with thin slices « of tomato. Cut 5 sHces of sharp cheese Into triangular shape and overlap on to- Style Shows Move to Penthouse Lawns Sheehan. Mri. Russell Holland, Mrs. Robert Landry and Mrs. Raymond Clemens are also helping plan tfie ■ 3 toS p.myevent in the school athletic program. By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) - The fashion show, like American dining, has taken to the great outdoors. Used to be that a style display, no matter how costly, was confined to a hotel or restaurant. Then, somebody discovered public transportation. So we reporters on the fashion "beat” got used to watching models balance on high heels as they paraded down the aisle of a chartered bus, on a train from New York to Philadelphia. or an airliner as we circled the greater New York area sipping champagne and munching caviar. Now, looking for (new setting and scenery, the shows have migrated to front yards and penthouses. to recent days. I've watched an all-cotton fashion display from a seat on Mayor Robert F. Wagner’s lawn. And for the first time. I’ve covered a fashion show in (or is it cm?) a penthouse. *■ ★ ★ The National Cotton Council took over the mayor’s residence for its show in conjunction with the presentation of its annual design award to Mrs. Jane Derby. Three designers—one from Honolulu, the other two from New York — held forth at a pt'nthouse belonging to'a resident in, of all places, my own apartment buildup. SETTING IA XATl-RAL Seems ti me a penthouse setting was/such a natural that anyone pwnihg same could iBillfortune just sub-nv^fttspion industry, r does run one risk I guests "tonr‘1 f clothes and the N< York skyline, to this particular case the clothes won. — Designers were Mrs. Lorrin P. Thurston of Honolulu, pio-ne^Mn bringing Oriental styling and fabrics to occidental wardrobes; Grant Wateis, who specializes in sports clothes (or the college and young career set, both male and female; and Dorothy Sours, who believes she is one of the few w^men in the nation designing menswear. ♦ ★ ♦ .Mrs. Thurston built most of her summer collection around South Korean silks. She borrowed designs from the tradi-> tional garb of the East ranging from variations of a Chinese banker’s coat (loosely fitted except for its belted waist), and the shape-concealing muu muu/ which missionaries introduced^ to Hawaiians for modesty’s sake. Tbe banker's coat, in print, made a handsome top for^iydiv 'i'.— ny slacks in solid cMors. And. a muu muu chopped off at thigh length was used to top two-|dece bathing suits or regular shorts and„bra tops. k k k ^ . Designer Waters stressed the ”' ’ use -of corduroy and cotton broadcloth mix-and-n^tch out-' fits, showing how wm blouse, skirt, tights, jacket "and ves.-tec, the separate bortions could t • be combing into a dozen c binations. TEN THE PQNTIAC PRESS, TUEgDAY, MAY 81, 1960 > 9riiig In Parii, am perfect mall ear-lobes should stay ' t girt with a long, st^fbe the button earring fashion. WorldBibhs Find Person You Married The Beloved Authorized King James ™ ^Version of The Holy Bible, beautifully ^ V bound, t>rinted on World Indo-Text, liulitt papers... a gift they’ll cherish always. Lovrtir Whita Blndingi in overlapping or limp coven. gold-sUmped. ' . ‘ >2.25 to 55.00 Slack or Whits Zipper-closed Bibles, especially liked by young > fnllrt 53-50 to 54.25 . Superbly Slender Personal Bibles, with new easier-to-read type, beautiful morocco bindings. 510.00 TakgYa<^tlon Together CHRBTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 By JO^PHINE LOWMAN ^ Many' people disagree about whether a husband and wife should spend tlwir vacation to-•. 1, lor oimC think that while shared responsibility iS a strong bond, it may not be as strong as shared laughter and pbared happy compatUonship. This is certainly true.ln dailj) life. If the man spends most of his time working and what little leisure he has with the boys, and the woman beoome.s too engrossed in her children, bridge or clubs, or all three, the marriage Is not apt to prospee. The man and Woman will grow apart, in different directions, in ta.stes and interests. The habit of impanionship will weaken and slip away almost without the realization of either the husband or the wife, until it is too late. (iRKAT HAZARD 1 Experts on divorce often have said that the habit of spending leisure time apart is a much greater marriage hhzard than money problems or in-laws. YOUR PERMANENT WAVE . . . is tho most important port of your hair styling; THELMA CHOW, Owaor UUIDUL’S HUOTR METHOD SHOPPE M Warao St FE ^-1424 PERMANENTS c Complete with Haircut and Set U Mo Appoiatmant Macaatatr FE 5-8000 SJ Mon. nr 1 through t: LOIJIS “nSr If West Huron — 2nd Floor Next to Buckner Finance their groups of the same sex, but evidently the pattern of spending most leisure apart is not good for marriage. Of course the joint vacation has its problems. Sometimes the perfect vacation lor a man is not the perfect one for his wife, and vice versa. . For instance, the woman may feel the need of a hotel i that she can be completely cut off from all household responsibilities, while the man may want to go on a camping or fishing trip. SHOIII.D SHARK When more than one vacation h year is possible this is not a problem, but when only one short vacation is forthcoming, 4t' does The joint vacation has its problems. SoihHimes the perfect vacation for a man is not the perfect one for his wife, and vice versa. seem a shame if hu^nd and wife Jo not share it together. They need carefree time in which to rediscover the gay. Interesting persons they fell in love with In the first place. If the desire to do so is strong enough, surely a combination vacation can be worked out. If this is impossible, then the husband and wife can fake turas choosing the yearly vacation. i . -k W If you arc going on a camping trip and would like my leaflet ■Tricks in Camping" send « stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for ieaflet No. ■ to Josephine bowman in .care of this^ncwspaper. , GAS RANGE SPECIAL AT CONSUMERS FOR A LIMITED TIME ON THIS MODERN 30-INCH ROPER <^S RANGE NOW ONLY 169” API REGULAR LIST PRICg $184.9S F R E E J N Sjr A A t|p N f trad^LinJy^ STOVE tODAY, WHILE IT ^TILL HA^S real VALUE-flUftRY? THIS OFFER IS LIMITED! One of the finest offers ever mode on 0 modern gos range! It has insto-Llte outomotk lighting of top burners, oven ond broiler, giont-slse 25" wide Boke-Moster oven, outomotic even heot control, Silent-Roll smokeless broiler, easy to cleon construction. Highest Roper qualify in every respect, yet priced to fit easily in any budget." Shop now during this special sale! Four Members Welcomed Into Sorority Newly initiated into Omega Mu Sigma Sorority are Mrs. Vance Powers, Mrs Joseph McCarthy, Mrs. William Katlch and Mrs. Alex Gadany. \ kkk The formal initiation ceremony was held at the .South Josephire avenue home of Mrs. Hsmold Clifford with Mrs. Louis Livingston as cohostess. Mrs. Ray Peterson, chairman of the group's annual breakfast June 12. has urged members to make early reservations. Mrs. Peterson dr Mrs. Merrill Petrie may be contacted for further information. Mrs, Petrie of Cherokee road will be hostess lor the* next meeting. ^eaguwi^tans June Party The Good Government League of Pontiac will sponsor a public card party June 29 at the American Legion Cook-Nelson Post No. 20. Other items on the club’s agenda are an August picnic lor members’ husbands and a study of work projects to be presented to members at the September meeting. Mrs. De-Wayne Shelfer has been appointed chairman lor the project study. k * k Vacancies on the group's board of directors have been filled by the appointment of Mrs. Sheffer, corresponding secretary: Mrs. Fred Goines, parliamentarian; and Mrs, Robert Rood, .one-year director. Mrs. H. C. Cboley was hostess lor the May meeting. Solemnized by Rev. Ellis The Rev. Lewis M. Ellis solemnized Saturday morning nuptials of Mary Suzanna Beall md La-Verne Eugene Collom in St. Patrick Church on Union Lake road. kt k ' k Hosts at the evening reception in Dublin Community. Center, Oxbow Lake, were the John Melvin Two Delegates Are Selected Mrs. Otto Zanders and Mrs. Archie Tryon have been named delegates lor the VFW Auxiliary June state convention in Saginaw by Auxiliary 1008 members. Mrs. Otto. McCrac, Poppy Day chairman for Auxiliary 1008, announces a successful sale in the city. k k k Members have sent a gift to each of the eight high school graduates of the VFW National Home at Eaton Rapids. 18 at Meeting The afternoon was spent sewing and knitting when Queen Mary Section of the Needlework Guild met for luncheon with Mrs. Frank Snover of Bopita drive. Eighteen members attended the Thursday meeting. President Mrs. Andrew Mc-Kerrow announced the next meeting as June 9 at the Mechanic street home of Mrs George Bickley. White Lake Township, who wore pale plak. Carrolton bouquets df feathered carnations and headpieces matched their dresses. The bridal goyn of white C*ian-Hlly lace over, silk taffeta featured a aabrina neckline outlined with seed pearis and sequins. The bustle back swept into a chapel train. ■ w ★ ★ A crown of pearls dnd handmade silk rosettes daught Ibe. fingertip veil of silk i|Hi*k>n. White feathered carnatlona gnd pink roses comprised thd bride’s cascade bouquet. Jerry Noell of Oxbew Lako was best .nten. Harold and Francis Collom seated the gVMts qt their brother’s wedding. Mrs. Beall chose light grefn lace over taffeta, with a linen bolero for her daughter’s wadding. Her corsage was a beige cymbidium orchid. Mrs. Oollom’s floral nylon print with fingertip-length jacket was worn with orange and white accessories. Her . corsage was of miniature tea roses. After a northern Michigan hon-f eymoon, the couple will live in Waterford Township. MRS. lA VERNE E. COLLOM Bealls of Pontiac Lake road, Waterford Township, parent# of the bride. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Francis Collom of Pershing street, Waterford Township, and the late Mr. Collom. Matron of honor Mrs. James Hennessey of Berkley apprared In baby blue brocaded taffeta styled with floating back panel of blue chiffon. Bridesmaids were Mrs- Andrew Noell In ballerina-length rose pink taffeta, and Mrs. John Perclval of New Knitting feags The Knitting Needle 452 W. Huron FE 5-1330 Meet Yoni Friendi foi CoiiBB RIKER FOUNTAIN Set Saturday Dances .Summer dances the first Saturdays of June, July and August are planned by the Promenaders Square Dance Club. The western style dancing for intermediate and advanced level are set for 8:30 p.m, at West Bloomfield’s Township Hall. Guests are welcome. Officers installed by the group at their annual dinner danre Include Glen Grlmshaw, president; Harold Hadden, vice president; Mrs. Glen Grlmshaw, secretary; and Robert Cram, treas- Board members Include Robert Price, Neil Mclnally, Raymond Bowman, Even Cram and Wayne Wilcox. ' Dances were called by Warrert. Allen, Robert Cram, Robert' Longe, Norman Hill. Robert Newill .and Wayne Wilcox. Mr. Newill was toastmaster. Zontians Meet Alice Scrrell gave a talk on* "Choice Characters and Friends” she has met in' worl4 travel at Zonta International Club's Thurs-i day noon luncheon in Hotel Waldron. Student Typing SPECIAL 2 WEEK GRADUATION SPECIAL! NEW ROYALITE PORTABLE Conp/olo Wilh Carrying Caso • N»w Staodard Kayboard • Wtighs Only I Povndi • Boll Boaring Cnrringo • Loft nnd Night Margin Sot -Inoy Crodit Tonns— IMTIMBRI • BSSHIESS Ml PITf BBS l23NorfhSiginiwSl ^FE.2483! CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Side-draping wftly accenU this graceful afternoon dress. Wear It belted or not there are no waist seams to interrupt the smooth and slimming line. Printed P^rn 4566; Half Sizes 1214, 14%, 16%, 18%, 2d^, 22%. Size 16 requires 3 yards 39-inch fabric.' Send 50 cents in coins for this pattern—add lO cents for each pattern lor Ist-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept. 243 West iTth St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address wiUf Zone, Size and Style number. - WUN0A WEVI ... THE BROADLOOM WITH OUTSTANMN« WEARABIUTY Spring H butting out all over with Wundt Weve Ctrpett I maguiEcent Flower Show of Colort. Choose your Wundt Weve Broadloom in cotton, nylon or wool. All Wundt Weve Ctrpett tre toom-woven for extrt.^rt of wear and guaranteed colorfasi in cleaning. And Wundt Wevf it tha only manufacturer that pmkruikt every carpet before it leaves the mill! Come tee Wundt Weve— America’s moat colorful carpets. WeuiUhave Wunda PTAu's ftunoutCutumDytSeniee —match your broadloom la any color in naturo. Only tlM extra per iq.yi. HEMP RUGS I##oot V(^dth ... Sq. Ft 39c DELTOX RUGS 9 x 12 ...... . . $19.95 OVALor OBLONG RUGS 6x9 .. ..... $14.95 ROIPD RUGS 6 Foot .............. $19.95 STAY ALIVE ^ LONGER X I TOja HiAuft rooGS tMW.Rur.. raa-IMl Aertu rniB Maw fott OtfiM OPEN FRI. and MON. NIGHTS 1666 S. Telegraph, Pontiac > FE4-p51i > THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. MAY 31, 1960 ELEVEN By JANET ODELL WWrh will It be? A discouree on spring housecleuilng or some news about in'msting products in the home fields? As if th?re were a real choice . . . We’ll appease our conscience a little and pass along a couple of cleaning tips. You can remove old decals easily by painting' them with several coats of vinegar. Let It soak In for a few minutes, then Just wuth off the decals. JIVIIIAS l« W. Hwm PE 2-0294 . for • llmitod _____________ stetor paltern K nptcIsUy pOctd. BMuUfuJljr flft • bond, UUi I - ploo* place Mttlnt la perfect aa • flft to the bride or for roureelf. Stegor. the arlitocrat of atalnleu. U the Ubie-ware for todap'a Srloi MISTS COlUCTCD IT MRS. 0AI| GERKR, MOTHER OF S “It’s unfair to I P. $. Gerber Baby compare,” goes Panta are hand or the old saying. I machine washable Wise words and ... have excellent ! true when it comes wearing qualities, jto your baby. Comparisons can Medium, large, die upsetting for you, eventually extra large for all tannful for baby. sizes of babies. VferHi rememberingl If baby is lemporarily outdistanced by the little fellow down the street, he’ll xatch up in inches land ounces...muscular and mental skills. If he’s a fast starter chances are hell level off. Reassuring to know that most chil-dreo catch up with each other wery nicely is . the end. Waw "MNdtrcever" agent for >our baby. Gerber Baby Pants are designed to keep your darling Comfortably dry and socially ac-peptable. Made of soft, soft, polyvinyl film thsn’s guaranteed Waterproof, acid-proof, leakproof. Best of all, fhe panu stay toft for the life of the garment Trimnfed with nylon laoe, they'fe amply cut to permit free movement, allow for grospth. This stoneware looks sturdy but attractive. It’s ovenproof. Colors are orange, brown, blue, black or white. This is available locally. Iriglil idea division. A regulation egg poacher is perfect for beating two or three different baby foods, quickly and conveniently. Wonderful to have everything warm and ready at the tame time. And speaking of dinner ware: Put a short piece of rubber Tubing over the ends of faucets v/hen you wash your best china. No tears to shed over chipped dishes. Wonderful te leek et . . . even better to cet. I'mtUlking about Gerber Strgined Egg Yolks..... tunny in color, creamy in texture and a delicate fresh-egg flavor that's hard to beat. As for nutrition, they’re rich in iron end vitamin A, offer e good t tant: Gerber Egg Yolks ere heat-sterilized for your baby’s protection. For a change of taste, try Gerber'' Strained or Junior 4 _ Egg Yolks and ^ ^ Ham... a great combination for the younger gMeration. Gerber Baby Foods, Ftcmoot, Michigan. After you tike down yeur draperies far niring or rleaning, wax the traverse rods. Tbe draw draperies will pull back and forth more easily. Here’s n suggestion for Fath?r's Day which isn’t too far In tlie future. Get HIM a new magnetic lock key chain. With this, Fatner can leave his ignition,key in the parking lot but can take all his other keys with him. The magnet has a lifetime guarantee and will hold up to five pounds. MULTIPLE BOASTER We have a picture of multiple hot dog roaster. It consists of a chrome plate ring equipped v/ith six pointed spikes on which you impale the hot dogs. ’The ring resting on the grill supports the weight of the food. Looks good. Is inexpensive. If yMi’re equipping yoar outdoor eating plaee with new din-nerware, yoa might consider oome good looking modom oer Fairway Club Has Luncheon § Custom Building ^ Elliotts wilt custom build or rebuild your furniture in any. style, size, color or fabric you desire. Quality workmanship is a specialty at 5390-5400 Dixie Hwy. OR'3-1225 ^ Ten years of memories will be dusted off when St. Frederick High School class of 1950 get together June 11 at a dinner-dance in the Elks Temple. At left, Jerry Webster of Joy-ceil drive, Waterford Township, checks graduation list with Mrs. Donpld Genereux of Mark avenue, seated. James McLean of Rochester, right, is general chairman and^ Mrs. Paul Boch-nig of Golf drive, standing, is handling publicity. LET'S HAVE A PATIO BUFFET Couple Honored by Sunset Club Newlywedsf Mr. and Mrs. Charles Graves were honored with a reception when 52 members and guests of the Sun.set Club met at Pontiac Boys Club. Mrs. Joseph Gartner planned refreshments lor the affair. ’ " First party of the season for Fairway Golf Oub members was a luncheon at Pontiac Country Oub. President Mrs. George Watters welcomed new members Mrs. Jack White, Mrs. Charles Barker, Mrf. Jack Hamed and Mrs. lioyd Hampton. Prize winners at ’Thursday’s affair were Mrs. Delbert Hammett, Mrs. Russell Hetzer, Mrs. Barker, Mrs. Frederick Foster and Mrs. Gene Elkins. Social committee for June Includes Mrs. Elkins, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Richard Robertson,' Mrs. Mike Ando-nian and Mrs. Hetzer. ^■|i I t tt) ,l| f? I 4 );• ;i j Bp. suro pxpprf elG^riQ your vu/urjhiG rjrr^periQQ Do you hava picturg window or wall-to--watl draporiof7 lo lefo and havt our oxporitneod drapory craftsman eloan tham for you. Tfioy-kfiWovery 4ypo-d{ drapoM . fabric and jiist how to tafoly roitoro colors and taxturos te their original luitro. Haadings are hand ironed. Homs art finished to hang ovonly. And a special hangar heaps thorn vrrinhio-froo until thoy'ro ready to hari hang. Wouldn't you rothof. have this tpocializod dnpary cleaning?^ — - WeelaM aoMy mathproaM... FREEI DRIVE-IN MAIN KANT 340 S. Telegraph Rood "^ONTlAf OtlVE-Mi BorMoyi. 2682 W. l2:MRa Rd. Talaphami n t-tiiM- IM 8BWVIC« ON SHIRTS AMD CLldkMINO ORIVE-INr lounderers Cleoners Liiien Supply 993 Huntor Wvl' Guests at the ’Thursday meeting were Mrs. Jean Luxon, Mrs. Sara Huttenhour, Mrs. Florence Brown, Mrs. Alma Lawley, Mrs. Genevieve Robertson, Mrs. Rebecca Rivenburgh. Mrs. Anna Bums and Edwin Goit. Former member Mrs. Edward Armstrong of Florida was also a visitor. The club has received an invi-tation to attend a meeting of the Waterford Golden Age Group Friday from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Waterford ^ • ■/A r: THE PONTIAC PRESS. TrESI>AV. MAY ^1. 1966 THIRTEEN Rtdi Buiy Rocket Cori LONDON U^-The Soviet Union is building guided rackVU pable of tramporting imall labora- tory cai^, radar-controUed fron^ the earth, to explon the moon and ] neighboring planeti, a Soviet exin a book published here today. Oy. (DMelioH 3i EAYBTA K. AMER80N ' and sister, Peggy Ann, both at Prayers were offered this morning at the WiUiam F. Davis Funeral Home for Kaysta K. Wherever It May Occur . . We are equipped to serve every family that may call —and wherever it may be. Distance does not matter. Amcrson, six-day-old daughter of Mrs. Irene Amerson of 15 W. Wilson Ave. Burial was in Oak Hill Cemetery. Surviving besides her mother is a brother, Keith of Pontiac. The infant died Saturday at Pontiac General Hospital. Be it at a distance, in the suburbs or farm, or another city or state, we can render the same hijgh type of service. We will serve you well and promptly, wherever the passing of a loved one may occur. m !. federal \riuikinf the Death of George Allen Bell We Will Close Tomorrow, Wednesday at 1 P. M. and remain closed for the balance of the day. Iliomas Economy Furniture Company 361 S. Saginaw St. A window decorator at the Thomas Furniture Co., he was fatally wounded in a gun accident at his homje JIunday. KRIS OORDONOrr Service for Kris Gordonoff, 79, of 101 Augusta Ave. will be hOld at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the De Witt C. Davis Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery. A retired employe of the Water Department of the City of Pontiac, he leaves two sons in Bulgaria, and a brother. Mike of Pontiac. Mr. Gordonoff died Saturday after a long Illness. MftS. JOHN J. KERR Mrs. John J. (Lena) Kerr of 25 E. Ann Arbor St. died this morning after a long lUness. She was 69. Mrs. Kerr was a member of St. Michael Catholic Church. Surviving besides her husband are three daughters, Mrs. Clare Harroun of Drayton Plains, Mrs. Ekiward Welnmsui and Mrs. William Hill, both of Pontiac; six grandchildren; a sister and a Her body is at the Huntoon Funeral Home. MRS. HENRY MIDDLETON Service for Mrs. Henry (Edna M.) Middleton, 81, of 307 Going St. will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. * Surviving are four sons, Matthew H: and Rowland F., both of Pontiac, Bert E. of Lapeer and Harry C. of Flint; three grandchildren; five great-grandchildren and two Orion and Mrs. James Osborn of Deford. Mrs. Middleton died unexpectedly Sunday night at her summer cottage at North Lake, Glennie. BOY A. HOLEY Following a two-day illness Roy A. H(rfey, two-monlh-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman J. Holey Jr., 242 High St., died Sunday at home. Surviving besides the infant s parents are a brother, Sherman J., Your Choice of Colors lUYRnr OAUON ^5^ OIT SKONO ONLY • Alkyd Nat • Perch and • Vinyl Hit Dick • Houm Piliil • Misonry • Olm inimel ^ Extirior • SimtOloii Pritmr INSIOi — OUTSIDI WHITE PAINT MICA COUNTER TOPS - Va OFF Vinyl Plostic Floor Covoruis First CQ® Se. Quality U9 ASPHALT Spotter Mq ^ TILE 0 9x9 Inloid LiRolowm Tile EXTRA Ce E. SPECIAL il* QUALITY^ Ir Armstrong Corlen Solid Viiyi Tils pt 12*'* Quality ■ * Plastic Wall TIlEl''* Unglozed Random Pottern Ceromk FLOOR TILE 27i Sq. Tt. $440 Per Shost I TILE OUTLET WE ARE YOUR AUTHORIZED If YOU DonH Buy Your TiU{^ oruey From VS,^ We BOTH Lo$^ Moi 1055 W. HURON FE 8-3717 Pianty of Parking SANDRAN DEALER HMri: Mm., Thim.. Fri. 'Hi 9 — Tm.. Wad., Sat. 'til 6 PMliac'a iorgvst Amsfreag Dealer Help Us Celebrate Our 15th Anniversary ENTER CONTEST TODAY! ’400 IN CASH PRIZES Xou may win one of 60 prizes by guessing the total CONTEST CLOSES AT NOON, JUNE 11 deposits in Pontiac State Bank as of noon, Saturday, ^ • een • June'11 1960 First Prize ..........$50 savings account Second Prize .........$30 savings account Here’s how to enter our anniversary contest: $20 savings account Guess our total deposits on the above date. Put this with Fourth Prize .$15 savings account your name and address on an entry blank in any Pontiac Fifth Prize.$10 savings account State Bank office. Contest open to anyone but employees __ • * of Pontiac State Bank and members of their families. 55 additional $o savings accounts PONTIAC STATE BANK 8 CONVENIENT OFFICES MEMBER FDIC Saginaw at Lawrence; 3300 Aulnirn Rd., Auburn Heights; Baldwin at Yale; 4496 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Hains; Bazaar Area, Miracle Mile; 9 to 6 Service, 4 E. Lawrence. i€ to ordtr—for aU-umOm amfdrt. OW a dtmomUtitionl 8m Th$ Dinmk Short Omy Show In color Sondayi. NBC-TV—Um Pot Bbom Chmy Shownom wmUy. ABC-TV. The Impala CorwertMe with Body by Fither What could be more sensible thait owning America’s first-choice car .. . especially right now when beautiful buys are in full bloom at your Chevy dealer’s! Once you’re behind the wheel headed fen* the far blue horizon, you’ll discover what a bom traveler this car is—from its big FAMILY-SIZED TRUNK ,to its spirited, whisperH^uirt ECONOMY TURBO-FIRE V8 ENGINE, Chevy takes your comfort to heart, too, with velvet smooth FULL COIL SUSPENSION at all four j wheels. There’s just nothing like one of these new Chevies to ] brighten up your whole summer! CORVAirS THE OHLY COMPACT CAR THAT GIVES YOU THESE CAR-OF-THE-YEAH FEATURES: America’s first and only air-cooled, rear-mounted engine—unique body-frame construction by Fisher that surrounds you with s unitized structure of steel—fold-down rear aeat-supple 4-wheel independent suspension. No wonder Motor TVend Magazine voted Cor-vair "Car of i the Year”! r\ Save—right now—during the ^inp Fever Selling Spr^ }it pour local authorized Chevrolet dealer*s X MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. 631 OAKLAND 6» CA55 P< TIAC, MICH. FE 5-4161 t’OUK'rKSN Michigan Needs More Doctors Stdt» Reported to Rank 23rd in Nation for Ratio to Population ANN ARBOR (AP)-MichtBan'i population is outradng its supply of doctors at an alarming rate, even though the state’s economy can easily suwort an intrease, two University of Michigan medical authorities say. In a report of "Medical Manpower in Midiigan,” published in the current journal' of the Michigan Slate Medical Society, S. J. Axelrod and W. R. MiUs said Michigan has an "unfavorable” over-all doctor-population ratio. Two years ago Michigan ranked 33rd among the 48 states in the number doctors per unit of population, the investigators said. “MIcidgaa's aeed for additional physlelaM hi ciear,” they said. "If the physiciaa-popuiatioa ratio, eoattnues to decrease as it has aver the past M years, this Axelrod and MUIs said the state' two medical schools (Wayne State University and the University of Michigan) are not providing enough doctors to cope with the state*! 22 per cent population spurt of^he past decade, or to offset the loss of physicians through death and retirement-They said doctors from out-! medical schools furnished 1,140 doctors In the state during a six-year period ending in 1955. This outnumbered the Michigan graduates leaving the state and left a net gain M 805 physicians, they added. Caiyl Chessman Done in Wax for Museum LONDON (UPI) ~ Madame Tussaud’s wax muesum officials announced- that work began the day Caryl Chessman was executed to construct a model of him in a replica of the San Quentin gas chamber for the museum. Olivet College Names Head of Development OLIVET (#»—Quentin ° J. Bogart has been named (levelopment director fw Olivet College, President Gorton Reithmiller announced. Bogart, a Kansas State College graduate, has been serving for two years as admission director Monticello College, Alton, Bl. Faces lyicome Tax Charge Has 8V2 Tons of Dollars RENO, NEV. (UPI)-Eccentrlc millionaire Lavere RetBleld, whose aHeged cryptogram will led federal agents to 84k tons of buried silver dollars, today faced income tax evasion charges. ’ RedBeM, Cl. a whMy knows The cryptogram was produced during the trial and govemnient agents said it wa^ really Redfield's sScret wUI. Decoded, 1^. led the agents to the buried silvM dollaih worth $270,000 and $20,000 in postage stamps. I $19.SN bond yesterday after Ms ladM-Tharaday on eharges of evading $90t.M7 la Income taxes between ISSS sad ISM. The secret silver dollar hoard came to light as the result of the 1952 trial of four men and a French divorcee who were convicted of stealing a SOO-pound safe containing cash, securities and jewelry worth $1,500,000 from Redfield’s fortress-like home on the edge of Reno. Hold Funorol Service for Actor George Zucco HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Funeral service was held today for veteran stage and film actor, George Zucco. best known for his vUiain-ifous roles. Zucco, who appeared in such films as "House of Frankenstein," ’Sudan," “Having A Wonderful Crime” and "David and Bath-Kheba,” died ^Saturday in a sann tarium at the age of 74. } 714 Comnumlty Nat’l Bank Buflding Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWUt Res. n 8.S7N Donald E. Hansen Bss. n t-MU Jibineowners’ PoliciM Accident Insurance Fire Insurance Automobile Insurance Life Insurance Liability Insuranra Plate Glass Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types Tenant’s Policies Strive* not with yow superiors In argument, but always submit your judgment to others with modesty. ( —George Washington, 1748, WEEPS WITH JOV-Eleven-year-old Ronaele ^llse sobs with happiness in hearing that the Eugene A. ScaUses of Glastonbury, Conn., chosen the 1960 Ail-American Family. There were entrants from 49 states and the District of NEW HOSES Eirsided cloth, all rt^ber. (No plastic or vinyl.) Wo YOU SAVE $2.55 COME IN OR PHONE FOR FREE HOME OaiVERY-FE 54049 For All Mskst and Models Complete farts and Repair Sendee on CleanertI Disposal Bags—Hoses—Brushes Belts—Attachments, Etc. 1077 W^URON Ixchanto with Year OM Remsbie Hate Indt CIJR'FS APPLIA]VCES ^ ^ ^ AF-44 ^4 4 -f-^ ^ + *9-^ Plant ’em Where They’ll Bloom FOR RAPID GROWTH Get all the facts ... Find out how you can mdke dollars bloom high for ymi. Start their rapid growth today and cultivate the, REGULAR SAVINGS HAMT . . . Your entire crop protected to $10,000 byF.D.l. C. 1 f National I Bonk Bank at Community Most People Do!’ ^ o P P B N r I A € Offices at; W. Huron . . . N. Perry . . . Kooge Harbor . . . Wallad Ukt ... Unioie Ukc ... Milford ... Uk^ Orimi . .. Watarferd ... Iloomfisld Kllii 4Hi^ Romoo Member FJ)J.C. a 4 \, • . ' • ' "A f.- THE PONTIAC f»RESS TUESDAY, MAY 31, I960 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FIFTEEN Citizens Seek Books to Set Up Novi Library Wins AFS Scholarship Troy Girl Norway Bound for Youth Center By USE WINBORN Slxteen-year-old Karen Vogel of Troy wiU exchange crickeU for train whistles this summer. The Avondale High School junior is used to hearing crickets ihirp at night. But when she spends the summ^ in Norway on an American Field Service scholarship, she will have to get accustomed to train whistles. Karen’s home abroad will be where other counselors will join her group and brief them on the customs and traditions of countries they will be visiting. TIk students are scheduled to return 16 New York Aug. 24, just< in time to get ready for schwl in the fail. Karen's family, which also includes her 13 - year - old brother, Eric, are almost as excited over her trip as she is. “1 just can’t believe it's happening to me. I know It will prove to be an e^tperience I'll cljerish all the rest of my life,” said Karen. Her parents agree. IKst September seven Avondale School ^dents, including Karen, apidied ifor AFS scholar-shlM which wo^ entitle them to sp«d about .10 weeks with a family ifn Europe this summer. After a ii^s of Interviews with the loc^ AFS committee, the names of lour students were sent to AFS hcf^kiuarters in New York dty. The day before her 16th birth-daA Feb. 10, Karen learned she had been selected to take the trip —ajthoug^ her destination had not yet I been determined. In'April ahe wre notitied ttet hbe\ would be stay»g wlfli a Nir-an Cansily, She>lnlmediately a cdrresponding with her Nor-„.Bi “sister," Anne Grethe, 17, the" elder daugjrter in the Erling Paul^ family. Karen soon dis-(Xiverea that she an^ Anne shared a common interest in music. They both are accomplished' pianists. She also learned that she would be jk>ing a lot of swimming and would be taking numerous side trips—by train naturally. Karen, who is the daughter of Mr. mad Mrs. Robert H. Vogel, of IM Booth Rd., will leave Jane "We, beUeve Mr. Shaw ideal person to take over the direction of our present Youth Center activities and to help ua complete the ambitious expansion plans we have made.” said George E. Mc-Keough, authority chairman. Upon his arrWal July 1, Shaw will start working immediately on planning the fall' recreation program. He will act only in an advisory capacity so far as the summer recreation program is concerned, because it already has been completed and should be supervised by the present McKeough said. but has lived most of hig adult life in the South. While in service, he was stationed in Oklahoma and Texas. Progress Reports Due at AAeeting in Addison While aboard ship, all of the students will study the languages they will be using in their "adopt-rd” countries. They will be spMt j rcHttac Prcu Pktl* OFF TO NORWAY - Karen Vogel, of 129 Booth Rd., Troy, is starting to get ready for her trip to Norway June 7. A junior at Avondale High School, Karen is spending the summer abroad on the American Field Service scholarship. Her extra-curricular ac-Honor in Rotterdam and dBW to AFS ^ S’«hjre Teachers Oulv-Nfl^aaal Honor So 3-year-terms and candid|i|if ime seeking the one-year The theee-year-term candidates are Donald Fish, Raymond E. Hoffman, both incumbents, and Kenneth M. Kiner, A468 Cascade Rd. The two candidates seeking the one-year term are Frederick T. Cbriiss, 9694 Cedar Island Rd., and Onni Kuhna, incumbent. The King Ranch includes more than one million acres of land, making it the largest privately-owned domain in the United States. It celelffated its 100th birthday In 1953. POUnCAL swm» — darkston High School studenU wiB get a taste of bow to nm a municipality tooiorrow when they change places vrith township officials. Independence 'Township Clerk Harold DoeUer gives Betty Rahiy a preview of the annual" Student Government activities. V-'"" V as Supervisor Duane Hurstall helps Da\ad Smith, and Treasurer Kenneth Johnson pe«tls out a few (Mlars fuid '‘aense" for Mike Simonaon's infor maboh. AO of the students are on |he honor roll., They, along with ten others, will take over township otfidals’v jobs. Richard C. Shaw, 27, Grosse Pointe Native, Romeo Recreationist ROMEO-Rlchard C. Shaw, athletic director with the Department of Parks and Recreation, Greenville, S.C, hu been hired as the recreation director of ne d Community Youth and Civic Center, it was* announced today. Shaw will. take over his new duUes July 1. After revlewiag^ appileaats aaki latervtowtag many at the more pram J sing candidates, bulMlBg satbority eaomiisBioaers anairimaosly voted ta a a I a c t Building Will Start at Once Shaw, wha Is 27, was grada-ated from Fannaa University Ja OraenvUle, S.C., last waek. ~ la married and baa tear < dren, twa giris aad twa boys. He is a native of Groaae Pointe, UNION LAKE - Groundbreaking arid-construction of the new post office building here will gin at once, the federal govem-ment announced today. Completion of the modern building is scheduled for about Nov. 20. on efforts to locate a township dump aHe. Also planned is a description ol work done on moving the kitch-from theaec-ond to the first floor. Face brick will be used on the front and side walls. It will provide 6,486 square feet of interior space, a 675 square foot loading platform, and 5.560 square feet of hard surfaced space for parking. MRS. JAMES D. UNIS JR. Donna Guoin Wed at Aliar in Walled Lake lYALLED LAKE — James D. Unis Jr. claimed Donna ML Guoin Mr his bride before a decked alUr at St. William Catiw-lic Churdi here. A silk organza, floor-length gown ending in a diapel train was by the bride. She carried a floral pink n centered in white carnations and stepbanotis. The bride is the daughter ef ir. aud Mrs. Bernard P. Gueta ef 170* Oakley Park Rd. The pareats are Mr. es D. Unis ef MM Mrs. Lyle Guoin was mah^m of honor toe her sister-in-law. B were JaMt Wtekens of Plymouth and Mn. Gerald Ayery. The bridegrodm’s brother, Robert, served as best man. Ushers Robert Webber and Lyle Guoin. FoUowiiR a reception Hall, East Detroit, the newlyweds left On a honeymoon trip thrsogh Ngw Yorir Statr. They wiU nMe at Walled Lake. Plan ice Cream Social at Stringham School Stringham School PTA to Wrie^ ford Township will bold a public toe cream so^ from to 7;30 p.m. Thursday on the sdiool lawn, accordin^to cochairmen Mr. and Mrs. Walter ABison: Hoa«X(and hostesses for the event 411 be members of the PTA executive board. Fund Drive Set for Next Week Village Has Building, but Used Only to Store Old Volumes Ry JIM LONG NOVI — The largest village in Michigan is without a library and a small group of citizens here intend to do something about it. “We haveHhe building, but we haven’t the books,” said Mrs. David Fried, spokesman for the library committee. “We plan a door-to-door fund raising campaign next week to raise money for books.” The building to be used for th« library is adjacent to the village hall on Novi road just south of Grand River avenue. FIRST GIFT TO UBRAKY - GiH Scouts from Novi's Intermediate Troop 149 do their part in promoting Library Week in the village by planting a blue spmee, a gilt from the troop, on the Iront lawn of the library. A fund raising “It’s campaign starts next week to purchase' books for the library. A gift frpm the township, the library building has never been used since it was The white frame library buiW-not stocked. The scoute from left to right are ing, a gift from the township, has Betty Monger. Janis Paquette and Carol Becker, been used only to store old books ^in the past, she Post Oilice Coming at Union Lake ■The building was a temporary branch of a bank, tnit was sold to the township when it was no longer needed.” « over five buildings every work day. “To achieve complete mod-ernlzciion of the postal plant, a total of 13,000 post offices must be modernizf-d or replaced due to lack of space and obsoles- The post office, to be located at Cooley Lake road west of Union Lake road, will be built by When completed, the post office will serve about 3.4fS! families in the area. The community is now served by a substation. The Union Lake post office Is oae of 1,400 new post offices to be built in the United States this year. Under a new program set up by postal authorities, the post offite win remain under private ownership while leased to the government, will pay local real estate taxes to bear its share of the coat of local government. 10-YEAR LEASE The lease will run for 10 years with two 5-year renewal options. Union Lnke presently is being in Verkler'g appliance store. No. postmaster has been aamed yet. Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield stated, “this is another important step in the Post Office Department’s modernization program authorized in tjie last session of Congress to improve postal services for the public by providing new buildings and equipment, designed for efficiait and economical mail-handling. ROCHESTER - New features, more professional talent and grii-eral enlargement of this year’s program are being planned by the Rochester Kiwanians as they launch full-scale preparations for their annual "4th-0-Rama” celebration. General Chairman William Slav-in today announced the ment of committee chairmen who will be responsible for the various phases of Rochester's "biggest community event of the year.” Headiiig the IMO program com-mlttM are Al Musson, John Boe-berits, Ron FentherstOne and Dr. Oscar J. So^son Jr. Hiey say that many 4op-fIlgfat nets are being lli^ up to entertoln the thonMiids expected to attend the Independence Day event Promotion for the holiday celebration is being bandied to' Arvid Jouppi, Vem Conley, Art Kollin, Robert Smitha. Gerry Moody and Herbert Stoutenberg. On the food committee are Russ ‘Under the Post Office Department’s unique commercial leasing program, the department now is awarding contracts for new postal facilities at the accelerated t^te of Schools to Hold 71$t Commencement ORCHARD LAKE - The 71st annual commencement exercises t. Mary 0>llege and High School here will be held June 5 in The Most Rev, Alexander M. ZalesU, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Detroit, will confer 22 bachelor of arts degrees and distribute 40 high school diptomas at 2:30 p.m. ceremonies. The maia addreM will be delivered by the Rt Rev. M^. Ladlslaas A. Sikera, P.A., tor of Rt Mn the Baptist Par- award given by the acboola aa-aaaOy, tin FMcUtas Medal. An alumnus of the Orchard Ljdce acfaools, Magr. Sikora’s addlr^ riU be “Orchard Lake; Its Gtaey. ir ir it nils past'year, the acboola have been celebrating the TSth anni-verinry of their founding. Asbestoa was had brake lining^ for the first tlriie tin 1966. He said the country's fices arq handling a total of 62 billion pieces of letter mall and parcel post annually. 'This is an all-time record and increase of more than 2f pci cent above the 50 million pieces handled annually 10 years agd."** Eye Bigger, Better 4th-0-Rama Event The book shelves also have been donated by the township. Mverai montha -ago, wUI meet today at 8 pju. In the baildiag to dlscuu plans for next week's fund drive. 'We have been told that it takes at least $10,000 to keep a litorary going year after year, but we will be quite satisfied if enough can be raised to get the project off the ground.” $10 FEE LOOMS In the past, residents of the community have been using the library facilities in Northville but recently found that they would have to pay $10 for a nonresident library card. Williams, Cy Borst, Arthur Kollin, Bill Fletcher, Jim Smalley, Howard Wilson. Art Mitchell, Fred Houghton, Vern Conley. Gerry Moody, Maurice Hall and Heibert Stoutenberg. Others are the Rev. J. Douglas Parker. Bob Jacobson, Ed Forbush and Arvid Jouppi. It's likely that a $3 fee might be charged local resMents for the use of the library at Novi, the committee said, hut nothing Is definite ns yet. During Novi Library Week, which begins June 4 and ends June 11, boy scouts, girl scouts and village firemen will set up exhibits on the library lawn to bring committee In attention to the campaign. tog aad signs are Richard F. Huisenga. He Is bring assisted by subcommittee riuUrmen Harold Browa, Ally Ensign, Frank Bogart, Ed Forbush, John Boe-bertts and Uoyd Christensen. Ftouice win be handled by Mil-ton Weaver and tickets by Paul Williams. Prizes will be the responsibility of Jack Mitzelfeld, aided by George Ennis, Mason Case, Howard Purdy. Don Pixley, Clarence Shepherd, Dr. Sorenson, Dr. Glenn Brooks, the Rev. Edgar A. Lucas. Ralph Gamer, George Martin and Robert Keiffer. Mrs. Fried said that several local (HganizationB have already pledged funds to purchase books. **11m consmtunity needs a library. We have nearly g,6M people here wltoent tim faritities.’’ During the campaign dtlzens will be asked to become “Friends of the Obrary” with donations of $10 membership up to $1,000 for livetime memberships. Sanford Sawyer is chairman’of the Library Board, and secretary-treasurer is Mrs. Warden Lyke. READY FOR BOOKtALE - COmpletiiR last minute preparations ^ the Rochester Junior Woman's Qub "Book Mart’’ fvtoch wens tomorrow at the American Legion Hall, on W. Unive)^ •ity driyfc is - Mrs. CarroU B. Chapmaq, chaitTnan. She is shown here with two prospective took purchasers, David Mair, 16, and Cyn- thia Crowe, 8. Hours for the used book sale are from noon to 6 p. m. Wedqesday, 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Thursday, 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Friday ^id 9 a, m. to 2 pi m. Saturday. Included to the varied selectibo bf literary .works to he ottered are ctassics, best seiUers. encyclopedias, children’s hooks and several eollectore* Items. -it-' SfX TKE?t TTHE PONTIAC PRESS. j^URSPAY, MAY 31, 1960 Dost Control I Liquid Chloride - Road Oil SPEE-DEE OIL SERVICE MA 4^1 2222 Novi Rood EM 3^ 4278 Hoggtrty Hwy. MA 4^I3S Froe Playgrosod SHOW STARTS At 8:15 THE OREGON TRAIL^ COLOR • With FRED MocMURRAY Airlift Carries Villagers Out of Quebec Forest Fire OAONON, Que. I^Aided by dying winds and a light rain, hundreds of firefighters feverishly built defenses today against a forest blaze that forced air evacuation of some 500 women, children and hospital cases from this northeast Quebec mining town. Twenty-six military, conunercial and private planes moved more than 400 evacuees Monday to Montreal, where they were installed in one of the city's best hotels. Another 90 IXCLUSIVI MICHiaAN ’’ ' tOAD SHOW ASrUlNE ybuimN^ «LL »iATi lEumo. iw. tt ijo (»••. •«»; THURSDAY {Si. •'une 2nJ; 11.50. lAll 1R0E& Niw. lM»Me elMik tt m^f , •rtfw p^rahlt to Maitsoo Tbutro. wHli Mif.atfdrOMod i ______________ MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY I MADISON THEATRI, at Grand Clrcut Pk., D*t. 36, WO. 3-4000 I' i ________________________________________ UprwMunr n OrthMiro oi^ Imr Mco.) D CM> *r Momt Ordw hr t _ r ___________________I ..ch-., I- ----------;-------- ■------------------hi ______Phono_________j , , [ ifKHoo toiT-«MroHo«, ««mpo« rofiwn envelop) NOW! Thin THURS. HURON FEATURE Starts at 7:00 and 9:26 ACADEMY AWARD TC'^net ' in in in HERSHWINi8L0RI0USIGREtri DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN Cor. Williomn Loko-Airport Roadi — Bon OHico Optni 7:30 P.M. I LAST TIMES TONIGHT-^ALL COLOr] ,.WR0W1 COLOW 2 WARNER BROS, tccmnicolom* - STARTS TOMORROW - 2 of the Finest Pictures Hollywood Ever Mode! Three electrifying peiformances) BING CROSBY GRACE KELLY WILUAM ' HOjUDEN THBCiouNiinroiiL AND ‘ I 1 lI were flown to Sept-Iles, an ore point on the St. Lawrence, 150 miles to the southeast. Showers and favorable westeily winds were forecast today, easing the menace to Gagnon, but authorities warned that the winds could shift and whip the blaze toward the community again. Gagnon, built around a 300-milUon-doUar Iron ore development being readied by a subsidiary of the U.8. Steel Corp.., lies about 600 miles northeast of Montreal. The company had expected to start production from the area’s huge iron ore deposits early next year. ★ A ★ The fire broke out from known causes on Sunday about a mile south of Gagnon. The winds rote early Monday. Fed by scrub spruce and moss, the fire appeared to be burning over an 80-mile radius. A Gagnon could only be reached by air because {loods had washed out the only road to the town. AAA As the last dependents were flown^’but, about 1,000 firefighters succeeded tn halting the advancing blaze. Flames came within 100 feet of the town before they were beaten out. Berkley Mayor Fighting Tax Dtttroit Income Levy Opposed by Candidate George W. Kuhn Berkley Mayor George W. Kuhn has declared war on Detroit’s |iro-posed Income tax, which he con-I a "most dangerous precedent of taxation without repre- Fhends of Hare Planning Party for 50th Birthday ’They’ll be jumping the gun by more than a month, but friends of James M. Hare promise a rip-snorting 50th birth^y celebration for the Democratic candidate for governor June 28 anyway. The Detroit get-together at the Latin Quarter Is being shoved np a month early — Hare doesii’t reach the half century mark until July SI—“ao that a maximum number of Jim’s friends will be able to attend,” According to Detroit attorney Hyman A. Kramer, committee chairman. ’’You can look at this affair in two light.s — a dinner for a candi-I date for governor arid also a dinner in recognition of 25 years of faithful service tn government by the man who will be our next governor,” Kramer said. A- A A ■ Proceeds from the sale of $25-per-couple and $15 for an individual tickets will help defray campaign expenses for Hare, Kramer said. Kuhn, who seeks the Republican nomination as state treasurer, accuses the Detroit Common Council of an attempt ”to destroy the state of Michigan in order to put Detroit on easy street financially. The proposed tax would be levied on residents of the snb-uHm, such as Berkley, working in Detroit. Kuhn himself would be taxed. He urged citizens to flock to public hearings in Detroit ”to ex-your indignation and pleasure with such ‘undemocratic’ action as demonstrated by Common Council.” If the tax still goes through, Kuhn urged dissatisfied pitizens, organizations ahd businesses combine in a court test of the tax. Detroit G^ts 1st Crude Rubber to Sail Seaway DETROIT (UPD-’The first ship, mont of crude rubber ever to rive at a U. S. port through the 8t. Lawrence Seaway is being unloaded at Detroit harbor terminals. The British freighter Hartismere docked here Sunday with a ci^o of 3,000 long tons of rubber. A long ton weighs slightly over 2,200 pounds. Aboat halt of the rubber to being delivered to Goodyear Rubber Oo. ptaata at Jackson and 8t. Marys, Ohio. The balance of the Shipment will be divided among lour other rubber companies—Goodrich, U. S. Rubber, Firestone and General Tire & Rubber. The rubber companies previously received crude rubber by rail shipment after it had been brought to New York on freighters. A- A A Goodyear and the other rubber companies banded together oosignment of a shipment to troit to determine whether savings could be effected in transportation Thruston B. Morton Boomed for VP Spot WASHINGTON (UPD—Republican Na'tlonal Chairman Thurston B. Morton has received new backing for the GOP vice presidential iKMnination. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) said that Morton would make the strongest vice presidenttai candidate. He said Morton is a very effective campaigner and is very well known ayoss the country." ★ ' A A' Goldwater said he would accept sacond spot on the Republican ticket himself if it were offered but he did not think it would be. He noted his state adjoins Call-lomia, home state of Vice President Richard Mv Nixon, the probable GOP presidential candidate. On the other hand, he said, Morton comes from Kentucky ”A state which is correct geographically—It’s neither Deep South or North, and it’s neither East oi West.” or civil government, and Viforld Auto Output 10Mittionint959. BRUSSELS W - Ten mUlion passenger cars were produced the world in 1959, three million in the rommon market, figures released by the European Communities Statistical Office show. A A’ A ’There are 90 million autos »ds throughout the world. 10 dlllon in the six community ations. In 1958 there were 33 persons for one car in the world, 17 persons for one car in the community. World production of utility vehicles kmounted last year to more than two million. principled usurper without avir-lomy toe: no statesman, knowing noth. «ipplying ignorance by bold pre-Ing of commerce, political econ-l sumption." ___________________________ Victor Hugo, ’Thomas .Teffer son, Anatole France and H. G. We.,lls an loathed Napolean. Jefferson said that Napoleon cold-blooded, calculating, un- NOW! Ihra Fri. I EAGLEn lih« ml»l*Haaf faith known to < (iifliiM-mwi-mRSiffl NOWI Doon ... Opra 10:4S Inside Pasternak Story 'Prize Saved My Life' ry 'dinner for 500-mile race eontend-{ers. after 10 long years of taking a seat below the winner. lie may pick up a check for well over SIOO.OOO. depending on distribution of special prizes, by accessory and petroleum product* companies. ' Just how much he won, fhe baby-fared, balding Miami veteran won't know until the dinner. But he does know he won it the hard way in a nerve-twanging duel with Ro^er Ward, last year’s winner. who finished less than 13 kec-onds behind. Bud Daley came on In relief of Bob Trowbridge in the' eighth for the victory. Four other Athletics’ pitchers starting with Johnny Kucks struggled along until the third when Trowbridge came on. In the nightcap it was Kansas City home run power which earned the victory. Whitey Herzog hit a three-run homer off starter emd loser Paul Foytack in the sixth to end pitcher’s duel which started between Foytack and A’s starter Don Larsen and continued with Bob Gi^ie who came on in the sixth to relieve Larsen who left the game with a pulled muscle. Giggle got the win even though he gave up the oi^ Tiger scores In the sixth when Al Kaline tripled. Marvin Throneberry added the final touch with a grand slam homer over the right field fence No Managerial Ambitions, Says Ted NEW YORK (AP) - Ted Williams manage the Boston Red Sox? Buifc,” said the great outfielder today. The only team I ever want to manage is the junior American Legion club in Diego, my home town. I’ve got no big league mana-^ gerial ambitions. But even if l| had, r would never manage in; with Jerry Lumpe, Slebem~and - "I've ^ several reasons," Wfl-trvtm- INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - “It’s sure nice to finally be a bride instead of a bridesmaid,” yelled 31-yearK)ld Jiiti Rathmann Monday as he pulled bis sky-blue Ken-Paul Special into Victory Lane ner of the 1960 Memorial Day 500-mile-race. Rathmann, who finished second in three 500s, said his car probably wouldn’t have lasted another two laps. "The rubber was g«f A 1 2 S aiebrra ik Cutx Ik S • • • ChUt e WU«a e 3 • S 1 WUlUmi V BolUof 3k 5 0 10 Bauer rf r’nudei u 3 0 0 1 Klelr b riKikn ' 000 Kutyjia p ------- . 000 dThrnky Hamlin u — aHem ri Kucki p Douldes have been the weakest link in Americui tennis, espe- we've never concehtrated on building permanent combines, the way AustrsJiank’ do. Teammates must play together long enough to react to each other instinctively. NEXT: "Ow'ta" «f 1 'Hey, don’t get in thSt car witfi a camera,” Rathmann'shouted at; l^ographen as they drove into garage area. First Ace at Romeo C.C. Eormer Romeo village presl-dent Joseph E. Rymlll yesterday scored Hie first bole-to-sae at the new Romeo Golf aad Coontry anb. Usfaig a 8-towi, RymUl aced the I7^y«rd UtK hoto Wtt- C„.Nstt iikl K. M. I Williams spoke by telephone from his hotel room in Boston where he is bedded down with a heavy cold. Foiles walked, to<^ second and third on wild pitches and scored on Frank Bolling’s error fgr the final Tr'kr'oa p 3 0 Ml uMWRiN. pwnny. rvA—uttrott x MB-Detnn u, xaoMi qtr u. 3 H. Cbm 2. ar-wum. I 4 ■ BIO Bruc* (L, 0-1) X—Kutki ..........■ < < 4 1 B Oarver ...........1 1-2 2 2 2 2 1 Trowkrld(( .......OMO 0 0 2 3 Klely ............ 3-2 1 0 0 1 1 Kutyna .........1-2 0 0 o 0 0 Daley (W, 0-3) T S 2 0 0 2 7 X—Faced 4 men In lot. HBP—By Oarver (YoM). Balk—Atulrre. J - Flaktrty, Stewart. Burier, Soar. T-0:00. ' ChrUley rt Maxwell U 0 into# a 0 Lumpa^ BaUIni 2k 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bamlbi n Fem’dei . 0 0 0 Lareea p 1 0 0 0 Oloslc p I 4 0 10 Kutyna p n itnkee for WUioB la Mb; oeincM _________. :............oooo«ocx-o X-Lompe. Femandea. BaUliif. T' ' Datnttito. Kaoaaa CUT 274. UM------ trott 0, Kiniae Cttr <■ IB-Balbic. BB-Batioc. IbroDobeny. •—Carey 2, Foy- 12 110 OIxfM (W. 14) .114-1 1 Kutyna . ... 214 2 S e i WP—SUler 1. O—Stewart. Burley,.! laberty. 1-2:40. *-15471. ^ MONDAY’S FIOBTS Bob Cleroux. 200. lleot-Ike Tbomas. 103. new •elle, ISOHi, Bale Ste An meU Lewti. 150^ New d-Masual Blau. 1X1. Fboe- In a see saw battle without precedent on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Rathmann pulled ahead yesterday about eight miles from the end and finished at a record speed of 138.767 miles an hour. Ward set the old record of 135.875 last year. Ward finally had to siackMi near the race’s end beconse «( n right front tire s^bndly woni he feared It would burst Rath- BACK WHERE YOU BELONG - Plate umpire John Flaherty pushes pitcher Hank Aguirre of Detroit back to the mound during an argument over a balk call which allowed a Kansas City runner to go to 3rd in the 5th inning of Monday’s AP Pbalatax game. Other Detroit players take up the discus-siofl with another umpire while a K. C. player watches. The Athletics swept a doubleheader from the Tigers. Ward, starting his 10th straig^it 500, forced Rathmann to run over 144 miles an hour late in the race— faster than many of the 33 starteys had run in qualificatians when they had the track to themselves. played for a manager who has worked as hard as he does.” The future hall of famer ha.sn’t done much playing lor Jurges this year. Off to an encouraging start when he hit home runs No. 493 and 494 of his career in the.first two Red Sox games, the 41-year- old slugger pulled a leg 'mu^le and has been sidelined ever since, except for occasional pinch hit duties and one start. Ted’s latest mishap is the troublesome cold which has even kept him off the bench the past lew days., ' Hams said. ’"Ilie most important is that I don’t think there’s a person alive who could satisfy the Boston writers. They are 4he biggest bunch of second guessers in the world. ’They are a manager’s pall-bearers. Even a great manager like Casey Stengel couldn’t satisfy them. He had his toughest time here as a manager, they finally him out of town. When he iBoke his leg while managing the Braves, one of the writers said it was the best thing that happened to the club." special, Ut.707 2. Rodger Ward, mdlanapollt. leader Card special. •“*” 0. Johnny Thomion. Boyertown, Pa. Western AAU Track Champion Williams has never hidden his disHke for the Boston writers, with whom he has been feuding virtually from the first day he joined the Red in 1939. Ted emphasized that- owner Tom Yawkey had not approached him about taking over as Red Sox manager. . ^ ' ■‘I'd do anything in the world for Mr. Yawkey, but he knows how I feel about this.” Williams "A guy would have to be a sap to manage here" unless he’s the greatest politician in the worid. He has to have the patience of a saint, explaining to the writers after each game the reason for every pne of his moves.’’ Williams praised Jurges as a sound baseball man who is doing a commendable job undej;. trying circumstances. , I hope he doesn’t get fired,” said T^. “I dtMi’t know what will happen but I have a hunch he won’t be fired. I have never Top '500' Finishers Estei Special. 126 70.. Eddie JohnxoD, Cuyahoga Fall!, I " Rokbltu Special, 130.130. Adamx Quarter Horie Special, 130.074 Bud TIngelstad. Dayton, Ohio, Jim Robblni Special, 133.718. 10. Bob ChrisUe, OranU Pa»i. Ore., Fod-erel Engineering Special. 133.417. Richard (Rad) Amlck. Muncle. Ind. Klng.O-Lawn Special. 131.540. 13. Duane Carter, Indianapolli, Diompaoi Industries Special. 131.882. 13. Bill Homeler. Pacolma, Calif.. Rldge- Woterford's Bill Cole Gains Firs| and 2nd in Eurdles special; Oene „-------------------„ —. Sumar Special; Chuck Stevenson, Oar-den Drove, -•—■ Special. 17. Clark (Shorty) Templethan. Seattle. Federal Engineering Special, wen*'—* vrlth ilutch (allure. :94 laps. Jim Hurtublse. Lennox, Culf.. Tl on TraUer Special, mnneetlng through block, IM laps. Jimmy Bryan, Phoenix. Artx., n Special, broken fuel pump < From Our Wlrr Services KAUV«AZ(X) - Western Michigan, with Waterford’s Bill Cole in a key role, took nine of 16 first places to easily win the Michigan AAU open track meet yesterday. Cole took the 120 high hurdles in 14.6 and was nipped at the tape for a second in the lows. John Boric of Western won the 440 hurdles in 52.9. Michigan State had four firsts, the Northern Michigan Track Club two and the University of Detroit one. Northern’s Kurt Harper was the only clouble victor. He heaved* the discus 154 feet, 7 inches and also took the shot put. Detroit got a win only because the Western mile relay team was disqualified for stepping out the track Ihnes. Pro Golf Stars at PCC Today Don't Forget Press Clinic Golf addicts in Pontiac and Oak- land County—don’t forge^! Today’ the long-awaited day for The Pontiac Press golf clinic at Pi^tiac Country Qub. match, starting at 4 p.m„ then conduct a one-hour scIkm^ ot instruction afterwards. All this for hall a dollar with the P(xitiac "Y” the worthy winner. g o 1 f e r s—tottriag women pros Joyce Ziske aad Beverly Haiisea aad local pru Al Watrons of Oaklatol IBIb and PonUac’s OeM Bom frpm Warwick HUls—wUI be to charge of the cIIbIc. [Fot only 50 Whts, area golf fans »n Ncfc up helpful hints on their own respective games through ex-hibitton play, denxmstrations and Adams May Build Own Stadium for Oiler 1T HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — K. S. (Bud) Aclams, owner of the Houston Oilers of the ' Professkmal American Football Leaguq>, may buUiiyhis own S2.000.000 staiiium. the Houston Post said today. The Post said toe stadium instruction. All proceeds from the|would be a multi-purpoqe type Press clinic go to the Pontiac;suitable for use tor basebaU and|^ hi.a YMCA. lotheT sports as weU as foolballll technique after hlg? Lloyd Ruby. Rouiton. Tfx , Agojanlan Special. 13S.IS4. ■ Calif. nomeier, racouna, uam.. 1 BuUdera Special. 131368. . .Bxacl order of flniah to be giver n official etandlnga Tuesday)'. Bobb) 161 1 axKDe aacna. Allentown, Pa., bean Van Ltaica Special, broken magneto and pUton rings, 133 lapt. Don Freeland. Indlanapolle, Rou.Bab-cock Traveler Special, magneto failed, 130 laps 32. Troy Ruttma; Zink Special. 136 laps 33. Toor BcUenhAusen. Tinley Park. Ill rear Uro so badly that Chick Hirashima, hla chief meohaato« said it wonldB’t have lasted over Adding to the drama. •Ward and Rathmann made their last pit stop for fuel and tires at the same time, on the^l3lst lap, three-fourths of the way. Ward went Into 4he pita leading by a few. feet and went oat with Rathmann charging at tall pipe. They swapped the leqd live times after that, with Ward having n little edge on stralgto* away speed and Rathmann m thin advantage on the turns. Fears that the blistering pace would end in tragedy were heightened when veteran Eddie Russo wore out a tire and crashed i■ to coax the botU Into * the cop by using body English plus plaintiYe cries of ’’get In.** The flgtur^ in the Illustration has stayed down on the putt. He appears to have planned to hit the ball * ^ along a certain line, and to trust the soundness of his' >' ** putting stroke to bring him success. >W^y not modeil 5-31 Hanson, Ziske, Bone and Watrousjand if built would be firiitoed in i 1. ' /V/ .’■7' EIGHTEgy THE^OXTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. MAY 81, 1960 At Watkins Lake Racing Season Begins Ttie racing season got under way otfidally for the Watkins Lake Ysghtlng Association over the Memorial pay weekend with full schedules Sunday and Monday. Chuck Morris stole the show ^n-day by starting out last and sailiiig through the entire snipe fleet to win. He was followed by Ray Frenkel and James Nye, guest sailor. Jim Zoeike took the lightning The tables were turned yesterday in the snipe heat as Glenn Fries beat out Dave Green fw first with Frenkel 3rd. Jack Berlien. Gas Eldred and Zuelke placed in that order for the lightnings and Norm Ledwan nipped Kreitz in a close thistle finish. MUFFLERS $8.95 >!> Imtoflad Fra* Mackeil Joins Aces QUEBEC fAP)—Fleming Mac-kell, a 12-year veteran National Hockey League player, Mrniday White Sox Skid From 1st to 4th in 9 Days Engineer Wins First Olympic SailingTrial /t Pirates Beat Them Again to Regain NL Lead What's Wrong With Braves? named player-coach of the Quebec Aces of the American Hockey League. Mackeil played the last nine seasons with the Boston Bruins, poming to the Bruins in a trade with the Toronto Maple Leafs. NO MONEY DOWN UP to 12 MONTHS to/PAY ot Reliable Transmission Co. SPECIAL PRICES ON HYDRA-MATIC '4l-'58 Oil Ltaktn (I '56>'59 Oil Laakart (Saalad) Camplata '49-'Sl Rabwilt Unit (Installad) Camplata . 'S4-'S8 RabviH 0*H (iRttalM) Camplata . '5«>'59 RabviH UrH (Inttallad) Camplata . . .$ 12.70 . $ 30.45 . $ 71.20 . $ 01.20 . .$127:00 Pries Includss ParH — Labor — Oil Credit Terau Artikble AH Work FiiDy Gnaranteed Mott Can — 1 Day Serrlce Reliable Transmission Co. UlN.Paric(Sr. FE 4-0701 NOW OPEN ... j The ISetP and Gracious Lo Vieon Dining Room ^ ^ s—loong. BOScoD i7>io. baui t Serving Businesimen^t Lunch ond Dinners | * * more ». 2B—Ualiona. Tuby. Rui ---------—------------(Hanun. Breedbif. 3B—Keoufh. HR—« A larvaJ lunch ( OuUlYan. StcpbeM, Oclcer. S—Green. 8T- By The Associated Press Is it the 12 postponements that have Milwaukee's Braves dragging in the National League race? Or is it Pittsburgh? ^ Idleness because of rain, cold— and fog—has been a real snafu for Braves’ pitching. But those Pirates haven’t hel{^ it either. Pittsburgh beat the fourth-place Braves for the seventh time in nine meetings this ^season with 8-3 romp before rain cut their scheduled Memorial Day double-header in half. That was enough, however, to break a first place tie with San Francisco, and the Pirates did it by beating Warren San Francisco slipped to second place, by a half game, in a split with the Chicago Cubs, winning 5-4 after a 2-1 loss. Cincinnati won the opener at Philadelphia 5-4 in Louis clobbered Lot Angeles 15-3 in the only night game scheduled, wifh Bill White driving in six AL Champions p Have Dropped 8 of 10 in Slump Spahn (2-2) for the second time. TO innings, but the last place Phil-Last season, when the Bucs lies then ended their losing string managed to beat the Braves only I at seven with a 6-1 .victory. ‘ Southpaw Harvey Haddix (3>1) who was winless against Milwaukee the past three seasons, made it thrM in'a row thls.year against the Braves. He had them blanked until the ninth, when Roy Face came on and saved it. Glno Cimoli in four rans for the Bucs Monday's Major league Box Scores cmcAoo ) Aptrlelo M oU I S • 0 MapU* cf ntr lb 3 12 0 Brnro e ucr lb 4 0 10 IfATlt rf r’v lb 3 0 11 Skowren lb «k U 3 0 0 0 McDfld 3b MB 1 0 0 0 Rleb’uo >• ____‘B'nt If 0 0 0 0 Torry p Batl«7 c 4 0 10 ABUncb’d Coiuolo H 3 0 0 0 dlcU'itrt Romot p 3 0 0 0 BhADU p tVAldlT'lw 0 0 0 0 ^ IMalo 14 t i t ToUlt » 1 11 a-RR Into foreo out for Torry to TUi: b—Ran for Blanchard In Tih: o—struck out for Dobbok ki fth; d-Wolkod tor Vnlo » tth: »-Ron for Vnlo In ' ‘ ' ' ut for Groan la tth. Foohln^ ............... I^KUIebrow PO-A—Wnchi^tm Row York r-5. DP—Conoolo. Onrdnor and Bo^or. LOB—Wnohlnoton 1* "— York 7. SB-Oroon. SB-AUIaon. IterU. Barm. IP R R KB B SO Romot (L, M) . . t S 3 3 2 1 Torry ............7 7 2 2 8 S|Andon CRICAOO SAN PBANCISCO krhki abrkbl aktk 4 o'] 0 Aihbunt cf 3 1 3 0 BU(-omo 2b 3 A 0 4 0 1 0 JohnMn U 4 0 2 0 Am fll no 3b 1 0 0 . .. .... .... .. 2 100!ArorUle 3012 ePhUlty 1 0 0 0 Kurnn rt 4 100 Sleveri U 4 1 3 2 zimmor 3b 1 0 0 0 Mnyt cf 3 0 1 0 Proncono If 4 2 11 Kluc’okl lb 4 I 2 1 Banka ii 2 0 0 0 HcCovt7 lb 4 0 0 0 Power lb 4 111 Mlnoao rt 4 0 0 0|Bouchao lb 8 0 0 0 Ctpodo If 3 110 Romano c 4 2 3 2 Smith cf 4 0 1*ThomM3b 30 10 RtrUand rt 3 0 1 0 Held so 4 2 2 3 Preeio 3b lOOOfhockerc 1 0 0 0 Landrlth c 2 0 0 0 PhUllpa 3b 4 110 Brown c lOOOAIImra rt 20 10 ollorahl 1 0 0 0 Lltmon p 30 11 cLollar c 1 0 0 0 WUI rt 2 0 0 0 Shmidt e 0 0 0 0 Brizgi p 1 0 0 0 Show p • • • a Rbidall 2b 4 0 2 0 Breaioud •• i • i « .5---Z ''till Mini with a triple, double and single among their 14 hits. Spahn, managing just four starts in the month May because of the postponements, gave up six hits and five runs while lasting less than three innings as the Braves fell 5H games behind. > Pllod at M 000 000-0 £J*^„taoo It 110 ttx—a aroaoMoo Hi Staley dOoodm III Total# for DonoTon In 3lh: b— ToUle a-Plled ______________ HooMrod for Mooro In 7tb; Into doubleploy lor Brown » oui; a— R-^UndiUb. PO-A-Chtcan n-11, Ban ... ■ PrancUeo «-U. DP-KlodiUi. Bonki ondlS*”™ 2! 3 3B-—Klndftll ®—^Fo*. Ftmm. PO>A-^ltTglAnd I7»9. lA ! Ef 1 i 1} 5Sf^?o* ?* i}} 2 cwcDfMAn 5 S 3 1 ZBrmndt cf I 1 1 01 ml r h M 5n? 1 • • <3 4 0 0 # ! 1 1 ! Flnoon cf -- 3 112 Robmion lb 4 0 2 31 BmU if PHILADELPHIA 0 Cum If 0 bSmlUi If , 1 0 0 0 TI»mao c J • J jlrStteroTe inaaowikl e 2 0 0 0 P’corrcrQ p 2 0 0 0 2b iBowsfld p 4111 donee p } ® I ® I N'combe p Fomlelee p 0 0 0 0 bBoyd 1 0 0 0 I Totelt 10 1213 12 Tetale t for H. SuUlron In Otb; ir Jooet la tth. R—Rent. PO-A—BoetoD »-io. Baltimore aOonzolet 1 0 0 0 Buihardt p Oiteen p 0 0 0 0 TeloU 22 1 0 1 Telale 20 11 a—Grounded out for Nuxhall bi 1 ^tooled tor Curry In Otb; o-SIntIcd foriktndaa “MOST 14 INCHES FROM MY WAIST in just 8 weeks!” rtAy doctor sold to reduce, and I did without dieting," soys John J. Overmeyer, 37. Overmeyer lost 50 pounds and 14 Inches in his waist ofter 2 short months -ot our studios. Jou, too, con lose excess weight! Take os many treatments as you like,, under the personal supervision |F «xperienced counselors. egrand opening I SPECIAL! %rst 25 Ch«rl*r Members J*i* Today ;$ 6 00 Ptr MoBth For o court* dosignod individuolly for YOU! Wo oro Exponding our Focilities and Need 100 Now Choitor Mombort! HeaHfc Studies Directar Alan Stephm, Mr. America 1946 and 1949; bviH his Inbaioat pkysiqo* through supervised troiniRg. [ ONE YEAR FREE t If we foil to get these results f> in 60 days:.Underweight: Add t. 1'/i" to each arm—3V2" on • chest end thoOlderi—Gein 12 pounds body weight. Over- | I weight: Lose 15 pounds—3'A" ftp- * £ off Wpt and waist: I Race Driver Killed Drott VACAVILLE, Calif. (fi-Seattle' racing driver Kenney McLaughlin was killed Monday in the first j50-mlle leg of the 100-miIe Vaca jValley auto racek when Ms car i flipped over on the north turn of jhis 34th lap. He suffered a broken ineck. 1 2 Drabowsky 1 1 . . . MorehcaO (L. 0-3) 11-11 1 0 1 g 4 10 3 Byerly . . .7 1 1-3 3 2 1 0 toes ............ 1-3 2 1 1.0 ODell 1-3 2 0 0 0 Miller (W. 2-1) 2-2 0 0 0 1 WP-^Sanford. B. Jotanoon. U—8m Sudol. Bofiou, Gorman. T—3:11. . 41.236. By Tke Associated Press In spring training it was new power and added pitching strength that had the smart money riding oh (3ilcago’s defending chAmpitm White Sox in the American League. Now June is bustiit' out all over and the Sox arc busts. The Pirates haven’t had a complete game from their staff in the past 10 starts, although they have a 6-4 record for that span. Haddix, who gave up all seven Milwaukee hits, has pitched only one complete-game against the Braves since 1956—and that was the one he Idst in 13 frames last year after a record 12 perfect inninigs. San Francisco salvaged the split with an unearned run in the ninth after the CXiba had tied it 4-all on home runs by Jim Hegan, just back from ret|iroment, and Bob WiU. Willie Mays socked a two-run homer and scored the Giants* last three runs. Stu Miller (2-1) was the winner with Seth More-head (0^) the loser, both in relief. The Cubs won the opener with Earl Averill driving in both runs. He singled home the flnrt and then laid down a squeeze bunt in the seventh that scored winning pitcher Bob Anderson (2-1). Mike McCormick (6-3) lost his third decision in the last four. Two-out singles by Vada Pinson and Gut Bell put away the opener for the Reds and reliever Jim Bronson (3-0) against th^ Phils’ Gene Conley (2-3), who went ail the way. The PHlls then tagged h r e e home runs in a five-run nightcap fifth that chased Don Newcombe (3-2). Bobby Del Greco, Harry Anderson and rookie Clay Dalrymple did the slugging. John Buzhardt (1-3) won it with a Six-hitter, blanking the Reds until -Willie Jones homered in the ninth. White hammered across four of the Cards’ ninsSwith a pair ot. homers. He also doubled and singled in the 16-hit outburst against CLEARWATER, Fla. (IV-Harry Sindle, 30-year-old industrial engineer from Uttie Falls, N.J., won the first and only official Olympic trials sailing race run Monday In the Gulf of Mexico. An afternoon race was voided because of a typographical error in the printed instructions. Slx' more races will be held to select a U.S. represeRtatlve at the Olympics in Naples, lUly, this summer. Sindle won the morning race by Indions Sneak -Goier to Birds by Beating Pale Hose Twice 80 yards. Bob Wood, Red Bank, N.JtT-was his crewman. Mrs. Pat Duane of Delray Beach, Fla., with her husband. Jack, as crew, finished second. The could-be sluggers aren’t Early Wynn has lost more than he’s won. Bob Shaw’s 4-4. Billy Pierce (3-2) has won just once in the last two weeks. And in nine nightmarish days the champs have lost eight of 10, skidding from the top to fourth place. Cleveland’s second-place Indians swept a Memorial Day pair at Chicago. 4-1 and 9-4, and used ►ex-Whlte Sox guys—Buhba Phillips, Johnny Romano and Barry Utman—to do It. That plunked Chicago to fourth, 3H games behind front-flying Baltimore. The Orioles lost a game of their lead, but still have a one-game edge over Cleveland after splitting with Boston. Baltimore tooCf the opener 7-5, then lost 12-3. New York to<* third place, beating PHILADELPHIA UP)— Harry ^Peanuts) Lowrey. who played with PhilHdelphla in 1955 and with three other National League clubs in his 14-yelte career, has been signed as a coach by the Phillies. Lowrey. who resigned his post s manager of the Idaho Falls dub in the Qass C Pioneer League to take the Phillies’ job, replaces the ailing Dick Carter, who resigned Monday because of high blood pressure. first game 2-1. Kansas City Detroit twice, 7-6 in 11 innings and 8-2. The White Sox left 23 men on base wdiile dropping their sixth in a row at home—where they had wm their first 10. They left 14 stranded in the first game, three in the seventh inning Jim Perry (4-2) got A1 Smith on a pop up. A four-run sixth did it for the Indians against Wynn (2-3). An error, Russ Nixon’s two-run single and an RBI single by Phillips did the damage. In the second game the Indians, who held first place by one game over Chicago a year ago today, walloped Shaw with six runs in the fourth inning. Romano and Tito Francona doubled in the big frame and each had three hits. Latman won his first decision (since the pre-season trade for Herb Score) with John Briggs’ relief. Woodle Held hit a two-run homer fm the Indians, who now have won three straight. Rookie Ron Hansen’s three-run double in the fifth inning won the opener for the Orioles. Their oth- Don Drysdale (4-5) and four re- er four came In the first inning. lievers. Ernie BrogUo (2-1) gave up Just tout hits, one Duke.mb 9^ Monbouquette (4-4)' ’s third home run in two days, in his first complete game. Rookie Julien Javier also homered for the Cards, his first. MAN TELLS ANOTHER! FOR FREE TRIAL, CALL FE 4-9582 TODAY! WE GUARANTEE RESULTS REGARDLESS OF YOUR AGE! Over $5,000,000 in heolth building equipment, including steom cabinets ond mechanical mossoge at no extra cost! .HOUBS: 10 AM. toTO P.M. Satud4flOAH.to6P.M. PIAOB HILE SHOPPING CENTEB ... ALSO HOUSE OF VENUS FOR WO^EN Chuck Elstrada (4-1) won it with Hoyt Wilhelm’s relief help. The last place Red Sox then beat the Birds for the first time in nine games, scoring seven runs on homers by Haywood Sullivan, Gene Stephens and Gary Geiger. Air Cooletd Comfort fiVwll HART-SCHAFFNER & MARX 71 50 two on Gene Woodling’s home Arnle Portocarrero (3-1) was the loser. Ted Bowsfleld (1-1) was a winner in his first start, with relief help. It was only the second defeat for the Orioles In 10 games. Y(xri Berra’s two-run homer lii the nightcap eighth beat Pete Ramos (2-6) after the Yankees had scored their first run on Reiser Maris* lltb homer, giving him the AL lead. Bobby ShanU (1-1) itron it in relief. Bob Alliaon drove in both Washington runs in the opener with a homer, off loser Art Ditmar (2-2), and a single. Chuck Stobbs (2-1) was the winner isvith relief help from> Tex □evenger. Peanuts Lowrey Named Coach for Phillies DON’T TAKE CHANCES I Hov* Your Brokat I Rosot to Original I Spocificotions To^oy t. Chock g] L* teals, cyloidon for leakai# ySi-a O ewan. inspect. ^5-5. Add brak, iuid * if nagHaor ^6. Adjust braksi oa all four wheels for “liko-aow" afTidency Road-taat brakea to aaiurt proper operation LOWEST PRICE firesfone! NYLON ^ 6.70-15 MONDAY’S ROME RUNS By THt Amrtaled Pmi AMBRICAN LEAGUE MarU (11). Berra (3). Yanki: Alliaon I). Seoaton: Held (I). Indlant: Toree-Ml (1). Wtotte Sox: Sadowakl (2), H. iiAtvaa (2>. Oeixer (li, Stephana (2). Sox; Woodltni (3). Orlolea: Chrliler <4>, TiBUtf; Bonot (3), ThroBebenr (2), NATIONAL LEAGUE ----- Del Greco «>, ‘ Wtattc 2. (3). Jarltr ( : Mari (7), GlaoU: AUTOMOTIVE HEADQUARTERS 146 West Huron FE 2-9251 Comfort and easy card is woven right tnto every HS&M Airmesh suit. Air-mesh is 45% worsted and 55% dacron polyester. Millions of tiny meshes trap fresh, cool air and dacron keeps Airmesh's trim, slim lines (the worldly new look of HS&M) in press through the most humid days. ^ SAGINAW at Lowronco BIRMINGHAMt-272 W. Moplo < ^ Opon Fridoy. NIgkt Until 9 THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC! EXPENSIVE EQUIPMENT It would cost a lot to raplae* It bocaus* of fir* or theft. Traveling at a high rat* of apeed, your boat can cause damage to property. Infury to Individuals. Insurance Is available In any combination you desire ot o reasonable cost. See usl -------- ■-'V ' • 4- I. T'/, "7.V,,i/; Be Sure You Are Well Insured! HEMPSTEAD E. Hum SL FE 4-B284 ''M THE PQK;TIAC TRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 31. yrxETEEy ^ Never Hit Ariy Fan on Purpose—Mantle NEW YORK (UPD-Battcred swollen-jawed Mickey Mantle, victim of one of the wcirst mob scenes in Yankee Stadium’s history, sisted today he n^vcr hit any fan purposely and "anyone who said I did is a damn liar.” ftis face still bruised and puffed up from the mauling he took yesterday, Mantle nevertheless accompanied the Yankees to Baltimore early today and expected to be in the lineup against the Orioles tonight. Mantle will be unahk to chew Ar PhcUlai SHOWERS ARE THAT WAY - 'There are many points In this 3rd-inning argument between Jim Plersall, Cleveland Indian outfielder. and umpire Cal Drummond during Monday’s first game at Chicago. But Drummond’s point la toward the dugout as he banishes the fiery player. Argument started after Piersall stole 2nd base and then began riding plate umpire Larry Napp after two strikes had been called on Harvey Kuenn, When Piersall reached the dugout, he threw bats, balls, gloves and caps onto the field. The Indians beat the White Sox twice. For Shame, Jimmy-You Hit Veeck's Scoreboard CHICAGO OH—Jim Piersall has hit Bill Veeck where it hurts moat — the Chicago White Sox president’s huge new scoreboard at Comiskey Park. The fiery Qeveland centerfleld-er threw a baseball against it after making the last putout of ■yesterday's doubleheader, which' the Indians swept 4-1 and 9-4. __ ^ The scoreboard, which flashes lights like a giant pinball machine and ejects aerial bombs when a Sox player hits a iTomer, Is Veer’s pridd and Joy. "I had a talk with Jim after the game,’’ said Veeck. "He started out in a Joud voice but ended in a soft one. If he ever throws anything against my scoreboard again. I’ll put him in one of my skyrocket launchers and 'fire him into orbit. This, I made very clear to him. "I don’t care what or where he throws things, just as long as it’s not at my scoreboard, tually. I’m very fond of Jim. But he can go too far." Piersall was ejected from the first game. He had stolen second in the third inning and from that vantage point was riding plate umpire l.«rry Napp for calling two strikes on HafTcy Kuenn. After a \iolent argument, second base umpire Cal . Drummond thumbed him. Piersall wont to the Cleveland dugout and began throwing bats, caps and gloves onto the field. Then he trudged fb the Sox dug-out. found an empty sand bud and tossed that out before goir to the dre.sslng room. TIretfoite CHAMPIONS $1^95 Sl» S.7S11I Tsk»-TTS* BLACKWALL FREE INSTALLATION MUFFLERS r«IUe, JCh««r*UI_*r 1S4S-’SS OasrsstscS for Uia •f Tsar Cart Can Da far Msmt i Trlcat aa Yaar Car AUTO SERVICE FE 2-1215 149 W. Huron St. Dr. Sidney Gaynor, the club’s phytician, said Mantle had suffered a severe sprain of the left tempero-mandible Joint, the region his left ear, as well sprained ligaments in his face. For Holiday Sports food for the next three da.vi as B result of the pummcllng he received. He’s not complaining, though. He says It could have been far worse. Complaints from people who described themselves as irate parents, however, came into the Yankee Stadium switchboard tha^ Mantle had purposely swung some children who mobbed him yesterday shortly after he made the final putout in the n^htcap of a doubleheadcr against the Washington Senators. To prevent a repdUrtion^f yes- terday’s trouble, the Yankees promptly announced that henceforth strong ushers with ropes will form a protective wedge around Mantle after home games. Joe.Di-Maggio received the same assistance when fans began to harass him following Yankee games. Crowds Turn Out Strong It was a highly successful Memorial Day for Major League ba.se-ball and hoi-se racing. A total of 268,523 watched base- The disorder began moments after the 28-year-old outfielder' had grabbed Julio Becquer’s liner to nail down a '3-2 victory for the Yankees. Mantle caught the hall,D»u in left-center anc^ then headed for the dugout. Almost immediately an excited portion of the 42.S27 fans vaulted over the fence, ran onto the field, and converged on the Yankee star. AMERICAN LEAGUE BtUlmor* Cleveland New York Chicago Wan Lail Pet. Behlad ,s» “Four or five kids tried to grab my cap Just aa I.got to second base," Mantle said. “One of them hit me on the chin with his elbow and another with his shoulder. Waehlnftoo Boston ... ij XI .JOS MONDAY’S RESULTS Baltimore 7-3, Boston S-12 Cleveland 4-t. Chicago 1-4 ihlngton 2-3. New York 1-3 isaa CUT 7-1, Detroit C-2, first 11 Innings TODAY’S GAMES r York (Ford 2-2) at Baltimore Cleveland ( Detroit ( “Then all of them started shoving, punching and pushing. For a while I didn’t think I was going to make the dugout. I never saw anything like it in my life. Chicago (Plerca at Kalisai City Washington (Plsclier 0-1 > at Boston (Brew-r 3-4), M* »dnr-- NATIONAL LEAGUE Waa Last I Pittsburgh In the second game. Piersall was the target for fans who tossed several oranges at him. “One hit me near the ear at the end of the game,” he said, “it made me mad. I had caught (Ted) Klusxewski's long fly for the last out. 1 Just whechtd and threw the ball at the scoreboard. I wanted to hit aomething made of glass and break It. Someone tossed me another ball from the bull pen and I threw it, too. “That scoreboard should only go off-if it has to go off at all-just once a game no matter how 1118117 Smr bomers are -hit. JPs-nerve wracking — all those lights I know I didn’t hit anybody. If I had hit one of those kids accidentally, I would have apologized. Anyone who said l hit .some-purposely is a damn liar. I love kids. I’ve got four of my own. But I don't like those bigger ones who think they’re wise guys." When's Rocky Returning? KANSAS CITY MV-M’hen Rocky Colavito, now a $35,000-a year benchwarmer, returning to the Detroit Tiger lineup? A barking Jimmie Dykes doesn’t even want to discuss the matter. Fair and His Pontiac Enjoy Banner Weekend flashing and those damn bombs bursting over your head." The banshee board erupted when Earl Torgeson hit a pinch homer in the seventh of the nightcap and again, prematurely, in the ci^th when Minnie Minoso’s long drive to left center bounced off the wall. Someone pressed-the explosion button before realizing Minoso’s shot failed to clear the wall. ^ Colavito was benched for weak hitting and the Tigers prompfly won six straight. Dykes said he didn’t want to break up a winning combination — A1 Kalinc, Neil Chrisley and Charlie Maxwell in the outfield. ' Joy Fair enjoyed a banner w end on the racing strip in his 1960 Pontiac. . Pontiac’s veteran race driver won the feature event at the Dixie Ipeedway near Saginaw and Vaned up Sunday; at Sandusky, Ohk), after spinninjg out of Saturday’s feature run at Jackson. Fair won flye races on the Sandusky track. He won both 20-lap fealures,' came" home 1st in lh< four-car tix^hy dash, took the fast heat race and tttmed in the best qualifying time. The car which Fair is driving with such marked success this year consists almost entirely of Pontiac components. YOU'RB THB BOSS*'. . . AT BBNBPICrAL Want cash today f Phone Beneftcial now! Get the cash you want when you waht it... plus the friendly, courteous service that has made Beneficial famous for 45 years. Phone for your loan ... right now! UMMSBtBSiNMSI 7 WEST LAWRENCE STREET. PONTIAC Yhm nmar. iBMiaiifi BMa.. ITiamr FUaral 2-tait OHN iVCNINCS 8V APYOINTA4CNT —YNONI K>« lYOSINO HOUU BENEFICIAL ' FINANCE CO. ». PCWCFICIAL PIWANCE CO. - ■ ‘_ . CItT . 17 17 .500 the holiday topping last year by almost 100,000. The American League drew 135, 19 with four doubleheadcrs while 132,874 .saw three NL twin-bills and a night game. At the trajeks. an alarming sum of $24,785,147 was poured through the mutuel machines at 15 locations across the nation. Aqueduct in New York set a world record of $5,560,628 — the .second fiye million dollar day In history. A crowd of 70,410 wa hand at Aquoduct. Garden State Park in Now Jer-se'y handled over four million and Suffolk Downs near Boston regi^ tored $2.175,836-'topping previous track marks. Colonel Wins of DRC DETROIT (API — Roman Colonel, ridden by L. C. Cook, led all the way- and fought oft Bone-dicto in a photo finish Monday to win the $15,000 Greater Stakes at Detroit rqce course. Whereas the best USED CAR BUY In town? At your FORD DEALER’S! He's a reputable businessman. His used cars are honestly represented, priced right, and every A<1 model is WARRANTED IN WRITING. Milwaukee Lou^ -..Icsgo Philadelphia 16 IS . 16 21 .462 MONDAT*A RESrLTES LAST AND HNAL WEEK! 38th'MacDonald's LouiE (Kline 2-3) at Loi Angeles (WU-Hams 2-0). 10 p m. Chicago (Hobble 3-6) at Ban Francisco (Antonelli 3-D. 10:15 p.m. Dykes Sidesteps Definite Answer ANKIVERSARY TIRE SALE! ARMSTRONG MIRACLE TIRES FIRST QUALITY — FIRST LINE — HEAVY DUTY — TUBELESS As a matter of fact, when asked after yesterday’s doubleheadcr loss to Kansas City about the Rock’s chances of getting back into the lineup, the Tiger manager replied: “You tell ’em It’s Done of their blank-blank busineas." He later indicated, however, tliat Colavito would remtun benchbound tonight. But now the Tigers have lost Ihree straight. Kaline had four hits and Chris-Jey and Maxwell three hits each yesterday, so Dykes had decided to keep this trio intact until someone stops hitting. ' ! Don’t worry about Rocky," said Dykes. "He’ll be okay when he gCis back in there.” C-oIavlto rame off the bench yesterday long enough to strike out in the ninth inning of the second game. His batting average dropped to ,188. dolavito, pinch-hit for Red Wilson to lead off the ninth with Detroit behind 8-2. , Detroit left nine men stranded i on the bases in the second game.i Despite the heavy hitting, the Tigers left 13 men on base in the| opener. That’s a total of 34 jn thei three straight los.<(bs. ' AT RECORD SAVINGS 1 Dayton Tire Co. ^ ^(FormeH^^ USE YOUR CREDIT Bonded Brakes MUFFLERS T MOST CARS $*T95 ARE YOUR TIRES WEARING TOO FAST? DOES. YOUR CAR PULL TO THE SIDE? IS YOUk CAR SHAKING AT 40 M-P H,? MOST CARS ALIGNMEItT ’5.95 Ho Ckargo to Chock HI Open Every Nigtif ^til 9 P.A^. 77 West Hirron St. FE 8-0424 8.00/14 6.70/15 7.50/14 7.10/15 THE TIRE WITH THE FAMOUS SAFETY DISC THAT GRIPS TO SAVE YOUR LIFE! y.60xl5 8.20x15 ADD JUST $4 FOR WHITEWALLS MOUNTED FREE Apmstpong Rhino Tires 6.70/15 4 Ply Block Tube Type WHITE $13.95 10 95 7.10/15 4 Ply* Tubed 13 50 WHITE $16.50 95 SQ95 7.50/14 4 ^ly Block Tubeless PRICES ARE PLUS TAX ondRECAPPABLE TRADE OR $3 14 6.00/16 4 Ply BIk. Tubed COMPARE THE ARMSTRONG LIFETIME GUARANTEE! Only Armstrong tires are unconditionally guaronteed for the entire lifetime of the tire. (Adjustment based on prorated charge determined by used tread depth and Armstrong s current consumer list price., EASY BUDGET TERMS MacDONALD TIRE €0. 370 S. Saginaw FE 5-6136 Home of the Fittest in Passenger and Truck Retreading \- ■ ; X' • TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. Tl^ESDAY. MAY 31 1960 Old Age Benefits Cover Millions Security Marches On and Upward By SAM DAWSON [NEW YORK (AP)-Securhy for Ihf American worker miircbes * More are coming under pension ^ani and the benefit payments are being sweetened. More com-lianies are insuring their employes against business travel hazards More arc watching the physical health of their workers, some even hire doctors to watch till health as ; All of these are employer-employe propositions. They are in;' Steady growth‘in the proportion of companies providing some form pf insurance against business travel hazard.^ for their employes is reported by the National Industrial Conference Board. In a 1956 survey it found two out of three companies doing this. In a recent survey of 319 manufacturing firms it found three out of four. cent insure only selected officers or key personnel. The board says that many concerns had only air travel or oth- er limited forms of coverage tour years ago now have all-risk business travel contracts. Breaking down the type of coy* erage, the board finds that 64 per addition to public security programs — old age peidiioos, un-mnployment insurance and work-ijien’s compensation. ■ Insured pension plan protection. Ik provided for 5V4 miUion work-jcent of companies insuring programs. This is more than twice against business travel hazards those so covered 10 years ago. Include all employes so exposed: the Institute of Life InsurahcellT per cent insure all salaried savs these future payments are^workers or all exempt from the ijow guaranteed by insured re- federal wag? and hour law: and 6 serves of 17% billion dollars —lllper cent insure all executives or ^r cent more than last year. I management men. The remaining Michigan 5th for Salaries Tells Education Ratios, Teachers' Pay Scales The majority o the pn)grams provide benefits only for death or dismemberment injuries, excluding medical expense or weekly indemnity payments. Retired persons are now sharing annual incomes of more than 300 million dollars under insuied employer-employe pension plans. Institute of Life Insurance reports. Conventional group annuities cover 2% million workci's undci' 5,250 contracts But of late the fastest growing type is the deposit admMstration program which provides a central fund from which annijitles are purchased as employes retire. The number of such plans has increased 16-fold in the past 10 years and now totals 2,530 covering 1>» million persons. THE GIRI^ WASHINGTON (UPI)-California has the nation’s largest public school system, and pays the highest teacher’s salaries. New York spends more on public education, per pupil enrolled, than any other state. ★ ! South Dakota has the most favorable ratio of teacher to pupils. Illinois has the longest school year. Iowa boasts the lowest illiteracy rate, Utah the highest average level of ■ ■ ] These are some of the facts compiled by the research -divl-slon-Td Die Natioiial EducaUoa AssorlatlMi (NEA) la its annuai report on “The Rankings of the .States” In educational effort. - Tables inHhe report show where-each of the 50 states ranks in 66,. different categories, ranging from; total public school enrollment to| per capita expenditures for education. California led the way in enroll-, ment. with 3,420,000 children in’ hs public schools, fcdlowed by New, York, with 2,892,000 and Texas,' With 2,(k».451. California also was first in teachers' salaries, with an av- ' erage of $a,62fi. Alaska was a hairs breadth behind at KMMM. I Other leaders were New York, >6,SM; N^w Jersey, $5,740; Connecticut and Michigan, $5,700 each; Maryland, $5,055. j At the opposite end of the pay; |cale, Mississippi paid Its teachers | an average of J3,175. Other states with average salaries under $4,000 a year were—reading up from the bottom—South Caroliha, Arkansas, iCentucky, South Dakota, North Da- Iraffic Deaths Jump in April : Rise ip Pet. Over '59, Biggest Monthly Hike • in Four Years . CHICAGO (UPD-Traffic deaths! last montH rose 10 per cent over April of 1959, according to the Na-' tional Safety Council, A A ■ * • The council said |yc.slei(iay the J,910 fatalities reeoixled last month reversed af downward trend dur-| ^ 4ho first three nlonths^ the! i»ear. * It estimated disabling injuries in )ipril at 400,000. The 10 per cent increase April 1959 was the biggest monthly Increase In four years, the council said. It also was the high- ! est figure for the month since ' 1957, when 2,93.7 died. - The council said 10,590 persons | have died on U. S. highways this | year, compai-ed with 10,730 through April 1959. Deaths were 5 per cent lower than last year until the AprijI jump. On the bright side, the council reported a four-month ‘mileage; death rate of 4.7, the lowest in the nation’s history for the first four' months of the year. The figure represents the number of persons killed per 100 million miles of vehicular travel. A 4 per cent increase in motor vehicle travel this year helped reduce the mileage death rate, the council said. kota, Nebraska, Georgia. Alabama. Tennessee, West Virginia and North Dakota. In annual expenditures per pupil. New York was tops at $559, Alaska second at $530, New Jersey third at $497, Criifomia fourth at $471 and Delaware fifth at ‘$460., Arkansas, which was in 50th place with $191, was the only state spending less than $200 a year. Iowa, with less fiian one per cent of its population unable to read and write, had the best literacy record. Louisiana had the worst— nearly 10 per cent illiteracy. Thh national average: 3 per cent. THE rOXTlAC PRESS. TUKSDAV. >[AVxn,Ti^ TWENTY ONE Board to Set Up Employe Rules Final Action Expected . on Waterford Township Leave Regulations Waterford -Township Board members are expected to take final action on regulations governing township employes’ attendance and leaves of absence at tonight'. 7 o’clock meeting, according to Clerk James Seeterlin. ★ ★ * The Board has been studving specific regulations for employes for more than four months iind has finally established rules on vacations, sick leave, compcn.sa-fion insurance, leave without pay and overtime and holiday pay. In other business, the Beard will lake action on purchasing two mobile radio units for the township’s two new police cars after a report on three previously opened bids has been presented. Seeterlin will request that the Township Hall be given a "spring facelifting’’ and repair job, inside and out, he said. Whether to for bids or hire contractors for the work will be discussed. ★ ★ A request will also be considered to advertise for cornbirff^ bids on workmen’s Compensation and comprehensive general liability insurance. Judge Moore to Attend Juvenile Court Parley Oakland County Juvenile Court Judge Arthur E. M6orc will attend the 23rd' annual meeting of the 'National Council of Juvenile Court Judges to be held at the Statler-Hilton Hotel in Detroit June 21-24. it it * Theme of the convention will be ’’Judicial Concern lor Children in Trouble." Grain Prices Weak as Trading Begins CHICAGO Prices started off toward general weakness in dull grain futures trading today. Scattered demand for wheat Imparted a slightly firmer tone but all prices were within small fractions cither way of Friday’s closes, 'The weekend accumulation of cash grain recepts created i tie h^ge selling. Corn arrivals amounted to 535 cars, of which ’280 were owned by the~C6fhmodity Credit Corp. Groin Prices CHICAGO OEAIN CHICAGO, M»y 31 tAP) ~ Op grain prim: Some $2 million is being spent to • improve Piarco International Airport in Trinidad during 1960. (Advertlaememi Business and Finance MARKETS TheNoHowing are top prices covering wes of locally grown produce brou^t to the Farmer’ Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, Friday. . laiS Mar........ l aOVa Lard idri . 1.13^ Juljr . , 1.17‘a 8ep...... Oct...... . .73H B—Bid Western Union facing Strike Detroit Produce rauiTS Applei. Dallcloui. bu Appica, northern Spy. bu...... Applea. atMit. bu. ........... VIQETABLBS Atparagua. dot. bchi......... Chlvea, dot. bch»............. News Pushing Defense Stocks NEW YORK liP-AirCraft, ilc and electronic shares, spurtrtlj n an otherwise modestly hightT| stock market today. j df- Potatoea, 5u-ib ii»» Radlahet. Red. doi. bclM. Rhubarb, holhouie, doi. bcha. . . Rhubarb, hothouse, S-llf. boa --- Rhubarb.'Outaoor. dot. bchs. Tomatoca, Hothouse, l-lb. bskt. . Cbflard.*' I Lettuce! Buying in the defense group wo.s spurred by a report Senate Democratic leaders are aiming for an m unexpectedly sharp increase in de-J fenso appropriations. few sperlallirs displa.ved sill! strength, as did a few of the ' drug finrtK. Some ndid buying ’Wj lifted farm rqurpiuents. Many of sol the basir groups, however, ' showed little ehange. ! L35 To.xas Instruments rose more *5J.than 2 while -Sperry Rand .*01 General Telephone were ahead more than 1. In the aircraft section Boeing and General Dynamics gained nearly 1. Livestock , ___________Jsy 31 '* Two Unions Meet With choice predomlntUni. cowi Telegraph Men; May Rjrt^.^inSdirite'iy -Walk Out Torhorrow blSui'V--"^ SE.AW.^V BOl'Nl>—Ready to be loaded aboai-d the Ingrid Wiodo at Detroit’s Marine Terminal is whaj designers and manufacturers at Detroit Broach & Machine Co. of Rochester believe to l)c the largest bi-oaching machine of its type ever built. The 20-ton machine, purchased by a Euro- pean auto maker, is the first of the Rochester firm’s products to be shipped via the .St. 1-aw-rcnco Seaway tliis year. Company officials cite the seaway as a great shipping aid in expanding its machine tool market abioad. • Fire • Theft • Comprehensive Personal Liability • Additional Living Expense H.R.Nicholie Agency 49 Ml. Clemens FE 3-7858 In th^ high priced group inter-1 national Business Machines roscj - The stock was still getting ai play «s a result of unveilmenli week of its management operating system. Death Notices MRS. -IK.StSK ( AIN HERB W.m i ROMEO — Service for Mi-s.i LAPEER — Screicc for Hrrbi |jes.sr iVcral Cain, 73. of 169 Dick- iason St,, will be held at 1 p. WASHINGTON (UPIi - Union and management negotiators met in eleventh-hour bargaining sessions today to try and avert a threatened midnight strike against W’estern Union Telegraph Co. Contracts between the firm and VO unions — the Commercial Telegraphers Union and the American Communications Assn.— ex pire tonight. The (TTIJ has informed its niembera that negotiations are deadlocked. It alerted them for a passible walkout tomorrow. The unions are asking a 23-cent hourly wage increase as part of a new two-year agreement. The company has proposed pay boosts ranging from 10 to 17 cents an hour plus changes in job classlli-cations that would provide further increases. The unions represent 35,000 i Iworkers, with the CTU acting as] I bargaining agent for all but 5,000 employes in New York. Pay now ranges from $1.16 an hour for mes-sengei's to about $3 an hour for skilled operators and repair men. Robert Morgan, chief negotiator for Western Union, said the company would try to operate if a strike were called. 1113 It.......- choice around “■ --38.00, HIWMB vesv*^^ ------- ____.... 38.26-ir.76: good to low choice * liumr i’ntf choice btUtri standard bellen n.oo-is.50: ■Tead7' Daley Rd , be hold at 1:30 p.m. Thursday j at Muir Brothers Funeral Home Motorola, attracting attention bo- Thursday at Roth's Home for Fu- will be in ,Stiles Cemeten’ nerals Burial will be Cemetery Many New Books Ready at Library a^creic!cause of perfection of a nearly all-"i^’transistorized television set. raced ^ ahead nearly 4. Zenith was up The vending niarhines stocks came back Into favor. A block of 10,000 shares of ABC Vending sold at 39, up Ht-Steels posted small gains and los.ses. -Operations this week expected to decline further. Rails reflected th^ capital goods decline, mostly easing small fractions. _____________________________00-33.50: chotc* heifers 35,50-37.00: ------- — 33.00-36.60: UUlliy M.OO-33.00; Utility smooth commercisl to U.OO; runners snd__cjaters W buSSie ..............„ 35c hlghi..................... mUod No. 1 »nd 3 moiUy No. 3 300-330 lbs. 17.35-17.60; no esrl» sules ’ these weights No. 3 snd 3 180-3: S 5^17.00 few up to 17.35: No. 3------------- 33<^300 lb. butchers 16-00-16.00. few up to 10.3S; mixed grades 160-180 lbs. 15.3o-1625; ..................... 8 35C high- books ready for circulaiion main library include tlic Romeo y,,. walz died Sunday at his following titles: home following a long illness. Besst^'johnson. Thr Hum- Psrgrti The Hc» Mrs. Cain died bncxpectcdly of .Surviving arc his wife. U.rare: wr^r^ Cprceti a heart attack at her home yPS'l'T" j j 1. 1 A u u North Branch and Mrs, Elmei eish. f%t terday. She and her late husband s«>arnps of Lapeer: three .sons. Paulj Biomphy’ ............. ^ of North Branch. William of Kir- ««"». Rose. The HsmUton The.Lost Romport. Bsilykeen. ixed grades 160-180 1, 3 snd 3 3'“"“ No. 3 snd 3 < ‘Wer^ - Salsble 30. to 1.00 lower full decll prlmo vealers 33-38: go 3g-33: standard 34-38: c Bheep — Salable lOOO bulk supply crop diorn lambs very slow early si 3 oS-3.00 lower slaughter ewes steady most good and choice lambs 1800-3000 cull and uUlity 10.00-18.00: choice snd prime lightweights absent cull to choice slaughter ewes 5.00-8.50. ■ American Motors weakened in ____the auto sectidn, dropping nearly brothers. but General Motors, Ford and su^y Chrysler posted fractional gains. International Harvester and Caterpillar moved adiead. were former residents of Oxford. •Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Faye White of Romeo; eight grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. Three sisters survive. Mi-s. Elmer Woods of Rapid City and,' Mrs. Harold .Pace and Mrs. Jo.soph Faik, both of Pontiac: and two New York Stocks rtgures 8fter declmsf points si sisters and a brother. Seventeen;: grandchildren and sevT-n great-, grandchildren also survive. | 1 Women Gone After Nazi Nab EicHmann's Mistress and Former Secretary Reportedly Flee Probe Gcnrrsl Sgbfccis ■h« Restlessness of ShtntI )thcr Writings; Andrews. The sros: Cstlln, George Cellln; ------- Grant Moves South; Cerf. The Lsugh s on Mr: Danilg. The History of Baseball; Oellhorn. McKay's Guide to the Par Bast and the Middle Bast: Hobbs. Basics of Missile Guidance and Space Techniques: Miller. The Golden Age of ........- ........... - copeUe 1 Painting. if .Philosophy. Presidents: Is soaring inflation the inevitable price of economic growth? The relationship between prices and growth was the question 64 representatives of education, labor, business and government put to themselves recently at a meeting of the American Assembly. Their answer: we can indee4 have dynamic growth wiiH reasonably stable prices and low unemployment. But there is only one way this ideal can be translated into reality-through a continued effort by all of us to achieve a steady rise in productivity. Published is i public service In cooperation with The Advertising Council end the Newspeper Advertising Executives Associetlon. The Pontiac Press News in Brief Burglars look an undetpmilnpd amount of change from Rogers Sales„& Service, 695 Auburn Ave. it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. imnufe Sale, Bloomfield Hills Rotary Club. Benefit Student Scholastic Aivards, crippled children and other worthy community services. Fri. and Sat., Jund 3-4, vacant gaa gtation, N.E. comer Woodward and E. Long Lake Bloomfield Center. Many articles like new. —adv. Have you had your carpets cleaned lately? Call TUSON, FE 6-8103. —Adv. Murphy Museum Is Dedicated at Harbor Beach jj; HARBOR BEACH (UPI white clapboard hou.se in which the late Frank Murphy was bom in this eastern Thumb area community has been dedicated as a museum In honor of the onc-time U.S. Supreme Court justice. “The law has known no finer justice than Frank Murphy," slate Supreme Court Justice Talbot Smith said Sunday at the dedication. Jurists and politicians from fhftjughout. Michigan gathered for the dedication of the Murphy Memorial in honor of the man who served as mayor of Detroit during the depression, governor of Micht g^. U.S. attorney, attorney general, governor-general of the F^il-ippincs and finally U.S. Supreme Court justice. Murphy died in 1949 while on the high court bench. He had .served in public office nearly all his adult life starting as a Detroit Recorder’s Court judge. fc Oh ... 63 1 Ow«n» Cng ler ... 45 3 -Owens 111 G .1 Sve ... S® 5 P»c OAEl Bquip .. 37 P»n AW Air.. Coe's Cols ____58.3 Panh Epl . . ‘ • ^slm _____35 Psrke Os ... Gss ... It.l Pe,nney. JC Us ....... 83 3 PS RR .......... Gss . . 43.8 Pepsi Cols . nerPw . 58.6 PJl»r ............ sk . ... 41 PI.elps D . .. sn ..41.8 Phileo .............. op*S . M7 PWll Pe‘ - ■ lot ...... 9 1 Pf^'t O 111 .. 42 4 on ... P?"*. .'.' 53 ^ Republic 8tl Called Signal for Cold Weather Sun Halo Startles City A rainbow-colored ring encircling the sun today excited sky-watching Pontiac residents. The phenomenon is known as a. "solar halo” to astronomers. Dr. Orren Mohler, assistant director of the McMath-Hulberl Observatory at Lake Angelus, said TYPIl^G FOR TEEN-AGERS TERM BEGINS MONDAY, JUNE 13 Typing is valuable for personal use; helpful to high school and college students; important in career courses; in demand by em-ployers. Call or Viait Office for DolaiU Pontiac Business Institute 7 W. Lowrence -Pf 2-35 the clearly visible ring means cold .weather is just around the comer. The phenomenon I* eaiiaed by the defraetlon of lee particles In elouds, he explained. Solar halos occur when arctic and tropical air massc!^ mix, Mohl6r said. Such ^phenomena, he said, are not uncommon, being visible to the naked eye from six to 12 times yearly. Sides must be cloudy for a solar halo to be as bright as today’s, he stated. TTie degree of brilliance depends upon how well the ice particles in clouds have crystallized and the altitude of the clouds. . 42 4 Wtiolworth . 55 2 Yalf A: Tow . IPI Ynvst 8h & T . 34.3 ZrAlth Rad . WORRIED OVER DEBTS I SfCURITY OR INDORSERS REQUIRED 6 ONE PLACE TO PAY I j Mrmkvi Amrrlcaa Axvarlatlaa at Crvdlt iwawwllwi-I 4. MICHIGAN ASSN CBBDIT milNSBLLORS __| U| 14 Ym» of Croctit Cehasoliag Exporiraco Assisi rou" ‘ Honrs; Doily ) fOv-S. Wod. and Sal. I (o IS Noon. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS The Ataoclalsd PreMi: I 140.7 Deaths Elsewhere CAMDEN, N. J. (API — Edward V/, Kellogg, 77, who held patents on 107 inventions in radio, dice Sunday after a brief illness. Author of many technical papers Kellogg was honored by the Society of Motion Picture Eiigineers for his developments in motion picture arts. it . it it CCXmOCTON. Ohio (AP)-WU liam pever» Timmons, 62, inter nation^ly known photographei and industrialist, died Monday after six months’ illness. He was the first American accepted for membership in the Royal Society of Arts in London. " ?c ♦ . * • ★ Plfur»« atler dfclmil polnti HARTFORD. Conh. tAPl-Mor- / gan B. Brained Jr., 54. vice president, treasurer and a director of the Aetna Life Affiliated oWnpanies, died Monday after a brief illness. ,. 18.1 John* l8l«n . 78.2 Jonei & L . . 52 KelloRii . 53 Kfnnecolt . 39 3 K(mb Clk . . 32.3 Kr«(r. 88 90 LOP 01»-'» . 18.8 Lib McNA'L . 38.7 Llg« A My 55 4 Lockh Alrc . 72 4 Lone 8 Cem 20 7 Lone 8^0»s V1F:NNA ii:PIi - An Ainetrian Cowboy Re»der: White, Bong Without Bnd. ChllSren'i Btudouy. Old One-Toe; Butler. TT»e Pur I^dire: DuBols. otto In Texns; Bu. Nln# D*yt to ChrlBtmts; rr«fm*n. Th® Bun. Stars; MacAfy. Oolnf GLENN A. HORTON PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Glenn A. Horton, 41. of 2799 Shimmons Rd., died yesterday at his home. emplo>ed in the Material Department of Pontiac Motor eighth*; Division. Surviving are his wife, Laura; a 84-1 j daughter, Mary Ann. at Home; ;:1j3ithrec sisters, Mrs. Erne.stine Grif-p reported today that ’J Jfin and.Mrs. Irene Lumsden, l^h „,.(,i,ajntanre(S of Nazi 52 5 of Pontiqc and Mrs. Lillian Walker ,.;,.hmann have disap- ,’>f Jackson; -four brothers Harold ,hpj, ,,omps in Linz 25 4 of Pontiac, William of North |,j^ . . Johnson and Daniel Book of Turtle^ ______ ____ Dleroverer of the North Pt of Robert E. Pe»ry. A Une: Morrl*. A . - sufford, The Story :i ;:Texas GOP Bucking 38 4! His body is at Sparks-Grtffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. rr Ch 8i S . 13 2 Ls Hon ■. 171.Z in M&M . 314 The paper Neoe.s Oesterreich said Anna Heclil, Eichmann’s war-MU.S. ANNA A. MeCOTFER itinic mi.stress. and Beatrix ROCHESTER - Service for • his former secretary, ap- Anna A. McCotter, 72. of 1.56 Al- h'^mg to avoid : 4C 7 bcrt.son St., will be held at 2 p. ; 20 8 Wednesday in the W illiam R. Po-terc Funeral Home. Burial will be 22 7 in Mount A\on Cemetery. sosl Mi-s. McCoHer died Si|pday at *3 3 St. Jo.seph Merry Ho.spitaI, Pon-jj Jitiac, after a brief illness. 23 Surviving are si.x sons. Harold. 515 James, Elbert, and Davi'd, all of Detroit, and Lee and Kenneth of 118 8 Rochester: a daughter. Mi-s. ! 61.3 Gladys Laatz of Rochester; two • • J 3 sisters, Mrs, Leah Case and Mrs. ! 49 Mable Frank, both of Rochester; *55^ and two brothers, III VERN MEACHAM HADLEY — Service for Vern 105.6 Meacham, 62, of 3590 Second St., 55 will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, La-. prer. Burial will be in Green’s ComerT'Uenu'ter.v" h(‘re. Anna Heehl gave the only available photo of Eiehmann, head of the Ceatapo’s infamoua Jewish Affairs Division, to Israeli agents iinmedialely after the war, the newspaper said. ■The same paper yesterday reported that Vera Eiehmann, wife, of the notorious Nazi, unknowingly put Israeli agents on her husband’s trail when she returned to Vienna two years ago from their hiding place in suburban Buenos Aires. Argentina. * A At that time, she was seeking *0 renew her Austrian passport. The Israelis, tipped that she was iue to return, kept a watch on all ■ (followed !ipT Stevens JP tudPick . . eun on ( Bwtft A CO Oebel Br Ooodrirh Ooogyesr . 43 3 Unit Fruit . 32.8 Un Oss'Cp. . 38 US Rub .. ■ 88 4 U8 Steel .. Inspir Cop IBWH»k Ir . 33.8 Wtigreen ....U.J . IS 5 W»rd Bk PH “ 78 8 we«t Un Tel • ill ^ Mr. Meacham died Monday at •3s“|Lapeer County General Hospital 31 Sjafter a long illness. He was a La-: jLvIpeerCounty Road Commission em 371 ploye for a number of years. ”1 Surviving are his wife. Myrle; : 46 6 a daughter, Mrs. Franklin Noake jJ * of Lapeer; his father. Charles of 40 2jHadley; and a brother. 44 51- MRS., HARVEY LVLTO.V '. 10*1 ROMEO —.Service for Mrs. liar ■ J5*jvey (Adah T.l Palon, 8,1 of 2H , 23 41N. Bailey Sl^.. will be held at 2 "*4!p.m. Wednesday In Wilbur's Fn neral llonie. Hurial will be ir Romeo Cemetery'. Mi-s. Paltin died, iHioxpectcdly a! her home Sunday. member of the Zeta chapter of Delta Gamma sorority at Albion College and belonged to the Romeo Btwk Qub for more than 40 years. Her sole survivor is her Harold. _____ 97,1 338.8 384 8 128 2 1 01 4 311.1 3017 114.1. 9 with their three sons, Horst. Dieter and Klaus, who would now be 24, 2L and 19 years old respectively. (In Tel Aviv, the Israel government office rejected a New York T-css report suggesting Eich-nann'if family may . have been lilt'd by Israeli agent.s wlio seized him. (Tile sharply worded ktatmienl Kill such sijoriiladnn .-dioiit tlv amily's fate was ".sliockiiig” and On their first trip out of the one-third of a mile. PUBLIC SALE D7FW335189 wlU be sold *t public ulr 33157 Woodward Ave.. Fernidtle. iddrese bein* where ' WHY NOT INVESTIGATE TELEVISION-ELECTRONICS FUND, INC. Watling, Lerchen & Co. Member N. Y. Slock Exchange 402 Pontiac Stato Bank Bldg. FonlUr. Mleblaan. Phone: FE 2-937* OWL WISE ADVICE-littiMnvN Umbrella Homwwnen Policy for your home end property. Then m you won't give a hoot when it rains trouble ... beciutp you're covered. Call Lazelle Agency, Inc. .4Ih Forms of Insurance 504 Pontiac Bonk Bldg. FE 5-8172 ’b;tselrss.”i Frank Yerby's Mother Dies; Service in Detroit DETROIT IB Service will be held here tomorrow for Mrs. Willie Yerby, 64, mother of novelist Frank Yerby. Mrs. Yerby died yesterday of undisclosed causes. A native of Augusta, Ga., she had lived here for 15 years. FOR investment securities and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL C J. NEPHLER CO, FE 2-9117 818 Community Notional Bonk Bldg. LISTED AND UNLISTED BECURITIEB—MUTUAL FUNDS OUR FACILITIES E3CTEND FROM COAST TO COAST TWKNTY-TWO THE POyTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY.’ MAY 31. 3900 IT’S Jl'ST FOR SIGHS? — Only San Francisco residents att?n’t confused by this sign which scorns to restrict the Bay Bridge to baby car- riages. Actually the top marker refers to the area directly behind it. not the bridge itself. w Little M High Take.Pride Exercises Quiet i'" 1 I nndwi.' im. Dem Senatorial Trio 'Working' California Last Two Negroes in Contention Group Get Diplomas U RBtH'K. Tex. W—The 2.500 persuns attending the Texas Tech eoniniencement exercises Monday stood with iiowed heads waiting lor the Rev. Dudley Strain to give the benediction. LITTLE ROCK. Ark. (API -The last two members of the "Little Rock Nine” were graduated quietly Monday night from the Central High School they helped integrate in 1957. They marqhed with 413 white students to receive their diplomas. The Negroes. Jefferson Thomas and Carolotta Walls, were the sectmd and third of their race to be graduated from Central. Hamilton’s who received degrees. When they first entered school in 1957, with seven other Negroes, federal troops ring^ the building to prevent violence' The r,,.‘^:l Rail Strike in France tional Guard to halt federal court-1 "^it a minute,” said a loud, lear voice in the nudlem-e, "I link we have forgotten soine- As faces turned In surprise, .lohn Hamilton of MaUdor, Tex., said “I suggest wo give the faculty a fine hand for all they have done for our sons and daughters.” The audience gave the faculty tremendous applause. , Thomas Kdrl By The Associated Press California Democrats will see | three of a kind today: a trio of | senators, who want to be presi-; dent. j Sens. Stuart Symington of Mis-' souri, Lyndon B. Johnson of Te.x-1 and John F. Kennedy of Ma.s-! sachusetts have scheduled a full day in I^s Angeles, trying to at- | tract support for the Democratic nom&iation. In the momiiw the three plan hour-kmg news inferences, one after another. During the day, the three meet privately with members of the delegation that probably will go to the national convention. The slate, pledged to cast the state’s 81 votes for Gov. Edmund G. Brown ortort wegr.,ion. ■ .Straiidj Tfavelefs This year, after an opening day, clash between police and segregationists. the school situation has PARIS (APi — A nationwide been peaceful. irail strike today strtjnded travel-j In June 1958 when Ernest era all over France and rfsuhed qj^ JjQQfjjpQQ ^ Our Segregation -Martin King schools in The two unions control almost all rail workers. They are asking for| everybody blind.” 1958-59 to prevent continued lnte-|^^ jj ,^.age increase andi King, who led the Montgomery, gration at Central. They .were re-:,j^ government has offered 2 per Ala. bus boycott several years ago. opened after a .stormy .school jsaid he thought the Negro sit-in Otdinary railroad workers now'demonstrations would be success-make from J90 to $150 a month.jful. ■The sit-ins are a demand for board recall election which resulted in ouster of three staunch segregationist members. GM to Provide Belts hr School Training Cars Gasoline Tax to Go Up PROVIDENCE, R.I. cent adition to the state tax on gasoline goes into effect Wednes- state tax seven cents a gallon. respect and we are destjined.to wdn that demand because it is a basic American demand,” he said. King was acquitted Saturday in Montgomery on a charge of per-■ ' hjs state in- Irome tax returns. General Motors will provide seatj belts for (i^rs leaned by General .Motors defilers to high schools for driver training programs, Presi-: dent John F. Gordon announced, today. Installation of the front seat belts next fall will represent ad(litional contribution to high school driver training programs by GM, which shares with dealers the cost of making the training cars available. Some 5,000 cars are used annually by approximately half a million high school students. "Development of new designs and devices for crash injury prevention long has been an important part of GM's, broad program in support of highway safety,” Gordon said. Huh Says; Syngman's an Old Man South Korean Students Protest Rhee's Flight SEOfL. South Korea (AP) - dent Huh ChUng resign because he ' Nearly l.OOO college students de-,helped ousted President Syngmanj monstrated in downtown Seoul to- Rhce leave the country, day demanding that Acting Presi-- It was the second day of stu- ' -----dent demonstrations protesting Rhee’s flight to Hawaii for a rest. Monday 1,500 marched in Taegu i Pope John Starting Plans for Council . VA'nCAN CITY (AP) — Pope John XXIII announced tpday the start of definite preparations for the Roman Catholic Church first ecumenical cqpncil in nearly 100 years. One of its major aims will be unificatton of the world’s Christian forces. Another is expected to be reaffirmation of thef Church oppositiao to Marxist doctrines And communism. Two years may be required to prepare for the assembly—fte 21st—which will bring bishops, archbishops and other prelates here from all parts cf (he world. The last ecumenical council of •the Roman jCatholig Church began in 1869 in Home. It proclaimed Uk dogma of papafj i«-talUMlity—4he Roman Cathoilc,be-Itef that the Pope cannot err When Ruling with his full authority on matters of faith or morals. \ demanding that Huh quit. Tlie student ^activity was reminiscent of the demonstrations in , April that mushroomed into the uprising that toppled Rhee from | power. So far. however, they were i on a small- scale and provoked! no police interference. I AT DIES AT 70 — Mrs. Theojlore Roosevelt Jr., daughter-in-law of former President T h e o d o’r e Roosevelt, died Sunday in Oyster Bay, N. Y. She ‘was active in civic ai^ -welfaire programs fdt most of her life. Since her hus-band’s death ’ in 1944 she has spent mpst of h« time on her estate near TR’s famed Sagamore Hill home. , The 84-year-old former president and his Austrian-born wife arrived in Honolulu Sunday by plane after a hurried, secretive departure from Seoul. They said they would return to Korea after a rest with friends in Hawaii, but there was widespread specuation they would never corhe back. The Assembly summoned Huh Monday to explain Rhee’s flight. Members of the anti-Rhee Democratic party accused the acting prestdent of letting his predecessor escape criminal responsibility tor wrongs done by his govem- Huh termed Rhee an “unfortunate old man” and said he let him. go because his presence in the country could provide a rallying* point for counterrevolutionaries. He said the 'government can ask the United States to send' .JRhee t^'k whenever needed -for QtcJ|pmt to his 1 A N T R E S U L T Death Notire*; AMinSON. MAY U. 1»M, lUYSTA muY SB. Knol*, IS W, wa»c- ... InltDl diusntrr of Iron# Amor-■ob: drar slalrr ot Kalth KuncoJ Amorapn. Prayer aervtoa tha William P. Darla Punaral • Inter- mant In Oat .............. ...JUAM SB Oreen St : age 50; be- _____ Jiuaband of Mrs. RuUt 1-b Beale; beloved aon of Mr» Llovd Beale. Completed luni mrnts will be annotir tha Puralajr Ptmeral Mr^Beale will He, In BXLt. MAT'SB. 1t«0. OEOROB B1 N Ardmore: age M; beloi _ husband ot Velva V. Bell; dear father of RIcherd A. BBlI and Bruee A. Bell: dear brother of Mrt. WUUam D. Thomas. Puneral aervlea will be held Wednrscla.v. June I, at 1 p,m from Sparks- McCall eltlelati ng. Interment Whita Chapel cemetery. _ POX. MAY i». iSdorilAIltlA ( srs Homeataad Dr.: age 7T: I loved husband of May Irer- .. Marguerite Emig. iwra. nuei Beckwith and Mrt. Norma Methner; dear brother of Mrs. Xltanora Hsrpsl: also survived by all grandchildren Pu-nerel service will be held Wednesday. June 1. at II Bparka-Qrlftln Punt the II ic_Lodge. N LOVING MEMORY OP PPC. VIc'or P Ruttrrbueb and Charlea J. Ruttevbueh who paeaed away IBM and IBU We know you era walking togeth- In ,Ood * prerlotta heaven ebove. Bomedav we ll all walk together Kntolded In trusted love. Sadiv missed by tha Rutterbuah Family. Funeral Directors d by tt ' uavis Aneral Home with rr. Qua Teonpauat ofllclatlng. Inter-mentjn Oak Hill Cemetery. HAOdADONB. MAY 2B. IBM. OAIL Arlene. San Rafael. Calif.; age J6. beloved wife ot Donald P. Ragga-done: beloved daughter of Opal and Leo Arnold; dear mother of Deanna Kay. Bhiela Ann and Wade Oordon Haggadone; dear atateos-of Twilah Rae Hritnn and Lee Johnson Arnold. Funeral ar-' rangements are pending ' William IL . Rafa^ CaUf. _ HOLXY. MAY 29. thony. 94B- High I ry. I . ROY J Phyllla ....... ...... held Wednesday. June 1. * ~ — Purtley Pur— and Sherman Joseph 0 10 with r n Oafe ; Ing. Interment In Perry Mount Park_Ceme]^cry^ ____ KKRR. MAY gL lOW. LENA. M X" Ann. Arbor; ag;e 80: beloved wile of John J. Kerr: dear mother ol Mrt. Clare iLeonal Harroun. Mrt. Edward illai Weinman and Mri. William iMarvI Hill; dear titter of Mrs. Pred Lee and Alfred Tulgettke. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. PuneraLarrange- COATS PUNCRAL HOME DrMrjon^alnii______OR B-fttl Donelson-Iohns PDNCRAL HOME Voorhees-Siple J T-" In Memorlam ■ CHEVROLET a farvlea Mg-roet ComDai^a Ipihim. lIm's. Ncdfr car salesman. Exjjcriencc 4 necessary in Pontiac line. Call M Y 2-2871. ask for Kuss Johnson. Htip Wanted 8 II BS PER HOUR OR MORI POR part or fuU Umt rouU work. Larga raptaf ordare. Man or wo-mnn. Wrlta or MlapboBt Mnmes Bnrratt. IBM Dtvonahlro Bl.. Pllnt, Mteh. Phgne Cl t-37«8. .. BBTAii. LtiBEiTHATEIHg BOOTHI ■ nvnllnbla. ISUI or part^ma. Avarua M BS par br. tli N. Parry. PART time'' a than MB weekly Must S^AflBAL^MAN PR! 3-Om, l_ REAL ISTAfi ^kjwlenea ■■• Unlimited _ j^^tential. "progreieivi K?T(®K) valuet S.\LESMAN’S DREAM REAL ESTATE -------- homes A homealtea ..company owned aubdivltlons plus alesm^a'n. Top ei BOLID. NATIONAL RATED CON- I (or higher Income. Mi icai background helptul, sal parience not neccatary. man can advanca to mat position ti ‘ Urrttorv, -------. . personal Interview v Cemetery Lots ,S Help Wanted Female 7 _LOT8_ PERRY MOUNT PARK, ARi^Ei PE 4-Bggy.____________ PERRY MT, CEMETERY, 1 Iful high ' ■ BABY BITTINO At ‘ HOUSEWORK; Uve In. PE 5-9104. bakery's ALES. 4 HRS PER DAY. COUNTER OIRL.OVER JO. PART DBUfEBT PERWJN wrfHCAR ■ liaht deliveries, well dreaa^-* y, jkandal^B'a^ l^B. SaglnasL I.earn Real Estate 1 PLtoOR SANDIHO. WtTT — --V tloor Sander PabjUan-Watar- __-Bruea-wa». PE B-JTO. BLOOMPIELD WALL CLKAHER8. Wall and wlndowe. Reasonable. p® a-iw- ^___________ MjBCfRIlS kOTOR •iStVlOB E-palrlng_.and rewindlna. BU E. ____J FE I-7B11 for InUn ,. AND mMEPiATE MOREY fni'E APPLIANCE AND lienee required iraduatlon. All Mlchlian Civil ervlce benelltt Apply In person or by latter, pereonnel Officer. Pontlao state Hoepllal, Pontine. Michigan. _______________________ SEVERAL ADULTS TO OBTAlS signatures ,}o , nom[natlon_ part'j a tor I II elecUons. Can e mnkt BM a day. > Boa 103. Pontiac terlaU^_A^ fatt. _ BP&rnR WITH KXWBIINCl OH men's At women's garments. Apply Pok Dry Cleaners, 719 W. Huron. Btisinesa Service 15 HOTPOINT, WHIRLPOOL A kEN-ytma waabty repair sarvict. PE PLABTERIHO-'H^ OR HEPAIR -Work Ouaraotatd. PE B-«SM. __ SEPTIC TANKB CLEANED _______PB_FJ07I___ Bookkeeping ft Taxes 16 BOOKEEI^mO^ALLJAXE. Dressmaking,jjUlorlng 17 ALTERA'nONa, PE 44BSB. 37 Plor- ancs Ave., Pontiac,_ _ DBEMMAEINO. TAILORINO Al^ tsraUona. Mrs. Bodall. FE 4-9053._ aarticn -Plotiring 18 “ No tflllpg Wiita - eat for — ANDY'S ROTO TILLING. 30 INCH Prast^ ■nller jre 4-M7L_____ Al WA'RNER. ROTO TILUNO lawns and |ardena. JPE_ 4-B940. OARDEN'PLOWiNO Bl HARROW-liig^jiaawnabU^^lcoa. Call Noel OABDEk*ANb~LAWtrROTOTIL^ Ing. 4930 Hobson PE 3-AY CAMI’ Unique Exclualva Day Kxparlanca. Limited g and B years of — aeaaloDs. July 11-8 days a week il Camp „ 10 girls. ... Two 3 waek and Aug. B-IB, vriniy ot Pontlao and L a Orion. MY_3-B011._ ___ _ GARDEN PLOWINO BY LOT a Pontiac Press Bog Work Wanted Male II 3 FINISHED CARPENTERS. NICK work, by hour or Job PE 5-32*3 3 YOUNQ MARRIED'MEN NEED a will b« announced later s Haniilton, was amoiiK the 858 Lg g favorite son, has minor op-1 position in California's June 7 pri-1 mary. In the evening, Symington, Johnson and Kennedy address 1.-200 Democrats at a ^lOO-a-plate dinner in honor of Gov. Brown. e Hunloon Puneral Home where Mra. Kerr _ MIDDLETON. MAT 39. 19«0.'eDN/ May. 307 Doing Bl . age Bl. deal ----Matthew H,-Bert E. Harry C. and Roland f. _ ion, dear aUter ot Mrs. Mary Blaney and Mrs. James Osborn' • Mao survived by three grandchIL rf... -------‘grandchll- held Wedneeday June 1, at 1:30 ** .*!\; — Voorheea-Blple Chapel with Rev. Daniel J. Wallace o«l-clallng. Interment In Perry Mount Park U,. __ Park Cemetery. will lie In state ai vn# voornees-Slple Puneral Home. SIEKMJWN, MAY 30. IBSoTmARY, 3133 Henrydale, Auburn Heights; •5*.®®' mother ol Grandvllle iPetei OUmore; dear sister of .Marshall, Ray Marshall. Mrs. Lena Peter's a: I Mrs. I grandchildren, Puneral arrange-menU will be announced later by the Moore Chapel of the Sparks. Auburn Green became Central's lii-st Ne- jn monstrous traffic jams in the.'" gro grafiuate soldiers and police cities. guarded the proceedings. It is the first industrywide strike About 25 plain-clothed and uni-since Charles de Gaulle became i.;n;oxVILLF Tenn iL'PIi -formed policemen silentiy ob- prench president. "Segregation is on its death bod served the ceremony Monday * ★ ♦ thing uncertain about 24-hour ■ strike—for higher jt jg wlien it will be buried,” Ne-, * i wages — began at midnight and g^o leader Martin Luther King Jr. ; Fifteen Negroes, mostly friends,,^-35 almost totally effective. Some told a college audience yesterday, and relatives of the two gradu-jcity bus drivers struck also. Speaking at Knoxville College; ates. were among the audience of subway traffic was affected in commencement exercises, King: about 1,500 persons. some areas. urged a nonviolent approach by | Everett Tucker Jr.', president of ♦ ♦ ♦ 'Negroes in their effoHs to end seg- the school board wWch rropened galled by the negation. . 1 public high schools 1^ I" Communist-led General Confeder-! , : a years lapse, called on gradu- j^hor and qlftckly joined , .-The principal BOX UmJES Al 10 a m. Today there at Tie Preat lie (ollowliig CURB / ___________________ PE 4<076 ___________ XXX Hamburavr, 1351 CARPENTER WORE. NEW and repall. PE 4-431*._______ 1 CARPENTER. SMALL JOB A -------- — ( otOce i boxc*: b' ORlLL OIRL8. BUT-. >10 Oakland. ' GENERAL OFFICE w6kK MUST ba fxparifneed EHiccllent fuiurv : ?u".‘im*«*!?‘ .‘4‘r*sv'sr I rriuimc to Pontiac Fra»» Boi 19*. OIRL or'WOMAN TO WATCH 3 rhlldrfn from 11:30 to 3:3«, VIr, I ol Sylvan Manor. Refi. PE 5-(70l. 21. 38. 57. S3, 69, 75, 82, | 87. 90, a. 92, 94, 98. 101, SAVE ENERGY, USE WANT ADS! To find a joli, pl.nce to live or a good uscfl car, see Classified NOW! BOUBEEEEPER FSr MIDDLE-aged woman. Phone FE 3-4341. KINO WOMA'N WHO NEEDS HOME' _Bonte wagek. OR 9-353B.__________ LAUNDRY WOMAN. EXCELLENT working condltlona, good future. Write complete background and reference to Ouett Houie, 1g40 Bcrlppi Rd.. Lake Orion.________ PHONE CANVASSER WAHTED POR modertlliatlon lalea. Work In office only^ Call PE 3-B345 ______ PRACTICAL NUR8T B. penlngi for a . Two Help Wanted Male rfltr. Apply In person or ___T Personnel Officer Pon- I tUc StaU HoepUal, PoHUac. 6 ! Michigan ________ ! REOI8TERiro''NUIlBE FOR DOC- ofllct. PI 4-9BW between _*J017__________________________ A-1 PAlN-rint INtIERIOR and Exterior. Rees. Free estlmetei. L.M. Urumm l^ 4-«4*2__________ tNT'WORK WANTED ODD JOBS. APi-RKNTti'C CARPENTER, wiehee work PE 5-33*3. . ltT CARPENTER. 8P_-formica. FE 5-33(3, CAEINEU MAKER AND CARPEN- CARPBN'TTR WORK.' CABINETS _and ad^tloni PI_5-3393^___ CABINET MAKER AND FINISH tmrpente^ ^ **** PI 4-4«M. ALL TYPES CARPENTRY _______rt 3-4g5>_____________ CARPTBN'rER WORK OP ANY kind. Reasonable. Call alter ( p.m^FE {-*43*. __ ____ _ LAWN WORK AND ODD JOBS. (ISO hour Ekp. and Ref. MA _*-323»._____^ _ _ UaH-T'TILLER WORK DONE ______PE 5;0a€7 _____ wnx DO WORK OF AlN¥ anywhere, ____________ UGR'i* HAULINO aND GARDEN ^lowmji^l wy sue and rtaeanable. ■• PLOWlk6“ANDT)R AOOINO!' "any rise lot. Cheyi FE J-»440 PLOWING.' MANURE A TRUCK-Ing.^narkston-Drajfton^MA »-l*29. KOTO - tiLUNQ I.AWN8,' OAR-dens, 3* In. 7'* horse tUler. PB Laundry Service 20 COMPLETJ^ FAMILY LAUNDRY . 540 8 Telegraph. PE Landscaping 21 A l ME:RI0N - AND KENTUCKY blue sod. delivery or pick-up. 3g01 crooks Bd. UL 3-*«*3 a' bSaUTIPUL LAWN, pimsH grading, seeding or sotting. Call 6l 1-0553 ____ Alii COMPLETE LANR8CAWNG.’ grading, tuting planUns^racs removed trimmed and complete cleanup 'Of all. dabrla. PE 4-433* or OR_J 01S8. B b CLTfc'ZINd. LANDSCAPiNO. trenching. EM 3 33M. EM 3-3415. A-1 ACE TREE 8BRV1CE STUBAP REMOVAL Tree J|£movaL_ trlmmjnj.^jtet our l-7l8g 0 COMPLETE LANDSCAPINO bIRV. 7' Colorado Blue Spruce. EM 3-35^___________________ CbMPLETE. LAWN MAI5 tENANCr Dan's Landsespa Bervlce. MI KNIBBd LANDSCAPE TRUCKING Planting plans A estimates quality Work________FE 5-204t LANDBCAPINO and TOPSOIL DB- , del. PI B-BBIBO ( :rower oeo, .usm.iuuig asenrrai » snliij. Call alter 3 p.m. PE Top boil nd haavy trucking. Rub-.1 dirt grgdlng sand, grtv------—• I o a d I n g . PE Moving & Trucking 22 A-l MOVING SERVICE on^sble Ratas_ FE5-345g CLEAN UP'or LIGHT HAUL-_tj. 5-33*4 _ dP LIOHt HAULING I loao. PI *-(303______ ... KIND OF LIGHT HAULINO A odd Jobt. FE_A»0in.______ BASEMEklE AND OARAGES cleaned lor unwanted articles. FE A .L ___ tin* fpy Hil**^*^^**____________- I ^ m«nt8 conUlntnc Ux>9 tUeii S FE FOR WANT ADS DIALFE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ported Immediately T b e Presi assumes no responsibility for errors other, than to cancel tbe chargee for that DortloD of tbe (Irtl Insertion ot the adverUte-ment which bai beer re it- er ror When eancelTatlona are made ba eure to get your "kill number." No adJustmenta wlU ba (Ivan NOTIL'E TO ADVERITSEES CASH WANT AD RATES LInei -l-Day 3-Daya B-Daya 3 11 50 *3.04 1311 Building Siervlce r away ' tree ol BAKER OR EXPERIENCED BAK- i fo^n- ers helper, FE 3-*580_ ^ I BUMPER A PAINTER. JLpTY j iw« 8.7ele*eraph/ " UL WHITE LADY 25 TO 35 LIVE'm ... T.k. complete charge Ipr 2. »25. A-l ALUMINUM SIDING Installed or In. stock Awnings, Storms, stune „, _____ _______ commlssic Also good experienced helper. 2-25 lu or IS., Ouanoooeque, ■ 1 Heights. COLLEGE MEN SUMMER WORK Limited number of applications being accepted now for l0-I2 week summer employment. Intematlon- JOE VALLELY WOMEN TO CAKE FOR CHILDREN OL 1-6023 ^OL 1-Om "Liaifr i 1ST clabs'licehsed builder. la. (30 _____?E_ 3-4(55_______ FLOOR BANDING. WITT DISCARDED ITEMS OF CLOTH- Ing lurnlture eppllsncea, - and doors hauled away I charge anytlmy FE 5-4g: _ HAULWO AND ROBBIBH. NAME your price. Any tjme PB 1-0095 LlOKt HAULINO AND CLEAN-UP; Odd Jobs PE *-4370 _________ ’ (5’DELL CARTAGE Local and .long distance moving Phone PE 5-SSOS Trucks to Rent WIU accent couple call ,altr 7 I j.m. MX 5-9391._______________________I — A-l CARPI Addltlooe - I..- --- — Oaratee -----KRST — children, ages ( and — GET UT Bid . ______ PE 3-7304 -1 BRICK BLOCK wagee. Rochaeter, OL ^Mint''W< TRUCKS. TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT H-Ton Fokups iW-Ton Stakes Dump Trucks Beml-Trallcre Pontiac Farm and !—Indtntrial Tractor Co. 835 8. WOODWARD FE 4-0e« FE 4-1441 Open Dally_____Including Sunday 'Bmplbymrinf A gencifr 91 older. 435 Orchard 2 POWER and 8 8 SAILS WhctHer you want a motor bbat or a sailing vessel you’ll find exactly* what you’re looking for at the price you want to pay -k in classification 97 of . . . /'I THE PONTIAC PRESS WANT • ADS. no you QU.M.ii'v:- limited opportunity lor men who caa meet tbes< qualifications: . Age IB to 31 .. Educa.......... Evelyn Edwards itlons and start Immadlataly a minimum of I3M per month. 1 Mr. Hagan. FE i-1103 I a m. To make^ temporary d^s for shdVt machine work. Conner Pebrlca-tors Inc . 555 Oolng Street. Fon- EXPERIENCED COUNTER MAN for cafeteria serving; also bus boys Apply Alvin's, llg N. Hunt-er Blvd.. Birmingham. experienced SHOE REPAIR MAN '» steady work at Mlvatlon - liar. Call FE l-IML Aak rmy Cent If Manat ESTIMATOR FOR GLASS COMPANY on comhiei Jobs. MuM bm ana loiiow-up joos. Oood fntqre. Salary plu.v commission. Phone for personal Interview FE Y-0353, THE WEST DETROIT GLASS OT PONTIAC TRAVEI, AOENCY M Needs good typist. No shorthand. Neat, attractive girl for IntaresUai Job. FINANCE COMPANY B3 ^ood tplet. no »^ho^ C STUDIO eda typirt ' ■1 Friday te I shorthand. Must ALL kinds CEMENT WORK. Drives, floors, etc. Jensen. FE. *-”40. ADDITIONS'OARAbiS MODERN Ising FHA terms. FE 5-07B2. A l RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL and Industrial Mgson and gen. contracting. AKo store front remodeling. John W. Caplea. MY _____________________ ADOrnONS dARAOBS, AWNINOS PonUac Home Servlce. PE 4-1(87. AS A GROUP OP BUILDERS. WE offer low prices through volume Surehasee. on custom "Quality utlt" bomts - 100 plane. We'll aecure mortgage. 1-A Reduced Rafes Fainting & Decorating 23 1ST CLASS PAINTING AND DEC- FE 3-7210 . niBSDER Addltlotti, elMratlons, eablneu Stairs, attics, windows, complete. Rero^ell^^ 9^0^2'l' **' BONDED'lICENSRD CEMIN'flBAl _8on. L. M Monroe. PI 4-gQOg. BULLDOZINO • EXCAVATiNO TBENCHINO - TRUCKING , ApTYtir T&nlr anri Tilm Heeds typist no shorthand. _ Manufs-iMrer's renresenia-flvf IBM Electric type- OFERATOR 43 Comptometer. Under 30. Lite experience. INVENTORY ................. |J Control and posting. Some typing. Expertanoad. SECRETARY .. *3 Busy axacutlva needs dependable right band. TyP« M w.p.m. Shorthand 80. Muat be tntalllgant. -ES 8TENO .............. 14 For Steel representative. Must be hlihiv 'ntelllgent. -J phone or-to ellente Dleta-eleclrtc typewrlt- SJri EXPERIENCED TURRET LATH 1 OperatoTi. Lyon Dear k Machine. 4nt Territorial Rd., iGoodlaon), Lake Orion. ---- BiucS; EXPERIENCED BLOCK----------- man. Muat be test k neat, MY J-U3*^_j____________ ■ Iave just enpranchibid nvi adjoining ataut. We need experienced talesman to vepreeent iwedlsh sewing mgchlne mnn-ufneturers In eaeluetva Ulebtgnn grant. RevoTutfonnry new petented mechanltm mnkM eewlnd machine experience unnecessary. Write McMaeter Pahlstrom Corp., Box 1113, Oi*«i Bay. Wltrontin. ^ME OWNER. EARN AND 8TAT home National Carpet Co . offers Ittetime saeurtty and earnings. No Investment or sollcttlng. Applicant must be buying own home. -MEN- Horse stabla. DESIGNER ................. $71 Special machinery; Jig lit-“— --------Job if — — perlenOft mandatory EVELYN EDWARDS VOCA'nOHAL COUNSELIHO SERVICE 34tb EAST HURON---------- FE 4-0(S4 — F ICE, WITH Septic Tank a BRICK WORK. VENEER AND mS-places. T% 2-2935_or FE 5^1927. CEMENT WORK - FREE ESTT- mataa OR 3-5741._______________ CtlSTbM c6nCBETE WORK TO _ . Beads FE 5-9133. COMPiiTi gOME IMPROVB-mcnG. Stornu screens, attics, kiiehena. recreation rooms tm-rages. Call now for free estl-mata Alto patented dormeje lor Uiat entra apace. Darn Bulling DRITWaLI TAPtNO AND FINISH^ uig;, Free estlmiWes FE 8-07(1. ELECTRICAL SERV -FREE EBT! FA^TNEV_Bleetric ______FEJ-B43* R)R ADDITIONAL WIRINO AND _Ea^_plugs^ail_FE 2-5g7E________ FREb; estimate on'all'eQEc^ ■ —*■ r, b Munro Eltc- ana wa fha ttmis Day Bldg. Co. FE 4-7744 Licenitd, bulidor. , _JKRINO k RKFAia RiUE. it LOO. FE 3-7933 ______ , BNfbih FLO&R iAYif^ tonding nnd flBlsBing; Fhono rd FE 2-8181' fvi3^ ---ly to pur- hgte A rani opportiujty with lading nnuoowlda Van ttnet. U Secretary i' InBerestlng posltton nveileble yoo hive good skills, * dni wci ----modem otftcea. exoener* ROOF REPfMRS EAVE8TR0U0H1N0_ FE 4-0444 TRrNCHTNG EXCAVATINO FOB eepilc Unks Pitid tile, lootinge. ditehoe nnd beet ogll. UL kkft*. VVA-ftER PROOFING CASH CU^- U^^'^idlPSl e*;Vi^«5?‘» TOMER5 through GlaBW- Rnuao Btnte B.';k fldg. Fi\ 2-818l'y _________ Beck^ OL 1 1ST CLASS DECOBATINO PAINT-.-----„ ,eu papering. FE 4-*"** .ITER I OR AND EXTERIOR painting. Wall washing. Frtt estl-mntes. FE $-0475. INTERIOR AND e'xtERIOR DEC-oratlng, O Ll-1980, PAINTING. PAPERlNd, REMOV- _____ . TK 3-3313^ _ . _ PAINTING. ALL TYPES; PLASTER repair d> pnper. hanging. FE PTiNTINO. INT k,"E'x'trPAPER ^n|lng. Mason Thompson FE PAPraHANOINO-PAINTINO FfsAS- Ur Rep. BUphen Nevnrri. FE ■T CLAiM'iTCT. * WT. FAlNTI»a P«!fL''l?*' J5. ^ig***’’ Prices rensonnble. fi i Television Service 24 CREST TV. 1-BOUR SERVICE. Dsy or night. FE 5-5310. 309 Baldwin _________________■ Bay or nioht tv semice. Upholstering^ BAKLE'S custom uPHOLSTER-taw $174 Cpolry Lwe Rd. EM 3-M41_ THOl___ _____ 397 NORTH Pl FE 5-1 Lost end Found jW FOUND: LADTS WAUJT ,<»N-i^WriS*Rl"^^'Rothrook, 4sl3 mall valuable eontente, Gerald L. Oreen, 38 McKinley. l^Unc, FE $-0074, Reward._____ ' '_____ jx3.ST : Ll VfcR A NO wrilTE ENO- ... ,....,. vicinity ol Orchard Lake and Telegraph , Rds. FI 5-M33.___ Notices end Personals 27 AA. PRI VATS DETHCTlVES. .Don't worry. JMiO* tb* facu. Ex-; - pert ihadowts^ FE'i-BBOl.___ AkY GIRL OR WoSaN^NE^ IM a tnaadly gdvltor phooa FE Mia. Afur $ p.Bi. or M M an-fwer, FE IS7M. OoklMaoUki. 'V', NotIcM and PerionaU 27^ Rent Apt«. Furniihed 37 I./— ACKOTREDS KNAPP SHOES >*r««l H»riB»n_ OB 3-iaw Rent Apti. Unfurnished 38' , For Sale Houses t9 TIZZY Kale Oaann THE TWEXTY-TitRE'E ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? YOUR BILLS -----OIV* YO~ ONE PLACE TO PAY BUDGET SERVICE IS W. HUROR ROb»nio UONTHLY jST Broaaway, Orion. FB l-ll *TLY T _ DECORi ROOM, NEWLY DECORATED Pi(A««iit. Ideal lor retlref- IM W. rtttj. nS I-3Wi? . J AND .3 RMS.. CLOkE IN. . INT.. BATH, til __ ............. AP art- 71. _ . All Utllltle., PE 3-433t. rn i ROOit PLUS BATH AND KITCfl-* eneUe, ,»rtra lArce iwAr WUltann T*T T<——-------------------- •“> »*Un PE Cim TM DFRT? i“RodiAlijrrTcHTijD wia^ ilN 1 r I M3 per wort. Iniiulr. at 373 Bald- S^iatt, DAINTY UAlb B0PPHE8~i^ Menomlnat. lira. Wallaca. |»TtOd. IF so LET us 113 par ! —_____________________________ 3 ROOM APARfilENt. SUITABLS lor penaton or - or 3 worUoi i3 LAROB ROOllS POR COUPLE. ‘ — ....... MICHIGAN CREDIT I’*,S}, COUNSELLORS RM. 703 PONTIAC STATE BANXi BLDO PE S-04M | Momlwr American Ateoe. Credit Oonntenora Michiaaii_Aieoc. Credit Oouneellori!■ IMPRINTm ~r Weddinp Jftpkins | jvt.^ath. adulte. MI ° * j^P^^TCLOSS IN CLEAN ROOMSr'^SuPLE lady, PEJ-3SU.__ ROOMS, ICOMPLrrXLV rURN "FREE" -PLUS 100. INFORMALB-Wlth Erery Order OI Wedding Invitations Backenstose Book .Store It EAST LAWRENCE _ PE 3-MM LOSE WEIORT S aY E L~Y AND, iO'3131 I I. Jehneon. W K F'AV aTJ, YOUR BILLS n a((ord I( y *‘,?™*f* ^ .w._ , -.... Cheaper (or ca(h I _ . , _ ____kltehen h.Ihrene, BIRMINOHAMT Give You 1 Place to Payi'?ar‘»7?’\“^h‘^x*".-.’;j.‘- ['fj^^tornw”!; ^00^ ^'e ^S„»;in.3l4r‘“*‘"“‘“"" ' I roVELY-TPATfMENY--6 V E R- ° (iKBINOTON WE ARE NOT A ‘■’S...-..... • PBI-U38 Working couple prelyrred re(er-, bV OWNER. 4 BEftROTM, HOUSE ■rMB .'NIARUcITY'HOS: ence, Teoulred. faj, 3-3831 | l"_H!Kcn Oardejii,. PJ_J-«0A .....4-MM I MODXRNf^'ROOV APARTMENT. 1 BY OWNER, h ROOM HOME ■■ — ADULTS OI - I'E 8-6‘M8 MANAOER 19 8ALMEB ST Open Dally * Sunday. 10 a m -3 p m. UNION LAKE PRIVLI0E8 BEAUT- liui iirw a iw.- •nd til® -- All •lectrlc kitchen, formic* cab-ineti. Prlgldalre ................. I, bate board hot wi ______ (aclllile*. Apt*, 7800 Cooley Laka Rd. i i Wllllam4_Lk. Bd. Adult*......i " UNION-COURT APTS apartment* i BUILT IN OVEN AND, RANGE. CARPETING. COLORED BATH FIXTURES. tlS 8S0 c,_„-WITH $2,4110 DOWN TO FHA MORTUAOE. PHONE PE >3330. WEST BIDE^^L ^'^AND^ Benedict ___ _,jiei*on ncnooi.., cloae_ to [ Hhopplng and PE 3-3383_or_ Hi or PE « Beautiful “LAKK SHIiRWOOD' *. CONTEMPORARY guad-levd on 110’ wooded I»k (ront. 3(0,000 or «ma MODERN Open tUily ..J" WILLIAMS , Real Eatata A Intura 1483 Baldwin______FI ROCHESTER - 5 ROOMS,,BATH ch"ck*!* J».*tage7’phoiocop^ CUtIR*' billt paltT ana nayroent ol rent'-T^^. and utllltira 1( deafrad. . .3 BOON Walk. ake— lronl_„, ihowing. $34,300. SIS'or*radie*^PE* Restricted Coniniiiriilies g»?IIS’e'”‘M.»sl'''''"*"' i «,‘th*i , located 3 mile. ea*t n( Milled •^^,\'=,,?J5rhole-''.Vlf j iji'drtlo' VATE bath , ^,^ ENTRANC1^ 3"BEbH^OM._J_ YR ^ ‘ '' 3 RMS A BATH, UTILEtlSiS. Rent Houses Furnished 39; 1ST FLOOR PW KNT AND | kee6o HARBI balh, PADDOCK STREET . newly (urnlaheri, baaeenent. automatic conditioned oil heat. . ‘ and utllltle. II dealrad. , ,3 ROOMS >ND BATH. NEWLY I L*»* Mi*Vl447*'' ' * UnVIl.'Y A-1 RERTALS 2-BLDROOM DUPLEX Wtd. Household Qcods 29! APPLIANCES A FURNITURE OPj all kUida needed. Immediate aerv-. waiting. Doug'a, PE 3 0648. PE 3-7199, _ _ _ 1-7 ROOMS OP PUHNITURE AN appllancra ncedad. Will pay mo: ca*h. Pleate phone PE aTTENtlONi CLEAN -3 AND j nuum nrnni- j manta. 17 and It Hovey between I Cqttage and Oamun. PE 3-»«43._ j "EPPIciENCY APARTNTe'nTS .. ---- kitchen, bathroom, ' 3M "iJ. Paddock;; PE' S^SOttV IN3R COLORED. 3 RMb7 A BATH. 333 Proapect St. PE 4-3703 ! MODERN 4 ROOM, PARTLY PUKN. $75 PER MONTH FE 47833' 344 EAST BLVD. H ____jlTTALINCIA ____ TbEDROOM. clean AND MOD-ern for »m*ll and neat reliable family On Auburn near Rochetl- I'ON'riAC REALTY | 737 Baldwin_______PE 3-327} | SEE THIS ONE INSIDE AND OUT 3 bedroom home with Watkin* ' Lake prlblege*.' 310.300 (i " 'BUD" CXUw» HllU po&session. place, carpetibg anS lot* of ei-another tiul finest - This ,1 HUTOEH8. 200 WEST eekdaya. Anything reaaonablc CIVILIANS $190 DOWN 2 bedroom.*. PiAll 1 estln.alea FE 3-0707 _ . , . _____ CASH FOR PURNITURIe AND AP- ™ 4r«>»3 or PE 5-0333 £liancai Old piecaa or houaofull. OXBOW LAKE 3 ROOMS A BATH iprompi couruou*"i'a r\ I a a. >X ~ Bahnelder .......—_________________________ *■’<** : _ _ . ^ THREE ROOMS PLUS KITCHEN 3 BKDRM LET US BUY IT OR SELL n ana Bath, All have one leparated Wall to wral --------- ...••a flrpnlurr u 1. OA 8-9M1_____ SLATER APTS. HK1.PINO HAND ' MA 5-1341. If, ^ ^ nojan«w«;^Pt *-jm._______| 33 N. PARKE ST. ^il^?.™?orkln'i®^r°»of''pE°“6343''APTEB 9. ANb*8UNDAY8. SEE ' » RMrTXRFWCI.yAS HKAT tor*, woraing or noi. re. a-w* r-*DW-r»wwo ud r>*DDni i *. — ---- WANTED: BEDROOM ■eretted call owner I DAYS WO 3-3350 EVES, SAT , SUN. TO 0-8561 KXECUT1\T: s HOUSE ON BEAUTI-ful Waterford Hill, carpeling. I drape*. buUt-lns, 3 baths. bt*e-. ment. 3 car garage. Owner trans-lewd. OR 3-3331, i EASY TO BUY Suburban Living At Its Best Your future home la tha fCONVEKTlBLi: 24) \V. W. ROSS HOME.S OK 3-8021 I Culoiiial Kaiicbcr In delightful Hammond I I Estatea. ahth lake prlvll Delightfully attractive ‘3 Uched garage, and featuring corner fireplace, carpeting and drapea. family room. "Ameri- St. Benedict' BiriTE.| It Rd.. Waahlnglon. . ARCADIA CT f 3-1331. Rent ApU. Unfurnished 38 Wtd. Miscellaneous OR 3-3717 pet, Venetian _________ 8 ROOMS AND BATH. OARAOE. Excellent location. CIos* to Parmer's Market and new court house. Inouire at 1376 Scott Lake Rd A 3 BEDRM. PARTLY TURN.. ] g rDoM HOUSE ON PADDOCK lakefrons apt* OR . >106. _ ij'**! Auburn. PE 2-5348 _ I TYPEWRITER. IFLOOR. LlVmd ROOM. ' CEDAR ISLAND LK . NEW LaTcE : or place ol qfdce j!i*- •***’• **A ** Paddock, front. 2 bedrm , duplex Beau- tqulpmen» not In 3 UNPURNISHED APTS, FOR tHul view. Ideal swlmthlng and buy thasa |•.am*:, rent. 301 N Saginaw. t.*.-* ...* y good Keogo Harbor I, ) Is In good shape. Only $483u 1 low down payment. Jaj:k Loveland -------- _ PE 2-4875 East of Auburn Hts. 2 bedrooms, btth. Oas heat. Lot 60 I 230 Only $5,000. Urms CUCKI.ER REALTY Walking d..._........ handv to shopping at little 4 room bungalow We hive the key____ Ing (or vour call-WIH you br \.\lue: bdond... compariaan. A clean 3 bedroom brick rancher wtomill Ba.sr~ neat kitchen with ^butitdn* -Large fenced back yard. 11* ceramic tile baths Yes — there are lake privileges too. A steal at 316.900 a itii low down payment and nu mortgage cost. BLOO.MFIEM)... Highland* - W> know vou will be pleased after Inspecting this real nice 3 bedroom-- ■-- LAWRENCE W (..\U)R1), Kealtni- 138 E Pike St, Pontiac Fb: 8-%93 OPEN 3-8 !oN-LY 3150 DOWN on. this newlv I decorated 3-year-old home 3 beif- . rooms, automi'tic Ml heat. Located on Colorado. Only 135 per . VERY NICE 3 t SMim WIDEMAN ; 3 ^BEDR(X)M8 II monthly notes Pull base-t. Immedlata poasesaion. ELIZABETH LAKE PRIVILEGES Be ready for the wonderful summer month* ahead Im- .. mediate possession In this 3 bedroom bungalow Shad- ' - ‘7ciSri'eV ASSOC LATE BROKERS Inv. Co Inc 443 ORCHARD LAKE y>^ 8-M63. Eves after 5 PE 3-1808 ol Oakland Lake Jqst off Pike St. Small garage house with approximately I'a •ere lot. Excellent locaUon to ; build your new home All city ! Improvementi. 15,000. Terms. | W. Ann Arbor I $7,400 Is the full price of this 6-year*old modem br---'— ^ lake prlvtl d at $n.6C piutiful lot. Ft reetlon room C( Pallo-Pordi. a ,clud*ed* PrTcEd*a ^eCs’u ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES. POR i _____ __I,'olf heat, rear yard^ completely fenced. Call us {viLLIS AT. BREWER JOSEPH P REISZ. SALES MOR "Bud" N'icliolif. Realtor 43 Mf CLEMENS ST. EE 5-1201 After6p.ni. EE 4-8773 FOR LARGE FAMILY ‘ 7 room 4 bedroom with full, basement, a very comfortable j clean home with lake prlYlle|je» PRICE, 33.050. ONLY 37.SU DOWN CLOSE IN Sanderson street I room* 3 • bedroom*,^ with ^a* Olasied (ront porch, outilde STOUTS Best Buys Today ____ ______________________3 BEDRM APT. EXCEITTONAr- WANTED, U8KD PENCK WIRK.| Iv claan. 8t. Mika's area. FE ____________ 1 0-1075 after 3 p.m________;^M&DEHt WANTXD: ELECTRIC APT. SIZE 3 ROOMS AND BATH, ADUStS heat ---- - — 3-300S after only. FE 4-0401 afUr 3:30..-^ i ___ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, 8Tp* baths, out. 1331b Oakland Ave. PE 4-1334. , S --- OR 3-3130 TRIPP pealing modern I Zero Down BARGAIN proptrtsr. Ona fulf*t 13X50 STORE. INCLUDINO SHOW-rooffi, office and work shop. 3313 Dlxlo H^hway, PR 3-1331. garage. ..AI---- 46 OR 3-8D8_____________________ ~ LARGE 3 BEDRM. HOUSE' WITH I'b car- gar. attached. Aero** Uic road from age. swimming and boating prlv. on beautiful'Watkins lake. 100 ft. lot with huge 'shade trees. Waterford •chool Attractti. , ------- ------- ----- lent condition, tastefully decorat-e7*'" ‘•11 N4 .—...------------pIOBa .. OR >73.18. EDSB MCN/B_____ , ART METER PcRce Quiet,: t KENT.. SEVEN ROOM HOME SALE OR TRADE - Won-derlul family ALUMINUM I GIROUX CARBAOE DISPOSAL Oaf haat Sxc*U®ot locatioo for $11,990 GENERAL REAL E8TAT1 4395 Dixie Hwv OR , Open 'til 8. Sun. 'til l EaUblUhed In 1313 STORAGE SPACE - Over 1.3 sq. R wlttaln one half mile cire of downtown Poutlae. Also 8 roo ! Elizabeth Lake Privileges! Family borne with 4 bedroom* and 2 baths. Ftraplace. Recraa-Uoo area. 'Very good eoodlUon I throughout. Oniy 313,330. 733 W. Huron - PULL PRICE MODEL OPEN 1 - 8 PM. ‘ DAILY b SUN 433 B COLUMBIA I between J06LYN b BALDWIN I snepherd '----..a. CLARK tiled 'baths, (treplaee In living rm and family rm. Wall to wall ear-petlng. 2 Plctura windows. 2 Car garage. Covered petln. Attreettve ly landscaped. 333,803 — Appoint- siNICHOLIE COLORED /' 3-Bdrm. Ranch Home4 BLAIR 3300 DOWN. WORTH YOUR MONEY -time to tea this fine brick 3 Ample bedrma. i' ^ " " noora.f aUraetlve kitchen. 13x14 family room Large 34x43 bsm’t •llowa 3^* faf rt8- tw- Bstra shower way ar Paved (or Un 3 bam't. Oaa beat. Car- r, Walter B sMtener Furnace *Toom.'^ forced air oil beat. 3 car garage Well landseaped lawn. Better act now I .. _______ ..... ___ , Do ’You Want to Retire? Ph. Shelby 3-3114. I Then tee this 4 bedroom home. j ck\wT*ok*d*ag1?n^ Sl.3||. 3137 lilnton. POntlpc. PE 333 W. WALTOW PE 33301 4-MM. ' ! 3« B. PUNT MY Mlti peted Hying ... -------- drapes and awnlngt Included — Fenced rear yard. Oood neiBi- & HARGER CO. $10 Down t living (or owner. INCOME Exeellent llvln Truly lojlrclT i 3 bedrooms. 4 room anon-■ment-upsutra? Sebarata ip-. ' tranca and utllttles. "See-ina li Believing " ‘^*L*k' mile, left oh Breehdah Completely renovated 3 bed room home Evcmhlnt don - Niceiy decorated posset No Mortg43g« Costs DON’T MISS OUT-OOINO FAST Model Open Daily & -Sun. 268 S: Blvd. at Franklin.: Model-ra >2133. 1:30 1o_3 p m/ X. CLASS LAKE RD. Urge brick 3 bedreom Only a vritlbule entrance Wall to wall hall* Combination kitcLn a^ (uU Uled bath, Oil heat. Washer b dryer. Finished 13 x 10 breeae-way. Attached 3 car garage. lOO ft. landacap--' ’ —*-■ *- 3300 DOWN 33000 WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Modern 3 bedroom bungalow, oak floors, qii heat. lad (OT 31.060 down. FRA ten GEORGE BLAIR REALTOR 3 Dlile Hwy. Ol DRAYTON PLAINS Eve*, call OR 3-lTOi 5RIES ARE EUN ... family 1.200 DOWN. 310.000 HOME b INCOME. 5 b bath for owner plus S30. monthly income from 4 b bath apartment, large lot. basement oU a floors, plastered Btesemkqt. tcreenetr* r< MODEL*^ 4581 Kenijif Floyd Kent Inc., Kealt* ; 33t« Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph o!\ ”P» 3-3133 - Open Evei. Prta Parking for every member when you own yo Whether you wAni favorite eollacUon; ,___ _ , own wqtf bench entertain m* garden club, or play HI-FI until the wee hours, it * all possible la your owb-heme YOU-ahlt find nonlet of every style, gta*. and foi every budget and hobby Start looking rt-*-‘----- NOTHiNO DOWN 3U.TS3 THREE , _ _ , BEDROOM RANCH All ifewlv putter at your dacorMad. automallc furnace. 3 ““ bath, large rooms, good nelgh------------------------ qutek_ ptMcaaiM 3howq S' W^ST HURON .fK.3-dl33.- ■ I * Dot! MacDonald 1 OB 3-3137. i*o/ir,i;" J-E 2-8181 I bslahce oa 3>4 per ebat 1 coatrhcl. , r CtOSED OECORATtOlk DI t PE 'I-Tiig ' - ■ RES , PB I , ( LARK RE-XL KSTA ' *^u7iT?£5>LlBWNa*»EHi'l V ■ TWRXTV-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. TI'ESDAV. AfAV 31. 1900 ^ Sale Houaea ’"“©PEN Modcra S kMlroom »U briek, full bAMinenl, *tc. 613 Shtron la. HufBB. n i-2474 _ For Sale'Houses , .49 Nothing Down wirinit Included. DON UcDONAU KENNEDY OPEN ’By Owner CIVILIANS $190 DOWN For Sale Houses MULTIPLE LiSTINQ SERVICE O'NOL " SPRING TIME IN THK CITY. Nestled on 2 lots with -sir conveniences of ritv lIvitiR We kiio CARNIVAL By Dick Turner I Business Opportunities S9 ] bedroom*. ST' " down psyineiu. PEOPLE A8K^ ^ome »t « price n bunsniow, I Rerige. * red •ubsUntld * YES' in only bedrooms, tiled 1 living rbolta with . Priced to eell ■ EVERYTHINO In this 6 room. ) bedroom home, h...'h I wdl*to wdi cerpef. od floor* , ,, I pltstered wdl*. I»rge kitchen, with cupbonrd*. full btseraeni. th dl *'» S'tMf. All •‘•■eet n»ir school tnd bus. Pull price 110.500. Bei-" ry. This one won t U.sl .‘.AUBURN HEIOHT8 ! S;eirV‘!oorho‘iSe ‘T'c'hef?;^ “ Rrii l»nd Auburn Height* exclusive * , locstion l&rfla llvina roAin riln. HAYDEN WILLIAMS; ,L ESTATE a INSURANCI SALDWIN PE ♦■( SMITH" 100 FOOT WORMER LAKE FRONTAOE. A solid well bulll Urge 6 room bungs- T H 1 8 ATTRACTIVE 2 BEDROOM home with ' Urge iii^lnlshed upstairs WE BUILD J alum, smin COOLEY LAKE HD 08500 fi h nice rooms, clean at screens, garage. Terms. ; LAKE PRO Enclosed porch, LAJCE ORION. APP™*j * •P'' garage. tll.OOO, terms. NORTH SUBURBAN. Excellent 2 B.R. home Plastered walls, breeeeway, I'j car attached garage Basement, oil ' furnace, 19500 on Of terms. Only mortgage closing cost down. ORTONVILLE RD. Approx. 8 acres ' Clarkston School area. 3 BR ~bathr~Vall lo”wali~cafpetT~Ktt: 23 5 X 13, Basement li * ' ' ^ {; WATKINS LAKE FRONT ‘ 8 room b fully lands excellent emiie take. 70 -ch, dock, undergi I would expect 1 Boats Large display room i sir.v.o.Xi'i::- 35 per cent more--------- Year-. Top lines of Cruisers and Motors. Buy or least property. IS thU year Variety Store Mortgats Lo^ns * 62^ Sale Household Goods 63 Sale Hoiiieholrf qoo<>« M Voss & Buckner, Inc. I National Bldg. PE MT38 Another Big Bear First Consolidate your debU and modernise your home I Let ju pay off your mortgaat or land contract, personal d a o t § and modernlie your home. WE OET RESULTS!! BIO BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. 82 W. Huron_________PE 3-7833 neighborhood E i lease. One-half ...... down BubsUntUI earning*. , I MIL1IIGAX iiUSINl'.SS ,j tractor tires iox38. will i .S.M.HS COKPORATIOX I .T^^jraller or will ..II cheap. JOHN A LANDME88ER. BROKER LANDME88ER. BROKER ! , IT] B felegraph Rd. PE 4-1583 PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR _ 0\v F K K ftTr iNcr ' 3 stares and 2 modern apartments. dompletc set of shoemaker's equlnment ; side rented 880 Ser month Owner III must Sell, n'y 815.000. 14.500 down OWNER RETIRING* Restaursnt — 30 x s4 cement block building, stone front. 2 lois 1 lot for psrklng. Modern equipment. Sests 40 cuolomers Building and equipment only 8 years old Miftt be teen Uy appreciate. Bargain. Only 85,000 dn. Paul M. Jones, Real Est. 0 H.P EVINRUDE OUTBOARD. .Late model. 8160; 750 watt DC '115-volt fenerator, $06: White Working or_not^Pl . TOR” 80 ford or CHEVY, 4 DR. Sta. wgn.. good '57 Ford adn. --- -..-0. irans . B * H, will paymants. Poh- DOUBLE DOOR PHILCO REPRIO. New cond Wringer wash math. Tort Itoner. Bendli auto, washer. Hoover >0000111, child's swing sft. Mlsc. Items^PE 5-340I ^ DAVENPORT AND CHAIR.^ OOOT condition OR 8-1014. after 3 DISCOUNT PRICES super Kem-Tonc — 84.48 Oal. UHia Power---- ......... dficing parking. Call . ____I, owner. FE 5-8111 — a or consider le Sale Lake Property DARB LAKE COLONY scenic colonial detail throughout, onlal fireplace, keeping LAWRENCE W. CAVLOKU, Realtor 138 E. PIKE ST. PONTIAC l-'l-: 8-9693 OPEN 8-8 „F VALUE. YOU C._ _ •JOY THIS SUMMER IN YOUR OWN HOME LOTS OP SHADE TREES-PAYMENTS PROM 145 MONTH UP TO 870 MONTH. IIM WRIGHT. Realtor 13* Oakland Ave. OP*“ LJ? FE -5-1581 . _or __ F^5-844l- LATE MODEL CARS AND CASH lor your land contract (wlicre you have sold propertyl. H. J. VanWelt.^R 3-1358._________ 8WAP^1«87 ISETTA POR ALUM-Inum housetratlcr Ac will pay dll- , I fcrcnce - or 57 Plymouth. SM j I 3-4MT________ _________I 5-8101 ___Open Bun. 0:30jJl:00 p.m.____ ELECTRIC OUfTAB WITH AMP' Ilfler. |40; porUble dish washers, cxc. cond.. 148; electric stave. 8*0; refrigerator. $16; wringer washer, 835; 31 tn. TV. good cond., 840; electric dryer, 840. FE 8-3700. ELECTRIC LIGHT PULt-DOWN fixtures Newest. exclUof modern light fixtures. Ideal lamp for stu--*"ts gI3.08 value. 88.85 Mlchl- Fluorescent. 383 Orchard Lk. “ ----Parking QE KREl .......... Uprights New modfls^sllghtly scratched^^r davs^same*a8*’cash waIt'nb oabIrt 131 N. Saginaw PE g-81M Famous Make FREEZER.^ NEW IN CRATES Vv"e'’ $169 MUNRO ELECTRIO i080 W. Buron_______ KNOeOIOHT WOOD TONSOLE. sl|-ia^4^ulp|>ad. 8«. Curts Appl. with Uuoefx »nd curUto, *461.80 Yslue, 834.45; lavatories. Ulc“|s?Pluo?«cfmt. »3 Chcha^ Lake Ave. IUar_Parkln8_;;;_»5. "trade-in DEPT. rebuilt washer •• • WOOD DINETTE .........{IJ®# LOUNOB CHAIR . ■ J *1® 3 PC. LIVINO RM. SUITE 139 00 COIL SPRING ......... J 0 ®» RECORD CAB^W^ ....... • ] ®» ODD ARM CHAIRS ...... » ♦ ®® lOr. DOWN. EASY TEPM8 Wyman’s Furniture Co. 18 W. Pike St. ~8lM8~UP7TieED~RI- ■ -----1 Radio Ac E 4-1133. Used Trade-111 Dept. sTiIdlo couch ........... Daven^n At chair.........{»-5® Relrlierator ........... }J» J® 3 place sectional . j... ■. I«»,5® THO.MAS ECONOMY 391 B. Saginaw PE 3-8151 Lrr^Ks^ poRNiroRE* £''^ap?l. I Vinyl Linoleum ..59c yd. S’” Drayton__OR 3-86M CEILINO TILE.-18X18 8Q. FT. 9e Random Tile ............2c PHEEZKRS - UPRIGHT FAMOUS name brands, scratched. Terclllc values 8140.85 while they. Ust. No phone orders please. Michigan .■>00 Other model available paneled 263 S Realtor i To ............ orsmn o B preferences t 3-1o28 '“■L, Lake FREE PLANNING SERVICE personal designs. 1 Individual lamllv 6 Wooded .Acres High rolling bcaullfullv wooded _______ ighout. building site (or better home- ; J 1- 0-VDV.1 TII?P .TIi;:?dk,‘V‘d7ys'.Vm.“"Ji:| S;i~ie*c7?e"t‘ak'er ______________________________ 8**Cai?°?o7*ac® PE V-SuS”’ ' I USED WATCH SOFTENER. WATER kiTPENERS TO RfNJ , OBNERAL~ELECrrHIC'“ REPWO-, . .. ,««* 1 „ator, 10 cubic foot, dial defrost, I 1 USED WATER BOinBNER. own now 8100.95. Pay only 93.25 perl condition, reasonable EM 3-05U wee. Goodyear Service Store, 30. after 5 p.m^BM 3.8031.___, 8_Cass, Pontlac^FE 5-6123. 3~bUDMAN AWNINGS. -ALCOA HOT #ATEH HEATERS 30 OAL. j alum. Llletlme guarantee *■••'4 gas New Consumer Power »p- 5 mon"'s P-^l IlOf HOUSE - •3150 I’uiitiac Restaurant SW Uuwii iwners want a deal Your chance 0 buy a real bargain! Heart 1 town and good equipment If ou want your own. easy-to-op-rate business, reasonably, see Ills today I Liquor Bar NEW 4 BEDROOM Trl-Le NEW 3 BEDROOM 1 t doubt Oakland County's and screens.! 151 50. These are slightly malred. j irVtiTOIL TANKS. GOOD CON-Also electric, oil and bottled gas Will deliver. PE 5-1120 _ healers at terrlllc values. Vichl- —piFe—4~rr 83 79 ■an Pluorescem. 393 Orchard Lk. ' ♦•INCH SOm PIPE, 5 r-i. sj ■*''.* ..***^LP®'^*"* ------ SA^E PL?IM81N0 SUPPLY HOTPOINT WASHER. 975; HOT- PE 5-21D0 point drver,,ll00i Admiral 37-lnch ai7 television. ||50; Prtgldalre 30- •'••LASTIC SWIMMING PML. $12. Inch stove, 975; and other Items. arie l“«» »*• ‘‘"P"'' “* OR 3-7731 ________Iterlal.OT 3-9603^-------^— IHOHRITE IRONER, PULL SIZE. , I 0°OD , JIBED 330 OAU OIL Deluxe model. $118. 3 years to tanks ,®l* --- Cooling Co. 1738 WUllsms Lk. 1, OR >W4 ___ ~RU8c6 WINDOWS WITH EM 3-0085 MU 4-8835 En hSi Hagstrom WEBSTER WANTED ^ A couple looking for a completely furnished ranch home, right on the lake. Wood burning fireplace. Exposed basement. fenced yard Breesewsy and attached garage. Boat and 12 n p motor 3*l“» mow- call 0 this c J ro‘mc"'Vith“attac"l!; o On paved road nci kc. Full price oftly gll I g’40 m o J WALLED LAKE AREA — / 60 »ACRE8, I ROOM MODERN A silo, live strear ' owner. 12185 Ri Good rich!__ 138 ACRES nearly modern 5 bedroom . Other outbuildings Good ; j I Sfrtd for Partridge's Free Mlchl-' ! can Business Guide." Partridge : AND ASSOCIATES Bateman Kampsen JUNE Ut -YNU 2ml ONLY REERIGER.\TOKS Only $199.95 KEI.VINATOR- OE 1 Pontiac. Want cash offer t HUROI TAVERN — Well esUbllshed. Tele-graph Rd. location. Living quar- Dorothy Snvdcr Lavender | lkjuor *bar -*one of the best Realtor E'st. 38 Year, In Traverse City area. Exccl- 7001 Highland Rd -MMI lent gros.* And priced right. Phone EM 3-3303 or MU 4-0417 j NEIGHBORHOOD TAVERN - Live couple ran make good living here Will consider some trade. ORIVE-IN — Good equipment and go Located near 3 LAPEER COUNTY Ishfd drapes r e call Sonee John- neighborhood, lull price *15,500 II ea.sy term* BARGAIN - Sharp 8 Evenings---- son. FE 3-3381. A. lOHN.SON, Realtor ,VeY«m "J" .-...I. I.',l i frame ranch Full basement! . Ktorms and scr^^ns. hard- ”jlAG.^TRO.Yf'"‘' • n" of; 7*50* I Paul M. loncs. Real l''.st. public beaciif.i., Hou*et eluded In price STATEWIDE Sale Household Ooods65! ' " ' ' 'I good HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 1 BLONDE DINING ROOM SUITE. ^nPa 859: 8 piece bedroom, 879; refrlg- |ji WEST HURON erstors, 920 up; gas and elecirl- — stoves, all sUes. 115 up. Washeri 130: child's highchalr. 53 50: piece dinette. 122: business desk $15 Big picture TVs. 130. Easy Spin Dry washers. 135 each New bedrooms, living rooms, rugi and 88'^ moi_____ please MIchlgar Orchard Laka A CABINET SINKS, 848.30 while they takes. PI i-U80 ______ 3 8"" X 14 i'‘ BUILDING - I attractive •—-* ** at- KROEHLER 8 - Rear parking GOOD COND FE 4-85! 1704 Tclcfiraph Rd. h'l-: 4-25.C1 WEBSTER IRWIN K. J. (Dick) VALUET I' l': 4-3531 " ; ' 345 Oakland Ave Open 8Jo I | A N N E T T! HOME FOR COUPLE -i i 1ST STRATHMORE r bedroom bungalow jlul linished attic; Ju ho*e teenagers that ory style sleeping qui worker. Living ^^tm. bylrn New oil ‘luroacc. M loo lot. |7b0 dn. N.. N. E... EXCEPTIONAL the word for this le located In the cooms, lovely kltcb ' area. Carpeted I UTOR Income Property SO ^ 3 FAMILY, COULD BE 4, EXC. , ^ond. FE J-0303. 3 family INCOME~BRINOrNO PROPERTY^ " AT^ 200 Infor. calf OL*ve*’3‘-769T WILL ROGERS Partridge plant Tills home heated f< proilmately 8100 It ested at *9 O’*’ *9 950? Then ( s all tillable. Has GI's miRable^l ome apartment. TO SEE qiace rge family May be a C A WEBSTER, REALTOR OA 8-3122 ^Y 2-2291 OWFEh TRANSFERRED. EXECU- I OXFORD-LAKE ORION live type home Too many lea- i SPORTSMAN.<4 10 ACRES - Locat-tu. es to mention |45 000. Low ! ed In South Lapeer County. Offers dn payment. 1030 James K Blvd. I private lake plus larger seml-FE 2-3305 ' . private lake Oood pheasant hunt- *’I bedroom."base'.f?m. “oT fumwe! Perry Lake OR 3-1400. _ outbuildings. g33.500 WHIPPLE LAKE PRIVILEGES, LOT | • 7 ' _I00 x_200_$1200^MA_5-3730 ___. LAPEER COUNTY—110 acre*. Oood Sale Resort Property 521 -.’f-'H.d'’?."'’' SCOTT LAKEFRONT B D CHARLES. REALTOR 1717 8 TJegraph FE 4 0621 wanted! MIDDLEAOED OR RE- turn for investment In business. ! Rep^y Box 33. _______ i WTD. PRIVATE PARTY TO INVIKT I>B1CE - rejects BEAU- fully insulated, wired, knotty pine Interior finijh. Must sell, will sacrifice. 83< N Main 81. Roche*t#r _ _ 4-2 ROMKX IN COIL LOTS. 3 A_Thompon7 7005 M-59 West. !0 ■ LAWN MOWER. 2tk HOR8E- Kwer, 2 cycle engine, 139.91. dget terms available._ GOODYEAR SERVICE ^ORE ____ ________FE 5-2p0 .\NCH1)K I'KNtKS' No money down FHA ^proved FREE ESTIMATED PI 6-7471 ■.YKTI'lSl.YN W ATHU SOI'TI'INI'.RS I PHA ai EM 3-0413 Sale Land Contracts Fireplace. I kitchen. O ment, oil furnace. 3 c outbuildings. t3>.noo. t joining 40 acre chicken good home, also aval landscaped lot, lOO ft. frontage | c A WEBSTER, REALTOR on lake 3 car garage Priced to , QA *-3!22 MY 3-2291 sell. $2500 down will handle. [ - —;-------- —------7 JTi Dototliy'.‘'^nytIcr Laveiuler Phone EM 3-3303 or MU 4-8417 Subur-ban Property 53 5 ACRES WITH 3 BEDROOM MOD-ern must sell quick, only 85.080 Cheaper for cash. MY 3-3701. For Sale Lots 54 »n”^-J0 Commercial 110 foot frontage b' 135 with 4 family aoartment am ROCHESTER Oxft)rd Income 2.a'i-Acre Indust. Site - 130 ft fronURe on M59. near PonU«c 916.500 Good helrctlon rfuidfiitiil loti with Ulcp priv. 9600 \nd Up. I and 2 acre lou on pavement $1,630 .and up 7 acre parcel, near Pontiac. 9700 Kolfc 1 f. .Siiiitli. Keallor Rochestee $8 000 ^ SMITH A & LILLY too N, Main St. Rochester ________OL 1J144_______ Rent, L^P'’®P- 57A 24 X 56 NEW MODERN STORE for rent or lease. 3438 W. Huron. FE ^3474 30 X 00 MODERN STORE 8157 . ------ .. Jrpu 199 Pay only I s Purniture, 43 ATTEINTIONI SMALL INVES'TORS 1 Why get 3 or 3', per rent Interest' on ybur money when^you can buy j Ttimk ager. Call FE 3 .... _ . _______ _______ _____________ .. . _ ._ Construction _ _ — ; \ invl l.iiiolcuni. Yard 79c „ to self eIh olrVs® \ dSn I Gal. 83 50,0 or FM ?4(ilg° • *'? W*'-'- 'rir.E. HUN. FT. 25c or EM 3-4086. 1----- ■■■ w. Huron —.*«-* _____________.____^-— ._ nllute. 43-Orchard Lake /..v. ! BUNK BEDS. CAN BE lamp TABLE, ROUND COFFEE pparately, 85 caciv Also ,gbie. leather top. Exc. condl- , , It dresser and bed, *30 „on, gso 3 pair drapes, dust | .«*.* *"!.«' I’iJ.S'' * ™ ruffle and coverlet to match. 30 X 38 . Phbne FE Yellow aiyl bluc. MI 4J453. ' LAVATOMiES. CHROME MIXING ' faucet*. 124 50 value. 814.05 AI*o ! bathtubfi, tolleU. ahower atalU, | * Factory irfi*guUrii TrrrtDc val- ' Uf»^ Michigan Fluorescent. 393 I __ Orc>)ard Lake Ave Rear parking ! BARN YARD DIRT. MAHURI. _ — _ - 1 black dirt, fill dirt an(L leveling. PfECI LIVING RC»M SUITE, linoleum AND PAINT BALE. '» Broken concrete. FE 0;iM3_ ar.nH O.w price at Jack s. .381 Baldwin Ave ^ BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND * MAGIC SHELF GAS STOVE," I.IV- ’ " »»‘er a steam 8 PIECE SILVER GRAY BEDRM. outfit. Double dresser, bookcase bed. large chest • 3 vanity lamps. All loi 889 50.' Pay only 83 week-Iv Pearson's Furniture. 43 Or-Lake Ave. 0 Cooler L Id peat humu* yards before Move Mr. Davis at y Polo Field at and mike your HMlywo 4 Jefferson. Sunday n SUBSTANHAL DISCOUNT O cellent 5 room and bath ern home. Purchasers hat Money to Loan : I paint: 83. .Lshpil!::?:. i cr-112 * i;| RUOS, $3 48 VINYL LATEX ,BIond Swivel Base F WEST SIDE — 8 Ige rm« Living rm 15x21. dining rm.j kitchfn with breakfast rml 7x10. 3 bedrms. H-10xl8i“ _ r sni, Nothing Down i Partridge i T.. ;e, Ige landscape^^ ! 1, family im with fire- .'ROeftESTER Inventiiicnt iR^mc .....rc» Rd. EM 3-4115 SMALI 24'"x 24' BUILDING, RENT ^atonable. 2525 Pontiac Lake 244 ,S. Tclc),Ga|»li ■! Business Opportunities 59 3J84g_________< MA 5-8431 ] ' APPPOVE& BUILblNO“LOTS~IN ! QT TM0P*0 HURON JucRon Perk on Adams Rd, Roch- | O VJ IN WOV-/ (Service Station for hca^e Call OL 1-7511 ’ FRANK SHEPARD. REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE iiatrly 9500 mort loan Monthly miudlng taxes i ftjllv furnished ( Terms available. T... home, tile bS 15x27. flreplacet dining r surT porch, kitchen w breakfast ri car garage 000 Terms. • ANNETT, INC . REALTORS 21 room. S bedroom* a . —' garage. Pric 10.050. les* than *5 with payment* FE 8-0466;|”;,r"» COLORED ^ HOME . SEEKERS 0 ft. This j at .1083 Huron St. iJ'eai-a ^Vh^'': y BY OWNER BEAUTIFOL GR-11 chard lot overlooking Forest Hill* ) Country Club, PE 3-0351. Pof. glS*lB prnbfem 3-84W. • 1 y^r 1 i; HowA • V privilege* X nlfhed 1 \81,4S0 « xnonth. *°b)id™m*buif2ow'wllh * 1n£rancE 2 cir garage, fenced yard Low;--...........------------------- taxes and reaeiMiable monthly.-’p»vmeBt*. Total price OMOOVO AVAJMBLE^ AT J Cfed« ^ rieport homb* all recpndltloBwd am Tip Top toape. .DetoiU for pbooc call. ' - ' Williaiji sMiller Kcaltor FE 2-02M nt w. I : Templeiorj ■......... 1 Dist ■ ' bu^aio .raciaois.. ,uar*ge. ,'fenced, loi. close to acboolt and bhurche*' Partly furnithed. Priced lor quick ■aie Reasonable term*. K. L. Templeton, Realtor tnt Orchard Lk. Rd PE 4-4583 Aftor • p m. PE 2-1714 For Ssle Lske Property 51 80' LOT ON LOWER STRAITS L^" *4,800^ Term* EM 3-3582_ "a dandy LAtEPRONT LOT~ Frank* ' 2583 Union Lk. Rd EM ~ 3:3208 _ _ I..\Ki: HOMKS AND r..'^KE XOT.S C^qtemporary desl built* by architect AT 24M-------- • DRIVE, and Lc Pine Li lot. . School!. WJNDIATE DRIVEI. ON Lotus LAKid terrific value on the I* front wifh kboui 5 1 Ha« reqm NORTH PINE CENTER ______ ju«t west of MMdlebelt and Long Lake Rd. Overlooks —— Lake, and built on 'k acre Birmingham, Bloomfield neighborhood. 8800 - terms. COMMERCIAL FRONTAOE 00 X 100 E. So Blvd. 810,000—terms CASS SYLVAN LAKE BUB 4 loti must be sold In one package 3900 - terms .SILVER CREST SUB, Lake prlv t.Ol-term* KENNETT RD. Oood building *ite SO X 100 1950-term* COOLEY LAKE RD A nief building lot 540 I 150-8700 Wm. Miller Realty. 870 W. Huron, FE Jt-0383^ ___ LOTS FOR SALE REA80NA*LE. FE_2-6JI w'k: LAKE PRlV! 110 DN, Schneider, MA 4.1382.________ FOR COLORED on Grasmere oH Earlmoor'Rlvd. PARKWAY DRIVE. BUILDING lot. 138 3 X 238.5. Close to Dodge Park No. 4 Broker. FE 4-3041 Eves. , Rochester! large restric'S rd lot. Near High School. UL 7-5375. k who desires ti SUN OIL CO. 500 S Dix Detroit 17. Mich Ph. VInewood 3-4 -\ftcr 7 p.m. call * Mr. Braev. El 9-2622 Hagsirom oellent 8 alley establishment BUCKNER I'lNANCi; COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BURROW UP 'lU $500 OFFICES IN Pontiac — Drayton .Plains — Utica Walled Lk , Birmingham Plymouto (iet $25 to $.500 ON YOUR Signature Up to 24 Months to Repay PH. FE 2-9206 OAKL'AND l oan Companv 303 Ponljac State Bank' Bldg i Burrow with .Confidence (il'H' $25 TO $500 Houscliold l-'inaiuc Corporation of Pontiat^ Vi 8 Saginaw St _ j;E 4-0535 LOAN.S $25 TO $500 On your signature or other aecu-itty 34 monUn to repay. Our service la la*t. friendly and help-lu^^^Vlalt our office or phone PE *‘llOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N. Perry St.. Corner E. PUt* I 21" RCA .......... . ai».ll5 PHILCO , r'lthn'r' *Vty’tr&“?;oT*o.^'! automatic washer boiler. Automatic water heater, Hardward, elec *upplle*. crock Ai 'pipe and fitting*. Lowe Brother* P*lnl, Super Kemtone and Ru*t- "" HEIGHTS SUPPLY _____9E ^5431 BEEP AND PORK - HAIP AND quarter*^ Opdyke Mkt. PI^ 8-7941 CEMENT STEPS. READY MADl! all ilse*. Splash block, door sills. *p*. Pontiac Pre-Cast 64 W. Sheffield. PE cash WAY STANLEY aluminum WINDOWS 4ilx‘'i PegbSard .......93 *9 4xlx't Pegboard ........ 14 99 - [|xk,.Plysr - *"• I and Sunday :7likK new. —OTHERS TO SELECT FROM- THERS __________ ______ .■iki*:s:roN‘K stori* range, new cona a/a. FE 5-23I7. ! l46 WEST HURO^_, FE 2-9251 40 IN PRIOIDAIRl STOVE. 980 REFRIGERATORS. LA8TYEARS KENMORE ET ECTRIC I 1959 I One ' Burmeister I.I MBEK (pMP.\NV 1940 CooleV Lake Rtf EM 3-4171 O^n a m. to 0^ p m dally little lor* - Cash amf Carry S|>ccials Vixlt bargains. ----e FE 5-9241 >I MON SAT 9 rO 8 7 TO I LOANS dept, ^ trade Coi I 4 miie F of Auburn Heights on Auburn Rd. M59 _ ALMOST NEW. APT SIZE'GAS rang*. 835. FE 3-0048.______ A VALUE ---.—headboards ______ $ 4.95 Hollywood bed frames fbest) $ 6.05 Odd cheats (ige. aliei . 814 05 Maple bunk beds ...... 830.05 BEDROOM OUTPimNO 4763 Dixie Hwy. or 3.0734 BUn.T-IN OVENS * RANGES ------.... $100.05 •- range 025195 ..... wrd refrigerator pioore«crnt 393 Orchard Lake, -— -* ................. ,i '"*”i Ave. Bear parking — A____________Pouring Injulatloji, ig. * * RBPRiaEBATbR. LATE MOD^ —I deluxe, automatic defrost, pay . Balance at 11.50 per week. Used *N HF I loftener. Uke over balance at 91.50 per week. Automatic Maytag. wgshef. balance $3 per week. Schick *. MY 3-3711. BEFRlbERATOJis ALL MAKES, all sues. Reaionable FE 4-710# or MIC5 1341. _ j !'SINGER SEWING MACHINE IN . . 9 pretlnlshcd' mahog. 18 40 ea. I X 13 shelving W. Pine. 12 lln. It. (Call for a free ektimate on all your-rough lumber di trim needs) HAGGERTY LUMBER Ac Supply 1847 Raigerty Hwy. MA 4-4151 ---lyiUl to 8 .Saj 7jc ’ DELUXE FAIRBANKS" MORSE rldf-mot^r. used ^ tractor. $1» PE 4-4243' 12*5 Club - Dr^ _ ' DO TGU HAVE A PAINT OR ■............ig problem? Hundreds of Appllince. FE 6-8407. SMALL RADIOS, 85 to"810.'NEW I —I. --J.- gig ye 5-0765. Hollywoot ’ Admirtl O' ,'5ce the Advantages A LIVING In llf'-liill \ illage 4 rolling community of custom I lullt htflnea with wirtding paved itroet* Excellent building site*. Low as 81 850 with tl85 down. ’ EAJ)D'.S, INC. PurnUure Included .r - Ideal for ' «88 ftlxie_ Hwy_ , OR 3-1231 I .........'A\ aterfdrH Hiljs Ustatc ! __PRlEN.m.Y_8ERVICE QUICK 825 TO 8^ LOA?»8 SEABOARD FINANCE CO 118.' N PERRY STREET Easy Parking - Phone , PE 8-8«81 \VHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 We will be glad to help you. STATE FLNANCE CQ. 703 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 Youngstown o _ _ I Tappan gas or electric ov., I Tappan electrtc cook top I Tappan gas cook top Hotpoint deluxe oven . I Hotpoint range top * 1 ElecCronlc cooking not, . R. B MUNRO ELECTRIC CO. . 8110 95 OUTSTAJIDINO VALUE - 8 Unit motel plus office and separate 3 bedroom honte. 314 feel on - main highway Ironlage. OwneP ' movint to upper peninsula. Pull price g35,flft^on^tems. ^ ' HA< .STRUM 4900 Highland Ad. IM88I ; I’ONTIAC OR 4-0358! TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 s. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 8-0711 01, PL 3-3518 c PI. FRIENDLY SERVICE' BEDROOM suite! 830.85 COM-plete line of good used atoves cheeU. dressere. automatic washer.'alectric dryer, wardrobes, Ilyina rooms, dlnetlcf, tewing machine. refrigerator, all alaet. Mtec. of gll klde. DOUG'S FURNITURE SPECIAL 8X13 RUOS, |24 Leod Carpet. Woodaard at squara Lk. just below Ted's. PE 3-7701. SOFA AND CHAIR , ' ONLY $109.95 813 down — 85 mo. , Foam rubber cuthloni 7 beautiful colors Bedroom Outfitting Co. 4783 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint Open 'til 6. Prt. 'tin 0 ___LOOO ft N. P Market___ take over payments »; NORGE WRINGER WASHER. 10 95 ]t>. capacity, lued 4 weeks, eioel- lent condition. Sold new for tll9.0S.,Come see, make offer. OE PORtABLE TV, 17 IN.. LIKE new. Sold new. $240 05. Will sacrifice lito 9.6. New guarantee OE AUTOMATIC' ELECTRIC DRY-.. customer didn't I. WASHER Ji DRY' a used softener ra 4-3573 4(»1 LOTUS DR. tJne'.fi'replacr'^i^rlcf^ONLY ’im"-' Hurry! 91.19®'DN. PYMT., I •WaVcH for more ADS IN PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY ' C SchucttTl'E 84M58 I Inventon. k just fi^t r and wine license. TO 8500 rr,*, w'^ Lae Credit Advisors l26._77_tMugjas ; BRAND NEW "WROUGHT IRON bunk beds eompleie with springs apd mattress, 930 05. Peirsoo'* _p«rnllufe^42 Orchard Lake Ave. SttiLT In range and oven! Now 9139. delivery. Bold lOr 0188.95. MI '*■ GOODYEAR; TIRES. 7. black, driven 1.500 mll< owing 918.95. Orlglaal tire, told for $37.95. PAY AS UTTLE AS 11.38 A WEEK ON AMY ITEM GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE • — 6-8133 30 s. cats or exterior bee -------------- . and matching fabric selection. Berry Bros. Jelled Mggtc no drip '“oAKLAND FUEL 8t PAINT 436 Orchard Lk^Ave. _ PEJ-tltO DOUBLE SINK COMPLETE 828 50 with trap. A grade FE 8-4713. Montcalm Supply. 158 W. Mont- LENGTH. 30-gal. heater, glata-llntd .. 841.96 Copper ptoe. H-ln. .. 16e a ft. Romex. W-iTd..........'g'/ic a It. Special sale on Koton Full line of building and plumbing materials Wa take trade-lni 30-ft lengtha ........... 16c ft. 4k-ln bard coppar 30-tt lengtbe ........*.... 34c (t. 4k-ln K soft copper 80 ft. coU .............. 80e ft. 3-PC. bath seta irttb trim White or colored. Factory 2ndi—Irragulare SAVE nUMBING SUPPLI 8«|lt COOK CEDAR POSTS .... 3 CLERK stocked. $50. OuanUly llmlira u. A Thompson. 7006 6UI. West . the help you ijccd is; ' pL-WliS Factory tecondt. all standard l^rbert s asf: «| WILLI AMS C. Davis, RltL real estate * imkirance ! I'itiat — ' --- '183 BALDWIN ww I ,1^ - - m Pruof;*cen('’3jrOrcr.rt ‘IM'chlv V t) U r S tluOUgl^ j *»•' 1/H-: I’ONTI.'VC (l*RES.S Eiecirrc "ddo'r' operator.. 4gldm«> ,CASH' POR-U8ED-TV.r"PURMl- f 'VA-VT AD COLU clo^oor. and dUgPPcarlng fliriXlET AOUR ________L: , . w£glJ,”.,tl«at.. « gatag. re-' 'CONSOLIDATE BILLS-NO LOANS twr*V^”oif ^\\ ^III Ad Dppail- t “b®*!" n 6-4311 1 ___out of flebC aea I DBHOkflBtPIERS WllM AOTO! 1”*^ diaF . . . FE 2-8181 AbERRY door SALES 6 3-oJli 371 8. Paddi^ I'HE PONTIAC PUKSS, Tl KSDAV. MAY :\l. TWKX'rV-FlVE For Sale Aliscellaneoui 67 _^I^Mualcal Goods 71 OARDXN TRACTOR, •Pr^rjfL '£.*-• wicrmc# KUntall SDinvt ptu m. Si I Knotty Pine Paneling 3 PATTIRNB WPS, WPS Md WCItO tuTPHni — Very r«M, MA 1-1501. ptYWOOD BOAT, iVrTl.P.'lcLoiN motor, 3 piece modern living room »et. OR 3-IB53. PAINT SPECIALS TV. n 13451, PIANO BENCHES $9.95 Reguler prlcee 130 to' $' (IRINNELL'S n 8 Beglnow______PE 3-73W Foi- Sale Pets W Poodlc.s, .Georgeous black puppies, either sex. Call EE 5-0851. PAHAkEEPB. OtJARANTEEO TO BPRINO CLEARANCE 30________ CENT aevlngs on *11 gultare and accordion* .......... SAVE Wiegand Music Center BAZAAR MIRACLE MILE ___PHONE PE 3-4934 White Pearl Drum Outfit 'lln^rland ^Ilke new. aav* p “ MORRIS MU.SIC 3« k Telegraph Rd PE 3-0M7 Aoron from Tel-Huton $2.79 gal Alkyd Plat Paint $Z79gal Enamel Palm $279 aal ' Beml-gloia Paint $2.79 gal Ploor Ac deck Paint $Z79 gal Paint Thinner .69, gal LIneeed Oil $2.39 Caulking Oun $1.^19 Caulking Tubei 4 for 88c Sale Office Equipment 72 I AOniNO MACHINES. PROM *35 CASH REOISTERS. PROM *45 I PONTIAC CASH REGISTER I _8AOINAW _________ PE S-OSOl iuSED OPPICE CHAIRS CHEAP. I CaU PE 4-0533 _____ I CPPERtLOWKR case obed tvpe-: writer!, *14 05 up. adding ma- I chinei *52.50 up. Comptometer*. I '*74.0* up; Duplicator!, *8* 50 up; Photocopy machine!. ■ER^I Dogs Trained, Boarded 80 BRITTANY PUPS, McNARY’S Tallwagger EenneU. boarding, training trimming. Brittany and Poodle^tud aervlce. OL 1-06*4 idai ^AND~CATB feARD^ BurrSnell. 375 Telegraph. PE JHunting Dogs 81 i3i ENOLIBH POINTERS AT BTUD. ^ 8,y». LL TYPES OP 1ST CUTTING Hay. Will dellear. OA *-317*. . HAY AND STRAW, _________PE 5-3*10__ For Sale Livestock 83 Sale Moose Trailers 89 MODEST MAIDENS By Jay Alan Sale Used Trucks 103 r Sale Cars 106 For Sale Cars APACHE TOUR-A-HOME ft CREE JaCobson’s Trailer Sale and Rentals - Va-Ka-Shan-Ette. tmalltsl i« containad travel trailer on t market. Trotwood. Mar-Elng Tour-A-Kome. Travel trailer*. !peclallty. Part* ft service, hit fc^verlo*^ inanlled^ Complete fttS ^WUU»m»^Lak***"Aoad. Dr»y. ton Plalns^OR 3-6M^ NFW"M00N. 1965 31 FOOT LOT 103. 3300 KllMbelh Like ,Rd Ix-cellent condition._____; Oxford Trailer Sales' New |0-«ldea ! Zimmer and Oardner. Traveling trallv* In Holly, Oarwood and Tour-Home., all !l!e*. kell-conlalned or not. 40 u*e.50_ up. jeHOCOLATE COLORED SHET-' • ^ poay. atalllon Silver mane I aiui tall. Pair of match pony ____ ________ ___ Oeldlnf^OA 0-3304 ______ Rd.. Lake Orion MY 2 4011 I YOUNG BRED SOWS. SMALL TlET US SELL YOUR" TRAVEL Safe Sporting Goods 74 pig*. rabblU. ~4531 Maybee Road. ! trailer, or MobUj ' TRUCK SPECIALS loss PHEVROl ET -CLUB TOUPE radio ft heater,. ABSOLUTE- lY NU MONCV DOWN Aflumc payment, of *27 34 per mo Cal i-r’rhi Mgr Mr PVkY at Ml . 4-7500 Harold _Turnfrj_Pord^;_„ ISOS' CHiEVROI-rf BEL ' AlB * ’5« bmlRe . . . ton plckup-n. $Il)<>5 •51 Ford .... 1 “«l “Uixr .$ .o.i '52 Clipvroit'l ■, ton uuluy $ ?)5 ’55 Internatio 160, 154 WD n.il, 5".- ’54 Internatio 1(0 13 It Van na! ...$ 695 ’55 ^iq!^5 ’55 C hevrolet 2 tun 13 ft flat $665 '56 l-'oril ... $ I'»5 11385 io5« CHESTtOI ET 4 door slaljo wagon Clean low milage, V-Automillc Radio and hcale Slots Suburban . OLDS-LARK 5‘'^2 >. \\ oodw.ird, H'liSi Ml 4-4485 ■l'>5j DESOTO. 2 DR. A very clean Birmingham .car, radio A heaacr, automatic elUft. 3.5,000 actual mite*. Priced right. PEOPLE 8 AUTO 8AL18 el Oakland ' PE 3-33*1 *53 DE SOTO' PULL PRICE *45: Km* Auto, 115 S. Saglnair_ X C ' TRANSPORTATION, ’54 Dodge hardtoj^RAH. wbiwwalli. . EX tlW I 1*53 POBD VICTOEtA KEPOSShlSSION |l»5 Pull Pric* No each needed Pay anly 111 month Due July 15th Rite Autu Mr Bell. PE *-4531 10* Ea»t Boulevard at Auburn_ i'4 f ORD CONV'ERT. auto J, Pontiac Ftdeul 2-0135. IWER CASE USm TYPE-eom^tomoleri, I Office PAKKHURST TRAILER COURT SALES ■'.SometiitU'S it's a little difficult to ^ct through to himV GUNS, modern and aniqub. Buy, !cll trade and repair. Burr-8hHI. 375 8. Telegraphy PE M70*. FEDERAL Modernization Company.! 353* Dl*le Hwy PLENTY qP PREE PARXINO IN OUR LOT 1 OPEN 0 TO * WEEK DAYS I ‘ Sundays 10 to 4 ^ P L A S f Tc PIPE reduced] , l-*lnch 11 cent! a loot 75 pound ; ^ water teated. O. A Thompson. i 7005 M50. West _ I’LYSCORE SPECIAI ji CASH AND CARRY I I repair. - -------- ------tph. FE_------- NEW GOLP CLUBS. LADIES'ANt) men * irtlh cart. *45 each. PE 2-7317._________________________ RAINBOW TROUT UP 1* INCHEB. ' No limit no Itcenae required.-Troia^^Creek Ranch. Orngnahleld I Sand. Gravel and Dirt 76 I l-A TOP BOIL. BLACK DIRT, clay, .sand and gravel. OR 3-7541 A-i TOP boil; BLACK DIBT, I fill-dirt, sand and gravel. Bull-do*mg FE M758 black" dirt, loaded or dlvej;fd^FE 8J732_or PE 5-5361 PEAT HUMUS AND BUtE^K 1150 per yard delivered. Sale Farm Produce 861 APPROX 100 crates CORN. good pig Jeed. MA 5-0077._ OERTIPIED SEED POTATOES — Jack^ Cochran. (Lake Orion. MY EATINCT^bfATOES.' ALSOTRio | Ponilac! and cobbler leed, Charlea Young. MY 3-4711. _ | 8EBAOO AND IRISH COBBLER *eed potatoea FE 5-3010 j Sale Farm Equipment 871 3 HP SIMPLICITY GARDEN TRAC-toi. complete with diac cultivator, lawnmower ft anowplow. Good cond. UL 3-3S7I, alter «:30 p m BIG SAVINGS NEW AND USED LAWN AND GARDEN EQUIPMENT SIMPLICITY - BOLENS ^JACOTSEN - PORTER CABUI aell Ask for free demonstration. Low down payment*. E. Z. Credit. J10UGHTEN & SON 31 N^Malm Rochester_OL 1-»7S1 BAROAINS (LALORE veral buyers waiting lor everything 1_ .. . ft HOLLY MARINE ft SALES. 15310 Holly Rd . ME 4-071L____ scHui/rs 10 ft by 43 ft and 10 ft. close out sale on both Originally priced at *4.1 »3,(w6. Will sacrllice ti (3.305 and *4.5*5 Also &oll"y M^RI.NE °AND°' Boats and Accessories 97 lOAT INS ONLY *3.50 PER flOfl Hansen Ins Agency FE 3-70*3. EE 5-8«* Huchanan Boat\vork.s j New aluminum boat. '3 hp. ' Ivlnrude *275; New 13 ft wood boats. $40; Steel. 1100: aluminum. *139; Piberglas, *170; Trailers, t»S. runabouts. 1145. New liber- 1 glws runabouts. *550. *66* M-5* I SEE THE NEW PRANK POR 51 Lake Road. DrayfOn NEW. H P A T8 4 *4 13 delivered. II OL 1-0321 __________ A-1 TOP SOIL CRUSHED STONE. Sand, travel, si'l Lvie Conklin. PE a-1112 or PE 2-».S72. A-I TOP SOIL. BLACK DIRTT. sand fill and gravel. PE 2-7774. jpoLENS ALB BLACK DIRT. TOP BOIL. I tractor* flit mnH nianiir* AUn COinplHel Of tillf loval and AND DEMO'S. SPOT FINANC- Wllllai __________ _ Plains. OR 3-59*1_________ SHORT'S MOBILE HOMES trailers. Trailer Installed. ige Over O' high quality Modern-Dlf-.t Jacobson's i \(3 Rentals. 5li<5 - onen oad Drayvfbn LioH-ra CONV, TOP and cover. E'TC SPORT.SMl'-.N'S IIFADOU.VRTER.S LAKE ORION Need used frailer. _ . ./eekday*. ■ to 0 on £tt-lays and closed Sundays W Huron* ! CUSTOM 4-3134 VACATION TRAILERS Piale Trailer “ ' - ■ " 1045 North L 8-37*3 BOAT BHOVt^MK por a Quality Deal See Us SCOTT MOTORB WH.TEHOU8E-SPORT8CRAPT. DURATfcCH AQUA SWAN BOATS ; --- Y-RIVEROAI.E \N'anted Used Cars AVERILL'S 2020 Dill* Hwy ’'(A BIG IF)' JEROME "Bright Spot" Orchard Lakt at Cass i’E *-0488 Opeo Eves ATTENTION Crissman ROniKSTF.R ' OPEN EVES Tl^l _OL 2 07-’l 1*55 CHEVROLET 8TATIONWAO b?own'*nhh‘’“'fa*kl over payment-' LLOYD MOTORS 57 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE PONTIAC Pl.YWOOD CO MM BALDWIN RD PE 2-2543 riding MOWERS • MODELS 24 uhd.caplog hnd to 31 Inch 30 modeli of power trimming 771 Scuvt nu.. rm mowers 13 to 32 Inch. Ooodall 4-422* or OR 3-0105. A-1 TOP BOIL. PIA^T HUMUSl FE 4-1303 ___ .\TTFNTION!!! Huy Now and Save Black aoll and peat humua loaded. and delivered. 7 days a week. Call Robert Davis. 311 Alroort _ Road^d*,v_or night. FE t-0373. BLACK DIRT, 'TOPSOIL. BAND * gravel Del OR 3-.»‘-" A N D WHEELHOR8E and attachmenu, * mooel* of tillers, 7 model* of riding Your authorised > dealer. EVANS equipment ran. nvt-co. DUt. Hwy_ , fill. FE 6-TI50 or ;***P'* A-’*™ VACATION TRAILFRS ■‘Sa'l , ------ -rtww TOP $$$ DOLLAR TOR CLEAN USED CARS Glcim-'.s Motor Sales «d" Rental, j To PER CENT DOWN. 38 MONTHS ’ *53^ W HURpN CRUISE-OUT BO.AT SALES ■a Tune-Up Time-All Motor* Walton. Open Bun. FE *-4402 ^EVINRUD^MOTOR^S^ 75 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM $5 DOWN AND Ul' Vt'E TRADE- EASY TERMS SEE BOB BUTLER HAROLD TURNER ' FORD 464 8 Woodward Bumingham Midwest 4-750 CUT L OR i Howland. 63 E 1 Rent Trailer Space 90 0 deal EVANS EQUIPMENT 0507 Dixie Hwy MAple 5-7178_______OR 3-7924 SPECIAL ‘ Cupolas—Special - . 118* Oarag* Biding .......*1* 50 Genulof Schol Desk, onlv • _ Clear^flr 100 f ol*k VlmTLorU *7o0ft t 7"t7 ' CR USHEDT STONE, 'SANDT'ORAVi Mahoga ty Ply 4*0 * 4 07' il. Earl Howard. EM 3-0531. AUBURN LUMBER AUBURN HEIGHTS MOBILE TIL- Tlpslco ___ lage The finest, 'k mile 8E of - • CORN PLANTERS, NEW AND Rl- i fontlac. bunt. Dans Mchy., Ph NA 7-3202, 170 N Opdyke »-33*I _Orlonvllle. _________________MODERN AND PRIVATE TRAIL- FARM EQUIPMENT FOB SALE 1 er loU Auburn Heights. No anl- 'Tractors, plowa Nearly new 01-. mals. 701 Ports Rd.^___________ Iver Super 44 tractor With front OXFORD MOBILE MANOR POR end blade and new spring trip: those who want the best. 40‘xSO' Oliver plow. As low as |3« 50 — .............. OUALITY MOTOR SALES NFFD.^ -A.LL MODFI, t l-FAN CARS TODAY 64* ORCHARU LAKE FE 3 7041 W n Morn I A35 *677 r *377 Financing to fit your needs right , 16'a40 ( i“ro*d***OA‘ S-JOir VE'SEEN THE REST: : one of the best, square Her Park PE 2-52*5. LARSON PIBERGLAS DINGHY 3 ft 5's HP EVINRUDE MOTORS CAR TOP CARRIERS—We CARRY 'TRAILER PAR'TS TIRES ft TUBES ALL ALUMINUM DOCKS 81 BOAT SHELTERS MARINE HARDWARE ‘ —" ft PAINTS .. MOA I_______ '68 Volk.swagen Authorised dealer for MO Morris, Minor. Austin and Austin Healy. UOUGHTFN N- SON 528 N Main, Rofhes^^er. OL 1-»761 'os'voLKswAaEN. 2 b'ooR; lIke new. '58 Maico 60 M P O Econ-Cats. 22 Auburn '57 COB'VETTE 270, 3 SPEED. Crissman ROCIll.STFR OPEN EVES"nL *■_ _OL 2-*731 '’ 1*54 CHRYSl.EjR NEV^ORT HARD iui ^ea^^ake over w^"menu Vl7 'redlt manager, fdr. While KING AUTO SALKS 115 S 8*glnaw_ _ FF S-0402 1955" CHEVIK .. hO. "TiTANDARD 1595 V H»rrt». ^*5-^66. ■55 CHEV . J DR RKPOSSKv^SlON ER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN . Assume pwymenu of (19 76 per mo. Call Credit Mgr Mr Rarks^at Ml 4.7500. Harold Tu ner F^d_______ 1954 FORD CONVERTIBLE. FORD- ful vellow finish. Take over pay-ments -117 mo No money needed Call credit manager. Mr. WbiU. KING • ,\UTO SALES ns 8 Saginaw___PE *-0401 •58 FORD *295 fl • No fl Pay only 117 mo Due July 1 . Mr Bell. PE *-453» Larry lerome' ROCHFJtTER FORD DEALER OL_l-971I ___ 954 ford' I CYLINDER CLUB coupe, radio ft heater, standard r Immaculate. Hur . 13*5 - 180* 8 TELEGRAPH Special Panelitijv Offer axA panels, mahogany V groove, D grade *4 80 each *'* panels. Va" mahogany V-groove. C grade 55 30 each 8 narieli. Vs*' mal GOOD BLACK SOIL BAND AND drag gravel. Delivered PE 8*071. Q ' GOOD DARK CLAY-LOAM, TOP: i aoll 5 yards, *10 delivered. PE, blade and disk. GRAVEL. 8ANO. STONE. FILL ' dirt. Black dirt, top' -...... ----- , r. u : EM 3-2204. EM 3-2415. ____ V-F p/i;inSh*?d“*‘“l7 00 each pNIB^^AND^CAPE TRUCKING Oak flooring samples ft prlcee on requeat_ Select eed 3325 M horseYianUBE. (Straw) any *l*e No 1 Commoei .......... *1*6 M |o,.j gj em 3-4207. _________ 2®' ? ...'..... 0 90 l2 PONTIAC LAK'E BUILDERS 8OT- 7,Vlt?Avr T TTitADT'D* rn ' P'r *''•''** * ■*"■* cement. BENSON LUMBER CO. mortar, trucking || " wa.-aa. . VV n ~ K PE 4-2621 , piat; BUSHEL OR'YARD. SHRto-ROTO--nLL.^ FOR bale -'t*l.%^‘?‘(^5.‘i^v.l«‘‘‘ri ' ------------------ north of CUrkiton^n M-15 Ibpecial, "pulverized black I _dirt. loadi FE_5-5361.__ ; SA^b ‘aRAVEL. DIRT AND TOP; SPECIALS! Come out and aee ua at Proulx j -Oliver Balts on M24. just north | of Oxford. OA 0-2681. Auto Accessories 91 '51-'54 PONTIAC MTR ft HYDRO , |,53-'54 Chev^ mtr^ A motor. '47 Ford motor & floor tranl^FE 2-2666._____ '62 OLDS 4 BBL. CABB AND' MANI-' • $10. PE 5-9752.___________ ..... ............ FE 2-8033 Easy payments available 'CEN-TURV ..... SAILFISH SUNFISH II. I. \’AX\VKLT ! 4540 Dixie Hwy Ph. OR 3-135S TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR 50 TO For Sale Cars 1955 BUICK CENTURY HARDTOP. 3-20: ----; MI 6-3904, _____rE 4-7121 |, _ ^ . ^oJ^‘lo*l'"m ^ya^tf^let*^ u^Jih I H OP Oa$h PaiCl them lor you. We wUl sell them I __ piQR USED CARB — ir Tp?l.vr*'I.Ioyd Motor Sales an opportunity to view It. HOLLY 233 8. SAGINAW FK 2-913! MARINE AND COACH SALES. WE BUY" AND^TRADE GOOD 15310 Holly Rd , Holly. ME CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS 4-6771 _______ I Economy Cars 23 Auburn ENDO'FMOi^II SAL^I We will gi(« a high discount on Used Auto Parts 102 all boats, motors and_ trailers |^ GLASS. 31 AND UP FOR 0 '54 cars Royal Auto Parts. Ml. CTemeiis _ I PARTS AND BODY "of 'Si 'TORD $9 45 'tir. I SHRIDDID PIA'f^HUMUB. DE-.1*2.35 ea. i ^jiyered 6_yards, g^S. F1_6-3M3._ lie KACH Fecial pricSe.” ioa 'btone. '... Birmi We .Service and Sell BOLEN TRACTORS AND TILLERS WHEEL HORSE TRACTORS LAWN BOY MOWERS TORO MOWERS JACOBSEN MOWERS .YARD MAN MOWERS CREDIT TERMS PE •4-0734 FE 4-1112 KING BROS. PONTIAC_RD._AT OPDYKE_ Saie Farm Equipment 87 For Sale Tires 92 l-l USED TIRE? 13 50 UP. WE buy sell. Alio whitewalls STATE TIRE BALES *7 Saginaw Bi. ISED T ITO *E-------- FE 2-1216 rtlEK EBTIMATEB SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL ^ B^^ 1^ 634q^Hlghl*n^Rd^(M-69» OR_3-J^ TORIDHIIT OIL PURNAiCB. 76.0M B'TU like new. $150 DomeiUe _Hehlinf__Co.,_FE 2-3635._ ■ TALBOTT I-UMBFR Water proofing for bkiementa, B P 8. paint glasi TOP BOIL, ROAD ORAVEL, BAND. Wood, Coal and Fuel 77 SLAB WOOD OR TOEFLACT 'Tlne'of _ 3 cord. *17 Del. FE S-613r. ces. 1035 ' DRV FIREPLACE LOOS AND bakiand AVI “ ‘ TRAIN CASES - *1 05 UP EDWARD'S 1 — Lay THE BALVATTON ARMY RED SHIELD STORE ^ EveiYthlng to meet your needa. tiiawn OAB HOT WATER HE.k'TER, tine condition. FE 2-7104. USED STEEL AND WOOD DESKS, chair*, table* and file*. Typewriters, adding machines. Forbes Printing, ft Office Bupply, 415 E^ “vitrified clay sewter pipe BEWER8 - CULVERTS - SUMPB Well* - Drains - Oreate trap* AU sites 3" to 36" PlalnHBllpJolnt-Wedgelock COAL ft BUILDNG BUPPLY CO. I Orchard Lake Ave. _ PE 3-7101 WANTED VACATTON BIBLE achool piano, plywood .plecea dyed old plctur* framta. felt hat*, paper platei, Bihlat, dlihea, etc. Ut 2-"- WILL BACRIPICE ^ Beauty equipment and Rouaebold _______good*. PE 4-0002.____ Machinery 68 ADAMS TANDEM ROAD GRADER. UD-14 Int. Dleael Engine. Very good condition. SCHRAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT 3539 Dixie Hwy, . OR 3-l3flt Do It irourpelt FOR RENT Wall Dtpor atoanor, floor stodart, polisher* hand tandwa fumtoe vacuum eleanert. Oakltnd Fuel ft Paint 43a Oi^rd Lakt Av*. FE 5-5158,____________________ Sale Musical Goods 71 ACCORDION BALE. ALL 80X8. Accordion loaned frw to,Mgli>-nars with itaapna. PE 5-5435, BALDWIN ACatOBONlC BPINif'. French Provincial, custom built, cherry finish Used for dlbplty III N._^ln*w . ______PE *-**n . _ -slab wood. PE 5-3990. Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78; A-l EVEROREEN8, SPRUCE, Pinr Fir Arborvltae. Juniper, Mugho Dig your own, I ana burlaps. 2933 miles W. of Com-- I'i E of In-Lake Rd. JOHN DEXR MODEL and cultivators and ele-....^ _8epar*tor. FE 5-0943.________ JOHN DEERE TRACTOR. SMALL alee, plow and cultivator!, like _new. PE 6-9440.____^_____________ GARDEN Factor with colti-vator 1100. power mower, IfO. Auction Sales 3 AUenONB EVEKT WEEK, abrupt stock of new furniture. Bealy and Reatokraft mattresses, Krobler and other famous make sectionals, sofas *r- •»•■- set bedroom sets, i — wrought Iron----------------- STANDARD BRAND NEW TIRES, trade In on General Safety Tires Up to 50 per cent off. Black or Whltew*"s FD WILLIAMS __451 S. Saginaw *t_R*'bura^^_ PLOW LOOKTlsbiM bIaCK tires. ALL 1952 BUICK HT FULL PRICE *46 King Auto. 115 8. Saginaw '54 BUICK A-l 'T'HRbUOHOUT — No money down, assume payment of *15 95 a month. 8U-‘ PERIOR 'i^TO SALES,' 312 Mont- , I ''54 BUICK "SPECTAiT'HARDTOP. ' Excelled EM 3-0081. SJJonway , 'S3 BUICN SEDAN, *145 BRAID, i FE 2-0160. _____________I TOP DOLLAR RFPOSSFSSIOX 1055 Chevrolet. Just take over imtll monthly payments Lucky Auto sales FE 4-1006. TE 4-2314. 193 8 Saginaw____ _ ’ Get in the ‘•NI''.^^ C.'\R CI.A.^^.^ ' \vmiouT Nl'.W C AR COST.^I THESE C*RS I OOK AND ' OO LIKE NEW ONES' YouBave $$$ '5* Olds 96 Hoi sedan JUst like A real sharpie - i owner '57 Olda S8* Hoi. sedan steering ft brakes '55 Pontiac 3 door real clean ..... .... - RAMBLER. 666 S WOODWARD MI 6-3904 _ 1053 FORD 8 CYLINDER. 3 DOOR club coupe, Standard transmission. radio ft heater Sharp. No rast. good Urea (211. No Money own (3 75 weekly. 3 more to choose from BIRMINOHAM -RAMBLER. (66 8. WOODWARD MI 8 LLOYD MOTORS senger—V-( Automal-s . Radio and heater, ateerlng, W-walls. ............. (1»5 10,10 FORD V-l, RADIO ft HEATER. FORDOMATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume payments of (27.24 per mo Call treclU Mgr. Mr Farki at MI 4-7500 Harold. Turner Pord. If May. Drive i •L.“J .ronae dinette ____ Norge and Admiral " 'ances Sewing maohinet, w OH I and I 503 S Sale Truck Tires 92A Attentiiin, Truckers _______13 p'y. . (73.37 plua tax 1st Quality ft Fully Guaranteed CALL MR ORAVCB — SEARS rO (-2770 or OR 3-tS .. CIosi VUiue a ID of Du< 4-0635 I 6. MU (3 00 e BEAUTIFUL NURSERY DROWN evergreena. Cultivated, thearad, •prayen. State Inspectadw 10 or --- 91.50 et Lest t?*n 10. a. You dig. 12 Ml. N ol _______1 on US-10. Cedar Lane. Evergreen Farm. (070 Dixie Hwy. _(^US-lOl Clxrkiton. MA 5-1933._____ evergreen 'TR'BEB ft SHRUBS. Special price on eeergreent, * sixes In t-fn. pots, 7(c. 0(c and 51.40 Spruce, pine*, taxus cuspidate, etc. 'rbompsoD'a Garden-. land. 0300 Highland Rd. iM5(i. 5 ml. east of Highland. 13 ml. _weat of Pontiac.___________________ FANCY nursery GROWN EVER-green*. 3 to 6 feet. (5.00. Grown under lrrl(ktlon and already sheared. Qrovefand Parma, half way between Pontiac and Flint. Orange Hall Rd. and Dixie Hwy. Sundt..._____- Tursdays Bat” lV*m\b 5‘30‘p.m.'Bevefiy Auction. 37705 Plymouth road Livonia. near Newburg road formerly Langa Auction. 3j^5M3. OLenvli chine ‘shop. 33 Hood Phone FE AUCTION, SAT. JUNE 4 AT I o'clock located 3 mllei north ol M 50 on U S. 33 to the comer of ayde Rd. at 5040 0.8. 33. 1(55 Ford Tractor, plows, disc, spring tooth, cultivator, woeder, 7 ft. naower. Held cultivator, mounted buxi taw, fcrtper and utility box. John Deere 4 bar rake. John Deert apreader on rubber, case 3 row corr planter. Oliver 13 hole gram drill, rubber tired wagon and rack Quantity lumber. tanks etc 1(47 up. iOO bu. oati platform scales power mower. a hay r Sale Motor Scooters 94 For Sale Motorcycles 95 1967 GERMAN TRIUMPHANT, IN good condition. (350. FE 5-3474 B8A. M A 'T C'h LEM DEALER, service _ all mkkea. o.... For Sale Pety 79 3>k MONTHS OLD BEAOLE PUPS. PE 5-8443 4 AKC DAC'MhCnDB AT B'T05; Puppies. ---- •"•* BAMET HOUND. _ - -------- - years old. AEC registered. Housebroken. _$75. OR 3;W8.__ BEAUTO^ POODLES. TOT wbIM, tilmra. black*. MY 3-3893. C^UARUA AEC RBO. UALE * female*. Reas. Lf a-«27(. CHIHUAHUA PUPS, ALL W.E Terrlor p - - - r Stud Bervlo*. 13M It salt AEC. SM KlTOMB^AyL^^ Maoi>. 55 WIU kiriENBC K OR * “ !LY WHlfl pies. PE 4______________ MlNIAl URE O O O L E 8, ALL _____ ___ equipment, ,cii brooder ft equipment. , itlty household goods. Robert '.nooD 24' Rt/in Prnn nAnk l*rtn.c — i For Sale Bicycles 96 Johnston. Prop. Bank Floyd Kebrl. . clerk. Ed Ootts-rhtlk. Lets Johnson, Auctioneer Phone Howell 1010. WA'TCH FOR bUR AD THURBDA'Y Open Dally I-l tor Retail ft PurehAstnx R & B AUCTION AND 25" BICYCLES. Sale House Trailers ... ......... Located ... Trailer Park on White lake. Close to Pontiac Real buy. $750 cash. Information OL 0-24S1.________ •5S dStROITER 45' X 8. EXCEL- lont cond, MA 4-1S45._______ ■51 DETROITER. 45 PT. ' ________PE 5-5750_________ 14 PT CEDAR STRIP WOLVER-Runabout with trailer. 7'v H. Evlnrude motor, (300. PE LIGHTWEIGHT A domoostTAtlao at Wsraer TrtQi Balea. 30N W. Huron. (Plan 1 ^ on* of Wady Byata'a (xet parakeets, bUAR. TO TALK. __________ . . , (4:06v Walker's Bird Hopsir 306 ■■ 0RGAS0NICC»8r,A.N- j BALDWIN •used iN^A-^ roNbmoN ’morrIs'mIjsic' I- mmUtures, U ------- ---- ----- champlpn wtock, JM Bemtnoln, want to pay at a deal you rarely gel. TTie extra bonus dollars now 'on your present mobile home In trade on the all new Detroiter. Terms to. your satisfaction. /BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOMES SALES 430' Pixie Hwy Drayton EUhw ' N. of Pontiac OR 3.-410* _____^D 7 day* a Neck • POR RENT 15 Pf ■TOTO-lk-Ha^, USED BICYCLES, AND UP. NEW 28 " Schwinn bikes, $41 (5 and up. Scarlett's Bike and Hobby Shop, 20 E Lawrence,.PE 3-7543.___ Boats and Acces^ries 97 12 FT. ALUM. BOAT, 714 HP. motor. -Same aa new. EM 3-5361. 12 FT. PLTWbOD BOW BbAT. with 5 hp. Johnson, alto 10 hp. Mercury. Come out and - make otter. EM 3-2063. _______ 12 CT) BOAT'cedar BTltlP AND -----------“h trailer. 5100. 5111 16 FOOT MOLDED PLTTWOOD. walk-thru 35 Evtnrad* electric, excellent condition PE H4M, 35 HP. irnNKTOE. EZC. CORDI- \RI^!^ASTRAVELER rocket. STKERINO and W/ 'EHIEl.1^1960 EVINRUDE MTR. ft trailer ready TO GO ■ .$995.95 .........jhlgan. HOl.LY MARINE AND COACH SAIE8, _163IO Holly Rd., Holly. ME 4-6'71 'JOIIXSOX -MOTORS MFG BOATS USED MOTOkS • BOARDMAN’S 7575 Highland Rd. at Wm. Lake Rd. OR $1-0212 I JOHXSON MOTORS Starcratt boats. Gator tralleri, everything for the boat. OWENS MARINE. SUPPLIES 305 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-S020 OWEXS 25-Ft. sea.skiff’ deluxe EXPRF..‘^S CRUISER Head, stove, refrigerator, sleep* 4. 185 hp. Flagship Marine En- aMazukkk ; v\: MARIXK .SALIGS _ PE 5-2G97 or FE 5J612 LOOK! I.OOKrLOOK’ ake ...... I 1956 Cad‘)lac. 4 door Sedan De- -— ' [ Vine, all power. No money down _ Lucky Auft) Sales. FE 4-1006.^ FE i Sale Used Trucks 103 _i-22i4 m s, sagmaw.__ ' 1957 CADILLAC. 62 2 DOOR SEDAN, ! Your Friendly Oldsmoblle low mileage, can. be eeen at Gulf i f** ......... Oas station, corner Auburn ft ' 1 TON MACK. 13 YARD DUMP box. EM 3-4879._________________________ 1955 CHEVROLET '.4 ton pickup and that Is really equipped. Has ladder rack, tool box and complete new paint Job. Excellent 1st class condition from on* end to the other and READY Iresh «w price of Only Houghten & Son • Friendly Oldsmoblle Dealer 1 Main, ROcheater, GL 1-9761 STATION WAGON • CADILlAC CONV '58. PULL P , All I New _______E56 3^4. 1953 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE i hardtop, automatic. ra Rite Auto, Hr. Hell FE 0-4539 109 E Blvd. K"at Auburn. KIN.G payments $3i month. Call credit KING AUTO SALES 115 8. Saglnair_,FB SA4ROP > 3080 W HURON___FE S-3041 j l-Tramportat'n Offered 100’ '53 F300 Air'ft Vac. '50 L. J MACK 300 CUMM SCHKAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT MDlxl^Hwy. ______ORJ-lW •66 CHEV Itk-I^N. STEEL RACK '51 Chey. Long wheel bate '52 Chev. ton pickup. '60 Ford. M-ton , '51 1-ton il and '48 International 1-ton Pontiac’s Truck Centet GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS 34.000 It. _ ... After 5. PE 3-4767 _ ■‘io-^H.AM.m.i':RS—To I Special deal this we»k on 10 ne 1 Ramblers See us today. i R^'C RAMBLER SUPFR MARKET j COMMERCE ROAD ; EM 3-4155^ _ EM 3-41! ^ wHm " 6“re(5. ' FK 5-0645 ____ 1955 ckBVY DEXUXE 3 DOOR. Very Me* PE 3-7542 H HU- iW'CHRTSyra^c'ROWN “^IMPER- 53 FORDOMATIC WAOON, Ra'- t atitr EM 3-9203 I Owner. EM 3 ENOINE airliner LOS teles Sir Franclaeo. " SHAW’S INC. . ' i ' fek Y2j*reuT^“rvic, i«. OR Main ' , RoctWkter i 3-I2M ____ BbAT WIliDSRlELDS. COMPLEfi CARS TO NEW YOlRK AND ••• Hardwt ' ----- “ ------ - --- NEW DODGE PICKUP -US'' WHEEL BA8E-- Heavy Duty Rear Spriags-- Directional Ugnall—W WasheM-—Oversixed TIRES- *. _(' body- . —Heater ft Defrosters- $1825 PLUS Mlchlgui Sales Tax If License JOHI^ J. COTVROLET, RADIO Credit Mgr.'Mr. Parks at 4«7600 Harold Turner Ford EXCITOONAL CARS 4 CadUlaci. 57.56-53-4I '56 Chrysler convertible 6 Buicks 56-S5-54-53 -55 CHRYSLER 2 DR HARDTOP . .Radio aQU heater. Auto • trans PS A PB. A GOOD 2ND CAR! 1525 WC ALSO HAVE A NICE SELECTION OF ONE-OWNER CARS TO CHOOSE PROM I JACK COLK ■ k I PLYMOUTH^VAUANT ) .1000 W. Maple at Ponttac Trait - jWAU^D LA^______ MA 4-4511; J ! 1(65 bbbOE HARDTGP; RADIO ‘ j and heater, beautiful black firf- ■ ---------------- payments *21 ; ’55 FORD , STATION WAOON $645 'Cy' Owens 63( OAKtiAND AVENUE tot ut help you auUust to a toss “dON’s'uSED GARS •77 M34 Lake Orion 3,' door ( 1957 KING AUTO SALES 115 8. Saginaw PE ( 0402 NEW ’60 DODGE DXRT $2076 Include* all standard factory equipment and federal tax. Sale* tax and license extra. RAMMLKR-DALLAS 1001 N, ^AIF, _ . ROCHESTER 1955 FORD 8TATIONWAOON, beautiful red and white finish: standard transmission, radio and heater. Thik# over payments 127 KING _____OL 2^ . DESOTO PIHEDOME. 3 . har itoD. Red and bUck, heater. whitewalhi { with Hardware (KU up. Ferry Seattle.' . aerytoe. Inc. (I2S Highland Rd, Bonnl^»_ve»??T. SMITH , ^ ’ DODGE iNC. Ff: 3-'i93g'lll_»- EA0»AW r FE V fR^ H'PART i(54 GMC 4 TON 'j^NEL GO r. FE 5-SSOe. cond. fB 5-'»S(. Suburban ; OLDS-LARK ‘1592 S,. Wood ward, B'ham 1 MI 4-4485 • Suburban OLDS-LARK 592 S. Wdward. B'ham kl 4-4485 - DO YOU llAVK , A SERVICE TO OFFER THE PEOPLE OF,. 0.\Ki..V\D COUNTYi ; FAST REWLT8 Offer your furniture, trim a hedga or do ^lied Want Ads. An experienced ad-vrli«r will be happy to help W* V^Adt"! t S'rwl . ITO PI.AQ'i YOU^ AD j Dl.VL FE 2:«18l J T.WEN TV-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. MAY 31. 19^ For Sal« C niM I ownrr car. No money' « .--..fii CLEAN HirniinRliam Trades > 1350 N. Woodward : > l-or Sale Car* 106 MARMADUKE I KM PLVMOtirTH. 4 DOOR SEDAN, down. Lucky A.... - - 4-lOM. PE 4-M14 113 8 8a«ln« f6Rb~‘«6 PAIltLANBCYL. 3 . ■*3400 MuU aeltj reaiv nian«ver Mr. wnue, KING 3-4004 between *• p m _ l»tt POROri IXXfR. TAKE OVER' paymenta in mo No money | needed. CaU crodlt manager Mr While By Anderson & Leeming KING ,\rTO SALES m 8 saglnaw PE *0403 ' S6 PLYMOUTH 9 PA88ENOER , --------- ----- CLEAN' PER MO Hurry. 1798 No money d 96 90 per week BIRMJNOt RAMBLER, 606 8. WOODWi BRAID DESOTO-PLYMOUTH' S.t^T PIKE PE 3-01** i 9 ffHlUClH SPORTS FURY AUTO SAI.l 11S_8,'Baginaw- ____ JS OLDSMOBILE RtH AUTO 3 ind brakes “torqurflVte.^iwIvel Vl93 PORD. POLL PRICE 945 I door. Good transportation 1400 Ijigs UL 3-3073 . j _ Call EM 3 0747 _ ------- , 1998''PONTIAC ,1 bOOR •87 PORD. 3 poO"' a* I»63 OLDSMOBILE HYDROMATIC, N I-'POSSE SSl OV HEA’TER. PORDOMATlr ABSO- ABSOLUTE IS I - I A !^u"m^f"prvm?nt^°ORD § cylinder 4 DC»R ............ Cop^ry Sedan. jadjo_A Bell. PE 0-4539 Specializing In One-Owner Cars | KING 1956 PLYMOUTH, WAGON REPOSSESSION t’hii/wr P»y “ly $Y7'mo.^Due*^uly"*' snirslmn IrflmVcu^Rlle ’Auto. Mr. Bell. PE ......91 95 IJLSO perL _lM_.E«‘.B'''^‘^'»ir!L Low cash down or old traTe 4*54 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR, I’ BIRMINGHAM - ‘RAMBLER. *66 Bargain. PE 4-4*16. 8 WOODWARD Ml 6-3904____i*54"PLVM0UTH! 2 DOOR. 1*63 FORD * CYLINDER. 3 D<»R, FE 4-960* club coupe -—•••”* Sion, radio automatic t ■5* FORD 3 Door I 85 CHEV Sport Coupe •55 CHEV Bel Air 4 Dr. •M FORD 0 '» FORD Station Wagon r -53 CHEVROLET •M FORD 9 pass. Wagon •3 CHEV Hardtop Coupa f!^ SHEP'S MONTJI-ENn '>ir2 1^1 rts 1 I " “*—^ I 8' W< 'Dixie Ok'd Cars'^K m AUTO <\EES JSs : 119 8_ Saginaw _ FE 8-0403 795 ' 1959 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ms hftrritnn A dooT VbU. soltd bUck, black Inierior.. white ' transmit' ; >8 CHEVY B Air I DIXIE HWY NEAR SjWHABAW , ; 100, $3605. $69.17^^per^mo. BIRMINGHAM*- RAMBLER, 660 - WOODWARD MI 6-3904.______ PON’nXC BONNEVILLE 'STA- --- —4• wQpper. 8."*^ : 8-2474 &6 CHEVY B-Alr H dio ina hValer Whitewall Padded dash. Clean. $1590. | ^ErIiURY Convertible hardtop ! « CHEVY-«-Alr 3-Dr I '&8 PONT. 3-Dr Sedan DRAYTOK plains. MICH. Jl^'sSrSj^r'____^_________ PONTIAC 4 DOOR tl»6. BRAID. Fullv eaulpped i'W PONT. 3-Dr 1 . Y ““T >KA Wf\t»T\ r»Fm.*nr VALIANT Johnson AT Lbke Orion I ■ OFFERS 16 Ford Wgn -----c W| Wgn. Power t Suburban OLDS-LARK T'sharpi »2505 592 F. Woodwar.d, R’liani; SALES ; Clarkaton MA 5-8141 1 I the overhead Is. low > KING to. 4 Dr. $ I 'as r'orn wgn *v-« Auto. 2-^- • ' ■83 Ford 8 Straight Stick J-4485_ . FULL PRlCIi $4 , 118 8. Saginaw 0 cylinder. Automi SAVE Suburban OLDS-LARK DECORATION DAY SPECTAt ' Corvette . ■ ■ I'* Automatic Transmission. ; AUTO SALES 118 S. saglna^r ___FE 1-0403 66 PONTIAC STA WCN. SAFARI. 9695 : Chev 6 ( 33 Auburn 1 *495. Economy Cars. I PONTIAC. DR , CATALINA. ■87 Plymauth Sedan, V-8, ■8?I^)rd 3-br. V-S. Stick ■86 Pontlao HT. Starchlel P ■87 Chev HT, 4-Dr B Terrific Trade-ins , Woodward. H’hain MI 4-4485 ' ■86 Pontiac HT 3-Tone blue •59 PonUac Bed. 4-Dr' 'Chief ...................... t a r 1957 Pontiac Chieftain 4-Dr. aedan. 1699 Hydramatlc. Radio * and heater. Jet black finish. Low down pajr- NEW PON’HaCS AT TREMEN-dous discount. Do not ftU to see us before you buy - Keego Sales & Service County ___KEEoS H^BOR^M^^-----------. PONTIAC”*”DR ”CATAUNA. -PONTIAC AUTO . h^d.wmauc.^^wer^ _and BROKERS grey UL 3-3*31. «5l Greenwood. •59 Chev Wg, 1 owner 92195 ’59 BONNEVILLE CONVERT. 9 OOO ■5* DEW, Elec, shift. 4.000 ml. 91065 miles._access._937'^ PB^-3849. ■50 Fcrd V-6 stick *1395 fjsj poNTIAC, 1*51 BUICK, 1*53 ■54 Ford V-8 stick *395 Roadmaster Butek V-* for parts ... S695 OH 3,3^ PONTIAC Russ Johnson f . Motor Sales Lake Orion I MV 2-2871 MV 2-258U top. Hydramatlc. Radio and h er.- Whitewalls. All leather terlor Low down payment 1959 Pontlec 1 Dr sedan. Radio ft heater. Your ’B* ’Ml or 11 R & R MOTORS, INC. Chrjaler-PIymouth-ImperlAl \ALIAXT I ImmeAlate Delivery—all Models ' OAKLAND — ----- ! 1956 PONTIAC iT^CH ;hief. cus- steerlng •59 TIIUNDERBIRD $2^5 HAUPT PONTIAC _ — * PONTIAC. 3-DOOR REPOSSESSION 1145 full price. No cash needed i whitewall tires. 910*5. ■ Suburban OLDS-LARK 5^2 S. Woodward, B’iiai LOOK! BUV! SAVE CLARKSTON one mil" nurtb of U.S. Open Eves. Until * MI 4-4485 *595 1956 PON T I A C'BONNEVILLE: >' nariow, radio Electra 3-door hi [."aty-TrVcV' heater whitew dash Many ' n 'Cy'Owens SrS.. UUca. RE 3-7S51. MApie_5-S ■H. *1! Both 4 erlne and i. 965 17 [ 0 OAKLAND AVENUE ■57 ply; . 6 cyl 8td.I Van Dyke, -JlOl___ tranamlsslon Almost new rubber. 1 owner. Immaculate. Hurry $395. No money down. 95.16 weekly. BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER. 6«« B. WOODWARD. Ml 6-3904^____ 1959 PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN -■-— wagon, powder blue 1 6 cylinder, economy 1 -- *1295. — 4 ; A58 Chevrolet 3 d ■n-1 198* Chevrolet Non ilh 4 dr. sedan c 2 dr. hardtop 3 dr. hardtop CYLINDER CLUB " ........... er clean'*1395. *37.20 per Low cash down Or old ti BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER. 6b« b. I WOODWARD Ml 0-3904 _________ 1957 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 3 ! door hardtop, clean, no rust, 0 ! cylinder automatic, radio ft heat- PORD DEALER- ! white tires Special *0*5. ^ s h d Car Shopping Center Full price. No moneV down. 89 30 ' nr. seoai per week. BIRMlNOHAM-RAM- ^ •59 FORD i BLCT. «• 8. WOODWARD. MI >'S*,Chevrolet^B.^^^^^^^^^^ DOOR HARDTOP i dip andjneate«,.JUe new^_^no 4 , condition “'WILLACCEPT i ans. outboard!, boats, refrigera- | i.,h. Very nice, tors and appliance!, etc. On our 1 igjg PONTIAC new 1960 Ramblera or any good Deluge 4-door used car as paM payment. ! radio and h< Super 4-dr with power. Steering. Power brakes, Dynaflow. radio and heater. Rldea like a dream 156 PONTIAC . ■* ..... »10*5 dio. heater. Hydramatlc a iv.d Starchlef 4-door hardtop with ra-whlte walls. Rose and 1'-- BILL SPENCE . 81095 'Cy' Owens’, r down. »18;«8 I "RAMBLER” 5 dr —BALES & SERVICE— « io and * 256 S. SAGINAW PE 8-4541 *1365 ___________________ . PONTIAC. '53. 2 DOOR, MOTOR, ' rubber, A-1. *298. EM Country , sedan v ,n. ^jdramatlc^ and It runa ....... 110*9 . . engine, radio and heater Solid green beauty 195* CHEVY ■ . «895 - • - 4-door t 380 I 1953 Ford 0 OAKI-AND AVENUE --------- --------- 1 while, 6 cylinder, economj _ PE 5-4101 _ ____owner clean. *129%, *3730 1987 FORD ( CYLINDER. 4 DOOR -- ------------------ ---------- country aedan, radio ft mo Low cash down 0: --- ___ ____ _ ....... BIRMINGHAM - RAMBLER, <66 transmission, Immac-j 8_WOODWARD._MI 6-3*04._ ............. 11653 PLYMOUTH STA'flONWAObN wagon, ^automatic. 0l(T*^trTd^- ^mRUrwailAM- RAMBLER, 666 8 WOODWARD: KING HOMER HIGHT MOTORS LU20 J__________________ 6 Pontlacs vis '53 RftH . ■48 Chevy, good running ■54 Ford RftH ............ '53 Mercury 8ed.......... t plain beautiful. Lovely , ; 1957 CHEVY ....... 7 *12*5 ■ : 4-door sedan with Powergllrte. ■ IjJ! ' radio and heater. Thli la extra 1986 FORD (18*8 ' ’S* Btudey *, Clean .........• 75 •52 Chrysler, very clean ----- $ 55 ■50 Ford, rough, good motpr .. 8 37 ■55 Ford I Palrlane .. .. *497 Plenty others. Finance arringed rain.nr rv» ' hardtop with MW-er steering. V-« engine. Matlc, radio And heater. This Is 1*57 BUIOT*' ^ Roadmaster 4-door harttop power windows, steering, brakes and seat Dynaflow. 8 garage . *27 month Call PASSENGER 8TA- AUTO s,\Ei:s 15 S Saginaw _ FE *-6402 167 PLYMOUTH CLUB SEDAN i RADIO ft HEATER. ABSOLUTE-LV NO MONEY DOWN Assume paymepts of *29 *6 per t Credit Mgr Mr P^ark, Both for $1150 Frank Schuck 4-J566._Harold Turner Ford____ 16 P'LVMOUTH 9 PASS ' SPORT ' BUB._1145_PN — r-r PER MO. B^ID. FE 2-61*6‘ 1*67 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 2 doer hardtop. Clean, no rust, 9 cylinder, automatic, radio ft V—-. _t.„4 ... .—.... Nc _ 1-26111 K HORNET, 1-6wnL _____ ladio and heater, j'54 PLYMOUTH SEDAN. --- “ -nnA BRAID. FE 2-01*6 24 ■ HOUR SPECIALS KING 1957 BUICK Century Cavalier wagon Py*'' steering and brakes. Dynaflow. radio and heater. Beautiful 2-tone blue finish Low mileage. ^ 19.56 PONTIAC 118 S Saginaw sutlon wagon. Hydrami ind heater Bf- " '* PONUAC Is and save 82898 Donur.iii. hardtop. Power steering and brakes^ Hydramatlc, WOODWARD MI ; down SUPERIOR AUTO 312 Monualm at Oakland __i MONTEREnfi 1954 MERCURY hardtop, beautiful gi top, automatic, radl No money _ needed KING HASKINS Used Car CLEARANCE '59 CHEVY END OF MONTH CLEARANCE .„.ne:SV.a"-liHrwVl?." ■ with- power Steer*’ brakea. Dynaflow Convertible power brakes, uynanow r« MA 8-2*74 alter 8:36, t ’s'* $695 Matthews' Hargrehves; ■' OLIVER ,954 CHEVROLET 4-door sedan, Stan One-owner! 28,066 1857 PONTIAC Starchlel 4-door sedan steertn* power brakes, heater and whitewalls. Llk< 1*98 NASH * 4*8 Ambassador super 4-door, V-6 eiv fine, automatic, radio, heater — OttW 96.000 actual mlies. O n e -o*n#r. 1666 BUICK ......... . *2168 4-door sedan, low miles and extra sharp. Radio, beater and whlte- MOTOR SALES Haskins Chev,' 0 MONEY DOWN. OAKLAND COUNTY'S I AROE»T CHEVY DEALER (kH a\Ki..\.\D ■ ■ FE 1186 OLDS , llim S-door .hardtop Hydrsmatl& Radio. heater Bod whitewall/; Red and! Ivory beauty. SHELTON. 'RE-\AUET 316 Orchard Lake A A\ U lu Pontiac- Buick . . r-A^Z BUICK OPEL jLep; ROCHESTER. OL 1-8133 4*4547 ' " * ' ----- "** IS STILL ONE OF THE Best Auto Buys Today NO MATTER WHAT YOU READ ABOUT ECONOMY CARS - COMPACT CARS OR IMPORTS - A CLEAN LATE-MODEL USED CAR STILL GIVES "MORE DOLLAR VALUE" THAN ANYTHING ON THE ROAD TODAY We Have The Cars — come SEE FOR YOURSELF— '60 PLYMOUTH ......'.$2295 2-OOOR — RdMlo and heaWr, wblUwtlls. Solid Ivory paint. '59P"ONflAC...............$2895 BONNEVILLE SAFARI STATION WAOON - Radio and heaUr. HydramaUc. power steerln* and power brakes. '59 PONTIAC ..............$2695 '59 PONTIAC ............$2695 CATALINA SPORT COUPE — Radio, heater and Hydramatlc. '59 PONTIAC ............$2695 '59 PONTIAC ...............$2395 CATALINA SPORT COUPE - Radio, healer and Hydramatlc. '59 CHEVROLET .......$2095 BEL AIR 2-DOOR — Radio, healer and Powergllde '59 OLDSMOBILE ...........i$2495 2-DOOR SUPER SO HARDTOP — Radio, heater, power '58'pONTfAC ...............$1995 STARCHIEF 4-DOOR - Radio, healer, HydramaUc am '58PONTI-AC ...............$2095 '57 CHEVROLET ............$1595 BEL AIR CONVERTIBLE — RkIIo hf»ter Powerillde and whilewalli Beautiful shlmmfrlng bjack with while top. '57 CHEVROLET ............$1495 BEL AIR 4-DOOR — Rgdlo. healer. Hydramatlc. power '57 PONflAC “.............$1395 SUPER CHIEF CATALINA COUPE - Radio, heater. Hydramatlc. power steering and power br*kei. '57 PONTIAC ..............$1795 SAFARI STA-nON WAOON - Radio, heater, Hydramatlc. power steering and power brakes. '56 CHEVROLET ...........$ 795 2-DOOR 6 — SUndard transmission, radio and heater '56 PONTIAC ............. $1095 2-DOOR 866 HARDTOP - Radio, heater, Hydramatlc. power alee/lng and powef brakes. .. FACTORY BRANCH PONTIAC , RETAIL STORE ' "GOODWILL USED CARS" 6.- .\IT. CLEMENS .ST. FF. ,l-7<)54 STOCK REDUCTION! Must Be Sold By Midnight MAY 31st 1 YEAR SERVICE WARRANTY ON ALL CARS SOLD •57 PLYMOUTH 1471, Priced ■ •58 RAMBLER 4-Door Sedan. Here Is a wc $586 '57 BUICK $1072 -’57 CHEVROLET. * cylinder Wagon with straight stick. If a. man Is .economy-minded here le the wsxon. Original green | $1398 ’59 CHEVROLET Impala Hardtop with radio, r. low price of $1168 _______ Powergllde tranimlsslon original paint. A real sparkler. Stock No. 1421. Our low price $2092 •58 CIlEyROLET •57 .chevrolf:t Our stock N Priced at only $1498, . ooe-owqer. Our $1092 •58 FORD Custom 4-Door I Cylinder Sedsn ‘ __________ _______ Pord-O-MaU Ic. beautiful tu-tone blue and white finish set off by sparkling white tires. Stock No. 1413. Our low low price of . . . . bsat/r. automatre traos-on. A dne-owner 4-door new. Ha* power steering. Stock No. 1472. Price . . - $992 • $768 ACT NOWl-BANK RATES ^ Most Cars arc Birmingham One Otyners NORTH CHEVROLET IIIJ^'TER BL\ D, ATvS. woodward AVE. BIRMINGHAM f . MI 4-2735 Eddie Steele I ford LAST DAY Of Our Tremendous $100,000 — Month-End— LIQUIDATION SALE ALI. CARS LISTED "Must Be Sold Today" re0ardli-:s.s of loss to us To‘Make Room For All The Incoming NEW CAR TRADE-INS yEar-model “ $200 DN, AND HNANCE - WAGONS '60 FORD .$2095 . '58 PLYMOUTH ..... .$ 795 '57 FORD .$ 795 '56EORD .$ 595 '55 FORD $ 39,Y - CONVERTIBLES - '59 PONTIAC .$2295 '59 CHEVROLET .... .$2095 '59 FORD : . i .$2095 '57 FORD .$ 995 - HARDTOPS — '60 FORD .$2195 '58 CHEVROLET .... .$1295 '57 PLYMOUTH .$ 795 '56 FORD .$ 695 '55 PONTIAC .$ 295 '55 OLDS .$ 495 YEAR-MODEL $200 DN. AND'EINANCK: 2DOORS-4DOORS '59 FORD .$1195 '57 FORD .$ 595 '56 FORD .$ 295 '56 CHEVROLET .... .$ 295 '55 PONTIAC '.$295 '56 OLDS ,.,: .$ 495 -FOREIGN CARS- ; '57 METROPOLITAN ..$ 695 : '57 VOLKSWAGEN . .$795 '57 RENAULT .$495 ‘ '59 ESCOURT ........ .$ 695 1 '59 SIMCA .$’795 '57 AUSTIN .$ 395 -TRUCKS- _ ' ’57 FORD $595 tb-TON PICKUP ’56 CHEVROLET ......$295 ! ’55 FORD . tb-TON PICKUP .-.....$395 tb-TON PICKUP ’47 DODGE llb-TON PLATBj^D $95 S ABOVE PRICES REPRESENT ACTUAL AMOUNTS ' - TO BE FINANCED^- —-----------.jjj DOWN 1 AFTER ABOVE MENTIONED C 140 Cars to Select From Immediate Delivery r— 36 Months to Pay Eddie Stee'le FORD 2 BIG LOCATIONS 2705 Orchard Lake Road -KEEGO HARBOR-3275 West Huron Y at ELIZABETH LAKEJROAD FEJ2-2529 FE>3177. > /■' J T/ THE PONTIAC PRKSS. Tl KSDAY. MAV .31. l»f>0 TWEXTY-SSlVEN • -Today's' Television Programs- - Proerama fnrniahed by atatioM I I In thin column nra aubject to change without notice * ObawMl i>WWJ-TV Channel 1-WKVZ T\ Channel *-CKLW TV TONiGiirB TV mcHuoirr C:M (3) Movie (began at S p.m.) (4) Jim Bowie. (7) Three Stoogee. (9) Popaye. (M) Return to Society. f.iS (4) Weather. 6:M (3l (4) Newa. (TIAoogea (cent.) \ (9) Quick Draw McGra^ (X) Newa Magazine. <;4b (3) Newa Analyat. (4) (7) Sporta. •:4S (3) (4) (7) Newa, Sporta. (St) Concept. 7:00 (3) Divorce Court. (4) Johnny Midnight. (7K Brave Stallion. : (9) Million Dollar Movie. Drama: Myma Loy, “Maa-Proot." (’M). (39) Time to Dance. 7:30 (3) Divorce Court (cont.) (4) Laramie. (7) Bronco. (9) Movie (began at 7 p.m.) (X) Shorthand. 8:00 (2) Demdi O'Keefe. (4) Laramie (cont.) (7) Bronco (cont.) (9) Movie (began at 7 p.m (X) Search for America. 8: .30 (3) Dobie Gillla. (4) (C!olor) Startime. (7) Wyatt Earp. (9) G.M. Preaenta. (X) Pattema of Life. 8:00 (2) Tightrope. (4) Startime (cont.) (7) The Rifleman. (9) Presents (cont.) (X) Psychiatry. 8:30 (2) Red Skelton. . (4) (Color) Arthur Murray Party. (7f Cdt .45. (9) Front Page Challenge. 10:00 (2) Garry Moore.. (4) M-Squad. (7) One Step Beyond. (9) News, Weather. 10:20 O)- Telescope. 10:30 (2) Garry Moore (cont.* (4) U.S. Marshal. (7) Interpol Calling. (9) News. 10:45 (9) Starlight Theater. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) Newt, Weather, Sports. 11:20 (7) Bold Venture. 11:28 (2) Nightw.atch Theater. Drama: Barbara Stanwyck. 'Bride Walks Out.” (’36). 11:S(K4) Jack Paar. 11:50 (7) Citizen Soldier. (3) Movie. 9tX (4) Faye Elinbeth. Utoc (4) Dough Re Mi. (X) Our Scientific Worid. 10:15 (9) BiUboard. t0:N (4) Play Your Hunch. (9) Ding bong School. (X) Art Appreciation. 10:45 (7) Detroit Today. 10:55 (7) News. 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy.^ (4) (color) Price Ii Right. (7) House of Fasiilon. (9) Movie. 11:30 (2) December Bride. (7) Topper. (4) Concentration. WEDNESDAY AKTERNOON WEDNESDAY MOR.NING 0:50 (2) Meditations. 6:55 (2) On the Farm From 7:00 (2) TV CoUego. (4) Today. (7) Funews. 7:30 (2) Felix the Cat. (7) Breakfast Time. 8:15 (2) Capt. Kangaroo. 8:30 (7) 'Johnny Ginger. 8:00 (4) I Married Joan. (2) For Better or Worse. 9:.30 (7) .Stage 3. (4) Exercise. I (2) Love of Life. (4) Truth or Consequences. (7) ResUesa Gun. (9) Come Dance With Me. 11:30 (3) Search for Tomorrow. (4) (color) R Could Be You. (7) Love That Bob. (9) Myrt and Doris. 12:46 (2) Guiding Ught. 12:50 (9) News. 1:00 (24 Our Miss Brooks. ^ (4) Bdd Journey. (7) About Flices. (9) Moble. i:M (3) As the World Turns. (7) Life of RUey. ttOO (3) Medic. (4) Queen lor a Day. (7) Day in Ckrurt. Itso (3) House Party. (4) Loretta Young. (7) Gale Storm. 9tN (3) Millionaire. (4) Young Dr.’ Malone. (7) Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. S:M (3) Verdict Is Youra. m Who Do You Tnwt? (4) From ’’hese Roots. 4(00 (3) Brighter Day. (4) Thin Mon. (7) American Bandstand. 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. 4:30 (4) Yancy Derringer. (9) Robin Hood. (2) Edge of Night. iiOO (4) (color) George Pierrot Preaents. (2) Movie. (9) Looney Tones. 6:M (7) My Friend Flk4(a. 8:50 (9) Jac LeGoff. TV News and Reviews Genevieve Plans First and Final Marriage Passage Nearer By EARL WILSON NEW YORIC-rreDch TV doU OeneVleve was busy Itllllng me of her plana tor playing "Seelk Stockeeengs" In the midwest this summer, atartlhg In Warren, O., when she suddenly pauaed and said; ''Ooootdi, cherleeeeee .. ‘‘Eeet'a offeeeahul—you can announce It!” She's going to marry Ted Mills, the producer, In August In New York. "Eeet’a my first marriage—and my last," she said. It's hla second. Informal Plan to Drop Antisegregation Clause TV Features By I'nited Pmui International May Puli Aid Through' dobie oiujs. S:3o p.m. (2) Beatnik Maynard Kreba (Bob Dem Firnch girt (Da- Beautiful Joan Collins hopes that After she finishes ‘‘The Stofy of Esther” In Rwne, and Warren Beatty finishes WILSON “Splendor In the Grass” here, he can Join her in England, and meat her parents—and get their approval. She and Warren,*who is Shirley Maclaine's handsome young brother, are cloeer than Rudy Vallee at income tax time. WASHINGTON lAP* - Chances ) falls for t that Congress will pass nicle, Aubrey) and sacrifice.s his construction bill this yeai- were increased tojlay with reports sweatshirt and goatee for lovo Actor Ed Brophy Funeral Wednesday I terms informal agreement of a compromise bill. The plan would drop an anti-segregation clause written into the House version of the federal aid bill. Advance agreement, on (hat point, sponsors hope, may soften Southern opposition within the House Rules Committee to any compromise effort. HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Funeral service will be conducted Wednesday for Ed Brophy, 65, familiar to millions as a pudgy, fast-talking choractei- actor whose trademarks were a cigar and derby hat. Brophy. who died Friday. came> to Hollywood in 1920 and played ... llo two-reelers with Bu.ster Keaton. N.4NETTK K A B R A Y SHOW.jjjjg varied career included roles 8:.30 p.m. .4), A musical hpok|j,s ..pu^^o'. :how about a waitress (Miss Fab-lj.^^ .Spencer Tracy's favorite ray> who yearns for the exciting]jjurrah " life of a Marie Antoinette or a _ _ Pocahontas. With Jean Pierre Au-moot, Tony Randall, Stubby Kaye. (Color I RIKI.E.'MAN, 9 p.m. i7*. A grum- Kollowing is a list of recent py old man ia robbed and mur-^births as registered with the countv’ dered and suspicion falls on the'clerk. They arc listed by name of Dave's Manhattan Spin Great (Most of the Time) star’s hired hand; an ex-convictifather. I Tlie plan was worked out in se- 'Whit BisselH. - ■, j, Helen O'Connell, whom everybody lovea. Is planning a TV unoffmial Senate-House con- .AKTHrR .MlRR.li Ertw.’'r/a‘^c K. _____________L T^-. ^ . L fercnccs. Other erms reportedly 9 .tO p.m. (4*. Celehniy dancers Kennuh h i comeback-and may be seen again on Dave Oarroway's show, '.gceement to lim.t use of Hal March. Paul Winchell and „ WWW federal funds to school construe- Alan Young ai-e Kathryn's guests. pam»i a ai ■The Crosby boys will play the CaUkllls! Phil, whose wife’s Lion, and to apportion the funds iColon expedting her second, says, ‘Td like to have a flock of boys !to states on the basis of nei>d. i:i;i> skki.ton show. 9:30 p. —but 1 have a feeling I’m going to keep getting girls” . . .: As passed by the Hou.se, the m. |2*. (Rerun) Frank McHugh is John Kivd»r When Tony Armstrong-Jones •was a Bohemian photog here, provide 325 million dol Rtsl’s girst in a skit about the e'® he liked to sit on the floor at parties. So a gal In the Century > Byron'"ai Apts, has an X on the floor with a Sien “Tonv Armstmnir Y*’*'"'® build putdic (<\KI{1 M(M>KK SllOVt, 10 prji. ttwin»i Jones Bouatted Here” ^ ^ ^' school classroom.s. A .Senate bijl (?.. Comedian Andy Griftilb and ^ ■ would have provided 900 million llte singing l.ennon Sisters, join ★ ★ ★ j, ypar fof tyj'o years, perirtitting Carol Burnett.Din-ward Kirby, . There are more moochers and more shoe shine guys ariiund federal aid to tea<:her salaries as C,an y and That Wonderful Year” jBroadway than usual—a sign of .business decUpe . . . Johnnie iwell as to school construction, of l^iO,- |R*y escaped from his sickroom and lammed over to P. J. ★ ,* ★ .iacK ra.^r show, ii 30 p m. Clarke's to show off his The House bilL called for ap- J^.v Bishop i-uns the show-; Aifrrd r Mrintoch. ism Bowtrr. 8chn.u,e, p„p , . EU. ™ S.WS p. 363 Ltnda Tluti By FKKf) DANZIG NEW "York tUPn-Dave Gar-roway, who has carted his Today show off to Europe in search of new pictorial delights, came up with one of hi.s more magnetic, chaotic and monumental programs yesterday without leaving New York. The two - hour eye-opener took NBC-TV cameras and viewers ot} a boat ride around magnetic, chaotic and monumental Manhattan Island. While the videotaped sightseeing emlso produced a number of breathtaking scenes. It also yielded to Inappropriate “show bli" stillness, stumbled on some technical problems and ooted forth some shallow descriptive Highlights included some caressing eloseupt of the Statue of Liberty, the new Battery skyline marred by the domination function^ SO - story skyscraper). the Brooklyn Bridge, the Navy yard, the soft, Victorian lines of EllLs Island, which were downright i beautiful .scenes, frequently backed by awesome cloud formatione. These must rank among the best ; examples of from-the-hip TV cai shots ever seen on the tube. The script, however, waxed eloquent not only about New York's place as a tourist trap, but its shortcomings, too. Garroway noted it was a miracle the city hadn't destroyed itself through panic, pollution, plague, hunger traffic jams, which probably reflects the wonderment of Its beholders. Garroway also displayed a macabre aenae of hunwr during thia festive occasion. At he rode under the George Washington STAR PERFORMER I AngtnenI n Bodr ot a L'uiT“ is M M 2 3 4 r- r 7 8 9 10 11 ir 1^ u i5 id 17 \i t* i!0_ r / 31 5T k" ■ t w 41 IT 1 44] 4S 46 ; , M 48 d6 BM r 53 t u US Bridge —. quite n TV shot, by the way. — Dave said, “I hope it won’t choose this moment to (all down.” I thought that was the line we use only when riding over II. Despite s 0jn e unprofessional touches and a tendency to linger on some scenes at the expense of others, it was a visually rewarding program and a worthy project. I move that Today hit the road. Let’s see the U.S.A. with Dave Garroway. Johnny 8llv», 3384 Jonlyn Albert r Kood, 70! Drsota 1 ^Iph Dias. Ill Perkins rorge R Dari _->hn R rianai,-.. Alfred F. Mrlntocl n. 720 Emeri didn’t like herself THE CHANNEL SWIM: The Emmy Awards” special, on NBC-TV Monday, June 20, has signed the Mike Nichols-Elalne May team and Bob Newhart for some comedy spots during the 90-minute show. Phyllis Newman has been added ta the regular cast of CB.S-Diagnosls U( has Ms prMBlero sa Tnesday, Jane 6. Miss Newnwa tray the rale at Darla Hadson, Linda Darnelt.^^at' HI base it on need Harrincton Ji-. and singer-comedi- Arlene Francls-Jack Paar show.: But thc real stumbling block dc-'onne Jane Kean. I looked like I was photo- velopcd when the House addl'd a^ graphed," she said, ‘ through aiprovision by Rep. jAdam Clayton i Navajo rug." 'Powell (D-NY* ta prevent use of ' federal funds^for raeiaHv .sogre- THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . gated schools. Until ihat was add-; Ed Sullivan enters Park East ' J Hospital June 20 for .surgfery . June 23. ' Ch»rl*s ; Set Tight Watch ■for Stolen Gems Han Smith. 57J4 Clinton Hlv»r E LrwiK. 4U Midwsv - Mlraclr. 115 Ptrlcdil* Coopor. IMO Bawtreo r...... „*rns. ni PrtnUIn lobrrt Norbfrg. lU W. Chicasft Uelvln L. SchoUke, J533 Fllntrldk# lanirs H Bishop. 7J0) Pontiac Laka William 33S Beechland K-Sable 01 fllzalwtli L :iT. 37 Clark ANNA MARIE British Police Seek Sophia's Jewel Cache; She Offers Reward Lawrcncf V Hardy. IM Wall Ivyl E PIcrcf, tl Summit Alvin E Jacobson. »»(l Cantrr Robert L. Wllkfs, 760 Kcnllwc :s H PurklM, 3M PI Anna Marie Baumann from ^ Carolina Governor Dusseldorf. a Faye Emerson J’’ v.uruimu vruvciiiwr look-alike startles you In UA’s ‘‘Last Days of Pompeii” . . .' Runoff Election Set Debbie Reynolds’ traveling companion when she comes to the | jg Drake’ll be Mrs. Phyllis Pollock of Miami. j5;anford and I. BevCrly Lake will ★ ★ ★ Isquahp off June 25 in a runoff iondON (AP* — British police Shirley Jones got a bonus for her work ln”'Elmer Gantry”-|eieftion (or the Democratic nom-l^.^’jphpd seaports and airfields to-i ^SmPJ’Har&Tw N«f?.*'**'* . . Tony Bennett, who sang at a Democratic party, will do jinafion (or governor of North Car- ^^ppp ,|,e jewels! l CAmpbrii'’?^^ the same for a Republican rally . . . ,The Yul Brynners left iol'na'. stolen from Italian screen star Arthur D^fnwn Jr. 66b.*5SI« Bu Switzerland. , * * Sophia Loren from leaving the John l*BrHi*‘»i Fkirn?*i'rth^ ★ ★ ★ Lake Rideigh attQrn6’.^ ,a^^ : ^ak^Uic'^'M™ Juliette Greco-H do a musical comedy. ''Migraine,” In Paris T Jr I * * . „ . r.iS"'m ^2.* "7rH?^'Ji';on someone »wljH)d jazz star Gerry MulliganVsaxophone from ("'r^'''in^'a;,:?;, “Letof .h"ei ^ ^ a rehearsal hall . . . Vivien Leigh saw ‘‘The Fantastlcks, ’ | Saturday's pri-: jewel collection, which she said checked her Siamese kittens at the box office. mary. iwas worth more than a half mil-1 EARL’S PEABIiS: The modem man drives a mortgaged | - Sanford, 42. a former state sen-i]ion dollars. She said much of Iti wiibur a. whtynr 'nss wiiiow nuAr o KAnH-flnanoAH Ivialvixrav r,n orAHlt-norH (vae ntnr f mm FaVPltevilP chamDionS I ,i.ae not incin-na I BlOTmIlel*^TT^ car over a bond-financed highway on credit-card gas. WISH I’D SAID THAT: This gag Is getting around In Havana, says Quote: ‘ Fidel Castro and his brother were In David Geisel, director of thlsja boat that capsized. Who was saved?” Answer: ‘‘Cuba.” . . . season's Pat Boone Show on ABC-jHiat’s earl, brother. « ’ TV, win be the new director of (Copyright, 1960) The Garry Moore Show next fall.|— . - He succeeds Julio De Benedetto, who will produce and direct the Ex-Turk Defense Chief Jumps to Death No Love Lost on Gedik Art James will emcce NBC-TV's Concentration for two weeks starting June 13 while Hugh Downs vacations. . Armstrong Circle The-j aler’s story for Wednesday. Junej ANKARA, Turkey (APt-One of;Communist Bulgaria, who 22. is, "The Prison Professor,” thelthc most hated members of ousted!been given homes and other fa-true story of a schoolteacher who Premier Adnan Mcndcrcs’ regimejvors by the Menderes government, set up classes for fellow narcotics has committed suicide. ' Iwere arming secretly for a rcs- addlcts while serving a prison Namik Gedik. who as interior!cue attempt. ator from Fayettevile, championsyas not insured. , ___________ North -'Carolina’s moderate ap-| The theft took place .Saturday! proach on the race issue and j night from the bedroom of a coun-l Douglas w unti. 47ii cr«>cent Point heavy Increases in state sj^nd-ltry mansion Miss Loren had rent-! Jame^M, ing for schools, l.ake, 53, a last jed while making a film in Bri-'. ® ditch segregationist, is a financial tain, conservative. ★ * ★ , A bargeman fi.sht'd a black and gold jewel case from the Thames River about ‘20 miles from the scene of thr'burglary. Inside werej . ,two pins, one with the namej "Sophia” if* jewels and the other! .shaped like an orchid. Neither! was of great value. I Rlchtrd F Bennrtt. 7379 N Shtkrr "-'im L Brehmer, 474 Biy (ph C HrnsrI. 333 Ojkland n C Pzlmi. 7M E Shusre L«k* Thom».n L. Thornbtrry. 155 W. RundcII Alfrrd VIdrto. 975 Csntrrburv ’•--htl N, ’liylor. 434 Fourth rs E Haskins. 7M Emrrton ir R. Lrnibkf, 5M Orchard Uka n H. Dowdy. 71 8. Johnson C Smith. 531 Bloomtlcld Albert 8 Cooper, 134 W. Mansfield Allen E McBride. 365 E. Tennyson ■■~38j,._Wllson^ 124 W. Hopkins . s. 367 Rockwell . . . , . , . 1 ,1. ,1 Scotland Yard investigators i o m" J'“■^‘(hcorizcd the case had becnj R„b,r.>’li The Peoplc.8 Repub lean party of| , „„ ocean-bound liner former President Ismrt Inonu.j„,. a «l •“ M, Spicer. 34 Florence term. Count Elector Votes in Alabama Runoff minister directed police, plunged through a double-glass wjjndow to a paved courtyard four st^es low his prison quarters in army war BWMINGHAM. Ala. TSP)-Ri-val factions .within the Alabama Democratic party today awaited the voters’ decision over control the state’s votes in the November presidential election. milita|'y rulers, who deposed Menderes last Fri- Te« of the presidential elector posts are at stake in the run-off primary. A SUtes Rights candidate. J. Bruce Henderson of Prairie, Ala., was the only elector nominated in the first primary four weeks ago. National party loyalists and States Righters each have 10-man slates in the runoff. 54 Place ' 55 Feela DOWN I HI* niekntmt If the States Righters win, they will haw a free hand to withtmld their vmes from presidential caa-didates they consider unfriendly to the South. -The loyalists are pledged to support the national Democratic ticket regardless of who wins the nomination. --Todoj'-'s Ra(dio Programs-- wxTX (imi wcza immi TONIOBT 6:66-Wja. H«»6 6:S6-Wja Wa06( Oito N. 7:6t-wjn, Ournt Houk. WWJ iBxweU wxvb. A Morna CKLW. Pultop U»l6 4r. wcAR. waoeiing WXVZ. P. Wtlil CKiw, icnoi^ CUN Jim tbiMe WCUN lt:Se—WWJ. Newi lf:M„WJK. HIVI CKIW HiowsnS tWi. kUMc roaik, wao CKLW. JtooaUr aub WJBK. Farm WCAR. Newa. SherldMi WPON Early Bird -WJR, Mui -w, kvt 0 IK. BIbla 11S*—WJR. Ntvt. Muile WWJ,--Mt«t RpbarU waya. Nawa. W«ll CKLW Neva. Toby David WPON. Nt«a OaM? t:ie-WJR. MuMe Rail WXVZ. Ntwi. Wolf CKLW eiMKa. Oa>ld WCAR. Novi. SkarMob ! as. wavk I MiLir WCAR. Neva WPON. Nevt,„Caaey ■;Sa-WJR, Muale Hall , CKLW (Iowa Toby payld grie-WJR. Niva WWJ. N»Vi. Martens WKva, Brtdkfaet avb CKLW. Neva Dteld WJBK. Neva. Raid WCAR. Neve. Hettyo WPON. Neva. Urb ■;Se.-WJR. Jack Htrrla Bse:; MB-OELW. kyrtlo LakbMt WWJ. iowT# WSTB. Bpaadvi CKLW Jm Ta ORI ik. Joe Vas WCAR. Neve. Purse WPON'Neva Lovla, lt:SS-WJR. Time for U WWl. )S'va*’^tgart CK^W. Joe Tea ------- Paul CKLW. Navi WtUR. ilava WJBK. Lot WPON. Carrtaea TraJo f ' WJBK SgOrU. Muale coUgge. ★ ‘a------ Turkey’s new military An airlift of the imprisoned former officials reportedly b^an Sunday night. The revolutionary gdvernment has Said It does not plan to put any of the former officials on trial. But the civil government that takes over after the elections promised by the military regime Pranciaco Cordova. 743 ....... Leon K Johnstone. 125 Ca(ltlla( ■ ■» D. Lon*. ■ ■ - .|g Rapiu rl»ht against which Menderes took se- verely repressive measures. jor that the thieves intended it asf a decoy while they disposed about-a 99 to 1 shot to win any !ithe gems in Britain, James K. Sprung. 340 Tl election held hi the next few; months. Foreign governments were lining up in support of the revolutionary government by extending diplomatic recognition. The United States, Britaip, Nationalist' Chi-Pakistan and South Korea were among the first to give such recognition. The shapely actre^.s told reporters she only insur^ her jewels when she went abroad but had not had lime after her arrival in Britain. Vanderbilt Quits Over Bias NAMIK GEDIK day, said Qedik had had a nervous breakdown. A fellow prisoner, Defense Minister Tehem Menderes and an army cadet had been spending the night room with Gedik. Gedik wa.s considered one of Premier Menderes’ closest advisers. The bloodshed which attended repression of student demonstrations against Menderes was on 'Tenth Man' for Spot Strike Gary O^per in Hospital for Corrective Surgery University Shaken os Racial Ruling Causes Many to Resign NEW YORK (AP) — Actors fighting producers in the battle of Broadway today picked “Tbe Tenth Man" as the first |day to be closed by a one-nighl spot I walkout. LOS ANGELES (A>) - Actor Gary Cooper Is in a hospital for what a spokesman calls "minor corrective intestinal surgery." Cooiier, who underwent an operation in Boston five weeks ago, entered the hospital Monday, He was expected to be released in a week or 10 days. i SONOJONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests 511 Pontiac State FEderal RCA COLOR TV Sales and Service ' Sweet’s Radio TV NASHVILLE; Tenn. (AP)-:-Vaiv-derbilt University, an S5-yc6Uvold Institution that prides itself on its scholarship, was shakien Monday by the resignation of the divuiity school dean and nine' faculty members over a racial is Producers have served' notice they will call a total theater hla^out—the first in more than ■fi) years—if the actors go through with such a move. Negotiators for both sides sched-i uled more talks today Fourteen students In the divinity [eleventh-hour effort to beat eiqpl-jj school also quit and three more ration of the contract between! who graduated Sunday judd they Actors Equity and the League of!; were returning their diptomas. New York Theaters. protesting the of the university to re-adrait lor summer classes the Rev. James M. Lawson Jr., a Negro minister who was expelled from the divinity school last March on grounds was a leader in sit-in dem- , * * * onstrations. I At issue are Equity demands! Chancellor Harvie Branscqmb, jfor a pension plan along with oth-! who turned down the request to er benefits. The league -has de-i The agrement runs out at mid-1 night tonight. Actors Equity slated; the blackoift of the Paddy Chaye(-| sky hit at the Booth Theater for Wednesday night if no agreement | is reached by curtain time. - AWNINGS CUSTOM MADE IN 18 tEAUJIFUL COLORS Call FE 5-2102 FE 5-1637 for Fre« Estimate I £ U Awning Co. Ili ff 16i W. MONTCALM SuV^ trS’. hmh^p^^ ‘his state-jelared it cannot the in- methods. Six persons were killed and more tha'h 100 injured by up-official count. 6:4s-(MR. Ntvi. MuMc WWJ, Newa. Lynker WXVZ. Paul Winter CKLW. sporta. Oavlaa . WJBK Hwale ^ WCAR. TWd. Bnila Por« 8ET AIRLIFT Premier Menderes also was reported in a hi^ly emotional state after his «rrest Friday. Menderes, former I^sident Ce-ial Bayar and 100 or so officials of. their regime were to be transferred by air from the war college to Yessi, Ada, - an isolated Turkish naval base island 225 mUcs northwest of Ankara in the Sm of 'Marmara. Purpose of the transfer is to went: .creased expense without raiding In a matter of this importance, ticket prices, involving so many members of thej------------------------ I do Cliurcli C«nt»r think that I should act on these | resignations, but should refer for Protestont, OHhodox them to the trustees of the uni- versity who will undoubtedly wish to examine the issues involved.” Dean J. Robert Nelson, who resigned first, said Branscomb's action was ‘destructive ... upon the lionfidence and morale of the divinity faculty and others in the university.” Nelson has been dean since NEW YORK (UPI) A 19-story interchurch center, America's first national headquarters* foi” protes-tant and Eastern Orthodox churches, was dedicated here Sunday in ceremonies led by Bishop; Johanws Lilje. president of the, Lutheran Oiurch in Gernjany. Hej 1957, coming from Geneva. ,Switz- called the center a symbol erf minimize, chances of demqnstra-erland, where he served four tions for.> or against Menderes. years . os secretary of tjie (potti-There hpw been rumors that mission on Faith and Order of the refugees of Turkish origin from!World Council of Churches. united world church effort. ITic Flying Farmers of Amcr-mji was organized in Oklaliotna AIR CONDITIONING GAS HEAT Now Whole House Air Conditioning as low as '' If yob want .quality in a furnace j duct work, call for free heating survey. *770 r «r the Wito-lt e* •rmiu far C«bi >570 Automatic temptra-tore control. Lott houM cloamnf, potion froo brootking if FE^-2963 BROTHEB'S HEATING and COOLING The whole family will thrilt to this wonderfully new taste treat! Sealtest Onion Chive Cottage Cheese! COTTAGE CHEESE Pure, creamy-smooth Sealtest Cottage Cheese, blended to tempting perfection with a nippy touch of onion and the zest of garden-fresh chive. You’ve never tasted a cottage cheesedike this delicious as only Sealtest can make it! ' All set to serve. Ready now, at your store or door. COTTAGE CHEESE EASY PARTY PUMPERNICKS Just one of many delightful serving ideas! Spread Sealtest Onion Chive Cottage Cheese thickly on pumpernickel rye bread and cut into squares. Then just listen to the compliments. Delightfully zippy new taste-tempters for party hors d’oeuvres or for luncheons ... and a wonderful idea when last-minute guests drop in. * . YOU KNOW IT'S BEST WHEN YOU GET SEALTEST Tune in Bat Masterson, starring Oene Barry, NBC-TV y i (i’. } h> ( t, i ' A \ / A U / T i A. f ■f T > ^ ^ V>> r:^:rnTn ""Tvr^ A. Jl a A jL '1 CL^iV A L AN