Th$ W§ath§r (Bttallt r*«« l> THE PONTIAC PRESS Edittoii VOL. 120 NO. 219 ★ ★★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 19«2~«^ PAGES EAGI.E ATTACKS DOO-A busy city like Chicago is hardly the place you’d exp^ to find an «agie seeking prey. Yet it happened yesterday as Penny, a month-oid puppy, became this goiden eagle's intended meal. Penny's owner Fred Goodman, swinging a broom, said the bird,actually was lifting the dog off the ground when he came to the rescue. The dog wasn’t seriously hurt. The eagle was shot with a tranquilizer gun and taken to the Lincoln Park Zoo. Auto Show Opens in Blaze of Color DETROIT - The 44th National Automobile Show, billed as the “world’s largest,’^ opened in a blaze of color at Cobo Hall last night. w ★ * An estimated 50,000 persons thronged the big convention hail at an invitational review preceding todgy's formal optfning of the show to IhiilMilitO. More Ihan 301 new INS passenger car models and trucks won the admiring gaze of onlookers while industry men ex- pressed hopes of another good sales yegr. The pageantry of cars, which continues for nine days, is strictly an American performance. There are no foreign cars in the show. Pretty girls and band music ,added charm and. rhythm to gala night. The show was i television for a half hour. FLAGS PRESENTED Dignitaries of the auto industry were on hand. Inlegration Move Set at Ui^ersity ot Alabama MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AV-Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. says five Negroes will begin a second attempt at breaking down racial barriers at the University of Alabama in the next few days. King, president of the pro-integration Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said he has talked with five students who plan*..—--- to apply for enrollment at the university. The announcement by the Negro leader came in the wake of the University of Mississippi crisis where two persons were killed in rioting after Negro James H. Meredith entered that school. ONLY * LEFT With Meredith's enrollment at Ole Miss, Alabama and South Carolina became the only states In Today's Press Prfild»nf Ailing ndi Ken* Bhti NIkIh Red ChiMse leaden bit K’a ‘high Uvli^' -- PAGtt 7 Injvnd •l•t•r«il(!olllaion--FA «Fifty-seven was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding K s-in- The thermomater readlhg'waSMatlp.m. Chinese Hit in Waves Reds Overiun Indian Attack Staged Along Border Communist Division Reported in Action by New Delhi From Our News Wires NEW DELHI, India — Thousands of Communist Chinese troops attacked along a wide fropt of the disputed border with India today, The main Indian defense post of Dhola high in the Himalayan Mountains was overrun with the massive “human wave” tactics the Chinese used, against the United States in the Korean War. An Indian official in New Delhi said the Chinese had thrown more than a division into the bloody battle around ttiola and were attacking in “waves after vaves” of men. Normally, there are about 19,888 men in a Red Chinese divizion, tnd Peiping is estimated to have about 350 divisions. *I3w low was officinl- i« New Delhi after the Defense Ministry disclosed earlier that the Chinese Reds had attacked in “successive waves” and driven Indian troops back at several points in bitter fighting along their disputed border. HIT IN WAVES The Communist Chinese hit Indian defense in Ladahk in the northwest and along McMahon Border line in the northeast Frontier Agency (NEFA) with human wave tactics reminiscent of the Korean War. The Dholn outpost was the in the NEFA area. According to Indian maps. It is about three mites sondi of the Ale* Mahon line high In the Himalayas where India’s border converges with that of Communist Chlneoe-controlled Tibet, The official announcement disclosing the fall of Dhola post said the Communist Chinese now have extended the area of fighting in the NEFA region to nearly 30 square miles in this particular sector south of Thagla Ridge. FELL BACK The Defense Ministry said Indian troops fell back over a mile in the northeastern battle area and were fighting three to four miles (Continued on Page 2, C!ol. l) Waterford Tax Rate UiKhanged The Waterford Townf ship Board last night pro* posed a |630,000 budget for 1903, with the pver-idl tax rate unchanged. The record budget, whidi exceeds the current one by 148,885, wUl be filed fat the townabip clerks offtce Monday morning. A piiUlc hearing is slated Oct. 29. FhmlbsertlediaBwillhetiiE-! Iswhig tte I pJB. hearinf. Next year’s budget ii'based on I town^ mlUage rate of wliidi amounts to W47 per |1,080 WET START With a point of the finger, Douglas Rudd, 2058 Richwood Road, sends his dog Butch into the field this morning to start southern Michigan’s small game season. His brother Verne (right) same address. and Wayne Batters, 2985 James Road, Joined Douglas in donning rain apparel against the light drizzle that greeted tfae three hunters front, Pontiac Township. U.S. Su(xeeds HONOLULU (AP) - A nuclear device carried aloft by a specially built rocket cessfully Friday night over Johnston Island—the second success in six attempts In the U.S. high-altitude series. ★ Joint Task Force 8 spokesmen Minced that the next test will take place between 2:30 a. tm and 7:30 a. m. (Pontiac time) Oct. 24. Friday night’s shot went off at 10:30 p.m. Hawaiian Standard Time (3:30 a. m. Pontiac time) after being held for an hour. The blast 751 miles to the senth- I In a heavy lirttnittglike I cioud bank. No official explanation was given for the delay, in firing. Earlier heavy clouds and rate squalls had moved across the tiny Pacific island. REPORTS ON MISSH.E An Atomic Energy (fommlssion spokesman reported the specially constructed vehicle that born the. device was powered by a Sergeant JFK, Nikita Trade Wdfhtngs on Berlin WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev have traded grim new warnings over Berlin that appear to leave little if any room for negotiation. Many Western diplomats believe that hope for avert ing a flaming new crisis, with the ever-present danger —---------nuclear war, rests prin- Another Satellite Put Up by Soviets MOiS(X)W (AP)-The Soviet Union launched another satellite to- who stayed np to wateh the this we^, Tass Cosmos XI carries scientific equipment for space research, the Soviet news agency said. It is traveling in an orbit with a high of 575 miles and a low of 153 miles above the earth, has an orbiting time of 08.1 minutes. Cosmos X was launched Wednesday. The first of the present series was launched March 18 to explore the cosmos in the vicinity of the earffi. They also are intended to study factors affecting the flight of cosmonauts around the earth. cipally on the possibility oJ a Kennedy- Khrushchev meeting in the next few weeks. American officials who should know will give odds that aiich a meeting takes place before a tei-als. But the tWo principles aiw ^ prOBChing the matto: of a fac»4o-> face meeting with caution. It seems that neither wants to appear too anxious. NOT BLUFFING Kennedy told Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko at their Thursday White House meeting that he wanted to make it dear to Khrushchev that there was no bluff whatsoever Irtthe U.S. deter-minatioh to stand fant in Wert Berlin against Soviet pressure, even at the risk of nuclear war. W ' . ★ A Gramyko, on the other hand, conveyed Khrushchev’s message that there oeuM be at acceptable aohitioa of Berlin short of Al-Had withdrawal from Jhe' Western sector of thq former German Field at. Windsor anokadoat to har deathrat 1408 teat last night, s door half apmi, Tha stawardaas was giving landing biilnic- trpgwiy In Which Uona to paasangara whan the door open I da Marlora, 88, ' and phngad her to har death. It represents an increase of M miUs over the 1961 rate of 18.85 per 11,808 valuation as assessed. deraraseelAmi^^ ty and school tax rates hmvinf the total 1812 tax rate of flU» per 81488 valnation. as oqaal-ized, the same as the 1981 rata. ★ ★ ★ Action last oliipit was essentially con(|i|jd to attons. _ ■ . AUUSAOYAOJUSliED Board mambers reoeivod pra- ’Township Sopt^iaor Elmar John-in Septembar and bad worked out major adjuatmants in taa in-rim. The 1041841 palira Mi flre-nea’sp ‘ ‘ Under provisiaiis ot taa pro-gram, taa township is obUgatod to pay 18.4 par cant ot pcdloe and tin dapartment salarlea into the fund. araUy aharad the view that mm much a beeflng-up program was made in taa bud0t to the Watartard Taww-ship Friends at the Ubcary, n mnclHllBcnMad' wMoalta racNmt waeksi ahw failed to maka taa heads and other hourly rated a ptoyas. W. ■*' W' : ■ ^ Hie only department head to jto granted a pay hike to taa jawpisid budget Is Phumlag Diraelor Robert Diefaall whose salny w0 be raised (Mm040to048l. TheWoidis... SERVICE! After four years of on-again, off-again East-WOst negotiation that nibbled at the edges of the Berlin complete as it was after Khru------------ madh hit de- : the OitHnyko merting, how» Kennedy.let ft be imawn ha was aware of Khrushchev’s various hints that ha would he ooming to the United Nations lato mod mpnth and thought a amnion with the President might be uaeftil. Kennedy made it elear (a Cha-myka that ha wauM ha wllltag to meet with the Soviet premier together rather thaa a formaBy > » A ♦ • ■ A' • The Idea on both aliM seams to be that ftdlura to toaks a«y wor raaa at an informal samlii ii somehaw Isas aminMis tfotai i 13101058 THE JPONTUCi PBBS& SATtTOM:. OCTOBBE 90» tm ISriglit Cold HUs Kennedy, iMs His Weekend Trip / WASHINGTON (AP) - A slight ^ forced President Kennedy to eancel the remainder of a West-|m cait^paign trip today and he letumed to Washington to take it iasy in the White House. '‘He has a slight upper respinh tory infection/' Salinger said. Kennedy is receiving the luu^ press secretary, announced in Chicago that the remainder of vhat was to have been a three-day toiir to the West Coast was being canceled on advice of the president’s p h y s i c i a n, Dr. George Barkley. Kennedy’s plane landed at Andrews Air Fmix Base in nearby Maryland at 12:33 p.m. (Pontiac Time). ^ wiped out adieduled visits today to Milwaukee, Wis.; St. Louis, Mo.; Albuquerque, N.M.; and Las Vegas, Nev:, and a trip to Seattle to close the WtH-U’s Fair there tomorrow. Last night, Salinger said, Dr. Bnrkley noticed that the President’s voice was husky, and Red Chinese Push Indian Army Back (Continued From Page One) south of the line vdiich India regards as her frontier. The Defense Ministry said Indian troops also withdrew from one or two posts in the CSiip Chap Valley of ladakh. The battle is still going on Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon told a news conference. The Chinese, with antomatic Indian positions in the north-cast “in successive waves supported by heavy mortars and medium machine guns. Our troops are fighting gallantly for every inch of ground,” he said. “However, faced with over-w^Iming numbers and firepower they have yielded ground after heavy and severe fighting.” — Mcnwi saidHtedian posts Khinzenume on the Nyamjang (Manas) River at the East end of Thagla Ridge had fallen to the Chinese and so had a post called Tsangle located 15 to 20 miles westward. The Indians thus lost posts at e|ich end of the ChineaHtsalient iO the area. Red China earlier had accused India of opening attacks on both ends of the disputed border -the ladakh area in the west and asserted Peiping’s charge was a cover up for the Red Chinese op- The Chinese “suffered hOavy losses and were compelled to take up resolute self-defense actions,” on the eastern frontier, the New Red China news ageiuy said. s morning he found his tem^ niiedicatiQn for a cold, Salinger said, and on his return to Washington will go to the White House and take it easy. This is the second time within two weeks that the President has had to cancel engagements becanseofacold. On the other occasion, his cold appeared Just before a Midwestern trip that took him as far west as Minnaepolis, but he recovered ‘ quickly and made it with no ap-‘ parent ill effect. Or 1 Salinger said the docttMrs arc sure Kmuiedy had recovered com-plotoly from the last cold befmw coming down with this one. There was one difficulty about today’s schedule: It called for numerous outdoor appearances, including an airport rally in Milwankee, a shopping center talk in St Louis and speeches in Albuquerque and Las Vegas. The President was to have ended the day by spending the night in Seattle and officially closing the World’s Fair there tomorrow. He was to have flown back to Washington late tomorrow afternoon. DISMAL WEATHER Adding to the President’s problems the weather forecast was dismal at both Milwaukee and at St. Louis. It was raining in Milwaukee and thunderstorms were expected to arrive in --------* —' Fisher Body Division of General Motors Cknrporation will be on display at the 44th National Automobile Show in Detroit next week—but only through other GM the President’s hotel in Chicago. Asked if the speaking d a t e i might be reinstated later, Salinger said he did not know but that the time element obviously would mean that Kennedy could not go to Seattle. The Fisher Body plant in Pontiac, for instance, will be exhibited by means of Pontiac Division models. A veteran of many automobile shows, Ftobrnr Body first began operating in Pontiac in 1122. Body by Fisher and the Napoleonic coach emblom, then a tradition of 14 years, was already the world’s besHawwn automobile body trade-nuirk when Fisher Body occupied the old Beaudette plant at Wesson and Walnut streets. On his Midwest tour the President has been busily preaching his political doctrine that the election of a Republican, any Republican, -j in his view a step backward for the country. “Pick yourselves up next Nov. 4,” ^Kennedy urged p^ workers' last night “and ffect the Democratic ticket from top to bottom.” Friday his scorn spared no living Republican and it was aimed particularly at a senator whose support he has sometimes needed on close international issues: Everett McKinley Dirksen, the GOP leader in the Senate. As is custoniary on these occasions, the President never inentioned Dirk-sen by name. But he went all in praise of Rep. Sidney R. Yates, a Democrat who is struggling “ upset Dirksen. The Weather Full U. 8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VIODNITY - Cloudy with scattered showers through Sunday. Chance of thundershowers today. A Ult>« cooler, high today in the Ms. Low tonight 4S W U. High Sunday M to N. Winds variable today becoming northeast 10 to 15 mUes and Sunday. Onttook for Monday-fair to partly cloudy At I TiUxltr » m ph. uti totardlj* at • « P « Hoao run Sundar M Il oa *.in. WaaUiar: Sunny^___ makaaraaO Uwaat TUa DaU la I Friday la Faallaa 3« In KM /■“’VTCSK'S:,’'.. bsL iistsaa.ss 0} 3j Loulavllla 14 M sxssr i 5? « n ^ is&t Skloln*, a si K. NATIONAL WEATHERr-Occasional rain and showers are I forecast for tonight for the lower Lakes, Ohio and Tennessee * vali^s and aastem portions of the south central Plains, W|th ’ wideqpraad ahowors from western North DakoU to the north-on Rockloa. Fog and drlnle will prevail on the north PaciHc Coast. It win be cooler In the cwitral Plains and central Mts-slaN|d vaOejr wtOi little temperature change elsewhere. , Official Inlfrfortnc« ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)-A federal appeals cmirt has thrown a le-gal ^ atnund Negro Jjass H. bbee^to protect him from any DIVISION’S PONTIAC PLANT Fisher Body's Displays Indirect at Auto Show Ground was broken for the present plant at 900 Baldwin Ave. on March 1, 1923, and construe-thm completed Carly in 1925. Fisher operated both plants until 1929 wh^n the older plant was razed. Various construction and modernization programs over the years have substantially increased the capacity of the plant. The largest of these prbf^ams. Just' recently completed, brings the total floor area to more than 1,429,000 square feet. NEW FACILITIES Entirely new body and paint shops now occupy 280,000 square feet of space formerly used for metal frabrication. ★ ♦ w New faciliHes for the trim and cushion room now occupy the former body and paint shop ireas. Also included in the recent modernization was die installation'of a dual assembly line system, and the addition of Proposal Seen Pro-Red ing dock. The people who work at Pontiac’s Fisher Body plant assemble sedan, hardtop, station wagon and convertible bodies for conventional-size Pontiacs, and integral bodies for the Pontiac Tempest. This includes welding the body together, painting it, attaching 1, and constructing and installing the cushions. LARGE CAPABILITY The plant contains nearly 414 miles of conveyors and is capable of assembling several hundred bodies a day. West Fights Ban Plan UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -The United States and Britain sought today to kill off a neutralist plan for an uhpoliced ban on nuclear tests. They pushed a rival proposal for a limited ban. Both powers were reported angry over the resolution by 30 non-aligned nations that echoes the Soviet call for an uninspected moratorium on tests. The United States and Britain, 3-Car Collision Leaves 11 Hurt Romeo Crash Injures Hunters, Teen-Agers Eleven persons were taken to hospital with injuries when three cars collided on M53 south of Romeo at 1:30 a.m. today. One car going north was loaded with four hunters. The other two cars were loaded with teen-agers heading south. * ♦ ♦ The two southbound cars were apparently on the Wrong side of the road on a curve, Romeo State Police said. The first struck the northbound car in the front and was then hit by the second southbound car. Most seriously injured were: ' Joseph Tsucher, 21, driver of the first southbound car, of 22035 Scotia, Oak Park, Who suffered a fractured leg and facial lacera- llene Stoller, 16, passenger in the same car, of 14431 Oak Park Blvd., Oak Park, lacerations of the face and a fractured right irm. In the northbound car, the most serloasly tajnred was the driver James Falrrls, 97, M1825 Paris, Uncotn Park. He suffered who have made plain they never would accept another uncontrolled moratorium, put in thpir^n olution as soon as tlW TO-na draft was circulated. WESTERN PLAN The Western plan called for an interim pact banning tests in the atmosphere, water and outer space where they can be detected without controls. As a second step it proposed an eventual treaty banning all tests, including those underground “with effective and prompt international verification.” The neutralist proposal would have the General Assembly condemn all nuclear tests and call on the atomic powers to stop all testing by Jan. 1; The plan was based on a memorandum the eight nonaligned nations put out at the Geneva negotiations last spring. SEEN PRO-RED The United States was said to feel that the authors of the resolution had taken a position that was more pro-Soviet than neutral on the nuclear question. American suspicions were heightened by Soviet clalnui of neutralist support made Friday at a Geneva meeting of the U.S.-Soviet-British nuclear test ban subconunittee. Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsar-apkin told U.S. and British representatives, "You are trying to get the neutrals on your side, but your attempts are in vain.” Tsarapkin said discussions at the United Nations showed “we have a common front against you, including the neutrals.” * * -tc The assembly's top political committee Is expected to take at least another week debating the nuclear test issue before reaching a'vote on the rival plans. lers, 38, of 18M1' Reed, Metvlndale, suffer^ undetormined Internal In- 'llie motorlsti were token to Al-mont Community Hospital, w w ★ All ll were thrown out of the cars and were found strewn in the ditches. The northbound car cauitof Itoe- Romeo firemen and policemen assisted state police.. Thousands of people from all walks of life in every part of the country are in some way dependent on the operations being performed in this plant. Other Fisher Body plants hi a nationwide nefwerk of cjmy. munities are eapged i» ' that must be coerdhiated with what is being done at Fisher-Pontiac. During the year 1961, expenditures for payroll and local purchases totaM more than $38,-500,000. Over 700 suppliers within a 75-mlle radius of Pontiac furnished plant with materials and services. One Dead, 23 Injured on Misiiosippi River LUTCHBR, La. (R - A ship-barge collision in early-morning fog today in the Mississippi River killed one paeon and imured at least 23. The N rwegian motor tanker Boheme;^ laden with explosive chemious, caught fire, end twd of the oil barges burned fiercely. Burning oil spread over the channel and closed the river to navigation about 35 miles above NeW Orleans. A federal act of hfarch 1867, declared Uw government dl AriumwM and nine other former Cbdlderate States illegal. Rob Motorist at Traffic Light A Waterford Township man robbed at knife point early this morning while sitting in his car waiting for a traffic light to change. ★ * ★ Owen Helwig, 29, of 2095 Kohler t., told Pontiac police that two men Jumped into his car at South Boulevard and Franklin Road and threatened him with a knife. He said a |40 watch, a wallet containing $19, and a shotgun was taken. The incident occurred about 5 a.m. MendiGeb “’****”"” * Legal'Cjoak' I ’ ' ,4‘- Court Ord«r Forbids ment during his studies at the University of Mississippi. A preliminary injunction issued Friday by the U.S- 6th Circuit Court of Appeals gave strict orders to the state of Mtesissiivi, its officials and their successors not to interfere in any way with desegregation at Ok Miss. The Justice Department said in WaihiH|t«» thr^ 0^ was the most sweeping action ever taken by an appeilate court. ‘DONTS’ LISTED The appellate court msntioned specUici^ several things Barnett, the state and its officials must not do. The prohibitions Included attempting to arrest Meredith or securing state court injunctions or “injuring, harassing, threatening or intimidating (Meredith) In any other way or by any ther' means.” Misstosippi’s Gov. Ross Barnett had no comment. Meredith was not on the Ole Miss campus at Oxford. The 29-year-old student, admitted after rioting and bloodshed, completed his third week of classes and left the campus in a five-car caravan accompanied by 11 U.S. nnarshals. ARMY FORCES CUT The motorcade drove off in the direction of Memphis, Tenn., where Merldlth spent the previous Weekend with his wife and child. With a quiet weekend in prospect, the Army announced it was cutting its force at Oxford to 500 regular troops. This compared with 23,000 troops called to duty in the area at ttie height of the desegregation crisis. The appellate court sitting in Atlanta did not njake a ruling on contempt charges against Barnett or Lt. Gov. Paul B .Johnson. The U.l4. Day progiiun, which atarts at I p m., is aponsMed by the Oakland County Chapter the American Association for the toted Nations. It is open to the public. John MaeVane. U.N. eorres-jMindent for the American Brendmuftog Os., Is the prlnel-pnl speaker. He wW he intre-EirnitiuMi M a y e r H.Wlllett. With offset printing. w w * ■ The INI edltioi of Derby Junior High School's “Cycle” was Judged seoond best offset ytowbock produced 1^ Junior high The BioomflekI wiU follow MaeVane’s .jatured on tha prognni is Mrs. Dorothy K. Roosevelt, who will play Respi^’s “Skillana” on the concert piano, w * Preceding the event, the county mayors will attend a 6;N p.m. dinner honoring MaeVane, a vetwan I and brqadcaster who H a timrespondent in Europe and Africa during World War II. Three schools in the Birmingham School District and one in Bloomfield Hills have received awards for excellence in production of their RWl yearbooks from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. RECEIVE AWARDS Birmingham’s Seaholm High School was one of nine Michigan schools honored with the coyeted ‘medalist” title in competition in the 6M to 960Mudent eatogory of Michigan high schools. t The scholastic press association announced results of its 28th annual Judging yesterday at Die openiiM of the conference and short course on yearbook production at Cblumbia University, New York City. Hopes End of Prisoner Talks Near 4 Teens Held in Beating Case Chief Judge Elbert P. Tuttle said a decision would be issued as soon as possible in the contempt cases. But he declined to say the Judges had reqebed a decision. MfiacMan Struck, Killed by Automobile A 69-year-oId Pontiac man was fatally injured yesterday when he ran into the path of car on Saginaw Street at the Patterson Street intersection. ♦ ♦ * Garnald Williams, 30765 Simmons St., died at Pontiac General Hospital about two and frwif hours after being struck by a car driven by Howard E. Cook, 34, of 715 S10 c u m Road, Pontiac Township. Cook was going south on Saginaw when the accident occured at 4:30 p.m. He told Pontiac police that he as traveling about 20 miles per hour when Williams dashed in front of his car. (3ook was re-, leased after making a statement. i Williams’ body is at the Voorhees SIpIe Funeral Home. Oakland Highway Toll In ’62 76 Four teen-ajers were beingjield tolfie DtotTand^i^^^ Jifl today investigation of beating a young ■ Those held for felonious assault are Charles W. Kester, 89 Oakhill St.; Boyd E. Gilbert, 27Mathews St; Paul V. Summers, 1055 Michigan St.; and Lee R. Mascorro, 454 Third St., all of Pontiac. All are 18 years old. The four were arrested about 3 p.m. by Pontiac police after they were stopped and found to have beer in the car. Mark Boyce, 16, of 1009 Millington St., had reported to police that he had been beaten near Oakland and Sanderson abput 12:30 p.m. ★ w ★ He said he had been given a ride by group of boys and when he started to get out of the car he was attacked. Hunteri Are Snared i^y M24 Traffic Jam Hunters heading into The Thumb Area on the opening day of Southern Michigan's smal' game season were snarled in a huge traffic Jam on M24 south of M21 in Lapeer C!ounty this morning. The Lapeer County Sheriff’s Department reported cars were Ibacked up for eight miles on M24 'south of intersection between 7;80_ and 8:30 a.m. BIRDHNGHAM ■> Mgyorf Of IIV Oakland Qounty cltief h«v« hMn country, invitod special UiBNi m SeAofan yaorbeah, ««• tkms Day ^Celebration to be hdd ■* - ^2 Moyevs/rOx/ff^ I hUM day Cefe^idh la MN mneamt Grove Hl^ ScfroOl'f “TMon” ron first place among Mldilgan imlor and high sdioola in tha 1,- NEW YORK (AP) -James B. Donovan expressed hope today that negotiations for release of 1,113 Cuban invasion prisoners are in their last stage. WWW Donovan commented after a . leeting with Ernesto Ifreyre, secretary of the Cuban Families Committee in Miami, who came here after a trip to Havana, Donovan is employed as negotiator for the committee and spent last week in Cuba. Freyrrcarried documentwfrom Alberto More, minister of foreign commerce under Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro, as he reached Miami Friday. At the time Freyre said: “1 am very optimistic. I feel the negotiations are in the last stage.” SHARES OPTIMISM Asked if he were as optimistic as Freyre that the last stage had been reached, Donovan said: “I certainly hope so.” Donovan and Freyre met at breakfast in Donovan’s Brooklyn home. As for material brouf^t by Freyre, Donovan said, “1 received his report and I am studying it.” Donovan said it embraced a 'massive” list of drugs, medicines and baby foods which Castro has demanded as ransom for the prisoners. WWW It was so massive, he said, Diat he had to ask members of his staff to give detailed study to it. Donovan emphasized again that no nnoney is involved in the negotiations. Castor originally demanded $62 million in cash, but later switched to medical supplies and foodstuffs. '80LEY A GIFT’ Donovan said his latest offer to Castro “represents solely • gift in the humanitarian spirit from the American people to the Cuban people for the purpose M helping children, the sick and the elder-'ly during their present plif^t.” Payments Deficit Lowers HOT SPRINGS, Va. (AP) Treasury official rqiortod today a “gratifying and encouraging” drop in the U.S. international payments deficit. But he cautioned the Business Council that hirther American industry, w w Undersecretary of the Treasury Robert V. Roosa told 100 corporation chiefs, attending the council’s fall meeting here, that U.8. ex- Cmust be expanded by bil-of dollars. tkm aide, the council wi uledtobear a moreopHmistiereport on the lON business outlook than it has had so fkr. TIm council Friday was told that a “great majority” of its » consulting economists entect a slight business dip in early IIN, followed by recovery in the second “ of the year. on today’s program, reportedly not ready to conc^e that even a very mild and brief recession Is in sight. ' Heller was expected to report teat mixed signals being given by key economic indicators leave 0pm the possibility that the dragging business expansion will catch Ha second wind next year, helped by the tax inemtives to investment already givm and the tax cut proposed by President Kennedy (or 1963. ^ ” Heller told a news conference in Pittsburgh Friday that the administration's forecast (or a NN But Walter W, Holler, chairman of President Kennedy’s OMindl of the council today that the administration concurs with the council’s view that an early 1963 tax cut is the best way to Stimulate economic growth. The Business Council’s own leaders seemed dubious that the downturn foreseen by their consulting economists will occur. Roger M. Blough, board chairman of U.S. Steel Corp. and chairman of the council, told rMortars 'T am not at this point forecasting 1161 would fall short by an em-barrasingmargin. He estimated K wouldn’t come within $10... or more of the forecast. He declined to predict next year's picture but said in general: “Uw tint half of 1963 wUl be a testing period. We will team then whetiwr there is steam to give expansion a second tancean Heller was expected to a United States is determined to demist aggression In all Its forms. #> “We hope,” said Rusk,” that nedy’s resolve to defend the vital interests of the Free World.” Rusk did not deliver the ad-ress in person because of the rase of buslneu. It was read for him by WiUlam C. Foster, director of the U.S. Arms Control and STRONG DENIAL iteid the head of the council’s — on the domestic econ- omy, F. R. Kappel, board chafr^ man of American Telephone and Telegraph Co., said “Hell, no,” ered the predicted minor dip a The consensus of the consultant! was for a drop of $2 billion from a record annual production rate of about $560 Ut-llon a year in (his quarter. Friday night Secretory of State Dean Rusk told tte executives the Both the Roosa and HeUar talka behind the ooundl'e tradi- gave nmortere copies of hie report on the admintetratten’s drive to reduce the payments dMiclt. In the firM half of this year, he saidv the deficit in iataraational ratoof|1.4bDlion, N.5 billion laM ys N billion ittllN when speculative attacke on the dollar caused an alarming outflow of goto. i: / ^ TUB POKtXAC PRES8» SAtURDAY, OCTOBER 80; 19g2 pJ^nior Editors Quii on I Z'PIANT$ QUESTION: Ifow do the Japanese make dwarf trees? ANSWER: The Japanese are a very paUent people who to do skillful things with small objects. They have long I famous for the art of “bonsai” which means growing tiny fa The principle is to plant seedlings or cuttings in a small pot which will cramp the roots (1) and (2). The roots can be clipped as the seedling grows and the leaves pruned (31. Thus the little tree is starved and beconws a dwarf. The trick is to do this without killing the tree; this is something requiring knowle^e and skill. If such tiny trees can be kept growing, the trunks will thicken as the years pass^and the whole effect will be that of a perfect tree in minature. Sometimes a number of sprouts are trained up from a single root and give a marvelous effect of a small forest. The Japanese love to make miniature gardens in this way, combining the trees with rocks, sand, moss and other minute objects. Trees which can be dwarfed include spruce, cedar, juniper, pine, pomgranite, bamboo, cherry, beech, birch, sweet gum, peach and alnrond. FOR YOU TO DO: Make a Japanese minature garden inside the lid of a box. It takes too long to dwarf a tree by "bonsai," but you can clip a bit of shrub to make it look like a tiny tree and wedge it between rocks. A bit of mirror glass makes a wonderful pool; cover the edges with sand. Look for a bit of green mbss. The feather is for smoothing the sand. Royalists Hit Rebels - . ./ ' in Yemen DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)-Pro-royalist broadcasts asserted monarchist forces are .battling troops of Yemen’s revolutionary regime on four fronts today in an effort to recapture control of the Red Sea nation. Rcyolutionary Premiere Abdullah Sallal claimed Saudi Arabian and Jordanian troops were actively involved in the royalist drive and also charged Saudi Arabia was massing huge army concentrations along Yemen’s northern frontier. LEADING FORCES Saudi Arabian and Jordanian radios said Imam Mohammad Ai-Badr, fighting to regain the from which, the rebels ousted him Sept. 26, as personally commanding forces on a northern front 30 miles south of the Saudi frontier and 180 miles north of the Yemeni capital of Sana. Badr originally was reported killed by the rebels. The broadcasts described three other fronts as In the northwest 110 miles from Sana, in the northeast 120 miles from Sana and in the southeast near the Aden frontier. The United Arab Republic has strongly supported the revolutionary government with men and material and the Cairo Radio quoted Sailal as saying he has enough power and arms to repel any attack. Democrats Invited LANSING Iff) — Democratic legislators and candidates for the legislature have been invited to a meeting at the State Capitol | Monday by Gov. Swainson. Swainson said the purpose of the 2 p.m. meeting in the House of Ri^resehlalTvM be to discuss state issues and problems in preparation for the work of the 19^ legislative session. INTERIOR VINYL LATEX PAINT $^29 p„, c,i. FRESH STOCK WESTEND PAINT and Wollpaper Co. 467 Ilia. U. M. — PI 5-5006 Three PlecldGuiliy to Gambling Charge Three Royal Oak township residents yesterday pleaded guilty to a charge of keeping and maintaining a gambling establishment and were sentenced by Circuit Judge William J. Beer to $100 in fine and costs or 60 days in jail. John Marshall, 39, and Catherine R. Peterion, 26, both of 20670 Westview St., and Benny Fields, 42, of 21666 Gilcrest St., entered their guilty pleas after a jury had been selected for their trial on a arge of operating a gambling The trio was arrested March 3 in a poUce raid on the Westview Street address. It Pays to Attend PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE Mid*1'erm Opening Monday, October 22 Speedwriting Shorthand Gregg Shorthand' Office Machines Typing I through II 101 Principle of Acct. I Miss Parker, Mr. Chapin, or Mr. Tull will be glad to answer any questions you may have. The phone number Is FEkieral 8-7028. A copy of our snew school catalog will be sent to you on request. Free Placement Service for Graduates POINTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE laslasss gdaeolien Slaes IMI 18-24 W. Lawrence FE 3-7028 GE CLOCK RADIO WAKE to MUUC BPBOIAL NOW |r| #:95 n n Only lo Weekly MOIWI. P SN the GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP ■w. flMM. rw. «t . Hi\ u«. MONDA wards Qo annivef^ry specials Sw H«w You Sn*l Ty«1c»I AWmh jOHi AinUmnir ValwCMiigl . : ? 8 pc. Bunk Bed Outfit Mople Finish NO MONEY DOWN Wonderful space saver! Includes 2 beds, 2 inner-spring mattresses, 2 steel link springs, guard rail, ladder. Converts to 39" twin beds. Colonial styling. 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HOURS: Mtoiiy ton Sataitoiy Stretch your dollars during Words 90lh Anniversary I,One-coot Latex is so convenient—point, use room the some doyl Pontiac Mall ’/r . \: \ ll'kihtrltrtMiWInd'Stt j| Tonigltfot Cbrkfton OARKSTON - “Inherit tVind" will he presented by the aarksfatt Village Players today at 8:M p m. in toe high school's Ittle thaator. Thi play deals with toe court THE foymc PEB8S SATUBPAY. OCT0JB1R 20, 1068^ drienae ri a teacher 1 tion created a controwrey. F— ed trial attorney Clarence Dar-rcw defends his client, the setting is Dayt(m, tenn. in July, Reds Chinesk Leaders BIpst Nii^ HONGJCONG (UPI) ~ a high "grows up Bke weyls tn a jp-ifa dteecthig tot % twrld ^ “* I !3^ [written hi VbytoTiK: The Old Masters used raw t in mixing their painta. has publicly critlciaed Soviet Pre-1* mler NIUta Khrui" " in “arlstocratk:" the criticism waa iMde hy The Chu, first secretary of ^ ^ manist Party's Butwau far Oe» ««Ti)day aema paorie ftlnlt gtaMB IfraPSatoClBiri^ was a dictatar anda inurdious China’s delegation to the 22nd So- {|^, as a matter of fact, klUing Viet Party Congress in Moscow ^ Inevitable under the last year. oMiditions mdsting at that tone." Tao Che. the meet pewarfhl Iho Chu said. Communist efOeial In sautoen UUDS STALIN China, toU a pnbito "We are of the opinion that 3.0N persons hr Canton that a.Hn<. achievements ou ’ Khmshchey’s dally life j,j, mistakes," he said. FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD 210 N. PERRY ST: SERVICES NIGHTLY AT 7 P. M. EXCEPT MON., TUES. ALL MUSICAL TONIGHT 7 P. M. Everyone Welcome JOIN OUR GROWING SUNDAY SCHOOL—9:45 A. M. such unproletarlaa aatonlMa^ "We who have reiri Stalin’s “two prhr^ cart, ■ works can never forget his genius two very flue television eete,” ----------------------!-------!----- according to a member of fte It is believed to be the first stance of first-hand conflrmatkm that high-ranking Chinese officials have taken the Soviet premier to task personally in the rnohihi that followed the explosive Moscow meeting a year ago. ATTACK REPORTED Unconfirmed reports circulated widely in Hong Kong last spring that an attack on Khrushchev was being mounted in party meetings throughout China. According to Kan Tsu-Tsai, lecturer at the South China Engineering College in Canton who fled to Hong Kong as a refugee earlier this year, Tao Chu told the meeting of college faculty, chief engineers, doctors and other professional men, that the Chinese leaders prided themselves in their simplicity of living. “To ns, the keders. toeeo are not necessities for the time be-tag,” Tao Chu said. “If we need British Ship, Uruguayan Boat Collide LONDON un ^ A British and a Uruguayan passenger ship collided near London docks in the Thames yesterday. No one waa reported injured. The ehipe were toe Britito 7,7M4en Soeetn of the Penfa-iiilar aal Oriental Une, aid a train or a motor----- — of which is privately owned, “For recreation, we can go to the dubs and the public stadium to enjoy ourselves. As to living, we do not own our houses, we rent them from the government.” Tao Chu accused Khrushchev of being a “revisionist” of Marxist-Leninist doctrine. WWW ‘Naturally, the revisionists always believe 4hey^w^ Leninists from top to bottom and faithful servants of the proletar-iat,” he said. “However, the people have sharp eyes.” Tao Chu said that revisionism Port Authorities said the Socotra suffered only superficial damage and returned to dock but damage to the Tacoma was more serious, and she tied up at a river buoy to await repairs. The Tacoma is owned by the Uruguayan government. w w w First reports identified the British ship aa the 498-ton Italian vessel Soccotra. ihMilwii tha fdtttoal baisn wMhtot Ma SmM Wtt '■am p like weeds In a gH^lin Aractoig that world ww| Isr toa ■Tr - Chu’a imweto by m aoern In tot intorriem ||i|Mlii^ (alM to take pewImR Mhotoitr nMMMk tto merm ilMWt U. of M. Experts. Eye Mystery Bones EAU CLAIRE from the University of Michigan have been called In to study Ixmes, believed to be those of a mammoth which lived thoBsandi of years ago, which were found m a farm near here Thursday. W__._W W.._..J?:_ . 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RONDO FAIRFAX 103.00 $31.00 S1M.7S Sll.» SllUS i4i.n KING EDWARD S0t.» $31.71 I1M.M S40.50 '’$140.18 *' ‘I4S.7S MELROSE nook S3S.SO $43.50 S141.IS S4I.7S tayaway or ONLY12to6 mer rnny. vake 9.95 MEN’S SUCKS of famous J.P. Stevens ALL-WOOL FUNNEL 88 UMITt 3 jsoirs to • customor while they losti 4 «u«Nintsod*t«*flt free elteratlens i mu Uifour biggest slack buy of the seasont 1 Ves, only 4.88 buys plire wool flannel slack " ^ liaiitlsOttiely tailored M>ltli pleated inner ^ Waistband, corded back p^kets... In trim i)laln front Ityllhg.l3bn*t nffsi Vuliiej bo here early and save! All the newest lull tones;..29^41 £ ‘mMt if'’’ 'SLOSSS 0|«^iw«y ;- 2M M. SMtam *1—* “•’* *'** ^ Dbife Hwy.—Just North 12 frt S of W«Nrfeid Hill ’I FLINTY OF FMI FAEKINO ■ i ............... SUB FOR SUN DIVERS~This submarine, acconunodats three men, is on display at the World Congress of underwater Activities in London this week. The streamlined plastic vehicle is designed for skin divers, offering all-around vision and protection from sharks and Council Delegates Have Little Money VATICAN OTY » - Every day the Vatican Ecumenical Council is fa) sessiiH), a battered Volkswagen sneaks its way through Rome’s duotically congested streets. Crammed inside are two of tree bishops, gingerly holding leir threeH»mered purple biret-u. “They asked for a ride to St. Peter’s,” explains the German prelate at the wheel. “They don’t want to waste money on a taxi. They are poor, very poor.” Many, possibly half, of the t,7M church dignitaries attending the Ecnmenfcal Connell get financial assistance from the Vatican treasnry. They themselves could hardly pay ^ travel cost, let alone all the expenses of their stay here, from the Catholic churches in wealthy countries. Contributions come especially from the American and Europepn churches. “There are not many which can afford such contributions,” sa;d Dr. Carl Joseidi Leipracht, the bishop of Rottenburg, Germany. How much will the council cost? “Nobody could know, not even the holy father, beeanse he does not know how long the conncil will last,” says Msgr. Walter Kampe, auxiliary bishop of Limburg, Germany. . Bishop Kanpipe said he personally guessed that the total cost for the stay of the council fathers and their more than 5,000 advisers and aides would reach about 12.5 million for the first session period of Vatican sources say. These 60 days. sources are quick to add that this , . not mean that the Vatl-jpense^ IS for food and lo^iiw can has money to spare. The Vatican itself gets an assist ‘This is based on a/daily ex-IS for food and lodging I think this is adequate,” the bism op ARAM by Larry Hutfc tSSSSmSul Fancy Nmpkii^f Inurn Beef Hash WHh Ppi Iddol for ony room in your home. A must for the cold winter weather oheod. Sturdy ASHORT TA(i)LE . . . The shortest, most economical, most pro--* ductive route from seller - buyer is through ' Pontok press Want Ads FE 2-8181 I wMm FMet [PEICHES *1^CM 23“ UMITt STAUKlfT vm CHWlKrUBHT 23* UMITt aaMOKft ensup 1402. LHinrt 4-PICCE OKNI. imam ALL4FIICES MEN’S LEATHER ITED BOOTS 77l MEN'S RUBBBt INSUIA1ED BttnnJ^meelnw UMk^auMieEM ‘JLbm nngenip ctihiinb Wmreiml onddHila hwer* 69* 8 M20’>PnHrBn4.HOItSEPOWa 44TCU| HUY SEimOPEUED SOLVE YOUR LEAF PROBLEM Bn»rUWN Wtlis ep tssees In swsedi. Hm • «» SlWnnW «WMM% MOM ImmM... Jwt leH K ekna nnd ». gMsnltliiewsHt. SI&ilSIBWtT. THE PONTIAC PifeESS [ The POWER of FAIJH ■A/ ■ '■ I'-. ' '3. Voice of the People: "tSUuir&lUr ' SATURDAY, OCTOBER 70, 196J ^ WS2.^mSSS” '•a-Aisara.™-. 'aaarw “.jsnswsr' —^erravHmAent^fH^ UPI Tlieorizes Red’s Action vnnaftov Churchill is quoted as having said: ‘‘Th« Soviet Union is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma,” and the same might well hold true for Cuba today. Everyonie has his or her pet theory on what we should do. But going out on the limb and carrying oat i"y one of the ^Ilcfes fa another story indeed. We Blast confess we don’t have a ready solation. ★ ★ ★ HtHRY SHM*iHPt long-time correspondent for United Press International, addressed a group of editors meeting recently in San Francisco and set forth some rather Interesting facts. ★ ★ ★ Shapiro has worked on and off in Russia since the 1920a and his background on Soviet pidlcy fa respected. Conaeqaently, his theories can be substantiated somewhat better than the run of the wemothers leaders laMlSIdB-.--™ who had power aiqdratiflns. Time also has worked against him. The glamour of dictators has become somewhat tarnished of late. Nasser today fa smart enough to realize this. He knows that hfa appeal has faded and that the day of the one-man dictator fa ebbing. He has lost face and fa not controlling the Arab world from the palm of hfa hand as he once in- ★ ★ ★ We feel that this If aU for the best. Nassir and his type are selfiah leaders with only one purpose, and that Is “more personal power.” Our paternalistic Uncle Sam. bless his heart, thinks of almost everything. For example, for^hose Americans who may be Interested, thiie fa available a federal publication titled, “Problems of Present-Day Poetry in Rumuriia." The Man About Town He made these points in the manner of a forecast: Khrushchiv saw an opportdnity in Cuba and took it. He was motivated mainly by desire to get a foothold near us to counter the nuclear bases we have even closer to Soviet territory than Cuba is to ours. But Shapiro doubted that Khrushchev would go beyond supplying arms, food and technical as-sislanct lot Uuba ainca Nikita fa rMlistic and doesn’t want a nuclear war. So he will be careful not to reach a point of no return there. This appraisal sounds reasonable to us. If an expansion Of Cuba into olherifahs of Latin America is at-temptbd. It is likely to be in a whittling manner, according to SiiAnRo. By this he meant taking advantage of such internal situations as may offer opportunities. ★ ★ ★ The Soviet plan probably would be to push ahes[d, but not extensively or alarmingly enough to provoke an all-out war. Shapiro finished his theories on the note that our policy should be to keep strong, take the firmest and ■ like* Relive the 20s JiataqaiekiwlelotailywhMpleasm I _ M to about jmir bpiiiifiaB at |l1m Piiis. Anylhiiif poiit^ is a^ii good and •Mi. We are weiliii vety Jirt sad ki yhe et an He oethiilm wo nn km ImmI at enjoy your big forward step. • Meyer nhwm Aslts if Newspaper Usinf New Tm Sand Uniforms Needn’t Be Fancy’ Either my have suddenly As a farmer band mombeir m foltia lU^. or you are using Watorfard. I con sty our byd ta eoshr to rood. Who do I oom I am P.M. Eves » oor I ««iaMeb as” to ^hoMoaaptay bettor doa’t (Editor’s Note: Wo bow i you’ll have to congratulate us. We have shifted to a more leg-. Ible letter after studying many. ★ * JT-j m - The new type face ta easier to Maybe ' read by an appreclablci margin) ber’a Mother" would Uho to buy ‘MakiiiK Big Thing Out of Cuba’ CiSiy Oravet Hospital Group Plans Turn Back of Calendar When 14-year-old Bernadette Soubirous repwted seeing visions of the Blessed Virgin at a grotto near Lourdes in southern France In 18M, the reaction ranged from surprise to dismay and disbelief. than a plUbox yet poUttotons ride it for all Its worth. Borlta to the prime factor. No one would have Russia fight over Cuba. Tboy don’t have enough equipment or suppUes for a showdown. If we refuse to givo groaal a win back dawn. He rattka Ms More Air Views on State’s Election BY HOWARD CURTAIN TIME! The clergy were soap^I, government officials were hostile, townspeople were -Romamoozous, a man w asAvamai The Pontiac General Hoopltal Womens Auxiliary fa readying its eljpith fund-raising theatrical production. Titled TERRIFIC TWENTIES and booked far Nov. * ltd I at ^oolite Ne^ aoootolfie flashback < a MAT) us. Dr. Pierre-Romaiif Dozous, a man whose life all three. He was among the thousands who observed the peasant girl in a trance at the grotto during one of her 18 experiences. Impressed with the radiance of Bernadette’s bountenance, Dr. Dozous conducted a scrupulous three-day examination of her and found she was sound of mind and body. Later he witnessed one of the first cures attributed to Our Lady of Lourdes, as the Virgin came to be called, that was of an 18-month-oId boy whose legs had been paralyzed. Dozous was convinced the visions of Bernadette and the cures wrought at the grotto were miraculous. For the first time he found room in his life for religious devotion, and unUI his 400th was^a chiamptoa of Benu^ coacede. When he kaaws we It wtthout a flpit, ha II push. If we push back he’U ow we intend to stand Arm. Why wasn't WiKonsin included in the list that benefit by busi-nemm leaving Michigan? What bamnsd to American Motors and Kehrlnator? What about the defenM contracts Romney refused becauN of religious convictions? How much business did Detroit and area lose? Michigan’s loss of business is due a lot to “lopsided p ------- I Michigan be like IM work? Romi The Almanac without defaitM work? Romney would mnd it efaewhere. Romney’s not the man far Michigan but he could try in Wisconsin. Non-Agitator ____j ... A few Mats of whrt ymi can look forward to wfll be dropped here. ★ ★ ★ This Auxiliary project merits 100 per cent area support. Its goal this year is 812,000, with antldimtod net from the TWENTIES amounting to half that. The hospital aid program now set up includes eight Important Items of needed equipment: Last year, the hospital benefitted to the extend of 810,000 from this source. - JtyJUiilteA Today is Saturday, Oct. 20, the 203rd day of 1902 with 72 to fallow. The moon is in its last quarter. The morning stars are Mercury ‘Bobby’—Greener Fields Beckon jS’*—j-p#* Washington Notebook: The Press advises readers to think before voting and consider the party that gave Michigan a bad reputation. Do you mean those Republican legislators who have run Michigan for years or Just ona lone governor? Albert E. Smith Drayton Plains Besides patron tickets. 82 general ad-n tickets are en sale to advance at and at the door on performnaee nights. These tickets are unreserved, and seating wUI be on a firsLcenM-firstHwrvcd ★ ★ ★ Heading this fine civic and humanitarian undertaking are Auxiliary President Mrs. 8. V. Sekles of 185 Ottawa aDrive, and ciKhairmen of the WASHINGTON (NBA) - Brother Roiwrt F. Kennedy says; ‘Tm certainly not going to stay on ax attorney general for eight years.” The hot dope is that he would like I to seek election A to public office. But he glvM no indie ation of what office; As ^SsHnlfor running for pgfllBHB D r e s 1 d ent he savs. “It’s not nHH|gan ambition of and the Scrantons were able to emerge from their room properly togged out for the evening’s campaigning. Newspaper cartoonists c o m-piled a new 4t-page pictorini history on the career of Richard M. Nizen to date. The title? “How to Ity ia Politics Without ReaUy Succeeding.” Richard L. Roudebush of Indiana got this brief letter from dashed back; “Have you any razor blades?” Sen. Stephen Young of Ohio reports that “even though months ago the Anwrican people ceased to take It seriously, civil defense spenders continue to think up new ways to spend the taxpayers’ money. “Anwng their more recent half-baked brain storma has been the acquisition of 70 million survival biscuits. The Kroger Baking Co. On this day In history: In 1873, P. T. Bamum maned York City his Hippodrome In New Yor to house his “greatest show on earth.” In 1918, in their third peace note, the Germans accepted President Wilson's terms to end World War I and issued orders recalling all submarines to their home bases. According to wins taka advantage of all dr- Mr. and Mrs. DsmU 8. Erkfrits of Clarktson. ^at may not mean immediate In- u. of m. band alumnus, Advertising De-tenrention in Cuba. But it certainly partment’s means being ready for positive action when an opportunity arises. alerts all band alumni to be on hand at the Rsota, October Nasser’s Power Loss Fortunate for Arabs 27, when the alumni band will perform. ★ ★ ★ The one to contact for details is Mm Jeakfas of 1908 Covington Drive, Ann Arbor. Jdiart £. Tho ntp-S-oa. and Hortenm Myers, authors of a naw Macmillan hook, “Robert F. Kennedy; The Brother Within.” the attorney general’s wife Ethel says, “The Massachusetts governorship needs him. It’s a mess.” Another suggestion is that Bobby change his voting resi-4ieoce, perhaps to his wife’s home state, Connecticut, and run for office there. “I don’t want any liberals to liberate me from what qw forefithr era fdui^t and died for; I the conservative! to conserve it for me.” landed on the eastern caast al Layte Islaad ta the PMdp|lasa. had beea forced to kavn the islinds two iRd ap kiV yiiri Saeh vmtk a prominent American tnvttes you to join with him in hU favorite prayer. Today, fain with: RALPH LrWOOOr “ Editor. 'Poems of Trayere’ a; *‘I Ck)median Shelley Berman announced to a somewhat startled audience in the Cai#ll last week that he’s “not going to make any Jokes about Washington.” Rea- totoel have retnraed . . .” In 1953, Corp. Edward Dicken- “I see n 01 h i n g funny about alone has received over 81 r in contracts to bake aurvlval biscuits. So now wo have 70 million son of Big Stone Gap, Va., one biscuits for nonexistent fallout of 28 American prisoners of war shelters which are supposed to be who originally refused to be rebuilt in prime target areas where palrlated after the Korean war, they will be aboolutely useless in changed his mind .and asked to a nuclear holocaust.” be returned to the U. S. 0 T|)0u Who art our author and our end. On whoM large mercy chains of hope depend. Lift me to ThM ty Tby pm- For lower I can find no place to stand. Just about a year and a half ago In Egypt we found President Oamal Abdxl Nasskr a strong-arm dictator. Hfa power was felt pretty much throughout the entire Middle East. There fa no question but what he has always been a keenly sensitive Individual watphlng which way the political winds are^blowlng at home and around the world. Visittaf with anr Ad maa about (he band item above brought to light a warm bit that should intrigue hsiWepe fol- above; “Aa uf now, I don’t think he can be eMcted president. But I said that of Jack, too.” A while back, his wife, Beth, was givmi some Press photo attention because of her striking resemblance to Liz Taylor. On the day the spotlight caught Pontiac’s “Liz,” her Pennsylyvania’s Rep. WilU^m Scranton, seeking his staleV governorship, had a little trouble with a busy swing suburban Philadelphia Post Office Department has designed a special “non-commemo-rative” 4-cent Christmas stamp. Mandatory requirement by the department to artists who designed it was that it should not contain anything whatsoever a b o u t religion or of religious significance. Says Republican Sen. Karl Mundt of South Dakota; Days of All Faiths: Factions Argue Churches’ Duties ChedUng into a hotel for a late afternoon rest, he sent his pants ★ ★ ★ It wan only a few years ago that hfa bark was tough, and hfa actfans backed it up. Afao, we seem to rtmember that ho chided tho groat colonial powern, Britain and Franco. This was at the xOBlth of hfa power. .. At NAsani was a glamor- oui Hgura and commanded a fanat-' leal following lA much of the Ahib world. Hu bad vialonf of a power grab, by the revolution route. It probably could be said that he expected to take over a poUUcaUy unified Middle KaM; with Egypt aa the hub of power and himself set up as top dog. ' ■" . it Apparggitly he forgot that there day bvahrisf achieTemeat, fame, peh-llcity. Let Lee showmanship prevalL Never be petty.” “That’s about the same as taking the red and blue out of the American flag and Calling It the national emblem.” Two good friends Barbeer aad Orpka Willlama of 60 Florence Ave., traveling south sent a nice card and a clip of a “Round the Clock” column from a Nashville paper ... Ho-hum. Well. I suifaose It fakes ail kinds of columns to make a newspaper world. Meow^neow. By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER What the objectors ought to o o II > "'••w to that they do not Sunday the National ^mil of churches Churches encoura^ t^ observ- ,bout expressing thlf Concern, ance of World Mw Sunday, a controversy is not so much day mml»d ^^r foreij^ Purposes as tt Is about "“thods. And there are, quite Gen. Maxwell Taylor, new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of a quick pressing. Meanwhile some thoughtful local politician ordered the i^anton’s telephone cut off so they would not be disturbed. ResUng comfortably in St. Joseph Mercy Hoapital Is James F. ffaMm of 111 Oneida Road. He to lonesome, and would like some of his countless friends to drop in and gladden things iq> a Ut. gaa to wsnry, however, when a bog time lator Mi aad kfa wife’s cletbes were ost retoraed. Uhabla to raise anybody on the. of his book “The Uncertain Trumpet,” which he wrote several years ago, was gofaig. Said the General; “Thu sales have been very good since the price dropped to 99 kind of community for which, in God’s plan, it is destined. Services and sermons in many local churches will center around the relation of Christianity to the development of world order, to the growth of a world economy, to the United Nations, and to universal recognition of every man’s rights as a child of God. On aide, represeutod by maay OhrbttaM, says Chrtottaa- fadlttlM la fight wheravar itappdars,.sirlklB|.as It to aat this cotamn’s func-ttoa to tahe sMas fa uy argn-mwl. We are euly saying here what wa think the argumeat to really abaat. And wa saggMt that each side waiM ha la a •treogwr pmMm It lhay faught it aot aa'thb bask. Abo, they might find that their poaitlomart not imconcilabla, Imt rather that within Christian action there ia a fdaw for both MOTHER RBAaY TRIED 0(^22 honys St. Salome, the -molhir of two important Apoofaw; This Isa « Verbal Orchids to- tapped on a politioan’a door, and asked for aid. Back In hto d w n rooip, Scranton again waited. The panto and dress did not omne. of Lake {Orion; 90th birthday. Mm. Ada F. Mfaeck of 146 E. Ruth St.; 8Sf4 birthday. J. Finally hto wife wrapped I sheet around her. pinned it togetbetr with a huge Scranton buttaa, and strolled down the hall far anottier try. Tfas time tho mtoshio paid off, A Hollywood movio studio making a picture picked actor Larry KeaUng to play tho part of Chief of Naval Operations. Keating had a moustaehe and he didn't want to shave it off unless he had to. A worried movie official, not wishing to offend the Navy, thwidit it wise to write to the Pwi-togon's Information Office aaklni 11)0 other aide saya. not quite In arifeulato terms, that the worth of the indtvidiial peraoa li Umat-enad by collectivist trends that ThatwoApostlMarealwayaman-tkmad N Itia aom of XabadN, but thia day hi the CtoMIan calendar itart(ar,n are reducing parsoM to mere units nywhere an^ iVN tha mMt hi m, or that category - youth, (OapyriEM litt) Hto objectors, state their point quite the way II it would !)4aa right tor Kea^ to keep hto ipoultaeiia wMfa fag the CNO role and whether it wouM be “offanstve?" Tho Navy white, black, lahar, L.._ mart, liberal, canservitive. etc. -and it is not right that the church not should fall infa coUectlvtot strat-vay egiM to oppOM thoM trends. Qiey mMn 'it when they say the ' A * a church should stay out of this. They believe the church’s Job Is That God’a church ahouhl ekpraM to devekm Chrtotlan todhrlduali oonoeroahout how paopll live And and M thooe todividuaia ebanya work together is rrelly not dehata- wociaty, according to the Lord’s hie.. ' prlini^ of hMven. THK FOXTIAC PRESS, SATUEPAY, OCTOBER 20, 1962 AVs. Cdword AA«y«r 1o Dir«d Junior Choir Xtv. llirM Mm wlD to iih ■talted M putor of the Luttonn Otorch or till AmbmIop It Uie 11 •jii. MrviM Mndijr. Dr.ltonk torving m ddigata fv tte Ai> omiion Churdi to Uto CoMtitut-big CpnvotttMi of Luthoron Church Women of MlchlgM Ibmod Tueidoy end Wedneidiy in De* troit.wlU to Mn. Fred Sytz. Mn. Bdimni Meyer, choir dl-reeler at the Good ShedMtd aeh la Royd Oto IS yean, wf to Ctoir Mr PINPOINTING AREAS - Marking Pon- ^ Tw » tiac areas where they are doing missionary Robert Martin, David Butt and Barry ^th. work for the Church of Jesus Christ of Ut- The young men make thet home during their ter Day Saints, 425 N. Woodward Ave., Bk>om> stay in Pontiac at 66 N. Johnson Ave. and #7 field Hills are (from left) David Anderson, Mohawk Road. Explain Mormonism Elder Robert K. Martin of Provo, Utah; Elder David L. Butt of Binglum Canyon, Utah; Elder David J. Anderson of Saljt.Lake City, Utah and Elder JBarry Roth of Alexandria, Va. are imong gineering. He will return to his studies after the mission is ended. After studying more than two years at Brigham Young University, Elder Roth wiU return to the university after the mission the 41,00lhiin^, fUlHtoie nrts-to^rosumo^studies M.J^^ piriod,apeDt Irat^-iasn-mu offering. sionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Sainto. ' ♦ ★ ★ The four elders are in the Pontiac area calling on residents and explaining the teachings of the Mormon CSiurch. A series of six brief discussions thoroughly explain the basic tenets of Mormonism and answer such questions as “Why am I here on earth? What of a piw> existence? What are the possibilities after this life? and What unique opportunity has God given us today?” These discussions are presented with no obligation to all who express an Interest in learning more of the Mormon CSiurch, Elder Anderson said. Since the organisation of the church In IIW, a aealmis program of stunriag the Gospel English with the goal of entering the field of educational administration. Elder Butt did mission work in Ohio and Indiana before coming has beea promoted by yoaag snen of Ito c^----------- Elder Anderson worked in construction prior to being called to the mission field. He attended University of Utah working toward a def^ hi electrical en- Pastor Stine St. Luke MethodW dmrch list Sunday heard their pastw. dtal-lenge them to devoted Christian living. “It should be noted,” he said “that Jesus had Iwt U faithful discripes, and as a result of their devotion the entire western toarsal is set fir 11 ajk S At the first fan nneeting < igue this of the Nancy Selberg was elected president; and Pat French, secretary. * * w Plans were made for a Halloween party on Oct. a. Included on the committee are Wayne Wilson, Bob Craw^trd. Lynn franklin, Matgaret WOsOB, Bruce Qraudord and Miss French. Sponsors of tto group are Mr. and Mrs. George Eidson. Auburn Heights Pastor Plans Baptismal Rite The sacrament of Holy Bap-Ifffw wUl to administered to children at the 11 o’clock worship service Sunday in the United Presbyterian Church, Auburn ‘On the Outside Looking In” wUl to Pastor Wayne Brookshear’i sermon theme tomorrow. The Chancel Choir under the direction of Art Dewey wlU sing “TUm Ye Even to Ne" by Harker. The Couples’ Gub is planning a masquerade party add soaven-gur hunt next Saturday meeting at the Wesley Foundation House, 8820 Pontiac Road. Rev. George MuskvaDey wiU preach at 11 a.m. Sunday and Rev. G. E. Ballard of Birminttom- Ala. will be the speaker at 7:30 pm. , A dinner meeting WiU be held at 6:30 Tuesday evening In the parish Church, 5500 N. Adams Road. to the Pontiac area. He expects to return to Brl^am Young Uni-versiW where he was In the school of engineering. “The work I am doing for Jto church I feel is A special love offering which Is received four times a year will be taken up tomorrow. Three years ago the session seeing a need to have an emergency fund on hand to meet financial problems established the quarterly ffNEHlLL 'No Man Is an.Island” is the topic selected by Rev. Harry W. (Sark for his sermon at Pine HiU (fongregatkmal Cliurch tomorrow. Woiihlp and OiurclLSdiool Me held at 11 a.m. each Sunday at the Pine Lake Elementary SdKwl on West Long Lake Road. Pilgrim FeUowship wUI meet at foe bonM of Gary Stuckey on Fieklbrook Sunday evenings. A play entitled, “Undertaking” wUl be presented. NEW HOPE The Citywide Choir Unkm (Jum-tet WiU sing at 7:30 tonight in New Hope Baptist Church. The City quartet union wiU sponsor the first anniversary of foe CSiarmette Singers at the special service at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in New Hope (Uiurch. Members of the group include Ophaline Bridge, Frances White, Cynthia Rush, Judy RolUngs, Mrs. Connie Goldman and Mrs. Robbie White. Virgil Chance Jr. is accompanist. Rev. Jesse Long, interim pastor, will speak and singing groups will waiters, composed. Of in the congregation, entertain with barbershop quM-tets during the dfonar. Rev. Carl R. Sayers, vicar ef St. Stephen, wlU ceoduet foe meefoig. The congregatton wUl be asked to vote on several is-raes presented by the vestry. The rector and vestry also wiU launfo the very membM canvass f(pr foe current season. Rev. Bertram T. White, director of stewardship and evangelism for tbe Epis-co|^ Diocese of Michigan, bcispeaker. pense as the church has no pro-fessional paid ministry. I plan to go back to school and continue my studies in medicine, said Elder Martin. Pontiac Psychiatrht to Lecture 3 Sundays In the intervening years it has been used for automobile acci-lent victims, clothing for Christinas baskets and as a loan for persons attending school. The Rev. F. WUIIam Palmer III preach ea “Plan Ahead.” He W«el «boir folder the new dhreetor. Robert, Evans, 1st SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchord Lake Avo. Ktr. Mankmlt, Ifewer Service Sun. 7.30 RM. Quest Speoker church. The industrial mission is a project supported by foe Ordiard Lake Church through its giving for others. The. Rev. James CampbeU will to present te and program el the missien. A United Presbyterian minister Gurrendy involved in educational work for the personnel depirb teeef the ship ef HareU L. Welch. Chartos Wright is elder-com-rnisshmer to the Presbytery of Detroit meeting at Grosso Pointo Woods on TtiMday. CarroU Appel WM eleoted alternate. Tto a|^ ooOeot for the United No-tioM Children’s Fund ttls year. APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST M||||||| f 458 Central Soturdoy Youtig People Sunday School ond Wonhip Sundoy Evening Service Tueidoy and Thuridoy Service Church Phone FE 5-8361 jHHHH AMeckrta fUwrs-WnUAM PA*INf - nfani,YlMjar T * for eupfier at 8:30 p.m. PONTIAC UNITY CENTER I N. GENESEE (Cofnsr W. Huron) 335-2773 EVERETT A.DELl, Minister _ 9 30 A M, SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A M MORNING WORSHIP Faith Baptist Church 3411 AIRPORT ROAD FIRST IN A SERIES OF 12 Color and Sound Rlmson "THE LIVING CHRIST" >a),A«wttAr-Ai«tvMWMr Sondoy Scbeol 10 A.M. Ptoitor KoMen Teoehtng 11 A.M. WORSHIP Rev. KoMen, proocMna CRICOON SISIW SIHfMtKh 7M m Ibbert unyiNan, Mvsle Dhoefor he is also an associate of the ataff of D.I.M. Rev, Edward D. Auchard, pastor, WlU preach tomorrow on the subject, “How To Please God.” The Senior High FeUowship leets on Sunday at 6 p.m. Thi executivn committee of tbe Dr. L. Jerome Fink, Pontiac psychiatrist, will begin a series of three Sunday evening lectures at 8 p.m. tomorrow on foe subject, “Religion and Mental Health,” at the Orchard Lake Community Church, PresbytM-ian, as a part of the adult education program. Tto Detroit Industrial Mission Monday evening to mate plans „111 present its work through a for tto November Bible Study M, tto jsirlhtt. IjatlfortJfoiLiai Families of tiie church will gather at 6:30 p.m. Monday for cooperative dinner. Group .„4ing, recreation and classes for all ages with the theme “The Famlty That Prays Together” is Junior high youth wlU see the rUm, “Does (forist Live in Your Home?” Roller skating is scheduled for . p.m. Monday at the University Skating Center. The Cub Scout Pack meeting wUl be at 7 p.m. Wedneaday In tto church bate- LatoOMKh regi^ty i.m. each Orac* Liithfran Church Offtring Adult Claiiti A sMies of Adult. Bbllo Forum laaaoa^I begin at Grace laith-ran Churab «t 7:30 p.m. on Nov. at Grace Lutheran Church. Chairman of the every member canvass Is Robert D. Montgomery. Mrs. William Dewey is dinner chairman. ST. LUKE METHODIST Ten new members received inlo Antioch Missionary Baptist (Jiurch, 861 Proqpect St. wlU observe its third annual Woman’s Day with Mrs. Mary Parker spewing at foe If a.m. worship Pastor John P. Erhard said “Tto often tbe chiwcb becomes preocctij^ with Hs intemal nf-airs and far away missions, over-looi^ to real mission just outside the door.” EWm Homer L. ’Trecartin, secretary of the Michigan ConfMcnce Corp. of SeventlKiay Adventist liurches, was guest speaker. Elder Tracartbi wtU stow color sUdes at tto Bfissionary VMun-teer meeting for y^ pele at 5 p,m. today. CROSS OF CHRIST Cross of Christ Lutheran Church located at Square Lake and Tele- iKoadi onr “Tto foiMt’a 6 to foe Saint’a Sfoiatlon” nt 10 njj^ evening sermon will to tto ^ first In a aeries from foe geapd of St. John. Fred Ebey, nutoc director for October, wiO lead con-.:' inging and to In , chMge of special muaic. The Mother’s Board and Senior Choir will present a musical program at 3:30 p.m. Guest speaker at 7:80 Sunday evening will be Mrs. R(»a L. Kimp of Flint. Chaimnan for tto day will be Mrs. Waltor Rowe, wife of the pastor. , • SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST 'How the Church Can Make Its Greatest Contribution to the Community’’ received special study faniilies into membership in tto 11 a.m. service Sunday. The Che-rub (fooir under the direction of Mrs. Ddayne E Pauling wUl alng. The fall and winter schedule for church services ^iw wwshbR at 8:30 and 11 a.m. with a coffee hour following: Church Sctool at 9:45 a.m. and Adult Bible Class at 10 a.m. A young people’s class recently organta^ by Mrs- Hebert Green also meets at 1:41. Mr. and Mrs, Robert Beuter been elected to head the new feUqwship group. Mr. and Mrs. Hilman Fortney willfill tiie office of secretary. Tto James Putnams wUI serve as tre------- The group will meet tto Friday of every month. R«v. Carl KowMr, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL . lOAJA. WORSHIP SERVICES 11 A.M. end 7:00 PJVl. CHURCH OF CHRIST 87 lAFAYrm (ht CcMond OaUaMl) OurPwmsrlsObffCtd and StnfOafy Him, Cama^BaWUkVs, WORSHIP LORD’S DAY 1030 AM LORD’S DAY CVENINO 74)0 PM WEDNESDAY EVENING 74)0 PM BALDWIN EVANGEUCAL UJB. Sunday to Men’s Day at Baldwin Evangelical United Brethren Churdi. A Communhm breakfast is scheduled for 8 a.m. Dr. Willard P. Haist of Pigeon will speak cm "Laymen — Called to Serve” ‘ 11a.m. ■ Susan KUlen is leader of tte at 5:45. Tto young Church Celebrates 15th Anniversary Columbia Avenue Baptla Ita 15ti WoHd CounciT Leader at Lutheran Churches Dr. P. 0. Bersell, former mem-lwill preach at Ilf Suntoy to bw Of the central conunittee of Clirlst Lutheran Cburifo, Wateith foe World Council of Churches, ford Township. ' At 6:30 p.m. Sunday he will ipt speak at the banquet in Gloria “ I Dei Lutheran Church, 2600 Pontiac Road. Dr. Bersell was president of Augustana Lutheran CJmrch from 1035 to 1951 and president of tto Iowa Conference the Augus-tana Church In 1926 to 1939. A member of the Lutheran Brotherhood of America, to also belongs to the American Latiun^ an Conference, Lutheran Worid Federstion, World Council of Churctoa, and former president of the National I4ifoeraa OouncU. Dr. BerseU holdt honorary doo-tor’a degraea from five Eunpean and American colleges and versities. He is oonnmander of the Royal Order of the North Star (Seed-lah), the Order of the Lhm of Finland, and associate editor of iLutiieran Brotherhood Board. _______at 2 p. m. Rev. H. T. Starkey, pastor of Church In Garden City, wUl preach the lannon. Ha was the flrst pastor of Columbia Church. Tto choir will present special lusic. The second educational buttd-Ing will to dedicated during this afternoon service. Former nwm-bera and friends are invited. • Columbto Avenue Church Is currently engaged in a financial cai^algn in an affort to undar- Ttom clasam aia for all mmbars ,^,fe , bwigst ol 166,400. Every ibw of tto church will bo ‘ and askod to asalat. membar < OOnUMSIM or praapaetlva members of Qraoo Church. TtoeourMforaqulitofwm^RMklito inoinborshlp is 603 and bari^, but thera is no obligation gumfey School anrouSnfient is 711. to Join the diurdi. Ttose Informali atinga are ct^ucted by Rev. Richard C. Stuckmeyer, pastor of of special education of Oakland Clounty. John W. Everett of Indiana, Pa. win speak at tto 7 p.m. lervlce. Bible study and prayer service will be at 7:15 p m. Wednesday. Theantiders’ Oass wlU to entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Frederiksen, Monrovia St. at 7:80 p.m. S^ltu^ day. JEHOVAH’S 77ITNESSES Local members of Jehovah’ Witnesses serving to vatfous ca paclties at the threeW comfoi tion In Lamphere High School, Madison Heists are Erick tolUer, James Buchblnder, Rlbhard Baugh, Samuel Wallace and Lee DR. P. 0. New Bethel Baptist Plans .Church Rally The Woman’s Auxiliary of the Wolverine, State Ck)nvention will sponsor a rally at 7 p. m. Thursday In New Be^l Public Relations Claii Offertkd by Colombia U. NEW YORK W-Noting tto Churches of the area will vie for mors. Choirs of Ci^ide Choir Union and Macedonia Baptist Church combine bi presenting an-a. Mra. Roaie Kenm, stai auxiliary, j dent of foe auxUL.,, rate Im all qua«w ^ foe Bible. Rev. Amoe Johnson, pastor, Revival Stgrti Monday Rev. HaroU tueaa of Flint will piaMdi at tto ravtvil maotta|f|^ ^ c ,, rtarfoif Monday In tto First G«.,Dr. Uandar E. I^. Vi 2an5apttsta>uid^ I860 Ma^ University thoo^j^ to ihte. Watorfard Ibwn- book, “Taktoif tto F * gervicoa w«l bagtoi it 7i80 y,^pybllihil by 'Read the Bible Rlghf NEW YORK (i-“1tora la a the puMk la fovltad. way of reading foe Bibiq which Uona of the modem clorgyman, Columbia University has Inaugurated new courses In church public relations. "Public relations abiUty is being required more and more by today’s clergy,” said Robert W. Miller, chairman of the program. “A growing number of^«M®d»on are coming to the program to acquire the necessary profiolanoy in the field.” . Launch Boys'Program SPRINGFIELD. Mo. (D-A new nationwide program for boys, called the "Royal Rangers,” was launched this fall by the Assemblies of God. p.m. r. rufa-w Y- ues r»wt w rfwk» m fo IVANOELICAL MISSIONAHV CHURCH 9S00 Wolfcini IK. M. Om Mie ttW. •> Vtw Mall • Saa4dyS€lwii-IOaM-OAMIhwto|i|rt^ • lyowAiaa «mI IMinWa W11 AM «Ml 74» raa • laMe4W Atowilw to S PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST Mom w ito OOAMaiMn Dr.r.o.insu MJKSaWfROVttlDATlIAM SCHOOL 0.45 AM morning WORSHIP HAM First Christian Chiireh DISCIPLES of CHRIST flW. Jock H. C Clorh, AMler 8MW.Hw«A». COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 54 W. Columbia Am - « 5-W60 Sunday School. ...... ft45A.M. Morning Worfolp.....<1 LOO A.M. Training Union ....... 6.30 P.M.' . Evening Worihip....... 7.30 P.M. Midweek Sendee (Wed.) ■ • 7.45 P.M. P H ay PtSlK laow OuaeaBjYeaTIballa# PoLlor l«4V»«riw.«1itoreWe««rCh«.«li (AffflMM wtt Ito SiwiiMm SaiSM OenveMhMi) CIARENC8 K JACKSON, MkiWir of EdwxdkMi CARROU HU6BS.Muile Director _____________ CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 N. Sdotnaw Sf. 7 GREAT NIGHTS OCT. 21 - 28 7:30 p.ra EVANOatSTIC SERVICES ftowerful Metooges footo the WbrdafOedhy BROTHER HARRY HANNiH of Bitafonwara Ckwfo el Chto MwS Such MiinRia tor e’llw dnirfo 1M MMfo ClHto IhIA' • "UNtCMeir • "iro Enough to Meks Vto tJrV’. SPECIAL MUSICAL NUMBERS, MESSAGE IN MUSIC FOR THE HbUR INVYHICHVYBUVE -----------------: ... THE PONTIXC PBESa, aArUBDAt, (yTOBEB M. l»6a LUTHERAN CHURCHES MISSOURI SYNOD Cross of Christ ralMraf* o» Sq«or* lpk« Rd. ^ ToWJhip 'll* Pt$VM Hi fpidlwA. ^ S«nicM«( VVbnhlp o» ®iM o"d UiOO AM. Scfiool 9.44 AM. St. Stephen SoriMlyaw'aiKMipf ------ft»5AM 't'vik .0^4wvtt«f ‘ glbo^ 10.30 AM St. Trinity Aub«m of Jojii* (lost Side) ft«4A C. Claiu, Factor Svfldoy School ....... 9.45 AM. fifil StfvKO . ..8.30 AM. Socond Sorvico ..I' .00 AM- St. Paul » Mdyo Of Third ^ W ^ (North Sidt) Hn^MaurktSHmeMI CorlyMMA*........8.00 AM. Sa*^ SchaM.......9.05 AM UMSnMco.........10.44 AM. Grace Coriwr ond GItndol* (Won 4idt) RUhmi C. Stuckm»y*r. Pmlor Xharth Swvieo....9.00 AM SMBdoy School...9.00 A.M. Church Soruieo ....... 11.00 AM. Sundoy School...11.00 AM. "Tho luthtron Hour" o»or WKMH 9 AM Ewory Sunday ANN ARBCA •> BIDboards my, "Famliim wMdi. pny toyotber, ■lay together,’* . The blUbowde m right, my* Utoiventty of Mhihigan aocMoglit Blood it. Other reseatcheni h«ve found, lor instance, that childhood Sunday School and church attendance leads to marital success. But there are important exceptions, Blood adds. One is that tsdigian helps''only Insofar as it Is shared by husbabd and wife.” Ifiditto gree of marital stability' and hap- ALDERSGATE Methodist Church 1536 Baldwin Avanua Morning WorsMp>9<45 ClwKh School* I ld» A SPKIAUNVITATtON TO OUR SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE at 7.30 PM VKsdnsiday Mght S«vko*7.30 Rw, HorocoO.Mutroy-potior Williams Lake (Jhurchof the Nazarene 2840 Airport Rood Paul Coleman . Uinhter to AM. SUNDAY SCHOa II AM. WORSHIP HOUR Tm. " WORSHIP HOUR Miwt Be Shared by Both Churchgoers Get -Fewer Divoices be made to am exactly "hw” mIMm Imldo monrioM tmether. 'Wormwood/ Pastor's Topic Sunday Night Tbare wU14te an Installation of teachers and officers of the Marl-Church during the ‘Less common in the American home today than in t religious rituals nevertheless give those who stW practice them a | tense of parUohMdhig In a common pattern of meaningful actlvi-'ty^iM^TSiii: : Grace at meale, family wonMp and festival rltualt art included in this category. ★ dr A ReligioUB participation in the community can also contributp^ to family welfare. Church participation is a joint family actlvlly; It links families Into a network, id other families with similar values; and the clergyman can serve as a therapeutic resource In time of trouble. Religious ethics cmtribute tM, U a.m. service tomiMTOw. A llie pastor will preach on “The Sin of Worship” Sunday morning and on “Wormwood” at the evening hour. Philip Somers Jr. will lead the singing tomorrow night. The first of four Wednesday evening cooperative dinners and Bible sh^ will be held next IV^ICo Those attending may attend one of three classes namely, “The Understanding and Use of thi Bible,” taught by Pastor Somers; a class on “The Philippines,” led by Philip Somors Jr. or a teacher training class taught by Robert Gavette. Junior and senior high youth groups, the Colonist, the Eta Chi and Boys Brigade will meet next Saturday at 8:3lli>.m. to go on a hayride. Refr^unents will follow at the church. EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 313 Baldwin ANw,rkMilcie Phono FE 2-0738 Communion Braokfoil-S AM.>*Ttw tml 8twkr«r WORSHIP* 11 AM ''LayniM>Call«d to Smv** SjMoAort Dr. r. P. Hak$, Pfgwii, Jfidbfgm voum HOUR * 4.44 PM VESPER * 7 AM * GumI SpoolMr ______________ Rmf.MR.Euiwlf.Mlnlitof Max Evans, president of Men’s Fellowship, and mm M the group will provide the program at Bethany Baptist Churdi at both the 8:40 and 11 a.m. worship services. Roland Richter wUl direct the choir in special luslc. The Baptist Evening Fellowship is a family centered pro-p*am arranged for all ages, k nursery te prov Wed fw children and a story hour for children. Fred Gibson Charles Hazel are directs of the program. FoUowiag the annual “Church Loyalty Sapper” Wednesday eveatug, Ben A. Milton will preside at the stewardship edn- CHURCH of CHRIST 310 HUGHES ST. K 5-1 ISA Sunday WWo Slwdy for oN ogoA 9i4S ojn. Sondoy Worthto torlods 11 o.m. ond 7 |m«. TuMdoY Wiokiy Mbto Stody 8 PM *1P’oM/ord TowndUp’* dmurtoon PoptfN Chunk" CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST CmWIM Loko Roed Noor HoMiory Rood Wonhip 10 A.M. 11 AM Sunday School lorgo Flodilag Lot Nuriory During All SotvIcm i*v. RalNrt I. Adoiw Hm Central Methodist ' ! Smvicoi T«mpon*rlly at I boocE-CraryJimtor High School MILTON H BANK 1 401 N. Cow toko Rd. PoMor H. H. JohnMM Amodoto Aotor morning worship 9tl5 and 10.45 A.M. Layman Sunday - "As Good Stewards" Nh. Wm. L iMy and Dr. Horry Godioll . BroodcoiFliroonWPONllfDOAM CHURCH SCHOa.9H5 ond 10.45 AAA — CARL a ADAMS, Mlniitor JOHN A. Hpll, Min. of VMIniion Souto SoaiiMMt to Judion MORNING WORSHIP 8.30 and II A.M. LAYMAN SUNDAY CHURCH SCHOOL 9.45 AM. M.Y.R.*6tlS PM . Wed. 7i30 PM'BIble Shidy ond fVoyer FoUowdilp ST. PAUL METHODIST leStStoomtotoRd. FE 3-S333*N 3-37S3 Momkig Worship lOiOO AM and 11.15 AM Chumh School 10.00 AM liMrmodtoto ond Stotor Yowh OteuM (hOO PM Oldw Vouihs, 8.30 to SJO PM SlV.|AMISAMtClMNO.MMiMr lumtoM IWy Pour Towns MMtiodiif Church SoMbytototo... .. MOAM. ..ItfdOAM Covalrf Mtohodiif Church tmiONnACIAIIIMh tow .. ,9k44AM ..II4WAM METHODIST CHURCH MAiMtoAPtow - Itodoylchnnl...HMOAM Mmnlng Wtotop.... AM | tlwch School SwWMdito........TAOPM. " ST; LUKE'S METHODIST CHURCH SjlJgrW^ .11.14 AM. . lOiOO AM pinesi but a very low degree to religioiw activity.” IN i studlea have yet to nMi lint to leUgloao ritaato to (h« home. Rltoato ot aay kiad are knowa to promote tamily to- Laymen Sing in Chorus of 40 Voices The 48-voice Layman’s Chorus will sing at the 18 a.m. worship service in Oakland Avende United Presbyttoian Church tomorrow. Rev. TheCdore R. AUe-liach will preach on the fifth in the eeries to aermona from the BooktoGalationa. Leading pobiNnalnra In their d^iartmenta et the Sunday SdMKd are Craig AUtotadi, Lynn Wallace, Laura Upton, Suaette Weil and A1 Jackson. “Victary Ovw Tenflatisn** wfll he the fhema af «ha PtoMer Yetoh Group at i:tf pjB. Sndly. The KiiMen’ topic b ‘iRefermatbn Fere* rmuen.” He Peto HIgh 4%eep Church Men Lead Services Cooperative Dinner Wednesday Evening Pastor AOebach ^ Mary h^datene” at 7 p.m. Music will include a vocal duet by Mrs. Thomas Mackie and Mrs. Steve. Hubbell, and a solo by William Coffihg. ★ ★ Area United Presbyterian Churches are sponsoring the monthly skating party at University Skating Center Monday ni^t. The aeries of discussions • will doae Speakers will include Ivan H. Long, church moderator; Harlan Boyce, James Donaldson, Robert Sickels and Maynard Johnson. Rev. Chalmer Mastin, minister )f education, and Pastor Emil Kontz will also be heard. Bethany Church b cooperating with the Detroit area and Michigan churches in presenting the challenge to tithe one’s time, taleht and treasure, Dr. Koiitz 'Religion a Faith Which Orienis life’ w should our religion show I in our dally Uves? Religion should be ”a deep, dynamic faith which orients whole, life and gives purpose to bur every act,*’ declarea a priest writing in a leading Catholic ‘Genuine religion will self in eveiy phase of our life and conduct,” says Msgr. J. D. Conway in the October Catholic Digest. “True religion does not merely produce a little guy who keeps out of trouble; it fashions a Just man who is widely aware to God and his fellow man. ‘It makes' an honeit ptoiticlan. truthful toMher, a reliable businessman, ah ethical doctor or lawyer, ami a man deeply cerned with charity and justice for the poor,^ the oppcnaed and CRood says. 4nr*reIlgloa b con-cenwd vdth the way to»pte troat each otlwr-wlthln tha tomily aa In just 28 years members of Emmanuel BapUst Church have Esther O’Neal will speak oi 'How to Lead a Child to Christ.’ etomentary school, a high school and Midwestern Soninary, all under the leadership of their only pastor. Dr. Tom Malone. * A * The congregation will honor Dr. and Mrs. Malone witfra reception from 4 to 6:38 Sunday afternoon fat Fellowship Hall. Members of the church and community are invited. Dr. and Mrs. Willard Stall- Church Choirs Offer Combinect Chorus The choirs of Second Baptist Church in Detroit and Trinity Baptist Chifrch win be guesto of the All Choir Anniversary of New Bethel Baptist Church at T:38 p.m. Sunday. The program will open with the theme song, “In Bri^t Mansions Above.” The combined choirs will offer “The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” “Almighty God of Our Fathers” and “I Will Give Thanks Unto Thee 0 Lord. Mrs. Clara Hatchett will present solo numbers and Mrs. Audrey Archer and Mrs. Eunice Fortian will sing a duet. Mrs. Lee Atrice Stewart, president, and Pastor Amos G. Johnson Will speak briefly. Mrs. Arthur L. Jackson will welcome guests and Mrs. Mable Cathy of Detroit will give the response. Word 'Mass' Loses Meaning in Antiquity Although the Mass is the official worship ot the Catholic Church, and millions of Catholica throughout the world participle h» the Mass every day, the actual origin of the word ‘‘Mass*' in antiquity. Some authorities believe in a discussion ot the “Mass” stems from . the Latin word for dismissal, “missa, still used at the end of Mass when the priest turns to the congrega-lon and says “Ite, missa est,” 'Go, It is the dismissal.” * A * Other authorities, says the magazine, relate the word “Mass” to the Latin “mensa” or meal, with inference of a holy meal, the taking of the Eucharist. Gradually the Latin “mensa” changed to “messa,” and this ia How, these authorities believe, the All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. ot W. Plko St. The REV. C. GEORGE WIPDIFIELD Roctor The REV. WM. E LYLE The REV. ALEXANDER T. STEWART WO AM. - holy COMMUNION WO AM. - HaV BAPTISM and SERMON |YIHERBV.WM.t.tYU CHUICHSCHOOL t ti15 AM. -> morning tmyER and sermon IYTHERtV.WW.ElVU CHUieHBCHOOl THURS,. OCT. 25 * to AM. -- HOIY-COMMUNION CHURCH of the RESURRECTION will moot in Clarkalon Etomontory Sclxwl, 65155 WoWron Rd. THE RlV. AIDWIBH* T. 8TEWART, Vlwr 9»30j^Hofy Cowmimton on^Se^^ EMMANUEL CHURCH CELEBRATESC-The congregation of Emmamel Bwptbt Churdb of 846 S. Telegraph Road will obierve tlw 28th annlvtoeary of its birth Jn sorvices Sunday. Dr. JUKI Mrs. Tun Malone who ori^antoed the church and re hem in charge of the pastorate for the past I8j I be honored with a reception from 4 to 6:S8 Su Baptists Mark 20th Birthday D|r. Malone and hb congregation eitabibhed the Ei Christian School in 1858. It now has 435 students from kindergarten through high school. The Sunday School averages 1,588 each Sunday with a p^ attendance of 2,198. The church and school run six buses for day school and on Sundays. The Midwestern Baptist Ala., to attend festivities. Dr. StaUenp, formor dean to the semini^ and schooto, will speak at 18 a.m. Sunday. Dr. Cabel Roberts, a lifelong friend of Dr. Malone, will preach at 7 p.m. Former graduates of the school and members of the church are expected to be present for services and reception. W A W The early church purchased and remodeled a quonset hut into a place of worship. It was the for- r Castie Inn, located at 845 S. in 1964, has a present enrollment of 281 students. The col-bge and day school employ a regular staff of 32 persons. SCHOOLS ON 46 ACRES The schoob are located on a 45-acre plot of ground on Golf Drive. Classes are held in the $638,868 in 1968. Plans are now in the process of construction of the first dormitory on the campus to house 168 Forty-two graduates of the seminary are already full time Under the baderhip of Dr. supping boft nMnnbers and lon^y. Among the group are Faith Baptist Church in Waterford Township with Rev. Al Kasten, pastor, Grace Baptist Church in Birmingham with Rev. Charles Whitfield, pastor, and Maranatha Baptist in Four Towns with Rev. Sti^ey Monroe, pastor. A A A Rev. Bob Mbiyneux b pastor of the Judah Lake Church, Rev. Alger Lewb of Avondale Baptist, Rev. Frank Holman of the Baptist Church in Keego Harbor, and Rev. Calvin Steeley of Indian-wood Community, Baptist in Lake Orion. Emmanuel Baptist members are supporting 12 missioiMry families, most of these grew jp in the church. They represent When asked the secret of growth of hb church Dr. Mai ■", “We have a wonderfi' Lord Fisher Coming to Detroit gragation. Members work for the • • days a week.” INMAKBCAI18 “More than 268 peopb go out every week to make calb invite families to church. Every Thursday evening groups head for all areas of the community and every Tuesday morning calb are made. We started from scratch. Someday we hope to build a new church on the Golf Drive property,” he added. “I was converted when I wai/' 18-years old In Abhsnia. F that moment I knew I r to be a minister,” Dr. I Dr. Malone hoIcMhe bachelor of arts and bach^r of theology degrees from Bw Jones University. He received the doctor oif theology ddgree at the Bapti^ ■ of Fort Worth, Tex. , dlrectsihe JunloE, lb and Adult Choirs. Every night the orchestra of 90 pbys for the evening service and sometimes on Sunday mornings. The Malones have two daughters, Mrs. Luther Clyburn of. Pontbc and three-year-old Debbie; and a son Tommy, a student at Emmanuel Christian School.) The Epbcopal Diocese of Michigan will welcome a distinguished vbitor when the Most Rev. Geoffrey Fisher, retired Archbishop of Canterbury, and now Lord Fbher of Lambeth, arrives on Sunday for a five-day stay in the Detroit area. The world-famous prelate who crowned Queen Elizabeth II of England and who, for 16 years, was head of 42 million Anglicans around the world, will have a busy schedule. On Sunday, he will preach at • a.m. at St. James’ Church, Bhrmtogham, and again at 11 a.m. at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, Woodward and H a n-cock^ Detroit. At 4 p.m. he will participate in the laying of the cornerstone of the new $125,888 Church of the Resurrection, Outer Drive and 18th 1., Ecorse. On Monday, Ttiesady, Wednesday and Thursday at 8 p.m. Lord Fisher will deliver the annual Mc-Math Lectures at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul. Speaking on “The Church b the Church,” he will touch on four traditional characterbtics: “Apostolic - Catholic - Holy - One.” The lectureiarsLOpen: toJhe public. A member to the House of Lords, and the Ith raaUag Peer to the Realm,, Lord Fbher became ArchbblMip to Cantorlmry im 1846 and rqlired fai 18$1. Hb vblt to the Pope in 19W, the first in 488 years, made front page headlines. He was the 69th Archbishop of Canterbury, in an 13 centuries to St. Augustine of Canterbury, who receiv^ the title in 597. ■A A W . Lord Fbher was born in 1687, the son of a minbter, and attended Marlborough College and Exeter Collage, Oxford. He was ordained a priest In 1913. Dr, Fbher was an assbtant master at Marlborough College f o r throe years, and was Headmaster of Repton School from 1814 to 1932, when he was made Bbhop of Chester. In 1939 he became Bbhop of London. From 1939 to 1948 he was also Dean of the Chapels Royal. BETHEL TABERNACLE too tontacoit Church of tonNoc IS tOAAi Worahip 11 A.M Sun. Tum. and Thun, 7.00 PM Ruv ondMrt t Crouch 1348 BoIcKdn A »ltM Abriuna, Jon Birnkrwt, Piter Biler, townm Priadmm, lO-chelli Qol^» t«ura Horowlto Michael Upehaw and Ihoinai Lyna. 1 *: * * Eadi atudant raodvad a mtoto' tura Iteah and a oettifleata ef Nrt af tba regular Sabbatli Amntt toa laaat el awduikm, termtoatea the JaiiM fall feiU- arwl —toiim tag at 11:11 to toe temple Wlh a epeeial proccMlea to which the Torah Scroll* were carried ; nriennily through too eyna- Children sang and had Am wlto Irult I toe youngstera goodim. The Simcbat Torah aarvito will taka ptoea at 7:to tonight with Rabbi Ernest J. Conrai!^ ottldat- Youngstors 'Pionoor' NEW YORK m - Younpten -ork at such camp projects as gardening, building construction, painting and trail blazing in a series oi " ■ ' ■' by the New York Federation of Reform Synagogues, Prayer and study also arc includsd. CHURCH ot GOD EaM eke at Andarion Evwiino Seetfcs 7-00 PM Young fMplM Sorvko Wed., 7iOOPM Seu. CMsI D. Moore Laymen In more than 1M,0M churches throughout toe United States and Canada and in mill' tary chapels all over the world take charge of worship services in It special way tomorrow, for it will be Laymen’s Sunday. The theme of too day is Good Stewards”. Laymen’s Sunday was first instituted because of a need for deeper Christian experience on the part of laymen and to provide opportunity for them to wlt- CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12WonwSt. Speaker 7.30 P.M. Horace John Drake Sllvnr Tno, Wndnuidoy 7.30 PM FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin . FE 4-7631 Sunday School... 10iOO A.M. Sunday Worship.. 11 lOO A.M. Sunday Evening . . 7:30 P.M. Wednesdoy Choir,. 6:30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer 7:30 P.M. Solurday Servko i. 7i30 P.M. Rev. Ttmmf Guest, jMsior FE 2-0314 CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN 47gOMtoiiltoi»WalaiM CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJEa for SUNDAY DOCTRINE OF ATONEMENT Sunday Swvicwi and Sunday ^diool lliOOAM Wodhwday ^fng StovIcmSFM. Reading Room 14 W. Huron St. Open Daily 11 AJVLtoS P.M. Friday to 9 P.M. First Church of Christ Scientist Iwnncuomi williams Sirooli PONTIAC I 9:45 m SUNDAY RADIO STATION CKLW 800 KC Laymen Serve School tof Minfoni Sft for FIvo Sundoyt Hw (tohland M MWbt ' '.................. Day at ton U PA. Morlei toto- Frank Martin win pnwide with Badl Maidleta, NonBaaTtoy and John mUer and Edward Valalnia wm address the oengregatom ea toe theme. ’’Stewards of Ood’i Grace” Sunday Sebfel b sehedahd for 11:11 a.m. Hw annual School et Mtasioai which begins at«:» pA. tomor-“ for fivw group fwabiw tto—yOii. CtoP--NtaaWitom* b dadraumet toi sdhodl and Mrs. Irl Williams, Ftoidc Martin and Mrs. Gtaytoa jtoCbsHwailWtosnbnn' ' ^ AM«»Cliw^Sdmo^ -4 - and Raymond Ceombe, Mrs. Gerald Wri^t and Mrs. John Dugan, young people. *1 House uMhe towmege 4 to 4 PML FES-1744 LEAD WORSHIP-Among laymen leading worship service at the (Yiscent FUUs Baptist Church in Waterford Town-toip Aimorrow will be Lae Suthertand of 77 N. Johnson Ave., left, and Rudy Schettling of 215 Hershey Road. Rev. Robert L, Adams of 2288 Crescent Lake Road, right, b their pastor. Others participating wUl be Norman Schmucfc, George Wlboh, Cerl Meng, Sydney Wood, Robert Elam and Charles Jimior class teachers wfll he Mrs. Lee Mnrphy and Mrs. John Nash. Rnto Rldby wfll head the nrlmarv enmn. Responsibility of the church to he handicap]^, the mentally retmded; toe Amta'lcan indliH and slum areas will be covered. Laymen to Preside, Preach Some of the films teachers will show include ’’Strangers in Their Own Land,” “Peter’s Flying Eagle,” “Dick’s Discovery,” “A Puppy tor Jose” and “Town and Country Cousins.” The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sunday School 9.45 o.m. - Yow*gfeopl*'» Ugteit 6 p.m. Morning Wor^ I i o ni. -Iwwm**'*'' Moling 7.00 pm. WediMiday Pwyw ond PWli* Metong 74» pm. URR. ond NNto GMT b aeWEU. Cm4 .WmSr-SbWliMf-IVev M r*«f fW-veS/WT God MmU WSh US-You, Too, Am InvIMd Of the congregation ^ serve In vartou* other ways. As a part of the morning wo^ sli^ Pastor M. L. Bellinger will dedicate the newly reorganized Men'a Club. first PRESBYTERIAN Albert A. Rkhtorlng, director of Oiristian religious education at First Preshyt^n Church, will speak on “You and Your Church”. Other toyman assisting are four past presidents of the Men’s Club, Earle Van Dyke, uppurKiiuiy *vr n«a« •« wiir ^ ^ ^ ^ Lyndon Satotoiel wfll alng “Thy Word Is a Light” and John Ward will present ’’The Lord’s Prayer” by Malotte as an offeratory aolo. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hunt and Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Pritchett wfll be hesta at toe coffee It was hoped that if they could team to witness to fellow church members It would help them to in their dally lives. Dr. Don L. Catome of the National Council of Churches said this week. ST. JOHN METHODIST Norell White, lay leader of St. John Methodist Church, will preside over the morning service tomorrow. Henry Woods, A. T. MacaskUl and Raphael Hooks ill be lay speakers. Special music will be offered by the Methodist Men’s Chorus and Poetic New Testament BELLEVILLE, lU. W - The New Mtament has been rewritten in poetic term in a book issued ' Mrs. Gertruds Sehmulbsoh, EMlevUte. The vohime to called 'Eternity Yours." mate chorus will sing “How Great Thou Art." Mrs. William Richards of the Ctorkston Methodist Church will speak to the commisaimi bers and teachers of the church school Tuesday evening. Methodist Men are sponsoring fish dinner starting at 5:30 p.m. Friday. The public is invited. TRINITY, WATERFORD TWP. Tom Peterson, Mrs. William Thomas, Harry Timmerman, Jacob Matieson and James Wohl- atthemoRilfigitoriHlp in Trinity Methodist Church, Waterford Township. Services are currently being held in Schoolcraft School 6400 Maceday Drive. F. W. Talbot will present the Rev. Paul D. Cross, assistant pastor, will direct a discussion on The Sermon on the Mount” Sunday evening. Arthur Van Ryzln and Ted Koella will be toy commissioners to the October meeting of the Presbytrey Cf Detroit in Grosse Pointe Woods Presbyterian Church. COVERT METHODIST Laymen of the Covert Method-it Church will be in charge of the worship hour tomorrow <31;^ led Ronald 's Day Loyalty Si lay wfll be Junior high young people will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday and the senior high group at 7 p.m. Programs include devotion, recreation and refreshments. Bible study tor women will be held at 0:30 a.m; Tuesday. The finance committee will get together at 8 p.m. Wednesilay and the official board at 8 p.m. Thurs-dny CENTRAL METHODIST The two morning worship services of Central Methodist Church held in Isaac Crary School at 9:15 and 10:45 a.m. will be conducted by toymen of the church. Richard C. Poole wiU mside and William J. Lacy and Dr. HM4, ChartosJH8IIJM Hetry Doo^« ^ Jerl Coe'will be speakers and • irthe eaflylmiir. Jdhh E. Milter Witt offer------------" Poslor Participates in Son's Ordination Rev. J. K. Beriche and Rev. R. 0. Porter, fonner Pontiac rest-dents, were ordained to the ministry at the Central District and Prayer Conference of the Christian A Mfutonaiy Alliance Church hM In Lexington, Ky. last week. fiance, Ohio. He was a of the Pontisc AUlanes ( Rev. Mr. Berache of partidpated in the ordlnatkm emgny for the two young mex Paetor ot the Chiiitian h Mie- duiky, Ohio, Rev. Mr. Bersche ia the eon ol Rev. and Mrs. 0. J. Berache to dwrge of the pastorate of toe looBl AUlanca Church. A graduate of Ponttoc Central H^ School aad Nyack Mlaakm-ary College, Pastor Bersche and his wife are missionary candidates of the foreign department of the denomination which now reachea 34 foreign countries and nip-ports 860 missionaries. the J. M. Porters of 11 Victory Court. A graduate of Pontiac Central and St. Paul Bible College, he Is currently pastor of the Christian A Missionary Alliance Church to De-, MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68W.Wa8on FI 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL ................KXOO AM MORNING WORSHIP HOUR..........11:00 AM. *IHE SIN Of worship- evening SERVICE...... 7i30PMk ^*woiMwooor nUhCm4k^tmM Elbert M. WUmot will speak on 'Layman’s Day.” ‘Seek Ye the Lord” and Chancel Choir will present “Be Thou My Vision.” Others assisting in the first service will include Mrs. William E. Bullock, Mrs. Daniel T. Murphy Jr., and J. Harry Baker. Mrs. Harold W. Sibley will give toe call to worship at 19:45 Church PR Handbook Published in Joint Move be Ley C. Bennett and William H. Taylor Jr. The Wonten’n-Bneie t y tor Christian Service is sponsoring a ve dinner from 5 to 7 1p.m. Thursday. Hosts will be Rev. and Mrs. Harold Johnson, appetizer course; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Stanke, 2261 E. Hammond Lake Road, main course; and dessert will be at toe Enar Wests, 2141 N. Hammond Lake Road. ST. LOUIS W- A new 202-page public relations handbook lor churches, called “Telling the Good News,” was published recently by Concordia ItoU^ing House here as a Joint Venture the National Lutheran CounciJ, t h e Lutheran Church-Mlssouri Synod and the United Lutheran Church’s Department of Press, Radio and Television. A "highly signifloant'’ step, observed United Lutheran President Franklin Clark Fry. “The Good News is the church's CHURCH OP SPIRITUAL FEliOWSHIP MATA TfMPLE-2024 PONTIAC ROAD ftonswiy SL liultiAMsriia^ FELLOWSHIP SUNDAY 8MVtois2i30>-C|icira4Ssr«fc*7iS0 HAMOINNBtSRM. tmOfadwSlwdiiiwufCti^^ Dr. Milton H. Bank, minister of Centtal, announced the first services in the new chiUY;h will be held on Oct. 28. There will be baptism and reception of members. Consecratioh of the new building with Bishop Marshall R. Reed preaching is planned for Dec. 9. Reorganized CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of Ixrtter Day Saints SwvtotllAMaiMiyPM. Staak Contersnoe - -----JWIeelHIglrSdiool---- • PM BraodMNKM WPON Fi^T NAZARENE 60 STATE ST. SUNDAY SCHOOL ... 9:45 A.M. BABY DAY PROGRAM MORNING WORSHIP... II4X) AM. SERMON "IF A onto (XHJLD CHOOSE A HOMT YOUTH FELLOWSHIP........... 6:00 PM evangelistic SERVICE .........7.00 PM JACK BURTOH. MINISTER OE MUSIC J.E. VAN ALLEN PASTOR FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH COR. OAKLAND AND SAGINAW STREETS RsY. Robert H. Shshem, Poilor 9i45 AM. SUNDAY SCHCXDL (|daM*i for All AgeO 10.45 AM. MORNING WORSHIPJERVICE Lwmnm (Meuage BrwtdcaH OverCKLM 5i45 P.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP GROUPS 7.00 P.M. EVENING EVANGELISTIC SERVICE WEDNESDAY, 7.30 PM. MIDWEEK PRAYER SERVICE First Presbyterian Church HURON At Wayne REV. GALEN E. HERSHEY, PASTOR REV. PAUL D. CROSS. ASST. PASTOR ALBERT A. RiDDERiNG, ChritHan Education Djrector 9^30 and 11.00 AM 9:30TS«m«0Am Worihip Service . . Church'Scliooi“;r EMMANUEL BAPTIST 645 S. Telegraph Rood ,_ .. i«.r wR?ti t . . Two Decades of Ministorrngf * X ond Around the World • ■ - • EVANGELISM. Preach ing the "old Time Gospel' and the, absolute author ity of thfe Bible, Li; TEACHING: Fastest grow ing Sunday School in Oakland County-*-1500 overage. T • MISSIONS. Starting 7 new churches in Pontiac area. 20 years of radio ministry Missionaries around the world. \« EDUCATING. Emmanuel \ CHRISTIAN SCHOOL 1 and ’ \ . MIDVYESTERN BAPTIST \ seminary 20th* ANNIVERSARY SERVICES SUNDAY; OaOBER 21 10 A M, OR. WILLARD STALLCUP, petotur, Alobomo I l:0q,A.M. r- OR. TOM MALONE 7i00 P.M. - OR. CABEL ROBERTS, Fort Worth, Textts $m:iM musk: lY ockxiMAN sftom c» eiiBCm AT Att lewiti# > > 1425 Sunday School Attendance Lost Stmdby' ^ THE IWJTIAC PBE8S, SATTOBDAY, OCTOBBlIl W, I»M i '• upholds» -C^5tnp,vy Eiateni Junior High SdM^ opms ht PTSA TuMdiqr "«t 7:30 |>m in Om idiool cafMn* rin. witfa Merlo Smith, icbool A tiny nwy 'lomrihw cbnia inioviiM ’*forM*i|arit ^■uVtuiiLJiui came Mrs. Rolwrt W«yno ^......-IWifiilir fnrinir In qt lijrlianra fl§Ml5Swi5~®" fiFillil ' JSl 0»#. Ckw Hiiwigh." Open houM is planned from 7 to 9 p.m. Nov. 14. ' Mrs. Ihomas Bartle an* nounces the following conuQlt-tees for the year: Mrs. Marvin Mcyicar. mother vice president; 3^. Ronald KaSh* er, teacher vice president; Rev. Charlea E. Cushing o^ fered the high nu|IUal Mass. The ymlding breakfast was served in the Hotel WaUnm. The newlyweds left for a trip to the Smoky Mountains and the Southern states fol* Bfrs. James Hartaock, secre* tary; Mrs. Robert Klinger, historian; and Mrs. Rayn^ n the OUvor Street homa of the William J. Robertsons, parents of Uw Inlde. AUen Ebv tHB s a r ▼ e on safety and Mrs. Bruce Graham and Mrs. Alien Bbey, Ivory silk kyied tte bride’s street- Lyle Abel, Oakland County Cooper* alive Extension director (left); Josephine Lawyer, county consumer marketing information agent; and Larry Ewing, representing Michigan State University Cooperative Extension Service, spoke during the Oakland County Farm Bureau Women's Committee annual. luncheon Friday at Independence Township Hall. On hoqtitalityare MTs. Glran Ogg, Mrs. Oimrad Bur* lisim, Mrs. Efosia Rajas and Thomas Bartle, with Mrs. Lawrence Proper on social. City-Farm Event Fasty^ The list continues with Mrs. Gerald Navarre, health; Mrs. Howard Smith, PTA Magazine; Mrs. Walter Oakley and Mrs. Roland Curtis, budget and finance; Mrs. James Cummings and Mrs. Roy Fleming, telephone; H o m e-room representative is M r s. Ernest Andrew. bell skirt and basque I accented srith narrow set-in belt. CLOUD VEIL Her ctoud veil of French illusion was fitted to an alpaca pillbox. She carried co[^* tipped gardenias and white roses combined with Fuji chrysanthemums, wheat and ivy in a semicascade bouquet. Dokres HtAerUon, daughter of the William /. Robertsoiu, Oliver Street, to Robert Wayne Bender, m of the Fronds Benders of Spence Street. Mrs. Dale FWyna. Mrs. Adalbert Ayres ai^ ** nounced an urgent need ef ' Moot Excellent Chief Mrs. Charles Lennon anninted Mrs. Paid Ettar, Mrs. UW I Cowie and Mrs. Georgs Newlin'to work on a survey ‘ eomiMttae fw tiM elB^ of the recent I OonveniiBa ef Highlights of tha Srand Templa Oonw .>ytliiaa Mslere at I Henrooe, Dstrrit. were given by Mrs. William Vance, dele- by Mrs. Fred Wheeler. MTs. MRS. ROBERT WAYNE BENDER Ayres. By REBA HEINTZELMAN The aroma of food cooking floated through Independence Township Hall at noon Friday. tato flakes and cherries to Europe,” he said. ‘‘The buyer-seller market at Rotterdam, in the Netherlands is Twoming,” he added. too heavy, he said. “This creates fat, and the public wants nice, lean meat. Fat on pork is waste and decreases the quality.” Mrs. WiUiam Shelton, Orchard Lake, her sister’s matron of honor, and Connie Rae Cromer, bridesmaid, appeared in bisque silk; alpaca with semitunic skirts. Marriage Never Automatic; Service Definitely Needed Downstairs, women members of the Oakland County Farm Bureau were busy showing their city-sisters a thing -embroidered Alencon lace. The newlyweds will live in Birmingham. An award to the Michigan StudentjiNurse of 1962 and a presentiitton by Kate Ireland on the Frontier Nursing Service will highlight a Joint convention of the Michigan State Student Nurse Association and the Michigan State Nurses Association, Oct. 31, Tfov I and 3 In the Hotel Pant-lind. Grand Rapids. MSNA for their evening pr(h ’Thursday morning, Luther Christman, RN, MSNA presi- The student’s role and responsibility in national de-f e n s e will be discussed by Mrs. Marie ..Jtodriguez, RN, Royal Oak, Clril defense nursing consultant, Oakland County Health Department, on opening day. with the Michigan Department of Mental Health, will discuss nursing in transition. A panel discussion with district MSSNA presidents will follow. Constance C. Lucia, RN, of Lansing, consultant in nursing practice with the Michigan Board of Nursing, will sj^ak concerning interstate licensure on PViday. Surprised by the Rodents of Miclt-igan State University Oakland, Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson of Rochester beams during her happy birthday celebration at the schooFs Student Center Friday. OnHerTSthBlrtliday MSUO Students Fete Mrs. r^ilson The students of Michigan State University Oakland honored Mrs. Alfred Q. Wilson of Rochester with ■ % of the conferMioo i New state officers will be narty on her 79th birthday announced at the closing busi- PYlday in the Oakland Stu- . A session on or liability by Thomas C; Walsh, attorney and legal consultant to the MSNA, will follow. Tho. group wiU join the Three films will be shown during the convention; “The Role of Nursing in Infection Control,” “Pulse of Life” and “Sorting in Mi (Jare.”^ dent Center. 7 Mrs. to the campus at noon to attend a meeting of the senior class aqcial com-mittof. When the divider waU for new business was responded to by the singing of ‘‘Happy Birthday.’’ ’The affair was organised and carried out by the stu- rto show their admlra-and affection to Mrs WUaon; who in 1967, with her bearing the slgnMarMtat lhe student body, designed by Tom Moeie of Waierfoixl, an art major at MSUO, ms pra-to Mrs. misen by Becker, a Rochester acre estate and M.0W,Md, to ......lanewu *. The 31 candles ycake 'Jssat Vvl/ Mon PciyS Unless Bill Overly Big car ind &tw* in home. On the mqr home ew of the woiiNO Mfimted that we etop at e very nice orffee ihop whlehwehadtopaaeforaome-tbimto eat.' ^ * w .■ a AH wore io favor and M We >to^. We had oandwlchee aiSTo^. My huoband paid the hM and later each of the vromon ottered him their share wMA he Tohiaed to accept. 1 would like t« know if. ink would not have been proper for him to haye taken their money as these women were not moots of ours. A: As these women were not yoitt guests* It was not your husband’s obligation to pay for but if the amount of the was not overly large and he could easily afford to pay it. it would have been “cheap” tfxe him to let them pay their share. ★ ★ ★ Q; A friend of mine has been divorced six years and is now remaitying her ex-husband. I would like to know if her friends are expected to give her wedding presents. If she had been nurrying someone else, 1 could see giving her wedding presenU but as she is nwrrylng her former husband, I don’t thbik it is at all necessary; in fact it seems silly to me. ★ ♦ ★ There are some who feel THB TOWTIAC FBESS, SATPRPAY. OCTQBEB iW, 1W2 WASHINGTON, D. C. - Twen-ty years ago, on Nov. 2S, 1942, the Coast Guard Women’s Reserve, known as the SPARs, was organized to free male military personnel for duty on World War II battlefronts. Since then, women have been be sent. What is your opinion? A; I agree with you that wedding presents in this case are not at all necessary, es-pecially^for any of her friends who gave her presents at the time of her first nurriage. ★ w ★ Q: I have been going with a young man for the past seven months. He has asked me to go with him to spend the weekend with relaOves of his who live hi the country. He said they have asked him to bring me. Would it be proper for me to go? A: Not unless you receive a personal invitation directly from the hostess by note or telephone. WWW Details concerning the announcement of an engagement ^e described in the new Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Announcing the En-gagem^t.’’'To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, care of The Pontiac Press. Namy Rabaut Aquinas Quin's Court Nincy Rbliaot. a sophopwre was elected to the queen's court which wiH reign during the mM wMkend festivities at Aqutos CoUege, Grand Rapids, through Sunday. She is the darter of the Paul Rabauts, Locklid t«ne. - w w Antique cars will take patrons on campus tours. Aqubi|M is a private coedu-cati^ college which Is cele-brsih^l its 40th anniversary. Table Talk Ancient Greek drawings and frescos show tables not unlike our modem cocktail tables, in size and shape, drawn up close to the couch, laden with food and drink. Hardwood tables discovered centuries later were made ot oak or olive, inlaid with scheduled I to g pjn. TUasday and I pjn. at the OoMwadiy beth Lake Road, Waterford Town-shbz, is fsnsi^ diahrman of the Part of Michigan State University Oakland’s three-day first annual Symposium on the Arts it the Mi^igan sculptor’s competition, bringing models and designs from some of the state’s leading miUs. One (ksign will be selection for incorporation, full site, into a garden and refleaing pool setting on campus., Dr. John Galloway, MSUO professor of art, views some entries with senior students, Julie Ann Becker of Rochester and Michael Deller of Detroit. The Symposium opens Wednesday and runs through Friday. SPARs Once Again Taking Enlistments acUvely associated with our old- SPAR is the informal name toe Coast Guard Women Reserves. The letters stand for the Coast Guaid’i latin motto and its English translation: SEMPER PAR-ATUS — “Always Ready!” SPAR officers and enlisted SPARs share the mission of the ________iranch ... to be trained and available to supplement the regular coast guard in time of Enlisted women took their recruit training at Hunter College in New York City unUI a new SPAR training center was created at Palm Beach, Fla. SPAR officers were trained and commissioned at the United States Coast Guard Academy at New London, Conn. They take great pride In the fact that they were the only service women ever toJ» b^^^ doctrinated at one of the nation’s military academies. By the end ot World War H, ap-prazlmately 1AM were serving in the coast guard. At the end of World War II, the SPARs were separated from active service either by discharge or release to inactive duty. In 1947, after the law establishing the Coast Guard Women’s Reserve was. through inadvertance, One of the make-up mistakes to avoid, says Josephine Cowman, is putting rouge too low on the face. Avoid Errors By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Things to avoid: Tight curls. Rouge wdiich is well defined or defined at all. ★ A A A mannish looking haircut in the back, It can be tapered and still out the pink. Therefmre use pinker powder at ni^t. Heels so high that they turn a lovely walk into a hobble. Fat legs with ankle straps. W W ★ ' If you would like Josephine Low-nans leaflet which will help yon make-up problems, send a Shoulder length hair, if you are nore than 35. « Make-up that ends at the jaw-Ine. Lashes that are too beady. shapes. FoL le Of yi » natnral line of your to correct a defect. A straight black hard line for Rouge too low on the face, e ★ w Powder which is too light for the skin tone. Try to match the powder to ym natural cdoctog, iw “ For Your Woddlnt QUALITY and QanntHy widi your request for leaflet No. so “What’s Going On?” Adeboss your request to Josephine Low-man in care of The Pontiac Proas. the coast guard opwates in a number of cities thronghoat the countqr. There are over 2M of these reserve units and SPARs assigned to them are helping to ease the^burden of clerical The commandant, U. S. Coast Guard, has announced that applications are now being accepted for the Coast Guard Officer Candidate School which will convene at Yorktown, Va. on Feb. 11, 1963. A subsequent class for officer candidates will convene in September 1963. ★ ★ ★ Applicants must bb between the ages of 21 and 26 and ' time legislaUon, all SPARs remaining in an “active status” There was none on active gain until 1949 when the Women’s Reserve was reestablished. To correct this Inequity, and to give recognition to those SPARs who were ready and willing to serve if called on, lerislatic cently enacted providw for constructive service credit between 1947 and 1949. With the outbreak of the Korean War. a limited number of SPARs came baek on aethre duty to take ever specialised jobs. Today a small group of on active duty. Althouid) the SPARs represent the smallest group, oompiued to >ther women's organisations in the armed services, there are pertinent reasons for this fact. ENUSTINO TODAY First, all SPARs are reserves. The coast guard is the only ermed fbree that has not integrated women into its regular branch. Ail SPARs serving on active duty today are veterans of World War H. Blood,Bonk in by Women Itda^m^.pa^ hnhec^t^i \t$m ot Uneobt Memorial wemj roents. thoqgh not neeesshry. may be made by calling Mra. Robert Munro, OR 34191 Church Wpmtth HoTd 1-unchiBoh Second, the complex and versatile duUes of the coast gudrd today require personnel available for rotation ashore and afloat, and women cannot be assigned to lea duty in the coast guard. The coast guard is enlisting womea reserves today. It if Woman’s Society of World Service. Baldwin AvAnujs Evai«elical United Brethren Church, held a hmdieon meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. , A. Harold Pearsall on Kemp Street. Mrs. Phillip Waldie led the mission study, Mrs. Oiarles Parrott also participated in the program, along with Mrs. George Hollis. Set WCTU Party Frances Willard Unit, Women’s Christian Temperance UnkNi, plans a benefit party 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. John Hall of South Sanford Street. /, ,> . , • • mSUT M PRESENTS to YOtr Saturday Night for Your Bandng Emil Salt and the Kinfriiiy Im WlUl IlllMilW^ of the latest Dance Rhythms n at '# VifU Our Friendly Cocktail Lounge with Don Preston at the Piano Bar Open 7 Days a Week ,.. Lupcheon U:30 ajn. to 3;»'| .i. Dbmer 9 pjn, to U p^t. a la Carls to 1:30 pjn. ... Brunch 10 ajn. to 3 p.m. Dtoner. Noon to 11 pJB. Call Jor Reservations Phone MI 4-1400 and JO 4-5910 SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PORTRAIT OFFER floM Their lAfeOme Portrait, roltcn iVow. AvM the Jbufc/ primarily designed to bring aocradited college or university at the time of selection for this Upon completion of 17 weeks Indoctrtaiathm at the Officer Candidate 8dwoI, graduates are commissioned ensip hi the U. S. Coast Guard Reserve and required to serve on active duty for three years. For furthar infotmatlon write Conunandant (PTP-2), U. S. Coast Guard, Washington 2S, D.C. Alpha Omicron Notes 5th Year * Alpha Omicron Chapter of the Delta Kappa Oanuna Society observed Iti 1 its fifth I in the home of Mrs. Arthur Van Riper in Royal Oak. Four memhen initiated ware Mrs. William Sharrard. Nbrs. Paul D. Carter, MTa. Homer Dado and Mrs. Walter Kingsley. SIiMBi#ier Seleethm of Pkoolb, No Akinin . NeeeaMxr at Studio Oifjr kiiidfw Vovnaibw 19. 1962 FAMILY BBdbBD FLAN MaMBBR STUDIO X VARDEN STUDIO .23 E. Lawrence ^ PE4-1701 Add a sunshine toudi to a kitchen with these charming girls— delightful sUtcheryt Always - welooma glftsl Embroider fliese lively sisters In vivid colors on towels or cloth. Pattern 6M: six 6x6W-inch mo-tlfk; directions. .Thtaty-flve cents (coins) this pattern-end 10 cents (or each pattern for Isbclam mall, Send to Laura Wheeler, care ot The Pontiac Press. 124 Needlecraft Dqpt., P.o. Box 161, Old Cbelsaa StaUon, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, NAME. ADDRESS and ZONE. NEWEST RAGE-SMOCKED diecraft designs in our new 1963 Needlecraft Catalog Just outl Fashions, furnishings to crodiet, knit, sew, weave, embroider, . Plus (red pattern. Sand 26 irku’r’EiK't:-. M.M :i ftrmt X MtaltoUm | i c. R. HASKILL STUDIO X I ML ClMBOM St. PB X 5e#aaaaa#aafaa*a»***«*«»*****»»»*********^***** NEW WAY ... Cleans my rugs . I hovs tried over ond ovsr again fa rsitora the color and lustre of my rugs by vacuum cisoning-but, it did not satisfy me ... Nsw Way’s dmp cisoning does thi job right. Just pkone .. * FE 2.71S2 Proftiiionol, experienced crofte-men ond new modern cleoning aquipmeitt remove! the dmoly im-todoed grit end Art tiMt shortens the life of yout rugs - you'll be lotisfied; They pick-up one deliver. very reasonable, tool ★ NEW WAY ^ RCC AND i^RPET dJEANEKS 42 WI8NER STREETPONTIAC 303 Main Street Rochester, Michigan (between yie Dants and the Doris Hayes Shops) Hair Dressers ... private interviews will be held to further staff our new Beauty Salon, opening this month.. ideally located to serve the Rochesteri ; Birmingham, Bloomfield ond Pontloc art . . . the atmosphere that surround's; thls'Salpn offers an exciting i \ to talented hpir drmrs./' Por private interviews: Dl 1-1 New Ideas in s at Standard Electric authontio early american j Come in and Miect your new Flxturf froh^ Pontiac's largest selection of troditionol of contemporory styled lighting. ' ’ : ~. TWELVB- ... j .J,:. THE EOK I EU: l*mm, miAtl>AY. OCToI^er 20/i9ea • Congrcihilatoi Fir «UMSING (II ~ Gov. Swainson hu lent litters of ronff'atulations to two industries afti^ 'one an> nounced an expansion and the oth> er started operations in the Upper Poiinsulis. The Jervis B. Wel|» Co|. of Detroit announced a 9I.S4nliIi(m expansion program.' Ilie Nets Glove and Mitten Co. Of j Milwaukee has announced thei OP' ling of a plant at Ironwood. | 1 hough hummingbirds range! om Alaska to South America’s, tip, more than half the world’s 319 known species Inhabit Ecuador. One subspecies lives only on Ecuador’s Mount Chimborazo at altitudes of 12.000 to l&.OOO feet. FINGERS SEE US AT THE PONTIAC COIN SHOW— 3CC ru H't- r vii . .. ^ -- -ELKS CLUB Building H4 Orchorg'tdR^ Ave.. Pontiac. October 21st—Noon to 6:00 p. 1^: We will be buying Collections, Accumulations ond Estates. FINGERS PONTIAC MALL PHONE tS2-04ll Strand ^ Lady and the Tramp 1:00~3sS5-6sSO-9t4S * Armdsf Angals 2i20~S:1S~ti10 FREE TICKETS ON NEW ‘'TEMPESF-DMWIN6 OCT. 29Ni DoGso^t ' >\< Disney s\ happiest motion picture THREE’S HAPPY NUMBER — Good things arrive in triplicate at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sorge of Bedford' Township. Here their 6-year-old triplet daugh- ters cuddle the three poodle puppies bom to the family dog, Buttercup, siJ weeks ago. from left Cathy, Christy and Cindy, each with her favorite pup. Hypnosis Can Relieve Fears of Heart Attack, Expert Says CHICAGO (UPI)-People afraid of having a heart attack can be helped through hypnosis, a Canadian physician said yesterday. Dr. Nathan Schecier, of Ottawa, told the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis such fears are borne by persons “who carry an unusual amount of anxiety in their personality structure.” sis have usually been to more than one physician and h a v e been hospitalized,” he said, “They will graphically relate their experiences of having ‘Even though told their heart all right, they are left with a li gering doubt. At times this is because no thorough explanation has been given as to the psychogenic origin of their systems.” REDUCES REACTION Hypnosis meets these fears, Schecter said, by reducing the patient’s reaction to stress. “jince in hypnosis, the patient is more susceptible to suggestion, various therapeutic suggestions I become effective,” he said. These serve to quiet the patient’s reactions by damping down, as it were, his general activity.” Ur. William S. Kroger, Los Angeles, in another paper, challenged assertions by some that hypnosis is dangerous. “The hypnotic relationship, Kroger said, “is used merely to get the patient and the therapist to focus on the communication process with more intensity.” ‘The incontroverable fact is that no one has ever died of hypnosis,” he said. “Can the s a m e thing be said about shock therapy which is used by psychiatrists primarily for symptom removal? Actually, it is doubtful if there is a modality less dangerous in medicalhealing than hypnotism.” Nitrous, oxide, known as “laughing gas,” was described by Dr. George B. Bingham, Knoxville, Tenn., as a good preparatory agent for implanting hypnotic suggestions In dental patients. “Nitrous oxide increases thn suggestibility of most, if not all, ^ fEXCUISIllE FIBCT ^^^^FOIIHM gH0WW?l THE ONE YEAR OUT OF HIGH SCHOOL CROWD MSr CAHS, GIRLS.. NO PI ACL W GO! patients,” Bingham said. “For use in dentistry, hypnosis enjoys Uttle if any advantage over nitrous oxide analgesia while being more time-consuming." Dr. Kay F. Thompson, Pittsburgh, Pa., said the unconscious mind exerts great control over the nervous system which in turn influences pain and bleeding associated with dentistry. She reviewed several cases in which hypnosis was used successfully to make suggestions'to the unconscious dental patient. OK Peveippment Plgni LANSING (J) — Gov. Swainson’s office has announced that the Area Redevelopment Administration has approved over-all economic development programs for Arenac and Emmet counties. The approval will enable the counties to receive federal aid for local economic development programs. -V - JacK HieGiaiit Hiller FiyjfjioKTtimoiiR' KeImn Mathews jiMEREniH JEFFCHAn¥eRhwd«b8^^ , EXCLUSIVE 11 FIRSTr™* PONTIAC 3 BIG , UNITS ' OP«N6s30 , STARTS 7 PM. RORY CALHOUN YOKO TAN! [ OF THEM ALU ■ I i3' ■ ■ I * us BAIIfB I ,12. r "J ' . 1 k I iOn*is/iaSc:op>6 anoCOLORiM HUGO FREGONESE'A PANDA film production^* -.'•r EXCLUSIVE! FIRST PONTIAC SHOWING oHiiftNP.ia. ....... . I STARTS T P.M. FREE!! Eiectrie in-carhaaters MALE ENOUGH TO ATTRIICT A DOZEN WOMEN NOT MM ENOUGH TO OEFNTHFOl TO ONE! w. metrihidldwyn-mayer EUA MARIE SAINT KARL MALDEN V»o^ WARREN ALL fall ANGELA LANSBURY BRANDON deWILDE THf FUNNIEST SfRVICE COMEDY SINCITHIWAR OMS12 Metm*Ooldw]fn‘Mayeri)i«iMii AEum piodiMton JHMNWIMS'JMXm HORIZ^ UEU1ENWIIT 3im backusitfharlesMtOra'i^ Mbtashi Umeki oo-tfaninji lltoB ^OiraiAC w«8g. SAtPBDAY. OCTOBBE 20, 1«W mn in • itagli ptot. to tte V. •.IrndM ■ Didk Vanoe^t , SKYROOM BESTAURANT P0N1UC MUMiaFAL AU^BTt Fa»IIrFM4«tFaMU]rTM«Mt Y«i*n Lmli...ik> KM* SuW ^ WifKAlwiplilwt * :i»7«.t>a*.Aliw» »*» T to »Wmww CHARLEROI, Belgium (AP) Another cam id a deformed that* idomlde babp-ihe fourth in thia country-waa reported bora N«w Thalldomid* Boby (n The haby girl vw bora three di^ ago wltbJier handa direetiy attached to her abouldera. The dhild’a (athar ewpt aa ba told re* portanrhia wife, tt, of Poliah orlt-, -bidiBliiniii dnifln ibi industries Get R^oaTaxes WASHINOTOH (l> •> Ibe gor* to ite month of her pregnancy. rirat hiker to trevtf the entire length of. the 3.000 Appelechlan mu wu Earl V. Shaffer la 1948. He hiked for tour montha. leflta "yaaterday induaby, the ra and manufactorera of antomo* biiM, machtne................. cal eqdfomaot. Operatora of hoMa, motela and reatauranta alao will be aided by ciafam to liheraliie further the nouneed July 11. CANT ESnMATE SAVINGS IRS officlala paid they could not . eUmate the additidnal tax aav* Inga to be realized by buainesaea. The July dqireciation changea ware calculated to be the equivalent of a H.S4)illion tax cut Tba moat Important cbame an* ounoed yeaMy will i----------“ -aera of audi equmroent a diea, moMa, drink I crockery, glaaaware, linena and allyerware to write off die coat d eu^ Itema in the July reviaion. TMa will mean a conaiderable tax saving for a number of major induatriea because, in the case of the items specified, past writcHiff policies were more liberal than those permitted under the July rules. Fire Rocket in Study of Atmosphere EGUN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (APHA biglMlUtude rocket was laundied over the Gulf of Mexico yesterday as part of the Operation Firefly study of the upper atmosphere. The Weather Bureau at Birmingham, Ala;, said the resul^g arti-flcial cloud was observed in that city and alao at Jackson, Miss. Today’s chemical payload was launched atop a Nike-Cajun, two-stage rocket to an altitude of more than 80 miles. SMOKY-UKE CLOUD The diemicals released into the upper atmosphere created a whitish doughnutehaped doud looking somewhat like a huge smoke ring. Rays of the rising sun turned it to brilliant shades of color for several minutes. This was the sixth in a series about M tests to be launched over the Gulf between mid-October and mid-December. The rockets will carry the chemicals to altitudes of 80 to 150 miles. Ground stations will track upper atmosphere motions and measure other properties. BEAUTY FOUND SLAW-ThO body of Terryl Lee Yelgh, 10-year-old drama student, was found by her mother beneath her bed in her apartment in Van Nuys, Calif. Just before the discovery, the mother, Mrs. Jacqueline Yeigh, had fiM a missing persons report with police. Officers listed strangulation as a possible cause of death. ____________________ Pontiac Theaien*^ EACUjB 8at.-Mbn.: **Jack> tb» Kilter,*’ riii’s Ml TUe.-Thu.: “Judgment at> emberg,” Burt ‘ cer Tracy; "War HURON Sat. - Hia.: "Tba niorrittmv rauders,** Jeff Chmidter, o ‘ Starts FrL: **lfr. Hobbs Vacatten," James Stewart, Maureen O’Hara, color, STRAND ... _..jwing: “Ata gels,” Walt Disney, color: *‘Lady and the Tramp,” Walt Disney, color. CommunHy Theaters r’ to OMMt a ''''Thurt.-flRt: "tbH Thr«« Mooi Orbit/' 0«Uh»," BhirKr MmUIim, SMWM4 of. RoblnMX), c^. . . Thur*.; "Tli» Inltrai." Hl*k i Buiy P«rk«r. BUrt* Prl.; "TKrMn Ooji to todto, ............................ But.“Hotorlow Uat----------- Prulsy, Loto AlbrtBbt, color. World consumption of pulp paper products Is 7T million tons. Economists predict that ttie world’s demand will double by IMS. lANCASftR MCAIRAZ L cl. U lyilllt'MilllllUID ■mMaoa — nKH'BI •‘Mr THE WORIS'S >ujrro SHOW Sac tha axciting '638 togathar for tba flrit timt In ona gigantic axhibitloni Saa tha. world’! biggast ahowing of naw U. 8. cart and tiiucka-mora aim, ttylas and 8pa cial faaturas than aver! Saa danling dia plays, aducational axhibitt, glamonMil ityla ihowtl /> And In baautlful naw Convantlon Arana-thameltlng mualcal rivua Amarfca Waaa AhiMI Braadwfof ttarti Brilliant dancings color and loiindi Original ntusici Spactac iMar adtartainmant tour tlmat dallyl 44th NATIONAL AUTOMOBILE SHOW COBO HALL^DETROIT-OCT.20-28 ADULTS $1.00 CHILDREN 35c ■ ^-rj • V TOtWCTBtW SHOPPER STOPPERS BUY NOW and SAVE Outstanding Values for Early-in-the-Week Shoppers! „ „ W M ■ R ■ ■ ■ rPTf ■ ■■■ TTTTP’nri ■ » TlllMlMlllim WE ME RUBMUM flWI By GIVING AWAY 2 FREE CARSI COME IN AND REGISTERI ’63 RAMBLER CUSSIC 2-OOOR SEDAN FUUY FMrraRT *19» tmoRiMN Pomiiae’M Ntwnt AtOkarM RambUr Dtahrl SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE. PE 4<7500 FEATURE of the WEEK! FRUITIAIID'S Own CIDAR HOUSE Featuring OLD MILL SWEET APPLE CIDAR HOME MAOE OONUTS Made While AC|c • Wafch "I® MARKET AUBURN RD at ADAMS GIRLS! GIRLS! GIRLS! Learn a HIGH-PAYING Lifetime Profession Under the Expert Direction of Senor Pablo Lopez Nine Month Beanty Operator’s Course Includes Both Basic and Advanced Tkuining EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS Sterling Beauty School 482S Dixie Hwy at WiUiame Lake Rd. ORS-08S2 Ki OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. t* 10 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 7 P.M. mart GLENWOOD PLAZA . Paddock and N. Par^ at Glenwood ^HALLOWEEN TRICK or TREAT WmATURE BiH MARS BARSH#® Lb.PI(f. Iff Pull One Lb. Pb|fio|ej Have Your Motor Tuned Up Now for Winter Criving Avoid Stalhf Lay-Upn^ Delay» and Hard Starting COMPLETE JOB INCLUDES: Only Adjusting points, condenser, carburetor and outomafic choke. Set timing, clean fuel' filler and dir filter. Plok and adjust front wlitel $| RS btirings bnd brake.......Only I HOUSE SIGNS Vill identify you^ home. Estate markers o md elegance. Attach to port light, mailbox ei ImiF Two Sidod Namo Plotos. Pormanont whito rofloctivo bood lottors. Shin# In cor hoadlights. IHEU UHUSIML 8IFT! .iwnsi illbsH meAe lOdeydolh lawn pr mallbm meAers. Large' and omomonts. 10 day delhreiy time evarletyef styles e...ferlettering.> WohiganFlimMesirtLiiiites. IN Orsl^M Lake Rtf.» Psiitiso FREE REeULM6‘ fe., ^lAtMDssOswNm^i CANDY BARS e Neslle'i e Hsrihsyt e luNerfingsrt • Eto. lo 10-33' HaHswssn Peamt Bvttsr KISSES Mcl4l^nox.PkK.j 24' . Approximately 6S Pieces OHM MILS IS sa. ta ll PJI. ' ' ' ' * 1 Home PERKY BEDROOM - This frothy little bedroom was furnished especially for the Bearss’ only granddaughter, Debbie Theut, 9, who feels like a princess when she snuggles PMtIaa Pr«»i Ph«»o* bjr V»M«rw«r» down under the pink eyelet bedspread. She has plenty of dreamy dreams in this all* pink*and-white room with it’s solid pine-colored maple furniture. I By REBA HEINTZELMAN Pontiac Pi^ Home Editor If a man’s home is his castle, Roger J. Benrss of Rochester is surely a king. For three years before he and his wife built their rambling brick and cut-stone house at 2111 Benedict Lane, Bearss looked for unusual ideas to incorporate in the plans. He claims to have visited between 400 and SOO new homes in the area, observing construction, decoration uUUty And all the effort has been wortb it, says the genial Bearss. The, cheerie vestibule features louvered closet doors. In the living room two white wrought-iron dividers introduce a white and gold room filled with There is no definite decorating scheme in the house. When he saw something he liked — color, different ideas and accesories that appealed to one individual who made collecting things for his home a hobby -r BearssJ&ouilht.^^^i^^^^^ Ciold carpeting, w hit e lamps and sofa make it appear sunlight is continually streaming through the living room’s eyelet ruffled cur- floor is spotted with gold snowflake-type stars. A big hutch is filled with a set of picturesque pottery. ★ ★ ★ One bedroom — decorated sp^ifically for Bearss’ only granddau^ter, 9-year-old Debbie Theut-is strictly “little girl.” The room Is immened in luschras |rfak, like fluffy frosting on a birthday cake. Even the perky kntt poodle on the dresser is soft pink. hlASTER BEDROOM The gold and white theme of the living room is carried on into the master bedroom. The furniture is elegant French Provincial. Walls udiite, and carpet gold. ★ Sr ★ In all three bedrooms, a special treatment of the valance over the windows adds a touch of distinction. ■•★■★★ Rather than loose-hanging top curtains another curtain rod at the bottom of the ohe-foot-deep valance is secured to the sides of the windows, giving a gathered-box or cornice effect. Window-sill length curtains puU easily oh the traverse rods. Bearss has a favorite chair mother. When he got U, the rocker was a “hideous” oak color checked with age. Now ft is a soft white, artistieaUy Utilizing what would be wasted space over the steps to the basement, Bearss had a walk-in pantry built off the dining area. Here are neatly stacked cans of every fruit and vegetable available. Shelves reach from the floor to the ceiling—a trick much overlooked in modem , house building. ★ ★ ★ Over a small table in the front hall, there is a unique picture with bamboo background. Actual ceramic flowers and leaves, seem to be suspended in midair—their bright reds and golds blending with the fall bouquet below on the table. A larger autumn arrangement on the living room marble topped cocktail table is made up of wheat straw, fruit and orange birds of paradise. ★ ★ ★ Silent light switches with a blue dot for seeing at night. Royal Douiton flgmines, and all these the Bearss couple en-. joy in their home fiUed with personal individuality. WRITING NICHE — Here is one of the most used areas in the Bearss’ rambling brick home. Bills are paid, shopping lists made and good telephone conversation with the couple’s many friends are held here. The niche is three steps down from the entrance hall, and is easy to be reached from any imrt of the house. SPACIOUS BATHROOM - Pontiac Press photographer Eddie Vanderworp took this trick mirror-reflection shot of the Bearss’ bathroom from the main hallway. Cream, and brown ceramic tile make up the color scheme with streamlined cupboards and drawers in profusion. A unit containing three sun lamps serves three separate areas. An unusual touch was added when the walls were painted white, then stippled in old leaf. This was accomplished by dipping a paint roller in gold color and rolling the print of a tiny maple leaf onto the walls. ★ ★ ★ The 18-foot-long fireplace with its raised flagstone hearth is topped by soft fruitwood paneling above the mantle, with a sort of knick-knacl^ shelf at one end. Three bright?’ red, green and yellow pillows on the white damask sofa spark up that area. FRIENDLY KITCHEN The kitchen is a warm, friendly place—as it should be. An old logging scene of early up-state Michigan dominates , one wall and blends in with aEAN COT - This not on y applies to the Bearss’ new the fruitwood paneling and *** maple with captain’s chaiif’^ gentleman has cut the grass zig zag and very close, dining room set. Creamy-tan terrazzo" tile He claims this is a winter crew-cut so he doesn’t I much raking in the springtime. OCtTOBER W. ' 4,'<■ •“br-=l Ailing Home ', 0y . and colt |U^ million. V i.»sSS»>MO '' G-P FACTORY FINISHED PHIUI>PINE MAHOGANY le'xS'wall As advertised in Post nil CUSTOMIR PARKING CORWIN UlMia md COAL CO. 117 S. Cwt FE 24315 Ailing Momr Design, Construction Help Disposition Now tfaather ddkiren iratMMdi in school, it may be timely for mother to do somS reflecting on her.‘^homework.” STYLISH RANCH — Inexpenshri but els* tailor made but actually is a clever combina< uches characterise this tkm of stodc items. House contains 1.51S epiere The ensemble Joining feel^of living area. Ys, for wNim»iot lOuii Does she take things in stride or does she fly off the handle at minor irritations? Has she provided the right environment for raising a family? How well does she stand up physically under dhe rigors of her daily routine? If the answers aren’t satisfactory oa all connts, It doesn’t necessarily mean that a visit 4e e physielaaer psycUatriBt is in order. At the root of the trouble, there may be some ailment associated with her home. If so, she should look to a ’‘house doctor” for a cure. Homes are seldom satisfying unless they’re comfortable and relaxing in all inqwrtant respects. Obscure' details of design and construction have strong bearing mi mother’s morale and physical welfare. For example, the ^ical bou^ wife walks nearly eif^t miles in an average day, mostly around the house. How well she endures the strain depends largely on what’s beneath the floors. Dr. R. SdMjdt of Norway, eminent researchist on hou^, says the “hardness of conversely, the K^^ffhtoning effect floors, is an impmtant part of our housing Intiroduce an Early American decor into the bathroom. One such design by a professional decorator used a handsome wood-grained finished hardboard ' a random plahk effect FLOOR PLAN -aration of living an< exceptionally well Design offers 4lear s^ 1 sleeping areas, and ' housekeeping area with kitchen convenient to rear yard, cellar and laundry. Contains 1,510 square feet of living area plus 420 square foot garage. Modem structural systems use himhiir to achieve the desired effect. Hie high resiliency of wood acts as a riiock absorber to cudiion footsteps and alleviate the strain of constant walking. Architect Gives Home Custom Look In, Out Your Dream Home Can Become a Reality in lAYNO HQCHTS By JULES LOH Regular readers of the House of the Week feature are aware we don’t go in for ostentation — frills and ornaments that some might think are attractive, but always are expensive. We do indeed like nice touches that give a home individuality, but insist they be practical. That is, they must not add materially to the cost, must be in good taste and, if possible, serve a useful as well as aesthetic purpose Oakland County's most desirable residentiol area surrounded by 4 large natural lakes, close to new Chrysler Expressway. A newly developed portion of this fine subdivision is now open for inspection. 40 large on-the-lake homesites on Schoolhouse, Loon, Silver and Wormer Lakes are now ready. 75 interior lots with lake privileges are also being developed. City water ond gas—paved roads. Schools, churches ond shopping areas close by. Restricted to better homes. Homesites from $3W5.00—^Terms. BUY NOW AT LOW PALL PRICES JayM Htighta to lecMad •ff WbIIm RM. Vk kUI* wmI of Sitow Uk« Read aM tk mM* MW af SMhabaw Raad. Rap. a* aMwtoM Sat. and Sim. Wa wiH balld yaar drMm liama — ar Silver Lake Censtriction Co. 2747 Huntington Paik Road Off Waltan 2 Blacks law of Silvar Laka Raad FE 2-1722 That’s a tati order, but not a sive look but actually is not, especially in view of the low maintenance required. Wherever possible, York uses indirect llghting-snbtie fllnml-nation of normally dark areas dinette space, large living room, diningroom and covered rear porch. York uses standard materials, but in such a creative way that the house has a custom appearance inside and out. For example, in the front of the house the two-bedroom wln- impon^ one. The proof is today’s selection, J4S in the series, destaMd Ify architect Herman H.fork. The house is a three-bedroom ranch containing 1,510 square feet lof living area plus a 42dsquare-foot garage in overall dimensimis of 07 foot 8 inches wide by 41 foot d^. It has a central foyer, two bathrooms, a generous kitchen with most large supply yards. LIGHTING In the hallways, York specifies walls of prefinished plywood or hardboard that also has an expen- a simple wood panel, shatters The ensemble appears tailor made, but actually it is a clever and tasteful combination of stock items. Similarly, the bow window is a standard part available in with the sonrce of the light con- In fact, it is his contention that a light fixture shouldn’t be seen unless for an ornamental purpose. ’These are the sort of touches we look for; the type features an imaginative architect can fit into a working man’s budget. The floor plan of this house al- M0nth$ to Pay on FHA Term» lARESr ilOWII, Inc. Serving All Your Plumbing Needs for Over SO Years SSIaWP|lM S^ FE 3-7195 HOWTO BUILD, BUY OR SELL YOUR HOME Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included In a S0K;ent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor's estimate. You can order also, for $1, a booklet called YOUR HOME - How 10 Build, Buy or Sell It. Included in it arc small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week Issues. Send oi-ders to The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan. I Enclosed is 50 cents for baby bhwprint on ' i I design J-tt □ ; I belosed la |1 for YOUB HOMK booklet □ ! IKE aM or iwnoi J-43 Statistics A three-bedroom ranch with central foyer, two bathrooms, kitchen with adjoining dinette, living roofn, dining room, covered rear porch, full basement. Contains IJilO square feet of living area plus 420 square foot garage in over-all dimensions of 87 feet, 8 inches by 41 feet deep. lows for sensible access to all rooms, offers clear separation of living and sleeping areas, and an keeping area with the kitchen convenient to the rear yard, cellar and laundry. York has included a large pantry in the kitchen, plus a utility closet opposite the laundry. Note also that the laundry is convenient to the bedroom area, eliminating long treks with the clothes basket. Other deft iWangements, such as counter space adjoining every kitchen facility - refrigerator, oven, range and sink — also help take some of the backache out of housekeeping. The living room contains near-,y 250 square feet, has wall areas adaptable to good furniture arrangement, and with the adjoining foyer and dining room forms a glamorous hub of a spacious formal entertaining area. A covered porch adjoins the p.M desired, it could be converted easily Into a family room. The exterior of the house has t central panel of brick (or stone) between the projections. York prefers this form of highlighting rather thm what he calls the “shirt front look" which results when the brick stops at a corner. Wood shako type shingles cover the side walls except for a small amount of boards and battens used to highlight the garage projection. The garage, incidentally, can be turned so the doon face the front if the lot siae iwohlbits a side entry. New Paneling for Bathroom PiqtHc Finfih Openi Usqgt Rang# The rich, dark wood tones swved as a complementary baekfreuad for the aausnal aceessorioi — antique coach lamps flanking a framod mlr- nsed as a towel bar. These panels were 8 feet tall but only 18 inches wide, which eased handling and Installation in the comparatively small room. As in similar scored patterns, the random vertical grooves eliminated the need for concealing joints between the planks. Plastic - coated hardboard 1 factory-sealed against dirt, grease and moisture, and once applied, the panels need no waxing or further finishing, and do not require reflnishing. letters wipe away, and the rugged surface is simple to keep clean with just a damp cloth or With today’s trend toward com-partmented bathrooms, there is more wall space to challenge the home decorator’s ingenuity and Compartmentizing Helps in Bathroom Looking for Ideas that wUl increase the usefulness of your bathroom? Then you may want to consider compartmentizing. This arrangement offers multiple-bath convenience in the space usually provided for a single bathroom. This idea of separating the fixtures can be applied to modem-iution projects as well as new In compartmentizing a bathroom the fixtures are placed in separate recesses or compait- Thus the bathtub-shower combination may be in one recess, the lavatory in another, and the water closet in a third. The advantage of this arrangement is that three people may the three fixtures simultaneously without getting in each other’s way. Compartmentizing saves space and helps to speed traffic in the bathroom during hours. A Very Familiar Sign ■THEY ARE EViRtWHERE” BUSINESS IS TERRinC Wl liOVS TO TRAM THE SPLIT RANCH ‘Compare This is Everything and more than you'd uxpoct In a' new hemu with more Plus features than you'd dream hoiM prioM from *21,900 ""w I AAedel iMofod In iMbmoer HIIIr »iib. OtiatlmiebMtfcPrivfc_ I SheulMiA Dr. r«mt Nw«h off Weiim llwl. (UnivwtMy Or.) 1% ImllM W«ttof DMwfoww Rocbeifor. R^. ROBERTSON, INC. SRsaiaifoStt-awi-.aww(baL\Miito»asMiii MSiii.iLt-assi SWIFT HOMES FALL SPECIAL! 3 bedroom home 24 x 40 ‘6995 nomonby DOWN THIS HOMEIRECTED . INCLUDING foundation «MCHIMN^ FLUSI MATERIALS FOR—. HEATING-PLUMBING-wiring-dry WALL-TRIM and DOORS m MONEY DOWN TO UTT OWNERS IS YEAR riNANCING NO PAYMENTS UNTIL NEXT YEAR TOWNSEND-SWIFT HOMES, INC 2819 UpMr M. (M-24)—Uk« Orion 5 Mitsa North of Pontlae of Oraanehiald Rd. O,«X«.ltaFH.10-I pg ||.903{ SaLlO'S Stiul-S MODERNIZE NOW! DEAL DIRECT With BUILDER All Types of Remodeling • ATTICS • RECREATION ROOMS • ADDITIONS » KITCHENS • PORCH ENCLOSURES • ROOFING • ALUM. SIDING • ALUM. DOORS and WINDOWS • HOUSE RAISING CuBtom Built FHA GARAGES I Ho Down Payment eBBeiINHhW I yp 5 CONSTRUaiON UttllN COMPANY Building in Pontiac Since 1945 2256 FE 2-1211 Dixie Highway Optnton on Duty 24 Hours Dally HAGGERTY announces TRUCKLOAD SALE ZONOLITr EASY WAY CUTS FUEL BILLSyS40%! BUY ZONOLITE’ INSULATION WITH WHAT YOU SAVE OpOUR ITI Zonoiiie Iniu- ^LIVIL........................ lelton 'pours like popcorn", free levellne tool. Now you Beelt every heat lask. Fills house.Is Insulated permanenll around pipes, wiring. No cutting, lor winisr warmth, big fuel sa« tming. stapling. BUY THIS WEEK SAVE 20F A BAG $139 |fos Casli and Carry IMT Naggedf Nuyr-Wslsd Uke Between W. Mepla Rd. end Feinfiec Trail of R. R. Haurat 7 a.niv ta A g.ni./ Sot. 7 a.m. to 1 g.m* ■'I TinS \jPOKTlAC FBteSS, 8At0BDAY, OCTOBBB ^0,1962 klta for Toller Rooms 'Witt tt« wood pUmMuNMiMtn qritem, ujler roonu «r« poaottlo in tte typically low contemporary homo. Awording to the Souttem Pine Asaociation. a Mnch thick wood roof deck does as a roof structui Because of this room hei^t Is roof level. duty Uing, to tq> 2 Furnaces to Heat One Home Two furnaces to heat OM home? er’s now are InstalUng two air furnaces in their larger homes to Insure a more efficient, uniform Job of heating. And they're doing it at little or no extra.cost |o the lip^ on Beautiful BeverlyMand or Waterford Hill I Models to Cheese tarn uvitHr MaaSi simmai. ..... -j« VliCoiJNT — 4 fct . t■ a^v tabto^can be transfonned Into a vwk-bench with a cover made of Masonite Vi incfrWmperSi wood fastened to a lumber framework. A blanket fastened to the back of the cover protects the table top. Tools can be carried easily and conveniently in the portable tool rack shown open on the table.' It’s Efficient Need a workbench? Use a table! ^ All that’s needed to accomplish the transformation is a cover that both protects the top of the table and provides a tough working surface on which various home fix-' up projects can be handled. doors, are 18 inches wide. The back of each section is a piece of Masonite one-eighth inch Peg Constructing such a cover Is easy. The top is a panel of Masonite one fourth inch Tempered Presdwood. This s m 0 01 h, splinter-itroof hardboard Is so tough it’s used in factories for workbench tops. Framing of 1 inch by two inch lumber should befastened around tte edges on tte screen side of tte hardboard. An old quilt or blanket nailed or stapled to the bottom of the cover protects the table top from damage. It also will reduce noise when a job requires hanunering or pounding. Both the table cover workbench and the tool rack can be stored conveniently In a closet when "* conveiuenuy ui m tiuuci. •— in use. With them the home handy- man can transform any room ii to a workshop in minutes. Another handy piece of equipment is a portable tool rack that doubles as a storage chest and permits carrying of tools right to the site of a fix-up project. This rack consists of three wooden frames made of "1 Inch by inch lumber. The center frame is 3 Inches wide and 28 inches high while the end frame, which are hinged to the center section and serve as Metal fittings placed in tte perforations of these hardboard Home Loans ^ Top G Billion Mortgage loans made by tte na- The trade wganisation noted that the increased lending activity of associattNM across the conntry was dne primarily to their greatmr share of tte total home mortgage market ratt-er than to any over^iil increase in market volume. On the savings side, savings and loan institutions rebounded from a poor month in July to record estimated August net savings gains of $640 million. This was 31 per cent higher than th e gains made in August 1961. Net savings gains for all of 1962 are running slightly ahead of last year’s record annual inflow. In Beautiful Wateiford lTownalii]R RANCH and SPLIT LEVELS^ • Full Basement • 8 Bedrooms • Panded Family Kitchen • Paved Streiot • Storms and Scremis _^129500^?JBLMMQDMW- TOTAL MONTHLY PA^HEim •89®® OFFICE: UN 4-4478 • MODEL: OR 3-3080 panela hold tte various tools. not For a free plan showing how w build the table-top workbench and the folding tool chest, send a postal to the . Home Service Bureau, 29 N. Wacker Drive, Chicago 6, 111., and request AE381. Latex Paint Requires Clean Surface on Walls Latex paints will not adhere to chalky paint, plaster or masonry surfaces. Be sure to brush away all traces of chalk before applying this easy to use, quick-drying lorless paint. Exterior surfaces with bad chalking may require a surface conditioner obtainable from your paint dealer, while interior walls may need an oil-based primer-sealer. PORT ms Wtf FMWUHI3 8WWS OFFBR HfiOO WORTH OF APPLIANCES CIVILIANS VfOAto^esYotfi w WITH SItVICES FERFORMED BY FURCHASER OR WITH SERVICES FERFORMED BY FURCHASER OR LOW FHA DOWN FAYMENT OBTIONS • BUILT-IN OVEN RAN8E • STORMS AND SCREENS • REFRIRERATOR • OARPETINQ • AUTOMATiO WASHER • AUTOMATIO DRYER Plm Thru Other Fealumi • OAS MIAT • * IXTRA lAOl LOTI •IDBOOMS • FULL lASIMINT • UR«1 family glTCMIH • CUSTOM TILI NATH • CITY SIWIR AND WATIR »C----- FLUMRINC • LAROI WAROROM CtOSm • cinuini hardwood floors • ALL ALUMINUM WINDOWS OWNERS DON’T MISS ALBEE’S FABULOUS wiring & CItct FIxturH Dry Wall or Rock Uth Intfrior Trim YOU SAVE WITH AtBECt EracHon of Basic Homo • Fully guaranteed alt No> 1 AAA Materialsi • Pracision Pre4hittlngl • Hug* Volumu Buying Powerl • No Material or Labor Wastol • FREE Conatructkm Supervisionf • FREE Profosslonal Designer Services! • 3 Eety Home Ownerahip Planil • Choice ot 178 Qw-------------- EASY FIHAHCIHG! SAVE VP TO 50%! TOUR lOT Aim $1(» DOWN ARiAa YOU HnDTORTAmVOim mw Aim* MOMt TODAY! DON'T DELAY! SEE YOUR AIBEE MAN SUNDAY 1 TO 9 PM! Ooeiu Saturday oao AMto 8 Ml — OeilY BttO AMte f Ml rMAIL TO: ALBEE CHIEF HOMES I 10483 Soiitli Sogloow GENTLEMEN: Pleaaa aond m* more Information •bout ALBEE’S "Eaay Homo OwnaraWp Plan," DIRECTIONS: Located on Dixie Highway (US-10) between Pontiac and Flint. 20 irtiles horlK of Pontiac on right side of US-10. Watch for the Big ALBEE sign. ALBEE CHIEF HOMES aifWitagiM. CHIEF HOMES ' I KIQIITKBN \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20,1062 mmH» hu'anwd te ptmtat th» !!?ri?5rSS1X!S eft ftmn flLL CUEiUMiP SUL' ft(14-FT. MHO roger a. aiithier r.ul(. Mr,m' Co l^SVO lliqh’itir.d M * E\i 5-lij-W RIO lARN SUBDIVISION FOUR NIW MODUS Jurt WMt of M-24 BotiinO Albon't Country Cousin Op«B U Nmb *UI l:ts r.M. SoUr CARLISLI BUILDINO CO. Bert Smokier BViLDER Phone EM 3-2123 M/x Periods, Nil for Home Meant Thera is usually at.Ieiirt me ecorating lesson h> b« noted in any lUrnbMjiwdel home no matter vhaHlie price bracket of the house. In the me «e*ra to aiwut, a luxury home, api^ to any home. ★ A A The house, a $150,000, alKelae-tric home in the Midwest, was built as a showcase tor good deco* rating ideas, and cmveniences designed to eliminate work and tkeq). . ' Two decorating lessons are tpiick tour of tte hmse. Items. I been hit by at least eight cases ; So the Cellu- of sabotage or attempted sabotage a lose Sponge In- this week, stitute Clears Record State Suparintendent Spoakt on Aid Bill Superintendent Lynn M. Bartlett said be vras “shocked by distortions being clrculat«r about the school aid biU. Hie bill finally approved by the legislature was a Repobli-can spoBMred biU “which cloiely resemMed in most respects Gov. Swaiasoa’s original propoeaT’ for school aid, Bartlett said. The governor’s original proposal, said the superintendent, was based on infornution gathered at meetings of many state educational groups.,It called for n 8 per cent increase in aid. When the Republican-dominat. ed House Education Committee RepubUcan-sponswed bill oyer the governor’s bill, Sivainson released HouBe Democrats from support of his proposal and “urged support of the Republican bill as the only way of getting the needed school aid Bartlett declared. Boaifi to Classmate MEMPHIS m-When Ilttla Lee 'forry, 7. was alck, hit claas-mates wrata him cheeraip letters. One young follow couldn’t help bouting a bit: "I madq an A on spelling," he wrote. “1 hope you fell better." -SUnn COFFEE m y MAKER 1 r MmMFBI B|jj|jjj|^ ONir $10.44 The Good Honaekeeping Shop or PONTUO It W. mntON FE 4.IN Life bisuraxice for the Entire Family in One Plan kft Tka Maatl. ataoMitaal aaJ pBavaalant malliBd I <4^ •( oMtlnfaf kaita Mb h«BfBMa pralMOBa b ■ ? Ikroagli Madam WaadMaa’a FamBy Flail. Tka ^ *ka taiwaaaa fata wham H bataaqa— tavlnga ara «a fa yea. InvatHfafa tha admirtaiai af Madam Waadmaa'i Family Flaa. M. I, DMialt M. E. DANIELS District Manager 583 Watt Haran Strnat FI i-7lll Madam Waadman af Amarka, Haiaa OfMca, Rack Itlaad, III. Beautifully Built to the Highest DIXIE Standards of Quality! Garam CoulradioB. lac. 5744 Highleiid RA (M-59) B*tw«*a Crcuaal Laka aaS SlnaH R4,. Eait af Poallaa Alrfari Cell for Free Estimetss ATTICS - BEC. BOOMS - ADDITIONS PORCHES—DREE2EWATS smiMG—insunoM OR 4-0371 EXPERT CEMENT WORK OPES DSIlTtStm. 9-7 P.H. Of course, you can’t stir with a cellulose sponge or flip a flapjack with one, but a sponge can be a dandy spatter-blotter. Thinner ones can'do business as emergency pot-holders. Cut » standard sponge In t o three or four parts for spoon-holders for all the drippy stirring and serving ladles. A quick rinse under the faucet is aU the cleaning they will need. A good thick sponge will make an excellent kitchen pincushion -for your turkey-basting needle; for smaller trussing skewers; for pointy hors d’oevre picks. A small one, strategically placed, will be 'lat finger-tip valet you need. AAA Have a special stove sponge, o, for the dirty jobs of burner and oven-cleaning. After you have spread a paste of baking soda and water over the crusted metal, a dampened cellulose sponge will whisk it clean. It will be a smart move to turn 1 extra canister into a sponge-caddy, fill it with the variety of sponges you need, and keep it conveniently near your kitchen range. Then you will really be “cooking with sponges” and making good household sense, too. Pedy-Bilt Gaiage Co. BUILDERS OF FINE GARAGES 7722 AuBtero, Woterford YOU OAR PAY MORE... BUT YOU OANNOT UUY UETTER Let us come out and show you our models, ond give specifications and prices on your goroge. piqni. NO SUB-CONTRACTING, DEAL DIRECT WITH THE BUILDER FOR GARAGE AND CEMENT WORK CUSTOM BUILT • BLOCK • BRICK • FRAMI M NO MONEY DOWN up lo 5 Yean to Pay AirWirk lrl80% Setriifiid NSSStS COMPLITI MOOIRNIZATION PROCRAM • PanAta • naaflaa a SMIbb A CKMKNT BIRD BATH may be made with a mould constructed of lath and lumber. Pattern 227, which shows each step and gives concrete (oimuhi, will be mailed for 35c. If ywi do not have your Spring bird houses made, a Bird-Houw Pattern Packet ot many different de-algiw also is available. Price |I. Pontiac PraM Pailem Dept., Bedfoixl Hills, New York. fOimMliNdtoito PAINT ITOBE ROCKC;OTE FAINTS, WALLFAFBRS [ SeMli Cass PU l•7Uf Today, National Newspa|ierboy Day, we join in paying a fitting tribute to all newspaper carriers. Particularly do we extend our thanks to the thousand boys who daily deliver The Pontiac Press. ’ Young men dedicated to serving their customers. Young men learning early in their life tfce lessons that produce su<;ces8ful businessmen, civic leaders and outstanding citi-zens. These are all facets of the really huge task lindcrt^en everyday by the these boys. These hoys schedule their time to see that this delivery is made at almost the same hour every day. It is a tremendous task. It is an imjportant task. It is a vital part of the Amari-can way of life. Throughout our area over i are visited by our carriers. ; Ambitions bloom in these boys, and through the efforts of their work they are able to have dreams become actuaUties. On behalf of all pur subscribers and The Ppntiae gratefully lhaftk you . . . The Newspaper Boys, fpr dipfii^ /" vfi! such a swell Job. ' ’ • ■ ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS f ii ■ -.1; ^ r r hr' ' \ THE POyTUC PRE8S> SATtmt)AY« OCTOBBK ad, im JFK Applaucb for Newsi)oys i Damocrati Invited to Chat With Swainton DAUJiS, Tex. (AP)-Tto Inter, national Circulation Managers ^ sociaUon released yesUnday a letto-of best wishes to newspaper-boys from President Kennedy. National Newspaperboy Day will be oinerved Saturday, the last day of National Newspaper Week, ibe message said: “lam happy to join my fellow citizens in paying tribute to the newspaperboys in America. “Our press plays a vital role in the education of a democracy. Its effectiveness must depend in a Tafigenffiearor^^ paperboys who deliver the newspapers into millions of American homes every day. “A newspaper route is the introduction to individual initiative and enterprise for many young people. That this experience will prove invaluable in later years is evidenced by the many outstanding citizens in all fields of endeavor who began their working careers as newspaperboys." TT JACOBY ON BRIDGE New City in Florida Will Hqve TV Antenna ST. PETERSBURG, PTa. (* -Tierra Verde, a city far 25,000 persons being completed wi fiU land in the Gulf of Mexico off the roast here, will have only one TV antenna. Zoned for 50 per cent residential and 50 per cent commercial building, the city will have jone master TV antenna to boost the signal and transmit it to each building site by underground coaxial cable. *A00« 4kKQI0« WK8T BAST AQO Vjrosot W10702 AQO - ♦J10874 *10701 #j;o somnitn) AK10872 VKQ ♦ AKOt *A8 Both vulnertblo goatli W«* Nafth BhI lA Pius 2* Pmo SA Bwf 2W PMs SN.T. ^ .0* , Pms PSM Pms7 Opening By OSWALD JACOBY A winning bridge player should have a, suspicious nature, but he should never carry his suspicions to the point of absurdity. In the Pittsburgh regionals last Labor Day every North-South pair landed at some slam Ion-tract on today’i hand. Some bid seven spades and made it when the trumps broke. A |few tried six no-trump and the JACOBY spade break brought that contract home, but since the hand made only six no-trump the no-trump bidders received poor scores. Bottom went to a suspicious ex-pm who stopped at six spades and held himself to his contract without an overtrick. West opened the jack of spades. South looked over dummy care- Astroloidcal Forecast * A' * 'V. UT ITDNET OMAU nr SundaT .... ■'The wiee men controli Ue ......... ;lE8,(Mer. 31 [or eurprue t benefit. N prove vlewe ei Permit full plev lor Intellectual eurtoalty. TAVKV8 (Apr. HO to May 10): Em-pheele on eecurltv. T%ls beet attained by being cloee to home, loved nue^Am- fe* sr!!!eX-'‘r”im‘s;ics?- *^».NriUm,dun. wm best lor ioumeys. Be fortnnVM., Btici •‘*-"'«-'^"“,dre''Tto“ytSr-n)^ „ money. One who awt-lulok eoheme ehouM bo --------------^rtiutBS: io *u,. t»: ttol. but proceed with oara. Swell gy.- enthueleem generatad by Idea t ..-I... u,, straaa. earvloe. , appreciation. *" lettied^rtortt ,_.ne iSioUKhC Day people are able to i falaa clalme. (Copyright 1W«) gesti cel*riob'qui dUmlesed. You eeedlog through whloC^'lll 1 sept, : wn?# o( mind. Ton art •men in inii py aUendini •plrtf-* ■Brvlces. Be with those who Mtoi you. Avoid those who bort fW, (rue to your own Inner deilrn. _ LIBRA (Sept J3 to Oct. IJM ^ihow IhBt Indeed you ere a true ineod. Be willing to LfSTEN. Let IntuUlM Wide you. Enjoy reading manuseiipt friend offers. Don’t try to be "teacher.” tor ENJOYMENT. . ^ gOOBPIO (Oct. n to Nov. M): LoM for aid In guartera formerly Iboughl to represent the "opposition.’' Ifuoh In wsy of ehallengo offered. seekiM aympaUiy, put up sign of -.V.---------------- r ^tt^tei fbu'know'whet you'vrnnti CArEICOEN Ifaec. » to Jan. IW; Good for visiting, short lonmna, ro mance. pursuit of creative ondeavors. Refuse to araue. Make IntolllgonI compromises. Plessure' Indicated through shoring of hobby, reading. AdtrARIVg (Jsn. 31 to >eb. Ill ’Tsurus. lake ^tock of^emotlgnal, ow *^!^u”*Sown. ’T-r. Ml: Fleaa- I may be In f'"Euri:triato!-i’;d y close at hand. It' SUNDAY W YOUR ilc ’ aeMe*” iBT^*”actlcalftyr”'You ” ciu •oar to the great heights. Ih a fee months, tbls msy not all bo “vlalonaryr ★ ★ OCNERAb TENDENCIES: CyolO UP for CANCER. I.EO, VIROO. ^«P«laJ word to AQUARIUS: SeAnf tha be“ •Ids Instead of being gloomy eoulif me dlflertnoe between succesa and faliut Por Monday ARIES^^IMar^^Jl lJ«ulaUo ylce!**eliSerlence. Hoping will NOT mal It so. ^ut your faith In found, aaou '"¥» ?«• to May M):, L- -------to In tallnf, drinking. Dot plenty tonight. YOU can oe yery suc-In handllns ’ details, especially a, .ivuie. Take lime to be patient. rHOROUaH. GEMINI (May 3t to June SI); I you oould surprise others and •normous prsstiga by FINIS humor help you over obstaelee, 1 lent tor using wit, wrilint Ulenl CANCER (June 33 to July 311: tain In dealings with the public. Ei yourself. Slate case clearly. Yoi. sell almoet anything today. Very good lor planning adverlfslng, and promotion. lEO (July 33 to Aug. 31): Bo direct, forceful, fnetead of ’’holding back,'' let the chips fly. Once air la glaared. you will feel better, Othere will have greater respect lor you. And you can ■ ViIgo''(Aug! 33 to Sept 33): Have falUi In your sblllty to move up alter Silnor scthBcb. Best to proceed RlQINALLY planned; You will find c*lm. logical BnoroBcb offsaU Dr«* ‘1 objections. (Sept, r 9 try to to Oct. aai: idehip. vioua object UBRA IS •7*ma time!' Beaulu”'Vn''IoattJ^l lorcea, plua emotional tenclon; InatMd. -mWi&f Tu, |M Vi*m w!»« TODArS QCBSnON Your partner continues to two no-trump. What do you do? 'Ole Miss Hired Palral Before Riot' MEMPHIS A Univeraity of Mississippi official ««y« « group of piMtographera wtra bind to act M4daindo«Nanon on Oe (Ha Miaa campua for three weeks, but wera dinnissed the day before rfotiig bnriw out FW three weeks prior to the riot of Sq>t M the plainclothes force patroM tl» campua, taking pictures and preventing the atagtng of possible Incidents, said Hugh (Hegg, assistant to the chancellor. “ We could not foresee what was going to happen," Oegg said, “and we dismissed them a day before the rioting." Victims of Stalin Purgo Judicially Rehdbilitatod MOSCOW (UPI) - Victims of Josef Stalin’s 1997 purge trials. Including Nikolai Bukharin and Karl RadeK, have been “judicially re-babiUtated," an Informed Communist source said yesterday. The source said their families had been compensated. There was no other information available on exactly what measures were takeh to “rehabilitate" the victims and compensate their families, about whom little is now known. Br. L ii itovtttg ttoi Conbn mi PMI Bvnm OUR ancestors By Qnlncy “I don’t like having squares here either! But our kind never h any money to spend!" BOARDING HOUSE rLisrrBAi*«'TWe popolatiom oPTHEua is] I80,00p»p00/1 HAVe R60RB0 THAT * . A80UT 500,000 W/WB A fflKmDAV DAILV —^tLL eAV THAT AT L6AST ^00.000 HAVE A BIRTHDAV WITH AM AVBRA6E OP.SAVylS CANDLES T<5 A CAKe.'THAT WOULD MEAN 6,000,000j CANDLES USED EACH DAY, DR 2,1*10,000,000 ayear/why, ir.^ STAGSERlND/ "------— — ^ ‘AN'YOUWAMTMETO I TAKBMV^SOO AM' fSOINTH BIRTHDAY > CAKe CANDLE- ^ BUSlMBBS WITH YOU, ^ EH^WeLL,T'M(30lN'y IMTH* CONFETTI < BUSINESS—ALL X NEED IS AFEWT&NG ) OF COLORED B^iPER j AN' A RAILROAD , conductor’^ PUNCH/j PieURES DON'T IMPRESS JAKE* m OUT OUR WAY JIUNALO UVCR By Walt Disney 1 WWK-qSKaWW— ■ !0 1 Chiefs Ousted by Handy, 26-7 Humphrty DatliM 90 For Lono Touchdown; Troiiod 19-0 BY DON VOGEL BAY CITY - A find up Bay City Handy bUtMd Pontiac Central out of tha Saginaw Valley Conference football race, 16-7, here last night * ★' ★ The Wildcata of eopch A1 Sig-man wwa in no mood to be ahoved around before 6,600 homecoming faii. They fereed PCH to fumble on the firat play from ecrlmmage, reeovered, and mnrehod in to More. The next time Handy got the ban tbo oame thing hap- A 76-yard punt return by Mike Gillis made it 19-0 midway in the second quarter and the Chiefs were still trying to mount ah offense. Charley Humphrey finaljb' broke the ice for PCH by retumingythe next kickoff 00 yards for the Chiefs’TD. ONEMOMITD The Wildcats cooled off during the intermission but still managed to cross the goal line once more, on the last play of the third quarter., ' ' ' j Sigman, disturbed by two straight poor showings huwrted Clayt Wilhite at quarterback ByJERB.CRAia Good scouting and sharp pr^ ime strategy paid Mf in a hard-earned 19-7 ^ctory yesterday afternoon for Farmington High School, its first varsity gridhon victory over Pontiac Northern. “We knew we couldn’t go inside the way they bunch that seven-man line,’’ Falcon coach Jack Hayes' explained following the win. ‘‘We planned all week to go outside and to throw a lot.” ‘The result made Handy resemble last Mason’s Class A state champions in the first half. Ihe loss left PCH with a 2-3-1 Valley record and eliminated the Chiefs from contention. Handy is 3-1-1, but indications are that the Wildcats will have to forfeit the victories over Midland and Arthur Hill becauM of an Ineligible play- Except for Humphrey’s long dash in the second period, the Chiefs could do nothing against a stiff Handy defenm. In fact, it was Central’s poorest offensive showing of the season, ne Chiefs netted only 16 in the first three quarters. They failed to move the ball oat of thebroimend. In the last period, against the Handy Second stringers, the Chiefs managed to reach the Wildcats’ 10 twice. PCH had only four first downs in the game. Fleet halfbacks JesM Hodges and Humphrey could do little against the Wildcats. Fullback Tom Lewis was the major threat, gaining 71 yards in 12 carries. He picked up 27 irith one fourth perri- Centrai’s defenM stiffened in the last half. Wayne‘Lee was a standout bneking up the right Ijde of the PCH line. FAST START Quarterback Randy StUes fumbled on the first play after PCH received the opening kickoff and tockla Wayne Meylan recovemd for Handy on the PCH 36. ried ell right foeUe five el the eight plays far tl yards, the last fSsur for a TD. central was forced to punt and Handy marched 74 yards in 11 plays With Knapp Slamming the final 12 off left tackle. Again the Chiefs vrere forced to punt and Gillis raced down the left sideline to make it 139. dr ★ dr dr dr dr dr dr ★ Huskies Tripped by Farmington That is exactly what did hap* lag HusUe defensive line by big receivers could get free. Kaufman hit Mvea of tea passes for 173 yards and the wfoaiag The lanky quarterback set . the Falcons’ fint sctnre with a 26-yard run aroUnd end, also on q bootleg play. The run put the pigskin on the one-yard-line and K«if-man plunged over for foe score two plays later. Mike Gilder kicked the extra point and Farmington led 7-9 at halftime. HUWrosSCORE PNH coach Eki Heikinnen fired up his team during the intermission: and the Huskies came roaring back in foe second half. Taking foe kickofif. they drove 67 yardsinl4|days. The longest gkin in foe drive was a 13-yard burst by halfback Ikssald Wcyer to the Falceas’ one. Quarterback Jha Kimmel fdanged for the six points after the Huskies had coatroBed the ban for seven minutes of playlag foae. Tlw PAT was booted by DenaSendeB. ^parked by a noisy homecoming crowd, Farmington rolled 66 yards in five ]days to regain the lead. Kaufman hit end Dale Pit-cock with two key passes for first downs, the second one putting the baU at the PNH seven. ★ ★ 1 Two plays later, the quarter in the clear at the one; and the bespectacled receiver grabbed the ball and fell across the last dialk stripe as he was hit. The loss gives PNH a 24-1 record (1-2-1 in the Inter Lakes League) and Farmington is 2-31 and 32 in foe loop, roUi rtrtt Downs .............. i xt t-M M S-U ' SOOaiiNO FLAVS tackle Dave Gruber (76) puts the wraps on srback Tom Kaufmann too late as the Fat- - ««■•». i i*bw.------------------- .. has already released the pass whldi proved nom winner. Teammate Frank Patterson was open w ecAaiyas. . . made the catch. f H fcil WAKE or WmTB-POBtiac Northern hai3 back Don Wayer (22) appears to be leaving a by the arm and is preparing to halt Weyer’s wake of whifo-Jerslad Farmington playen be- run. Farmington halted, enough Huskies dor- hind him but one uifolentified Falcon has him ing the game to make oil with a U-7 win. New Haven Holds Thumb Advantage New Haven moved a step closer to foe Southern Thumb Tttls by but there’s stlQ a big obstaek in New Haven’s way. Ttiat's Capae, a 2312 Wlfofor ever Anchor Bay last night. The twe teean wiS SMet la foe seasee llaala two weeks hence aad Capac, with eae less, mast wia Is gala a psrt ef foe 254 and Brown City whipped Menqilds, 237. Dwight Lee ecored three New Haven tondiddwns on rum of 4, 26 and 89 yacda, white John Mack added a pair on IS and one yard-ers. Dryer who had two ex-tra point! aoored on a.l6 yaider wifofreahmnnOickaMmultget-tihi foa tent out on a 12 yard dash. ■ W, e, With 210 yards rushing, l^ok Id 100 sMOfryer 192 yarfo as New Haven ted 264 at luriftinM. V I fcl ___^.'.BdyiMlaitcte^'for • hiB, 2N^ two Dnal perlsi e petals, white Ksn KebyasU a far sns aad passad ts Bar- foiM Stanllou picked up nlng I yards. Stanek got Anchor Bay’s tallies and Kan-dter (he point. John Moman ran « P«nt « yards and took a 45 yard pun for two Armada TD's, with Knenbech adding one on a 10 yard rovaiee. Drydon's Tom Sterner pr " to Paul Grondin for a 30 yard tag play. . Kettering liQgeB, 21-6 Romeo Wins Championship They’re oetebrating in Romeo today! The Bulldogs won the Trl-Coun- night by whin>ing Kettering 21-3an the Waterford gridiron and th^ also preserved their unbeaten record, now standing 34. Qmrterbaek Bass SmHes hit sa nine m 19 passes for 176 Rochester Is Edged by L'Arise Btated 162 rashtag yards to — AW- - —A-A- ipwK IM wsiuye In foe opening pmfod, after « 60 yard drive, Mark Johnson hit pay dirt from the six yard line a^ Mike Doyte added the ptant to make it 7-0. CAPTAINS STBIKE Kettering quickly sfriafo hack on only three ptays fm 60 yards. Jim Haviland went foe last 12 yards hut the Cmdatas ml foe ptant to make It stand 74. Eatly to foe eecend qaerter, Kettortag qaartefback Bid Pat- L’Anse Cnuse might-hw anly runnerup In foe Tri-Gouniy Brooklyn refrain of “walt’U next year” comes wifo Justiflcatkm from foe Mt. Ctenhens school. WWW Coach John Antico used six sophomoree in his starting lineup last night at Rochestm' as the Lancers edged the Falcons, 1313. to bring their final loop record to 31-1, ^od enought for at least a second place tie behind champion Romeo. gopbemere tackle Dick Ole-Jar boetod befo extra potato to to foe single wtag. It cmbied Kettortag to amoM 172 yards ratUag but foe Captains were aaable to crees foe gsd. Smitoe Hit Jdm Hantey in foe second quarter on a 43yiml pass r ifoW ^nUes mod Keith Simunic as a receiver for a 28 yard aoortag play. scoring done la foe cioeiag seconds of eeck qaerter. wifo L’Aiim CreuM getting In foe first licks. Junior helfbadc Okk Skelton sewed on a l7-yar wn. During the intermission Hof f staged a play-hydday practice seasloo in the Bloomfield bus to try to find the trouble and ' residt was a changed dMena Ihe Barons took defensive < tool at the onset of the set half and never lost it < the remainder of the game. At the break Milford had M ,ards to the Barons’ 97. and 72 of those were through the air. After the defensive Oxford Revenge Sweet Wildcats Roll Over Imlay Easily, 52-6 By BRUNO LKEABNS Revenge can be aweetl Ji ask the Oxford High school fo The Wildcats clinched the South Central League championship last night by lacing Imlay City. 5241. and they did it with a strong mennory of a 72-7 defoat they took from Spartans two years ago. Most of the CIlye Even the Oxford “Hot Dog’’ 11. the team of reserves, got into the There's certainly little Joy In akeOrionl! . The Dragons seemed to lack le fire and thunder they breathed upon two earlier foes and absorbed a 26-13 Ucking by underdog Avondale. |A brother combination of Mike and Roger Ball gave the 'green and white’ fits, scoring four touchdowns between them to account for ail of Avondale’s points. Cork Sander with two Id's. Bury Wheeler with S. Buzz Cork with 2 and Jack Ferrell with one accounted for the eight Ozford After Imlay fumbled a punt la the first period, ^ ‘ The Lakers are 64) and remain tied with Bloomfield Hills for the loop lead. Perennially strong NortbvUle now la 3-2 in the league and 3-3 overall. roomi.1. mnwKiji ^ i n l-MW* InUr(ifpt«d oy . r , eunt> Mid Av.r««» V»rd»;^ 1-33 Mid Tdt. e#n«li««d tour yards to start the scoriug. Imlay immedtately Hci K. H when Dale GeetM paaaed 16 yards to Manhd Rea. On tha first play from scrim-mags after the next kidkotf, r Cork raced 66 yards for touchdown. In the second quarter, Barry Wheeler broke away for a 67 gjiyard touchdown Jaunt to make “ J19-6 at halftime. w.P. — Aumdiifhw. t ,— ROUT CONTINUES The rout became evident in the third quarter Just after tha kick-off when Oxford drove 79 yards capped by Cork’s 11 yard TD. Vaa Vhat ^ttaa eiMsch 4th8aaderfora91yariaea byOaKPark,t9-0 Oak Park recorded Its second win of the season Friday afternoon Iqr wearing down Lamphere for a IMvictory. Marshall Shencopp was the big ' noiM for the winners, running for one touchdown and . Ha Wheeler fore off going M yards. In another lei North Branch. 2-1 in the and 3-3 overall, trimmed 1,21-0, with HoVtard Myers get-g all three touehdowna. He scored in the first period on five yard run, then went 17 In ......1 quarter and two yards in the last peri ' ~ ‘ ' got two poinjs and Paul Harnie added the other. Ri^port for the first Redskin tally on an eight-yard pass p I a y. p ran two yards for the second six pointer and Bob Pearl mada it liH) when he ran five yards to paydirt in tha last quarter. Lamphere is 1-6 for the season and Oak Park 24-1. Wtifam Wfni Titia BOUTH BEND, Ihd. W - We8^ etn Michigan look the team trophy with a tow total of 61 pointe in I Dame Invitational crqss Ifridny. Central llih with I Oxford with a 4-2 mark overall for the season, has a non-leaguer at Madison next week. /^'ox. n -bt Downs Muihlni ....\.. II Total nrst Downs TsrOs Oninsd RimI.„. ... -----Oslnsd PnMlM .... lot Turds Oslnsd .. , IntaSSXl 'iiT, ' ' •ad Aoorois Tsrds 1! ‘S .ni Hi mI .................. I lysrdit. (dn Oooi (H.nrS tun I, vsn rissl iiord—wussisr (I7.^rd fiwr, .vtB Oslord- sS{:r-^ qw(ord-«ork (I wiiord-wiissls Oslord—aondor »l in^ asss I Avondale Plays 'Bair Upsetting Lake Orion is, without a doubt, a big feather in the cap of Avondale Coach Frank Crowell. Although neither team . much punch in the opening period, the final few seconds set the stage for Avondale’s This, coupled wtth vktortos attained by Troy and Clawsaa. ematical chance for the (Mk-lud A crown for Orion. It was the visiting Yellow On a play origiuatfaig oa the Ortoa 45, Avoadale’s Mike BaO lateraled to quarterback Lyaa Thorpe npou ceatact oa tha II. Thorpe made his way to the 26 aad 6 plays later to tha lad cad from the i to paydirt Dennis Acker ran the Troy Wins 'A' Loop Game 51-6 THiy aiKl Ctowson, continued to show their class in the Oakland A League by posting Impressive victories Friday. Troy rolled over Fitzgerald 61-6 with six different players tallying Clawson, from its 19-7 loss at fny last week, gathered steam iiitbeaeo-ond bidf to bomb Idadlson 95-7. TVoy’s Kan Hsktor need 41 tooebdawB aad ti judt with a hlekaff far another to toad the OoHs’atladk. Jeff Qaaadt seered twice ea raas el three yards. ITie remainder ot the eight OoH toudidowns were tallied by Roger Qualntami on a 90-yard pass |day from Don Armstrong, Armst^ on i threa-yard run, Jim Craighead on ■ sevtai-yard run, nnd Chuck Showaltor on a90-yard pass fromPhUCiesIlga. Clawson fell behind la the first quarter when Madison’s John Oiisrotti capped a 36-yard drive with a 15-yard run. Clawson’s Bre-Burton ran 37 yards for a toudidown and Rob Birch ran thaPATtotiethelcore. ' Hm Trojans’tackle BUI Hiyaa Mf^fged n seeond pertod totteh- was tackled at Madison’s twa-yarddtao nwl fnmblod tho bnO. BnyM grabbod ths toaso pigskhi Two touchdown passes in the second half put the game out of the Eagles’reach. mattor with i six-yard tosa and r 11 j t Tom Grundnar. Pete Misdnas rim six yards for tha final Clawson score. Mike Bradley kicked two Second Half Hillt Sejuad Rimaim Unboatan by Spanking MUford Eiavan , ooadt .Carl l^endw wna-tolking whenhesaid“BananaPat-wna the pasa ^ tha tern,’’ wna the pasa play that aet up a4datlBath« wflitoip to a wild game last niglit at Birmingham, which the Maptos won. 25-u; Boh Dralhhr, the receiver, to cxeenttog tha pkqr cat to tha eatdde el the fleU and dmm acroee the middle to Bad him-self mere than » yarts hehlad thi ML Clam yards rmhiaf aad 17 pais-whito tha Barem mada N lag while the air and n ea the ARhough Milford took a Noonmeld fumble and. t«roeptton in the saoond quarter, the Bnwmnmnaged to icoN firet touchdown M the game. INTERaSPTlON intended for Redskin’s Jim Con-zemious and sprinted 17 yards for the first Baron tolly with rix minutes left in the second quiuv ter. Roger Stewart ran tho PAT. Thirteen ptoys Inter. bndi Gary Newcomb clteked ea a 17-yard pass play to Mike Wixom. The score stood 7-7 with one-minute left in the half after Harry Johns kicked the PAT. ’The fired up Rloomfieuld teem started to roll early in the second half. The Barons quickly picked up two first downs on only three running plays before giving up the ball on downs. A moment later a Milford . as Intercepted by Don Hamilton and this set up the BtoomfteM scoring march which was climaxed by a 9-yard pass play from Stewart to Mike Miller. This put the Barons ahead 13- 2 Secornk ^Wt^Maples Hlf ByNATUSMMERMAN as Saaholm proceeded to score ‘ irinning TD triien it NWMred calls it, can’t be printed, do brnmnna have to do idsr a big plleup i hhd sounded ending the Jack Harvey was found frith tho wind knocked out of QB Jim Foster’s pais „ him slow down. Tiw piny covered 63 yards and just 2 seconds toft, according to le scoreboard clock. That’s when lots of the Mt. Clemens side of the field M llto liiq.il ito«liiuiaM and total to ihtat ttfd m m • reiBMfarlhawtaalngTD,bat, as ha ronehed the ene, tarn- curely between his legs. It was such a madhouse that the officials decided not to try to kew the fans off the field and dlipenmd frith the PAT. TD SETUP Lemte, after ha had a chance > stop chewing on his cigsrette in dm toefcar room, said ths im tha winning TD )d in the locker room during the half.” In tho first quarter, Sesholm •d ■ M lead before 1<1I had In a three-play drive covering 94 yards, KenHeft got the TD from It yards out on a right end skirt. Brent Miner’s boot made him: - ------------, An to-yaid ndi with ad interception by Rick Carlson accounted for the Maples’ third TD and n 19-12 lead, but moments later Carlson deftooted a psM into the arms of a Mt. Clemens receiver to give the Bathers n chance to tie it at 19taU. Mt. Clemens kicked o» with Just 30 seconds left to play, but It was enough time for Sesholm to pull off the ainasing closing Clarksfon Downed, Holly Gains Notch as an also ran In the Wnyne4)sk-land Leai^ last night. The Wohtes visited Brighton ipd sme homn wtth a 20-12 setback while Holly moved iq> a notdi away from the baaaiMOt area by trimming ClanneevUto, 21-12. Ctarkston led M at bnlMnie on an 01 yard ran by Oaaay Jenks to tbe two from where GngFklm went ever. Tbe W e IV e s poshed the margin to IM In the third qmrter with Jenbs raetaf M yards areaiid Then ■ bnak started Brighton on its way. A bad punt gave ------ the haU on the 15 * "*CinfteM1hew weitt th^ In the second quarter and Jim Ray added the point and In the third period, Fagan sneaked two yards and he passed to 'hirner for the point to make it. 21-0. In the final minutes Monroe Ashley raced 30 yards ifor Clar-encevlUa’s last telly. The game was marred by penalties and Holly’■ defensive unit was spurred by and Jim Starr and tance to make it 12-7 with Amen-son’s point by passing from Hart- Little time elapeed before Orion rebounded, however, as the Dragons crossed, the ‘Jacket goal just 2 minutes henol. Don Harvey, Orion’s bulhdoier type halfback who averaged 11 yai^ in 19 carries, twisted and ran SO yards to the Avondale 1, from where quarterback Jon Cucksey sent him over on an off tackle thrust. Cucksey’s pass for the PAT fell incomplete and the Onvon, 7* r GOOD PLAY Probably the prettiest play the contest followed. Lynn ThorpeLe'«««inti.4_-.« grabbed the kick-off and handed off to Mike Ball on the 0. Several would be tacklers ignored BaU temporarily and purstted the deceptive Thorpe. Meanwhile, Ball was streaking down the shto-Une for a02 yard touchdown Jaunt. This incroased the visitor’s margin to 134. pushed the margin to 1212 on s 16 ltd Hartman yard run and scoring with an 11 yarder and he also ran the point. HoUy’s Tom Fagan went two rsAVs tT.y«r4 |NiM PMI irAT Sl-TStai Cklhmm, The ’Jackets upped the count to 204) following intorinisslon when the pigskin was placed On the 40; the result of an out of bounds kick-off. Having • 52 yard TD run nuUif ted via a clip-llting infracUon, Mike Ball repeated the effort by going from tho 13 after Denny Acker had thrown to end Bob Row for 30 ynrds. Thorpe’s pass for the PAT Orion scrambled back inunedi-atelb'-Aiher • aeries of downs and own 49, Dave Halimark found day-Ugbt and raced 41 yarda to ■ ’Jacket goal-line, r---- plunged for Uw wing the deficit to 2213. -ii ftTu. "'W orta. Wtaanii. — 4t-»rd PAT niA) rail nrtff In the final period Buzz Divistet RO Dondaro VtcHmiitd by Pordion'f Clacking Fullback Don Clacking led Fordaon to a 3210 victory over Royal Oik Dondero Friday by scoring three touchdowns. The 222pound power runner scored on runs of 03, 22 and 5ft' yards in logging a total of 21ft yards ip 10 carries for the winners. Clacking, also, raced 48 yards and latoraled to tom Bud Forest who went the re tog 20 yards for six points. by Bob Fldter on a 21-yard ran, and on pass plays of 22 ynrds from KMi Burk to Gary McKw and 79 yards from Mike Novick to BIII the petat to start the seertog. Windy Weedbww em went fire ynds for Ctonneeville, bit tbi mlssid pript nude It 7-0 for grabbed • iiit CtomsM fimbli to ml2 nfr and nn M yaids tar tbe The officials really give us the business,’’ said Dick Chapman. Mt. Clemens cosch. “When they went over for the winning TD, not only should the game have already bwn Over, but they never got set at the line of scrimmage before the snap of the baU. “The ndes say yen hare to get Mt ea the Una el scrim-megs tar' a seeoed before tbe be mapped. They etiH’’ didn’t get Mt it i The officials’ vwsion of Uw fiasco was that the scoreboard dock was wrong and Uwre were 8 seconds left to play. They said that time had been '‘inadvertently caUed, but for Just two soc-onds. Thera was plenty of time for Uw piny to get started.’’ TTsits Ferndale, Kimball Post lopsided EML Triumphs Ferndale continued Its all-wto-ntog ways In Uw Eastern Michigan League Friday with a226 victory over Port Huron. Royal Oak Kimlwll grabbed Its seoond loop victory wiUi e strong 4210 decision over East Detroit while HsmI Park and Roseville fought to a 04) stalemate to a non-kegue game. Port Huron thrilled an eatinw M crowd ol 6,400 by taking ■ 04 first quarter lead over leegue leading Ferndale. but the Dales took command wiUi 19 points to Uw sscond quarter and coasted to behind the scoring of four difte^ entptoyere. Di^ Wn^att oosN^^ dewM ea twe-ynrd nsw. Tsam-Biato Jew Hicks went then SM better to tolly frem Uw-ttofM. Pert Hana’s Larry Bnttar went 71 ymt ter Us sosre. IQmbaU’s Pat Rowf ran the igwnlng kickoff 70 yards to score and the Knights were never headed. Teammates John Bnumann (12yard run), Ted James (one-yard plunge), Tom Briwmeyer (17-yird run) and Andy Crawford 12yard paM from Janws) and Snry Weckerly (S2yard pass from Bob MUes) Joined Rowe to the scoring column. Stove Wilson booted thrM PAT’S and scored on an 82yard pass interception. East Detroit scorers were Harry Driver on ■ six-yard run, Brian Hansen on n one-yard plunge, and Tom Seavy on a niiw-yird rail. Hazel Park lost its only scoring ttUmblMlntthe opportunity when It fr RoeevlUe eightyard line. John Dn- tw a 17-yard toudidOwn to Uw fl-‘ quarter for RomvUto but It I hulUfied Iw an off-side penalty. PtOMUN PARADE^The bell Is loom to the Waterford Iwck-fieM. but not for Iom. Bob Rowston (M) divM tar Uw free nieskto but It squirted away from him again and finally was ‘ ~ ra Wlltoe (W). Oilwrs to Uw ictton era bytadleDnrel HUpiMirs Andy Straka ,(ll) and Bob Wtokelmnn (01). Vikings cloriiii ib are John C Wayiw Mervto (tl). I John CempbeU (07), Roger Romtoskl (60) and I tm tonnAc m&m. 8i^ttmbAy; ocTo»BE SHORT OF GOAL-Miami halfback Jack Sima la dragged down by jMlaryland’a Murmia I the one yard line after taking a lg>yard paaa from quarterback Ckmrge Mira. Four playa later the Hunricanea punched over ............. ami won, 21-M. Parochial Grid Jam May Result :=!ii I Three Nor t h i/e a t Faroe League gantea Sunday will pit four of tno five teanu who atill have aomo chance for a piece of the title. When the duat or mud fde> moved to their firat two touch-loffenaive threat, are favored to downa laat Sunday and Juat miaaed anap their pattern of win one« low a third. one thia year? n i aa The Lakera, with their aiqrorkirlwie thia year. ■ there may be a big log Jam among the top five aquada. It would only take one upaet for ■gWaterfi thia to reault. Aaauming Waterford Our Lady and Detroit St. Agatha build their recorda to S-2 and 4-2, nnwpicttvely, with vtctoriea over wlnteaa St. Frederick and once-vlctorloua St. Michael, it would only take a Royal Oak St. Mary upaet win over Farmington Our Lady of Sorrowa to leave one-half game mparating the firat five. Orchard Lake St. Mary, the ether cqntaiMler, win vlait Flint Atherton for a Saturday night By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The New York Knidwrtiockera, .oor relationa of the Eaatem Divlaion of the National Baaket-ball Asaociation, were riding high The claah at Farmington between the Lancera and ROSM probably wlU be the top gaine on the weekend achedule. brothers ACT Led by the high acqrlng brother duo of Jeff and Rick Barth, the Lancera were flying along in fine atyie untU they w«e atopped cold by OLSM 7-0 two weeka ago for their only loaa In four atarta. FOLS had aa epea date laat week and aheuM be wen reated for thia Mg game. RoyalOak St. Mary, meanwhile, haa bean coining on atrong led by Ita hiiJtwi ruiming halfback Don Walla. Ifiah of Major Carl Walla may be Jailing with a lineup generally of underclaaamen. St. Mlke’a loat a heartbreaker last week 14-1J to WOLL and coach Jim Niebauer may have a tough time getting hla eleven up for the game at Agatha. The home team will be playing ita laat loop conteat and needa a victory to keep alive Ita champlonahip Ideaa. WOLL will ba meeting a game. but undermanned St. Fred aouad ■ -iB often- that auddenly developed ita aive arm laat weekend. The Rama Ex-Piston Shines Shoe Paces Knicks in the firat place today-mataily becauaa of n fine defenatve JUb by Gene Shut. The Knicks checked the Loo Angeles Lakers, Division champions 116- Lema'sPace Still Torrid Boston Celtics In Boston tonight in the NBA champions’ first game of the season. Shue, never particularly noted as a defensive specialist, dogged • Tony ONTARIO, Calif. Lema of San Leandro, Calif., held a oiMHitroke lead today aa the Ontario Open golf tournament moved into the third round at the Whispering Lakes course. Lema fired a fivo^mder-par M yesterday for a 3t-hole t o t a I of 185. Itraliing by one shot at IM J«ty West, one of theiLakcrtf] high scorers, and when it was all over West had Just 15 points. ”We tried to keep him from getting the ball,’! aajM Shue, who was obtained this year by the Knicks in a trade with Detroit. Then, when he did get it, we tried to crowd him toward the so he’d have to pass it off.” West had Just two field goab in the first half, one while Shue ***• V"*’'??***^ ?! guarding him. One of his four I. Al j;«ondJialf field goals came While ‘T don’t know our lineup against Donovan. ’^But after that performance on West, I think I’ll put Gena on Bob Oonsy and aae how It Oeibargir, agd Fred HiwMna, the veteran from El Faso, Tea. **i don’t know oui Bob Pratt of Las Vegas, Nev., the firat day leader, sUpped to an even-par 71 yesterday. It gave him a SUiole total of 187 and a tie for fourth place widi Caa Jawor. Jawor, a p h y a 1 c a I education teacher from Detroit, matched Lema’s 66 yesterday. The field was cut for the final 86 holes but there were no prominent casuaities. It took 148 or better to continue. Milt Winner JiisflTime Against NY Lions Expocf to Got Aoriol Borrogt From Y. A. TIttIo By BRUNO L. KEARNS Rkely I _____for it Royia sends his Tam Longhorns, currently the NO. 1 college In the NEW YORK - The Detroit Lions don’t want Milt Phim to tOOlb umCK 10 Ini Ol^rl wnil Cleveland Browns during his stay in New York this weekend. The Lions have a big game Sunday against the huge Giants who are feeling angry after teeing to Pittsburgh last week. Past htotory has shown the Giants to be a thorn in Plum’s side white with the in the glamnr game of the week with the country’s top ranking Conference tl- and the Southwest tie Ih the Tems ranks a IW point favorite, and it weuM have la be TOUGH ON PLUM Phim was quarterbacking Cleveland he was whlnwd seven times, wUming- only once and tying one against New Ymk. Some of the games were by high scoring margins. beaten 87-U and had a 7-7 with the Giants; in IMI the Browns test at home 17-18 and wen the with Phan #41 la NM la 11# New Yarit woa ia Cleveland »7 and at home 44^7 and la ttH #o Giants were IS-U and fl-17 One ttiing is Mmoot certain. The Giants will probably ttarow more than the Lions with Y. A. Tittle doing the I Fridw nighLtom their roe-' d to 46. The Kniclui meet the New York, once i ground team, has turnedmore to passing with Tittio the last three years. To data the Giants have tossed for 1,232 yards white the iions have 970. In rushing De- The same holds true in first awn statistfcs where the Giants are #47 ia possiag over theUsns. Both teams will be missing two key players, pass receivers Don ShMner ot^ the Giants and Terry dr WLibf^ Shofner’s in-Jury, a shoulder separation was more severe than Barr’s, but the Lion’s flanker back is still Ing a badly swollen knee. ’Die Lions have played the (puifs only twice since the championship year of 19U and New York has won 24-19 in 19# and 19-17 in 19U. 'the all time series stands 84-1 for the Ltena, mid the biggest gdme in the series was the championship game of 19# when Detroit won 247. Kickoff time in Yankee Stadium Sunday is 1:« Pontiac time and a sMteut crowd of 87,0# has The Lakers’ Elgin Baykar was high scorer with M point ~ Guerin had 27 for the Knicks, who outscored the Lakers 40-# in the final period to pull It out after trailing 77-76 at the three-quarter In other games tonight Los Angeles is at ^acuse, Cincinnati is at Chicago and Detroit is at St. Liston Frowns ,^bf Questions; Will Referee PORTLAND, Oro.«l-weigbt champion Sonny L i a t < who will referee a boning b in Portland tonight, found report- questions at a dinniw last night He frowned in sihmee through much of it Final^hesald; mat for you want to asl kqueationsT Man, they the same all over.” Someone asked how long he aa-pectsd to be champion. "New hew ie I imew lhatf ” he saM. ”Hew long yea gilng to he working at what yoiTe do-la^t don’t wnnMsMMtefer as Ashed about his brushes the tew, Liston imottOMd his fmwn and Me alienee. “I dal ttiMMliqr iliould,” **■'*■, , *■ ■ •: OSU-NorUwrtgtwn. TwoM-AitoimH Big Ganm tor By The Aimseteted Press n Danett Royal has a slightly % baven’t to be a very good Where mm irFsyettsTiite, Arfc-ehseM *i Psrhare paB R sat Bat it heaMFt really he Just sqn^ m. Because Royal’s Lpnghorns wtU be runniog into eiactiy the amt of team the Texas coach — taught to construct when learned his football at the knee of the Oktehoma master. Bud 4 'V#/j''*’' and the victor has a very jsod BhwStel#! MJspi|f]i(2) Highway Patrol (4) Surfside 6 (7) Casper. (9) Popeye (Cont.) 7:11 (2) Death VaUey Days U) Surfside 6 (Cont.) 11:1$ (2) Sports (4) Weather . (7)..Weathcr 11:29 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Sports 11:2$ (2) Movie: 1. “StraMerson (7) Beaiy and Cecil (9) R>peye (Cont.) 7:1m (2) Jackie Gleason (4) Sam Benedict (7) Roy Rogers-Dale Evans (9) Playhouse 15 7:4$ (9) Sports 1:99 (2) Gleason (Cont.) (4) Sam Benedict (Cont.) (7) Rogers-Evans (Cont.) (9) Hockey: Maple Leafs vs. Black Hawks 1:39 (2) Defenders , (4) Joey Bishop (7) Mr. Smith (9) Hockey (Cont.) 9:99 (2) Defenders (Cont.) (4) Movie: “Rivw of No Return." Matt Calder rescues gambler Harry ton and his girl Kay from waters of turbulent river. steals his horse and leaving Kay. Matt and .... son Mark to face hostile Indians. Robert........ Mai%n Monroe. (7) Lawrence welk (9) Hockey (Cont.) 9tll(9) Juliette 9J9(2)Have Gun Will Travel •, (4) Movie (Cont.) (7) WeUc ^Cont.) (9) Juliette (Cont.) ^9:4$ <9) Sports 11199 (2) Gunsmoke ......(4) Movle^^ fCont.)- (7) Boxing: Zora Folley vs. • D^ Jones. , (9) News llilf (9) Weather, Sports 19il9 (9) Telescope UAW 19:99 (9) Road to Wealth 11:41 (7) Make That Spare 11:91 (2) News ♦''iM«.^4>:News !•' . (7) News (9) Movie: "This Time for Keeps." (1947) Girl swim-ming-star is watched very carWhiOy by her grandmother. Esther Williams, -Jimmy Durante, Dame May Whltty. 9:99 (2) Detroit Pulpit (4) Bom the Clown (7) Rural Newsreel (9) Christopher Pragi 19:k9 (2) This b the Life (4) (Color) Diver Dan (7) S (2) Movie: 1. "Strangers on Cathedral of Tomorrow a Train.” (1951) 6n train n.jg(2) FdixtheCat Wmiar VArk Rriino (4) HocUQ 81X1 J6CM6 bound for New York, Bruno Antony suggests Antony suggests diabolical (7) Realm of the Wild scheme to tennis star Guy (4) House Detective « Haines. Farley Granger, ------- Robert Walker, Ruth Roman, Leo G. Carroll. 2. (7) cammpionshh) Bowling (9) Herald of Truth jimii, ^ V. -----------11:15 (2) (brtoonCbtema “Desperate.” (1947) IVuck n-jKg) it Is Written ----- ---------------- (5) Home pair driver becomes innocently involved in warehouse rob-bery araTslaying of police-man. Steve Brodie, Audrey Long, Raymond Burr. (7) Movie: 1. “The C!alne Mutiny.” (1954) Captain of war-weary destroyer cracks under strain of playing hero over years. Humphrey Bogart, Van Johnson, Jose Fenrer, Fred MacMurray, Robert Francis, 2. “The Flying Missile." (1950) Sub-marine conunander believes V-2 rockets can be underseas craft. Glenn Ford, Vlveca Undfbrs, Henry O’Neill. 11:39 (4) Movie: 1. “Boonw ang.” (1947) When CJonnec-ticut priest is murdered, jobless ex-GI is arrested. Dana Andrews. Jane Wyatt, Lee J. Cobb- 2. (Cokw) ^‘Wisp Eml." Young concert pianist desires career far beyond the bounds of his talent. Gene Raymond, Karen Sharpe. SUNDAY MORNING 7:1$ (7) Americans at Work 7:2$ (4) News 7:39 (4) Farm Report (7)TalkBack 7:$$ (2) Meditations 9:99 (2) Mass for Shut-Ins 4A) Indusb^on^^Perade (7) Nuclear Age 9:19 (9) BUlboard 9:1$ (4) (Color) Davey and Goliath (9) Sacred Heart 9:99 (2) Christopher Program (4) International Zone (7) Understanding Our World (9) Temple Baptist Church 9:4$ (2) With This Ring 9:99 (2) Decisions (4) Church at the Crossroads (7) Faith for Today (9) Oral Roberts 9:1$ (2) To Dwell Together 1SUNDAY ATIEHNOON 12:99 (2) Detroit Speaks (4) U. of M. Presents (7) World Adventure Series (9) Movie: “Girls on Probatkm" 12:39 (2) Voice of the Fans (4) Builders’ Showcase (7)^Utics’92 12:4$ (2) Pro Pressbox 1:99 (2) NFL Football: Lions vs Giants (4) NFL Highlights (7) Directions ’63 (9) Movie: "Suspicion’* 1:99*(4) Top Star Bowling (7) Editor’s Choice 2:99 (7) Issues and Answers 2:39 (4) Movie: "Over 21” (7) AFLFootiMll: Titans vs. Texans 3:99 (4) America Wants to -Know (9) MbVte: “Three Godfathers” 4:99 (2) Movie: "As Long as You’re Near Me” (4) Bullwinkle 4:39 (4) IhisIsNBCNews $:99 (4) Update $:1$ (7) All-Pro Scoreboard $:39 (2) College Bowl (4) Probe (7) Riverboat (9) Tombstone Territory SUNDAY EVENING 9:99 (2) Twentieth Century (4) AutoShmv (7) Riverboat (Cont.) (9) Popeye and Pals (56) Muslcale 6:39 (2) Big 19 Highlights (4) Auto Show (Cont.) 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WCAR, HtwK Hattya CKLW, Hnry Morgtn MiM-rjR, KnrI Hana WJBK,’ Nawa. Clark Raid WCAR, Nawa WPON. Nawa. TIno IliM-WJR. Nawaomw, I WWL Nawa. Lynkar ^LW, to^Ohnt WXV^ wSlJ’r **** WPON, Nawa. Tina ilitS-WJR, Timo For 1 WWJ, Nowa, Lynkar WXYZ, Wlnitr, Nowa OKI.W, Joa Van ISitB-WJR. Hawa. Farm WWJ. Nawa, Lynkar WXYZ, wintar CKLW, Nawa, Orant WJBK, Nawa. Raid WCAR, Nawa, Puraon WPON, Nawa. Tlno CKLW, Jot van WJBK. Nawa. Mold WXYZ. Wintar, Nowa liSb-WJR, Nowa, Bhowoaai WWJ. Nawa. NoUhbor WPON. Nowa. Tlno WCAR, Nowo, Muolo V/JBk Nowo. Bold WXYZ, WInUr, Nowo CKLW. NOWO, Joo van S^M^WJI^ ‘il WPON. Nowiu Olaon WJBK. Nowa. Rohort Lao WXYZ. Winlor, Nowa CKLW. Nawa. Joa Van ttlA-CKLW, Nawa. Shut Bl t:S»-WWJ. Nawa. Hullinan CKLW, Dkviaa WCAR, Nawa, BhatMnn W^, WXYZ, BtbatUnB liW-WJR, Muolo Uan WWJ, Cmpliooit. Hullman «5».'nVw7’« 8:69 (2) Ed Sullivan (7) (19) Movie — "Timbuktu.” (1969) Time: W ‘ War n. Arriw hriiin are trying to ; tom French. MUrnGonway) American adveaturar, takes advantage of aitua*' . tiop by selling guns to both t, sides. Victor Mature, Yvonne DeChurlo. (9) Telescope UAW-Guy Nunh (59) Your Marriage |:39(2)EdSulUvan(Oont.) (4) Car84 — (7) Movie (Cont.) (9) Interpol Calling (59) World of Art 9:W (2) Real McCoys (4) (Color) Bfflppnza (7) Movie (Cont.) (9) aose-Up (56) Producer’s Choice 9:39 (2) True (9) Quest . 19:99 (2) Candid Camera (4) Show of the Week (7) Voice of Firestone (9) News 19:19 (9) Weather, Sports 19:29 (9) Telescope UAW 19:99 (2) What’s My Line (4) Show of Week (Cont.) (7) Howard K. Smith (9) MaryMwgan 11:99 (2) News (9) Movie-“Three Strangers.” (1946) Girl and two head.l’1)rumo(TahlU.’A (1954) -Tha. year: 1W7. American agrees to help Island’s old quem smuggto guns. Dennis O’Keefe, Patricia Medina. FrVia,. L; Sullivan. \ 11:99 (4) Thriller \ MONDAY MORNINO 9:99 (4) Continental (Hassroom 7|:1S (8) Meditationa 9:39 (2) On the Farm Front f:2S (2) News (7) Funews 9:39 (2) College of the Air . (4) Continental Classroom 7:91 (2) B’wanaDon (4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty 7:89 (7) Johnny Ginger 8:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo Year. Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lmre, Joan Lorrlng, Alan Napier. 11:15 (2) Sports (4) Weather (7) Weather U:29 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Sports 11:25 (2) Movie — “Mystery Sea Raider.” (1949) Ship is hijacked and converted into German raider. Carol TV Features By United Press International SATURDAY JACKIE GLEASON SHOW, 7:3 p.m. (2) Art Carney and Tony Bennett are guests. Skef ' focus on litterbugs, foreign cars and watching football on tele- Ision. MR. SMITH, 8:39 p.m. (7). Guest Harpo Marx is mistaken for concert pianist and is Invited to perform at a Washington, D.C. DEFENDERS, 8:39 p.m. (2). First of two-part drama about psychotic killer and his trail, which centers on old law dealing with definition of legal insanity. HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL, 9:39 p.m. (2). Old, hunted man has his trail dogged by Paladin and revenge-seeker. FIGHT NIGHT, 19 p.m. (7), Bob Foster and Doug Jones in 19-round heavyweight bout at Madison Square Garden, N.Y. SUNDAY N A T10 N A L AUTOMOBILE SHOW, 9 p.m. (4). Look at cars in Detroit in one-hour special. Hosts Include Chet Huntley and Hugh Downs. CAR $4. WHERE ARE YOU? 8:39 p.m. (4). Guest star Molly Picon plays wonuin who moves into an unfinished housing project that was supposed to be ready- BONANZA, 9 p.m. (4). Search for army deserter centers on Ponterosa. (Color). TRUE, 9:39 p.m. (2). “Ckde Nanw: Christopher.” Host Jack Webb stars as marine officer on mission to Ger- SHOW OF THE WEEK, 19 p m. (4). “Ihe Betrayal.” Franchot Tone and Maureen Stapleton star in story of young man’s treac' during student rebellion in Berlin. Play is based on U-yeM^ old work, "under western nyes,*' by JosepbfConrwl, PWARD K. SMmi 19 p.ni. (7). Commentator analyzes good and bad Influences of automobite (7) Movie - 1. "Jei Eiigllf." (1197) RIm f^nt stage atir Jei .Kim Novak. JOff (56) RMKlingtor Taatiheiv 1:11 (7) JackItaLamie (81) AuericanaatWork to# (51) WakleiaQii 5:51 (5) mSoud to# (SyDecembwErida (4) Living (7) Movie: "The Sun Never. Seta," Parti. (5) CSiee Helene (55) United Nationa 9:11 (9) Nursery School 9:59 (2) Millionaire (9) Friendly Giant (55) Numberaand lto#(S5)SpuiiabLaaaM 1I:#(S5) GantaanLaaaou illi# (2) McCoya (4) (Color)PrlcaTBllWil ■ (7)EnlieFord (5) AdvanturaTIma 11:55 (55) SpanlahLaaaoo U:I5 (2)Petoand61adya (4) Conoantration (7) YouraforaSong (55) Music and the 5:45 (9) 1 1:55 (2) TV Editorial li:# (2) Connie Page (4) say When (9) Romper Room (55) Our Scientific Wwld 15:15 (7) News 10:2$ (4) News 15:95 (8) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Big Payoff (56) jPrench Lesson Darin Attacks Fan Mags, Photogs, Columnists By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Angry young actor Bobby Darin’s got a war going on three fironts-agalst "degenerate” fan magazines, wlumnists who claim his wife Sandra Dee’U leave him because of his temper and photographers who take his picture when he doesn’t look his best. Having been tipped off about his wrath, 1 took ami of a bodyguard along when I went to 8t him. To my surprise he smiled, shook hands and kidded around. "Why is everybody on me?" he inquired. He turned to my bodyguard. “Do you like —?" He named a couple ef colnmnisto. Before the bodygi^ could answer, Bobby said, “And to heU with yon, too." He was stiU kUdtog-4>nt suddenly he wasn’t. “Fan magazines first!” he said, "I say they’re a paper form of degeneracy. Not that they print pdriidgraphy. B(ft tWqi'pRSBnt fiction to a group of minds not aware that it’s fiction. Bobby and Sandra are co-starred in a Ross Hunter picture, "If A Man Answers,” and some whisperers have hinted that Bobby’r jealous of his wife’s prominence in the film. "Isn’t that crazy? Can I look as good on the screen as she does? Can she get up and do an hour and a half on a night dub flow? That’s what makes her a star and what make* me whatever I am. “Sandra’s got 16 or 17 pictures to her credit and I’ve gut 6. What kind of competition am I?” Bobby says his battle isn’t a one-man war . . . “there are others aIsK> pretty mad.” ★ ★ ★ THE WEEKEND WIND-UP . . . Shirley Temple’s now tremendously Interested lSt surgery: Brain operations and such ... S5ielley Berman Introduced his wife during his cafe act, adding: “Stand up, honey—make your gown deduc-ible.” . . . Orson Welles told an interviewer on the “Trial” aet the only sure way for film companies to make money: “Discover oil on the lot.” ... The musical “Fanny” is still paying off; the latest profit gave backers a 152 per cent total return. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Joe E. Lewis says he’s changing his habits: “No more wasting money. I’ll save a dime here, a dime there—and before you know it. I’ll have 20 cents.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: There are two kinds of birthday pres-enta—those you don’t like, and those you don’t get. EARL’S PEARLS: The modem girl’s idea of a labor-saving device isn’t one you buy—it’s one you marry. “Some people pay for the work of an efficiency expert,” notes Rip Taylor, “-but if a wife told ’em the same thing they’d '* it nagging.” ... That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1962) r r" 3 4 IT" J. F IT" _F vT HB sr i n n BT _j 5T - j, ' S' w I IT ra W 43 IT W W 5T" ST 8T 8T n 0 t □ □ B B B IT.# (2) h MONDAY AFTERNOON U:M (S) LoveofUfe (4) Ftntlmprandmi (7) JaneWyman • . (66) Discovery #:# (2) Seardi for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage 12:46 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round (56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guiding yght (9) News 12:55 (4) News (7) News (9) Playback 1:99 (2) Star Performance (4) Bestof Grouoho (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: “Devotion” 1:19 (56) Fr«ioh Lesson 1:M (2) As the World Turns (4) Peent Ch. 6 Antanno • 1-^Krtife Switch • 50 Lead-In Wire • 4 Stood-Off Iniulatori AvtastMe# TWA Peaiiew Mated on 1 THE !^OKTIAC FRESS, SATUBDAY, OCA)Bgk 20,1062*, H.J. Rice Dies 8tfvtc« for Ifaity J. Wee, r»> gtenal luperviior of terminal op-eratioM fqr Qrwid Trunk West* em BaUroad, will be 11 e'.m. In 8t. Benedict CettoUe Churdi, Burial will be in Mt. p.m. Monday in 8|MtrlnHGrij^ hineral Hune. Mr. Wee, N, ef IM Oiemair Bead, died thli moniaf M Ve*. Ranger 5 Sajis Past Moon Today er a kng flbMM. Formerly trainmaiter in Pontiac, he joined Grand Trunk Weitem in 1912 aa a atenographMr in the engineering department at Detroit. JHe transferred to the transportation department and worked through various positions in Ppul>im> back to. the drawing boards for work on another project: Rangv 0. 'Weird' Ella Stays Clear of Mainland WHMINOTON, N.C. (UP»-Hur-ricohe BUa, the ’’weirdest” tropical disturbance on the Weather Bureau’s books, inched away from the mainland today, flail-inig the water with 100-miIe-an-hour winds and kicking up high seas from Florida to Rb^e Island. The storm qualifies as the most unusual by virtue of ttm fact it has demonstrated an ability to resist cool, dry air. Such afar usually spells death for a hurricane. It also is unusually large — 1,009 miles across in some spots. At 8 a.m. (Pontiac time) Ella was centered near latitude 34.3 north, longitude 70.6 west, about 300 statute miles east-southeast of Cape Hatteras, N.C. It was moving toward the northeast at 15 miles an hour. Gales generated by the storm covered an area of more than 600 miles in diameter and there were winds of about 109 m.p.h. this one will be desli^ by the labmatmy to imout lie moon. If will have six television cameras, as compared to Ranger 5’s one. Scientists hope to fire Ranger 6 toward.the moon in the early part of 1063. They hope the cameras will take pictures as it lands on the moon. What caused Ranger 5's fail ure? ’The laboratory and National-Aeronautics and Space Administration expertO have ruled out interference from radiation. It had been theorized that radiation from high altitude nuclear tests might have affected the solar cells which provide the Ranger craft with power. Dr. Homer Newell, NASA Ranger expert in Washington, said that the spacecrpft’s solar panels unfolded as planned, and the craft turned properly to point them at the sun. They provided some power, and then it suddenly ceased. Why they didn’t deUver the power expected of them hasn’t yet been determined, although sclen-tlstf are sifting data radioed back by Ranger 9’s small battery-powered radio. Ranger’s signals ceased entirely when the battery failed nine hours after launch. ter. Along the coast, gale warnings were displayed from Cape May, N.J., to Cape Lohkout, N.C. Ships Just offshore from Cape Charles, Va., reported winds of about 35 Mrs. Iva Campbell Dies Today at 68 Service for Mrs. Iva E. Campbell, 68, of 100 Miami Road, will be 3 p.m. Monday at the Sparks-Griffin Chapel, with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mrs. Campbell, the widow of Consumers Power executive Birum Campbell, died today. She had been hospitalized for a month. Mrs. Campbell was a member of First Presbyterian Cburcb, and sbe was active in tbe Business and Professional Women of Pontl^ She was a paMfmatron of Eastern Star and White Shrine, and a life member of Pythian Sisters. Surviving are two sons, Robert Redmond of Pittsburgh, Pa., and Donald Redmond of Washington, D.C., and five grandchildren. The Pontiac Area Jilurior Cli her of Commerce has again been awarded (he state franchise to conduct the sixth annual Micfai- ’Itie State Chairman Charles Bronillet of the Pontiac Jaycees. He said the eoavstMisa win SIX-YEAR-OLD MEETS LBJ-Diana Bonner, 6, obviously is delighted to shake hands with Vice President London Johnson at an Omaha political rally. Behind Diana is her father. Dr. Thonus Bonner, a Demo- AP PkcMti cratlc congressional candidate. Johnson will be in Detroit Monday where his speech will highlight the 44th National Auto Show at Cobo Hall. Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths DOCK GIBSON Funeral service for Dock Gibson, 46, of 6481 Prarie Lawn, Waterford Township, will be 3 p.m. Monday at the Battle Branch Baptist Church, in Clayton, Ga., with burial in Roan Cemetery. His body wps at the Pursley Funeral Home. He died Friday after a long illness. Mr. Gibson had been employed at General Motors Truck and Coach Division. Surving are his wife, Grace; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Gibson; two sons, Kenny and Paul; and three daughters, Mrs. Yvonne Oliver, Mrs. Lucille Biggs and Mrs. Betty Deaton, all of Pontiac. Also surviving are three sisters and three brothers. WOVE-POX LEONARD — Service for Roy E. Fox. 90. formerly of 45 Mack Road, will be 2 p.m. Sunday at the Wilbur Funeral Home, with burial in Romeo Cemetery. He died Friday after a s h o r ipjHER ANDERSON SPlraGFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service fV Helmer Anderson, 64, of ip841 Dixie Highway, will be 11 a.m. Monday at the Dryer Funeral Home, Holly, with burial in Oak-hill Cemetery, Holly Township. He died yesterday after a short illness. Mr. Anderson was a retired carpenter. Surviving is a brother in Swe- MRS. IDA C. KIRKPATRICK LAKE ORION - Service for Mrs. Ida C. Kirkpatrick, 79, 326 E. Flint St., will be 2:30 p.m. Sunday at /Jlen s Funeral Home, with burial in Eastlawn Ceme- A retired farmer, he is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Walter Bed^ow and Mrs. Lambert Arnold of Detroit and Mrs. John Palmer of Florida; a son, A. N. Fox of Leonard; and a brother, Ernie, of Detroit. illness. Mrs. Kirkpatrick was a member of First Church of Christ Scientist, Oxford. Surviving is a son, Carrill J. of Lake Orion. LESTER C. HUNT UNION LAKE - Service for Lester C. Hunt, 64, of 264 Farnsworth St., will be 2:30 p.m. Monday 4it the Voorhees-Siple Chapel, burial in Evergreen Cemetery, Lake Orion. A retired Detroit Urban Railroad employe, Mr. Hunt died Friday after a short illness. Surviving are two brothers, Theodore of Union Lake and Norman of Lake Orion. Military prosecutors have pealed the 10-year prison sentence given former Premier John M. CJiang, opening the way for a possible suffer penalty by the military appellate court. ’The move Friday followed an appeal for acquitflil by the 63-year-old ex-premier contending he was innocent. A general court-nuurtial Sept. 27 convicted Chang of giving 100,000 whan (6700) to a member of against Gen. Chung Hee Park’s military government. Reserve Board Loosens Credit Business Week Gets^Brightener NEW YORK (PI-Action by Federal Reserve Board to loosen credit and thereby perk up the national economy was a highlight of a week In which the economy badly needed a lift. Business continued to move sluggishly, with only a tiny spurt here and a little sputter there to relieve the week-to-week same- The Federal Reserve announced that industrial production in September was almost exactly the same as the previous two months. , The Reserve action, reducing from I to 4 per cent the amount bnnks must keep on reserve to bnck time nnd savlnp deposits, could free |4.8 blUion for busi- changed from a year ago. The stock market spent most of the week within a tight range in slow trading. Talk of a recession in the United States Is being Joined by that But the financial community commented that making money avaikble doesn’t automaUcally mean a businessman will borrow It, not unless he’s convinced he can make a profit by doing so. PROFITS I^OT SURE The way things have been going lately, profits don’t mem a sure thing. The business council, embracing 100 top corporate chiefs, spoke of doMrums lasUng deep Into the iMxt yenr. Commerce Secretary laiOier I, while taslstlni he ex« On the cheerier side, auto sales continue to boom, one prominent economist foresees an economic upsurge next year, airline traffic is mtting records and tax revision legislation to perk up business poets things to get^tter next year, said buslnessf”ls going to k a little slow for a few Steel production during the ^k again refused to break away from Price reductions have generally balanced off any rises. New cars are NlUita for about the — prices as mt yeer. it on stainless sheet by about 5 per cent. This dullness in the steel *mar-ket fits in with the general picture drawn by the Federal Reserve board of the economy last nwnth. Europe nuy h e In for deflation and its own kind of economic i into li Steel pi^uctlon was announced as 1,746,000 tons of ingots, exactly the same as the previous week and therefore disappointing to »who were hoping for a seasonal upturn. SECOND DISRUPTION It was the second weekly disruption hi the Industry’s climb up from the profltaquelchlng slowness caused by users * strike-hedge Inventories. gain hLShlpments of about I to II per cent fer the menth, and a similar gain again fas Navemltor-At the monMnt, however* mar-^ oompotUkm by shaving jha price and magazines (of the construction trade. It listed the output of mines, factories and utilities at an index of 119, tbe same as the July and August levels. That was 19 per cent higher than the 1917 average used as a base/ This plateau-like economy is being interpreted by many acono-niists as meaning there’s a down-111 slide not far away. One private survey of mists showed most of them predicting a mild recession next year with rising unemployment. A recovery by fall was foreseen. CITES OVERCAPACITY Swedish economist Per Jacobs-of the In- ternational Monetary Fund, warned HManwhile that world ove^ capacity in some iftajor industries could load to worldwide business-staUlng deflation. H6 said western nations should apply economic stimulants next year to prevent this. eommenti In Washington glum, that Bie European Common Market comifries shonld talur stope to aet together If a reemlen thiroatewi.them. A quite fflweid coniH, however, from the chief economist of F. W. Dodge Ciorp., the firm that puUlshee statistics The economist. Dr. Gordon W. McKinley, predicted that tax reform will come next year and that it will revitalize the nation’s economy. He said the effect could well be striking. Another heartening comment on the economy comes from auto sales figures which continue to belie other economic Indicators. Ward’s Automotive Reports said that sales of new automobiles the first 19 days of October hit all-time records. It listed a total of 250,670 cars sold, compared with the previous high for the period of 167,007 cars set last year. The two periods are not wholly comparable, but it’s clear that this year’s sales aro starting with a banjl, the report said. Jaycees Get Pageant bq leU ian. 21 is *9 state. the stata in the pageant at itobW, Ali., sometima In March 1981, _____ .to have a local contest to select Pontiac’s Renewal Action to Shift state wtonorl fOt foosivw • Hearings to Move Again scholanbip to. Pontiac urban renewal con- turn to Circuit Court Judge Willism J. Beer's courtroom at the County Courthouse Oct. 29, Judge Beer said yesterday. ’The hearings have been held in the City Commission chambers at City Hall since Oct. 2 when the Circuit. Court Jury Find Ruins of Synagogue Called Oldest ROME (UPI) — The ruins of what may be the world’s oldest existing synagogue have been discovered near the ancient Roman port of Ostia, it was reported yesterday. Prof, Sabatino Moseati, an internationally known expert on Hebrew antiquities, reported the find yesterday in an article in the Rome newspaper II Messag- term began. The Jury term will end Friday. Judge Beer said Hearings will continue at City Hall Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. They are expected to be concluded early/in November. The proceedings are well on their way to being the tongest Judicial hearii^ of any type ever held in Oakland County. choice and a frsa trip h . where tbey!H via for ft scholarsUpa to be awarded thsrd. BroolUet said additisnal latart matioii on how to enter the lodU contest would be availaUe ItMt' this month. 2 Children Blamed in Barn-Ruining Fire WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Armqd with a new frade expansion art. Children playing with matches are responsible for a fire that leveled a bam in Rose Township yesterday. Frank Gaines, who rented the bam at 2320 Pool Road, said tbe loss to contents was more than $2,- „ conference early next yw to find^ls to chip away at werkT trade barriers. / signed the General AgreoneRl fq Tariffs and IVade. Springfield Township Fire Chief Oharles Hillntan said that two boys, 8 and 10 years old, admitted that they were lighting matches in the bam just before the fire was discovered by Gaines. 'I would like to take fUD advantage of the authority wbidi the trade expansion act confers upon me,” said Kennedy, “and I am eager to explore with other like- He said the synagogue, dating possibly from the 1st C e n t u r y A.D., was discovered under an-other 4th Century synagogue which had been unearthed one year ago. le discovery of the upper synagogue was hailed at flie time as one of the most interest^ finds of recent years, Sut wiH be en-She died Thursday after a long tirely overshadowed by the n e w find Moseati said. Ex-Prdmier of Korea Appeals Prison Term SEOUL, South Korea (AP)- Fiying Family Makes It Sound Like 2nd Nature LOUISVILLE, Ky. (*» - Mrs. Charles Morat is the mother of an air-minded family. Her oldest son, Charles, Is a colonel in the Air Force. Another boy, Warren, works for Pan American Airways, and the third is operations chief for National Air Lines. Mrs. Morat’s daughter was an married a Navy pilot . ” * *. * ’The youngest son, Larry, wed an American Airlines steward- New FM Station Broadcasting From Pontiac An FM radio station serving southeastern Michigan and a por« tion of Canada began operating today in Ponttwe. Designated WHFI 94 7FM, the new station will broadcast daily from 6 a.m. to midnight from the top floor of the Pontiac S t a t Bank Building. Gar Meadoweroft is president and general manager. Larry Payne is news director and Don McLeod is program manager. Both Payne and McLeod were formerly associated with Station WPON in Pontiac. Kennedy Asks Confab to Cut Trade Barriers Those taking part would be rap- sible the problems aiid pirospeeta for a new approach to the reduction of obstacles to world trade." TRADE LETTEiUI Kennedy’s remarks were In an exchange rtletters with Canada’# < Prime Minister John G. DiefSv dy’s reply Friday in Ottawa, aald be is instructing the Canadian delegation to next wedk’s GATT meeting in Geneva to seek ripP-clal meeting next year. Kennedy had suggested February or March as a possible time for tbe conference. *•' ‘>f Sporks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME **Thoug1ufid Service** 46 WiMaan ». PIwm fl ^5S6| i News in Brief The Mazza Market at 118 Bald-1 in Ave. was broken into and I 657 stolen, it was reported yes-1 terday to Pontiac Police. Edwin J. DobskI reported to I Sheriff deputies yesterday that I his cabin at 815 Highland Road, [ Highland Township, was entered I and a 6115 radio stolen.. ”Let’s All Work Together” Rummage, 389 Orchard Lake. I Fri. and Sat. all day. ~ Rummage, 3989 Green Lake I Road, Oct. 19, 6 p.m.-9 p.m. 20th, r 9a.m.-6p.m. —Adv. Wanted-oew and old books for I public library. Need 109,000. Call 3324455, 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.. ' Mon. through Fri. 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.. Sat. and Sunday. —Adv. Lodge Calendar Pontiac Chapter No. 228 OES | installation of officers, Monday, October 22, 8 p.m. at 22 State St. Retiring officers practice, 1 p.m. New officers at 2 p.m. Sunday, October 21 at 22 State St. Edith | M. Coons. Secretary. Your Business Ethics Board is working isvery day for ] you ... and Pontiac! fr Through its Solicitations Control Plan, it diseoungee unworthy solicitations. fr It promotes ethical business methods by eonetantly endeavoring to eliminate the undeefrable pmetieee of fly-by-nightere. ■fr In cooperation Vith advertising aourees^it eneonra^ honest representation In Merchandise and Service advertisiiig. •fr It acts to eliminate fraud and misrepreeeotatlon In Direct Door-to-Door Selling. ★ It exercises control over Book and Magazine Salesmen through proper registration. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID- WePickVp FE 2-0200 ★ Since experience proves that the customer may expert satisfaction only .through dealing with local, well-established ’ firms. It discourages Pontiac |>euple from doing bwelnaM with out-of-town, high-pressure coneerufc The files of your Business Ethics Board indiosta that it is saving our dUssM 1 many thousands of dollars each year throu|^ its variaus oparatioiia, Yoav J support will make it work even more effeetiva. ' BUSINESS ETHICS B< I Pontiac Arfea diamber of Cowimer*^ /JWBWTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PKES8 SATtHtPAY, OCTOBER 80. iwa ' ',«■/ 'J. .Death Notices jBrs%¥Ea??„jajs VSSSl..?'»“■«! j«!S»UM***lSurmmt“to Pmj jsr‘.,"Mr^*»*s sirsici* w , aerTlc«^ will Of^neia Clsteon, Ocorgl* with Mr» Lu I K?™oirfl«l»Mnf. Rai^ii Cem»tery. Ctoyton. «r-c.°^’T.r.7w« kKS:££.r^ iatiKEE Blplt Funeral Hoin«- -- iUBKPATBICK. OCTOBER l«. •*« mtms Kent in E»«il»WD Cemetery. Mrs fhf WK C.»r L.f, Our evM ahed many lean; Ood Inbwe how much we mUi . L2i,Vt..i«la‘MoK Dad and diiian._______^ tehV, Mri. Bruce Carroll Biward Rice; also survived by » 1962, I will not be res^slble any debts contracted ny any ir than myself. Signed, Leo R. lolson, 131 .Augusta, Ponllac. To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 W.m. day following \ll|Bt insertion lEAD THESE Classified Columns Classifieatioi^, 106 (or the car of your choice. Region Dealers Atid Individuals ... Keep this column fresh with daily listings of your favorite model and make at competitive prices. IF YOU ARE IN THE MARKET NOW ^or soon to be Consult Classification 106 ' ITODAYl W« WISB TO TKAItK T«E frMBdt and aalsb^a for,Ui*^ Und| SanavaHiant «f gurMoUitr. Mra. i.'ai*, 1 ■>» Wi^ Molo 6 ■xpaRnNcao apfliamcs In Meiiylwii 3 LOVINO MEMORY OF RAT-“‘'imSInlna hara without you. lEM^Y OF bMa INDEBT Arrange to pay all your bll with ono small weekly paymanl. BUDliET'SERVICE SAFELY AND eonoinicimy with newly rehlei' >ex-AiDrel «bIelirr”W cerili Pay Off Your Bills -without a loan -Payments low as 919 wk. Protect your ]ob and Credit ‘Homo or Office Appointments City Adjustment Service - W. Huron ---- . J. OODHARDT FUNERAL Home, Eeego Hnrbor. Ph. 6t2»oaoo. D. E. Pursley HUNTOON OWNER.OPERATOR. SPARK.S-GRIFI‘TN FUNERAL HOME ‘"1 Sorvlco" FE ^9I : LADIE^HAMILTON WRIST rh. Food Fsir St Miracle Mile .....la if. High. FE S-0012. Im StAaYED; MALE ■ahua. tan. wward. VIcIntty ol ler and' St^t. 28 Stout St.. LOST: SATURDAY, LADY'S WHITE ny............- ■ sward. OR f H23. UABLE BOOK A' LOST - LADIES’ 001)0 WATCH. PLACED A SUITCASE IN M 0R ‘ Ford by mlaf'" " '— Hoap. Would 3 PARTS MANAOBR \ .____iced with Chevrolet to l|k< shario of iiiy pans dcnarimrot. RATHBURN CHEVY SALES ^ 960 8. Main, NorttivllW APPLIAifCE'SALElfMEN WITH liX-perleiicr.. Commisalon plus hose with all amploya benetlis. Con. suiners Power Co., 26 W ’ ' APPRENTICE PHSTOORAPHER "Oaltlon o(ien. Kendale's. 49 Blood Donors Needed FE 4-9947 tS Rh poflttlvA. t7 Rb neinilv* 9 to 4 Mun . Tuo$.. Wrd., fhum. Detroit Blood Service Mftple nnd Ciunbrook, OA8 BTAtiON ATTENDANT, m Bxpcrltnccd in iubrlcntlon_ ilnor repBlri. Rood p»y. Apply lunoco BUtion. Telegraph and M..... Looking for a Better Job? Lost Money Valuable Papers or a Pet Want to Sell Items You No'Longer Need or Want—from Andiions or Zithers then Dial FE 2-8181 for Courteous, Informed and I'riendly Service Fib'^rglas Laminafor .... ^ ‘ lley C.ulligan Man Tho Culllgan Water CondlUonW Co. foolery braneh at Pontlaa entering Into an axpanalon pr gram In lha Oakland County aroi Appllcatlona .ore now being Ukt for aalra cnltnoero. Thoao aolocti will be given thorough tratniii ...j ...... 11,0 Ian 'sin&HT'SnS'’ OR PART TIME 8BRVIC work. OR 3-M60. LATHE OPER.^TOR Aircraft prototype and nart tolai auco eaporlonce doalniiAa. Mui produce llnlahed parto. Paid bol daya. Insurance and vaoallona. M. C. Mfg. Co. INVESTIGATE THIS Need 2 ambitious moriiod men 22-44 for route sale* opening h Pontiac area Wo teach you hos to earn ,1117 up Feekly. Applloanli must haVa high achool aducatlon dopondahle car and neat appearance. Fif personal Inlervlaw phona OR MM«._________ ■ , AUTO SALI^SMAN Outstanding opportunity lor os riehced man. Terrlflo pay pi hospltaliaatlon. honua. frog dot Blrmlngham’a only [,lncoin M. eury dealer. Bob Borat. LAM Inc.. 479 8. “ ■ ■ "■ Training Program with chgnea for position In sales If Qualified. Flre-atone StorY - 146 W. Huron. See Mr. ZelasHol ' Machine Repairman Rebuilding or grinding machin Must hava high quality acrapli txperlence. M. C. MFG. CO. .IS Indian Wood Rd. Lake Orion An Equal Opportunity Employer TO 50 truck .. ----------------- -------- nationwide. Must be physically fit and able to paaa an ICC physical examination. Rate ol pay — percentage basis. PersansI hiterview. contact National Trailer Convoy. Inc.. Terminal at------------------ Lake Rd.. Drayton or Marietta. Mich, ivnnu milea louUi on MS3, or FUn Terminal, 2yo2 Lippincolt. I. Mich. MARRIED MAN ON DAIRY FARM. -SECOND COOK Muat be good broiler man CLUB ROCHESTER bolldays, Inauranoe and vaoal M. C. Mfg. Co. Ipdlanwood Rd.. Laka o-' SINGLE MIDDLE-AGED^ N 'fE 4”Sf. SALESMAN 1 clothtng experience, ernon only to Roberl Tire' Salesman We have an excellent opportunl for a man thoroughly expei enced In selling passenger < truck tires. Apply personnel « MONTGOMF.RY WARD _____PONTIAC MALL SURFACE-"broach CIRlNpiR. must be able to handle all types clahsis 'preferred"*' Stato*' wa'fei and experience. Reply to Pontlai TITiS is FOR YOU Onnortunlly to grow with an e oandliiK nation^ orjanlsalloi^si eful'** Neat'"api)eSn?e. e sentlal. Age 29 to 90. Tel, f __ _______________________ SERVrcK STATION MBCHANK' Must ^ ex^ierleiieed. f Ruck" MECHaIiC MUS'fBE "pi ^Heneed. Call FE 8.9945 after •Iruck mechanic, own toou ^ly^^ qualified need apply. 59 wobLPBESsiiUwiTH^^ license. Apply 3.19 W. Huron. Pot w6rk1~YBAiTs’FOR "us"and‘¥e- tlra wllh^stesdy liicuine. 2 ssles. Registered l’h;irmacist Full lime, excellent working co dlllons, good fringe bencllU Ss. ary open. Reply Box 17, Pontiac Real Estate Salesmen o*'* managing FHA Proportlcs chancs for higher camlngo "aluel. FK 4-3631 fo NttJ^^CURB WAmiEM. ^FR08- babiTsitter^r TsmAi.L cTiiL- $4000-$4400 o?r orohuSin^-iSd-to: tlon'for^a'* quallHof^aSn"Vta to FICB BUILDING. 1 LAFAYSTTB ST . PONTIAC. M1CH10»*» “Personnel oouhi ist he mature, ago sollonl tolephono volt- ng pcraonallty. FIno opportu-V for high oallbor poraon. Bant. «*cX*RvX as:j:D*r'S‘L' KXPBRiBNCBD work^^art “■ ring. r«l H--._ waTtrebb to -—‘1. Muat bo betwooD ‘ EXPERIENCED WOMAN^ FOR housework. 5' days, sit 2 nights. Own transporlatloo. Must 1 o v o chlldron. FE 2.7019. ^ >1 housowork. 5 days. Ml 7-17t9. EXPERIENCED WAITRB8B ANL abort order dock, part lima. 0R« pPBRlBNCBD SALES LADY FOR ■ slry department, port time. A^ Mr. Paur. W*C. lOt N. Sagl- l fABt tisaai (snwo porlenood l^orrod. Muat Me. onorntle and willing Contact Mr, SmlUl, Mttaol- FOLL OR PART • ly. Experienced capable, ener- learn. Contact mr, i---- da Dept. Stora, OL 14171. »n Roehcatcr. Mich._____________ GENERAL HOUSEWORK. MUST like children. Drive or llvo In. 13 MlloMIddlebett oroa. Refarenoea —.....- 6-5259i UVB HAVE A TOY CHEST TOY PARTY, receive up to 25 per cent in free merchandise. FK 5-4721 LADIES Would you like to 1 family Income on basis? Become en^Av coamotlca, tollelrlea and ^ Chrlatmaa gifts for the entiri ■ -------“ offor 4 pin COOK EXPERIENCED ' MACHUS MIDDLE-AOED LADY, CHILD WEL-como for mother'— ‘-I Ponllac fresB Mature lady" for lioht housework and. full ohargo of teenage high school girl. Live In. More for h o ra o than v 363-3937 between 19 a.m. MANICURISTS. BXPBRlIMlfH Nl^ fssary to take over clientele. MI 6-4940, MA 6-2666 after 6 p.m. . REPiNED MIDDLE AGED HOU8B- JI-MOS; alter 4 p.m._______ siiil t I'ress Oiicrafor Experienced. Apply Liberty Clean- SECRETARY FOR turer Operate electric typewi dictaphone and teletype, Knowi. of production schedule helpful. i resume to Ponllac Preaa. Box I WOMAN FOR CLEANING I ta\irant .lull time days 5171 I Hwy . Di'sylon Plains. Mlcolgan WAITRESS. EXPERIENCED 1— night shift. Apply RIeky’a Plasa House. 519 8. Woodward. WAITRESS WANTED FOR FULL time employment Night sljift Apply In iwrson only. 2:30-5.' Huron WOMAN PHOTOGRAPHER. 25-39, Sludlo. 47 W. Huron. ___________ WOMAN TO CARE FOR ELDERLY woman, live In. UL 2-2347. WOMAN FOR GENERAL HOU8E-work. must stay. *25 to 930 pe- week. NA 7-2925._______________ WAITRESSES WANTED. APPLY 3( Lounge. 100 8. Caaa Lake Rd Pontiac. WAITRESS AND KITCHEN HELI Catholic home, own Iranaportotlo Call alter 7:30 p.m. MY S-1206. vTaNTED 4 LADIES TO HEL with our Christmas rush of bus ness, muat have uac of car. part time, 140-960 per week, lull lime 975-6100 per week, no Inveetinen-lor delalla, call Stanley Hor Prodiicta. Tuxedo 2-9*45. or wr to Mre. I. Story, 1693* Harper. Detroit 24.______________________ WHITE WOMAN WANTED FOR cleanln* and Ironing It* daya,per wk., own trana. Telegraph-Long 29 AND to! anca In retail store aelling. Thun dav. Friday and Saturday, pei manenl position. Phono for ap nt, FE 4-2511 Ext. " Waite* Department St WOMAN OVER *6 TO DO ALL ol general office work, t like to work with figures, le P. O Box 912, Ponllac. glv age. cducallon. Job cxporlonco __ family elatua._______________ WOMAN TO LIVE IN. HONEST. LADY OR MAN, LIVE IN. HELP rdio patient. CbllS welcome. MA 1972. Big Boy Drivc-In Has openlnga (or: EBTABLISHED WATKINS ROUTE, Write Ponllac Preee Box 69 BABY 'sifTERFo^ r (Till brSyr^ ermicea. 332-2994 alter 4 |im.' BABYSiTTiR AND Llbift llbUBir-keeping. -Phone Hadley 132. B^wfeRTO rbiTpAHT time. 2 yeara experience, Milford. 6g4-«77l. H F. L P WANTED. WAITRESSES and hue boye Jtoply alter 3 p.m. al the Hucllau Reelauranl In per-eiin. Hawaiian Oardene. LADY FOR OFFICE TO LEARN Int rtlf. Cftll PS 9^7911 or Ml 6*«!MiO. BRI8TOL-MEYEB8 Houeewlvee — Doee your nreeent Tncome fall abort of your needaf Add ealra dollare to the family liicoma by becoming 0 Liixlor Con-•iijtwH^today, For appolnlmem, «s6TOiim"FbriifflB^^ Writs Holmiidsbrrg siid NuvsA UPAS. 10919 .Ismsi UOUMOS. Dsl. U, Mich. StgUng fsitry ex-trlsncf. sig In^'”^ MEN OR WOMEN: IF YOU ARE aaleamtnded. high achool oduoa- < (Ion or oqulvalonl you can ro-oolvo (roe Inalruclloni al our of-flca preparatory to obtaining Stato l‘:.T.*r* *m'f,h»k. *ca^! or stop 111 Mid talk it o»«r With Mr. MIU. LAWRENCE W. OAYLORD.^altor T30 K pike St. FEi-1003 ShIbi Haw liiila^aHWh M TELEPHONE SOLICITORS NEED- ‘ ad. oood oommlaatou. PE S-TSSO. 'BOOKKEEPER FOR SIMPLIFIED bookkeeping In IneUrance Agency In downtown Pontiac. Aga 25 to 50.. Renly Pontiac Proea, Box J02. BEAUTTaAN"lwPfH''"’'SO*ii ji^)L^ , lowing, excellent 'working eondl- Bxp'iRiik*giir^'BAW"^ Ator. good Wigoo. CaU RE A41«». Iw|iil«]pist AftEdM ' 9 PRESibN WALKER. SMITH EXECUTIVi PERSONNEL , oosETair*^® “raSS-i-m ‘ Ella lU^ HoSSs EVELYN EDWARDS VooMlouhl CiUM*l>l> atTVlM rpo»fiharttuiod ‘ i*.‘ ‘ Am' IbST BOOKKlfEPBIt ............ Thraugh TrM Bstaoet. UBLIC MLAT10N8 ......... ALBSLADlis ............. OOUHTIR OIRL .......(20 ^UrtoUVo. For ooHoo alup. lANAOBR TRAINEE ...*32 EVELYN EDWARDS SECRETARY $370 Aga 25-39 for amall mwutaetu Ing plant. Typing and ahortham heavy work load. Muat have ou Iranaportatlon. 5 day week. Midwest Employment 10 FINISH HIGH SCHOOL No olauea, rapid pmgroaa. pro- Eoma SfapMo'tlme!*Lr lS?*Sook*- k ol any kind. FE 2- LICENSED GENERAL CONTRAC- •tor Insured. New t— -------—“— recreation rooms estimates 332-5*21. PRESS OPERATOR. PLATE makef. repair duplicating r 19 Warner St. TK A****.________ YOUNG MAN. 22, DESIRES STEADY ............ PLASTERnffi, ALL KHTOS. H. Meyere^OR 2-1348.__________ w5rK op any KIND, EXPERI- rough carpenter. 2 WOMEN DE.1IRE WALL WA8H- liig,,A-l work FE 4-1131. _ DAY WORK, experienced] RECEPTIONIST. SWITCH BOARD, typ]ng^_bookkeepliig. MA *6931. __ WHITE LADY WANTS HOUSE Bvildiiig S«rvict*Suppli6i 13 I. MY $-1125. ' AAA-1 ALUMINUM Sftve BIO money by innif youraei. All typea In atocl NO WAhlN'l Installal'on availshia — a windo’s awnings FHA torma. JOB VALLELY OL 1-6623 ___________ FE 5-9945 CEMENT CONTRACTOR. OUINN'I Constnictloii Co FE 5-9122.______________ LDllio MODERmZATION^ k ralas and convcWcnl Icrma. llac 8ta!c Bank, FE 4-3S91. DRYWAI.LS 'or better ctrywall work i 8,S2-36(.l L. A. YOUNO HOWBF MOVING. Fully equipped. FE 4-8490, MASON WORK. FIREPLACES ^clalty. All work guarante giving fall special on bias mate. 24-hour sorvlco. All ---------- uuhranleod Phono collect 624-4312. Walled Lake. Mich. n Keller. UL 2-1740. ALI. MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by (actory trained men. General Printing A Office Supply Co., 17 W. Lawrence St. ___ ELECTRIC MOTOR SBRVtt-'Bi H*> nalring and rewinding. 21* " Pike. Phona FK 4-3MI1. fpriaffM3ffEs"bN all Int. will ftnanca. R. E. 1"- Erectnc Co. FE 5 9431, BookkupiHg & taxes BOOKKBKPINO. ALL TAX Dwtiwak^ ALTERATIONS — PLAIN SEWING and_chlldren's_wear. FE 4-6168. £RESSMAKrN&. T AH.5Kil4dr7u torallime. Mte. Bndoll. FE 44051. ALTERATIOI48 DRAPERIES " e pickup and delivery. M2-I272. AL'S COMPLETE LAND8CAPINO. ---• - —--- nlanllng. tree ro- iming, welcome; 665 a ROOMS AND PRIVATE BATH and entrance. FE 2-1672. ROOMfl" PAB'ri-Y rURNI8H|b. *50 a month. 10317 Big Loko Rd. oft Andereonvlllf R(L_________ 1 ROOMS. PRiVATB ENTRANCE and bath. 107V4 N. Saginaw. Abov* the Pantry. Apply_Apf.Jl._____ OOXIO-FOOT HOUSE TRAILER — bodroonu. No cMIdren or animal allowed. Call FE A1190. after ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED On I- and, 2-room effloloney ap monte, looafod on Pontiac Lake, Only *10 nor wk. Call Mra. LUay, 073-11(0, bachelor. PRIVATB, QUIET. nice, N. end. TV. FE 2-4370.____ bachelor APARTMENT. 1 ROONI. Kitchenette. Private bath. CLEAN 1 BEbitOOM APARTMENT COLORED 3 ATfRACTlVE roon only. *1* week. PE : :I,BAN 3 ROOMS. ALL UTILITIES. (69 mo, 2IB2 Leach, Auburn Hcighle, 73l.0396._______________ •LEAN WARM 3 UPPER. BABY welcome, also email apt llrel front. Ideal for adult. |ae heal, ulllltlee, 53 Park Place FE *47**,______ COLORED 3 rooms " 8569 Ponllac Lake Rd^___________, i4icB a-Robii and bath. 2 walk- in nlAMta Ainrt llniin elMCt* N6tr UNION COURT APARTMBNTft Arc you looking for oloan alirac-llvo apartmonte wharq tha pwla are friandlyf Cool In iummortlir-warm In winlartimo. Thaaa for 060 per month. AdulU only In thio building. K. O. Hompoto^. Roaltor^^ E. Huron. FE I42M Aporti^^ BBDBOOM APARTMENT. *90 110 ScmlnoleJOg-6.192j»r FE 4 19“ "HOOli. CI.i!AN~FbR~ bbR> 253 Weal Wllaon, FE 2-6792. "RWMs'ANb BftlL 'WEST SIDE, redoeorated. *M ulllltlea Inoludod. bfiUMh; ftlrtifttK- _______ BA'rti, CLOSED Tn pneoh. *12.90 wk. Inquira 01 N. "liOOM* APARTflikt FkilVA^H aniranca and telh, ^ lowtL 100 a r"fto6Mo“"ASb B^i vTOHIli lurn. 00 Wllllanw. ra *4***- IBlSlitl ____ rooma. haaL M 445^J^!*. Plh* gMrtNMMielliifmiiiMtdl Ift nywe SLATER'S BejaW!3l8iKra«4», t-BEOROOM MODERN. SASHMAW aWeSS? •*» • mo. MA 5-ITSO. I ROOMS. BATH, NHWLY TOC-orotod" Weil for oowplo. EM 2-25tf S liboMS AND EATN AND UTILITY men. newly doooratod. Couple only- FE 1411*.. '__________ rate, atornia and aoraana-jpoo. lino, walk to eioroa and Nimoi. W. ildo'jW par mo. Uldoiro H MTrrLVsm"iw“78~w®w. FOR RENT UNlTL JUNE — 2-bedroom. Lake Ltule ' “ ‘ ----At *01* Fay Road. ROOMS. OFF M90. 039 mu. Jiigniand Townahlp. Phona _________________ NiCELY FURNISHED 1 iJeDROOM "----- adulta only MY 3-2T74. !*■ WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT -NICRLY furnished. fSO per mo., yexr ■ Adults only. MA_M4W.____ — • — r —PRONT. Y„. Knotty birVinoham; 2 ksbuibotl bR'JCK ranch, etovo, refrigerator, earpot-Ing lull baeamonl. gaa heal, It* car garage., foncod yard. *129 month, year laaao or more. 644-6530. CLEAN 2.BEDROOU, (ArAOB. ;___ m$477. ___ _____ COLOmiD *65 idONTH. NEW 1-bedroom einglo homo. Ooa heat. Rant Idopooli riquirad) or wlU aolt. Ready eoon. Real Value . Realty, FE 5-3070._________ $55 A MONTH . 'Hh ountraet to buy Mu-I quality lor martgago\ READY SOON \ 009 ,Klnfioy. comer ol Blaine. I blocka eaat ol Oakland. 2 bihoka -------- W. Baverly.' FE I-4020. CLiAH' SLEiflNO BOOMsTIHbB cooking, near town, FE 1-750*. , ieRA*i««crLAitoB^ ROOM'ras gonlloman. private hath and on-fronoo. walking dlatanoa to Tal. Huron and Hall. FE 44*9«. LARbr BOOM roS OENTjaWM Room ' for oentleman. oA-_rage,_5394437,^ 198 Chamborliln. ^ SLEEPINO RbOM. 2 BlbCKS FROM Scare. Call after 4 p.m. FE l-»4ll*. stiCiilplNa ftbAM- bRlVAtK HokTi miar ^anle. FE 4-2770,_________ YOUNO LAby] CLOSE IN. 4N K. ALCOA A L U M 11 STORM WINDOWS AND DOORS ............njif ■ TEB FREE ESTIMATES AflibulEHM StrviM GENERAL AHSUI4NCB NEW HOUSE AND REMODBLINO DRIVEWAYS -ASPHALTED, RE- AUTO SPRINGS SPECIAL *9 99 BACH Foctorv rebuilt tor any maka 1 HGLLERBACK AUTO PARTS REBUHT MOT^^ ""*Molnr'Egoban(a%. Saginaw_______FE *-7422 Work guarantoed. FE 4.Q777. t guarantood. FE 9-5470 kovty Sl^ aolumn 8po|lan^ ^ ^ 499 Evae. hy Appm' I bEAuiir iALON rei'inanaiila. M.9* 70 Cham^lAta! olhy'e 2-1244 CBEP YOUR BOAT SEAWORTHY I - WINTER STORAOE-All typaa of Ropolr«nd lonrloo Harrington Boat Works ••Your Evinrudo Dealer **• 8- Tolograph Rd. FE 2-**** ■■too. Houio Ralilng, Oaragoo, Conorala Work. Nothtoi Dgam. PAUL ORA YES CUNTHACfiNO ‘ EHImatoa OR 4-WU HOME IMPl^OVEMENT SPECIALIST Addltlona. porohoa, garagaR I ___________________________ *4122. WE "draw your plans Kiib klva autgoeltone: addlllor---------* lion roomo, oHIoo^^anoltii .... tiytKi............. Complatojj^lod Coml i. MOf W. Maple Rd. Call 6M-MM for APPOtnlmonl »cTIwifib®il"l;ARFE^ CarfMHtry OBNBRAL CARPENTER WORK OF all kinda. FE 9-6341. SdRtiii BROWNIE'S HARDWARE FI-OOR SANiir.RB - POL18HBIIS WALL PAPER BIHAMiRS DRILLS. POWER SAWS 092 J08L5N PB 4410* CABINET MAkiNOr BEMODELINO, oarpenler work of all klnde. Free oallmatea. FE 2-7310. Cu*tow TaHariHg ^ SABRA'I Mlraelt Milo FS 9*11928 Wallpaper Steamer Floor akndoro. poltahora, hand •andara, lurnaco vacuum cleanara. oahland Fuel R ^'hit, 4N Or-chard Laka Ava ,FE MlW Rugi—ll|iholit«ry CldBHiHg I'ord’s Cleaning Service Couch and chair cleaned *0.99, Average living, dining room and hal. carpet cleaned *13.99. 2 or 3 pc aoctlonal cleaned *7.95. 1 tingle chair and ottoman Otoanod 94.WI. 9x12 rug cleaned M 99. Detroit, 526-8588, 9-9 Danca Initruction PRIVATE. SEMI, SMALL CLASSES. Mre Betty Smith. FE 9-9705. DrtMRiaklnge Tolloring^ ALTERATIONS. ALL OARMBNTS. Inc. Knit Ui'oeeOB OR 3-7103. FtRCiRg ANCHOR FENCES No Money Down. FE 5-7471 TtltviiloR, Rodia Ewd Hi n Sarvica M. P. STRAKA TELEVISION SERV-lea. Day or ovoo. FE 0-13W. PONTIAC FENCE CO. 9932 Dixie Hwy. OR 34915 FImiIri SOLID OAK PARQUET FLOORING and wall tlla. Dlacoiinl price at mill. 0400 Tindall. Davlaburg. Tr«# triwHHlwt Sarvica ACE TREE SERVICE STUMP REMOVAL Tref rfmovft). trlmmlnj. OM «vr bid. 682*36at> or FK nMr SrrAhi FLOOR SANDINO THURMAN WITX PE *-3721 PABULON - WATERLOX - WAX EXPERT TREE TRIMMING AND removal. Low ratoo. FE S-MM. Genera! Tree Service iJLTitU. ” CARL L. BILLS SR.. FLOOR sanding. PE t-V.OO. HONTROSS TREE SERVICE Tree removaT—trimming. 915-7UO R. 0. SNYDER FLOOR LAYINO, •ending and flniabing. Pb, FE 94992. TRin REMOVAL* PRlK EBTI-moto MA 9*a894a TREE TRIMHINO AND REMOVAL. vary Inw coat. FE 0-2000. WATERFORD TREE SERVICE OF 3-073* •VT 3*34094 HootMi Strvica ALL FURNACES CLEANED AND Serviced. C. L. Nolaon. FE 5-1788. Trail and Shnibi tERdlCRplRg A-1 MERION BLUE SOD. DELIV-fries iimdf or vou pick up. 2A0I Crooks Rd, UL 3*4642. A-I TRBBS-SPRUCE. PINE, FIR, Yewa. Mugno, Arborvllao and Junipera. Ohada treat, maple, oak, etc. Dig your own. 2032 Sloeth Rd . 3 ml. weal of Commerce Vllloge. Dally. 0*4-0*38 LANDSCAPING AND BXCAVAT INU. BBBDINU. SODDINO. Fro# oallmAleo EH >-2415 ■VBROREENS ~ ARBOR VITAE. r.'.': ?«••.•; rof,»-,i.“"Ka'; than 10. *2 00 ta. You dig- 12 mllaa north of Ponllao on U.S. 10. Coder Lya jCvygrto^Fam^ p|g|t TrvchlHf HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any lime. PB *4099. UcawitS SulWm NBIDRICK BUILDING SBhVICE -Homo, Oarage. Cablnela. Additiuiix. FHA TERMS FE 4.6969 liRilMr TALBOTT LUAHIER .0,5 W5D"»'“'’fi"4.4.,. |ravel and (rant end lotdins. FE Now rrS UwS TV TRADE-IN TELEVISION “SERVICE CHECKED'' ^*'qoobraAii^i^!(» store H S. Cao» FE 54111 Track Rairtal Trucks to Rent bump Tmcka-SamJ-TrolIon Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. HOOPWAHD PH 4-04*1 nra 4-1441 - PP«» D»«r DiohidSig ousdor fiBRE TrrIrI immeomte service Wiegand Music Center niiiho FEdorsi 24024 UidiaMariiif TUNINO AND RBPAIRINO Oloar Ochmldl FE l-Otl? HANEY UFHOLSTEHT. FREE ES-llmatot. FE AI7S4. RiftariRf Sarvfc* A-i PLASTBRIHO AND REPAIRS. Roao. Pat Loo. PE i-IEB FE S-8888 gLAJ«Rmo FREE .jTJMAraj PLASTHRINO. new. AND RE- sriu^pii sxvj.rS: Mike. Wall daman OtotoraTOtiS-o^^llS-44646 io oTG xr-’dr-AB^liNM promp: aorvMo. oaU SU-2004. . . / Utiit yiww IPr»|wrty 44 ■vmgtmfni •TOM siriTMiJi roft. sqPA ^lS*SSf..rc«ISr."li* tint IwIbw friyrty 47-A »yj&.$g^wsygtoy’^ liio VouAiiB rnT. t omcss. SaltHMMM i.an>iiooM. ^ BMiraNT. i lot. MMrt> 1 IU.WM. Rmv tormi. WAnmroBO b«Alty. rioois: i-FUJOB BOMB. BAM-mont. »-««r large •hedsd tie^g^TOoBr^ygg.**- j a-bedmm. I int. il.3M. Nei 1 'ph» taaet. » bediwantr floWietf bawmeiit. |ara|o. Near Northern Call OH MMl tor DetalU 323 Seward near Auburn. 3-h room, full baaement. large kit en-dlnlng area. Oaa heat, oar and drapee. Corner lot, I7> t beat, nioeir lac garage. M.W0. I tere. FB MSM. -“assocTatb BlItokiBS - ALUMINUM SIDINO. BTONB front, beautiful 3 bedroom ranch home, atlaohed garage, economical gac heat, large lot gtx200. Localml in Anchor Bay eeoUon, near Mt. Clemene, Mich. New bomo-glO.loo, email down pty- ment. Fhone gga-aTg«.____ Br OWNBB BAST 8IDB. 2 BBD-room home aoroee from Longfellow -.echool, large lot. tl.gOO down. FIC 4-UH2, bafpro 7 p,m i,____ bWNBB. WltST 8IDB, « BBI> room*, newly decorated, largo lot, lanced, eaey terme. Bt Lincoln. Ro#BB._VAC^^2-BM^^ .....—I n.ooo ?■ tAlNB HANCH. 2;Bfg- f.wyaU%i«'TO ***i*”^ O, taV 3.1011. cemanf"^re'.~iandecaOTd lot. iwe a&.-rm'^rdur"’ N ABBA joslynVaLtow.. |-bmIrooi;*y’eMS^^r^ Auburn Heights—Owner ft. recreation room, 2 atoM lira- "raSKS 170 numlh plua taaea. I bi I balha. lot 79g|M. W. W. BOSS BOMB - Ca»-oB^so2i Hr tun Schools l<.1i BLOCKS TO EMBBSOlO 9 BLOCKS TO MADISON 0 BLOCKS TO NOBTHBBN 0 rm. and bath, large heated Ir porch, alum, tlorme, full baaemt tt".,; 19.000 on itnd eontTMt wiin roM. down poymont. FE 4»HM._ LAKE PRIVILEGES GOOD LOCATION Cloae to new MalhodUt chdre^ Syir^^a^d^ gurMe'**^ *baao-' ment, ceramic tile bath. Don McDonald LICBNSBO I OB 3- -NEW HOUf-ES- Model at 2107 Pontlae TraU er Walled " ^ $190 Moves You In 3-B«droom. nil brlok. ^ niicU«d II---- id lorngtr lOfollo I York BuUdlnf ‘ lunday tt f \ li ni^ll $9,500 __rd*e”*ok 5h7(asr „ BUSS MeWAB ABT MBYBB NEW HOCUSES $68 OPEN 12 TO 9 DAn,T SPOTLITB BUnJIINO CO. 1 Stanley, 3 blocka COLORED 3 Bedrooms "O" DOWN PE g.2762 1:30 to 9 LI 2-a$77 after 7 prn. WBSTOWNBBALTY HAYDEN LAKBFBOier. 9700 d ^Mealon on Ihia . nobtob^ him ABI^^ 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL i|;9,995_$1.000 DOWN OPEN Annoiniment y«i may ••• ' trj-level Ki for Oklra Hying arao y HA.SEMENT •lorgoe and utility Ineludino •• ‘'family room ) alum. COMFLETEtY^ FINISHED $11,990 mtUMBIA VALLBY Bya.unUII||. ' COMMERCE AREA $500 DOWN *1».nr?arS“t>r*" " $500 DOWN Full Price-$5.500 turbaoa, tuU bath, a; clc RANCH ittLBT’BB irea Bd. ^^^f‘'OPEN OWNp NEAR DOWNTOWN PBA A"""- AuatnanT Wk LftemTitk fea.'“Mtohan'bmi owner. OL t-0919. _______. WEBSTER LAKE OBION-OXPOBD Nice older borne In egoelleni 0* cheerful roome. camted 11 room. 9 bodrooma. itk bolbe boioment, cUy gee and wa encloaad porehti. Oarage. A dertui buy at 911.000 with VvH MILLER WATKINS LAKE PHmLEOBS. ■"droom brick ranch with all mmlngs. oak floore. plaelored 12,790 C."a. WBB8TEB. BEALTOR NEW 3- and 4-Bedroom Brick Homes cly PHA Approved INCOME 2-PAMlLY Wcet aide locallc neecs. tenanta pay utllltlea, coverad re car garage. CaU ur you full delaUe. y NORTH SIDE $69 me, only 10 yeare old ublc duty kitchen, tiled ly Inaulated, heatmg ooa ui $100 per year, alum. a. d acraena. 17.200. Eaay PHA William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 Featuring: 3 Bfdrooin.s Brick Ranch Attached Garage Gas Heat Paved Streets Large Rolling Lots r'MA Terms Model Open Daily 12^~to 8» OPEN .Sunday 3 to 5 304 Draper PIONEER HTOHLANDS; Large brick 3bedroom rant eaUng are^* acSnilied bedroot I'/i balha. Pull baaement. Owi leaving town -anxloue to eall. Ol._ lermi. Take Huron to Tclegraim. Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 79 wool Huron Street PE 9-9191 .. (Evcnlnge FE 9-0190> 628-256,3 ■_.JLE CUILDINO CO. 1y owner b-our gnrftRc r«et. WxlM 1o Dor6thy .Snyder Lavender Lake Home wcat cl town In Waterford Ml a eubdlvlalon of all, beau-aka hemt propcrilae. Lovely fireplace, veri with all bullt-hi with private I d fireplace, the lake. »f'*'934,Mo! Brewer Real I'.slate JOSEPH r. HEISZ, SALES MOB, rgj 4-9191_ EVee. PE 94)921 ^oung-Bilt Homes” $9300 MODEL 1017 HOLBROOK HURON OABDBNS OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1 to 5 NO MONEY DOWN available. Jual a lob mjvae you In. big bouec. BRAND NEW. 2 bed-jiiM walk-ln oloccla. cab floore. family algcd kllohan. 99171 a month. “Young-Bilt Homes” “i^eTngeOjs"^ r^.yjh'KcWfe.in. W family room. bcauUful view of lake. Private park and lake pr. legce. Conelder trade. Friced to eell. Call WATERFORD REALTY. Itast Boulevard, a-room brick terrace, oil jhei reaeonable price and terme. Retired Couple Cheat, very eoavenlenl 1« eaey terme. Willard St. Sa-fflSa® price and Urmi. Battar hurry Brewer Real Estate ®^KEl?(?51^A»Tr PMeaealcn i Wisner Schfjwl E CRAWFORD AGENCY THE PONTIAC PBESSe SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1962 •*;ctl8?«iis “i!l‘gi breakfael apace. r'with" Ei^ed' garagr'Tu'rge wef lai SH^N BY APWINTMEtiT. PIONEER HIOHLAND8: SCHRAM 2 Bedrooms Large carpeted living i —--------"hilO kll 10x19 kitchen v oar, lull baaement i &)ly* 110,960 on P Drayton Area IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor FE 5-9471 042 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD )PEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE HIITER CITY WEST BIDE. 9 roome, IVk bathe, lole of cloeeta. b-- cun |>orch, 2u:ar garage. NORTH SIDE, 2bedroom. OVERLOOKINO LAKE. S-bedrocm. - "alhe. large living room wl*>-ilace, flnrahed rec. room. Ci m Ihle one. 99.909. WE BUILD. 3-bed room li •—1. plgatered waUc, onk flooi H. C. Hiller. Real EaUI Ella. Lk. Rd. FE 92990 94)179 or FE 9-9974. OPI Val-U-Way IE TRADE ON ANY HOME FOR COLORED, to 01. Thia nice ui%*nJ15?Jluu™ SSii a'r9S'‘p gM: R. I. (Dick) VAI.UET REALTOR FE 4-3531 949 OAKLAND AVE. OPI OPEN Sunday 2 to 5 2447 EMERSON ST. NICHOLIE Listen to this, George! As though it isn’t tough enough getting baby sitters, the Peace, Corps is now taking grandparents!" OPEN CUTE AND COZY Nearly new 2-bedroom brick ranch — VoorhcU iuil off Tcicgrfph I. Everylhing hi A-1 oondillon. DUCED — Owner leaving alate. ! piece b---- . and ecreena. V imer lot. m-garage. Priced at 912.900. mediate poaseaelon. Shown by polntment. BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS: , For that handy man, here la what you are looking tor. An older, large home with 2'A acres —five large rooma and bath on the firat floor. Pour bedrooma wd two hatha up. Ver^^epMtow rage!"pri'ee^'at'%a.W* ’sHoSiN BY APPOINTMENT. ESTATE 'SACRiricE';.. ~'g family home or Income — ur roome. fireplace and Mi bath 1 first floor, lour large bed-nmu and bath on second floor. us:! Priced et tl ► LISTINOS* John K. Irwin A SONS^WALTOHB^ Phone FE 9-044S-Sve. FE 2-gg09 POUR-BEDROOM HOME —.WITS H to wall carpeting. Situated large wooded lot near wilUami [c. Two-car garage, good val-and ony 91.200 down. EXTRA SPECIAL - <»oloo wcet side location. Large a-room modem home wUh fuU ^ basement wd feting, fwo-esr garage. Only 9990 9 ACRES - With 3-bed room frame bungalow home and twiMar garage. OIL fired hot water heal. 1^ cated In RochatlarOrlon dtatrict. Only 91.900 down. Hera you arc SELL OR TRADE — 40 aero farm —— Bolding. Michigan. 9-room ic for only 99.4(i0. Would like ic In or near Pontlae. WATERFRONT SPECIAL - Lovely galow w^ attached It rage. PuU baiemcnt, i lib balha. Encloacd pi JSS. 9. PE 4-3994 or FE l-4gl0 WATKINS I Claudia Drive, off on. cyclont 1 Paved alrcct. -- - Sion. ONLY 97.990. TERMS. PRICE CUT $1,000 On Ihla campsel 4-room Vi home In CLAkKSTON. 20 ft. Ing room with carpeting a.-r draiira. IVk-car garage. IH bathe. Large lot. CALL FOR PRICE AND TERMS. CHOICE LAKE PRIVH.EGES * Compfel^ loulh on Telegranh Road to Square Lake Road, left to Emereou 81.. left to properly. JOHNSON REALTORS FE 4-2533 1709 S. TELEORAPH OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. 312 South Dover Rd. r, aluminum “-rner St. eereene. Corner etSrma** Drive cut EllHheth take Roa to Dover, to open elgn. John K. Irwin ria.' m eompictt ir i IW-CJU* tirti mtW lanaicM ___Such wJIlo’des^&i^ DRYER. REPRIOERATOK AND Smith Wideman O'NEIL Special NOW AVAII,ABLF, IN SYLVAN SHORES IP TOD'YB ABOUT OIVBN UP HOPES of finding a ana-atm heme with anough apaco In iihuh to plaaa all ycur Ri San brick ehould hold fvarv-Ing, even a ccncarl grand. When It'a your turn to entertain your equal# dance club, you can do that loot ^ 49 Foot recreation room iiao a natural llraplaoa s anack bar. alao another full bwh. Ooe hot water heal, lw»cBr garaae with an elteirte doitf opener. We highly n IhU property boAi, I I conelruelli polniment anytime. OR II lers. ideal for terrlttc oflarlni 91,900 down. See Hired couple, at 911.2W wll t today I PARTRIDGE REAL iSTATE. REALTORS )0 W. Huron FE 4-3991 Exchange OR Trade Your cqull tag ^omc? ■ direction. Y - Let Ue l.need no money your Real KBiaie prooiema. Today's^ Top Trade.s” OPEN SUN. 2 TILL 5 1315 Avondale Citv of Sylvan -uid clean, five-room brick, to lUo bath. 21’ living room llretaaee, m-car garage. lot — paved etreol -- — Sylvan Lake. Of- ». 10 per cent down ....—. witt Otriwtiona i Of chard Lake Rd. to Pontlae Drive. OPEN SUN. 2 TILL 5 1980 Beverly natural ft 75xM-prlvll lered __ ______ Onjy 912.790, lO'^'r down plua. olocint coele. Dlrecltone: Orchard Lake Road to Beverly. Your boat. Fred Roeevear. EM 3-4779. KAMPSEN OPEN ment with reorealton epaea. built In 1999. Vacant. Paved etreel, cloae to grade echool. Similar homea bringing 913.900 to 914.000. Will ooneider offer ae low as 910.000 on FHA terms. All you need la 9390 down plus emte. Drive out Pealheratone to Bay Street, left on Bay to Dufraln. right on Dulrain ' to No. 12H Dufraln. Clark Real Eelate. PE 4jm. Mr. LaMondra, aaleeman. CLARK BRICKRANCW Jtaly__912.»IL^ei^ la, dIV ralking db ir high an 1-bedroor a. plaelere batta baai -room modern, fireplace, dli room, oag iioora. IVk hatha, b ment. gae furnace. 9900 dow OPEN lUN. I TO 9 " CLARK REAL ESTATE E 9-7999 RES. FE 4- Multlple LUtln9 Service » klhllwww _ BATEMAN WATCH WWI TV-Suriv 11 am. TV-^pecials OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 405 I.akeview A REAL STBAU we .....». and newly deeorolad. Only ,.ww Jown plua eoeli cn new 391 gear mortsMa' and low -’in^ly paymenla. TOIa U a heaty.,EI^ hath taka Rd. to Avenlea St. og-bow Uka at Ukalaod Markat (Ma Open Sitn). left to property. FoL OPEN ■19MSSi>waf«j "Bud" NichoHe, RckHtfr FE DORRIS YOVMO EXECUTIVE: Eon ta 2'A or 23 Acres w-ir' airport havi amaU taka. —^ . #.TrioludOe*carp-Dry baeemant. FA c .. Lars# traen bous-. i,is5’,’af.i.Vwr?s} ortlon with bltea, i trade or equlV- 130 Acres—Lake t rear porch. Ftrqtlaee. : and new kitchen. ^ ' ehaped living and dining area, bandy kllchen with adjoining ' laundry apace. !>' ceramic bathe, plenty of eloi ct ipaee. 3 hedroome, 2 fin placea, family room, PA o heat, alt. 2-car garage. Ri duced to 927.000, mig. tarmi OPEN SATURDAY and SUNDAY 2-S P.M. New Tri-Level WATCH WWI rV-Sun. il A.M. TV-Specials OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 2335 Maplewood In Sylvan, 3 ba 1$ iMynkMli. t OPENHOUSf and elaaa Srooln buDsntow wttUn 9 Hoaka at Lass neatly deewatod »---- SriS.«S ' H-24 to Indian Laka Rasd. DORRIS ft SONS, RIALYORE: . 2939 Dlxto Hwy. OR MtH MULTIPLE LISTMO SRRVICtr O'NEIL beauty-rite-— HOMES Open Sunday 1-8 P.M.ll SPRAWUNO - MOraRN - « planned FOR SPACE AGE . --- *"—" ‘ » 'tlSa I IW’l" ' Uvins -Today”—All ataatete or flraplaaat t ) atlanUoa of i frlandt. Color aj a paHy. Attaehad two-oar so-rage, pavad drtva. Haka a dJa wlUi your family Sunday and diiva out to M-91 to beautiful Twin Lakaa. Watoh : for O’NEIL *01100’. attna. ' f OPEN * Sund^ One to Eight in’'bbaoiif" wn^ THE LADT*OF*niB BOUSE I IhST'an bna bema tagtoSi ^ Beauty Rita Roma* D(e.'‘^ worksnanaUp. DupIlMtor^ar'’''^ tJO.Ma on your lot cr awa. FE 2.7181. TRADINO tt TERRmC ' INDIAN VILLAOE-A Mrrlfta value on tbU 9-room brick homo wtth oarpotod Uvtng 8? •nm'n^ wiLS^ill triM. SK'»'KWSffi fS rJL-y*^ImmadiM. po*. GI No Money . Down TWENTY-EIGHT " 1 ' f ' ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER ^0, 1962 fomer, Warrfu- & Co. OPEN, 1 TO 7 4NP KLIZABBTH LAKE ROAD t-NUntbOH tMick ripch. M rarottld lIvtDi nom< oak floor.. SKySi largo ilasiad In D«^Ttka-ie& iUAt Road to Open Sign. ARRO . FuUy Ineulated, .t?.y T.ncr'’ir’wpe. iCtnn^ '“.Hd -rS beauUful yard with akruta. flow er» and garden cpace. Selling foi COZY itbeii'^ «ncl live put and have a mi room' I‘^ acres to be ( bedroom ranch home only '^Wtetfra' wlth'“eatln Dhw cupboanls gak>r* i I KJ" TED MCCWLLOUOH REALTOR ^pft;N tt-d Sunday 11*5 MULTIPLE L18TINO SERVICE Va.V3990. {riiige* FF LAND CONTll ACTS WANTED Immediate cash Earl Oarrel Realtor, 6617 Commerce Rd , C SHOP AROUND, THEN BEE beforo you sell your land contra Capitol Savings Loan Assoo., Salg HohmIioM Goodi 65 A MAHOGANY DESK __________FE 5-0043__________ ROOMS OF FURNITURE, EXCEL- lent condition. FE 2£566.___ prARTMENT SIZE REPRIO- bimdii'g "’’malerla'ii^'lb Auburn. 335-9332. D'Hondt Wreeklng._ CABIN AND ANTIQUE FUBNI-4ure, dishes, lamps, Irames. FE LADY'S BLACK PERSIAN LAMB full length coat, good condition. $125. allies iSbW8~BLACk“w60L CoStrALSO brown tweed coat. Wc-' — and skirts. SIse 16. 5 DA VEND AND 'chair. 2 END TA- MINK STOLE. SILVER BLUE, . —», weekends, 626-7012. SIZE 40 TWEED TOP COAT FOR man. Good condlll Telephone Ml 4-47«0, Sale Housahold Goodi Vk PRIf.'E — REJECTS. BEAUTT ful living — " ...... t70. 01.50 i HOTPOINT AUTOMATIC WASHER. 1 sofa. OlS. MI 6-9569. i BOLL-A-WAY "BED'AND" PEARSON'S FURNITURE _____42 Orchard Lak^Ave.___ 2 WRINOEB WASHERS. 022.50 AND 1958 ^d.E. MOBIL jMAID^ 0 FOB 8 MONTHS V “I couldn’t understand why Warren was learning to dance when he hatfs girls. Now It’s quite clear!” Sal^HowrtoM Gaodi 65 BewINO machines WHOLESALE ' all. Singer Console, alg sag pped, 030. Many otheri to is« from Curt's Appliances, Hatchery OH 4-1101. 5-7491■ EXTENSION KITCHEN lOUBLE BEDS COMPLETE. Dressers. Kitchen table and chairs. FE 2-1657. ELECTRIC RANGE t 30 INCii 602.3298. __________ __________ FAMOUS name brandi. Scratched Ter-rlflo valuei. 0148.90 while thty laat. Michigan Flubreaoent. On Orchard Lake. _______________ FRIOIDAIRE ELECTRIC DRYER. good _condltlonJ50^l^3-4289_ FRIoiDAIRE REPRiaBBATOR. m MY 3-3711. FRIOIDARE ELECTRIC T . offer takes. 852-3724. Manor Drive. Rochester. “IZl- MICludAN" WHOLBSALE MEATS AND GROCERIES "FIRST TIME WHOL MEATS AND---------- -FREE HOl.E DELIVERY- , coffee, , baby goods. ?rt. butter, ----- . - dog food, vegetables. Slfa'iig."" Baby juwu — s, lu, «™ Cut un fryers - 16c a lb. Call for free catalog and Informa buy m "theae prlces?'"EM M238‘ FURNITURE. APPLIANCES, BRIEF I. 3940 Crooks Rd. HAMILTON AUTOMATIC WASHER, good j!ondUlon._040. 682-0393.^^__ KiRliY VACUUm'cLEANKR. I IKE new. Compicle wllh all allach-mcnls including noor polisher, grinder and butler. Pay off de- a furniture store. 3 floors gas heal. Privati ake an appointme further details. 018.000 -FE 44)520. Bateman Realty. xmed light BM 3-5W4. Ing, 6 :trlcal. ear Ponllao mfg. OR ! Monay to loan Signature AUTO or FURNnUIG'. Up to 24 nNinthf to renftv PHONE PE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan ConipHnv 202 Pontiac Male Bank Bldg LOANB'Mli'TO 0500 BAXTER - LIVINGSTONE sat Poniigc Slate Bank Bulldlni FE 4-1538-9 button holes, rbasonabL JOHNSON’S RADIO and TV 40 E. Walton I OCTOBER SPLASH! CA Whirlpool Dish Washer, 12 settings »140.« MOTOROLA 23 Inch TV, new, 1 year warranty 0188.0 MAYTAG Wringers, new, , , guaranteed, delivered 0 98.6 REFRIOEHATOR8, family »l», freeeer. new ....0130,0 14 storage '...0188,0 ’’'good HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of Ponlla. ** W. Huron FE 6-1555 USED KEN MO RE VlSA-MA'ric waaher. Exc. 075. OR 3-1890. washer. 025: ELECTRIC ‘STOVE 035: refrigerator, 025: 21" "" g40; dryer. $45; relrlgerator 040; gas atova J20; deep 175. V. Harrla. FE 5-27llC WHIRLPOOL ELECTTRIC DRYER I gas (18-In.) lawn mower In lent condition. Call alter 3:30 EM 3-8087. r USED ELECTRIC 8 :n working - . -ppllances. 6481 guarani 0125; I ....... - ______ctro Hygiene, Phone FE 3-76M^ I fancy stitches, i KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER. .... .......... 031.20. Capitol' enif tables.^E*2,9043.__________/. _____ Sewing Centers. FE>9407.---------KENMORE AUTOMATTC DRYER, tresses. ADMIRAL CABINET STYLE PORT- perfect condition, 950. 2896 Em- price. E- able TV UL 2-1634. _ ________ R<»^»ler. _ _ ELECTRIC S'TOVE. DOUBLE OVEN. KENMORE APAR'l'MEN'T SIZED and tables. Everything In --------- furniture at bargain prices. ALSO NEW LIVING ROOMS AND BED-R(X)M8. Sofa beds. dIncUes. 9x12 RUGS FOAM I BUY;;SELL^'raADB KITCHElf ETS "•^/gRtsgfwr*. —>-**aibWAik tiA mm *new wTlSnel H.p, t—. train 050. baby. Bwl. lilsS^oby^ _____ Bulidkr BupplJI____tUyil! HI - BBCbVBRY OIL • FIBBD . HOT water heater, oomplete. Alan b*—'* duty fufnaoa oU biumer and trola. Ml 4 1456.___________ HORIZONTAL OIL FURNACE.'^ lOT WATER BASEBOARD, per ft.! big eavlnge “ ‘ neatink suppllea. 0. “I»_|jr;50_j. iibT "water HEATER. 30 OA^ chard Li II «-W93. _______md workbench. LEONARD OUN or. after 5, call------------- LAVATORIES COMPLETE 024 M value 014.95, also bathtubs, lets, shower atalle. Irregu terrific‘values. Michigan Flu ___cent. 393 Orchard Lake. — 1__ LABOE (ML BURNER. DUO Therm. FE 5-9015, LADY'S C H I ( ROLLER w. 015. OR MASONITE SALE 14" 4x0 tempered ......... W 3-16" 4x0 standard JJ K," 4x0 tempered ......... W Ml” 4x0 40-M 22 Vk" 4x8 garage liner 23 95 PIJNTIAC PLYWOOD I??- . „ t4N Baldwin Ave___________2j! neW 1x6 shbathino boards. $94.50 per thousand delivered. 8-11087. __________ NOROE OIL BURNER. olTveb dozer loader, tandem tip-up trailer^ and Hat deck ..fKiia: «ii2-22!iT. OFFICE DESKS 024.50: 50; drafting tables 212.50: storage cablijet- $37.50; new portable typewritei 140.00: adding machines, she parts cabinets, mimeograph ini chines, offset prr»».„b®»‘ FORBES. 419 Frank St., BIrmlni ham, MI ............. tors with snow blades. Belt, ne parts, repair service. EV-j EllUIPMEF''’ r"*'* 825-1711, OR 3-7 gT, 8507 Dixie Hwj ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AND Step Railing corners, and posts, room dividers AVIS CABINETS. 1570 Opdyke, FE 4-4380.____ PliUMBINCi'B"A R O A I N 132.05. Ihower stall Grinnell's $750. UL I ORAND, RBCON- Theater^"Ml*”i-io02:*"6pen 'm - a local firm ,, aervlea and iatlefactlon.^2«|^Jp]ii2.»»«^I®f.^ ^y£^!^S'aw^a^ T6iiA<)k*fewi^b FREE! FREElFiiHfei ' as 5 ,•!»«£ i&W-ilBlTIS vJLuam -y TRKF elllYiCB. rmiPLAC* wood. OL i9_/^burn Hd. _____i " UAS :!I'RiaEUATOR USED'$25 Sewing Center. Antiques Ih fittings. k with trim, ----------------- I up. 30.gai. glass-lined he, 1.95. Sump pump. $32.00. 3-pc. Ih sets. 069 93. *^®gl*®J|'^ inleBale*'"Hcea. ** FiberjUs faun- ' SAVE* PI-UMBINO CO._____________ t. Ba^aw________________PJB 5-2100 1 playpen Wi'TH PAD. CAB BED. FE 5-4035,_ .93. Marrad tubs, CURTIS TWIN : new, reasonable, OH 3-7173. HO'f POIN'T DEEP FKYEH, DONUi' fryer, barbecue, machine, Frose." food lK)X. FE_5£354. ""NETiN'siON FOR TILE'STORE" ^emsTk. Rd. 2 auolloneere to selling.________________•_ _______ AUCTION SALE, OIOANTIC MBR-chandlse sale, WCd,, Oct. 24lh. 7 30 pm. at B A B Barn 5080 Dixie, Dre; ‘ ^ ' n UTBft. DON’T ••nd b«ach od large lake. Fishing ^d boating.^ Deer and partridge HarrlMm and come to Bprliigwood Li^dirt^lce on kmnlnoss on iorth side of cUy^. two blocks north $f Wilson elate Park. Open 7 dayn a week- (Member Chamber ol Commerce.)________, _____ Lft»-Acrauga 54 S SCENIC ACRES — 01.890. TERMS Wetto Realty. Ortonville. 1956 M15. OlfLY 0200 DOWN ON THIB CHOICE PU 2, torme. bontiac realty ZBLJEtitite-------OLAW?,* 185 ACRE FARM MORIHWUST OP PONTIAC - Ac-Uva firini very productive clay iaiim aoiT Larte bam. Allracitve 10 m. modem farm home. 7 rm. I Kent Inc-r Realtor OWNER RETIRING lawn, garden. I’ET and GENERAL STORE WELL ESTABLISHED BUSINESS IN CHOICE LOCATION Went of Pontiac L Wot) slot-kMl a ness. Also Inclndt*.. 4-bcdroom brick bl-level homt for owner with 2 baths. % t\r‘ piaces.. large recreation root Phis 2'bedroom colonial hon adjacent to bUAinens. S M A L ACREAGE with man - mad spring-fed lake PROPERT CAN BE PURCHASED WHOL OR IN PART. VERY REASOl ABLE TER'^H HURRY ON THLS ONE! SMITH-WIDEMAN REAI-TY 412 W, i^URON^STBEET KENT 0 RESTAURANT - restaurant location. Call for detail Flnvd Kent Inc., Rcalti) FE 'i-Om ~ Businssi OtHMrtunitisi TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS 02: TO 05 •FRlENDt Y SERVICE * $25 to $5tX) on Your SIGNATURE Auto or Other Security FAST, CONVENIENT FINANCE COMI’ANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OPPICES IN 'onllac -■ Drayton Plalne - Utica LOANS 090 TO 0500 - 028 - 0900 COMMUNITY LOAN CO 30 E LAVIHIi,NCB — '■ Need $25 to $500. See Seatioard Plioiie FI.'] 3-7()12 1185 N, I’erry St. PAIlKiWi N(; PRom.EM -Seaboard l*'iiiiiiKe (O. WiiEN YOU NEED $2.') TO $500 We will be gleil lu help you. STA'I E FINANUl*. tO. ^9|Mortgags Louno Ible. Pure Oil Compeny, 803- nrelsai fee. R I Evenings. Ml 741829, wlMMO, Sble V* ” l"'"’ beauty" 8M0i*7 ES-fABUSHED, 3 Telegrei-h FB 4-0 operelors, 079 a nmnih. Reasmij CASHAVAU,, for selling, healUi *- - 1. Eguit-1717 S. liAl^RY “ mmilh. Reas(wi]“ _ Reply to Pon- to pay ,i-f! all youi eontraot * or mortgag ?»™r*1 ”r.*rT funxtri and equipment . Call J. A, Taylur. 44)300. 6BNBRA*lrOR AND CASH ::smtxR! Loans to $2500 Pm40. “ on autoe, home eqm nfe.......Volt...bdliRfc. is'fini. Ilehed In orowing buxlnesa 2 milks mimMr nament. {S'" iSTSt. ‘n? ’Sirircnim Family Acceptance Corp. K?r»’ p> a'lL.’- 2 pc. living room sulle wiu y tob\?'tomDS**desk'Bnd'”oh»lr nuiun -r...... tinues 262 W Ypsilantl 3 pc bedroom sit with -rmcfsprlng' KIRBY SWEEPER AND ATTACH- , XQTfbVi^'Tf)H mauress and box spring to match ments, f48 00. Phono ELECrRO mih 2 vanity aunps HYGIENE, FE 3-7623 '*'” Antloue r S lie. kitchen dinette sel, all for LEAVING STATE. APARTMEN-r 0393. 9x12 rug Included. BZ terms, n^e gas stove. Refrigerator. 2 kltch-el the Wyman Furniture Co. 17, cabinets. Chest of drawers, MIsc. B. Huron. . ' ....: FE 8^312. 597_Mt. Clemens St. 3(PiNCH KENMORE OA8 S'TOVE, LARGE CHIB AND MATTRESS . PROFESSIONAL JET —. Chinese Rugs. 9x13. Gloria Nortli-_ 76 Water Rd , Rose Cen-Vlllage, near Holly. Mich. 637-1797. ILL rlv, ____________ Prompt installation of fm- comhinalinn windows -- -^CaU now. A 4i H Sales. MA RtoNdi"HbbD8. 029.901 MBOICllfi cabinets, .eliding door. 012.96. G. A. ’rh(rtnpMnr 700$ 11-5$. ____ SiifALL S’llCAM table', HEATBD storage below. FB 9-0580._____ SAl^ MiSCELLANEOUS FURNI- ifire. OR 3-1400 ____ SMALL "Am (XjMPHEMOR, 030. Sporting GooOo t lableclotiiB, " J^L TENT, LIKE NEW, 000. IvFFh'weaVbR post scope. 1. OR 3-r___________________ 30^''kp6RTiR. CUsfoM STOCK, Weaver ................. “* 0-7714;_______ U" REMINGTON, theep-skin ease, Im ou» ... 079. (W 3-3127, aflej^O p.m A”Bra slii7BCTibN used guns and riflee. Hen’e lx>an iO N. Saginaw. FE 4 3141.____ BROWNtifO GUNS. ALSO USED Dieciuins, luiuaeiium ..... ......„.iwaro. electrical ap- pllanoes, hand and power toole, mechanical toola, sewing machines, watches. Jewelry, furni tore, linoleum, rugs, carnets, hair dryers, hendbags. perfume end many Heme loo numemu* to mention. Free prises, bargains. Coma a'.....* ______auctionTau«b” EVERY FRIDAY 7 30 P M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:^ jP M. 5089 Dixie ifwy,________ AUCTIONS. 7:30 PM. WBDNES-days. Wlll-O-Way Country Mart, 013 W. Long Lake Rd. Ml 7-34e9. Nunts-fraut'-iliiruli~ .'99 Norway Spruce. ......... - - 3‘. 01.90. 3 to 9' 02.90. Dwarf Yews 82. Meny more. . CLOTHES DRYER NOT POINT — RATED NO. 1 ‘ ■ Sta!&tron"*£ OIM.OO KELLY’S APPLIANCES 0217 Dixie Hwy,_pfWlOfl W»l"* Bi^NO CONSOLR . TBLlidW^^. renport - .jllnlns L-2-po. curved "able, chins maliosauy .............. — Thomas Furniture Co. mo. K»««i. ‘Qffi.’SGBPS nnmi. LARSON BOATS-SYLVAN WUJA' Sl(l'Tl™vln»*«?*^ 1M3 pvunidfi UUW VII UIBMIVil All types fepsin -i •torsfS fip 1-^! ®ow1n-s“mawnTsopp^^^ Ml Orcimrd L«Im At«, W »-* BBBT susrMtM BBST tr(d< In tllowuio* BEST deni In town l)ol) Hutchinson Mobile Homes Sales Inc. 4101 Dlxl* HISHwnr. . OR HIM Always a Good Buy j Oem Irnveleri iS to I Iirtlon ol lUtd ualU. Lons lorni, tair prION. nnnk ratu. Oafoid Trailer Sales dally. Deed lOM-fool Boenwi; alto. Beeiner Orubb, OrtontMlo. iixPil »W> B. Ttleiiraph Road, Fontlae Wawtad Coi^Tnicki_________1M PnVo‘rirob«av-sa «0I^DI«^o Hwy.. Oraytoi ____ ______ ri-rOOT VACATION trailer, eleepi 6. VI 1-1111 ■__ HUNT Efts 8 P E CTa L, M;POOT D-McNALLY ATLAS Alrelreim TrayiT TrjUw Mind a paeaonnr automobUa and, ra> eelve PRIb lha latait tm M tha RAND-MoNALLY UJ. B^D AT-LAB and Trayal Oulda. Mo obUaa- lAILRRIIALBa Ml 81.. Pontlao 11-4 FB 1 DiSy;*ilun. U-4 ' FB HdW FALL SALE M* Tratwood r oaloid on*VlM*^y H*U B NBW LpOirrWBIOHT AVALAIR MUST l^iisworth . MA 11400 ar From aiicnen, Wat M.4M SAVE I MM IF FRANKLIN. Bell «onl. 14V4"*CRBE*Ball oont. Waa ILMB. 1Im“m“ wS oonL tMdarn^^ FAN trsvel IrsUer, Wis •AVB *"* NoTradalonma Sales and Rentals Vaaatlon Irallcra 11, H. 17 R. wXlrVa pie bap aampat- iPra"; MS‘A??fflK"NOW F. IL Howland, Rentals iSv5SNSj»;p*ffl t4 Niw mMI ffrrf fInNfci THE PONTIAC PBBisk SATURDAYa OCTOBER 80, 1962^ TTOHirr^ M, Lo. ..M.lRBSadt, John’ McAuliffe, Ford BIMijraW^af! **^***'^^^^ TAlii AOraOBiZBO UAiilLlTy - ONLY lid OOAipBR: mit.i. MM or tiaod boalo and moiora. Tour "aiiorp. ai.Mi. or vim. ,. M«T'"Sup,?.7a!:: >««l voj^»csw*o«^«T*"<” ma-^A k^^obn. ooOS-TSBW. MtrEv'lIiVuda*“Md “Sund^ m" lekorr RldnRd!^ to Dombde iiM PBOOOITroOOO CONDITION. d. Lafl and lollow aingt la OL Hill.________ .,... AWBONT^BALBd AT^iWico iurTTmiira TR-1. iSTSS:. FLOATS > TrsllerS ts-moiim Itsplsy mi types rspmra -n ivorsf* Harrinffton Boat Works ■r bbda^ »wVir«.«« ga«N*«ss.' PINTERS MARINE iifiT" ■^ILORS it be randy Ootobar IT-M cl our now Olympia alnaa ai Oatlun Sallboata. Bid tbo IWUNB*&&’"-:yR-ra TOWM __JAM_5ftLKN A SON iNC.__ ABOUT IM TO~IIM MOBB FOR any ear good enough to make a trip to our lor Plymoul OR4-14M’ y LATB MODEL CARS snnnir m\f»jn>u v^vd*a Averill's Demanding , I,ate Model Used Cars Check Our Price Before You Sell SEE A I, BAUl'.R Malthcws-Hargrcaves nd at Caaa rm g-4141 ______r» OUT-STATE MARKETS Extra Top Dollar FOR LATB MODBLi M&M MOTOR SALES “"’i8.iV«:iir"' 4.0SM ______OH_ “WA«fKbr-«^*riARB Ellsworth AUTO SALES gm Plata Hwy. MA M4M Hi cal ■‘10? DOLIuCr tAID’ FOR "CLBAH" GLENN'S $25 MORI MA $$ TOP DOLLAR $$ Qean {T^edCar. JEROME "Bright Spot" FE 8-0488 Us«4 Avto-Track P«rta 102 IMT FORD, IMI CHBVr. ■—nttonal pickup. FB l anai^ llil MODBL T PART* __________EM J*MM______ . Naw ami Uitd Tracks 103 BHia Tiwi.^^Boonottw and oia- ennduloB. Ige or Duymg » e»r rocoouj > ted credit, tenknipcy, tic LLOYD'S Unaeln-kfaraury-Cainat Mataor-Bntllth Pnd INI FON7TAO CATAUM S-FAS> •anger haator. brakaa. buckai aaau. e.ew nu»e.'^fyai$i Suburban Oldsmobile \ MS a WOODWARD MJ 4-448'^ One Year Warranty ON all VBBD CARS BOB BORST r~FD5MMF” ilaTlio alter aw.m. „ ..YMObTH S-DOORT HBAThR. absolutely nu Mr iParC. aCW 4-7M0, Harold CONVSiRmBm nA«*» nteerlBH. DOwer brAke*. 1959 PONTIAC nila ana to n »don with JSfc: wAla«a.. (or a rau good anr at $995 ^ONTIAC IM lllWM T &Q ■ Tuwn dBd Ownrtnr dodge, INC. gT^g%ea,.is t«ix PONTIAC g^aiff'pisrnjJssi VAbL’S AUTO*SALES ^Mirpnssu-r" LLOYD'S D our Opinion Wd tXItr TBS BEST DEAL Finest Servic© COMPLETE LINE OF PARTS FOR RAMBLER ALSO ALL IMPORTS Factory Trained Mechanics Pontiac’s Only Rambler Dealer Superior Rambler 550 OAKLAND AVE. RAMBLER S RAMBLER GOOD—BAD-NO CREDIT and haaier, power oraaeg. a>»°- Special Payment Plsn MA 5-lon. IfTOunaadnaar. Iwfll dallyar on ----7=-----;—^ the spot tha ear of your aholeel l» - Special - fflu wKJSr- •“ UfTBUtCK ----- •■■I — raamw d ■ eyli ■ atiak | FORD mfen. Mr uan. ...j RAMBLER NEED A CAR? MS FOBtlAC BONNBVTLUI « arT'Bamboa tlreeS'iSieMEmt «*• «UH«n.MIT-»4l. M lUlUHbaR 4-OOCNIJRATI^ wasad, 1 nwitar. pla^ eawan £>isr"Lu®'Ti^ im kambw >poo». atoom» BELOW COSTl,, IMS RAmums Mto^cHooSafioii Birmitgi^ha^^mbler *MI Mm Russ Johnson's One-Owner Trades it« luioutt s«oo]a sBD^ juit ukakaw. Coma and ••• ui ssjssse,ssnss%. IPBdT 4-OOOa SEDAN I tranendiiyB^wu^hra^ EHPBST CONVERTIBLa ^ tile, radio, baatar. A MM II and the laat ana M MM IMl FORD OALAXm IM X-l. nuSte lwi^Mtod*L5gMnffiaa*iw tm MBRCURY STATION WAOON. --^to. baatar, automatla Irantmto-I, 1171 down, and aaauma pay-nto of I9S.4I per montbl retail FONTUC I MANY Mim 1 STORE ii LLOYD'S '65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 , IMITONTIAC VBNTOBA HABOTdy Rydramalle. Pawar atoartog. Fnw-" Vakea. Thto to • raid abarp aar. 1Mb FONTUC 4-DOOa 8) Llncoln-Marcury-Comet Meteor-Bngllen Ford 8 Saginaw «. FB 1-bHI ORY MONI " ” •r eieering, power Iranemtoelon. I3W, t ay down. Or baal ca irMumortallon. 419b Drayton Plahu. OB 1955 FORD Convertible arttti radio, boatar. wniMwalla. an a rad and whlla flnlehl $2495 John McAuliffe. Ford ISO Oakland Avo. ,FE 5-4101 1957 OLDSMOBILE SURPLUS MOTORS WILL ACCEPT Boats, motors, i^uhs, echo off a steam whistle, sui»i shine from a beanery, exhaust fumes from an outboard motor or most anything movable. in Siroat 1962 Ford Convertible h radio, trnnamtoi '""$295 aitr ano auwmai-, rad wllgwaalhl rMl^ltb a white John McAuliffe, Ford tm»r USBD CAR See SHELTON Ponti..c-Buick Rochester, Mich. OL 1-8133 SSeTiU LLOYD'S toll, ahim rarM «» CADIUjAC 4-IW numc. ruw« .waving and brakaa. Low mUea gnd aalra 4-DOOa HAED^ ' POOD *to.*lMd'Fralira^a-” UDb .rOHTIAV «W«ll nuwiiie Power tleerbig. Power brakaa, ^ , dramaUo. whltawnU tiraa. Rune pa^ faol. IHt PONTIAC d-DOOR HAimrOP .,. g-^ii5SiJSs;.“S5,, sxdstie Ml CHBVROLRT MONZA Wm radio, baatar, automatlo tnaamto- •arTiinSJSf. . RED HOT SPECIALS THESE CARS MUST GO! UM PONTMC STATION WAOOM . BRAND NEW 1962 RAMBLER SPECIALS RUSS IOHNSON-" pontiac-rambler»»< la -- —................ M-24*at the Stoplight fWxLAND“!?v‘lr iSraffi Uke Orion MY3-6M6, OLIVER BUICK INI BUICR Skylark Convert Cony imrilblo . . im1 iSi SuiCT BI^eTRA iSSsElTO anything movable, on a new car or used! gJis::, JiS BILL SPENCE I _ MaUiStoNt_ WeMan;:..' .. iStoan mMI OLIVER BUIGJC FE 2ll( DON'T PASS US BY! STOP IN AND TEST-DRIVE ONE OF THESE USED CARS I •asi "**■ $2595 19S9 Rambler $945 1961 Chevy ^ *• $1795 ? 1962 Pontiac Catalina, power iteenns. power brakei, automatlo trananltalon. Oon\ Ntoago^w^. I960 Chevy $KR5 aharp «ar, only $ia fl875 MANY OTHERS ' TO CHOOSE FROOJf Don’t Buy Any New or Used Car or Truck Before You Have Seen Uil,, HOMER HIGHTS MOTORS. INC, ,.»■ viuitti - Pontiac BuieP • Oxford MOTORS. INC, Chevrolet - Pontiac Buid^: Isiifeft THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1962 BAST LANSING (JR <- Michi-, sit-in movements in the South. gm State University officials yesterday began a. probe of an ap^ IMBrant attempt to defy university poUcy on outaide speakers, -three Detroit members of the student nonviolent coordinating oke to some 100 stu-y evening. littee spoke i Thursday e They gave firstJiand reports of voter registration drives and The campus organization .that scheduled the speakers did not dear them with a faculty-student committee prior to their appearance. University policy that most student organizations apply to the clearing committee before bringing a speaker onto the campus. Jqckie Endows Seat for Father at Lmcoln (tenfei to seat,BB101 reading: “For John Vemorf Bouvier — flrom His NEW YORK (UPI) - Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy has given 11,000 for the endowmeMt of a seat in the new Philharmonic Hall in memory of her father, it was announced yesterday. A bronze plaque was attached Daughter — Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy.’' Another seat in the hall at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts was endorsed in the name of Mrs. Kennedy by a group qf former classmates at Miss Porter’s School in Farmington, Conn. The snow loopnrd or ounce hi lund in the high mountain, regions of central Asia. It resembles the leopard but has longer fur., JANSING IB -- Gov. Swainson has written President Kennedy urging approval of a public works program in the Hiawatha National Forest. Swainson wrote that he understands a Federal Works Program in the forest is under consideration. The problems of counUes make this area a prime target for the idtlation of JdlHvo- works programs,, the governor in Delta, Schoolcraft and Alger The number of motor vehicles | registered in Norway during 1981, the first year of unrestricted car >rts, was 42.8 per cent higher Siiaiaai Trial We eevef aH weelwerit U» m shew yew why Aiu«iamn 8WaasndMa.Uyaa.bei»to. n 4-25W—iM C. WEEDON SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO Be Smart, Be Thrifty — Monday and Every Day! You Can Be Sure of Extra Savings at Sears! no pllone orders, CO.D.’s or deliveries except large items YOU MAY WIN! Drawing on Mon.f October 29! MONDAY ONLY! boys’ double-knee corduroy pants 097 ^ pr. Charge It Smartly styled corduroys with elastic at waist for a good fit, self-belt, zip-fly. Handsome, warm and carefully tailored to deliver a long, long future. Double knee for . extra strength. Choose from ass’td colors in sizes 4-10. Boys' Wear, Main Floor Child’s 2-Pc. knit pajamas w Charge It. reg. $1.99 sizes 3-ftX , pajamas with snug fitting knit necklines and cuffs at _jikles and wrists. Colorful prints for boys, girls. 2-nc. pi rib kni Infants' Dept., Main Floor MONDAY ONLY! Your Choice ... Galvanized, Wire Trash Burners D22 each Reg. 83-98 Charge It Choose a 20-gal. galvanized trash burner with tight fitting lid. . perforated top and sides, or a heavy ghuge steel wire trash burner. Priced to save you 76c this Monday. Uousmam, Main Basement MONDAY ONLY! Kenmore Matchless Automatic Gas Ranges 199 Begular 8249.9.’> 30 Inches Wide! NO MONEY DOWN on .Sears Easy Payment Plnn Giant,i^.'i-in. oven features new dual temperature trol ^.. lltaw food at low liraU lhen copk it auioiuuii- ’*Burner-wilh-a-liraiii” plus top piddle and removahie oven door. See it . . . buy it Monday! eally. Appliance Dept., Main Basement . MONDAY ONLY! Sears 45-lnch Galey and Lord Tarpoon SI. !fr Charge It Pre
    ulton o|»eration;”<#)pens any shape, size can «)uiekly. Md niugnel, auiomalie shul-off. Wdill-in sliarpeiier hones knives razor keen. In white, ^ UL listed.'Save $4 Mondgy! Electrical Dept., Main Basement MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Mfg.’s Close?Ont! Assorted Men’s sweaters Charge It Choice of Wools, wool-blenda and synthetics in flat and bulky kniu with crew, V-or-shawl collars in men’s sizes: small, med. and large. Pullover or coat style. Not all colors and styles in all sizes. Limit 2 per customer. Save up to 16! Stepladders if Were A99 $7.98 “ Charge It i 6’,Tlegr$9:98~... 5.99 While Quantities Last! If .Buy now at Mfg.'s Clot«4)ui prices. Sluridly huill . , . steel steps. Hsndy for dozens of home chores. Save Mondayl * 1 fofnl Deptsf Main Uatemeni | Drive a Racer by Reftiote Control Steel model Indianapolis 500 Rac^ Was 85.99 is steered by remote control. Builtg > “I 99 in jack raises car; 2 spare tires.' \ J. 16 inches long. Batteries extra. charge It Limit 2 per customer. ' * Toy Town, Perry St. Basen. ent MONDAY SPECIAL Atomizing Type Humidifiers 31“ Reg. 839.95 .Simple lo inslail on vcriiral surface iii rclurn-air duel. Easy in ailjuKl . .. alomizes from 1 lo 10 ga!lons of walcr per day. Oporairs aiiloiiialically ... no pan lo fill or cmply. MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Yoiii* (Jioice: 18-iti. Aliiitiinnm Snow Shovel or Pusher 66 each Regularly at 83.49 Save 83c Monday! Charge It Asphalt Drive XCOATING Regularly 86.98 Your choice: 18-inch lightweight aluminum snow shovel... 15x18-in. blade or a Craftsman 18-in. aluminum snow pusher . . . heavy ribbed curved blade. Priced to save you more Monday! Reg. $2.89 Craftsman Icc Chipper Scraper has 7x4Vk-inch blade of carbon steel. . . 199 499 f pail Charge It Less than f 1 per gal. Reg. $5.98 Steel Snow Plows Rigid 24-in., I4-ga. enameled steel blade . 810.98 Craftsman SnoW Plows, 28-inch . . . 9.99 84.98 Alum. 18-inch Heart Saver . ......3.99 Hardware Dept,., Main Basement Just spread on blacktop •phalt or other surfaces and get new protective beauty. Dries quickly. One pail covers 300 to ,500 iquare feet. Get yours this K at Sears . . . save! square fe Monday 1 Paint Dept., Main Basement IVIONDAV ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Save *51*®! Automatic Washer With Suds Saver Kegiiinriy at 8239.95! 3 eyries for all faliries 188 Winterize! ALLSTATE Permanent Anti-Freeze Check Sears Low, Low Thrifty Price-SAVE 127 JL GALLC Charge It NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan S|M>clal eyeles for everyday, delieaie or wash *n’ wear fabries. Big 12-lb. capacity. Built-in lint filler, 3 water level selections, S wash-rinse lemperalureH. AppUakee Dept., Main ffasemeni GALLON l-ahoralory tested for, lower freezing |minl, iiigher Imilini point. Retards rust and corrosion. Fill radiator once ... gel proleelion all llirough the winter. Buy Monday atOUR LOWEST PRICE ever! Amto Aecestorles, Perry St. Basement ‘"Satisfadion guaranteed or your money back” SEARS 154 North Saginaw St. . Phone FE 5-4171 T Th0 W§ath0t V.». WiKlktr IraratMt Chance of ibowen, cooler (Pcuiit rift s) , THE PONTIAC PRESS ONE CflU VOL. 120 NO. 211) ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1902-80 PAGES tm.T«^*SSjr5gT£grT,o EAGLE ATTACKS DOG-A busy city like Chicago is hardly the place you'd expect to find an eagle seeking prey. Yet it happened yesterday as Penny, a month-old puppy, became this golden eagle's intended meal. Penny’s owner Fred Goodman, swinging a AP rhalorn broom, said the bird actually was lifting the dog off the ground when he came to the rescue. The dog wasn’t seriously hurt. The eagle was shot with a tranquilizer gun and taken to the Lincoln Park Zoo. Auto Show Opens in Blaze of Color DETROIT (iW - The 44lh National Automobile Show, billed as the “world’s largest,’’ opened in a blaze of color at Cobo Hall last night. An estimated 50,000 persons thronged, the big convention hall at an invitational review preceding today’s formal opening of the show to the public. More than 300 new 1963 passenger car models and trucks won the admiring gaze of onlookers while Industry men ex- pressed hopes of another good sales year. The pageantry of cars, which continues for nine days, is strictly an American performance. ■There are no foreign cars in the show. Pretty girls and band music added charm and rhythm to a gala night. The show was on television for a half hour. FLAGS presented Dignitaries of the auto industry were on hand. Integration Move Set at University ol Alabama Henry Ford II, as president of the sponsoring Automobile Manufacturers Association, gave Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh flags representing the 50 states. The flags are to be a permanent exhibit at the sblw. A narrator (tilled them sym* bollc of the “interrelations” of all the states of the anhm. Besides Ford, chairman of the Ford Motor Co., the participants included President John F. Gordon of General Motors, President Lynn A. Townsend of Chrysler, President Roy Abernethy of American Motors; Harold E. Churchill, Studebaker director, find President J. N. Bauman of White Motors. MONTGOMERY, Ala. (ypi—Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. says five Negroes will begin a second attempt at breaking down racial barriers at the University of Alabama in the next few days. King, president of the pro-integration Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said he has talked with five (students who plan*——----------- Among conspicuous personalities was 78-year-old K. T. Keller, former president and board chairman of Chrysler, now retired. oldtimers banquet in a ballroom next door to the auto exhibit Keller was given a standing ovation. to apply for enrollment at the university. The announcement by the Negro leader came in the wake of the University of Mississippi crisis where two persons were killed in rioting after Negro James H. Meredith entered that school. ONLY 2 LEI-’T With Meredith’s enrollment at Ole Miss, Alabama and South Carolina became the only states which have no integration at any level in public education. Although not segregated by law, the University of Alabama has been left untouched by integration attempts since Negro Autherine Lucy attended the institution for three days in February 1956. In Today's Press Pr«flt/«fif Ailing Sllghl cold ends Kennedy’s weekend trip — ■ PAGE 2. Blast Nikita Rbd Chinese leaders hit K’s 'high living’ ~r PAGE 4. 7 Iniurtcl Wreckage cleared after ; state rail eoIllsion-PAGE ' , ’i Asterelgy ..............N ' Bridge j Comici..................M Editorials .............I Home Section ......i.lS-|ll Obitnaries 21 Sporto ..............II-H ’rheateri ..........12-13 TV A Radio Programi U ! -. Wllsea, E»ri.. ss Lucy, admitted under a federal court order, later was ex-d for accusing school authorities of conspiring with a mob which touched off rioting on her arrival. King said leaders of his group were in Montgomery Friday organizing an Alabama chapter which will aid students who want to enter the university. ence did not pick the students, the minister said they “are applying as a result of their own desire and own choice.” He declined to identify the students, except to say they were attending another college and would apply for transfers. NEW DELHI — The Indian army fell back today before superior Red Chinese forces in heavy fighting at both ea.st and west ends of India’s Himalayan boundary. News of the Indian move followed a Defense Ministry nouncement that Red Chinese forces attacked all Indian outposts on the northeast frontier area in the Ijimalayan mountains early this morning after mortar and machine gun fire. At almost the same time, the Chinese attacked in ladakh’s Chip Chap Valley in the northwest frontier area, the Indians Keller, tanned and vigorous looking, made a speech in which he expressed concern over America’s missile program. He directed the nation’s guided missile program from 1950 to 1953. Keller, remembered as a perfectionist in the car industry, said he feared the pr^esent missile program is being “pushed too fast.’’ He said he feared that “for the sake of speed it is not being carried out on a level of perfection.’’ In addition to showing off cars the auto show will make a special bow to the women next week. There will be fashion shows daily from Monday through Saturday. Bombs Injure 7 or More in 2 Italian Rail Stations VERONA, Italy (AP) - Bombs exploded today in two north Italian railway stations, injuring at least seven persons and causing extensive damage. Officials feared it might herald a new period of agitation among German-speaking residents who greater autonomy in troubled South Tyrol. One-Word Forecast: Gloomy The weather ouUobk for Pon | tiao through tomorrow Is somewhat gloomy. The U.S. Weather Burequ predicts showers and a little cooler tonight and tomorrow with a low of 46 to 55 and tomorrow’s high rising to near 65. Fair la partly chmdy and slightly cMler ik the forecast for Mdhdiy. , I Morning northwesterly winds at 8 miles per hour will become northeast at 10 to 15 m.p.h. tonight and tomorrow. FYom 10:18 a m. yesterday til the same hour today, .05 of of rain fell on the Pontiac area. Fifty-seven was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The therinomalir reading waa M at Reds Mount Offensive Chinese Push Indians Back Menon Claims All Outposts on Border Hit Communist Reported to Three Miles Inside Nehru's Territory Indian announcements said the Red Chinese attacked with “very large forces” — possibly thousands — and indicated that Peiping’s attack was launched after acciOsing New Delhi of initiating the offensive. FELL BACK The Defense Ministry said Indian troops fell back over a mile in the northeastern battle area and were fighting three to four miles south of the line which India regards as her frontier. The Defense Ministry said Indian troops also withdrew from one or two posts in the Chip Chap Valley of ladakh. The Waterford Township Board last night proposed a $630,000 budget for'1963, with the over-all tax rate unchanged. The record budget, which exceeds the current one by 148,000, will be filed in the township clerk’s office Monday morning. A public hearing is slated Oct. 29. Final board action will be taken on the proposed budget following the 8 p.m. hearfaig. Next year’s budget is baaed ori a township millage rate of 1.42 which amounts to |3.17 per 81,(100 valuation as equalized. WET START - With a point of the finger, Douglas Rudd, 2056 Richwood Road, sends his dog Butch into the field this morning to start southern Michigan’s .small game sea- son. His‘ brother Verne (right) same address, and Wayne Batters, 2985 James Road, joined Douglas in donning rain apparel against the light drizzle that greeted hunters. HONOLULU (AP) - A nuclear device carried aloft by a specially built rocket was detonat^ successfully Friday night over Johnston Island—the second success in six attempts in the U.S. high-altitude series. Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon called the fighting very heavy and severe and told news-‘our troops will naturally meet the Chinese attacks.” Red China earlier had accused India of opening attacks on both ends of the disputed bonier — the ladakh area in the west and the northeast frontier about 900 miles to the southeast. Menon asserted Peiping’s charge was a cover up for the Red Chinese operation. The Chinese “suffered heavy losses and were compelled to take up resolute 8elf-defen.se actions," on the eastern frontier, the New Red China news agency said. PLANNED ACTION’ Menon said the Chinese onslaught in the northeast opened at (Continued on Pajife 2, Col. 1) U.S. Succeeds in Sixth N-Try Joint Task Force 8 spokesmen immediately announced that the next test will take place between ■ 30 a. m. and 7:30 a. m. (Pontiac time) Oct. 24. Friday night’s shot went off at 10:30 p.m. Hawaiian Standard Time (3:30 a. m. Pontiac time) after being held for an hour. The few Hawaii residents who stayed up to watch the blast 750 miles to the southwest saw a barely visible, lightninglike flash in a heavy WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev have traded grim new warnings over Berlin that appear to leave little if any room for negotiation. Many Western diplomats believe that hope for averting a flaming new crisis, with the ever-present danger ^meeting in the next few No official explanation was given for the delay in firing. "ler heavy clouds and rain squalls had moved across the tiny Pacific island. REPORTS ON MISSILI An Atomic Energy Commission spokesman report^ the specially constructed vehicle that bore the device was powered by a Sergeant missile JFK, Nikita Trade Warnings on Berlin It represents an increase of .32 mills over the 1961 rate of 8 2.85 per 81,000 valuation as assessed. This increase balsMes out a decrease of ,32 mills la Om ty and school tax rates leaving the total 1882 tax rate of PSM per 8L008 valuation as eqnal-ized, the same as the 1911 rate. Aetion last night was essentially conffawd to making minor alterations/ ALREAOirADJUSTED Board members received pre< liminary budget figures from Township Supervisor Elmer John* son in September and had workw* out major adjustments in the interim. Ibe 822,548.82 police and tlTf men’s pension plan ni»o«nto for Another Satellite Put Up by Soviets MOSCOW (AP)—The Soviet Union launched another satellite today, the second this week, Tass reported. Cosmo.s XI carries scientific equipment for space research, the Soviet news agency said. It Is traveling in an orbit with a high of 575 miles and a low of 153 miles above the earth, has ai biting time of 96.1 mlnute.s. Cosmos X was launched Wednesday. The first of the present series was launched March 16 to explore the cosmos in the vicinity of the eartli. They also are intended to study factors affecting the flight of cosmonauts around the earth. of nuclear war, rests principally on the possibility of Kennedy - Khrushchev weeks. American officials who should know will give odds that such a meeting takes place before a cil- poltee perswnnel mre n^^, .nc sis. But the two principles are approaching the matter of a face-to-face meeting with caution. It seems that neither wants to pear too anxious. NOT BLUFFING Kennedy told Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko at their Thursday White House meeting that he wanted to make it clear to Khrushchev that there was no bluff whatsoever in the U.S. deter mination to stand fast in West Berlin against Soviet pressure, even at the risk of nuclear 'War. CAUSE OF DEATH - Allegheny Airlines Convalr stands at Bradley Field at Windsor Locks, Conn., with the torvlce door half open, of the tragedy in which atowardesa FYancylse da Moriare, 38, was suck(xt out to her death at 1,500 feet last night. The stewardess was giving landing instructions to passengers when the door blew op Friendt of the Library, a much-discussed appeal in recent weeks, also failed to niake the Minor pay raises were provided for some salaried nondepartmeni heads and'other hourly rated pito ployes. ; The only department head- to bS granted a pay hike in the propdied budget is Planning Dlrectoi Robert Diehall whose salary will be raised from 88,000 to 88,252. TheWoidls... SERYICB! ,1. ..11' z.-: ,f ma MAO am I THE PONTIAC PHES8. SATPBDAY. OCTOBEE M, KNU MSlight Cold Hits Kennedy, '-h ■ lEndjife Trip I ifil |u4r E today canceled the remain-if his weekend trip because of l^t «30ld and prepared to fly l|ack to Washington immediately. «The announcement was m a d e press secretary Pierre Salinger, who said the decision was leached on the advice of the Pres-toent’s physician, Dr. Geor wrckley. and made It with no. ap-II effect. • Last night, Salinger said, Dr. tiurcUey noticed that the Pres-Meat's voice was husky, and this morning he found his tem-|»erature one degree above nor- J“He has a slight upper respira-^ry Infection,” Salinger said. •Kennedy is receiving the usual i^edication for a cold, Salinger said, and on his return to Wash-iiigton will go to the White House, ajid take it easy. ‘ This Is the second time within two weeks that the President (as had to cancel engagements because of a cold. ;On the other occasion his cold appeared just before a Midwestern trip that took him as far west as Minnaepolis, but he recovered It called for numerous outdoor appearances, including an airport rally in Milwaukee, a shopping center talk in St. Louis and speeches in Albuquerque and Las Vegas. The President was to have ended the day by spending the night in Stattle and officially closing the World’s Fair there tomorrow. He to have flown back to Washington late tomorrow afternoon. DISMAL WEATHER Adding to the President’s problems the weather forecast was dismal at both Milwaukee and at St. Louis. It was raining in Milwaukee iRed Chinese Push Mian Army Back Asked if the speaking date might be reinstated later, Salinger said he did not know but that the time mean that Kennedy could not go to Seattle. ; (Continued From Page One) 5 a.m. and very heavy fighting still continued at 11 a.m. Calling the Chinese attacks premeditated and concerted, Menon s^ the Chinese had concentrated vary large forces in the eastern ai^a “and they are all being ttoown into the attack.” He said this attack came after a bombard-n^nt with heavy mortars and machine guns. • Menon refused to estimate the numbers involved in the fight- ^ken of thousands on each ^e In the area. )\t the same time, the Chinese attacked Indian posts in the Chip-c(ap River valley of Ladakh and h^vy fighting Is also g o 1 n g on there, Menon said. ^enon reported Indian supply-dsopping planes were attacked by Chinese ground fire on bA fronts today but all had returned, to base Hb added that India had no fighter planes operating on the fronts. ^Burglar Robs Peter :in Order to Pay Paul THOENIX, Ariz. UP) - Exconvict Henry W. Roff, 31, of Phoenix, af aitlng trial in a burglary charge was arrested recently after breakup into a Phoenix business firm. *“I needed money to pay my law-y4r for the other job I pulled,” of-fij^rs quoted him as saying. Saiinger said the doctors are sure Kennedy had recovered completely from the last cold before coming down with thfs one. There was one difficulty about today’s schedule: ed to arrive in Missouri, and being made rain poured outside the President’s hotel in Chicago. Meredith Gets Legdl'Cloak' Court Order Forbids Official Interference Birmingham Area Newe 22 Mayors Arei to U.N. Day Celabi^ion DIVISION’S PONTIAC PLANT Fisher Body*s Displays Indirect at Auto Show On his Midwest tour the President has been busily preaching his political doctrine that the election of a Republican, any Republican, is in his view a step backward for the country. “Pick yourselves up next Nov. I,” Kennedy urged iwrty workers last ni^t “and elect the Democratic ticket from top to Friday his scorn spared no living Republican and it was aimed particularly at a senator whose support he has sometimes needed on close international issues: Everett McKinley DIrksen, the GOP leader in the Senate. As is customary on these occasions, the President never mentioned Dirk-sen by name. But he went all in praise of Rep. Sidney R. Yates, Democrat who is struggling to upset Dirksen. BARELY CARRIED STATE Kepnedy barely carried Illinois and some Republlcaitf claimed he made it only because the votes n’t counted accurately in Chicago. “They said terrible things about you,” Kennedy told 3,000 precinct committeemen, “but I never believed it. “I hope that you will do the ! for congressman Sid Yates, who has my unqualified support. In effect, Kennedy blamed Dirksen for the loss of a favorite administration project, medical care for the aged under Social Security. The Weather ■ Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report • PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with scattered showers • through Sunday. Chance of thundershowers today. A little ! cooler, high today in the 60s. Low tonight 48 to 55. Iligh Sunday •80 to M. Winds variable today becoming northeast 10 to 15 miles t tonight and Sunday. Outlook for Monday—fair to partly cloudy ’and slightly cooler. T*S«r In PonlUr ^owMt Wmptrttur* preceding I t k.m.! Wind veloeltr S i D(r«cUon: Northwot --'H Sdturdny nt g:44 p.m. ')•• eund«y nl D M • m. Ml« Sdturdny nt 3:07 p.m. Dtrtouo aun « K >3:03 n. Downtown TomMroInrri rndoy In Ponllto Fisher Body Division of General Motors Corporation will he on display at the 44th National Automobile Show in Detroit next only through other GM divisions. The Fisher Body plant in Pontiac, for instance, will be exhibited by means of Pontiac Division models. A veteran of many automobile shows, Fisher Body first began operating in Pontiac in 1K2. Body by Fisher and the Napoleonic coach emblem, then a tradition of 14 years, was already the world’s best-known automobile body trade-mark when Fisher Etody occupied the old Beaudette plant at Wessen and Walnut streets. Ground was broken for the present plant at 900 Baldwin Ave. on March 1, 1923, and construction completed early in 1925. Fisher operated both plants until 1929 when the older plant was razed. Various construction and modernization programs over the years have substantially increased the capacity of the plant. The largest of these programs, just recently compleM, brings the total floor area to more than 1,429,000 square feet. NEW FACILITIES Entirely new body and paint shops now occupy 280,000 square feet of space formerly used for metal frabrication. New facilities for the trim and cushion room now occupy the Proposal Seen Pro-Red West Fights Ban Plan UNITED NATIONS, N Y. (AP) —The States and Britain t^aytok^ff sought today to k|B%ff a netltral-ist plan for an unpoliced ban on nuclear tests. They pushed a rival proposal for a limited ban. Both powers were reported angry over the resolution by 30 non-aligned nations that echoes the Soviet cail for an uninspected moratorium on tests. The United States and Britain, 3-Car Collision Leaves 11 Hurt Romeo Crash Injures Hunters, Teen-Agers Eleven persons were taken to hospitals with injuries when three cars collided on M53 south of Romeo at 1:30 a.m. today. One car going north was loaded with four hunters. The other two cars were loaded with teen-agers heading south. WcBther: flunny lllfheM end Low Thie Hole I In 1020 rrldny's Temi Angeles 6? S7 73 40 Kbiisbs City 73 05 Detroit 73 60 Ltn Vegr* - ‘ Mirauelte 67 38 * — ^ellBWtt 63 33 , B. Mftrle 03 40 ‘rRverse C. 60 46 ____________ __ . lUitnU 74 no Mpln.. Bt. P 63 36 Ml Ai||iel lifivUle 84 61 Port Woi Honolulu (II 30 PhocniK 61 M m. Loiili 26 8 rrani’lii > II n IndlRiiRpons 73 64 Wushlngton 74 63 61 64 68 46 85 68 70 45 i NATIONAL WEATHER—Occasional rain and showers are. «forecast for tonight for the lower Lakes, Ohio and Tennessee ' valleys and eastern portions of the south central Plains, 'f i ---------—^ ghowers from western North Dakota to the north dth Rockies. Fog and drizzle will prevail on the north Pacific j Coast. It will be cooler in the central li valley j^th little temperature change I and central Mis- The two southbound cars were apparently on the wrong side of the road on a curve, Romeo State Police said. The first southbound car struck the northbound car in the front and was then hit by the Most seriously Injured were: Joseph Tataucher, 21, driver of the first southbound car, of 22035 Scotia, Oak Park, who suffered a fractured leg and facial lacerations. Ilene Stoller, 16, passenger in the same car, of 14431 Oak Park Blvd., Oak Park, lacerations of the face and a fractured right arm. In the northbound car, the most seriously injured was the driver James Fairris, 27, of 1825 Paris, Lincoln Park. He suffered a possible broken pelvis, chest injuries and facial Injuries. A passenger James Sanders, 82, of 18641 Reed, Melvindale, suffered undetermined Internal In- The motorists were taken to Al-mont .Community Hospital. who have made plain- they never would accept another uncontrolled moratorium, put in their own resolution a9 soon as the 30-nation draft was circulated. WESTERN PLAN The Western plan called for interim pact banning tests in the atmosphere, water and outer space where they can be detected without controls. As a second step it proposed an eventual treaty banning all tests, including those underground “with effective and prompt international verification.” The neutralist proposal would have the General Assembly condemn all nuclear tests and call on the atomic powers to stop all testing by Jan. 1. The plan was based on a memorandum the eight nonaligned tions put out at the Geneva negotiations last spring. SEEN PRO-RED The United States was said to feel that the authors of the resolution had taken a position that was more pro-Soviet than neutral on the nuclear question. American suspicions heightened by Soviet claims of neutralist support made Friday at Geneva meeting of the U.S. Soviet-British nuclear test ban subcommittee. Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsar-subcommittee. Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsar-apkin told U.S. and British representatives, “You are trying to get the neutrals on your side, but your attempts are in vain. Tsarapkin said discussions at the United Nations showed “we have a common front against you, including the neutrals.” The assembly’s top political committee is expected to take at least another week debating the nuclear test issue before reaching a vote on the rival plans. Tiger Woman' Search Is Pressed by Police PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) - Escaped trunk murderess Winnie Ruth Judd continued to elude police today — almost two weeks aft-her seventh escape from the Arizona State Hospital. The notorious “Tiger Woman’ of the 1930s was convicted 31 years ago for the double slaying of her two roommates. She was sen-All 11 were thrown out of the tenced to hang but was judged In-cars and were found strewn in sane later and committed to the ditches. The northbound car|hospltal. Police speculated that caught fire. iMrs. Judd is still in the Phoenix Romeo firemen and policemen area dnd is being assisted by assisted state police. |friends. former body and paint shop tion of a dual system, and tl about 56,000 square feet for production area and a receiving dock. The people who work at Pontiac’s Fisher Body plant assemble . hdrdtop, station wagon and convertible bodies for conventional-size Pontiacs, and integral bodies for the Pontiac Tempest. This includes welding the body together, painting it, attaching the trim, and constructing and installing the cushions. LARGE CAPABILITY The plant contains nearly 4to miles of conveyors and is capable of assembling several hundred bodies a day. ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)--A federal appeals court has thrown a legal cloak around Negro James H. Meredith to protect him from any i official interference or harassment during his studies at the tlnlverslty of Mississippi. A preliMnary injunction issued Frldiw by the U.S. Sth Circuit Court tit Appeals gave strict orders to the state of Mississippi, its officials and their successors not to interfere in any way with desegregation at Ole Miss. The Justice Department said in Washington the order probably was the most sweeping action ever taken by an appellate court. ‘DONTS’ LISTED The appellate court mentioned specifically several things Barnett, the state an dits officials must not do. The prohibitions included attempting to arrest Meredith or securing state court injunctions or “injuring harassing, threatening or intimidaUng (Meredith) in any other way or by any other means.” Missi8siM>i’s Gov. Ross Barnett had no comment. Meredith was not on the Ole Miss campus at Oxford. The 29-year-old student, admitted after rioting and bloodshed, completed his third week of classes and left the campus in a five<;ar caravan accompanied by II U.S. marshals. ARMY FORCES CUT The motorcade drove off in the direction of Memphis, Tenn. where Meridith spent the previous weekend with his wife and child. With a quiet weekend in prospect, the Army announced it was cutting its force at Oxford to 500 regular troops. This compared with 23,000 troops called to duty in the area at the height of the desegregation crisis. The appelUte court sitting in Atlanta did not make a ruling on contentot charges against Barnett or Lt. Gov. Paul B .Johnson. Thousands of people from all walks of life in every part of the country are in some way dependent on the operations being performed in this plant. Other Fisher BedY plants in a nationwide iNiWUrb of coimD in ww* what is being done at I Pontiac. During the year 1961, expenditures for payroll and local purchases totaled more than |38,-500,000. Over 700 suppliers within a 75-mile radius of Pontiac furnished the plant with materials and services. Rob Motorist at Traffic Light A Waterford Township man was robbed at knife point early this morning while sitting in his car waiting for a traffic light to change. Owen Helwig, 29, of 2095 Kohler t., told Pontiac police that two men jumped into his car at South Boulevard and Franklin Road and threatened him with a knife. He said a $40 watch, a wallet containing $19, and a shotgun was taken. The Incident occurred about 5 a.m. Preceding the event, the county mayors will attend a 6:30 p.m. dinner honoring MaeVane, a veteran newsman and broadcaster who served as a corresponden Europe and Africa during World War II. Three schools in the Birmingham School District and one in Bloomfield Hills have received awards for excellence in pr tion of their 1961 yearbooks the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. RECEIVE AWARDS Birmingham’s Seaholm High School was one of nine Michigan schools honored with the coveted medalist” title in competition Chief Judge Elbert P. Tuttle lid a decision would be issued as XHi as possible in the contempt cases. But he declined to say the had reached a decision. IPonfiac Man Struck, Killed by Automobile A 69-year-old Pontiac man was fatally injured yesterday when he ran into the path of car on Saginaw Street at the Patterson Street intersection. Oakland Highway ; Toll In ’62 Garnald Williams, 30765 Simmons St., died at Pontiac General Hospital about two and half hours after being struck by a car driven by Howard E. Cook, 34, of 715 S10 c u m Road, Pontiac Township. Cook was going south on Saginaw when the accident occured at 1:30 p.m. 76 He told Pontiac police that he was traveling about 20 miles per ...............................in BIRMINGHAM - Mayors of» Oakland County cIUm have boon invited to the special United Na* tions Celebration to be held Wednesday et the Birmtnghnm Community ^ The U.N. Day program, which starts at 8 p.m., Is sponsored by the Oakland County Chapter of the Annerican Association tor the United Nations. It is open to the public. John MaeVane, U.N. corres- wlth 1,400 others throughout the country. The Seaholm yearbook, “Pl- pondent for the the IJWO te l “Talon” Grovo High School’s ' MMi first place among ^ _ ............schools in the 1,- Broadcasting Co., is the principal speaker. He will be intro-dneed by Bhrmingbam Mayor Florence H. WiUeU. A quesllon-and-answer period will follow MaeVsne’s speech. Also featured on the program is Mrsi Dorothy K. Roosevelt, who will play Respighi’s “Siciliana” on the concert piano. LONG THANH, South Viet Nam (AP)—Five hundred Vietnamese troops, IS helicopters and a heavy 4 Teens Held in Beating Case umbrella of air support raided rubber plantations east of here today but came up empty handed. Four teen-agers were being held in the Oakland County Jail today on investigation of beating young hitchhiker. Those held for felonious assault are Charles W. Kester, 89 Oakhill St.; Boyd E. Gilbert, 27 Mathews St.; Patti V. Summers,‘1065 Mlchi-St.; and Lee R. Mascorro, 454 Third St., all of Pontiac. All are 18 years old. The four were arrested about 3 p.m. by Pontiac police after they were stopped and found to have beer in the car. Mark Boyce, 16, of 1009 Millington St., had reported to police that he had been beaten near Oakland and Sanderson about 12:30 p.m. He said he bad been given a ride by group of boys and when he started to get out of the car he was attacked. Hunters Are Snared by M24 Traffic Jam with cffMt prlntiniji. The flMl edition of Derby Junior Hl|^ School’s “Cycle” was judged second best offset yearbook produced by Michigan junior hjgh The Bloomfield Hills High chool "Hillcrest” received second-place honors, offset division, in the 600 to 900-student category of Michigan high schools. The scholastic press association announced results of its 28th annual judging yesterday at the opening of the conference and short course on yearbook production at Columbia University, New York City. Vietnamese Draw Blank in Big Raid Intelligence had reported that a battalion of Viet Gong troops had moved into villages In the area, 25 miles east of Saigon, one in which several French plantation officials have been kidnaped. As the sun rose, a heavy air strike was to have pounded the suspected rebel positions, and heavy artillery was standing by. But a low mist that hung over the vast plantation area delayed operations several hours. Five of the new U.S. Army escort helicopters flew on the flanks of the troop-carrying H21s, ready to pour rockets and machinegun fire. There was none. MINE EXPLODES The troops landed at a small clearing in the orderly tirest bL. rubber trees for a sweep of the area. They found only peaceful hamlets. The quiet was disturbed near the landing area when a small mine exploded—apparently because of the vibration from the helicopter rotors. No one was hurt. “Getting after the Viet Cong under that green canopy of rubber trees is a problem,” one U.S. adviser said. “We’re going to have to bring the air war against the Viet Cong Into the jungle soon,” he added. “One of these days we’re going to be hurting him as badly there as we are in the plains and paddies.” At Saigon, U.S. helicopter companies are being warned by bul- Hunters heading into The Thumb Area on the opening day of Southern Michigan’s smal' game season were snarled In a huge traffic jam on M24 south of board ToUce^V^^^^^ ~a viet M21 in Lapeer County this morn- antiaircraft company with tog. four .50-callber machine guns is ..................... ....... The Lapeer County Sheriff’s De-operating somewhere not far from front Of his car." Crok was re- partment reported cars were Saigon, lased after making a statement. Ibacked up for eight miles on M24, The heavy machine guns are Williams’ body is at the south of Intersection between 7:30 lethal against helicopters and low-Voorhees Slple Funeral Home. tand8:30a.m. 'flying planes. Payments Deficit Lowers HOT SPRINGS, Va. (AP) - A Treasury official reported today a gratifying and encouraging" drop in the U.S. international payments deficit. But he caution^ the Business Council that further progress depends largely American industry. Undersecretary of the Treasury Robert V. Roosa told 100 corporation chiefs, attending the council’s fall meeting here, that U.S. exports must be expanded by billions of dollars. From another top administration aide,, the council was scheduled to hear a more optimistic report on the 1963 business outlook than It has had so far. The council Friday was told that a “great majority” of its 20 consulting economists expect a slight business dip in early 1963, followed by recovery in the second of the year. DOESN’T AGREE But Walter W. Heller, chairman of President Kennedy’s Council of Advisers and a speaker on today’s program, reportedly was not ready to concede that even a very mild and brief recession is in sight. Heller was expected to report that mixed signals being given by key economic Indicators leave open the possibility that the dragging business expansion will catch its second wind next year, helped by the tax incentives to investment already given and the tax cut proposed by President Kennedy for 1963. Heller told a news conference in Pittsburgh Friday that the administration’s forecast for a $570 billion gross national product for 1962 would fall short by an em-barrasing margin. He estimated it wouldn’t come within $10 billion or more of the forecast. He declined to predict year’s picture but said in ' ”nie first half of 1063 will be a testing period, i We will then whether thinv is enough steam to give expansion a second wind or whether we will experience a mud recesaion.’JI Heller was expected to assure the council today that the admin-1 United States is determined to de- istrstlon concurs with the council’s view that an early 1963 tax cut is the best way to stimulate economic growth. The Business Council’s own leaders seemed dubious that the downturn foreseen by their consulting economists will occur. Roger M. Blough, board chairman of U.S. Steel Corp. and chairman of the council, toU reporters “I am not at this point forecasting a downturn.” STRONG DENIAL And the head of the council’s committee on the domestic economy, F. R. Kappel, board chai^ man of American Telephone Ond Telegraph Co., said “Hell, no,” when asked whether he considered the predicted minor dip a its forms. We hope.” said Rusk,” that neither Moscow nor Peiping will make the terrible mistake of underestimating President Kennedy’s resolve to defend the vital interests of the Free World.” Rusk did not deliver the address in person becauZe of the press of business. It was read for him by William C. Foster, director ^ the U.8. Anna Control and i Hie consensus of the consultants was for a droj> of qnly about $2 billion from a record anr production rate of about $560 lion a year in tills quarter. Friday night Secretary of State Dean Rusk told the executives the ession i DISTRUIUTBS REPORT Both the Roosa and Hellqr talks wro behind the council's tradl-tkmally oioeed doors, but Roms gave reporters oqile> of his report on the adndnlitratkm’s drive to reduce the payments deficit. Inr the first half of this year, he lid, the deftdt in International ittlements was cut to an annual rate of $1.4 bUllon, compared with $2.8 billion last year and nearly $4 billion m 1960 when speculative attacks on the dollar caused abudmlng outflow of gold. 6 /- /■ , f; THE PONTIAC SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1902 wards 9o anniveibary S«t How Yo« Sovt! Typieol of Wards 90th Anniyarsary VolMf-CIving! 8 pc. Bunk Bed Outfit Royalists Hit Rebels in Yemen DAMASCOS, Syria (AP)-Pro-royalist broadcasts asserted monarchist forces are battling troops of Yemen’s revolutionary regime on four fronts today in an effort to recapturp control of the Red Sea nation. Revolutionary Premiere Abdullah Sallal claimed Saudi Arabian and Jordanian troops were actively involved in the royalist drive and also charged Saudi Arabia was massing buge^rmy concentrations along Yemen’s northern frontier. LEADINtS FORCES Saudi Arabian and Jordanian radios said Imam Badr, fighting to regain the throne from which the rebels ousted hitn Sept. 26, as personally commanding forces on a northern front 30 miles south of the Saudi frontier and 180 miles north of the Yemeni capital of Sana. Badr originally was reported killed by the rebels. The broadcasts described three other fronts as in the northwest no miles from Sana, in the northeast 120 miles from Sana and in the southeast near the Aden frontier. The United Arab Republic has strongly supported the revolutionary government with men and material and the Cairo Radio quoted Sallal as saying he has enough power and arms to repel any attack. QUESTION: How do the Japanese make dwarf trees? ANSWER: The Japanese are a very patient people who like to do skillful things with small objedts: They have kmg been famous for the art of “bonsai" which means growing tiny trees. The principle is to plant seedlings or cuttings in a small pot^which will cramp the roots (1) and (2). The rooto can be clipped as the seedling grows and the leaves pruned (8). Thus the little tree is starved and becomes a dwarf. The trick is to do this without kiUing the tlree; this Is something requiring knowledge and skill. If such tiny trees can be kept growing, the trunks will thicken as the years pass and the whole effect will be that of a perfect tree in minature. Sometimes a number of sprouts are trained up from a single root and give a marvelous effect of a small forest. ’The Japanese love to make miniature gardens in this way, combining the trees with rocks, sand, moss and other minute objects. Trees which can be dwarfed include spruce, cedar, juniper, pine, pomgranlte, bamboo, cherry, beech, birch, sweet gum, peach and almond. FOR YOU TO DO: Make a Japanese minature garden inside the lid of a box. It takes too long to dwarf a tree by “bonsai, ” but you can clip a bit of shrub to make it look like a tiny tree and wedge it between rocks. A bit of mirror glass makes a wonderful pool; cover the edges with sand. Look for a bit of green moss. ’The feather is for smoothing the sand. Democrats Invited LANSING - Democratic! legislators and candidates for the legislature have been invited to a meeting at the State Capitol Monday by Gov. Swainson. Swainson said the purpose of the 2 p.m. meeting in the House of Representatives chamber will be to discuss state issues and problem^ in preparation for the work of the 19M legislative session. Three Plead Guilty to Gambling Charge Three Royal Oak township residents yesterday pleaded guilty to a charge of keeping and maintaining a gambling establishment and were sentence by Circuit Judge William J. Beer to $100 in fine and costs or 60 days in jail. John Marshall, 30, and Catherine R. Peterson, 26, both of 20870 Westview St., and Benny Fields, 42, of 2165S Gllcrest St., entered their guilty pleas after a jury had been selected for their trial on a charge of operating a gambling The trio was arrested March 3 In a police raid on the Westview Street address. It Paya to Attend PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE Mid-Term Opening Monday, October 22 (Day and ivening Pregrami) Speedwriting Shorthand Gregg Shorthand Office Machines Typing I through II 101 Principles of Acct. 1 MIm Parker, Mr. Chapin, or Mr. Tull will be glad to answer any questtona you may hove. The phone number is FEderdI 3-7W8. A copy o( our new school catalog will be sent to you on request. Free Placement Service PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 18 • 24 W. Lawrence FE 3-7028 GE CLOCK RADIO WAKB to Mtnuc SraaAL Now 11^95 iiw Only -lO weekly THE lioOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OP PONTIAC ^ MW. mntON P8S 4‘isH BULK HEAVY DUTY Vitolized Oil DISCONTINUED Corpet Somples 27"x54" 3«» CHARGE IT aaa3»as»8 ipK'siaiiSB save 1.08 per pallon WARD! ONI-COAT lAnX FIAT WAU | | RAINT--RIO. 4.98 990 Multiple Purpose Porloble Kerosene Heoter 988 Main Floor Applionco Dopt. iRi WIIH A SIONATURII *< a Ui# brush or roller a Wash tools in water t Rainbow of colors || ;| Stretch your dollars during Wards 90th Anni-variary I Ona-coot latex ^ it to convanlant—paint, ,1 uta room the same day! STORE MO A.M. It 8M P.M. DAIlflSMr KAsili HOURS:.; Rtsthy ttn'^Stlirthiy ■., IT0.111 ililto irfflRM Triwroi»'Ot^^^ii^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1962 JAKLOMMB President Signs Appropriations Bill Gambling Hit by New Bill WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy yesterday sighed a bill appropriating $2,025,895,700 to run the State, Justice, and Commerce departments and their allied 8gen> cies until next June 30. Included in the total is $100 million for the purcluom of U.N. bonds to help the organization through a financial crisis created by refusal of some U.N. members to help pay for its peaceJceeplng operations in the Congo and the The major items in the bill are $793.6 million for the Department of Commerce, $396 million for the State Department, $306.6 million for the Justice Department and $305.7 mUUon for the Small Business Administration. WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi-dent Kennedy signed a bill ye day tightening a ban on interstate shipment of gambling devices, except to states where their use is legal. One of the anticrime measures recommended by Atty. Gen. Robert P. Kennedy, it is designed to bring the law up to date with the latest gambling devices — par-ticuarly pin ball machines that pay off. It also extends the required numbering and registration of gambling machines to parts used for repairs. Stricken from the bill by Congress was a provision that would have permitted the attorney general to compel testimony of wit-i' in return for a grant of nity from federal prosecution. SUNDAY ONLY12to6 Save over 50% comp, valtie 9.95 MEN'S SLACKS of famous J.P. Stevens ALL-WOOL FLANNEL ilMITi 2 pairs to #■88 « customer while they lostl nuoronteed-to-fit free olterotlons JVii.v in tjour bigaesl slack buy of the season! Yt's, only 4.88 buys pure wool flannel slack Imiulsoint’ly tailored with pleated inner SK'aistband, cbrded back pockets... in trim ^ilain front styling. Don’t miss ibis great value; be licr*' early and save! All the newest lall tones... 29-42. OMN fvny IN rONTUC Op«ii Evtry 200 N. Saginaw Street Night 'til 9:30 IN cmmoN-wmiroNP On Dixie l^wy.—Just North of Waterford Hili Sundoyt 12 to 6 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING To Rocoive Ctrtifieott 1^' $chool Building Riifi cate. The certificate, to be signed SAULT STE. MARIE (ft-Ev-ky Swalnson arid Prime LANSING (J> - School class-erymnotoiist crossing the new In' Minister John Roberts of Ontario, room construction took a sharp ternational Bridge linking the will state that the motorist upswing during the first thr ee twin cities of Sault Ste. Marie crossed the new bridge on open- months of the 1863 fiscal school In Michigan and Canada on Oct.llng day. ' 'y e a r, the State Department ot PubUc Instruction reported. The ” construction of 1,131 classrooms was authorized during July, August and . September a 2 per cent increase over the same jpe-rlod a year ago. __________ , BOTH STORES SUB FOR SKIN DIVERS-This submarine, which can accommodate three men, is on display at the World Congress of Underwater Activities in London this week. The streamlined plastic vehicle is designed for skin divers, offering all-arbund vikion and protection from sharks and other underwater hazards. Council Delegates Have Little Money VATICAN CITY UP) - Every day the Vatican Ecumenical Council is in session, a battered Volkswagen sneaks its way through Rome’: chaotically congested streets. Crammed Inside are two of three bishops, gingerly holding their three-cornered purple biret- “They asked for a ride to St. Peter’s,” explains the German prelate at the wheel. “They don’t want to waste money on a taxi. They are poor, very poor.” Many, possibly half, of the 2,700 church dignitaries attending the Ecumenical Council get financial assistance from the Vatican treasury. They themselves could hardly pay the travel cost, let alone all the expenses of their stay here, Vatican sources say. These sources are quick to add that this does not mean that the Vatican has money to spare. 'The Vatican itself gets an assist ASHORTTA(i)LE... The shortest, most economical, most productive route from seller......... . buyer is through Pontoic Press Wont Ads FE 2-8181 2 UNES 6 DAYS *3.84 PEN SUNMl 1SiH„6PA,T0NKIir..10PJL«H|; BIGRRST BIRTHDAY Biml EUCmilOMIHIBi noHicH* snjl*' BREAD WMiFon 4 ID loaf. 1 LBs FRESH Idool for ony room In your homo. A must for tho cold wintor weather ahead. Sturdy construction. from the Catholic churches in wealthy countries. Contributions come especially from the American and European churches. “There are not many which cani afford such contributions.” sa;d Dr. Carl Joseph Leiprecht, the bishop of Rottenburg, Germany. How much will the council cost? “Nobody could know, not even the holy father, because he does not know how long the council will last,” says Msgr. Walter Kampe, auxiliary bishop of Lim- ' burg, Germany. Bishop Kampe said he personally guessed that the total cost for the stay of the council fathers and their more than 5,000 advisers and aides would reach about $2.5 million for the first session period of 60 days. “Thi$ is based on a daily expense of $5 for food and lodging — “ think this is adequate.” the bishop added. PolyethylwH^WPj . Baked by Famous Makar Limit 3 LoqfsJ I Dal Monte or Libby’* No. ZVk Can Fancy Pumpkin Limit! Twof 4-PIECE J Broadcast Brand UVz-O*. Can ksara Bed Hash Limit . Twoi OVENto TABLEWARE stabkist TUNA CHUNK* LIQHT eVz 02. can 23- LWrT2 BELMONTE • CAS8ER0U WITH COVER CATSUP • MVIDEDMSH 14 02. Bottle ALL 4 PIECES was 14* LIMIT 2 RUBBER TIRED J00RHAT3 7? Rubber (inil nylon. Heavy. MEN’S LEATHER INSULATED BOOTS MEN’S RUBBER INSULATED BOOTS Reg. $8.88 1$”MTIM4LP.,4^mE Snow Bkimr Fingortip control! for throHlo ond chuto lovor. BI6 2l"PATH,Bia4-H0RSENWER 44irCU. FULLY SELF-PROPaUD SNOWBLOWER SOLVE YOUR LEAP PROBLEM BI8 24"UWN SWEEPER ncU »p !•«»•» •" H« a ayt-buihel topoctly Uh-«ut baekat. JuM >« • ‘.,V#1 : Panlinc I'lww* Carrier, l4iwrcnca H. Taylor We Salute All The Pontiac Press Newspaper Carriers Today, Nalional Newspaporhoy Day, wo join in paying a filling trihiilp lo all newspaper rarrioi H. |•alii(•nIarly do w<-extend our. tliaiiks lo llu‘ llioiisaiid hoys who daily deliver The Ponliae Press. Young men dediealed lo serving iheir eusloniers. Young men learning early in iheir life llic lessons that produee guccessful businessmen, eivie leaders and outstanding eiti-zens. These are all faeels of ihc really huge task undertaken everyday by the these hoys. These boys sehedule their lime lo see ihaiTliis delivery is made at almost ihe same hour evtry day. It is a iremendous task. It is an important task. It is a vital piOrl of the Ameri-<*an way of life. Throughout our area over sixty-thousand homes and office? are visited by our carriers. Ambitions bloom in these Iwiys, and timough the efforts of their work they are able to have dreams become actualities. On iKjhalf of all our subscribers and The Pontiac Press we gratefully thank you ... The Newspaper Boys, for doing such a swell job. THE PONTIAC PRESS THIRTY Wdnum Trig' PONTIAC vmss, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1002 .„.Ji Michigan State Probes Policy Evasion KAST LANSING W ~ Michi-, gim State UniveMty oNiciala yea* terday began a, probe of an ap* parent attempt to defy univeralty pc^cy on^outaide apeakera. I Detroit membera of the student nonviolent coordinating committee apoke to some 100 students Thursday evening. They gave first-hand reports of voter registration drives and sit-in movements in the Sonth. The campus organisation that scheduled the speakers did not clear them with a faculty-student committee pripr to their appearance. University policy prescribes that most student organizations apply to the clearing committee before bringing a speaker onto the campus. Jackie Endows Seat hr Father at Lincoln Center to seat BBlOl reading; *‘For John Vernon Bouvier — from His Daughter — Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy.'* Another seat in the hall at the Lincoln Center for the Perform- NEW YORK (UPI) Jacqueline Kennedy has given 11,000 for the endowment of a seat in the new Philharmonic Hall in memory of her father U was announced yesterday A bronze plaque was attached ing Arts was endorsed in the name of Mrs. Kennedy by a group of former clasamatea at Miss Porter’s School in Farmington, Conn. e anow Impard or ounce is found in the high mountain regions of central Asia It resemblea<. the leopard but has longer fur. Governor Swainson Urges Forest Aid LANSING (fl ~ Gov. Swalnson has written President Kennedy urging approval of a public works program in the Hiawattha National Forest. Swainson wrote that he underands a Federal Works Program in the forest is under consideration. . ' The problems of unemployment Schoolcraft and Alger target for the initiation of job-producing projects under the public works programs, the governor said. 1 Del^,! The number of motor vehicles registered in Norway during 1961, the first year of unrestricted car imports, was 42.8 per cent higher than in 1960. HOMfOWNlRS jSr WHO DON'T WANT TO PAINT Covtr WiA ^ Algnigin Siding anil Trim We cover til woodwork Lot us show you why Aluminum SIdina and trim Is your host buy. BODCn ^ V- 029 % jg$gf UgAntnielgig Algnfaiom Of rihorglii SertOHigg or 61iig Bgclofiiro Aygiliblo FE 4-2597—EM 3-2385—OR 3-2842 C. WEEDON WIN A NEW TEMPEST , ..... Monday and Every Day! You Can Be Sure of Extra Savings at Sears! MONDAY ONLY! boys’ double-knee corduroy pants r..nl.r 2^7 8i;i.59 ^ Chargr It Smartly styled corduroys with clastic at waist for a good fit, self-bell, sip-fly. Handsome, warm and carefully tailored to deliver a long, long future. Double knee for . extra strength. Choose from ass’td colors in sisei 4-10. Hoys* tfear, Main Floor Child’s 2-Pc. knit pajamas 66 II S1/,CS.>-..A Charge It 2-pc. pajamas with snug fitting rii) knit necklines and cuifs ui ankles and wrists. Colorful prints for hoys, girls. Infnnl»' Drpt., Main Floor no phone ordei^s^ C.O.D.’s or deliveries except large items Get Yonr Entry Blank at Sears! YOU MAY WIN! Drawing on Mon., October 291 MONDAY ONLY! Your Choice .. . Galvanized, Wire Trash Burners 022 Reg. 93.98 Clisrge It Choose a 20-gul. plvanized trash burner with tight fitting lid . . . perforated top and sides, or a heavy gauge steel wire trash burner. Priced to save you 76c this Monday. llou»mart$. Main Bawmrnt MONDAY ONLY! Kenmore Matchless Automatic Gas Ranges 199 Kegiihir 8249.9,’S 30 Inches Wide! NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Wan rcniovahic oven door. See it. . . buy it Monday! MONDAY ONLY! Wood & Metal Stepladders 4^.. Were $7.98 6’, Reg. 89.98 ... 5.99 While Quantities Last! Bay now at Mfg.’s Close4)ut prices. Sturidly built . . . steel steps. Handy for dozens of home chores. Save Monday! Paint Dept., Main Uatentent Portable TV for Ilard-to-Get Stations A breeie to carry and store! Hcige <.al»lnct 19-inch overall screen diagonal ^”1 . . . 172-square inch view area. Full-range sound. Save at Sears! monky uowin Natllo & TF Dept., Mnln Floor Sears Kasy I'aymenl Plan '138 Drive a Racer liy Remote Control Steel model Indianapolis 500 Racer $5-99 is steered by remote control. Built- “| 99 in jack raises car; 2 spare tires. X 16 inches long. Batteries extra. Charge It Limit 2 per customer. Toy Town, Perry St. ttaten. enl MONDAY SPECIAL Atomizing Type Humidifiers Keg. 3X^ $39.95 PlumhinmDept. -Perry St. Batmmont MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY Your (slioice: 18-iii. Aluminum Snow Shovel or Pusher Regularly at $3.49 066 Charge It Save 83c Monday! Md *'®*^** Your choice: 18-inch lightweight aluminum snow shovel. . . I5xl8-in. blade or a Craftsman 18-in. aluminum snow pusher . . . heavy ribbed curved blade, Pricetl to save you more Monday! Reg. $2.89 Craftsman Ice Chipper 199 Scraper has 7x4Mi-inch blade of carbon steel .... -$• Reg. $5.98 Steel Snow Plows /jj 99 Riaid 24-in.. 14-«a. enameled steel blade. Asphalt Drive COATING Regularly $6.98 4?2 Less than f 1 per gal. Just spread on blacktop driveway or other asphalt surfaces and get new protec- Rigid 24-in., I4-ga. enameled steel blade $10.98 Craftsman Snow Plows, 28-inch . . . 9.99 $4.98 Alum. 18-inch Heart Saver.............3.99 Hanlwnre Dept., Main llatement beauty. Dries quickly. “tt to i>06 One pail covers 300 square feet. Get yours Monday at Sears . . . save! Paint Dept., Main ttatemeni MONDAY ONLY! Dual Can Openers -Knife Sharpeners 1488 Regularly qt $18.88 Smooth, quiet action Charge It Save *51’®! Automatic Washer With Suds Saver *188 Winterize! ALLSTATE Permanent Anti-Freeze Regularly at $239.95! 3 cycles for all faltrics Cheek Sear* Low, Low Thrifty Price-SAVE 127 JL GALLON Charga It Giant 2S-in. oven features new dual temperature con-.............................. lokita ‘ • trol ... thaw food at low heat, then cook cally. “Burner-wllh-adirain” plus top griddle and It Mond .tpplianre^epl,, Mnin OntMtep push-button operation. Opens any shape, siae can quickly. Lid magnet, automatic shut-off. Built-in sharpener hones knives raaor keen. In white, DL listed. Save 14 Monday! Flei'trlral Dept., Mnln llmement NO MONEY DOWN on Sear# E*sy Payment Plan Special cycles for everyday, delicate or wash *n' wear fabrics. Big 12-lb. capacity. Built-in lint filter, 3 water level selections, 5 wash-rinse temperatures. Applinnre Dept., Main llutentenl Laboratory tested for lower freeaing point, higher boiling point. Reterds rust and corrosiou. Fill radiator once ... get protection all through the winter. Buy Monday At ODh LOWEST PRICE averl Auto Aeco»$ario§, Perry St. Hatoment "Satisfaction Ruaranteed or your money back” SEARS 154 North Saginaw St. Photte FE 5 4171