The Weather7 5* Wntt» l»rm rwimi . Owe, ihmn My (DtUlb hn » VOU 119 . yd 173 THE PONTIAC PRESS * ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN MONDAY, AUGUST *8, 1901 —20 PAGES wra«S C It NATIONAL Home Edition ' 8® Con-Con Kickoff Teens Find Slain Man on Roadside U.S.S.R. Says Nyet to Test Bon Attempts GENEVA (UPI) — The Soviet Union today rejetced two new American proposals aimed at speeding a treaty banning all nuclear weapons tests, Clhef Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin called unacceptable today’s U. S. proposals dealing with ‘ ning small power nuelear tests and only amou American Ambassador Arthur j Dean who put forward the ipoaals at today’s 337th setsto the three-power talks, said he acted at President Kennedy's instructions to try to make the Soviet roops Heading I Stop Goulart Report Carrier, Ships Sailing to Stronghold of Leftist VP of Brazil NiUii Fmm nut OOP GET-TOGETHER Republicans of Oakland County took their families to a party outing in White Lake Township Saturday to hear George W. Romney. GOP senatorial candidate from Bloomfield Hills, tell of the great responsibilities of the forthcoming constitutional convention and Its delegates. Romney also kicked off a statewide drive to get out the vote for the Sept. 12 election. Some 1,500 attended the affair. Backed by AMC Pact. UAW Puts on Pressure DETROIT (ff) — Armed with a profit-sharing settlement at American Motors and with strike authorization, the United Auto Workers Union applied home-stretch pressure today on General Motors, Ford and Chrysler for new contracts. Unless something gives by Thursday midnight, when current three-year contracts run out, UAW President .Walter P. Reuther says there will be a strike* against ~ "' ' . "" • ' "*i(me of the Big Three, Work- Civilian and military leaden met! JJ rj jlers have rolled Up over-j In night-long talks herein advance! Ho me tum /LttClCK] whelming rn a j o r i 11 e s-of an expected government request Sends Tigers Out Front 7-1 RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil Ul *■* Kalnleri MassUll, temporary president of Brazil, told Coa- greao today the aatloa’s three Italics after bis surprise military mlalsters have refused trip to Moscow* said It is Impos-ible to continue these negotiation without taking into account national events. • I * ♦ * He referred to an armaments buildup throughout the world and. said • of the American* proposals that it was naive to speak quietly If technical terms under currrent circumstances. Tsarapkia again echoed Premier Nikita Khrushchev's statements by saying the wily way out sf the deadlock at this conference la t# merge it with the entire disarmament problem. Dean, who returned last week from two months in Washington far a crucial try at advancing the test ban talks, was clearly disappointed at the negative Soviet reaction to what he called his 'Jar-reaching" proposals. It -X.-BRITAIX PROPOSAL Late AprR T*. the United States | and Britain proposed, a completed j BRASILIA (UPI) — An aircraft carrier and two other warships | loaded with troops were reported sailing today toward Porto Alegre, jstronghold of leftist Vice President Joao Goulart, amid mounting indications that the Brazilian armed forces were determined to bar Boulart from succeeding, to the presidency. The navy and most of the air force were believed to be backing the army against any attempt .by Goulart — now in-Paris en route back from a visit to Red China — to assume the presidency left vacant by President Janio Quadras' resignation. AT DEATH SCENE — Two troopers from the Romeo State Police Post examine the spot where ‘Norman L. Hall of Detroit was found dying Saturday night, three bullet wounds In his body and one in his head. They are (bum left) C. Conny Snyder and Orville K. Dalman. The shooting victim was left on the side of Jewell Road, just north of 27 Mile Road, four miles south of Romeo. 'West Will Deman County Traffic Berlin Conference Claims 2 lives Detroiter Shot 4 Times, Left Area Seven Youths Spot Man; Polict Search for Clues to Mystery Murder . By LEE WINBORN State police detectives ere continuing their investigation today into the mystery death of. a Detroit paint salesman whose bullet-riddled body was found on a back road four miles south of Romeo Saturday night. Dead at the scene of the slaying- was Norman L. Hall, 35, who was discovered, as he lay dying, by seven Romeo teen-agers. They were in a car en route to a wedding reception In Utica when they saw the body sprawled on the roadside. The youths said at first they thought the men had been hit by a car, but when they approached they saw he had been shot. Pour .38 caliber bullet* had been fired at the victim, two hltttag Mm la the stomach, one la the chest aad one la the head. One ballet was found beneath the body. { According to David Verellen, IT, of 67908 Van Dyke, Hall was still alive when he was found on the I draft treaty banning nudear tests mandln the next few days aconfqrence with the Soviet: funder international control Union on .the Berlin crisis, West German Foreign Mln-t . . - - . _____ .... _________ _______. However, the draft treaty did |liter Heinrich von Brentano said today. to back up demand, with jjjjj« «Lu*i i BrmUn° towanewa conference such talks are nead-| ed to make clear the posi- •I'M nmo" The boys said he mumbled In- BONN, Germany (*-The Western powers will de- Oakland Toll Stands M Aftar Waaktnd1 w Accident, Death WASHINGTON-The Detroit Tigers took a 7-1 lead into the 7th inning at Griffith Stadium today with a chance to cut the New York lead to lVa games. A grand slam home run by Jakq, Wood and solo blasts by Rocky Colavito and A1 Kaline backed the pitching of Ron Kline. It 5th homer in two days for Colavito off Senator pitching. All Set to Go at Courthouse 'Worth Waiting For/ Say 300 Employes Getting Settled With shipping cartons discarded and filet arranged, offices in the new 33^-milllon county courthouse hummed with business as usual today. ♦ * * It was the first official day of business in the white marble, six-story home of Oakland County courts and allied functions. “ft wa* worth was from worked lev Friday — day — to ON GROUND FLOOR Offices located on the ground floor are the cleric-register of deeds, probate court, register of deeds tract index and that of Chief Probation Officer Arthur P. McKenna. A snack bar -is also located on this floor. The second floor houses the court rooms and offices of Judges Frederick Cl Zlem and Stanton G. Dondero, the assignment cleric's office for the circuit the Jury assembly room a circuit court probation de George P. tuts, as brary, are «a The public is asked to park in -the parking lot on the 'north side of tpe building’ while the lot on the east side is being finiahed. While the telephone number for the offices remaining in the County Office Building. 1 Lafayette St,. ' is as usual. FE 3-7861. the number of the offices in the new courthouse is 336:4751. Mt provide for a baa. « Meteor teota which registered ] 4.78 or less on the untiled mag- i Hltade wrote. walkouts, if necessary. h + t Goulart from the presidency Reuther said there still is time) Meanwhile ex Presideat Quad ",tndr il^OOn Thai Dainmai for agreement “if there is good. ***• who resigned last Friday, I Today, Dean at the three-power j |\CCp II IQ I IxQIIILUQI both sides." He pointed out announced he wu leaving Brazil j nuclear teat ban talks presented . . . the AMC-UAW pact was put to- and thu* removing himself com- the Soviet Uninn and Great Brit- Uanfly (nr Tiipc/iaw gether between Tuesday*, and Sat- pletely from the domestic potlti- lain with two alternative DroposalsJ* lUIIUy Ivl lUvJUuy urday. . j cal scene. . which would seek to ban TIMETABLE J A spokesman for the Quadras Here is the timetable for tomor-j family in Santos said the ex-presi-row when the United Auto Work- dent and members of his family ers executive council will decide would Tuesday morning' for SSTr SeM,2:aCti0n 8bo8rd ,»» Lines vessel Arlanza. Informed At t p.m. national connells of _________ the union for Ford, General Motors and* Chrysler will meet. - Brazil Undertow the international | Page 3 6 p.m. executive council, of the union will j meet at Solidarity House, union's teadquarterz At tins time, jten t0 made presumably .theNo. i target com-L,^ SnTout of Brazil’s terri-pany wiU be picked. y toriai wateni. {Sources said Quadras left a \ They're Big Spenders The 13,190-ton aircraft carrier Minas Gerais set out Sunday from WASHINGTON (UPD—State gov- Rio De Janeiro accompanied by emments spent more than $31.51 the U.S.-built light cruiser Tam-billion in fiscal I960, according to andare and an unidentified destroy-the Bureau of the Census. these small nuclear blasts. Under the April 18 draft treaty, an uncontrolled moratorium would be called on the small, underground tests, which are extremely difficult to identify accurately. This moratorium would last three years. Today, Dean proposed that at the end of two and a half years of the moratorium, a panel of eminent scientists should examine the possibility of controlling more and more of tiie small underground tests, thus bringing them formally into a test ban agreement. A Plea for Patience ' BUFFALO, N.Y. (fl-Sign on a suburban service station: “Ring the bell for night service, aad keep your shirt on while I Cloudy skies will continue In the Pontiac area with thundershowers likely thid evening, according to the weatherman. Tuesday will be mostly cloudy with probable showers and thundershowers. A high of 85 is expected. * * * Rainfall recorded in downtown Pontiac from 10 a.m. Saturday until 10 a.m. today was -9 of ai inch. Far the next five days tempers to re* will average fear to five degrees above the normal klgb of 78 and normal lew ef 88. Winds were recorded as southwesterly at 12 miles per hour at 8 a.m. The Two more traffic fatalities have .. .been added to Oakland County’s tions Of both sides before a tan toll, bringing the figure to 80. catastrophe develops. A third victim lies unconscious East German Communists today | at Pontiac General Hospital with demanded a voice in any East-|**ver'e and facial injuries West talks on Germany and raid *" ! ... . . , , -,-J Dead are former Holly resident the subject of such talks could LJg G WUkop x ^ only be the conclusion of a peace Hotel. 811 Ennest Road, in White treaty. Lake Township Oakland Highway Toll in ’61 and Miss Veva F. Neues Deutschland, organ of the Hanoute, 50, of East German Communist party, >3449 Cowybum raid in a front-page editorial: “It Road, Waterford should be clear that negotiations Towntiiip. about the German problems with-! , the East German Democratic! i"^nou* Republic are unthinkable.” *f He said it should be on the for-!£\ J****1 * eign minister level. 5* ^ Brentano hinted that differ- ®tuUn‘ *• ol 30 ® ences between France ehd the nac' other Western powers about the! Mr- WU»P WM killed Saturday advisability ot an immediate con- ni*ht when his car rammed into ference no Mger exist. * alongside Row Center Road - _ ^ . in Rose Township. He suffered a ■? he fractured gkuj, and a broken neck, bold either before or gftor the 1 Sept. 17 West German parliamentary election* aad the Sept. 18 opening of the United Nations General AssemMy. Brentano raid it was 'possible the foreign ministers of the Western powers should hold Another motorist who saw the craah summoned sheriff's deputies to the scene. Mr. Wilkop, en mate to visit Ma family la Holly, wa* alone in the ear. Jj_____ Mias Hanoute died at Pontiac preJimi- [General Hospital this morning ofj nary' meeting to make prepara- lnfories suffered when her car, tfons.' 'rammed into the rear of a gravel Romeo post and Harold Ernest of Two of1 the youths, Larry aad Danny Schultz of Riehmoad, is. and 18 re*pectlvelv. stayed behind white the rest of the group drove to the home at DevM’s cousin, Tom Verellen at 88188 Van Dyke to telephone the Romeo State Police pool. By the time officers arrived at the scene the man was dead. His body was taken to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, where pathologist. Dr. Richard E. Olsen, raid there were no other marks of violence on the body. Police believe that Hall had been driven out into the country, pushed out 0! the car and shot. He was found at about 9:20 p.m., HAD HOTEL KEY His clothes contained a wallet with no money inside, and a key to a room in the Hoover Hotel in Detroit where he had lived sinee Wednesday. According to State Police de toetivm, Halt was a sell-employed paint salesman who was separated from his wife, Rosalie. 87, Of Detroit. Mrs. Hall could shed no light on anyone who might have wanted to kill her husband. She said they had been married for 10 years and-that she had recently filed for divorce. The Halls have four children. Detectives Paul Brabant of the fiss on Berlin, Page 7 be truck in Orion Township last Tues-ght. The crash occurred suffered head and ininjuries. An autopsy was to j be perforated today. Mrs, McSkulin was hurt wheni her car ran Into a huge tree alongside Gregory Road in Orion Town-r ship early this morning. She was alone in the car. Sheriffs deputies raid she ap-i parentiy lost control of the wheel on the wet gravel road, heavily rutted by yesterday's rainstorm. Neues Deutschland said that if | separate peace treaty is signed! 'dth East Germany — as Soviet Premier Khrushchev to do by the end of the year nations who want to use the and air links between West Germany and West Berlin will have to make bilateral agree-oi) the aqbject with East 3ermaiiy. The Western Allies have always refused to negotiate with the East German government, contending! that it was imposed illegally by; Soviets ted Army. Spotlight on Page 2) News Flashes NORFOLK. V. ysiiae; ww me ovjciic x i;*uay in uic . cartaiMittered clerk-register's office In the y*eW Oakland County Courthouse. But three members of the derfc's office worked 12 hours Saturday setting up the last records and removing the debris. sniel T. Murphy Jr' today posted the. "business n the ground floor office after a two-day layoff the downtown building. v 1 WASHINGTON (X — Cuagree* ILFORD, England flTPI^Thel r'kAU* organizer of a charity sale, Mrs. death for aliptaae hijacking. Phyllis Proctpr, took off her tweed The Senate and Rohm had jacket briefly (O axi off. When paaaed rival ventous of the MH rite went baric to gef It, she found blri .the Senate agreed today to lit had been sold. | accept the House Ml. (Continued on Page 2. Cot. 8) 1 In Today's I Press I Peace Wanted I I West Germany fails to sell I I her story—-PAGE 88. Name Pro-Red 1 | Algerian rebels dump lead- I | er—PAGE 18. I Chinese Bomb I Sees Red China producing I I nuclear bomb by 1964 — 1 I PAGE 8. 8 Little Words? I Michigan's 1906 constitution | may get extreme boiling at 1 convention—PAGE IS. •tfwo w: THE PQNTIAC PRESS,, MOftDAY, AUGUST 28, 1M1 |p. Acts Fast to Katanga Under Adoula i jn m^nrnm i r Katanga J tik Congo hit The massive show of strength came only 48 hours alter Adoula, whose Leopoldville regime is supported by the United Nations, pro-; rUtmrai determination to rid this copper-rich province of all foreign civilian, financial and military interests. His chief targets are Belgians. who developed Katanga’s '‘mineral, Industrial and agricultural resources while the Congo was a Belgian colony and still .have ''.millions of dollars invested In Its resources. •AKKE8T M ■ Indian Brig. Singappa Raja, ‘.commander of the U.N. task force, ‘reported the arrest before noon of 68 of the 512 Europeans serving the Katanga regime in * various capacities. About 300 of the white men on the Katanga payrolls are officers of the army —Belgian, French, British, Italian and South African. A A A ** There was no interference with •press dispatches to foreign cities, "bat other communication with the outside world was halted. The U.N. troops put Godetrois Munongo, Katanga’s strong man and minister of interior i house arrest by surrounding Ms residence, but Tshombe drove through the U.N. cordon later and left with Munongo. Tshombe escorted' him to his own residence. ♦ ‘it *. Tshombe, to wild acclaim, toured part of the city and asked all to work and remain calm. Stop Meddling, Japan Tells K Pftmw Minister Ikeda Hitt Soviet Criticism of Security Pact With U.S. TOKYO (API—Japanese Prime Minister Hayato Deeds today told Soviet Premier Khrushchev he was meddling in Japan's affairs by demanding abrogation of the U.S.-Japan security treaty. A A A reply to a personal message from Khrushchev, Ikeda said in effect that unless the Soviet Union has aggressive Intentions against Japan, the U.S.-Japan pact could not be a threat 'Ex-Newsmen ' Sentenced to Die South Korea Hand! Out “’"Penalty to 3 for Aiding Red North 3HS0UL (UP!) - South Korea’s special revolutionary tribunal today sentenced three former news-paper executives to death after convicting Diem of aiding Ootn-^amnlgt North Korea; ¥he publisher, tho editor . and an adviser at the defunct newspaper Mlnjok all received the death penalty for urging student and reporter exchange* i Korea) into a The action brought to six the number of death penalties handed down this month. At the same time, Dm prosecution asked the court tor death penalties against two former 1st ROK army colonels charged with trying to Mock the coup d’etat that pUt the ruling military Junta in power May 16. Th« two officers, Got. Lee Kap “Yung and Got. Pak Seng Hoon, *, .allegedly agreed to back Die coup v-nnd then leaked the plans to their • Commanding officer, Brig. Gen. Lee Sang Koo. The text of Ikeda’s message, delivered to Khrushchev by the Japanese ambassador in Moscow, was released by Die Japanese Foreign Office. Ikeda also told Khrushchev Japan will stay allied with the free world. PURSUES FREEDOM’ “Japan pursues freedom democracy as the highest political ideals. This is and will conDnue to be our immutable policy,’’ he kid. Khrushchev's message said the Soviet Union could not remain Indifferent to the U.S.-Japen security treaty and the presence of foreign ’ troops. He said these pered normal relations between the two countries. » ★ * * The message was delivered earlier this month by First Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan dur-_ a visit to Japan la which he repeatedly attacked Japan's military alliance. Ikeda said Soviet treaties with Red Chins and North Korea were 'in complete contradiction" with Moscow's demands tor the complete abolition of military Mocs. In land of the Midnight Sun 'Retired Chapter Calls Wednesday Meeting on Trip A special meeting of Pontiac Chapter No. 7 of the American Association of Retired Persons has been caBed for Wednesday afternoon, according to Maurice E. Fitzgerald, chapter president.—-The meeting will be at 1 pjn. In the Community Service Building, US Franklin Blvd. “Due to the rain washing out our picnic last week, we must hold this meeting to complete plans for our trip to the Michigan Stats Fair,'’ said Fitzgerald. “All those interested in making arrangements tor the Sept. 7 trip should attend.'’ The Weather Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy today and tonight with chance of a few thundershowers this afternoon and tonight. Tuesday mostly cloudy, showers and thundershowers likely. Not much temperature change. High today 85, lew tonight 68, high Tuesday 85. Variable winds mostly southerly 18-15 miles. Om Y**r Af* li Hlfhfit Prmp*r*tur« . Lowest temperature . lfesn temperature . __1to . Weether—relr « ItsjiSsr *t 7:11 p m Dewetewn Temperater t.......,...S» u*,m... k. .».....St Mm..... l. ..... ST 4S4S... 1........:*> 1pm. Br. ____I temperature ..........ts.l Weather—Mostly Cloudy—Sain S evening. Rein, J ot m Inch. SunSnr's Temperature Chert tl It New Orleene Trararas C. T* si {tow York n Albuquerque N M Otnehe Sf AUeata It Si Phoenix IN Bl.merek (S IT Plttehurnh SI Boston IS ft OtLenU tl Chicago M T« Salt Lk. City M Cincinnati SS ‘ *1 8. Prancleco *4 Denver H H SO. Marls T« 5 Detroit Si *t jeettle m AT Phetotei NATIONAL WEATHER—Warmer weather is expected Monday - night to the Middle and Southern Atlantic states white some coot " air win roofs ihto the northern state* from Canada. Shower I be scattered. Experts to Air Communism i The Day In Birmingham DETROIT (AP)-A formber FBI counterspy, a senator from Connecticut two former Communists and Michigan’s lieutenant-governor will be principal speakers at a five-day counterattack freedom school, designed to fight "apafegr w... the matter of Communism,” j staff wM fulfiD one of the major beginning here today. ! recommendation* of the Cttteeas 2___. , „ ___________ ; Committee toadying Curriculum Speakers Include ex-FBI agrtot | , b tlM> p.rem Teseber *rr.r <<*1. ! Araoeiattou Connell. according le maatets Bella V. Dodd and ^ ^ Frank S. Meyer. Oflter speaker* areSen.-Tbomat The itewly appointed chairmen D^fj^mn., and Lt. Gov. T. wiU assist to curriculum evahia- John Letinski of Michigan. A ■ A -A Honorary co-chairmen of freedom school are Detroit Police Commissioner Herbert W. Hart, retired US. District Judge Frank A. Picard and Charles R. Landri-gan, executive vice president o! the Detroit Edison Co. ♦ * * The school is being held campus of the University of Detroit which is renting quarters to the sponsors of the school. WORK OF A PRINCESS — Although milking a cow hardly seems fitting work tor royalty, it'a just right for pretty Marjorie Mueller, II, of Saginaw. She's the 1961-82 Michigan Dairy rratlM Prats IWt Princess ot the Michigan Dairy Association. She showed why she holds the title in a cowmilking demonstration Saturday night at the Miracle Mile Shopping Center. Visits Town Perched on a Rock By JOE HAAS A trip on the 25th annual Churchill all-rail tour; to the far roaches of Northern Canada reveals many contrasts between these two groat countries. And many are in favor of our good nelghborstothe north. ....* dr * The train of 17 cars of the Canadian National Railway took 200 passengers, each of whom paid Ms own way, into the land of the nomadic Eskimo and Cree Indians, where the midnight sun flirts with the northern lights, and the ground never thaws out. But it was hotter there on Aug. 22 than it was in Pontiac. With air conditioning and every modem railway facility, Dm train sms made ep ef two lounge cam, twe diners, an open observation ear aad II sleepers. For six days it was ear home, because there Isa’t anywhere else to etay; mo accommodations far the traveler. Stirling Iran Winnipeg, the trip of over one thousand mile* to Churchill it mostly one through deeolation. It squirms out of the Province of Manitoba, over into Saskatchewan and back again into Manitoba, and was built tor, a very unique reason. * A A the English crown decided feat it wanted an ocean port, away from I the St. Lawrence River, to handle the wheat Canada’s great midwest provinces land asked the Canadian National Railway to build the line, with sidles and enormous adjacent land grants. Three years later it was finished. Gigantic elevators were built at Churchill, aad are the later-change point for shipments to all parts ef the world. Our party saw a mammoth steamship, load- area. Getting below the surface of the ground is an impossibility. SNOW FOB WATER Its water and sewer pipes are Jd on Di* top of the ground, wMcb i* okay-tor. *-few weeks in the summer. When everything freezes up, they melt mow for water, and as for Die sewage — you can image, Even the telegraph and telephone wires are supported on tripoda of poles. The natives, wfto work mostly for the railway or harbor trade, go through winter temperatures down to 48 below sent, but have little trouble with enow, the fail being light and the barren country net being conducive to drift-teg. Trees grow sparingly and only to a small size on th \ ground, their only fertility coming from the sparse soil that is brought in by wind erosion. Since the coming of the railroad, oil has supplanted wood as fuel in many ' tunes. 'T~ This outpost of civilization has had little effect on the native Indians or Eskmos. The Eskimos come down from further north, but maintain their roving ways, subsisting largely on game, and In igloos in winter. They mix quite agreeably with the Indians, and keep peaceful by not paying too much attention to each other. A reversal of our tobacco habits Is found among Dm Oreo In-of the women Churchill itself Is an aggregation ot a thousand souls, the like of which is found nowhere else on earth. It is built On a i rock foundation, such as covers thousands of square miles in that Vote to Top Agenda of Hospital Trustees The election of officers will top the agenda of the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees meeting tonight at 7:30. A # v it The board will be, making up for some lost tiipe. The meeting was originally slated tor Aug. 17 but postponed. a * * j The board usually elects officers m July, but was forced to wait i year until board appointments were made by the City Commission about two weeks ago. About 39 per cent1 of the deaths and 35 per cent of the injuries resulting-from motor vehicle accidents occur on Saturdays and Sundays. bacco enters the pic tore, most of the feel being the dried leaves ef weeds. First English word to be taught an Indian child is “penny," to be used > in begging from tourists. They lata1 learn “dime,” and when they’ve learned “quarter,” they're ready tor the Indian college de- gree, (initials of the three words), PDQ. LONG REACH The cute papooses on the squaws’ backs also, are early versed with an appealing monetary loch, and long reach. Among the older children the distribution of a dime's worth of candy creates s mob. However, It meat be stated that every ad ventage tor a grade school educate* Is offered tho Indian children, often In defiance to their parenta. fa other areas Indian college* are maintained, where the young people are taken iiid remain throughout the school year, Churchill has no highway connection with the outride world. There are no roads of any description tor several hundred miles. The Pontiac dealer there gets his cars by nil or by boat. Aviation facilities are good, on account of the maintenance of both the British,and U.S.A. armed forces then, the latter being much the best boused. When Canadian National Railways agreed to build that railway to Churchill, they were smart. It is a part of the agreement no highways be built, giving the railway a land monopolyt and keeping out their auto, bus and truck competition. A system to wipe out the Influence ef apathy in Its elections is being worked in some ot the Canadian provinces that should offer a broad hint to the United States. People are actually being shamed Into voting. This* is bringing good results, and is done by pushing in a paper of general circulation in that area, as ^ legal advertisement, the names and addresses of all registered voters who did not cast their ballots. TUnk it over, you Pontiac area residents. Spotlight on Berlin —The United States and Britain have asked the other NATO allies to endorse s decision to propose September negotiations with Russia on the Berlin crisis, authoritative sources said today. —decretory ef State Dean Rusk denied published reports that the United States, Britain aad West Germany agreed to seek Berlin negotiation* with the Russians without France. —West German government sources said Chancellor Konrad Adenauer wants the west to take initiative in starting negotiations and so instructed Walter G r e w e, Bonn's ambassador to Washington. Grewe returned home yesterday to report on activities of the four-power policy committee working in Washington. —Prime minister Nehru Hectored Western seeese to Berlin should conttouo as heretofore and —though the Commanlsts may he legally Justified—the blockade ef the Berlin sector border to a harmful Wag “from every point of view.” —Pravda said the Russians are prepared to sign a peace treaty with East Germany (apparently meaning, as Premier Khrushchev has said, by Die end of the year) nothing will prevent them from achieving it." -**■—»—,• *sr" • “ir ' ~~h ""' —Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has sent Italian Premier Amin tore Fanfanl a “very importapt' message concerning fee Berlin crisis, It‘was reported today. A A A The contents ot the Soviet message were not revealed, but informed sources said Fanfani has informed the governments of the United State*, Britain, France and West Germany about it. School Board Gives Okay to Department Chairmen An area resident 12 years, she was a member of the Central Woodward Christian Church. She is survived by tour daughters, Mrs. Georgs Ribottn, Sacramento, Calif.. Mrs. J. W. Brice, Royal Oak, Mis. A. C. Richards and Mrs. J. S. Hamilton,' both of Birmingham; 12 grandchildren and aevfn great-grandchildren. Board to Air Zoning, Traffic Waterford Twp. Meets to Discuss Changes, Revised Control Law 5-Day Freedom School __® .___. . e 1*. « o e. Duit BIRMINGHAM—A* another step to Feature & CX - Keas, {J* improvement of instruc-Former Counterspy I Bon. the Birmingham Bond Of r/ Education has approved the appointment of department chairmen tor secondary schools. In initiating this action, secondary school principals have made appointments in fee academic subject anas. supervisory ___and development and the supervision of classroom instruction. Each will be required to teach two or more classes with the remainder of tile day devoted to their newly assigned duties. AAA Teachers selected tor the chairmanships were those who had demonstrated the proficiency of master teachers, explained Daniel A. Nesbitt, deputy kuperintendenl in charge of instruction. “Is addition to aa excellent ef the content ef a* spe- cific subject, each has displayed a high degree of administrative and leadership skin,” said Nesbitt. Named to department chairmen posts for the coming school year in English are Katherine Blunt, Margaret Freiwald, K atherine Peters and Della Webb. AAA Chairmen tor foreign language are George Choch, Donald Finn and Jean Pierce; mathematics, Arthur Kersjes, Catherine Slide, Edward Storey and Charles Thum-ser; science, Patricia Sargeant and David Voydanoff; and * o c i a studies, Robert Richards, Richard JScharchburg and Ned Spencer. Mrs. William N. Albee Service for Mrs. William N, (Alice S.) Albee, 79, of 288 Townsend St., will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at the Bell Chapel of the William R: Hamilton Co. Burial will be in the WMte Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Tsoy. Mrs. Albee died Saturday at the Paul Oliver Memorial Hospital, Frankfort A resident of Birmingham 18 years, coming from Detroit, she was a member of the Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church. * A A A Her late husband was the owner of a Detroit advertising agency. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Howard A. Clarke, Detroit and Mia. Roes S. CamphcU, Bloom-field Hubs 'a son, William N. Jr„ Franklin; four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Mrs. Charles Whiteman Service for Mrs. Charles (Amelia M.) Whiteman, 85, of 32417 Sheri, dan Drive, Beverly Hills, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be In Evergreen Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Whiteman died, Saturday following a short illness. Revised zoning and traffic ordinances will be the main topics to be discussed at the Waterford TownsMp board meeting at 7 p.m. today. Fsr more than a year, board members have been concerned about the large increase In requests for zoning changes. A new ordinance has been drawn np, placing commercial zoning fn three categories. Final action on this ordinance to expected tonight, according to Supervisor Elmer B. Johnson. Township attorney Paul Mandel will present a revised traffic control ordinance and an ordinance to control traffic on school property. AAA At present, the police department haa no Juriediction over reckless drivers on school property. Later, the Township Board will meet with the newly-formed nine-member planning commission to discuss what has been accomplished since their appointment in early Jane. Police Chief Millard J. Pender will report on high accident areas throughout Waterford Township. Report Fall in Salary ot Auto Executives NEW YORK (UPI)—The pay of chief executives in the auto industry fell 2 per fant last “year, reflecting a 12 per cent drop in profits—but wages of hourly employes rose 4 per cent, according to a management consultants firm. McKlasey A Go. Inc.’s seventh annual survey ot executive compensation, which cowers the most highly paid four men to 887 companies In 28 Industry groups, pay M i I industries was aa-i 1889 following an 8 lse fa 1889. 'All companies in the sample whose profits were up in I960 paid their chief executives as much as in 1959, and many pak) more, while over half the companies whose profits were off cut the total compensation of their chief executives the survey found. A A A Distinguishing characteristics of the automotive industry included: —to the larger companies, tho top man gets substantially more money In relation to sales than la any other Industry. “Pay of the second, third and is closer to that of the chief executive than in most industries. -Deferred compansation plans! not as popular in the automotive industry aa in others. ■ RALLY HOUND ROMNEY — There was lots |o^ talk Saturday — about Berlin, the foreign aid bill, the constitutional convention — at the 2nd annual family outing and ox roast put on by the Oakland County GOP and held at the John F. Ivory farm in White. Lake Township. Talking on Talk Planned Saturday at Oakland AA The Oakland CoQnty Alcoholics Anonymous Center, 1143 Joslyn Ave„ will present the first in a series of four discussions titled "N&w Horizons" this Saturday nigM. , Ar- ♦ A .lit________ The discussion, '‘Inroads to a Greater Understanding of Alcohol, Alcoholism and the Aloo-hollo,” will begin at 8. Successive programs will be held at the same hour Sept. 9, 16 and 23.' Hie discussions are led by the department of group therapy staff of Hurley Hospital, Flint. AAA Leaders will include William L. Keaton, senior alcoholism therapist; George F. Plum, outpatient .therapist; and Marian H. Parks, inpatient therapist. Find Detroit Man Dead on Roadside (Continued Fran Page One) the Center Line post are working with detectives from the Homicide Bureau of the Detroit Police Department on the case. A A ' A They checked Hall’s hotel room yesterday and found nothing unusual. The victim was last seen in Wayne County Circuit Court Friday where he had been called to appear in Ms divorce hearing. The hearing was adjourned. It Wai Just a Suggestion PORT HURON (UP!) - The Southeastern Michigan Gas Co. has rejected a Teamsters Union local request for tour extra holidays a year, including Union President James Hoffa's birthday. MONDAY-TUESDAY SPECIAL Full 39-inch Wide £ COMPLETE BUNK Ml BED OUTFIT || WKC, 108 N. SAGINAW, FE 3-7114 these and other top subjects of the day were '(left to right) William S. Broomfield, R-Oaidand County, and con-con candidates George W. Romney, Richard D. Kuhn and Raymond L. King. RENTALS WANTED Furnished end Unfurnished Homes ond Apartments ore WANTED within the Greater Pontiac Area. For Further Information . . . PLEASE CALL H 8-4028 or FE 8-4029 THB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1961 THRKi Important Question: Brazil to Go 'Leif? By JAMES MARLOW M New* Analyst WASHINGTON - In this moot i»v»|e of centuries, and the moat unpredictable, the reaigna-tion of Brazil'* President Janio Quadras may be only a minor episode or a turning point in the history of the Western Hemisphere. TO AFFECT OTHERS One thing is sure: Brazil, with 87 million people, is the biggest of all Latin American countries and, whatever direction it takes, H will have an efMct on its Joao Goulart, the vice president supposed to succeed Quadras a leftist—or whether a military dictatorship of the right will take over and keep Goulart out * Sr A For that matter, it 4 seem too dear what direction Quadras might have taken whether this sudden move of his is part of a (flan to come back soon — how he could do it isn't clear, either — with more power than before. Even .Goulart seemed uncertain over the weekend. He had visited Communist China and was in Hong Kong when news of Quadras' resignation reached him. He lUnitkii New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair HOUSTON, Texas — For years of your hair loss, if you wait until "they said it couldn't be done."!you are slick bald sad your hair But now a Texas firm of labors- roots are dead, you are beyond tory consultants has developed aj help. If you still have hair (or at treatment that la not only stop- least some fuss) on top of your ping hair loss . . . but Is really [head, and would like to stop your growing hair! hair loss and grow more hair . . . They don't even ask you to take now is the time to act their word for it. If your symp-| Loeach Laboratory Consultant* toms Indicate that the treatment > will supply you with treatment will help you, they Invito you to I for S3 days, at their risk. If they try it for a days, at their risk,! believe the treatment win help ahd aee for yourself! you. Just send them Information Naturally, they would not offer i to help them analyse your proto-this no-risk trial unless thS treat- lem. This information should foment worked. This Is all the more elude how long your hair has been remarkable In light of the fact [thinning, ahd whether or not you that the great majority of cases!now have or ever have had any of of excessive hair fall and bald- the following conditions: Do you ness are the beginning and more [have dandruff? is It dry or oily? fully developed stages of male whether your scalp erupts in pattern baldness and cannot be pimples or other Irritations, does helped. But how* can any man or your forehead become oily woman be sure what is actually greasy? does your scalp itch and causing their hair lose? Even if how often? and any other tofor-baldness may seem to "run to I motion you feel might be helpful, your family," this is certainly no!All letters will be answered proof of the cause of YOUR hair promptly. 8end the above Inf or-*0M- , mat ion, and your name and ad- Actually, there an IS acalp dls-jdrega to Loeach laboratory Con. orders that can cause hair1 loss, j sultants, Box 60001, Houston 0 -No matter which one Is the eauaelTexae. Bring’em back 4 I Your Congressmen Vote WASHINGTON 10*20*1 • 15*20*1 • 18*20*1 • 16*25*1 0 26*20*1 Ckanpion m£ Brand Ntw For Cm J TURTLE WAX' Lifaid CAR WAX SKI IS fijp '■For most ears—brand * . O Clean* and polishes, leaves hard now, not reconditioned plugs. • aboil finish. Compact Hr* bottle Llfnit 8 per person. *■ io ounce*, oooooooooooooooooeoeoooooyygwwoooooooooooo- AUTO Headlamp BULBS SEALED BEAM—S Ok It VOLT Regular $2.50 Voloo 1 fm*Mk Seeled ogolntt moisture and dirt ... for 6 or 12 volt systems, tingle or dual typo. Limit 2. 29 Hardware —Sad Floor TONNE and TUESDAY Ilf Dul DISCOUNTS HOUSEWARES llVkaJSVo" RUBBER Drainboard Tiayi $2.00 Value Gonuino RUBBERMAID Dish Draiaen Regular $179 |27 sorted colon. Protect* glasswares and drains water away. - —— — ■■■■■».■—• oawOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOObOOOO* Adjusts 24 to 36-Inch Heights i STEEL Ironing Boards 3" $6.95 Value For totting, standing at comfortable heights . . ventilated tap for fatter, cooler ironing’. . . standard 54-Inch size . . . fingertip adjustments. •oooooeoooooooooooooeoooooooooooooeeoeooo* Famous O'CEDAR Sponge Heps Genuine AIR-GUIDE Tkenraaetei Regular $5J00 88 BACK-TO-SCHOOL SALE Childrens' - Girls’ - Misses’ - Ladies' Anklets and Socks First Quality and Irregulars Regular Value to 39c (3 Pair 49*) (6 Pair* 96‘) (12 Pairs for 1.89) • MUSimSHl • Hisses and Ladies’ I'/i to 11 * Strip** • Strotcnta* * Pgetele • East Colore * Fancy Cuff* Morcorixod SENSATIONAL SAVINGSIW* bought 3000 pairs to b* able to bring you thos* super discounts. No limit — buy all you noodl ^ ooooooooo* 1st Quality-Guaranteed ‘ ENDICOTT-JOHNSON : Childrens’ SHOES ALL SIZES IfttrlStt 1 to 3 Actual Sellers to $3.98 e Drt*s (Metis e Leaf ere e Girls’ Strap e Girls' Tits e Beys’Casual e Sports etc. 'Ploywolf brand by EJ — nationally-advertised at much higher prices .. . gonuino leather uppers, long wearing competition soles, rubber heels. Guaranteed by maker and Simms. oooooooooooooooeoooooooooooo**0ooooooooo* Girls’ sss Dresses 6Mt 3 (cli MESSES First quality USA made for pre-school and kindergarten misses. Big selection Includes washable no-Sran cottons. Girls’ *298 DRESSES I and 2 piece pylet, Kelly green, burnt orange, Uoc, magenta Ond all wanted colors. Big (election in sires •-y-to-w.--— ----• ____ Girls’*338 DRESSES All wonted color* In dreaaes-wMti' undarblouse effect*, leetber-Uke jocket-v*it>, matching purses, etc. Sire* 7 to 14. Girls’ SUPS Size 4 to 14 2 ® 42c ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• These Kits Are Made by THERMOS Lunch Kitsw Bottles Usually Priced $3.491* S3.9S Mony style* for boys and girls in metal or plastic. AH wMk Thermos ‘Koapsit’ bottlei for hot or cold Kguidt.—2nd Floor 1 99 THE POftTIAG PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST j, W1 FOUR ply Halt Has Less Business AUGUST, MONTH-END SPECIAL! Complaints, Requests Down m July and for 1st 7 Month* of Yoar Famed Film'Vamp' Dead in N.Y. at 77 QUALITY TAINT USE OPTION TERMS Girls' Cabron SCHOOL ^ JACKET AHMuit City Manager Robert vivor. -tn, Wonn, too sty and washable. Genuine Cabron with a soft quilted lining with orlon pile trim. Colors: stone blue, green, white. Sizes 7 to 14. Chefs Delight CHEESE SPREAD 2iL49° SKINLESS Perfect for Meat Loaf Boys' 'shaggy blazer" Hamburgers Farm Fresh! Chicken Parts!! RECKS... IP. BACKS...10*. i WINGS...19V LEGS&.4SV BREAST,H. 49*. MON., TUES.aad WED. MI6.21-29-30 Qalyl 50 FREE GOLD BELL K GIFT STAMPS ■i With This Coupon and $8.00 * Purchase or floral Pine 100%' virgin wool, brushed to • soft, fiooey feature . . . boidiy stripod with bands of muted color. Designed to add a luxury touch to every boys' wardrobe, the Shaggy Maser features a smooth lifting crew neck, in predominating Blueberry, ChatGrey end HAMILTON Grade "A” Medium Size AND THIS COUPON smart beginnings for school Campbell’s PORK & BEANS SmTro'lla^; Poll-Parrot ahomi give the youngster* a start in school that’s right for their fast going, fast growing feet. Whether they’re starting to Nursery School Grade School Junior High Poll-Parrot ahoee are ready to meet the demands yoor youngsters will make of than. See our collection of-■nert bagtonmoA today. Patient and correct fit always —wind. luna Time Chunk Style Hawaiian MIRACLE MILE UNSWll ?,RE App^f JUICE 1 PEOPLE’S 1 FOOD TOWNl FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS ■ 263 AUBURN 1 465 L PKE ST.1700 AUBURN ST. Hi ■ ares seen a «■ ■ eesMsejuesrji ■ one 7 BAYS A WMK K| y\ ■’■SiSu ■ ceesSSwretea ■ • *a e It pm. Ha | en im—>vi 1 a wsmeavi ■ to ' ween. | H:: /THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AVGUST 2Sf, 1961 "T FIVE Urges Fallout Shelters KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPD- , Knox County official laid Sunday that , “all signs point to war" and urged construction of fallout shelters in itoe county’s 79 schools. “There are more than X children In our schools,” said county education committed Chairman Willard Yirbough. "If wa nuclear missiles and bombs won't be any respecter* of children. If our coming generation is lost, so is America.” Sturgis Fines Auto Owners Inviting Thieves £ The People of Oakland County k 1 Who Never Finished 3 S UGH SCHOOL 1 are Invited to write fee FREE booklet. Telia how yen eon . W cant your American School Diploma. k V AT HOMK IN SPARE TIME 3 W AMKBICi ^ BoM m AMEBICAN SCHOOL STnUito (t'PI) — The police department here, boooird ter Ita traffic eofety program, h gottlag tough to halt a rut of onto thefts. Ten auto Bolt* have beeo recorded to the hurt three weeks re instructed to' ticket rerv.ef motorist* who park their ear* eod leave the keys to I the ignition. Eleven tlcketa were ' given the first day the plan went Into effect. ♦Plus tax and trade-in tire off your car extra speedway-proved ★ S/F Safety-Fortified cord body resistance to blowouts or breaks. ft Rugged 7-rib tread design. for non-skid safety. ft .Fireotono Rubber-X... provides long money-saving mileage. ft ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE... proof in writing of Firestone’s extra quality. NO MONEY DOWN FREE INSTALLATION with your old tires No Hidden “Extras" firestone 19 MO NEW TREADS applied on sound tire bodies or on your own Urea COMPLETE SET of TUBELESS WHITEWALLS IITil POAD hazard IV I II GUARANTEE 4 for 4949 M^nch Siao Plus tax and 4 Trade-In Tires ———B Our Neie Tread*, identified by Medallion and ekop mark, OUARANTIID |. AfoinM hhrti I * mnehip red ptniili raplMammte prorated re tarad ajgggWMMJMimmMaK mmm \ Take a 60-Day FREE Rida Let us install a set of new Monro-Matic shock absorbers on your car today. Try them for 60 days. If you’re not fully satisfied, return them for a full refund and reinstallation of your old shocks. -2£2- i BUY NOW ON EASY FIRESTONE TERMS BBSS firestone mufflers Precision engineered for your car Aircraft Firm to Bid on Contract for Apollo ST. LOUIS .(API McDonnell Aircraft Corp., which builds the Mer-jcUry space capsules used nation's first manned space flights. [has announced it Will b6 fpr the gram is designed for clrcumlunar principal contract for the Apollo .flight add to land three astro* ' spacecraft. nauis on the moon before the end McDonnell is one of 12 firms to*jot" P* d-?ade’ **+ vited by the.National Aeronautics! • and Space Administration to bid The Klondike valley has yeilded on the Apollo program. This pro- more than 1315 million In gold ore.. EASY BUDGET UP TERMS Rust-proofed with special coated steels to last longer. Fast courteous service by------- CARTER TIRE CO. ,370 South Saginaw St. FE 5-6136 ) PONTIAC AF Pkstotsx' COMPETITION—Nineteen-year-old Inge Jorgensen. Miss Denmark 1961, gives the famed little Mermaid statue In Copenhagen Harbor some competition as she poses for publicity photos. She'll represent her country In the Miss World beauty contest in London in November. ly in Baggage ;or Fugitives He Will Marry ANY Woman !/or $700 Price Planes Bring 24,000 Pounds for Refugees From Cuba MIAMI, Fla. (API — Two Pan American World Airways planes brought in 24,000 pounds of cess baggage for Cuban refugees ___the weekend, but a third was turned back by Cuban authorities. A Saturday flight and a Sunday morning flight brought in bags, parcels and trunks left at the Havana airport when refugees board-led planes for the United States. | A second Sunday flight from Miami turned back when advised | by radio that Cuban authorities 1 id not wish it to land. No reason as given. The Cuban government decreed iFriday that all baggage must fol-jlow its owners within 48 hours. Pan American operates two flights daily .between Miami KEVWOOO. England (t PI) — A SO-year-old British soldier today was reported to marry anybody “young or old’’ who will put up $700 to buy his way out ‘tl’ve got nine years to go" the Dally Mirror quoted Trevor Long as saying. “The only thing I have to sell Is me. I’d marry would bay t r freedom.” “Of course I’d Hke to marry tor love. But there Is no reason why 1 shouldn’t fall la love with somebody wealthy.” Volunteers In the British military services can. buy buck their service contracts. About 45 per cent of Rhode Island’s labor force is employed in manufacturing as compared with cent for the U.S. as a whole. but space out of Havana so limited that refugees limited tof hand luggage. | Pan American said its flights, lout of Havana are booked solid IthrougH next March. Richmond Set to Hatch Plot to Promote Eggs Eggs,! RICHMOND, Vk. U'PI eggs, eggs. Thousands of eggs (hard-boiled) [will be given away on Virginia' streets. The giveaway is a promotion lor ‘Golden Goodness of Virginia [Fresh Eggs Month" declared recently by Gov. J- Lindsay Almond. Eight pretty girls will kick off I the drive Wednesday by giving away 4,000 eggs in downtown Richmond. About 2,500 persons were killed on Australian roads in 1960 and another 60,000 were injured. CASTONE AND ALUMINUM SIDING *169 |00 FREE! 1000 SAH Green Stamps FI 2-9421 24 HOUR SERVICE 2457 Farrell Drive-Pontioc Cockroaches Written Guarantee From Houses, Apartment*.. Groceries, Factories and Restaurants. Remain oat only one hour. No eigne need. Box Ex Company FINAL WEEK! * AUGUST Shop Tonight, Thursday and Friday Nights Till 9 o'Clock A Waite's exclusive in Pontiac! Whiter-than-white for Lift! LONGER-WEARING SPRINGMAID SHEETS SPRINGKNIGHT MUSLINS 1.79 139 SPRINGCALE PERCALES Reg. 2.99 torfn Reg. 2.49 double or double fitted Reg. 1.20 pr* ---------- .96* Reg. 1.19 double or double fitted Reg. 1.50 o*. cotes 2.29 2.49 ALSO AT SALE PRICES: Haid-to-find sixes in white percales, postal percales, candystripe percales, rose print percales and muslins! All Springmoid muslin and percale sheets ore fine combed cotton and very long wearing. Big, Thick, -Thirsty MARTEX "WESTMINSTER" TOWEL ENSEMBLE Mortox "FIRST ROMANCE" TOWEL ENSEMBLE Bath Towel Hand Towel Wash .Cloths ■tf. Tml Hm4 T.-.I WMh CUri, Reg. 1.99 Re*. 1.29 Rag. 49e 2 99 It.,. 1 19 hi. 1.69 89* 39* 1.99 1.49 59* "Coronet" Foam Backed EXTRA LARGE COTTON SCATTER RUGS 10% Imported GOOSEDOWN BED PILLOWS 2T*'«T2" or R«t* O QQ 36"x54“ list 3.99 beVV 5* ivtji Washable and skid-resistant. 7 colors. For haHt, dens, bedrooms, bathrooms, traffic areas. 90%. imported white goose feather* for firm sleeping comfort. Feather-proof ticking! Twin or Double BATES "KENNEBUNK" HEIRLOOM SPREADS Floral Print DACRON POLYESTER FILLIP COMFORTERS .ft* 10.99 6.99 Luxurious bullion fringe . . . reversible . . . rounded corners ... Snow White or Antique White. Rose print acetate cover filled with fluffy warm Dacron. Pink, iliac, brown/yellow. Our Own EXCLUSIVE BELLEAIR ELECTRIC BLANKETS twie (lie 4A A A .ftill.slse . One Control 1 / XX One Ceetrel 17.99 Value 1 Jni W 21.99 Valeo 14U wfe 11.88 7Q% Rayon, 20% f««M« Nvhxi. Full 2 rear guarantee, Choose gink, blue# omen, beige Waila't While Safe . BEST DRESSED ON A BUDGET. BACK-TO-SCHOOL Crisp, Pretty, Cotton SCHOOL DRESSES 3.99 Plaids, prints and solid colors. All With full skirts and dainty trims. Sanforized washable cottons, in sizes 7 to 14. Sites 3 to 6X ....2.99 Girls' Wear . . . Second Float GIRLS' ORLON CARDIGANS 5SR ’ t largo assortment of Milky, fine oauge end brushed tftoiAI Orion Cardigans in new tali colors. Sizes 7 to 14. Also some sizes 3-6x. Girls’ Wear ... Second Floor Boys' end Girls' Drip-Dry CORDUROY SLACKS t«f. 1.69 2 For SJOO Little boys' boxer styles end girts'- tapered ’styles. Red, green, brown, magenta, charcoal or teat in sizes 3 to 6x. Children's Wear . . . Second Float Beys' Long Sleeve Watli-and-Wear SPORT SHIRTS t* Woven plaids and prints, plus collar ■00 style knits. New fall colors in )00% cotton. Size* 6 to 20. > 2” *5° Boys' p|oportioned WESTERN JEANS K«S 1.99 Slim, Reg. Sixes 4 fa 12 Sturdy doubly knee Western jeans sanforized end made In portioned sizes tor perfect tit. intercede at points or strain, plenty at savings! REGULARS HUSKIES Roys' Wear . . . Second Fleer I I 4 rrtt THE PONTIAC PRESS ' , " FaHtae, Midi. MONDAY, AUGUST 28.1961 48 West Huron Street New Freeway Important to Pontiac and Vicinity Next year’s completion of the new 75 Freeway means much to local travel Leading out of Detroit, it skirts Pontiac on the east. Well have several cloverleaf con* nections with it. With an ultimate goal of the Straits ef Mackinac, its 288 mile* wiU be the longest freeway In the Nation. With no grade intersections and no stop lights in its entire length, H shrinks distance to a remark: able degree. Experience with other freeways proves that It will save 200 lives per year. It is found that 90 miles per hour is safer on such a road than 50 miles per hour on our present main high* ways. ' ★ ' ★ ★ In the 14 Michigan counties traversed by 75 Freeway, its greatest mileage is in Oakland County, also Its greatest number of cloverleaves and, outside of Detroit, its greatest contiguous population. It will be a commuters’ road, and bring cities closer together. TraVehrise, it will then be no further from Pontiac to Saginaw than it now is to Flint. Thousands of families who now must live near the metropolitan center where the bread winner spends his day will then get out into God’s country and really live. It will be the biggest boost to a further decline in Detroit’s population. And watch Oakland County grow. ★ , ★ ... ★ . The stretch between Detroit and its connection with the present 23 Freeway* just southwest of Flint,' will be completed next year; but further north not until a couple of years later. numerous other allergies, along with providing information, help and advice, ★ * * The only cure we’ve over heard of is a former local resident that was a hay fever sufferer and spent several hours a day continuously for three weeks chipping golf balls in a field of ragweed. We have it from proper authorities that his hiy fever disappeared and his golf gamo Improved. Needless to say, we can’t all take this cure. Along this lino, tho nows that a research tedm in Chicago has isolated the element In ragweed pollen that causes hay fever is especially welcome. ★ ★ ★ Its discoverers believe that.an effective antifbver injection will be forthcoming. Good. Bad cess to him who start at dawn ... To power-mow his spacious lawn. The Man About Town Out of Ordinary Freak of Nature and Other Odd Incidents Football: A game that now bstta In an baacbaU’a aaaaon. A tree cut down on the new 75 Freeway by In Independence Township was a mixture of oak and maple, having oak leaves on one side and maple leave* on the other. A cock pheasant flaw through a window at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Malowskl of RochesteV the other evening, surveyed the premises, crowed and flew out. The wild turkeys are Increasing In the Drahner Woods sanctuary east of Oxford, according to • Eberaon Landsdowne who lives near It. Re saw only one pair last year. Now there are a dosen or more. Construction work over most of the 288 miles is already well under way, and assuming marvelous proportions through Oakland County. ~~ In some respects a competitor of the Dixie Highway, that road now is ondergoing the moat extensive repairs in the Pontiac area since it was first built. ★ ★ ★ This includes several miles of black top surfacing, so any fears that it would be neglected in favor of the new freeway are discounted. Thus Oakland County keeps its Dixie Highway as a main road, and-gains this great 75 Freeway. A letter from former Pontiac resident, Arthur Kingsbury, now of Dayton, Ohio, wonders If the old court house clock Is to be saved. He says it always did appear to have a dirty face. This column’s idea of a pessimist is the person who, every year la the latter part of August begins looking for die first frost. Newburgh Incident Sets Fine Example for Others Under the heading: “Write Your Own Editorial,’’ The New York Newt says: “Newburgh, N.Y., the other day began forcing ablebodied reliefers to work for the dty. The first man so drafted labored until noon, but didn’t come back after lunch. Instead, his wife telephoned the welfare office that he had landed a paying job as a painter and wanted his name stricken from the relief roster.’’ Certainly the Newburgh Incident has focused sharp attention Id many cities on chiseling and certain types of phony relief addicts. The taxpayers have rights, too. Commenting on our recent item from Msleolm Faraday of Bloomfield Hills, that we give majority votes for bond issues and at the same election defeat the means of raising the funds to cover It, Fred Smoko of Rochester writes that it simply says, “Yes, we want it, but don’t want to pay for It” 1 . First Christmas card of 1M1 comes from Mr. and Mrs. Randall PlalnUff of Bloomfield Hills, who are leaving on a world tour, and will not be back until 1962. Champion dumb commercial on TV, according to ' • Mrs. Harry Osterdorf of Keego Harbor, Is that of the beer which says it does something about the weather, and doesn’t tell what it is they do. Perhaps It’s to make It hot for his family when a man staggers home. National Allergy Month Serves Useful Purpose U relief in sight? To hay fever sufferers, it may seem almost like adding insult to in-jury to proclaim Aug. IS to Sept. 15 “National Allergy Month.” For the fifth straight year the Allergy Foundation of America has done this. Verbal Orchids’to- The purpose, of course, is to focno public attention on tbt 18 million Americans afflicted not «i|jr with hair fever but with the Mrs.'Harvey McLotter or Keego Harbor; 81st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Felch of Waterford; Slit wedding anniversary. Michael McFaUen of Birmingham; list birthday,. George H. Look of Middle Strait* Lake; 87th birthday. Mia. Onto Butler of DraytonJ Plains; Mtfa birthday. * 1 'M T Voice of the People: ‘So We Aren't Aiding Cuba-WMt About The Howe of Representatives In Washington voted to authorize President Kennedy to Impose a total embargo on trad* with Oiba. It shouted unanimous approval of a flat prohibition against any aid to CUba “under the present government”; and accepted an amendment to the original bill which authorised the president to withhold aid to any country ttat provide mlitary or economic aid to tbe Csetro government. Stop aid to Poland then. Msg Says Executives Deserve Bonuses ‘Communists Hoping to Control Education* I am one that can say a good word for executives that get bonus payments. More than 1,780 auto-mobile companies have started, failed and grate bankrupt. Their executives couldn't swing it and so those that do, deserve recognition. There are 1.700 companies, where the executives don’t get a bonus and where the workers haven't even got a job. J. S. P. Several Communist governments kindudiiig Cuba have drafted a treaty with a phony tide called "Convention Against Discrimination in Education.” It would deliver our educational system into UNESCO international and would do away with afl local control. -Iurt-diction tar tho UJf. In temapsaal Court of Jostles writ ten tat* (Ms UNESCO Treaty ‘King Isn’t Trying to Hide Issues* ks Grounded by Bad Weather David Lawrence Finds: Europeans Admire Allen Dulles John Collins, Democrat state chairman, accuses the Republican party of trying to keep con-con issues from the public. Ray King,' Republican candidate has Challenged his opponent to a debate. Where, is the Democrat candidate? Why didn’t he appear at the Oakland Citizen's League candidates’ interviews? Why doesn't he answer the Democrat chairman's questionnaire? King is willing to debate before any audience, including all local labor unions. Charlee W, Rants late fields ef hrtematleaal law. The federal gonereweat would become only a astlmal ageat ef UNESCO. Every American dti-sen wiD be placed under International law, at laager protected by our Conotttation and oak Jut ' ' V ‘ m ■■■Mt by UJf. e Let us bombard our congressman with letters to tone down huge federal spending tor foreign aid and support the idea of review by LAWRENCE EN ROUTE FROM EUROPE -They know a lot more In Western Europe about intelligence work than we do In America. This is because they have been at it longer. Hence, it was father disquieting to have some of I the European of-Ificials who are I most experienced I in intelligence ac- ItiviUet say pri-1 vately that they are worried about the future of the Central Intelligence Agency in Washington, which up to now has been a bulwark of strength in its cooperation with European governments. Oddly enough, they wonder how so much got Into print about the CIA and why American officials haven’t learned that judgment of intelligence work cannot be fairly based on one episode like the Cuban affair. They suspect that inexperience and ptfmibly a desire by other agencies in Washington to shift tit* blame led to the controversy over the future functioning of tbe CIA. Perhaps ooe of tbe most sklUfal of tbe European Intelligence executive* asked what was gstng experts who understand the ambiguities of expression and the spirit ef a speaker's remarks. Thus, one intelligence official pointed out to this writer that he doubted whether an accurate analysis of the latest Communist party platform had as yet been published anywhere and that several expert translators would be necessary to do such a Job. and the results are often disappointing as well aa expensive. Portraits Every major government has to prepare itself for there verses that occur in Intelligence work. For all too often one's own agent is bought or compromised in some way by the other aide. But when it comes to ways of frustrating the espionage carried on by the Communists through their own embassies and legations throughout the world and the activities of the Communist party units stationed everywhere — all financed by Moscow —■ this Is a tremendous problem. It means a vast personnel of counterespionage. Above all, this correspondent is impressed with the observation made to him repeatedly that it would be a mistake for the American government to go off half-cocked and reorganize drastically its intelligence setup mid take the risk of turning bade the dock in respect to America’s intelligence achievements during the Inst decade or more. (Copyright, USl) Dr. Harold Hyman Says: By JOIN c. METCALFE There is nothing more delightful . . . Than tho sun behind a hill.. . As daylight is just dawning . . . While the world is sleeping still . . There Is nothing giving pleasure ... In the wide, wide work! to me . .. Like a gray-green misty morning . . . Slowly sailing out to sen . . .There is nothing quite as joyous ... As the flowers In the Spring ... That from little wayside gardens . . Large bouquets to heaven bring . . . There is nothing so alluring . . . As the twilight's fading light . . .When the lengthy arms of shadows ... Hang the stars out for the night . . . There is nothing so entrancing .. . As a moon with golden grain . . That is stading guard in nighttime ... By your bedroom window pone. Congress each year instead of the five year plan.. It Is the Communists' plan for financial collapse of tMs country to produce chaos necessary for tho Communists to take over. Mrs. Mary D. Walter Lake Orion The Almanac By Ualtod Proas International Today Is Monday, Aug. 28, the 240th' day of the-year with 125 to follow in 1961. The moon Is approaching its last quarter. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. ♦ * dr On this day in history: In 1830, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad tried out the first American-built locomotive, the “Tom Thumb,” built by Peter Cooper. Your Allergy Can Aid the Research Physician Smiles Sending me t dipping from a Detroit paper to the effect that this la the year for a vialt from the 17-year locusts,_____________ lion locked np la the mind of Allen Dalles when he “retires’’ nt tbe end of this year. Rightly or wrongly, Intelligence experts down on paper for tbe record. of Waterford asks If this column has any Inside Information on the matter. Sorry, Mrs. Flewelllng, we haven’t; and are never short on space fillers, as that Detroit paper evidently was. ' It involves too many risks. Hence, they say a top intelligence man should be utilised as long as he is able to function, even when "retired.” About 30 yean ago, when this writer first began to talk to intelligence officials In Europe, he found them predicting that the United States might in the course erf 25 years or so achieve an effective intelligence operation. It takes a long time to plant the roots of intelligence work so that the sources cannot be detected by the enemy. AW»mi DULLES . Today some of th| higher level men in foreign governments express admiration for the progress that has been made by the United States in the last 20 years. In fact, they speak in terms of warm admiration for the achievements of Allen Dulles. Ninety-five per cent of ail the information gathered it what is known as “overt." This is a vast job of analysis of information that is derived from a close reading of newspapers, magazines, radio speeches and interviews, as well as trade journal* of a business or scientific nature. I must warn you against placing too much reliance on the do-it-yourself plan for investigating allergic reactions that I detailed in a previous column. Not that your efforts will be wasted. a * *. For, with the Information you have collected, your own physician or the allergy specialist will be able to extend his investigation further and more rapidly, thus providing you with toe safety and relief you seek. tonsils or sinuses in which a possible bacterial allergen seems to have taken up residence. Maybe even isolate the bug and have it made up Into a vaccine. Desensitize you with tablets if you have poison ivy or with a course of pollen injections if you have hay fever., used In the investigation of aa allergy Is the skin test. This is done by applying to your skin (patch test) or Injecting between the layers of the skin an extremely dilute solution or suspension of the suspected allergen. —Now all of this sounds pretty complicated although I’ve tided to simplify It as much as possible. But your understanding of what you can do and what your doctor can do for you may be the means for saving you and your children a great deal of distress. Maybe even your lives! Horse sense is just good old stable thinking. A >■ -A * If there Is ever a complete care for rheumatism, goodby to oar best weather forecaster. ♦ * * Prices make people toe the mark so they can toot the bills. ♦ A A Saying very Uttfe usually comes from thinking twice. A * A A prison sentence for a Kentucky man upset hit marriage plans, but . he’ll still be tied down. * ' A' * ' On most farms an oM coat teems to always fit a scarecrow to n T. ★ A A . A crook geta no place making Impnaahma only with his finger In 1M7,10 suffragette# picketed the White House, hoping to win the sympathy of President Wood-' row Wilson. They were arrested for disturbing the pence. In 1922, the first commercial in radio broadcasting was heard over New Yoric station WEAF. The sponsor was the Queenaboro Realty Company in Jackson heights, N.Y. A thought for today; Russian writer Leo Tolstoy said, “The vocation of every man and woman is to serve btiier people.” THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Distress and anguish terrify him; they prevail against Mm, like a king prepared for battle —Job 11:84. ★ A A Fear is that passion which hath the greatest power over us, and by which God and Hlo laws take the surest hold of us.—John TUlotson. Case Records of a Psychologist: Such allergen could be Ivy extract (rhus toxicodendron) if you have poison ivy, or pollen extract if you have hay fever, or horse serum if you're to be treated with a^ antitetanus shot, or penicillin if you require an injection of the most valuable of the antibiotics. College Helpful in Reaching Goal If you’re not hypersensitive, *the defense mechanisms of your skin will take care of the test substance without producing any immediate reaction. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE J-479: Robert P. Crawford is emeritus professor of journalism at the University of Nebraska. “Dr. Gwne,” newspapers, speeches, scientific Journals and the like — must be ' subjected not just to a translation by eome clerk, this must be done by language But If you’re hypersensitive, enough histamine will be liberated to raise aa Itching hiva. Now these skin tests are admittedly a great nuisance. And sometimes the information they provide is useless and even misleading. But more often than not, they yield dues that permit your doctor to prevent, relieve or actually rid you of your difficulties in some one or nibre of the following ways: DR. CRANE began, have some data that 1 feel sure you will enjoy. Vln the present confused educational and economic picture, few colleges ever attempt to find out just what happened Apples and pears on the same tree In the yard of lack Slnnett of Waterford, makes him wonder If that tent a batter Job of grafting than we usually got at Lansing. The Country Parson Identify the allergens to which you’re hypersensitive and tell you where they're to be found (In the case of plants of pollens) or what foods they're contained in (in the case of digestive allergens like milk, eggs, grains, meat, fish, berries etc.) Suggest substitutes for basic items you require for every-day living, such as goat’s for cow’s milk, nonalletglc cosmetics for those to which you react, cotton goods for those made with synthetic allergens, kapok pillows for made with animal feathers. to graduate* in their specialized fields. "Out of curiosity, therefore, I picked out a former class in one subject — youngsters Just getting out Into life at the start of the depression of the 1930s. “The happy results of course surprised me.” COLLEGE PAYS OFF You may recall my quoting Dr. Paul C Glick’s data from the Census Burtrfu which showed that a high school diploma adds $49,000 more to your future earnings than the grade school diploma. ' Each year of college also contributes an additional $25,000. intervening M years. Here are a few of Prof. Crawford’s students ef that elaso: William McCleery, famous playwright and associate editor of Ladies Home Journal. Murlln Spencer, ace AP war correspondent and now head of the AP.in our Northwest. Howard Alla way, talented editor of Popular Science Monthjy. William*.H. Butterfield, versatile college executive and now vice-president ef Texas Tech. Elraont Waite, of the Saa Francisco Chronicle, and proHflc writer for the slick paper maga- achooler may protest, “but can’t you become successful without going to college?” Yes, indeed, but it is much harder if you try to go it alone, without any college training. etc. Treat you with anti-tuberculous drugs If the suspected allergen Is the tubercle baeUM, and with anti-streptococcal drugs If you’ve rheumatic fever er one of the other dlstarbaaces that, appears related to “strep” Infection. Recommend surgejy for. Infected The reueens are many, Inoind-ing the making erf new, Influential friends, plus a broader outlook and more'entree to good Jobs. But your creative thinking Is also stimulated by sorb splendid teachers as Professor Crawford. William McGaffin, superb foreign correspondent, writer for magazines Uke Reader’s, Digest and how with the Chicago‘Dally New*. Neal Gomon, popular president of Peru State College. Arthur Kozelka, an ace Chicago Tribune columnist. Robert Kelly, astute manager of public relations for Chryiler's Imperial Division. Many other ftunoua men and women (though most of the girls soon married) were members of this same writing course. CREATIVE THINKING Prof. Crawford stressed creative thinking and the development of new, original ideas. And send for my “Vocational Guidance KR,” enclosing a ■tamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. Osgrn Wj. Cries Alwaya, writ* Is Is care « Ttw I ■Wrasse. uwas a hoc « cant •tamped, aelf-addreuad envelope and IS eeeta to oarer typing and printing cede *h*" ““ mmmA Omm pgyctlOlOf lC*l In the single class he analyzed, we now find approximately one out of every 8 listed in Who’* Who. He would be the Inst to claim credit for the future saccosass of his many famous graduates. But he certainly merits n “stake” In their varied contributions ts Mth century education. Iterators and They have aO wielded vast in-flounce In America daring the “Yes, Dr. Crane,” some high i AaaoeUted Preaa 1 The Pontiac eras* a delivered by carrier tar «S cent* a week; where mailed in Oakland. Oeneeee, Uvtnc-•ton. Macomb. Lanaar ami Waafi-tana* Count*. H U I1IM a year: mmm to Michigan and dg Mar Plata* to to* united auta* M O a yaor. AB mall atihacrtpndai payable la advance. VaMaga baa bare paid V LONDON (AP) »afe, warm and comfortable -homo th« Wi ml Be Safe! Call FEderal 5-8181 NOW . .. 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Macmillan Irks Press by Shrug Over Berlin ("Everybody else knows them Is |a Berlin crisis.’' But the Minor di {faction from the n and said "perhaps the prime min Mar was seeing things mor clearly after a good night ! sleep*" 1 Sleep Like Log Ste iMMfe tm I Ttami Fsstsr in aMMlimU WMnr Mha <(|wtm Mltta, today at Print Minister Harold Macmillan's golf 'course dlsmt—1 of tbs Berlin crisis as something "got up by fl>* press." Ilia editors' Ire was little Ufiad by a news conference day at which Macmillan said the Berlin situation la "serious and there la a danger ariring from rash and provocative actions such The National Chdc Union, a self-styled nonpartisan organization that has Isd criticism at the _ the rally. Union officials protested the police action. In the capital both the Chdc I---------IP PP . Union and the Dominican RevohJ- as have recently been taken in . . rirht_wim, !■» ■»«, •mrn. mlut d2T£££- -Sit J6v2 was attended bv a crowd of sev- * * * Mr Marmillan eral thousand. There were no In- Macmillan said he and U>i;fefewhfe. Dooe Mr. ■*** i cidcnis. Home, his foreign secretary, wh*‘ »• ? lieve that East-West negotiations and at the ifeM| Macmillan threw out mark that arouaad the editors during an impromptu chat with newsmen on ths 18th holt at Glen-eagles, the Scottish resort when the prime minister is on vacation. To i question about Berlin he replied: "I think it la aU got up by the proas. Nobody Is going to fight about it." OHN IVIRY NIGHT TO t Mondoy through Saturday lust gay CHARGE IT The Federation of Malaya hadlon Berlin and Germany should fewer strikes in 1960 than in take place but to be effective, previous years. I "these must be held in the right Berlin' "Is Mr. Macmillan living in the same world as other people!” the pro-labor Dally Mirror IN THE KIVEK — A Connecticut Co. but plunged into the Park River at Hartford, Conn., carrying five persons with it. All escaped serious injury- The bus went over g wall Into foe river after turning opto Flatbush Avenue from Over-. sr ruMii look Terrace. The driver of the bus told police his airbrakes failed as be made the turn. The driver, - Kenneth Freeto, has ps passengers his wife'and 11-year-old son. lies Status Quo|30“ in Court System Justice Souris Defends Mode of Naming State Jurists; Hits Proposal Ings Banda wants to glva Ny- OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday KALAMAZOO (UPD-State Supreme Court Justice Theodore Souris defended foe method of choosing judges in Michigan and! criticized the "Missouri nan" method of appointment. * * 4r Souris, speaking at a picnic of the Kalamazoo County Democratic Club at Spring Valley Park, (aid, "No one has ever said Michigan judges have been incompetent or corrupt at any time la state history. There Is therefore no reason to change our system ef selecting judge*." The Missouri Plan, which Souris said was being urged for passage by the forthcoming constitutional convention, calls for appointment of jurists and approval by the state] legislature. "Advocates of the Missouri Plani , are jgade up to a large Ihctent of those who haye lost their savings in tho courts, who don’t like the trend of recent court dedstoniand ‘who, for that reason, say they want to ‘throw the rascals out.'1 He added that they would like to replace the "rascals" with judges more to their own liking. Florida Minister Invites Nikita to Prayer Meeting ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Orlando minister has invited So-Orlando minister has invited Soviet Premier Khrushchev to at-j tend a two-hour prayer meeting for peace. 1 The Rev. Auburn Hayes, pastor' of foe Colonial Baptist church and the Colonial Drivein church, tele-, graphed Khrushchev an, Invitation to Join a prayer team of the Worldwide Prayer Fellowship Sept. 24. in Nyasaland BLANTYRE, Nyasaland (I) - G. Mennen Williams, U. 8. assistant secretary of state tor African affairs, has been made an honorary chief of Malawi at Chileka Airport in Nyasaland. Malawi is the name Dr. Host- pendent. Banda — who last week I won Nyamjaad's first general j election)* — heads the Malawi | Party Congress. .'+ * * A crowd of ISO Africans and a few Europeans dapped as Congress Party Secretary General Dunduza Chisiza presented Williams with a fly switch as a present from Banda. SALES (GOODYEAR) BRAKE AND FRONT END SPECIAL! REGULAR *15 VALUE > Check brakes, adjust for tepack front wheal bearings GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 30 S. CASS FES-6123 playtex girdles Exciting savings on these First quality Playtex girdlesl Only Playtex girdles have 7-way stretch.. stand, stoop or sit — they won't ride upl Cool all cotton lining. Hurryl Jest say 'CHARGE IT' ‘ Magic Controller with 'magic finger' panels to tug in tummy, (look you at never before 'neafh fob fall's'fluid fashions. Painty or girdle. ES-S-M-L. 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Yellow, rod, blue — straw soot. 18" High III 2.81 SMtty dig nil demand ter a walk Jaunty Scotty wag* hk tail, nods his hood, walks, barks, lottery 1.98 Raalistis aiak with raaaiRf^watcr Ilka mom Modern, pastel blue finished steel. With plastic dish, soap Rag. 1.98 “Jahaay Ring# nap gun firm it ya« draw You can't lose. Rope-pull causes caps to fire up to tlx Ublattory. ran Raakat Ship Futuristic ship runs EIGHT. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST 28, 1961 Swim to Lake Erie Off Boat; 2 Drown MONROE (UPI) - A Fostoria. Ohio, man and his woman swim-nine companion were missing today and .presumed drowned in Lake Erie Sunday. K—bP Levan, S8, and Mias 9mm Dailey, M, 0« Columbus, Ohio, were with sit ether par seas hi a 17-foot outboard motor heat about a ndle off Avalon Beach when they decided Is ge The boat owner, Jerry Carrol, 23, Monroe, told sheriffs deputies that Levan and Mias Dailey were missing when the party decided to return to shore. Eye Bill to Reports Japan Race Info Leak TOKYO (UPI)—The number of May Make Slipping J1"""**'*"'*: Trade Gambling Newt low. Mare than 800 different kinds of trees grow In U.S. forest lands. a Federal Crime Need ‘50 till payday? You can borrow |50 for two weeks.for just 70* The Associates makes loans from 125 i. $500 on your signature, furniture or car. Our terms are tailor-made to fit YOUR budget. You’re always welcome to our money. THE Associates LOAN COMPANY Pontiac: 125-127 N. Saginaw, FE 2-0214 Michigan Miracle MHe, FE 8-9641 Drayton Plains: 4476 Dixie Hwy., OR 3-1207 btsnst suatstd at S% eer weett sa Salsaass ■» to tw, OM pee Math katuarn «St aad IMS, sad «« par matt an aay fsmtaiir. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. John L. McClellan laid today Ms investigations subcommittee is | thinking of a Ml to' make the "slipping of gambling information from race tracks a federal crime. -M PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE A Professional School of Business for High School and College Graduates Courses Offered Include SECRETARIAL ACCOUNTING BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION CLERK-TYPIST OFFICE MACHINES SHORTHAND- Fall Quarter Begins September 5 . Night School Sept. 11 Pontiac Business Institute Bulletin of Courses will be sent upon request $ Pontiac Business Institute “Training far Bnainesa Careen Sine# 1896" 7 W. Lawrence St. FEderal 3-7028 Cuba Distorts Cabled News Reporter Checks Copy, Find* Hi* Fads Given Red Tinge "Gangsters are steadily building new territories, especially in newly developed industrial areas such as those between Tbkyo. and Chiba and between Osaka and Sakai,’ The Arkansas Democrat saidj**1* Pe"0rt ”***' * * the Senate may act any day nowj ^ ma>or rammitted ^ to sump final coongressionai ap- gangsters during the flAt aix proval on a measure that would |months o( thfs year was intimWa-make interstate transmission of tion wlth gju <***, sported. II gambling information illegal. jwas.folkwed by assault, with 7.983 A law making It Illegal to take sucp Information off a race track, let alone across a state Mae, would throw a farther klak into the horse I services, described booktoa' lifeline. McClellan’s subcommittee planned today to recall Walter Shaw of Miami, a former telephone equipment engineer identified as the designer of a complicated electronic device to help bookies accfept telephone bets without detection. The subcommittee will also summon Albert Toilin, operator of a racing information service in Wilmington, Del. McClellan said the taxpayers have a “tremendous stake" In the legislation banning Interstate transmission of gambling Information beoaase bookies siphon billions of hollars to taxable wagering money from the tracks and seldom pay the 18 per mat gambling tax. Testimony before the committee has shown that the information services use a variety of methods to keep posted on race results, Including binoculars, portable radio transmitters and wireless sets worn around the waist under the coat. ★ ★ dr Subcommittee Counsel Jerome S. Adlerman said the investigation will soon fan southward from Chicago, with Cincinnati, St. Louis, New Ore Ians and Hot Springs, Ark., figuring in the hearings. He said William P. Brown of St. Louis and Carlos and Joseph Marcello of New Orleans will be summoned to testify. 8 Drown in Sweden [With Hundred Nearby STOCKHOLM, Sweden (API-Six men and 'two boys droi Sunday in a lake in " central Sweden when their motorboat capsized only a few hundred yards from hundreds of people on shore. None of them saw the accident, or heard the cries of distress. Police believed the accident took place during a prize-awarding ceremony while attention was directed toward announcement of the winners. ■iraeiwRW'rawraaiiiiiutw LOWEST PRICE EVER for SPEED QUEEN AUTOMATIC DRYER Rust Resistant Drum Will Dry Full Washer Load at One Time Adjustable Temperature Selector Switch speed oim WRINGER WASHER 00 Double WtD Bowl Tub FOR ONLY 98 with trade NO MONEY DOWN 90 Days Same as Cash .-. J or Long, Easy Terms! ^ GOOD HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC Open Monday and Friday Evenings’ TSI 9 51 WEST HURON STREET FE 4-1555 new minnow bucket is silent and won’t scare the fish. It is plastic. By JA(* BIST Canadian Preaa Staff Writer OTTAWA (AP) - The Cuban government has no official press snd asserts there is no --------p of press 1 dispatches sent out of the country. But it concedes that members of the Co-Telecommunications Syndicate, who transmit the copy, have [authority to decide whether dispatches are based on truth, and [may delete or' alter copy accord-1 ingly.' * A I* > During a three-month assigned in Cuba aa a reporter for the Canadian Press 1 kept copies Dies Before Foil Trial MONTREAL (AP) — Lung cancer tout claimed the life of Abel Voeburgh, 63. who was to have bees tried this fall on charges of murdering Ms wife and 11 el their 15 children- of cabled stories. A comparison of theae with the stories reaching Canada shows that the syndicate members exercise their authority in free-wheeling htfi" Stories may be revised aial distorted. For Instance: The word ’’priests” in stories! - n 1 ■■ ■■ " about expulsion of foreign mis- Hospital* of the U.S. have as-stonarica became “fascist priests” * about ML5. billion. About 86 per cent of the bitumi-ous coal produced hi the United [{Rates it loaded mechanically. AIRWAY LANES For Reservations OR 3-7340 FE 5-2513 ‘Mercenaries” was substituted "prisoners” in stories about men captured in the April invasion. a story filed May IT aodt-big to describe life la Havana a reference to a "small force” of Cuban exiles was altered to] ‘heavily armed force.” You're really hung on the girl when you write letters that she. never answers, and you answer letters she never writes > . j Aj little common sense would have prevented many divorces. Marriages, too ... A famed actress' complexion has gone to. pot. 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He said Mlt might ha a very expensive bomb Or it might be dirty bomb.” j added that "tolar having produced the bomb, they have get to invent « vehicle lor its dtotvwry with accuracy. That’s mi fo Bid Good Luck to Departing Priest LAS VBGASL Nev. (API — A star-studded Hat to eatortaiaen plana a gotag-away party tonight far Las Vegas’ "gamblan' rteat" The. Rev. Richard A. Crowley to being transferred to Spring-field, Hi., after six yean In Las Ramin. Dean arid, Is not helping Red Chinn make a nuclear bcanb, which la ana to the causes to Mo tton between the co On nnotfaer pngn-------- toe Neuberfer. said she had e ’hstrer” to what nide Red China. "After all," aht BIG BARGAINS 0x12 LINOLEUM HUBS lot Quality, Large Selection $395 GENUINE FORMICA COUNTER TOPPING if. 1st Quality . Mu (Disc. Pot.) TV« TAKE YOUR PICK! Ill Pintle Wall Tils . % OFF Reg. Sale Mm Pries 2c.......1c 4c.......2c 5c ...IVst 6c..... 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The Mm was ordered discontinued by the Roman Catholic Bishop to Nevada after aa edict —.... at the Williams in RhodMia; Earlier' in Nyasafand NDOLA, Northern Rhodesia (API «* CL Mcnnea Williams. UJL assistant secretary to toste for African affairs, today was visiting Northern Rhodeton, when fighting Js raging between African extremists and the white govern-nent's security tarn. Williams arrived Sunday — traveled to the Northern Rhodesian capital to Lusaka to visit Gov. Sir Evelyn Hone. Earlier, Williams attended a private dinner given in Blantyre, Nyntoand. by Dr. Hastings Banda, leader of the African Nationalist Malawi Congress party. Father Crowley has continued toe aariy Mm at a email chapel. More than two million Americana make their homes In house trailers. SHE EMI -.nth Id boa Um A% Established in 1890 — Never 71 years of sound management, Assets over 67 million dollars. missed paying s dMdsnd of security. Capitol Savings & Lou Assn. Established 1890 75 W. Hum Si. Puttie FE 4-0511 CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OP BUILDING PENNEYlS But former Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Lewis Strauss, Senate-House Atomic Energy Committee Chairmen Chet HoUBed, ^ Calif., and San. 'Thomas Dodd, _ Conn., said Russia had probably been testing secretly and toe United States should resume. D- fftnutf argued the United State* ought to i trame aayway, Into restrict the tests to peneetot fur-poses like harbor construction aad extracting oil from shale. Dean said be felt toe United States had not lost ground during the-34-month atomic teat morator- Li tin mnlst Himtoto «li "ihHD* ment. Would-Be-T hief Got More Than He Bargained For HUNTINGTON, Ind. (AP) — A car containing two sleeping children was stolen here Sunday but police had toe cm solved before an hour and a half passed. They figure the thief woke up to the fact he had sleeping Pas-eengera—and ditched toe car In a hurry. „___ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hereto said they stopped at a store | left the children, Tony, 4, Jackie, 3, asleep on the bock seat. Five minutes later they came gut to find the car gone. A cab driver saw the auto at the east edge to the city, with Stretch pants J WITH LEAN, CLEAN, LEGGINESS JL THAT LETS YOU BEND AND SIT WITH STAY-PUT BIT! Here’s fashion, modern science and Penney low prices in action thanks to a new stretchable fibre that provides the “limber muscle” in the fabric blends we use! Button-to-fit, lined waistbands, inner shirt stick-urns, sip fly froats, stirrup straps . the workmanship of a man’s tailor and a good buy! 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W * Priceless Protection From Kindergarten Through College! There’s no better way to begin a successful school year/ no finer encouragement toward good study habits, than this Lightolier study lamp It’s scientifically designed to flood glare-free, eye-saving light down over a wide study area ... with no harsh background shadows. Three-way light adjusts to most comfortable level. Evenglo shade-diffuser dip-dries to dean - - - and i* practically indestructible. Available in three subtle color combinations suitable for just about, any setting, including your own study sewing room or office. '' COME.IN AND SEE ITS QUALITY CONSTRUCTION CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY M Wa*r Lawrence Street Telephone FE 3-7812 TKN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST 28; 1061 Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths MSB. ELIZABETH H. GAGE Funeral aervlce will be at 2 p.m. Tueaday from the Wflliain F. Davis Funeral Home tor Mr*. Elizabeth H. Gage, 73, of 434 S. Saginaw St. Mr*. Gage died last Thursday following a brief illness. Burial is to be in Oak Hill Cemetery. Survivors include her children, Earnest Chamber* of Pontiac, Mo* tela Johnson of Oohoma, Miss., and Johnnie Mae Mitchell of Memphis, Tenn. Also surviving are three sisters She was employed in the teal Survivors include her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Charles Nasstrom of Pontiac; flour grandchildren; and two sisters. Service will be held Wednesday at f p.m. from the SparkoGriffto Funeral Home. EDWARD W. JOHNSON Edward W. Johnson. 54, of 383 Raskob St., died suddenly Sunday at Pontiac General Hospital. A member of the First Baptist Predlla Knox of Pontiac, Victoria, Church, he was employed at Pon* McClain and Lucinda Monger, bothitiac Motor Division in the service of Indiana; two brothers James and storage department for 32 Brook of Pontiac and Sam Allen years. Survivors include a son Edward W. at home and a daughter Mrs. of West Virginia. JAMES W. GILLESPIE James W. Gillespie, 60, of 8275 Epworth Blvd., Detroit, died Saturday following a long illness. A member of the Baptist Church, he was employed as a caretaker in an apartment house In Detroit. He was a member of the Seaforth Highlanders. Survivors Include his wife Lena; two brothers. John of Florida and William of Detroit; and three sis* ters, Mrs. Jean Robertson of Florida, Mrs. Christina Brown- of Waterford, and Mrs. Elizabeth Campbell of Pontiac. Service will be held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. from the Pursley Funeral Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Ward Rathbun of Pontiac. Service will be held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. MRS. GEORGE HANOUTE Mrs. George (Veva) Hanoute, 49. of 3448 Coseyburn St.. Drayton Plains, died this morning at Pontiac General Hospital from injuries received in an automobile accident early last week. MRS. DAVID PLANK Mrs. David (Isabelle) Plank, 73 of 4001 Solvay, Drayton Plains, died suddenly Saturday. She was a member of the Community United Presbyterian Church. Survivors include her husband and a sister. Service will be held Tueaday at X p.m. from the Coats Funeral Home in Drayton Plains with burial in Evergreen Cemetery. Detroit; a daughter Naiacy of Detroit; and seven grandchildren. Service will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. from the Coots Funeral Home to Drayton Plains with burial In Crescent Hills Cemetery. MRS. GUERDON ARTERY UNION LAKE - Service Mm. Guerdon. (Catherine M.) Art-ley, 85, of 6055 Carroll Lake Road, be at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Patrick Catholic Church. Burial will be to Mount Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Artiey, a member of the Daughters of Isabella of Pontiac and of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary No. 140 ofDetroit, died yesterday after a long illness William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Roy at Union Lake; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Touting of Pontiac And Mrs. Christine Kellogg of Milford; two brothers, Joseph R. McGinnis of Detroit and Hugh McGinnis of Pontiac; grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren. . JAMES F.YUGUSE James F.. Puglise, 73, of 2545 Grandview, Drayton Plains, died Sunday at Pontiac General Hospital following a long Illness. Survivors include Us wife Jessie; three sons Leo and Eugene of Waterford Township, Dale of Tho Don* Ison Johns Funeral Home servos families many miles away. Throughout Pontiac the kind dignity and high character oi Donelson-Iohns is well known. Waierer fbe distance, whatever the circumstances oil death, call us with assurance of prompt and sympathetic service. SINUS Sufferers good nows for you! Exclusive nsw '-'hard Cairo" SYNA-CLEAR Decongestant tablets act instantly and continuously to drain and danr nil nasal-sinus cavities. One "hard cere" tablet gives up to 8 hours relief from pain and pressure of congestion. Allows you to breathe easily steps watery ayes and runny nose. You con buy SYNA-CLEAR at THRIFTY DRUG STORES, without need far a proscription. Satis taction guaranteed by makar. Try it today! GLENN H. BARTON MILFORD TOWNSHIP—Service for Glenn H. Barton, 37, .of 505 Burns Road, will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Milford Memorial Cemetery. ’. Barton died unexpectedly Saturday at Pontiac General Hos- Surviving besides his wife Carol are two sons, Robert ‘and Ronald, both at tomte; his mother, Mrs. Andrew Barton; a brother, Leonard of Union Lake; and a sister, Ella Gauthier of Orchard Lake. ROSOOE M. BELL LAKE ORION - Roacoe M Bell, 81, of 194 Philadelphia St. died today at his residence after a four-year illness. His body is at Allen's Funeral Home. Mr. Bell, a member of the Holy Name Society of St. Joseph Catholic Church, is survived by his wife Agnes; two daughters, Mrs. Carmelite Eckhart of Lake Orion and Mrs. Oral Hardy of Detroit; MRS. FRED LAUER KEEGO HARBOR—Service for Mrs. Fred (Ella M.) Lauer, 75. of 2340 tius Lake Road, will be at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Hone. Burial will be to Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Pontiac. Mrs. Lauer, a member of Baptist Cbiirch, died yesterday after a 2H-year illness. Surviving besides her daughter-in-law Mr*. Mary C Brown of Keego Harbor 'are four grandchildren. RALPH G. W1LKOP UNION LAKE — Service for former Holly resident Ralph G. Wilkop, 38, of 811 Ernest Road, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow to the Chapel of the Flowers at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Wilkop died Saturday in an automobile accident in Row Township. His body is at the Dryer Funeral Home, Holly. Surviving besides his- wife Margaret are three daughters, Sandra, Darlene and Lue Anne Wilkop, all at home; father. George Wilkop of Troy; a brother, Charles of 1Toy; three sisters, Mrs. Evelyn Bone of Holly, Mrs. Margaret Rusher and Mrs. June Williams, both of California. B* \. AU. FIRST QUALITY MATERIAL p!?|tgp BRAND HEW, 1961 AUTOMATIC ZIGZAG WHITE Sowing Mochine ' Sine* 1878 *59*° What It CERTIFICATES AND JELLY BEANS - Looking over their Pontiac Public Library certificates are (from left) Anthony Ardniaga, 10, of 286 Midway St., Carmen Garda, 11, of B-57 N. Parke St., Mary Drake, 11, of 689 N. Perry St., and Carolyn Bowling, 10, of 215 Rutgers St. r—*ia« rna rk.t. They were among the winners of certificates for reading up to 25 books during the library’* sum-. ■ mer reading did) program. The dub had its annual party last Friday. Carolyn, obviously has a slight advantage over the others. She's holding the party’s Jelly beans. Bomb Is Exploded at Newsman's Door PARIS (AP) — A big plastic bomb exploded today at the' door of an apartment building where Hubert Beuve-Mery, director rtf the newspaper Le Monde, lives. Beuve-Mery was not at home, o one was hurt. Plastic bombs are usually the work of French ultrarightists opposed to President Charles Gaulle's promise at independence for Algeria. Le Monde, one of France’s most, respected paper*, supports the policy. Report More Cholera HONG KONG (AP)-Five i cholera cases were reported Hong Kong today, bringing the total number of confirmed cases The death toll remained at 10. ALUMINUM I SIDING and I ■decorative stone! IHsM.N Current oil reserves in Canada,! according to estimates, amount tol one-half tank car for every rest-! dent. Only WHITIS FIN8ST QUALITY F^^^WARAHTEED Free Home Pemsnstrattoa Withim IS Mils Eadfos New 7-Foot Vacuum Cloantr Hose Braided CloHi, All Rabbnr (no plastic or vtofU twhsogs with Yew OM ftsesabl* Haas Bads Isgslor 17JJ $4»5 > Delivery (SERVICE Farts and IMPAIR l__ „_____■■R . ON ALL CLCANERS Disposal lags—Noses—freshes—Jetts Attackmonto- ffc. "Rebuilt by Cart's Appliance* Using Our Own Parte" iLX*TAOLU Fully Guaranteed Attachments Included $1.25 Week Free Borne Deaeistratioa 01 4*1101 7 Within 25 MHe Rodim CURT’S APPLIANCES Fuetery Aath.rlsr* WhIU Dc.I.r NIW LOCATION <481 HATCHERY RD. iimria BACK JO SCHOOL STUDY LAMP SALE Hotel Provides 'Extras' I for Its Busy Guests Famous Sight-Engineered LIGHTOLIER LAMP at New, Low Prices for Every Budget... ■_ ONLY NEW YORK (UPI) - Guests to the lobby of one New York hotel at last have found out from the manager why the electric dock to the lobby always is three min-l utesfast. ! An executive of the hotel explained that the dock is purposely fast to allow guests extra time to keep their appointments: "In the long run the guests will always thank us for helping them to be on time," be said. ARMSTRONG ALPHALT TILE in QUALITY MuVk ARMSTRONG VINYL — EXELON IWQUAUTY $X89 Ca**, 9*9x1/16 *0 80 Piscas AU COLORS CRAY MARBLC !*♦ BUCK MARBLE Quality guarantied ENOUGH TILL MASTIC, TRIM, ETC FOR A r*T' BATH 4' HIGH — 70 FT. FOR $lf.$0 Exclusive Lumilon sho do-diffuser provides eye-easing glarsluss light outward and downward through luminous styrene... tittered light upward through tho mosh metal baffle. 21" high, 18" diameter shade. INCLUDING 50-100-150 WATT BULB J, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 98, IMl ELEVEN : Danish Miss Likes Life in U. S. ■y MAPWtiawE DOEREN guest of the Herbert 0. Glenna Mm and hot dogs are “the la 90 mites Jlith of Ooptn- Twenty-three-year-old blonde of Henry Clay Avenue, likea greatest." > hagen, Miss Nielsen arrived to • Aim Marie Njrlsen who lives in the American way of life sad - A graduate of Haatev TVach- America on Jane * as a coun- Roskilde, Denmark, house- thinks our hambuigerst French er's Training College which aster at Guaw Sharparoon, 8 mites north of New York City. It is operated by the New Yack Mission Sociaty, tor underprivileged children. hen were made through the World Friendship Federation, Interesting guest of the Herbert G. I. Glenns of Henry Clay Avenue is Ann • Marie Nielsen of Roskilde, Denmark, (at left) who misses her cocker spaniel back home but makes friends with one of the Glenns' three Scotties. Womens Section Where There’* a Will , Abby Rely on Good Features By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I*ve pot a problem a lot of girls my age have. I am 14 and look worse than my brother. In other words I am flat-chested. I am so discouraged I don't know what good points for now. If, at age If, you are still concave where you should be Convex, find yourself a lingerie shop, and you’ll come out ahead in noth* lag flat. DEAR ABBY: Our 12-year-old doesn’t know the first thing about how to handle money, and his father ft The boy gets $2 a week Just for breathing. He is supposed to keep his room picked up for this, but be won’t hang up his trousers without a fight. He has never saved a dims in his Ilfs. He had four teeth extracted this summer and, since he is too hi* for the "fairy" to leave money under his pillow, his Dad paid him a dollar a tooth. I am against handing out money for no reason at all. My husband and I an having some heated arguments over it What would you dot ALWAYS THE LOSER DEAR LOSER: Before you can teach your small boy how to handle money, you Should tsach your big bay how to handle his aon. He Is doing the boy no favor by giving him IL. ,J-~ tk. ---“ ---- save something — If It’s only a dims a week. Building a bank account la one phase in building character. A A * DEAR ABBY: A new nun recently Joined our company. He la middleaged and very attractive. He announced right off the bat that he was married. Knowing this, we single girls didn’t get our hopes up. I work where the records are kept. I saw his application for employment, and he filled in "BACHELOR" where it had "MARITAL STATUS.” I can understand why a married man would try to pasa himself off as a bachelor — hut why should a single man lie and say he is married? I don’t get it JUST NOSY DEAR NOSY: The gentle- for what he gets, and hill appreciate it more. And insist that ha to bt bothered. So don’t bother Wed in Ann Arbor; on Southern Trip Candlelight vows of Marcia May Thomas to William L. Van Fouen were spoken before Rev. Richard Cockrell Saturday evening in St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Am Arbor. Daughter of former Pontiac residents, Mrs. F. Lee Thomas of Holme* Beach, Fla., and the late Mr. Thomas, the bride wore chalk white pique styled with chateau neckline, circular back panda and train. Silk illusion veiling fell from a qijeen a crown of torn and tulle. MRS. WILLIAM L. A white orcMd centered her cascade of white roam and stephanotis. Duane J. Thomas of Ann Arbor gave his sister In marriage. Attendants wore hyacinth silk sheath dresses and small 'silk crowns. Mary Aim Thomas of New York City, her sister’s maid of honor, carried deep orchid carnations, stephanotis and orchids. ' Bridesmaids Mrs. Jaynel Moore of Ypdlanti, Mrs. Robert J. Ensworth Jr. of Plymouth, Mrs. Gordon Burrer of Cincinnati and Mrs. J. Thomas Markham of Pittsburgh canted lavender orddds. The bridegroom, soij of "the , Robert D. Van FoawnS of Cincinnati, Ohio, had Dr. Frank C. Wilson of Houston, Tex., for Ms best man. Seating guests were J. Thomas Markham of Pittsburg, Peter Van Vterah and Gerald Wolberg of Detroit, Gordon Burrer, Carl Solway and Dr. Richard Puls of On dnnatl. Mrs. KJtll P. Danielson and Mrs. Robert Pearce of Pontiac assisted at the reception in the Ann Arbor American Legion Hafi. - ’• The new Mrs. Van Eoesan was graduated from the University Of Michigan School of ; Nursing. ‘Her husband, an alumnus of Virginia Military Institute, holds a master’s de-, gree in business administration from U. of M. where be will study engineering.. The newiyusds are motoring hi the southern states. Fall Nawt! Fashion :oo* ioi out 110 CratliUfid PeiMMBt $7*°* I" *** 515 Mil til permanent MO* for w $20 fifty pinMMit Your halrdd plays such an important part in the new Mason fashion*, that whethar you're $ baek-to-»chooltr or her mother, you’ll . welcome the transition now et these big sale prices. Shampoo and fashion sat included. Th* shorter haircut for fall $ J00 Personalised by donnell kaircutting stylists « $25 LUXURIOUS KATHY WAVE Now you can have the you've always wanted—the wave with me finest lotions at half price. Haircut extra. ir 'BUDGET DIPT. Shampoo and Set $1.50—Hnirent $1.50 ----IAS m later* “ Ssnssnr n HAIk STYLISTS donnell l MIRACU mils We Specialize in Corrective FI 8-9039 Hair Coloring Your Plans Violate Convention By The Emily Past Institute Q: My two daughter! would like to be married at a double wedding. The older one wag married before, but this wUl bt the first marriage for the younger one. Would ft b» prop-or, under the dream stance*, to have a double wedding’ My The Glenns met their guest through Lorrayne Bdberg of Wheaton. 111., who is also visiting them. Miss Edberg who is secretary to Dr. Ted Engstrom. president of Youth for Christ International, met Ann Marie in Denmark during a youth congress sponsored by Youth tor Christ, held In Copenhagen in issr. Leaving Wednesday for Wheaton with Mias Edberg, Ann Marie will travel on to California to vlatt relatives, flying back to New York to time for the return to her homeland on Sept. 28. Her pupils in Denmark will enjoy hearing about Pontiac (daces of Interest, Greenfield Village, Northland Shopping Canter and a trip to Bob-Lo. Activities Soon to Be Fall Style By Bim SAUNDERS Only ana mors carefree weekend left until summer cottages will bs dosed and back-to-echool plans will have caught up with the all too short summer season. * * A At Bloomfield Open Hunt and Metamom Hunt the early dubbing season precedes the more formal hints, and bowling groups will return to lanes and more civic duties. A A h At Metamora Saturday Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence B. Hlgbte and Mr. and MM. Cornelius N. Ray II entertained at cocktails and dinner for the Victor H. Taylors who have been living in Metamora this sum- Energetic Mrs. Chit H. Zub-er entertained at a recent luncheon for several members of the Woman's Association of the Detroit Symphony to plan for the season which opens Oct 5. A A A Nothing daunted by (he cancellation ot the Metropolitan Opera’s season, the Detroit Opera Thsaler It going ahead with plans for a luncheon and fashion show, Sept. 7, In the gardens at Cranbrook. Invite Alumnae to AD Pi Meeting Mrs. Fred R. Wuellner of Hummel Drive, president of the North Suburban Alpha Delta PI Alumnae Association, will be hostess to tbs alumnae in this area 8 pm., Sept. 7 for tbs first meeting of the year. Cohostess for the event will be Mrs. Richard Hilkey. Members new to this area are urged to attend. For information call Mrs. WueUasr. be dreesed as a bride, but the older one cannot ot course wear bridal dothes. Both sisters are vary dose and would like to be married at a double wedding if possible, without violating convention. A: I'm very sorry, hut the situation you describe does not: Ifitd itself to a double wedding. One bride In whtta and the ether la a color would ha ■eemi very unfair to the one to share this very special oo-caeton with one who haa already had her wedding. Q: wm you kindly settle a dispute as to whether or not It is proper to tip a soup plate at the dinner table? I have always thought this bad table manners, but have been Informed by several people that, it is proper to do so. A: To take the last one or two spoonsful, it is not improper to lift the rim of your plate slightly on the bent forefinger of your left hand and tip the plate away from you. Q: I love tee cream cones and occasionally when I am out walking, I will stop at a confectionary stars and buy one and waft along the street sating it. I have been told that a well brought up person does not eat anything whan walking on the street, wui you please give me your opinion? A: In the impersonality ot a large city, it would be vary unsuitable; but in the friendliness of a village it would bo quits aU right. A A * Q: My husband and I received an invitation to a large testimonial dinner. The Invitation specifies “Black He." Will you pk what this means? A: "Black Tto" the man are expected to wear ' tuxedos and the women, din- Not So fay, Yoongateri Find Hunting for Job an Education RUTH BULLITT | It was no ngp for the average young person to |«t a Job this summer. For most, it took * let of looking. Bren whoa * JOb was found, it often wasn't sn easy Job at good pay, th# kind young people have been used to finding without too much trouble. . it it it . But most of the young people who really wanted to work, didn’t give up whan they found Jobd .were hard to corn# by. Most who wars willing to . take anything found soma kind of work to do. The resourceful ones who couldn’t get anyone to hire them got busy hiring thsmsslvss out for such neighborhood jobs ss lawn mowing, window washing, baby sitting and so on. Maybe tkte summer’s experience has been bettor for the yeung people than the experience of pari summers, whan Jobs have been easy to get. There’s real pride for any young per- son in landing a Job when Jobs are scarce. When a JobHsn’t easy to got, there’s not so much temptation for a young porson to loaf, "goof oft," or figure, "Oh wall, If Z get fired XU Just get another Job." ★ ★ ★ Also whan Jobs bsooma scares young poojdo tend to think of the future and begin to see the Importance of educational and Job training. Nothing their parents and teaeh-an can tall them about the value of education makes the impresstsn that finding unskilled Jobe "anyone eon da" teas than plentiful. Bo while It is good for young people to have summer Jobs—It isn’t too bed for than to hare to oompete to get them and work hard to hold them. Anything else gives them a falsa idea ot their equipment for earning a living. ■it. it it writs for "How to Hare a Happy Husband." Just sand U cants to Hath Miliett Reader Barrios, c/o The Pontiac Press, PjO. Bob 489, Dept A, Radio City station, New York 19, N.Y. Personal News flriswaotly ’ meafte that The Emily Poet Institute cannot answer personal mail, but questions of general interest are answered in this column. A A A' Details for tbs announcement and christening of e baby are described in the new Emily Pori Institute leaflet entitled "The New Baby ” 1b obtain s copy send tan cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to The Emily Post Institute, care of Ihs Pontiac Press. Early In September, Joel Thome, son of Dr. and Mrs. : Maurice Thome of James K Boulevard will leave from New York City for Israel to begin his first season as percussionist with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. A graduate of the Eastman School of Music, Mr. Thome recently returned from Marl-bore, Vt., where he performed chamber music alt the Mart-boro Music Festival under the direction ot Rudolf Beridn. He has been invited to return In 1962 to perform the Bartok-Sonata for Two Pianos and percumten with Mr. Ssridn.: A A ■ A Fun weekend at the Haraan’s Island summer boms of the Eugene Clelsnds of Waterford began Friday with the arrival ot MM. Lloyd Thornton, Mrs. Lester Enos and Mrs. Fred , Bohlman of Pontiac for sn afternoon of bridge, Mr. Thom-ten Joined the group on Saturday for a day an Lake St. Clair and the river on tbs Clel-ands* sail-boat with the ladies taking turns at the tiller. AAA The E. M. Stegers wifi) their children Leigh, Jane and Stacy spent last week with her mother, Mrs. Ralph W. Beebe of Sylvan Lake. AAA Marie Peterson, son of the Cart Patersons of Going Street celebrated his 8th birthday Wednesday with his young friends as guests. Enjoying sn afternoon of games were David Taylor, David DeLong. Debbie and Jo Anne Sturgis, Candy Stokes, Michael and Steven Abbott, lhariene Flgurskey, Jerry and Sandra Roach, Carole Ann, Frank and Karyn Frierson and Pat Smiddy. A A A Returned to their home on Csmbraok Lane, Waterford Towmhip, are the Jack Buck-leys and daughters Unde and Paula, who have bean vacationing in Los Angeles'and* San Francisco. Pat Kidwell Will Marry Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Kid-well, Meigs Street, Drayton Plains, announce the engagement of thsir daughter Patricia Ann to Kenneth A. Armstrong, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Peny ot Pine Lake Avenue, Keego Harbor. A Sept. 29 or 90 wedding Is planned. Blot Silk Spots Out Blot — don’t nib — to remove spots from silk doth. The National Institne of Dryctean-ing haa warned drydsanere on this, and the advice Is good for anyone trying to remove spots at home. If ft's silk, Mot- — don't rub; tamp —don’t brush. 2-DR. AUTOMATIC DEFROST No More Defrosting of Refrigerator Section 100 LB. TRUE ZERO FREEZER NO MONEY DOWN Free Service ... Free Delivery SYLVANIA 23 M “HALO-LIGHT TV CONSOLE The Only Eye Comfort Feature Built Into Any TV Today—“Halo-Light” | CLOSE OUT OF PREVIOUS MODEL 99 Days for Cash ... No Money Down w ..No: 1km\) HOUSEKEEPING OF PONTIAC Open Monday and Friday ’tit 9 51 WEST HURON'STREET FE 4*1555 -J'V tfWBIiVB THB PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1061 —August beauty triumph!— ■Protonic Hair Treatment " FREE! With Remarkable } re-awakening , for aun-dry ; hair...see ■ new sheen, t feel I luxuriant ■ texture! Nsf ; Serena [Cold Check The§e Many Extras—All included eisners 1 Floor Phone FE 8-1343 tntWaal Kit Always HnM Op#n Mom. n4 FxL 9:30 ajm. 'HI 9M p.m. 42 N. SAGINAW STREET an CONDITIONED m jKd - jrA IPCM0NAUY conoucteo rout Wal/t^^ 1 OCTOBER 7TH ^HOLIDAY 16 Exciting Days in the Islands LEAVE SY JET DIRECT FROM DETROIT En|ey th# lilting kiiwlosi living #f Ih# Hawaiian lilandt an • dr.om vacation yaa'I navar forgot. Your Stay wHI include beautiful island (totals plus S days in Islands of Maul and KauU .ani 9 oxdling days in Honolulu. $8851 >' Writs or Cal for » FREE KXDEHS. J I Nam#.........<| I Address..... | JlOy..... ^ M''itT! 702 West Huron PE 8-9611 Don't Prafee Child if It's Going to Stop There By MURIEL LAWRENCE Las June Peggy’* parents received • letter from her high ischool principal. It told them that | although she'd missed a 12,900 college scholarship by a poor math mark he considered her a studept of outstanding ability. He said that his counsel would ha available for other tuition grants. Oh, how proud they wen!. They told me about It Her mother called relatives to read them the letter. Her father took it to hi* office to •how his colleagues. They praised and praised and praised. Yesterday a pale aad dinap-pointed Peggy said to me, "Do yen' know what Papa naM to me toot night? He eald I ought to be thinking of finding n Job for the fall. He eald that at my age us to Jest bang not anyway, for a Hug while. In Use peat I have suggested that praise, of a child’s achievement is ^ hidden demand for continuing achievement. . ★ It also contains a promise of continuing support of the achievement. Please don’t misunderstand me. I think dud young people can survive without college degrees. I think that parents who can't afford to finance the earning of the degrees are entitled to say so. But I also think that they should ssy so is soon as possible so that their children know where they stand, instead of depending on the promise which is implicit in all praise, [ school achievement. Nor Is tt Jast tl sidll-bat when his teacher’s arrives, wonder sadly how we’re going to manage. Lois will be inflated to the sides for the chocolate cake she has made--and then get fussed at lor the number of she used for her Icing. Let's watch It Such praise to like lifting a two-year-old up on a high table, saying. ' Jump—and I’ll catch you,” and then moving away ao he Jumps into nothing. Put mildly, it to not very kind. 1'Ship-shape' Suit _ (UPD Completely wdfke the many a coed from entering the college swimming pool, a new tank suit holds Ms shape without stretching or sagging. Tito suit cornea in Jade grsen, royal blue, mandarin red. Mack and navy, lbs WPS even May to without straps- Final Week of Our SUMMER SALE! rd bo needing pretty thing# he oonldnt afford to get me. . . Even if college ttdttoa grants were still available, Peggy wouldn't want one. Not any more; of sapporttag them. We'll glow- make herself a dress—hot when aha tasnaa to a tricky sleeve fitting, find eomalvea tea basy getting sapper to help. WC'Il brag of Howard’s violin Garden Reception Follow Wed in Christ Church A garden reception in the Bir-1 princees-Une bridal gown of white mingham home of the Junior Burl silk-faced peau de sole styled with Schmidts followed the candlelight i day evening in Christ Church Oran-brook. Rev. Gerald O'Grady officiated. The bridegnem to the sew et Mrs. Hnmbert Nammer of South-field nod Arthar G. Nammer of Detroit Hand-run Alencon lace toadied with seed pearls accented the Speak Vows in Claikston Ceremony Candlelight vows of Ann Louise Hamilton to Lawrence R. Ollltfe were spoken before Rev. William Richards Saturday evening in the First Methodist Church of Clark-ston. I Parents of the bride ere the Kenneth M. Hamilton* of North HiUdale Drive. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Bert L. Olliffe of Ctorkston and the late Mr. Olliffe. ! Fashioned of white Schlfffl nylon lace, the worn with toee gauntlets and silk Illusion veMag. White carnations and Biles of the valley tier sister’s honor maid, while another sister Mrs. Joseph F. Kotik of Rochester and Sophia Skinner served as bridesmaids. Pink roses and carnations complemented their laVender • silk shantung sheaths. Cathy Gormong, in pink organdy, held an all-pink nosegay and Joiey Kosik carried the rings. Lynn Canon was best bub. SAVE 30% to 40% on ' RE-UPHOLSTERED or NEW, CUSTOM-MADE FURNITURE wmumwpiT Fumifuro Makar# and Ophototororo 270 Orchard Lake FE 4-0568 •mkf OoMaaS Onto Ov#r M »•#*»« American Beauty and pink roses distinguished Nay M. Hamilton, Church, of Christ 87 Lafayette St. Th# Church of Christ EASTERN LABOR DAY MEETING MU U held tt IT LtltyetW Street. SvtnceiUt Billy Artec formerly of L»wrencebur». Tenn. now of Shreveport. L#. M I Am. Mth Weekly Service* etch Eve. 1:M p. m. Sunday Mom. Service* . 10:1# ». m. Sunday Bve. Service*..... 7:0# p. m. Bteket lunch Ml be eeryed la Oakland Park, Sept. M. There MU be Afternoon Service* followed with Congregational Sin(lnf and Oueet Sneaker* from vartou* Concregatlone of the Boitera United State*. Tli» Public la Cordially Invited to Attend This Soria# at Ooapol MooHnga MBS. LAWBENCE B. OLLIFFE brother wKh Thomas .......... — Kenmore, N.Y. aad Joha Greene of Clarknton. For the ceremony and church reception, Mrs. Hamilton choae powder blue silk organza and corsage of pink roaes. Mrs. Olliffe wearing cocoa brown silk crepe with orange accessories clipped yellow roses to her purse. After a Northern Michigan honeymoon, the couple will begin their senior year at Central Michigan University. Prospective Bride Is Given Shower | Miriam Harrington, bride-elect of Thomas Jacobson, was honored with a miscellaneous bridal shower at the Silver Circle Drive home of Mrs. Elmer Jacobson Wedenaday evening. LOANS for Hone Improvement -REMODELING HOME is the family center ... we’ll help you to , enjoy it while the youngsters are growing up. If you are thinking of adding a room/ modernizing your < home or finishing off an attic. ADD TO THE VALUE OF JOUR PRESENT HOME WITH A HOME IMPROVEMENT LOAN HOME LOANS MORTGAGES We Purchase' Land Contracts M0.0M AVINGS Mm. William Jacobson and Mrs. Robert Jacoboon. Among the 38 guetf* present were the prospective bride's mother Mrs. Norbert C. Harrington of Litchfield Drive, Drayton Plains, her fiance’s mother, Mrs. Elmer Jacobson, Caroline Harrington of Pontiac who will serve as honor m#id and Sue Gilliam of Utica who wi)l serve as bridesmaid. The honoree will exchange vows i with Mr. Jacobson Sept 2 at Our Lady-of-the Lakes Catholic Church. Immediately following the luncheon TCceptidfi at the Elks Temple the couple will leave for Boston, Maas., where the prospective bridegroom will work on his master’s degree in business administration at Harvard University. Shower Is Given Wedding bells and pink carnations completed the setting for a miscellaneous riwwer Thursday .honoring Agnes Mazza, bride-elect of Charles F. Tefend. The event was given by Mrs. Domenic Mazza and Mrs. Joseph Bonfiglio of Hickory Court. Parents of the couple who will be wed Sept. I are the Eageae Massaa of LMasbory A venae sad the B.J. Tetrads of Lake Orion. Among the 45 guests present for file affair were the prospective bride’s mother, her fiince’s mother, and Mrs. Eugene Nickman who will serve as matron of honor for her sister. Hold Weekly Game Members of the Wednesday Duplicate Club held their weekly bridge game at the Elks Temple. Tied for first place honors were Mrs. Dan Macpherson and Mrs. Lester Hamilton, Donald Bowen and Donald Stephenson. Other winners included Mrs. Robert Segula and Mrs. Arnold Richards, Ira Benjamin and Ernest Guy. Clayton’s Name Brand August Furniture Sale PICK-UP and DELIVERY SERVICE COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE 719 W. Huron FE 4-1536 Quality Cleahihg Since 1929 he Mmart?tee* smart MBS. DONALD A. NUMMEB illusion veiling. Album lilies, and liUes-of-the-vaitoy rested the bride’s white prayer book. attended r. Mrs. Da via luaer, mro. Stuart Frankfoid,and Julie Guest, of Birmingham served asi bridesmaids with Mrs. James Ryckman of Kalkaska. Rubrum lilies complemented their frocks of peony pink chiffon. Virginia Cutler, of Lancaster, Pa., was her cousin’s Junior attendent. ..... +. (,■#. * Kenneth E. Gulow of Grouse Potato waa heat mao. Abut Btralth of Northvtlle, Arthar Poo-doll and David Shook at Detroit, the bridegroom's brother-in-law James E. Byckmaa and William B. Schmidt 111 seated the gaeote. Pink cymbidium orchids accented j Mrs. Schmidt's royal blue draped chiffon heath. Mrs. Nummer, wearing aqua chiffon, chose beige cymbidium orchids. A honeymoon trip to Mackinac Island Was planned by the couple who will live in Mt. Pleasant while attending Central Michigan University. Rub Buttons Clean Shirt buttons sometimes become slightly discolored when laundered. This usually can be removed by rubbing the buttons with an ink eraser. 75 Cot snd Set Included Why Pay More? Hollywood’s On* Price Plan Includes: Easy to manage hair cut, permanent by an erperi-enced operator and styled set. t Hollywood * , No A intmenl ^ ***** ^ $ Your Permanent Completed in Two Hours FE 8-3560 Qver Baxley’s LAST 4 DAYS! ALL FLOOR SAMPLES “RED SAVINGS UP TO 40% Colonial and Modern Living Room—Dining Room—Bedroom Furniture by: * COLONY HOUSE * VALENT1NE-SEAVER * SEEMAY * KR0EHLER * JAMESTOWN-STERLING; HEYW00D-WAKEFIELD; SPRAGUE k CARLET0N * HOOKER * BASSET * DILLINGHAM * FAIRFIELD * Tables By: HERMAN * T0NK * IMPERIAL * MERSMAN DILLINGHAM Bedding By: SIMMONS SEALY Lamps By: STIFFEL REMBRANDT M0DERNA * M0DEUNE BETTY LEE . FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES MAGNAV0X STEREO HI-FI AND TV MOHAWK—FIRTH—MAGEE—ARTL00M CARPETING OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY EVES. ’Tit* 9 $ Air Conditioned 3065 Orphtrd Like Road I The “Quality Store Phone 682-1100 4 / THE PONTIAC IPRgSS, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1961 THIRTEK Shaw-Asher Wed in Firs Judith Wagner Is Honored Dr. H. If. Smie officiated at < Shaw* of Auburn Avenue, at the candlelight nuptials of Elisa- church recaption, beth Susan Asher to'James 0. Shaw Saturday evening in the First Baptist Church. The newlyweds joined their parents. the Homer L. Ashers of Waterford Township and the John R. WisklcoalA PLAY A PIANO) “NT had the chance to learn." Don't deprive your child of the priceless benefits learning to play a fine piano affords! Arid choose aKimball... all the family will be proud of owning the world’s leading piano. Remember, every Kimball piano is built to standards famous for over 100 yean. Today, see, hear, try our beautiful new Kimballs 2 FLOOR MODEL SPINET PIANOS—LARGE DISCOUNTS long Easy Terms SMALL BABY BRAND PIANO GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. It East Huron St. FE 4-0566 Wo Soil Chord Organ looks and tullo. H topped a bouffant tiered skirt and fall chapel train. 8Uk lllu was sttaehsd to a Bride-elect Judith Wagner was honored at a miscellaneous shower Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Gary Petty covered in your choice of fabrics—for such a tiny price! Choose from charming provincial prints or nubbly textured tweeds in decorator colors. -? Foam cushioning that's super-soft, and quality construction that assures relaxing comfort, combine to moke this fine chair a beautiful addition to your home. 34" HIGH 28y2” WIDE 21" x26'/a" T-CUSHION .. . . I Only $10 Down will order a pair of chairs for you—delivery about 30 days. USE A WIOGS REGULAR CHARGE ACCOUNT—90-DAY ACCOUNT— Oft DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN * 24 W. HURON ® Open Mpn. and’Fri. ’til 9 ® mm P^lRK FREE on our own privatt lot dirocHy bohind store. V T T JV. FOURTEEN h '' . ' • ■ ■ ' \; "■ ’ ■, , \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST 28,'W1 ROUND—(Full Cut) Special Sale -a&ps "super right" Steaks QUALITY RIGHT..,TRIMMED RIGHT...PRICED RIGHT...SOLD RIGHT "S«ipir'lti|ht" It Fully Matured, Groin* Fed leaf' One High Quality-No Confusion—One Prica ot Advartised PORTERHOUSE or CUBE 991 "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY, SKINNED Smoked Hams SHANK PORTION None Priced Higher 39 ( - 49c Skinless Fripnks Canned Hams Cantor Cut Ham Sikes . . • • 2-LB. QQm 1-LB. . i PKG. U7W PKG. POPULAR BRANDS 44.1. CAN 4*15 B-LB. CAN 89c 45< 5*39 OPEN PIT 11*02. BTL Barbecue Sauce 33* - 47* ASPs Pare Vegetable Shortening dexo 69^ 3 THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES 2“27e HOME GROWN, STEM-COOLED Sweet Com » 29< HOLIDAY PICNIC NEEDS Mavis Canned Beverages !C ROOT BIER LEMON-LIMI GOLDEN GINOIR All RUCK CHERRY PALR GINGER All ORANGE, COLA, GRAPE 4 » 49* Master Chef .SrKL om, 29c Dixie Old Cops m* o7» 79c Dixie Plates *SP 5% 47c Dixie Cold Cups ««■ 5% 27c Stpiriir PlatteS»49c Dixit Hot Ctfs «>» »» 47c ^•jwilor Melw 49c Dixie Cup Refill* ., 37c Sett Hopkins Suf «» 10c ftrb #r Spoons £& » 19c CHARCOAL BRIQUETTES IMS. BAG 69c |.i9 Bulk Charcoal • ••••••>•• 5 .«• 39c Aluminum Foils Luncheon Meat 3 1.00 Dailey Polish Dills . . . '.T 29c Grapefruit Juice »«*» 4 % 99c Coral Liquid pordisiTwmhing • e . ’K1 39c SAVE 16C—JANE PARKER Apple Pie 39( SAVE 10c—JANE PARKER Angel Food « e e e a ■ UWI **• 39c JANI PARKER FRESH, CIUSP Potato Chips e e e e e e e e BOX 59c YOUR CHOtCB—2 PKOS. OP * ^\ Popside or Fudgside 12 «• 49c Reynolds Wrap IBS' Alcoa Fail..... • rou 25-fT. ROLL AH prices in iMs ad affective thru Tiiee.. Aup. 29th THE Git AT ATLANTIC t SACMC Tf A COMPANY, INC. Super Markets ft MIRKS'S DiPtNDABlE tOOD MIRCHANT SINCI IIS9 AGP—OUR FINEST QUALIT1 Chunk Style, Light TUNA r K. M IJ CAN* JJ5J r AGP—OUR FINEST QUALITY Yaftow Cling—New Pack Peaches 4»99c ANGEL SOFT CLEANSING Tissues 5 - 89‘ T? AGrP BRAND OUR FINEST QUALITY GRAPE _L 4 JUICE l-99c Risdon's Large Curd or Old Faehioned COTTAGE CHEESE POUND | I 1C CARTON ■ WM I 4 Kitchen Charm WAXED PAPER I \LW TWO 2-CT. PACKAGES 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS A. MONDAY AUGUST 28, 1061 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FIFTEEN Annual Romeo Peach F Open Friday Wed in Oxford Area Newlyweds Living in Waterford ORION TOWNSHIP - Marilyn Cromwell became the bride of Kenneth Austin with the exchange of nuptial vows recently at the nee Methodist Church in Oxford. Officiating at the ceremony was the Rev. Harlow Hoyt. The bride is the daughter of Mr. 'and Mrs. Clarence Cromwell of flfUPoata Road. Parent* of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Austin of tXt South St., Ortonville. For her wedding the bride chose a gown of embroidered imported organdy finished with roses Hire 16 Teachers a! Walled Lake Added Staff to Meet •Needs of 300 New Students; 6,500 Enrolled WALLED LAKE—Sixteen additional teachers have been hind in the Walled Lake School District to meet the needs Of the 300 students who will classes next month. I bo enrolled fat the district's schools whoa the fall term begins Sept. J, according to gupt. Clifford H. Smart. The staff additions bring the total number of teachers in the school system to 259. The instructors will receive salaries totaling about 180,000. 4 * ★ t Meetings for teachers Mil be held Sept. 5-6 at the schools they have been assigned. All students will attend classes on a full-day schedule except kludergartners. Unavailable facilities in elementary schools, however, have made it necessary to assign two sixth grade classes to each of the two junior high schools. MORE NEEDED BY *#* "It’S apparent that im mentaiy classrooms will be needed by the fall term'in 1962,” Smart said. “Recommendations on these the school board by the Citizens’ trite school board by the Citizens’ Advisory Committee.” In new quarters also this year wtH be the elementary and The elementary classes have been moved to the Union Lake Elementary School from the Twin BChch Elementary School, the' junior high special classes have beat transferred from the Walled Lake Junior High to the Clifford H. Smart Junior High. .School Slate Is Announced j Full*Dov Sessions at itdh to Begin on Oorksl ’a softly, Sept. 8 for All . ' 7 I Her bouffant "ve» "of English1 CLARKSTON-The schedule for| illusion fe)l from a cap of Alen- lhe opening of the Clarkston con lace tips and a large organdy munity Schools has been roae, touched with seed peniis and nounced and following Sept. 6 and 7, all classes In j the schools will be in full-day I sions Sept. 8. Beginning at 9:15 a.m. to .registrations will be taken for dren attending the Knob, Clarkston and elementary schools. | Sixth grade puptb ia the Anderson vtlk urea will attend the Aadersoavilie School, while sixth graders from oil other areas will attend the Clarkston Junior High School. . Clarkston Junior High ' School pupils in grades 6 through 8 will register from 8:l3 to 11:06 and Clark in grades from 8:10 to 11 ENTIRE DAY On Sept. 8, all grades from 1 through 12 will be in attendance for the entire day. Kindergarten pupils will begin full-day sessions Sept, 11. tUudergartaers who have not already' registered may do so aay time after Tuesday, Aug. 99, In their respective buildings. At the time of their enrollment, parents have been asked to bring a copy of the child's birth certificate, a record of the protective shots the child has received and a doctor’s statement attesting to the physical condition of the child. Coronation, Floral Parade to Highlight 4-Day Event ROMEO — The annual Romeo Peach Festival, a four-day celebration which traditionally draws thousands of visitors to this center of Michigan’s fruit growing coun-will open here Friday night. One of the major tourist attractions In the state over the long Labor Day weekend, the Peach Festival this will be highlighted by a full schedule of sports MRS. KENNETH AUSTIN crystal drops. She carried a cascade at stephanotis, roses and gardenias. Mrs. Robert Thayer of Pontiac was the matron of honor. The five brideanaMt were Loretta Priest aad Karea Curry, both of Pontiac; Mr*. Wayne gchats of Drayton Plain*; Karen Cromwell, sister of the bride; and Beverly Austin, sitter of the bridegroom. Best man was Robert Thayer of Pontiac. The 350 guests, were seated by Lloyd Cromwell, br “ er of bride, Louis Gktdings Warren, Dave Schatz of Roches-Wayne Schatz of Drayton Plains and " David Garnett of Pontiac. Patricia Polhkottie of Clarkston was the flower girl, A reception was held at Collier Lanes following the evening rites. The newlyweds now are living in Waterford, following a honeymoon in Northern Michigan. Daughters Engagement Announced by Couple UNION LAKE — Mr. and Mrs. William D. Lintz of 9151 Funston announce , the engagement of their daughter Joan Hope to Patrick L. Cassidy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shyril Cassidy of 9471 Portage St. Sept. 9 wedding is bring planned. In the 6th century B.C, Persia, as Iran was then called, ruled a huge empire stretching from Egypt to India. A secret police system known as "The Eyes and Ears of the King” kept close check oil the provincial governors. The monarch was protected by the “Imptor-"a personal bodyguard that always numbered 10,000. PACKAGE DEAL—A familiar scene but one that always turns heads In the neighborhood of the Avon Township home of Mr. and Mrs. Oiva Hed-berg are their triplets (from left) Sandy, Sidney and Simone being pushed in a “tripeyde” by twins Pam and Paula Angus, 16. The stroller was designed for the 21-month-old children by their father, an electrical engineer. The family lives at 911 Grace St. Pam and Paula, the triplets’ regular babysitters, are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. James Angus of 3821 S. Livemois Road, Avon Township. Parents of kindergarten pupils1 will be notified by mail prior to j the opening of school, as to the] morning or afternoon session their! child will attend. Sweet Adelines Chopter to Meet in Utica Tonight The Utica-Rochester Chapter of the Sweet Adelines will meet at 8 ¥ jp-. m. today at the home of Mrs. ill be open be-'Mada Frase, 48701 Van Dyke, Utica., ' All book storep ginning Aug. 29. Clarkston school officials antict-1 pate a student enrollment of 4,200 Membership in the singing group is open to all area women. Area 4-H Members Attending State Show Over 2,000 '4-H Club members, including scores of delegates from this area, are in East Lansing today for the opening of the 46th annual State 4-H Club Show at Michigan State University. 'William Tedrick, MSU program specialist, said this year’s state show, which will continue . Thursday night, includes several, new features. For Hw first time moot con-competitive events son tor individually with Judge* about the strong and wenk points of their entries. Tedrick said no other statewide 4-H Club event ever has given members such an opportunity for individual instruction on such a large scale. PERSONAL CONTACT "Personal contact with judges and other participants should improve the educational value of each event,” Tedrick stated. * a ★ ,. Another new feature is the automotive skill driving contest. Contestants must pass a written and oral test on automobile driving. They also moot drive oa the road and through o special obstacle course. Hog carcasses will be butchered and judged for the second year A row, but for'the first time there will be public demonstrations of carcass-cutting techniques. ♦ s , ♦ , Hundreds of blue ribbons will be up for grabs during the 4-day event. Adult 4-H leaders will be honored for outstanding service and over 100 members will win educational trips in this country and Canada. Open 9-Mile Stretch of U.S. 23 Freeway MILAN UR — A nine-mile section of U.S.-23 freeway between today, ttretrh Were Wed in Davison Couple to Make Home on Lake in Clarkston DAVISON - Mr. and Mrs. Gene dale. The guests were seated by Gentges who spoke their wedding other brothers of the britoltuoml vows recently in the Lutheran George and Leigh Gentges. Church here will make their home A honeymoon in Northern Mich-on Maceday Lake in Clarkston. Igan followed the reception which The bride is the former Sue was held in the church parlors. Berason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bern son of 319 Genesee St. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. George Gentges of 3139 Marten St., Auburn Heights. For her wedding the bride chose a street-length gown of Ivory organ** with white floral by i petal cap, and she carried s bridal bouquet of gladioli camettas. Sylvia Lake of St Johns was maid of honor. Serving- as best man tor her brother was John Gentges of Fan- Actress Found Dead on Floor Friends Pick Up Empty Bottles in Gail Russell's! Apartment HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actress Gail Russell, 36, who a year ago said, “I’m an alcoholic” but .declared she had put drinking behind her, died with an empty vodka bottle by her side. * * A . The brunette beauty was found dead on the floor of her West Los Angeles apartment late Saturday night by two women neighbors. * * ★ There were other empty liquor bottles throughout her four-room, 3130-a-montb quarters. Police said Miss Russell’s death apparently was from natural causes: They said she had been hospitalized in recent years activities, a gigantic floral parade and coronation of the Romeo Peach Queen. A three-act play, “Kind Sir” by Krasna, will kick off the fun-fUtaL. events. The comedy will be stowed by the Ko-Players at 8:30 p.m. Friday the Romeo Youth Center. ■* ' A * Art and athletic events will be foe' order of the-day on Saturday. ~ ‘ Invitational Sweepstakes .Golf Tournament will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Romeo Golf and Country Gub while an 11-team softball tourney will start at 8:30 and continue all day at the Memorial Stadium.„ From noon until 6 p.m. Saturday, an art exhibit will be .presented at the Masonic Temple. TOURNEY An archery tournament Is slated from 11 a.m. to .l p.m. Saturday at the Romed State Police Post Shooting range on 33-Mile • Rood, just west of Van Dyke. A pistol will be held from 2 to 4 P-i same location. A A . A Lt. Lester Coykendall of the Lansing State Police Post will give demonstrations of trick shooting and the safe use of firearms during the pistol tourney. An antique auction Is scheduled from l to 4 p.m. at the Lions Community Field. Impressive corohatlon ceremonies for 1961 Peach Queen Dorothy Jean Bilbrey, 18, of Flint will be held under the start at the Memorial Stadium at 8 p.m. -----#----* W Television and radio personality Toby David will crown the new queen, who will be escorted by Rep. James G. O’Hara. D-Utica. Adding a, touch ot color to foe event will be another television star Jingles, who WBf be on to entertain the children. QUEEN’S BALL The coronation will be followed by the Queen's Ball at the Youth Center. Dancing will start at 9 p.m. A A A Also slated for 8 p.m. Saturday are free vaudeville acts, which will be staged at the Dons Community Field, and a street dance, listed to continue until llr30 p.m. at the A A P parking lot just off East St. Clair Street. Softball action wW resume at 9:99 a.m. Sunday. Doable cHm-I nation* In the noftbnll tournament am planned tor Sntnrdny, •Ingle eliminations are scheduled for Sunday aad the finals win be held following the floral parade on Monday. hery tournament con tin-' 1 hr 8 p.m. Sunday and ■hoot begins again at in both tourna-for top honors Horse Show will be held at foe Romeo Golf and Country Club. Monday will bo parade day In Romeo. Top attraction will be the colorful floral parade, which tost year attracted some 30,009 spectators to the village. The colorful parade up Main Street will Include some 20 (lonts, 12 bands, precision inarching units, clowns and many other attractions. The floral parade will ptart at 2 p.m. It will be preceded by a children's parade at 10 a.m. HUMOROUS PARADE The satirical Mummers’ Parade, one of foe humorous highlights of the festival, is slated for 8 p.m. Sunday instead of on Monday as in previous years. Vaudlville acts are scheduled for 9 p.m. Sunday and again at 4 and 8 p.m. Monday at the Lions Community Field. A concert by IB members of the Detroit Sympahany Orchestra will be presented at 8>98 p.m. Monday In the Romes Junior High School auditorium. The archery “shoot off” starts at 11 a.m. while finals In the pistol and softball competition begin at 4 p.m. Monday. A bowling tournament will be held Saturday. Sunday and Monday at Ormac Recreation and a carnival of. rides and amusements will be located at the Lions Community Field. Both will continue At 12:30 p.m. Sunday, the Rotary For , Caryl Ann Needham Candles Light Ceremony HIGHLAND —Caryl Ann Need-| guests were seated by Gregory ham and Paul Allen Sandford exchanged their nuptial vows Saturday evening at foe First Methodist Church, Milford. Rev; Howard Short performed the candlelight ceremony. A A A The bride Is the daughter of Mr. aad Mrs. Arthur Needham of IM E. Livingston St. The bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mr*. Fred Sandford of 14M N. Gamer Road, Milford Township. For her wfeiding the bride chose a gown of silk-faced peau de sole ce accented by a lace with tracings skirt of invert-a chapel train. Eastwood of Huntington Woods, Richard and Thomas Harman, both of Grand Rapids, and Tom Sandford of Los Alamos, N.M. A A A The church parlor was the setting for foe reception that immediately followed the rites. After their honeymoon trip to Northern Michigan, the newlyweds will live in Albion. i l to 11 ptfRA k l J tnuorof the busy 1 on 'all three holiday week- from days, dtnnor end here will be a huge fireworks display at 9:30 p.m. at the Lions Community Field. mhhmh. ’new$ Class Offered on Skin Diving Rochester YM Course to Be Held Sept. 1o to Christmas Time ROCHESTER — A skin-diving ci*«* will be a new feature in the swimming program which will be offered this fell to members of the Rochester branch of the YMCA. The fall swimming schedule, which was announced today by Jack P. Zahn of the Rochester YMCA, will be held from Sept. 16 to Dec. 23. On Saturdays, classes for beginners, both boys and girls, are to be held at 12:45 p.m. while advanced instruction for boys and girl* is stated for 1:30 pan. These classes, which are limited to else for Instructional purposes, will Include bos transportation to and from the Pontiac YMCA. Program fee to IB. Open swimming classes with no transportation available will be offered free of charge at 2:15 p.m. Saturdays. Instruction will- be available. The skin diving classes, including instruction in the use of mask, snorkel and fins, will be held cadi Saturday at 3 p.m. Membership in the Rochester YMCA Skin Div-nub will be $1 per year, the fourth Wednesday of each for father and will be at 7 1ms are ached- POLMHNG UP — Shelley Hambaugh, 11, of „ 6299 '‘Elisabeth Lake Road, Waterford Township, gets in a little extra training with Shetland /“Dancer" for competition at foe 112th UHitpn state Fair which opens Ms 10-day run Friday. The Shetland Judging is scheduled lor Sept 5 to the Coliseum, Detroit and Shelley to casting her eyes 9a one of the ribbons. The fair will end Sept. 10. ; ' OAK PARK — Sharon Shutty of 13706 Wales St. was awarded third place Saturday in the llfo annual International MBJorette contest ini Fayetteville, N.C. ' The ^S-yeaiSotd baton twirtar, daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Shutty. became eligible to enter the international competition when toe won the title of Miss Michigan Majorette in May at the Walled Lake Amusement Phylc. Hearth Were four years’ Madison— her life’s Hie low points were a series of drunken driving arrests 1960s. In 1967 she lost her driver’s licence when hpr new convertible smashed through. 6m front of a coffee shop and ' janitor. ' ; A"1 A * The judge fined her 3420 and put her on three-yuain’ probation. She vowed never to dripk again. A seed peart crown held her elbow-length veil, and she carried a cascade arrangement ot white Fugi mums with dracaenas. . ★ A A Maid of honor was Karen Needham. Suzanne McFarlano of Milford, -Nancy Weidman of Ypsitontl and Mrs. William Ayotte of South .Haven served as bridesmaids. .A * A Scott Sandford, nephew of the bridegroom, was ring bearer, flower girt was Kimberly Needham, sister of the bride. Assisting as beet man was Her-bert Gabehart of Flat Rock. The SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PgESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 28, im V A Boys Go H but Yankees Still Win Rum WASHINGTON iro-The Detroit Tiger* were eupposed to go horn today — and taka Rocky Oolavito with them. But after drubbing the Washing* ton Senators 7-4 and 10-1 yesterday —v with lots of Rocky's tour home runs nuts batted in — the were here to make up a game rained out Saturday, to # * And the Tiger* were seeking thejr 10th victory in 11 starts, trying to keep tip with the New York Yankees in the American League pennant race. The Yankees won yesterday and stayed two games ahead. and Oolavito have been lust as sential to the Tigers as Marls and Mantle have been to the Yankees. The pair collaborated yesterday to 7-4,10-1 sweep Orioles blanked Minnesota |-S with Washing- best day la a Detroit uniform. His present home run total all 38 is three higher than his total! tor all last season and his il9| RBIs leave him second only to the Yankees' Roger Maris, who has 130. The Tigers took over early in the opener and had run up a 7-1 lead by the POUR SOCKS FOR ROCK - Roc (right) and Paul FOytaek were f doubleheader team which scored In yesterday. Foytack pitched the nigh from Oolavito’* solo homer, two triples by Dick McAullffe, a triple by Jake Wood and a double by Norm Cash. A throwing error by Dick McAullffe led to three unearned Waah-ington rune in the ninth, but Tery-ry Fox and Gerry Staley came to save starter Don Moaai'i 14th victory. Staley fanned Chuck Hinton with two runners on base to end the game. Oalavtto'a three botnera accounted tor Ms of the Ttgen' IS new la the nightcap. He tod eft the tourih Inning with n 410-foot blast eff starter — and leaar — Dave Haler, Ml a three-run By The Associated Presa Cincinnati's National League leading Reds have their 3H-game bulge back today thanks to some •tout relief pitching, timely pinch I and sound managing, throe factors stood out Sunday lika the Empire State Building as tha Rada toppled second-jplace Los An|ties twfc*e ^5 and Dodgers’ Staler, and hit a two-run clout In the eighth off Mike Garala. Hits by A1 Ktline, Wood and McAullffe also brought home runs. Paul Foytack picked up tha victory, his ninth against eight losass, and pushed Washington's losing streak to nine straight. •hf hM okrfeM wood Sh ...4 111 mutaa tt ..Site am «t ..nil o-co-mu nilii Koiio* n ..}}•• Johans w til* Colorlto H till Orom rf .40#* cut u ...itit mu if ...no McA'llHo lb 4 111 BrlcM o .401 Ftm'dot ot t*l i *•(■> to ••«** Room c ...4 1 10 doUtor lb . .4 I } Mood p ... ISM Daniel* p . 000 . Till -... .0 0 0 0 A—Tool .1000 Statoy p . 0 0 0 0 aajdii J oooo C—Wo'dlln* 10 10 Woodttat t DETRorr KngjMMln tl 17-11. DP—McAullffe IB—Coehjohnooo. Detroit 1. wuhlnston §PO HOT Chicago's White Sox strength eaed their bold on fourth place, defeating Cleveland twice, 194 ‘ 43. Baltimore’s third place I the two-hit pitching of Sweep Key Doublehcader From Dodgers Redlegs Prove Tough in Qufdi thoroughly foil the bid to take over first place. Henry, Jim Branean and Jim O’Toole buried hltleaa ball in a combined 7 1*3 innings of perfect relief in the first game as the Reds surged back from a 1-1 deficit with three runs in die seventh inning and two in die eighth. Henry and Broanan then came back to pitch scoretem relief in the second game after the Dodgers had knocked out starter Ken Johnson. A double by pinch hitter Wally Post drove in the winning run In the eighth inning of the after die Reds had tied the on an error and a triple by Leo Cardenas, This followed • three-run homer by Gena. Freese off Stan Williams In die seventh inning which narrowed the Dodgers' lead to 54. Pinch hitters cams through for the Reds in the second gams, too, aa Manager Fled Hutchinson continued to make the right moves. Frank Robinson, who didn’t start, batted tor Jerry Lynch in seventh end slammed a run-scoring triple. He scored a moment w • • t • * later when pinch Utter Dick Ger-.a a • S s - -• * i -ease cisco 9-0, dropping the third-place Giants 9ii games off the pace. Milwaukee split with Philadelphia, winning the first game 11-10 in 12 inninga and suffering a 3-0 shutout at the hands of Art Mahaffey in the second. Pittsburgh and Chicago also divided a pair. The Pirates won the first 7-3 and the CUbd took the second 6-5. A standing room crowd of 30. 195 saw the Reds Inflict the eighth defeat of the season on Don Drya-dale. The Dodger, right-hander, knocked out in the sixth, was making his first start against the Reds since a rhubarb Angeles brought him a five-day suspension and a 3150 fine for throwing at Cincinnati hitters. Larry Jackson blanked the Giants with three .hits for hie eighth straight victory. It also was tiie Cards' seventh straight end 33th to a row st home. Kan Boyar helped the Cards gain the season's series from the Giants, 13-9 with a three-run homer, was his 20th. Mahaffey limited the Braves to six hits as ha posted his second straight shutout following 10 straight reversals. Tony Gonzalez drove in two runs with a home run and sacrifice fly, A 12th inning double by catcher ^ammy White, his first extra baas hit as a Na-Leaguer. drove In Frank Thomas with the winning Milwaukee ran in the opener. Jim Brewer, young Chicago right-hander, won his first major league game as Richie Ash burn paced the Cubs with three hits against the Pirates. Brewer had lost his first nine decisions, six season. Dick Groat's bases-loaded single sparked a tour-run sixth inning in the Pirates’ first game triumph. Ron Santo provided all the Cubs' runs with a pair of homers. Plttiburgh Phll*S«lphl» Former Giant Coach Prophet on Conerly DETROIT Sri* WOOS Ik lltl K*ou*h U Bruton cf 14 4 4 Cm Ik •Morton rt IflfWMHm KslM M 4 1 llOrtn c Col*vlto If ItllMSM 4. .... Cook lb ! 1 SffetpM lb 1444 McAuiKit lb Iil l TasSy cf lit# F'nondei u SlOSCottler » 1444 ROWS* • 4 114 Staler I Hit ***** * } # # # 0*rcl* p 0 4 4 4 ■ MIS* Tot* It . Mlf 4 for Bruton to Mb; b Orouodo* Mm* k % , 4M m I 444 441 i. Po-A—Detroit {14. , IMnwn, CMita. .___ ----tndos *nd C*ok. Wood. For- ____I *od Cuh. LOS—Detroit 7. WMb- Infton 4 ZB—Kollo*. McAullffe. SB-CMb. Wood. HR—Colavlto }. SB-CMb. S- r V MB EBBS SO Foytack (W. 44) * 7 1111 Stator 4 in . jjfl I Ito to 11 7 II Wf ......10 I (to MO Tt to IIS fiftase ...»• wt mi 8jj Bim Amid .....S » (to try m or n ■■ rCftoib .. 4 i s.n iso ns m « £8V::::iS» I* 888 s EL : W 8 (Malta . 44 a Ml mi 11*7 4M 471 441 Short New GM of White Sox Raplacti Resigned Graai^barg; Claims No Mon Untouchable CHICAGO (AP)-Ed Short, who has replaced Hank Greenberg as Chicago White Sox general manager. iays no White Sox player t« on the trading block—but none is considered an untouchable, either. "We’D make any deals that we think will make a better ball dub," Short said. "Hurt's t aim: To have a better club.” Greenberg, who announced his resignation at a newt conference Saturday, was not explicit on the reasons for his resignation. He said only tt was tor "personal "I- got a lot of personal prob-ems,” Greenberg said. "I’m going back to New York and Just breathe.’’/ White Sox President Arthur C. AQyn named Short Greenberg’s successor immediately after the onetime slugger announced His Greenberg purchased Sox stock with B01 Veeck when Veeck took charge of the American League dub in 1959. Allyn, who bought 54 per cent of the Sox stock from Greehberg and Veeck this season, said Greenberg will continue as a director of the White 8ex. Short, 42, started with the Sox, in 1960 as publicity director and in. 1959 became traveling secretary. Prior to Joining the ’Sox front* office, the native Chicagoan was sports director for a Chicago radio station. By United Pro## International It was old Stove Owen who once said that a quarterback like Charlie Conerly can bast you any number of ways, and with each succeeding season the ageless wonder of tine New York Giants constantly The 49-year-eld Conerly 1ms had to adapt himself to a number of playing styles siaee he first broke Into the pro rank* under Oorea In 1949, but Hke the former marine that he Is, Chuck matter what the conditions have boon. He made Owen’S out-moded "A" formation work, once completing 36 passes against the Pittaburgh Steeten from that modified single-wing, and after some difficulty, developed into one of the top ball-handlers In the "T" formation used by most pro teams. Now he’s barking signals for the Giants’ new flanker offense. * ★ dr When the Giants took on the Dallas Cowboys in an exhibition game at Albuquerque, N. M., Saturday night, Conerly, like the rest of the club, god (rtf sluggishly In the thin air. In fact, Charlie overthrew on most of his passes In the first quarter, but before the period was over, be made the proper adjustments To get the Giants off to a 28-10 victory As things turned out, Ms 37-yard touchdown pass to Joe Morrison four minutes before the first period ended, was the only score at the game via the airways. Alex Webster capped a second period drive, kept In mottos by Conerly’* passing, with a two-yard plunge to give New Yoit a it-8 lead, aad the* Lae Gross-cup took over to guide the Giants to two more oeoreo la the second half. The flew York defense, which has been the key to the dub's success down through the ran, played its uaqal game, stopping several budding Dallas drives and picking off three covering a fumble to throttle the Cbwboys. Dallas finally scored Us only TD In the waging moments when Don McQhenny completed a drive with a four-yard Elsewhere Saturday night, the Baltimore Colts ripped the Washington Redskins, 41-7, at Norfolk, Va.; the Green Bay Packers came from behind to beat the Chtcagp Bears, 94-14, before the largest crowd ever to see a pro game hi Wisconsin; the Pittsburgh Steelers downed the St. Louis Cardinals, 24-14, at Jacksonville, Fla., and the San Francisco Forty-Niners nipped the Minnesota Vikings, 14- •I ASSOlM ....M Jiasisls ......is WoMUostan ... 40 RuMmag#.... si jfl'EDAVS Detroit ol WMhtattac (oHUnorc t, — -,»*o 14, Cleveland I r York I. Xoooo* CRT Detroit 7-14, WsehtailOS Chicago 14-4, Ctavofiod Baltimore 1, Mian--- Mow folk 4. Kani______ Angelei 4, Boaton I _ TODAT S GAMES Boaton (Monbouquott* 4-12) — ------ CUT (Baas'7-4). BUM. Baltimore (Brown MT ll Loa Aafoioa (BouMWM 4-4). subt. Detroit (KUno 4-7) alF-R|tatomUMu iixint' TUESDAYS GAMES Baltimore ot Loo Angtloa S. twl-nlght dovoiood M —^------------ Newport' ai I___■ I, FBtakwiB S ft. Lotllo a SOB WBBlUlt I L*i Angalea 10, totanU S Milwaukee at Fkilpdtlphla, i 11-0. PhUadelptala 10- saBw. IS tOBlnfa Cincinnati M. W Angela. 14 st. Uata i. saa Fraaetaco • _ , TODAT-S GAMES Chleajo (Drott M) at PUUbur#h (Fraacta --'waukee (gpMin 1S-U) at Philadelphia (Ferraraaa M) or Robarta (1-1), night oly came, acheduled TDESDAT-S GAMES i Angela, at Chicago Loub at Phlladelphta Franclaco at Milwaukee. BUM Clarksfon Cyclist Local Race Winner Outstate driven took many of the honor* in-Detroit Motorcycling Club races at the Waterford Hills course- yesterday before nearly 1,000 spectators. Hal Burton of Silver Springs. Md., driving a 250 cc Pari 11a, won the first heat and the finals by going the 12 laps in 20 minutes, 43 seconds. ★ ★ * Duane Barton of Pontiac suffered a badly bruised leg in a spill while Jerry Eveningred of PCrt Huron was awarded the Triumirfi Trophy for the neatest competition rider. Dave Ludwig of Oarkston in a 650 cc BSA was the winner of the third final race, going 8 laps In 12 minutes, 553 seconds, while John Graham of Lqjtrobe, P*-. won the fourth final race in 13 minutes for 8 laps. Among the local driven, entered were Bobby Johnson of Pontiac, Fted Leach of Farmington: Pat Bradley of Farmington; Thomas Compton of Birmingham; Bub (30 of Pontiac in baseball and Rochester’s Shelby Oil in softball are the only teams still In the running for state honors following a rain-hindered big weekend of action. Two softball aggregations each from Pontiac and Rochester toll by the wayside. CIO bowed ta tbs opener of the 10, at Portland, Ore. in’the only Haimbaugh ot Pontiac; Joe Tison exhibition game played Sunday, the San Diego Chargers of the American Football League routed the Oakland Raiders, 35*7, before a hometown crowd of 10,436. of Farmington; Jfin Lawrence Madison Hgts.il’Jay Latham” of Pontiac; Joel Haynes of Water-fold and Gene Littlejohn of South-Add. POPULAR GUY—Home ran slugger Roger Maris of the New York Yankees walks down the runway from the Yankee clubhouse •t Municipal Stadium in Kansas City white fans taka his picture and reach out for autographs. This was Just before the Yanks’ final Kansas City appearance this season. Maris, with 51 homers to his credit, couldn’t find the range Sunday, but Yogi Berra and Elston Howard did aa the Yanks beat the A’»,~l-7, before a record crowd of 34,065. CIO, Shelby Only Local lie Hopefuls Remaining two big game, to twice, a six-run in the first game with a dealing triple. Al Smith Stevera homered in the in which the Sox had a seventh. ot only pitched a two-for the Grides but home runs off Pedro am 35 home The Twins’ the league fej&i 1997. Little Rocky Bridges rapped three hits and Ell Grba permitted only nine hits aa the Angels took undisputed possession of seventh place by handing the Red Box their 18th loss in the last 30 road games. Don Schwall, Boston’s rookie sensation, lost his third. He has won IS. 9-9 to Detroit Pepsi Cola bare straight to reaeh state play at Battle Cheek starting Friday. Play waa halted after ll/t Innings with no score nt Detroit Sunday. They play tonight at Mansfield Park, earner of Mack and Conner to Detroit, at 7:49. Pontiac led the opener 1-6 after three innings on a triple by Clay Williams and a passed bell. Young Jim Ray had allowed only one hit and fanned six but an error, two walks and two singles actually clinched the verdict in the 4th. , <♦ ★ # CIO got one back In the 5th when Jim Bog doubted, advanced on a fielder’s choice and scored on h balk. Detroit put it on ice in the when Hid Lautenbach got credit tor a three run homer as Gene Oox couldn’t hold his long belt after crashing into the fence. Berg, Wjltoms and Woodmore had wo hits each. Shelby aad Fttnt will renane their Cta« C softball final to-night at 7 at NorthsMto with Flint ahead 9-9 la Am Ml Rain halted play teat sight Flint had dropped Pert Huron 4 3 Saturday. It wffl be tiie same time and the same Inning in the. Ctase A regional as Flint and Pot Huron,, clash tonight at Beaudette tied 1-1 Port ‘ minated Pontiac Elks 64 Saturday on Ed Urban’s one-hitter. Earl Lamberton’i single was the only safety. Doug Hall and Gary Boe allowed eight. ★ Sno-Bol was dumped from Class AA competition Saturday bowing 4-3 In 12 innings to Ann Arbor at Port Huron. ’This” Keith forced in the winning run with a walk after retiring two batten with the bases full. He hurled two-hit shutout ball from the 1st to the 12th. Down M ta the 1st, Sno-Bol ■cored two la the ltd aad got even ta the 9th on a double by Lea ieay sag Boyd Themaeon’e stogie. But Ann Arbor ace Roes entered the game and pitched hltieo# ball the loot 4 2/S inning*. Fyke A Son lost out Saturday to host flint in the UB" regional 5-3 with tne winner crossing in the 8th. McNeill Insurance waa beaten at flint in Class D. Waterford playoffs were rained out for the 4th successive day. Tonight, AAW vs Rockcote at 7 and Big Jim’s vs Lakeland at 6:30. THk PALMER MITHOD byAmoM Pcdmer Award for CIO Nina Playing-manager Chet Wood- $< PRESS BOX Rookie halfback Herb Addtery, from Michigan State, was lost by the Green Bay Packers tor an indefinite period Saturday when he suffered a broken collar bone against the Chicago Bears. San Carlos, Calif., Is champion of the Babe Ruth world series after defeating Englewood, N. J., Jtan deter, tormei Hazel Park High School athlete, was named moat valuable player of Detroit to the championship of the National Amateur Baseball Federation. *• ★ ♦ The Detroit Red Wings have scheduled a 12-day pre-season exhibition tour in Western Canady starting Sept; 24. The Wings havr one game set against the Toronto Maple Leafs. Paul F. O’Brien of Shreveport. La., defeated Arthur F. Hickey of Saginaw, 25-23, in a shootoff Saturday after they had tied at 99 x in the 62nd Grand American Trapshoot. see Battle Creek yielded seven unearned nine and suffered a 12-7 loes to West Allis. Wise., Sunday more' accepted (&e Quaker Ostsjta the quarter-finals of the Connie trophy honoring'the CIO team for Mack world series, winning the dty Clam A baseball playoffs Saturday night at Jaycee| new tox*?d££ *385? isi. Row Park. L. 8. Schell of the Quaker gj- Vo° ut FMieror- Oats Company made tne presents- j torto—m™yuki bumm. mv rotten. l!8«ta£ir*d * T- W1, “• Pay. Set Through *68 Lane Goes on Vacation KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPD-Frank Lane, baseball’s traveling trader, packed his well-worn bags today tor a Mexico City vacation financed by Charles O. Finley for not betas general manager of the Kansas City Athletics. Finley, the owner of the lash lace A*a, fired Lane teat Tuesday as general manager but agreed yesterday to honor hii contract with the 65-yem>old vet-of four major league fhxit offices. Finley said he win send Lane check every two weeks unt Dec. 31, 1961, to/ pay off Lane' contract which calls tor an annual salary of 350.006. The contract sefttoUMUrt was reached Sharing aa howrytong con torjmee between Lam ahd Finley ta Ftotoy** hotel ream Jest prior "It was a very pleasant and heart-w a r m I n g conversatteti,” Lane said, “and we parted on tiy best of terms. I only wish that w* could have gotten along as weR before I was canned last Tue*-day.” Lane said Finley told him the reason he was fired was that Finley “wants 100 per cent control of all matters regarding the dub-r trades, promotion, ticket tales and publicity.” 9 ■ t # Lane said U be had known this when Finley hired him last winter, he would not have taken the JOty.” “I am amnry that I couldn’t have, done the kind of Job Mr. Finley wanted me to do,' but he had to have the last word on pveiy decision I made,” Lam added. f THE PONTIAC PRESS) MONDAY; AUGFgT 28, 1961 sevkktrk: Adrian Girls Advance ftlRTLAND, Ore. OJPI) riatf. .Mich, Ripped Mew Orion. I Lag 1-0 mtmUy in the Women’* World Softball Tournament. ' * * dr Elaine Langenderfer scored die game's only ran in die fourth inning on a throwing error. The defeat eliminated the Louisiana team from the tournament. ★ ♦ ★ The victory advanced the Adrian team to die fourth round today. Katlin Wins Feature Mickey Katlin of Howell won tta feature race at the Dixie Motor Speedway yesterday. Jim Cot of Pontiac waa a heat winner. Dearborn Team Takes Golf Title at Indianwood A steady-shooting Dearborn team won Indianwood Country Club's annual Invitational Best Ball golf championship Sunday. ★ * , ♦ Long-hitting Brace Studebaker and Ralph EUstrom shot one-under-par golf to defeat the Indianwood tandem of Owen Davis and Bob EMetan, 2-1, In yesterday's-finale at Indianwood C.C. The losers were 1 down at the turn. GARAGES CEMENT WOKK I TONIGHT tH»u»»rr »oj WOLVERINE RACEWAY onsoim, .............. — i HxoOxflk.^Fxrai- MgfcO up, M hetot. Bias* Studcbxker, Dtarbom. sad Ralph flta. I UP. IS holm. Sag inSL aS WHoolfild, MSkSg, on. in no. oaroow. Rod Run, ud Jim Sinrtr, in- ___.1* and Erdrlon dot. Cochr. Horgrov.i, S-l; Btudebokor and El M. WHfht sad Mltnlteld, I up I Ellxlrom dtf. Doris OTHER FUORT RESULTS i Caryls rack, S-l. r Potmcd sad Ray LovsadowiU, LAWRENCE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY EVENING DIVISION 8MT fop • Li RfoW APPLY • •am • MHVWaL NOW fo mmsmm BEFORE • ElCCTttCAl mi, E CASH? \AatS9y • -ft* worcf! It’s Summer Money Time at Beneficial— Vacation cash is ready for you now! To get the money you want in a hurry, just phone Beneficial! Get cash for vacation ... cadi for left-over bills ... plus an International Credit Card for txtra cash wherever you go. “You’re the boss” at Bbnbficial. Loam $29 to $800 on Signature Furniture or Car Bawaidol Finance Co. of Detroit 7 W;~ LAWRENCE ST., PONTIAC Phone: FEdersI 2-9249 • Ask for the YES Manager OPEN MONDAY AMD FRIDAY EVENINOS TIL 7:00 P. M. —BENEFICIAL— FINANCE SYSTEM ATTENTION YOUNG MEN Your future is in electronics . . . the fastest growing industry in the world today! Plan for that future by toking the finest training available^ -, Enroll now for our next "Electronic Engineering Training"' program. EMrssies Institute of Tocksology S Nooks North of Fox Thootor WO 2*5660 Jay Hebert Takes Player in Akron Meet Playoff LOTS or HARDWARE — Ypsilanti’s Doug Wilson (second from right) inspects his loot after winning the Michigan Publinx Golf Association's state match play championship for -the 2nd straight year Sunday with a 3-1 victory aver John Kurach of Detroit (fur left) in the l« st Pontine Country Club. Pontiac’s Roy Poattoo Pnoo Photo Iceberg (second from left), MPKA president, hands Wilson the traveling O. V. (Tex) Ellison Trophy while Joe Peak of Detroit, MPGA tournament chairman, presents merchandise checks to both Wilson and KuAch. Wilson holds his own permanent award. BarretT Golfer Repeats m State Publinx King Wilson Redeems Self By BILL CORNWELL Ypsilanti’s Doug Wilson won the most satisfying golf championship of his career Sunday at Pontiac Country Club. A A ★ Suspended by the Michigan Publinx Golf Assication for unsportsmanlike conduct earlier this summer, Wilson gained a full measure of personal atonement yesterday in the finale of the MPGA's annual match play tournament. Shooting three-under par golf. play champion with a S-l triumph over lanky John Kurach of Detroit. Wilson was suspended from all remaining events on the 1961 MPGA calendar for a dub-throwing incident during his lit-round match in the national public links tourney at Rackham Municipal Mine in July. * * * The MPGA board of directors rescinded the suspension Just long enough to let Wilson defend title at Pontiac C-C. The suspension Is now in effect again for the remainder of die season, but Wflsorf can retire with his 2nd straight title. easy road to the championship for the 36-yearold Wilson, who won last year’s crown at Loch Alpine ‘ by defeating Al Whited of Wayne. Wilson, a general foreman at the Detroit Transmission Division ef General Motors hi Ypsl-lantl, met six sf the state’s hast pobile links players and conquered them all. He began by eliminating Pon-tia's Roy Iceberg, MPGA president, then followed with victories over Pad Bada of Pontiac, Dick Preston of Detroit, Al Pazdan of Detroit, Pontiac's Mike Andonian and Kurach. * * ♦ Wilson shot five-under-par goft Sunday morning to eliminate Andonian, Who was gunning for an unprecedented 4th state crown. Andonian lost a 2*1 decision to Wilson hi the semifinals after a tree doomed Ms bid to rally and puU out a victory. Birdies on the IMh and l«th holes by Andonian cut Wilson’s lead to 1 up. Then Andonlan’s tee shot on the 11th struck a tree limb and tell Into the ditch. They couldn’t find the ball, Andonian took a penalty stroke and conceded the match to Wilson after chipping onto file green and missing Ms putt. finalist in the Michigan Amateur, s trap. Next year Wilson will ha seeking to duplicate s state publinx feat performed thus far only by Andonian — three consecutive AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Jay Hebert, admitting he storied whistling too soon, won the 150,000 American GoU Classic by defeat-tog Guy Player on the eecond hole of a sudden-death playoff. wit, the Louisiana playing out of Miami, Fla., did it the hard way in gaining first prise of 19,000 Sunday. He held a fiver stroke lead over Player with nine holes left, blew it and then sank 90-foot putt on the 19th hole to force a playoff. Two boles later, he scored a birdie 4 on the 500-yard par 5 No. 2 hole to defeat Player, who took eecond prise of $4,000 and boosted earnings this year to over $80,000, tops among the pros. *'I was whistling .when we toed ft'on the 10th." said Hebert, 'but when I double bagged tbe 11th, I knew I had started whistling too loon.’' »' Player began to apply the pressure and by the time they readied the 625-yard par 5 16th, Hebert was only two strokes ahead. Player bird led the hole and took the lead u Hebert ran into another double ?bogey. Both paired the 17th and on the 18th Player missed a 35-footer by todies. Hebert went up to his tall and dropped a 30-footer to bring on the playoff. Two holes later, Hebert, winner of the I960 PGA championship over fids same 7,165-yard Firestone course with a 1-over-par 361, clinched the victory. Both Player and Hebert were astonished at the behavior of the gallery and remarked about It to accepting the prises. "I played badly the first nine because 1 was hurt,” said the sensative 25-yew old Player. 'When I missed a 5-foot putt enl the .third hole, the spectators cheered. Then I missed a 4-footer on the fourth and some of the people laughed. I was heartbroken.” I didn’t mind their pulling for an American." he continued, “fate wanted a fair shake. When you're a.long way from home and you're heartbroken, it’s hard to take.” Herbert also, aafal he waa surprised by the gallery's behavior. "I’m glad to have people pulling for me,” he said, “but never want to tee anything like that." LUXW00B LAVES Team mi ladMJuefe Opsaiaf for Fall LsogaOS Miffs leacui mom. raw h r. m.—wn>. > r. u. FBI. S F. a.—TOSS. IS A. M. 3121 W. Hurau FE 4*7943 TOE DISCOUNTS Whs Rut ■ Sst>>T Brut Sw First asst, F»Ut OuiuM 6.70x15 Ttf $ 7JI 7.50x14 $10.88 NO MONEY DOWN UNITED TIRE SERVICE OMS lU-WSER Ofta Duty | IS»7tr“— Torrid Last Round Wins Spokane Golf SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — Mickey Wright of Dallas, Tex., finished with n scintillating 61 Sunday to win the Spokane Women's Open GoU Tournament and $1,247 prise money with a 72-hole total of 290. Saturday's leader, Betsy Rawls, plumped to a final round of 75 The 40-year-old Kurach was down at tbs turn and trailed the rest of the way. He went 2 down after three-putting the lltiv hole and Wilson dung tenaciously to his advantage. The match ended onover the Esmeralda courts to al-the 17th green where Wilson won tow Mist Wright to plip in with with a par three u Kurach visited an easy four-stroke victory. Barbara Romack fired the best round of the day. a 68, to finish to a third-place tie with Jo Ann Prentice of Birmingham, Ala., at 286, two strokes behind Miss Rawls. Joe Peak of Detroit won the first flight title with a 5-4 Triumph over Larry Beaupre of Rochester.. WWW -Chuck Canterbury, former Waterford High golfer, and Barry Hayes Joined forces for an eight-under-par 66 Saturday to win the consolation best-tall tourhey. Canterbury carded 67 with h ball. sannuAY’s results TUN Inas Wllxoo, YpriUntl. d*f. Dick PTMton, Detroit, *'• “ ~ boro. 3-3: Mlkt AndonUn, Pontlxc, del. Dick Robcrtura, Pontlxc. M: Wally Kurach, who posted a 2-1 tri- *“**• aui curt* r»rn>. umph over Bill Montgomery of Etwxxik. fqbum, m. Bud i»jr, Trenton In the semis, gave Wil-» » • ■*]■“*»,fter,tv*s* the finals of this event for the Tnoton, doTjjUj^ cant, aDotroit, 1 up. list time. He had twice been a Record 14 and 13 Victory for Anne In USGA Amateur TACOMA, Wash. (A$>) — brown-eyed bride who teaches history in school and makes it on the golf course, Mra- J. D. Decker of Seattle won the 1961 USGA Amateur GoU Cham* with a record 14 and 1$ victory over Phyllis Preuss of Pompano Beach, Fla. TMs is file second time she has been queen of American goU. AP Anne Quest, a student at Stanford University, she won the Cham- Detroit Boat Co-Favorite n*nr tournaments and holds the Western women's amateur title, hut. ^ never has the 23-vear-old brunette j 1 been greater than she was in the 61st nationals. RENO, Nev. (AP) - Detroit-based Mias U.S. 1 and Century 21 of Seattle were the favorites today as the weather-harassed 1961 Gold Cup unlimited hydroplane championships hoped to reach their conclusion. Two of the top contenders to this $35,000 event were out, one at the bottom of Pyramid Lake, after spills Sunday eliminated eiSK YOU CANT BUY MORE •••FOR LESS! I1AFJ BIG SAVINGS ON ALL SIZES NOW...AT ).,U l 5A7I SHAPE IQW^PROfiU I fcGP.j® I NYLON RAYON ■ f 25%~30% wMrMo# 8 SOP-TUP TREAD UGMTNltiO emfb SAFETY SLOTS both Bfla. Row and Min S. _____ The former was towed “ ■ 1 | R| ^ ■ ■ “i ashore but Miss Spokane sank in 100 to 150 feet of salty water. Air Force Col. Russ Schleeh, piloting Miss Reno, the defending champion boat, and Rex Man-[cheater, driver for Miss Spokane, suffered only cuts and bruises, ij ■ * W....w. W; Miss Reno was on tile fifth tap! of the opening 30-mile heat, trailing in fourth place, when toe flipped on a high speed turn. Manchester, 34, had Miss Spokane far ahead when she went over on the final turn of the 3-mile course'. Today one heat and the final [race for the seven remaining [boats are scheduled. Miss U.S. 1, winner of a heat| Satureay, tad pulled ahead < Century 21 and Miss Bardahl, an- ff other Seattle craft, when thelfc heat was halted as Miss Renojk went over. The race had not gonajE the five laps necessary for it to ff [be official so was reset for today|J vjien time ran out. iMias UJS. 1 picked up 400 points| winning her first outing while 11 Century 21 had 300 for a second, I Miss Bardhal 225 for a third, >.andj| Tempest of Seattle also 225. Mias U.S. 1 and Century 21 figure to finish strong in today's rescheduled heat and hence are favored to go into the final strong on points. Only three boms remained In Sunday’s only official brat after the Miss Spokane went over and down. Pre-Labor Day Special TWO ml MONEYS U.S. ROYAL TUBELESS NYLON WHITEWALLS 2^“ 7.50-14, Tubal#**, Whits. HwTiiMit Tiwtali Dm. Far Late Model Chav., Ford, Fly. THE AH (IK. ftuwre-Tanpsref HT10H fer Sopor-stranglh, iswolb rids. "X** tar" NnlnsiMp. IASY TERMS FREE A tough ON J sizi 1,000 GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS with Purchasa of Sat of (4) FISK TIRES! (Includad Proa Ufatima Rotation) CALL FEDERAL MARKET TIRE CO. '61 MODEL CLOSE-OUT! 68 CARS MUST GOAT BIG SAVINGS Before You Buy , TRY HRMIMIHAM RAMBLER 666 S. WOODWARD KING TIRE CENTER ft _ 60 SOUTH TELEGRAPH RD. IQ FE 3*7068 1 Acron from Tfl-Huron Center Wi SERVICE WHAT WE SELL Open Da«r 9:30-5:30, MJay 'tH 7 PAA. l&gZZZZZZZ2ZZZZZgZBgZZZ£L Guaranteed NEW TREADS 6.70*15 7.50-14 I rat Mounting Flex Tex** MS UetieeSbMe Cxaler k Tuba or Tataloss Oleckwall Oafy GUARANTEED USED TIRES “i" *3?5 NEW TUBES Most ’ Sixes 195 Alto Hava e Large Selection of Hew Treads fer All Feregin end Compect Cere "Mek Up and Dolfrory forric. la City” MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER FI 1-7845 1Z1 K. Mentcelm St. FI 1*7846 YOU AUTO PAINT NOW! says Set/USckett' I WILL PAINT ANY CAR ANY COLOR FOR FEderal 4-ffSS THE PQNTIAQ PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1961 Sr Dk. L M. Uriti. Um Cotta' —d PM Wnm How Much Will Survive? ByCnrlGrubcrt Vice President Has Quiet 53rd Birthday Miniature Train Kills Youth, 15, in Denver Park DENVER (AP) — A tMn-ager was struck by a miniature train, dragged M teet end killed in an Beet Denver park Sunday at pee* eeagen and byetendere looked on ‘Religion, morality and know!* ODE ANCESTORS By Quincy Bank's Optn Door Policy Giyas Cautu for Alarm EAST POINT, Ga. (AP) — A policeman making a routine check found a tide door unlocked at the Citizens A Southern Bank of Beat Point. Police squad care rushed to tile scene' Sunday. Investigation showed nothing was taken, Sgt. H. L>. Smith' reported. “Apparently somebody Just forgot to lock the door," Smith- said. The private and public debts of the U.S. combined oomprtse a SB PA$0hie tf with a supply jP^^yya 1 ^pf weenoti MWZ&mkrf Hj ‘You're braver than i am—YOU be the first man to eat an oyster!" , WlTM HI* PtUS HAT AND A \ AUiennlc ws m sc a \ riolovl WHAT rM (SON M A DO f\\ tAA 0OMQA tfQDYl A MOSTACHO N fOtlX. LOOK LIKE-THATMOTttg£ OF GST BViSfJ YMTH . HiM/l'lL SO AROUMDMAKlM© A / NUISANCft OF MYSELF, AhJ'TtV ( CROWS WILL FLY EACKTO ROOST 0t*H\fi\!~*SUPPOSEUe£ETS ltd NANCY HI, LI'L WAL”-you Y .LOOK < TIRED J WORTY MEEKLE ( TO SMACK HIM/ " TO HOCK WITH X WMEUSH BORS.'J NOW-WOW-POUT OfTAAAP/X DON* YOU A FAVOR ormN* vou out trrmi DONALD DUCE WOKSUtMtW*/ M,yH^ZAMuYli ..TH’MOUMWBf HMjperWWOffiC mm wozw m l mmw mwmm ICS, AMD KIPTWnJWRTIM WMtM/gg pnmaSMHaiiiO kUHAftEQ 91 fMUUir | MmnM mciEj '/JPOJ i ^ \v I PUNNO, BUT WtMSI L‘iNpdTBONCSfWnH mss* AocjpnwvsiuL k ( I COULDN'T WHAT — f we have M SLEEP LAST ■ TELEVISION \r NIOHT AFTER It SHOW WAS 1 television WATCHING ALL fV/rHATf^ THOSE MONSTERS, Ss, GHOSTS AND \f isT BhJgm ^WEREWOLVES £3, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1961 NINETEEN That's Right, Fellas, their wives go out shopping - w'- . JZ . v only when dUy go out buying . . W« Forgot t6 Tell YOU . . . If they, (tart running those long Hollywood films on' TV theyil probably call It the Lale Late Early Show. — Earl Wilson. Dfcs MOINES, Iowa » — The suburban Uibanews recently published notice of tiie first practice for the Urbandale softball team. | The paper neglected to identify the team as agate’ outfit. Quite a few males showed up but not one girl, so the workout Was postponed. Family Forced to Aid in Holdup Hooded Gunman Makes Store Manager Open Safe; Escapes With Loot Missing Minister Is Sought by Pontiac Police Pontiac police are seeking information on the whereabouts of a Huntington, W. Va., minister who left home Aug. U to .visit in the Algerian Rebels Dump Abbas, Put in Pro-Red Pontiac A hooded bandit terrorised the family of a Pontiac supermarket manager Satiirday night. need them as hostage* to i the manager to go with Mm to the (store aad open a safe which contained between KUO and MM, Pontiae police laid. Clyde Jenkins, 31, manager of the Wrtgley's Food Store. 398 Auburn Ave., told officers the black-d holdup man entered his home at 208 W. Ann Arbor St., I at about 10:30 p.m. Jenkins said the bandit, carrying pistol, forced him and his wife, [Bonnie, 30, to lie on the floor. After tying Jenkins’ hands, the gasman made the wife aad the eon pie’s two-year-old daughter Deborah get Into the ear, and told Mrs. Jenkins to drive to the supermarket. He held Mrs. Jenkins and the [little girl in the car while Jenkins was told to open the safe and take out the cash, police said. FLED ON FOOT He then made Mrs. Jenkins drive [to Pontiac's south side. He got out of the auto on Wall Street east of Sanford Street and fled on fgot. Jenkins said the bandit was six [feet tall and wore black leather tfoves. - has not seen i ■ The m filing person is Rev. Ju-liius H. Keaton, W. Va. ’ horities described (him as 5-foot 10-inches, iso pounds [with gray hair, thrown eyes, and 'ruddy complex-REV. KEATONlon. When last seen, he was wearing blue-gray suit, blue-white sport shirt and straw hat. He wears bearing-aid glasses. He was driving a 1955 Packard, tudor sedan, two-tone, white and green bottom, with West Virginia license 306-262. Police appealed to anyone with information as to his whereabouts . contact the Pontiac Police Department. According to a recent Agricultural Marketing Sendee report, there were a total of 27 retail food companies with 11 or more stores operating fluid milk processing plants in 1958. In 1958, dairy products advertisers placed $17.4 million worth of national advertising in newspapers. In I960, that ure rose to 818.2 million. The Commander Glacier In Brtt-I Electricity to now available to ish Columbia has traveled 800 leet|98 per cent of all ot Sweden’s to the last six years. TUNIS, Tunisia (APt - Alger-i’| rebel government has placed Premier Ferhat Abbas with a tough younger pro-Com muntot who opposes cooperation with France. The naming of Ben Youssef ben Khedda, 41, Sunday to replace ! Abbas, 62, was expected to mean intensification of the seven-year-old struggle with France ami to bring the rebel regime closer to the Soviet bloc. Named as foreign minister to the reshuffle was Saad Dahleb, 42, who took part in the unsuccessful peace talks with France. Belkacem Krim, veteran, revolutionary and leading exponent of jthe tough line, was kept on Bing Golfs With Joseph P. Kennedy. CAP D’ANTIBES, France (UPI) — Bing Crosby played four hours! of golf with Ids “.old friend" Joseph P. Kennedy Sunday at Biot, near the vacation home of the U.S. President's parents. Crosby, on a four-day Riviera holiday. Joined Kennedy on the links at 8:18 s.ni. They played a full 18 holes, Winding up around 1:80 p.m. Their scores were not disclosed. Both Crosby and Kennedy turned out in shorts for the round of golf. Kennedy was accompanied by his favorite caddy, 22-year-old French blonde Francoise Pellegrini, who has invited the Kennedy* to her wedding to a shopkeeper at neighboring Vence on Sept. 22. Hoiia Laughs at Any BIG Opposition CINCINNATI, Ohio (A1 Teamsters President James R. Hof fa. pooh-poohing the possibility of any national trend to unseat hto), flew in here Sunday and confronted the. leader of a rebel faction who says Hoffa is using the union to gain “personal wealth nd power.” The Teamsters chief came face to face with James Luken, who has led four Cincinnati locals to bolt .the Hoffa regime and declare Intentions of Joining the AFL-CIO. The two did not shake hands. They sat on opposite sides of a ho-j tel room as they answered ques-l lions and explained their viewpoints deputy premier and’interior minister. ' £ The government’s Tunis headquarters announced the shakeup to a communique which said Ben Khedda would go as premier to Calcp for a meeting of chiefs of state of the Casablanca group of African, countries, then head Algeria’s delegation to the 4Mfer-ence of nonaligned countries at Belgrade beginning Friday. The communique made no mention of Abbas. Observers believe he was dumped because his policy of negotiations with France had failed. The talks broke down July 28 over the issue of control of the mineral-rich "Sahara. The shakeup apparently was decided by the policy-making National Council of the Algerian Revolution which has "been meeting to Tripoli, Libya. Rebel leaders who have accused Abbas of being too soft apparently decided the time, had come to pick a fighter with more militant views. Canned citrus juices have soared; by more than 1,500 per cent stoce[ 1945 arid consumption of fresh oranges and grapefruit has diminished. 4 \NCA Patronage at City Reaches All-Time High North Central Airlines patronage at Pontiac Municipal Airport hit an all-time high Sunday an' sured officials of their first quotamaking month since the service became available last December. The airline recorded its l(0th outbound passenger for August yesterday, according to J. O. Edwards, ststionmaster. This is the monthly minimum proscribed by the Civil, Aeronautics Board (CAB) If Pontiac is to be assured of keeping the North Central service. h h It “With four days still remaining to August, we expect 10 or i additional patrons by the end of the month,” Edwards said. "This will make up for the deficit last month.” la July the airline had a record high 140 patrons, 10 short of the minimum. The previous high was set In June when 80 patrons were reported. The CAB minimum to five pa-, trons per day. Mayor Philip E.| Rowston urged stepped-up use df the airline 'facility early this month. Until yesterday, patronage had | been consistently below the prescribed minimum. PEPF NOMINATED mACADEMY f AWARDS! Jtof Rock Gina \.&s SCf Hudson Lollobrigida yjjjf Sandra Dee Bobby Darin W" mZELC00RT-B08EllTBam I I “THE NAKED EDDE” Starts TUESDAY . —LAST TIMES TONICHT— Wilt Ditney’t "SLEIPINC BEAUTY" •nd "GOLD OF THK SAINTS" I EAGLE; THE BIG ONE FOR EVERYONE! METRO-O OLD W YN - M AY E R priwu EDNA F E R BEITS Sabra, the bibnde beauty who loved Cimarron and SchooRtousa gun-battle! The Kid was twenty vowad to follow Nm to the ends of the earth! notches old... was this the end of MswidcarserT ..GLENN FORD 'MM SQffli'ANl BAXIMUR O'OTNEU, MANHUNT OF THE CENTURY — for the master assassin\ With - WERNER KLEMPERER Open 6:45 Starts 7:45 P. M. . FE 2-1000 EXCLUSIVE SHOWING IN MICHIGAN in SUPER PANAVISION—70mm TWICE AS BIG! TWICE AS BRIGHT I FIRST TIME AT REDUCED ADMISSION! •THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR ...RIPS THE HEARTP BOSLEY CROWTHER, NEW YORK TIMCS I PRESENTS PAULNEWMAN/EVA MARIE SAINT RALPH RICHARDSON/PETER LAWFORD LEE J.C0BB/SAL MINEO/JOHN DEREK JILLHAWORTHi CAREFREE MOTORING STARTS AT FIRESTONE GET YOUR CAR READY NOW! f Precision adjust brakes, re-1 pack front bearings and add brake fluid, if necessary. f Scientifically inspect and align front-end to manufacturer’s specifications. t Precision balance both front wheels. » Check power brake and • power steering units where applicable. Arty'American Car PAYDAY ______ TERMS Replacement Porto and Torsion Bar Adjustment Are Not Included fWfi where your dollar buys MILES more 146 W. HURON FE 2-9251 ; ' •", ‘ ®8 'T SEE US FOR [ *4 SPEEDWAY >1 DOWN ‘1 A WEEK TWENTY -y-T—«------- P*arl Harbor Shipyard Mggoit Firm in Pacific HONOLULU (UPI) -.Hie Peed Harbor Nivel Shipyard, mote than SI year* old, is the largest industrial 1—1Hnw in the pacific Ocean. THE PONTtAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 28. 1061 Tin facilities include tour dry-docks, two marine railways and a »-»*»• Hie shipyard is Hawaii's major ------— employer with 4,750 civilians on the payroll News in Brief .P4reElected — JAat t^SlL^SZ£iPesign Firm PoBttoc Taw ana men an among the three naff members of W. B. Ford Design Associates, Inc., Detroit-based Industrial design firm, to have been elected associates by the board of (lirectors. it was announced today by Walter B. Ford 11, president. A record player and lt-gaage shotgun with a combined value of S11B awe reported stolen Saturday tram the home of Arthur Pohl, OIL COMPANY WILL LEASE OR BUY Ywir SERVICE STATION Write All lateraletlea to PONTIAC PRESS BOX IS Mhda Bllba, IN Cottage M. ported to Pontiac police Saturday that a clock-radio and a record player with a combined value of SUT were stolen in a break-in at [her home. Two radio* valued at tU were stolen from his home, John Askew, 368 W. Kennett Rd., reported to Pontiac polite Saturday. Viator Baade ef 174 Plsaeaat [Lake Drive, Waterford Township, repotted to township police that || somettme between Aug. 30 and Saturday afternoon, someone stole |a motor and equipment valued at ||900 froth his host. Waterford Township police: reported that sometime Saturday night, thieves broke into (M’s Golf Range at 2045 Dixie Highway and stole $351 worth of golfing equipment. Ailments of the heart and circulatory system account for about one-half of the deaths in the U J. COMPLETE INSURANCE SERWOE I ” I I *H Ng Membership Pees Vera M. Daniels Battista Insurance Agenry 583 W. liras Stmt R 3-7111 Working Capitol Available for Your Buiinots Call FE 4-1522 SIMKET INVESTMENT CO. The three are Theodore E. Lad-eroivskl, 4655 Franklin Road, Bloomfield Hllls^ James EL Eekete. 8634 Huntington Road, Huntington Woods, and Douglas N. Cabell, UK Feverti, Birmingham. Most Grain Prices Weak Early Today CHICAGO ill — Grain futures prices turned mostly weak today in initial dsalingb on the board of trade with soybeans leading the Corn and rye were off major i fraction! in spots white wheat held | about steady tn a rather slow trade. Brokers said commercial demand was light and that export ^business over the weekend apparently, was limited to a small amount LlTDKKOWRKl Luderawski has been with the firm since 1956, Fekete since 1965 and Cabell since 1958. * * * Ford Associates are engaged the design of consumer products and components for many national manufacturers, as well as In graphic, package and interior design for both national and local I companies. Holdup Man Appears at Truck, Gets $50 Cash A Pontiac grocer was robbed of 650 at gunpoint Saturday night when he left his store to buy a newspaper. ★ * * James B. Harrison, 53, 90S Voorhels Rd., told officers he had left his food store, seme ad-dreso, sad had drive* to Myra A venae gad Voorhels Road when the holdup man came up to his truck. “Don't look at me or I'll blow your head off,’’ Harrison quoted the gunman as saying. He said the gunman fled on foot after getting 850 from his wallet MARKETS The following are top priest covering sales of locally grown produce by grower* and sold by them in wholesale package lots. JB _ _ ^ Quotations an fumtebad by the setback on lossers running to well ®UPB*U Markets, as of over two cents a bushel. Friday. | Moderate trade Sends Mart Up Detroit Produce VmS«T Apples. Wolf River . Blueberries. ‘ Blackberries, ... CsoMloupct, bu PMehn, Elb.ru .. .. Weakness in both corn and soy' Fetches! beans was ascribed to additional reports of good to excellent condition of the crape. Pressure in September soybeans, however, was linked with expectations that there may be a somewhat larger supply in Chicago commercial positions for delivery during the next few welts than had been indicated earlier. Grain Prices NEW YORK CP—Steels, aircrafts and some chemicals paced a market advance early this afternoon in moderate trading. # * * ' Gains of fractions to a point or so among key stocks outnumbered losers. huhM. It** Haven .... htri, Clapps Favorite Pwra. Sugar ............ la. Boteank ......... Beans.' Kentucky Woudtr . Beans, Roman, bu. Mi, dot. behe . l.ilVb Dee U4te Mar ........ . l .soH Bu ......... I lgS Lard i drums i Portuguese Natives Made Full Citizens Carrot*, t»pp. Cflary. P»ac»l ............. JJH C.lary, root -------......... 7*'4 Corn, a»Mt. bail .......... 1I(% Cucumbert. *111 .......... .Cucumbers. plcfclt ala* ., 1.32 Cucumbers, tUcert. bu. l-tttb DUI. dot. .... l.liVe Eggplant. bu. ............ gpfc.’SS. SK. Okrm, pk. ......1.'. .’.... Onion, dry ................. Onions, freon, do*, behc. Onions, pickling ........... Parsley. curly, not. beh*. .. firslar, root, «Ob. MM. ... CTLC& Pepper*. cayenne ........ Ptppeil. hot pk. ........... . a APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAY Peppert! sweat ... Peppers, rad aweat ...... OPORTO. Portugal (AP)-Over.|f»H*^| seas Minister Adriano Moreira an-jRsdUhaa. kiaek nounced today a decree that]^“i^iha.'' every native of Portugal's eight jsq«»*|>, >cora. bu......... overseas provinces is now a full Squish.' Suiurnut "!!! citizen of Portugal, “without ’dte- feyjfr bu..... Unction of race, religion or cul- squash! summer, 4 ou. M i« iTomatoes. bu............ Tomato**. 14 Um* ......... Thii decree, to be pushed of- TmiMTiMpMi. bu ficially soon, ia the most sweep-jTurnlpi' "* **............. ing reform by a Portuguese osskns government since the abolition ofH'»<>b*ti, bu. slavery in the Portuguese terrl-.jc ” ** Bites of Africa a century ago. “ ‘*=ssssr*issMM*^5SSur*7SsSSsJS*wSk "ou.............. ■NBNB ■■■* ■■■ iMWEscarole. bleach**, t ■ Lettuce. B»bb. pk. Lettuce, Breton, doi Lettuce, head, dos Lettuce he**, bu. Lettuw. leaf, bn. Kale bu...... Mustard bu..... ftemalne, bu. BorraTku.......... Spinach, bu.... . Swim chard, bu. Turnips, bu. — tor ar* expected to reach new sate strike rr not. American Motors was fairly steady in active trading following news that it had agreed “in principle" over the weekend on a new labor contract. Ford and Chrysler sagged and General Motors kept fractional gain as their chance* of avoiding a strike remained in doubt. . * * * * Jones k Laughlin, up about 2. made the best showing among the maior steel producers. U.8. Steel and Youngstown Sheet were up about a point each. Lukens advanced more than a point. Bethlehem and Republic added substantial fractions. Prices a* the American Stock Exchange were generally higher I* moderate trading. Todd Shipyards and Fairchild Camera were up about a point each while losses of about a i were shown by Microwave Associates and Glnninl Controls. t Hazel Bishop was active and i!m 1 fractionally lower. Moderate gains { J® | were made by Cinerama, Baldwin **i Securities, Electronic Communica-° tions, Mages Sporting Goods, Gen-» eral Development and Sapphire t Petroleum. N«w York Stocks rtfUTM tfttr decimal point* are eighth* . Celery cabba** I' Collar*, bu. .... Endive, bu. .. OUl* dhal . a I Challenge Anybody!! i ... and furthermore I promis* to giv* you on* *f th* tost appHawss, TV sr Hi-Fi d*ais ia tbs Unit States—DURIIM THI NEXT S DAYS AT FUTTCR'S AFFLIANCI STORI. Poultry and Eggs ___ DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, Aug. Ml APl — Price* per From Our Trydt-in Dept. Fully Reconditioned 1-Yoar Guarantee Refrigerators $]Q95u, CU U FINANCED FLOOR MODEL SALE! . Admiral PORTAILI TILIVISION $ 8995 IS C«vft. $10095 Upright PRHXIR 33" TV STIRIO CONSOLE New Ib Crete* .. $9995 HOTPOINT Daub. tlQfiQC Dr. Atrte. Date. .. f IW <10995 STIRIO with AM* PM limulcort radio WSgfi *14*95 RCA Whirlpool PORTABLE STIRIO $ 499S 30-In. DILUXI t OQ05 OAS RANGI .... * Dehumidifier DISH WASHIR *14*95 S*i.’SJ?, *1180® AntamHc — Cuteri *5993 MAYTAG pi IRONIR ...... *179*5 Je’&f u’r,»2399S I heavy type roaster* ever i l1 DETROIT EGOR I DETROIT. A US- SS (APi M ... I pat* oer down by first receivers <• ere* to Detroit, table In M-dbsen ci Consumers arid* ilududlng U.S. >: IJ.S Kelsey Hay .. . 74.1 Kenneeott . . 42.6 Klmb Clk . MI Kre.g. SS - Kroger ___________ If' .... IS LOP Olaae ... • 44.4 Lib Me A- L . 4S.6 Llex A Mv J*} Llfton Indus i 1 J5 ‘ Lockh Aire .. ,‘S f Lon* S Cem .. T" m! lerlllard . Jj-J Mack Trk ... Armour h Co {*!* gj*■ ad‘D Cp° . Minn MOM Canaan Cb .. Mont Ward Mot Wheel . Death Notices, RTLET, AUOOST ». IK tbarlne M.. Mil Cart ad. Union Lake, age t* wife of Ouerdsn sr ■otter of mm Artl lor of Mrs. Harp 1 I grandchildren and ] debit*ran. Recitation <3 _.y will bw Tuesday. Au-I M l pm. tns.tki ““TIM Pnaernl Rom*. _________u Puneral service will t held Wednesday. August ]S bt sd a.m. from ft. Patrick'* Church, Union Lake with Pr -=--x=r _______„ JtiMi, i h . SOS Surns Road. Milfo 37 boloved husband of Carol Barton; belovsd mu at Mr. and Mr*. Andrew Barton: dear father of Robert and Ronald Barton: dear brother of Leonard .Barton and kin. HI* Oauthlor. Puneral MgHM vriu be held JgMUi «rtd.?n.B‘.trd‘ Milford with Rev Shank Williams offUlatlog Interment la Milford Memorial Pebuterv. Mr. Barton will lit In state at Ul* Richard-son-aird Puneral Home, Milford GAGE. AWSurr It. IS*'!. ELIZA-beth. 434 a Oaclnsw at.. *» 15; dear mother n Earnest Chambers. MeMla Johnson bad Johanir Baa Mitchell; dear sister^ of - James Brook. Piedla Knos. 8* m p m from the William p. Puneral Home with Rev. d Con afflcUttlag. Inter-_____In Oak HtU Cemetery ^ Mrs. WlBtem P writ Aneral* Home oTlCwS! acoust K is#. ■ me* W . Mil Bp worth Blvd . rolt; age M; beloved husband Lena Olllesple; dear brother John Mdwtittam OlUespie. i. Jean Robertson, Mrs. CbrM-- Brown bad Mrs. EMaboth Funeral Mrvie*' will sesdajr, Ajgust sa^ -• l.M p .flat * ursley Pun-ev. Lelsnd Lloyd offieietoiT jMgiqig Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mi. lespie will He in state at the Pursier funeral Heme. ________ JOHMaON. AUOUBT Si. IS*!. ED-ward w Mi Raskob. ate M; dear father of Mrs. Ward Rath-bun nnd Edward Warren John- wlth Rev. Toronl officiating Fr termeat m Perry m Nllmw tery Mr. Johnson will Me in stat ~t thaMaatoea P-----------“— Srir*g»WMf Brlst Mv . Brunswick .. Burroughs Cal Pack garrler Cp”! Celanesr Ort-Toed _____Ches At Oh m*diumw,|lithl4; SS^j5i,rrN * . cmet i Palm Calum Gas . Con Bdls . . Con N Oas . Consum Pw Cont Bak <.. Coat Can ... Cant Oil ... Corn Pd ... Curtla Pub .. Doer* ....... Dot MM .... NORGE 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC WASHER • BIG 10 LB. TUB • 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC TIMER • NORGE WAVE ACTION AGITATOR • 5-STEP SUPER RINSE • 5-YEAR WARRANTY ON TRANSMISSION COMPONENTS—FRETTER'S LOW, LOW ■ Livtclock I DETROIT, Aug. 10 (API — (UBDAt — Catue — Salable mo. Balk tarts supply , jhmw imwi aai hrilrim ttm----------- I what rtduoed from last Monday; _____ andUhsUers,'moderatel*nJ|’^1 trade^steers I! SS cents higher thaa hut*'w*2 leu elOM, or tulip steady with hut Monday; , eows opening vary slow, (aw tartar mlei mostly M cent* lower, gome lit off; 2 J**® prlmo around 11M lb. steers I' SB.**; t loads mixed prims and high choice and prime lOOO-UO* lb, yearling steers SB.SS-ll.M: four loads at “ *** laad mostly prime around ISM lb SB.St; most choice steers 1350 Ihe ___ gj*~**:**: “JmJ !“®ehlrh Mod end rood Mach _ la. mb. --------•*** >*“ -----“" Word ito ~ ep Sul .. ueh Tr* >— ,—rly Gardner Dei Oen Djiism El dt Mus ... Ex-Cel 1-0 .. ralfb Whitney SS * Dairy It.* g*t Oyps . , u.) iiatl Lead ... mi XT Central . 2?.1 - Xort * West 13.t Nor Am Av . 31.1 Nor Pa* ..... 40.3 Ohio Oil . . 36.1 Pac O dt El . |)i Parke Da 411 TO ^ Sr.’l Phelps D 153 Philo* CO Polaroid .. ft Pmi a o . 8 s faf °“ M.'« Republic Bt »*.« jtevlcn .... 13 Rex Drug . MS 3 Boeony .... South Pac . jj'j Sou Ry ^ J Sperry Rd . 41* «W Rrato, V® Maude. 3340 can tail »o*a. Keego Harbor, age 1); survive* by lire. Mary C. Brown and 4 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesdtv. August 30 Pt 2:30 p.m. from th* C..J. Ood-hardt Puneral Horn*. Keego Harbor Witt Rm. PMI Tucker of-flclatlng. Interment Ih.PWTy Mt. Park C*m*t*ry. Mrs. Laser win He fit etate at Uu C. J. Oodbardt Puneral Home. Keeg* Harbor aft- PLAN*P AUGUST SI. 1MI, ME belle. 4M1 Mean. Drayton ‘ Plalna. age IS: beloved rife, bf David Ptutt; omeitter of Alice Cranna. Puneral service will be held Tuesday, August SO at S p.m. ftem the Coat* Puneral Home. Baitm Plains with Rev. wrw • ter Teeuwtssen Jr. ofllclatlng. Interment ia BrtrgtMa PfWMgdgf, Detroit. Mr*. Plank will lie In eta to at tto Coats Puneral Rome. Drayton Plalna PUOL1RB. AUGUST 21. 1M1. JAMES Prank. 3545 Orandvlew. Drayton Plain*, ago 11; belovod husband ol Jessie Putltse; dear fatter of Leo. Dale, Haney and Eugene Pur Use; atao, survived by 1 grandchildren. Puneral service eral HonW, Drayton Plains With Rev. WARM Teeuwtssen Jr. of-fldatlng. Interment in Crescent RUla Cemetery. Mr. Puglise will Ub to state at th* Ooate Puneral Home, Drayton Plaint. Fwotef Directors 4 Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME "DulfPDfi for Fttnarali** COAf S FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAIN) OR 3-1111 SPAKXA-ORIPPIN .CHAPEL fhoughtful Bwoh* Pi M001 Voorhees-Siple PUNERAL ROME PE S-BSK —RaUhUahtd Over 3) Team— C*m*tary Lota 5 S BURIAL LOTS, MABONIC OARD-•ns. Oakland Rills Memorial Cem-etery. Pull price tilt. PB 3-451*. -I LOTS. MAOONIC itcnON U* Oakland Hills, Phone FE 4-33T. EhA DTI POL b&t. PERRY Mount Park cemetery Call attar BOX REPLIES At IB AA Today there were replies at Hu Frew office Tb Both 7, U, 14, II, 96, SB, 66, 66, 73, W, U, SB, tt, K, BB, IBB, 111, 117, US. 51 Help Wanted Male 6 I PART TIME JOBS taring and k be able to * Std Oil Ohio 55.4 » choice boSen fill * weight utilities early 11.00-11 J2; l.. I! early sales canners and cutters 12.00- ; um. Hoc* — Baloble *00 Rutchon opening ! around 21 coat* higher: sows steady to >21 cents higher; meat UA. No. 1 1*5-12* lb. butchers U.15-11.00; mixed No. 1 _ and 2 1*0-330 lb*. U.M-1MI; 9 nnd 2 ■I 1*0-230 Iba. Ig.gg-U.g0; 3 and 3 330-250 I. U-00-lb 25: No. 1 2*0-200 lbs. 11.00-No. 1 and 9 and 2 300-400 lb. I4.1l-I0.1i; « and I 400-000 lb. M| — Salable 300. Steady, prim* S; goad and choice 30.00-35.0*; 34.00-tt.M: euU and UUUty II 11.50; lleOW* 13.76-14.2 Vealtrs — 8 I 35 0*4* 00; goc I! standerri ll u 44!g Tex Ini . 37.g Thlokol . ' 122.2 Ttaomp Rw Ooodyear ... Ot A & P . Ot No Ry ... Oney hound .. Oulf Oil ... Tlmk R Boar i Sheep — Salable ll*. Blaugfator lamb* inland St! and ewes steady; choice and prime int But Me wring lambs K.oo-20.00; good and.Int Harv . choice 11.00-12.00; cull sad utility 12.00- Int Nick .. 14.00; cull to choice (laughter ewes 3.50- Int Paper . I I Stocks or Local Interost figure* after decimal points are^el^hthj ACF-Wrlgley Stores. Inc . 11.2 11.4 KBHBlF~Vtb. .... S3 On Carbide . .41 On M ft H .. 22.5 III UB Rub .... *' 1 . 52 4 US Steel . . . S3.4 UpfOhn ... ____ . 3* West Ua Tel 44.3 36.1 Watte El ... 158 NO MONEY DOWN! it Tel ft Tel. it.) Woolworth . , 11 il Crk Coal .. 21.2 Yngst sb ft T Id jhns Man :. 61.3 Zenith Rad It Htei ft L .. 52.5 American Stack Exch. BUDCET terms ■ 30 Days Exchonge ■ GENEROUS TRADE ■ FAST 24-HOUR ■ NO MONEY DOWN H (ourteeut, After UP TO 36 1 If Not Full* Satisfied ■ ALLOWANCE ■ DELIVERY ■ ON ANY PURCHASE ■ the Salt Servic* MONTHS TO PAT Frafter'* Cartead OtecraK Malm Hu Mf Differtace - Fravt It ti YbutbbK — Strict Cbbwb Bret hfDm e* Fries FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Doily 10 A.M. 'til 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 - Sunday 10 A.M. 'til 7 P-M-l | 1 1 * tf ' * 1 1 ,"T"PI Batdwln-Montrooo C. Co. Pfd. U.4 1 Borman Pood Stores ..........** ■ Curtlss-Wrlgb* Corp.......... Fedir^1Uopil -Bower Baa rings Orest Lakes Chemical .........-.. • , Hoovor Ball sad Roaring ..... 20.1 21 1 Leonard Refining ............12.1 114 OUn MatlUetoaCbemlcal 4*3 Proohot Co . 22.3 93.2: Rockwell Standard ........... 15.4 M.Y Toledo Edison Co. 32J 33.1 OTCR THE COUNTER STOCKS The fotlowing quotations do nit necessarily represent actual transactions but are Intended a* a guide to the approximate trading nag* of the securities. I BeetroMca Capital .. Electronics Merentieaal Ijirito O*. .vTSBSSs**,'--,- McLouth Steal Oo. ......... Michigan Seamless Tube C 1 pioneer Finance.......... Shatterproof OlglS Cap ifnylor Vw— .. 33.6 MJ Zinc .. . til j teetfle Pet Ltd 14.1 .. 13.1 Pag* Bor .... 34 . 15.2 Sherw wm .. HR Volume 4* * p.m. AIN. m STOCK AVERAGES 24 U U 40 lndust Rails Util Stocks (et change ... +2.4 + .3 — .1 +1.1 Noon Man. ... MiJ 1141 131J 334 4 Prev day.......3M.I 124.4 W.4 243.1 took ago ........m'4 124.0 133.4 3M 0 Month ago .... IMA 1144 1X4 MU rear ago....... 324.1 11TI 144.3 221.1 Ml toga ....... 112.4 134.4 1244 251.0 1M1 low..........3U4 1U4 1114 211.4 404 high ........3M4 135 2 1121 »S4 14*0 low .... 1*0 4 103 0 Mi 142.4 8* 84Oibson 'Puts Up' Airlift l" MUTUAL funds ^ , GREENVILLE (UPI)—The Gib- Affiliated Fund .... *.42 “.a1 son Refrigerator Sales Corp. will SSTalS'wJSS'audk u8 £:S l;pon^ what » d?cra>e>“tKe Keystone tnoamo R-i 341 tool largest commercial jet airlift in MSSMTtov' oTowth iin ujliyy^f BBWU titoR 106 dta'. ftotdmjia Iw Treat .14*4 ion tributora and dealers and their ..CHpaWOTic*'’•’•’ •’•’! ,*4* *».”[families being flown to Jamaica Woiuagtsa Equity .....n il u.igjahd Panama for a sales conven- ------------wil ”■**!tkMn bn Sept. 5. / 1 llr. Mellroy. OR 3-0922 4-8 P.M. RO EXPERIENCE NEOERSART CAB DRITERA-FULL aXD PART-time. 434 Orchard LaEi. CAN PLACE 1 MEN OR WOMEN. Pontiac ana to supply east one re with notlotolly aOvortlmg household prodaete. Per appointment, phone. FE 2-3053. ■ fttAt— OaLESMAN. 2242. MAR rled good oar. Take order*. 4.00* ootasnihod customers, tut per weak plus expose* allowance. Some part tlm* work. OR 3-5410. EXPERIENCED MEAT COUNTER man to work evenings, g to 10:30 p.m. and Sunday. Vast be reliable. Qoad.pay. Wes to wn Pood Center. 100 W. Huron. HANDYMAN for taro wore “PLENTY OF WORK NOT ENOUGH MEN” 'Salesmen M te 44 looking for b Smith—Wldeman r still retain your regular lob. For infnrMellnn sail Ml a Wave •as.J' >. FE 3*4628. OR Are You Unemployed? WE NEED SEVERAL NEAT, ENERGETIC MEN TO FILL OUT OUR BALES ORGANIZATION NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY WM WILL TRAIN TOU. PART TnCHJOM FULL TIME NO PHONE CALLS. APPLY IN PER-SON, ) A M. TO 11 A.M. Kast Heating & Cooling 463 S. SAGINAW ALL ABOUND HANDY MAN, ItE NAtlonal 1-2365 AKTEk6P.M. 4 hours per evening. Earning* of IN pn week. Moat be neat ap- Cring and good worker. Start aaoiaiely. ,V*~^~g ’ * FIN BOYS llOTbR INN REC , Help Wanted Male t> MACHINIST REQUIRED FOR malntonance dept ol Rachester Paper Oo. Journeyman or equivalent preferred Apply la person Mill it. Rochester. Seal e6tate hAUfcsteAN. tx-perleneed preferred. Or have trafti-big program starting for applicant wflh other esl*i expoflonee R J. Taluot, |*5 Oakland Av*.. FE Qjjff BALES MANAOIR’WANftD OEN ereus aver rid*. 44.550 to 412.000 pot year ataw S gaUamoa. oupe-rlesoed ln selling water gsHMin. •antirar about 4144 per week. top ranejbd nAthtnal HR cim ham onenlat to aaloe de- to sun. Car a ~ WANTED PRINTER 1 COMPOS 1 a mm. 1 4 mm ap) ea feMBlftn Of MD* Young, dynamic, lqcal sales mgr of new-eorp has oDenlnx for as enthusiastic. < —— . imig 01 1 OR 3-0422, 4 (turtle* Bteadv wore tsse wav plus fringes ReUabje company Prlntuft’ft* Office Bapply. 12 W. Lawrence St.. Ptatioc. Mich- •KgrasPHrtsra "young WaN local sales opening I ut young .*■ sslstant gaits mer vase us rWT . n m. 243**. Berth. Help Wanted Female 7 CT >10 rnie Ua*Trj~~M TO 34. 4 DAT! A ssfti foV&Esrz a*. Apply fo pew*_____: cnSIwBtirM OR OVER. BEEF Drive In, 54M Dlxl.^gh. way. Waterford. Curb Waitre*sea Ted’s have Immediate openings for curb waitresses on the_ aay shiff. Apply la person only. * V *TED’S Woodward at Pouare U. Rd. DEPUnDABLE WOtiAN. *0«PE-kooptog *n<> oareofhey 4. Own trmoHlIMi- OR or OR eXWerienced wAfrUssTAF ply *7» Baldwin, EXPERIENCED W A. 1TE BBS far hlxhta. Phene Ml t-4444. *)SwtK(n®vAWie(* to full time employmenl. Dny ahm. OIXL FOR CUtANWO MOTEL FARTT *pfi*«WnU)TOItg ^TOdSaJ?ii.2£ monJhlyHonus, weekly W «heck, RALES LADIES NEEDED NOW Manager opening. T O Y 8. J4U Bellevue Rd . Teledo 13. Ohio. _ l.ADT TO CARE row iff LDREN. live In, IIP week. 304 3^0*0 RECEFTlONTBT-EOOEEi^l.Fk'R IN doctor’s office Shorthand, typing: neceetary Steady work. IUfer-eneM reguired. Apply Fontla« Pri.B max 11. _ SECRETARY! SSERfENCED] above average akUU. faet. accurate. some shorthand. Pontiac "‘"siliTfinishek Full ar part tlm*. Voorhei*,,Cl*an-. 'WrHe>brairton Maine • TOY CHfeST THE FIRET_____ AND ONifoy THE riNEST TOT PARTY PLAN IN 24ICH. TOP EARNINGS It par cent in free ti TOP DEMONSTRATION KIT 130 fun is show Item* furnished fret to dosleri TOP DEMONSTRATION AIDS Excellent eompany training Free color cataloea THE TOT CREST Delivers - Colleeu — Sorvteo* CALL PE 6-4131 WANTED MIDDLEAOED WOMAN ----and baby el‘“— y between 1 I children, i WOMAN FOR OENERAL OFFICE work experience IdOy* Apply tn' person after s. doU'i Inn. 3401 Eltoabeth Lake ltd. ford. Rotoroncoe. FE 4-1244. Help Wanted 8 MATURE COUPLE: FOR MOTEL management, experience not’ necessary tt similar background references can be furnished. State age and prevloui employment in first letter Pontine Fret*. Sox MAN OR WOMAN WITH CAR. Nationally advertised ^Watkins Food rout*. Experten or part time. FE 2-3053. REAL ESTATE SALES ’ Have room for 3 experienced men or women, foil or part time. Call Mr. Ralph for Interview. Hag stram Realty, WOO Highland Road (Mtol, OR 4-035*. Eve*. PE 4-4344 Surgical Technictani Pontiac General Hospital ha* Immediate opening* for surgical salary Increasing to 4344.40. Must have high echoed education. 2 year* experience In routine pa-Ueet care and tpecille training to obi glial techniques. Differential (or evening and night duty. (Applicants must be wflllng to rotate shifts) 40 hour week. tree laundry. WANTED: REAL ESTATE BALES Must*' he've «oM Va?*11 exper*- enced preferred but will train right portlet. FE 4-3305. Ask tor Mr. Crawford. 3M w. Wal-ton Blvd Employment Agcnctea 9 Evelyn * Edwards car $ personality __ __________ I be meetlng tfee public all arant tt* trey. MISS EXECUTIVE ............ 4325 A vary special boss la his very swank of bee needs a good secretary. Type 50; shorthand ioo_ ’ "*-* *—‘■‘■—‘nf Good appear- ■ HOUSEKEEPER If you nr* sum pad. drive your will he right far OoobUvQ . clean EVELYN EDWARDS Vocational OouW-*^--- - | NH East Em H iv . j 1 ' v ‘ , MONDAY. AUGUST fa 1961 TWENTY-ONE Empkymsnt Agucfcs 9 , OFFICE TRAINEE TMf BU MM M to train In office and credit work. Must tjrpe -™t hart knowledge -* t--“—• ■ Mas* k* high ezra uSPS&toeltato Bulk SECRETARIES t|M t$4». W« beer Immediate Smi oveiieb(g •-tallM i ad ill i MEN NEEDED Train At Meat Cutters And Countermen To eomplet* present elate Only $199 Until tlaaa completed REGULAR UH Become a Meal wilt. Counterman tad yrtcttttf to 10 Weeks FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE DAT OREYENINOa Inquire About Our Club Plan WOMEN t Cashiering or Meat Wrapping After two weeks you wiiibe abl to work la the systems used hi all Supermarkets Just $25 REGULAR SM This it the last time on this >pe Work W—fd Mala 11i Bookkeeping A Taxss 16 SMT1U AOEMAN WARTS TO j BOOKEEEPlfia ALL TAXES pstohajssT Uhoe toe_ emaM_ wa|m | CM >341$ WMCt rmo Ran! ~ &-iW. Dressmaking, TaBorlnt 17 °SSSit*SS: *«■* Wsstsd Fsmt. IlifgSga -ADY WISHES STEADY PIVE-DaY . weak housekeeping or causal ascent can. Prefer city or Binning- ■ ham am. Relarencea. PI l-CCTI alter «. all day Buaday. . _ „____- J O-Uto. . I Harts 6aT woRR J warn S and t p m 1 PI Landscaping A-l Marion Special Soy a----------■ —— labor Painting A Decorating 23 paperhamoinoT PA lif t no.; —---■*— —ipalrlng. UL 3-r l6st part poodle, meter! ---female Last Mm Aug It irferd Drtre ha. Child liter-| 3-t»l Plasma. jsSTtetBir-wiffi watch Lee* Aut IS. tt Dtele Bar. Howard. PE HSU LOST: ORAYtCT-R»6WN~%ltiMA; sw‘ " found! __ ft Mb i-ttot CARNIVAL By Dick Turner Building Service BUILD NOYt Idrntlal Trss ra moral trim mint Ott ou* i tod. MSSH0 or PE SSPS. i A-l COMPLETE LANDSCAPING ms teMSMtos ataUahto, lawn tutting and lertlllal ns OR 3-0350. A-l MARION BLUE SOD. DELIV ered or tacked up. aod told. StOl crooks. ulmut .......... . AL S COMPLETE LANDSCAPINO Seed ins. sodding, black dirt. " Top soil, trte trimming and removs) • to .a- cement wort, patM and fencing mUSm n $-5m STw 13im_^ ---- 1 COMPLETE LAWN 'WORK.OAR- ■*— plowing, finished trading and ___n ____ >ifi _______| *oll. MB XSM. _ ____ flreplaceadffT$40i j LANDSCAPINO. BULLDOEINO —---------~~~------1 -—tot and seeding. EM 3-14 U iMJ-Mtf. Notices and Personals 27 oWA“Si*a PULL yard '« »«»“ ^gjkATU. UTILITlEa. ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? ___________ 13 | A-l ALTERATIONS AND'MODERN-i isatlon. Resldenttnl and eommer-n*1 Rih Cook Conatruetlon Co. rase MM . porches *300 work Ms gq.Tt? nL MM Quinn's Construction. PB 6-4404. I A-1 BRICK. BLOCE AND CEMENT | ROYAL OAE MICHIOAN before Prices odellng, both res-commercial, eh a terms w, A. Wlnkleman 442-4144.■ TONOIXTK DIUTS; PATto! CALL tftsr >, PS HM. ’1 DEAL WITH BUILDER, OARAOS! gagreongn rooms SOD LEE AND LOUIE’S Work Wanted Male l-A WALL WASHINO. CARPET. inSIckle. Bto. Cs., EM 3-S050. MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD, — *»««——»”- »- — 1 —-----------1 *-*■* Grading In- PE j-m», -Employer Pol contacted -airatehe* your dollar . -No eharft for budget analysis Write or phone for free booklet MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 70S Pontiac.^tato^^ank Bids Pontiac's oldest and larfatt budget se lsunce company Membrr: ■ . -Michigan Association of Credit Coooae'ors —Amcrican Aeaoelatlon of Credit Couniriors ___.__ AENOTREne KNAPP SllOFS PREP HERMAN OR $-1603 ANY GIRL 6It WOMAN NEEDING a friendly advtoer, phone " 2-5121 After S - - — “— 1 Rant Houses Furnished J9 For Rent Roeim_ U\ For Sak Housss 49 «■&Hokyai r'j^ii | $9,500 141 AfSSa £?p'' o \Ti rSiS’VoK ® ! front. Sees* "nrhor. 14 4-l$i»-‘ ppp, room raws. Ml w Ifurm ‘ ^rsLzrSS . Tbh KV to Mm —.— oa fiooa UhToaih, Mroft aup-,^.g?B^AWr MEYSSS farad. Newly deedratod Iftad- brlek ranah on Eton wto Nqer ■cheat*. Carpetod Tiled full ba»#- !rfrwAftWfl Rfli!>iik."i sVbI*jffTwmt Zda. ya 3411$ i t-htdmm %m*t.. o»*^ _ Mcff BR^ote entITancE Aurogfe furntohad Ntar Ujton Lake. Bapt- r l€ bmt and hto wator. F> 447I0. ** Jm** *** mk ii,i . i jattflkii lIEctb. ifttlP BSAUTIFUL > .yPEOOH 1 pmWS^WmiT _ ■ e 3-*sia 1 Rooms With Board 4J meto^jlgJIoYMl^^VttOOM *!** rooms. SLIM. F.O. Bot II Shtaa <58 I CRESCENT LAKE FRIYIUBOEB Ltot of Watt around thlanloe --------- with dosetA^ojsly ti.MS down board St*^riyiii ^PtatKrTw^MYtrTtfenmd j a*'*** home oartly furnished Emhree UT- EM »-Sm without meals. PE t-I33t. ft-25 #smt*»ai "The thrpal ot vioisnee hanging ovwr everything! Over the Congo, over Berlin, and now, over my getting out tonight!'' •iwmfi int mm* IBM per vnontn oatiftofl *»* rt «*iwra. | Iw*-To8rW,«sSSw L» ConvsIescratHonisii_44. uTroS^VER rtONT^HOliff N EWMODB "" f ranch. $37$ down to gmd pnrty of.Ara,,-5r:r«? ring's* isss*™ lS3SS^iJ3au!l 'middle ,lAf"bf?!^? ^^^OTyo^^aiSS?^ i from Pantto* »Ntt —— ! «)th battv TV Aim doctor on NEW MODERN FURNISHED DU- . eB„ p|,>w call Whitmore l ake i pie*. 9 miles west of Pontiac LI j HI 0-3330. _ . i&gALL. QAkiJy FMjifBEA^| Rent Stores ^ , <6 CANAL-FRONT COTTAOE Leads to Cedar Ulqnd Lake. 2 bedroom*, tonto Betas lWOTii 14x18 kttchen-olntrg room, fuh bath, for aniy 04.1* with 01.144 " pace . 1 REALTY OR 444)4 BUILDER DUBLIN AND ST. PATRICK'S Dandy gram cedar ihaka. White trim. Carpeted living rm.. ank i p?eto?rerd* Woodiilwp. <*“l> ' | 1.000 SQUARE FOOT STORE. AIR- *},», torney* office Ctoe# to Mlrogto 1 Ml”’ Mile Shopping Cqnter. Hint re SMALL. CLEAN YEAR RQuMfa. | . lAuvcnv u. SONS floor*, lit kitchen with dining | space, hath wltti Wjttdn vanity, oil fuvnaee 3 alee high Iota Rear yard ayetooa faaead AttraaUve noma and price, $1 Oja ' da BAftOuTR. pKAWfik, Ej^-1 lor. SMS Union Lai* Rand. EM • 3-3304. ,' . 11 ! FREE ESTIMATES OR ALL WIR- - - sf rie"®/'1-- ~ ~ ------- schlne clssned' PE 4-1077 ! HOUSE RAISIN6 'HOUSE MOV- 1 WATERFORD lng. licensed faUp equipped .Pi -- timates. Raaaab Marlon. 1 ttel a PE t-t7}« Conflden- I ROOMS / 1ST CLAM LICENSED BUILDER free eattotoUe. MSM77. Ad CARPENTRY. ADDmONS. sldlai. repalrt. ato. PE S-7S40. 2-72M. BACK TO 8CHOOL COLD WAVE. (>.M. Dorothy's 500 N. Parry. PE 2-1244, - DAINTY MAID SUPPUEl. 7» I s i mians wit e-w>ew ... „„ ^ Jl****.'1 1 , — ----r— ! *' Economically with newly released Tr3L-_ Moying and Trucking 22 Dee-A-Diet tablets, tt cents et_f«m»4l RATH. PRIVATE 2- OR 4-ROOM UPPER, PURN. OR SEPTEMBER TO JUNE* ___________, “nd. on has line 1 ----------A-TCT—a -------------“ For adults. I1XBQ. FE 8-6842. _.... ' "apartment atottoa. ______ , _____ 2-BED- | _____Adults, mu. M> PsssQck room haaaa. oil turaaea. Vicinity 3 ROOMS AND IBXfEC REErIO- I Union u. 2415^12 --- arttor and stove. PB MM4 J WILLIAMS LAKE, . CLOSE, .JO ; -«»H'"si»Mg:Ti?>CT^£gy school*, —yt. to July. °* i'm.. -------H»M|WH«t»h««» WILLIAMS LAKE CANAL YEAR i t-MTt. ----- • ---- cottars ^ 2t«t i a tnly OL i-t77>. HOUSE MOV BLOCK latino, licensed CE-mant work, porches, patios, steps. floors. TE 4-0465. ’ CEMENT iirORK, ALL KINDS. REA lonabls OR 1-MM-CARintNffcR WORK OP ANT kind. Rskstaahls. Call after S p a. FE 4-4434- CASPINTER WORK. NEW AND rsmodsllni. IM-dlM. cabinet maker carpenter. Kltchans a specialty. K 4-MdC CARPENTER WORK AND PAHtT .Int. reasonable. PE t-ssu. MAN, 24 YEARS. NEEDS JOB IMlppod FE 4-445 )OrS: NF.V 1 MOV1NO SERVICE, REASON-sfale rates. PB HIM. PE MM CAREFUL 1MOVUro. LOW ; Besato Peace GET OUT OF DEBT ____ partly furnlshad. Middle j- ^^^i»!^An,.ynm8 Rem Houtss Uwlurw. 4 ROOMS, UTILITIES FURNISHED ' —C 4-4431. 55 WllUamr REAL *"■*!Sr£51°a^C* 1704' 8. TELBORAPR - FE 4-2533 | JCATlON day and night. Nawly decorated In a ftot apt- building Otll Mfr, rk i SWIMMING POOL 20’ a 40* glia, only *2.800 IF a 3F only M.2M. Made of durahla solid cement. M a 4F model to inspect. Efjely yourself this summer — twist to yoar ~ yard to 7 day* I nomas, addNIaat, 4-MI2 also Mid taraass. aiding _____ _ liaiti builder. now dim Williams. PE LIOHT HAUL1NO WITH to '------, _ ptok-ap. Moentoaa. PE 4-sfa j gSST~lIBO^O. MUBBT^ MamiaTadPtmtoa " lOlNartoa- Chambar of Commerce, j ' BOOMS AND BATH AT W Business Service 18 1 BETTER PLUMBINO JOB RE-palra.. alterations and new work. Licensed master plumber JU M6». If no ana. Mi-Itt2. Lowe's LATEST NEWS IS LISTED ON THESE PACESt Maw* at Wbat People Hava to SELL, RENT or WANT to BUTTOvdar your Ad on thb S Day, Low Cost Plan . . . Cancel Whan Results Art Obtained . ■ . It’s the Economical Way. Just Dial PE Mill 1 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS I Wall ami windows. Reasonable. ! FE »-l«21 ___ ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE pairing and rewinding MS E. Pike Phone PE 4-MM. ________ HOTPOINT, WHIRLPOOL AN D, Kenmore washer repair service. | We flnanoe. PE M«31. Signs Painted lettered. “ I Protect your ] 888-MU A FIRST CLASS MOVECALL BOTH MOVING CO. FE 4-48Q4 | Avoid Oarnlshments HAUUNQ A RUBMSH. W Aff» L, mvw the Baparlaoea and your price. Any time. PB S-0M5. operation of your creditor! HAULINO A N D RUBBISH. 12 | Coma In or Call for load, anytime. PB 4-tSM I A HOME APPOINTMENT - Nf-Wl_ liqht HAULiNa_ AND t a k o City Adjustment Service ; mub. FOR SCHOOL WEST SUBURBAN • 2 bedrooms. 1 b RlIi!, * * Middleton Broker. tpotiea- 2 ROOIU AND BATH BABY WEL-r®- P^y-VtaV* laq* 273 Baldwin Aft. HoUtrhack't Auto Pant FE 5-9281 load. PI t-ltM. HUBOW ANP~lpUir" ________.Jheavy mucEiNO. , Rubbish. flQ dirt, grading, and ---------- —--------- wtd. Household Goods 29 week; RUBBISH AND UOHT HAULINO fm hmmara and appltaneaa. Bar-— l —1M1, ^n»je.kmTa;r^sar •ROOM r~*tB*bt>Un 1*7» WliUXSs "nJl AduSi tolr~* Tauasttaara| 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX j "town PooUton*Ne'wWfanel Automatic htM_-Pnllhaaament j flees. Wn,LDEOORATB_ $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 M4 Eat! Blvd. H. tt Veleocla | I OFFICES MMI RENT. 4MS DIX- . It Hwy. OR 2-124* < DENTAL sulfk ulifl Bf' UR , nM"7Vowiia«_Uka" Orion" Ms tor’ll yatra. 4M#5K*Jjlghway. | ^rofaaaltnal » Drayton Plains. OB HIM. Home and offlm. Mato St. < ..._______ net. Second floor apt ■edaeamed. Oaa hjat, irompt courteous,J ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND1 _i tlmatet. Phene UL j---- i LAD# DUhRIOR bECORATOR. j Paneltoi. PE MW. ] It*R~I OR AND IKjftallOR I painting, wall washing. Free «a- I AMP j _ Pearsons Fur-i entrance. Utilities, adult! __ PAtNTINO AND DECORAT-, nlture * I 2-*7S7. ______________ lng. 26 yaMS eBJ^Re^Prti ea-1 W1LL PAY UP TO $M CASH FOR j ROOMS. PRIVATE •laetrte sewing machine.; entrance, tie weak. ___ _____ | “ TkfiTAND BATH. FURNWHED I 5 ROOMS’ AND' i daylight haaamawl. storage rooms. lMeh«w s« heat, ggltonar atrvtea, garage, larja yard an^gardtB.^lle anl- Post Office and Tfl-Nuron. Shown by appclotmenl. OR 2 *444 after 4 pm. I „„ irons i»r ROOMS. QUINT RESIDENTIAL I Lake Rd. OR -^hborhoed., g»W. ~~~iSgROOM DuFLjg . Children Welcome PB S-TMt RkfeRodU. basei«nt ^oH- Sej Wtd. Miscellaneous ' furnished rooW terrace on a. edith. near Auburn migto "' month, lnquiri —4-6378. garage. 2-BEbR^-^M^RV RAVB YOU* ; i ar.MntOR Sgmi. °f MY.24ML---------- !, 3JSEDROOM DUPLEX Children Welcome_PE S-7g7t . .] BEbROdM. BASEMENT. OIL heat. Rawly decorated oarage "!1 Drayton Plains area. OR 3-MM. | J 13-BEDROOM HOUSE. :LAROt LAROB 3 B------■■■■■ .tttt. separata dlalaf rm., maw*, pah* sams*. »hua. aiding storms and sareene an hlaak toP road Large tot. FHA terms Tale Brewer Real Estate HAVE BUYERS FOR CONTRACTS FE 441(1 Evening. 'FE 6-4423 ____ASK FOR JOE RBI82 I Share Living Quarters 33 i RodUs^rtr* Private iAftt and entrance Baby ' per week, inquire gyjrvis.r vbj^slh! ".i:arsn&Aess: and rafrlgerator furnifhad. Immf-diija $ccip$aiy, In »• Iwt. ) "priVatI 'BATH 22 CAbjuid. 3 ROpirti *ato BUSINESS WOMAN WILL SHARE J-rSoMS' 1 CHILD 'wfELCOME ____water. 4M. fj S-1063.' Brick Flit—Heated "bedroom ome. includes ■ *w baths U46 nf I VN rural ^hgJjBlto hon 1 BEDROOMS. BASEMENT. rat* WltUawe Lake prtvll ___________ FE 1 ■ »r owner. FE 2-7taV - j phone OR 3-M85 1-BEDROOM FULL BAIltlElW' ^ LAkC-PlSi _ 'MODERN—FARM Carpeted/Aluminum storms and______________MA HIM U-0D™ and 2 f'^lo^*roJS‘'Ba,*ii iireit «d’ ROOMS PTui UT1L1 garden. {,u"d ihto *Ve° 2-21S0. ° “ 1 Lake prlvltogaa. 2-bad roam. 2BEDROOM, OAS HEAT. SMALL down paymant Larfa yard MY MW. terford-Kr \ trrlnt School a bedrooms! tiWBrmt trrtd. Fhont ™ b“b basement Oh 3 aerta «f MODERN 2 BEDROOM. 3 I attached garage, basement, privileges. 111.700 By ewner Wtd. CsntiwcU, Mtg*. J5 ^ | r .......... nn awn t and mo. Letts Orion. MY 2-1141___! required 175 par month, phone ~ aim naii'HEAT 1 AVAILABLE CASH FOR. LAND contract!. Dawson and Butterfield 11 to N. Saginaw. FE 24410 or FE 3*TM0i ROOM FURNIBHBtv APART-ment. UtllltlM, $10 week. Wait Bfia. FE 0-MM. basement. Mr fa rata, largs lot, OR 34737, ' BibftdOMS AT CRESCENT, jj Lake, vary clean. Sacrifice for BOAT - TRUCK - AUTOMOBILE R. O- BNFDBB FIXN9R LATINO; 05 0* Ekcbangc. Guaranteed sanding and flnlahlng. Ph. FE ear-life Battery 1 CA^JT BlllA SR FLOOR SANb- ! mg. FB 2H8UO ACTION e^M‘— --- ------' |kl, AUBURN ----------------------------- FE 3-IW0 . ABSOLUTELY TEBPABTBrrAC- f^oOMg AND BATH. Uon on your land contract. r**h ” - — -«* buyers 3 ROOMS AND BATH. lOlto NOStTH 4 AUBUBN ioaOHTS j __________ 4 ROOMS Aifb BjmLUAa HEAT. 5 ".L^r ^ub?.° i ** ^tii t6 Orchard Uki Art, i - iChooli it nit, «.v _ . _____________ CAST PRIDMORE | New FHA MM Im. (MMg. MIPPtI MllM Bf »■ .wwmjj. tSSj a-BBDRObll MOMS. ATTAOTMO I •4-44*“ full bMt»W, llBlBlttl Ott Hrtd 1 f^ZhhBR IMA damn HR 1 vm furnace $45 par month. Pi 3 BEDROOMS A-l F LOOM SANEJINm—;WITT ioing Out of the Boat Business! na new Crestline 17-ft. Cruiser. sleeps 3. windshield flying yuRNlTURE REFINI8HINO bridge.' cost new 01700. NOW rcpglrtof. Free estimates. K ONLY $1400. __ A AotTsOll PUto Hwy, $7 CrwtWm --fiberglass. Cost $000 ITOW 852* One 16-ft. Lone 8tar Mamtago. Cost Mil. NOW ONLY $0$0. One ntw CraatUne Mustang 14-ft. Coat $731, NOW ONLY 1516 _ TWO fishing koatl, 12', $100—14-ft Oato^Trailer 000 lb. eapaelty $130 Little DUda Trailer 1000 lb. $300 keiZy hardware 1104 Auburn Road open aSBaflOM ul two PINTER'S 7370 M OFDYKB RD. FE 44034 ‘ THOMPSON LAP8TRAKE8 DORSETT FIBERGLAfj AEROCRAFT OLASS AND ALUM GLASS AND ALUM. CANOES r AND 10’ ALUM. PRAMS BOCE SAIL BOATS-SPEED QUEEN FIBEROLAS JOHNSON MOTORS OATOR TRAILERS Comntote stock w marine acces-■ottaa. Faints and liberties ma- Wr“" WE RENT PAUL* a!*YOIW^*INC OPEN 7 DATS A WMBE , 4030 Dtsli - On l^on Lake Furniture RsfbiUhing AND $74-1170 Paintera & Decorators WANTED: BOaFcUSTOMERS tt«smI ■*»*« Motors — From $2$ V] U#CLO$Stotn* ON SOME BOAT DO IT YOURSELF DOCK KITS FE 34033 _________Fsocieg__________ anchor fences Ahimlnum-rStetl—Wood ^^E^TTMATTO1* pff*M47i Pontiac Fence Company Continental chain Itok fawea. Oom-plete InstallaUon. or Do-R-Your- Ixl FINE ROOF BOARDS 4e lto_ ft 1X1 FURRINO STRIPS Be Mn ft 2*4 Klin Dry FU _ 5* Un. tt. 2*44 Kconomy Stud* 3Sc aa. 4*0’ Fes Board $*•** 4zl' V-Orovt Mahogany $4JS 4*s*to Hardboard PONTIAC LUMBER CO- CASH AND CARRY $31 Oakland *— ” Plastering Service StampB^for CoBoctors STAMPS ON APPROVAL Squirrel Stamp Shop Bag 4004 Auburn mights Stencils BOAT NUMBERS 3 Inch - Fa' act IS atoees MADE TO-ORDER STENCILS Pontiac Stamp * Stencil Co iffrtai FOR OOWTRACTS CLARK RIAL ESTATE ----. Huron “ I FB CASH Land Contract*, homes, equities. . WRiGHT I' 345 Oakland Avs___FE 5-8441 j CASH. FOR LAita: cormtAcm Realtor VL‘rb Vantoncas' Seni: to Jus TdEAL ! COLOREO-4-ROOM UPPER. NEW- IMMB PTlilTpl WMW- »UW ^^^MmtoammittMmdto*-' *'* “ ” gat beat, i caa. Sept. I fKACHERB -..... rROdU kklVATE ENTRAkOk , and bath. Apply Apt, « ** * 2-car tarasa. 4 Mat. mam nwy., union l ■ant , adults. KM >-i«13. , CLARKSTON S-BB^ROfS^BRICK. j arga i to hathi _____________torn wains m Full baaamtn*. On taiMt Lake privileges on Oommi * —jNhto ------------ *- P On any good tend centra or tsMOMa. Your cash Uiactory lnspectltm of And title. Ask for KaA T 8*3-0800 2330 Orchard I— AND BATH. NICELY' FUR-nlsbad, couple only. 20 Norton. ROOM LOWER. NEAR PON; tltc MOOT and Either Body. FE M722. ATTRACTTVI I AND 2-ROOM apartments, convenient location Insulrt 0* 320 W Huron. BABY WELCOME. EXTRA CLEAN a modern. FB 4-7251. ENT, SHOwm r« 3-437$ Far couH« nyroom apsrtmant nePl^MdreeP Private bath, tntranca. ground Bragd new 3 bedroom I ROOM lotoVI*mNHMab dttW- 2-7007 for appotntmant. _ MODERN 0 ROOM APARTMENT. r’F^^^ulm at t« Bloomfield Terrace. f SKWit DECORATED 4 ROOMS, partly fwSSSt. t"*** ~ furnlshad. UtllltUa fuyniabt Peacock madt ranch. Oti heat. Ceramic Slam bath. Btarmt aad mraams. Kitchen rant fan-hood. Nice big lot, with aide drive. Low rant. Built by Ludu Building Oo-, Balsa 1~ZS: IB an. ni MU3 JOHN J. VERMETT iraferred. »« )_' REAL ESTATE^ ^ SX4 — » BOONOMT BTUDS aa 3te 1*13 whit# plne boarda lla US. ft. 2*4 No. 1 ftr 10-10 ft. to. ft-2to TD catms JJ* “• J*' ji/g td base ...... Me u$. fl- ito - I It. it. tath - ett Waterford Lumber Oath and OMIT _ _ 3875 Airport Rd.___ Ott MW Plywood a Isa MM alack hi hi) time® AU. 'rafSrNaWBBj AND SPNCIES °? 8HeIt"or car 2oad Plywtiod Distrilrwtor m » Cm FB $-0434 ^ . ' (FECIAL THII WEEK wnUh mQvino. ISSElPnt |MU| * hadaantn fcmmwto AR ANNETT • NEEDS LISTINGS MM ttvins _____ , No drlnkeis. (82-2043. _ CLEAN LIOHT HOUSEKEEPING N_................. room for d^Modahto caretaker of anartmanti FOR SALE OR LEA8K W.1LL SAC; -mee beautiful Duck Lake-front __________________ ixecutlve's home. ,3 win aad Walton area Storm* “T ' — .nd screens, anchor fence, built-' toyjKtfWWfHi Sed'Th omwi. (Too mmtk L/flitoi-lakefront- R^arLAft* j ’’oT^mStoasa ■*'^?34W8C 1 *■1 D sulatod.' 3 hiOTs'from Midtown [4 BedrOOttlS, 2 FflU Bath* , RENT. CLARKSTON AREA -bedroom. I bath, full bammanr. tt itched garage tot 80x160 trit-h r Lhk« Orion MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE DAT OR EVES. PB »-llM_ 31700. I Annett Inc Realtor 21 E. Huron St. _F* • j open Evening, and Sunday l ALL CASH U ym art K^uJTSto1?? need NICI 3BOOM_AND RaTh --y quickly call FOR COLORED. 3 AND 4 ROOMS. private bath nod entrance. 40) .. ^ a ____ |___________t rnR JcOU>XXB. J NICK ROOMS j FURNISHED UtD UNFURNISHED Slr^'me/Fbcma OR 3-M08 after Orchard L-aka Ava. MA »» N . * LEASE WITH OPTION to BUY— ■ new Ikadraam • suburban lea area, Ctorkston school t children, refer----““ Phone OR * 1.800-Sq.-Ft. Brick JoSe o^ ^ Bibn AuTs ^in Basement, 2-Car Garage j $16,500 " ‘ 1 brick Capa OM ‘ »!2?j *2! >!flSi ■hMQNnjS^o yUL^bwc. j gy*,,. ■«««. b&S? 4$ J I ORCHARD . COURT . APARI LwcwS~Twn astM vng. iJSft * **,,*,• AND SUNDATK SEE1 — *”R. CARROLL. rBKET. ; I apabtments; *Tw'.c?rr MODERN 0 ROOOIS AND RATH cv...... atuwqmtlc oil heat. $70. US Jtffertwn. FE TIONS NO MONEY DOWN I Carpet Cleaners______ COUCH AND CHAIR. SJ.00. UV-ing room, hall and dining room. iiltoToxir moo, ijMm *m-tinnal 06.00. 3 or 4 pirn* $M0. Wa tint fornltor*. Open 24 hours. Cadillac Carpet Cleaning. LI CsmsBt Coatructors 2*10 'sprue* .. S ALPORT LUMBER AND SUPPLY CO. fl Mghlawd______OR $41 Motfst Sorylcs___ ^LAWN MOWERS Repaired aad Mhapranad ntUBURN ROAD SALES ft SERVICE 116 W. Auburn ftohd DL MW iBetween CrooU and UvnrnoD) Preasmaking, Tailoring THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR YOUR BUSINESS OR SERVICE AD TODAY I DIAL FE 34111 BOB S TREE SERVICE ^ Trimming and raaoval. 335-2324 EXPERT TREE SERVICE. FREE aattmataa. FE 3S503 or OR 3-2000. General Tree Service Vnyaliajob —Try our hid. FE TRIMMINO or REMOVAL. VKRT Low Co»t. FE 0-2000. _______ Track Rontai________ ma SPACE RESERVED OR SERVICE AD DIAL FB 34ISI TODAY I Trucks to Rent rT0*TRUc2l — TRA^rSls***'** AND EQUIPMENT Damp Truck*—Saml-Traller« Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Coin s. WOODWASD THOMAS uraOLaramiNO Iff NORTH FERRY BY. FE 5-8888 EARLE’S CUSTOM UFHOLBTER-tag, 0114 Orntoy Lab* Road. EM aha. JOSEPH P. FE 44101 . .. JflgF-^^raTWr aSFgfBB8r*rSal Wrecking Service FOR FAST LIST WW ii® COMPLETE BOUBE AND COM-marclal w*«cklng aartto# $4101. /{A . jM* vh'ty'KrvTJO'Vi^Si OtAI* Parkside Apartment* 1(1 Mechanic. Nicely furnished at-1 ....--“ultable far ' —- ' •-1 balldtog. ____OL TEACT______ Only 2 beautifully furnished apart* menu left. Immaeulatoly clean Each apartment suitable / rtlihed. Lincoln 04173._ TWO bEdroomifartment within wolktas dUtaneeof downtown. $M per month Phone 882 3371 altar *1* or •** Mr. Her-maoie tor i **nda* ot SO <3ark Btroat. central High i Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor Untu *“ 1 70 West Huron Street me FE 5-8161 _____________________h TfeACHERS—COUPLK | At*. FE 3408. I, SINOLE ____t OL $4801 2 bedroom cbtnnSf 2 ibigt-a- Ol 0-2030. ___i UNFURNISHED YEAS AROUND ____________i dining arm. Oowntty etyto kttahon with bullt-tn raaqa and utcr. Lnrt* eating ipaca. $ larva bedroom* swBAas bath. Formal entry hall with ttoto floor. Bardwiid floor# jamah-out. ConoNto. Roady Ot move ba**m«nt garage, very aeat home. Only $14460 PACE REALTY OR 4-0*30 BUILDER, RANCH.' TRI-LEVEL. B1-UCYK1. To ha sold by builder 3 had-raame. baaemeats. garag**. .tors* __ Wllllai ike. 'Beautiful heaeh. * tow lam*. $100. Larne. OR »-11$* Yal-U-Way Rentals . OR ISORE Vacant Let* Ctty. nf Pcnttac ■ Any area. Feet Actton.by. bu^er (w CALL. PI MfftUJ! *, I-7SP IJJ. RU1LDIMO CO. . ! LISTINGS NEEDED Hivt » miRiktr of ktfiw for 2- Md w. ror kuic # roovnt wrnri vwmnum* ‘bS^Rc.IE.UW jR»t ApU. | aa*.* i Mda. TaA-Bwran. private m-pa. parch, clean. $$0. all will- -FE 34SS1. 78 Mohawk. front nnfurntohed - , ______________ ____ ____ Ito hath* Fireplace. SYLVAN SHORES DRIVE 3-ear fares*. t$0 feet wator front- j Country, Mvto^ “**" __r»T"*Bs t^TSmWmrsi BEDROOMS. PAETLY PUS-! _ ftoar. FB 4-IML •bed. lakalroct apto. OR 3418$. | OFFER 4 ROOM ROOMS ANDnUTH. STOVE/^ ■HB|| **“* | refrigerator turn. MO. M R. J. (Dick) VALUET ^Realtor FE 4-3531 3134$ Oakland * Rowt Apts. Funtlahod 37| bedroom, liyino ROOM,,-k lichen and hath aoWa* Lake.jf Cletn neat. Adulta. SS3-Q3*. Rft&i ftjjm IITCJB 'AROUND B-BEDROOm!' w.. I... _ Iglhttoe^furattiedT yaaad-l Rut Lake CottagQB 41 . 330 A-hum j Rent Houses S-g”^ 2-BEDROOM. ELISABETH LAKbIlAKBPROWT faaai SwaitskU flMt. (ft Jtth*. I Lfttt, L*Wl»U»n. rm m root eisv. •m. 410 pe i aooila'%rta" * 1 Inqalre Ant, t at *1 Charlotte. - LAROE ROOIU Aim BATH. jtuitue. non ipl rtf'! On hue line, aaapto preferred. In Oto g*atra*n$J^ dementod. C& nlihed. UtUltle* Included Tel-Huron location. MO month. PE $4210 or FE A-SOM.__ ___ ULTgg. n l?”TORBFE^43003j 1 CLEAR"! onto FE l---- |I BEDROOM.___________________________________ bedroom. I R*ferenc*» “'chlppew* MM tits .AROUib) ,AKE UVINO, SSTffibr tt. too Flato*. OR $43U. furniabm. noogg AND BATH. jmFEIO- t ltdftki MTAkLi Wr i 7>R VmeT FrtvaU entrance « 2-7145. . I > hlldren In bids. _ SHIRLEY APTS. hmch. 3 bedroom*. jtwl. Ricrwtlo#, lowawnm*. wm-g. BY OWNER. 3 ROOMS AND BATH BUED 1 J43-7OT FE MlM far thtt^to^rta^^brtck^bjui- 17$ X. mft, iPAMILT. 4-ROOM and batten, toraem and hath W.W. Rom Rtatt 6$ OR M^H for dtixAto^ , —r * Son In' Small dawn payment! r* 3-o*M- AN ACRE ON PINE LAKE. SANDY saw- Jr&r— ® 3-Bedroom Brick CLEAN WOdlEKEEFlNO R66kf‘. ] ptortdgqd waUi. AWnchad » »3^LX—Don McDonald CLEAN SLEKPINQ ”~'”c ”1 cuDboerdspece. Ftolahod rmrea- ■ licnrem * with til* floor, oalllng and wart bar. Oa. heat and SkKvs'Sr* — — after 3 J$ ‘P-to LEASE «RM. M a yon have good eradtt wa have $ awusm randy tor ■■ansaary tits down, $40 and tss par mmth. A. C. Compton & Sons asm W. Huron OR 3-7414 After » a.m OR 34»$S PE S-tto* SEMI-FINISHED • menu. Soma furnish toSAgrtoltoJtotoR. Of wUl build oa your lot. Tam* to «ttt A. C. Compton oc Sons hi *■ OR Mil* PB 37084 1. 0ft 3-4*4$ I ;TWHNTY-TWO -T«AC JftKSSs MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1961 For Sale Houa*a 49 -m BUILD E'&SSB 1 Don McDonald KAMPSEN Crooks Road $9,950, G1 Terms Neat flve-roo 1— ; gated nwm Walled Lake Area Big Brick Ranch In okoeUanlicaodtttao - jovsly i*>« k*«l, dream °kttch-* fan mimi tM tw ear ______ .1 pinf HI steel ot *1*.*5*. Tsrms. loo. Family Room 18x13 Veterans-rNothing Down All , plettered walla. Two bedroom; ■ down, tipanelon attic IF YOU WANT AQOAUTY HOME. — THIS ONE) List with Humphries DORRIS OAKLAND LAKE A room - homo iumplotd*, racoodl-Honed la the beet of etyle, -------— and convenience. Stone fireplace la the MBIT foot I at to-- ■ ton OPT JOSLYN Sava N. buy out e 4W per cent OI. i pay menle of only -------- with comp.et.ly ‘ fenced. INDIAN VTLLAOE INCOME Oat of the beet loceMeoe la town, t roome Sown with full bath aad 3-room sport- atovolT aVel apartment ailed waeher. Located on ooraer lot with pa- HURON OARDENS BUNOA-LOW li.W MM down, living room 1 lilt, kitchen 10 xlitt, all tUed H“- —T ' HIITER U-- ft of cum-in acove tad thede. only tlt.MO NORTH SIDE. 4 roomt I beiement, city water ai It.MO with ItH down. NEAR OFDYKE, attract! t Call FE* W a. c. Milter, Haul Eetate. Elisabeth Lake Road. Builder Must Liquidate Trade-In at Only $79 NO OTHER MONET NEEDED No credit check. Immediate' poo-eeeeton. *b block from Lineg*-*-mphScheot. * yetra old. : GILES Rochester Area . A pood buy on thia 3-bed* ream homo Moated to MSUO area aa large lot. Ml basement. oil MM, hardwood floarf. plastered walla, J-eer MM. ffNI with imp down, nda woa t North Suburban Indian Village A real sharp IP-room brick near Webster School. Largo family homo or Income if nroforrad. Auto, gee heat, full basement, 3-car garage Priced to MU. Terms can he arranged. GILES REALTY CO. FE 4411* Ml BALDWIN AVE. Open p a,m. - I p.m. MULTIPLE LIBTIMO SERVICE • DOWN — CUm 3-BEDROOM, unity roam, largo living robot nd hath. On largo lot. Oak floors, WM- T. (TOM) REAGAN 3441 Auburn Avt, Auburn Heights Area ______t with flrepleee, in- i aad HI-FI musie through-shopping oenter. churches, veil landscaped. Lot ItOxIM Only I1T.PM. H. C. Ncwinghsm Realtor CRAWFORD AGENCY Mg w. Walton FE M3M ■ WM MY 3-114* Homes-Farms mica counters a h gas heat, li corner lot US x 130. 1 ad with Made aad i trace, M.M4. Terms. O'NEIL MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE NEAR JOSLYN — Walk to )-keet 3-bed ■EBM---------------1 floor; am aloWerad wane. Ceramic tt) bath with shower. "Boa Dry" hoaomoat. the owae says, nicety painted, too. i only tlt.top. Lou if on your k full basement — cyclone ft garage — large let with t 113,100. M.IM down. 3-BEDROOM CEDAR SHAKE home — full basement — 314-ear i*rage. Anchor fence—nice landscaping — awnings, etc. $13.M(, ur* raspberries. Th# alee mirtat Weet aad have wd Is sen with only *3- femlly. (23. 3-BEDROOM YEAR AROUND borne — paneled living room with (MSMJmSw overlooking lake -S58J lot water knot — Sim tat wltt Mado treat. Fan bargain at M.500 - terms.. Saw you. Property aoned emamewtal aad multiple dwelling, plus aa It-room okter firm house. Presently e 4-famlly Monthly Income I — nonth Terms give ydu free real far yourself and the Income from tlta otter two apartment, wtfl make your hoots pay-meat with moaayv to spare. A0 apartmeede aka nicely furnished Excellent location —■ Pitted rtoht — call WOW! 11 ,_____to tom* . 14x30 $ ft iia room BP a natural wall ,$* wan carpeted ltv-•tooe fireplace. 1st. dining no with kxrtH-ta hatchet, rintahed VUWUhHea room ' lx haeomoat. Soar tango. L-ni RAY O'NEIL, Realtor ■d 1 —- Open $4 p.m. tSKs workshop aad ban — fruit ai berries — tractor and aqotpmas JMMBMa farmer i SEMI-PRIVATE M LEVEL ACRES pared node — wt —hear Lapeer with sale Batemi painted. gU.*M LA*9E ^J*1* HOME ON I ACRES •hi vmage—'I'lMjIrutfl eepelratelr* HHPHFOOO REAL estate * I-1M». Bam Ft .VUM Drayton Plains Income a SSSjWS?* —■ West Side ^olleat leeaOea aaar Webster Jg*!- brick Mtf fruie. ffWI baaemeot. mu heal aad 2-car 2S£.2.C1?£.“ " W. Huron Near Hospital Svtea «R Ftr WHimh 49 rAKB OYER BALANCE OF NM WmeaST|W dowa aa | rooms - aad ham, iaera taL FE Mat, FOR COLOREp 4 Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths 1^00-Sq.-Ft. Brick Basement,- 2-Car Garage $16,500 A colonial, full brick Capo Cod . with 34-ft ftont porch. 3-car M. parag*- Pared drive aad full basement. Large living room with natural fireplace Formal dining area Country etyle kitchen' with buUt-ta range aad oven. Large eating apace, t large bedroom* both. BmiI__ __ _ floor. Hardwood floors through-out. Complete Ready to move into for only 111,10# on your tot. LADD'S IRC. 3SS4 Lapeer Rd. (Perry) M34 PS 8-Mil or OR 3-1331- after 3:34 $39‘ Moves You In QiESAPEAKE BAY MODEL 965 Carlisle ' Bedrooms Family-Size Kitchen Vanity in Bath North on Baldwin to Eon-don, left to Corueta. OPEN DAILY 11 to 7 THE HUDSON BAY Basement Models $100 Moves You In SPOTLITE FE 4-0985 Designed for Today I LOVELY MODEL HOME la Ideal SeVtSag 3922 Percy King Lotus Lake Estates SIjIVIK realty _ Mornings cell MA 4-4003 Rotwooa 1 ond 3 call or 3 0001 BRICK TWO-FAMILY aad haatiat plants ! Aute-atatte heat, excellent condition Inside aad out. Reasonable pries aad terms. Ask far Mr. Alton Nicholie - Harger Co. ■wo. r~ - Am TRI-LEVEL STARTER Model Qpm Daily 10—4 p.m. No monoy down, on jr«6r tat. KSowf*"* * “"*• H •Iding. Stormi oad screen*. Large euo room. Living room. Dining area. Modern kitchen Utility room. 3 tote. Lake pUvtlogee. WtU Mil (ora. or unfurn. or eonaldei trade on income property. At traotlvehr priced. FAMILY ROME Large 4 bedroom modern. 1 com plots bath, two halt bathe, ear amt* tile. Largo eerpoted living aad dating room. 3 ear garage. 3 tarn fenced tote. At la T,rMi Lakefront weeded lota. Only LAKEWOOD -VTLLAOE Large lakefront tot. Exa building alto. 15.400. term*. Dorothy Snyder Lavender MSI Highland Rd. (MM) EM 3-3303 Pay# MU 4-4*17 Evee. Colonial Hills Brtok ranch homo with attached garage. Large beautifully landscaped yard. Screened terrace. 2f living room with fireplace. Radiant Mot. Many astrae included with this fins property. COI1 for appointment. Suburban ) bedroom brtok and from* ranch home./ Automatic bees Largo lot. Bath and c Joet decorated. Loir’dowa pay meat aad low monthly pay Eve: Can Mr. CaeteH FE 3-7373 M W. HURO NICHOLIE - HARGER FE 5-8183 It*. Cl hue II ANNETT $6,950-Low Down Payment I rate, and hath, - Separate Matas_. . meat, gas heal. Oerai to shopping area aad Oakland Lake Privileges 3-bedrm. brtok reach, excellent eondltHn. 14 ft. *)«"» tree, model kitchen, Ige living rm.. foil basement, gas boat, water softener, , alum, itonne and serooaa. Farad street. *15.500 Convenient term*. - New Brick Ranch 3 bedrm*., II ft. Urtnf rm., 1—-ramie tU* t By Klt^ Onann | For Ssk Husas ^, 49 you believe in flipping at first sight?" For Sale Houses 491 For Sale Houses 49 SCHRAM , carpeted North End Two larto_ bedroomi ChseVful” itchen*1 full Im with SO* PA beet, tiled tlon room. 3-oor garog*. grape arbor fruit t-—r- —1 —4 . garden »pot. zru% forthern and Madison lave a Garden! A Mat 3-badroom bungalow AUBURN HEIOHTS. large U Ing room with *eporate dlnn room, modern kitchen, fun be* ment with oU forced air ho and a targe garage, the tot _ ' 2*0 feet deep. Priced at ooly dining and kitchen area, full basement with oU PA beat and • 3-car garage. Phte a 11x31 DOG-KENNEL, on a lot l*4x-335, priced at only 11,500 with •l.Hddewa. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD BEDROO) *hl(f Largo lieges. Only , BEDROOM ranch carpeting. Largs IMS. watsrford Town- t only fn ________________sew coo- —leu, brssiswsy, 3-csr garage, large tot. $12.tie, sa*y term*. LAUINGER realty 1*31 William* Lk. Rd. OR 4-MT1 Hagstrom Owner Transferred oak 1 tree*. ■ 3 "ling bad room*, kitchen .haa built-in* Includxig waaher and dryer. Window walk la dtntod room and dinette At-tached I-oar garage, beautifully lundmaned, 3MM Include* e»r-petlnx aad drapsrle* Oakland Lake GI's No Money , “t- Down *50 WILL MOVE YOU Into . this elonu. altsrp horn*. NO 00 Brick Apt.—4^Unit Excellent condition, good rental area showing net return of t! per coat. Ea. unit he* 3 bedrm*.. 30 R. living rm., dining hiU hath ana kitchen, cop-, basement, 4war garage. | toeattoa, paved streets. Brick Tri-Level Neighborhood of wed planned homes, minutes from tom. carpeted living aad Storing area, modern ktt. with ballt-lns, 3* ft. asUvtttee rm.. wall type fireplace. 3 too bedrm. sad 1 full both*. Alt. 3 oar garage, ea-gortly^laudKapod corner tosa- i. Alt. 1-car garage. Lake ,...^l*i. 30.1*0 - Term*. -E WILL TRADE Annett Inc. Realtors 3* E. Huroo St. FEB-0466 „ _ rv-v*-^ coun- ty. Beautiful brtok ranch homo. | oatra largo bedroom* plus lfs excellent kitch- ■ Kir^d fireplace aad wall to wall i. 14xlE family mom piu* jet with recraatioe room.-sttecheri tarM^^aMBto^H . Tbp environment of s*Ue!*^5Sptoisly furnished htclud-teg refrigerator, stove and TV. Largo 13x30* kitchen with plenty of cupboard*, taka privilege*. $7,* tat total price. TED McCULLOUOH. REALTOR PHONE 687-2211 •143 Caso-Eltaabott Rood Val-U-Way ROCHESTER COMMERCIAL at foot of commercial free teg* aa ths main abraat of Rochoater. Ha* a largo 7-room hom* wtth IU1 basement aad garage. fll.fSS. FOR COLORED $959 DOWN f rooms aad bath. tSteat ifvlng room, kaioment. astomStic otl boos, 3-ear garage., oorjyog nod __________ R.J. (Dick) VALUET, Realtor) 'FE 4-3531 MA OAKLAND AVENUE OPEN M TRIPP Lake Privileges: Large paneled living room — country kitchen — large family room - two spacious bedroom*. 3-ear attached ■ garage.. . HOYT Poeicciitn la It day*. MULTIPLE LMT1NO SERVICE living room with ledgorock I place. Dining room, lull kitchen, •alt ft ml Extrs fireplace _ _____________ could A $7,000 GEM "F’ DOWN TO Ola t roomt. 3 bdrooms, fi Living room. 13H7 ft. SMITH WIDEMAN * 413 W. Huron St. OPEN EVES. FE4-4526 nut to yoaratlf. completely decorated throughout, mtaatod — sa aero of toad. Ideal to;at*«n for a newly married couple retired folks- Immediate posi HERE IT ISf ome you folks have been far. A lovely 3-bedroom : orou. Fireplace, attached 3-csr ftragt, sad many other deluxe fauturaa. This to a new home In excellent araa. 4-BEDROOM Brtok bunt---- ------ - 3-car garage aad situated large well-landscaped tot. Can M bought ou FHA term* mBtoteta Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad Thst’s because of the greater selection of everything from automobiles to employment offered every day. l* Just Dial FE 2-8181 J. A. TAYLOR, Realtor REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 7733 HIGHLAND ROAD (MMI Dally 4-4 Sunday 10 GAYLORD CLOSE TO ST. Priced to sell quick at $$,-(50 with a dawn payment Of tl.500 Set this MW. Call PE S-MS3. EXECUTIVE TTFE HOME. 7-room homo 3 hath*. Extra largo spoclous horn* with numerous built-in features Lake privileges wttt private boot dock. Selling for much toss buDders cost. Thl* 1* a truly quality built Mma priced to sell quick. Call PE MM. BRICE RANCH HOME -Three spec loos bedrooms Hardwood floors. TOod basa-' meat floor with sxtra shower. Home la In excellent condition. Lot 70x130. So 'BUD' Otvti These 5 Units Only a short walk tram downtown, ctooa gad neat Ihraagh-•ut. separate bath cash unit, aU ftrad atoMS {boat. sutomaUc hat watevTPytcsd ot lit.*** -A money-maker, see R today! Only $600 Down Near Waterford Village Cosy 3-bsdroom horns w“*- (root acres--- remodolod.________ ■ terlor soar compli basement, gas heat, hot water, garden space, ssr-rite. Total price, arjfet.«#. Balance on land sontraet. “BUD” Nicholie Realtor . 4* Mt. Clemens Strset ■ FE S-Mtl :■ / After 6 p.m., FE 5-8004 TEMPEST RANCH HOME $29.00 CAN MOVE YOU IN YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO RENT WHEN YOU CAN BUY XU THE CfTT OF PONTIAC $55 A MONTH Excluding Taxes and Insursncs 3 Large Bedrooms All Carpeting Included MANY OTHER DELUXE FEATURES CHOICE LOCATIONS IN ALL PARTS OF NORTH PONTIAC CITY MODEL AT lQ8N.EostBlvd. 1 Block N of Pike oa Boat Blvd. Open Daily, Sun. 12-9 Model Phone FE 5-3676 S.B.S. BUILDINO CO. For'Sale Homes 49 HAYDEN LOWER STRAIIH LAKE. Aa Ida MODEL OPEN DAILY 4 TO 1 FJri. RAT. aad SUN. 1:00 to 4 p m. 3-BEDROOM TRI-LSVKL NEW 1*43 MODEL. Largo family room, over 1,14* sq ft. of living SSMi. MW dn. Lower rimjomijri u yea own yaar tot. we will flMnee for yam «a liberal contract terms. No mortgage east. TO MODEL: EBnahem Lake Raad g ■ . Lake Rood, aaaT g ■ Right to model. 4 New Model Homes RED BARN SUBDIVISION Face Brick—Oas Heat The House of Ease The Oxford Squire 3 Bedroom Tri-Level Pace Brtok — Oas Hast Selsct Oak Floors The Expandable -For Sole Houses ■ Custom Builder CLARK OI SPECIAL. West Suburban M M# real bar- Nothing daws. 1 bedrooms. basement, oil boat, 3-ear garafe, white frame wttt awn-togs aad ParmastoM front, large tot iMaisr. Needs a Uttto In- s faraaeo, 3-oar gang*. « ;. blacktop street. UM It ____JDNEE RC- $14,34# full arte*, lib-story 3-Mdroc ____________my igssaaasga MB Mtaur, 3-car basement aange. oil haul, 1 Mi blocks to Tcl-Huron. T 3-7*4* Res. PE *4*13 CLARK KBAL ESTATE l$l W**( Huron Opto $ to I MULHFLE LISTIHO SERVICE ll Wed of M-34 o BATEMAN REALTY MULTIPLE LISTTNO SERVICE Jayno Heights , 2 Fabulous Models COMPLETELY FURNISHED MANY OTHER PLANS toft on Shawnee. Lady of the Lakes efiurch and school dose by. Charming 3-bed room *—-*■ -- VACANT. BAST MANSFIELD — lb block to Norttort High Sharp 3-bedroom home. Large family kitchen, oak Soon. Low term- TRADE YOUR HOME — Vito several atoa homes that trade, can he worked out on, titter way. smaller or larger. Golden Real Estate 3*33 Orchard Lk. Rd. Keexo Harbor PHONE 682-3200 CALLS TAKEN M HOURS A PAT. MUST SELL ONLY $600 DOWN SocrtfjdBji^olmtot av modern for only tt.*M lib baths, av* stetd utility room. la partial oat. ’dltlon Inside aad oat. Ctartston School DtoWtot. Atoa Ot approv--* with tiw dowa. Phono MA r«3 YOUNG-BUILT — the Bto House ____________ obi* bat tra*. 1M0 sq. II. of boas*. 3 bedrooms, walk-tn closet*. jMamlat oak floor*, family steed kitchen. *01.13 t----- No Money Down Brand now. la ooe of Pontiac', exclusive, leaallaas. 3-bedroom with walk-in ctaaota, gleaming oak floors, fall kaoamaaL BRICK FRONT, family sltad kitchen airiy *733$ a lioaf*’ STOUTS Best Buys Today ROCHESTER SCHOOLS - Ooodl-son* rural charm, a breathtaking flaw, t acres, aad a tamed eled (-room farm homo wttt walk-out basement, finished recreation room wttt bar. Vista view platan window la dining room overlooks Fate* Creek valley *U.$** with terms. WHERE else can yon got a til bedroom home with beseme 3-ear garage, $0x130 | M3EHS — Conveniently 0 shopping osoter, but 1 schooU. Attractive am* quo cod 3-bod-im* with largo ttvtag ’ Uar?*..3«ar gang*. Price only (13. Mi with (arms. TRADE TRADEI This lovely 4-bOd-m room *11 brick family homo Is located In beaaMfUl Seminole HUU. R hat 1 saaponhae. m bath*, formal dining room, full tessaml with sepante plastered laundry room, Pear is-, trSte hr*S doeoroted. WUP or borne. Immediate potaasataa. Family room. ’ plastered Pear garaat and largo spacious kkch-ea. Late of extras. Hard to ba-Ueve. Only *33.»M Witt *3,4*3 down plus closing co*te, - Donelson Park Menominee In Ottawa Hills. 3-bed room brick ranch with fuU basement and garage. Choice area and Immediate poaaesstoa. This Is the one you have been watting for. May ha handled on FHA wttt as HUle m (goo down alas closing costa. Only (15.(50. Will you b* to# hteky oot? Budget Specials! Want A bargain ? I. *55 per month. Complete’Including taxes and Insurance. 3. MW dowa. j bedrooms, mlnum siding wttt sterfBt HP - screens. Close to oil now schools —^Vacant and Immediate pos- idsislrtn SUIT A BT1V .a REALTOR FE 4-0528 , FE 8-7161 377 B. TELEORAFH—OPEN EVE8. bath, .aaar public aad parochial schools. Onto $5.(00. terms. TWO-FAMILY INCOME: basement. Good condition g rental district, bath each. Fan gas hast. Only: John K. Irwin 3.3 w*s».MALTO*- Phonc FE 5-*444, (1.300 FULL low home on largo Mx304 *ot with privileges on Beoteh Lake. Bssement, two nogOMiTasiwa. part bitb. Small price and easy *350 WILL HANDLE — Excellent BARGAIN SPECIAL rooms «o» ms* .*m gy_________________ faraaeo. Vary oaay ten priced •* only (*.000. HONEY OF _______ ---. Beautifully bungalow - BUT — Just Uka I. fanOitonm.^ Hod- i High. Paved at. Wall _________ pefiag. Aluminum ttorma. tH-oar garage. Boat of terms. Priced at only gK.M$. NORTHERN HIGH DISTRICT -Owner moving. Real bargain. Lovely 3-bedroom brtok rancher on paved at. Largo 3-oar garage. Frtood „ special — Brand —--------am hunt bungalow In brick. FUU bssement. IV, baths Plastered wills. Mirror Uka oak noon. This lowoty home must be ■old and owner win carry sn .paper. Ix*mef--‘------- far details ORCHARD LAKE AREA - Custom brtok rancher with hUl base- ---- Attachad two-ear garage Largo family rm. Flraataoa. All *-— <^g- —— n 4to at owner homo only 1 yn. oM. Priced ot esriygTT.M*. 1ST win US — WE BUY. SELL AND TRADE. Open AS. .33 yrt L. H. BROWN. Realtor MS Elite both Lake Rood ft. FE 4-3*04 or PE'ROMS MILLER area. $ largo Ms bath ito .... _____________ ft. living rm., brtoi fironlaci petlng sad drapes. 3-13-R. m rooms, tote of closets, atom, ■toms and serseos. Basement, ,2-car garage, shaded wca landscaped lot. Prtced to ecu, SIMM vest SIDE Orst time offered. A neat 3-bed room older home- with ------—— fttiures. Remodeled excellent condition. Large attractive •coped lot. 21-fl. Uv. rm. me: carpeting and drape*, ce bath, lovely kitchen. FuU meat, gas hoot. A home U spacious, appealing and q to design. Priced at Ill.Tttt William Miller • Realtor FE 2-0263 170 w. Huron open I to t Income Property 90 3-PAKILY ALUMINUM - SIDED home located oa Weet ltd*, near but lines, I mite from Downtown Pontiac. Homo In Ideal location, 1 naar Pontiac Oeneral Hospital. Selling to settle estate — wul be shown by appointment. Apply 1 REAL BAROAIN BY OWNER Duplea home on Pontiac Lake Rd. Liva la one aids, otter wUl make payment (or yaa. PE *4131 or MA *0*0*.________- CLEAN. LOVELY HOME. CLEAR $3,DM yr. PE 5-4377. EW JOB REQUIRES SELLING the following MONEY MAKERS, all la good locations and folly furnished. rnmi Hrhtri In f, ... 112.50* with (3.50* dawn. MA 5-1250 TODAY I FUTURE, phone Templeton INCOME 4 rental unit*. All completely furnished. Plus owner's 5-rm. apartment. 4 full bath*, income 3300 per month. 3 lota, pleasant location in city- Reasonaale down pay- For Sale Lake Property Si LOTS AND 4-ROOM HOUSE ON channel of Wmt. Lake. Sell equity for (3.500 for quick t-1-BaL *3.745. Fh. OR 3-474* —____LAKE FRONTAOE IN tt* Waterford ar*a. Excellent location on private toko $5,00* -Term*. George Blair Realty REAGAN BEAUTY SPOT. RA M.7M with o new Chryelr Tri-City Iding it (Wt) >ck. Own* 7 smaller fireplace. Thermt^ane consider Itrade ’ INDIANWOOP LAKE. LAKE OR_-lon. Hear Indian wood OolTcoars e 3-bedroom ranch. Attached garage. Open recreation room to lake. $ baths. Fireplace. Bomb shelter. 1700 sq. ft. 147 “ -- lake. Owner. MY 3-1445. LAKE-FRONT COTTAGES REDUCED One for $S,(M0, One — t bed mo. nice and clean, goad eluded lot. One — $ bedroom, new aluminum aiding. *7400. can also, bo bought on terms. Aha, lake-front tote aa tow aa $3.*$$.’ Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 EVEN1NQ8 LAKEFRONT HOME. 3 BEDROOMS, face brtok, 3 bathe, paneled den. beautiful fireplace. $31.3*0. EM down. $30 mo. »acL_r. . _ 4-4*00, LI MTU. Data Brian Com. build whan you art randy. Easy terms, can Commerce. EM 3-0003 for iatarmaniNt, totoBti Development Corp., 7404 E. load Rd. (M-54), Dorothy P. Hort, Broker. garage. Paved drive. $12.-mIH* SObto. EM 34*13, VACANT LAKE FRONT, 3-BRD-room*. aluminum sMtog, fireplace. screened porch. (13JM. OR WEBSTER hmno on Loka Orion. 3 bedrooms with lotto dooms, modem vanity typo bath, breakfast her to kitchen. Separate dialog room with boUt-U) rhino cupboards Floater dtvldsr between living end dining moms. Ptotara window* ovsrleoktng toko. Oas furnace, stove and water heater. mHpto^dUpdhsH. Jslt move TsttY price llUSa01 d*W*' C. A. Webster, Realtor **Y MMI .. OA g-3tll Northern Propqfty 81A Wk SALE. FULLY FUR-"‘-tod^rtve Channels Dam. Coil HlW_ TRI-LEVEL 1 ROOM tract stream, i buntlog. I loose Writ* owSor e:s' (. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST, ?*» mi Mi Rwrt Prspsrtr U ■f 14*01 ta wnTiWr»^ cfei! fvSSmBb 109 caboi dm f» r. "8uK Irkrcocc C. Ridgeway PM MMI M* W. WALTON BLVD. 1(0 ACRBS, H01.lt TOVMniB. Only * HN nek Mr to 0823 ■ad M« laterrtale II highway, Oood rttortp*”^-—------- •Mr. Bn ___________ BATEMAN REALTY FE 4-0528 FE 8-7161 377 |, WWlB — OWt IM. Money to Lm 61 .tltasatoil Mumar Lradoral QtoTWTjNpug» «m>un •-ft* MM . Gei$&to $500 " OH TOO* - Signature "'p&Aiff'ft'i.sR' ' OAKLAND BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY BORROW UP TO $500 l5an« m to «M* BAXTXR a UV1N8TONE W. Uwk to. HI Ml TEAGUE FINANCE 00. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO Sale Household Qoods I wn ^ MpMM mSB Stt£[Wterkfcd iPARTMKNT lltl ELECTRIC dm. 11 M. Ik. KaMaator, 1 ejMlh.«ft radb jai ah*. da*l*B*rt aad cbelr Uk* aaw SSTwTXrI&3 telephsa, (Bair. *411 D*1 wood. Mm w iBinMiBWiN *w BbOT' iNtfkiNo rab~mm FOtt THW HOME CAN BB USED Tun Mr tnda ML lot rael hergata*. &%&£&TC*?7f£ p0«5f MoV-aAT. • TO « M MONTH* TO PAY ■cratchod. Several (nil Mat mm la Safito aad ia* at lanfltoral-uti Si nar la jar. MtaMaa* .Phteraacart. Bl Orchard Lake. HABTLAND AREA Borrow With Confidence GET S25 TO $500 Household Finance is a. sBBa*"* **' rwrt w ' LOANS r wmoS*1 erf5J$prtfc 14.000 dowa. on monthly. Dorothy Snyder Lavender i. MO ABUT Era#. s&naa orchard. Twortery ban, SUM rr leaving etato, to E. LAWRENCE Need $25 to %3B5T~~ See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7017 1185 N. Perry St. > parking no Mauni Seaboard Finance Co. Sale Business Proparty 57 Union office now lake an. paaia- isrws’iisr'.i aad (-room howa on rear , many poeilblalta* ban. ant aad Saak It am. EM SBa. BUSINESS PROPERTY IWaBLE lor atBaa, TV cboa. or Odwa Industrial Building Locatad da U Mile Bd. sail Woodward near B.B., Drtek t mm, ana beak, fenead Jol L IM. culUble far aontraetlng Mil. Brewer Real Estate ass/—■vanns Rent. LWBto.Pmp.t7A DOWNTOWN buUdtac #__ ......___ it.aoa *q. ft. full Maaraaaa). Bun-abla far automobile, tra»k.or.9>h-ar rtorage, warehouse. tlrtnhu ton. (erect, etc Shown by op-polntment. OR 3-7444 eftor t»p.m WEST «fW, NBAR NBW SHOT pin* eta ter. Aek far Tom Bat#. mam. W MU1.___________ Business Opportunities 59 KSAm'&'f- s^' - - COFFEfe SH6P Dinloc room. Small town. Prep-arty and all. Paread *al* One of mcmSrasmEss SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LANDMESSER. WROKER 1473 TELEGRAPH RD PT ‘ “** ____Qpon 'til 1 Evae. TOR SALE: RESTAURA1 fact metal college ton_. __ deni equipment, large tee ting capacity. Urlpg querter. lncluMd. must bc eeen to be appraalated. Write Bel lit White Cloud, Mich. __ POR SALE - DAViBBURO MAR-ktt. Bargain. Ml Broadway. MAJOR ML 00. HAB SEVERAL Money Maker Dairy and daadvloh Bar—Tear ‘round operation. Loop tod uyt to large sefiaLBmk MS month. All tor gg.iao. Term*. STATEWIDE M> w^SKS* fL.WSSS* LOANS $25 TO $500 on roar elgnatura or other aeci sLSjfeSSS HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 E. Perry St , Caraar JB. PI WHEN YOU NEEfi $25 TO $500 We wM ha EM la hW you. STATE FINANCE CO. Cradtt Advtaera 61A BUDGET YOUR DEBTS CON*. UDATE BILLS—NO LOANS Portour Bad Bat la Oat Oat of Debt, Sea Financial Advisers, Inc. «k a. iamb aw ra bum M»rtga|t Ubm 62 MORTOAOES ON 1-ACRE qB MMaaf —— ^—I Sut-Lin ■ UR IHVMM , Wf. A Mortgage Problem? leflaancing. remodeling and a* !HK?T^C>SPrOAOK ft REALTY Safe HouaahoM Omds 65 ' AIH B R. AUTOMA1 WOOL CAM - WASHERS — (BUILT AUTOMATIOB vrsunoAS stotbin perfect; 3-1173. «5 ACCEPT PAYMENTS M MONTH ■dB mulMr^^— ““*“ cabinet SL ATTENTION B.^U’TS ■srvs S/'«i-F£*S s>tbar aria ts 4-4041 Open I h I. BEDROOM OUTFIT, CHEAP IN-—----* “*» Cherrylaum. before . WYMAN'S OaaD TRA1MHN DBF’ ____ klectrtc Waiher Ouar. aiectrle Rofrlgarotor . Apt. SUe Oa* Seam.... Apt. akae. rsBsa . ... M-lnch Oat Btom ...... “*• -*-c. raaaa .........-- PtkerB 4-I1M AsBfRto «A QU^OBLMILgCO^PqMP. ypB Hl-R, TV R Radtot r SIMAS picture t JCjsas. feEtTER BUYS AMdlUe bed framee ...... MB Hollywood headboaxde ... MJ •Tnennrtag aattraaa ... USJ pc. bedroom eult# .... SMJ pc. ltvbg room eulte .. Ml BEDROOM OUTP1TTINO CO «m Mala ____ Drayton Plata Man. Berry Garage Door Factory Seconds AraOablo at elaadbla dieooant »M Cola Street, Birmingham B HOU Tim MARMADUKE ' By Anderso.. Jt Ueming h. Thith will make you run Idthter! KITCHEN CS.at NBT________SINKS. ecratcbod, 42" model. Ml value. MAM While thug laet. terrific eaL net on M" and M M Orchard Lk. M INCH COiMOUB MODEL Cnrtt^2gr< j35CTa»ffS?g» boLfaUaxi ‘S¥8aB0 for sale, aaler. name lor oeoroome. mmmr-one. dining roome. halle, gaedene. Priced not at dlecount tot below wholeehieT Michigan Plaoreecont. 103 Orchard Lake - 11. TALL SHOWERl, COMPETE with faucet* aad gspWBg. MM> value. MM Ad. Laretorivv. too-pleto wRh fawetoMMS; kjUato. lit M Michigan Flaoreecent. Ml Orchard Lake -11. TIMKEN CHL CONVERSION UNIT _____ aI New ptoturo tube warraaty OODYXAR service STORE M >. Cava_________#» MIM For Sale MiscelUneoits 67 Tim leather 2X1 r LONG, 11 CHWTi HACT. —*i fir 11’, M cento each. MM lb II.M. 4 fc Oftpkr- | COLONIAL aBafr. ’ ea 1-gMT.___________ ________ M&B1 COUCH AND 3 CHAIRS. LAM#s” roll-a-way bed. PE g-Mll. MROME DINETTE BETS. Assemble yea reed, earn. Pour chalrv and labia, tn ei value g»Jt. New 1M1 deelgne, formica tope. Mlc£ Igan^PluoreecenL IM Orohard LK CEILINO TILE lag RUOS PLYWOOD ........ IM BQ. "BUTLO" TILE. IM ». SAOIHAW DRAPERY NBW BEIOI BILK FOR window. Ph. MS-glgl. DAY BED *5. APARTMENT OAS etove 111 up I ptoaa dlpbto eel t». Beta tod aad chair (M M. Refrigerator! Ill ap Apartment ti*0 Voss & Buckner, Inc; tot. PB M7M AVASdWUK - I----run aavjrjra&rs^ wAAns. Benderotf. PEARSON’S FURNITURE 41 Orchard Laka Art. PE 4-Till DRYER. WE8TINOHOUSE. g«. H141M. ECTRIC STOVE LARGE WE8T-Ingbouve. live new; Crotley khel-vador refrig , good eondttlor *** Oneida. Art. 1. Swapa t BEDROOM HOME, __—— brecMway. 1 car garage, black top drlreway, M s 3001 m _in Waterford, eheapor he jtfcjm Airport, Pontiac rl Actiis - So pH? ROAfi frontage, rallmad *««*»«•• eHher commerclol or reeideotlal. Bell 1«’ PIBEROLAS INBOARD PUL-to*ej|Ulppod. **** — nn ■g/ltA^-RV - DAVISON MOTOk- ■r----------.— » *m- 56 CHEVY STATION WAGON POR • - track, for tale. M Me- my ________________ toll MERCURY MOTOR AND AU- toyaU^, tor Mto or rma. eoutlrdlue OR VHft._ **™RAL CJUH RMIBTER. 1717 8. TELBC realtor RETIRED’ Ulf ALTTV* with Mlnlvture OoK course IM. Owaer mu*t eon at eaertfl ---------—- -yter I p.~ PATHSR AND BOH IN NORTH-Ideal ottua for two people t operate I woodworking mmehlnee. pclutlnj aad flocking equipment gll.OM plus Inventory. Call MS-11M In toon a ana. ana a p.al. IW-3344 _r after l. p.m. WlWr. PURE pq POMP A NY. SUNOCO STATIONS Franchise* are areilahle la PcmtUe-Rochevtor area* offering Mw or i—PAm'TRAmDIO PROGRAM J^-MODE8T^IN VESTMENT «—OUTDOOR WORE laUen eah PB MMI. lag Partridge IB THE "BIRD" TO EBB TOWER-TYPE HAMBURG Buoy tower tope hamburger r on mAln hlfbwty Ml Flint art.. White porcelain bldg . Pjwad Igrk; tog. All counter otrnaa. aqulpead iWJNmTwj oontoo ovnerthlp. F«il Mti cludtd at only $3,100 ft* PARTRIDGE AND ABBOC , BBALTOM \ BUSINESSES THRUOUTMICH IMS W. BORON tefrtgeratore |U up Apartmi electric etove MS Student da IM. Sofa had lio. Wadtof. up. Davanpom aad chair SIS. Oil buffets $1. Norge gae dfje- ™ PEARSON’S TVa. < to. -TRADE URNITURK EXPERIE1 -REPRIOE1L ilral, rMMb 1*1— ' 1NCED LATORS— I. Prtgldalri forge and OB - “ervtoe UB' k. Bagtsotr "save Vlumbino supply 171 8. SAOINAW PB Ml HOBPrrAL__BKn|t FOB BAM. Laundry tray* and aland and -*"1 —15. Cath and carry. wto. 121.15, Cash and sy.VE >LUMBINO , Saginaw gE Bicellent quality, priced to tell, •ee ua tag ra your hqUdtog SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES tX>MPANV 1315 Highland Rd. (M-10) OR S-TSgl ^°2KrS?o2DiK5& BThrauar chines, used deal, envirv, up-holitored it might chain, tthtot. •toragv Olee. tala, work bmoh. coat raeki. drafting machine*, •lietric A.6. Dlclt mlmtacraph. muItlBth offset press typewrit---adding machines, chert prc... ton. TMk BBSS! BbOC MW Porbei printing A Office Supply. SRDULUM CLOCKS AND CHIMB clocke. FB I-1301. PLAOTIC PIPE, % INCH. M M per baadM; 1 men. Mil per hundred; 1V, tart. *11.07 per PEEL PROOF Sale Muskal Goods 71 Wicirand Music Center — »SAW* THE -rOaR- _ur Davis r— PVU keyboard. Yaart far only MORRIS MUSIC M S. Telegraph PE ] Aona* from TeWtoraa SMALL UPRIOHT PIANO. 00OD condttlao. 0*2-0332_ ' b if IK 6 AND REAlWlN boar etrvtaa all MRVH Dot* fraioad, Boardad 80 Hunting Do g* UREUUBD . JJAU^ ^---------“(BE rUWUft ■atas, 100. SB Hay, OraiB A Ftad AL^^ i»b k(b km For Salt Livestock M i qeldinO*, colt, i mm UKlrotok 44A1I. sLlt H TWENTY-THREE iouaetrallera 99 ___________ AD~Newln Pootkc Bob l^utchinson Mobile Home Sales. Inc. 1301 Dtzle Highway. Drayton PJrtns or i-iiai Open 1 days a to SPECIALIZING IN “TRAVEL TRAILERS" wjsMbjshs Service and" porto. Book year ZnSSXLJlIE. W.r’S!! Jacobson Trailer Saks and Rentals d&V»-----T 111 __ Boat and Trailer Sellout ■atoaMsa o_ _ — _ v&S&VZ OimSlSSRlNK supplies ,k , Draytoa 1 3-5981 NA 1 , __ STALLION PONY WITH SADDLE and brldla. 1300. MU 0-0001-ARAllAN AND MOROAN MAR! t weak filly colt aad ene 11 moo1 _^V£S“ TWO SA_ salt. TR S-0210.1 _______ WELL-MANNERED TENNESSEE walking horse. Ur“ '*’-**•• yoar» “ Boat Discounts DUNHAM'S 1PEN EVES. AND BUN. *«*■ — For Sale Poultry____85 Sale Farm Produce 86 OPPOSITE WHAM THEATER Sale Office Equipment 72 BLUEBERRIES. GIANT. CULTI- vated. flrt your ova, .Me nor pound. Open SqRy. Kalmbach» Plan tetlon. Mil Oraham Rd.lm- 1*?l«^uth^afM-kl 0< ***** 1 "§LUEBERRIE8 at bluOtts’’ - Bumper crop. Open emry dey Including BMtyt. S o.m. to 7 p.m. A chUdrsn under U ta the field, please. Follow elgae from Mil aad Otter Laka Read. Blueberry Lane, Otter Lake, Michigan, __________IN IEASON FROM * Office iai ‘Pfetu NEW NATIONAL CASH REOIS-ters from UM up . New Notional adding machine, tram MS vp. The County where yau aaa buy new ar factory roMfM ea»h legUtert. The Natjeall cash Register Co , Ml W. Huron, Pontiac. LE SAM*. » 8. Gratiot. Mt. Clement, HOw-ard VUM. PE *-1117 Oakland County 1 nea r-onUse Lake Road. . Telegraph PE 3A07I Opon T dm and Saturday 7.00 la 1 MA»TOU*^S«^ TODAY MSt DELAY Cliff Dreyer’s Holly Marine Saks ^LL^&cj&AN BANe’tKRNS [OPEN DAILY AKP SUNDAT) TRAILER RE SSS& L«A&_ 3300 S. Rooheetor Rd. RtVA+E PARTY V ParkhurstTraflcr Sales —FINEST IN MOBILE 14VINO— 10 Famous mAKHs TO CHOOSE FROM s: With rant wings naS Say wii aoo'theso quality MakBa. hama. oo to itokj(rant. S to jS wtoot. Bay or real your vacaUoa tralL OxfordMTrailer Saks l Mila S- of Lako Orton oa M-St MY MIM NEW IN itone. Bring baeket. IW Locb-aven Rd. CORN POR FREEZER. *M* bushel. 1741 Lapeer Rd. PB nw uStim ,o?sr.... CRUME-OUT BOAT PEACHES RED HAYEkS NOW at Oakland Orchards, i ail. aaat of Milford on E. Commerce Rd. Finest tor freeolng. Excellent PEACHES Now picking ond. .selling. --Havens at Oreea Orchards MIM it mbs Road. WaoST ujw-miles West of the ead of Jams nSrvsSMT.. Ut Orohard Lako Ave. PB MUS --- 11 —— R6YaI dkliET DELUXE V#hj-writer, Tike new, Mt. UL »-3»il 5»lon«».tractor mjcito PUiymjRE OP ALL KINDS. FREEZERS—$148 Hama bfand frees#ra. AO fast freeae shelve*, handy dear (tor-age. sealed In unit, now to aratoa. LITTLE’S APPLIANCBS 1217 DMh Hwy, Drayton Ptoln* Vb MUe N. Wtiilam. Laka Rd. PRIOID’aIRE AUTOkflrtC WAkH. ar. m aad team are dryer. Ml. Excellent ecadltton. 11M lor both Cell PE 1-MU aftor A FREEZERS—UPRIOHT, FAMOUS aam* brand*, aoiatohad. Terrific gS^7u%ShfB WOROE REPRIOER- M1M pan# window. PE MDI aftor p.m. Keaaetb Eggert. 100 PER CENT AUTOMATIC WA-ter eoftoaor. Plbergla* lank* with is year warranty. Take advantage of our 14 years’ experlep-- ***“ Including normal tnxtalli A. Tbampaoa. TOM MM Wa»t. IM 6ALLON OfL TANK. *1S M 8. Midland. W 2-MU.______ to oall6n PRQPAici a as tank, 2221. UL 2-41M. after ■ -» 1*11 CUSHMAN EAOLE. OC _ _ condition, ’ll Plymouth station as0 x ^7 BTTL^ 8EWINO KcHINE-I typo ilg-sagger, (alia eutchad designs. buttonholes, oto. Oal* fe^to^cO ALUMINUM SIDING STORM SASH — AWNINOS No money dawn M mo. aad «P mi direct with eWMr and eav Call JOB VALLELY Now Old ItoUaMa Ploneof^ - Bg Oil 1-dfO Sak Store Equhtment 73! couaene hwi________ ---------------------—•* red havinpiaches bar. Motorcycle. Roto-Hoe Ullor. n 4-M2I. .. r r .. EPOBSBMED. 13 CU. **Y. O* refrigerator. Take over weakly OlSoi™ EAR “service STORE > S. case________ PB MIM “reduced prices 2 Bolens riding mowers, ,Mra porter Cable moweys and Yardman electric starter. Wheal Bona Ysr..n~srstijs Sum and tool*. Vo tad H nor**-fivir electric motor*. Mil gTAWLfaS tfSo. DOPlLIllN* *24 *5. ToitoU, I17.M. P«n hoods. 121.15. O.A. Thompson. ISM MM Wart. ILL AUTOMATIC '--------- TV. gun cabinet, model 11 wj"-cheater, 55 lb bow. PE l-Hfl Sale Sporting Good* 74 BULMAN HARDWARE Browning oana 3545 Elisabeth Lk Bd.. FE M771 OPEN DAILY ’TIL *; SUN, g-l. COMPLETE DIVING OUTFIT. ■ everything — —■ — majm m 7-2tgi. bR RIFLE* VERY JtEABON- Deal BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND etoamU>boiter SUUUVa1# BJgSSgfe Brothers Nak, MPSt KatotoM washing maakfim and d ta laihaaae’ far toe scaping or cash. PB 4 iqatoA LOVELY SINOBR, DESK MODEL MWtaa machine with llr-MI^ —' For Sale Clothhig 64 MEN'S HUNTING SUITS 40; Mart raincoat. PS H IREEN LAKE RESIDENT---------- Ing to Florida, man'a *ult», eports coat, (toe 40- long. Men'* top ooato. rail eouton#i»*l tor coat, tO the 14. and shorty coat, rtae excellent MklMML HPPPu Universal Oo. PE 4-0to>. LET US BUY IT OR SELL IT FOB TOO. OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION, OA 0-2W1. MUST-SELL. 2 PIBCB SECTION- - --------aadorn design. old. glM. PE i length 1 jacket l AU In 2-Mil. tS-M*S. OPPORTUNITY ‘ r business Aag- r clothing. » toiH. iND DAVENPORT AND Ml*, good condition. ___________ Pali 4C2-H73. TRADE OAS RANOE POR KLEra *— *nge b . B. Mtmro Electric IMS W. Huron. NEOCHI ZIO-ZAO AUTOMATIC sewing machine Just dial to pot on button*, duigns, blind horns, ate. without using attachments. Sak Honaebold Goods 65 1 O.B. ELECTRIC DRYER, D1 lax*, Uke now, *1M. CaU after ‘ BM 1-2***. ___________ 1 complete *4*; 1 nice 2-ptoee had-room suite. *41; clean, guaranteed itora*^ refrigeratory and washer*. 8*?’ bJ?*ptotora^,I^i d«»{! (17; Mapto ehlfferob*. draaaera, chest*, odd beds, springs. “*c 15 torniuir* at bargaia aetoa*. ALSO NBW living norndT bedrooms bunk badaTraBA Btoittea, frames, hand boards and toartram*a. — tory aaoaade. About H price teems. BUT, BELL, TBADB and Prl. __MATXOM TV, — 1 speed auto, record player, nreakirmt, 4 drawers, |rtr Antume .atoR gtoeo enclosing top half with whatnot abatrac. Reasonable. MA g-UTg. RKPRIO ERA TORS, get At; Sale Land Coniracts R SALE. BA] ecoant S180C _____— Ek.-SA.1S, —. ___living reap cuttaa. Law 11.50 weak. Bargato House I CYEAR CRIBS. BRANli NlW. -------- — - Puarwast*s FurnNure, 42 meats, only gl.M a to Oeiisai I LAND CONTRACT SOLD NE I MM. MM da. 7 per cert Inters afAMuS/Roaltor -Sgy^PAMB. w yuNtogr JlRHRRR rr itowH 21” Olympic. • Btonff Emerson ... OE Portable MaMrato lowboy . *24 *5 128 i. Law. baton ee * CASHWAY STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS I*x4*Vl??tf>Rart ‘ H S Wte1W ^Burmeister , LUMBER COMPANY COCA COLA Of* water - jy f IRIWVRPVwSMi * I ME3UILT VACUlfkl.' - - 742 W. Huron. Barnet A Margraves 6 Machines, ""wuOlk-an. New, ■ Over „ _____ m Prices etart Singer Hatchery Rd OR 4-1101. ftPBCIAt 1X12 RIW, Jetort Mc !TJ;.¥gi.r7»‘.'ja7»s5 Used Trade-In Dept. Cor. Mbit. Heywood Wake- Mto huftot and « (Bain “ “ 2-Pc. sectional, foam tukU. fHWdAS ECONOMY Ml Saginaw PB MW VACUUM CLEANER — 4 BRAND now fin tank type wlthejl •*-’ aento. Otot fijto. Bt g* Uniting Co. CaB PE 4^ VSSi REACH CASH CUSTOMERS through Cl*sii-fied Ads. Ctll FE 2-8181. FINISHED "PANELING Oak A MUM rd* .... 53 5 Oak AbltlM 4’xT ... |3 > Rustic BlfCh 4’xl’ . 47.(1 8:! tahi^^nmab do. * I4M BALDWIN AVE PE 2-2543 FREE ITAND1N6 TOOltTS 41« M able. Ammunition free, EM > dunk — BUY. SELL. TRADE: abta*7— *buy ^EnSfrltAbi. TALBOTT LUMBER bps paint, odd Bead palrt. Pm font lucit* no drip VTimTb^. i — ___ Browning. qfcaM. Colt, Map** aad maaato, We da aar ewn gunsmlthing. We have our awn rlfie-pletol range sad trap field. Also Large Selection • of Uted Guns CHff Dreyer Gun & .Sport Center 15210 Hour Rd. MB >6771 BOLLY. MICHIOAN. BANK RATES Open Dally and Sunday Sand, Gravel ft Dirt 76 TOMAldL. nlng, ll.si buehel. Bring baeket*. MW Otddlnls Rd. FE MMO. TOMATOES, SWEET CORN AT whotortto' pries. Dealers Invited. 234B Crooita Iff N. of “ ~ Sale Farm Equipment 87 LAROE INVENTORY OP USED SMALL WALKING AND RIDINO TRACTORS. MOWERS AND EQUIPMENT. FARM AnF DCDUEmiL TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT. ALL ARB PRICED TO SELL. WB QUARANTEE T MONEY REV CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROS. ‘pOpSaC ROAD AT OPPYXE* John Deere made!_____ doxer blade and backs! M7I. Ford, very ehery, |7H. INS I Ptol'na. OR 3-1202. THE TIMEIS NOW! FOR UE TO PICKUP, ANDMLL HOLLY MARINE A COACH —-15310 Holly Rd.. HOLLY. ME MTTI VACATION TRAILERS Three 14' ^Vaeotlon TraUeto niKT traUer. i ’SLinS: TENTILATtNO PAHS FOR ErTOI-ena and chimes. Ha Fluorescent, ] Machinery _______68 YARDS BLACK DIRT OR itortMrtsf ' Tver*. OR MW. UBHED STONE, -1 RICH FARM SOIL, < YARDS 515, also loading PB Mitt ROEEN UP SIDEWALK-DE art. PB 4-2271. Ar ROAD Sale Muatcal Poods 71 BEACH BAND.-----— -------I gravel *7; * yds. del. PU1 and Cushion (aad. Loading. 42? “ Williams Lk. Bd. IM MU CRUiHBD ST6ltE7 SANDTol el Bari Howard. BM 3-0511 IHAOLrNB, BthODOZINO, dam* trucking, Nojobe too small, ’^"ofK'oPssats?" LIBERAL TRAW ALLOWANCE ■nMini mwn*R LAYAWAY OR rATMEN^IJLAN HOWARD S M *• *A°5I,AW SImb uvituufif » “iMBfecca.________ m h. sachBIaw *■ ***“ Excellent condition. Reaoonable. Leovtag e**“ ““ PE 4-0152. RICH BLACK DIRT^TOP_Spa. l 2-7IC4. VHEEL THAI______ ___________ Jeep, new trl- cmrb aad manifold for 34* Chevy. poUrtfaE wheel, epot welder, flex grinder, National 7-33*1. HOT WATER HEATER, 30 QAL. gas. Coosuaers apwwrt to* 50 value. 535.55 and *4*25. marred. Also electric, oil and bottled gae heater. Mlehigaa Fluorescent. 3*3 Orrtard Lah* — la. ROT WATER BOOEB, to. *00 BTU ELECTRONIC ORGAN MORRIS MUSIC^ to S. Telegraph ^PB SdSdl Across from ftww jar^aa.Th.^-m- NEW SPINET PIANOS PROM tXU up. Slightly used Hammond rtord argon - BeauUful walaui case. Only STM. GRINNELL'S 27 8. Saginaw PB S-TMI OLDS SUPER RECORDING COR-—I *—ind new condition. Oort .. -U for 517(, PE StotoO. if6 YSiriWA - AW2X SPECIAL-WASHED, NBACT BAND to* yd. Pea Orave! a.’VJsarTdfYuaffis BD. MA Midi. s^iiMc,1^rn^r 5-Galkm .Can $9.95 BLAYLOCK OOrt ft S0WVLY to II Orchard Lako At*. PB MMI T*c length Me~ft. grit, i jt A N i complete gain and tfrti.Wl MORRIS MUSIC j isrim t m PLACE*A“ “LOST” AD. FREE PEAT 1 yard free when you buy t yards at Pox Bay fc*.. Elua-beth Jam Rd. at William* Lk. Bd. EM Vtlrt. _____________ ■ONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS 8UP- ■ly. and. gravel aad dirt. Cesnort matter, trucking aad ttto. OR Wfftj. €>■! A F—» 77 tkor Mill*. PB M13L; For Safe Pets 79 Perguwm to 3-plow rt—‘tally aad rat—, , . _ OUv*r heavy duty ----------- crawler, 1271. InUmeltoail Mg I mower. *71. Trad** kttejef-Easy monthly poymortg. Poattoc Farm and ladurtftol Tractor Oa. OHver aad Ma*»ey - Ferguson Tractors aad Htoutomr-* ■« Woodward Ave. tot. FI — PB t-ttt l. ■«. _________ Wheel Horse Tractors Bolens (Mto*: Btowure. OrbM-Alr mower* aad tUtora. Srraral u**d riding traetora. Evan* Bqulpmr-*507 DUto Hwy. MA 5-7(71, A uction Sales AUCTION SALES TO SETTLE THE —»*to Either B*ck-1M1 North Sag- Wednesday. ___________J at | p.m. room* complete of good furniture Including electric etove, refrigerator, chrome kitchen set, TV, davenport, aad ehalr. rag. 2 bedroom suite*, lamps, rortara with located -fttoWr—StoaUrMW Street In Lapeer rtdm—1 30th hegtt B 6c B EVERY WEDNESDAY bybby embay .... EVERY SATURDAY . EVERT SUNDAY OPEN 1 DATS — 1/1 1___BELL - RETAIL DAILY DOOR PRIZE® EVERY AUCTION Sak HoasotrsBen W 'Mg-gHywjgg; J* bedroome. treat ktichen. Co«t MJpo. wiu eacriflce at tort# dto-coiint. PE ATWS._____ iwiwli ______b:caiiHi- 8 poodly*. HA 7-M31 Uiftrtd* >-1911. HUSStgggLJtoBg DALMATIAN PUPPIBR PURB-bred, 15 to up. OE MOW. PUmEf. RABBTfl.^ALL^P E T CLEAN CLEAN CLEAN Closeout on All 1961 CREES 16J4- to 29-Ft. Now in Stock! "Liberal Discounts" PARAYYnrrji TOaSaWeed to talk. Chaartaa, cages aad eup-ptlas. Tropical Art tonka, mid Bff***abuia*TfT*|Hii Httchtrr' Cel! FE 2*8181 for Ml ad PARAKEETS GUARANTEED TO • - -__i 1 MrlWriIBBil MW* to recovtr a loss. OkI Pffl iMlT 2-8181 for an td writer. 1 S5. T~ iw*r58S ■ 1 TWffeAL faii. 8iii>jwnri 32(5 Dixie Hwy ".'UgAT MHIUMT ■HARD^TO FIND” ... pAWBona Mltt PuifcfV a*w aad~ wed'beau rU' plSiU-H»rJw»re-Aece»»ortee YOU'LL LIKE DOINO BUSINEI Btortlag Inboard aad — "*- raftrafiasWLji PINTER'S ka jk jSBUsiaja convertible top. **1W- J*"®" a?s!BPWSfi« Trans. Offered’ 100 l ENOINB AIRLINER. HOMW; 1 - — w-aaetoeo, fan . 5*0 *8 Now ,.J*U 3-11154: Wanted UsedCft *01 | BlfOXinD AIRi*ir**eit. n IWYSaB.K’S aLfgatcM Rent Trafier Space 90 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR -those who wart the best, 50’xO*'1 lota. 10’xtr eement patto*. oto. Op* mil* cart of Oxford oa Lako- -94.------ buy. rail. Atoo whltowoB*. Mato Era sale*. M3 o. tain at PB A0M1 ar PB ftOM. QUARANTEED USED TIRES. 11, bfmad*. Off IB «AS MMI iMhkHliB. HINIf sw* rr mbib ****''• n BTAit6ARD BRANg^NEW Tlftfc* ED WILLIAMS 451 >, Sagtnow rt Haebura Ham, igioi. yinraaSri! $25 MORE >lt, *540 Dtato Highway Phon* B 3-m*. ..... ; LLKN ft BON INC. AS MUCH Aft to* FOR JUNK — ggnowT THDCKS. WRECKS OR 1, ROYAL AUTO PABTC. ■ak^P *jggr«oo ‘TOP DOLLAR PAID" Gknn’s Motor Sales HI W. Huron St. PH 0-7271 —waggi*! »AWEb,~'~ - ** towing Oft n»to WENEEDtAR^I tote model Pqrttooo, __, fTlIrtilfllli But Ob. clot*. Pur tea dollar on modal* aai emer* can u*. M & MMOTOR SALES 2517 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1*03 Autt Service no really need Chart Mo root aad toy AVERILL'S pb oasis*** ni*U *" chin* 2-2883, rar* 23 BoadTAoMl Sale Motor Scooters 94 I* CUSHMAN MOTOR BOOOTBR. 0 h.p.. 415*. 4177 Cam-Bile Lk. For Sak Motercycka 98 Per Sale Bicycles 96 8»,5?j0?'w USED Bins, EXCELLENT CON Boats ft Accessories 97 14-FOOT RAVEAU RUN-A with 0* bore# Mercury with i it'11 wnISoot"*^ wbo'P ww 14 FOOT WOLVERINE. LIKE NBW pi Tims If LOKBPriiR^MtOO. ^j* Bp. jcfraji-a3' 1 after MAHOGANY aedaqmMo, ___*. war, 2-4271. ir crub*he nic, Lapotraee. livr top. eld# iKrtalne. t-*-lndsbleld wipe re, dual horns. --la, to h.p. Hvtonrt* electric tort motor, ski* and other equip swssf sw«a* Several other good buys! Alao o STOP OUT TONIOHTI Hotly Marine & Coach toll* Holly Rd. MB 54171 TOLLY. MICHIOAN BAjOCNAni 0 pm DanysndSun^^ Travel Trailer, f “~~ t. to BE. Oom travel Weivwtoa track oatopci CLOSEOUT SALE ON ALL 1961 Arkansas Travelers -land Winter Cruisers ALL BOATS. MOTORS AND TRAILERS MUST GOII , Holly Marine & Coach i I HOL^Y^UICHIOAN BANK*RATE* Opea Dedly aad i of part* aad hortto a in*tailed aad can I ■ : 2171 W., Huron , towmntM. Wpptd NR rHaKkh5HSW WANTED '61 PONTIACS AVERILL’S Used Ante Parts 102 Sftlft Used Tracks, 105 DUMP TRUCKS We Have 'em! dumps For Hauling Cbal DUMPS Per Oarbao* DUMPS POr Oravel and ID DUMPS Mart aay toad oapaetty DUMPS Six (0) to choose from ALSO AVAILABLE . . trucks of alt kinds for most every conceivable job. DUMP . . . your hauling problem into our bp. Our wide selection wilt take care of most of all individual hauling problems at competitive prices. Contact Us Before YOU BUY GMC RETAIL BRANCH Oakland at Csss ' . . FE 5-9485 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1961 Sola Vmi Trwcki •lUffxm-viB* Close-Out ; 1961 CHEVROLET PICKUP* PANELS twT '■’Si* --1. STAKES CAB AMD CHASSIS Save * $$$$ Dollars $$$$ While They tMtl ! EXAMPLE: ; #-Tdn Pickup Heater -Signal. -Washer. AS Task am Plates $180 DOWN $12.72 Per Wk. , i FE 5-4161 « Ask for the | TRUCK DEPT. Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oakland at Cast For Salt Can sst •MW iWVlkw. radio, heater, sad whitewall ttw, white with rad Mb, (I1M. NORTK OT~~ ~ »atkmcwAM,ip UW CHEVROLET HDCAl NOTICE tieo. rat ltt7-PLYMOUTH. Model —RATION WAOON, lorial No. ltaun W(B ho liquidated for the MMAMA d« Of WT . IMS OAT BAP bo ABlBAd by taking orer weekly payments of SA.7J. Absolutely bo CAJB Doodod until ftrot payment u mode IaIa ia lugbri, INI The bounce duo BBT »>“ bo PAM off B cooh tt prcroi InotoAd of toklbt o»*r i—j— DESCRIPTION: Mat: StorUto Blue. MAWAK Original vinyl. Bode AoadHloa: Oood. VIMH .Equipment: Radio, hooter, white- ThU oat it b*teg otorod by ocd cab bo OOAA at Kin* Auto Bates Liquidation Lot. At ill S. SAO , ________________ . w AW. IB POAttAC. I Mock I7*f IK AW, B PoBtlAC. Auburn Aeo.. U) time from At Ants 1». to I p.m. doily. except Sun-1 u. *SL-_____;_____________________ 4«y For Safe Can 106 mMUMitMOM JEROM E-FERGUSON ------Bfi?------ NOTICE time After pubUihlnt of tbu AO- SfflisBBaSm CLAIJt, Aorlol Ho. ITHABOf -«UI bo Bqridoted for the betel duo of PAT. ThU OAT BAP bo eMBted bY MM ovsr weakly payments of I1N. AboohitolY ba cooh ModBd feu flrot .payment to mode to to to August. Ml. The Color: Yellow, tatertor; bml ■ Equipment: A cylinder, outomoilc lfA|jiBlBl“ “ whltewoU Thu U bated Mo ten at King I br end So ante*, SAO- --- . _.jck 8. onetime from dolly, except Bu -- broket, radio heot- whltewalls, white with rad Mini, $2396. NORTH CHEVROLET. I ffiVBS""- BUtMIwa' * Ante Insurance 104 $14.0*0 LIABILITY * ALM MKOICAL ll.AAO DEATH BENEFIT »JO,000 Uolnaurod MotorUti COMPREHENSIVE (ON, MIL M COLLISION (IMA deductible) - ROAD NEK VICE i STOP IN OB •PHONE FE 4-3535 br b free coot end adraragt egmparlsoo folder on your dor Superior Auto Soldo M0 Oakland 1*8# CHEVROLET IMPALA HARD-top. ^jwMuli^jofjr ‘ 'AO IMPALA. CLEAN. 40 SHERI -<>*» INI CORVAIR STATION Wi.. Doluxt model. Power Olido. radio, wMtewrih, rad ili IIB Tail Demon »t rot NORTH CHEVROLET B. WOODWARD. BI~' MI 4-njA. . iou Chevrolet; ubcaynk door eeduo. A cylinder iwith powi slide, radio end Mater whitewi. tiro*, extra eUe*T (1,0*1. NORTH ^^BnSi^HAM. ^*t%nL ‘M chbvrouit. v-t. btick. IQOd condition. KM 3-AIM. ’M DODOB Yl. SHARP, A41A. UL I'AV’S AUTO MART 1 Cooley Lk. Ed, PH AALTJAI CANCELLED AUTO INSURANCE ENCT t-UJI Lit.----- frInea Foreign (k Spts. Cara 105 'M - AUSTIN maAIB. 1 after t, p.m. OOtCART, 066r UN, WILL SELL M AUA. FK I-IT1A. wXRfi-McELROY, INC tM .DOWN ANSI MONTH OgDER TOUR 10A» YW NOW! ■oi f volkAwaokn. t DOOR, wbiuvou ureo, radio, hooter, low mlleote .118*5. MAtUREK 8TUOEBAKER BALES “Wo Tradf-8. Bird. At Saclnew. . -we^. Aik-; a ~~~ I For Safe Cars REPOSSESSION ISM Brick 4-door hardtop, full price (A*. Payments of «J a mo. Flrot per Beat daa Oct. A. tdMMTW- —— : NOTICE BA tt hereby known that At ony tra* otter puhiUhtax of thta no-tie, one ISM MUX Berioo— FilRLANE, Model—2-Door «&. TQR1A HARDTOP, Borlul No. fpNVAMN* Win bo itoridAted for the bounce duo of Sift, TMo car lately no cooh needed naMl tint payment la mode Into B August. INI. The hotonce dan mny nleo te^ntojfMneeoh if preferred OMCMPTIOH: t*™mU Color: Btno And White. Interior: Matching. Bode condition: Oood Equipment: Automatic rife, radio, boater, I cyllndes. TbU oor to Mag otorod ty end ISM BUICE SPECIAL. DTN AFLOW gAdto. Heotor. Power ottering. PWjr broker Red OTor white. “API* »-»NA. Open Mon . Tue.„ Tfeora till A rm 115* BUICE HARDTOP RADIO, HEATER. DYN AFLOW, ABSO-HTTELY NO MONEY DOWN It W 4-HN. Horold Turner, Ford 14S4- BUICE SUPER 4-DOOR. |1N. UL M1AA. ltef CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE" Fewer broker, tteertne, wlndoWt! «WAY AtooMe MBAs, beautiful em-ontld (non ftetoh. 23.M actual ffi^JKjRTH**CHEVW3LE1? 'co '. HNA^OOgNARD, BIRMINO- CYLINDER wTto 4-door, stick shift mi NO MONEY gTp«rWSM.®55?V: IPALA CON- BTrenki&,k^~Powcr"mecr-- tTUym*w Van Camp Chevrolet. Inc NOTICE '• h»reby known that „ , er pubUrhlnx of thlr 1 i Utl POW), Rertor TIBLE BrrUl NodBCMMl] be liquidated fAr lBl fe of ANT. Thu ear my I ad nrM payment tote In Awruat, 1*41. Tt.___ due any Ui be paid off In carh if prefamd lnrtead el taklnt SScKlKlON: radio and boater ' Body erndttlen: Wait food ThU ear u belnx ttore- ■-«w bo Men At tint A Coronet. ATM mile,. E. «. 1 DOOR, Btandard tranrmlralan, eon nted. FK 3-7S4A, H. Rlstlna. Dealer. #5« EDBEL. REAL SHARP AND / hardtop. Full price AM. Uoyi ^JSsZiPBsr0-* REPOSSESSION IASS FORD ATANDARD TRAMS-Blrrion, VI nttna. fuiTpetee H end pay menu of A2I am Flrrt payment tee ON. A. aka«ldajpn._ -Bfensi MW. Hmtetln »»* TPjiP * DO<». A CTLINPE 5WlS ♦•TAN. Harold Turner, Ford. 1957 FORD RetraetabU. radio end •utaBMte, power gteortel won tlrer, liter CLOSE-OUT 1961 MODELS and Demonstrators Rammler- Dallas CLEAN Birmingham Tildes WLSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward ACTION SALE/ AT Suburban-Olds USED" CARS All CVs Must Go! Dealers Welcome First/comr, first served 1961 COMET Sport J-door. bucket Mate, t^y^BTATibN HiSSBTWK. FORD. _J.ua NSW, ■> Bata Auto. FI t-UTA. 1AAA FORD. OOOD TXlfefe. "ruBI Aood. SIM, sore Auto FE A-JtTA. ki 'M roi^ a4MT. IS4 FORD, vir'sTATION Wa6on. * pauencer. clean Standard trano, ANt «M 2^043. IMA FORD 600 HARDTOP. POWER BUYING f OR SELLING SEE US nPORR TOO DEAL HOUGHTEN & SON AAA N. Mato. RAChooter OL I-A7A1 $2198 $2388 1961 FORD OanvertlbM, rtrauht rtlck, v-A. "$2295 1961 OLDSMOBILE BUrftro Convertible, full power. Maw Mr warranty. ),M mltot. $3803 1960 OLDSMOBILE Holiday 4-Daar, power itAArtnt and brakee. Lovelyi $2340 1960 CHEVROLET Impale Convertible. A.00A mlloe. Continental kR.. Red ImMa. $2196 I960 FORD Ranch Wagon. Automatic. Good condition. $1678 1959 OLDSMOBILES A-Door Hardtop and Mow Bard-top. From . , . . $1888 1959 RAMBLER Wyn automatto. with chro ”■ $1088 1959 MERCURY - tSK&?*&:"•*i $1499 1959 CHEVROLET mala 4-Door Hardtop, aul Bane with power. Tlrae like ba ,$1692 1958 PONTIAC FnrSnfeCniy 106 1960 FORD FISQlER BUICK used'Suicks ^ 1A MONTHS WARAUITTY TN B. .Woodward BT MI MAAS kCROBS FROM ORKEHFIBL S» FORD STAT^kb WAOoW A Far gnls Cnrs M»i Fmr Infe t REPOSSESSION Uir Ford. A real buck too fin WripA Of 1404 meou of AMs aoath. AS low All a WBR BAYBMIA. Moran. Unaoln - Mercury-( 222 8. BoHnaw, PS nut UAAFOROOA£^a60(fe.Wi: MernAlto. F>aw ttoAring end 412 s week. Lloyd Moron, Un-coln-Morean-OoaMt, 23A S. SagL through out. way Doator. DOOEA PAM CTmTsI REH)SSfiSSl6N ow or brake. ■ 00 toM PoyrB NT Ford ouuon BMC VX Pt.. ■teoring, full price They Must Go I /y I CodUloi Tnp;' iTurLSi iCkfgjB l FORD SM a-dear. Two to BIN ML ASA A month end TO down. Lloyd Moton, Uneoln- loreuy«AaaL r“ “ ---- A FALCON 4-DOOR. LOW lilts-ace. outomotlc. radio, hooter, will take trade. OR 3-222* after I. ---------------------------------- 1(64 FORD STATION WAGON. RADIO. MiATWR. 4 DOOR. AB- MUST MOVE OUT OVER IN CARS AND TRUCKS. No SNlAnabl* Offor Refuood. ECONOAIT CARS AA AUBUBN NOTICE dated far tlw b*lanoo of MT. ThU oor bay be claimed BY taking orer weekly payment, of Ain. Absolutely no ca*h needed until tint payment ie mndo late in AMUit, W41 Tho balance due mar aba ba paid off in eaxh It preferred inetead of Inking over Mnumo*: ---- Blue and White. cylinder, automatic radio and heater tiuo car n peine stored by and can be Aeon at King Auto Bales. Liquidation IeL-tl’lU A. 8AO- ■wr™*------------ all extraa. Al.TIA, OR A transmission, full price only 44. Lloyd liaters. .LkiooteMAr- cury-Comst, 222 i. 1--------“ 24121. N1 LINCOLN _____________ DEMO, I,AN mltosrWW priced to sell. Lloyd Meters, Un-coln-Mycitry-Coael. AAA ». Sifl- QUEEN AUTO BALM 5SW LO-cstloa. trucks, iars, ASM DUU Hwy. FE HA1A, OB 21 AAA 1AM FORD VI 4-DOOR STATION -----------------FB MM. list tmbasr a pamknokr wagon, take AM payments, ItA 8-1319 After 5:30. 1M1 COMET DELUXE A-DOOR. RA-dlo. neater, whltewaUs, midnight blue finish, A IAN. NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. 1||| JL WOOD-WARD, BIRMINOHAM. Ml 4-AT3A. tAAA NASH ■»sewv.mp __ SUE ABOOLUTELY NO MONEY NOTICE S»“JSS s^rgaSp^tfaMod ft until first pnmMnt I ' late in Sank INI. The -no may else be pAM or preferred teofeed i Fwr Ssfe Cm* REPOSSESSION automatic. JMS price IAN tad M.V 13A-T1A1 pepmenU a Lake*™.”11Mot 1IN FLTMOUTH, ECONOMY IsMTi He wane. * eeU. OR m ’S'OLDSMOBILE "98“ 4-Door hardtop, tin* owner I Al DOWNI Surplus Motors 1 dreg. Oood traasporte- IIH OLDS A DOOR. VERY CLEAN, INI OLDSMOBILE HOLIDAY jjjr 'QL e>*»2- AQ extra, and broket, radloT TuiaterT eSM ^CN^SoLK^do..^ WOODWARD. BIRMINOHAM. demo clearance id .election modeU and col-. Mood to sell now. m c TOM BOHR, XMO. UP «, Main, Milford MU 4-1114 BT OWNER. IMA FLYMOUTH, V«, anyUme. Fhona AAA-1A24. 1-DAY SPECIAL -----XTUFSBr REPOSSESSION l((t Plymouth hardtop, power Mercur^-Ooutri. AAA «. Nglna., I jrakj. . I nrri^^aut die"ML A.***' *dUAAldoV1idtrs, 334-71*1 AiA W, MentealB NEW ECONOMY BPBCIALI tl Atudebaker Lark. ' defroeter. A----- _____ “We Trade" B. Blvd. at Saginaw. ____ UM NASH AMBASSADOR t-DOOR, power brake* and 'otoArlng. Sharp and black. A1ASA full nrieo. Lloyd Motors. IMMGmr-r— AAB 8. Saginaw, FE 2-M31. STOP! BUY1 SAVE! N Brick Convertible ...... AIM •1 Ponttee Ventura ....... |3M AT Ford 4-Door ............ Ml M Oarvitr miw i,....... ■ M Pontiac 4-Door ... .... (IN ..41 Brick Hardtop ........ AIN UAT Chevy Bel Air ......... (1M 1*60 aw*t Sri Air ......... aim FositMU 4-Door .. ...... AM IMA Poatlac Cataitn. UM Briok Invlcta . 1*54 Ford A-Door ........ 1M1 Bulck Electro ... At 1*44 Brick 4-Door ....... 1*44 Pontiac Star chief . 1*54 Mercury 4-Door ..... UM Brick 4-Door ......... SHELTON nr tim^from *» [ Rochester illy, except SUB- PONTIAC - BUICK OL 1-8133 Open ’til • p.m. or later Closed Wed., Fit., end Bat., A p.m. $1166 1958 OLDSMOBILE ALL NEW BEATTIE s'wsswrefsas OR3-1291 BIG $AVING$ TO Rombter 'BglAM . AIM ^A OLMMOBn4C°H* OP ... *»St ■so CHEVROLET J-DOOR ” JRY BED) M* to appreciate. $1329 1958 BUICK Super 4-Door Hardtop. Lovely and *-rtaMe. $1269 $888 1957 PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop. Double pel $963 4955 FORD '. Terrific transp utomatlc. $294 1953 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop. Clean inaldA. $188 RUSS JOHNSON LAKE ORION ICY'2-2371 MY 2-2381 AU These Bargains , -Knd Many Others. Credit statements taken plover the phone. Immediate ALL TtilS TAKES AT Suburbcmi-Qlds If Your Credit Has Been Rejected By a Bank or Finance Co. or By Another Auto Dealer- COME TO CHEVROLET-OLDS Large Selection of Clean USED CARS From 1953's to 1961s All Makes and Models Can MA 5-1606 FINANCING NO PROBLEM! LOTS OF NEW 1961 CHEVROLETS OLDSMOBILES Still Left in Stock! Gall MA 5-5071 delivery, 1 year warranty. JLL THIS TAF~~ 1 PLACE AT . USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 DEMO CLEARANCE 1961 Olds and Chevy NeW Car Guarantee alULL DOWN PAYMENT MAY BE REQUIRED IN PROPORTION TO TYPE OF OAR SELECTED HASKINS Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Corner of U.S. 10 and M15 — YOUR CROSSROAD TO SAVINGS - ; MA 5-5071 CLARKSTON MA 5-1606 power > Nice fu Rtran5pqrtation 1959 VOLKSWAGEN REAL CLEAN AND SHARP CONDITION $229 Down 1957 CADILLAC SHAW COUPE AND NICE I $339 Down $349 Down No Money Down Down ALSO 50 NEW So Hurry Orchard Lake at Cass Av§. FE 8-0488 $200 PRICE CUT! NEW 1961 ENGLISH FORD HEATER-DIRECTIONAL SIGNALS-WHITEWALL TIRES AND LICENSE 30,000 MILE WARRANTY NOW $1,395°° $150 DOWN OR YOUR PRESENT CAR PAY ONLY $9.25 Per Week 43 MILES PER GAL. This Is the FAMOUS FORD VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE Used by Winning European "LOTUS RACERS” LLOYD MOTpRS LINCOLN - MERCURY — COMET ENGLISH FORD - LLOYD’S GOT IT- 232 S, SAGINAW . // R£ T 7...r j /"T ' * Tv,/- THE PQNtlAO PjtESS. MONDAY, AUGUST, 28, t»6l W TWENTY-FIVE- - -Today's Television Programs-- «IM< MW»»n ftl—| 4—WWJ-TT£wmTi TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS cm (2) Movie (coat.) (4) Broken Attow (D Newt, Weather (9) Popeye (91) Anthropology CIS (T) News 6:95 (?) Weather •:30 (2) News (4) Newij (T)Tt> Be Announced (9) Tugboat Annie (56) Design Workshop CM (2) News Analysis (4) Sports 6:19 (2) News (4) News 7:M. (2) Assignment: Underwater (4) School ?(7) High Road to Danger (9) Movie: “Everybody Sing.’’ (1S37) Daughter o( theatrical family tries to keep family froi broke. Allan Jones, Judy Garland, Fanny Brice. (96) National OilturakCenter 7:99 (2) Grand Jury (4) Americans (7) Cheyenne (9) Movie (cant.) (96) B% Picture 6t66 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Americans (coat) (?) Cheyenne (Coot) (9) Movie (coot.) (56) Musicals 9iM (2) Bringing Up Buddy (4) Wells Fargo (?) Surfside 6 (9) Cinderella • 9:99 (2) Spike Jones (4) Whispering Smith (?) Surfside 6 «ont.) (9) Cinderella (cant.) 9:99 (2) Aim Sothem <4i (Odor) Concentration (7) Adventures in ParadlM (9) Cinderella (cont.) "Hope Letters Keep Allen's Humor Alive WILSON By BABL WILSON HOLLYWOOD — Fred Allen’s wonderful letter! are being collected for a book by Portland^ Allen, who’s now living here, and she’s asked me and many others to lend her any letters BH we have from Fred. I’m rushing my collection right to her. I’d like to help keep the memory of Vted Allen fresh. “have been working on some vacation Ideas,” Fred (who never used capitals when typing, not even In his own name) once wrote to me from Weet Harwich, Mass. “a detachable blister for busy people who can’t get away from their Jobs to sit In the sun. also, a pair of hiking shoes with built-in. pebbles for people who’d rather sit around saloons than take long walks, also, a self-wetting bathing suit to make others on the beach think you have been in the water on cold days.” , it it it From Bermuda, Fred wrote once, “It is hotter here than anything count basie has played up to new. the only breeze I’ve come acroee 1 felt the other day when i happened to walk In front of a native who was whistling.’' FTed was always after the politicians. "how can the republicans hope to run the country when they can’t even run the party?” he asked In another letter. At this time of year, Fred was always doing vaction guest columns, for all of us. it it' it “if you have a deadline to meet one of those deadlines might be of some help," he wrote when he mailed in a guest stint to me. I hope .that Portland, now the wife of Hollywood ad executive Joe Rlnes, will Include some of Fred’s after-dinner talks. THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK . . . Danny Kaye plans to take his one-man show through Alaska and Hawaii in ’62 .-. . Frederic March whose "Young Doctors” is his 66th film, will do Just one a year now . .. Remember when "MM” in a headline meant Marilyn Men-roe — Instead of Mantle and Marla ... Singer Connie FratteisTl finance a swank hot dog stand on Broadway. dr it it EABL'S PEARLS: A fellow described a lush: ‘If the bar didn’t have room to put his elbows, he’d never get any rest.” TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A comic admitted that his act Is so old be still tells Jokes about Tommy ManvUJe’t ninth marriage. / WISH I’D SAID THAT: Dieting Is the time when the days teem to get longer and the meals get shorter. Someone has figured out how the Egyptians, with no heavy machinery, still managed to build the Pyramids. They cut out coffee breaks. . .. That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1961) (2) Glenn Miller Time (4) Barbara Stanwyck (7) Paradise (cont) (9) News 10:16 (9) Weather 10:« (|) Telescope UAW it:» (2) Bremer (4) M Squad (7) Peter Gunn (9) Golf Tip 19:46 (9) Sports (2) News' (4) News (7) Racket Squad (9) News 11:16 (2) Weather (4) Weather (I) Movie. "Violent Play ground.’’ (English: 1967) De> tective finds eotne dues to madman who is setting mysterious fires, lit* (X) Sports (4) Sports litll (t) Movie. “Shanghai Express." (1932) Paaw Shanghai Express become in* volved with internal Chinese • trouble when rebels attack the train. Marlene Dietrich. n:99 (4) (Odor) Jack Pair (7) Movie. “Remember Lai Night?” (1998) After night of wild carousing at < after another, man awakens to discover one of hosts has been murdered. Edward Arnold, Robert Young. Tuesday mjrnino 4:90 (2) Meditations 9:99 (2) On the Farm Front (2) Spectrum ’61 (4) Today (?) Fwwwa 7:99 (2) B’Wana Don (7) Johnny Giage^. 9:19 (2) Captain Kangaroo. 9:99 (7) Movie. 9:99 (2) Movie. (4) Ed Allen, till (4) Consult Dr. Brothers 0:41 (4) Gateway to Glamour. 9:10 (7) News. W.ee (211 Love Lucy (4) Sty When (7) Jack faunas tl: M (3) Video Village. (4) (Color). Play Your Hunch. , (7) Jackie Cooper 19:49 (9) Billboard 19:41 (9) Junior Roundup 11:69 (2) Doubt* Exposure (4) (Color). Prico Is Right. (7) Gale Storm (W Romper Room. 11:99 (2) My Little Margie (4) Concentration. (7) Love That Bob! TUESDAY AFTERNOON 11:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Truth or Consequences WplPl mm TANK HUNTS SNIPER — This tank of the Idaho National Guard was used to help find a sniper on the farm of W. K. Miller, Caldwell. Idaho. Later/. Milter’s 13-year-old aon admitted ■hooting the two police officers and terrorizing *r Pkotota* his parents Saturday night. He couldn’t say why he did It. One of the officers, Police Chief Keith Judd, was critically wounded with a 22-caliber slug in Ida spine. Asia and Africa Refuse to See West Germany's Side of Story Scandal Rocks Denver Police 13 Officers Indicted for Burglary, 5 Convicted) State to Launch Probt DENVER. Colo. (AP>—A»i the officers watched from their police cruiser, a safe tumbled from the trunk of a moving car on a down* (own street. The officer* gave chaae. halted the car and que» ttoned Ita two occupants. . The driver waa Arthur Win-Stanley. 24. a Denver policeman, i His passenger was Eugene Haas, a former deputy sheriff in suburban Arqpahoe County. From that bizarre beginning 16 months ago has come a widen* Ing scandal which has reached deep into the 770-man Denver police department, outraged com-mpnity leaders and ted to a full-scale state investigation. W W W I So far, it Denver policemen! have Men indicted on burglary] charges. Flve/have been convict-including Wlnstanley, who is serving a 4-to-S year term in the Colorado /Penitentiary at Canon City. Two other officers have pleaded no contest. Six are a wait- are now bainf investigated by grand Juries. By WELLINGTON LONG BERLIN (UPI)-The Wash German campaign to "aril” its side of the Berlin' story to “noutealtet’ ns in Asia and Africa if total badly, it was authoritatively re-ported today. Soviet claims that the Issue b nothing more than peace or war seem to . be winning a greater assure of acceptance. This explains the reluctance of the Weet German government to see Ui* Bohn issue taken before the U.N. General Assembly or discussed by a conference of the nations that fought Hitler Germany. West Germany has been able I* hold the diplomatic line against East Germany. Boms baa 1 Military food I rood llih itsit -x —a rattla 26 Olft 30 Pork cut 31 Entrant* 33 Beetle 34 Cultivated 33 Morsel of food 3t Stingiest 33 Piece of music 31 Individual 40 Pood container 41 Pisco* of bacon . 44 Fruit 43 Kind of gtory 43 Decimal unit M Lon»-tlm* «Sr*" pronoun *1 Tropical P i ■ Maternal DOWN ancestors 1 Da tier • Lamb 3 Stringed 10 Solar dll Instrument . U raws _ S Bread spread 13 Oolf dor! 4 Kind of TV 20 Beverage show - S3 Ooad a Humped animal 33 Bang d Was Indebted 34 Cipher r r r r r r l !T r nr ii 14 IT 14 IT IT w 1 » ■ 9 ip S F r 9 ■ 9 KT “ H r sr ■ r i r r IT H F r H r u r - 41 II IT ■" ir IE IS sr B 8 » Opera by Verdi 34 Rnymster M M*M3- . 11 Memereadum 33 Waete allowance - II Preecribed amount 34 Barnyard 41 VMS 43 Load 43 leeweel 44 Rod vegetaMe 43 Christmas carol 44 Likewise 47 Cloy ' 4# Three (prefix) (ban 66 other states, but East Germany's Communist regime has been recognised by Ooenmn-nist governments only. Not even the neutralists official, ly recognize the East German regime at the moment. West German foreign ministry officials an mid to be consider- ably depressed, however, by the reaction of the African and Asian ■tetff to the Berlin crisis. Indian Premier Jawaharlal Nehru’s statement that Western access routes to Wort Berlin were a Soviet “concemlon" was headlined throughout Germany. It caused elation in the East and consternation in the West. AMENDS STATEMENT Nehru has since amended his statement, end now says he be-lleves the Western Allies have (ttt-tain legal rights in Berlin including access to the Communist-encircled Western sectors. . West German officials fear most of (he delegates to the neutralist conference opening this weekend in Belgrade will tend to support Nehru’s initial opinion. ■ The difficulty Is two-fold—first, that Wort Berlin lies deep Inside East Germany, and African and Asians tee quickly compere this to colonial-type enclaves In tbete , pert of the world end, second, that the Berlin Isene could lend to war. Ten days qgo, Wart German bassadore throughout Asia and Africa wpre instructed to inform the governments to which they ar^ accredited of the Wfertem posit' on Berlin in detail. The returns are dtecouragii cording to an informed soul One foreign minister listi the Weet German case, tj n mid: ‘We. are for the tkm of all people* 'We algo are ~ 'If (he alternative is self-determination or peace, however, choose peace.’’/ Resort Manhunt Nabs Last of Trio Sunday Night on TV Nothing hut Reruns (T) (9) Maty Morgan 19:10'(9) News 12:90 (9) Search tor Tomorrow (4) (Color). R Could Be You. (7) Number Please (9) Susie 19:46 (2) Guiding Light 19:16.(4) News. :M (4) Journey (2) Star Performance (7) Seven Star Theater (9) Movie. i:SB (7) News (2) As the World Turns :|9 (7) Life of Riley :Si (4) Faye Elizabeth !:9t (4) (Color). Jen Murray (2) Amos ’n’ Andy (7) Day in Court. 9:19 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (?) Seven Keys (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (9) Movie s:9» (2) Verdict la Yours (4) From Them Roots (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Movie. 4:09 (2) Brighter Day. (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand. 4:18 (2) Secret Storm. 4:96 (2) Edge of Night. (4) Here’s Hollywood ' (9) Adventure time. 6:99 (2) Movie. (4) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger. (9) Jingles in Boofland (56) Discovery 6:96 (?) Rocky end His Friend*. (96) Retrospect 9:41 (96) News Magazine. 6:69 (9) News About 1,000 ships sail from New York port each month. By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Televiewers returning from a weekend at the beach or a visit to relatives are in no need of stimulation when they flop down before the TV set on a Sunday evening. And, almost as if by design, Sunday night'* programming waa as bland a bunch ol reruns as was ever slipped a weary weekender. Beginning at 7 p.m. stowage had Mr abate# of “Lassie” et ‘The Shirley . Temple show.” Shirley, playing a princess, was set upon by a bead of gobllaa. Lassie made Meade With an Army pigeon, which ess granted an honorable discharge to be-come the Conte’s full time pot. So far, so good. No' stimulation jere. Now it's S p.m. and time to flip i coin between a reran of “The Ed Sullivan Show" (CBS) and a rerun of “National Velvet” (NBO. . ♦ to to After the long, hot drive home, “Velvet’' appears more in keeping with “Lassie” and "Shirley." The quiet farmhouse atmosphere is mildly ruffled when it is discovered the neighboring ranch has com* up with a dandy case of toot and mouth disease. It is touch and go whether the entire cast, including the family horse, will bo wiped out. But all ends well. TUNES TO TAB At 8:30/ it was either “The Tab Hunter 8how“ (NBC) or “Law-(ABC). Westerns are too noisy after the heavy traffic, so we turned to Tab and his friends, to to to It turns out that the story and performers in this little comedy suffered from a malady as bad -Today's Radio Programs- wn < cstw re**) wwi (*■*> wzflu (tsis) wean wise) wpon <1 TONIGHT *:«#— WJR, IfSWS ww/V new _ CKLW, Vtn Keren, . wxYZ. Hartar. Wtottr wjbk. Robart ■- £m WCAR, How* _ wpuk. im sport* SISS—WA. Baroreotor WWJ. Burton* Dale Jfft5*£5«8r-uri. 1:14—WJR, Oow4.no*** WWJ, Ph. Opinion WXYZ. SO Morgan CKLW. Jae UOntl WJBK, BiUbaf £ WCAR, D. Conrad T:**—WXTZ. HI >1 Club WJR, Choral ■:**—WJR. Milody WXTZ. Fred Wet** SH4-WWJ, Intoriochon *:**-WJK. Tonlt* * Mm .( .. flUsaoeta -wjr' I----- CKLW, Bopw#*4 WCAR, km WPON, Mini* tills—WJR, Sport* ICAR, I :klw. a TUESDAY ssn:w MS-WJB, Volo* 1 Agri*. wwj. Rom, Mens wxtz. Pnd ff jfc CKLW, Parse OpWM WCAR. Rosa .AtokAAei-wpor, Pam Row*. VOS—WJR. Riml Mutt* WWJ.Htvs. Robart* WRY* Row*. Wolf CKLW, Row*, Ml Do rid WCAR How* wpon. Row*, sen non. 1 sa-WXTZ. Hew*. Wolf CKLW. ROW* . WJBK. Tra/he-Otptar um-WJR. Bari Baa« WWJ. Row*. Martin* WXYZ, Breakfast Chib CKLW, Jo* Van WJBK, Row*. Bold S:SS—WJR. Muto 9 1—WJR, HOW*, Hafftf wpon. cur Ran, I i*:sa—wwj. Row*, a«M CKLW, Jo* Van WPON, Msda, Row* lisa—wjr, Bi*wia«i WWJ. Mr Tra* story WPON, Jerry OI*cn WXTZ. MoRboky. Ho* -WJR. Jack ,W. Mare M >R, Mem. I CKLW, Jo* Van WCAR How*! Martyn WPON, Mualct) Haleb. l:Sa—Wjn, TIB* Tot Musi* TUESDAY APTSaROOR I.-S4—WJR. New*. Parm WWJ. Now*. Vna wxrz, Now*. Hinssay cklw. Jo* Was wcar. how* pen*____j WPON; Man on at., Must* OtfS-WWJ, Row*. MaswoU CKLW. Bod Dart** 4 W0—WJR. Kendall. Raw* WWJ. Row*, MaswoU WXTKWkiir WWJ. JUaaaae, J WCAR, Sport* as that besetting "Velvet”—toot, in-the-mouth disease. One happy note. The shew was brightened considerably by the pfirtBSa of the beautiful young tody named Antoinette Bower. ‘Dte 9 p.m. time slot offered "GE Theater” (CBS). “Mystery Theater’’ (NBO and “The Rebel’ (ABC). The whodunit and the western were out of keeping with the evening’! lethargic atmosphere. Regardless,, Sunday night was proof enough that you don’t miss a thing if you return from your weekend on Monday morning. TV Features By United Pi THE AM8XICANS, 7:10 p. (4). (Rerun). Story of soldier who risks his life to befriend victed coward” in Confederate ranks. CHEYENNE, 7:30 pjn. (7). (Rerun). Wealthy father seeks ven-gance tor lawman’s Justified killing of his soo. WE JONES, 9 p.m. (3). Pat Harrington Jr. is guest on musical hail-hour. ADVENTURES IN PARADISE, 9:30 p.m. (7). (Rerun). Story of Japanese battling with island tyrant ever oyster fishing rights. GLENN NOUS TIME, 10 p.m. (2). Music in the manfter of the late Glenn Miller. • y JACK PAAR, 11:3b p.nl.. <4h Guests indude evaafdtet Billy Graham, singer Robert Merrill. (Ootort. ’ -• 1 Get your •At PIRMIT and mvo $ $ $ with tho mcNvtfovfi Gives Yew "Wvoted-Ort” Hesse Heofing — iadlent, Preduees up I* 40% Mete Castro Will Return Funds to Foreigners HAVANA (AP)—The Castro n-gime has agreed to return immediately all funds deposited by foreign diplomats and embassies the Aug. 13*14 currency exchange, informed sources said Sunday night. Diplomatic informants said last week ambassadors and charges d'affaires of 26 nations had protested to Foreign Minister Raul Roa the government's decision to withhold moat of the Cuban currency they bad turned over during the exchange. Late Friday night, the informants said, Roa told the diplomats in a surprise meeting that all the money would be returned without delay or restrictions. Find Third Gunman Accusad of Murdor Injured in Swamp LYNDON STATION, Wte. (AP) —The last of three gunmen accused of killing one policeman sod wounding another...waa..found Sunday injured and helpless in a swamp by bloodhounds. The capture of'William Welter, 23, of Chicago, brought to a close one of Wtoconsin’e largest manhunts. Police and volunteers had searched the resort area of central Wisconsin since the officers were shot down at nearby Lhke Delton a week ago today. Or * % The first member of the trio as picked up shortly after the Shooting, The other was hunted down by two possemen last Tuesday. Mika Spencer, the Sauk County chief deputy sheriff, [had directed the search. Wetter, who waa unarmed/ had suffered a severe cut on hiv right | knee and the wound was, badly infected. He. alao hM contacted poison toy. i f INJURED IN CRASH Spencer said he apparently was Injured in the crash of the trio’s getaway car, and poesibly crawled into poison toy dragging himself to a creek for water. Involved is Sheriff Robert Adame County, bor-•ring Denver on the north, former FBI agent, he is accused of aiding Denver police burglars to plan and conduct safe-cracking jobs in this heavily Industrialized county. He will go on trial Oct. 17 at suburban Brighton. Gov. Steve McNIchoU stepped into the controversy last week at the request of Mayor Dick Bat-terton and other Denver officials who complained that overlapping regulation* and red tape hampering the city'* cleanup efforts. ' A ♦ # McNIchoU end A tty. Gen. Duke Dunbar are expected early this week to chooee a man to head the state's investigation. The likely candidate is Anthony S. Reeder, 54, a retired FBI agent who now heads the security force a Coors brewery and industrial complex at Golden. The Democratic governor him-■elf a former FBI agent, said last week tjiat "appropriate personnel’’ will be selected to conduct the Investigation. If necessary, be said, he will finance the probe with money from file governor’s emergency fund. Denver Dirt.- Atty. Bert Keating and prosecutors from the three suburban counties—Marvin Danaky of Adams County, Martin P. Miller of Arapahoe County and Ronald Hardesty of Jefferson County — conferred with McNfcb-ols and Dunbar last week. The sheriff's offices in all throe suburban counties have been, or ONLY tumor TW) QvUkly Rory* fee Itortf — Then Pay* You UfeAenf Dividend* In Cnmfnrt and Inwet Fuel •Me. WIRMD-UP DIMONfiTRATION Michigan Healing Oo., Inc. 88. Nfiwbfirry If. FI 8-6821 JOHNSON'S Radio ui TV II n. Walton PS 1-444* Oac -tuil Hook Bed of MM* Mick. MJJL He*—* No. 1IM AIR CONDITIONER ♦199* JSS• SWEET'S RADIO Bed APPLIANCE RCA COLOR TV 8AL6S and SIkVICI Vnv Year TV Frem a Technician CONDON'S TV CLOSE-OUT on Wash«n, Drytri and Rtfriffiratori Bargains whilt thty last Easy Ttrmi—No Down Payment ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 W. Huron St. PI 4-2526 Already hrtd hr the Jail were Welter’s two companions, Richard Nlckl, 28, and .Lawrence Nutley, 26. All three are from the Chicago Severe Floods Hit Nepal KATMANDU, Nepal (UPI) -Large areas In the south of Nepal were reported today to be devastated by heavy floods. Reporta reaching here mentioned no serious low of lives, but 25 villages with a total 3,000 persona were said to have been washed away. At least 5,000 acre* of cultivated crops were reported destroyed. WORRIED OVER DEBTS * neM* to (ummjaj—te. 4 CREDIT COI I4SZLOBS Ml *1 arrang* let a— I *k«* In, no tel 14 Yean of Credil Cenasettag Experience Assisi Ten Honrs/ Daily 9 to S Wo4. sad Sot 9 to 12 Noon MICHIGAN CRIDIT COUNSELORS « F*alt*« State Saak BIS*. PE M4M A GOOD FEELING—State Trooper Glen Chandler relaxes with a cigarette and’a cup of coffee after lassoing two little • brothers at the bottom. pf a 28-toot dry wrtl near Gloversville, N.Y. The boys, man Sumear, 5, and Kevin, i, fell into the well feet first and were trapped tor 2H hours. Oxygen waa pumped down to them. • m of 4 PACK COCACOUl (Regular Six.) f With Each Purchase. of Ona ar More Radio or TV Tahat During . . . ioth unnmsuT cnnunoN at a* Oakland County Eloctroaici Amociation Bring your TV or Radio tubes in for testing Hove them tested by expert technician* on professional tube I—tern at.no duage. Or call one of the OCEA Dealers listed below for expert service. Either way, a FREE 6 pack rf Coca Cola is touts with the purchase of one or snare tubes. Rely on Professional Electronic Technicians far ALL your service needs. This slier good smtO Sept. 9, 1191 toons tike fallowing OCEA Service Pert ere: Latimer TV-01 3-2452 Phelps TV Sandro Oi 3*1217 ssse e«*k*»ee l)i«>t*o hi* Male Uwy. Jones Kofla A TV—432-1350 INfaroHMjoI,T*\HMM7 Mil OreharS I aka Stag* . llsl w- • Arnold A Stover TV—III 143M 4‘11M * TV-H 2-3247 Johnson Radio A TV—Ft 34540 . *i* z. w*u— WKC, lac, Service Dept. Poor Apptinace IN 34114 MSI CoMMirn CM— Leh* FE 3-7114 IMby Radio & TV-FI 4-9IQ2 §i i m m V//■ i , ‘‘- v cry, ' j mm ' . TWENTY-SIk u \ j. ^ THP PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1901 Mr; VJHKa X jW>8 Certain t It’» Likely to Keftp Rising # 5 Many Definitions Given to Describe Cost of living i ®y SAfit DAWSON , Many of you may retort that * AP Bmtaeoo News Annlyot neither is it adjusted to take into I NEW YORK - According to “*«■* <*“ numerous cates 4he official figures die cost of[where toiality of consumer Hems living has moved to a new Ugh—|Wt what It used to be. and probably will keep on rising. Another argument is that the According to many harassed rising cost of living has been off* hands of families, making both set by the increase In personal in* ends meet keeps on getting hard-j comes—to many cases a .rise ex. from wage scales tied directly to Or * * the index Itself. In other words, But same business end finan- both prices and wages have risen, dal spokesmen hold that the coat and only the market place viue of living hasn't risen as much as of the (dollar has dropped. •the Labor Department's conium- ' lndiyIDI'AUHTS REMAIN Ter price index indicates. They say of ail the warnings you had, how much more it will cost you to •end your child to college this fall than It cost your parents when you went. Or # W And each year there is something new that your family wants badly If it is to be •• happy as the others in the neighborhood or as the families of your fellows at the office or the factory. These wants may be for goods, or, increasingly, they may be tor services. the quality t t wmm wmmmm We Must Unload Now! SCHOOL STARTS IN JUST 7 DAYS! Girls' Rubber RAINCOAT and NAT SETS Ofrls' rubber rain-coot and Hat tats. Slicker style, double stitched loams. Car- ter. Two patch pockets. Salmon, fc 1 a a, malti.' Sikes .#-14.' Boys' REVERSIBLE JACKETS Washable c a m b e d poplin shall. Reversing to plaids. Navy, rad, charcoal. Sizes 6 to 16. Boys' SWEAT SHIRTS Mck. Assorted colors. Siset 6 to 10. 88 Girls' QUILT-LINED CAR COATS R Quilt lined. Zip heed. Button or zip float. gjMRR 1 Gay trims in oNjUl j sizes 3 to 7. ■MM SCHOOL SHOES FOR LESS Boy*' and Girls' and Children's Shoes ■ Sanforized chronic. Continental Choose from o wide range I ond ,VY Assorted colon. H $177 Boys' *2** Value BEDFORD CORD SLACKS of styles. Sizes 5 to 3. B Sizes 6 to 16. URLS’ SCHOOL SLIPS Dainty polished cottons. Lace trims. Adjustable shoulder straps. Sizes 4 to 14. 88e GIRLS' SWEATERS Cardigan style. Bulky knit classics. Hi-hulk erlen. Sizes 7to 14. T BOYS’SHIRT I SUCK SETS Lm| tlteve speit skirts to warm cotton flannel. Matching lined cotton flennal corduroy slacks. Navy, brawn, froy- Site* i to I. $|89 GIRLS’ SCHOOL SKIRTS Easy care school fashion. Sizes 7 to 14. fields. $2<9 GIRLS' SLIM JIMS Printed corduroys in tapered cepris. S|67 GIRLS’ SCHOOL BLOUSES Roll Sleeves. Tuck fronts. T | LADIES’ CASUALS ■ Over 8 Styles to Choose From i Moo’s & Boys’ Sport Oxfords 1.99 Ladies' White TENNIS OXFORDS ... GIRLS’ BOBBY-SOX 6*77' BOYS’QUILT-LINED PARKAS T | Bedford colored ihofl. Wool qnilt-lined. Zip front*. Assorted colon. BOYS’ RAIHC0AT SETS 99' Hoevy gtugo vinyl piortic. Snap front. Copo Mack. 1 Comploto with holmot. BOYS’ SPORT SHIRTS Long tloov« Woven cotton* and print*. Flannels. Waoh and wear finish. Hoods littlo nr no iroaina. Siso* 6 to 16. $109 BOYS’ DOUBLE-KNEE JEANS S'! 09 Rng. 1.91. 10 os. donim. Sonforixod ihrunk. Donkin knot for doukio woor. Sixo* 6 to 12. BOYS’BUZER HOSE O A*. Rog. 4 for $1.00. Bright ManP^rttemo. fl, HR" Nyion.inf.rc.d too and bool. Slni 6 BOYS' GYM TRUNKS Sanforized cotton twill. Elastic boxer woist. White, sizes 26 to 36. 77' BOYS’ FATISUE PANTS Sanforized combed sateen twill. Extra large cargo pockets. $|77 FRL, SAT. till 9-SUN. till 6 | ■at The Weather / *!■»• Wt»U»r finwil Cloudy, sb*wet* likely <»«UU> Pace ti THE PONTIAC .VOL. m~ MR'HHfAN ^MOXDAV, AUGUST 28, 19ttl —26 PAGES amocutbd «•— ■ D Maw IN" KKNATIONAL Find Bullet-Riddled Body on Roadside .138-4751. ^ Con-Con | Brazil Army, Navy Out to Stop Goulart BRASILIA (UPI) — An aircraft carrier and two other! warships loaded with troops were reported sailing today toward Porto Alegre, stronghold of leftist Vice President Joao Goulart, amid mounting indications that the Brazilian armed forces were determined to bar Bdulart from succeeding to the presidency. I The navy and most of the air force were believed to ] be backing the army against any attempt by Ooulart— , now in Paris en route back Detroiter Shot 4 limes, Left ' Romeo Area Four Youths Spot Man; Police Search for Clues to Mystery Murder News Flash BONN, Germany ill —■ The Western powers will demand In the nevl few days a conference h the Soviet t'nlon on the Ber- from a visit to- Red China I —to assume the presidency left vacant by President Janio Quadras’ resignation. | Civilian and military leaders met in’night-long talks here in advance! of an expected government request I to Congress that it approve a Iln crisis, West German Foreign stitutional amendment to Minister Heinrich von Brenlnno 'Goulart from the presidency. ***** ________’ ' Meanwhile ex-PresIdent Quad- ms. who resigned last Fjtds.v, I announced he was leaving Brasil I and thus removing himself completely from the domestic polltl- Set to Go GOP GET-TOGETHER — Republicans of Oakland County took their families to a party outing in White Lake Township Saturday to hear George W. Romney, GOP senatorial candidate from Bloomfield Hills, tell of the great responsibilities of the forthcoming constitutional convention and its delegates. Romney also kicked off a statewide drive to get out the vote tor the Sept. ji election. Some 1,500 attended the affair. spokesman forth#Quadras | family in Santos said the ex-presi-1 ident and members of his family , ... ... _ ,iwould sail Tuesday morning tor Worth Waiting For, England aboard the Royal Mail Say 300 Employees|Ltne* vesgel Arlanfa informed1 Getting Settled With shipping cartons discarded! and files arranged, offices in the' new 33V4-millk» county courthouse! hummed with business as usual today. Brazil Undertow Page 3 'sources said Qusdros’te/ta writ-, iten declaration to be made public jonce he is out of Brazil’s terri-i AT DEATH HCENE — Two troopers from t|y . Romeo State Police Post examine the spot whert Norman L. Ball of Detroit was found dying Saturday night, three bullet wounds in his body knd one in his head. They are (from left) C. Poll liar Frtaa Ptoto Conny Snyder and Orville K. Dalman. The shooting victim was left on the side of Jewel! Road, just north of 27 Mile Road, four miles south of Romeo. By LEE WINBORN State police detectives are continuing their, investigation, today into the mystery death of a Detroit paint salesman whose bullet-riddled body was found on a back road lout; miles south of Romeo Satufday night. Dead at the scene of the slaying was Norman L. Hall, 35, who was discovered, as he lay dying, by , seven Romeo teen-agers. They were in a car en route to a wedding reception in Utiea-when they saw the body sprawled on the road-, side. The youths said at first they thought the man had been hit by a car, but when they approached i they saw he had been shot Four .38 caliber ballets had been fired d the victim, Mo‘ hitting him In Backed by AMC Pact, UAW Puls on Pressure i „• , J" . , torial waters. I It.^,.th?ufir*Lu0f6d,1u,day ,0f the 13.190-ton aircraft carrier j business in the white marble. rix-jMinaf Gerail m ^ from ' Rio De Janeiro accompanied by DETROIT UB — Armed with a profit-sharing settlement at American Motors and with strike authorization, the United Auto Workers Union applied home-stretch pressure today oh General Motors, Ford and Chrysler for new (tontractfti. Unless something gives by Thursday midnight, when current three-year contracts run out, UAW President ■ Walter P. Reuther says there will be a strike against one of the Big Three. Work-1 “It was worth waiting for,'” was typical of the comments from the 300 employes who worked feverishly Thursday and Friday — and oome on Saturday. — to be ready to face the general public today. ON GROUND FLOOR Offices located on -the ground floor are the clerk-register of deeds, probate court, register of deeds tract index and that of Chief Probation Officer Arthur P. McKenna. A snack bar is also located on this floor. the U.S.-built light cruiser Tam-andare and an unidentified destroy- ers have rolled up over- Gibson Tuts Up' Airlift whelming majorities Greenville (UPD-The Gib-to back up demands with «» Refrigerator Sales Corp. will walkouts, if necessary. Reuther said there still is tinfe for agreement “if there is good will on both sides.” He pointed out the. AMC-UAW pact was (put. together between Tuesday and* Saturday. Reuther says the new American Motor* agreement “ought to lay' the basts lor economic settlement” with other aMtMtttkers, but If say of the Big Three knows a better way sponsor what it: describes as the largest commercial jet airlift in history, with more than 5,000 distributors and dealers and their families being flown to Jamaica and Panama for a sales convention on Sept. 5. The Voice of Telephone I ANGELES (UPI) — Telephone switchboards were operated by teen-age boys in th& iirst few yean of telephones, but the i ice left much to be desired, cording to Pacific Telephone. „___.. .____. Women operators proved more « willing to follow that route. .nH The Big Three have said they taken over by the 1889’s, the com-have no intention bf following a ipany said, profit sharing path. They insist production workers have shared in industry progress over the yean through wage increases that have 'brought the average wage to $2.80 hourly and added fringe benefits worth 35 to 40 cents hourly. They haye offered wage raising packages that the union has rejected. E. Germans Demand County Traffic Voice in Treaty Claims l Lives The Navy refused to give the ships’destination or give the rea-i , ... . son for their departure. FROM OUR NEWS WIRES ' Oakland Toll Stand* at But unconfirmed repoij* *sid j feERUN — East German Communists today demand- j 60 Aftfr Weekend TottoAirgrl*- *£1 jed a volce m *ny East-West talks on Germany and said Accident, Death quarter* of Goulart’* brother-la-1 the subject of such talks could only be the conclusion law Leouel Brisota, the governor of a peace treaty. _ J Two more traffic fatalities have Neue$ Deutschland, organ of the East German Com- ^ Coun*£.‘ . T . • .j i " * TTT , . , ..1961 toll, bringing the figure to 60. munist party, said in a front-page editorial: "It should A ^ v(rti * unconscious' ^be Clear that negotiations at Pontiac General Hospital with ! about the German problems ■*'***. h.e ad and. fa^lal I . .. _ , _ suffered in a crash this morning. ' Rio Grande Do. Federal authorities closed down two Porto Alegre radio stations for broadcasting pro-Goulart state- The second floor houses the court rooms and offices of Judges Ziem and Dondero, the assignment clerk's office for the circuit courts, the jury assembly room and the circuit court probation department. Judges Holland, Adams and Beer are situated on the third floor, the Juvenile court is on the fourth floor and Prosecutor George F. Taylor and Ms nssis- M^h^nrth n«!r ** I secret of his determination to keep brary, are on the fifth floor. the teftlgt Goulart out of the pres-The public is asked to park to idency. the parking lot on the. north side ________ .... of tte building while the lot on t0* lTI tha‘ BrM" the east side is being finished. Opposition the transmitter of a third station j into his headquarters “to correctly ryf j\nvr R1C-t inform the public.'' \ In Paris, Goulart himself reported keeping in dose touch 1 with the tense situation in Brazil, , where War Minister Odilio Denysl CWCINNATL Ohio (AP> -has been quoted as threatening to | Teamsters President James R. jail the vice president the moment.Hoffa, pooh-poohing the possibility! .. ... . , he returned to assume the presi- of any national trend to unseat Macmillan Irks dency. him. flew in here Sunday and con- pres$ on fier/in Paae 7 The war minister, currently the fronted the leader of a rebel fac-l • « ® de facto ruler of Brazil, made no|tion who says Hoffa is using the! without the East German Democratic Republic are| Dead are former Holly resident unthinkable." iFtalpli G. WUkop, 38, of Andy's The editorial said it should be I «<•**. Enn«‘ White ■lear now to everybody-after the ^ake Town*hip While the telephone number for In Paris, nevertheless, informed the offices remaining in the County sources raid Goulart has decided to Office Building, 1 Lafayette St., return to Brazil and try to assume .. ni1 7-7acii rammed into the rear of a gravel .....-r truck in Orion Township last Tues-! day night. The crash occurred oni have to make trilateral agree- M24 menu on the subject with East # e * | rmany. ^ ^ A she had suffered head and i/i- j I The Western Aliies have always te™8' injuries. An autopsy was to refused to negotiate with the East ** performed today. German government, contending Mrs. McSkuiin was hurt when. | that it was imposed illegally by car ran into ahugetree along-! ilhe Soviefs and is kepi in power |^regoty Road In Orion Town-jby .the Red Army. In Todays Press We'll Talk N-tesl ban talks start lay in Geneva—PAGE 19. jKeep That Raincoat Handy for Tuesday ship early this morning. She was : i alone in the car. - Sheriff's deputies said she ap-' I parent ly lost control of the wheel ] on the wet gravel road, heavily] ! rutted by yesterday's rainstorm. ! Peace Wanted West Germany fails to jier story—PAGE 15. Name Pro-Red | Cloudy skies _ will continue in the Pontiac area with thunder-j showers likely this evening, ac-j cording to the weatherman. Tues-day will he mostly cloudy with' probable showers and thundershowers. A high of 85 is expected. Rainfall recorded in downtown Pontiac from 10 a.m. Saturday until 10 a.m. today was .9 of an inch*, Hero of Father's Day, Original Honoree, Dies RICHMOND. Va. (* - Edward, j Agnew SWiaefont, 91; tne man for ‘ 'horn National Father’s Day was!' founded, died Sunday at Shady; Springs in Chesterfield County, h •OPEN FOR BUMNBw—"This w^s the scene Friday in the carion-Uttered clerk-register’s office in the new Oakland County Courthouse. But three members, of the clerk’s office worked 12 hours Satucday petting up the last records and removing the debris. Clerk-Register Daniel T. Murphy Ji as usual” sign on the ground floor office^ after I.__ J______________liji. for moving from the downtown building. For the next flvv .days tent-pe rats res will average, lour to five degrees above toe normal high of 79 and normal low of 99. It will be warm through Thursday. but cooler Friday and , Saturday. Winds were recorded as southwesterly at 12 miles per hour at 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. ,*n»e lowest temperature preced-two-day layoff Jtng g was 66. At 1 p.m. the mercury reading was 76. Pootlot Prcio Photo today posted the ‘business . Swineford's youngest daughter,! Mrs. Kate S. Burgess of Miami, Fla., went to Virginia Gov. E. -Lee Trinkte in 1919 and was isUtru-mental in having the third Sunday in- June proclaimed Father's Day. The proclamation was picked up nationally. According to David Verellen, 17, of 67909 Van Dyke, Hall was still alive when he was found on the side of Jewell Road, just north of 27 Mile Road. “I’M DYING'’ The boys said he mumbled incoherently. All they could understand him to say was, “Pm a dying map.” Two of the youth*. Larry and Danny brbutts of Btobmoad, is, and 19 respectively, stayed behind while too rest of the group drove to too home of David'* cousin, Tom Verellen at CI909 Vaa Dyke to telephone the Romeo (Mate Police pool. By the time officers arrived at the scene the man was dead. His body was taken to St. Joseph' Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, whore pathologist, Dr. David E. Olsen, said there were no other marks of violence on the body. Police believe that Hail hod been driven out into the country, pushed out of the car and shot. He was found at about 9:20 p.m. HAD HOTEL KEY His clothes contained a wallet with no money inside, and a key to a room in the Hoover Hotel in Detroit where he had lived s%e Wednesday. According to State Police detective*, Hall was s self-employed paint salesman whe was separated from Ms wife, Rosalie, 37, of Detroit. u_ Mrs. Hall ewiM nn light on anyone who might have wanted to kill Her husband. She said they had been married for 10 yean (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Plane Falls, Kills Two KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI)-A light piano: apparently out of fuel, crashed abodt a half mite from! the building* of a small suburban airport Sunday, killing tw# men. Chinese Bomb Sees Red China producing nuclear bomb y hy • 1964 —' I PAGE 9. f V 8 Little Words? I Michigan’s 1968 constitution [ may get extreme boiling at ■ convention—PAGE 18. Aren New* ............ U 1 Markets ...............88 1 Obituaries ............19 1 Sports .............19-17 | TV ft Radi* Pragmas* . » Wilson, Karl ..........98. I Women’* Pages ii ........... i inijffi* ' ff - • S % r '• to appear in The hearing making up for r meeting was r Aug. 17 but RENTALS WANTED Hie board usually elects officers in July, but wqs forced to wait this year until board appointments ware made by the Gty Commission about two weeks ago. Fiimisliad ond Unfurnished Homes ond Apartments ore WANTED within the Greater Pontiac Area. For Further In* formation . . . SALLY ’ROUND ROMNEY — there was lots to talk Saturday — about Berlin, the foreign aid jrf]l, the constitutional convention — at the 2nd these1 and other top subjects of the day were (left to right) William S. Broomfield, ^Oakland THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, mi UN^ Acts Fast to Pull . EUSABETHVIUJE, Katanga, the Congo (AP)—U.N. troops put Bfsabetfaville under a virtual state of siege and arrested various foreigners today in a move apparently aimed at swinging secessionist Katanga province into the Congo government of Premier, Oil. detachments seized several key points in President Moise Tshombe's capital, took oVer the airport to assure the safe arrival of reinforcements and launched a roundup of white officers, chiefly Belgian, in the Katanga army. There were some minor clashes and a scattering of gunshots, but a U.N. representative said nebody was hit The massive show of strength came only 48 hours after Adoula, whose Leopoldville regime is supported by the United Nations, proclaimed determination to. rid this copper-rich province of all foreign civilian, financial and military Interests. His chief targets are Belgians. who developed Katanga’ mineral, industrial and agricultural resourdes while the Congo was. a Belgian colony and still have millions of dollars invested in its ARREST « Indian Brig. Singappa Raja, commander of the U.N. task force, reported the arrest before noon of 68 of the 512 Europeans serving the Katanga regime various capacities. About 300 of the white men on the Katanga payrolls are officers of the army —Belgian, French, British, Italian and South African. ★ * There was no interference with press dispatches to foreign cities, bat other communication with the outside world was halted. The U.N. troops put J3odefrois Munongo, Katanga's strong man and minister of interior under house arrest by surrounding his Rain, Lightning Batter State Late Sunday ^ By the Associated Press -Wind, rain and lightning battered parts of Michigan Sunday night, knocking out power, uprooting trees and flooding basements and roads. The weather bureau station at Dot raft Metropolitan Airport measured an lack and a half of A heavy storm struck the Battle Creek area and Kellogg Air-post observers .reported wind gusts up to 64 miles an hour. A number of trees were uprooted on city’s north side tearing down wires and blocking traffic. Numerous basements were flooded. John Crofton, 37, a Battle Creek water department worker, was working during the storm when lightning hit near him! The charge Jumped to a pick Crofton was holding and the shock knocked him down. He was treated for bums. A Mount Clemens man, Homer Vaip Hollenbeck told police light-Ding struck a downspout at his heme, melting all the solder holding it together and the entire'pipe & to the ground in- pk residence, through the left with Munongo. Tihombe escorted him to Ms own residence. Tshombe, to wiki acclaim, toured part of the' dty and asked all to work and remain calm. Stop Meddling, Japan Tells K Prima Minister Tkada Hits Soviet Criticism of Security Pact With U.S. TOKYO (API—Japanese Prime Minister Hayate Deeds today told Soviet Premier Khrushchev was meddling in Japan's affairs by demanding abrogation of the U.S.-Japan security treaty. In reply to a personal message from Khrushchev, Iktda said in effect that unless the Soviet Union has aggressive intentions against Japan, the U.S.-Japan pact could not be a threat to Moscow, dr The text of Qceda's message, delivered to Khrushchev by the Japanese ambassador In Moscow, was released by the Japanese Foreign Office. Iked a also told Khrushchev Japan ^will stay allied with the free world. ■PURSUES FREEDOM* "Japan pursues freedom and democracy as the highest political ideals. This is and will continue to be our immutable policy," said. Khrushchev's message said the Soviet Union could not remain indifferent to the U.S.-Japan security treaty and the presence of foreign troops. He said these hampered normal relations between, the two countries. •#' ♦ * The message was delivered lier this month by First Deputy Vnastaa I. Mike Ing a visit to Japan in which he repeatedly attacked Japan's military alliance. Ikeda said Soviet treaties with Red China and North Korea were io complete contradiction" with Moscow's demands for the complete abolition of military blocs. Retired' Chapter Calls Wednesday Meeting on Trip- A special meeting of Pontiac Chapter No. 7 of th? American Association of Retired Person* has been called for Wednesday afternoon, according to Maurice E.j Fitzgerald, chapter president. The meeting will be it 1 p.m. la the Community Service Building, 18* Franklin BJvd. 'Due to the rain wishing out our picnic last week, we must hold this meeting to complete plans for our trip to the Michigan State Fair," said Fitzgerald. "All those interested in making arrangements for the Sept. 7 trip should attend.” * The Western Hemisphere supplies 80 per cent of the world's coffee; Africa provides 17 per cent and the rest comes from Asia and Oceania. TheWeather MNOMMaaMMMMMRR Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy today and —tonight with chance of a few thundershowers this, afternoon and tonight. Tuesday mostly cloudy, showers and thundershowers likely. Not much temperature change. . High today 85, low tonight 86, high Tuesday 85. Variable wtads mostly southerly 18-15 miles. Mir t> fmum Lov»t temperature preceding I At S a.m.: Wind nlecltr II n Direction—Southwest Sun Beta Monde, at 7:11 p.m. Sun rise, Tuesday at tiM a m Uttheit temperature ......1...1S <> Lotreat temperature .........S3 M Mean temperature ............SM 73 Weather—Moatl, Cloud,—Rein Sunday Oae Tear Aga ta Peatlie Hl|hest temperature ..............M Lowest temperature ...............SI Mean temperature .................Tf Weather—Fair. Highest gal Lewett Temperature* This Data la M Veers sn AT Phetefe, NATIONAL WEATHER—Warmer weather is expected Monday night in the Middle and Southern Aflsntlr atataa while sameenni - air will move into the northern states from Canada. Shower -activity will be mattered. to Air ,ommunism 5-Day Fraeddm School to Foatura 2 Ex-Rads, Former Counterspy DETROIT (AP)-A formber FBI t senator from Con-two former Communists Michigan’s iieutenant-goveraor will be principal speakers at a erattack freedom fo fight "apathy of Communism,'* today. ' ex-FBI agent former Com-Dodd aad Frank 8. Meyer. Other speakers are Sen. Thomas Dodd, D-Conn., and Lti- Gov. John Lesinski of Michigan. ' WWW Honorary co-chairmen of t h e freedom school are Detroit Police Commissioner Herbert W. Hart, retired UJ5. District Judge Frank A. Picard and Charles R. Landri-gan, executive vice president of [the Detroit Edison Co. The school is being held on the campus of the University of Detroit which Js renting quarters to the sponsors of the school. The Day in Birmingham WORK OF A PRINCESS - Although milking a cow hardly seems fitting work for royality, it’s Just right for pretty Marjorie Mueller, 18, of Saginaw. She’s the 1961-62 Michigan Dairy rentier Free* Photo Princess of the Michigan Dairy Association. She showed why she holds the title in a cowmilking demonstration Saturday night at the Miracle Mile Shopping Center. In Land of the Midnight Sun Visits Town Perched on a Rock By JOE HAAS A trip on the 25th annual Churchill all-rail tour to the far reaches of Northern Canada reveals many contrasts between these two great countries. And many are In favor I our good neighbors to the north. The train of 17 cars of the Canadian National Railway took 200 passentera, each of whom 'paid their own way, into the land of the nomadic Eskimo and Cree Indians, where the midnight sun flirts with the northern lights, and the ground never thaws out. But It was hotter there on Aug. 22 than it was in Pontiac. With air conditioning and every modern railway facility, the train was made up of two lounge cars, two diners, an open obser-vatlon car and 18 sleepers. For six days it was our home, because there isn’t anywhere else to stay; no accomodations for the traveler. Trees grow sparingly and only to a small size on the rocky ground, their only fertility coming from the sparse soil that is brought in by wind erosion. Since the coming of the railroad, oil has supplanted wood as fuel in many honses. # * di: | This outpost of civilization has had little effect on the native Indians or Eskmos. The Eskimos come down from further north, but maintain their roving ways, subsisting largely on game, and living in igloos in winter. They mix quite agreeably with the Indians, and keep peaceful bV not paying too much attention to each other. A reversal of our tobacco habits Is found among the Gree Indians, where nil of the women smoko pipes, and the men roll their own cigarettes. Little tobacco enters the picture, most of the fool being the dried leaves ot weeds. First English word to be taught in Indian child is “penny,” to be used in begging from tourists, later learn “dime,” and when they’ve learned “quarter,” they’re ready for the Indian college degree, (initials of the three words), PDQ. LONG REACH The cute papooses on the squaws’ backs also are early versed with an appealing monetary look, and long reach. Among the older children' the distribution of a dime’s worth of candy creates a mob. However, it must be stated that every advantage for i (ride school education I* offered the Indian children, often In defiance to their parents. In other areas Indian college* are maintained, where the young people are taken and remain throughout the school year. Starting from Winnipeg, the trip Df over one thousand miles to Churchill is mostly one through desolation. It squirms out of, the Province of Manitoba, over into Saskatchewan and hack again into Manitoba, and was buift for 8 very unique reason. * ★ * In 1935 the English crown decided that it wanted an ocean port, away from the St. Lawrence River,* to handle the wheat from |Canada’s great midwest provinces and asked the Canadian National Railway to build the line, with subsidies and enormous adjacent land grants. Three years later it was finished. Gigantic elevators were , built at Churchill, and are the Interchange point fo^, shipments to all parts of the world. Our party saw a mammoth steamship, loaded with wheat, depart for Australia. "Churchill'itself it an aggregation of thousand souls, the- like of which is found nowhere else on earth. It is built on a solid rock foundation, such as covers thousands of square miles in that i. Getting below the surface of the ground is an impossibility. SNOW FOR WATER Its water and sewer pipes are Vote to Top Agenda of Hospital Trustees The election of officers will top the agenda of the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees meeting tonight at 7:30. The board wil Ibe some lost time. The originally slated iot potsponed. , sfon about About 39 ]ier cent of the deaths and 35 per cent of the injuries itg suiting from ntotor vehicle acci-■dents occur on Saturdays and Sup-days. a • laid on the top of the ground, which is okay for a few weeks in the summer. When everything freezes up, they melt snow for water, and as for the sewage — you can image. Even the telegraph and telephone wires are supported on tripods of poles. *■ * '•* • The natives, wjio work mostly (or the railway or harbor trade, go through winter temperatures down to 45 below Zero, but have little trouble with snow, the fall being light and the barren coun-tiy not being conducive to drift- | Churchill has no highway .connection with the outside world. There are no roads, of any description for several hundred miles. The Pontiac dealer there gets his cars by rail or by boat. Aviation facilities are good, on account of the maintenance of both the British and U.S.A. armed forces there, I the latter being much the best! housed. ★ * ♦ When Canadian National Railways agreed to build that railway to Churchill, they were smart, is a part of the agreement that no highways be built, giving the railway a land monopoly, and keeping out their ' auto, bus and truck competition. ' A system to wipe out the Influence of apathy In its elections Is being worked in some of the Canadian provinces that should offer a broad hint to the United State*. People are actually being shamed into voting. . This is bringing good results, and is done by pushing' in a paper of general circulation in that as a legal advertisement, the names and-addresses of all registered voters who did not cast their ballots. Think it over, you Pontiac area residents. Spotlight on Berlin —The United States and Britain have asked the other NATO allies to endorse a decision to propose September negotiations with Rus-the Berlin crisis, authoritative sources said today. - —Secretary of State Oran Rusk denied published report* that the United State*, Britain and Went Germany agreed to seek Berlin negotiations with the Russians without France. ! —West German government sources said Chancellor Konr Adenauer wants the west to take the initiative in starting negotiations and so instructed Walter Crewe,' Bonn's ambassador to Washington. Grewe returned home yesterday to report on activities of the four-power policy committee I working in Washington. —Prime minister Nehru declared Western access to Berlin should continue as heretofore and —though the Communists may be | legally Justified—the blockade of I the Berlin sector border I* n harmful thing “from every point of view." —Pravda said the Russians are prepared to sign a peace treaty I with East Germany (apparently meaning, as Premier Khrushchev has said, by the 'end of the year) "and nothing will prevent them from achieving it." , . Tif. —v-. I —Soviet Premier. Nikita Khrushchev has sent Italian Premier Amin tore Fanfani a "very important" message concerning the Berlin crisis, it was reported today. • The contents of the Soviet message were not revealed, but informed sources said Fanfarii has informed the governments of the United States, Britain, France and West Germany about it. Find Detroit Man Dead on Roadside . (Continued From. Page One) . and that she had recently filed for divorce. The Halls have four children. * * * Detectives Paul Brabant of the Romeo post and Harold Ernest of School Board Gives Okay to Department Chairmen BIRMINGHAM—As another step toward the improvement of Instruction, the Birmingham Board Education has approved the appointment of department chairmen for secondary schools. In initiating this action, secondary school principals have , made appointments in the academic subject areas. — v ^ . I Increasing the supervtaery staff util fulfill one of the major recommendation* of the Citizens Committee Studying Curriculum appointed by the Parent-Teacher Association Connell, according to the school board. The newly appointed chairmen will assist in curriculum evaluation and development and the supervision of classroom instruction. Each will be required to teach tiro or more classes with the remainder the day devoted to their newly assigned duties. dr . + h Teachers selected for the chairmanships were those who had demonstrated the proficiency master teachers, explained Daniel V. Nesbitt, deputy superintendent n charge of instruction. "In addition to an excellent grasp of the content of n specific subject, each has displayed a high degree of administrative Named to department chairmen posts for the coming school year in English are Katherine Blum, Margaret Freiwald, K atherine Peters and Della Webb. ★ ♦ A Chairmen for foreign language re George Cooch, Donald Finn and Jean Pierce: mathematics, Arthur Kersjes, Catherine Slick, Edward Storey and Charles Thum-ser; science, Patrigta Sergeant and David Voydanoff; and s o c i a' studies. Robert Richards, Richard Scharchburg.and Ned Spencer. Mrs. William N. Albee Service for Mrs. William N. (Alice S.) Albee, 79, of 288 Townsend St., will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at the Bell Chapel of the William Hamilton ‘ Co. Burial will be the White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Albee died Saturday at the Paul Oliver Memorial Hospital, Frankfort. resident of Birmingham 18 years, coming from Detroit, she member of the Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church. ♦ # * Her late husband was the owner 1 a Detroit advertising agency. Surviving are two daughters, Mra. Howard A. Clarke, Detroit and Mrs. Ross S. Campbell, Bldotn-field Hills; a son, William N. Jr. Jet Smashes Store; 1 Killed, 30 Injured Franklin; four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Mra. Charies Whiteman Service for Mra. Charles (Amelia M.) Whiteman. 85, of 3207 Sheri- 1 dan Drive, Beverly Hills, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Evergreen '.Cemetery, De-troit. Mrs. Whiteman died Saturday following a short illness. An area resident 1? years, she as a member of the Central Woodward Christian Church. She is survived by four (laughters. Mrs. Geprge Ribolin, Sacramento, Calif., Mrs. J. W. Brice, Itoyal Oak, Mrs. A. C. Richards and Mrs. J. S. Hamilton, both of Birmingham; 12 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Board fo Air Zoning, Traffic Waterford Twp. Meets to Discuss Changes, Revised Control Law Rvised zoning and trafic ordinances will be the main topics to be discussed at the Waterford Township board meeting at 7 p.m. today. <. For more than a year, board members have been concerned about the large Increase la requests for zoning changes. A new ordinance has been drawn up, placing commercial zoning in three categories. Final action on this ordinance la expected tonight, according to Supervisor EL ntpr R. Johnson. Township attorney Paul Mandel will present a revised traffic control ordinance and an ordinance to control traffic on school property. —....A-—♦ # At present, the police' department has no jurisditclon over reckless drivers on -school property. Later, the Township Board will meet with the newly-formed sion to; discuss whnt has been accomplished • since their appointment in eariy June. Police Chief Millard J. Pender will report on high accident areas throughout Waterford Township. Talk Planned Saturday* at Oakland AA The Oakland County Alcoholics Anonymous Center, 1M3 Joslyn Ave., will present the first in a antes of four discussions titled “New Horizons” this Saturday HORSHAM, Pa. (UPD—Rescue!nig,rt’ ** . . ^ workers today poked through the wreckage of a department that was smashed and set on fire by a crashing navy Jet, killing I the pilot and injuring at *1 east 30 shoppers and employes. Police and firemen carefully probed debris to see If any other of the loo panic-stricken persons in the store when the Jet hit Sunday were trapped. Authorities said It was possible ball not probable that other victims would be found. with detectives from the Homicide Bureau -of the Detroit Police Department on the case. .. _ - . The impact pf the crash, flying *and den*e smoke The discussion, “Inroads to a Center Understanding of Alcohol, Alcoholism and the Alcoholic,’’ win begin at 8. Successive programs will be held at the same hour Sept. 9, 16 and 23. The discussions are led by the department of group therapy staff -of Hurley Hospital Flint. * * * Leaders will include William L. Keaton, senior alcoholism ther-aaplst; George F. Plum, outpatient therapist; and Marian H. Parks. inpatient therapist. - touched off panic among patrons in the store, witnesses said. They \ scrambled for- exits, bowled over several children and hurdled turn-They checked Hall's hotel room stiles. yesterday and found nothing un-| _ usual. The victim was last seen The one-seater FJ3 Fury plane > FE 8-4028 or FE 8-4029 / % THE JfrONTLjLC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, Important Brazil to Go ? 'Bjr JAMES MARLOW s' A—dated Prreo News Analyst WASHINGTON — In this most siv-ige of benturies, mid the most unpredictable, the resignation of Brazil's President Junto Quadras may be only a .minor episode or a turning point history ol the Western liemis- Joao Goulart, the vice president supposed to succeed Qaadroo is a leftist—or whether a military dictatorship of the right will take over and keep Goulart out. For that matter, it doesn’ seem too-clear'Twkat direction Quadras might have taken whether this sudden move of hid is part of a plan /to come bad; — how he could do it ‘— TO AFFECT OTHERS One thing is sure: Brazil. 67 million people, is the biggest] clear, either of Latin American countries I than before, and. whatever direction it takes. Even GoulartHkfeemed uncertain; it will have an effect on its over the weekend. He had visited], neighbors. iCommunist China and was At this point no one seems sure!Hong Kong when news of Qua-whether Brazil will turn left — Idros’ resignation reached him. He I New Way Found To Stop Hoir. Loss, Grow More Hair He seemed to want to make sure what kind of reception to expect when he got home—trouble or open arms. l Brazil is a land of great wealth and enormous povertv, in northeast Communists had stirred! the peasants to revolt. When Quadras became president seven months ago he inherited tremen-vdth more power problems. Brazil was In bad financial shape. He himself was regarded as jconservative financially. But fra 'the start he gave Brazil a sense of movement: he investigated {government corruption, proposed tax reforms and economies to balance the budget, fired some lire [needed government workers. Brig’on back ] Your Congressmen Vote } WASHINGTON (API — How {Michigan members of Congress were recorded as voting on recent nil calls: D; Maohrawtes, D; Meador, R; { ewMsow O'Hara, D. Against — Bennett, •} “T „ . . I. _ I *; Oderberg, R: Hoffman. R; On Bush, 2-Conn.rj amendment. Jnhannrn g> Knox R. Net Tot-adopted 61-34, to bar foreign aid ,nR _ D, to any country determined by! ' - ^ . ’ | president to be dominate? by in- <*> P“***e. M6-)W. of Nil to ternational communism: For the provide subsidies for small pro> amendment - McNamara. D-Jducers of lead and zinc: j Far — Bennet. Dingell. Diggs,. Griffiths, Hoffman; * pen ’til 10 B-M, of $4,07$, • $00,000 foreign aid authortaatlea bill, Inclndtiig long-range borrowing authority tor the program: For — McNamara. Npt voting — Kart. On passage,* 60-31, of bill to establish a. $655-million program Machrowicz, D'Hara. Against — Broomfield, Cederberg. .Chamber-lain, Ford, Griffin, Harvey,! Johansen, Knox, Meader. Not voting — Rabaut. For blish a. $655-million program c tAAj, cra.L retraining of Jobless workers: | Say* Food* Kept Fresh McNamara, Hart. Treated -With Radiation* ... Hickenlooper. ^R-low*, HONOLULU (API - Food, amendment rejected 32-59, to re-treated with a mild dose of radl-duce from $40 million to $25 mil- ation can be kept fresh for days, the authorized appropmUoii: -^4^- ^rifreration. says Thinking Driver These were some of his meas- . —, |ures and they made enemies tori]j6tS (JOJlui llOflS :--{him. *When he resigned Friday he] ^ , {said he had wanted Brazil for the I/IC1QI6 uDGGu j Brazilians but that his efforts at * HOUSTON, Texas — For years j of your hair lost, If you wait until reform bad been bloAed. An op- Thinking motorists meet chang- “they said it couldn't be done."] you are slick bald and your hair poition Congress had. bottle- ing conditions on the road with But now a Texas firm of labors- roots are dead, you are beyond necked him. variations at speed designed to tory consultants has developed a;help. If you still have hair (or at ,He called his policy neutral but "Bring ’Em Back Alive!" treatment that is hot only stop-[least some fuss) on top of your 6°! huge foreign 'aid from this * * * ping hair loss ... but Is really: head, and would like to stop your counify. Yet, he sought to restore j «*• ,, th t trowing hair! hair loss and grow more hair . , . relations with Russia, which had----L t lfi hiehwavs and They don’t even ask you to take now U the time to act. been broken off in 1947, and had|.^“fl JSI their word for it. If your symp-| Loesch Laboratory Consultants:sent representatives to Commu-toms indicate that the ‘treatment j will supply you "with treatment nist China. for the Peace Corp: Against the amendment — McNamara, Hart. {bouse I On passage, 287-140, of .$4,368,-{500,000 foreign aid authorization 1 bin, stripped, of long-range provisions: For — Broomfield, R; Cham- Atomic Energy" Commission entjsL andLihe foods can be eaten J without ill effects. Dr. Paul C. Aebersol^ said ini a paper prepared tor the 10th Pacific Science Congress, that the process, called "radiation pasteurization.” makes it unnecessary to freeze perishable foods. 1 needs will affect their their [speed. They ahro realise that while a highway may be pooled for a maximum speed, that speed may not be sate la Inclement Weather. will help you, they Invite you to!for 32 days, at their risk. If they] to 19®. before taking olfice, he -try it for 32- days. at their risk, | believe the treatment will help [ visited Cuba. He called the Cas-and see for yourself! you. Just send them informationJtre revolution beautiful but later Naturally, they would not'offer|to help them analyse your prob- hid he would be the first to con-this no-risk trial unless the treat- lent. This information should In- damn a Communist Qiba. In all ment worked. This Is all the.more chide how long your hair has been this he kept,, the United States remarkable in light of the factlthlhning, and whether or not you guessing. * that the great majority of cases now have or ever have had any of * * * of excessive hair fall and bald-!the following conditions: Do you There wasn’t and Isn’t an>'jj[0^~the driver ^nd^are based oni ness are the beginning and morejhave dandruff? Is it dry or oily? doubt that if Brazil went Commu- ^ conditions — good' fully developed stages of male [whether your scalp erupts lnjnist it would be one of the great pattern baldness and cannot be [ pimples or other Irritations, does disasters for this country which helped. But how can any man or your forehead become oUy or has Fidel Castro for a next-door woman be sure what is actually greasy? does your scalp Urn and neighbor and which doesn’t krtow causing their hair lose? Even if how often? and any other lnfor-baldness may seem to. “run in{mation you feel might be helpful, your family,” this la certainly no All letters will be answered proof -of,the cause of YOUR hair promptly. Bend the above Inf or-toss. v- 'mation. a The Automobile Club of Michigan asks you to remember: Speed Unfits are,' at best, general guides! NO SAFETY GUARANTEE what direction British Guiana will They do not guarantee that such take. This broad mation, and your name and ad-Actually, there are 18 scalp dls-lg^,, Loe,** Laboratory Con-orders that can cause hair loss. sultante. Box 66001, Houston 6, No matter which one-is the cause/Texas. puzzlement about | what’s going to happen next In Latin America is typical Of this 20th century when the West and communism are in such deadly struggle that intrigue spreads across the face of the earth. And even if BraAil turns' right it might be a. spur to its backward neighbors to turn left in a hurry to keep the same thing from happening to them. Save On Labor Day Needs is SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. Check the item you want anywhere—then come to Simms for the LOWEST PRICE. Here's proof-—tonight and,Tuesday discounts on famous brands. ' • • *. . ■ / - ■ ■? 1 - PHOTO DEPT. VALUES All Metal — Holds It Tsars Slide Tray Chest $3.2$ Value—Wow folds 12 friys—- TOC, Argus, Airquipt. All metal chest .With arrying handle. KODAK Brownie 8mm Movie Camera WITH F2.7 LENS speeds are safe. While it is usually safe to | drive af the maximum posted j speed of 1$ miles au hour in the daytime ea expressways and 1 freeways, It to not necessarily I safe to drive at the same limit I on other highways. Eighty of Michigan’s 83 counties, for example, nave practically of their roads posted for. the same maximum speed as the free-j ways — 65 miles an hour In the daytime. 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AUTO Headlamp BULBS SEALED BEAM—6 OR 12 VOLY Regular 12.50 Value Seated against moisture and dirt ... for 6 or 12 volt systems, single or dual type. Limit 2. 1 29 »eeeie2e?2Te7v?T#eee'e»* LABOR DAY and BACK-TO-SCHOOL Transistor Radio Sale it. ~u~ Radio with BArTERY \ Iff sSoWBl^BlPay holiday or carry it baeb-U Btphool. Powerful local station pet-Iter complete with battery i af|l holds In tgfsT tayussay. 4 NortbP Saginaw^ IONITE and TDESMT Big Deal DISCOUNTS HOUSEWARES ISVbulSAb" RUBBER l Genuine RUBBERMAID Drainboard Tiayi : Dish Drainers $2.00 Value ^ Regular SI.79 compound |^||Q • IlkUHiSH;' drat colors. PTO-(lauwaref and in drain* water away. e dishes from chipping, eaceeeeeeeeeeeueeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Adjust* 24 to 36-Inch Height* c ALL STEEL Ironing Boards 3» S6.95 Value For setting, standing at comfortable heights . . . ventilated top for faster, /too ‘ :ooler ironing . . standard 54-inch size .... fingertip adfustments. 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Rig selection includes washable no-iron cottons. Girls’ *2,98 DRESSES I end 2 pits* ityiei, Kelly green, JhBA burnt orange, Mac, magenta and all M M wanted colors, Big (election in size* 7 tell. . Girls’*3.98 DRESSES 3s7 All wonted colon in drawee with undotbiouso offacts, l*athcr-lil<« jocket-vosti, matching punoi, etc. Sizes 7 to 14. Girls’ SLIPS Beys' DUNGAREES Western Sfyl* Sizer % to \6. These Kits Are Made by THfRMOS Lunch Kits^r Usually Priced S2.49'te S3.9S Mony ityiei for bays and gkfl in motal or pte«Mc. All wMt Thermos Keaprit' bottler for Hot or cold liquids.—2nd Hoar f 99 ' *»«****"! '■i J§P| EIGHT THE PONTIAC PltRSS, MONDAY, AU&JST 28, 1961 Swim in Lake Erie Off Boat; 2 Drown MONROE ■ PONTIAC \ BUSINESS —HtsHiropr A Professional School of Business for High School and Colhege Graduates Courses Offered Include SECRETARIAL ACCOUNTING BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION CLERK-TYPIST OFFICE MACHINES SHORTHAND- Fall Quarter Begina September 5 Night School Sept. 11 Pontiac Business Institute Bulletin of Courses will be sent upon request Pontiac Business Institute tar Business Careen Since IMS” 7 W. Lawrence St. FEderal 3-7028 By JACK BEST Canadian Press Staff .Writer OTTAWA (AP) — The Cuban developed industrial areas such a*jgovernment has no official press there is land between Osaka and Sakai,* —. .. the report said. • ,,»■'* The Arkansas Democrat said: * e A the Senate may act any day rtow The tnajor otfense committed-by-to stamp final coongressional ap- k, gangsters during the first six proval on a measure that would; months 0( this year Was intimida-make interstate transmission ofjtion, with 8,843'cases reported. It)patches gambling information illegal. I was followed by assault, with 7,983 may J ' A law making It Illegal such Information off a race track, let alone across a state Hue, would .throw a further kink Into the borne race Information services, described as the take cases. censorship of press dispatches sent out of the country. But it concedes that members of the Cuban Telecommunications Syndl-cate, who transmit the copy, nave authority to decide whether dis-based on truth, and nr alter copy accord- sionaries became “fascist priests" L** of about $11.5 in transmission. ‘‘Mercenaries'* ‘wag substituted! for "prisoners" in stories about! men captured in the April invasion. In ‘fc story filed May 17 peeking to describe life in Havana a] reference to a “small force'* of Cuban exiles was altered to. 'heavily armed 4orce.H AIRWAY LARES For Reservations OR 3-734Q FE 4-2513 You're really hung on the girl, "wfitfi ywrwrtte letters that she; never answers, and you answer' letten she never writes . . . A little common sense would have, prevented many divorces. Mar-1 riages, too . . , A famed actress’! X new mjpnow bucket is silent! During a three-month assign-!complexion has gone to pot. That ‘ " scare the fish. It isjment in Cuba as a reporter fori is, right back where it came from.! |ingly. and plastic. M e Cl e 11 a n ’ s subcommittee 1 planned today to recall Walter Shaw of Miami, a former telephone equipment engineer identified as the designer of a compli-J rated electronic device to help bookies accept telephone bets without detection. The subcommitfee will also summon Albert Tollin, operator al a racing information service in Wilmington, Del. McClellan said the taxpayers have a "tremendous stoke" In the legislation banning inter- Information because bookies siphon billions of bollara to taxable wagering money from the track* and seldom pay the It per cent gambling tax. Testimony before the committee has shown that the information services use a variety of methods to keep posted on race results, including binoculars, portable radio transmitters and wireless sets worn around the waist under the coat. Subcommittee Counsel Jerome Adlerman said the investigation [will soon fan southward from Chicago, with Cincinnati, St. Louis, New Orelans and Hot Springs, Ark., figuring in the hearings. He said William P. Brown of St. Louis and Carlos and Joseph Marcello of New Orleans will be summoned to testify^ 8 Drown in Swoden With Hundred Nearby "STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Six men and two boys drowned Stmday in a lake in central [Sweden when their motorboat capsized only a few hundred yards from hundreds of people on shore. None of them saw the accident or heard the cries of distress. Police believed the accident took place during a prize-awarding ceremony while attention was directed toward announcement of the winners. \ LOWEST PRICE EVER Tor SPEED QUEEN AUTOMATIC DRYER Rust Resistant Drum WIU Dry FuU Washer Load at One Time Adjustable Temperature Selector Switch WHILE !00 SPEED QUEEN WRINGER WASHER Double Wall Bowl Tub FOR ONLY » \ with trade NO MONEY DOWN 90 Days Same as Cash or Long, Easy Terms! GOOD HOUSEKEEPING' V of PONTIAC Open Monday and Friday Evenings Til 9 51 WEST HURON STREET FE 4-1555 ! the Canadian ] 1 kept copies!—Earl Wilson. JUNK CARS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PA)D- WE PICK UP FE 2-0200 | PONTIAC W VST* | 398 AUBURN Hygrade or Swifts Premium Smoked TIL-HURON CENTO .fcUfi||uW ■'i * *!'«SIw.. DRAYTON HAWS m7&*'&£ST- ^ PUMTT Of f»“ ***** * HANS Buy a Nationally Advertised Smoked Ham for Your . Holiday Cqok^ut or Cook-ln. Select Shank Portion With PlsrtfV . Of Select Center Slices Lett On 39 lb. cifaed Btot U»er PescbkeSlkedfcKW r tenter Cut Swiss Mean* ctayp« Soviet bloc. ' The communique made no men- claim today. 2:3d a.m. today. Most of thqse ar-| Named as foreign minister in tion of Abbas. Observers believe .rested were charged With incitipgjthc* reshuffle was Saad. Dahleb. he was dumped because his pol-to .not. but several persons werej42, who took part in the unsuc- icy of negotiations with France charged with carrying concealed cessful peace talks With France, had failed. The talks broke dpwn weapons. Police said hearings for Belkacem Krim, veteran revolu- July 28 over the issue of control will be held tionary and leading exponent of of the mineral-rich Sahara. Ithe. tough line, was kept on at The shakeup apparently was ...—~............._ . < •" jdepidedbythe1 policy-making Na- ' , «ij- - , itional Council of the . Algerian A A ___ I *____ 1^* | Revolution which has been meet- /YxOtion rictum Lirni iri* *Tripo,i LH,ya . . . . . - -/ ” IV/IIV/I I I IV*I wl V# Rebel leaders who have ac-i he has the right to speak first. .“ico^d Abbas of being too soft ap-| MUST AGREE I 4-j~l I I ll, _ * ^ parently decided the time had In the past he has said thatifO JiOiTOi II I tltl\A/^l\/come topick « lighter with more the Soviet Union was willing to* ■ 1 ,V/I 1 1111 »y TT Cl V militant views, conclude an agreement, if only the West would' agree to Soviet AP Movie-TV Writer • and to Humphrey Bogart. Only I “compromise” proposals. Jliplo- HOLLYWOOD (AP)—The Mo- the outline of the novel remained, matic observers-bebeved hc would Hon-Picture Academyr which usu-j “The Sun Also Rises’* -(199Tti ally arises from it* slumber butiran into creative and censorship once a year to hand out Oscars, problems. The hero's emascula-is .currently running a film series, tion could not be treated as frank-'‘Tribute to Ernest Hemingway.” ly as in the book. And the gay, * * * idle International set seemed being treated to [somehow dated after 30 years, showings, of three W a a Hemingway adap-| How has Hemingway fared on tations: “For film with his other Works?-’ Whom the Bell The 1932 "A Farewell to Arms”! Tolls,” “To Have with Cooper and Helen Hays re-and Have Not,” mains fond in recollection. Like and “The Sun most vintage films, it would prob-Also Rises.” ably not stand up under re-ex-J The' choice is amlnation today, not the most apt.!LESS SUCCESS IN “For Whom the Bell Tolls’ repeat this stand today. Turapkia's flying visit to Moscow sparked speculation that he would retain with some proposals designed to “steal the show” from the Western • side. Reports .reaching here from Moscow indicated the Soviets might show flexibility, might offer Certain concessions but would continue to insist on a “troika" administrative council. This proposal has Nocked-agreement at the conference, because | the United States claims it would [give the Russians a veto on all I control measures. Members i IMS SERVICE DIRECT TO OUR DOORS! DESIGN CONSTRUCTION CO. It4 S. TEUCRAPH RD. 338-4024 BLUE SKY DRIVi-IN THEATER Last 2 Days! Shown 7:50 * 11:34 I STARTS WEDNESDAY Walt Disney's “PARENT TRAP” BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 Shew Startt 7:40 . EM 3-0661 THOMAS The 1957 "Farewell” was leu . L Y N - MAY-E R EDNA FERBER’S Sabra the Moods bsauty who loved Cimarron and SchbofhouH gun-battle! The Kid was vowed to follow him to tha ends of tha earth) notches old... was this the end of hi* wild camef 7 ^GIMroilD'MMm'MBAm'MllRffCONm . MANHUNT OF THE CENTURY for the master assassin! With , . ^ WERNER KLEMPERER ■ r . -NOW- FIRST PONTIAC SHOWING DRIVE-III Open 6:45 Starts 7:45 P. M.» FE 2-1000 EXCLUSIVE SHOWING IN MICHIGAN in SUPER PANAVISION^70mm TWICE AS BIG! TWICE AS BRIGHT! FIRST TIME AT REDUCED ADMISSION! 'THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR .RIPS THE HEART!" BOSLEY CROWTHEft, NEW YORK TIMES, --------WINGER PRESENTS PAUL NEWMAN/EVA MARIE SAINT RALPH RICHARDSON/ PETER LAWFORD LEE J.COBB/SAL MINEO JOHN DEREK JILL HAWORTHi CAREFREE-MOTORING STARTS AT FIRESTONE GET YOUR CAR READY NOWI * Precision adjust brakes, re-/ pack front bearings and add brake fluid, if necessary, p Scientifically inspect and align front-enid to manufacturer’s specifications. f Precision balance both front wheels. > Check power brake and power 'Steering units where applicable. Any American . Car •* PAYDAY TERMS Raplocemant Ports and Tor*ion Bar Ad|u*tment Are Not Included 146 W. HURON FE 2-9251 A . SEE US FOR ' A l SPEEDWAY PROVED TIRES ‘1 DOWN *1 A WEEK •!6i0»0i0!fdblQSJ5D5010!QnSr M H3A03WW THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1961 4- Peart Harbor Sl^jyanj Biggest Firm in Pacific HONOLULU (OPl) -> Tbe PmH Harbor Naval Shipyard, mor* than 50 yen* old, hi the largest industrial otfutedoo til the Pacific The facilities include four, dry-docks, two marine railways and score at shops servicing more than 100 ships during the ayanii~yiar. The shipyard is Hawaii's major employer with 4.750 civilians Ae payroll. Oil. COMPANY WIU LEASE OR BUY tow SERVICE STATION IfiMs All lafonMtioS fe PONTIAC PRESS BOX IS Wot Coast Fanners in Stateof Plenty SACRAMQ4T0, calif. (UPI) -California farmers lead the nation in the production of grapeu. lettuce, tomatoes, turkeys, sugar beets, celery, lemons, strawberries, walnuts, pears, carrots, cantaloups, asparagus, alfalfa aeed, apricots, plums, broccoli, almonds, avocados, cauliflower, olives, green lima beans, figs, honey, nectarines, twussel sprouts, honeydew melons, artichokes, chili peppers, spinach, dates, garlic, ladino clover seed, Persian melons, persimmons and pomegranates. A, Crab Is a Crab, Whether 17 or 75 ELMIRA, N.Y. IB - People tend to act the same after they retire as they did during their‘younger years, says Miss Bernice Scott, a specialist in rural sociology at Cornell University. “If you’re grumpy now. Heaven help your family when you’re 75. You can't be an old crab writinut a young crab first,’’ hhe 3 Are Elected x Associates at Design Find' Two area men are among the three staff members at W. B. Ford Design Associates, Inc., Detroit-based industrial design firm, fo have been elected associates by the board of directors, it was aiw nounced today by Walter B. Font II, president. * * * The three are Theodore El Lud-erowski, 4655 Franklin Road, Bloomfield Hills; James E. Fekete, 8634 Huntington Road, Huntington Woods, and Douglas N. Cabell, 1166 Peyeril, Birmingham. ie reached railway is The highest altitude standard track raih the Peruvian Central Railways pt La ClmP, where the track rises to 15,848 feet. OOMFLETE INSURANCE SERVICE |j rm [ J auto | |gj Membership Foss V.ra M. Daniels Brnttels insurant* Agettry 513 W. Hum Shut FE 3-7111 Working Capital Available for . Your Business Call FE 4-1522 SIMKET INVESTMENT CO. AtBOli MDEKOWHKI Luderowski has been with the firm since 1958, Fekete since 1955 and Cabell since 1958. Ford Associates are engaged in the design of consumer products and components for many manufacturers, as JtuBt graphic, package and interior design for both national and local companies. Puerto Rico to Get Largest Telescope AREOBO, Puerto Rico (UPI) —The world’s largest and most powerful radio-radar telescope currently is in construction here » expected to go into operation shortly. ■ ★ ★ * The magazine Steelways, official publication of the American Iron and Steel Institute reported that one of the first experiments would be to try' to determine whether the. stars in other solar systems emitted radio signals like those of the sun. . 4r A ★ H the signals art* received, they may help to explain the physical laws that govern the phenomenon, It was explained. Azout three million Americans play string instruments.; Most GraiA Prices Weak Early Today CHICAGO UR - Grain futures prices turned mostly weak today in initial dealings on the board of trade with soybeans, leading the setback on lossers running to well over two cents a bushel. # * ★ Corn and rye were off major fractions in spots while wheat held about steady in a rather slow tratft. Brokers said commercial demand was light and that export business over the weekend apparently was limited to a small amount The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furotriied by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, i Friday: Weakness in both corn and soybeans was ascribed to additional reports of good to excellent condition of the crops. Pressure September soybeans, however, was linked with expectations that there may be a somewhat larger supply in Chicago commercial positions for delivery during the next- few than had been indicated earlier. Grain'Prices MARKETS {Mart on Upside but Irregular, Detroit Produce Apple*. Wolf River ........ Blueberries. 12 pt. . . . .. Uackberries, _4t. . , . Cantaloupe*, bu. ......... Faathta. Snorts ......... Patch**. Oolden Jubilee . Narnia. Bata Barm .... Peaches. Red Haren _______ Peart, ciapp* Parorlt* It Kentucky Wonder . Beam! Roman, bu! _____ *“♦«. dot bchs............ jt^tojpje. b«. .......... Cabbage, curiy, bu. .... Cabbage, sprout, bu. ...... Cabbage, rod. Ira. . ...... Cabbage, standard Thrifty . Carrot*, doa. bcha. ... Carrot#, cello pak ........ tappM. fe«. ...... Celery, 3 t< i Celery, Pa **% Celery, roo 144$ Corn, i-----| S»rD.L *52! a as.- Okra. pk. . .......... ...... Onion, dry ............. — Onlone. green, doa. > bche. lOaftas.' wriBtog | Parsley, curly, ddl. bche. . Parsley, root, doa. bch*. .. Parsnip#, cello pak........... Peat, blackeycs' .............. IPeppera, cayenne.............. Oh, That's Right, Fellas, We Forgot to Tell You.. Ipeppere! pimento , DES MOINES. Iowa IB - Th* fcg™. suburban Urbanews recently pub- potatoes. so-ib«. .. lished notice of the first practice for the Urbandale softball team. S^utwa. rod. do*. The paper neglected to Identify! squMh^'oeoro Ui>u* the team as a gate’ outfit. SSSSSS! Quite a few males showed up — ssaath. oeiiciou# ........ but not one1 girl, so the workout jjjjffi?’ USSlSSi, 'i bu. ! was postponed. .*— «... ESS! ANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: [Turnips, topped, bu. ,«„■■» Canned citrus Juices have ioar£ — (USDA) — Livestock; Today's racolpta Cattle 254. calves 122. hoc* ISO. Sheep ISO. { Cattle — Pamparsd last w**ks slaughter steers and heifers 20 00c lower; cows tuny steady; bulla fully Steady:---- loads high choice and mlsod bial .and prim* 010-1120 lb. stasia 25.i Farmers ASP Kenya Needy NORGE 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC WASHER •BIG 10 LB. TUB • 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC TIMER • NORGE WAVE ACTION AGITATOR • 5-STEP SUPER RINSE • 5-YEAR WARRANTY ON TRANSMISSION COMPONENTS—FRETTER'S LOW, LOW HdPtl utility Item 10.00-21.00; I, moot choice heifers 22.50-11.21; good to low choice hotter* 21 50-22 50; standard I half art 20.00-11.00; utility helfars 18 00- 2M0; utility powa 14.10-17.50; can----------- and cuttars 13.00-10.50; utuity 20.00-31.10; euttar bulla U.00-20.00. I Vealers — Compared last wcok. V*___________ fully 1.00 hlgbtr; most prime vealers I 3i.oo-38.oo; goad and mm “ “■ ; standard 24.00-22.00; ou 10.00-24.00. > 1 Bheep — compared last week. Blaugh-’ tar lamb* 1.00 lower, alaufhtar ewes i fultar steady; most choice and prime ■'slaughter lamb* closed 15 00-30 00: good utility IiseatMrtlta good grade Item 32.50-23.60; tow small Iota good grad* heifers 21.60-ili.00; utiilty and standard mixed offer- trong welg _____rs and owl___________ Vealers — Salable 2ft. 1 ■ set up quota tons. I Sheep —Salable 100. Rot enough of say an* class to act up quotations. If ragfe'.4^MMM* too. MiSSn tows stoady; Umltad aarly sc butcher* mostly He. 2 and 3 grad* : 230 lb. weights, them 12.M-12.4d; ■ No. 1 and Tama No. 1 thorn .woight* —-I gent. HO. 2 and 2 130-300 lb*. 18.16- 111.00; mixed sows 3*0-400 (fee. 14.75-115.50: No. 2 and 2 ooo-ot* m. sows 13.75. 1440; boars l2.ld-12.50. Compand tar* i weak barrows and gttta 25c lower; sow (taady. *158 BUDCET TERMS ~ UP TO 16 30 Days Exchange If Net Fully Satisfied I GENEROUS TRADE ALLOWANCE 1 FAST 24-HOUR DELIVERY II NO MONEY DOWN ON ANY PURCHASE MONTHS TO PAT ../"v NO MONEY DOWN! Cdurtedut, After the Sole Service FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Doily 10 A.M. 'HI 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 - Sunday 10 A.M. 'til 7 PM. mm,tbssssssssssi II Vacuum Cleaner Ends 'an Alarming Situation I MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) - Mra. IIL C. Gwyn revealed his sister's secret of putting the vacuum clean- I! er to work aft an alarm clock. Mn. Gwyn said her slater's clock radio was out of order. So, her sister placed the vacuum cleaner I beside the bed and plugged it-into 1 the back of the radio. “It work*,’’ Mrs. Gwyn said. "Every-morning the vacuum whin on at the right H! time.” I Tightwad Hill' Okay I BERKELEY. Calif. (UPI)-Be-11hind Memorial Stadium at the | University of California is a tow-lering hill where fans short of ‘ funds sit to watdh the gairi^ from over tbe rim-top of, the 80,000 seat stadium. It’s called "Tight-Iwad Hill.” “Ia my country," said Francis solemnly,. “such a valuable tool would never be allowed to rust.” At the next meeting of the Bethlehem Jayceet, Fehnel piade a “Why don’t we ask farmers all Over, the county to denatl abandoned equipment for shipment to Kenya f We businessmen can pay the cost* gathering it Up. and shipping it'to Kenya as oqr contribution to the project.’ ‘ j 1S2JL&A Walled Lek# y of Robert i * p.m. from I * Mata at t Funeral BARTOM. ADOD8T 2*. 18S1. OLINR H.. HS 8am* Bond. MIMird, at* 31: Aslovod husband of Carol Barton; beloved ton of Mr. and BtTtaOw Barton; dear father ~ —- —- Ranald Barton; Leonard JSarten augtai 2* at 1 p.m. from the Rtchardaon-Mrd Funeral Home. Milford wtlhaiv, Frank wtniam* officiating. Interment In Mllferd Memorial Cametary. Mr. Barton win Uo la atata at the Rtahard-aoo-BIrd Funeral Bom*. Milford Mae MMlik dnr litter g Jamea Brook, Frodlla Knox. Bam Allan, victoria MoClata and Lucinda Mangar. Funeral aonrloa will be held Tuasday. Auguat 28 at * p.m. from Mm William P. Dari* Funeral Homo with Bar. Raland Carr nfflitattag Inur-mast in Oak Hill U* mot ary. Mra. 5L?” ..... OiygESPIX. AOOU8T 24. Ittl. James W.. 1211 tpworth Bird. Detroit; sea M; beloved hnafeoad of Iona OUleapta: dear brother of Jtfen and wiiuam OUtaapi*. Mr*. Jean Robertaon. Mra. Christina Brown and Mra. fWnlbrih Campbell. Fnaaral aervlce will be bald Tueaday. Augu»t 28 at IM p m. from tha Purltay Funeral Bainr with' - Rev. Leland Lloyd officiating. Interment in pHtai Park Cemetery. Mr. QB leapt* will U* In atata at the Funley Funeral Home. _______ JOHNSON. AOOORT 27. 1M1. FD-ward w . 583 Baikoo. ago 54; dear father of Mra. Ward Rath-bun and Edward Warren Johnson. Funeral service will be held ...'Mr, Johnson will ______ at the Huntoon Funeral Horn* LAU2R, AOOUBT 27. 1M1; ELLA . Maud*. 224* Cbm Lake Road. Keogo Harbor, ago 75; (arrtrad by Mrs. Mary C. Brown and 4 grandchildren. Funeral service will a* held Wadnsaday. August N at 2:2i p.m. from the C- J. Ood-hardt Funeral Home, Ktogo Harbor with Bo*. Paul Turner officiating. Interment la Ferry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mra. Lauer will 11* la atata at tha C. J. Oodhardt Funeral Homo. Kiag* Harbor aft-or 7 p.m. today. FLAMS. AOOUBT 21. 1*41, UA-boiie. 40*1 ialvary. Bww Plains, Sg* 72; beloved wife of David Plank; Utar riltag of Alice pranna. Punaral aervlce tMBfe* held Tueaday, August M at } p.m. from tha Coot* Funeral Home, Drayton Plains with Rev. Wal- -— *-------‘-sen it. officiating. Evergreen Cemetery. “-Ilk will lie m __________________Funeral Home, Drayton -Flalna. w PUOU8E. ADODST 31. 1*81. JAME8 Prank. 1145 Orandvtaw, Drayton Flaw*, — ’ Dotroit. Mr*, naakj iile *Puipl** Data. Man rugose; also, survived by 7 grandchildren. Fuaoral service will b* bald Wednesday. August 30 at J p.m. from tin Ctaat* Funeral Home, Drayton Plains with Rev.' Walter Teenwlssea Jr. officiating. Interment in Crescent • Hills Cemetery. ilr. Pugltse will 114 in (tats at the Coat* Fuaoral Home. Drayton Flalna. Funeral Directors 4 Donelson* Johns COATS FDRKRAL BOMB DRATTON FLADIE OR 3-11*1 Vcx)rhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME FE 2-S378 Otmetery Let* 5 2 BURIAL LOTS, MASONIC QARD-ans. Oakland Hill* Memorial Cem-etery. Full Price 8176. FE 5-4518. • LOTS, MASONIC SECTION IN Oakland HlUs, phone FK 5-3387. bka6tipol l6t. -f*rbt Mown Park Cemetery Call attar * p.m. FB 4-8822.__ 'Operation Ru$V Willi Send Abandoned Tools; 'to East Africans BETHLEHEM. P*. (UPI) -1 Most Americans think of foreign! aid as something the government] does. *tat the people of this Penmyl-v«nta community are prating ** private Initiative eaa aim play a part In extending help to | underdeveloped countries. Tliey have started a little "Point Four" program of their own to assist farmers in Kenya, East Africa. They caltLJT “Operation Rust.” ★ it * Operation Rust was born several months ago when Robert Fehnel, a director of the Bethlehem Junior Chamber of Commerce, escorted an African hoy on a tour of the rich farmlands fa Northhampton County. The youth, Francis Mbu-gua Mwihia, is a student at Moravian College-in Bethlehem. Francis spotted a harrow rusting hi the comer of a field. "Why do American farmers neglect thpir tools?” he asked. horse-drawn tool “Oh, that’s just an old horse-drawn harrow,” Fehnel replied. "Our farmers use tractordrawn equipment now, and that harrow is completely useless. You’ll see lots of old farm equipment like that rusting in the fields around here. It’s not even worthwhile to gather it up for scrap.” 7, 15, IS. 16. ft, 24. 25, 30, 58, 66. 73, 86, 88, ft. 91. 99. 99, 191, 111, 117, lit. Help Wantod Male 6 3 FART 11MB JOBS If you art fro*’ T to 18 p.m., an Information salt HA $117 GUARANTEED While tretains for. ambitious, married man in rout* sales. Must bo 22-21, blah school grad, good car and phone. Reply Pontiac Are You Unemployed? ws need several neat. ENERGETIC MEN TO PILL OUT OUR SALES ORGANISATION. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY, WE WILL TRAIN TOO. FART time or POLL time, no prone calls, apply,in person, 3 A M. TO II A.ftf. Kast -Heating & Cooling 463 JS. SAGJNAW ALL AROUND HANDY MAN, RE-tlred or saml-ratlrod. non-drink-or, *4* per week and room. Call NAttanaf MSI ___________ AFTER6T.M. Due to taeitsaod factory production. Must hay* 3 man to work 4 hour* per oveatag. Earning# of $18 per week. Must be neat appearing and good worker. Start immediately, opening ntaS|ferl9| * time man. For information call Mr. Menrsy. OR 3-0922 4-8 P.M. CAN PLACS 3 MEN OR WOMEN. ‘ FWttar ana to supply customer# with natioaaHy advertised household product*. For appointment. phone. PE3-3883. , Sealer salesman. 22-3*. mar-rled, good cor. Take order*. 4,88* eatabllahed cuatomera, $11* per wook rid* expense allowance. Some part time work, OR. 3-6*7*. man to work evoatasa, * to l*1n • p.m. and Sunday. Muet fed re-llabta. (toed pay. We*town Food Center. 788 W. Huron. HANDYMAN FOR YARD WORK and elasotas- Room, board and small was**. Writ* riattns _*u particulars to Footlac Fraa* Box "plenty of Work NOT ENOUGH |4EN" Salsamen 21 to 22 MM for bet- ter employment and future. Call FE^MUf tor appointment and REAL ' ESTATE SALS8 Ps6FLi ’ 9IIIISIHSII. full time. Experience • preferred, but not oaoentlaL Top eommlaaten paid. Ask for Mr. Wldemao/.ndg.lb W1da*>q| Rtol-' fak 16ts. xm6toe ' INN1 HEC-roattoo. \ • /r'k,U.#V„l ’• ' Hdp Wanted Mak 6 MACHINIST sHgUOUB) FOB rap at Co. Journeyman of equivalent preferrod. Apply to panto MM i, Hacka«t»f. ORAL ESTATE SALESMAN. EX-■ iritaanl preferred OT have trata- . (COMFOa- > sot as foreman at production. steed! work—good nay pfui fringe*. Ealiabl* company to feualnoo* 28 N«a Own - Printing * OBtalRdr- 13, F Lawrence St, FtoSI**. >**«*- WANTED EKriERIEkCEfjhDuS; -or and caantir man- Apply 212 Branch ■ ' YOUNG MAN Tanas, dywsmlc. local salts mgr of new carp ha# opening tor an to warn joo m m™*™' —-j mgr.' Call C« Ml**. • M*- - • “m Mta* Barth- , Hal|8 Wanted Fnmnfo 7 BABYSITTER TO ,UVS “ Curb Waitresses tf\jrusssr& tre; shift. Apply to pafton only- 2 ** to TEDrS Woodward at S ahijjortatron '6r°4-M*7 VoB EXPERIENCED WAITRM*. At*-ply *78 Baldwin. _ - • - EXPERIENCED^ W A1TB ESS for night#. Phone Ml 4-8880. FULL TIME SALESLADIES TO sou 3-D picture*. For Interview phone FE 4-8082. S£?5l #F^ jagSitoTta ^S***Rw iSi LAST CALL ^ vestment no cOHoewon, w erlnc 33 per coot commtMton. monthly bQOT^ weekly pay SALES LADIES v itN1M3 Manager apa^Jj® * *;. **“ Bellevue Rd. Toledo 11. Ohio. ‘sgsssS encei rogttlrod. Apply Pro— Bok l>. . - . nCRETARY.'-above averageiktlU. cur*Ukn#°S^»l#h°TthaBd Ponu*c ^SILK FIN1SHER- HCALLINO” iot -u WW-.-S •no want to earn. Phone today « 4-4588 or write Drayton Plata* P Q, BOX *1- .__ TOY CHEST p THE FIRST* ONE OP THE PD PARTY flff® Our 17th Yoar THE PLAN THAT OIVES YOU the tops in everythino TOP BARNINOS 18 per cent commlaalon to y*» plus season benuato • abaolutiy nothing to buy TOP HOSTESS PREMIUMS TOP DEMONSTRATION KIT 130 fun to show Item* furnished free to dealer! “ CALL PS 6-4T21 WANTED MTODLSAOBD WOMAN for houeekeeplng and habyilttln*. 3 childrro. Anply.betwttn 1 a.m. and 2 a m M2 Auburn. WOMAN FOB OBlTOAL OmClE WAITRESS. NIGHTS. PART Time.. Apply to parson after 8. DJll i tmL Mil Klaabotb Lake Rd. WHITE wbilAH CHILD CARE and hewsawe^ Owntranaporta-tion. Vicinity Crory StooeLWatar-ieri. Eeferanoa*. FE 5-13**. Hdp Wanted H HmUar background reference* con bo furnlahod. State ii, mi previous emptayauot tn tint letter Pontiac Proa*. Bo* iieii OR WOMAN lHi CAR! Barn 12 to $3 ud tip per boar. Nationally advertised Watjtins Food row#. Experience anneeeB-nu Old-age no hMdieap. F«U ReS ESTATE SALLS Have room for 2 experienced men •or women, full or pert time. Call Mr RalpK tor Interview. Hag-■trom Realty, 4*08 IM58I. OR 4-835*. Eve*. FS 6-8384 Surgtcat Technicians Fqtotao General Hsnital baelm-mediate opening, for technicians. 8213 In surgical toohtaquea- xrrssj?. sbtftfl) Id boor wptk, free ljun par5nwT Monday thru Friday. TTsTsSrisi enced preferrad but wlU train right parties , n I-2J88. A« for Mr. Crnetford. W w. ww Employment Ageack« 9 Evelyn . Edwards payroll end Invoice clerk with ES^rSnimy. foodtyptoj wbo drives her #w* *•* to 41. °^ly"S.AYta * Writ.. tab7Uk* thl. come atajj- Tw officials ne*A awrotary wtm go™ tvn|fi( ami ftlUVthlOd, VM It to travel tboo* Paltod State* * times a year. Muet baft •***'-lent peraonallty awl appearance, Will ^0 meeting Ota public all r along tba way. • MUg EXEUU11VE • • • - • ■. - ■ t® mri' office need, a good ato- and drive your own ear. yoa wUl fe* right nr this fta* house. Cooking - cleaning and oonva-leacant' care. EVELYN EDWARDS Vocational Oounaellng Service 4AM. ^U < III