Tha Weather IMmkmm ritos» 118th YEAR THE PONTIAC PRESS Sr ’pontiAc. Michigan. Saturday.*august 20, ii«o—so pages * * 'MOSCOW (UP!) _ Soviet scientist* sold today foey ^ monitoring the behavior o( ML , ■*■’« tew *P«ce dogs thrash television cameras in the cabin of the "space VtetetflM'llfoV Tbe new Soviet sate^e, said to wdjjk fast over $ tons, mis circling the earth once every •M minutes. In addition tor the dogs, fca (Arrow) and Belfca rell« official Soyiet meats said the space „ ried other animals but details. The official Soviet agency Tass said the two dogs, in inatrument-festooned “space suits," were tethered loosely enough to give them room to stand up» sit down and move a short distance backward or forward. Soyiet scientists said they hoped to recover the. animals alive, but. did not say how or when. neip Pilot Until Hope Gone .MOSCOW (AP)—Barbara Powers said today she will not leave Moscow until she has done everything possible to help her husband Francis Gary Powers, sentenced to detention (or espionage. But she told newsmen that the pattern of the fixture Down With thw Ivy —Navy flooring It Out ANNAPOLIS, Md. (API—Forget that "ivy-covered” bit—it’s ruining the walls. At least that seems to be the case at the Naval Academy where the Department of Public. Works is busy removing the ivy from the walls jot the academy chapel. The greenery is being removed because foots have grown into the cement between die bricks and have gradually begun to-deteriorate the walls. ftED DOGS IN 8ATEULRE — Strelka, top, and Belka,are aboard the new Russia^ space vehicle put in orbit Friday, the Soviets say. Moscow claims both dogs have flown before. A TV camera is reported with them to bring back their reactions to earth. . All Eves on the Stars... Field and State * All eyes were op the stars at Wisner Stadium last night—even when the North and South squads were off the field for half-time ceremonies. Attention centered skyward as fans craned their necks for a look at America’s Echo I satellite passing overhead. News of the celestial visitor spread quickly through the stadium, and for a few minutes, the fetelhte rivaled the Detroit Edison Lamplighters Drum a Bugle Corps in popularity. Another star of the evening was Miss Michigan of 1960, .pretty Ijhncy Anne Fleming of Montague. ^Bhe flipped the coin to start the game and presented trophies to the game’s most valuable player and the two most outstanding on each of the squads. The three players each received a bonus — a big, warm kiss from Michigan’s reigning beauty. In Today's Press Church New* : „..M Comics .................,. -n tutorials ..................4 Item* Section ...........1741 Obituaries ................53 Pet Doctor..... ......,...,14 Sports .................14-19 Theaters ,............. . 1-11 TV 4 Radio Programs........a Wilson, Earl ...... ...... Women's Pages ..........13-13 Slim of the People Jack and Harry to Me Hands Ktnnody to Mm* Tasty Truman Today; Nixon Busy at Capital KANSAS CriY, Mo. (AP)-«en.. John F. Kennedy was to clasp hands and confer toda^ with doughty former President Harry S. Truman. A * A“ ' The Democratic presidential nominee, expected here about 10 a* m. CST in his private plane, was seeking to close a breach that developed when Truman questioned Kennedy’s readiness for the presidency and refuted to attend the Democratic National Cdnven-tloa, declaring it was rigged in /the Massachusetts senator’s favor. : ■# A A -Since then Truman has said he will do what he can- to get Kennedy elected. Kennedy has said that’s what they will talk about today. ,. * * * Traveling with Keancdy ware San Stuart Symington ef Missouri —Truman’s choice for die nomination-end Sen. Henry M. Jack-son of Washington, national Democratic chairman. ? * A -K .. Kennedy. Symington and Jack-son were expected^ to go tp Truman’s office in Independence -for the conference. . - .. A luncheon later In Kanoai CHy, with Truman ao hast, was sched- (Ooodmjed on Pag* 3, Col. I) Better Plan on Raintogs lor Sund Sunday worshippers may have to don raincoats for services as the weatherman predicts scattered showers and thunderstorms tonight and tomorrow. *' A o A A . ' ' Not much .change in temperature is expected. The low will be near 65 tonight and Sunday’s high about 83. Showers and little change fat) temperature is forecast lor Monday. N A A V Morning easterly winds at five miles an hour will become variable east to south at 10-20 miles. A A A Sixty-three was the lowest recording preceding 8 a.m. in the downtown area. At 2 p.m. the thermometer reading Was M Readying 2nd Show Trial? Still'Haven't Acted on Crewmen of Downed American RB47 - WASHINGTON (UPI) — The United ^tates plans to make a vigorous demand to Russia —* probably next week — for the release of two captured U.S. Air Force RB47 crew- sfirst Recovery Aloft Brings Jubilation Work Toward Attempt to Rocket Monkey Into Space Orbit Soon HONOLULU (AP)—The Jubilant U.S. Air Force to-d a y celebrated history’s first aerial eatch of « capsule ejected from an orbit* ing satellite — bringing man’s journey into space a giant step closer. > The capsule, snared by a talking about the family’s dr it The two are 1st Lt. Freeman Bruce Olmstead, Elmira, N. Y., and Lt. John Richard McKone, Tonganoxie, Kan. They were the copilot and navigator, respectively, of aa KB47 rernaaalsaanrm pi a which went down In the near the Soviet coast inly I Of toe six-man crew, three members were' listed as missing. The body of the pilot, William A. Palm, Oak Ridge, Tom., was recovered and returned to the United States, EFFORTS FRUITLESS The United States has been demanding the release of Olmstead and McKone for weeks. So far, its efforts have been fruitless. Washington has rejected a Soviet charge of territorial vteta-tion, declaring the plane was ruthlessly shot down by Soviet II g h t o Aa ever In terns tie asl waters. | State Department officials said they have had no word other than the threat of a trial as to what the Soviet government intends to do with Olmstead and McKone. They added that the United States will continue to nfhke all possible efforts ta win freedom for the two merl. rustic reunion with the flier direct-ly after the conclusion of his trial Friday, told: "He’s the same old boy I raised from a little feller right on up.” ' A The Powers family pinned their hopes on Premier Nikita Khrushchev for getting the pilot’s sentenced reduced. ♦ Ar * « Their American lawyers planned a conference with the 31-year-oid pilot’s Soviet defense attorney, Mikhail I. Griniov. Ia Washington, the U. 8. State Department said Friday sight, questions from that arrangement* have been made to continue Power*’ salary “while he Is under detention." It also said that provision has been made for his wile. This apparently means that at least some of his 32,500 monthly pay. will be turned over to her. In response to other questions, ie<-department - said that “the U. S. government has no intention of prosecuting Francis Powers be-A retie CARA **** nothing in his con-r i auct to warrant such prosecution..” Tito questions about prosecution had arisen on the theory that Powers might have dls-(Continued on Paw 2, Chi. 1) hooked into its parachute shrouds, was plucked from the sky 8,500 feet over the Pacific Friday by a C119 Flying Boxcar after its ejection from Discoverer XIV over Alaska. Packed with instruments and equipment designed to speed development of space spy and missile warning satellities, the 85-pound capsule and three of the from the catch plane Lodge Aids GO By JOHN KRAFT (Special to The Pontlsc Pres*) Republican vice presidential cat didate Henry Cabot Lodge Coo-tributes substantially to Republican chances of victory In the national election coming up this faB. * * Ami the reasons'are directly related to his long experience- as United Nations ambassador. Further, his presence on the Republican ticket makes the most difference with women. f • A. A A survey1 conducted right after the Republican Convention showed that a surprising one out of five voters had undergone a change of heart during the previous three months. And while some drafted to the Republican column and others to the Democratic column, on hgfencf Jhe shifts favored the Nixon-Lodge ticket. wife -of a manufacturer’s representative in Wilmington, Dei. “I told yoa I wouldn’t decide until I’d read both platforms. Wefl 1 have and I’m voting far Nixon — he’s the strongest man. I don't like the Democrat’s platform of spending, and I do like Lodge. I’ve watched him oa TV la the U. N. and 1 fed like know him. -An echo of this point of view was heard in Pontiac, Mich, from a young Catholic housewife who previotgly hadn’t been sure where she stood: “Nixon is a little' bit more con-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Lodge a presidential nominee Lgafea B. Johnson were not In dated Ja tea first poll which aaly pitted of tea totenaen ef toe vice presidential ■imtams, Some voters hadn’t been sure before, but now they were. Others -had favored one ticket or the other 4mt now had switched or had be-' aure of themselves. In summation, the shift fevered the Republican ticket. > ONE PONTIAC OPINION One voter contributing to tee shift to theRepubticans wee this prto-convention vot«H«onings post-conVGrvtion votdr leanings KENNEDY 40% 3996 1896 NIXON 43% MAJOR REASONS FOR PRO-COP SHIFT THWHWWTtmO.. ,.i.. * . .MMdHS RELIGIOUS QUESTIONS GOP MORE CONSERVATIVE GOP PLATFORM BETTER NIXON MORE EXPERIENCED LODGE* FOREIGN AFFAIRS EXPERIENCE ION If % 19% 22% 42% Lodge Resip His U.N. Post To Dig In Immediately on Campaign Workout in East and South WASHINGTON (AP) - The Republican command apparently intends to .give vice-presidential nominee Henry Cabot Lodge a campaign workout in New Eng-' ind, the Midwest ahd the South. ■A . A p Lodge announced Friday his resignation as United Nations ambassador, effective Sept. 3. That could put him into the active campaign by Labor Day. In a “Dear Cabot” letter, President Eisenhower expressed regret at losing Lodge’s U.N. services. The President said this feeling was mitigated because Lodge was offering Ipmself for “an elective post of high responsibility and opportunity for service.” "In this effort you have, as you know, my heartiest endorsement,” Eisenhower said. White House press secretary James C. Hagerty said Elsenhower Intend* to name James 1 J.. Wadsworth, deputy chief of the U.8. delegation to the U.N., • as Lodge’s successor. Lodge appeared Friday with a campaigning fellow Republican for a TV filming with the interiors of the U.N. headquarters lor their backdrops. He talked in front of (Picturo on Pago 2) TV cameras in the General Assembly building with Rep. John V. Lindsay of New York, who is seeking The two pluses and Lodge noted that U.N. Food and’ Agriculture Organization has made studies' of how they might be disposed of., .* * While he has stayed on his U.N. job, Lodge has been getting a of invitations to speak in the campaign. A surprising number of these were said to have come from the Midwest and the South. * A A Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona,'chairman of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, has reported finding a great deal at interest tn'Lodge not only in the South hut in stated itee Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arizona. AP flMMti GRABBING THE CAPSULE — A parachute-carrying dummy space capsule is finagged by recovery gear trailing behind a modified Cl 19 Air Force cargo plane in the same way the space capsule ejected from Discoverer XIV was caught over the Pacific Friday. This photo of a practice run was made as planes prepared for Friday’s successful recovery in air of the object returned from the satellite'in orbit. Hurried to California sped to the U. S. mainland after short stopover in Hawaii. A ,* ★ Will an animal make the next |trlp? and then man? “Net necessarily,” said Maj. Gea. O. J. Rltlaad, head of the Air Force Ballistic Missile Division, when asked the question In Los Angeles. "I wouldn’t expect it in the instant future. But we’re working toward that goal.” “I don’t see why we can’t catch all from now on,” exciaiihed the successful plane’s navigator, Lt. Robert Counts, 25, Yuba City, Calif., who with others Of the 1G-man crew was decofated arrival back in Hawaii. SENT TO CALIFORNIA . A plane sped the gold-colored capsule from Hawaii to toe Lock-hee(J laboratory at Sunnyvale, Calif., for scientific analysis before it continues on to Washington-A A A With it went Capt. Harold E. Mitchell, 35, Bloomington, 111., the catch-plane’s commander, wearing Ms newly bestowed Distinguished Flying Cross. A A A With their commander went Counts and the winch operator, Tedh. Sgt. Loujs F. Bannick, 39, Hermiston, Ore-, two of nine crewmen awarded Air Medals (or the spectacular achievement. Their Cl IS, one of IS planes in the sky hunt, made the recovery 3M miles southwest of Hawaii .while flying at *57 miles aa hour. Discoverer XIV, the ejecting satellite, had been triggered into releasing the capsule on its 17th (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Container Will Be Tested MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. (UPI)—The 300-pound capsule of the Discoverer XIV satellite, which made 17 trips high over the United States, returned this morning for an “indefinite” stay. A Cl 19 Flying Boxcar brought a gray container carrying the instrument-laden*—>—------------------- capsule into Moffett Field at 5;0T .A.M. (Pontiac time) today. * Captain Ed Mosher, 38. ot New Bedford, Mass., piloted the plane which brought in the historic cargo. Mosher flew one of the planes which patrolled a 12,000-1 q u a r mile area near Hawaii"Friday In order to catch the satellite in midair. He was ,400 miles away when Capt Harold E. Mitchell snagged the parachuting capsule by means of a rope strung between two long poles. It took three men-to unload the heavy container here Friday night. A A A It was k can 2% feet by 24 feet by 3 feet. Photographers immediately rushed forward to photograph the container, but requests that it be opened were denied. AAA One crew member, noting the 100 Navy personnel and 30 newsmen and photographers at the scene, quipped, “If we had known there was a party here we would have got here earlier.” site and Space Division at Sunnyvale, Calif. Daniel J. Gribbon, manager of the Lockheed satellite system, said that thd satellite would remain «t file division laboratory for aft “indefinite" period until tests were completed. FIRST TO BE TESTED He pointed out that this was the first satellite which would undergo thorough testing after a journey through space since the one ri covered Aug. 12 was given a quick check-over and then sent to Washington, D. C., where it will end up in the Smithsonian Iotfitute. G ribbon urged csutlsa for Americans who are hopeful that Friday’s spectacular feat means the United States will soon send a man la space. “The recovery problem is very complex and we’re just beginning i crack it,’’ he said. AAA But Col. Alvan Moore, commander of the 6594th Wing, said be felt that “recovery was now almost 100 per cent probable” for any Discoverer capsule. Gribbon revealed that a full crew of scientists was at Lockheed waiting to begin immediate tests on’ the space traveling gold-plated globe. WWW AWARDED FOR CATCH - Pacific Air Force Commander Gen. Emmett O’Donnell pins a Distinguished Flying Cross on Capt. Hamid E. Mitchell of Bloomington. 111., at Honolulu Friday. T)to captain is the plane commander of-the C119 Flying Boxcar which snagged Discoverer XWI space capsule from the nine crewmen were monies at Hickam AFB atety after landing with the first succehsfut catch » husfci air Friday. The other air medals in care-near Honolulu iramedt-the now cone. It wau of a space object. TWO THE PONTIAC -PRESS. SATURDAY. AUGUST 20* I960 Political Rivalry Sends Mali to Brink of Battle PARK' (A#) - Rival political leaders today threatened violent dismemberment of the new African stale of Matt. Troop* and police—with dfotided loyalties—maintained a tense calm in the capital at Mur. A pr~ Except tor sporadic radio broadcasts from rival stations, the port city of Dakar was all bat cut off. Strict censorship spit have been imposed on news dtopatches from Dakar. Conflict hip reports had Acting President Modtbo Keita under house arrest or, alternately, in the modem, gleaming-white government buildings ringed by loyal African soldiers. Ill It appeared most of the city was under control of local Sene-galeae Authorities wh Churth. •! Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Joshua Gibbons of Birmingham; two sons, Clarence of Southfield’ and Robert of Oxford; a daughter, Mrs. Dm Swancy of Orville, Ohio;, four sisters, Mrs. Fled Hopson of; St. Petersburg. Fla.; Mrs, Ray Conley and Mrs. Mabel Gotflttd of Birmingham;- and Mrs. Goldto, Smith of Dearborn; three brothers, Herbert Gibbons of Birmingham; Wesley Gibbons of BirmLig- The Commission decided to ppat-pone the grant when if was Ml requested to June, to order to ham, arid Ivan In Pennsylvania; stud? the finished work. .,';A„" AS' p\ Commissioners atoo will study h request from tne Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank to make Martin street a one-way Street fend reserve four parting apees in front of tile Harlan BuUdtag for bank cus-mers. The request to to connection with proposed construction of a drive-up Man Smokes in Bed; Suffers Bad Bums A Pontiac man suffered first and second degree burns to hto hud. right shoulder and leg while removing a blazing mattress from hto norfeside home early this n ing. City firemen said fee victim, Myron Vandecar, 44, fell asleep while smoking fo bed at 38 E. He, was treated at Pontiac 43to»-eral Hospital -for .barns received getting the. mattress oat of the house. The hospital released him. Flames caused an estimated *400 damage to the house and another *400 to contents. Haven't Seen Our Echo Yet? Here's When WASHINGTON (DPI)—The Echo satellite may be seen over Pontiac at the following times this weekend: Tonight: 7:03 p.m., low in the south; 9:13 p.m., high fo the south; fl:19 p.m., high in fee noth. Tomorrow: 1:24 a.m., high north; 1:32 a.m„ medium south; 6:40 p.m. low south; 8:50 pjn., high south; ]l0:S0 pirn., high north. Graham Calls Rttligion Decisive Voting Issue GENEVA (AP) — Evangelist Billy Graham predicts religion will be a decisive hsue in the coming U. & presidential campaign. Graham insisted religion to a legitimate issue in the coming campaign and told • news confer* i in Geneva Friday that “a ____i’s religion cannot be separated from hto person.” He said Democratic prosfctential candidate Tohn F. Kennedy, a Roman Cath-lic,/‘has faced up to this.” West Germany fo the third target tea-drinking nation in Europe wife per capita consumption exceeded only fo Britain rfnd Bol- and four grandchildren. Plan Vote Probe in Macomb LAN8INQ (UN) - Stole elec time officials today planned to Investigate alleged absentee ballot “lrregatartitea" in CUnten Township, Mount Clemens and Warren fo Macomb Oesnty. 'A A" A An attorney for Patrick Walsh, St. Clair Shores, who tost fee i Democratic nomination for stole senator to Incumbent Georgs C. to veto. “We’ll gn down there and do some checking, tart It may be two or three weeks before we saa get to If,” said State Else, done Director Robert-M. Montgomery. Wilfred A. Dupuis, fee attorney for Walsh, said ta n tatter* to the elections division feat Clinton TswnShlp Clerk' Edward Faabnaa and a deputy brought * Faabnaa was a candidate for county drain commissioner on Daddy Made a Great Catch ,• r-butolfhat? HONOLULU (AP) - When Ana Marie Apaka, 6, heard that her father’s C119 Flying Boxcar had caught Discoverer joy’s space capsule, she raced abort her home, squealing with glee. Then she stopped and asked: “Mommy, what’s a nose cone?” “1 couldn’t anewer her," said . Mrs. Richfrd Apaka, wife of fea pilot whose plane snagged the; first object from outer space to lory.* T don’t Imow what it to either,’1; said Mrs. Apaka. “All we know’ to that it’s something big and important." , Raise Justicti's Salary? CHEBOYGAN (UPI)—A referendum will be held here on Nbv. 9 to decide whether to boost, the maximum salary for justice of die peace to *5,000 a year. A A . A Justice Dene Curley is now paid *1,800 and has threatened to quit if the salary fo not railed. * Teachers 'Agin' Reds DAYTON, Ohio (UN) - Delegates to this American Federation of Teachers (AFLrCIO) Convention here Friday rejected a resolution , that would rikve opened the federation to Communist member- Dem Officers Re-Elected DETROIT (D—All of fee Wayne County Democratic officers were re-elected Friday at the county meeting here. They were Mrs. Elsie Gilmore, chairman; David Lebonbotn. vice chairman; Mrs. Esther Dawkins, Mcretary; fend Paul Silvers,, treasurer. U.S. Gave CoL Abel 30 Yean Power s Sentence Lighter Thao Red Spy NEW YORK (D-The Kbyear sentence given U2 Pilot Francis Gary Powers ta Russia was only a third tint received in the United States by Russian Masterspy Cd. Rudolf I. AbeL Abd, bke powers, could have gotten the death penalty. But he drew a 30-year prison term upon conviction of espionage charges ta New York on Nov. 15,1957. A A - The sentence for Powers was less than the 15 yean given to Valentin Afe C.ubitchev, a Russian employe of the United Nations convicted in 1960 of conspiring with UJ. government employe to Sl V.S. secrets for the Kremlin. pended when he agreed to return to the levfot Uatoa. ‘The Russian government intervened ta GuMtchev’s case but madefno efforts to aid Abel, who entered the United States JT ** in 1848 and. far nine years spy network aimed at the theft of UJ3. military and atofoic secrets for Moscow. , i ' -ft fr a- ★ Evidence offend in both the Abel and Powers trials faitod to pren that either dsfendant got secret information back to their itapacttva homelands. Soviet witnesses testified in Moa* cow of finding exposed film ta the wreckage of Powers’ plane. ‘A Abel was convicted otfor of conspiring to steel and transmit such, data. Tbe U.S.-court indictment not require proof feat be actually succeeded ta doing so. . Re to rorvtai hto sentaase to aa Atlanta, Ga., petals. Tbe (ML Supreme Omit tost March M up- held hto conviction oa a 64 de- Tha Russian's attorney, James Donovan, aaM at tha time of the 1957 sentencing that tha time might coma when ^bel could be used lg an exchange to save the ttie rt * U.S. spy who might fall into Ruhr Last June, foDowhqr th* U2 incident/ Donovan said Powers’ father, Oliver Powers wrote Abel ta tha MMl prison and* proposed that Ms son be returned to the United late in exchange tor AM. Donovan said AM replied that he could,not communicate directly with tiie -Soviet government and advised Powers to addrom hto M quest to AM's family ta EM Gutmqsjr.' AM will hf eligible fcr'pareli on April 9. H«. " THE PONTIAC PRBHOr SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1060 THESE John Paul Jones Got* Pott erf Grand Rapids grand rapids (upn _ aty M«acar Alfred R. Rypstra has “Bounced appointment ot Join Paul Jones as yfani-g jj. rector tor Grand Rapids. J*ne«> who assumes the dude* Sept. 15, succeeds Keith M. ««~T libttiat planning dtoaetor for the dty of East Lansing and Id do graduate work at Michigan State University. Ike 39-year-old Jones has been aince 1967 tor Ebasco Services si New York CHy which tormnlated the iflaster plan for downtown Grand Rapids rehewal. Reds to Help Arabs DAMASCUS. Syria (AP>-UtU-ally reliable aoarces here stod today die Soviet Union soon will undertake to finance and carry out more than 300 million dollars’ worth of development projects in the United Arab Republic. Boy WHAT from WHOM The ever - increasing . number # of complaints we are receiving from the public — having purchased something from an unknown firm or an itinerant salesman makes this warning MOST IMPORTANT. II You Don’t Know the MERCHANDISE ' Be Sure You Know the MERCHANT You simply can’t know everything about the thousands of purchases you will make in your lifetime. No person can. But you can make sure of getting the best and most for your money by dealing with honest and reliable merchants. Truthful advertising, honest selling methods and a reputation for fair dealing are the trademarks of a legitimate retailer. If you know about the merchant —then you don’t have to worry about the merchandise he sells. BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce 51 S. SAGINAW ST. OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. 'Psycho'CaN Hitchcock Best Mystery Producer Was Impressed With Impact of Bloch Novel A mw motion picture production from the muter of suspense films, ALired Hitchcock, to a major movie event but Judging by the talk about hto latest Paramount re-, "Psycho,” Hitchcock has outdone himself with hto newest entry in the shiver-and-ehock haO of fame. Psycho,” which opens soon In the Pontiac area, is based op an Inner Sanctunf mystery novel end stars Anthony Perkins, Vera Miles, John Gavin and Janet Leigh as. Marion Crane. Cs-starred are stage and dim star Martia Balaam aad John Mela tire. An outstanding supporting cast ladades Frank Albertson, Pat Hitchcock (the To the appeal of every Hitchcock film he added another ingredient-^ secrecy which kept Hollywood agog with interest. during production. The original novel by Robert Bloch hit Hitchcock with such impact that he immediately purchased the screen rights, then embarked on a campaign of secrecy and silence. The barest story oattlae, supplied by Hitchcock ldmsclf, describes ‘’Psyche” aa the story of a young woman who steals a fortune and encounters a ytrang man too long under the domination of hto mother. For months Hitchcock kept even the title secret. For full enjoyment of the unusual suspense drama, patrons are urged to see it from the beginning. 2 U.N. Guards Almost Shot Firing Squad Halted by Ghanaian Soldier at Lumumba Residence ANTHONY PERKINS AUDI MEREDITH LEOPOLDVILLE (UPI) • Two United Nations guards, arrested Thursday while trying to deliver a note from U.N. deputy secretary-general Ralph Bunche to Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba, narrofrly escaped execution by a Congolese firing squad, it was disclosed today. . A ★ ★ A U. N. spokesman said the guards, a Jamaican and a Brazilian, were arrested and disarmed by Congolese soldiers guarding Lumumba’s residence, then ordered shot. Just as the eight-man flriag squad was about to shoot, a Ghanaian guard stationed at the residence Jumped in front of the two men. Shortly afterward, Indian Gen. I. Rikhiye of the U.N. force arrived and led the two U.N. soldiers away, saying, “Come, chaps, with The incident was another in the series of harassments of U.N. personnel by Congolese troops since Lumumba began his feud with U.N. Secretary-Genera! Dag Ham mars kjold. Actress Objects to 'Sexy' Title Judi Meredith Soys She Has Talent and Hates Publicity Dates HOLLYWOOD l|) — What’s this? A Hollywood stress objecting to being labeled sexy in print? A A ★ One of the so-called expose magazines recently called Judi Meredith “the sexiest starlet in Hollywood. The girl who made Frank Sinatra zing-ring a ding, tfing." * * * Judi blew her pretty top. I “First of all,” she storms. “1 am not a starlet. I’m an actress. ’And I am not sexy. 1’nt cov'd with freckles. I’m flat-chested and I have a Mg mouth. * * A “I don't want that kind of publicity. It's not true. * I found Sinatra very charming but there was absolutely no romance. We just had toughs. “I don’t need Sinatra or auy-one else to get me pubttclty. I don’t want iexy publicity. I have talent. I don’t need It. "Why can't they print true stories about me, like, for instance, that l am the finest young actress in Hollywood. That's the kind of publicity that helps in this business—not those romantic twosome items.’’ h ★ ★ Judi looked anything but sexy the day I visited her on the set of "Jack the Giant Kilter.” * * * Her face was painted green, her finger nails about three inches long and special contact lenses in her eyes made .her look asleep with her eyes wide open. Ik tr ft Judi, at one point in the classic fairy tale, turns into a witch. * A A She says she is so serious about the no-sex publicity that she no longer dates celebrities. 'I date no one but Gary Nel-i,” she says. 'Who’s Gary Nelson?” ‘See what f mean? Everybody asks that. He's an asslstan director.” Nehru Regrets Incident NEW DELHI, India (M>) -Prime Minister. Nehru said today he hag sent a message to Congo Premier Patrice Lumumba pressing my deep regret” at the Leopoldville airport incident. An Indian aircrewman was manhandled and Canadian troops assaulted by Congolese soldiers. 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' Some of SIMMS Customers Think WE CUT Oir PRICES Too LOW and therefore the Quality isn't high- THIS ISN’T TRUE We Sell You QUALITY At A DISCOUNT j ,It'* * fact, som« of our valued customers are always asking “How Come This is Priced so Low?” And we always tell 'em the true (Mom raised us to never tell lies) story -—’about Our searching the ---- U.S.A. for bargains, about th« low overhead, no fancy fixtures, no high priced executives etc. And sometimes if an item is slight irregular, or seconds we toil our customers that they ere iutt that, but always priced tower than usual ... so daer customers our policy is to sell GOOD GOODS at Cheap Goods DISCOUNT PRICES. Come, see for yourself — we have so many GOOD GOODS that it's impossible a to advertise 'edt all! Aad for Farther Proof Shop Simms TONITE and MONDAY rtii io p. m.) (9 A.M. to 10 P.M,) Gilbert's 'REVEILLE’ Genuine Itistol Slatdf Alarm Clock f Pocket Watch |1L7I Value J 179 ! ptndabla tad accurst.. M. Tax. White Utility Oxford teg. ISc Value For Nurses, Waitresses, Housewives, back - to -school for girls ' etc. Washable super-hyde in White only. Sizes 5 to 9. T Famous LISTERINE H. H. AYERS Fall 53c Tooth Paolo : LIPSTICKS Clearance of ‘Sale Samples (•^001^ RADIOS Values to 139.95 15 M Solid Color Patfenied Chenille DRAPES JERDEHS Coconut Shampoo St VXiDE 3-1 Spring Action Hardwood Clothespins tkg0cof 50F 36* Diamond polished hardwood pine with coil spring action. In ptostic hag. THE PON/TIAC PRESS ~ ron Street Pontiac, Michigan SATURDAY, AUGUST IS, IMS Owned and Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company 48 «W Huron Street | The POWER of FATIH » It Seems to Me. Space Achievements Are Great Triumphs for United States This week has really been a period of triumph for the United States and conversely a time of gloom and dejection for the Russians. Our Air Forc^placed Discoverer 13 in orbit and it whizzed merrily around the old globe. That's a right tolerable feat just in itself, but the denouement was still to come. ★ ★ ★ After the Discoverer had proven to everyonera satisfaction that she was doing a top-hole deal in space, she disgorged a capsule on her 17Ui trip and the Navy recovered it in the Pacific Ocean. This is s tremendous accomplishment. It’s the forerunner of placing a man in space and then bringing him .back. We’ve been able to pat one there for years, bat no one eoald guarantee he’d be retained in one piece. Now we have some assurance. We’re a big step nearer. ★ ★ ★ Secondly, we just put the 100-foot aluminum-painted balloon in space and it has been whirling grandly around our Earth, visible to people all over the world—including the ihinions of Comrade Khbushcbxv. thousands have seen it from Oakland County. ★ ★ ★ : Here are two ^ce achievements that rank high inwQpk annals. Both dre ours. They indicate we’re strug-gling into the rote of international leadership In otrar space. The President delivered & message that was reflected back as Intended and the process worked beautifully. ★ ★ ★ Nikita’s boasts and flamboyant claims of world leadership and world domination will have to be soft-pedaled. He ehooid speak through the wrong end Of his megaphone. Indians Here First.... More people were aroused—yes, burned up—over White Chapel’s refusal to bury an Indian than anything that has occurred along that line in many years In the Pontiac area. ★ ★ ★ A consensus seems to be; “If anyone in the world has the full and complete right to be buried in any cemetery in America, it’s an Indian. Indians were here first. It was their country and their native land.’’ It still is. ★ ★ ★ I’ve heard several people who have lots in White Chapel express more indignation than those that ^haven’t. I don’t know White Chapel’s legal rights, but I recog- nize the amount of antagonism officials aroused all over the community. Even t h o u g h White Chapel took its original position through some reasoning of its own, once the full fury of the ' storm broke, it might have been the part of wisdom to bow before the “will of the people’’ and gracefully acquiesce/ ★ ★ Court actions are imminent. It’s a live issue. Speed Is Fantastic.... When an X-I& flew 2,196 miles an hour, It attained a speed that defies credulity. About the only way to understand anything so fantastic is to apply the rate of travel to circumstances which we are all familar. * ★ ★ For example, this airplane was traveling at the rate of 36 miles | a minute. It could fly from Pontiac to Los Angeles in an hour. Pram here to New York would require a mere 14 minutes. It covers ‘‘It is by his example, rather than his works, that he has exercised an influence on civilization, and that he deserves a place to himself amongst the men who have ennobled humanity." Lamartine Bernard Palissy, a 16th Century French potter, was so enthralled by a specimen of Chinese porcelain that he worked for 16 years to discover the secret of its manufacture. Impoverished and with a family to support, Palissy struggled through his experiments without pay, even burned his furniture to keep his kilns going. Palissy never found the secret of making Chinese porcelain, but his devotion to his art made him the greatest potter of his age and enabled him to create objects that are treasured in museums today. This devout Hugenot firmly believed £hat "the talents a man has received from God, he should endeavor to multiply, following His commandment" Faith of such caliber enabled him to face an even greater test later in life. At the height of his career, when he was patronized by the royal court and named “inventor of rustic pottery to the king and the queen-mother," Palissy suddenly found himself imprisoned for his faith. The king said he was compelled to turn him over to hid enemies and pleaded with him to compromise his beliefs. "It is rather I that should pity you, who utter such words as these ‘I am compelled’," answered Palissy. "This is not the language of a king, and neither youraett . . . with all your people shall compel me.? The potter was mightier than the king. Days of All Faiths; Traditions Differ on Hats in Church a mile in less than two seconds. That sounds impossible. ★ ■ ★ And to go a step further, it -could" flit from here to Detroit in 42 seconds. Try that on your model "F.” And finally, it«could whiz over the center of Pontiac and then pass over the middle of Birmingham 15 seconds later. You take it from there. Powers Grets Ten.... Francis Gary Powers draws a ten year sentence with three years In prison and the balance in lesser confinement ★ ★ ★ I think tho entire procedure has been largely dictated by Russia’s estimates of world opinion. The bloody butchers of tho Kremlin would think no more of killing another human being than you would of drinking a glass of water. They’ve murdered millions already and subjugated millions more. ★ ★ ★ What’s one more life to them? . Echo answers: “Nothing." ★ ★ Hence, their entire procedure is predicated on what the world in general will best accept. Death guaranteed an International hue and cry and a long prison term would have been equally offensive. ★ ★ ★ So they compromise with the maximum they believe the world will accept. I feel desperately sorry for this young man and his people.. And In Conclusion.... Jottings from the well-thumbed By DR^ UOWARD V. HARPER a» the seventeenth century, but it notebook Of your peripatetic re- The f^yal of the Immaculate required 300 years to make the ob- porter: Heart of Mary is a fairly new one servance universal. Someone asks anonymously if the ■**» Roman Catholic Church. it hato in church ... ... * was as late as 1944 that Pius XII Thines ease off a bit in the new computet machine at the water directed iu observance, it fails T° ^in JL Z works is a filtering man’s thinker always in the octave (eight days) , . . f j„*_n „ of the Assumption, which is ceie- ’ this time °* Y**r- There ®re n0'" .... The important details brated on August 15. 110 important days or saints, at are ccgiigg throujh. Nucoh buy* hi» -------- * suits "Off the Shelf" and KsnNEDY TMi devotion to tho heart of it seems a good week to tgke up a has his made by an exclusive tailor *■"* *» “Hch “k® that to the question that has come from aev- * _ _ . ... Sacred Heart of Jesus, which eral readers. in London...................I hear that come, m tho eightfay ported „ . _ d# teW9 G. Mennen Williams may not get ■»« cover their head, at worship and the Health, Welfare and Education Department cabinet post if Kennedy uo« ^ ^ ST - for aSwia- women’.** is elected. Representative Edith JJ* Ve^rete Mary‘. «qui«d to appear rn.ome.ort Green is a potent dark horse . . . . . heart as an emblem repreoeatlag °f ■**d‘C0Ve,lB*- xjp.j, Teraev ha* the her love and her own deep There la no simple answer to New Jersey has tne mplrltlMU this ^question, for the reason that mwt people per ^ direction .1 - *9uare mile, 801, will, tha Cl, b. ««rtr Alaska last among ship bareheaded, and there are MMNe the 50 states with .04. Msu0 omclto My d^,. 'A,*b, wh0 w“r nHSS'^V ....................Purely piine there is perceptibly * * * ‘ ^ l°r caddy , the national side, the hair has always been (as 1980: Robert Sabour- average it has to the Mohammedans) in TM BOB „. . . brother “ J1 8 ' some sense sacred. To swear by (or am I Ron?) IWf- Hls twm WOiner | . Good!... the hair, or by the head, was, for is second by an eyelash. !. ydfdm ...........The examPie» a- m°st solemn kind of *** jpp.si * * oath. The hair had something to WWW' KENNEDY - d0 with man’s (man, that is, not Denver’s Bocar is the newest Nixon do- woman) being createdlnfiie image ■ . . .. , . . ... of God: To cover it showed humii- entrant into automotive ranks. Mtes Will ity and reverence. Thkppear un- The car reaches 60 miles an hour probably be covered was arrogant and shame- in four seconds and has s top carried on all ful’ speed just under 200 miles per three networks............... hour. The firm built 3 in 1958, sign in Milwaukee office: Paai's imtrurtlona to the Corta- 30 last year and anticipates a <«wnrk eight hours sleep thiaaa (i otrinthian., chapter id whopping production of 50 In 1M0 ^ houri_but not’ ,t the “ ' -n.: • • •.• ••.* t same time.” ............... The Country Parson polled readers to see what names _ * they'd moot like to >00 omitted • Hew model TV sets are hav-from the news for the balance of ^1 a big run. the year. The leaders ran in this ...................Greetings: order: Sinatra, Weld, Bergman, “Bunky” Knudsen becomes Cal las and Merman ............ a grandpappy .... .. Licenses glimpsed this week; Miss Michigan spent most Rhode Island, Texas, Quebec and 0f her time during the foot- Arkansas. • hall game autographing it ★ ★ programs......... ......... Sign behind the electric chair in a Dept, of Cheers ahd Jeers: western prison: “You can be sure if the C’s — Pontiac Jayceea it's. Westlnghouse.”..............for that football game: *the Jackie Gleason has a permanent J’s—TV’s re-running the reweight prdblem but he just shed 59 runs. . , , pounds and dropped to 220 ...... . — Harold A. Fitzgerald ^ *** wanted (hat fourth strike. He didn’t waat to ptay the rules. Regrettably, he ha* caused disturbed thoughts in many people. A true American, he was, a true sportsman, he was not A Mrs. R. W. M. \ Voice of the People Cheek Used, Car fox Lien With Register of Deeds Before you buy a uaed car check with the reflates of deeds to see if there la p Ben. * My teenage neighbor went to a dealer and traded In Mb old ear worth about 9500 pine he paid H,000 cash and received a dear title fretn the Secretary of State's office. it it. ★ * la the weeks that followed the ear dealer declared haahieptoy. The ear dealer had bestowed «SM (astag the ear as collateral) before he toM It. IMa lad waa forced to glva ap hto ear when the fiaaace rsmpaay and a deputy came to the heaae. He had to pay thb fiaaace compaay $SM plus lawyer's lees af IMS more. ★ ★ ★ Don’t rely on that clear title from the Secretary of State. ^Prejudice Behind Articles on Hairdo’ I’m really sick and tired of reading criticism of Mra. Kennedy’s hairdo. I’m not crazy about Mra. Eisenhower's bangs. The prejudice behind these ridiculous articles is much deeper than how Mrs. Kennedy wears her hair. I have come to believe that your paper is completely Republican. Aa Angry Reader Indian Burial Still Receives Comments Racial discrimination has reached a new high (or low) in this country when an Indian, the only true American, can't be in a cemetery of his choice. If the privately owned cemetery wishes to cater to the snobs of the Caucasian race it wa/ cruel and inhuman to have made preparation for the burial in the first place or to have add the iota to an Indian family. Perhaps some:- buyers of lots there haven't read the find print, but this incident has made those of us who believe all men are children of God and are our brothers, -more determined to continue to work to see segregation ended! A. Irene Stephens Orchard Lake George Nash’s case shows Just how deplorably ignorant we people who consider ourselves Americans are. The true Americans, the Indians, weip pushed from their homeland to reservations. Now this modern atrocity has beat brought to bear. Lincoln once said, “Man was created frdp and equqj . . , " yet we cannot remember to practice this. I'm proud to claim that I have a Utile of the true American blood In my votes. I’m tkree-quartera foreign (Irish) and one-quarter Cherokee. My grand- The Almanac By United Press International Today is Saturday, Aug. 30, the 233rd day of the year, with 133 more is 1960. The moon is approaching its new quarter. The morning star is Mars. The evening stars are Jupiter, Saturn'and Venus. On this day in history: hi 1741. Danish navigator Vitus Jonas Bering discovered Alaska, In 1833, Benjamin Harrison, 23rd president of the U.S., was born. In 1914, Germany occupied Brussels, capital of Belgium. In 19M, Prime Mhristor Winston Churchill paid tribute to the men of the Royal Air Force saying ... “Never hi the Held of human conflict was no much owed by oo many to an few.** In 1941, the Rufkians blew up their Dnieper Dam as German troops swept across the Ukraine. Thought for today: British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill said: “There is no finer investment for any community than putting milk into babies.” Portraits In which he tolls the men to warship hareheaded and the women to cevor their heads. There are two points to be con- “I’m proud of Pontiac and the willingness of those officials at Perry Mount Park to grant this man a resting place lor his remains. _ * Cherokee hy Adoption In diis great big world of ours rules and regulations are set forth for the benefit of the greatest number of people. A five sportsman plays the rules. It would be . unthinkable and truly unsports- By JOHN C. METCALFE It seems that when our boy retires ... He d^aim of pirate den . . . Of scuttled sails and ocean fires ... Of wails from drowning men ... A little later on he screams ... Of horses running wild . . . And clutching at the bed sheet seams . . . There is a bouncing child ... A« if all this la not enough ... To make Ms parents mad ... He dotes on even sterner stuff . . . T» shake a sleepy lad ... He rolls and rants throughout the night.In moods both sad and gay . . . And never minds the haggard plight ... Of parents nearing day ... I hope that when he gets to be... A man In. quiet nook . . . His son will never mt tv see ... A comic horror book. (COPYRIGHT, mt) Smiles sidered here, and both of them'are manlike to want a fourth strike, long out of date. Yet. to death, George Nash The feUovt who does Just enough work to get by isn’t able to buy very much. * ★ ★ -r lee cream mm always get a licking for being good.') Case Records of a Psychologist: Tactless Minister Frightens Boy Alton's cose is a challenge to the church, it illustrates the fact that many critics of the church we carrying over an emotional bias from adolescence, which they should now eliminate with their adult perspective. It is not logical to hate a church just because one tactless member thereof alienated us as a timid child. Br DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE F4H8: Alvin J., aged 16, was a self-conscious teen-ager. His mother had asked him to attend- a large church meeting where a visiting clergyman was conducting a revival, but' Alvin refused. Later it began so Alvin for . the witk her pos- DR. OUN1 conscience waa still bothering him because he had refused to accompany her. The visiting clergyman was orating nbont Satan when Alvin Atvfii “How many people In this great-audience today have been saved *’ the speaker Hfouted and cast his eagle eyes over the congregation. * ★ # “I want all (hoee to stand who have been saved and who have thus reserved tor themselves a place In Glory." SCARING PEOPLE The great majority of people' for they were church but Alvin remained Mated, as did a few others throughout the morn. Naturally, them who remained seated felt very ancon tollable at torn being hraaght Into tha Hmallght, Hot they hadn’t men anything jn*. “Now I want all af you good souls who are savid, to sit down," shouted the revivalist, "Then I want those of you who are on the broad highway that leadeth to destruction to stand up." dr * * The “saved" folks gladly sat down, but the “lost" souls tried to shrink out of sight. “Stand up, stand up;" yelled the preacher. “I saw a number of you who belong to JSatan." POOR PSYCHOLOGY .So Alvin reluctantly stood up, aa did a few of the other recalcitrant sinners of the town, Alvin looked around, wild-eyed. And when two good ladies got him by the anna, he bolted. They tried ineffectually to head Mm off, but he Jerked loose and fled. IPs been M yean since he became a halter, and ha han't been back Inside a church since. ' In fact, he seems to have a complex about preachers and enjoys taking verbal pot toots at them In his position as a clever new* No, they have first ingratiated themselves into the hearts of the natives by curing their side and feeding their hungry. The "sale" of file new religion has thus been a by-product oflhis friendly bond that was established first. The second error Indicated by today’s cose, however, Is Atria's edult hostility to clergymen. At tho ago of 16, he was Justified la hls emotions) Mss. But as a mature man, he now should put away this personal affront to-himself and view the Two gross wrongs> are evident from this case today. In the first {dace, the poor psychological method of that clergyman not only ■cared young Alvin, but would probably have done ao to any other MISSIONARY TECHNIQUE Th» way to win souls is similar to that employed in winning customers for any other sound com- Show them tha outstanding merits of your merchandise, but meanwhile try *to win their admiration and personal friendship. This to tho “mMeaary took- And wall they ought to be, for Jeans was tha greatest Applied Psychologist the world has ever known. m THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, !9ao> FIVE Few Tap Dancers Lett in Entettainment Field ____ By KARL WILSON . _ YORK—Lorely Carol Lawrence la pretty good proof that Bing Crosby doesn’t do all the advising In his family . .. sometimes his sons advise him. "Daddy-e," his mbs Lindsay, PhlUp ■nd Dennis told Blag after they'd worked with Carol on the Perry Como TV shew, “yoa should ase this girl ... " . - And on their recommendation, Bing had I kla agents engage Carol to dance In his up-I coming TV spec—to be taped the next two | weeks In Hollywood. it ★ ★ Carol, a flashing-eyed brunette from Chl-WlLSON cag0 and Northwestern who got famous In “West Side Story” and Is now bade In It after “Saratoga,"-ia one of the last of the hoofers. “Yeo're a hoofer!” exclaimed Danny Daniels, dance director, when be and Card had laateh recently. "A hoofer/' you see, Is not Just any dancer—but a tap dancer. And tap dancers are a vanishing race. Paul Draper, Is about the .. Minister REV. DANXIL J. WALLACE, B.D., Associate Minister REV. JOHN K. BALL, D.D., Associate Minister MORNING SERVICES 8:45 A.M. and 10:55 A.M. “THE HEART OF WORSHIP” REV. WALLACE SPEAKINO (BROADCAST Over WPON, 11:00 A.M.) . "SEARCHING THE SCRIPTURES'' with Roosevolt Wells, Minister CHURCH CALENDAR Bible School Sunday... I:U A. M. Sermon and Worship. 11:M A M. Bee.* Worship and Sermon.. 1:90 P.ll. Bible Study Tuesday . > 00 P M. 'THE SEAT OF CORRUPTION" In the past lev artlclee. I hay* been placlno treat emphaati on tbs heart. I hays painted out that the heart, when rilled with erll and unrighteousness Is responsible for the InduliM at the body. The evils which art to prevalent In our land and which are constantly contributing to the dattn-quency of the human family i— evils which dally plague us. In Matt lS:lg, we —„ ----- procead eril thoughts, murders, adaitortae, fornications, thefts, false witness. Maephemlesn I have previously discussed with you evil thinking and murders; In this Issue I shall discuss • Adulteries and Fornication.” "ADULTERIES AND FORNICATION" X pm studying both of these erUa together ot they combined cover the "EVILd OP UNCHAOTTRr.” Are wo not constantly confronted with the nreihlome Which result from participation in these stoat How many people cried! How atony parents have worried t Hew away couples feared? How away homes broken? How many counselors hove advised? How many preachers have counselled? How many courts limit **“" Mow atony Judges ruled! How many children suffered! : * ... . —— —f net hypothetical notions but realistic occurences which toes us >ur Savior Jesus Christ has (Old THI HEART IE RESPONSIBLE, o many have courts toed WANTON IMAGINATIONS AND DE- _____„„ lAnimn jo UBT.” la It act lor this reason that Jesut said, "Who looketh uixm a woman to lust alter her ....’* Mt, IB. Here1 as previously s eted^esu. does not only condemn tha Mt but goae back of U« act and condemns the ‘ SECRET OP THE HEART " The example of David, whose deep, and awful crime fully shows tha danger of Indulging desires and the roving* of n wanton eye. dee n Bam. II, Pm. 11. . . Out oaototy la everywhere feeling the effect* of thooo evils and their MM* am everywhere displayed la: 1 More IllaamancaBran I. More Children's Nome* ' ]. More XMvoccca «. More Needed Adoptions I. More CWM Support It is no wonder that Lust Is condemned and Lasciviousness named a* a devise of Baton. The Bible any*. 'Then when luet path conceived, it brtnaeth forth eto: and sin when It 1* finished, brtngeth forth death. Ja*. l :]| would you In view Of these truths allow your life to be Influenced by toe word of Ood and your heart to be mqde pure end "kept pure by the lattrurtMa #ftoy Lord who said through Jsmcs PURIPY YOUR HEARTS, tl POPBLB-MTNXNg)," Jas 4 :1. BEUBVETH THOU THIS! CHURCH OF CHRIST fto further tniormatiQa tall PE-5-1156 or writ* to address Mow. 210 Hughes St, Ponfioc, Michigan On the other hand, there are people have plenty of problexna and yet by ffeM attitude of mind positively generate happiness. Not long ago I stayed overnight In the home of an <— friend in a western city. Before going to bed he asked me how early I wanted to be up the next morning. “Well, I have to catch a plane at 9,” I replied, “so I’d better be up at 7. That’s my usual rising hour anyway.” "Dent worry,” he assured me- "I will be up and 111 wake you. Go to sleep in confidence.” 801 went to sleep In confidence. Next thing I knew I i roused from blissful slumber by the noise of my friend’s I , outside my door. (That is Just what it was: noise—although afterwards he insisted it was singing.) And the words he r=? shouting were, "Oh, what a beautiful morning ...” ★ ★ ★ In a few minutes I heard my friend calling from downstairs. "Hurry up and get down here. We have a wonderful breakfast for you.” So I hurried and got there, and we sat down to breakfast. There were six of us. From the head of the table my host beamed at me and asked, “How are you, old boy?” “Oh, I’m fine,” I said. “How could I be otherwise around you?” He then proceeded to ask each of u in turn, “What do you have to thank God for this morning?” When he asked his wife this question she looked tenderly at him and answered, “I thank Ood for you.” Thereupon he rose and went around the table to her and gave her a big kiss I on the cheek. I. My friend then quoted some Inspiring passages from the Bible and ended with an impromptu discourse on the wonders and opportunities of a new day. I looked out the windows to the raindrops lying heavy on the shrubs, and the atmosphere | was so happy in that house it seemed to me every raindrop [ reflected the glory of God. I have known this man for years. He has had plenty I of problems and trouble In his life. But even so somewhere along the lino he learned how to have happiness. Aeschylus, first of the great ancient Greek dramatists whose plays are still performed today, declares, “Happiness comes from the health of the soul.” What doss that mean? Well, soul health Involves goodwill Instead of hate, outgoingness instead of selfishness, and faith Instead of doubt. , , ★ ★ -• Learn really to appreciate God’s world and give thanks dally for your personal blessings. Think happy thoughts and National Lutheran Council Churches ASCENSION WATERFORD Meettoe U Leggett School 3621 Pontisc Lake Rd. . War. LaPountain, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 9.00 A.M. SERVICE ....10:00 AM. CHRIST of the LAKES WHITE LAKE TWP. BREAKS GROUND — Turning over the first shovel of dirt at groundbreaking ceremonies for the new addition to Four Towns Methodist Church are. (from left) C. D. Cornell of 12915 Westbrook rootles Press Photo St., Detroit, the Rev, W. Cadman Prout of 1200 Williams Lake Rd., pastor, and Chester £. Amann of 5435 Sarvis St. 6333 Elisabeth Lake Rd. Iran C. floss, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:15.A.M. CHURCH SERVICE 10:30 A.M. SYLVAN LAkf Pastor Clark McPhait' SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:00 AM. SERVICES 8:00 end 10:15 AM. Gives Viewpoint at Leaders' School CHRIST . WAtERFORD TWP. Airport at Williams Lake Rd. Arvid E. Andarson, Pastor EAST LANSING — Farmers and politicians are going about seeking solutions to the nation's agricultural problems the wrong way, a Protestant church official declared at a Rural Leadership School at Michigan State University persons form their views on farm policies by adopting those of a political party, or by absorbing the viewpoints of cenaht agricultural publications, or listening ___________—___ their friends and neighbors." do tilings that make other people happy. This Is a great for- |*fid Shlriey Greene, of muU lor nal happiness, as you will discover toy trying It. fern ’STaiiW^a^AS?1 (Distributed I960) Mo. Finds Life's Work in Kenya NAIROBI, Kenya W - Miss Lillian Blewitt has been in Kenya eight months, and she’s decided devote the rest of her life to missionary work in East Africa. ★ W W Stricken by polio when only 3 years old, she is confined permanently to a wheel chair. WWW But despite her handicap, Miss Blewitt didn't think twice when ■he received a letter last October from family friends, the Rev. and Mrs. John Twyler Ludwig, urging her to Join them. They ns a mission school for African girls at Buaraka, In undulating. dusty bosh country some miles north of Nairobi. “The Ludwigs had been asking me to come to Kenya for the last 20 years, but this time I knew I must go,” she says. !‘I had no money for the fare, no means of support when I got here and had no teaching experience or qualifications — but nevertheless, here I am.” WWW The Ludwigs, who have been missionaries in East Africa since 1927, when Nairobi was a shantytown, have been extending their school for African girls for the last 19 years. ' w w w Before this thdy were attached to the Church of God Mission in the humid heat of Kiaumu on the shores of Lake Victoria. Bat whea Mr. Lodwig, bow 78, reached retirement age, he waa advised to go home. The Ludwigs’ answer to this was to accept 10 acres of land offered by a wealthy Nairobi hotelier, and to start a school for African girls, independent rd any financial help from missions or the government. New Bethel to Present \Mrs. Jackson in Recital Mrs. Arthur L. Jackson, wife of the assistant pastor of New Bethel Baptist Church, will present a voice recital at 7 p. m. Sunday at New Bethel Church. WWW Sponsoring the program is the Missionary Society, with Mrs. Helen Lagrome and Mrs. Conola -Busbee in charge. WWW Mrs. Jackson, a voice student for three years, received her B.S. * degree in guidance and elementary education from Arkansas Mechanical and Normal College in Pine Bluff, Ark. She taught six years In the public school system of Blythvilte, Ark. W t it ■*. W | Currently she is working on her master of education degree, which she hopes to receive from Wayne University in January. I Future piano are counseling work In Pontiac public schools. j Mrs. Jackson's vocal numbers will consist of the. following songs, ”The Lord's Prayer” by Malotte, “Trees,” “Ave Maria,” and “The Holy City.” Other numbers will be “Steal Away.” “Wade in the Water,” and “Hold Me Jesus in Thine Arms.” The Amos G. Johnson is pastor. j EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE I 2800 Welkins Lake ltd . N. W. Oak. Co. Mkt. ! Sunday School 10 c.m. Classes for all agosl Preaching 11 a.m. & 7:30 pun. Youth at 6:30 P-®-• Radio — CJCLW 7:30 a.®.. 900-ko in Detroit “Bat this is not the way to achieve a sound, morally defensible solution,*’ Bev. Greene sakl. “One should measure the' problem and the solution against a code of ethics, the ethics of one’s [religion, to find a solution which is right by ethical standards rather than political expediency.” i w w w Rev. Greene served as a staff member at this 14th annual Rural Leadership School this week, attended .by more than 140 pastors and fey leaders from churches j throughout the midwest. Christians should be Intimately Involved la the nation’s political processes, he stated, la order to infuse Christian principles Into national policies. W W W ■ ■ As in the case of productive capacity, Rev. Greene said, the firmer should ponder whether be shduld! raise more than can bo sold at Over the years -the Ludwigs and their friends both in America ami in Africa have given enough to take care ot about 70 African girl boarders from 11 to 18 years old, fawn all parts of the Colony — which is about twice the size of the British Isles,— and tor a qualified teaching staff, mostly Africans. WWW Until they are 16 the girls get a general education, but for the following two years they are , taught domestic science by Mrs. Ludwig, 70, who fe- a qualified nurse and domestic science teacher. Throughout their ochuoUag the pupils are gtvea religious Instruction by Miss Blewitt. Her wheel chair is no longer i transport problem, despite the rough tracks which link the school’s 21 separate buildings. About 10 of the girls hoist Miss Blewitt’s chair shoulder high and carry her from classroom to class- Though Miss Blewitt receives no salary for her work at the school, she refuses to waste time on financial worries. “I didn’t have enough money to get here and never thought I’d have enough to five on when I arrived — but something has always turned up, she says. fair prices, whether he should cut! production, or whether he should! work to eliminate distribution bot-j tlenecks which deny food to those j desperately in need. W W W The question of price and farm 1 income supports,1 and the conflict between- the nation's stated principles on free international trade and our present protective tariff on agricultural products should also be examined, he said. WWW Rev, Greene advocated that when] ethical and equitable solutions to these problems are found, farmers should work jo. incorporate the standards into political platforms,! and on into national policy. I BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR N. Adams Rd. Bet wren Long and Square Lake Roads. Donald G. Zill, Pastor Matins Service..8:30 A.M, ST. JOHN'S i PONTIAC 07 Hill St at Cherry 8t. Charles A. Colbert. Paator SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 AM CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 A.M. BEV. DAVID ESPINOZA Coming to preach at the Light of the World Assembly ot God Church Monday through Sunday win be Evangelist David Espinosa. Services will 'begin at 7:30 p.m. The church la located at 280 Harrison St. The Rev. Daniel Aguilar is Revival Starts Sunday The Rev. J. O./Hughes of Detroit will speak nightly at revival meetings Sunday through Aug. 28 at the Provide** Missionary Baptist Church, 311 Bagfey St. Meetings will begin at 7:30 P- m. The Rev. Gaude Goodwin said the ofllllB FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw Pontioc, Michigan Rev. H. H. Savage, Pastor Bov. W. E. Hakes, Asst Pastor 9.45 A. M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL , Classes for All Ages 10:45 A. M.—MORNIN6 WORSHIP “What Was Wrong with the Rich Young Ruler" Evening Service—7:00 P.M. “Three \Therefores in the Bible" Dr. H. H. Savagofspeaking at both services , , _ !XsiWMBamNMeiim®BmMasmna FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Avenue . Aev. Harold Marshall, Pastor Harry Nichols. President Sunday Evening 7 30 P. M. 4 / Rev. Marshall, speaker Wednesday; Evening ,7:30 P. M. — Rev. Marshall LiACH ROAD COMMUNITY CHURCH 1 ICle Baal of Sahara HelfhU, 1 Block NorUl of Auburn M. Tuesday Night Mbit Study T:JS P.M. “1/ You Need Spiritual Encouragement... Come” OAKLAND PANE METHODIST CHURCH Montcalm and GJsawood Bov. J. W. Doeg, Pastor Sunday Service 10:00 A. M. Sunday School 11:15 A. M. Mr. . William Herts), Preaching — “Never Ending Vigil” FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 341 r AIRPORT ROAD Sunday School ...............10:00 A.M. Worship Service..............11:00 AM. "Why Reach the Moon?.' Wednesday Prayer Service .... 7 JO P.M. Evangelhtic Service............... 7:30 P.M. Pastor Easton, Preaching Ample Perking — Supervised Nursery CHURCHES of CHRIST Listen to the "Horald of Truth” Each Sunday CKLW TV 8:30 A.M. WXYZ 8:00 P.M. SYLVAN LAKE OfthMe Lake tad Mlddlobelt Rd*. PI 8-7778 Bible School 9:45 AM. Morning Worship 10:45 AM. Evening Service 6 PM. PONTIAC Bible Study 950 PM. Classes for All AfP* . Morning Worihip 10:50 A.M. Evening Worship « P.M. Wad. Bible Study 9:30 PM. LAKE ORION 1060 Hemmlngwey Rd. off Clerkaten Rd. Bible Study Sun. 9:45 AM, i Tut*. 7 JO P.M. , Worship 1045 AM. 600 P.M. 2} KEEGO HARBOR BAPTIST CHURCH •> Out Uk« Road JKHfcVA. North Control College THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ADVENT ST. ANNE'S EPISCOPAL MISSION WESLEYAN METHODIST ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMES YOU SERVICES 8 and 10 A.M. 5301 Hatchery Read Drayton Plain*, Michigan THE fOXTIAC PRESS, SAftTRDAY, AtTGtTST 20. IPfifr SEVEN _ First Christian Church Disdplos oi Christ Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Church Service 10:15 A. M. 858 W. Huron Roy. O. D. McCoIJ First Social Brethren Church 111 Baldwin, PE 3-0814 Sat. Eva. Service ... 7:30 P.M. Sunday School ___10:00 A.M. 'Sunday Morning Worship .......11:00 A.M. Sunday- Evening Worship ....... 7:30P.M. Tuas. Young Peopla 7:30 P.M. Thursday Prayer 7:30P.M. REV. TOMVfY GUEST. Pastor £ Williams Lake Church of the Nazarene 10 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. WORSHIP HOUR 7 P.M. WORSHIP HOUR ZION CHURCH of the NAZARENE 239 I. Pika Street 10 ajn.—-Sunday School 11 ain.—Morning Worship 7 pm.—Evening Service ’ Rav. Harold L Harris ft 4-6216 CENTRAL CHRISTtAN CHURCH G. W.-Gibson,-Minister FE 4-0239 347 N. Saginaw Bible School . 8:45 A.M. Morning Worship .. .11:0(1 A.M. Youth Sarvica . 6:00 P.M. Evening Sarvica .. 7:00P.M. Prayar Meeting and. Bible Study Wednesday 7:30 P.M. I LUTHERAN CHURCHES MXB80U1U SYNOD St. Stephen. Sashabaw at Kemp* St. Trinity Auburn at Jessie (Bass aid** Ralph C. Chat, Pattor Sunday School — 8:45 A.M. First Sarvica .f^AJI. Sacond Sarvica ;... 11:00 A.M. St. Paul Joslyn et Third (North Met Georg# Jtebdor, Pattor Morning Service ■. If 45 A.M., Sunday SditK ■ • • 900 A.M. ] Blbomfield TOWNSHIP Square taka and Tekgraph Wot. C. Grata, Pastor St. Mark m Commerce Rond [Sacred Concert Slated Sunday I WASHINGTON. D. G (*, - fU.*_ 1 o«dd of the National Astoria ttan of Evangelicals reposts that the number at Evangelical Protestants ! hi Colombia increased tram 16.000 LEAVING FOR KENYA — The Dr. W. Walter Oliphant family bf Lake Orion, all members of the Riverside Seventh-day Adventist Church, 156 Mt. Clemens St. starts packing for moving to Kenya, Africa this fall. Dr. Oliphant plan* to begin a medical mission with Dr. E. Arthur Calkin* and Dr. Percy S. Marsa, both of Lake Orion, supplying funds. The family consists of,' from left, Carol, Sue. Mrs.. Oliphant, the doctor, Jimmy and BUI. The three doctors have arranged to divide their time between Lake Orion-medical practice and Africa with the two in the States supporting the one in mission work. • « Trio to Prosont Musical Numbers at Baldwin The North Central College Trio will present a concert In the Bald-, win Evangelical United Brethren Church on 212 Baldwin Ave. at 6:30 and 11 a. m. Sunday. .it * The trio is on a three month tour of the Midwest to present j concerts in Illinois. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Ohio ! churches. They will also appear in church camps throughout the vart-joua states. - * * * Included .in the sacred musical will be “Chat Thy Burden Upon the Lord” by Mendelssohn. Handel’s "He Shall Feed His Flock,” "The Beatitudes,” and "One God.” Other portion* of the program wiU include “No Man la an Island," “I Heard a Forest Praying.” "Give Me Year Tired. Your Pear.” and a group of Members of the trio are Marilyn I Gibson front EarlvUle, IB., Mae Seely from Wauzeka. Wis., and Sylvia Parks from South Bend. Ind. Accompanist for the trio is: Sharon Zimmerman from Battle: I Creek. ★ w w North Central is a liberal arts college affiliated with the Evangelical United Brethren Church,' and is located in Naperville, 111.' The college has an enrollment of | about 900 students, many of them {coming from this area. Attending ] the college from Pontiac is Donald First Congregational Church Mill. E Huron and Mt. Clamant Mateotm K. Button, Minister Morning Worship Service 9:30 A.M. "As On* That Travalsth" Tha Rav. Mr. Burton Cut for Children f and Under CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whittemore Street Sunday 7:30 P. M Harold Phillips, Speaker Wednesday Silver Tag UNITY 70 Chambarlain FE 3-2 6:30 Sunday School 11:00 Morning Worship "You Con Conform or Trontforoi ' Wednesday, t PJC. • Life nnd Ministry of Paid" Thursday. 6 PM. "Truth Forum" Youth Delegates in Switzerland Young People Agree ; to Give Pari of August [ Earnings to Others i With youthful •forthrightness in putting words into action, youiy delegates of the church in Switzerland and Sweden agreed in 'Lausanne last month to give five {per cent of their'August earning; to help , countries of rapid sodtf1 change. 5^0 • The action wad commended byl the first Ecumenical Youth Assem-| ' bly sponsored by the World Council of Churches which bright; isome 1,809 Protestant and Ortho-j dox delegates and visitors to the] I Swiss city. * * j In a 3,500-word statement which! i they adopted at the final session, the young people declared: "Euro-I I peans mint realize that the age of 1 colonialism is over and replace! selfishness with sacrifice, even if it means lowering our standard I of living.” They were also concerned ova |the present disunity of the church | and disturbed that they could not I take communion- together. “We have not beea able to Join In Maty Commaaloa and have beea unprepared by our churches to enter late effective The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. Lawrence Street Sunday Sch'l 9:45 a.m. Young People's Legion 6 p.m Mom'g Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Mtg. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. CAPTAIN and MRS. I. WILLIAM HEAVER Good Music — Singing — Truo to (ho Word Preoehing God Meets With Us — You Too, Are Invited BIBLE Ql lZ — Audrey Limkeman. director of tha^Evenlng Vacation Bible School held at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church this week, quizzes Cheryl Right of 295 Summit St. and Don Sweeney of 412 Lynch St. during the Scripture memory period. The schooi for junior high school young people included Bible study, group singing, craft projects and surprises. Assisting as leaders were Mrs. Donald Sweeney and Mrs. Walter Messer. Wa. C. Graft, Pattor Sunday School — f:45 A.M. Church Service Student Will Assisi iDr. Thomas H. Holt at 1st Presbyterian lto.Be New Hope Pastor they declared, adding: “We urge eur churches not to seed as te another conference like Laue-anne mill enough pregroaa has been made an tide paint” The young people were addressed by world church leaders Including Dr. W. A. Visser’t Hooft, general secretary of the World Council, M. M. Thomas, lay leader of the Syrian Church of Malabar, India, and other prominent church-1*0. ■ The Rev. Andrew Young, associate executive secretary of the United Christian Youth Movement the National Council Churches, waa in charge of 189 young delegates from North America and Canada,who attended the Lausanne Assembly. Gary Miller, a member of First! caiicd to New Hope Baptist and Mrs! Holt have five children, Presbyterian .Church and a pre-church as pastor is Dr. Thomas!Beverly Ann. 17; Thomas III, 7; „ [Robert, 5; and twins Kenneth and and’ 11 a. m. worship hours of I __ * ... * . Kei*h ** thm months’ the church Sunday. Born inFrwiklm, Tenn. ,n 1924,} » ★ * „ w.„ TTY . he came to Pontiac in 1944. Mr. Miller will be a sophomore Children to Perfgrm at Central Christian Bible School demonstration program will be held at 7 p. Sunday at Central Christian Church. Children wtU perform and show what they made during the two-week Vacation Bible School. Directors of the school were Mrs. William Carter and Mrs. Raymond Hlbbe. > The Rev. Gerald W. Gibson, pastor, will preach on “Fieri! and and this faU. The Rev.. Galea E. Hershey, associate pastor, will preach ea “Building Bridges” at bath services and Lyndie Salsthiel will stag "The Twenty-Third Psalm” by Matette far the oM^tery solo. Attending Presbytery sponsored Junior -Gaifcp at Clear Lake -near Oxford this week are Ronald Wood, Michael McGrath, Richey Richards and Stephen Hershey. Oakland Church to Hear Message oi Missionary The Rev. Paul M. Hanselman, missionary on furlough from Belgian Cbngo, will be guest speaker at 10 a.m. Sunday in the Oakland Avenue, United Presbyterian Church. Carl Matheny wilLbe solo- His early education was received! Jessie St. i Franklin. It was while serving! in the Army in World War II and the Korean War that he secured his higher education through resident attendance and correspondent courses. He served in the Army for 29 years. ★ * * Dr. Holt holds degree* from the University of Berlin, Gam-men theological Seminary and Berkley School of Divinity. He is a member of Prince Halt Kansas Jurisdiction, F&AM. He participated in football, baseball and track diving his high school years. Married in Pootiac in 1942, Dr.. The two youth groups will mqpt at 5:45 p.m. Sunday. Speaking at the 7:39 evening service ,*111 be the Rev. John Hall, an associate pastor of Central Methodist Church. Soloist will be oh Bell. Youth director Audrey Limke-um wilL lead the 7 p.m. prayer Bible study service Wednesdg Grace Corner Geneses and CHcndale § . - iWed 8M«t .1 Richard C- St&ckmtyir, Pattor I Church Semico Sunday School 9«l A.M. | Church Service : ■ LOO A M. I Sunday School .... 11:09 A.M. fl Apostolic Church of Christ 458 CENTRAL Young People Saturday 7:30 P. M. Sunday School and Worship 10-.00 P. M. Sunday Evening Sarvica . 7:30 P. M. Services Tut*, and Thura.... 7:30 P. M. . Church Phone FE* 5-8361 \ j Ul 2-5142 ^ Bishop L A. Parent iSi!, mur They make their home at 435 S. | |Dr. LR.Ditzen atM-in-Hills Granted Awards for ; Sermons by Freedom Foundation Guest Minister to Speak The Rev. Warren Smith of Cold-water will preach Sunday at the! Church of Spiritual Fellowship. 82 Perkins St. Services are scheduled tor 2:39 and 7:39 p.m. Dinner! wttl be served at 5 p. m. . / f A clergyman-author whose latest book, "The Storm and the Rainbow," was a best seller, will visit the Kirk-in-the-Hills Sunday. The Rev. Dr. Lowell R. Ditzcn. pastor of the Reformed Church ini BronxviUe, N. Y., will speak “The Second Mile” at both the 9:39 and 11:39 a.m. services. 1 Nationally known for hi* writ-i Inga and radio • TV appear-I anm. Dr. Dltsen baa opoken at | numerous colleges and baa preached abroad in several j countries. He has participated in ecumenical work here. and abroad, an was granted national awards for • his sermons, seven years in a row, from the Freedoms Foundhtion. Phillip Steinhaus, the Kirk’s or-{ganist choirmaster - carillonnetir, I Will present a carillon recital from 4 to 4:15, Sunday afternoon. RSHIP 28 Aug C AM** usiov 43V IA-W Wa Cordially Invito You to Worthip With Ut. Nursery and Children’! Church Ample Parkins FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH MS X. Kelt Bird. Pontiac. Mlehlaan Factor. O. P. Eastman \ Office: P* 4-l«ll Paraonas*. «3J Benson \ Reildence: PI 8*0924 BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH West Huron at Mark Street Dr. losoph Irvine Chapman, Pastor Poicy M. Walloy It., Ministoi of Education Two Worship Services — 8:40 and 11:00 A. M. Sermon by Rev. Robert Adams of Crescent Hills Baptist Church. "WHAT IS MAN?" 9:45 A. M. — Church School Classes for All Wednesday 7:15 P. M. — Mid-week Service —%■ "Spiritual Conversations" ,. "An American Baptist Convention Church" All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike The REV. C. GEORCE WIDDIFIELD, Rector The REV. DAVID K. MILLS, Gnats 8 :C0 A.M. —- Holy Communion 10:00 A.M. —- Morning Prayar and Sermon by tha Rav. David A. Mills • Church School ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 801 Commerce, Milford 8:00 A.M. — Holy Communion 10:30 A.M. — Holy'Communion and Sermon ! CLARKSTON MISSION will matt in Clarkston Elementary School, 6595 Waldon Rd. 9:15 A.M. — Holy Communion and Sermon by the Rev. Bertram T. White DR. THOMAS H. HOLD JR. hm CHRISTIAN SCIENCE bb SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY “Af/MT mra 1 Sunday Service* and Sunday School U:00 A.M. vzpen uauy ■ Wedneaday Evening 11 AM. to 5 P M. Servtoea 8 P.M.' Fiidoy.to V P.M. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Willidma Streets HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS RADIO STATION CKLW—800 KC SUNDAY 9:45 A. M. * ‘ TV Evaiy Sunday, Channel 7; 930 A M. SttNMMWMRI Emmanuel Baptist Church 645 S. Telegraph Road DR. TOM MALONE Speaking at All Services 7:30 P.M. Sunday School 10 A.M. Morning Worship 11 A. M. SurulayfSchool Attendance Last Sunday 1263 • BIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. AUGUST go. IMP CHURCH of GOD tPfceat igH|| Protestant Program Set Up tor Congolese Relief for dnt periods of service until foe crisis has passed. With the appointment this week at the Rev. Dr. Roland G. Metzger as Interim Liaison Officer far. Congo Relief, the work will he carried out In cooperation with Church World Service, the Africa Committee and {he Christian Medical Council, all of the NOC; the American Medical Association: the United Nations World Health Or-! ganisstiou; and the denominations working through the International! He himself was evacuated from the modem mission hospital at Kimpese with its director, *Glen W. Tuttle, M.D., which left Kim-pese without a doctor. ‘ Dr. Metzger, who has worked 1 in the Congo since 19(2, and Dr. [Tuttle are missionaries of the ‘^American Baptist Foreign Mission [[Society. ’j, Dr. Tuttle is now heading the' j Congo relief team of eight medical TO a. m. Sermon: ' The World Around and Within" ish Guiana. Currently she to speaking at churches presenting the need there. * * * The pastor said the public *s invited to the services at the Collier Road Church. 165 East Square Lake Rd. Mrs. Richard Grave* and Mrs. Charles Robinson, cochairmen, are assisted by 25 women in the program at Bible study, projects, and planned recreation. Gasses from 9 to 11:39 a. m. will continue through Friday, ST. PAUL METHODIST — Linda Buhrer of 186 Eileen Dr., (mm left. Terry Niggeman of 105 Barrington St. and Judy Graves of 116 Barrington Dr. make churches representing thoge of other countries at Vacation Bible School at St. Paul Methodist Church, .Missionary Council. Betere the aprfaiagB, said Dr. TRINITY METHODIST JCEEGO HARBOR Robert H. Benedict Minuter 11:15 a. m. Sunday School Reorganized CHURCH OF (BUS CHRIST of Lafter usy Saints is rmta., mw nc s-tm* McVltty Drayton “ *■ °rt- —fM tM. keep a HEALTHY Spiritual Climate * CHURCH WORSHIP and CHRISTIAN OROWTH DON T MISS A SERVICE . Sunday School 9:45 A. M. Morning Service 11 A. M. "Count the Cost.Firar Evening Service 7 P. M. "The Handwriting on the Wall" THE ALLIANCE CHURCH B. W. LANPHER, Ass t Pastor missionaries which has made Its headquarters in Leopoldville, Dr. Metzger reported. They will advise on urgent needs and assist in the distribution of hospital relief supplies. ’‘As soon as the United Nation troops restore order in the interior,” he said, "the mission doctors now in Leopoldville hope to fetum to their posts or to areas which have been served by Belgians and which are in the most! need.” Trained C—golese caa handle routine eases la Congo hospitals, he added, bat doctors aad surgeons are vital la a country when are ns many as 1JOS births n month In one Hospital alone, about 166 of them are by Supplies of drugs, he reported, have reached a dangerously low level in most Congo hospitals. Stating that the response from several U. S. drug companies “has already been very gratifying,” Dr. Metzger cited generous gifts from the Upjohn, Merck and Lederie pharmaceutical companies, among FIBST ” METHODIST CHURCH 501 MT. CLEMtNS STREET Lyal H. Hewiton, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:00 A. M. MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 A. M. Assistant Pastor - Dunn Preaching His Farewell Sermon ‘The Mm of Oar Lord ’ EVENING WORSHIP 7:00 P- M. Pastor Howison, Preaching MID-WEEK SERVICE WED. 7:30 P. M. St, Louis Colls 750 Members Laymen's Conclave ^af j United Church of Christ | Set for Thursday, Friday [ ST. LOUIS, Mo.. - Some 750 ; church members Isom all parts of the nation will convene in St. Louis, Thursday through Saturday to consider the role which laymen will have in the burgeoning United Church of Christ. * * * The laymen’s conclave follows on the heels of the, denomination’s Synod meeting last m #a t h in Cleveland where a constitution for Hit United Church of Ovist was unanimously approved. The United Church of Christ, termed la 1617, represents a union between the Gem ml Connell at Congregational Christian Churches and the Evangelical and Reformed Chnrrh. FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N. Perry Sunday School 9:45 A.M. OUR SCHOOL OFFERS YOU THE WHOLE BIBLE. YOU WILL BE WELCOME1 The constitution, which has yet to be ratified by local churches and local synods of the two participating bodies, calls for a Council for lay life and work within the United Church but leaves the working out of moat of the details |. Church Preaching at the 11:15 morning Sunday service at the United Presbyterian Church in Auburn Heights will be the Rev. A. E. Potbury. A retired minister of the Free Methodist Church, he will be assisted during the worrivtp hour by Elder Orvin Weaver. Nancy Lowery will stag * solo. The last of the young people' semi-monthly swimming parties will be held Tuesday with the group meeting at the church at 6 p.m. Swimming Wgl he at Cass Lake. When the finance committee meets at 8 p.m. Thursday plans will be drawn up for presenting « unified budget to the congregation on Sept. 7. Roy Kibbey will preside. Book Traces Christianity NEW YORK » — TV early centuries of Christianity, from the days of the apostles until the Middle Ages, are traced in a profuse-! ly illustrated new book, “Tbej Kingdoms of Christ” (McGraw-Hill) by Peter Bamm. Says he: “For the success of Christianity in the beginning, the historical circumstances were of greatest lm-| portance.” United Presbyterian Churches OAOJUIP EVPTOE Oakland at Cadillac Theodore a. Allehech. Motor Audrey Llmktman. Youth Director Morning Worship ... 10:00 A.M. Bible School .11:20 A.M. Youth Fsllowahlp ... 5:45P.M. Evening Service .... 7.-00 P.M. Wednesday Prayer Meeting ... 7:00P.M. AUBUBH HEIGHTS 8466 Primary Street P. Wm. Pulaor, Pooler 10:00 AM. Sunday School 11:15 A.M. Worship REV. A. E. POTBURY ' COMMUNITY UNITED Drayton Plains, Michigan W. J. Teeuwluoa Jr.. Pooler Bible School ....... 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship ... 11:00 AM. Youth Groups .......6:30 P.M. Evening Worship ... 7:30P.M.' LAKELAND Sunday School .. Morning Worship . 9 30 A.M. . .10:45 A.M. JOSLYN AYE. Joelyn at Third Erl mood I. Watklni. Pieter Bible School ..... 9 30 AM. Morning Worship ...1045AM. Youth Meeting .....6:30P.M. Evening Worship____7:30 P.M. DONELSON BAPTIST CHURCH Citssbstii Lake US* at TlMee on J-Mos Sunday School .. 10 AM. Morning Worship .. 11:00 AM. Junior tad Sechners' Church „ „ Youth Service .......• >-....................0 JO PM. Evening Church Service — ............a ... ...7:80 PM. Midweek Service .......... ........ 7:09 PM. Wedneeday Ptotor—inv. ut LaLOMS a. s. s«pt.—Arthur wwald At rear are Maureen Halfpenny of 30 Lewis St and Mary Ellen La Fave of 22 Cooper St. The 10th annual program in six tableaus trill start at 7:30 p. m. "Wgtariord Township's American Baptist Church" tRESCENrrilLLS BAPTIST Crescent Lake Road near Hatchery Road Worship 10 AM * 11 AM. Sunday School Tsu-g* Parking Lot Nursery During All Barvtoss Rn. Hebert L. Adeem. Pester Rev. Dr. R. pastor of the beet church. The Rev. John Dock of the coo-h e Immaculate Heart of Mary will deliver the sermon. Fallowing the Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament, everyone will participate in an outdoor numilellght procession around the Stations oi the Cross. Each will carry a lighted candle. conduct the ses- The Men’s Chbir of St. Hugo of {bulletin tells'a story of a preach-[ the Hills will sing hymns follow-jer who was on vacation in Ver- Visiting Preacher's Story Tells oi Giving, Receiving The Central Methodist Church.morning we would tike for you to Major items to come before the convention will include election of officers tor a three-year term, well as members of official boards commissions. The matter of a district office building offices will also be con- Homing Worship 11:00 A.M. Evangelistic Bally 7:00 P.H. Choir Music in All Services Pino Lake Congregation to Meet New Minister Hie new Pine Lake Congregational group will hold a fellowship timurting at 8 p.m. Thursday at omfield Township HaH to plans for the opening of ces and to meet . Alfred D. Grey of 11 begin in September i Lake Elementary : one mile west of pad on West (Long each of the six tableaus which represent the apparitions at Fat-in Portugal in 1917. SIX TABLEAUS The tableaus include the “First Appearance of the Virgin Mary" in the month of May; “Sorrowful Immaculate Heart of Mary' the month of June; "Vision of Hell,” in July; “Exhortation Pray and Do Penance," in August;’’ "Miracle of Roses,” Mi September; and "Mary Revealed Her Identity and Told purpose of Walt,” October. The presentations nre under the direction of Junes A. Jones, at the Restoration Arte Theater, Detroit. In the procession will be Mrs. Louise Kelly of Detroit, state moat. A tiny back-country church invited the minister to come end preach for them. Came Sunday thfe preacher and his little girl went up to the little white church on top of the hiU. As they went in the preacher saw offering box—and so he put a quarter in. After the service of worship one M t have the offering.” The man opened the box In which was one quarter. He gave the quarter to the preacher. Just then the preacher's little girl looked up at her father and said, “Gee. Daddy, if you hadn't put anything in—you wouldn't have gotten anything out.” So it la with life—end to it b torn for conducting their morning service. The member said, “You know we don’t have much money here. That is why we don’t pass the offering plate. Instead of passing the plate we have a box at door—those who are able to give put money In upon entering, ‘nils FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN t 45 NORTH ROSELAWN * Sunday School 10 AM. — Morning Message 11 AM. , *1 Um pastor / , Vi ' SKOAL MUSIC —r ; * 7 PM. ' « Evening Servic# Wednesday Bible Study and Prayer 7:30 P.M.- FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH NtflON AT WAYNI MV. WILLIAM H. MARtACH, 0.0. MV. OAUN t. HMSMY, 0.0. WORSHIP SERVICES . CHURCH SCHOOL . . . ,9:30-11:00 . 9:30-11:00 Associate Pastor Speaking Sunday The Rev. William Worth has chosen “A God in America” for hia sermon topic at the 10 a. m. service Sunday at First Methodist Church ' * * % *• A ladies’sextet consisting of Mrs. Lloyd Dawson, Mrs. David Cowan, Mrs. Merle AapUn, Mrs. Norman Legge, Mrs. Lewis Butler and Mrs. Paul Kratt, will ring “0 God, Creator Blest.” ' . * * * "Something Old, Something New" will be the Rev. Mr. Worth’s subject at the 7:30 Bible study and fellowship hour Wednesday evening. The church needs the help of every member. And every member needs the help of the church. What are you getting out of|i church? Why not question the reason for doing everything you do today, to see if there is a better way? A. F. Davis. Marimont Baptist Church 68 W. Walton * - w FE 2-7239'' SUNDAY SCHOOL ...... I.... 10:00 A. M. Morning service.......*... n .00 a. m. “Fte Indeed” YOUTH GROUP . EVENING SERVICE 6:30 P. M. 7:30 P. M. “Of Death and Dishonor ” Rev. Somers, preaching ST. PAUL METHODIST l« 1. SOMOM Uki M. R MW-flMW ,iM 11:11 AX. Start Urinj" Morning Worship — 10 AX. -’bow To Slop tolas one I v Church School 10 8r. Youth Fellowship, 4 PM. Intermediate, I P.M. R*v. JAM IS A. McCLUNO. Mlntitcr SUPERVISED NURSERY - ALL SZRVICBS - AMPLE PAR KINO Evangelical United Brethren Church 212 Baldwin Aye. Phono FE 2-0728 COLLIER ROAD CHURCH UM COLLIER HOAD Special Million* r; MootlRs* Sunday. A lit- Jl through Widneiday Aug. M ROV. Margaret Chow, Madmn from Britleh Qulana Com*—rot o Slatting, Sea—Her In Native Cartaatt • Rear—Hair Ohoat Anotnttd Mataagoa, la Word end song. Sunday Morning Service. 11:11; Nightly. 7:J0 flev. Francis I. Myors, Pastor ■ FIRST METHODIST South Saginaw at Judsoo Paul T. Hart, Pastor Wm. P. Worth, Associate Pastor- MORNING WORSHIP 10:00 A.M. “4 Cod in America** Rev. William F. Worth, Preaching 11:16 A.M.—-CHURCH SCHOOL Wednesday Bible Study and Prayer Fellowship 7:30 PX. lot’s Take a Walk” Columbia Avenue H BAPTIST If_ CHURCH ’'WWm 64 Watt Columbia Avo. H 5-9*60 ' Sunday School ..................9:45 A. KC. Morning Worthip . ... -i./.. ■ ....... ...11 A. M- "T«X UNOCCUPIED LIPE" . , B.T.U.*..........................6:30 P. M. Evening Servjfce —J;.......7:30 PI M. "BLESSED ASSURANCE" REV. MARIOH F. BOYD, Hk, Spooking Cooparating with Southern Baptist Convention / ---9,485,276 Momboro-- ★ PLUS ★ SELLER :irstTimeOn fhe Screen! The day i 'COLLEGE CONFIDENTIAL' and "CHARTROOSE CABOOSE" STARTS tNues. , ’; i,. i nwM- ; T — r . MILE-HIGH DRAMA AND EXCITEMENT! His mein l^r danger Yet he MUST ** challenge 5cm** mountain! THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 Bull Tramples, Kills Bad Axe Farmer, 74 SAD AXE iS-ftowatHDur-y—r-oltf Join A. Partelu was trampM and killed today by a two-year-old bull ia a field aa his farm ll miles sooth of here. Parteka Vas attached by the boll while bringing fat a herd Of cows for their morning mUMac. Senate Orders Delay in Teddy's Monument WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Friday ordered delay in building a controversial memorial to Theodore Roosevelt 'until the plans are mar* acceptable to his CHAUTAUQUA, N.Y. (JT - Gov. G. Mennen Williams of Michigan would accept a Cabinet position if San. John F. Kennedy is elected The governor said state and local governments are paying 96 peri cent of the pdbiic school hill and collecting only 3 of every 1®. tax dollars. "State and local governments have been pushed to the limit,” he sold. State expenditures between 1948 and 1968 were increased 100 to 300 per cent, he stfd, while local and state debts Jumped ISO per cent compared to less than 15 per cent in the federal debt. ★ PLUS * WRiiiii m-mwimo JAMBS IAuRCK! * -W-NKMSSSS alomriMhSk*l lemee iamssy Ifflw THRILLING DRAMA FROM WALT DISNEY! —SATURDAY ANb lSUNDAY SCHEDULE— “MOUSE THAT ROARED'* A 2:50-6:10-9:30 “3RD MAN ON THE tfO JjNTAIN 1:00-4:19-7:3«-10:57 Margaret 30 Sunday; Still Gay and Happy LONDON (H — Princess Margaret retches her 30th birthday Sunday-happBy married at last —and still a liveiy\pace setter on the royal merry-go-round ★ > w This has been Margaret’s year. First came the surprise of her love match with her untitled photographer, Antony Armstrong-Jones. Then her dazzling beauty on her wedding day. Now, still suntanned from her Caribbean honeymoon, the princess Is bringing a new note of informality into rojral affairs. The highlight came this nSonth. Margaret and Tbny called a cab and went off by themselves to see a rowdy musical about London’s underworld. All Margaret's previous theater 'outings had. the protection of a large eecort of guests. This time she and Tony pushed their own way through the crowded foyer Woman Teller Has Own Way of Foiling Bandit tfEW YORK (AP)—Bank teller Estelle Vonosinski read the would-be bandit's note and cooly informed him: "We don’t handle that et this window” The bespectacled robber—wearing a purple cap, checkered shirt, and gray suede shoes—obediently wafted to the next window. By this time Miss Vonosinski had signaled guards and they closed in oA 1dm. Attested Friday at a Chase Manhattan Bank branch in the heart of the financial district was Glen Sewart, 26. SewarTs note rand: "Give me all your money. I have lye. Don’t cry.” g The experiment worked smoothly enough—except that Margaret felt obliged to deliver an icy brushoff to a young American girl who wanted an autograph. Next evening the princess and her husband toured the night spots with actress Suzy Parker. Stay's escort was BOly Wallace, Margaret’s "old faithful” escort of pranarriage da#. Margaret and Tony will i Jtf birthday at Balmoral, royal family’s Scottish holiday home. ♦ w A . After three months of marriage, Margaret has not yet had the pleasure of playing hostess to her sister and Prince Philip. But that no doubt be achieved by her next birthday. Near $4,000 Taken I in Store Burglary Between $3,000 ahd $4,000 was reported stolen from a safe in a Farmington Township drugstore sometime Friday night. Township police reported few dues were left by the thieves, indicating tbs work of professional] sale burglars. Entry was gained to Amsld's I Drugstore in the Keadallwosd | Slapping Center at W. ll-MUe and Farmington roads by ehsn-pisg n hole through the roof. Fefies believe a pick was nsed. The theft was discovered by storg manager Ernest Slobin this morning when he came to wort The sale had been pried ppen and cleaned out. Missing were several checks and the cash. A cabinet containing narcotics also had been opened but nothing was believed taken. United Nations when the Congolese Parliament meets la II days. ★ ♦ ★ “If Lumumba Is not voted oat of office, we shall strike by otter means, and it will be right oa the target," Monads said la aa Interview. Agree to R«ce$v^N-Talks GENEVA (UPI) - The United States, Britain and Russia today agreed to recess the marathon nuclear test ban talks for five weeks beginning Tuesday. The three delegations agreed to hold their last meeting Monday before recessing until Sept. 27. Oxford-Orlon Blood Bank to Bo Conducted Monday The Oxford-Orion area blood bank, will be conducted at .Methodist Church in Lake Orion Monday from 2 to 5 p.m. and 6 to g p m. For appointments, donors may contact Mrs. Homer Hight of 97, Dennison St., Oxford, who reports that blood is urgently needed. Mrs. iBeTnard Espland of 465 North 'Shore Dr., Lake Orion also is handling appointments. Jazz Crowd Orderly DETROIT' ®—An orderly crowdl of more than 6,800 music-lovers showed up Friday night tor Detroit’s second annual Jazz festival gt the Michigan State Fair grounds. —- TOMTE --- OWL SHOW Starts 10:00 P.M. NHi MOUSE THAT ROARED’ IS OUR NOMINEE FOR THE FUNNIEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!* I — Coo*, N, Y. World- Telegram MA hilarious movie! Peter Sellers la the fanniesi actor England has sent to America since Alec Guinness!” -Life Magazine "Wild fun, in terms of social burlesque end sheer Mack Sennett farce... it has a dear Guinness comic quality!** -CwhAt, n.y. Times "Starting with the title, everything about 'The Mouse That Roared* ia hugely amusing! Ingeniously off-beat comedy, with delightfully daffy ■ incidents, gags and chases. An elegant spoof!** —Peiawic*. n.y. joumaJ-Amorican "Brilliant... sparkling with wit, satire and juicy humor!** —zunaer, Cue Magatina "A comedy that is sending audiences into roars of laughter!** —Camerott, MY. Dotty Nawa "A sprightly rib! Peter Sellers is vary funny!” "Brilliant! Wonderful! Hilarious!” —Redbook Magazine -Gilbert. MY. Mirror “Downright hilarious!** —Saturdoy Review The hilarious story oi how the Duchy of Grand Fenwick waged war ^ on the U.S.—aatf wan! COLOR COMMERCE ■wSmwM _ South Tnd Union Lk. Rd. MAI EM 3-066T WHWi MCTWmOWYlllUyiV tmrn SAKUEl 80LDWIL *t * iSiRnThejVdveiltUPM of £*^cyeberrftHnn Even the architecture, particularly modem boUdings, baa changed the lace of ancient "This Is an inspirational story and it calls for inspirational writing, acting and direction Just as it does breatihNddag backgrounds,” the ttiiectOf aat’ti. "That’s the principal reason we a small group of chain-mailed warriors mined with bows and arrows. ★ EXCLUSIVE! FIRST SHOWING1. ★ 2nd FEATURE STARTS SUNDAY LATE LATE SHOW He's The Silliest!!! -INASERJESOf Sequences That Are Even Siiuer! ' EXTRATOWIQHT ★ AND ★ TARZANS NEWEST LATE-LAfgSHaW AT 12i2S OKLY Virginia grey * anna may wong ' AMO AISO CO • i t ASONC ■ RICHARD BASEHART TEN Holy Land Poor Bible Film Set Will Make “Greateat Story’ fa U-S. "Bat vnrtou» tavaai— aad wan aecoonted tor wksleaale destruction of forest* aad fields, transforming the countryside Into u entirely dlffbr-ont place. ”1 wasn’t kidding about goad. They’re all over the place and have depleted the wealth and beauty of the land itself.” JKwMt "H«rcule« ! Sun..’ Tu*«.: "Th* Apartment.’" Sack Lemmon. Shirley MacLalne I Thun.. Sat.: The pnforglvcn." Burt Lancaster, Audrey Hepburn, color I «-*-rd ulea Unchained." teve Reeves, color Thura.: "The Story of Ruth" ITALIAN STARLET - A new |M r, Hutbonci G«tS Amo KanntuL_l ntipm Rnmfln— i _ Rome beauty—Leticia Roman— made her film debut as—of all things—an Italian girl in Elvis Presley’s movie, "G.I. Blues.” Leticia, 19, got her screen Call while studying drama in Hollywood. Remember the good old days, when your wife phoned you at the office and asked you what you wanted to eat that night, instead where? . . . The most obnoxious man in town is the guy who’s leaving today on hit vaca- tion. 250 Pounds From Gram LONDON UR — Anthony Armstrong^ones, Princess Margaret’s husband, got 250 pounds ($TOO) from his grandmother’s estate -of 119,900 pounds ($335,440), probate of her win showed yesterday. Seven other grandchildren also received 250 poipids each. ★ . ★ Armstrong-Jones’ Grandmother, Mrs. Maud Frances Messel, died last March at the age of 90. The Bulk of the estate was left to her called on Carl Sandburg to assist with the writing. * ★ *- "This film has a responsibility to present Jeaus attractively to the people who have such conclusions readily at hand. I hope to show the picture behind the Iron Curtain and into such countries as India and Pakistan where Christianity is a minority re-tiffed ’It woukl be unsatisfactory tor me to make a propaganda film for people who alraidy believe la the subject matter. 1 ;”The Greatest Story Ever Told should touch them, but it also must have, a point of view accepted favorably by those religions outside the Judeo-Cbris-tian tenets.” * . * * , Stevens said the picture’s theme —.compassion and man’s humanity to man — is desirable and acceptable to men of all faiths. «. “Making* this film Is greet fun for me. It in also a privilege. I could make two or three movies la the time that N will take to complete this one,” he said. "Bat I am net undertaking this project for money. i “It is good business to give an audience something it can take home and think about. This picture cannot be taken lightly. That’s why I win have to spend almost two years doing research. * ♦ “To commune with such wife areas there must be a serious understanding of what people of | the world think of Jesus. This is our intent and objective in | making The Greatest Story Ever TOM.” , ™ Randolph Scott, i imummsmm STMTS SUNDIT BY MNLU REQUEST LUCILLE MLL MR MSI MMZ AFtHE LONG, LOW TRAILER”^/ V ----------ALSO— w CLIFTON WIM and MYRNA LOY “Cheaper hy the Dozen” ALL COLOR—AND A ALL LAUGH SHOW British comedian Peter Sellers, who takes three different rotes,; and pretty Jean Seberg, who made her impression on the motion pie-| lure public with two strong dramatic roles in “Saint Joan” and; ’ Bon jour Tristesse." are starred; in Columbia Pictures’ “The Mouse ’ntot Roared," now playing in Pontiac. The Cahimbta comedy, a Highroad picture, was filmed in Eastman Coke. Based On the novel by Leonard Wibberiey, “The Moose That Beared” Mb bow the world’s smallest nation, the Grand Uuch.v of Fenwick, declares war an America oe that It can enjoy toe “fruits of defeat” imposed by a generous victor. Sellers leads the invading forces, Completely ignorant of the real purpose of his mission, which is to be defeated by the U.S., the energetic and enterprising Sellers “invades” New York during a routine air alert, when the 'streets are| empty and captures a general and [four New York policemen. Then be seises a fantastic, powerful aew weapon of vast Possession of the new weapon helps Fenwick win the kar. And Fenwick organizes a League of Little Nations which dictates and maintains world peace. The Greatest Story Ever Told, therefore,f wilt roll early next year on location at Lake Meade, the gallon Sea, the Grand Canyon and Zton National Park. No one has been cast for the picture yet, but Stevens con-, siders the settings to be equally as important to the success of the film._____ LAND HAD PART “Locations are extraordinarily important in this case,” he said from his office at 20th Century-Fox studios. "They must contain grandeur and excitement. The land played a part in the history of the people who lived during those times. It shared their lives, their hopes, their zeal. Briton Takes Three Roles in ’Mouse That Roared’ By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UP!)—Producer-Director George Stevens spent two months searching Ideation sites in the Near East for The Greatest Story Ever Told before deciding to shoot the picture in the United States. Stevens, a painstaking perfectionist, ’ found the original landmarks unfit fee a biblical back* drop.. * He traveled Lebanon. Syria, Israel, .lordon aad Turkey, tracing the Life ef Chrtot. researching kilt multi • million • dollar religious epic. < "The land ha* been eroded by | men and goats," he said. ‘tin biblical times the Holy | Land was a lush, rich area with I forests and fertile farm land. I NOw it is barren and burned [ out. “Shooting a picture jn that I part of the world about the life f of Jesus Christ is equivalent to j 'making a 49er gold rush film in modem San Francisco. " BUSY MAN — Peter Sellers pity* three roles in “The Mouse That Roared,” a royal comedy concerning a "hoax about a hoax." The British actor has been widely acclaimed for his performance. In this photograph, he’s shown in all three roles. “Mouse” Is currently showing in the area. I NOW PLAYING 2nd BIG WEEK PREMIERE OAKLAND COUNTY SHOWING 2nd FEATURE SHOW TIMES PORTRAIT IN MACK 7:50 - 11:00 walk like a dragon ... «tst ROYAL AFRICAN RIFLES .it. 1:45 A TIME TO MtMM WOMUk KtUN ; J0HN6AVW tILO PUIVER mumtci DON DifORf KEENAN WYNN LUVc v? You hated my father ^ because he could not \ give you the kind Y of love you craved ... from someone else!” "What have you driven me to do-with y your insatiable lUP lust \St of murder... of every sin? "We’re in each other’s blood. We can’t wait-no matter what anyone does to stop us! DOWN! Y THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1960 ELEVEN Goi^g to Do Movie Together Lamas Is Cool, CanOutswim Esther ^unbiicon HOLLYWOOD. (A—Fernando Lamas says Hollywood producers see Latins only as lovers. But he says they have other talents, too. Ha, for instance, hopes to capitalise sn his swimming. •s any ever made at MGM. Filmed in color, they represent just too much production to be used up in "to night,” be said. “Esther and I, using the production numbers as a will add •n,. Kmvtsnm. ■ - ~~ - . . * atrong story line and have a of the Latin lover casting rut that has existed in Hollywood tines the Valentino ofe. • ^ • *• «’ • “I do not put grease on my hair, ds not dance the tango every afternood. ip fact, 1 do what most AmeHbm Wen do, Frrnagtip and Esther Williams are jotn&g fortes to make a movie using the same water production numbartL.fbe two used in a TV spectacular recently. USING TV NUMBERS “The numbers were as elaborate me aside and told me not to worry t the swimming scene*. Esther Is vt.„ _ he told me. She^ll hold sp her leading men in the water. to put on the TV show.” * * ‘ * Fernando is the first leading man —Max Baer Jr., son of the late heavyweight, has chosen powder puffs STARTS SUNDAY The Adventurea of jik WILKINSON/ that MAf-tm by using all he/nature-gifted channel Junt WILKINSON CHARLES ROBERT KIANC WnUM Abo Dims Does in "TRIAD SOFTLY ST RANG IR" Laos King Bars Envoy of U.N. Reported Under Control of Military Forces, He Refuses to Spa Him VIENTIANE. Laos (AP)-King avang Vathana has refused to see a U. N. representative whs went, to the palace in an attempt THEY’KE A WYNNING TEAM - Three theatrical generations tiutre the spotlight in Hollywood. Ed Wyno, right, his son Keenaiv center, to boxing gloves by signing s longterm movie-TV contract to avoid cauliflower ears. Baer, tslier and more handsome than his famed father, made the decision after his first college fight. “I got the hell tea tea oat of me la my first match,” he said, illustrating hit point by flattening the Up el Ut bom. The 22-year-old, 195-pound newcomer is a collar ad type who faintly resembles Jim (Maverick) Garner. He’s poised, self assured and a college graduate. ★ ★ * “I came to town four months ago to look around at the acting situation,” Max said. “But I didn’t want to take advantage of people like Rory Calhoun, Red Skelton and Jimmy Durante who were close friends of my dad's. I wanted to get ahead on my own.” it it h And get ahead, he did. Through the help of actress Pamela Duncan, ho talked to the canting directors at M-G-M studios and Warner Brothers. 3 Wynn Generations Together in One Film By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (B-h was and sentimental event —, three generations of the Wynn family playing In a movie together. “This makes my cup of happiness very full,” said Ed Wynn. “They both asked me to sig contracts without a screen test, Baer said. “I decided on Warner Brothers because they seemed more anxious to have me sign up. Thus far the big guy has appeared in segments of the "Bronco,” “Sugarfoot” and “Roaring 20s” TV shows to be seen this Pontiac Theaters EAGLE and. Keenan’s son Ned relax on the set. They’re together In the Walt Disney movie, "The Absent-Minded Professor.'' never pushed info it, the way some kids are. I deliberately stayed away irom acting all my life. I thought I might want to be an anthropologist. But after trying the theater, know what I want.” to act and not just be a personality. In 1945, - less than 31 per cent of all high school graduates wait , 'My father is 100 per cent in,to college; today more than 50 per needed to establish full legal sta-favor of my career. But I was cent do. I’tus for the new government ofj Prtope Souvanna Phouma, set up ‘ r pressure of rcmhittoBary (ores* here. ♦ lit Gen. Phouml Noeavan cootin-tinued to threaten to recapture Vientiane. Phoumi, defense minister and antt-Commuatot strong man hi the old government, refuses to recognise . Souvanna Phouma. He claims rebel forces in Vientiane are opening up the country to the Communists. tralist rebels and remnants of the pro-Western government turned out of office. ♦ ♦ fv Reliable sources reported today that a palace secretary told the N. mission chief. Edouard Zellweger, “The King is under the control of the military.” Zellweger flew to the royal city of Luang Prabang at the urging of Western diplomats as tension and confusiota grew in Vientiane, the capital city seised by military rebels last week. APPROVAL NEEDED Final approval by the King is Running into debt isn’t so bad —it’s running into creditors that hurts . . . Sometimes a man who deckles to gat mahied finds it's the last decision he’ll get to make. Earl WOm HE RE-CREW HAH IM For Dramatic Story SEE PAGE 30 Sharing the historic event with: J him were his son Keenan and ! grandson Ned. The trio are appear-jL ing together in "The Absent-Mind-ed Professor.” “I don't believe this has ever |Sj happened before,” commented P* grandpa Ed, as alert at 73 as 1 his grandson nt l». ‘‘Twenty-six years ago I was able i to watch Keenan's acting debut. Now comes Ned. I think it's prctty L wonderful.” ^ How does Ned's father feel about Si ? Illl PRAYS FOB HIM L| “I'm encouraging hint in every M way I can,” said Keenan. ‘ encouragement isn't all he needs./ There has to be a tremendous i drive on his part or it doesn't !| mean a thing.” Ed agrees: "I'm praying for the boy’s success, bat he’s got to want to be an actor himself. So far he shows a great desire for It. He's n good-looking boy and intelligent. “If he can keep up his desire'raj to act, he might make it. He would iSS ______ | be the fourth generation of an THFATFR PACF actln8 IamUy th,t N1** back t0|3 THEATER PAGE- .. .. .. ....>Ugfc That’s when Keenan’s grand-Sat Mon.: “Sonof JtobinhMd,”^ Frank Kee t A1 Madison; “1001 ArabianL,^1 NTim* ” . M.n- Ned >s tad] and lean, his looksil T^s” rtl': Anatomy of a Mur‘i favoring his mother. EVie Johnson. ! ---STARTS-— ! THURSDAY IT IS | REQUIRED | THAT YOU! see! MIRACLE MILE DRIVI-IN THEATER hMk T 1 FROM THE DOE 1 VERY BEGINNING- sps ► gib. Sursly you do not hsvo your mast course after your t at dinner. You will thersfors understand why ws am so insistent that you sfijoy PSYCHO from start to finish, exactly as wa intended that it be served. We won’t allow you to cheat yourself. Evary theatre ■ manager, everywhere, has bsen instructed to admit no one after ths start of aschpsrfbnn-snes of PSYCHO. Ws said no ona — not oven the manager’s brother, the President of ths United States or ths Queen of Eng-f land (God blam her). To help you cooperate with this extraordinary policy, we art listing ths starting times below. Treasure them with your life—or batter yet, road them and set accordingly. -GOME EARLY FOR PARKING-fiOX OFFICE OPEN &16 P.M, SHOWN AT 8:30 P. M. 10:45 P. M. James Stewart; “Face of Fire,” Cameron MitcheU. HURON Sat.. Thura.: “The Mouse that Roared,” Pater Sellers, color; "Third Man on the Mountain,’ Janet Munro, color. OAKLAND Sat.; “Ice Palace,” Richardjhe said with youthful enthusiasm. | Burton, Carolyn Jones, Martha {“Primarily I’d rather do pfays than' , Hyer. movies. You get more of a chance! rather than the Wynn branch of the family. He made his nuMH and stage debut simultaneously: during filming he worked nightsl at the La Jolla Playhouse in ‘‘Dark! at the Top of the Stairs.” it * * “I've found a whole new world,' PREMIERE SHOWING IN OAKLAND CTY. N0W1HH fc “THE APARTMENT loYe-wisc, laugh-wise 'or otherwise- TONIGHT 3 Rig Hits! IT’S IMOGEN! ITS BETTER! ITS BRIGHTER 11 I OPEN 7:00 P. M. — SHOW STARTS AT DUSK — ADMISSION 80c, CHILDREN FREE! rti* McefacniNQ awektureb a aw tva hapT KTWMionwimi —. suun mown. jits MARK TWAIN'S ThojUventures of Huckleberry finn “DAMNED if yoa’re INNOCENT ...DAMNED H yes’re GUILTY... Dm only thing Hurt eoiofs is Is LIVE!" Oijy the lotion Pietiro Screen Would Dare Tell This Shockiig Story! SCARING— SHOCKING- EXCITING! The true story of Barbara Graham T HAYWARD vmmet to r XitwoT EXTRA {-SPECIAL .'-EXTRA! Never Shown Anywhere Before! 'The BIG BOUNCE" It’s the Story of too Satellite Echo . . . Now Circling the Earth Every 2 Hours. So* It Built—See It Launched! loop Your Eyo'on the Sky and So# It Go By. Shew Start* st 7:55 P.M. LAST TIMES TONIGHT - EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING! In the Tradition of "Poytoa Place” “STOLEN | LOVE ON A 1 GEORGIA BEACH” -IN COLOR -Starring RICHARD EGAN DANA WYNTER LOOK FORWARD TO SHOCK UNEMBARRASSED AS A BED SHEET! ntMiuo r WARNER BROS* RICHARD CIAIRE MARY BURTON BIOOM UREgj ★ STARTS SUNDAY! - 2 ALL-TIME GREAT HITS! ★ - SHOCKING SUSPENSE! - ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S dial M for Murder •p 1-«j Boo* Cinemascope warnerccxor^ ia5mr jambs WiUIAM JACK HH'MEt'PH'UMffl mow WARNER BROS WarnerColor RAY MILLAND-GRACE KELLY-ROBERT CUMMINGS TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 August Wedding Bells Are Ringing With Happiness * ★ * ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ it it if it it it Black and white giant sited glen plaid makes its appearance in wool suits this fall. This suit has u double-breasted look with off-center closing. The collarless jacket lops an easy skirt with double row of self buttons Married in St. Michael's Honeymoon1 in North Michigan bridal cascade of stephanotis and Pink sweetheart roses. Mrs. Angelo Alonzi was her slater’s matron of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Colleen HeEnery, Jeannette Ganje, Margaret Bateman and Joyce Dropps. Cascades of lavender gl&mellias complemented their dresses of laven- C Visa re-embroi pearls, e bridal g organza over silk taffeta. The molded bodice of Alencon lace featured a scalloped scoop neckline and sleeves ending in wrist-points. Butterfly veiling of French silk illusion fell from a tiara of rhinestones and seed pearls. A white orchid centered the Has Many Visitors Birmingham Busy BIRMINGHAM — The new swimming pool Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. LaJoie have installed this summer was the setting for the delightful splash party given Tuesday by Mrs. LaJoie and neighbor cohost-Mrs. Thomas E. Sheehan. Coral, turquoise and beige were combined in the tile patio where the bnjnch was served. f Among die guests who swsm and stayed to ptay bridge were Mrs. Lloyd Diehl Jr., Mrs. W. Sound Diet, New Cream Treat Acne See Your Doctor before Applying Any Medication Newspaper Enterprise Assa. Acne is no joke. The teenager who has it suffers acutely. Boy or girl, the problem of acned skin is one that can be damaging to the sturdiest ego. Being told that you’ll outgrow scfte isn’t true balm for putting up .with It And this statement isn't even accurate. For acne which goea untreated can tear the face permanently. '# * O' There are two ways of treating acne: the inner and die outer. The inner refers, of course, to lots of rest, a sound diet which eliminates fats and sweets, plenty of liquids, lots of fresh air and exercise. The outer means the attention the teen-ager gives her skin. Here, she can get help from products designed exactly for this purpose. She should, Of course, check with her doctor before she applies anything to her skin. ♦ O t Once die has her doctor’s approval, she can make use of ; a new antiblemish cream developed by an old and respect -| ed beauty house. It's meant to be applied to immaculately 1 clean skin which has been j carefully washed with warm > water and mild soap. Rinse the skin and pat, don’t rub, it dry. Now, use a light but thorough coming of this soft cream over each blemish before retiring. This cream dries while you’re asleep and forms a masklike film which should be gently washed off with soap and water in the morning. Clean skin is, at course, absolutely essential in any case of acne. This means that you should wash your face three and possibly four times a day; dr * * Packaged in a gold-colored ■hwntnum tube, this new anti-blemish cream is lightweight akl compact so that you can thbs k with you whenever you travel. Cotton Suede Takes Showers fUPI) — Cotton suede is the choice for tnaqy casual rain outfits headed for the campus. Mod often, the fabric is flans up isvsn eighths eoats efifii deep pocketa. Eldon Hazard, Mrs. Harry S. Stark Jr., Mrs. Roy L. Huf-facker, Mrs. E. Govan Hill, Mrs. Ctrl Marr, Mrs. Robert Frye, Mrs. 0. O. Beck, Mr*. John W. Fauver and Mrs. Robot P. Owen. it h it Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Backus at Latham road are enjoying a visit from their soh-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McQanathan of Kansas City. it it it Mrs. A. E. Gehrke was hostess at luncheon Friday in her home on Tudor Lane. The Gehrkes have recently returned to Birmingham after living for several years in Red-dington Beach, Fla. Her guests included Mrs. Charles H. Welch Jr., Mrs. A. Hart, Mrs. Robot Mantell, Mrs. Harry F. Klein, Mrs. Warren Pease, Mrs. Morgan J. Hammers and Mrs. Charles L’Hommedieu. f ' it Mr. and Mrs. R. Jamison Williams and their family are sojourning at Torch Lake until after Labor Day. ' • • a o ■ Mr. and Mrs. Jere T. Kemp, en route from California to their new home in New York, are visiting Mr. Kemp's mother Mrs. J. E. DeVault and Mr. DeVault of Hills Drive. Next Sunday their son will be christened Jeffrey Ryse in Christ Church Cranbrook. + * ♦ Mn. Edgar A. Guest Jr. of Bingham Lane and her mother Mrs. A. R. Maynard of Detroit will give a luncheon Wednesday at the Detroit Golf Club honoring Mrs. Edgar A. Guest HI. The young couple is spending a fortnight with his parents. sleeves and cummerbunds. Triple bows of organza trimmed their headbands. The bridegroom, son of Dr. and Mrs. John L. Bookie of North Perry street, had his brother John for best man, with another brother Donald seating guests. Also ushering were Richard Plourde, James Lauinger, and 6onald Armstrong of Pint Huron. it t o flower girl, Deborah Bookie, niece of the bridegroom in lavender organza, wore a wreath of pink sweetheart roses and held a nosegay of roses and glamellias. Michael Alonzi, nephew of the bride, was ring-bearer. Leaving for northern Michigan, th* hew Mrs. Bookie wore a white linen sheath dress embroidered -hi deep beige, matching her hat and gloves. Sioes and purse were of deep metallic brown. The couple will return to an apartment on South Marshall street. A diamond necklace highlighted Mrs. Vizza's aqua sheath dress of silk organza with lace applique on the skirt complementing the lace bodice. Black accessories, white gloves and a corsage of white cymbi-dium orchids completed her ensemble. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Bookie chose violet Chantilly lace styled with tiers over a sheath, worn with matching shoes and hat. Pink cymbidium orchids were* clipped to her purse. Girls Go Dressy; Teens Are Beat (UPI) — Two points stand out in girls' and sub-teens* back-to-school clothes. In girts’ sizes, there’s a definite dressy trend. Meanwhile, sub-teens go off — way out to the semi-beatnik look, Women’s Wear Daily reports. MRS. WILLIAM X. KINLA W JR. At Christ Church Kinlaw-Vows Repeated A reception in the Orchard Lake Country Chib followed the four o'clock nuptials of Carol Qsworth Wilson and William K. Kinlaw Jr., today in Christ Church Cranbrook. The Rev. Lester Dobyns performed the d ou b 1 e-ring candlelight ceremony in the pretence of some 200 guests. it O' w The bride la the daughter of Mrs.' H. Richard Steding III of Birm^igham and Edward E. Wilson, also of Birmingham. The William Knox Kin-laws of Lumberton, N. C., are parents of the bridegroom. Glamellias and phalaenopsis orchids, arranged in a hand-cascade, complemented the bridal gown of ivory peau de soie, styled with square neckline and chapel train. Small leaves of seed pearls formed the crown which held fingertip veiling of silk illusion. Kathleen Wilson was her sister’s maid of honor, with Martha Wolfe,'"’Peggy Farrow, Patricia Heatherson and Linda Stevenson, serving as bridesmaids. They wore identical dresses of sapphire blue silk organza over taffeta and held white glamellias. ★ * * William K. Kinlaw was best man at his son’s wedding. Guests were seated by William Hutchinson, Robert McClure, King Cole and John Landry. ★ it O For her daughter’s wedding , and reception, Mrs. Steding pinned green, cymbidium orchids to her dress of champagne silk organza and lace. Pink orchids accented Mrs. Kinlaw’s dress of navy blue peau de soie. ★ ★ ★ Leaving for Bermuda, the new Mrs. Kinlaw changed to H silk suit of wine red and navy Mue. it wk ★ The bride is a graduate of Kingswood School Cranbrook and Saterri College, Winston-Salem, N. C. Mr. Kinlaw was graduated from Davidson College, Davidson, N. C. Both , will attend the University of North Candina at Chapel Hill this fall where Mr. Kinlaw will be a medical student. On a Bermuda Honeymoon Bride Wed in Montreal Church Rite The Church of St. James the Apostle in Montreal was chosen by Yvonne Louise Per-rault for her marriage to Jasper B. Reid Jr., of Bloomfield Village this afternoon. * ★ # Following the ceremony performed by, the Rev. Canon Latimer, Mr. and Mrs. Rene Perrault, parents of the bride, hbated a reception in their home at Westmount. The bridegroom is son of Mrs. Jasper B. Reid of Bloomfield Village, and the late Mr. Reid. BOOT ANT ORGANZA The bouffant bridal gown of pure silk white organza, appUqued with bow motifs of Alencon lace and small sprays Womens Section mmmmmmmmmmrnmmmmimmmmsajjmMmammmaHwimmmaaamaneaeaamsammmmmmOMmmamm Wait-Huffman Rite Held at Home Diplomacy Trying for Post in Uruguay, Finds It's Difficult MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay After a home reception for some 125 guests, the newlyweds left for northern Michigan. They will he at home In Kalamazoo where both are acflhomorea at Western Michigan University. Tell Betrothal of Hills Man and Kay King Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth 8. King of Algonac announce the engagement of their daughter Kay Ann to Darwin L. Johnson, son of the August Johnsons of Franklin Road, Bloomfield Hills. The bride-elect has attended Alma College, where die is a member of Alpha Sigma Tau Sorority. During the past year she studied at tbeUniversity of Geneva in Switzerland. / Her fiance is a graduate of Alma College where he was affiliated with Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity. Sept 30 nuptials inTrinlfy Methodist Church, Algonac, are planned. Purse corsages of orchids wera worn by the bride’s mother in Ice-blue silk and mother of the bridegroom in a silk print. Kathleen Zimmerman Marries James Piper The Cfedar Room in the Knighta of Columbus Hall was the setting for the reception whioh followed the marriage of Kathleen Jean Zimmerman to James P. Piper in 8t. Vincent dePaul Church. The noontime nuptial ceremony was performed by the Rev. Thompson L. Marcero today in the presence of some 150 guests. Parents of the couple are the Joseph P. Zimmermans of Whittemore street and the John R. Pipers of Parkdale avenue. Mrs. Gerald G. Grubb at San Antonio, Tex., as matron of honor, preceded her sister to the sanctuary. Her ballerina-length dress of azalia pink chiffon over tulte and taffeta was designed vrtth a Sabrina neckline which fell in soft folds. A matching chiffon caplet was worn. She carried azalia pink carnations and ferns in a white lace basket. The bride’s floor-length gown of white Chantilly lace flver tulle and silk taffeta was styled with molded bodice and V-neckUne in front and back. She wore ' the bridegroom’s gift of a diamond pendant and a fingertip-length veil of silk of lilies of the valley featured a wide scalloped hem. The elongated bodice of bombazine was styled with scoop neckline and short sleeves. An heirloom lace handkerchief carried by the bridegroom’s great - gnat - grand motfternon her wedding day provided the traditional ’something old.’ A wreath of Ufids of the valley secured the lull veil o< silk illusion. Cattleya orchids comprised the. bridal cascade. ★ ★ ★ Mn. William Ridewood, of Montreal, honor matron, appeared hi street-length Imported beige lace over taffeta, styled with Sabrina neckline and short sleeves. A matching Dior bow accented the waistline in the. back. She wore a beige taffeta bow bandeau .and carried Orange Delight roses: ATTEND bridegroom Edward S. Reid HI at Brook- 4 lyn, N.Y. acted as best man . and guests were seated by William Ridgewood, Jade Upper of Washington D.C. and John K&uach of Birmingham. .* * * : JU small .feathered white.hat complemented Mn. Perrault’s dress of . moss green Italian •ilk. Mm Reid wore a sheath dress of rose Italian silk with moss green apflUqiie and small hat of green, velvet leaves. Green cymbidium orchids were dipped to her pune. TRAVEL TO MONTREAL Going to Montreal for the wedding were the junior Edward S. Reids and Mn. John Kausdi of Birmingham, Mrs. Jack Upper with daughters Nadia and Elizabeth, also Mrs. Edward S. Reid III with Car-roll and Richard. Others were Mn. Cassius Sdden of Grouse Points and Mm- J. Truman Streng of Kenosha, Wis. 10 0 0 After a Bermuda honeymoon, the couple will live in Aon Arbor where the bridegroom is studying for Ms Ph. D. de-* gme. The bride is the granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs- / Frederick C. Mathews at Detroit. illusion caught by a tiara of seed pearls. A white orchid rested on her white prayer book. * * O H. Thomas Marion, brother-intaw of the bride, was best man. Ushers were the bridegroom’s brother John R. Piper Jr. of Wayne and Michael J. Wells. Brown plaid cotton with touches of white' pique was chosen by the new Mrs. Piper for the northern Michigan honeymoon. She wore white opera pumps, white gloves and a small white flowered hat. The couple will live on East Third avenue. A corsage of orchid glamellias and white rosebuds complemented Mrs. Zimmerman’s dress of pink chiffon over silk taffeta, worn with pink hat and white accessories. Mrs. Piper appeared in teal blue silk shantung, white accessories and a corsage of white glamellias and pink rosebuds. Can't Ask for Ticket Cash Now By EMILY POST Dear Mrs. Post: My sister and i had tickets for a, show. The day we were ssppoeed to go my sister took sick and could not go. I called a friend and explained what bad happened and asked her If she would like to use the ticket. She was delighted to go. "She has evidently taken It for granted that she was my guest as she has made no offer to pay for the ticket. I certainly did not intend this as the tickets were quite expensive. Cftuld I possibly ask her to pay for the ticket, or is her gain my loss? -Answer: Uhlesr you asked her /if die wanted to buy the ticket when ydtr Offered it to her, she quite naturally thought you were inviting her to tile theater as your guest, and I don’t aee how you can now ask her to pay you for it. too Dear Mn. Post: My wife and I were invited to a rather large buffet party given by • business friend and his wife, I know the man quite well but know his wife only slightly. The invitation asked for a reply and my wife sent an acceptance. - We had full intentions of going but at the last minute something unexpected turned up and we were not able to go. I would Uke to know if 1 should write a note to the host explaining why we did not go to tihe party. What is the polite filing to da In this situation? Answer: Yes, you most certainly should write a note of apology, explaining why you could not go to the party, and •ho send some flowers to your friend’s wife. ♦ , O . o ■ Dear Mrs. Boat: When dining to a public restaurant where a lighted candle k on oech table, k it proper la light one’s cigarette from fit t would appreciate your answer-tog this mall point of etiquette ter me to settle an argument. Answer: Jt it not proper became there katoktf Aged ’“rigi ,1( - THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 THIRTEEN iLJL February vows are. planned by -Colleen Horecki, daughter of the Edward Horeckis of North Branch, and Richard Ayling, son of the Vem ■ Ay lings of Edith street. [Fight Those Advancing Years /!’■ . ' * , . r / 1 ■ •.1 . Find Time for Exercises ■Dr JOSEMNE LOWMAN Modem women an pioneers in attractiveness and prolonged youth. They already have won the first great battles. In increasing numbers women are realising that age is now measured by condition and appearance rather than by years. Ibey know that they must fight yean With eflort. • 7 , COLLEEN HORECKI Hi softening tl It hard/today to remain sNm or leas, vital pad elastic, when temptations to live “with the greatest of ease” are all about as. Our modern conveniences, our cars, our condiments, our sauces and highly refined, rich foods, all' urge us on toward surfeit and indolence. Mother Should Guard Against Being Mprtyr By RUTH MILLETT If she doesn’t guard against it, it’s easy for a mother to be just a bit of a martyr. So how mifek of a martyr are you? ft ft1 ft. Do you frequently remind your children of all that you do for Tourists Get No Guides in Garden They Often Paint or Read Under Trees on N. Y. Estate WESTBURY, N. Y. (^-Tourists who abhor guided tours through old mansions and yearn to sit down somewhere and take off their shoes will appreciate the casual approach adopted by the overseers of a Long Island garden now on display. There are* no guides, with few rules and no timetable for sightseeing. picknickers actually are encouraged. This informal attitude was adopted by the board of directors of Old Westbury .Gardens when the park was opened to the public. Families waader through the large brick home formerly occupied by tke John S. Phipps family, 'move across the garden to the children's play yard, where three separate playhouses are located, and often spend the rest of the day painting or reading under one ot the famous linden trees. Daughter of the Phipps family, Mrs. Etienne Boegner is president of the board of trustees and has many ideas for adding to the estate without overorganizing the visitors’ trip. Currently, a; sculpture exhibit is being shown in the estate’s formal garden. Mrs. Boegner talks of a string orchestra which might {day outside the 18th Century brick mansion’s front entrance, garden chib and art exhibits. Botanists, she thinks, also will enjoy the garden's large collection of flowers and the sweeping rows of trees, many of which were planted by the Phipps family. it '''ft ★ Not included for tourists are the five polo fields which flourished in a bygone generation. They are practice fields now, but probably will be sold for building sites soon. them and all the sacrifices you have made for them? When junior tracks up a freshly mopped floor, do you go |nto a pitiful tale about how hard you’ve worked scrubbing floors, instead of quickly and cheerfully dispatching him to get a mop and clean up the mess he has made? * * it When your husband , is grouchy or unreasonable do you suffer in silence to get the children’s sympathy instead of telling him off or trying to kid him into a better mood. When yoa allow the children to do something that you consider n bit dangerous do you remind them that yon won’t rent root an til they are safely- home? Do you resort to tears instead of taking disciplinary action when one of your children is rude you or defies your authority? Do you regale your friends with how much you did for your children and how inconsiderate they are of you now that they are grown? Do you “do without” clothes at #3ur teen-age daughter can have everything she wants? ~ you frequently remind her of the fact instead of dividing up the clothes budget more fairly? ' it h ★ Do you let your children get off without any chores and then coin-plain about how hard you have to work? xfN, It's so easy for a nfothgr become a bit of a martyr that every mother ought to check onbe in a while to be sure she isn’t becoming one. For happy solutions to some of the problems in husband-wife relationships order your copy of Ruth MUlett's new booklet, "How Have a Happy Husband,” Just send 25c to Ruth Millett Reader Service, care of The Pontiac Press, P. O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New fork City, N. Y. MIMEOGRAPHING SERVICE Bulletins, Letters, etc. FAST SERVICE! Christian Literature Seles We ride when we could walk. Prize fighters and actresses are about the only people, who is a group, take their exercise seriously. We Indulge in rich food and too much of It, and all of our modem electrical appHaacoa and w we spend that bonus of more leisure is of the greatest import-to us. Perhaps now we will have time to walk instead of ride, to take up some outdoor aport, to study, to take better care of ourselves. If these extra hours mean a more sedentary life, one which has less physical activity in It and more rich foor, and boredom, we would be better off without the conveniences and the leisure. In our kitchens we can prepare nutritious food rather than devitalized food. We do not have to lose stamina and vitality and a pretty figure. Leisure time offers yoi/> health possibilities right in your own back yard. Theta we find the opportunity for outdoor exercise, ffesh Hr, sunlight and relaxation. Pontiac Area Items of Interest The Rev. and Mrs. J. E. Van-[vacation fishing. He is the pastor Allen of West Iroquois Road are leaving next week for Indian River where they will spend their of the First Church of the Naz-arene. Miscellaneous Shower Fetes Phyllis Raymond Bride-elect Phyllis Ellen Raymond was honored at a miscellaneous shower -Tuesday evening by Mrs. Gerald McHaney of Orchid street, Waterford Township, with Mrs. Daniel Dropps cohostess. ♦ dr it Among .the 30 guests present were Mrs. George Raymond ot East Ypsil&nti avenue, and Mre. Robert Sonnenberg of North Anderson street, mothers of the engaged couple. ■ it A * Out-of-towners attending the party were Mrs. Sarah Murphy, grandmother of the bride-elect, her aunt, Mrs. Robert Kirchner and a cousin, Sharon Kirchnef, visiting here from Meyersdale. Pa. .• FREE instruction la Weed Fiber Flaws# Making JUgislar Raw for (apt Classes Cleo'i Hand Craft St. Michael Church has been reserved for the September 17 wedding of Miss Raymond to Leo £. VandenBoosche of Stout street. $8.50 Permanents 15 Shampoo and Wnve $1.50 La Chic ' BEAUTY SALON in Edison Si. n 4-1W7 Shower Held Mrs. Robert Burns, thd former Joyce Clements of Watldne Lake, was honored at a recent miscellaneous shower in the home of Mrs. Clinton D. Persons el Over-ton street, Waterford Township. Among some 20 guests present [were the honoree’s mother, Mrs. Russell Clements, Mrs. William Stiraman, Mrs. Robert Wheeler and Mrs. Orlo Deford of Drayton Rivaling the landscape of Florence, Italy, in design is this gown of pure silk which one fashion editor claimed brought “.•*. tiers to the eyes’* a at restates Displayed by the Cesare Guidi fashion house at the recent showings in Florence, the dramatic gown is printed with floral motifs on a green background. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hughes of Marion Street, Waterford Township/will leave Monday to attend the National Greensmen’s Convention at Purdue University. They will display a unique automatic evergreen roping machine that was designed and patented by Mr. Hughes. Visiting the Christian A- Addisons of East Pointe Lane, Lower Long. Lake, Bloomfield Hills for a week are the Arthur P. Duquettes of Kenosha, Wis. Mr. Duquette is Mrs. Addison’s brother. The Rev. and Mrs. Lyal H. How-ison of Dwight Avenue have returned from a 10-day vacation in the Upper Peninsula. He is pastor of the First Free Methodist Church. * * it The David Etchers of Orchard Lake are spending two weeks varied camping situations in Michigan. A A ' A week at Green Like near [Traverse City will be spent camping with two other families, the Charles Forbes of Westacres and Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Schandler of Cleveland. Mr. Schandler, conductor of the Cleveland Women’s Symphony, will Join the Eichers in fishing and hiking while Mrs. Schandler will Jttend the Chamber Music post-camp sessions at In-terlochen with David and Karen Eicber. „ *“ A three-day canoe trip on the Manistee River, followed by a fossil-hunting expedition to Sock Lake completes the family's agenda. * A A Twin daughters, Barbara Ann and Bonnie Sue, were born Aug. 18 to Mr. and Mre. Paul A. Benson of Owoaao, recently of Pontiac. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank whhr of Manistee and the Paul R. Bensons of Pioneer Drive. princess jumper by Anne Klein of Junior Sophisticates goes back to school or the office with equal poise. Gently fitted, the jumper Itself-has a low scoop neck, pockets. A smartly tailored fly front, long sleeved shirt is included in the pattern. Try woolens, tweeds, flannel, cotton, sharkskin, Miscellaneous 49*4Ctefir?"'friteugggqH*anne klein *■»«!:•*!»25 cents. miaceiiur ICUUS - cottm. or silk. From ^ toltowlng ^ she chart stfeet the one stee available at 31-00 each - or any best for you. OuS* measurements 2 for M any 3 for $2.00, «d are comparable to ready-to-wear - - ------- ***** Length Size 13 requires 214 yards of 36 inch material for the blouse and 3 yards of 36 inch material for the jumper with or without nap. To order Pattern No. N-UTT, state size, send $1.00. For first class mall,' add 5 cents. For airmail handling, add 25 cents. For Nape cf Suit Waist Blpt Neck tt Inch*. Wtljt for 12.50, all 5 for 53.00 — No. 12-13X, B-C, No. 15, No. 16, No. 17. If paid by check, add 5 cents for handling. Address SPADEA,' Box 535, G.P.O., Dept. P-6, New York 1, New York. Copyright, IM For Your Wedding Quality and Quantity e 1* Fhetea In 8x7 Album • Frpe Counseling • A Wedding Guest Book e A Large "Just Married" Sign •A Miniature Mintage Certificate All lot fust $39.95 H..IIII Studio Ft MR Jumpers are headline fashion for back-to-school. Wear them with tailored shirts for year-round o! without blouse when the weathei or occasion demands. Side-buttoning shapes a deftly sUmmlng jacket — perfect line shorter, fuller figures! Note too, peplum’s clever V-detail. Choose, checks, nubby tweed. Printed Pattern 4860: Half Sizes 14tt. 1614, 18Vi, 20Vi, 22Vi, 24. 16 requires 3% yards 39-inch fabric. Send thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-dass mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St. New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. SEND NOW! Big, beautiful, COL-j OR-IFIC Fall and Winter Pattern: Catalog has over 100 styles to — school. Career, half-sizes. Only: Further proof that Connolly’s will not knowingly be undersold! 1% down vSoTvnocluft/ 'slue Guarantee JtfttIM / ed to Suit tern u w. HlKn ■< ru FREE Printed Napkins and Thank Tm Cards With You Wedding Invitation Order Invitation* forW PONTIAC STATIONERS •owatewu FootUo—N.it to tUnm 4 N. Saginaw St FE *-4242 OUR MOST IMPORTANT PRODUCTS. QUALITY AND SERVICE NEW WAY 42 WISNIR STRICT CARPET aid RUG CLEANERS BACK-TO-SCHOOL Now is the time to get those school togs out of the moth balls and prepare them for thpugoing back to school ^ra$h. No matter what material or style of clothes they look better when they're dry cleaned. Pile the wrinkled clothes in a box and bring them down to. Greshams and let us put that new life and look back ir^them. You and your Family will be most pleased. FREE PROTEIN DRENCHED HAIR TREATMENT tcith your choice of FLAIR STARBRITE COLD WAVE Longer lasting permanent ... a superb new sheen, cell In early. v^NdB** BEAUTY SALON > 62 N. Saginaw St. AIR CONDITIONED Phene FUeral ■•IMS this incredible ■ offer includes • Haircut • Protonic Treatment • Cold Wave • Shampoo [•Styling Appointment Not Atosys MtetaS FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1960 North Oakland All-Stars Outlast South County Squad, 19-12 7315 See First Game of 1st Annual Classic ★ 'dr it Named Best of All-Stars By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Oakland County proudly showed off its high school football products last night at Wisner Stadium. With 7,315 fans looking on, the North Oakland County All-Stars defeated the South Oakland All-Stars 19-12 in the first annual classic sponsored by the Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce. It was a well played, exciting game between two enthusiastic squads and as was expected, it was the North’s depth and balance which finally proved to be the difference. „ With all-stater Ron Bishop of Royal Oak Shrine guiding the attack with his passing whisardry, the South team took command right from the start Playing 15-minute quarters under college scoring rules, the South started its*- opening drive after the kickoff on its own 26 yard line. In six plays covering 74 yards, Bishop climaxed the drive with a 50 yard pass play to Bob LeZotte of Royal Oak Dondero for a 6-0 lead. Norm Parker’s attempt for the point tailed and the South led alter wily 3:15 of the game had elapsed. A few North failed drive, the Seath again started to aaareh and It appeared that Blshep waa going te roat the North wtth hit aerial*. The South team moved from its own 20 to toe Noth 31, aided by 24-yard total to Gary Wirth. The North line then bolstered its defense and Bishop waa forced punt to the lS-yard line. The upper county offensive failed to move and the South again had possession when the second quarter started. Bishop finished with 11 completions out of 27 passes for ISO yards. The South managed only nine yards net rushing while the North had a total of 133 rushing and 82 Basing. Hocking, whose only offensive duty came in the late stages, had 44 yards in five carries while Forrest had 26 in six tries and Stott 25 yards in eight attempts. Long waa the North's best pass receiver having caught four for 49 yartte. North Depth Pays Off gave me North the ball oa the South to-yard line. George Jhcrest of Birmingham got nine yards on two plays but two idf penalties hampered the North drive. Bob ftvritt of Clarks-ton replaced Denis Alix at quarterback and be immediately hit John Long of WMt Bloomfield with 10-yard pass to the South 5-yard Wilson Tags Rabb for QB TOP PERFORMERS — There were raan^ candidates for outstanding player honors in last night's first Oakland Cbunty All-Star football game but these three boys won out in a close vote. Halfback Bob Hocking of Pontiac Northern, far left, was named the best North gridder, half- back Bob LeZotte of Royal Oak Dondero, center, led the South and standout quarterback Ron. Bishop of Royal Oak Shrine was most valuable player. Each was presented a trophy by Nancy Fleming, Miss Michigan of 1960. The MVP award was contributed by The Press. t it it it it Picking the outstanding players in the Oakland County North-South All-Star game last night had more nominees than the recent Democratic convention. ★ A A , After the balloting of sportswrit-ers and spartscasters,,. the. Most Valuable Trophy awarded by .Pontiac Press went to Ron Bishop, the talented all-state quarterback from Royal Oak Shrine who sparkled in a losing cause for the South team. Bob LeZstte, the all state halfback from Royal Oak Dondero, ; rannerup honors as too All-Stars Credit to County A penalty moved the ball to the 10 but Porritt hit Long again from tune for the touchdown and it was 6-6 as Phil Isbell's point try went wide with nine minutes to go. Bishop was forced to punt on the next aeries and the North then started a drive from its own &. Porritt thrilled the crowd as he maneuvered away from’several Seath tackier* to gala 11 yards after be waa trapped 10 yards ia Ids awa hsckfMd. Four play* ttater Alix, back at QB. passed te Dick Caverly of Ctorkatoa for the teachdewa tad the North led 114, ’when the point agate failed as Daag Stott of Oxford tried to raa It The half ended with an incomplete Bishop pass to Wirth on his own 41. A A. A -i Early in the second half, tempers flared and John Meadows, big Dondero end, was ejected from the game for giving Isaac Jones the elbow. A moment later Charlie Brawn of Pontiac Central was seat to the shower* along wtth Bill Smart and Mike Glynn of the South team a* the eathastastlc gridder* hit hard and spirited. The fourth quarter action grew * 1 as 'the South got back a big break. Gary Tinkle of Farmington shot through to block Phil Isbell’s punt on the 45 and the South recovered on the North 18. * * A LeRoy Hill of Madison got 11 yards and after two running plays failed. Bishop hit LeZotte with a perfect pass for a 16-yard touchdown to tie the score 12-12 as the point attempt passing again failed. The North then took over with 11 minutes to play after the ensuing kickoff. Coach Leon Hart then pat his "Mghtatav" haekfietd on the Held, made ap of Reggie Dixon of B* cheater, borne Jones of Pontiac Central and Bob Hocking of By CHUCK ABAIR Pontiac and all of Oakland County was still buzzing today about last night’s first Oakland County All-Star game. AAA ft was the kind of game you could talk about for hours — loaded with thrills, excitement and outstanding play. Every member of the two squads lived ap to Us name as •a All-Star during the (* minutes of healed action. Several had college scouts writing some fast Botes. Coaches Leon Halt of the victorious North and Lou Cfeekmur of the South heaped high praise on their charges. Each had trouble singling out individual pacesetters. The North had a number of, different ballcarriers headed by Bob Hocking of Pontiac Northern with a big last half showing. Denis Alix of West Bloomfield, Boh Porritt of Clarkston and big Bill Bryce of Waterford divided the quarterback work and all showed good stuff. Hart praised Phil Isbell of Birmingham Senhotm mad lit fie backs Bob Christina of Walled Lake aad Avondale’s Dick Smith for their drfeaofve play. Iteomia Fred Weisman of Milford drew praise Just as be had afl through the North practice sessions. Hooking’s big last half amazed the North boss and his assistant Jack Simmons. The quiet ex-Huskie showed speed the skippers didn’t know he had. “He ran right away from their buys,’’ said Hart. AAA Disappointed South leader Creek-mar “lack of enough” horses hurt hurt his squad as the North’s depth proved a key factor. He said quarterback par excellence Ron Bishop of Royal Oak Shrine “lived up to every-thing we had hoped for.” Everyone will agree with that. The cool passing wizard, who is headed for the University of Detroit, was surrounded by the Titan staff in the dressing room following the final whistle. U. pf D- head coach Jim Miller was all smiles HAPPY CROWD - These North fans had good reasons to be happy as the first Oakland County All-Star game neared the finish last night. They Frattaa taw n*U not only saw an outstanding grid battle but alap had the winhfer. A total of 7,315 were at Wisner Stadium for the game. * Hocking, who stopped a South touchdown earlier in the game in bring the last one tojiit LeZotte an a kickoff return in the second quarter, picked up 8, 20 and 5-yard gains.. • He hit over from the 4-yard line tor the North’s third touchdown to mtmkrn ft 18-12; Isbell converted to amice it 18-12 with 4:04 to play. -pans pqsteaHaa early la the ! 1st* stages bow-t South defender-., i had to go both \ All-Star Statistics saying he was “real happy” wtth “on. Miller lauded both squads pointing out that both played very well and appeared in good condition despite the fact they only had two weeks to get ready. Wally Ffomhart, aide to Creek- The North had many players who distinguished themselves and in the final tally Pontiac Northern’s Bob Hocking was named for the upper county team award. .A ’ A A Hocking made a spectacular tackle early in the second quarter when Boh LeZotte picked up a kickoff on the two and raced toward pay dirt. When LeZotte passed the 25 yard line, only Hocking stood between him and goal line. The ex-PNH bade eluded two blockers and made a rive for LeZotte, hitting him 1 First Downs Pensltle 11 TMm First Down* 133 8M Yards Rushing sf Net Yards _KB*a lit Total Net Yards 10 Passes Attempted sietad Gary Tinkle aad Norm Parker an the top South linemen. He said of Mg Pontiac Central grad Jerry Rosie “How would you like to have three guys Uke that oa your team?” Michigan coaches Hank Fonde and Dan Dufek were on hand as Aere Bill Yeoinan and Vin CariBqt of Michigan State and representatives from many other state colleges. They saw a lot of good talent as the boys showed. the caliber of bail played in Oakland County. A A A EXTRA POINTS — The Pontine Junior Chamber of Commerce turned in an excellent job keeping the things rolling. The Jaycees deserve considerable praise for starting the gafhe ... All the boys were saying hlW thrilled they were to have been in such an affair. . . Many made a lot of new friends among former rivals and they played under some outstanding directors. A A A Miss Michigan and the Detroit band webe excellent added features . . * . The Pontiac Police Department came through with flying colors when a midfield fight broke out . . . Press box workers were realty puzzled trying to pick the top boys. A A A There were no serious injuries. Another of many reasons why the opener was a perfect success . - • The game may outgrow the stadium before too many yean . . . Creekmur admitted having coaching, jitteri as he paced around before pre-game drills . . . Two of the North touchdowns had the mark of oddities. Alix of Keego passed to Dick Caverly of Clarkston for one. Porritt of Clarkston passed to glue-fingered John Long ‘ Keego for the other. A. A A Feature games will have to go some to be any better than Fri-' -day’s first one. Few people will L'Tn forget those long aerials by j! Bishop, the running of Hocking, IjBob LeZotte and many others and the hard-hitting throughout. I Flue, Compfct— 1 Pu,e, Intercepted ' by 3—33 3 Punts' and Average > Fumble, 4 Fumble, Lost *-46 Penalties and Yard* Sears by Quarters North .......I U Hearts* Flays Nsrtb: \ Alix prssed to Caverly, ST yard* Porritt passed to Loss. I yards JtaaUas rushed 4 yards' Isbell conversion for FAT North Squad ENDS—Earl Richardson, John Phil Isbell and. DlckCayorly TACKLES- Roger Krtebel. Doan Cal-Uson, Walt Cooler OUARDS—Charlie 1 and John MltcbeL CENTERS—Ken Johnson. Prod Wiseman and Jim Hails. QUARTERBACKS—Dei____ q was on the receiving end it tom posses tor 97 yards, plus Paattaa Press Photo THE CLINCHER — Bob Hocking skirts wide for the deciding touchdown in the last quarter of last night's North All-Star victory over the South. His TD scamper broke up a tie gafne. Far behind . lACKt—D« from playing. They ire linebacker Sam Williams, end Dan Chamberlain, rad tackles Jim O’Brien and Ron latctrao. Two farmer Lions, cud Ferry Richards aad guard Mike Rabold, will be starting tor the Cardinals. St. Louis will probably divide the quarterbacking chores lunoug King Hill, M. C. Reynolds aad Jehu Rauch. John Crow, Bobby Joe Conrad and Mai Ham mack will be in the backfield and ends Woodley Lewis, tackles Ed Cook and Ken Panfil, guards Ken Gray and Ra-bold and center Don GilUs will complete the St. Louis offensive lineup. s A A A. The Lions win be back in Briggs Stadium next Thursday to face the Pittsburgh Steelers and fortner Detroiters, coach Buddy Parker and quarterback Bobby Layne.* Pontiac Trotter Wins DETROIT — Clever Redwing, 5-year-old horse, owned by Clovis and Springer Skelton of Pontiac, paced his best mile of the year Friday night to win the first race at Wolverine Harness Raceway. USING US READ — Bob Christian of Walled H»frT like he is playing soccer breaking up this gjass intended for South star Bob LeZotte (behind Mm) Friday night at Wiener Chris- tian nd little Dick Smith (28) of Avpndale were outstanding db-fcndtng against i rag PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 , FIFTEEN CUmtoai n*»ut_____ >13 MM DM N1U 1“S^ NmJn .$g «'£!»« ■jji **»,...vftSd• •■•*■ i -m Si iK::|??f! 5 wwrauAt unm W M MM # Sjil Flayar. Ctab A* k I m ma ou J. m, m m it i Sl«veri, CM. MS 71 W U 1 wuuum. Mm. m 41 n 21 MlnoaoTCbt 8 » i h gkowroii, N T. 4M 44 127 22 I Ku*nn, CM. Pl«tr, Ol. Rob«oa. Balt. GantUa, Bill. Oafr. ■ *72 • Aim. MX Aipr'nti, « uSuTirx _ Pl*rialL CU. Ml Werti. Bm. 311 ■Mkm e.c. «i —«jr s 36 71 11 41 JM 43 17 6 M .2*6 *m n lu m a 3 * fill 14 M S X'poUto. CU. mmm.JJX* ”» 7. KS5-JSP- M S S S • is*!! tin m 6i • Bunntnf. on. 1*6 164 M 165 7 5STk~ m»«88 sss.v-- sa Sign s»}»“5«. apsSS 2saA» 55 111 Sh« gS S'S: ffiSV'- as 8,8.i &B:. 5.85 3! •tawT cSr — “ “ ■“ IB t 46 | 71 63 MM3 Ml MB 41 44 I ■ 8 66 166 * MM n MU 11 Hut * 76- M i > I MM 73 166 13 MM M 67 6 121117 B N ( ltt 13». 61 64 3 iflst a *7 36 37 3 43 46 M 34 4 76 64 W 47 1 «Sfi» i _______ BiltlnMN-. Kimu and Bouafto" *“ land (eombtoad). em*agsiiu EaPd*!!!** ^l»JnU .....Mil fllg^ PMibiSxlf C $ 3 Breaks Up 2-2 Pitching Duel in 6th Inning Aguirre Gets 2 in (tow to Save Fischer's Win, Tigers' 6th of Lost 7 AMEBIC AN LEAGUE 55- .966 6ft 96 M .56* M S3 66 .41 lift 1 city .J| 73 663 36ft rkiBATi umn jU» 4. New York 1. nlgbt > Mntt 6, CUNftBd 3. *4(04 TOM* Kmmi Clly 0. nlgbt Baltimore it Boston, poitponed. log TODAY'S GAMES ___ (Times MnIin BUslOfd Chicago (Score 3-7) at KoaaiFCBy (Lai IN uf)7 I *». Clsvslaod ^a. Batttmort It Boston. 1 p.m. t a-=i=t ojQni NATIONAL LEAGUE , j| 64 .463 I ..66 73 .IN 3 H rUDAT-B RESULTS . San FfMeUN 3. Chicago I Sir LotM 1. Loo AngoUs S. night CtncMnatl A PttUburgh 3. night PhnoiUMiU 3. Milwaukee L night TODAY'S GAMES for Article About Philly's Hurler PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Jack Meyer, Philadelphia Phillies pitcher, filed suit In Common Picas, Court Friday against Time 'publisher of Sports Illustrated, alleging the magaatae damaged ids career. The Buit demands a retraction and over 15,000 in damages for an article last June titled “The Dalton Gang Rides Again." The ani-cie also mentions Jim Owens and Dick Farrell, two other Phillies pitchers. Owens and Farrell filed suits earlier against (Time Inc. s 3-Run Homer Beats TribelJ^ - T* ’ * * ■ * ’ +\ * A' ★ ★, ★ ★ ★ 'V Pirates Lobc tp Redlegs DETROIT (UPIk«* Tiger second baseman Frailk Bolling has been somewhkt of a forgotten bail player under manager Joe Gordon. Ihrer since .Gordon took charge of the club two weeks age, Bolling has had share the keystone duties with young Ozzie Virgil. But last night Bolling, who sat out the Kansas City series, turned to the lineup and cracked three-run homer that drove across the winning runs in' a W victory over the Cleveland Indiana. Bourne’s Mast la the sixth Inning, his eigMh home ran af the year, followed singles by AI Ka line aad Rocky Colavito aad broke ap a 3-3 duel between the Tigers’ BUI Fischer and Cleveland's Bobby Locke. -It was the sixth win in the last seven starts for the sixth-place Tigers who are apparently launching a late-season surge. ' ★ jti n The Indians * threatened verse the decision when they chased Fischer with a ninth-inning rally. Fischer, who yielded only [five hits oyer the first eight frame* left the premises in the ninth when Cleveland loaded die bases with one out on singles by Jim Piersall, Tito Francona and pinch-hitter Bob Hale. Bat reliefer Hank Aguirre preserved Fischer's fifth triumph In 11 3edsbM by mowing down two soceeostvo hitlers to end the game. Dstrolt took a 1-0 lead in the first on Eddie Yost’s walk, an infield out and Norm Cash’s single. * ' ft ' The margin was quickly erased, however, by the Indians’ two-run rally in the second. Vic Power’s single, an error, a single by Francona and Mike De La Hoz’ sacrifice fly produced the two tallies. The Tigers tied 4t up In the, fifth ou Harry - Chill's single. Fischer’s (aerifies and a single by Cash who collected three of the eight Detroit hits. Then Bot- Associated Press Sports .Writer I he’s done it against Pittsburgh If Art Mahaffey had the fftters apd Milwaukee, the 1-2 clubs in when he came up with the Phils- [the National League race, deiphia Phillies last month, After beating the Pirates 4-3 they're long gone now. last Monday for his first major jlr * 3r [league decision, the 22-year-old The kid right-hander has won roolde came back and pitched his each, of his last two starts—and first complete game for a 3-2, six- Braves Goof Chance to Gain hit victory at Milwavfcee Friday *ht. That kept the Braves from closing the gap on the front-running Pirates, who still lead by TH games despite a 4-3 loss at Cincinnati. The St. Louis Cardinals, after losing six in a rod-, regained EASY WINNER Miss Supertest m, ’Canada’s only boat entered in the Harmsworth race, piloted'by Bob Hayward, approaches the finish ar WMtfhvte line way'ahqad of the pack to win the first heat on Long Reach, Plcton, Ont., Friday. Rote Sets Pass Record for Canada's Big Four TORONTO (AP) — Tobin Rote, passing for a new Big Four record of 38 completions, piloted the Tot route Argonauts into the league lesKl Friday night with* a 36-14 victory ovw the Montreal AIou-:tes. A crowd of 26,524 watched as the former Detroit Lkst quarter back passed for, all five- Argos’ touchdowns. thrae-roa wallop Into the lower left-field seats In the sixth. The . Indiana scored th%ir third run in the eighth on singles by relief hurier Don Newcombe, alk and Bolllpg' extra-base hit of the game for either team. The two dubs dash again 'today in the second round of their four-game shies which will conclude with' a double-header tomorrow. MSSJ Total! ______Mr Wktaon to I nouncod tar jkr7^ for Mils li Mb: t » w§r Colls Handle Cowboys; Pams Win in NFL lilts By Its_______ - Lenny Moore, a fleet-footed hoinwr-if with built-in radar, is becoming tee No. 1 attraction in the aerial circus operated by Bal-timer* Colt quarterback Johspy y Howie Ferguson. close against the Redskins with four field goals until Poo Burroughs pounced on Oubewski's bobble. Moore, who baa an uncanny ability to dude tbs defense and camp under a long, looping lead pa<3. ftfWH two Unites strikes for touchdowns Friday night at the defending National Football League champions defeated the Dallas Cowboys 14-M in bition, " After catching a 46-yarder in the first period to put the Colts abead, the lithe Negro hauled in a 52-yard pitch from Unites with a minute left to giye tee Colts a come-from behind victory^ ’ In other exhibMone, tee Lea Angeles Rama beat Washington’s p«d«kfai« 26-21 in an NFL encounter and j the Bds Angeles Chargers whipped the Oakland Raidstt M-17 - in League game. Wp A field godHw Wed Cooe and • 1-yard phage tap qoartsacback Eddie LeBaron gave the O0WW9* a 10-7 lead in the final period b»l fore Mootv mad* ids last-minute rate a* Dallas. The Cowboys, preparing for thetr mat een*an * NFL action, now have, lost m three, of their pre-season games, ft * , ♦ ' A ll-yafd TD run by Tommy ' Wilson, after a Johnny OlwaNrid fumble in the fourth quarter, was Danny Villanueva kept ten Rama —4— _ former NFL star with Cleveland, rammed and 9 yards for third period scores as the Chargers overcame a 17-10 Raider lead. Oakland had built Its margin on a Henry Wallace field goal, a 4-yard pass from Tom Flores to Brad Myers and BUly Lott's 6-yard plunge. jjfi 4633 4 4 10 HH ar* 1 3 IS ChUI. c 4 6 6 0 PMur p 3 6 66 bfliWO P Wynn Keeps Sox on Yank's Tail third place from Los Angeles by beating the Dodgers 1-0, although held to Just throe hits by Johnny Pod res. San Francisco beat Chicago’s Cuba 2-1. ft ft ft Mahaffey, now 241, shut out the Braves.,on three hits until the eighth inning, then gave up a double by Del Crandall and Ed Mathews’ 27th home run. He showed plenty of poise in the tenth, however, when he retired Joe Adcock and Johnny Logan, and then got pinch-hitter Ai Dark on a foul pop for the final out after Mel Roach had opened the frame with a double. ★ ★ ft The Phils, beaten 1-0 by Lew Burdette's no-hitter tee night before, scored twice in the first inning against loser Juan Pisano (66), then clinched it on Lee Walls’ baaes-loaded sacrifice fly in the second. Tony Taylor /singled leading off the first, went to second on a sacrifice, stole third, and then stole home as Pizarro triad to pick off Walls, who had walked. B. G, ‘ Smith, who had three of the Phite’ six hits, brought Walls home with a two-out triple. PRESS BOX The Waterford BlooperbaQ League for mea 20 years old sad over have ended play for the se*-son. The Whiskers won the gold medal tournament far the top four loop teams beating BeQ Telephone 174 to the finaL Lake Oakland Heights whipped Watqcford Town-134 taking silver medal hon- By The .Associated Press Two of the oddities vt American League season are the fact that Early Wynn, has been above .500,only once since May, and Washington's whammy on the New York Yankees. ★ ★ . ft Put them together, and the Chi cago White Sox are within i*> games of the first-place Yanks again. - \ \ • Wynn, the tough right-hander who Has .wbn more games than iahy other active pitcher in the AL, edged the Amending champion Sox a bit closer Friday night [with a seven-hit, 10-0 bfe*je at Kansas City. That gave WJmtt a 9-8 record and Ida 280th victory, but it's the first time since May 20, when he had a 2-1 record, he’s been clear of the breakeven mark. ★ ft ' ft " Washington made ,it three straight over the Yankees with a 4-2 decision on the five-Mt pitching of Ounlo Pascual and a two-run, two-out single by Bob Allison in the eighth taming. It was the Sdnatbrs’ ninth victory in J5 games with New York this sea- season, after getting o baaes-loaded Jam in the first inning by striking out Bill Tuttlq. He walked four, strode out six for his second Victory over the A’s, who beat him three times out of four when he led the majors with 22 victories last season. ★ ★ ♦ Minoso drove in a first l ining raw# while grounding out, then belted his 14th homer for another the third for the White Snx, who rolled for five mare in the fifth. John Tsitouris, second of five pitchers used by the A’s as they dropped their tenth in a row. St. Paul Open Has 2 Leaders Public Parte Net Tourney in Finals LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AF) i— The National Public Parks Tennis Tournament is minus 28-year-Old defending champion Allen Tong and bis 17-ya4tr-dd conqueror. 'Johnny Evans of Louisville baa a berth to tea final. Ryans tH**1 the fiCLA .far froth Loa AngeMs in a rugged semifinal match, 64, 6-2, 10-12, 42, Friday. This set up tea possibility of an alLLraisvOle'te«M|e final &n>-day as 15-yuur-oid Mickey Schud, of Louisville, faces second-seeded Garold Dubie, of Hamtramck, in file Other semifinal today. Winnie MbCby -of Los Angeles artvanrrd to tee final to the wom-db’s division with s 64, 6-2 win over Ethel Marshall, of Buffalo, IE Y. Miss McCoy meets tee Of tee amifinal matching Jean Getetr, of St Louis, Johnson, Leo Angelas. Dukes Misses Training Camp, With Bosses' OK DETROIT (UPI)-4Paltor Dukes, star center for the Detroit Pistons, will not be on hand for early training camp, drills (his fall. But this time he has the full approval of his bosses. The seven-foot center, who missed the Pistons pre-aeaaon workouts last year because of a snag to contract negotiations, will be “much too busy” to attend the first 10 days bt practice, next month, according to Piston general manager Nick Kerbawy. Dukes will h* writing state bar examinations for both New York and Pennsylvania during the month of September. He was graduated from the New York Oofiegd of (aw last year. Kerbawy is hopefid that the^vet-eran pivotman will be ready for gainst Cincinnati at Cotymbus, hk>. •» The Pistons will open training drills Sept. 15. Carolina Golfer Wins International JC Test WATERLOO, Iowa (AP (-Raymond Floyd ol Fayetteville, N.C., Friday won the International Jay-one Junior Golf Tournament with a 5-uiyler-par 284 Mr the 78-hole rente. ■ . " • , , Floyd had a five-stroke edge over runner-up Bruce Richards of Belleville, Wash., whose 74 gave tom a total of 289. Sure Putting Touch Puts Mickey Ahead ASHEVILLE, N. C. ' (AP) -Mickey Wright of Bonita, Calif., showing a sure touch on wet turf, took a two-stroke lead info today’s second .round of the fourth annual Asheville Women’s Open Golf Tournament. ★ -♦ ft Mickey shot a 3-under-par 35-34 49 over the rain-soaked Beaver Lake course Friday Id take the lead to the 54-hole tournament. Ruth Jessen of Seattle, Wdsh. and Betsy Rawls of Spartanburg, C., were tied for second atTL Tied at par 72 for tee 5,692-yard Mine were Wiffl Smith, St. Clair, Mich.; Louise Suggs, Atlanta; Jo Aim Prentice, Birmingham, Ala., and Kathy Cornelius, Lakeland, Fla. chased by Umpire Ed Hurley after hitting AI Smith and Sherm Lollar following Minoso's home ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)—Lionel Hebert and BiU/Caaper, a couple of heavy-set belters, today shared the halfway lead at 133 in the $30,000 St. Paul Open GoU Tournament. „ ft . ft ft' Hebert, of Labette, La., missed a 4-foot putt on the 18th (green Friday and that was- the kind of trouble he had Ml day as be tricked up a 69 to go with his opening 61 Casper shaved five strokes off of the Keller course, par 72 layout, including an eagle deuce on the 11th hole. The Apple Valley, Calif., golfer dipped it in from 80 yards out with a wedge. He shot a 67 after an opening round Wisconsin Skipper Is Thislle Champion DETROIT (AP)—Broce Gold- nith of Racine, Wis., won the National Thistle Class sailing championship on Lake St Clair Friday. The 24-year-old former national collegiate sailing champion from the University of Michigan ran op 306)4 potato to tee touwlay competition. Ronnefmp Howard Boston, 50, of ML Clemens, Mich., had 211 potato. Jerry Smith of Detroit, the defending champion, was third with 210. * Goldsmith went into the fifth and final race with 243)4 points and could have won by placing j at far down as 26th to the 66-boat [fleet But he placed second behind Skip. Boston, 22, of Mt Clemens. In five races Goldsmith piloted Hebert had a good chance to Birdie the last two and go ipto a two-stroke lead. But he muffed a 5-foot putt on the 17th before missing one a foot nearer on the next. One stroke baric at the leaders at 134 were Joe Campbell of New York, the first 'day co-leader with Hebert, and Dop Fairfield of Jacksonville, 111. * ft * Three others trailed at 135, Ai Griberger, Studio City/Calif.; Don Whitt, Borrego Spriirgs, Calif., and Gordon Jones, Atlantis^ Fla. Sam Snead of White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., lurked within striking distance with three others at 136 after IdertUral 68s. Defending champion Mike Soudiak, Gros-singers, N.Y., also duplicated his first round with another 69 and tied with nine other* at 138. Cary Middlecoff collapsed from an opening 66 to 74, taking 35 putts whle he bogeyed six holes. CIO, Boys Club Win and second place .finishes. Starter Johnny Kucks (3-7) was the loser. He left in the first tong when he was spiked by catcher Danny Kravitz as fielded a bail in front of the plate. The Senators came from behind and took a 2-1 lead on Bob Lem-28th run and Hannon Kille-brew’s 20th, then broke a 2-L tie to the eighth after reliever Ralph Terry almost worked out of jam. Wkh ' lhe bases loaded on two walks and a single by Lentae Green, Terry got Lemon to bit into a force out at the plate, then retired Reno Bertoia on a pop up before Allison broke it up. ft ft ft- Ryne Duren (3-4) was the loser is first defeat since July 4, when he was beaten 98 by the Nats. The Yankees who had won fotto-to a row since being knocked out of first place by the Senator* Sunday, scored their first run off Pascual (124) on Bob Cerv’s 12th homer, in the second inning, then tied it -2-all in the seventh on single* by Mickey Mantle, Bill Show-ton and Johnny ^Blanchard. NSW YOU WASUINGYON akrkM Safer Jb 4*16 Gardner 3b S Kubek r * ------ ' Berra ri Sham* lb jilt Pobbefc 1 The Reds came from behind with three runs in the fifth, capped by Vada Pinson’s two-nm homer, against Wilmer (Vinegar Bend) Misell (94). The Pirate lefty had won five In a row, Wally Post also homered for the Reds, who beet the Pirates at Cincinnati for the first time in six tries I this season. ft h h The Bucs, out-hitting the Reds scored twice in the first off win-1 Bob Purkey (134), and made it 4-3 in the right*)' wjien BOjb Skin-double^ and tfobeitq Clemente singled for his second R&i. Bat after Bm Mazeroalti and pinch hitter Gind Cimoli singled with one out in th« ninth, Jim Bros nan relieved and retired Bill Virdon and Dick • Groat on fly balls. A meeting (or members of tee Cooley tunes Senior House ' League wfil be held Aug. 24 at f p.m. at Cooley Lanes. The Junior Home group will meet Sept 1 at tee same tone. Thu latter loop needs three trams with 776 average*. - ft ft 'ft BUI Dando. 28, former star halfback at the Utevertety of Detroit, has been named assistant football coach at John Carroll University. He coached three sports at Detroit “L Cecilia High School tost year. ★ ft ft' Richard Van Raaphorst of Charlevoix, Mich., will help represent the North today in the [Prep All-America North-South Football Game at Memorial Stadium, Baton Rouge, La. ft ' ft ft ■ ’ Phyllis Preuss of Gregory, Mich., will be paired with Sandra Palmar of Fort Worth, Tex., Monday in the first round bf the 60th Women’s Amateur Championship of the United States Golf Assn. Par is 3536—71 on the 6450-yard Tulsa Country Club course. On* U 4111 Bortol* 3b ~ cb'd « 3011 MM rt ’•oo lb 33 31 Bollay « ____D'i'd 3b 1 3 • 3 VbMtY'sa u Dttmar p 3 0 • * bValo cLapas 1 f 3 f fnwli ft Derm p 6 * 11 PmcwU p ill Terry p is* ; l lor Biaiiaritmn to TUt: „_________jut lor Valdivielio to 7th; ritod out tar Dttmar ' New York -....... MMdtau ' X—Blanchard. Waabtogton 37-1' PO-A—Ni DW—Pita _________ and Skowron: VoMlvtolso. Gardner KlOebrev. LOB—New York 4. Wmbk ... X IB—Boyer. HE—Cere, Lemon. KUIe- EB EE 80 u a. > 3 1 o batter* to tlh. The Cardinals beat Podre* (10-9) in the ninth inning without a hit, scoring an unearned run on wale and Junior Gilliam's two-out error. Larry Jackson (1440), who combined With Stan Musial and Daryl Spencer for. tee three singles allowed by Podres, gave up five hits, walked two and struck out three for his second shutout. Two uf the Dodger hits were doubles by rookie Tommy Davis, extending his hit streak through 19 games, and Charlie Neal. It was Jackson’s first victory in five starts this month. Olympic Star May Be Barred ROME (AP)—The fate of one of the world’s great all-around ath- i letes hung in the balance today as Kns within the International tec; Committee (IOC) wrarv gled over the name Nationalist China Will use in the i960 game*. Thev athlete is Yang Chuaa-Kwang*. "UPllu known as Yang. He win compete in the decathlon at the Olympic games opening Aug. 25 if his nation agrees to enter under the name laid down by the IOC, which would be Tai- _ . ^ *T. LOUIS grv.*''ms &!K T:V HH 4 3*6 N'1to*nlb|17 .4 if ? f tep ** * 4 • ill! Pte rt SSI j iu P«dr»« p 1 t 1 « smith e 2 0* aOtoMb (it nws J fI **ik*d”tor" Javier C E-Ottttsm. PO-A—Lo! AascWa 36-14. J out when Vtontni run enaradt st toMa 77-14. DP—Lilli* Neal and La'rker: Larker una»»toted: Neal. LUlls and Larker. LOB—Loa Anaaia* 7 «• *--** “ Neal, Darla. Podree (L.10-6) . Lout* 3 28— IH 3 1 .. T—2:61. A33.3M. abrhbl m el s l 3 ( Martin lea »*f?^ There may be a ruckus at the. full IOC meeting Monday over what to call Nationalist China, but indications .were strong today that Taiwan is tbs name the IOC insist on. The Nationalists competed aa Taiwan in the pra-Otym-pic basketball tournament at Bol-. ogna, but under protest. Just how good is Yang? Bob Mathias, who won the decathlon for the United States in 1948 and 1952, thinks he can win this one. Meanwhile, sentiment appeared to be growing to re-elect Avery Brundage of Chicago to another four-year term as IOC president-Athletes continued to pour into Olympic viltage. Eighty Russians came yesterday along with 20 Qi-bans. 41 Argentines and 102 Australians. DRAG RACING SUNDAY 26 MU* Road late ri Crotiof SPORTS CARS CorroM* Cioh-k.C.C.A—AB Othon 4 131 Robtuon 11 sa—1 fliS'CVH ClrmtnU if 3 • 3 3 Cook 3b tomH a 4(0# Baiiay * Hook Jb 4 3 13 Coleman Jb Enr'lU 3 4 • 3 * Cardmas to Xhnll p 3 t # * Purkv P totoart t (*• Broanan p Lablno p ( t * S Total! fl IUI T04ali C—Paporello. Kongr. Rice, Smith. T-!:**. A—77.211. Shuffleboard League to Be Formed Monday Plans for an Oakland County shuffleboard league will be set up Monday at a conference of au interested-teams at the VFW Hail, 398 S. Saginaw St. .Session will begin at 1 p.m. and any teams interested should be represented. There are at present 10 or 12 teams of 10 players each, including both men and women. There is [room for others, says Paul Parks, who is hjmdling the arrangements. Dost: Control MA 4^4521 EM 3-0203 RODEO Every Sunday at S P.M. FORSALE Livestock - Saddle Riding Equip., Etc Also Long Distance Horse Trailer lor Rent SUN DANCE ENTERPRISES l&M E. Hlfhland Ri (Mltford) 4 Cage Spots Settled BALOGNA, Italy IB — Four nations — Czechoslovakia, Spain, Yugoslavia and Hungary—Friday [were assured of places in the t/w—tournament The remaining place is between Belgium and Poland, who will clinch tee argument f ganje. Saturday. The Poles are slightly favored. The CIO softball team moved Into the Class B finals tost night aa tea Pontiac Boys Club entry in the Rochester league did the same in **D.” CIO meets Royal Oak tonight at 6:61 at Highland Park. The l&ys Club will play .the top tram of the lootr’t bracket Sunday at 7 p.m. at Baaadette Park. Floy* Beks barfed CIO to aw M triumph. The nafoa tout trailed It early tote a *tex-raa Chet the BASEBALL RANGE Knock the O out of Otmun's Sign to WIN a $10 Gift Cortificoto KIDDY LAND and GOLF RANGE 2045 DIXIC Mer Cor. Telegraph Ad. II 5-0095 CARL'S SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY* AUGUST 20, 1060 Knudsen Next GM President? Adam Ames By ton File fid Auto Firms Play Guessing Game a lteulenan' By BE> PHLEGAR AP Automotive Writer DETROIT — The Detroit auto companies, vitally interested in national politics, have a little presidential sweepstakes of their own tUafan. “Name the next president” has become a favorite game after top level changes at Ford and Chrysler. AT CHRYSLER tion as to when either company may make a change. Both could come next month. Chrysier's board of directors has its next regular meeting in New York on Sept. 8. Ford’s board meets Sept.' 14. AT GENERAL MOTORS General Motors, with 60-year-old John Gordon as president and chief operating officer and 58-year-old [iiiii[i I ^______ ______________Frederic Conner as chairman and on Chrysler where "lI? Colbert!chief .executive officer, appears gave the president s job to his hand ** the ‘°P (or «™*her five years picked successor, William C. New>- at least. berg, last April, only to have every- GM’ has comiftilsory retirement thing blow up la a company crisislat 65 although the directors can over conflicts of interest. make exceptions. Newberg lasted only 64 days • * ' before he was asked to quit. CM- Gordon and Donner moved into beri, who bad succeeded to the their posts two years ago when mains extremely cioudy. Colbert, president since 19S0,*had left little doubt Newberg was his man. Now some groups, of dissident Chrysler stockholders are demanding Colbert get out, too, sHth new executives chosen tram outside present company ranks. • Nj h h ★ On the other hand the Ford situation appears to be only a matter of time. Henry Ford personally is known to favor McNamara’s elevation. McNamara. 44. was graduated from college at 20 as a Phi Beta Kappa. He* was an assistant professor at Harvard Business School post of board ckalnnaa, took back the presidency as well. But most observers feel he will relinquish the title if another man can be found. AT FORD At Ford, Ernest Breech resigned as chairman of the board and turned his'job over to Henry Ford H who also is president of the .company. Ford is expected to keep only one of the posts. Ike ether, whichever It may be, generally is conceded to Rob-1 ert 8. McNamara, cuircwtly There has been no public indica- I PET DOCTOR •y A. W. Mailer, D.V.M, Harlow Curtice retired. Curtice had held both jobs. Speculation oa possible succee-son to Gordee has centered mainly oa two divisional heads — Edward N. Cole, general man-ager of Chevrolet, aad Semen E. Kaadaen, general manager of Pontiac. Cole has boned GM’s biggest car division since 1956 after early training at Cadillac. Now 51, lie long has been regarded as a serious contender for bigger tilings. Knudsen, son of former (^M president William S. Knudsen, moved strongly into the picture with die resurgence of- Pontiac. He is 48. v Several other qualified candidates also are In the GM wings including P h 111 p J. Monaghan. 46, head of the process development and manufacturing staffs, and James M. Roche, 64, former boos of Cadillac and now head of GM’s dealer and distribution operations With Newberg out and other executives admittedly still being investigated for similar conflicts of interest, toe Chrysler picture re- cl THE GIRLS mm and a lieutenant colonel in 'the Air Forc^Afsee going to work at Ford in 1945. * ' He became controller of toe company in 1940, vice president aad general manager of Ford division in 1965 and a member of the board in 1957 when he moved up to his presentjob. AT AMERICAN MOTORS Reports, steadily denied, also circulate in Detroit of impending executive changes at American Motors. President George Romney has been said to have political ambitions. Romney says it isn't so. By Franklin Folger BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By Edgnr Martin t-aoi A tenpin THE BERRYS WITH WEBSTEE5 dictionary | IN MY HANO. I By Carl Grubert [SHE SMDTHATS just) ONE MANS OPINON/jf* Dixie Dugan d after it dries to an even haze, you simply wipe with a soft d your floors stay*beautiful for months;” Q. We ham a aine mouth-old, White guinea pig. Hu* da we bathe tt aad keep It clean? Lucille Randy at BUMug. Mont. A. We all know how modi these animals have contributed to ad via experiments and research, but did you also know your pet is knows aa a ”eavy" among breeders? ' Varieties of guinea pigs have such fanciful names as Longhaired Peruvians, Agoutis, Himalayan*, Abyssinians, etc. A guinea pig by tttse, or other names, will not smell sweet without some attention from the owner. Frequent grooming with a brush, ci—npig the penence a week and regular dhange of cedar shavings or sawdust should eliminate the necessity of bathing. However, if you led ablutions are in order, you can proceed with confidence. Use a good dog shampoo, rinse, and dry your guinea pig well. It wont hurt him at ail. Detroit's WWJ Radio Station Has 40th Anniversary DETROIT IP—Forty years ago today the few Detroit-area residents who owned radio receiving; sets waited eagerly for radio station WWJ to begin a scheduled! musical program. ♦ ★ ★ The program, beamed out by a 20-watt transmitter from an improvised studio on the second floor of the Detroit News Building, was the satten’s first- broadcast from ■ commercial radio station. WWJ celebrates its loth anniversary In a modern five-story building. Us 5,000-watt transmitter now serves 1,808,00# radio homes In Metropolitan Detroit and Southeastern Michigan. When WWJ began operations in 1900. the government hadn’t start-,ed issuing licenses for commer- j —-end radio stations. So the station obtained a special license from the Commerce Department. * * * The musical programs continued for 1 days. Then on Aug. 31, the station took iuivantage of an election and broadcast the world’s first radio newscast. The program covered local, state and congressional returns plus general news bulle- BOARDING ROUSE RELAY.AMOS,THE Hill' , ■I COLLECTOR WEMTTHA-r-i AWAY/YOU remember MV ’ COUSIN EMMA,the WOMEN‘S WEIGHT-LIFTING CHAMftOhJ of Pumpkin county/wbll, ■SHE 3UST BROKE HER RgCORo] 0UT STRAINED HER BACK / EMMA WANTS ME TO COOK FOR HER FARMHANDS UNTIL.] THE KlNKS LEAVE ‘ --jARTHA GETS Restless once aysaR -, OUT OUR WAY By McEvoy and Strieber By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Toner THUCK NANCY HERE COMES THE BULLY OF MAPLE STREET AND HERE COMES THE BULLY OF OAK ,STREET ra By Ernie BushiqiUer DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney SyDidt CevaDI \<28m mm By Chari— Knhn I ^.AN* FUMWATR I— —I ' mrwwjji/jMi *' - THE PONTIAC PRESS SEVENXEElT lAJiUROAY, AUGUST ao, HKio POyTIAC, MICHIGAN, Your Neighbor’s Hduae Ernest Browns Chose Chandler Estates white. The room at the south belongs to the Smith’s son, Earl. His floor, like all the bedroom floors, is polished oak. Walls are pale gold: Draperies are sandalwood with a gold thread in them. The furniture is pine. There’s a bookcase headboard. Earl made the wall rock that hokH 'his gun collection. By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Rome Editor You'd never khow this was anything but a ranch home that is, from the front of the house*. But the Ernest Brown home on Phillips street in Char* Mer Estates is an interesting version of a tri-level. 2 Just a year ago in June the frowns moved into their new home. Mrs, Brown is a teacher and moving day came the day after school dosed. The Browns have a son living at home and i, married daughter. The latter with i her own small daughter was on hand the day w# took .tfdufcs. . We went in die kitchen door. This is a large square room with plenty of space for the round plastic-topped “maple” table. Matching maple' chairs have coral cushions/ This house was built by Nosan Builders of Detroit. The exterior had buff brick on the front with cedar shakes on the sides. The Browns built their own garage after they moved in. Their lot is 60 by 175 feet. ' Back up Into the living room. In here there is sandalwood textured carpeting on the floor. In front of the stairs leading to the balcony, level is a handsome hooked- rug. LIGHTER WALLS * Walls are a lighter sandalwood. Draperies at the three front windows are pale beige with aqua, gold and a bit of rose in them.' At the far end of the room a brown, gold and aqua chintz. Painted louvers that rcgek almost to the ceiling behind the" chintz chair close off the vestibule On the opposite side is a - Just beyond the kitchen is the door to the lower level. We stand corrected; it’s a half door. Six steps down is a recreation room with beige tile floor and green walls. The Browns entertain down here and have a drop leaf table and chain under fine window. The green sofa' and chair are STAIRS The stairs to the bedroom level are carpeted. There is a brass sunburst clock on the stair wall, a planter below the railing. The room right at the top of WELCOME GUEST — Mrs. Brown looks forward to the days when her daughter comes for a visit with young Janet Ardelran. Here Grandma and Janet are relaxing in the recreation room. The ^cement block walls down heir are painted green. The floor is beige tile. The upholstered furniture is dark green. Here's the Answer lightly with sandpaper or steel wool. Or you can use .one of the' undercoaters made especially for this purpose. Wax can be removed by rubbing the Woodwork with a doth saturated in turpentine or a commercial wax-removing preparation. QUESTION: We have to replace the screens in our house and are thinking of getting aluminum screening this time. However, we aren’t sure we like the bright, silvery type. Does aluminum screening come in colors? ANSWER: A new process IN CHANDLER ESTATES — The Ernest Browns live in this tri-levd home on Phillips street. Built by Nosan Builders of Detroit, this house has the tup and bottom level at the rear. The PmtlM Preii FhcUt h; Phil W«M front is buff brick., Cedar shakes are used on .the. sides. The Browns’ lot is 60x118 feet. QUESTION: The Sidewalk in front of our house has several^ very narrow cracks. I read In a book on home repair that when repairing small cracks in the walk, grout may be used, but it doesn't say what grout is or how to mix it. Can ylu help me? ANSWER: Grout Is a term’ used* to designate a Portland cement mixture which fa very watery. Generally, such a mixture contains nothing, except the ce- QUEST10N: I am going to repaint our living room. The last time I did it. about four years ago, I put flat paint on the walls and enamel on the woodwork, but this time I intend to paint everything with the same wall paint. Can I put it on right over the enable2, or do 1 have to take, the enamel off with paint remover? The woodwork is in good condition. with no chipping or scaling as far as I can see. ANSWER: Yen ran paint directly over the woodwork provided that K has loot the gtooo M originally had and provided that it does not have a covering of wsx on H. If the gloss is -still present, it m"St he etif down toe rubbing and no gravel. Merely ndx until the mixture to similar to The grout is then smoothed into the cracks, which should be sprinkled with Water a couple of times a day for three or four days. This will work only with hairline cracks where a sand or concrete mix can not be used effectively. For a better and more permanent repair, the cracks should be enlarged with a cold chisel and a hammer — and the openings filled with a mixture of one part of Portland . cement to 2% parts of clean sand, with enough water to make the 'mixture workable but '•not loose. ’.......;~ MlRRORED VIEW «- This full length mirror on the bedroom door shows a part of. the room itself. This bedroom is done in shades of aqua. Alt ^pdroom doors arc natural polished oak. SLOPING CEILING — The ceilings in both living room and kitchen slope from back to front because of the tfi-ievel nature of this house. All the new furniture the Browns bought to go in their ni?w home is Early American. Carpeting and walls are sandalwood color. The draperies are pale beige with aqua, gold and a little rose in the design. The sofa is brown. balcony is one of two gold swivel rockers. At the extreme Ml at this picturkyou can sde Just a bit of the louvered wall that closet off ^he front entrance. I | ( / BALCONY BEDROOMS — In the Brown home the bedrooms an on a balcony above the living room^ This open are? makes ,the living room, seen! much larger. A graceful wrought iron railing to used up the stairs arid across the upper Ifivel. Below the EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC frAESg, SATURDAY, AUGUST Half Grt Homos ' Approximately one has been built fop ever) bom in lit U S. since Igarages OTTAWA HILLS One of Pontiac’s finest at a Sacrifice Price. 4 year old brick on two tots, screened porch, patio and a recreation room you would dream about with adjoining • <> bath. All custom features throughout. If you have a good land contract dr smaller free and clear«home we can dp business. Y^TY SETTLE FOR LESS. VOOKHEI8 TO NAVAJO 4# *B6PERTY V 1st fifmmA in NOVEMBER NO MONEY DOWN—5 YEARS TO PAY Stt Our Models Now on Display expert cement work AH Types £ UL 0GB GARAGES ill 100% GUARANTEED ___Ws Abe Be IsaetlM MiStndiatlw Werlt— e ATTICS • EEC. BOOMS • ADDITIONS • PORCHES • BBEEZ1WATS B-26 Statistics There an eight rooms (three bedrooms with a possible fourth) in this spilt-level design based on the average of aO homes .erected .last year with FHA mortgage insurance. That average p 1,095 sq. ft, the exact area of living fend bedroom levels of B-36. The house has an entrance foyer, family room, Two full baths and basement. Overall dtniensJbns are SPIT’ in width, including attached garage, by 24T' in depth. DIXIE GARAGE BUILDERS 5744 Hif hland Rd. REALTY Copper Tubing Gains in Drainage Systems ■foyer level SERVICE, Inc. home drainage systems is reported by a leading manufacturer despite j obsolete codes that still prevent its general use in many cities. An estimated 34,000,000 pounds of copper tube were used last year for waste, vent and soil pipes which is approximately double the BUILD BEFORE WINTER and SPHALT FLOOR PLANS — Grade-level bonus rooms set the home apart from the average on which It’s based- Note five separate entries, each contributing to excellent traffic circulation. Split Level Provides Bonus tor 'Avera' Home facing at the front of the lower levels. The dimensions are 59’11” in width by 24*8" in depth. B-36 lends itself admirably- to possible use las a professional home. A grade-level room (which may be used as office, dm, guest room or fourth bedroom) opens directly off die reception foyer and ia convenient to the downstairs bath. The family rams Is oonvenient* ly located at grade level, with Its owe big outdeer-Uvtag (er-race. The breakfast balcony, overlooking the family room, ‘ By DAVID L. BOWEN A cold national statistic provided the dm specification for this eight-room split-level, but almost everything Mae is dig result of pure architectural inspiration' jThe size of living And bedroom levels is LOSS square feet—exactly matching the average square footage Of all home built last year under the mortgage insurance program of the Federal Housing Administration. . Because of die economy of split-level construction — under whirti half of what is normally basement area is converted into usable grade level space — B-36 in the House of the Week series adds 513 sq. ft. of cheap bonus space to the national average figure. vising codes to provide homeowners the opportunity of using light- weight copprt- tube for drainage lines has kept the increase in use from befog greater than it is. New York, Chicago, st. Louis, Boston, • ADDITIONS • GARAGES • SIDING. . • BASEMENT V • ATTIC ROOMS ROOMS • BATHROOMS # KITCHENS • PORCHES • ALTERATIONS • RECREATION • COMBINATION . ROOMS WINDOWS |Ln NO MOHU DOWN... 5 TEARS TO PAT H EAST FHA TEEMS sr BANK LOANS Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Milwaukee are among the cities where code revisions are needed On the other hand, codes have hem modernized in moat other'major building markets and copper drainage is also available in many suburbs operating under a focal, country STORAGE for Informal aettvidea. Another mg outdoor living area— a combined porch and terrace-serve# tbs living level. For convenience in serving outdoor meals, access to the porch is direct from the dining room. The room arrangement promotes excellent circulation of traffic. From either the entrance foyer or the mudroam entry, you can readily reach any part at the house without invading the rooms that may be in uee. The kitchen door— a must in the minds of many housewives—alio plays a. strategic role in the trouble-free traffic flow. wood are easily glued. Use reasonable care in making sure the fofote fit properly and apply the right glue for the Job* Nails or brads will strengthen the--Joint, which should be clamped firmly until the glue acts. Over 28 Years in Pontiac built under FHA regulation last year had more than one bath," reports Architect Rudolph A. Matern, who designed B-36. “This reflects* the growing importance of the second bath to American no.l specialist in packing! END of SEASON LUXURY FEATURES A number at other interior design features provide touches of luxury) seldom found in such an economical house. The reception, foyer, for example, is an impressive 10 by) 11 feet. Aa unusual corner fireplace design dominates the glamorous CUSTOM SEAL (Please Prtat) UNMATCHED YEAR-AFTER-YEAR! OVER 80 MODELS, SIZES, STYLIS GaH far FREE EsHbmIm! —- ATTICS—TORCHES NO PAYMENTS UNTIL OCTOBER SCREENED COMPLETELY IncM* Cl FRAME — BLOCK - BRICK Regardless of your choice. GREAT LAKES' iron-clod Guarantee of your compile satisfaction covers every garage we build. 1 OR 4-0418 MID-STATES AWNING MFG„ IRC. HONE: PE 4-0994 FE 4-0995 3152 W. Haros SI. Jot 4 HissMk lab 14 Drayton Plains, Michigaji Up! NO MONEY DOWN, 5 YEARS TO PAY : 1 as. j)B 1 1 ; s tilfii IQ |ajl , . r. t. Ulj THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST NINETEEN Hitching Post Holds Sign far WEINBERGER BUY OF THE YEAR! 1AM S+ ft. J~S ' I M IwiNt Iwdi PrWf. e«y; . . The hitching post, with Mine plate, Is a do-it-yourself project originally suggested by homecraft specialists of Thor Power Tool Company's SpeedWay Division for term and summer cottage owners. IJONIW HOMES Avoid bruised lingers when driv-big small nails by wedging tacks or brads between the teeth o! a comb. This way you can place dach nail exactly where you want It on the wood, and once it’s started, Just remove the comb and drive it in. DONE , ns. 1920 SQUARE FEET!! conversation piece. The hitching post can be expertly fashioned from 4-inch cedar posts with one of the portable pay- RIGHT WAV to get cumbersome ladder from horizontal to where you want it is shown above. 1. After bracing footed ladder against wall, lift top usings. X ‘‘Walk” the ladder up in the air rung by rung. 3. After ladder Is against house, pull foot away from wall to about a quarter of ladder’s length. er saws designed for homecraft use. Though size o'f the hitching post should be in proportion to the size of lawn and home, SpeedWay craftsmen have found a height of 38 inches (with another 6 inches hewned for insertion in the ground) and overall width of 35 inches generally acceptable. For lasting strength, the posts should be mortised or notched the depth at the crossbar, and the ends of this center post sawed to font) a fitting tenon. After the three posts are joined, drill a tt-inch hole, through each mortise-tenon! joint and hammer in dowel rods to lock posts in position. The sign, which can be cut any [ shape desired with a jig saw, is fastened by a chain looped over | on Home Improvement and Modernization Needs! • ROOFING • SIDING • • BASEMENTS INSTALLED • • RECREATION ROOMS • PORCHES • ' • GARAGES • ADDITIONS • • BREEZEWAYS • House Ladder Only as Safe as Person Climbing It Was hing windows, painting, cleaning the gutters, putting up screens all have one thing in common. They’re jobs that can’t be done completely while standing on the ground. Unless you’re ready and able to hire someone to do all these jobs, better master the fundamentals of handling a ladder safely. START RIGHT Begin by getting a good ladder. This is no time to hunt for a bargain. Get one with sturdy rails and a good spread between them, heavy rings, rustproof hardware. and start walking toward the up as you go. When the ladder is house, raising the ladder straight against the house, move the bottom of it away from the wall. Hie distance should be about a fourth of the ladder’s height. Too great an angle and the ladder might break, too close to the wall and it might tip. As you work you may have to Get back oa the ground and eaoe the ladder away from the wall so that you move the top a foot or two. Then move the bottom the same distance. Make certain the base of the ladder is always on firm, level ground. A board or a sandbag should be used under the ladder otherwise. If the ladder is metal make certain that there are rubber tips on the ends of the side rails. Face the ladder when climbing ^ ■■■ Eves, or Seadeyt OR 1-2270 2255 E. WALTON cor. OFDYKE LOWEST PRICES Ws Ever Offered brackets. , Keep it away from moisture which could cause warping. Protect the wood with clear varnish. f/* In Bsaatifsl Watkins Hills t*TlAC> “The Builder that Makes a House, A HOME” W. W. ROSS HOMES, lac. OR 3-8021 Never paint a- ladder since the paint might conceal cracking in the wood. Learn to cany a. ladder so that yan don't strata a muscle er drag the ladder over a cement mmmrnmm&mimBmsm I Complete 1 Modernization I Service the petit at which It balances, and heist H Ip on one shoulder. Raise a ladder by bracing the foot of it against the house foundation and laying it flat on the pound. The ladder should be at right angles to the wall. START AT TOP Grab the top rung and lift the ladder. Then grab the next rung Avoid ladder climbing on Windy! days. And if you have a metal ladder, watch out for overhead wires. Safety Experts Advise Stripes on the Stairs They say most accidents occur in the home. One way to cut down the casualty rate is to take care of those treacherous basement stairs. Paint the top and bottom steps in orange and black, yellow and black, or black and white stripes. ♦ ★ * First paint the entire step the light color. When paint has dried, put on self-adhering, masking tape in a striped pattern and paint die exposed area black, when this has dried, strip off the tape and there are die stripes. HEATING EQUIPMENT. ewIineemd res letter Living” ROOM x ADDITIONS GARAGES PORCH ENCLOSURES ALUMINUM SIDING KITCHENS AWNINGS STORM DOORS STORM WINDOWS ATTICS 'ROOFING RECREATION ROOMS FUSTIC SIDING SLIDING GLASS WALLS PATIOS WITH A 12 FOOT FEDERAL MODERNIZATION STARTER ADDITION Includes: •PLANS You will find that a Crane powder room will bring yon new convenience—relieve bathroom congestion—add to your joy of living. Illustrated hem are the NmUp lavatory aad toilet—two of the many fixtures ia the complete Qate line. Drop in aad talk over your remodeling with us. We can give you prompt service—furnish you with newly styled, highest quality Craae fixtures, aad assure you the best values ia plumbing. Prime Undersides err ALL THE FACTS FROM To assure a long-lasting paint job on new wooden porch floors, paint the underside and edges of die wood with a good primer before the flooring is laid but after it is sawed to proper length. This will prevent moisture from entering the wood and causing the topcoat of tough popch paint to peel and Mister. Following the instructions on the dan label for the proper {Miming to use on exposed surfaces be-Ifore applying the top coats. Evaatagt and Sundays CALL MA 6-6247 FE 3-7195 Fabulous Value I Take this opportunity to provide more Jiving space for your family—the heavy, difficult and unpleasant work we will do... And you can finish your new room ot a tremendous saving! Now Model in Pontiac Knolls Moves Vets In FHA Only <150 Down •lend Oaiy Price *12/100 FOR FREE HOME ■ ESTIMATE 3 Bedrooms • Full Basement Gos Hoot • Brick Front • Large Kitchen FHA TERMS CELL R 3-7033 BET M RIGHT THE BATHROOM CAPACITY OF YOUR HOME! TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 Wood Paneling Will Add Design, Beauty Room turn electric CM 3-6234 ' MU 4.1223 CONTRACTOR Asphalt Shingles Are Popular, Sturdy Asphalt shingleg are the most To Romovt Whit* Spots The design interest such arrangement* provide also simplify the LIVING ROOM UV>HV shingies can be applied on roofs with as Uttle as two Inches of pitch and have a life expectancy of 20 years. They are available in 'a wide range of colors and gre fife resistant. They are not wind-resistant, although wind-resistant appli- Last Chaise! awee tWiotor FOR SUMMER DISCOUNT TRICES On Coni. Our Stocks Am Now Complete Free Parbiag MM to Oar Office CUSTOM BUILT changed to violet, blege or any other hoe In the spectrum simply by tinting the finish with oils. When wood panelling is properly BLOCK • BRICK • FRAME BUILDERS OF. FINE GARAGES 7722 Austoro, Waterford PEDY’S SPECIAL! All Aluminum 20 x 20 2-CAR GARAGE TWO-BATHS and a lavatory near the Idtchen- are offered by this tightly designed three-bedroom house. Cellar stair, garage and service entrance are grouped for easy access. This is Plan Y2SAP7194 by Herman H. York, Architect, 90-04 161st St., Jamaica 32, N. Y. It contains 1,576 square feet of habitable area. Stepped Deck Will Replace Old Porch House Paint Won't Do ! Don’t use left-over house paint ■ to paint your outdoor furniture, jj Many house paints are designed to|B chalk gradually, making them self- J cleaning as the chalk washes away 5 with the rain and carries the dirt 5 with it. But the chalk will also ■ rub off on clothing if you sit on it. ■ Use, instead, a colorful, long-last- J| ing exterior enamel on your out- 5 door furniture. &i We Will Assist You In Obtaining Your GAS PERMIT IVi CAR GARAGE cSL’TSZ. *574oo 2-CAR GARAGI BSS- $72000 4 fads Painting Problems • Insulated fated Eaamol Siding and Trim • Absolutely Mo Wood fxposod to llio Weather > O First Offering of Ibo "Carago of tbo Fntnro" Getting tired of the old back porch? Then here’s a way to make it an exciting part of your home. Tear out the old porch and in Pontiac Electric Supply Co. 343T W. Huron at Elisabeth Lako Rd., Pontiac its' sfead build a lovely, attractive stepped up wood deck made of 2x4s laid on edge. Build one deck of edge-laid 2x4s at the level of your Bouse floor. It can be of any size, but probably one of six-by-ten feet would be adequate. Then, build wide steps around two or three sides of the deck, stepping down to the yard at normal stair depth. AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. The effect is to create a stunning entry to your home, whether it is to the front door or the back door. Douglas fir is a good wood for such installations becauise It is hard and will wear for many years. The 2x4s should be spaced slightly to allow water to ran through and the decks may be stained or painted with deck paint or left to weather to a silver grey. TBS Orchard Lake Are. FE 2-9124 A TRI-LEVEL WITH 1400 SQ. FT. OF LIVING AREA ALUMINUM SIDING aid PRE CAST STONE MOVES VOtf lift PRICED FROM e 3 OR 4 BEDROOMS FHA TERMS e FINISHED RECREATION ROOM INCLUDED IN PURCHASE e BUILT-IN OVEN AND RANGE e SEPARATE DINING call for Free estimates ■ SALES BY J. W. MIIRPHV S ASSOCIATES MoM Mon* OR 3-4911 9 Modtls open daily and Sunday from 12 Noon to 8 p.m. MOVES YOU Irtl CONSTRUCTION CO. 92 W. Heron HOMES FOR AMERICANS TWENTY-O&B THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 Prepare New Brush New brushe* that are to be used In oO or alkyd paints should be conditioned by soaking in llnffd The sunshiny tints of Southern I ground lor copper lamps and ap-Pine paneling make an ideal back-jpUances. Try a Colored Ceiling and Light Neutral Walls tp you’re looking for some variety in borne decoration, try a colored celling and white or very light neutral walla. This scheme can turn a comparatively dull room into an exciting one. ♦ ★ 0 The walls highlight the furnishings. which may in themselves be on the subdued side, while the ceiling becomes a bright and unifying accent note. The ceiling color should “pick up’’ the general color scheme of the furnishings but not necessarily harmonize with it. FURNACES VACUUM CLEANED Gas Heating Lux-Aire—Muller Supreme—Excell MOERY'S FE 2-4970 FRED W. MOOTE, Inc. Electrical Contractor • INDUSTRIAL • COMMERCIAL • SERVICE Otw 25 Tears is Pontiac Stole and City Ikeased 845 W. Huron St. Ft 2-3924 — FI 2-4001 Factory Installed See This Amazing Softener Today at 9. E STANTON Heads? and Plumbing Contractor 103 State FE S-1183 designs can be made from ordinary stock lumber and the species that come from the western pine region are particularly good because they arc economical and easy to work. HANDSOME SIMPLICITY — This simple sun screen in an egg crate pattern not only shades a front entrance but also lends privacy and architectural interest to a home. This and other Custom Styled Homes in Clarkston Meadows _ Ellis Msdsraizcn Since 194S LOWEST PRICES FREE ESTIMATES FE 2-2*71 crisis Ml *4188 Additions. Porches. Garages. Etc. Ordinary Lumber Helps Creative Home-Owner Prevents Splintering Firm support under a fir plywood panel will help prevent splintering while sawing or drilling. If you use a brace and bit, reverse the sheet when point, ap' , pears through the sheet and complete the hole from the back. When the exterior of a house cret often lies in the ingenious use lacks architectural interest or charm, many home-owners inject individuality through use of color or attractive planting. However, the Western Pine Association suggests another way to transform a house and that is by using lumber to dress it up. Ideas can be as siidple or elaborate as the individual wishes to make them. However, the real se-of stock lumber. Such items as two-by-fours, and ordinary boards of average thickness can be used to create handsome sun shades and screens, yard dividers, patio decks, fences, and decorative trim for the house itself. shades and screens can be used together almost anywhere around! the outside of a home. Some of the best kinds of wood tor this type of project are the] economical species from the western pine region. See tbe Fabu/ou* LAKE-RIDGE COLONIAL • lotus Lake Privilege* • 4 Bedroom*. 2 Bath* • 1750 Square Foot • Attached Garage BI-LEVEL—TRI-UEVEL OR COLONIAL RANCH MODELS Featuring Suburban Living . . . With Downtown Convenience . . . Sidewalk* to Village Shopping . . . C hurches . . . School* . . . Paved Street . . . '/, Ace Let* . . . Stream Frontage . . . Gae Baseboard Heat JUST S MINUTES FROM INTERCHANGE OF NEW CHRYSLER EXPRESSWAY Spatter Paint Your Floor for Colorful Effect For a colorful floor which requires little upkeep, try a spatter finish. First give the floor a colorful coat of floor enamel. After this has dried, dip the brush in the color you want to spatter. Hold the brush in your right hand and strike the metal ferrule against a stick held in your left. 'THE CEDARHURST' 24 x 28 Cerpari Optional Delivered To Your Lot Includes lot. Featuring up to 1800 square feet of living area, 2 fireplaces, gas hot water baseboard heat. JOHN W. 8TOPPERT — BUILDER — SALES BY CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE, Inc 5904 S. Main St. — Clarkston Model Phone MA 5-1721 MA 5- Take M-15 to Sto Clarkston. turn tel to Holcomb, turn I follow Holcomb to Starting with the front entrance, for example, a sun shade can shelter tne doorway from direct; s u n 1 i g n t and support flowering vines or bushes that tend to soften | the lines of a house. This might be designed in a louvered pattern with the louvers set against the strongest rays of the sun, or it might utilize an egg crate design. * ★ ★ A sun screen can do much the same thing at the front door but, since a screen is mounted vertically, its role is not so much to provide shade as to lend privacy to the interior or, from the inside of the house, to block the view of ! the street Naturally, of course, iftl block light and For small spatters hold the brush i a foot from the floor and strike gently. For large spatters, fill toe brush fully and hold the stick three feet above toe floor. Use as many colors as you like. SWIFT^tHOMES Houseman - Spitzley velopers el Over IN S«MWt*Jeea Lore to Make the WIFE HAPPY? COMPLETE BUILDING SERVICE • Garages • Alum. Storm Windows, Doors • Breezeways • Asbestos aad Alum. Sidiag • Driveways • Roofing • Porches Eadosod • Concrete Work • Attics • Room Addition Come in today and let our trained experts help you select the style and the design that best and the design that best suits your home, needs and budget IF IT'S BUILT BY G & M IT HAS TO BE GOOD FREE ESTIMATES Woatharproof Pre-Cast Modernise Your Home with Operator on Duty 24 Hourt a Day t Permanent a Beautiful Colors to Choose from HEAVY GAUGE 600 SQ. FT. 0 No Painting # No Pealing a No Chipping a No Rusting FREE With Each Egfimata! Portable Car Air Conditioner Unit for Family Driving Comfort. • UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY - ERE? ESTIMATES! > Additions 9 Boilings > Cement Work 9 Insulation > Kitchens 9 Awnings > Store Front 9 Insulated Vertical Redwood > Storm Windows Aluminum Siding FE 2-9421 2260 Dixie Hwy.-North of Telegraph PROTECTS children pets and property NO MONEY DOWN ^ twbnty7tWo THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 Ashes usually Most out of er-jcsns with sand or gravel- 1 dinary uk trays when yon ase the tides and bottom of the can than on the porch or patk). You with colorful enamel that foes can make windproof ash trays bylwith the rest of your outdoor fur-ng large fruit Juicej niture. REUPHOLSTERING Save up to 00% on Bolt End Materials CHAIR FROM $39 50 SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR ABSOLUTELY NO COST! CALL NOW!!! FE 2-7567 Your Problem May Be Here the Plumbing - Heating • Cooling Ion Bureau brings quea- GET RID OF EXPENSIVE OUTMODED'HEATING UNITS Promise yourself a winter with low fuel bills. Call us now. Let us modernize your heating system. Our rates are very low, our experts work fast and leave no mess behind. SEE us for your GAS PERMIT! We can do it for you Coma in Now and Salact Your Heating Unit - Sava! WHOLESALE TO ALL! NO DOWN PAYMENT FIRST PAYMENT NOVEMBER 1960 Both OIL and GAS ------THESE FAMOUS BRANDS------- GENERAL ELECTRIC, COLEMAN, ARMSTRONG MONOGRAM GOODWILL Aitouatie Healing 3401 WEST HURON FE 8-0484 IS IT THE FOUTf — The LaVeme Sallees of 556 East Beverly have been told that they have the first permanent cement swimming pdbl to be installed in the city of Pontiac. Measuring 14x28 feet with an 8x12 L. the pool goes from 24 inches to Vk feet. lira. Sallee (she’s at the right on the chaise longue) says the family has enjoyed the pool but would like it better with some wanner weather. Drayton Cement and Pool, Inc. did the installation. Information tions from bousehoiert pertaining to the care and operation of the mechanical equipment in the home. QUESTION. I have a radiant heating system with pipe coils in the floor. Can this system be used for cooling, that is, can I circulate arid water from a water chiller through the piping and In this way cool the rooms? ANSWER. No, this would not be practical in moat sections of the United States due to the humidity problem in hot weather. In the Southwestern states where the ^humidity is low in the summer, your work out. However, in Create Family Center in Basement Young American families are spending several hundred million dollars a year on the moderniza-of basements that serve as recreation rooms and hobby rooms as well as work areas for the distaff side of the family. This is the estimate of Joseph C Ekkers, manager of (he home improvement financing department of Universal C.I.T. Credit Corporation. one of the nation’s largest consumer credit organizations. The young couples, according to Mr. Ekkers, are finding that there is no better investment when modernizing an older house than the creation of a family room that can lighten Mother’s housekeeping chores, provide a home workshop Center for Dad, a safe play place for the small fry in the family and a party center lor the teenagers. When planning such home modernisation, Mr. Ekkers advises getting professional planning on the lay-out In order to make the most of space and also to work out au economical plan. By nil means have a budget, he says, and make every effort to stick to it as elssely as possible. Storage space is important in such a room, and there should be closets for , outdoor winter wear, sports equipment and summer lawn furniture. A soft drink counter will delight the teen-agers and young children alike and can easily be installed in one corner of the room. As a space saver consider “mural” television and stereo-hi-fi. All such recreational units can be placed one wall, thus saving a considerable amount of floor space. A lavatory should be placed If the room Is large enough the distaff side of the family should have her own corner, where she can sew and attend to household records while listening to radio or hi-fi music. that the children cun reach it easily from the yard. An indoor barbecue will be another popular and practical feature of such a room, particularly for winter use. Provision should be made for cooking utensils and serving dishes near the ‘ barbecue. Enough floor should be let free for dancing; furniture should be sturdy, practical and cosily moved, sod there should he folding card tables aad chain for special occasions. If other home modernization is planned, such as a new heating plant or air conditioning, it would be well to consider this with the family room modernization as these improvements could be financed in a single package, according to Mr. Ekkers. • Many lumber dealers maintain ’one-stop home modernization centers” that can handle all details of a basement renovation from the blue print stage through completion of the project. Better Get Help With Roof Gutters There are many jobs around the house you* can do successfully.! few homemakers are equipped to put on roof gutters so they do! 100 per cent job. There are sev-j eral reasons for this. is hard for the weekend j handyman to install roof gutters with the proper slope so the water will flow to the downspout—not |tpo much slope so the root looks crooked, nor too little slope so the water stands in puddles to rust out the gutter before its time, j What to do? You can get skilled, inexpensive service installing your gutters from your local sheet) metal contractor. He’s listed in the telephone book. He'U be gladi to inspect your house, give you aj free estimate on supplying and correctly installing a complete roof drainage system, says the! Roof Drainage Manufacturers Institute. AND FIRST TIME EVER AT THIS NEW LOW PRICE. *2,950 Down 30-YEAR FHA TERMS w; BoomU V CTj — IjVINCitbOU (SxBAofc • 2-Car Finished Cange • Lar,e Country Kitchen with Inilt-in Snack Bar and China Cupboard • 4 Badreenn — 1 V* laths • 8-Feat Sliding Class Deer te Future Petie • Perimeter Cat Heating • Blacktop leads. Community Water this Breathtaking 72-Foot Wide 4-Bedroom Colonial Ranch Home in Beautiful CHAPEL HILL ESTATES If desired. 4th bedroom can become part of a spacious I Ix20-ft. family dining room. The master bedroom in this superb 4-bedroom all-brick home has huge wall-to-Wall wardrobe closets. Covered front porch, large brick planter in living room. Luxurious kitchen cabinets, finished like fine furniture. OTHER HOMES WITH 3 AMD 4 BEDROOMS, 2 AND VA BATHS FRED BLACKWOOD CO. men dally if te t NS. dally end Pun.. 1820 S. Woodward T s150°° Down Payment Incoming mail at the office of big contractor install a special type of mixing valve in the wattr to the tank. This vatv* wfB pennf* a certain amount of heated water to mix with the cold water. Another thing you can do ia to replace the doaet combination by a unit having a tank within a tank which provide* insulation to prevent condensation an the outer has led bU other countries In the production of nickel since 1806. other states, where the is high, there would be condense-lion on the cool floor which would be very undesirable. QUESTION. I am annoyed by the! drip from the water doaet tank during humid weather. What can do to prevent this? ANSWER. There are two things you can do. You can have a plumb- ALUM. SIDING JOE VALIELY OL 1-6623 011-919! PONTIAC Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPER 2 South Cass. FE 3-7129 | Decor for your home professional work-mo nshiraond council Cli Jfcke your h o iti ^Exceptional for it%w a r m t h, charm and choice of colors. Interior Painting Wallpapering Exterior Painting featuring LIFETIME WARRANTY * ECONOMY » COMFORT ,* EFFICIENCY Call vs new for an estimate - FHA Approved - l W. KENT PAINTING and DECORATING CUSTOM PAINTING Hsm FI 14471 Heating end Sheet Metal Contractor 351 N. Paddock Stint FE 5-6973 Gas for Space Heating Is Now Available CALL FOR INFORMATION Dowaglac Sf III FURNACE PirfQjnjiqjPUPiinijQj^sri (1 MODEL LEFT) 3 Bedrooms-Full Basement Aluminum Siding City Water and Sewer | MODEL OPEN SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 1.2:00 NOON TIL 8 P.M. Modal at 4th St., 3 Blocks East of Joslyn WILSON REALTY EM 3-6556 UNIT STEP ALSO CUSTOM RAIUNG For a Step in Beauty CHICK THESE FEATURES: • One-Piece Construction # Permanent Beauty-Ruggsd # FHA Specification # Strong Reinforced Casting # Avoid Messy InsteHafisn Free Estimates — Wb Deliver Anywhere! Safety Tread Jfeducaa Slipping UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE CONCRETE STEP COMPANY 6497 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 3-7715 ! MODEL HOMES Come out and take a look— you will be surprised at the beauty of these custom lake homes. They are set on beautiful wooded rolling hills, with blacktop roads, in a highly restricted subdivision. Each home is exclusive — each home is different. You wouldn’t believe a home could be so strikingly attractive. The Home* That Give So Much— For Such a Low, Low Price When You See Them— You Will Love Them! RIVERDALE fflll.S “Prerequisite for Elegant Living9 THE PONTIAC IrRKSS, ^TUHDAV. AUGUST SO, >960 TWENTr-THRKE [Come Home or Go Broke Congo Talks Set U.N. Worried at Fiery Permier Continues to Widen Breach Cuban Fund Curbs Aimed at Halting Heavy Exodus UNITED NATIONS. N. y. (AP) —The arrival of the diagruntlod Congo delegation paved the way today tor behind acrites talks on the eve of the emergency Security Council session on the worsening crisis. HAVANA (UP!) - The govern-ment Friday announced drastic new currency regulations aimed at forcing most Cubans living abroad to return home and halting the heavy exodus of Cubans fleeing to othbr lands. Delegates awaited Sunday’s Council session with growing anxiety as fiery Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba continued to widen the breach with blackmail charges against Secretary-General ,Dag Hammarskjold and demands for withdrawal of all white troops from the Congo. The regulations would so tighten money, restrictions that it would be virtually impossible for, Cuban nationals to live abroad without foreign bank accounts. Lumumba capped his latest outburst by declaring that he was ready to renounce the services of the U.N. because the Congo “is Delegates of nine African member countries have been confer-in the African nation. Hammarskjold and prompted the angered secretary-general to return to the U.N. last Tuesday to ask the Security Council to endorse his neutrality policy in the Congo. Slnce then attacks on U.N. personnel have increased tension in the afrean nation. Only last month the embassy disclosed it was so deluged with visa applications that applicants must wait nine months for the U.S. entry permits. A Soviet plane carrying the five-man delegation from Congo arrived in New York Friday night after being rerouted to Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, because of bad weather. Vice Premier Antoine Gizenga, heading the delegation, was upset at the change in routing. He and his four aides glumly sat out the lari. 45 minutes of their wait in the silver Ilyushin 18 turboprop plane where they had a three-hour delay. Cubans living abroad on money from home henceforth ean receive only $100 a month tor a maximum of three months, the Cuban Monetary Stabilisation Fund announced. It called on Cubans living abroad who are dependent on money .from home to return to the fatherland. Up to *aew It has been pOaaiMe for OrixuM to sead their dependents abroad aad to forward then $156 a month without nay time Umtt. The meaenra was certain to affect Cuban students. The strict exchange controls followed last week’s government crackdown on travel permits Death Notices 14,000 Vets -Gathering at Coho Hall , KURT ECHARD MILFORD - Service tor Kurt Echard, 18, of 401 E. Liberty St. will be at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home with service and burial Tuesday at Toledo Memorial Park Cemetery, Toledo, Ohio. The youth died Friday at Detroit Memorial Hospital after a lengthy illness. Surviving are his parents Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Echard of To-ltdo, two brothers and a sister. MRS. OSCAR GOODWIN Service for Mrs. Oscar (Elizabeth. S.) Goodwin, 71, of HA Raeburn St., will be held at 1:30 p m. Sunday at the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. Burial will be ip Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Goodwin died Thursday at Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of tour months. A member of the First Church of God, she leaves three son. Doyle of Pontiac, Ralph of St. Louis, Mo. and Otis of Parisville; three grandchildren; a sister and a brother. OXFpRD — Service tor John E. Cooper, 72, of 9 Lakeville Rd., will bt «t 2 pm. tomorrow at die Bossardet-Reid Funeral Home. Mr. Cooper died at his home yesterday. He was a member of the Oxford Methodist Church, and tomber of the American U" a memtx Oxford 1 He is survived by his wife, Emma Jane, a son, John Cooper of Pontiac, and three grandchil- Burlal will' be In RidgeUwn Cemetery, with a Legion graveside service. , TROY—Service for John T. La-Clare, 54, of 114 S. Blvd. E. will be at 3 p.m. Monday at the Price Funeral Home. Mr. LaClare died yesterday In Bloomfield Hospital after an illness of several months. He was a welder for a Warren manufacturing firm. He is survived by his wife, Helen; his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Kueck of Troy; and three sons. Leland, Leon and George, all of Troy. Burial will be at Union Corners Cemetery. STERLING1 TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Helen Breaid, 40 of 2625 Undell St., died yesterday hi Pontiac General Hospital after a two-month illness. . Mrs. Break! was a member cf St. Annes Catholic Church in War- all residents, Cuban and foreign As of next Monday, any resident wishing to leave Cuba, or re-enter it, must have a military pass good only for a year. Hitherto, residents have » been issued travel passes without a time limit. Announcement of the aew currency restrictions, effective Sept. 1. swamped the American embassy with kindreds si new visa Chba* navy. Castro was reported to have had a lengthy conference with revolutionary Havana University student leaders who seized control of the bicentennial institution several weeks age. There was no informa- tion as to the nature of the talks or his present whereabouts. Government propagandists ws-im tmrrr n jt v * cV S^sstSSm 2?siTwo Win VFW Medals tacks on-the American delegation the foreign minister* conference] at San Joae, Coats Rica. Harassed Gl Need Not Pay DETROIT ID-Tlie first of some 14,000 delegates expected for the 61st annual national convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars settled right down to work Friday. The early arrivals attended the annual preconvention ipeeting of government experts from the Veterans Administration. The discussions of veterans’ affairs will continue through Sunday morning. Ooaveatiaa organisers said Friday tost Vice President Richard M. Nixon s wife Pat the convention But details still were lacking on tiie conditional acceptance of Sen. John F. Kennedy to speak at the Tuesday session. An acceptance telegram Thursday said he would be here unless Senate business interferes. A threat that pickets would march at Cobo Hail during the convention vanished Friday a few bqurs after it appeared. The dispute between the United Plant Guard Workers Union and VFW officials wu blamed on a misunderstanding over the use of poiicemen-VFW members to assist the convention’s sergeants- Preters Jury, Ends Up With Lite Sentence (AP)- SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Clarence Franks turned down a seven year prison sentence Friday and wound up with sentence. radio station, meanwhile, reported Castro’s return to Havana from a trip Into toe Interior where he was believed te be heading a purge of dissident elements in Prepare Home for Sleep Babes Lodge Caltndor To sB paid up members of Pm-tiac Aorta No. 1MB Fraternal Order of Ragles. Please be notl-X fled that a vacancy has occurred -. on the Bid, of Irastoas. stoashMe 1 tion will be held Tuesday August » Hid. at t pm. at the Aerie Home, j Albert B. Mallett, Secy. Adv. News in Brief Mother to Bo Tried on Sopf. 19; She Now b Denying Giving Dope j « Burglars attempted to break CLEVELAND. Ohio * ter. Vcnita. 5 - while attorneys Frayrr* Refrigeration gates Co. I prepared to defend their mother reported to Pontiac Police yester- * at a Juvenile Court jury trial |day that a television set was stolen from its store at 588 Orchard * * * ’ [Lake Ave. when thieves entered Criminal charges againat Lillian through «> upstairs window dor- MUtH BETTER THAN ONE — Sculptor Heinrich Husgen. 66. Ins presented his daugiter Doris, 31, an unusual birthday gift each year — a likeness of her. The heads provide a unique Fratautonio will be tried (luring {the week of Sept. 19. Judge Margaret J. Spetiacy made that ruling i Friday when she transferred cus-today of the youngsters to the r'co;‘d of her growth as well as her father's de- , . veiofunrint as an artist. He plana to continue^ the ;Catho,k: Gharitlea Bureau, practice ns long as he is able. U2 Brings Joy to Some; ing the night. An estimated $50 worth ef whisky . and cigarettes was reported stolen -early yesterday morning from the ‘ Perry Friendly Market, 1238 N. Perry St. DETROIT ID - - The high-flying [recognition ay have brought! ! grief, to Francis Gary Powers iii: DENIES ADMISSION '[f Jtbi 29-year-old Mother - charged with ill-treatment of her [daughters.tar secretly giving them overdoses of sleep-inducing drugs which put them into comas lasting: up to 24 hours. h a a | Theft sf aa eight foot sail hsat KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya Mrs jvatantonk), who has tn- from the lake In front of her house .API—The government of Malaya tereroken into last night and an un-that the statement is ^mtru . [determined amount of change was J stolen from a cigarette machine. The VFW’s Gen H. H. Arnold • _ tl _ e ... |Clarence L. Johnson, vice presi- TO LOllOCt Prom ooldior dent of Lockheed Aircraft Corporate individual judged Stnt to UP Mines MILWAUKEE ID - The Army has agreed to drop its attempt to collect some $5,000 for World War II allotments paid to the family of private it sent to work in Michigan copper mines without Army pay, Rep. Henry Reuss D-Wis., said Friday. Reuss formally demanded that the Army withdraw its suit against John J. de Francisco, now a 42-year-old Milwaukee construction worker, after U.S. District Judge Robert E. Tehan halted the government’s prosecution eartier this week and directed a full inquiry be held. have contributed most outstandingly in the field of aviation.” Arnold! [was World War n Air Force chief. [ Text of Powers Plea Short; Shows Pride A year in jail, plus a $300-fine s te the maximum penalty tor the) Would party who boaght ’55 Ford offense, but permanent custody of i Station wagon. Hceny No. OM- volvcd. ... - ..... - Adv. The VFW’s Bernard Baruch news Agency Tass: Gold Medal wUl go to Allen W.| -you have heard all the circumstances pertaining to Dulles for "outstanding service as the case and you are to decide my fate. a diplomat and especially in recognition of his efficient directorship! of the United States Central intel-j ligence Agency which tributed immeasurably to national security and toward more effective unity with our allies.” Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates is to get the VFW’s Americanism Gold Medal award; “in The Army advised Reuss, lid, that it would withdraw the action next week. Its suit tended that while De Francisco was Working in the mines at $4.60 day paid by mine operators, he really was in the ready ,reserve and his four dependents were not eligible tor allotments. Eisenhower Nominates Four From Michigan dent Elsenhower has sent to>fhi, - - PPP - - H P P Senate the following nominations) man who never before had faced a court on any charge for Postmaster In Michigan. - whatsoever and who deeply realizes his guilt. Thank you." Jack S. Paul. Dowagic; Paul A. * it Racheter, Pigeon; Robert E. [ ^ cpQrt, which could have sentenced the Artjericin U2 Smathers Will Head Dem's Dixie Drive Flaherty. Watervielt; Robert C.J Mason. Augusta. Pilot’s Family. Friends Express Feelings WASHINGTON (UP!) - Sen. George A. Smathers of Florid! was named ' Friday to lead the Democratic presidential drive in Dixie. He was chosen at luncheon thrown toy Southern and Border State Senators by Sens. Jahn,F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Relieved Penalty's Not Worse The luncheon, first of three that the party’s national candidates will bold tor their Senate colleagues, was designed to whip up southern support for the Kennedy-Johnson ticket ter attested the gathering, including 8mm. Richard B. Russell aad Herman E. Taltnadge ot Georgia, who have not endorsed toe ticket. Absent, however, were Sens. Harry F. Byrd of Virginia and J. Strom Thurmond, the other tow holdouts among the southerners. Oxford Gunshot Death The district attorney’s office offered Franks, 31, a seven-year „ , «-»_ j tom if he would plead guilty to Victim IS Identified robbery by assault. Franks rejected the offer and the case went before a jury, where Alfonso Garza told of being robbed of hi$ billfold by Franks last Jan- The jury, noting previous convictions for burglary and theft, sentenced Franks .to life. An elderly man found dead of a gunshot wound in Oxford Thursday has been identified as John E. Cooper of 9 Lakeville Rd. Oxford police -reported finding a 12-gauge shotgun by the body when they Mitered Cooper’s home. The dead man’s name was first reported to be William Cooper. Catholic Charities will keepW., »________________i______* in their placement secret, provide Dl** ,n London at Or , !for future medical observation on[ iQwnQN (g^Lord Weeks 69, MOSCOW (AP>—This is the text of Francis Gary Powers ian out-patient haste, and work «Jt IornM.r chairman ot Vickers, Lti.. final plea to his judges Friday, as reported by the 8ovlet with the family the matter of|d(cd Middlesex Hospital ; visitation rights. | after a short illness. He graduate o( Cambridge and cap- ★ ★ ★ “I realize that I have committed a most grave crime and has cotv! deserve punishment. I ask the court to weigh all clrcum- WASHINGTON Uarade Jaaklns end Harthal At- kiaarel Horn* with Rev,__________ officiating. Interment Is Parry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. M-via will Ue la data at the Malrtn a. Sehatt Funeral Bmno. LAMBERT. AUO. IS. 1*80. ARTHUR MspLtMS Pstroble. age 02; be-toted husband of Oreaa Merle-Lambert: dear brother of Joseph end SUe Lambert. Mra. Oertrude Rlchway, Mrs. AnnabaUs Browa and Mrg. laeaors Heins*. Raetts-. Pas .at the Rosary will to held Sunday evading, Aug. 11 stJ p.m. from tht Melrln A Schutt Funeral Homo. maul sartlaa will be held Monday. Alls- 33 at II e.tn. from St. Patrick's Church. White Lake. Interment in st. Ana's Cemetery, Unwood, Michigan. Mr. Lambert will lie In alete at tha Melvin A. Bchutt Funeral Home. FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 from • a.m. to I p.m. be i> The "KTr waa n canoai mo chargta tar that portion at the Oral insertion of th# advartise- eh use bear raw aalaaa through the has cancellation* j be ears to £t I be' tttaa manta containing type atsaa rJ! regular agata _______'cloak noon the lay arartowa to paMlcatlea . ADV K RTISXkS ' ' rha daadllno far enaeatla-Uon af traaataat Want Ada w saw p am tha day af aabUeattaw ar.ar tha firm Insertion. CASH WANT AO RATES Uses l-Dey Moya Mhn J St to $3 08 Nil 1 “ in iw I.W t.to ISO i additional ehsifa « In Memorhim 2 Help Wanted Mala 6 WILFRED BOWEN 7FEO PASSED jnsSrerjrjrsJt •vtae, But^memorls* last UU too end TWELVE MEN IMS to anatot manager to out- ss.’SKfra?-"® TELEPHONE OAMYAaiBRS ^dso^Mo^ JdhJ'iSe ,>Irel^-dleaged white warni as haaaakaapar lar _____ Plus wages. OR MRl 4-41623. o Aval! GRILL COOK WITH SOME COUNT-ar work. Minute Lunch a K. Pika. GIRL FOR GENERAL DRUG I OSTORE L axed el *-wn. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WAHT-ad. Apply In parson. 3M5 Dixie, Five wot. EXPERIENCED Did HWASUAK. CLASSIFICATIONS INDEX ANNOUNCEMENTS Cart af Thsnka . fc.ifcr EMPLOYirairr Help Wanted Mala . .. Help Wanted Female . Help Wanted . .. Employment Agencies . w. dry cleaning plant, apply I wslkagi Claanata, Lake Orieh. i EXPERIENCED WOMAN FOR fountain work. Full tint, day work. Cranbrook Drue. Till West I Mage Road. Birmingham MI EXF.' WAlTRiaS."MUST' BE NEAT Top wageaL Apjrty ^Ui m US IE EXPERIENCED HOGSEK i X PI R for lasarsl and cooking, to Uvt In, ne heavy laundry or cleaning. I^gibgri-afad children.^ for doc- rtgufar job. For information V*1' 1 gaHM| *”_ - j*/ A11*"..??. 8 ,to JL-g "r | EXPERIENCED 8HORT ORDER AUTO BODY PAINTER. ALSO. cook. PhonoMI 4-toto. a-— ->-yii^NTA^«r»Aiar8v»r must have some exparlanea. Excellent^ working conditions, good TOUR WOMEN OVERTWBhTY-one. work In otllcg tall tuna. Filter Quean phone soliciting. JOHHHOH RE8TAU- sajwfc^yLnStti*1 SS; IP YOU CAN SXXL FOR A PACE OH SSgto , $75 TO WATWEEK Inn up to rk to gwe a woafc la ' aptos. Mi Ms while making Mka Mats Clana. Meat appear-- tag man tod woman to offer free gifts to MM-MfiKinpH to run and para HsJM selling tn-fianTkilirnn U atoj. at 4112 W. Walton. Drayton HICIROOM FOR ELDERLY WkrrX WOMAN OR COUPLE TO LIVE IN farm koma atm care for oldorhr man. Utica araa. OUU OR 3-UW. 9 COLLEGE GRAD Man batmans to |fn of .Et-M. learn finance mart. Midwest FSSUau EMU sa“« ay Evelyn Edwards DR'S. RECEPTIONIST ...... 13 Must barn office experience PBjT?l*C*PTt«?NLST ...... U / Must be attractive with good poraonaUty. Bookkeeping ex-perlonee Agtd 23-Up. RECEPTIONI8T ........... • II This to a clamour of flea and needs a glamour gm UrapUve BnUding Service VALL ELY QL MW ALL KINDS CEMENT WORK. Drives, ftoarg, ate. Jensen. FK .LL^TTTO OT UODK-NIE.TIO- san&sriS.“* ggg-^ir.“%sr.iY ADDITtONa. OARAOES. AWN1NOS Fontlae Hama Service. FE 4-HOT- CEMENT WORK OF ALL KINDS. Free eaUmatog. W HW. ___ CEMEWT AND ELOCE~~WORE Keith O. Bto«wart/FijblOT>.. a'STOM CONCRETE WORK TO fl> year nooda. FH MIR_____, _ CUSTOM BDILDINO. RE81DEN-tlal QW. commercial Remodeling DRY WALL TAPINO ANPPINI8H-Ing. Free estimates. PE AdraL )RV-" WALL,' TAPiNO AND PIN-lahlng. free aatlmata.JHI MT31. may be able to duality lor a job that will amble you to earn - —- —i atm retain your strictly f need apply. RECEPTION*. Hospital tab. Type so w Must be naat and altr-ASS T. BOOKKEEPER Must have ear dealership experience. Aged 23 - Up. Type to w.p.m. BOOKKEEPER . .. - • • ...... Ml Aged 22 to to. Must have experlanee ta "Job Costing." hoatlna or plumbbif. Lite nW...................... if Personnel Director aoada rip MM gal. TYPo.Vfl ’ w.p.m., aloatrto typowrKtr; shorthand 09. Af SECRETARY ... Civic offlelal _ Friday.'' Must l. _____ responsible, with good personality. Typing and abort- IandTwUdn^Rag'iln Electric71' 3P34 o/MD MW. ~ _ FREE BSTDiATB ON ALL ELEC- ; ‘SK: MEN reuy in ss ciesa, apply.MTl 4-4011. COOK - BOUSXKXXPER - CARE-TAKER - COUPLE. fuU time for both: Permanent: references For Information Call Mrs. Rally. EOT, II YEARS OLD OR OYER, for kltehen and grill work. Apply at Big Boy Drive Inn. 34M Dixie Hwy. __________ BRAKE MECHANIC EXPE-rlenced on all cars. Must have tools, fli Orchard Laka Rd. DISSATISFIED Employed married men, 23 to 42. wQUng to start at till a week guarantee. Established customers. ?»l Oakland. ORILL COOK. A&W ROOTBEER SERVICES OFFERED BimEk teriaa .............. 13 Building SupMea ./..........!♦ Business lawi -X........... IS Bookkeeping * Tsxst ....... If Droasmudas • Tailoring IT Ogrtoa Flowing .....".-t,....IS mssSM Taa Sorvlca Uundrv Service ... ^Wreaking- SI PsInUng ml Television • upholstering Lost .A Pound....... Hobbles A Supplies .. Mettoeg m Porsonalg . 38: att Wtd. Miscellaneous Wanted to IMA .......... Share Living Quartan . Wtd. Transportation .... Wtd. Contracts. Mtga. .. Rent A Rant A u rsss&i Ms Furnished .. sea Unfurnished EXPERIENCED MECHANIC. A1 Ply toi Elisabeth Lake Road. EXPERIENC part tlma opportunity to earn go^ mcome. lW N. Perry. t:3S FURNACE INSTALLER. EVER in both gas and oil. FE S-34H j HELP!!! . . i Wo need IS good mod who are f willing to train 3 weeks at ea- ! pany expense for a Job that will i < five you a lifetime aeeurtty. For men who arc Mred • of roaming from. Job to Job this to a real j opportunity for men who want steady employment and wtll not have a lay-off. Our positions limited. Full time muy. Appi] person with v<— ‘ land, FUtar Qu laaa, jl-ll. HM of West Mlch- evenlng work. Call Mr. Taylor. OB 3-£»33. 4 to « p.m. _________ Wayne, « to 4:3d p.m. PART TIMS WOKE. FOR ELEC- Press Room Foreman Outstanding opportunity for qualified man. Must have in supervision. hamUtoSSHr types and tlies of punch pregees. Prefer jobbing atop APP?yr EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hawtoorne Metal Products Oa. 433d Cooltdge Rd. Royal Oak, Michigan SALES -REPRESENTATIVE WANT-ad. Leading OM dealer In Lapeer hae opening for a sales representative. Unusual incentive for right' man. Repljj Pontiac Preaa Box It SALESMAN WANTED. NO * Experience necessary, part or full time. Roger’s Sales and Service, Wb Auburn, call FE S-41M. KELLY GIRLS NEEDED AT ONCE 15 IBM TYPISTS VtotiM convenience our interview be gt the 8agamore Motel ward a/S Bivd.. PonUac f. to ion O 3-»»u KELLY OIRL SERVICE , W Froe Preae Bldg . Detroit OENSAt" ilPriCE Wfeax IN-eluding typing and shorthand. Mum be neat and energetic. This to a^TacAaMBto position Will) ■ood pay opportunity. Houghttn * Son Oldsmoblle none for appointment ol i-awi . KouasEEEFER wanted' for west Side motherless home. 3 children ago. 13 add 7. more for borne than «uh. Write Faatlao *---- Box lto FOREMAN ........... IOFEN Small welding and atamptng plant. Experienced only. FOMAS!* ?* ..... IOPEN g Years experience. Supervision of punch press room. Aged -39 to 4b. EVELYN EDWARDS COU N8ELn?0*aiikviC* 24‘a EAST HURON SUITE 4 , -OUSE MOVING. FOLLY ooulneed, FE 4A4M. L.A. T«ua«. I & MObSSHBiTIOK. SSCOOttWO. 1 poured walls, restdsntlsl and commeretalT mlr Cook Construe-j tlon Company. Pit 3-4d33. PLASTERING A REFAIR. REAS, i F»t ttd. FE vim l PLABftRINO. R O. SMYDER FIOOR JfAYtNrf J sanMng and finishing Phone FE I ROOF REPAIRS I EAVEaTROUOHlNO PE 4-4444 W ATERPROOFI NCr Work xusrsntrsd.^Krst • stlmaUs. Painting & Dacorating 23 . jf | a 16 H Alto palnUng^jrsU^wjsshlns Fw PAINTOfO A PAPYRI Frog estimates. FE 9-MS9. HwaSrisffTnBiTnHW hmajlng. Mason Thompoou. FH m ----HANOINO I I»” “EJ*" »an. FE MfS otrildM fain'itno -■t-rjar Stephen Navam. Television Service 24 CREST TV , I. NOUR MRVICE "tor aad atfkt. .EEJjg iSAY Oi^NIOET TV SBimCE. M. F STRAEA. FE T-ISW M, F BTKAan. rs s-isev_ Upholstering^ H FE 5-8888 tan‘lae'e!*2g"'"tall at Shoulder. Rtl wart. MAyfglr MM. LOST: 3 VOX WJUNDB. BLACK *and white spottedwalker rod and —*-—1 ytolaltjr of AndorMB-■ake Rd. OR 3-3941 totof, answers to TWkikia, elrtty aarkston Area. ROWS... FEb-2417 L^oM,~eootaliSn> Important paper*. ffblHI, 491 Brwwn Rd._____________ Hobtess and Supplies 26A OIVB A HANDMADE OIPT SPEC . lalising la haadaaado Roma. KMt-Ung, cruobstlna, loathsroraft. etc. Michigan Handicap Craft Center. 318aTTetegraph. Notices tad PstsodeIs 27 38 STORM WINDOWS, gl 88 BACH. Ti^FaHvtow, _________ AEROTREDS Wt4 Ceafrfitte. Mtgi fi ABILITY To aoll your land oaatraot at as tor Psara-Alaa cash totJSir ________ land eoetrgct. cash CUM CASH TOR LAND CONTRACTS H/J. ,Vga WSK 4440 Dixie H» > " ^TOR IMMEDIATE ACTION Op gar good toad ggtotraatd. Raw dr seaaonsd. Tour (Sak (kM sat-tsfactory Inspection ot property sad title. Aik tor Eea Temple too K. L. Templeton, Realtor J33S Orefcard Laka Ed. FE 4-4ac LAND CONTTUCra TO BUT OR Wntel Reel E«tetQ 26 CASH FOB YOON EQUITY. PI 4-Jgdl. Eve. FE 4-W13. ALL CASH OI AND PEA EQUITIES If you art leaving state o - W1CKXRBHAM 1c MAyfilr 1 7199 W. Maple___ LISTINGS wanted ^.nh,rd*«.rW.n?Ui.J»rS: and ^axe^advimtaga af tha prgg- CLARK REAL ESTATE 13*2 REE. FH AMU open Eve, a a ‘NEEDED” Lake Properties LOTS — COTTAOto — YR RI Buyers Galore J. A. TAYLOR. AGENCY 7733 HIGHLAND HOAD OH 4-4318 SPECIALIZED REALTY BXRVICX 8-3843. Louts Eorat, Realtor. Ft ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS?. CONSOLIDATE ALL TOUR BILLS BUDGET SERVICE WAjrnx> Young eqsplo want to buy home from private owner. Prefer a Sect'y No shorthand required tor this executives secretarial position. • Good typing, able to handle die- depending on background. MM- TRAINEES Aged 21-25, young men mechanically inclined for training program. H.8 Orads. Non# draft-able. Tap; wage*. MMwaM Employment, 404 Pontiac State Bank 5ldg- Ffe 5-8227, ______ Instructions 10 BMEteeQE Service _ 16 ALL MAXES OF POONTAIN PENS repair ad by factory trained men at oar office. Oeneral Printing to Office Supply Of. 17 W. Lawrence it Jtontm FE M13B. ALUMINUM SIDtNO, COMPLXTX houeee or trim. FE 8-d3f8. BLOOMFIELD WALL CtoBANEttA Wall nnd windows. Rtasooeblo. FE 8-1W1 FRUITS New crop pis ehsrrtss. pitted, blue-berries, dry pack to bulk cans for frosting or conning. Open ■ '—4 4 exespt Moodtys m custom cut for IVfiMHHP'tostoir , Royal Onk Froaen Foods Oioien moats, a PAt’a PARTS Aim SERVICE whoicsait and Retail to Oakland Am, FE 3-4031 HiAflNOT¥URNACE8 ‘CLEANED and strvlced. C. L. Nelson FE 5-1728. 11 W HURON AltV OIRL ok ) lng a huMv M •wefmVMJ SS?££^ m. or If on an-Jonfldenttal. DAINTY Mil Menomlnae ! Mr. IPPLIES - 738 . Wallace. FB Wedding Napkins "FREE" —FLUB lto INPORMALB— With Brory Order Of Wedding Invitations Backentose Book Store tt EAST LAWRENCE_FB 3-1414 wepqht iafEly" awI LADY 35 OR OVER WITH PLEA8-lng personality and^ talcs abUlty tag----------- at W7 W. Hnrmi. LADY TO For Sato Roaort Property FINANCIAL ■utlusts Opportunities . Sols Land Contracts Monty to Loan ....... Credit Advisors ..... Morigagt Loans ...... MERCHANDISE Christman Olfts «Tnnrotof Cameras to Equlpmsnt . Salt Musical Ooods ...... Sals Offlca Equipment Sals Store Equipment ■ 8slsu Sporting Goodly | Bolt, Minnows. Etc. (and, Oravel to JHrl 1 Wood, Coni to Fuel Plants. Trees Shrubs For gala Fete Dogs Trained. B rded Hunting Dugt PARM MERCHANDISE TEENAGE BOYS LIVING IN KEEGO HARBOR in this tree which offer a good income requiring approximately an hour of your ttiat etch afternoon. Beside* money to ipeod w PONTIAC PRISS CARRIER gains vntonbk experience In modern business methods nnd soqtrires Habits and traits that will help to their career. If you am Interested in obtaining a route colt or oomo to the circulation department of the POIfTTAC PRESS FOR AN INTERVIEW ITS M — lEULft OAEIL LIGHT OT&-Jyv* MIDDLX-AOED WOMAN TO CARE for elderly invalid woman. Own quarters, wagon, Ure ta. FE 3-8718. NURSES FOR PUBUC HEALTH A number ot public health nursing positions ore available for registered nurses who art willing to take college courses toward a degree to public health nursing. WhU* working as beginning level puble health' nurses. Appleama must be rsptstered as professional nurses by tht gtato of Michigan nnd meet gentrsl university entrance requirements. Work sebodnlN art tailored to fit class room attendance when ever poetlble. iThe salary range before completion of degree re-jutrementa to from M.888 ‘ Finish High ,School No Cissies. Study ot borne spore time.. Diploma oworded. If you — — —- and loft sehooi. I High ;. 8tudy for’ trtV eataiog”"WAYNE OL. Dopt. tOtC, Box 4844, It 34, Michigan. HOTPOINT, WHIRLPOOL k Erik-more washer repair service. FE 5-4431. iKsiEfiXABC wltotlt «t. RELIABLE ASPHALT PAVING All work guaranteed. Frgn estl- SEPTIC +ANKTmJUWB Work Wsnted Msle II work by hour ot Job. FI 8^3383 I MEN WANT SOEEOPAHT kind. FE S-0887._ A-l WALL WASHINO. CARPET to Uphol Mach, cleaned. IH 4-1877, A-’ CARPENTER WORE. NSW nnd repair. FE 4-4318. APPRENTICE ' CARPil*TKR, 5 wtohes work. I’E 8-3383. COLLEGE 11 H I O R DESIRES work house pointing. Experienced. — 4-1703, 800 After degree 1 88.188. Itowo potll word satisfying it 18.080 to ImmS to-rtwardtog | NIGHT CURB OIRLA, APPLY AF-| ter 4:30 m person onto. 18 or over., Ted’s BMtnnrnm. Wood-ward at Square Loke. 1 PART TIME OENERAL OPPlCE, j 8-8. 7 days a week. Pontiac Osteo-pathic Hospital, 50 N. Perry, REGISTERED L.P.N. OR R.N. Medical experience necessary. Write Pontiac Press Box 181. REGISTERED NURSE FOR DOC-tor't Office. Can botwoen to and 18 8 a.m to t p.m. flood wag** A tips. References. Apply Submarine restaurant. 3487 Sash-shew Drayton Ftolaa. AUTOMOTIVE | Rent ^Tral Sale Motor Scootorg For Sale Mmofevclee For Salt Bicycles Butts A Accessories 1 Fibergla* ' Per Solo Airplanes ' I Transportntlou Oflered ! Wanted Used Can/ ; Used Auto Fart# ...... j Bale Used Trocks ....... Sy C E. HARTLEY Aug n. S3, 1880 e*Vao} c HOBBIES ARE FUN... tor -Yvsry member of tha family whan you own your own horns. Whether yon want to display a favorite collection: putter nt your own work bench: entertain tha garden club; or play BI-FI until the wee hoars; It's all peoatble In your own home. YOU wtll find homos af every style, stae. end for every budget and bobby listed Qlnrt looking right now to get the nest oat of life. •esnaowe. ssonuay through F_____ until school starts. 218. Vietal Herrington Elite, to HIS. WAITRESS CURB GIRLS Apply nt Elf Bow Drive Inn 3480 OlXlf HWy. 1 WHITE w6llANTthfE IN. CARE TecholOflst 243 bed hesptui. salary open merit Incrteses, pud i vsestion, ales Aave nnd boX-f . days Write, to: Dtroctor Ol Ptr-•onncl, 8t Mary's Hospital, Sag ' todw, Mich. Woman for 'orilL woiOl 1 also, .curb girls, gkuiet Drtve-ln. 1 EM 3 3873 er EM MIN. CABINET AND TRIM. REMODEL-lng of all kinds. Won. ex peris net Free esUmntes. FE 3-7310. CARPENTER — HOME IMPROVE-mcruf of u>^ kind. FB 5-3283. CARPENTRY. 30 YEARS XXP Kitchens a specialty. Repairs. Reas. OR 3-4381. CARPENTER WORE CABINET* __and additions. PE 8 32*3 _ CA.RlhCNTER. S P *~GU L T Y IN formica. FE 8-3183. Cabinet maker And carpxn-ter. Kitchens a specialty. lY CARPENTER WORE OF ANY kind. Reasonable. Can after 8 p.m. FE S483S. Booktwfhf Texse 16 1^ TAKES Drcssnitoklng, Tailoring 17 DRESSMAKING. TAILORING. AL-teratlons. Mr»..Sod«U. FE 4-8053. TAIUiIImq - ALriEKZri5ks OirdEw Ptewteg 1» AL WARNERS WFTflTQjUNO, lawns and gardene. PE 48848. tils. Ltoswdry Strvicfl 20 COMPLETE FAMILY LAUNDRY __ , prices right. . ---, FOR ADDITIONAL WIRINO Al(D FS MW. plugs calfFEI ,in JEFF PITER MAN Cement work of all kinds. Blde-wnlks, basements, ftoon, driveways. FB 8-8847. 284 Prospect St, License and Bond. MAIQUiD 8tAN, 33. WOULD LIKE work of any kind. Hat chauffer's ltoenae. rt 8-2734. MARRIED MAN WISHES ol any kind, FB 2-8761. MAN NEEDS WORK OBEFERATf ly-ACaU any time. FE. 8-I4J7._ PLA8TERINO OF ALL KINDS Free estimates. D. Myera. EM 3-8123.________ _uphol., cleaned. FE Work Wanted Female 12 I DAY IRONINO SERVICE. REP-ereneoa. eroortenee. FE 8-I47I. DR'S. WIFE WILL BAEV SIT IN own homo. FE 4-8578/__________ OOINO ON VACATIOH7 HA VINO a baby? Let mo Suf yon. Mrs. . Eototbert. FE 4-88*4/ LADY WANTS COHVALESCINT ear* work, 8«mo nursing exp. FE MIMEOORAFH1NO.TTFINO. BBC-rotortoi gervtoe. EM 3-3842. BaMdhitServke u T^F^S^^m FAEULOH • WAraatLOE - SKUCTI ADfirfiONS SjEMODSUNO Torn Lahev to Son — ___Fmiikgf Darpwdgfg ___________FE 8-3383 ________ - Aj cXfejaENinftY~^~" AddWaaa - Eaoaments Attica — Oarages - oBtIT E9FEMT « »B 3-7384_________ A* a'oroup 6f BUILDERS wfc' offer low prlete through volume purchases on enatmn "Quality Built'; homes — 800 plana. Ws’Il 1 secure mortgage Bn ’ obligation Builders Exchange FE 3-7311 OR__________2-3483 A work.1 Ato8*itototoeoo. (R MM 21 AA-l MERION BLUE SOD, DE-livery or plck-ap 3881 Crooks Rd. OL tec ^i~ace- tree arirasi STUMP REMOVAL bid*nmiim TAM? mr bulldozing, lands Cap HTo' rood work, and bench Installing. EM 3-8415._________ BROKEN CONCRETE' PRkB TOR hauling a why. ;FE 8-TTtjkl StPBRT rims SrilYICB. FREE satlmates. FE 8-8883 or OR 3-1080. UU^OATiO TOD. ^DELIVERED ■_____'W tend grtvsi m w»m* aggregate. Prompt ssrv- too FE MTO FE Mto_________ LAEDSCaHnO. LIGHT BAULIHO and plowlag. WS8. CHI 3-0350._ TRtHTRfMMINO- AND REMOVAL reasonable rotoa. FE S-llli. IN DEBT? IF SP LET US Give You l Place to Pay Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY ‘ MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS HM. 783 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLOC . Ft g-8458 Member Amerleen Assse. Credit Counselors Mlehlgso Asses. Wilt Counselors WWiirT&DDLfAOED oa tn- hobbles, reply Ban 18 Fnnttoe down payment. Call front 8 to 8. F» l«a / WTD: SMALL FARM. AROUND is nor IT Immediate oocupanc; OR*3-3044* n °r 011 exenans* RsntAptE. Furnishfl^J? 1 ROOM - t OIRL. FRIT ATE entrance, Washing. FE 3-0883. I BDRM. DLX. 1ST FLR. KITCH-enette motel opts. Private antr Day, week or mo. FB 3-1188._ 1 JSufc MaTTrlSr 1ST FLOOR, "3 RMS AND BATH. separate Ed'... couple. FE 2-2532 1 A(W'"’t EtDROOlt PARTLY furu Ukefront, apta. OR 3-8185. 1 ROOM KITCHENETTE BACHE-U>r_ to, everything torn. 1~LARGE CljfcAN 1 l(00M APT-UtU. torn. Pontlas. 888 par week. MA 8-1358. 3 ROOM APARTMENT. PRIVATE bath and entrance, 173 Horten. FE 8-1731. 3 CLEAN BOOMS. PRIVATE utilities near OMC>-White only. tIsTEdIth. FE 3404. 3 LA ROt ROOMS' PVT. HATH aad oat, utilities. Clean, nicely furnished. Child wslcdms. Olngle-villo/FE 8-1837. Fltbdals AND BATH. PRIVATE entrance. 183 Woronco. 2 ROOMS, PRIVATB RATH AND ontranoa. 3 blocks from Post Office. 83 Pnlon st. 3 ROOM AWr. VOrhiSHED. util-I Itiss furnishtd. W. Wilson. UL 3-1783. ! 3 ROOMS. 2 CLOSETS. PRIVATE | bat^ nedecorated FE 3-3043 r^aNtt T~R06Mi, PC 8-3843, 118 LalavstU. 3 AMO 4 ROOM* OA8'HEAT eleeo m. FW 44IW. 3>/ STUDIO Am.. PARTLY TORN Oat of tha finest apt, to Pontlsc Heat, hot wotor. parkins (urn. Gloria Apts* FS 8-4318 87 Moehnnle FE 4-433* 3 ROOM*-AND SATH NICELY tarn, adjacent to high seboel See enwtnief. Ml WnsHngtnn, 3- AND MOOMCAtofS. 4374 DIX-to Midway. WE PAY ALL YOUR BILLS Our service includes froe tan service, bookkeeping, cheeks, pottage, photocopies of bills said, sad payment of rent nnd utilities Sdmftod. HOMEX SERVICES Wtd. CbOdrsn to Board 28 Top Soil Light and heavy trucking. Rubbish. fUldtrt grading Sana, gravel aad front nnd loading PE 3-Q8Q3. . - Moving1 and Trucking 22 1-A Reduced Rates ^Mov^^yg1^ T HAUL1NO AND RUBBISH. !l)ELL CARTAGE ' Trucks to Rent urn**" Dump HW^SB?T»«to„ Por.tiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. F. 48^ fcWOOOWA% 4-1*8. Qoan Dally toaladtog Snsdnv_ Painting 6 Decorateig 21 1ST CLASS FAlHTtHO AND DEC-oraUng Cash or Urma FE 44844. i*t clamint and~I:Et. tAiift-tog, Roas. Don Back OL 1-3141. ST CLAA8 DECORATtNO PAlNT^ ' OR MW. __ CHILD CARE IE LICENSED HOME. Laka Orton arm. MY 3-4*83. \Md. household (icods 29 UNWANTED ARTICLES PICKED up free of charge. Phone "THR HELF1NO HAND ETOHBB," MA 8-13*1. 11 no anawer Pi 4-710*. UNWANTED ARTICLES PICKED up free of charge, phono 'THE HKLP1NO HAND ETORBB." MA 6-18*1. If no answer. FE 4-718*. 1-7 HOditt'WPUiNlfUlik“and sppllansse needed, win pay aaore cash, Pleaet phone FE 3-8*41 CASH TOR TORN ITURI AND AF-. pitanees. OM puma or houaefull Prompt courteous Mirlia FB 3-HOOM APARTMENT FUR- m.^rS,“JS‘wKSm: FB 4-8378 after 8 p.m. trance. J „ , __________ 3 EM. MODERN, FtjWT FLObxT 8 N. Johnson. RM LOWER, CLEAN tdlL ’ used tslsvlslons. mlseellantous. Froe furnltaro _________ estimates. FX_2-03*7.___ L*T~u*nRrr it“or sill it *-----J. OA 3-2881 Wtd. Miscellanfous 30 Wanted: 2-Horse Trailer REASONABLY PRICED Call MU *.31*9 afttr 4:30 ».m. adding machine or ptopn of office tarnlton nr iguipmnsi ‘ aget 1 “ OR 3-9787. equipment n< 1 buy those I MonEyWanted 81 OLD COSTS AND COLLECTIONS. Endian-bead cents - Tssaeh. PX 2-8243. WOULD lack TO BORROW 83800. Repay at 714 per cent. Write rnfiiae Froas. Box 13. WantadtoRent 32 > EEDBOOMS, REASONABLE. 4 Rk. so38x~f6r .kLDXRLt: couple. Ref. turn. Mast be to need oondWtoft. OR 3-8338. LANDLORDS TENANTS RENTAL SERVICE HOUSE AND APARTMENTS IN OR OUT OF TOWN. NO CHAROC g^DONT MNT^Sub R.(Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 84* OAKLAND AVENUE » * TO » .SUNDAY II TO 8 Share giving Quarters 33 MAN TO SHARE HOME WITU bachelor. EM 3-08*7 after 6 P.m. TRACHIH WILL UU1UI I XOOU home with working girl. OR 3 LAROC ROOMS- All PRIVATE utllltle* furnished. Couple only. *17.80 wnok. 188 Summit. FE Mils after 4 p.m. 3 CLEAN RM8/.PYV, BATH AND eat. Adults, n 8-8748. 2 ROOMS. CLSAN, CLOSX IN FI 8-MBI 3 ROOMS AND BATH. FVf~EN-tranes. 8*4 N SnjftnnW. 1 jMlil CLOSE IN. ADULTt 143 E. Upward. FE 2-2948._________ 3 BOOM. FURNISHED APART-— Trlval# antrane#, hosted. OrtoovUle PANOU8. REALTOR « Sonn st. HA 7-3818 3 ROOMS, BufATE HATH Alffi m,yJVl^m*, ** 3 ROOMS, PYT~ NAT# H.Ssw upper, adults only. 8H mo. PE S-4I89. i~K6o*ri, PSTv~BATH anD YEt Middle aged or rijirMr ooupl. a;., ■v^v^rvo fe|TwtT>iar cmr adults. W8. T^iitor st. _ 3 RMS, CLEAN. SHARI MAfETW. . rtdto adult*. $86. FE 3*3787. 3 EEDROOM FLAT TOllENT ON Elisabeth Lake. Year nround^Ex- E^k^V^Fys-TsS* 9 BOOMS, • NEWLY BECOBATSk r'EdojiTroMFLWC 1 ytU'- lshed, welcome children. Close to temR. Fi Mil*. ,_. 3-AHD « ROOM FURM. MICE. ■“ ik“Hg-1 ■ LAROi RMj~Pvf BATH, UTTU fttan^to/FE^4A1X3. 3 LAROB ROOMS, OFFER. WABH-tag. 1Q3 Farkhurst, FE a-tWB. ^^*WUS, TOUS KITCHEN toton mm. AH have ana separated bedroom. As tow as 888. SLATER APTS. fiii FttJiA yyr « _ _ / NnSUtod » MHMtMn « THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY. AUGUST go. i960 3 Mf** WORTH BID. 1iin» 9Uhtm I - —JlJ‘*~unv~t*LirLr ^rJU‘Lr'*** vry im.fr FL°01^ * bkdroom ucvmnii tbai .a*W«ST*iR»JSSri: Egg. __ NEWLY DECORAT- For Sato Houses Auocl.tM.10M w iSSSTT^ it jtoSrwai mmi »iaa.. ■to* noma. *ta ‘KSS5?SiS 5-ROOM HEATED 3*tS^l5rt3e. (bower. >u kert. ■> Wi sioBL- Mi> MW. • jgETw®*fROffar— furnlshad. etote to (tore •ehool, children wotoem*. • RMB. Al/D BATH. LOWE • bdrnu. 70 Newberry Beer Web- %\v8r*?Sr*** taehMt flow, prtetle entrence. PH Via*. BACHELOR I ROOMS HEAT Mjhh end linen> now. tee e no. 170i Baldwin TE 4-4117 @%nnM: SS3S1 *g!rttfcAy» ‘-«k| s&wvi J t>|] ^ ’ ** Fa ^Jn OTTAWA mu/rn , __ KH. jraftisF-18®* nuu. I raonooM soon on Ooolej Lijwsar roomi h belb. FE I-137*. •n. lesoo «opt. to May. EM > COMPLETELY MODERN LAKE- lor salt tonal available Au|. 3 through anytfms Laky Day *r veer leas* EM j -Tra~l » FURNISHED cottage on east [ Ty* Lak*.L*wltton.,F« 5-1336. j 1 LA*g FRONT COTTAOE8. LAKE -Tr ini.i i ............i F«c Rant Rooms j”.Commerei l bedroom, oil| BUS STqrPDep $T DOOR. _h*»t. Septcmber-Jane, PE 4-2IH beautiful LaRk Vr'6nt. furnished 3. bedroom home. Sept. CL*AN « ROOM APARTMntfTfr Kevsy between Cottage end Oemun_ FB t-tttl. “ DANDY CUUN. COOL FAMILY apartment, everything furnished,! w je^fmt. MilA welcome. FErURNltoib * mSTKatSTm bcmn^rTWSoirimU^ *• JSSSSTMJS. m”th n\f^m^v«rmnssr. Efficiency Apartments I torn, i BBDRooM~H03arwnr. Living room, kitchen, Mthroom. i‘f.m*l*kefront motor end boat, rn *■ h^. Wl-fil I-*”-P*r month. 1711 Lenmea._ rURNI®ED APARTMENT; 5 »01IOOM HOME ON room, end bath, mtddleggoi ar ¥**>«&, Uk*. Prom sept, torn worklne couple. HMmwn^ »3ll_f!»5i-i,» MW. Praper. FB,»W33. OREEN LAKE, YEAR ARggwn PPRN. e>ri. ON CABS LAKE, j Mg*i_ >■**■*■ »i*y—Tttaijele. • " • ^ ~ EM » » » “ front attractive _______ CLEAN SLEEPING ROOMS ’“PE *4*41. MW. Huron COMPORT ABLE ROOM FORQ«RT-leman, near Ptoher Body. ..and Pontlae^ Motors, ri 4-M0* ^ MSIRABUI ROOM. OINTLBMAN private howm. close in. PI 3-M14 OIRLS, NICE HOME OF TOOK own, rm. ratee. rt7 W, Huron LARGE ROOM- FOR 3.' PEHFIfR men. or couple. Close to out. M W. Anderson. PH 3-7434. HOME PRIYILEONB BY OWNER. Waterford and i^mto|^m ROOM ROME IN to solo lead. 3 oar1 do *r wit, by owai it »fwv AjF* t-tiM $950”DOWN room borne legated t ms all hat, wT I bay with payments | GIROUX i d OBNRRAL REAL ESTATE 43M Dixie Hery. OR 3-1701 Open 'til I. Sunday 'til • T\V#NTV-Fiyfc Ff fmto Hwwe 49, Privacy Tea can eM perfect pease when pw frontdoor, dose to echeel. privilege* on S lake*. Convenient See It BUY It Mi ‘ ‘ ~ mt tot to build MHHMP , .beietoy of Clarketao, apprieimately M scree Ff Sito Hwtm ‘ hea^ban’Dit " I . ■ 3gt t SANFORD Relieve us. it's real easy to lees your head ever toto lovely name. J bedroom*. *ne 33.e x 13.1 lettte) f ‘ aad tranap. Low A|., bacement. **p. DJI., rmeau. fha SCHRAM OPEN nw ArroumaiiT CALL l _*..» JO 6-9834 SUN-2 to 5 j converted tat* gerege, be* -extra bunding, ua* for Merage, or have rtdmg boreea. convenient to eehaal*. Vrm fumnn baud-; plan* fee 7 ream modern - Price wily tis.ooo. East Side 7 warn raneb bungalow, lock from City E|U. Am all around to no improved in aoar 1 future. Thte home ha* 3 bed- i rooms den. tiled bath, gas heat, gerege. lltM down, Colored A eery ftn* bungalow, keeled an Perry Street, t fedroome. bath. basement, gas beat. I ear gareg*. Tabes laM deww. WILLIS M. BREWER Blavtk Realty Inc 1045* W. Nine Mile R» $10,350 THE SKVUNKK •3 R. Arm Will build this | bedroom C temporary Home an year tot. I basement. Alum, tiding Pam_ Kitchen. W* arrange financing. OPEN SAT. * SDR. 3 TOTP.M. ft*----------- _ MlJWjrm STREET MW I*** dd0WD °D ^ 3nuul ».1 II Extra* mSlag <*Urngti room, 7 x 3. On* bet water beat. Bull price II*.5*1. to Mock Weet I ^ upatein; btoN* ~Sto^e 86 E. Walton Realtor $9,250' "An v hose eat, big. adorable man is oi 3-b*it an-excamgd kitchen, with tiled floor dining roc full Wen ■63 BY OWNER. 3 BEDROOM FULL naament. K*« home aaoo. My and take over mortgage. TiORM.' 153" g? OWNER 1 BEDRM RANCH ‘tear school* - 1 nd Drayton Shot____ nlorly landscaped lot. gB> d OWNER TRANSFERRED ] Mutt sacrifice - 3 block* from Airport, adult* only. OltV 3-1843. ^r- ~|LAEB FRONT — MODERN 3 NBAT 3 ROOilTND'RATH~BVIRY - Sg^SSSk *m'J ,00B thing furnished. FE 4-7253 Ig—~^=L-— --------------- ®f*W;..^r”rMnV«28m?.k*,{B. 0A' 1 ri' POtlTlAC - MHJN3RD ARIA~MO^ dern lake-front house. Pally ________________Jito^i SMLJjrj!*- 7 ahower _On Lalte and M-51. | trSt BB 3-4361* ““ nirtJw" ii BY OWNER. 3 BEDROOM rULL ! Take over payment* ....PW..,, . 43 huaement. Itow BMP* 8880. My | gate. FE 2-5900 boom wrrs ioaro — o 07* H. P. HOLMES. INC. AND BOAKD WITH BOUTH- churches and Drayton Eiopping Larue nearly new 3 bedroom looking- PE 5504_____ located on nl<»ly Tandaeaped lot JJJS to^e with flrepliSr^d ROOM AND BOARD »i WIL- “u*1 ake™**/ o«U OR basement, 3 gar gang* ead stable ----' “*-* 1 i-Tin 1 (or aaddl* horses, g acres of land. l NEAT 4-BEDROOM with hard-! wood floors and pi a stared walls la really sharp! Nicely landscaped oh a comer let. Pull basement. I auto. heat. Fenced back yard. GOOD BOY FOR $450 DOWN as^ars&Ts: s/* arapea, ess heat, recantty p ed and landscaped. I3.M6 < towards l a 3 bed-, vtth 14 I on your | Rtnt Apts. Unfurnished 38| mm ^D^o^'d^waj^1* ^orsyto'n i ultra new stores, west bide 1 BEDRM UPPER NEAR OMT UnW# .UU ‘ Pkbtlf., ‘ VUi ------Pent nMea Cnsra-----47 stove, automatto oil Boat and hot around home Volued ut tsoooo i ”®ni UTTltC space 47 water furnished. Modem, eloon. Custom brlek, 3 bwdrooms. ele! ■ ^ PI S-*84._______;__ ___ f tantly and completely fum.. for I >*« BROWNELL. BIRMINGHAM 3 ROOMS AND BATH, FRIVATx! ot trscher*. Lease at Central Business Diatrlct. 6 room sntraacs. BM 1-tHt. • . wo. WO M883 oy EM; kj"*JJP**' •bo,>' ''tofiiFs V^S^J^|yBai6~'LUEi,''''i mi’mr-1 m~iu>6*r9 Hoc«a‘:op'G0F: knotty nine kltohea car nort ‘M*. tarn., boated, adults. Ma ftc* space all or part, in heart private BLnS^.to“i..r3i • ■______1 ?' *!“ Corner !oca- - '— — FE 4-62M._______i Waterfront — j 865H55H *tan. Lawr«nce and Ferry Btreet*. “x 3|. si BY OWNER, s BEDROOM HOME. Pontiac Community Finance Com- AvaUablo Bept. ment. 143 W. Columbia. 1 3 BEDROOM. OFFER, WWT- _ , .... |___Mg (told Btreets, 888 mo. I 3 bed- Fite parking apace. rmT, l^Si dWJ® is^^rxeis 'rr5S‘l , „ l-A-l MMTALE 1 °mSg 1 AND 3 BEDROOM PARTLY 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX turn- lakefront opto.. OR 3-8108. Automatic Heat — Full Basement I BDRM. APT. AVAILABLE SEPT " BY OWNER BLOOMFIELD HILLS BUB _ 51 g. BERKSHIRE All brick 4 bedroom home on 1 acres, lot sq. yard* of now oar nl and drape* Included. 31 ring, room with fireplace Kitchen, breakfast nook. Dining room, snn room, both with von Ity. Lota of shad*-pear, plum, cherry and apple tree*. 85,001 down. Term*. PE 5-6*18 or PI 5-0788 a" * IT‘ lot for only ERMHPVP model. _________________________ “JIM" WILLIAMS JUDAH LAKE EBTATEg 3 BED-!____ Rsal Bstat* A Insurance rater softener, aluminum 148J Baldwin__PI 4-0547 “■*-------- 61.800 [ SYLVAN VILLAOl 3 MDROOMB . 4-8878. j basement, garage, gat boat. II INDIAN_yn3^!.ToVg.YJ!dMB I _• J?30._ . Just paint _ out. Pull basament, garage, large fenced back yard, am all down payment. ASSOCIATE BROKERS! Inv. Co Inc 443 ORCHARD LAKE ! PE $4863 5 Bedroom SPECIAL IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 843 J08LYN COR , MANSFIELD OPEN EVENINGS A SUNDAY MULTIPLE T.I3TINO SERVICE EAST BERKSlfiRl Seal Bloomfield Highlands. Largo 3 bedroom brick, fireplace, tile »V,34»,M74S^I&?4, Near Crescent Labe: Neat 3 bedroom. Aluminum storms, utility room, oil furnace da ft lot 67.750. torma. PONTIAC REALTY GILES 3 Bedrooms ■i and i JWWW n, 8Wpor month. PE 4 Jt VXLLAOB,-Ito RM. UFFTO PLAT. PVT. ..... —* M bg-‘“ “t- ■“‘VJgfto Sanderson, child 3HDRM- ALL 1 FLR B8MT 6«t * Lounaburr off Oakland. FE 847t4 irlvllege*. W~irnma >i'i-f73i. ' ~~ ' I* LounSugy’off 6aklaad.~FE~84784'' contract. 8300 dn. jx 4-4813. _ 3 ROOM APT..- NEWLY DtOORAT- 3 BEDROOM AT WALLEDTaKK 2 A011*8’ ®Y, OWNER. BEAUTf- rd. stove and refrigerator, good’ MA 4-l8gg. ____ } ful view oflake. load* of elbow location. 288 Whfttemoro. St.— 3'bedroom home in Pontiac ^“bun^I.^nuVTJ^law*; --------^r' c3om. patio gae heal, 3 ear > 1* ana large fenced lot. This 1 t first offering on this lovely . W* suggest an Inspection. ALL NEWLY REDECORATED - lto BATH — UTILITY ROOM - OIL HEAT ON PAVED STREET — JUST A FEW LEFT. HURRY ON THIS ONE. j JIM WRIGHT. Realtor j 345 Oakland Av*. Open TUI S:30 I PE 5-8381 or PE 54441 “OPEN Sun.' 2 to 6 Lakefront - Sacrifice i LOCATED AT 8886 HIGHLAND ROAD iM-661. Owners Illness force* eel* of this modern by- j level home with 1.348 sq. ft. • on i first floor. Include* fireplace, full basement, 3 car garage, and beautiful acre lot with excellent I sandy beach. Reduced from SIP - | 500 to 816.008 — easy terms. For information call J. A. Taylor, I Realtor. OR 4-030*. | Near Auburn Heights 3 bedroom frame home with full basement, automatto oil furnace, large 100 x 30* ft well landscaped tot. Located In a nice quiet neighborhood Cell for further information. Brick Income Located Inside the City In * good rente) section. 6 room apartment and 4 roam apartment recently dteorat- OPEN Sun. 2 to 6 183 8. Winding Dr. Bllaabeth Lake Estates nearly new brleh and frame 3 B/R ranch hem*. OU heat, hardwood floors, large kit- ' LAKB FRONT Close In 1 . MUST SELL ! (660 DOWN Near Lake Orton. 8 room K ranch, targe let, paved < Immediate poeietilon. stone fireplace, full walkout base ment. all beet, fenced yard, 1 ■■ 11- car gersg*. A rare bargain ei 1 68.858. CITY NORTHSlflE - A good com r gerege beautifully land-| ■ *n Waterford Twp. Ex-BiHiMibwi; 1 furnace, close to school. Many other SetoctletM s nonna antTbatH U^ftH.~i44 nuHTWITH UlUrnrli lakefront modal hemes. Av*U- WtUli'lufiK KtALl i eel* for Immediate possession. | OR t-Otgl Open g to 9 1831 Williams Lk. Rd. Open Bun. ~AND~TuW~BCIlMBl PORCH,! — ‘Ex® jtos. Witty option to j Dose In. IRICKyfcAROE tfHl-1 3-337*. ’Arne . to jjrad*, j bedrc 1 EM 3-0085 OR 3-8982 u! « It OWNER. | RM. BOOK LK? ----MiUOTARET . PrlT- rent, dn. peymt. n 3-4*M. I very nest 3 bedroom with pan- By Owner—$60^Down ----------- » ROOta* * Vj2L ^“8 1 ROW ARh RATH, TBS fwtego*. Koogo Itorbor. Fl^_______________OR3-J**3_G __4-tsas.--------------—, w/vmi unn» anm. RIORAM I - __•J,,Aio MjL wire. J ed. 1130 PE 8-3toT__ m WATE"§t. — jdiflAb.Atti; 3 roeate. ltov*. RelHfmtor. ‘tsasRasfl^a Raijgna.'CTgt 6 ROOMS, REWLY DECORATED. -I. Close to, good ntlfh-FE 34348/ Beet aid*. C bornood. FE 6 ROOM. ahlldren welcome. Inquire 367 g. . _______ GOOD LOCATION. pod slave. 888? PE HM4. I RM. 3 BEDRMS. NEWCt DEC-o re ted. 488 W. Huron, ARCADIA □ I ■ milted. $54 pur month. Close to schools, ehutfihes end downtown. Cool to the summertime Ample laundry facilities. K. O. ferti t&t^riVriH after 8 p.m ' __ COLORED _____r month, fff____ TREOENT - 2 FAMILY. I AH? bath each email family._ I ELM tTHVCf. 3 BEDROOMS and garage. Fruit trees. BR Low Interest. Lawn and shrub* — Priced la sell fast. FE 44888 BEDIM. BRICK. FULL TILED bsmt., kltehen-dlnlng oomb. Nut'l. wood cupboards. Many extra*. 83,888 down. OE 3-7418. ©ROOM, ALL ALUMINUM — “ d| *”' - month. Judah Lnku *L} py . 3 Bodi__________ mortgage. FE t-4811 BY OWNER. EMAL: home. FE 3-385.___ BY OWNER. 8 BEDROOM RANCH acsJr * tit 3 BDRM lM8CH,.biiAfllt dib septic and drain HI* to. 88808. 8458 down. 6884 Frwbkwell off Felton. ----- MODERN RANCH TfPE BUNOA- ROOM low to block (rum Williams Lake .....■ ffisr COUNTRY LIVINO On approx, to aero—1 ml. northeast Pent. Newly decorated modem 3 bdrm. 118.888 with $1,588 dn. Owner wtutog to deal. FR main. CaU PR »-l_. ■ ■ — ___ ■ _ ■ | 3-7888 between 8-5.__ RM. BONOALOW ON tRl 3-BEDROOM FULL BASEMENT —-•1 --------------------------- — - j ma 5-21— i/a i ie TOE AREA, churches, schools and al area. New ta l8M. 3 bet lto both*. 3 fireplace*. 3 < ___rag*. 817,588 with 14,880 Tr^Tl i ^5.1^15_____________________ breetewsy. pevment. Immediate^possei-FE 4-7508 or OR 34101. MODERN 3 BEDROOM RANCH type bouse, basement, ell heat. large lot. Near Oxford FE 3-7538. M-59 f koKT 3*7 x 386 of fertile lend. 6 rm. ---- ----- iw FA furnace. PACE , an b nay-" ""Cfiki, Lower, l. Children wel- COLORED %’gg" ROOMS an6 front porch. 3 cur nrjgl’^m _y*rd. *lto. Mo._C*ll_n8 4-7614. , Attention, Renters 380 W. Yale, off Baldwin. Hurry! Only 3. left. Rent with option to buy. Rent money apply* to eoet. Hew t bedroom brlek ranch, full basement, large let. pevetf it. WUl take your home to trad*. 80S o mouth. JEROME BUILDINO CO-FB 4-5833 EnL TOI-M1! AUBURN HE1OHT0. NICE 4 ROOMS Call_5 I BEDROOM. A Farming*— — 4-8*38. CONDITION _____■ 811,000. 83.000 aown, sou month OR 4-1369. _ 4 Bedrooms, By Owner Close in. near bus and school, modern, garage. ‘ * — COLORED. d with many modern features ■ downtown, 'kitchen with gas bullSdiM. DIs- I ferred. I itstandlng vatu* i located an Oxbow Lex*. 3 ear at- f tached earage. basement, oil beet. I The owner Arisons bound says sell. The asking price is only I 813,88* with 11.458 down. You ean’t beat this for s like front, j William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 WHY DONT YOU? | any other property^’tj'tyn* or all Oakland County areas, icily. Suburban or lakes). REGISTER NOW WITH ARY OP OUR OFFICES IN WAYNE OR OAKLAND COUNTtEB 48 Salespeople to help you TELL Us WHAT YOU HAVE TELL US WHAT YOU WANT PHONE FE 8-0158 C. SCHUETT “Tlie Ole House Trader" , DVORAK 5511 lINDEtENDEifCE TOWNSHIP) CIVILIANS $190 DOWN I 1 bedrooms. Corner tot. Utility' room, Erick end asbestos, carport. Vacant, Open Walk la end look at tt. if Interested, call to Wtndlg Dr . toft I FB 4-350* 13 l-lgtl KENNEDY Realter 3161 W. Huron at MULTIF1E LISTING SERVICE “ ARRO PRICE! REDUCED On this neat 2 bedroom home loaded with extras Fireplace, oak floors, stainless steel sink, plenty of clasqg space, heated porch. 2 car garage, fenced fear yard, 810.858. Term*. ' . SECLUSION In the tone* with this tovely 7 room brick A aluminum no-n* 3 fireplaces. 3 5 tsths. full basement. targe rrc. room paneied in knotty pin*. 3 ear garage. Almost an acre of laadT S,y Suburban 'Living At Its Best Your future heme I* the (CONVERTIBLE 24) 3 A 4 bedroom*, lto batbs W. W. ROSS HOMES OR 34*31 RUTOERS M0 WEST (PONTIAC) CIVILIANS aluminum OPFN 1 $19°D0WN J* J—JX V I Bum 1358. 3 bedrooms, full -----— located g 535 Screened uotth num -.forms A tcrtena. ------J ptay yarl. om/ I*}*) Term*. STEPS 10 SCHOOL Very neat t bedroom ranch, part grill S’btoeks from school, norm s ows and door, water softner. heat, dog kernel. FR 14*11 NEW « BORM lto BATH8. ear garage, bsmt. -------1 1-1353______ NEW WEST SUBURBAN. 3-BED-room rancher with attach*1 rate. U3 500. 11.000 down 447M ranch. OL I .tm;-.—" -| ONLY $10 DOWN ’ ' ..... BEDROOM. BT OWNER NEW- „ _Model at 2M S_ Bird _ I .—■ --------------a 10p*D Dwii^*j»ALTT ’p m | Nothing Down -J, Incinerator, garage A patio. Ftolihed hasement. paneled fireplace. 3338 Manchester Btr-mttutham, MI * ■ i BEDRM.. iV 6«|rtk lto bathe aear public and paroehlal schools. Late artv. watoM^refrix A beStl BtoutB. \ Commerce Township. OR furnlsbrt.' W MIM 1_ I a- . jS ROOM MODERN ROME rUO- ^Irv.fnrhtiilT APARTMENTS Nicholie & Jlargcr Co. 1 libl* Surtmt.8MI8. BiTbM. tote WiBT HURON PR 6-1113 5 RMS,. 1 BLOCH rttOtTfLlzT- ADPL7BWliV W 84818 ___PONTIAC. MICHIOAN_ beth U. Cash far equity.- ---“4 ST0YE B1 Is. fiteluded. Bue flns., In* Oood eeud.,' 847.88! --^ -----A 1-8888. NEWLY DECORATED ' LAttAfc living room, fw alwAbjdrqom. 1 gSa^gtiga? 8JCTaggtt?M short distance. 888 1. f»0. part of rout. Writ* Bon 78, Fon- NiarGoBAN .iut . applP only. Itortt HftM*f8to8 ftei V»A g’«ir*tand AdulM only. MApt* Atm. OB . 3-7731. _ ~~ ?»W- r totormattoi), clariSton REAL ESTATE, INC. 8884 E. Mato Bt. 4 bedroom home. __________ large lot. Located on bee otiee Benity Co. rm 84i7» WEST BIDE Itout 6 room unpeg opart- vaa&ggsal a«s*i» _ ROOMS 1380 DOWN 155 YtR month. 55,000 M price. 85.000 lab* ptlvltosee. EM 34138. I ROOM FLUB 3 BATH RANCH heme at HAMMOND UKE bv owner. Price reduced. 3115 E. Hammond Ut. Dr? JU 44818. PONTIAC. MICHIOAN UOD^BLDOT^COB-(Yt. BT0Y1 BEAUTIFUL l”BEDROOM ' LAKI-included Bus line front, brick ranch. Bemt-fur-HI M «®aif_df J«tar«l.ltod. COLORED. For real with option or sell - 3 bedroom. 3 story. Full basement. Large tot. Tli* floor*. Ix>w total. Law dawn. 338 me. PE Mm wp MutAE i wiimoott, it » ii ft. family reom, living ream aad Mtt earpeted, 3to ear garage. Wolverine Uttu Blip, Immedlete jcnmde*. 1130 pin* deposit, ha For Rent or Lease room Southern Colonial Xs'xts, j«*t to au. from fwiilm. I bedrooms. | full bath*. I llrtplaes*. Den. huis kitchen BgtMifcjgn. Living ream II t M. Basement with reeruutltu room. 3.M8 sq. ft. to Uring ana. Only 1150 ate month If worth twice this ---- MA —|------- CENTER LINE 1384 EDWARD 4 Bedrm. brlek. 8 ear garage, full bamt., newly decorated. SLocum 6-3306._______________________ CLARKSTON AREA. 3 BEDRMS plastered wall*, oak fleer*, smart kitchen, tovely tile bath, aluminum storms A screens, full base-ent, lg*. Ml with take prtvi-““ 1 to tot. 81,188 daws. | $55 MO.! WEST SIDE! Plus taxes ttr-oi s tor this fine older 3 bedroom hwne. Has Bring room, dining room, kitchen, bath, full basement, and garage. Only mortgage carta of approx. *308. to more lain Fun price mild. Look Me Jrtqr 88 Henderson and call W, W. Rose Homes at OR 348EI tor farther Information. (83 MONTHLY SSJSWfcVSULlSUS! Perfect for couple or mifl lmm-lto. Thla to hi excellent location with doekaa* an Sylvan Lake. Payment Includes totes end Insurance. Pull pries 1*3850. JACK LOVELAND IH3 Onus Lake Hd. ft 3-487* “oi^TKtanbeUt'u. * tot. 81.M8 d.w. | 5j Smir CALL u* FOR BARS. TAVERNS. **B.Y nousee and farmi. Childs Real i*"* Hstoto. MY Mfli. Lake Orton. I f- s. COTTAOB FOR BALE |4 888. LESS i _S2fSL ter cash. FB A1884. basement. Beer Central W|h. with Intercat. tome and taaur-aae* Included. FI 4-C1T8. tW DSWN. t ROOM8~AND RaTH Newly decorated. Large lot. CUM tafl irtee . PE Mg_______ 29b W. YALE OOLDEN OPPORTUNITY --- secure future ------ _____MODEL — FB 8-3763___^ CALL U8 FOR BARA, TAVBRN8, j house* and farm*. Child* Real I Estate. MT 3-4*31. Uke Orton. { 3 Bedrooms, full basement, rough | tofu * -*-e# bath set, alerter i OR 1-8887 and PB M*^ TRI-LEVEL STARTER NO MONEY DOWN BulM a home to be proud of. Your tot or our*. Have model O. Flattley, Bu!to*r._EM_344M where nfrn home* are built Big Bear will build them , at * price you can afford. Call todayll Don't delay. Over 1,080 satisfied customers. Free Infor-nixtlon. Ask for William Ben-deroff. Big Bear Construction Co. _ 83 W. Huron. FB 3-7813. WEST SIpF.K Immediate Occupancy! For the Jr. Esecuttve or Pro- ; , Iccslonal Man!I! Lovely 3 bed-’ room bungalow. Ha* eeparat* din-1 lng room, carpeting, tiled base-ment, ftolsbed garage and breetc-1 way, fireplace and an outstand- < Ingly beautiful yard!!! Can be handled for about 83.088 dawn on a maximum FHA mortgage. Look this evgr at 38 E. Iroquois and . -t OR Sun. 1 to 7 4 Bedroom Tri-level Drive out and eee this eutrtsnd-lng custom built raneb on ) level . Family roorar Fireplace end barbecue pit. ButH in oar, I'i baths. I Out Elisabeth Lake williams: 'BUD' COUNTRY HOME ON It ACRES I " Or part. Rear U( 16 and Ratal** Lake Rd. LO 1-8753 NEAR NORTHERN! FIVE (5) BEDROOMS!) I bath, t belt bath. WEST BLOOMFIELD TWP , 2-BED and an extra toewsr!!! Designed ! for a BIO HAPPY FAMILY! ! ! ; Separate dtnin* room. fulL base-gas heat, tereae - Ttatur-'* —a older home cause make them like that tor love H*" Look* tSlc ) t *44 E Madison and Ross Rome* *t OR I ttrtSer Information tbty 4 ____home, bullt- I relrlgcrstor AI >nd storms, lill*. By •| Cozy 2-Bedroom One Acre Ground j Country living, lots of garden j spec* In thi* attractive f room ; ---home with unfinished ■MV „r additional bedrooms . sirs iven, automate beat end hot Elizabeth Lk. Estates tee LAKESIDE This very attractive hem* has carpeted Uring room aad recep-• lion hall Natural fireplace. Cheerful kitchen with tote to cupboards Small dining room. 3 bedroom poaalbtuty. Large let aad gang*. All tor 5*6*6. Widow must sell. ELWOOP REALTY FE 44183 $210 MOVES YW IN Watertord Fentlaj and ether loea- itoas. Xfte»_ MMHI homes. Call tor complete artaus. C. PANGUS, Realtor _______ PE 84838__________ FOR SALE 3 BEDROOM HOME, toh* prtvi tog**, emeu down mt, call Mtor « OR A1W8. TOR COLORED GI O.I. THUMB. PROSPECT BT.. *8.-*88 tall pri#* only mertgage costs down. With tow monthly payments of approx. M.II 1^ Including M8P| and Inturaae*. fhls is hard to b**t. A bed room. Artery, oak Monk plastered wall*. Half MMP kitchen, fuU tnssmeed. Large ta-etoeed front poreb. Oarnge. fenced back yard with toteuf shade trees pins fruit tr*«e. FbUtte Mary HlUmaa at OR MB or FK 3-7»*l Clark Heal EstaU. 13*2 W. Huron watSowlakr - to pFpSont- . basement bargain if sold before winter, opto Saturdays and Bun- [ days. Uto 7 PM....... NICE HOME. ROCHESTER AREA. Double lot. Asbestos siding. 3 bedrm*. FuU basement Shade trees. Penaud grounds ess heal. PE 3-3454. OWNER 3 BEDROOM HOUSE neaTIl. Mtohael s. PE 3-488* OUT 6p town 'oWnir, must sell. I ft. old 3 bedreim ranch, lib baths, built In*, attached *aT rags, toeatod on pared rd.. near I public awl parochial eaheele. lake prlr.. Will consider lease with op-tlion to hay. BM 3-3toT ORION LAKE F garden,, only 13.25 Phone OL 1-7511 ___FRANK SHEPARD N*ALTON ONLY lld DOWN T 2*0 W. TALE ' , • Get* you started toward* owning! WALLED LAKB 1 BEDROOM brick, large lot, gas heat, 2 bathe, mortgage. JIA 4-5585 ■ *" WHITE LAEBTWp; I PORTER RD. NORTH OP M3I 1 3 BEDRM. HOME ON 3, ACRES In Huron Valley School district j and convenient to hkot and ree-1 restlonal areas. $7350 TOTAL 1350 DN. PAYMT G Schuett, FE 8-0458 j Zoned Commercial " j 58x300 ft tot. Has 3 bedroom ! modem horn* with gat beat. Reasonably priced at 17.580. torma. CUCKLER REALTY ! today! Spotless 3-Bed room FHA Terms . Bparkliag clean I downstairs, generous kitchen : with dining space, plenty of i cupboards fuU basement, auto- ; well kept ground*. Offered at; 518.580. only 5 per cent down. • plus costs, to qualified buyer'. - - LAKEFRONT BRICK 3 BEDROOM. *SS* ,,1^51 POEBME BY OWNRR -- * <»<»M l —ev-evnas COST CLEAN.! turn Uring rem. til* bath* beau- opu« to buy unique, h0UM Mr gehoeto dr bus Ba*. neatoafiflMEM. 1 ^S*.®***. BM 3-tott aad tw; Appeeelmuffi 588 month. ^EjffVSSS* wx *****' rtiywmtoriMr! 3-BllA ■ ......... On a new 3 bedrmmi Srick ranch, 58_Oot>aa* Bt. ^ 1 autemaSi waSeraite^dryer peu N1WLY OSCORATBD I BOOM DU- fuU bsmt. tarn Jet. PM8d. to FOR BALE BY OWN*B~Cm3GB5 . ZH^S&rto she*. Lake WWI pita, automatic heat, basement. I exchietve Ballet TToodr ““*■ * * ■■■ ■*““ ^a*grwqSBary. Ot«58it«o| rtese^.^Ne prtoerteA hN pw | __ jkromc buildini TVSStoaej ___rMemmC.’m ______ I _____w. 3 bedroom, fM s’VPm-.1 'SrsTur* ’ Fenced base Yd7 trees, easy *45 Oakland terms. PE 5-7813. OPEN A beautiful brick ranch bom* you witt bo anxious to see — Lovely I Fireplace - serves Uring room. | — ------- or dun 3 large bed- beth - kitchen end breakfast ream - carpeting In tbe bring room - dining room -den end'hall. Breeieway with a ' J ’ ANlfniVa NOT ALL A Hirtpetllg washer and dryer | with a son water system. ALL FOB ONLT 518.581 mu take a smaller home in i trade outside town. ELEORAFH TO PONTIAC LAKE ; RD., ABOUT 1 mil* turn 8. on ; Nash Et.. 1 block to Hallman Dr RIGHT. Realtor ______ Are. Open 'tU 6:30 PR 34380 a* PR 3-f441 > “BUD" Nicholie, Realtor to Mt. Clemens at: FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M., FE 5-80(M I MAT MANAGEMENT DAYS WO 3-3358 EVE*,, SAT., 8UN. TO M551 BY THE LAKE 3375 SHAW DRIVE A really tremendous value. Ha< lake prlvUege* on beautiful Loor Lake. 3 bedrooms. Insulated, auto heat, stone and aluminum sldtng 108 x 358' lot. Near schools anc transportation. FHA terms $350 DOWN FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 106-9834 Slnvtk Realty, Inc. 18459 W Nine Mils Rd. TRIPP OPEN Sunday 3 to 5 *29 Xeoine Drive i Indian Village: 3 bedrooms, 3 full bathi, ful basement. 11* car gertge. Net ural fireplace, gas heat. iTun toft off Elisabeth U Rd. a • *l|n or right oo CtmiM of: .Huron, to Hoomo.l FI 4>437l OPEN Sunday 3 to 5 4322 Fowler Waterfront Bi-tevel: If You Earn $2.47 Per Hour You'can have this 1.20* sq. ft. brick borne including V« acre weeded tot on pared street for 313.780. Includes ETSwi“"Hb "tatO large bedrooms, built-in lunch bar aad "MaUasur’ built-in «—“- hogany kitchen with l OPEN “Candlewick Woods"' addition 31* -MUe* 1North of Wslton /On Joslyh DLORAH BLDG. CO. "Builders of National Homes" PE 34121 i Sunday 3 to 5 1837 Beverly Sylvan" Lake: I Charming, brlek, 1H Mery col-1 I onlal with alum, awalngs. ] j bedrooms Sown—room tor 3 more up. Largo Uring room, j Washer-dryer Included Immac-1 I ulat*. Oaragg (Out Onhqrd! Lake, right on Beverly) PB i 8-1383 ; I Leslie R. "tripp. Realtor 75 West Huron Street 1 1 i / Office Phone FB 541(! basement, attached scrag*, drive, berries h fruit tre*_. . In pleasant rear yard. Very __ tractive heme^Cw 118.358. With privileges an 1 lakes Hue 3 bedroom*, rail both, living reom ^kltcjyn^aneled in knotty pine. | TED7 McCULLOUOR, REALTOR ARRO REALTY 5153 Casa-Ellrabeth Rd. FE 5-1284 FE 4-3844 Open 3 am to l:J8 p.m. ALL DAY gURDAY OPEN SEETHE i E-CON-O-TRI j VOORHE1S ROAD Val-U-Way FOR OOOD BUYS AND VALUES OPEN 1.288 square feet of living ere* plus carport. Modern kitchen with even and range. 53 loot living room, oak floors, plastered walls. 108 fbt lot. meed at 514.880 with Mon. Modem kitchen, an large room*. Quick peesesslon. COLORED-CASH BAROA1N OR OI 5 room, 3 bedroom*, gas f urnace, nice town, a large glassed-in porches. 3 cor garage, on pnre-i ment. is block from school. Can be used for 3 family imnato tot with sung*. Oat heat, tm‘ basement. 3 baths. Excellent location and on pavemont. R. J. (Dick) VALUETj Realtor FE 4^353ii 345 OAKLAND AVENUE Open 9 to 9 Bun. Met; . COLORED 4 BARGAIN BASEMENT-________ LAROE LOT — OWNKB HAS REDUCED PRIDE 5 —» - JIM WRIGHT. Realtor “ °StrCUT.ntSu* •’“! TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESSTSATCRDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 i2«3 For Salt House* 49 For Solo House* 49 CARNIVAL l)kk Tamer IVfali Bimi 49 ForSoloLalco Pnjmty SI Open bateman DORRIS REALTY SUNDAY 1-5 ; JWtt OPEN ** MODEL SAT. AND' Sl)N 1 - 5 ^Navajo ) Inflation . isiHSg TD^Mcp^^LD |. PONTlSc^ ,^R4^0358 ^mYDEN »y poy J ■ Io #p=-»i OPEN saanrKaH SMITHA-LILLY j NORTH HILL — jj ^ WHS kxUNTON RIVER — £5!®gfrB building Sites — ijsvss. &$vse m kf ’ I OPEN SUN. 2-5 PM. "COMPOSITE" Lake Fronts Galore \ ^^w3Sr? ’a jv*s2 BLAIR ^eal Estate Coi I N. ] OL 1-8143 . Open ’tit 9 IP Park It Here 'AFS& WHITE BROS. Horse farm SILVER LAKE open SAT.. SUN. ready even it he isn’t late!’’ t Houses 49 For Sale House* OPEN •j- C HAYDEN, Realtor SATURDAY 4-7 SUNDAY 10-6 MODEL | THE j SiorttM.: ----------------- ----| N^nnn^ ransri^ ^ ^ VOORHEIS GE0^xoBnLA,R 1.8?®^^*-^ m^T~:gaTlord; CLARK room and bar. A rare I .'U. X iet t^FF* 8-0458 Benedicts Parish open m SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. -**Sr Robert H. {EM 3-0085 OR ^SSSal * STEELE REALTY (Main Office) OPEN | KENT J. A. TAYLOR Hb m 40 ACRES BSE? SSH&H2 a iffi." XL3 S.TLWsa« ; Sun. 1 to 5 : DRAPER NICHOLIE of,i“ «E ^ i: i£i P I BLOOMFIELD TWP. & HARGER CO juPPER LONG LAKE BMH RAY O'NEIL, Realtor S I 3F3 ri l™Utn* STM,J EN Sun. 2' to 5 Ftovd Kent Jnc.. Realtor i r^was*' i Partridge HOME, 10 APTS. Alaska Owner Sa^s Sell! ILAKEFRONT "Lfflunur- TjK"' 53)4 WEST HURON | Johnson SYLVAN VILLAGE i - open H9q .SUNDAY SStaUor p™ I 2 TO 6 P.M. " ' Sun. 2 to 5 >kfiE 71A nirr ct < !**&*<1 tCLARK REAL ESTATE! : zMMSi&u\ KAMPSEN ■sKST***” : Property 52 , 244 DICK ST. Pioneer Highlands 4 Beam.—yi Acre and Berries y Partridge- IT, I mtw.‘ttJT°cuatm *m SMITH WIDEMAN P ER| “-has- HOYT OPEN rf^Sra. SUNDAY UNDIA^nlrAUE-1 3 TO 6 P.I aygar jy tf?s $1,000 DN. OPEN A. JOHNSON. Realtor |____ 1704 fe YliSf** R<1 |g.E.ALI2g— F£i-2?g| gsv™ ! KAMPSEN $9,500 OPEN* '^<8K£»~ mar™ 2to5 RM ! annett L RANCHER, I -3 Bedroom 1 Near Emmanuel Baptist J ’—' * *“ ’ pis; Uffltll SUNDAY PRICE REDUCED ___________ MODEL RANCHER _ _ _ . __ _ b Brick—3 Bedroom 'Near E BROWN ™ SMITH-WIDEMAN REALTY i School Time Near LIST WITH OPFKT ; Humphries "SMITH" ^PBr«2Bt “Fir kale or Exchange M A PARTY STORE “BUD” Nicholie. Realtor { South of Rochester ‘ I'E 5-T201 , can m* non • r. DL MW or UL • HAGSTROM XX TOOK OKU BOM. Etorw’t chaooo to got into buslnees «UL |00d IMM. ran prlco It,000. HARDWARE AMD FAIHT — Oood ESi SULKPScOT plus ilook. ORADX B MILK BOOTS__ farming am. Excellent groat -Boot hauling priest. Includes 1654 E&WX.VZ'm'T' H. R. HAGSTROM 4000 BI«iuS5|toRd. (MM) PONTIAC OR 4-03 Money to Loan M TOUR Signature Op to N Months to «W PH. FE^-9206 OAKLAND Lota Company M Poattoo auto Sant BUS- Borrow with Confidence "GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance »'» .€SS£mm* *"% *.» BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WEEKS TOO CAE' BORROW UP TO $500 .• OFFICES IN £*ftc - Djayton Plain* — Utica Welled Lk„ Birmingham Plymouth WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 We will So glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. WS Pontiac State Saak Bldg. FE 4-1574- HOME and GROCERY MODERN TWO BEDROOM HOME * GROCERY BUILDING M ~ " ft. Equipment and ctock inch ea three acre, of land _ grocery and Boat business. Boer t wine fieeait. Located tn growing community near Milford. Only $15,000 with tt.000 down. This It OHjfOdbuy. Phone FE 3-7885 CLARE REAL E8TA’— *“ “ • sasos rATS. 1 urtUer « LAWNMOWER SALES AMO 8ERV-Ice. Forced to sell because Oi etc knees. Of 8-1166 tow Partridge la TBS "BIRD” TO BBS LIQUOR BAR—INltf On Main Baet-Weet Thumb Highway — I acre* — newly remodeled rabetaattal building — seating over 100. Excellent dfnlng_ faellf-tlee. Book gnu over $75,000. r this Tory popular spot. TRAILER PARK •t spaces, I seres with 3 vacant serai. Oakland County — living quarter! — Ml,000 easy terms. (Others at Flint. Davison, st. Hsian). Send for bur' free "Michigan # Btulneoo Guide.'• Partridge and associates BUSINESSES THRUOUT MICH. 1050 W. Huron ~ EE 4-3581 LEASE TO RELIABLE PARTY, nice restsurant-drive-ln, 3515 E Walton. HI health. Reply. Pontiac Fuse Keg B. LUMBER YARD r>w Located between Flint & Pont Lie 3 bedroom la thriving community, handling lumber, coal, feed, hdwe. % **'" equipment, good bldgs. ^ Credit Adhrtaora 61A BUlXJET YOUR DEBTS CONSOLIDATE BILLS—NO LOANS For Your host bet to get out of debt, see Financial Advisers, Inc. 1H I SAOINAW FE 3-7SS3 Mortgage Loans 62 Voss & Buckner, Inc. ■ fb 63 Swaps » H P SCOTT-ATWATER MOTOR WFIrifalrly new portable type-writer. OB 8440S. ■ U FOOT WOOD BOAT. U OAUOE Mule barrel. 3030 bolt action. Bell or swap FE 3-0897, 1 16 FT. MAHOO. SPEED BOAT. AH upholstered, windshield and Secern., with 33 H.P. Bvinrude motor. tlM or trade. 14 foot Thompson, new t HP. motor, >150. PI 8-0036.______■ BURROCOHS ADDINO MACHINE, c»»h register. ’Si Plymouth, Mlm-oogrsph, U automatic, nortablc electric Singer. OR 3-61 BOY8 20 IN. J.C. HIOOIN8 BI-cycle for a girl's 30 In. in good coudltton, HE6-4I2*. . CABIN NEAR . OCaDWIN. MICH. ■■■■I . CffoRT OH MOM. I COW WITH « WEEK OLD CAUL win jell or awap for tractor. FE 2-8740, ....... I CASH FOR USED pht-- _Jmk__________ ELECTRIC WATER. HEATER FOR • • I you. OL 3-1011 EQUITY. HOUSE . Oood .condition. OA 2 PR. (HP ORBEE FLORAL DRAP-erlee S pr. roee print draperiee. PE Mttt. PIECE BEDROOM SUITE AND anUqae cherry cheat. 42S5 Meyer* Road, OB j-M ■xSIam* !. OOOD I PIECE SILVER ORAY BEDRM. outfit. Doable dresaer, bookcase bad, large ghret. S vanity tompt. All for MS.50. Pav only S3 weekly. Pcareon’s Furniture, a Orchard LstoMt. S*FT. RKPRIOERATOB, *l*;*l“ TV. FE 2-4231. 7 FtECE-LIVINO ROOM SUITE, Brand now davenport and chair. 2 modotn atop tables matching coffee table, I deceraler lamps, all for 0*6. Fay on.y $2 weekly. Pearson’s Furniture, 42 Orchard LtkeAve : _ 8 PIECE MODERN BEDROOM mutt be cold. Danish modrn. on toga. Include* S drawer triple dresser, * drawer chest, large landscaped mirror, upholstered headboard In supported naughyde, 2 night tables, ami 3 modern black brace lamps. FE S 8846. 8 PIECE WALNUT DININQ ROOM set, .KeMnatar electric Emm Cold spot rotrlg., dishes lad-- household Items. 3310 General Motors Rd, MUford. IgS . VINYL—4, », 13 FT. WIDE tic TD. Vinyl Linoleum Tile 6c ea. ‘‘BOrLO” UNCLAIMED TILE OUTLET 102 8. SAOINAW FE 8-2488 Tweed rugs, *38.86; Axmlnster, 840.08: Rug pads. ISOS. Pearson Furniture. 43 Orchard Lake Avail CU. jrt. PHILCO REFRIQERA-tor. 030. OR 3-2746, IT’ Teletone ....... i IT* Motorola ....... i 17" Fhllco ............ 21” Admiral comb......... 638.56 30 other sets to choose from. All sets with written guarantee. Obel TV, 3*MKliiabeth Lk. Rd. “ - 4-4945. Open > .to 0 and 8u THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 bAY SHIFT TWENTY-sfevEX Salt HsuiskoM Qoada 68 DON ’T Win* MOMET HA VINO ”■ jfti^TV fibead- We bavb a ah low as alar 1418. BAOIEAW E-DRYER comb. $169 Mil Damaged New in Crates *—-^dou -Wsrraaiy — |gmi — KbEuigy AND I’ve got ’em In (tea for Immediate delivery No Money Down — ** — | um.n rnimvt FOR SALE: BABY BED. DOUBLE mattress aad eprtngo, FE 8i0l>. FREEZERS — NOROE FREEZERS Chest and Upright* Raw medals slightly scratched or crate marred. Models at Mg dto- Two years to pay 10 day* tame as cash WAYNE OABERT 121 N. SAOINAW' FE 5-8180 FREEZERS — UPRIGHT FAMOUS name brands, scratched. Terrific value* 5148.85 while they last. Mo phone orders please, Michigan Fluorescent, 383 Orchard Lake O.E. DOUBLE OVEN ELECTRIC stove, Duncan Phyfe drop lent table and o chairs mahogany. . Electric rotator and cabinet, si- By Frank. Adams For Solo Ml Ilocolliaoow67 ;cmoir S In. 4 to .............C 54 44 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO , 1408 Baldwin Rd. ______>j 8-2543 SINGER SEWING MA C H IN E standard model, still wider warranty, pay no • payments of Of per rniolt or 838 If paid cash. Universal Co. FE 5-0805. STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE wtftt faucets — “ ' value 834.50. __ Jl with hairtQH 66 ' Michigan Fluorescem. sej w chard" Lk. Ave. — 31, BEARS M0 EGO ELECHRc IN" cuhator. perfect e«ndWoa, 'I grape prase aad l't a 0 foot trailer Can after 0 nV FE 53005 STAUFFER DELUXE REOTCINO louage, to settle aetata OR 3-7791 tabott Lumber Water proofing tor basements B P S. paint, glass Installed, wood sash W all sites, full law of lumber. Reasonable price*. 1025 Oakland Ate, FE 4-4595.. _ Special Paneling Offer 1 4x1 panels V,” mahogany V-groove, D grade 54.80 esch 4x0 paneU. V.” mahogany V-groove, C grade 44-30 each 4x8 panel*. mahogany V-groove preflnlshed 17 00 each Oak Flooring S*le Spertlng Qook |4 OURS MODERN AND ANTIGUK. Buy. sell trade aad repair. Burr-■hon. tn 8 telegraph, rx 2-47oa. NEW AQUA LUNO. ALL ACC1< sorles, mail laerfitee. Olid. FB 4-IOiI Bait, Minnows, Etc. 78 MINNOWO. WORMS. AND CRICK-cts. all 8isat. Pubjto trout flwSog. Trout Crook Bench, M34 at Oreen-jgps Sand, Gravel and Dirt 76 100,000 YARDSFILL Loading truck f dsn u week.' cheap. Will deliver. Thor Con- __trading Co . Inc MA 5-8893._ 1-A FIAT M088. DELIVER 112. I yard lead, PE 0-1701. A-l FEAT"HUMUS. frATOliflD. ! 81.75 yd. for 7 yd. load. 01.50 yd. I ' 'fft 14 yd. load. Hill View Pbrm, “* Baldwin Rd.. MT 2-1415 or DUCHEgg AFFLEE, FLUM8. FO-tolooe 3100 OotRiH Rd.. Ologar vUto. - * MT -3-1: Urorod Tdays _ ______ I sand, tap soil. 888 Lot haven. FE 8-1413. A-l TOP SOIL CRUSHED 8TONET Band, gravel, Htt Lvto Conklin. I FE 0-1113 or FE bOtft. AL’S BLACK DIRT TOP TOIL, flu and manure. Also complete landscuplng and tree removal and imBgTro Scott Lake Rd.. PE Produce Specials m< Rons or Halo Raven posch-**, |3 M a bushel These pro top quality. Romo - grown Roney-Rook*, by slsei, 3-4 for 0 81. Cucumbers aad peppers. 0 for St Snt"Trm* *j£T% Wt*** I Home-grown temptlee. 4' pounds 42e Re. i MtolMgem oalotitoL m roR,miENDLr^uJfr»ua SERVICE. WE WILL SELL YOU rr. . . uuihk yyu. BILL. BILL'S TWIN LAXX FRUIT MARK IT # 100 HIOHLAHD RD, • M-5f). POKTUC, OO 3 BUI west op AnRtotr. «m hIr HOME^OWIWN^OLADB. w^ysba^r riet ydwi t Of Milford. trtmm 4-422$ . 8185 N BENSON LUMBER CO. Pimtlac FE 4-2521 SEWER AND DRAIN SUPPLIES SEWER FIFE 4" plain pipe .... 0 .38 ft. complain about what I put p*pj • ....$ U n In your lunch bucket before you went to sleep in front ofU” siipsoai pipe ' . 11.21 n. I LAROER SIZES IN STOCK T-V ... . Complete stock of fltUnti __1 . . , | DRAIN TILE _____^OR 3-0165. I SPECIAL: IDA STONE. $2 YD Mkfogw. 52 yd. Beech “You used to come home Sale Household Goods 65 For Sale Miscellaneous 671 OAS STOVE. FE 5-823P AFTER 5:30. , ■■ OB BLIC. PUSH BUTTON STOVE, 36”, Ilka now, 5100. RB 3-0000. IRONR1TE IRONER FULL SIZE. Deluxe model. 8188. a years to W' WAYNE OABERT 121 Wr SAOINAW_______FE 5-8180 UtONRITE IRONER. PROVE TO yourself that Ironing time can bo cut tn half with ease and comfort. Rem an (ronrite for -pennies a day. FE L3573 Crump Electric. * I Used Trade-In Dept. Vanity chest ft Bed . .. 830.50 RCA TV Console, 21” Mohog. $130.50 THOMAS ECONOMY 381 a Saginaw FE 3-0151 USED TVS. 818.85 AMD UP. COL-ored TV. RCA. 1375. Sweet's Radio and Appl., 422 W. Huron. FE Blacktop Driveway coat, call your Advisor. FE 8-4858 | :ar parts for ■*» to is v da. Royal Auto P Clemens. Pontiac. > Parts. UN Mt. ’ drain tile CftC ’ Oranteburg pipe li Orchard Lake A i grease Irsps duet*. 1338 Sdshabaw Rd., Clarkt- ton, MA 8-tldl. _____ 2'j YDS. BLACK DIRT OR PEAT Prompt delivery. OR 3-8044. FILL SAND. PILL DIRT. LOADING fill sand. Bloomfield Htlls-Bir-inIngham are*. PRescott 0-4020. _ BLACK DIRT, BROKEN CONCRETE _ bull-dosing. PS 8-0042. BROKEN SIDEWALK. CHOICE FARM ' _ llverpd. F* 4-44i ORAVEL. SI 4-3311. r SOIL, 0 trading. SAND ft TOP SOIL" ! processed rock, FE 4-3817 ORAVEL SAND. STONE.. FILL :°a>3 #,;-*£c,llrot coo<>1-1 SPECIALS! evv stvm wviriv u*nv- a-ta aa-jSu-( 4 4 Clothes 0*1 ... —ithly.________ PI (-6522 or WE 3- _ EQUITY IN 80 X 10 FT HOUSE 13 CV. FT. REFRIGERATOR Freezer 08 lbs. UL 2-1W4 18 ASSORTED LAMPS, A88ORT-ment ot chairs aad end tobies, several other household Items. Mart Evans. 3210 Oeneral Motors -Rd ,-Milford LnctH^: | LEAVUMO rrATK - MJNOLDS- fitti r“ 1““l Automatic iShir^i? TV* 2 matching love seats, rnlscl furnl- KALAMAZOO COAL FURNACE Swwnn wT Mwnr?111 with gravity flow torrid boot ell HEBUILT washer ' "conversion unit. Complete . with 280 gal. oU drum. 8x18 wool rug end pad and 0x13 rug with pad. ^08 3014______________________ KITCHEN SET. DAVENPORT. TV. __Dresser and and tobies. PE 2-0070. LIVING ROOM CHAIR, IRONRITE Irener porch glider. FE 2-2118. LAROE LOOSE CUSHION FOAM seat and back touttge chair. 100 per cent nylon ^cpv" — scat Chair la factory n original tags on It. Sells at all leading stores. '. (or 880. This chslr Is too lari fde our room, and store nm take lt hack. FE 8-0040. MI REBUILT WASHER 2 PC. UPH. SUITE METAL BEOS COIL S----- 10 W. PIKE ONLY WAYNE COUNTY 65 PC Earthenware Dish Set - Service For 18 -Regular 820.08 - NOW 814.88 SIMMS 28 SOUTH SAOINAW Dally 3 to 8. sat. 10 to 5_FE >-6838 WILL SACRIFICE NO(tOE WASH- PE 8^373 CEMENT STtaPS. READY MADK, all atoes Splash block, door *IUi chimney capo Pontine Pw-CwmiBiiillWWPBWi 2-380(? Co” M w- Sheffield. FE Exterior sheathing 4x8' .. *x.» ea. DO YOU HAVE A PAINT OR EJ*kD TIL® • U« EACH decorating problem ? Hundreds of I PIPE . —.... STEEL colors to choose from. Intertori .. _ :Ll*^hlBV,fa#bAcW,iilJXr I AndnTU?rarB*toC*M.nteri:.T 5?ln7 *r#*' J""* “M‘e ESTIMATES FHA TERMS OAKLAND FUEL ft FAINT ___________I______ 43d orcKtotoko Ave fk mho SURPLUS LUMBER & DELUXX DKLCO OIL CONV.. A-l MATERIAL SALES CO. - 15340 Highland Rd. (M-481 OR 1-7002 TYPEWRITER. OOOD CONDITION ORAVEL. SAND. FILL DIRT h 1 black dirt. OB 3-8884._____I Gravel land for lease. I OA 0-2038 ___ CRUSHED STONE, SAND. ORAV- ' J el. Earl Howard,. EM 3-0831. . LOADING DAILY FILL DIRT 30c 1 slee Sand Pit Square l*%ke | Red haven and jubilee peaches pick your own, minimum } bushel VaOey View Orchard. 11311 Hartland Road Fvntoa. MIch ■•a moo Row operated by Diehls Orchard and Cider MU1. Holly, Mich. ME TAdtO. T7 Sale Farm Eqaipment 87 14 IN. DOUBLE BOTTOM PLOW. Disk. . drag. Anthony hydraulic Jlft gate, cow manure. UL 30204 A REAL OOOD SELECTION (5F garden tractors, Roto Tillers and lawn mown*. • HOUGHTEN & SON 52* N Main. Rochester OL 14781 CLEARANCE SALE USED EQUIPMENT “ — walking tractors CREDIT TERMS FE 4-0734 PB 81113 KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE EVERITf TRENCHER, COM plete with hydraulic back till blade for ford or Ferguson tractors. Oood condition. $475 oi Small rl FORD TKAC- Royce Long. 2080 Ford Rd MU Rd Will ( . UL 1 . UL condition. FE 86816. CASH WAY STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS dkOutb Fegboord ......... 83 H 4k8xVb Pegboard ... 84.80 4S0xH PIvsoore . .. 44.48 18x48 32-ft. Rock Lath 4x0^ Plasterboard . 828. FE 1-4480. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE Iverythlng to meet your »** lothlng Ft'—*—i*. PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS 8UP-pty. Sand, gravel ft dirt. Cement, mortar, trucking ft tUe. OR 3-1534. LOOK! Bulldotlng, any slit job. no mov* time. Check our ratez by job or hour. Also dragline and dump tm wor$k 4 6595 yard gradino, to# soil.' Rede garden ^fjuCTOR.^4 plow attachmoats. I 82^84__ 'inw, tvr :- FI I-35&3. Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY ~ Furniture ' Appliances | .80 I m WEST LAWRENCE_____________ 25 THOR WRINOER WASHER, $15 ■ Rotlsserle. like new, $20. Fry rite ■ cooker, 18 Large pressure cook, er. OR 3-1002. * TAKE A LOOK AT THESE PRICES! Birch Vx4’x8*-a-2 Clrade . $13.60 1 **“ * 'x4‘x6 A-D Orade ..t i.If ’IW C-D Shop - - - i Wood, Coal and Fuel 77 LAB WOOD OR FIREPLACE wood. 3 cord. 817 Pel. PEMI3I, Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78 SATURDAY, AUGUST 20TH AT 2 P M Wc wlU auction tor tho O’Hara farm tho following farm equipment In good condition and ready to go to work for you! Brllllon IF cultl-pscker 4” axel Moline 6’ disc Moline 3-bottom plow ** n.r,r(] Comi-------- 1 urday 'at 3 p.m__________________ SMALL GARDEN TRACTOR WITH attachments; Scott spreader; rid* rotary mower. OL 1-UOQ. erythlng with inventory OI at least 530,000. Roy Annett, Inc., Realtor! R. B. Munro Electric CO. __________ West Huron. 16 IN. GAB HANOI, OOOD CON-dltlon. UL 2-238d. ’58 model. For ANTIQUES AND ALL TYPES torn, sold dally. MV 81521. __ ATTRACTIVE MAHOGANY I ... ____ toy*, clothes,pH a display In garage. 18281 Rlv-slde Dr , Birmingham. MI j EM 3-4171 FI, - .. . --— - -_________ l. dally Fir %"*4’x8’ A-D Shop . YOUTH BeB; MATTRESS. AND ____________Bunds*J^O am to ^3 Jim ---- PLYWOOD DISTRIBUTORS matching chest, 648. Water Soft- DELTA JIO SAW WITH BENCH. 378 North Cas* __________ FE 3-0430 I FE 4-8803. _________I 24 In. $25. Expandaway dlhlng WORK BENCHES AND PICNIC For Sale Pets 79 AUCTION SALE GOOD USED REFRIOERATOR Orchard 1 roo INCOME NICELY FURNISHED, i steady tenants. Retiring will take I £Uy terms. Schick’s. MY 3-3711. ...... I e-^ln5^4NOrth ADMIRAL"FM-AND CU^~RA> WWW8:--' —- 616.65 and up. R. B. Munro MOTEL. 5 UNITS AND HOME for your land contract (where ■ Completely furnished. On lake. 14} you have sold property). B. J. mile* north of Pontiac. 16663} Van WcB. OR 3-1385. _' Dixie Highway._—--------MOTOROLA TVTSaDIO and REG I MOTEL FLORIDA What TOuT VL \ Ob main HWY. and tokra. to **» ]3!*R. ^82^? HoiS.tJS.r0^ i I units plus trauttfttl owner lake-. home MI 7-2240 I front out. Privet* beach, wonder-1“1 ' I tul fishing, excellent retirement!SUN^UNILUP MACHINE 8ELli | proposition. Dlvoret forces aale.i or’-'”' “ — - - — Consider trade toon partof downIpe____ payment. Write Oqner, Box 146, . SWAP AT .r Haven, Plotlda.__ JOSEPH FURNITURE MAJOR~Wh CO! HA3 SEVERAL I SMALL BOAT AND MTR. service itattona for- Isaac. .Oood> good used storm windows. OR __________Good uun...... I,, Financial as- sistance available. FE 81611 after 8 p.m. FE 88203. OAKLAND AVENUE FRONTAGE FOR SALE. LEASE OR 1HBW. - It ffraOBT-aoe yo rr deep - 14 BUILDINO. *- IDEAL WR CARS BALES ETC REASONABLE RENT. -- Sm U.56 month. OR 3-2340. ■ Distributing Co,__________ WILL SWAP OR SELL - FREE ft Sh ra dayt. MP 4-6457 Evea^ TIM 347 Oak M WRIGHT, Realtor isle. $760 C 83834. RaMrrAufc^RT AKD CANDY SHOP on Washington Avt, Lansing, Michigan. Owneri retiring. Want quick action. For detotts writ* or •«* Oorald A. Baker, Broker 103 Bank of -Laaatog. Phono IV 84403 SOFT ICE CREAM ABSENTEE OWNER - Will aacrl-flee this going business lor W,M$. Beit ot xfl he tart STATWIDE. Real Estate service oV Pontiac I D CHARLE8 realtor 1711 ft. Telegraph FE 4-0521 STANDARD STATION ANDt bulldliifa. Roy Brown. Luke Orton. MY 2-2N1. - SERVICE STATION FOR LEASE Good potential. Florae coll be-, tween land* FE 2-0101 After ■ 3 6-1448. Pure Oil Oampnny. ^ SAGINAW STREET 3 stores raw rented. 3 apurt-ments with sewrato furnaces, basement. Deep lot. Oood tuy Paul M, Jones, Real £st. m ^-Ww* H,,n,a .. OWN 1 i. Priced r le. FE 8-frndi. WILL TRADE EQUITY ON 4 room and bath, naftly decorated for late model ear. Balance ow-too oe heuie 6616a. FE 3-6661. i^TiBSFQlloSlinBYIXHD- --- -rannon tor Dent end load- wlU aaU. PE 6ftU6- . WILL UotCHANOE 6 BEDROOM lakefront home for amaller home, eicellcnt sohodla, MA 4-3136. ■ For Sal* Clothing 64 4 FORMALS SIZES \ PE82Sld. JO OOOD DRESSES. SIZE 1 TO II. Baby clothes, boysrta* 1 to 11 Men and Wemena abac. FE 8-5335. BOYS C1.0THINO. SIZE 14. LIKE new. IE 2-3544 after 4. KWoShSiRANCH MINK COAT site 13 dyed squirrel cape. 1180, 1 Wk. days, MA 6-2856 mom.__ BUCK PIRS1AN PAW FUR COAT. CLOTHING STORE FOR SALE, thousands of articles. 6450 total pries. 377 Baldwin. After 1 > ■• tail li ynn______________- CHILDWnrft CLOTHES, hlZB I- pall wcmmvrt _™_ It. clean, good cond., r Sale Land Contracts 60 LAND CONTRACTS TO BUT OR to mB- Karl oarrels. EM 3-3511 or EM 3-4666. La >55 06etbact|_#oc_=^--_ WANTED: PRIVAtE INVESTORS LOOKING POR OOOD RETURN. EARN 11 PER CENT ON TOUR INVESTMENT YOUR MONEY IB SECURED BY DEED TO PHOF ERTY YOU OUT A CHECK EVERt MQNTH. FE 3-1633. — AL BENDEROFFft______ GIRLS’ SIZE S AND LADIES’ sliet 6 to 14 d ret set, aklrto, and .welter* Brownte SEVERAL OObD__ LAND CONTRACTS FOR BALE BATEMAN REALTY 377 ft. TELEGRAPH FK 4-0626 Money (Licm*»dl to Loan 61 LOANS $25 TO $500 ^OME & AUTO LOAN CO. T N. Fcrrv 6t. comer E. Pjk* TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E- ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO luiiSSSD°OOODS •■FRIENDLY SERVICE’ BOUI Uh __ LOANS m TO 1668 - m TO 6800 ^.uunvrrv true M 18. 7«i l oxfords. Exc. Sale Household Goods 65 yi PRICE "Baumrltter-Lane-Locke-A rtllne’ ’ MAPLE MAHOGANY-WALNUT LIMED OAK-CHB1RRY-EBONY * . NUT 3CAPLE Btbp Tables — Lamp tables -Coffee Tables - Drum Table* r Bookcase# — Record Cabinet* - Sofa Ten House Tablet -Dinette Tables — Nit* stand* - Bfiit TuHdi. SIMMS 25 SOUTH SAOINAW Dally I to 6 Sat. 16 to 5 FE 84836 FObR POBTER MAH. BED room. 5 Maytag waahtn. 4 very alec 31-lnch TV’s. Several fuob* Th'^riZ Blond etfor chest *17. Refrigerator*, watbers ft atovea. IIS up. Wicker lawn Mi *11. Lara* wan mirror If. Metal ironing heard. Table*. liao new bedrooms, living room., dinette.. ftrUg* .factory reject, about (k price. BZ terms. BARGAIN HOUSE 1*3 N. CAM FE fMODERN SOFA FOR BALANCaE affir»JKF.r*«aas Dixie, Drayton Plator. _; | TEAR OID APT. BOB OAS ivtae room "ebtta*. *1.71 MjgO flout*. 563 N. Cat*. fPOKT SECTIONA^ND"tMi - g-gg .......>imuvnpiirai PL 2-^11 acadltlen. EM P-KR . rnmSPORTCT l6ve seat, i B Led, to good condition. ; 86558 between 8 A.M. Call’ F tars ‘«EL*SroK‘- s%s. -----K Tb U, t» I Terrace, ALCOA ALUMINUM Combination DOORS " guaranteed 1 FULL INCH THICK Aluminum comb, doors. Rrgularly —■ -“-ft; you pay enqr Tax Included. priced $36 81 f $23.95 PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED ON UfftftUbflSMM ORDERS ONLY. Installed price \ $3.1.95 FEDERAL Modernization 3536 DIXIE HWY. I A M. TO * P M EVERT DAY BATS.. 84; ftUNB. 184 fe 3-im Plenty of Free Parking On Our Lot REOULATld) REFRIGERATOR. BREAK fast set, hldeabed. TV. tewing ma-hl.t.. and other misc. condition • 1 USED APPLIANCES, FRIOI-dalre electric range, like new t«$.$8: i cubic ft. FriddaD frlgerator. excellent — 87J 85; GE wringer Wasuer. iup shape *44.66; Norge automatic washer 2 year, eld $66.68. For the beat see Obel flr.t. Obel TV ft Appliance*. 3930 Elisabeth Lake Rd. open t to 6 dally. FE 84*45. ABOUT ANYTHINO YOU WANT FOR THE HOMS CAN BE FOUND AT L ft ft SALES. A little out of the way but table. 4 Mares, desk type. seat*. | 10 open. *80. Fuel ell tank 220 «<»»“• ^ l «■»>, ftjter and gag*. »28_Chev- litFI, TV and Radios 66 XV cond.l owner. FE ft” TV GOOD COND. FIRST *35 DEEP"WKLiTpUMP AND WATER | takes.It. FE 4-2*61. tank, vibrator couch, 2 army 1*1 HLFI SILVEftitQNE ‘TAPE cot*. Coldzpot refrigerator. FE | __ recorder. 118 MA 875*1. .. 1-3071 dltlon. 675. MA 8116*. _ “ MOVING—MUST SELL EXCELLENT gaz stove. 36 inches. 136. Misc. item*. EM 3-0407. _ MODERNIZATION BALE ON NEW and used furniture and appliances, 1226 B5d5S*,?,U,mra 5-11*1 i ELECTRIC. AUTOMATIC WATER ! ELECTRIC”FUM^^NDyfANKTlO* W.buy,Mll«dtr.«l, | i^ratoe. « bar: .~n-M.cAK gsarw^ef KnT^gcT Huron. FE | luxe binding, reasonable. FE tobies, shop loads. OR 3-8622. WHILE THEY LAST — COLORED I steel 5 ft. bathtubs, 838. O A. Thompson. 7668 M58 west.________ WHEEL CHAIR. DINING ROOM I table and organ. FE 2-2833. _______I 68 _______ -Lk_^_________________— FRIDAY .............7 P.M. 5 AKC DACHSHUNDS AT STUD. cATfinniv Puppies. Jamor’s. FE 82536._| bA rURUAY AKC S“ »yr.... ____ . ... .7 P.M. TO MOBmaUD COCKER SPAN- ! SUNDAY .........2^P,M. Machinery GARRARD 301 TURN’ Bhure stereo studio l Excellent cond. OL I-l Water Softeners 66A Montcalm suppi DUO TfiERM ' SPACE ' HEATER CEMENT BLOCK MACHINE, X — >n<« blower 220 gallon oil tank. er’ P*llel* *«• !|fl truck. | 656. UL 2-1168 * _ 7^ condition. I300. comP!rtL1,, I DOUBLE 8INK. COMPLETE IN“ I ^NorUoraa, Dearborn. LO 8028 5-471L j EVEREfT ^TRENCHER. COMPLETE AKC LOVELY POODLIS AND PEK- 1 EnMM3-8201PJ >nd °ldBr d°** ltl> AQUARIUM AND STAND. ALL Pet shop. 85 Williams. FE 86433. | BOXER PUPPIKS. REG. AKC. 1 * ^-^ra 2— DOOR PRIZES EVERT AUCTION NEW MERCHANDISE CAN BE PURCHASED WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT 12 ft 24 MONTHS TO FAT noroe Refrigerator"excel. ; lent condition. FE 81355._ NEW SOLID ’ CHERRY DINING | BOSTON STUD CH STOCK. CURT- | rdndlLlon or” trede PE _‘“ -OR 3-62H , , , * 4 1442 ! CUTE 8MALL PUPPlra, $5 EACH } ------^————................... ..._4631_ Maybre Road. Sale Musical Goods -5* dalmation, _ (.vx _years_ old. ; it Service. R B I NEW EUCCTR1C DRYER. 6146. | s-MJl ' ^ “puSnrcV | For S-le Miscell.neou.~67155!ffi &]S? TO,L1!TaTt OVER sTUBED ^~ ----------------------r- tWftj hard copper 614.55 up. TV antennas. $9-58. U OIL FLOOR FURNACE, USED L, TOto lengths 15c: WALTON TV plumbing, used 2x4, *xT l u*ed %^- hard copper srn * tub * misc. On dliptor tat ft J4C 1 ,IS *• *3^°° Sunday morning. Cass Lake Rd. * *™‘ «»PP«r • i ------R-ggg---------,-----I ramr of Venice Court, FE 822*3. " P-w*01!.. .)th trlB, ^ USED 80 006 BTU’I OIL FORCED Whiter eolorld ’ furnace and controls 6126. Factory 2ndf - Irregular* ------------— — — ----- SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY 837.50 FE 81666. 5*8273^ 1 : ROPER School Plan Ranges We have Ju*t exchanged our home economic clrae ranges to two more of Our Pontiac School District Schools. They are Just like new. go here la your chance to get the range you have been thinking shout at Prtcea to your liking, some Sre completely automatic, other* itmXsttto-matte, la both 36” and 38" 1 new Coleman OO.OOo Bib's gas forced utr furnace- and controls (110. 1 new Luxalre oil counterflow forced air furnace and controls. 111,000 BTU’s. 8281. 1 used gra conversion burner and control*. *66. Act Heating ft Cooling Co.. Ills N. William* Lake Rd. at M56, OR 3-4864. THERMOPANE PICTURE Window. 12 to. X IT to. FE 86135 between 1 and 16 p.m.__________ 2 BEAT GLIDER. $5. 2 PIECE BEDROOM SUITE house trailer hitch, and bird caot. PE 81*63. 3 WHEEL TRAILER. FOR SALE. 2-1037. r. »3 »8 plV*H _____________ Cohn Rhapsody 1 25 note^ toot pedal 81,800. Koehler 'ft Campbeir'6415. Morris Music/ 3« L Telegraph Rd . acrois from Tel Huron. fE 3-mY ______ attention musicians -WE STOCK EVERYTHING YOUR MUSICAL HEART .DESIRES SELECT FROM LARGE STOCK AUTHORIZED GRETCH DEALER LIBERAL TRADE ALLOWANCE LAYAWAY OR PAYMENT PLAN i EDWARDS_______IS_S. SAOINAW BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR, BY I factory expert CALB1 MUSIC CO 18 N. BAOINAW________F 88232 No paper* Like* children. Good watchdog- FEFfolO _________ ENGLISH POINTER,"2Vi YRS. OLD. Beat offer take*. OR_3-4472.___ GERMAN 8HEPPIRD PUPS. IS each. PR 5-0341._____ GERMAN 8HEFERD. FEMALE; »pay«d, . shot*, ll mo. FE 8-33*5 B '& B AUCTION 5089 DIXIE HWY. Lunch Room Open WrtAiidlm Aero** from Drayton Flatos ____New Shoppjng J7entor_ FARM AUCTION FLUB OFFICS equipment, household ft antiques. .Wed. AUg, 2* - 12:30 Elmer McCormick, owner. 8024 M-15, Goodrich Stan Perkins. - MB 86364, Swart* 8 8*glnaw ^ ' ~ FE 82106 FOR SALE COLEMAN,; GRAVITY furnace and 206 gal. tank, double bed, box tprlagi and mattress. FE i MOII, _ I RAt.nwiN OROANSONIC ORGAN FOR SALE: ALUMINUM STORM and bench. Luxurious blond fin- doom. 30 by 80. MV. Ilf. . n ish. A bargain at $1016. •........North ------ 1 Public Notice! FOR SALE - USED BATHTUBS {jo Q. “ ** Plano Tuning Or|ta Repair POODLES AND POMERANIAN puppies. Beat of pedigree Call FE 80881 ____ PIGEONS OF ALL KINDS. CALL ______ __ Wiegand Music Center 3 FOLDING WHEEL CHAIR . FOR BAZAAR AREA MIRACLE MILE sale. $20. CaU after *, OAJMHaO. _ PHONE FEderal 2-4024_ GAS AND OIL FURNACES, SUM- BITOND HAMMOND CHORD OR- ] ... -—I*'- *A« rau. ui! perfect condlUon, Mcrltlce, lot | v ft usi . Tor r We buy, sell or trade. Come out and look around/ 2 acres of free parking Phone FE 8624L OPEN MON. SAT. * TO * FRL l 'tp *_ 24 MONTHS TO FAT. 4 miles E~ ef Pontlac or I mil* E ot Auburn Height* on Auburn mattress, *38.85. Pearson i Furniture, *3 Orchard Luke Aye RECONDITIONED AU.TO MAT1C 172 s Saginaw washer, 03*. Under counter Hot- y-„ -w *u p* point dishwasher *75. R B Munro Electric Co. 1066 West Huron. REPOSSESSED 2 PIECE. LIVING ----n. 2 Step tables. MmdeftjmJ 4 INCH SOIL PIPE, 6 FT. ^sa^b^iEBUbino 8Ufpl\ 112 8. Saginaw_______FE 82100 21 INCH TV a SNOW TIRES. I « i« MT 3-4362.____________ •52 PONTIAC, *140. ALSO RKPRld- I rrator, *35 FE 5-7409.___ 52-UAL ELEC. HEATER. $89.95. j 36-gal. auto, .gas heater. 854.15. Cab. sinks and fittings *54 95 up. Laundry tray* and stand and 1 '*"-*♦» 819 95 C««h and eaerv. I SAVE PLUMBING ___ ipacials, ____ _____ _ 81501. * GE STEAM HEATTNO PLANT. OIL Tank, 6 radiator*, adequate for I rooms, only 8 yr*. , old. Exe, condition. MI 4-8434 or call at 3884 W Maple Rd., Birmingham. GARAGE DOORS Factory seconds, all standard ______________^-_l *28 L ■ Electric door operators folding closet doors and disappearing stairways. , We give estimates on garage :e modeling JS. r6» ELECTRIC SPANISH GUITAR, 5M LOWREY OROAN STUDIO REPLACEMENT SALK Every 8 months we equip our - -r rath brand new: Lowrey tty 6 n ..udto wttt. organa, AU Lowrey organs must be sold quickly at tremendous reductions. Only during this sale—can you buy a BLACKS TONE 8 HI NO MA-- CRH Ann high hack coffee table, end wheel UL 2-3575, ___________ in? room set. Exe. condition i garden tractor tjlth cuUlvjator J BUILT IN OVENS AND COOK tops, -comolete line of gas and electric, II6M5 end up. R. B. Mhnro Electric Co.. 16*6 West BIO FREEZER“REFRioT7ft NICE C A 8 ■ FOR WALL RADIOS, COUCH AND CHAIR. BLOND TV, tcreens, odd chair, baby buggy. Jenny idnd single bed. For cash Or take trade. PL 2-1265. CARPET TWEED. NEVER USED with tram pad. $40- FE 87240. CHEST. DESK. ROLL-A-WAY BED; ’ Rug. * by n. Hying room suite, blonde dinette, twto spread*, misc. FE 87323.____________________ caw for Furniture and tools, FE 4-4664. ’ ;____ “ASH FOR USED TVs, FURNt-tur* ft Mime, FE 80347. , CALORIC * BURNER OA» STOVE, suite.“odmblnitto* ram* .and record ptoyor. OOk drtssar Moving - must sell cheap. FK 8166*. emOMB KfrewSTiET, OENERAL Electric range, living room suit*, twin bedroom t»t. refrigerator with T> lb. framer, FE 8nft. Custom made i pirch. ro sectional Modoratoty priced. FB 86146. . ' . ; DRTKR NOROE. ELECTRIC $50. DAVBNFbHT AND CHAIR. GOOD condition. 8*0, after 6 OR 2-62*6 DEEP FREEZlf-SIMMONS SOFA REPOSSESSED: CLOCK RADIO - OK. Sold new for 634-66 pay off balance of 'ORTABLE* TELEVISION. 17 IN. OE Sold now for 6326.65. Pay off balance of ttM.65 at 13 25 WrYnOER WASHER - NOROE Sold new for 8186 *1 Pav off balance «< $119.85 at 8i.fo.per week. WASHER-ORYEIt COMBINATION. NOROE. Bold new lor 8*66.68 Pay off balance at $380 per week, AIR CONDITIONER. OE. .8500 BTU's. Sold new for 834661. A real bargain at 611*.** Pay balance at J2 per week. OAS RANGE - NOROE. 2* to. deluxe Sold now for *2*6.65. Balance of *1*6.66. Payment* at 82 TiKeS**- OOQDTEAR. All *ltei. Priced from *5. *1.6* per week. Goodyear Service Store, 36 S. Cass Pontiac FE 5-6123. FE 84046. SPECIAL *812, RUOS. 634.65. Me-■ Leod Carpet wood ward at Square Lk Just Vwow Ted’s. FK J-T701. SINOER 8EWINO' MACHINE ZIO-zagger for blind hom. design, *p-----------------------“ jow it BERRY DOOR SALES Open from 6 to 6 „ Noon on Saturdey FE 5-3100 371 8. Paddock FE 2-0303 WrcOMB~RADIO~REC- HOT WATER HEATERS. 2*~OAL.. ord niever 220 Male Cockatlel - Oas, Consumers approved. 890 50 cage *J» Used men’s clothing. value. U6 M and *48 50 marred. cheap. 12* state. ._ __ | atoo electric, dl and jpttled gra 3 PONTIAC CONV. . fo TON etc., etc. No you ore. or where you *re It is a muat to attend thu terrific auction solo. Everything sold, nothing - held ' back, dome one, com* all -to toe if ft H sales. Dealers ft eanalgnment* welcome. Acrea of free parking. Snack bar on ground*. AUCTIONEERS COL. BILL KNOWLTON. FENTON COL. JOE PARRIES. FT. HURON COL T. FURNESS, FT. AUSTIN COL. SINGER, RICHMOND BILL HACKETT. MILFORD SK^W“AL* PU"Y' ^COL°W?i!2K'%oSo" -^-dirFb^srimer ^ HARVEY PABKER-I*tX)DLES $10 DOWN !' And many rhore, _the H_ft 1 FE 81112. HUNT'S, EASY TERMS j $4.66. Waflter’a ___ ----------. Flrat El. Rochrator, OL_ 1-6312. REG. 5 YR. TOT FOX TERRIER, $30. On-Kart, <120. FE 82644. REGISTERED COLLIE PUPS FOR SCOTTIE 5 MOS. OLD, MALE. home trained. EM 3881*.___ THOROUGHBRED COCKER SPAN lei oupples. Black or blond. FE ...EE 2-6225. Mlac. storms ^nd screens. 75,006 BTU DELCO GUN TYPE furnace, like new. 675. FE 6-0366. 105.606 BTU NATURAL OAS LUX-airt. forced air furnace, with duct* and controli. OR gar* udlng blond orop sea _____..• can be paid 66 pel month. Univurtai Co.- FE 4-0608 — SELLING OUT — ENTIRE STOCK OF MERCHANDISE WILL BE SOLD BELOW COST 8YER 8 PAINT * jUSSSL. Antique Wtlah cabinet with chair Inner oaring and boxi spring m*8 treas. Bods, antique chair, sheet, bar stools, flash camera, electric akfflot, lamps and misc. Very Br i-Sm. TRADE BEAUTIFUL gINOER ZIO ZAO console model tewing machine. Does decorative stitching, blind menta of $6.51 per mo. Capitol _FE 8*407.__________________- ■ ANTIQUE black walnut ta-rca television., slide trom- tailored ittt ano amna hew blower heater. Also many oth 4882 Elizabeth Lake Rd. time before poon. _______ Michigan Fluores:------- 3*3 Orchard Lk. Ave. “ to-______ IDEAL LAWNMOWER GRINDER Perfect condition. OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE IN EXC. COND. furnace, wltl Oas Convorait- ______ .... . _---- — —* — 4-0146. RPRMMNPflHi. Terrific val-on 54” and *6” models Mlch-n Fluorescent 363 Orchard Lk. Gallagfhpr illiskCo. | to K. Huron St_ Ft 4-0564 FKM Imperial Dlsbmaster- with each new Conn Electric Organ or Story ft Clark Plano Limited time only/: MORRIS MUSIC 34 8. Telegraj>h Rd _ ^FE J-OOOT 7 OA *8237*713 } RADIO - ViCTROLA, MAONO-vox. blond console. 158, Baby grand piano. 140 MA 8115* _ RESTYLED"PIANO WITH MIRROR —reconditioned Immediate free delivery — Only ties. GRINXELL'S 27 S. Sagtogw______FE 3-71*8 i Dixie Hwy., AYMKNTs OF t* per mo. M Singer consolo model sewing machine. Totol balance only SM.ta CapUol FE 8*461. furniture. 11 W. Wilson Street. .Bo Jens — Wheelhorse Tractor* and Tillers Power and MBft moWera. Jacoboeo. Yardman and Tore, g/models of riding mowers, selection of uaod equipment W» service wkat w* sell. EVAKS EQUIPMENT SMI Dim* Hwy MApfo 8761* OR 876*4 aU new Cree camper vi ton QMC pick-up. Os, refrigerator, water tank and pump. 3 burner stove with oven and foam rubber cushions, sleeps 4. cEtPF7 DREYER's'* OUN * JEl?D SPORTS CENTER. 15216 HOLLY RD.. HOLLY, ME 4-8111._______ drawer files. 44* 50 complete seT diving gear . ____f safe, large 2 door for rate. 1206 EM 82116, eat*. Forbes Printing and Office OUNS - BUY WELL. TRADE. Supply. 415 _K. _Frank St. »lr. Manlev Leach. 10 Baglay. ) , mlngham. Ml 8-2016 around cor- - - —T——----------—— —1------------ nor from Turner — - * -Dr tv ton Plains WANTED TO BUY 3 DAY OLD For Sale Poultry 8S to over paymonto. 44iS. •56 PRAIRIE SCHOONER. .JF long, r wide.’ FE. 81742. . APACHE. TOUR-A-HOME. CREE (The/B>g Thr#e) _ We still hqye U desks. 414 54 chslrs i i io. , DF.ER HUNTERS uaed typewriter* and adding 1H| OMC suburban station i ijtlnei. Next to Foutlra-State ^ v-4, Hydramattc" power bn lk. 4166 Dixie. PR 3-9787.__ Bl( and roomy. 8785. Wlf S 1 WHEEL TRAILER. COLE 34 W. Huron Si. FE 81234. 8 lantern. Ilk* MW. OR 1-IU 38 BANTAM CHICKENS. 18c EA. ___________MA 83366 j 50 BARRED ROCK RObsTTERS" ' Several used travel trailers ’* Fryers 56* each. FE 3-06S7. j uiid a "’ ‘ LIVE OR DRESSED DUCKS 1 Oper ---c .---_ "TT ! RINK sini cuscn souse. m> Sale Farm 'Produce 86 holly rd., holly, m£T«wQi. ■ ; A |g"8Ti*A: ’ 1.. .7} “_7j_7 15 AND 70 LBS. OF cherries , Travel Trailer Stone 1832. Quay-and- 26 and 11 lb. mueberriet also antoed for Ufo tr *”— — —I Other frooen vegetablss. - Davey’a a demonstration a Market and lookert. 10*6 North Saws 30M W. 1_______________ Main Rochester OL 2-1111. Also ! loin one of Wally 196811) * ---- - ---- , gragygggj !r*M THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 Sal* Hwm Trailers 89 Jacobson’s Trailer Sales « and Rentals Baals and Accessories 97 H» .. PIBEROLAB IS'. 40 ! actor trailer: HA iSStf. ■MMOL inillVK . . J- .travel trailer on t —CBwrk* tW»Mt Mar Kin. n, ■w‘‘Frank’ and Tour-A-Home. Trai-,.,.__ B . trailers, our specialty. Parts and ns. Now ............ a » rrtaa, hitches and overUMe In- USED — »’ Royallte runabout. ? Helled. Complete hook-up. Don't Con. tap. Ren 1605 Now $395 be disappointed get your reset-.USED ?£■' If! spelrUl runabout, «-.«Mtaa, In now! 588$ William? trailer, Reg. p Now .. UN - Sake Road. Drayton Plains. OR NEW — IT Meyers Alan. Res - S4M1 I «ut now ................ am “■ *uurT rmi“bC «R&iiuPapr houbsthailek' BOAT SALES I new tins, stool and needs som*43 E. Walton Open 9-4. FE 4-4403 repair. «250. EM I-0I8S- I BOAT INSURANCE1 ONLY $2.00 per ^Oxford Trailer Sales Jffi, A*'BCJ ** 1 canoeTi-ft-alum. LiEk NEW. 4$«e *£ 40*^55'^ ““r 3 »i£ »S». EM 3-5382. form. Small trailers, too. Oood selection of used alt sires. 1 mile S. of Lake Orion on M24. TAKE ADVANTAGE i taler model jggg AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE] > Nika ' a wvriw I and baatar. Excellent condition, take ever payment*. OR 3-8799. of ottr need for food condition ! HARMLESS BALES A SERVICE Used Cars. Ws wiu pay Top Dot- 3138 S. Telegraph Pi 5-948- Makes and*all models. C WHERE QDALITT COMES FIRST, , SHORT'S MOBILE HOMES * | SALES AND SERVICE All new Oem and Beamer travel! traitors complete line of parts CENTURY CHRIS CRAFT CAVALIER SLICE CRAFT FIBEROLAS SAILFISH SUN FISH PORTABLE DOCKS-HOIST AJAX TRAILERS JEROME "Bright Spot" For Sale Cars Orchard Lake a 2137 V * bitches Installed. Need * ?ee^,.‘rci£d feaj to ' Gearance Sale J173 W. Huron PE 4-8743 ! 2 only, big flbergla* b .LET ua SELL YOUR TRAVEL *f*si Ml KMf tratirr or Mobile home for you ’ ‘‘eel, m: trailers. ,— * Wo have several buyer* watting “j £’rlBnJ Elm. PB 0-4437. cam. complete. FE 5-1894__________ FOR SALE: '84 BUICK 4-DR. IN ----’ 1053 FORO POB PARTI----------- . Ookflekl. __________FH 3-7201 ' mi 50 BUICK. OOOD MOTOR tiro*. AUtO- trans. RAH KM 3-0358. ■ Exe. cond.. MI 4-0300. ’57 BUICK - DOOR HARD TOP, POWER STEERING, BRAKES. SAVB 0400 4 USED BOATS ' ______________________________ ... iNPr»JJPT0B8 1 HOLMAN AltD MOODY. CAM AND A7r vSTS nn5ro® hit. new. UM-’OO-’OO. 333-343- H » tow „BOAT® | lot Ford and Idtel engine*. 0315 ALSO REDUCED^NOW51 j jjfj? iP“r^h***d' ,l##’ n ,*4U* j 8bailr pS 3-3310___________ ---V SMALL CUTTER BOATS X--------------------- 1053 BUICK SUPER. VERY CLEAN " ‘ - 103 hard top PB 3-7543. H! Riggins. '*2 BUICK ROAD MASTER. NEW tires. *75. Call between I and 0. | PB 4-7823. __________ •8$ BUICK-CENTURY, 4 DOOR, bt fuU power, very good, will I I EMI-SOil. » w-------- ’56 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR HARDTOP $895 'Cy' Owens SM'OAKLAND AVENUE _____PB 5-4101__ M CHEV PARKWOOD V-0, STA Wag.. RAH. PO. A-l cond.. 1-owner. 8.700 actual mUCs, 83.000. PE 5-7304. JM. HT FORD OAL^CIE, J Pull Price 01800. 1064 FORD VICTORIA 2 DR. BARD, ton. Radio, h004ar. wmoniWM condition. Ho monoy down, lull price •100. Acaums paymont* 0T 810 month Call Credit Mg.. Mr. WTMU. PB 8-0413, Ulg Auto SOto*. U» S, Saginaw, ___________ ISM FORD PAIR LARK 4-DOOR SE-dan YA engine. “—’— 00. NORTH CHEYROL1 to FORD VICTORIA STANDAltb transmission. RoMtt’s Ekl Shje. Radio R Hlrtcr. Abaolutely "No Money Down" EDDIE OTEEXE FORD, tilt Orchard Lake Rd. PE JJMt: Mil West Bnron. PE IBB ■_________fWW black Wp. 848 down - Up to 8» Bgmi on balance EddU Steele >ord 3370 West Huron. PE 5-3177; 1700 Oeonnid Lako Rd. I 4 DOOR RADIO STRAIGHT shift. 1 ,Y NO MONEY DOS jcBWKl —HR Assume payments of *l* » -SO. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks t Ml 4-1900, Harold Turner Ford $50 TO $595 rra true. dAct miss out BE ONE OP THE LUCKY OWNERS •S3 Bulcks 3—’S3 Fords ’It Fords 'M Ford “ ’—*“1 Oougo ' 00 IWT. Ml air, anw. v-s Nice Olds II t DOOT THU IS JUST A PEW, WE HAVE MANY MORE. COME IN CHECK THESE BUYS. FRANKIE & JOHNNY'S 3M W. MONTCALM PK 8-3711 OPEN EVEN IN 08 HARRINGTON BOATS For Sale Trucks ?”TSai ,LES CLIFF DREYER. IVIN RUDE ELECTRIC 30 HP | motor (Lark), in excellent condl-I tlon. 1548 Union Lake Rd. Or call if km 3-3888 after 8:30. o INBOARD MOTOR. DEARBORN TO|MM|-------- mplete. 818 HP. iterccptor E 1-5508 A trailer, ql 1-0180 RD- HOLLY. MY 4-0771 | v H ...NATION TRAI I f -While Trailer Sale* i-- » IN North Lapesr Rd., Oxford. • -OA 8-1783. ______ . I VACATION TRAILERS \ LOOK! I •« sow TtaUar-Btaxer, Apache PlJ^Poa was .19M HOW mM ; campers. Sale or rent. Caf top Sun-A-Pon Was t7»* NOW »«oo ' carriers. Make reservations now. ,,®*J-Alr* ««» Or»“ : Y K Hpwtand^oa 3-1450 was omo^ NOW onto «. _ _ - . ___«ras tint now ooos " 20% OFF ON 4AH EXCELLENT LOCATION WITH | BOAT8, MOTORS, TRAILERS. * -btovcrvlce In Ponttsc. Park your gPORTING OOOD6 MOST l SUMMER ITEMS «SSf SPORTSMEN’S " - * -{; . hE^PQUARTERS , «„R! Ml* at the Double 8toplight 40 *40' Open 7 days a week MY 3-4511 ! LAKE ORION BBRHBMPHPf^SMPMMBMMMI Pontiac Mobile Home Park. Wal- • ton. East of Saldwliy FE 5-0902. •OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR: • those Who want the tad 1 a lots 19'*40* cement __ _____________ ____________ \ One mile east ot Oxford on Lake-{LARGE 14 FT. ALUMINUM swi v vUta road. OA 8-3022. J and 14 It. run-about. Also motors. ^PRIVATE AND MODERN TRAIL- ‘LkUer, and picnic table. PB » er tat. IN Darts Bond. Auburn!. ------ • Heights. No domestic animals. MERCURY 40 H P MOTOR. EEC. ** ''-T ---=3=--------------d ■ cend. 9320. PX 4-0044. " NEW 14 PT.ToiPE BTrAR MALIBU r .____ __ run-about. Cmitrols new trailer. •A-l USED TIRES 83.50 UP. WE and used electric sUrter. 35 h.p. • buy, sell. Also whitewalls Evlnrude motor. $075. terms. .< 8TATE TIRE-SALES , k'-llv’s HarHuare .ID g Hssinsw st. n 4-4561 Rcity* naruware ii-w-Wfla-Tit 3094 Auburn Avt.. at Adams Rd tLOQKl 759x14 BLACK TIRES. ALL, pig 2-4411 i tiajo Sow^tax ‘and By«h.cy WEPrtCH - SALAH'K - WELD t gtaw Tlrs Sal*s 50J 8 Saginaw ! All Sizes Carried In Stock I fTmiSi m peTimc^ 24-HR. PROP. REPAIR LafrABSSib BRAND NEW TJRE8. Free Check Uo * --- '----------- ty Tire*. Newkirk's Boat A Prop Service — ’ 3156 COS* Lako Hoad, Ecego For Ssle Tires 92 i HEAVY DUTY TRUCKS 7 New '60 Ford F75Cfe «nd F800s PRICE? They Have To Go MAKE US AN OFER —-50 NEW AND USED TRUCKS IN STOCK ____ finish. Turbine Drive Trane., Delux Heater A Radio. Full Power. W-Wails. PULL NEW CAR WARRANTY. 3.670 actual miles IAYX 11,000. ONLY BIRMINGHAM MI t-1100 JO 4-6424 ’55 BUICK HTOP Very sharp. 2 door, radio, heater, ham car 41,000 actual miles. Olad automatic, double power. Birmtag-to demonstrate. PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES 00 Oakland______ PE 3-3351 '54 CAD.. 4-DOOR WHITE-WALL Crissman CHEVROLET COMPANY ROCHESTER OPEN EYES, OL 2-0731 1057, 0 DR. ALL BLACK. CHEV. BEL AIR WITH POWER' PAK PULL POWER. OOOD COND1----- LOW MILEAGE. PE TION, 1050 CHEVROLET Blit AIR door sedan. V-8 engine. ’ Powe HAM. 1C V2735. 1955 CHEVROLET. GAS SAVING 0 eyllndr engine. $23* full price. Payments of 94.13 a week, with (10 down. C*n Mr. Barnes, Ml 0-7478. Bchuts Motaw, ’83 CHEVROLET. lXCELLENT] 8178. 33 B. Prsncls._ •87 chevy Bel-air” 4-door h»dto^- Powerglide. Oood cond. NEW Dodge Dart $1975 INCLUDES FREE RADIO And all standard factory equipment. Salta tax and llcenae extra. RAMMLER-DALLAS 1801 N. MAIN ROCHESTER _______OL 8-0111 Transportation Specials NO MONEY DOWN WITH YOUR OWN TERMS VanCatnp Chevrolet, Inc. MILFORD _______ MU, 4-5235* ’83 FORD, V$, Ilk 7015 Cool*! Lk. Rd 8. Conway. 104*1 JjjpRD, EXTRA cIEAH] UL '55 FORO 3 Door $495 'Cy Owens mission, Dixie Highway. ’57* FORD 3 DOOR $595 'Cy' Owens (30 OAKLAND AVENUE Trade Ini >50 Down. 00.75 FEB WE. All Taxes. Ana Financing Included. 12 mo. Used Car War- FISCHER BUICK INC. 909 8 WOODWARD AVE. MI 4-9100 _______JO 4-0434 erSbtaV1Kffi™“IFALA COW- liimbgW ' 3" 1 lux* il mflea. ] » ED WILLIAMS * 491 8. Aaglnaw at Raeburn I '666d UgED ftKEB KUHN AUTO SERVICE .140 79. Huron__PE 3-13181 WEST BEND MOTORS | We need good need truck* and will pay or allow "Top Dollar for Your Truck.’’ EASY TERMS — SPOT DELIVERY Ask for Truck Dept. FE 5-4101 i-t ah service m Clearance Sale CRANKSHAFT ORINDINO IN THE| ftj- Pli* I , Severe^ Bl<3on'^l Cy Owens fS^lBoals & Motors TRUCK MART ) go Harbor •DUNESHAPT-CAMSHAPT GRIND.! • tag. WobHell Dee. 3374 Telegraph, j i Sale Motor Scooters 94| •CUSHMAN MOTOR SCOOTER t A COMPLETE SELECTION OP USED MOTORS AND U8SD BOATS 38' C. C. COMMANDER LIKE 4EW 2-145 e. CALL ON THIS ONE! —u --— qjama LIOHT HOUSE INN. 630 Oakland Avenue - Pontiac I YARD DUMP I DO E Pik*. Phone PE 3-8300.1 * For Sale Motorcycles 95 MARINS 8UPPLIE8 MICHRiAN BOAT SERVICE. WOv HARLEY DAVIDSON 14 B«aT go«o W* HUTON^*01'' I*pi 11911J ^TQNY’S MARINE i For Evlnrude motors. 84 years' "pair experience 2695 Orchard SCHRAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT 3838 Dixie Hwy. QR 3-1208 18*1 INTER NATIONAL D U M P truck by owner, new Urea. 04.71* actual mllea. Take over payments. PB 8-1407. ’52 PICK UP. DODGE. 371 H1LL~ cltfte PE 2-0555. SO CHE V H TON PICKUP A CHEV. IMPALA WHITE HARD- R E POSS ESSIQN 1957 Ford hardtop Palrlane 500. no rust. Full price $1.0*5. ’Dike over email monthly payments. ............ . Pint payment due 8ep« ton pick- 11*SrfC?5iSrOL551.S5i SIIELTON Potltiac-Buick up Assume payments. MU 4-5292 heatar eieellent rondltinn I CHEVRbt*ri»5J FICK-UF. 0375 LOOK SPECIALS ON ALL MOTORCYCLES THIS WEEK •Yidfton Salet t k. ,,_____ __ FE 3-t300 * For Sale Bicycles )oiRL8’8 AND BOY'S 20 IN PB 0-4531. 3*4 E Rundell onTa^e nd used bicycles, tricycles lens. B»nr f - ■ ■ Lake Ed., FE I SAVE $$$$ Big discounts on quality Boats—Motors—Trailers Easy budget terms Oakland Marine Exch. “Outboard Specialist*'‘ 381 B. Saginaw PE mot_____________ Open Eves. OWENS MARINE ‘SUPPLIES 386 Orchard Lake Ave. __;____PE 3-8020 THE ONE AND ONLY 100% Boat Repairs . BEFORE YOU BUY A NEW OT. i truck dept. Vi WlRCfthmu! jTPORD PICKUP. 0100. 741 ST? | ixcellent condition. - no money down, full price 0113. Assume payments of (IS month Call Credit Mgr. Mr White. PE A0403, King Auto Sales. 115 8. 1950 CmtVIE. 2‘ bdOR] stick. Ilk#------------ 3-7111. «. -o^ru Rochesttr, Mich. n\ OL 1-8133 __’ Just Make Payments SO- 55 CHf” * — OR Pay only gli box. automatic' transmls»__. ■ cclient condition. PE 2-00*7. *56 CHEVROLET TON PICKUP. I ft. bed. Oood condition *025. Will dicker. MI 6-1300 Pontiac’s Truck Center CHEVROLET 1-DR. BELAIR. I Like now, 1 owner- MM 38119. '13 CmCVT.' ADR. PAIR COND GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS NEWKIRK 114* OMC TRUCK. OOOD TIRES] PROP SERV. -*gL-y“--°r-ta*dc. PE 5-704*. ____ PE 2-0*61 1 *4*^001X3E STAKE CHEAP- OR •aim'Hr• MURRY srEErHiUiDLY Transportnt’n Offered 100 jeep~with snow~plow and » used. CaU OR 3-3*46.---------- ------------------------------i >M ch€r„ , 4 dump. PK 1 ENGINE AIRLINER. -teles. San Francisco. I •55 CHEVROLET 3 DR. PB 2-3088 ■ '85 CHEVY 8PORT8 COUPE. POW-ergllde. PE 5-3838. 56 CHEVROLET^ 2-DOOR, V-8. BY owner, 8888. Pfc 4-0801___ 1051 CHEVROLET » DOOR] BA-DIO A HEATER^ ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 07.10 per ate. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parke at Ml ' 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford. ‘55 CHEVROLET S-AIR 1 DOOR Absolu - ---- — DIE $ . Scaru i Bike New York. «* Perry Service Ine. OR j ,^-TOW FLAT ----------------------------- box, g new tires ........ *795 1 '51 Ford Pickup S', ton . 9115 ..---——-----------—— -------- 51 Inti Pickup, 1 ton ... 1105 TRUCK OOINO NORTH PART ECONOMY CAES » AUBURN load either way. PE 0-0000 . j M^W.^hdf^POB HOUSKTHAEU ri aUNABOOT 40 H P-MO-' | D j ’ JJl’BJBd*' M° *• 4,1 8 Tfle ,AS MUCH zi ISO FOR JUNK AND 1 lent condftton. Mta*l5l A1300 --- J--Ii!WLl.e^— ,, .... .------- cheap cars. Fg 2-2*04 days •» 1----------------------------1 * Boats A Accessories 97 bonnA? dkiveawaYy° fe i Hr CHRIS CRAFT RUNABOUT! * “---I-|g“ 30 h.p. trailer, aee— 1 17 B. Montcalm PE 4 Owner Family Car. In New Car Condition I Your old car down. AND 113.13 PER WE. Including Tax**. Financing ASK FOR BOS. FISCHER BUICK INC 404 8 WOODWARD AVE BIRMINOHAM >14 CSDAR STRIP BOAT. 035 FB y 2-300*. . _______■■■ Saginaw at South Blvd. Economy Car?* ARB YOU OETTINO THE MOST . FOR YOUR CAR? — WE BUY — - TRADE DOWN -— TRADE UP — FOR MOST CABS 080 FOR I MONTHS -3530_____Eves, PB 3-4353 LLOYD m6tor sales 1 32 J. .dagtoaw Pg 3-0131 “ "buy AND TRADE OOOD ! —TRUCKS Tremendous Savings ON AUTO INSURANCE qualified ■MI6 11a- Nicholie & Harger Co. )'s WEST HURON .PE MU “ASK FOR DON’’ sedan V-l engine. Power- rude, power steering stock No. 443. duly 81308. NORIW CHEVROLET CO 1808 8 WOOpw|»w" BIRMINOHAM, Ml 4-3738, REPOSSESSION 1058 Chevrolet 3 Boor, beautiful green and whit* ftntob. Pull price 0400. Onto 037 month. No ef-needed. Pint payment due f teen be r 30th King Mr. ainx, ! 4-11*1. Lucky UN aatos. 1*1 ’55 CHEV.. 3-DB...__ “** —. Due Oct I nnv SIM, air. 8*11. PE 1-4530 10* East Blvd. at Aubum 1153 DODOE, RA&10, HEATER, excellent condition, hill price $05. Assume payments of n month. Call Credit Mgr , Mr. White. FE 6-6402. King Auto 8*10*. US S. CAR PAYMENTS' TOO BURD*N~ some? Come In and see ua and tot ua help you adjuat to a torn expensive car. DON’S USED CARS (77 M34 Lake Orton •. ___in 3-2041 DESOTO, 4, DOOR. RADIO. *— • —w tires, motor over :u. am brakes, power steer-body good. A-l trsnsporta- 1444 FORD VICTORIA. 3 DOOR. _ HT. good condition. OR 3-7065. ' ’40 ^PORP.j t*j»»8 kxctllent! CLEAN-UP SPECIALS •52 Chryslar, v *. RAH .... *50 '53 Ford Station Wgo RAH . . |M 'S3-Ckevv, BAR .......... 15* '53 Pontiac o Dr........... $9* '52 Dodge, like Dew ...... *145 '54 Plymouth ............. 4145 ■54 Old* IS. No rust ..... 8106 'It Dodge, stake' truck, A-I running .................. *175 '63 Ford RAH. Sharp! ..... 0145 '54 Pontiac RAH Sharp!) ... ‘18 Chevy, I, stick. 3 dr. ... 4355 ‘54 Ponttoe Wgn. 4 dr..... $3*5 ‘54 Pontiac s c. HT ------ 1355 choice of so Kobe cars. MO PAIR OFFER REFUSED' HO MOREY DOWN.' Superior Auto Sales 550 OAKLAND You can always locate the parties interested in 1 what you too longer need. j Whert- you .use the Pon-1 tiac Press “'For Sale’’ Want Ads! DodgeDart $47.73 PER 1IONTH DELIVERED ALL_STANDARD FACTORY EQUIPMENT PLUO HEATER, FEDERAL TAX. BALES TAX... LICENSE TITLE. AND CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE. jQhri Je Smith DODGE, INC. in a. saoinaw pe l-Ttio LLOYD MOTOR SALE* 232 8. SAOINAW___PE 3-8131 1163 FORD 4 POOR, RADIO AND HEATER. STRAIGHT SHIFT. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 915.1* per mo Call CredH Mgr. Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford. ’60 THUNDERBIRD Cruisomatlc transmission, radio and heater, power iteertng and brakes, solid blue color. 1,000 mllea. 83,488. Larry Jerome SHEP'S MOTOR SALES ’57 CHEVY Wagon 4-Door .. ’M OLDS 4-Door Super It . . ’SO FORD F-Lane 4-Door .. ‘50 PONTIAC 4-Dnnr H-Top . IS FORD 3-Door .....”... •55 CHEVY B-Air H-top .... ■55 PONTIAC 8-Chlef. R-T ... 55 CHEVY D-Ray Clt Cpe. '54 FORD Custom 4-Door 54 PONTIAC 4-Door Sedan .. *11 CHEVY B-Air 4-Door ... "53 FORD S Door ....... '53 HUDSON 4-Door ...... Suburban OLDS 115* Ford Oalaxle, 3 door hard top. Stack wtDi gold top. V4 Automatic Power steering 1 brakes. Dim! spotlights. Radio J healer, WbitnwAU tirss, Ron sharpl! I31S5. . IPSUf I HUDSON JET. EXC. COND. ■53 HUDSON HORNET. CLB. CP. fully equipped. EM 1-0011. S. Con- LARKS TERRIFIC DEALS NOW rota SALK MI UNOOLN 1 new, 01,100. at Townsend I Leonard PL 3-3773 « LINCOLN 4-DR. SEDAN. PULL BOB FROST, INC. LINCOLN-MBRCURY ____Ml 4-1300___ _____ condition _________, full nrle- t payments of 017 105* MERCURY 2-DOOR SEDAN. V-8 engine, Mereomatlc. Stock No. 1431-B. For 4 days mly *5*5. NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1006 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINO-HAM. MI 4-2735. 1155 MERCURY HT. VERY clean. OR 3-9008. ______'■ _______ 0TEE_____________ _____ Orchard Laks Rd, PE 2-2539; 3375 West Haroa, pE 1-3177. _ 57_Mine CONVERT PWR. steering, brakes, R*H, WW tires. 31166. ft MOTT brakes $500 actual __ ___ be purchased with very low down payment. BOB FROST* INC. LINCOLN-MERCURY For Sale Cars 166 Suburban’ OLDS Saai „ wbfiewM liras. Solid white Color keyed white, silver and black intnftor, 02*05. SUSURRAN-0LD4H40BILE in S. Woodwar^Blrmlngbam EXTRA CUUlf TS OLDS. 1 K hardtop. PR 8-9930. _______ 1957 0LD8. on 4-DOOR HARDTOP. All power Incladtas soato and windows. Many dslaae cxUna. AIR CONDITIONED. a*il|llB> condition. 8I.SIS. C*U to ovoninf. ’55 OLDSMOBILE 4 DOOR II ABiamatVc transmission. Bn- LLOYD 833 8, lAOl tOTOR 8 IINAW pk atm GOOD CARS t 3—'57 CADILLACS HT AND 4-DR. •88 Bulek. very nle* 'St Chrysler Convertible , 3 Pontlacs. '57-’55-'53 •50 Ford 4-Dr. Wason 3 'it Chevy, 3 Packard* '5*.'»-’*4 "■ ’lAmT VothtwaieD '9* Dodge path button TS Chevy Impato •so fcmVIitUt •57 Mercury BT •83 Cadillac HT „ Many other*. No reasonable ^fer refused. Pl8W|l*_n# problem ECONOMY CARS, 33 AUBUNN M OLDS **, COR VERT 1BL1, ALL power tlta. EM 3-0310.________ llM OUM "Mi *-DB HARDTOP Eacel. WIU Trade. PE 5-1*4*. USED CARS. . MO TO 0508. »Q MONEY DOWN QUEEN AUTO gXLEg 171 >■ SAOINAW, They Must Go! ■50 Plymouth .............. tig «-’53 Pontiac* ......... • • • * W '53-'52 Chrysler# ........ 8 65 ‘52 Plymouth a Olds ....... 9 45 '53 Dodge ..., J S '49 Cadillac completely O.R. 5 *7 •5*-'53-'8* Ramblers ... j 15 ttt a ECONOMY CARS. 33 AUBURN 1851 PLYMOUTH R. H VERY good. 3181 Elisabeth Lk. Rd. Clutilts. * •53 PLYMOUTH. EXCELLENT ^ condition, stick. RAH. EM 34881. 8. Conway ., .________________ BRAID- FE 2-0186 REPOSSESSION ISO- Plymouth. 4 door. Pull price M. Only *" “—* ---*• >nly Ml . First I ______ _____t payment d tember 83rd. Ring Mr. B 4-1088 Lucky Auto-Bales Just Make Payments '07 PLY;. 3-DR. 0005 Pay only 837 mo. Due Oct. 1 Rite Auto. Mr. Bell, PE- *453* __10* East Rlvd, st Auburn_ UM.PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE. Radio, hentor, automatic trans- >747*. achutx Motoi_________________ 1IM PLYMOUTH. RADIO. HEAT-'er. excellent condition. No money doWn. flRl price 8305. Assume pay-menu of all month Call Credit Mgr., Mr White. PE 1-0402. King Amo Sale*, lit 8. gAghmw. __________ For Sab Cars 106 t REPOSSESSION lit* PwNto*. fdenr. NO cash ■nodod. Beautiful MMk mush. MOO fwl price. Only 817 a month, •fnt payment duo September 33. PB-^eaay ta. Kin. mat, OR UOO BONNEYILLB. 3 DHTjff. to pGntuc *»a» cJiikp (»n-vertlble. Hydro., reasonable. Can PB P3386- k PB, buckat seats.-axle JpW asflaane. e FE 3-7*41. dona dlssmut. Do not t us before yon hoy — Keego Sates & Service Just Make Paimients ’ll pontiac. tm Pop only IU mo. So Oct 1 Rite Auto. Mr. Bail. P* M538 i no East Blvd. at Angara attw. taarp. M Mt. f ISO pbNTIAC 8TARCHIEP 4 DB. hardtop, full power, excellent CCO- ditlon, *1.70* PE 5-7537. ’59 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVERTIBLE ' standard tmtmmmclon. ,110- ............... $2395 Pontiac Retail Store Ifl^MT CLEMENS ST, PE >70*0 ION) BONNEVILLE STATURi WAG! on, Bk« now. OB 5-785*. 59 PONTIAC. 3 DOOR STARCHIEP 10 PONTIAC iTATTOR WAOhlV economy I, radio, heater, power steering A brakes A other ox-* - “ Bald Emgtai Lake Rd. 'S3 PONTIAC, GOOD RUNRDfO cond., clean, 888. W MB. 54 PONTIAC STATION WAOON. In excellent condition. Now paint Ramblers . Ramblers Prices slashed Big discount. Ail models in stock. Buy now and “r&c rambler . Super Market COMMERCE RD. KM 84188 1050 RAMBLER 8TATION WAOON. red and white ftatoh, sharp. Stock No. 1658. only *1.390. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 100* 8, WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM. MI BOB FROST. INC. LWCOU6-MBRCURT ' In8-8300 I. jpgs CAR I FE 3-71 ■4* MERCURf^ COUPE. *100. Weekly Special .1957 Olds 88 Convertible' HTDRAMAT1C - RADIO POWER 8TEER1NO POWER BRAKES A REAL SHARP CAR .Only $1349 Houghten C & Son Just Make Payments _ '53 OLDS, HT . {128 Pay only 97 mo. Dae Oct, t Rite Auto Mr. Bell, PE >4531 100 East Blvd. at Auburn 1054 OLDS. 4-DOOR HARDTOP, eqtmer and bel|e. full power, rah. ' l, owner. Look this over. ; Clarkston Motor Sales CHRY8LXR-PLYMOUTH DEALER Main at., Clarkston MA >81*1 105* OLDSMOBILE 8* HOLIDAY coupe, Power steering, power brake*, power windows, arlvcn nearly 15.000 miles. 11995. term. Brewer. PE 4-5191 or PE 5-030*. AUTOMATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MOREY DOWN. A,rams payments of 88* 30 per mo. CaU Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI >700*. Suburban OLDS hardtop Rsdio A Jicater, Power steering A brails. Whitewall tires, Rad A whit. Exceptionally clean 81,088. / ifl 4-441* '50 OLDSMOBILE OTTAfaPIRE^CON .20 Fine Cars PROM $95 to $495 NO DOWN PAYMENT IU0QUIRKD 34 MONTHS OR BALANCB I8T PAYMENT. SEPTEMBER 1*YH BRING YOUR TITLE quver; Motor Sales t >10 Ore ha Id link* Avw. PM >1101 < ' Open Eves. BUICK - RENAULT OPEL JEEP Just Make Payments '5* PLYMOUTH. 13*6 rtf only $23 mo.. Due Oct. t Rite Auto. Mr. Bell, PE 0-603* ^ 180 East Blvd. at Auburn 1060 PLYMOUTH-FURY 3-DOOR hardtop. V-0 engine, automatic transmission, power steering, extra nice! Stock No 1663. Only liaO/froRTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 s. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-2735 ___ 1043 PLYMOUTH. RADIoTEAT.-er^txcsUent condition. Pull price 49s ' Assume payment, of fS. month. Call Credit Mir, Mr. White, PE 0-0403, King Auto Sale,. Ill 8. Bentonw. timing b bo handled With a PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS •PINS CARS. BOLD * COl n«9 Furry nt^ltedlaon ‘57 Bulek Special 4-IJr. H-top — Power ........... .... Sum '53 Chevrolet 4-Dr. ... t 1*5 HARDENBURO MOTOR SALES Comer cm* A Pike PB I-73M Open Eves tU I LOOK! 1055 Pontiac convertible power steerlos and brakes. Piul price 13.496. A* little *s *140 down. Pint payment du* September 30lh. Rlhg Mr Bing. FE 4 1006, Lucky Awe Bale,. 193 S. Saginaw. WILSON PONTIAQCADILLAC CLEAN Birmingham Trades 1350 N.' Woodward BIRMINOHAM ttM-4-DR. CATAUNA SEDAN “-•’ power. 10,000 ml . like net after g o.m. HA 1-M34. $1895 'Cy' Owens 131 OAKLAND AVENUE HASKINS Used Car SPECIAL 111* CHEVROLET Delray 8 door Mdan. V-8 engtne. powerglide. radio, Banter. Un a*w tins. 11(7 CHEVROLMT 111 8 deer sedan. V-l snghls, powergilds, radio, beater, Beautiful red end Ivory pewet HASKINS CHEVROLET ‘ Open nitei tu i LOOK THIS OVER '87 Studebaker. V-S station wagon, copptr and white,, autemetle transmlsalon, beater, white pall Clarkston Motor Sales CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER Main 8t , Clarkston MA 5-5141 1*5* STUDEBAKER >DOOR SE-dan. I cylinders, itattontd shift. Look! Only lita. NORTH CHEVROLET CO., 1*0* 8. WOODWARD. BHIMINOHAM, MB >073*. 19*7 8TODjBI«jjjB> 8 DOOR. BA-DIO A HEATER, * CYLINDER. STR(UOHT8mFT, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume pay- 4-75*0. Harold Turner Ford '52 RAMBLER, $75 MA 5-17*5 5* RAMBLER SUPER SEDAN. A1 owner beauty. Fully equipped. **• down. Up to 30 month* on balance EDDIE ■TgPUl FORD, 3275 West Huron. PE >3177; 1706 Orchard Lake Rd. PE >2538. •0 YALLtNT., AUTO TttANS.. 7.8*8 mltos. 91,7**. MI MM BILL SPENCE -RAMBLER” WILL ACCEPT Ouas, outboard*, boats, refrifera-tors and appliances, ate. On our .new ini Ramblere or any good need ear.a* port payment. SALKS A SERVICE MS S. SAODUW »fc^+mt SPECIALS MM PonUae >Dr. Hardtop. Rydra-m^c’ *5* White- walls. White and gold. Lob down IMS Pontiac Catalina 4Dr. Rjrdra-matlc. Radio and heater.' White-walto. Beautiful blue. Low down. payment. 1*57 Pent toe. (.Dr. sedan. Black with toned Insert, Hydra.. R*. dlo. Heater. Whitewall urea. A little gem I Tour 53. ’*4 will make HAUPT PONTIAC OK USED CARS TAYLOR'S CBEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE MArket 4^01 *TWIgfai,d Lake ,Btt,ek * Dr- hardtop. 1M4 Chevrole* 2 Dr. sedan.. .| lit sonrertlbto. Owed tend. turn Ch^rTolet 3 dr. sedan. ! t *50 Packard 3 dr. hardtop..! 1M 1N4 Pontiac « dr. Btarehtof. l 145 l*J* Chevrolet 4 dr. station wagon vt. Automatic ................. 1M* Bulek 8 dr, hardtop.......836*4 1M1 Ford 3 dr. mdan ........* «g 18iT. Chevrolet sUUon wagon. 4 dr. VS. Automatic ............... $ngs IBM Studebaker Lark 4 Dr...|UM IMS Bulek LaSahra I Dr. lata *°8 ........................ *31*5 MM Old* M 4 Or. Hardtop...| IN IMS Plymouth 4 Dr.- Sedas. Automatic Iran,mission ............$945 1M1 Pontiac 4 Df_ sedan. Auto- HOMER HIGHT MOTORS ' httatoec Pram Penttai" OwWd, Mich. oA MM t' 7^ THB PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY/, AUGUST 20, 1960 TweyTY-ynfi Today S;®elevision Programs ' Progrmns furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice ChaaneI 7—WXY7-TV TONIGHT’S TV MOHLiDHTS l:M (3) Early Show (began at 5:30 p.m.) (4) Mr. Adama and Eye. (7) 1889 Pro Football. (9) Papaya. list (3) Early Show (began at 5:99 p.m.) . (4) Honeymooner*. ' (7) Football Jecstt.) (9) Waterfront. Tilt (3) Torn Just Men. (4) People Am Funny. (3) Girt Decay. (3) Big Four Football. 7t90 (2) Perry Mason. (41 (Color) Bonanza. XT) Dick Clark. (9) Football (began at T 4>.m.) |:N (3) Perry Mason (coat.) (4) Bonanza (coot) (7) John Gunther. (9) Football (began at 7 p.m.) * . 1:91 (2) Wanted: Dead br Alive. (4) Man and Challenge; (7) Leave It to Beaver. (9) Football (begap at * 7 p.«t) i:oo (3) Mr. Lucky'. (9 Deputy. I (7) Lawrence Wdk. (9) Football (began at T pjf.) i:so (J) Have Gun, Will TreveL-(4) Work) Wide m (7) Weir (cont.) (9) Cue lor the Court. 14:W (3) Gunsmoke. • (4) World (cont.) / (7) Jubilee U.S.A. (9) News, Weather. iO:is (9) Passing Parade. 11:10 (3) Sea Hunt. (4) Man From IMerpol. (7) Jubilee (cont.) (9) Starlight Theater. ll:N (2) .(4) News. Spts., Weath. (7) Silent Service. , 11:90 (4) Movies: Cesar Romero. “Fifteen Maiden Lane.” (’38); Will Hutchins, "Stranger On the Road." 11:25 (2) Movie. James Mason, “Hatter’s Castle.” (’41:; Boris Karloff, "Sabaka.” (’»). 11:90 (7) Movie. Rock Madison, "Man Beast” < 11:1* (3) Little lulu. Ut*e (3) Union Pacific. (4r Michigan OinwrvoHon., (7) Three Stooges. (9) Special Agent. * 11:4* (4) Americans it Work. nno^r aitmrnoon II: 90 (3) Detroit Speaks (4) U. of M. Presents. (9) Mickey Rooney. (7) Champtonafilp Bowling. 19:90 (4) Builders’ Showcase. (2) Dr. Christian. (9) Damon Runyon Theater. 1»00 (4) TV Readers’ Digest. 7:** 0:00 0:10 SOI 8:90 (3) Movie. (T) World Adventure Series. (9) Movie. i (7) Big Game Hunt. '(7) High Rood to Dangv. 44) Lab 30. > (T) College News Confer- (4) Marie. i (7) Open Hearing, i (7) Movie. (9) Movie i (3) Movie, i* (3) Detroit Speaks. (4) Briefing Sesaion. (7, Matty’s Tunnies TV Features DUX CLARK SHOW, 7:30 p.ffe (7). Guest* are Jackie/'W&ion, Annette, Ned Sedaka and Joanie Sommns. PERRY MA80N, 7:30 p.m. (3). (Rerun) Through‘a poker game, a convict tries to push himself into partnership in a rare orchid business. but Mason (Raymond Burr) discovers a due that brings the ~ue to a conclusion. BONANZA, 7:30 p.m. (4). (Rerun) Three U.S. Army prisoners escape and take refuge on a ranch. JOHN GUNTHER, 8 p.m. (7). First of two parts on a tuna hunt aboard a commercial dipper. MAN AND THE CHALLENGE, 8:30 p.m. (4). (Rerun) Government scientist Glenn Barton (George Nader) goes to France to learn jky diving from a brother and sister gether with look at Soviet -Inllu-see.. GUNSMOKE, 10 p.m. (3). (Rerun) A drifter miraculously saved from lynching at the hands of two ranchers faces the noose again wfien he carries out * plan for revenge. Sunday OPEN HEARING, 3 p.m. (7). Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., will discuss the current *eption of LAWRENCE WELK SHOW,* p.m. (7). Hour of popular music, featuring Walk; Peggy Hayima and guest Champagne Lady Kay Hart. .CUBAN CRISIS, 9:30 p.m. (4). Picture of upheaval in Cuba to- ED SUUJVAN SHOW. 8 p.m. (3). Guests include actor Sam Le-vene, Lionel Hampton and his band and singer Una Robin. MYSTERY SHOW, 9 p.m. (4). Walter Slesak stars in TV version of famed story about noted inspector who throws the missing person* bureau into chaos when he is reported missing. GE THEATER. 9 p.m- (2). (Rerun) Newspaper columuistis spurred into probing mystery of a woman who tries to take over steel company whose owner has committed suicide. ALFRED HITCHCOCK, 9:30 p.m. (3). (Rerun) Devilish-looking little man separates saloon full of miners from their gold. 10:30 11:00 SUNDAY MORNING (3) Meditations. (3) Mass for Shut-ins. (9) Billboard. (9) Sacred Heart. (2) Christopher*. (9) Herald of Truth. (4) Newt. i (2) Court of Health-(4) Church at the CToteo rads. (7) U n d erstandihg Our World. (9) Temple Baptist Church. (2) To Dwell Together. (3) Detroit Pulpit.’ (4) Catholic Hour. (71 Christian Science. (9) Oral Roberts. (7) Accent. (3) This Is the Life. (4) Clutch Cargo. (7) Faith for Today. (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow. (TV Rickey the Oowa (2) Felix the Cab . (4) Kit Carson. (4) Sergeant Preston. (7) Johns Hopkins. €9) RCA COLOR TV Sweet's Radio TV SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests Free Parking at Rear a4 "Opts Ivefcby Appoiatwear 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. Bounced Off Echo WOO Miles Into Air, Print Takes5. Mi (2) Press Conference. (4) Big Picture. (2) Face the Nation. (7) lme Ranger. (4) Reading Cut Loud. (9) Science Fiction. SUNDAY EVENING (2) m (4) George Pierrot. (7) Citizen Soldier. , (9) Pofceye. (2) TWcntMb Century. (7) Rescue I. (9) Hat Full of Music. (3) Lassie. , (4) Overland Trail. (7) Broken Arrow. (9) Movie. “Pursuit." (1335) An aviator is asked to fly a young boy ip Mexico. Chester Morris, Sally Ellers, Scotty Beckett (3) Dennis The Menace. (TAMaPerirk. (3) Ed Sullivan. (4) Music on Ice. (9) Movie.’ “White Heat." (1949) A gang Mils a man during a train robbery and escapes with $300,000. James Cagney, Virginia Mayo. (T) Lawman. (4) ((Mar) Mystery Show. (3) Theater. (7) Rebel. (3) Alfred Hitchcock. (7) Alaskans. (2) Lucy In Connecticut. (4) Loretta Young. (9) News. (9) Weather. (9) Crime Does Not Pay. (2) What’s My Line? 441 Not for Him. (7) Johnny Staccato (9) Movie. "Bitter Sweet” (1940) Victorian belle elopes to Vienna. Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy. (3) News. (4) News. (7) Movie. "Pier 23." (1951) A San Francisco shopkeeper investigates two murders involving a wrestler and ' an escaped convict. Hugh Beaumont, Ann Savage. ll: IS (9) Weather. (4) Weather. 9 (2) Sports. (41 Sport*. 8 (2) Movie. "The Killer Is Loots.” (1956) A bank tetter’s wife is accidentally killed when police go after the teller, suspected in a robbery. Joseph Cotton, Rhonda Flemming, Wendell Corey. • (4) Movie. "The Saint’s Girt Vriday.” (English; 1964). A beautiful London sodah: sends a plea for help to flic Saint. Louis Hayward, Ni omi Chance. MONDAY MORNING (7) Funews. 8:5# (2) M-'dltations 4:1* (3) On the ."arm Front (4) Today. *(2) TV College (7) Breakfast Time. 7:39 (2) Felix the Cat --Today's Radio Programs ► ,7) Johnny Ginger | (2) Captain Kangaroo. ! .(7) Stage I I (3) Mwte V (4) I Married Joan. > (4) E::erU.e (7) Exercise. . I (4) Faya Elizabeth. » (4) Dough Re ML (7) News. 19 (7) Heartthrob Theater. IS (8) Billboard. » (4) Play You; Hunch. (9) Ding Dong School. (7) Home of Fashion. » (3) I Lave Lucy. (4) (Color) Price Is Right. (7) Divorce Hearing. (9) Romper Room. 19 (4) Concentration. (2) Clear Horizon. , (7) Topper. MONDAY AFTERNOON »:« (2) Love of Life. (4) Truth or Consequences. (7) Restless Qun. (9) Safari. 19:99 (2) Search tor Tomorrow. (4) R Could Be You. (7' Love That Bob! Lit) Terrytoonjime. woaa (MM> wars nvw> wjbk cklw. h«w* WCAR. Neva, ran wpon, swi. Sparta S:3*—WJR. Threa SUM WWJ. Monitor CKLW. aocy. of State wpon. Cnadlottte CB“, Tourlat _ wjbk, jock aona WCAR. Woodunf WPON. Boundstot* S:M—WJR, Prota Box . *:1»—\ JR. Lions Football< CM—WWJ. Monitor WPON. Jcrrr oimo CM—WJBK, -Jata Bern. •:M-WWJ. Old Opry , RICHARDSON, Tex. (J) - An Associated Prase picture of Presi-^ dent Eisenhower tins shot a thousand miles into apace early today. Signals from an AP Wirephoto transmitter bounced off Echo Land were received back on earth. A Collins Rato Co. spokesman said be believed It was the fleet time a picture has been successfully bounced off a satellite. The experiment was conducted with AP equipment pt the invitation of the Collins Arm. needed to oempleto Am picture Transmission and reception’was handled at the same speed as AP Wirephotos move on the tranaoenti-nental network—about one minute Inch of picture width. There was some distortion and noise interference in the picture of Eisenhower as received. It was n picture of the President taken in March 1969. The print was wrapped around a •ending cylinder which then revolved at a closely controlled ll:M—WJR. Newt WM^r till*—WJB. Dane* Time SUNDAY MORNING •sM—WJR. Farm Revlev WWJ. Muale _ cklw. Album Time WJBK. Brettwrhea* Hr ima-Wja. ftrorU. Hymn. WXTZ. Quest Star CKLW. March of Palth WJBK. Crucified Boer WCAR. Nava. Woodllnp WPON. Sunday Serenade 1:M—WJR. Pam Forum WWJ. Martaer’a Church WXYZ. Heatlna Winn CKLW. Bausbay Tab. WJBK. FraUMaal Hour' S.-ta-WJR, Na*i, Moode WXYZ.^Oral Roberte CKLW. Tour Worship Hour WJBK. Byaat Wo Lot# WFON. Calvary Saptla* tiia-WJB. Ranrro VaOay WXTZ, Prophecy CKLW. Fontiso BapUM WJBK, Ava Marta wcar: Beck ta ttsi______ WFON. St. Jeha'a Lutheran MB-WJR, MtWS, Flano WWJ Creaaroeda Church WXTZ. Prank and trnaet A tight cast onto the revolving picture waa reflected hack into a photo-electric cell. The light spots reflected most of the light, the dark spots little of ft. The t of reflected light CALL FOR OUR SPEOIAL JUNMEfc PRICE! ar dual" p»|htiBM. ALL WORK 9 ’’GUARANTEED", WE CLEAN * I. Rafters mi I Booms -1 Itfen and Braochings J. Slg| Mi kikes 4. Finishing Room* 5. Beet Wort, Pnmnoos Etc. 6. Stacks sad Chimney* 7. Air Conditioner Units KLEEN AIR ruma aunts JOf LOUIS (owner) OR 3-0100 i^te whether the reflected^, was from a tight of dark partiaa of Hw plrinre. At the receiving end, these varying impulses activated a light exposing a revolving unexpoaed piece of paper, which when developed recreated the ntettire. The difference was that today’s impulses were cut a thousand miles into space and back by shortwave radio, rather than over the tdgbffdeUty AP Wirephoto circuit. Air TqHcs Scheduled LANSING (UPI) — The eighth a«wmiat Mlridgaw Aeronautics Conference will be held in Port Huron Napt 28-30. It was announced today. Liberia President Concerned on Congo PICTURE VIA ECHO - This is the way a picture of President Eisenhower was received on The Associated Prase Wirephoto equipment Friday after short wave radio signals had been sent to satellite Echo i and (back to earth. •:M—WJR. Album. WWJ. Muale WXTZ. Sunday S CKLW. Bab. Chrlatlan WJBK. WorMNim*, WPON. Firm Baptlat MU WJR. Hymn* WWJ. Radio PUlpM WXTZ. Newt. Ban. Beat CKLW. Radio Bible «», Newt. Rptecopal WPON. Cbrtatopber ia:so—WJR. Chapel Hour WWJ. mWe. Seoult CKLW. Voice of Prophety WJBK. Town Hall WPON. Immanuel Baptist 11:#*—WJR, Laymana Hour wwj. at. Paura Cota. WXYZ, Sunday Baat cklw. Paotuia BopUat WJBK, RatraTlNaa ’ WPON. Central Mathodlat I:SO—WJR. Sunday Choir CKLW. Ntwt. An'e'lcn WJBK. Det. Speala SUNDAY AFTERNOON !:aa—WJR, Newt. Quest WWJ. Haws WXYZ, Sunday Baat CKLW. Labor Neva WCAR Newt. Woodline WJBK, Nawa, Bun. Sound WFOH. Muale IMS—'WJR, Cap and down fid#—WJR. scone WJBK. Sundae Sound. wpon: Big Four snow WJBK. Sunday lump t:.ta—CKLW. Knowlet S:M—WJR. Percy Palth WXYZ, flour of Dedal on WJBK. Sunday Soaoda WCAR Nawa, Loeaa WPON. Pontiac Weekend 1 CKLW. Hebrew wttaeoo IlSh-WJR Spectrum WWJ. Boaakoll Scoreboard CKLW, Chitetedelphlana WJBK. Sundae Soonda WXYZ, Baeteal Hour WCAR Nava. Thomat wpon Ceneereatlnn Piece WXYZ, Radio Blbla ):M—CKI w. Wo. Id of Ufa WXYZ, Chrlatlan Action WCAR Neva. Thomat wpon ReUdon Police Sits—WJR Pop concert CKLW. The Quiet Hr. WXYZ, Collect Howa Pita—CKLW, Orntee Ft Bpat-WXYZ. Dr. Bob Ptoreo WCAR Nawa WPON. Liberty BopUat t:M—CKLW. Dr. Barnbouta 10:-*—WJR Aak Protestor WWJ, Sternal Ltakt CKLW. Lutheran HOOT WXYZ. Rcetral ll:tO—WJR Rows. Sports WWJ. Itod. Monitor WXYZ, laraol tfaaora* CKLW. BMer Morton WJBX. Hava. Showtime CKLW. Album CCLW. Newt. Toby Doeld WJBR '.ewe WFON. Nowa^ essay l:M—WJR. MUSIC Batt CKLW. Nawa, Daetd WJBR Nawa. Stera Si**—WJR Nova, I wjbr Nawa. .. WPON. Nawa, . WCAR Nava. Martyn 10:ta—WJR, Karl Kata WWJ, News. Martens WXYZ. Newt. Sherman CKLW. Jo# Von WJBR News, Clark Reid WCAR MM- It: SO—CKLW. Myrtle Lebbltt WWJ. Hews. Haaaart MONDAY MO BN IN O WJBK. Newt. Parm WCAR Neva, dheddan WPON. Bitty Bird diSS-WJR Muale Hall CKLW. Eye Opener WJBR Dally Blbla WWJ. Revs. BobtTte WXYZ, Hava. Wolf CKLW. Nava. Toby Doeld WJBR Nawa WCAR Nawa WFAR Neva. Casey T:S»-WXYI, Hewn Wolf CKLW, Sports, David WJBR Newt. Troftta WCAR hva ____ _____ Newt, Oueet wwj. Newt. Bokarta WXTZ, HOWA Wolf IrF* «.2S2S*\j "HAMPTON’S ELICTRK COMPANY 300 tfwe, newt, t CKLW. Joe .. WJBR Retd WPON. Levta MONDAY APRBNOON MW—WJR Hews, Parm WWJ, Newt. Haaaart WXYZ. Nawa, MeNtelty CKLW. News. Van WCAR Neva, Parse WPON. Newt, Lewis IS:M—WJR. Tima tor Music I CKLW. Myrtto Labbllt ckl w. Jot Von wpon. OnA Lewis WCAR Nawa, Muale WJBR ROM SW—WJR. Composite WWJ. Maxwell, Mutlc WJBR Lao CKLW. Joe Van wpon. Bob Lark tiM- CKLW. Mows. Shift Bk.j l:M—WJR Composite WWJr Maxwell WXYZ. Winter cklw. Dovtee • WCAR Newt, Bennett WFCK. Bab Lark WJBK. Xee I M-CKLW, Bite Devlet CKLW. MOWS. 9MM WCAR Nova, Bennett wpon. Onrrtafo Tnido !:M—CKLW, Bud Dovtee. I:M—WJR MOW* Muale WWJ. Newe. tmpC WXTZ, Wlnttr (?) Guiding Light. (9) Newt. (4) Bold Journey. (2) Our Miss Brooks. (7) About Faces. (9) Movie. (7) Life of Riley. (3) As World Turns. (3) Medic. (4) Queen for a Day. (7) Day in Court. (7) Gale Storm (4) Loretta Young., (2) House Party. (2) Millionaire. (4) Young Dr. Malone, (7) Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These Roots. (7) Who Do You Trust? (56) Redman’s America. K2) Brighter Day. (4) Fibber McGee. (7) American Bandstand. (56) Heritage ^ (2) Secret Storm. (3) Edge of Night. (4) Buckskin (9) Robin Hood. (56)Japanese Brush Painting. (2) Movie. (4) (color) George Pierrot] Presents. (7) Johnny Ginger. (9) Looney Tunes. (36) Centuries of Symphony. (7) Captain Gallant. (56) Sing Hi — Sing Lo. (56) Friendly Giant. (9) News. MONROVIA, Liberia UB-Secre-tary of State Rudolph Grime* announced that President William jV. S. Tubman of Liberia had sent telegrams to all heads of independent African states expressing concern about Congo developments and especially Premier Patrice Lumumba's harsh words about Secretary-General Dag Hamroar-skjold of the United Nations. ★ ★ ♦ Tubman suggested African U.N. members should individually and collectively inform the United Ite tions of "our regrets.”, COMING SOON for Custom Home Buyers . . . SIXTY ONE Building Cmvabt of (ho MiVAZO/VE HOME Well Get Yeur Gas Permit ^ and give you a choice of 2 Big Gas Specials! BIG DELCO 105,000 BTU FORCED AIR CM STAACO FUBNACE J04 Includes Ducts and Registers DELIVERED for Full 6-Room House NO MONET D0WN-Sll.il PER MONTH FOR PERFECT HOME COMFORT GAS HEAT this fW- -co4tway H you now have n good coal or oil hooting plant... wo’U inttoll this now gat humor in It, save you the rest of • now plant; and assure yea tire mast officiant homo heating manor son hoy. Fh i Flttl IP MMRSTMTIIR Saa 10 Noun DOWN Up to If tin to Pay MICHIGAN HEATING CO., INC. «• NIW98NNY STRUT FI 1-6421 FI 2-7164 FREEMAN-Burdett UADI-HEAT GAS BURNIR (L. P. ON NATUNAU Cots goo fool coot op ta 40% In comparison with leko Gas Conversion Burner now $10000 only |77 INSTALLED St.34 PR MONTH JL . PLUS Ai r HOLDEN BED STAMPS Wmt EITHER FURNACE OIIIEI HEATING & SUPPLY Authorised Oakland County Distributor 371 Votfhtit M. ■ IjE 2-»19 DON’T LEARN the HARD WAY Soma rabid TV fans find their TV set never fail* i time. In’fhair anxiety to we a TV thdw at night or on Sunday whan regular TV shops are closed, they hastily pick out a handful of tubas and rush to the comer drugstore, The "do it yourself" tube checker is there to sell tubes so usually the customer parries home $15.00 to $20-00 worth of tubes, most of which were not necessary. When he finds the picture still does not appear because of a tube he missed or plugged Into the wrong socket, it is still necessary to call a Servicemen to restore operation^ Save your time end money by celling an OCEA member. He is qualified to give you quick, efficient service at honest prices. FREE tube testing and technical advice from any Oakland County Electronic* Association member. It Takes Traiaiag and Experience The constant change of television circuits plus the change of manufacturing methods, present o challenge of never ending training of the professionol. electronics service men. Your Oakland County Elec' tronics Association servicemen spend many hours of home study and attending lectures so that they can do the best possible repair on your electronic equipment whether it be old or new. MEMBER SHOPS LISTED BELOW Aebern Radio A TV, 19 Aebern, EE 4-1459 Baldwin Redk A TV, 1218 Baldwin Ave., PC 8-8231 Ceedee’i Radto A TV, M1 Telegraph FI «.f73« C A V Sales A Service, 1 $8 Oakland Ave., PE 4*1S1S > Dalby Radi* A TV, MB Lehigh, FE 4-9802 H—ptee Electric Ce* 82S Bf. Her OR FI 4-2S2S Hod’s Radio 8 TV, 770 Orchard lake Ave* PI 4-5841 Jehesea’i Redie A TV, 45 L Weltoa BhnL, FE 8-4569 Laattch TV Sarvki, 6734 Bfadt Hwy., Gpriuton, MA 5-5311 MetrogeRtle TV, f1» Orchard lake Apr, PI M4B1 Okel Rodto A TV, 3930 EBzebetk Lake Rd* FI 44945 Rkb TV, 1989 North Opdyke RdL, FI 4-0221 Phelps Electric Cev 4348 Dixie, Drayton PMms, OR 3-1217 . Stafanski Radio A TV, 11S7 W. Korea St., FE 24967 twoofitodfoi Applooto, 422 W. Boron $»„ PI 4-1133 Walton Radio A TV, SIS L Woltoe Bhd., PC 2-2257 WKC toe. Sendee Dept., 45 IL Parry SLT PI IJI14 0IKLANB COUNTY ELECTRONICS ASSOCIATION — ■■■■■ ■■■■ , 'in,if» ■■erefci m V n *4? THE PONTIAC PRKgS, SATURDAY, AU< THIRTY No Phone Carders C.O.D.’s or Deliveries Be Smart, Be Thrifty — Monday and Everyday! You Can Be Sure of Eytra Savings at Sean! boys’ back-io-school Boyvflle all-season underwear Ctarft M Assorted patterns.and sleeve lengths. You’ll look nest and feel fresh ts a delay in yours I Bevel ladles* Roady-to-Woar, Roney lane end Kerryteen flannel lined-poplin jackets with front sipper in solid end Rlald for hit Combed cotton tee shirt in rat knit. ■ Hemmed sleeves end bottom. Cotton-knit briefs that require no ironing! SEARS AT Ffcatofat AVERAGE I P — The Associated Press average o| 60 stocks pwbed higheh for the second straight week, closing Friday at 221.4 Iran 219.7 a week ago. Led by livestock, the commodity index declined for the fourth consecutive week, closing at 165.0 from 165.3 in the preceding period. watcli overhaul Your Choice of Stretch or Novelty Hose 258* 27* p“ Chart# U Buy several pairs and save! In sixes to fit most men! 8hop Monday nite tjl 9. Ladies Cotton Jamarettes Erie, called the ptorbouse of There will be an estimated 330,-Eurape in 1940, now has one ofOOO new cases of cancer in the U.S.| the highest per capita wealths in;this year, according to American) its history. Cancer society calculations. Let experienced and trained watchmakers cheek and repair your watch. Shop Monday nite until 9 pun. Watch Repair Dept, Mala /low HE Rt-GREW HAIR Jfea’s Furnishings. Main Floor YOUR CHOICE all-purpose sport sock In sizes 9-11 Garment Bag, Shoe Rack, Blouse Tree or Skirt Rack! Rogmlat Me fit Your Choice before Erickson Treatment A Few Months Later Thaasas'A. Melton, Jr. bad a vary obvious hair problem (not mole pattern boldnooa) but be ro-graw hair by the Erickson Homo Treatment Method. Hair Specialists Here Moaday; Will Show How to Save Heir aad Prevent Baldness New home treatment methods for saving hair and improving its growth will be demonstrated in Pontiac, Michigan on Monday, August 22, I960 only. Consultant L. E. Schroer will be in charge, representing the dynamic Erickson Hair & Scop Specialists organization.'He will personally examine hair-worried ■mu and women from 12:00 to 3:00 pjn. Monday at the Waldron Hotel, phone FE 5-6168. teen’s school shoes Shoe - rack for women. Holds 9 pr. Garment bag Of clear plastic gives Insight protection to clothes. Skirt rack knd blpuse tree hold 6 garments. regular 3.99*,/ She’ll be off to the righiktart in her new Sean shorn. Styled to her likes in brown or black leather. 81xw 44-9. Shoo Dopl.. Maui Floor Hosiery Dopl. Meia Floor Charge It men’s ivy • styled Bedford cord pants Enchanting Beauty Sero-Glo satin enamed , For about seven yean, Erickson Hair aad Scalp Specialists have brought now nope to thou-sands of hair worried man and writnea in erer 400 dtim through-.out the United States, The ^Erickson organisation has become the world’s largest home traetoMBt system hframe it was founded on tho principle that certain cases of thnuung hair and ■potty baldness can bocorrected by an inexpensive new approach to ocalp treatments. D. W. Erickson, Preadent, admits vary frankly that most people who come m for their free examination do so with an attitude of complete skepticism. “This is a natural reaction" says Mr. Erickson, “because the average person has heard time and time again thet a thinning head of hair will lead to eventual bald-naaa and nothing can ba dona to ■tern the tide. We’re not magicians, hair Van not be grown on a completely bold ocalp. All we can base the national acceptance of our treatment on is the fact that thousands of men and woman are now happily using the Erickson Treatments right in their own homes. Our files are bulging with testimonials of satisfied client*. No organization could grow aa fast aa puts has , without proof of performance.” Sotiified Cuftomere Recommend Other* Tho moat gratifying contacts We make are with people who have come in to aee us on recommendations from our thousands of satisfied clients. One client in Illinois actually referred over twenty of his friends and relatives with hair problem* to an Erickson Consultant to aee whether they too could benefit from the new home treatment method. Not Everyone is Accepted Wo cannot help men and woman who are slick-bald after yean of gradual hair has. la a groat majority of reg. My™ 3.98 MM Charge It Rugged and handsome for -school or casual wear. Durable corded cotton in 3 shades. In men’s 30 to 38. When you shop at Sears you save time and money! If Your Casa Acceptable? If your ocalp is still creating hair you may at least save and thicken what you have. Only a thorough examination will determine whether there is still hope. Some condition* auch aa “spot baldnom” usually have complete coverage 17 caught in time. Such waa the caae of Mr. Melton shown above. Chock These Womlhg Mgna • Dandruff, itching, over-oili-neoa or drynam, follicles clogged with sebum or seborrhea—can bo alleviated by the new Erickson Home treatment method and kept from recurring by a simple system of poet-treatment care if caught before the hair factories are destroyed. Don’t watt until it is too late! 95% of Cliantt Under Treat merit Satisfied So selective i* the Erickson system that the organization claims 95% satisfaction among those persons accepted. “Actually Our biggest problem is not in doing what we claim,” says D. W. Erickson, “Getting the doubters and puttar-offera to erfme in for an examination ia really tho problem.” Free Examination Wo want to make it clear that you incur absolutely no charge or obligation by coming in for an examination'. Your only obligation is to yourself to ease your mind of hair worries by learning how you may save and thicken your hair at home. We will tell you frankly and sincerely whether we believe the new Erickson Home Treatment Method can help, how long it will take and how much it willjcoat. Written Guarantee The Erickson Hair aad Scalp Specialist* will give you a written guarantee that you must bo satisfied or you are under no obligation to continue. You may stop at any time. You won’t be obligated or embarriered ia any way. Examinations an given in -complete privacy. Don't delay. See your Erickson consultant. • Mr. L. E. Schroer is tho Erickson consultant in your area. Bee him for a free examination. Qates and location shown below. Hours are from 12:00 noon to • PM. Siliconized fog-long lasting beauty; withstands repeated scrubbings. No annoying painty odor. Chip, mar and stain-re-s i s t a n t. D r i 9 s fast! White and colors 16-in. Green Plaid Zipper BR Bag Rubber Coated ■ Rubber coated tartan plaid rants water. Full ' sipper, vinyl handles. Nylon stitching and riveted; Plaid and Solid Color Zipper Bags.........ttc si luggage Dopl.. Perry Si. losomoal . 3-piece double dresser bedroom in 2 shades Regularly at $184 a ||aa Lovely lined oak or dark 91 §10^ -walnut -veneers $5 Down Truly, a modena-masterpiece... with lustrous hand rubbed tops afa hardwood construction. Includes 6-drawer dresser, ^drawer chest and full size bookcase bed. Dovetail drawers. . Fnmilar# Dopl., tocoad floor car coats women:s Special MOO Purchase W - ;£ , Chars? It Your choke of pile-lined corduroy with hood, piie-Uned bed ford cord with knit trim, polished cotton or 100% wool car coats in many styles. Sizes 10-20. In beige, eharcoaf, tan, gray. Similar to picture. Ladior Roody-lo-Woat. tocoad Floor that ora af value, therefore, Erickson Hair aad Scalp IporiaHat* will eootinua ita oaUcy of refusing all hope- Bras: Because the straps attach to the elastic, the lift you get lasts. $izes 84-38, B; 34-40, C cup. Girdle or Panty gives you just the irght firmness yet lets you be aa active os you like. S-M-L. Cortolry Dopl.. Second Floor Pontitc, Monday, August 22, at the Waldron Hotel Phone: FE 5-6168 Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back1 154 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 54171 MONDAY ONLY XfiE mmrl SE= Bn HI Hi BIS I lorewW.i 1 «*r * mo u j MW I wlzzm oaroicBPi 90OQ 1 -ie» : : SSS!!:::- (BM OP » WIIOIfIRIl COSmOIMW 1 - The Weather 118th ¥&A& THE PONTIACSPR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST *0,1960-30 PAG^S nrMDWAtioiiAJt ~ • - *« 0.* ", ”tag U.S. Plane Snags Satellite Capsule in Mid-Air y«wwtHtion voter leaning* post-convention voter leanings' KENNEDY NIXON /40H MAJOR REASONS FOR PRQ-COP SHIFT iwHwirow..:.........wAfowt RELIGIOUS QUESTIONS GOP MORE CONSERVATIVE GOO PLATFORM BETTER NIXON MORE EXPERIENCED LODGE* FOREIGN AFFAIRS EXPERIENCE IOK MX 1»X 22% m% UPKEEP STARTS EARLY - Snoozing blissfully through his first trip to the barber, and not citing,id all about the outcome, is this husky •Vday-old lad, Brian Scott Allie of Montgomery, tl ir mwu Ala., only two hours out of the hospital. Holding Ms well-groomed son is Jerry AHie. The barber says, '’Shall. I make it a crew cut as he’ll be in* -style with the resfof toe kids?” All Ep tm the Sian.., Heaven, field and Stale All eyes were on the stars at Wisner Stadium last night—even when the North and 8outh squads were off the field fqr half-time ceremonies.« Attention centered skyward as fans craned their necks for a look at America’s* Echo I satellite passing overhead. News of the celestial visitor spread quickly through the sta-dium and for a few minutes, the satelMe rivaled the Detroit Edisdn Lamplightera Drum A Bugle Corps to popularity. •' Another star of the evening was Miss Michigan of I960, pretty Nancy Anne Fleming of Montague. She dipped the coin to start the gamps moat valuable playeg'ahd ihc two most outstanding an oadb of the squads. The three playerj each received a bonus u. « big, warm Mbs from Michigan's reigning beauty. Jack and Harry to Shake Hands Kennedy to Meet Testy Trymcrn Today; Nixon BuSy at Capital KANSAS <3TY. Mo. ONE PfWtlAC OPINION Ons vafer contributing ’ to toe tifill 1> fife Republican* w» fahtol Their American lawyers planned conference with the 31-year-old pilot’s Soviet defense attorney, Mikhail I. Griniov. b Washington, the U. S. State Department said Friday night, in response to questions front newsmen, that arrangements have been made Pewers* salary **i under delation." It also said that prov**1™ been made for his wife. This ap- M08COW un — Barbara Powers said today she will aet leave Moscow until she has done everything possible to help her hatband, Francis Gary Powers, sentenced to lt years detendon for espionage. Work Toward Attempt to Rocket Monkey Into Space Orbit Soon HONOLULU (AP)—The jubilant U.8. Air Force today celebrated history’s first atrial catch of a capsule ejected from an orbiting . satellite •— bringing man’s journey into space a giant step closer. The capsule, snared by a dengling device which hooked into its parachute shrouds, was plucked from the sky 8,800 feet over the. Pacific Friday by a C119 Flying Boxcar after its ejection from Discoverer XIV over Alaska. Picked with inotrumento and equipment designed to speed development of space spy and missile warning aateilitiea, the 85-pound capsule,and three of the crow from the catch plane were sped to the U. duct b parently means that at least some of his 32,500 monthly pay will be In response to other questions, the department said that U. S. government has no intention routing Francis Powers be-( sees nothing in Ms con-warrant such prosecution.' The questions about prosecution had arisen on the theory that .Peweri might have disclosed U. 8. security information la Ms testimony. Frank. Rogers of Roanoke, Va. one of the lawyers sent by the Virginia Bar Association serve Powers’ three-day trial, said the machinery for granting clem-(Continued on Page 2, CM. 1) Lodge Resigns HisU.N. Post To Dig In Immodiataly on Campaign Workout in Edit and South WASHINGTON (AP) Republican command apparently intends to give vice-presidential nominee Henry Cabot Lodge campaign workout in New Eng, land, the Midwest and the South. - ♦ A # Lodge announced Friday his resignation as United Nations ambassador, effective Sept. 1 *(1101 could put him into the adve campaign by Labor -Par, lii a “Dear Cabot” letter, President .Eisenhower expressed regret at lasing Lodge's U.N. -services. Hie President said this feeling waa mitigated because Lodge was offering himself for “an elective post of high reaponaiMlity and 0^ pnrtunlly ior service." In this effort you have, as you Jmow, my heartiest endorsement,” Eisenhower said. White Renee press secretary James C. Hagerty said Eisenhower intends to name James J. Wadsworth, deputy chief ef thi U.S. delegation to the U-ff., as Ledge’s successor. Lodge appeared Friday with a campaigning fellow Republican tor a TV filming with the interiors of the UN. headquarters lor their backdrops. He talked in front of TV. cameras in the General Assembly building with Rep. John V. Lindsay of New Yerk, who fa seeking re-election to Congress. ... ... .q|» .A ■ p* ; / The two discussed U.S. food surpluses and Lodge noted that .the U.N. Food and Agriculture <3r-ganizatioo has made studies of how they might be disposed of. A fir fi While he has stayed bn Ms UN. Job, Lodge has been getting a lot of invitations to speak in the cam-surprising namber of theoe were aaM to have come from the Midwest food the South. ■4 *... A Sen. Barry Golflwater- of Arizona. chairman of the Republican Senatorial Campalak. Committee, has reported fiikfii^ a great deal of Interest in Lodge not only in tfie South but tn states Use Oklahoma, a short stopover in Hawaii. Will an animal make the next trip? and then man? “Nat necessarily," said Ms). Cca- 0 J, Bltland, head of the Air Force Ball fade Missile Dlvl-. slon, when asked the question In Loo Angeles. “I wouldn’t expect ft In the bh riant future. But we’re working toward that goal.” “I don* see why we can’t catch (Pictures on Pago 2) all from new on,” exclaimed the successful plant’s nsvigator, Lt, Robert Counts, 25, Yuba CMy, Calif., who with others of the 10-man crew was decorated arrival back in Hawaii. SENT TO CALIFORNIA A plane sped the gold-colored capsule from Hawaii to the Lockheed laboratory at Sunnyvale, Calif., tor scientific. analysis before it continues on to Washington, Wife it went Capt Harold' E. Mitchell, 35, Bloorifington, 111., the catch-plane’s commander, wearing his newly bestowed Disfin-ainlfej Flying Cross. With tbeit commander went Counts and the winch operator, Tech. Sgt. Louis F. Bannick, 39, Hermiston, Ore., two of nine crewmen awardea Air Medals for the spectacular achievement. TTrrfr rt|t tm l)f II the sky hunt, made the recovery 390 miles southwest of Hawaii while flying at tn miles an . sr nswu GRABBING THE CAPSULE — A parachute-carrying dummy space capsule is snagged by recovery gear trailing behind a modi-—fied CHS Air Force cargo plane in the same way the space cap-side ejected from Discoverer XIV was caught over the Pacific Friday. This photo of a practice run was made as planes prepared for Friday's successful recovery in air of the object returned from the satellite in orbit. Hurried to California Container Will Be Tested MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. (UPI*—The 300-pound capsule of the Discoverer XIV satellite, which made 17 trips man over the United states, returned this morning for an “indefinite” stay. A Cl 19 Flying Boxcar brought a gray container carrying the instrument-laden*------------—--------—-— capsule into Moffett Field at 5:07 A.M. time) today. (Pontiac Captain Eg Mosher, 38, of New Bedford, Man., piloted the plane which brought in the historic cargo. Mosher flew om.of the planes which patrolled a 12,000-sq uare-mile area near Hawaii Friday in ordtr to catch the satellite in midorder to catch the satellite in mid- Re waa W miles away, when Capt. Harold E. Mitchell Magged the parachuting capsule by means of a rope strung between two long poles. It took three men to unload the heavy contojnerhere Friday night. A A A It was a can 2%. feet by % feet by 3 feet. Photographers immediately rushed forward to photograph the container, but requests that it be opened were denied. •He and Space- Division at Sunny-vafa, calif. Daniel J. Gribbon. manager of the Lockheed satellite system, said that the satellite; typuld remaip at the dMsfanJsboratory for an “indefinite” jJSfod until tests were completed. FIRST TO Hi TESTED He pointed put that this was the first satellite which would undergo thorough testing after a Journey through space store the one recovered Aug. 12 was given a quick check-over and then sent to Washington, D. C., whew it will end up to the Smithsontah Institute. GribbM urged cant 1m far Americano who are hopeful that Friday’s spectacular feat mesas the United State* will soon send a man In space. ^The- recovery .problem is Very-complex lmd4we”w Just beginning to crack it." he said _______: member, noting the 108 Navy personnel. and 30 newsmen and photographers at the scene, quipped, “If we had known "m‘ | there was a party here we would Discoverer XIV, the ejecting have got here earlier.” satellite, had been triggered into! - A A A releasing the capsule on its lTthj The can was. loaded onto a truck (Continued on Page 2, Got. 4) (ami driven to the Lockheed Mis- er of the 6504th Wing, said he fait that “recovery - was now almost 180 per rent probable” for any Discoverer capsule. Gribbon revealed that a full crew, of scientists was at Lockheed wait-* ing to begin immediate tests on the space traveling gold-plated globe, . AWARDED FOR CATCH —^Pmdfic Air Force . , sr rtowfai Commander Gent Emmett O’Doonell pins a space capsule from the air Friday, The other Distinguished Flying Cram on CXpt. Harold E. ninefirewmen were awarded air medals in cere- Mitchell of~Bloomington, lift; at Honolulu Friday, rnonjfes at Hickam AFB near Honolulu immadk^ The captain is tW plane commander <* fjf* %-»»■»■ eone. ft- sa^™’BLja ‘ r RlV’t , nfe’faKt sureessful dBfc^sia space object, Pilot Powers' Family Seeks Lighter Term History's first * Recovery Aloft Brings Jubilation $2 for His First Crew Cut? W H3A0 filVIM THE PONTtAC PRESS. SATURDAY, Au6U3T:*0, IMP Political Rivalry Sends Mali to Brink of Battle PARIS (AP) - Rival political leaders today threatened violent tiRdIBWiittfirririt ril of the new African state of Mali. Troop* and police*-with divided loyalties—main-taped a tense calm tat the capital -if Dakar. A ~ A* A Except lor sporadic radio broadcasts frop rival stations, the part city of Dakar was all bat out aft. Strict cenaonhip appeared to have been imposed on news dispatches Gram Dakar. Qpfltetinc reports had. Acting President Modifao KeiU under bouse arrest or, alternately, in the gleaming-white government buildings ringed by loyal African soldiers. AAA It appeared most ot the city Family Trie io Aid Powers (Continued From Page One) racy would be set Is motion today. DIRECTLY TO MIRA Alter the initial appeal, Rogers said, toe family would follow up with a direct idea to Khrutochev. “We win etay here and tight far Gary as hag as ear aeaney bolds eat and the Soviet govern ■seat lets as,” sold Otiver W. Powers of Pound, Va., the pitot’s .wtstcr:. ' rjj When the elder Powers arrived hero a week ago with Ma wife Ida, he said he planned to appeal to Ifltatotobev '___. other." He diadoaed that Khrushchev had promised to buizhe did not say how ha received a message from Khrushchev or elaborate on its contents. A A ’ A An appeal tiirough the courts couM be baaed on points ei law and made to the president of the Supreme Court or the procurator (prosecutor) general. But thh ta a lengthy, complicated process. If Soviet authorities agree tc madder ouch an appeal, it must hs considered by 12 judges of the Soviet Supreme Court sitting with pnisideRts of the Supreme Courts crip 15 Soviet republics. It waaM he ataspler far Bar-ban Powers, N, the ptiaTa wtie. Is follow the piaa she aatitaed Friday to a Soviet reporter- She said she would appeal far shinned following the ordeal of the tbree-day trial, the verdict and their bittersweet reunion with the lOtr-- — - ....... Powers broke down and’“cried after kissing his wife. The rowatoa, lasting one hour waa the family’s L’t recon nail The family sat around a table in room behind the judge’s das in the Hall of Columns, scene of the trial. ' A A ' A Rogers described the meeting, which waa attended by Powers' wile and parents; Ms sister Jessica HBeman of Washington, D.C., tod his mothey-to-law Mrs. Monteen Brown of Milledgeville, Ga. Powers told than he had been treated .especially well during pretrial imprisonment. Then Powers explained the details of Ma sentence as he under* rod H. Be said It would he broken k be given a Job. Soviet law provides that prisoners sent to such “assigned resi-ences" may live with their wives, There was no Gteo> Heads Off Coas Rain Heavy NEW YORK (API—Hurricane Cleo moved northward over open •era today headed toward Nova fleotia. Storm warnings were out along toe Atlantic seaboard from Massachusetts up as the blustery lady fn|p the south pressed steadily The Weather Bureau said it ex. peeled her to confine her wrath tottaufrtoera ana as ahe moved up along th* toast. Cleo, bora Thursday about 510 miles oft Capa Canaveral, ITa« wan centered some 210 milei moved slowly past, east of the But tits Weather Bureau said it was the result of a law-pressure disturbance not connect-ad with the hurricane. A A, A The city caught 3 >4 inches of rain; a record for the date. The previous high was 5 inches was under control of local-SAe-authorities who Friday aight announced the, secession of Senegal from the Mali Ft ‘ formed only tod year by' joining Senegal with Keita’s inland state of Sudan. Dakar i§ capital of both and Senegal. French officials hoped the po-litical crisis Would end without bloodshed but felt that no .-natter > what happened, Mall is finished and will be replaced by the states of Senegal and Sudan. 8TAT|C OF EMERGENCY Keita proclaimed a state urgency—just short of martial law —Friday aight after an emergen-Cabinet meeting which dismissed rival Mamadou dia, a Senegalese, as deputy premier «>f Mall. With the backing of an o’d Senghor. Dia immediately dared Senegal's secession, Dakar, much of it a sparkling Kite modern city with French-built government buildings towering 15 stories, is the capital oi both the state of Senegal and the new federation of Mall. waa formed last year by joining the interior stale at Sudan with Senegal on the Atiantie Coast. The new federation -waa granted independence froth France June 20 although it remained within the loose French Community. Staice the formation of the new state the leaders of Seneagl and the Sudan have been squabbling over who would become top leader of the new stole. A.. . .A. . A Presidential elections had been scheduled in seven days and the approaching showdown apparently touched off the crisis. • The soldiers moving into Dakar were reported to be Mali soldiers under the command of Keita, a flamboyant ex-schoolteacher who was previously premier Sudan. Senghor called on his followers to form militia wilts and answer 'strength with strength." reunion. Mrs. Powers’ immediate hopes, however, lay more in the rasurances ahe has received elemeney directly to Leonidpossibility was eBscuueJ at Bta Brezhnev, the presided *1 the - Mg ~ Soviet Union whose «fti mostly ceremonial, and the Presi- _ to^ ftuillmrate sf ras 1 it 1 st j UMon, which always follows the policy laid down by the Communist Ftarty. STUNNED CONDITION The Powers family today was in acotoliiion best described Polio Cases Up but Under 1959 U.S. Health $trvic« Sms 12 Pd. Increase Over Post Wftftk WASHINGTON ttJPD-Tha U$. Public Health Service (PHS) Friday reported a 12 percent increase new polio cases last week. But the total was far below last year. A A A The health service said that 123 ew cases, 91 of them paralytic, were reported by Bate health officials far the week ended August 13. This compared to US cases the week before. yet this year," the weekly report Hi ■ During the tame week last year, 413 potto casts were reported. The total national incidence for the first 32 weeks of 1956 was 2,920, which contrast with 1,0ft reported so far this year. It v i the suburbs. Up to iLS Inches were Westchester County. White Plains vitf dplttged with 3JS inches in nine hoars. the Weather £ESn».r,tr%sa: far any single state was in New Jersey, which bed 11 new cases. Only one case was reported in Rhode Island which had suffered severe outbreak earlier in the season. Rayburn Challenges Nixon On School Bill ■ W t*a»r wry**, ■ lovMt tsaipcrftturc pmsSWf • »■ Vn» wwa wusv *-*»* Dlmfim: SMt _ .;:■?** SUB s*t* istardsy at 7:J* •Ms rUct OejSir at »:♦**.». MSan tot Saturday at f V p.m Stamp to Laud Car Industry ^ Coining Oct. IS — WASHINGTON to - PusUmu-ter General Arthur E. Summer-field has announced his department will issue a four-cent commemorative stamp honoring the automotive industry. ___ t .The stamp, featuring the theme “Wheels of Freedom," will have first-day sale in Detroit on Saturday, Oct 15, In. conjunction with toe opening cl the National Automobile Show. The issue win be printed in 'blue, with the design executed by New York artist Arnold J. COpeland. This will show a woriti background with a symbolic steering wheel superimposed Soy Lodge Helps (Continued From Page One)--,; servative like Bte. With world affairs in such a mesa t don’t think we should rtyngt hew, and Lodge1 is certainly better informed on; world affairs than JohnMR *r The Pay in Birmingham Foresf Avenue Hearing Monday Night BIRMINGHAM—A public ing will be held at Monday night’s Kmedylor that matter.” / \|tan of a sewer to Forest tfenue. A huiMna niDurintendent in San ” * A . > A buildkig superintendent in San Frandaear expreseed the tame view, but even more affirmatively. He’d been unsure of his. choice some months bock: It’s the combination of men that helped me make op my mind. Nixon end Lodge together have more experience in foreign affairs than Kenmdy and Johnson, Things are too critical not to take advantage of every ounce of experience avail- The pronarad 17ft-foot sewer is to run from pi afreet eastward. The hearing was adjourned from last week’s meeting. Csmndeslnoers else are expert-ed to gnat an estenrira of time to Ben P. Fyke * tons,' ■. ar mwu DISCOVERER CAPSULE — Crewmen of the CU9 Flying-Boxcar which moggod Discoverer XlV’t capeuie near Hawaii Friday to an historic, catch Unload the space capeuie in a metal container. The lid was never lifted. Crewmen an S.Sgt. Algaene Hannon, left, Wedowee. Ala ; S.Sgt. Arthur Hurst. Tazewell. Tenn.; Akmaa George Donahou, RusselviUe, Ark.; and S.Sgt. WandaU King, Stearns, Ky. The two standing below are unidentified. The aircraft’s crew was honored immediately. Jubilant Crew Catches U. S. Capsule in Mid-Air AMl while this 40-year old printer _j Louisville was still toe Kennedy, he showed signs of Wavering on the same grounds: "’No, I haven’t changed my mind. Kennedy still impresses me and 1 can’t warm up to Nixon. But Lodge impresem me as much as Kennedy; I wish he was on the ticket with Kennedy because we sued a man Aith all that international experience when things ’: > 'Abel wgs convicted only of conspiring to steal and transmit such data. TNI U.S. court Indictment tUd not^Hjo li’e proof titnt he acroatiy^mccaeded tiirdring so. Re fe sen tog Ms sentence la laprenro Court last March 96 fe keM Ms esavWtiM on a i-4 de-todoo. Thk Russian’s attorwy, Jamas Donovan, said at tbs' time of the 1987 sentencing that the time might conp when (tori could bp need in an exchange ta save tha tile of a iUJB. spy who might fall into Rite- Last June, following toe U3 incident, Donovan said Powers’ father, Oliver Podfers, wrote Abel to the (Ota prison and pwprited tori son be returned to the United State to exchanga for Abel. Popovan said Abel replied that tu 'eml not ceranmifeais fotife with the Soviet geverantent and adviaad Powers to address his rate Abel’s toantiy to East Qmuwa-________t Abel Kilt be eiigfofe for panto on Aprils, 1969. Regular 53c size I low price.- Limit 4. ®AUon MlMttou, fi&rsiu j $39.95 |V -- One end two of * kind—* eft in perfect' condition. With .battery, earphone and' cate. J1 JEMEHS ""'M Coconut ( Shampoo I . SI fMUt. PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS Regular SI9.9S Vplt Cotton pile, fuj» i Til auorted itrtpt colon III may On tmm rub- III Spring Action Hardwood w Clothespins Pkg01 of 50 r~ 36* Diamond polished- hardwood pin* wftik Mil spring action. In plastic bag. HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huron St. ROCHESTER: 407 Main St PONTIAC: 16 E. Lawrence St DRAYTON: 4416 Dixie Highway ' £ \ ’ WALLED LAKE: 1102 W. Maple Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, THREE John Paul Jones Gets Potf at Grand Rapids I to become I planning director for the city ot JEMt Lansing and to GRANS RAPIDS (UPI) - Otyjwork at MtoMgm Site Utdver-Manager Alfred H. Rypstra has Announced di e anntaiminf cf L1*? ******* *»” haa been rector jar Grand Rapids v -W York CHy which formulated _ Jo*A- **° •**B® ijg *Ue« the master pian for 8sgt ftsacoseds Keith M. HaaaylGmmd Rapids renewal. Reds toHsIp Arabs DAMASCUS, (AP)—Usu- ally reliable sources here said day the Soviet Union soon will out more than 300 million dollars* worth of development projects In tbeNUalted Arab Republic. California produces'D per cent l«l U. 8. domestic wine. MiiiPiM The ever - increasing number of .. complaints we are receiving from the public—having purchased something from an unknown firm or an , itinerant salesman makes thie warning MOST IMPORTANT. II Voil Don't Know, the MERCHANDISE Be Sure You Know the MERCHANT You simply can*t know everything about the thousands of purchases you will make in your lifetime. No person can. But you can make sure of getting the best and most for your money by dealing with honest and reliable merchants. Truthful advertising, honest selling methods and a reputation for fair dealing are the trademarks of a legitimate retailer. If you know about the merciiant —4hMTyou don't have to worry about the merchandise he sells. BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce ■A new motion picture production from die matter of suspense films, Alfred HttcheodL It a major movie event but juuftlng by the talk about his latest Paramount re-i,. “Paycho.” Hitch outdone himself with his newest entry ip the shiver-and-shock hall of fame. "Pljfdn.” which opens soon in the Pontiac area, la baaed on Inner Sanctum myatery novel and stars, Anthony Perkins, Veen MUe* John Gavin antf-Janet Leigh as Marion Crime. 'Psycho Called Hitchcock Best Mystery Producer Was Impressed WHh Impact of Bloch Novel Parting enat Includes Frank Albertson, fat Hitchcock (the predaeer • director’s daughter), Vaughn Taylor, Larene Tattle, 1b tee appeal of every Hitchcock film he added another ingredient—a secrecy which kept Hollywood agog with interest during Droduetion. 2M Guards Almost Shot Firing Squad Halted by Ghanaian Soldier at Lumumba Residence the original novel by Robert Bloch hit Hitchcock with such impact that he Immediately purchased the screen rights, then embarked on a campaign of secrecy and silence. The barest alary outline, supplied by Hitchcock himself, de- ft* at Mi mother. For months Hitchcock kept even the title secret. Far ten enjoyment of the unusual suspense drama, patrons are urged to me it from tee beginning. fjardviiJrtivniJE (UPI) Two United Nations guards, arrested Thursday while trying to deliver note from U.N. deputy secretary-general Ralph Bunche to Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba, narrowly escaped execution by Congolese firing squad, it was disclosed today. ■ ,★ dr # U. N. spokesman said the guards, a Jamaican and a Brazilian, were arrested and (Unarmed by Congolese soldiers guarding Lumumba’s residence, then ordered shot. tat as tee., eight-man firing sqaad was about to shoot, a Ghanaian guard stationed at tee reatdcace jumped la front of the Actress Objects to'Sexy'Title ; Judi Meredith Says SfU Has Talent and. Hales Publicity Dates i hJU^ywOOD m - Whet’s this? A Hollywood Octrees objecting to being labeled sexy in print* ★ * * ' One of the so-called expose "T11"- iwwnHy callwl Judi Meredith ’’the oexieat starlet in Hollywood. The girl who made .Frank Sinatra zing-ring a ding.” . * ★ * • Judi blew her pretty top. p "First of all," she storms,."! am not a starlet. I’m an actress. "And I am not sexy. I'm covered with freckles. I’m flat chested and 1 have a big mouth, dr : L "I don’t want that kind of publicity. It’s not true. I found Sinatra very charming fwt there was absolutely no romance. We just had anghs. "I don’t need Sinatra or anyone dn la get me publicity. 1 4aa1 want sexy publicity. I have talent. I don’t need M. "Why ’ can’t they print true jigrtee about me, like, far in-stance, that I am the finest young actress in Hollywood. That’s the kind of publicity teat helps in business—not those romantic twosome items.” f^^W Judi looked anything but sexy the day I visited her on the set of "Jack the Giant Killer.’ d * dr Her face was painted green, her finger nails about three inches long and special contact lenses her eyes made her look asleep with her eyes wide open'd dr ★ Judi, at one poinLin the chMric (airy tale, turns Uno a witch. Shortly afterward, Indian Gen. [. Rikhiye of the U.N. force arrived and led the two U.N. soldiers away, saying, "Come, chaps, with WE CUT Oir PRICES Too LOW and therefore the Quolity isn't high - this isrr TRUE We Sell You' QUALITY At A DISCOUNT ; It's a fact, tome of our valued customers art at*-_ ways asking “How Come This is Priced so Low?" A?d * we always tell 'em the true (Mam raised us "fort never tell; lies) story —■ about out searching the • U S,A. for bargains, about the low overhead, ho ... fancy fixtures, no high priced executives etc. And sometimes if an item is slight ~ irregular or seconds we tell , our customers that they are just that, but ' always priced lower than usual .< i. so dear customars our policy is to soil GOOD COOOS ot Cheap Goods ’*1 DISCOUNT PRICES. Como, see for yourself — wo ’ have so many GOOD GOOOS that M’s impossibla- , to advertisa 'am alii - > AM far Further Proof Shop Simms TONITE o„d MONDAY (9 A.M. to 10 P.M.) saving Genuine Irisfol Sturdy Alarm Clock : pocket Watch S2J9 Value J JBh 139 [SSf^ 179 She says she is so serious about the no-sex publicity that she no longer dates celebrities. "I date no one but Gary Nel-in," she says. - • "Who’s Gary Nelson?” "See what I mean? Everybody asks that. He’s an assistant director.” ----iMfimssmoan-:—— HERE-GREWHAIR B tom x-raus in % h» ; HHR MOTOR OIL * MOTOJ, Ribbed SOLE SIJS Fata • ■ 2-GALL0N 10® -L------tuum swMtf r | Road Map Atlas Mjm 11* White Utility OxioH keg. 95c Value as ; For Nurses, Waitresses, m mhfi ' rlouiewW*, back - to - .M****-^ school for girls etc. Washable super-hyda in , J white only. Sizes £ to V, mm AYERS Fall LIPSTICKS Tubes !il 91 Take for in • 1 1 Bfi 3 for Mil foJlM •1 m Ukw 1 The incident was another in the series of harassments of U.N. personnel by Congolese troops since Lumumba began his foud with U.N. Secretary-General Pag Hammarskjold. Nehru Regrets Incident ML OPEN W> SUNDAY 51 S. SAGINAW ST. ^ A# M. tO 6 P.M. NEW DELHI, India (AP) — Prime Minister Nehru said today he has sent a message to Congo Premier Patrice Lumumba expressing my deep regret” at the Leopoldville airport incident. An Indian aircrewman was manhan- ror Dramatic Story SEE PAGE 30 died and Canadian troops assaulted by Congolese soldiers. SAVE where it PAYS... Clearance of Sale Santplei Current Rate of Dividend Dimes or* Dollars ... will Open your Account ,.. we don’t stipulate tfye amount... the same high dividend rate applies to all our savers. OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT WITH ANY AMOUNT 51 S.SAGINAW ST. - Next to Wrigh/s^ k THK yONTlAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 KffiGO HARBOR BAPTIST CHURCH i 1TM & C*u Uki Hud North Contra! College Trio to Present Muticol Numbers at Baldwin THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ADVENT ST. ANNE'S EPISCOPAL MISSION CofigregdtiohoP z Church WESLEYAN METHODIST Wisconsin, Michigan, and Ohio churches. They will also appear in! church camps throughout the vart-j ous states. Li}]), E. Huron grid Ml. Clemens Malcplm K. Button, Minister , Morning Worship Service . 9:30 A. M. . "As Qhe .That, Travsleth” .. The Rev. Mr. Burton C»r* for CUMfM 1 iM Oadir First Christian Church Distipfcs Ot Christ Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Church Service 10:15 A. M. 858 W. Huron Hof. D. D. McCall CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whlttemore Shoot » Sunday 7:JjO P M Haro|d Phillips, Speaker ' Wednesday Silver Tea First Social BrethrenChurch 311 Baldwin. Ft 3-0384 Sst. Eve. Service ... 7:30P.M. Sunday School .... 10:00 A.M. Sunday Momma Worship ....II.-00A.M. Sunday Evening Worship . .. .. 7:30P.M. Tues. Young People 7:30 P.M. Thursday Prayer ... 7:30P.M. REV: TOMMY GUEST. Patter Members of the trio are UHAynl Gibson from Earlville, IU., Bide! Seely from Wauzeka. Wis.. and Sylvia Parks from South Betid, i Ind. Accompanist for the frto is Sharon Zimmerman from Battle Oeek. UNITY 70 &smberlain -FE 5-2773 Diana Seaman, Miaistar mi 7-ua >:30 Sunday School ' 11:00 Morning Worship North Ontral la a liberal arts! cbllege affiliated with the Evan- gelical United Brethftn Church,' and is located in ffapervifie. IU. The college has an enrollment pi about 900 students, many of them coming from thtt area. Attending] the college from Pontiac Is Donald! rrailac VMM Photo Ovion. supplying funds. The family consists of, from left, ’Carol, Sue, Mrs. Oliphant, the doctor, Jimmy and BUL The three, doctors have arranged to divide their tone-between Lako Orton medical practice and Africa with the two in the States supporting the one in mtsskto work. ’ * - ^ LEAVING FOB KENYA — The Dr. W. Walter Oliphant family of Lake Orion, all members of the Riverside Seventh-day Adventist Church, 156 Mt. Clemens St. starts packing for moving to Kenya, Africa^ this falL Dr. Oliphant plans to begin a medical mission with Dr. E, Arthur Calkins and Dr. Percy S. Mama, both of Lake Williams Lain Church of tha Nazarene Corner Airport ft 29 W. Lawrence Street \SP Sunday Sch'1.9;4S a.m. Young People s Legion 6 p.m Mom'g Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Mtg. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p*m. CAPTAIN and MRS. J.' WILLIAM BEAVER ——Good Music — Singing ** True to tha Word Prewiring God Meets With Us — You Too; Are Invited 10 AM. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. WORSHIP HOUR 7 PM. WORSHIP HOUR, ZION CHURCH of the NAZARENE to Giv Port of August! Earnings to Others With youthful forthrightness ‘ putting words into action. Rev. Harold L. Harris FI 4-6216 riper cent of their August earnin&j l] to help countries of rapid socitv change. [ Hie action was commended by! ! the first Ecumenic*! Youth Astern-; My sponsored by die World Coun-cil of Churches which brought Vinie 1.800 Protestant and Ortho-j dox delegates and visitors to the! .J Swiss city. • ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMES T0U SERVICES 8 and 10 A.M. 5361 Hatchery Road Drayton Plains, Michigan to"«. Iran City Wo Cordially Invith You to Worship With Ut. FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH CENTRAL they adopted at the final session, , the young people declared: “Euro-1 peans must realise (hat the age of colonialism is over and replace selfishness with sacrifice, eyen if it mans lowering our standard ‘.of Uving.” j They were also concerned over jtbe present disunity of the church :and disturbed that they could not take communion together. BIBLE quiz — Audrey Limkeman, director of the Evening Vacation Bible School held at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church this week, quizzes CMryl Hight of 206 Summit St. and Don Sweeney of 412 Lynch St. during the Scripture memory pertdd. CHRISTIAN CHURCH O. W. Gibson, Mtrustor FE 441236 347 N. Saginaw Bible School . 9 45 A.M. Maming Worship ...11:00A.M. Youth Service . 6:00 P.M. Evening Service .. 7:00P.M. Pray#r Meeting and Bible Study Wednesday 7:30 P.M. BETHANY,BAPTIST CHURCH WaMHuronat Mark Street Dr. Jotsmh fnrfne' Chapman, Pastor Percy M. W allay It., Minister of Education / Two Worship Services — 8:40 and 11:00 A. M. Sermon by Rev. Robert Adame of Creecent HUM Baptist Church, "WHAT IS MAN?" 9:45 A. M. —. Church School<3088*8 for All Wedheiday 7:1$ P. M. -5 Mid-wepk Service •— \ "Spiritual Converaationa" Mu American BaptistConvention jChutch" ' . j Dr. Thomas H Holt Jr. | jfo Be New Hope Pastor !j Called to New Hope Baptistjand Mrs. Holt have five children, ’ pturrit es pastor is Dr. Thomas Bevedy Ann, 17; Thomas III, 7; J|H. Holt Jf. jRobert, 5; and twins Kenneth and] Student Will Assist at 1st Presbyterian Gary Muter, a member of Ftrstf Presbyterian Church and a pro-ministerial student at Alma College, will assist in both ttte 9:30; Granted Awards f or LUTHERAN Sermons by Freedom and 11 a. m. worshla hours. Foundation catoe to Pontiac in Bfo. All Saints Episcopal. Church HU okrly education was received)Jessie St. {tn Franklin. It was while serving: in the Army in World War II Aid1 the Korean War that he secured his higher education through resi- ^ ‘a dent attendance and correspondent courses. He served in the Army for : JR 20 years. m St. Stephen Sashsbaw at Kempf Guy 8. StaiA, Pottor Church Service — 8:00 A.M. Sunday Stftooi — 9:15 A.M. Church Service —10.30 A.M. The young people were addressed by world church leaders including Dr. W. A. Visser ‘t Hooft. general secretary of the World Council, M. M. Thomas, lay leader of the Syrian Church of Malabar, India, and other prominent church- The MV. C, GEORGE WIOOIFIELD. Rector The REV. DAVID K. MILLS, Curate 8:00 A.M. — Holy Communion 10:00 AM:—Morning Prayer and. Sermon by the Rev. David A. Mills Church School St. Trinity Auburn at Jeeele I (*M» aide) Ralph C. Clems, Pastor 1 Sundew School — 9:45 A.M. I First Service . 6:30 All. 1 Second Sendee . . . 11:00 All. | ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH l* Oakland Church to Hear Message 0/ Missionary* * ! The Rev. Paul M. Hanaelman, missionary on furlough from Belgian Conga, will bejpiest speaker at 10 a:m. Sunday in the Oakland A v‘e n tt e United Presbyterian 00 Church. Carl Mathehy will be solo- > He has participated int ecumenical work here and atiroad, an waa granted national awards tor his sermons, seven years to a row, from the Freedoms Foundation.' Phillip Stpinhaus, the Kirk's organist choirmaster • carillonneur, will present a carillon recital ffom 4 to 4:15 Sunday afternoon. | Children fo Perform at Central Christian St. Paul . Jodyn^st^T^ird George Mphder, Pastor MoriStog Service ... 10:45 A.M. Sunday School . . 9 00 A M. CLARKSTON MISSION wiH meet fo Clartaton Elementary • School, 6595 Weldon’ Rd. , 9:15 AM. —Holy Communion .end Sermon by-the Rev, Bertram T. White Guest Minister to Speak The -Rev. Warren Smith of Cold-water will preach Sunday at (he Church of Spiritual Fellowship, 82 Perkins St. Services are scheduled tor 2:30 and 7:30 p, m. Dinner will be served at 5 p. m. The two youth groups will meet at 5:45 p.m. Sunday. Speaking at the 7r30 evening service will be the Rev. John Hall, an associate pastor of Central Methodist Church. Soloist will be Bob Bell. Youth director Audrey Lhnke* man will lead the 7 p.m. prayer and BlUe study fcrvtoe Wednesda -Bloomfield TOWNSHIP. Square Lake and Telegraph W«. C. Praia. Poster_ Church Service .". .10:00 A.M. Sunday School .11.00 A.M. SUBJECT fOR SUNDAY , %//V0” Sunday Services and Sunday School 4 nil A,M. Wednesday Evening ... . . M,..., , , . . Services 8 P.M. Friday to 9 P.M. FIRST CHURCH OF) CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lavrtace and Williams Streets IlHibbs. I The Rev. Gerald W. Gibson, SI pastor, will preach on “Flesh and Reading Room 2 East, Lawrence Street VSeuwa fWlee . 7 Apostolic Church of Christ 458 central mmmm Young People Soturdoy . 7:30 P. M. I Sunday School and Worship 10:00 P. M. / Sunday Evening Service — 7:30 P. M. 1 Services Tues. and Thurs— 7:30 P. M. * * Church Phone FE 5-8361 v UJ--2-5142 Bishop L A* Parent Parent. FuUr Groce Oorner Oedeeee and Olendale . * 1. Theodore Roosevelt until the wooded sanctuary in the Potomac ‘ Ians are more acceptable to his River, has been approved by.Fed-escendants. eral agencies and authorised by C * + • the Howe. The Senate took heed* Mrs. Aliep Roosevelt Longworth, of mounting protests, however, in Ii He has ^kmoastraied fids amplyiperaments In motion pictures toll many a motion picture, includ- day. While “The Apartment” and tg his last, “Some Like it Hot," “Some LH» It Hot” are comedy, hich brought Marilyn Monroe he aim excells in a serious vein, acfc to the screen lor the first time “The Lost Weekend," "Sunset > two years, teaming her with Bbulehanr and “Witnesk Per the ony Curtis and Jack Leidmoa In Proaccutiqn” displayed his prowess roaring'comedy of the in the category of serious grama. * “Bakrtaa," “Love hi the After- That film Was one of United Moa’’ and "A Foreign Affair” rUsts biggest box office smashes. P*vcf he ha* a, way wilt love ...' ‘TIE MOUSE THAT ROARED’ IS OBt NOSISIf FOR THE FUNNIEST PICTURE Of THE YEAR!” "Cook. NYTWorfd- Telegram *A hilarious movie! Peter Sellers Is the funniest actor England hag sent to America since Alec Guinness !*‘ ■Ufa Magazine “Wild fun, in terms of social burlesque and sheer Mack Sennett farce... it has a ctearGuinniii oendc quality!** -Cnwther. n.y. rrnm starred Shirley MarLaine and Fred MasMmtay. "The Apartment” is a Mirisch Co. presentation and a United Artists release. “The Apartment” was written by Wilder and I.A.L. ‘Starting with the title, everything about ‘The Mouse That Beared* is hugely amusing! Ingeniously off-beat comedy, with delightfully daffy incidents, gdgs and chases. An elegant spoof!** -Peiawick. n.y. Joumai-Amehcan Laine and Fred MacMarrmy are three of the greatest comedy craftsmen in the business and that “The Apartment” .will prove thflf bold assertion; —7—- Desegregation OK'd ‘Brilliant... sparkling with wit, satire and juicy humo^!' ■Zunaer, Cue Magazine Wilder was born in Austria, June 22/1908, educated in Europe, andl has always had a passion for things American. His mother named him Billy*- hot jwilliam — because she thought it typically American. “A comedy that is sending audienoes into roars of laughter!' —Cameron. N.Y. Daily News —QUbert. N.Y. Minor 'Downright hilarious!** —Saturday Review garet reaches her 3dth birthday Sunday—happUy married at last —and still a lively pace setter pa the royal merry-go-round. KNOXVILLE. Ttoin., (UPI) -Federal Judge Robert L. Taylor FridAy approved the Knoxville School. Board’s gnde-A-year school desegregation plan. ♦ ' ♦ # The ruling, means that approximately 17 negro lint graders wiQ enter the city’s previously all-white schools August 31. outings had the protection of a large escort el guests. This time dje and Tony pushed their own Fay through the crowded foyer and sat tn*tbe orchestra shoylder (0 shoulder with the mob.. ‘A sprightly rib! Peter Sellers is very funny!1 'Brilliant! Wonderful! Hilarious!* —Redbook Magazine 9 After a period writing sports for Die Stundc in Vienna and covering crime for Nachtausgabe, one of Berlin's top gazettes, ‘ This has been Mafguwt's year. First came the surprise of her love "match with her untitled photographer, 'Antohy Armstrong-Jones. Then her dazzling beauty on Mr wedding day. The experiment worked smoothly enough—except that Margaret tejt obliged to deliver an icy ~.. . he studied! law and tried dancing professionally. bruahoff to a young American girl In. approving' the plan Taylor —SATURDAY AN D SU N D A Y SCHEDULE— Itis movie work began in Berlin. who wanted an but lie left with the advent of Cariflbean honeymoon, the princess is bringing a new note of, informality into royal affairs. The highlight came this month. Margaret and Tony called a cab and went oft by themselves to see a rowdy musical about Lon- Hitler. Stayed in France for awhile *-4hen headed for HoUywood-ron Next evening the princess and htf husband toured die night spots with actress Suzy Parker. Suzy's escort was Bffly Wallace. Margaret’s "cidfaithful” escort M premarriage days. Margaret, and Tony will spend, the birthday at Balmoral,, the royal family’s ^Scottish holiday home. next birthday. The hilarious story of how the Duchy of Grand Fenwick waged war on the U.S—MMft won! Britain Gives Official Nod to Laos Regime iDNDok 1 it Britain Friday acknowledged the Laotian regime headed by Prince Souvanha Phouma as* the legal government of that Indochinese kingdom. Cad Foreman presents The foreign office announced that British Ambassador John Addis has begun official dealiiw Etrton Co. Completes Its Pump Division MARSHAL (l>—The Eaton .Manufacturing Company has. completed a $450,000 expansion of its pump division. This gives the division 20 per cent mote operating area. Eaton says it anticipates an increase in the present etpploy- ar nrisu SAFE AFTER ORDEAL — George McKee, 88, was found safe Friday by police and a bloodhound. He had lost his way last Sunday while on a walk through • dense wood near his home at Elsmore, Ky. He ate apples and drank creek water during his ordeal. ★ PLUS ★ A NEW KING OF OUTLAWS! IFirstTuheOn The Screen! Qnsmj&copE COLLEGE 'CONFIDENTIAL' STARTS THRILLING DRAMA FROM WALT DISNEY! ELEVEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26.1960 going to Do Movie Together Lamas Is Cool,Can Esther Hv Him BACON HOLLYWOOD (B—Fernando Lamas say* Hollywood producers we Latino only as lovers. But he says they have, other talents, too. He, for ketmcu. hopes to toSpi-taHwAa hhr swimming. 2Ihe handsome Argentinian has been fighting tor years to get out ait the 4am lover casting nit that has existed in Hollywood since the as any ever mode at MGM. Filmed In color, they represent Just too much production to be used up in one night.” he said. "Esther and I, using the production numbers as a basis, will add a strong story line end have a movie tor what it originally cost to put on the TV show.” Reported Under Control pf Military Force*, He Refuses to See Him VIENTIANE. Laos (AP)-King 3avang Vathana ’has refused to . see a U. N. representative Who j went to the palace hi an atterppt < to end the fanpnsw between neu-1 tralist rebels and remnants of the pro-Western goverrandiit they turned out of office. ; ‘ Fernando is the first leading man who could ever match Either stroke tor stroke. He used to be a . champion swimmer in Argentina. > "when MGM first signed me. I I Esther was the boxoffice queen of . die lot'. As I came here on the , plane, I thought to myself that I add Keenan’s son Ned relax on the nNftV. They're together in the Walt Disney movie, “The Absent- Reliable sources reported today that a palace secretary told the U. N. mission chief, Edouard Zellweger, "The King is under the control of the military.” Zellweger -flew to thr royaL rtty of Luang Prabang at the urging MindedProfessor. never pushed into it, the way some kkto -arer-I deliberately—stayed away from acting all my life. I thought I might want to be . an anthropologist. But after trying the theater, -know what I want.” 3 Wynn Generations {Together in One Film HOLLYWOOD «UPI)-Max Baer] Jr,, son of the late heavyweight:' champion, has chosen powder puffs to boxlng'gloyes by signing a longterm movie-TV contract to avoid cauliflower ears. Baer, taller and more handsomel than his famed fattier, made the] decision after his first college fight. I *i get tiie hell beaten out of me i In my Brnt match,” he nald, i illustrating his point by flattening j ] the tip of Ms nose. The 22-year-old, 195-pound new*1 comer Is a collar ad type who faintly resemHes Jim l MAvericfcl | Garner. He’s poised, sell Assured | and a college graduate. jof Western diplomats as tension [and confusion grew in Vientiane, ! the capital dty seized' by military .rebels last week. I APPROVAL NEEDED t Final approval by the King is • needed to establish full” legal status for the new,-government of MIRACLE MILE THURSDAY ' I r. mreouii “I came to town four months ago to look around at the acting situ-] ation,” Max iSM, ''But''I dUfetl want to take advantage of people like Rory Calhoun, Red Skelton and Jimmy Durante who were close Surely you do not have your meat count after your deasert at dinner. You will therefore understand why we am ao insistent that you enjoy PSYCHO from start to finish, exactly as we intended that it be served. We won’t allow you to cheat yourself. Every theatre manager,, everywhere, has been instructed to admit no one after tha Mart of each perform-ance of PSYCHO. We said no one —not H even the manager’s brother, the President of the United States or the Queen of Eng-land (Gobbles* her). r To help you cooperate with this extraordinary policy, we are listing the starting times below. Treasure them with your life—or bettor yet, read them and act accordingly. _ rvl/25EveeA> STEVE REEVES as THE GIANT Pamela Duncan, he talked to I the easting directors at M-O-M n studios and Warner Brothers. | “They both asked me to sign 1 contracts without a fcntsa test.'* J Baer said. ”1 decided on Warner Brothers because they seemed I more anxious to have me sign up.,'[ Thus far the tor guy has appeared in segments of the "Branco,” "Sugarfoot” and “Roaring 20s” TV shows to be seen this fall. [Prays fob him si "I’m encouraging him in eve^H way I can,” said Keenan. “But jSj encouragement isn’t all he needs. There has to be a tremendous ^ drive on his pert or it doesR’tinJ mean a thing.” I SB Ed agrees: "Pm praying for H the boy’s success, but he’s got to SS wont to be ss motor himself. So RU far he shows a great desire for il. He’s a good looking boy and .01 intelligent. “If he can keep up his desire! HJ Jack Lemmon Fred Madhrray Pontiac Theaters^ EAGLE THEATER PAGE-.........J Sat., Mon.; “Son of Robinhood,” Al Madison; ’’1001 Arabian Nights,” Mr. Magoo. „ to act, he might make it. He would -be tiu? fourth genewflaH of ab{ acting family that goes back to ,181*. That's when Keenan’s grandfather, Frank Keenan, got his “start.” [favoring his mother, Evto Johosqn, der,” James Stewart; * Fire,” Cameron Mitchell. HURON I Sat., Thurs.: “The Me Roared," Pet er Seller-, ______ _________3 , , „, . “Third Man on the Mo(mtoin,”]at the Top tg the Stain.” Janet Munro, color. t ' OAKLAND ] “Tve found* whole new world," I Sif.T ”Ice Paige*” Rich* r d he safd with yetoMuI enthustoamT II Burt on, Carolyn Jones, Martha [“Primarily J*d rather do plays than i Hyer. movies. You gft HUM of a chance PREMIERE SHOWING IN OAKLAND CTY, ISATUEDAT FBUf^klnc lmfng he work itaneously; giftad charms! EXTRA {-SPECIAL {-EXTRA! Never Shown Anywhere Before! The BIG BOUNCE ftV fee Story of tha Satellite Echo . . . Now Circling the Earth Evury 2 Hours. So* It Built—See It Launched 1 Keep Your Eyo or, the Sky and See It Go By. EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING! LAST TIMES TONIGHT LOOKFORWARDTO SHOCK SHOW STARTS AT DUSK — ADMISSION 80c, CHILDREN FREE! WTUREBABOYEVKHADI I ill TERROR IN A BOYS’ SCHOOL! || UNEMBARRASSED AS A BED SHEET! TliejUmitRreSaf, Huckleberry Finn — IN COLOR — Starring RICHARD EGAN DANAWYNTER STARTS SUNDAY — TWO SENSATIONAL FEATURES They said she vas guilty as sin... * the naked shameful life of a “G00D-TI1IR GIRL” SCARING— SHOCKING- EXCITING! ★ STARTS SUNDAY 1-2 ALL-TIME GREAT,HITS I ★ * - SHOCKING SUSPENSE! *♦ ^°r 1* [every ^lhor» For every ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S dial Mfor Murder (V ""N'T* THK ltJJtTiA'- *. flfcagh* SA'-URDA , Ab 11 1 JLtf&V 20, 10o Behmd-Scene jCidiiie Home dr (So Broke Congo Tsiks Settiiban Fund Curbs Aimed at Halting Heavy Exodus .UN. Worried a* Fitly Permier Continues to Wic|aa Breach UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. < AP) —The arrival of the disgruntled Congo delegation paved the way . today for behind scenes talks on the eve of tyie emergency Security Council session on the worsening crisis. Delegate Council i awaited Sunday’ session with gnwiqg anxiety as fiery Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba continued t« widen the breach with blackmail charges -against Secretary-General Dag Hammarsidold demands lor withdrawal of white troops from the Congo. Lumumba capped Ms latest outburst by declaring that be was ready to renounce the services of the Ujr, because the Congo “is nobody’s property." Delegates of nine African member countries have been confer-in the African nation. Hammarskjold and prompted the' angered secretary-general to turn to the U.N. last Tuesday to ask the Security Council'to-en-: dorse his neutrality policy in the Congo. Since then attack! on~U.N. personnel have increased tension in tte afrean nation. A Soviet Mane carrying the five-man delegation from tym Congo swbef ft New Yqrir Friday night hftef being rerouted to Andrews Air Fores Base, Maryland, because of bad weather. Vice Premier Antoine Glzenga, heading the delegation, was upset at the change in routing. He and his -four aides glumly sat out the! last 45 minutes of their wait in the silver Ilyushin II turboprop plane where they had a three-hour delay. Death Notices KURT ECHARD ILFORD — Service for Kurt Echard, 18, of ioi E. Liberty will be at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Richardson-Biid Funeral H o with service and burial ^Tuesday at Toledo Memorial Park Cemetery. Toledo, .Ohio. The youth died Friday at Detroit Memorial Hospital after lengthy IBacea. ________ Surviving are Us parents Mr7 and Mrs. Abraham Echard of Toledo, (wo brothers and a sister. HAVANA-rac‘.'.3e as long as be Is able. Stayers Refrigeration gate* Ga. . -[reported to -Pontiac Police yesHto v~ at a Juvenile Court Jury trial day that a television set was stolen * next month. from its store at 589 Orchard i- ,„ ■ * * * (Lake Ave. when thieves entered • | Criminal charges against Lillian (through an upstairs window dur- ' Fratantonio will be tried during (tag the night. the week of Sept. Mfc Judge Mar- . —5_________. ... '* : caret J# Spell*? made thaV ruling *• S Frkto^rhen she transferred ^[and cigare^etjMi gpprtgl.jtj^» I early yesterday morning from the # Perry Friendly .Market, 1220 N. * Friday when -she transferred -e today of the youngsters- to thejj Catholic Charities Bureau. U2 Brings Joy to Some; ^". ’ I Theft of an eight-foot sail boat * ...... KUALA, LUMPUR, Malaya Mrs:-Fratantonio, who has. tiJfrom the lake In front of her house * •^ / * , iAP)—Tne government of Malaya jPl0(j an innocent ptea and is free l was*reported,to the SbertfTs De- 1 DETROIT UB — The high-flying recognition o’ his outstanding has placed a ban on the weed on 31.000 bond, initialed a state-fpartment yesterday by Mrs. T. G. «2 spy plane may have brought leadership xrhich has -inspired hew kilter sodium arsenke afte^<4fl-,ment -aweeK ago admitting rite Fosterof 7848 Bamsbury Rd., West, » (grief to Francis Gary Powers in hfteh . v-. nrnfiH-n„„ . rials claim it killed cattle worthdrugged tMfe children, police Sgt. Bloomfield Township. “ Russia, but the man who designed ™ 01 P_ ”ency and * morc than 363.000. (Norman Ferris said. Friday, how- . t „ _____ Z it and two men closely associated [ Grisly dynamic a ffp l i c a t i on of ever, she told one of her three A *** station at 5748 Clarkstoa . with its military operations will Americanism Principles through-, * * * defense lawyers, Fred F. Httow, **•; dependence Township, was^j get medals in Detroit next week. [«* '** Armed forces of our The Chemical is widely used on thaf the itatcment is untnie. broken into last night and an un- Z I by the Veterans of Foreign War*: nation." irubber and coconut estates. . w * w determined amount q( .change v 14J000 Vets Gathering at Cobo Hall MRS. OSCAR GOODWIN Service for Mrs. Oscar (Elizabeth S.) Goodwin, 71, of 101 Rae>-burn St., will.be held at 1:30 p.i Sunday at the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. BuriAl will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Goodwin died Thursday at Pontiac General' Hospital .after an • illness of four months. A member of the First Church of God, she leaves three sons, Doyle of Pontiac, Ralph of St Louia, Mo. and Otis of Parisville; three grandchildren; a sister and a brother. OXFORD — Service for John E. Cooper, 72, of 9 Lakeville $d., will be tot 2 p.m. tomorrow at'the Bonsardet-Reid Funeral Home. Mr. Cooper died at his home yesterday. He was a member of the Oxford Methodist Church, and a member of the American Legion Oxford Poat. _1_ He ia. niirviued-ky hia. v4 fA Emma Jane, a nan, John Cooper # of Pontiac, and throe grandohU- Burial wiH be in Ridgriawn Cemetery, with a Legion graveside service. ’ • threat that pickets would t march at Cobo Hall during the convention vanished Friday a few hours after it appeared. Prefers /ury. Ends Up With . TROY—Service for John T. La- , dare, 54, of U4 S. E3vd. ErwHT^e at 3 p.m. Monday at the Price Fu-neral Hogae. Life Sentence Bloomfield Hospital after ness of several months. He was a welder for a Warren manufacture ing firm. He is survived by his wife, Helen; his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Kbeck of Troy:. and three sons. Leland, Leon and George, all of Troy. Burial will be at Union Corners Cemetery. STEHUNG TOWNSHIP.- Mrs. Helen Breski, 40 Of 2625 Lindell St., died yesteriiay in Pontiac General Hospital after a two-momh illness. 'Mrs. Breski was * member cl St. Annes Catholic Church in War- Her body is at.the Price Funeral Homs. She is survived by her husband, Lawrence; a daughter, Alice; and a son, Kenneth J. . N.D. Rep. Burdick WASHINGTON IE-Former Rep. Usher L. Burdick, a homespun ^ ^ poiltician with a shar^ wit -and a Frtoieie -Gary lumbering' gait, is dead at SL . $► * it ■ A power in North Dakota politics for almost 59 years; he died Friday ' night to Sibley Hospital. He had served to the Republican nudes to Congress for 30 terms—from 1934 '' to J958. , At ^>is bedside was the man who succeeded him, Ms so*. Quentin , Burdick. The son, a'Democrat, followed pits father into the House and, then wag elected tWthe Senate tost June. . ' ‘ DETROIT (to—The first of sonte 14.000 delegates expected for the Ust annual national convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars settled right down to work Friday. The early arrivals attended th» annual preconvention meeting of government experts from the Veterans Administration. The discussions of yeteram’ affairs wifi continue through Sunday Osaveatton organisers said Friday that Vice President Richard M. Nixon’s wife Pat will be with him when he addresses the esaventtm But details still were lacking on the conditional acceptance of Sen. John. F. Kennedy to speak at the Tuesday Session. An acceptance telegram Thursday said he would be here unless Senate business interferes. The dispute between the United Plant Guard Workers Unton and VfW officials was Mamed on a misunderstanding over the use of poUcemen-VFW members to assist the convention's sergeants- Army Drops Attempt to Cdllect From Soldier Sent to UP Mines MILWAUKEE. <* has agreed to drop its attempt collect some 35,000 (or World War U allotments paid to the family of a private ft sent to work in Michigan copper mines without Army Ipay, Rep. Henry Reus! D-Wis. said Friday. Reuss formally demanded that the Army withdraw its suit against John J. de Francisco, now a 42-year-old Milwaukee construction worker, after U.8. District Judge Robert E, Tehan halted the government’s prosecution earlier this week and directed a full inquiry be held/ at its national convention. The VFW's Gen H. H. Arnold Award -will go to U2 designer CIPitiKt L Johnwn. vic^ presi-dent of Lockheed Aircraft GbrpcW-tion, as "the individual Judged to have contributed most outstandingly in the field of aviation." Arnoldi The Army] was World War II, Air Force (chief. The i Arpty advised Reuss, he said, that it would withdraw the action next week. Its suit contended that while De Francisco was working in the mines at 34.60 a day paid by mine operators, he realty was in the ready reserve and his four dependents were not eligible for allotments. Smathers Will Head Debt's Dixie Drive WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. George A. Smathers of Florida was named Friday to lead the iDbde. He was chosen’ at a ~ TtaTiuedals are being presented A Text of Powers Plea Short; Shows Pride The VFW’s Bernard Baruch Gold Medal will go to Allen W. Dulles for "outstanding service as a diplomat and especially in recognition of his efficient directorship of the United States Central intelligence Agency which has- MOSCOW (AP)—This is the text of Francla Gary Powers’ filial plea to his Judges Friday, as reported by the Soviet news agency Tass: "You have heard all the circumstances pertaining to the case, and you are to decide my fate. , "I realize that I have comnlltted a moat grave crime and ______ | ________deserve punishment. I ask the court to weigh all clroum- tributed immeasurably to national I stances and take Into account not only the fapt that I had security and toward more effec-j committed the crime but also the circumstances which ln> ttve unity with our aHtes.” j duced me to. ♦ W ' ■k + £ -----“I ask the court to take into account went- through the channels they were supposed to go. All of them landed In the hands of Soviet authorities. ★ ,if * r "I realize that the KftUlAn people regard me w -atr enemy, bpt I should like to stress that personally I do not have and-never ha^fe had any enmity for the Russian people. it it it ____“I ask the court to Judge me not as an enemy»but as a Than who never before had faced a court on any charge whatsoever and who deeply-realizes Tils guilt. Thank you.” ★ it* "i# - The court, which could have aentenced the American U2 pilot to death, gave him 10 years. t yew in jfll, plus a 88MMinc slQ*en M is the maximum wnalty for, the ( Would party wh« taught ’55 Parti ] offense, but permanent custody ofrstution Wagon, license No. OM- , ___> -i • . • . nine - 4 * •— Bernadette mid Venite also is in-(Ml* P'e“* contact Ollbort Her-volved ntndez. 544 Mt. Clemens. Pqptioc. Catholic Charities their placement Tor future ^medical observation on swreL proS Oit* in London at 69 LONDON UB—Lord Weeks, 69, ' former chairman of Vickers, Ltl., out-patient basis, and work out|A with the family the matter visitation rights. ~ graduate of Cambridge and cap- * Not all so-called beavers are tain of that university's soccer ( web-foofod. flat-tailed, water-lov- tehm in 191% ing animals. The mountain bea-seweilcis. found in thej mountains of Oregon, * Washington and northern California, never go In World War I he served with J distinction in the trenches and « held high army rank in World * War II. He was chairman of Vick- * the water, have neither web- ers, the big* steel •ahd armaments J bed feet nor flat tails. ! firm, from 1948 to 1956. Eisenhower Nominates Four From Michigan WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Eisenhower has sent to the Senate the folio wins nominations for Postmaster in Michigan. Jack S. Paul, Dowagic; Paul A, Racheter. Pigeon; Robert E. Flaherty. Watervtelt; Robert Q. Mason,- Aagusta. Pilbfs Family, Friends Express Feelings Relieved Penalty's Not Worse Border State Senators by .Sens. John F. Kennedy and Lyixkxl B. hold for their Senate Colleagues, tor sttsude! the gathering- to* awl Rennaa E. Tutoiadge of Georgia, who lave net endowed , .Abb5t4 '*BW(fveri were Sens. Hai^y F. Byrd at Virginia and The district attorney1* office of- Oxford GuUlhot Dttath tered • Franks, 31, a seven-year’ term |( be would plead guilty to robberjr by anundt. Victim Is Identified Franks rejected the offer'and the case went before a Jury, where Alfonso Garza told of being robbed of his billfold by Franks last Jan-tutry. . The jury, noting previous convictions for burglary and theft, sentenced Frank* to life. An elderly man found dead, of a gunshot wound in Oxford Thursday has been identified as John E. Cooper of 9 Lakeville Rd. Oxford police reported finding a 12-gauge shotgun by the body when they entered Cooper's home. The dead man’s name was first ported to be Willianl Cooper. 1 POUND, Va. (UPI)—Home town * friends and relatives of U-2 PW Francis Qary Powers expressed relief that his sentence by a Soviet court was no more severe than 16 years In prison. * * * “I’m jutt very happy that It wun‘t mure i-r- or worse,” said He added that a “tof of other* | here think the game way I do," Others in this quiet southwest Virginia community of 1,100 were reluctant to discuss the trial or sentence, ’ii*———j z * * t Mayor J. P. Robertson turned a newsman’s cafi over to his secretary who said the mayor Mrs. Joyce Stallard. We of Powers’ five sisters. would not be quoted. Another of the pilot’s sister, Mrs. SUBard, heard the,News of her brother’s sentence from Mrs. Verill W. Melvin, said at to- home ta Fall Church, Va., Tvtaarir whs called the sapee-market where she works as a cashier. that the sentence was not as haAh as she expected, "nor as light as - She said she eagesfy awaited rtw» roturn of- her parents, Mr. and Mfs. Oliver it. Powers, (rorh Moscow, to learn personal details of the trail. Mrs. Stallard has not she hoped- ... — CONHDERS FEELINGS . “Right now, she Said, "al] I wife) and mom and dad and howl they must feel. , seed her mother to three years. ♦ * * Pound 'Police Chief Bob Shell echoed Mrs. Stallafd’s sentiments HUt said-he thought Powers had been “brainwashed” by his Soviet captors. EXPECTED WORSE * . '*T expected a worse sentence,” Shell said. "I’m glad ft Wasn’t any moTe but I think he "said a lot of things someione else bad him say.” * .ftt was reported from Moscow that Mrs. Barbara Powers, 35, i wgs planning to try to get ■ I Job with the U. S. entonssy In > order to remnln ab close ns poo- { stole to her hnoband.) Former Richmond restaurant j operator Yincent Spenanza, who financed the trip of Oliver Powers to Moncow for the. spy trial, laid he thought the pilot would receive clemency before serving the full sentence. ‘T don't think he'll serve the ). years.' Speranza said. He added he did not think the “After all.' he' said, “He 1 Just Conversation ; nversation is an art. It began to the tether KmSmESIWHPHP stimulated, we form mental pictures and we add to our store of knowledge. Conversation is ah EXCHANGE of Ideas. We rive and we receive. Vacation experiences j. i. vooaans Banker, business man, house wife, teacher, minister, each adds to our wealth of factual information. One of the moat interesting conversations I ever had was with a farm boy about soil and Ms nutrients. He, to turn, wanted to know about my business. Interesting speech need not be s galloping flow of words. Enlightening conversation is is fimt The gentle art of conversation It the most beautiful art ever conceived by man. B. 8. To discuss- a funeral service with us, before the need arises, is one conversation that brings solace and peace of mind. VOORHEES-S1PLE FUNERAL HOME 968 North -Perry Street-—Phene f» 9-W78 Papers Side With Pilot and America Powers Trial Fails to LONDON (AP) — Western Europe today summed up the Rowers’ trial as a propaganda showpiece that toiled to impress. the nations ef Western Eulope. The verdict never was to doubt The sentence generally was regarded as lenient. Throughout the Continent there was sympathy for accused U9 because America needs to. know what is going on there and could hot find 'out to other ways. Hie mare the prosecutor light to materialise President Eisenhower in the dock at Powers' right hand; the flatter grew the shadow of Mr. Khrushchev on his left1 It- was conceded the United wile and Parents. They were seen as ah ordinary States may have acted raMy te£ «* wta to estritfish Jbe tween • the wocld’s i two HIT PROPAGANDA But there was little sympathy with the Soviet Md to put U. J. policy in the dock alongside Pow- Britain s Daily Telegraph ttm• i was sent over J Union on the eve of the Paris sending the U2 over the Soviet (trial as a platform for bitter attack on America, the Russians suggest that they da^Jot think they have anything to gain from being on speaking terms with the West at the moment,” said the London-Thnea. — final statement, reveals “statements so strange, falsehoods ro evident and distortions of truth so artificial as to confirm once* again that with the Soviets it is impossible to have discussions and dealings on the ordinary level of good faith.” to. Denmark, Copenhagen’s Ber-lingske Tmende said the real aim -United States as the culprit. "But H is doubtful whether the family caught «R*to the dash be- summit conference. But all thfo'tej show to Moscow will alter the - - - —.IT . ------------ • • • - • ••• world’s Judgment flf the U. 8.fend has been said before and the trial brought out nothing fresh on the Many observers believe file pattern of ,fite trial may have given the West i glopmy pointer to future Soviet ppttey. T -. . COLDNESS FEARED . 'The depressing thing Is that Lb£ ferial the fihal stages of the the I’sjud uls.s.1 S.R.,” file conservative In Rome, the Independent B Messaggero said: “The scope of the trial was to Mace accent upon the ‘criminal American- .espionage mtoi|j|wH|| tion.'" # But 11 Messaggero added that I Neutral Sweden was equally Impressed by the prosecution’s denunciation of U. S. policy. - but otherwise the Swedes found the Soviet handling of the case satisfying surprise.” . The Stockholm-Tidningcn speculated that when a new U. S. president takes office, Powers should stand a good chance of a pardon. Other European Newspapers al-) ’suggested Powers may not have ta serve . his fell Idyear a study of prosecutor Rudenko's yean ta Jail. The 'Farfe newspaper Figaro skid he might be expelled from the' Soviet Union after three Facilities, Like Character, Are Built By Time and Service The high character that marks all contracts of the Donelson-Iohnt Funeral Home is a product of many years of experience, and the faithful, performance of our dutie^. ft could not have been acquired in a shorter time, or without effort and sacrifice. Likewise, our facilities are the result of careful planning and experience By serving marly .families, we have acquired the knowledge of what is best, and how to provide it. Without this experience, the gracious dignity and soft beauty of the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home could never have become a reality, nor could our orderly and adequate facilities be avaiiahlft tp the many families we serve. . 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