WASHINGTON OH — A 72-foot “Scout" rocket roared 3,500 miles high and 5,800 miles out over the South Atlantic today on a mission that could help develop means for In Today's Press signed to test die flight performance of this unique solid fuel and relatively low cost rocket which is dated for various important space-exploring missions in the near future. But the rocket also carried a special Air Force experiment designed to test die feasibility of spotting radiation from speak nuclear explosions high anvt the atmosphere. Such explosions, 'touched off by an enemy, could Honor Prosecutor at Dinner heroin, Tt* Weather M. Sutler Sanaa fsaaaaal Fartty dandy, warmer. THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition 118th YEAR ♦' w ♦': PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4. 1060—28 PAGES u",T*Sa8^ra® SSktwm‘' Guatemalan Envoy Arrested Paint Shop Seize $4 Million in Heroii Reds Put More Heat on Dag-Seek Mac Talks Neutralist Sponsors of AmHy Propoial Confer ^ This Afternoon UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. MR—The Soviet bloc turned new fire on Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjdld in the United Nations today as prospects faded for significant advance this session toward West agreement. ist" interests in Africa’s Congo. The stepped-Up attack on the secretary-general came in the midst of a new round of diplomatic activity. Just before the proceedings began in the Assembly, British Prime MlnUter Harold Macmillan conferred with Hammarskjold. And at the same time the Soviets asked for a meeting between Khrushchev and Mae-mlllan, a key figure to the Weet’a maneuvers at this session. The British suggested a meeting later to the day. Khrushchev's attacks on Ham-marskjold are viewed as a barometer of cold war weather and one of a number .of clues to prospects for East-West accord. Another indication has been Khrushchev's restatement of bis price for a face-to-face meeting With President Eisenhower, gently recommended by five neutralist nations. Khrushchev demanded Monday night In n letter to the heads of JM Im- neutralist states that Eisenhower first confess guilt for “treacherous acts” and “perfidy” In. connection with the U* spy plane incident of last May. An Indonesian spokesman said neutralist sponsors of the resolution for a Khrushchev-Eisenhowcr meeting ng Smashed Manhattan TALK OVER OLD TIMES — Incumbent Re- Pmusa Frau rx»u publican Prosecutor George FT Taylor (centeH Judge H- Russel Holland, at a fund raising dinner -spoke of old times with two of his former bosses, staged by hit friends at the Kingsley Inn in retired Circuit Judge frank L. Doty (left) and—Bloomfield Hills last night. Incomes Higher, Claims Nixon Dick Woos East and Jack Rests ByTbe Associated Press Vice President Richard M. Nixon said today that wage earners have had a 15 per cent increase come under the Republicans as against a 2 par cant gain under the Democrats. Narcotics Could Have Sold for $20 Million on Illicit Market NEW YORK UR—An in-ernational dope-smuggling ing has been smashed with he arrest of a Guatemalan llplomat and three other nen and the seizure of $4 1111 on worth of- pure officials say. Narcotics could have irought in $20 million on retail market. Officials said it was the largest seixure of narcotics ever ki to the U.S. government. CHARRED CARS — uied for a paint job today that they'll never get. They were casualties of a ' night that gutted Earl 8cheib's Auto Painting $50,000 Fire on S. Saginaw Auto Paint Shop Bums iMrium be Inchsded la the WiUman said the guide Would take into account the city’s financial structure and bonding ability. Emphasizing that ha was submitting "a guide," WiUman said: "This material W to help the iB. its thinking about Scheduled bearings: On proposals for curbs and gutters on FUUar Street, Madison to Beverly; Melrose Street, Madison to Perry; Cameron, Street, Baltimore to, ML Clemens; South Jessie Street, Prospect to Raeburn; on gam for lewalks on the north side of tllaril Street and tfre west side of Jessie -Street; on assessment rolls covering proposed walks on both sides at Harvey Street south i of Ditmar Street and oh the northeast side of Mill Street. tire from the front luggage compartment to the rear engine compartment and the use of a hot air- heater Instead of the gaaoHne-fiird type used to i960. Seize Heroin Batch; (Continued From Page One) New York City, a purser on the Paris-New York run of Trans World Airways; and Nick Cala-maras, 47, of New Ydfk City, a longshoreman. NO CUSTOMS TROUBLE Agents said Rosal acted _ courier because he was able to get through customs without difficulty his diplomatic position. They accused Calamaras and Bourbon-nais of being'ln charge of distributing the narcotics in New York. Tardlti, who operates an electronics business, customarily flew Into New York a day in advance of Rosal to arrange for a pickup, officers said. The operation had extended over 11 months, agents believe, with an average of one trip being made every two months. Each delivery consisted of from 30 to 90 kilograms. A kilogram Is £2 pounds. . -Xjn Agents of the Federal' Bureau of Narcotics in tile United States, working with the French Surete — conducted the investigation that led to the arrests. (Continued From Page One) showing at the neck, and a gray-flecked cloche hut. At the airport the Nixons go their separate ways to mingle With the crowd and* ■shllte hinds; along the fence. Mrs. Nixon has a word and - a smile for everyone. And she passes out cards autographed by the vice, president. They are engraved with the leg end "the vice president of the United States," and signed in ink at the bottom by Richard Nixon. There is great demand for them. When Nixon speaks- day after day, Mrs. Nixon presents an attitude of absorbed attention, thought! she has in most cases heard the same words many times. Her eyes stay qq Nixon throughout his [talk. A small smile stays lira. .— —— ■ ■ Almost invariably the vice president opens his talk with a reference to his wife, if she is travel-with him. point, in her manner or dealing with crowds la a receiving She shakes hands with all in reach, and has something to say to everyone. She thanks them for turning out and says she is glad to be back in whatever dty they are visiting. She stoops to shake the hand of a shy little girl. She calls for more autographed cards to hand out. At Charlotte she caught sight of a man carrying a little boy in his anus. "His eyes are blue Just like his daddy's," she said, and passed The Kremlin leader now appears week - perhaps two — pern leading the violent Communist mmpsdgn against the evils of 'colonialism," Western policies In general — and U.N. Secretary-General Dag Hammarakjoid. A hud look at the diplomatic scoreboard doesn’t seem to support any such rosy Khrushchev view, at least not now. The bond pwpesnl. the drat ever placed before city voters, was accepted MS to 104. At least 292 positive votes were needed of the 420 property owners who*' wenfr to the polls to decide the queetibn. The City Commission At 7:30 p.m. today will canvass the slim margin vote at City Hall on Long Lake Road. The veto carried toe 60 per sent mnjertty hi preciaet II by 6 veins, and was defeated to precinct I by 8 veto*. The vote In precinct I was 117 to 81 and 130 to 83 in precinct II. City officials said the seWer system construction could be started as early as January with ootafde- A lower figure, of about 10.48 per thousand has been arrived at if the dty only irauCUs file sewer mains in developed arena. With fids plan property owners would only be taxed for direct benefits derived from the aewer project. ■ Only areas now subdivided would pay for the sewer program. However, the City Commission has yet to accept either plpn. A final decision will be made by them before the bands are sold. Still Time to Join Coast Guard Course tira late in 1861 if the bonds could There’z still time to register for the UJ. Coast Guard Auxiliary boat handling and safety course at Pontiac Central High. The class will meet each Wednesday at 7:15 P-m. tor eight weeks. Tomorrow’s meeting place is Room 216. It’s your last chance to register for the fan course. Those who pass Elmer Kephart, city manager, said general obligation bonds of this type generally have been stll-‘ ir a 4 per cent interest rate, and in several cases, the past few months, under 3 per cent. p teat at the'end of the course will receive basic seamanship certificates from the Coast Guard Auxiliary. 80-yaar bond* would sell for 4 Actor Stumps iri State WHITEHALL (UPl) — George Murphy, Hollywood actor who is chairman of the Celebrities for Nixon-Lodge, will campaign for the Republican ticket today in Oceana and Muskegon counties. Bentley's 'Welcome' in Troy Is Upset Khrushchev seems a little wearier than when he arrived Sept. 19. But, if anything, he has stepped rather than slowed down his pace. Monday night, alternately grim and Jolly, he sped through three separate diplomatic receptions. - He capped this with an hour-long news conference, where he nounced an assortment of Allied statesmen from President Eisenhower to the late John Foster Dulles, Bragged about Sfikiet education, mineral water and rehashed the U2, and RB47 plane incidents. J Khrushchev’s own assessment of his whirlwind New York visit came from an independent-minded foreign leader who talked at with the Kremlin leader. ; By DON FERMOYLE Troy Commissioner Roy L. Duncan, who last .week decided not to vote against the route of the proposed Chrysler Expressway through Ttoy, did manage to detour Republican Alvin M. Bentley's campaign for state senator in the city last night. Duncan objected to Bentley’s presence at a Troy City Commission meeting when the* candidate was called up to the speakers' table by Mayor Robert J. Huber, also a Republican. "I think If tola la going to be a political thing then we should Khrushchev believes, said this official/ that Westerners who view his activities so far as a driest for Soviet policy are like those who add up the result of a football contest before the game is over. In Khrushchev's view the final tally will not be known for many month*. He is reported to have come to New York realizing that the immediate results might appear to favor the West. to our problems," Huber said. "I think our representatives in Washington, whether Democrat or Republican, should hear of them." .“Our problem ia with Detroit, and not with Washington," Duncan Ex-Receptionist Told to Return Embezzled Cash to speak," said Duncan, a former chairman of the Trey Demo- Bentley answered as he approached the table that he would withdraw from the discussion if anyone thought he were intruding. There was no comment from the other . commissioners, and the Owosso Republican returned to his chair in the audience. , At the end of tiie meeting Dun-can told Huber: "I think you were entirely out of order in inviting Mr. Bentley to the meeting. I don’t think you have the right to invite any political candidate to main a speech or take part in this commission meeting." “I asked him to come and A former receptionist for a Pontiac dentist', who admitted embezzling funds from the dentist to pay back loans and to buy hew clothes, yesterday was placed on probation for three years and ordered to return 81,57p. Circuit Judge Stanton G. Don-dero handed down the sentence to Donna M. King, 33, of 457 N. Saginaw St., and ordered her to pay an additional HQp in court coats. She pleaded guilty Aug. 24. The former receptionist for Dr. Peter Hoogerhyde was arrested in January by Pontiac police and admitted overcharging the dental surgeon’s patients and then writing the amount the patient should have been charge in the office account books. She kept tiie extra > Advantage of Debate" Area Dems Expect Crowd Arrangers of Friday’s big Demo- cratic 18th Congressional Dinner in Pontiac weren’t to be disheartened by af possible conflict of interest*. When they learned that the second in the series of debates between Sen. John F. Kennedy and VWe President Richard M. Nixon last Saturday (An Parte. Rosal From the moment Rosal stepped K a plane at IdlewiM Airport, he was under round-the-clock surveillance fay federal agents. When Rosal met Tutiiti w the East Side early Monday,; agents in panel “ trucks took photographs. They were also followed to another meeting with Calamaras and Boarbomate. The four were arrested as they drove along East Side in a text cab and a station wagon. The four were charted with conspiring to smuggle narcotics and were held in $250,600 bail eacji after being tajeen before a U.S. commissioner. A ‘hearing scheduled for Oct 17. \ Library Turns With Sod, Not Envy as their annual’ fund-raising affair, they envisioned a reduction in the number of diners that evening. County party cotters might shrink is a result, too, the^Mt. Principal speaker Sea Eugene J. McCarthy, the second Minnesota senator to speak at the local dinner in two years, woifld be a big drawing card, they knew, but appetites had been whetted by the firet Kennedy - Nixon battle of issues. The gram is flourishing today at Pontiac’s new public library, a front-la wnfull of it. What had been, barren dirt the past year yesterday underwent a sudden transformation. delivered to local warehouses, said Stierer, where it is being held until fife city accepts the building from Bundy. Getting set for completion 0f the befldiag a few days heaee, crew, of the Pasha A Recreation Department laid M square yards The City Commission authorized the administration to spend fioo,-000 over and above construction coats, for equipment and other ex The green glory of the Pike Street frontage of the library site will be matched next spring along Puke Street and Water Street The side and roar of the site were Robot A. Stierer, assistant dty manager and bead of the library committee, said he expected the Bundy Construction Co. would an-nodnee it was ready for final inspection within a few days, possibly at the end of the week. ef the *500,000 civic center edifice began Jnst tittle ever a year ago. Ground C at the equipment hrdend e library already Nhs been The Omy Ihl Itonwtamm moving basks tram the old library to tha mo af aaata library service. The moving dale, rat yet finely a eke Haled, wll ba Donald Nagle, dty forester, said aiding and seeding represent the tint steps in a landscaping pro-will continue this week ^A variety of bushes and evergreen are! to be planted, he said, including flowering chinrre and crab, lilacs, forsythia and red and gray dogwood. There’ll be planters and rose (jeds flanking the entrant* way not spring and azalea beds akmg been Pike street, he said. was scheduled for the same night Adlai Stevenson at the Democratic national convention. Democrats here also remember la appearance back in March when he subbed tor senior Minnesota Sen. Hubert Humphrey at the Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner. 4 Persons Hurt as Autos Collide in Highland Twp. So Allen Zemmol, dinner chairman went to work and solicited a large television screen to bring the second dash .to the some 600 Democrats expected to pack tiie' Elks Temple to hear Sen. McCarthy and many state and county Democratic dignitaries. “We. didn’t want anybody to Oakland Democrat* promlaa tha C. Scott, 'bept-ever". in congressional dinner*. It will begin «| 6:30 one hour before tiie scheduled television appearance of the two presidential candidates. Lobster or steak will be the political blue plate special, Zemmol said. Principally, the <10 per plate affair wfli help defray costs ter rongrtmiansl candidate James against Incumbent William S. Broomfield. Other Candidates, bath state and iscal, are equated to realise same benefit* tram the gathering, to®. Sen. McCarthy, 44, etched Min-self further into political Matey t* Ms nominating speech of for a painter. Four persona were injured in a two-car collision Monday on M59 at Duck Lake Road in Highland Township. In satisfactory condition today at Pontiac General Hospital were Leo G. Kern, 66, of 485 Mohawk St----flarindnn. and Mr. Tn^y Kern, 65, at Adrian. Korn suffered a fractured arm and his sister-in-law a fractured collarbone. Kern’s wife.,was treated tor minor injuries and released from the hospital. Driver of the other car^ Evora Road, Milford slab was treated Mra. Tony Kara’s husband escaped injuries. Lao Kan said Scott attempted to make a left-hand turn from tha opposite direction and he was unto atop in time. The Scott crashed into the side Kern's ear. Paint! Princess Grad# MONTE CARLO (AP) - fipanteb painter Ale jo VkWl Quadras is do-tag a portrait of Monaco’s Princess Once and her 1wo children, rrtnre Alhtrt erei rrtaneee fTero tine. R te the tint time tha pete-cess and her children have posed ■V4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER*«, 1960 THEM ENDC0RN8 Fart Leopoldville Men Quitting Lumumba hi }li H! («.i MilSaeoS !*HH t« I natal « Dr.lAoU-, Zino-pa D-Scholls lino pads NOLLANO BULBS CROCUS, DAFFODILS. HYACINTHS. TULIPS TASKER’S «> W. Huron P| 3-6291 LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (API—Boom Western diplomat* attached considerable dfnlficance today to public declarations by at least eight members oI Parlia t that they have broken once and for all .with Patrice Lumumba. * The MPs (spied a tour-page statement Monday night accusing the OMnmunist-backed deposed premier of ordering a reign1 of terror in Stanleyville, Lumumba's political stroogpotm. ..Signers of foe statement said that all but 3 of foe 39 senators and deputies from Oriental Province, which Includes Stanleyville, have Joined them in leaving the jLumumba camp. Sues iot $25,000 Aker Swim Suit Goes Transparent ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)—X father has filed a $35,000 damage suit tar foe humiliation Ms daughter suffered when, ha says, a new the first time she wore it in foe Claude C Rogers filed foe suit Monday in behalf of Ms daughter, Linda Rogers, IT, against R. R Macy sad On., of New Yolk, doing business as Davieon-Panon Co. Town Residents Weren't All There hit Seemed OXFORD, Md. (AP)—Residents of this small Chesapeake Bay town -were counting their neighbors this week to see if it were true that about 00 per cent of foe population had sudfenljT'vgnishcd. OAKLAND FUEL Gall FE 5-6159 In 1950, the population of Oxford was listed as 757. But according to the 1990 preliminary estimate, population in 1990 had dropped to 370. Indignant civic officials began an Investigation. It turned out that the census tak-• had reported - preliminary suits before finishing his counting, and that there were really 992 residents in the town. One relieved Oxonian said “They nearly counted us out of existence.’ The suit said foe giri paid $19.91 for" foe white, bathing suit which became transparent when wet 'and did expose plaintiff's nakedness, then and there causing humiliation, mortification and em- barrassment.” Guatemala Shoots at Cuban Invaders GUATEMALA (AP) — Guatemalan air -force planes havs machlnegunned a Cuban schooner that apparently attempted to land forces on Guatemala's Atlantic coast, it was announced officially Monday night. The official statement said the schooner grounded on Cosumel Island after the machinegunning. Phantom Cat ’Sure Covers Ground Fast' Digitalis, a heart medicine, leaves of foxglove. The latter can be poisonous. "The schooner, of Cuban registry, presumably formed part of a flotilla with which the Communist government of Fidel Castro plans to invade the Atlantic coast of Central America, especially Guatemala,’’ foe statement added. IN THICK WITH DICK — This 10-year-old Bethesda, Md., lad gets a warm embrace from his idol, Vice President Richard M. 'Nixon, Monday, at National Airport, Washington, D. C. He's almost completely covered with Nixon campaign buttons. He had attended a "Pat for First Lady" event which was a aendoff for the vice president and his wife on another JaunLof his presidential campaign. * * gaa really baa a phaatsm eat, N save eaves* ground la a harry. Laat week a aaaa reparted a myaleriaua bea«t near Adrian M Mathura MMdgaa, ha spotted aa sitiemnly forge SIMMS Trios la STOP the ii BULL U * . . and the only W4y We Know How is to Advertise What We Havt and Sell What We Advertise1 WIONtSDAY—3 te 1:10 P.M. REMINGTON llactrk Shaver RECONDITIONED 1150 anna ssaricp aaws»«t*a no-(ary nprwaslanvs tin m in war atom mr> WadaasSar at arary mam Basilic Shavers —Main flaw and foal's no "Bull" —* toe try to havs tvary Item that a_ ample quantities/<*o foot w* don't 'lust ran out* (but"on hot-ieHtnj (toms, fois-hat bappaned te us too) However, most of the time Jhe Nam Is ,in stock.. Now as to price •—■ we sincerely feel that our DISCOUNT PRICES are foe LOWEST on most Itams and when you come in for that item/ it isn't 'bptted to foe' floor' you get It of foe advertIssd prtea, no itappmfl-you-up to a higher priced item at Stmms. Betear art lust a taw itarns you'll , find on sale for TOMORROW—WEONCSBAy Warn 9 a.m..to p.m, '-‘No DuB" — you'll save on aach purchase her*f te Tmmmr Voted by Owners The Most Trouble-Free Car... RAMBLER ANNOUNCES STRONGEST GUARANTEE IN AUTO HISTORY - LIFETIME GUARANTEE ON NEW CERAMIC-ARMORED Born of space-age developments, Rambler announces oiTall 1961 models a new Ceramic-Armored muffler and tail-pipe guaranteed against defects for the lifetime of the car while in die hands of the original owner. This covers total replacement cost including parts and labor. Every *61 Rambler muffler and tail-pipe is completely coyered with a special ceramic coating—similar to that used in rockets and missiles—to give lasting protection against rust and corrosion caused by water, salt and acids. Another Rambler first! 12-MONTH, 12,000-MILE WARRANTY EXTENDED TQ ALL NEW RAMBLER OWNERS Now Rambler extends to all new Rambler owners its comprehensive full-year or 12,000-mile warranty, whichever occurs first. In fact, this liberal warranty, announced to dealers more than a year ago, also covers total replacement cost including parts and labor. It applies to all 1961 Rambler models and to 1960 gamblers still within the warranty period. The \ or 4,000 miles* rUHDBNT, AMERICAN MOTORS Mere Evidence That rambler is the new world standard of basic excellence AMERICAN MOTORS CORPORATION, DETROIT 32, MICHIGAN for MEN, LADIES, CHILDREN Mu’s Plastle RAINCOATS Regular $1.99 vslua —- non-in. flammable plastic is waterproof, will:,not crack, dry out or rot.' Smoke or tan colors .In .sizes S-M-L-XL 1 57 Mae's Poncho T0PPEBS Bright yallovg plastic poncho* In on* size that fit* all. ideal for work, sports, hunting,. farming, 1 49 Men’s Rabbar RAINCOATS Black rubberised raincoats with metal buckle fasteners, double back. All diet 36 to 46. i 198 Boy's Plastic Raincoat with RAIN HELMET 92.00 Value 159 CTaJStft .. .ram. suarantsee not te rlo oi Ladies’ Plastic RalmMle 147 9199 Seller Raincoat with hood and belt to metsk. Trensparent vinyl plastic. Sizes S-M-L. - Birrs RAINCOAT OUTFIT tlJS Vain Will CAP |99 GIRLS' ALL WEATHER Rain and Shine COATS $10.98 Vain#—NOW Corduroy coat it water rapellant, wrinkle resistant. Rad or turquoise colors in Azat 7 to 14. With eap>. 3“ 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS ►J cM.rcv.. REVEBESancePaa STAINLKSS STEEL Gloss Plates and Cups l-Pe.- Suck Sets te 1 d eupo. TV 1 17 PRESTO 4-Quart Pressire Cooker 8Ti. bitUr'cM*-! 8 88 Coco Door Mrt FORCE CUP Silk Driiu Fingers irxlS aufoUtv rubber. Limit I net wnm \. Sasaf fn7'Pr*rt;.nni Knu. TU H|WWl''lll ,W «*MS» ‘ t°r Partisan Bow Tit UX)ie^ cmi8r.,fttiBPipqft- Clrcult Judge H. TTliwrl fWlUdl^ a'‘print bow tie, something CM caught with his bowtie on last <**' the trademark of Gov. G. night. Mernten Williams. Describing himself as a “noo-i “I didn't know I waa going to W nartlun ~ *" “ Ik. ■*—!--««- l ■*- »-*■- M L. _U Register tor a FREE pair of Naturallzers. No obligation . . . nothing to buy. V$b a Convenient Lion Charge for All Your' Purchases and ONLY toub THK POhTIAC PRESS. TITE8DAT. ■ OCTOBER 4. 1900 Alibi for Spwdiwg Fails lo Wipe Out a $100 Fino ; MANAWA. Wic. Ul—Police Chief Jtaduey MM heard a new Innocent e-'uheeS - DETROIT (AT) - A • A youth said he whined through and a patron accused of assault-MW St 10 miles par hour at night lag a Senegalese exchange student fill Us Ughts
a •"d Willard of Fenton; are a brother and three sister. , |»w". ZWKkhikirenand 19 great _Thoughtful Servicer Two Locations to Serve You Michael, Michele, Scherl Ann and Denise, all at h g m r; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Croteau of Pontiac, and Mrs. James Thomas in Florida. I , The infant died shortly after I _ $&$?*** “^^(Service Tomorrow ! NORMAN D. JOHNSTON I IMLAY * CITY - Service for, Norman D. Johnston, 80, Of 3419] Block turners Road, wig be at ; LAKE ORION - Service ftp Vets grandchildren. Two sitters also sur-non Stevens, 84, of 674.Sunset St., jvlv.e. nil "he at 2 pfm. tomorrow ■S-}»ad«t Fu.l Researcher Dr. Schlesinger Dias ; CHICAGO UR—Dr. Hermaii l Schlesinger, 78, professor - emeri-litis, of chemistry at the, University of Chicago, and international 1 jly known educator, died Monday, ____________ ______ORION TOWNSHIP — Service ! Ifo wasjileader.ln jet andrackcL 2 p m. -Thursday at West GoOd- 'for Horry Slater, 7t, a member of f(,el r^JYh- and; .had worked for land Methodist Church. Burial ,f* 9rion Township Board, will be ^ Commission. { will be in Goodiand Cemetery/ |* 1 tomorrow In the chapel of «»* Mr ihhn.to. ai a a Jot the William R. Hamilton Fu- Rovemmenlal research and JrLSST Mineral Co.. Detroit. Burial will be in development agencies,/ Schlealng- Ms ^ran illness °f]Woodlawn-Cemetery. Detroit |w. who «n the Chicago facul- two months. Ws body was taken M >y from 1907 to 1958, was bora in to his home today from the Mtfr “ J,1” Brothers Funeral Home. _ Trsll, who practiced lawUn Lake, {Orion for 16 years after moving eJ 3530' Auburn Road Auburn Heights. UL 2-1000 ‘Minneapolis. Established in 1898 Farmef-Snover FUNERALHOME 160 W. Huron St. FE 2-9171 PARKING ON PREMISES >******,*******esseeeese*ooesoeeeeoeoeeoeeoseea!Mount Calvary Cemetery. panese government for construe tlon of medical buildings in Nagasaki and; Hiroshima, targets of mer member of tho Lake Orton American .atomic bombs in World War II.' Surviving besides his wife Flora;here from’ Detroit, died Sunday Pay* Japan for Buildings are a son, Edwitr of Lapeer; a after an illness of three weeks at TOKYO let Tha "- J __I Imlay City and Robert of Lum;' * ,M* *T,dw‘* •* »*» Detrol^ mHHon yen-|800,005- te the Ja- eaaaoaaaaooaaaaaaaa«a three sisters, Mrs. Alice Kuehn, i S* ***f.®J ^ WM 5 Mrs. Della Sass and Azel John-! ^ ** Uo"» ctab J ston. all of Imlay City; seven! ta was a (or • grandchildren and. seven great-1 ”tr_ "‘t!” . ^[grandchildren. | Sch##l Bo*rd‘ . , .. , ^ ................. He also was a member of De- • MRS. THOMAS KENNEDY jtrolt Commandery 1, KP, the Old • | IMLAY CITY — Service for Mrs. |Guard Commandery and a life, • Thomas (Martha) Kennedy, 79, ofimember of Palestine Lodge 357, •11545 VanaDyke Road, will be at .10 F A AM. « a.m. tomorrow at Sacred Heart Surviving besides his wife Mar-i ^CathcBc_ Sue! E. Starr -now. Is top man to the same field.------- Peddling The Pontiac Preea 47 years ago, he had. 49 customers on a route In the Parke Street vicinity. They each paid him seven cents per week for the paper, and he paid four cents for it. That profit of $135 per week,' (when everybody paid), he felt could be- increased tf he could give better service. There still were a few families on hrs route who did not get, the paper. He attended the old Union School on East Pike Street, and It was a long hustle__ to The Press office on West Huron Street after school, and a long walk back to his paper route. . In a downtown store were displayed some roller skates which gave Buel a notion. But they were priced at $5.00, which wxs too much for a >1.35 weekly totdgrt However, the store needed a boy to sweep out and do errands, and Buel persuaded them that he was that boy. 8o he got the skates and became among the first td arrive at The Press offlde and get his papers, and among the first to deliver them. The Increased patronage out an WASHINGTON - Is the danger of a world war being increased by what |s happening at the current meeting of the United Nations in New York CRy? — The speeches at the General Assembly use high-sounding phrases about "peace and d i s a rmament," and there are frequent references, to the need for a I "reduction of ten-1 sions/' But the! stark fact stands | out that one man States are weak and that the Washington leadership has been so poor that American prestige has diminished throughout the .world. If what the critics are saying about their own country is true, Nikita Khrushchev would naturally feel that he has the upper hand and that, il he provokes a crisis, the government here will feel powerless to take stern meas-thereto. * Jr In the month between now and the presidential election. It la unlikely that tb« Soviet leader U there is lb be g change of ad-.ministration here, and many high officials prepare to resign, would this be the time that Nikita Khrushchev might select to create a crisis ot major proportions? No government with a parliamentary system would hold an election under similar Circumstances but would tend to postpone it until tiyies were calmer. -ruthless, capri- LAWHENCE clous, arbitrary and' volatile -in temperament — can at a moment's notice order a huge military opera-tion to start a small war or a big. war> on any continent. can It be safety assumed that he would exercise the same restraint on the trouble-making side la the period between Election Day, Nsv. 8, and Inauguration Day, dan. NT To people abroad, the coming election in the United States hangs on an issue well known throughout thd world—a vote of confidence or a vote of no confidence in the existing government. Nikita Khrushchev is deeply interested in the American election contest. It could give him a cue for his big mover in lgSL - (Copyright. 1M0) probably impossible to obtain.1 in such an event what is the matter with adding the sales tax which would put our state in the black in two or three years if they kept salaries down. The sock the rich policy and attempt to steal the Democratic party for labor Or vice versa has left us a bad reputation , for solvency. Maybe a homely gqgernor to match our homely legislature would help. Let's try it. blight get some of our industries We have left to not leave home. Cy Klotron* By United Plena International Today is Tuesday, Oct 4, the 278th day of the yeftr with 88 more to follow in 1980. The moon is full. The morning star Is Mam. The.evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. On this day to history: In 1822, Rutherford Hayes, 19th President of the U.S., was born in Delaware, Ohio, ‘Sen. Kennedy Would Never Stand Up to K’ la 1864, Abraham Lincoln made his tint great political speech ... at a state fair In Springfield, III. In 1892, after muchy litigation, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the claim of Thomas Edison that he was the sole inventor of Jhe incandescent lamp. In 1933, Adolf Hitlgr suspended freedom of the press in Germany. , In 1945, the U.S. War Production Board was dissolved. Nikita Khrushchev, is giving the world a demonstration of the power of his dictatorship over tens of intlliona of people not only in the Soviet Union but in the captive countries which his armies control". He is "also giving an exhibition of how he exerts a coercive power over a group of so-called "neutralist” nations which do his bidding. Dr. William Brady Says: It* 8 Silly to Be Worried About Pain These Days Khrushchev is stilt being/consid-ered fay too many peopl^on this side t>f the Iron Curtain os merely a bizarre individual wjno is endeavoring to restrain a war?like Red China and who is himseU supposedly anxious to maintain peace. But Adolf Hitler^ who was also something of a showman, was able to convince many people in the 1930's that he, too, wanted only peace. A reader asks: Please inform me whether there is a cure for fistula, without an operation. I dread an operation. , Another reader asks: Would the quinine and B-l tablets, which prevent stage fright and examination jitter*, be appropriate to take before tooth extraction or other dental treatment, to prevent nervous-ness? - "Fear always springs from ignorance,” said Emerson. Fear of snakes. Fear of ghosts. Fear of leprosy. Fear of "hydrophobia.” Fear of thunder. Fear of operations. Fear of the dentist. Fear of exposure to cold. In fact, ft you have any of these phobias you just show your ignorance. Kennedy would never stand up to Khrushchev the way Nixon did. He would immediately begin that Democratic line of appeasement and fawning and'we'd be taken for a sucker again. We don't dare put Kennedy in the-White House with people like Steven son and Eleanor Roosevelt hanging around to begin their appeasement of the Moscow, butcher. Eleanor is the only- prominent person I'Ve heard about that wants K given tree ran of America. We can't afford to put that crowd in power. . J. J. A thought for today: American -politician Adlai Stevenson said: "A wise man does not try to hurry history.”______ Portraits THOUGHTS FOR TODAY ' Proclaim this among the nation*; prepare war, stir up the mighty me*. Let all the men of war draw near, let them come sp i Joel 11 ~______ 1 111 Ward* long pertaining i ' Green Bey team should have been equally eiluustcd. Thfy pllTftf the same number of minutes. ■ endue- n. rn.Tit.lliv «f a Khimhrhev h scarcely different from" that of [Ik There’s no treatment other than surgery that I can recommend for fistula. I do sot believe the qulitine s aad B-l tablets would put at oaoe personal health i MM. dlagnoala, or treatment, win at aniwered bj Dr. William Brady, tf ■ To be prepared for war, is one of the moat effectual means, of preserving peace. —George Washington. By JOHN C. METCALFE You may have heard me boldly say ... A thousand times or more . . . That I would like to be alone ... And ffee forevermore . . . You may have heard me talk at length . . . About the distant sky . . . Beneath which fascinating dreams ... Of glistening castles lie . . t You may have heard me tell the tales . . . Of . days of endless joy ... Of longing for Jbe carefree ways . -. . When I was just a boy . . . You may have heard me sing a song . . . Of tender bygone loye . . .Of lambent moonbeams to file- night . . . And whispering start above . . . You may have heard these many things ... And to them often vow . . . But to my heart the truth is that ... I could not leave you now. (Copyright, IMS) Still following that same line, Buel now ★ ★ ★ If the defensive Lions possessed enough ability to hold the Packers and make them give up the ball, they could have had the rest and recuperations they required. It was strictly up to them. They were on their own. ★ ★ ★ Professional announcers should quit crying over professional athletes that are outmanned, outgunned and outmnneuvered. "The listeners want objectivity. Pontiac Motor Division, makers of about the only car that sells all of Its production before the new models come eat. •'-Candidly, how’d you like the Job of appeasing a few thousand agents who have most of their assets tied up In buildings. and equipment for the sale of a car that they often cannot set as fast as their customers demand it? Buel Is back on the job after an Illness which I have a hunch was brought on by trying to equitably distribute production. But he tells me that the 1981 line starts off with plenty of evidence that may .force him to again get some roller skates. with the West In the atmaner of ISM, nude an sllktitee with Hitler that enabled Ihe toiler to sisrt World War n by concentrating on one military front. The whole world has been watching Khrushchev since he broke up the "Summit” conference at Paris last May. What was hoped would be a passing storm turned out to be the beginning of a diplomatic hurricane, with frequent changes in direction but no loss of Intensity. Instead of negotiating seriously with the West, the Moscow dictator has threatened and bludgeoned. Japanese Permier Ikeda Campaigns for Progress A carrot In the garden of Anson Angus of Auburn Heights grew, up through a metal washer, which it lifted out of the ground. r The government of Japan, headed by dynamic Premier Hayato ikeda, is dedicated to friendship and cooperation with the United States. Leader of hii country’s Liberal Democratic party, he also is stressing domestic issnes and an expanded economy in the campaign preceding Japan’s general elections in November. Thanks are extended to Mayor and Mrs. Philip E. Houston for a letter which I wrote on Jan. 8.1901, to her father, William A. Brewster, then Sheriff of Oakland County, tharrfring him for the appointment of ___:__________John S MlHt________ as deputy at Holly. It was recently found in the effects of the late Mr. Brewster, and makes me wonder If our county htehad a Democrat Sheriff since he held THINKS U. 8. WEAK The—Soviet premier has unwittingly managed to'unite the Western leaders, but he is nevertheless playing a bold hand. He is convinced that the United States has already repudiated President Eisenhower and is ready to administer a resounding defeat to the present administration at the presidential election next month. Coming to the United Stales in Ihe midst of the political campaign, the Soviet dictator is undoubtedly taking seriously the many speeches made by prominent Americans declaring that the defenses of the'Hfnited I’m no stole. It W"WJI 11 IN my policy to holler before l‘m hurt. I’m not so morbidly sensitive to ordinary little aches and pains as most Yankees seem to be — thej aspirin eaters, you I •know — and I be-Heve this is at DR least In part be- > cause I am at .greater pains than the average Yankee to get an adequate daily ration of Cal D — calcium being nature's analgesic, sedative, tranquilfeer. Uhildren Need OccasionsdHSpanking Jerry’s case brings up the problem of spanking. Mothers, if you want your words to have authority, back them up oe-'casionally with some corporal punishment. You don’t need to spank very often. But a little punishment, judiciously ap-. plied, permits your words to steer the child correctly, thereafter, i ’ The Country Parson it ★ ★ As Mr, Ikeda sees it, the Jap-1 anese people desire an end to controversies over foreign policy which have engulfed the country for the put eight years. Un-> derstandably, fils government is worried over conditions which led to cancellation of President^. SnkHHowBB'a trip to Tokyo and the job. It also shows that I could write legibly nearly 80 years ago, which I have been unable to do for many years. Verbal Orchids to-- Mrs. An* Maltby I . of Auburn Heights; 83rd birthday. Benjamin Antwerp of Reego Harbor; 82nd birthday. j • Mrs. Price HalUday \ Ot Bloomfield Hills; 8*nd birthday. On the other hand I contemplate calmly and casually* an appointment with my dentist, whether it be tor an extraction, a root canal filling, an. inlay or just inspection or scaling and polishing — what Old timers call ^prophylaxis.” There's a reason for this. My dentist is skilled in local anesthesia. Before he starts work he injects a drop or two of novo-caine here ami there and waits a few minutes. Then he proceeds with the operation and it doesn't hurt a bit. So. you me. I know in advance that whatever the dentist has to do won’t hurt, so there is nothing to dread. By DR. GKORGK W. CRANE CASE F-486: Jerry B., aged 11, is a mischievous boy. "Dr. Crape." his worried mother began, "Jerry often is quite naughty. "Scoldings are not enough to make him behave. So is it considered good psychology to use corboral punish-ment on a modern child? "If so, should J. wait till his Dad-1 dy gets home at I night to adminis-1 ter it? she was out in the living room by the tone the nurse reached there. A third time the nurse calmly, smilingly put the child back into bed, and again the youngster hopped right out again. This game continued for something like 57 times. Then, probably because the toddler was too tired to throw her leg over the side of her crib, the child finally tell asleep. An eaglneeriag student in one of nay elasoeo at Northwestern University, thus wired Mo Utch-ea gas stove as his toddler son would get a shock when he turned on dm gas jets. That Is "par” la applying paatohment. And don’t-wait fill evening for Daddy to spank the youngster, for then the punishment isn't likely to be linked with the misdeed. THEORISTS VS. PARENTS The next night this same "game” started all over , again. But after about 45 tuckings, the child stayed abed. The third bight it required only about 30 tuckings. And after a week or 10 days, the child stayed in . place after just one tucking. "See,” exulted the uuree. “Yon* can get results without spook- DR. CHAFE "And what is the best^wey to . True enough. But what busy mother with possibly several children and a husband to look after, can take time to play "tag” with each child at bedtime? ' Wealthy parents with individual Also, give your child two choices of punishment, letting him pick the one he prefers! This makes him a partner to the'-acf ot punishing and thus reduces his anger at his parent. ^—I have had but < ao subject oI a major sperutlsu but M was enough to free mo frous dread of surgery, aad operation I aright require. My operation was an appendectomy — the appendix Was gan-grehOus, so I had to wear a drainage tube. I my truthfully I never loafra"eight days more pleasantly than I din for that operation. After *Mch an experience one can scarcely fear any surgery done under either loca? or general anesthesia. Brain trusters Invaded oir economic and political life 25 years ago and foisted some cockeyed customs on our ristion. They even invaded the Add of education and tried to outlaw ALL corporal punishment. One of the nurses of the Dionne quintuplet* wrote an article ^ which she showed that she couH^ ’ The reader who says fab dreads an operation for fistula — if he knew .more about operations in general in the 20th century he’d be glad to be cured so easily. lags. For. .instance, she tucked one of the little girls W bed. But by the. time this nurse had reached the living room, there stood the same youngster.. Smilingly, tiie nurse agith tucked the quintuplet in bed. But indulge in this inefficient game. But a normal mother wants an "efficient” system. So tell your child what is what. If be violates your rale, smijingly warn him a second time, always in language be can comprehend. Then utdulge in a "laying on of hands’* Iff he breaks your rale a third ume. Jesus said if a' man smite thee on one cheek, turn (he other also. W Christ didn’t pay .you should staqp there indefinitely being a human punching bag! , ft . r Parents,” enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20c (nonprofit). HOW TO APTLY PUNISHMENT d be applied as near to the naughty act hi point •f time as la possible. ---- -a.—--jJL 'Mjssi aai w*«&- tceav Croatia* It |a .IMS a amr: iPMa to Mwiit«» *»e si mfit pUtw* to Uw United SUtaa tlS.ae a ,,—_----—- —rlnttaaa ________ to advue*. Po*«a«* -baa btan ntu ' -* St PmUae, i. Maabtr *4 ABC. SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY BUICK DEADER NOW . Your Quplity Buick Dealer in Pontioc is: OLIVER MOTOR/SALES, INC. , • 210 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. COMPARE PENNEY'S LOW PRICE TOR KNIT SLEEPERS WITH THESE FEATURES! Baby’*} ready for bed faster than you can say the night! Sturdy snap fasteners at waist and down back keep sleeper in place, make for fast changes! Skid-resist plastic soles gives proper feet ventilation. Sized by weight for proper . fit! Maize, mint, pink, blue. Now! 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Combining savings and ease with Buick comfort and luxury! For an all-day ride . you get more total head, leg and hip room than in the compacts... the tame kind of Control Arm suspension aa the full-size '61 Buirks, And for git, its new aluminum V-S and aluminum' —Dual-Path Turbine Drive* give yon twite the pow per pound of moat THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER ♦, I960 Mediators Call In | GE and Sinkers NEW YORK (API—Federal mediators summoned the General; Electric Co and the striking,fetor national Union of Electrical Worker* to new peace talk* today Negotiations had broken ofi before IUE members struck GE ptauta across the country last Saturday night. The two aides 'seven Williams and Bentley I-gSJagg Discuss U.N., Soviets Wetumpka, Ala., the party's candidates tor president and - vice president The party filed petitions ‘ -UnWg more than IjOOO names ualify the' randidatea for the ^ of ‘ fobbed on tho United Nations in new- contract, including wages and ^ • cost-of-living clause. three-man mediation board will meet with company end union ■y The Associated Proas fere nor at the Overseas Prom Both Rep. Alvin Bentley, Repub* «'ub la New York. lican candidate-lor the U. S. Senate, end retiring Gov. Williams speeches Monday. Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev's “temper tantrums In the The question fit captive aad colonial nations should be ralaad not only within tho United Nations but Vat every international conference, Williams said. CAMPAIGNS. QT STATE TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (API Nainas of 10 preekfentlal electors lot the National States Rights party were certified to the ascre- ______ J .. ,_______________,_, 'Ury of state's office by Gov. Le- literature in the campaign which mmM Monday ha aaid had twachad the gutter representatives at the New York United Nations” at* aimed >» in. „U!*p.ta *** day- WiBiams end offices of thk. Federal .Mediation timidating the small member na-* r*v**’ I*11**6* V- and Conciliation Service. tlons Bentlmr said otT«™»iE ^cNwn4ni- campaigned In Bay iu»,jwnieymm at a Btrmlng-lc^jy McNunara viafied [civic leaders in Pinconning, talked! P^ ltoe ritirmwhe. were re- ham RoUryCSub luncheon. ported_at various GE plant. Mon «W*aH Communist tech-. But be assailed the rise of hate £ Bishop Pike saM ho was great- iFatibim said he hadn't asked to have his name listed hut he didn't ask to have it removed. Ho has endorsed the Democratic pros!-jdential candidate. Sen. John F. I Kennedy. A Nigel la a U.8. citizen born of retired Adm. John Crommeltn of Japanese. immigration parents. About 2.000 plant sp oms economic value. l| About 90 per ecu! of I exports'are agricultural. Dr. Stanley W. Black OpiQmetriM 1511 Elizabeth Laka Rd. Comar #f Cuss Luka Rd. Evenings by Appointment Phone FE 2-2362 Closed Wed. ospMeas as a prasriag world one disagrees! day. Several arrefcts were made jfrom the yodng neutrals" into S club'ln Bay City. bigoted.' he said, I Bishop Pike said "it is possible j In several townships 'and wasj-tarlth the position taken by -the, - . . . . ' .. . . /v.uL.tt- » ■ a-----Li-iL W . Kh?Jfhd^v «'hcduled to speak before • Demo-|Rom*I1 Catholic bishops birth U.N.Expected to OK Nigerian Membership UNITED NATIONS, N. Y (AP) —The UJf. Security Council will meat Friday to consider Nigeria's application for U.N. membership. The General Assembly is expected to give fiAaf approval to the application Friday afternoon and make Nigeria the 90th mem-^- position « e they will make ton-7 cessions to him in order to pacify ... . . him. j Williams headed for Ann Arbor g e * Hnd Detroit today to attend recep- Wllliams said in New York Mon- **' **"• * day . that the United States should constantly raise the issue of captive nations *nd Soviet colonialism in eastern Europe. . chairman of the Democratic Party’s NationsHUm Division, appeared at a news eon- Will You Help Me to Get a Job? . . yc_. service when yon graduate and throughout your business career. The finest employers in . this area call upon us to fill excelftpt positions with good pay and opportunity. Thly are offering more positions now than we have graduates. (Mid-Tens Opening October 17) Pontiac Business Institute 7 West Lawrence Street FEderal 2-9551 Since 1896 - sister of Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Democratic presidential candidate. Othtir Kennedy supporters made the state circuit Monday. Actress Shelly Winters, spoke for Kennedy. Attacking Republican Richard M. Nlxea as .a man whs has n M who Is * and whoae that the Roman Catholic Church might feel free to pressure a Protestant president thkn a Roman: Catholic president ." Ban-Bomb Faction Threatens Gaitskell SCARBOROUGH, England *ts of information that seemed to repeated solemnly the 36 oaths of loyalty required of ordinary mem-burs. Then Ah Chai pulled a squawking white rooster out W the box end said, “Yam will swear by the blood of tbe while cock that you will never disclose any of our secrets.” They, knew the meaning as Ah Chai drew h knife, and with one< swift movement cut off the head of the raoster. confirm his suspicion that the kidnaping of Tam was not an isolated 0 ‘ ' that powerful Mr. Big somewhere in tine city had engineered a series of abductions and payoffs for more than two years. ~ several alleged victims, wealthy Chinese, refused to talk. It was obvious they feared thing they believed more powerful than the police,. I. Two days alter this weird ritual, a wealthy Chinese rubber broker, iTam Puay. Choo, stepped into a trishaw — the bicycle - propelled version of a rickshaw—and headed for the rubber mart. 1x18 PHOTOGRAPH 95‘ The trishaw "bid traveled only a few blorks when a small black sedaa suddenly forced it to the curb.' (Rsuular $6.45 Val—) ■I "The boss wants "to see ypu. said one of two men-with pistols ■las they forced "Tam into the car. He was pushed to the floor, his • Selection of proofs • No Appointment Needed • Only One Offer Each 9 Months f Croups, Costumes, arte Persons Over 12 Years —■ Siighttyf-Additiohal ____ |i Ji i eyes bandaged and his hands and ■| It all happened so quickly that passers-by did not realize they had Aen a kidnaping, but the tri-|shaw driver caleld police. Headquarters immediately ra-[dloed an alarm and a cruising ■police car spotted the sedan racingj When almost crazed by Mar and revulsion, he was forced to write a pote pleading with the family to meet the ransom demands. The-payoffs averaged more than $200,* j jOOO each. Ah Chat surrendered meekly, j Asked, “Why .did yw keep on | when you bad already plied up u fortuuef" be shrugged aad -Id: “I bad te keep oa to pay off the blackmail by gamblers-” After be had won huge sums at the gambling tables, they had threatened to disclose his kidnap operations if he refused to meet their demands. And so the Mack-mailer was blackmailed. Ah Qhal paid with life for his crimes. But sdmewhere in Singapore another Heung Chiu has picked up the underworld reins. battle against the secret societies goes on. GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY WED. deemed to live frugally. But Inspector Goodrich made an Interesting discovery. WMIe Ah Chai by day seemed one jump aheud ot storvatlba, at night he As the hours passed, the man’s craving became unbearable. Per-: spiration poured from his body. He began to babbie and revealedl that Ah Chai, perhaps the most It wasn’t until October 1957 that police got their first big break with the kidnaping ol 65-year-old Ngsen Choy, who owned a prosperous tailoring establishment. . As Chdy left home in his chauf-four-driven limousine, accompanied by his wife and a grandson, a small car forced him to the sidej of the road. Old Ter 1 •uk j MJ | \f: l& V*i Two gunmen knots ked the chauffer unconscious and hauled Choy, struggling, into the small ear. Mrs. Choy saw them pull u sack over her husband's head as they said, “You will hear from But Ah Chai and his men made iK fatal mistake. They underrated the courage of Mrs. Choy. Instead of being hysterical, she hailed a truck and persuaded the driver to take her apd her grandson home, where she called police and described the abductors and their KEHDALE STUDIO {along Bukit Timah Road. , ... ■ Minytes later a police cruiser, TH1 fTBBT 1BKAK-----------— (spotted the small car. In an ex* One of the kidnapers c Yl e d,{change of gunfire, one of the gang- II"Keep driving — and shoot!” Gun-jstera was wounded and captured, fire from the little car forced thejHe. talked enough to cause Inspec-! police to drop back but another tor Goodrich to suspect that the Studio Hour*. Mon. 12:30 to 8:30. Tuei.-Sst. 9:30 to 5:00 14 S. Saginaw FE 5*0322 I |THIS OFFER EXPIRES OCTOBER 31, 1960g | I Car Renters Ignore Tickets •dtpnJm 714 Community Natl Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & H Richard H. DeWitt Res. FE 5-J7W Donald E. Hansen Rm. FE. R-H18 Homeowners* Policies Accident Insurance Fire Insurance Automobile Insurance Life Insurance Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All types Tenant’s Policies Traffic Court Stymied kind words for motorists who car, collect a-parking ticket or inff~ffieR” f81fFf ' fRF 'Whole thing. And Murphy has figures to show [that patrons of rent-a-car agencies [do a good job of getting tickets, ' at a woeful job of paying them. He said one rent-a-car agency in Detroit has amassed a total of 1,800 unpaid tickets in the city, with the fine ranging from $3 to $5 per ticket. But Detroit has no way to collect. Under state law, a car owner cannot be fined If be ran prove he wasn’t the person (Who broke the law. "Rental agencies, the owners of the cars, have a good case," Murphy said. Murphy wants new legislation ‘T/’Tr “Tlffliililtil fill til revoked for autos wmciv have outstanding parking tickets. He said rental agencies could then be forced to pay for tickets acquired by customers. Murphy said the rental agencies could then pass the charge along I to the customers who broke the law. Rutgers University estimates Hurricane Donna caused , a & to 50 per cent loss in New Jersey’s fruit crop. After the storm, an estimated 750,000 bushels of apples were lying on the ground in the state.- So good is their case that they don’t e*ven bother to acknowledge For Finer Fuel Oil Clarke Oil Co. 659 Pershing St., Pontiac LET US FILL YOUR TANK NOW! OLDS F-85 Coming Oct. 6th Jerome Olds Cadillac 260 S. Saginaw GET READY FOR FALL ond WINTER SAVE 25% to 33% Half Staea WINTER COATS *29 COTTON A KNITS M *8.99 n White Uniforms $3.99 Car Coats *8.99 Skirts THE KENTUCKY BOURBON WITH THE Proudest of all fine whiskies is the true Kentucky bourbon.. And of them all, Old Taylor has the firmest claim to flavor superiority. Delightful—the flavor lasts right down to the bourbon dew on the ice. Try Old Taylor 86 tonight M.* l Warn, Suburban mm • a m* - m m Una witim mm i lasaif. n.• m. n mtmui khub mama. Insured Budget Pay-Plan Distributers for C/etke Oil Co. HARRY SHOUP >BUD KUKUK JOHN INGAMELLS MY 3-4591 UL 2-3227 EM 3-2210 No# tfCtomvuty.., Where Thousands SAVE Millions.... DON RICHMOND OR 3-5072 ED ROSS MA 5-9756 Mill Membet Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation " , 74 N. Saginaw ft. J THE PONTIAC PRESS -TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, imp XINK Orient Pontiac Area UF. Women Canvassers Joseph Schultz, training chairman for Pontiac Area United Fund volute tears, uses slides to instruct area chair-* men at Monday's orientation session. Xbby Says: Others Have Intent in the foreground are Mrs. Roderick Taylor, women $ division chairman (at lefi), and Mrs * Ben Hawkins, Pontiac cochairtnam If You Have Mind to Learn, Inquire About Adult Classes " By ABIGAIL VAN RUBEN - DEAR AMY: I am 41 and Have. a wonderful family. I went only, through the seventh grade because there were 10 fo our family ^ ^ , And I had to quit school to Help -out. .-I married a tnjtjLi ■who gt a d U a t e.d from college. . Slow t am fcft way behind when we lri|‘ with His business ABBY friends. I even Teel ignorant when my children ■ And their friends discuss * things. . Is thebe any way I can learn correct grammar and vocabulary at my age? No home courses, please. MRS- LEFT BEHIND DEAR MRS. LOT: Inquire into your local adult education classes. Older people with far less education than you have . picked up the thread of learning where they dropped it years ago. All you need is the'desire to leant—and you have that.. A# A DEAR ABBY: Before you condemn ALL "other Women,"' please, listen to. my story. I was “the other woman,” six years ago. I broke up a man's home and took' him from his wife and 4 children ancP I didn't even know it. He not only lied to his wife Vour PTA in Action - Madison Junior High School's Parent-Teacher* Student Association will meet Thursday far the flirst ■time this fall. A 'typical school luncheon will be .seryed at the 6 p.m. get-acqualhted affair iir the school cafeteria. At the 7:30 p.m. business session George Yansen, •principal, will introduce the teaching staff and Mrs. Harrol Beebe, PTSA president, will introduce her officers and chairmen. Group discussions on the theme "Working Together to Build Responsible Citixens” will follow. SLIDES FOR NORTHERN £ At Pontiac Northern High School’s PTA meeting Wednesday Philip Wargelin, principal, will speak yi rnrrnt trln ihrnifl nniTiili about me—he lled4o‘ me about his wife. I didn't know until 10 months after I married him (and we went together two years) that he was married when I met him. ■ * , A * As you can guess, we aren't very happy. What woman could be, knowing she married the world’s biggest liar? LIAR’S WIFE Get Dirt Out Fast Answer: The oil saying that "the play must igo on," Is equally true of all professions. If you would not have inconvenienced any one by staying away, then of coufpe, 1 think you should have. But to have stayed away and let someone else do your work Would have been to consider your own feelings at unfair expense to whoever bad to take over your part. Had you 'gone about amusing yourself, that-would have been a very dllfoc ent situation. *0 . * * Dear Mrs. Post: la a godmother expected to buy the baby’s christening clothes, or, if It has a dress to wear handed^ down in thedamlly tor this special occasion, then what is she expected to buy the child in place of the dress? Answer: It 4s never expected of a godmother to buy the -christening .clothes. Typical presents from a godparent are, a silver mug or porringer, a silver fork and spoon, a silver comb and brush set, a government bond, etc. ★ * ' Dear Mrs. Post: When a retiring employe says she doesn’t Want any dinner given in her honor, or in fact anything made of her leaving, may her fellow employes go ahead anyway and plan sucha dinner, and disregard such expressed wishes? Answer: If she really dislikes the Idea, consideration should be taken of her feelings. But if her objection Is because of her realization of die trouble she would be putting the others'to, this could be overridden. WWW Dear Mrs. Post: Isaman who was once a senator, But is one no longer, always called Senator So-and-So? Answer: Even though he is no longer a senator, he continues to be called Senator So- T Symphony Women Hear Dr. Ward Dr. Ted Ward, coordinator of the Michigan State Parent-Teacher Association and president of the Pontiac Symphony, spoke to members of the Women’s Association of the Pontiac, Symphony Monday afternoon. Opening her Long Point Drive home to the first meeting of the season was Nr*. Leonard Major-She was assisted by Mm. drills Scott. Mrs. Walter Witlman and Mrs. William Donaldson. Officers steeled ware Mrs. Ar- s. Alex Opposite, second vice prmideht; Mm.(Cbaries Utigiaa. recording oeerotary; Mrs. Pnead Bigler, correspond. ~ , Pontiac Symphony business man• ager Mrs. Charles Gadd (at left) of Orchard Lake and Hostess Mrs. Leonard Major of Long Point Drive were de- lighted with Dr. Ted Ward's talk when the Women's Association of the Pontiac Symphony met Monday afternoon to inaugurate its season. So TheyTl Be Sturdy Adults Babies Need Muscle Building Games for broadloom carpet with rich textured beauty that never needs pampering By DR. DOROTHY WHIPPLE AP NEWSFEATURES At About one year, your baby will master- Ms legs and make the marvelous discovery that they will take him places. Then he wants to wait, He is likely to drop all previous activity. He wants to walk, walk, walk. He still-needs your fin-r, ger to hang onto before he will venture into the open spaces of the center of the room. A baby can waar you out with bis demands for your supporting finger. But walking la very good for him. Not only is he practicing how one foot goes in. front of the other foot, hut he is exercising all the muscles used to keep his body reset and move it about.-- Finally the day comes when - your baby becomes a true toddler antf can go off or Ms own. For a while he will still like to walk just for walking's sake, hut eventually he masters the art sufficiently so.that the pure joy of putting one foot in front of the other has lost a -tittle of its charm. SMALL ACROBAT Now your little fellow wants to run and skip, go sidewise and backward. He wants to pull something after him. If he spies a wall he must walk on top of it, or a big piece of pipe must be crawled through. These are all variations of the art of waiting. Each brings in a few extra acts of muscles all of which need use to develop their fan capacities. Go on walks with your toddler. When you start, make the distance short so that he ean make the round trip on Ms own legg. When your toddler is in the house he still needs to be do-tag things. He will run, jump, pull things wound after him. He will climb over the furniture and drive you crazy. It's a good idea to provide aome spot indoors where strenuous physical activity can go on without harm to the child or to your possessions. EXERCISE MAT TMs Is the time to get an exercise mat. A discarded mattress is fine if you can find a large enough floor area to lay It. •* Help your child to learn to somersault. Let Min put his head and hands on the faat, rear stuck up in the air — a ' gentle push from you will send him over. He will chortle with glee and soon learn to do It without your push. It’s an excellent exercise. Do you know how to play wheelbarrow? Let the child lie on the floor on his abdomen. Pick up Ms legs and let him walk forward on Ms hands. The. closer to his knees you hold him the easier he finds it to go forward on his hands. Gradually move your support back to his feet and then even let go one foot. This is a wonderful exercise for the shoulders. Children enjoy playing this game among themselves. The wheelbarrow game leads to standing on head and hands. Muscles grow strong and sup-ple when youngsters use them vigorously for exercises tike this. But muscles become flabby and weak when the chief indoor activity is watching TV. Quiet activity has its place in the life_of a child but it must not take the place, of the vigorous muscle building games. The early years are the important ones in which to develop sturdy bodies which will be a jqy to their owners all their lives. —In the toddler years do not slip into the easy way of turning on the TV whenever ypu want a/tittle peace and aufet. TV has many good things to recommend It but it can be greatly abused. II we are not careful our children become watchers, not actors- If we let them slide through cMldhood without vigorous .physical exercises they will wake up in adolescence to discover that their bodies are more of a liability than a source of strength and pleasure. Dieksteia, treasurer; Mrs. Den Dawsea, parliamentarian; and Mrs, Irving Qordm, auditor. Named to committees wen Mrs. •A C. Walker, , membersMp; Mrs. Gapsalis, program; Ito. Fred Coleman, publicity; -Mrs. .Louis Schimmet and Mrs. E.’C. Russell, hospitality; and Mrs. Vernon C. Abbott, hoiue. , Others serving will be Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Curtis Panes slid Mrs. JO-seph Belant, ways and means; Mis. Dawson and Mrs. L. Raymond Sampson, constitution and bylaws; Mrs: Marvin Talan, yearbook; Mrs. Cecil McCallum and Mrs. George Shearer, public relations; and Mrs. George Pratt, federation delegate. Mrs. IMglaa will have charge of liaison and tickets. Other committees Inc In re Mrs. g. V. Se-kles, Mrs. Donald Hogue and Mrs. Herman Dieksteia, budget; Mrs. Norrnaad Durocher, telephone; Mrs. Maxwell L. ghadley, Towu Hall liaison; Mrs. Gadd, Symphony liaison; and Mrs. Horace Hall, courteoy and flowers. I "A symphony is not just the musicians but the many people supporting it,” said Dr. Ward In Ms talk, "What Is A Symphony?" He stressed the need for strong community support Jo maintain the civic orchestra’s srabtiity. "Hie Pontiac Symphony perpetuates something to the young and old that la good and dean,” concluded Dr. Ward. Members went reminded of the Oct. 18 concert which opens the current season.. To be heard in the acoustically fine Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium, the cert will feature John Gregory narrating Copland's “Lincoln Portrait.” Smart town ’n’ travel companion ■— a suitdress with trim, slim UneA to make you lode taller and narnramr,. Choose tweedy rayon, cotton faille, wool, Prtated Pattem 4838; Half Sizes 14%. 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, >4%. SUs 16% jackal an skirt 3 yards 39-inch fabric. Send fifty cents fa coins for tills pattern — add 10 rants fop each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Said to Anne Adams, care af The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Drat., 243 West 17th St, New York jLn.Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. SEND NOW! Big, beautiful,'CoJ-or-ific Fall and winter Pattern Catalog has over 100 styles to sew — school, career, Only 35 cepts! Transform ' Basement to Garden Make Colorful Bulb Containers From^Afood Box When the time comes to transfer your delicate greens «aad bulbs from the garden to tbs basement for winter protection, why not make that area ik the basement an attractive Indoor garden? Hie idea, of course, la to do it inexpensively using materials thaUare readily come by. ; . , ADD COLOR ♦. -> , Fpr Instance, though the bulbs will lie dormant for many months, you can make colorful containers to hold the day pots fa which the bulbs are transplanted. Just a few bright Splashes of color on timuf planter boxes will do Wonders for the basement area. With some ordinary plywood boxes and a roll or two of a decorative covering material, you can easily make your own planter boxes. Here s the way. - First ctg a piece of the decorative covering material large . enough to cover the bottom and all four sides of tAe box, plus enough to go over the top, and about one inch down the in' side. Ideal material to use for this purpose is adhesive decorative cpvering for it adheres beautifully to plywood: And you can select it In virtually any color and design you'd like. -★ fr ★ When you've cut put the right size piece of material, remove the backing sheet by running your thumbnail between the sheet and the material and peel apart. Place the material, adhesive side up, on a Rat surface. Place the'box in the center of it. Pull one short side of-the material up and smooth tt into place with your hands. Crease along the entire bottom edge of the covering material and cut the extended Part of material on the crease fa toward and up to the bottom corner, of the box.' Trim off all but one fach from the vertical side Rap. then smooth the flap around corner of box. life,' * Repeat this procedure on the opposite end. Then turn box around and repeat on opposite side. Smooth the two long remaining sides to the box from the bottom to ttie top. Now all you have to do is mitre the corners, by snipping off excess material with ads- terial into the box. it W ■ it You can line the inside of the box, too. If you want a completely profesuional finish. however, It Isn’t necessary. Two or three.clay pots filled with greens and set in the container will fill it amply. Though adhesive covering is moisture-resistant a«nd can be Wiped off with a 'damp cloth, you would be wise to place folded paper towels fa the bottom of the planter box to catch How to Buy Hose (UPI) — Stocking terminology: Renter la the measure of weight determining the size of tile thread used. The lower the denier, thq finer and more fragile the thread. High dentes are stronger and less likely to break. Choose denier accepting to occasion — 19-12 denier for evening wear, 15 denier for dress, 20 tor daytime, and 30 for walking, housework or sports. . i. n THE J*ONTIAC PRESS: rtVJ 1 ELEVEN 1 {yfiwVVUtl Easy crochet — every little girl will love this set. Pattern 965: directions for cap, mitten 4 to 10 year sire included. Send thirty-five cents (coins) for this pattern — add 10 cents tor each pattern lor lst-dasa mailing. Send to The Pontiac Press, 134 Needtecraft Dept , P. O. Box 104. Old Chelsea Station, New* York 11, N.Y. Print plainly Pattern Number, Name, Address and Zone. JUST OFF THE PRESS! Sand now for our exciting, new 1961 Needlecraft Catalog. Over 135 de- SetCourseS iPaa’t Stuff Yourself in Modeling, Mime Here Being Pregnant No Excuse Henrietta Hermelin will teach modeling as well as the theater By JOAKPHINK MIWltlAX Muty pregnant woman are ao Imbue# with the Idea that they must A student of Martha Graham and Joae Liman, Mlea Hermelin hokft degrees from the Unfveftlty of Michigan. Wayne Stole UN-verstty and has played wNh The American Mima That ter. ter aa Increase la the intake of eertala food*, namely. Ugh quality ................. rule, the need for the foods i Moat of you know that the high quality protein foods are meat, fish, poultry, aeafooda, agga, milk and cheese. You should have more eat for two that they eat _ ____ they an aptthg tar faun Por some, Prtwocy k aa «megs for patting «a (ha “feed bag,” hot others staff themselves because they want to ha surs that their future child laiof these than usual. Also fruits and “ell nourished. vegetables should play Many women do not know thstjtantpart in your diet. " J* ■» '«* Jn‘T*ase fjuTBK TO DOCTOR Celia Mer- In calorie Intake. The -increase ___ Ishould he siicht I J^viduel cases differ and you should he guided by your doctor The trick la to Increaae your intake of them Items without corv yau. The growing baby will take what N needs and ynu get wfhat Is left over. ‘W,. .: diet, l If a woman eats wisely and ex-erctaes as her physician advises and does not become (st herself, genenljhfhgnam-y should be a revitalizing] rather .than a debilitating expc Basement Floor Is 'Hard* on doming Sorting clothes on (he |nso> ment floor onfy adds to the sefl on the ctothes, warns the Amar-tcon Home Laundry Manufacturers' Association They sog-geat a sorting table « coonter that la easily wiped dean or separate hampers «r baskets for various types of loads. « # 4P . it With the latter, clothes could be automatically sorted as sson ss they aro pulled oft That h. Mom can set all mambsro sf the family trained to throw each garment In the right basket. wonderful nine months will *»fer and delivery will be safe/ own weight down. with Social Study Help NEW YORK fUFl) — A new approach to making social -Studies more, meaningful to primary grade youngsters involve# the use of flash cards. The cards aro enginterod tor use In gams playing techniques, progressing Bom simple to more difficult information to fit the knowledge levels from grades thro# to seven. B/UMgA/ng. Up Babty. hints cquictm ii m du etesu. norms or I Heve you tried I ’Armour Meet Protein it corn- , these elmost foot- ptefs protein, supplying ell’ the proof peyi of essential amino acids tost build combating craoki- and re-build vital >*^31 . ness when baby j body, tissues. USVHSi ■ Mime will be included as a poise aid in the Will-0-Way Apprentice Theater's teen-age modeling course, which opens this week for eight weeks. Instructor Henrietta Hermelin -(at left) demonstrates a point in good posture on student Cardl Stokes of First Avenue. For High School Paper Covers K on Li GLEN COVE, N.Y. (UPD-Dorothy Durkin, girl reporter, headed back to school today from the journalistic big-time where she finally helped to cover Nikita S. Khrushchev. “Tough but thrilling,” was the Gleh Cove High School aophomore's verdict. She missed the big scoop she wanted — an interview with the ^SovietPremier himself she got into one of his Impromptu news conferences, overcoming such handicaps as tha-lack of a press card. Dorothy* 15, became a reporter for her school’s monthly paper, The Tattler. Assignment: interview Nikita. ★ ★ * A pretty brunette with soft voice but steel determination, Dorothy, like any good reporter, scouted the Soviet residence a. week ago last Friday, in advance of Khrushchev's arrival. * -- Wearing a special application of lipstick for. the occasion, she was on hand pgsin the next day when . the Red leader's limousine entered the estate. She was able to hand Russian security agents a note to Khrushchev before police told her she would have to move . away from lbs front of tbs estate unless she' had an official press pea*,* Or W i ★ “I would consider it a great k brief Interview," she told the Soviet Premier in th4 note. Other newsmen promifid to let her know ss soon as her note was answered, ao Dorothy went down the road and sat on a fence to wait. She waited and waited, but She considered climbing over the stone wall around part of the estate, until another reporter advised her against it When Khrushchev held a news conference in toe road . in front of the estate, Dorothy wasn’t even permitted to cover that, and she considered printing hgr own press pass, but “jfl wouldn’t be ethi- cs rd. The letter and other reporters convinced police she should be allowed to stay In front of the gate with the rest of the press corps. She again spent a long time waiting — even after the time she had been told to head home for supper. Her waiting paid off. Khrushchev came to the gate for a brief impromptu news conference. Dorothy coveted It. “Thrilling," she said breathlessly, and she rushed home to gulp down dinner so she would be able to finish her homework and spend some time on her story, top. - #65 Trovel Tubs Used by Our Ancestors Nineteenth century bathtub styles varied according to the kind of bath preferred. There were hip tubs; fountain tubs; and slipper, full, sponge, sits, and mower baths — even tubs to take along while traveling. These days you can still enjoy the same rewarding variety of baths that cleansed and comforted our ancestors — but all in one modem, convenient style at tub! Big Fashion News Dressmaker detailing is the big fashion news in upholstered sofas this season. Latex foam cushioning still reigns in the high end of the price scale with high style fabrics such as'sllks, satins, and brocades, appearing in exqtic tones. To Tingle All Over (NEA) — To obtain a tingly massage effect from your toower baths, consider tnstatT-ing a special shower head with a rotary oscillating nozzle. (Jerk on Elections Daniel“T. Murphy Jr., clerk-register, spoke before Pontiac Woman's Literary Club On Monday at the Sylvan Lake home Of. Mn. A, Q, Carmer.- ♦ ♦ ,it * “Problems add Statistic! of County at Elections" was Mr-Murphy’s topic. He also informed members of the. procedure for operating the voting machine at the Nov. 8 election. Mrs. Jda Reeves vyas program chairman on the topic Legislation. ' - * ♦ as Mrs. Joseph Phillips, president, announced committee chairmen for the year. They. are Mrs. Mabelle Wilson, program: Mrs. Maude Place, membership; Mrs. Carl Weber, house; Mrs. Herbert Sampson, telephone; Mrs. Car mer, budget; Mrs. Slaybaugh, so,-cial; and Mrs. Harry Vernon, past presidents.' tit Members will attend the Southeast District Federation meeting in Royal jOak Oct. 11 -and Oakland County Federation’s meeting at Rochester Nov. 4. Mrs. Conrad Simon and Mrs. Fced Manes Jr. were guests. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Slaybaugh, Mrs. Reeves and Mbs. Phillips. The correct diet during pregnancy is not only essential for your, child but' also for you. Many women do not know that there is no need Joe a big increase in calorie intake* The increase should be slight. However, proteins, vitamins and minerals should be increased. Altar Guild to Honor New Members - A coffee honoring new members of the St. Hugo Altar Guild was held this morning at the Alveston Street home of Mrs. Glen W. Ober in Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. Alan L. Cline of Bloomfield Hills was chairman of the event. * it ' The affair is the thtirtf in a series of four welcome coffees, which have been ached-uled throughout the year by the ,gtlild- Encou rage Study NEW YORK (UPI) - Set up a home study hall in your youngster’s room. If a-regula-tlon desk isn’t available, an old table with legs sawed\off ■ to the proper height, or an easily built dropshelf will do. Desk tope should be at least two feet by' four feet in area, and 25 to 30 inches from the floor, depending on the child’s size. ' d out-of-eorti spell: • A short social session in aroom. other than baby’s own often works wondtrs. e A spot of soft radio music will ofttoi lull, your darling into sweet tranquility. • A playful splash In a tepid bath . usually inspires smiles. Smiles are Inspired, too, when you serve your sweetheart Gerber Strained or faaior Meats. Succulent, savory, they have smooth, t texture any tot I will take to. Only I selected Armour eu.te are used. After careful trimming, they’re carefully processed to remove most of toe fat so digestibility is assured. All are 100% pure meet, with Just enough broth to brighten the flavors. Most important, they’re rich In protein* for baby’s growth, strength and the development of all body structures and tiseues. Fitting story. From time to time T’s a good idea to check baby'll leepy-tlme clothes to see that he hasn't outgrown’em. Check these points for tightness: neckband, crotch, armholes and footed pajama lege. “flat up nnd grow” division. Fm talking about Gerber High Protein Cereal * . . with 33% protein an iron to span Plenty of power 1 here to eld baby’s ] growth, give him strength. And talk about flavor...Iff delicate, toasted, nut-like, terrific. Serve plain or pretty up with Gerber Strained Egg Yolks. Or uee the egg yolks m e bean for a nog, made with Gerber Orange Juice and milk. Gerber Baby Foods, Fremont, Michigaq. PERMANENTS to J Complete with Hslreat end Bet V , M Mon. No Appointment Necessary FE S 8000 ’ ( 1 ’■ through LOUIS ■SST I FrL 19 West Huron — Snd Floor Next to, Buckner Finance Amt tuinrm MLloods-htft art the serving pieces to keep foods and beverages at their delicious best! _ SIZZLE PLATTERS Perfect for Indoor or outdoor broiling ■ end frying. Specially designed heavy cast aluminum platters with wooden trays. ,» JOVi-Inch Size . _L3M-Inch Size . •$3.9S $6.95 * 6r Learn to Skate q} ' V >, Bloomfield Hills /Cl Ice Skating Studio v =n C » gSkarrr. n*.i | Ml 6 0406 805 W. Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield Hills a^-CHAElNGJ21SH_______ Elegant -r yet practical accessory for buffet serving. Stainless steel lend cop- * 1 (Can per with black legs end handle. * I D7V " Other, chafing dishes from $15 to $30 IS YQUR FIREPLACE READY FOR PALL? See our complete selection of ffre screens, fire fools, gratae, and other hroploce equipment. ‘ FIRE SCREENS CUSTOM FITTED IN OUR QWN SHOP—48-HR. DELIVERY! SALTON HOTRAYS Keep foods hot and delicious . . in- definitely (Perfect for serving buffet meals! Radiant glass surface has aluminum frame and Walnut handles. Hotrsy with 14V4-inch besting $ j*^95 Hojray with 19'/4-ineh heating $24^5 New Kino-Slit Hotrsy with 16” x25“ heating surface and duel control with "not spot” that's “ perfect-tor, keeping beveraOss pip- New Walnut Hotrsy Serving Tray with 5Vk" square h sating unit at one £ j /j WIQGS 24 WEST HURON ST. Open Mon. and FrL 'til 9 P.M. It -■—-— Your Cashmere U—---- - --1 xk Coat... lor \ ~ Y J COUNTRY TWEEDS ¥/; I / t J135- ' , 1 \ A dwi One look, one touch, and you I / B ' know why Cashmere '400* is the w Mf great name in cashmere! By its 1 M* % softness and sheen, the richness # r f t - ■. * of its texture; the beautiful way . 1 ft has with style! See this ond the many other superb Country Tweeds styles we hove available, 7 V A *n 18. vibrant new Ufa colors. \ \ Misses' sizes 6 to 20, petite sizes I \ V 4 to 18. / \\ ■ U VA ■ ,ni Ufam Of PONTIAC. HURON at TELEGRAPH ' t * ' r Moh., Thurs., Frl. 10 to 9—Tues., Wed., Sat. 10 to 6 fcWELVB THE PONTIAC PRKS8. TUKSDAY, OCTOBER < Trolly Merchants Jo Salute Village's Industry Stores Exhibit ' In Oxford Townihip Local Products Bonqudt Will Kick Off Observance Thursday dt High School g Gift Starts Last Night's Meeting * By JIM LONG HOLLY — More than 20 industries here providing a livelihood for citizens and j revenue for the village will J be saluted this week merchants who will display! “blade in Holly” products In store windows. While, a lew downtown stores are already* displaying local products, I the majority of exhibits will not • be ready for viewing until Thura-I * day. On that day,' the "show ot glrailMe" will officially be I kicked off daring a banquet at { 7 p.m. la Holly High School. . It is expected* that representatives ot all industries serving the area will be on hand at the “Industrial Dinner.” dust rial Dinner." The public has bean invited. OXFORD TOWNSHIP - The Pontiac Area United Fund Drive In Oxford Township was kicked off last right by a' substantial advance gift of $1,600 hptn American Aggregates Corp. The presentation of the check was made fay Jack Satowafel, manager of the company, to * Chest speaker at the dinner will be Arthur M. Sarvis, director of die. Consumer Power Co. in Flint THIage attorney Robert Me-Kinney win be the toastmaster I be to- trodhced by Chamber of Commerce President Clifford Dreyer. Walter Lents, president of the Holly-Cltisens Commercial Savings Bank, will introduce Sarvis,4 who is also a member of the executive committee of the Citizens Commercial Savings Bank in Flint. TQ PROVE A POINT The Rev. G. Phillip Nossinger, pastor ot the First Baptist Church in Holly will give the lnyocation. the Monday Club Chorus will sint several selections. Pari Dryer, chairman of the “Batata to Holly ladmtry" said that the week-long program, ■over attempted before, was be-iff| held to "prove a point." “We want to thow everyone that industry is happy here and that wafre fortunate enough to have so many sources of income.” Tax Renewal OK'd in Troy “The community is glad industry is here and hope they’ll stay, Dryer emphasized. The Chamber of Commerce president said that the promotion ta a direct reoalt of a speech given lari February by Donald* Meeks, director of the State Eeo- cUmate. At that time however, Dryer said that his organization was too small to begin any program to cement relations between industry and local groups. ta planned program this week, he said, is hoped to correct the situation. The attempt to promote good rotations with Industry, however, FOUR MOVE! — in addition to Ha many athletic programs for boys, the Pontiac YMCA offers numerous games and handicraft activities. Making his mow in a checkers contest at the Y la Gordon Winfield, 1M6 Wlnthrop road, Bloom-fleM Township. His opponent, Rick Quiet, 213 N. Berkshire road, Bloomfield TWn- ImUm Pro* Ffeele *WP, watches closely. Enjoying the game aa a spectator is Dave Butler, 278 Ferry Ave. Funds from the Pontiac Area United Fimd campaign help suppert the Pontiac Y. 8-Mill Levy for School Operation Approved by 1,050 to 567 Avon Poll to Determine Need for Building Levy TROY — The renewal __ eight-miU operational tax levy in the Troy School District was approved by an almost 2-to-l majority in a special school election here yesterday. The renewal request by the Troy Board of Education, which was de-feated in another ballot June 13. this tone by a margin of 1,050 to 567. , Continuance ol the extra mill* age wtU be tor three yean, start, lug In the 1961 St school year ami ending la 1S6S-S4. Loss of the additional eight mills would have meant- a cut of 23 per cent in .school operation, the school board contended before the election. The eight-mill tag levy would By LEE UNBORN Suburban Editor AVON TOWNSHIP — Voters here may be asked next spring to decide on a one-mill tax levy to build- and -operate a recreational-community buildirig in the township park. Whether the millage proposition will appear on the February or April ballot will be determined largely by a survey to be conducted diving the coming month. report on initial plans for the proposed community building was given last right at a special meeting called by the township board in the Avon Park Pavilion. had been defeated. Is the earlier school election this year when renewal for five yean was sought, only SSI cast “yes" votes while 506 said “no” Troy School Supt. Rex B. Smith ' laid he thought the work of a special citizens committee and the Council of Parent-Teacher- Associations helped torn the defeat Into victory. The citizens group was specifically formed to instruct citizens of the need for the additional tax ^Ths -ritlsaaw eoraasittoe -ai ITAfim Smith said. The American "BjPrtursf HWto.TBKTwMcS «fi-~ ploys nearly ZOO. In Juno, president of the 40-year-rid firm Ian F. Stevens, announced “tay linwl UP speakers for all that, tbs plant would move Its en-mec,inKs ■ I COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — A break-in at the Commerce Township Hall in which an estimated $400 was stolen, Was being investigated today by sheriffs detectives. The theft was discovered Monday when Township Clerk Margaret WiUet reported to work. Entry had been gained by forcing a rear door with a crowbar, sheriffs deputies raid. Ad attempt to epew toe township safe failed. The thieves then toned to n pile ef mail left to the office over the weekend. “They probably got better than $300 in (tosh and checks from the mail," Miss Wiltet said. Mental Hoalth Expert to Talk at Smart Sdiool Thedeiegates were requested -for discuss the building with their respective clubs to determine Interest in the project and hr solicit further comments before return-the forms. Rochester School Snpt. Donald C. Baldwin said the site was located In the heart of seven or eight new subdivisions and that it to Ideally suited for toe needs ot toe school district. Planning of the building, which will be located on high level property near the Avon trunkline sew. er, will be done by Linn Smith Associates of Birmingham, Baldwin said. The' school superintendent, reported that construction of the Junior high school will begin in the spring. He said that it should be ready for occupancy by September, 1962. The new building to part of a construction and expansion project in the school district wMtch was started following voter approval of a $3.1 irijlton bond issue May 9. The program also includes construction of the new Howard L. McGregor Elementary School and additions to the present Hamlin and Meadow Brook elementary schools. Also Several people at the meeting suggested a complete and thorough analysis of the youth heeds in the area before definite plans were made. Another person mentioned a roller skating rink as a nucleus tor the building to be expanded as money becomes available. el tog of the present Junior high school in Rochester. The capacity at the rider building will be 600 students while the new Junior high school will accommodate 900 students. WALLED LAKE — Wallace F. Watt, consultant for the Michigan Department of Mental Health, will, bo the guest speaker Thursday af the Clifford H. Smart Junior High School Parent-Teacher Association meeting. , # * ’ A Hto talk will tie in with a movie he will show entitled ‘Teens Age of Turmoil” The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be preceded by a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. in-the school cafeteria. Coast Guard Auxiliary j Offering Bpaf Course ROYAL OAK - The first class i a safe-boating course offered by the U. S.l Coast Guard Auxiliary will be held at 7:30 pm. Thursday at Kimball High School, 1500 Lexington Ave. t Thoae who complete the course wifi be awarded Coast Gu$rd Auxiliary diplomas and water safety division certificates. ,MILRI Romeo to Hear Rival Hopefuls ROMEO — Six candidates for public office will air their views at an old-fashioned “town meeting” Thursday at the Romeo Community Youth and Civic Center. Following brief speeches by the three Republicans and three Democrats participating, .a question and answer ported will be held. U. S. Rep. James G. O’Hara, * hto Republican opponent Robert McIntosh of Port Huron will be present. Stae Ben. George Steeh wM Kenneth Sanborn, Republican, running for state representative In the Third District, will vie for public support as will his Democratic opponent Ray Apley, now in office. ta Rev. peter Vos of the First Congregational Church will introduce] the tpeakers and serve as mdtferitor.. »■ . prp? " The bi-partlsan session to slated to begin at t p.m., and each candidate win be given a limited time to speak. THE SILVER SHIELD- Your Guarantee of Heating Comfort! Heating Cwwfart . . . YOUR MOST IMPORTANT DECISION WHEN YOU BUILD. BUY 0B BDtDDEL THE SILVER A hooting system contains many parts, all brought together In your home. Unless thp system is engineered and balanced properly, you and your family ore doomed to 20 years qf discomfort or more. Furnace size, design of system, location of registers ond dozens of other details must be just right for adequate results. 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A Device Multiply Night Vision For Damages ip Fire Track To Sue Waterford Board Eye Uniform Jeamstef Sues Lake Level FT. BH.VOIR, Va. (AP)-^A new electronic vision tube en-able soldiers to firs weapons or drive tanks on the darkest night. M Army physicist reported to- in Petition Hs said It could Increase the range of night-time vision up to 30 times. ■ The Waterford Township Board was informed at last night's meeting that it will be sued for $6,500 for damages to a new fire truck owned by the Young Equipment Co. of Detroit «f the tube. Which Is net yet available far routine service use, was an-■—»« •* Democrats In control of the state After- barnstorming through California last week in behalf Of the Kennedy-Johnson ticket, the gov-jemor will turn his attention this week on Michigan political races. Caa wasbqrtaK with RATIONED EDUCATION? . I Ms arhedale rails for the same j relentless, dauntoduxk cam-I palgnlag style that -characterised ! his drive fee the chief executive’s office ever^ two years since IMS. trained minds are more powerful than mianles. And now America ia engaged in a -. great education race. We moat hot lose. Yet today manyof our colleges and um-w already a This yeay, t|»c Democratic governor-hopes to turn over.-the Job to Lt. Gov. John B. Swainson. Monday night,• Williams campaigned in Bay City with Michigan Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, who la trying for re-election. veraties are a! —,_________idy crowded. And in just ten yean, applications are expected to double. You. can help prevent this college'crisis. But you must help now! ®Yr generously to the college of your choice. Help it to expand Ha facilities and pay adequate salaries to ita faculty. Send your ewitrifrttfwn nowl Today he will head for Ann Arbor and Detroit and receptions for Mn. Patricia, Lawford, sister of Sen. Kennedy. | The next day he will join forces rith Rep. T. John Lealnaki, Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor, in a swing through Kent County. -team store about (hit urgent college crHit Write for your free booklet, "OPEN WIDE THE COLLEGE DOOR," lex 36, Tim., Square Station, New York 36, N.Y. PMMtd oi o The rest of the week will follow the Same pattern. The schedule Includes a corn-husking festival ia Hudson Thursday, plant gate ap-jpearances to Macomb Ooawty aariy [Friday morning, an 18th Congressional District banquet Friday night ip Pontiac; a birthday dinner I for McNamara Saturday to Detroit [and a Columbus Day celebration, [a.Pulaski Memorial Day parade! and. an appearance at an Italian-, American Fraternal Club, all to the Detroit area Sunday. THE PONTIAC PRESS Church Buys Theater to Show Catholic Films MiLRA\l * SINUS DRAINAGE SStSHR New Improved MENDACO Quickie helps alien,, relax bronchial li BOSTON (UPI) - The Boston Catholic Archdiocese has bought Loew s State — and will It for nhowtritt Cathotic films. It Witt he known as the Cardinal Theater In honor of Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boa- ton. JF DID YOU KNOW THAT Klllr^/V CONTACT LINS1S ACTUALLY SEE DKTTKN THAN WITH OLASSBST BRING OUT YOUR BEAUTY! lib gate this One many 4_ „-------. people can actually see bet- *• wear as glassee. torwiih KIN-opSfc Contact ^TbrgTOtigd Mta easy Lenses than theycan with ***• Mart a new lift with classes KIN-optic Contact Lenaes. _ Am are the newest. Cjme In for a demooatra-: meet modern to the world **»• Our experienced 777 recommended and ap- ***** is ** your sendee to 1J--!- rzZ antwpr anv miMfctan* von Dr. SpsWMf Oatee , flyNnlrist 13 N. Soginaw Heeee send me pouf rittt booklet lutes HINT TO SAVE MONEY ON YOUR NEu PURCHASE? Make your deal for that new car, then tell the salesmanyou want our Gold Key Cir Finance Plan! YOU’LL SAVE THREE WAYS! SAVE ON FINANCE CHARGES.»m*m our tow bank rates. Compare Gold-Key Car Financing with others: PHONE NO.’ FEderal 4-3591 You need ...........................51,000 You pay monthly...... >......... $46 $1,500 $2,000 $69 $92 V ySSSSyP z (24 months) Rates above apply to new cars. Used cars financed at slightly higher rates., SAVE ON LOAN INSURANCE a Your loan is covered by life insurance * of no extra charge. The balance is automatically paid up in case of death. SAVE TIME AND TROUBLE ■ You get a registered Cold Ignition Key FREB with your loan. Registration number is on file at Pontiac State Bank. If key is tost, we'll return it to you. Save 3 ways by financing your next car at Pontiac State Bank. Noother financing organization in this area offers ail of these benefits! PONTIAC STATE BANK Mpin Office: Soginow o» lowrenee • Auburn Heights • loldwin of Yofe • Drayton Plaint l Miracle Mile 9 to 6 Service, 4 Cost Lawrence THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, THE PONTIAC PRESS, FIFTEEN Community Center a Beehive Activity Built more for service and utilisation than beauty, the Community Activities, Inc., building is located In the center of a three-acre plot where more than 2.000 automobiles have been parked at one time. On the outside, the square cement block building looks coldly barren and its plain architectural design is deceiving to an average onlooker as to what goes on inside. ARCHERY PRACTICE — Although regular lessons in archery, or league competition, do net geT started until early Decmthef . Community : Activities Manager Robert Bauer gives William Howevei*, once one is inside the spacious lobby, a feeling of warm friendliness prevails and the urge comes to “get into the swing” of having a wonderful time with congenial people. ^ ★ ★ + In this beehive of activity, oldsters dance, play cards and push discs down the shuffleboard court. Teen-agers Aspen a few pointers on how to point the arrow. Twelve teams have signed up for league play during the winter months, with ptayoffs In rarljr* spring. —mwd~4lhweMiiie—1—■■ . ■, —^ by Reba Heintzelman Tmim.-iuTSi,-■ .. j jitterbug, and munch hot dogs at the downstairs snack bar. Howsewives decorate gakes, exercise and play bridge in the many gaily decorated club rooms. Men and boys have league basketball, volleyball and archery tournaments in the large gym, while tiny “ballerinas" learn how to stay up on their toes isihi upstairs ballroom.----- Boy and Oirl Scouts, the American Red Gross, Oakland County Civil Defense, Cancer Foundation, government surplus food programs and the township library are a few of the organizations with headquarters at the cotter. Supported largely by the United Fund, which last year contributed $11,000 to the $28,000 budget, the CAI is practically self-operating. Not-one cent of taxpayer^* money, has been appropriated for its support during the past 15 years of existence, according to CAI Manager Robert Bauer. A minimum cost of $5 annually enrolls an entire family. For special buffet suppers (minimum of 20 guests), the price is $1.25 per person. All food is served by the Waterford Women’s (Hub, the originator and sponsor oftbeCAI.~ —— . Ba*il Thompson and Mrs. Clare i for needing patients. More white ijm* •o lake wwnheycanspareTMn^enter^udn f the most popular ladies in the country . ... Miss Abigail Van Buren! On'Tuesday evening, October 18, Miss Van* Buren will spend an evening with Pontiac Press readers. Hie time is 8 P.M. and the place is the gymnasium of Pontiac Xlentral High School. Following her very entertaining talk Miss Van Buren will answer questions from the audience. If you are a faithful reader of Abby (as most of The Press readers are) you will find her even more Baienaag-aow . . ; Tuesday,October 18. ~ ~ NO ADMISSION CHARGE READ “DEAR ABBY...* I m THE PONTE AC frRKSS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, SEVENTEEN Mhell just learned to pitch In the last couple o# yean. We didn't want to\ trade him but. bed to have a second base-man and got one in Julian Javier. Mizeli became a star with the Pittsburgh defense. With us, he was handicapped by men. placing Monday's announcement by Wellington President Calvin Grif- fith that Cookie Lavagntto would return as manager of the Senators from the Pres Box RMnnoLiam Kearns, Says Pirates in Six Cames 'Em Bucs—Moider De Yanks Otto Graham, who many will argue was pro football** greatest quarterback, has “aqthoritaUTtly” ranked the signal callers In the National Football League. Of course, we will go along to say thatOrmham was ONE of pro football great quarterbacks, but hell -be down on our list somewhere around 4th or 5th. This Is the way Graham rates the quarterbacks Jn the NFL today: L Johnny Unltas, Baltimore* 2. Y. A. Tittle, San Francisco 3. Norm Van Brocklln, Philadelphia 4. Bobby Layne, Pittsburgh 5. Charley Conerly, New York 6. Billy Wade, Los Angeles 7. Milt Plum, Cleveland Pirates vs. Vernon Yanks Art Ditmar I Pittsburgh's iNew York's Art Ditmar, a pair of _ , . veteran right-handers, were con- Tneres no denying it. Unltas Is a great quarterback tinned Monday as the starting and before his pro career is over he will take hls placelplt<‘hm 1,1 th* flr,t'xame of the Smongthe most famous. WorW w— H“ w- Both camps breathed'optimism. Danny Murtar ■ 1960 World Series between rates and Yankees, starting here Btlt, Graham and a lot of people are certainly using! the two championship years of the Baltimore Colts as the absOlutebible for making Unltas the “greatest." In another five or six yearn Unitas may match tl|e likes of Layne, bat right now, no quarter* , back in the NFL can compare his record with that of the blond Texan. Layne recently surpassed Sammy Baugh’s all-time record of passing yardage with 22,351 In 12 seasons, while Baugh had 22,085 in 16 seasons. ★ ★ ★ In making comments about the quarterbacks, Graham said of Layne, “He Is by far the greatest competitor In the NFL, but his one weakness is that he is quite a gambler. Bobby goes overboard on some of his calls." Hiis is an Ironical statement to make about a player Who overshadowed Graham every time they played each other. Layne and Graham faced each other 12 times in their pro careers and the ex-Lion won 11 of these meetings. The three divisional titles and two successive world titles under Layne’s guidance have yet to be matched. Unltas mignt ao it this year' but when the Baltimore ace is in pro ball for 12 years and he Is able to match or better bis record against Layne’s then we will jump on his bandwagon. It gets to ah aggravating point every year when publi-cations and players start throwing their laurels around about great pro quarterbacks, they leave Layne out or put him down around the ordinary class. Vernon f law and The r***on wa* obvious. Mur- the right handed Gino Clmolt after-,Orv In left, Bobby Richardson baa laugh wants more punch. Although.natlng In left, depending Upon the shared the an-ond base position with Gil McDougald and alao has spelled ClcUa Boyer at third. Game time la 12 p.m., EST; Partly aunny and cool weather with I Until Unltas gets on the seniority list of NFL quarterbacks this is our version of pro football’s greats of the modem era: 1. Sammy B a ugh 2. Bobby LayAe 3. Sid Lackman 4. Otto Graham 5. Norm Van Brock-lin 6. Charlie Conerly 7. Y. A. Tittle 8. Johnny Unitas 9. Cecil Isbell* 10. Frankie Albert. We would like to see Layne stay in pro ball 16 years lilris Baugh He WYlild Braves After Banks Stuart haa .alternated an season opposing pitcher, with Nelaon, he led the team with Stengel aaid he would not am 23 home runs and waa third be-inounce hit lineup and batting or-hind Bob Clemente and Bob Skin- der until after Tumday'i workout, ner. With 83 run* batted in. The only undecided posts for the Murtaugh alao aaW Bill Vinton Yankees are in left field, aecond will be in center field “all the bhse and third Mkse. Hector Lope* way" with left-handed Skinner and I haa been alternating with no rniif la predicted. A .capacityI crowd of. aome 38,000 is assured All game* will be televised nationally. manager of the Pirate*, predicted a Pittsburgh victory because: ^ -“We beat the beat la a tougher league. We're loose; we’re not frightened; we ll show the Yam kee* why we woa the pennant." Casey Stengel, wise old pilot of the Yankees, in his best brand of double talk, had this to say: “My writers tell me we got the momentum, which is supposed to give us some kind of psychological edge. I dunno about that but if it means we can stretch our 13 straight to 19 straight then I agree because that’s what I. told my players." , Kearns Says 'Beat 'Em Bucs' Stengel, of course, was referring to the Yankees’ blazing finish which produced victories in their last IS* regular Reason .games. The odds-makers have made the Yankees’ 13 10 favorites and even-money Ip foe first game. The Yankees should encounter their most trouble from Law and southpaw Harvey Haddix. They should have less difficulty with right-hander Bob Friend, who has been named to pitch the second game here on Thursday, and south- been tabbed to pitch the third game ht Yankee Stadium on Saturday. Friday is an open date Jn the best-of-7 competition. Unlike Murtaugh, Stengel- did not name his second and third game pitcher* but it appeared he would follow Ditmar witha right-hander Bob Burley in the second game in spacious Forbes Field. Stengel ia expected to open with Whitey Ford, hi* left-handed ace, at Yan-kee Stadium. “ ^rrrSBURfSH (KP) — The Milwaukee Brave*, who muffed the National League pennant two year* ago, are wrapping up a giant-size package of player* and a bundle of cash for home run king Ernie Banks of the Chicago Cuba. This leave* Bob Scheffing, Hank Sauer and Eddie Stanley as the leading candidates to succeed Tom Sheehan, who is expected to resign. Cubs 1H61 C»ri Willey Oriole* Invaded the Stadium and fottr games In front when the Yank* had from our ctub and Buffi- cf ntf l^lly Bruton, short* stop Johnny Logan Slid first base-man Frank Torre. The informant, who requested anonymity, said the two clube wouldget together during the World Series to discuss the trade. He said the Cubs have agreed to listen. -s». ■... . By At bom... f Whtle Sox Manager j elieve the Yankee* will defeat the P^rates in the World Series. “The Braves fed they can make an offer' so attractive that the Cubs cannot help but take the matter under advisement,’’ the informant said. "I know the great regard (they have for Banks but they realize that even With him they have been tmable to finish hi the first division. The fellows offered to them could fill four or five regular positions who could help them more than any one man.’’ And my thinking is npt Influenced by the fact that New York best Chicago in the course of the regular With Banks in a Milwaukee uniform, the Braves would have* three players who among f hit a total M 120 home runs in 196(J. The slugging shortstop, who will be 30 next Jan. M, Is the Cubs’, all-time home nui leader with ^69 in seven seasons with flilayi He was the league’s most volume player 1958 and 1969. The Braves have had several second baseman Frank Bolling. The Braves, It Is understood, have Howglwi outfielder Wes Covington, young aecond baseman Chuck Cottier and a pitther. Still another player sought fay the Braves is Dick Farrell, the hard-throwing relief pitcher of the Philadelphia Phillies. It is the Milwaukee dab’s contention that tack1 of an effective relief pitcher cost thfon the pennant this past-iSMon. Murtaugh, who has previously announced he would start hla “left banded” lineup against a right-handed pitcher, surprised by naming Ike right-handed bitting Dick Stuart to piny first bate Instead of Ike left-handed hitting Rocky Nelson. “I am going with Stuart all the way If he warrants it," said Mur- BY .BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Presn Every year at this time a couple of American cities are hit with. World series hysteria. It’s such a common occurrence in New York that the oeople there become just mildly exlcted. In Milwaukee they went hysterictl. In Chicago they-went wild, * ^ ; But in Pittsburgh they’ve gone eraxy. Thirty-throe years hi a long time between pennants and the -fans gre making up.for loot time. -—r—h.! “Beat ’Em Bucs" is the sacred slogan and there’s no doubt In any Pittsburgher’s mind that the Pirates won’t, dr *dr « The top tune of the day on ail disc jockey programs is ’Beat ’Em Bucs." All the nationality programs play the record. It’s heard in Italian, Croatian. Polish, -German, Lithuanian, Greek and Syrian. There’ii nothing the housewives can’t bay In the etoree which doesn’t have the “Beet ’Em Bucs” libil. ■ Every loaf of bread is wrapped in cellophane marked jwlth the slogan. Every carton of milk has “Beat ’Em, Bucs’’on all four sides. ' y A ★ ★ The butcher wraps the customers’ meat in “Beat 'Em Bucs" paper, and even the hot dogs are individually placed jn bands like cigars marked with the slogan. Pittsburgh hr one community where the presidential election is running second in importance at this time. Kennedy and Nixon stickers have been replaced on car bumpers for “Beat ’Em Bucs,"* and election buttons carry faces of the different Pirate players instead of the two presidential nominee*. In the Pittsburgh area, .where the beverage for which Milwaukee Is famous is even more popular, it is almost a mortal sin to walk into a-tavern and ask tor water or a soft drink. dr it ‘ , Besides, the Allegheny riv^r which flows through the water pipes into homes is so terribly chlorinated people have always feared contamination if used too much, therefore most the body’s adequate liquid supply la de-— llvered in 24-contalner cases. Every brown bottle naturally is marked “Beat ’Em Bucs” as the manufacturer gives preference on the label to the Pirates and pdts his own mark in an obscure bottom line. The business districts in the Pittsburgh'area are hav- \ lng field days with “Pennant Specials," “World Series Days," “Beat ’Em Bucs Saving Days," etc. Yea sir, my ole home town has gone nuts. The ddtlmers haven’t forgotten that black year of .1927 when the Yankees swept tour straight games from the Pirates Jn the last World Series for Pittsburgh. General manager Joe Brown of tha Pirates has conveyed the message to tho Yankees from the Buc players that there will be “no repetition" of 1927. “Our players don’t feel anyone can beat them, and they’re convinced the Yankees won’t," said Brown. People point $o the fact that the youthful Baltimore Orioles folded to the Yanks in the big four-game series at the season’s end. 4. “We won’t be as over-eager as the "Orioles. We have follows with more experience with such pitchers as Vern Law, Bob Friend, Harvey Haddix, WJ1- ... (Continued on Page 19) tkos*4to9s4B-4 Gdffl&s- The Yankees .have many players who are use? To aWorid Series. This Is the reason .for-New York’s ability to meet a challenge. Ia my opinion, have foo ranch power and too deep end good a bench for Pitta-Mmglfc—~—— This is not ns fine a defensive club as Yankee teams of the past, but it hasn't gone shout beating itself too often, particularly in more, recent weeks. The pitching has been spotty, but Casey Stengel has' enough of it for a short series. This experience will be helpful to the Yankee*. And you must take into consideration tint the New Yorkers finished with a rush, whereas the Pirates didn’t have the pressure on them which Whitey Ford, Art Ditmar, Ralph Tefry and Bob Turiey give Stengel four adequate and tested starters; * Hike the relief pitching of Bobby Shahtz. Luis Arroyo was great for the Yanks but he was in the -National League lor some time and might not prove as tough against hitters w|o know him. A World Series is won and lost in a hurry Md the Yankees are oM hands at gettipg ttie-jump; By SOLLY HKMI’x j C ardinal-.' Manager . j I pick the Pirates to win the) 1 -Wortd SeriHi lh slx games. beat the PlWaburgii « luh, l*d aayjfrom the slickest tfouMe piny com-l#- bination I ever saw. - All games are won on defense And giving you a rough idea of and the Buccaneers’ Is vastly su-Jhow well Danny Murtaugh Is feted And I’m not doing this beconoo Iperior to that of the Yankees. Any [for infielders, the great Groat and .. . ____ _______________ . . .. __ ... . iliict W hottilW. oimrona ----------------.. I consider this the best Job of managing that Professor Stengel has done in his long and illustrious career. The Yankees had weak spots from time to time which had to be plugged. Gssey managed to plug all of ttpm before dhidtr sot In. This was a team which required a lot of Improvising from time to time and there to ao more skillfai Improviser la oar bushiess than The Yanks faced two distinct tough hurdles, one in late August when they had to friay six games Within a period of 50 hours In whioh Stengel had to husband his pitching staff ocarefully. He won five of (hose six, Tha came tito four games in three days with Baltimore in the Yankee Stadium fa mid ffaplimin i Only two weeks before, thr Orioles had beaten the Yamme three straight and shut them Mg twice in succession. w 'Not Bush' Here Says Ole Casey , m mw., -325 batting average wasn't I believed tho Ysnkeeo coaid jDlck Groat and Bill Mazeroikl!m***“ w*1Pn * Burdette pitch broke the bone on the great short- | of loyalty to the National League, [baseball man will tell you thaf.rj PITTSBURGH (P—A joking and laughing Casey Sfengel arrived with his New York Yankees Monday for the opening World Series game with the Pittsburgh Pirated Wednesday. The 70-year-old Yankee manager predicted his team will continue in the series whine it left off in its, drive for the American League pennant. The Yankees won their last 15 games in a row. Pointing to Bill Skowron. Mickey directly behind him as they tered a downtown hotel to register, Casey remarked jokingly: “Look at them fellas. They don't look frightened, do they. " Then, turning to some girls on hand tb greet the team behind tbs registration 'desk," Casey winked at them, stuck out his hand and said: YANKEE POWER -* New York Yankee power led by Mickey Mantle who had 40 homert during the season will test the walls at Forbes Field fa Pittsburgh starting Wednesday in the opening of the World Serin. Roger Maris is the other Yank Mg gun with 39 homers. Casey’s wife, Kdn>, was at Ms side. When she gave him her mink coat to holt for ier^ he laagbeS and said, “That’s my present tie step’s left wrist, Dick Schofield stepped- in and the Bucs kept right on going. That's an old Cardinal for you, * . . • i , ~ , ___l>on lloak Is a tremendous third- bhseman and Mnrtaagh haa oM Rocky Nelaqa to back up slagging Dick Sturt defensively at first. Np one goes farther for a ball titan Bill Virdon in center fetid and be is flanked by superlative flychasers in Roberto Gemente and Bob Skinner. Gino Gmoll doesn't hurt the Pirates when he replaces any one of them. The Pirates have catchers who can hit and throw you out, Hal Smith and Smoky Burgess. The Yankees’ pitching isn’t comparable to that of the Pirates with Vernon Law, Bob Friend, Vinegar Bend MiscB and Harvey Haddix an starter* and El Roy pace and -Clam 1 BUG POWER — First baseman Dick Stuart, leading borne run bitter for the .Pittsburgh Pirates with 23, panes with the tools of his trade tp the Pirates get ready to go against the Yankees in the World Series opener Wednesday in Pittsburgh. V . mm BIGHTEKN THI» ONT1AC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, I960 Certainly Not Miami U. Who Needs 11 Players to Score Extra Point? MIAMI, Fla (APi — End Laity jit dawned on me that I've called Wileon told a htlarioua atory Mon-la pan Involving the right end and - day jtf how Miami * football team I have no right end since I am scored two points following Its the right end and Fm playing North quarterback. “I changed the signal at the line to SS left but nobody beam me. , I’m left with no fullback pass pro-H J, tection when I roll out to. the left. .S*ik the ftokTexpecttag"to he W ^ tWnldnt *»“ V*W ‘replaced toy someone who wouldIJ* * ri*hf' foes to the right to hold for an extra point kick. The|bloc* for coaches didn't notice his depar- .* * * tare and no replacement was sent “Before I take two steps In. * ! right end of theirs, with nobody •The coaches holler from the!*0 block him out. Is on top of me sidelines Mid put up two fingers," I*** 1 hooking la the WUaan told Tommy Fitzgerald of *“ *°"? Milt *° *® W®-’ ' the Miami News. Not that ft makes any diffet . "We're In a huddle but we have *""• f* ** P®®*» probablyi £* g« a yiarterback- We watt a JJ™ S'SLm^^tSl^SSd "22 ™»vie# of Hatardayta tew seconds thinking one win ®niy PN*" «n the field, did -------- come in. P0* have thr required seven men “We can’t call time out without!0" ****** *» •*■«*»* , S penalty because we’ve exhaust-**18101 won 29-12. ed our time outs. Finally, BU1| Miller (die other endi says, ‘Left throw a pass.’ I said, *Okip, I’ll play quarterback. We'll go M right.’ Spartans Appear Stronger for Iowa Michigan Seeking Improved' Punting^ Ha* Ballman and ArlrlarL ANN ARBOR (ft — A 24 yard punting average against Michigan State wasn’t enough, coach Bump Elliott decided, so he had his Michigan kickers working hud yesterday. The Wolverines play Duka here Saturday. Michigan held "Now this is a play on which! the right end goes deep and the right halfback into the flat. When ' I got up to the line of scrimmage si j? •Postponed Fight Upsets Robby aad Scott M Beats went A crowd of 68,000 is expected for the Duke game. OLDS F-85 Coming Oct. 6th Jmmm Olds Cidillac Title Bout to Doc. 3 4 h Hurt Changod t Fullmor JOIN OUR LEAGUE BOWLING Mti i •- Mixed • OPENINGS PON MOTOR INN RECREATION 16 S. Feny FE 5-8032 TIRE DISCOUNTS Bread Haw • First Osss 6.70x15 WMUw.ii. mS 7.50x14 wilu...ii. ItvN No Monty Down Mar T.t u| lar OK Tin LOS ANGELES (AP)-"I waa so upaet with the news that I felt like the whole world fell down on me,’' said Sugar Ray Robinaon, ironically cast today in the role of complaining challenger. . Robinaon was glum and unsmiling after learning that his Saturday .title fight with middleweight champion' Gene Fullmer was postponed Monday until Dec. 3. Fullmer pulled.a calf Hie Wolverine coach said last night that hr was "very impressed" by Duke’s victories over South Carolina and Maryland. “And they aae a ‘lonesome end’ offense which la something aew to us.” explained Elliott. Michigan was definitely keyed up for last Saturday’s game Michigan State and Elliott's . battled, the powerful Spartans on even terms until fete In the final quarter when State fullback Carl Charon punched across tor the Winning score. * ★ * : There Is always the danger of a psychological letdown the week after a big game and this it Elliott's concern. Duke, he emphasizes, can't be taken lightly. The biggest casualty was sophomore quarterback Bob CtyuKUdr who suffered torn ligaments in Ms knee and underwent surgery Sunday. Chandler will be lost for the season and Michigan will toy to gain an extra year of eligibility for him at the Big Ten meeting In December. dr- * n Last year Dick Thornton, the star Northwestern quarterback, granted an extra year of action when an Injury In the second game sidelined Mm for the season. Chandler, regarded as Ml chi- ^United TEfe Service during a sparring session Saturday. “Believe me, I was in top ditlon for this one,’’ said the down-cast Robinson at his training camp at -* nearby Gilman Spring*. “I feel I know Sugar Ray the best, so I know in my beaiR" I was ready to prove that I waa still a champion—not a, has-been.’1 Fullmer’s manager, 'Marv Jensen, said he was angry that the Robinaon camp Instated on Its own doctors examining the champion's right calf. They agreed with the diagnosis of Fullmer's personal physician, Dr, Reed S. Clegg: The champion pulled his' plantaris muscle and needs six weeks to Cl—-Pit I960 RAMBLERS - MEBCUBYS Sm Up to I960 Wilson Aato Sitoi. lac. ■-as at MIH.rS M., Mtklt.i BM S-7SM MU 4-71X1 In place of the Fullmer-Robln-son battle,;, a nationally televised 12-round lightweight title elimination contest between Kenny Lane and-Len Matthews will be fought. Brown in Nontitla Go HOUSTON, Tex. (API - Light- r . ., wrighr^RampToh Joe Brownlndl^f1 *ny profolemn jTorres meet in a IB-round, non-i title fight, tonight. Torres, only It, be fighting a man 15 years • and far'w older and far^wiaer In ring expe- Eight Western Colleges Near Loop Formation IaLT LAKE CITY (API—Formation of a new border-to-border athletic conference of eight -western colleges appeared In the making today, the final decision left up to the individual school presidents. ___________________^ Athletic directors and faculty representatives met for ..five hours Monday, then gave a "do pass’’ recommendation that would align Utah, Brigham Young, New Mexico, Arizona, Arisons State, Oregon, .Oregon State and Washington mate to major sports competition. They asked Dr. A. Ray Olpto, president of the university of Utah, to invite his colleagues to a meeting “for the purpose of taking action," Indicating they have their In any event, the new conference could not be effective immediately. Some schools have completed their football contract schedules through 1966. plagued by lajariea received la passer, larbed Dave GUSka’s i defensive ability. Bat he was be- fog counted sa to help oat sa aMnaa, particularly la toag pass Minor Injuries struck two of the Wolverines’ key backs. ★ •a Starting fullback Kan Tureaud came cut of the game Saturday with a hip Injury which |s giving him considerable pain and Elliott •aid It Is “questionable" Vhether he will be ready for Duke. If Tureaud Is out, Rudd Van Dyne will get the starting call at fullback. Michigan’* fastest running threat, halfback Bennie McRae, la also a questionable starter for the Duke game. McRae sprained his ankle against State and unless he responds quickly to treatment, Elliott will go with Jack Strobel or Reid Bushong. Ballman and Addftrky Have Been Hindered by Injuries EAST LANSWC&TUH)^-. Duffy Daugherty's first-string backfieM finally looked like the pre-season predictions of sports writers said it would today when right half Gary Ballman was reinstated- on the Michigan state football team. Ballman teams with left half Heri> Adderley, fullback Ron Hatcher and quarterback Tom Wilson,.who starred to Saturday's 24-1? win over Michigan. Syracuse Moves to Top of Weekly Football Poll By The Associated Press Syracuse, with a surge to the voting reminiscent -of the second hall rallies that have won two games for the Orangemen, today ' to the top in The Associated football poll after two weeks in second place. it it h Syracuse displaced Mississippi, leader for the past two weeks, .by big margin in the voting by 48 football experts who .comprise four points and Missouri by two. Syracuse received 28 of toe 41 first place votes to 14 for Mississippi. Iowa drew five and UCLA, Idle last weekend, drew In file point scoring on the basis of 10 for first Mace, 9 for second, eta, it was Syracuse 428 and Ole MiSs 402, Just about the reverse of last week’s figures. While Syracuse won a tough one from a major rival, Mississippi newupapor, television and radio outscored -a imer foe, Memphis The Associated Press panel Impressive Iowa moved up from eighth place to third as the rank-underwent another wholesale revision. Fourth-place Illinois only team which remained In the saq>e place it held after last week’s (rating. Others in the top 10 are Ohio State, (5) Navy, (6) Purdue, Clemson, (8) Arkansas (9> and Kansas, (10). Ohio State moved up from ninth place after its solid 200 victory over Southern California. slipped -from 7th to 10th after its loss to Syracuse and Clemson dropped a notch to eighth. Newcomers are Navy, Purdue, and Arkansas, replacing Washington (No. 3) last week, Northwestern (No. 6) liter Geoi- it gia Tech (No. 10). Washington, beaten 15-14 last-play field goal by Navy's Greg Mather, barely lost Its place to top 10, trailing Kansas by only State, 31-20 in a night game. That probably was the difference, ★ ★ ★ Iowa's 424) victory over Northwestern and Illinois’ 334) decision West Virginia obviously made good Impressions. Purdue came from nowhere in the voting after walloping Notre Dame 51-19. Clemson turned back strong Virginia Tech 13-7 and Arkansas beat Texas Christian 74). SUe. Tot«s ta* tap twmi wiu, < s *• ■; a SB?**?* .I;;; ;; !■ Star (2-0) . Arkansas (34) *252 Kansas n. fflaaan ZZ°*a ™ S' Mwntsa at. 04-0 14. Minnesota <24> .... 15. Texas (S-l) .. SttVSl, Baylor (24) . Top Halfbacks Ready to Start had been oat of the starting quartet with minor Injuries tor part of the early season. Daugherty scrimmaged reeervea against a scouting team that was learning Iowa plays Hut night to preparation for next Saturday's game against the Hawkeyes East Lansing. . . * it it Iowa whipped Northwestern 42-0 last Saturday add the Spartans expect one of their.toughest Big Ten tests. “lews Is probably the fastest sr natofos UNCLE SAM’S TAX—Horae racing fans are finding something new to think about when they go to the mutual windows at therece tracks. In New York the sign at the window shows the daily double paid lor a $2.00 wager and also the fact that each winner over $500 must sign his name and address for inqome tax purposes. Positive 'Identification must be produced to be paid off. Ann Arbor Takes Lead in State Poll Shuffle He planned to run the first two units—defensive and offensive specialists but touted as equally good teams—against the scouting team running Iowa plays today, Daugherty said scrimmages this week would probably dictate any changes that have to be made to lineups for the rest of the season— barring unforeseen circumstances. Fear players who received minor Injuries against Michigan were to uniform and ready to' play yesterday. Carl Charon, defensive fullback who carried much of the offensive load and scored the winning touchdown against toe Wolverines, had recovered from body bruises. ^ ★ it h Adderley was playing with stitches to a gash over the right eye, .guard Tony Kumiega was all but over the effects of a bruised back and sophomore Georg* Stephenson was recuperating from a pinched nerve in the neck. By The Associated Frees The clashing of giants, has produced the inevitable scrambling in toe Associated Press state high school football rankings. A week ago, Flint Central nosed out defending Class A champion Grand Rapids Catholic for the top spot in the ratings. Both met defeat over the weekend—Ann Arbor beating Flint Central and Grand Rapids South beating Catholic de- Idle Gridders Retain Leads Walled Lake Harriers Unbeaten in 5 Meets Walled Lake’s cross • country team stayed unbeaten to dual meet competition Monday with an 18-44 victory over Hamtramck on toe Walled Lake course. The Vikings’ season record now stands 541. The Viking runners grabbed six of the first seven positions with Dave Janeway taking 1st place to the time of 11:0L Paul Lawson was 2nd tar the winner* with Ham-tramck finishing 3rd. ••dr dr Walled Lake meets Pontiac Northern Thursday on the PNH ww DALLAS (AP)-Dave Smith and George Blanda, of Houston were idle last week but still held onto their leads in rushing and scoring in the American Football League. Smith has gained 256 yards to three games, which is more than his pursuers have gained in four. Blanda’s 40 points stood up as the scoring- lead. A1 Carmichael of Denver also held onto his kickoff return lead, He has 301 yards on 12 runs for a 251 average] The only leader to lose his place was Jack Kemp of Los Angeles, who fell out of toe top fiva to punting as Paid McGuire of Los Angeles took over'wfth an aver-age of 42.3 on four kicks. — spite the fact that South could get only -two first downs. South scored once on a fWnble in the end zone and another time i an 88-yard run. So the second weekly poll from the AP’s panel of sports Editors, writers and brpadcasters shapes up this way: Aim-Arbor to first place and Bay City Central in second.. Both are unbeaten and untied. Flint Central slipped to sixth lace Mid Grand Rapids Catholic r seventh. In third tttamrtnsu Sexton Flint Northern is fourth and unbeaten, united and unscored on Detroit Denby fifth There was little change in the Class B ratings Defending champion Kalamazoo ‘ University high maintained its No 1 ratlBg, dutL-polling its- nearest rivfil by 32 points The points are awarded on this basis: ID for first plaqe, 9 tor second, 8 for third, etc. Here's the Kray the AP panel picked the top 10 teams in each class this week: class a ' rec. pts. 1. Bay City Cnitrsl' '•! !' li.O-S 13? t®“oS5S * T. Qnuid Rapids Catholic 3-(. pw Aoi 10. Ptrndale™ Davidson Has Big Lead in~ AFL Passing In order: Detroit Cooley. Pteaaaat. Niles, Walled Lake, R oak Dondero, Pontiac Central. Mu E^cyhaMc. Holland, fcat lZH >' VnlT. Hlah t-fl-o 2. Dowmim .7 7"... - - - 2. Mania tea .... 4. Sturfla ........ ,3-d-s i Ooodwt-144 .ijXS (. Tecumaeh - HaryiTtlla 10. OmUUm ............... w _Othf2*. Jn order; Ludlngton, Monroe Clthnl i- nua n._--- • 1___ DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Cotton be hogts to the. All-Oakland County harrier meet at the Muiii-Lakes Oonservatfon Club course. Linebacker Problems Slrike Lions Again DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Lions rookie linebacker. Max Mess-ner, was to go to University Hospital to Ann Arbor today for a diagnosis of a knee injury suffered to the game with the Green Bay Packers Sunday. „ The team physician said Mess-ner appeared to have a torn cartilage and ligament and if ao an operation will be taqt«b*d< This would sideline Meaner for tito rest (ft the season. 'rifleman**, passed for 333 yards ' ifagr N^ YorrSvirigay a«a^ an a substantial toad to that statistical department in the American Football League. Davidson connected on 19 of 31 passes, although the Texans wen beaten 37-35 by the Titans. The performance pushed his total to 72 completions for 926 yards and six touchdowns. • Jack Kemp of the Lot Angeles Chargers Is second, having hit on pucka third and New Yorkto-Al Dorow, who pitched four touchdown tosses Sunday; Is fourth. Governor Worming Up PITTSBURGH (ft — Gee. Da-VM L. Lawrence of Pennyslvania will threw oat the first bafi Wednesday at the opening game of the ISM World Series between the Yankees than nay team la bargh Pirates. The 71-yeareM governor Is a former mayor of Plttsborgh aad Pirate tea. BgogsriU.. South W»T«n, Lsasffs Convertible Tops Start Covert * MANY STYLES ---• MODELS— (•COLORS Immediate Installation We Can Cover Any Car • AMERICAN — • FOREIGN SEAT COVER MART 111 $. $a«laaw PE t-4514 OLDS F-85 Coming Oct. 6 Jerome Oils Mill MTianLLiammN..UKiiu.niNcwnitii.iM.NNM | && 1 THE PONTIAC PRBS,S, TUESDAY. 'OCTOBER ♦, i960 Don Heffner May Become Tiger Manager Pub Directors Will Discuss Matter Today NINETEEN Firing of Hitchcock May Have Convinctd Gordon to Quit DETROIT « — The boanl at director* of the Detroit Tiger* it meeting with President Bill De-Witt today and out of the cession to expected to come the announcement that former Major League tafWder Don Heffner “ * named manager. ' Hie opening was created Monday morning when Joe Gordon auddeidy resigned the post. Ortg-tnal plans had called for Heffner to replace, fired Billy Hitchcock aa a coach. Gordon said he Just didn’t have time to go to lunch with DeWttt —he had to go to Canton, Ohio for 18 holes of golf yesterday. Gordon declined to say why he quit bat there were lndlc». ttons that he sat DeWttt disagreed ever the handltag-ef the Tlgess. Gordon was reportedly miffed at toe dismissal of veteran coach Qitchcoek last. week. 1A .A A ' "BeWfit made the decision, said Gordon. "He asked me what I thought of Hitchcock and I had nothing but good things to say about him. Frankly, I think that economy had a lot to do with It.' IIS,000 as • Tiger conch sad ‘supposedly was one of toe high- caa League. Gordon’s departure yesterday was the second v time toe ex-manager had milt the Tigers in a hull. Ixi lini, Gordon quit aa a coach because of a front office tiff with Spike' Briggs, who was then president. % A Gordon returned to toe majors .tt manager of toe Cleveland Indians in June 1968. He had a fiery career under general manager Frank Lane and waa ousted as Indian manager and then rehired ini the last week of the Gordon came to Detroit two month* ago la a sensational managerial swap that sent Jimmie Dykes to manage Cleveland. DeWltt, who masterminded the trade, said he knew absolutely nothing of Gordon's plan to quit ■r*f ytafiuy —"—fng Qy was released from Ms Detroit contract which tan through 1981. ★ "W A 'A few hours after Gordon resigned, the Kansas City Athletic* fired Bob Elliott, their manager for only one season. Parke {Jarrell, Athletics general mhaager, said he Intends is discuss too Peases City managerial Job with Gordon (hiring too World Series, starting tomorrow at Pittsburgh._______ - Chrroll said he had talked ifitl DeWltt about Gordon’s release. -“I explained-in DeWltt,’’• Car, nfiarTBoar^niitri/iBinwi tsty group to negotiating for the purchase of the club and it has been agreed that it will be consulted on certain matters relating to future plana. _____“Katorally toe 1X1 maaager was discussed. Four or five men were mentioned who would be accepts Me. the Athletics, Gordon talked to a representative of the Kansas City group during Detroit’s visit last weekend. Now that hq-to available I will discuss g' contract with him in Pittsburgh.” Earlier, Gordon denied that he was headed ‘for Kansas Gty aa manager. - T have resigned at Detroit loymeat.” i la Gan- Important Grid on Fridays Clashes Prep Slate Hayes Detents COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP)—Ohio who said "it's unfortunate that an state Coach Woody Hayes imid Immature statement by a mature IlnMnu tiara* Imilkmta fVI'o — a-a.- By BOX CORNWELL It's still too early in the 1980 football season to pick any ference champions, but several key game* are scheduled Friday on the Oakland Coimty prep front. Gaines of a “make-or-break" nature are slated foe a handful of area high school teams. Perhaps the No. 1 attraction ea the heal scene Friday to too Inter-Lekes Ooofereweo clash be* tween Walled Lake and Water; ford ko the Walled Lake grtf-lisle. The Skippers, fresh from their 7-4 conquest of Southfield last Friday, will have their* backs against the wall in this Crucial test unbeaten Walled Lake. A -A - A Walled Lake, defending Inter-Lakes champion, routed Pontiac Northern last week in its circuit opener and now is a top-heavy choice to repeat as I-L king. Waterford, trying gallantly to move ap the I-L ladder after flonndertag around the cellar, has started sff an the right foot, but the Skippers must make their big play here er else "wait until next year.’* The Vikings, boasting a 3d record, will be favored to repulse the Waterford challenge. The Skippers now show a 2-1 record. Northern, which can't aff "•««■ and^Mteompanying , ** ^Mury legates gathered for a lO^ay meet- the constantly dwin- | It Is the first UMW eouvention lng that was destined to become dl,nK ™nk» of the miners. (6 tdjfcfraaatjysalAif * ttlttfc orthodox economic thinking by labor union, standards, wants unlimited unemployment compensation benefits for work-idled union FIRST RUN government aid plans. The UMW was toe, key union in the revolt of labor organisations from the old American Federation of Labor to 1933 that lad to formation of the rival Congress of Industrial Organizations. vSS!SSSkKBi THIS IS WORTHY — Almost completely unrecognisable under a pair of big dark glasses and''a white scarf Is French film star Brigitte Bardot. She Is shown Monday leaving the clinic in Nice, Fra/tce, where she has been under treatment since her suicide attempt last week. Her destination was unknown. New Film Comment Decries 'Sick' Films MMbE VAN DORBn RICHARD COOGAN MttlBIB-IUnMMlB At Th. MIRACLE MILE DRIVE-IN THEATER By BOB THOMAS , AP Movto-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Strong words about film contend come from Martin Quigley Jr., editor of Ralph Bellamy's FDR is one of the superb characterizations of, the decade, and Hume Cronyn’a Louis Howe is also Oscar bait. A big surprise is Greer Garson as Mrs. Roosevelt. It is a warm, affecting performance though some-1 times the high-pitched voice and facial transformations were' disconcerting. Her Lady Godiva act started .the excitement t that Couldn’t p be stopped I . recent theater owners convention over Hollywood's preoccupation with the sordid and the sexy. “Too many 'sick' pictures I will have one in-i evitable result-la dead Indus-jtry," said Quig- rnr. • . Only one element seemed out of pitch. That la the portrayalJbt the President’s mother as the heavy. No doubt Dore Schary found grounds in history, but it seems a little rough on the old lady. ]New Auto Titles to Be Compact, \Tamperproof ’ LANSING (UPI (—Certificates of [ title to Michigan will soon match . the new trend to cars—they're . going to V compact and produced > with a safety factor. IF IT'S CHILLY IN-CAR HEATERS Fjr Your Cooriovt At No btro Charge | He added that the aelf-censor-! ing production code is sick "because it has been punched full of holapi'’ and ao is the admtoistra-Ition of it because “there is no encouragement in high places to do more than keep people out of Jail for exhibitions that violate obscenity laws.” mSSm joSTSimo No Oao — 1st ao ono will bo admittod to aftor th. start of 'PSYCHO!' * Marcarh O Brien Sieve Forrest Secretary of State James M. Hare laid Monday his department would start production this month of a. smaller, tamper-proof vehicle certificate of title. Kim Novak ia still playing it coy about a forthcoming marriage to Richard Quine. He says yes. She says who knows? Friends expect it will happen, but Kim takes a long time to make up her mind. Hare said the new titles would be more readable and would save the state JT.5 per cent in paper and , tints ■ The MOW titles were to be printed on paper similar to. that used for drivers licenses now. The word "stop’’ shows if any ‘ alteration of the document is attempted. A patron at the “Song Without End" premiere will never know her moment «of glory. As the movie began, the started up the aisle, blacked out and feU flat on her face. Four men leaped up to help her. The two who carried her into the manager's office were James Stewart and Anthony Frandosa. EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING! REALLY A WING-DING FOR FUN! IT'S A HOLIDAY IN HILARITY! write masleroftk*s by Ms tody, friends.. Despite, the familiarj theme, the film has a fascination ; in its florid acting, the lush music f^tOVNlVIR ■Sunrise at Campobello" makes an even finer film than it did a) i play. since the Camera allows some of the sweep and scope of the country during the early years of Franklin D. Roosevelt's invalidism. It ia a tasteful and only ■lightly partisan account of FDR's conquest of polio, reverently done, with high points of emotion. Our new location on Telegraph Rood is now open. We are located, directly across from Bloomfield Fashion Shop. Lots of parking space, Lots of chi|i on the dogs. Drop out and see us soon... well be looking for oil Ae" customers we got to know at our old location on W. Huron Street. -A—— AND——— FOR YOUR COMFORT We Hove the Flnfst ELECTRIC IR-fiAR 1651 TELEGRAPH HWY OME WIithMe! THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUE Despite Rise in Hoht Savin SPAY, OCTOBER 4, HWQ ~ I • TWENTY-ONE ADAM AMES gs Accounts ARE j THBN THEfttfS HOUR ySMTC ) OF COUEGE-—BUT WECAN J GET MARRIED BEFORE I JSETAfy DEGREE,AM>- Qf SAM DAWSON 4,1 New* Aul.v.1 YORK W — Kind won!.! !<#• .thrift are still being said to-! day. This is surprising in an age] wien personal debt in this land1 V* risen to a record total of $212 hulkm and the younger genera-! tjpn seems to tailor its fiscal at? to how much income is available tor monthly payments. -The kind words cited here cornel a group whose careers have wyn them some public recogni-tfttv And, to be truthful, most of, them are middle-aged or more. ' * ★ A «The. Savings Banks Association - o! the State of New York enquired lqto the savings habits of about 3.000 individuals in the East listed lit Who’s Who and got 1,000 replies. ★ * * 'Nine out of W have a -savings account today. And even more. 98 Par cent, say they think savings are important to the economic soundness and continued growth of the United States. - Champions of thrift praise it as assuring confidence, peace of wind, independence, elbowroom ' In job selection, or see it as important to self-discipline and character building. JPer dop’t think younger person* nave-home buy-jar by putting away collfctionsl thrift has done anything ImportantTfiW. education of children—rank from paper routes Also ranking forOjeir own^ careers. _ w.eU down the scale. Two per cent high, are school thrift programs Som® • th® contrary-minded j »ay they save for no specific rea-jahd home piggy banks ^MoTS ' , , „ S0" al aU * * * ‘ The association got the most re-j • Most thrifty people miss the * * * Iplies-lS^from those in the med-l sparkle and joys of life and rtadtl a third of the respondents first jlpal profession, with 94 per cent nothing/’ says one burinessman. Igtarted saving regularly between j having savings accounts, and An educator believes “a spend*!U and 20 years of age; 29 per from educators—154—with 92 per; ing economy is necessary to keep]cent started before they were 11; cent on the saving kick that the! our peculiar system going; too and 24 per cent while in the 21 to ; bankers fully approve. m«h saving can cause depres- ■» bracket. Once past 30 -there I And the pavings bulk group that **on- ■ ■ , were few starters. And five peri conducted the poll proudly an-! * * * jeent say they never saved regu- nounces that the accounts wenr And another educator belittlesjlariy. . ip {distributed: 68 per cent In sav-'j "stored up dollars destined to be , , * * , ings batiks, ;« per cent in corn- smashed to smithereens by the in-1 First savings were inspired by] merciai banks, and 26 per cent evitable Inflation:" ; such goals as buying a bicycle, in savings ' — loan associations.' Lou Fine BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES I foWtilt IfdC.UMO PMW MOO . . L-- " 'j Tftuw kigouf! -num Ki'■/, But some of the thrifty-minded ; aco/equally broad in their views/ One calls savings the only after-1; native to increasing -reliance on j government. Another lambastes spending as the road to "inflation. | bankruptcy, instability, moral! weakness, labor problems and susceptibility to Communistic in? fluenees." The - association finds the low- j est percentage of the Who's Who! having savings .accounts among those in the financial professions—75 per cent. These include brokers, investment coun-J ■dors and bankers. The largest' percentage—96—are in. construction or real estate,' ' i- ARTISTS AND EDITORS Far outdistancing the financiers) among pavings account affdorul ados .’are artists—writers, actors, * musicians—with 87 per cent boast-j nest eggs, and those in com-1 munications — reporters, publishers, editors, TV and movie personnel—wtth 93 per cent. First reason for saving put for-Ufard by the Who's Who continc-geht is security, followed closely by retirement income, with travel a trailing third. With the list largely-made up THE GIRINS \ C«OMWt> MtWC Nt'WUN- htOT YOTWLV.*. wcmnowm** HUt -took oww om OP i®OT fAUCH TVfNft THPfrwi______ / NOW WHY SHOULD J SOMEBOOy MOVING INTO A HOUSE INTEREST >OU«0> Bv Edgsr Martin ; Q. What kind *f bone* are safe t* give to our dog? Pamela * Black, Chagrin Fall*, Ohio. ,A. Bone and dog sound almost synonymous, but Indiscriminate! handouts of bones often result in pretty sick pooches. Raw bones] contain a large amount of gelatin. This holds the bone fijaers together raid makes them a safer choice; than cooked bones. Chicken, rabbit, and fish bones should be strictly avoided, as they splinter easily and can cause serious Intestinal trouble. ★ > ★ 'The bones most dogs seem to prefer, .and which also are the safest, are raw knuckle or marrow bpnes of beef, pork, or lamb. I .Smaller bones, even qf these Three choices, can cause trouble, vored nylon bones can give your pg the same pleasure, and rid you of any worry. Auto Revenue Is Way Down Rise of Compact Car Is Partially to Blame, -....XANSXSJG—13 ttg collections from auto salesj dropped $811,000 last month from! September, 1959, the State Revenue I Department reported Monday. The decline from $4,998,563 to! $4,186,750 was partly the result] of rising sales of compact M said Henry C. Schroeder, deputy! revenue commissioner. Over-all September sales and| use tax revenue, collected August business, moved up from] $29,907,748 to $30,356,002____ Since September, 1959; however, the tax has been extended to hotel ag) motel rooms and to telephone and telegraph service. The business activities tax stjpwed a significant jump, in- . creasing from $1,528,140 in September a year ago to $1,985,256 litgt month. -in the same period, revenue! from the cigarette and tobacco pfoducts taxes went up from $4,-160,782 to S5.590.591. Last month’s figure includes the new 20 per cent lrtfy on the wholesale price of tobacco products. A howitzer-shaped Army cam- j eg with a 100-inch infrared lens] cms through haze to make pic-ttfres of ohjeets 35 miles away. f DONALD DUCK SSI T l a ^TWKyTY-XWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. , TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1*30 Pontiac Doctor Elected Trustee oi Osteopaths Wheat, Soybean Trade is Steady markets [Market Gropes : to Find Base | The fallowing are top price* covering sales of heady grown CHICAGO OP—Wheat and soy- [produm brought to the Farmer’s beans demonstrated steadiness tnjMarw 'by powers aqd sold by early destli«s on the Board of‘***«t in Wholesale oackage lots. trade, today Quotation* are furnished by the NEW YORK UP—The stock mar- Scattered buying of the bread|0*bn>tt Bureau of Markets, a* et ket slipped lower early this after* grain was attribute to India's pur- Friday. noon after a hesitant stmt. Trad- chase of 12 million bushels of hard |. big was sluggish, and white wheat ter November r Detroit ProdUCW Dr. B. F. Diddnsqn, who has offices |n Pontiac, today eras elected trustee of the Michigan Amo, elation of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons at thr group's annual convention in Grand Rapids. shipment. Colombia bought 375.000 bushels for delivery this month and next. ‘~i;; Grain Prices CHICAGO. cncMo oitft mom 1OT=P V :: 'AJtaaihoa. bu . Apptea, Ngrtlnrn Spy. ka. ‘ “—ilM, Macintosh, f-*#*, won n*— The Associated Pnaa average < Named president-elect was Dr. W. C. Andreen of Wytkndotte, Dr. Donald R. Cummings ol Grand Rapids will take office as phesident of t|ie association for one year later this week. Three other trustees elected at; this time were Dr. M. L. Logue! of Lansing, Dr,, A. F. Fuller of Muskegon and Dr. R. E. Benson1 w A N T Death Notices wit tO&H ■ wSsMssar, oa s at s pm. SuWy Iwaaral Hons with o.Jrdnssa sffjrSW i InUav will ij Panin Ub« lat*r-Ife Cemetery _____________ land, MUST am St; dear lillwr 5 an. Otart* L gars nhr CharlM Ciraa: Star brother o Mrs. Clifford Marita aaS Mri _______% lrom tht*{t*m£n tall» —v mrafimaai vna Rer*fRe r oTy, _____ ba Bald at I 46 p m TUMday. Oct.! ACCOUNTANT FOR CORRESPOND-4 IlM ljll Oonelsod-Johna Fu-. ence. cost work, and general off-neral Home. Funeral service will Mo Wart. Engineering interests be kakl Wednesday. Oct » at it batata), Small maul working g.*». (row If. JBUaal'a Chureh. oiani. Write Box -log Pontiac Interment In Mt Rope Cemetery.: Press gUlag age. work and pay Mri. Rtharb will lie In »ute at' esparlanca, education and fam-t h t Doneiaon • John* Funeral lly , _--------- . AUTO'BLAkTONSTALLER. NEED- SPIERS. OCT A list, BEATRICE, ed must have-experience L l«L»A“‘v»!rmtn«ham, bj» jMbJWta SI. i tdt SUver of Mrs. Marry _t Tel a Ttl it J W Crk Cent 21A Johns Man Jones a l garage at the home of Mrs.! William Young at 7765 Macedayj Thuriday. Oat. I .. . . : the Wm. Vasu Fun« ._. I, till N. Woodward. Royal fENS, OCT. 3 »dS. VERNON. FAhfTEME JOB r “ tree y to to p.ia.. a< may be” able id qualify lor a Wm fl VMUlif Job Far Information'_ Mr. Mien OR J4»2Sr 12 noon to < S.M. gun drivers, si or over, fe rtTsernarS" Me-LeRoy. Carl Burg tarn brake Into Polk's Gs- • rage, 149 W. Howard St., and stole s several tools, it was reported to , f Pontiac police yesterday. , Auto Parts, 181 E. Pike St., it _ ! was reported to Pontiac police! * ysstsrdsy. Two storage rooms In the Roote.-; iJjlWt Hotel, 125 N„ Perry St., were] \ BOX REPLIES At M Today there The Prose following CAB DRIVERS FULL ANft'pAdf time. Night. 20 or older. 414 Orchard take. 2:S> p.m. delivery and stoce clerk. ---** ~ ‘ or part lima. WrIM - 84.__ ABLE FARMER TO o¥- CEO DOCT INSTALL- be thoroughly ciperl- —.________ hare tools and ---- portatlon. O’Brien Heating panjr._________________________ EXPERIENCED M1SCELLANEOO) j structural draltsmi Fabian. OR 24821 la *, », 6, S, 18, 18, 18, 89, >4, M, W, 78, 88, 97, 88, 184,118, 118. i* * I broken Into, but nothing taken. ; tr’ wa's reported to Pontiac police yes ^•Iterday. EXPERIENCED CAltPENTERn AND cement men, wanted for subcontract work. Apply at I8T W. Montcalm. itb rran MORI inter eoted in ___iBA pfsit- Wri.. _ 40t Fimtlae Frcaa. giving age. ‘ ‘ rag experience, educa- I |iSF~STOOL- PRES6ER APPLY II Mala Cleaners 4488 Elisabeth ii LrtaHA . POOR MEN.OR WOMEN WITH ---- .... —mcles.. Bull op. i[ The theft of ^caunera from I ..' parked car nt 6> W. Huron St. I [} Ji was reported to Pontiac police yes-[j-’j terday by Bruce W. Franklin of Um*. Apply 43 Auburn afWi COOK j OPENING FOR 3 MEN m T-l OR ~ '"4 CLERK- pN A ... the help you need is quickly yours through THE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AD COLUMNS J revolutionary elsetrlcal u > YOVNO MAN -Jit wort, t ■ ffunlerBlvd. 1 —-oss-wtst-tsss— ltd Apply In perton. Afternoon < _______:___, shift. ____________ WAI L WASHING BY MACH. RUGS fxFBftttMAcD WAfraisTFOK ^uphoi... cie.nra._rajmhm,_ — person. 931 W. I----- EXPERIENCED CLJOUt* ,»■; drug store, relerences, 1788 Orton- ' experienced- woman taee Work Wnntsd Female 12 eompleto chan* i fountelo. in* , Orionvllle Rom. (MU). ^ 2 WOMEN WAHT WA1XWASH- “FREE TOYS - FUN "' . ARTIST WANTS WOMTaT ROME cal) Ft 8-tm. - Have own traaiporialtan. PE POOR WOMEN OVER TWlriTT.; WP . . 298- I ONE ' DAY^IROMInO, EXFERi- FUter Qumo phooa soliciting. ended, references. «3t Melrose. 281 Oakland._ • 1» FE M«7l. HOUSEKEEPER. LIVE IN, FULL ONE DAY IRONINO. SatF., REF' Jg. Paddock, nr. Ferry. FE —..... for ekecuttva ' — __. 12 year old daughter. Reference! . _ required, white, under M. 8tb Say u.TT, week. 828 week. Rochester area | "ij!! Pieaae e*'f ~ FR l-iait qr, F* ___ _ aad flreplacaa. B—kkeepfatA Taxes Ye Dressmaking, Tailoring 17 ALTERATIONS. TAILORING. DRBSSMAklWO. TAILORING, hi-teratteaa. Mra, RadaR. FE iWB. WllOSflan -AinftlTMBI QsrSsa PlwU| I* FLOWINO ORADINO DISCING A weed cutting. PE 4-423* or OR PLOW^Id DRid gMD T DISEINO. LMfjrf AmAai “ JO nnoga^t^g^i&p1 Undscapint tliK PONTIAC PKKS ,OCTOBER •mmmm 17i Wtd. Contracts. Mtgs. 38, Rant ApU Fnrnlgt>ed 57, CARNIVAL TWKNTY^THliyy Si MMMJI MMJ ( g»»s«gQHl»s^ SSS,CF'“ .“jg-^sra *^err*«4ttiate tasg&«tfWA‘ It tSM ’***' "*• s*f *•» i t*kW i»o6i6_ rLfn itfahift By Dick Turner For SnU Hmu BIO t BEDROOM HOUSE, decorated. D,M with *1 (PE MWi * ___ BY owner. SWAfriHHLU.' 1 i . . . 4» For Salstfi NE^LY * SYLVAN VILLAGE- . ___, , » *m | JNU Not, 0ns haaL, rflUSf wau.Kd Old. 1 MBl ’ ntruitiWo Wedding Napkins m HOYT raoing Mpkt "FREEr THB5flfTr_„. ■MB* mimmrn. uS. din* and fertilising M gradtog* grg^ Movbiyand Tmcktaf^a -PfcO» M INPORMAL* -Order Of Wedding Invitations ALL CASH ' . Of AND PHA BQUIftEB * HrntN Iwiai Mat* or MM [ *M us lor immediate W»NAte*”C^K^ MBI [ Backenstose Book Store > IL«AST-lawren™r%E 2mm! LISTINGS WANTED „ CLBANINO HOUtt' I CASH tar mr Ml --~~>*M arUtta* gsakad. —I INM lead. land «s StahTJ* **! c«T«Bg^.>My.M!g. ^ TlfY foJSEAf! • Callao OntT ***** i i JACK LOVELAND **j HU (Me* L**f.Rd. PE 24*14 I WAI.TF.lt8 I.AKF. YltAR;-AROUND Top Sdi! M. tfd front tad i*»dta*. PB | SKnt? ‘ mg'iWtiapr MMtiatna*. Mr*. Wallace. 1-A Reduced-katcs tiiffS* go^o^Vt8^ ^^?”Tian C^Sr0MM3 W ° i A:»r»iOTDro-tt «*► ruction. Located | **UWII>—1 gg-gjrw; ^:-^l °».Ka hsp» 'J*U IN DEBT? IF SO LET US ,P^'JfowL-. r- v i r»i r, Jw» IPOBLANP<)i^n1pl0l>tC^^S0d l IQMU ltiP BATH DOWN. Give You l P!»ce to Pay d^i^ a^LtY «RYtar i )KT ..%*e.y°U,:.¥ind 1 3w *°rrt- Kn'tn rt J ROOMS B BATH. CARPETED. Wt55«, , WANT ACTION? YOTJm ^Ijity4 IN LBiisi*NE*a - flriolaaaT > a raiwc HOYT REALTY »,JIA ' ««*«*» w land cootraat*Ltt on»*of'uit ' lartrit orfanliat'— — ». A oi“^ a NieHOLIE outiona wrprk Semi Trailer! Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. - __ . IS* ‘S. WODWARD PE MMIJ n 4*1442 Opan Dally Including Sunday O'DELL CARTAGE Local and Ion* dlattnot moving >hona PE MMd Painting St Decorating 23 STATEWIDE Bn—Ejssl .Real Estate service' of Pontiac -St 5,A s5 B. D. CHARLES. REALTOR ri.po^eiM. for"i£y*d£u 3La il"*. ~~ ^|M'rw*5ec^rpEir: HAyOuYERS adults only OnkhlU St UL H71I Y f|tOOM8 tANL) BATH. OROUND ^That's Freddie! He rocs to night school!1 September « |*i( i'iBH T Htar Oxbow Lxkr Lo'cxtfd 3*4734 BY OWNER POR SMALL FARMS ta 41 Mraa with buUdlnes LADD'S INC. 1 boom nrrm *ninT« wesT , aide. IU i rt. r» Mttl J ROOM OBtih. EAST SIDE I Rent Houses Unturn. 40 Rooms with Board MS PERRY ST. •MM, ft Slot M APTS .r ira. adulta WE PAY ALL , YOUR BILLS , 1ST CLASS PAINTING AMD DEC-orating Caaa or terma. PE 4 IttO 1ST CLASS DECOBATtNO' PAINT-mg and wall papering. PE 4-0216 A-l PAINTING INTERIOR EE-......* ‘ it dl»c for oaah MSUO I dawtl, P i iiko l Guaranteed Free eat. PE 4-I20S lit CLA88~1NT. AND Bit. PAINT.' log. Raat. Don BgcB. 01, 1-3141. linpia Dr.. Rent Apts. Furnished 37 _Anaurt._AT. ^flE i-swr / -----------—-----^ J ROOMS. PRIVATE KlffitANCC 1 BEDRM . PVT. BATH, KITCH- htrnlrtad. *—anti , tally tain., naa> OP«rl» ^8 *^11. Perfect tar bachelor stu-1 ♦ ROOMS. iFPYe rTTubORN ant. PE MMI. , .Heights area. PE 2-38*1 after I. ROOMS, 110. CLEAN. | * EXTRA LARGE ROOMS AMD , ..— ~ ->wn PE Mill ! hath, alove. tee bog and dnrnae . paid,rtyrw7asfir~Rinud. ,ynUt'u» “a*1* buG“,‘ 1 -"l ^Ro^g Tuitf^: HOMEX SERVICES i 1^!1Vnps;Vn» »•?» ™g^^!^rfr^M-1ut^i*^^ 1 4 Sf1-*?.? bath Uh| APPLY I-A-l RENT ALB 2-BF.DR00M DUPLEX Automatic Rant — Pull Baaamant WILL DBCORATi $75 PERMONTII FE 4-7833 (4d EAST Bl.VU. N. AT VALENCIA 43 | PtfllN BLEEP- I bobrd tor HI M I NICE NOME. 1 go Drive. _ _________brick ranch. Oaa heat, Btorma and aaraana. ttb bathe Pull baaamant. Saar, room Car-pattni and drapes Included.. On achool btia. line. Near stores h rah ba hattdll w w Ross' Home tar lurthn Intorn _ Water for t) aIea ■ CD ROOM _ B JJ Cj •ft HARGER CO. LOTS OP RXTRAS rttLL BOARD h ROOM..... tract aide. Ml Owego_ I ip YOU'RE looking 'for' .. ! me* clean plea*, anil .PE MMi IU8T , TERMS. BASEMENT - OAR CAB OAP* INCED YI DOWN - on large iot °am isa^VwMed back lawn Carpeting, refrlgera-tar. built-in ovcit and t»bie-top' burner*. Drapes r** • *“■a-t-Urroughasst All *f I down and MO per / photocopies of bills tnd jpaymynt of — —-M8IW Oakland______^ ROOMS It AND IT. BOARD 0f. gas hoot. OL 2-1011 I ROOMS $40 j oppign ___ W 2-2144 ___________ SUITE OP r'-oSOUND FLOOR ornct*. Tarn. FmmI purklin. Air* condltionint. hflt tod Uflliia M » Idrn 102 WashingS>n*1i.-____ “ 4 ROOMS, ctdBi m. c heat. FI 4-0 CUBAN, |40 30U Aubu:„ Haight*. UL Mil*.____ N 2 BEDROOM. LOWER I ROOM MODERN. BuMPDRClf. utUltjr room, Oos heat. Call FE > DAY OB NIOBT TV SERVICE. M r. BWUEA. PE I-ISM. ‘••JENNEN'S-TV SERVICE. APTER-~~ 8 ovanlns, — MA I a ROOM PLUS BA kitchenette. TV. w Pike and PB 4-42TI. Upholstering 25 EARLE’S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER-tag. srn Cooley toko Rd. EM — 3-3641 ----------- THOMAS UPHOLSTERING 1*7 NORTH PERRY ST. FE 5-8888 'ra Votes Wanted Miscellaneous 30 —rooms and bath, upper im HAVE YOU A TYPEWRITER, par week. East aid* ta Pontiac, adding machine or piece of nrttsal or i-snsi furniture or ' equipment H Use7 Wo wlU buv then OP. 3-1711 Lost and Found " 26 would like to borrow - -v. ... , Good Interest rat*. Writ* P Press Box M LOST SIAMESE FEMALE CAT. since Aug 13. PoadIMy In Tel-Huron vicinity. Much loved pet. Howard. EM X»U. AND 3 ROOM. PVT: BATH. AND entrances. Newly decorated. Ill 240 s. TELEGRAPH RD ------- ——---------, H.-Telegraph, AwlV 1* Clark St. FE 3-7aa - — __MA C-4431 J.'JS; 12 * vfiaB PLAY‘1 MOObaiU. PRIVATE entrance. modern'T room APARTMENT. erjmno^U^I^VT^,----------- ■ utilities clean,,111 weekly. 1 man. stove and refrigerator furnished Money Wanted 31 —. ________ ’ ~ - » LARGE ORO\jND FLOOR . * *•, *• room*, private entrance, perklntt. MODERN nice tar retired couplet or boche- meat, lors 110 to 111 ’ weekly- Call ; tarnUht — - . EM 34MI, 3 to I p.m. heat. SM par mon.... Wanted to Rent 32, i Boom APARTitENT im weekT _ _ --------I -a----- NEWLY MOOBATBD - LARGE month, 3” Booms, ^eanuo. A u n n . BEDROOMsT wkjDEVN . 'FuITt- | to ovenard rAnge, vashar and dryer. Clrpettag. IM iRonth. Brat ! and last month* rent. Available ___ , Oct 14th. MA 4-3MI *ggj* I 4 ROOMS ' MODERN FURNACE ffTYtl fireplace, rntrl of double house. hb4. *® I 4033 Oak Knoll, too FE 5-*OOfl. I ^co^ED-i-RiriiFTOr14 *£i‘ vTffinW:TH OARAOE I tarn!’ to7g{ 'iMr4w**k hBt *ltfr 4 ROOM H 0 U lB WELL IN- Kolfe H. Smith, Realtor | manufacturer s MenT'wurd'iv OR 3-12M.___________ For Sale Houses ■b^STOJY. -—ON+vY 410 DOWN— Model at IMS. Bird Open Dally and Sun Ii30 to 1 p nt. WBSTOWN REALTY , LI 3-7331 after 1 B.in. MUDBL - Fi l-2703 ■ COZY I B8DROOM MODBRN Attractive eettlng | acres Good fertile suit Fruit treat and bet rtba.IOobd road. Softool bus. At. tractlvaly priced. 11,000 down wfU handle, Dorothy Snyder Lavender Realtor Bat. M Yearc 1001 Highland Rd (Mtli MW 4-0411 Bvea EM 1-3303 Day*. '■ KIRS.TSTREl£T Ranch style bungaldw. 3 bad-rooms, full bartmopt. 114.100 PHA or OI term*. EAST BOULEVARD I rooms, tall dtatat MONTH. sroMd. Vaaaat Easy tarmi INCOME PEOPERTY avail* bis JIM WRIGItT ROttOf ; 3to Oakland Ave opeis III * 30 I FE >0441 FE S-7MI Evenings gftar 13* PE M3M apartment (Betoa ef locations, Oladjrs Klmmel WEST BLOOMFIELD Here is,a home that has had 1 the personal touch. 3 large bad-rooms. IVk baths, carpeted' In living and dining arga. Attached garage and WfllO. Yard cam-pletely tanoed and baantlfuUy landscaped Priced at III,MOM WASHtNOTON PARE: NRHOLIE-HARGER _ 53>i WEST HURON 2 ACRES '■ ful cjirpctii)^^ xnd dripi . btSooniB ’ KHch«n .wltt Immaculate Utree bedroom bunnbtew built in 'M bate* ment *11 Willi, n*w ear-peting. iwa and s half car garage. . aluminum alarms and semens Only 113,M0 $950 DOWN i fur* rJrU l per t CAR OARAOE. » Finished^ ujetel rs Itilly Insulated Auto' 14.000 each, Bel I1.0M i o f. Ml.ta — Nothin* 4 a FMaI Cadillac. FE g-g42J^ PE S-ICM. to.iso down. fE 2-1171. r BEDROOM NO M E WITH breeseway and attached garage. Lot ItlMO. M.M0 with W00 down ADANlS REALTY r® 3-7013_________ FE HOC! i bedroombT'Ttlr' by own- er. N, tide. Drape*, carpeting, 33 It. llv. rm„ hlx tiled kit., tiled Paul M. Jones, Real Em. 833 WBSf HURON BTREET FI 4-MO* rt 0-1371 ... PDW ' -f . down. 4 room, modern Need* decorottak and a 1 raw repairs. Only . 13.000 Full price. v -i H. C. NEWINGHAM i CORNER CROOKS AND AUBURN ! ri caa ul 2-3310', 1 in clarkmon. By owner, ; WARD'S ORCHARD straot. toy wilt ttl Kampaea Realty I ■ rx: bedroom brick ,.i i bxihs. down DBvmant M Sooa Apple Drive. I. I15.IPVW Ml MA a-I26l. tohir Kr lrwTn Sr Sof»s*1 REALTORS Slue* IMS ■“ "** Huron ilrert « 04441 FE 24103 AR AROUND HOUOE WITH I »r Oar., La* Llv. and Dm. rta. Natural Phone FE 4- •h. Phone FE 4 and 2 to 2 p.m. | S' ROOM BRICK AfttRT- I ROOMS AND SHOWER TH J to 500 equity month. Will it odor t< LOST: HONEY BROWN DACHS- puppy, # • months old. -RENTAL SERVICE furnished. 1 Ichlldre * of Prttoy. VI-«. ..... Lake Country Club. Children’s pet FE 0-aIm. IM REWARD POR THE RETURN of my do*, small tan wad white female Chihuahua. PE 2-1223. LOST: LmfiTAN'irWHrnS mAlk English Pouter. Vtctatty Orchard R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor _______FE 4-3531 Jm|i i Lake^MO aNman5tATFE 44414™ ' , **°*¥[- UTn._”RM NXWLY 7^M~AN£“BATHr-DRAPBa thrOughont FE 444r — “ — ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE. rt 4-0404 attar 1:20, _________ l ROOMS. NICBLT FURN. CLOSB dinette; A 44*72 Fat. 444 mo H 1 i BEDRM ALUM? siDIf4Cf~0AS ''location 11*000* rtn FE 444JV i INDIAN VU.LAGr EM J till 21* MohowV! Ill.tSo. I .akv (iakland Heights BonmontU<^M enor. 2MI Br- oil tarnacr . Bal. | per lBefc-*! 113,M COLORED ■ julr PUT ON the market 0 and both eacepttoaoUy clean 3 bedroom* op • I down. Cnt-peted living, dining room and stairway, 2 enclosed porenta, baas-ment and 2 car gar***. P«s»*d vard neauy landscaped. Only 4* too no down-payment I* O.I I FAMILY - I tooens DUPLEX ' |Brtae ■ach. DlvM I. Old 4 . TZ > 4 ROOMS AND SaA(. LOWER ___________ _________ ‘I'l Hear PooUac Motor*. FE ; 2 BEDRM. BRICK LOE. LOT. breeseway. and garage —------ Carpeting Wster Breaker Bt. Oft W vo. wwiitr. OR 24012. "LITTLE FARM! Ptah'fi!‘ I 2 ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE “p Automatlc gas hot watotv day entrance. |is a week. Baby wal- "!*bt, Tiled hallways. High, „„ s manta Rofaraacaa. earn*. Inquire 272 Baldwin Art. Ihort distance*1^*! ** i5ke" U,',, 3-1470i. Huron, MI 440' AND i achool. adults, yu_________ I-ROOM APT.. EVERY- I rcfrlgerstor, «74 Notices and Personals 27 ___ ittemore.__. .ROOMS. KITCHEN. CHILD WET: _ coma. 431 N. Parry, PE I-Mlo. 1 Wtd. ContractsTMtgB. 35 3 jo^nto ' it^JROOMB, MODKRW AFT . ON ANT OOtL OB WOMAN NEED- •----■ ‘tndly advisor,’ phone T~ or I p.m.1, or It no a VI » „ . m nwmmr mwmm Art., GW—KLr'suJlllfflWl.,|V fag Buyers for Contracts poatta* Lota CLARK REAL ESTATE I 3*1311 liter 9 I__ ! PB _ __Re^ n 4-4113 3Mi BpOMat HEWLT'biroiufTOi j APAj>T¥EHT IN CLARE- Oll heat. 1810 Moot*, Scott Li FE 4-4413 , 13 to 4. » RM AND BATH *2 WASHlNCf Ar* you lookmii for cliito?iliflc- weleqme. - —Ml-----‘l, whore the pe ' friendly! Cool: ......,„c These 3 room_______ _________ apartments rant for 041 pea! Ill VINONA ~STr. CARROL h - *■"- nJid- I -Heights, Commerce. 4 root mo. James Rlchwsr. PE I BEDRc Elisabeth Lake Rd. Dlorxh Building Co. _. . ) BEDROOM RANCH. PRIVATE h ono*third down. Louk ; > other* Prlcrd 13.000 with one-thl. _ lit ov/tr at 10623 Oakhlll r. w Kota Homoa at " ir yiyrthar IriforttUtion B THE BIRD- TO SEE BRICK RANCH. .1 ifi ^“‘ditaa"*** BLKB WEST OP CITY HOB* Sit hc*|rn*6 Dwlaht'‘or :i-2«e! ,AKE 3 BEDROOM HOME NEAR i FOR 301. CLARE I utllWea furnlahed. Coualt INVEST . Oas heat eloaq to. MApl* AW. NEW I BEDRM RANCH. . AEROTRED8 KNAPP SHOES PREP HERMAN Savant good land contracts m available on new homo*. Llbei discount*. Ask tor My. Hayden. IJuffalh. HCji_.______ i. Wlxom MA 4- wslton and Blue Sky Wig* 2 NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS, pvl. beta, garage, no drinker*. _____ High school SIM Joan- gay Bird, too ft. lot. Ponced In nick. Nicely landacaped.e Less than 14,000 Owing. t'» par cent PHA. at CSC par month. Including taxes ana Insurance. Beat offer toko* It. Horn* moat of the time. 3 APARTMENTS North Johnson. 2 apartments, 4 rooms, ownsr's apt. g rooms. 3 oil furnaces, 3'/k hatha. Largs tncoms. Bundaie ' OR 3-V I NEAR S' ad sod fenced, with option to I Dr., Drayton Pit ?BEMEDlCfC 3_ BED- it MORTOAOE ; .22.01 4141 NEED 4 BEDROOMS7 chan, plastered walls, oak Iloors PES-WM. OLDER 2 _ BEDROOM HOME . to appreciate.' IV j Base mint, 1 la mb Musi sea 4-4744 no d6Btn payiAbnt 3 room home. AtUminum atorai.s. ,'ER «NT INI. Veteran Administration Improved 1 homes Not witflcllt tor . ana. Pontiac, Milford, anyfc-Walerford, sis Ah relatively jl | family toaaM0, t__ .. downtown, Pontlae Oenaral and Pontiac Central. PULL PRICE, 412714*. 0*4 on our Immediate eatt M*e tow sqeaa to each fZZTCtn 1 handle these Mloa ' CONSOLIDAIE a!.L YOUR BILt* AND LET US OIVE YOU ONE PLACE TO PAY BUDGET SERVICE -44 W_RURON___ FE 2-0*00 CHINA PAINTINO CLASS OPEN-fit*. Order to* —hMB ““ e Christmas 1 K. L Templeton, Realtor _ 233* orchard Lake Rd. PE 444*3 • 1»7>1 N._B**I«.»W. • dren welcome t*5 n#r' “23-°°^ rS2KSSSS: h. j. tDickrVAiX’ET rw#CHTAiUf ifa--------------------------PE-4-35fr Pxrtrldgc. FE 4-3411 1990.1 t AND 9-9997. ft OAKLAND AVENUE Ban. Quick Reference BUSINESS 3 RMS. AND BATH _ ~BEDROOM MODERN LAEE-1 ~ 4144 Cftatonvllie Rd. OH 3-47M. | TTfedSTT nfl west1 o"* Union 3 ROOMS. STTBAM HEAT. NO Lake Village ' EM 3-0430 dmklng. Near bus. Ml N. Pad-1 rBtmbojl h6ME. OWKER-MOF. POR RENT 4 RM. HOUSE No ■“ f6r sale oiLremt Wailed Lake prlv 3 bedrm ran near schools and shopping. 1 decorated. 4*0 month. MA 4-3 jBslI p.m. LAEEFRONT RANCH HOME. 3 I bedrooms. LI 3-OTM__________| MODERN » ROOM FARM HOUSE --------------““ill family. OA room *w bath* rut 1 tsament.—attached garage, 10 sres. Wilt accept small Pontiac ..jmr II ido WO ■RV*BE* WHla Pontiac Press rt 4-3034. Overlooking Lake 3 bedroom, oak Iloors. beautiful basement Oae hast Total price , fll.i**. T*f!HI IS TOIL Ml* Sn*- WE8T HURON BTREET SM ITH-WIDEXI AX REALTY —OPEW "EYIttrr 1007 BERKLEY WASHING fON Pork. 3 bedroom modern, gat1 heat, basement, garage, carpets 1 gn OR 3-4121 a Oxford a L A RO 1. Like n 4-2*41 ir Body, TX 4-706d. close to Pteb- Partly furnished. Sorry c dren. West side. 444 per 1 - eluding garage. FE 3-7M * p.m reiKw. MODERN 4 ROOM HOUSE. REC-nation room, fireplace. Clarkston area. MApto 4-IM4 .____, NEW 3 beBroom brick fpXIY ‘ r», n.i-rt Fenced potto. Vi car I Basement. Harrington { .MO: H.*«* da.. Ml no har- LD 1 RED) FRANKS, 24*3 Un-n Lk. Rd. EM 3-330*. Open ttl FE 4-4526 GAYLORD BATEMAN REALTY' MULTIPLE LUTING SERVICE NO DOWN PAYMENT tsyw mow * <74* doe____ $300 DOWN 3 bedroom ranch, newly d ated. It* car garage. *11.30 MIKE 8, DISTRICT SERVICE DIRECTORY I 344*4 SERVICES—SUPPLIES—EQUIPMENT ____I ...miles Beat .. _ ^Heights,_3330 B. Crooks Rd. ROOMF AND BATH. ifg'WEEK. Floor Sandhig 1 aluminum sidino with Cafotax inawfflaa PABULON - WATERLOX - BRUCE dlspoaxl. Couple only. FE 44032’. LAROE ROOMS ALL PRIVATE. Util. turn. Couple only aivaa weekly. 144 - Summit. PB after 4 p.m______________ 3 LAROE CLEAN ROOMS. 3 t, frond svtvato atsfrsnta,^-1___________rm mu ___________■ jv-ffl. ■flFSFSStJp.. fjpKTl j «b AND BATH, mCAR BBT. COET raw iMwi/wm. wsvess. ! tery eiran, modem. auto, heat, other adeaataaea. ideal tor 2 women or aider couple. PE ROOM MODERN 1 CHILD WSL-----JgeOIMS after «, MY LOVELY 3 BEDROOM RANCH with carport. Between Case * . Union Lake. Ml* Baron*, tit le r atorci sun and ^utility 1 Many Basement *a completely finished with loads of cupboards ha'^ family raom lent West side location close to askaols. Reasonable monthly payments. Only If.40* ! JX THE COUNTRY Betotl rnlUnw. Music Instructioii — STORML No money i Dual f—* UN 4-67*0. NEAT BUNGALOW ON DIXIE Hwy., Wstertard. Nr. 2 VEST ATTRACTIVE ROOMS, I rvt. bath and mi., adulta aaty j IT par weak PH *-2412.____ HOOftl rUKWMKD. CLEAH. L. ry-t * m sMgm., lufT baaut., on furnace, Ideal far couple, 44C IWf. BC. iM 3-32M. i SMALL HOUSE. 1 ROOM AND " Auburn Heights Call ____pa RQoBdS BED BAfrtlUPPER I __ .... Util. Para. Pvt. ant., PE 4-SMS. I ATTRACTIVE 2 ROOM. MODERN ~I*J* J = 1 ' ' knotty pine and basr----— jrtl’ ’—jrlooktag Wai d chard organ b Gallagher's Boot and Motors _______jkupi d~~boom afajftiffirt. ifitoM. j —............... PE 3-41*1 ! BIRMINGHAM, CLEAN PURN- . / uti'f T xiTK * tTVM’ii a ntTt~TiT ! lxhod lioflfta for not of loo90• 4 O , rn, ADULT8. eiooo. trxiuportxtlon tad shop- I Eeega. Pvt. EM. PE_44*M._' ptag, Adulta wily. Ml 4-7M1 .OAKLAND AVENUE.. NICE CLEAN 3 ROOMS. BATE. JDAB Ot 243SI after UdALL I ROM* BAT2L S* H. CAM Lake 34a., Pm *4*P. It to S. SMALL LAnOFRONT UOMSTlPi month Oft 3-tlSg. UNPUAiHBhOD S B i p ft O O M house to sattsfactory tenant. PB - *iiin WEST SIDE BRICE. * ROOMS tot baths, gas bask agM^Mto Neai general Hoapli __ JUST , ARRIVED^ > 4t JOT OT^M EYlNftUpE INTERIOR A N D E XTERIOR 11 cMld 437* H Rent Lake Cottages 41 f j LAEEFRONT HOME, TIL JURE. achool* Oft 34104. — 0500-1- MOVES YOU IN - this eta* west tub., 2-bedroom with carpeted living room, taxi SfiS*; 19 ' RUSSELL YOUNG ! REAL ESTATE B BUILDERS $500 Total. Move Int Immediate occupancy 1! 1111 No other costa an these quickie , deal* Mint ____ 3 bedroom — MM Oakvlsw toff Dixit at Waltao) . j bedroom - 2(3 East Blvd. S. ] bedroom — ft Henderson Cheek these out right away and call W. W. Rosa Home, it OR 3-8Q21 to make your deposit !'!! I' $600 DOWN MOVE RIGHT IN 3 bedroom, tall basement, new gas stormed, fenced, carpet, porch, tall bsmt. 818.U0. Name your dn payment. OL 1-0*07.____ SCOTT LAEE. LAROE ] ROOM home. 13x22 living room Large both 11*111* ft. lot. Newly decorated. Ntc* shade trees. Lot -completely landscaped. IB00C 4500 down. PE 2-3**t.____________ Sylvan Model Open 314* Pontiac Dr. 4 level brick. 3 bdrras . 3 bam*. Fireplace Family room Mud room, wooded ear-1 ner lot. Lake privilege*. 411.100. WlU duplicate. Albert M. Cattail. 'ILL TRADE ’Sty room home with three bedrooms, basement, st- w*aV> excellent • lichen gas woaded view. 3 bedroom aluminum i * wtS'm without trade. Call MY 1(M Pull baaamant. carpet- . ______________ n private lake . in the Rochester area with 3 bedrooms you'll aurety want 1 to see this Ceramic IS both*, fireplace, built-in oven and range. Oerbege disposal, targe lot gad Ot-- tamed garage. This ta a Plus mortgag* --------arty term $500 DOWN $600 DOWN taatadtd. Ill.tc# $950 DOWN In* wo jtav* etort to. carpeting . 'OPEN BUN. 10-2 '| BY OWNEB. NICE ROOM. RIGHT iob aooBr OT. Rent Houteg Unfum. 40 ji II. I M ___kitchen, yard. Sac. at M.M0 Edison PB 2-MMIbe. BEDRM, It LAROE' 2 ROOM APARTMENT. 1 BEDROOM HOME WEST m» piivalo on met. FE u*w * ^ •"652? i . STEELE REALTY t I (Main Office) 124* N Mima Rd . between High- j land and IfiUord MU 1HM* ; or EM 241 vacant — MOTE' RIOBT IN, i ' K® i can i*5fr WHK,'jln*k gag an h***- 2-2*21 tv MY 3-14*1 • E. PIEH BT;,- ' | $500 DOWN ’ ' IBitrt Em* -11211. o« Joslyn. ctaa* 4* Fbntlaa * Englaaarlng II2.4M - 1 Oarage agg basement OR 24MM. I I OPEN EVEN1NAMS M|7|f. flow'raace In CONSOLIDATE BILLS—NO LOANS and mettroea UIH Aleo^iaaple U>. OR faatgrowm* Skat Side ttoootna i For Tow boot hot i! bunk and trundle, bods at big dt>- . Tr| Center Plenty of frao customer ; ta cot not of debt, nee ; counts I parkin*. Building ana* ha earn JSM33 MOOE EE 1 AIR building oo Dixie DocturrDenttstfx ------- proa, soo iq it .«... ». I ..'i »ll* ! Parking Shown by appolotm. Highway , only Phowe OB 1-4111 Aik fade and t Jim or John. ' 1 - -I i Financial Advisers. Inc. . -----—i .............. Mb a SAOINAW s PE HM3 j BEAdpEfrLJ jPC^REp gCYlON- conditioned Mortgage Loans Mat Ideal (ar _______ SIS month FE 4-MOO 1.1 »WU, «S FT LAKE PRdNTAdiL - -----------------* * u_r__________Jfe_s-iim._____________ “or"trade.*PE“l-MlS! TRAPnc' JAM: ..ife >t. LA&EPRONT 40 aorta of rolling wooded prop IT _ terrific spot, ale block to I .. _ Tod Are butlneaa mo whore istapt flow of traffic ... ^ $600 TO $2,000 Oo Oakland county homes, t ' Voss & Buckner. Inc. MS National Bldg. PE 4-47M Swaps 63 *? %!?^.|.,^Z00PE* ® BOTTLE < J October cw attached garage. Inwel tot Sm Tarots, Value for appoint meat. Clark Beal Estate u« W. Huron it.. FE 1-tCCI FOR LARGE FAMILY Lakefront home ta very ptc turcagu* eettlng Shed- tree, landscaped and gaad a I partment etore Krogi and proposed sbappL. ------ | Can tot information. Warren Stout. Realtor ; 71 11: sagtaaw----» PE Ml«' - _ Pp*2 •«> J;M . '! used' car lot with office Nty-eornerad , g FOOT PRAM BOAT, IDEAL POE » word e De- fishing and duck hunting Will » Pood store swap toy shotgun. OR VMM, j fjfcs SPECIAL THROCOH - - up. Tat par „„ . ... _ __I tubing Call Cnyoa OaTca OSl 1-MH. CLEARANCE SALE Hand refrigerators *0050 up. Dead Electric Ranges 154 50 up Used gas ranges 171.50 up. Ubad wringer wpabors MIAS up- INC mar samples. Oas ranges, washers, Dryers up to 50 per cent alt. Consumers Power Co. 28 W. Lawrence ISM DESOTO FOR A GOOD I 1 piano. 3741 HI-TU1* PE 6-jSjW I. •54 CADILLAC I DR HT POR! CASH TOR FURNITURE AND itge And etc. I3.&00 down C I I , PAngUA^ ^ r j NEAR UNION LAKE | 4 bedrodme, S lots, piiu basement. .all furnace, lake privileges Only ..] pojTtiac lakefront a tees e. ess as. TM Sea. u e Vet aw. /d-H ! 1 bedroom*. Ilreptoce, lull bese- gwamia wtoMww O | ment. l^lmn^c Jots, late-of shade i.the Holiday Hop with the president of the pau| M JqneV. Real Est. ittd i»cr<»en*..‘ Priced At $14. »hy WAlt mak« your Appi "BUD” wTcholl#. Realtor 41 lit. Clement ftl. FE 5-1201 Aiitf t p« n Mm KENT BaUMUhad In till NEAR NORTHERN HIOH “ Altractiv# 1 Mm. 1 •CHOOL • oak floors nice kitchen a of cupboards Oil beat. 1 ; RulfejI{. Smith. Realtor ,1__ 344 a. Telegraph Rd It FE MJM____________MA 5-4431 i $300 DOWN 1 F INCLUDING COST i. I bedroom, ranch style bon j. clerk .ton area. Faymenla tat •-C PANGUS, Realtor __ ORTON TILLS M « STREET___ NA Mill MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE IRWIN NORTE SIDE 1 Thu home to budget priced I you bu*e A large rooms, big ba meat, automatic heat and ha* « tor. Mk floor*, nice Utahan w Business Opportunities 59 A LIQUOR BAR SHOT I « roar toRM ‘----- Only *20 000 dot Alley with tlVira license. AIBU. ont wtth'rrAi tiUU And Uvtm Acmiaa. Id iot down Peterson Real Estate 504 S BROADWAY MY 3-1681 CASH POR USED Tt. PORNI-I turt k Mae FE 5-S002 1 1400 F LOOO FORD TRACTOR. 477 cu. In motor Row alum, sleeper.. A.i mod Wilt trade my equity r modal plcku^ or who! | — | CASH FOR USED TVe. PURNI- r with taro k mica PE 3-0307_______• . *1050 | CUSTOM MADE EA* AMD RACE kar far raa. roam aaUque gnnd- chalr. Area after S p m 3S31 Pon-Uba Lake Road. J COLD0POT~t* rOOfTREFRIOER* llOfw $$5. dottd WAlnut kn««hole doak^gtoaa tap aod chair. 134. 33 FT-MODERN | CLOSE-OUT FABRICS, INTERIOR . I , cloee In. Call before rentals ! PE 4-3400 ■' f . bowling . cbLORED 2 BEDROOM, POLL I basement. IH baths on Oolng St. WIU take tote model station wag- f oo. land contract or smalt down i, payment- Fe 5-TOS*. Owner. ASH TOR USED TV'S, RADIOS, phonos, and tape recorders. PE : 4-4845. WORE POB" WHAT ' decorators closet acceae. PE S^IM. DININO ROOM TABLE AMD i chalrt SM. PE Ml34 »y, corner. MA 5-4000 GROW MONEY sail Atosc bv me combine . CEMEMT building — . _____ . --------- ^ tor only 39.500 Manley Leach, IS Baglay._______ MM* ,or MItc«i HUNTINO -CABIN NEAR EAL- iSH? a.I^E»,*B0W - *“k».,#r notM* EXCELLENT WEST side lore- Sown. jj“m».WISd UtodP5^,kAttra?t?J,i ORION TOWNSHIP closed breeseweyjo attachedja-| link lanced O—, „ down payment. - near commerce L“Un 1 UnS-tn Lmam ft,.... STOHTS • Best Buys Today1 j ROOMS ROOMS ROOMS!! The per-; : feef home for the large family. . J Located on the West Bide, and , [ contain# I rooms and 1*4 baths , 6 bed room s^ beautiful, big lie tag ; | boat* corner tot *tn*qulet*r*ahftn* I tlal area.- with one car garage ! .Total price only 113,000 with res-I sonablo terms. 3 BEDltOOM JLRlCK — 1750 down Dorothy Snyder Lavender Realtor. Eat. 20 Years ... 7001 Highland Bit I MM) EM 3-J30TlMrs MU 4-Mlf^Eves. MODEL > 4581 KEMPF DRAYTON PLAINS 3 bedroom home with full b -meat, l'e baths, automatic b largo kitchen with built-in a and oven. Will build on your Daly |U_ H. R. HAGSTROM . REALTOR 4000 HIOHLAND RD. (M5ti -PONTIAC OR 4-0351 PE 4-7000 AFTER 4 $9,500 WATERFRONT HOME LAKE OAKLAND Cogy t bedroom, attic, flraplaca. paneled living room ana kitchen, auto. heat, basement. Quick possession Excellent beach. Enjoy summer cadwlnter sports. Only an soo Low down payment. Call OR 3-4515 Sale Retort Property 52 HUNTINO CABIN. | GIROUX 4r«t Md clean house trailer GENERAL REAL ESTATE ORM701; **L.*^.« T FOR rW7 RM. jftlFVRN. HAGSTROM 1 MONEY MAKER POR YOU — Drive-In Within 5 ml. of P3*— Plenty o! parking. Bid equipment all A-l. Operal IN you — i _ - of Pontiac SWAP EQUITY IN SMf. trailer. Or -10S4 4, BEDRM ART MEYER ^ For Sale Lots _____84, I ACRE WITH SMALL PEACH i jr*$ir price; j 1 northern re- . > equipment. | ir&: urb and gutter u Oak lev Park. Mlq* _ <770: By’ 3-U3L ___ ________________ ■«. ■ •' eood groat, plenty eata 43 Total price 431.000. H R. HAGSTROM— REALTOR ■ ___ . ...™„ ... t»00 HIOHLAND RO. IMStl plenty Ol apace for houst. Only FONTIAC ON 4-0354 <1750, -terms, broker. OR 3-0000 FE,4-7005 APTEH 0 I LOTI. 4150 IA.. IN CITY LIMITS. I POR SALE OR LEASE. BORDEN I Ba' Call after < p.m. no W. Fair- MUk route tn city of Blrmlngbar 1 — • mount. j approx. 430 point#. This la 5 LARGE BUILDING LOTS. JOS- | — —— ton Road ad|scant to Judah Lake f. Cleat to seod school aod shoppins > — P ---------------- center <150 my equity and tske FUEL OIL TRUCKS WITH JOB. --- —---------------------------- drawer. (3 li per wk. >3 cubic It. frost free double door. M lb. fro tier. twin crisper. 04 per weth. FIRESTONE STORE II N. Saginaw FX t-ICM -I1N1NO EDOM,—JUNIOR size! Bleached mahogany, 0 pieces. Olass top for table and buffet. MR 0-3780. DINETTE SET. FORMICA TABLE; I S chairs. Upholstered chair. Leatb-f' ar TV chest. Utility labia, chrome. Chroma $ gyMan* I chairs. AMIque ptotara. oagaleg l table. OR 3-4330. mm Stramdon Way, Pontiac. ! DAVENPORT AND CHAIR. <10: | »< gal. oil tank. 115 FE M1M DININO ROOM SUITE. BLOND. 7-pc . 3 eneata. One baby ebltferoba i Baby buggy. .Kitchen set. End ta-! bits Wood • ahutten. Bike. Mite. _UV 3-5175. ■-__ FOR SALE PLAY PEN 11 COOL-: .ay .St, after #:!# p:re. t FOR SALE OR TRADll PULL SIZE gas range. $55 or good TV. UL $169 Nat Damaied — Now |A Crate* Includes Warranty — Service — Delivery . un \’yt g0( (n, J„ fttock . - delivery y Down - II.M p tiring OR 1-0474 MM DOWN — I a (Ol side Pi '■ C 0 milt north of Pontiac City limits. High and dry location, ideal for children. Total price only $0,000 'BE Dixie Hwy at TrtatrapB FE 2-0123 — Open Brea. Prat Parking________ - uRAYTON woods ' Leras 1-bed room r,--Walton PEl^ii MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE |f Johnson ' j . <-M P m.__ ANNETT 2‘Family rancher within walking < LAKEPRONT. 11001 Large Urkac reoa 00 ft. ol troatege A. JOHNSON & SON - 1704 S. Telegraph • I DIRECTIONS: Off Union Lake Rd r *™,r a*- Patricks Church. Follov slgna. Follow a. Commerce Kd to Oaktox, Park Rd. and follov !; algna, .;__________ L ..... STEEtB REALTY (Main Office) 1310 N. Milford Rd. JW»R Highland and Milford 4 MU 4-3041 ■ war x-ggy Wall Street Voeent, Quick pc | .0 worn modern b I my equity a into. FE 4-5071 l jso FT WOODED I Water- j wjf _ _ | Watklne-Pontiac eau ford TWp. FE 3-0303. CLARKSTON ESTATES. ROLLfNO' i and wooded lots 75x150. Vk mlU , _L from new Cnrytlor Highway. Shopping, churches-— grade end -high school within 3 blocks. Use i Of lane lake. 11405 <15 da.. $15 aaa. PE 4-MM. U S-Wl, FOR SALE LOT AND 3 BEDROOM I ,h»U OR 3-OM4 LOT BARGAIN j 70' x 105' Lot south - of Woodhull | Lake, west of Saahabaw. food \ 'PONTIAC REALTY I 777 Baldwta____ FE 1-4274 UCKs V O <750 d: Near Clarkston II acres rtghi on Mocktop road. Cosy IpMissa bungalow, large Paint Creek Kfl5lls ~ CREEK SITES---------: HILL SITES * "MOUNTAIN-LIKE" VOEWg tf » t ACRE LOTS HIGHLY RESTRICTED 1.000 SB; PT. MINIMUM ^ SHOWN SUN. IM ‘ DUTTON RD. AT LIVERNOI9 Area of Rochester and Mich State Unircrattv Oakland L MARTIN Hamburger and Hot Dogs On corner lot 45 a 140 near school, tn etty. Bldg. 30 X 30 c omgletoto ^«q t**^*<* ( ’J***1 Roy Artnett, Inc., Realtor.^ 30 E. Huron St' Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 _Partridge - IS THE "BIRD" TO SEE 6 COTTAGES ; All wlatertoed on US-33 near Taw* as. All era 3 bedroom, outside bar-b-quea Across from lake. Total price <30.000 on terms. Qood retirement setup. 50 Room Hotel— Bar Thriving Industrial city. Several rentals. Grossing around laeludins busy straight1 f SWAP’AT JOSEPH FURNITURE [ " TRADE TOP-SOIL OR TRACTOR worh lor deep freeae. PE 4-4331 No ■" - SELL — TRADE. ' ' ** -----------fgrarea. 743 W.- Huron _____ .. ......______________ WILL SWAP GARDEN TRACTOR FREEZERS — UPRIORT FAMOUS and equipment lor used Electric ] ,er»*®h«d- Tarrlflc Oultar. OR 3-0I3C I value, _ j extra large bedrooms and fully tiled bath up. Loads of closet space, living room with flrealace. Dtatog and son room, xttchen room gown. Hardwood floors and woodwork, plastered waUa. throughout. Huge toll baae- CRAWFORD AGENCY ! 350 W. Waltou PE 0-3308 000 E. Pitot______MY >1103 For Sal* Inarms M ACRE 0 RIM. HOT WATER heated. 13.000 dn. 15 aero wheat, ground plowed. 3 barns and alio. _ Bilk house, crib. Ph. NA 7-J3M 10 ACRE FARM. MODERN HOUSE; barn, silo and other bulMlngs. to Lapoer County. 114.000 with : buyer. The kitchen] I other -ounty, 51 _ . UL 3-5443 after 4 P. HOLMES. INC FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN ___ Pontiac - Drayton Plains - Utica 56 Trailed Lk.. Birmingham, Plymouth LOANS $25 TO $500 On yodr signature or other security. 34 months to repay. Our service to toiL friendly and helpful. Visit our office or phone FE 5-112!. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 H. Parry a*. Corner E..Plko 30 IN OAS RANGE IN EXCIL-lent condition. PE 3-MI3. 5* FRIOIDAIRE AND WASBER. *100 ea. PE 3-0323.: .-AVAILABLE OCT~T~HSifi>iS washer aod dryer. Good send.. <135 tor boat. MA 5-2150. ALMOST" NETT NECCm AU+O-matlc gig sag to beautiful wood console Makes buttonholes, designs. monograms, etc without using attachment*. Must dispose of at gfJO per manth or |14N balance of defsalted contract. PE WHAT DO YOU NEED? ; Whatever it is, you’ll ( I 137,500. consider trad DRAYTON AREA - ........... ..... , 1—almply radiates with the Bride the ■ : owners Jake to caring for It. A 1 ; perfect plaster Job with core ceU-logs, oak floors separata dining : I . roam, targe kitchen, garage, j i screened terrace, the lot and land- , I seaptRg show OH tha cosiness of I this home to all passers-by. Easy-! £ William Miller »• I Realtor FE 2-0263 1 •10 Wtit Huron sirttt ______Ojti l to t "CLARK /*•!* CENT INTEREST MORT-GAOE Only^M.700 with $1,500 OPEN DAILY J OpM7 day# a week. 3 and 3 ! bedroom homes ta sunset Park, i Age no handicap, on our lots -tor 47,Mg, 04M gowu Sid *74 per month. On your tot. |TM0 j _ aiM|have mor* success in find- wf"* J-----!L I The Pontiac Lake. atUcbeo iv» car garage. ai»o an* ■closed summer poreb. Lot 100 a 100 with lots of shade. BaceUent • tarter home, on reasonable idroom a dining in8 W abooaa > Press Want ^\ds. sjusy^toxV.. Interest. Rear trail 5-room, mode* i-i furnace, lot 53X110 Uogea. DIRECTIONS: Off Union Lake Rd. 5®*r St. Potrlak'a church — follow alga*. Also, la tn Htghli nuw i STEELE REALTY (Main Office) SECTION V h.H I U4* "E^."**** Road Between 8.KKnif^ ; KM l-lSP1"* Z* MUtSS 4-3043 Pike receatly decqrat-1 ith'aa?kUcheii. 54 50* *500.' U0 IDEAL hopio tor the aeolyweda | WILLIAMS! "WSSi MB ***» Elivmmomj To Place a [ atsM, n MR . a . v Ad i 1 awning1 aaTfroatmonh*M.560*I70 v *>;. ' |p . a ■ w j dtt, 1 DIAL FE 2-8181 LT'^"'?!i2LL"”" Srightoffi tog? pJBKU'g! . ■ i 450 with Ol.kM down, l jjj NORTH SAQIRkw; THREE ■WO BEDROOM POR , Three J*9*1*}* entranoa* and BEDRM Will accept your^” ^FriC loSa wW.nu40 down {hi. laoom'S^ rVh‘hSm°en i - . , _L Has bsaeasent, recreation room 1 _**D BATtH EACH. Mi heat electric kitchen, wall- I Rd- vicinity, priced to to-wall carpetfng. garage, other ««• down. Broker alee features«What have vnu t« ! OR XSM. RETIRE y FLORIDA Tn: newly decorated00*! I 414.100. 16.000 down . PE 3-7444 l (CLARK REAL ESTATE IMS W. Raroa Open t .la I year old 1-bedroom home: school house suitable tor remoa-1 'on,b|tn*°O oSmt 1 titohles. Ren- j 15 ACRE* With approximately ISM ft. lake frontage, house, horn and ! large concrete storage building. . Pared road. This la tdenl for sub. dividing. Sea H now. * acres ’with t-bedroom farm home. Win consider smaller home 25314~. Lapeer Ed. PE HR1 LAPEER. SMALL FARM. M TO 30 eerss, stream, completely remodeled, 3 bedrooms, both larg* kitchen, largo living room. By * ,tth SrI> BtMja—e Property 57 PARKINO - --------- ORCHARD Lake Road, Phone evenings. PE 2-2144. \ " ■* L COMMERCIAL CORNER: LOCATE ed an Orchard Lake Avenue, 1(0' 1 ' • ’**' ■*— “““toiL lOt iceneht I _____ ___ —.r Ideal officers, clinic or home. Piets- | ty of room to Jront tor modern I typo store. Pries Just reduced to 422.5M. ■», f Warren Stout, Realtor « 77 R. Sagtaaw PE A-4115 Open U1 S:M p m. J LOANS <50 TO >500 — *25 TO 1500 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE PE 0-0421 FRIENDLY. SERVICE " LOANS 525 To' 1500 BAXTER ft LI VINOS TONE 4 W. Lawrence St. PE 4-1430 WHEN Y(5U NEED 125 TO $500 Usatf 7 ATTENTION!! : _ -'V, 415.(5 and up. wash-dryer*. ranges and retrtoer-■wi'i J piece sectional. Mend dinette sot. bOdfWOM suites, complete. PE 5-0002, Globs Furniture. JSfflSSi i t win « glad to help you. STATE finance CO. 2M Ponttoc'State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 Borrow with Confidence GET $25 TO $500 , Household Finance Corporation ol Ponttoc —— “ fm 4-0035 trsali* un twit Signature Up to 34 Moatha to Ralbay PH. FE 2-9206 OAKLAND A BEAUTIFUL BUY. 2-Piece Living (Un. Salta ONLY $99.50 Cbotoo of 7 Color* 0 Down; *5 Monthly. AUTOMATIC MAYTAO WASHER tad diyor, late madal. Biwnra *2 per wk., ctoatote range, delux* model. WIU trade. Schick's. Visit bargain*- , We buy. sen ar trad*, com* oat and took greang, 2 aero* of fra* parking. Phone FE 5-5241. CaeEN MOB. BAT, 5 TO < - uns nftnui, aavate y-. condjtlon. 2* E. Longfellow. mmoB iu#r1ukrator. qood > oMdStaaTiL-______ TT SETS FROM 7t up. TV aatenaaa. (MS. WALTON TV REFRIGERATOR 425. DRYER 540. I m0*0 »«t*on*1 .Entto store 545. OH water heater too. 21 to. TT JM. Washer «5. das ator,« <35. Y Harrla. PE M7io SETTLE Alt ESTATE AT ONCE; Several valuable pieces furniture, houeehojd oooda, dishes, ate. la-eludtog one bairn carved Ctraaa-aian walnut grand piano. 121 Otta-wa Dr. SINOER SEWING MACHINE. ZICL mg for decoratlra stitching and fine finish aewinc Mahogany cabinet Included. (If balance, ar 17 pe^month. Universal On. FE •^^‘(^jtPLfc #f~53l. fwiN bed. sprlng. jkgpiam,\n<. Pair of twin maltreatec. (Ike aew Marie deck cheat. Mice. PE TOP QUALglT~IJORT~5R AT COT-hmuearpfttag. u x 15 $50 HA TRADE OAS RANOE FOR ELEC-*/!!• r*M* -l> -*- Mania Rtoctri# CO., KM W. Huron. TAKE OVER BALANCE ^RLtJTiS ^ M's Ra-ron. FE USED Tti. iuii ard x/FTc&C- ored TV, RCA. JM, g-^ -dii and Appl.„ 423 W. I 4-113J. Used Trade-In Dept, fe irn Heights 0 PECK lontoko™ ■ -f.klV” nec-iBing cm on Auburn. Refrigerator ltt* now. Moving tsnl eoat. 51,500. 7 moo. call Win. ogprariiitad.! ■* “’* Ovl«- — sa-dor .__ . PBIVM THOMAS ECOiioMY “ * Sagtaaw / Px 3-llit -f *a*» HwwiliM Of* ifc Miscellaneous « V 'JrtKGER’W ASHER THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUKSDAY, OCTOBER 4 19(H) TWENTY-FIVE KSSSSSna 5 day sale, WYMAN’S SKO 171A DE-IN Dl MEfl J Fc. U». RB MIU Method* toll.print* » Pc Wood Dinette* . ras . HIPI, TYwi lUdiot 66 ' ALCOA ALUMINUM COMBINATION DOORS ' GUARANTEED 1 FULL INCH THfCK Aluminum cent Mon Regula(ly priced 13PM You MV Mb. BALE! TAX INCLUDED $23.95 fWettWElPI W. Walton. MW. OlM Bun, t to >. 1 oood wlSEtion or'uiisrTv ; ppta. Priced for quick fair Every oap • bargain! GRINNELL’S - «T 8. Saginaw rx 3-711*i ....... -........1 PHONE ORDERS - ACCEPTED ON IMTUiUTION ORDERS ONLY OR 64*88 attar >. ■AMD INBTRPMgl?T lEPAtR,~lT factory expert CALB1 MUSIC CO, I H. gAOlflAW ,- FB Mfel BEAUTIFUL U 8 ED CONOVER grand Piano Lypp and Healy Onad^Ptaa*. ] practice piano>. “tag Ptmau etuSeafcu* Morris *f2fr «; J* i. Talerrapb Atraaa Iron .. Tel-Huftm. FE 34587. POR SALE BALDWIN SPINET ssrv%3&m °* OUI.BRANSEN TRANSISTOR OR «an (1. MO OR 3-1011 _ HARMONY OUITAR LIKE' NEW' PE' 24084. KIMBAL BABY GRAND PIANO and bench, beautiful walnut color too cam alWays pmb alan6b' af bit ModPL —— 1 ed tetovlitoai. OBEL TV Modernization FEDERAL Water Softeners 66A iau For Me Miscellaneous 67 forced dr furnace and control* on. 1 row 100,000 o.t.0. •*• ,0100. Aae Heating i 'OP. 1TS0 N. 1 1 FLOOR RAPE. 2 WALL SAFES Demonatratore. Lea* than _o*t i. BKbWr—. i 1 ’ • , . . TTPllNRflfiMBB. AMD IE Plenty ol Free Parking On Our Lot INSULATION All type*. Call — M. A. BENSON Ponttap. H t-it»l n Pluoretcent 201 Orchard Lk. ati- .ll. -w .-as.- . £avat6ium. complete. oM.n *4Mr value. lioB; dap bathtub*, tol- t INCH SOIL PIPE. S FT. 03 00 *•*•. ebower (tall* Irregular*. Sump Pump* ...... 020 0J Tprrlfle value*. Michigan Pluore*- SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY . (J*. 101 Orchard Lake Ave — 1. m ». Saginaw PE MioBi lovelV ainoer sewing ma 0 IMCE BOIL PIPE |3f*. COP- eW“*. hlond modern cabinet Beer* per nipe at gpaelal prlaae, Pint I *»*r pint. etc Take on payment Quality 17 x 21. double alnk* 0( M par month or rail balance 8*4 SB. O A. Thompson, 7009 im only Hi. Unlvored Co. PE o-oooo. fM____________j_______________ let us but it or bell IT POR 1 ROOM CIRCULATOR OIL BURN. I TOR. OA MW._________________ DWd 1 k***00 M» LIKE MEU - MODERN HIDE-A*- OE electric Mode. Pith PE 8-7417. . ROOM OIL HEATER. OOOD condition. cheap. PE 0-44P2, 12' LADDER, it: WOnCLluR-™w, 04; yard fence, furnace duct. Venetian blind*, iled*. ]«" bike. Qt. Mlae. pjrMPPt MjaAL. ELEC HEATER, »«ll.v 30-oal. auto, aae- beater “ Chi. -*■*- —J'n***---- ** i fitting*. -——- . -f»/e and7 stand and feucete 010.09. CUk and carry. SATE PLUMBING W S. Saginaw PE ms binding*. PE 9-7027. MEDICINE CABINETS. LOE 20-: mirror, (lightly marred 01.00. lge. selection of cublnet* with or without lights, sttdlac doors. Terrific hart, v---------- — aquarium 20 ci Orchard Lk. Mowers, Tractor Sale Wheel Horse pad Rotowa tractor* Price reduced onfall walking an A LAMOI TdJOCTIOH. 1 USED MAPLE 0-7070 •hotguna and rifles. Ban's Loan!MODEL A riffle* a wm i.nli I rT—fr. r____ ------------------ tillers, della. go-carte. Loti of good used a ere and tractor*. Priced to Buy aaow removal unite abw. EVANS EQUIPMENT (007 Dixie Hwy. APT. BOB REPRIO. ROYAL' est (Mar. 4040 Rochestei typewriter. FE 2-8911. | Leonard. ' NEW AND USED FURNACES' RBA~ ANCHOR FENCES ...____*__., sonable. Free estimate* mi u*,»i- raE* ^!MvlTOHA rPLVtii »(>»■>« J»oha Heating pi b-SRII. - i WttmvMiijarStiinarat Sar t. —.----- —..Cm----—V used BASEBOARD RADIATION _____________________Weot. _ _I Thompson, 7008 M)g Weet! Blacktop Driveway on. kuRMER kenWore^i pot ^ T.r?^A™55um° pu,______________ ga* furnace*, not water R Mona bqller. Automatic, water heater. Hardware aloe supplies.--k R m— ~ad fttunge. Lowe Super Ear--------- as BARGAINS 4x0V* In. V-grooved mal 1x12 sheeting OH par m Penelyte counter topping. 4te 1 WOLVERINE LUMBER 120 B. Paddock PE 2-0704 CONVERSION BURNER AND i Royal dak, Lincoln CIRCLE FLUORESCENT LIGHTS' newest U||Bi lor. kitchen*^ 0MJS _____13. CASH WAY STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS ‘xSxVk Pegboard ....... 01.20 4ktxVb Pasboard ......... M M 4xtxS Plyicore ......... to.M lsxtt 32-ft Rook Lath | till Plasterboard . 014.00. Romas i >r ft. Heater cable, n*. u. aompeon, 7000 MOP West RUBBER MATS ARTHUR’S Sate Musical Ooodt 71 WieeaiRl Music Center BAZAAR AREA MIRACLB MILE PlsnoTur*-- “--------1- proan Repati phone PEdarat 2-aaoe LESTER BETSY ROSS SPINET Mahogmyr. EteaUaot condition. ottacbment for plan Wood, Coal and Fuel 77| DAY SHIFT FIREPLACE 70000, DELIVERED . y veu^bauL Jim Buraa. vino. f ** riREPLAcE! _ ruRNACir A N n kindling wood. PI 4-M80 or OL »dl07. BUS WOOD OR .FIREPLACE MM 3 Cord, ns del. Alberta Lumber Mills rr. Alt Seasoned wood fireplace. ■’ “ ‘ 779 ScOU Bv^Fr>i»k Adsis , Boats A Accessories 971 Foreign and tft Core 1091 Ft Sorts Co^ Md * ! INBOARD NYDROPLAfilO RAOINO '07 OORVBlf ITS ENOINE CALL 94 CHEVROLET BXL-AIR. BSAU-A ! JgJ VJh 4 ctUuder CraMay Em _ _PE M>4» tsTT? tST ^ - OPEN __________*&m'm V0MS- ,... ■ . TREE FOR" TM'CUffUtO _______PE 4MI Saai SudoaO term* ) ikliuul Marine Exch. "Outboard BpeatalliU" 171 S Saclnaw Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78 A-l TREES. SPRUCE. PINE. FIR. I ArbovlUv. JunipTr. Yeti iai m*. MIIPI88 Oatk. A ah. Linden, •1961 IMPORTS 8loe& rokd. one and fa siiw east Of Duck Lake Rd. and Wig. am M. On# mil* touUi ol Cbm- Jaguar. v Morris • 'o AlfaUonVco Lancia come in-.p6r a TtON. THURS I0TM to nuretry - although the slan j etoeed Daily I to a. | BEAUTIFUL NURSERY GROWN veriwovw. auiUaalad. sheared prayed Stnta uupected U»ed piano ................. Uaad piano . ....... | Small Orand plane. Uka mew. Id jr ea” You*^***12 ‘S" N**of ‘poollac on US-M. Cedar Lane Evergreen . gum, 0070 Dixie Hwy. (US-ld), CtorfceOon MA VI022 1 Hardy mums, osc~ perennials Garden*. 070 E Walton Blvd., SPECIALS NOW LAKESIDE NURSERY 1044 EUXARETIf LK RD.. __Open Eve* and Sun . FI 4-3812_ l real For Sale Pets VMS a T 2 YEAR OLD MALE POODLE, _ AppRance* GALLAGHERS Huron H_______ PIANO TUNINO—(SSCiUFSCHMIDT PE V^i7 ;_________________________________ Sate Farm Equipment .EM Vdil'B ' ....I 8 ARC DACHSHUNDS *T STUD. I ' tTnmn~AnunTWhidn~ wi nra~inS Puppies, jamoi e. PE V253B. FERGUSON TRACTOR. 1092. S FT. °£to. raVlOW. ° * AKC REGISTERED B*E A OTs fbhU"lr,r..5L,i!i^;*.^iL.uC.^,' a^’ TUNING AND REF AIRING. 14 ^E*3-007|*ift*r<*i Ch*BiPU“ ,*®Ck I . MA 8 3824 _' l«,r|actory*trainadk nnfT AXC REO. DACHSHUNFFuPPIES I ^adal of ^UplayT UWvS°Mach7n- ____1 - jBftJBJo.................. e”r<>?tonvi}R!*,hA*vS2o1*,,“n I AEC RMlOTEIUBp MAGLE^PUP- | John' D EE RE~JS_ TRACER” 018. 'ft 2-1737! ‘ ___ BOSTON- terrier' BOLL ~DOO* CHSVT RAKSTbP. 'fiMEON- HCjUSE — IJealey Sprit* Austin >IG PEMONSTRA- Houghten ' & Son Tour Friendly otSemaMto Dealer “ “ — j>t, i-tMi SHARE EXP.' TO' S-l »** Ret. Sun. FE BHARB THB RIDE WANTED RID- I an to take tutne driving from I ■. Cemmeftie Rd. and Pun-1 ,!•« Trau to dswnopwn Detroit ^ r»*:, K5«V,-ffl “iKONT BUYJIIIS CAR Wanted U**d Car. "*10* ‘90 ENGLISH'FORD. BLACK 0071 i FE 9-7100. . corvette iiorikisi-YiiTcrfRni 110 aujpn# 1 apaed Iga. eond itEtRa~A cnTiF“?AT and m.p.a., Ilka r— &M M MA 41088 Phone Me MANNT OTERO PB I VS04 or FS l-rnt Sava uma, aoa#l chock ^e.ri uSaded °for °d‘«Sf 2JE2T hSKKsSSOT 41 oo per weak, isal O*0lvarT. See or phone Manny at Eddie Steele’s ■aUa trehemieeian, radio sad haator. white wan tlrya. I owner. Clarkston Motor Sales CHRYBl.ER.PLYMOUTH DEALER Tweens . MA S414I ---------——l-MA 8-0141 7,,‘avjftwjssitte; ■1MI, Minn Turner fard. pris'essftf^rif while ARE TOO II E T IR B L. „ •;««»!• lOieanCarsAre MAIL$rDIPark '(Under ■ How Management i_ FE 2 0019. A MUST IN ORDER TO OPERATE A BUSINESS' •QUALITY MOTORS • ORCHARD LAKE PE V7*4l Sale Office Equipment 72 Male. PE 4 BOSTON STVdTCH. STOCK. CURT- 88- ADDINO MACHINES FROM Oil CASH REGISTERS. FROM I FREE PUPPIES. 107 W. Ropkinc_____ HOME POR ‘ TTn' KITtENB. 287 137 S. SAOINAW . __ ADOINO MACHINE FOR SALE! , " __________ _ _ FE V11M. AfUr l jr m___MALE FART- TERRIER HOUSE- POR VERSATILE. COLORFUL OF- J,rek^(*' — IRISH SET mi PUPS. CHAMPION typewriter , hue, call Ml 0-1242 After 0 week-/TYPEWRITER , dty, anytime weekend*. PE R^S WHffl/MICE. ALL PET Shop. 90 Williams, FE 0-8413 _ PART COCKERS. BLACK "TAILS eltpad, wormed. FE 9-8111, no . Cat*. FE ary auth< in Oakland Macomb County hit* new or factory rebuilt fsa jfiiMuicitt__ 982 W. Huron. Fontlai J*M register Reg- FE 2-0288, 22 S. Oret ' Clemane, HOward V4213_________ NEW * USED OFFICE MACHINES* Typewriters, 014.89 up; adding machine*. 002.50 up; comptometer*. -074.15 up; duplicator*, on so up; photocopy machine*. 020.09 __up;. dictating machine*. 0190.90 up. 'General Printing A Office Supply. 17 Weat Lawrence St., Pontiac, fb »*>. BVBRY WBD 1000 nVtr Hwy, Clarkiion. ; ♦-7101. ________. ALGER BROWN EST ATS AU r PARKHURST LAKE* ' Clean '™A{*JBj}vl“ou,IT Prtveie'lake/tornarfo belter. AVERILL*S ,14 Dannleon I Located hall 'way between brioii I I and Oxford on M-24. MY 3-*ah I - BHBKjSfTOP DOLLAR I PE 2.gg7g ' ‘— PONTIAC MOBILE" ifoME j way beta —_______, > M-14 MY 2-4011 | AUBURN HEIGHTS. MOBILE > : {gffe »w i- 00 CORViCT, NEW TO> AND NEW Urea. II,on - miles. Rammler-Dalla*. Roeheetar. A*k for otto. 40^DODbl'ifAtirSirT'owcir Lloyd Mtri. 231 Seg . FE 2-plll new tree siUca, 310 miles, v dr., eadan, waw, direottonal aim nale heater, windshield washer*. M^.r ".-" MG SPORT* CAft SPLENDID eond., |1.2n. ktl 1-0071. Brea. _ VOLKSWAGEN. I HO GOOD CON . IMP Dixie Ho) PARK ARB YOU QBTT1NO Me silt II ila. 10 clscY* Nice d 1 aulta. 7 piece Jon I bedroqm autte Ch* Auto AcccBBorica JA THE MOST POR TOUR CAR? . Marshall kxec . Bud Hick-Auctioneer. OA I-21M Aa-by J. A. Arnold. OA 2-2220 I FARM. CONTRACTORS EQUIP- j k for I ______ _ For Sal* Tires L8372 J j M| . REO. OERMAN*SHEPPARD PUPS ! ■nmeSn—irnwvw.----T-.fi-owner. Stan Perkins, Auctioneer - " SQUIRREL MONKEYS 010.M n. u«* a.i4ae Bw.rt. rr..k 1503 8. POODLES. $10 DOWN [ orion auction opbn rof.'cag~. looe1 FE 0-3113 HUNT'S. EAST TERMS *lgnment_dally ._MY^2-152I._ nami alkino ^AlN.parakeet, j. gale House Trailers 891 ffi! ____ --,--- --.............| 4-490 or PE 4-OtW, __ I PT. HOUSXTRA1LIR, NSW 0 1 NSW TRIAD TIRES. 170 x ply tlm. goto. MA 4-4604. plu* tax and raeapahle tli i Ft. ALUMINUMfT R A VI L j .^O^JjRM. — WE BUY — TRADE DOWN - - TRACE UP -- For Sale Car* HWVHPHINIpbav! Uth Rita Auto.* Mr, Ball . PB 0-4031 log Boat Blvd' at Auburn BUICX IMS CONVERTIBLE. OFF •eeaon prise, 0401. full 12 month* STATE TIRE SALES' 8aglnew_St _____FB 4-4007 750x14 BLACK TIRES. ALL LLOYD FISCHER BUICK, INC. MM 8 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM ■ jp M*i I. OR 1-0714., n^ooifiv(x»r 4 WAQON, d CTL. ___-FE J-7842. I .. ■90 CHEVROLET** Imp *.vrt »n»i kardenburo motor sales Corner Owe and Pike rE V72M Open Evas 'til _____ »• CHEVROLET 4-DOOR HAND tomeu red, no rust OdOSTTE BEL AIR SPORT ' COUPE. V4 pawerillde. silver • white Anleh Me. sporty rad •rlmbniy |12M nArtW CHEV HOLET CO . IBM 8 WOODWARD . AVE, BIRMINGHAM. MI_4-271S. 18 CHEVROLET VDOOR. 0-CYL^ ladtr. Beautiful ear. Absolutely no money down. 06,20 waOkly. Call Mr. Murphy; Credit Mgr. FI 3-28n, Eddie staele; Pdrd 9* CHEVROLET V'd'R* RATkOtOP* ’58 CORVETTE Powerful 230 boriepower engln* wilt carry you over the hlihwey With the ■moothneae and pr-■ * .®"e wstoh. Stralo •tick tranemleelon. ja. . _ _____wiSa^rnBua SOFT TOP S muet on vour Wag (let. SEE IT NOtri Beam tnca silver and Orey tliftona • MOTOR SALES IS2_S. Saginaw_FB 3-0131 bBPBNDABLE USED CARS . RARDENBURQ MOTOR SALES DVNA^DW. AMO- Dogs Trained, Boarded 80;1 10 FOOT MAR-KINO, '00. SELF T3 - **-*-*-“* •••" — uSbo i— r. Bleep ----- it __ | _ - -JM _JI#rol4 Turner Ford -T3** ! BUICK ion INVICtAr 4-DOOR, dark blue, full power, radio! 4fc. hi. th: ■' excellen ly priced, mar - condition. ARTHUR’S, __________l-FE 24268.____ ^ROOF. LEAKS? tlmete. Sava vleor tot to bn U the coat. 1 SNACK BAR, RADIO *8 AND MIS. eellaneou*. oa 8-2845 ' SCHOOL DESKS A CHAIR DESKS Collector* item, or tor playroom. BW VllB. or 1?E 0400T . Special Doug, fir 2x44. olo each. Cash MT1 carry. We oarry all Unde of bujldlng i C t e ei j WW, -Am-nimr, -• ----------- —ROUSBTRAILER AL Sale Sporting Goods 74 S contained, like new. u_________ ' | 0400. 0t7_lflUtop prlvc. EM 3-2220 I OAUOE• WINCHESTER HAM- ) BRIITA VY PUPS, McNARY'S merlese pump. 30 Remington i Tallwogger Kennels, boarding. . pump. Dear rifle like new FE training, trimming. Brittany and INTO MOBIL HOME. 9-8262, I ’ Puwd-a etug service, OL 14504.' “* ^^E.nd“S.7T..’e 1Hunting Doi. 81 Office, 4 Paltenon. V1219 i Economy CaV* ! AN MUCH AS |94 POlTdUMfc AND I cheap care. PB 2-2000 day* or i, OL 1-llM, __IL BOMB. 0 sacrifice. RA 0-4 Mel MO i n ^ | , RIO. ENGLISH POINTER PUPS BULMAN HARDWARE I _ Mate and female MT 2-5704. Browning Gun* AKC REGISTERED BRliANNET 7545 ELIZABETH^ LK FE 54771 | Spaniel* OR 3-0022._ OPEN DAILY TIL 0: IUN REPAIR A SCOPE MOUNT-lng. Shot guns and rifle*, 115 up. Ouna. buy or trade. Burr-Shall. 375 8. Telegraph. PE 24708. OUIW - *bY, SELL TRADf! I SALE. REASON- , BRITTANY ,... . Ate. FE 4-om. BBAOLBB AMI MALB GERMAN j “—------------------ AUTUMN CLEARANCE $200 DOWN 'it Royeraft, jc, 013*5. '52 Travclmaater, 45', 11400 '02 Alma. OF, SIMS '94 Royal. 21‘. 013018 4 Prairie Schooner. 37 , 01005 '63 Richardson, 30‘. 01005 Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes Sales Sale Truck Tires 92A WychalS. wt^FE8*^*^_____ LADIES' 14 LB. BOWLINO BALL ASH hoa! Mini* 18 1b. bawlfia hall ---■ ■— **-“ “ * • With ENGLISH SETTER. FEMALE. 4 I R " y* a wm | UOHTWEIOlir raller r III*. I ANDY CSIKI OARAOC. DOMES. | Baldwin. CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE | ear. Crttndare rebored. Zuck M* I grime Shop. 33 Hood. Phone FE j a APETY BFKCIAl -----int. Fyoii. I. Brakes reUnad. I or' mo. Eddie ste 2706 Orchard Lake CASH FOR YOUR CAR Poritiac Auto Brokers 1280 N. PERRY AT MADISON FE 4-9100 : HIGH 0 FOR I AT* MODEL Haworth A Beettte MA 0-140(1 FISCHER BUICK, INC. 808 S. WOODWARD BIRMINOHAM MI vnoo__________JO 44020 Just Make Payments ROCHESTER OTENjsVESJrtL Q OL >4721 •50 CHEVROLET - - automatic trana.. radio and tor. 2-door no money dawn. ONLY $2350 Crissman [: Jack Cole, Inc, $'■ .... w. MApy* AT PONT. TtiLML WALLED LAKE |8aM . FRONT END tor TOP DOLLAR for clean u ear*. Witt Map trade up hr do DIXIE USED CARA 4270 Dixie, Drayton Plalne “AERAr *“ d hardtop. *harp. Q47t. OR 3-8409. 1 NO CASH NEEDED I 1004 Bulek, l doar hardtop beau Just Make Payments 84 CHEV.. 2 DR. 0200 Pay ante on me. Duo Nov. lMi Rita Auto , Mr. BaU. FE 0-403* 100 Bait Blvd: at Auburn. 4 CHRTOLEn wmnfifblOliND HEATER. BMatlaM conditio**I Nn ATTENTION II FE S14IQ. I exclS 3*70 Airport Road. OR V7703. SEWER PIPE Aim FITTINOS' ISJKiS^uS^ ..........—Warner , _ ____ . . ______ Safe* 4o*6 W. Huron --UKC REG. BLACK AND TAM. II Join one of Wally Byae r,„ . - llr- I mo old 070 OR 34M lng okravsna.l __ SPORTSMAN S REOlSTiCREb GERMAN SHORT CENTURA 24 FT. EXCELLENT 1 ARTF.RS I Umlr^ pointer. Beit; altorT^fTjaonAtoAVM^^^^^^J Auto Service rum. not lull *ttoe. Pay only •22 month. Pint payment -I-~ November 7th. Bins Mr. FE 4-1000. Lucky Auto Sal* 93! 97 ROADMA8TER BUICK. FtfO! power- Perfect running eond. OlMOar — ■ -••“ 1 34472“ A T steam CLEANINO, AUTOS,,! -------- - , TKSU 2C ORANOXBURO PIPE A FITTINOS J M TRANtrrf own pin Corrugated Steel Culvert Pipe Iron loll Pipe a PUttua anhole Coven, Orate* and Stops BAYLOCK - . Coal h Building suppiy co. 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-7101 SPECIALS! Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY FIELD 1 PIPE ... . 02.35 as. no EACH ......... . STEEL ' Bargain* In New 141 Coaler Lai mmm FREE ESTOUTES. FHA TERMS „ --------------— i BROWN WESTERN SADDLE WITH Bait, Minnows, Etc. 7Sl topadtra* and martingale. |70. , Black pleasure saddle and bridle. CRICKETS, 28 FOR 35c; CRAWL- g0: *nd brW,*> er*. 25 for Ode; Leal worm*. 48 QOO MA 04708 Evedng* lor 5*c; Red worms, 75-for -50cPONIES FOR SALE. MARES. T-out Creek Ranch, M24 at | etalllon and a gelding. Phone EM qreenghleld. . ____ | 3-3747- • ■ ___. REGISTERED HOLSTEIN HEiK Tar, 2 years aid. Due October 10. TB and bang* tasted. 5260. MY -HEADQt JNS At ARCH1 IBRT EQUIPMENT ! BUT • BILL - TRADE Hay, Grain and Feed 82 6U4 AT DOUBLE WT price 03,900 MA 5 EAT AND STRAW. I BALE OR 0.-*80 bales 775 Scott Lb. Rd. FE .44228 or OR 34188. _____ For Sale Livestock 83 Sand, Gravel and Dirt 76 Jacobson's Trailer Sates ii Rpntyln Sale Motor Scooters 94 Trot wood. „ ____________ iwrtMrifi. hi fl-7630. p- h?”hJi‘Xand VvirteaSf lnVuiteS: i For Sale Motorcycles 95 Complete hook-up. Several used - ^ models. Reserve your trailer tor '90 HARLEY DAVIDSON, ** Florida vacatlon* 9585 William* I Fourth St. ' '' , 3 sail K5“d Or»r*®“™fa4- OR IfHARLEY MOTORCYCLE. CALL MY 3-1347. ' WERB PATINO TOP $$$ DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CAM Glciip’s Motor Sales- W. Huron Bt. _ FE-4-7371 ■] l,loyd"Mtr* 233 TOP DOU^AR __ •89 "BUICK HARDTOP ' Lloyd Mtr*., 232 Sag . FE 24131 "* ItlttlK AFEClAL., 2-DOOR Ered^^anaoer R King Auto Sale*_111 a Saginaw IMS OORVAIR TOO 8KRIML POW or «Ude! madUi. haaUr rgyAra T7 CORNET,** FUEL INJECTION. . very good condition. UL 2-3102. '•ao^coMaiT WAboJi. iioTSir'' ■ Lloyd Mtn . 232 Sag. PE 24J3I CAR PAYMENTS TOO BuSbEN-* i|t carl wanted *HTjr. van LET US SELL YOUR TRAVEL trailer er Mobil* bom* for you. We have several bum*^waiting ft.r HO*l£y nfi*RINE A COACH SALES, lf*“ - ME' 4-8711. Oxford Trailer Sales 48 unlta to pick ! Used Auto Parti 102 1JS HTNO—AND ' PINTONT TOBir ctian, for '80 Pontiac, 848. FE EM 34238 WTrr; *•1957 BUICKS , Holly. COME IN AND SEC THE NEW 1961 HARLEY DAVIPSON ILL NEW MODELS A DESIONSi r\~ .... ! ’82 PONTIAC PARTS ■ . ■ "EM 3-7420_______ '55 PONTIAC AND '52 CHEVlE I lb* Port*. PE 5-1131_or PE 24282. 1188a CHR'r 0 MTR!7 1853 PON-' •<-« 8 mlru 1048 1837 Padkard i, 'Ford rebuilt PE J-MM. 4-WHEEL their car thee* Immaci MASTERS emphasise 1 lire*. These radiant beauties I available la both ireaif and whl and 2-ton* blue. Either of the ""RKp HOT" buy* a |-------------- i hapmyft Gami • tooth comb" y**il2oI *!5DNrSCUSED CARS n M24 Lake Orton .ETHm 100 CAR SALE M^dJi^ff'.ter../tf__ 7 A '13 Cadinsea. Tull power. Ford* '9e-'Sd-'64-'53, cheap —H ,nd '90 Pontiac, a Packards '1S-'M .. > Ford and Chevrolet ... 0209 •03 Chavtaa. pg , itralght 0109 Okie 'M-'M- OJ ItM up Pontiac* •M-'M-'O] ...... lift- up 00 Ford, eta. wp», clean “ —wn victoria, sharp hardtop, clean ‘ “V oBSrp '55 FaS’, 'gw ■oa M'ate**fo> * Rambler*, el ’ll Studs*. ( :*tm Finance ho probtom ECONOMY.CAM 22 AUBURN ’»• DedOTO. ONLY MH “ MA 9-203# Even V fARja*1^t.to8,*rbMViL jtAfm r Sale Used Trucks 103 SUBQFbdii •‘•EL »4 w. oomimm, rm. Tw, - .... ......—. Trade new. No money down. BS TOO MAM A .PAINT OR[ ietSitt'A iMt>a48 a* in I-271L * ?g^-^^^"---5^SSL5:lTAEE. ON. PAYMENTS. ON SING, or exterior See cur wail P*P*f — end—matching fabric eeleetlon. lng. ~OB 3-to!i' 214 YDS. BLACK* ■ PE 4-5*90. WELL BRED YEARLINO SUP-IRT OR PEAT. I folk ram- MA 8-318*. For Sale Poultry 8$ 100.0QD YARDS FILL Harley David ton Sale*, NServle TRIUldPrf SALES -A SERVICE * i 22* E. PIKE PE 242*0 . air brakes, fully equipped '-'ijUuifi'c/tJtuij for road. FE. 5-4467, 675 I 5')2 S/Woodward. B’h*m. OAKLAND FUEL A MINT 438 Qrclmrh Lak* Ave. FE 0418* DOUBLE SINK, COMPLETE t grade FE Mtlj. bSUCIOUS FOODS AND A PRXXZ-er too for ten money than .you art! now paying for food alone. ISO per cent guarantee. Preexe-way Wholaaate Co, 2* — tUBCTjOC* balloons. __i location. A 4448*. "XlOHT FIXTURES. “H design*, — ■*““* UrsBedi Michigan Fluorea^ MN .Thor Contract- — or comract oaiance sjs.yo. can • ',.I Credit Manager. Fq HW capi- l-A gPBClAL: t»A TONE, gg YD.! - tol Appl.j_________ * OkfS. 8780 yd. nil dirt, 30c, A FEW TOMATOES LEFT. 1 ----—----------------"■.....- *, s* American Stone 1 ------------- Sashabaw Rd., - For Sale Bicycles 96 f, TALBOTT LUMBER • I* the time- to get ready winter Basement waterproof- CtorEaton, MA •A BLACK DIRT AND FEAT. TOP —" *■" sand, clay and (raval, OR TABLX SAW. to-HORSE MOTOR! stand, light, -eld* extensions. PI Free standing toilets sis »» Double, bowl sink ....... 8 »•" to-tn. hard copper Used Trade-In Dept. Bvffti .... ..............>114 arpet samples 18 E 27 Ins.. Many to eeloct from Snob Davenport and chair ... *29 50 3 Piece bedroom set :.. $31.90 Reclining chair .. ....... 84858 “-*-^grutor ,....,.r:..... 168.58 » Mahog. TV THOMAS ECONOMY 381 a. Saginaw__ Px 34»l 3-pc Mbsato wtlb trim ... I door*. All alaaa. 84Jd. PX 4-dili! work BXNcisB Aim tacnc - ^ 6> Hr THE SALVATION ARMY ~ STORE yffil. fiSrter jlai* lined. 848. For outdoor toll r* *"**"• “ Koton. 11. off per i ---------—dSattn OUH. MOWER. SEED SPREADER. PINAFORES, 82.1* AND UP. Aprons, 81 nad -up. Extra large coverall apron, tenoral sewing and alteratlan. naan and women. ------- dancing t—' " Material* GARAGE DOORS Electric deaf apaistori. closet ^ydc--- ■— Wa give estimates aw garage i BERRY DOOR SALES %5 *2*Saturday 171 ». PaddaA f* 34883 i._K'iagTLK AUTOMATIC FLOOR marred. . Atea etoftele W and batUed *u ar shotguns and dear Orchard Lake and and black dtrL-Loadad llvered 7 dayi a week, auo nu •ana, top sou. 881 Lochaven. FE 8-jaQ. y. . - 1-1 SOD JENSEN NURSERY! now cutting straight Merton and Kentucky Hue sod, SSdl Board-man Rd. Romeo. Will deliver, MTs-SOS*. IW S4S71.____________ DeConlck't Bros Maple on# Otcharo *>aae ao;__ KATINO AND COOK1NO APPLES AL'S . BLACK DIRT. TOP SOIL. Machinery TOBCXES. TANKS, SMALL Ms. cart, welding and cutting :hmenl*. 1148.00. Baa at WM ACT. saw Elisabeth Lake Craseras and Equiptn’t 70 POLAROID LAND CAMERA. Sig Modal. OUilllalt rryinc caaa and all toerjM. OR 3-2133. NritNfeo k> camera wm casC flash and viewer, reaaonabte. fOUan CTHICTMML »1 !• bull-doting FX a4PW. _______________ BLACK DIRT. LSad! YARD AND bugjteL rj Hft 1 TOP SORT CRUSHED STONE. ---- ------ jUj j^e ------- E 34173. 8-1112 CHOICE FARM TOP SOIL OF ALL kinds. Sto yard*. £WfMtv«a2! FK 84800 alao. Iga&g. ORAVEL. SAND, BTONE, FILL dirt. Black dirt tom sail, pant. EM 342M EM 34BS. CRUSHED STONE. SAND. ORAV-al. Earl Howard, EM 34831..' L6ADINO DAILY. FILL DIRT. 3« cent* a NN and fla sand. 41 aawto n pmi Beardelaa Sand Pit. Square Lake Rd. Win *,u..r UL 3-3018, UL 34000 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUF-Ply. Sand, gravel and dirt. Cement mortaR truck In# and tile “ Rd . opposite Mlrai SS 4HDP jNSW 3200_8. "Rochester Rd! UL 34190 j Hobby Shop. 30 ’ k! * Lawr*nca?.| WE FIND OURSELVES OVER- I -Zy-JJM3:. --------------------- ^mrTto^wri^trmter*.' ST Boat( * Accessoriet 97 ouMor'ona^of ewertert plaek* i 14 PT. PLYWOOD BOAT IN GOOD ! ere deal*, you ever beard ol. For 1 condition |34 EM 3.3510._ “•“P1' IWO Apache for only is FT. FAMILY BAICnOAT'RULL ! S3SS. HOLLY MARINE AND r —Ug —-- ---------------- —I COACH BALES. 1921* HOLLY I < Ut *.*771 13*9 NORTH FILL YOUR FREEZER DAVEY’S NOW AT MARKET. HIND QUARTERS OF BEEF .59 CENTS. CUT,, WRAPPED & SHARP FROZEN, READY FOR THE FREEZER. DAVEY’S MARKET OL 2-Tilt Roeheetar, Mich. PICK THEM YOUR- . 523 Quota Road. Oxford. OA H944. ORAPE8 . I _ UL 2-518* . ORAFES, TOlfATOES Aim VEOB-tables. organically Orchard Lake atM •>ri4 PEACHES Last chance tor canning peach** UM Btokll. bring your wan back at. Thompson Garden Land 0j E ^Highland Rd., 13 mile Sale Farm Equipment 87 Ml 4-4485 speed '93 buick suPSjrTflbOSrWSlr! >d eond- * ayhifiDw. im pn majsatw f "i4 CADILLAC. KVXRYTHINO POW-•r, 3 door hardtop, now tire*. FK 44117. a M0 CADILLAC. (2 • S R I E ■!. Coupe, low mileage, or 34*59. | ADJLI.ACS (3). OLpS. ltL NEW, j 50x10'. 2 bedroom*, i --------... FT. INBOARD. SORQ- DETROITKR Oood *kl boat. Jl MPH 1% m. I beam, trailer. •S7S._rE_MS4l.__ FT. THOMPSON M HP MOTOR ellh ac ceMories ..11495. OR 3-OIM air’SLkfcn. f unrr xrhLttj inboard "I I 2!S.-ww«r«| w?"bottled g5? 1 tbhea It. Or 3-US8. ' and »et-up. Get ; 25% Off ml'top'radedn! Boats, Motors, Trailers r present mobile NEW AND USED « '— SCOTT MOTORS A SERVICE t. CRUISE-OUT BOA'f BALEf Bob Hutchinson w i walton open »-t pb »-_4«« Mobile Homes Sales 25% DISCOUNT O01_Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plain* I On »a JM» Jphnaon Motor* M*oilv^P»^ LT PM ENT I's* chevroue? ~^thtdown 253S Dixie Hwy _ OR 3-1202 Lloyd Mtr*. 232 g, Sag. PE 34131 >S FORD PICKUP NO"MONEY DN 'M »|ofUI«Xl|DiCSO^ H —T i -JgE 2413t Llovd Mtr*. 232 - —~ - .171 Dresden. Oood condition FE 4-6102 »• CHEVlE. 10 FT VAN. COU-gjeiely bum mechanically. $375. *97 “cHEVY PICKUV CALL 4P- See Us „ Pontiac * OR 3-1282 Open 7 am a Wow SALE OR"SkNT, 46' COMPLETE-ly modern traitor. Perfect eon-1 . . . union. Lat 41. Keego Harbor HARTLAND Traitor Park. Og .SHORTS MOBILE HOME* ’ ! sales ass rnnor All new Oem'-and Reamer ton..., T_ ______r trallers. complete line of part* j 3-7003. PI 54 HfeZ OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES —30* orchard Lake Ava PE 2402Q BOAT STORAGE. ____ _ .. . __ Information (all EM 3-2879 -FQR YOUR Truck Needs Sftles ft" Service HIM Clyde 1 GMC price only *805. NORTH CBXV-ROLET CO . 1000 S WOODWARD _AVE . BIRMINOHAM. Ml 4-2738. ‘94 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR, RADIO —end heater, 8 cyl., no money down. Full price 1188. Assume payments of $18 per mo. CALL MR WHITE. CREDIT MANAGER. FE $4182 King Aula, ialee_lit I. tagtoaw 1185 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-on, assume payment* el $27 per me. Call Mr O'Brian credit Mgr. at BIRMINOHAM-RAM B-I ER. 888 0. WOODWARD, MI „ S4III 1881 DODOmTbOOD IHAPlL AFT-*r I FE 84481. People s auto sale THE BEST FOR LEM •ST Butck. full power . lass 1 stick .... 8*09 i, full power :. MN Ififi E I ‘St CHEV. RAH. FAIR CONDITION aai-TMia -a.-r . | FOR SALE CHEAP. NEW ii Foot ri5Sd^2n«. Tfi&a t Tl\ Z2‘J£L1*7 aSfMv’waM "NOW" ON DISPLAY 3172 1990 CHEVROLET BI8CAYNK 4-door. V I angina, radio, hantar. Silverblue and white flnlet. Stock ratoMM. Only *1.2*8. NORTH -------- OAKLAND-AT CASS Factory Branch Bleeps FE 5-9485 Skin, express cnUset. ^htmTuAVUm. » fcAV ^ Sale Musical Goods 71 wST '*-=------- ---------------------- WosmI,CosJmmIFwcI 77 SALE1 • SALE! SALE SHOP Aim COMPARE 1887 Mainline OOT sms Mazurek, Marine Sales 1954 Star. 32 X I ... 91095 FRANCHISE OWENS DEALER 1848 Marlette. dl X I . *2118 8AOINAW AT SOUTH BLVD. iSmr^l'm IIS? " closeout to83P^tee% m\‘t s!m» SK 184TCqtteg* CrUteer. .34 x 8 1*10 l DRKYCR S OUH A SPORTS J. * . * i**® ! CENTER 1921* HOLLY RD . __ .........1191 Pontiac Chief. 40 il ... SISM HOLLY. ME 44771. ** 44138 FH 44113 HOLLY MARINE AND COACH ~aorH KING BROS. . TMtaTjioLLY rd. | wjobim^ss hf. call after chenu. OR 34388. I- l#e Nofth Lapeer Rd.. Oxford. ; CP**»G*» ..... '84 FORD UTILITY TRUCK Lloyd Mtr»„ 332 Bag., FK 2-8131 I TON MACK 13 TABU 'DUMP hex, 1M84OT8. ■4* CHEY . PICK-Uf>. OOOD TIRES and body, EM 348M. Codway Auto Insurance 104 logMMrem' Foreign and SpL Cars 105 ATTENTION MUSICIANS ■TOCr wravruten WM JUSICA SELECT 1 -------t ' PAYMENT 1 ICE 'EVER CAL |HBAI PROM llZErt* OR AL Tf--- LAYAWAY 0 EDWARDS . | ^ . . nr* — » , rwt ^ ^ ^ [ EASY '• TO DEAL -Wl'I'lI irtpiicity, I VACATION TRAILERS! Mwimri muhi aaa’.ni’™ ! NOW HUNTING 8 RIlrtK 1 Tlpalco take f MAtn » • attwhinem# Lbruril"?* i SEASONS. ALSO PLORIDA VA- 18" 8LAD WOOD.. 1 • FIREPLACE j e aeon at 2343 Fairway Drive, SSmet PE 84194. d.w8L 81*7 DM^L9fmUlf£k 1-7*78^WaNtED SMALL HOUSETRAILER I P«»» Want AJ*. X OR 3-7884 “ Call after » p m. UL B-W7T. I riding mo aka miaoalte _ _____ A few pennies will tell SETnow. f'e. howlahd. on j and needs in The Pontiac jlngham. Ml AIM. MIDGET RACER, B, CLASS. Excellent condition. Studebaker engine. extra. Tire*, wham, angina and tear*. CUB MA 84884 after M FORD T-BIRD CLEAN ■9# Ford. I, ettek . •88 Chav.. 8 attek ....... T____ »« Oaklaad n %Sti ‘ii KD0XL HARDTOP, IM OH. Lloyd Mtn., 332 B. Bad.. FE 24131 . M- M-":*# PORDB-CHBVB.3s i|f. Lloyd Mtn. >12 8. Sat. PE 14131 ford. nrr vDooR. RA&ib and heater, automatic tranimlaaton. • month* wnrraaty- Thirty month* to pay. Burry al NR 1*07 Cbm y, 2 door, haaatlfal yel-blaek ftotah. IM fan I a moathT Ptrat pay- . _ maalhl Ptrat pay. 1158 CHEVY 2-5GOR BEL-AIR, V4. auto 1 owner. KxaaptMal^ cie^' m^Man. inder stick, radio, kaatof. wMI* finish. Stock No. 1718, Only 84*8. s^dS^^ShS RAM Ml ^ if CHEVROLET IMF A LA, rtXLL CT: SHARP '98 CHIVY . OOOO OONDI- Ltoyd Mtn., as BBS. FB 34131 Si 1961 Dodge Lancer $1795 rammi.er-dAllas TOOK! BUY! SAVTCL '** Dart Ptcocer Mr. wagon 62285 'It Pantiac Cat. a4f. H top *23*6 is* Mr N-tom tu*5 »* Batch 4-door wagea 7! .77! M Jtord "M" Hardin .....Sin - gtavy Blacarac 3-door ... *13*9 *!f gniyjhapato herdtap ... tlTtt ‘17 Ford Customline^door ... 88 ;to Buick Bepc Adr H-4ap .. i IS WH^RryMrHAep .... 8 48* 'to Pontiac “170" 4-dr. ■M Pontiac *4r. sedan. _ *83 Lincoln, tnoepartatten ion ... I 179 SHELTON . POHTIAC-BU1CK.V Rochester 01/ l*6!6d rLFiJW'rA. il TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, I960 Eg£ P» «ri» Cm m '■ 'Just Make Payment* VV8T SACRIFICE IIM FORD V-■ itralght stick- OR 3-W651 Just Make Payments RU* Auto. Mr. Bril. FE M*M • TO* Kart Mi* It Auburn ■n foio t do5r auto *T«. Lloyd »n WY Sag. F1SM131 FALCON. 4 DR. I TONE. AUTO. Mu man JMUa.! Take mr payments. On a-3553. jJKRRY MIC*. Ft MM . lU* PCIRD CONVERTIBLE. HEW Eu»« «MM. credit m non! urea. no nut. uu W pnana. Tour old car « FE HIM .TM fall) Va60N. tu* DM. Lloyi Mtr« . m 8 l»| FE Hill 1 to FOrd tT rah. fordo ! •am. 114*0 flaoncrtf M month. I Mi firry. foTTfe >mm T M FORD PHAETON ~ im n mi, Phone Me 1 OWNER, CLEAN. 1957 FORD. 4 door ’ wagon.- excellent condition. . power rtoortn*. cull MI 4 00)0 or QL 1-0*7* .___________i Just Make Payment* 1 5*. FORD, HT.. MM For onlv'ttf mo..- Du* Nov. Itth; Rite Auto Mr. Bell, FE * 453*. 1 1M Knot Bird; Of Auburn I 1ME FALCON. STATION WAOO.N 1 less than too miles. EM 3-6115 or i EM 3-0*36. 105*' FORD I payments ox oia.au per monin.. MB Mr O'Brton, Credit Mgr. Alt BIRMINGHAM < RAMBLER. 006 S- WOODWARD. Ml 6-3000 •55 FORD FAIRLANE 1-DOOR VI , Ford o pane, tuod cond., *425 - IM MWjf tBer 0;M p m._ •55 FORD CONVERTIBLE WITH I RADIO arJ jSijr"-- -----1 Fie* from over too cuaruato* used aura. Payment# ao low ■ B3.lt par week. Spdt delivery. Sj?e or phone Jerry ___at Eddie Steele's 1959 THUJJbERBIRDj i dirt rtmlnatlng person wh qautlty with Ita’classle’ body 1 I DOOtL A~8 f it M E nocis I i only, 13.000 actual ■ mutpped .with * makes dr! ring ^ beater, aulora*,i< w "MiDNio^r ‘StHiRr* u For Solo Cora OLIVER Motor Sales YOUR Y,RANCMIB«!D 7 HHICK DEALER NEW CAR ' Announcement Week CELEBRATION OF THOSE FABULOUS NEW BU1CKS THAT. WILL SB ARRIVING SHORTLY OLIVER MOTOR rfALEB WILL -OXV*" - $50 WORTM OF . .GROCERIES ~br YOUR CHOICE MARMADUKE By Anderson A Looming 5 tull| King Auto Sales 8. Saginaw! T4 3 -DOOR, NEW tires, excellent eandMic Cooley Lk. Rd., Conway. *5* FORD 2 Dli NO MONEY DN | . -6.000-mb—5 mo old R and H.., tut trana White r liras and wheel discs Platinum paint. Private.! best oKer. OR 3-7843. ' ..'51 FORD CI UB COUPE ' • j OR 3-7536 After 4 p m. Larry Jerome ROCHESTER FORD DEALER OL 1-FTtl ;S5 FORD. "'V*. RAIL FOR6-0-matte, 13*5. FE 1-0480. Sixty Auto ’ Satot. . '^Stop" AXt> SEE "' THE ALLTNEW 1961 FORD Suburban j OLDSMOBILE Woodward. I VIT 4-4485 WILSON POXTIAC-CADILLAC CLEAN Birmingham Trade* 1350 N. Woodward GROCERIES ARE ON DISPLAY AT III ORCHARD LAKE AVE ALONG WITH 70 THOROUGHLY RECONDITIONED USED CARS bSfHR' r for Solo C*r* 106 [ ^ For Sale Cor*____ION 1460 PONTIAC CATALINA, EJ(- I \ IT TOHI /**\ 11 - jssfe. m jm 1 MUST GO I • ICASH Fm_YOUK CAR | v 1 ^ V1 * T5U -RamblerYVgn. After teeing tba NEW SUB CAR the enthusiasm was so great that OLIVER MOTOR SALES Immediately ..though of this gro- OUR OLD CUSTOMERS ARI BEATTIE Chevle. ■»* motor- Cheap. 3111 Eastwood, off Auburn_ 54 HUDSON. 0. 3-DOOR. CALL OL •II KASwTFOR- SALS ~ CHEAP Call FB .6-770*. . _____ 'I M LAlUt 4 bR. D*MO Loaded! V-l. automatic.. radio. | healer, waahert. undercoat, white • . Urea, HUGE DISCOUNT I .1 I RINK MOTORS 1 4455 W. Huron OR 4-0301 [Next to the. Rolladlum) I* LINCOLN PREMIERE. PVT. I OLIVER Motor Sales f * 210 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. FE 24101 OPEN EVES ; 1---^-BUICK" . RENAULT__OPEL__JEEP | ,YMOUTH I tedan. This UP OR DOWN Superior Auto Sales i 550 OAKLAND I poNTiAc.- 'so. Sport coupe. auto, trana. pa and pb.. RAH. ww. 0.%,m»es,ex«. eond. ,..45°[ 1064 PONTIAC. 'ASSUME ?AY-| ments of *0,50 nor month. Call L I Mr. O’Brian Credit Mar. at BIRMINGHAM •RAMBLER. MO S WOODWARD. -MI 0-3*00, 'SIjMliwicT WrYk RADIO AND 1 HEATER. LIKE New throughout. I Real gas saver! No money Sown ; 037 per month CALL MR WHITE { CREDIT MANAOER FE 0-0402 King Auto Bales ms. Otainaw 1959 POXflAC ;" 1 $1695 " $AyE$800 '60 Pontiac '-S.C. 'SAVE $1100 '59 Pontiac Convert. $2195 Russ Johnson Motor Sajes LAKE ORfiJjT MY 2-2871 • MY 2-2381 REAL ECONOMY!! John XtcAttliffe'. Ford' « 630 OAKLAND AVKNUE 1 FE 5-4101 t PONTtIAC DEPENDABLE transportation, CM 34M1. Coo- I0M MERCURY PARKLKNE CON-verUMo. FuU power. White with red trim. A beautiful one owner car. Mock No. 1743. Only 01,706 * NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE., B1RMINO- Jlist Make Payments M PLY , 3 DR. $006 Pay only (3* mo. Du* Rov. 15th Rite Auto.. Mr.. Bell.-PI *-453* _ 10* East Blvd. at Auburn-M PLYMOUTH STATION WON Lloyd Mtra., 233 Sag., _FK 24131 » flYmouIh Convertible ] Radio and Heater, excellent con-, MOTOR SALKS INC Your Ford .Dealer Since 1*30 , AT THX STOPtlOHT WATERFORD HAM. M1T„_, UM DIKI^HWY - OR 3-12.1 f HARP! Ml~ MBRCUR77 2Y)R* ^MKRCTRr'cONrERT^li'310 ^W ul iTh* ,t,er'>»w '55 FORD J-DOOR BEAUTIFUL] IjA ranltloD. Absolutely no money down. JS.n weekly. Call Mt 14 nor RED! 1*00, PONTIAC. 4 DOOR STAR chief Vista. Hydramatic. power brakes, power ateerlng. 3,000 mllea ■ Like new. II,Stowe Drive. 1(4* PONTIAC. NICE |1M. r—— °R_ 3-3023 10*3 PONTIAC. DELUkE SEDAN 1 owner, very clean. F» 3-7(43. _H. Riggins __________ PONTIAC. 'A* BONNEVILLE. 2 140 223 Russell Strei 1055" FORD ' HEATER. NO CASH XEEDED 1055 Mercury, g-door. hardtop, power steering and brake*, beautiful green ana .whtte finish, ho rust, 14*5 full price *27 a month. Ptrst payment due Nov. 7th. Ring Mr Bing. FE 4-100*. Lucky Auto 8alst. il) South Saginaw._ MERCURY STATION WAOON” vertlblf ' 1*57. Torq 5550 MAS-3223.______ . - 1*55 PLYMOUTH REPOSSESSION Assumt payments of ((SO per month: Call Mr. O'Brtan Credit Mgr. At B1RMINOHAM-RAMB-LER. 666 8. WOODWARD MI •ditHanaoerS SiTa-Sm7'' —P>» •4* PONTIAC doob tirMs and battery^ Mdtor OR 3-020t:_ 1*54 PONTIAC DELUXE 2-bOOS Automatic radio, neater, white tuli original blue trim. Sharp! Stock No. 171*. Only EH*. NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-273* LATELY NO MONEY DOVfN As- Mgr».t_2^[_ e payments of filM ner mo. *4 MERCURY HARDTOP. SAVE ‘ atjLtoyd Mtrs . 133 Sag . FE *-(131 'M MERCURY. OOOD TRANSPOR- —. Credit Mgr----------- _. M1_W7500 Harold Turner Ford “. '60; F6RD1>EM0 : ! ;chiap- __________________________ Patrlane 500. 1 dr.. RAH.* gyt^iMM MERCURY CUSTOM I DOOft whtte atdc Walla, aide mirror,] V4 automatic, radio, heater, white . undercoat. Only 1.400 -miles. , Ures. A nlee ear throughout, stock No T421B Only *005. NORTH KuM Sacrifice Nuks selection at CHEVROLET CO. 1000 *. WOOD--00 Fords at low overhead WARD AVE , BIRMINGHAM. Ml ■-----■— I 4-2735. — - ' ' : 1067 MERCURY CLUB-COUPE, MERjCAMATIC, RADIO * HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 134 7* per mo. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parke at MI 4-7500. Harold < '57 PLYMOUTH - 4-DOOR HARDTOP ) $695 John. McAuliffe, Ford • 030 OAKLAND AVENUK PE 5-4101 _ PLYMOUTH. 1*5* CONVERTIBLE,' JOM BOHR. I 0 S. Main.. MUford -10 FORD CUSTOM Absolutely I Pontiac Convertible 1050. All power. Clean and sharp! Blngle owner. FE *4001 or FE *-3105. ! ----1960 PONTIAC —1 2 DOOR HARDTOP* $2695 1000 PONTIAC. 4 DOOH7 STAR-chief Vista, private owner. FE _J-I20I, ■ ■ 10*0 RAMBLER AMERICAN STA tlon wagon, eicellent condition. town, or In th* country. Driving a Lark la *n amtslni experience Its maneuverability, stability and road-holding tr* superb In all kinds of wotther. In. all kinds of. conditions. Here's what mom needa to get th* kid* diet to and from school . . . end to do her shopping, -nils 1060 . Blue Lark -.-Demo" Convertible ; with radio, heater, whitewalls 6 cylinder and 3.000- miles fills the bill completely, Your wallet will love the eitra money you'll save omv with ‘"big car" convenience and comfort. Sove *701.53. Suburban- oldsmobiLe 592 S. Woodward, B’ham.* MI 4-4485 Valiant '—YEAS END SALE—j • . SAVE $$$ See It At CLARKSTOX- * -MOTOR .SALES i Main St.. Clarksten ma 5-0141 ! I "■ Out where the overhead la low kvmiu Mgr. FB 2-2! Ford -. Murphy, Credit =siac •5* FORD 3-DOOR, 114* DN Uoyd MPa., 232 Sag.,-FIE 2-0131 1054 FORD. 2 DOOR, RADIO ANDl wix'i; rJS£0L™kr. "yrQ! ^ money dl.n tl*« l of *( .65 I - E RC Bit T MONTCLAIR] ! BogoMfiy 1 tans Hum>. Blach «m4f " ■ Power ateerlng a ’ FISCHER BUICK. IXC.: Ml S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM MI 4-01M . JO 44424 | ML'ST SELL Pontiac convertible. ‘■““Bjottml mllea. ' - Eddie Steele 11050 rambler; 2-DOOR, “radio. I .J- TAYLOR'S _ _ . 57 MERCURY >DR . , ■*1045jy°y^- «3CKL- j CHRVROLET-OLDSMOBILE ' to selling ■ going to Europe Bar-‘ MAtWet «3« tahtl ! •m ford galaxie st7v "down, po S* X errv — Economy i lUtf* Mtr* . 232 R. Ilf . FC 2-2131 *61 6lds HoUdSf HT pb««r 1695 ! ST rORD CONV . Id DOWN Cadillac. Power Lloyd Motors. 231 8a« . PB 2^31 £9**VAV* Ford ■^^^■REIRACnBLK Rite Auto. Mr. Bell. FE (-453* , 10* Ear* Blvd. at Auburn _ 10*4 PONTIAC STARCHIER. RADIO and heater, Hydramattc. PB 0-1107, M2S N. Perry. '13 PONTIAC. NEW TIRES. RUNS I 4-7500. Harold Turner “ Ford. ’58 RAMBLER Your "lady Fair'’ will be delighted, with the georgous Ivory In put finish ana- spotless Interiorof Mils CUSTOM CROgg COUNTRY STATION WAGON, that I* just perfect for shopping and personal errands. Automatic Everybody " Can Afford—— A CAR AT Eddie Steele's * . Easiest Place . in .Tbwn to Buy JEROME • SALE OF 1960 MODELS HAVE US LOADED WITH ALL MAKES AND . MODELS ;.. SALE PRICED-OCT. 4 - OCT. 7 . . ALL USED CARS CARRY 30-DAY 50-50 GUARANTEE | LATE MODELS | | OLDER MODELS '59 Chevrolet STATION WAOON '55 Olds 4-DOOR HARDTOP 4-Door. Automatic traps-• and power steering/ With automatic trana-m|saIon. and has cvcry- ......$1899 .......$695 *59 Ford . ’ . SEDAN '55- Chevrolet HARDTOP with automatte trank-rr Clean throughout THIS IS CL KAN. CLEAN, REAL CLEAN THROUGHOUT! '59 Pontidc . 2-DOOR • ’ wiu» automatte trdna-mUaion. power tteerlnc. Kwer brftkti. radft) and •ter. ......$1795 '60 Ford GALAXIE 2-DOOR ' With automatic trana?* mission, radio and heat-• er. 4.00b actual mliea. '......$1925 .'57 Plymouth 4-DOOR With autombtle trans-heater. Nice throughout. ......$695 '57 Chrysler 4-DOOR HARDTOP 1 With automatic trane-teiaelopt radio, heeter, power steering and power brakes. REAL fl H A R PI ......$1195 .......$595 ! '£4 Plymouth 2-DOOR HARDTOP Beautiful ooral (Intel White walls, radio an heater.* ...... $365 '56 Olds 4-DOOR HARDTOP With automa mission, powc and power biw»vs., .,.....$725 '54 Chrysler' ' SEDAN With' automatic ^trans-power steering and now- .',.....$199 '54 Buick MT mt* radl OSS 9 CASS At ORCHARD LAKE —OPEN TIL 9 PTM. OR LATER— WEDNESDAY CLQSED AT 6 P M. FE 8-0488 24 HOUR SPECIALS! : 'BO^Ford 2-Door...$1595 FALCON. Standard tranamlaiian. radio and beater. SalM . cascade bine with white Uyee. '60 Chevrolet ......... .$2495 '60 Ford _________.$2095 OALAXIE SPORT SEDAN. V4, PordO-Matlc. power steering. radio and naator. Tu-tone beige and bran. '60 Chevrolet .\.... — .$1795 B1SCAYNE 2-DOOR g-eyltndor. standard IranaaUaalon, radio and bonier. Cascade green. '60 Chevrolet .................... .$2195 PARKWOOD 4-DOOR WAOGN. . V-». standard tranamlllslon, radio and beator. Solid India ivory. '59 Fold ..............................$1495 2-DOOR RANCH waoon «-«yUnder. tUaderd trsnemteelen. radio Md heeler Ivory end, red. '59 Chevrolet ....................... $1895 • PASSENGER KINOSWOOD WAOON. V4. MvorgUd*. power steering, radio and bento. Solid aipob green with white t£res. '59 Fdid .....'.....................,..$1895 - OALAXIE SPORT SEDAN V4 Ford-O-Matlo, radio, hcatar ‘59 Chevrolet ..........- .$1495 BEL AIR 2-DOOR, (cylinder, standard Uansmtaslaa. radio and healer, solid gothic gold with whit* MMa.-, '58 Chevrolet _________________________.$1095 BISCAYNE 2-DOOR V4. standard transmission, radio and boater. Sliver blua with white Urea. '58 Chevrolet ..........................$1295 BEL AIR SPORT COUPE. V4. Powergltde, twwer sUertng and Bower brakes. Silver blue and Ivory finish plus whlta Urea. Oh yoa. radio and heater. '58 Chevrolet. ..—..$1195 ■ YBOMAIV 4-DOOR WAOON. .f-cylinder, standard trajiamission radio and hthto. Solid harbor blue flnlab. '57 Buick .... . :.....................$895 SPECIAL SPORT COUPE, llulllo. heater and Dynaflow. Tu-tone ivory and blua with white Una. '57-Ford- -$695 -.RANCH WAOON. O-oyllnder. standard tranamlaalon. radio and neater. Tu-ton* Ivory and light green. '56 Rambler ..........$695 SUPER 4-DOOR WAOON, O^yllnder, standard tranemlaaloo. '56 Pontidc .................. —$795 SPORT COUPE. Hydramatic. I heater. Colonial MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES -^-OAKLAND AVENUF. Oakland County’s Largest Chevrolet Deafer FE 4-4547 ADVERSARY SALE! '5 Successful Years with Rambler'' -36 BEAUTIFUL RAMBLERS ON DISPLAY- No Purchase Necessary Donuts and Cider FREE! October 5 Only 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. 1958 FORI) 2-DOOR___ -•••jWr... Mr. ' O’Bri. 1 OLDS SUPER i 1*5* oi.pgunBttx u hVater, hydnamaticA°m<> -----atftdWBWBtettir l- htatei-i .hydrasaatir powei •»« FORD WITH RADIO i HEATER Beautflul 3 tone M No money down gut lull t *10 per month CALL MR WH _ 8-0402 l1 Li TO BALES 115 8 S | JOE’S CAR LOT _'PS 1*56 FORD RANtH “wAOON," RA- dkS a neatt----------- ABSOLUTELY 2-1150 Frank’s Auto Saif. . whitewalls. VI. ■ f FISCHER BUICK. IXC Mil 8. WOODWARD BIRMINOHAM Criaaman ROCHESTER' | OPEN EVES TIL -*—-- OL 2-9721 USED CARS. $80 TO $500 NO MONEY ^^GOWAUTO ! M "RAMiLEr GOOD TRANSPOR - ration. MA *-170*._ * • Ramblers Ramblers Prices iltatted. Big discount. All | models In Hock. Buy now nnd 4 “^R & C? RAMBLER I Super Market JP Parka , Put' ~ " 1*57 PLYMOUTH J MM HARDTOP. CLEAN. J^USiat •teertng and br ^ -11 Mi ma______—................ . PfMOr---. ..----------1 this one Stock No. 1747. Prtei 2-DOOR t -CYL RADIO at 1(06. NORTH CRXVROLST CL t.Jtoter Sharjp throughout! 1000 s WOODWARD AVB. BIB- E'g CAR LOT P MINOHAM Ml 4 HASKINS ! USED CAR • SPECIALS You Want j Bargains Many oth i*c flnlab. Only 12705 foud golden mtat imian ... flag* l*j* Chevrolet Impale 4-door hnrd-b* V4 engine, powerghde. power brake*, radio, boater Beautiful 111* Chevrolet BeMtr *-door hard- Sp. V-0 engine, powers- - jlnrtog. power brakex 1 Ml Buick 4-door gedas. V-* engine. Syneflow, radio and heater. Beau-yhU k4on* due fmiah AR* many low mileage demonatra-*ar» to Itbooee from. HASKJNS . tejEV-ROLET ■ar&R” wam tteertng. Radio. Heater. Hydra-mattr. Whitewall Urea. A Mack beauty! Low down payment 24 EXEC. 6c DEMO CARS BIG SAVINGS ON Radio. Heater. Like alMion wagon. IMf Chevrolet Mr. Radio. Hex Straight attefc. A nice ear. •r you *5*. 41, or ‘tl'wffi ■ dm payment J«lt a few IMf Pontiaca left — terrlfle decals! 2g to ehooae from, low down payment, 36 mo. on .1HAUPT PONTIAC CLARXSTtHt ' -N 4—WWJTV OuM 7—WIV7 TV Pontiac Output Record Varies TONIGHTS TV HIGHLIGHTS •:M (4) Trnckdown. , (2) Movie (oont.) (7) New* and Weather. (9) Popeye. (59) Genera: Chemistry. 6:15 (7) Sports. 1:16 (7) News. 6:96 (4) Weather. •:30 (2) News. (4) News. Paul Williams. <7' Boots and Saddles. (9) Quick Draw McGraw. (13) News, Sports, Weather. •:«0 (2) News Analysis. (4)Sports. 6:46 (2) News. (7)1 _ 6:96 (2) Meditations. *49 (2) On the Perm Front. •:** (2) TV College. 7:99 ‘ (4) Today. (T) Breakfast Time :M (2) Felix the, Cat. i:00 (7) Johnny Ginger ItU (2) Captain Kangaroo 1:99 (7) Stage 3 |;00 (4) I Married Joan. ' (2) Movie. 9:99 (7) Exercise (4) Exercise. (4) Faye Elizabeth. 10:00 (4) Dough'Re MI. 14) ) (56) Philosophy of Mm. 1:M (2) Divorce Court, r (4) Lock Up. Drama. Mails . and Weston investigate murder in which the weapon was an explosive golf ball. t Maris: Macdonald Carey. (?) Exciting Years. (9) Movie.. 7:30 (4) Laramie. (2) Divorce (cont.) (9) Movie (cqnt.) (7) World Series special. (59) Int-rductory Psychology 7:49 (1) Lio: ’ Quarterback. 1:00 (2) Father Knows Best. (4) Laramie (cont.) (9) Movie (cont.) (7) Rifleman. (SB) Heritage. 1:30 (2) Dobie GilUs. (4) Alfred ’litchcock. (7) Wyatt Earp. (9) Encore. (56) American History. 0:00 (2) Tom E**U. (4) Thriller. (7) Stagecoach West. ( » Don Mess&r. 9:30 (2) Red Skelton.. (4) Thriller (cont.) (7) Stagecoach (cont.) -(9) Front Page Challenge. 10:C3 (2) Garry Moore. (4) Rivak, the Barbarian. (7) Step Beyond.- > (9) News. 10: IS (9) Weather. 10:90 (9) Telescope-UAW. 10:90 (7) Mike Hammer. (2) Moore (cont) (4) Rivak (cont.) • (9) News. * 10:45 (9) Race Results. 10:00 (9) Movie. “The Crow Roars.'’ (1938) A* choir singer becomes a boxer. Robert Taylor, Edward Arnold. 11:00 (2) News. —(4) News. ________ • (7) Bold Venture. 11:10 (2) Weather. ' (4) Weather. 11:90 (2) Sports. — (4) Sports. 11:90 (2) Movie. 11:90 (4) Jtck Paar. (7) .Citizen Soldier. 10:10 (7) Movie. 10:90 (9) Billboard. 10:» (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch. ' (9) Ding Dong School. (7) House of Fashions tl:M (2) I Love Lucy. (4) (color) Price Is Right (7) Divorce Hearing. (9) Romper Rocm u:30 (2) Clear Horizon. (7). Topper. (4) Concentration. —— 11:40 (4) World Series. WEDNESDAY MORNING 0:00 (4) Continental A*sw*r to frtrtou Panto (7) l WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON (t) Traveling Time. Util (2) Search tor Tomorrow. (7) Queen tor o Day. (9) Myrt and Doris. 19:fc (2) Guiding Light 19:00 (9) News. i:oo (2) My Uttie Margie. (7) About Faces. (9) Movif. 1:30 (2) As the World Turns. (7) Ule of Riley. (:00 (2) Media (7) Day in Court. 9:90 (2) House Party. (7) Gale Storm. (2) Millionaire., (4) Young Dr. Malone. (7), Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. 3r99 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These Roots. (7) . Who Do You Trust? 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. -(4f Make Room For Daddy! (7) American' Bandstand. 4:10 (2) Secret Storm. 4:90 (4) Here’s Hollywood. (2). Edge of N’ght. (9) Robin Hood.I (4) (color) George Pierrot Presents. * (2) Movie. (7) Johnny Ginger. (9)- Looney Tunes. 0:90 (7) Lone Ranger. 5:00 (9) Jac LeGoff. Pontiac Motor Division produced some 4,460 tower can in September than in the same month last year, but was some 3,145 ahead of 1969. production at the end of nine months, General Motors announced today. TV News and Reviews Hope's First . Close to Being a Movie Writers Stress 'Bad Girls' Nowadays Soptombor Hat 4,460 fewer Than '59, 3>145 Ahead Over 9 Months Assist Teens Taylor Urges According to the monthly production report GMC Truck & Coach was ahead of its 1959 fig-both In September production and nine-month totals. The plant produced 1,452 i trucks and coaches In September and production was 9,031 over last year’s, total at the end of nine months. By 1ARL WILSON - Whatever happened to nice girls, anyway? NEW YORK Hava you noticed that this is the era of the Trollop on stage and In movie#? W# wouldn’t ha vs thaes female bums in our homes. But wu rush oft to see them portrayed by our groatest actresses (This Is Parson Wilson, the Broadway Reverend, aermontstng). - , You uull blame the actpeeeee. if Tea-■•«as Williams and Brendan Bahan write so enchantingty of the wicked women, and the produeen see the dollar sign ahead, they’re going to be offered the parts. General Motor* produced 150,-59* passenger car* and track* In the 17.8. and Canada during September, a* compared to 171,994 during September 1950.. Of these totals, 124,052 were cars and 32,544 .trucks last month, while 145,618 cars and 27,288 trucks were produced in September 1959. Pontiac Motor Divibion’p production figure wap 19,627 last month and 24,087 a year ago. By Oct. this year 327,692 fontiacs rolled off the production line compared *o 324,547 by the end of nine months last year, GM officials reported. By FRED DANZIG NEW YORK (UP1) — It wasn’t Bob Hope’s night. Usually, thp best part bf a Bob Hope hour is. the opening monologue, when he stands In front of the curtain and unspools some top- filmed comedy. The ingredients include Griffith as a determinedly-charming smalltown factotum who is a wonderful lather to little Opei, an all-American boy played by an appealing youngster naihed Ronny Howard. leal g Monday night, for Hope's first NBC-TV special bf the season, ‘‘technical "difficulties” washed out almost all of the monologue. Too ‘ Tm sure we tort out on best part of the show. Once the wire* became disentangled and fall audio was restored, nothing that 1 heard on the show came close to being worthwhile. It wa* a dullie. Therfe were two alleged comedy sketches. The first involved Hope and -Patti Page in a rocket ship trip that was misguided.- The sketch appeared to have been built Around two sight gags and they fell fiat.-The big comedy effort was set in an Oriental tea house, where Hope, an Oriental tycoon, and Bobby Darin, as an American artist, competed for the hand of Patti Page, a tea house entertainer. Official Seeks heaper Homes And there's kindly old Aunt Bee, played by Frances Bavicr. She can bake an apple pto like mad, bat she's nowhere ns a baseball player and fishing companion. The CBS • TV premiere offend nothing hew and everything old. “Peter Gunn” turned up on ABC-TV last night tmtih fiegan what seems to be a toned-down season. DETROIT *nMl wpon. Jany oimd citt w *'ST'*«ad weak, woodirn* WSUNC8DA1 MORNING wxyk won _ CKLW Rooeter Club wjbk. mh. Haws weak News, sherldao WPON. Bob Lark (:**—WJR. Mane Roll CKl W. Bye Ooener WJBK, Urtawr. Mbit WPON. Bab Lark IMS—WJR. Newe. Musle WWJ. Neva Roberto ways. New*, wolf wjbk. n*i* fsilMr.. it:**—WJR. Karl Baa* WWJ. Sam, Write* WXTZ, N*w* abermon CKLW Jo* Voa WJBK. New*. M WPON n«ra Lark WPCIk Sarly Bird 7^0—WJR, Made Hall imltetoF. CKLW, Snort*. Da eld wjbk. fMS4flhr WCAR New* Bbarlte* *:•*—WJR mn oneet W WJ New*, itemi* wxrX. mo*, fm \CKLW. New*. Daria WCAR New* WPON New* Coeer JR BeaNb v2 mia Arid oa| ___ WJBK (toot. lil_ WCAR. New*. RMartyo Ui«-WJR. TUm toe Marie CKLdr: Jaa s&frsa as ISMS—WJR Tima I** 1 'Srl-S^ss? Three From Detroit WPON. Bob La gift M* wpon, Jerry C Die in Auto Crash •ttnjrzss CKLW Dario* WCAR (too*. Sheridan WJBK. Rook La* trib—CKLW. Newe. (mria* Site—WJR. Marie Bon WWJ, Now*. Lynker WAVS, Paul Winter CKLW New* Darie* WCAR Dm, BherlC-n WUS Hook Loo WppN Corriso* trod* 4:**—WWJ. Lynker CKLW. Newe. Darie* ' WJBK Sports. Mari* WWJ. (tow*. Lynker WXfZ. Paul winter CKLW. Sport*. Dane* WJBK Mari* WCAR Moor CKLW, Newt. Darie* ’While I’m sure that Mr. Mazey found expressions of friendship everywhere during his tour of Russia, he has only to look at what Is happening at the United Nations to learn that this outpouring oj good wtll Is not necessarily shared by Kremlin leaders," he added. ^VASSAR « - Three Detroiters —■ including a tether and his soldier son — died in #4 note wreck near here Monday night while returning from a hunting trip. The desd were Identified as Gerald P. Hackney, §9, Virgil King, 48, and his son, Gcrvin J. King, 19. an of Detroit. , ' (Gag’s wife Martha and daughter Linda, 12, were hospitalized in serious condition. Another daughter Carol, 18, did not make the trip, 1 . f ' I Police said the c^r ran off the road and hit A tree about two mile* north of Vaster. anyone to suggest that the United States might trigger s third world and thafa exactly what Mr. Mazey implied.” Elliott told his audience, “It is and irresponsihlej'for Michigan Youths Are in Bond-Buying Mood DETROIT UR —Michigan youngsters purchased 31,717,997 in UA. Savings Stamps during the 195960 school year, the Treasury Department has EfHMrted, Thatls a 3.9 per cent increascf over the previous year's total of Jl.654.299. women and four men was selected Monday for a second trial of Maurice Hamilton in the love triangle ’Arabian Nights’’ slaying of Aziz Hermiz. Hamilton, 23, was granted the second trial last April by the Court after the tribunal found errors in the conduct ot the first trial Hamilton, who came here from Baghdad aa a student, wo* convicted and sentenced to life in Southern Michigan Prison for the fatal- stabbing of Hemds, a Detroit grocer, In 1165. , Mrs. Victoria Hermiz, the victim’s widow, was found inocent after the first trial on grounds of toganlty and was committed to ' Institution: She was released in ) Grand Rapids 'Face-Lift' Starts With Post Office An Oakland County man. and toft others have been appointed executive engineers lor major development programs at General Motors Technical Center, It was announced ' by HL D. Hall, director of mann-facturing development. They are Clayton J. Trible, 1907 Wllahire Blvd., Berkley, formsriy general master mechanic lor Chevrolet Gen/ A Axle; Raymend H. Bite, former works manager for Electro-Mattvo Division; and George A. Zink, former director of -process development tor Defense Systems Division. Sanitary Sewer Contract Okayed by Supervisors A contract for 393,198 for the construction of sanitary Vribla hao been assistant pro-~ "pfnent manager ter Chevrolet at Ite central office In Detroit, a ter Htorhanto and g He began with GM as a jet c gine designer at the Chevrolet Tonawanda plaht after graduation from the GM Institute in 1942. He later receive^ a mechanical fen- after completion of extension i at Cornell University.. Junior Achievement sri^kMeetWedhealav The season’s first big Junior Achievement meeting in Pontiac is slated for Wednesday night at Ihc Pontiac Busines* Center. 20?k E. Pike St. Local JA officials will hold’ a . briefing meeting and open house beginning at 7 p.m. The focal volunteer management, sales and production advisers to the County Service Center — site, JA companies will map of the new courthouse — was ajv strategy for the 1MM1 JA year DETROIT ®- A Jury of 10 ^ ^ of supervisors Z m UMffivdnv yesterday. Lowest bf nine bidders on the estimated 3200,000 project was the Warren firm ot D’Angela & Poiicel-U. which opens Oct 10. The line, to be constructed of concrete instead of the usual clay pipe, will be principally for the courthouse tower unit, but ex-isting'-couhty buildings in the center now employing septic tanks [might eventually be hooked up to m»wpr1 a nffiylal explained. The sewer will empty into the city’s treatment plant and maintenance will be provided by the city, he said. .a.%1’■*.’ RCA COLOR TV Soles and Service Sweet’s Radio TV SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests Free Parking at Rear ef Building "Opma fees, hf Appointment" 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. E and H Savings igan amounted to 321,964, SwpM — 32-85 million or 14.9 per cent over August, 19G9. GRAND RAPIDS (ft—Downtown Grand Rapids; has started c ambitious faoaJifting program with ground broken for a new 33-miIlioo tain post office as the first step. Postmaster General Arthur- E. Summerfield, principal figure in the ceremony late Monday, said ‘it represents the culmination of eight yean of planning and to a demonstration of the ultimate in cooperation betirten tha people and their federal govehunent.” Goaf os’s RCA Color TV 8« tries BUT TO** K5 C010E 1* not A Color TV Servicing Dealer SAVE! — IT IS CHEAPER—■ SAVE! • NO SfRVICI INSURANC6 CHARGCS ft • MO INSTALLATION CHARGB ft ft Hill ONI YIAR WARRANTY ON ALL PARTI ft ft PRII INSTALLATION AND DELIVIRY ft C0MI M ANB SB TM MORtil PIBROT SNOW on RCA Color TV tknly an5 P.M.% CONDON’S TV SALES I SERflOE 16 S. T*l»ar*»b (Awe** from T*l Heron) H MQH jSrWENTY- -ei6ht THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 4. i960 - ONE COLOR Ask Lawmakers & Legalize Tax Being Collected : right on collecting it—to the tone of nearly $870,000 • SUVA, Fljt (LTI)—Lawmaker* j worked fast here recently to teBsl-ho a tax they’d been eollectiflg Wily for more than thrde] Hi* government, noting that if the Octal collection* were refunded and the tax aholWied, the money would have to he made tip In other tame,- put a poet-dated legalization bill for the.auger tax at the top of the legiaUtlve -■ .. (Warn* on Insurance „Thc comptroller of customs. toeed with a complaint about ' a LANSING (OPJ) — Atty. Gen. Bx on sugar exports, reported Paul L. Adams Monday warned a somewhat red face" that consumers against “fly-by-night in-tel authority to collect the tax surance companies” selling policies •si lapsed in December, lflJS. j through the. mail with "high pres-~But the customs ' (froerimentl sure halt advertising.” ihhb w wmmrnifi 5-DAY SALE WITH A GIGANTIC BONOS Sabs'Tex Included is Al'Priess! Guaranteed 1. Full Inch Thick ALUMINUM STORM DOOR SAVE *77.67 At Last! A Window with Everything! Deluxe Two Tiack || Triple Tilt Action Aluminum STORM WINDOWS Windows. Cioon wfthout removing Htivy Extruded Aluminum Never Needs Painting Reg. $24.95 For Window Foi Window Any Size Up to 34 x 60 Inch Opening $15.95 FHA Term! Free Estimates Call FE 3-7033 NO CASH NICOCD P.HJt. TERMS AVAILABLE take AS LONG AS 5 YEARS TO PAY wm Pan Am Will Cut Out t Polar Routo Until Juno WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Civil Aeronautics Board Monday authorised Pan American World Airdrays to suspend its polar route service between the West Coast and Paris until next May 3L »• FEEDER — Elsewhere, slingshots Feathered Nation in Friends Have Fowl Mess .NEW YORK (MEA) — The have every kind of bird men-American Audubon Society reports tloned in Shakespear’s works. And that one of their research stations Lit is written in the pjqy Henry Real estate men all. i lert (hat starling and .pigeon droppings increase maintenance costs by, thousands of dollar s every year. Medical geieaee says that the dangerous disease encephalitis rise — borne by birds and distributed by mosquitoes. In fact, the whole country is In a fowl mess, complicated, usual, by the people who think there should be a national pigeon-feeding program or more bird protective assbeiations or more shotguns and slingshots. Now', the most, dangerous birds are the pigeon and the starling. But the problem is so big that no accurate count.can be lifiade. In New York City 4done, for example, the starling census is anywhere; from 50,000 to 100,000. The amount of damage they do can be counted to the penny. The Delaware River Bridge, Commission In MorrievlUo, Pa., calculates that bird droppings cost them $10,000 in yearly maintenance. And encephalitis, now traced by science to a mosquito-bird cycle, hits an increasing number ol i Americans each year- ■ - J>S per cent of theni children under loj years old. "Frequent connecting service* re 'available between London and Purie,” the board that the effect on the pubUc of suspending the direct flight to Parla “is negligible." fly fra Lee Angela* 'and flan 'Safety Lane' Station Offers |«lo Protection OAK RIDGE. Tern. W - Seeme mi erm’t sale even in Safety Lane* a bar inspection station Leroy Eggert (hove his The board agreed -with Pan American that the reduced volume of traffic in the .winter «e warranted a cutback in | route sendee. India Ship* 1st Ordar of Pig Iron to London the lane’s brake tester and stomped on the brake pedal His car didn’t stop until crashed into the rear of the automobile ahead. It flunked the safety check. NEW DELHI UNKKXl. A consignment of 2,000 tons recently sailed and another 6,500 tons . have been ordered by Britain. In* : dla has exported iron to Japan and Pakistan in the past. “I’ll have a starling shall be taught tQ speak nothing but! ‘Mortimer.'” Instead, be flies around city halls screaming "cheap, cheap," BANK at \j(hkMJUL Most People Do! Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Now., .try the motor oil that Surpasses Carmakers' Toughest Tests! Things are so bad that the Audubon Society and the Society for the Precventton of Cruelty to Ani-mals tell me the situation 1st serious. But-as both organizations are committeed to helping birds, they have few constructive suggestions to make. i And so, to meet the/challenge, many citizens have already tak-en up arms. SUNG SHOT BEST "I found the best is the sling-l shot,” a middle-aged lady in Pat-terson, N.J., said, asking that her name be withheld. “‘It is light, portable,* time-tested and you ean practice in your cellar until you More conservative real estate] men aeroao the nation, how 4 ’"TWr 1WI WfllBaC IIWBJ fo WIB 1 the battle. Expenoes I a c I ■ d e j electrical hazards in nsaal roost- I lag places, bird repellent paint, ' high frequency noises or re- ' corded bird dBtroa* calls.” ~ (According to the Audubon Society, there has been one report! of success in driving off sea gulls with recordings by Elvis Presley.) Tired of the heavy expense, the state of Ohio has now passed a law making it legal to shoot pigeons. And the Delaware River Bridge Commission has circulated! a directive making it mandatory ! to shoot starlings. i FANC IERS RESIST But these moves, like all others in the same direction, have brought on the grim resistance! peculiar to bird-fanciers------who! are responsible for the whole problem in the first place. The pigeon is the descendant of domesticated European rock doves who escaped their cap-| ttvtty and came to this country because they heard that certain people do nothing bat feed pig- The starling ig another matter. He wSs brought from England be- 1890 thought that the UJS. should Time a Machine Saves Salij Allowable Cost WASHINGTON (UPI) - A farmer can figure out how much he can afford to pay for-electrical equipment by considering the amount and value of the time the machin-j cry saves him, say economists at Purdue University. ! For eXampJe.^if labor is worth $1 per boiur and a machine saves! 10 minutes a day, the fanner cant I afford to pay $300 fqr the machine, j Or he can pay $U00 for a machine that saves 30 minutes' per day and $2,250 for! one that savfs 60 minutes a day J- .--V v —If-you drive a car, you shoulcTknow thia; America’s— leading automobile manufacturers agreed on a series of really tough tests for motor oil. These are wear and protection testa designed to rate motor oik for MS (Maximum Severity) service. Standard Super . Permalube surpassed every test in this series! Now what does this mean to you and your car? , le You get lower oil consumption with multi-grade Super Pkemalubk. Result—you’ll go lots farther with- ___________fimmKTS^BKSBETl Super Permalube saves up to two gallons in every * tankful, up to 15% more miles per gallon! e«' You -get more useable power! Super Permalube cuts combustion-chamber carbon deposits, actually restores lost power. 4e You got smoothorentl-knock performance! Super Permalube reduce# the octane requirement increase of your engine—in effect, adds octane numbers to your gasoline. * j>.| £ ‘ - 8 a You got e quieter-running anginal Super Permalube helps silence annoying hydraulic valve-lifter chatter— stops sticking. P* You get doubled piston ring life! Super Permalube lubricates so perfectly it helps piston rings lest twice as long—probably longer then you’ll keep your car! That’s why We say Super Permalube is the best protection you can get for the big investment you have in your car. It’s true... and yoii can prove it for yourself. See your Standard Oil dealer. Change over to Standard Super Permalube Motor Oiu Feel and hear the difference in your car. Experience lower maintenance coeta—that’s true economy! You expect more from and you gjtf it! rhe Weather ,t It* (mu Fcfttftil Partly, rtsud.v, former. 118th YEAR THE PONTIAC PRES»KE OVER PAGE ★ ★ ★ 'it'it PONTIAC, MiciIlGAX. TCKSDAf, OCTOBER ! UWo—28 PAGES * Honor Prosecutor at Dinner Colder’ N a r to tics could have brought in $20 million oq the tfticll retell market-. total ball Monday alter their Smashed Dope Ring Press Attack as Me Stands Firm K Wants to Huddle » Macmillan Again; Cold War Gets Narcotics Could Have Sold for $20 Million on Illicit Market CHARRED CARS — These cars were scheduled for a paint job today that they’ll probably never get. They were casualties of a fire last night that gutted Earl Scheib's Auto Painting Shop, 147 S. Saginaw St. The door in the Oppe left corner of the picture leads to a paint stor age room where fire inspectors beltev blaze started. the Guts S. Saginaw Auto Shop $50,000 Bla ' UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (if)—'The,Soviet bloc turned new fire on eral Dag Hammarskjoltf In jthe United Nations today fts prospects faded fbr any significant advance during this session toward West agreement. t—In the .first Communist reaction Hjmmarikjold defiant rejefr Cause of a $50,000 fire that gut-jterior of the block-long two-story| ted the Earl Sclieib Auto Painting brick building today.--- Shop, formerly Cy Owens Ford) The blaze was discovered at Dealer showroom and garage, at about 8 p.m. when flames suddenly 147 S. Saginaw St. last night has erupted through the garage roof, not yet been determined. lighting up South Saginaw Street Fire Chief James R; White andllike high .noon.----- City Fire Marshal Charles E. MMx_________—Jk.—A.?. —were investigating the charred in- Officials were surprised that no low firemen with preventing the blaze from spreading .to nearby Got a Problem? Abby Due in City Oct. 18 “Dear Abby,” the gRl who has an answer to every social problem sent in by her millions of readers, (see ■ today’s Women's Pages InThe PonUac Press) will appear In PonUac Oct. 18. The popular syndicated columnist is being brought here by The Pontiac Press to discuss her amazing career WM and to perhaps give some advice in person. She will talk at 8 p m. tn the Pontiac Central High School Auditorium. Known to most of her readers as “Dear Abby,” Pauline Phillips uses the by-line Abigail Van Buren to bead her column. It ion Monday of Premier Khrushchev’s suggestion that he resign, Nikolai V. Podgorny of the Soviet Ukraine renewed the Soviet leader's charge that Ham-marskjold served only ''imperialist” interests in Africa's Congo, j The stepped-up attack on the . ___'secretary-general eame ■ in been hyfog of a now round J djplo. matte activity. Just before the prpcecdings be-an in the Assembly. Britisf lie credited the fast work-of tel I Prime Minister—Harold' MficnflT had noticed the fire empty building earlier. ”11 must hav for at least a half-hour before It hurst through the roof,” said Fire Capt. Lee Nye. Several frame houses across Whittemore Street, less than SO feet away, were slightly blackened by smoke billowing from the huge building.___ RESIDENTS SPOT FIRE NEW YORK UP—AnUK ternational dope-smuggling has been smashed with the arrest of a Ouatemalan diplomat and three other men and the seizure of $4 million worth of puns heroin, officials say. seizure of narcotics ever 1 government. Ouatemata’s ambassador IS Belgium aad the Netherlands Mauriclo Rosal, «. and the held on St million TALK OVER OIJ) TIMES — Incumbenl jiulilican Prosecutor George F. Taylor ( spoke of old times with two of his former bosses, retired Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty tlcfli and. Ian conferred with Hammarskjold And at the same time the l ~~ Soviets asked lor a meeting be- ■nd Mac- |Pays Jam Up for Both Pratts* Prm Pk*(* Judge H. Russel Holland, at a fund raising dinner Bloomfield Hills last night, (See story on page 2.) Federal agents said they bad three black valises containing1 about 110 pounds of heroin, and - had about $70,000 In ca.sh,-eppar»— entiy a partial payment tor the tween Khrushchev mtttaiir »“lrey~1tgurrr WchI'n maneuvers at this session, j The British suggested a meeting later in the day. _ _ . Khrushchev’s attacks on Ham-' *"e gUd<^n -bU!2L !*^bt an“ marskjold are viewed as a barom- Jack Rests and Dick Woos East heavy smoke in the viebtRy was the first sign residents had of the fire. An unidentified person telephoned the fire 'department at 8:30 p.m. Four engine companies, an aerial hose truck and a hook and ladder truck rushed to the scene. Twenty-two firemen battled the Maze for better than an hour before it was under control. eter of cold war weather and one _ _ - . . ., . „ of a number of clues to prospects *** for East-West accord. Vice President Richard M. Nix- aad not the other ticket.” Another indication has been ion coaxed support from New Jer- tj,p vjcc president got his warm-Khrushchev’s restatement of his voters today after a free-wheel- est applaUscwhen he defended Ei- with I^idetRC^B^Shm^^ gently recommended by five Beu-joc#*Mc Sou^J1-tralist nations. going to vote for our ticket | most all Wednesday touring Indi- A preliminary investigation Indicated die fire started In a paint aad paint thinner rtomge room, which would explain several muffin explosions which were beard throughout the blue. Khrushchev demanded Monday I night In a letter to the bends of I the five neutralist states that Elsenhower first confess guilt for Although be has no public appearance* on tap, even a day In the life of a candidate baa Rosal, a dapper, balding mall, was indignant at the arrest and claimed diplomatic immunity. But officials said he was not accredited to this country and did not enjoy immunity from arrest here, In Washington, Carlos Alejoa, Ouatemalan ambassador to the United - States, said be wna shocked to hear of the arrest and promised an Immediate Investigation by Me government. iings with Soviet Premier Khru-/"' »"<- .man- Charles Bourbonnaia 38. ot shchev t£ Sen. John F. Kennedy on the; The crowd was about the «8»A]™k» 1P**»**f of NOtro -parte-New York run of Trans other hand, turns lo an almost for-jaize as that Which had turned *° ‘he Negro vow|\y0^d Airways: -and Nick Cain- gotten word today in this presi-'two weeks ago for Kennedy. ' | a-. W ★ imaras, 47, of New York City, a ampaigh: rest. • . ,1 * w w Another chore to be attended to longshoreman. , „ .... .. .. j .«nf-r nuttina in a 18-hour dav ! Indiana once was a Republican was the recording of onr-inliiut(L« rififouii troiiii r treacherous acts and “perfidy’ J |f| ni|nid., Monday stronghold, but Democrats have and five-minute films to be uaed with the U3 spy I RMMwdy^nlann to take It com- fbeerr making such . spectncularjlater ; iii the campaign. paratlvelv easv i gains there, especially in congres- Kennedy Monday put In another Podgomy, titular head of the! v * ^ ,'sional races, that Kennedy hasiof those incredible days in which J* plane Incident of last'May. Soviet Ukrai government aixL—He has nothing on' his formal 0f picking up its 13jhe tried to do approximately twice the scintillating career of Abby | (Continued Van Buren began when, as a young socialite, she breezed into the offices of the San Francisco Chronicle about five years ago and announced that what the paper needed was a better advice-to-the-love-lorn column. _ .. . W » A I Sixteen cars, left in the shopiserving for the time being aslscheduk1 but a -fund-^aismg speech-voles. He WiTl Spend aWas much ashehad' time for. In Today s Press i Page 2, Col. 5) {chief of the Ukraine’s delegation I in Indianapolis tonight jin the United Nations, took up The Republican presidential| New Voters Top 4,000 in City She has been at it ever since, {opening millions of letters daily land replying in a way that /attracts ] even bashful male eyes to the women’s pages. Journey Into Crime See Page 8 nominee concentrated , in a scries j of New Jersey appearances on a contention tbnt the Eisenhower administration has held the line against inflation and that he will continue these- policies. Nixon So Proud of Pat He4lames-Week for Her . Her often uproarious column Is now appearing dally In at least IM newspapers across the United Mates. Abby’s accomplishment is even toertion, ScKtdul* Registry PlocflirTisfod; to foct, until she became a colum- —v 11/_ i—jZ .—,a----------nist she had never earned a dime., PeaCHtne IS UCt, lU-----------Abby'is no sob-sister when it) comes to advising the lovelorn and! New voter registrations in poo-other*- An answering pun is her tiac have topped the 4,000 mark. I stock in trade, and she has the The latest count lists 4,063 new habit of solving her readers’ prob-registrations since the Aug. 2 pri- pems w*th a laugh, mary. said City Clerk Ada R. { .. -----— , „ . , Fair and Warm Deadline for registering for the; Nov. 8 presidential election is . Get. Mi. Comics ............ County News ....... Editorials Markets ........ Obituaries ....... Pet Doctor ........ Sport* ............ Theaters .......... TV A Radio Profcra WBuoa, Earl . . . . > Women's Pages ... the offensive against Hammarskjold with a charge that he acted in/the Congo as “a faithful servitor of the imperialist powers.” ' He said Hammarskjold's defiant statement of refusal to resign showed Jhe secretary-general ‘‘fo^ rijANOE OF PACE " 1 future Mn St represented '* change of po-l ........ United Nations but of a - certain • group of states,whose policy runsj^ „r p0plt,i, NEWARK, N.J. (ifu-In her quiet way, Patricia Nixon tism, plugged for state’s rights ond|jS M seasoned a political campaigner as her vice presl- , ra raara, .t it « ms « d5ie?s proposano* scrap"th^ sec-1 * * * Her status as a valued component of the Richard M. retary-generars office and substi- Nixon told a bowling, appinud- itfijeon campaign was raised to new eminence Monday. Jute an executive of three mem-| tog crowd of about uam per- [Thp vige president, leaving Washington for a Southern hpr* each urtth veto nower over sons to tkw -fhartotle CultoWUU [ 1 , v „ ___, J IU N. peace-making decisions. « that MONTE CARLO 00 - pound, fonr-stagel i fired nt 11:2$ a. m- M UalUsMi Telaiwl 17a advance of the opening building later this month. FraUit Frtsf ratio There’ll & a green viqta when you walk into the $500,000 Civic Oenter edifice for the first time. (See story on -page 2.) ■ their separate ways to mingle with the crowd and shake hands the- fence. Mrs. Nixon has word and a smile for every* one. And she passes out cards autographed by the vice president. They are engraved with the leg-“the vice president of the States,’’ and signed in ink at the bottom by Richard Nixon.- _ — There is great demand tor themr—fr” °f the NjttHtitf ALWAYS ATTENTIVE , “* > *■'«*'«l« ■ When Nixon. speaks day after dm. Mrs. Nixon ixresenta an attitude of absorbed attention, though After she has in most cases heard the same words many tinea. Her eyes stay on Nixon throughout his /Continued on Page 2, COl. 4) touched off by an enemy, could cast a kind of electronic curtain around the earth, bMebing another nation’s early warning system and hiding the approach of attacking missiles or bombers. from the Wallops island, Va., agency announced here. The originally scheduled, tor Sept. ■■■I n postponed ' / ' ■ flight; the rodtot waa e>. come down in the South between South America rica. i TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER *, i960 Is Actions at U N rushchev Dancing to Reds'. Orders? Bloomfield Hills OK's Sewer Plan by 4 Vote Like a Puppet _FJipfiops in Policy and Absence From Moscow Provoke Wonder . By WILLIAM L. RYAN .UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) «4*remkr Khrushchev’s extended stay in the United States andhts performances at the IT.N. arouse speculation again that he is tak-j »£ orders, rather than giving} them, . this «|wahllwt rWpInped jast _ May in Paris, inspired by sudden ' fiipflops in policies Khrushchev had appeared to be pursuing. Much was printed about the poa-.ajhUity that powerful Soviet mil's* fiRures might be wielding a CHEVROLET IMPALA - Designers have applied smooth lines tSSrtt !° *** 81 Chevrolrt Bel Air and Biscayne passenger car IlTL l^n vl !^ ^ Mjnotod in Jhe Impala .port sedan (above,, are line Stalinists who nSTwereS fT»nd *Nmtie',wVJmer usaf"^- A for capital Improvement ni»ht and wedneariar. Btfh tadaj w.ispending in Pontiac over the next teU ’H ypars will be submitted to the •Mterty l it Mile, thb afternaon aud.City Commission tonight by City Manager Walter K. WUlman. ,2 The document is expected to »t play an important rote in fiscal **[ planning from now on. Downtown Temperatnrea at I i.».: Wind velocity i m. ’Bllrtioa—Bavtliwoat. . Bun aet« Tueadoy at l:S* p.m. - «c dm Wed. eaday at « JJ a t aMCoott aet» Wednesday at t ot at Moon rlsm Tueaday at 6:11 p.m 4taa Yoaraca la roattac wt temperrture it temperature ............. temperature Willman said the suggested project* range from the state-ordered sewage treatment plant expansion to the long-dreamed of civic andltorlnm. Others mentioned by Willman in advance of the commission meeting indude urban renewal projects, the downtown loop highway, Citation River flood control and realignment of the water system to handle Detroit water. capital Improvem^its. While it is only a guide; I expect that It will be largely-followed.” The commission Is also scheduled to take ap again the Md for SIAM In separation pay claimed tor former Police Chief Herbert W. Strajey. The Md apparently WU he tamed down an- other* that It Is justified.. An amendment will be introduced by the administration to permit Community National Bank to put the awning over its Saginaw Street entrance. Prohibited now by the sign ondinsnee, the snmlng would be an attractive downtown feature, the bank said. Nixon Proud of Pat, Calls Week for Her (Continued From Page One) [talk. A small smile stays on her [Upu- Almost invariably the vice president opens his talk with a reference to his wife, if she is traveling with him. Ret perhaps she Is at her beet from the vlee president’s viewpoint, fai her manner of dealing wtth crowds ia a receiving line or at an airport reception. She shakes hands with all -in reach, and has something to say said there were about 300 gallons of paint and paint thinner stored in the locker room. * ♦ * , The last employe la the shop__ believed to have left the building at about 7 p.m. South Saginaw Street was dosed Elmer Kephart, dty manager, said general obligation bonds of this type generally have been selling under a 4 per rate, and In several cases, the past few months, under 3 per cent. Based on the figure that the 30-year bonds would sell tor 4 <, It has been taxes would Increase ap- SHU Time to Join Coast Guard Course There’s stUl time to register for the UJ, Coast Guard Auxiliary bout handling and safety course at Pontiac Central High. Ths dam will meeteach Wednes-day at T:15 p.m. for eight weeks. Tomorrow’s, meeting place is Room 316. It’s your last chance to register for the fall course. Thorn who pass a teat at the end of the course will receive basic seamanship certificates from the (toast Guard Auxiliary. Actor Stumps in State WHITEHALL (UPI) - George Murphy, Hollywood actor who is chairman of the Celebrities for Nlxon-Lodge, will campaign for the Bentleys 'Welcome' in Troy Is Upset ______ en-p nail protruding from a fallen thn-her. He was treated at Pontine General Hospital ang released. * * * A firebug has been suspected of kindling recent blazes tat the dty since an investigation of a Friday night fire at Waite’s Department Store on Saginaw 'Street showed that it definitely had been set Intentionally. Z.. * * * Firemen were alerted to watch for a possible arsonist tat the vicinity of last night’s Maze.___ The gutted paint shop was kept under night-long surveillance, but no clues were turned up. By DON FERMOYLE Troy Commissioner Roy L. Dun-ut, who last week dedded not to vote against the route of the ChtysLer Expressway through Troy, did manage to detour Republican Alvin M. Bentley’s campaign for state senator in the city last night. Duncan objeded to Bentley’s resence at a 1Toy City Commission meeting when the candidate was called up to the speakers’* table by Mayor Robert J. Huber, also a Republican. "I think If lids is going to be poUflenl tMng then we should ive Invttew both candidates hero to spank,” said Dnncan, a for-chairman of the Tray Damo-cratlc Club. Bentley answered as he approached the table' that he would withdraw from the discussion if anyone thought he were intruding, the Kremlin leader. There comment from the * *. other commissioners, l_________ Owosso Republican returned to his chair in the audience. At the end of the meeting Duncan told Huber: "I think you were entirely out of order in inviting Mr. Bentley to the meeting. I don’t think you have the right to invite Utica! candidate to make a speech or take part in this commission meeting.",____ “I asked him to come and listen to our prpblenu,” Huber said. “I think our representatives in Washington, .whether Democrat or Republican, should hear of them.” ”Our problem is with Detroit and not with Washington,” Duncan retorted. Khrushchev believes, said this official, that Westerners who view his activities so far as a defeat for Soviet policy are like - those add up the result of a football contest before the game is over. In Khrushchev's view the final tally will not be known for many months. He is reported ,to have come to New York realizing that the immediate results might appear to favor toe West. Ex-Receptionist Told to Return Embezzled Cash A former receptionist for a Pontiac dentist, who admitted embezzling Hinds from the dentist to pay back loans and to buy new clothes, yesterday was placed on probation for three yeans and ordered to return 31,510. 4 "♦ # t Circuit Judge Stanton G. Don-dero handed down the sentence to Donna M. King, 33, of 451 N. Saginaw St., and ordered her to pay an additional 3100 in court costs. She pleaded guilty Aug. 34. * * * The former receptionist for Dr. Peter Hoogerhyde was arrested in January by Pontiac police and admitted overcharging the dental surgeon's patients and then writing tiie amount the patient should have been charge in the office account books. She kept the extra Take Advantage of Debate Area Dems Expect Crowd Arrangers of Friday’s big Democratic 18th Congressional Dinner in Pontiac weren't to be disheartened by a ^ possible conflict of interest * fr A When they learned that the second in the series of debates between Sen. John F. Kennedy and Vice President Richard M. Nixon Library Turns , With Sod, Not Envy as their annual fund-raising affair, they envisioned a reduction in the number of diners that evening. Comity party coffers might •brink w a result, too, they felt Principal speaker Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, the second Minnesota senator to speak at the local er in two years, would be a big drawing card, they knew, but appetites had been whetted by the first Kennedy - Nixon battle of issues. The grass is flourishing today at Pontiac’s new public library, front-la wnfull of It — What had been barren dirt the sudden transformation. - Jton oi the betiding a few days hen£f erows of tiw Parks * Recreation Deportment laid ISO square yards of sod, tram 7 ana. Jo S: to p.m. The green glory, of the Pike Street frontage of the filmy site will be matched next sprta« along Parke Street and Water Street. . _ . _ _ The side and rear of (he site me to everyone. She thanks them for seeded. yean ahead, others of leaser Importance are expected to ho ‘ “I'“‘ ‘ ' Willman said the ,guide would take into account the ett/o financial structure’ and bonding ability. Emphasizing that-he was submitting "a guide,” Willman said: "This material is' to help the mmisskm in its thinking about Scheduled hearings: On proposals for curbs and gutters on Fuller ~ Streif, Madison to Beverly; Melrose Street, Madison' to Perry; Cameron Street, Baltimore to Mt. Clemens; South Jessie Street,. Prospect to Raeburn; on plans for sidewalks on the north Mfo of Willard Street and the west sfate| of Jessie Street; assessment rolls covering proposed walks onj both sides of Harvey Street south of Ditmar Street and on the northeast side of Mill Street. tuning out and says she is glad to be back in whatever dty they m vktoDf. She stooge to Robert A. Stierar, assistant dty * Cllls for mote fliifmnwnkifwl mrHu rt_______* . /* vwpeviyu u* calls for more autographed cards A i hand out.. At Charlotte she caught signal a man carrying a HtHr boy in his arms. "His eyes are bhieijust like Ms daddy’k,” she said, and passed The man smiled from ear to < Surely, one thought, Mrs. 'Nixon has nailed down at least one Republican vote. was scheduled for the same night |with his nominating speech of- So Allen Zemmoi, dimer chairman went to work and solicited a large television screen to bring the second dash to the some 600 Democrats expected to pack the Elks Temple to hear Sen. McCarthy and many state and county Democratic dignitaries. "We didn’t want anybody to delivered to local warehouses, said Stierer, where it Is being held until the'dty accepts the building from Bundy. * The City Commission authorized the administration to spend U00,-000 over and above construction costs, tor equipment and other ex- ” wanted a toll hsase for tiw groat senatei from Minnesota.” ....... Oakland Democrats promise the ‘best ever” in congressional din- ___ _ _____^ Jnere. It wfll begin at 6:30 one brary service. The moving date, hour before scheduled tdevt- __a ___a miAJLdail - • . _ w HMi grin■■ inn a# Mm «m*-------- Lobster or steak will be __________ political blue plate special, Zem- Bjgndy Construction Co. would announce fi was ready for final Inspection within a few days, possibly at toe end oi the week. ■Constrertios of the SSM.SSS civic center edifice began Jast a little ever a year aga. Groundbreaking waa Sept, m, ins. Some of the equipment ordered for the library already has been 'A variety of bushes and ever greens are to be planted, ha said, including flowering cherry and crab, lilacs, Mrsythia and red land gray dogwood. , The re’ll be planters and rose beds flanking the entrance way next spring and azalea beds along Pike Street, ha said. dty. fl I betjr def Adlai Stevenson at the Democratic national convention. Democrats here also remember his appearance back in March when he subbed tor senior Minnesota Sen. Hubert Humphrey at the Jeffereon-Jackson Day Dinner Seize Heroin Batch; Smash Dope Ring (Continued Fran Page One) of Narcotics in the United Statin'/ working with the French Surete -conducted the investigation/~tiu(r led to the arrests. Iu*til • wen-dressed prca-peroue looking man, arrived here foot Saturday from Paris. Rosal arrived the next day. Fran the moment Rosal stepped off a plane at Idlewild Airport, he waa under round-the-clock surveillance by federal agents. When Rosal met Tafditi on the East Side early Monday, agents in paw>i trucks took photographs. # - * - * - -..... They were also followed to an-Iher meeting: with Cabmans nd Bourbonnais. The four were arrested us they draw along tiw East Side in a taxi cafe and a G. Kells’ campaign this yenr " ' uni bent William 6. Other candidates, The four wopr charged with eon-spiring to smuggle narcotics and were held in 3250,000 bail each after being taken before a US. commissioner. A hearing was scheduled for Oct. 17. Sen. McCarthy, 44, etched himself further into political history The first mass at St. Patrick’s torch in Montreal, center for English-speaking Catholics, was celebrated in 1847. THE PONTIAC PRESS.'TUESDAY. OClWn M mil Ufa* Upm.1 Leopoldville Men Quitting Lumumba MMI (iCMifatikw ,».&£«'? Zino-Md. D-Scholls lino pads HOLLAND BULBS CBOCITS. DUTODOS, HYACINTHS. TULIPS TASKER’S <3 W. Huron 'FI 5-6261 LEOPOLDVILLE, the Om«o (API—Some Western diplomats attached considerable significance today to public declarations by at least eight members of Parliament that they have broken once and for all with Patrice Lumumba. The MPs issued a four-page statement Monday night accusii*! the Communist-backed deposed .premier of ordering a reign of terror in Stanleyville, Lumumba's political strongpoint. Signers of the statement said, that all but 3 of the 38 senators and deputies from Oriental Province, which includes Stanleyville, have Joined them in leaving the Lumumba camp. Claude C. Rogers filed the__ Monday in behalf of Ms daughter, Linda Rogers, ft! against R. K. Macy *nd Co., of New York, do-DwHson-Paxon Co. XownResrdents Weren't All There Gl —ft Seemed OXFORD, Md. (AP)—-Residents t this small Chesapeake Bay iwn were counting their neighbors this week to see if it were true that about 60 per cent of the population had suddenly vanished. In 1850, the population of Oxford was listed as 757. But according to the 1860 preliminary estimate, population in I960 had dropped to 270. Indignant civic officials began an investigation. It turned out that the census taker had reported preliminary results before finishing his counting, and that there were really 662 residents in the town. One relieved Oxonian said "They nearly counted us out of existence.'* Sues hr $25,000 Alter Swim Suit Gpes Transparent THREE ATLANTA, Ga. (AP»-A father has (bed a $25,000 damage suit tor the humiliation Ms daughter suffered when, he says, a new bathing suit became transparent the first time she wore it in the e «pit said the girl paid $16.86 for the white bathing suit which became transparent when wet "and did expose plaintiff’s nakedness, then and there causing humiliation, mortification and embarrassment." uatemala Shoots at Cuban Invaders GUATEMALA (AP) — Guatemalan ah- force planes have machinegunned a Cuban schooner that apparently attempted to land forces on Guatemala's Atlantic coast, It was announced officially Monday night. The official statement said the schooner grounded on Cozumel Island after the machinegunning. "The schooner, of Cuban registry, presumably formed part of a flotilla with which the Communist government of Fidel Castro plans to invade the Atlantic coast Central America, especially Guatemala,-’’ the statement added. T" IN THICK WITH DICK - This 10-year-old Bethesda^MdHad gets a warm embrace from his idol, Vice President Richard M Nixon, Monday, at National Airport, Washington, D. C. He's ■»n«?st completely covered with .Nixon campaign buttons. He"had attended a "Pat tor First Lady" event which was a sendoff for the vice president and his wife on another jaunt of his presidential campaign. Phantom Cat 'Sure Cpvers Ground FastT CKDARVIIXE m - If Mtrhi gaa realty ha* a phantom eat. It sare rover* grsaad la a harry. beast aaar Adtiaa la Michigan. Hpfftaea Dental said ae »polled an extremely large eht with a long tail and large head near MIS4 ootahM of odor vINe la Bast Upper Michigan. PlgHaHa, a head medicine, is teaves of fbxglove. The latter be pofsonous. Factory hsprossatstlee Nero WIDNISDAY—2 to 1110 F.M. REMINGTON Electric Shaver RECONDITIONED mm SIMMs SXHVICX—Remlntton racier? reproftoaUM*# *111 be in mi iter* every WMmdir el ererr mam Electric Sharers —Malm Float SIMMS Tries to STOP the "BULL" ... and the only Way We Know How is to Advertise What We Have and Sett What We Advertise Ihst» no 'Sull” «n- we try l« Keve every Horn that wo *dyertlto Ousntiflot, to that wt don't.just ten out* (but on hot-sodtag itoms, this ..he* happened to us tool However, most of the rime the Item ajr^w~prOcw“ "oror-otesewr^yr 'fwer# fKaV our DISCOUNT PRICES are the LOWEST on most Items end when you come ta for t item, it isn't 'bolted to the Moor* you get. W at the advertised price, stepptag-you-up to e higher priced item et,Stavns. Below am lust a pXi‘11 find on sal# for TOMORROW—WEDNESDAY Amin you'll sera on each purchase hamf ‘"No Bull" Voted by Owners The Most Trouble-Free .., RAMBLER ANNOUNCES STRONGEST- GUARANTEE IN AUTO HISTORY rijteefibit, X RAINCOATS for MEN, LADIES; CHILDREN Men’s Plastie RAINCOATS 57 Regular $1 98 value flemmable platiic is waterproof will not crack, dry out or rot Smoke or ten colors in sites S-M L-XL. 1 Men’s Ptacho TOPPERS Bright yellow plastic ponchos ... one size that fits ell. Ideal lor work, sports, hunting, farming,* 1 49 Men’s Rnbbar RAINCOATS 4s* oieck rubberized reiriCOetf wlltl metal buckle fasteners, double back. All sizes 36 to 46. Boy's Plastic Raincoat with RAIN HELMET Ladies’ Plastic Raincoats SIM Seller Birl’s RAINCOAT OUTFIT |99 DM Vslst with CAP Water repellent rubberized cloth in assorted styles. Button front, pockets. Sizes 3 to 6X end 7 to 14. With matching .rein cape. LIFETIME GUARANTEE ON NEW CERAMIC-ARMORED MUFFLER AND TAIL-PIPE STANDARD ON ALL’61 MODELS Born of space-age developments,' Rambler announces on all 1961 models a new Ceramic-Armored muffler and tail-pipe guaranteed against defects for the lifetime of the car while in the hands of the original owner. This covers total replacement cost including parts and labor* Every '61 Rambler muffler and tail-pipe is completely covered with a special ceramic coating—similar to that used in rockets and missiles—to give lasting protection against rust and corrosion caused by water, salt and acids. Another Rambler first! 12-MONTH, 12,000-MILE WARRANTY EXTENDED TO ALL NEW RAMBLER OWNERS Now Rambler extends to all new Rambler owners its comprehensive full-year or 12,000-mile warranty, whichever occurs first. In fact, this liberal warranty, announced to dealers more than a year ago, also covers total replacement cost including parts and labor. It applies to all 1961 .Rambler models and to 1960 Ramblers still within the warranty period. The normal industry warranty covers only 90 days or 4,000 tides. PRESIDENT, AMERICAN MOTORS Mare Evidence That > RAMBLER IS THE NEW WORLD STANDARD OF BASIC EXCELLENCE AMERICAN MOTORS CORPORATION, DETROIT 32, MICHIGAN 'fc GIRLS' ML WEATHER Rain and Shine COATS 98 -NOW $10.98 Volui Corduroy coat Is water repellent, wrinkle retilt ant. Red or turquoise colors m sizes 7 to 14. With'cap. 3! 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS STAINLES^CTEEL REVERE Sauce Pan Gloss Plates and Cups PRESTO 4-Quart 8-Pc. Slack Sets Pressure Cooker SI.49 Seller* R| Kagalat 11585 - gg Aa shown 2 itenml 1 BS I snicks, ole. C»»t ftlumtnu-n cooker XK tor taster, better *ook-K~S Ine ot all food,. CMkOV ■ulde ob handle. - Sink Drain Pliagers Regular SSe IL 19' ■MM rnd-HH quality n xjuAMf-an.. fluLuRfla 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY r|jw* . WmA^r Register for a FREE pair of Naturallsers. No obligation . . nothing to buy. Use a Convenient Lion Charge .for All Your Purchases TOUR Alibi for Spwdlng Foils #> WipoOutqllOOFino • MANaWA, Wb. UN—PdUce CUM Rodney Taubel beard a new alibi Ponder Free Rides During Bus Strike ___. .. MIAMI, I’M. (API—The U0.OOO /^«ith »aid lw whizzed thresh of Miami and Miami T,n? ftPtf,^r^."^IBeadi today awaited action by T •**** He pafd a WOO One. 1,**^ free rides on buses manned by the striker* without puy. The buses and fuel would be provided by the Miami Transit Co., and Miami Beach Railway Co., against which bus drivers went on strike last Saturday. William D. Pawley, owner the bus companies, said. "I'm prepared to go on as long as they tthf drivers) can.’* 7 Drivers struck over their demand for a 50-qpnt an hour pay raise. They cut the figure to 20 cents but Parley would offer no more than 4 cents. The average Win fill in Sour Shop Downtown DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION DR. HENRY A. MILLER •------Optometrist .. s_1 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 “Better Things in Sight” Contact Lenses Open Fri. Evenings—Closed Wed. Afternoons IF TtttS WERE Your HOME BURNING ... would your insurance cover the cost of rebuilding ... at today's priest? IP YOUR ANSWUt IS "NO" . if you srs not fully insured . . . then you haven't enough! NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL 'Bud' NICHOUE “Get Complete Protection Today" 49 Mt. Clemens Sheet IT 3-7858 ■MSi rest of the world, great issues are at (Make. 1 1 HU Ideeiegleal quarrel with / ,i, .■ of -the Soviet U.lf. delegation scarcely could add to his pretigtl OLDSt-85 Red China may Mt gn ss deep as “leaks” trim CMMMpial piiiwnie have todiested. Yet certainly a succession of de- Failure to favorably impress the new African nation* certainly would represent at least a temporary setback to Communist expan- Coming Oct. 6th Iwmm Olds Cadillac 2g0 $. Ssstosw n 3-7021 ^tM i .A. * ' ."..Hlt- Meet Mr. Edward Thorpe WEDNESDAY —10 A.M. to 0 P.M. MIRACLE MILE With the Entire New Collection "CONGRATULATIONS" - Newly-elected president of the Psychiatric Attendant Nurses Association of Michigan, Mrs. Clair Young (right) exchanges congratulations with the newly-elected president of the grqup's local chapter, Mrs. John Stratton. Both are ituraes at Pontiac Stott Tontine Fmi Photo |ajj| Hospital, where Mrs. Young is supervisor of the K female nurses. Dr. Percy S. Marsa of Lake Or- Bp ion, recently returned from the mission field in IflO the Congo, will be guest speaker when the I We PAN AM manual banquet is held at 6:30 p. m. BB today in the Old Miii Tavem in Waterford. Here’s the k i n d, of wmmimu softness your feet will |i»B| revel in! The lightest, most supple unlined , aBBBN leathers rr. cushioned-^-y^^H from heel to toe. Their .% jHp™ tailoring touches are all new this fall . . . and they fit like Na-turalizers always do. SI095 to $1495 Nikita Khrushchev Playing Up Like Ml Boy for Effect on Crowd;! By PHIL NEWSOM I So, a« he raises the price for reactionary power which seeks to To watch Nikita Khrushchev in world disarmament, beats upon his extend colonialism and hold new SEP action is to watch a man who eiJUnited Nations desk, or insults ajnattonaUn bondage._________________Ip Joys hbr work. [world leader, he looks about hira| Shapiro puts it this way: |W As he seu about either to destroy for the effect he is creating. | -The outburst* and balcony ap- M the United Nations or to revamp Last weekend, after a name-call-|pearancea are largely a function MS it in his own image, his is the ing tu-ade unprecedented in United of the Khrushchev .personality.i. figure of a small boy turned loose Nations history, and as he stalked!That is how he behaves every- §R with a large red crayon on freshly whitewashed fence. His look frequently is an Impish one Which dares, (he world to stop him. from the United Nations headquarters for a pleasant time, on Long Wand, he spotted United International correspondent Henry Shapiro whom he long haa known in Moacow. He said to Shapiro: "Yoe asked me U i ■peak about China. Are you satisfied” It was the session In which he raised the threat of Communist withdrawal Item the United Nations if Red China continued to be refused a seat. All thia should be buffoonery. But Khrushchev.1 who does not hesitate to illustrate a point wit! crudities, is no buffoon. This Is a. man who fights a deadly game with gutter tactics. This is a man intent upon dem-i jonstrating his status as a world leader. He is intent upon furthering the image of Russia as the true friend of dependent and derdeveloped people. Equally; tie is intent upon holding up the United States as where and all the time. “He cynot sit sffll and his noises I jL may indicate either approval or[E disapproval. He is shrewd enough [1 to realise that most of the time]! he makes good mileage and grabs! 1 the world headlines.” For Khrushchev, as with the' 5 Mr. Thorpe, will be here j all day and evening to- \ morrow to assist you I and to show the entire { Naturalizer line. THREE BECAiJSESr FOR YOU TO BUY A NEW REFRIGERATOR NOW! 1. Because the old one has no FROZEN FOOD STORAGE. 2. Because the old one is not AUTOMATIC DEFROSTING. 3. Because the old oneri* TOO SMALL. NEW GIBSON Big 100-lb. True Zero Freezer. No more messy defrosting because it is COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC I 14 Cubic Feet of food storage. Convenient 2-door model. Trade-in your old refrigerator now on this new, bigger and better Gibson! and ONLY 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! FREE SERVICE - FREE HOOK-UP Yes, WHO) but Schenley could put out such a remarkably good whisky as Red Satin at this low price! $3«h $2« Ten States Righten Certified in Honda r;::,:: cam will be extended to next January. American! Bkby’s ready for bed faster than you can say “sandman”... comfy warm, protected through the night! Sturdy snap fasteners at waist and down back keep sleeper in place, make for fast changes l BUd-resist plastic scries gives proper feet ventilation. Sited by weight for proper fitl Maize, mint, pink, blue. • • . COMPARE PENNEY'S LOW PRICE FOR KNIT SLEEPERS WITH THESE FEATURES! sises 1 lo 4 AS FINE, ASNEW, AS YOU CAN GO Now! Full <£mfort, full luxury, in a new trimmer full-size car! thefullsize61 BUICK Now there’* more easy-living room for all of you—up, down, all around. For thia full-tixe Buick i« new clean through from its big Comfort Zone light down to the ground. Doom an wider and the dog leg’s smoothed away. A new Hide-Away driveshaft gives far mom flat floor apses. A new Safety-X from lower* the door sill*. New Cootrol Arm suspension amooth* the bump*. And wait till yoo try it* new Wildcat V-B, atreamlined from within far mere go on leaegao... and to ■* earing new Turbine Drive, standard on aawy full-aim Buick! And, then’* piaaty atom to ok and be proud of. See jeor Buick Dealer today, am why.. r s ’61 IS BUICK’S YEAR! tttistasssaasssMsssMssssssssss •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY BUICK DEALER NOW . , Your Quolity,Buick Dealer in PpntiosJs: OLIVER MOTOR SALES, INC, ■/* 210 ORCHARD LAKE AVE^ yHE POMT1AC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER '< But It Costs Much More to Operate President, and His Pilo Their Jet WP WILLIAM I. BATON WASHDKJtaN (UPU - President ElawUwwtr la making more and mom me of the Air Force Boeing TOT Jet plane assigned to the whit* House and other government VIPs. Air Foma Col. WfUtam G. Draper, the prudential pilot and Air Force aide, flew the Mg orange-tipped TOT to Philadelphia and New York recently rather than use the ptatoowngtned Columbine TMs choice la ratoer uarpris Hals. They flgu* as a rale at thumb that It costa about U.40 . a mUe to fly a Jet compared to aa estimated tt.M to fl.« a mOa for a foor-eaglaed Oeaatol-latton. On a shut trip horn Washington to Philadelphia, aviation experts say, a Jet Is even met* uneconomical since It consumes a great amount of fuel getting off the ground and at low altitudes. The explanation offered around the White House is that Draper Just prefers to fly the swept-wing Jet and Ha 550-mile-per-hour speed auto the President, tdB. Last week on a trip to, New York, the President flew to Philadelphia to deliver a speech and then Jetted from Philadelphia to Newark Airport. This last leg took Just IT minutes. Using he W | There’s no question about the President's liking for the “choppers” that whisk him directly from the White House grounds to airports, to his Gettysburg farm or to other nearby points. ' He recently used a 'copter for aj three-minute trip that took him about two miles from the Whitei House to the parade ground at FYi Myer. Va., across the Potomac ftkm Washington. ■ * * This ’copter-jet combination Is proving to be quite a headache for the White House press corps because it’s tougher than ever to keep up with the President by fly. ing in a piston-engined plane. n Jet harness they're to* snpin atom to charter far a aaaal «*»■►) , / Dawn departures to precede (to President are becoming mmmu This caused one airline official to rwnlntoqp about the “good old days" . when President Truman used the DOI that was known aa the “Sacred Com." In those days, he said: “W# could watch Thunaa tdke off from Washington, climb aboard a Constellation with plenty of time to spare and J* almost anywhere In time to watch the President's Mane come In for a landing." ^ Will You A Help Me to W. Get a Job? acement service will be at your n you graduate and throughout s career. The finest employers in l upon us to fill excellent positions y and opportunity. They are' offer-itions now than wohave graduates. id-Term Onenlnr OrtnSer in ~4 Our free pi service whe; your busines this area cal! with good pa ingmore-pos IM Pontiac Business Institute 7 West Lawrence Street FEHeral 2-3551 Since 1896 Wants to Certify All Space Records BARCELONA. Spain lit — Famed American aviatrlx Jacqueline Cochran has started the wheels turning to assure that flight records set by the first person into space are given official,1 recognition. * ♦ ’ * She is president of the Inter-! Aeronautic Federation, I960 Dr. Stanley W. Block Optometrist 1511 Elisnltarii Lake Rd. ' Corner of Cess Lake Rd. Evenings by Appointment Phone F! 2-2362 Closed Wed. At tawiu HATED HI NUARUN TALKS 1 — Janos Kadar, first secretary I of the Cbnununist Party in Hun- j gary, addresses the 96-nation • General Assembly of the United 1 Nations In New York Monday. Australia to Make Ramblers Next Year I DETROIT (UPI)—Production of! open the federation's ul! The company said a licensee! Ives of 40 countries. Australian Motor Industries, Ltd..j * h h • I of Pert Melbourne for the m She told a news conference the facture of Ramblers. as come for IAF to move Major parts will he shipped to! see and set the rales and:Australia from the American] the arrangement! whereby Motors plants in KcnishnWIs.j certify aa official all thi.Other parts will be produced ! No# .. Tomorrow's Banking Today kBodt lltlllfS Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation More than two-bUlion pounds Here Now! General Motors and Buick introduce THE QLEAH LOOK t of action the specialize BUICK SPECIAL THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS stood. rw", rids, fo. prida of the costliest cars plus the tarings and ease of ths small Look at this gem—then look at ths full-size Buick below. Can you doubt the Special’s all Buick. too? Cotnbin-, ing savings and ease with Buick comfort and iusury! For an all-day ride you get more total head, leg. and hip room than in the compacts.. . the name kind of Caatml Arm suspension si ths fuH-sise *61 Buick*. And for git, its new aluminum V<8 and aluminum Dual-Path Turbine Drive* give you ~ twice the pow per jxmnd of most compacts (more even than many full, size cart)! But, the biggest new* it that all this it your* for fust a u hisper above the compacts! -option,) it trtrtcti Smaller than big Mow? Full size living in two ncw-size.surin‘ises SIGHT THE POXTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1060 II L Huron FE 4-0566 ' Pontiac i W# Art Open Monday and Friday Nighlt 'Ul i P.M. Secret Kidnaping Society Runs Rarhpant Throughout Singapore lEDITORS KTI: ThU nib intUllmcot oJ a 18-on lnlern*(lon»l crime . Irom "Journey Into Crime, book b; Don WMMMOC^ By DON WHITEHKAD The name Singapore conjures up visions of waterfront brawl* ... beautiful Eurasion women available at a price . . drumming | downpour* . . . and old BUI Bailey sitting behind hi* bar strumming [ guitar. Singapore also is slebkj men and women in limousines . . the Orient with a British accent ,1 Singapore Js ait this, but 'under- j ncath is,a world of crime and vi.o-1 lence — controlled and directed largely by the secret societies jhbM„influence has degenerated, into organized terror; 1 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET WEDNESDAY ONLY SUPER SPECIALS AT BAILEYS Leg or Rump VEAL ROASTS IC Lb. 39 Shouldor Cuts VEAL STEAKS IC Lb. 39 REMUS—WE LIMIT BUnER 55 ttfc P ■ ■ ■ SPECIAL OFFER ■ : 6x10 PHOTOGRAPH The hour was midnight. One by one *fx Chinese men slipped through the shadow* of a Singapore street and entered a dingy bouse. Once Inside they squatted on their haunches and nervously notched a little man wearing a black robe and a red turban, symbolic Of his position as lining Chiu, or area leader, of society. ! police car. swung into the path of gang leader was operating from a _ | the sedan which skidded 16 the secret *'de of the road. The driver and bis two com- downtown 'headquarters. j playing A careful check led detectives! witoteiy candidate in aM Singapore.) was m brains behind the Udoap- had more power than Aft CfeaL Goodrich was amazed to learn that Aft Cbai bad engineered the abdyetion of U wealthy Chinese merchants. Once a likely candidate •very mowe was watched for days. HMD be kidnaped and thrown into a pig pep or chicken pen — to live in the filth of animals and big own filth, i .? * A when almost crazed by fear, and revulsion, he was forced to write fl note pleading with the family to meet the ransom demands. The [payoffs averaged more than 6300, [000 each. Ah Chat surrendered meekly. I Asked, "Why did you keep on ‘ When you bad already plied up a fortune?" - be shrugged and said: M1 bud to keep oe to pay [ off the blackmail by gamblers." > Alter he bad won huge sums at the gambling tables, they had threatened to disclose his kidnap operations if he refused to meet their demands. And so the blackmailer was blackmailed. Ah Chai paid with life for hie crimes. But somewhere in Sings-[J pore another Heung Chiu has ' -GKAfifc'S-' GET FOR YOUR MONEY WED. By day the little man - whose pantos* jomped out, leaving Tam — small import-export' form near of^Ah t^ha?s*t^^ag^t^was^l§i^e^i. *5Lt*W **•“•[ Raffles Ptace, similar to dozensjdnw ■*«„* RaiHim, *h« miiaK-PN J**10* against the secretj ----- .—i Ah Chai — wore the! ragged clothes of one on the edge car, te a short skirmish, two of [of poverty. Only a few Chinese] *** kidnapers were killed. The knew he was one of the most third was captsred and sentenced powerful and dangerous criminals [ *• death, but not owee tta . „ . . , , [drug addict, Raiding tlfe officejBOCil,«mi the floor of the of other small business places in they found some morphine, arrestH._______________*°C* Singapore. Three men worked in led the addict and placed him the office, one of-them a ragged | a closely guarded cell, looking fellow named Ah Chai. All) * * * seemed Jo live frugally. Bat Inspector Goodrich made an Interesting dtoeovery. While I Ah Cbai by day seemed one Jump [in the city’s strange underworld ! ■*"M! of Ah Chai escape from bis * ★ * j “P* On this night of March 1956 Ah At headquarters. I nspecial [ . ...... . Chai had called before him recruits B- w- *■ Goodrich put togetherlabead of starvatloa, at algbt he who were to be initiated Eachibila of information that seemed to * -i. 11 1—st— repeated solemnly the 36 oaths WI (than two years. ■ ■ ut several alleged victim*, [weatthy Chinese, refused to talk. It was obvious they feared some-i They knew the meaning as Ab! thing they believed more powerful [Chai drew a knife and with one[than the police. [swift movement cut off the head] of the rooster. As the hours passed, the man’sj craving became unbearable. Perspiration poured from his body.| He began to babble and revealed] that Ah Chai, perhaps the most' OLDS F-85 Coming Oct. 6th Jerome Oldi Cadillac | Two days after this weird ritual, a wealthy Chinese rubber broker, Tam Puay Choo* stepped into a [ trishaw — the bicycle - propelled version of a rickshaw—and headed || for the rubber mart. J The trishaw bad traveled only ' a few blocks when a small black [Laedaa suddenly forced it to the (Iteuular MAS Value) EREE: S EXTRA SsIS INTERVAL rilOTOOEAPHS ir VHD WITHIN IS OATS * Selection of proofs • No Appointment Needed • Only One Offer Eech 9 Months * Croups, Costumes, Persons Over. 12 Years Slightly Additional ■ ‘‘The boss wants to see ..you,’*] [said one of two men with pistols ■las they forced Tam Into the car. He was poshed to the floor, his[ It wasn't until October 1957 that I police got their first big break with the kidnaping of 65-year-old Ngsen Choy, who owned a prosperous tailoring establishment*. As Choy left home in his chauffeur-driven limousine, accompanied by his wife and a grandson, a small car forced him to the side of- the road. .Two gunmen knocked the | chauffer unconscious and hsuled Choy, struggling, into the small car. Mrs, Choy saw them pull a tack over her husband's head as they said, "You will hear from Old Tk I u/V fiii Up 181. KL r; w GET READY FOR I FALL and WINTER SAVE 25% to 33% 1 But Ah Chai and his men made one fatal mistake. They underrated iLall happened soqulckly thatithe courage of Mrs a*y- ta**M * ' ••• "- [df being hyitertcal. she halted a truck and persuaded the- driver to take he* and her grandson home, where she ealied police and de-| scribed the abductors and their ■[passers-by did -not realize they had seen a kidnaping; but the tri-[ ■|shaw driver caletd police. Headquarters Immediately ra- ■- jdioed an alarm and a cruising police car spotted the sedan racing icar’ along Bukit Timah Road. ■Kthe first break ]apotted the small car. In an ex-One Tif the kidnapers cri e d,[change of gunfire, one of the gang-I# ■■ Ml Bfc ■ ■ Ml *B|i|b|Sk h "Keep driving — and shoot!” Gun- j stem was wounded and captured. H k HI II n I k k I 11II III Hi tire from the little car forced the [He talked enough to cause Inspec- |R L 11 Ir HLL H I wlwlw ,P°lice t0 droP back but another tor Goodrich to suspect that the] Studio Hours. Mon. 12:30 to 8:30. Tues.-Sat. 9:30 to 5:00^” 14 S. Saginaw ____ FI 5-0321 1 ■THIS OFFER EXPIRES OCTOBER 31, 196o|| | ImrrtJg /AGENT |[Car Renters Ignore Tickets Traffic Court Stymied 714 Community Kal’l __Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt Res. FE 5-3753 Donald1E. ‘ Hansen Res. FE. 3-5513 Homeowners' Policies Accident Insurance Fire Insurance Automobile Insurance Life Insurance Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types Tenant's Policies ---- DETROIT (UPD—Traffic Court Judge George T. Murphy has no [kind words for motorists who rent r, collect a parking ticket or \twtr and then forget the whole thing. And Murphy has figures to 'show that patrons of rent-a-car agencies do a good job of getting tickets, but a woeful job of paying them. He said one rent-a-car agency in Detroit has amassed a total of 1,800 unpaid tickets in the city, with flte' fine ranging from S3 to 65 per ticket. wit TSetrolt has no way To collect. ! Under state law, a ear owner cannot be fined If be ran prove I he wasn’t the person who broke [_*« tow [ "Rental agencies, (he owners of I the cars, have a good case, Murphy said. h—a------------A- -.★ - —------ So good is their case that they-don't even bother to acknowledge! (summonses. _ ^ Murphy wants .new legislation enacted so that license plates could be revoked for autos which outstanding parking tickets. For Finer Fuel Oil . . . Clarke Oil Cc. 659 Pershing St., Pontiac LET US FILL YOUR TANK NOW! Insured Budget Pay-Plan HARRY SHOUP • BUD KUKUK JOHN INGAMELLS MY 3-4591 UL 2-3227 EM 3-2210 DON RICHMOND OR 3-5072 ED ROSS MA 5-9756 i rental agencies could! then be forced to pay for tickets acquired by customers. Murphy said the rental agencies could then pass the charge along to the customers who broke the Rutgers University estimates Hurricane Donna caused a 35 to 50 per cent loss in New Jersey’s fruit crop. After the storm, an estimated 750,000 bushels of appleq! were lying on the ground in thd date. THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, lftfie 0\i ^ i km* ■ Pontiac Area UF Women Canvassers Joseph Schultz, training chairman jor Pontiac Area United Fund voluq• men eg Monday's orientation session, men at Tuesday's orientation session. Abby Says: Others Have Intent in the foreground are Mrs. Roderick Taylor, women's division chairman (at left), and Mrs. nen Hawkins, Pontiac cochairman. It You Have Mind to Learn, Inquire About Adu * By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN * DEAR ABBY: I am 41 and have a wonderful family. I went only through the. seventh grade because there were 10 {■ our family out school to help out graduated Bom college left way ABBY friends, I even Jfel ignorant when my children and their friends discuss things. .V Is there any way I can learn; correct grammar and. vocabulary 'at my age? No home courses, please. MRS. LEFT BEHIND DEAR MRS. LEFT: Inquire into your local adult education classes. Older people with far less education than you have pitted up the thread of learning where they dropped it years ago. All you need is the desire to learn—and you have that. DEAR ABB^ Before you condemn ALL “other women.” please listen to my story. I was “the other woman,” six years ago. I broke up a man's home and took him from his wife and 4 children and T didn't even know it. _ He ndt only Bed to (lKs wife Your PTA in A v Madison Junior High School's ?arenl>T%aeher-Student Association will meet Thursday for the first Jime this fall. A typical school luncheon will be served at the 6 p.m. get-acquainted affair in the school cafeteria. c At the 7:30 p.m. business session George Yansen, principal, will introduce the teaching staff and Mrs. Harrol Beebe, PT8A president, will introduce iier officers and chairmen. Group discussions on the theme “Working Together to Build Responsible Citizens” will follow. {SLIDES FOR NORTHERN V At Pontiac Northern High School's PTA meeting Wednesday Philip Wargelin, principal, will speak and show slides of his recent trip abroad an a Ful-prlght grant. Refreshments will follow the 7:30 p.m. meeting. about me—he lied to me about his wife. I didn't know until 10 months after I married him land we went together two years) that he was married when I met him. As you can guess, we aren't very hdppy. What woman could be, knowing she married the world's biggest liar? LIAR’S WIFE w * a DEAR ABBY: My hubby and I have been married almost 25 years with no major problems, We’ve been disagreeing over something for a long time. Do you BITE into ah ice cream cone with your teethr-or do you lick the ice cream? This debate always starts fireworks in our fhmlLv.___ ICE CREAM CONE FANCIER Dancers Will Meet aTSchool The Square Dance Club will meet for its first regular dance of the -season at Herrington School Saturday. Several members will can tor the^9 p.m. affair. The Promenadm s q u a tt Dance Club will meet again Oct. 15 after opening their sea-son last Saturday evening at Hawthorne School. O * * ■ Wayne Wilcox, program chairman, asked Robert Cram, Warren Allen and R ob e r t Longe to call. / Mrs. and Mrs. Warren Allan were presented an honorary membership- in recognition of service and support of the club. Graybiel,—Mrs. Victor- Lindquist, Mrs. L. A Hamilton, Mrs. Joseph Fox, Mrs. James McGuire, Mrs. G. E. Strickland, Mrs. Charles Klstner and Mrs. Gerald Stanke, districts 13-21, all of Area II. . * * * Mrs. Hawkins, explained, the new Solicitor's Manual, informing the group that this year's goal is $27,000. .Joseph H. Schultz, volunteer training chairman, presented a slide program, prepared especially for the women's division. The final Pontiac session will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Community Services Building at which time Mrs. Taylor and Mrs. Hawkins will introduce area chairmen Mrs. William Coulacos and Mrs. Leonard Buzz and chairmen from 'dis- ' tricts 22-44. Pontiac Area Hi district chairmen are Mrs. Kalvin Williams, Mrs. Robert Petrttto. Area and district chairmen lottk over-printed material designed to help them in their campaign efforts. Chairmen (from left) arc-Mrs. Glenn Griffin of Ogemaw Road. Mrs. Irring Cocking ol Putnam Avenue, Mrs. Joseph Fox of Starr A venue and Mrs. Richard Fox of Pioneer Drive. Food Editor Feasts in New York By JANET ODELL NEW YORK CITY - This is your foreign correspondent reporting from New York where a celebrity is the abundant item . n town. The city is. i w a r ming w i t h police- Sunday rtoon we had brunch at a still-uncompleted South ' American restaurant; La Fonda Del Sol. The color scheme and the waiters* outfitreombined r viv-- id orange With an equally vivid pink. The quantity and variety of foods was discouraging; no one could eat that much. Mrs. Harold-At5rSffi*r^Mr *. Eldon Sweazey, Mrs. Clarence Mack, Mrs. S. M. Edwards, Mrs. Frank Scully, Mrs. Cas-rnier Zelenski, Mrs, Cressy Larson, Mrs. Clifford Hickmont and Mrs. William Robare, districts 22-32 respectively. Pontiac Area IV district chairmen are Mrs. James Miska, Mrs. John Frichter, Mrs. Felipe Rabaja, Mrs. A. A. Rodgers, Mrs. F. B. Huston, Mrs. Earl Steinhart, Mrs. Leonard Cotter, Mrs. Lyle Hen-retty, Mre. WilUamWllllam-son, Mrs: Burton Bartholomew and Mrs. Nick Thomas, districts 33 to 43 respectively. FiguriTffOuf (NEA) — Overweight people should remember that no single food makes you fat — not even U BV pie or ice cream. What does make you fat is the total amount of all toods you eat over and above what your hotly neRtt to 'gW along. ■ Get Right Color (NEA) Gals with light hair should avoid dark eyebrow pencil. ~ Redheads will find an auburn or light brown pencil gives just the right amount of emphasis, and blondes will get best results from light brown— alone. Dark brown or black . Will create pn artificial look watch i n g to see that: Khrushchev and other U.N. visitors are unharmed. MRS. ODELL We food editors are just as curious as ithe local populace and line up to see Mr. K and the Crom Prince of Japan, or Nasser enter or leave the hotel. Despite the daily drama at "the U. N. and a five-hour parade on Fifth Avenue on Sunday. we’ve managed to. got around to the various spots where our meetings are held. Citrus fruit was used as a garnish or an ingredient in many dishes; our hosts were the Florida Citrus Commission. When I return, I’D have a report about the status of the ...citrus crop in Florida after the hurricane. WWW Three of us each ordered a different dessert and tried all three. I had a smooth creamy cheese cake and tried both a rice pudding with fruit and a Mexican cake that tasted like - a-choeoiate -Napoleon-.-—:—fc* ~ Late afternoon saw ds at the Nippon Gub where we surten- Hears Ta^k on Living Panhellenic Unit Meets Mrs. Robert Anderson of Silverside Drive, Drayton Wains, opened her home for tlie October, meeting ©f.Pontiae Gty Panhellenic Association Monday evening lyfrs William Freyprmuth and Rosamond Haeberie were hostesses. H, H. Peters, local representative of the public relations department of the Michigan Bell Telephone Co., was guest speaker on the topic "Plan loir ....Pleasant Living." • Plans were completed tor -Jhe.XhUDlfflL.card Party Nov. 4 at the Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building. Proceeds * will be applied to the Ptn-hellenic Scholarship Fund. Committee ctalrmen are Mrs, John K, Irwin, tickets: Mrs. Richard Kuhn, cards and tables; Mrs. Ray Wilhelm, favors and door prizes; Mrs. E. W. McGovern, pencils and paper; Mrs. Russell Jacobson, refre• hments; Mrs. W. H. Ragsdale, clean up; and Rosamond Haeberie, publicity.------- Betsy Camall was a guest at the meeting. " dcred1 our shoes tor . sandals and donned "happt" coats. We-word served traditional Japanese fish dishes, Including bits of raw fish. Service and music were provided by native Japanese. Heinz Introduced two new soups at their "Chalet 57” dinner Sunday evening. Cheese soup 1s excellent as lust a soup or as an ingredient in other foods. RECIPES NEXT WEEK I'll have recipes for you next week—evert tor cheese soup in apple pie. This soup should be In natlonat dlstrlbu-— lion next week, so watch for it. Their second soup is a mildly flavored alphabet soup for children. ' At breakfast this morning our hosts, the makers of Sara Lee Products, presented Amy Vanderbilt who spoke on "The( Social Acceptance of Convenience Foods.” ★ * * She says it’s perfectly all right, gals, tor you to serve your frozen meat pies right in' their foil pans. * * * Two of the most Informative —programs came today: one was a speech by Dr. Robert if. White-Stevens, manager of the nutrition, physiology and biochemistry research section of American Cyannmid Co. His talk pointed out the great advances made in the production ancj preservation of food with the aid of the chemistry industry. He asserted that the major problem of our time is to increase continually our food supply. He said the public is being falsely told that its food supply is being contaminated with poi- son from insecticides and other chemicals, We must -restore the conft- -donee of the people iff the safety of our food supply. A meat cutting demonstration was the second Informative session. We saw a pork loin and a beef hind quarter cut into the kind ol meat we •{ hay- —i V i - Jj TO REGULATE FAT We learned how great a pro- (4 portion of the animal is fat -which Mrs. America doesn't want. We learned the names of the different cuts. The forecast , was made that animals will—k probably be fed differently to f change the amount of fat they y now carry. Tea time found us trying out ) the new Gerber animal crack- -era. Made in the shape of , horses, bunnies, ducks, cats *.j and dogs, they are, a crisp ‘ glazed cookie sure to appeal^ to infant appetites. Gerber is also introducing an sppto-cherry juice for babies. Sounds as If the plant in Fremont, Mich., is going all-out1 for native fruit. They used Michigan • grown apricots this year for the-flrst time. Dow Chemical, another of handy wrap now in the stores. , It is designed to keep sand- > wicheg and other foods fresher In lnru-ti linves Witrfr foj; this ‘ _ # * * The R. T. French Co. tried on us Monday, all using spices. They also gave us curried shrimp gazpacho and Mexican coffee flavored with cinnamon. Before meal time, we saw an interesting movie on spice* F The first two days are over and already we’ve eaten our way around the world. More on Thursday, I A lurking figure in the shadows will- poseSno threat to MickiKmg of Parkins Street. She's on her way to learn "the art of self defense for "women”. at the)TMCA. The 10-week course is offered in hour-long sessions beginning Thursday at 7 p.m, Instructor Otto Chanko of Livonia, who holds judo's third-degree black belt, shows' Micki the technique'of the stomach throw. “Takes a little self-confidence at first,” the admits, “but it's fascinating.” Micki was an Olympia diving contender, so her coordination is above the average. Jhe hip throw comes next. Leverage and how to use lit defensively gives the smaller person an advantage,” explains Chanko. Micki tries to recall the leverage principles Of physics, but decides to abandon these in favor of doing what comes naturally. In this instance, it will be over and down for Micki. the M Micki has her revenge, •tiavsng learned t hold she returns it, turning ike tables bn instructor. She** learned the commando, secret^ judo: speed is all-important. ‘To think I learned in 10 easy lesionsshe grins. TEN THE POXTlXc PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, I960 Pontiac Airman Marries in English Ceremony After their marriage Wednesday] In HHchbt Catholic Church, Hitch-in. England. Airman lc Hugh W. Walker and hi* bride, the former June Betty Mitchell of Letch worth, left for a honeymoon In Parti, The Rev. Mkhael Lee solemnized the nuptials. * * A ' Daughter of Mrs. A. G. P. Mitchell of Letchworth and the late Mr. Mitchell, the bride was given in marriage by her brother James A. Mitchell. Rmetvtng with the . bride’s j mother at a rKeptlaa la Worm!- ! tage Halle, Httrhie, were the ! Weeded H. Walkers ot East I The bridegroom’s sister. Nfncy Carol Walker of Pontiac and Mary E. Saunders of Letchworth appeared In forget-me-not blue nylon > white nylon over taffeta, and short lace-edged: veil of lllutlon. the bride carried | a cascade of red rases, stephanotis and lilies of the valley. ADULT and CHILDREN'S BOOKS - Greeting Cuds Come la aed browse around/ Pontiac Seek & Cud Skip I W. Lawrence FE 1.1041 DON'T RUN OUT OF MILK THIS WEEKEND! NYE DAIRY SIS Oakland Are. PI 2-67S6 Meet Your Friends Iff Luck MKBt FOUNTAIN STAY ALIVE LONGER VMt VITAL HEALTH FOODS LEARN TO KNIT Classes Mon. thru Frf, I-S p.m, THie Knitting Needle 15I^r.Truldh TET-tm SHOES for Hi* Entire Family NEEL’S SHOES j MRS. HUOR W. WALKER |organdy. Jean Mary and Margaret Joyce Mitchell, in peach organdy, were their sister’s Junior attendants. All wore pearl coronets and :carried sprays of pink roses on] white prayer books. 1 S. Sgt. James . Sorrell of Chlck-sande AFB where the bridegroom is^aleo stationed, was best man . Tae newlyweds will live iirLetch- How to Get Along J With Gol Worker NEW YORK tUPI) - In a special report tided ‘’Industry’s Growing Stake in Womanpow-er." the Industrial Relations News gives the formula a boss should use to get along with female employe*. The formula: recognize in what respect women differ from men; treat them accordingly; and don’t let them know It. Are You a Cut-Up? If you have a talent for cutting ,out paper dotts. Tfy making a truly stunning bedspread by cutting a filigree design in an expanse ot white felt. Line with a vibrant sateen and use with a latex foam bolster which adds the final note of smooth elegance. 'Play Must Go On' Is Excusable By EMILY PORT Dear Mrs. Post: My mother-in-law died recently and wee kept at a funeral, home for three days before being buried. I went to work every day during this time and stayed out only on the day of tne funeral. Now I understand I am being criticized by some of my wife's relatives who are paying that I was very disrespectful for not staying home. Will you please comment on this? Answer: The old saying that “the play must go on," is equally true of all professions. U you would not have incon-venlenced any one by staying away, then of course, 1 think you should have. * But to have stayed away and let someone else do your work would have been to consider your own feelings at unfair expense to whoever had to take over your pert. Had you gone about amusing yourself, that would have been a very different situation. ♦ ♦ ★ Dear Mrs. Post: Is a godmother expected to buy the baby’# christening clothes, or. If it has a dress to wear handed down In the family for this special occasion, then what Is she expected to bu$r tiie child in place ot the dress? Answer: It Is never expected of a godmother to buy the christening clothes. Typical -presents from# godparent arc, a silver mug or porringer; a silver fork and spoon, a silver comb and brush set, a govern* men! bond, etc. —— * * ★ Dear Mrs. Post: When a retiring employe say* ahe doesn't want any dinner given in her honor, or in fact anything made of her leaving, may her fellow employes go ahead any* way and plan Rich a dinner, and disregard such expressed wishes? Answer: If she really dislikes the idea, consideration should be taken of her feelings. But if her objection is because Of her realization of the trouble she would be putting the others to, this could be over- Symphony Women. Hear Dr. Ward Dt.'Ted Wand, coordinator of the t~Michl4g&.gtate Parent-Teacher Association and president of the FoA-Rac Symphony, spoke to members of the Women's Association of the Pontiac Symphony Monday after-noon. '' 4 Opening hyr Long Point Drive home to the first meeting of die season was Mrs, Leonard Major. She was assisted by Mrs. Oollis Scott. Mrs. Walter WObnan and Mra. William Donaldson. Officers elected were Mrs. Ar-" Hllleraiaa, president; Mrs. Pontiac Symphony business man• | ager Mrs. Charles Gadd (at left) of Orchard Lake and hostess Mrs. Leonard Majorf of Long Point Drive were de- lighted with Dr. Ted Ward’s folk when the Women’s Association of the Pontiac Symphony met Monday afternoon to inaugurate Us season. | So They’ll Be Sturdy Adults ; Babies Need Muscle Building Games Dear Mrs. Post: Is a man who was once a senator, but is one no longer, always railed Senator So-and-So? Answer: Even though he is no longer a senator, he continues to be called Senator So-and-So. for broad loom carpet with rich textured beauty that never needs pampering hoose CaLTWIST By DR. DOROTHY WHtPPLE AP NEWM’EATllREB At about one yea r, your baby will master his legs and make the marvelous discovery that they will take him places. Then he wants to wale. He is likely to drop all previous activity. He wantl to walk, walk. walk. He-still need* vour fin-ger to hang onto before he will venture into the open spaces of the center of the room. A baby can wear you out with his demands for your supporting finger. Burwalkihg is very good for him. Not only is he practicing how one foot goes in front of the other foot, but he is exercising all the muscles used to keep his body erect and move it about. —finally thy day come* When your baby becomes a true toddler and can go off dh his own. For a while he Will still like to walk Just for walking's sake, but eventually he masters the art sufficiently so that the pure joy of putting one foot in front of the other has lost a little of its charm. - SMALL ACROBAT Si _ Now-your little fellow wants |i-to run and skip, go sidewise 81 and backward. He wants to B| putt something after him. If he 8 spies a wall he must walk These are all variations of the art of walking. Each brings in a few extra set! of muscles alt of which need use to develop their full capacities. Go on walks with your toddler. When you start, make the distance short so that he can make the round trip on his own legs. When your toddler is in the house he, still needs to be do-ing things. He will run, Jumj>, pull things around after him. He will climb over the .furniture and drive you crazy. IFi~ani6diI'"ldea to provide some spot indoors where strenuous physical activity can go on without harm to the child or to your possessions. EXERCISE MAT This is the time to get an-exercise mat. A discarded mat-tress is fine if you can find a large enough floor Area to lay it.. Help your child to learn to somersault. Let him put his head and hands on the mat, rear stuck up in the air — a gentle push from you will send him over. He will chortle with glee aqd soon learn to do it without your push. It’s an excellent exercise. Do you know how to (day wheelbarrow? Let the child He on the floor on his abdomen. Pick up his legs and let him I walk forward on his hands. The closer to his knees you hold him the easier he finds it to go forward on Hi Hindi. CUBE ually move your support back to his feet and then even let to one foot This Is a woriSer-ful exercise for the shoulders. Children enjoy playing this game among themselves. The wheelbarrow game leads to standing on head and hands. Muscles grow strong and sup-pie when youngsters use them vigorously for exercises Uke . this. But muscles become flabby and weak when the chief indnrtr ^Hyl»y Is watching TV. Quiet activity has its place in tiie life of a child but it must not take the place of the vigorous muscle building gafoeri. The early years are the'tat-portant ones in which to develop sturdy bodies which will be a Joy to their owners aH their lives. In the toddler years do not slip into the easy way ot turning on the TV whenever you want a little peace and quiet. TV has many good things to recommend it but it can be greatly abused. If we are not careful our children become watchers, not acton. If we let them slide through childhood without vigorous physical ex-erefoes they will wake up in their bodies are more of a liability ’than a source of strength and pleasure. Named to committees were Mrs. ’ J. C. Walker, membership; Mrs. Capaalis, program; Mrs. Fred ■Coleman publicity; Mn. Louis rSohimmeI and Mrs. E. C. Russell, hospitality; and Mrs. Vernon C. Abbott, house. Others serving will be Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Curtis Patton and Mrs. Joseph Belant, ways and means; Mrs. Dawson and Mrs. L. Raymond Sampson, constitution and bylaws; Mrs. Marvin Talan, yearbook; Mrs. .Cecil McCallum and Mrs. George Shearer, public relations; and Mrs. George Pratt, federation delegate. Mrs. UUgtan will have charge M Kelson and tickets. Other com-mlttccs Indore Mrs. 8. V. 8e-kles, Mr*. Donald Hogue and Mrs. Herman Dicksteia, budget; Mrs. Norm and Durocher, telephone; Mrs. Maxwell L. Shadley, Town Hall Hahun; Mr*, Symphony Kelson; and Mrs. Horace ItaK, courtesy and flowers . "A symphony is not just the musicians but the many people supporting tt," said Dr. Ward in his talk, "What Is A Symphony?” He stressed the need for strong community support to maintain the civic orchestra’s stability. "The Pontiac Symphony perpetuates something to the young and old that is good and dean," concluded Dr. Ward. Members wore reminded of the Oct, 18 concert which opens the current season. To be heard in the acoustically fine Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium, Km concert will feature John Gregory narrating Copland's ‘‘Lincoln Portrait."— ^ Special Purchase Discontinued Pattern MAQEE'S CEDAR HILL - High Pile Random Loop Texture Elegant carpeting from Magee, permanently mothproofed, in a limited stock. SALE PRICE $io:s. BUY NOW AND SAVE! 5390-5400 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1225 Serving the Pontiac Area foe Over 37 Years Smart /town ’n’ travel eomp&r. ion — a suiGress with trim, slim lines to make you look taller and narrower. Choose tweedy rayon, cotton faille, wool. Printed Pattern 489; Hair «— 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. Mite 16% Jacket an skirt 3 yards 38-inch fabric. Send fifty cents in coins for this ^pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept, 243 West 17th St., Ntew York 11, N.Y. nrint plainly Name, Address with tone, Size and Style dumber. SEND NOW! Big, beautiful. Colorific Fell And Winter, Pattern Catalog has over 100 styles, to sewschool, career, kaH-ifees. Only 35 cents! Transform Basement to Garden Moke Colorful Bulb Containers From Wood Box When the time comet to trqnsfe# your delicate greens and bulbs from the garden to the basement for winter protection, why not make that area lit the baaeroent an attractive Indoor garden? The idea, of course, Is to do It inexpensively using ma-' ♦crisis that are readily come by. ADD COLOR For instance, though the bulbo will-Jje dormant- for many months, you can make-colorful containers to bold the clay pots In which bulbs are transplanted. Jua a few bright splashes of color on those planter boxes will do Wonders for the basement lima. With at boxes and a roll or two of i decorative covering material, you can easily make your own planter boxes. Hern s the way.------- First cut a piece of the decor-ative covering material large enough to cover the bottom and all four sides of the box, plus enough to go over the top, and about one inch down the in aide. Ideal material to use for this purpose is adhesive decorative covering for It adheres beautifully to plywood. And you can select it In virtually any color anddesignyou’dlike. it e e When you’ve cut out the right aize piece ot material, remove the backing sheet by running your thumbnail between- the sheet and the material and— peel apart. Place the material* adhesive side up, on a flat surface. Place the box in the center Tf lt. Pan one Short ifcfcoF the material up and smooth it into place with your hands. Crease along the entire bottom edge of the covering material and cut the extended part of material on the crease In toward and up to the bottom corner of the box. Trim off all but one inch from the vertical side flap, then smooth the flap around comer of box. ★ ★ ★ Repeat this procedure on the opposite end. Then turn box around and repeat on opposite side. Smooth the twa long remain- . ing sides to the box from the bottom to the top. —Now all you have to do Is mitre the comers, by snipping off excess material with scissors, and snioofh covering material into the box. '* it it You can line the inside of the box, too, if you want a completely professional finish, however, it isn’t necessary. Two or three day pots filled with greens and set in the container will fill it amply. Though adhesive covering is moisture-resistant and can be wiped off with a damp doth, you would be wise to place folded paper towels fit the bottom of the planter box to catch excess moisture'. How to Buy Hose Ow>|w A treeiiwyi TtARS or MPINOAWUTT .FINANCIAL ITRfNCTH NONDT (USINtU PtACTKS NOMOHCY DOWN-. FHA TERMS '^FE 3-7833 ssr BIG BEAR CmMimIImi C*. 92 W, Hwn fONTIAC THE FONTIAC lmtfs, TUKSUAY, OCTOBER, 4, 11HH)' 1960 Census Figures Disillusion Memphis MQ^US § — Preliminary figure* from the I960 census stripped one disillusioned Memphis man of a title he held only a few months. When Eric H. Witherspoon nunc here from Pittsburgh the Cham., ber of Commerce dubbed him "Mr. Half-Million." Census figures show the population to be only 495,039. OLDS F-85 Coming Oct. 6th Jerome Olds Cadillac 2S0 S. Safinsw Ml 1-702! PARKER “KLEEN-SWEEP” LAWN SWEEPER Reg. $3t.95 NOW •COME BACK HERE’ - If you think this oct-I lot has just captured Us next meat, your gueM is wrong. This one is just playing with the white I rat. Ozzierwho. is about one year old, makes her home in a pet shop, in San Rafael, Calif. Her AT PbtMu Owner Oaude Frlland, said the cat regards rats *as her playmates, pulls their tails and pats them with her paws, never leaving a mark of tooth or claw. .. PERRY DRUGS 619 L Bird. 1251 Baldwin il Perry • it VeBllRnii FE 2-0259 FE 2 8359 SPRINGFIELD ROTARY TILLER SOT AS rtcruuw Can we stay free with RATIONED EDUCATION? Trained minds are more powerful than missiles. And now America te engaged ift a ,great education race. We must not lose. Yet todsy, many of our colleges and universities are already crowded. And in just ten years, applications areexpected to double. You can help prevent this college crisis. But you must help now! ( Of*e genemusly to the cof-lcge of your choice. Help it / to expand its facilities and ~ pay adequate salaries to its facujty.., Stm vour contribution nowl learn mors about tbit urgent collage crisis. Writs for your fret booklet, “OPEN WIDE THE COLLEGE DOOR,1 lox 3d, Times Square Station. Naw Yerk 3d, KY. PiiUitM at a public- trrritt in — aooptratian untk Tkt AdatHiaiua . ( imnr.il and Mm Xrmpaprr Ad-■ trrlmng Ezaettliu* Attorinltun. THE PONTIAC PRESS \Williams Oil [to Toil for State Dems LANSING « — Gov Williams turned on the campaign steam that carried him into office six straight terms Monday night* as he Democrats in control of the state E | House. R After barnstorming through Cah ifornin last week in behalf of-the! j Kennedy-Johnson ticket, the gov-jemor will turn his attention this 'week on Michigan political races. 1 His HTbedule esjln for the same , retontiemi, dawn-to-duxk campaigning style that characterised ■ hi* drive for the chief execu-' j five's^ office every tw« year* since IMS, I* This year; the Democratic governor hopes to turn over the job to Lt. Gov. John B- Swainson, I Monday night, Williams campaigned in Bay City with Michigan Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, who is trying for re-election. - Today he will head for Ann Arbor and Detroit and receptions for Mrs. Patricia Lawtord, sister of Sen. j Kennedy, The next day he will join forces with Rep. T. Johp Leslnski, Democratic nominee foe lieutenant gov-! emor, in a* swing through Kent! County. S’ W - W -________ The rest bit The week will follow, the same pattern. The schedule In-1 dudes a corn-husking festival in [Hudson Thursday, plant gate ap-pearanees in Macomb County early j [Friday morning, an 18th Congres-L ! atonal District banquet Friday! night in Pontiac, a birthday dinner for McNamara' Saturday in Detroit and a Columbus Da/ celebration, a Pulaski Memorial Day parade and an appearance at an Italian-American Fraternal Club, all In the -Detroit-acea. Sunday. _ [Church Buys Theater . to Show Catholic FHms SS^AfTUli R ; BOSTON — The Boston! ^ . AjI Rnfl .Catholic Archdiocese has bought! /®A***B ■ wD-oWLiona of Rnstnn’s biggest movie I * SINUS DRAINAGE -{houses — leawVSfaf — and wtill SgSiffBBS I use It for showing Catholic films. * ccmb»T*^ro^^^xCSonch?iaTtub*2 iThehter in honor A Richard Car-bSfSufKnWuSw dinal- Cushing, Archbishop of Bos- : •IMP. Get MKNDACO At druilMU. {ton. . DIO YOU KNOW THAT KI11y>/?#C CONTACT LBNSKS HSLP MANY PIOPLI ACTUALLY MB BBTTBft THAN WITH aUSSWT C CONTACT LINUS ► tAST-TO-WIAS AS SLASSIS1 BRING OUT YOUR BEAUTY! It’s quite true that many ______________, „ Easy J® wear as glasses. let "arith WTN.nntfr rnntaM You'll be surpTlsed how easy Lenae*ihanthey canwlth »Jfe * ne/m w)& glasses. These are the "newest KIN-optic Contact Leases. I --r_ ■PH Come in for * danonstra- mest modem in the world *fxm- Our experienced ... recommended and ap- ** y°°r service proved oy leading members entwn way questions you eg the optical profession, may have! ary—Sjf ■" •SK»c»gs*as.*’“’-*** Dr. Spencer Oats* I Optometrist |$ N. Saginaw' WANT TO SAVE MONEY . ON YOUR =NHTCAR= PURCHASE? Make your deal for that new car, then tell the. salesman you want our Gold Key Car Finance Plan! YOU’LL SAVE THREE WAYS! PHONE NOj FEderaf 4-3591 Arv? x X 3. SAVE ON FINANCE CHARGES. **<1.-** our low bank rates. Compare Gold Key Car Financing with others:- -51,500— 52,000 $69 192 You pay monthly....!............ r... $46 <24 months) Rates above apply to new cars. Used cars financed at slightly higher rates. SAVE ON LOAN INSURANCE a Your loan is covered by life insurance at no extra charge. The balance is automatically paid up in case of death. SAVE TIME AND TROUBLE ■ You get a registered Gold Ignition Key FREE with your loan. Registration number is on file at Pontiac State Bank. If key is lost, we'll return it to you. Save 3 ways by financing your next car at Pontiac State Bank. No other financing organization in this area offers all of these benefits! PONTIAC STATE BANK Main Office ^Soginow ol Lawrence • Auburn Heights • Baldwin at Tale * Drayton Ptgins • Miracle Mile Member F D f.C -9 to 4 Service, 4 tost Lawrence THE PONT! AO PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER i, ’ 1060 Despite Rise in Debt TWEXTY-OKB ADAM AMES By Lou FIm Savings Accounts ARE Popular Bjr SAM DAWSON [■“»’ * cent don't think younger persons save-^wme buy-jar by putting away collection*! i New* Aaalyit thrift has done anything important I tag, education of children—rank! from paper routes. Also ranking NEW YORK » — Kind worda]** ttefa’ 0WB c*f8cr*: well down the acale. Two per cent high are school thrift programs for thrift are still beii« said to- Som* ot ** contrary-minded *«y they save for no specific rea-jand home piggy banks. ^•J^TW^ls surprising In an age “^„,Ulte.l,p^:ific , loon at all. ^ % ' j The axsociatlon got the moat re- “Mast thrifty people miss that * ■ * ’ Ipliea-156-from those In the med-1 sparkle and joys of life and rttkLA third of the respondents flrstiical profession, with M per cent »dilng.“ says one businessman. |started saying regularly between{havtng savings accounts, and An educator believes "a spsnd |u and 30' years of age; 39 per from educators—154—with 92 per] ing economy is necessary to keep’cent started before they were U: cent on the saving kick that the' our peculiar system going; toojand 34 per cent while'tn the 31 to bunker* fully approve, much saving can cause depres1*) bracket. Once past 30 there' And the savings bank group that] ,ton” (were few starters. And five per conducted the poll proudly an- * -* * I cent say they never saved regu-|nounces that the accounts were 1 And another educator belittle*tlarly. {distributed: 6* per cent in sav-| “stored w dollars , destined to be; * R,. * .. ing* banks, 36 per cent in com-! smashed to smithereens by the in- First savings were inspired by tnercial banka, and 36 per cent evitable, inflation.” j such goals as buying a bicycle, in ’ saving* — loan associations.' when personal debt in this land has risen to a record total of $313 billion and the younger generation seems to tailor its fiscal affairs to bow much Income is available for monthly payments. The kind words cited hero come from a group whoae careers have won than some public 'recognition. And, to be truthful, moat of them are middle-aged ft * a The Savings Banka Association of the State of New York enquired into the savings habits of about 3,000 Individuals in die East listed isrwfio’s Who and got 1.001 replies. NinftMMt of 10 have a savings account tmLy. And even more, 9g per cent, say they think savings are important to the economic soundness and continued growth of the United Slates. Champions of thrift praise tt as «•* Percent** of the Who's Who! assuring confidence, peace of|crowd h,vin6 “vings accounts mind, independence, elbowroomj amonK tho« 1" the financial pro-in job selection, or sec it as Im- ,**^on»“75 P*r Th**1 M portant to self-discipline and char-!cl“* brokers, investment coun-acter building. selors and bankers. The largest; ■ ............... •.. ....- — | percentage—96—are in construc- tion or real estate. ARTISTS AND EDITORS Far outdistancing the financiers among savings account aficion-ados are artists—writers, actors, musicians—with 87 per cent boast-ing nest eggs, and those in com-; munications — reporters, publish-] era, editors. TV and movie per-l sonnei—wife 93 per cent. ~ First reason tor saving put for-; ward by the Who'a Who conting-1 gent is security, followed cloaely by retirement, income, with travel a trailing third. With fee list largely made up bf older citizens, the reasons that But some of the thrifty-minded are equally broad in their views.] One cplls savings the only alter-; native .to increasing reliance on government. Another lambastes spending as the road to "inflation.' bankruptcy, instability, moral) weakness, labor problems and, susceptibility to Communistic in-j fluences.” The association finds the low-i THE GIRINS H.v Franklin Folger 4, "Such a cheerful office staff you have. dear. 1 could hear them all .^laughing when 1 phoned to say you wouldn’t be down.” BOARDING HOUSE* Q. What kind of boaea are safe to give to our Sag? Pamela Black, Chagria Falla, Ohio. A. Bone and dog aound almost synonymous, but indiscriminate handout* of bones often result in pretty sick pooche*. Raw bone* contain a large amount of gelatin. This holds the bone fibers together and makes them a safer choice than cooked bones. Chicken, rabbit, and fish bones should be strictly avoided, as they splinter easily and can cause serious intestinal trouble. _____ "ft ft ft , The bonea mdat dots seem to prefer, and which also are the safest, are raw knuckle or marrow bones of beef, pork, or lamb. Smaller bones, even of these thtee chokes, can cause trouble, Particularly in the older dog. Flavored nylon bonea cqn give your pet the same pleasure, and rid you of any worry. L VI9. THESE ARE I L--—WBi, NO VOIDER MNJ . TwnAie Times, yrjsuT \broubhta troop or \ OCF...9ANDITS / IN THIS \ CAVALRY TO GUARD WYS | AND OUTLAWS f COUNTRY THAT flOU> NUGGET .... „ ARE EVERY- l NOTHING kfv Of OURS THEN VOU'RK \ YEH 'S-ABOUT SURE XVVt / THREE FEET ...OUT 1 FIGGER WEVI OCT ) $ FOUND Tff J DOWN N TH* DfOUfiK .RttP-TBIT ff-BA£K / J0UD6H0UND ^ ■ ' ■ i jT"— i KSj| - * 11/ r*.Z!Xi_"3r Auto Revenue Is Way Down Rise of Compact Car Is Partially to Blame, Says State Official LANSING lit—Sales and tax collections from auto sales! dropped 3811,000 last month from September, 1959, the State Revenue j Department reported Monday. The decline from $4,998,563 to] $4,186,750 waa partly the result] of rising salps of compact cars, said Henry C.. Scbroedcr, deputy revenue commissioner. Over-all September sales and j use tax revenue, collected on August business, moved up from $39,907,748 to $30,356,002. Since September, 1959. however, the tax has been extended to Hotel and motel rooms and to telephone and telegraph service. The business activities t a x showed a significant jump, increasing from $1,538,140 In September a year ago to $1,96 last month. ' * In the same period,. revenue from the cigarette and tobacco products taxes went up from $4.-163.782 to $5,590,591. Last month’s figure includes the new 30 per cent levy on fee wholesale price tobacco products. A howitzer-shaped* Army camera fttth a 100-inch infrared lent cqts through haze to make pictures of objects 35 miles array. DONALD DUCK 4111 n Business a: '* Grand Rapids Starts With THE PONTIAC PRESS, /TUESDAY. OCTOBER 4. i960 Pontiac Doctor Elected Trustee ol Osteopaths | MARKETS (Stocks Stall in Dull Mart w - B. -F Dickinson, who has office In Pontiac, today waralect-ed trustee of the Michigan Amo-elation of Osteopathic Physicians! and Surgeon* at the group’s annual j convention in Grand Kapidi. A GRAND RAPIDS »—Downtown! The foUowtng are Grand Rapids hat started on an covering sales of locally grown I ambit tout face-lifting program wilhj produce brought Sy. Firnwr'i ground broken for a new $3-mIUion Market by rrowars and told by main post office as the Brat step. I them in wtmtetale nackage tots. [ * ★ # - Quotations are furnished by the: NEW YORK * __ ______ Postmaster General Arthur E. {Detroit Bureau of Markets, at of {market moved Just about at dead Summer field, principal figure in {Friday.__________________. / {center early today. Trading bathe ceremony tar Monday, said: - ... n__________came very alow after a fairly ’it represents the culmination ofi UgrTOti rroauCti active Mart *hf years Of ptonntag apd is a;^ — jwm J SmalI fractlonal changes with demonstration of the ultimate inijtp^S tMiicioue.b'V cowiton between the P'oplsJ***; , and their federal government. {Apples, Mac^moeh. bu. cwicaoo grain StetlSSm. b«.pu . CHICAGO. Oct. 4 i.APi Opening Drapes. Concord, sis . "*1"‘ Peaches, Albert*. bu. Wheat ; Ore tsas V* r*i m, Man*. ei*. . Barttott. bu. - Sum, bu L Pram. <4 M - J " prices mixed prevailed among key in.stocks. Many issues were unchanged. . ].m| Mo leadership was apparent la ‘ any stork group. The business ' newt barkers sad remained an Named president-elect was Dr. W. C. Andreen of Wyandotte. Dr. Donald R. Cummings of Grand Rapids will take office as . . . president of the association tor one A dull stock ye*, bter this wwek.^ Three other trustees elected at this time were Dr. M. L. Loguel of Lanotag, Dr. A. F. Fuller of Muskegon and Dr. R. E. Benson of Dearborn. Delegates attending the convention also appointed a committee to investigate possible abuses by, members In relation to claiming health Insurance benefits. N ■ iw finned «l*r$. The price of ripper UM was rat by casta j 00 despite a strike at l so j btg Chilean mine. WHY NOT INVESTIGATE TELEVISION. ELECTRONICS FUND. INC. Wotting, Lerchen Co. 402 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLOC PI 2-9276 Csbbage. Red. bu. | Cabbage,: Sprout*, bu Carrots! Topp»d,h,bu iooi Anaconda traded about un-; | changed. Kennecott was steady. •J*{American Smelting was off about T Lodge Calendar To all members of the Ladles' President, Tues., Oct. 4th at • p™. at the Aerie homt Florence M. Maltott, Sec’y. R E News in Brief i bu Lstks, not boh.. I Okra, pk ........ Onion>. dry, SO lb*. 'Onions, green, dot. brh hu. bu. ... Parsley. cu-iy. set. b«r ifaulty root, hehs. .. ifsnslM, do*. Peeks . Phelps Dodge picked up 1 fraction. { , The same desultory pattern was! * l?*,***1',^** M'J' g shown among steels. Bethlehem I ™ N’ 0xfo7‘ $ traded about unchanged. U. g, |P^ TbOTrifr, wssrtohm trara[ »S Stw| eased. Republic Steel gained l**6*11"* ft? >!owt« *heriff* <*«P«rtien S is j slightly and Jones A Laughlln tookjreporte<*today' iSj* ft-«ctloriwl loss. George Moore of 7N N. Lsng ' JJJ1 * * * Lake Road. Orton Townahip, told | '•» Among autos. Ford and nherttrs deputies Monday Us two ! iB! American Motors were about un- ®e*S'e dogs were stolen from their j ' VS1 changed. Chrysler and General'kennel behind his home. ■ >N Motors eased. A I horsepower chainsaw valued' - UU . Qfls followed through In the do-(,t $206 was reported stolen from! uyrthtng trend. Jersey Standard!, ^ ,t the home of Mrs. s Death Notices WlUlam “ UBB O. W. Olbeoa ofndanm. tolar-Perr^lJV tortGrmotory Vwlsral R rsiTsinr" Utter ■ L bn sad Up brotter at Sparto-Ortffto Funeral Borne. UOTin. ocr. 4. last, osoug., fttutord. Michigan far warty of Danville. HI . aga TJ; d«r Utter at Ram uaur ^ ■* Winn- lillama: alto survived by 4 _________________isrvtei______ IwM ThurMUy. M. S at 1:10 p ai. haw tb. Sbaiaa Bar ‘ ‘ a Bon Puaarnl Horn*. Don' in. Intarwant in CaUln O tab. Oatlln. 111. Ib. uiw u L ri* >. Hot I igii-~ *—— ». Tismna jmslamuni taung it rm whewtoy i S about unchanged. Royal Dutch Dr.. Waterford Township, sorne-M:! was firm. Texaco tost a fraction. tut nWlt< wu reported ....oo*. Den Squash. Acorn, bu. ....... Squash, Buttercup, bu. Bquash, Butternut. bu. ... (sun. Delicious, bu .. MM, Hubbard, tb bu. . Squash. Iltl.. tb bu. ... Squuh. Summ.r, tb bu. ... Ton.tout, 14-lb. bikt..... TanMota, bu............... Turnip*, dan. baba....... Turnip*, losted. bu. OEXBXS , s ao Market analysts said the market ; I ?? was still groping for a firm sup-2jS P01"* fpveI and digesting the big i so recovery drive of Friday. ’ ( Jj The chemical group was out-; f.n standing in Its dullneos. No Initial • j|2J} change was shown by DuPont, i Sj Union Carbide, Allied Chemical j og and American Cyanamld. East-iMjman Kodak dropped a small lUIUe Thompson of U6 Hickory nut Dr., reported to Waterford TOwnahip police that sometime yesterday a $50 chainsaw was stolen from his unlocked garage at the rear of his home. .Obtery, Cnbbaat, d colli—1 *-*- ’ : > o» I fraction. ..ti.nl hi New York Stocks ILmIum. Bibb, pk Uttucr, Boston, d Lettuce, Lent, bu t>ttti*» M..H ... Rohisnr bu .... ' fifcOV ■ U J Jon.* A L . Ji Kellogg .... rtth Poultry.xmd Eggs » aw» - ft] ssiooir im a i^jB DETROIT f_______ 1 DETROIT, (tel. J I API -| pound deUvmd Detroit tor II jlty M*. poultry: I u---------^— 30>31: Am Bmolt Am Ttl S Am Tob . An.cond. f Ar^i f e Atchison XI ■ to Waterford Township police. Bonnie Payne, tn'/j B. Parke Bt., reported to Pontiac police yesterday that a radio valued at $50 was stolen from his apartment. Bargters brake Into Folk's rage, 149 W. Howard St., and stole several tools, it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. Vandals smashed windows of s 7 thirty cars on a lot of East Side Auto Parts, U1 E. Pike St., it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. M . -U; heavy type roasters oyer S At-~ EH «t»iL fe’h. i. ..»•-«- • juu.wv Sstb-Sg; turn Cel Peek Itrgt M'v-41: lari* Itlb-M; medium 4S- *- !«•: Hull 11-SI; brown*—tr*3* — Itrn km S4-M: largo iL smtll 39-30, check* Detroit: loo** Con»umer*^»r*d» (Including C_8 4 ? May D Ar . Tt pa .! ! Merr Ch k a | Mpl* Hon w Minn MW 3 :J Si Mot^Whoe? .. 51 Motorola . tt S Mueller Sr “ r Two storage room* In the Reow \ ig.givelt Hotel, 125 N Perry 9t., were J-j J broken into, hut nothing taken, It 4t.i|waa reported to Pontiac police yevl *Ji torday. • TRY W i P. Rlharb; dur mother ot MM P.. „ _ Charlie, and Georg* P. Rlbarb end Mr* Lektejkitdeni dtar R. of Mr*. OdVfrey Oefto; •,*■ aurvlved by 34 grandchildren. P.rUh- Rotary will te held Toot- I. 4 si 1:11 pjR _JI - . -—> - John* Punerel Mom*. Knight, tt Columbus Ronry will n.r.l Horn. Punerel ttrvle* will be held Wadauday. Oet. * at IS ). Mtefieel'i Mt.Rote will UTte on - John* SPIERS. OCT. I. Ittt. BEATRICE . 14*1 He Ml. aimingbem, am i. »■-«—-4 WtftTin T r .l*ter #f Mr*. Harry Home, Mbs X. weodwarS. Royal 0«k wrb Dr W. OteB Hsrrtr orfleietlnt. Intermen l|-------- Chapel lira. Spier* STEVENS. OCT. 3. 1M0. VERNON. S14 Suneet. Lake Orion, ago S4; dear fatter of Mr*. Bernard Me-Menleel. Carlyle. LeRoy, Ctrl end Willard Steven*; dear brother of Mr*. Oby Monk* and Mrs. —I Wm; *leo gnrvtvud by 1 draadohUdreo and 18 srent- stpi* fiapre__________I_ Kind* officiating. Interment Pony Mt. Park Cemetery. BOX REPLIES At 19 a. m. Today th office In (ho following 1. W9»I*U, U, 19. to. 94, 64. It, 7$, «, 97, to, IN. 113, 119. Card of Thanks BSSSE their bob Mr* .r or witusM r. norm* tteir tln- fSSRM WfiHB P—Up CHRISTMAS JTVm “wS jzsrLu •EvtrtURd. emni Funeral Director* CURB WAITRESSES COATS DRAmffyBKfcltq**on i-nsi Donelson-Johns _^gggttjSgu:. . SPARKS OKUVtM CJUlhrt. VkindSBrswvS* HThl Voorhees-Siple KO^ CsmoUry Lots PERRT MT. PARK CUOTBgT. IMutl^ni srere lot WUi divide. Hfi» WtortfidLMfilt 10 BO YS Mod IS hoys 1S-1I yre. age J* WOVE one nftor-« Op. Thuredey, Octo- ber t. from 13:11 p.m. i 1:30 p.m. Apply |n Pereon Bert Pnlkner CIRCULATION dept. THE PONTIAC PRESS 12 MEN. 18 T0 28 to neetat mentser la outeldo or. dor donamow. Promotion* avail. Obi*. Transportation furalsbed. OuAraateed enlory. For Interview NEEDED men OW Phone PK 4>1UI ACCOUNTANT FOR CORRESPOND^ one*, eoet work, and general off-lee work. ■Batooorliia iatoraata helpful. Smell metal working, Ptom giving am. work and pay exptrleoe*, education end (am-My. AUTO OLASS nNSTALLER. NEED. I hart mwiSMIl oponfaga. curb wattraama to too day SUM dWL Apply----- TED’S I. LAKH ROAD Tvrjsjss ia a^lji'UHerylew iTte te 1 only «N«b M-EEVk. Ag tlmahia plan* Steady '_______ SOT3J. gif Beet Maple. Blrmlng- Iarn extra MOMf yoi ChrUtmae. Be a Tapper Wart ^dealer. PE gut. INCED WArTBEA* flgVt^SS-mr _ ....-jami Apply la pormp. gll W, Huron si. gxpihhnidiD cDcres, por , Wfrk WAtotoitUfiN It ^vrw-jtr^ OARPKH JPLtVwiNO 'AfiB"lB>fi. TOONO MAN 1r9 TRUCK wlahm light hauhag. PH 3-3Sa. toon MAH SI DRStREB WORK SMSjmU/PE 3-1344.___ TOONO MAN DESIRES WOftk OP nay mm, PH UM.____________ Work Wanted Female 12 nun. _________,________i. atai via* imim. EXPERIENCED WOidAN TAKE omplete ehar** of fountala. STSS ----------------—™- HteavUlo ROM. IMU),_________ I 1 WOMEN WANT WALL WASH- ER EE TOYS -Tun" lava a toy cheat, TOT party nod veetv* free toy* for Chrlataut*. ARTIST WANT* WORK At hOMK Pootor*. elga*. layout*. EM 3-1*4* ■OUSEWOfiK WTD. STTSlVtl ----------— traaeportauon. PH Have a a* OVER TWENTY. 8-43*3. .? to-11..-.**?*- i ONE DAT IRONINO. EXPERL “ ■*““* : ----- reference* to* Melroea. PUter ..... ...... ....... Ml Oakfiad. HOUSEKEEPER, UVeTn. FULL I DAY IRONINO ttyotr aid daughter. Rtfertec required, white, under M. It* di week. 431 BBSw|| .■Rfc, i i-oggo iftir C * uVfPf* 9 If you gronoo t--—------ J? s?Tl«aV^iNw:J HOUSEKEEPER FE 8-8631 MS a weak and (till retain your regtuar TwT r§r Information can Mr. Aura OR 3-0*33, 13 noon to firHHVIII. It OR OVER. PK CAB DRIVERS PULL A SI Mia*. Night “ Orohard Lake. ” f" IT * "ill 3 or 3 hour* during day or | early pruning and Wien lo.-earo4 8* ama***ojl'ri-Mm ’ e*n ***" ' LADT FOR OENStAL ROUSE. I kmptns. Maet have owa trane- portattoa. MA *-*33*__________ tAbr. OCAhANTEE N,tts 66m- tatertei a---- SCHOOL OIEL iltUas Available anag xim p.m. FE 04111. • • » • ■ » Wabhinos and ironinos pwe- up and delivery. OR 3-7470, Building Service DELIVERY AND STOCK CLERK. IS. Pull or putt time. Write ____ae Praae, Ros M. DEPENDABLE PARMER TO OP-erale modern equipped farm. Write Pontiac Proas Bax us (tat- ias exp*limoe S reference*. Good ------------- I S Hargrave*. 1d3 Wail____________________ MIDDLEAOED LADT POR BABY-alttlag. Uv* In PE 3-775*. NURSE POR DOCTOR'S OPPICE. EXPERIENCED DUCT IN8TALL- EXpERIXNCED MlSCELLANidtlg ‘ atructural draftsmao. Call Peblan. OR 3-4431 or WO etcpxrienCed CARPENTERS AlfD . wanted for eub- Apply at 307 W. INKER MORI INTX1 rMpoadeace, amt in to*, and g«n*r»I----- = Is pur* eoffmeeriac. Sm ~^-t*pteRt- WBt» 3 Erf-WOOL PREMER ! Math ^Cleaner*. 44M try Step. .___ ___, _ .ll lagham, Mteh. Apply morning*. RECEPTIONIST AND ASSIST DR. Rave LJP. M. Prevloua tap. Light typ(B». PE 44M1.________ SELfdjfCx WOlf AN t6 liVE IN ,_____jar*. M________ REAL ESTATE SALESMAN WANT- td. WU 6iP---------I lag to work. ildfirspl FE 4-2533 ALtd UDT, BETWEEN SLtf couneou*. plr----- —* ML fti| Ths (hell if s parked car at 65 W. Huron Si. ^!| was reported to Pontisc police yes-M.sjterday by Bruce W. Franklin of 3*Clawson. good Income. to fit** * ■»■_______ KITCHEN iHELPER, i Pun time. Apply 43 A ertert*oCed"'ta”'reteir*»le”i’ppt* Crocker*, g*7 W. Huron * WANTED- SALESLADY TO SELL KiS Livestock OWL ___DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROlf, Oet. 3 lAPl—MBA—Cottle alald* 3,SSI; bulk early auppty elaugh-1 ir tteere Bad heifer*, good aad choice redomlnatlsg: cove cor-- | -- per cent; good and ch_____ heifer* modretely acUv*. *tei ^ WISE ADVICE—get the new Um-' brellj HosMownsn Policy for yoor homo ind property. Then A yoa won't |iys i hoot when it rains trouble ... bocsuM you’r* covered. CsH Laud* Agosey, Inc. - .... L tow* opening iteady to «t .......... *5-34.04: MOM down 34.74-14.71; choic* _________ W.34-3S.S4: good tenor *11* Bio Burglars stole tools ! y*.i|$160 from Csss Motor Sales, 352 ■ jJ-J S. Saginaw St., it was reported Jf jl ’ WEirnUfito Tifiikii Tf—HrlMi-------------------- . 3ft.4 unio oil «... 33 I • :|f:| Ow£5 m*oi *J Ijtawins In Itenphslstered and; H i p*c o A El *3 * reflnlshed furniture. At ths Sal-If P*n AW Air l»J ------------ ------- “ ‘ --------- ~ 1 vatlon Army Red Shield Store. Ill W. Lawrence 8L, Pontiac. Free customer parking. —Adv. Business Notes Ml*-M**j MaiT «OW» 19.0 WAS; eaaaor* sad cutter* 11*4-114*. Hcmh-iAtehto 1.044; h«teh*r* itoady k higher: aow* und.r *44 Ite. (tote •tehte over 440 lte. aogUy Me huh< nan M US No. 1II* - •—■ Charles C. Rockwell has been appointed a registered representative of Watling, Lerchen Ik Oo.. Pontisc inveetment brokers. All Forms of Insurance 504 Pontisc Bonk Bidg. FE 5-8172 FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL bJEPHLER CO. FE 2-9117 CJ TV COOK MAjr fe L wMH, IN - GARAOK niihte. 141 w. Huros.___________________ H OPfi^ING FOR 3 ^EN A now laotery breath ka* op*n*d which aood* lam who arc mo-toMkaJ to dMtod bow TtotoMfSrw J p'to 4-4441 bo- and 4. 7 end S. T CLERK NEAf APPEAhlNO TTOtikti 1(AN tor Mu boy, atoBt x Alton*. 1M W. Huntei Both sea and Jake sturgeon live i gmp in th» fresh waters of the St |o«dD.f Don » Lawrenoe River, all year round. Rodcwell, U S. [Holcomb St, iClarkston, wai Teal estate dealer ; A former presi-! dent of the Clark-Village Coun-Rockwell is [past president of j the Clsrkston Rotary Club. ; WdtttfiL Ler ROCKWELL chen k Co. h i s A D . - - the help you need U quickly your* through THE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AD COLUMNS For the Want Ad Department just dial . . . gromaUy wunaa to work. . ----MAL341L 4 to _____ daily. ■ PaSKDIO ATTENDANTS U AND ovtr. Day work. Mast ho good driven. Apply * to iX.Ti PART TIME 0» >*n. tf----- Mr. faytev, Qualified structural steel, lay-out man and fitters, Redford Iron Worksp Inc.. 2800 Alliance, Drayton Plains. SINOLC MAN FOR DAIRY FARM, milking experience necessary. MA tay*. teuse „ plan Apply 373 Auburn IS a.m to 3 p.g*. ■ woman por OENERAL OPPICE work. mu*t Ilk* dctalud eUrleil ’ work, typing raqwrtd. write Poa* JfeJBrlrwat ■„ .§jtiiSkr ______ i.'ni »im7 BARGAIN I work. Low priced, FE 4-444* < CEMENT TRENCHINO . TRUCEINO Septic Tank aad Til* Jim Nlvmohak_______ EM 3-41*1 iioNCR^fit wOkK dPigijlALrt Floor*, drtvw, walk*. 3*104 E«U- t*roi*i. 1 ^.rajfc«T;___________ REMODELING EERV-• ».»Bl4Bte under pg**r-A horn**, addition*, elteretlonw M ln*t«. brick tad block. LIMB* CEMENT WORE OP ALL KINDS. ■Nathlas tea latm at email. Cast-mtrclAl or rmtdmtlAl. ^* yn gg. dbbtast Bvns*- — — of 1 efilldiva. Llr* toTtll > wmk. PI *-«»8. WANTED ELDERLY WOMAN POR tobydttlng. afternoon *hMt. mutt tor* own transportation. FE O. SteswteL. PE Mils. ^fegjKBBT DRV WALL TAftNO AWy^PIN|SH- SALESPEOPLE TO V^ITE ORDERS Experteaeod specialty ,*le*pogplt HThuA W.m vto. it you MT* to* delire to Mrs BIO MpNEfTPyr tMo.aow Ute.of s 4-3143^ Just Dial SALESMEN SELL ADVERTISINO *pecl*ltl*i. calendar*, executive | Rift*. Smaoa on. Pull or • pan j mo. Commissions Advanced. Bo-v } aum*. Sample* free. Consolidated Pro**, 334 1 Wood. Chloso. SERVICE MANAGER ROOF REPAIRS ! EAVESTROUPHINO_PE 44444 WATERPROOFING Work suerenteed. Free MtlmtU*. .818 Community Notional Bank Bldg. OUT PACILITIE3 EXTEIID PROM COAST 3 » S5Jv"” **• wmonot". \ SISt, He asar*^,™., PUBLIC SALE 14*4 Chav. tpt. Cp*.. S*rl*l 41I31P-237434. Sal* to be teM October 11. ilia “ “ M. at III S. Washington. Ol- About 20 per cent at Ireland is 11 covered by bogs. 1*44 Bulck. Bertel No. 4AUm31, Dear. Bate to bo Md 14:34 am. o 11, 14*4 at 341 Auburn Avo, Pontii Mich. 134*4 434 In th* Blatter of th*, pt cernlng WI1U* C. Lev*. Ml tom To Botert Love, fatter of mM ■ ^{ FOR US MANS ^REDUCED OVERHEAD ✓INCREASED PROFITS ✓BETTER CUSTOMER RELATIONS "MEin Ww Answer totophona+^4 Hnvr* ivmry Dmyl .ELECT TO USE: TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE 15 W. Lawrtncfi || 4-2S41 of Mtchlgaa. You an Berate notified — oarto* on mid notlUon win OatonM County Sorvtc* in Bow* Aaaox. i***B to City of Poatlae In ^ tow day of Oc ■■ . ARTHUR K MOORE u ^ ^ CSBaMBT FE 2-8181 IF F ffn Ei 0 The Pan Use Press FOR WANT ADS % DIAL FE 2-8181 Prant • sjh. to 9 m. P»,"SaJS».NR ■^Jrm I -—4 \ E& refSeh|..h.“thm;hr!te IP WltaO cooetUtotloag Tl* gtrm Orth* Urn* toy advorttao-peote oontalatag typo atom day irovtew to uakhiallea. ZJ 1 adtZKSsEss „Hte1 doadUa* ter mumn* 4 l , Man Of transleal Wont Ada Bps-iPa nw jj fiArm 1 UMt I-D*f 3-Days Mays •1111 11 i 1 TOUR OWN BOSS AS BALES REP-nsentatl?* with torso fineael*l Institution Immediate asd long mag* teeoate possibilities. Excellent lor the man win ability te meet aad talk te people. Tteroaxh training aad on the lob help. Top notch group insurance aad rv-tlrement plan. 0*0 hMWiia t a.m. and I* a m Or « p m. to I pan. OR 4-7*4* or MI 441*3. WANTED GOOD PAINT MAN AND ' bumper sad painter. Mart ha Won commission plus guar. r ias T APPLICATIONS TAB wattroa* and MsteM ___ o$mr. to no |im*te».- Writ* Awuaa.. Pram. CANVi ____....smen fc. ■ale*. PE 1-8345. cooking knowledge, ■oa between g-g p ev*-1* ks*V brrfiR wanted, lh* in -SHSjjtePWMMtoteHMMn WANTED: 4 DATS Late SeteeL wiSSji >sid woman pr*r ferrvd OA *-»*3 anorTsis. ---- dally jarwater*. * bEAUTY OPERATOR fart Mai*. Om with fellowteg pro-n s-dtos--^—— CAPABLE WOMAN POX OKNER--a bemwwk Uto la preferred. ClTY^F PONTIAC SALdff^tfj» tfjM tl KawikB Sportmci eeneat fr OPENINOS ARE AVAILABLE POR substitute JM Sllltr peelllme ---- — Pontiac board tt Education. Work will oecar when regular Srtvorg cannot drive, aad * a N hourly eaels f « to WMURisi :loa and arrange tor l: at 4* Pattereon it O . of Director of Transportation. BushwSwvict M Employrnwit AjtoQcies 9 IR. SECTY. r> canton lal of-light saerthind. iSty Important, -mart boom-% Custom AsphoR Paving Specialist* la OUB'teBretSl Ssr* JTUbf Lake Orton ksj PE 4-4337. •a*? Empb COUPLES YiBSKIgbil tax. ior ropsslr sorrtee. PE EUROPEAN PIANO TB AOKBK win groat eapotteam. would so- Finish High School ENCBD EDUCATIONAL SALESMAN TO SELL HOME STUDY COURSES IN THIS AREA POR ONE OP AMERICA'S POME-MOST SCHOOLS. LEADS PUR-"NI8HED:—TOP COMMISSION AND BONUS. WILL,OH PART TIME CAR NBC. WMTB ROR- ST E. EWINO—ELECTRONIC ADE3. Ot S. DEARBOnN. CN1CAOO t, ILL. Work Wanted Msto II I HANDY MEN WOULD KkTVSJ &3at C-l4TJT.E rJHNAci UaRII iid *ervwo. PE LOli. I Ars PARTS AND SERVtti: . _ .Wholesale aad RotoU ^ Bookkeeping 4 Texos 16 ■ggsss^T*"* Drossmsklug, Tnilortwg 17 AtTERATTONS. T^tlLORINQ. VAfidliilRi — JlmiUTion hrmi MaStoa - Pur Repalro IDNA WARNEk WHW Owiw Plwwlfig it _jwnw flft. I ssifiiry Sorvicr IB family laundry oossioo — shirt amvte*. rami taaaSry. 54d S. Telegraph. PE THE' PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. OCTOBERS, i960 - -Today's Television Programs- - rmrwm by fU-i 0*4 to Mi eutamn are subject to chug* dm >*• CUamH 7-WXYITV Channel MHWTV TONIGHTS TV HIGHLIGHTS •:M (4) Truckdown. O) Movie (cont) (7) New* and Weather. (9) Popeye. (56) General Chemistry. 9:19 (7) Sports. fcU a) News. 8:95 (4) Weather. <:» (2) New*. (4) New*. Paul Williams. JJ> Boots and Saddles. (9) Quick Draw McGlraw. 03) News, Sports, Weather. 9:49 (2) News Analysis. <4)Sports. _ 9:48 (2) News. ~ (4) News. - (56) Philosophy of Men. 7:00 (2) Divorce Court ——(41 Lock Up, Drama. Maris -and Weston investigate murder in which the weapon was an explosive golf ball. Maris: Macdonald Carey. ----(7) Exciting Years. 49) Movie. . 7:30 (4) Laramie. (2) Divorce (cont.) (9) Movie (cont.) (7) World Serifs Special. (58) Introductory Psychology 7:41 (2) Lion ’ Quarterback. 9:00 (2) Father Knows Best. (4) Laramie (oont.) (9) Movie (cont.)—— CD lUfleman. (56) Heritage. 8:99 (2) Dobie Gtlli*. (4) Alfred Hitchcock. (7) Wyatt Earp. (9) Encore. (56) American History. 9:00 (2) Tom Ewell. (4) Thriller. (0) Don Messer. 9:30 (2) Red Skelton. . (4) Thriller (cont.) (7) Stagecoach (cont.) (9) Front Page Challenge. 10:00 (2) Garry Moore.— (4) Rivak, the Barbarian. (7) Step Beyond. (9) News. ~~ 10:19 (9) Weather. 10:90 (9) Telescope-UAW. 10:90 (7) Mike Hammer. (2) Moore (cont.) (4) Rivak (coot.) (9) News.' --------------H 10:49 (9) Race Results. 10:99 (9) Movie. "The Crowd Roars." (1938) A choir singer becomes a boxer. Robert Taylor, Edward Arnold. 11:00 (2) News. _ — ~T4) News. _________________V (7) Bold Venture. 11: IS (2) Weather. - (4) Weather. 11:9942) Sports. (4) Sports. 11:99 (2) Movie. 11:90 <4> Jack Paar. (7) Citizen Soldier. WEDNESDAY MORNING 0:00 (4) Continental Classroom. 0(99 (t) 0:39 (2) Meditations. 9:49 (2) On the Farm Front 9:49 (2) TV College. 7:99 (4) Today. (7) Breakfast Tima 7:99 (2) Felix the Cat 9:99 (7) Johnny Ginger 9:19 (2) Captain Kangaroo 9:99 (7) Stage 3 9:90 (4) I Married Joan. (2) Movie. 9:99 (7) Exercise (4) Exercise. (4) Faye Elizabeth. 19:90 (4) Dough Re Mi. (7) News. 19:19 (7) Movie. 10:99 (9) Billboard. tt:9« (IT(Color) Pliy Your Hupeh. (9) Ding Dong School.------ (7) I*ouae of Fashions . 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy. (4) (color) Price Is Right. (7) Divorce Hearing. (9) Romper Room 1D90 (2) Clear Horizon. (7) Topper. (4) Concentration. 11:41 (4) World Series. 19:01 TV News and Reviews rtifhn Full* WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON (1) Traveling That. 19:90 (2) Search for Tomorrow (7) Queen tor a Day; (9) Myrt and Dork. 19:41 (2) Guiding Light (9) Newt. H99 (2) My Little Margie. (7) About Faces. (9) Movie. (2) As the World Turn. (7) Life of Riley. 2:99 (2) Medic. (7) Day In Court 9:99 (2) House Party. (7) Gale Storm. . 9:99 (2) Millionaire. ' (4) Young Dr. Malone. (7)'Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. 12) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These Roots. 47)-Who, Do You Trust? 12) Brighter Day. (4) Make Room For Daddy. (7) American Bandstand. 1:19 (2) Secret Storm. 4:99 (4) Here’s Hollywood. , (2) Edge of F'ght (9) Robin Hood. 8:00 (4) (color) George Pierrot Presents. (2) Movie. (7) Johnny Ginger. (9) Looney Tunes. 8:90 (7) Lone Ranger. 5:99 (9) Jac LeUofL Union Election Alleged Rigged Labor Dapt. Requests Court to Throw Out Seamen's Ballot But it is hardly WASHINGTON Ot-The Labor Department sued la New York Federal District Court Monday to throw out the re-election of Joseph Curran as president of the National Maritime Union (NMU) on grounds of balloting improprieties. The court also was amed to void the elections of 67 agents and trohnen" In 23 cities including Detroit and Ludington. Mich. The Labor Department's suit charged the NMU Illegally disqualified some caadldatea far office, permitted potltug place electioneering, aaed union funds la promote serial*- candidates and lgarten.-w tUXf . otherwise failed to provide eqnal treatment for Hope's First Fall Show Close to Being a Dullie by Explosion Gift Cigarette Lighter' I Blasts Boy Friend's By FRED DANZIG tj? NEW YORK (UPI) - It wasn’t Bob Hope's night. Usually, the best part of a Bob Hope hour to the opening monologue, when he stands to front of the curtain and unspools some topical gags. Monday night,. tor Hope's first NElC-TV special of the season, ”technical difficulties’’ washed out almost all of the monologue. Too bad. I’m sure we lost out on the best part of the show. . with the carbohydrates of standard filmed comedy. The ingredients include Griffith as a determinedly-charming smalltown factotum who to a wonderful tether to little Opal, an all-American boy played by an appealing youngster named Ronny Howard. And there’s kindly old A nut Bee, played by Frances Bavier. She can bake an apple pie like mad, bat she'* nowhere aa a baseball player and fishing com-paatoo,—l—*—! Parked Car— MONROE HI — A divorcee was maimed here Monday when a “gift" cigarette lighter exploded in her boy friend’s car parked across ■ from the Monroe County Court- < house. Police said the booby-trapped, lighter was Intended for the boy friend. Mrs. Louise WUson, IS, ef Monroe, erne rushed to University Medical Center in Ann Arbor, where she underwent surgery.- tangled and full andlo eras restored, nothing that I heard on the show came close to being worthwhile. It urns a dnllie. There were two alleged comedy sketches. The tot involved Hope and Patti Page in a rocket ship trip that was misguided. The sketch appeared to have been built around two sight gags and they fell Oat. The big comedy effort was set in an Oriental tea house, where Hope, an Oriental tycoon, and Bobby Darin, as an American artist, competed for the hand of Patti Page, a tea house entertainer. - ★ »- * »— Miss Page and Darin seemed think it was funny because they .kept -teytog'-to held- to- laughter. From where I sat, the sketch was anemic. . 4 4 4 Darin also performed his latest record, a tune called "Artificial Flowers."'He spoiled it by taking it too seriously. Watch out tor "the Andy Grif- The CBS-TV premiere offered nothing new and everything old. "Peter Gunn" turned up on ABC-TV last night and began what seems to be a toned-down season. THE CHANNEL SWIM: "Quest,” a series of one-hour programs hieing prepared tor the 1961-62 season by NBC-TV’s special projects division, will report on primitive cieties as they face periods of transition. Each program will be filmed on location. •The Gershwin Years,** a 99-mlnute special scheduled as a CB8-TV special an Sunday, Jan. 8, has signed playwright director Moss Hart to be the program boat. Beginning Wednesday, NBC-TV* ‘The Price is Right” will invite its viewers to send in post cards. A monthly drawing will select one program panelist from among those who sent in cards. NBC-TV’s “Bell Telephone Hour” for Friday, Nov. 25 will .deal with the life of Peter Ilyich Tscfaai- By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Should a boy work Ms 4)«y through colleger Many people still ding to the idea that this is a fine way for a young man to build character, which It may be. The-oomptalnt tiled 1n behalf of Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell asked the court to order new NMU election held under government supervision. It charged the NMU voting was held from April 1 through May it the secret balloting quired by the fair election provisions of the 1959 labor law. Woman Hurt Mrs. Wilson lost both thumbs and two fingers of her right hand in the explosion. She also was badly cut. Police ««M the lighter apparently had been placed in the car by mne who hoped to mutilate « murder Mrs. Wilson’s boy friend, Burl M. Weaver, 34, a Monroe poolroom owner. TWfeyTY-SKVJHf Parents Should Hdp It Hurts to Work Way Through College m JOTU the strains pf learning do not yef put so much wear and tear upon his mental apparatus. Recently ta( an article on 6 opening of the school year I su gested it Is far preferable for parent to take out a mortgage on the family home to finance a son’s education rather than let him try to work his own way unaided through college. . A REAL INTEREST This view presupposed, oi course, that the son had some real and honest Interest in getting a higher education. No one would ad-• putting the family home-in hock merely to keep Bat several readers wrote la to express the firm belief that 1 waa speaklag ^rtth a Use 7M: votes tfcrough a site S1 < bat, the Implication being I didn’t know what I was talking about. The tenor of moat of these letters was largely self-congratulatory, such as: "I look bad: with pride upon the fact 1 worked my own way through college. It did me a world of good-’* ■ * * ★ Undoubtedly, If that’s the way they still feel about It, the experience did do them a world of go8ar~ir~twght~ them dtsrii pride and self-reliance and proto ably kept them out of pod parlors as well. BITTER MOMENTS But that experience was not unalloyed joy. If they will look back on thoee years with the eyes of truth, they will remember the bitter moments, too, They will realize college life had a lot of possibilities they missed at **“ time and perhaps still miss. They gained much,' but they lost a lot itoo. The advantage of gel having to week year way through oaBage to Amply this: Yea are able ta taka better advantage ef what a mltafs has to after—taantiag. You eaa prepare years* better tor what yea want to be. No one, no matter how mentally exceptional, can work his way through college and learn as much as he could If he had that same time fret to devote to his studies. At its best college is a full-time |ob in Itself, and it gets to be more of a full-time Job every year cs the standards rise. Man's knowledge is 13 la*le'l nest 14 Maacwta* appellation 15 Wetfht of Inft M Kama 37 Hobo 39 Greek letter 41 ip. 41 ward 43 Lawer ...____ 45 Three ttnea (comb, form) IT rer Oynl’e sjithsr ' 44 Martha .... r r r r r ir 12 IB 14 IB It It II ll n r 54 n 41 r r IT BT M « IT r 14 ■ ST Matt drink SS Burdena es Suffix •1 Greenland Eskimo a Pass axel ta I S3 Fleh esse *4 Drone bee 1 Sportive trisk 2 Bread nM 3 Ortaas of hearing 4 Nat good 5 Drilling tool* 4 Shield bearing 1 Droop* 11 «L St Harrow fill 33 Harvester 25 Debar* legally 24 Tardy n g------- 31 AraoSaM* 44 Legal point 4l hmn 48 Sudden attack 49 Staging voice . ■■ * SO Period of tlau r Measure of land SS Faradlae s* Close to 54 Weary SS Maturate IS Shakespearean SI Irpouolan ——river ----------------- Indian SS Organ glop 32 Inquire! 54 Ignited Shutter Seals Fate oi Would-Be Detroit Thief DETROIT (AP) — An Ontario woman and her camera made it easy tor Detroit police to identity the man she said.tried to break into her car. 8he had pictures of him. W ft. June Abbott, 49, of Red Rode, nt., was visiting the Detroit Art [institute with her husband, Roto art, 45. When they same out they saw a man standing by their car. Mrs* Abbott aimed her camera rand took pictures of him, * * * I Police developed the roll and asked tor a warrant charging Vincent Bertolino, 37 of Detroit with jattemupted breaking and altering of an automobile to commit a larceny. The Abbott* said the car showed signs of tampering. -Todays Radio Programs WXTS <1>W) WCAB oust *:*•—WJR. Neve WWJ, Mewe CKLW. lew* •rus flews, eports *:** WJR Otnne> Otto WWJ. Bps. News WXYZ. J. Dsly —WWJ, re Opinion WXYZ. B. Morgan CKLW. Jtc LcUoff WJRR. Bellboy WCAR Weedlfns l:*e—WJR, Ousit -louse WPON. Jerry Olsew *:*•—WJR. Shcweeee . WWJ. r. SHiebeth WXYZ, Weiss SrSS—WFO*. city Cemmh *■“ ““t BsSTjywsih. lt:lb—WJR. Auto Repo WWJ. World Hews lliS»—'WJ* News WWJ. UmI* WCAR. Woodltng irwj. Mori, Kartou* WXVZ. Brmkfatl Club WimtlMI MORNING asa-wja an. agrinu. CKLW H*wa. David WJBK. Ntwt. Reid WCAR Ntwt. Mirtyn WWJ. Ntwt. Robert* . WXYZ WoU T WPON, Ntwt, Cttey CKLW Bmwttr Club . WJBK. Firm. Mtvt - Ml WJ*. jaaa Barm W«:*H Ntwt shtrldan WPON. Bob L*rk 3«m—wjn. Karl Baa* WWJ, Newt. Martaat cklw jo^Vm***** WPON-, BobLark WPON Bewt Lark Y.W -WJK Newt. Mtt*l* WWJ. Bttt^Bobtrt* 19:**—CKLW. MJTU* Labbltt WJBK. Htwu Lartawr CRI.W Hew* rnbv Oafto WPOH, Early Bird ftSB-WJa Matte Ban wxta 1m wm cklw wwttr-niiB* wjbk. Tram* ssnMr WCAR M*S SbtrXHn iTWb-WJK Ttoto tor Mato •:*•—WJR. Ntwt. OtMtt WWJ Ntwt iwiits WKOMSSDAt ArrtnNOOD lt:ta— WJR Ntwt Para wxra new*, wot: cklw an. Datto WCAR. New. wpon Newt caasv *(^a,WP^«|5'*DaTld war*, liiaiwii •aa-WJK Ntwt. Mum •*w*—WJR 9ns for Mato lidb-WJK. Stinwaa WWJ. Oood Mutle CKLW See Tea 1 :SS—WWJ, Oood Music CKLW Jet Tea WPUM Bbb Lbfk W tBK. Lee WPON, Jerry Oleta td*—CKLW Haw* Shift’brk CKLW OstIcs Z warn, News, eksrtaea WJBK. News. La* Stab—CKLW. News. IWTto* Sjta-WJR. Itaek HaD WWJ. Hew*, Leaker WXfB. PbOl winter CKLW Hews Devlee wCML Newt. Sheridan BOTt wgwir-far—'—-WFON Carriage Trade 4:Sb—WWJ, Lynker CKLW. Nett, Devlee WJBK areri*. Music SjJS-WJ* Newt. Meets WCAR, Hew*. Sheridan / Movie Writers Stress 'Bad Girls' Nowadays and deepening at ___ rate, The college yean an the beat years tor absorbing as much of that knowledge as possible, aa much of mankind's vast storehouse of culture as the mind can gulp- KEEP MIND FREE The student needs to keep his mind and attention fret tor this great goal. He should not have to spend half his time earning his bread and butter. Certainly he can leant dlnrl pHae, pride aad self reliance by firing a furnace er pressing pant* to pay tor Me tatitea. Bat he ran leans those same qualities Just as wen by reareatrattag the Another advantage of net wmto-DC your way through college ttT ou have mors leisure to trad ipon the great mystsrisa of Mb— and to enjoy small plea—rsa e things are fart of oaL lege, too, # * - ........ 1 had to work most ef my asm way through college end teal the resulting benefits are greadhr overrated. Now and then I atfil wish I had spent leas time m a • sophomore building up ay.-, character and instead had teamed to play the ukulele. Look what it did tor Arthur Godfrey. FILM PAIR TO WED — Linda Cristal, Argentine-bom actress, Monday announced Jher engagement in Hollywood to Yale Waxier, actor- producer. Her first marriage, to oil executive j Robert Champion, ended In divorce last December. Wexler (above) has not been married before. Little Leagues Overprotective, 'Rifleman' Connors ByEARLWILSON By PHYLLIS BATTELLE Should little boys Join little leagues? Hits controversial question finds sportsmen, sociologists and par-lento as loggerheaded aa Khrush 'and Ike. But a reporter can’t help [being swayed when Chuck Connors gets talking about it. ' ft ft ft Big Chuck is a former National League slugger who turned actor. NEW YORK - Whatever happened to nice girls, anyway? I to'S^iskm^thS^to Have you noticed that this to the era of the Trollop on ^ Mark; after working stage and In movies? We wouldn’t have these female bums In hours he Is father and coach of our homes. But we rush off to see them por- four sons, sports addicts all, rang-trayed by our greatest actresses. tag from 4 to A: (Thto to Parson Wilson, the Broadway { «rm against Httie-toague play Reverend, sermonizing). for my kids tor a lot of the reeaona you’ve heard about — too mack pressure too early, the danger of creating deep Inferiority complexes and enormous egoo, too much competition at what should be a carefree age,” he says. ‘Tvu seen kids, If they don’t hit well, who think they’ve raltted a real crime ... and their parents think so too. ‘GVERPROTECTO THEM’ [ “But the part that really gets me is that little league play patronizes boys. It overprotect* them physically- They start out on small Baseball -diamonds, and as Say get older gradually work up to regulation fields. That’s Yoa east blame the actresses. If Tennessee Williams and Brendan Bahaa write so enchantingly of the wicked women, and the produeers see the dollar sign ahead, they’re going to ho offend the parts. ____________ I just got the Actress’ slant from Shirley Jones. WILSON Shirley — the beautiful blonde wife of! actor Jack Cassidy, and mother of a handsome son, Just two, named Shaughn—to here publicising a picture she made with Cultinflaa called “Pepe." But she recently played a bad, bad, bad woman In “Elmer Gantry"—and adored It. 'From the actress standpoint, these parte are flashy and meaty,” Shirley told me. “You play a nice girl—and you’re Just kind of dull.” ‘What did your mother, over in Pittsburgh, think about you In such a role?” I asked Shirley. "She loved It!” shrieked Shirley, "She cried, of course, about the girl I played being such a lost soul, but she loved It.1* And. as X write, here comes a flash about Aims Francis in a future, movie, "Girl of the Night.” What does she do? "She undergoes analysis to And out why she to a call girl.” We’ve got "Susie Wong” coming up — I guess every-knows about Suzle; we’ve SHIRLEY got "Never on 8unday” which 1s about the happy life of a floozy on her day off, and David Merrick brought us "Irma La Douce” which to about the true love of a love-for-sale girl, and one of the dirtiest shows ever in New York. But do you know something fellows? "lfy Fair Lady, the biggest hit in many a year, wasn't about streetwalkers, and “Camelot,” also by Lsraer & Loewe, their next smash hit, to about King Arthurs court. It can be ' DC. End of sermori. Pass the plate. *-• * * Mjd’S PEARLS: One nice thing about a drive-in movie to that a gal can find her Shoes when it’s time to leave. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: An actor told Peggy Cass, ‘T don’t like my wife to serve me breakfast to hid-—she make alctusy martini.” WISH ID SAID THAT: If Castro begins a five-year plan for Cuba he’ll first spend 20 years describing It. A theater-goer described a new show: "It was so bad everybody hissed, except one man. He applauded the hissing.” That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1990) w Features "My boys and I play softball every .Sunday on a regulation Held. They learn to piny real ball, not mlnlmtare ball. My nine-year-old — you should see Mm go hHO deep’short and get eff three hard shots to first, right~mr target,” Connors’ kids ate* have a regulation size basketball court to practice on, . , His seven-year-old can shoot iff] j straight baskets at 15 feet. ; “If you don’t overprotect your kids," Chuck grins, "you develop a pretty good team." pitcher* ooold see that, aat’ they’d poor In that fast ball while I was thfatotog.” Fortunately, talent scouts saw his downing ability when he was playing In Los Angelas, and offered him movie bit puts, later TV spots. When he was offered the lead in "Rifleman,” Chuck Anally gave up baseball.* v .'dr .0 Or Now he’s on top of the world-But not literally, like his young " boys. “They Uke to climb moun- '* tabu," he says, "and I can’t see So I drive 'em out to the hUte* 1 sit in the car while ttay -. climb. I sweat out whether or not« they’re going to meet up with rattlesnake one day, but they Just laugh If Oft , "They don’t overpwfact me, either.’’ Michigan Youths Are in Bond-Buying Mood By United Prase International WORLD SERIES SPECIAL, 7:30 t.m.17). Interviews, with the managers and players of the New York Yankees and Pittsburgh Pirates. Mel Allen, host. ALFRED HITCHCOCK? 8:30 p.m. (6). A psychiatrist to perplexed by the strange case of Ralph Jones (Dick York.) TOM EWEIX SHOW, 9 p.m. (2). Tom encourages his daughter to Join the school band and soon rues the day. THRILLER, 9 p.m. (4). Wedding plans are Interacted by a murder. With Mona Freeman, Shep-perd Strudwick and Jessie Royce Landis. Boris Karloff, host. STAGECOACH WEST, 9 p.m. (7) Simon Kane (Robert Brayy^uid David (Kftftard Eyer) meet Luke Perry (Wayne Rogers), driver of the westbound stage, as they attempt to flee from their past. RED SKELTON SHOW, 9:30 pm. 12). George Appleby (Skelton) be-comes clairvoyant. With Vivian Vance. OARRY MOORE SHOW, 10 p.m. (2). Dancer Chita Rivera, comedian Dick Van Dsdte, Join regulars Marion Lome, Durward Kirby and Carol Burnett- Special guest: actress Carroll Baker. RIVAK, THE BARBARIAN, 10 p.m. (4). Rivak (Jack Patentee), a galley slave during the Punic War between Rome and Carthage, vows revenge against Cartilage after his sister's death. (Color) JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 “P-m-14). Jack’s guests are comedian Joey Bishop, Victor Bocge, comedienne Kaye Ballard and magician Harry Lorayne. (color) DETROIT m — Michigan yotmg-sters purchased Jl,717,997 la UA.... Savings Stamps during the MM4> school year, the Treasury Depart-Connors learned basketball and ment has reported. That’s a SJ baseball as a child to Brooklyn I prr rent increase cw *bt pryvkhM Hi* father still 1st bank guard year’s total of U,654,290. ................. to New York City. Chuck played tel the sandtots as a kid, showed much athletic ability that he L won scholarships to Adeiphi Academy and Seton Hall, where hel was signed ih 1942 to a contract with the then Brooklyn Dodgers. Combined purchases of Series E and H Savings'Bonds in Michigan amounted to 121,954,000 in August — up 32.85 million or 14J per cent over August, 1969. Later he played for the Chi-«ago Cubs, Lon Angeles Angels aad Montreal Royals for several summer seasons —.while playing basketball for the Boston Celtics la the fall. Ccrihors was known as a cutup and down on the field. a Pagliacci really,” he remembers. "I had to cut up to compensate to my heart for the fact t was not going to realty cut the mustard to the big leagues. I had to front for my insecurity. At night, alone, I’d think — how long can I tod them? “In retrospoet, I think my mind got in my way as a ball player. I wasn’t Instinctive er animal enough. Babe°Ruth never analysed — he got up aad hit the ban. T9 say to myself, why didn’t yon Mt that pitch? What’s he going to throw next? The The First Church at Wells || Somerset. England, to said to hnv been founded in 704.---- RCA COLOR TV Sales and Service Sweet’s Radio TV 0*tt Mm. & hi. Night* SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests Free Parking at Rear of BM&iog "Open Eves, by Appointment” 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 pontiac, men. WORLD SERIES, 11:45 a.m. (4) The New York Yankee* and Pittsburgh Pirates kick off the 1960 World Series at Fofbes Field to Coidoi’s RGA Color TV Sorvko nnr nn su cotoa nr non A Color TV Servicing Dealer SAVE! —IT IS CHEAPER—SAVE! • NO SIXVICI INSURANCE CHARMS • • NO INSTALLATION CHARMS • • PIUS ONI YIAI WARRANTY ON ALL PARTS • • FREI INSTALLATION AND MUVIAY • 1 on RCA Color TV Dally at 5 P. tf. j CONDON’S TV SALES I S6 S. Tatoflraph (Across from To! Howto) * f-EIGHT Xsk Lawmakers !o Legalize Tax ^eing Collected J SUVA. Fiji science to a mosquito-bird cycle, j [hits an increasing number, of TOicnciins —clj year r68 -per cent of them children under Id; years old. A ' v- » ——r~ Things are so bad that the Audubon Society and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals tell me the situation is serious. But as both organizations are committeed to helping birds, [ they have few constructive sug gestions to make. And so, to meet the challenge,! many citizens have already tak-j en up arms. • - —' [ -SLING SHOT BEST ’’I found the best is the sling-j . shot," a middle-aged lady in Pat-; terson, N.J., said, asking that her] name be withheld. ’’It is light, portable, time-tested and you cani ■ practice In your cellar until youj get experience.” the battle. Expeases i a e I a d e electrical hazards in usual roost-lug places, bird-repelleut paint, high frequency noises or re-corded bird distress calls. (According to the Audubon Society, ~ there has been one report of success in driving off sea gulls with recordings by Elvis Presley.) Tired of the-heavy expense, the! state of Ohio has now passed a law.making it legal to shoot pig-j eons. And the Delaware River Bridge Commission has circulated a directive making it mandatory! to shoot starlings. FANCIERS RESIST But these' moves, like alToth-l erj In the same direction, have! brought on the grim resistance! -peculiar to bird-fanciers — who, are responsible for the whole problem in the first place. The pigeon is the descendant j of domesticated European rock j doves who escaped their captivity and came to this country ' because they heard that certain ' people do nothing but feed pigeons. The starling is another matter. He was brought from England because one Eugene Schieffelin in 1880 thought ttartheUA Time a Machine Saves Sets Allowable Cost WASHINGTON OJPI) - A farmer can figure out how much he can afford to pay for electrical equipment by considering the amount! [and valur of the time the machin-j cry saves Mm, say economists \ at Purdue University. For example, if labor is worth: fl per hour and a machine saves 10 minutes a day, the farmer can1 [afford to pity 3300 for the machine. [Of he can twy $1,100 for a ma-[ chine that save* 30 minutes per! (day and $2,250 for one that savesv 60 minutes a day. ‘ ’ '’j; have every kind of bird mentioned In fftakespear’s works. And it is written in the play Henry IV: "I'll have a starling shall be; taught to speak nothing ’Mortimer.’" A A * Instead, he flies around city! halls screaming "cheap, cheap,"' * digests Insects very quickl.v and! Nob ftCoMuuufy... Most People Do I Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Now...try the motor oil that Sit DPP If you drive a car, you should know this: America’* leading automobile manufacturers agreed on a series of really tough teats for motor oil. These are wear and protection tests designed to rate motor oils for MS (Maximum Severity) service. Standard Super Permalube , surpassed every test in this series! Now what does this mean to you and your car? 1a You set lower oil consumption with multi-grade Super Permalube. Result—you’ll go lots farther without adding oil. a You get better gasoline mileage! For moot cars. 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