Th® W®ath®r THE PONTIAC aSo> PAGES; UNITED TOSSS INTERNATIONA!. Egyptians Told to Get Out one color:. Edition Civilian Regime PJ ‘Your Cheatin’ Heart Will Tell on You" Forms Republic |Basl7’s Kiss Reveals All After Revolt I BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - Rule No. 1 1 for tourists entering -.Yugoslavia: Don’t Damascus Raisas Flag! (f^ ^ -8 I' A businessman, Identified by the Belgrade newspaper Politika only as Basil, 1 tried to and it cost him about $5,000. This Wl Is the Story Politika toJd: os Military Rule Ends; Democracy Promised BEIRUT, l2bSipV(AP)f Syria’s new civilian regime raised the flag of the Syrian Arab Republic over government buildings today and ordered the ouster of Egyptians in quick sequel to the revolt against J Cairo’s rule. Basil was traveling by train from Germany and arrived at customs con-, trol in Jesenice on the Austrian border. An officer checked his baggage and found it conformed to customs regulations. He saluted the businessman and turned around to leave. UK’S GOT PROBLEMS — President Gamai Abdel Nasser wore a worried expression as his Hakim Amer (left!,-conferred with him in Cairo's Republic Square today. United Arab RepuUic chieftain Nasser told an estimated crowd of inn non Egyptian* gathered in the square about Weekend Tala Recognition of Syria j Held With Ford Is Put the situation in Syria. At right is UAR vice tary Deal president Kamal Hussein. , ment home. ’signed by jof the Syrian Arab army,' | was broadcast by Radiol (Damascus. This broadcast and another announcing the flag-raisings were monitored in Beirut, capital o( neighboring Lebanon. Auto Company. Union WASHINGTON (AP) — U. S. recognitionjif the hew p A h o' A‘ (Syrian regime seemed out of the question today until rresseo oy r e n a i n g a lot more unfolds in the latest Middle East drama. Tuesday Deadline j one impelling reason ruling out early establishment of formal ties with the Damascus insurgents was a U. S. DETROIT (UP!)—Ford Motor).. ■ . „„ _________________________— Co, and the United Auto Workers,de8ire 40 remaln 011 S000*' Union planned today to meet terms with President . through the weekend in hope* of'Qajnal Abdel Nasser of thelAoentS Smash reaching a contract settlement be-j_... amwL/ . ^ ... fore Tuesday's 10 a m. «trike "0W'^ruPted UnitCd AT&b\MOOIlShine Still deadiii*- {Republic. Basil, evidently satisfied with the out-... m . - ' .. ^ . .1 i come, Jumped to his feet, embraced the i All Egyptians, civil and; 3 customs map and gave him two long, remilitary, were instructed to-i i.r i, present, themselves at mili- sounding kisses straight on the face. This ends the'gay part of the story. The customs man, apparently unused to such friendliness by passengers, decided to take another look. He took a screwdriver, opened several planks In the walls of Basil's sleeping compartment and felt around Inside. LUCK CHANGED The ertd of the story has Basil sitting with a long face and the customs man beaming over a big pile in the middle of the compartment — 60.0n0 gold buckles for necklaces, three pounds of gold bars, a quantity of lighters and other commodities. Politika figured out the two kisses cost Basil a total of roughly LA-million dinars, tax Included. GOP Delegates to Con-Con May Hit Stalemate I Could Bypass Romneyf and Hutchinson WH*fl| Choosing President LANSING (AP)—ReputM lican delegates to the constitutional convention werd j headed today for a possibly caucus deadlock over a choice for the presidency for the first such convene ition in Michigan in 54 ■years. The GOP delegates, who will ou(y idquarlel'S fui ship*) yi . — —-w—r|-*-1. _______i i ■ |__» I « ^1_________________ 'Nixon Hits Knight Charge Premier Mamoun Kuzbari had announced dissolution of the military group that boosted him to power. He promised democracy and constitutional rule. Anotfter WM thft thp Syrian]/] WcttetfOld Twp. After negotiations recessed Fri-J group has yift to make any day UAW negotiators moved to the qwtst to the United States forj y g Revenue agents and Pon-12th floor of the downtown Detroit recognition. jtiac state police raided a Water- hotel in wWch the bargaining ses-j Still another was lack of ev, ?(oltj township home yesteiday in Mom are beiktg held; for a specialjdence of the new regime's nature.|which a moonshine still Wfs ‘al-meeting. j rxprrl. *.|d that It was |legedly being operated. According to Trooper J Kuzbarf has not yet proclaimed Syria’s Independence from President Nasser's United Arab Republic, In which It Joined Egypt In February IMS. But the new flags flying over government of-fled*. Indicate this was Just a technicality. The exact number of t,'<,y(|||f number the Democrats 99-45 w to Pontiac Woman, 44 iof Pressure As Libelous Center next week, scheduled if preconvention caucus at the Elkti Club here. —i . Faulty electrical wiring wasj blamed for a house fire thismorn- LQS ANqELES (AP) — Richard M. Nixon denies he mg that resulted in the death of a .' * ' A , _ _ _ Pontiac woman. {sought a secret deal to get former Gov. Goodwin J. Knight out of the 1962 race for California’s Republican Mrs. Jerhme Webber. 441 was pronounced dead of smoke inhalation in the burned-out bedroom of gubernatorial nomination. ■False and libelous on its face,” the former vice If no agreement is reached to$ day on the presidency, the Republicans might meet Sunday anq Monday in an effort to fill tM post before the convention is called to order at noon Tuesday. 4 her home at 5?HLeBaron St. She president said Friday of Knight’s charge: That Nixon A semi-Invalld, she apparently | was unable to get out of bed in time once the smell of smoke awoke her, according to Pontiac Asst. Fire Chief Victor Bodamer. Flames in the house were spot-i No details of the meeting were rein man termed It, meeting." UAW President Walter Reuther was expected to be hand tor today's meetings. ... _yria is not known, but there ed shortly before 6 a;m. today by must be several thousand. In ad-la phasing cab driver, who sped toj dltion to the hundreds of govern- nearby Fire Station 4 to report the; ment officials who serviced the blaze now-sundered United Arab Repub-j * * * lie in Damascus and other cities, Chief' Bodamer estimated the; would want to maintain some no- I Brown. Elmer E. Edmisten. ;s7-1 the-ro were large numbers of Egyp- tire, which started in the base-j liticnl and military ties with Cal- was preparing a batch of illegalfolding posts in the Syrianlment, had been burning for about; ro provided Hyrta bas s high de {whiskey when they arrived at _JjJ*inrtny There were several units be- two hours before it was discovered ! grre of autonomy. jhomc al 87? ft "" -.after noon. ABSENT FRIDAY He was absent Friday in the » spHnlering the morning, to attend the funeral of Union ' Charles E. Wilson, former General * . Motors president and secretary of The U S. Nicy to go stow Defanse and during the afternoon |»ny recognlt.on of the Damascus Resentment against being treated)^.,, >urran, igsupd by Federal! tike a stepchild in Ihe U.A.R. jcourt jn Detroit considered a major reason for' -year-old Tyrone SI. shortly||jpvwjj pompo*,^ entirely of Egyp-he officer had s' „ ^ he worked in his office at UAW Talks continued along t h e lines established In the paat few days. Noneconomic matters, of the same type that Idled nearly 3ftO,OM General Motors workers for two weeks early this month, were points of discussion. They centered on outside contractors, Joh, seniority and working conditions. Bargaining sessions continued to be conducted under a news Jilack-out agreed to by comppny and union. The strike deadline, set earlier . by the union, applies only to national economic 'and, noneconomic matters, government was stated Friday by Joseph W. Reap, Jitate department press officer. Asked about U.S. recognition, Reap said, "It is premature to consider the question." Reap also reiterated Washington's hands-off policy. He said the evidence indicated the uprising was of Internal origin, not set off by any outside power. Another high • ranking official saM, "As far as we are able to. detect there is no Communist Influence" in the rebellion, which he attributed to deep dissatisfss-lion with Nasser: * | U.S. authorities Were reluctant to say anything more about the revolt for fear of further stirring up Middle East troubles and getting the United States involved. Officers smashed the still, 13 barrels of mash fe In the basement, i ed about 30 3ft-pound sacks of sugar. The copper still had a weekly capacity of between M and tot gallons of moonshine, according to Brown. Neighbors in the suburban residential area Apparently were unaware of any illegal activities at Ihe Edmisten home. An exhaust fan had been installed in one of the basement windows to dispel telltale odors, according to offi-ceri. Edmisten was taken into custody by the revenue agents from Detroit who said he would be arraigned in Federal Court .on charges of violating the alcohol tax law. Agents said they had received a lip In Detroit that Edmisten, who moved here from the South, was supplying a blind pig lit the city, selling moonshine liquor at gallon. , WOMEN STAY HOME Egyptian women were asked to stay, in their homes today their own gaiety." This, and a previous rommunl-)ue asking Syrians to stop staging demonstrations In support of Ihe revolution. Indicated the leaders may have been worried. Ih Beirut the newspaper Lisan al Hal reported the new government, which was named only Friday. freed all political prisoners in Damascus. There was no confirmation in Beirut of the report. The government waited less than two days after Thursday's virtually bloodless coup to ask foreign diplomats in Damascus to seek recognition by their governments of the new Syrian regime. Turkey and Jordan already have accorded recognition, Iran wan reported considering recognition. and' Iraq came to Syria's defense. All four ballons have , (Continued on Page.,2, Col. 5! He said the house was well- | built and tightly sealed, prevent- ; Ing the flames from burning through the outer walls until Just j before the Are engines arrived. Mrs. Webber already was dead,, crumpled at oik end of her bed. j sent an emissary to offer Knight any state job he wanted if Kriight withdrew. “No person representing ipe or authorized by me has made such a promise," said Nixon. Knight retorted. “I will disclose the name of Nixon’s ■ presure emissary and present my proof and witnesses at a public press conference within a verj^ few days.” These were the latest develop? | ments in a dispute between California's two top Republicans — a | Democratic delegates, while, were meeting thh after- Adoption of rules and committed assignments also may toe settled a{ the caucus. The two |eai _ the presidency are Edward Hutchinson, fonner state senator, and George Romney, American Motors Carp. presKT dent. Hutchinson, a candidate from the conservative wing, said Friday that be felt confident there would be agreement on the presidency today. CLAIMS TOP SPOT He claims to be the front-runner, with between 30 and 50 votes lined up in his behalf. California Feud Curbs GOP Optimism, Pg. 3 - campaigning -actively Her husband arrived home from; ork just as the fire engines pulled j up in front of the hodse. ^ j The blaze was extinguished within an hour and a half, and caused! nn estimated $2,500 damage to the m-story frame home. According to Bodamer the fire started in faulty wiring of a wash- Youth Charged With Murder long-simmering 'feud that has come to a boil since Nixon announced hjs candidacy for governor Wednesday night. Knight, now i Los Angeles TV A commentator, claims Nixon en-1 gtneered the GOP maneuvering ing machine In the basement, di- . , .... , rectly beneath, Mrs. Webber's bed- Mold WI til O U f that forced him to step aside governor in 1M8 lo allow then L'.S. Sen. William F. Know land lo run (or |hat of fire. Knight ran ter KnowlaSd’s Senate scat. Both lost badly. Knight claims—and Nixon denies—that Nixon, then vice presi-| lleved Bohd j dent, wanted both men defeated | commission There appeared to be a growing feeling among observers here thit delegates might not give the necessary 73 votes to either Hutchinson or Romney, but would settle for a 'compromise candidate instead. ___% At a Republican conference last week in St. Joseph, Hutchbume was asked to draw up a set of rules and to present them at today's meting. v room. The flames burned upward through the floor. in Shotgun Pontiac Girl, 18 Japan Fallout Rises TOKYO W> — Japan's Central Meteorological Agenty said today the highest radioactivity since Sept. 1, when the Russians resumed nuclear tests, was detected j from rain and dust Friday inL!ls bound Northern Japan. !\Vedn< so he could have unquestioned I equate set .of Death of | control of California's Republican! instead, Hutchinson said, he had party. burned his attention to drawing. UP I The latest rupture in the never- \ nn agenda tor today's meeting. I John Haase 19 who has ad-j‘‘ordial relations between Nixonjseveral of his proposals were ex-nutted slaying an 18-year-old Pon-!11™1 Knight started in thisjpeoted lo stir up some contro-tiac girl while "playing around” fashion: with a shotgun in his home was) ■barged with first-degree murderj icsterda; startl'd , .'ersy of Nixon's mk- First item on the suggested (tonally televised news confer- agenda was whether ’ the caucus nee Wednesday night, William .should bar newsmen. Hutchinson \|Hrsball St. | A. Munnell, state Democratic (said he personally was in favor of >ver for examination' ehsirmsn. issued a statement (holding closed meeting while Cer-hen arraigned before! claiming a Nixon friend offered iiain subjects were being discussed. ! Knight a secret deal to withdraw Tigers Lead Twins, 6-4, as Rain Falls 1 negan yesterday afternoon He whs] from the race, remanded lo the county Jail w-ilh-- The next morning. Knight toll lout bond. ■ newsmen that he had beensefferei includ- MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Rftinj intervened in today's pel mil riggers - Minnesota Twins baseball game ns thp Tigers came to bat In the lop of the sixth. The Bcngals were lending al the lime, 6-4 in a conleat played in loose fashion by both learns. The contest, an unusual morning affair, was also dcluyed at the outset by fain. The unusual morning contest was scheduled today to avoid conflicting with the Minnesota - Missouri football game. Howie Koplttz (1-0) was making his first major league start for the Tigers, against Jim ‘KaaK<8*16>, the pride of Zeelund, who started Tor the Twins. After the "morning hour" there is only one game left—Sunday. Today's game was delayed (or , a tlijne by rain. The action: TiGEII’H FIRST . . Fernandes singled to right. Rruton saerlfieed Fernandes to secohri. K a a t lo Klllobrew. Morion doubled down the right field line, scoring Fernandes. ColavHo singled, apparently senring Morton, but Morton wins singled to right. Colavlto sloping al scoopd. Wood singled lo center, scoring Colavlto. Borns then scored when the ball got by Green ter an error. Wood tried lo go all the way home Kaat covering first. Tuttle threw out Freehan. Koplitz struck out. No runs, no hits, no errors, none dlvlelso to Battey. Three runs, five hits,« none loft. (Two nni| el to Val- TWINS SECOND Green filed to Colnviio. Martin fouled to Morton. K i 11 c b r c w walked. Altobelli singled lo center, KUIebrew stopping at second. Allison struck out. No runs, one hit, no errors, two TWINS FIRST , ..........-,Vi Green bounced a single to right. Martin singled to center, Green going, to third, Klllobrew struck out. Altobelli grounded lo Wood, who dropped the boll trying to tag Martin on the base- Allison singled to left, scoring Martin, with Altobelli going to third. Naragon walked, loading the bases. Tattle filed to Bruton, Altobelli scoring after the catch and Allison going in third. Val-dlvlelso bounced h single lo left, Scoring AIIIkoU, with Naragon stopping at second. Kaat was vailed out on strikes. -Four runs, four hits, one error, two left. scoring Fernandes and then went plate. Valdlvlelso threw out Morton, Bruton taking thled. Colavlto singled to left, oooring ter an error. Boros walked Stonge replaced Kaat on the d tor tl to Allison. Osborne walked, load-log Ihe Iimhcs. Freehan walked, forcing home Colavlto. Kllle-krow threw out Koptlts, Stonge revering first. TWINS THIRD Naragon tiled to Morion: Fernandes threw out Tultle. Vakil-vtolsn singled lo left, Slange was called out on strikes. hit, no errors, one Prosecutor Rob- ]“*'* aid the accused fo* Califorma rhfof JM, a .•.s.hhm.i telephone call Sept T by a TIGERS FOURTH Fernandez bent out a single i| :»•«' tonight or early toniorrow. shotgun, belonging to one -of Winds will shift lo north to north-llaase's brothers', ‘ was on the bed- w°st at IS’'to 3ft miles per hone room floor I •'tends,v. Haase said he didn't intend Iu4 Fifty-three was the lowest to t the girl, Who he had been j peratuie in downtown Pontiac pre ig for the padt month, but (ceding 8 am. .The mercury had In Today's Press Episcopalians S.S. Hope Pontiac man sees cult problems for Peace Cor PAGE l«. Cheap Fuel? Fuel cell search contipues -PAGE 7. Theaters .. ....... TV tt Radio Programs Wilson, Earl ....... Women’s Pages________ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1961 TWO The Day fa Birmingham Twelve Town Drain Bids to /Be Opened Monday Pilots Threaten to Boycott ♦‘“MIAMI, Tla. tAP)—Six hundred'ter, not the pilots’ responsibility. ^Eastern Air Lines pilots say they | He indicated that the test might will stop flying DC8 jets in three be used td blame/pilots, for a flays if the Federal Aviation Agency doesn’t assure them the plane’s- hydraulic system is safe. * * * The pilots raised the safety question in a telegram sent Friday night to Najeeb Hallaby, FAA director, by Council 18 of the Air tine Pilots Association. , » “Silence on this, question will force us' to suspend operation on, DC8 aircraft which is used on Eastern Air Lines within!'three flays.” the telegram said.' j .■ The protest was a .result of a] hew FAA regulation requiring pilots to answer 10 true-or-false questions on the Douglas DC8 hy-j draulic system. • * ★. * '« Capt. John D. Payne, chairman hi Council 18, said that thfe safety |f the system’.was an FAA mat- PayneTsaid the DCS hytfrauHp system has been under scrutiny because of several failures. Tfle pilots could tie up at least 15 DC8 flights which come and go from Miami daily. Report Monday on Mail Drive Unit Seeks to Stem Late Afternoon Flood of Sending by Firms Lansing Argues Aid to Children ! To Urge Lawmakers * Decide Whether to Join U.S. Assistance Plan ! The Pontiac. Mail Users Council i will report on progress in efforts, | to halt late-aftemoon overflow mailings by ■area firms when it meets at 4:30 p.m. Monday at the !Main Post Office. 735 W..Huron. The council was set up in July to gain cooperation from mailers to spread mailings throughout the day instead of dropping all mail in postal boxes when offices close in the afternoon. A cross-section of mailers in the Pontiac area, totaling 100 handling the largest volume, J LANSING (UPI) — Budget committees of both houses of the legis- fature will be asked to meet Oct. 7 or 18 to decide whether a third |ry at bringing Michigan under the ____ According to Featherstone, mem- —federal Aid to Dependent CMldrentbers' M I of the Unemployed would 'have a ’— fhance of success. I A meeting with Gov. John 8. Iswalnson, who wants to call a * special session on the matter, fulled to produce much enthusl- * asm among lawmakers. ‘I’m not optimistic about the fchance of holding a special session If this (ADC-U),’’ said Rep. Amell Engstrom, Republican head of the Jlouse Ways and Means Commit-lee from Traverse City, “But I think we ought to give it a fair Rearing. * Swainson said if the legislature would authorize Michigan’s partld- it ioh In the plan for the first six of 1962, he would set up J»tii wanning trend is due east end south of the Appalachians and in pai 2 DC8 Jets Make Emergency Stops CHICAGO fAP> — Two United Air Lines DCS jet planes carrying a total of 148 passengers made safe emergency stops Friday night. One landed at Chicago, the other at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. ’ . „ The plane that landed at Chi-tgo's O'Hare International. Airport with 68 persons aboard had one of Its four engines out. It was on 9 scheduled nonstop New York to Denver flight. The other plane had 80 aboard and was boiinfl from New York lo San Francisco. Crewmen said It suffered a complete hydraulic failure. ' The huge craft rolled nearly three miles down a runway! before stopping. j morning, U.S. officials, said that the talks would continue probably well into the afternoon. As he ^ arrived for the meeting Gromyko said he did not know if he would see President Kennedy while- li Washington. CRITICAL ISSUES The future status of the U.S. British and French garrisons in West Berlin is one of several critical issues discussed by Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Lord Home in separate talks with Gromyko. June. The railroad claimed mounting losses in commuter operations. U.S. Negro Fugitive BIRMINGHAM - Bids million in bonds to be finance the city’s fliajpr share of the 12 TOWn Drain will be opened at the City Commission Meeting Monday. City) Officials have expressed hope that the Interest rate on the 20-year general obligation bondr will be 3 per cent or lower. The bide will be opened at the ■tart of the 8 p.m. meeting and reviewed by the city’s finance director and bond consultant.-Recommendations will then be made by them before the meeting ends and the commission will either accept or reject the bids. It is the intention of the city to sell the bonds to a syndicate ratty KennedfSigns Foreign Aid Bill Inks Another Measure to Let Football League Make TV Packages NEWPORT. RX/KP) - Presi-ent Kennedy 'toddy signed a $3.9 billion foreign/aid appropriation blU that al*y included funds for the Peace/Corps and other financial actiyfties abroad. Kennedy also put his name on legislation allowing the National Football League and other sports circuits to enter package televi-slon contracts. the city tt matured for SO years. The city received Approval of Its method of financing the con-structon of the drain from the Michigan Municipal Finance Com-mission Sept. 12. > , No matter what plan of financ-/ ing had the city decided on, trn/ payers will begin being assr- -J for the major Improvem^n July, 1962. A public hearing "on7the- confirmation of the spepial assessment roll for the paving of the alley from Hunter Bdulevard to the city water tank/has been scheduled by the City Commission for Oct. 9. Total/wst of the project has been estimated at $3,700, with the paying $1,400 of the improve- The Women's Society of Christian Service of the First Methodist Churdi will celebrate a Latin American fiesta at its first general luncheon of the season Wednesday. Each of the 15 circles of the society will decorate a table to represent a different Latin Amor tative of these countries will be served. ( Mnr. Marshall Reed, wife of the bishop of the Methodist Church in Michigan, will be the guest speaker: at the program. She will’ preoent background tn- ~ formation on minion work In Latin America and relate experiences Rusk and Gromyko expect to meet again in Washington next week. Rusk is returning to Washington and Home to London tonight. Says Red China Can Coexist Chou Sets Condition: U.S. Must Discontinue Opposition in U.N. TOKYO (UPD—Chinese Communist leader Chou. En-lai said today his regime was willing to coexist peacefully with the United States, providing the United Statesdropg its opposition to a ^United Nations seat-for-Peiping. Chou said his Communist regime and the millions it rules "wish to live together in peace with the peoples of all countries, including the'United States of America.” Chou made the statement In nn unusually brief speech which he delivered at n Peiping reception for visiting dignitaries on the eve of Red Chinn's 19th anniversary. His speech was carried by the Communist New Chins News Agency In a report i monitored here. Although Chou tempered his statements on coexistence with the|a settlement United States by laying down - certain ‘‘conditions,’’ they were an apparent reversal of Red China’s often repeated stand that war and only war can settle the issues , between East and West. 1 Gromyko hopes to have a conference also with President Kennedy, but U.S. officials said the meeting has not yet been arranged. ★ * ★ ! The talks, which actually mark the start of informal negotiations over a compromise settlement, have dealt with three major aspects of the Berlin crisis: 1. Rusk and Home have tridd to impress upon Gromyko that the Western powers will fight to defend West Berlin and its access routes. Some aides of the two Western ministers think Soviet Premier Khrushchev now. understands that he runs the risk of war if he overplays his hand. j MINISTERS CONFAB LOOMS ' Rusk has tried, to discover whether Khrushchev is willing to agree to a basis for negotiations on Berlin. If he is, an East-West foreign ministersv conference In November or December seems certain. The President signed two other spending measures-lncluding the|^“"^“ ^Thustond had during $1,133,453,164 supplemental appro-] vi#it ,0 m|saions. priation, which the House dropped' . . . on the Senate in a temper-boiling adjournment of Congress early Chapel, William R. Hamilton CO,, 820 E. Maple Ave. He was a section manager at f ■ f* 7™ k | _________________! adjournment of Congress earlyl WILLIAM H. 8CHULTX J06KS lUDdfl ASVllim Wednesday morning. Service for William H. Schultz. 1 The House quit work after pass-|57, of 4754 Burnley Drive will be HAVANA III _ A Negro wanted tog the measure to add to funds held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Bell for kidnaping a white couple to'previously appropriated for gov-North Carolina during a race dis-jernment agencies. As a result, turhanee has reouested nolitical senators who wanted to Increase asylum in Cuba, the official Cuban!some of the allocations could do Chrysler Corp. Missile Plant and News Agency Prensa announced;nothing about it. ,A member of the Lutheran Churth today. The 'other appropriation bill fur- of 'he Redeemer, pronsa said Robert F WllliamS™he8 $3,877,915,989 lor public Surviving are hi* wife, Marga- .!««*»<< «“• *™y,A,«nk ■Hffi-r’- ■V- cut ion in his country. partment, Tennessee vauey au residence after a brief ^ ._____. thority and for qeveral study com- ‘P* 81 resraence aner a oriei ght •. The announcement charged Wil- . * 8 |illness. In Washington, it is understood Hams was harassed by American, authorities “because of his valiant auinonues Decause oi ms vauum ___m .. r * tight in favor of colored people Th<* National Football Leaime r. r If. e and his defense of the Cuban rev-^ouroged Congress ^TOII HUIII L(ll Mil* Independence Man | TV bill In order to offset a fed-. oral court decision outlawing its I jsharc-the-revenue pact with thep I Columbia Broadcasting System-jEach of the league's 14 teams]. An Independence Township rr It's an Exclusive Club! As the Skies begin to lighten up!would then split the cash. Sunday morning, faithful- Edm-------- -------------—-— eyers will lift their heads to the I _ , _ . _ • heavens and watch the balloon I Execution Raises Total satellite follow a brief' arch 84-89 $25 for Fidel Ca$trp degrees over the northern horizon, , heading northeast. Anyone who HAVANA (API—A firing squad! Would like to Join these .early ris- Lxecut(Kj Ezcquiel Delgado Reyes ers must be ready at 5:39 a.ffl.un Santiago t o d n y -on conviction 11...... of counterrevolutionary activities ['Tried to Kill Don in arms Jhat tttt Pn>»nt Lake Road near Hatchery Road 11 AM. Sunday School Nursery During All Bervlces APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 458 C.ntrol Saturday Young People...........7:30 P.M. Sunday School and Worship.......<0^0 AM- Sunday Evening Service..........7:90 P.M. Tues. end Thurs. Services.. •. • 7:30,P.M. Church Phone FE 5-8361 Associate Paatar—WILLIAM PAMMT Ml 7-343S CHURCH of CHRIST 210 HUGHES ST. FE 5-1156 Roosevelt Weils, EvangeII*T~Z Sunday Bible Study for all ages, 9:45 a.m. Sunday Worship Periods 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Tuesday Weekly Bible Study, 9 p.m. the Church that *epseks aa tha Oracle* el Ood" (1 Pater 4:11) u: EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE S800 Watkins Lako Rd. near Oakland County Mnrkct SUNDAY SCHOOL— 10 A.M. PREACHING — 11 A.M. nod 1:30 P M. YOUTH GROUPS — S:30 P.M. — YOU Arc Invited RADIO—CKLW Sun., 7:30 A.M. Tune In ■ghey, pastor - DaWitt laughey, A««t. Pastor The three youth groups will meet at 5:45 p. m. with “It Pays 7o Advertise/11 the theme of Pioneers. The Builder's group will discuss "The Church Moves Forward" the Post High group will continue (he study of the Book of Revelations. ★ ♦ ★ William Cofflng will provide special music at the 7 p- m. worship hour. The monthly Youth for Christ Singspiration is scheduled for 9 p. m. Guest musician will be Johnny Shaw of Detroit. Those registering for the National Sunday School Convention Oct. 11-13 at Cobo Hall, Detroit may register at the church office. FIRST METHODIST The fall schedule at First Methodist Church will Include worship at 8:30 and 11 a. m. and Church at 9:45 a. m. During the second worship service, there will be additional sessions of the church school so that young people from first through the aixth grade downstairs, to classes as ml hymn of the service is sung. ’ Rev. Donald Wlttbrodt, associate pastor, will give the Communion meditation at both worship hours. . ' -Merlin Asplin, music director, will ring “Overshadowed" at the early , hour and the Chancel Choir witt * be heard singing "A Mighty Fortress'' at the later hour. the School of CHUrch-are slated for 7:30 p. m. Following Senior High Fellowship at 6 p.m. the film, “More For Peace,”, will be shown. Moderator of the fellowship is Linda Newport. Other members of the- executive committee areJlohnna McDonald, Nancy Clark, Marjorie Ashby, Jan Appel, John Kern, Barbara Cramer, and Mary Reeves. Grace Purdy, and Mr. and Mrs- il. C. Sarto are adviser*. Wendell Strait and William Irons, cochairmen of the stewardship committee, are in_charge of the delegation attending the general mission interpretation program of the Presbytery of Detroit at First Presbyterian Church in Birming-am Monday evening. Parents of Cburch School are invited to meet with teachers at the open house from 8 to 9:39 Wednesday evening at the Orchard Lake Church. Refreshments will be served. ____ Walter Johnson and the Council of Med will complete (Naps tor Layman’s Sunday, Wednesday day evening* Junior High Fellowship will resume supper meetings at 5 p.m, Thursday under the leadership of Moderator Judy Field. SALVATION ARMY Lennart Sandbergh, Swedish Gospel musician and singer, wiQ hold services at the Salvation Army Citadel MondAy through Fri- Arthur Mnnsfield, president of Methodist Men, said Friday. The Aurora Class have a birthday dinner the same evening In the church dining room. AUBURN HEIGHTS U. P. Worldwide Communion will be observed at the 11:15 a. m. worship hour at the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church Sunday. “The 25,000-Mile-Long Table" will be Pastor F. William Palmer's leme. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Weston and Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Swartz will. serve as sponsors of Youth Fellowship, the group for young people meeting at 6:30 p. m. each Sup-day. Girl Scouts who are working for the Celtic Cross Award will meet at the church at S;S0 Thursday afternoon. The Couples’ Class will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Norval Jones on Featherstone Road for business session and hayride at 7:30 p. m. Saturday. PINE HILL Dr. Alfred Grey will be back in the pulpit of Pine Hill Congregational Church for the, 11 o’clock service tomorrow preaching on "The Grace of Go J 314 Stanley Rev. Fred H. Both. Pastor MORNING SERVICE 10:00 A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL ■ 11:00 A. M. EVENING SERVICE *7:30'P.M. CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN «1M Hiller,,t Dr.. Waterford SERVICE - 7 00 P M. Rev Lena Bullock o( Del., Speaker For'Information call OR 1-M14 trass of Christ Rev- Chaimer Mastm Pastor, Lapan ii n it rv to Serve Bethany Baptist .. Has Rally Day ..._.. ^.... at Convention GH0RCH ol SPIRITUiL FELLOWSHIP 8EMIS OLSON POST — 570 OAKLAND AVE. Sunday Service—7:30 P.M. Stanley Gutt, speaker Oct. 8th—Vita Winge*. speaker . Rev Chaimer S.v Mastin, newlvcrsity of Iowa. She also has the. 1 • lj minister of Christian education at degree of master of religious edu-: Congregation to Hear Bethany Baptist Church, will beginjeation from Union Theological I nilmrnn Cwntiunt nt his full time service,Sunday He|Seminary. The Mastins have a! i Lutheran txocunves atl|akw) the placf of Pervy M Wal.laughter, one-year-old Rebecca i Loyalty Dinner Tuesday .ley who accepted the pastorate of Ann. V - ■ Roseville Baptist Church.-Detroit. Pastor of Bethany Baptist is Dr, j Children of Cross of Christ Luth- * * * Emil Kontz who assumed the pa> eran Church School will lie promot- A native of Binghampton, N. y ; Itorate in March. ed at the Rally Day service at 9:45 (he Rev. Mr. Mastin completed 1------------------ a.m. Sunday. ihis undergraduate academic stud-. The boys and girls will sing the ies at Colgate University in llam-j ^ plaeessional hymn, "Onward Ghris-jilton, N. Y. ttan Soldiers" Children ot the He received te bachelor of f 1935 and was j •la Kappa bon , orary fraternity In his senior j year. •nursery and primary department: r(Mt |>|l( ,tle Children." and the junior inter-I mediate and senior departments, [will present "Living for Jesus” . Parent* and friends are invited to! A graduate of Union Theological the program, !Seminary, he received his bachelor . _........ . ... jot divinity degree in 1959. Much Cross of Christ ChureN wit | hl> splnmHry work wns in thJ hate a loyalty dinner starting at ,f,pl(J of chrlgtian education • :30 p.m. Tuesday. < Ilf ford j Rrandt, president of fhe congre- j .. . gallon, will be In charge of fhe Ml, program cnee *n<'luc*e8 youth worker at Cen-| p * -Iral Haarlem Community Center tnj t Rev. Paul T. Hemecke,. execu-!]yPW York, minister to young peo-live secretary of the Mission Board ;p|P t„ „ Baptist Church on Stateni of the Michigan District of the |„|Hnd and H vear ats intern at the Lutheran Church - Missouri Sy-.Community Church m Radburn. nod. and Rev. Edwin C. Weber,^ j chairman of church extension, will! address the congregation. FIRST” ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N. PERRY , pursued s three-month i Clinical Training course at I Cleveland Mate Hospital and I served tor two year* as pastor " i Roseville Church, an ex- I Baptist Mission Society. YOU ARE WELCOME TO ATTEND THE rULL GOSPEL SERVICES OF OUR. CHURCH ' SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A M BRING the FAMWY lj A filmstrip on stewardship, ■ called "Seek Yf First the King-I jdoni" will also be shown. 1| Assisting Mrs. Ililman Fortney, 1 (chairman, with dinner ajrrange-j Ijments will be Mrs. Robert Beut'er.l His wife, Alice, holds the degree], I j Mrs. Clifford Brandt. Mrs Norman W bachelor of arts from the Uni JlDehnkr. Beverly Dombush. Mrs.I” “* «lOimleS Garven, Mrs. Dale Mun- Mrs. Andrew Pitonyak and Class on 'Prosperity1 Starting at Unity Center RKV. ROBKKT HORTKR Rev. Rubert Porter in Charge ol Music Christian Churches|| Holding International j | Meetings in Missouri jL 1 Representing First Christianjj |Church at the International Conven-w Ition of Christian Churches in Kan-iE Isas City. Mo. this weekend ah*!||' j Rev. and Mrs. Jack H C. Clark jand the Joe P. Morgans. Ik | 'Hie Rev. Mr. Clark is pastor ofifc {First Christian and Mr. Morgan is ,chairman of the official boa I'd.' I Some 10,000 members and dele-, i • gates from 8.000 cliurcbes through-,fc I out the world are gathering foe this r six-day meeting. Business sessions will be held In thv* Municipal Auditorium and the Disciple pastors will lie guests In the pulpits In the Kansas City area tomorrow. The Christian Churches have em-| barked on a 10-year program called the "Decade of Decision" which {embraces the forward moving emphasis of Christianity. Eugene D. Thompson, president of Christian Men’s Fellowship, will be in charge of Laymen's Sunday I tomorrow at First Christian. I Speaking 4m the theme, "Ye! {Shall Be Witnesses" wiU be Harold, Brown. Paul Colton and Donald, Woodward. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw I Pontiac, Michigan ■Rev. H. //. Savage, Pastor 9:45 A. M —SUNDAY SCHOOL Classes for alt ages 10:45 A M—MORNING WORSHIP ’ SHIRKERS AND SNOOPERS" 7:00 EVENING SERVICE "LESSON FROM ELI|AH" D\ Savage Speaking o' Bo:3 Services f Services at 8 30 A.M. and If A.M. ■ Sunday School 9;4S A.M. Grace ' Corner Oenetee and Glendale (W«t aide) | Richard C. Stuckmeyer, Pastor Church Service — 9:00 A.M. Sunday School _ 9:00 A.M. Church Service .. 11 DO A.M. || Sunday School . 11:00 A.M. fYThe Lutheran Hour” over •’7KMH 9 A.M. Every Sunday I St. Stephen 1 Sashabaw at Kempt I Guy B. Smith* Pastor I Sunday School ...V 9:15 A.M. ft Church Service —10:30 A.M, 1 | St. Trinity I Auburn at Jessie f iSaat Side i f Ralph C. Claus,.Pastor I Sunday School — 9:45 A.M. | First Service . .... 8:30 A.M. I Second Service . 11:00 A.M, Jnme* Putnam. MORNING WORSHIP moo A.M. * HELPFUL INSPIRATIONAL sionary-Pastor, McKeesport, Pa •Ret-, ]\ Her sc he, Pastoi A J rv';. \± ■ •. ' i,. ', ^, [The POWER of FAITH by Howard A It Seems to Me President's Peacetime Budget Is Highest in History of World m warn Well, he did it. I mean John F. Kennedy. The largest peacetime budget in the history of the Nation — or the world—comes to the American people as a completely unwelcome contribution from the President and his Democratic Congress. . ★ ★ ★ Many people thought the House and Senate would rebel and hack JFK down to size. But as they adjourn, the peacetime totals are a staggering and unbelievable $96 billion. This is $11 billion more than the previous peacetime high and the Dems thus break ail existing records. JFK really socks it to us. He gives us both barrels. ★ ★ ★ Whether you’re a Republican, Democrat, Socialist. Cemmunist or a • Disciple of the Errant Ground Hog, you’re nailed'with this monstrous budget. There’s no more debate now for it has passed. You’ll pay your share. \ There’s no escape. \ ★ ★ When Kennedy was campaigning, he promised almost everything to almost everybody, and even the case-hardened members of his own party had their tongues , in their cheeks at times and regarded these as the campaign promises of irrepressible youth. However, the youngster made good. He let us have it. ★ ★ ★ The total take on all tiixes in this country — even before this record breaker—was approximately a third of the entire national income. Of course, this ups it a* bit more but when your old man’s worth $200 million dollars as JFK’s is, another advance is probably unimportant. But if you aren’t in that happy predicament, you can start to worry a little more. ★ ★ ★ And hang on to your hat! gome of his inflationary measures didn't pass and others were reduced; and he promises to revive these next January when Congress meets again. The young man isn’t 'a bit daunted and he’s preparing to give a right, smart whirl to the balance that failed to pass. ★ ★ ’ ★ If the boys from Washington hear enough from the people at home in the interim, we may yet survive. But If the free-loading, free-spending crowd runs, unchecked and unchallenged, we’re, doomed. If you don’t like it, say so. If you’re happy, pleased and content with the current tax confiscation, just remain silent. There’s more in the offing for the victims and sufferers who accept their fate without a protest. ★ ★ ★ Two years ago, afier the interim elections, Congress sat heavily upon the free-spending proposals of the new Democrats who had just been swept into office. The House and Senate held the line and tossed the inflationary measure in the basket. An early one passed and Elsenhower promptly vetoed it—and that was that. But this time, both houses “rallied to the cause.’’ Frightening Facts... . Do you want to know what a loo-megaton super weapon could do? , , In U.S. News'and, World Report, Lewis L. Strauss, who was a member of the Atomic Energy Commission, explains: “It could level almost any U.S. city by wholly destroying every building within , a radius of 12 miles. Its heat could cause lethal third degree burns to everyone exposed within a 50-mile radius. Radioactive tfallout, carried by the winds, could destroy most living things within an area the size of the New England states.” ★ ★ ★ There! . Know enough? And in Conclusion.... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter:, Everyone will' feel safer about World War III when Russia applies for space in New York’s. 1964 World’s Fair ...........Here are thejead- ers tin order) on the last TV check: Miss Universe Pageant, Gunsmoke, Have Gun, What’s My Line, Candid Camera, My Three Sons, Real McCoys, I’ve Got a Secret and Untouch-, ables .......... Understand a newr Chinese Restaurant in Tennessee is known as “The Chattanooga Foo- Chu.” . ... .......ElSa Maxwell has been blitzed. Onassis had several big parties oh his yacht at Monte Carlo and she was uninvited. Then she tossed a big shindig of her own and people remained away by droves .......... Purely personal CAROLYN nomination for an especially attractive young lady: Carolyn Hubbard. ★ ★ ★ 1 can’t prove it but I’ll bet a sugar cookie the 1961 Michigan-MSU football game will be one of the most fiercely (and cleanly) fought battles of the season. ..... A Cadillac stopped on the turnpike and offered to tow a Model A Ford which had conked out. They hitched ’em together and soon the Caddie forgot the Ford and reached 60, 70 and then r 80 miles an hour. An officer started in pursuit and the Cadillac ripped up to 90 plus whereupon the officer radioed ahead: “Black Cadillac headed your way doing 100 m.p.h. And you won’t believe what I say next: Model A Ford on ,his tail honking madly and trying to pass Cadillac.” ★ ★ ★ Todays English bit: I’m intrigued when anyone says" “Hure-on,” for Huron with a slight accent on the last syllable instead of “Hure-un.”.... .....They tell me George Washington started a lottery and if it was good enough for the F. of H. C. it’s good enough for me............TV men have been amazed to find JFK memorizing scripts in an amazingly short space of time...’... • • Tour- ists didn’t leave us Labor Day. Licenses glimpsed this week: Oregon, Alberta, Alabama and Florida..... ....Cry Baby Buddy Parker threatens to quit agairr if his team, doesn’t have a winning year........... Jimmy Hoffa’s personal airplane is equipped with all the best, the most luxurious and the finest... ..... - Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s— the Detroit Lionspthe J’s — me (for telling duck hunters the hatch was plentiful when later advice says, it wasn’t). * - Harold A. Fitzgerald If you are past 60 rffd can ,t#ke care of a 5-year-old grandchild for a week without passing out'from exhaustion or having a nerypus breakdown, you are in tip-top physical ahd mental condition. •" j -.7 ■ . ,/ Voice of. the People: *Local Governments Should Keep Money in Fitst Place' No in history ha* ever survived A tax burden of one-third qf its national income. Today, 31 cents out of every dollar earned in the United Statea goes for taxes and out of that 31 cents, 23 cents goes to the federal government leaving 8 cents to be shared by the state, county and local community/ v •' ... No wonder our local governments are told to ask for federal aid! But wouldn’t it make more sense to keep money at home in the first place instead of running it through Washington only Jto get it back minus a sizable carrying charge? ‘Health Principle Involved in Pork’ / I read With awe remarks made -by Dr: Crane (Sept. 231. Dr. Crane was using supposition that Joseph and Abraham ate pork. Before Abraham, God gave instructions to Noah concerning the clean and unclean classifications of beasts. In the New Testament Acts 10:11-15 the doctor weald have ua Iretleve Peter and God ok eating the unclean meats. In Verne <5 of the seme chapter la the Bible Interpretation of Peter’s vision. In. short, the Gentiles were1 to have , the gospel. They were not an?" ‘Men Should Spend Weekends at Home’ Pfoase tell me “GOP Republb —eon’* where any-mam should spend the weekend, other than with his family? ★ .♦ # Where do you spend yours, at ■ your place of business? If that is all you can find fault with, I certainly would keep This is a wide world and you are free to go where you please. Try Russia, or maybe caddy for Eisenhower. P.G. PROMINENT MEN OP FAITH— Rt. Rev. Arthur Lichtenberger The Rt. Rev. Arthur Lichtenberger, presiding bishop of America’s three million Episcopalians, says: “We do not .live in a world of worship and piety apart iron! the world . . . Christianity must affect the way people conduct business and the way they, vote, as well as the way they live at home and conduct themselves on Sunday.’’ As a former college quarterback, he combines words with action,' championing individual expression, minority rights, social justice. Respecting the faiths of others, he sees church .reunion as the bringing together of “the gifts and treasures we now nurture separately.” .. • . . The genial, silver-haired Bishop manifests his conviction: “The church has a mission . . . It is sent to serve God in the world ..." In the book of Isaiah 68:15-17 the _ .^ ,. prophet here ia apealdng of the f OrtrflltS second coming of the Lord. Those ,. . found eating swine’s flesh, etc. By JOHN ('• METCALFE will be consumed. , The milkman rides a little truck Yea, Dr, Crane, it’s a health , , . Each morning through our principle, then and should be now. neighborhood . ■ « And I would say it ia a way ... To make a pleasant livelihood ... I wish that I could ride around . . . Each early morning of the year . . . When only lengthy yawning mouth* ... And snappy snoring you can hear ■ ■ • But by the time that I arise ... The neighborhood is wide awake . . - And all the noises in the street . . Can just about the eardrum break-. • . 1 think he has a peaceful life , ■ ‘Worthwhile Movie Shown in Pontiac’ Many people have talked about hot Uking some of the movies we have had in our theaters. Now is our chance to see a movie which is very good. It is called St. Francis of Assisi, and IT more people go' to see it, 1 am sure the “ Days of All Faiths: Correction on Beliefs of Witnesses By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER A discussion ,of some beliefs and customs of Jehovah’s Witnesses in a recent column brought in quite^. a few letters from members of that group. DisaJVbements mostly boiled down to three points—I had said that Jehovah’s Witnesses be-, lieve no one will be eternally punished, that they don’t believe it is wrong to smoke and that they refuse to be vaccinated. 1 went directly to their national headquarters lor definite statements on these points, and here, in their own words, are the answers: . “Jehovah’s Witnesses do believe that those who are Incorrigibly wicked will be destroyed for all time. Therefore, the punishment, which is a cutting off from life, ia eternal.” The other big point about Tyn- a little how shocking this was when dale’s Bible was that it was in real vre see how today people are made time. We can perhaps understand (COPYRIGHT INI) Dr. William Brady’s Mailbag: Dogs Can Do No Harm to Heart Trouble Victim manager, will send for more. ’ Threw and Linda (junta let 124 Henderson St. The Almanac By United Press International Today is Saturday, Sept. 30. the 273rd’ day of the year with 92 to follow in 1961. The moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning star Is Venus. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day In history: In 1846, ether was used as an anesthetic tor the first time in the extraction of a tooth -— by Dr. William Morton, a dentist in Charleston, Mass. ,In, 1939, for the first time, a football game was televised. The cameras of stiition W2XBS in New York photographed the game between Fordham University ahd Waynesburg College at Randall’s Island, N.Y. In 1953, President Eisenhower named Gov. Earl Warren of California chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. A thought for today: American writer Ralph Waldo Emerson said, "The ornament of a house is the friends who frequent it." home . . . When only hungry cats and dogs ... And paper boys the driveways roam ... I envy him who rides about. . . And all of us each day can please ... By just delivering some milk . . • And juice and egp and cottage cheese. (Copyright, INI) Smiles By HAL COCHRAN When the spring Hewers are In bloom that's when the whole family gels out to gather. * * Sr Instead of dreaming about a beautiful flower garden, get down to earth and plant one. 1 * * * There’s little chance of raising The Country Parson categorically 1 smoke. They themselves as a group, however, do not nse tobacco." "Whether or not to submit to in-noculation with serums is a matter for personal determination. It Is left to the individual aa to whether to submit to such a vaccination or innoculation.” I am grateful to those who challenged what I said, causing me to find out more about this interesting group! DEATH FOR TRANSLATING BIBLE Another thing I would like to know more about *is why, in the early sixteenth century, a man could be put to death for translating the Bible into the language of the people. From our 20th-century point of view he should have had a prize, not a criminal's death. * * * But that Is the way It was In (be time of William Tyndale, who was borq on tills Oct. «, IlSft and ranie*to a fiery end at the stake In 1536. His offense was that he translated the first Awe books of the Old Testament, the book of .fonali and the New Testament into English. * A ' dr To accomplish this at all, he had to get out o( England. He did his wprk ln Germany, where the air was freer, and where the art ol printing was flourishing by this time. He then sent copies back to England. The shipments were all secret, of course, but church authorities managed to get hold of most of them and bum them. They just did not want people reading the Bible. Tyndale was not really the flrsi to translate the Bible into English. A nuin named Wycllf hud done It in 1.382. Bui Tyndale did have two IVnfmrtant1 “firstk” to hi* credit: Ills translation waa the first one in s d c from the languages in w h I c h the Bible hsd originally been written. Wycllfs waa only a translation of a Latin translation. Father has heart trouble. He keeps two dogs. They sleep and eat in the house, winter and summer. I don’t think it is good for father. The dam dogs jump UP on the bed and lick his face ... (E.C. J.) A ns. — of coarse dogs may transmit the eggs of worms In their saliva — this Is the reason why DB. bRADV .children or adults should always wash their hands with soap ami water Immediately after petting or handling doge. Otherwlee the dogs will do your father no harm. ♦ * * I wish to thank you for your remedy for hives. Numerous shots hud been used, with no apparent effect. Within a week on your remedy the hives were gone nml have not recurred . . . (T V.) A A * Ans.—My remedy Is an optimal dally ration of calcium nnd vitamin l>, that Is, two or three Ana.—No harm dope, f It was not on Friday?* Higned lett«jc«. not more U» p*g« or 100 word* long port*! personal hoalih and hyglans. i •nsw«red by Or William Brad ftampod, •alf*addroaaod envelop# to trio Pontiac Press. Pontiac, a (Copyright, !*«) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY For unto us was the gospel preached, as well as unto them: but the word preached did not profit them, not being mixed with faith In them that heard It. —Hebrews 4:1. * * * In actual Ufa every great enterprise begins with and takes its first forward step in faith.—August W. Schlegcl. ns the fellow who first: Case Records of a Psychologist: Give Children Mental Jobs, Too quires to maintain good nutrition. A A A In my case, cankbr sores follow indulgence in chocolate, tomatoes, pqachcs. I Can nibble a little of-any of these occasionally without trouble, but if I take Just a little bit more I get canker sores. Other members of rhy family have the same trouble. We have found .riladn In small doses Is very beneficial. You recommended this some years agq. (S.M.K.) ns.—I es hut an optimal dally ra* 1 of niacin (nlootinte) add By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE K-412: Billy Q , aged 12, Is a bright youngster. “Dr. Grane.'fhls mother began, ‘•Billy wants some way by which he can earn more money. "We have adopted your piecework method of paying for each Job he performa, and It works perfectly "But Billy wants to raise his Income still more, so wh nl else. w,o u I d you sur-I geat besides the I usual choresl around a small suburban home?" Divernify the job opportunities of your children by mixing some meptal pay jobs with their muscular chores. Good mothers routinely try to nurture the spiritual life of their youngsters, so let your children start reading the Bible, probably beginning with the New Testament. Mrs. Crane nnd I used to pay our children $1 for each of the N books of the Bible they read. That meant they got 61 to j DR. CRANE Meanwhile*, K will be giving the youngster access to the most world shaking prose to mankind's history. A A A As a variation of the Bible reading, you can also pay (he child for memorizing a tew of the great church hymns,'’ auch aa “Rock of Ages," “The Old Rugged Cross’* nnd any others that your child wishes. Most of us udultH-’wtsh we coujd sing n few hynfms without looking at the songbook. Your children will thus he fortified with s doten or maybe 50 hymns they can sing while you are driving In the car to visit their grandparents. And to their old age, they will have a rich spiritual and muaicnl "bank account" on which they can draw aa a tonic for their aouls. BLESSED MOTHERS Thousands of times, even after" you good mothers have left this world for your henveniy home, your children will then think back gratefully and call you blessed. Meanwhile, however, you will and let him copy a dozen or more of those quotations from my textbook. - A A * , Then pay him tor every one lie can recite fluently from memory. I’d suggest JO cento to 25 cents for such, puytog 10 cents for im-' mediate reproduction, and the additional 15 cents If he enh recite ii a week later. For further hints, send for niy niacinamide tablet three times a day for a month when one Is subject lo recurring canker sores. I don’t understand wluil , chocolate, tomatoes or (teaches may have to do with canker sores. Niacin Isn’t medicine. II Is one of the B vitamins. 'AAA ' ' While picking raspberries, 1 ate some and I think I ala a worm . . . (Mrs. II. .T ) But children prefer quick rr-words, so you might pay for each chapter. Since we are now In an Inflationary period, better offer them five cents per chapter and 10 cents If they read It aloud. They can finish a chapter-in h few minutes, and the reading drill alone will be invaluable. It can help change slow readers into taster ones nnd thereby alter your child’s school marks,, too. i drill, 1 pay laaka will pay rich dividends, in addition to the Bible and church music, you might also pay for their memorizing of the, eholce proverbs nr wise sayings of the past. Because I deem these no valuable as ammunition for speakers, I have listed (00 famous quolnllorta at the bottom of various pages of my college textbook, “I’sy etiology Applied.’’ 80 sqnd your child to the library booklet "20 Ways Children Can Earn spending Money," enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents. ' * • Always writs to Dr. Otoryt W. Crsns to tart or The Ptmitoo Frits, fteltos. Sfe St Mil Ito sow typln* sad prtntln* tssu whtn you Stoll tor bis psysholostosl shtrlt and ptmphltit. (Copyright, tost) THE PONTIAC 1*KKSS,' SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1961 But It May Not Be Cheap Search for Fuel Cell Power DRIFT MARLO SEVEN By Dr. L M. Levitt. Toni Cortke and Phil Eva—/ By BEN PHLEGAR AP Automotive Writer DETROIT — Even before gso-line engines became the standard power plant for automobiles, scientists were dreaming, of using water for fuel. ■ # ; ★ The steamers tried and failed, although a small cult still talks of their revival. Charlatans got rich quick on magic pills which supposedly turned tap water into gasoline. Bat behind It all has been a solid basis of scientific tact —-the fuel cell. This is usually de- vice In which the chemical cat of conventional fuel is eon- has known the fuel cell principle since the early 1800s. Over and over It has been proved sound. But aiyet it has not been proved practical, especially' automobiles. MANY SEEKING ANSWER In a paper presented to American Petroleum Institute's di-vision of refining last sptdhK. J. Sweeney and C. E. Heath pf the Claims Voters Ready for GOP S«n. Goldwater Says Electorate Disgusted With'New Frontier' SUN VALLEY, Idaho (AP) Sen. Barry Goldwater says Draft Director Says Sorensens Record'Regular' LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)-Nebras-ka’s Selective Service director says he** reviewed the draft record of presidential aide Theodore C. Sorensen and found it "very regular. "I noticed where some member iof Congress said he (Sorensen) reW b-1'-—' Esso Research and Engineering Co. of Linden, N. J-, noted that 100 research laboratories the world over are studying fuel cells. Tljey Wed: “The hope Is that some day a .iractlcal tael cell will be developed which will have twice the efficiency of the beet present day thertnsl power plant — say M per ceot. "The surest thing about the fuel cell is that the theoretical concept Is sound! This fact has tickled the imagination of everyone from laboratory hoy to banker. They seem to say 'You scientists tell us it is possible, why don't you go arid make one,' or 'Someone is going do it, Why not us?’ " ... dbyiously it’s not that easy. Thexdream car would be pow-rad by electricity. Today this would have to use storage batter-But imUke conventional batteries, which Waiver only the electricity previously stored, a fuel cell -generates current as long as fuel is provided, Ideally, this electricity next to Dr. Shaw says: “If you are counting on a fuel ceil to .take dollars out of your car expense and add only pennies to your water bill - don’t.” Messrs. Sweeney and Heath elaborated on this point: "From the standpoint of simplicity, pure hydrogen and pure oxygen are a relatively easy fuel and oxidizer combination around which to develop a fuel cell. landslide in the history of country" if congressional elections went held today. The Arisons senator, addressing a Republican weriem conference dinner Thursday night said people have had enough of what he termed New Frontier fumbling and extravagance. Goldwater looked up from his text to say of President Kennedy: "We hear him talk like Churchill, then see him act like Chamberlain." Neville Chamberlain was the British prime minister ing to be a conscientious objector,” said Guy N. Heinninger Thursday. Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., recently read to the Senate- a newspaper story which said Sorensen; 33, had escaped military service as a conscientious objector and Korean War service as a father. The story said Sorensen was classified as "1-AO” between 1948 and 1954 "This 1-AO classification does not avoid military service,” said Hennlnger, a retired Army major_______ gpnpral.^'Aprrson wiTtrttrat-qual i-flcation goes into uniform the same as any one else and serves in a branch such as the Medical Corps. But before you decide to wait fpp such a car, consider the ion of Martuel Shaw, head of who vainly tried to appease Germany prior to World War II. CITES URGENCY "The failure of the New Frontier. both at home and abroad, makes it a matter not Just of po- /-;-nftrn| Cootls CorD litlcal choice but of national and^e"6™' r0 , * „ P' international urgency that Repub-j Cuff PrtCB OT Coffee lican power be Increased In the , _ . Congress," Goldwater said. | NEW YORK IP-General Foods An audience of more than TCOjCorp. Friday reduced the Whole-gave the leader - of conservative | sale price of all its regular grind, Republicans an ovation before and vacuum-packed coffee two cents) after he spoke. a pound, effective Monday. | former Vice President Richard] The decline, first since a similar M Nixon speaks ,to the confer-]two cent cut In July 1960, was at-ence Saturday night. It will be hlsjtributed by the firm to the "down-first appearance since announcing I ward drift" of prices for green his candidacy tor governor of I (unroastedt coffee since that time. --------______---------------------------------------------------- California. . , {The cut bring* the glad to hear. Dr; Frankenstein, that It's only a gag, and Goldwater, who was boomed for I to the lowest 1 e pc . I Vm/nr int*mW9 tn mrrnli»t* vnur horrible exDeriment!" the 1960 Republican presidential ] firm said. nomination, told * news confer] ....... " ence he has no plans to seek it1 in 1964. "If 1 run tor anything. It will be tor the Senate,” he said. "I come up again In 1964. My plans are to help elect people to Congress and to the Senate.” Hunts Delegates "J to Michigan s 1908 Con-Con LANSING tit—Secretary of State James M. Hare Issued a tentative “missing persons report" Friday in connection with the forthcoming constitutional convention. Kara, who will preside at the opening of the convention Tuet day, ifinti to know If there •» I any delegate to the IMS eeaven- j Hon who is still alive and living la Michigan besides retired U.S. Circuit judge Charles O. «m- ] Simons will be an honored guest at a. governors reception] and dinner Monday night at Kei-j logg Center at Michigan State ttol-j vereity. ”1 would personally feel very, badly if we had overlooked any; other delegate to the 1908 con-; vent ion In our haste to get this 1961 convention under way,” said! Hare- Buick Recalls 1,200 fa Flint AufQ Planfs FLINT * — General Motors' Buick division Friday recalled] some 1.200 skilled trades and pro- j duct ion worker*. Buick General Manager Edward Kollert said the recall lei! lowed a production boost The work tore* increase brings total Buick employment In Flint to nearly 17,000 - Its highest level since last January. nSowmmoii noTici ron city ■lMtlea. Tuotdty, aoMmisr f, IHI. Aw:«r Ssstjp M ''fioilc* if'jptfy that In tormitv with tht ’'Mlohiftn ■ ttiion Ui1, i, th« unosMlimd alare; will upon •nr day nan Swday tali g Wgsl .jotpl sundsy and » «ot*on or pHmltj »OTon' rij eS^arajMHI iny effins Monuty. 0«i inst. day, tho thirtieth .... ... CMPB »«ld •ltollon, as MWWMrjW pi, Ael No.lit, Public M* « >•»«, (roin » o'clock ik until I o'clock P;"> on tsld dny jorlh* puptM of rtv t*ln» the reslatratton snd waltltrina sm«» oi the quallfltd tlttlort In *»Uf Oily ■> •hill proptrty tppty jhgtjer-Tht asms pt no ptrton but dn actual rttlatal of tht prttlnct M tht time oi rtglsirntlon, and onMUsd un —« Give Him Awhile to fy ABIGAIL VAN BIKEN >EAR ABBY: I ,am a wid-Bjyears old, and the mother ofljjur children. I am the t of my children, and have'Sbeen for four years. My problem . is a v e r\ handsome and\ nde w ho is only 19. He looks older., and has a \cry good job, He wants lo marry me. I have known year. ladies do not shake hands. Is that correct? When I meet someone, my hand automatically .goes out, whether it is .a man or a woman I am greet- ■ ing. I can’t find the answer in . an etiquette book, but I want to do,the proper thing. Can you help me? 'A LADY * * * DEAR LADY; Ladies DO, shake hands. Both with other , ladies and with gentlemen. ★ * * DEAR ABBY: After raising ,my son, and seeing him through college bn the start of * a promising career I have the is French, and that people \ should study a map once in a whije. FED UP LUXEMBURG * * ’What’s troubling you? Write Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Include self-addressed stamped envelope.. * ★ * ' For Abby’s booklet. “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send ■ 50c to Abby. and I think the world of hiip \ gon-ow of watching him choose but, .Abby, I, haven’t a thing to offer him but my troubles. He knows this, but won’t take no for an-answer. He says he loves me and doesh’t care what , . anyone thinks, and he is camping on my doorstep. _ My children adore him. I think it would be unfair to him to marry Him.-Move him in a way, but am — - CONFUSED ' DEAR CONFUSfeD:’ If you love him—don’t marry him yet. He Is only a boy. Give him, a chance .to mature and if, in *' another year, you both feel the same—well, perhaps it will work. ★ * DEAR ABBY: I^m told that Women Hear Hospital Aims Dr. Theodore Satersmoen, Pontiac General Hospital consulting psychiatrist, spoke on “Purpose and Aims of Pontiac General Hospital’s New Mental Health Unit” before the women’s auxiliary Tuesday afternoon in the hospital auditorium. James JRydman gave a brief outline of the 1961 High Fever Follies of which he is a co-chairman. Plans were completed for the awards luncheon Oct. 24 at the hospital, Workers who have' contributed 50 hours or more during the past year will be honored. Alumnae Club Slates Tea for New Members The University of Minnesota 'Women’s Club has scheduled a membership tea for 1 p.m. Friday in the home of Mrs. Carl Christensen, Birmingham. Mrs. John Toomey, Birmingham, will present a program of “Hebrew Liturgical Music” with commentary. Any woman In the Pontiac area is eligible for membership in the club if she or her husband has been a student of the University of Minnesota. - Reservations for prospective members will be taken by Mbs. M. J. Patterson, Birmingham. girl , of different religion, "background and education. So faj- I have only shown "mild disapproval." Should I do more? I am afraid of forcing the wrong, results. TORN MOTHER * * * DEAR TORN: If you have given your son your best guid-i ance, there is nothing you can do. You are wise not to snipe at the girl. That usually boom-, erangs. 1 ★ * * ‘ 1 ■ '. DEAR ABBY: Since I have seen all sorts of unusual problems in your column perhaps you’ll use this, as it is indeed my biggest problem. I’m from Luxemburg And,—invariably.... when I am in the States, people will say, "Oh yes, GERMANY!” Now Luxemburg Is a small country, and it is bad enough that people don’t know whcTE"ir is, but They mistake 1 H for a part of a nation which, twice in 20 years, has invaded it. Please print this, Abby, so that people will learn that Luxemburg Is a very proud and independent country situated between France and Belgium, and that the official language Slate Meeting for Delta Zeta The evening group of the Delta Zeta Sorority,alumnae of. South Oakland County will meet at 8 p.m., Monday In the/ home of Mrs. John G. Rometty, Birmingham. Stanley Isenberg of a local stock brokerage firm . will present a short filpi “How to Invest and Why.” He' will give an informal talk and answer questions from the group. Dessert will be "served by*. 'Mrs.' Wolfgang Sagante, Berkley and Mrs. Gordon Knapp, Royal Oak. Mrs. Carlyle W. Rees, Royal Oak, will give details about transportation. Florist Arranges 7 TaHcxinFaHPkrnts New England Estates Branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, will meet Thursday evening in • the home of Mrs. Nelson Carpenter, West Long. Lake Road. Curtis Crowell, Dearborn florist, will speak on fall plant materials and show new trends in arrangements. Mrs. Robert McDonald and Mrs. Roy Johnson will be cohostesses for the evening. Crisp days and frosty nights mark that time of the year to bring in the potted plants for the winter. Members of the Watson Rose Garden Club, Bloom• field Hills’, who have conducted a horticultural therapy program on Wednesdays at Pontiac State Hospital, work with patients in the foreground at one of the entrances the program has beautified. Club members (standing)- are (from left) Mrs. Robert " McCurry, director of occupational therapy, at the hospital; Mrs. William Kahn, Mrs. W. B. Anderson and Mrs. William Burlingame. Offer Teens, Your Friend Moms Class, Should Have in Modeling Lhum Up UlSpute Made Call Culture Bows In at Town'Ha 11 By RUTH SAUNDERS BIRMINGHAM — Theopen-dig of Birmingham T&wii Hall - Thursday and Friday launched Birmingham’s cultural season. Present at the Birmingham Theater to hear columnist . Harry Golden was a throng of Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills fashionables. * .. ★ ■ ★ At the luncheons at Birmingham Country Club both days following the Town Hall programs the speaker’s table was graced by Town Hajl President Mrs, Donald. Bay ,4s peak Or Harry Golden, Dr. and Mrs. , Kenneth H. Gass, Paul N. Av-. erill, Carmina Brooks, Lynn S. Miller. Guy S. Hitt, Mrs. Morris Halsted; Mrs. Charles Renfrew. Mrs. Ralph Backus and the Rqy. and Mrs. Herbert G, Myers. « * * O 1 Birmingham Town Hall, a, subscription series, meets six times a season under the auspices of St. Anne's Guild of St. James Episcopal Church. * * * Among parents who have re* cently taken their offsprings to college are Mr. and Mrs. Forrest B. Hubert .who tOok Christine back to Miami University in Oxford. Ohio. Peter Hubert who is living in Cali-from Dartmouth College has FmUm prn* rs.u just moved to Hollywood from Laguna Beach. The William CL*. Lerchen* took yoUng Bill V Gambler, Ohio to enter Kenyon College. ■— — * ★--------* Mr., and Mrs. Charles Baird Cunningham (Natalie Ensignt now of Battle Creek, announce the birth of a son Charles Scott The Kenneth SHARON LEE HOWELL A new course "Modeling” lor Teens and Moms” has been announced by the Will-O-Way Apprentice Theater in Bloomfield Hills. The classes are an extension of the- popular teen-age modeling course offered by the theater school in the past. "Mothers and daughters will attend “different classes together” from Oct. 9-Dec. 11, culminating their training with a fashion show. The 10-week course will be offered from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday evenings at the Will-0-\tfayWorkshop on West Long Lake Road Celia Merrill Turner, Will-O-Way’s director, reports "Aunts ■ and nieces also will- be accepted in this 'imaginative Course which plumbs the depths of your closets to match and refashion styles and accessories, that are right lor you uses tape recorders to Improve the “look” of your voice; finds out the truth about your figure —and deals out exercises consequences; takes the elbows out of walking and the knees out of climbing and puts ‘art’ Into your make-up." Marge Bradford will be fashion consultant for the course. Noted for her charm and “know' how" Miss Bradford who was Miss Canada of 1950 has appeared with the Windsor Symphony and Light Opera Company. - Leonard -Smith's Belle Isle Band and a Canadian television station. She modeled professionally for five years. Currently she may be heard dally as hostess on a local fine arts broadcasting company's “Show Time on Broadway.” For further Information 'Mrs. Turner may be contacted at Will-O-Way. Club Appoints New Chairmen I Committee chairmen were named when the Ingenues Chihw* met Thursday at the Middle Belt Roud home of Sharon ileman.’ ’Appointed by the nyw presi dent Sue Hill/, of Ottawa Drive were Sharic Logan, chaplain: Mary Sue Smallwood, publicity; Judy Hlleman, calling <• o m in i 11 e e: Vicki Lands-parger, historian; and Sue Carriger and Linda Plmlot, sergeants-ut-amut. Future ac tivities include a “traveling bake sale" Oct. 14 and a leaf-taking project with proceeds to be used for charitable purposes. Nancy Armstrong nnd Barbara Kenney are the club sponsors. Set Girl Scout Calendar Sale The Southern Oakland County Girl Scout Council will begin its annual ’calendar sale Monday. Sales' will be direct with no advance orders taken. While each troop will receive a small profit lor each cairn dar sold, the hulk of the profit is earmarked for the, council's '_ 'alnping pro-- the council I in ii i Kripprrtdoi nan, lias set a goal •idradars. The s through Oct. By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI)' — Teen-age marriages create problems for the school official; as well as for parents of the teen-age couples. Some educators contend that a marriage in high school should mean expulsion of the couple. Others argue that marriage should not terminate the teen-agers’ formal education. ★ ★ ★ A statistical lodk at how the young are marrying younger, and the results —both in schooling and in the divorce rate —came across fids desk today from the Science Research Associates, Inc. The organization, with headquarters in Chicago, specializes in educational services including guidance publications. Its researchers have rounded up the latest Information on teen marriages and education from governmental and privately supported organizations, from school publications and sociologists. 39 PCT. UNDER 20 A Population Reference Bureau study, for instance, showed that in 1958 (latest year studied), 39 per cent of all brides and 12 per cent of all bridegrooms were in their teens. In 1950, the figures were 32 and 7 per cent respectively. In turn, a Bureau of the Census study showed that the annulment and divorce rates are the highest and the probability of second and third marriages the greatest among women wed for the first time while they were 19 years or younger. ★ ★ ★ Researchers cited another statewide study in Iowa made by Dr. Lee G. Burch Inal, who found that teen-age marriage often means dropping out of school. Dr. Burchlnal found that 80 per cent of the girls who married In high school dropped out and only 8 per cent ever re-enrolled. Among the boys, 43 per cent quit School and only 9 per cent reentered. “Although the educational 'requirements for jobs are continually rising," said Dr. Burchlnal. “the chances for further education for boys and girls who marry In high school art very slim." EDUCATORS DIVIDED ' Educators are divided on whether married students should be excluded from regular high school classes. The National Education Association asked a group of elementary and secondary teachers for their opinions, In both groups, 53 per cent replied that boys should be permitted to continue school. And 45.4 per cent contended married girls should be allowed to go on to classes. i ★ ★ ★ Some 34.3 per cent thought the married boys should be excluded; 40.8 per cent thought the girls should. The rest were uncertain. The publication Nation’s Schools asked school administrators their opinion in two studies—one in 1960, the other in 1956. In 1960, 78 per bent thought married teen-agers should be permitted to continue their schooling. it it it Boston, Cleveland, Miami, New York, Atlanta and Long Beaun, Calif., are among the cities which often send married-students; to evening schools Instead "Of to regular schools, said the report. Several cities including Washington, D. C., place husband and /wife in separate schools hoping to discourage other early marriages. Houston and many other cities leave to the school principal the decision of individual cases. ' •it it it Omaha, Indianapolis and San Diego are among the cities permitting married students to stay In school, but often exclude them from extra curricular program!. By The Emily Post Institute Q: Recently 1 learned through friends that a friend of mine from another city was in town. I did not call her as I felt -it was her place to call me and let'me know that she was in town. 1 understand that -this friend is very hury because I did not call her. Will you please tell me whose place it was to call? * * * - A: As an unexpected visitor to your town she should have let you know of her presence, but having learned that she was in town it was not very gracious on your part to insist that she he. the one to make the first call. SHOULD BE ON TIME Q: Please give me your opinion regarding the following problem : When’a large organization gives a luncheon or dinner and all the guests to be seated at the hyad table do not arrive on time for the function to be started at the appointed hour, how long must-one delay the luncheon or dinner? Our club banquet was delayed over a half hour because all those to be seated at the head table were not present at the appointed hour. It didn't seem fair to those who made the effort lo be on time to have to wait, but we didn't want to be rude. * . * * A: It is an Important requirement that those who are to be seated at the head tgble make a special effort to arrive punctually, and it Is not necessary to wait more than 15 minutes for any of them except the guest of honor. ACKNOWLEDGE VISITS Q I have just moved to a strange city. Several ladies have called on me. Some of them came while I was away from home and they left their cards. Just what is the proper way for me lo acknowledge their visits? , . •• * * * A: You go l' -"w . I Slight Changes From Last Yedr Noted by Vice President DETROIT IB—FOrd Motor Co. |H cost about the same price as the °8 “We hope to have the unit Installed and operating In 60 days.' D NEW IN SCOPE The IBM equipment is so new in scope that the hospital must train business office personnel in its use. Installation, isn’t slated to begin until early next year. The system will be brought la pieces with final Installation and beginning of full operation scheduled for April. It Is estimated that rental fees for all the new machines will total $1,500 per month. tlon section, Statq Department of Mental Health, lectures, films and discussions on children and sex will be offered to'*- couples four consecutive Monday evenings be-! ginning next Monday at the Waterford Township High School at 18 p.m. * * * <- Miss Middlewood, the author of numerous articles in the field of [child growth and development has had experience In public school [teaching ahd’ child guidance clinics. Arrangements for her" appearance were made by the Parent! Education Associates of Water-] ford. kimPiDsmJmfomm barbmEdenPeurLorre RobertShriine Michael Ansara mtFAAHKIEAVAlOH Plus; HILARIOUS COMEDY BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER 21 SO Opdykc Rd. FI 2-18 LAST NI8HT ALL-COLOR FEATURES! Iferoul ■lOPITTON ill Ain: UX BARKER'in "WAR DUMB' SUNDAY DaPkatTteTbpliele 70C Penck Fits I 3 All Binders ■ W ’ Sharpener fdj {9 $2.00 Voiko 25-Pc. Family Pak 1 SHE AFTER'S SCHOOL SET CARTRIDGE FEN • B Pencil. • B Pens • • Refills WA( Wtkstar /y Dictionary B “ CQc Refills Vw $1.40 Value CAULKING Spout Type 4 <" 88' Children*! FUN SHOWER 39 each BAR-B-Q OUTDOOR ITEMS Save Over 50% SI.95 Round Sgit Baikal fit Inch Crill Hickory PA( Chunks, 5f5P fit 14 in Charcoal llfht.r AfC 24. #| Field. 59c Value-. £Q Bar-B-Qaa Tangs, $1.00 Value . 49* $5.95 Black Wr’t . $011 tree Charcoal Hop- £ per with Skevel .. $5.95 Ilsstric Dalai* Slsa Charcoal Uffctar ............ >29 GARDEN SUPPLIES DO-IT-YOURSELF HOME AND WORKSHOP TOOLS! • Values to $2.98 • Scotch Brand Electric Tape .... 39* 12" Alumindm Bevel Level 39* Hack Saw Blades Pkg. of 20...... 39* 5-Pc. Punch and Chisel Set. . . 39* 3-Piece File Set 39* Electric ■ Soldering Iron . . . * 39* fc-Pc. Plated Ignitidn Set . 39* 5-Pc, Open End Wrench Set 39* BUY NOW! SAVE! GENUINE PRESTONE Permanent \ Anti-Freexe BUY NOW! SAVE! 25* 25* $495 79* SIM ARMOUR'S 10-6-4 1 Lawn and Turf CA Lb- $|79 Limit 6 gallon. FERTILIZER W ■ HUNTERS' SPECIALS Individual TV TABLES with Brais Lagi or tV Lap TABLES Your Choice Men's Insulated Lace-Up BOOTS SHOTGUN SHELLS HEAVY LOADS SHOTGUN SHELLS TARGET LOADS 20 gaugi . $2.29 box M gauge .. ..7 $2.59 hex It gaupa .... $179 hsx i I. 1 X f PONTIAC PRESS THIRTEEN PQNTJAC/ MICHIGAN SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1961 maple. The floor, has a spatter print, covering. Walls are cream. The cafe curtains and. the ruffle are natural color. Appliances are bronzetone. ' , • WALL MUBIAL — When the Rogers’.eat in the kitchen, they sit beneath a colorful farm mural. The wainscoting in this area Is painted light brown. Captains chairs surround the table; all are tor*tt House First Family to Settle in Concord Green CURVING LINES — The brick patio is pleasing to the eye with its gently curving walls. White brick like that used on the house, ‘exterior is repeated in the patio and the screened, porch. „ The Rogers’ are pleased that their clump of birch trees has dpne so well. Take a close look and you’ll see Lady, the Rogers' blond cocker, posing prettily in front of the barbecue grill. • By JANET ODELL are many families settled in the Pontiac Press Homo Editor neighborhood. Moving from one town to another can be lonesome business. But if you have friendly neighbors In your new location, this helps to bridge the first few weeks. ^ ' * * ' *4*—— The PhilipP'Rogers hot only moved into. the Pontiac area from Glenview, Illinois last December; but they were the first people to move Into Concord Green subdivision. Now almost all the 49 lots are arid .aMfmere Prepare Entryways for Winter Run Lots in Concord Green run about half an acre- in size. All utilities are underground and the builders left a good many trees. So the subdivision has a more settled look than many of its contemporaries. It’s east of Op-dyke and south of Long Lake Road. Tom Rogers is • college student. Mb younger sister, Sandra, Is In high school. . It was raining the day we took . pictures of the Rogers' home and we ducked into the garage, rentering the house through the kitchen, it's a long room with a fatffl| mural on the end wall. The I brown and green scene with its i touches of red looks so real thm Are your front and back door-j ways protected! A door canopy Is among the least costly homa improvements but Is very important in keeping the, door step clean | and safe, in cutting down on the amount of.traekcd-ln mud and dirt and in protecting the finiah of I both iBeTloorTmtr^rsrmr: j Have you set aside a specific "area (such as the garage or basement) where skates, boots, rub-1 bers and raincoats can be neatly stored? These are leading causes] of dirt and hard-to-remove scull marks.---------------- New Plastic Patching Expands and Contracts The product — a heavy-bodied! pigmented material for patching plaster cracks. A thin coat of the product is spread over the crack and smoothed down with a special ] applicator. A length of glass fabric! is applied over the coated area, followed by another root of the pigmented substance. as# The manufacturer’s claim — that, this material Is flexible and will expand and contract with the opening and closing of th6 piaster crack and thus will last Indefinite-' ly. (Made by Tuff-Kote Co., Wood ] stock. IIM ■ you think you're looking out of a window. The floor is beige with' brown and yellow spatters. Walla are cream color with a light brown .dado at the dining end. Little shutters fold across the (Op of the windows with natural color cafe curtains below. .... Cabinet* are birch. Counter tops ami splash harks are white. Alt appliances are broosetone. Between the kitchen and the. living room is the family room ] which opens onto a back screened porch. This porch and the curving patio outside are made of brick matching the exterior brick. The porch is screened around three sides, w * 0 There's nn oak Work floor in the family room with taffy colored walla and dado. Natural draperies can be pulled, across the sliding glass doors. One green awl one beige textured srmehnlr provide comfortable seating lor TV watcher*. At one side Is n metal table with a plastic top that looks (or all the world like woven bamboo. White iron furniture with pale gray-blue cushions it used on the porch, The rug is a gray and w‘hlte fiber one. There's an inside planter around one corner. Mrs. Rogers’ father laid all this brick when the porch and patio were added during the summer. * * ★’ In the dining room and living room and up the stairs there is creamy white carpeting. Walls and draperies are the same color. The dining room furniture Is ’ ash which has « beautiful . grain. A buffet snd a small chest provide storage space. , All the chairs ‘(there are 1 armchairs) hive seats and backs of a tweedy material ia green, beige and yellow. The front hallway has a slatf floor. Cranberry red wallpaper on the stair wall offers a pleas- ing contrast to the cream background of the adjoining rooms. FORMAL ROOM Quiet formal simplicity is the theme of the cream colored living room. The Rogers’ are still looking for just the light pictures to hang. There’s a gray brick fireplace with a plain wooden mantel. The sofa is beige. At one end of the room there’s a pair of turquoise chairs. A dub ehalr upholstered In a light aqua squared design is near the fireplace. Tables are mahogany. This Is a house with 4 bedrooms. One of the front ones is the guest room. Jn here walls only whisper that they’re greert. Pale green carpeting comple- ments them. Draperies are creamy. Mrs. Rogers had fun painting all the furniture in an antiqued aqua shade. The twin beds have blue, green and aqua spreads. In one corner is a bookcase and a desk-vanity. Tom's room has cream walls and carpeting. Natural Unen doable cafe curtains hang at the windows. The furniture has been spray painted belg& The bedspreads are brown corduroy. ' In the bathroom there is a blue and .white color scheme. The blue wallpaper has diamond shaped figures oi, white. Fixtures are blue. The shag rug and the little shutters on the window are white. Sandy has a charming bedroom with new furniture of her own choosing. She displayed mature taste in picking out the cherry'Italian provincial bed and triple chest of drawers. Both have a narrow gold trim. Walla are pale sandalwood. Two sets of natural' shatters at each window take the place of { curtains. She pas a green slip- per chair. A cork bulletin board Is crammed with souvenirs. 1 The flowered bedspread has violet, pinks and aqua in it. Scatter pillows are purple, orchid, (dive and beige. There are pale aqua walls in the master bedroom. In the attached bath wzdlpaper is blue and green. Draperies are cream. Furniture is antiqued gray. The bedspread has stripes of blue, green and aqua. Mrs. Rogers is about to cover a chair in blue and moss green. ★ ♦. ★ William J. Pute. Inc. was architect and builder for the Rogers’ home. The exterior is white brick and white siding with, black shutters. TF.KN TALK — Sandy (left) and Iwr house guest from Glenview, Illinois, Judy Layman, are probably discussing fall fashions as they lounge on the bed Sandy’s room Is* ft large one with light sandalwood walls, She likes the little folding shutters in place of eurtains. Behind the girls is the Kalian Provincial triple chest with its big mirror. MMiKING DOWN — The Press photographer went par( way up the stairs to get this shot of (!»' dining looffc. Walls. draperWs and carpeting are Just tike those in ihe living room The furniture is ash. Chairs have a tweed-like upholstery of grpen, beige him! yellow. CREAM BAOKOROUNDJ-Wnlli, carpeting and draperies are a warm cream color. Over the gray brick fireplace there’a a almple shelf mantel. The dub chair is aqua anti the sofa beige. The Rogers' are still looking for exactly the right picture to hang above the mantel. - IN (XINOOHD GREEN — -Philip Rogers on Lamp Post Lane, Designed in tlie^outhcrn colonial style, the house Is half brick and half siding. Shutters are William J. Pulte, Inc. has done the developing of the 49-lot subdivision, designed and but/the housed. The Rogers* were tlw first family to move in. . Plan Island Apartments Plans are being revived to build lard Dawson bought the island in a $1.5 million dollar apartment 1/2 acres all beautifully landscaped. The east end of the island will be devoted to recreation facilities consisting of a club house, sandy beach and a built-in swimming pool. These 102 apartments will be In eight buildings built- in a circular arrangement with an excellent view of the lake from every room. White Lake is one of the larger lakes In Oakland County with clean and clear water and our complete sewerage disposal plant will maintain this ideal situation. Each apartment has 2 bedrooms with walk-in closets, large living room, separate dining room, ceramic tile kitchen with built-in O.E. range and refrigerator, ceramic tile bath with built-in vanity. All electric heat offering each room individual thermostat control. mmrr: 8 $14,500 $38oo MONTH 'if Think of the Car It Needs Room it /you’re still stumbling over, lawnmowers and garden rakes in fo^ garage by Christinas each year, this article it for you. If you're one of millions of Americans whose cars have been dis-| possessed by summer clutter, then this article is really for you! ' ' With; to modernise your bathroom the AMOTCAN-<£tAftdtad way I ThtfhMst We Americans possession of tools. We see' them advertised, decide we need them, buy them and use them.! This Is wonderful. It's good for the economy — It helps us with our Work — and, besides, It's very! satisfying to,own and use gadgets.; All these acquisitions, however, j tend to fill up our garages, And,; since most of them are used in the summer months only, It Is especially annoying, to hpve them in our way all winter long. There are two parts to the.solution. first, think before you buy: Do I have room to store this ; tractor? Even .though It will j definitely help In weeding foe X petunia patch, Is there WIIM space for It beside foe mUMf j spreader, leaf cart, lawnmower, 1 hedge clippers, rakes, shovels, pruning shears, lime bagy gar- j den hose, lawn roller any other j equipment? / The other possibility f- one you'd/ better get started on/lght now jA is the construction A a tool shed or an area Inside me house Where all this needed summer emflpment can be 'stored during the bulk of the year wheipt Isn't in use. Your rewaya for fofo forehanded thought and action will be the ease wlthr which/ you back your car into’ the /garage all winter long. /' ouses Are Built ally Too Strong Laboratory tests show ihut.in w U. S. sofi wool species hive fa -greater strength than 1: necessary for most house-framing. JieeflgL. . i The tendency, says H. V. Simp i son, executive vice president of the I West Coast Lumbermen’s Associ, atton, has always been to over-j build our homes. We always use j better and stronger lumber than ; is needed. No one, he said, ever i heard of a house falling down be-1 cause lumber framing gave way. That is one reason, said the lumber leader, why we recommend Utility grade west const lumber for most..,house f aming require-! ments.~ Not' oily * Utility grade Douglas fir and west coast hemlock less expensive than other grades, but it Is almost as strong, j i In home framing. Simpson said, stiffnesa is one of the prerequisites,! and Utility grades have ample stiffoiess, strength, and long life to frame both foe cottage or the *100,000 home. Many stylo to choose from EAMES 55 East Pike Sti BROWN, INC. Do It yourself . to s professional? That’s one of the first questions ,.iat you’, as a homeowner, must answer when you’re planning a Home improvement project, some* times it is a difficult question, too, with sound arguments on both Try A Compromise typos of Work are involved—euch as carpenter, plumber, electrician and painter—the job of coordinating them requires professional Attention. The efficiency end close lupervfoen that a reliable company ^provides often make the totti cost lees then if you tried to Jr_____make your own arrangement* with of these independent work- POi . if you [have the talent and the time, go those amall projects on your own. ’Tiling a floor, painting a room, panelling a>w*U—thaee are the kind of jobr that anyone who is even slightly handy with tools osn accomplish with fine, rssults. It’s economical and it' oaa be mighty satisfying, too. ^han you are planning an ex-tensve .project, such aa a room addition or a remodeled kitchen, there are many reasons why you should rely on a professional home moderniser. Oood design will WeTe Reedy to Help At Poole's Home Improvement Center you will find help end encouragement for the projects you-can do on your own, We will bo happy to provide profeeekmal design help and how-to-do-it advice. If you decide that the job la really too complicated for you, our highly trained craftsmen are at your service. for the answer to any home improvement question, phone us todiy>st R 4-18*4___________- ' Lot Owners! BUILD NOW s5990 THREE BEDROOMS • Forced air fvmoco • Erection of the home As Low as f34.64 Month Prico Includes Building the Foundation, Erection of House and Inside Materials Furnished. MODEL OPEN Weekdays 1 -6 Saturday and Sunday .14 E-CON-O BUILT HOMES MODEL Tdegraph Road, South of Squora Lake Rood FE5-9888 Open Doily end Sun. 1 to 8 P. M- 3950 ORMOND RD. DAWSON ISLAND APARTMENTS I1-""* [ ' . MU 4-8193 Only Simple Math Is Needed to Buy Tile Here Is an easy way io determine how many tiles are needed for, a room when inatalllng a floor of solid vinyl or vinyl asbestos tile. Get the square footage of the room by measuring length and wridth, then double it and subtract 10 per cent, which gives you the number of titles needed. This is based on the fact that a standard 9“ by 9" tile is 9.16 of a square foot. H.H. STANTON Plumbing and Heating Contractor 103 STATE STREET FE 5-1683 Skating, deling, lea fishing, sledding, and fun-filled thrills for tha family to onlay dally when you buy La ChatoOu In foil LOTUS LAKE ESTATES . . . An All New Community Offering Two Tremendous Home Values! You*ll Never Buy , Better—So—Why aaS.’, |i Le Chateau Pricad from only *14,990 Ui Todayl The Space Queen Pricod from only *13,990 A« Low at $440 Down, FHA Tormt Featuring! • 1920 sq. ft. of living area • 3,4 or 9 Badraoms • Hugo Tiled Family Roam • Paved Stroots • Storm Sowars • Oas Hoot • Carpotlna • 1H Baths • Reserved beach on Lotus Loko. As Low at $290 Dawn, FHA Tormt Faaturlmgt • Over 1,000 sq. ft. of Living Atoa « 3 Bedroom* • 2 Car '«Attached Garage • Hugh Form Stylo Kitchen • Full Basement * Oas Heat • Reserved beach on Lotus Lako. Salas Office Located at 6214 Williams Lake Rd. 2 Blocks W. of Airport Rd. Open Daily front 2 to 9 P>M> Model Phone: OR 3*0001 I on Beautiful ! WATERFORD HILL A Planned Custom Community with Laka Privileges MODEL AT 6288 BALMORAL: OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 8 P.M. *26,990 Directions to Waterford MUt Intrense W-mile past Old MM Tavern, turn left off ef Dials Hwy, and turn rigkt at first letersiwtlen to medd. r Built by Carla Construction Co. O, Sole# by , e s JL- A V I JHL f ino. 10450 W. Nine Mile Road Oak Park JO 6-9824 A.M. MA 6-5097 P.M. OR 3-0001 f ffHE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1961 PONTIAC Reckcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS Z South Cm PI R-TU* LAKEWOOD KNOLLS LAKE HOME SITES EM 34WS or MB 41765 FRED W. MOOTS ELECTRICAL — ■* — / 845 W. Huron St. • Free Estimates • Surveys Ov«r 30 Yaara in Pontiac Choose From 80 Models BUY WITH NO MONEY DOWN A* low at $22 Per Month Townsend-Swift Homos MM UfMr M., Orion n l-MM 24-HOUR SERVICE Foraicos Vacuumed Ges Heating LUX-AIRE —MULLER SUPREME —- EXCELL MOERFeS Phone 682-1810 Window Boxes improve Looks of Most Homes With all due respect to contemporary aseticism of architectural line, wtadow'boxes can naught but enhance the exteriorof a home; Built. of easily handled Western Pine region wood, the project would be highly do-U-jtouraelfable. h - ★ .In general the box should be as wide as the window siU and as deep -and high as necessary. Beveled aide pieces and an extended front piece make a more finished let. And don’t forget drain- Highland Estates ■ST *13,950 BERT SMOKIER BnUm Model Fhene OS I-4EU LmM .Alraert Baai Between M-5» and Pontiac Lake Bda. MASONITE Hard Board $2^ 4x8-'/s PER SHEET l^mSONITE Plain oTUndarlaymant 4k8 SHEET ~$3T9- Porch Colimns Onit Stem Tim GARAGE K~ 1st S F 1 tsCEIL DRY- .ING |V R A G f - FAMILY i -18-8,x II «?0 M BEDROOM 4 13-8410-0" B-86 Statistics A five bedroom' (or four' bedroom and den) bi-level home with three bathrooms, square loot living room;. 195 I square foot dining room, 283 square foot family room, 9’6" by 13’ main kitchen plus separate kitchenette off family room. Dimensions are 66* wide (im eluding 8' wide upper level sun deck) by 29*8’’ deep with 1,63 square feet of living area on the upper level and 924 square feet on the lower level not including garage and basement area; FLOOR PLANS — A mid-level foyer in this bi-level home guarantees privacy for both levels. A second staircase, from the family room up to the kitchen balcony, completes the traffic drcula- Large Bi-Level tion pattern. Not also the abundance of storage space in this house, especially the storage wall off the family room. Many Unusual Features more than enough of. Note the oversized closets In each of the j V rooms (or four bedrooms and a 0 den), three bathrooms, a double 11 garage, a 24’ by 13’ living e with a large fireplace, separate dining room, and — one of the i of all — separate lower level kitchenette off the family room. Its dimensions are 66’ wide by 29‘ft” deep with 1,65$ square feet of living area on the upper level and 924 square feet on the lower level not counting the garage and basement area. An 8' wide deck on the upper level, entered through sliding glass doors from both the living and dining rooms, runs the full depth of the house. A mid-level foyer controls the traffic In sad out of the house, guaranteeing no intrusion on the privacy of either level. A second Staircase, from the family room ■p to the kitchen balcony, completes the traffic circulation pattern. At no time Is It five bedrooms, and especially the! large storage wall in the family room. Note also how the closets are arranged to serve as sound buffers, especially for the master 1 The family room in this house [is a spacious 283 square feet, which seems even larger because of the two-story ceiling and the | huge, panoramic rear window. There are three entrances to the family room — from the rear and through the garage as well as down from the mid-level entrance foyer. SECOND KITCHEN The lower - level kitchenette makes the family room truly a livable area as well as an excellent place for teen-agers to entertain. And the surrounding balcony makes possible supervision (of small fry as well) from an unobtrusive vantage point. As dramatic as the balcony Is the upper level porch, or sun deck, which has the ellect ol adding about tSS additional square fed to the living room-dining room expanse. The large planter extending from the deck across the front of the house, on the npper level, provides an unusual exterior feature. Use of the lower level for living —- the primary economical value of bi-level design — does not, In eliminate all ths normal basement space. There Is plenty of room for storage, both Indoors and out, as well as an oversized heater room, As a matter of fact, storage space Is one thing this house has [iFalliiaiilia Robert W. Golf Phono: 6S2-2429 Pontiac I SUBDIVISION FOUR NIW MODELS Juit Wait of M-24 Behind Alban's Country Cousin Opts It Noon ’Ul l:M P.M. Dally CARLISLE BUILDING CO. PB MM 0A MM See the MY-T 3-LEVEL MODEL Abo 4 and 5 Bedroom* • Finished Family Room •'Gas or Electric Built-Ini • Over Quarter Acre Lot* • Paved Streets Rd. 1. of S. Commerce Rd. * «, WAIIIP LAKI * Completed Sidiwilkt PHONE AT MODEL: 624-9826 or MA 4-3815 KAHMEH CONSTRUCTION CO. pqgMMMraiiallEHIBWEEEIREIEHIEEiraKraiBItWEBraMIIIEBHIEWilBiMEIIIIIIEWWEEEIli'WUEWI | LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME . . . SEE A 1 1 mmmmm WEINBERGER HOME FE 5-9497 DO YOU KNOW THIS MAN? Hi® Advice Can Save You Money If your heating system is old or inadequate, he can recommend the proper installation tot you and possibly save you needless expense and trouble. The most expensive thing you can do is buy an inadequate heating system. A good heating system not only saves you money in the long run, but gives you perfect comfort •.. . something you can’t gat by "cutting comets”. This man is a conscientious craftsman, engineer, and business-man whose progress depends on honest, capable service to his customers. He won’t disappoint you —with his work or his materials. He'll custom design an installation to meet youT exact requirements. And the heart of it will GAS OR OIL HEATING NO DOWN PAYMENT—FIRST PAYMENT NOVEMBER GOODWILL Automatic Heating 3401 Wert Huron Street FE 8-0484 DIXIE* GARAGES DEAL DIRECT SAVE $50 fro $80 ■ See On Modtli Now on Display DIXIE MIME CONSTRUCTION Ik. -—5744 Highland Rd. (M-S9) Hrlwrrn Cmnnl Lake U< Airport Me. Cell for Free Iitlmetet OR 4-0371 OPEN DAILY end SUN. 9-7 P.M. Ikufm NO MONEY DOWN and 5 YEARS TO PAY EXPERT CEMENT WORKT ALL TYPES ALL 0VR WORK IS 100% GUARANTEED __We Alio De Beautiful MederaiiWIen Work «J • ATTICS « REC. ROOMS • ADDITIONS • PORCHES • BREEZEWAYS • AWNING • INSULATION iiaanaaiaaaaaaaaaiiaaaaaMiaai Concrete Step Co. K lighlondRd. Telephone 673-0775 ALSO AVAILABLE IN COLOR DOOR V* Thick Full Length JHkige Welded Conrt. •39* Comp lately Initialled • Combination • 2 Glass • 1 Screen *9 95 Upto 46U.I. BE OUR GUEST at Lake Angelos GOLF VIEW ESTATES, Walton Blvd. , . at Angelus Drive, this weekend. Two beautiful —-—models- now open for your—Inspection. - Our 1961 Models are now for sale. JAMES E. ZUEHLKE “THE CUSTOM BUILDER" BREAK AWAY ■aFROM < HIVING; 4ln Beautiful • Ranches a Colonials a Early Americans a Tri-Levels . -r- a Bi-Levels We Are Taking Trades Ask lit About Custom Building end Modernisation “The Builder That Makes a House a Home” W. W. ROSS HOMES 1.4 Mllea Past telegraph ltd. , OR 3-8021 THIS PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1961J SIXTEEN PwifarfBhtral n Pontiac North. 14 Berkley ......26 Hazel^l^rkj.,.21, Y|alled lake..26 Femdale .>...32 W.BloomfieW.32 Holly HHIV-- JI3 SpuifieM.... 6 Waterford_______19 Seaholm........ Famington... 0 East Detroit >.. 0 Milford 6 Brighl 4th Period to Whip Southfield, 14*6 in i. r rt* fv Shields,Fisher Huskies Rally, in PCH Loses Lead Twice as Hillites Gain 13-13 Tie Chiefs Muff Field Goal Attempt on Final Play of Valley Game By BOLL CORNWELL SAGINAW - It would be difficult to imagine a more frustrating football evening than the one Pontiac Central High School experienced here Friday night. . Ihe Chief, .pent most of the evening poshing n beefy Arthur Hill team np and down the gridiron but when the 4C minutes had elapsed on the scoreboard clock, "___all they had to show for their efforts was an exasperating 13-13 deadlock. —----Coach Paui Dellerba’s PCH grid- Skipper Torment Resumes; Walled Lake Rolfs Alo By BOB BEEDLE Waterford High coach StU Hior-ell is going to have nightmare* about runbacks. Two weeks ago, it was a pair of long interception returns which upset Waterford’s applecart and provided township foe Kettering with a one-point triumph. But last night was the topper. The Skippers won the battle of the s led Arthur Hill in every sta-'tistical department but when the Saginaw Valley Conference battle came to an end, they were still searching for their 1st victory of the 1961 season. ; It marked the 2nd straight year that the Chiefs and the Hillites have fought to a draw. They struggled to a 20-20 tie last year on this same field In a contest quite similar to this one. The Chiefs twice blew leads, then climaxed their frustrating flight by muffing a field goal Attempt from the Arthur Hill 17-yard line on the final play game- Just as in their 13-0 low City Central a week ago at fumbles and penalties CM dearly in crucial momenta, second-consecutive week, PCH lost four fumbles to an alert enemy. week, but dropped a 26-19 verdict to Berkley when the Bears exploded with two tremendous kick run-backs within two ahd a half minutes in the third quarter. Pontiac’s n takes can he listed as toHowtt Two costly tombtee, two pen- Central'.enjoyed a 7-0 lead at halftime, but the Chiefs so completely dominated the first two quarters that the estimated 4,000 fans' gathered in Arthur Hill hie-piorial Stadium probably were wondering why they didn't collect three or four touchdowns. The Chiefs were stalled twice in the 1st quarter. They lost the ball on downs on the Hillite 19 after a fumble lost 10 yards, then another bobble was recovered by AH on the Saginaw 23 to halt another threat. The Chiefs finally hit pay dirt midway through the 2nd period. A 26-yard punt return by halfback Boy Couser ignited the drive and they marched 55 yards In nine plays with Couser scoring the touchdown on a 16-yard swing around left end. Quarterback Bob Pomeroy kicked the point. Arthur Hill squared matters at 7-7 late In the 3rd stansa. A 34-yard punt return by Dave Laaderyou .parked the Hill.’ 1st TD and they putrfied 3S yards for the tying counter with fullback Ken Bubliti cracking aero.* from one yard put. Ed Kriets booted fhe 7th point. A 15-yard unnecessary roughing penally against PCH kept this driv* going after AH quarterback Jim Flora had Men dumped for a 12-yard loss. Pontiac bounced right back and drove 68 yards for a TD with Angy Roach streaking 28 yards off tackle for the counter on the first play of the 4th period. The Chiefs had three cracks at the all-important extra point. Pomeroy1 made the 1st attempt but PCH was offside. He missed the 2nd try but Arthur Hill side. An CrtrAnt pass from center nullified the 3rd effort as the ktek never got off the ground and PCH led, 19-7. Ike Hillite. rebounded Immediately. Ken Birch rue ad 40 yard* on the 1st play to reach the PCH 32, then three play, later Bubllt* Ambled 13 yard. Into the end .one. Krlcts’ kick was wide and the score was even, Pontiac got .Its first real break •with 5:17 remaining when tackle Dick Richard, recoyered a Hillite fupiblf °n the Sajjiimw 21. After - gaining a 1st down on the’ AH 10, the Chief* gave up the ball agnln as Roach fumbled and Tim Bren-t nan of Saginaw fell on it on' the 10. Aided by a pass' Interference penalty, PCH kept punching away but Ihe Chiefs were also fighting J the dock. They took io the air and moved to the AH ll-yard stripe. , Pomeroy dropped back to attempt a field goal from the 17 on the fame’s last play, but a poor pass *wn center rujned the effort. In another opening Inter-Lakes League action, Walled Lake easily downed Farmington, 264), for its third straight win. Berkeley had the upper hand In the Bret half In taking a 1*6 lend. But the Skipper* came back strong and moved t o within six-points on Gary Walla’ one-yard scoring plunge edriy in yards through what seemed the entire Waterford defense for a 19-6 lead. ft/ i Then, just 2:25 later, it was Dick Kakkuri's turn to help relax Wilson when he took a punt and sped 77 yards up the right sideline for the final — and clinching — Berkley TD. Rick LaBalr’s 57-yard kickoff On the succeeding kickoff, however, Berkley junior Steve Hollingsworth made new coach Irv Wilson breath easier when he grabbed the ball and raced 75 It was Kakkuri, a big high-stepping halfback, who opened the scoring with a slx-yarder in the opening quarter. Dan Osborne made it 124 on a two-yard plunge. Waterford, now 1-3 overall, corned the second half inches. The scoring was cap late in the contest on a I yard dive by Wall*. —with the exception of the long runbacks — Berkley <2-1 overall) managing only 14 yards from scrimmage during that time. Lee Reiser, 14-year-old sophomore whiz.continuedhlssolid running for the losing Skippers. Reiser picked up 131 yards in 18 carries to ' his season ground total to 3661 yards. Waterford was without the ices of Readier, first-string quarterback, toy most of the first half, due to the slow recovery of an ankle injury he suffered In practice this week. Gary Moran, normally a halfback, did credjtably in his'place. Mike Buffmyer tallied twice— on ran* of one and It yards, and Mike Hinckley <1|) and Bill Green (14) wrapped np the ooor-log for offensive-in laded Welled Lake In Its easy triumph over Farmington. Dave Smith’s Walled Lake craw has now counted 119 points in three contest! while limiting lti foes to i mere 26. WATtMOBD-aMUtUnr STATISTICS First downs posslac .... First downs Densities ... ratal first downs ....... I Ysrds coined rushln* ... u Ysrds folned ptsslnf — 1 net fordo sslnsd .. 11 > ottomptod........ ______. completed ...... r. Posset intercepted by ... overost Fumbles STRANGE HAPPENINGS — Pontiac Northern r,"u*' Pr*“ quarterback Rick Fisher seems to M running last night. Les WUldnson ot Southfield is the other out of the crowd in this double exposure picture gridder mixed in with the happy Northern fans taken by Press photographer at Wlsnef Stadium -*-*-• *- -■--•— - jAf who had plenty to cheer about in a 14-6 triumph. Bay City Teams Stay Unbeaten in Valley Race Few cities in the country can boast of two teams fighting for state championship but Bay City is one. The town of near 60,000 population on Saginaw Bay this year has produced two of Michigan’s top prep elevens in Bay City Central and its crosstown rival, Bay City Handy. Last night, each school won its third straight Saginaw Valley Conference game, Central walloping Flint Southwestern, 32-6, and Handy downing Flint Northern, 20-13. In another Valley game, Midland routed Saginaw High, 26- Fullback Roy Campbell scored twice on runs of 8 and 6 yards to lead another Class A power, un-Maten Ann Arbor, to a tight 19-16 victory over highly-rated Flint Central which suffered its first setback. PCH-Saginaw Summitry 1 # e—1| I .............. I 1 4-11 Smrlns iummirj PCH—Couftsr 10 run lay. A 46-yard pass from Harold Klusendorf to Aldred put the ball on the Falcons ’ five and Tom Towler carried it over from the^three. Rochester roiled up 362 yards, all on the ground, with Mltxelfeld accounting for 187 In 13 carries. Troy rushed for 223 yards and a furious passing attack by the Colts in the second halt added 120 more. Tabbed as "The Untouchable*” by their followers after posting t h a I r Sid straight shutout tri- point plunge by fullback Eddie Dando stunned the Celts, whe had ground out It first downs during the lint half but had only Dave Aldred's four-yard slant for a touchdown to put on the aooreboard. The go-ahead tally still had the Falcons fired up when they returned for the third period and they struck again with devastating speed. Mltzelfeld sped 49 yards following the kickoff and then he went the final 10 yards three plays later. After Rochester held Troy on the next series, Dando scooped up « short punt and dashed 40 ysrds for another six-pointer. Dando had plunged for the extra point or Mltzelfeld'* TD; this time Mltsel fold ran it over. Troy hit back through the air and two rompletioM for long gain* net np Aldred’a two yard blunt early In Ihe fourth to make the score 21-12. But the Falcons came right back to put the game on ice. Dar^' rambled for runs of 34 and yards before right up to Quarterback jays hitting bard both on offense and defense right from the opening kickoff.. scored seven points, hard-running Dave 8hielda tallied the other touchdown end Chris Payne averaged better than >10 yards per carry but it was a team-type effort! Happy borne coach Ed Heikklneit refused to single out any individuals. The blocking was strong and the defense, led by hake Marcum, was surprisingly success-fill against the nigged SH8 backs heir aeasoa point margin to 112- t. Romeo got off to a slow start taking 11 plays to go only 23 yards following a fumble recovery in the opening period. John Hanley crashed over from the 1 on 4th Is 1st of two extra points. Bill Trieloff followed with two six-pointers in the 2nd quarter and another in the 3rd betides having one nullified by a penalty. He ran 73 and 31 and made paydirt on pass from Mark Johnson covering 45 yards. Trieloff now has seven TDs. Satin* Strikes Early to D«f«at South Lyon Saline struck for two first period touchdowns and went on to down South Lyon 19-8 Friday night. South Lyon got a TD on Its own in the opening period on a 45-yard pass from Lowell Burges* to Dave Race, The loKra picked up a safety in the second quarter when Dennis Glass tackled s Saline ball carrier in the end son*. The Lions, now 1-2 on the to the Saline 10 twice md half before losing of the ball. ' GOOD MON — Ihe best sign for any football team is’the official's signal for a touchdown as lost his helmet on the play and Berkley's Norm shown when Waterford's Gary Walls hit paydirt Wolff (80) appears to he pulling St Walls head, for two yar^s-in the 7th quarter yesterday. Walls The Skippers lost to Berkisy, 28- Northern dominated most of the t the much bigger Blue- gotag 82 yards In si Fisher's running paced an early PNH threat which fizzled, after reaching the Southfield 18 partly due to a 15-yard penalty. The Huskies reached the enemy 42 before punting early in die 2nd session and that urns when Southfield got going. *. it " * After Ming htld without a 1st own for 16 minutes, the blue shirted invaders appeared to M taking command with an easy ground march to paydirt. A 41-yard dash by sophomore Dennis Lamb was the big gainer. Les Wilkinson cracked aver from the 2. Bet the grift* Peottee kids shook It ett Md started a drive ef their ewa. Payne went 42 on Jht opening play. They get to the days It with a 1st down hut were halted by an Interception. A penalty nullified a Southfield TD pass early In the 2nd half and it was all Northern the rest of the night. The Huskies took an ensuing punt and traveled 92 yards -r »H by rushing — to go ahead to stay ■ft * M lutes gone In the final quarter. it it ' ‘ dr ■ Fisher mixed his plays welt along the way using Shields mostly. Payne went 21 once and Fisher a crucial 12 anotMr time. Bill Young’s seven-yard scamper made it 1st down at the 2 aqd Shields went into (he end zone standing up A neatly-executed PAT play broke the tie. Soph Dean Houden put on a good act apparently getting ready to kick hut Fisher snooted arrooo for the point. The Huskies misted a golden opportunity to'boost the lead later when two 15-yard penalties helped ruin a fumbled punt recovery at the Southfield 10. Guard Don Vance another fumble a few minutes later at the 17 and this time the locals made it count.' Payne went 6. Shields 10 and Fisher tM last 1. Souden booted a perfect placement this time. it it it x Southfield had reached the homo it's 35 as (he final wjilsfle njar 1 'll 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEP' PonlUe fmi Photo NOWHERE TO GO — Berkley's quarterback Phil Krumm (14JT has nowhere to go as he runs ,into a wall of linemen of both teams. The white Waterford helmets close the gap to keep Krumm from going anywhere. Berkley still won, 26-19. Avondale lops Clawson, Dragons Tie Madison Avondale opened Oakland B play on a victorious note Friday, but Lake Orion had to settle for a tie. The Yellow Jackets rolled to a 194) lead and then held off a third quarter Clawson surge to post a 19-13 triumph. Lake Orion led until late in the fourth period wh Madison tied the game at 7-T. Fitzgerald moved into first place, half game ahead of Avondale and Trhyr by. bouncing Oak Park, 26-14. Troy toft a non-league encounter at Rochester, 28-19. M R 30, 1961 SEVENTEEN- NorfhvHte/_____26 Clarenceville 719 Avondale C-..I9 lake Orion 7 Rochester .....28 Romeo .......38 Bloomfield H.. 7 Clarkston ....13 Clawson .....13 Madison ..... 7 Trfay .......--19 Oxford ...... 0 Juday Leads Northville Past Hills, 26-7 Lakers, trojans RecortHJpsetr in W-0 League Broncos Notch First Win of Season 23*20 Over Brighton By DON VOGEL Huger Ball put Avon In front 'n the first quarter with a I® Football Results MICHIGAN HIOH SCHOOL ■nnTiii t. irniri SICHIOAN HIGH SCHOO FOOTBALL scoacs Ann Arbor It. Hint Coolral U Anchor hay 40, Drydtn « tv City Control 33, Hint Bout •y City Handy 30. runt Nortl nd ax« 31. Cui city s rown City M. Almont 0 irtntnthnm Orovas *« whlim The Yellow dockets score In the second quarter ot Bauer’s 70-yard TD ran On the first play for scrimmage in the third period, quarterback Roger Van Conant hit end Dale Yarger with a 35-yardscor-ing pass. Romy Lucero picked up the extra point after the second touchdown. Clawson rallied * for two touchdowns in the third quarter. The first came on a 30-yard aerial from Paul Kebrow to Tom Grunber. Mike Bradley kicked the point. Mike Haley blocked an Avondale! punt and fell on the ball in the! end stone for ihe other Clawson TD.! Avondale marched to the vis-j Itor's 20 and four yard lines dur-j ing the Rame, but failed to score. Coach Frank Crowell had high-praise for Bauer’s play. He is a junior. lake Orion recovered a fumbled punt on Ihe Madison 30 In the first quarter to setup Its lone touehdown. Frank Ochoa went yards and “He's the best." Northville coach Ron Horwath used this simple statement to describe Steve Juday. It Is doubtful if any Bloomfield Hills player will come forward to dispute Horwath. The senior quarterback did everything right as the Mustangs rolled over the Barons 26-7 before ,500 fans at Northville Friday night. - By wlnnig their third straight game without u defeat, the Mustangs now are top heavy favorites to make oft with Wayne-Oakland league honors. Northville is done in first place after the second” week of league action. Clarenceville knocked Clarkston from the ranks of the unbeaten. 19-13: West Bloomfield upset Milford, 32-6; and Holly slipped past Brighton, 28-0. SHARP PLAYMAKING Juday displayed good ball handling and sharp passing. Twice he pulled the Bloomfield Hills defense out of position with take# to enable halfbock Tom Swiss to break loose for runs, of M and 27 yards on pttchoutt. Both runs setup two second period touchdowns, scored by Juday on short sneaks. Late in the third period Juday sprinted 16 yards around end after taking a pass. This pdl the ball on the five and two plays later fullback Joe Hay pounded over from the one. Juday didn't pass much, but when he did, ihe Barons had trouble, He completed eight of 10 afc rials for 90 yards. To offset the Hills offense, he Intercepted a pass and punted three times for a 38-yard average. St Michael Favored Over St. Fred Sunday City Parochials Play 27th lime in Grid Series Fired-up Rams Hope to Pull Good Upset at Wisner Maples Lose, 27-6/ Kimball/ Da AT Photofsx NO GAIN — Xavier University fullback Tom Clark (wearing helmet) is hemmed in by University of Detroit players as tackle Bob Turley (79) makes shoulder high tackle in the 1st quarter of Friday night’s gamd at U. of D. Stadium. The Titans routed Xavier, 34-8, for their 2nd straight victory. ____________ Shorter Scores Twice as Titans Whip Xavier By CHUCK ABAIR It will likely make" little difference after the opening whistle sounds but St. Michael will rank as Th“‘ Groves Romps Over Whitmore lake, 50-0 Xavier's lone score came when Bob Daumeyer intercepted Ron Bishop's pass at Detroit's nine and waltzed into the end zone with his team trailing 274). >n Misieri . Bterlmx 0 la TI. Baker n >uri 31. King# iP*» iWVi.l 3S. Polomai I mini 14. Elmhurst ) (NDl 31 Bethel it ! Birmingham Graves, which has taken its Ifiocks in two varsity i years of football, dished it out last nighl, The Falcons white washed 'Whitmore .Lake,, .’SWl ns Art Schuler scored four times on runs ■ of 63 71. 53 and 20 yards. Groves scored 20 points in the first quarter, 18 in the third period and 12 more In the final stanza. ] Other scores were by Tim Mit-j n p^pii on a 50-yarder in the third | put of retirement waa an important fac- tor. Balanced Scoring Wins lor Country Day, 25*0 Country Day scored on# touch-— .. . down tn each period Friday to by the other National League^ ^ ||amt,.amt.k Immaculate team*. This selection will lie made -/5.o for Kg first win of by Naw York and Houston on alternate pick* the. duy after the World Scries ends, ' Gists of the player* will be madb available to the Meta on Monday when Weiss expeels Htengel to vome to town from hi* Conception 25-. ... I---- the season against dale setback. Arnte Depkerman scored In thfe first quarter on a four-yard run. Steve SiAoman passed' nine yard* to Nell Satovsky and Deckerman kicked the point to give Country Day a 13-0 halftime lead. Dan llormoylan and Paddy 1,-kixi up extra points for the Lakers. Haggard w’tts credited with 22 ’tackles from the, safety position. Monroe Ashley meed 88 yards for a touchdown with t« seconds to piny to give Clarenceville Its upset triumph. Tho sophomore speedster scored the Trojans' first TI) on a 78-yard gallop In yards during ihe game. Willie Knox scored for Clarkston on spUrt* of 15 and six yaids. Dick Sheldon kicked the point. Randy Marx scored tw-o touchdowns, passed for a ihhd and i two extra points, but It wasn't enough to stop Holly. The Broncos scored tn each quarter to chalk up I heir first win of the season. Larry Bradsher raced 45 yaids, BIU Conll 13, Jim McArthur four and Jim Ray tour for Ihe" TDa. Ray and Conti got two PAT each. Every Sunday Drag Racing M.H.R.A. 26 Mile Rd. E. of Gratiot NOTICE, BIG GAS MEET OCT. 8 PI- Sports Promoter Fined BET FOR RAM8 — Three linemen figuring to give St.'Fred plenty of trouble In the annual city parochial battle at Wisner tomorrow at 2;30 p. m. are, left to right, Jim Hurren. Dave Moreno and Blaine Prtebe. Hurren and Priebe go over 200 imuitds. Tiie Shamrocks ale favored to win the 27lh meeyng between the schools. I GRAND RAPIDS lift — S| promoter Theodore ' Rasberry, of Grand Rapids was fined $5,000 and plared on probation for two | years today at U»S. District Court for admitted gambling violations. SIDNEY'S OIL SERVICE 1995 CASS LK. RD. Kaago Harbor 682-2651 PROMPT SERVICE 2S gallon ord TRI-STATE CHAMPIONSHIP MOTORCYCLE RACES Fsaturing the Nations Top 66 Expert Ridj,rs in 10 Thrilling Events Wolverine Raceway at Middlabelt and Schoolcraft Sunday, 0c1 Trials 9 A. M. Races 2 P. M. Adm. $1.50 Children FREE aft 1 EIGHTEEN PONTIAC, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1961 ¥ 'P Lions, 49ers Boast Defensive Backs Ex-Detroit Ace Now Coach of in Morning o Defense Tigers and Twins drew only 3,151 r - The -Detroit Tigers, shooting for paying customers yesterday, but MINNEAPOI.1S-ST. PAUL M - their 100th American League victory of 1961, sent rookie Howard Kopjitz after it in a morning game against the Minnespta’twins today. KOplltz was a 23-game winner , at Denver and won his first appearance as a Tiger, a seveninning relief stint in which he gave up oqly two runs. Today’s game was moved up to II a.m. (EOT), to avoid conflict with the Missouri-MInnesota football game In Minneapolis. The Tigers and the -Twins will - close out their seasons In a slnfele game here Sunday; With no' counter-attraction, * the those baseball fans witnessed the breaking' of one American League record and a rousing finish “that brought Detroit a 6-4 victory in 10 innings. ing into the ninth ahd had man-aged only six hits off Pascual. Their only runs to then had been provided by Norm Cash's 40th The recoil was set by Jake Wood, who struck out for the 139th time before lashing a two-run single that provided the margin of victory in the 10th. 'Wood’s whiff surpassed by the old AL record set by Minnesota’s Jim Lemon when he was playing with Washington in 1956, , ... . .' Wood has today and . tomorrow to "improve” on .the record .Ca-milo Pascual forced onto him. home run in the fifth with a. mate aboard'. Cash opened the ninth with his third hit, a single. Steve Boros fifed out, but Wood managed a walk. Dick Brown singled to center, loading the bases. Charley Maxwell, batting for Hank Aguirre, singled off Pascual’s glove scoring Cash. Al Kaline, batting for DicpMcAuliffe, was thrown out i arWst but Wood scored on the play. Bill Bruton grounded out to end the inning with the score tied Ford, O'Toole Look .Ready for World Series Opener ' ____t KUlocu in f Detroit ah r h M Mlnnestoa ab r 1iW Cash lb S S 4 4- Tuttle 3b — — 4 0 10 Valdlvl si - - . - 4 11 I Pascual p « ro 0 . 4 0 11 Moore p “ “ * * E-Freeban 0 0 0 0 Roarks c 1 0 0 0 -tunning P 1 0 0 0 ,-WVrts- United Press International Why wilt for Wednesday? Whltey Ford and Jim O’Toolev the two southpaws who’ll open the World Series, look ready to go right now. Both took their final tiine- 61st homer, going 'hitless In two official trips,. but Johnny Blfcn-chard belted his 21st homer in the fourth and then singled home the winning run in the ninth to bring reliever Rollie Sheldon his 11th victory. Like Foni, O'Toole also gave up e sharper of (be two, O’Toole turned in a smooth enough performance to win his Itth and bring a nod of approval from Cincinnati manager Fred- Ford struck out nine in a scoreless six-inning stint for the New York Yankees, allowed only four hits and might have won his 26th game of the season had.not the Boston Red Sox tied the score off reliever Luis Arroyo in the seventh inning. The.,Yankees snapped the tie and went on to win, 2-1, at the expense ot Bill Monbouquette. -Roger Marls failed In a bid for his ECONOMY OIL CO. 01 3-1217 Kllbe p B-Qsborne C-Msxwefi 4iVi3 5 Tot»a ..... v—Piled out lor punning in Oth; B— iled out for K!ing_M Aguirre in 9tn; jp~-gTounded out^ for 9th. ■ps last night and although Ford fnur hitg during the five innings he pitched for the Reds in their 8-1 victory over last year’s world champion Pittsburgh Pirates. Warren Spahn scored his 21st victory as the Milwaukee Braves defeated the San Francisco Giants, 4-1, In a game called after 4% Innings because of rain. Spahn yielded four hits in winning the 309th game' of his major league career.: Eddie Mathews broke a 1-all tie when he hit his 32nd homer with one on third off loser Jack Sanford. It was the only other National League game scheduled. In other American League ac-the Baltimore Orioles beat the Chicago White Sox, 3-2, In 10 innings; the Washington Senators blanked the Kansas City Athletics, 2-0; the Detroit Tigers scored a 6-4 win over (he* Minnesota Twins in 10 innings; and the Los Angeles Angels downed the Cleveland Indians, 6-4. BATEMAN’S TK A BE-IN POST WHERE THE TRADE WINDS BLOW The Tigers Were trailing 2-4 go- 10 0 0 oooo looo 0 0 0 0 10 11 .10 0 0 Detroit .............. 000 030 001 3—4 Minnesota ............. 101 000 000 0-4 B-McAullrte, Brown. Po-A—Detroit 30-11; Minnesota 30-7. DP—Tuttle. Mar--in and Klllebrow; Sunning, MeAulUfs nd Cash. LOB—Detroit 0, Minnesota 0. 30—Brown. 3B—Martin. HR—Martin, Cub. 8B—Green, 8—Nari M| ip b tnni . 4 4 4 4 1 .110 0 3 ..3 0 0 0 1 ..3 1 0 0 0 News in Brief change and several bottles of whisky were reported stolen last night from Giroux Market, 1535 "Union Lake Road/' Commerce Jack Christiansen Back to Haunt Former Mates With Coast Team investigating. Bargains in reftnlshed furniture at the Salvation Army Red Shield Store. 118 W. Lawrence (Street. New merchandise received dally. Ritters Farm Market. Hand picked peaches and pears, $285 bushel. Lame selection on handpicked apples, Concord trapes, crab apples and plums. Squash, 50 lb. Bananas, 10c lb. Fall sweet elder. Also beer, wine, liquor to take out. 3226 W; Huron St. FB 8-8011. Open 8 a.m. to 12 p.m., 7 days. M?.C,K0 St. IsOttl* ..... Pittsburgh ^*CftgO ladelphia arm 78 74 .513 IB 73 79 .490 20 By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pqntlac Press It’s no wonder the San Francisco 49ers boast of having the best defensive backfleld in the NFL. The man behind it all is Jack Christiansen, once the Lions' leader in the famed "Chris Crew," noted to be ’cme of the most famous back-field arrays in pro football. When Christiansen roamed the Lions’ backfleld during the great championship years of the 50’ .with him were Yale Lary, Jimnty David and Cart Karilivacz. Lary still remain^ and the Lions feel that the Four L’i the current defensive combination la the . beat since Christiansen and David departed for coaching Jobs. With Lairy is Dick Lane, Gary Lowe and Dick Le Beau. The 49ers defensive foursome consists of Jerry, Mertens, Abe Woodson, Dave Baker and Eddie Dove. ' ★ ★ ★ It will be interesting to see the battle of the two defensive, quartets Sunday when the Lions and 49ers tangle at Tiger Stadium in the 24th game. between the two teams. ’ Last year’s game with the 49crs could be called the contest which actually coot the Lions at least a .tie for the title. || After leading 104) late in the ‘ fourth quarter, the 49ers scored with four minutes to play to make it 10-7 and then John Brodie hit R. C. Owens in the end zone as time ran out for a 26 yard TD and a 14-10 victory. dr ★ dr The Lions,then went to the coast and whipped the 49ers, 24-0 in the hot streak which they scored six wins in the last seven gamies. Since then, the Lions have now won 14 of their last IT games, Ineluding five pre-season games. The playoff bowl In Miami could be added to this 1 Francisco 1, night. 3th • Angeles (Ortega 0-1) at Chicago (Ellsworth ail). n Francisco (McCormick 11-1*) waukee (WUlay *-tl> or Plcl , Louie (Washburn 0-11 I..... (butbardt *-171. nlgbt. _ SUNDAY’S SCHEDULE It has been 1956 since the Lions have won two straight in starting the season and they did It the past two weeks against Green Bay and Baltimore, , the top contenders of the Western Division. San Francisco is recognized as the other top contender. Game is 1:30 p. m. and bleacher seats will go on sale at 11:001 LIONS 1MI STATISTICS AMERICA^! New York 1, Boston 1, . Baltimore 3. Chicago 3. night. 10 Innings Washington 1, Hr------/”*“ * Detroit 4. Mlnne t Minnesota (Kaat TODAY’S GAMES Detroit (Kopllts 1-0) ____---------- 3S-S1 " **» Tork Chicago'(loorV^i) nt Baltimore (Pappas | id (Bell 13-15r at Los Anieles "ride 13-15). night. SUNDAY’S SCHEDULE it New York. Pint Downe Rushing Downs Passing ____ Downs Penalnos Totol Pint Downs Yards Rushing Ysrds Passing Total Net Yard! Liens Lodge Calendar officers. Oct. 2, 8 JMto, Temple, 22 State St- Ethel Clark, YoungGridders Can Still Sign for Competition Nearly everybody fetid* a n daily for the more than 62 million copies that are sold. Iwrtc* or raiuc ms kt.ttaa *“ ■ *■ ■ “■ -flven by the - day, October B. 1901, if • -*—1—■“* Number m-4ni4A'wii^rS neta. sor citli to the highest bidder Perndale. Oakland City National Bank of Detroit, B«pt- **• to. 1*41 PASSINO nmp. Til. . 41 30 Sit PASS RECEIVING n 20 249 42 Fox Defends Title at St. Clair River State PGA Event Sunday TRADE old. 311,344 with 31343 dow MANY PLANS Ranchers, Tri-Levels, Colonials, Confempories. __New colonial uneJar construction naxt to model. Ask salesman for details. Many surprises. You may Trade-In your present homo. BATEMAN Realty 377 S. Telegraph Michigan’s final major gol event of the 1961 season is slated Sunday at St. Clair River Country 'Club where 70 of the state's finest professional golfers tee off In the annual Michigan PGA championship. j Defending champion Ron Fox of Detroit heads the talented field and five other former State PGA champions also will shoot for the title over a 88-hole medal | play route. „ In addition to Fox, past champs I entered to tomorrow’s tournament I include ageless Al Watrous of Oak- I land Hills, Horton Smith of De-§ trait Golf Club, Wally Burkemo of | Franklin Hills, ^ John Bamum of | Blythefleld and Joe Bel fore of the II Country Club of Detroit" ids, John Dalrymple of Lake- polnte and Meadowbrook’s Paul Shepherd. The total purse is $3,000 with the winner pocketing $600. Host pro at St, Clair River C.C. is Don Perns. ★ * ★ Because of the lateness of the season and the size of the field, the State PGA will try a new tee-off system tomorrow. PelMnse and darting timed MOHNINO—NO. 1 TUB AFTERNOON—NO. 13 TBE 3 a.m,—Maude Harrle, 41m Romar. 3:04—Kan Judd. John Moalte, Bob 3: IS^Tom loo, Foto Oeaek, Ralph Yankae. 3:34—Barry Laur, Jack Hoffman, BUI Hamilton. 1:33—Don White, Wayne Henriekeon, Ramon Peterson: ‘ 5:40-Waller Leaky, Alai Redmond, °l:4g~*Eddit Kirk, Chick Rutan, Fau*t Farmlnton Country Clugb, defeat-1 Ijrtg veteran Cliff Settergren of Mu*-I kegon to a sudden-death playoff i with a birdie three on the 1st ex-| tra hole. Settergren also is entered 1 in Sunday’s tourney. 1 Barnum, reigning Michigan Open I champ, and Burkemo are expected 11to give. Fox plenty of trouble to I j his bid to repeat as State PCS T winner. [' Shepherd, Oordon Carlton, 3:13—Mac Me Eli ‘ Other title threutn ace Gene Bone of Warwlc Hills, Mae Me-i ElmuiYy of Knollwood, Max j Kvhiin of IIIlea, Eldon Briggs of DGC, Washtenaw's Tom Talklng-I ton, Glenn Stunrt of Grand Rap- Ip.'/m :64—Bill Markham. Ra] slrous. 104- Hal Whittington, . irry Tomaduu * NIB Ron Fun. Eldon Iking ton hONWalter Burkemo. Jo ‘ Don Soper, Mel ANNUAL STATEMENT __________ SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Caeh Receipts and Dlsbursemento^ JJulY™ lath on Hand Jot* 1, 1348 (Pleesesee Note Ai _________________30, 13ft through June, 30, till 030.100.33 for registration in the punt, pass and kick program for boys six through 10 years of ago-★ dr * Boys desiring to register can still do so at John McAuliffe Ford on Oakland' Ave., and at Beattie Motors on Dixie Highway In Drayton Plates, dr. V ♦ df The program Is being conducted In cooperation with the National Football League. Local winners will receive various prizes of football equipment and regional win-~ appear on the Lions’ TV broadcasts. 'v/.' ..dr ★ dr' The Beattie contest will be held next Saturday, October 7th at Waterford Township High School field at 1:00 p.m. McAuliffe registrants can enter up to the day of competition October 14th. The contest will most likely be held at Jaycee Park. Orend Total of Oenertl Fund Receipt! ............ Totol of .Oooofot Fund Receipts and Balance :jut* 1,134* ................................... - OBNERAL FUND DISBURSEMENTS Administration . . .1 Salaries of Bupertatendent and Assistants .......3 31.374. Salaries of Business Administrators ...... ” Clerical Salaries ........................ Administrative Supplies end Expense ....... Census and Compulsory Attendance ......... Elections . ... .......................... Other Admlnletrotlve Expense ................... f34.33 38,734.53 38,343.05 31.675.44 ‘‘Sift Totol AdmlntatntlTo Disbursements . Instruction Salortee of Supervisors . ................ Salaries of Principal* and Aealetants *C.. Salarlea ot Teaohere ................... Clerical Solar’ISs .................... Teaching Supplies and Expenae ........... Textbooks ............................. School Libraries ........................ Other lostruotlon Expense ................ 3 ' 134.313 43 Operation ot School Plant want . . ............... Fuel and Utllltleo ............ Operating Supplies and Expense Other Operating Expanse........ 3 34,018-U 336.137.35 3.301,531.84 311,414.77 147.434.31 73.430 43 34.43847 13.331.74 373.431.74 34.444.47 1.141.14 Total Operation Dlibunomeott .............. Maintenance of School Plant Malntananee ot Orounde ......................4 Maintenance of Building! .................. Maintenance ot Pumlture and Equipment .... Other Maintenance Expense............... .... Total Maintenance Disbursements .......... Fixed Chargee Rents apd Leases ...........................4 34.43143 ni.333.33 63.316.14, .. 14,434.11, Total Fixed Chargee Olsbursements . Transportation Salaries ...... ....... Other Transportation Expenae ... Revolving Fund Deficits .............. Wealth Service ......... ............. it Recreational Activities . Other Auxiliary ■ e (Including Traffic * Total Auxiliary Service Disbursements . Total Current (Operating) Expenses .. Capital Outlay Buildings . .. ........................ Transportation Equlpmsnt ........... Total Capital Outlay Disbursements Total Oentral F____ _____ Supplements] Disbursements Transfers to Other Funds ........ ............ Revolving Fund Disbursements ................. Other Supplemental Disbursements ............. Totol Supplemtntal Disbursements.......... Grand Total Oenertl Fund Disbursements....... Caeh on Hond Juno 30. 1631 (Please see Note B General Fund Disbursements plus Balances on June 34, 1441 ......................... Note A—Includes 3344,314 accounts payable and (143,448 capital Improvement funds. Note B—Includes 3373,343 Accounts Payable. 131.374 33 3 6,143.630.15 Sports Car Finale at OCSC Sunday* The final sports car race of le season takes place today and Sunday at Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club ahd the featured guest is Sterling Moss, recognized as the world’s greatest sports car Moss will put on a driving demonstration after the 7th race on Sunday which wtil be around LOO p. m. and he win have his choice of several of the finest racing machines in this area. A record crowd is expected at OCSC for the two-day Fall classic. Racing begins at 11:00 a. m. each day. Typhoon Fury Growing TAlPEf, Formosa 4ayme Curtin: dear eon of WlUtnm J. Curtis: dear father of Raymond Lao Curtis; daar brother of Robert. Leon and Bom Curtis. Fonanu kerv-lea urUI ba held Monday. Oct. I, at t p.m. from the Rfehardaon-Blrd Funeral Homo. Waned Lake, with Rev. UvlSayW offldaUng. Interment In Commerce Cemetery. Mr. CurUa will lie In state at tha Rlchardson-Bird Funaral Home. Walled take. ferOTSSSTSSfF-s:'lMi]"’FRBir Bl Winifred G—.- ___...___Mr. Mae MeConooghy; deer brother ot Mrs Edith Peterson, Mrs. Cards Beukma and Mrs Mattla lluggons also survived by 14 grandemldren and 13 great grand-children Funeral service «U1 be held Monday, Oct. 3, at 1:34 p.m. from the Sparks. Ortffln Chapel vttb Dr. Emil Konti ofllclatlnx. Interment In White Chapel. Mr. Ferguson will Its In state at tha Sparks-Orllltn Funeral Home. rinniE SEPT 11, imi. jacx It. 4673 Devorak. Clarkston: age 34; VPIKm Riviera; lather of William. BiJHpm .. xr.--------i|r, Winifred Over Interei n Delinquent Tax: brother o( Mrs Helen Hansge and Mrs. Jeanette Braeo: deer nephew o( Leslie Ferris. Funeral service will pe neld Monday. Oct. 3. at 3 p.m. from tho Donolson-Johns Fuooral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemelerr. lir. Per- il Other Fund* Sale of Proporty Transfer from C-Othor Receipts Total Rulldlhg and Site Fund Receipts ........ Total Building and Site Fund Receipts and Balnnees July 1. 1334 .............. - Building and Slto Fund DtsbursamonU Capital Outlay Orounds . ..................................4 33,700 o Fund Balances and Bite Fund Dlsbi V Lady of Interest on ipellnquent Taxsi Rovonuo from Interest on Invoatmonts.. Total ot Debt Retirement Receipts .. Other Debt Retirement Disbursements . Total Debt Rotlromsnt D._. Transfers to Other Fundi ....... Other Supplementol Disbursements ............ Totol Debt Retirement Fund Disbursements Total Debt Retirement Balances June 30, 1881 Total Debt Retirement laveftminte June 34, 1(41 ................................. I* Value of Sohool P ftjulpmer Insurance Values 3 1,816,00( W,360,001 3,000,00( Number of Olasaroom* - tout 1,118 none 18.116 tl Statement of o that at Oanaral I..... Tha Fontlao Public Sohooli provide a I (MS quota instructional materials, quality taoohiof, an — —I- * has tha opportunity to atten ___and temporary situations. effort 13 made to provide superior "‘trials, to ovoluota and upgrade I substandard oleisroom facilities, ■ program it physios lull time, eulfiolent Instructions! materials, to O _ now eitnbllshed. During this year o major emphasis will bo placed on science end social studies. A reading specialist has bean employed to asalet tn strengthening reading Instructs •mi diagnosis of reading probiame. Several elementary schools ore oxperlmenlln with departmentalisation m grades 4, 8, and 3. ' Tha revised secondary mathematics program has been established In th seventh and eighth grades and will he used In the ninth grade this year for th flrat lime. Wo have a four treok methematlce program for tho nlhth'grade. plan are under way to revise our science and social studios programs. A major empha sis will be placed on In-mrvloo education for teachers in mathsmttlcs, sclsnoi The school dlofrlol' will again participate In the N.D.S.A. -— —' —ndary levels. Vernon L, foolslll neral Homo, Case City, wnon Mrs. Hayden will He In sMte TOP5SS survived by several cousins. Fu-neral service will he held Monday, ' Oct. 3, at 13:34 p.m. from Bparks-Orlffln Funeral Home with Rav. finding B. Blhl officiating Interment In Oak Hin Cametary. Mra. Jacquln will its In state at the Sparis-Orllflh Funeral Home. LEROtiX] BilFT. 31. I3dil L Inge limited only by your ability Sea O. Hardenhurg. Jerome "Bright Spot". Orchard Lake at Casa Avaoua. arS^^rts^andllnin^l JW *m^* chants apprentlouhlp. willing tu learn Axtarloan and foreign ear* Must ba wall tduealad and reel-dsnt Apply In parson. Andy CelM Osrags. 771 Baldwin Ave A PART-TIME j6lt -Needed at onca- 3 man for eve-' ' nine work. Call Mr. Orson, OR 3-0033 _____Coll I P.M. '• 3 P M. _ ~ AtScdiMt¥TASJ0iff f K'. Excellent opportunity for advenes Financing" »n**lKre/er,',Yln men around 33 years ot ags. Must be e high sohool graduate. Good starting salary with car allow- aco funiisheS! A Vheraf of company benefits. Call or contact Mr Roeoka. Asscelatos Discount Corporation. 131 N. Saginaw. PK _ 3-0314.___________________ Averaging $158 Weekly If you are married. 33-18, hove a high eehool education and a dependable oar. let me determine It you quality tor one ot our local routes galas experience not goeej.a,r. w. Ally train. OR ....'“AFfitoTFfir----------- ! man over 11 naedqd Immediate-jjr tor a part-time Job. Coll Mr Penrod MA 4-3411. ACCOUNTANT rolS3 COfiRta pondence, cost work and general pMloa work, Engineering Interest* helpful. Write Box M. Pontiac Press giving agt. work and pov exptrlenoa. education and family iARBia^AHTl^yAWrotiP OR 3-53** [wiltieftor COLLECTION A0ENC\' PERSONNEL If you Ore presently employed and wane to make o change for the better. We need top producing collectors and salat personnel, we are expanding. ^Salary and coni- ments. Trl-Ccuntv Credit^fun-ee Inc. U 8-5880 cab drivIcrb" FfiLt fiSiY 3ft or older. 438 Orchard Lake ' tAh oRTVElt*. 35 OR OLtiKfi FE 3 0343 6TiT>r(58M*l'TI*H''Yl8irTtlft.Ai opportunity. 4100 par wtek draw aim." 4 to 'i p m.h,ft4 0ioi. if THIS PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1961L XINKTOfeMg Hip Wanted Male 6 Hip W«ntcd Fcmalo ? CAREER Major Ufa Insurance-MR bat opening tor a full time rep-reeentative Jn Pontiac area. Ho M «*%...___________________ —J mat employment, write P.O. Box »T Pontiac, Mich- —J adverfleed house-,.„.jta. For appointment, pbooa, jmpi I FOR ESTABLISHED route, 11 or, over, CoUlna Cl.ean-ers^MOWoodward, Rochester, OL .LSonftrda Orchard*231*N, Bqutrrai . - -’EX«BR1*HC*&»/ *0-0T¥~S AN wanted for toll, quality dry cleaning Sant- Only mos* interested in permanent position need apply. , Mutt be honeat and dependable. uMQ Wale. MA MOM, » MpRt INTEREST- 'MPNNKffilRRHPNRIINM ad In eorrCepondence. coat work, eeoeuattng and general office work than In engineering. Write Box Tf Pontiac prose giving aga, work and pay experience, educe-.. ~d family. I AM tOOKlNO FOR A MAN TO replace me. Can you qualify* Call rt MW M appointment, ' UPE lN8URANd* SALE8 IN CITY —ogee. M to 42. Salary, coqimle-elon, bonue. FE >6731. new 6fficeneed8men ex; nun owri have * oeorobs Wed. or- Thure. off ■ other Sunday, Ml Ml* I a ti. and»p. m. .... ,Jhr«lMrw9.JPi Apply at Big Boy Drive ls8oDixie Hwy HOUBEKMEFTNO. uv9 UOHT I. MI 4-4741. HOUSEKEEPING. BABT , to home In the country. Fatherless home. Room and boara, ill a week to atart. Woman with j child acceptable, Prefer eg* m to II. Mutt bo "*“• hut affectionate with children, am ont. e. Referencee. Write 111, ■mgaa *— LADY WANTS HOUSE-teeper and be companion to tMarRr lady. No laundrp. 2 In amlly. Stay in. 1 day * —*fc md every other- *“ ■ mmmmmm. 332- *241, after ». -- ■mature Woman to babysit , n e Tri roMPi.irrE haler staff, good commission and fringe hmews, P« 4-own qualified oil BURNER BFlTv. lee man with hand tools. Apply • to 10 a.m; Economy Oil Heat-m« co„ 1222 Dixie Hway, fown And country * FOOD COMPANY, INC WANTS 5 MEN ' Oakland and Macomb Counties i-a#r Call after ( pm CURL TO LIVE IN, 5 DAYS IN-cludlng weekends, child cara and housework. MI ‘ WAGES AS LOWVAS d$140 PER WEEK car. Mr. Avertll * If you do for famU personally, Call EE appointment. lit try earning for the ' General Staff Nurses I4.70fl-M.30* Licensed Practical Hip Wanted Female 7 Work Wanted Fcmalel,? y ; TOY CHEST TOP HOSTESS PREMIUMS i II nor cent' in free toys, or. rWltw to ten guest Amaelng "Party Hite Gift" TOP DEMONSTRATION TOP DEMONSTRATION AIDS Excellent company training Free color catalogs' THE TOY CHEST Deliver* — Collects — Servlets CALL PE S.4T2I______________________ wanteB waitress, must be neat, honest and experienced In dining and eooktall__seTvlee._/ l nt 2321 8. Tele- l/Wtat CARS FOR MAR research interviewing. Assignment to begin (mediately *1.50 an hour. Ho telling. Reply ■-j. , MAIL! TERVIEWINO SERVICE,) 346! Minnehaha Avenue, Mlaneapolii 0. Minnesota, .with a resume hi your gast^ experience, and your WOOL PRE8SER. MUST IeTex- 1 DAY IRONING. REFERENCES. Mrs. McCowas ~rt F14TI. 4 DESIRE V l wtHtTPR H)WHt'KNIM -?AOT':3fTW! HARD work. HOU8EWOHK $.75 HOUR, m6K« && &ii mm m “v " D Y " blHlRiS S' bAY WOf I Thursday*. I I ws JfYWNQ. : paActtcAL Huitsr available!! Building Service ^Wr home Free Setlmatee_.___FHA Terms Call JOE VALLELY How l-l ALTERATIONS AND MODERN-isatlon. Residential and commercial bale Cook Construction Co. OR 3-4621 Nttlc^ilPtwiisI* 27 ' / aerotHHds "" " KNAPP- SHOES ■ ■“* ■■ _lw*ggj YOUR BILLS Budget -Service, Inc. 18 W. Huron PM 4-0M1 . DOROTHY’S BEAUTY ------, . 500 N Perry Ffc 2-1244 " DOHbtHY'8 BEAUTY shop 468 w. Ferry PE 2-1244 GET OUT OF DEBT WITHOUT A LOAN!-- Regain peace of .mhid through our weekly payment Man. Protect your Job and endu. Avoid gftmtenmente and ropoa- ON FALIOUT BHKLT______ All types. For free estimate 1 Come In o’r Call foi A HOME APPOINTMENT City Adjustment Service FE 5-9281 132 W. Huron » Pontlec. Mich. OPPOSITE MAIN POST OFFICE Member of Pontlec Chamber of Commerce_______ Rent Apts- Furnished 37[ Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 _______—______.IT aHt. I ...._____end entrance. 1 child _ waloome. OtogeUvUle, PE t-l»21.1 ---------Norton. -^ll:^tlLT^O!p iidva, rffrintt." . nlebed. 22 Union. Phene 022-1042 4 ROcIs/AND BA'gi. jgARAOll. utIUtle* furnished. 415. Wes gas heat. ’ utllltla* furr1 ■TOdWomorc. FE HUM. __p« i-utt « ROOMS-AND" BATlCl ROOMS —‘ hath. —J 3 ROdMS AND BATH. *40 MONTH. OR 3-5154, OR 3-1*13, • rooms:- near senooi. oil $55 month. UL 2-2325. 1 DAINTY MAID __ SUPPLIES. 731 IlHjE. ___________ IHA-Y RIDES. klTCfafcN AVIAL- 3 ROOMS AND BATHTWEST SIDE, private entrance, couple only. FE ♦>>613 after 4 4 R66Ma" ANO SATH CPPER. ,ur* Rent Hojises Unfw^. dd Sett, BeMonahia. EM feSL -iSaittM HOWL _WUUk wkfc- ”-7rtett. Call “ Realty. Foe Rent Roeny- ■ EMPLOYED 0 E N T l R It AN, ■ Call Garden City tW-WQI._ On iBEDHOOif. NEWLY REDECO; tments. 6171 rated. Crescent Lake arei Hoep., garage. F 5;r6oms®D bath, full base-ment, near echools, FE 5-221S.— ROOM .TERRACE ON S- EDITH, LaggM^aag— ' tvenue, *«5, per 120 8. Edith; or g-BEDROOM H O U yard, gas heat,, M.. — per month. FE 4-31M. Eihtlll*, 2 BEtmOOkM^ NEWLY DECORAT- « ROOMS. ___ after j, _______ PROFESSIONAL OR E'lisiFuSS ufia wwsMp. OankM privtltge Must have referencee. Reply POi ROOM # t YR BE Hospital FE M402, , Rooms With Board 4.1 Seat I. 2 BATHS WILL FUR-'2-BEDROOM Pt,US( STUtHO" gas stove and r-trlgeraioi and hot water. Cluidrei SPICK AND ^PAN. relcome. lit weekly, lit 8. Met-Imae. FE 1-0*03 or OR 3-2251, 1 'ROOM-APARTMENT UTILITIES i furnished. Couple ' 1 High School. 51*2 Joan i from Waterford OL 2-6021. 412 pniensad. Apply Pontiac lAunary, graph Road. Mr. Metrlek, ,_.™ —, —dl John MY 3-112* or FE 2-3261, | ‘^ble ■firTn'ackT'rF'iliai. ALLjffiQT^NRYWORK. Lofg wiioHf’ SAFELY AND BH *•"”>*“* “A ».i«n* i . wlth oewiy released ivalld, light i. Cali attsi Free petlmatee. MA 5-I004. RMI CITY StDEWALES '' REPLAcEb. bV*M"biet"'tahiei«'' Cement work of all kinds. Free | simms. • estimates, Ouln^^Cnetruotion. j M1CH]GAN CREPTF I CUSTOM FALLOUT SHELTERS, j Help Wanted APPLIANCE SALES an with direct selling txperienc Position offers r e £iU,'. \u»i _____...___________I____™ COUNSELLORS^ Michigan Shelter Corrojatlon. m Pon,|gc state Bank Bldg. Call Jerry McKelvey. , 4831,2108. pE 9.0455 oWcReYe DRIVE, PATld. CALL Fontlec’e oldtht and largest budget >• FE 5*6447. / -> tMilinea Cnmninv. ' I* rt'S BEST 3 ROOMS AND BATH, COMPLETE-ly furnished. Steam heat, lights and gas furnished. Private entrance. Auburn Heights.* FE 3 ROOMS AND BATH,- SMALL CEMENT. WORK AT Floors, driveways, r‘ sen commlne. NA______ :»T work op all Rinds BEST. NOTICE 18 HEREBY OIVEn THAT estimates'. OR V-6T417 deal With builder, oarages u. additions, recreation rooms. R Auto'supply Co I VauBlekle Bid,., ^,,^3-5*56 ’ Mexican" 'Mutual Society whose premises are locateu • 2166 PoMlae Rd. has applied t< "•e Michigan Llquhr Control Com welcome, 106 Dresden 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatic beat — Pull basement WILL DECORATE ___________________ . $75 PER MONTH ,t last: DESIRABLE LOCiC pp 4.7(111 tloo on West side. Ne»r shopping • rJ~ ’ _ . . center on West Huron Street, Si 544 Best Blvd. W. et Valencia rooms and bath, gas heat. $65 3 BEDROOM. YEAR ROUND Dawaon 61 Butterfield. FE 2-54201 home, full basement, oil furnace. Or FE 3-7225. atove and refrlg. Lake privileges. EST FOR LESS - DAY, WEEK. I Call 662-2056 -----------«------ month Rms.. kitchenettes, bedrm. 3 BEDROOM. WK8T 8UBURBAN, apts. On Loon LUe. Motor Lodge. ■ full basement. 2 car garage. Call M84 Dixie Hwy., OR 44011. _ for further Information FK FIRST FLOOR, FRONT APART-' 6-6115. NICK AND CLEAN WITH HOW* privileges near Tel-Huron. wftl or .wtafeut meals. FE g-3332. REASONABLE. b6aRD OPTIOHilL 141 tl. Oakland Avenue. FE 3-4100. OENTPEMEN - CLEAN''r6c”“ born* style meels FE 3-0311, ROOM* AND. OR BOARh 'll 3 ROOMS. SECOND FLOOR. 4145 Oakland Aye. CUntonvlUe Road,_____________ COUNTRY APARTMENT, 3-BED- v.,„.v 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH AND room, big yard. SchoeP-hue line. R j ,blc ■ntranoe. PE 2-6686. OR 3-7610. No pets. FE 6-2828. ■ Oakland A 1 BATHS, aide, 666 per month. Vsluet, Realtor. 345 , OR 3-3634. mission for a club It 1-ROOM APARTMENT. 1 CHILD ; CLEAN LOWER 4 ROOMS. BATH 3~bEDROOM8, OIL FURNACE. OA-welcome, FE 3-1765. 1 —^ ~-> ——a »•* ........ rip and that It I -----"-mtri cens , £2L\. laurxiry facilities. 165 r not for th«m» < Nurses _________ r BE EX- SwaStoLattnfnf!' 54o 8 Telegraph j ^ Road ^ ^g,wlig______________ II. for rental store- Write to Pontiac Frees, Boa 61 03.*00 - 84.300 __ Career positions now open with Oakland County and Oerlatrles Hospital In Pontiac Ana. Pine opportunltiea for edyeueoment plus ]ob security Exeellent fringe ' benefits bicludlne paid vacations end sick leave, life and hoanltall- irn 82 to 63 arid up per bour. JSML. Experience mmat I FREE ^MA^ DN^lL; S5s*3c,p- ^ I _g.ri,;‘uo.?ygiw%Bu,oi : 3^ *^*mtSwdtBea)ty 1 ae*MA^S?je”2p” the Intent of the Liquor Control | 3 LOWER. NEAR OMC. Commission lojrant saldlleenee , t nei-hbor)lood pg. 1-455$. ' " After 6. 1% 6-f FOR SALE. USED BUILDING MA- ] ■sts-! terlal. lumber, -glass, bricks. Etc. | a 21“, *£. ! ^^^UlM*r•0,' D*“d I 3-ft5oM~-ir~poNTiftc' u'mmiea | r^t TmreCT ! riie^ awn-<^»rBW ' ThS""!BaW furn. 615 week, 1 child. MV 3-1145. luvino room, I bedroom. tSii »*be 2PROOM PRIVATE; NICE.* F® batii A garage. Brick .Flat—Heated Attractive four lamllv building am Aubu-- * o buy. 5400 Elisabeth September 30. 1041. I will not be : easnAnelhU fnr R ll V flrbtl Cfttl- traJted by aiiy'other than myself. Employment Agcncto »j j ^ EVELYN EDWARDS HOME. 6ARAOE. CABINETS. AD- Help Wanted Female 7 progrs'm.'oem Jca wave, use mnu "VOCATIONAL L Insurance-plans ---- COUNRELINO SERVICE' PM___________I ALL. MORE CASH for furniture and^sp^hancee. Bar- it Huroi CITY OF PONTIAC Clerk-typist I Salary »J,«5 High srhool gredutte. ^At g 1, Oakland County, 0 personnel. City Ball, 36 8. Perk, i, orgaalti ‘with the state : I’houc FEderal 4-0584 — SECRETARY 5iEk” FINISHER FOR CLEANINO nlant in Birmingham doing qual-aork^ Must he^ooU Steady CASHYOR FURNffURe AND AP- Karsoo i V.Pr °f U ' 4 ROOMS AND BATH 3385 DON ■ . ley St. OR 3-4830, , :« 4 and BATH, NltAR AIRPOl *tt*i to man and wlfa who will help . -----jctel with lawn and tardeo. OR 3-l»43. required. W Jper month, phone rooM8 UTILITIES. BASEMENT FE Midi or FE 5-6666. , ■ ' »11 fttriiace. *15 mo. Must lease f5* WATERFORD. 3 CLEAN. EM B-WSI. ‘IfJi'ii,.r‘.2PnS0?.!™' 14 ROOMS AND BATH. WILLIAMS ____,...frlgerator. no peM. *«. OB 3-4330 ; Ltke (r«.. cle,n. pE 4*613 after 1 ROOMS AND BATH. SMAiL! LAROC HEATED 2 BEDROOM | «, ^ - baby welcome, 123 Florence 1 apartment. »# a mq. sHrOOMS AND BATH NEAR OEN ROOMS; CHUDMN WELCOME j 5^ Sun. f« toapeeUro *TOj *<•“«* V h«‘ 3 OFFICES FOR RENT 4544.DIE l« Hwy. OR 3-1355_________ CHOICE LbCATIQN—ON TETeS graph Road. 456 square (■ I ** ______184 Mt. Clamant. ROOMS,. CLEAN. UFSTAIRsT private tiled bgth. back and front ________ r.—1-1., et mm DENTAL' SUITE USED bV'" OrT for 11 years, 4546 Dixie Highway. Drayton Plains. OR 3-1365. OFFICE SPAdE NEAR--WE3f~8iDi mopping centers, for rent or ease. Call Tom Bateman. Bate-.nan Realty. FE 4-0628 OFFICES cion TO THE NEW Court Home, FE 3-*614 PON-TEL CENTER — Alft-CONDI-tloned office with 'ample parking pHiSS: I Ml 6-8733 . <15 *■ INSTALLATION OF WOODPANEL- l§T US BUY. IT OR SELL IT FOR mg, floor tile, celling tile and you. OXFORD COMMUNITY ceramic floor and wall tile. FE AUCTION. OA»2681. ____ ' 5-0241 1 '...;________1_ WANTED TO ktlY HOUSEHOLD AC* 23-15 •|‘h N’EW- « K-P A IR i Zla? rol^MTa«.t Emolo“ I P.YESTROUOmNO^ FE 4-0.44 WL ---| ■“ Pontiac State Bent 3 ROOMS AND BATH. NEAR OEfT- j era! Hospital. Adults. FE 3-1436. 3 ROOM AND BATH APARTMENT., Attractive clean, completely fur- _______i asw- iiavuni n i — MODERN 5-ROOM APARTXfENT. Stov« and re/rlgeritor fv * 1 685 monthly Phont FE Call from 9 to 2 tnd 1 . Apply 103 Bloomfield Terra* H. Smith, FE 5-3321 5 rooms ; For Rent Miscellaneous 4 ".MODERN 5-JIOOM TERRACE ■PHHRMK' Bave a ; SALnLADV UANAOEH dUKluot^toy^^arly. FE 6-6361. j {or new Ladles’ ^Mrnlty^o^d Bldg. FE 6-0231. Ik I SEPTIC, SYSTEM. FE 4-0444 TERKACK, ,----- jfrlgerator. i 5-ROOM E. Blvd. FE| drlvewaj quire — OUSE, OAR A Oil. | - - Fairmont In-. et II Falrenont. ] 6 HEAT. 463 RAB- j Wanted Miscellaneous 30 ‘ CITY OF PONTIAC Clerk Wteno I. Salary 63.« High eehool graduate; At least years experience In office »r typing speed 50 W»M 1 hand spe I Apply in person 2nd. 10 » m -3 p.MM between Cunningham t Fenny Farmer Candy Store. Instructions -10 Business Service IS OFFICE FURN IT UR* AND BU8I- ^ 1 nets equipment Forbee printing — Sfftct gupply m 6-3010. „„ ------W , —a mooth^call OR 3-8 - , furnished, til Oneida. *160 month g ROOMS. BATH. STOVE, RKFRIO-*” - - uulitlee furn. FE 5-676S.! Wallpaper Steamer Floor sanders, polishers, h a r Modin, fornano v-“-— litfUtlaa Inch included . ridge, FE 4*Jl ». Ward ♦*1561.___ Huroi speed 60 WPM. AopW Per-sonnet. City Hail. » ». Parke ; SAlV-nmM #k6 PrWe, i The Pontiac Press issifietl Departim’ Work Wanted Male 11 i m* * Office supply Co,,17 W. ---------- Lawrence at. Fhpnc FB 2-6135. ■ A WALL WASKINO CARPET. BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS .. ...ku. -l.-..ev I Wall and windows. Reasonable. FE 3-163) Ders. 1 4 4450. 6 rlclnlty Mt ■ pm cSfiHShc' 3®**.....Hxijp.""#!^ , train. 4*4 WT Huron. . ; COSMBTICSAUMIWOIUN., EXPER- IS ADblNO To Its Staff 460 K-’rike. FE 3-1065. jgSOKFlTAi™>eR. 0.so vo | 3 30. 4 or 6 dayt a week Es-1 MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS; 25-10 yean of age . - High School Graduate lion. MI 4-500* __ ’■ g'g'Ktft(IHCed 'waRKBSsH 1 wented Apply In pereon II em or *10 nm Spilt Whitt girls . • tl a m.4 to * w.m. «■ * p m ’ •“ - - - " 3 Mill Tavern. Weter- • pin I uk< Ittch and d \UM • people tde for detail bem on epelllng dsble I---------Ut ■ BASEMENT WATER FroSfInO ^|t/.%Jnt.n.,on;.pmr|, Oijr A-l CARPENTER WORK ; ,[3*. Ml g-ltlO_______ i small Jobe" a* Specially 1 ELECTRICAL CoHfHiCYOR 1 FE or FB 5 2011 needs electrics! work, any type. ., —tssS-2-.*,'* Free estimates. 0A 0-21*2. | SS liitehSVbS i fcLEcYtetc MoYOk ’isgViBm I 1 ?TT FHA lenne Fhooe M2-l»10..| Pairing end rewinding. 211 E. PUte ' ® hfg’^EJd H«!p*n?or“ WSi | HOTWbfr-VRlRlPoOL ' AN D i j - -------18atm?-I M____... WmmtmA *1 4 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE MODERN money wsntw__________and batti. on bus line. FE 4-1615.! apartment. ‘ WANTED *20.000 FOR 3 YEARB. 1 * pff**W|,bty)01iSL'..^T*S!5Sf' 4-300 **” ■')aby* commerclli i Y rile Poatls 5 ROOM TERRA C E g ROOMS. 1013 BOSTON. HURON ; apartment, stove, refrigerator. Gardens First and last month i 3100. 332* Jsmee K Blvd., FI rent In advance, *11 mo. Inquire KM 2-1110. For Sale Houses 40 4-3000 Adults . 13 Ptnegrovc. 5 ROOM TERRACE | TROOM DUPLEX IN KEBOO. OA8 stove, refr geretor heat. <00. FE 3-7177____, I Ittnee K Blvd. FE: j.roomt HOUrfiTcLEAN. ELEC- , trie »tove (urnlshtd. Cl»rk»too t .113. Wanted to Rent 32 RENTAL SERVICE Tenants waiting. Call R. J. Vail Realtor,- 345 Oakland Avenue. ROOMS. BATH. NEAT. NEAR I town. FB 1-7503. | ROOMS, 2ND rt6oR. NEAR; NEWLY DECORATED. 3 ROOMS. Utilities, stove. OR 3-7173. UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES Beautiful modern 3 room apartment and tile bath. Ail electric (ROOM HOUSE. 3 KITCHENS, full basesnent, gee hast. 10 N. ! Roeolawn. 6O-1606 2-BEDROOM 1001, children. 73 Washington. st, 3 LAROt ROOMS AND BATH, nmir II lefewrne^^^m --- , , ROOMS AND BATH. UPPER. YOUNG MINUTfeR. WIFE AND 1 Private entrance. FKv 4-467*. ^ ZinSL°6 rMOMB-AND-Mfngfim | heat. Auto, laundry facilities, water softener, storage locker. Heat, t hot water and drape* furnished.: Near ahopplng center*. Must ate; to appreciate. Lake Lynn Apts..*. 7600 Cooley Lake Rd 3-2475 { ♦00* lot. good neighborhood’ Daly 97.600. term*. Peterson Real Estate Newly decorated. 67* (2ft deposit required. K. stead. 1*2 East Huron. PB 4-83*4. MY 3-1681 TO_______________ .Dependable transportation s Is a splendid opportunity start one of the roost mterr lug and rvwerdlnf bualnese . pump well .repair^service, 241 share Living Quartert 33 4 ROOMS. AhULTg ONLV. MEAT, Ptnegr i. See after • p.m 4 ROOMS OROUND FLOOR. 37! experienced weekend wait rvaa. prefer over 10 veers of a* Phone OR 3-4621 before 12 Aow nvlroi i cABisif Kite Hens a epeelalty^FE 4-6000 ______ : OOOD _CARFENTKr _ N E~E D 8 CM 3-3410 4 AND 3 LARGE 'woman for Oakland County with ^tnjte’ben 1-6. rt 48601 .to 4:30 p» Uk Mg ^rWo'y^A kV j ^.8nI.yMgK„ B^^gD:! " 0™ *V^^!:^j Bookke«ping ft Taxes 16 L 7&ZI' » I«iDRooMsr-pR.- ' lY____ ... _.I_. lakeside ranch homo with work-1 v,t,. g #hlld. rt ’“* uons>«« ALL TAXIS Ing mother and high school girl.. -i „ _ _ _ ____ FE 6-2036 private bath, garage. 3 TVs. yard ■ 6-ROOM lork. Fries* right. FB 68228 - --- to putMr ln re„0nabl*. Hcpli n------In Udil—-------------------- NEAR TEL-HURON floor, plus -tlllU*! Ith, i ro u n d: nt and eaiaee , . ssii- - usiiiurs surwshed, ,8100 per; month, call OR 3.71*3 for *p- TENNVSON , NMH______6 bath, in r‘— lentlal neighborhood, -—“■id. Automatic ) grad* and hi $78 per month. Referent I quired. K. O. Henfpetoad. Rea... 102 E Huron, FE 4-6364. After ~ FE 2-1436. BOOMS CHIL. ORCHARD COUR1 a>ARTMENT8 e3M RicfiiOi''DR:-SRt6WdN: » 3-5406^ l^and 3 bedrms Air condltroned^, rtrMMl teiT.t U.8 M. 3 bed- Apt~ * IRDINO 3 BEDROOM. NORTHsfo down, 66.800 FE 6-6734 3-FAMILT INCOME. N6RT No brokers. FE 6-3111. . 3-BEDROOM HOMES BASEMENT garage, large lots. Rental options considered. 813.800 to jhMOO... Nelson Bulldlng Co,, OR J-llOl. i 3 bedro6m. it* BAthav niAiX down payment. OR >813*. .. ... . « - ro6m BUNdAioir. older . fin* west eld* location a Charles Burn* II I. win Mcfc f&fiT) -WoIET-HOuiCif an. DressmakiiiR, TBilorlng 17 Fohiii _________ .ro S ■* .CO....O blind* cleaned In my --------------—'—- WOMAN WILL S _ Henry home, FB 68001.__________ALTERATIONS DONE IN MY with older couplet Catholic “cilWiT- LIOHT HAULING AND TRACTOR home Call 333-1304 ____ _ . _,^“^B^aniWMaW7lAa R^NT RRTIE FOR BOARDING T« ara.,—~ irSTFoBI | 6-ROOHs. rf^AR^HER~I65Y- ROCHESTER-UPPER. I BEDRO- - ^ HY OWNER LI 0-6173 for i 1 DRiwaMAiino tailorTno AL terattOM r ~ fij| Mgtt f erred. MA | AND 3 ROOMS. SCHNKIDKhT 1 MA 4-1301, Kvea. MA 4-____ B^VlU lFICW4 60S3 YOUW6 dlRL WAf^TS* OWL TO i 6 ROOMS AWb^I^iC^iHUVATE uii^i5n*fT *‘»ars apartment and eapenaes entrance W. side, first flootv Part* ANn L*. Phan* 462-2463 after 5 30.______ i ly furnished. 4 rooms and bath -BEDROOM AND BAAF. ~ Pern. Rem or lease _____________363-0662 CORY 4 ROOMS AMb RATH. ------- --- >48- $60 Palm Villa Apts , A3 NEW. 2-BCDROOM HOMli, Oil. - furnace, garage. 166 per mo. OR Rent Houses Furnished 39 _ ........, - --------—-—- I COLORED-LARGE HOUSE SUIT- 667 Mo.ll'! f Bedrooms w w Rote Homes or 38021 3-BEDROOM RAfcCH. YEAR 6lD ract Cs Asphalt Paving DRIVEWAYS ASPHALTED AND Fencing_____ ANCHOR FENCES Plastering Service SA-u^Vattkrt^oo1 ' [ 2*3 Auburn Ave rt »->»H ,8~FLAOTKI j{W(,l(.gqg||)ntMit -— S! , PE 4-2007. OR Boils FINAL CLOSE-OUT Heathtg-Servicr- . FURNACES CLEANED ! CONTRA CTOR S BOUIFMENT Home-owner's tools. Jftckeon. *1 __W. Monualm. FE~ 6-6340 _ Sewer Contractor* CO&PLBTK LAWN wGht, CZIT-den plowing, finished trading and lop soil. FB 3 0003. irae&Airoa:—gwcnssEiRr yers sailing. Call Res dgc FE 4-3641 10*0 W Huron. CASH ir'youy land eontrnet. eoultlet morieaees Don’t lose that roc. small morigagas available. > cost tor estimate. Call 4*3-1*20 d ask for Ted MoCullougb. ARHO REALTY 3-BEDiROOM. FIREPLACE BC0?K ' from lake, <66 EM 3-2261 __ 2-BEDROOM HOME. OIL Hfc'AT Burnished Cell MY 3-3461 ul jjelT |2 - bedroom ' Modern. y*ar. -Yff —1I .n.M enttae* EM 1.1*5* SEWERS. SEPTIC TANEB ANI drilng And si Em 3- 21*4 Moving and Trucking 22 A-l MOVING SERVICE CASH Land ConlwlAjmmo 345 Osklinu AVI ________ CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS H Cam Lako Road. Keogo Hat____ CLBAN 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 23* ». Marshall. FE 484*3_____■ ,Wi COUPLE. PRSVATE BATH AND pro antranoo. rt *8*47. I or FOR oSKSbID ■OMMERCE LAKE. 2-REDROOM fireplace, full batament 3 mile* from Walled Lake Ideal for couple. *76 month, C*U MArkM rottage. EM 3-4*6*.__’ - FOR"' COLORED 3 BEDROOMS, NOVEMBER Lares home on Orchard Lake Av- through March. ORJ^tlie,_____ roue. ---------- ”” | " 3 ROOMS AND BAtH. 616 A WEEK. ---- Hear- 0*11 a -1an. FE 6827t or -fc FE 6-23*7.__________________j Lako. ttov# and rsirigerstor 3 - BEDROOM MODERN. "COM- nlahed- *73-7»1t................... fortably furnished. Largo sun-;MODERN HOUSE. RESPONSIBLE ---------.- —vrated, aluminum couple. (13* lor 6 months. — nd storms. Lake! «-«4*3 after * p.m FE g-6676 MODEL k0ME FOR SALE Situated on v. acre lot. NTceUf »eat ftaalng ...... 1—Best of AU • one block from the achool. d for family with emotT ohR- monthly. EM 3-33*3 apartmqnt. "TIES- FOR "REST OR LEASE. 4-BED- t brick, oil heal^i Including Wise and Insurance’ immediate po««etnlon Hurry on one Qlorab Building. PS FOR RENT 3 r or Y 3-0058 Tru-Ruiiic Cabti ‘ ORcn nT’OUR T * 3 BEDROOM ON l > Pierce School* in Waterford Twp 11 1110_per_month Phone FE *•**» * t ROOMS. basEment, oas heat ON AI -1 - HO A I I’AIT. A. YOl’NG OPEN 1 DAYS A W D““ H0(^ . L' l.andscapInK LAWN’ SERVICE BLACK fill dirt, tleneral clean-up - tilling. Weed cutting. Bod FertUwtni lawp SjjA Stamps for Collectors STAMPS ON APPROVAL APARTMENTS l briti m furnished FE • ••»«• Pt F ASA NT 1.AROk* ROOM t ADY only FC 5-6565 MMAl t. APARTMENT PRIVATF .1 RCX>M8 ’ AND PATH i AND BATH SEK TO AP>RE* 765 St < ADULTR NEW 3 BEDROOM Creacenf Lake area. .161 lllghgate rr 6-1635 M o D r R N* 6-RObM TERR A('F m* OR 3-2134.____________ $J?A .\IOa\Tf I with 3 I *1 FE 6-8512. | Bo * 4004 Stencils 4 PINTER'S 1370 N OFDYEE RD._ FE 4 OfM — REbUCKl) -Rfjat*. Motor* ami Dock* CTN*.wnLli*Ml<3,.ri.10 YOUH EVINRUDE DEALKn Harrington Boat Works 1666 S. Telegraph Hd V«>J «til3 1X6 PINE ROOF BOARDS 6c Ito 1X2 FURRtNO NTRIPK 2'ke lln. l!J.ftey>«ii. c ur iT | ^ag.'.agrr 48 Fee Bonrd «»H >• 4«lv'k Jlardboard fttDI — 4s6s1. tlr Flvwood $2 it PONTIAC LUMBIiR CO. .Hcljhls HAULING AND RUBBISH 62 load, anytime FE_40M4_____ ------; Li5HT'HA«jLtNa AND tSTlNIWW , BOAT NUMBERS ' LTSit’ /?nd' heavy Fruckino" 6160 S' Rubbish, 1111 dirt, trad— —■1 |t Bt FE ! _5 «B63___ ! STUDIO APARTMENT NEAR DA■ 1 ROOMS ANt IODERN 1 BEDROOM AT PON llaa Lake. 0323 Gala Read _ L MODERN flifDROOM AT PON Only 6.1.66*. Law down paym't. j $40 A MONTH 6 room rebecs, jew^furoaee a * l i.ATTI I Y RCAI.TV MADE-TDORDER JftEl _ I Tail Television, Radio and Hi-Fi Service I .... FE 38603. UNWANTED ARTICLES PICKED ' •■•' (ua PromM earvlca - any hone FE 68*36._____ Wanted Real estate 36 Fully modern. - Room 26 s lionet. Referei living In other 40., Faculties apt "^aU row CASH AND CARRY I Oakland Ava. FE 4 C4 I’ ECGNOMYllTtffts ei BuMdlng ModernlzaMon A 1 ADDITIONS, FALL-OUT SHICL a.m. tt-.eea.sa B ml win* Olftfft. C0»’ MICK!’Y STRAKA TV SERVICE ___DAY OR EVES. FE 6-1206 Tree Trluuwing.. Service Painting ft Decorating 2.11 1ST CLAES PAINTINO PAPER j us. fstep.___ _________ INTINO AND DFCORAT- vermr. m«n H»ft» F«k# me. ! 3-1396 ALT. CASH I OR PH A BQIUTIES ^ dtpohlt suitable for 2 professional tirlt. *26 wk or 0160 mo FE 6-3700 ACE TREE SERVICE STUMP REMOVAL 4 removal, trimming 0< 12-2010 or FE t tfii ■ I PAINTING ANK'bframT In* Free esllmalet 6*2-3471 TaDV INTERIOR DECORATOR WICEERSHAM '. Me pi* MAylalr _l " * i.isfmos colored' WXST BIDX i ROOMA AND flAlil cate FB 6-2432 After 5 FE « SERVICE HnTAkCAiN LIST WITH US FOR SALE OR : TRADE WE CAN OKT YOU CASH ON AN FHA OR til BAIT JUST 1’IIONK F* 3-1866 AND 1 ET US 1MON OUT YOUR REAL 1 Dance Instruction PRIVATE. SEMI. flMAU. CLAMI Mr* 8*lty mnlth. Tf >81*6. | hressinskjnKi Tailoring .TERATIONS. ALL AljTE Waterford I.utnber 3976 Airport" lid; ; ^OR 3-1102 Pivwood I EXMnirTREitT TREE 8ERVlCE.~rRe:k ! 1 N T E li 1 OR AND °-ia&r i dW‘e.r1#p"i huron PI >rw4 Didtrihutnr (if nCr»TI X TCf >crvicf ■ rNTERlOR AND BXTERIOR J —-1-r—r—1 gg \}y^T Ant .. Tf^our bW. pk * minting will uft(*Vtug Fffr Rent Apts, hurnished )7ft N CSf* FB 1-U4JH i ** mis* ttvr K.tnnn »nru i * ‘ RPBCIAL THWnBoNTff “ I g 6 white fir board* 600 ft or morft 3MK1 ft 3 a 10 • 160 ft J x 13* It® ft- AIK TOUT I.UMBKK AND SUrTI.Y CO. Kent Apts. Unfurnished .IK , lroom Efficiency r,( : nm* rr BEDROOMS PARTLY FUR- _ __ .............. . TfcRIOR FE 686*2 or ok 2-2000 < ieneral Tree Service Anv eteo Job - Try' our bid. FK p, 2 *640. FKjt.3028 _________it, TRIMMfNo'OR REMOVAL. VERY I PAINTING "aSD DECOR AffS6 t AND 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH S 'cVnentry. V I__R*»S _Ch*ap M»-33( i*~IND 'PAFERHANOINt oe heated imtlitH'* An^ fee* « Pike. FE 1*001 LAKE fir? Fi.oolt. lar61s 3 rooMs BevestrouKhlng ROOF' DRAINAGE. INST AT .l.Kp and replacso, all lyP-L Bxciivatliig till Hlghl* Nursing Homes Trucks to Rent W TOnTRUa«!s_- TRA^T^RS***^** DRYDF.N REST HOME ir nursing cars.’ Rota, ret*}, 0 Mala. Drydgn. Phona Swift Floor Sending Dump Trucks—Semi-Trailer* Pontine Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 726 a. WOODWARD FB 4-0461 FK 4.1442 Open Dally Including Sunday _ FfRfnhc 6if 4 r56H» KlbblH W ‘ mdulte. 11) 154 JudMoti FB'SiSHobM tfrnnfcncY~a. a-RKDROOM UPPER P AND 3 MDRObjl I ROOMS. PRIVATE RATH AND -fin™.-------------- igTjSsfa-aiiirwnffr pT TTT pi js!J5P!5L.“ SKki^N.^Mn TV' tg%SS. *J dUILU VfSS: i ,« aSali,l^t\.i|,XSi.es.. ^ V.ur plan, ar cure ALACK BBAULii. viuin 1 Schoolcraft School. Yourt a4. QR Mill, 3B|Tfwo5B »63l' CON’tAlNINO electron tubes. Reward. Pit. OR tw*M iiioDmirt Jhg. FB 3-5W. (ON CHAl.K HOUSE FAINT . I».» .NTKRIOR LATEX. ...... 63 JJ iNTEBlOB ENAMEL . __ .63 J* AmSOTfDflffi, _FB 444360 166* Ol’DYKI RD. tOMAS UPHOL8TKR1NU 21 NORTH PERRY BT. FE 5 8888 iAli,iT'-ciIit^M''"tiin»6lOT’*M ■ - *•— Conley Lake Road VI 'Tn D^p6oi37~iFRW ate " en ■ iranee and bath, 111 N, Telegraph “RcSomsT ist "rLpiyitr”’ NEAii vrs . vi.A i Fisher. Suitable for 1 or I men, .-..■Y ». OB 3-6660, pgr LOST* "ik^TTfd81iT_RK AOIJ. fniftSBlAND lAVk. I.bvitfil. I ■ 'af*' | Adulls. FB 616M. 16* 8. Hoepltal ■ Reward. .. .» ....... CSiOMR dkTWflrVV ciLMSw. I r* 6-1)161. , ; D58T nlrS *Tc14 "' !51n m i.ii K a! ing eld. Vicinity nf Royal end i j Walled lake MA 4-4M3 _ end Hear. Thureday.JfE 6-42*3. * LOST; BHUTANY Filip 6 MONTHS l Ti56KrrTfilVXfii! 4aTA an"B. FK 4 6236 180 E Huron FK 6- iJtooMS. DTO.TfifffimNisHEi) I ehlld weleoeae, FB 4-6H6.* 3-ROOir—^ EiTCHENAND Freshly deeoreted. Rest hi Srpftratfd bad root fftoilltlt* — Cnildm Sonool Mir « Ai It 6-6933 SLATER’S ir iT'odrrK ~2 bISRoom avB ’ ZundJy 1-1 '.°"l denme - HlC«TV FunlTlsViED MODERN F; * as 660; bedroom home In Union Lake 1 4 mlty EM 3-1216 after < pm. pON'fTAc-T'jjjjmr4 I*ri~ ■ni.hed. pay. owe Art Meyer ' Bum Me Nab ,; BY”16 per week Pg 6-3643_________ f AftlBTiWrff. t/rato. IRW.lKlitfT oWRIr r~no&m. I rafrtg.. t»nd utll. Ut 3-3656 * bath. 5 atrel 6096 “ " ' 3 »ud iv» SfWj per muuth Hefei ,DalI Mr ». Near »< ovner. 3 Bi»i«5riince >me with full basement and; game. beach privilege*. Oai heat. Has l" BA T H R K FHKL It's the Eeoi •t Dial FS Id i-BEDROtiM HOMES Vl| *r HUB STOPj pleasant tguiwr I ..■l.hhArlioAd lease t* right tell-! ’S?!---.™-ne .... h tiall Holly [OeNTLEAL^ tnolls PE 4.0*3* . ' OWNER. 24 ACHES 6 ROOMS ... and gerate. Or will wll and ‘aege lot 3 miles , of Pontiac Secluded neigh ■ )d. Phone 333-0***, aftel 1-fUI. NICE r jlorE6“1I*"«AI»9Rr TWENTY , 5 MODELS Open for Your Inspection _"i’jK" FEATURING: I * OPEN SUNDAY I 3 \ll Brick Jvsiei ii .1 and 4 liedn jAttractivc 2-Car Garages I'nll Basement $24,900 |l'; and 21 j Ceramic Baths Including.. ' I m0^OVed Lot KYiTr.ition Booin'- KS-iiVW !x.............. JloWARDI |ARRO REALTY 514,1 l ass-KI./ahetli INkM. OPEN 7 HQiSTovEks1 . C;ul u )13,500. Tame. . Elizabeth Lake Estates Overlooking Golf course, 1-bedroom newly decorated bungalow. CaipatM uvmg ram and dining all, aaram. lo bath, kitchen lanta, Tim* ken oil Mat, water aofton-ar, awnings, paved drive, ati'd garage. Anchor fanned lot. *O.M. Terms. Williams Lake Front v Spacious living ait Ms best. 3 bedrooms, full basement, fireplace, its baths, rec. room itxtt, Mar ati’d garage. meludes carpeting and. drapes. All copper plumbing, oil hoot, 3-way water system, geniter badroam 15*17, Loads of closet apaaa. Landscaped lot. sand Mach, OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 Silvsr Lake treat, e-room ?rifunm with buUt-lns. 3-way fire, place in nvtng room, boautl- Sutww sr%s& ■ r. Oil " ’ *— -*- |gj --- from lal- Lake Heal a Blvd to - verhUI R mt WILL TRASH ANNETT INC Realtors 3$ B. Huron at. Open Evening*- Bl* Bi excellent condition • lovely IT firing reI dream kitchen with built-in appliance*, one and one-halt bath*. dandjr basement gas heat, attached two-car I rage. 11« X 1W lpt. P»»^ BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP BRICK RANCH WILL TRADE Ah unuftuul'y «* to Third Street, 'turn right W block "OPEN Sunday 2 to 5 571 E; Mansfield l-bedroom bungalow, with Hill Ur-Ins room. till kitchen, full basement who cas heat, neat a# 3k"tt rCri^a and 43.74# win handle. DIEBC-TtONg: Parry t* Jerirn. left jo Mensfleld. turn rt«M H block IVAN'W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 mjajo2ltn cor ma5S»^u5 For Snlf Houses 221 CHIPPEWA Open flundiy 3-5 #»OTU)gtO. gElg ...... m.SIS $r»$S8; lot. Oaraaa.^hlS want side tram lc W excellent condition. Nee bus line.. raved etrtet. Imme fw Silo Lake Property 51 Sato Resort Property 82 IOMBINB BUSINESS WITH A very lovely Autumn weekend on Maonatoulm Maura end look at our nauiotud cottage sltes on ggRTggra. a Cash or Terms. WiHW, deal" dUr mnrriNO o-room jiqum, 7 lit*, compute)? fur* 1^ LOT, 110X133, LAKH PR1VILEOE8, lot. of trees. Call 334-0050/ iVilboeb. Pared road ______l aiocv Lotu._________y... Ueiiee. OH 3-UOoafter 130, CRB HOME ilTB. MOST DE-slrabla location with cinder block foundation for 3S«3f ranch borne. Prtead at % real value, ruil J!2.r...,ulek " sites available. HI-HILL VILLAGE Choice Building Sites Estate steed hilltop parcels o paved roads with excellent draii age. Low aa kUbO with 4111 d I LOT IN PKRRY ACRE8 Btislnest Oppoetaiilttos 59 A TWIN wmu HULK ROUTE - ness, .sails - 13304' -‘-*^*- 1- highway, good building and lure*, gee Joint,. tease or .our-, chase building, plenty ot parsing Brewer Real, Estate*' is**™./- gggi MAJOR PRODUCER OP, asst-HOMES aHAS OPEN- Ti8INa'AtoMTAl^^R08PECT MATERIAL. Aim FULL BACK- PRESS. WOKAO. dROCBR^i1 8T0R* NORTO A^D Balt of Lapaor, 40«M building, stock and equipment on a 50x150 corner lot, all for 413,000, terms. Owner retiring., - , . *; . EAST HOWARD ST. — 14 R. brick school building, basement, gas heat, could be used as a church, lodge, union hall. mo. 143x150 corner lot, fur further < details call r» c-3000, B. c. Hitter, Real Estate, 3340 Elisabeth Lake Road. ■ Beer- Store oeated in good holxhbortraod on main highway, axooumit building and aqulpaiant, gat heat, plenty of parking space, less# or buy tho building. Brewer Real Estate JOSEPH F. REI8Z, SALES MOR. tWMiil ■ . Bvoi.FE ~ DIXIE CREAM DONUT SHOP, BY owner, low down payment. Rene. Oood business lor husband and FOR COLORED „ Tavern and grill Detroit. M.-000; 13,000 down. Nice equipment — Good clientele. STATEWIDE Real Batata Service Of Ponllao B. D. CHAFES, REALTOR rill A TELEORAPH PE 4A131 FOR toLH BEAUTY SHOP. GOOD location, 33t Main, Rochester, OOOD ttouo STORE-W)UTHKRN ■ Mlehlgan—Veteran—health - sons, win gngg|^Jk||||J Pontine Prase Box « — HARDWARE — SMALL TOWN. x 377, Orand desira- Pontlac Press Baa 0 «d:WACL' WATHIno tor sale FE 0^430. STATIONS FOR LEASE OOOD POTENTIAL. Please call b tw»»n l t m And A nm. CARNIVAL Bjr Dirk Tnrtter Sato HtwiihoMDoodi 65 . t«5. Hlghcbalr, 55- Harrtk’a, F* T3ri" 'wringer type wnan- m>; .. stove.’omggjrak, T* 3-W. iSgCgagt!^ Company. FE > 0111^ . LMOPr NEW .BED C--— box spring, Innersprlng mattress. 5 formal! alge 30Vb 3S — 'Another reason I can’t run this house like you run your office ig that I can’t fire certain people!" 61 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO ““"*w «•» HOUSEHOLD0'GOODS a as m&i “FRIENDLY SERVICE" ’ Credit Advisors 61A to Oet Out of Saw. toe Financial Advisers, Inc. 3tb g. SAOINAW_____FE 3-7053 Mortgage Loans 62 Voss & Buckner.InC. Ildg. FE 44733 UdlSt W. oot frontage. No apprala-. D. Ch »rle s. Equitable in BarvSra, ltlTS. Tala- money available rio# To pay off your bills, land oon-trxcf or mortgage. Also, to lm-prove your Dome end lower your monthly payment*. You must hho*;'.6s.M,ntsiulwn«oo.u.r or Wm. Bendvroff at FE I-4M3. For Sato Acreage 55 5 ACRES West of Pentlao, t-room raneber. “-** ------* reereatlon room. nd ranee. Add)-wanted. 331,000 bullLtn oven i C. Ridgeway BROKER IK 3-7001 3M W. Walton Blvd $800 an Acre ’*r" 10 seres adjoins Stale land. Com merte area, will dlvtda. FLATTLEY REALTY 0331 Commerce ltd MMII IDEAL FOR »» Ily or oavpi home ell on or ft living r o 01 tuning room, kltenen, 3 bedr™..,, — - shaded lot. Bsck yard S±f. !l t Ird »«.M0 $1.- GeL'S No .Money Down LARGE FAMILY WEST SUBURBAN HOME. 4-ltsrt-room pleeeant living room, kitchen with huge dining Area, Full basement, finished reo room. Ur*e*e**7 with natural burning fire-place. Attached IMt-car aerate on ftovely lots Priced «l >13,600 About 4M0 closing costs and 444 per mo. Including Cages and htsur- APPROXIMATELY M«« wSrSsiTO room bung*low wllh room for possible third. Plecjant en!l/ulir<^ment^?e»irj|c-bufldlngl>,Pul*l’i'rioar 410,600. BUNGALOW i«n P Ock floors, p cs-l wall*. Large utmu i. Oil heat %car gm Y O’NEIL, Realtor il-U-Way JOHNSON 31 YEARS OP SERVICE Open Sunday 2 - 5 Tilt house east nearly 441.000 ,oi ] yp*ra im Ownmr moved CaUfornlft. w‘“ “ “ For Sato Farms^ . Webster Oeod bssement, barn and 1U0. (3) 3-bedroom and hath homes, flowing well. Beautiful tree* mid lawn. 13 miles to Pontlsc. Exeel- 80 Acres ... », l\k baths. Landaci on Orchard Lake ] from Oats Lake. •mat profitably “ basis. Sale pnb« mw*«u«b *>*• equipment and furntshlnfs. All good In quality and condition. This is an esUblishad operattn* buijtnrss. Price »16,750. About ATJftO down will handle. A fold mine (or a family. Shown by special appointment. BATEMAN REALTY FE 4-0528 FE 8-7161 171 g.JTBLBORAPH OPEN EYES. •H6%T~0R5ERd . Drive In restuurenl In ihv Ink* area. Excellent location with op-portunity to buy property loo. Only 16.000 dn. MICHIGAN BUSINESS-SALES CORPORATION 1573 TELEGRAPH RD FE 4-1411 Open ’Ml 4 Evoe. * VARIEtY *f3RE. aflXOM, 40CH. Small inventory. Schneider. MA 4-1303. Eve MLA 4-3865. INVESTIGATE THE OPPORTUNITIES I______________________ In^RetaUIng. own yoar^own ^busL Jfa COMPRESSOR UNIT FOR national concern. For Information { _____ SEWS* V4KvSr'Sj! 1 LOT ON 8TERUNO. sdlLL OR trade for lat« model car. UL 2.1661. ■SVNpX OIL_,BURWR MOTOR Swaps l-REDROOM HOME »WAF FOB Income. PE 3-4471. ■ yBEDROOM HOME, COMPLETE-ly carpeted, tile batement. WIU •wap tor amaller bom*, or late model ear. OL 3-7111______ 4 IttEDROOii >ARM U66ek trailer, oar or land contract aa close in school, will laJts nouse- r what have ! 11X1 PICTURE WINDOW. 4 K Sato Household Goods 65 5 BOOMB OF UNUSUALLY > furniture Including family r - t bedrooms, will sell by room. Most see to apprecl FE 3-307A__________________ I 'YEAR CRIBS, .BRAND NEW/ 413.0* up. Pearson’s Furniture, al Orchard Lake Ave. a * I3 POAM BACKED RUGW. . 414.14, alee twaada and Annin-stars. Rug pads 44.41, Pearson's Pnrnltura. 43 Orchard Lake Ava. MC3 RUOS .................... 31.31 ASPHALT TILE. BA. ........ 04e unit d^ifisHif. i wnmerite -*nr. Double doors, freen irtmenty >150. OR 3-3374. rttor-'-i. FE 44043i 17" Munta .......... at" Olympia ......... 31” HtonC Emerson ... IT” OE Portable ..... 31’’ Motorola lowboy v 8J St GS-S ■ & 00 seu to choooo from WE TAKE TRADES OPEN ( TO J Walton TV FE *-3347 414 B- Walton, comer of Joalyn 70 SQUARE YARDS NEW GRAY -*■ -*--il WUton carpeting. FE all wg>ol WUtoi a-1033.1 *3.41 FlSrUENTl dallnquant accou . SINOER SEWINO MA-HM fa* beautiful nanmnmMnto makea button bolea. hema, tie. Ntw con. of 133.08. call Capital ter. FE 4-0407. wood con lealgna. b met halt KELVINATOR RlgPRIOKR; ---------•“ »e 4-3050. condition. 440. APPLIANCES. CARFE77NO. 8EC- i raaioa ana mba?c«ienl with gae heat, ftneod yard, II,#7* with only glTI down. Wt art an approved VA sales brokar. Many rapaeeaeellons to ahpaec from, cell PE 4-3000,1 C. Hiller, Real istala, 1M0 BH.a-bath take Ra ' wn EAST SIDfi HI basement, a 4 street, imn raw price, t r Iraq*. MODEL OPEN DAfLY AND' SUN. 1-7 PM IN The HEART of White Lake Tiwnitop. ] bedrooms, carport, hardwood floors and- forced air furnace, Prlcee ranee from 17.-•00 to lia.ooo, Model shown Is J*41.-340,« complete Including storms and screens. HRHOTtONS: 1 block eeal at While Lake Townchlp Hall mi Mil, turn north to hiMlal on Dalapa Blvd. LAUINOER REALTY or traili 75 . Acres . . . gosnlc property - pine trees, woods, about 14 miles of rosd frontage Large lodge typo home — ----- cliakc elding- Four Humphries FE 219256 Only I miles each way to US-13 ana now Interstate 76 Hilbwavs. Good aubatantlal hops# property. as g4,M* will handle bATeman realty FE 4-0528 EE 8*7161 377 g, TELEORAPH OPEN TVER Sale Business Property 57 KAMPSEN REALTY 1071 W. Huron PE 441431 Open Evenings ^£°&SUS“ ebmuVmm or KM 1-40— _______ BELL OR ' On M33 near MflilOB. I Money to Loun 61 - BUCKNER Wailed Lk . Birmingham. FymoulU l6an«~»3S -rd 4600 _ BAifTER A LlVlNdTONE •4 W Lawrence St. FE_4-1631 cKNfBR'TT'iNANci company 111 South Broadway _ « LOANS TO $500 On your signature or other .coup Ily. 34 mouth, to rep*y. Our eerv-Ice U leel. friendly »nd helpful. Visit our office or phone PE 4-4131 HOME vV AUTO LOAN CO. . 7 • N Perry St., Corner », Pike Borrow with Q onfid^nce GET $25 TO $500 ’ Iloiist'iioltl Finance Corporelton of rontlae 3J4JI Sa|lnaw__rBjL0535 Get $25 to $500 ON YOUH Signature SSS5SI '’VnoNEEh\*d to help y< Sn'ATK FINANCE CC. . ■ 60* Pontiac State Bang Bldg. • f* LI.' J.II74 ft*? Sale Household Goods 65 Mi PRICE - REJECTS, BEAUTt-ful itvinf room suites- Low MJI7S> $i 60 WftOb. Htratiu Roust 103 N. CMS. FE 2-WU2 7T» tWtisr BPIRt tofi WTHf W*’*'-treaa, gal* rue. FE g-0330, I DROP LEAF TABLE AND "nuiTtherm"' o?l healer, 433. ... .......m X AUTOMATA modern zio zAo- gar, beautiful cabinet, (lightly Seed Singer sewing machine. On new payment* of 44 month, -Equipped to do blind bras, fancy designs, button holas. Full price, I3d.». Call FE 4-3511. Waite’s. A LAWSON 3-PIECE SECTIONAL sola. Esc, pond. MA *7374. ABOUT A N YTHINO Y op WANT FOR THE HOME CAN BE J«OUND AT L A S' gALES. A Utile out of the way but a tot AS used visit our trad# dept, for regl bargains. ^ _ We buy. aell or Irada. Con.a out and look around, 3 aorta of frto parking, Phona FE M34I. OPEN MON.-8AT 0 TO I FRI. 4 TO 4 „ 34 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles E. of Ponllao or I Bill E. of Auburn Hotfbls on Auburn. M53 UL ^ ^ trie atoiro, 410. wr-"’" *" frlger--- ;rw* ■ 31" ri 440 heater 115. ARB Reel Howard. FE 3-MM Appliance Bargains — Repossessed — 3 OE Auto, waalrara — ’* Mod. I Norge Om Range — M Model l OE Comb. Waeb-Dryer 54 Mode 1 Norge-Auto. W “ “Ul Take over part ......jre. 0176. OR 4-1300. APCnON OA 4-344X. MAPLE TWIN BEDS/ EEP -COM-nleta. Raautyrart, FE 5-333»-........ New apeedqueen washer .. Norse automatic washer .. .. $UI Frlgldalre electric dryer. Including free wiring .............*»» PORTABLE RECORD PLATTER, like new with r«“r4*. Call nfter 3 and-Bat, and F- ”* REFRIGERATOR. Sal APARTMENT ELECTRIC ■— M5; datenport^^and^^chair bird tag* — --wooT^lnrito $15; apartmant" gas sf d»iKto*«b*s.u«Bib5;: Ski sTtoT m $» up; wa aiaa bad apringi 43-01; cM huf-ieta tt; qdd dremr* and beds and everyratog tor lha_hom*. , BUY. SEU. AND TRADE PEARSON’S FURNITURE 43 Orchard Lake At*. Wg 4-7SSI RUMMAGE SALE FRIDAY T TO 10 p.m. and Saturday 10 a m. to 7 p m. IMS Cola Street, Blrmlng- riOtMTEWT COLOR -T- 13 SHADES rebuilt -Vacuums, *i*.4» ui 743 W. Huron. Bamaa * Hargrav: STOVES. ALL KINDS' 403 Mt Clamant SIEGLER a AS — OIL HOME m Pays for Itself With the tuel it »»v««l MONEY BACK GUARANTEE SCHICK’S ' 44V *•»“ SWIVEL ROCKER. tAH TWEED Upholstered. 414/ MI 4^441. SPECIAI Vxl3 RUOS. »34.35. Mc-° Laid Carnet, WoodbartTat mraar# Lk. Ju*t balow TaO'f. PE 3-770L - Used Trade-In Dept. Platform roekor ....... *3J5J Davenport and chair .— 435.60 Cor. table. Haywood Wake- field, champaign ..... Tabla*buffet and 4 ahaiu.'.. S-4» 2-Pc. sectional, fora rubber cuflblont .......... • • • f THOMAS ECONOMY 341 Saginaw FE 3-6181 uaSb'wnl-66 sk#r!obba«>m: 10 qy.Tl, with IrHMr wt®" USED la gal. gas water htator, USED phllco refrigerator. *30. RECONDITIONED Frlgldalre w Cfump Electric, Inc. 3405 Auburn Rd FE 4-3^3 TRADK OA3 KANOE FOR EI.EC- “US'ED appliance BARGAINS Frlgldalre Relrlgerator UJ JJ OE Refrigerator , , Rj.to Weatlnghouae Refrigerator . $59.05 Thor Wringer Warner *»-» Kenrnore Wringer Washer . §3* #5 OE Auto. Washer ...... |1J »5 Easy One Dryer • ■ 3« »a Douglas Blao. Dryer Your ehole# - $3.00 down »• low aa ILfta VSfc °u*r“‘ teed . . Free Delivery. OOOD YEAR SERVICE STORE 30 $, Case________FE K133 U«BD ELECTRIC ^DRYER, HAM- VALUE WISE? BETTER BUYS Adjustable bed frames . M M HaUywood headboard* 64.03 ::::::: |g * SE&rai&rrNa R* 4743 Dixie Drayton Plain# pH 3-0734 Open 4 till 5:30 Man. Mil 3;30 Berry Garage Door Factory Seconds ' Available at alaeeblo discount 33MjCol. Street. Blrmlnihuro PE 3-0303 Ml 4-1031 MWIK »Ebi "'VMtTO coUKBfS Clean* guaranteed a|TriaaaJnMf,to iVm. n(toal healer. *30. Big TV, 430. Living room. 130. Bedroom*, 446. Sink* and cabinets. 444, Cbia, 514-. Dr.....| |«SKl»r5Xir 0TOV*!: St*: elSc. ‘ trie Stove. 330. wasber. 430. refrigerator MO. 31" TV, oil apace heater 415. A h B ReMle. M W. Howard. rE 3-M58 DffcWo ROOfi TABLE AND 4 ohalr* with light finish. Table measure* 3txll'T and will open lo 43” In length. 130. FE 4-MtO after BuNtS fiifHt TiiNlWa taWlE and 4 upholstered chair*. OR 3-0145 or PE 4-1077 SWfScTrT?SSSr”BW,...WaLIaR VACUUM CLEANER - BRAND miPqilPW— type with all at-tachment*. Clo»e-outa. $14- ▼»* cuum Center Can FE 4-4346. WHIRLPOOL 6AS DRYER. 474-KM 3-4447 after 5 p.r WANTED TO BUY HOUSKHOLD — - house full. Call FE WYMAN'S 150 TRAD* IN ALLOWANCE CrN YOUR OLD _ LIVING ROOM SUITE__ ON this Brand new 7 piece , UVINO ROOM OUTFIT Comfortable Sola—matrijlny chair a|0 DOWN- BUDGET T For Skit MigcrilHEOU» 67 For Sale Miscellaneou* 67 PLAT CONCRETE. BLACK DIRT for sale. Bwldpalng and concrete breaking. Will buy or eol! on conrignmant. machtoetj at equipment Cone’* Rental. FE g-1642. iATfiROOM FIXTORM. OlIT ’ gat furuaeea- He* w a * a r steam boiler. Antomaoa w - — heater Hardware, elect. *upplle« ereek andjlpe and nWnga-jraavaJ Brother* Paint, -Super Kemtone STALL SHOWERS, COMPLBITE SEEP AND FORK -,3m1 Quarter*. Qpdyk* Mkf. FI BUTCHER'S BIO 700 BTU PER UN. FT. BASE-board radiation, 4184 par foot-Oa* boiler with elrenlntdr and. wired. 4344. O.' A. Thompson; 7005 M50 Wcat- ■ • D ri FURNACE. DISASSEM- ■ttAsav/araag BABY CLOTHES AND EQUIPMENT. Bridal gown. Maternity clothe*. :7 oak abltlbt . ... $3 30 ■H pra-flnlshed Mahog, *4.65 Vi in. 4x8pre-tlnlshed ash .. $7.0$ PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. . Baldwin Are. PE >3543 STOKER FOR SALE! -EM 3-5025 '“LESS STEEL DOUBLE SINK I. Toilet*, 117.05. Fan hoods, mlae. OR TWO SETS OF ENCYCLOPEDIA'S. 21" OE. console TV, Weheor | »terco yrvSH WAY STAN vet ALUMINUM WINDOWE *3 pS *> H Wygeor# ....... Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY 7140 Cooley Lake Rd. EMJM111 Open S a.m. to 1 P-m. drily Sunday to a.m. to 3 p.m. .... CEMENT STEPS. READY MADE, aSB’ Sim16 PotUscd J»re-Casi Ste^So- M W. Sheffield. FE mowejr "M-lBch blade, reverts £raw JSw at^mraK SJkbu, re**. HI 0-3001. WYMAN'S 2M Oal. fuel oil tank On standard, all connections, complete. 432.10. FOR 8ALET -- used tor 4 mo til. 6l 1-0400 PORM1CA, PLUMBINO. P A I NT, in g fluiBif yi t*2ioo FURNACE 2-3070 nlgntl or mwiw GOOD 2-WsnML TRAILER. Ope piece* of londtaro. Cril rilat I Dm. weak day*. FE M744. GOOD USED FURNITURE. OTH-miwllmtoM lUm*. OB y B Only » f»w ui used equipment. imbn8bew (ers Accepted. E**n* Iqttjpi <607 Dixie Hwy.» MA hot“"'watM aa*. Consumer* approved, 00* 50 value. 530.04 and MO M. marred. Ala. alectric^riTandJMrilad.M-363 Orchard Ul now. OR 4-170*. attar L or MY 3-3801_______________, KilT MACHINE AhD BLANKS. excollant drape. PE v • * .., ■ . • • • ■ • •#" IwifejaTr 14- COPPER PIPE .... Uc FT. r SOIL PIPE . 13.05 LENGTH JONT 1*1 damp toll weather etor your outdoor painting—uao Kotor 307> orchard Lake Head leu* fthower •(»!!«. trrtfulani. Ter* rifle value*. Michigan >1uor«*cent 363 Orcbafd Lqlte - MEDICINE: '’Every Man HU Ojrn Doctor," William Endian. M.D.. NOVELS *"%*lM^lMipplBubbt»." Ood." Lew Wailaca. Boalon 140* 3 vriumet. 47.40, ^rffrara^LatT^ $3.40. "A Selection of Curtou* At .tlw'ra_Vo-f„«M ,Oj Antiques Road. Vtllaia 16347 Big Lake Anderson vtlle. 'ocerlord. Mich- Iganl ......... A NTfQUBS-wE 6WY AND SELL china, antique*, glaa*. ^riamp*. primitive^ ^Jtonda^anar-' ^ Michigan ...... add aada. spring*, mltrort aiid^chalr*. Everything In used furniture at bargain prra#.!AtS0 ItiTObed. room*, .'living room*, bunk bade, nargaltl House, 103 N- Ca**at Lafayelle, FE MW. Open 'lll 4 3*^°^TirTfCTi8HAi. "‘isnxnr dtp cover*, table, lamp, picture and knlckknaek*. $50 1400 North Pine, Rochester. . HEATEftS. I youd condition.- UL 3-3385. | 3~ ROOMS OF BRAND NEW. TOR ntture davenport and ahalr, tobies, lamps, bedroom suite, mat- 43 Orchard Lake Ava. EXPERIENCED -REFRIGERATORS—, Admiral, Fhllea. Prtgldalr* Norge and Ol_____ Rebuilt by our Service Sxpert* _Your cbolc* "Zg odf chwtrt, gdod condition. 666 LfBtrttt. ------iwtmrarw'WB':............ OR 34703 itjCTgg'TUiMi.’,'i DOx. JO-3J BuvRge bolt wctIon rlfte. OR i 'iare $66. FK i>IN6. . gold t< t jplnf. 4 • SSed gtrskSTribrirg. table*. storage file*, safe, work tomah, •eat ririuL tmmi ..SmAmS, electric A J, Pick raMwawash. multtllth offset preat, typewriter*, adding machine*, check protector*. OR M747 and„« a-laie. Porte* Printing te Office [ iratrae'IS&ri.^dSthlo griney' Sa^Ind „ _________TAMJB, 4 6HaKHA M Otbson refrigerator, eneelleat con. dltlao, *100/ Bottle g*» water tank, 414. Oil tank 334 gal., 414. 4000 Beyliss, Warren. Michigan, atoaa to Ryan Bead. IOMEX WITH GROUND WIRE. 44.74 far 340 ft. COIL No. 3 service. entrance cable. 4040. D * Thompron, 7008 M54 Waal. value, $34.50. Lavatorli irie* complete totteta. 131.40. SPECIALS TULIP BULBS TALBOTT1 LUMb"eK * BPS paint. Odd Bond paint. DuPont toelta no drip wall paint. Hkrdware, plumbing, electrical ■imnitaa and toll Una of lugnar. ,m ‘tu 4:30. Sun. 4 to I. --- — FE 4-44*8 40IXWALJ3ON Ztd 106 automatic 5Wtn5 ■ NEEDLE SEWINO MACHINE, only 4 month* rid. teak** fancy stitches, button holed, overcoating without using attachemeut. cabinet style. Wifi accept *4.10 monthly on defaulted contract or only *46.30 total. Call Capitol Sowing (hater tor appointment. FE 5-4407.____________ WRINGER WASHER *1*. LAUNDRY Sale Musical Goods 71 1 after 4. OR MW. BABY ORAND -drily priced. upright, excellent condition. LEW BBTTBRLY MUSIC Of WHEN SCHOOL STARTTB, CHOOSE FROM LARGE BEWDCWON_ OR 3-43*1. Vo*"e~h* Bona Orand Dtono. M*/ ?hmed{ate s5S»vtce Wieeand Music Center Phone FEdoral 2-4*74 complete score and lyriea. MORRIS MUSIC S. Telegraph PH 3-04*7 Aero* From Tel-Huron RENT a new pm no OF, tour choice. Only *9 per month plua' cartage. Afi money applied if purchased. /-nil GR INN ELL’S. TRY BEFORE YOU BUY 1 a. Sagfnaw L YOUR UPRIGHT OR SFIN-lo to OaUagher Mualc Co. y eseh. Call FE 4-O04*. MISCELLANEOUS: "The Ufa of Bentamn Prankllo.” O. L_Hooley, Philadelphia. 10M. 40. "Th# Romance of Modem Invention," Arohltbrid Williams—Lmrii»k_U14-*4.00. "Mormonl.m, It* Leader* and Design*." John Hyd*. Now York. }087, M, BOOKS ON OTHER ilHNto avail-ablo. Writ* or call: Book-A-Neor. 33M Shank Id, Walled Lake. MAr- LAKE < WUM FULL Merer* Dumb: used 1 uaaon In perfect ceodltlon, 470. OR/M04L LAROE ttLECmN OF W-eailed tor thotgun. and rifle*. Corner Orchard Laka and Bagley ~''~LTRflfToTtrTAWK OR 3-4444 , UlNto DRAPlirilJ. RKbRoOM ____.trvlc* all war^H (by factory trained men V CALBI MUSIC CO lll/N- SAOINAW I 8LIDE TR6MroNE8"»10 AhD giW®NiT£k6tlD OROAN wkt.-nut flnlrt. bench to matoh, excellent condition. 504». term*. 400 down. Balance #Ia par month CALBI MUSIC CO 116 N. SAOINAW __FE 5-4333 REldlNISCENT OF THE ROAB-mg twenties’ U our Davt* Used Flavor Plano Cpmpletriy ro-. - built and In oncolloat condition. Full keyboard. Tours toe only 4310. , MORRIS MUSIC 34 8 Telegraph FE S-QSSI Aero*, from Tel-Huron USED SPINET PIANO WANTED. with biowor. Ilk# I ' 1344. SHlH USED 4x4—1x4 , Excrilenl quality, priced to jriL 8m ua for *& yoUr building need*. SURPLUS LUMBER St NEW WOOL FABRICS Mill end*. II nor yard. Now nyl and wool .trip* lor hand woa ' ing. also' Indies hand woven -be end throw, rug*. FE t-4121 USED PIANO AND ORGAN , BARGAINS lerllnx upright ...... Ilto Umbafl plena ............... fll* ,»ble welnut ................. 41»J 8m*lf*ar»rtd Plano. rettntVhed, like new with new Ivortea....... 1580 WHAT TO TO 7 at it — bar** In Grlnnoll eotwori, like new. Medium-sited practice plane, re-comUMonod .. GALLAGHER’S ’ 1* E Huron Ft 4-04M1.-. Sale Office Equipmuit 7% VICTOR ELECTRIC 3 TOT AL CASH reguter *30 down.. *11 00 per *10 u*e I* grooory. hardware or “vrat. TWENTY-TWO , Sate Office Equipment: f WYMAN'S ’ . * GENUINE ^Genuine walnut #4" office d**k. cash »woia- . tore from $l«* up.. New WattoMl adding machines from $» up. Tha c-Jtaflj,' Tiyetorr authorliad Jmwfi ' offices in Oakland and Macomb THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1961 For Suit Pete MM j-Wl. _ BRITTANY SPANIEL. 6MONTH8 old, • and' don house *“ r'° BARGAINS WE HAVE A jaMlWwv.j tracto&b.mqwbm~ a » p EQUIPMENT. .--------- arm AMD* nrojmn*iAL trac TOftS AND EQUIPMENT. ALL ARE PRICED TO BELL. ^QR-3MW31. 6824 Williams Lk, Rd. COLLIE PUPPIES, i'i MONTHS, m. OL I-«Md. falte Store Equipment 73 . . is' tables m matching chairs- IS booths, used only ihobths. 1 grill and stand.. . GREAT DANE, 3 TEARS OLD. male; good watch, dog. $90. OR 3-1930. Sale Sporting Goods 74 19 . GAUGE DOUBLE BARREL shotgun, good condition. Hunting coat, else 40, and- vest full of shells, FE 3-3034. 13 ’GAUGE PUMP GUN, STEVENS 104 V Rundell, FE 0-0230. 33 GAUGE MARLIN PUMP. §40. Complete cutting and welding but-liT $09. EM 3-3000. 300 REMINTON AUTOMATIC; case and I'M holes of shells, very wood condition; $79. PE $-3911. 1060 U* VACATION TRAILER. Cheap. *373 Peach Dr„ Clarkston. U8. Springfield 30,06. 303 Sport __er. -P-38 Shotgun. Hunting clothe* and boots. Will buy-sell or trade. OR 3-0370- or OR 3-3773. GERMAN SHEPHERD, ,AKC, 8 weeks old. Oreys and . 3031 North Grant, Auburn. ^^^of Crooks. - ■■■ GIANT MASTIFF PUPS. PURE-bred. No papers. 919-930. EM 3-7361, OERMAN SHEPHERD reasonable. MArket 4-4390. MALE BRITTANY SPANIEL. years old. OL 3-0033. ■ MINIATURE 8CHNAUZER PUP- jpoODt.ES, SILVER MINIATURES. ARC. above average-quality. 691 Fourth. FE 3-4039.______________ PUPPIES FOR SALE FE $-4437 ________ PART COCKER PUPPIES,, $ weeke old. OR 3-6608. POODLES. CREAMS -AND 8IL-■asa, 934 Auburn Avenue, alter ». CONTEST! v'Ithaca 23 lever action guns given awayfree wlth^purchaae^of weighing 'ufe’most* aqdthe longest, Marshall’* Gun Shop, FE ^9t73. - __________ Manley Leach . GUN SALE Shotguns and rifles, new ‘and used. Gun repair and scope mounting. Burr-Shell, 379 S. Tele-eraph. FE 9-470$. BULMAN HARDWARE Browning Oune -3849 Elisabeth Lk PARAKEETS GUARANTEED TO Canaries, cages and **•■*-Tropical fish, tanks is. Crane's Bird Hat __uhurn UL 3-2300 _ POODLES — SPECIAL, LEARN poodle clipping while youre Is clipped. Also will build outside kennels. OR 3-4370. OR 3-0170. PARAKEETS GUARANTEED TO jg-jiaaiua REGISTERED ENGLISH FEMALE pointer. FB 0-1413. SIAMESE KITTENS. 10 WEEKS orf. FE 3-0877. / SIAMESE KITTENKHUREBREDS. Call FE 8-7647 after4p.in. --------- ALL KELLY HARDWARE NEW AND USED OUNS Browning — Remington, ---Winchester — Ithaca WE TRAD* _ , Final Clearanca on Boats New 17' Crestllner Cruleer SI. New 14, Crestllner runabout $ MOOSE HUNTERS—A FEW RE8-ervatlons still opsn this season. Out. 18 to Hov. 18. Clean, comfortable accommodation!. Experienced. well equipped guides. Modest rates, Write Immediately to Renner Bros.. Peshu Lake Camp, P.O. Box 111. Thessalon, (teftno, McNART’S TAILW AGGER KEN-nets, boarding, training, trlm-OL 1-0004. 14 MONTH OLD FEMALE WEIMA-raner, ready (or training, foi sale. UL 3-3473. AKC BRITTANY SPANIEL PUPS. FE 0-8330 WILL TRADE ENGLISH I tor shotgun, rifla or > MU 4-0064.______________' Ssnd, Gravel & Dirt 76 T-A TOP SOIL, BLACK dirt, fill I bulldozing. “ * *"** AKC BEAGLE PUPS. I WEEKS 039. Female 4 years »U nale, t'/, years old- i tors. Will give trial run. »■ delivered. 7 days ! t-A RICH BLACK DIRT, P*AT. 6 yd. $10. FE 3-0340._ i'M YARDS RLACK^DIRT OR peat, prompt delivery. OR 3-0044. A-l BLACKDIBT, $0.00 LOAD DB-live red. OB 3-7980 or FE 8-1788. J-A BLACK DIRT, PEAT. TO# , toll, flu eand, otay and graval. OB 34800. f I yard load, $1.60 yd. for it yd. load. HUlvlaw Paat Farm, MY 3-3471, iCI TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, sand, fill and gravel. FE 3-7774. p 46il, ~ * BEACH SAND. 0048 OR ItbAD gravel $7 8 yds. del. FUl and Cushion sand- Leading. 493 8. Williams Lk. Rd. EM 3-0373. feULLDOZING. SHOVEL aNd PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS OUP-ply, Sand, graval and dirt. Cement mortar, trucking and itle. OR .3.1834. RICH, BLACK DIRT. TOP SOIL 6 yds. $10. del. FE 4-09M. FE 9-3304 SPECIAL—WASHED BEACH SAND 60c yd. Pea Gravtl. 01 yd—F— Oravel, 00c yd.—10A iton# _-Overstzed Stone. $3 7*1. FUl Dirt. 30o yd. Delivery extra. »»*»•>»- --- '1TONE. “■ ■' A Midi. Can' STONE, 6336 SABHABAW ami, ^^jprdi for 010 delivered. YARD AND DRIVEWAY G* Ins. FE V3983._____J Wood, Coal 6t Fuel Roai. ... . CANNEL COAL. THE IDEAL FIRE place fuel. Furnace — fireplace woodeeOaktand Fuel and Paint 48 Thomas St. FB 8-818$. cool MAN? BE WARM AND FirYo874Urn *!*rdwood' Sry slab wood, to c6rd. a for 111. Fireplace wood, delivered, FB 9-3000. rAND HICKORY FIREPLACE wood. Tree removal. OR 3-9083. SLAB . V OO D M FIREHLAC* wood. 3 oord, $30, del. AttaMa Lumber Mills. MA 6-263'. , Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78 A-l EVERGREENS. SPRUCE pine, fir, arborvltae, Juniper, yews and mugho. Dig your own. Bring tools and burlap, 3033 Sleeth Road. 3 miles west of Commerce Village and l>4 mile eaet of the ~ aiffiW* dm Road^M. *j|u 4-Wffl ircAUTIFUL NURSERY OROWN •vergreene, cultivated, ehearr* sprayed, state Inspected, 10 more, $1.60 ee, Less than 1 *300 ea. You dig. 13 Ml. nor ot Pontiac on U S. 10. Ced Lane Evergreen Farm. 8970 Dla Hwy., (U.B. lot, MA 6-1933. evergreen and shade trees do Blue . Pontli Beautiful Colon Douglas *firUy-4* talV V Grafted upright Junipers 8'-0 ■ 1 12 50 CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROS. ■g 4-0734 FE 4-1113 PONTIAC ROAD AT.0PDYKE •Wheel Horse Tractors Riding moWeta and tillers. Used tractors, tUlers and mowers. Reasonable offers accepted thle Irani Equipment, 6907 1 Hwy- MA 6-7878. OR 3-7934. WELiTbUILT CORN CRIB FOR aale. WiU gladly trade for brand (traw. 34971 North Wostei Hwy EL 6-3454. Auction Sales AUCTION. SPECIAL LIQUIDATION aale. Hadley Auc“— Mich. Sun- Oct. 1. Special Auction SATURDAY IM —- - Several der* of furnttui 'rim. —w No waiting* 3 auctioneers avauaole. Sale conducted on B&B Auction parking lot. Everybody welcome. Llingjaag table. Call OR 3-271T foj dltlonal Information., B & B AUCTION SALES SAT. NIGHT SALES AS USUAL 9080 .DIXIE HIGHWAY, DRAYTON Sale Housetraiiers 89 JQ FAMQUS makes /TO CHOOSE FROM Bee. the latest. 47H0 wide and the new ABC Deluxe Model with roof wings and bay wln- Dogs Trained, Boarded 80 ».v‘3a mt* . Jti years old. Traloed. ___________EM 3-3091. Enolmh pointer, MAI months. $3$ or trade for tn--- radio or small TV. 3910 Jackson Blvd- White Lake. ____________ German short-haired point- — AKC, *36. EM 3-0390 OERMAN SHORT HAIR POINTER. _______ FE 2-3*43 OERMAN SHORT-HAIRED POINT- Hay, Grain & Feed WANTED'. EAR CORN. PHONE FE For Sate Livestock 83 “Sue1 ITEIN OOW, t YEARS OLD. pony. Raddle and bridle. _Can hr — aa— OB 3-7943, i ridden or drlvei ftEdl8TERED THOROUGHBRED SACRIFICE 3 HANDSOME BLACK geldings. 110* and 0139. 3-0171. Eyas. 3fM 3-04*7. 78 LEOHORN PUlLeTR, LAYINO T^ar cant, Orlando Lsrei Sale Farm Produce 86 APPLE8. 6 LEADINO VARIETIES. fate Farm Equipment 87 MARMADUKE By Anderam i Leeming For Sale Motorcycles 95 151 74 FOOT 8HIFT. 383 NORTH 1 Roelyn. ___________________ '61 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, BEST \ offer or trade“ call after 6, FE 2-1626. _______________, For Sale Bicycles 96 . GUARANTEED USED BIKES ..aw sebwlnn Bikes. 934.09 M Scarlett’* Blka and Hobby Shi 30 E. Lawronee- FE 3-7943 Boats & Accessories dows, sea ib< oo to (..jpnMpmnpnpuHiRi Buy or rant your vacation trailer boro today. Oxford Trailer-Sales— Mile a. of Lake Orion on M-34 MY 3-0731________ M* ALUMINUM 18 FOOT TRAIL-m Vary reaeonable. OR 3-0301. ot Wally Byam’e exciting GARDNER, 10 X 41. 1957~FRONT 651-8688. ' HUNTING TRAILER — Sales and Rentals -Trail Blaser — Apache Camper Reese and Draw-tlta Hitches Opening for Bow and Regular Deer Season F. E. HOWLAND Evlnrude Motors ■BART 8PORT__ ___ tesW-.WUTO - Dally & Sundays 7 a.m.-6 p.m. BOAT INSURANCE One of our specialties Hansen Insurance Agnncy FE 3-7083 3848 Dixie Highway OR 3-1460 13 Wort CRBE TRAVEL TRAILER, new condition. FE 9-3458.___ i‘/a' TRAILER. OAS REFRIOERA-tor. toilet, water pressure. Discount price. 389 Martin, NA . ny firto nvl**- All New in Pontiac ORADY WHITE LAP8TRAKB AQUA SWAN ALUMS LAP HITEHOUSE. VENUS CRUISE WEST BEND MOTORS -Porta-Camper Camp Trailer mood. Alum- Flberglae, 8 R-M ft. SCOTT MOTORS AND SERVICE CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES S3 E. Walton PE 0-4403 Dally 0-0 Sunday 10-4 DETROITER Mobile Home A LARGE SELECTION OF NEW DETROITER8 NOW ON DISPLAY \. SEE THE NEW DETROltER 8PAN-O-WIDE WITH ITS FABULOUS 18* LIVING ROOM AND 12’ BEDROOM. WE Also, have a l----m ARKANSAS TRAVELER BOATS Thompson CUnker Built Boat* *jBl JOHNSON MOTOR8 . GASOW —SPORTS CENTER-3178 Case Lake Rd. 693-1090 KEEOO HARBOR. MICH- LECfriON OF USED MO-BILB HOMES ON DISPLAY AT BUDOET PRICES. SEE US TODAY AT TOE "SION OP THE SPINNING TOP." LIMITED TIME ONLY ...Bob. Hutchinson' Mobile Home Salas, Inc. 4301 Dixie Highway Draytbn PIa|na Parkhurst Trailer Sales -FINEST IN MOBILE LIVINO— Featuring New Moon—Owotso— Venture — Buddy Quality Mobile T VACATION TRAIL1 SPECIALIZING IN “TRAVEL TRAILERS! Jacobson Trailer Sa'es and Rentals 9008 Williams Lk., Drayton Plains OR 3-5981 SHORT'S- MOBILE HOMES 14 ft. to 33 ft. Oem travel trail on. Wolverine truck camper alst home typo mobile homes. Complete line of parts and bottls gas. Hitches Installed and care Wired. ------3173 W. Huron XFPnSSTT'SirX’ftjffifr “•'"in Middleton Sr. .— .. Lake Orion. MY 3-1991. SQUASH APPLES. CIDER. PRODUCE! Kingsbury's MarkM. 3330 Clarkston Road, Laks Orion. A$>PtBs - ORATES ~ PLUMS 93 a bushel, irtok your own, brim own containers. 9963 Cooley Drive APPLES, PEACHES, PEARS AND prune plums. Hill Top Orchards, Vs mile south of State Road School on Hartland Road. Fenton. MAln poaches and apples. DeConlck Bros. Orchard. Maple and On chord Lake Roads. HONeV!' lie TO IH FOR COMB. 190 Baldwin Rd- Orion.___ macintosh apples, 'sprayed fruit. Orchard. 601 OAKLAND COUNTY FARMERS' Market, 3390 Pontiac Lake Road. ’ Just off Telegraph. Open Tuesday 1961 Close-Out *61 NIMROD TRAILER $376 *61 PORTER CAMPER $785 •01 holiday camper $56$ ’61 APACHE iOn* Only) $300 STOP OUT TONIGHT I oily I I Holly Awright, that’s enougji,NMr. TV Repairman!! eck the rest and try for tl it. AVERILL’S 2020 Dixie Hwy. 3-8878_____ FB 4-81 WANTED ’61 PONTIAC3 AVERILL’S 2030 bills Hwy. toito*Virirald Deov«*rl6 ’» BUICK WITH OLDS POWER, Ev^de XweT'Kinee , ?“1c1ke‘n"»,,,'D S'*- ,Pi-r.e-p‘rW' or 3-0322. .call altar 8 pm. trailer. OR 3-0322. id Cjr ul a- WE SELL AND SERVICE ■uirude Motors and Lawn Mows DART 8PORTMEN CENTER. Sale U*ed Trucks 103 1991 CHEVROLET TON PICK- 8-cyltnder. standard shift. 9496. NORTH CHEVROLET CO , 1000 8. WOODWARD. BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-3735. I* CHEVROLET '/» TON ITCKUP. traad on front and spare, good brtkoe. motor and tranemlislon. OR 3-0188.___________________ BOAT. MOTOR AND TRAILER. ________FE 4-8111 ____ BOAT 8TORAOE. ________ EM 3-4889 OAKLAND MARINE EXCHANGE 301 8. Saginaw FB *-4101 INBOARDGUTBOARD SALES-SERVICE-STOBAGE Complete boat and motor repair -hill line of now and need boat* Full lino of new and used motors Y0mSu£^Wo«Ess —“a usi '96 OMC, 3 ton, 1 ■69 CHEVROLET 4k TON PICKUP, Phone 873-7480. ___ 1965 CHEVROLET PANEL FOR $305 and a 1990 Chevrolet panel (or $400. Both In excellent condition NORTH CHEVROLET CO-------1. WOODWARD AVE- BIR- MINGHAM. 4-2736. 1991 CHEVROLET PICK-UP. GOOD ^condltton.^MAple 9-^8.^ ^ ga'Vftjr ^ SEASON-END SALE( Loaded — “Got to Go’’ Owens cruisers. 3V to 37’ Owens liberal**, all models Skee-Craft. Volvo's and Outboards MANY USED BOATS AND MOTORS Mazurek Marine Sales ■ .SOUTH BLVD. AT 8AOINAW Marine Supplies. Repair Sere. PINTER'S 1370 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 4-09 tii MILE 8 OF BLUE SKY THE; Johnson Outboard Motors Starcraft Boat* Gator Trailers 1957 FORD PICKUP A real idea VI lb ton. Radi*. Heator. I ft. box. Exe. rubber. PrpEOpffis AUTO SALfcS 88 Oakland I FE 3-3381 i mileage, good condition. Oood usclreepIn^Shop, | - ..vered box, a jewel, OL 1-0941 63 >4 TON CHEvV. A-l CONDI-tlon. , EM 3-2340. Better Used Trucks GMC FOR 8ALB 1046 pickup. In gOM OA 8-3369 After V FORD ti-TON 1 ebape, $1M. 1 p.m. Auto Insui — --'-r'""'' Lice 104 LOOMIS BOATS -- .SLIPS LAUNCHING on Lake Pent... Stocking Inboard and .outboard. -emSfft - boats — , canoe — motore, 1401* Fenton Rd.. Fenton. 13' ALUMINUM BOAT AND 3v4 4kbOUt. 1 $ 14’ Tho.IT eluded, “sacrifice ofiT altoF4 parrel raft. 920. All In excellent condition. Phone EM 3-224L_____ WINTER DISCOUNTS NOW 11 NEW — 19' Henry. Wood lapitrakt Safety glass windshield, steering and cuenlone. Regular prtco 91.1*9 now only ................... $™°' All 19*1 n „ "cent dlse left In stock are Owons. Ray. Aqua ^ur- Holly Marine Si C oach 19310 Holly Road MB 4-0771 Holly, Michigan --------- ----- "-tn dally and gundi Rent Trailer Spice OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR ' »e who want the best, • 40 x80' s, t6'x40' cement patios, eto. is mile east of Oxford M " L------ OA 04033. 'PARK. PONTIAC MOBILE ore Pall. Cor *2 "blocks post of Baldi For Sale Tires 92 1 USED TIRES, 93.9* UP. WE .._ . .. *. - whltewsir ” Sagl 186$. . 803 8. FE 3-9070.___ ____ PEARS. YOU PICK BRtNO OWN containers $139 bushel. FE 0-3398 "”••••••----— SAI.E FARM PRODUCE 96 1149 W Huron______ PEACHES.' 13 99 AND 92 49 BUSH-1 OtJ ARANTEEb rfSKTI«KS,f,7J• $2.90 L > High* ----- —.......... .... ... ' TOMATOES. AT WHOLR88 maplo — Up to 19' tall. 92 00- price Pick your own.' $1.29, -96 00. ' ... already picked. Dealers Invll -Flowering eh rubs 4' tall. 7So 2349 efrooks Rd., N. of Auburt •You dig. „ MtJNOER'S orchard, fr'o' -M?1*?111! Ifggg- I hat hit the pumpkln-llme le dunkin';- pick rout i Kali I GOOD.' USED “TRUCK AND PA9S- ----------- "'•■-'--D Tire Rerv- »y. 6738441 *074 Dixie Hlghwey . 3331 Dlxl Trlple-D Til ^.xle Hwy. 673 il4 BtA6K'T1RE8, ALL .ndt. OH new oars $l9,r and oxehango. State Tit 791 For Sale Pets J 1- CHIHUAHUA; POODLES. CALL after Oct $. NA 7-2H1. S^KiioLisH Setter-Wps,”' io -weeks. Call after 0. Ft: 9-3993 f*MONTH OLD IIP:tlUFVER 2871 , / ■Williams Lake Road aJcc ' "dachshunds Hlc'c BRlTTANVT"l0 MONTHS PIS 1-8281 after 6.__ XStC HiAGi.K' PUPS, $ WEEKS 429 each FE 4-8146 Ac'-MAlTts.' f 'dREX’f’D.an*-T value.’ UI. 3-4070 LOOKi £afes!’?03 “s. Vaglnaw',’ FE’4-4987 or FB 4-4908,______________ STANDARD BRAND NEW Tift EM iv varirun, vi,w i,r. Trade In cm General Safety el and up Hurry, supply Tlree. $ave up to Vb of Mlg.'e ed, 8280 Hadley Road. IVb list price. Blaok or whitewall* 3 Sg '““I ED • WILLIAMS FPi.Es. REfinrfft) velI.6w niif llrious. Pick your own. II 00-81 21 o bushel Bring Containers 2791 Bald Eagle Lsie Road. 3 miles | -----------------------“ West of, M18 __________ AUTO REPAIRING 8PEC1AL1Z- fale Form Equipment p7| t’^n l£,^mSsB2S5«v‘cl,llty 1,1 ‘l>1'. Crankshaft oRiNbiNti IN TftE PLANET. 9 H P. TRACTOR WITH I attachemnts. 1190. EM_3;3833 8UOHTL? . ffgED“FIELD CHOP- Bsvle*Maghbrnry. Sh 7.3392. or-toDVlile. I WANTED. TRACfOR ANI) MOW- l.. NA 7-3830. Sale Motor Scooters^ 97 CUSHMAN SCOOTER, 0 ___Cadillac. A few 1*61 Evlnrudes left. Hurry on these II Winter .stqrajje M *9 *to*W°nHIThl»ndj Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left andjpjlow signs to DAWSON'S SALES at TIPSICO - LAKE. Phone Main 0-317*. WANTED To FOOT INBOARD. private party. EMalre 3-0131. 1*' THOSOWON CABIN CRUI8SR, 75 h.p. Johnson motor, Oatoi 334-2040 after 5. WANTED: Used boat trailer, eultable fo 17’ inboard boat. Phone FI M061. Hollerback’e Auto ParU| WANTED: USED BOATS OF ANY kind Barber's, Pontlao Airport. OR 4-0330,____.__________ For Sale Airplanes 99 •40 CEBIWA 140, NEW LICENSE, . Trans. Offered 4 ENOlNE AIRLINER, NON-STOP-Los Angeles. San Francisco. San Diego. $79.80. Hawaii, $90 extra. New York. *1*. Miami. $44. Ferry Service Inc, OR 3-138*. would Like party to dHIve, 1861 Chevrolet to Ban FranolHCOe California. Oae allowance. References. Write P. O. Bos $6. Rochester._____ YOUNO LADY LEAVINO i^OR Colorado Oct. 5 wishes another girt to share driving. Fg 4-0100. Wanted Used Cars 101 $25 MORE u»°r b?torehl5ou r re*l.U Hd TS/ao Welt, 4640 Dixie Highway. Phone OR 3-1398. __________ "ALWAYS-BUYING" $IJUNK CARS - FREE TOWI9 TOP $$9 CALL FB 6-1143 SAM ALLEN Sr BON INC, HIGH ObiLArf FOR JlfSE ~£arb and trucks. Call 00- mas $ llawoHh q Bbatte._MA_9;1400 HI DOLLAR. JUNK CARS AND i truck, FE 2-3600 days, evenlnjs. JUNK CARS AND f^WTVSSSb r~- dng. OR 3-3930. NO DbUGH'? «"h*'lp*you^'op1 DoffarChPsld clean, '6$, ,'00 and '01 Models ^Bletin’s Motor Sales | *62 W. Hur :ars and MM .. JUNKERS. ROYAL A1 WE NEED CARS! Especially late model Pontiaci fadillaos, *-—olets. . ____ model* M^M MOTOR SALES 2$37 Dixie Hwy. OR 1-1*03 $37 FOR 6 MONTHS ... on the- average cat tnchsdtnf 835,000 LIABILITY $1,000 MEDICAL $1,000 DEATH BENEFIT $20,000 Uninsured Motorists COMPREHENSIVE (fire, theft, etc) COLLISION ($100 deductible) ANDERSON AGENCY Foreign A Spts. Cars 1 sell. Beet offer. OR 3-1811. ’»« "tk-l EXCELLENT condition. 612-0804. _ lOOrVOLMWAGEN VOLKBWAOEN, RAD I O. ilte walls, dark blue. 14.500 le». Excellent condition. OR WARD-McELROY, INC. 4460 W. Huron_ OR 4-0408 V0LKSWAOBN C A M P B R AND •eats, excellent condition. Pt-bird, hardtoF, LtoHf me. full power, good cdndltlon, heater, pvt. * n.rt. sax. . Paysj FE For Sale Cars 106 1*80 BUICK, 3-DOOR, HARDTOP. Take over payments. Near wnole-sale. Owner, FS 8-1416. ONE OWNiR. ‘ *6 buIcE »$Fi-clal. very elenn, drives like new. Only 8496. . TOM BOHR. INC. 130 B, Main MU 81719 "“.'9* BuicK Hardtop With' auto, radio, heater. lull power, rune llke^newl Marvel Motors MUST MOVE! 100 CARS TO OO. CHEAPf •5$ Chevrolet I, Power •56 Plymouth 6, stick .. $28 J957 PONTIAC STARCHIEF 2-DOOR HARDTOP $795 ThU U V/l would car. 8om aon« clso will ha vr:,,r lllSlh'leaa Than on^the used*' ar lot. Power br akea. hydramatlc tVani- Hlrtljli ikutlf'ul two-tone or dealer* call "ahai ir°that For-fate1 Car«. *17 BUICK CONVERTTIBLE.' FOW. , . er^stoerin^ Wi W ^*ts,s"SSrs.‘ r«. Lincoln- Mercury-Comet, (Ml. 4jW4( ilaok _______.....____ ery sharp, MA 0-7391 aftar d p.m. FOTEVROLEy impXlX" con: vertlble, white - with black excellent oondltlon, power Oteer-Ing and brakes. V4 engine, pow-erglide. Call now, OR 3-14M. On?7*£&9. "fcasy HEVROLET CO., dan. V-8 dlo and_______________ —- terms. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 0. WOODWARD AVE. KIR MING HAM. MI 4-2738. - ; ’ 1999 ' CHEVROLET BEL-AIR^ I cylinder with automatlo, red and ' white, aharp, low down And low payments. Lloyd Motors, Lincoln-' Marcury-Comet, 232 8. Saginaw, FE 2-Q13I._______ 1999 CHEVROLET‘4-DOOR, ZERO down and $4.00 a week. Lloyd Motori. Lincoln • Mercury-Comet 332 8, Saginaw" FE 2-8131. 1980 CHEVROLET BlSCAYNE 6-oyllnder with standard shllt. full price $1.0$9. Lloyd Motors, Lin-. ooln-Mercury-Comet, 332 8. Sagl-VTB 34131. __ .... CUMN 19(3 T IMPALA 3-DOOH ____________ .__0 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINOHAM. MI 199* CHEVROLET 3-DOOR Has stick ehUt and 6 cylinder en- wtiita Ptopd*rE^lo*Uent1^\*ondRIon mh08U^yPd^n>^S flntnce. Batata Liquidators, 190 S Saginaw..FB 4-009$. \ 1097 CHEVROLET S-DGOR. AUT.6-MATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO AND HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOTON. As sum* pfo-ments ot $30.16 par month. Call Credit Manager Mr. Parks at MX 4-7900, Harold Turner Ford. \ EXCEPTIONAL ’$$ - CHEVY Sport* coup*. FE 1-0*03, altar 1*94 CHEVY. SEDAN. 9 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE ‘ — OH 9 $1.88 1*50 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR hardtop. V-0 angina. Powerglldc, power steering, radio, heater, whitewall tlree. Lika new light blue ftnleb. Onto $19*8. Easy terms. NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1000 B. WOODWARD AVE.. BIR-MINOHAM. Ml 4.3730. MOO CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertlblo V-0, automatic, power steering and brake*, radio, hast-»r, wnltowall*, white with red trim. $2105. NORTH CHEVROLET 1000 S. WOODWARD- BIRMINO, HAM. MI 4-—* HOLiw*. ^ "id. liaQOmltM, »1 4-1413. CORVAHt 780 ‘MIE" For Sate Car« | '5&:Studebakeri -1., real sharp buy. at $88$. JERQME “Bright Spot” . , Orchard Lake at Cass ■ For Sate Carr V* . IRBIRD 18W DODOB I V mxtic. radio, h«j,in.Br. , R6cR MOTORS 734 Oakland A»a. lull prloo ot $00, Uoyd Mot* Linooln-Mareury-Comat, 131 Sfglnaw. FE i0131. 1958 DODGE Conxertlble. radio and haator, ttomatle transmission, power ■»ke« and power steering. Whitewall Urea. OtOI. John McAuliife, Ford 030 Oakland ' FE $-4101 1157 DODOS 4-DOOR, *190 DOWN and payment! o( $33.00 a month. Lloyd Motore, Llnooto-Mereury-Comet,^lI3 B^aglw^FE^m. ar, good tlrts. Runs good. $1*0. - MA 4,4040.................... ti6bOE. 1*67 R O V A L OtjjoSS baapty. powor ^totfta^ THUNDER-...... nau.0 add heator, automatlo atrapomM|n, wall' tlreg. &09. « John .McAuliffe> Ford 1866 FORD bAiAiffli" OOR, ! lo choose from. Full prlo$# of MFisCHEk BUICK ' usedTuicks 13 MONTHS WARRANTY MS S. Woodward »h Jill . •’58 Plymouth-Belvedc*®-; 4‘IW<”-^fnp«SSu Surplus Motors 171 S. stklnaw Bt. . FE MW$ 199$ CUSTOM SUBUitBAN 4-DOOtl *7uymcBjb Statitw WMon. matic tranimleskw, Very *l*»n,. $949; CarT’E iaWl V ... This, ear la U*e “WS?HUCK FORD ' REPOSSESSION 1995 Ford 2-door, automatlo transmission and I cylinder engine, full price 0! *3*6 and payments *L*6/ “ ^ RADIO. HEAT-ER AND AUTOMATIC. TRANB-MIBSION. ABSOLUTELY MONEY DOWN.' Assume menta ot $3*.l* Mf month, ... Credit Manager, Mr. Parks at MI 4-7900. Harold Turner Fold- See Us Before You Buy! SMALL TOWN- LOW OVERHEAD RAMMLER - DALLAS 1001 N. MAIN ~ "ROCHESTER OL 2-1111 DO DOE—CHRYSLER—8IMCA 1M0 FORD FALCON 4-DOOR, lull price of $1.3*0. Lloyd Motore. Uncoln-Meroury-Comet, 232 8. Saginaw, FE 2-0131. ___________I RADIO HEATER. A8BOLU7EL7 MONEY DOmi.telHIB moot* ol *14.37 pe mss _______ ..lecutivo's oar. excellent condition, big ongln*. Ford-O-Metier power brakes and steerir- month.a First payment 33*-71ll $87 PLYMOUTH '^DOOR. AgTO- LUTELT NO MONET DOWN. As-sums payments ol $22.79 per »\tCiSl«WrT»fe, r Ford. ' 1 •......... - 1 PLYMOUTH BUBtlMAN. TAR* ■ rer payreante. UL M808. _ ■ REPOSSESSION and payment* of $2$ a mo. First payment-duo Noyembor 3-leelde Mira, „ , , 339-71II 312 W, Montcalm . J^fiobm nerds T rk. $360. Hj Wllllams L 'hardtop, loaded with a Wenonah. FE 4-2393. _ ----------------------- Radio, beeter,.-A. beauiuui lamlly oar. Gold with white top- Morroolde trim. 30 mot, on balance, Haupt Pontiac Bale*, Clarketon. Ult. .1 mile northol Us 10. MAple 6-85*8. Open Mon.. Tues.. Thure.. tUT $ p.m. 1*M PONTIAC. CATALINA « door, hardtop, excellent condition 03,110. OR 3-01*1 -_ ■ ieSTfoWlAC CATALINA HARD-top wlth power. 0*11 anytime. OltlO. FE $-3003, 1*60 PONTIAfc. *3.000. 4-DOOR 8E-dan. can he seen or, call between 7:30 DM. OR $-830*7 rvwsiAO bTarorief. ■*• hardtop. Very clean, white* >•—*— Hydramatlc. 3-7909 after 8 J?ffi8^R*ll9Mi>"9 N 6 !ATO» ABbOLUTELY NO "1EY DOWN. Aeeume payf at 933.33 per month! Cali Manager Hr. Arks at MI Harold Turner Ford. ID 3-DOOR, MfcCHANIC'8 special, lull price ol 88*9. Lloyd Motors, Llnooin-Mercury-Comet. 333 8. Saginaw, FEU-OPl. 1*9* FORD CUSTOM Easy tat ROLET CO 1000 ’8 ^ TmaVmi]' row’e'r •brii’a.- OR See SHELTONPontiRcBuick Rochester, Mich. OL 1-8133 1081 PONTIAC, door KESSLER'S MM Inside Used Car Lot All Inside — AH Sharp 10 N. Washington Oxford OA 8-1400_______We bur used cars ’ RADIO. DOOR, REPOSSESSION MM Ford Station Wagon. Moor, straight atlok. 8 cylinder with o,’.Xx. rill eric. of |4M and papments ol $SPf * month. Flret payment duo NoTsmber 3 Lakeside MOton 338-7101 313 W. Montcalm < rW^ORD * FORDOMATlC. tors, 180 8. Saginaw at. r*l(t FoRBr tDbClI. Full pricB 1107. Take over payment* ol 91.13 per week. King Auto Salei 8 Saginaw, FE 8-0403. MM FORD COuNTrT bSDAN EX-cellent 1-owner, fully equlpped. $1,479, can .finance. Ml 0-8836.. i$M roioi::otivicRfrffinc Sparkling Blaok and Red, full price 6309, We will finance. Lucky ' Auto Sale*. M3 8. Bagluaw. FE ••JiHsitb. RSfciltliHT condition. No rust. 9178, OL 1-007$. *0 OALAX1B 4-DOOR, FULL POW-•r. Crulse-O-Matlc. V8 engine. R»-dlo. whitewalls, >1,090, OR 3-33M 1*55 FORD WAOON, 3-DOOR, V* ■ automatic, clean. OR 3-1077^ ‘M FORD, 3-POOR HARDTOP. , Falrlane $00, FE 4-6007. 1037 Can- M CoTvet. Hardtop and soft $ijM$ •57 Bulck, Hardtop $77$ •97 Plymouth 3-door .. $878 ’M Lincoln 3-door, A-l . $7M SfBTte^AV.\vvv:: Sut»erior Auto Sales No fair offer retuwto 990 Oakland _FE 4-7900 ISTfSHD CLUB COUPE, VERT clean and Mild. Will accept TV. Hi-Fi, or Ram radio equipment In trade. 311 8- Tlldco. FE 3-7*00- REPOSSESSION MI3 Ford Station Wagon, real nice, lull price 9149 u| of 9* a month, du* Novamber 3. aU extra*. Will consldOr trade. OL l-MOt. Mi miles, like i.. . I I At $^0*4____________________ 1893 PONTIAC” RUNNINO CONDI-tlon, 9*9. 903-3319 ■84 POrrlAC 4-DOOR. 8 T i c K. 9900. 3703 B. Walton FB 0-30M DOAN. new , by present owner and baa had etc silent care. *1*89. C*U Ml 1-4700 tvaninga. m$o 3-666R'HXrB’- top. '8*' apwer brakes and. power steering, f owner, lull pries MOM. We wlU (inane*. Lucky Auto Sales 1*3 g. Baglnaw. TT6 4 FOR SAflf: 'fr%6NTIAC CATA-line 3-door hardtop. Ranter tur-quolse. Decor group, whitewall tires stick. About 7,000 mllta. MY 3-9631 First payment 1,4 j Lakeside NMtr»'M, 5' J3I-7M1 313 W. Montcalm QUEEN AUTO BALE8NEW LO-cstlen. trucks,. cars. 3048 Dlxl* Hwy FB 9-3812, OR 3-1900, INI COIIET D|^*«?hPWr$ cylinder with elandeijl ihlll. Full •67 FORt) V* AUToMATtC. _NO rust, $900, MU 4-0171, *04 East it.. Milford,_ M'iToiib staTioTWaoCT-ra- OL^.W’k.^T.fc MONEY DOWN. Assume i menu ot |I4.$7 per _mopth. i credit Marnier • "-rojO AND HEATER, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of M*9,ngr, month. Call credit Manager m. Park* at Ml 4-7800, Harold TWjrgjwr Ford. I ,arf?4S .Sc!<*, *’Thf Snow* of KUlnuin-ijj^ - ^ thing* to behavior of S:90 <2> Mass for Shut-1 jaro," starring Gregory Peck-i the, Three Cartwight boys. Guest *:to (9) Billboard Susan Hayward and Ava Gardner..|atar John camtdine. tColor) (B:is' (9) Sacred Heart (4) (Odor) Wells Fargo (7) Leave It to Beaver (9) Tad Lindsay 7:16 (9) Passing Parade 8:M (2) Perry Mason (coni.) W Wells Fargo (cont.) (7) Lawrence Welk (9) Closeup 0:80 (2) Defenders (4) Tall Man (7) Lawrence Welk (cont.) (9) Closeup (cont.) 9:00 (2) Defenders (cont.) (4) (Color) Movie: Sun Hayward, Ava Gardner and Gregory Beck afar in' "The Snows of Kilimanjaro." (7) Boxing (9) Inviiiblf Man 9:00 (2)Jte#13^ (4) Movie (cpnt.) (7) Boxing (cont.) (9) Explorations 10:00 (2) Gunsmoke (4) Movie (cont.) (7) Assassination Plot at Teheran (9) News 10:10 (9) Weather, Sports 10:80 (9) Golf Tips 10:80 (2) Gunsmoke (cont.) (4) Movie (cont.) (7) Teheran (cont.) (9) York Confidential (2) New* (4) News (7) News (9) M o v i e: “Gty tor Conquest” (1940). So his brother may have money tor a music scholarship, truck driver agrees to one boxing match. James Cagney, Ann Sheridan. 11:16 (2) Weather (4) Weather (7) Movie: “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” (1939). Idealistic, rather innocent young man ls elected to Congress. Jean Arthur, James Stewart, Gaude Rains, Edward Arnold. 11:80 (2) Sports . (4) Sports 11:86 (2) Mo v i e s: I. “Hondo” (1954). At an Isolated ranch, Cavalry dispatch rider finds woman and her son. J o h n Wayne, Geraldine Page, Ward Bond. 2. "Call Out the Marines” (1942). Two Marines tall for same girl. Victor McLaglen, Binnie Barnes. 11:36 (4) Movie: "Submarine Patrol" (1938). Chief petty officer (alls for skipper’s daughter. Richard Greene, Nancy: Kelly, Preston Foster, SUNDAY MORNING Shown uncut. (Color) GUNSMOKE, 10 p m (2). Season premiere in new iull-hour format. Badman (Ed Nelson) goes to Matt Dillon's (James Aroess') aid when marshal la -threatened by three outlaws. FIGHT OF THE WEEK, 10 p. 8:86 (4) News 8:39 (2) Christophers (4) County Agent (9) Herald of Truth SHOW OP THE WEEK, 10 p.m. 'Hemingway," filmed chronicle about the noted author’s life,, from boyhood until recent death. ADVENTURES IN PARADISE, 10 p.m. (7). Season premiere, “Appointment at Tarl-bl." Troy (Gardner McKay) serve* as lntermedi-Welterweight champ E m 11 e[ary |n negotiating for release of, Griffith defends title against Benny hostages held by escaped convicts. NEW YORK (UPI) Paict in 15-round bout. Average Family Uses a Ton of Paper a Year The sver- C’ANIHIl CAMERA, 10 p-in. (2>. age American family uses a ton; ------------* -a w [Season premiere. Ventriloquist I of paper a year. SUNDAY Paul Wlnchell baffles lobby-sitters] This accounts for articles from’ Al>l-AI STEVENSON REPORTS,[when he poses as desk clerk and birth certificates, to newspapers, i8:88 (7) Three Stooges 3 p.m. (7). Debut. Guest: Secre- throws his voice around. Durward wallpaper and money, American tary of State Dean Rusk. i Kirby, host. Cyanamld Co. reports. 9:09 (2) Decisions (4) Church at the Crossroads (7) Understanding Our World (ft) Temple Baptist Church I:1S (2) To Dwell Together 9:89 (2) Detroit Pulpit (4) Frontiers of Faith (7) Christian Science (9>„Qral Roberts 9:46 (7) Americans at Work 10:01 (2) This Is the Life (4) (Color) Davey and Goliath (7) Faith for Today (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow 11:16 (4) (Color) Diver Dan UrM (2) Felix the Cat (7) Q, T. Hush 10:46 (4) Industry on Parade 11:06 (4) House Detective (7) Realm of the Wild (9) Christophers 11:16 (2) Little Lul» --- u:30 (2) Washington Conversation (7) Youth Bureau (9) African Revolution SUNDAY AFTERNOON 18:00 (2) Detroit Speaks (4) Seeker* (7) Directions *62 (9) West Point 18:80 (2) Report from Washington (4) Builder’s Showcase (7) World Adventure Series (9) Men of Annapolis .8:46 (2) Movies: 1. “Mystery in Mexico" (1948). Young woman’s brother is suspected ot jewel theft. Bill Lundigsn. 2. "The Saint in New York” (1938). The Saint comes up against gang of criminals. Louis Hayward. - - :oo (2) Movie (cont.) (4) Journey (7) Championship Bowling (9) Movie: “Escape to Burma" (1955). Fugitive takes refuge on plantation. Robert Ryan. :00 (2) Movie (cont.) (4) Captain Gallant (7) Adlal Stevenson (9) jfovie ,con,) 8:30 (2) Movie .(cont.) (4) Mr. Wizard (7) pro Football (9) Movie (cont.) (2) Pro Highlights (4) Lock UP (7) Pro Football (cont.) (9) Movie (cont.) (2) International Zone (4) Capitol Reports (7) Pro Football (cont.) (9) Movie: “Goak and Dagger" (1946). Scientist goes to German-occupied Italy to spy on the Nazi*. Gary Cooper, Lilli Palpier 3:15 (4) Mpnicipal Reports 4:00 (2) Camera Three (4) Medicine At Michigan (7) Pro Football (cont.) (9) Movie (cont.) 4:80 (2) Accent (7) Pro Football (cont.) (ft) Movie (cont.1 5:00 (2) Amateur Hour (4i Wisdom (7) Pro Football (cont.) (9) Movie (cont.) 3:80 (2) G-E College Bowl (4) Chet Huntley (7) Football Scoreboard (9) Troubleshooters (9) Kiplinger Changing Tlmps 11:16 (2) Weather (4) Weather (7) Movie: “The Thrill of Brazil” (1946), American Brazil attempts to Win’ back Ms wife. Evelyn Keyes. (9) Movie: “Reach for the Sky" (English, 1956). Story of ace pilot Douglas Bader who lost his legs in crash. 11:80 (2) Sports (4) Sports 11:16 (2) Movie: “Man Abou Town" (1939). London producer attempt* to gain reputation with the ladies. Jack Benny, Dorothy Lamour. U:3d (4) Movie: "Girl in the Subway.’’ Imaginative young lady carries a blanketed rubber doll on the subway to get a seat. Natalie Wood, Jim Gamer. MONDAY MORNING 6:00 (4), (Color) Continental Gass-room. <:80 (2) Meditations 6:86 (2) On the Farm Front 6:30 (2) College of the Air (4) Continental Gassroom (Color) ■ 7:00 (2) News, Weather, Sports (4) Today (7) Funews 7:l0 (2) B’wana Don 7:80 17) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:30 (7) Movie 9:00 (2) Movie (4) Ed Allen (96) Spanish Lesson 9:80 (4) Consult Dr. Brothers (96) Careers 9:46 (I) Gateway to Glafoour 9:60 (7) News 10:00 (2) Calendar (4) Say When (7) Jack La Lanne (96) Our Scientific World 10:86 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Jackie.Cooper (56) English V 10:40 (9) Billboard (9) Junior Roundup (2) Video Village 14) (Odor) Price Is Right aL Texan - ~~ (9) Romper Room 11:16 (56) German-Lesson ii:80 *(2) December Bride (4) Concentration , (7) Love That Bob!' ’ (56) Sorts of the South MONDAY AFTERNOON 19:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage (9) Mary Morgan (56) Science in Our World 18:80 (9) News 18:80 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) It Could Be You (7) Make A Face ~ (9) Susie (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (56) German Lesson 18:66 (4) News (2) Star Performance (4) Groucho. (7) Day in Court (9) Movie 1:10 (56) French. Lesson 1:86 (7) News (2) As the World Turns (4) Californians (7) Ufa of Riley (96) World History 1:86 (4) Faye Elizabeth 3:00 (2) Amos ’n’ Andy (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Number Please (66) Adventure* tn Science 8:80 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven' Keys (96) Tomorrow’s Craftsmen (2) Our Miss Brooks (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day BtXO (d) Movie' 8:80 (2) Verdict I* Youre (4) From These Roots (?) Who Do You lYust? 0:66 (2) News _____________ 4:00 (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room- for Daddy (7) American Bandstand ’4:16 (2) Secret Storm 4:80 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Adventure Time ' 4:50 (7) American News Stand «:55 (4) News « 5:00 (2) Movie (4) (Color) George Pierrot (?) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles and Pinocchia (96) Science in Our World 5:30 (56) Americans at Work 5:45 (9) Rocky end His Friends (56) New* Magazine 5:55 (4) Kukla and Ollle -Today's Radio Programs-- WSfS (imt W« AB (1 CKI.W. N«*< WWJ. N*»« WPON. Ntut • JO WJH Ii wcarI Conroe lilO WJR. Mod Mu*le l oo wjr. a: Your Rwu< WWJ. Music 'Ul Down SUNDAY I»n«NINffl J.&LW. WJBK. Srolhorlwiwl Hr CKI.W, Morob ol filUi WJBK. Oruoltlod Hour WCAR, Row*. Wood lino WPON, Know Your Blbl* xv'z. ' uK.1 W, I— WJ UK, fro< t WJUK. Town Mall WPOIf Bm »Rpi. New* i WJIt Halt Lk Choir WXYZ, Sunday B«»t. Mowo WPOH, Church or Weak WJBK. Sunday Bound! WCAR. Mimic WXYZ. Sun B*»l WPON. Bun S*r t oo WXYZ. Bun. Boat, Ncwi WWJ, Tls'ar Btaabkll WCAR. N»wa, LofOn CKI.W, Ron Knowloe I 30-WCAR, NOW!. Lofkn !:0O—WJR, SoorM. HHlfhti WJBK Sunday Sound! WXYZ. Sunday Beat. Sport* 4:1* WJR. Porauuctl**. UN, WCAR. New*. I."0*n WXYZ Sunday Baat. New* wwj. new*, WXYk. jtovlval Hour CKIW. Potutnc BapUn WJBK. Avo Marla Hour WCAK, Siauk to uod OilKJ-WJR, HOW!, Baldwin WWJ. Criaoreatw wtufib WXYZ, Radio Blbl! CKI.W, Rr-hcada TopiBla WJBK. Haw!, St. Prinola » so WJR. Album. I WWJ, N*wa, MIMIC WAVS. Voice Ol f i'ki.w Hab Chi.*! WJBK. .World Toim WA>Z, Healino Wl'nt* CKI W, Radio Bible WJUK, Now*, kulacopal WtryN tminanual Bapt. Mliblt—WWJ, Now*, SCOUla WXYZ, Pll|itm»«* OKLW, Oral Robarta WXYZ Sunday u**t. Sport* WPON, Sun. aaranado Silo—-WJK, Auto roport WWJ, Monitor WCAR, Nowa, Losan WPON, Pont. Raporta, J4*w WXYZ. Sunday Baat, Nawi SUNDAY EVBNINO *'0»->wjn, Now*, forum WWJ, Naw*. Conaldlne WXYZ, Sunday Baat, Uporl WJBK: Sunn»» Bound* WO/ It, New WPON, Msd OKLW. ailip.- WJR Bpactrum WWJ, Meat Praaa 8^' fiwsr^^vid IJIW-WOAR, Nawa. Thoma* m,ter%i. h wSWt •uniiyC»ir|, »P0?U WXYi. Sundny »wt, • :<*~‘WXY2. Bumlny ! CKtW. Hftvlvftl WJUK. New* Stereo WPON. Clark Davi» WWJ. Monitor. Ne*» Itia-WJR. Hymn* of WWJ. Nowa. Monitor CKLW. TIM Qulft Hr WPON. Jerry Olaon. ! WWJ, Nawa, Monitor WXyI Docunw WCAR. Now* WPON, Chuck Lawt* WWJ, Nawa. Monitor OiSO-WJR. Layman * Horn WWJ. Nawa, Monitor CXLW, Slblo Study Hour WPOH, Bob Lark WXYZ. Jaaa Acadamy WJBK. World Tomorrow Oiio—wjr. atorto WWJ, Oathotlo Hour WJBK, Now*. Concert WXYZ. Truth Herald CKLW, Hr. ol Ooulalon WPON, Don Thompaon WXYk, Revival Tima CKLW, Light. Life Hr. WPON, Mallow Music 111**-WJR. Now*. Sport* WWJ.Nawi, Mualc WXYZ. Praed. Bln**, Naw CKLW, Older Morton WJBK. New*. UD. Corned: II JO-WJR. Mualc WWJ, Naw*. Mu»lc CKLW. Album WJBK, Adolaacant* WXYZ, laauea And Anawart MONDAY MOKNINO *!**—WJR, N*W*. Af'Olt. WWJ, Nawa. Robtrl* -WJR, Mualo 1 ,W, iyt Open#! IK, Dally Blbli KLW,‘ N« IJBK, Ni iwa, Toby David WJBk WCAR, iww« WPON. Nawa, Early Morn, WJBK.' New*; Traffic WCAIt. Naw*. Sheridpn ___-WJR, Niva, Qtiaal WWJ, Nawa, Robatt* wxvk, N< WJBK. Nr WPON. N< at**—wjr, WJBK (11*11 CKLW. Naw*. Daald P:J*—v/jr. Jack Harrta CKLW. Mary Mor*an WfON, Mualo. NM|b.. Nowa i*.*a~vjH. Karl WPOH, Mualc al H MONDAY APTKRNOON III**—WJR. Nowa, farm CKLW, Nawa, Van Iliia-WJR. Tim* ror N WWJ. Smphaala, Lynkai CKLW. Joe Van i WWJ, Bob Alltaon WCAR' Nawa, Mual WJBK, Raid ItSO—WPON. Mualo, it**—WJR,' Nawa. ■Showcaa* WWJ, ------"I OKLW, Maxwau Van McLeod SHOW It**—CKLW, New*. Shift Bk WWJ, Bmphaalo, Maxwoll WJBK. HM-WJR, Mualc Rail CKLW Bud Davloa WPON Don McLood Shot Ntwa, Clark SUNDAY EVENING 1:00 (2) Twentieth Century (4) (Color) Meet the Press (7) State Trooper (9) Popeye (96) Musicals 6:30 (2) Big Ten Highlights (4) Rendezvous <7i Maverick (91 Parade (36) brdeal by Fire 121 Lassie (4t (Colori Bullwinkle i7i Maverick (cont.i (9) Movie: "Sea ol Grass" (1947). Conrad Richter's story of feud between cattlemen and farmers. Spencer Tracy. Katharine Hepburn. (56) Notes on Music -7:80 (2) Dennis the Menace (4) (Color) Disney's World (7) Follow the Sun (9) Movie (cont.) (96) To be announced (2) Ed, Sullivan <4» Disney's World (cont.) (7) Follow the Sun (cont.) ill) Movie (cont.) (56) Songs ot the South 8:30 (2) Ed Sullivan (cont.) (4) Car 54 (7) Lawman (9) Movie (cont.) CJi) Russian Writers 9:0« (2) G.E. Theater (4) (Color) Bonanza (7) Bus Stop V <9l Closeup (56) Guest Lecturer (2) Holiday Lodge ' (4) Bonanza (cont) (7) Bus Stop '(cont.) (9) African Patrol (2) Candid CRmera (4) Show of the Week (7) Adventures in Paradise (9) African Palrol (cont,) ’ 10:80 (9) Golf Tips 10:80 (2) What's My Line? (4) Show of Week (cont.) (7) Adventures (cont.) (9) Dr. Christian (2) News (4) News (7) News WXYZ. Winter CKLW. Nawa, mum WCAn, Nawa, She-ldan WPON. Don MoLaod Bl *:**- WUR, Mualo Hull CKLW, Dud Duvla • to* WJR, Ntwa, Mualo WWJ, Nawa, Tomby WXYR, Wlntur , Actor Denies Rumors of Being Great Lover By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Walter Chtarl hustled along W. 44th St. the other day—ypung, slim, good-looking, darkly romantic, often called the Danny Kaye of Italy, widely known to be the former sweetheart of both Ava Oairdner and Anita Ekberg — but waving, his hands and denying the widespread forecast that he'll soon be one of Broadway’s greatest lovers. "Listen, everybody’s a great lover," he scoffed. "Men in rage even ... but they don’t have the publicity.” Rushing off to feast on some pasta at j the Famous Kitchen, the siender-waisted, thirty-flvtoh Chtarl said It’s all because WILSON he's east as a colossal lover in the new Broadway show, "The Gay Life," which Is based on Arthur Schnltaler’s “The Affairs of Anatol.” it it it "Would you believe It - what I am Interested in now is; my singing?” he said. "I made 15 pictures In Italy; ltv-two years — I paid $200,000 to the Italian government in!! taxes. But when something is;; too easy for me, I lose interest. -If eveirbody. thinks you’re one ! of the best, you don’t work so ; hard ...” So, he sighed for lVk years! and "coming to America is like ! being born again” — even If1 Ava Oardner'dld arrive a short! time after he did. ! “I know I can act, I know I can dance in some clumsy way, but sing, never!” Re CHIARI gestured expressively as he ordered a daiquari. "All : Italians can sing but I was the exception. ; ! "But Kermlt Bloomgarden says, 'There's a man here who1! [gets some kind of noise out of you.' " j! The man was Herbert Green, the coaOh. “I Was my first ; astonished audience!" Chlarl said. "Now I will sing seven songs.! jSeven!” ! it it it ! THE WEEK-END WINDUP . . The French refused to lend 25,000 troops for the filming!; of Darryl Zanuck't "Longest Day." A Paris wit cracked, "With -25,000 troops Zanuck could take over France" . . . Stan Kenton ; signed a five-year contract with Basin St. East . . . Theresa; Brewer’s going into the beauty salon business with hair stylist; < Ernie Adler ... jack Lemmon took a quart of Leone's spaghetti]! sauce to London, where he's making a film with Kim Novak. |; ★ ★ ★ KARL’S PEARLS: Taffy Tuttle told her escort, "I see both|! points of view just fine—the one that's wrong and the one!; that’s mine.” < TODAY'S BEST LAUGII: Comic Jackie KatmOn boasted,!! ’Last night I was out with one of the town’s really big spend-i! era—my wits.’’. ; WISH I’D SAID THAT: A married man differs from a • bachelor In that when he ties one on, It s likely to be anj! apron.—Frank J. Pepe, Quote. . . . That’s earl, brotther. J ELLIS* INC. Since 1945 • FKKK KSTIMATtS • low raicss • rHA on* TKRMM Addition*. Kllohon*. Porrhr*. a*na*>, Aluminum, al*. PI 2-2671 ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES! "DO NOT TURN YOUR FURNACE ON . . . UNTIL you hove had your fur noce CLEANED by Kleen Air Power Suction. Why DIRTY up yOur walls, carpets, drapes with dust from the air ducts?" 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We use dependable Q-E Service-Designed Tubes and Black-Daylite Picture Tubes. Arnol^e tovar TO UL^2-1800 Auburn Radio » TV FI 4-1655 « nun bk. V FI 4-9736 Loti mar Radio ft TV OR 3-2652 MS» tiuh.b.n, Ur.jUn Pblua Morao lUctrouic* MA 4-1366 IM W W.ll.d L.k* Ur . W.ll.d Lk. Norton Radio 6 TV PI 2-3106 a«o«J Van D?ln, w..kin*ton Ob.l TV Sank* FI 4-4945 .mi* Klliol '• ‘ ‘ .....'• C & V TV Inc. PI 4-1515 Nor Applianto lk* Oakland, ronll.r UMMUfM Dolby Radio » TV F| 4-9602 S«* Loklfk, ronlik* > . Dobkt TV ft Radio OL 2-4722 tot W. Valnnllr. K»<-h*»(.r trie FI 4-2525 IM 1-4114 Orshtri Uki Phelps TV Sorvico OR 3*1217 Ml* DIM* Hwy.» Ponllko Rich Radio ft TV FI 4-0221 Nod’* Radio ft TV FI 4-5641 Vtt Orehkrd Lake. Pantlar |ackaon A^plitnca OR 4-7561 Stefenokl Radio ft TV FI 2*«9t? till W. Harm, r.nll.o Street's Radio ft TV FI 4-4111 m W. Marks. Pki.iUo ,, Al Roodine TV MY i-t 124 \ TWUfffY-frOUR. . r * '\ 1 'r T THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER BO, Igfa rJU Romney to Tell Ration Thinking Behind Contract r r —...............**'*..■ • DETROIT (UPD—George Rom-/ tfty, president of America*) Motors, I - will discuss the national implies-lions of thd eompany's profit sharing contract with the United Auto Workers Uftton'toi a . national television broadcastSunday. "Widespread intA^egt in American Motors' progress (profit) sliar- ' m 1 ing approach confirms our belief that it is of major national significance,” Rontpey said. F ’• ,vf ? He added, 7'We-feel that it M important in the public interest that jit" explain the thinking behind our action."/ ' jk * Jr ’ i. RoiWney said that the profit shar ing agreement, which stunned the auto industry, "opens a new door into labor relations,- - deepens the equity of our ethployes have ,in their jobs and ■ • ... bucks inflationary trends.”- CAB OKs Airlines' 'No Show'Penalties WASHINGTONIUPU—TheOvlt Aeronautics Board (CAB) has given the nation's airlines authorization to consider ■ stiff ’penalties against passengers who make reservations but fail to show up for flights'.' Chairman Alan Boyd said Thursday the CAB had given to. dls-an >■ inpenalty the c^rrle 1 cuss the ; dustrywlde severe enough , to practice.. Jgut Boyd, who met with the presidents of major airlines, said that if the airlines levy such penalties,''(hey also must accept fines tor over-selling' and over-booking. The Capet family held the French' throne from 987, when Hugh Capet founded the dynasty, to 1789, when Louis XVI lost his head in the French Revolution. State C.o/C. Plans Statewide Growth Confabs LANSING UK *- -The Michigan State Chamber of Commerce reports its plans to hold a statewide series of' at least 90 economic growth conferences in local communities during the next year. ' The two-hour sessions,...starting in October, 'will be conducted by teams from, the state chamber staff and member business and manufacturingfirms. The programs will outline the economic and employment situation- in the State and relate it directly to the immediate the conference. Speakers also will outline 'the «gisWtive> mid followup action needed for econoipic growth. 7 - Steam locomotives* are on 'thdr Way out In Italy. They haul about 15 per cent of the traffic at present, but plans call for them all to be replaced by diesels by the end ; of 1961, when All major routes will " be electrified. +..... The symbol ot the 1964 World’s Fair in New York’s Flushing Meadow is to be a huge openwork globe of stainless steel, called a Unisphere. • FOR 10W COST CAR LOANS GMTfi EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 156 W. Huron fl 5-6151 A J 0 SON Of MAN! t loved thy creation, hence I' created thee. Wherefore, do thou love Me, that I mey name thy name\fnid fill thy soul with the spirit of Ilf*. BAHAI CENTER 84 Hehry Clay ’ No Phone Orders, C.O.D.’s or Deliveries’1* •Except Large llama MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Hydraulic Storm Door Closers Won’t Leak Air • Regularly at 3.49 Q,* . • Save This Monday charmt it Only Hydraulic action can give you trouble-free, year-round performance on all doors; wooden, heavy aluminum jalousie types. Adjustable for slow or fast closing, .piece is pertnanc “ you’ll save more at Sears! Kenmore Automatic Console Sewing Machine . . , Save! • Was priced at 89.95! O • Makes sewing easy! Here's a Kenmore that's made to do all your ordinary sewing tasks with cash! Sews forward and reverse, has foot-^perated\control. In attractive console cabinet Save 40.95 Monday. Shop Mon. ’’til 9! \ Sewing Machine Dr pi., Main Hoar \ MONDAY ONLY! boys’ Biltwei shoes with guaranteed soles your choice A’** Of 2 Style. ChTra.,1 Choice of 2 styles, both moc-tor, 1 with scuff-tip in black ... 1 in black or brown. For the 1st time we now have a shoe with soles so good we guarantee them to outwear the uppers or a new pair without charge. Limit 2 pr. MONDAY ONLY women's assorted blousettes MONDAY ONLY! 73% Cotton and 27% Rayon Cover-All Slipcovers 88* w? 333 snug slipcover look. Choose brown or green upholstery type fabric. Machine washable. Save at Sears! I-IV. Sofa (’.over .... 6.66 open t intii. v Monday nii>; MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Save Monday! Your Choice of 5 . Painter’s Needs rtr 66' Your choice; date putty, speckling paste, roller covers in pack of 3, 2-inch nylon brush, Wxl80’ roll of masking tope. Shop this bargain Monday . . . save up to 34c! Cooling System . . . «t OCI ALLSTATE 3-in-l Kit FOR A 2.17 Combination Flush radiator, stop leaks, prevent rust, lubricate v with these tested aids. Shop Monday ’til 9! ALLSTATE 6-Foot Radiator llose, Mondoy only . Nylon Wound Vinyl Covered Basketball Keg. 4.98 3*®r,,n No stronger hi.ketbsll made. Offi- ^sBrnmuK^dM Steel Basketball Goal and Net Keg. 1.98 133 Regular 22.95! Large 9xl2-ft. Rug With Fbam Rubber Back Cotton acetate and rayon pile comes ii back gives longer wear, comfort. Brown, while. Save! Solid colors............. Sporting l.notl., Perry Si, Basement MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY MONDAY ONLY! ggjMPRMT u I [jgj Circulating Type Gas Heaters Save on Fuel • Regular 3125! • 75,000 BTt! output $63.80 *98 Hollywood Bed Outfit 1 No Mnn-v Dnwn /■ Combustion chamber design gives you maximum amount of heal from the fuel. Automatic controls, handsome cabinet, Gel your healer Monday and lie cosy and warm this winter! 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Appliance Dept., Main Basement Phone FE 5-4171 I H ■1 F0N17AC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 30, 1961 —24 PAGES VOh. 119 W. 202 Egyptians Told to Get Out Qvilian Regime Forms Republic After Revolt HE’S GOT PROBLEMS - President Gamai' ' - ' --.if. Abdel Nasser wore a worried expression as his chieftain Nasser told an estimated crowd, of top military aide in Syria, Field Marshal Abdel 100,000 Egyptian* gathered In the square about Hakim Amer deft), conferred with him in Cairo’s , the situation in Syria. At right is UAR vice Republic Square today. United Arab Republic president Kamal Hussein. Weekend Talks Held With Ford Recognition of Syria Is Put Off by Auto Company, Union Pressed by Pending Tuesday Deadline Damascus Raises Flag as Military Rule Ends; Democracy Pr&mised BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) i- Syria’s ne«L. civilian regime raised the flag of the Syrian Arab Republic over government buildings today and ordered the ouster of Egyptians in.quick se-quel to the revolt against Cairo’s rule. All Egyptians, civil and military, were, instructed to present themselves at military headquarters for shipment home. The order, signed by “the commander of the Syrian Arab army,1 was broadcast by Radio Damascus. This broadcast and another announcing the flag-raising* were monitored in Beirut; capital neighboring Lebanon. Cfc Union planned today to m e e through toe weekend in hope* of reaching a contract settlement before Tuesday's 10 a.m. strike deadline. " After negotiations recessed FH-day UAW negotiators moved to the 12th floor of the downtown Detroit hotel In which the bargaining sessions are being held, for a special meeting. No details of tin meeting were released, but one anion spokesman termed It, “Just a anion meeting.'* UAW President Wal Reuthor was expected to be on hand for today's meetings. ABSENT FRIDAY ‘ He was absent Friday In the morning, to attend the funeral, of Charles E. Wilson, former General Motors president and secretary of Defansc and during the afternoon he worked In his1 office at UAW headquarters. Talks continued along the lines cstsMisbed in the past few days. Noneconomic matters, of. the same type that Idled nearly Ue.OtM General Motors workers for two weeks early this month, were points of discussion. They centered outside contractors, Job seniority and working conditions. Bargaining sessions continued to be conducted under a news blackout agreed to by company and union.' UAW Vice President Ken Ban-non would only any after the see-alone Friday, "We had a very g e e d discussion, I’m always Ford Vfce President Malcolm L. Denise echoed his optimism, and reticence, saying, "I’m never without hope, jve had a helpful cussion.” LOCAL ISSUE SEPARATE The strike deadline, set earlier by the union, applies only to national economic and noneconomic matters. " '"Locals of the vast union have not been given permission to strike over unresolved local issues. However, some locals have Indicated they will walk out. U.S. Negro Fugitive Seeks Cuban Asylum HAVANA (ft — A Negro wanted for kidnaping u white couple in lurbunce, has .requested poiltl asylum in Cubnyfre official1 Cuban 1 News Agency Prensa announced today, Prchsh said Robert F. Williams . fled the United States "because of threats against his life and persecution. In Ms country.” The announcement charged Williams was harassed by American authorities “because of his valiant fight In favor of colored people tigers Friday and reportedly hi ahd his defense of the Cuban revolution. Httral and military ties with ..Cairn provided Syria ha* a high degree of autonomy. Resentment against being treated like a stepchild in the U.A.R. is considered a major reason for Syria's spiimering the 3'vyear-old union. The U.S. policy to go slow on any recognition ol the Damascus government was -Slated Friday by j>h W. Reap. State Department press officer. Asked’ about U.8. recognition. Reap said, is premature to consider the question." Reap also reiterated Washington's hands-off policy . He. said the Nice indicated the uprising of internal origin, hot set off by any outside power. Another high • ranking official said, “As far as we are able to detect there h no Communist Influence" in Omt rebellion, which he attributed to deep dlssatisfas-Non with Nasser. U.S. authorities were reluctant to say anything mpre about the revolt for fear of further stirring up Middle East troubles and getting the United States involved. Agents Smash Moonshine Still in Waterford Twp, Fire Fatal tp Pontiac Womati, 44 WASHINGTON (AP) — U. S. recognition of the new Syrian regime seemed out of the question today until a lot more unfolds in the latest Middle East drama. One impelling reason ruling out early establishment of formal ties with the Damascus insurgents was a U. S. DETROIT (UP!I — Ford Motor!,. . . mwsM—-—- I * the United Auto Workers stitutional convention were headed today for a possible caucus deadlock over a choice for.the presidenftf for the first such convention in Michigan in St years. The GOP delegates, Who will ot*. umber the Democrats 99-45 wh# they convene in Lansing’s Center next week, scheduled ft preconvention caucus at the EH* CluoXhere., LOS ANGELES (AP) — Richard M. Nixon denies he sought a secret deal to get former Gov. Goodwin J. Knight out of the 1962 race for Califomia‘,s Republican gubernatorial nomination. "False and libelous on its face,” th£ former vice president said Friday of Knight’s charge: That Nixon sent an emissary to offer If no agreement is reached Ms day on the presidency, toe Reptdl lic&ns might m*?t Sunday atffi Monday in an effort to All. tEk post before the convention Is caBy to order at boon Tuesday. W Flames In" toe house were ed shortly before 6 a.m. toddy by a passing cab driver, who sped to ijeaeby -Fire Station 4 to report the blaze., Chief B6damer estimated the; flt-e, which started in the basement, had been burning for about two hours before, it was discovered, said the house was well-ami lightly sealed, prevent- through the outer walls until Just before the fire engine* arrived. Mr*. Webber already wa* dead, crumpled at one end ot her bed. Her husband arrived home from work Just as the fire engines pulled up in front ot the house. The blaze was extinguished within an hour and a half, and caused an estimated 82,300 damage to the IMrStory frame home. Knight any state jcb he wanted if Knight withdrew. "No person representing me dr authorized by hte has made such a promise," said Nixon; Knight retorted, "I will disclose toe name of Nixon’s p emissary and present • my and witnesses at. a public conference within a very few days." These were the latest developments in a dispute between California's two top 'Republicans — long-simmering feud that he come to a boil since Nixon announced his candidacy for nor Wednesday nigbt. Knight, now a Los Angeles TV commentator, claim* Nlx*n «w gi nee red the QOP maneuvering Hutchinson' a candidate from the conservative wing, said Friday nigbt that he felt confident there would be agreement on the presidency today. CLAIMS TOP SPOT He claims to be the frant-runMr, ith between 30 and 90 votes Unoi j in bis behalf. According to Bodamer the fire started in faulty wiring of a washing machine in the basement, directly beneath Mrs. Webber’s bedroom. The flames burned upward through the floor. Japan Fallout Rises TOKYO (P — Japan's Central Meteorological Agency "said today the highest radioactivity since Sept. 1, when the Russians resumed nuclear teats, was detected from rain and dust Friday In Northern Japan- Take 99th, In 10 Innings Tigers Seek No. 100 in Morning Game John Haase, 19, who has admitted slaying an 18-year-old Pontiac girl while "playing around” with a shotgun in his home was charged with first-degree murder yesterday. Haase ot 181 S. Marshall St. was bound over for examination Wednesday when arraigned before Judge Maurice E. Fin- negan yesterday afternoon. He was remanded to the county jail without bond. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP1) There was. baseball with morning coffee breaks in the twin cities today. At 10 a.m. local time (11 a.m, Pontiac time) the Minnesota Twins and Detroit Tigers met with tigers seeking victory No. 100 of the nearly dead season. They got N«. m Friday but for eight Inning* it appeared that they weren't Interested, The final all four TWin runs before giving way to Ron Klin?. CASH HITS 40th Norm Cash slammed his 40th homer ol the year Into the seats fifth to highlight his attempt to single-handedly lead the stumbling Tigers out of the wilderness. Altogether Cash had four-for-flve his average to .359 and clinch tiie American League batting title, ..... score, In la inning*, was i Petra* ■ Tlte tMuttual morning contest was scheduled today to avoid conflicting with the Minnesota • Missouri football gurae, __r.__. fUJVwns . _ his first major league start tor toe Tigere, against Jim Kaat (8-18), the pride ot Zealand, who started ’ ,r the Twins. After .(he "morning hour" there only tine game left—Sunday, Jim B u n n I n g started tor .the hopes of winning No. 18 this year. Mo last four Innings and gpve up the loss, and that ran his league-leading total to 221 for the season. Billy Martin poked his sixth homer of the season for the Twins off Bunnlng. Terry Fox got the win for Detroit, cotriing on tor the final two innings after Hank Aguirre also got Into the act. It was Fox's fifth victory in seven decisions. Pascual took the loss, his 16th against 15 wins. ‘ \ Mow the Detroit rookie a spot In It was the 139th strikeout ot the iason tor Wood, a league record. It Also helped Pascuul's teammate Jim Lemon clear Ms name. LemOn old record of 138 set In 1996 when the team was at Washington. Wood redeemed himself In the 10th when he rifled a single to drive toe winning run. Pascual had six other strikeouts to Ms credit, even though he took Today's game was delayed for a lime by rain. The action: TIGKItS FIRST Fernandes alngled to right. field line, ecorlng ' Fernandes, Oolavtto Mingled, apparently scaring Morton, bat Morton was called out dor falling to touch third, Green to Ti)tUe. Rom* Mingled to right, (olsvlto *lop( tag at second. Wood singled' to center, scoring ('olsvlto. Boros then scored when the ball got by Green for nn error. Wood tried to go all toe way home and was Thre r is, five hits,'on* error, (Two runs earned , Green bounced n single to right. Martin singled to center, Green going to third. Kffiehrew struck out. Altobelll grounded to Wood, who dropped the ball trying to tag Martin on the base- ViiiNon singled to left, scoring Martin, with Altobelll going to third. Noragon walked, loading the bases. Tuttle tiled to Bruton. Altobelll scoring after the catch and Allison going to third. Val-dlvlelso bounced a tingle to left, scoring Allison, with Noragon stopping at second.' jKaat was called out on strikes. Four runs, tour kits, one error, Red Leaves Filfland MOSCOW (UP1) - Soviet President , Leonid, Brezhnev returned home’ today after an eight-day official visit to Finland. governor in INI to allow the* U.S. Sen. William F. KnowUnd * to run for that office. Knight ran Youth Charged With Murder Held Without Bond in Shotgun Death of Pontiac Girl, 18 Asst. County Prosecutor Rob-ri D. Long said the accused trying 1 icare” Janet M. Olsen, dough- Mr*. John V. Olsen. US Euclid Si. whew the lt-guage , shotgun went off. Haase saidvhe didn't remember pulling the trigger. The shooting occurred during a party al Haase!s home shortly after midnight Friday morning, while his mother, Mrs. Ivy Haase wa* at work at Pontiac General Hospital. ; Other youths at the part/ told police they heard the shot, but did not are the actual shooting. The dead girl was shot once In the head "while riandlrig In a doorway between a hallway and s bedroom In the Haase home, llaase ran out on the street and hysterically told two passing patrobuen what had happened. Officers Roger Allen and Gerald Pointer found the body where it had fallen in the hallway. The shotgun, belonging to one ot Haase's brothers, was on the bedroom floor. Haase said he didn't Intend shoot the girl, who he had bt dating for the past month, I only Intended "lo scare her.". any state job he wanted—tadud-< ing California chief justice—in * telephone call Sept. 7 by wealthy Republican friend of Nixon’s. Robert Finch, Nixon's I960 campaign manager, termed Knight’ report "totally preposterous." The Democrats, plagued by Intraparty fights for years in California, obviously were happy at signs ot an intramural GOP squabble. lost badly, Knight claims—and Nixon denies—that Nixon, then vice president. wanted both men defeated so he could have unquestioned control of California's Republican party. The latest rupture in the cordial relations' between Nixon Knight started , in thi fashion: On the eve of Nixon’s nn-Honally televised news conference Wednesday night. William chairman. Issued a statement claiming a Nixon Mend offered Knight a secret deal to withdraw from the race. / Icky Weather Is Scheduledf for the Evening Scattered showers will the Pontiac area tonight, with warmer tem'pereturito. tonight’s low'Will be in the 50s. Sunday is expected to be partly cloudy and somewhat cooler, the high about 60. Fair and warmer u the outlook for Monday. Morning southerly Wtml* ol 6 mile* per hour will heesme south to southeast late this rattnunu at is to ts m.p.11., tote tonight or out Winds wilt shift to t west at it to M n Fifty-three was the lowest temperature in downtown Pont me preceding 8 a.m. The mereUrv had climbed to 72 al l p m. * GOP Delegates to Con-Con May Hit Stalemate while, wore meeting this afleft noon In Detroit. . * Adoption of rules and commitri* ssignmenta also may be settled t| the caucus- The two leading candidate* toll ■ * RjriKV the presidency are Edwa and Geer** Romney, tor* Carp, presw wa* not cnaspnlgalng actively far the asmtaatiaa. hot Hurt hs would accept the post If M were There appeared to be a growing feeling among observer* hare that delegates might not gby the necessary 73 votes to either HutoMti ir Romney, but would r *“ In St. was asked to dm* up a set of rules and to present them at In-day's meting. HutcMaaaa said g» hr lh>ved the « equate set at rule*. Instead, Hutchinson said, he ftpi turned his attention to drawing up an agretda for today's miig||< Several of his proposal* wens *§• pected to stir up some controversy-First item HutcMtissn The next morning. Knight toM mid he pmMaftHMi In taver at newsmen that he had been offend holding cioaad meeting addle tain subjects were beind diacusaad. In Today's Press Rmady br GOP Sen. GoMwnter says country disgusted with New Frontier—FAGE 1. S.S. Hop* Pontiac man sees cultural problem* tor Peace'Corps— PAGE IS. CfcaopPwGI? Fuel cell search continue* —PAGE 1. t riser h News t Untie* f EGtortnl* a Hssuo bsrtiun l»N> MbHaarisi . •: ipssto mm. Tarotrr* »*« ft * Gudta’PliffiHiiii • * Gilson, fens* SB Women* Panes , • fj V , . ■ ' The W.other ' vt--'-%zx%ss THE PONTIAC PRESS lte%Ttafc' SEPTEMBER to, 1961^-24 PAGES Egyptians ToULt Get Out COLOR, Edition * ,, ■* * » * ‘ Your Cheatin’ Heart Will Tell on You TKE’8 GOT PROBLEMS — President Gamal Abdel Nasser wore a worried expression as his top military aide in Syria, Field Marshal Abdel Hakim Amer (left), confected with him in Cairo’s Republic Square today. United Arab Republic ir rki chieftain Nasser told an estimated crowd of 100,000 Egyptians gathered in the "square about the situation, in Syria. At right is UAft vice president Kamal Hussein. < Weekend Talks Held With Ford Auto Company, Union Praised by Pending Tuesday Deadline DETROIT (UPI) - Ford mW Go. and the* United Auto Workers Union planned today to through the weekend In I reaching a contract settlement before Tuesday s 10 a.m. strike deadline- * * * After negotiations recessed Fri-, day UAW negotiators moved to the 12th floor ot (he downtown Detroit hotel In which the bargaining sessions are being held, for a special meeting. Ns detail*, of the meeting were released, bat one union spokesman termed If. "fast a aaloa Recognition of Syria Is Put Off byU WASHINGTON (AP) — U. S. recognition of the new Syrian regime seemed out of the question today until announced dissolution of the mill- Forms Republic After Revolt Damascus Raises Flag as Military Rule Ends; Democracy Promised BEIRUT, Lebanon' (AP) — Syria’is new civilian regime raised the, flag of the Syrian Arab Republic over government buildings today and ordered the ouster of Egyptians in quick se-‘ quel to the revolt against Cairo’s rule. All Egyptians, civil andj military, were instructed to! present themselves at mili-| tary headquarters for shipment home. The order, signed by “the commander of the Syrian Arab army,” was broadcast by Radio Damascus. ..This broadcast and another announcing the flag-raisings were monitored in Beirut, capital neighboring Lebanon. * * * Premier Mamoun Kuzbari had Basil9s Kiss Reveals All BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) — Rule No. .1 for tourists entering Yugoslavia: Don’t kiss the cust^s man: A businessman, identified by the Belgrade newspaper Polltika only as Basil, tried to and It cost him about $5,000. This 4s the story Polltika told: . Basil was traveling by train from Germany and arrived at customs control in lescnice on the Austrian border. An officer cheeked his baggage and found 1 It conformed to customs regulations.’ He S saluted the businessman and turned % around to leave. ★ it . it I Basil, evidently satisfied wlith the out-| come, jumped to his feet, embraced the | customs mat) and gave him two long, re- sounding kisses straight on the. face. This ends the gay part of the story. - The customs man, apparently unused to such friendliness-by passengers, decided to jtake another look. He took a screwdriver, opened several planks In the walls of Basil’s sleeping compartment and felt around inside. LUCK CHANGED The end of the story has Basil sitting with a long face and the custom* man beaming over a big pile In the middle of the compartment 60,000 gold buqkles for necklaces, three pounds of gold bars, a quantity of lighters and other commodities. Polftlka figured out the two kisses cost Basil a-total of roughly 4.6-mlIUon dinars, tax .included. |a lot more unfolds in the latest 'Middle East drama. One impelling reason ruling out eaTly establishment of formal ties with the Damascus insurgents was a U. 8. desire to remain on goodj---------------------" “ terms with President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the now-disrupted United Arab Republic. Another was that the Syrian grbOfr-hM yet to make any request to the United Statea for recognition. Still another was lack of dence ol the new regime’s nnture|which a moonshine still iUKs "at Some experts Mid that it wa* legedly being operated, » I According to Troop* Brown, Elmer L. - Edmistci Agent&Smash Moonshine Still in Waterford Twp- tary group that boosted him to .power. He promised democracy and constitutional rule. Kuibarl has not yet proclaimed Syria’s Independence from President Nasser's United Arab Republic, In which it Joined Egypt tn February IBM. But the new flags flying over government of- teehnicaUty. The exact number of Egygjjgps in Syria is not .known, but there must be several thousand. In addition to the hundreds of government officials who serviced the' ._ ...... .. — , - - - now-sundered United Arab Repub-j Syrian group [ According to Trooper Johnj|jc' jn pamaRCUg and other cities, ; maintain some no- |Brown^ Elmer L.j Edmistci^ j*;|thcre were large, numbers of Egyp- agents and Pon-Hl state police raided a Wafer-jford Township home yesterday in Fire Fat to Pontiac Woman, 44 Faulty electrical wiring wj blamed for a house fire this morning that resulted in the death of Pontiac woman. ♦ * * Mrs.- Jerome Wei?Iter, 44, was pronounced dead' of smoke inhalation in the burned-out bedroom of her home at 571 LeBaron St. was alone in the house when the fire broke out. A semi-invalid, she apparently was unable to get oat of bed In time once the smell of smoke awoke her, according to Pontiac Asst. Fire Chief Victor Bodamer. i the Syrian | JAW President Walter P. tidier was expected to be on nd for today's meetings IMKNT FRIDAY lie wu« absent Friday in the x-nlng. to attend the funeral of urles E. Wilson, former General >tors president’and secretory of fonse and during the afternoon worked In his office at UAW adquarters. Cal- wa* Paring " ba,ch °[ Mtlw holding posts . a,. !\vhiskf»v when they arrived at his,8rmy There were aw 873 _.Tyr°nf„. Sl j lieved "composed entirely of- Egyp-; .. Q |PP| I home .after noon. The officer had a;tl Soldi«> Resentment against being treatedwarrant issued by Federal i lines established In the past lew days. Nonecwaomle matters, of* the Mine type that Idled nearly 230,000 General Motors workers for two weeks early this month, were points ot discussion. They centered on outside contractors, Job eseniority and working conditions. a * * Bargaining sessions continued- to be conducted under a news blackout agreed to by company and union. a a a The strike deadline, set earlier by the union, applies only to national economic and noneconomic matters. i stepchild in the U.A.R. ta| lered an. s splintering the .Tv-year-old The U.S. policy to go slow ny recognition of the Damascus government was slated Friday by Joseph W. Reap, State Department press officer. Asked about U.S. recognition, Reap said, "It is premature to consider the question." a a a Reap also reiterated Washing in’s hands-off policy. He said tlie evidence indicated the uprising was of internal origin, not set off by any outside power. Another' high • ranking official ltd, "As far as we are able to fhieace" in the rebellion, which he attributed to deep dlsMttsfas-ilon with Nasser. U.S. authorities were reluctant to say anything more about revolt for (ear of furtiier stirring up Middle East troubles and getting! the United 8tates Involved. (court in Detroit. Officers smashed the still, and U barrels of Inash fermenting In the basement, and confiscated about 10 25-pound sacks of sugar. The copper still had a weekly capacity ot. between BO and 100 gallons of moonshine, according to Brown. Neighbors in the suburban residential area apparently were unaware of any illegal activities at the Edmisten home. An exhaust tan had been installed In one of the basement windows to dispel telltale hdors, according to offi-trs. Edmisten was taken into custody by the revenue agents from Detroit who said he would be arraigned in Federal Court on charges of violating the Alcohol tax law. 'Agents said they received A tip in Detroit that Edmisten, who moved here from the South, was supplying a blind pig in the city, selling moonshine liquor, at $5 a gallon. WOMEN STAY HOME - Egyptian women were, asked stay in their .homes today "for their-own safety." This, and a previous communique asking Syrians to stop staging demonstration* In support of the revolution. Indicated the lead-. era may have been worried. In Beirut the newspaper Lisan al Hal- reported the new government, which was named .only Friday, freed all political prisoners in Damascus. There was npron-firmation in Beirut of the repdn. a a a The government waited less than two days after Thursday’s virtually bloodless coup to ask foreign diplomats in Damascus to seek ognition by their governments of the new Syrian regime. 1 Turkey and Jordan already have accorded recognition. Iran was reported considering recognition, and Iraq came to Syria’s defense. All four natlops have (Continued on Page 2,'Col.. 5) Flames ip the house were spot-j ed shortly before 6 a.m. today by a passing cab driver. Who sped to nearby Fire Station 4 to report the blaze. a a a Chief Bodamer estimated thej' (fire, which started in the base-1 iment, had been burning for about two hours before it was discovered. He said the house wss well-built and tightly sealed, prevent- ( Ing the flames from burning ; throtigh the outer walls until Just j betoVe the fire engines arrived. | Mrs. Webber already was dead. —...«..i,..a -*-■ — d of her bed. ! Nixon Hits Knight Charge of Pressure As Libetous LOS ANGELES (AP)- — Richard M. Nixon denies he sought a secret deal to get former Gov. Goodwin J. Knight out of the 1962 race for California’s Republican gubernatorial nomination. ■ ‘’False, and iibelous on its face,” the former vice president said Friday of Knight’s charge: That Nixon sent an emissary to offer Knight any state job he wanted if Knight / withdrew. "No person representing me oi authorized by me has made such a promise," said Nixon. Knight retorted, "I will disclose the name of-. Nixon's praiure emissary and present my proof and witnesses at a public preM conference within a verjj} few days.” These were the lutest developments In a dispute between California’s two tdp Republicans — a California Feud Curbs GOP Optimism, Pg. 3 crumpled a Her husband arrived home from work just as the fire engines pulled i up in front of the house. J The blaze was.extinguished within an hour and a half, and caused an estimated $2,500 damage to the| lVj-story frame home. - a a a According to Bodamer the fire started in faulty wiring ot a washing-machine in the basement, directly beneath Mrs. Webber’s bedroom. The flames burned upward through the floor. RICHARD M. NIXON Youth Charged With Murder Held Without in Shotgun Death of Pontiac Girl, 18 long-simmering- feud that has come to a boil since Nixon announced his candidacy for governor Wednesday night. Knight, now a Lou Angeles TV * commentator, claims Nixon engineered the GOP maneuvering that forced him to step aside as governor to IBM to allow then U.S. Sen. William F. Knowland to run for that office. Knight ran for Knowlaad’s Senate seat. Both lost badly. Knight^ claims—and Nixon de-Inics—tbat NixOn, then vice presi-Bond <*< nl wanted both Japan Fallout Rises TOKYO UP) — Japan’s Central Meteorological Agency said today the t^l g h e s ( radioactivity' since Sept. 1, when the Russians resumed nuclear tests, was detected from rain and dust Friday in Northern Japan. defeated x>uld have unquestioned control of California’s Republic party. The latest rupture in the never-John Haase. 19, who has ad-i00”1*^ rela,ion!' between Nixon mitted slaying an lS-year-old Pon- Knight started ’K'* Tigers Lead Twins, 6-4, as Rain Falls in Sixth Inning tiac girl while “playing around" with a shotgun in his home was charged with first-degree murder yesterday. " asc of 181 S. Marshall St. bound over for examination Wednesday when arraigned before Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan yesterday afte y jail with- M1NNKAPOLI8 (AP» Rain Intervened In today’s Detroit Tig gets ■ Minnesota Tw ins baseball game ns the Tigers came to bat in the top of the sixth. The Bengals were leading at the time, 6-4 In a contest played In loose fashion by both teams. The contest, on unusual morning affair, whs also delayed at the outset by ruin. ' The unususl morning contest was scheduled today to avoid conflicting with the Minnesota <• Missouri football game, a a a Howie Roplltx (1-0) was making his first major league start for the Tigers, against Jim KAat (8-10) the pride of Zealand, who itarted for the Twni._ a a "a After the ‘.’morning hour” there Is only on* gam* left—Sunday. Today’s game wao delayed for a time by rain. The action: TIGKlt’H first Fernandes singled to right. Ilruton sacrificed Fernandes to called out. for falling to touch third, Green to Tuttle. Boron singled to right. Coinvlto sloping nl second. Wood singled to center, scoring OolAvlto. Boros thrn scored when (he ball gut by Green tor an error. Wood tried to gp all the Way home and was throWn out, Allison to Val-dlvlelso to Bailey. Three runs, five hits, one error, none loft. (Two- runs earned . TWINS FIRST Green bounced a single to right. Martin singled to center* Groan going to third. KlUebraw Morton - doubled down the right field line, scoring Fernandes. Cola \ h» singled. Scoring Morton, hiti Knat rovering first. Tuttle threw out Freehan. Koplltz struck out. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. TWINS SECOND Creep filed to Colavito. Martin fouled to Morion. K111 c b r e w walked. Altobelli singled to center, KUIebrew stopping at second. Allison struck out. No runs, one hit, no errors, two left. TIGERS THIRD Fernandes singled to center. to Wood, who dropped the ball trying to tag Martin on the baseline tor BS error, Green scoring. Altobelli scoring after the catch and Allison going to third. Val-dlvlelso bounced u single to left, scoring Allison, with Nnragon stopping al second. Knnl was called out on strikes. Four runs, tonthll*. one eryor. Iwo led. # ¥ riGERS SECOND KUIebrew threw out Osborne, scoring Fernandes and then went to second on the throw to toe plate, Valdlvlelso throw out Morton, Bruton taking third. Colavito Blngled to toft, sooring an error. Boros walked to Allison. Osborne walked, toad. Ing the buses. Freehan walked, forcing home Colavlto. Kllle-brew throw out Kopllts, Stonge covering first. ,a a a Three runs, three hits, one error, three toft. TWINS THIRD Naragon Hied to Morion. Fernandez threw oul Tuttle. Valdl-vlelso singled to left,’ Stonge was railed out on strikes. TIGERS FOURTH FtVnandcz bent out a single lo deep short. Bruton hit into a double play, Martin tagging Fernandez trying to advance, throwing to KUIebrew. Morion singled olf Tuttle's glove. Colavito (lied deep left. * No rims, two hiti, no errors, one left, TWINS FOURTH Green popped to Fernandez. Martin filed to Wood. KUIebrew popp* I ,to Bruton. No runs.’ no hjts, no ert Johnson Completes Mission for JFK ton. TIGERS FIFTH Boros struck out. Wood a out. Osborne doubled to Tuttle threw PARIS (UPI)—Vice President Lyndqjj B. Johnson took off today from Paris cn route to Washington after a swift round of talks with top American officials here on Berlin and Western defenses tn Europe. The U.S. vice president said he would report to President Kennedy that Western forces In Europe are “ready for whatever action they may be forced to tske.’’ Johnson had met -for iwo tjouts with' U.S. ,officials to obtain first-hand report for Kennedy developments in the* Berlin erl and Western defense moves, inferred at the -U.S. E hussy this morning with U.S. Air Force Gen. Lauris M. Norstad, supreme allied commander tn Eur-M*.., . Asst. Count •t D. Ixmg said the accused second, Nara-| youth said In a formal statement. I Valdlvlelso that he* "was just trying to v scare” Janet M. Olsen, daugh- I no errors, tw o I ter of Mr, and Mrs. John V. Olsen, TtS Euclid' St. when the 12-guage shotgun went off. Haase said he didn't remember pulling the trigger. j The shooting occurred during a party at Haase's home shortly aft-1 midnight Friday morning, while; his mother, Mrs. Ivy Haase was j at work at Pontiac General Hospital. Other youths at - the party told police they heard the shot hut did not see the actual shooting. The dead girl was shot on the head while standing in a doorway between a hallway and i bedroom tn the Haase home. Haase ran out oh the street and hysterically told two passing patrolmen what had happened. Officers Roger Allen and Gerald Pointer found the body where it hn^ fallen In the hallway, The lhotgun. belonging to one ol Haase's brothers, was on the bedroom floor. Haase said be didn’t intend to shoot the girl, who he had been dating Jor the past month, but Only. Intended "to scare hek ence Wednesday night. William A. Munncll. state Democratic chairman. Issued a statement claiming a Nlxdn friend offered Knight a seeret deal to withdraw from the race. I The next morning. Knight told newsmen that he had been oflexed any state job he, wanted—indud; ing California chief Justice—in a telephone call Sept. 7 by a wealthy Republican friend of Nix- Robert Finch. Nixon's 15160 cam Jlkiign manager, termed Knight's [report "totally preposterous." GOP Delegates to. Con-Con May Hit Stalemate j Could Bypass Romney and Hutchinson When! Choosing President * LANSING (AP)—Reputkj lican delegates to the conn stitutional convention werd headed today for a possible caucus" deadlock over af choice for the presidency for the first such copven4 tion in Michigan in 5ft years. The GOP delegates, who will oU$| number the Democrats 99-45 wheif they convene in Lansing's Civic Center next week, scheduled 2 preconvention caucus At the ElM Club ♦here. Democratic delegates, mean-* while, were meeting this afternoon In Detroit. If no agreement is reached to| day on the presidency, the Reput* licans might meet Sunday aria Monday in an effort to fill tM post before the convention is calM to order at noon Tuesday. !1 a a? a Adoption of rules and committed assignments also may be settled •( the caucus. The two leading candidates foe* the presidency are Edward tor, and George Korany*r American Motors Corp. presK dept. Hutchinson, a candidate from AM conservative wing, said Friday night that he felt confident there would he agreement on tire presi-today. CLAIMS TOP SPOT He claims to be the front-runner, with between 30 and 50 votes lined jp in his behalf. Romney, backed by the moderate-liberal bloc, has said he for the nomination, but that he would accept the post If It were offered to Idm. There appeared to be a growing feeling among observers here that delegates might not give the necessary 73 votes to either Hutchinson or Romney, but would settle compromise candidate instead, «, At a Republican conference last Week in St. Joseph, Hutchinson .... asked to draw up a set of rules and to present them at today’s meting. But Hutchinson said bo believed the con-eon preparatory Instead, Hutchinson said, he had turned his attention to drawing, up igenda for today’s meeting. Several of his -proposals were expected to. stir up some contro-?rsy. First item on the suggested agenda was whether the caucus should bar newsmen. Hutchinson said he personally was in favor of holding dosed meeting while certain subjects were being discussed. leky Weather Is Scheduled for the Evening I Scattered showers will dampen the Font lac area tonight, coming with warmer temperatures. To-tonight's low will 6e in the upper 50s. Sunday is expected to be partly Teudy and somewhat cooler, the high, about 10. Fair and warmer is the outlook (or Monday. Morning southerly winds at S j mite* per hour will become south | 10 southeast late this afternoon at IS to «K m.p.h., and northerly i late tonight or early tomorrow. 1 Winds will shin to north lo north-went at II to W mile* per hour Hiniday. Fifty-three wjw the lowest temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The mercury had limbed ti» TO at 2 p.m. * ’ In Today's Press Episcopalians Parley closes with charges in ecumenical features — PAGE 3 S.5. Hope Pontiac man sees cultural problems for Peace Corps— PAGE IB. Cheap Fuel? t'hurch News ........ Comics .... Editorial* . ........... Home Section ........ I Obituaries ............. Theater*.............. I TV A Radio Program* . Wilson, Earl ........... Women'* Page* THE PONTIAC PRESS, $AT|lliDAT^ SBjPTTEH^jBB W, 1961 ■ The Day in Birmingham Pilots Threaten to Boycott BC8s twelve Town Drain Bids to Be Opened Monday > t Await Word on Legality of Hike; Affects 1500 Tontiao-Detroit Riders BIRMINGHAM - Bids on H-5 million in bonds to be used to finance the city’s major share of h.a 1*1 Tiniirn nrald will hp nnpnfMi ter, not the" pilots' responsibility. He indicated ■ that the test might rMIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Six hundred jDaatern Air-Lines pilots say they the 12 Town Drain will be opened at the City Commission meeting Monday. City officials have pressed hope that the interest rate on the 20-year general obligation bonds Grand Trunk Western Railroad is now charging increased fares for its Pontiac-Detroit runs. An estimated 1.500 commuters are affected. by the hike. The Kike is from $8. >r a 10-ride ticket. ' flays if, the Federal Aviation Agency doesn't assure •'them the pane’s hydraulic system is safe. * The pilots raised the - Safety tjttostion in a telegram sent Friday night to Najeeb Hallaby, FAA director, by Council 18 of the Air Jjne Pilots Association. . • -* “Silence on this question will force u»’ to suspend operation onj DC8 ‘aircraft ; which is used on' Eastern Air Lines within three (lays," the telegram said, t The protest was a result of a hCw FAA regulation requiring pilots to answer 10 true-or-falsej questions on the Douglas DC8 hydraulic system. * crash when the real fcaus^ rnight lie elsewhere. * ■ Pajme said the. DC8 hydraulic system has been under scrutiny bedause of several failures.. The pilots could tie up at least 15 DC8 flights Which come and go from Miami daily. Report Monday on Mail Drive • Capt. John D. Pqyne, f hairmanl Of Council 18, said that the safety | pf the system was, an FAA ~|||g Unit Seeks ,to Stem Late Afternoon Flood of Sending by Firms Lansing Argues Aid to Children - The Pontiac Mail-Users Council' | will report on progress in efforts late-aftemoon overflow [mailings by area firms when it meets at 4:30 p.m. Monday at the 'Main Post Office. 735 W. Huron. *To Urge Lawmakers S Decide Whether to Join » U.S. Assistance Plan f LANSING (UPI) - ‘Budget committees of both houses of the legis- fstore will be asked to meet Oct. 7 or 18 to decide whether a third fry at bringing Michigan under the I'ederaf .Aid to Dependent Children *f the Unemployed would have s fhance of success. A meeting with Gov. %ohn B. who wants to call a "failed to produce much enthusl-, asm among lawmakers. * “I’m not optimistic .about th Chance of holding a special session |f this (ADC-U),’’ said Rep. ArneU Engstrom, Republican head of the Jlouse Ways and Means Committee from Traverse City, “But 1 think we ought to give it a fair Rearing.” *" * Swalnson said if the legislature would-authorize Michigan’s partici-pat ion in the plan for the first six inonfts of 1962, he would set up a I'task force” to study the matter. • This would help lawmakers de-*clde whether to keep Michigan In "the program if Congress decides iaext year to extend It, Swalnson ! “I would not be interested in calling a special session if .we can’t get agreement,” said Swalnson, , who told the lawmakers the State Treasury would save about $3.1 fruition by taking .advantage of the federal money for six months. bPKNLY SKEPTICAL " Republican legislative leaders, however, were openly skeptical of the post possible benefit from the program. * The House Ways and Means Committee killed a bill that would have brought Michigan under the ADC-U program for the entire cur-sent fiscal year during the regular Kon, and repeated the action special session which Swain-son called a week after the regular meeting' adjourned. ■gnsHiiiHS mmm « « u mmmmm u * t The Council was; set up -In July l to gain cooperation .from mailers to spread mailings throughout the day instead of dropping all mail in postal boxes when’offices close the afternoon. FINAL SALUTE—Military men of dll services carry the flag-draped casket holding the body of the late Charles E. Wilson from Christ Church Cranbrook following funeral service Friday. Wilson, former president of General Motors and Secretary of defense in the Eisenhower administration, died Wednesday of a. heart, attack. A cross-section of mailers In s largest volume, composes the committee, explained Robert 3. Featherstone, Pontiac superintendent of malls. NEW YORK «*- Secretary of State Dedn Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko held the last of their New York talks the Berlin crisis, today with some evidence they will be able to agree negotiating formula at further meetings in Washington. According to Featherstone, members attending the Monday meeting will, see a film on mailing methods and will be shown through the post office during its peak hours of operation from 5 to 8 p. Also on the Agenda are cussions of every-day mailing problems and setting of plans tor the Christmas flood of mail. The Pontiac mailing area a population of 145,000. Rusk, Gromyko Show Signs of Negotiating Formula Accord The increase went- into effect midnight Thursday. GTW was told it could' raise the rates at its own risk —until the State Public Service Commission finds put* exactly what its authority ty iff the case.' . The commission was recently Informed of a Ml* statute 'which seta railroad fares at a basic maximum of 2.5 cents per mile, with provision that this can be increased under certain condl- cussions here, though apparently!through these talks that they have inconclusive, had served to definejno intention of negotiating with the issue; more clearly. They Ulsd East Germany over-their rights to gave some encouragement that the maintain troops inf West Berlin. Soviets will agree to acceptable ar- They also pressed Gromyko for an rangemenis for an East-West Tor-[explanation of what the Soviet On-eign ministers’ conference later ion means by talking about guaran-lis.year. tees of access to West Berlin. The Western powers are reported * * * Western diplomats said the dis-!to have told Russia emphatically! Gromyko went to Rusk's suite in jthe Waldorf-Astoria ' Hotel i morning. U.B. officials said that the talks would continue probably Reds Siring Barbed Wire Around Tiny U.S. Enclave Pontiac Man Fdund Stabbed on S. Edith St The body of a 35-year-oid Pontiac man who apparently had Been From Our News Wires BERLIN — Communist * police today strung a barbed wire loop around a tiny American debtor enclave from which U.S. Army helicopters,! rescued seven . refugees this week. Residents reported1 that East Germans put up concrete posts this morning and strung barbed fatally stabbed in the neck was wire around Steinstuecken, a vil- found shortly before noon today between two houses on South Edith Street, Pontiac police identified the vic-__m as Frank Avery of 153 Raeburn St. Officers theorized that he did not take his own life but had been murdered. B body. 1 i lay- weapon, however, , Asst. County Coronor Dr. Isaac Prevette said Avery had been dead for "several hours” and probably since last night, y passerby noticed the partially concealed by some stacked between houses at 478 and 474 S. EdltH St. He notified police. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy and cool with occasional showers and scattered thundershowers today, high 64. Showers and mild tonight, low 58. Tomorrow , partly cloudy and cooler, high 6Q. Increasing south to aoutheaty winds becoming 15-25 miles this afternoon, shifting to northerly late tonight or early tomorrow, north to northwest' 15-25 miles tomorrow. nsnnsrxn sn have orders to fire, at refugees trying to cross the Border—even if the bullets land in West Berlin —the escapes continued, as about 20 fled in the last day. lage cut off from West Berlin by a one-mile strip of Communist territory. The barbed wire cut off Stein-atueeken inhabitants from the grassy Held where President Kennedy’s personal representative. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, landed by helicopter recently as the first U.S. official to visit the enclave In 10 years. Helicopters "also have been using the field-’to bring supplies to a three-map military police post stationed there following Clay’s visit. CLEAR NEW LANDING AREA The inhabitants of Steinstuecken today promptly began to fell fruit trees and level off garden plots behind their homes to make landing place for the helicopters. The Communists built I barbed-wire fence right ae the only road leading from West •The border was tense because the Communist orders to shoot threatened to touch off a possible international incident. Says Red China Can Coexist Chou Sets Condition: U.S. Must Discontinue Opposition in U.N. Observers said the barbed-loop was aimed mainly at keeping East German refugees from reaching the tiny .hamlet surrounded by Communist territory. ( In Berlin, East German refugees sought, liberty or death in a grim game of "hide-and-seek” Communist border guards under orders to shoot to prevent them escaping to the West. Bavarian police at Hot, Germany,' reported that East German authorities will Impose a curfew on border areas, effective Sunday, In s new move to make the Iron Curtain escape-proof. The police said they have learned the restrictions would af-jfect all East Germans living In ,w!a 500-yard zone along the border m]ai the same lime, poller reported 5i preparations seem > under we 4* evacuate all residents of this JJjantl to level their houses. Although Communist police Although Chou tempered his statements on coexistence with the; a settlement. United States by laying down cer-‘condltions,’’ they were an apparent reversal of Red China': often repeated stand that war and only war can settle the Issues between East and West. i|2 DC8 Jets Make Emergency Stops NATIONAL WEATHER — It wjjl be colder Saturday night between the KokIuch and the Mississippi and in parts of the Ohio Valley while a-warming trend is. due east and south of the Appalachians and In parts of the Central Rockies. Scattered showers are expected from Northern New England soulhwestward Into Tennessee and ground the southern fringes of the tiiv.ii bikes Into th* Mississippi Valley. Scattered thundershowers are expected CHICAGO (API Two United Air Lines pC8 Jet planes carrying n total of 148 passenge safe emergency "stops Friday night.'One landed at Chicago,.the other at Ed wards-Air Force Base, Calif. The plane that landed at Chicago’s 0’Hqre International Air< port with 68 persons aboard had one of its four engines out. It was on a scheduled nonstop New York to Denver flight. The other plane had 80 aboard and was hound from New York to Kan Francisco. Crewmen said it suffered- a complete hydraulic failure. The huge craft rolled nearly three miles down a runwuy before stopping. TOKYO (UPI)—Chinese Communist leader Chou En-lai said today his regime was willing to coexist peacefully with the United States, providing the United States drops its opposition to a- United Nations seat tor Peiping. Chou said his Communist regime and the millions it rules “wish to live together in peace with the peoples of all countries, including the United States of America. Chou made the statement In an unusually brief speech which he delivered at a Peiping reception for visiting dignitaries on the eve of Red China's 12th anniversary. Hit speech was carried by the Communist New China Newt Agency In a report monitored well into the afternoon. As he arrived for the meeting Gromyko said he did not know if he would see President Kennedy while- ii Washington!' CRITICAL ISSUES The future status of the U.S. British and French garrisons in West Berlin is one of several critical issues discussed by Rusk and British Foreign Secretary L Home in separate talks with Gromyko. The President signed two other i spending measures—including the $1,133,453,164 supplemental appropriation, which the House dropped on the Senate in. a temper-boiling Seeks Cuban Asylum [Wednesday morning ! The House quit work after U.S. Negro Fugitive HAVANA im *. A Negro wanted ing the ,measure to add to fund* tor kidnaping a white couple in previously appropriated for gov-North Carolina during a race dis-|ernment agencies. Rusk and Gromyko expect to meet again in Washington next week. Rusk is returning to Washington and Home to London- tonight. In Washington, it is understood Gromyko hopes to have a conference also with President Kennedy, but U.S. officials said the meeting has not yet been arranged. The talks, which actually mark the start of informal negotiations compromise settlement, have dealt with three major aspects of the Berlin crisis: 1. Rusk and Home haye tried to impress upon Gromyko that the Western powers will fight to defend West Berlin and its access routes. Some aides of the two Western ministers think Soviet Premier Khrushchev now understands that he runs the risk of if he overplays his hand. MINISTERS CONFAB LOOMS Rusk has tried to discover whether Khrushchev is willing to agree to a bqsls for negotiations Berlin. If he is, an East-West foreign ministers conference in November or December seems certakv 3. Rusk ajnd Home have sought to explore the possibilities for sue-of a foreign ministers’ conference. In essence, they want to know whether Khrushchev is willing to compromise or whether he intends to dictate the terms of As such, Chou's statements u the nearesl thing to a Peiping dorsement of Russia's call tor peaceful coexistence, which the Soviets announced In'a new Communist party program in early August. FCC Chairman Wants Newscasts in Prime Time lit Texas, Oklahoma and Southern Florida with rain mixed frith mla WASHINGTON (AP) — Newton Minow, chairman of the Fed-ommunicutiohg Commission e thinks radio-TV newscasts ti nn .outstanding public , hut there aren’t enough of them The FCC boss, who has Jabbed at the quality of television programing often In the past, also complained there was not enough full-time news directors on radio and television 'Stations. speech before the annual convention of the Radio Television News Directors Association Friday night, Minow protested a "vlr-blackout” on television during the prime, viewing houri •h night. * , * * ‘ ! "Syria extends its hand to sister 'For those of us living in the'Egypt to strengthen the aim ofj stern Standard Time zone, at I the Arab nntloo- on the basis of Offer Reading Course i‘‘'“"Ml ^ *ul^."lhc,c>1 "° ™Hfrw,dom .T*!, w,u*ll,y We 9 k on television between 7:15 and 111 ready any time lo accomplish A reading dynamics course Is be-pm. "The world goes on during this," sold an announcer. This was offered Monday night at Pierce prime evening time. But you|not on official statement, but was The. commission ruled the railroad can raise-its rates until the state attorney general adjudges whether the 1919 statute can legally be applied. FURTHER OUT OF LINE Ihe commission indicated its feelings about the hike when a spokesman stated that fares were ‘getting further and further, put or line. The railroad can also cut Its service as long as two trains a day rim In each direction, the commission decision said. The railroad hod asked permission to discontinue the train leaving Pontiac at 7:45 a.m. and one leaving Detroit at 6:15 p.m. The fare hike was requested in June. The railroad claimed mounting losses in commuter operations. [ ________ _eitt or lower. ' The bids will be opened at the start of the 8 p.in. meeting and reviewed by the city’s finance director and bond consultant. Recommendations, will then be made by them before the meeting ends and the commission will either accept or reject the bids. It is the intention of the city to sell the bonds to a syndicate rath- I for 80 years, yhe . dty received approval of its method of financing the com structon pf the drain from the Michigan Municipal Finance Cpm-mission Sept, 12.‘ , " , ’ No matter what- plan of financing had the dty decided on, taxpayers will bdgin being assessed for the major Improvement in July, 1962. Kennedy Signs A public hearing on the confirmation of the special assessment roll for the paving of the, alley from Hunter Boulevard to the city water tank has been scheduled by the City Commission tor Oct. 9. Total cost of the project has .sen estimated at $3,706, with, the city paying $1,400 of the improve- Inks Another Measure to Let Football League Make TV Packagesr' NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - President Kennedy today signed a $3.9 billion- foreign, aid appropriation bill that also included fund*) for the Peace Corps and other financial activities abroad... Kennedy also put his name on legislation allowing (he National Football League and other sports circuits to enter package television contracts. turbance, has requested political asylum in Cuba, the official Cuban News Agency Prensa announced today. Prensa said Robert F. Williams fled the United States "because of threats against his life and persecution in his country.” The announcement charged Williams was harassed by American authorities "because of his valiant fight in favor of colored people and his defense of the Cuban revolution." result, senators who wanted to increase some of the allocations could do nothing about it. The other appropriation bill furnishes $3,877,915,989 f o r public works of the Army, Atomic En-i ergy Commission, Interior Department, Tennessee Valley Authority and tor several' study missions. The Women’s Society of Christian Service of the First Methodist Church will celebrate a Latin American fiesta at Its .first general luncheon of the season-Wednesday. Each ef the 15 circles of the society will decorate a table to Mrs. Marshall Reed, wife of the bishop of the Methodist Church’ in Michigan, will be the gueat speak-■ at the program. She will present background Information 1>n mission'work in Latin America and relate experiences she and her husband had during a visit fo Chilean missions. WILLIAM H. SCHULTZ Service tor William H. Schultz, 57, of 4754 Burnley Drive will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Bell Chapel, William R. Hamilton Co., 820 E. Maple Ave. i a section manager at Chrysler Corp., Missile Plant and member of the Lutheran Church -of the Redeemer. Surviving are his wife. Margn-*t; two sons, William H. 11 and James A., both of Birmingham. , Mr. Schultz died early this molding at his residence after a brief illness. The NationaF^Football League f encouraged Congress to pass the | TV bill in order to offset i eral court decision outlawing itajl share-the-revenue pact with the * Columbia Broadcasting System.] Each of file league’s 14 teams: An Independence Township man As the "kkles begin to lighten up; would then split the cash. died last night at Pontiac General Sunday morning, faithful Echo; ------------------------------ Hospital of injuries received when It's an Exclusive Club! Fall From Car Kills Independence Man eyers will lift their heads iu ««.-!_ . . heavens and watch the balloon Execution Raises Total satellite follow a brief arch 84-89 !»0 zo* for fidml Castro degrees over the northern horizon. jTO DZ0 TOr naei v-asTro j heading northeast. Anyone who HAVANA (AP)-A firing squad would like to Join these early ris- executed Ezequiel Delgado Reyes bo ready at 5:39 a.m.jin Santiago today on conviction ■ of counterrevolutionary activities Tried to Kill Dog in ,Tp Oakland Highwat Toll in ’61 Date; 76 he fell from his car at midnight Sunday. Jack E. Ferris, 34. of 5873 Devo-rak Road had suffered a fractured skull when h i t head hit the pave-Telc- 1 UPPSALA. Sweden — A!band from ,hf u s Navy bas0 at , „ , , , „ , Swedish official said today an at- Guantanamo. graph Road at Pontiac Lake Road, tempt was made to assassinate! The shooting raised to 625 thei His wife Lorraine, 34, was driv-Dag Hammarskjold on a visit to count of announced executions;ing when the mishap. Jerusalem Just after the Suez cri- since Fidel Castro took ovei sis of 1956. ' 'government in January 1959. :urred. the She told Pontiac state police that he fell from the moving car. Pontiac General Making History Breaks Occupancy, Billing Records In-patient billings arid occupancy; time in the hospital's history. Gromyko's practice in thfe talks. Western informants say, has been to repeat stated Soviet policy. Thus he has reaffirmed his government's plan to sign a peace treaty with Communist East Germany by the entP of Jhf> year. Pontiac General Hospital havi hit history-making figures, according to Harold B. Euler, hospital administrator. Billings are higher than any Euler saki. Average occupancy for the first two weeks of the 10th accounting period was 95.8 per cent, record high for a, two-week period. Syria Sets Up Rule After U.A.R. Split Although the figures present an optimistic financial forecast, they also caused some hardships. “All this created patient relations problems In thnt a number nl surgical hnd elective admissions were canceled during prnk leads and whenever We hnd hnll beds,” said Euler, Page One) long been wary of Nasser’s ambitions for a unified Arab state dominated by Egypt. Premier Abdel Karim Kassdm of Iraq, Nasser's major counterweight in the continuing Middle East struggle tor 'power, said In Baghdad that the Iraqi army wag alerted "to stand ready In the face of any foreigner, if he tried to Interfere fn our broth-country Syria." 1 WARN AGAINST EXCITEMENT Radio stations In Damascus and Aleppo broadcast pleas to Syrians to stop staging demonstrations „ In support of the revolt. They warned that continued excitement might 'allow exploiter* to infiltrate their ranks." Damascuf radio also broadcast a word ol friendship for Egypt In Its morning program. ’utlng at rapacity except our 23-bed mental health unit that had •rage daily consult of 11." ol, Waterford wouldn't know, it If you wdre made by a-commentator between watching television," I musical programs. .. SCRUBS DOME—Charles Armstrong, secured by ropes, got-to the top quickly at the Lincq)n, Neb., Capitol Friday and really cleaned up. The gold-plated dome is 40(1 feet above street level and is tying given. Its first scrubbing since it was completed 29 years ago. Armstrong is normally a photographer with the State Department of Roads, but he volunteered tor this assignment. Above him is the bronze statue of The Sower. n Indications arc that the year will result, in a break-even operation though occupancy will be over 90 per cent against a budget forecast of 87 per cent. More services begun this year hnvc Increased patient dny costs. During th* ninth accounting pend'which ended Sept, 9, tricorne, exceeded expenses by $4,362. For the j|ast year, the excees of Income flver expenses amounts to $13,040. Total patient biiltnga this year rd $4,077,000. Coipmuniit China Claims Spectacular Leap Ahead TOKYO (AP) — Communist China boasted today, on the eve of Its big national holiday, that during the three years of Its "big leap forward" industrial develop-inr has risen spectacularly. The boast, couched lA general Lerms without spoclfie figures, as made as the Chinese capita! decked Itself out fn festive clothes tor tho 12th celebratibn of the establishment of thf> Papin's Re- public. , •Pjtyple’s I I THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1961 THREE Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths mk FRANK HAYDEN Former Pontiac resident Mrs. Frank (Agnes M.) Hayden, 09, of Deford died this morning at Saginaw General Hospital after an illness of several weeks. " Mrs. Hayden leaves three daughters, Mrs. Nina LArkbi of Water-lord,.Mrs. Margeret Davis of Myrtle Beach, S.C., and Mrs. Elizabeth S. Cobb of Des Moines, Iowa; grandchildren; and two sisters. Service and burial will be from the Douglas Funeral Home in ■ Cass City. i ■■■ SANDRA K. HAYGOOI) Word has been received of (he death Of Sandra K. Iiaygood, 18-month-old daughter of former Pontiac residents Mr. and Mrs. S. C, Haygood Jr. of Tyler, Tex. Graveside service was held in Tyler. Grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Jay T. Find, former city residents, are now living in Tampa, Fla. MRS. GEORGE JAOQUIN Mrs. George (Lena) Jacquln, 3397 Clintonville Road, Waterford Township, died yesterday in Bloom* field Hospital after ah illness several weeks. She was 92. Service will be held at 12:30 p. Monday at tfte Sparks - Griffin mine M.; three daughters, Sharon, thapel with burial in Oak HOI Cemetery. ' MRS. IRMMR-. WEBBER Service for Mm. Jerome (Floy) Webber, 44, of 871 LeBaran St. be held at 1:30 p. m. Monday at the Huntoon Funeral Hon g in Perry Mount burial following Park Cemetery. Survivors Include her husband; her lather Sherry Montgomery; a daughter, Mm; Terene Ferres of Waterford; two brothers; Donald and Byron, both of Pontiac; and two sisters, Mrs. OHn LaBarge of Pontiac and Mm. Charles Shaw of Seattle, Wash. Mrs. Webber died this at her residence. i WHEN IT'S TIME TO ACT Unexpected Callers! Some time It may be someone beside* relatives. Protect your valuables with Burglary Insurance. We handle all typas of, Insurance. Barbara and Donna, aft at bbme; and two sisters. Mr. Ferris died yesterday afternoon in Pontiac General Hospital from injuries received lit ah automobile accident at Telegraph and Pontiac 'Lake Roads, Waterford Township at midnight Sunday. LuAnn I. LeRoux CLARKSTON-- F»ve-yearold LuAnn Jean LeRoux (bed Thursday night at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a 7-month battle with Star, ARTHUR A. The Order Of -I..... Areme Chapter No. 503, will duct a memorial service Arthur A, Witt, 58, of 200 Marlon St.. Wateiford Township, at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Service will be et the funeral hohie at 3«p.m. Monday. Conducting the graveside service at White Chapel Memorial Cemeteiy will be Masonic Lodge, No. 46, F&AM. Lake Orion,’ Mr. Witt died yesterday morning of a heart attack at hi* home. ROVCE N. CURTIS UNION LAKE — Service for Royce N. Curtis, 42. of 8843'Hib-bipg St. will be 1 p. m. Monday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake with burial in the. cemetery at Commerce. A pattern repairman at Pontiac Motor Division, he leaves his wife Mayme; his 'father William J. Curtis; a son, Raymond of Union Lake; and" three brothers, Harry of Union Lake, Robert of Detroit and Leon of Pleasant Ridge. Mr. Curtis died at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital Thursday. JACK E. FERRIS CLARKSTON — Service tor Jack E. Feris, 34. of 5873 DeVbrak St. will be 2 p m. Monday at Donel* son-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial following in White Chapel Memorial Cymetery. Survivors Include hls wife Lor- California Feud Cools Repubircan Zeal in West LUANN 'as the daughter of Mr. and. Mrs. Gerald LeRoux of 5357 Columbia St. She had. been in the hospital three weeka. is survived by a brother, Lance, and a sister, Michele, both residing with their parents. Also surviving are a.grandmother, Mm. Ida Leroux of Detroit; and a grandfather, George Steele of Pennsylvania. Memorials will be accepted by the Oakland County Unit of the Michigan Cancer Foundation. The body will be at the Lewis E. tint Funeral Home, Clarkston, un-U 9:30 a m. Monday. At 10 a.m. a Mass of the Angels will be held at Out Lady of the Lakes, Burial will follow at Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. ‘MW*- GILBERT TALLMAN lake ORION—Service for Mrs. Gilbert (Anna MO Tollman, 63, of, 438 E. Jackson St> wUl be 10 a.m. ______day"Xt the Flummerlelt Funeral Home. Her body will be taken to Gananoque, Ont„ for burial. Her body will be at the funeral home after 2 p.m. Sunday. Mrs. Taliman was h member of the Methodist Church, the Order of Eastern Star and Maccabee Lodge. Surviving are her husband; two sons, William of Lake Orion .and Gordon in . Canada; five grandchildren; a. sister and a brother. Mrs. Taliman died yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital. She had been in ill helth several years. SUN VALLEY, Idaho (AP)-CaliforniaYearly outbreak of Republican feuding tempered OOP optimism today over prospects for major |»litical gains in the West next year. Party leaders from California, at the Republican regional conference, lined- up behind. Richard M. Nixon in his fast-developing tile with former GoV. Goodwin Knight in the Republican race « governor. But i there was open concern over.how the intraparty squabble Would affect Republican, chances in the . West’s biggest state. TO SPEAK TODAY . Nixon himself was due here today to address delegates from 13 Western states. It will be his first public appearance since the 1960 GOP presidential candidate .announced he would_.spek the California governorship. Rep. Bob Wilson, R-Calif., chairman' of the Republican ■ Con- gressional Campaign Committee, talked pf a 50-seat gain-for the GOP in .1062 congressional elections, including a pickup of eight districts in California and six to eight in Southern states. This would overturn Democratic con-trig of the House. ★ ★ ★ Wilson said Nixon would be of great help, in his home state’s campaign—provided he wins his own primary contest. The present congressional lineup in California favors the, Democrats 16-14. Eight additional congressmen will be elected next year as a result of census gains. Wilson said he expected former President Dwight D. Eisenhower teS campaign in ..California next year^-but not until after 4he June primary showdown. Norwegian Ship Hipped by Blast; 2? Dead, Missing TANANARIVE, Madagascar U8-Explosion and fire wracked the Norwegian freighter Starcarrier at Dfego Suarez Friday night and port officials set the toll at 21 persons dead, or missing. They said eight persons were badly injured. ★ Sr- ★ Port officers said the freighter caught fire as she was discharging her cargo and a heavy explosion Mowed. Cause was, not immediately determined. -The 5,564-ton freighter is by the A/S Star Carriers of Bergen] and was under charter to the Pe-j ninsulaire Co. of Le Halve, France. Diego Suarez is a pent on the northern tip of Madagascar. j Picketlid Clamped on West Coast Ports SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — With crew* paid oft and perishable cargoes removed, the nation's latest major maritime strike tied up piost Pacific Maritime Association shipping-along West Coast ports under a picketed lid today. ★ ★ 4r Pickets were set up late Friday Just after a meeting—urged by the federal govemijient- SALVATION aSUy Lennart Sandbergh, Swed Gospel musician and singer, will hold services at the Salvation Army Citadel Monday through Friday at 7:30 p.m. He will appear at both 11 a.m. and 7:30 n.m. on Oct. 8. Mr. Sandbergh, traveled "The 25,000-Mile-Long Table’ will be Pastor F. William Palmer’s terns. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Weston and Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Swartz will serve as sponsor* of Youth Fellowship, the group for young people meeting at 6:30 p. m. each Sunday. tiie church at S:M FIRST CHURQHthe NAZARENE.; 60 STATE STREET - ) . E. VAN ALLIN, Paator i Sunday School, 9:45 A.M. mmmm DON LEACH, 5. S. Supt. ■ Corning Worship 11 :Q0 A. M. ^1 II .COMMUNION SERVICE ) . 4151 PONTIAC tAK! KD. Wm, La Fountain, Paator y CHURCH SERVICE 8:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 9*45 A.M. CHURCH SERVICE 11 *00 A.M. DIRECTS YOUTH — Basking to the sunshine on the step* of St. Trinity Lutheran School are Mr. and Mra. Herman Schmidt and twin daughters Donna (in front) and Debra of 164 Westway taUn Ttm Phate Drive, Mr. Schmidt Is the new director of St. Trinity Lutheran Church and a teacher at the school. Rev. Ralph C. Claus is pastor. Alliance Church Holding Missionary Convention The annual Missionary Convention of the Christian and Mission-Alliance Churcfi, Cass Lake Road at M-59 will be held Sunday through Oct. 8 with services tomorrow at il a.m., and 7:30 p.m. Week night services will begin at 7:30 p.m. AAA Speakers Include Ruth Pattlr-in, returned missionary to the Congo, Dorothy Wilson, missionary to Thailand, Rev. D. N. Clark, district superintendent, and Rev. G. H. Davis, missionary-pastor, McKeesport, Pa. Rev. Mri dark will preach Sunday. Miss Patterson will ■peak Monday through Wednesday. Rev. Mr. Davis and Miss Wilson will apeak Thursday, Friday and In ail services the dosing Sunday. Miss Patterson is a registered nurse who began her missionary career in 1952, spent a year in Belgian homes and schools in preparing for the missionary service. To have an effective ministry i a nurse, it was necessary for her to acquire a knowledge of the French language,Vpecial training in tropical medicine and a personal , acquaintance with tha culture and customs of Belgium. larged her ministry as eke labored with Dr. and Mrs. D. 7-Kroh at the so-hed Alliance Hospital in Klnkoml. In addition to her physical services, Mlss/Patterson’s opportunities Included spiritual service in dally devotions with the hospital native staff, teaching French in the Bible School; Sunday School, young people’s work In the villages and trips to other sections of the' field for medical and spiritual ministries. Holy Communion at Trinity Methodist Observing Worldwide Communion at 10 o’clock Sunday morning will be member* and friends of Trinity Methodist Church, Keego Harbor. Rev. Elmer Snyder will conduct the service. 8unday School will be at 11:15 .m. Following th$ .11:15 Sunday School service the congregation WHO7 have a picnic dinner. It weather permits It will he held at picnic grounds. Young people will gather at the church at 7 p.m. for an evening of devotions and discussion. Church Officers Elected Newly elected oifficers of the Church of the Good Samaritan, Waterford Tdwnship Include Allen Hlnz, president; Mrs. Walter Bulloch, pastor and vice president; Mrs. Allen Hlnz, treasurer; and Arthur Witt, secretary. Chosen secretary and treasurer of the building fund.committee was Mrs. Jennie Ridley. Trustee* named were Frank Green, Walter Bulloch aijd Mrs. Frank Green. Pastor Lists Services "Keep the Firs Burning" be Dr. Joseph W. Moore’s sermon title et 11 a.m. Sunday In Trinity Bnptiet Church, Baptist Training will be at 5:46 p.m. and a service oif Holy* Baptism and HolY Com* munion is ^plagned tor 7-p.m. NORTH EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH V . ' evangelical united brethren Mt Qlemsnt »( Ftatheriton* MS A M Church School 11:00 A.M. Wdrahlp Hour Sermon: "Tho Unlvtraal Tiible" Holy Communion aorvlco Mummy corras hour following worship efmvics FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HURON AT WAYNE WORSHIP SERVICES . CHURCH SCHOOL ... 9:30-11.00 9:30-11:00 PONTIAC -CHURCH of CHRIST 1180 N. PERRY ST.' FE 2-6269 W. W Hall. Minister Bible Study ...... 9:50 A.M. Classes for All Ages Morning Worship .. 10:50 A.M. Evening Worship ____6:00 P.M. GOSPEL MEETINGS Tonight and 1 Mr. & R: Moron RALLY DAY to Sunday School, - IP 90 A.M. Worship Services 11 tOO A.M. and 7.00 PM " * MId-Wask Service,' ; ' Wednesday 7:30 PA*. FIRST r,“ METHODIST CHURCH 501 MT. CLEMENS STREET Ly»! H. Hewiton, Paitor CHRIST of the LAKES WHITE LAKE TWP. Ivan 6. Hots, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:15 AM CHURCH SERVICE 10:30 A.M. SYLVAN LAKE Figs, off Orchard Lake - Pastor Clark StePhatl SUNDAY SCHOOL .. 8:15 AM WORSHIP .........10:30AM BEAUTIFUL SAyiOUB N. Adams Rd. Between Long and Square Lake Roads Donald GL Bill, Pastor MORNING. WORSHIP 8:30 A.M. and 11OO A.M. Sunday School diiO A.M. ST. JOHN'S PONTIAC 87H!lli|t.ataiMR7SL CtarlM A. Colber*. Patter SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 AM CHURCH SERVICE IldlO AM CALVARY CLARKSTON * Clarkston Elementary School Pastor Paul A. /ohm WORSHIP ....... 9:30 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:45 A.M, Sirst Christian Church DISCIPLES at CHRIST Rev. Jack H. C. Clark, Minister Biblo School — 9:45 A.M; M or (ting Worship — 11:00 858 W. HURON ST. EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH Methodist Churches of the Pontiac Area Central Methodist Services Temporarily a MILTON H. BANK H. H. Johnson and J. H. Hall, Assoc. Pastors MORNING.WORSHIP 9:30 and 10:45 A.M. ''THIS IS HOLY COMMUNION'' World WM* Communion SMy ■ Dr. Sank Preaching Broadcast Uvo on WPON - 11:00 A.M. Church iSchool 9:30 A.M. and 10:45 A.M. Youth Fellowship 6 and 8 P.M. - KLu. IH rorionofo, (il loiuon Marimont Baptist Church 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 Sunday School..... t ... 10:00 A. M. Morning Service ...............14 :QQ A. M. “Dependent'or Independent” Robert Gevette, preaching . Evening Service ..........i l i.. 7:30 P. M. “The Who of Minion*” Rev. Orval Dunktld, preaching Youth Group .................... 6:30 P.M. OAKLAND PABK METHODIST CHUBCH Montcalm and Glenwood Rev. J. W. Deeg, Paator MORNING WORSHIP I0:0Q A,M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11:15 A.M. FIRST METHODIST MORNING WORSHIB-8:30 and 11 A.M. * World Wide Communion Sunday Communion Meditation Rev. Wlttbrodt, Preaching Methodist Youth Fellowihip—6:15 P.M. i \ CHURCH SCHOOL—9:45 A.M. WEDNESDAY. 7:30 P,M,-BIBLE STUDY and PRAYER FELLOWSHIP ST. PAUL METHODIST ' in s. asusre Ukt lie. . fa s-sm-fw ami Morning Worahip 10. A.M.'and 11:15 AiM. * Church School 10 A.M. InUimtdUt* ami Stnlor Youth Oroupa, i:M P.M. OMar Youthi. S:10 to UN P.M. MV. MMM A. MoCLUNO. MlnUt-r a mplo Parkins n .. mstrriaid Nuntry Four Towns ; METHODIST CHURCH ooounr lakb an. at LooiUlAvaii Ray. W. Oadman Prout, Paator Sunday School .. 9:45 A.M. Church Service..11:00 A.M. Covort Methodist Church mt PONTIAC LAKH no. , Rrv. W. ■ Courtar, Paitor Church Ssrvlc# — 9:45 A.M. Church School — 11:00 A.M. t ■* THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1061 EYAN MET^ODISt 57 N. LYNM ST. tohoou ....... 1«:M'A.Jl. CHURCH of GOb E*»t Pike at Anderson immmm o ■■ j FIVE Night 7 p. Rev, Esiel D. Moore, Pastor BETHEL TABERNACLE tint Pentecost Church of Pontloo 8. 8. 10 A.M. Worship 11 A.M Evangelistic Service -Tuesday and Thursday 1 P.M. Key, and Mr*. E. Crouch Sunday School 10:00 A.M. Worship Hour 11:00 A.M. Youth Hour 6:15 P.M. Gospel Houf 7:00 P.M. PILGRIM . HOLINESS CHURCH Baldwin, at Falrmount Rev: Calvin .ffendrk k ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH *301 HATCHERY ROAD Rev.. Edward A. Lowry. Hector Holy Communion 8 A M. Morning Prayer 9:30 ahd 11 IS A.M. Schutze Family Moves to Lake Orion Redoi f 'The Heart of the Matter", will: be the theme ‘of the sermon at I both the 9 and 11 a. m. Sunday , services in St. Mary’s-in-the-Hilte; Episcopal Church. Rev. .Wilbur R. Schutze and his i family moved this week froth Lake | Angelus to the new rectory at 3521 E. Shadbolt St., Lake Orion..’ A cooperative dinner is sched-j tiled at 6:30 p. m. Thursday in the, undercroft: All members, friends; and children are invited, the Rev.i Mr. Schultze said. The program; j-will include a filmstrip produced j by the Diocese of Michigan to help acquaint lay people with the Or-' Iganization- of the diocese and the -part of the layman in the group. Those who do not study are only cattle dressed’ hp in men’! clotbes.^-Chinese Proverb. .Will Discuss Property I Rev. J. Allen Parker, pastor of ! Newman A. M-. E. Church asks Ibis congregation to meet at the church at 7 p. m. Monday for a: business session when members! will discuss the purchase Of prop-1 erty for the relocation of the BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH Temporarily Meeting: Hickory, Grove School . - Lftbsrr. aout^PoY-Squete Cake Rtonlty Rev. Fr*4'-N' Hath Pastor morning service ro.oo A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL. 11:00 A. M. EVENING SERVICE 7 30 P. M. Cross of Christ Rev- Chaimer s. Masbn Pastor, Lapan ■ ■ in 11 is fo Serve Bethany Baptist. r .. Has Ray Day ,M, , ' iltalh at Convention « 1 Roy, Chalnier S. new|versify of Iowa. She also has the, Christian Churches Holding International Meetings inMissouri All Saints Episcopc ; Williams St. at W. Pike ; The REV C. GEORGE W1DDIFIELD -- : [j il Church | Rector j . The REV. WM. E. LYLE, Assdciaf* ! The REV ALEXANDER T. STEWART, Tlmai Vicar | O' « 00 A M HOLY COMMUNION ! ' V 30 A^M. endj U:}} A M -Holy Communion ( end Sermon by the Rt. Rev. Lourleton L. Scetff. Bishop ot the Dloces^of . 1 i Western New York. ChurchJSchool.. ■ 5:00 P. M -Evening PrsyrT Th6rs . Oct 5th. 10 A. V —Holy Communion t CHURCH OF THE RESURRECTION j | will ’ynegt in Clarkston Elementary School, 6595 Waldon Rd. . i| The Rev. Alexander T. Stewart. Vicar 9:30 A. M — Holy Communion and Sermon j CHURCH of SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP BEMIS OLSON POST — 570 OAKLAND AVE. jj Sunday Servic#"-7:30 PM. Stanley Guff, speaker l| Oct. 8th—Vila Winges, speaker , LUTHERAN CHURCHES U MISSOURI SYNOD I Cross of Christ ‘I - Bloomfield Township I Square Lake and Telegraph \ Rev. Delayne Pauling I Church Service 9:45 A.M. ? Sunday 'School . 11.00 A.M. . St. Mark I 7979 Commerce Road I (West Bloomfield Township) I -Wm. C. Graie, Pastor _ I Church Service ... 8:45 A.M. I Sunday' Sfchool ... 9:45 Aid: | Church Service '—11:15 A.M. I Cedar Crest I Farnsworth off -Union Lk, Rd. I 1 Next to Dublin School! J | Howard E. Claygombe, Pastor i ' Services qt 8 30 A-M- % I' arid 11 A.M. M I Sunday School 9:45 A.M. 1 Gra& Comer Genesee and Glendale (West std*> Richard C. Sfuclmeyer, Pastor Chaimer S. Mastin; newlversity of Iowa. She also has the, .minister of Christian rYiucation at (degree of master of religious edu-; Congregation to Hear Bethany Baptist Church, will beginjeatioh* from Union Theological riiriimrnn Fwmnifivma oVhi* full ,lime service Sunday. HejSemjnary. The Mastins have a | LUtneran executives ™,^ thc plltcfl ot Peny M Wal-(daughter. one-year-old Rebecca I Loyalty Dinner Tuesday ley who accepted the pastorate of|Ann. (Roseville Baptist Church. Detroit, pastor of Befhany Baptist is Dr. ’ Children of Cross of Christ Luth- ' * * * Em*1 Kontz who assumed the pas- cran Church Sel\gol will lie promot-j A native of Binghampton, N. Y.: [lorate in March. 'ed at the Rally Day service at 9:45 the Rev. Mr. Mastin completed -----a---------t— [a.m. Sunday. his undergraduate academic stud-i The boy* and girls will sing the ies at Colgate University in Ham-j processional hymn, "Onward fiirix-jliton, N. Y. tian' Soldiers " Children of the1 „„ ^ived the bachelor of nursery and primary department do|r^. l#M Rnd wm j wlH xing "Praise Him All Ye I-H-j phi Beta Kappa bon , lie Children.” ami Ihe junior Inter- orary fr.,,.nilty In his nenlor : departmeftls CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN 4780 Hlllersst Dr . Watarford SERVICE - 7 OO P M. R«v Lana Bullock ol Dot., Spbakor For Intormnllon coll OR J >1 mediate and will pi'eaent "l-ivin Parents and friends the program. CroM of ilirinl fliurrb will have a loyally dinner nlartlng al 1:30 p.m. Tumday. Olfford Brandt, preyldenl of thf congee-gallon, will be In charge of the program. Foul iviled to1 A graduate qf Union Theological Seminary, he received his bachelor [of divinity degree in 1959. Much (of his seminary work was in the ] field of Christian education ♦ * o j Mr. Mastin'* practical experience includes youth worker at Cen-! Irnl Haarlem Community Center in minister to young pen FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N, PERRY live secretary of the Mission Board;,,iP tn „ Baptist Church on Statenj of thc Michigan District of the (gland, and a year ** intern at the Lutheran Church — Missouri Sy-jCommunity Church in Radburtt. nod, and Rev. Edwin C. Weber,j chalrman'of church extension, wllll address Ihe congregation. I "•* Punu*, • . . I Clinical Training Course at 4'leveland Mate Hospital and screed for two years as pastor of th» Roseville Church, art cx YOU A’RE WELCOME TO ATTEND THE FULL GOSPEL SERVICE:; OF OUR CHURCH ' SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A M BRING the FAMILY A filmstrip (*n stewardship, called "Seek Ye First the Kingdom" will also; be shown. Assisting Mri Hitman Fortney, chairman, with dinner arrange* nients will be Mrs. Robert Beuter, Mr*. Clifford Brandt. Mrs Norman IMtnke, Beverly Dornbush, Mrs. iCharles Cmrven, Mrs. Dale Mim- son. Mis. Andi-ew Pitoityak and class on Trosperity' Mis. .lAmrs Putnam. , tension project of the Detroit Baptist Mission, Society. His wife. Alice, holds the degree of bachelor of arta finm the Uni- HKV. ROBERT PORTER Rev. Rubert Porter in Charge of Music r Pm 1 Representing First Christian1 (Church at the International Conven-| |tion of Christian Churches in Kan-i Isas City. -Mo...ilus- weeRbnd are! ^ Rev. and Mrs. Jack H. C. Clark! land.the Joe P. Morgans. I j The Rev. Mr. Clark is pastor of j (First Christian and Mr. Morgan is chairman of thc official board. 1! { Sonic 10,000 members and dele-J ( (gates from 8.000 churches through-]! l out thc world are gathering for this j six-day meeting. Business sessions will be held In tin* Municipal *Xudltorlum artd the Disciple pastors will be guests in the pulpits In the Kan-' sas (Ity area tomorrow-.. The Christian Churches have cm-! barked on a 10-year program called-"Decade_ of Decision." which1 embraces the "forward moving emphasis of Christianity. Eugene D. Tbom|>son, president of Christian Men’s Fellowship, will be in charge of Laymen’s Sunday, tomorrow at FTirst Christian. Speaking on the theme. "Ye Shall Be Witnesses" will be Harold Brown, Paul Colton and Donald, Woodward. '•ypp x*-v t * V** ^ FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw Pontiac, Michigan Rev. H.H. Savage, Pastor . 9:45 A. M —SUNDAY SCHOOL 'Classes for ill ages 10:45 A M —MORNING WORSHIP SHIRKERS AND SNOOPERS’’ 7:QO EVENING SERVICE • LESSON FROM ELI|AH” Savage Speak:.-.g o' Bo:3 Services |i Church Service .... 9:00 AM. Sunday School- . • 9:00 A.M. I Church Service 11:00 A.M. i Sunday School . 11:00 A.M. 1 "The Lutheran 1 ’VKMH' 9 A.M. Every Sunday I St. Stephen I Sashabaw at Kempt I Guy B. Smith, Pastor I Sunday School__9:15 A.M. I Church Service ... 10:30 A.M. JL St. Trinity 11; |f Auburn at Jessie (East Side) mi Ralphs. Clau3uPasitor 11 !i Sunday School .... 9:45 A.M. l||i First Service..8:30 A.M. .31 iff Second Service ... 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 A.M. f> HELPFUL. '7 INSPIRATIONAL * ENLIGHTENING EVANGELISTIC RALLY SUN. EVE. 7:00 P!M. The Friendly Church Youth for Christ Singspiration Set j for Oakland Ave. 3 Youth lot Christ In Oakland , County Will hold h* monthly Sing-, , spiral ion al 9 p.m. Sunday in Oak-ylnikl Avenue United Prejtbylerian i'll. Guest soloist will lie John of Dt'tioll * * ★ 1, Playing as a flute trio will lie! Breen. Sue . Underwood and Anfn Wilson, all of First 11 Baptist Church, 1 Cheryl lllllnian of Nunny Vale I Chapel will he evening eololst.' | ' The Youth for Cltrial Rally Isj for Oct, 7 at Pontiac| Northern High School at 7:3Q p.m. 'A Warning/ S®rmon Theme at New Hope Rev. Thomas unit will prench on "A-Warning" at the, 11 a. m. serv-tomorrow at New Hope Baptist Church. A service of Holy Communion will be Included. Ruby L. Harrison will lie guest soloist at the 7 p. m worship hour with Rev. iJt'Roy Ford, aasiK'lale pastor, Ihe speaker. The program [is sponsored by Ihe beacon hoaitl.j Rev! Robt'rt Porte ac resident, will be in charge of( Starting at Unity Center jmusie during (he revival .m-paig» at Stringham United Mis-i A class on "Prosperity" will j sionary Church through Oft. H. ■ start Thursday at Pontiac Unity (Service begins at 7:30 p. in (’enter, 8 N. Genesee Ave. with | son 0f Mr mid Mrs. Joseph Kverett Dell, of Del roll, thc leach-1 p,)rier of Pontiac, iic is a graduate cr. The tligc Is 8 p. m |0f Pontiac Central High School ana 4 ★ , * 1st. Paul Bible College. Organist. Thc Tuesday das* will continue]soloist and choir director, he is .with a series of lessons on "Pray-j currently serving as pastor of Uic ier" under the direction of the min- Christian and Missionary Alliance lister, Rev. Mrs. Diane Seaman. Church in Kokomo, Ind. ^ topic for the 11 o’clock Service .Rev Warren Pamp, a* Potlawnt-Sunday morning Will be "Priest-ilontie Indian from Harbor Springs, I hood of Parenthood." 'will be the evangelist. BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH "TTrst Church of the brethren St. Paul iariy Servico Sunday School . Emmanuel Baptist Church 645 S. Teiegraph Rd. Premillenpial—Independent—Fundamental Rev. V..L. Martin—-11 A.M. DR. TOM MALONE 10 A. M.-Jl A. M. and 7 P.M. MID-WEEK SERVICE 7:30 P.M. Sunday School Attendance l.a.\t Sunday 1,140, DR. TOM MALONE, Pastor FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Ave. ' Servirs Sunday—7:30 P M. Rev. Arthur DeGtall, speaker Wednesday .Eysntng S*rvlrs-t 30 P.M 'Rev. H Marshall. Pastor Faith Baptist Church 3411 AIRPORT ROAD Sunday School .........lOlDO A M. Worship Service ..II 00 A M, Evening Service . ... - 7 m30 P. M Wed, Prayer Service . 7:30 P M. I iii>w*iUrtiwiMrtiwwirtrtirtiirtrtliwrtrtrtlrtiwaiirtrt*—*—nr is> n isniTfnr^ttitt-r-rr > rWW BAPTIST ■ Mnriii CHURCH 64 West Columbi* Av*. Sunday School ................. 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship, ................10:55 A.M. Training Union. .......’.................. 6:30 P.M. Evening Service . ...‘.................... 7:30 P.M. OtlBST SrKXHKR (.'l.AKKNCC B JACKSON, Minister o( BctucnlKMi Attlllatsd with Snuthern rtsptlst Convention MeMkeretylp Over ».tb0.00«| , ■MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH M-59 at North Cass Lake Road ANNUAL MISSIONARY CONVENTION Miss R, Patterson Missionary to The Congo OCTOBER 1st-8 th SUNDAY ]1 A.M.-7 P.M. NIGHTLY sE.3aV 7:30 P,M. HEAR: ^ REV. D. N CLARK, , ’District Superintendent. thnsiian and Mnslonary Alliance. Sunday. Monday, Tuesday Miss R. PATTERSON All.-tnce Missionary to the Congo ' -■ ' Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday Cwsfumes p.'•^ttr.l^ ..‘ .PHiuif s . IHUR5DAY thru SUNDAY I^L^uiorln. Wii,,n Mrsuonary to Thedind, a I " y-Paitr Ret . C. 7 , Be >d Rn McKeespo \h\ Pastoi Rev D. N. Clark, Ihst. Supti V THfc PONTIAC PRESS 18 Wot Huron Street . SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 r*U) Thovwo* Advertising Director MU.. O Marshall Josh ir L6e«l Advert till • , Manager It Seems to Me President’s Peacetime Budget Is Highest in History of World Well, he did it. t mean John F. Kennedy. 1 The largest peacetime budget ji\ the history of the Nation —: or the world—momes to the American people as a completely unwelcome contribution from the President and his Democratic fcftngress. Many people thought the House and Senate would rebel and hacK JFK down to size. But as they adjourn, the peacetime totals are a staggering and unbelievable $96 billion. This is $11 billion more - than the previous peacetime high and the Dems thus break all existing records. JFK really socks.it to us. He gives us both barrels. , , * ★ ★ ★ Whether you’re a Republican, Democrat, Socialist, Communist* or a Disciple of the Errant Ground Hog, you’re i nailed with this monstrous budget. There’s no more debate now tor it has passed. You’ll pay youV share. There’s no escape. ' ★ ★ ★ When Kennedy was campaigning, he promised almost everything to almost everybody, and even the case-hardened members of his own party had their tongues in their cheeks at times and regarded these as the campaign promises of irrepressible youth. However, the youngster made good. He let us have it. ★ ★ ★ The total take on all taxes in this country — even before this record breaker—was approximately a, third of Ihe entire national income. Of course, this ups it a bit more but when your old man’s worth $200 million dollars as JFKis is, another advance is probably unimportant. But if you aren’tx in that happy predicament, you cak. start to worry a little more. • • * ★ ★ ★ And hang on to your hat! Some of his Inflationary meos- " ures didn't pass and others were reduced; and he promises to revive these next January when Congress meets again. The young man isn't a bit daunted and he’s preparing to give a right* smart whirl to the balance that failed to pass. ★ • ★ ★ If the boys from Washington hear enough from the people at home' in the interim, we may yet survive. Blit if the free-loading, free-spending crowd runs unchecked and unchallenged, we’re doomed. If you don’t like;, lC say so. If you’re happy, pleased and content with the current tax confiscation, just remain silent. There's more in the offing for the victims and sufferers who accept their fate without a protest.. Two years ago, after the interim elect ions. Congress sat heavily upon the free-spending proposals of the new Democrats who had just been swept into office. The House and Senate held the line and tossed the inflation- > ary treasure in the basket. An early one passed and Elsenhower promptly vetoed it—and that was that. But this time, both houses "rallied to the cause.’* Frightening Facts.... Do y,qu want to know what a 100-megaton super weapon could do? In U.S. News and World Report, Lewm L. Strauss, who was a member of the Atomic Energy Commission, explains: .‘til could level almost any U.S. city by wholly destroying every building within a radius of 12 miles. Its heat could cause lethal . third degree burns to everyone exposed within a 50-mlie radius. Radioactive fallout, carried by the winds, could destroy most living things within an area the size of the New England states." ★ ★ ★ . There! Know enough? And in Conclusion.... Jottings from the well-thumbpd notebook of your peripatetic re-) porter: Everyone will feel safer about . World War III when Russia applies for space in New York*s i964 World’s Pair.............Here are the lead- ers (in.order) on the last TV check: Miss Universe Pageant, Gunsmoke, Have Gun, What’s My Line, Candid Camera, My Three Sons, Real McCoys, I’ye Got a Secret and Untouchables ...........Understand a new Chinese restaurant in Tennessee is known as “The Chattanooga Foo- Chu.” .............Elsa Maxwell has been blitzed. Onassis had several big parties on his yacht at Monte Carlo and she was uninvited. Then' she togsed a big shindig of -her own and people remained away by droves .......... Purely personal CAROLYN nomination for an especially attractive young lady: Carolyn Hubbard. * ★ ★ ★ 1 can’t prove It but I’ll bet a sugar cookie the 1961 Michigan-MSU football game will be one of the most fiercely (and cleanly) fought battles of the season.. ..... A Cadillac stopped on the turnpike and offered to tow a Model A Ford which had conked out. TheS’ hitched ’em together and soon the Caddie forgot the Ford and reached 60, 70 and then 80 miles an hour. An officer started in pursuit and the Cadillac ripped jup to 90 plus whereupon the officer radioed ahead: "Black Cadillac headed your way doing 100 rii.p.h. And yon won’t believe whatjI say next: Model A Ford on his tail honking madly and trying to pnss Cadillac.” ★ ★ ★ Today’s English bit: I’m Intrigued when anyone says “Hure-on,” for Huron with a slight accent on the last syllable Instead of “Hure-un.” . . • .....They tell me George Washington started a lottery and If It was good enough for the F. of H. C: It’s good enough for me.............TV men have been amazed to find JFK memorizing scripts in arj amazingly short space of time .........Tour- ists didn’t leaive us Labor Day. Licenses glimpsed this week: Oregon, Alberta, Alabama and Florida...... .... Cry Baby Buddy Parker threatens to quit again if his team doesn’t have a winning year. ............ Jimmy Hoffa’s personal airplane is Equipped with all the best, the most luxurious find the finest........ Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s— the’Detroit Lions; the J’s —me (for telling duck hunters the hatch was plentiful when later advice says It wasn’t)., - sHakold A. Fitzgerald If you are past 60 and can take care of a 5-year-old grandchild for a. week without passing out from exhaustion or having a nervous breaks •dowh, you are In tip-top physical and mental condition. Voice of the People: * > “Local Governments Should Keep Money in First Dime9 No nation in history has ever survived a tax burden at one-third of Its national Income. Today. 31 ceijts out of every dollar earned in the/ Uhited States goes lot taxes and out of that 31 cents. 23 <*nti goes to the federal government leaving 8 cents to be shared by the state, county and local community, * ,/ ' '* ' - No wonder our local governments are told to aril for federal/#!! But wotildn’tit make more sense to keep money at home In th* first instead of running it through Washington only to get it back minus a sizable carrying charge? Noah Mason, R H1. ‘Men Should Spend Weekends at Home’ Please tell me "GOP-Republican" where any7 man should spend the weekenfl, Other than with his family? / .%:■ *: * Where po you spend yours, at your pliM of. business? It that Is all you can find fault' with, I certainly would keep Health Principle Involved in Pork* I read with awe remarks made by Dr. Crane (Sept. 231. Dr. Crane was using supposition that Joseph and Abraham ate pork. Before Abraham, God gave instructions to Noah concerning the clean and unclean classifications of beasts. In the New Testament Acts 10:1115 the doctor would have us believe- Pbtor and God ok eating the unclean meats. In Verse toot the same chapter Is the Bible Interpretation of Peter's virion. In. short, the Gentiles were to have the gospel. They were not In the book of Isaiah 66:15-17 the _ ; * —— prophet here is speaking of the POftrSiltS second coming of the Lord. Those found eating swine’s flesh, etc. will be consumed. Yes, Dr. Crane, it’s a health principle, then and should be This is a wide world and you are free to go where you please. Try Russia, or maybe caddy for Eisenhower. P.G. PROMINENT MEN OR FAITH Rt. Rev. Arthur Lichtenberger The Rt. Rev. Arthur Lichtenberger, presiding bishop of America’s three million Episcopalians, says: , "We do not live in a world of worship and piety apart from the world . . . Christianity must affect the way people conduct, business and the'way they vote, as well as the way they live at home and conduct themselves on Sunday." As a former college quarterback, he combines words with action, championing individual expression, minority rights, social Justice: Respecting the faiths of others, he sees church reqplon as the bringing’ together of “the gifts and treasures we now nurture separately." The genial, silver-haired Bishop manifests his conviction: “The church has a mission ... It is sent to serve God in the world . . .’’ Days of All Faiths: . * Correction on Beliefs of Witnesses By DR.' HOWARD V. HARPER A discussion of some beliefs and customs of Jehovah's Witnesses in a recent column brought in quite a few letters tram members of that group. Disagreements mostly boiled down to three points—I had said that Jehovah's Witnesses believe no one will be eternally pun-, ished, that they don’t believe it is wrong to smoke and that they refuse to be vaccinated. - I went directly to their national headquarters for definite statements on these points, and here, In their own words, are the an- • "Jehovah's Witnesses do believe that those who are incorrigibly wicked will be destroyed for all time. Therefore, the punishment, which is a cutting off from life, is eternal." . The other big point about Tyn- a little how shockii^'WVwi dale’s Bible was that it was in real we seebow today peojupare made . . _.. ~___uncomfortable by Bibles written in time. We can perhaps understand (COPYRIGHT 1961) Dr, William Brady's Mailbag: Dogs Can Do No Harm to Heart Trouble Victim ‘Worthwhile Movie Shown hrPontiac’ Many people have talked about not Wring some of the movies we have had in our theaters. Now is our chance to see a movie which is very good. It is called St. Francis of Assisi, and if more people go: to see It, I am sure the theater manager will send tor more. Threw and Linda Gousales 124 Henderson St. The Almanac By United Press International Today is Saturday, Sept. 30, the 273rd day of the year with 92 to follow In 1961, The moon.is'approaching its last quarter. The morning star la Venus. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1846, ether was used as an anesthetic tor the first time- in the extraction of a tooth — by Dr. William Mbrton, a dentist in Charleston, Maps. - in 1939, tor the first time, a football game was televised. The cameras of station W2XBS in New York photographed the game be-whpn’ tween Fordham University and WAynesburg College at Randall’s Island, N.Y, ' In 1953, President Eisenhower named Gov. Earl Warren of California chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. A thought for today: American writer Ralph Waldo Emerson said, "The ornament of a house is the friends who frequent It." By JOHN C. METCALFE The milkman rides, ar little truck' . . . Each morning. Ahrough our neighborhood -X- * And f would say ft is a way . y,- To make a pleasant livelihood . . . I wish that I could ride around'./-. . Each early morning of the year . . . When only lengthy yawning mouths . . . And snappy snoring youcap hear ... But by the time that I arise ’. . . The neighborhood is wide awake . . . And all the noises in the street ... Can just about the eardrum break ... I think he has a peaceful fife Who calls upon .each ahuttered „ home . . . When only hungry cats and dogs ... And paper boys the driveways roam ... I envy him who rides about. . . And all of us each day can please ... By just delivering some milk . • And juice aixLcxgs and cottage cheese. (Copyright. INI) Smiles - By HAL COCHRAN When the spring Hewers are In bloom that’s when the whole family gets out to gnther. * ' ♦ # Instead of dreaming about a beautiful flower garden, get down to earth and plant one. ♦ ★ * There's little chance of raising your spirits when yen look down The Country Parson Por i Father has heart trouble. He keeps two dogs. They sleep and eat in the house, winter and summer. I don’t think! it is good for father. The darn dogs jump up on the bed and lick his "Jehovah’s Witnesses do not lace ... . But that I* the way It was-In the time of William Tyndale, who was born on this Oct. «, 1495 and came to a fiery end at the stake In 1536. His offense was that Ito translated the first flw books of „ the Old Testament, the book of Jonah and the New Testament Into English. To accomplish this at all, he had to get out of England. He did his work in Germany, where the air was freer, and where the art of printing was flourishing by this time. He then sent copies back to England. The shipments were all secr($, of course, but church authorities managed to get hold of most of them and bum them. They just did not want people reading the Bible. Tyndale was not really the first to translate the Bible into English. A man named Wyeltf had done it in 1.182, Bui Tyndale did have two important "firsts" to hi* credit: Ills translation was the first one made from the language* In w h I c h the Bible had originally lM-cn written. Wycllfs waa only a translation of a Latin translation. DR. BRADY children or adults should slways wssh their hands with soap and' wafer Immediately after petting or handling dogs. Otherwise the dogs will do your father no harm. * ★ * I wish to thank you for your remedy for hives. Numerous shots had been used, with no apparent effect. Within a week on ■your remedy the hives were gone and ijpe not recurred . . . (T V.) Ans.—My remedy Is sn optimal dally ration of calcium and vitamin D, that Is, two or three By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE K-412: Billy Q., aged 12, Is a bright youngster! “pr. Crane," his mother began, "Billy wants some way by which he can earn more money. -"We have adopted your piecework method of paying for e a c I job he performs and ii work’ll pei fectly. quires to maintain good nutrition. In my case, canker sores follow indulgence in chocolate, tomatoes, peaches. I can nibble a little of any of these occasionally without trouble, but'If I take Just a little bit more I get canker sores. Other members of my family have Ihe same trouble. We have .found niacin in kmall doses is very beneficial. You recommended this - some years ago. (S.M.K.) ★ ★ Sr Ans.—I recommend not smsll doses but an optimal dally ration of nlaela (nicotinic) acid - amide—tor example a M mg. •. -u u ..._________- CRANE suburban home? Diversify the job opportunities of your children by mixing some mental pay jobs with their muscular chores. Good mothers routinely try to nurture the spiritual life of their youngsters, so let your children start reading 1he Bible, probably beglnping with the New Testament. Mrs. Crane and I used to pay our children $1 for each of the «e hooka of the Bible they road. ■■Ig ’ they got 61 for a day for s i month when one Is recurring ranker Nor.-.*. I don’t understand what chocolate, tomatoes or peaehAt (nay have to do with ranker sored. Niacin Isn’t medicine, ft' is one of the B vitamins. While picking raspberries, I ate some and I think I ate a worm . . , (Mns, II. T) dollar for Math, etc. But children prefer quick rewards, so you might, pay tor each chapter. Since we are now In an Inflationary period, belter- offer them live cents per chapter and 10 cents if tiiey read it aloud. They cari finish a chapter In a few minutes, and-the reading drill alone will be'Invaluable. It can help change slow readers into faster ones and thereby alter your child'# school-marks, too. Meanwhile, It will be giving the youngster, access to the most world Shaking- prose in mankind's history. * * * As a variation of the Bible reading, you chn also pay the child . for memorizing a few of the great churehghygins, such as "Rock of Ages," "The Old Rugged Cross” anrLytny others that, your child . wishes. Most of (j* adults wish we could sing a few hymns without- looking at the songbook. Your children will thus be (oiltiled with j> dotrn nr may# 50 hymns they can sing while you are driving In the car to visit their grandparents. , And In their old age, they will have a rich spiritual and musical "bank account" on which they can draw as a tonic tor their souls. BLEMED MOTHER# Thousands of times, even after you good mothers have left this world for your heavenly .home, your children will then think back gratefully and call you blessed. pver, you will m with extra spending money, as well as reading drill, so this Injection of mental -mnd religious chores ns pay tasks will pay rich dividends. ,,In addition to the Bible and church music, you might also pay tor their memortzlng of the choice proverbs or wise sayings of the and let him copy a dozen or more of those quotations frohn my textbook. * * * Then pay him tor every one he - can recite fluently from memory. I'd suggest ]0 cents to 25 - cents for such, paying 10 cents lor tin- ■ mediate reproduction, and the ad--dltlonnl 15 cents If he can recite ii a week taler. For further hints, send tor my booklet "20 Ways Children Cm Earn Spending Money," enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents, Alwayi writ* to Or. Owrff W. Cr«n« to «srs of Th« PonttaM) PrOM. Pontl.o, ssr JsssLCJavi’-rf emito to covor typing *M prinuns. «««*" *h«i yo« rent tor. hF —JwT.— ohsrto and psmphioto. (Copyright, i- I X, noted that , research laboratories the world Co, in Toledo, studying fuel cells. They trochemical research (including fuejr cells) at the Electric Autolite "The hope la that some day a MANY SEEKING ’ANSWER In a paper presented' to the American Petroleum Institute's division of refining last spring, W. J. Sweeney and C. E, Heath of the Draft Director Says Sorensen's Record 'Regular' Lincoln, Neb. (AP)—Nebraska’s Selective Service director says he’s reviewed the draft record of presidential aide Theodore, C. Sorensen and found it regular.' 'I noticed where pome member of Congress said he (Sorensen) avoided military service by claiming to be a conscientious objector,” said Guy N. Helnntoger Thursday. Sen. Barry Goidwater, R-Ariz., recently read to the 'Senate a newspaper story which said Sorensen, 33, had escaped military service as a conscientious objector and Korean War service as father. The story said Sorensen was classified at “1-AO" between 1948 and 1954. •This 1-AO classification does not avoid mmrarjf service,’’. said Ilenninger, a retired Army major general. "A person with that qualification goes into uniform- the same as any one else and serves in a branch such as the Medical Corps.” / Claims Voters Ready for GOP Sen. Goidwater Says Electorate Disgusted With 'New Frontier' SUN VALLEY, Idaho (AP) -Spn. Barry Goidwater says “we would see the greatest Republican landslide to the history, of the country” if congressional elections were held today. The Arizona senator, addressing a Republican western conference dinner Thursday night said pie have had enough of what he termed New Frontier fumbling and ej$r«vagance. Goidwater looked up from his text to say of President Kennedy: "We hear him talk like Church-Ill, then see him act like Chamberlain." Neville Chamberlain was the British prime minister *who vainly tried to appease Germany prior to World War II. CITES URGENCY "The (allure of the New Frontier. both at home and abroad, makes it a matter not Just of po- Qenera| foods Corp. litical choice but of national andj~ _ , . - u r international urgency that Repub- Cuts Price Of Cottee lican power be increased in the , _ , (SgresP." Goidwater mid. NEW YORK Foods An audience of more than 750 Corp. Friday reduced the whole-eave the leader of conservative j sale price of all Its regular grind. Remihlicans an ovation before and I vacuum-packed coffee two cents afterhe spoke. , «pound, effective Monday. Former Vice President Richard The decline, first since a similar M Nixon speaks to the confer* i two cent cut to July I960, was «t-ence Saturday night. It will-be hlsjtributed by the firm to the down-first appearance since announcing Ward drift” of pri«*s lor ^ green his candidacy lor governor of (unroasted) coffee since that time. California. -|Tl»e cut brings the wholesale level Goidwater, who was boomed for| to the lowest level since 1949, the] the 1960 Republican presidential j firm said. ______' nomination, told a news cooler-ence he has no plans to seek II "If I run for anything, It will be for the Senate," he told. I come up again to 1964. My plans are to help elect people to Congress and to the Senate." Hunts Delegates to Michigan's 1908 Con-Con LANSING lit—Secretary of State] James M. Hare issued a tentative j "missing persons report” Friday i In connection with the forthcom--Ing constitutional convention. Kara, who Will preside at the opening of the eonventlou Tuesday, wants to know If there Is any delegate to the IMS convention who l» still alive and living In Michigan besides retired U.S. Circuit Judge Charles O. *lm- J Simons will be an honored! guest nt a governor's recaption and dinner Monday night nt Kellogg Center at Michigan State lint-1 varsity. 1,I would personally feel very badly if we had overlooked nnyj other delegate to the 1908 con-j vention In our Haste to get thlsi 1961 convention under way.” SHid| Hare. the efficiency of the beet present day thermal power plant — say 80 per cent. “The surest thing about the fuel cell is that the theoretical concept is sound! This fact has tickled the imagination of everyone from lab-, oratory boy to banker. They seem to say 'You* scientists tell us It is possible, why don’t you go and make one,’ or ‘Someone is going to do it, why ijot m?’ ” Shaw I says; *‘U you counting qn a fuel cell to take dollars out of your car expense and d only pennies to your water f — ; 1 He says the major problem is Obviously It's not th^t easy. The dw&ih car would be powered by electricity. Today this would have to use storage batteries. But unlike conventional batteries, which deliver only the electricity previously stored, a -fuel cell getwrates current as long as fuel is provided. Ideally, this electricity would come from fuels costing next to Butck Recalls 1,200 to Flint Auto Plant* FLINT W* — General Motors’ Butck division Friday recalled some 1,300-skilled trades and production workers. Bulrk General Manager Edward Roller! said the recall followed n production boost to moot | _modal Jntrodoc- n In several years.” he work force increase brings d Bulck employment to Flint tearly 17,000 — Its highest level •e last January. i iys^rrv niiS* ^MiohiiiV IfltoUon 1 fifty1 £ , October f, in>— ear, »n» inirtlbiti Sir piMMln; l •Uotton, ai provided by fiction Act No, III, Public Act. ef l*M. n • o’clock a m. until I o'clock p.m mid day for the purpoie pi r**l*»in» I properly apply therefor jjn? d?*tj!e proMnotV"he'limt’oi •(ration, ana 011(111111 under tlx •tltutlon, if romolnlni Mich r»»h I, to vote at (ho next oloction. ohxl ,nter*rt In igSffWfe,, (OK., RIDE. HERE) I HOPE TOUR REAPIN' ARE MORE OLD ROOM AT TH' SHACK 1 H-M/... OLD MAGAZINES. THAT REMINDS MB~^-“— [n^OAZINES/ J IS A SUCCESS/. By Charles Kuhn YBP! PVEAN APPOINTMENT WITH TH* DOCTOR NEXT WEEK/i DONALD DUCK 1 alt Dinnev ( GOSH, H(£» SUCH A BRAIN! ( l HOPE I PONT APPEARr-\AS PUM» AG I AM.1 J ' AAV UNCLE, PROCESSOR} LUDWIG VON DRAKE, \ l« VISITING U» AWHILE...J) 7“ive gottaT V LEARN^PE^-^ AT LAST.., MV BAGGAGEJ | IS HERE • / IS, THAT ) EIGHT ' THE HONTIAC KRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1961 ^IfayN Next Yegiy Afrby Say» Don't ^Accept Proposal Now, "Give Him Awhile fo Mature By ABIGAIL VAN Bl’REN DEAR ABBY: I am a widow, 29 years old, arid the mother of four children. I am the solo support of my children, and have beenJor iour years.. My,' problem handsome and ' job. He wants to marry me. I have known him a year, ABBY and J think the world of him but. Abby, I haven’t a,/thing to offer him but my .troubles. * He knows this, but won’t take no for fui answer. He says he loves me and doesn’t carl* what anyone thinks, and he is camping on my doorstep. _ My children adore him. I -think it would be unfair to Jhim to marry him. I love him in a way, but ajn — r» ^’CONFUSED DEAR CONFUSED:_____If you love him—don’t marry him yet. '* He is only a boy Give him a . chance to .mature and if, in another year, you both feel the same—well, perhaps it will •work. . - DEAR ABBY: l am told’that ' Women Hear Hospital Aims Dr.i1 Theodore Satersmoen, ‘ Pontiac General Hospital con-. suiting psychiatrist, spoke on “Purpose and Aims of Pontiac ’General Hospital's New Mental Health Unit” before the women's auxiliary Tuesday afternoon In the hospital auditorium. James Rydman gave a brief outline of the 1961 High Fever Follies of which he is a co-chairman. • Plans were completed for the awards luncheon Oct. 24 at the hospital. Workers who have contributed 50 hours or more during the past year will be honored. » Alumnae Club * Slates Tea for New Members The University of Minnesota Women’s Club has scheduled a membership tea for 1 p.m. Friday in the home of Mrs. Carl Christensen, Birmingham. Mrs. John Toomey, Birmingham, will present a program of “Hebrew Liturgical Music” with commentary. Ady woman in the Pontiac area is eligible**^ member-' ship in the club if she or her husband has been a student, of the Uniyersity of Minnesota. Reservations' for prospective members will be taken by Mrs. M. J. Patterson, Birmingham. . ladies do not shake hands. Is that correct? When I meet someone, my..hand automatically goes out, whether it is a man or a woman I am greeting I can’t find the^answer in pn etiquette booR, but I want to do the proper thing. Can you help me? - A LADY * * • * DEAR LADY: L a d j e s DO shake hands. Both with other ladies and wi!h*gentiemfn. ★ * DEAR ABBY: After raising my son. and seeing hiiin _ through college on the start of . a promising career I have the sorrow of watching him choose a girl of different religion, background and education. So far 1 have only shown, "mild disapproval.” Should I do more? I am afraid of forcing the wrong results. TORN MOTHER . DEAR. TORN: If you have given your son your best guid-. a nee, thefe is nothing you can do. You are wiser not to snipe at the girl. That usually boom-, erangss . ★ it ik - ■ DEAR ABBY: Since I have .seen ati sorts of unusual problems in your column perhaps you’ll use this, as it is indeed ■ "my biggest jproblem. I’m from, Luxemburg .and, invariably, when ,1 am in the States, people will say, “Oh yes. GERMANY!” Now Luxemburg is a small country, and it is bad enough that .people don’t know where it is, but theyjnistake it for a part of a nation which, twice in 20 years, has invaded Please print this, Abby, so that people will learn that-Lux-emburg is a very proud and independent country situated between France and Belgium, and that the official language j^aiFreridK ' and that people1 should study a map once in A, while. FED UP LUXEMBURG A ★ ★ What’s troubling you? Write • Abby, ’ care of The Pontiac Press. Include self-addressed * stamped envelope. * ★ ★ For Abby’s booklet, "flow To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50c to Abby. Slate Meeting, for Delta Zeta The evening group af the 1 Delta Zeta Sorority alumnae of South Oakland County will meet at 8 p.m., Monday In the home of Mrs. John G. Rofnetty,., Birmingham. Stanley Isenberg of ,a local stock brokerage 'firm will present a short film “How to Invest and Why.” He will give an informal talk' and answer questions from the group. . „ Dessert will be served by Mrs/ Wolfgang Sagahtc, Berkley and-Mrs. Gordorj Krfapp, Royal Oak. Mrs. Carlyle W. Rees, Royal Oak, will give details about transportation. Florist Arrarraes Tojk on Fall Plants New England Estates . .Branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, will meet Thursday evening in the home of Mrs.. Nelson Carpenter, West Long Lake Road, (Ourtis Crowell, Dearborn florist, will speak on fall plant materials and show new trends in arrangements. Mrs. Robert McDonald and Mrs. Roy Johnson will be cohostesses for the evening. The Kenneth W. Howells, Berwick ■ Avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter Sharon Lee to Jerry, M. Stickel, son of the Robert Stickels, sRochesler. February vows are planned. Crisp' days and frosty nights mark that time of the year to bring in the potted plants for. the winter. Members of the *Watson Rose Garden Club, Bloomfield Hilts, who nave conducted a horticultural therapy * program tin Wednesdays at Pontiac State Hospital, work with patients in the foreground at one of the entrances the program has beautified. Club members (standing) ,are (from left) Mrs. Robert McCurry, director of occupational therapy at the hospital; Mrs. William Kahn, Mrs. W. B. Anderson and Mrs. WilHorit Burlingame. SHARON LEE HOWELL MAGAZINES We constantly receive, palls Irani housewives explaining that ,jome magazine salesman or woman was at their dqor explaining some kind of a contest or they give a very strong sympathy appeal urging the housewife to purchase hooks or magazines. . Your Business Ethics Board frowns on such tactics. Buy the magazines for what they arc worth and give charity to some local, legitimate agency. BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD of tll<‘ Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Offer Teens, Moms Class in Model ing A new course Modeling" for TeeJis and Moms" has been announced by the Will-O-Way Apprentice Theater in Bloomfield Hills. The classes are an extension of the popular teen-age modeling course offered by the theater school in the past. Mothers and daughters will attend “different classes together” from Oct. 9-Dec. 11, culminating theiF training with a fashion show. The 10-week course will be offered from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday evenings at the Will-O-Way Workshop on West Long Lake Road Celia Merrill Turner, Will-O-Way’s director, reports “Aunts and nieces also will (be accepted in this imaginative course which plumbs the depths of your closets to match and refashion styles and accessories that are right for you u"*es tape recorders to improve the "look” of your voice: finds out the truth about your figure —and deals out exercises consequences; takes the elbows out of walking and the knees out of climbing and puts 'art' into your make-up.” Marge Bradford will be fashion consultant for the course..: Noted for her charm and "know how” Miss Bradford who was Miss Canada of 1950 has appeared with the Windsor Symphony and Light Opera Company, Leonard Smith’; Belle Isle Band and a Canadian television station. She modeled professionally for five years. Currently she may be heard dally as hostess on a local fine arts broadcasting company's “Show Time on Broadway.” For further information Mrs. Turner may be contacted at 'Will-O-Way. Club Appoints New Chairmen named when the Ingenue* Chin met Thursday at the Middle Belt Road home of Sharon llilemnn ‘ Appointed by the, nbw president Sue Hill/, of Ottawa Drive . were Sharie Logan, chaplain; Mary Sue - Smallwood, publicity; Judy ,llUcman. culling c o m in i t ter; Vicki Lands-parger. historian; and Sue Carriger and .Linda Pimlot, Future activities Include a “traveling bake sale" Oct. 14 and a leaf-raking project with . proceeds to be used for charitable purposes. Nancy Armstrong and Bar-bum Kenney are the club H|x>nsors. Se? Girl Scout Calendar Sale The Southern Oakland County Girl Scout Council will begin Its unnual calendar sale Monday' Sales will- be direct with no advance orders taken. While each troop will receive • a small profit for each calendar sold, the bulk of the pfoflt Teen-Age Weddings Churn Up Dispute By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) v Teen-age marriages create problems for the school officials as well as for parents of the teen-age couples. * " . . ■ Some educators contend that a marriage in high school should mean expulsion of the couple. ...Others argue that marriage should not terminate the teen-agers’ formal education. ★ ★ ★ A statistical look at how the young are marrying younger, and the results —both in schooling and in the divorce rate —came across this desk today from the Science Research Associates, Inc. The organization, with headquarters in Chicago, specializes in educational services including guidance publications. Its researchers have rounded up the# latest information on teen marriages and education from governmental and privately supported organizations, from school publications and sociologists. 39 PCT. UNDER *0 A Population Reference Bureau study, for instance, showed that in 1958 (latest year studied), 39 per cent of all brides and 12 per cent of all bridegrooms were in their teens. In 1950, the figures were 32 and 7 per cent respectively. In turn, a Bureau of the Census study showed that the annulment and divorce rates are »thc highest and the probability of second and third marriages tjiet greatest among women wed for the first time while they were.j® years or younger. ★ Ik * » Researchers cited another statewide study in Iowa made by Dr. Lee G. Burchinal. who found that teen-age marriage often means dropping out of school.»Dr. Burchinal found that 80 per cent, of the girls who married in high school 'dropped out and only 8 per cent ever re-enrolled. Among the boys, 43 per cent quit school and only 9 per cent reentered. “Although the educational requirements for Jobs are eontin-• '■’bally rising,” said Dr.. Burchinal. “the chances for further education for boys and girls who marry in high school are very slim.” EDUCATORS DIVIDED Educators are divided on whether married students should be excluded from regular high school classes. The National Education Association asked a group of elementary and secondary teachers for their opinions. In both groups, 33 per cent replied that boys should be permitted to continue school. And 45.4 per cent contended married girls should be allowed to go on to classes. ★ ★ ★ Some 34.3 per cent thought the married boys should be excluded; 40.8 per cent thought the girls should. The rest were uncertain. The publication Nation's Schools asked school administrators their opinion'in two studies—one In I960,'the other in 1956. In 1960, 78 per cent thought married teen-agers should be permitted to continue their schooling. dr ★ ★ Boston, Cleveland, Miami, New York, Atlanta and Long Beach, Calif., are among the cities which often send married students to evening schools instead of to regular schools, said the report. Several cities including Washington, D. C., place husband and wife in separate schools hoping to discourage other early marriages, Houston and many other cities leave to the school principal the - decision of Individual cases. .. . ★ ★ ★ Omaha, Indianapolis and San Diego are among the cities permitting married students to stay in school, but.often exclude them from extra curricular programs. , see them as , and M they e, you leave Your Friend Should Have Made Call By The Emily Post Institute Q: Recently I learned through friends that a friend -of mine from another city was in town. I did not call her as -I felt it was her place to call me and let me know that she* was in town. I understand that this friend is very hurt because I did not call her. Will you please tell me whose place it was to call? A; As an unexpected visitor to your town she should have let you know of her presence, but having learned that she was in town it -was not very gracious on your part to insist that she be the one to make the first call. SHOULD BE ON TIME Q: Please give me your opinion regarding the following problem: When a large organization gives a luncheon or dinner and all the guests to be seated at the head table do not arrive on time for the function to be started at the appointed hour, how -long must one delay the luncheon or dinner? Our club banquet was delayed over a halt hour because all those-to be seated at the head table were not present at the appointed hour. It didn't seem fair to those who made the effort to be on' time to have to wait, but we didn't want to be rude. A * ★ A: It is an important .requirement that those who are . to be seated at the head table make a special effort to arrive punctually, and it is not-necessary to wait more than 15 minutes tor any of them except the guest of honor. ACKNOWLEDGE VISITS Q: I have Just moved to a strange city. Several ladies have called on me. Some of-them came while I was away from home aqd they left their cards. Just what is the proper.. way (or me to acknowledge their visits? BJ RUTH SAUNDERS BIRMINGHAM — The opening of Birmingham Town Hall Ihursday and Friday launched Birmingham's cultural season. Present at the Birmingham T h e a tit) y to hear columnist Harry Golden was a thrpng of Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills fashionables. ★ ★ ★ _ \ At the luncheons at Birmingham Country Club both days following the Town Hail programs the speaker’s table was graced by Town Hall President Mrs. Donald Bay, speaker Harry Golden, Dr. ami Mrs. Kenneth H. Gass, Paul N. Av-erill, Carmina Brooks, Lynn S. Miller, Guy S. Hitt, Mrs. Morris Halsted, Mrs. Charles Renfrew, Mrs. Ralph Backus anti the Rev. and R^sT Herbert G.-Myers. , * ★ • A Birmingham Town Hall, a subscription series, meets six times a season under the auspices of St. Anne’s Guild of St. James Episcopal Church- * " ■* ★ Among parents who have recently taken their offsprings to college are Mr. and Mrs. Forrest B. Hubert Who took Christine back to Miami Upi-• versity in Oxford, Ohio. Peter Hubert 'who is living in Cali-from Dartmouth College has Just moved to Hollywood from 'Laguna Beach. The William G. Lerchens took young B4H to Gambler, *' Ohio to enttT qfenyon College: A it. it Mr. and Mrs. gbarlea Baird Cunningham (Natalie Ensign* now of Battle Creek, announce the birth of a son Charles Scott Sept. 17. ——- * * ■* Mrs, Daniel Rownd and Mrs. ^ouis H. Rownd of Wheeling. W. Va. are house guests of Mr. and Mr*. Lance G. Minor Jr. of Top View Court. • * ★ ' ★ Mrs. Benjamin Brewster has • returned from Westport, Mass, where she has spent' moat of the summer. Women to Hear Talk on Congo by Missionary Episcopal Church Women of Christ Church Cranbrook will have as their morning speaker Oct. 10. Mrs. Robert White. Birmingham, a missionary to the Congo. * * * Dr. and Mrs. White, of the First Methodist Church,- Birmingham. have spent the last four years in Belgium and the Congo. A native Detroiter and graduate of Wayne State University, Mrs. White will discuss "The Challenge of the Congo.* including the most recent news from Dr.' White, on a special mission there, * * + ■ After returning to this country. in January he and Mrs White will go back to the Congo. They will live near Leopoldville Service Club Sets Luncheon ■ The Parliamentary' Study Club will open Its 37th year of Service to the women of Pontiac and Oakland County with a 12 o’clock luncheon ‘ Wednesday in All Saints Episcopal Church. > * ' * Mr*. Virginia L. Warren, coordinator of emergency welfare in ’Oakland County and southeastern Michigan. ‘ will discuss latest trends In .civil defense, illustrating with films. Reservations are being placed with Mr*. James llnmp-ton and Mrs. Robert NtenStedt. * ★ * Meetings are held first snd third Wednesdays October through March for study and practice of pnrllamentaiV usage by various organized camping fund. Camping program* offered by the cotinell Hie self-supporting. j ' Mrs Helmut Krlppendorf, . sale chairman, -has set it goal Of 45,000 -calendars. Tile sale will coni Inue through /Oct. |M. Weary with the ways of primping womanhood, 6-year-old Jamie French of Church Street fell sound asleep under the dryer nftqr a session with the hair- dresser, She emerged from the warmth to admire the end result curlers ami c at right. eno)i if f A- NINE ■ THE POE%AC jpRESSV SATURDAY^ ^P^MBjBRv^o, 1961 |Desserts Subject of Club's Lesson I The lesson "Deserving Des [by. Mrs. Gerald Wright to! How Many Do We Need? AtOTitv Dietates Calories weight and hpw active you are. The calories used in physical exercise vary greatly depending on how strenuous the exercise Is. For Instance, you use less than JfflD cal* ories when doing an hour/ot light housekeeping, while you will up several hundred calories an hour when Indulging in very active sports. , . STORED AS FAT If you take in more calories than you use, these are stored as fat. U you take & les* than you expend in activity, some of your stored tat is called on and you lose weight. It Is just as simple as that. ★’ # dr. Two factors which are Important )n finding your Ideal weight are your bony structure and muscle development. Flower Shpw Opens Season Pine Lake Branch of the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association Opened the season guest day at the Ptoevlew Drive home of Mro, Edna Keller. V*Sikv * Mrs. Rusaell Kock was chairman and Judge <* the garden flower arrangements created by members, Mrs. Clarence Suhr, branch president, made a pink gladioli arrangement' for the dessert table. report on fertilUtng lawns » and fall planting. Church Unit Has Prayer Retreat The Women’s Association of Jos* lyn Avenue United Presbyterian Church observed a prayer retreat Wednesday at the chunh. Mrs. Fred Bohlman, president of the elsoctatlon, welcomed members and guests and discussed the Importance of Christians' reading the Bible using the subject "Let the Spirit of God Direct Your Thoughts as You Read." Speaker wee Mrs. Joseph Lem* on of the Detroit Presbytery who For Yom* Wadding QUALITY and Quantity SAUrss -MM MtffM* Mss 0 A Wststsrs Mttriiii C.rUftette 95 Up •39 fades! Tones Available C R. HASKILL STUDIO SPECIAL. Monday and Tueiday Only A delicious dinner treat for the .entire family. Includes creamy mashed potatoes, brown giblet gravy and green vegetable., Only 50* /attache tea room 70 BAGLEY STREET Announcing Reopening of Seautif Se Monday, October 2, 1961 NIWKST We Are ChHatteas." Mrs. Henry Jttfeoe, who sang a »olo, and her accompanist Mrs. John G. Hevlland represented the Community Church 'of Orchard Lake Presbyterian. Also represented at the meeting were the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church, Drayton Plains Presbyterian Church and the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church of'Pontiac. Luncheon waa served at noon by Mrs. Robert Dunham, Mrs. Leonard Slade, Mrs. Geraldine Boeneman and Mrs. Sara Esrallan. Area Woman to Attend Convention ID 8. Saginaw St. Pontiac Between Engl* Theatre and J.C. Penney Hawaii Theme for Beta Sigs Hie September social tor Zeta Etn Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority WM Thursday at tha Ross Drive home of Mrs. James An- The hostess’ recreation waa decorated to simulate a home In Hawaii for the guests who arrived in native garb. Guests for the evening were Mrs. Leslie Mar sac, Mrs. Robert Goff and Mrs. 1. L. Bulgoxdy. * ♦ * * Mrs.'Byron Barnes, Mrs. Jack Barker, Mrs. Douglas Fox and Mrs. Joseph Galardt entertained with a skit depicting two Bets W Phi members on a plane trip to Hawaii. Mother Singers Choose Officers Officers for' the coming year have been elected by the Pontiac Mother Singers. Mrs. Russell Jacobson Is president; Mrs. Cecil Diehl, secretary-treasurer; Mre. Sidney Fellows, flowers and sunshine; Mrs. Harry Dickie, historian; Mrs. Diehl, publicity. Nr ★ 4r A buslnes meeting at the home of Mrs. Herbert Broom on North Paddock Street followed the annual banquet Wednesday at Al-ban's Country Cousin. Honorary members, Mrsj.Fum Tubbs was a guest. 'Tm surprised. I’ve never had it so soft” • I HAVI CLEANER—WHITER CLOTHES Soft water take* away tbs 1000 curd Ibol fllngi to clotboi, fim.i away tbs tCUin, dolLas look bright, now. • I SERVE TASTY-FLAVORFUL POODS Natural food flavor b kapt bocauio herd water minerals aron'f coektd In. Yaw food, aro tally and delirious. • - • I CLEAN MORI EFFICIENTLY MR. and MRS. J. PRANK McPEEK The J. Prank McPeeks of Norton Avenue will observe their golden wedding anniversary at Sunday dinner and family open house in the home of their daughter, Mrs. Ralph M. Williams, Lake Angelas Estates. The couple, has a son, Earl, living at home. Their grandson Jim Williams attends University of Michigan. -L . Several members of the Republican Women'! Club of Waterford Township are plonningto attend the Tri-State Regional Conference slated Oct. MO at Detroit’s Shera-ton-Cadillac Hotel. *' t f Delegates will be Mrs. Eugene Griffin, Mrs. Charles Campbell, Mrs.. William H. Bedard, Mrs. L. Raymond Sampson, Mrs. Glenn Walters, Mrs. Byron Cole, Mrs. J. H. Edwards, Mrs, Vivian Tubbs and Mn. Ann Opperman. The national president Mrs. J. B. Pnrks and members of the national board will nltend the convention, along with Mrs. Claire Williams, assistant to the Women's Aides Hears Lecture, at Monthly Meeting Mrs. Leon Skelley of the Oakland County Society of Crippled Children and Adults gave an illustrated lecture at the September meeting of the Junior Women’s Aide Society of Oakland County. Mrs. Thomas J. Livingston, Markle Avenue, Was! hostess. ★ tk ★ Plans Were completed for a food demonstration at Consumer* Power Co. Oct. IT. Guests for the evening were Mrs. Charles Guinn, Mrs. Vito Salviati, Mrs. Gary McRath and Mrs, Robert Johnson. ______ Miller. A panel of Michigan Congressmen, August Johansen, Robert Griffin and James Harvey win attend and a group of Michigan representatives including Robert Waldron and Don Pears also will be present. ★ A ★ Mrs. Charles Campbell of South Shore Drive was hostess to the group for a dessert luncheon business meeting Monday. Robert ,Templin of the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office was guest speaker on the. subject "Your Prosecutor and the Law and How You the Public Are Affected." Fete Miss Buckley; Plan$ Oct. 7 Vows Twenty-aix women attended recent miscellaneous shower for bride-elect Margaret Buckley In the home of Mrs. Lyndon Davies, Logan Street, Williams Lake. Guests were from Oxford, Warren, Pontiac and Lake Orion. Miss Buckley has asked Bonnie Hies to be honor maid lor her Oct. 7 marriage to Fred Collier In Bethel United Church of Christ. Parents of the couple are the John Buckleys, Paddock Street, and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Collier, Lake Orion. Chinese Auction Follows-Meeting XI Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met at the Sanders Place home of Mrs. Ray Slaughter Tuesday evening. Cohost-"is was Mrs. Thomas Ogden. A Chinese auction of vacation gift items followed the business meeting. Candy for sale to augment their charity funds was distributed.’ Plans were completed for the ritual of Jewels dinner for members in October. SAVINGSpksBONUS SALE 16-PIECE JSERVlCE^FOR FOUR) fOctabAr 2-14,1961) HAC USE AMERICA’S MOST USEFUL CHINA... GUARANTEED AGMNST BREAKAGE FOR ONE FULL YEAR...CHOICE OF GRACIOUS PATTERNS • Chip resistant • Oven proof • Dishwasher proof I SAVE UP TO $6.65 on a 16-piece Homemaker Set! ♦FROM OPEN STOCK PRICES 4 dinner plates,' 4 tea cups, 4 tea saucers, and 4 versatile soup/cereal bowls. Serena pattern regularly $26.60 nof only $19.95. Other pet. terns priced at comparable savings. SPECIAL SAVINGS: $1.00 WILL HOLD ON LAYAWAY OR PAY AS YOU USE, 10% DOWN AND 10% A MONTH DOWNTOWN 16 W. Huron, Open PH. Night*/ FI 2-0294 MIRACLE MILE 2203 Telegraph, Optn Every Night FE2-S39! Reg. $4.90, $6.90 MATCHING SUGAR and CREAMER ONLY $1.00 with the purchase of MATCHING BREAD AND BUTTER PLATES I Reg. $1.10 .................. .Sale Price 59c Reg. $150.....................Sale Price 79e Reg. $1.75 .............. .....Sale Price 99c £hnit 4 with purchase of starter eet. JEWELEISS • I f AVI 70H ON IOAM All my leap I* used far walking Instead of combating hard water. Detargants go further. « R.S.t IT MYI FOR ITSIIPI FREE Call FE 8-9651 for fr#9 laboratory analysis of tha water you wash and COOl(vwlthl WATER SOFTENER toc% IRlfNER--“ssrvla| fstnisi Moit-ts-seait far 20 ysanl" SYLVAN PUMBMGtHUTMG 2005 Orchard Lake Avnt. Pontiac WATIR at*** CARPET NEED CLEANINOt THIN ^2^ US -WE DO IT WITH KARPIT-KARE* The fantouB cleaning method endorsed by BIOELOW * Right In Your Own HsNto • In n Single Day! We're authorised dealers for' this dirt -chasing method—-quick—efficient -—low cost,, . NEW WAY RUG and CARP.ET CLEANERS 42 Wlsner Street FE 24132 A TRUE OPEN END MORTGAGE We are proud to offer these truly open end mortgages. This is what they provide: • You may pay up the mortgage at any time without advance notice and without penalty. • Your mortgage can be increased at any later date to the original amount borrowed for additional improvements or for any other satisfactory reason. - * • You may pay any additional amount at any time without notice / or penalty. • You may pay interest and principal in advance at your con* venience. - • Terms on our conventional open end mortgage up to 25 years. • Monthly payment includes Interest, Principal, Taxes and Insur-v ance. We have cash available today ... for theses attractive open end mortgages. Come in and talk with one of our friendly, courteous representatives. WE SPECIALIZE IN HOME LOANS WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS ■a. EDERAL SAVINGS 761W. HURON-—-PONTI AC Downtown • Rochester • Drayton Plains * ’ Walled Lake ' • Milford Mi* 1J w / Ae PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER BO, 1061 niw ap Addison Twp. Woman Trice Is Right* Winner * An Addison Township house 'yesterday won the sweepstakes •prize, 4 plane trip to Nlcd, France, ■fat- the nationally televised gtve-faway show, “The Price Is Rfght.’’ j I Mrs, Edward Kuscera of 770 Lakeville Road sent an estimate to ithe show that,was' .lodged closest to the correct‘iptal cost lor a “‘showcase’’ of prizes. She will appear on the show next week. Ms home to be heated with GULF SOLAR HC AT toBe toipud c&a^ M '62-Ford Prices About the Same Slight Change* Nrom Last Yedr Noted by Vice President , , DETROIT UP—Ford Motor Crf. says its 1962 models are g$ng to cost about the same price as the 1961 models. J. 0. Wright, Ford vice preside^, said Thursday that slightly lower prices will be offered models; unchanged prices models and slightly higher prices on J7 models in the Ford and Mercury lines. Wright said suggested list prices on all 8-cyllnder models in the 1962 Ford Galaxie line have been reduced from 190 levels, ^Prices on (-cylinder models remain unchanged. Ford Falcon suggested prices have been reduced $2 to $3. The Mercury Comet was increased MO. The Thunderbird suggested factory list prices have been^ increased $38: ' Ford, like General Motors, has made a heater and defroster standard equipment. Prices were increased to coyer these former optional items. AU prices are minus state, federal or local taxes, transportation charges and dealer handling GULF 392 S. Sanford FE 2-9173 CARL'S FAMILY FUN SPOT CLOSING WEEKEND! t ALL KIDDY LIND \ RIDES 10c CARL'S Miniature Golf TKLKGRAFH at DIXII Pontiac Mon Pharmacist gar S«S. Hope Sayst* Cultural Problems Ahead for Peace Corps Pontiac Theaters EAGI.E Sat.-Mon.: "Morgan the Pirate, Steve Reeves, color; "Tomboy and the Champ,” Ben Johnson, color. Tues.-Thurs.: "That Kind ol Woman,” Sophia Loren, Tab.Hunter; "Wild Is the Wind, Anna Magnanl, Anthony Quinn. HURON Sat-Thu.: “Comer September," Rock Hudson>Sandra Dee, color. < STRAND w Showing: "Francis of As-1 Dolores Hart, Bradford Dill-man, Cinemascope, color. By RAUPH HUMMEL "The largest problems fife Peace ‘Corps .will face will be language and cultural - difficulties,” says ChSriA W. Dickerson, 25, “ Ogemaw St*., who recently re-turnedtrom an 11-month, 20,000-mile medical mercy and teaching mission to\ Indonesia and Viet Nam. \' ' "The corps men will have to live with strange people and eat their food, and then’ll have to show they enjoy it whether they like It or not,” accordlOg to Dick-who returned yesterday to Michigan State University for graduate study. In charge of the pharmacy aboard the privately : sponsored mercy ship SS. Hope on *its maid-. en voyage, Dickerson carries a vivid impression of a dinner with high Indonesian official whip later told .him: ’Mr. Dickerson, we are very happy that you enjoyed our food.” The official left Dickerson with the feeling the personal touch was sometimes as important as the mediCal team's actual mission: the training of doctors and nurses in Indonesia. Eating^ Indonesian food takes some getting .used to, Dickerson admitted. The original Spice Is- MSUO Seminar Begins Tuesday, Not Oct. 23 Michigan State University Oakland reports that the second section of its Seminar in Small Business Management Will begin Tuesday, Oct. 3, not Oct. 23 as It had previously announced. The seminar is directed at own-rs and managers of small busies and will last ten weeks. Fee is $50. • \ VANCEiv S K Y ROOM RESTAURANT AT PONTIAC'S MUNICIPAL AIRPORT . . . It'S great tan to watch Price* from 10« and 15c up ta $1.45 and $5.25 Pntrick Vance, Mgr.-Phone 01 3-2370 ^ WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY*DRIVE-IN OPEN 6:00 P.M:—SHOW STARTS 7 P.M, Creates New Division DETROIT i4 OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY Toke Adventoge of These Grond Specials!^ U.S. NO. 1 MICH. ^OTATOES ^Sorry—j^agJPeMFmmilir GRAPES TENDER STEER BEEF STEAKS E “ 69* Westown F00D CENTER 706 West Huron Street BEER • WINE • LIQUOR SUNDAY 10-6 MEN'S INSULATED Full Lac* BURNER BOOTS of Styled Youth'*, Buy*' Basketball Shoes 2 pair | ,©F" 51 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET ftnEiifiuniPr Mon., Tues., Wed. SPECIALS! LARD •"10- Pork Liver 2“* 25’ LfeAN PLA+E " Boiling Beef 2 Lb 25c BISCUITS 19 Hoffman’s Pontiac Freezer Foods, Inc. 526 N. Perry (Neat to WrigMy'ii FE 2-1100 I • SHUTS LAUNDERED 4 p. , "A Htap < • V. , Cleaning ior.a W— Bit o' LOOK At Thao* Cnth riieally Celle-. -«.ad win Dry I. Cltanlnc Order ef A n.eo er Mere * CASH and CARRY ' WITH COUPON 19M SAVE 35% .65 With SolMt-Ur-Service Dry Cleaning Insured .. .65 Plain Sweater* ............... -59 Dreuet ................ 1.40 Plain Ladi**.' Coat. ........ 1.25 Plain Suita, Mon'a and Lodi*.' .1,25 Plain Overcoat. . . :.... Blank*** . ............ ’ M0 Snow Suit*.............. 1-25 Cart* You LESS Than Cain Operated ECON O DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDERERS 944 WEST HURON STREET « 2-0211 NEXT DOOR TO TRADE PAIR . W# Own and Opart la Ow* Ova riant' SHOPPER For Monday Only | STOPPERS Outstanding Values Especially Selected tom Save You Plenty! Shop Monday and Save! I Big 36 inch WALKING DOLL $C99 \ m Buy. Mow! Don’t Wait! BARBIE DOLL CLOTHES MOVING TIME IS NEAR - WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE SPECIALS! ODDS AND ENDS—-SUMMER ITEMS — MANUFACTURERS' EARLY CHRISTMAS SHIPMENTS 4 Pok PLAYDO 69* PAINT SETS Aitorltd Dailyai. iljxf Value 99* RUBBERMAID DISH DRAINERS $|59 SCHOOL SUPPLIES 500 Shaatc CRAYOLA Loot* Leaf CRAYONS PAPER T2 Crayon*—Beak - 5-hoi# 7QC Punch Pit* IS All Binder* ■ “ Sharpener 29 , $2.00 Vatu* 1 25-fc. .Family Pdk SHEAPFER'S SCHOOL SET CARTRIDGE PEN * 1 Pencil* • 1 Pen. n 8 Refill. RA{ * Webater / M Dictionary I “ t CQe Refill. 11^ 11.49 Valu* Children's FUN SHOWER Buy On* New far Next Year • 39' BAR-B-Q OUTDOOR ITEMS Save Over 50% 11.95 Round Salt $|7B Batket fits any 24- 1 « inch Grill' ....... Charcoal Lighter AP{ Fluid. 59c Valu*— L 9 no limit—guart ... Hickory CAc Chunk., OH »•« $5.95 Black Wr't . $029 Iron Charcoal Hog- A gar with Shovel ... Si*- 49° $1.00 Valu* w $5.95 (Metric Do- $4)49 lax* Six* Charcoal /. Lighter WORLD'S LARGEST GIANT SIZE—13-Inch GENUINE PRESTONE Purmonunf Anfi-Fraet* BUY NOW! SAVE! GARDEN SUPPLIES Colorform PUZZLES Misc. $ l Values 44' CAULKING Spout Typo 4 <• 88' CRAFTOOL DO-IT-YOURSELF HOME AND WORKSHOP TOOLS! • Values to $2.98 • Scotch Brond Electric Tape .... 39* 12" Aluminum Bevel Level . . . . 39* Hack Saw Blades Pkfl. of 20 . 39* .. 5-Pc. Punch -• and Chisel Set. \ . 39* 3-Piece File Set 39* Electric Soldefing Iron . . 39* 8-Pc. Plated Ignition Set ..... 39* 5-Pc. Open Encfe, Wrench Set ...... 39* XX BUY NOW! SAVE! Individual TV TABLES with Bract Lege or TV Lap TABLES Your Choice HUNTERS' SPECIALS SHOTGUN SHELL} 199 TRADE ly. (Made by Tuff-Kote Co., Wood-stock, III.) are many families settled in the neighborhood. - - . Sr Si- Lots In Concord Green run about half an acre in size. All* utilities are underground and the buUderg,ieft a good many trees. So the subdivision has a more settled look than many'of’its contemporaries. It’s east of Op- * dyke and south of Long Lake Road.. Tom Roger* Is a college student. HI* younger slater, Sandra, Is In high school. It was raining the day we took pictures of the Rogers’ “home and we ducked into the garage, entering the house through the' kiteben. It's a long room with a farm mural on the end wall. The brown and green scene with its touches of red looks so real that you think you're looking out of a window.. The floor is beige with brown and yellow Spatters. Walls are cream color with a light brown dado at the dining end. Little shutters fold across the lop of the windows with natural color cafe curtains below. Cabinets are birch. Counter tops and splash backs are white. All appliances are bronsetone. Between the kitchen and the living room is the family room which opens " onto a back screened porch. This porch and the curving patio outside are made of brick matching the. exterior brick. The porch is screened around'three Sides, * * * There’s nn oak block floor In the family room with taffy colored- walls and dado. Natural draperies can be pulled across the sliding glass doors. One green and one ■ beige textured armehalr provide comfortable seating lor TV watchers. At one side Is • metal table with a plastir top that looks for all the world like woven bamboo. While iron furniture with pale gray-blue cushions is’used on the porch. The rug Is a gray nnd while fiber one. There's an Inside planter around one corner. Mrs. Rogers' father laid all this brick when the porch and patio were added during the summer. , A *lr* A In the. dining room and living room and up the stairs there is creamy whflte carpeting. Walls and draperies are the same color. ^_____^ The dining room furniture 1s ash .which has a beautiful grain. A buffet and a small cheat, provide storage space. All lie chairs (there ire I armchairs) have aeats and harks of a twwidy-material In green, beige and yellow. The front hallway has a slate floor. Cranberry red wallpaper on the stair wall offers a pleas- ing contrast to the cream background of the adjoining rooms. FORMAL ROOM Quiet formal simplicity is the theme of the crqam colored living room. The Rogers’ are still looking for Just the right pictures to hang. There’s a gray brick fireplace with a plain wooden mantel. The sofa Is beige. At one end of the room there's a pair .of turquoise chairs. A elnh chair upholstered In - a light aqua squared design Is near the fireplace. Tables are mahogany. This Is a house with 4 bedrooms. One o( the front ones is the ,guest room. In here walls only whisper that they’re green." Pale green carpeting comple- ments them. Draperies are creamy. Mrs. Rogers had fun painting all the furniture in an antiqued aqua shade.' The twin beds have blue, green and aqua spreads. In one corner is a bookcase and a desk-vanity. Tom’s room has cream walls and carpeting. Natural linen double cafe curtains -hang at the wiadowa. The furniture has been spray painted beige. The bedspreads are brown contain the bathroom there is a blue and while color scheme. The blue wallpaper has diamond shaped figures of. white. Fixtures are btoe. The shag rug and the little shutters on the window are white. Sandy has a charming bedroom with new furniture of her own choosing. She displayed mature taste in picking out the cherry Italian provincial bed and triple chest of drawers. Both have a narrow gold trim. Walls are pale sandalwood. Two sets of natural shutters at each window take the place of curtains. She has a green slip- per chair. A cork bulletin board is crammed with souvenirs.. The flowered bedspread has violet, pinks and aqua in it. Scatter pillows are; purple, or-chid. olive and beige. There are pale aqua walls in the master bedroom. In the attached bath wallpaper is blug^ and green. Draperies are cream. Furniture is antiqued gray. The. bedspread has stripes of blue, green and aqua. Mrs. Rogers is about to cover a chair in blue and moss green. A A • A William. J. Pute, Inc. was architect and builder for tlft" Rogers' home. The exterior is ^yvhite brick and white siding with ‘ black shutters. MlOKING DOWN— The Press photographer . arc just like those in the living room, five furnl- werfl part -way up the stairs to get this shot of tore is ash. Chairs have a tweed-like upholstery the dining room. Walls, draperies aqd carpeting of green,.beige and yellow. CREAM BACKGROUND—Walls, carpeting and draperies are a warm cream color. Oyer the gi;ay brick fireplace there'* a simple shelf mantel. Thu chib chair is aqua and the sofa beige. They tyaUas tnn rkaUa.tr M Natl* Rogers', are still looking lor exactly live right picture Ip hang appve the mantel. - ' , .1 , , ) IN CONIXIKD GREEN — This Is th? home of .Mr. and Mr*. I’hl|lp Rogers, on Lamp ‘Post Lane, Designed In the southern colonial stj'le, (he house is half brick and ht|lf siding. Shutters are black. William X Pult'e, Inc. has done the developing of the 49-lot subdivision, designed and.built the houses, ’live Rogers' were the-.>-» first family to move in.' , * . . II ■ . - . ‘ a * ' >* \ THE PONTIAC PllKSS, SEPTEMBER 80, 1961 For FREE ESTIMATE By An Old, R*li*ble Concern CALL FE 5-8405 Ambassador Iniulatlon Co. Plan Island Apartments Plans/are being revived to build a $1.5 million dolla^ apartment development on Dawson’s Island lp White Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Wil- mmm iiiiiilli! Hut's o I %ft for f*- VALUABLE “Homo Idea File and Guide lor Bettor Living" To Organize and Save Your HOME BUILDING and MODERNIZING IDEASI If you plan to buy, build or modernise within 24 months, simply moll the coupon below to get your FREE Home Idea File. We also Invite your questions or problems on alt phases of your planning. Feel free to coll on us there’s ho °bligatiml Moil Coupon for Veur FREE GIFT TOOAYI PONTIAC COUNCIL for BETTER LIVING F.O. Bex 152—Pentlee, Michigan lard Dawson bought the island in 1944. They are planning 102 apartment units in 8 buildings to be sold rather than rented,, Recreation and park facilities are planned for 20 acres of the island. These will Include; a clubhouse and swimming pool, area and beaches. Dawson’s. Island is 1?400 feet off shore. It will be connected with the mainland by a causeway, much in the same manner In which this is done lit many Florida locations. A model apartment is on view on the White Lake malnlat$. Think of the Car It Needs Room If you’re still stumbling over lawnmowers and garden rakes in the garage by. Christmas each this articlis is for you. If ______ one of millions of Americans whose cars have been possessed by summer clutter, then this article is really for you! We Americans are obsessed with' the possession of. tools. We them advertised, decide we need them, buy them and use them,! This is wonderful. It’s goodHor the economy — It helps,us With — and besides, it’s very! satisfying to owmand use gadgets.! All these acquisitions, however,] tend to fill Up our garages. And, since most of them are used in the summer months only, it is especially annoying to h*ve them in our way all winter long. - There are two parts to the sohi-tion. First, think before you buy: ’ Do I have room to store this tractor? Even; though It will definitely help In Weeding the petunia patch, Is there really space for It bealde the mulch •prouder, leaf cart, lawmmwer, hedge clippers, rakes, shovels, pruning shears, lime bags, gar- Spacers Are- Built In rfave yoU ever wonder*} ho the tile-aetter is able to install watt of bright, durable ceramic tile and manage to keep them so evenly spaced? Well, most glazed ceramic tile made in America wfth built-in lugs — sp L on all four edges which automatically and uniformly space the tile for mortar Joints. mu to modamim your bathroom tfcg Ajwu-AMdud wayl The finest 1 K. MONTHS TO PAY RMMity cm buy) I Many itylts U ON MA TERMS (umk to choose from f ■■ ; ■ ’■ : V. < Calf tfs for a Free Estimate! ! EAMES & BROWN, INC. 55 East Pikg Strati FE 3-7195 Home Qiiic Do it yourself ... or leava It to a professional? That’S one Of the first questions that* you] as a hotnsowner, must answer when you’re planning a home improvement project. Sometimes it is a difficult question, too/ with sound arguments on both des. Try A Compromise As-wlth most questions, the best _jiswer Is a compromise. If you have the talent and the time, go at those small projects on your own. Tiling a floor, painting a room, panelling a wall—these are the kind of Jobs that anyone who Is even'slightly handy with tools can accomplish with fine results. it’s1 economical, and it oan be mighty satisfying, too. When you are planning an ex-tensve project, such ss a room addition or a remodeled kitchen, there' are many reasons why you should rely on a professional home moderniser. Good design Witt as- sure maximum results, and that ‘ takes experience. When several: types of work are involved—euch as carpenter, plumber, electrician and palnter-the job Of coordinating them requires professional attention. The efficiency and. close supervised that a reliable bom-pany provides often make the total cost less than if you triad to make your own arrangements with each of these Independent workmen. Were Ready to Help At Poole’s Home improvement Center you will find help and encouragement for the projects you can do on your own, We will be happy to provide professional design help and how-to-do-lt advice, if you decide that the Job is really too complicated for you, our highly trained craftsmen are at your service. For the answer to any home improvement question, phone us today at pt e-MM DAWSON ISLAND APARTMENTS “A Little Bit of Florida in Michigan” ONLY 14 MILES FROM PONTIAC PUP! Dawson Island Is located In scenic White Lake, covering approximately 20 acres of woods. The apartments will occupy about 4'/j acres all beautifully landscaped. The east end of the Island will be devoted to recreation facilities consisting of a club house, sandy beach and a built-in swimming pool. These 102 apartments will be In eight buildings built In a circular arrangement with an excellent view of the lake, from every room. White Lajse Is one of the larger lakes In Oakland County with clean and clear water and our complete sewerage disposal * plant will maintain this Weal situation. Each apartment has'2 bedrooms with walk-ln closets, large living room, separate dining room, ceramic tile kitchen, with built-in O.E, range and refrigerator, ceramic, tile bath with built-in vanity. All electric heat offering each room individual thermostat control. I The other possibility — one you’d; 1 better get started on right now —! is the construction nf a tool shed ! or an area inside the house Where I all this needed summer equipment carl be stored during the bftlk of the year when it isn’t in use. Your reward for this forehanded thought and action will be the ease with which you back your car into the garage all winter long. I Houses Are Built ! IReally Too Strong Laboratory tests show that nv» U. S. softwoo.i specie-: hnve fa1 greater strength than i -. necessary for most house framing needs. | The tendency, says II. V. Simp { son. executive vice president of the j West Coast Lumbermen’s Associ-ation, has always been to over-I build our homes. We always use l better and stronger lumber than is needed. No one, he said, ever heard of a house falling down be* 'cause lumber framing gave way. That Is one reason, said the lum-/ber'leader, why we recommend \ltttlty grade west coast lumber for most house f aming requirements. Not ofily ’s Utility grade Douglas fir and west coast hemlock less expensive than other ( grades, but it is almost as strong, i In home framing, Simpson said, stiffness ie one of the prerequisites, and Utility grades have ample stiffness, strength, and long life to frante both Jhe cottage or the $100,000 homo. [Only Simple Moth 1$ Needed to Buy Tile 1 Here ig an easy way to determine how many tiles are needed for a room when installing a floor of solid (vinyl or vinyl asbestos tile. \ Get the’ square footage of the room by measuring length width, then double it and subtract 10 per cent, which gives^you the number of titles needed. This Is based on the fact that a standard 9" by 9” tile Is 9-l« of square foot. N6 Money Down THREE BEDROOMS Lot Owners! BUILD NOW <5990 As Low as $34.64 Month Priqo Includes Building th# Foundation, Erection of Houso and Intido Matorials Furnished. 4. • traction of tho homo • Bathroom fixture* with chroma fitting* • Underfired automatic wator heater • Birch kitchen cabinet* • Jloctrical fixture* and luppile* •Ihterler deer*, hardware, pAiterboard, etc. MODEL OPEN Weekday* 1-6 Saturday and Sunday 1-8 E-CON-O BUILT HOMES -MODEL Talagtaph Road, South of Square Loko Rood i FE 5-9888 pm 4 *38M Month *14,500 Open Daily and Sun. 1 to 8 P. M. 3950 ORMOND RD. DAWSON ISLAND ; APARTMENTS , MU 4-8193 H.H. STANTON Plumbing aijd Heating Contractor 103 STATE STREET FI 5-1683 WINTER or SUAAMER Livin'* a Heap Skattna, riding, lee fiihing, sledding, and fun- f MOTO FlIH In fitted thrill* for the family to anjoy dally whan you buy La Chateau In thl* wonderful retreat. LOTUS LAKE ESTATES'. . . An All New Community Offering T^Tromondou* Home Valuetl YpuHfftfever Buy . Better -So—Why atl Settle for Lest! a! For Proof Visit U*Today! The Space Queen Pricod from only *13,990 At Low as $290 Down, FHA Towns Featuring! « Over 1,000 *q- ft. of Living Area • 3 Rrdroomi • 2 Car Attached Oarage • Hugh form Style Kitchen • Full Basement * Go* Heat • Rotervea beach on letu* Lake. Le Chateau *14,990 Pricod from only As Low as $440 Down, FHA Tgrms Featuring! ft. of living area • 3/4 or 9 Bedroom* • Huge Tiled hpr^own • Paved Street* • Storm Sower* :• Oe* Heat 1 lb Bath* • Reserved beach ohletu* Lam. Solos Offico Locatod at 6214 Williams Loko Rd. 2 Blocks W. of Airport Rd. Open Dally from 1 to 9 P.Ilfl. Model Phonet OR S-OOOl IM ID LM)! WATERFORD DILL A Planned Custom Community with Loko Privilege* MODEL AT 6288 BALMORAL: OPEN SUNDAY* 1 to 8 P.M. *26,990 INCLUOINCtv LOT ™ Directions lo Waterford Hilt ■ f lntmn«e W-mil. past Old AAO Temm, tum loft off of Dixie Hwy, and turn right Nulls fsjr Carlo Construction Co. Sales by / SLiAVIK e 10430 W. Nino . Milt Reed 1 Oak Park JO 6-9834 A.M. MA 6-9097 P.M. OR $-0001 ci?Wi: t: /' THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1961 J?JPTEEN PONTIAC PMIIT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS 2 South Can FI J-7129 LAKEWOOD KNOLLS LAKE HOME SITES EM-3408S or MU 4-17*$ Window Boxes Improve Looks of Most Homes With ail dtfo respect to contemporary wetidsm of iuriittecttiral line, window boxes can naught but enhance the exterior of a home. Built jU easily handled Western Pine region wood, die project would be highly do-lt-yourselfable. h ■ • In general die box should be aa wide as. the window sill and as and high as necessary- Bev- deep a eled si FRED W. MOOTS ELECTRICAL r- IRC. — 845 W. Huron Sit. Wiring • Free Estimates • Surveys Ow 30 Tear* in Pontiac Choose From 80 Models BUY wm NO MONEY DOWN As lew os |22 Per Month Townsend-Swift Homos tilt L»»wr U, Orion PS l-NM t piece make a more finished And don't forget drain- Highland Estates 'Sr $13,980 BERT SMOKIER RSUm Model rh,n, OB S-4S11 Located Alrsart Ral _I Between M-5» and F.ntUc Ull Ed». EXTRA HEAVY RAILINGS $-299 . 24-HOUR SERVICE Fnrnaces Vacuumed Gas Hooding' LUX-AIRE —MULLER SUPREME —IXCELL MOERY’S Phone 682-1810 - MASONITE Hard Board $2** , 4x8- V* FIR SHEET Va” MASONITE Plain ar Underlayment 4x8 SHEET $g|9 Free Customer Parking CORWIN 5 I The bl-level home,'by now firmly established, still is new enough to offer the freshest variations of all contemporary designs. The house is definitely in the large-size category. It has five bed- UP p»o ■OUT* 1 door i ISTOR. storage heater room 1 ,1 ! | MIQ-FOYER|CLf B-86 .. 'X..;. yj floor PLANS — A mid-level foyer in this bi-level home guarantees privacy lor both levels. A second staircase, from the family room up to the kitchen balcony, completes the traffic clrcula- Large Bi-Level Plan. Has Many Unusual Features rooms (or four bedrooms and den), three bathrooms, a double garage, a 24’ by 13’ living room with a large fireplace, separate dining room, and — one of the ctical touches of all a separate lower level .kitchenette | off the family room. Its dimensions are 66’ wide by I )’8" deep with 1.658 square feet I of living area on the upper level I and 924 square feet on the lower | level not counting the garage a basement area. An 8’ wide deck on I the upper level, entered through I sliding glass doors from both the I living and dining rooms, runs the I tall depth of the house. A mid-level foyer controls the traffic In and out of the house, guaranteeing no Intrusion on the privacy of either level. A second staircase, from the family room ap to the kitchen balcony, completes the traffic circulation pat-fora. At no time It It necessary to past through a room, may be occupied, to got to another room In the house. The family room to this house is a spacious 283 square feet, which seems even larger because of the two-story celling and the huge, panoramic rear window. [There are three entrances to the family room — from the rear and through the garage as well as [down from the mid-level entrance foyer. SECOND KITCHEN 1 The lower -'level kitchenette makes the family room truly a livable area as well as an excellent place for teen-agers to entertain. And the surrounding balcony makes possible supervision (of small fry as wpll) from an unobtrusive vantage point. As dramatic as the balcony Is the upper level porrh, or sun deck, which has the effect of adding about *35 additional square feet to the living room-dlnlng room expanse. The large planter extending from the deck across the front of the house, on the upper level, provides an un- Dtcksr R CimUtMi ahi Al»r«» RO. Call tor Pros Estimates OR 4-0371 OPEN DAILY Wid SUN. 9-7 P.M. v \ ALL TYPES ALL OUR WORK IS 100% GUARANTEED _.Wt Also Do loootlful Modernisation Work _ ♦^ATTICS • 1EC. ROOMS • ADDITIONS . • PORCHES • BREEZEWAYS f o AWNING • INSULATION BREAK AWAY par.from cROWDEDsnmm ? living; 4 In Beautiful IVediuu Hith • Ranches • Colonials • Early Americans • Tri-Levels 4 Bi-Levels We Are Taking Trades , Ask Us About Custom Building and Modernisation “The Builder That Makes a House a Home" W. W. ROSS HOMES a U>|— . Telegraph Rd. or 3-8021 WatRIn* Lake Rd. ' * I ‘ SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, X EE 80, 1961 "pontfarO^tral 13PontiariS HazelPai'k-,'T2IWdll6d^^ Femdalfe ---..32 W. Bloomfield ul& Hotty. • »^j ..AS Southfield /__6 Waterford ..,.19 Seaholm 6 Farmington... 0 EaslDetroit... 0 MHfowf ■:.... 6 Brighton —,.20 ★ ★ ★ Huskies Rally in 4th Period to WhipSouthfield, MNS Shi#, Fisher ID Scores inlasi Quarter Another Frustrating Night for Chiefs PCH Loses Lead Twice as Hiliites Gain 13-13 lie . Chiefs Muff Field Goal Attempt on Final Play of Valley Game ■■■By BOX CORNWELL SAGINAW - It would be difficult to imagine a more frustrating football evening thqn the one Pontiac Central High School ex* * perienced here Friday night. The Chiefs spent most of the - evening poshing a beefy Arthur HM team up and down toe gridiron hut when toe 4C minutes had elapsed on toe scoreboard dock, all they had to show for their efforts was an exasperating 1S-18 deadlock. Coach FauL Dellerba’s PCH grid* ders led Arthur Hill in every statistical department but when the Saginaw Valley Conference battle came to an end. they were»ftUl searching tor their 1st victory of toe ISO. season. ' It marked the 2nd straight year that toe Chiefs and toe Hiliites have fought to a draw. They strug-gled to a 20*20 tie last year on this fame field in a contest quite similar to this one. The Chiefs twice blew leads, then climaxed their frustrating bight by muffing a field goal ate tempt from the Arthur Hill 17-yard line on the final play of toe game. ' Just as in their 13d) loss to Bay City Central A week ago at Wlsner, fumbles and penalties cost them dearly in crucial moments. For toe second consecutive week, PCH lost tour fumbles to an alert enemy. Skipper Torment Resumes; Walled Lake Rolls Along Waterford High coach Stii ThoJv ell is going-to have nightmares about runbacks. Two weeks ago, it was $ pair of long interception returns which upset Waterford’s applecart and provided township foe Kettering with a one-point triumph. But last night was the topper. The Shippers won the battle of the statistics for toe third straight week, but dropped a 26-19 verdict to Berkley when toe Bears- exploded with two tremendous kick run-backs within two aAd a half minutes in toe third quarter. takes can be listed, as follows: Two costly fumbles, two penalties and two bad peases from sr. ; Central enjoyed a 7-0 lead at \ halftone, but the Chiefs so completely dominated the first two liters that the estimated 4,009 s gathered in Arthur Hill Me-Stadium probably were wondering why they didn’t collect three or fouy touchdowns. The Chiefs were stalled twice in the 1st ‘quarter. They lost the ball pn downs on the Hillite 19 after a fumble lost 10 yards, then another bobble was recovered by AH on the Saginaw 23 to halt another threat.t . , The Chiefs finally hit pay dirt fpidway through the 2nd period, A 26-yard punt return by halfback Roy Couser ignited the drive and they marched 95 yards to nine plays with Couser scoring toe touchdown on a 10-yard swing around left end. Quarterback Bob Pomeroy kicked the point. at t-T late in the 3rd stani*. A Si-yard punt return by P*ve Laaderyoa sparked the Hills’ tot TO told they pushed St yards tor the tying counter with fullback Ken BubUts cracking across from one yard out. Ed Kriots booted the 7th point. A 15-yard unnecessary toughing penalty against PCft kept this drive going after AH quarterback Jim Flora had Men dumped tor • 12-yard loss. Potttlac bounced right back and drove 68 gajBds.for a TD with / Roach streaking 28 yards tackle for the counter oh the first play of toe 4th period. The Chiefs had three cracks at the all-important extra point. Pomeroy1 made the 1st attempt but PCH was offside. He missed the 2nd try but Arthur HI1U was offside. An errant pass from center nullified the 3rd effort as the kick never got off toe ground and PCH led, 19-7. \ The Hiliites rebounded Immediately. Ken Birch raced tf yards on the 1st play to reach the' PCH tit, then three plays later Buhlilt tombled It yards into the end tone. Krlcts’ kick * Pontiac got its first real break with 8:17 remaining whlto tacklfe Dick Richards recovered a Hillite flipAle on toe Saginaw 21, After gaining a let down on the AH 10, toe Chiefs give up the ball again ' at Roach fumbled and Tipi Brennan of Saginaw fell on it .on top 10. ! Aided by a pass interference penalty. PCH kept punching away I hut the Chleto were also fighting ' the clock. They took to the sir and 1 moved tb the AH 9-yard stripe. , Pomeroy .dropped back to attempt a field goaf from the 17 on the < game’s Nmi to center ruined the effort. In another opening Inter-Lakes League action, Walled Lake easily downed Fhrmington, 26-0, for its third straight win. Berkeley had the upper hand to the Brat half to taking a 12-0 lead., But the Mdppera came back strong and moved t o within -six points on Guy Walls’ one-yard scoring plunge early to the ttird stanu. On toe succeeding kickoff, however, Berkley junior Steve Hollingsworth made new coach Irv Wilson breath easier when he grabbed toe ball and raced 75 yards through what seemed toe tiro' Waterford defense for a 19-6 lead. , ★ ★ ★ Then, just 2:25 later, it was Dick Kakkuri's turn to help relax WU* he took a punt and sped 77 yards up the right sideline for the final — and clinching^- Berkley TD. Kick LaBalr’s |7-yard kickoff actum helped set up a Waterford touchdown minute* later. Bob Readier going across from ton Inches. The scoring wu capped, tote to the contest on n two-yard dive by Walla. Dave Smith’s Walled Lake crow has now counted 119 points to throe contests while limiting its foea to si mere 26. WATxnroan-Mnuuu statistics Sint down! pai Toil firs?**?* Tarda fslnsd r f ardi fslnsd psssln'f'.... II Total oot fords sstnsd .. ill *■...fga™. i Posits attempt, Passes tr— -Punts* an STRANGE HAPPENINGS — Pontiac Northern quarterback Rick Fisher seems to be running out of the crowd in this double exposure picture taken by Press photographer at Wisner Stadium last night. Les Wilkinson of Southfield is the other gridder mixed in with the happy Northern fans who had plenty to cheer about in a 14-6 triumph. (iftuiRj--..- B—KBkkurl 77 pitot riturn (Osbornt r W—Re»dl«r ! ni Bay City Teams Stay Unbeaten in Valley Race Few cities in the country can boast of two teams fighting for state championship but Bay City is one. The town of near 60,000 popula- on on Saginaw Bay this year has produced two of Michigan’s top prop elevens in Bay City Central and its crosstown rival, Bay City Randy. Last night, each school won its third ‘straight Saginaw Valley Conference game, Central walloping Hint Southwestern, 3241, and Handy downing Flint Northern, 20-13. In another Valley game, Midland routed Saginaw High, 26- Fullback . Roy Campbell scored twice on runs of 8 and 6 yards to lead another Class A power, unbeaten Ann Arbor, to a tight' 19-16 victory over • highly-rated . Flint Central which suffered its first setback. .« Anchor Bay Player Dropldcks PAT PCH-Saginaw Summary pcn-ARTHtm mix statistics SEpudb? 4 PCH—Coussr 10 run (Pamsrof kick) AH—Subllts 1 run (Krlcts kick). PCH—RoacIi as run (kick fsllsd). ■NM: Hulls, Short*, Ssln. -.x-ix. aCrodosMa, Richard*, Church. Wesley, McGee iSckSTlup UUARDH uiUsyjsn, Wilson, Toylot CltolWo* r,feunchek'^choenmsysr. QUARTKI,.BACKS: Piors, Houlihan, bardt. Birch. Bofil, Cook. Imlay Routs North Branch Imlay City picked up itl second South Central win in as many games Friday night by crushing North Branch, 47-11 The dropklck made one of its rare appearances in present day football as Anchor Bay roiled past Dryden 40-0 in a Southern Thumb contest. In the same league, Armada upended New Haven, 19-14, Brown City routed hapless AlmOnt 584), and Capfc slipped past Memphis, 4-0. Doug Perkin* and Dick Set-vocio scored twice for Imlay City. *<• Perkins went three yards to open the scoring and Sefvocic sprinted 29 before the first quarter was over. Bob Maison picked up a second quarter TD on a two-yarder and SefVodc went 28 to give the Spartans a 28-7 halftime lead./ Perkins got his lecond touchdown in the third period on a one yard plunge, and Mike Folk scored from two yards.'Jim Rivert caught a three yard scoring pass in the fourth quarter to end the Imlay TD paraae. dr * Folk ran three extra points, Per-klnds, Maison and Terry Ignaslak me each. ' , „ ' The, freshmen combination of Prod Monroe to Denny Smith produced 20 and 89-ynrd scoring passes lor North Broach with Hibbard running the PAT, Don Halley dropklcked one of two extra point attempts tpr Anchor Bay. A1 Ludeman 'scored twice on runs of 22 and 82 yards. Gary Marrero sprinted eight and 43 yards for TDs. George Torney scored on a two-yard plunge and added scored the other touchdown on a 15-yard run. Gary Gorslin scored twice to Britwn City’s win ovbr Almont. The losers were inside thfr-Brown Gty 20-yard line three times only to lose the ball on downs. ★ ★ ■ dr Perry Lee scored on a 20-yard run and Dwight Lee ran 28 for TD, but it wasn’t enough to keep New Haven in the game. Armada held a 13-7 halftime lead. Stan Kobyashi passed 40 yards to Jim Standout for the lone score in Capac's triumph over Memphis. West Suburban Grid Homecoming Tonight A parade and participation by civic official^ will help feature the West Suburban Boys Club Homecoming tonight at West Bloomfield. Following a parade from the club 'through Keego Harbor to West Bloomfield High field, to ship superisor John Rehard will kick off the 1st ball which will bo held by Keego mayor Russell Gregg. Games In the All American Little Football League against Gross* Pointe Farms will follow at 6 for the Frosh, 7 for Jaycees and 8 for varsity. The varsity boys were the only victor last week at Royal Oak. North Farmington 3-0 North Farmington chalked up its 3rd straight triumph blasting the Plymouth reserves 314) yesterday paced by alternate quarterbacks Bill Hail and Lee MarteUa, Five different boys scored ay Uie victory gained 470 yards — 330 on ground. Kettering is1 the extra point. PeHfUs Foian NFHS foe Thursday. It was Kakkurl, ping halfback, who opened the scoring * with a six-yarder in the opening quarter. Dari Osborne made It 12-0 on a two-yard plunge. Waterford, now 1-3 overall, completely dominated the second * —with the exception of the long runbacks*—Berkley (2-1 overall) managing only 14 yards from scrimmage during that time. Lee Keiser, 14-year-old sophomore whiz, continued his solid running for this losing Skippers. Keiser picked up 131 yards in 18 carries to push his season ground total to 366 yard*. Waterford was without the serves of Readier, first-string quarterback, for most of toe first half, due to the slow recovery of an ankle injury he suffered to practice this week. Gary. Moran, nop mally a halfback, did creditably in his place. Mike Bnffmyer tallied twice— on ran* of one and 18 yard* and Mike Hinckley (10) and BIB Groan (14) wrapped up the scoring tor offeaalve-mladed Walled Lake In Its e Mint ..... nellies ... scoRiHG ruri jrt I run i“n(s«orth II kickoff r ENDS—Rudlsff, Sir* TACKUCS—WlltM, Solan. Irvin, Oar- n completed ........... Passes intercepted by - Punts nod areraye yards _ Fumbles ........... Tumbles lost ...... Penalties and yards penalised SCORING PUSYI |§i§i§JE WHOA, HIJSKIE — Southfield defender! swarmed all over PNH star back Dave Shields on this 3rd quarter play last night but they didn’t have much success stopping him otherwise. He scored a touchdown and gained 71 yards rushing to help pace a big Inter-Lakes triumph. Win Gives Northern Big Start in H-L; Walled Lake Next By CHUCK ABAIR Striking back for two last period touchdowns, Pontiac Northern hammered out an impressive -144! triumph over visiting Southfield before about 5,000 fans on a perfect night tor football Friday. It was a big victory for the Huskies for several reasons. It got them off to a good start to the Inter-Lakes race and was against a 1960 co-champloo figured to by a strong contender again. The come-from-behind win in the PNH home debut was sweet revenge lot a 52-13 lacing last fall. d to meet tha ether Rochester, Romeo Roll; Big Contest Next Week Touchdowns exploded all over the place at Rochester last night as the Falcons beat highly-rated lVoy 28-19 in a spectacular often* Ive show. Meanwhile, Romeo was getting warmed up ,for a ^meeting next week with Gene Korney’s gridders by blasting Oxford, 384). Rochester scored twice in a two minute span in the third period, and they were enough, to eend Troy reeling to Its first defeat In three games while giving the Falcons their second victory in three, dr, *S * Both of the rapid-fire TDs were of the same thrilling Variety first one late to the second quarter When left halfback Tom Mttzelfold raced 84 yards to give Rochester a 7-6 halftime lead. Mltsetfeld’o ran and (ho extra point ptange by taUbaek Eddie Dude stained the Colts, who had grand oat if ftrat downs daring th* first half bet had only Dave AMred’o (oar-yard slant for a touchdown to ^et or the score-board. The go-ahead tally still had the Falcons fired up when they returned for the third period and tlWy struck again with devastating speed. Mltzelteld sped 49 yards following the kickoff and then he ‘ final 10 yards throe plays later. , 4 ,v Attar Rochester held Troy on the next series, Dando scooped up a short punt and dashed 40 yards for another six-pointor. Dando had for the extra point on Mltzelfeld’s TD; this tone Mltxel-feld ran it over. • Troy hit back through th* air and two completion* for I o a g gain* act up Aldrod’s fwo yard blast early In fhe fourth t« make the score 81-18. But the Falcons came right back to put 'the game on ice. Dando rambled for runs of 34 and 20 yards before crashing seven yards right up- to the goal line strips. Quarterback Bud Baldwin then sneaked the ball over and Pets Long ran lor the conversion. Troy found new vigor after recovering a Rochester fumble on its 36 and pushed over the final touchdown when only 20 seconds remained to play. A 46-ynrd past foom Harold Kiusendorf to Aldred put the ball on the Falcon*’ five and Tun Towler carried it over from the-toree. Rochester rolled up 262 yards, _ll on the ground, with Mltwlteld accounting tor 187 In 13 carries. Troy rushed for 223 yards and a furious passing attack by the Colts in the second half added 120 more. Tabbed as "The Untouchable*” by thahr follower* after posting their Srd straight shutout M> Northern dominated moot of toe play against the much bigger Blue-jays totting hard both on offenye and defense right from the opening kickoff.. Tricky quarterback Rick Fisher ■corod seven pointe, hard-running Dave SMelds tallied toe other touchdown and Chris Payne averaged better toap 10 yard# per carry but it was a team-type effort' Happy home coach Ed Heikkineri refused to single out any individuals. Tbs blocking was strong the defense, led by Mike Marcum, was aurprlsingly successful against the rugged SHS backs their season point margin to 118-I, Romeo got off to a slow start taking 11 plays to go only 23 yards following a fumble recovery in the opening period. John Hanley crashed over from the 1 on 4th down and Butch Peralno kicked 1st of two extra points. JU Trieloff followed with two slx-pointen In the 2nd quarter and another in the 3rd besides having one nullified by a penalty. He ran 73 and 31 and made paydirt on 45 yards. Trieloff now has seven TDs. i; Salifit Strike* Early to Defeat South Lyon Saline struck for two first period touchdowni and went on to down yon 1941 Friday nigh Lyon got a TD on its in toe opening period on a 45-yard pass from Lowell Burge** to Dave Race. The losers picked up a Safety in the second quarter when Dannie Glass tackled a Saline ball arriar in the end sons. The Lions, now 1-2 on the son, pushed to toe Saline 10 twice In the second half before It 'h of the hall. SEr\' ITHi ilfwil ‘ip \\T % §ri ® K '*:MlI GOOD SIGN —. The best, sign for any footbsll team is th* official'y signal for a touchdown as shown when Waterford’s Gary Walls hit paydirt 1 for two yards in the 4to quarter yesterday, Walla lost his helmet on the play and Beriday’e Norm Wolff (60) apptars to he pulling at Walls head. The Skippers lout to Baritoqr, 26-19. going II yards to seven ptay* to opoa too point-getting midway Fisher’s running paced an early PNH threat which fizzled after reaching toe Southfield 18 partly due to a 15-yard penalty. The Huskies reached the enemy 42 be- got going. * k k After being held without a 1st iwn (or 16 minutes, the blue-shlrted invaders appeared to be taking command with an easy ground march to paydirt. A 41-yard dash by sophomore* Dennis Lamb was the big gainer. Les Wilkinson cracked over from the 2. Bat th* gritty Peatiae kids •hook It oil and etartod a drive *t their ewa. Payne wont 48 On the opening play. They get to the Jaya 88 wfth a 1st down bat ween halted by on interception. ’ A penally nullified a Southfield ID pass early in toe 2nd hall and it was a0 Northern toe rest of the night. The Huskies took an ensuing punt and tra iled 92 yards — ait by rushing — to go ahead to stay with two mfmffSs gone in the final quarter. ♦ _ ♦ k Fisher mixed hht plays well long the way using Shields ' mostly. Payne went 21 once and Fisher a crucial 12 another time. Bill Young's seven-yard scamper made it 1st down at the 2 and Shields went into the end zone standing up. A neatly-executed PAT play broke the tie. Soph Dean Sovden The Huskies missed a golden opportunity to boost the lead later when' two 15-yard penalties helped ruin a fumbled punt recovery et the Southfield 10. Guard Don Vance another fumble a few minutes later at the 17 and this time the locals made it count. Payne went 6, -Shields 10 and Fisher the last 1. Souden booted a perfect placement this time. k k k Southfield had reached the home as the final whistle IWU - SOVTHPICI.D STATISTICS) 19 Lake Orion 13 Madison . Northviile ....26 Clarenceville .19 Avondale Bloomfield H.. 7 Clarkston ....13 Clawson THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1961, , 'l SEYENTEEfc Pontiac fm> Ph«U NOWHERE TO GO — Berkley's quarterback Phil Krumm (l4f has nowhere to go as he runs into a waJJ of linemen of both teams. The white Waterford helmets close the gaip to keep Krumm from going anywhere. Berkley still won, 26-19, •M**' * -• •* .. IRochester .. .28 Romeo ........38 7 Jroy -19 Oxford ...j.. 0 in W-0 League Broncos Notch First Win of Season 28-20 Over Brighton Dragons Tie Madison By DON VOGEL "He's the best." Northviile coach Ron Horwath used , this simple statement to describe Steve Juday...It is doubtful if any Bloomfield Hills player will come forward to dispute Horwath. The senior quarterback did everything right as the Mustangs rolled over the Barons 26*7 before ,$0 fans at Northviile Friday night. „ By wlnnig their third straight game without a defeat, the Mustangs now are top heavy favorites to make off with Wayne-Oakland League honors. Northviile’is alone In first place after the second wcfck of league " Avondale opened Oakland B play on a victorious note Friday, but Lake Orion had to settle for a tie. The Yellow Jackets roiled to a 196 lead and then held’ oft a third quarter Clawson surge to post a 19-13 triumph. Lake Orion led until late in the "fourth period when Madison tied the game at 7-7. Fitzgerald moved into first;place, half game ahead of Avondale and Troy, by bouncing Oak Park, "* The Yellow Jackets scjywd again In the second quarter on Roger Bauer’s 70-yard TD run. action. Clarenceville Clarkston from the ranks of the On the first play for scrimmage in the third period, quarterback Roger Van Oonant. hit end Dale Yarger with a 35-yard scoring pass. Romy Lucero picked up the extra point after the second touchdown. Clawson rallied tor two touchdowns. in the third quarter. The first came on a 30-yard aerial from 14. Troy lost a non-league encoun- paul Kebro>v t0 Tom Grunber. ter at Rochester, 28-19.^ j Mike Bradley kicked the point. Wer Ball pot Avon lb front I Mike Haley blocked an Avondale In the first quarter with a**- {punt and fell on tKe ball in the yard jane* Into the end lone, end zone for the other Clawson TO. Football Results o c k e d unbeaten, 19-13; West Bloomfield upset Milford, 32-6; and Holly slipped past Brighton, 28-0. SHARP PLAYMAKING . Juday displayed good 'ball handling and sharp passing, Twice he pulled the Bloomfield Hills defense out of position with token to enable halfbeck Tom Swiss to break loose lor runs of M and 27 yards «* pltchouts. DETROIT — Detroit's titans, Avondale marched to the vis- [■ P***V*™nUvVtatw“fuU-1 SPUT^ bF Jerry Gr0“’ deadly ____20 and four-yard lines dur-1*16 JjL'iSv* ,Mmnded over from Passing and Billy Allen's 90-yard tjing the game, but failed to score. Jjjcli Hay ^ ^ punt return, crushed Xavift-, Ohio, I fbt^^ueFVnlav^He !s*a Juday didn't pu. much, but 3441 Friday night. P . when he did, the Barons hXd trou- Xavier was bottled up by a ’ . . blc. He completed eight of 10 *c~ tougfa defclllie and could cross mid- Lake Orton recovered * fum- for 90 yards. To oUset the thrce under lti St I" Hills offense, he Intercepted a pass the first quarter to setup Its lone ar^) punted three times for a 38- - ■e h -t . . wires t&i», Cnckoey passed' to Dave Hall- j Twlwt also had a good game. Hejhit Lary Vargo with a 16-yarder mark W the PAT. jcarrled the ball 10 times lor 901and Jim Shorter w| Favored Over St. Fred Sunday City Parochials Play 27th lime in Grid Series Maples Lose Kimball, Dales Win , NO GAIN — Xavier University fullback Tom Clark (wearing helmet), is hemmed In by University of Detroit players as tackle Bob Turley (79) makes shoulder high tackle in the 1st quarter of Friday night’s game at U. of D. Stadium. The Titans routed Xavier, 34-8, for their 2nd straight victory. Shorter Scores Twice as Titans Whip Xavier yards far1 another, touchdown in the final period. * VMI OVER RICHMOND RICHMOND, Va. M — VMI’t Keydets used a 101-yard run by halfback Andy Tucker as the springboard for an 06 Southern Conference football, victory Friday night over a Richmond team that 7-yard Birmingham Seaholm. expecting rough going in the rugged Eakt-n ,, ern Michigan League'this season, Fired-up Rams nope tjowed 21-6 to visiting' Hazel Park to Pull Good U d S e t last night R°yal tak Kimball and ~ Ferndale won other loop games, at W'sner The Maples tried to keep it close but could not cope with the By CHUCK ARAIR * [running of Rick Golinski.and Frank Stagg. Each made a touchdown and Stagg kicked three straight out as did a Mt! Clemens march to the ROK 5. It. was the 3rd successivej win, for Royal ’Oak“. Ferndale continued to roll along ith ease by pelting East Detroit 32-0.. All thfe scoring was in the initial half. It will likely make little difference after the opening whistle sounds but St. Michael will rank as the favorite going into the 27th annual head-on collision of city parochial schools tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 at Wisner Stadium. St. Michael has dominated the series for the last several years and romped 266 last.'fall despite being a slight underdog. " i The Shamrocks took their annual ,(mating from West Bloomfield opening night this fall after playing the Laker* all even tor one half. -They bounced back last week with a come-from-be-hind over St. Benedict. extra points. Bruce Bates took a 2nd period kickoff back 80 yards to score for the losers. Bill Merkel got the other six-pointer for the Parkers,' who are unbeaten In three starts. Coach-Tom Kennedy’s Rams outplayed Royal Oak St. Maty but had to settle for a tie first time out and then took a walloping at St. Clement last Sunday. .Greater experience and gives the Big Blue the* advantage On paper over the Parke Street contingent. The Mikes are also in their best physical concjjtion of the year with Dick Ghasthi set to play fullback for the 1st time. Spirit has often turned the tables in games between eld rivals and It could tmppeffthls time. St. Fred has been getting nil fired-for the occasion while 8t. huffed and puffed up and down Mike coach Jim Nlebauer ad-the field most of the evening to jffio mltr be ha* bi?en battling an avail. ;• oV^olffldence'problem. "I think The electrifying nm by Tucker, they have a better teem than sophomore from Cocoa Bcgch, last year,” he nays of the Bams. Bob Micheau scored two-touch-downs while Bob N'eilson passed for one. and. rah tor .aether to spark the Dales. East Detroit got to the Ferndale , 4 in the 3rd period but fwnbled the ball away. Bob Maraseb was an outstanding two-way performer for the losers. Kimball tops the EML-standings with 2-0. Ferndale and Hazel Park " _ . . . .-leach are 16. Port Huron won its 3rd straight league, warmbp tilt 276 over Hamtramck. scoring opportunities but could not capitalize on them. Seaholm is 1-2 for the season. Mt. Clemens was blanked b^ Kimball 126 following two .tune-up triumphs. The teams were all even at 06 at halftime but Kimball took charge In the 3rd quarter. Wally Gabler hit Wally Frank on a 15-yard TD ^ass and Chuck Mba-" ger ran 25 for another tally a Rochester Summary BOCH TTM One other Kimball chance filled I ROche,tfr01 W-0 Summaries Ytids'aatBAd Ru»bln* _„3h: Balefwin? Gsnesk. Lon* rsn Mint. Troy; Towler, 3-run. Armstrong pkssed *° "ROCHESTER UNlff Ends: Kowoleskl. Swobodo, Koromptv , Brandt. . Tackles: Thom. Sterns, Benhtm, Muck- A pass tnterferenc carried the ball 10 times ior so ----- ‘ a sophomore from cocoa uepen, ntfwltv yards and scored Northvllle's first toaa. Allen d* ya^* Fla, came when he intercepted an c ■ Pvba y ! ^ ^ opening period on a I for Detroit s last touchdown after | nns sien inside thel against the Dragons helped Madi-jTD in the op MB ~*ph ,hp lJtke °rton ,our ,n , VBri«n O Neil ran one yard In tfie |W„ reach the Lake Orion tour In I the fourth quarter. Wally Niei-jguski bucked the needed ’short yardage and Jordan booted the extra point, that tied the count. Orion reached the Madison tour in the second period, 6ut lost the ball on downs. The deepest penetration for the Dragons In (he u second half was to the opponents' fourth quarter for the visitor’s lone touchdowi 30- Coach Frank Kownackl noted that this was the Dragons best game? They didn't fumble once after hobbling the pigskin U times the first two games. «orth«ra 14. Southfield S .fciemen. L'Anee Oraura k Klmbel) IS, Mount Clen Union IS. uvoiUa Bern if y Jraveige Ol GrovesRomps Over Whitmore Lake, 50-0 GrtWes. which has ck» \n two varsity: .it ai4h»H il out last for Detroit' making an over-the-ahouldcr catch j of an Xavier punt. Richmond pass one stepJnside the] eepted. But the Barons were detected Interfering with the receiver and the Mustangs got the ball back orrUke Hills' 18- Three play* later Twlss scored. Northvtlle completely dominated play in the first half. The Mustangs rolled up 211 rumhing and passing to only 40 for the Barons. With a 206 Intermission advantage. the Mustangs seemed to let down in the final two periods. TTiby came up with only If) yards total offense. A much Intfrwed Bloomfield defense took , care of last BARONS SCORE itrons moved tire bull Artilittle tielter, bul couldn't mwmnl Xavier's lone score canie when ob Daumeyer Intercepted Ron Bishop’s pass at Detroit's nine and waltzed into the end zone with his team trailing 276. MIAMB BEATS PENN. STATE j Birmingham 1 taken its knocks years of football, dished it night. Ti»c Falcons whitewashed Whitmore Lake, Schuler brined four times on ru.^.nmt, of 65. 71. 53 qnd 20 yards. sway on a Graves scored 20 points in tiiel fourth quart first quarter. 18 (n the third period 22. A pass interferneee penalty Shorter got another touchdown with a M-yarSl rim after Inter- HHMH _. ip-insi end zone, 'ft v?H followed by two-point conversion pass from Bobby Mitchell to end Bob Moda-rellt for the winning margin. MIAMI, Fla. (B — Guided by two crippled quarterbacks, Miami's unrated Hurricanes h 11 Fenn State with startling ground and air power Friday night to cruah the nation's eighth ranked college football force, 256. Although he had to be helped off the field three times after being hit In painfully bruised ribs, file sensational Miami sophomore .Quarterback, George Mira, guided Miami on a '79-yard touchdown!rich scored « 76 victory pvt 'drive to fifit tho Hurricanes aheadilonvlllo last night Goodrich Uses Workhorse to Nip Ortonville Niebauer has a pair of standout runners in Jerry Martin and Gary Hintz and an always dangerous quarterback In Larry Sonnenberg. Bill Harding has filled in .well tor the injured Ghastln and will be a key reserve. The line Is headed by star tackle Jim Hurren and Blaine Prlebf; John Blerline heads the Red and Black offense. He runs fast aiid »uon ,hard. Mike Wtndey has good speed, kick. Quarterback Charley ' Dean ' has been recovering from early arm troubles and ready to fire some TD aerials. Tim Snitchler - and Beftiie Gross lead the forwards. Lnzvn rue, J. Juday. TACKJjm—Biddle. Engle, Clark, Busch, Stamen, Rice. GUARDS—Nichols. Hallam, Rebtake, Jar- CKNTERS—Dowd. Budlong._ BACKS—S. Juday. Twtaa. Ollbert. Hay, "rttary, Blery. BlwcU. Bice. • BLOOMFIELD MILLS ~ - - “ -roec. Cool, McKee, Senior fullback Jim KlUbreatM as "ITie workhorse in a 99-yara march in ihe 4th period Since the game Is so early this year, they have played no comparative toes. Both have had Btttrd. Pubapg. ildwin, Goul< Mltzelfeld, Long, Out™ ____ Stefanski. Kot-v.-.. Fullbacks: Dando. Yoyng. TROY LmilIP 1yds: Krepp. Dennison. Cu man. Walls. randt. Tackles: "Action at Jackson” BEGINS MONDAY! NO at halfII Bobby Weaver la the M-yard gallop in' the IMrd Tlerlod. Ilmptog on the Northviile The ' land'12 more in the final stanza. ! Qther scores were by Tim Mil-,rn|cheil on a 50-yarder in the third ! quarter. b>TDick‘Clark on a 10-. yard fitmbtf recovery and run and by Bob Wright on a 40-yard pass from Clark. Clark passed to Bill I Stevenson for a 22-yardcr as final '! tally. Stevenson kicked both points. got the ball to 10 and O’NeU scored after faking a handoff. Bloomfield recovered a fumble on Ihe Northvtlle 14 with two minutes to play, hut gave the pigukln away on a pass Inter- Casey Stengel I Back as Manager of Mets fen yards to lead West Bloomfield’s win. The Lakers jumped ‘~ NEW YORK » — Casey Stengel was back baseball today, a year after’the New York Yankees fire him because he was too old. At the age of 71 thp grizzled old-timer has agreed to a one-year contract with the New York Mets. Thus George Weiss and Stengel ■ are reunited with the new National Lcngu4 team that will compete with the Yankees for the fans’ M-vor In 1962. Weiss also was put out to pasture by the Yanks last fall, at the age of 65, but latel' accepted a job- as-president of the Mets. Glendale, Calif., home for a meeting with the scouting staff. Weiss said Stengel didn't agree to come back until about _6 a.m. (California tlmek Friday when he 1 called WeisS on the phone. An earlier conversation In which Mi’s. Charles Shiftman Payson and Donald Grant (financial backers of the club) urged Casey ,to come out of retirement was an Important Jac- First Item on the program of the Welss-Stengel team will be to select the players made available by the * other National League teams. This selection will be made by New York'and Houston.on alternate-picks the day after the World Series ends. Lists of the playe made available to the Meta on Monday when Weis* exptot* Mtengcl to eolnie to town froin hlo 206 halftime margin and going away. BUI Vancnssepno opened the scor -tng by racing 36 yard*, Dan Grelg passed 50 yards to Gary Carpenter for the other TD. Milford tollled in the last period on a lu-yard pass from SklV Miller to Ron Hog- Balancod Scoring Wins for Country Day. 25-0 Country Day scored one touchdown in 6. each period Friday to down Hamtramck Immaculate Conception 256 tor its first win of the seasoh^against one setback.' Arnic JDeckermart ((cored In thfc first quarter on a four-yard run. Steve Soloman panned nine yards to Nell Satovsky and jpedterman kicked the point to give Country Day a 13-0 hftlftlme lead. Mira a* he led a n • I k e surge of 81 Against a NittHny Lions, Ingston kicked and John Mike Paddy scored three touch-" “■ three and add; ankle, and filled in beautifully tor IJ^naMtwIto tor him to the driv MIm kn Lid fkh lliirrlfunu sail ” vns 20 yards. Ortonville had a 55-yard TD run •ailed back In the second period, the remainder of the game, team of Charlie Ltv-38-yard field goal drove three reek* have scored 14 and allowed 44. St. Fred’s figures Me 12-47. Hintz has scored 7 points, Charlibj Paul 6 and Sonnenberg a PAT.!,,•n•ll,, Wlndey and tiny Fred Medina, » ” (|uai1rrhack and end. own the Ram run touchdowns. Medina is out for the reon resl of the season with injuries. [ _ _ -Ray BT. FRED ly 150 riser i»0 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY troth teams battled between the 30-yaril lines in a rough defensive game. : 3S 5C Every Sunl(y Drag Racing M.H.R.A. 26 Mile Rd. E. of Gratiot NOTICE ■ BIG -GAS MEET OCT. 8 Romeo Sumrttary Dan Hermoylan and P loked up extra points for the Lak-rs. 1 laggard was ered!|ed with 22 tackles from the safety position. | Monrae Ashley rat'ed 58 yards for a touchdown with '!« seeondt to pluy to give Clsrenoevllle Its upset triumph. The sophomore \ 71-yard gallop in the first period, and gained lit yards during the game. Willie Knox scored tor Clarkston on spurts of 13 and six yards. Dick Shelden kicked the point. Randy Marx scored two touchdowns, passed far a third and ran two extra points, but It wasn't enough to stop Holly. The BroncoFscored in each quarter to chalk up their tint win of the season. Larry Bradsher raced 45 yards, Bill Conti 13, Jim McArthur four and Jim Ray tour for the TDs. Ray and Conti got tyro PAT each. Sports Promoter Fined j^RANl) RAPIDS SET FOR RAMS —'Three linemen figuring to give St. Fred plenty of trouble In the annual city ■ parochial battle at Winner tomorrow at 2:30 p. m. are, left to right, Jim Hifrren, Dave Moreno and Blaine Prlebe. Hurren and Pfiebe gq”over 200 pounds. The Shamrocks are 1 favored to wig the 27th meeting between the schoela., ........ Theodore Rastx’ of Grand Rapids was fined $3,000 land* placed on "probation for twi |years today at U S. District Court tor admitted gambling violations. STONIY'S OIL SERVICE 1995 CASS LK. RD. K*«90 Hsrbor 682-2651 PROMPT SERVICE 25 (Alton orders and up TRI-STATE CHAMPIONSHIP MOTORCYCLE RACES Ffttvring the Nations Top 66 Expert Riders In 10 Thrilling Events Wolverine Raceway at Middlebelt and Schoolcraft Sunday, 0c*. Trials 9 A. M. Races 2 P. M. Adm. $1.50 Chridrep FREE ift 1 EIGHTEEN PONTIAC,, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1961 Lions, 49ers Boast Defensive Backs 3PSP ’*'#'* < • ■" '* t : ^■ r^! Tigers After 10 in Morning Gamef I MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL lift The Detroit Tigers, shooting for their 100th American League victory of 1961, sent rookie Howard Kqplitz after it in a morning game against the Minnesota twins today. jjCoplitz was a 23-game winner at {Denver and won his first anc pearance as a Tiger, a seven-inning relief stint in which he gave up. only two runs. / Today's game'was moved'up to u a.m. (EST) to avoid conflict with the Mlssourl-Mlnitosota football game in Minneapolis. The Tigers and the Twins will, > close oat their seasons In /a single game here Sunday. Tigers and iSvins drew only 3,151 paying customers yesterday, but those baseball fans witnessed the breaking of one American League record and a rousing finish that brought Detroit''a 6-4 . victory in 10 innings. The record was set by JAke Wood, who struck out for the 139th time before lashing, a two-run single that provided the margin of victofy in the 10th. Wood’s whiff surpassed by the old AL record set by Minnesota’s Jim Lemon when he was playing with Washington in 1956. Wood has today and tomorrow to “improve” on the record Ca- — With no counter-attriiction, -the | milo Pascual forced onto him. ford, O'Toole Look Ready lor World Series Opener The tigers were trailing 2-4 got jpg,into the ninth and had managed only six hits off Pascual. Their only runs to then had been provided by Norm Cash'^^K home run in the fifth with, a mate aboard. CasJj opened the ninth with his third hit, a single. Steve Boros flied out, but Wood managed a walk. Dick Brown singled to cen-, loading the bases. Charley Maxwell, batting for Hank Afcuirre, singled off Pascual’s glove scoring Cash. Al Kaline, batting for Dick McAullife, was thrown out at first but Wood scored play. Bill Bruton grounded out to end the'inning with the score tied 44." abrhbl Mlnnestoa al as 4 C 0 0 Green ct l 10 0 1 Martin lb { United Ptosa International Why wait tori Wednesday? — Whitey Ford amjt Jim O’Tbole, the two southpaws ji who’ll open the world Series, l^ok rgady to go right now. ] Both took tbelr Anal tune- e sharper of the two, g a nod of approval from Cincinnati manager Krtrf- . Ford struck out nine in a scoreless six-inning stint for the New York Yankees, allowed only four ■ hits and might have won his 26th game of th^seasgn had not the ' WmiiiM&K tied the scdbe off reliever Luis Arroyo in the sev-- enth inning. The Yankees snapped the tie and went on to win, 2-1, at the expense of Bill Monbouquette. Roger Marls failed In a bid for his ECONOMY OIL CO. 01 34217 61st homer, going hitless in two official trips, but Johnny Blan^ chard belted his 21st homer in the fourth and then singled home the winning run in . the ninth to bring reliever Rollie Sheldon his 11th victory. Like Ford, O’Toole also gave up four hits during the five innings he pitched forjhe Reds In their 8-1 vlcfory over Tast year’s world champion Pitetojgh Pirates. barren Spahii scored Ms 21st victory as the Milwaukee Braves defeated the San Francisco Giants, 4-1, In n game culled After 4% Innings because of into. Spahn yielded four hits in winning the 309th game of his major league career. Eddie Mathews broke a 1-all tie when' he hit his 32nd homer with one on in the third off loser Jack Sanford. It was the only other National League game scheduled. In other American League action, the Baltimore Orioles beat the Chicago White Sox, 3-2, in 10 innings; the Washington Senators blanked the Kansas City Athletics, 2-0; the Detroit Tigers scored a 6-4 win over the Minnesota Twins in 10 innings; and the Los Angeles Angels downed the Cleveland Indians, 6-4. RoUrk**1*11 10 0 0 Dunning PI 0 0 0 .,-Werti 1 0 0 0 .i Kline p 0 0 0 0 n-Oiborn* 10 0 0 :*MaxwefI {oil Hi D 1 4 0 0 -'Otafi 41 « 13 # ’Total, A—Plied out for Sunning In --- _ ouled out for Kline In 7th; c—tingled or Aguirre In 0th; D—grounded out for CcCeullffe In “ Detroit Mlnneeoti BATEMAN’S TRADE-IN POST WHERE THE TRADE WINDS BLOW ; IB—ren fi ..... 000 030 003 3- kullfte, Brown. Po-A—Detroit Inneeota 30-7. DP—Tuttle, Mar- ....___Klllebrew;, Sunning, MeAullffe and Caah. LOB—Detroit 0, Minnesota 0. SB—Brown. 3B—Martin. HR—Martin, Caah. BB—Green. S—Naragon. IP H a SB BB S I * 4 3 0 3 Ex-Detroit Ace Now Coach of risco Defense night from Giroux Market, 1535 Union Lake Road,' Commerce Township. Sheriff’s detectives are investigating. ' i !■ \ at the Salvation Anny —|________ Store, 118 W. Lawrence Street. New merchandise received, daily. Farm Market. Hand Jack Christiansen Back to Haunt Former Mates With Coast Team By BRUNO L-.KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press It’s no wonder the San Francisco 49ers boast of having the best defensive backfield in the NFL, the man behind it all ts Jack Christiansen, once the Lions’ leader in the famed “Chris Crew," noted to be one of thenmost famous back-field arrays in pro football. When Christiansen roamed the Lions’ backfield during'the great championship years of the 50’s, with hjm yyere Yale Ldry, Jimmy David and Carl Karllivacz. Iiury • Lions feel that ' the Four L’s the current defensive,combine- sen and David departed for qonchlng Jobs. / With Laity is Dick Lane, Gary Lowe and Dick LrBeau. The 49ers defensive foursome consists - ol Jerry Mertens, Abe Woodson, pave Baker and Eddie Dove. Sr ★ ★ It wfll be interesting to see the battle of the two defensive quartets Sunday when the* Lions and 49ers tangle at- Tiger Stadium in the 24th game between the two w,' 4-3) kl (L, 15-14) 5 6-12) or Plcbo 14). St. Louis (Washburn 0-1) at Philadelphia •““lardl WIT), night SUNDAY'S MMI Pltuburgh. -* Chicago. •I Mliwaul AMERICAN LKAOUE Last yesr’s game with the 49ers could be called the contest which actually cost the Lions at least a tie for the title. After leading 10-0 late in the fourth quarter, the 49ers scored with four minutes to play to make it 10-7 and then John Brodie hit Owens in the end zone as time rah out for a 26 yard TD and! a 14-10 victory. WWW The Liorjs.tb^n.went to the coast and whipped* the 49ers, 244) In the hot streait which they scored six vins in the last seven games. Since then, the Lions have now won 14 of their last 17 games, Including five pre-season games. The playoff bowl In Ml- ■ ami could be added to tMs streak. It has been 1956 since the Lions have won two- straight in starting the season and they did it the past two weeks against Green Bay and Baltimore, the top con-' tenders of the Western Division. San Francisco is recognized as the other top contender. Game is 1:30 p. m. and bleacher seats will go on sale at 11:00 a. m. LIONS ISSl STATISTICS 5ia>)il>i'-. Dioumamw) i wimmmsimm c taMMriwittt*' mmj ‘ -1 > Michigan's final major | event of the 1961 aeason is slated sttnduy at St. Clair River Country Hub where 70 of the state's finest professional golfers tee off in the annual Michigan PGA champion, ship. Defending champion Ron Fox of Detroit head* the talented field and five other former (Mate PGA champions also will shoot for the title over a, 24-hole medal play route. In addition to Fox, pkst champs entered in tomorrow’s tournament include ageless AL Watrous of Oakland Hills, Horton Smith of Detroit Golf Club, Wally Burkemo of Franklin Hills, John Barnum of Hlytbefteld and Joe Belfore of the | Country Club of Detroit. W W ’Wj | Fax ton the title last year al Farmlnton Country Clugb, defeating veteran Cliff Settergfon of Muskegon in a sudden-death playoff with a birdie three on pie 1st extra hole. Settergreq also Is entered in Sunday's tourndy, -Barnum, reigning Michigan Open champ, and Burkemo are expected | to give Fox plenty of trouble In his bid to repeat as State PG8 other title threats are Gene Bone of Wurwlo Hills, Mile Me I'llinurry of KuoIIhimmI, Mai : Evans of (('Ilea, KMon Briggs of j DOC. Washtenaw’s Tom Talking-! ion, Glenn fMuart of Grand Ids, John Dalrympln of L a k e-potato and Meadowbrook’s Paul Shepherd. The total purse is 83,000 with the winner pocketing $600. Host pro at St. Clair River C.C. is Don Perne. ★ ★ w Because of the lateness of the season and the size of the field, the State PGA will try it new tee-off system tomorrow. ■tsrtint Haifa: MORNING—NO. 1 Tl --------- || APTICIINOON— I Harrla, Yankee. Pit! OsRck, Rlipb ___ _____|______| Jack Hoffman, Bill am 11 ton v • :33—EK»n WhIU. Wayn« XHenrlckaon. Redmond. Hklcile Kirk, Chick Rut Feust ----Thom Roeely. Ooorge I Jot Thocktr. BOAPruI Shepherd. Oordon 9 jj E ANNUAL STATEMENT SCHOOL DISTRICT OP THE CITY OP PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, June 40. INI Cash Receipts add Diaburaementa July 1. 1440, through June 30, 1411 General Fund Caah on Hand July 1, 1444 (Pleaee see Note A).... I 439.101 Revenue Receipts Revenue Worn General Proputy Tax ' Current (1440) Tax C«UectUma ...... ....$ 5,414,564.49 , / Delinquent Tex Oollectlone .......V.... 1 i Interest ta Delinquent Taxee ..... Total General Ptind Property Tag Receipts .. Library Fund (Penal rtnei) .... Vocational Education .......... Driver Education ............ Tuition (Handlcappad Children) N.D.E.A. •J.................. Other Revstue Receipts (Rentals, interest Income) Total Revenue Reeelptt ...... ..... ......... Non-Revenue Receipt* Sale, of Property ........ .......................4 Revolving Fund* (Cafeterlat, Athletics, etc.) __ Total Non-Rovonuo Receipts ...... -,(........... Grand Total of General Fund Receipts ........... .Total of Oentral PUnd Receipts and Balance I 4*5,514.75 3,443.Mi.43 .43.444.44 lg.14t.03 34,437.54 37,744.00 11.7S1.63 S.SMJ3 304^430.74 404,765.83 I.M1.W4.M L fund! 'disbursements Administration, ' , Salaries of Suparlatandeat and Assistant* Salarla* of '*#11555 Administrators TT~. .. 1 91.074.0t 35,555.55 Clarldal Salaries Administrative SuppUaa and Ekpant* Census and Compulsory Attandance .. Elections ... ’ 54.744.65 -■■■ 35.40145 ... 31.575.4# Instruction * • Salaries of Suptrvtaars Salaries of Principals And Assistants Salaries of Traoher* ..5 54.013.43 ... 3*4,17133 ... 5.301.5*1.4* Clerical safari** Teaching Supplle* and Expanse Textbook*')'. 313.4N.77 147,431.31 7#,*W.jl Other laMruetwn Expense . . . . 33*454.70 Total Instruction Disbursements Operation of School Plant Wijn ’d gytuntem ? ...5 #44.072 7T Operating Supplies and Expense Other Operating Expense 30445 47 1.157.15 Total Operation Disbursements .......... Maintenance of School Plant Maintenance or Oraunda ........... ....... Maintenance of Buildings ................. Maintenance of Furniture end Equipment Other Maintenance Expense................. Total Maintenance Disbursement# ____ ... Rents anSliOatM •. ....................... Insurance.................... .. ......... Total Plxad Charges 'Disbursements Transportation Salaries ................ Other Transportation Expanse ........ Revolving Fund Deficit# .................. Health Servlet ......... ......!.......... School Recreational Aetlvltlaa ..........* Other Auxiliary Expanea (Including Traffic Total AuxlUary S Total chrreat (Operating) Expense# ....... Capital Outlay Oraunda ..... .............................. Building* . .. ................... ........ Furniture‘and W4'(lament .. ................ Transportation Equipment ................ Total' bapltal Outlay Dlshurtamenle Total Oentral Fund Disbursements ......... Supplemental Disbursement# Transfers to Other Fund* ............... Revolving Fund Disbursements ............... Other Supplemental Dtsbureemente ........... Total Bupplamantal Disbursements.......... - Grand Total Oentral'Fund Disbursement*....... Caah on Hand Juno 30. INI (P1*om tee Not* General Fund Disbursement! plus Balances on June 34, INI ..................... Note A—Include* 5141.671 accounts payable and’1 6141,446 capital Improvement fuade. Note B—Includta 4374.405 Account# PA] Bulicilni 34,733.04 11,734 44 36,440.36 Youny&riddeis Can Stitt Sign for Competition tat NfbMtlon wlho punt, pass and kick program for twpf six. through UyepireafEge. Boys desiring to register eon still do-'-EOAt John MeAullffe Ford on Oakland Ave.; and at Beattie Mofors on Dixie Highway in Drayton mains, (*#»•* AV . The program.Is being'conducted in cooperation with the Hadonal Football League. Local winners will receive various prizes of foot- ners wfll appear on the Lions’ TV broadcasts. ,-|r ★ ♦ The Beattie contest will be held next Saturday, October 7th- at Waterford Tbwnship High School Held : At 1:00 , p.m. MeAullffe registrants can enter up to the day of competifloo October ldtk The contest will, most like! held at Jaycee Park. Sport* Car Finale at OCSC Sunday ^ The final sports cab race of the season takes place today and Sunday at Oakland County Sportsmen’s C3ub and the featured guest is Sterling Mofs. recognized os **“ world’s greatest sports car Moss will put on a driving'demonstration after the Tth race on Sunday which will be around 4:0(1 p. m. and he will have his choice of several of the finest racing machines in mis area. A record crowd is expected at a for the two-day Fail classic, g begins at 11:00 a. m. each Typhoon Fury Growing TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) -Typhoon Tilda, roaring oyer the Pacific, toward Formosa, was reported today to be growing in* fury. The strength of the typhoon had increased-from 90 to 135 m.p.h. Death Notices T. 2t, II if, ttnlee of “wmii 41. ROYCE N.. i Lake: age 41: ISaymc Curtis; M MeCoaoughy. 1.451.104 51 ''a.m,ii2.il it* Amo Receipt* tit* Fund Btlonoet an July 1, 1440 ___________ Oeneral Property Tex Receipt* Delinquent Tests .. .. mm.................. .1 Interest on DaUnquent T»x«* ...... ............ Total Building and ait* Property fax Receipt* Bala of Froparty.................. ....... .... tic dear brother of jlobert, Leon and Harry Curtis. Funeral e— tea *UI ha .haM Maodar. OcI at 1 pm. from the Richard Bird Funeral Home, Walled L Hth Rev. tovt Saylor offlotat Interment In Commerce Ceaipt Mr. Curtis will It* In state at . nichardton-BIrd Funeral So ' Waited take: f**h* fot^VU llsm* Earl* ani 1 sell Fbrguson, Mr* Winifred r beugb and Mrs. Mae MeConoi deaf brother ol Mrt. Edith f win, Mrs^ Carrie Beukma ana viced fey It grenSeBhiran and 13 great grand-ahlldren. Funeral urvloa will b* held Monday. Oct. 1, at 3:35 p.m. from the Sparkt-diiffta Chapel with Dr. Emil Xante officiating. Interment In While Chapel. Mr, Fergueon will Be la etete at tha BparVa-Oriftin Funeral Hama. FgRRi^i««:''3*:’'iMi:’jArK,,,*: NDDavarak, cUrkstoe: ago 34: beloved huehand of Lor re In* m. Ferris; dear father of Sharon. Barbara and Donna Farris; dtar brother of Mre. Helen Hangge and Idri. Jeanette Brece: dear naphew • of Leslie Ferris. Funerel service will tie neld Mondey. Oct. 1. at S p.m. from tha Danaleon-Jahne White Chaaal Cemetery. Mr. Fer-... ... i- Donelson- Lg. On. A*e. Td.l g and Etta Fund Receipt# . Total Building an Balancet July I, Capital Outlay Orounda . ......... Building# . if and Site Fuad Disbursements MitlayD d Elia Fi AYDEN SEPT 14. 1*61. AONES M, Deford. Mich., formerly of Fonllsc; ago N; dear mother of Nina Larkin, Margaret Davis and Bllaabeth Susan Cobb; dear sister of Lottie Farley .and Charlotte McQueen. Funeral arrangement* ere pending from tha Douglas Fu- Debt Rctlremcn in iDellnquent Taxes . Total Revenue from Property Tkx ..................... Revenue from totaraat an Investments.. ... ra?,nHoms." Cass ”ciTy~. Mrs. Hayden will lie In i MSaW.-ii ESRU&TSPSfarttJR Oct 1. at 13 30 p.m. tram Eporka-Griffin Punaral Homo with Rev. Hlldlng I. Bllil afflclatln*. Interment (n Oak mil Cemetery. Mrs. Jacqutn will lie In etate at the Sparks-Orttfln Funeral Home.-LKROUX. SEPT. 2i. 15*1. lb AM, 5357 Columbia. Clarkstaa; age'.5: beloved daughter of Gerald and •"Mu Memorlam 1,7 ‘ IMBTiggra" "wciVKfs’ara,. Food memorlte Ungor Ptofy day. iaNf Ml", ■«“-. by wffa, Jana, Sma^^day _waJb4(p|a__»o mort him. Ji Moora who P»**ed away cm. 1. 1455. . . ■ ■ , Gone le the rnae w* loved *4 dear, Silent la the vale* w* loved, to mmarw^m tick FTCaMhl jS^pMtod Donelson* Johns funeral home __ ’-Designed for Funerals” COSTS ~“ FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-7757 8PARES-OR1FFIN CHAPEL fhoughtful Barvjo* FE 1-N4I VoofheeS”Siple FUNERAL HOME FE 3-5375 -established Ovar 35 Tear*— fitmeigty Lot* ^ 4 GRAVE DOT AT WHTTI CHAPEL. MY Mitt hilar 4 p.m. eaGtiful 'lot. BHKy ---- —f Call iflir _ BOX REPLIES Al IS a.». Today there ■ I Tha Preaa tallowing ai ia an. l ei wwr# rtpMw at T off% In U5t" l bomlt 12, 25, 66, 67, 77, It, 82. 25, 57. 01, M, 111, 114. The Pontiac Preaa FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2t81M From S a.m. to 5 pm. mmedlately. laumaa no ______ ____________ ■ reepon- aibUlty for arrare other Ihan to asaaal the charges (or that portion of tha first error. When cancellation# art made ha aura to get your '-MO number.’’ No sd^istmenta will ha given _____iaa Free# Claaatflad Cola Ana rieationa • ■ ust dearly ■ i git* gin in 1SSS Total Debt Retirement Receipt# plue Caah Balance* July 1,1455 .................. Debt Retirement Fund Dliburi Principal on Debt* —............................. Interest an Debts ............................... Other Debt Retirement Dlaburaementi ......... Total Debt Retirement DMburtementa .......... Transfers to Other Fundi _____-.... ............. Other Supplemental Disbursements .............. Total Debt Retirement Fond Disbursement* ...... ---->1 Debt Retirement Balanee* June 34, 1*41 Total Debt Retirement Disbursements, plus Balanee* Juh* 30. 1551 ..........,,o>...... Statistical Dot* 144* 59 Eetlmeted* Value of Behool Property 464.111 lit,541 204.311,S3 541,176.: ..— elementary methemaMes program ».« . • majaf emphasis trill be r “ -*‘- in* epeciallet hat been employed to________ ■_______,_____ ... and diagnosis of raiding problems, several elementary schools a with departmentalisation In grade* 4, J>, and 4. - , The revised secondary mathematic* program hat been established In the seventh and eighth grades Mid trill ha-----1 >m|h ——*- *“• —— first time. W* have a four i-—*• -*- d Michele t 2. at 14 am) from Our Lady of the Laky, Church with Fr De-jsijey ^jfftglattag. Interment^ In will Ue In Mat* at thajeiwli E. Win, Funeral noma, clarkston, -11;1* a.m. Monday. Mamorlai he mad* to the Oakland ty Uhl, Of the Michigan dear sister of Mrt. Jaannt hr. Funeral tarvle* will l» Monday, OeL 3. at )1 a.m ponelaon-Jahns Punaral Home. Sfe'KllW Mate at Danelson-Johns Funeral Home, itwflJHr^siPr.«' itiU/j^M" wife of Harry 'b Rooney; dear sister of Mrs. Anna Hyatt and Richard Oreen. Funeral service jjfteiqjing, tnteriitr-* ■- jpri^fraiM fer the ■ will be placed on 14-eervice educetlon for teachers In mat i social studies school district .will Again partlolpits In the N.D.B.A, Vernon L. Eehlli menpary Se^ptenfhei '. INI. it bath tha tla-, . Treasurer.’’ d i»y four txatuitl... Areme No. 503 wllr conduct - —..jorlal service Sunday, Ool, giv^n • will be held MondaF, Ocl, 2. at ix 5Epn*utt officialiitn pravesld* service at /JotWkM Witt ayvoorhsss- Hclp Wanted Male__________i) I AGGRESSIVE NEW AND USED Of kilffimpn. CammlMlon •urn1-!• Ilmiftod only by your ability A llar&LL YIWB. ~v> or older, 431 Orchard Lake *Al 7^7 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, -SEPTEMBER 3ft, 1961 m XIXETEEJr E ER i' s, Tssata 6 .' Help Wanted Female . 1 CAREER Major Lit* Insurance Company ba* * opening tor a tuu tuna representative In Pontiac tree. No SSTqkH marital status, m. W4.8f.CS: - ci3?°WJici J Mti^oR Women, Pontiac arta to aupnly customer! trim nationally aduritsed household ptodocU For appointment. DRIVER FOR ~ iiSTABLJSHED WHKKJgWWrStm *—■ —ot position need apply, meet and dependable. •> HWt ssntur 7010 Plate. M* 1 NOINEER — Ml __________I----IORES INTEREST- ,ed in. correspondence, cent wbrit. accounting and general office work wan to engineering. Write Box 17 Pontiac.Press giving age, work and par eiperience, education and taau&.-AM LOOKING FOR A MAN JO/ replace me. . Can you qualify? " ~~ 1-5438 for appelntment. ■FjiMKAI^i BALES W CITY Ao 43. Salary, Icommis-' m L J* nm I>fUU5MANTOCO* staff^jtood^conimli QUALIFIED OIL BURNER SPRV-' Ice man with hand tools. Apply r to 10 a.m. Economy Oil Beat-tne Co.. MSS Ptalo HNar. . TOWN AND COUNTRY FOOD COMPANY. INC WANTS 5 MEN Oakland and Macomb Counties------------------■ - full -dr pat 4OT*7. ¥ern GENERAL OFFIC'E 3 phone solicitors, irt time, guarantMd ns a-osoj HOUSEKEEPER. WHITE........iMf out. 016 now, $30 later. 3 school-dge jChMdren’ Own transportation,. MtF- .crrtiBi dual I ,.t Kg Boy Drive 39 LIVE bath. Ages ,IGHT HOUSEKEEPING. BABY sitting, In home In the country. Fatherless horns. Room and board, lit a week to start. Woman with 1 child acceptable. Prefer aga 35 to 35. Must be firm but affectionate with children. Be. gm 0m. I. References. "t tSn, tftw , MATURE WOMAN TO BABYSW 5.^days, Call after 5 pm. fpi OIRL TO LIVE "Ulj 5 DAYS.. IN-cludlng weekends, child ears and WAGES AS LOW $140 PER WEEK AS - General Staff Nurses 54.755 - 55.300 Licensed Practical* Nurses Help Wanted Female- 7 P TOY CHEST f ..TKB,‘ FIWgT ■ AND' ON* OF TOB FINEST TOY PARTY FLANS 'IN' MICH. J Our 17th Year .THE FLAN THAT AT OiYES Y EVERYTHIN ?F«irty Hite OBT • TOP 'dbmonstration kit 130 fun to abow itoma ■ ! furntabed trio' to dealers TOP DEMONSTRATION AIDS Excellent company, training Free color catalogs , ■' ‘ THB TOY CHEST Delivers Collects — Service CALL W 5-S731 -------WITH CABS FOR MAR- raaaareb interviewing. Aaalgn-ment to begin" lmedlalely |1.50 an hour. No MUlng. Reply Immediately - (AIR MAIL SPECIAL DELIVERY TO WINONA INTERVIEWING SERVICE.) 3403 ■ Minnehaha Avenue, Minneapolis A Mtansaota, with a resume of past experience, inability. >l l*RlcasEi _______assail. itUET #1" EX- . perlenced Apply Mr. Metrlok. Pontiac laundry, 540 S. Tele-graph Road. alid. light ______Call after .... WOM A N 'FOR UOHT HOUSE- Help Wanted Work Wanted Female 12 ... jaMrlijMOPiBMilJ STORM WINDOWS AND DOORS WhlM, Blaqk, hronae, beige '' pink, green,’ deoorator Colors to ReAOTIPY YOUR HOME Free Estimates FMA Terms Call JOE VALLELY Mow , OL 1-S4M PE 5-9545 cmi1°DaUecookt*Con»truct?on Co. OR 3-5ttt, ____ Notices and Personsls 27 7AVON CALtINO”\—- FOR Uti Tsa k iour homo, Fe 4-4508. aerotrPdI KNAPP SHOES FRED HERMAN / ’ OR MM* liy adviser, phone . ,-oiui nfter g p, m, or if no a. swer /call PE 3-3734, Confldentla roNSOUBATEI I t Budget Servjte, Inc. II W, Huron FE 4-00C •DOROTHY’____._______„ 53o~n. Ftrrv ■ F» a-H “150ROTHY S BEAUTY SHOP* 435 H. Ferry FS 3-1344 ,TER8 Jmate and Caples ON FALLOUT All types. For fr-c w quick service, call Johns MY 3-1133 or FE 3-3357, XL TYPES OF MASONRYWORK Free estimates. MA 5-1008. CITY . siUMWalks replaced Cement work of all kinds. Free estimates. Guinn's Construction. — 5-51M GET OUT OR DEBT WITHOUT A LOAN I Regain 'peace of mind throuSh .aur weekly, payment plan. 1 Protect your Job and credit. Avoid garnishments and rapos-sessions. City'Adjustment Service FE 5-9281 „ W. Huron Pontlsc. Mich. | OPPOSITE MAIM MM* OFFICE . - MimberofFonttec I ,• Chamber ot Oomsnerce DAINTY MAID “ jtoFPLIES, 73* ■ Menominee:" FE 5-7505. HAY**RIDES. KITCHEN AVIAL- Rent Apts. Furnished 37 Rent Houses Unfurn. 40 For Rent Rooms EMPLOYED Oi5T LEMAN. ' an eomfortabie room. Oa* heat • can PROPR88IONAL OR BUSINESS -man or woman, oarage privileges r— —u— Reply. Pon- ROOM WITH SOME KITCHEN privileges^ References Ngulred SlSXPINO ROOkf NEAR 0*NERA1, Hospital. PE Httl; -SLEEPING ROOM. CLEAN AND * . quiet. Near town. 133 E. Huron SLEEPING ROOM PRIVATE EN-1 trance. Men. 175 State, ■ Rooms With Board ’ 4.V • CLEAN WITH HOMv privileges near Tel-Huron. witt or without meals, FK i-3333. IARD OPTIONAL Ts-eioo I CLEAN ROOMS. la. FE 3-03l». ROOM 'AND. OR BOARb. I3Ws 'ex-A-Diet tablets. 3 ROOMS AND BATH PURN18HID Adults only. 41 MorSlarJ J~ ROOktS / PE ______ Corporation. .... McKelvey 853-2108. CO'iftRETE_DRiVE, PdTIO. CALL (Bar 5. ME 5-5447. __________ MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 703 Pont!4e State Bank Bldg. FE 5-0455 Pontiac's oiliest and largest budget ly furnished. I and gas ^furnl 4MH- " I. COMPLETE, “ heat. Hr1" Heights, . oldest and assiatanoo Company. NOTICE li~HEREBY _______Sa'Th, NEA^t BUS. NO drinking. WI N. Paddock.________ 3 ROOMS AkD SaTH, SMALL -----, 105 Dr------ DESIRABLE LOCA-lon on West ilde^ Near ^hop^lnj|, )aw»on*bd Butterfield? PE* 3-5430 .r FE 3-7555._______________ bt "Tor less - day. week, ' ~ >.. kitchenettes, bed rr _______m 5151 Joan Oay. 1 5-1455. ______ MR 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatic heat — Full basement i - . ..» . WILL DECORATE p $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 544 East Blvd. N. at Valencia _ I VACANCY, BED OR AMBULATORY BEDROOM. YEAR ROUND patient. ---- - home, full basement, pll furjiuce, Home. I •frig. Lifo p Convalescent Homes 44 FE, 5-4307. Rent Stores bebyv ........ lIVBN THAT Clinton!____________ 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE entrance. FE 3-S»55_ 3-ROOM APARTMENT. jeea pixie HW7~, OB 4-0311._____ riRsf Pi^R. PRdrrf apa r bathed' “ |»I ANpi--rj0;kr,-'big7a. nr 3-7510. Wo pete, PE 5-253S. I Oakland Avt . OR 3-3 CHILdIclEAN LOWER 4 ROOMS. BATH’3 BEDROOMS. OIL FURNACE. OA- BEDROOM, BEAUTIFUL BASE merit gas heat. Lease or option •- - *"”> v'lsabeth Lake Road BATH 3255 'DON Rent Office Space 3 OFFICES -FOR RENT. 4545 DIX-le Hwy. OR 3-1355 CHOICE LOCATION ON TEIe- r 3mlth*?EeaRor FE 3-7045. AIRPORT dental some l!«vrn “ tor II yeart. Drayton Plains. QR 3-1355. Dixie Highway,. Help Wanted Female 7 ! CITY OF PONTIAC Clerk-typist I. Salary 53.45 ‘ High echool graduate. 4.. yeara eaper*—- to . Typing epj aie^rtey“ grty. pk Mm ' vicinity ot Perry Park. »54 Ket- "TitY OF PONTIAC Oakland County and Oertatrtcs 1 Hospital. In Pontiac Area. Floe XftWurU,? WffiemWeM benefits including paid vacations and etek leave, Ufa and hoaplteU- : gallon insurance plans’ and Social-, Security combined with retirement CLEANING ’ SILK FINISHER plant Ifi‘Biminfhai jtjr work. Mtt*t SALESLADY MANAOER sor new Lodtea' Maternity, Uniform Shep Opening I Apply to person Mondoy. Slid It o.m.-l p m. Miracle Ittwiis Cunningham^s Pontiac Press Classified Depart me i -----— ■, AND BATH, rvom. 1 ueuruuui, kitchwettei to man and i— — — t, bath A Reftr»nc»i) wtth i»wn and tardan, OR 3- pT&lrii W A>rn nWWBth' Ph |4 BOOMS. UTILITIES. BASEMENT OPPICE 8PACI NEAR iTT'fe^JtS-^c'iri Abr c^furnsc. ,75 me. Must .ease. | ^.ppi^nters^l. ........I ir m ”• --------------------------------------- EVELYN EDWARDS ••VOCATIONAL • COUNSELING SERVICE’1 |icy East Huron Suite Phone FEderal 4-0584 SECRETARY ANtv Vk 3 ROOMS. Ahb BATH, PI 0» Mbit NO." tally 1^55 o7 ho^Cl I eral Hespl>aj;_Adulti........... equipped PE 4-8450. L. A. Yeung. , Fsarson's. FE 4-7551._ 3 ROOM AND BATH APARTMEN" Installation op woodTanel- letIjb buy IVOR sell it roR i leg, floor tile, celling tile end YOU. OXFORD COMMUNITY I »«*«■ isramlc floor end wall tile. PE AUCTION. OAHMSI. ' i lYJWv ; WANTED TO unnivunm , -------JL- ROOMS AND B _________________________ ^ ...----- ----- «™. - .... i omaE^XLOSE^ TO^^THE~NEW 4Mlrhl^' 5 ROOMS AND BATH NEAR OEN-1 PON-TEL CENTER _ AIR-CONDI-Micntgan. ( efl, Hosn|U1. Adults. Oaa beat( , tloned office with ample parking Heat, bot ' water furnished. W'1* he decorated to suit tenor* - rbor_______ H. Smith, Realtor. PE 3 oil at, 8575 Ellas. | inant, Rohe T. i HOOPS: N E W, RE PAIR ! 'Os’carafu.^ ilary ^Midwest Employ- BAVESTlkjuOHlIlO i Community Auction, FE 4-8400 or « ?nntl^ atata Bank I SEPTIC SYSTEM. TRENCHING, | Holly. ME I-"" S 5-5327. 1 ROOMS AND BATH. OROUND ... ‘ Mis 3A507 after 8 p m.________ •ROOM, OARAGE. COUPLE ONLy ] MODERN 4-ROOM 1ST FLOOR, Instructions ^ 101____ ; I PIANO OR THEORY LESSONS, i ALL — |----J>JL2%L_r- *'*“' " trucking, loading, MA 4-3515. Business Service Wanted Miscclhtneous 20 , - call before 4:35 p m OAS HEAT. 463 RAE- I Business equipment. 'Forbes Frlntine end office Supply. Ml 0-3010. Work Wanted Male II j jns^ a^ohim i -A WALL WA8HINO. CARPET. , BLOOMPtELD V Money Wanted Partridge, 1855 W. Huron. l| ___ -__las. « 4-3SS1 | it 31 4 R60MIT piSWat^ eNtranck m o SIDE. CLOSE PE 3-7454. — and aUnjQDgr " * Huron, I |F«r ___tANCE PE 4-1815 Wallpaper Steamer Floor senders, polishers, hand senders, furnace vacuum steam -—. Oakland Fu el A Faint. ^ 434 hip Dijr»| bjd^ yi' IO ITS cnau CSgMifhC H*tU* ' ^Kl .Two young women require^lo t COih^rcbAfjtoWman! | KXPklt. i the ClMalUed Tflepiione R( iSe8*' p{k*cr>Pty75to?C* * PrU* MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: . H^Se^aVuIIe, jmrtentei and own tranaporta-1 mtfclfcWio WAlfgpstSI a*^L Qt^tee s**!, nrt*MufV tx UJ S. Old'JlirT.MrV'w.ter0. ' fMsMRST-WFTTtlB; wanted nights at Julies Orili. 810, Il^SRnWCgD^^WgBKgND W»tT- iS'^WSSam'tfAWRi^iEs , .women tor Oakland County dlanl- I ppsitlon Good commission j with fringe benefits Cell between i U. rk 44551. t-1 cARtaNTikY. ADfifflSMiS. j IammItt watsr Fn^ina siding, repairs; ei«. PE 8-7345. | “a*®0. '•TomSaaMm*. ^repairs our • A-l CARPENTER WORE* J Jfdo M? •-1818. / SmalT*3ehs ("‘Speeteity : EtWcf*i 1 CAL'co»TRA&fBk -ROOM TERRACE ■MMM____________________ .love, refrigerator, CittAN hOOMS: BflCTfltC !'{!L wt J,m** K Blvd' rt. rlvate bath, entrance, waaher. --------- idults. 13 Plnegrove ______I NIWtY DECOR A ipgiLY'PURlff ........... sTrOOM DUPLEX IN KEBGO OAS heat, $55. P» 3-7777. 6-ROOM HOUSE. CLEAN_ ELEC- __ VARIETY- OP > i1 a-story home. 8 en: 2 unfinished up. s family room. Terms 7th option to buy. PE Ranted to Rent 32 pROOSI. r ROOM®. BATI 2-7503 ___ ROOMS __________________ —1 HOUSE. 2 KTCHKN8, u ____j UNION LAKE PRIVILEGE j fun bisement, fit hAAt.. 10 N. "nr"at—near ••■utiful modern 3 room apArt-| R0sel»wn. 682-1808. 3 « orFn^tr^7^" Free estimates. t ierins.' Phot CABINET MAKING ■“1 and carpenter -- ■ — e esttmwtea. FE »• _ ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVtdE RE- ! «-353l ..UL_M______ ((3-1878. [ pairing and rewjndlng. 211 E. FUte , YOUiTo 'MJNf8TER1(t WlFE~ANu I ktoda. Free sstlmetes FE 1 CAWENTEi4'-W«iE' NEW 1 remodeUng Call 553-5105 i CARPENTER WORK AffO PATNT-• - - aaonabla —-------- WHIRLPOOL _________ PUMP WELL REPAIR SERVICE. ■ 3M7- F| 5-5355. service. room, on West glde. bybet. goth splendid opportunity Share Living Quarters 33 : ’ ‘fEW'OSSf*! -SSsSp asns ,0 i V kSdf R..t».blr Call .fur 8 ! - , '.. in, AftexJL W _______ ____BjyjffSL--, 1 Basdrtwamlwa ft Taxes 16 ^fS^.red^^nslon*” — c^l^ ^---------------— tekeridi JLclkKme with 1 asswiuBisr s, «si,“rivaf-«; EaSSSS ' hot water aiM drapes furnished. | "I Near shopping center. Must s oprsclste. Lake Lynn AP Cooley Lake Rd, EM 1-3 ROOMS AND BATH. UPPER. Private entranoe. FK 4-4878. ROOlU AND BATH. LIGHTS. iSSJay*! "house mak Dressmaking, Tailoring 17 whr f*A WW' TAh SftRlir- j uoht mas have a Sandra lev party rfbrk. HAULING AND TRACTOR And odd Job* Nlghtn «nd ltd* FK 8-1167 ALTERATIONS DON I IN 1 home CaH 338-1384. drUssMakino. ta"ILoriW6, a id, high achooi glr oatn, (brags. 2 TVs. yarn ir in. reasonable. Reply frees Boa 55. WILL 8 HAkl HOkli ley LI TEL-HURON s rooms and bath, floor, plus basement a __________________, All utilities furnished I ROOMS GROUND FLOOR. 37! month. Call OR 3-7li Mechanic. FE 4-5388 . . | polnttnenl.. 4 AI4D 3 LA ROB ROOMS. CHIL-' ORCHARD COURT drsn welcome. PS 3-5458. | I and 2 bedrma. . t ^jtywirv bedrooms. Erl; „d^.',r „ g()„ 1-iSoii Lower' apar¥meT5t itaad. 153 East Huron. PE 4-1214 tftet 5 p.m. FE 3-7435. 838 E. TENNYSON RTMENT8 ’fe i-ssiai ,-er. 18 Sslmer St.. Apt. 8 free For boardino permitted. Automatic gas furnace. Close to grade and hi(h schools 575 per month. References required. K. O. Hempstead. Realtor, 103 E. Hurbn, PE 4-8354. After 5 p.m. PE 3-7435. __________ 6358 RICHELLE DR. BRIGHTON neighborhood’ Only Peterson Real Estate } MY 3-1681 IS BEDROOM. NORTBBtDE. ~$500 i down, 15.500. PE 54734 __ 1 1-FAMILY INCOME. nOrth side I No broken. PE 5-3117 i 1-BEDROOM HOMES. BASEMENT.. cenHdereX**»lM0*l*lt?1 SSlSo! , Nelson Building Ce„ OR j-til'.. i'S'BEdRO^il. its hAtAs. small down payment. OB 3-5135 , | i ROOM BUKO ALOW, OL&EB 1 home, fine west side location and neighborhood. Many good feature OWNER. i FISHER Wdhiffi ‘ r»r/ed#‘Vali«^,Lake''dTitric". ,MA 11 AND i JlOOMS.. SCHNpH: ; 4-3755 MA 4-il51.Evts.MA 4-3585. Youlid 6iRL WANTS^ OIRL^ TO 11 JSOOMS AND^KAtH. nPRlV^TE Plums itf-MOl*.,after 5.10.____ j ly furnished.* YOUNO WORilNO OIRL ‘ "* * ”* •here^ apartment ^wllh^ eame BODY" ROCHESTER-UPPER. 1 COLORED. 2-BKDROOM _____ i ment at 310 Perry. R-I BEDR5I 1 option Call 3514553 . icOZY 4 ROOMS ___^Ve” 4-4329 ” Or* JOB 'l-Olfc CtJTt OH * Flow. DRAG AND »r««ltoi .Anywhere OR j-j558_ Landscaping 21 A-1 MERION BLUE SOD. 20c-25c 4 vri ai field. Deliveries made ^ath. BOOM HOUSE IN WATERFORD ! Township. Call PE 5-1543 Rent Houses Furnishe4f 39 1*1*1 ‘kdiygPraS Qarden Plowing s complete landscapino 1 Wtd. Contracts, Mtgf. 35 | lowing grading, discing mow- ^—“ - - j IMMEDIATE SALE FOR YOU | I Contract or Mortgagi1 — II Mr. Hlttei , p1*r£*t utilities. Near Fontlac plants, Ap- -ply at 80S St. Clair. 1 ip a htUint. watEFFOKB i preferred, or working | rs 84031 I ON TEACHERS—CI.EAN I in^ygcffooLmpE‘548M? *" r* I “achelor apartmEnt. 1, COLORED—LARGE HOUSK 81 able for 2 families. OH heat, month. Annett Inc., Realtors, 3-BEDROOM RANCH. YEAH OLD 1 BEDROOM HOUSES MOD- C s PE 4- 1-BEDROOM HOME. Fencing Plastering Service DRIVEWAYS ASPHALTED AND repaired. PE 5-5I47. ANCHOR FENCES Aluminum—Bteel—Wood IMMEDIATE OatVICE^OI^ ALL j * Reas. Pe* Le«°FEW Vt&S?* \ ¥GSffiSBiQ~¥Sn bot®ates D. Mey«re EM 3*0163 | Bstt erics No Mono? Powa. rHA Approved FREE ESTIMATES. Tt 54411 BOAT - TRUCK - AUTOMOBILE (5.55 Exchange. Oueranteed Pontiac Fence Company Continental chain link fanee. Com-skint a fmtftlifttloo or Dolt-tour- RenUlt-Equipment K^LOPE SATTERT CO y*3 Auburn Ave. Fl 5-ltII M*f Ew/«*rms: Irae^Sst. GR 3-6595 CONTRACTOR'S BQUWMENT | i Hom^-wwneCa tool»^ ^Jackson. 51 j Boats Hasting Service Sewer Contractors finA ’ ALL PURNACM^CUlANgO^ AND 1 grwBRS. SEPTIC^ TANS* ^AND CLOSE-OUT ON ALL BOATS i •all* aTyounL. Txr. Landscaping Stamps for Coflectors ■ Sll LAWN SERVICE ^BLAtVC ’ Stog. ^erttffting,tawn*UtpE^ «-»M3 " STAMP* ON XFPROvAI, Squirrel Stamp Shop 1 sox 4004 Auburn Hflghts i Stencils • OPEN 7 DAY* A WEEK 4535 Dixie Hwy,^- On Loon Lake OR 44411 Lumber BOAT NUMBERS ’ i . PINTER'S - j|78 ft. OFDVKE RD. PE 4-5584 j — REbUCKD — Rosts, Motors and Docks ctr"^J5*Ji2,:i.for 1X5 PINE ROOF BOARD* 5c Itn. ft 1X9 PURRTNO STRIPS. 3'to Ha. ft 3«4 join Dry Fir .. 5a tin. ft. 12x4-4 Economy Studa 44r^ ea. 1 4X(- Pas Board 55.55 4x|x.»k Hardboard 51» PONTl ACrLUMBER CO. 1 TAHM AND CARRY 51.5b 3 Inch — Fee set If pltbea 1 MADE-TO-ORDER STENCILS 1 Pontteo Stamp * Stenoil Oo 54 8- C*»a FS 4-5331 Television, Radio and j HI-FI Service COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, i ABSOLUTELY THE Fa _..j and fertilising 6r* a’o350 | buyers"»suing, 'call » ALlTWPi^ LAT^CAPE-WORK; trldge. FE 4-3551, 1055 CASH -1850. BACHELOR. OARAOE ----kt and Auburn, c • 34848. 3 COMMERCE a LAKE. J-BECHtOOM HEAT 1 (Jons'*Walled* Laff'"* * T-X: i. 175 month. Call 5 Ceramic baths, screened to por-storms and screen*, carpel! optional. Oas heat, excellent MODEL HOME FOR SALE YOUR EYINRUDE DEALER __ Harrington Boat Work* ' 1555 «. Tetegraphjtd.-ESJ4013 , ^"VuT^ ^ |n ft , Building Modernliatlon I adwtions. pallout Ewcl lera. House Raisin*^ ?*«••*• Cba' PAUL OR,AVlW#TOljTRACTiNn "TiargaiN till additions. -5550 -- «er»8s: 8455 - F»rchoe 830# ^ Cement work 33* eq. ft. FMA -terms Quinn’S Construction FB 8-8132 Dance InEtructlon PRIVATE, SEMI. SMAIX Cl.ABBES Mrk Retiy Smith, Fl__»_470»._ Dressinsklng, Tailoring ALTERATI^ Its vest roughing Nursing Homes ROOF DRA1NAOE, INHTATt.ro and replaced, all types. OR S41783 ExcRVRtlny DRYDEN/REST HOME AmhVlntory' Patients t.lcensed home. Dr, on 0(11. 34 / BKCAVATOOH^BEMfNT* AND bomb (hellers: 653-1333. liqur nursing cord. Real.- rates. 43X5 Main. Drydan. Phono Swift 4-1470. * Floor Sanding -V R. O. SNYDER FLOOR LAYIIKJ, sanding ana flnianlng. Ph. .PE MWTO, ___ exsirp^iLtris. fs.6oO(Wk NON-CHALK HOUSE PAINT . 53.31 INTERIOR LATEX 83.1| INTERIOR,,ENAMEL ... .. 13.W AMS SUPFLDBS . _ .FE 4-4355 OPEN 5-5 1515 OPOYKB RD. Waterford Lumber/ Caeh and Carry_. 3578 Airport BS. OB 3 778 Plywood all*thk:knesses* a*nd bfkcie °"|l °Or"c3£oADUr Plywood Distributor 175 N Cass FB 3-041 sriciAL thTsTJonW _ 1x4 eritlts fit boarda 005 h AIR-PORT I.UMUliR , AND/SUPPLY CO. 4871 Highland MICKEY S7RAKA TV SERVICE . DAY OR EVES , PS 5-I35*_ Tree Trimming Service ACE TREE SERVICE ' STUMP REMOVAL --------A e-T-^oat ,ur| * i AND 8-155I B COMPLETE LANDSCAPINO lading, sodding, black dirt, sol), tree trtmmlng and removal sment work, patios and fanatns ri 4-4335 or OR 34155 I. coBRbte* laHn wOML 6aK-dsn plowing, finished grading nnd top soli, Wfc 2-0453. ^ LANtMCAklMS. IBIXDBBWtr ___* AWviQg niiol Trucking 22 A-l JMOVINO ^SERVICE. jREANON 1ST"cARIEP^L~MOVING.- LOW iAuUtRTir RFBlisn/' li a m it your pries. Any time, pg 8-0085. HAUCfNO AND RUBBISH 52 load, ahytlms PE 4-53S4. ua'H^-HAUljFu~rND“«T^^ - cleaning, reasonable. PE 6-8313. LliEffiT AND HEAVY' TRUCitlNO , UNWANTED ARTICLE* FlCKED 11 up flee. Prompt aervlce - any tftne Plione PE 5*4535.___ j Pointing & Decorating 23 7 LASS PAINTING PAPER Par Igejee. Don't lose*1 that (fall mortgages available. BACHELOR. TV. SHOWER I I M S, NOVEMBER ’ b. O* 3-4275___! BAflClte A week; COLMe5~-_3 ROOMS, call'-Hem- after 8:30. PE 5-0454.___■* ROOMS CLEAN ''LiidUPBONYlkPARTMKNT j rzt eas»CUk4 Road, Keego Harbor °|3 -.BE^OOM , MoBIrF CLEAN I R60MS AND BATH. , 8. Marshall, Fl 54455 COUPLE. PRIVATE BAT it A NO privlTeySs. 15} monthly. entranea.Fi 44547._________ \ or Mtf 4 8411 r^es. For colorxd - i-BiOROok For rent or sale fortably furntahei Sw;'" I d.Vfum FOR COLORED Large home on Orchard Lake Av- . enue Reasonable. FE 4-1841 or PE 44313. L, Middleton._______ Taros home on williams' Lake, stove and refrigerator fur- "Y*” ; ' nlulled. 673-7874.__________ '-|MbDi'RN“HOUSE. RESPONSIBLE M*;, »r»di endscaped, with town/ flowe rlth' double closets. Modern he minute kitchen, large pies xterlorln^4o upkeep. 'Lak^prlv-leges on one of ^the beet fishing bfScI from family win W RIG III; 148 Oakland Ave._ PE J-M4I 7A81I For i.and CONTRACTS h I MMKUiAT i: ACTION' ; ■ torther information, pi Fake orton” "!ioutfirkTepin? , APARTMENT 44453 after 5 p m. : FOR RENT* OR LEASE. 4-BED- I room brick, oil heat, niar shop-ping center, achoole. M8UO. trail-able Oct 35th. Examined by ap- polnlmenl OL 14M8. _________ i for-rent 3.Se6r<»M^BR!C* Pierce Schools In Waterford Twp SI16 perjnonih Phone PEJMM38 8 ROOMS BASEMENT. OAS HEAT s: .ra - Priced *XPFhT TREi~TRlMMINa AND removal. Reaeofiable FB 5-1555 iX?ERT tiki SERVICE. FEkk i LADY INTERIOR Pajiermg PE_8-5143 VuAllAN/ricKII PAIN DECORA 1 -543-3471. IeCorator 'iNi». TOW- » FE 54553 or OR 3- (kneral Tree Service i rn/i r“To r" and” exterior Any sine job — Tryeur bid. FK nflnUiig. wall wteulng Free.es-3.5S4ITFE 5-3031 , . lime its PE 8-5375! ______■ fkiMMiN'6“6h removal, very I pTOtIno aTTd blicbnAfiNO i yi >»lao6, . I wall papftr removal. Kxp«r(Jy 7>mReas*r^Tvsap.' ia-3in^r .pXlSfTNtl’liND P AI'EH H ANOI NO I Mark Nelson. PEJLliyg/ PAlNiTNCi, PAjMlNOrirE^OV- Truck Rsntsl^ Trucks to Rent WT°BTRiJ^i?--VRA^TSRg*Uk" ANb^EQUlFMilNT Dump Trucka—«emt-Trall*rs Pontmc Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 738 B WOODWARD FB 544si Fe 4-M73 i open Dally Including Sunday_ ~ l i! |Jpholsterlng WALLPAPtR HANOlNO. * FOBFAST ACTION j USTYOURBUSINESSJ Bb Lost and Found 26 FOUND—BLACK BEAOUC. VIC1N. Tty of Scliooleraft school. Yours (or payment ot ad. OR 3-3173, electron tuhes. Reward. Ph. OR umIiW fflrxau. ■MiMMMr rWJh dFIftFITV oLAjSslif. r* REbKNT zIeRIth hear ItiifT/CXBlM'SSLTPi Vd I (f Wrist patonTTosi between Kresges "huraday | *-°>’ Wanted Rsal EsUts All- CASH 'til OH F’flA EQUITIES **K*PI° W1CKER8HAM 71(8 W Maple _ MAyfalr e ‘ “ USTfNOS -COLORiD l. R Middleton rEJ- Louis Borst. Realtor PE S-3S4 SPECIALISED REALTY SERV „y IsTUDtO APARTMENT. EAR DA- *• S'ully modern. lots of closet spere ud _ Room 35 x 40 PecIlUJes for 5881 living" In Other "aptT Call Penton. , MAin 5-1355. 36 I 9erT~ATTRACflW PRIVATE. ......................■ m 3 BEDROOM ~ AT 1 rROOMtf. ufiOffi 3 nt. N W ^ Pontiac^ $^r'55m8~and bXth. WVHVlBHitV MODERN 2-REDROOM i iajload. e-pronY oi r I'jtONE Y Jut* reaV I ITR PROBLEM* CLARK L ESTATE. 3101 W HURON 37 ‘ Rent Apts. Furnlahed ANp 3 ROOMS, ^PRIVATJ^ BATH -WrTbE (SJT^ bkOroom iFrldliNcV/AFARi ments Fully furnished. Parking I AND 3 HKiiKotma, .Gi.iiA Square Lake, Pvt. PE 4-3358; nsii-rAbpTi.i Ri ’ bain. I5« Roblnwood, . _ , . IT*T»ibRdSHir PAifftSf“*»i) r nlsheil, lakslront apta, OR #|ir" slOtTmo*" PE* l-VAo* ■ : wi»T¥iDg' :i H(WM*~anF*bath a cate FE 8-2432 Aflei V FK' --------------/ ~ ’i f Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 l-ROOM EFFICIENCY Fl^|'r J^nth Na‘7*3484*VWN *' 385 N Peddoc*k Ap*nn""lf.r .j.jog, FbFHENVYEAR rSIInd'HOME i i:3n| B«imyOMH"pj^V gll h«t ^fe’oomt0 b«Tmem j B,|vmg rpom. full sis# br:lr:::vS^ and rnoklns uten- ■ eyit !(( jL>lplk*t*pgT84»o ta^ FuKiTi. larSe • 3 ro and bath, heat and hot s before I 33 Myrtle Dr off 3-RKftiiooM “UFFIrT^ fiilv fe mi___________• 1 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH I RKNT WITH orTION 3-bedroom, modern. ’ good lornilon near Williams Laks. 87g Dtr month * i BEDROOM ALUMINUM. FULL basement. Unfinished upstairs 3 enr^garage^ Large^krt^ John R - 1 BEDROOM RANCH IN WATER-terms OR/WIM^^____ $35 A MONTH Only ^ |»“,m V FI. ATT LEY REALTY 5858 Commerce Rd. 353 6981 27t EA8T BOULEVARD WCTL $9,500 •3355f-I AND LAND 3-ROOM. PRIVAT* EN-nance and bath. Ill N, Telagraph. rTBoRSig? nsxm. near Fislier^ nullable for Tor 5 men. *(TOn.5w*s‘ Adults, rg! 5 IS4S 154 B. HoaplWI 5 R^ks-TfvfRYTHlW /pur-nlehed. place to wash, adults, no dklnkete qr children. 13 ’Felr- 5 I. M 2 BEDROOM, NORTH S1 l nvlvao Lake Only 6 mlnuies drive a-oauiwum. ew k OR L ROOMS, PlNi. QVIET to"dXiitown Pontine S150 pen automatic heat i apt. bldg. Extra 4ge. rooms, pvt* JX„Mh will consider lease, Call t mediate possess parking, No children In blot* - — -.. . . • SHIRLEY , Al’TS] E 4-4385 118 E, Huron FK 5-4»i4i a oearco ¥5oRs. WiTffl^ ru'RkisHEi) ciair^iiMIS, fl 4-S353 .......... ...........lio#a SSk i LAKE* OfildNrifrf ft'A-MOOKHN. |« flat, tot niched. ■ I* LA ROIC pamiOKs fir IVeiSJ tf ft ACTIVE" 2 bedroom '1 - .Town, tfA*’3$igO.W331f Editor BUILD" •sfisir STotSTTRli' BATH: - HTSK1Y FuhMiAiifnV klobERk 7 i« bedroom home in Unton Lnkt vicinity. EM 34514jiftor 5f» foiii^cdRiCrolGb '1111*. TWBKi J ern, 3Jlbedroom MS months to: \J» lateSTHIEwF ir CfiriB ON THESE PAGE* I News of Whsi. People Have 1(1 SELL RENT' or WANT TO BUY Order your Ad on toe 4 Hey. Low Cost Plan . Cancel Wbfn VltlUiift Ar* Frftahiy dtooralad. II lieuaraied badrooti fftfllUtlta - Children Hi'hool near -■ AI tow a« aov unnirnlened SLATER'S . II N. PARKE BT Pays ,PE. 4-3544 Nlghta FE 1-5137 3 ROOMS. NE/iA OniBRAtTHOS-pltal utlllUea furnT Ft 54403 | __... .... . . 3 I yaw iy ywiri 3 hSom5T"aST5*%afh * rit • i _ ._ eralor and Siovt pg 1-0544._* WHITE LAKEPRONt 3 I S^kinWwSSwtf'' H6H*I f6ViJ clean allractlye homS X.C ,8? m"*l' rnsxjaini ■ H*f)RtK)M XWb *■ VJIud" Nidiolie, Rcaltoi' 48 Mt Clemens St ri 5‘iiii ~mu |^towil5rse rooms iltchen and bnth. Large lot. r urlvllsaes at Crescent Lake, )8 do . jo trades. FB 54334 »3ei^b fewirSRTctE FifRNisHKrR6U«i“h UumitMi furnlihed t _Bab^^ ROOk R RrJeten :' KSi m ■ ;' oupaiicy. OR............... For Rent Rooms kl ell^loM"; oIRTUEman Knolhi. fT 4-8035 ‘_________ BY^G#faCR^34^ACRM^5 ROOMS borhood* PpRoi»S Mlivtob. ""after UOLQREff.^jl5”REitllt)RN WtfK aeJrooufi. to»5 town F* I'*11* / TWENTY THE POXTIAC PRfeSS> SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1961 . For Salt Homes 49 CUTS 3 BEDROOM, BY OWNER. 4 years old. carpeted, storms end screens. Kxaeaint for «Mi HOST SELL DOE TO ILLNESS, 3 PirtriWl ranch, all brick. 3 year, old Phone OR *044t. after rVondaya through Friday. *" I ROOM TERRACE. drOLL SASE-ment* gat beat, water eoftener. $5,400, small down payment. tit- ALL BRICK r'v^S&irr . w B-.I CLARKSTON 3-BBDROOM BRICKj For Sale Houses 49 3-BKDROOM. IJTOtO-ROOM. DIN-jna rm., kitchen and Bath. Full basement. Extra 100x200 lot go*» with It. Plenty of ebade. MY nm.__________________ BIRMINGHAM 3-hedroom rancli- well lend-scaped to foot froht. Built-me. MATURE 3%£ SHADE TREES MODERN r OR 3-1331_____ BEDROOM HOME, ping center. $100 down. FB 2-201*. NEAR WASHINGTON JR, HlOH-i 3 bedrooms. * bath*, paneled Mcreat°tlanor, Royeh . U C-54CC. £ot)‘ lovhry' west SUB BAN LOCATION. LAKE FR--_ LEOES. Trade, or (4,500 down will handle. CALL NOW! LIST WITH Humphries Ft 2-9236 W-jgl N. Telegraph Open Eves. 3 BEDROOM HOME IN CLARK-J - n school District — very cle*" 1 attractive - (3.500 cash For Sale House's * 49)1 TIZZY By Kate Osann ill For Sale Houses^Jl -W HAYDEN: WILLIAMS LAKE. 3 shady land- J^anTwcir'^ontlSW room ranch home., Bree(eway. This attached garage Is finished, decorated wrtthjtate of^c^bo^rde. (1*000 *down plus FHA mortgage _ ycp*CJk-e,A>-A3>0,VM/CA^vA Cl HOMES . SHELL OR FINISHED YOUR LOT OR OURS ___ 8 eR**FE 5^2003 __ SMALL,HOUSE ON STIRLING ST., I BEDROOM HOME ( For Sale Houses 49 . FE 6-3834 . tri-level starter ! " Model Open Dally 10 -1 p.m. j No money down, on your lot, your plane or ours.- Ranch or! • NM Commerce Rd. Call 303-0001 j O, Flattley Bldr. Eve. EM 3-04|2 plastered walls. Attached 0 ear Don McDonald LICBNjjBD BUILDER RED BARN privileges. Terms. (33.000.' 3-bedroom, lji fireplace. 3t irick. tiM t NOTHING DOWN_______ BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD Waterford - Sharp 3 bedroom ranch, - carport - gas heat [ privileges - Williams , Price $13,M0. 1340 coets. Call I---- t 3-33(1, representing Maceday - Price $12,350, ap- bbssrwsr' large utility.' Hot The House of Ease 3 Bod rooms — Pace Brick Oa* Beat — Free Carpeting Attached Oarage The Oxford Squire 3 Bedroom Tri-Level-Face Brick — Oas Heat Select Oak Floors i Heat — Blr Large Walk-In Just West of 11-34 behind Alban's Co Mtwsn Lake Orloi OPEN 11 a.m. to SPOTLITB BLDG, CO. 3-BEDROOM • __ sir heat. Oak floors. large con-lot. Near laka. $14,000 with ten JOHN J. VERMETT WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT OR OURS YOUR PLAN OR OURS , Have 3 bedroom, ltb hath, full basement model to show? Don McDonald . A New Distinctive Community PINE LAKE ESTATES Luxurious Suburban Living for Those -Who Desire The Finest.. Paved WlnSlng Streets «00B*FtUtlof BEACH** nd Park Aren Developed i Oxford, n. Dally or OA MMft , FOR SALE O.S. GOVERNMENT PROPERTIES THE VETERANS ADMINISTRATION ARE OFFEIUNO NEED OF BETTER HOU8-nia HOMES WHICH ARE IN “LIKE NEW” CONDITION — These properties ere offered at substantial 8AVINOS TO YOU — YOU NEED NO DOWN PAYMENT — You can purchase these homes on a long term contract with low monthly navmente and low interest rates — 3 and 3 bedrooms — Large lots — ldeal locs-uons — YOU DO NOT SBSr%8tfe£3« ACER by the GOVERN KENT for this area, call FE 3-7103 and one of their representatives will snow tbesa properties to you. Ray O’Neil. Realty 3 8. Telegraph Rd.^Open M p.i ForSaleHouses J Bbargain brick MVlWwr QPPT^PDC t out, drapes, nice recreation room. . ,, Ready and Waiting! r— . \urrui iig i MODEL HOME - w»«L MS. «8RI •BE lac on ____PUPP ... ram (1: Including lot. See our model < Snowapple Drive In Clarkston. R. MAOSTROM. REALTOR fife®*5* Rom. (M^, After 4 n.tn. FE 4-7005 NORTH END „ . 3 BEDROOMS - ALL ON 1 FLOOR - '3-CAR OA- nK°\ut DO^N D /TAR° FOR COLORED - ---SALE rat WILL HANDYMAN’S . SPECIAL It ACRES WITH SCHOOU-HOU8E EASY TO CONVERT^ TO SMALL HOME - SMALL DOWN PAYMENT. »* WRIGHT, Oakland Av«. Open 'U1 0: . FE 5-9441 SUBURBAN WEST (300 DOWN — FHA TERMS Attractive i 3 bedroom hom plus expansion attic for adi tlonal bedrooms. Carpeted ltvti and dlnlhf rooms. Screened front porch. 3 lots. PRIVILBOB8 ON SYLVAN LAKE. 49 Gls—ZERO DOWN LOTUS LAigc PRIVILEGES 0 room. 3 bedrooms, ampli m •I SUBURBAN ,«wr« -d. and hath near schools. and, era market. Best of OR (5,450. INK THIS. SCHUETT FE 8-0458 1034 W Huron near.Telegraph OPEN 0 TO 0 SUNDAY 1-0 MILL OR TRADE on M33 near Lewiston, 5 sores. Fully soulpsd restaurant. Cabins A steal at (0,000, or trade for BY OWNER room Ranch. Large 1 - — .-rage. ... „. lot - OET YOUR START HERE, ■ HUNTOON LAKE *• ;; brick ranch 1, (0 FT. FRONTAGE on Huntoot Lake, featuring 3 bedrooms 1 living room with Tenesaet .1 ledgerock fireplace, eeramle tile i bath, vestibule wjth entrance closet, excellent kitchen, self-1 storing aluminum storms and screens, 3 car .attached plastered garage..* PRICED FOR 4UICK SALE - (30,(00. SMITH WIDEMAN doofpatlof and lovely8 landscaped yard aU fenced. Handy to both parochial, and public schools. Priced well below marbet at 010.-500. FHA terms. L A. TAYLOR. Realtor REAL ESTATE AND. INSURANCE 1733 HIGHLAND ROAD iM50> illy 0-0 Sunday 14-5 | OPEN Sunday ! " I inmediate_Occupanc^ 12 :30 to 6:00 P.M. - - Very Gene rolls Terms On this neat 3-berfroom home with garage and large garden apses near Dodge State Park. Full price 01,050. In Keego Neat 0-room house on Prldham. Only 07.300. $500 down.-* '1 Also modern-to-the-mlnute, roomy Ilkete'*Htii»M 49 * 3 BEDROOMS 5 CHERQKJEE HILLS •; 2 FULL BATHS - M THIS NEW HOM* IS LOCATTOBf ah' exclusive west side neighborhood. 0 minutes from downtown. ftaliurtSfnmMdatm riding. 3 bedrooms. 3 full baths, full bass-ment with rsoroatiOh room, gas hot water boat, select ook floors. FHA approved. 01,7000 FHA TERMS Orchard Lake I"" Lakeland and I STOUTS L Best Buys Today ■j LAKEFRONT' INCOME -Deslf ! ' vWager near * Pontiac Large J room, 3 story horns, plus ( rooo [. and bath modern rental unit | bath house. Lovely 105x350 lend ) 118,500 with reesonahle* terms.1 PONTIAC WATKINS — Custom bedroom home, with 11x30 llvtn ■ —*••» fireplace, • 14X13 bltel loads of cupboorda. GI SPECIAL (10* DOWN — IMMEDIATE FOSS. VACANT. #-room modern I i home. 3 bedrooms, 3-ptec dining room, open front oak floors, plastered wal l bath. LICENSED BUILDER « $29.00 L, ' CAN MOVE YOU IN YOU CANT AFFORD TO RENT .WHEN YOU CAN BUY IN THE CITY OF PONTIAC $55 A MONTH Excluding Taxee and lnauranca 3 Large Bedrooms All Carpeting Included MANY OTHER DELUXE I FEATURES I CHOICE LOCATION! IN ALL PARTS OF NORTH PONTIAC CITY * MODEL AT w 108 N. East Blvd.i Ssb£ '*Sg* t^ow*' you*CVh*« lovely i priced at (15,750. Terms Inum riding, .spark! plastered walla. 1 gat heat. Claim as ,* throughout. 110,100, joslYjv AREA 0 room bath lit on one Door. 1 sited bedrooms, bright , kitchen, enclosed porch.- Pul i .FUr^te fi ousts 49 "^LGOMHELD \AKE PRIVILEGES mser 3 BEDROOM HOMES< Facebrick {Front Paym’ts Less {fhan Rent $10 DOV\^\ ■TARTS DEAD J t lio Mortgage Costs/ °^isr»oTilr .LIFESAVING - 'Fall-out Shelters (OPTIONAL! No Down Payment 714 CORWIN (1 block north of Montcalm} (block east of Oakland) _ [BATEMAN REALTY MULTIPLE LISTXNO SERVICE OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. 901 Argyle _ . ' PRICE REDUCED: Owner has 3 bouses and moat ttlL Im-medlate poaiattlOB r ‘ William .Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 J70 W Huroo Opvn t to » . Full buaem«nt i | nmI m » m • I yew» c OPEN HOUSE 3-5 P.M. EXCLUSIVE LAKE ANOELU8. 3433 PRIVATE DRIVE Rriek.Bt-Levet — 3 ysort old -center hall arrangement. Living room with fireplace — dining room-10x11 ultramodern kitchen - four bedrooms - 3‘« bathe’ - family room with flre-place — summer kitchen On tale level — Hi-Fi Intercom aye-tern — carpsting and drapes — Many txtras—Two-car attached garags — Large lot - Priced at: (M.000.00. DIRECTIONS to Open House: Walton Blvd. to fronton. Iron-ion to Anders. Right on An- Laks Oolf Course •' garage. • leiisCsped-corner lot] 1 one you muet eee todaj. ---' (1.350 down plue closing emit. Orchard Lake Road to Berwick to Arayle, Your noet. Meynerd: Holmes. OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 5 P.M, , 2703 Colrain DONELdON PARK 4 bedroom brick. Newly decorated and new carpeting. Nicer than you eould hope to find and py>««* to »fl1: Voorhels to Colrain Clarksjon *,i?e°; from shopping :hl> 1-bedroom lot. good garage, hon throughout, carpeting place, handy kitchen panelled basement thi gests a party ^ A hoi •TO SETTLE AN «W 4 BEDROOMS — Only on thla one. near Oakland floor needs 1 Block N of pike on Boat Blvd Open Daily, Sun. 12 - 9 Model Phone FE 5-3676 S.B.S. BUILOINO — \\. Huron Near^Llospital Sunday 2 to 5 P.M. .E!},pJ#ncS2fM ent. Individual baths and OPEN M. S *drSve*Vari OPEN SAT. 4-7 SUN 1-7 Jayno Heights See Page 18 OPEN HOUSE | Ad and Details. 2-5PM OFFICE OPEN 1#T' SUNDAY 1-5 P.M. fc* 4-BEDROOM BRICK THK PRICELESS LOOK^ . **: but ft budget price tftft. Fin«M V1” j of etty W»*t ftWe locfttlont. »«• n m......I iUy n Oftf Meet. Streetc . Water c ..ocftted In th jloomfleld H School District “ hool Bun iportatlon ^provided DISTINCTIVE ARCHITECTURAL 'ulomals . , . Tri-Quad Ran OPEN SATURDAY SUNDAY^, 1 11 A.M. to 7 P.M. CHOOSE A HOME IN’ BEAUTIFUL '"FOX BAY" I • | IMAGINE: ! YEAR AROUND RECREATION IN YOURijrRONT YARD. ONE OF NATURE’!! 1 I MOST ATTRACTIVE SET-TINOS IN WHICH TO I BUILD THE "HOME OF YOUR CHOICE." BEAUTIFUL LAKE AND RIVER-RIDE AVAILABLE. YOUR PLANS OR OURS. -5 MODEES^" IOpen for Your Inspection FEATURING: Elizabeth Lake Estates 368 S. Winding St. Lake prlvtlegee at beautiful bepch, 3 bedroom bungalow, with full basement, gas heat and hot water, and featuring aluminum elding, aelf storing aluminum etormi And screens, awnings, carpeting, nice yard, paved street. Offered et^lll.SOO, appr°xlmetsl^ ^ 4«M qualified buyer. To lqepect. drive west oa Elizabeth Lake Rd. to S. Winding St. (1 mile west of Telegraph Rd.), turn left to "Opon. “Bud" Nicholie, Realtor FE4*6-UHH Coim™ 4-4773 NEAR DOWNTOWN basement, oil PRICE ONLY ($. merclal ‘lot, ($0$ down. Rolfe H. Smith. Realtor 344 S. Telegraph FE 3-1S43___________ MS 8 6431 'BUD' 11760 DOWN - Ntwt; with full bftjftmtnt,^ of-t6wn Owner Must now) immcdlftte occupftncy. ftiuehftd 3-car ffttftft®/ fenced lot. nftftr aobooli. »w ftnd aubmlt offftr. rl OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 3-5 DORRIS A SON. REALTORS 11 2534 Dixie Hwy.___OB «-033< HOYT Warren Stout.' Realtor n N. Saginaw St. Ph. FE M145 Open Eves. Till I p.m- TRIPP OPEN .Sunday 3 to 5 " 127 Illinois Avenue lOnly $10,990 13 WEST" - full baaelenl Tek BWrs. iole Hills. xtre large 17-foot room, a lad a family nm., . forced air oil boot, (-car garage. aluminum siding and many other fine features. I FE (-4(4$ JOHN K. IRWIN! and Sons - realtors i 313 West Huron - Since 1(11 Phone rE 5 (444__! """multiple LISTING SERVICE i ARRO SAVE TIME AND MONEY WE HAVE APPROXIMATE LY 400 PHOTOGRAPHS OF I HOMES IN ALL PRICE 1 RANGES AND AREAS -CALL AND HAVE ONE OP OUR REPRESENTATIVES VISIT YOU. WE ALSO TltA^E ^(OliiiSlJTY^ ^ ^ ’MCMODI: IIAKGLl 63 W. HURON VE 5-8183___ “OPEN St\t).’Vi 1 ' lig Family Special Five bedroom family home with-In wftlklng. distance to 8t» Mich* FI'. 5-1201 After O pm. FR.4-8773 SOBURBANLIVINO At IT’S BEST In this gi Jd looking home. A beeutlful ICO a 300 wooded ot. Choice loeetlon. Large ^carpeted Dvina room, ex nig bed- ifis end oik Clll g TELEGRAPH ■ FE 2 (540 ■LE LISTING SERVICE Clove In ip. gaa h« WM T. ITOM * REAGAN j RKAL ESTATE 441 Auburn Ave UL’3- OPEN COMPLETELY FURNISHED - CmT, I N'DAY 2 $24,900 Induding Irnprpved-Lot and sold bv the HOWARD T. KEATING i Building Company Bunding comp*"/ Fine Lake Estates Is Located on Weit Loatf Like , Road, 'a mH* east of Or- • chard Lake Rood. Cpnven- MODI'-LS UIM'N DAILY . * Noon to 7:M) F.M. Closed Tliuradays Notin to‘5:30 Satiij P.M. pLOOMFIELD^ HI^xecutfvt-t t|ful?y -l.-ughout? living room nreplace, kjtchen fi ■Mini ,n i MACEDAV^^, IfrafTftS handle It. Sunday r onlj) «.M e West Side Brick 4 bedrooms with walk-ln closets carpeting and drapes. |.lk*-n*« carpeting and drapes In Uvlni room, dining room, nnd spactoui richly paneled library. Dtshwesh tic-lent*1 kitcSen*rBreakfa»* room Florida room, plus lowrr levs south Poff *Huroi* at 'SenVssrt^i welt on Illinois. FE ( 01H OPEN Sunday 3 ttt 5 108 Ottawa Drive ihrofiAout. Mm garage. Own) rn aoutn off Hu Leslie U. Tripp. Realtor 75 West Huron', Street r FE 5-11(1 _r__ OPEN SUNDAY 2-6 P.M. *5726 Hummmghird 'Lane landscaped corner lot. Cerpeling, ^*..pi,in.,^:.r.b.t.v:r hood. 4lli Baybrook Drive. North Watkins Lake orao, Frleed to sell et J16.IOO. 41.300 down. Call OR u,s,rx GREEN LAKE FRONT sandy beach. This 1-1------ brick home Is priced tor quick tale.' Owner moving io Florida. Largo living room with new well-to-wall carpeting, lovely fireplace, bandy kitchen with penty of cupboards,- ooramlc til* bath, hat . glassed-in enclosed shower, erirst I r*gP*,fc*1f\or'appointment RETIREMENT SPECIAL Eatira 1» located tor°bue Md eSrtrc e"*-celleM kitchen, comfortable living room, full both, gas heat, completely mauloteil, 1-car garaga, gaved elreai and drive. Ony (*,- IMMEDIATE FOSgEMION^- Old- room* with* brick’ flr*pl*c* * I handle or you ■ lln your preaenl home or land contract as down payment. LET’S TRADE .^l HUB BAN LIVING . , 6rion New 3 btdfpogi brick riftlfo^b*iwm. plu» *elMiiic coni will hftndlt. CALL HOW. $12.950... Is a ridiculous low price for - this 4 bedroom brtek ranch. IS baths, water softener and carport aro fust a few features to m cotton. Cloto to Sylvan Shop* Gls NO DOWN PAYMENT 6 room bungftiow clout to new Northern High Nice y»r v Honvc c-ukroKhe HILLS Now for Sale! ■ ARRO REALTY!" 5143 -C.ISS-! Iiznliftli Roiul # OPEN.........“ ' .,Suiiday 1-5 HORSE LOVERS UNDERWOOD (REAL ESTATE IR 3-13(5 t tW MX* lor* tar'iKo''"!)*' Newingham OPEN different I V > I brand-new weraem orm^ 1 LAKE FRONT - }1V,U S I, ESTATE it./FE 5-7(38 frontlg*0 All for c iib.uw nnd term* oftn be ranged. SUNDAY call If — FE 6-3441. LIST WITH US - We buy. 141 Open C-CIMUlllpla Lltilni Service L H. BROWN. Realtor 80S - Elisabeth Lake Road Fl>. FE 4.38(4 Of FE 3-4410 Hagstrom tally, blau- j ‘hsTfoome D^l Xti . *?/i* baths, vanuy ana mirror, alum Wardrobo type closets, ranis and oven. Attached eoorlcd lot. IOHWAV to Maybee Road, n Hummingbird Lan« and A ilfully landscaped. Completely fur-H.J»d HAOgTROll^lAEALTOR GEORGE R. IRWIN, REALTOR HI W. WALTON_FE 1-1(1 SYLVAN LAKE LAKE FRONT 919 Jame? K Blvd, OPEN Saturday,.and ‘Sunday 1 - 6 WILL TRADE FEATURING NEW BI LEVEL HOME WITH 3 ALL-TILE BATHS HI-FI AND INTERCOM^ BUILT IN, LARQE PANELED FAMILY ROOM, HOT WATER HEAT, , RUSSELI CLARK screens ln city off Baldwin I SPECIAL NOTHING DOWN: bungalow, ledge ^rock front avm-Ihade trees. *3* hedrooms, bsth.' nea*nWaterford*lUgtb.*Qnly M.Mo! OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 7 P.M. THE "Loadstone" IS A 18>FT. LONCI BRICK RAMBUNO RANCH. “LOADED" WITH OVER 60 FEATUIliS TO NAME A FEW 55 ft. femlnln* planned cabinets, Elteher^domijd radftp* hta°L plrturesquo stiadowtrol III tiling Bungal 'oll'autoa l, etc Only 67.300 ft . 3-He3M, Terms,, 3 Units, West Side Mato house 4 rooms Mid t! A T—cent and oil heat. 6. Dining room with China cabinet - Vestibul* entrance, guest closet. OOPUCATION PRICE ON tour Tot iibsoh-low DOWN PAYMENT. YOUR FREE AND CLEAR Lot COULD BE SUFFICIENT TO COVER THE DOWN PAYMENT. CUSTOM BUILDING > Visit our new effleee at 1671 West Rnron and choose WE WILL TRADE We need four present home for ear need home deportment. fete talk up a deal, DRAYTON AREA yew round peted Uirottfhout, Ilia b*lh. utility . room. attached §•* WALLED LAKE AREA condition -~ For Sale House* 49 For Sala House* ANNETT St. Michael'* District Beautiful view of usuk •haded porch. AU’~ 1 bedroom; And. Snd floor. New gs w ■ FA fu Elizabeth Lake Estates bedroom newly decoreted bungalow, Carpeted living ’ .ra^kitti^as: sf .te 5 ati'd garage. Anchor fenead Ml. 413.460. Terms. Williams Lake Frfaht , 3 Pbed0rMms!in/ul*tbasement. fireplace. 114 baths, lift room MxM. 3-ear att’d garage. Includes carpeting «md drapes. AH. gamir plumbing, ell heat. 5-way water srstsm, master bedroom 11x17, Loads of ckwet spaes. Landscaped lei, sand beach, $34,10#. Tense. ^SPEN SUNDAY 2 - 5 ■liver' 'Lake front, 6-room brick bi-level. 1 bedrooms. 1 <4 bathe, modem kitchen . with Built-In*. 3-way ftre-1 place In living room, beautt- itW fiftJSS! bar. OU heat, Alum, windows, storms and screens, Eoar att’d sarsfs. 933.000, Terms. Directions: . West from IntersecUon of Mlyer Lake Road and W. Walton Blvd to open sign, 37*1 8H- FE 8-0466 lovelv IT^H/ appliances, < hill baths, d BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP , BRICE RANCH - WILL TRADE bedroom boms with a family roorn^ kltcb- »n screened palto. air-conditioned. water softener, etc. Situated on a 13* * IW inner parcel, landTcapcdto W#rt*rt My” U,V,,U,*U *** ton W. Huron . FE 4-6*31 Open Ei m SCHRAM OPEN Sunday 2 to 5 377 E. Beverly tbedroom ranch with 13*10 living room, tall kttehah. with large utility iwosa. all Mai, 114-ear garage. On a 40*133' .lot lanced fn rear. Priced at $11,186 on FHA terms. >100# wUi move you to. DlMCnON*: Perry to JoelyA, left to Bavoriy. left 1V4 blocks to >71. OPEN Sunday 2 to 5 5% Third Street L*rgo living. room wllh seperets dining room. 4 bedrooms. Itt btths, 10 closets, lull basement with oU HA bent, newly pointed outside. nicely lendseaped iris nnmc- left to O'NEIL MULTIPLE L48TINO SERVICE CANAL FRONT WITH «N- Trance in two « e«A408LTN. COR. MaJjSf! hardwood Boors, full base- wttssnfz tss Including closing coots. MWN** ft. living room, eepareto lining room. Convenient kitchen. 3 bedrooms, toft. “p&e?*faWr '^#.»°t^ 360 down. Mt a^ month to- G;I.'s No Money * Down LARGE FAMILY WEST SUBURBAN HOME 4-Bed-rooai. pleasant living room, kitchen with hug* dining even, Full besement, finished me. mom. Breeaewey wllh natural burning fireplace Attached l'i-car garage on llovely lots. Priced at 413.400. Aboui 4000 Closing ceete and *36 tor mo. Including taxes and taaur- APPROXIMATBLY MOO CLOBtNO . COOTS DOWf* Itvin^room. mo rage and ano building. Full pi CHARMJNO 1*® BUNOALOW. Beautiful In* fli kliohei "ohm Oak floor JOG . West sub within 6 1*11*1 - K^3Swnto^>Ue«Tg closing CMU°*dpwn, 1 RAY O'NEIL, Realtor Offle* Open 8uc3* p m, n 3-1103 OR HULI Val-U-Way GIs—$50 Wit’ll full MNhi*hiiWb*i¥ *".;rv Race. Vhlnlng oak noora, palntfct wall* and very nlc* aHchan. ll# par every thlnf Parent* Needed RUn (down oridiansd home toed* lergaln. b a nice lot *er m th”' NlllUl * 111 Home and Acre ^ ■R: J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR' Ff 4-363 346 OAKLAND AVB. OPEN I- v. Jp' ■ ' " "OPEN Sunday 2 to 5 .57) E. Mansfield r\mn,w*J5« irt.kr^tomA,s8 ,760 win handle. DIREC-: Perry to Jotlyn, left sfield, turn-rtghtH block 221 CHIPPEWA htorooSTLSn^M. by mm (1 Mook north of Mootoolm b unu totoo. u .i -I pjroiwiy.' . ________ 'MHjfpw.'Ta 'lihi. iSty7 Mlif *9*4 eleio, Mil’ ness property ee down, or 3-4I061. $11,950 IPflmgtf room apt. on first floor, 4 i ' apt- on sscond. l room Uttomotto’^"(NMommL mmSSSmi becue. Automatic gat heat. lot. Oarage. This west eld* home Is In excellent condition. Near hue line. Paved awNt. ImiOe-dlate possession. 43400 down, 476 Dorothy-Snyder Lavender For Srie LrIw Property 81 0x300 LAKK LOT. WAUMEOAH near Clarkston. Lot No, 14. $3>00. t LOT, 140x133, LAKB PRIVILBOBS, Iota Of trees. Call 310-0640. > loth. Mo L^. PRiviLiaiw. jg________________ tCMB HOME SITE. ilrable loer”-- foundation Prtcsd at ^13M. *Mr Coffin! . block. Lotos Lek* priv-OW-MHOg after 4 to, , JOMB 81TB. MOST DE-slrablo location with — c6LL*6I sW: a rat neeas tuition money .and must st 11 - |1.*00 each. ■ 14' ACRE LOTS In highly restricted lake privileged Clarkston Let u* show you gome si tee available. HI-HILL VILLAGE Choice Building Sites. Betoto elied hilltop parceU o paved road* with eseeuent dreli •g*. Low •• 41.700- with im di LADD'S INC 3*06 Lapeer,Rd. (Perry) M34 PBi-OMl Os' OR 3-1331 ~ «7perry -acres . * For SrIb Acreage SACRES Weet of Pontlec, 0-room renebei Pull beeemrat, recreation room built-in oven and ranee, Addi Uonal eerie U wanted. 033.00 Clarence C. Ridgeway BROKER PE 0-7001 300 W. Walton Blvd $800 an Acre 10 aorta adjoins Btstojaad. Com A TWIN PINB MILK ROUTE ....Beer-Storp Just OUteldt Pontlso on State fetAs1* chase bUtldM*, plenty Of perking "dewier Real Estate Ari '■"liTfl INO OF HOME OFFW*. V FOR DETAILS. PONT PRESS. BOX 34. poii ' eonier*tot. *2ll for"Jl3?W0, tofmi. . owner retiring' * EAST HOWARD ST. — 74 A, brick eehool building, baeemeut, get ------MS ir further detolls B. c. Hlltor, |m Betoto. ' lodge, union ^ OTbM —3*0. 3040 Ml , ' Beet' Store Located In good neighborhood on main highway, aaodlent building and equipment, gas heat, plentf 3 parking «pftc«, l«»it or buy the building. .. Brewer Real Estate i JOSEPH F. RBISK SALES MOR. Sw s-sist BraeiWI 04WI3 ■»pp' *pa»"si 1-1073. %,on"£ DIXIE CREAM DONUT SHOP, BT ownar. lew down payment. »**•• ' Oood butlnese lor nasbend and wife. Excellent ^c^oel trad* - FOR COLORED n and grlU In Del 13,000 down. NIC - STATEWKE location, OLlv* I---- . OOOri DRUG STORE-SOUTHERN Mlehlgan- ....- *■—'— HARDWARE ■ Thumb area eeneldered. P.O. - SMALL TOWtC living quarters, good terms, come ^trade INJ30M1 Pontiac Press box ss._■ Rbo:rAnrWA8W6^BTI5IifS3Ji for eal*. PE *-443*. __ STATIONS FOR LEASE OOOD POTENTIAL, Pleas* cell be-1«*»" a sjn end q p m. MS-3344 13-34*7, PURE W block from base Lake. Operates profitably on a 13 month baste. Bel**- price Include! all equipment and furnishings. All good In quality and condition. This Is an established opersting business. Prise gie.760. About $7,!B0 down will handle. A sold midi for a family. Mown by speeial appointment. BATEMAN REALTY FE 4-052$ FE 8-7161 i PH OPBI ....ORbibs ____ rhstaurant in the lake area. Baoellent location with op-nortunity to bUy property too. Oply $6,000 dn. MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION 1673 TELEGRAPH RD FE 41663 ____Open 'in ■ t Eves. varie¥y sf5SE7inx6if. lifbfr VW. Evc'jllA talM? *f’ _ T\VESTItiATE THE OPPORTUNITIES CARNIVAL" ^ By Dick Tamer ‘Another reason I can't run this house like you run your ottice is that I can’t fire certain people!’’ Money to Loan . 61 TEACfUE FINANCE CO. 202 S'. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER!. ROMEO ““•a# HOUSEHOLD0 GOODS ?L V7TR1BNDLT SERVICE'' Credit Advisors 61A BUDGET YOUR DEBTS OONSL LIDATB BILLS—NO LOANS ' Por Your Best Bet to Oot Out ..of Delft, Se* Finaneial Advisers, Inc. 314 S. SAOINAW FB 3-7043 Mortgage Loan* 62 U?6, IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 JOHNSON 13 YBARa OF SBaVICB Open Sunday 2-5 LAKE ORION-OXFORD WESTERN At) P. O. Bos II Ft. weyn r to Opportunity.' rO mi ppi. y bo. Vbss & Buckner, Inc. 36* Notional Bldg. F» M73» a@ggss53^S -OrJym. Be noroftlgallo Swap* 63 3-BEDROOM h6ME «WAP FOR Jipe®”4JEEJ^L—- ---=- TbSdroom farm h treller, car^or land con 13X1 P1CTURI WINDOW, OO-CAHT, TW1N WE8T bend~S ports, will trade for pick-up or OWMd^ basement, barn ^an<^ silo lawnVll mllsj^to PontUe. Excel- l gags. C. A. WEBSTER. Realtor J OA *-3611 -------- ftcer St. Sell location ■ ■ in Oakland County . * licit 80 Acres^... Cape Cod home - beautiful orattona are lovely through. living room, carpeted, r*‘— place.. Huge family n room*. 11^baths. Landscaped *«t era* • room suest borne. 3«*6t bant. Clay loam roll, a small pond. CALL FOR SHOWING QF THU WONDERFUL GENTLEMAN'S FARM I 75 Acres i irons ” Detroit! sm.eoo groea j»>ost -- mostly beer take-out. Buy business only for 11.606 dn plus stock. See . ft in operation today I Send for Ml EE ''Michigan Busl- • PARTRIDGE AND ASSOC , R8ALT0R8 BUSINESSES I'hltUOUT MICH. 1006 W. HURON FE 4-3641 Sal* Land Contracts M BALANCE OWlNO Rlk -JJ to you 47,300 Ask ;lor Mr. Kampstp. KAMPBEN REALTY W. Huron PE 44*31 Open Evenings______ loNTKraili To J»dV t0K r EM' 3 40SS ________ Money to Loan 61 ~ j LgNNOX OIL BURNER .MOTOR, stack controls and 346-gallon j tank. Trade for what bava you or BOTiSN*R4AHdt ITVl* i-«TO rC PANGUS. Realtor ORTONV1LLB B South Biros'’ ' NEW RQUSf1_____ Ml .. _____ .,frige* davenport. 36 Fall*rove oTiTTiuQ-tflliutW nilUUch. iii -374 jtalfon tonka, awap or tsll. RABBIT* AND PENS. TtlADi bk OPEN SUNDAY 4-( law. wul mova you laeoratod. iirtii rea ou TBMfmn DIRECTIONS: WUliams Lake Rd. to 3466 Lotto Drive, WATER-FORD REALTY. OR 3-4434. HIITER — It s R. of It laijt kit. FOUR BEDROOMS srea!*?ull-Isat with butit-ln fnreplaess, ol SECIIND STREET Urgo fltchen, fuff t heat, brlck frum, aa Mon, 43.000 down. SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES -(■room horns, 3 bedrooms on ons floor, plastered walla, baseman! :!£ ■ah4iysoVS,7‘r'1' ,M1‘ ftur,iSu,ppr&.?iLr,js h*4h Lake Road. •...... EAST SIDE s«,?“imtfidCtr; d^‘ro^^s^,,M,'‘',w, PONTIAC REALTY " Baldwin FB 4-4376 MODEL OPEN dJuly and SUN. |.t F M. IN THE HEART of White Lake Township. 3 bedroom*, oarport, hardwood floors ahd forced air rurngee Prices range from It,. 460 to 114.004. Model shown is tfl,. 360, complete Ineiuding storms LAnsK*m^^atfi *1 N. Telegraph Opso Eves. ifo_ACRE8, H5n;Y~T0WSii^ Only > miles each way to US-33 and new interstate 71 Highways. Oood substantial heuaa properly ■ Ideal for development. A w •Teal at ($4* per •«« ae low aa $4,444 will handle BAtEMAN REALTY FE 4-0528 FE 8-7)61 ~ *. teleoraph OPEN--| Sale Business Property 57 140 FT. PRONTAOE Onruer BttrcFt looitid In W fold T-*“* Sf:arl «t(h $m Uno off Dlsl*. x,r I iioui t. FI 6*ayto kAkb’pdh- aoned Indual rial, of .shop or ator-e feet of offle* tnd for expansion saaonably priced. 4-6334, days. OR DIXIE HIWAY—DRAYTON 60S340 lot Mil to Pr ’ “ esnler of rapidly det ?.nr.......... WEST SIDE CORNER . , In fast growing hospital area. Lot too x 140, 3 brick stores, has. and 3 story brick snt Has 10 3-rm. and bath furnished apt*. Has potential 13 her rent net ,'*aShb^t <^&c * riaLtors a* *. Huron St. FS i-otse Open iv»nlu$a and >unday 1-4 L*a« But. PrOfLjiTA ■HOP. FURNISHED ypr rent FE 4-3434 66UM|hdiAL BbiLHlko! 41x11. Telegraph Rd. location^ ga*^heat. for* ftirnSur*^ ^ appliance, retail Brewer Real Estate JOSEPH P. REISS, BALES MOR FB Mill ■ BvesVFE 4-0633 Business Opportunities 59 AUTO SALVAOB YARD DOINO good buaweas. Stork' of oyer 400 Sara on mein highway nea'r l'Tllil BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICE* IN Ponllao -- Drayton Plalne — Ulle* Wailed I,k.. Birmingham, Flymouth 64 W. Lawranee »L Fiji 4-1434 Clottilny 64 t wool sunr*. womens sibe h. Two three-quarter ooate. FE SCY's chaHMaL Pray w66l top »— A little out of the way but a ' OPeRt ITdN'.-gAT. J- r- - 14 ^oP%^te,erTl mile ;.'ofl*Auburn Ha?|hta°on'Auburn. frigerator $46 31" TV 4to t •pact hector 41*. A 1J R‘“ 40 W. Howard. PE 3-4466. Appliance Bargains — Repossessed — t O* Auto. waehoVa — ’*# Model 1 Nerg* flea Ranee — ’*1 Mode 1 OB Comb. Waoh-Dryer *M Model i Morgo Auto. WMhar - ’M Model Tf.S* KnTn little *M I3.M ooodyear service store Sal* Household Goods 65 FREEZER^—$148 OAS water HEA-n^ar.—- B ------ washer. *46^efrt*erator, ■,nv. Office desk. P* 4-«343. ‘c5erT^ ,on MMUihTY AUCTION. OA 4-3681. MAPLE TWIN BEDS. BED COM-oleU. Reautyreet, PB 4-3334- REFRIOERATOR, ■ reataurant alee., ------ . 6Ee APARTMENT ELECTRIC stove 636; davenport and chair , ais- philcas stove 436: chrome bird cage and stand 46: refrigerators, *1* and up: 6 Piece wood dinette *16: apartment gee and electric etove* $10 upj^wal- . FiSV upabl4 size bed spring* $3.66; odd buK fete *4: odd dressers end bed-” RUMMAGE SALE FRIDAY 7 TO REBUILT VACUUMS, tll.it 6Y — — —ron, Barnes A Hargraves )V®4. ALL EINDS ' m Mt. Clemens O MACHINES, WH choose from. Price; Start Singer S?.rtnr,CuA!:MAifia^..MSi?I Hatoherv Rd. OR 4-1161. 5 LB. BOX BED.. QlJl RA._ lg SHADES OF PLASTER COLOR * SHADES OP MORTAR COLOR Concrete curing agent*, floor fflBcrdco^7» n Orchard Lnito AV*- FE 3-7101 SIEGLER OAS — OIL HOME HEATERS paye for ltaolf upholstered, MI 4-6438. 8TEC1A1 **13 RUO8. S34.S0. MC- bed and apringa. *4: town taowsr, 64; 3 vlfitas. 4*GjdM »*. 625 WhUtiroort, FR 5-2984-_____ — USED REFRIGERATORS — RecondlUonraj—lysMpWrrranty FRETTERS appuancte MIRACLE MILE CENTER DEVERE ROTARY POWER LAWN nUO-THMRM GRAVITY te ogi *—w«A Mosfer nnd eontrol*- EVERYTHINO POR THAT FIRE phrne. Brlek-dampera-flro tnrita Boice Builder BuppD___FE 4-6164 Cor. table, HeywooS Wakefield. champaign ...... Refrigerator, • • ■ • ■ • ■ • ■: ■••• Table buffet And 4 ehalra 3-Pc. sectional, town rabbet cushions ........... THDMAS ECONOMY 3*1 Sftfnu?- _____ n M1>? UsSd Social, gai water heator, 116. USED phllco refrigerator. *34. . RECONDITIONED Prlgidalr* vraab- Crump Electric, Inc. 316ft Auburn Rd. ». ,PE_MgH TRAD* OAfl^llAWO* JWjggfc Tm$'\ ~USED APPLIANCE BARGAINS Prlgidalr* Refrigerator 43JJ °K ta*hnuI,*Refrlgerator 46t ! Thor Printer Waener .... #«-• Kenmore Wringer Washer . *».* OS Auto. Waaher ......|J| Easy Oaa Dryer *4» •- Douglas Elec. Dryer ■..... *»»* l ewk. *Oueran-OCM3DYEAR MRV^e'JSoRE 36 g. Can _________FE Min USED ELECTRK: DRYER. HAM* VALUE WISE? Rebuilt Waaher Ouerapteed Delivered Refrigerator* Renewed, Ouaranteed aweegera ......... Motorola Radio# OE Dryers, new ,. 7 months ‘fancy' designs ___j—. JFull* priet -Trr„T............ BBAUT1FUL CHXRRY CABINET. 4 m?^utlr*'gwSfe5.....-awroa fo, - tsks over payment* of 45 per «. mlh. Universal Company. FE Etna. ~psrch rmvmiwc: fi I lamps, ping pong Uhl*. ■a and bos spring, ehalra, seord player. Ml Argyl* Birmingham housbkbepino shop or PonUa Huron St. IK 4iW WRINGER WASHER WITH PUMr! good condition. Peer ApP>‘»n«' >161 Commerce Rd.. EM 3-4114. WYMAN'S BETTER BUYS sMtts&Sff: .S3 W^rooT^* : . . . mg Sifi^l^OOwilTiNO TO.' 743 Dixie Drayton Plains OR 3-6734 __ Qpao 6 till 4:36 Moo. tUl 6:36 Berry Garage Door Factory Seconds Available at alaeabl# discount FB 3-03091* rm 40 Tl*>* n9kt ksbs inbw) comTOcte Tnlo uPl*nfiapl#.,'t Iron, ifond. Also Trundle and Triple ""pEARSON'S FURNITURE 43 ORCHARD LAKE AYE. oisiTtSo.' dAt sfoviTTiSTElec- ‘-lo stove. 436. washtr, 414, re-rlgsrator 440, 31 TV. oil *P»ea DINTNO ROOM ' TABLE AND. 4 Store WMT' light ftalril. Table isures Jlxir and will open to In length *36. FB 4-6416 after m a m. on weekday*,___________ BPn^Tan 5Wf1^iklFg~TXIp end 4 upholllered ehalra. OR 6.6146 or FE 4-1W7.______> at 6146 or will sau separately. EXPERIENCED -RSFRIOSRATOR*-AdmlraL Phils*. Frjgldaln I bv our Seme* Sxi odd ohalrs, good condition. 64* I.eBaron - _____ -—“uarni bay mb itSWKic^AHaii:....iJHOrl 1**4 and up. gwaot's fijdta.fn? Appl., 41* W. Huron. FE 4-1133. IasyspIF BRyIr wAiiMtR. .good cenilltlon. 614. OR 3-6311. r«q»S£ie Jir ~Jk W wHrY'Er~it^ both like new, 14 W7 Chicago. Call FE 4-4240. WlilRLFOOL OAS DRYER, * bm 3-4467 after g p.m. WANTED TO BtlY HOUSEHOLD m............. o buy i >r Holfy H WYMAN'S LIVING ROOM SUITE ON THIS BRAND NEW 7 PIBCI * LIVING ROOM OUTFIT Comfortable Sofa—metchlne chair 3 step tables — 1 cocktail tabli 3 matching tab]* lamps NOW 614* 36 WITH TRADE 416 DOWN—BUDOET TERMS 17 B Huron , 1* W. ,Plk< W 4^**1 FB 3-314* Antiques furnishings if Waterford, Mich- ANTIQUES—WE BUY AND SELL china antiques, glaan stamps, c o I n t books, guns, furniture, p"l »wPIo n?!“d‘Xnllqu*.r iruiina. Mtfbll - Hl-Fl, TV & Radio* »6 II INCH CONSOLE MODEL Completely Reoondltloned rHETTENa APFtiyNfE miraclel miLe r8?R For Sal* Miscellaneous 67 rjftiiltfcAll StANDARD li MTU, in for$$d ilr furnici 1 PinMd Jk«^Win™,4olL forced air “S '/ce Heat-' rxirpsH^SjdWi i pxm r^iitVL^fSA'JTER NO ilflx 30-30|Savage boil action rifle. OR For Sale Miscellaneous 67 ForSate Miscellaneous*?. NEW AHD OBlO GAB AND OO, furnace*. For he*t by" e*H3*A 4- tonk. heata 3-6 n Siitored’^trAlg^cheS^UbS? storage nice, safe, work bench, coat racks, drafting martilnet, electric AH. Dick mimeograph. muttiUth offset press, typewriters, machines, eases protec-OR 3-67*7 and 40 4-3610. ---------~ ~" R Office Su»~ „ M paint, double mSfey ” OR 3-6431. REX-O-ORAPH. LIQUID DUPLIC-ator, 464. Electric mlneomlgrtph. electric PLAT CONCRETK BLACK DIRT lor lilt Buldoting fw%A breaking. Will bu* - --- - consignment, machinery or fiulp-ment. Cone’a Rental. FE 4-4642. ATBHOOM FIXTURES. OIL AND gas furnace*. Hot-water land Steam boiler. AutomaUe W Star heater. Hardware, elect, auppllea, crock and pipe and fitting#. Lowe Brothers Paint, Super.Kemtons and Ru#tMeum,>___ HEIOHTjSUPPLT 184 Lapeer Rd. PE 44431 FB 4-4446.______________ REDWOOD TABLE. 4 CHAIRS 44$. Otbson refrigerator, excellent coo- BABY CLOTHES AND EQUIPMENT. Bridal gown. Maternity clothe*. Mane suit and other M|| 3-3773, SPECIALS 4x$ masonite ..... 41.46 Jx* fir, 018 ...... 63:66 V, In. 4x7 oak abltlbl . .... $3.36 V. in. 4x8 pre-flnlihed Mahog. 14.95 V4 In. 4x1 jire-flnlthed ash .. $7*6 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. --------erimtame. FE 8-3443 POR SALE. 834.84. Toilet*. 817.34. Pan h 833.94. ~ * ----------------- Wsst. 1 shades TWO SETS OF ENCYCLOPEDIA’S, / CASH WAY ^ANLET. ALglCNUM WINDOWS 4x1 ta'PnboMdi ^ js-m IS“ J&riSKS ^.:' I 4x1 % Plyseor* .... .. $4,73 Burmeister ’ LUMBER COMPANY 7346 Cooley Lake Rd. _ ™ W171 Open fi a m. %o a p.m. daily Sunday 10 i.». to > P.m. WALL BARE * X t/X 13. NEVER gear. Bulk# snow plow *' condition, i FORMICA. PLUMBING PAINT glass. Wiring. Open 7 days. FE , 6-4713. Montcalm Supply, lr* “ copper. 30 bath -**--nless SAVE FURNACE blower and c6n-trols Va HA. Motor#. 3 H •* i.™"* m-Ii-. Vatoianl TlriVn . week days, FE M746. OOOD USED FURNITUKE. GIH-mlacellaneoui Items. OR 4-6113. fr>R SALE RADIO AND PHONO-graph oombtaattao. JXnta* rm. table and buffet. Bathtoette, Btay-pen . and misc. toys. lee wrote, end Children’s clothing. MY >-3*M. FALL SALE AO mowers, tllleri and sweeper# at reduced price*. Bom* bj*1 cent pff to move this “°ntb. ustS wnlpmeta^ReMWUkle of- f„8,uTuI?T.^ IfT iErchiiri '—’tag. FB 3-7164. WATER HEATER, 30-OAL. Consumers approved, 6*3 40 I $33*4 and 449.34. marred, electric, oU and bottled gas ,.,.^rs. Michigan Flue------ sat orchard Lika — It, HOT RAYS YOUR #ARTV AT WALTS Baft. Walton and Perry. FE 3-3763 or. MT 3-3431.______________ __ KEY MACHINE ,A«D_ BLANKS excellent shape. FE 8-3*63. K-OUTTER ........... *3® LENT DON’T let damp fall weather atop your outdoor painting—uae Koton buster and peel reslafor palnt. WARWICK BUPPLT COMPANY 3673 Orchard Lake Rond ------- gOo EXCEPTIOl MBOiaWB: ’ Evtnr Man Hto Cftra Doctor.*» William Buchan. M.D. NOVELS!‘"%*lMl*elarippl Bubble.' Ood," Lew Wallace, Boaton 11*1 3 velum**. *7.16,_ LITERATURE: '"The Se**64*7 Across from TeLHuron . BALDWIN OROAUONIC BPWET organ, lima oak with pre-ast stops. Complete with poroMilan. Re-tamed from BayneWMualeCtinp New guarantee. Large discount. CALBI MUSIC TO. By Maetor t IMMEDIATE ______ Wiepand Music Center Phone FEderal 3-4334 RELIVE BROADWAY’S THRILL-tag momenta with complete acorn from yonr favorite smash hits. Just *7.50 par More with, completo score and lyriet. MORRIS MUSIC 8. Telegraph FE 34587 Across From Tet-Huron HINT A NEW-PIANO OP TOUR choice. Only 83 per month plua cartage/ All money eppilM If ^ GRINNELL’S, TRY BBFORI YOU RUT I 8. Saginaw ___Fg-3-7183 _________ work guaranteed 11$ H. SAOINAW — - “** imnjamn rranann. y. "“"'"J. Philadelphia. 14*0. I*. -'T7»» Roll mance of Modern invention. Archlebeld WUllsma, London. 1*14, -44.46. "Mormoniam. Its Leaders head Designs," John Hyde, New eYork. 1*67. J*. ... poors ON OTHER sublects avail-ab)f. Writfl or call: Book A-Neer, 2229 Shankkn* Walled Lake. MAr-let 4-3213. * 1 SLIDE TROMBONES. $10 AND $20. rm . fcljcCTRlC dUITAR AND AMPLI-fler. FE S4643. HAMMOND CHORD ORGAN. WAL-nut flntah, bench, to matoh, excellent condition. $444. term#. 45* down. Baleno* 614 per month. na « C*HS if0810 C9. LMM Lake pump, i full horsk Z74 S Telegraph FE b06«7 Across from Tel-Huroo i LAROE OlL TANK .1 OR »**4 lompa, Jmilor ctwlr. Oj» wall epiflt neater, |lw. MA MiW. USED SPINET PIANO WANTED. ma urn. __aa" upright* ....I1|T Klmbafi piano ..... $1*4 . uijwi l»owbiy ojf^ ^ . Oulbisnsra'8p 1IIet In maple. A r*al bargain ■ ^ ’ 3S0‘pv‘o5cr*p“n#- .a GALLAGHER’S Sale Office Equlpimnt M VICTOR ELECTRIC 3 TOTAL CASH register, *36 down.. 611 40 per mo Ua* In gtooery, hardware *r BUSINESS MACHINES 74 Auburn Av*. FE 441*1 r twknty-tW6 --1 ; .; * : ’ s .K.' r \ .y ,> $c'$:,<•■/,} £ .:sy : THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY gEFTKICBER 80, 1961 gqmpAwwt 72 {. WYMAN'S | GENUINE s Genuine walnut 64" office desk. W BAITOHAt -{fefBSRMS - foe Nettonel OMh Beglstjr Co.. 23 g, Gratiot, Mt. Clemens, HOw-iTti ■ COCfcER AND W!>6btic PdJWHctji MH»a. 6834 Williams Lit. Rd-GOLUB POTPIES, lit MONTHS,. . iatTot i-4$g6. ~ v Sate Storc Equipsncnt 73 ■ u ’ mud 3 SELECTION For SfUePets FREE TO GOOD • HOM ' ”1 4-4903 5. XITTENS FREEH GREAT DANE, 3 _______ mole, food watch dog. 3.1836... ■ Safe Form Equipment 87 —i--- TRACTOR. DISC. sEwbeal trailer BARGAINS fiB ’*HATS A— jFftjftfW-ssar.r.r LARGE INV^OHY OF USED 'AjSS^tND INDUSTRIAL TRAC TOR8 AND equipment. . ^ ALL ARE PRICED TO until. WE guaranteei TO SATISFY 01 MONET REFUNDED. CREDIT TERMS A^^ABLE KING BROS. FE 4-0134 EE 4-111 PONTIAC, ROAD AT OPDVKE Wheel Horse Tractors Riding mowers and tillers., Use tractors, tillers and mowers. Res sonable offers accepted this pc ISma'S!i&MiS MINIATURE BCHNAUZER PUP-ples. AKC registered. *100. MA 5-1104. ’_____________•:_______________ Ben’s Loan Office SmCH OUN CABINET. NBVT ' Marlin. 300 Remington *uto. rlf U-S. Springfield 30.06. 303 Spi ' er. P-30 Shotgun. Hunting ctoR and boots. Will buy-eel! or trai , OR 3-6310 or OR 3-3778. POODLES, SILVER MINIATURES. •, AKC. above average quality. 801 Fourth. FE 3-4026. ____; PUPPIES FOR SALE FE 0-4437 . i PART COCKER PUPPIES. < old. OR 3-8606, _______ CREAMS POODLES. 834 Auburn- Avenue, $s CONTESTk ca 22^ lever^acthm^ I Weighing the mo est, Marshall s 12S1— GUN SALE BUY, SELL, TRADE Manley Leach 16 1 gun saLe Shotgun? and rifles, new filed* Out) repair end mounting. Burr-Shell, 37$ 0. graphs FF * I ecope Tele- BULMAN HARDWARE i» Browning Ouns _ ■ <■« Elisabeth Lk Rd.. FE 8-4771 q daily TO I; bun. *-,3 KELLY HARDWARE^ (JEW AND USED OUNS Browning —i Remington. Winchester,—Ithaoa WE TRADE _ i Final Ctsanmea on Boats New 17' Crestllner Cruiser 81.7 New 14- Crestllner runabout *8 PET MONKEYS, 850. _________EM 3-0086. parakeet® Guaranteed to talk. Canaries, cages And sup-uH Auburn UL 84300. POODLES , . C.«vq kennels. OR 3-4376, OR_ parakeets guaranteed to roistered enolish fbmau oiu. FB F-0877. ___ SlAMWam KITTENS, PUREBRED8. CaU PE H647 after 4 p.m. RATS. KIITeHC" bon. 88 WttMama. PE 4 WILL TRADE Akc BEAGLE PUP for Welmaransr. aernasn . or English Pointer pup. EM 3-6814. Dogs Trained, Boarded 80 .MOOSE HUNTERS—A PEW RES-' ervstlons still open this season, Get. IS taJWaVTMS. dean, com-fortsble accommodations. Expe- Modeltrstex to Renner Bros.. Peahu Lake Camp, P.O. Box 111* Sand, Oravel A Dirt 76 McNARY’S TAILWAOOER MIN--*•- **—krdlnf, trim* Hunting Dogs TM-R-°er 14 MONTH OLD FEMALE WE1M/L ’ —sr, ready for ’training, foi I. PL 3-3473. . "BRITTANY^SPANIEL PUPS. AKC WEIMARANER PUF8. lt —*- nld. US ear*-OA 8-1118. 1 gravel »7 8 yds. dor^FUi And ' Cushion sand. Loading. 4*3 S. SPECIAL-—WASHED BEACH BAND 80c yd. Pta Oravel, ft yd—Road ■gJKlMrWwH 30c yd. Delivery extra. AMERI* CAN STOVE. IMS 8A0HABAW rp. ma wia. - RICH DARK. CLAY LOAMTOF Ettf' AKC* REGISTERED BRITTAliY: *—tie, f mot. old, char"*'"" tint stock. PE S4»M. It yeera ll give t groceries, flousewar eras. etc. These t new merchandise. <1 MARMADUKE By Anderaou A Leeming Special Auctipn SATURDAY 1.00 P.M. UNTIL :??? Several dealers with truck leads of furniture appliances, poultry, rebblts. fruit, vegetables . and •^auctioneers avallable.^salel conducted on BAB Auction parking lot. Everybody welcome. Lunches available. CaU OR 3-3717 foC ad- dltlonat Information. ___ B& B AUCTION SALES (IAT. NIGHT SALEB AS USUAL 8066 DIXIE HIGHWAY, DRAYTON Awright, that's enough. Mr. TV Repairman!! For Sale Motorcycles 95 1881 74 FOOT SHIFT. 283* NORTH TOP BUCK—JUNK CAR, TRUCK, PONTIAC WASTE. PE 2-0208. *WE REALLY 5669 CARS! Sale HouSetrailers 89 JO FAMOUS MAKES TO CHOOSE FROM Sea the latest 47x16, wide blithe new ABC Deluxe Model with root wings end bay wln- OdARANTEED USED BIKES New Schwinn Bikes. 824.68 ui ■earlett's Bike end HObby Shop 30 E. Lawrence. PE 3-7843 14 FOOT DUNPHY RUN-ABOUT, blond'end.mahogany front, eon-,—----------------------- ter and rear decks Upholsterea BUICK WITH bLDS POWBR, trailer. OR 3-0333. DUCK BOAT, MOTOR AND DE-. —. 4086 Oak'Perk, Ctor^ettm. >88 ALUMINUM 10 FOOT TRAIL-tiv Very remsopgbie. OR 3-82Q1. . IA 8 TREA M , LIGHT W*l6k Travel Trailer. Slnee 1833. Guai GARDNER, 10 X 41. 1 . -uetom but 651-8688- HUNT1NG TRAILER Salsa and Rentals - Apache Camper TraU Blaser Reese ■ ' Opening 13 FOOT CREE TRAVEL T AKC BRtilTANY SPANIEL, MALE. lit roers eld. OA 8-3MS. ir transistor MS Jackson OERMAN SHORT-HAIRED POINT-er puppies end dogs of bunting ngs, OA 8-3831. RED. PART IRISH SETTER PUP-i, huntors and pets, EM 3-6666, Hay, Qrain & Feed 82 For Sale Livestock 83 HOLSTEIN COW. I YEARS OLD. Dus October 8tn. Tested and V**-ctnated. MY M4M, after 1:19 p. 5 YEAR OLD GBLDINO PONY. Black, saddle and marUngale. OA 0-1476. ns™-’ PONY, SADDLE 1 Can be - 3-7863, 011*30610"" PETROITER-. Mobile Home .fisyy ALSO. H* LECTIOl L1VINO BOOT! __ BEDROOM, we HAVE A LARGE SE-OF UHED MO- For Sale Bicycles 96 28’. BOY'S RECONDITIONED bikes for sale. 663-3676. Wanted Ugcd Cars 101 ■WANTED ’61 PONTIAC3 AVERILL’S Boats & Accessories 971 fe 3-»»7S3W AKE Used Auto Parts WITH bLDS PC its, mine, spsre 8 b-m. FE i-1383. 83 PLYMOUTH HY ^DRIVE^MCN ’86 Bulck ^Sale Used Trucks 103 '50 CHEVY H TON PICKUP. 8138. ALUM-CRAFT.___________ JHMP GLASS. Freelend. Pon-Toon boats. Aqua swap Aluminum,-and Cruisers Inc. cllnkerbullt hosts. WE SELL AND SERVICE Evlnrude Motors end Lawn Mowere . SfS* iSv. Vlrt Wi 1#up.CV?rVy*01^ ra n Daily & Sundays 1 aw«n -8 p m. ***• — BOAT INSURANCE vne of our speclalUes Hansen Insurance Agnncy FE 3-7083 , All New in Pontiac ORADY WHITE LAPSTRAKE AOUA SWAN ALUMA LAP WHITEHOUSS1. VENUS CRUISERS WEST BkND MOTORS Porta-Camper Camp Trailer taravgi S3 E. Walton . FE 6-4403 ____nsllv 8-0 Sunday UM AR*ANSA_S TRAVELER, BOATS 8-cyllndsr.,. ktnndard NORTH CHEVROLKi vu, iwv S. WOODWARD. BIR8QNGHAM. MI 4-3738.____________________ i» CHEVROLET '» TON PICKUP. '81 JOHNSON MOTORS GASOW -SPORTS CENTER—JL—j/ ass Lakt Rd. IHUMO IEEOO HARBOR. MICH. • r. MOTOR AND TRAILER. _________Em 3-4086 OAKLAND^ MARINE EXCHA^NO^ salesTeWotstoraoe npiste q - - —— — line of u. CHKVROLIT. 'A TON ... ... •>5 GMC, 2 ton. long whsslbase. 2-speed axle, llko new .. 8436 For Sale Car* 106 ’ RUICK CONVERTIBLE, POW-tr steering »ei( .top, OR 34306 1666 CADILLAC. SPECIAL St door, tall price $1,065. MoyW Motors, Uneolq - Mercury-Coraeti 833 8, Ssxlnsw, FE 6-6Q1. •83 CADILLAC 4 DOOR. POWER windows. Alr-oondltlanfni. FE 4-6334. ; CHEVROLET.' • ''1664 .BEL AIR, hardtop, power glide, nlcelooklng. i°0240 *"**’*' A,ter 4 P-m’ rE 660 CHEVY SPORTS COUPE, 34688. ,•86 ctov*~i0R. door. 6-pessenfer, — a-,!5G,rga~» mlleeie, clean, 61,068. MA 6-1804. ■" CHEVY. IMPALA, 4-DOOR 1667 CHEVRbtET 310 2-DOOR SE-dsn. V-8 engine, Powergllds. radio and.heater. On&_6n8. Easy terms. NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. 1600 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIR-MINOHAM. Ml 44738. . payments. Lloyd Motors, Lincoln-’ Mercury-Comet, 333 8. Saginaw, FE 3-6131. 1688 CHEVROLET ‘4-DOOR, ZERO down and 84-60 n week. Lloyd Motors. Lincoln - Mercury-Comet 333 8. Saginaw, FE 34131. 600 CHEVROLET BIBCAYNE t cylinder with standard shift, fu! price 81.065. Lloyd Meters. Llr eoln-Msrcury-Comst, 232 S. sag! new. FE 24131. ___________ 1688 CHEVROLET IMPALA 3-DOOR hardtop. V4 r engine, standard shift. jWdlo.j^hester^ whitewall S'**' 61898. Easy terms. NORTH VROLET CQ...1000 8. WOOD-AVE., BIRMINGHAM. MI 44738. Hss^tlS^r® and 6 cylinder glne Powder blue! ftnlsh wit.. _ white top Excellent condition KTno money riown. llnance.^KstaU iMldators. 180 NODMUiiETB, LAYING Bjjr tg ----------J---- ~. Wcwd, Coal * Fuel 77 ALL KINDS OF dUnj FE 4-42! CANNEL COAL, THE IDEAL FIRE pises fuel. Furnace — fireplace wood. Oakland Fuel and Point. 05 Thomas St. PE 84180. 'boot MAN? 51 WARM AND KtYSLAf" — for 111. Fireplace it dellvei.__ 1ND HICKORY FIREPLACE „™j. Tree removal. OR 3-6082. ^vanCsTOB Lumber M!ll». MA 6-282’. ;«B4' Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78 A-l EVEROREENB. SPRUCE yews and'm*(bo.rVI>lg‘your own! Brlpjl toola aml burlap. 28M Sleeth andrwisi«S^oa?Ui4, MU* e-'p??^ liifitt^L" "MUkiiSf Srown evergreens, cultivsted. sheared, •prayed, state Uspected, 10 er more, 11.50 ee. Less than 10. Ptoi.1 Y°U B11 t$L Cedar ^HWy*., fOT. 8 lowing, t?'ESJ6-0877,<’nFK pAkfOP n urbery'h UomuIhs Ur 3 4' OfaUed upright Blue spruce. 12 Sfoteh pine 3j-4' •’ lo ut 22.80 ■gj- - iaft ’lowering shrubs 6’ tali, 7 :V«tt “Vh,!., NUrserj *' • For Salt Pot*. '„ „? I {.null t! A It l^s.. rOODLEB, CAL Sale Farm Produce APPLES, 816 E. \. of Joslyi A^pTeCY^OTATOKB. squash Mkrvin Middleton Sr. 1510 Pred* more, Uko Orton. MY a-IWl. iPMli CIDER, pndbvcW Kingsbury's Market. 2330 Clerk*-i Rood, Lake Orion. 8HORT‘8 MOBILE 22 ft. Gem travel trail-ine truck eamper also mobile homes. Oom-of parte and bottle home type mobile pleto un ' L®fe it ei MW wx ;th uSi_ repair U line of r sin ess OMC 1984 TRUCK WITH S—ttft gate. IV, ton stake bed. Usage, good condition. Good keeping Shop, >1 .BOATS JOHNSON MOTORS Marine 8--- “—....... •Johnson Outboard Motors ' SteKraft Boate Oator Trailers Everything for the boat 8205 and a 1886 Chevrolet panel for 8485. Both In exoeUent condition NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIR, MINOHAM. Ml 4-2738._________ 180 CHEVROLET PICK-UP, GOOD condition, MAplo 6-1838. 14 'FORD, >4 TON PICK-UP. BELL or swap for 44 or 1 ton pick-up. , MA 6-3136. _______. - " 1957 FORD PICKUP A real nice V8 44 ton. Radio. Heater. S.“ —A**i*. 2-3381 engine, Powerglldi .over nwrlnc. radio. heOtei. whitewall ttroe. Like new Hght torms.flSoRTH "dH^ROiKT CO iOOO 8. WOODWARD AVE, BIR-MINOHA84. 241 4-3738. 40 CHEVROLET IllPi verttblo V4, eutometlc. power srs&z&ir&WnS ±s‘2MISuC=^ HAM. MI 4-3722. 1855 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-on. V* engine, Powergllds, power steering, radio, heater, white-—’’- Blue with beige top^Only PripEOPl5t’S AUTO SALkS Oakland_______ FE 2- . Better * Used Trucks GMC LOOMIS BOATS LAUNCH1NO on —----------, Stocking Inboard end _outbogrd 12’ ALUMINUM B6AT AND -horsepower motor. <135( Mmplete. about.* wlndshieW'end steerlpt W-ciudrtl Sacrifice $15 also 4 barrel reft. 620. AH In excsllsnt eklendO Ilford 01 APPLES, PEACHES. PEARS AND prune plums. Hilt Top Orchards, V, mile south of State Reed School on Hertlend Rood. Fenton. MAia _______________3172 W.-Huron TRAILER RENTALS Cempert and Houtetrallers OOODELL TRAILER SALES » fl. Rochester Rd. UL 2-41 1961 Close-Out NIMROD TRAILER $376 ’$1 PORTER CAMPER $795 ‘01 holiday camper $$$$ ’ll APACHE «Ono Only) 2300 ’ STOP OUT TONIGHT! -Holly Marine & Coacl Holly Road . ME 44 Bank Re Sunday BARTLETT PEARS, 13 AND L peaches and apples: DeCon Broa. u Orchurd. Muplu • and , 1 ■- ■ rd Lake Roads. I •* W7Ti------------- __Baldt________ . .__ macintosh applIsT sprayed fruit. Orchard, 091 N. Squirrel Rd. __________ OXitLXNb' cSUNTY FARMERS' Msrket.\3J50 Pontleo Lake Road, lust off-Jclesreph. Open Tuesday i"oo. Thursday pm. l*oi to '< FE 2-y07l._______________ pears, Tori pick srTncTc SALE farm >RODUCB 66_ *A°Mlelil|an #No I p!itttoc» 16210 Holly. Rent Trailer Space 90 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR • se who went the best, 40 s80’ r, 16x40’ cement petios, ete, » mile east^ol Oriord on Lake- PONTIAC MOBILE HOME PARK ToWfSK. at wMoCii price. Pick your own, 81-2 already picked. Dealers In 3346 Crook; Rd., N. el Aubi_ mUnobr'S ORciiARb prost has nil the pumpkin—rime tor spple. flunkin'. Wck .your own I up. 60 lle> 1 lioe- J^NOLisif 'IWbr Flips, .. ' “weeks. Cell aBer 6, FE 6-2863. ■ 0‘MOi*'TH OLp RkTRlEVER ^78 - 'wmiumi. Lake Bo*d. , , atr1fismSom iw tmw -* ISTU1MI IAWIM'1 REO. FE..6-25J8 | J . /ifecT gMI'an jpfifTOtTptyp the I.___________ J_____ a'FFTMT RliT'AHB filfSw "toft1 a''bushel e»rffrcontalneri. Iliilil Eaijle^Lske Road. 3 Sal* Farm Equipment 87 PLANET, 6 H P TRACTOR WITH attachemnts.^ 6)60. EM 3-3833. msuviiv "uifcp~w*'Lj|r^cHy ^6V^MechbieryC,■ Beilnew at Reeburn ‘ Aut’i Service AUTO REPAIRING. SPECUUZ-Vsri Lake™ 682-21(60. car. Cylinders rebored Ziick Mb chine Shop, 23 Hood. Phone PE 3-2863, _ . '. Sale Motor Scooters 94 CNTED 18 FOOT "INBOARD, private 'party vunita i~oi.ii THOIEPSOf ____ CABIN CRUI81 h.p. Jobneon motor.Oa •— all^equlpped, $2,800, < 334-2046 WANTED: Used boot trailer, suitable tor IT Inboard boat, Phone FB 4-1061, Hollsrtoack i Auto Ports WAHtICD: blBD BOATS OF AWS W^lnd Berbers, Ponttao Airport. condition. FE Too For Sale Airplanei. 99 II CESSNA 140, NEW^LICENSE 4-0^3 Cpr*TlE 8-1321. Tran*. Ottered ENOINE airuner. non-stof- ....Rl' ¥ouno Lady leaving W6k Colorado Oet. 6 wishes another to share driving. FE 44100, Wanted Used Car# 101 $25 MORE !T.or *r*«|| “ Hd */r,Va3 ■I fljflfil &xle *Hlgbway. Phone OR 3-1366. m : ^ALWAYS 'BUYING' 68J0NK CARS — FRKB TOP Ml, _CALL nT8- SAM ALLEN AJBQN 1____ high dollar Tor junk cars HlBOLLAR.m “ *“* truck, FE l»-«vw «■!*!.r L."-.V^HIZ.- jBWi^Ri"TNb"TRucisrfree ^ffiSnir- Ffnancee got you in a pinch 7 L«t ui held vou-~Top Dollar Pi for cleen '^M and ’6t Model. * Glenn’s Motor Sales,. $62 W. Hufon St/ YB 4*73 CAliffAND TRUOTS. WRECKij C JUNKERS, ^>Tf^AUTO PARTS. CTievroleis. hr top these models end cm.. M & M MOTOR SALES ■2621 Dials Hwy. ““ Foreign A Spt*. Cara 105 EXCEL- S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM. Ml 4-3138 REPOSSESSION BiST 6Wc*&r ^ SveX. Vull prU of 6«6 and papmenti of $27 a montn. Lakeside d“* “ *1 w Montcalm ni6e ’si forTTfordomatic. -768. OR 3-1073 _____ fordIdoor with stk ....... WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-3738. 4i chevy,"nomad; 8-PASSEN------ragon. V^H equipped. 4.™ I960 CHEVY - Imp ala hardtop, radio an heater. Turboglide transmleelot whitewall' tires, excellent cor JEROME ‘!Bright Spot” ireherd Lake at C-- FE 8-0488 ioiA CHEVROLET.^2 ^DOOR^ SEIM CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertlble V-l, eutometlc power tteerlng and brakes, radio, heater, end whitewall tires, white with red trim. 61865, NORTH CHEVROLET. 1000 S WOODWARD. BIRMINOHAM. MI 44136. ‘88 CHEVROLET BROOKWOOD 4-door station wagon. Auto, trane-mtsslon, radio end heeler. 61.666 • Van Camp Chevrolet, Inc. MILFORD_______ MU 4-1038 1880 CHEVROLET IMPALA C< verttblo. VI engine, Power*!! radio, heater, whitewall tl, Needs a little work tor bargain fioRTH * ctWrOLET1^) W 7oS6 ■ S WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINO-HAM. Ml 4-3738. 1686 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR_ 8E-dsn. 6 cylinder engine. \m.........i m ly 6646: Easy terms. NORTH v-./EVROLET CO. 1006 S WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-3738. 1680 CHEVROLET IMPALA door hardtop. V-6 engine. Powe glide, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Beautiful suntan eopps |*h. Only 63.666. Easy - t NORTH CHEVROLET CO. t WOODWARD AVE, BIRI HAM, HI 4-3736. •Si CHEViT CONVERTIBLE NEW ’1061 VOLKSWAGEN I860 VOLKSWAOEN. RAD: -“to walls, dark blue, 14 is. Excellent Condition. WARD-McELROY, INC. '4416 W. Huron ___OR 441466 VOLKSWAOEN CAMPER AND teats', excellent condition, .like new, ,2660 Pentlee Lake Road. 1M6 FONTlAc WITH ’60 ENOIN* Trl-carbs, floor shift, ifiorp. FE 5;2723, 6506, ioeo tbird. hardtop, lIoht For S»l* Cara 106 I . BUICK, 2-DOOR. HARDTOP. a? W!f»«N**r wf,o‘- m owpJ¥n~ '‘ *6611 DuicK.iWt ml. very clean, drive* like new. nly $W* w TOM BOHR, INC. i BUICK HARDTOP Marvel Motbrs ,5 buiGk "convertible. Southfield Motors MUST MOVE I ldb CARS TO OO, CHEAFI ’ll Chevrolet 3, Fewer ’86 Plymouth 6, stick . s 1$7 PONTIAC ST ARCH IEF^. 2-DOOR HARDTOP $795 This Is ell the dealer woe allow On this clean, one own i,T.J 2-DOOR, MkCHANiCS tpeclal, full price of $868. Lloyd Motors. Llncoln-Mcrcuty-Comet, 73i S. Saginaw. FE 2-8131. >8* FORD CUSTOM 300 3-DOOR sedan, V8,engine, FordD-Matte. he*%. white**!) ‘'"V.r: o clioose fri OLET C<>mi Choice tor I U«llentRDl-^eBTRtoll^qu^«d -i»to'4FORbn 6 O N vfcRTmTE: Auto Seles. 1*3 8. Seglnmw. PE 13>ORD. EXCELLENT RUNnWG condition. Ho rust, 8176, QL 1-607*. 10 ^ORD 2-DOOR SfGrT COUFE fully equipped, 61.668. OR »r OR 3-0844. ________ ft foRD Station wai y clean. 8841, ’ **“ HASKINS CORVAIR SALE KESSLER’S Inside *Used Car Lot’ All Ijiside — All Sharpy "raBio; For Sale I Cart —f# w'tefmV Erie^^WdatSa “ g, Saginaw 8t, 1%. 46866. *58 Plymouth Belvedere Surplus Motors Baelnaw St. wSSM flnaw St. ^PE M6M 'agon, i Very e dition, 2 door, $$$$. OR 3-23B4. 1087 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR,. AUTO* I_____________). HiroTd Turo! sr Ford. | nfr • 18 ^.YliKOUtK SUBURBAN. TAKE REPOSSESSION 1886 Pontleo .Hardtop, a real glee ear for the full jprlee of *46* and payment, of #2* a. mo. First payment due November 3. Lakeside Mtrs. .... 236-7161 , 312 W, Montcalm •5* PLYMOUTH, NEEDS LITTLE work, 6366, 134 Williams U 4-2383. 1286 PONTIAC EAPARI WAGON. Hydramatlc. Radio. Motor. A ■---*nul family ear. Grid with top. Morroctde trim. 30 mos. - "-“m Ponttao Sales, -beautiful family e ‘— 'torrocid- _______ Haupt Ponuac oaies. Clarkston. MIS. 1 mile north of US HLMApIe 5-5666. Open Mqu, —--- I1>ure. tUf 6 p.m _ - 1060 PONTIAC, CATALINA, 4 door, hardtop, excellent eondltlen. • 62.186. 6m iun. 108* PONTIAC CATALINA HARD-top with power. CaU anytime. 61550. FE 4-3*03. ____ ____ iko pohtUT-uoov vQpotunn- door hardtop. Very cleen. « —radio; heetor. 'Hydrai* imra Power brake. OR i 1 PONTIAC, 82,800, 4 bpOR ' [ PONTIAC 4-DOOR, ST 3 E. Walton FB TICK. 8-3088. Quality Cars Cost Lei •liY-Blrd'CraveittMe .. •58 T-BIrd Hardtop ^ ^ 81088 •81 Wilck.’ Hardtop ... 671? ’87 Plymouth Moor ...•■ ■ ■I* Lincoln 3-dqor, A-l . f™ ■8* Mercury, Moor . . . . . . - i 8488 •6* Ford 4-door ...•■••■ to** Superior Auto. Sales frift^lfi’cLUB coefF^r cleen and solid. Will eeeept TV, HI-FI, or Ham radio equipment In trade. 311 8. Tllden. FE 3-7880. REPOSSESSION 1983 Ford Station Wagon, real nice, tuU price *148 and payment* of 8*Me mouthy First payment i 331-1101 312 W. Montcalm 7S*'H.BOB flM*. ----fDlLBXE J-DOOR „jo a. weoo, WARD. BIRMINOHAM. MI ti*o coion. '"" and beater, Uoyd Moton Comet. 633 S. 1888 ^MERCURY STO/U4. Uoyd Motors* LtnoolmMeTcury-Comet. 333 8. Mglnaw, FE 3-6131. ifdie^KRCURY MONTERfr. 2-Jraoor herdtop. full price of 1788. Lloyd Motors, Llp^oto-Mercury. Comet. 333 g. Seglnaw. FE 2-813) •56 MERCURY, CLEAN. 1300. 1*61 TEMPEST 4-DOOR REBAR Hydremettc. radio, heater, hlac finish and trim, whitewall tlr« Only 6,660 actual miles. Beugt new by present *- hod excellent tHSPE kit 4-4760 evenlnge. . *1*66. 4 Lakeside Mtn. Beautiful blaok a healer. Uke r ether accessories. 1959 CHEVROLET 'SS5M«nABaSuW ments of *16.61 per month. Cell Credit Manager Mr. Parks at MI 4-7600. Harold Turner rord. BOB HART MOTORS Yoyr Choice $119 FORD Auto, Redlo, heater. PLYMOUTH 4-door Auto, adlo and heatoe. FORD Btlck 2-deer. Orchard f,xke_334 8*30 :**“5S¥Vr BEL air Vi iflcK; > cfflnlsh n~. Several new 16*1 Corvxirs still left In stock. As low ei 1100 down. Financing no problem. Financing No Problem HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds ‘asiVston ■8d Pokb. HA'ftWoF. atom: ’ green and White, new tlreo, eleao. Good eondltlen. I door, 6L**® . SAFETY-tESTEU USED CARS Suburban-Olds 1*6 8. WOODWARD Ml 4-44*8 )**!' METROPOLITAN. HARDTOP, redlo. whlto wells, heater. 36 lmmoa,*n.torr'.om.‘ "oTk.^ll price 63*1. we flnaace. 1*85 Mercury 3-door herdtop. emo^a^ little, full price 1188. **LUCKY* AUTO 6ALES 163 B. >e»lnr- ** *-*“ CLEAN Birmingham Trade* WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward BIRMINGHAM_M14-1631 -I* »i FULLY^EQUWfgg emXwT __(ring, fawner, full price *1*6*. OR SALE: ’<1 FONTT^ CATA- REPOSSESSION 1*8* Chevrolet with stick shift ae I cylinder engine. FuU jmli 8868 and payment! of 633 t*M>ONT1AC. RAbfO AND REAf-er. automeUe, toll pile*, lies. ZERO down. Uoyd Motors, Lto-coln-Mercury-Comet. 336 S. 8*fl-naw FE Mill. Back4o-Work - Special- 1961 PONTIAC-TEMPEST .... This qut* little 4-doer t# fuU» equipped end ( has a ^ standard mo,..c«.»y.. $199S PONTIAC RETAIL STORE —65 Mt. Oemeni AND Corner: Cass and Pike FE 3-7954 i. Call *i FOR A'j O^D nCLRAN^ CM INGHAM RAMBLER 060 0. Woodward Ml $-3900 _____0 min, from Fontioo •is chevSoCet 2 d6or. V-l. Powergllds. radio, beater, per— brake a, excellent eendil throughout, $406, OR >-$030, •ft ctovy’ a-j sMAFil, IMU nctuel miles, FE 8-1713, GortwAlf's usXd dAlU •SI ?lymoulhUC0. stick «t»5 *56 Dodge, custom royal ... t386 •66 CT«rvy.r,|V8"tlChsrdtop. nice *669 pala sports coupe. ExoeUent at ’’“in, white with turquoise Ini . VI. stick, radio end best t offer, OR i-6I46. BIO IAVINOI RAMBLER ...... ... JfolWanM.'.1!! (tjac wacion ., e» CHEVROLETJWPALA '66 ItAMBLiR SEDAN .... 56 FORD. PICKUP ... '61 BUICK, CLEAN .. '66 FORD 3 DOOR .... 9 METRO! 9 PORTIA RUSS JOHNSON LAKE ORION My 2?2371 MY 2-2581 ":5T EgAd 4-DOGr ~ J F.ROME - FERGUSON ROCHK0TBR FORD DCALBR * OL 14711 I5i»^6W“i^iON"~WAG"5N.'« price<*Vl.>65h {W&ott CK ooln-Meroury-Comet, 232 6. S**l- ■U ' yyjRfi’ Ve AtlfSKfATli), NO rust, jj**® MU 4-6172. 604 Best mai MONEY DOWN. Alsum* Pey-ments of *14.27 psr monUi. Csl) credit Mentger Mr. Forks et MI 4.1669. Harold Turner, Ford. NO MONEY DOWN. Assume BMJ- Credit Menegsr fir Parks et MI - 4-7609, Harold Turner Ford,_ Large Selection ON NEW* 1961 v Ford* — Falcons at Drastically Reduced Price* Ever Greater ^Savings on our . Remaining 1961 . Demonstrators BEATTIE 1 DEALER ..... Weterlord 3-1291 ♦•DOOR. FO vbltowella''13,099 m 1. FE 4-3144. MU *• ¥r All Cars Volume-PriCed to Sell IMMEDIATELY — $5 Down t-KING AUTO I-iquidatori 1959 OLDS ••**’' Holiday (Snipe, full equipped with ell power, Axui Blue with mulching Interim JEROME “hriglit Spot” ^FE^-O^01" HOMER HIGHT mfeitm, ICWtT 1*61 PLYMOUTH 3 di •nd heater. Autometlc •ton. 6 cylinder. Sharp dlo end heeler, mission ..... ^CHEVROLET Hr bfkkes, Rk-■ Irani-EMM M* FORP • • li-j • j.■ 1*9 NASH * DOOR Rebel. _- £.ter’ «fd'u,fiSS.{Jg Trensportetlon S| *60 end up . Chevrolet Pontiac-Buick Dealer “16 Minutes f OXFORD, MICK. TIRES AND HYpRAMAWC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY TOWN Assume payments of 333 1* P«r month Cell Credit Men*|er Mr oS°^,Nsw*eer' prices stei R S C RAMBLER SUPER MARKET EM 3-4186 2146 Commerce B< - BUYING OR SELLING SEE US BEFORE YOU DEAL HOUGHTEN & SON I, IHWHWWr Mir i-rin to!k1Wao7n •8* VOLKSWAOEN, SUN ROOF. >680. Good condition. FB 8-1978. 1853 VOLKSWAGEN RADIO AND OLIVER I960 BUICK fuu'tpower* 8 *wayP'« »t Auto^ m‘“# *M $2595 1960 BUICK Invlet* 4-door e»den. Power steering, power brakes. Dyneflow. radio, heetef. Lovely Autumn $2395 1960 BUICK LeSebre 4-deer ssden, Dyneflow. radio, neater, whltowells. Cordk- V*n>b,#wn' $2245 1960 PONTIAC Cfttftlinn 4-door w»d*n, Ifrdrk-vimtlo, rAdtOs niAlfr, imwfr »twr* ini Atra nrARAi* whiUwAll*. Liaht blue finish. .lj, $21/5 OLIVER' BUICK , 210 Orchard Lake A4e. FE 2-9101 l\ •1 T#B PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1961 NTY^THKEE Today’s Television Programs Programs' furnished bj stations listed in this column are subject to changht without no\ office Channel1 fr—CKLW-TV . Channel 7-WXYZTV Channel 4-WWJ-TV Channel »~W«R-YV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS COO (2) Highway Patrol (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) 8tarlit Stairway ^ (9) Popeye ^ 6:30 (2) News, Sports (4) George Pierrot (cont.) (?) Courageous Cat (9) Popeye (cent.) 7:00 (2) Death Valley pays (4) M Squad (?) Bold Venture (9) Mackenzie’s Raiders 7:30 (2) Perry Mason TV Features SATURDAY V MAGIC RANCH, 11:30 a.m. (7). New series blending comedy am) niagip in a dude ranch setting with junior magicians as guests. Don Alan, host. VIDEO VILLAGE, JR. EDITION, noon (2), Debut of audience participation game show, featuring -children as contestants. Monty Hall, ’‘mayor.’' . MR. WIZARD, 12:30 p.m. (4). Season premiere. Spiders will be Don Herbert’s subject. COLLEGE FOOTBALL, 3:15 p.m. (7). University of Oklahoma vs. Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind. Curt Gowdy, play-by-play. * PERRY MASON, 7:30 p.m. (2). Premiere episode for fifth season, “The-Case of the. Missing Melody,” opens with wedding scene in which the bride (Jo Morrow) leaves her bridegroom, a jazz musician (James Drury), at the altar. Mason (Raymond Burr) checks Into murder and blackmail during his inveirtigation. TALER OF ’WELLS FARGO, 7:30 p.m. (4). Season premiere to expanded full-hour format. "Casket 7J” involves agent Jim Handle (Dale Robertson) with Southerner’s plot to avenge South’s defeat to Civil War. Guest star: Howard Keel. (Color) . ASSASSINATION PLOT AT TEHERAN, 7:30 p.m, (?). Part 11 of fictional account of Allied “summit meeting” in Iran during World War II. John Larch, Oscar Ho-molka, Nehemiah Persoff and Her mione Gingold star. DEFENDERS, 8:30 p.m. (2). "Death Across the Counter.’’ Drug addict accused of murdering a storekeeper during attempted holdup. Guest star: Clu Gulager. LEAVE IT TO BEAVER, 8:30 p.m. (7). Season premiere, "Wally Goes Steady.” Wally (Tony 'Dow) worries his parents when he starts dating marriage - minded id-year-old girl. SATl'RDAV AT THE MOVIE#, 9 p.m. (4). "The Snows of Kiliman-i jaro," starring O r e g o r-y Peck, Susan Hayward and Ava Gardner. Shown uncut. (Color) GUNSMOKE, 10 p.m. (2). Season premiere In new full-hour format. Badman (7) Faith for Today (ft) Cathedral of Tomorrow » (4) (Color) Diver Dan • (2) Felix the Cat • (7) Q. T. Hush A (4) Industry on Parade K • (4) House Detective (?) Raalrn of the Wild' . (9) Christophers 6 (2) Little'Lulu o (2) Washington Conversation (7) Youth Bureau ' (9) African Revolution (9) Kiplinger Changing Times n: is (2) Weather (4) Weather (7)'Movle: “The Thrill of Brash” (1946). American in]: Brazil attempts to win back his wife. Evelyn Keyes.,r . (9) Movie: "Reach for the Sky” (English, 1956). Story o( ace pilot Douglas Bader who lost his lege to crash. tliM (2) Sports . ’ (4) Sports ll:M (2) Movie: "Man About Town” (1939). London producer attempts to gain reputation with the ladles. Jack Benny, Dorothy Lamour. it:30 (4) Movie: ‘‘’Girl to the Subway.” Imaginative young lady carries a blanketed rub-l bcr.doll on the subway to get af’ seat. Natalie'Wood, Jim Garner, SUNDAY AFTERNOON MONDAY MORNING 0:00 (4) (Color) Continental Class- « (2) Detroit Speaks -(4) Seekers (?) Directions ’62 (9) West Point • (2) Report from Washington (4) Builder’s Showcase (?) World Adventqre Series (9) Met) of Annapolis a (2) Movies: 1. "Mystery to Mexico” 0948). Young woman's brother Is suspected of jewel theft. Bill Lundlgan. 2. "The Saint to New York” ' (1938). The Saint comes up against gang of criminals. ■ Louis Hayward, i (2) Movie (cont.) (4) SUNDAY MORNING 7:SS 12) Meditations 8:00 . (2) Mass for Shut-ins [8:10 (9) Billboard 8:18 (9) Sacred Heart 8:25 (4) News 8:30 <2) Christophers (4) County Agent t9) Herald of Truth Average Family Uses a Ton of Paper a Year 8:30 NEW YORK (UPI) - The average American family uses a ton of paper a year. i This accounts for articles from, birth Certificates, to newspapers, 15:88 wallpaper and money, American CyananUd Co. reports. (7) Championship Bowling (9) Movie: "Escape to Burma” (1955). Fugitive takes refuge on plantation. Robert Ryan. (2) Movie (cont.) (4) Captain Gallant . 10:40 (ft) Billboard, 10:45 (9) Junior Roundup 11:60 (2) Video Village (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Texan (9) Romper Room 11:18 (56) German Lesson 11:90 (2) December Bride (4) Concentration (7HLove That Bob! (56) Songe of the South C:30 (2) Meditations 6:88 (2) On the Farm Front i?) Coilegh of the Air , (4) Continental Classroom (Color) 7:00 (2) Nows, Weather, Sports (4) Today-(7) Funews -7:10 (2) B’wana Don 7:80 (?) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:80 (7) Movie 9:00 (2) Movie (4) Ed Allen (96) Spanish Lesson 0:80 (4) Consult Dr. Brother* (96) Careers 9:48 (4) Gateway to Glamour 1:80 (?) Newt 10:0r*tt) Calendar (4) Say When (7) Jack La Lanne (96) Our Scientific World 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch .MONDAY AFTERffOON (2) Love of Life (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage (9) Mary Morgan (56) Science In OUr World. • (9) News (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) ft Could Be You (-7) Make A Face . (9) Susie (96) Spanish Lesson (2) Guiding Light * (56) German Lesson (4) New« (2) ‘Star Performance ~ (4) Groucho (7) Day to Court (9) Movie (56) French Lesson (7) News (2) As the World Turns (4) Californians . (7) Life Of RUey (56) World History (4) Faye Elizabeth (2) Amos ’n’ Andy (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Number Please (56) Adventures to Science (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Key* (56) Tomorrow’s Craftsmen (2) Our Miss Brooks (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (9) News (9) Movie (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) From These Roots (7) Who Do You Trust? (2) News (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Daddy' (7) American Bandstand (2) Secret Storm (2) Edge of Night ‘ * (4) Here’S Hollywood (ft) Adventure Time (7) American News Stand (4) News (2) Movie .■;* (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles and Pinocchio (96) Science to Our World (56) Americans at Work (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) News' Magazine ' (4) Kttkla and .Ollle - Actor Denies Rumors of Being Great Lover S-P-E-E-D-Y SERVICE TV REPAIR/ Radio Dispatched n* FE 4-1133 SWEET S RADIO ft TV 422 W, Huron St. Get Our Price on GAS HEAT Chandler fleeting Ce. OR 3-4492 OR 3-5632 SONOTONE House; of Hearing . Free Hearing Tests ' Free Parking at Roar of < Boudins “Open Fro*, by Appointment" 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 ' ' PONTIAC, MICH. . Y CALL | J TODAY Q FE 2-2919 § Jfor Prices oii > ALUMINUM* 4 4 * / / > WINDOWS ; r ' • and ; ; / i SIDING | s O’BRIEN j ^ ___ ■ 4 £ HEATING and g S SUPPLY CO. / S 371 Veorheit Rd. Jj OiJMrorjOn^Ourj & By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Walter Chlarl hustled along W. 44th St. th&yOtJier day—young, allm, good-looking, darjdy romantic, often called the Danny Kayo of Italy, widely known to be the -Today's Radio Programs- uslrmmd win d wcas (sines wrox (i t:M—WCAR, I SUNDAY EVENING (2) Twentieth Century (4) (Color) Meet the Pr (7) State Trooper (9) I i, Bporli >n>, ' wpon. Clark Dari. WWJ, Nava, Montto WXYZ. Sunday Baal. *:#*- WXYZ Sunday WJIIK' Naw«. et.ffo WJBK. Nana, Raid WPON. City Hall. Muale WCAR. Nana. Martyn l Town Meet Monitor , 1. Sherman . Midi. Caih jack. Wllkoy , Conrad aw. your Roo> Dance Time as ® wi'Tow" Muaio PI,. Allmih.| Hallcll" loa ol rroph'C rid Tomorrow MONDAY ArrlRNOON l»i«e-WJia ____ ____ — inday Boat, Rtwa WJR, Nl rs. "fund N, Churc I idf—WJR, Mualt. r wcaA i WXYZ, S« WPON, S WWJ, Nl WXYZ'. Sunday na«t.V>N' li)»-WXYe. Sun. Beat. : WWJ. Nawt, Around Bi VJ, Tltar Baaaball r"* lidO-WrON, Bun, Reran WXYZ, lun. Boat. N»wi WCAR. Nawa. Lotto CKLW. Ron Knowiaa ,30—WCAR, Mows, I.o| 4i(H>WJR, Bcoraj. HI 4iSS—WJR. PoriMotlvo, U.N; WCAR. Nawa. Lnyan WXYZ Sunday Baal, Nawa l:» WWJ. Baaaball BoOraa CKLW, Nova, Knowloa WJBK, Sun. Sound! WXYZ Sunday Boat, fporta WCAh, Nawa, h WPON. Pont. Re, WXYZ. Sunday Z SUNDAY IVZNINO |,INb—WJR, kawa, Porum WWJ. Nafl, r WXYZ, Sunday Beat, Bporta WJBK.' Sunday douhdi WO/R. « WPON, I OIU.W. F WWJ. I liOO-WJR, Chapal CKLW, Oroaaa Pt. WXYZ. Documant WCAR, Nawa WPON, Chuck La a WWJ. Nawa, Month CKLW, RIMo. Study WPON. Bob Lark WXYZ. Jaaa^AMdai 10:00—WJR, Stereo WWJ. Oothotlo Hour WJBK. Howa, Conrai WXYZ. Truth Hairalc CKLW, Hr. o( Dyclal WPOH, Don Thompat I0:M—WJR. Aak Prolaaaor WWJ. Oood -Mualci WXYZ. Roaloal Tim# CKLW. Lliht, 1,1(0 Hr. WPOR, Mallow Muaio WXYfc. Praad. I CKLW, I--- WJBK. I WWJ, Newt. Roberta WXYZ, Prod Wolf. Nawa CKLW, Parr - k nawa, ^Rliarltl I, Burly Morn, t -WJR. Muaio Hall I VidO—WJR, Nawa, Muaio Hull WWJ, Nawa, Roberta T WXYZ. Ntwa, Wplf _ cklw, Nawa. Tdby wjj|. “— 7 wpon/ b arty WPON, Nawa, Muaio. N*l«h. IiM-WJR, Muaio Hall :—v/jr. Jack Harrta XW, Mary Motion •on. Muaio. Nol|h, Na i—WJR, Karl Haaa WXYZ. Rraaktaat Club C.JLW. Joa Van WJBK, Nawa, Clark Raid WCAR, Nawa WPON, Mualoal Nalgh. IlOO—WJR. t iwa, Lynkar bMn, Joa Von WJBK, Raid WXYZ, McNaaley WPON, Musical NaishOtlr it For Mu« I Neighbor MONDAY AFTZRNOON 11:30—WJR. ‘ CKLW, Joa WPON. Mui 'XYk, Nawa, i KLW, News. V WPON, CKLW. Joa Van I ltd—WJR. Nawa, fhowcas: WWJ, My True Story WPON, Muaio WXYf, Nawa. MeNtalay WCAR. Nawa, Muala WJBK. Raid IlM—WPON. kl WWJ. Nawa. Maxwal CKLW. joa Van , wpon, Don McLaed Show VJ, ZmphaaU, Maxwell •M.J,W,nHr' 1 CKLW. pn*tto WCAR, Nawa, Sharldnn WPON, Don Met,ami Shot WJBK. Lae did»_WJK, Muale Rail CKLW Bud Davlaa WPON. Don McLeod 8 1:00—wjr, Nawa, Clark . ,5XYZ. Wlntar ’ .1 WPON. Don Mcl wwJ. Nawt. Tan WXxB, Wlntar (56) Musicals l (2) Big Ten Highlights (4) Rendezvous (7* Maverick (9i Parade ,, 1561 Ordeal by Fire 1 (2) Lassie U) (Color) Bull winkle ‘ (71 Maverick (cont ) (9) Movie: "Sea of Grass" (1947). Conrad Rlchter't atory of feud between cattlemen and-farmers. Tracy, Katharine H< (56) Notes on Music 1 (2) Depnlz the Mena< (4) (Color) Dlsney’i (7) Follow the Sun t9) Movie (cont.) 456) To be announced former sweetheart of both Ava Gardner and Anita Ekberg — but waving his hands arid denying the widespread forecast that he’ll soon be one of Broadway’s greatest lovers. "Listen, everybody's a great lover,” he scoffed. *, "Merl In rage even ,.. but they don’t have the publicity.” Rushing off to feast on some pasta at the Famona Kitchen, the slender-waisted, thlrty-flvish Chlarl said It’s all because WILSON he’s east as s colossal lover in the new Broadway show, "The Gay Life,” which is baaed on Arthur 8chnltsler’s “The Affaire of Anatol.” ★ ★ ★ ’’Would you believe It — what I am Intarest&fTn now to my singing?” he said. “I. made 15 pictures In Italy In two yegrs — I paid 3200,000 to the Italian government In taxes. But when something is too easy for me, 1 lose Interest. If everybody thinks you’re one of the best, you doh’t work so hard .. So, hie signed for 1ft years and “homing to America to like being born again” — even If Ava Gardner did arrive a short time after he did. “I know 1 can act, VACUUMS — VACUUMS VACUUMS BradNnrVaMsm 2 Year Guarantea ,*13°° Only REBUILT ELECTROLUX VACUUMS Completely Reconditioned —• includes Hose, Cord, Bag, Filter, Motor ALL THIS FOR ONLY $13.95 free nacur — naivety — apfkaisais VACUUM CENTER - FE 4-4240 -A CHIARI Spencer I can dance In some clumsy way, but sing, never!” Re gestured expressively as he ordered a dalquari. “All Italian! can sing hut 1 was the exeeptlon. “But Kermlt Bloomgarden says, ‘There's a man here who gets sotfle kind of noise out of you.'7’ j The man was Herbert Oreen, the coach. “I was my flrat ow I will sing seven songs. astonished audience!” Chlarl said. Seven! ★ ★ „ * THE WEEK-END WINDUP . . . (2) Ed Sullivan > Disney's World (cont\) (7) Follow the Sun (cont. *9) Movie (cont.)! (56) Songs ol the South (2) Ed Sullivan (cont.) (4) Car 54 (7) Lawman (9) Movie (cont.) (56) Ruaaian Writers (2) G.E. Theater (4) (Color) Bonanza (7) Bus Stop (9) Closeup (56) Guest Lecturer (2) Holiday Lodge (4) Bonanza (cont.) (7) Bus Stop (cont.) (9) African Patrol l (2) Candid Caruem (4) Show of the Week (7) Adventures In Paradise (9) African Patrol (cent.) 0 (B) Golf Tips 1 (2) What's My Line? (4V Show of Week (coot.) (7) Adventures (cont.) (9) Dr. Christian t (2) News (4) News , , (7) News . v The French refused to lend 25,000 troops for the filming of Darryl Zanuck’s "Longest Day.” A Paris wit cracked, “With 25.000 troops Zanuck could take over France" . . . Stan Kenton signed a five-year contract with Basin St. East . . . Theresa Brewer's going Into the beauty salon business with hair stylist Ernie Adler ... jack Lemmon took a quart of Leone’s spaghetti sauce to London, where he's making a film with Kim Novak, ★ ★ ★ EARL'S PEARLS: Taffy Tuttle told her escort, “I see both| points of view just fine—-the one that’s wrong and the one that’s mine." H TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Comic Jackie Kannon boasted, "Last night I was#out with one of the town’s really-big spend-! —my wife.". WISH I’D SAID THAT: A married man differs from a chelor In that when he ties one on, lfa likely to be an —Frank J. Pepe, Quote. . . . That’s earl, byotthcr. Attention housewives; cllis, Inc. • rilA ait* TURN Auniraa, k | Oarataa, I n ; "DO NOT TURN YOUR FURNACE ON . . . UNTIL you have had your furnace CLEAN ID by Kleen Air Power Suction. Why ow .,m... DIRTY up your walls> cqrpets, drapes with dust from the dir ducts?" JIM LONIE, Owner 'XlatEN AIR FURNACE CLEANERS 1.TQ2 ALMA OR 8-0100 VERTICAL ROLL Getting the best picture your set con deliver? If not, call us for professional service. We use dependable G-E Service-Designed Tubes and Black-Daylite Picture Tubes* Arnold A Srorar TV UL 2-3800 UFima^Radlo O TV QK £-2651 Auburn Radio O TV H 4-1655 Morro *** *l! Bill's TV Survlcu EM 1-651 •|#l# Union 'Lake Kd . I nlnnXaka “ »— Condon Radio <► TV FE 4-9714 Qba^TV^Soralt# C A YtV Inc. FI 4-151 ft P!f!, APP1'4"”, Norton Sadio & TV PL 2-3106 HTOJ.t Van Drki. W»btnfMn FI 4-4945 ■M 1-4114 __ ___ ________ irakar* Lak* SDalby Radio & TV FI 4-9802 Fbolpk TV Soralco 0*1-1217 SU l4l|lt. Penlleo *«Jka n*.. rannaa SI 4.2525 tofMiU Radio A TV FI 2-6907 Hampton llottrlc *M W. Haran. MR --- Hod’* Radio A TV FI 4-5841 Swoot a^lo^iy TV^F*^4-1 til |jckaon Appliance OR 3-7561 Al Roodlno TV MY 3-1124 ___ SSCt Dial# Hwy.. Walarfar* mi* Jailyn K* . taka Orion lobnron Radto A TV FI 8-4569 T(Uvj,jon s«rv. Co. Ml 6-1500 |ono« Radio A TV 612-1350 , [rtif Walton Radio A TV FI 2-2257 Lako Orion Appl. MY 2-5111 »ta R. Wattan. Paattaa -----------|„r) Uka Ortan WKC, j< lire nrvRvneji viwb TTRVt IHSij effTISf , . V UkoTV ' MA 0-6205 Dapt. » F« 8-7114 < [ I ► Jill## Orrherd in he. lermlnflon tO Alley. Peullee « , I]* • 4 NTWBKTY»FOUK Romney to Tell • Nation Thinking Behind Contract ‘DJSTROrr lUPl);-rGewge Rorn-tifcy, president of American Mdtors, witl -discuss the. Rational impliea-tjons of the ecfmpany's profit shar-ir^ contmct with the United Auto Workers Union .in a national tele-: vision broadcast Sunday, ^ . ■ /‘Widespread interest In Ameri-can.Motors1 progress (prof#) sliar- ^ mE PONTIiiC, PRESS, SATURDAY, SBPTfeMBER 3ft, 19611 ing approach confirms our belief that it is ofc major national sig-hlfipance.’-Jtomipey' said. , v p ■' ■ it-J ■#,; * * | jj He added. **We' feel that it fa important tin'the public interest that we - explain the thinking be-htod' our actiori." *■ ^ lit .. it Romney said that the profit shar Ing agreement, /which stunned the' auto industry, "opens a new door into labor relations.' deepens the equity of our employes havei in their jobs and . . . bucks inflationary trends." ' CAB OKs Airlines”. 'No Show Penalties WASHINGTON (UPI)-The C$fl Aeronautics Board (GAB) has giv-the nation’s airlines authorization to 1 consider stiff- peiWtles against passengers who make reservations but fa# to dhow up for flights.. , ' t . 1 Chairman Alan S. Boyd said-the.......CAB, hud1 given cuss |ihe possibility of an In-10-show" penalty to discourage the aodjseA' .who ntet with the presidents'Vf major airlines, said that if the airlines levy such penalties, they also must accept, fines --seiling and Oyer-booking,: The Capet' iamiljk, held the French throne from 987,„ when Hugf Capet founded the dynasty, to 1T&, when Louis XVI l6st his head in the French Revolutionr StatpCfoi C. Plans Statewidej Growth Confab$ LANSING (p-K^he1 Michigan State Chamber of Commerce re-j porta Us plans-jo; hold a staiewid< -Series of at least 50 economic growth conferences In Ideal < muhities during the .next year, , The - two-ljqur sessions, starting io'^pertmerr will be conducted by teams from the state chamber I Waff and member business and| manufacturing firms. - The programs will -outline the! economic and employment situa-l tlorf ifi the State and relate It directly tb the immediate area of the conference. Speakers, also wiUJ outline the legislative and follow-dp action needed lor economic) growth. Steam locomotives, Art on their [ww om tn-ltalyr^hey haul about 15 pec cent of the traffic at present,' buit plans call tor them all to be reptocied..by diesels by tpe'eSid of 1961, when sill major routes will be electrified. - : v,. , The , symbol of the 1964 World’s Fair ifl New York’s Flushing Meadow is. to be a huge openwork | globe of stainless steel, called a ] Unisphere. , * FOR tOW COST CARLOADS GMTC EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 156 W. Humn -r W 5-6151 0 SOU OF MAN! A 1 lovejl thy creation, henCi created thee. Wherefore, 'Sm thou tove Me, that I may name/ thy name and fill thy soul With the. spirit of Ufa,' BAHAI CENTER' 84 Henry Cloy ' Be Smart, Be Thrifty—Monday and EveryDay! You Can Be Sure of Extra Savings at’ Sears! No Phone Orders, ' C.0.D,V or Deliveries* ’Except Large firms MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY boys’ Billwel shoes with guaranjeed soles 444 your choice of 2 styles argali Choice of 2 styles, both moc-toe, 1 with scuff-lip in ’black • 1 • 1 in black or brown. For the lit time we now have a thoe with solas *0 good we gttars nice them to outwear the uppers or a new pair without charge. Limit 2 pr. MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY Hydraulic Storm Door Closers Won’t Leak Air • Regularly at 3.49- 229 . • Save This Monday charge it Only Hydraulic action can give you trouble-free, year-round performance on all door*; wooden, heavy aluminum and jalousie types. Adjustable for slow or fast closing. Qne-piece case it permanently' sealed. Come in Monday— you’ll save more at Sears! * ' Kenmore Automatic Console Sewing Machine . . . Save! • Waa priced at 89.95! • Makes sewing easy! Here’s a Kenmore .that’s made to do all your ordinary sewing tasks with ease! Sews forward and reverse, has foot-operated control. In attractive console cabinet. Save 40.95 Monday. Shop - Mon. ’til 9! Sewing Machine l)«pl.f Main Floor women’s assorted 1 blotisettes 88* Charge It Assorted roll-up sleeve Moot-elles in many styles. Made of easy-care cotton. . . . you’ll want a wardrobe full at this special Monday price! 22-38. 73% Cotton and 27% Rayon Cover-All Slipcovers Special ! (hair 33 One*piec*e cover* with ruf-1 fled slum. Stretch to -give snug slipcover look. Choose brown or green upholstery ’ type fabric. Machine washable. Save at Sears! 1JV. Sofa Cover.... 6.66 f Dept., Main Floor MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Circulating Type Gas Heaters Save on JFuel *98 St • Regular *125! / • 75,000 BTU output Combustion chamber design givei amount of heat .from the fuel. Automatic controls, handsome Tabipel. Get your heater Monday and he coay and warm this winter! See itj Appltanr* Dept., M»ln Ms.rmrni ^Satisfaction guaranteed or Save $24 Hollywood Full Siges 110 More. Metal F yuur ni^oney 21988 back’ *39 No Money Down SEARS No Monr Now you ctin give your clothes careful laundry attention 'with push button simplicity! 8 cycles; J2* speeds, 4 automatic wash and rinse temperatures, infinite water level, automatic bjleach > dispenser. I Appllonro Drpl., Main Hisrme'nt Coldspot Combination Is Frostless Throughout! 25r» . r, * Regularly at 289.95! “4 Frostlcaii refrigerator, front less 100-lb. freciter No more mestfy defrosllhgt Big 11.8 ell. ft. ( has the conveniences you want most, including ttyip. slide-out crisper*, butler compartment, egg shelf and light-seal magnetic doors. Bee it! ■ ■H Appllssrs Drpl., Mstn »«*< 1.54 Norik Saginaw Street .....r.........1....... I' -Phone FE 54171