rhe Weather •mi'* ht< *» THE PONTIAC-PRESS Home Edition PONTIACi MlCHlGA^, SATURDAY* AUGUST 6, 1060PAGES 118th YEAR Dems Whittling |jH8p Ike’s ’S6 Margin, "MBjl Survey Points Up|ketyj|| Urge A Bad Weekend Looms Ahead. Rainy and Sticky Umbrellas, raincoats and other rain gear will be the fashion -tonight and Sunday when scattered j thundershowers drop in an the ;Pontiac area. Congrtftfoss His Program Sy JOIN KRAFT (Special to The Pontiac Press) The 196S election‘will be a doe# one, unlike the last two presidential campaigns, according,to accumulated survey results. In J998 President Eisenhower won a landslide electoral college victory of CTT to-74, topping Ms 1952 margin over Steveneon by 15 votes. Eisenhower conceded only five states la the Deep South, and by. an eyelash margin of $^1 per cent he lest border-state Missouri. To Stond Reconvening Sum of the People From 'Aloha' to 'Hello' PRE-CONVENTIONS MEASURE OF REPUBLICAN STRENGTH compand to 1956 ELECTION ; to Speak Tonight There are many ways-to analyze national election*. Tip begin Solon! Message Citing [tonight will ** ® *nf,,the hi*Jl a list, for example, big cities versus rural area*, industrial areas; Work to Be Done l^und*y .***?..** .*?, . versus'agricuitural states, attitudes of Catholics versus those of! .' j jhum 1 d wit*'scattered thunder Protestants. But looked at from a regional point of view, here is thej , ... [showers likely is Mondays fore- Ebenhowrt* percentage-share of the vote as it turned out In 1958: | NEWPORT, R. I. (AP)— Eisenhower Share ol Prp^idpnt Eisenhower Willi Vote -r 1956 PTeSWeiU EWennOWer WIU, Moming gou^, winds at five % sena the reconvening COD- miles an hour will become south Industrial East and Northeast ............. 81 gress a special message at 10 - 20 miles tonight and Sunday. MWweat " • ® Monday urging- action on a Fifty-nine was tin lowest record-j Toe W«6t and Fir Wcit...................... 56 \ r' .. ■ ____ \nfJ {*« downtown Pontiac orcccd- Border State* (Bell-weather) 54 program the White g a m tv thermometer read- The Deep South ............................ 49 [termed Vin the public in- Ins at 2 p.m. was 79. .ft ★ terest.” But it-appears clear that Nixon can’t match Eisenhower in any. Announcing this today, pw ■ /• f*a I I iectlon of the country in 1980. In Maine, which used to point the ^__ r - « |J-%| il \ ni/f UlHol .’lection direction ter the rest of the nation. Ac Democrats as recently Press Secretary James C. |tq|J| jQWj | |llR| Hagerty left open the pos- ,xuWl M%,WI sibility that Eisenhower also may go on nationwide | television and radio next week to plug tor his pto-l YoUnger Brother Toth win 101. (’•opb Cuba Will Take! the Senate when it convenes Mon- Rod MlSSlI# Ala jday at midday after a recess for the political conventions. , HAVANA. Cuba (UPI* — Raul „_____________. , Castro has promised that his ailing | The Uwse does wt rHu^jg £££? Fidel Castro will I ,“‘U Au*' ST appear tonight before the first Lat- • *»AmnrtaS Youth Congress to J* £* 2 “answer enemies of the revolution the same time It goes to the ^ (he(r ^ about hig heaith.” I Sen*,c' Raul. Cuba’s armed forces min- Eisenhower will end his seaside ister. made the pledge to the peo-[ vacation Sunday afternoon and fiyjpie of this island republic Friday jto Washington. Re has been in [night when he took Fidel's place [Newport since July 7 except for before television cameras to de-[six days last week in Chicago and liver a ‘‘fireside chat” to the na-[ Denver. Ition. * • ,* * v The Cuban leader’s younger i The President’s message. Hag-! brother reported on bin trip to igerty said, * will “stress the effect' the Soviet Union and the United there there is much important Arab Republic. *W1" AtncnMa ho. torfowl ^ o(icr goviet rocketakl -• we accept it despite whatever the Organization of American State* may'say, ‘ Ms audience. * SHADED AREAS VOTED DEMOCRATIC Mil MAINLAND WELCOME — Republican presidential candidate Richard M. Nixon and his wile Pat w*ve to a crowd of 7,500 at the Seattle-Tacoma airport in the State of Washington V'M ar n*Mu Friday night on their arrival from Honolulu, Th* vice president was returning from a two-day island-hopping campaign tour. The Nixons arrived in Washington. D. C, this morning. Kennedy Will Visit Mrs. F H«’H Presfl Rights Drive "Says Province Would Do Battle jto Halt Troops ' ]• Insurgent Area Seale I Itself Off as Ghanion* Threaten to Mobilize From Our. News Wires ; UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ;—U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammerskjold today i asked the Security Council jto decide between the use of force In the Congo and a 'middle course that would ! avoid Interference in .the baby republic’s internal affairs. ‘ ! He said flatly in a report [to the council that the 11,-1000-man U.N. force in the Congo could not have en* [tend Katanga Province I without the use of force. l The UN. force was to have gone [into Katanga today but was called j off'at the last molpent. j In n&tted incidents: [ — Three Congolese minister* : derided to foitow Haimnarskjekt to New York tor the Security Council showdown, planning to confer on the way with Premier Patrice Lumumba, new touring went African countrim. I He may abandon his trip, turn [around, and return to New York for (he council session. [SEALS SELF OFF - Katanga Province virtually iNixon Back From Hawaii!^ scaled itself from the outside world and pressed plans to confirm |and if necessary defend—its independence. Preside at Kwame Nkromah , ef Ghana revealed he would Ut HQ l .....ft | I .... ft -v. •- ■ - Us-Paiflamoui Mauday foe •* _ UYANN1S port; Maw. (UPI) | WASHINGTON (AP) Vice President Richard M.) thortty to moblltoe alt force* hi8 he toid -ttontoeraiir protideutiai eaw [Nixon returned todiy from a five-diy Western cam- C-,B# F‘, “T'ffr’r‘nrr* topr, his first as the RepublicAn presidential' ' j new move to smooth over pre- r — U. N. special representative •daatro said he visited Khru- coiveottou party dUtormeeu. |nominee. Dr. Ralph J. Bundle was assailed shchev under orders (from Fidel) said today be will visit Eleuaor The tour was highlighted by S two-day SWing as a spy by the East German Corn- men. The president said *1 the time, “The Republicans took a heating public interest tor the people of and there i* no .disguising K.” jthle country.” ^ . 1t' The session, expected to tost In 1980 we found a lot of voters talking the way this one did: MM least uatU Labor Day, wW "I still like m^the way I did in ’58 — but he isn't naming and have an inevitable aura of pePmHM- . . , - - NP - , - - —1... IH have to think it over. If either Nixon or Kennedy ever caught a tics tM* presidential election [to express gratitude for •P°‘>ta- J"*”** “ h*r p*1*’ through Hawaii Where Nixon demonstrated the hard-.muni*t government in Berlin. trout, it was with a worm. TV President uses flies.” y^ar. dietotoreeted atf the ftovtotf N. Y., fiawa Aag. -H. driving tvue of camDaign*—----------------------------------------\Y J * * gTvx ^ j . ... Union has offered and given to; •■■■■ juTlving type ui campaign. •• \ — A Belgian government spokes- |Cuba. ! HYANNIS PORT. Mass. (AP)-jhe plana to wage for the . ^ _ man in Washington Called Congo But other voter* In that doww-Dtot purt of the ^ «“*,»>€ Vl«f Wch«,«1 ,d,icd that to* date for fcn- John F- Kenned>- back (rom «rv,u* Amnilbfo Rnu C (ftlfflMir Lumumba a liar foe deny- Rhode Island, had argumeoto founded on different end lew frivolous on. the .Republican "* aJJ2L a fence-mending presidential cam- White House. AmPUldlC DOV 5 lOOI ing gnfiwhite atrocities during re- lines of reasoning: . 221^1 STu cSrohaV »o New York CBy.| atom', ptoae arrived U_________/*_L | cent rioting. The Defense Ministry in Brus- "Om part ef the «em„w __ M IBB k Kennedy was brought ap around here aad understands it. Besides that; he's traveled since he was a bay and knows international preblsma. IT feel much better about voting Democratic thus I Far to the South, when Eisenhov i unprecedented Republi- can inroads, Kraft Interviewer* foimd entirely different arguments lor defecting from the RepuMttan line: Why down yonder in New Orleans, the Longs' stamping grounds, a cotton-baler put what a bt of his co-workers were saying, this way; “It Isa't easy ts toll who’s on our side anymore. I crossed my party line* to-vote lor Ike because I thought he'd hold tilings down to a reasonable pace — but It looks to me like Vice President Nixon It tryilH to outdo them labor leaders in stirring up trouble with the raCM. Ha’s been known to take sides against us Southerners. Kennedy couldn’t be any worn, even It tie is a Catholic.” fflU OTHERS ■ ■ And oot on the West Coast, where the population is “exploding, still other lines of reasoning were discovered: ' ♦ • ★ it "This is hard to say. I don’t care to vote for eRberonel We don't! A Detrojt pastor collapsed in Ms like Johnson on account of the rlght-to-work law. We wondef If^Vhe peasant Ridge Rome yesterday pope would have an influence with Kennedy. We don’t think thelpj^gntg after being stung by bees country would have a good chance against the Russians with Nixon ;arcj js jn wrious condition today because they don't like him any more than they do Elsenhower. Ijat william Beaumont Hospital, would really prefer Rockefeller myself.’' > Political chiefe began to arrive In Washington today for the bob-tailed congressional session expected to feature plenty of political hay-making along with legislative harvesting. Members ef both parties have (Continued on Page 2, CM. 2) Bee Stings Injure Pastor Seriously toll to Cab* has been P®**" 10 N mM. u M intervene her, «lthon£h Uiey Niltok After Mower Gash jmivi i iwnwi viwii < u ^ ^ Belgian troops.-t_________________ Lit, -* « .- thg exception of those In Katanga. 1 e/t i00* been withdrawn from emer- planned to before the'warnlng from Khrushchev. No Soviet soldiers are going to come here either, nor will Soviet rockets fall here. They may fall in other places.” BLASTS U. g. Raul again blasted the United States which he said "never has made a generous gesture to any nation . . . it prefers to throw its excess production into the sea while millions are dying of hunger.” Committee’s nationalities division at Kennedy’s summer home. Kennedy’* staff said about S* ate expected to Jala the talks with Ike Democratic presidential Sen. Stuart Symington (D-M6). ie of those Kennedy beat out for the Democratic presidential nomination, is due here this aft<£noort to discuss what tack the Demo- tiative in civil rights matters if Mected, Nixon told newsmen*1'at Seattle that "the prestige of the presidency could bo brought to bear to help” alleviate civil rights controversies. I "I don’t think it is enough simply to say that we will get Congress to pass (Civil rights) laws and then let them M* there,”- he told a news conference. Nixon laid Atty. Gen. WUUam P. Rogers naa been meeting with !*; BloomfieltJ Township boy was am- putated Friday night alter being cut in a power mower accident. * * ♦ The boy, Joseph M. Odenweiler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Odenweiler, 4912 Haddington DrJ was in satisfactory condition at1 WlHiam Beaumont Hospital today. gency positions to their bases. — The Defense Department in Washington cited swift U. S. move-^ ment of V. N. troops far present-(Continued on Page 2, Col. I) * Fiftcen-y e a r-old Charles Whit-read, 4742 Tullamore Dr., was mowing toe lawn of William As-- -- . kew, 4851 Haddington Dr., shortly executives of chain stores whose ( u^en the accident outlets in the South have wen the scene of sit-in demonstrations hy[ Hc ^ lownsWp police he was HP T Icrats should Take in Congress next Negroe* j ____[backing up with the rotary-type ** JTJ* week tor-demanding step# to; This, he said, vvas an attempt|m k. ika kail. an*., miiet dnatwui tka arfriu ttnH ' . . J * . - . . legal process. 133 Believed Drowned !in Philippine Storm the owner and ‘‘Prices, I .mean to me bee stings, collapsed in the hallway' before he could reach medicine to. counteract the stings suffered while working on an upstairs porch of his home at 28 ★ ♦ ~ AC Mrs. McClIntock called police and he was rushed to the hospital. like this to the Republican farm program: “There I* no oee answer to ear proprietor of 988 acres of farmland the prices we get, Jhit never meet ear costs. But It that Seerotary Bemea’a program la toe beet. I work my term ike the way they say. It saves tea **B - aad they see I don’t starve to deatly HI stick with the RopebOcaaa.” „„ m „„ ,usircu t mwi ( FtnaHy tot'tee beUweather borderstate of Kentucky, thte attitude ^ ‘^.‘^g^imock faTpastor of might prtve to be a haiWgger of the kinds of problems Nixon atoiLj^ paU] g Episcopal Cathedral, Lodge will have to fife- ^ ^ • [4864 Woodward Ave., Detroit. rwell, I tetl you. President Eisenhower was one of (he finest jmesi-"dents this country has ever seen. But I can t-sky the tame for Dick ’NW especially if he teams up -Jto* they say he’s gMng to - with “Somebody like Lodge. Those Republicans are all for India and Africa and not for the home front I think a Democrat, even a Northern Democrat, would remember America first.’’ MUST WORK KARO Taken together, toe moot recent precenventioo surveys indicate that the cemtidrto must work hard indeed to hold and regain the victory, margins enjoyed by Dwight Eisenhower four Will Select State Candidate by Ballot County GOP Devises P * ft ft Hero to a comparison of Richard Nixon’s pre-convention standing combated with that of the President’s strength ef 1961. Eisenhower • ft,v; Nixon’s* * Victory Margin Standing Today g . % i % • % Industrial East and Northeast ..... 81 <6 Agricultural and Industrial ’ Midwest .............»«•“ •••• “ « The West and Far West >>.,.... . K Border States^fBdhweatber) .... M ^VioTpreakient Nixon is running significantly behind the Etoeo-bower margin in aO five regions of to*, country. In two areas he still runs ahead Of Democrat Kennedy, but In the "predict the otocome' border rW be it slightly behind. The border-states area may Well Nb vitaL tor if Richard Nixon can win there, he may do well enough to off-set hia loses elsewhere, tout there to an question that at this point in time, at the idetoeff of tee campaigns. Nixon to right when ETsaye teal' he starts ftom behind. S By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL «. County Republican leaders believe they have devised (he utopia of convention*—free from the tiresome seating of delegates, long speeches, behind-the-door resolw tiona drafting end the Hke. their wares at MX| Wednesday's WASHINGTON UP — The United States charged Russia today .with making almost hysterical efforts “to inflame public opinion” in ad-....... . ivance of the spy trial of U.S. pilot MANILA (UPI — Thirty-three quy p^f,; persons were reported missing and) Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Power# and drowned today in South-ithrtr adviser wfll leave their Nbf-e4rn nMPP** waters ton, V’a., home tomorrow for Rus- stormy weather has prevailed for L, ^ the trim] 0f their son. the last two days. '-s^Jr sew The State Department also I Most of the missing were fish- made public an exchange ef notes ________ man with the same crmcn. believed to have been wMh the Soviet foreign offlea A little repair [him in his campaign against Rich-j name Nad defected to the Com- [caught in the Open seas by giant! showing Russia’s flat refusal to [art M. Nixon. , [ nmnists. \ [waves' and strong winds. ! I»nnll American attorneys to - - / ' — - • ^ — ---------------------------------. -------------------————--------------------——| take pari la Fewer*’ detease. The trial begins Aag. IT. Powers’ relatives will be given opportunity to confer with his Soviet attorheyjf they visit Moscow. a Russian note of Aug. 4 declared, The Soviet attorney was. identified as a member of 'the Moscow City' Lawyers’ Collegium” with the name of Griniv. Detroit, will be the first test of I with biographical outlines seeking wnen you nave your 'Sunday night and return to Wash- ,, r '«- U- r n-Wte? you must destroy the army andLftailf (or tb( senate’s re-^' 5. OOldier Detects. the diplomatic servioe. There ar* convening Monday HEIDELBERG Germsnv Rn4 tite State'Dfcpnri- ] Kuhn said back in April (>e saw intent saidtbe demand for direct nothing wrong in sending two can- contact with Powers would' ha (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) I pressed again in the future, . ., THB PONTIAC PRB38, SATURDAY^ AUGUST 8, 199$ Firm Denies Pledge to Rehire 57Drivers An. official of the Great Lakes when we begin Wring again." said Express Co. said today there were T. D. Knox, Great Lakes vice pm- no promises of More jobs made to if laid-ofl members of Pontiac's trucking industry. . "But the Pontiifc men will receive preferential treatment if and Want in charge Of traffic. Believes Agents in Red Territory Department of Defense Breaks Its Silence on . 2 Missing Men WASHINGTON un-Two American intelligence specialists were presumed by the Pentagon today tcrhave gone behind the Iron Cur-ain. The two are Bemon F. Mitchell, 3L end .William H. Martin, 29, employed since 1967 as mathematical analysts at the National Security Agency at nearby Ft. Meade, Md. NBA la s sapeneeret defense mitt which intercepts radio |tg-nals end works on oe—llea-Hons Mrlligence M hows a day-Mathematics Is one tool aoed for breaking secret cedes. The Defense Department broke silence late Friday chi the ’whereabouts of Mitchell and Martin, who mysteriously disappeared June 24. ■ NO TOP INFORMATION An official statement said '‘must he assumed that there is a likelihood” that the two “have gone behind the Iron Curtain.” It added that an tayestigattaa dons at 171 S. Saginaw St. and shifted them to a new terminal In Detroit. “That.terminal cost us,a million! dollar* and we had made it ex-; plicit that to pay for it we were! eliminating the Pohtiac operation,' said Knox. 'As far as the Pontiac people being absorbed directly into the Detroit operation, why we’ve got people laid off in Detroit now. “With leas seniority in Detroit than any of our other employee, the Pontiac workers simple would be laid off down there.’' Stating that Great Lakes business was down IS per cent last month from -the preceding month, Knox said there are “no plans at the moment for hiring.” He ladleat far from Ignoring the fate of the A Pentagon spokesman declined say whether the pair Had other information of value to the Reds, for their jobs, rush as on U S. code-breaking * techniques and on NSA operations. Nor would he say what Cc country they might have gone to or by what means. Teamsters Local fit Is going t bat ter them. “The union is made at me personally. They've been fighting for their members, naturally." * ♦ * Local officials are scheduled to debate the workery jol) status with the Michigan Motor Carriers ployers Assn. Tuesday at the Veterans Memorial Building in Detroit, Knox said. UNION VERY BITTER’ “The union Is very Utter,” Knox said. “But our position is that the company has to be economical now and Ms the. right to reduce itl vork force,” The company la preooxlly employing members of Tea mote ro Loeal let - the home local of Claims Cuban Broke Info Agenft Luggage, Stole War Trophies WASHINGTON (UPI) - Cuban police broke into an FBI agent’s luggage in Havana and took World War n German trophies which the FMU Castro regime then used to brand Mm a “Nasi,” the 8tate Department charges. The department said C u bap authorities confiscated a Swastika flM. a Swastika emblem and a signed photograph of Nasi official Hermann Goerfog. The earn Involved William G. This, the five laid-off workers said, is the reason they doubt Local 614 leaders have been fighting Ike fo Urge Congress Pass His Program (Continued From Page Otoe) Called on their opposition to avoid political oqoabbilag or graadstaadiag aad attend te ban-' tame daring the seoolen. Bat no one figures there won’t be politicking. ... Johnson has said the major objective will be to complete action on bills already passed Ire ti House and “get out by Labor Day. Asked about reports that Repub-cam might introduce bills Meed on the Democratic platform, especially its civil rights plaak, Johnson said “I think there are always some Republicans who want to play politics. ” A A A Nixon has said the session could ’turn into a domybrook.” He called on both parties to take a responsible approach. State Will Pave Mackinac Island Highway in Fall LANSING (AP) — Michigan’) strangest stretch of highway *-the 81 miles of gravel that skirts Mackinac Island — will be paved this fag, the State Highway Department announced. The new pavement will be a 18-foot asphalt strip — the width of one lane of an expressway. Cars wifi still be barred from using the road, although it Is payed for by gasoline tax revenues. The need for paving is a sequel to the building of the Mackinac Bridge. State-owned ferrys, which were sold when the bridge opened, used to bring equipment to the island each fall to eB the road. Transporting the oiling equipment on prirote boats has more ^than doubled the Coef. from 87,000 'to about 818,000, said Tom Farrell, department publicist. Detroiter on Board of lakes-Seaway -Unit WASHINGTON CB —The Great Lakeset. Lawrence Assn, has elected Robert C. McLaughlin, •Detroit, and John A. Ulinski, Buffalo. N., Y.; to its board of today the 15th anniversary of -the directors. Jdropping of the atomic bomb on McLaughlin is vice president and. Hiroshima with pleas for banning assistant to the president of Mc-|I]Uc^ar weapons. Louth Steel Corp., Detroit. Among, # i ____________J _ other civic poets, he is chairman Crown Prince Akihito attended Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium of the Port Committee of thejand delivered a message at agov-imilitantly denouncing the United Greater Detroit Board of Com-jemment-approved memorial ser-1 States and its allies as the “force mere*. vice in Hiroshima. Some 30.000!of war.*’ ✓ P * ft* 71* v-*V. A vf* 0 The Diy In Birmingham To Break Ground Sunday tor Education Building FATAL scene — These two mangled autos mark the spot on Interstate 94 east of Jackson where three pereone died in i freak four-car accident. The left front wheel slithered off a car driven by James T. Williams of Albion and hurtled into the car, (right), of Frank Gibson of Greenville. Gibson tried to ovoid an hmwu the wheel and smashed into an auto, (left), driven by Robert Mc-Dounough of Ypsilanti. McDounough died this morning in a Jack-son hospital. His wife and four-month-old eon were -killed in the crash. Four other McDounough children were injured in the collision along with Gibson and his wife. Nazism Charge £oun* gop Devises r i r .. r I Peaceful Confab Plan Fake, Says U. S •ai Edwin L. Sweet. Abilene. Tex., FBI agents assigned to tee VA Embassy In Msvsno as -statist legal attaches. The Castro regime charged them with “meddling" in Cuban affairs ousted them from Cubs June 15. State Department.Press Officer Lincoln White said Friday two Cuban policemen broke into cartons containing Kriedemann’s belongings July 6 and took the German trophies. He said Friedemann and Sweet already had left Cuba and the cartons were awaiting shipment to the United States. ♦ A A White said Friedemann’s brother had brought the trophies back from World War II and left them’with the FBI agent for safekeeping. The spokesman said the Cuban police also slashed Friedemann’s furniture which was awaiting shipment, stole his coin collection, his wife’s jewelry, bonds i investment documents, and, even took his tax records and household records. Caught Thom Napping HAVANA, Cube (UPI)-Inmates at Havana’s Principe Jail were treated to an extra hour of sleep Friday when reveille buglers Evtlio Gamarra and Ernesto Acosta failed to wake them up. The two buglers had escaped during the night. (Continued Fran Page One) didates to the state convention. He said this would ensure landing at least one spot. Elliott reported that now Kuhn and Calhoun "have mutually cfc-—1—-- on the Vot-> a. Although no commitment* were made to Co lb pan when party leaders convinced Mm to qntt,tbo Senate race, the chair —an aald, it appears tint Col bona, (i, boo garnered more onpport than Kuhn. The old, monotonous procedure of delegate selection from the floor consumed several hours in past county conventions. Another highlight of Worines day’s convention is also taking shape days in advance. PUBLIC r-auj-n Under the new plan, as approved at the.April convention here, minimum of two open hearings frill be held to draft county hocked resolutions. The public is invited to participate for the first time. “The moot Important aspect of the plan will be the resolutions system where we-wlB Slave grass roots people making sag-gesttons and taking an active part hi shaping the eewnty’s platform.” explained John - A. Gibbs, executive secretary of the county committee. “This surely win put more force behind Oakland’s viewpoint these issues when we pn them at the state convention,” he said. Hie second of these hearings wUl be Sunday at 2:30 at the GOP headquarters. 351 ft. Woodward Ave., Birmingham. A A It will be under the direction of C. Ray Ballard, Huntington Woods party worker. Each of the six legislative districts has one member on Ballard’s committee. The nominee for the House of Representatives will be acting chairman of his legislative district caucus. Pontiac’s will be led by Rich- rd I. Moon, who was un- Tuesday’s primary A nine-member committee, under the direction of former County Chairman Chad M. Ritchie came up with the speed-up ideas. Another time-saving suggestion was that the county chairman serve as convention chairman. SEEK SPEAKER This also took some time in past conventions when he was elected from the floor in a tedious roll call vote. A a Knowing that something had to bo left to do at the convention. Elliott’s forces have been attempting to attract a nationally known speaker. None, however, has been chosen so far. Gibbs sold the party “missed by x whisker” getting Walter A. Judd, uatlouil convention keynoter, and Charies Pony, chairman of that convention's platform committee. Whoever the speaker 1a, M promises to he a new name to fit into the local party’s new look in conventions. Japanese Leftists Rally in Tokyo Observe 15th Anniversary of Hiroshima TOKYO (AP)—Japan observed persons lttended the rally in Peace Park, In Tokyo, the Communist-dominated World Conference Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs opened a four-day conference at The leather Examination Set in Auto Death Southfield Man, 20# Charged in Fourth of July Smashup A 20-year-old Southfield man charged with negligent homicide in the death of a companion in a July 4 auto accident Friday demanded examination before South-field Justice of the Peace Clarence . Reid Jr. AAA James Smith of 24509 Lahser d. was released on 8509 bond pending the examination Sept. L tilth and/ three passengers stead Recreation Area, Steam-field Township, when he last control of the rai near 11-MUe read. Sss I. Weather Bareaa Repert *1* vicwttr — r»- —air MOM so* Little teapermtare ehaaie. I i as* tea law taatfht at. I SI. Saoteaael wtaSe •-» ■ la« Mate 10-10 aillet tenlfht TBit; Is Pan time Hlfhett temperature Thrown Off Horse, 9 Area Girl Badly Hurt "p ■Jj A 14-year-old Commerce Town-I ship girl was injured seriously Friday when thrown from a horse tempefstara pracadtss i s ue. I while riding near her home. Wins valaett; I mp h.| AAA Jo Anne Cary, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cary of 9060 Git. ting St., is listed in fair condition today at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. She was riding a hone owned by her (afher on Btrchton street near Gitting when the horse evidently bolted sheriff's deputies said.. The girl suffered a fractured jaw and collar bone end possible spinal injuries. • Sunday al »:J0 a m. ■leva euti Sunday St #:M a m. Moon rieai Saturday at 111 p m. —■■tews Taaapaaataeoe Us...'.........N tfstei.;....:.. • am’........-i.te to— »Vm ..........U ■ 3 pm......... ISr’f.m.... ..TJ frteay to —abac (At recorded downtown) Hlfheit temperature ......... Laweet temperature ............. imperature ...... Weather ■ Sunny. a Tasa A*a la feattae Mras temperature Weather—Sunny. This Particular Drinkar Is Certainly Wall Aged NEWBURGH, N. Y. (* — The! County GOP Exec Committee Announced Arthur G. Elliott Jr.. Oakland lounty Republican chairman, today announced the selection of officers to his party’s county executive committee. ' f A A Chad M Ritchie of Bloomfield Township, former county chairman, was re-elected treasurer. Mrs. Howard Liveraoce of Bimilagham, a past chairman af the Republican Women’s'' Finance Dl via ton. was elected vie* chairman. Mrs. Isabel Ifpynes of Farming-ton, president of the Republican Federation of Women’s Clubs, was selected secretary of the committee. Abrnt 109 police scuffled briefly with 50 extreme rightists who demonstrated against the Red-inspired conference. One nun Was injured and three' dubswinging demonstrators were arrested. Prime Minister Hayato Dteda sent a message to the Hiroshima rally expressed regret that despite Japan’s repeated appeals there still was no halt in the manufacture, stockpiling and testing nuclear weapons. •MORE EFFORT “We must in the future appeal with even greater earnestness to the world to ban nuclear weap-Ikeda said. “I hope that everyone of you will work for the achievement of eternal peace with renewed determination.” ♦ AA Walk for peace” marchers, organized by the leftist Japan Council against Atomic and Hydrogen Btuphs, arrived Friday in Tokyo from five 'direction*.' The marchers 'claimed to have covered 6,000 miles. They included a man who said he Md walked three months coming from small talhnd south of Japan. Polios said the ranks of marchers who demonstrated past the Defeme Agency had swollen to 4,500. At night an anti-nuclear rally of 5,000 was held at Hibaya Park. Killed In the accident was David B. Neilson, 29, of 21446 Avon Lane. Darryl Ashley, 20, of 23465 Lee Baker Dr., was seriously injured. ■ „* A A Southfield police said tM four occupants of the car had be drinking prior to the accident. Loose Wheel Causes 3 Deaths i Children Orphaned Near Jackson at Car Tries to Dodge JACKSON (UPI) — A wheel came hurtling along a highway yesterday, causing .an accident In whidi three persons were killed and four children orphaned. Mrs. Emma McDounough Ypsilanti and her four-month-old son Patrick died in the crash. Her husband, Robert, 32, died this morning at Wood Hospital here. The couple’s tear other chit-drea, Peggy, S, tens, 5, CM-torn, 11, aad Cathey, IS, were la critical condltiea and were aof told of the deaths of their par-eats sad brother. . State Police said the accident occurred when a wheel came off a car on Interstate 94. Frank Gib-Green ville attempted to veer out of the path of the hurtling wheel and crashed into McDoun-ough’s car. Gibson, 57, and his wife. Theresa, 50. were also hospitalize-' BIRMINGHAM — Ground will be broken Sunday for an educational building at the First Baptist Church af Dhmtorttam, Taking pari In tM 1*41 a.ra. ceremony on the church grounds will be the Rev. Dr. Helper Armstrong, putel Earl I buUdtog chairman; Robert. Critch-field, construction chairman. Glen Paulsen, architect, and Frasei Pomary and Robert Masher, ft nance and publicity chairmen. The $875,000 building will house all clMdrea aad youth depart menU of the church. % With construction expected t( start next week tM structure Is scheduled fbr completion In early 1961. TM State Municipal Finance Commission Friday approved 8L 100,000 in borrowing on tax anticipation notes by tM Birmingham School District TM money will be, need Sea Gulls Force to Crash ST. JOSEPH IB—“We ran into a bunch of sea gulls—about a million of them.” * A passenger, H. D. Grau, 41 of South Bend,. Ind., was plaining how a four-seater airplane in which he was rifflnr crashed on a Lake Michigan beach eight miles south of here. Grau said be didn’t know what happened after tM gulls were encountered. ‘A A * He and three others were injured to the mishap. • A * A TM pilot, Edward F. Fisher, 39, of NUes, was admitted to Memorial Hospital with severe head cuts and a fractured ankle. AAA Hie other passengers, William Kubiak, 28, of South bend, Ind., and Lofcell Fred, 25, of NUes, were treated for minor injuries. • A ' A - A • Grau laid M and hie panions reified the plan NUes City Airport and were flying around Berriei) County. Elliott said the names of new 3 trUer** TeatRereiere Chart aSSeN S 1s TKSphte* m “-defendant was charged with public BriMM 3 ft Stent a. it w intoxication. i .___________, u. Bmiteta M § Muveaker n s» .... . . omltaA will be announced Monday. #885 ft If StovtepoUi » is How old are your asked ,______ gtyJP8 S it 2 Judge Charles Roskoski. ctnretSte A 8 omihi si 8] “I know I’m 90,” answered ISo Thofs Whar* It Is! kSS • M 8 Phoiou 103 M Mooefc Powell, ’’because this is thei BtejtttL ^ j 5J gju-ftgf1 H h; third time I’ve been In trouble. OLSO, Norway (AP) — Norwe- 8 8 a FreadKo 8 it!And I.only get in trouble every gian scientists have discovered the IS 8 U » )*“•’*. ' r I petrified tracks of a giant reptile justea W loe n weeMsftea n n "Sentence suspended," said the .on the artic: archipelago of Spits- GR*.lS®r S-fyor. y K— Five men and a woman carrying disarmament placard* started the vigil Friday! The V . planned to keep it up in two how shifts through noon Sunday. ft was part of a series of meetings and minor demonstrations ‘ in the New York City area for the day. Truck Drive Concrete Results DENVER, Colo. (AP)—Jot Nelson to going to get a 1948 model automobile to replace his 1946 car which Bob Porter filled with wet concrete. Alee, he’s going to gat another load of concrete far the driveway ha pluu to build. Joe’s old car to going to M displayed by the cement company with a sign reading, “We pour cement anywhere.” Joe and Bob shook hands and agreed to let bygones be bygones. Tfte Mppy ending wound up today an Incident , which Started when Nelson ordered the concrete and 11 eras delivered by Parlor. Nelson wasn’t home. He claims he canceled the order several hours before the delivery. The company saya he didn’t. Porter suspected a Joke because he had Just won a $20 bet from Joe. . JUST BLEW MY STACK “I guess I Just blew my itaek,” the truck driver aald. He dumped the load—all six tone of it—In the back seat of Nelson’s car. > •' •„ .Mrs. Nelson commented: “We’d have money enough to’ buy a new ear If we charged admission for all tho people who come by to ana tho ear.” Ronnie Stewart. Porter’s boos, saw possibilities in the situation and came up with the peace plan, agreeing to finance the whole thing. He isn’t even mad at the driver, explaining, “I’m not sure I wouldn’t hfve done the same thing myself." He did give Bob a talking to, though, about dumping the semen L Bald the driver: “The bom told' me, ’porter—you know this Isn't company policy.’” 43081 W. 13-Mile Rd., wfll be at U a f Monday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Mr. Reynaldl died Friday fright [of a” heart attack at William Beaumont Hospital. A member of the Fleet Baptist Church, ho mm ip . He le survived by his nifty Lena, Burial will be at Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Fred Gravlta . longtime Birmingham resident, Fred Gravba of 38650 Pierce Studied this morning at William Beaumont Hospital. His body is at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. The Brimingham - Troy Republican’s Women’s Club will meet Thursday at the home Theodore Wills of 852 Puritan Rd. at1 p.m. ~~ l JoM C. Finegan, program chairman, will review her trip to Chicago as a delegate to the National Convention and a member of the platform committee. There also will be a taped speech by Dr. William Mayer an American prisoners captured by the Communists in Korea. , Approximately 116,600 of the 840,000 sought by tM Frtande of tM Baldwin Public Library has been collected to equip and furnish the new addition, accordingfio fund drive chairman Herbert H. Gard-*. , V He said that' about'five per cent of the 1,700 letters requesting finds have been returned. Besides the gifts resulting from letter solicitations, three have been many large donations foade independently. Victor Reynolds Service for Victor .Reynolds, bill. Utter 13 Soviet Yeah It Was HaH/ Ha Says — Wants to Saa a Ball Gama and His School DETROIT (UPI) — Thirteen years ego, 19 - year - old Thomas Mooradiwi, a high school honor student and athletic star, left the United State*, hie family and his friends to live in Soviet Armenia. A -A _ A* Now 32, Mooradian is once more an American cittoem On his first day home yesterday, he announced he wanted only two tilings: **Te sea a baseball game aai rlslt my aM school.” Daring hto IS years in the Soviet Union, Mooradian attended a university in Armenia, graduated and became a teacher. He visited all 16 Soviet republics as a teacher of physical education. But be became quickly disillu- “It waa hell,” he said. “I just want to forget the past 13 years. I’m only interested in the figure.” Through the efforts of the U.S. diplomatic corns end Detroit's Armenian colony. Mooradian finally to return home. Katanga Province Bars U.N. Vanguard (Continued From Page One! ing a possible threat' to world peace. Hamtnerekjold made It dear N O T to blame far the Katanga Hammarskjold put an 11-page report before the council detailing his efforts to carry out previous council resolutions calling for a speedy withdrawal of Belgian troope Aram the retire Congo. Bunche became convinced of the danger after conferring to EUse-bethvflle with Katanp Premier his chief troubleshodter Hammarskjold called the council meeting on the turbulent Congo for Sunday night after hto troubleshooter, Bunche, warned him entry into secessionist Katanga would Ming bloodshed. Moise Tshombe ' who vowed ->he would use force to keep out U.N. troops. OMINOUS RUMBLINGS Hammarskjold's decision not to enter Katanga-and replace Belgian troope now patrolling the province came amid -ominous rumblings from two quarters. The Soviet Union drummed out a warning that if the U. N. to get all Belgian troops out of the Conip, forces should M sent to from other countries “which would be ready to contribute.” And ministers of the central Congo government talked loudly of ' ding our troops to Katanga” if [tho U- N. keeps stalling. | At Katango’s EltoabethviUe Airfield, all normal traffic was pended’ and trucks blocked tM 'runway. However, a plane carrying Belgian official Robert Rothschild was allowed to take off en route to New Yprk to advise tM Brigtop delegation at Sunday’* Security Council debate on Ka- Area Residents Named to State MESC Council Two Pontiac area residents have been appointed to the Michigan Employment Security Commission Advisory Council, returning the eight-man group to fun strength. Filitoxcounctt positions are John F. Williams of 4)71 Harding St. Waterford Township, end Colin L. Smith ol 155 W. Frank St., Birmingham. arts here said This morning the Katanga government announced tM suspension of all dealings In foreign currency pending tM introduction of a new Katanga currency on Tuesday. Observers said the move port of hurried plans to confront tM world and particularly the UJf. with a fait acconfpU as fiur as the Katangeee independence to Brave Motorist Hangs Ticket on Fire Hydrant NEW YORK (AP) - For the harried motorists in Manhattan, where nothing is so rare as e parking spot, it was poetic justice: a parking ticket on a fire hydrant. A patrolman ticketed a car Friday fdr parking too dees. Two hour* later the car was gone and rammons hung defiantly from hydrant top. The police wto«| amused. TM summohs remains in fores. Williams, secretary-treasurer of the^Wayno County AFLCIO, waa named by Gov. Williams yesterday to replace'-Howard R. Sowers of Detroit for a term ending April 21, IB. Smith, executive dlreCtor of the irifigan Employers Unemployment Compensation Bureau, was reappointed tor a term expiring April 21, 1986. Neither appointment requires Senate confirmation. FPC Approves Hike in State Gas Intake WASHINGTON (fl - The Federal Fewer Commission today eta Pipe Line Co. of Detroit to Increase Its avsrags dally sales capacity by approximately 199 million cubic feet of natural gas. A A ' A The expansion project, estimated to cert $44,*70,000, includes construction of eboat MV miles of pipe Me aad 0,100 ad- The additions! gee \ per Oenaty, Okie, end w|R g# to the company’s present market arena In I Woman, 82, Dies After Pontiac 2-Car Collision' A woman injured In a pro-car collision at Telegraph road and West Huron street Wednesday died this morning at St. Joseph Mercy! “ “1 I She was MrsJ Amice Floury, 82/ of rurajt Stoney Crtak, near Ypal-tonti: She suffered head lajnrtaa ' when the car in which aM wds riding, driven by her granddaughter Mrs. Virginia J. Hicks, 38, of 563 East Blvd., collided with another driven by Donald R. Smith, 59. of Southfield. Mrs. Hicks was treated and released. Oakland Highway Toll In *60 - 64 Edith Plot in Hoipita! ; PARIS (AP) - French sk«er‘ Edith Ptof was back to tha hot-’ pttal today, undergoing a new treatment tor the Uvur ailment that threatens her Ufa. Slim mm jwBBB AC. PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1990 gstb THREE Committee Ip Study Detroit Income Tax Mr Barbour. president of the Wayne Ctamty AFLdO; Robert Heines, vice preefclsnt of Thman-ters Joint OMnd 43; and Irvine DETROIT nflpfo n.^n ri , **• P«b«tersifisArict council of tpPD-l*** Coim- ^ Detroit Building Trades Cbun- cfl President Mary y. Beck Friday named 12 persons to a citizens committee to study and make recommendations on a fwyH 1 per cent income tax. Mtas Beck named Common Pleas Judge Benjamin Stanczyk as chairman Of the menwUffry Other members indude John D. Leary. Chrysler Corp. vice president; Milton S. Bosley. National Bank of Detroit vice prad-dent; Mr Osnos, president a< a department store chain; Alfred G. Guimond, insurance broket; dt. Pentecostal* Oppose Presidency for Catholic Abo Nat Wetngerg. director d special projects for the UAW; Mrs. W. S. Sellman, secretary of the Federated Civic aaaocktkme of' Northwest Detroit; Richard H. Austin, past president of the Oakland Bmdevard improvement A* ; and B. Joseph Kress, secretary of the Outer-Van Dyka Homeowners Association. A single VS. Jet bomber carries a fuel load equivalent to four railroad tank care. LAKE ODESSA (AP) - The blies, which daima a 10,000 n bership in ha Protestant faith, •ays it uppoaea selection of Roman CstfaoMc as peeddent of the United States;*. Dr. William doseard Carter, a minister-educator from Goldsboro, N. C., said a teaotattaf which ha offered was adapted uanimously yesterday it the biennial meeting of the aseemhilea. The Penteeostal Church objects 0 a Roman Catholic president ‘due. to the fact that where the Roman CathoHe Church is in power governments fall to give Protestants freedom of worship.” Wiiwtiinii mu iT * ^ “We’re Recommended by the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce” SIMMS SHOPPER STOPPERS Tonife and Mondays ('♦il 10 p.m.) (Pom to 10p.m.) « Now Is the Mm# to buy, you won't get prices any lower than SIMMS fbf night end Monday Shopper Stoppers. Rights resented to limit quwwtties. OFTEN HAPPENS — A mandrill, member of the ugly baboon family, clutches her newborn infant at New York’s Bronx Zoo. Mama chews a peanut and wean a blase expression. She AP FUtolti has a right to took bored - zoo officials didn't even know the family addition was on the way until it was discovered Friday. ^Reports continue to come to our attention that both door-to-door salesmen and telephone solicitors claim to be approved or endorsed by the Chamber of Commerce. Beware of such claims! Collector Fights U.S. -Out to Keep $10 Note Robert Kennedy Hails Kefauver The Chamber of Commerce definitely disapproves of the methods used by such solicitors. WILMINGTON, Del (AP>-Ju-I lius Reiver, collector of coins and I currency, wants to keep a pre-I 1934 U. S. government *10 gold I note, The government does not 1 agree, and so Reiver faces a hear-1 ing before a U. S. commissioner 1 on charges of possessing a gold 1 certificate. The only recommendation your Chamber of Commerce ever makes is that you deal with local, well-established firms. Reiver wrote J. Edgar Hoover, I director of the Federal Bureau of I Investigation, to say his collection I included a *10 gold certificate be-I lieved to be one of the Lindbergh I kidnap ransom bills. logues for $25, and, if a true note from the Lindbergh case, worth even more than that. The United States went off the gold standard in 1934 and gold and gold certi-cates were called in. Thursday Alva M- Boteler, special agent of the Secret Service, signed a complaint before U. S. Commissioner Edward C. Pollard charging Reiver with refusing to surrender the certificate. “I am surely no lawbreaker but have my conviction in this matter and I hope it does not lead to jail,” Reiver told newsmen. Back came what Reiver called “very nice letter” from Hoover BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce mm}*'W'wyjyT est la type to Ltoeaia of aay ’ "They can't do the Job," they aay. So the new employes aad people off tho streato gat lint choice, regardless o of ability. eel field riaee the days of Lie-coin. Aad it wo eaa have some debates betweea Ntxoa and Kea- ‘'Every subject sooner or later ia linked to some basic factor called faith,” iays Dr. Joseph R. Bizoo, Mlibank Professor of Religion and Director of tho Chapel at George Washington University. George Washington is a secular university that recogrtlzes its responsibility to the moral and spiritual development of its 10,000 students. Faith is promoted through the Department of Religion, dormitory discussion and campus organizations of Protestant, Jewish, Catholic, Orthodox and Unitarian organizations. Visiting speakers peg their talks to faith — like Lewis L. Strauss, former chairman of the. Atomic Energy Commission, on "Religion and Atomic Power;” Undersecretary of Labor J. T. O'Connell on “Religion and Manpower; ” Maryland Gov. T. R. McKeldin on "Religion and Political Power.”. “The University,” says Dr. Slzoo, "believes education must interest itsilf not only with facta but with values which give meaning to Ufe. Apart from spiritual sensitiveness learning is sterile and artificial.” themaeiVM late their gimps with local asafsrtty agreements' so that the seniority employs Is left ont completely. Lincoln aad Douglas It wtl la- Also, the foremen for personal reasons or otherwise, block the older man with the same gimmick. The committeeman’s pets . or the booses' pets am the exception to the rale. Although we do not sat the same benefits wo still pay the same dues. Whp s tor a raise in union dues? Confused We are sure living in tense and . troubled times and without the ■ guiding hand of God our ship of state may sink. ’ THOUGHTS FOE TODAY But Seans answered him. Let it be ae now; tor tons it Is fitting tor as to fulfill all righteousness. Then be consented. — Matthew St IS. Days of All Faiths: Prayers ’ Helped Convert Romans The Almanac * Jt By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER Salat's Martyrdom Helped Convert Roman Halers St. Lawrence is one of the most famous saints and, it what writers have said about him to true, one of the most important. He Ins been, given credit for the end of idolatry in Rome and the beginning of the conversion o( the Roman Empire. If he accomplished this, it would be impossible to think of any other man who had such a profound and far-reaching effect on history. To get Lawrence's tall story It to accessary to combine (act and legead. He waa one ef eevea deacons la Home who were charged with the care ef each goods as the Church possessed and with the distribution of alms to the needy. This was la the middle ot the third eeo-fury, and the Church at that time did aet have much la the way of material treasures. It is also known that in 298 Pope Sixtus II, to whom Lawrence was deeply attached, was put to death tot the faith and that Lawrence followed him, in martyrdom Just four days later. Here legend takes over and fills in the details that have made Lawrence famous. It to said that he followed, weeping, as Sixtus waa led to execution, and that the Pope said to him. “I do not leave you, my son. You shall follow me in three days.” Within hours Lawrence was called before a Prefect who ordered him to tar* the Church’* possessions over to the govern- quite peacefully, be Dr. William Brady’s Mailbag: Ear Drops Were Remedy for Fungus Infection Have used your ear drops for fungus infection, of ear canal, with excellent results. Msr**^ 1 had triad all * mm, m kinds of drop* and MS ■ other treatment MbfWk' S with no results. I am certainly grateful. (K.K.J.) m too worth tons pertain in* ( Stoned tetter* — — MS wo _____health and bHMaHHUH eaie. diagnosis, or treatment, will be antwertd by Dr. WQitem Brady, 11 s atamnsd. aclf-addmied envelope la lent IS As PWiUa* Pieu, Pontiac Michigan. (Copyright liM) By UMfed Today is Saturday, Aug. 6, the 219th Hay'of the year, with 147 more in I960. The mOOfi is full. The morning stars are Mars and Mcrairy. The evening start are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history: In 180D, Alfred. Lord Tepnyson, British poet, was born. In 1914, Austria and Russia declared war. In 1926, Miss Gertrude Ederte became the first American woman to swim the English Channel. In 1930, Joseph Force Crater, a justice of the New York State Supreme Court, disappeared and was never seen again. In 1945, the White House announced that an atomic bomb had been dropped oo Hiroshima, Japan, killing 78,130 . . . injuring 37,425. Another 13,083 were miss- Where truth and right are concerned we must be firm as God. — Thomas A. Guthrie. Hie Country Parson ratefuL^ (kic.j) Records of a Psychologist: [ructions for pro- [ ' 1 "1 r ' ... 'Psychic Wages’ Important in Jot 1st ructions Ipariig and using ■drops for chronic I running ear send BEADY stamped, self - ad-dressed envelope. UFE EXPECTATION Lois shows that many work- Has a man aged 36 who has AM m ^ ^ coronary thrombosis a shorter Ufe despite big cash pay cheeks, expectation than a man of sixty and all bacause they don't get sstu'wtrs (Mrs. J.A.) below. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE FILES OR HEMORRHOIDS CASE F-436: Lois C., aged 26, is If you have anything on piles or a b^iM and also a very efflci-hemorrhoids, please send it in the clent dental assistant, enclosed stamped, self-addressed "Dr. Crane, I have changed po- less money, than a bigger salary 'and be under constant nervous tension! “Moreover, my preooet dentist Include* oar oameo m his dental letterhead. Aad that isn’t all, tor ha fl lalHns MM all fha afafliM. Furthermore, he said his former boss was a "bearcat" who kept everybody agitated and unstrung, so he had developed a peptic ulefr Just being under such constant tension. envelope, and don’t return the currency in any case—have a cup of rency in any ... m nrvmnt coffe. on me ne*1 Um. y«. «Wt better than my Finally he prayed that Rome just celebrated his 93rd birthday. He worked like a dog to accumulate $8,000 and “started a store.” Last year his stores did mors than 400 million dollars in business. Oakland County Is proud to claim his son, Stanley, as a resident.... ...... Travelers back from Alaska say our newest state is flooded with things “made in Japan.” But, are they selling?............. Dept of Cheers and Jeers— the C’s: the boys and girls that made the U.8. Olympic swimming team; the J’s; the yo-yo that declared Our best backstroke swimmer off the team because “he dipped one shoulder too far on a turn.” —Harold A. Fitzgerald the bowling green. (D.K.P.) P.S.—Can internal hemorrhoids fnrnifr employer, in a woman be curled by ambula- "And that may lory treatment? (D.K.P.) seem odd because Am.—No, thank you, but I'll buy * I don’t make as a package ot my favorite blend MJtob money here., and gladden the hearts of soma of ^ ^ offersJtaal the Scotsmen who are always ran- *°rtfe psycholyi-ning out of tobacco at a critical eri rswerul moment. The ambulatory (ambulant, Injection. office) treatment to especially for latefMl piles. Which physicians give such treatment I cannot tell you.' Canvass the list in the telephone help, book, or Inquire at the County Medical Society office, or ask “And, of course, we girls like that, for it gives us some ego inflation to write totters to our relatives and also to our boy friends, with our names listed in print at the top cl the page. “And we girts also have another incentive here, for my present boss treats us as Junior part- A tot of medical patient* come to’M physician* because of ten- month thaa we did thq cor- •t have be- jj* CRANE For example, my former boss dominated the office and took all the glory. He rarely paid anybody a compliment. He was the ’big shot’ and we were Just the office then we get a certain percent-age ef tho lactcase as a bonus. “That adds a lot of zest to our work. Oh. 1H admit tint many other dentists and physicians give their assistants a bonus at Christmas, especially if the income to greater this year than the year previous. ’But my present dentist to ca- nny doctor you know. 77m warn- tirely different. He leans so us phlst You Need Not Suffer From for advice and actually makes us PDas is free to anyone who asks feel as if he couldn’t get along feu* It and provides stamped, self-addressed envelope. GOUT MYTHICAL — I have suffered a good deal from what very good doctors tell me to really gout, so I am annoyed when you classify it as a mythical malady. (W.C.A.) "if g patient compliment* him, be trios to laetode m aad modestly says ho eaa do good work became he has web tel- "Naturally, that'makes us girls feel happy and we work all the Ana.—I do not mean to imply harder to come up to his nigh that there's nothing the matter with praije a person who purports to have “gout,” but lust /that deposits of Uric add salt (monosodium Urate) PSYCHIC WAGES' "Although I started st $5 per m the tissues does (tot explain what week less money, I wouldn’t go the jdd timers and some latter day back to my former employer. “I'A rather have hanninos* ai “But I like to get mon frequent ’honusee’ which is what this monthly arrangement amounts to-^to I wish yse'd toll employers of aO sorts that wsthsis are not mottvatad oeloty by each alone. Wo ake Mka pqreksisgtoal wagm to lbs term of apprsda-tion sad compliment* sad even having our aamsa to friat oa the cempeay atattonery.” PERSONNEL STRATEGY What Lois has stated _*>' simply, t to exactly the keynote of modern Perinnnel Strategy. 1 raeaB a tanner student la saS ef my psychology classes at So send for my “Tests for Employers A Employes,” enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus Bte. They explain “psychic wakes” more fully. »*arjn.%a.*EE,,,w8g sa&arauaasrss (Owrnu uw doctors call “fout” Td rather have happiness and changed Jobs aad todt a 1661 eat ■/ THE PONTIAC PBB8S, SATURDAY, AUGUST WO FITS Anh Adopt Foo Babies Captuf»d in Ijyaitoft ATLANTA — One ftn«i thl •*"* Mt W i, that if the vadNl tDrc* <*P*mes am bab Nip Laguna by Surfboard Licensing End of Model Run Cuts Auto Production This Week by 4.7 Pet. POPLIN COATS $790 m SLIPS end HALF SLIPS $044 AUSTIN-NORVELL Agency, Inc. 70% SAVINGS Wsttt repellent, fully lined coett In e coat with hoodwlth hood or coat with hat. 3 colors; 7.17, 8-tB. . tflfh'l Lingerie . . . Second floor PONTIAC STATIONERS Back-to-tchool special! SPORT SHIRTS CLUTCH HANDBAGS HH rm. $047 Ward's said American Motors was the first car maker to begin production of 1961 models,* turning out 965 1961 cars in June and 4,855 in July. Buick built 225 of its new 1961 compact Specials this week, and Chrysler turned but 1,000 Valiants and 100 of its new compact Dodge Lancers. -Sparks Griffin f; FUNERAL HOME “Thoughful Service** MONDAYONLY Soft leathers and plastics in several styles. Red, black, brown or tan. Handbagri... Street fleer 'Regular or button-down collars, many handsome new fell patterns. Sixes S-M-L Wash V weir. Pilot production also began on the 1961 Plymouth and the OkU-mobile F85, another, new compact ' ** Boys' wash V wear polished cotton PROPORTIONED SUCKS Reg. $2.99 > L__J {jkse (Jj^ HOODED CAR COATS MONDAY ONLY Buy now for school! Continental -or Ivy models 4p 10 colors. Slim, regular, husky . . . $-18. Second fleer ZIP PILLOW PROTECTORS of whlto percale Floor-to-cetling BRASS POLE LAMPS MONDAY ONLY Type 180 white percale pillow protectors with zipper closure. Save now! Domestics . ,. Fourth floor MONDAY ONLY These beautiful lomps reach ta & foot 6 inches . . . floor to ceiling. Put light where you want accent. Walto't temps... fifth fleer_ Famous maker... barkcloth "MONTAUK" SLIPCOVERS 6-FT. AIR MATTRESS Green, gold Or brown cotton barkcloth covers to fit most furniture. Treated to . repel soil, steins. Giant 72" by 32" heavy gauge Krene plastic oir mattress by Bardell. Easy to inflate, many lises. Outgrown? Slipcovers . . fourth fleet Just call FE 2-8181 and ask for Want Ads. Tell the representative that you want to sell some clothes and she'll help you write an ad that will clean out your closet and give you thf cash for your new fall outfits. Graceful 50-piete; service for8 . STAINLESS TABLEWARE SA77 MONDAY "Silhouette" desig $9.95 ¥la* ■ ONLY butter knits Our own Ambassador SLIMLINE 21" TV Fringe area switch, controls grouped at side. Matching bbse........$7. ft... Downstairs SHOP MONDAY 9:30 A.M. 'TIL 9 F. M.—USE A FLEXIBLE CCC CHARGE! j Officers were elected when o5 members of the Friendship Bible Class of First Christian Church met Wednesday at the Virginia avenue home of Mr. and Mrs. George Hodge. Naming of secret pals and prayer by Mrs. E. L. Williams preceded a buffet supper. Mrs. Clyde Milliken offered the opening prayer. Mr..and Mrs. Adams invited the group ip meat at their Sinclair drive home Aug. XL . surrounded by Prince Charles mid a, doting Princess Anne. One of the royal family's corgiag; (a breed of WdUh working dog) was also on hand for the proceedings. ,, ^ Queen Mother Elisabeth posed this week in the garden of Clarence House in ’Lyndon with Queen Eliea-beth’s three youngsters. Prince Andrew sat securely in his grandmother!g lop * AX snt THE PONTIAC PRESS, 8ATURDAY, AUGUST W» in 'lll|p Am i i'llpi l ! HBl. IIHPtS Pontiac Central violinist Jean Hut-; tula of South Roselawn drive, a mem-; ber of the Aft-State High, School Or‘ • chestra at Interlochen, looks Over the j score "Of Sunday's final concert with director Gerhard Schroth of Chicago. Jean holds fourth chair in the select orchestra which is drawn from public schools throughout the state. - Only He Can Sour Her: Abby Boy Friend’s a Lemon By ABIGAIL VAN 1 DEAR ABBY: My 19-year-old daughter is in love with a 22-Marine. He didn't fin-school, has no ambition and will probably never amount to anything. He has had one marriage failure and has to Support his ex-wife and two children. He borrows money from my daughter, to check up on a her of gring count on getting anything "through her head." A girt In love has a filtertipped brain. She’ll have to discover for herself that this fellow is no good. ' ♦ ★ * DEAR ABBY: I have my 17-year-oid mother-in-law with me, and I am at the end of my rape, she is the world's biggest trouble-maker. She tells my husband I like every man I talk to. . First it was the Janitor, then the insurance collector. Now she makes up stories about my haying men callers. My husband says not to pay any attention to her because she is getting a little crasy in the head. She is crazy like a fox. She hides things and says I stole them. END OF ROPE P.S. And another thing. My/ husband has SIX healthy sisters, so will you please tell me why I have to be the one to put Up with this? She has lived with me for 29 years! DEAR END: If your husband pfcys no attention to her, why should youf She very probably is not responsible for her actions, so humor her as you would a sick child. PA. YOU have put up. with Newcomer Is Feted ^ Paula Williams of Commerce roai Green Lika, wan hostess at s Thursday ln^haoo in honor of Jan dark. * Miss dark and her parents Mr. and Mr*. Jimmy Clark moved into their new home on Great Lake .last month. On hand to meet the honoree were Sandra Miller, Barbara Cartoon, Judy By, Gale Murray, Mary Ann Stanker, Christine Thomson, Diane Sprunk, Karen Latimer and Ginny Fagen. her because obviously you are the best of the bunch. DEAR ABBY: I am a girl who to 12 years old. I have made up my mind what I want 'to be hi life, but every time I mention it, people laugh at me. I want to be a policewoman. ‘'XfcMy mother says I will change my mind, but I know I won't because I have wanted to be a policewoman ever since I can remember. Do you think it is a good choice? FUTURE POLICEWOMAN DEAR FUTURE POLICEWOMAN: It is a fine choice, if based on a thorough knowledge of the Job and an earnest desire to pursue it. Perhaps your mother or father will take you to the local'police station so you can meet a policewoman and learn first-hahd what to involved in your Chosen career, dr- ♦ ★ CONFIDENTIAL to "STILL SAD": It is fine to honor the dead, but don’t forget the liv-r ing. Why don’t you visit a vet-* erans’ hospital? ♦ * * "What’l your problem?" Write to Abby in care of The Pontiac Press. For i personal reply.- enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. 0 dr * - For Abby’s pamphlet. "What Teen-agers Want To Know," send 25c and a large, self-addressed, stamped envelope in care of The Pontiac Press. Tantalking Tidbits Getting Tbs Rev. had Mrs. Oalen E. Hershey and sons Stephen, Michael and John of Wait Iroquois road have returned from speoding the month if July at Sastport on Qrand Traverse Bay. The Rev. Mr. Hershey la associate pastor of First Presbyterian Church. 1 ★ * ★ Returning from a vacation during the month of July from 'Southwest Harbor, Ms. are "the Rev. and Mrs. David K. Mills with children Peter and 8arah. The Mills visited her parents Mr: and Mrs. Alan F. Sands at their summer home. He is the vicar at All Saint Episcopal Church. ★ ★ ♦ Lyndon Salathiel, organist - director at First Presbyterian Crurch, la attending the i International Eisteddfod in Llangollen, , Norjh Wales and visiting relatives. ♦ ★ ■ ★ House guest of the Edward Zleikes of Coseybufo drive, Drayton Plains is their daughter Mrs. JCeith Palmerton of Dallas, Tex.' While here Mrs. Palmerton also will visit her sister and brothfcr-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Richard D, Bashore and their daughter Vikl of Big Rapids. it dr. it- A visitor at the South Edith street home of the Frank Laines this week was Mr. Laine’s mice Mrs.' Alii Vthavainen of Turku, Finland, whom ha had not seen in 53 yean. Mn. Vthavainen, who waa here to attend the 13th International Congress of Industrial Medicine in New York, and her traveling companion Sylvia Virta, also of Turku, were taken to Pontiac by Mr.-and Mn. Laine’s daughter Mrs. Alexander Elan of New York City and her daughters Susan and Nancy. Accompanied by Mrs. Elan’s sister Sylvia Laine, the group left Friday for Imlay City where they will spend several days with another of the Laines’ daughters, Mrs. Alvin Norlin. * it ★ Thomas W. Hall H and hto mother Mn. Philip W. Hall, tormerty of New Jersey, an w>»Mwg their home at the Washington Apart- . Mr. HaB Is a project engineer with Pontiac Laboratory. Mrs. Hall was formerly a New Jersey suburban society editor with the New York Herald Tribune. . it it it Receiving congratulations on the With of a daughter. Cindy Annette, July 21 at Pontiac General Hospital are Mr. and Mn. R. Dale Dodd (nee Annette Sauey). Grandparents of the infant an the Louis Saueys of Lancaster drive and the James Dodds of Roaedale street. ★ ★ it . Mr. and Mn. Curtis and Wilfred Thompson of Durham drive Will hostess the second annual Neuman family reunion at their hoihe on Elizabeth Lake Aug. 7. Members of the family an expected from Mississippi, Munising, Laming. Wyandotte and Aim Arbor. Some 58 members gathered in 1168. it ‘ it ★ *• Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Shelton of Third avenue announce the birth of a daughter. Jill Ann, born Aug. 2 at Pontiac General Hospital. ★ ★ ★ Announcing the birth of a daughter, Christ ins Marie. Aug. 4 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, an Mr. and Mn. C. Donald Campbell (nee Patricia Tstham of Beverly avenue. Grandparents of the infant are Mr. and Mrs. Chester Campbell of Uplong drive and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Tatham of Lake Orion. ★ . it ★ ' A daughter, Tari Lee, was born Aug. 2 to Mr. and Mn. James Willard Hinds of Toledo. Ohio. Mrs. Hinds to the former Jerry Jacquelyn Barnes of Motorway drive. dr * * Mr. and Mrs. Lewis G. Waterfleld (nee Joanne Adams) announce the birth of a daughter, Sherri Lynn, bom July 24 at Community Hospital in Big Rapids. Tha maternal grandparents an Mr. and Mrs. George Drittler of Dwight avenue arid Harvey Adams of Lake Orion. M/Sgt. D. R. McKee and Mrs. McKee of North Shirley avenue an the in-fant’s paternal grandparents. EAST LANSING—Some 50 women, concerned over the grpwing number of poordriv-eri traveling American highways, wiU meet Aug. 10-12 at Michigan State University to plan a campaign to combat this motor menace. A colloquium on Driver Licensing Improvement will at- , tract a state safety Chairman and national officers of the Women's Auxiliary ,to the American Opto metric Association, representing 45 of the 50 states. Conference officials stated that this women’s organization has been interested in driver safety programs for many yean. Now, they add, this interest to vary logically focused on the driver licensing aspect. The officials point out that then to a disturbing lack of - nanced by a grant from a leading insurance company. The W o m e n ’ s Auxiliary notes that this is a situation which concerns every citizen. Because of the great mobility of die American people, they say, unfit drivers from the lax states are freed to menace drivers and pedesTTWhs from other states. The Auxiliary advocates the use of standards published by the American Association of Motor* Vehicle Administration, Washington, D. C.. for driver trailing in all states. They also recommend a national program of suspending the licenses of poor driven and putting them through a thorough driver -education course before restoring the drivers to the road. Indicative of the interest and concern in this matter to the feet that the conference to fi- uniformity in licensing procedures among the states, with some states asking little more than the tendering of a tee. In pursuing a program of total driver safety, however, ■easions-on such topics as die 2 Pair of Twins Plus 600 Diapers Equal Problem By MADELEINE DOEKEN Sixteen dozen diapers go to the automatic laundry three times a week to keep the Noell twins, all four of them, dry and happy. ; Just think of the folding it takas to keep a railing stock of ) nearly g00 squares ready at , the drop at a rattle! * (K# Jerry Dale and Mary Louise, first set of twins born to the Jerry NoeUs of South Midland drive Aug. 20, 1968. in Pontiac General Hospital, arrived prematurely. They spent their first month of life in incubators to bring their birth weight of four pounds up to five. Mary Louise to three minutes rider than her brother. Twin playpens form an individual world for the romper-dad youngsten, now proudly able to stand., *—r*~ * * * Sherry Lynn and Gary. Wayne weighed in at five pounds, 12 ounces, July 11 at Pontiac General. Sherry was born three minutes after hen brother. * * * ' The attractive blonde 20-year-old mother qf five, who is the former Nancy Ody, and her 25-year-old husband make their home With her parents Mr. and Mn. Fined J. Ody. Their new 3-bedroom home on Mansfield avenue in Bonneville sub- division will be ready in about three weeks. With little time for Hobbies, Mr. Noell hopes to have a little garden plot to raise fresh vegetables for his family. He drives a construction truck for the Pontiac Department of Public Works. FEARS #0 AVALANCHE Wttli a casual approach to the mountain of other laundry lor the five children which is done at home Mn. Noell says she plans her work and then works the plan. Rising at seven, she prepares breakfast and does not tackle the bath project for five until after kitchen cleanup. The infant twins usually sleep until noon, which gives time to feed the other children before their afternoon naptime. The early-to-eat and early-to-bed routine for Robert, Jerry and Mary allows for a brief romp with their father. A gallon of homogenized milk every day makes the Noeite preferred customers on the milkman's route. It takes 14 cans of evaporated milk for the infants* formula each week. The Noells attend the First Presbyterian Church where they were married the first day of June 1957. Husky two-year Robert Dale has accepted the arrival of so many sisters and brothers with • bewilderment. When hto mother goes to the doctor he asks if she is going to bring back some more babies. Elect New Officers New president Mn. Hodge will serve with Mn. George Dickie, vice president; Mrs. Arthur Smith, secretary-treasurer; Mn. A. T. Buckler, publicity; and Mn. Brady Adams and Mn. Allan Heraee, coteachers. " Naming of Barbara Jane Everett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Irvin Everett of Markle avenue, was among 102 outstanding high school students front 16 states selected to attend the High School Honors Science Institute at Michigan State University Juno 19 to July 29, The Pontiac Northern High School senior is shown die- ; cussing a spherical geometry problem with Dr. Frands W. Qtrroll. Shirley DeleneSnow Marries Raul Rosales Women Join to Combat Bad Drivers drinking driver, legal reciprocity, education programs and legislation will becdnducted by experts from the fields of police administration, insurance, psychology and government. 32 Guests at Shower Stephanie Jones, bride-elect of Wayne A. Ostrander, was honored at a shower Friday everting. Mn. Edwin Ostrander was hostess to 32 guests at her home on Undo Vista drive. The couple whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Jones of Jodyn avenue and Mr, and Mrs. L. V. Ostrander of Chippewa road will marry Sept. 3 at United Missionary Church. Picnic Planned Plans for a cooperative picnic dinner in September an being made by* the Ladtos. Auxiliary of the Metropolitan Club. The affair will be at the Cass Lake home of Mn. Joseph Koran. , Mn. Karen was hostess for Tuesday's auxiliary meeting at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building. A floral arch of blue and white gladioli banked by palms was the Setting for the 3 p. m. wedding today of Shirley De-•lene Snow and Raul Rosales at Wesleyan Methodist Church. The Rev. J. M. Kavanaugh performed the ceremony. WWW The Floyd W. Snows of Fiddis avenue and G. E. Rosales of East Colgate avenue an the couple’s parents. The bride wore a floor-length. gown with a scalloped Sabrina ' neckline accented by sequins and pearls and long sleeves extending to poihts at the wrists. The full skirt of Chantilly lace and tulle featured ruffles cascading to the floor in back, A coronet of orange blossoms with little buds held the finger-1 tip veil of silk illusion.. The (>ride carried a' cascade of white roses with baker’s fern, t w w w Attending wer& R u t h a n n . Snow, sister of the bride, ss maid of honor; Gloria Wiltes and Lois Treadway as bridesmaids, and Deana Rae Snow, sister of the bride, as junior -bridesmaid. Elizabeth Guzman of Royal Oak served as flower girt. • The attendants were gowned alike in blue nylon chiffon over taffeta and net with lace bodices, picture hats and matching shoes. The maid of honor and. Junior bridesmaid carried cascades Ot stem-dyed blue carnations while the bridesmaids had cascades of solid blue carnations. . w w w The flower girl wore a white «e dress over white taffeta similar to the bride’s and carried a basket of blue and white petals. Best man waa Ray Rosales, the bridegroom's brother. Serving ea jus hers were Jesse Rosales, another brother of the bridegroom; Gene Reagan, the bridegroom’s brother- in - law, Lawrence Lopez and Dale Wiltse, Terry Wall and Daniel Reagan, all of Pontiac. MRS. RAUL ROSALES A reception was held at the • Pontiac Township Hall immediately following the ceremony for which the bride's mothef chose a bone rayon dress with lace bodice, white accessories v and orchid glamelia corsage. Mn. Rosales, stepmother, won \ a pink nylon dress with white J accessories with an ordbld > glamelia corsage. A * * For traveling for two weeks in northern Michjgap, the bride changed to a mint green drees of nylon dotted swtee with matching cape, white accessories and the canege from her bridal cascade. ♦ ★ * The bridegroom served two ^ynn in the U.S. Marines. Upon returning, the couple will > reside on Chrurchill road' in S Auburn Heights. • Women s Section Jerry Dale Noell, left, snuggles close to his P*‘* mother Mrs. Jerry Noell of South Midland drive/ July 11 in Pontiac General Hospital. Mary holding'twins Gary Wayne and Sherry Lynn, born, Noell, Jerry's twin sister, it at her mother's i. ’ V* ‘J •/f' ■■" THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST I960 SEVEN Momes Pqul in Ofelahofrta Mafpney Church Thi Edmond, Okla, Church of the Nazarene wu the scene Friday for the marriage el Lots Wfauber-Pwl C. Maloney, TW Rev. Eufflpf TUtefag officiated at ^e ptfnta, tsrp enlarged tans decorated with daisies, an aftfc-war and candelabra formed the altar aettiag. ■^Wria.ri the « . •Mama Whnberieys of 1 aad the Harold Maloneys tla* the tekfc chose a gown of Chantilly lace with side panels ol tiered ruffled net and back Iaee panet formtoga chapel train. Her veil fell from a pearl and sequin crown. She held a gardenia and 13 baby roses on a white Bible. «*, ♦ * fe„ ' Mrs.'Robert L. Hensley of Oklahoma Qty attended as matron of honor wearing blue taffeta with a lace cape enter and carrying daisies arranged on n pleated lace fin. Sesving as bridesmaids were Wanda Wimberley ol Bdmond, sister of the bride, and Mrs.' R. L. Key oI University Parte Iowa, sister of the bridegroom. ■sat maa was Richard M. Ma lmsf of Psatla o, brother of On bridegroom. Also a tt fading the bridegroom were R. L. Key of Aim Otkar Cnn imsm. CUPS HAND CRAFT SHOP MS Oakisad Am R i-zmi MIMEOGRAPHING SERVICE Bulletins, Letters, etc. FAST SERVICE! Christian Literature Sales IP Oakland PI 4-9591 RUG CLEANING f: I • . The Very Finest NEW WAY Rug and Carpet Cleaners "Siace 1921" 42 Wisner St. PC 1-7111 f ___ji MRS. PAUL C. MALONEY Uafveraity Park, Iowa, Rickard C. North of Poatlae aad JVfarlin Wimberley of Edmond, brother ’ of the bride. . Karen Chandler of Yukon, Okla. and David Gay of Edmond served as flower girl and ring bearer, respectively. Following the ceremony the -bride 'changed to a white sheath with a Mack eyelet duster, black hat with veil, and white accessories. The couple will teach in Water-fifed Township. Gift Was Quite ih Order Ry EMILY POST. » Dear Mrs. Post: When our finally doctor's wile had 0 baby I sent her a few flowers and a little present for the baby at the mmc time. His wifi was a stranger to me and the doctor is not n personal, friend beyond his pro- Flabbincw MdtsAny We are very find of him as many people an ol their doe-tors. I thought it was not out of place to take the opportunity to show our feelings. , Now 1 understand from a “kill Joy” neighbor that I was very much out of turn bi doing this and that ! have placed them in our debt. Is she right? * ★ - k' " Answer: On the contrary! You followed s natural and friendly impulse which couldn’t have been other than appreciated by both the doc- * tor and his wife. fi fe * Dear Mrs. Post: A man I know quite well, will be going to the hospital soon to undergo an operatioA. Would It be proper for me to send flowers while he is there, or are flowers sent only to women? I do not want to do anything that could be criticized. ★ ♦ ★ ' • • Answer: It Is entirely proper to send flowers to a man in a hospital.w However, a plant is rather more suitable than cut flowers. Pack Witch Haiel T h a uninvited, unwelcome guests at any picnie are the ants, bees * and other assorted pests from the insect kingdom. So, addle you’re remembering to pack the temper with the sandwiches, deviled eggs and other picnic favorites, don’t forget to take along a bottle of Witch hazel. It’s the old reliable remedy, not only for bites and stings, but for bumps and bruises aa well. Birmingham Very Busy City Happenings k BIRMINGHAM — Brides are continuing to hold the center of interest and will until late Fall. And Birmingham and Bloomfield churches are dear to their hearts, even the many families have moved to “far away places.” fr *• it In the Spring Sharon O'Gorman preceded her parents the J. S. O’Gormans Jr. from their new home in Tuscon, Ariz. to arrange tor her April 23 marriage to David S. Glass. k k k Mr. and Mrs. Genaro A. Florez now of Phoenix, Ariz., and their; family have taken the E. M. Veh-meyer house on Shirley drive until alter the Sept. 9 marriage ol their daughter Jean Louise to Thomas Bruce pay ol Saginaw, even though they maintain an apartment. The ceremony will be read in Qirlst Church Cran brook and a reception will be given at Orchard Lake Country Club. ■ * ★ Mrs. Paul McDonald gave luncheon Wednesday to her Lake Park drive home. Besides the bride-elect and her mother guests Mrs. £LHP i Regular Exercise Magical If baby la fretful aad rest-• lets because of tbs July teat, .fry this cooling suggestion. SMk a cotton square to good quality Witch hazel and hold It to tte back ol the baby's aMk for ■ few minutes. Evaporation of the freshener creates a cool- R is especially appreciated. mmmm Here is an exercise from the Marathon booklet. , To reduce the bust and upper arms make large circles with both arms, pulling back as they come down side-ways. They cross in front as they go up Mothers—Don't Give Advice to Young Bride Floyd Doherty, Mrs. Ferd Broock, Mrs. Bowen Broock, Mrs.‘Robert Isaacson and Barbara Underhill. Dr. and Mrs. S. W. Trythall, their daughter Sylvia and the William Knauses gave a swimming and supper party Sunday at their Orchard Lake home and many other lovely parties are planned. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd H. Diehl Jr. and their children* spent the month of July at flie Tawas Beach Club on Lake Huron. By RUTH MELLETT lit. An experienced homemaker can A young bride writes: be a real help to « bride. “My husband and I have been But no young, wife who is new at married six months and'live in the the job of homemaking wants to same town with my parents, feel that she is being directed by “I am an only child. That may j someone else, be the reason why my mother | It’s hard for a mother to keep doesn’t seem to understand that I hands off when she thinks that by grownup and capable of run- a word or a suggestion she can ning my life and making my own save her slaughter from making a decisions. mistake. No matter what I say I am go-1 This is harder lor some mothers Dorothy G. Braun, Mrs. |{ng to do, mother has a suggestion than for others. Ry JOSEPHINE LOWMAN The benefits of dafly^teercise{ are truly like magic. Not only does this promote health and increase energy and streamline the figure: but it banishes to many minor discomforts. ★ • fe ♦ Not everyone can take exercise and a woman can reduce successfully without it, but when your doctor says that it is safe for you, I don't dismiss exercise from your daily beauty and health routine, j . The following Is a letter tram a Marathon winner, la part ahe says, “I go to a physician reg- r ularly for shots and treatmeata. After I ted been oa your Mara- { thon for a while, aad exerrMag : regularly, he told me- that I was j la better shape aad firmer than I had been la U years. "I did not tell him why but just! kept on exercising. Last week I told him what caused this and he! said, - 'I've been telling you this for a long time, but, no, you wouldn't listen to me.’ FLABBINESS GONE *T am leaving for Florida in a couple of weeks and tried on my. aborts and bathing suits I had worn last season. I noticed thatl ' tfre flabbiness on my hips and; 1 legs had disappeared. AU of that j wavy fle&h has gone. My bust has firmed. "Also I never could under- i stand how anyone could kneel on their knees In chnrch or sit j on their legs. Now 1 can walk J all over the room on my knees | and they don't hurt any more. . I had bursitis for more than a year and It has completely dls- j appeared. I “If you can use this letter to encourage other Women you are welcome to do so. I can have it signed by my doctor if you wish."j These are wonderful results of regular exercise: Stiff joints disr, appear, constipation is no longer a problem and chronic fatigue becomes a thing of the past. k k ★' II you missed - Marathon, and would like to try it now, for a loss! 15 to 20 pounds in the next eight Weeks, you may want ntyj Marathon booklet. If so, send 10 cents and a stamped," self-ad-envelope with your request tp Josephine Low man in care ofThePontlac Pfess. For Your Wedding Quality and Quantity • A Large "teat Marrtod* Sign • A Ministers Marriage Certificate *39.95: C R. Haskill Studio ’ 1 ML Ctemena St. FE MU - STARBRITE COLD WAVE values to 14.00 Longer lasting permanent . a superb new sheen, call in fearly. BEAUTY SALON 42 N. Sifiniw St. AIR CONDITIONED Phene FId.nl 8-1343 Appointment Not Alw better way of doing it. If I j. So it’s up to the grown daughter am going to look for drapery to gently pull away enough to be material^ mother invites herself to {able to stand on her own two feeij go along and she picks out the ma-jand make her own decisions forial. , ’[even though she may make a few “She even wants to go with me to j mistakes at first, shop for clothes. Though I love my I Done gently, there need be HO J mother very much and realize she hurt feelings, is much wiser than I .am, she ! Get the mbst out ef marrl-makes me feel like a kid playing [age; order your copy of Ruth I house, instead of a wjfiJ jMillett'f new booklet, “How to How can I change this without j Have a Happy Husband.” Just send hurting my ntothery feelings, 25 cento to Ruth Millett Reader which I wouldn’t do for anything?” Service, care The Pontiac Press, k k k I You might try asking! your hus- j P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio' City j Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Smart band to go with you wh^» you se-jstatton, New.York 19, New York. have as their home guests their i-to-law and daughter Major and Mrs. Wesley B. Young and their children. They win live in Texas after duty in Germany and Japan. • k k Mrs. Morris Halsted gave a tea Tuesday honoring her mother Mrs. WUlard Holman. Mrs. Holman has recently moved to Birmingham from Chicago. * k k Mrs. Robert K. Edmonds of Tuscon -Ariz., who formerly lived in Birmingham, will visit Mr. and lect something for the* when you shop for a'new dress. Then you can tall your mother that the two of you are going shopping. together, because you want to be Land-O-Lakea duplicate sure that he approves of what you j Bridge Chiu held its monthly buy. Bridge Winners That will be i gentle hint that Joe is the one to be pleased now. Also, you don’t need to mention I mdsterpotot game at Hotel Waldron Friday evening. Winners were Mrs. Robert, Segula and Mrs. Ernest Guy, REUPHOLSTERING _ j Cutes UphoUUiM* included Mrs. John E. Day motherjjjrg. j7 e. DeVault of Hills drive of the bridegroom -elect, Mrs.wt week. James Neal, Mrs. George N. Tis- ^ present Jean Woodridge of cher, Mrs. William A. McHattie, Darien, Com. Is their guest. | ■ ★ ■ '★ Mr. and Mrs. David G. Nether-1 cot were dinner hosts Wednesday {evening to Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Mulliken of Champaign, 111. and their son BUI. Bill, who attends Miami University at Oxford. Ohio is trying out to qualify .for the Olympic swimming team, fe fe »★ Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Matthew^ j are entertaining Mrs. Matthews’; mother Mrs. William R. Tracy and j Mr. Tracy of Naples, Fla. j There are 1,268 city-owned parks: jin New Yark Qty. your plans to your mother before Mrs. Elliott Heugh and Edwin you have a chance to carry them V. Clarke and Dr. and Mrs. out j- Carl Bolton. Now and then, of course, you Others were Dr. Segula and may want your mother’s advice. Dr. Robert Gantz, Dr. and When you do, go ahead-and ask for* Mrs. Edward F. Collins. Save up to 60% on Bolt bid Motoriols V- CHAIR J3Q50 from ■ » w SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR AISOLUTEIY NO COST! CALL NOW!!! FE 2-7567 Benjamin Franklin bifocal lens about 1T80. YES..: WE DO QUALITY' DRY CLEANING FE 2-6424 CLEANERS mi SHIRT LAUNMY Office and Plant 941 Joetyn Are. , \ U BlUck North «f Pontiac Motor Engr. BldD "IfEEilsr ear branch on M-59 end Creacenf Late lewd is uh fat yanr deify dry sfseatey service. > 1 DAY SERVICE ! 4V*"* Going on Vacation? Just Coming Back? Let’s Get Them Dry Cleaned! Start your yacation with clean, crisp vacation clothes! No-matter what the fabric . . . dress or sport clothes . . . they'll look better • • • feel better if they're dry cleaned! Pile the'boiled, crumpled after-vocation clothing in a box . . . trundle down to Gresham ... let os put bock that new life, new look into your clothing! You'll be glad .ydu did! * 4 HOUR snvici « REQUEST 5 SHIRTS 1.13 Expertly Laundered CASH and CARRY flritiia■». . * Pay only $2.49 for the SECOND pose . . * If you like it. If you like the THIRD pose pay only $2.29 for It. * If NONE appeal «to you, your 99c deposit will be refunded. * Age Limit: five years end under. * Not more then two children per family at above, prices. ♦ Each additional child over two-pen femlhlT first pose ............................ $2.49 PHOTOGRAPHERS HOURS . . . MONDAY aai FRIDAY, 930 A. M. Is 9 P. M. Other Days 9:30 a.m. To 5:30 p.m. GEORGE'S MONDAY SPECIALS, 2nd Floor Look I Oar Ray. JJ.7S Oar 69c Fiat Qaalify Group of S3M Dainty CURITY WRAP NEW TOTS DIAPERS BLANKETS DRESSES $2.79 39' *2.99 GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE 74 NORTR SAGINAW STREET press. Saturday, august c. imp New Congregations Blooming in Area's Subdivisions actor of Divinity degree at Deuce College. years he served Con-in Toledo, He was the Protestant chaplain at the State Penitentiary for Women in Teha-chapi, Calif. The Greys have bought several acres and a home in Bloomfield Farms. SHOVING OFF—The Rev. Wayne Brookshear. new pastor of the St. Luke Methodist Church, is ready for a day of fishing, one of his favorite sports. Mrs. Brookshear will manage the motor as the boat skims the water. Decked oyt in life jackets are five-year-old Vicki and six-year-okl Wayne, the couple's children. The new pastor is a former Pontiac resident. NEW CHUBCH - Frederick L. 1905 N. Hammond Lake Rd.. i the Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Alfred D. Grey of new Pine Hill tng organised in the Middle Belt-Long Lake road area. Dr. Gray, former minister at the Birmingham Congregational * “ ‘ Sunday School Plans Picnic Study on Lift, Teachings j of Jesus Christ to Start! at Unity Church ht and friends at 9:30 a.m. “Your Hope of day The “Truth Forum" held during July will be continued through August by popular request. Thie is a discussion group in which each person has an opportunity to ask' and answer questions. METHODIST PAATOB The Rev. and Mrs. Frank Brannon ’and daughter Carol occupy the parsonage of Aldersgate Methodist Church at 25 E. Chicago Ave. - Studying at Wayne State University, the Rev. Mr. Brannon. 24, is a student approved pastor. He plaits to continue his training at Drew Theological Seminary. bans la Twnenee, the Rev. Wayne Broekshear was reared in Pontiac in the vicinity of the St. Lake Methodist Church which he new serves. Upon graduation from college, he accepted the pastoral duties of • a community church in Atlanta, Ga. for six years. During that time he began his theological education at Candler School of Theology, Emory University. When he returned to Michigan In 1955 he' was appointed to the Methodist Church at Lennon. During this period he finished work for his degree at Garrett Biblical Vnrtada phases sf Jesus’ teachings sad their apfradau In mod 1105 Pontiac WHO SERVES — and Mrs. Wallace A. tennis. He is the first pastor of the newly organized Bloomfield Hills Baptist Church. Until a road just south of Square Lake road. “Adventure in Prayer" will be| the topic for the prayer panSI from 10:45 to 10:55 Sunday morning. The devotional service will be at, 11 a.m. The Rov. Harold L Harris of tha Han Church of the Nesareas Topics for the following Sundays will include “What Do You Think You Are?" “You Can Conform Or Transform'’ and “High Cost of Living.** «. NEW PASTOR — studying at Wayne State University and serving as student approved pastor of AMersgate Methodist Church .is the Rev. Frank Brannon of 25 E. Chicago Ave. Mrs. ---------------------2---------4--------1---------- mend a enjoy mi upon him to wheel. The Brannons outdoor activities. Four Towns METHODIST CHURCH COOLEY LAKE Rev. W. Cagmmn Prout factor Sunday School „,10.1S A M Church Service.... 9:00 A.M. KEEGO HARBOR BAPTIST CHURCH lUS S. Ca*« Lake Road SUNDAY SCHOOL—II A. M MORNINO WOHOHir-U A. M EVENINO WORSHIP—7 10 P. M CooperaUes with Southern Baptist Convention Pastor—Rev. “Bob*' Kunnert Reorganized CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST • of Latter Day Saints • rroot St.. PooUae n S-7MZ McVtttr School tn Drayton S31 mint St.. Lake Orton lint St.. — OL 3-MM Church School 1:41 Preaching. U A M. and CHRISTIANS HAVI SIRVEO GOD through Churchas ____YOU All NIEDID Sunday School,9:45 A. M. Morning Service 11 A. M. "USE OR LOST* Evening Service 7 P. M. "WAtCH YOUR STEP" THE ALLIANCE CHURCH J W. LANPHER. Aii’tSPastoc Seventh-Day Adventists Assist at Camp Meeting Rev. Paul T. Hart Speaking Sunday at 1st Methodist chnrch in Flushing. He studied st Boston Eastern I Nazarene College, and did graduate work there. Before coming to Michigan he served pastorates, in Ashfield and Bethesds, Ohio. The new pastor and his wife, the former Doris McCusker. of 273 S. Jessie St. have three children, Kathleen, Jonathan and David. BLOOMFIELD MILIJI 'What Is Good,' Pastor's Topic The Rev. Paul T. Hart will speak n “Life’s Purpose” at the 10 o'clock worship 'hour in. First Methodist Church Sunday. Woman's En it mbit Will Sing Offortory at] First Presbyterian OAKLAND PARK METHODIST CHIJRCH OVTDOOR SERVICE— BALD MOUNTAIN PARK — 11 A.M. NO SUNDAY SCHOOL The Rev. Galen E. Hftshey, associate pastor, will preach on What Is Good" at the 9:30 and Coming to serve as the firat(u a. m. worship services Sunday pastor of the new Bloomfield Hills at First Presbyterian Church. Baptist Church is the Rev. Wallace A. Alcorn of Grand Rapids. Organized in April, the new; con-gregation meets in the Hickory Grove School on Lthser road just south of Square Lake road. The new pastor attended Marquette and Indiana Universities and received his degree from Wheaton College. Other training .Sabbath school and church lead-, John O. Erhard of the Riverside era of Riverside Seventhly Ad- _ • " . . _ . 1S> ... ~ l “This is one of the moat looked ventist Church. 159 Mt. Clemens L ^ (o occasion of St., will participate in the 92ndjour church Members will hear Annual Camp Meeting ot the de- Spiritual messages from outstand- During ,he service the Mcra. nomination at Grand Ledge today big church officials, and meet with m^nt ^ H^y Baptism will be ob-|-HI „„„ and Aug. 13. Sessions started Adventists all over Michigan a"djMrved. Merlin Asplin will sing the was at Grand Rapids Baptist The-Thursday. >*°me neighboring states, be [offertory solo accompanied by La- ologfcal Seminary. * * * j ——————— [Verne Cox at the Organ. | n. »-v u, .irnrn ,..l Hunter L. SaviUe ofJ^ Sabbath'Sefj Colleg# Education * * w ! gredatto we* la nddaaee and Scho®1 said members will hold the i _* tinn OQO-PluS Leading the prayer fellowship at conaseHag at Michigan State regular Saturday program* at the j VO IU* Ot >IUU,UW-HUS 7;M w^^y^eV«iing wiU be the! tmrerrity. ° OU"-' |,:lto.wuilmw«1b..—A form«r public school tnchor, worth from 3109,000 to, |150,000jtor- ^ - - j he has also been s private fnven- The Woman'. M.J ings will be given there.'' ...» wtortmd^ d«*de« “rving as a counterintelli- m 3158,000 tor. All worship service* af the ju, a man’s increased ’lifetime local church will be held at the earnings," according to publisher camp meeting today and next Maxwell Drake, quoted in the weekend. Catholic Digest. ana engurmnn I-SZ13—PS J-J7SJ Morning Worship — 19 A.M. and 11:19 AM. Church fionboi L ____ . „ Youth Fcllowthip Senior;. 4 PM., IntenMriiata 4 PM. REV. JAMES A. MeCLUNO. Minuter SUPSIWISXD NURSERY - ALL tOWlCM — AMPLE PAMCIHO "Walariord township* American Baptist Church'" CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST Crescent Lake Road .near Worship 10 AH. / \rJ Large Parking Lot ' missionary in Ghana, West Africa, Mrs. Alcorn was an obstetrical nurse at Blodgett Hospital School off Nursing for She attended Hampden Du Bom Academy In teBwood, Fla. A graded West Suburban Hoapttal School ot Nursing in Oak Park, 111., she received her' B. S. in nursing from Wheaton College where She mat her husband. Mrs. Alconi has, also takenji work at Michigan State University.!work days.” FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 49 NORTH ROSELAWN 7 P. M. — Evening Service Wednesday Bible Study end Prayer 7;30 P M. EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE Sunder/ School 10 a.m. Gasses for oil ages! Preaching 11 a.nv & 7:30 p.m. Youth at 04B p.m. ll • Radio — CKLW 7:30 am., 000 ko In Detroit A. J. Buufhey. Pis. DeWItt Biugbiy, AM. PM.. Praises Lay Workers RICHMOND, Ind. ill - The Ok) phrase, “the prieethood of every believer." has become a working reality in contemporary Christian. tty, says philosopher Dr. D. Elton Truebiood. "Today's new layigan movements ale a fionscioue revolt against the jnadeqoecy of Sunday morning religion . . . Tha real test comes ad Monday and other CHURCH of SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP MALTA HALL, 82 PERKINS STRUT Evening Service 7:30 P. M. Elsie Parker oIRoyat'Oak, Speaker Thurs. Aug. 11 Silver Tea Sun. Aug. 14th — Rev. Hgsel Pamrau oi Detroit The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. Lawreticfo Street Sunday Sch'l 9:45 a.m. Touhg People's Legion 6i>.m Mom'g Worship 11 ajk Evangelistic Mtg. 7:30 p.m. Wadnaaday Prayer and Praisa Meeting 7:09 p.m. > CAPTAIN and MIS. ft WIJ.LIAM HEAVER Geed Music —Singing —True to rbe Ward Preaching God Moots With Us —Ton Too, Aro Invited THE PONTIAC FRRS& SATURDAY, AUGUST i, i960 mtm Salesmans Trust in Lord Rewarded With Top Position* ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMES TOU SERVICES 8 and 10 Ail. Confident Living Prayer PracticaS^M to Man Tossed fortune TMHITT METHODIST ■jmsjassL. 10 a». Sermon: "The tipper Room* ol Life" A Communion MedUatb* , 11:15 «Jp. Sunday School LUTHERAN CHURCHES IpBOOUJU SYNOD .Grace Corner Genesee end Glendale , (Keel Met I Richard C. Stuckmoyor, Parlor | I Church Service — 9:00 A.M. I Sunday School .... 9:00 A.M.. I Church'fterrloe -.. .. 11:00 A M. I Sunday School . .11:00 A.M. St. -StepH Swhabew M Km i en Guy B. Smith. Parlor Church Service — 8:00 A.M. Sunday School — 9:15 A.M. Church ServiOe .... 10:30 A.M. St. Trinity Auburn at'JeMte (■tea etem Ralph C. C/au*. Pastor Sunday School ... 9:45 A.M. First Service ..... 8:30 A.M. Second Service .... 11:00 A.M. j , St. Paul I | Joslvn at Third . I (North *Me) L j | George Mahder, Pastor j i Morning Service ... 10:45 A.M. I Sunday School -9:00 A.M. j Bloomfield | 1 TOWNSHIP I Square Lake and Telegraph I l ’,/ ' \ 'j Wm. C. Grata, Pastor 1 I Church Service_10:00 A.M. I I Sunday School _11:00 A.M. j St. Marie Wm. C. Grata. Pastor 1 f Sunday School — 9:45 A.M. B | Church Service — 8:45 AJL | | Cedar Crest I s Farnsworth oft Union Lk. Rd. | 1 (Nest te Dublin Schoolt • g Howard E. Claycombo. Pastor | Services at §:30 A.M. . By NOBMAN VINCINT PBALK f There Is a man I know who uaed to be a aalesman paid on e commission basis and who sold Ida xompany* pcodnota so etmeaaefnily that his earnings rose toT* level never before -------— achieved la the sales and of that buetnees. This started a very curious chain of events. The bigwigs of the company decided that this man was making too much money—and, they reduced his commission rate. Meanwhile, hie exploits inspired other members of the sales force, ao that they likewise increased their sales. But ad soon .as they fcot beyond a certain level, the management cut their com* mission rates, too. * My friend, fm his part, asesptsd his HALS , rata cut as a challenge and started selling even mere. But meet of the ether men reacted qaite differently. Seme of them quit. Others stayed en, bat ho longer worked se hard. Now, of coarse, the heads of that company by their stupid policy on commission rates wore violating a law of supply. The only way to make a business succeed or make your life a success—is according to this .law of supply. Give all you can, do all you cin, help all you can, and benefits will flow back to you. ★ it it But when you start cutting off the outflow, deciding you are not going to do so much, then pretty soon this law of supply stops working for you. Well, In short, the company failed. dr ★ ★ Thus my friend, after many years with this one company, found himself out of a Job at the age of 54, and with a wile and two teen-age children to support. This b one ef the meet unfortunate, most wasteful things about our present-day economy. Many men I have known have only Just been coming Into the best, most productive yours of their maturity as they reached the middle Ms. Indeed, n man United Presbyterian . Churches omAro avekoe Cadillac Theodora R. Alleboeta. Poator Audrey umktmto. ToMh Director Morning Worship .. .10:00 A.M. Bible School ....11:20AM. Youth Fellowship . 5:45 P.M. Evening getvlce — 7:00 P.M. Wednesday ’ Prayer Meeting ,y.‘ 7:00 P.M. AUBURN HEIGHTS 10:00 A.M. Sunday School * *J|:1S A.M. Worship REV. EDMOND WALIGNS, epoaker COMMUNITY UNITED Missionary to Be Speaker Music Includes Solos, Duet at Oakland Ave. U.P. Church The Rev. Paul M. Hansel man, missionary to the Belgian Congo, will preach at the 10 a.m. and 7j p.m. services at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. j WWW A graduate of the University of. minds, he received advanced ' training at Trinity Seminary of! Chicago. He has worked with Idler-j Varsity Christian Fellowship for three years and spent four years' in the Congo. W * W I Mrs. Hanseitnan is the daughter! of Dr. Isaac Prevette of Pontiac. Mrs. fir raid Schnlt and Mrs. Gerald Shafer will slog a duet at tanltlw. mt ii you wwt to it rwnttul* or«t™ ».,to" School . . ... 9:45AM. ing Worship'...11:00A.M. i Groups ...... 1:30P.M. ing Worship ... 7:30P.M. lesday Prayer and ■. idy Hour ....... 7J0PJt LAIELAKD Meeeday Lk. and Wms. Lk. Rd*. aw, rot P. Lombort. resist . 9:30A.M. ,10:45 A.M. Sunday School ... Morning. Worship . * * ★ The person wha looks to God and has faith In Hb providence will find that difficulty beoomes a passageway to better things. 'Life Is a Quest' Sermon Topic Vicki McLaughlin, Bill $hirl«y to Be Youth Assistants at Bethany "U(e Is s Quest* will be the! topic of Dr. Joseph I. Chapman! when he speaks at Bethan^ Bap.] tlst Church at both the 8:40 and H a,m. Sunday services. ‘ Others taking part in the morning worship will be Percy M. Willey Jr., minister of education, and youth assitants, Vickie McLaughlin and Bill Shirley. Special music will include solos by Mrs. La Verne Cox and Mar-lene Beale. . Korea Ob* and Dick Taylur will ke hl charge of horseback riding for the lSth-UOt grade men*ers at Yeatb Fellowship scheduled for the lMh grade end college-age group wMh Alice ST. ANNE'S EPISCOPAL MISSION smith at. isS Tory OSktojr Park Rd.. Willed Ulu Sunder School 1:30 A. M. Church. 10:00 A. M. Sponsored by St. Jam.*. S how. ZION CHURCH of the NAZARENE 239 E. Pike Street 10 am.—Sunday School 11 am.—Mowing Worship 7 pm.—Evening Service Rev. Harold L Harris PE 4-6216 Attending the Missionary Conference in New Wilmington, Pa. I are Peggy Wilson, Marilyn Bell,! Judy Williams and Kathy O'Brien. 18:88 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL CM MM toy All sm. . 11:06AM WORSHIP SOME W1®MoT^1ST8 max -- T;3S P.M. BVI ___EVSNINO WORSHIP gay. motiutn, poaching. WXPMXBPAT-TjX PM. mw OROUPS »nd YOUTH CHOIR We cordially invito you fo worship with US, Nursery sad CbUdroe's Church Ample Forking FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH lit N. IASI Bl«d. . Pontiac. Michigan Paetor, O. P. tollmen Me: PS 4-1*11 P»M MUSI. 03 Ben (on lUtld.no.: FI I 0*30 DONELSON BAPTIST CHURCH fiiMim (4ii gd n fmn | qh Sunday School .. IS AM. Morning Worship .. 11:00 AM. _* Jwalor bn4 BactiMri' CBirA r. * y*\r 'TBlSIT’ Youth airviee ....Wvr.^.TTT. ..^T......841PM. Evening Church Service .................lOS Midweek Service......... - “ “ mm All Saints Episcopal Churth Williams St. ot W. Pika D* REV. C. CEORCE WIDOIFIJELD. Rector The REV. DAVID K. MILLS. Curate 8:00 A. M. — Holy Communiqn 10:00 AM. — Holy Communion and Sermon by the Rsv. David * K. Mine Church School ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 801 Commerce, Milford 8.-00 A.M. — Holy Communion ip:30 A.M. — Holy Communion and Sermon CLARKSTON MlSSIQN oet in Cloriuton Elementary School, 6593 Weldon Rd. 9:15 AM.— Holy Communion N and Sermon by the Rev. Bertram T. White " "SEARCHING THE SCRIPTUHES" with RooMvtlt Wills, Minister CHURCH CALENDAR "THE SEAT OF CORRUPTION" The Sset of Corruption Is the Heart —this t labored to prove to the lest Article, it m alee pointed eat that the heart (the oitodi Is that eat ef which the Mm of Ufe flew. Prov. 4:33. Boosavalt Walls which Jccac lacntlaaa aa prccccdtos tram tho Heart, to Matt, it:i*-30. we toad, "BUT THOec THIROO WHICH PROCEED OCT OP THS MOUTH COME FORTH PROM THE HXART. AND THEY DEVILS THS MAH. FOR OUT OP THE HEART PROCEED EVIL THOUGHTS. MURDERS. ADULTERIES. FORNICATION. T RIFTS. FALSE WPCTB* BLAOFHXMIBS: THUS' ARS Tin THINOS WHICH DRPILR A MAR. BUT TO RAT WITH UNWASHED HANDS DEF1LETH NOT A MAM.” ThU Unguase tram JCeae should eonatrtln each sincere hearted person to oadeavoe to maintain PURITY OP HEART Well did the songster write, "PURER IN HEART. O. OOD. HELP Ml TO II----M "EVIL THOUGHTS" Bvtl thoughts are eeleeted by the Lord ait the Bret to tkts arteetlee ot sins, let us briefly consider It. "Xvil thoughts are tho preparation of all other etas and have V pernicious influsnoe en the character. We an very much what we think. That on which our minds an fixed, that which I* the chief object presented to ear toward sight, shapes ear disposition aad Ufe. High sad nobl* thoughts elevate aad parley; low and mens thoughts debase and peOuto, The wickedness in a man springs team within: ha is guilty et M. If he admits the tempter, enoeuml Bit own w* that is to fault, encouraging the at ease resisting, abhorring, aad re palling W i Pulpit Comm We should all atrtvt to purify our hearts that our actions, words, live* aad Intentions may bo ."right in the sight at Ood." BtUXVBTH THOU TKISf CHURCH OF CHRIST For turthar information call FE 5*1/56 or writ# fo addrasa bolow. 210 Hwghts St., Pontioc, Michigon 'Spiritual Conservations'' be tha theme of tbs Wednesday midweek service. Dr. Chapman is returning today from the American Baptist Assembly at Great Lake. Wb. where he served as one of the leaders at th* Mxgonal Minister's Conference of the American Baptist Convert- REVIVAL “Jesus” The Sams Ysstsrdsy, Today grid Forever The Rowar of God Will Sat You Fra* Bring Your Sin, Sick and Diseased Jesus .will Deliver them Sinner,. Jesus is Coming sopn God Is A Good God Services nightly, except Monday PONTIAC EVANGELISTIC CENTER IQSLTN AVE. Joslyn at Third ■dmead L Watkins. Paster » School 9:^0 A M- Morning Worship .,.1045A.M. Youth Masting ..... 8:36 P.M. Evening Waiabp W*- • Columbia Avenue aMMBAPTIST CHURCH 84 West Columbia Ave. FE 5-9960 Sunday School .................9:15 JL M. Morning Worship ... i,..................W,M A. M. w ANATOMT OF. A UAH- B..T.is.:............X-W* ■ 4• •• --6:3°p* M*. Evening Service —..■■*. .......KI• ....7:30 P. M. MU Olass of toe Dvtrett Ueaa Peotball Team, speaking. PASTOR BOYD, masking ' Cooperating with Squtham Baptist Convention W r...-A.. .... Aug. 7 LAST DAY OF GREAT Aug. 7 7:30 NIGHTLY SAT. NIGHT SINGING Tent Revival 7:30 NIGHTLY SAT. NIGHT SINGING Emmanuel Baptist Church ; • ' 645 S. TEUGRAPH kOAD • FE 2-8328 Tent Located on Golf Drive Between Telegraph and Woodward Adjoining Beautiful New Christian School Building GREAT ARRAY of MUSICAL TALENT The Musical Betts Chapel Trio — Joyce Malone — A.T. Humphries — The immanuel Choir and Many Othersl JOYCI MALONE DR. TOM MALONE AMPLE PARKING NURSERY FOR ALL SERVICES PREI IUS SERVICE CALL P| 2-8328 A. T. HUMPHRIES ■ AMPLE PARKING NURSERY FOR ALL SERVICES FREE BUS SERVICE CALL R 2-8328 An Old Fashioned City Wide Tent Revival Campaign Aug. 7-7:30 Nightly PONT MISS THI SATURDAY NIGHT RINGING “K EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH mnuuuiub TINT LOCATED ON 60LP DRIVE BETWEEN TELEGRAPH AND WOODWARD FUNDAMENTAL FRIENDLY THIS rONTIAC KRR8S, SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1960 Missionary Service Slated for Messiah K William* Uke Church of the lauroM Comer AirpertA '•MlST » 10 AM. SUNDAY SOiOOL a am womnpwm 7 PM WORSHIP HOUR To Study Alcoholism NEW YORK OB A church-wide study m the problem of ateotoUm is scheduled for the coming year by the Methodist Church. The text-! book (or it is a new book, "Stum-1 blin? HhHt: A S*udy of Alcohol and Christian Responsibility." by BALDWIN AND FAIR^IOUNT SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. WORSHIP HOUR 11 AM. Evening Worship 7 P.M. M. C. Straight, Pastor CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN TVS FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N. Perry Thanks........ "Your Attendance was Appreciated Lost Sunday Come Again" 9:45 A. M. Sunday School Bring Your Entire Family 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship PASTOR A. 0 HASHMAN , j MINISTERING f YOU Will RECEIVE A FRIENDLY WELCOME 7:00 P.M. Sunday light Rally ENJOY THE REVIVAL ATMOSPHERE OF A FULL GOSPB. SERVICE THE DAYS OF REVIVAL ARE NOT PAST Special Music by The Choir "The Church With a Heart in the Heart of Your City” Hational Lutheran Council Churches ASCENSION WATERFORD Maritas M LtfffU School 9631 Pontiac Lake Rd. Wm. LoFounfoln, Pastor ['Produces Ad Mots NEW YORK IP — The United |[LeRwran Church bee produced a I of IS newspaper adver-I (Using mats, under the theme of I “Letberana- Believe," to be lltriboted to the church's 4,600 con-|:gregations across the country for in daily and weekly news-||papenL , . CHURCH OF CHRIST Cow* Worship M Church P* Lord's Oar Worship Lord's Day tnslni Wsdaesday Bvrnlnc , Par Horn. Bible Study. Call: W. Thompson t O. C. Wtills FI 1-2071 Pf 5- 1SS3 CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whittomoie Street Sunday 7:30 P. M. Guest Speaker Wednesday Silver .Tea First Social Brethren Church 316 Baldwin, PC 3-0364 Sat. Eve. Service ... 7:30 P.M. Sunday School .. .10:00 A M. Sunday Morning Worship ____...11100A.M. Sunday Evening Worship ....... 7:30P.M. Tues. Young People 7:30 P.M. Thursday Prayer ... 7:30 P.M. REV. TOMMY GUEST. Pastor CHRIST of the LAKES WHITE LAKE TWP. 6533 BUaabeth Lake Rd. Iwaa C. Rom, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL. 9:15.AM. CHURCH SERVICE 10*30 A.M. SYLVAN LAKE Pastpr Clark McPhail SUNDAY SCHOOL 900 A M. SERVICES 800 end 10:15 A.M CHRIST WATERFORD TWP. Airporl at WilHaau Lake Rd. Arvfd E. Anderson, Pastor BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR Donald G, 2 Matins Service .. .Pastor .830 A.M. ST. JOHN'S PONTIAC 67 RIO st. at Cherry St. Charter A. Colbert. Partor SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 AM. THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ADVENT CHURCH of GOD E. Pike at ' Anderson easier geheel ir.se am. Moralae Warship n o* a m. Krenlns Service I N Fit. Youth mot Wod. 7:3# P.M. Par prager or Caeeaal Can PI i-aiee First Congregational Church Mill E. Huron and ML Clement Malcolm K. Burfon, Minister Morning Worship Service 9:30 A.M. THE REV. MR. BURTON SPEAKING Cara tet children t and under. Central Methodist MV MILTOW H BANK. D.D., ldlnlater KXV. DANIEL i. WALLACE, B.D, Associate Minister **V. JOHN ■. HALL. D.D., Associate Minister MORNING SERVICES # 8:45 A.M. and 10:55 A.M. TRANSFORMED LIFE RBV. WALLACE SPEAKING (BROADCAST Over WPON, 11:00 A.M.) FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Avenue Rev. Harold Marshall, Pastor Harry Nichole, President Sunday Evening 7 30 P. M. m ' . John Meed, speaker Wednesday Evening 7:30 P. M. — Rev. Marshall BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH Weal Huron at Mark Street Two Worship Services — 8:40 and 11:00 A. M. Sermon by the Pastor "LIFE IS A QUEST' 9:45 A. M. — Church School Classes for All Wednesday 7:15 P.M.—Midweek Service — "Spiritual Conversations" “An American Baptist Contention Church" FIRST METHODIST Booth Saginaw at Judson . Paul T. Ha Wm. F. Worth. Aeaoelate Pastor MORNING WORSHIP 10:00 A.M. i “Lift*J Purpose** > Rev. Pftul Hart, Preaching . 11:15 A.M.—CHURCH SCHOOL Wkdneaday Bible Study and Prayer Fellowship 7:30 P.M. displays CURIOS—The Rev. and Mrs. HtrtyJ. Metro (left). * missionaries to Ethiopia who are home on furlough, show his parents, the Joseph Metros of Rochester, curios Mat Africa. Mrs. Metro wears a white homespun cotton dress and shama or shawl bordered in bright blue. The cloth is made by Ethiopians. A Mack . PmUm Pimi re»te and white sl&n of a "colobus” monkey is held by the Rev. Mr. Metro. His mother fingers the ivory handle of a white horsehair switch for frightening flies. Au iron spear head is examined by his father. UNITY 70 Chamberlain FE 5-2773 Diane Seaman, Minister | MX 1-US1 9:10 Sunday School 11:00 Morning Warship "AdTMtartel la Prsytr" Wednesday. 0 PM. "The Man Who Kate" Missionaries Return Home Rev., Mrs. Horry Metro Speaking at Marantha Conference Grounds ■ ■'V.TioueiM- me for the second furlough since becoming a missionary to Ethiopia in 1949, the Rev. Harry J. Metro and his wife will mate their home at 2576 Lapeer Rd. | Before becoming a missionary, I he was graduated from Pontiac Business Institute in coat account- Holy Communion will be’ celebrated at both the 9 and 11 a.m. services of Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian tomorrow. Rev. Edward D. Auchard will preach on "Not All Bad.' A vocal” trio composed of Kay Roaster, Jean Urquhart and Ayleen Wright, will sing “Lift Up Thine Eyes" by Mendelssohn. The Board of Trustees will meet Monday evening under the leadership of Robert Newton. The Session will meet Tuesday evening. V The Metres will attend ted apeak at Marantha Conference Grounds next week. Later la the month sad la the tell, be will be beard at lecnl mad eatetate L Supported by Emmanuel Baptist Church, the Rev. Mr. Metro is under (te Sydan Interdenominational Mission, which includes [more than 1300 miasicmayies from Germany, Australia, Canafe England. New Zealand, Ireland and the United States. His work in Africa is out of the capital city of Addis Ababa. When he returns in May 196L he will be in charge of finances for the area. President' Eisenhower’s pastor, tite Rev. Dr. Edward L. R. Elson, will speak on "The Peril of Un-9:30 and 11:30 Sunday morning services at the Kirk in the Hills. * ♦ ★ Minister of the National Presbyterian Church ip Washington, D.C.. Dr. Elgon is the second in a distinguished group of Protestant H i who mil deliver guest at the Bloomfield Hills Church this sttmmer. Paster Is the Praijiept and Mrs. Elssakwyr, members of New Members Added to Board by Appointment Four new members have been recently added to the Board of Trustees of St. Anne's Mead, the diocesan sponsored Episcopal retirement home soon to be erected in Bloomfield Township. Serving by didcesan appointment are Mrs. Hollis Halliday, Mrs. Henry Wootfenden, Ralph W. Moore and C. Theron Van Dusen. Mrs. Halliday and. Mr. Moore represent St. James Episcopal Church of Birmingham, apd Mrs. Woolfenden and Mr. Van Dusen are members of Christ Church Cranbrodk. Harold Dempster, president of the board at St. Anne Mead, report* encouraging response in the solicitations of capital funds. He said it is expected that building [operations will be under way Iin the year as planned. Bahamas a Diocese WASHINGTON CR—The Bahama Islands have been elevated from missionary status to a full-fledged diocese Jn the Roman Catholic church by action of Pope John XXni, the church's apostolic delegate disclosed here. Plans Headquarters | RICHMOND, Vn. ID - The Presbyterian Church in the U.S. (Southern) is planning a nee, mil-lion-doUar headquarters building for its Board of Christian Education on recently purchased land Just north of the city. Churches List Services FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Soginaw Pontiac, Michigan Rev. H. H. Savage, Pastor \ Rev. W. E. Hakes, As#t Pastor 9:45 A. M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL Classes hr All Agee 10:45 A. M.—MORNING WORSHIP “The Disputing Disciples!* Evening Service—7:00 P. M. ! “Jilst Walking Around!” Dr. H. H. Savage, speaking at both terricee TRINITY "The TYagedj) of Growing Up' will be the theme ofithe Rev: Joseph W. Moore at Trinity Baptist Church Sunday morning. A service of Baptism and Holy Communion is scheduled at 7:30 p m. MEMORIAL The Berean Class of Memorial Baptist Church win hold a meeting at 7 p.m. Monday at the home of Mrs. Lon Brown, 295 Going St. Mrs. John Veneman will be in President's Pastor Slated to Speak at Kirk-iH in government. Dr. Elsoa to the . author of numerous religious articles and beaks. His latest, “And Still He Speaks, was published earlier this year. ★ ' * A chaplain in the European Theater, he has served as president of the Military Chaplain’s Association. For two yean be was named’ national chaplain of tite Disabled, American Veterans. In 1954 Dr. Elion was honored I "Clergy Churchman of the Year." * & REV. JEAN CARR Speaking at 7:30 each evening next week at Pontiac Evangelistic Center, 12 S. Paddock St. will be the Rev. Jean Carr of Akron, Ohio, an evangelist. Joslyn Ave. Pastor at Auburn Heights The Rev*. Edmond Watkins, pastor of the Joslyn Avenue United Presbyterian Church, will preach at the 13:15 morning service at the United Presbyterian Church of Auburn Heights. Elder R. Grant Graham will assist the visiting pastor. Young people, will meet at 6 _ Tuesday for another swimming party at Case-Dodge Park. Virgil Weston, one of the sponsors, be in djiarge. >t 7:30 p.m. the Sunday School Cabinet will bold Ha monthly meeting in the church parlor. Chileans Grateful NEW YORK UB - Chileans will never forget the “spontaneous and large-hearted generosity and sympathy” of Americans in rushing aid to Chile's earthquake victims, Chilean said in a letter to Dr. R. Norris Wilson, head of Church World Service, relief arm of the national Council of Churches. FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 Al$PQRT ROAD' Sunday School ...........lO.OO KlA. Worship Service __________ 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Prayer Service 730 P.M. EvangelWic Service....... 7:30 P.M. Pastor Kasten, Preaching -Ample Parking — Supervised Nursery / charge of devotions. Refreshments! will be served. At the Happy Hour Group this week Pat Brown entertained at the organ; Linda Brown at the piano; and Diane Meyers sang a solo. Leading the songfest was Edward Justin Jr. Douglas Brown was speaker. CRESCENT HILLS Arthur Smith of Midland will be guest speaker at the Orescent'Hills Baptist Church Sunday morning. His sermon topic will be "Tbs Greatest of This So Love.” The Women’s Missionary Society has voted to purchase a mimeograph machine lor the church. MAflgfO!HA Mrs. Martin L. J. Bellinger whose husband Is pastor of the St. John Methodi^t-tjhurch will be guest speaker at the midsummer banquet at 7:39 tonight at Pontiac Federal Savings A Loan Bldg., 751 W. Huron St. '‘Making of a Life” Will be her subject at the festive affair sponsored by the women of Macedonia Church. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH G. W. Gibson, Minister PE 4-0239 347 N. Sorfinow Bible School .9:45 A.M. Mogiing Worship ...11:00A.M. Youth Service . 6:00 P.M. Evening ^service — 7:00 P.M. Prayer Meeting and Bible Study Wednesday 7:30 P.M. BLOOMFIELD HILLS . BAPTIST CHURCH Temporarily Meetihg: Hickory Grove School Lri>«tr, South et Sseen Lost M SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. Corning worship it-aim. EVENING WORSHIP 9 PM. PRAYER MEETING (Wednesday) 7 30 P.M. Plgstor; The Riv. Wallace Arthur Akarn WESLEYAN METHODIST « n. lynh nr. _ Sundty School lSA.lt. Won hip 11 Km. 1 iNrti Strrlct 7:38 P.M. rod. PnystMd Blhte 7:JO P.M. nr. i. M. KAVAMAUQH. Minister First Christian Church Disciples cl Christ Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Church Service 10:15 A. Mr Marimont Baptist Church 68 W. Walton * .V FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL. x......... 10:00 A. M. MORNING SERVICE.............11:00 A. M. The Wail of Division”. YOUTH GROUP ................6:30 P. M. EVENING SERVICE .. ........ 7:30 P. M. **Adultry* Rev. Somers, preaching CHURCHES of CHRIST Listen to (he "Herald.cl Truth" Each Sunday CKLW TV 8:30 A.M. . WXY2 8:00 P.M. SYLVAN LAKE Orchard take end MtddtoktH Rd.. Marvin W. UssUmn Mlaltter Bible School 9:45 A.M. Morning Wershfo 10:45 A.M. Evening Service 6 P.M. Wed. Night Bible Classes 7:30 PM. PONTIAC 11M W. Perry SC. Morning Worship 10:50 A.M. Wed. Bible Study 930 PM. LAKE ORION 1080 Henmlngwsy Rd. off Clarkston Rd. . Bible Study Sun. 9:45 A.M. Tues. 7:lo>.M. Warship 10:45 AM. 6:00 P.M. Evangelical United Brethren Church 212 Baldwin Avp. Phone FE 2-0726 Warship — 6:96 and 11:00 All i Sunday School — 0:48 AIL . Minteter—Star. M. R. Kvarrr iCHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT FOR SUHDAY *spiiur Sunday Services and Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Evening Servicbe 9 P.M. ' Reading Room 2 East Lawrence Street Open Daily FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams Streets BETHEL TABEBHACLE Pint Pent.coit Church of P—tte. SB.. .10 ajn. Worship 11 ate. Evangelistic Barvica 7:90 pte. Tues. and ThurlSt 7:90 pte. ■•v. tad Mr*. I. Crouch Emmanuel Baptist Church 645 S. Telegraph Rood DR. TOM MALONE Speaking 10 A M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 7:30 P.M. EVENING SERVICE MEETING UNDER THE TENT SukAay School Attendance Lad Sunday 1304 HOW CHBISTJAN SCIENCE HEALS RADIO STATION CKLW—800 KC SUNDAY 9:45 A. M. TV Every Sunday, Channel 7, 930 A At. Bf Yam..M»lwM,-iBgggrr MA 4-3135 “Man of* the West," based upon Will c. Brown's novel, is a sub-penseful story of powerful personalities — good and bad — wherein Gary Cooper, as link Jones, a reformed bandit and killer raised In the ways of western vfoieno* by his unde (Lae J. Cobb), Is tossed by circumstances back Into tbs dutches of Cbbb’s font several y«ma after be left them to so The craft unions are affiliated with I.A.T.S.E.; which also includes the nation’s theater projectionists, and there have been threats of a boycott of the wandering actors. Rock just finished a film in Mexico. He is leaving next week for another in Italy. Early next year, he will make a movie in Java. Thus Hollywood’s No. 1 box office star will be making pictures elsewhere for more than a year. Actually, It will be more than two yean aince, he was long idle after “Pillow Talk’’. "Bat I’m net making pictures out ef the country because of taxes," Hudson said. "My residence Is still Lido We, CsllferaU. Hudson added: "I don’t blame the actors who prefer to live and work abroad to make more money. It’s the tax structure that’s to blame. "I can buy a business associate a Cadillac and that's deductible. co-starr ing~aUdie mumRT “WHERE'S THE LUGOiGE?" — Jerry Lewis to look elsewhere. Lewis stare ln <’The Bellboy,’’ la greeted by a strange eight — an engine — as showing soon in the area. Seemingly with idle he opens the "trunk" of a guest’s car. Gifts* . time on his hands, he wrote, produced and di-again, Jerry, that’s not luggage. You'll have reeled the Paramount release. STARTS SUNDAY- Pontiac Theaters vest as much as $400 million to expand. Chilean production If they get the guarantees they want from the Chilean government, the informants said. Chile Deals for Hike in Copper Production DonAmeche Coming Back • City Manager Quitting ! at Sault Ste. Marie SAULT. STE. MARIE (AP) -’ Ralph E. Speer says he is re-I signing Oct. i as city manager after nine years at the |U,000 post. Tubs, thru TH.: “Boy and the Pirates,’’ Charles Herbert; ’’Com-manche Station,’’ Randolph Scott HURON /- Sat. thru Than.: "Gallant Hours,” James Cagney; “The Usk forgiven,’’ Burt Lancaster, Audrey Hepburn. * OAKLAND Sat. thru Wed.; Walt Disney’s "Pollyaftna.” Thurs.: "Ice Palace,” Richard Burtbn, Martha Hyer. NEW YORK - Eight out of 10 homes built In the United Statea last year were equipped with gas heating systems. In some areas heating is by ga* in 98 per cent of the new homes. Ccnrt Explain Dadino; Nat Sony Ha Invented the Telephone' City Engineer Jim Lipsett also announced he wifi quit soon. j By BOB TBOMAfi HOLLYWOOD IB — “Are you sorry you ever Invented the tele- TONIGHT SUNDAY “No, not at all,” replied Don Ameche thoughtfully. Ho was discussing why ha has been off the screen for 13 yean, though hit is a household name to moviagoen everywhere. He lo now making his return, playing a high-powered potittrtan in "A Fever hft the Blood." A total of 90,113 deer were killed la Pennsylvania in 1959 against 111,Stt the previous year. TO-NIGHT 3 BIG FEATURES EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING NOW* the girls will j lmowwhythe/7 guys go for Qi Brittle “KINGS GO FORTH” Bardot! ‘Tbk I don’t think tba pkturo had n bad effect on ay earner. After all, I (fid ‘Alexander Graham Bell' in 1939, and I was in pictures lor nine yean after that. It was a big htt.” . DOESN'T KNOW WHY ^ Why does a top star .suddenly BelicVe it or not.^.Mxnething hew has been added. She's got talents HHh you’ve never quite noticed before f ...end here’s the picture \p prove it! STARTS SUNDAY'- FIRST PONTIAC SHOWING The Adventures of In the Exclusive , Behind-ths-Scene\ Story aif* I the fetching ] figure. She j reached stardom Mm by ueingM her hafutm gifted ci^ you’ve con ArriMol BEumu^m Columbia Picture* presents -fT A Raoul J. Levy Production fjrjtfhStyy Jacques Charrier ALSO; THIS TRULY GRIAT STORY- Mach in# Spoodf Taih ih Diagnosing Lung III* LONDON - A new machine tar automatically diagnosing lung all- A Bentley Films Release, Starring A DATE WITH DEATH in Irondta. has teoNtafetad tor'the University of touioyjAuo>raMa, whom it wn be used for research late the canoes «t lung disorders. ' - ^ Not Recommended for dtUffian ptirfijp anwmanta >he troupes Let others pay me YOU DON'T HAVE TO!' H HBhRh rSuunol CUR 1 MARTIN TONIGHT waterfordI! 3 BIG FEATURES! DRIVE-IN THEATER «SSssS THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN THE POKTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, I960 Cooper find Julie Star in Western Sympitfalw With That Who Film Abroad Rock Hudson Denies Running Away ?to Hallinan plans to leave tor Moscow by plane Aug. 13, br the Mol, scheduled to start Aug. 17. He said his Invitation was signed by Prof. Gorshenin of the Soviet Legal Society. to the Soviet Valeo. , Hallinsn was candidate fat president of the leftist Independent Progressive Parity in 1962. He recently waa teetered. to law practice after a three year suspension, stemming Irani his ceavktfcn of federal income tax evasion. He served a term, in McNeil Island Prison, Wash. “f assume they are inviting attorney from various countries to observe how the trial is conducted,” Hallinan said. /T fed quite honored to be selected as one to be invited to attend from the United States.”, This is •the salty, personal log-the \ deeply I human r * stofcy -of the bristling whose hell-raisers tamed the » tide! Aihidid Abbey Produced enl Directed fe | Scnenpbyby DENN.S WEAVER. ROBERT MONTGOMERY- borne UYand frank GILROY A CA6NEY- MONTGOMERY PRODUCTIONS. INC. Picture • Released thru. UNUEDOBARTISTS THE HOWLARIOUS NEW COMEDY HIT THAT GIVES YOU THE LOWDOWN QN LOVE AND TAXES.., m AND A HAYSTACKS! ■■ Pa^j DOUGLAS IkeAfdtmg Game SATURDAY, AUGUST ( "GET MOVING!” — Alan Hale spurs the pit crew into action to get Rory Calhoun back on the track la this scene from "Thunder in Carolina” which has its Midwestern premiere Thursday in the • Pontiac area. Rounding out top members of the cast in the racing • film are Connie Hines, John Gentry and Helen Downey. S 4 ( * 'Moonshine' Runners iinkecTWith Racing When 100,000 gasping fans sit in the stands at Darlington Raceways, watching a mass of roaring maehhiea whirl around the oval hi the famous “Southern 500,” piloted by tron-nerVed men competing for money and glory, perhaps very few of them know| that the popular sport of stock car "racing originated with “moonshine” runners. This is the background of “Thunder In Carolina” starring Rory Calhoun and coatarring Allen Hale, Connie Hines, and John Gentry, making its Midwestern premiere next week in the Pontiac Each fellow was proud of the speed of his own car and his driving ability and before long impromptu races were being hdkl to Film Features Eskimo Actress Goi From the Land of the Midnight Sun Seert In 'Ice Palace7 The first Eskimo actress to be featured in a Hollywood film la Dorcas Brower, a 19-year-old beauty. from Ibe Land of the Midnight Sun, who portrays Robert Ryan’s Eskimo wife, in Warner Bros.’ screen version of Edna Fer-ber’s epic Alaskan novel “lee Pal-ce.” ; She was discovered by director Vincent Sherman when "lee Palace,” which conies to this area next week, went before the technicolor cameras in the 49th state. Mbs Brower was bora oa her father’s Half Mom Throe Beta-deer Baivh la the Art-tie Ctarete aad tea roeldeat of Patat Barrow, Alaska. After location shooting in the far North, she was flown to Hollywood for additional scenes with the film’s cast, which includes Richard Burton, Carolyn Jones, Martha Hyer, Jim Backus, Diane McBaln, Ray Danton and Shirley Knight. -* it * The young actress from the arctic is 5 feet 4 inches, weighs 111 pounds and has dark brown eyes and black hair. She is fond of prove their speed and Mvi*!™*-'"'-™!! usmbeilsnitaasm«liamaWI IUTRII FEUTO COLOR CIRTOOE AND NDTELTf] • a • • STARTING THURSDAY • • • • MICHIGAN'S MOST FAMOUS TELEGRAPH RD. AT SQUARE IK. NOW nm SUN. EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWIHC FE 2-1000 2 BIG BIG BLOCKBUSTERS ON ONE PROGRAM' OH THE LARGEST SCREEN YOU'VE EVER SEEN! ALL COLOR PROGRAM ^ Metro Goldwyn-Mayer* ALL m WONDERFUL FUN OF THE SMASH STAGE MUSICAL ...ON THE SCREEN AT LAST! An ARTHUR FREED Production &GLCS ar& . /g CINEMASCOPE The singing-est, dancing-est, laughtng-est love story ever Ml to thrilling music f FRED CLARK w>EDME F0Y, Jr -JEAN STAPLETON ^ * PLUS ★ A SECOND BLOCKBUSTER ♦ FRED CLARK una merkel EXTRA TONIGHT! KIDDIES CARTOON PARTY FIRST SHOWING! nsanmoiTHUip n in ranne uw SAT. ANP SUN. SCHEDULE Unforgiffn 1 :09 - 5:19 - 9:29 Gallant Hours 3:14-7:24-11:34 ..IS* WAS ^THE BULL OF THE PACIFIC! His name was Halsey—But The Enemy.^ Spelled It ’’Hell”! This Is His Story...” Deeply Humin And Depth-Charged! A Story That Goes Beneath The Battle Ribbons Of An Admiral - Below The* Decks Of A Fighting Fleet...To Bring You The Burning, Personal Side Of War!' wm PLUS she wasn't Ben s sister. Then she Zeb-The West had Wm Hi toll v. and now ha waa paying H back! the. start of the THIRTEEN Tint PrtXTXAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AIJfiUST 6, i960 Vermonter Waits long for freight to Past By ST. ALBANS. VI. (UPI) — W1 Mary PicktordSays IV Will Devour Movies The Greatest Show on Earth Revivech Due in Area Sunday That all-time great time epic, which stands in a darn by Knell —Cedi B. DeMille’s Technicolor production; “The Greatest Show an Earth” — is once again , to be shown in the Pontiac area beginning Sunday. ICOMMULCEI 3—FEATURES—j Lost Tims Tonight denm'BH vs. "Aa an industry, I don’t look lor it to ever coma back. Eventu- Ki| will malt into TV. Bat 1 k television wilt otter a much greater choice' of subject matter In the future than now. Wilde, Charlton Heston, Dorothy, r i a Grahame and Countrymen Too Polite, Cheer Bad Work, Says Japanese Star Lamour, Gil James Stewart, and an unprecedented array of Ringing talent, “The Greatest Show on Earth." combines two of America's most popular entertainments. "Pay. TV will come, toa, but there will always be tree TV. Pay TV will be great; for motion big-ttea Big Top show. In addition; there is toM a powerful, personal story dramatised by tile stars, completing a combination of such outstanding en-' “The Greatest tertainment that .... _____________ Show on Earth” was honored with the Academy Award for Best Pio-ture of the Year in which it was first released. rhe Hitchock Formula; "I’m on the phone every day to New York," she says. "I’ve had three breakfasts get cold on me whUe I talked. I don’t know as much as I’d like about the market. But I’m satisfied with a profit, not in trying for the ultimate maximum." She hesitates to talk about her charity work for fear she might sound publicity conscious. She admits, however, that her interests range from education foundations to a Jewish home for the aged (•he’s a Gentile) to cancer drive* to the Motion Picture Relief Fund, STARTS SUNDAY —IN COLOR Made with the cooperation of the Ringling people, the DeMttle epic features hundreds of famed attractions i~ circus "flyers,” acrobats, tightrope walkers, clowns, performing animals and other hair-raising thrillers. M" for the many successful film hits be has created, Allred Hitch-cock declares, "It’s very simple. With Jet travel now so fast, you can dress for dinner In Loe Angeles and arrive In New York in time to find everybody already asleep . . . There’s a parking lot attendant who has parked so many small cars he how walks in a crouch. Earl Wilson. Community Theaters Aadteaeee demand only eae thing — to be entertained.” And when it comes to bizarre plots, it would be difficult to beat that of Hitchcock's latest chiller, "Psycho,” which conies soon to foe Pontiac area. It stars Anthony Perkins, Vera Miles, John Gavin and Janet Leigh. "There are several. Japanese in ~ ^fteilm the picture,” she said. “And it is "VivoboM women-interesting to see the changee in ^ my people both In the United Sat. u>n» .Thuf«.: States and Japan.-Interesting and nSo," j»m»* awei sometimes sad. wauuu < "I am a member of the last Japanese generation educated in _s»m. thru tW: ■ the old tradition. Now all the books 1% yjnJS’ have been changed In the schools, *5. thmjat.: -i and tile customs, manners, morals iKS^briaette a and even tiie dress of the Japanese sad mt.: have been changed forever. nun ■at. thru ♦»*.: "T "The younger generatidn hasn’t curtu._ DehMo nor been exactly Americanised, but The producer - director has permitted my little to be known about the film-because he believe* that audiences like to be surprised. “This film," he says, "has so Vf jThe talent from Tempo who became e V ten-cents-a-dance girt. The guy from Milwaukee who got caught h the rat race... — \ A. Unless your horse Is protected through yearly tetanus inoculations, he should receive an antitoxin Injection within 34 hours after Sustaining injury. Anyone who has witnessed a case of lockjaw (or tetanus) will realize the necessity these Inoculations. “Even though I ’am young myself, I remember when Sumo wrestling and kabuki theater were the main entertainments of Japan. Now It Is baseball, movies and television and rock V roll music. ”1 am grateful that the geisha remains in Japan. I think they always whl. It Is a .tie with the old traditions when a woman dedicated her life to the comfort and welfare of Japanese men. * "As a child I remember the most shocking thing In my life. It was the day the . emperor spoke to the people on tiie radio. Wa had alamwe AMialrtoM/l Rim a amrl Jhfl ' Symptoms may not appear for at least a week, and can lay dormant As long as three or four months after infection. The first sign can be paralysis, of the cheek muscles that causes the Jaws to kick (hence, the name "lockjaw”). ; This la often accompanied by stiffness of the leg muscles and eventual affliction of the entire Jody. • (Address year qaeetfoa to Dr. Hitchcock believes that such a scene has its place, "flex fat films should be only for the purpose of explaining a situation or advancing the stay," he says. * * * "Give audiences too much sex. or In bad taste, and subconsciously they Will rebel. They become embarrassed, and laugh In the wrong place.". There isn’t very much laughter la "Psycho." Suspense, drama and Sst., Wed.: "The Greatest Show on Barth," Charlton Heaton. Jamee Stewart, color; Boy Who Owned An mophant." Tallulah Bankhead, color. ★ ★ SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY ★ ★ The Most Amazing jungle Picture Ever Made I technicolor UNDER THE GRACIOUS AUSPICES Of HIS MAJESTY KING LEOPOLD III tb/"* BU8HKIH - SMI BUTERA • Gtfttf UULUGAN Band on His PUy - A Par amount Picture OWL But Twran ml HL'IIIT -j j SHOW 0L“Lc!§ij SAT. OWL SHOW LAST COMPLETE SHOW STARTS —10:00 p. M.—---------- RIX NANCY REASON* GATES LIKE NOTHING EVER KNOWNOR SHOWN! Hen untouched NVMPHet BBAury SET OFF A BLAZING DESERT WAR f Nature Girl ■■ih? SLAVER TOlntTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. AUGUST ft 1S9C Rome Next Stop for 37 U.S. Swimmers, . LOUIS (AP) — Battling Billy Martin, backed by Cincinnati Manager Fred Hutchinson, is bitter over a $900 fine and five-day suspension and wants baseball Commissioner Ford Frick to'bear side of the case. Martin declared, "To me, that meant I was gonna get punched— so I swung." Then he wondered ft, ft ft- out loud: Hutchinson implied that Nation- *1 wonder what would have al League President Warren C. happened if I had miaaed?” Giles was influenced by Martin's I Brewer said he merely asked past record in fining the Redleg .Martin if he wanted to fight and ap ntwu : WOULD MARK — Powerful freesiyier Chris Von Saltza flashes through the water at Detroit's Brennan pool to break all listed and pending records for the 400-meter in the final day of the trials yesterday. Her time was 4:44.5. Casey's Mound Platoon Saves 4-3 Win Over As KANSAS CITY U) — New York] can League defending champions, scrambled to a 4-3 victory over 6-1. After retiring the first two Kansas City Friday nitfit as batters, Shaw 10-9 walked two bat-Manager Casey Stengel used three! ters, then was clipped for singles pitchers in the ninth Inning to by Faye Throneberry, Billy GarJ-choke off an Athletics rally and'ner and Jim Lemon. • - boost the Yankees’ American [ Pete Ramps won his seventh with League lead to 24 games, ft—fit ★ - Roger Maris had parked a, two-run homer in the third inning to run his league-leading total to 33 and the Yanks were sailing along on a 4-1 lead when the A’* came to bat in the last of the ninth. Luis Arroyo, the reclaimed southpaw screwball ace who had choked off a sixth inning rally by the A’s, was on the mound and had pitched hitless ball. it it ft Arroyo walked Ken Hamlin to rtart it and Bill Tuttle doubled to left. When Pete Daley scored Hamlin with a single, Stengel called in firebaUer Bob Turley to pitch. He fcot Russ Snyder on a fly with Tattle scoring after the catch. V ' * ft ft When Turlfcy wild pitched Daley to second and walked Hank Bauer after getting Jerry Lumpe on a fly to center, Stengel called for Bobby Shantz to pitch to Norm SMjbern. The little left-hander got the left-handed slugger to fly out to Maris in right field. sm |p< • ft #e ft The Yanks bad scored what had turned out to be the winning run in the seventh. Gil McDougald singled and was forced by Tony Kabek. After Bob Oerv popped out. Kubek went to third an a passe " ball and scored on a wild pitch. Art Ditmar 10-7 was the starting Ntir York barter and got credit for the victory although he departed In favor of Arroyo with twb on and no one out in the sixth The right-hander was struck in the forehead by a line drive off the bat of Lumpe in the tyird and the bell caromed into left field for a single. It appeared Ditmar might he seriously hurt as be * “ to the ground but be recovered after a few moments and sumed pitching. ■ ft ft ft It seemed Maris and Ditmar had file game well in hand until the sixth when the pitcher walked Sie-bem and gave up a single to Dick Williams with no one out. The A'* had scored a run off Ditmar in the fifth and Stengel apparently thought Ditmar had weakened. He called in Arroyo who, after walking Marv Throneberry to load the bases, got out Of the taming without yielding a run. ft, ★ * Hie Yankees, after Maris had them off to a 2-0 lead, scored again in the sixth on doubles by John Blanchard and Cletis Boyer. jThe Senators battered Bob off the mound with a four-om explosion in the first inning and went on to inflict the fifth straight defeat upon Chicago, the Ameri- The Pontiac Police axM not cope with the arm of Floyd Hicks who pitched 13 innings of hitless ball, in two games, including a regulation no-hitter, to lead CIO to a pair of class B playoff softball victories at Northside park, 2-0 and 1-0. fn the first game only a walk and an error allowed a man to get to base and in the second codtest, a single by Walt Patton in the last inning preyented Hicks from his second straight no-hitter. He strode out 12 In the first game and three tat the second game. Two Mg nms on four singles In Martin Is Bitter Over Sentence for Slugging get the bat. Brewer said, "You want to fight — I’ll give something." second baseman Friday night. Chicago CUb pitcher Jim Brew r, slugged by Martin, suffered s fracture of the orbit bone below his right eye. He win undergo surgery today. Hutch put it this way: "Do you think Brewer would have been fined $500 and suspended five days if the fight had gone the other way?" Martin said he felt he had been hart." ‘dealt with very unfairly by Mr. Mown three times Wednesday, he [he wasn’t expecting the punch. ! Old) Manager Lou Boudreau said if he were president, would fine Martin $1,000 and keep him under suspension until Brewer was able to play. ♦ . fir ft ' Martin charged that Boudreau had issued orders for. Cub pitchers to throw at his head because Tve been hitting the ball real Cub pitchers knocked him Giles. I will ask the commissioner for a hearing. The fight wasn't my fault and I was only protecting myself after he threw at my head." ★ A * The fine was one of the largest ever imposed by Giles. The fight came after a pitch by Brewer Thursday caromed off Martin’s bat and hit his helmet. On the next pitch, Martin’s bat went flying toward the mound and first base. said when he came out to said. * * it 1 Martin has been in several player fights. The New York Yankees traded him after implying he was at fault in a night club altercation involving other Yankees and fans. A year ago Martin was hit in the face by a pitch in Washington and suffered a fractured cheek bone. Pitcher Misses 2 Straight No-Hitters in .City Play the Sth Inning gave the CIO team its first game margin. The lone telly la the nightcap came in Am Sth inning on two hits and two errors. In Clam E, the West Side towards defeated JAR Auto, 8-5 with Bill Crawford getting four hits including a double. ★ * ft In other playoff games, Rogers Electric led by Mike Montgomery’s three hits, defeated Pontiac Retail- Jim Reynolds had foiir hits for the losing Retailers and Mike Campbell blasted a bases-loaded homer in the first inning to leafl the ‘‘300’’ Lounge team. Hiese were the junior baseball scores yesterday: . • # * * Widget League Scores: Wizzards 4. Ctaba 1; E&B 10 Warriors Tr Emerson 6, Furtney 0; Owen Eagles 31, Baldwin Pharmacy 5; Fur-ney’s 10, Rappy’s 2. Swim Summaries SCTROIT (API - Summaries at Mat rent* Friday In tti* 0. A ot- (IM earn Olympic team bartbi) si* Sew York (M~ 11 (SaU *7). r.M p m. Ion (Sullivan . 7:05 p m t Phlladel- San Francis Claikston G. C. Bitten Twice by Hole-in-One Bug The hole-in-one bug bit Clarkstpn Golf Club this week with two aces going by the board in as many days. ♦ ft ft For the first time in Clarkston G. C. history, an ace was scored on the 220-yard 5th hole when 18-year-oid Butt Weaver of Lake Orion knocked a No. 4 wood shot into the cup. Witnessing the ace were Paul an4l David DeLongchamp, brothers from Oxford. Weaver carded an even par 35. , ______I (Martcbal W> Ot Pit burgh (Law 14-5). 12:20 pJB. ilcago* (Hobble 10-14) at Milwauk (Pliarro M), 1 30 p.m. Cincinnati (Maloney 0-2) at St. Lot (^""ibsdiw* cBuoes £ co* »MPttu5urrt *2. 'lS^p.m™ Milwaukee. 1:20 p.m. ****&ftJprUfi? Ann prmncUco at Cincinnati, • p.m* hm Aagtltt r* Mm “ Knights9-Under133 Sets Insurance Pace WETHERSFIELD. Conn. (AP) —After what has happeed so laf in the $30,000 Insurance City Open Golf Tournament, it’s tough to get anybody to predict the event-ual winner of this 72-hole battle. The leader after 36 holes Dick Knight, 30-year-old pro from Apple Valley, Calif., who has posted rounds of 66-67 for a 9-under-par 133 for 36 holes. Only one stroke behind Knight are Dow Finsterwald of Tequesta, Fla., and Jack Fleck of Los An-11 Open The 2nd hole-in-one was posted yesterday when Mrs. R. M. Parker, a Clarkston businesswoman, clicked with a 7-iron on the 140-igeles, former N yard 9th hole. Witnessing her "per- Champion. ^ fact" shot wag Mrs. C. F. Hancock In fact, only a few strokes sepa-of Louisville. Ky. , rate. Knight, who shared the it ♦ ft ‘ opening-round lead in the 19591 ft was the first ace of Mrs. National Opro from^ some of the Parker’s volfinc career and the world s greatest golfers includingu j,,»nn Joimwm. innw. w»»b 3©f (he year at the ClarkstonlArnold Palmer, Ken Venturi, - toiSrw. - Doug Ford and Gene Littfer. litsu, uti. C.. f%U*delphi». into An». Calif., Men's platform diving (first two placet tra Olympic team bortivu—1. Boh _*r. Santo Ana. Cslif.rilS.5e. 1 i Toblan. Log Angeles A.C.. 150.00. 2. i determine second ■ Frank FraunlelMr, D.k. Air Force. 1.14. 100-meter breaststroke special * —in tar 200-meter medley relay)— ____ _*— * * “•** nlaca). ______ ....... .. Beach, CaBf.. 1:14... . aid Mlki. UA. Air Foree. y1-— p. .0. 4. Chatter Jastrtmskl. DBlanapoili. .2. 2. Dennla Ruppsrt. Marion. (Hilo. .5. 6. Eon Nakasone. Indlanar " ____.». 7. Fred Munseh. Now York, 1: I. Gardiner Green. Princeton, N.J* t: Women's 100-meter breaststroke—1.________ Warner, Santa Clara S.C.. 1:22.3 (Amer-record. Old record 1:22.4 by Marl- _____ Hargreaves. July IMS). 2. Jackie Danielson. Multnomah, Ore., A.C., *-*** 1. Undo Clark. Loo Angeles A.C., 1. Patty Kempoer. Hollywood. J-.24A. 3, Marianne Hargrsavea. A_________ lekemp, Indianapolis A.C.. 1:24.1. 7, Susan Rogers. Worcester, Mato., 1:23.3. 2. Anne Bancroft, Arlington. Va.. 1:25.0. (Second Olympic berth awarded Mita Kempoer] Men's 201 meter freestyle (first a Maces earn Olympic team bertha) — Oeorgo Harrison, innta Clara O.C., 2:03.i. 2. Richard Blkk. North Central, HI.. Collect 2:042. 3. WUUam Darnton. Detroit * - *:04.4. 4, Jeff Farrell. New Raved _:04A. 5. Thomas Winters. Lot to solos A.C.. 2:051. 0. Steve Clark. S Clam AC.. 2:02.2. 7, Dougina Rowa. Angeles A.C.. 2:00.7. a John House. Angeles A.C.. 2:05.2. women’s MO-noeters freestyle relay placet earn Olympic Mam berths) -Busan Dotrr. Vesper S.C.. Fhlladal 1:04.2. 2. loan SpUlane. Houston. 1 1:04.4. 2. Shirley Slobs. Miami She . • “■ 4 MUly Botkin. Lee Angeles A.C.. I, Donna DeVarona, Berkeley, ' ------ Tuutka. Berkeley. Call/.. i Nullmeyer. N— fUKB 9 Kanaksr. M fora.. a.c„ ias.2. Women's 400-meMr freestyle (drat two places earn Olytmda I--------ftgtt * aria Von Bnltt*. tai 4:44.3 (world record. 4:42.4 by Ilea Konrads. 19*0). £ Carolyn Hob—. ^ A c., 4:12.1. 2. Joan SpUlane. Ta*.. 4:54 3. 4. Donna l*sVaroii_.-------- lor. Calif., 4:52.1. A Joanna Blackwell. Los Angotoo A. C.. 5:04.0. A Laura! Watson, Santa Clan A C.. 5:11 A. 7. ■»»*«• Ruuska. Berkeley. Calif.. LllJ. k Flnneran. Coral Oables. Fla., 2:12 Women's ISO-msMr backstroke tww places esm Olympic teao» b_._ 1 Lynn Burke. SaoM Clara A C.. 1:09.2 (World record. Old record LM.0. by Mice 2. Nina Harpoer Vesper F.C. Phllodelphla. ItUATi DEAD HEAT — Alan S«non (loft) End George Breen reach, the finish of the 1,500 meter freestyle final in the U. S. Olympic Swimming Trials in a dead heat. Both were docked at 17.40. The judges gave the decision to Somen. Sweetens Bucs Margin SHIP SHAPE -*- Oakland County All-Star Football players took their physicals last night at Wianer and Dr. George Petroff was one of three busy physicians on hand. Dr. Petroff gives Doug Stott of Oxford a check while Pontiac Central’s Charlie Brown watches. They are members of the North squad which started practice this morning at 9:00 a.m., and have a workout planned for 3:00 pjn. They gave up on Vinegar Ben) Mizell. They said he’d never be a winning ' pitcher. They called him a “frustrating” type of hurler ... one who is always showing promise but who always disappoints. h it it That’s what the’experts said about this tall, gangling country boy from Alabama who came up in 1952 toufeft as a "left-handed Dizzy Dean,” but never lived iq) to his potential. * .* ★ The St. Louis Cardinals stuck with Vinegar Bend eight hoping each spring he’d come up with that big year. Finally, their patience ran out. Lapt May they peddled him to Pittsburgh. ★ * * Maybe ft’s the change of scenery. Maybe the easy-going southpaw .has realized time might be running out on him. Whatever the reason, the 30-year-old Mizell finally appears to be fulfilling the tall predictions made for him etfht years ago. ★ ★ * Friday night ftHzell shut out San Francisco 1-0 for his seventh victory in nine decisions.rince he joined foe league-leading Pirates. It waa his second consecutive shutout and gave him a string of 26 successive scoreless innings. This is the same fellow who owned a mediocre 6807 lifetime record before this season, and a .3 marie wifi) the Cards before ie Was shunted off. Thanks to Mizell, the Pirates have 'a four-game bulge over second-place Milwaukee, which displaced the Cardinals in the runner-up spot fay walloping Chicago’s Cuba 10-2. St Louis, blanked by Cincinnati 34), dropped into third (dace, a half game behind the Braves. Rain washed out the Dodger-Phillies game in Philadelphia. * * An unearned Pittsburgh run in the eighth broke up a scoreless pitching duel between Mizell and Sam Jones. The Giants’ ace pitcher walked BUI Virdon, leading off die eighth. Then he threw Dick Groat’s sacrifice bunt over, Don Blasingame's head at first base. When Groat and Blaaingame collided, the speedy Virdon raced home before the baU could be retrieved. The Pirates may have lost Ro* berto Clemente for several days The outfielder suffered a cut chip that required five stitches when bed into the concrete wall akx« the right field stands making a one-handed catch of Willie Mays' liner in the seventh. Bob Purfcey snapped St. Louis’ seven-game winning streak,1 limiting the Cards to four hits in eight innings Marshall Bridges, in re--ftnMiMl the shutout ta Calhoun 1st, Jones 3rd in Pre-Olympic Test Sime Rashes 100-Meters in :10.5 LONG BEACH, Calif. (ft-Dave Sime and Dave Davis have a couple of things in common—a first name I file distinction ot berths on the U.S. Olympic track team. But the things they share today don’t include the same feelings. Sime, the former Duke sprinter, misked the 1$6 Olympics because of a leg injury and wasn’t given much of a chance earlier this year of making the 1960 team. Today he haa net only made the oq*ad bat has Jest about locked np the third poofttoa on the 110-meter team that will compete for the United States la Rome. Davis, one ot the “big four” shot putters, is headed in precisely the opposite direction. Troubled by a sore hand, he failed again Friday night to come even close to hfi best performance and made it tool even more probable that he won" get to fiupw in Rome. ★ * ★ Sime, competing with Paul Winder of Morgan State for the third spot on the 100-meter team, stunned a crowd of about 10,000 in the pre-Olympic meets here by dashing home first in 10,5 seconds —against a 7-mile-an-hour wind. Left behind the dashing young man from Duke were such formid. able sprinters as Ray Norton, Frank Budd, Stone Johnson and Winder. Norton, who has the fastest time of‘anyone on the U.S. team, ran last—but not because his legs failed It was his ailing hack this time. Johnson finished second to Sime in :10.6 and Budd" was third. Lee Calhoun led. the field lu the IIS-meter hurdles in tl8J with Willie May taking second and Hayeo donee of Portia* in third ptece. BUI Nieder, the ex-Kansas starlworld record of 65-7 but food who is an alternate, won the shot enough to move him closer to push-put with a heave of 63 feet, 11 lag past Davis for a starting poai-inches. It was w*U off his pending It ion on the U.S. team. CONGRATULATIONS — Jeff Farrell is congratulated //by hi* mother Mrs. Felix Farrell after the swim star earned a berth on the Olympic swimming team yesterday in JOB meter freestyle finals. He finished fourth. Six of the eight were choden. ______ shutout tyt cement Purttey’s 11th .victory to 18 decisions. The Red* broke a scoreless tie with an unearned run oft curt Simmons in the sixth, scoring on a double by Goa BeD and successive errors by Daryl Spencer and Ken Boyer. - * * ft- Every Milwaukee starter except Eddie Mathews hit safely as the Braves walloped four Chicago pitchers for 15 hits including Ifenk Aartn’s 30th home run, tying him with the Cubs’ Ernie Ranfat for the league lead. Lew Burdette, who coasted to Us 12th victory, also homered.' Del Crandall and rookie Al Spangler had three hits apiece for the Brave*, who snapped a four-game losing streak.- Red Schoendienst. returning to second base for Milwaukee, had i a stogie and double. Playoff Decides League Winner, Tourney Berths double result was achieved lari wight in the Waterford Recreation Softball contest between ijtwtend Pharmacy and Rod s Sunoco dubs. The game waa a playoff of. tie lor the regular season championships. flhe competitors had 8-7 marks. TWert was also a question of entiy for state softball tournaments to be settled. 3 World Marks Set as Olympic Trials Finish - Pair Tewn-rAg* Blond#* Carry Global Records From Detroit Pool By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Edtter, Porttec Press DETROIT — ^be best swimmers and divers the United States has to offer, a squad of 37" tatdtsfing three world record holders, now set their sights on Rome after completing the Olympic trials in Detroit’s Brennan Pools last nMJf " A pair of look-alike blondes, -Chris Von Saltza and Lynn Burke, brought last night’s session to * ’ stirring climax by shattering world ... records to 400-meter freestyle and ^ 100-meter backstroke, respectively. All told, M members ot tke ’ ~ teem were added last aigkt, aad m the UA squad Is comprised of * •tars ranging in ago tram a 81* >• year mother ef few Jane Irwin, to 18-yenr-eM Donna deVarena.; The baby-faced deVarena, who « will be an 8th grader at Lafayette, * Calif., next month, it the world ~ record holder in the 400-meter individual medley relay. Mrs. Irwin competed in the 1948, 1962 and 1956 games and yesterday -_ the platform high diving finals she finished second behind another _ Olympic veteran Paula Jean Pope. -Mrs. Pope accumulated 96.48 points And Mrs. Irwin 86.44 points. « ‘Baroness’ Von Salts* was one of five doable qualifiers. She ~ won the lM-meter freestyle and .?, her time la the to*meter freestyle yesterday was a stxsllng iMA Miss Burke waa timed in 1:09.2 for the 100-meter backstroke ecliito- « ing the mark of 1:10 flat she estab- ’. lished Thursday. The other world record was set Thursday in the 200-meter -butter- ~ fly when Mike TnSy of Indianapolis “ did it in a time ot 2:13.2. ^ Jeff Farrell finally mad* the -team the way he wanted to do it— to the pool. earned his berth by finish- -lag fourth* ia the *00-meter free- “■ style. Ba rejected offers to make him an alternate oa the relay team by a decision of the Olympic committee. ' •»* He did not want to look Uw an f-invalid gaining the sympathy ot ^ the Olympic committee after his emergency appendectomy, and his -failure to qualify to the 100-meter Z freestyle just five days afterward. u Holder of the American record of :54.8 in the 100 meters, Farrell's time was 2:04.6. George Harrison of Santa Clara won the event in , :03X A crowd of 6,000 at the finals i screamed ^Chton Jeff’ and he . responded in lane No. 7 by spurting past Doug Rowe to lane No. " and John House to lane No. J. j “When we made the last run " into the final 50 meters I looked -op and it seemed everyone was ahead of me, so I just swam as hard as I could and I’m grateful ' that I made it,” said Farrell. Bob Webeter, a 26-year-old Michigan senior from Santa Ana, Calif., men’s ‘ platform diving with 166.56 points. Gary Toblan, the Olympic veteran who had captured the springboard final, finished second and earned a double place on the Olympic team, Toblan had 159.69 points. Ron O’Brien of Ohio State waa * third with iM.57 aad Doa Harper, •liver medalist la the Olympic • springboard, waa fourth |a the | final field of eight with 151 A*. . Harper, physical education teacher at Ohio State, also tailed to make the team la the spring- by Lakeland’s 8-8 victory, •* eared ky a terse-run blast la tl Lakeland thus bMpmea regular msou champions. It also will go to file state Class B tourney. Rod1! erew getting the assignment to the Clap C trials. TYailing 1-0, in the top of the 5th, LaUtfairi put runners on by virtue of a walk and a tot-batsman. Then, with two down, Jones blasted triple, bringing in two tallies. When the pitcher dropped the bail, at the mound, Jones was waved, to on a piled balk. That run proved be the winner. Webster led at the end of the thorning prelims and semifinals and clinched first with a sensational exhibition on fate next to last dive. He received perfect scores of 10 ‘ from three judges, two 9Hs and two 9s. The dive was a flying fop- • ward m somersault with a double ' twist. When he came to the surface he had p big grin on his face. He knew he had made it right there. . Toblan, 24-year-old Los Angeles ‘ ace, was second to Mexico’s Joaquin Capilla in the platform of the • 1966 Olympics. The Californian lost toe gold medal by Just three-hun-dreda of a point. Playoff Under Way for Southpaw THI# TACOMA, Wash. (AP) — The National Left-handed Golf .Tournament (toded a scheduled 72-holes in a tie and Bob Wilson ol Auburn, Wish., will meet Jack Wallen at Tacoma today In an 18-holo playoff to decide the championship. Walters barely missed an 8-foot putt Friday on the final hole which would have given him the title. He carried a 1-over-par 72 to make up a three-stroke deficit to the final round and match Wilson’s 292 total. Wilton shot a final ns 71 Wilder of Baton Rouge, La., who was one stroke back of Wilaon. when the final round began, took n 75 and placed third V with 286. THE FONTIAC PRESSy SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, i960 FIFTEEN Major League Averages at> 1 ■eweer fillips ***»:.,. New Tart W*«hta*ton TrtpU play „____ „I n m I UUWI l MTItio .*SK»,S3Bo WUltom*. Am. 09 » 87 t» .42 .jl* Mino*o, CM. M | i fi 71 J14 Skowron. PUT. 341 S3 M9 » 71 Jl} Slever*. Chi. fil H MU'* " Runnel*. Boi. IN 91 1U 2 Power, Cl«. St 41 1M 1 Berra. K.T. ■ S3 M W 18 Oelxer. M 949 S3 N 1 **** ■ sa j _ S vi ■p^jtcm. 1 fi S H PlersaU. Cte. Suns Bertola.' w5t 344 *3 79 2 £p3l i §83 8 4 S S •!" White, le. Balt, j >r. to*. ] svri Warm SSth s . Phil*. 1M 9 CaUle'n,____ HeVMfd. l.a, Carry. Phil*. Henaf. K.C.________ Mantle. N T. » Br edlnf. ^tolt. fit Taaby. Boa. MB KiTb'w, Waah. m Howard. N.T. St ■ ■ Pi B JH MB M M IB M 3 B 1 >fi i f a S § UB * “ »* 37 (2 is M 9 _ „ __ U MT J 27 .287 fi MS t “ “ * I i 17 M if »7 Spencer. St Boyer, St.L. Crandall. M Vlrdan, Pitt. Oemeter.Hi Kaako, C AllUon. Waab. 38 wdltof. Balt. 2M McDVd. N.T. W Colarlo. Oat. Ml Rich'eoa. W.T. St Buddfe!*. mb 8 5S&& 8 Stephen*. Balt. BM Heft St. m ssa.’ft st Trlando*. Balt. Ml Brandt. Balt. 107 Yost. Dot- IS Becq’r. 1 Bolltn*. I „ S M Jl? 21 44 S 21 .2*7 M 5 1 17 3 97 M M M JM 44 71 7 17 J44 Mathewi. MIL 244 “ it, Cjn. us ley. cln. 273 MODI. 8.P. 232 __il7L.A 74* ittrMand. SP. 13 JST am t, PbUa. 2U 24 8 4 1. I 141 i 34 J M » 3 21 JM 17 S7 13 SO J31 _____dt, S.F. *217 19 lioryaTtlX. MS 14 Santo, Chi 134 M Logan. Mil. 323 30 315 fi M • .jca ; 31 fi If fi _____ _ m » CorrriT.T. W 30 Lapdts. CM. 300 36 Tuttle. K.C. 333 44 Wilson. Cla. US IS Kallne, Dat. 143 , 44 Maxwell. Dot MS 47 5 fiaii 11 S 47 12 30 .249 M 04 T M JIT ■_____, __________era — SMaoee. PHte- burwh and Howard. Lao AmoMo. i each. Banka. Qtlcaso; McCorey, Francisco; N. thorn. Davis, Mow a.—- — --- Coker. Phi Pinson and Bailey. CSt '41 3 M Jit 9 I | M 17 3 S JM Hamlin. K.C. 274 29 55 Wmsm SI * ^ggJLeMJL «sst two. MMtna. Chloam; Borhorwt and Cash. Detroit;OantOa. lUbtosan and Ban. Bgqgxjvcfa.x tan; Pwwar and Bald. Cleveland: wil-1 tanas. lama 4N< Thmahany. Kansas City; Bwi Waw Tark. an asafe. _ _ __ __V L IBA. L M (Til 34 9 5 1 N I. MS 24 29 9 4 191 ______ Chi. Ill Ml 31 M 7 4 2.U K pstetn. Cl* S3 It 24 14 3 4 2.43 p£«ML waah. 114 B7 M 117 14 3 IN Ford. H.Y. 123 M4 41 44 7 3 J.M Bunnlng, DM, Ml 5 47 MS 4 > |M Stobb*. Wash. M J3 11 33 4 1 l.M Fomleles. Bos. 7» 34 42 38 4 1 3.M Barber, Bolt. 1M 99 It It 7 4 MB Perry. CU. 3 MB M S 13 3 J - M'nb'q’tto, Bst. 134 lit 41 37 11 3 1 Turley. M.T. MB M SO 41 7 1 IB Mossi, Dot. 130 MB^S 07 t 7 3 J4 Dttmar, NT. IS IS 34 39 10 7 3J4 Bumslde. Det. 94 *5 35 54 5 4 M7 s2ss*% %'s a | i“. S Wilhelm. Bolt. IS m 31 « I 4 1.37 ssr’jr ms “•■fsMflr. JT m'rer, Ch wl Chi. fitlS M 34 M 4 i 131 IT 73 Mur M4 MB M M 7 J Tirry"' IJT fl4 M4 M H 3 3 i snsis SiS;! is W'd'shtek. Waeh. M 41 88 I ^ if 8 S I 11 M M M S I * 88 5 8*5 5 Ss 88 88 S S18 mill S M t 3 4.B 1*4147 54 44 * * 1 “ 8 8 8 8« i mb M4U4 4t 47 3 11 J.n B» 37 17 17 1 4 *” 44 75 33 S 3 4 Johnson, K.C. Daley. ILC Fischer. Dot. Wynn. Chi. score. Chi. Conte* H.T. Brewer, Bos. Delock, IK Otrver. K.C. KUcke, K.C. Caotn Boo. M 71 1 Baltlmoro; 'Mlcman o land (comMMd). IJ f.fl ,BS: Id. Clevo- Army Dominates PistolToumey Coast Sorgoont First Service , Negro to Win Natiotypl Crown CAMP PERRY. Ohio (AP)-The V. S. Army proved it has the finest service marksmen in *h* country by dominoting the Ni-tional Pistol Trophy matcheB Fri- ie Army took three of the first placet in the individual com* leu and the firtt throe placet w team competition. All com* on fired tervice-toaued .« ier pistols and ammunition * # ★ my S(t. l.C. Andrew N. Jack-of San Frandaco won the in- lual teat with a record-shat- ig acorn of 3S4 points out of Msible 900. He was the first ice Negro to take the contest x 57-year history. t * e old record eat In iX7 r _ points. hdd by alx-time mal pistol champion Army ft. Huriet Dsnner o< t, N. Y. •Force M.Sgt. Jack E. f Phoenix, Arte., with 282. followed by Army 8*t-i Smith of Painted Poet. Ur F6rce S.Sgt. Edwin L. of 8an Diego, Tex., and t.Sgt. James W. Kurtx of ■s.Gfc / - » ' * # '* litter three ail.had Boore. and the tte^ranktag "X •mailer droit within the , was wet to determine the same words of advice and a wfilrtii formula on lie Detroit Tigers. But they lacked the lame ufi n n .177 W" • M 177 M44 M 102 .974 Plsysr. ^ M»ys, 1.P, LsrUr, L.A fi 71 02 21 74 . 91 ifi • i ii s 811 S3 j 8 5 1 71 144 M if m S 41 JU M JM 9 9> S 8 24 .291 a 5 8* s Is ■3 "Just relax," the seventh Tiger snager in nine yean told his sfadhpplaoe charges before hie debut last night "Iky to loosen up and Just play hell.** “ Moat of the Tigers had heard it before.# Jimmie Dyke* said H May S, IBM, the day be took ever the Ttgen. the Tigers, lesers of 1| et 17 games, relaxed and beat New Yerfc In a double-header. Bill Norman’s advice waa dw same on JuneM, 1958. The Tigers Indians Win, 4-3 Ml 40 M 17 fi' AM 1*4 19 47 5 28 .293 i . 44 101 14 54 99 13 fi - fi S' isu. Jtu 43 MM n. i a i 1 hi. 219 M 40 I _ „ L.A. 194 21 48 9 29 .274 49 94 I 47 .144 Hf. MS 39 220 23 37 f 10 M US to 41 1 1‘ 353 S3 91 3 « 31 1 27 JU NATIONAL LEAGUE ifi m 44 194 . SO 34 20 44 7 2 2.4} • 144 M is iwi Ml MS 171 N jfi 3 1.43 fi S7 fi fi J 1 |fi US M IT Ilf U 3 * 79 Ml IM QffilIU 1M 111 131 M 194 3 I MS 99 75 M M J I ifi 1M 177 M lit 11 * 190 1» 59 113 U M M M 47 S3 3 I S.M MO 131 SO ITS M 11 47 40 13 33 3 4 147 U7 fi 3114 5 72 44 31 M f 3 S.M 102 40 33 71 I t (fi 44 41 24 It > i SH H 71 M 7S S j I.M W 141 45 It I | 172 las s fi fi 12 . J| 94 H N 17 fS Sm 4i st # | ‘ MS ft! 44 MU J Cooler. Phils. 1U US «7 M1 7 Hr, MU. , 47 47 40 44 3 4 ,.»* mSoi mu. win n en r an TESa 4SM* CySwstt. Chlssfj. Ono-hil gsmst—8. Jonos snd Msrthlsl. JSrnSSST Bobsrts. Phllsdelphls: Koufsx. Los ABStMlt BrSgBo. St. Loalo. DETROIT tfi-Joe Gordon hesd made hte dsbut n with a double victory over Beaton. B«k even Fbank Lary couldn't save Gordon from a disappointing dtbut Lary pttchsd both Nonaan and Dykes to their inaagurbl triumphs with ths Tigms. dr fi *. Lary was the bear last _ Boston ruboAd Gordon’s Detroit baptism 4-2. Osrdsn . Kallne to cleanup la toe Tiger toieep. The INS Amerleain League batting ehsmpisn took a .NS batting avenge Into the game and west S-for-4. “Kaline’s going to start hitting, that's why he’s fourth," said Gordon as he watched batting practice before the gams. Dykes Happy With Start CLEVELAND (AP) — Jimmie Dykes told the Cleveland Indians he feels they ate capable of win-' ning the American League pennant. Maybe the players believed him, f s They immediately went out and beat the Baltimore Orioles 4-3 last night to make a success of Dykes' debut as Cleveland manager. The question of- | pennant came op la Dykes’* pre-game tall to the players. “We’re fix games behind,” he said, “but stranger things have happened. No team is taking charge Ml the race. There’s a tang way to ga and we’ve got a ihauiV." After the hard-foughtJcontest, general manager FrsmF Lane stopped into Dykes' office to offer congratulations. "AV hew!” claimed Lane. “It waa nice to win that one, brother. It was played big league all the way.” change of managers with two hits in three trips, a daring Mt of base running and a running catch that saved at least two nips. Each time Pienall returned the bench after a successful effort Dyke* gave him a pat on the bade. Piersall played it straight all the way, dropping his usual clowning routine which got him in trouble with umplers and former manager Joe Gordon. "I don’t think yen'll • much of that (downing),’ Dykes. “I’M hot on it” Piersall, of course, wes delighted with Dykes’ attitude toward him. “He .told the whol? chib ‘I’ll never show up any one of you in front of the others,’ *’ Piersall reported. ‘That was music to my ears. He treats me like a man. Taht's all The Indiana broke a g-3 tie in the seventh inning when Johnny Temple laid down a bunt as Red Wilson came racing lor the Mate Afterwards he spoke casually about the No. 1 problem he inherited tram Dykes when the two swapped Jobe Wednesday in Detroit’s unprecedented managerial Blugtugh, Klnyon in Finale the way he’s swinging. It’s got to lie nothing but he's trying toe hard, that’s ML” Gordon popped questions at interviewers about Ms former dub. The Indians edged Baltimore 4-3 in their first game under Dykes. Yeh. I watched the scoreboard,’' be said, “and Jimmie had a good debut* didn’t he? But tell me about it Did Jim Perry go all the way, did Harvey Kuetm’s home run win the game? 'It was a real strange feeling being over here. You know how it is, you don’t know the personnel and all that. 'But don't worry about this club. It’ll get going hs soon as they start hitting.” . ,4' ! 'V .... Dykes had been saying the same thing since April. And if the Tigers don’t make a move soon, they'll find themselves in seventh- Hie Red Sox climbed to within 3% games of the Tigers last night. They spotted Detroit a 24) lead before routing Lary (10-10) with a four-run seventh inning.' And they had Dm Delock (8-4), Boston’s starter and winner on the ropes, as early as the second. 8lag!es by. Rooky Oslavtto, 5th Test to Decide Berth Ossie Vtrgtt awl Cost Veal ae- I But Detock squirmed tree wbeu Nans Cask came to MU attar I ** * M ***** Eddie Yost walked with two out Detock then made only one M and the bases Intel, Detock pitch until he retired lor t pine found hknefif In deep triable. I hitter to the Sox’ Mg seventh 1 NORMAN. Cbla. (AP) - Doug Blubaugh and Phil Klnyon meet today tor the fifth time this week and after 12 minutes of wrestling ons of them will finally be Rome-bound with the U. S. Olympic team. df te .te Another major battle between Shelby Wilson, Ponca City. Okla., and Frank Bettucd, of Ithaca, N. Y. will decide who represents fits United States at 14TH freestyle. Blubaugh got the, first edge in the week-long tussle with Klnyon in Friday nitfit's 1604-pound match. The Ponca Ctty grappler got the nod from two of three Judges after they had fought to their 10th draw in 10 matches. One judge thought Klnyon. of Stillwater, Okla., was the winner. * * * Wilson shaded Bettucd on split decision. Since Betucci was ranked first he got another crack at the part-time Baptist preacher. Terry McCann, who many experts believe will win America’s first gold medal- in wrestling since 1962, won his 1254-pound berth by getting a Split decision over two-time NCAA champion Dave AuMe of Ithaca. Two Judges voted for McCann, of Tulsa, one for Auble and one called M draw. Another berth was grabbed heavyweight Bill Kerslake of Cleveland. After wrestling to throe straight scoreless draws with Hallow Wilson of the Navy, Kerslake broke the ice wtth a pair of takedowns in the last two minutes of Friday night's match. * * W Also claiming space on the plane that leaves New York Aug. 14 were Lu Glani, New York City, and Army Lt. Ed Dewitt of Pittsburgh, Pa. ■tog. That came on Cash’s aofo mar to toe fifth. .- J. $ & Don Buddto was the Mg gm to Boston’s ecortog frame. Hto triple, a liner to right cantor, chased to two runs and chased out Lary. Vic Warts doubled, Frank Mahout singled Wartx home and Pumpfie Green walked before Buddto’s tew. Buddin scored whan Ray Boons ' slapped a line drive off reliever ’ Dave Skier’s glove. Mike Fomleles, relieving Delock, stifled any hopes the Tiger* had of a comeback. He retired the last nine batters .in rotation to the , seventh, eighth and ninth.' ^ The Tigers’ attempt to get thefi;.' first triumph under Gordon today j • Pete Burnside (54) goes for De- • troit against fteank Sullivan (3-12). Eagles RelttOM Two HERSHEY, Pa (AP) - The National Football League’s Philadelphia Eagles Friday released rookie end Larry Hubbard, formerly of Marquette, and bad* Bobby Gordon, formerly of Morgan State. ■■■PNtotonMte ta liki 4-4to;W Ptfllaront to 7th; *—Filed out,for Otter totojjfo f—Piled out for V«*J IB *te. E—Buddin. PO-A—Bo»ton 27-7. Detroit Ml DP—Mellon, end Wert*: Runnel*, uddin end Wtrts; Yoet and Cub LOB— -oston 4. Detroit I. SB—NUoe, Runnel*. Wert*. IB—Buddto. HR—Ceeh IP n R KRMSO Detock — U. S. civilians spent 158.7 billion tar farm food products in 1969 but a whopping 66 per cent of the total went for marketing charges instead of to the farmers. y The Agriculture Department M()f0 XW9YS said the marketing charges, such!1 ,w,v ADAMAMtt • By L— Tie* MIAMI, Fla. (API—Raul Chi-vas, the latest high - rankign Cu-H_______defect, actually is an un- dercover agent for the F1M Castro regime, says a bitter fellow countrywoman, widowed by » rebel firing squad. presided over the military tribunal which sent her husbana to his death. Maj. Jesus Sosa Blanco was executed in February 1969 charges he committed at least 25 Amelia Sosa Blanco said she murders while a commander uo- fill Mali MM (ha IT Q Staff* TV*. /Viiat Old Salem! *ltrHatliom and JoAnne M. Kiln -3433 Erie Dr.. Orchard Lake. Ooorie E. Ehrman. 2711* Lathrup Bird., Loihrup Village tad Sondro A. Smith. 77040 Lothrup Bird.. Lothrup . John K. Moore. 1*08 Oeaefleld. BJr;j VSt r “ __________________ Uhda L. Ml. a LeOrande jjaei H SaM. ldtll MiAtst ____ » J. Brown 1330 Mt. Vernon. Jtknley R Ayers. 13(3 Rowley. Dray. ttfcPlaina snd Heidi JscotMon. 1X3 Rowley Drayton Plains Wm E. Sts.hpa. 1*4 EUbub buo warsti E. Dallas. am UFever. Wsrren. ROlson D. bn 304* Fwiiiac W 1 BooKolsr aad Loafc A. Or***. 1 v taw. Oxford. Michael J. Romberg Port Huron. Mteh i aad Sharon M. Madlll. MTS Coteybum. Drayton Plaint. Mart i. Borg. 3t Auburn and Dorothy! J.jkHaro. msi Oreeufleld. Detroit. Wonlbio Oroos Jr.. 407 Bruch i tEpt ~' Rd. ood Carolyn R. 1 nd. Robert E Het», 416>, W B Androo J. Mlcu. 47* MUway. Aadroo O. Mum 3073 W. . .. aad Lydia Delgado. Ml Baalor. Albert A. Bucco. 0*07 Elizabeth Rd. and MAmu IMigM. M Hulbert Timothy A. FWmer, 21S Walnut, Rack- AM* R. Roy, I23td Cloverlatm. Detroit. ttoa E. Ounler. 134 Um------------- “ T erlne A, McClelland, 134 l SW i Ifkwtakt. J4L. HI Southfield and carol A. Sec combe. 24233 Lao Baker. Southfield, uoraoi B. Cassidy. 20 Anderson ■ - --------------- “Mi. ___________ .. Edna aad Shafts M. Hubbell 4*73 Maplertew Richard t .Ashton._SMlCrayvietr and Tunc I. Ackerman, 4330 Sunburst, Dray-,! lot plains. . WMter N. Nsiboclt Jr . 230 Long Lain} Murphy. 3*490j Rd., Troy and Marshall. SouthiicKr. Da rid R. Ereretl. 317* Rd.. X*cp> Harbor and Jes 3*37 n»rcol>. Eooga Harbor, L. Bodson. 3* Melbourne. Ralph E Prtnalo. MS Franklin. Holly aad Carolyn P. Cbeasemann, — MaMaa «#F. JpnrM -J. Berron. si g. St-------- ■r* L. On**. SI 8. Sanford .Jkassell M. Young. 3330 Pine __ darkston and Vallle M Oates. 131 Cad- John p. Wolfe H* tit Whllohorn. Ik C. Oordm E ---------- Birmingham * THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, i960 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SEVENTEEN SISTERS — Barbara was writing a letter b*-fore The Press arrived to take pictures so she went ahead with it. Betty had her hands full keeping Domino quiet. Company excites him. Ypur Neighbor’s House Brady B The girls are out in the breezeway where much of .their time at home in summer is spent Furniture out here is casual bamboo. . TWO ROOMS FOR LIVING — This view, taken from the living room, shows the den. The white framed fireplace is set In a papered wall. On the floor is a brown braided rug. White louvered doors separate the two rooms. The cabinets on either side df the doorway house the stereo speakers; they were mafic to match the Early American maple furniture. Both of. these rooms face the back of the house. Live in’ Early American Style neafh for guests. Painted walls arc avocado with the fourth wall papered in avocado and ptntu Cafe curtains matq|t (he wall paper. By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor Early American furniture is * consistent favorite. One of its best' features is that it never gam out of style. We don’t know whether that is the reason the 'Brady Brentons of Pine Hill subdivision chose to use that style throughout their home. At any rate, the results are pleasing. The Brentons have a colonial ranch home on Walnut HUl drive. Their kit measures three^Oar-ters of an acre. Only si few - changes were made in a stock plait wl en Robertson Brothers of Royal Oak did the building. Barber* Brenton is 15; her sister, Betsy, is 1L The fifth member of the family is Domino, a gray French poodle. We entered the. house through the breeze way. Here, the two end watte ar$ red brick white to match. A window seat on the north Avail has brown leather cushions. Bookcases ere built in at either side. Curtains are white. panels. Furniture is bamboo with bright cushions. . .The first room. inside the house is the den. The floor has beige tile on it. Above the white dado the walls are - papered. The documentary design is black and beige on brown. On oncwail a Mack federal eagle mounts guard. WINDOW SKAT .White Micks and a narrow whit* frame outline the fireplace. The mantel is painted Next to the fireplace is a gold whig chair with homes|Siu type upholstery. A red leather chair stands near the folding louvered doors to the living The floor length draperies are white. The linen covered sofa fares the rear picture windows. The upholstery has a beige background with turquoise and brown strawberries tor a pat- • The opposite end of the room has a maple harvest table which opens up to just , the right size for entertaining. Under the aforementioned eagle Is qt-fenall love seat, upholstered in beige and aqua stripes. Carpeting in the living room is sandalwood. Walla are cream! In front of®the windows there is a pair o! tufted back chairs. These have an aqua and gray • design on off-white. Between thpm is a low coflee table -with f/a tall'brass lamwTA At the far endj&tne room' is s leather ~ topper fames table. When extended, this will seat 12. Around it are Hitchcock Ocbairs with rush seats. Above is a Hhree-light Tole fixture. The buffet is an Interesting piece ef furniture. The top is slate. Louvered doors hide the contents. Oa this buffet Mrs. Brenton keeps a pair ol Limoges apothecary Jars and a tall lamp. From this end of' the' room ygu go into the frefitJvestibule. This .area is papered in gold and White. A narrow apothecary * chest stands against one wall. Above it is a barometer. The kitchen at the right of. the front entrance has a gray tile floor. Cupboards and appliances are....turquoise. Hardware is black. Counter tops and splash backs are gray. RECIPE ABC's In the eating area wallpaper and curtains match; the design is an ABC of recipes in blues and turquoises. Tiny shutters are mounted on the lower part of the window. 'The pine table has • lazy gray and turquoise. A pulldown Tole light fixture hangs over the table. In the bathroom tfaq watts are pale yellow tile. Above is bronze and white paper. There is sandalwood . cotton carpeting on the floor. The fixtures are turquoise. In this house the utility room has an unusual and practical location. Instead of being near the kitchen, it is in the bedroom area, across from the bathroom. There is kn outside entrance to this room. Mrs. Brenton has her planning desk in here. Betsy's bedroom has a, beige tile floor and white walls. Blue and lavender butterfly chintz . cafe curtains hang at the lower part of the windows. Above are little white shatter*. She has a piano tn her room, painted white to make it Mend into the background. Her bed-{Continued on Page 20i X BARBARA'S ROOMAny teen-qger would love this room. There is space to store clothes and treasures. There's a vanity foi* primping and a desk for studying. The bed has a trundle under- Robertson Bdilder* of Royal Oak did the building. The Brentons have three-quarters of an here for their Ipt. “Candlewick Woods Addition” SALE PRICE $12,780 Monthly Poymtnf $94.00, Including Principle, Interest, Toxes, Insurance ‘465 MOVES YOU IN TF You Earn $245 Per Hour You Can Own This Home'1 JFL. . • .. THE LAMP LIGHTER e Matching Ctiered Gas luiH-in Oven, Range, Sink Hoad and Fun 'pSn - ■ ShefV"14 Cater mm s • Perimeter Gu* Kent • AH Brick Front e Papered Family Room • Full Bntfc Pint Private # Wallpapered Dining Aren # Deluxe Kitchen DniH-ln Gat Appliances. Ltnch Bar # Curvilinear Paved Streets e V* Acre Weeded Lett • Lake Privilege* • Community Water • Scheel Shopping Near 1209 SQUARE FEET rfirrrtnrrr 3622 Joslyn FE 2-9122 EIGHTEEN- Rft THE FONtlAC PRESS, SATURDACYj AUGUST A IMP On Edge Over Your Tools!? 3uy and t/se an Oilstone Fiaiogr how moat of us want cam a roast without giving the knife, a few swipes with a sharp-! ening atari, bat well forget about Sharpening other tools for long; intervals. i Watting until tools have gone complrtriy dull makes sharpen-! tag more of a chore than it need be. A small amount of work witfij an oilstone, done freqently will keep edges in good condition. | Check your tools now — plane blade, chisels, drawknife, scrap*! C», pruning shears, grass shears, hoe, ax, even yoar pocket knife. YOU’LL NEED: . You’ll need an oilstone and a mill file to start with, eventually. 4 grindstone, preferably power driven. The grindstone will be needed .after a Made has been honed ■so oflea that the bevel needs restoring. A grindstone la alee jnetal for ordinary sharpening •too, bat yea can got along with something smaller and cheaper to begin wttb. • Buy yourself a combination silicon carbide oilstone, one with a coarse grit on one side and a fine grit on the other. Before using, soak bn light machine oil. Using a stone dry or with water will cause the surface pores to fill with metal particles. Wipe the stone dean after each use. Wafer b seed when sharpen lag a Made against a hand or power driven grindstone. Dip the Made la water freqaeatty to keep It tram overheating and taring Ms temper. •Make certain that your oilstone Is lavri and in a position so that it won’t slide. Plane blades and chisels are placed with the bevel of the Made flat against the stone. Lift tbe back edge of the bevel slightly and move the Made back and forth .the full length of the stone. Maintain a steady pressure. Work on the coarse side of the stone. Wbeh a fine bucr appears on the edge, stop. Tam the Made over aad the stone tea. Holding the Made flat, move It back and forth a few the same angle as the bevri, stroking along the edge of thf blade and moving the file diagonally at the same time. Remember fiiat when you sharpen shears, the beveled edges are on the outer surfaces. > When you’ve finished filing, one a line stone to hone eft the burrs. If you use a grinding wheel, m member that the wheel turns toward the work, not away from it. Use a tool rest. Wear glasses to protect your eyes from flying particles. When restoring a bevri on chisel or plane Made, keep the length of the bevel about twice the tMckhem of the blade. Install New Furnace Now Thinking of changes in the heat-! ing system or possibly a new system? Don’t put it off until fall when heating and plumbing contractors wiD be busy with rush Jobs. Make! arrangements to have your beating work done now, the numbing • Heating - Cooling Information Bureau cautions. Whether your plans involve the replacement of an old boiler with a new unit, die replacement of radiators with modern baseboard, or the zoning of tbe system by die installation of modern controls, summer is the time to have this work done, the Bureau points out. Even such annual Jobs as the checking and cleaning of the boiler are best done during the Screen House Keeps Out Bugs would probably Ilka to “screen out" these mdmdtod guests. A jrt-sumroer houss will do It ** 3WO- V, A shelter for yoar car during the winter, this carport becomes the warmer months. Theji foot structure has a concrete slab floor, and a sturdy fir plywood roof. Opt ride to Amend with plywood atoraao lockers which give you 91 cubic feet of storage space lor gardening, athletic Sad picnic equipment You may find using a file the easiest way to sharpen gram pruning sheers. It’s also the easiest way to sharpen items that take a square edge, such as a scraper Made. Uae a file to dress up the edge of your hoe before you begin gardening. Remember that die bevri goes on the outside. USE VISE Before filing, damp die tool securely in a vise. Hold file at There are many advantages in replaciijg old boilers with modern units'made for automatic firing. The present-day boiler is compact and attractively styled and lories good in the basement, in the utility room, or in the game room. Furthermore, its beauty is more than skin deep. It is' engineered for economy and will pay for itself in a few years. ’ BASEBOARDS The substitution of modern baseboard heating units for old-style radiators will not only provide better heating but will release considerable room space. Baseboards provide an inconspicuous source of heat at the floor level. Installed around the outer perimeter of the room, baseboards will prevent drafts. For trouble-free and efficient operation, installation of hydronic heating systems under the super-‘ an experienced plumbing and heating contractor is advisable. DETACHABLE PATTERNED GRIDS—These windows. The removable muntins come in a grids can be removed from the frame to leave a • variety of styles to fit economical standard-size large glass area for easy cleaning, are taldng. Thermopane windows and blend with any type the work out of "housecleaning” multl-p&ned of arcMtecture. * AN OLD-FASHIONED- WELL curb is an interesting yard or garden feature. This full-size roofed model is made with a gate and hidden shelf. It may be used for storing flower pots, tools or even the garbage can. Pattern MIR which shows construction steps and lists materials, is 35c. This pattern also is one of four in the Building Projects'Packet—all for $1. The Pontiac press Pattern Dept. Bedford Hills, Nep York. Never connect lines from roof gutters and outside drains to a home’s erotic tank. This taxes its capacity for ■ handling drainage from Inside the house. A steel bridge was put across Blondes have aa average of the Colorado River at Moab, Utah, LIST hajrs per square inch of in 1912. scalp. Anckor “fence star from the h«* am er the rata. Ike fiawawaek of the 'atruetare to large, pi sat rvsites frosted poles set deep Into the ground. A complete rot of esnrintotfan House set available by (Lit to American Homs, The American Boom Building, Depart* CP, Foseri HSBa 75, New Yack. FURNACES VACUUM CLEANSE Go* HooHm Lux-Aire—Muller Siipmn ExtoH MOERY'S H2-4970 A pre-fob fireplace provides a nice source of warmth on cool evenings, aad can also be need aa a span barbecue. There is room for a small barbecue party even when the car is inside me carport ke main door la mads la three sections fold back to allow a fnU-cise opening for Ike car. The screening lets «the cool breeze filter through, but stops all insects. The plywood roof has a YOU CAN HAVE THAT EXTRA BATH in less spate... for less money... than you think.1 KSTAL AmKM«Jla*lNi MONTHS TO FAT ON FHA TERMS Call Us far a Free Estimate! EAMES & BROWN. INC. 55 bat Pika Street PI 1*7195 PROTECT CHILDREN. PftS, PROPIRTT * Par complete, permanent all-around protection, insist on Anchor Fence. Reqdree no annual painting—id sine coated after weav* ing, not before. Call for free estimate. NOW AVAILABLE! _ _ PORTABLE DOG RUNS FE 5-7471 Factory Installed Custom. Styled Homes in. Clarkston Meadows BUEVEl-TRI-lEYEL OR C010MAL RANCH MODELS Featuring Snberbaa Living . . . With Downtown Convenience . . . Sidewalks to Village Shopping . . . Churches . . . Schools . . . Paved Street . . . M Aee Lets . . . Stream Frontage ... Gas Baseboard Heat JUST S MINUTES FROM INTSBCHANOI OF NSW CHSTSLIB SXFBBSSWAT *19,900 - *22,900 3 fireplaces, gas hot water base be JOHN W. STOPPERT — BUILDER — SALES BY Take M-U to eteplleht In Clarutaa. turn toft 1 block to Holcomb, turn rl*ht and toUov Holcomb to atodele... CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE, Inc. 5904 S. Main St. w Clarks ton Model Phone MA 5*1721 MA 5*5821 NSATlONAL “The most spectacular homing The Fabulous Spacemaster SUPER FANTASTIC FEATURES • S Bedrooms .•2 baths • Huge dining i with «* r Dor-wall • Fully Insulated • Large walk-in closets • Extra wide overhang • 76*1150* lota • Planted tree ** • ■ • Select flooring • Extra large Family Room with beamed ceiling • Mahogany cabinets and doors • Paved streets, curbs, • Paved driveways and • Storm aewers • Aluminum sliding windows • 1 your Warranty • Optional 2-car attached garage • Township water system 1 1 Dps ir- 1 ALL PURPOSE M mem (LOOM , fa—- 13* x 24® UTILITY UNEXCAVATED 1,460 SQUARE FEET OF LIVING AREA Subdivision 2 $ Priced at Only LOWER LEVEL Subdivision 3 Priced at Ojnly /' ‘ *: 13.990 $290 DOWN Phis Caste 30-Year FHA Terns 14.990 $390 DQWN Phis Costs 39-YeerFHA Turns THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY! AUGUST 6, 1960 NINETEEN Include Oak on Concrete for Comfort JEFFERSON Plus Two Other Models in BEAUTIFUL WATKINS HILLS Homos Priced from $17,000 to $70,000 by “The Builder that Makes a House a Home** H. W. Ross Homes----------“* OR 3-8021 | 12 to 8 Doily and Sunday ***** That's right. In Ins thin thrw day* your beautiful lifetime Swim Queen pool can be ready (or aetioal Because of the miracle of Swim Queen’a exclusive Fibercreto construction, you can gat quick delirery on this factory-engineered pool. Every Swim Quern pool is a complete perhagt, ready la be hwtalad ea your site. Includes filter, chroma ladder, complain fittings and walk ana around the pooL A variety of ails* to chooaa from. ^ ‘ - Imagine tbs fan It wffl la for tbs wbob fasfljr. Tea can skip tha traffic Joan and crowds aad begin to enjoy luxurious poolside Bring. Beat of all, year family siasd pool coots joat pennies a day with yaars to pay. R & C Builders, Inc. Builders of Fine Custom Homes » also V"T Pontiac-RoAeiter Swim Qoecn Dealer Rochester, Michigan Phone OL 2-0266 IF No Answer Call OL 2-7531 OL 1-6474 Beautiful Wood Flooring New Popularity When You Think About... •ADDITIONS • GARAGES • ATTIC ROOMS • BASEMENT ROOMS • SIDING •KITCHENS • BATHROOMS •ALTERATIONS • PORCHES • COMBINATION WINDOWS • RECREATION ROOMS No Money Down 5 Years to Poy Easy FHA Tones FE 4-2575 MIDWEST BUILDERS Over 28 Years in Pontiac 718 W. HURON FE 4-2575 spoons flout* blending well until smooth. Atjd 1 No. 1 Flat can of crushed pineapple (syrup included) ♦ h, . ★ ' • Cook for about 2 minutes until sauce is thick. Add Y* teaspoop salt, dash pepper, and 2 tablespoons prepared mustard. Serve hot with cold or hot baked ham. ----decorative practice M leaving large expenses of attractive fkm4i« uncovered has sparked new homo owner interest in the various species and styles of hardwood flooring now available, ac-enrding to 8. If. Nickey, Jr., president at the National Oak VToarb« Manufacturers’ Association. ★ h ■ Many leading interior designers il% utilizing the exposed floor idea . in. their smartest room creations. Hardwood, America’s traditional flooring favorite, is ideally salted to the exposed floor arrangement. Mr. Nickey points out, because of fts eye appeal and ease of upkeep, together with resistance to wear end to denting. Then, too, ho adds, the wood’s resilience makes it easy on the feet, while its insulating duality serves to promote welcome floor, warmth in winter. , Oak, noted for Its rich natural beauty of gnato aad coloring, Heads the hardwood popularity parade. Other haadsomt floor, lag species readily available to-ctade hard maple, beech, torch , cherry, ash, hickory Interesting selections can made from among the four basic Styles — strip, plank, block and parquet. Manfy architects and designers recommend a combination at a budget-stretching price—then the Spacemaster is the house for you. See it today! Compare it... AND THE WONDERFUL LOCATION ... with any home you’ve ever seen! Then buy it and you’ll have made the best investment of your lifp. Located in Scenically Beautiful LOTUS LAKE ESTATES Here every day is a holiday. A private beach on lovely Lotus Lake is reserved for residents of this ALL NEW community. Fishing, water skiing, swimming, ice fishing, skating, boating, picnicking, sledding, skiing—you name it and it’s at your front door in marvelous Lotus Lake Estates. LOTUS LAKE ESTATES also features these Gorgeous Homes LE CHATEAU Over 1800 sq. ft. of living area. The Beautiful SPACE QUEEN Over 1000 sq. ft. of UVing area, plus attached two-car i AND fall basement. Priced from *14,990 MM D.W. 30 Y« FHA T.rm. (m; $1^990 ,290 Do.. 30 Ye.r FHA Term. Main Model and Sales Offiee Located at: 6220 Williams Lake Rd. 2 blks. W. of Airport Rd. Open 1 to'9 P.M. Daily Phone: OR 3-0001 Built by: CARLO CONSTRUCTION CO. WATERFORD, MICHIGAN i THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, I960 TWENTY Military Pay poablacl STOCKHOLM, Sweden (l> — Sweden U doubling the daily allowance* of Swedee serving in the V. N. Congo forces because o< high living costs in the Congo. The new rates range from the equivalent of $3.20 lor a private to Sid for a battalion chief. Carpenter Ants Do Boring Building Job We Win Assist You In Obtaining Your GAS PERMIT these big, Mack or reddish-black 'ants bore into wood to make living [quarters. Unlike termites, they [don’t consume wood, but expel [their borings as sawdust. Left tin-1 {checked, they can do extensive 'damage. ants, which are a hag-inch long ] litaMtk Gas Heat far csofrrt, ^ . tfi? HR Pontiac Electric Supply Co, 3432 W. Huron at Elisabeth lake ltd-, Pontiac AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. Now In a Now Ucstioo 133 Orchard Lake Ava. FE 2-9124 OVBB ft.SM SUCCBiSFll INSTALLATIONS IN THE PONTIAC ASIA Spray or dust into any slits i you’ve found. It may be necessary, l to reach fully the interior ant run-. ways, to remove window casings, I door sills, siding or other wood , cover. Boring holes into infested ; timber, and then spraying or dust-, ing, may also be needed in severe - cases. * For large-scale control under • buildings or other places outside, use a chlordane emulsion concentrate mixed with water and apply with a hand or power sprayer. Follow directions -for mixing, as different-strength concentrates can be obtained. For example, one cup of 44 per cent concentrate to five quarts of water is sufficient. With ’75 per cent concentrate, only a half-cup is needed. If only limited, localized control is required, the household spray or dust will be effective on the outside. The entomologists add a reminder that chlordane apraya and dusts are for residual use on build- ; ing material surfaces. They are not' space insecticides designed for | ■praying into the air. Even trees are targets. The ants bore into the heartwood of living fruit, ornamental and cedar trees. Carpenter ants are considered less of a menace than termites, however, because they are easier to spot and thus easier to control, say the insect experts, the sawdust piles are one giveaway. Slit- YOUR HOME Let us help you plan at NO EXTHA ceiling tile in Ai&umn Leaves pattern and linoleum floor tile with brown and white feature strips. A few other decorating flourishes and the result was an up-todate, living area which had once been depressing. brightened UP — New acoustical ceiling and linoleum tile floor changed this mobile home interior from night to day. Previously, the trailer was drab from harsh treatment by former owners and by shiny surfaces that had been stained in places by water leaks. New owners installed Think of tho advantages you will gain with another room-thosa extra bodroftms you mod so badly, or uso it as a don or . perhaps a guest room. Get our Fret Estimate today for this remodeling job. Recommended for fighting cider as part of the Swiss fruit i'farmers’ campaign against the growing competition of alcoholic beverages. 31-Year Olds Employ* Dies at 65 in Lansing LANSING tit St the time of his retirement last February. A native iof Gran^ Rapids, he was a.Michigan State University graduate. (Continued from Page IT) spread is lavender as is the cushion on the chair. For storage she has a chest on a chest. TEEN PAPER In Barbara's room there are three walls painted avocado. The fourth wall has “IT" paper which , shows all the Items dear to a teen-ager—sodas—hot dogs —telephones — knitting — books. It’s a medley of pinks with some avocado. Barbara's bed la a modern Henry G. Sommer, 65, an employe of the Lansing Oldsmobile Division of General Motors for 31 years, died Friday at a local hospital following a brief illness. Sommer was superintendent of packaging methods for Oldsmobile 2 Faiths Share Temple KATMANDU — The mountain people of Nepal practice Buddhism and inhabitants of the valleys are Hindus, biit people of the two faiths live together fit peace, often shar ing the same temples. NEIDRICK BLDG. CO. Swiss to Give Cider BASEL, Switzerland (A — Every foreign tourist entering Switzerland at Basel win from now oil be handed a free glass of sweet apple ts Ideal. It fora takes a guest bed without taking up suy extra space when It Is Mt ta use. The bedspread la yellew. One wall Is lined with maple furniture. There’s storage room 'and a little vanity; Next to her bed is a desk and near the closet a maple bookcast. Her chair for relaxing is a Hitchcock rocker. The master bedroom has more of the same maple chests. Li here the vanity is a corner one. On another wall Brenton has Ms storage chest, a taller one. GARDEN SCREEN—A lovely decorative paneL. such as this can lend charm and style to any garden. Made of long-wearing western red cedar, this screen shields a driveway from the back yard. Wood panels like this are easy to design and make. Sandalwood walls, pale beige curtains and brown tweed carpeting set the tone of the room. The quilted bedspread la white. On the bedridrt there are brown and yellow diamond-shaped figures. Brass lamps on either side of the bed were made from antique candlesticks. LET US SHOW YOU HOW TO BEAT RISING BUILDING COSTS I QtllVEOUTWtTH mMMHYTOMY SEE Tfil EXCITING I960 MODELS lOKAM The “Bradley’ "'*Wbown a» amaqom G1H BATHS "I mi, A GFULL BASEMENT w e CARPETING - • CARPORT I e LARGE KITCHEN e STORM DOORS Model Located at 804 Robin wood Off Perry St. pen Dally j^to 8 — Saturday and Sunday 13 to 8 Plenty of Ice for barbecue parties, candle holders with chimneys, wooden napkin anchors, and screened food covers are easy to provide with pattern 447. This pattern, which gives actual-size cutting and decorating guides and shows steps in insulating ah ice keg, is 35c. It also is one of four patterns in the Aids for Outdoor Dining Packet 58-MI for $1. The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. Bedford Hills, New York. ^IIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIliilHIH ATTENTION! -| OWNERS OF CEMENT OR CINDER BLOCK HOMES, SHOPS, STORES, CHURCHES I • PEELING *PAINT? I # rust spots?? w I • BLISTERING??? The Plastered Brick Wl/ GORDONAIRE Delivered to your lot. 34 x 28 fret. $3290 Garage optional. 80 HOME STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM CLAD IN BEAUTIFUL RED CEDAR SIDING OR LIFETIME ALUMINUM SIDII YOU CAN SAVK THOUSANDS • if SWIFT HOMES are pre-plannod-Savet < cetttyfculkHngtlroo - ★ Mass buying savings art petted on to you Jv* , k ♦, * sa&dkk eiC ★ Swift Homes are pre-enginaer*d,you need no architect, no costly on-tha-job cutting ★ Our crew* wMt erect your home far you or * ★ 1 Do-It-Yourself and tave even mere DOVER 24 x 48 feet. Delivered to your lot. ‘3905 TOWNSEND SWIFT HOMES Inc. Choke of fun real brick colon • IT LOOKS LIKI MICK • IT FEELS LIKE MICK • IT WATERPROOFS • INCREASES VALUE • ENOS PAINTING Phone OL 2-1711 for Free Estimate PONTIAC Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPER I South Cat*. FE 3-7129 CURRENT RATE on ALL SAVINGS Established It90 FREE PARKINC IN REAR OF BUILDING 75 W. Huron FE 4-0561 budget for NO MONEY dOty/v "BLOW MONTHLY PAYMENT. WE FINANCE FINISHING MATERIALS: FOUNDATION, HEATING, PLUMBING, ELECTRICAL. WALL BOARD, INTERIOR DOORS, TRIM I KEAST CONSTRUCTION 8 5 153 GRIGGS STREET ROCHESTER- MICH. 3 2810 LAPEER RD. (M-24) LAKE ORION 5 Miles North of Pontiac at Graenshield Rd. FE 1*9636 Open Monday Thru Saturday 10 to 8 — Suntjay 1 to 6* I I CBy ■ , „ | _ ■ ■ Sftaftn . COM! OUT TOOAY Oft MAIL THIS COUPON | J mt THE POffTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY,, AUGUST fl, 1960___t TWEyT¥-0NE Bon't Allow Sandpaper & Rub You Wrong Way assortment of sandpaper in an assortment of tools. Picking the npt type for fit job. at is arlmportant ss picking the right saw or screwdriver. TThere are five basic types made 'with five - mineral* — flint (white •‘arts), -garnet (red quarts), emery, aluminum oxide and sOcion carbide. paper personality , Flint paper is the yellowish pa-fir that yen generally think of when sandpaper is mentioned, it’s cheap, doesn’t last long, is used for sanding paint. < Garnet paper is tougher, costs more, lasts longer. It’s a good. abrasive. See Architect • When Building Most couples building their first home should he on the lookout for hidden costs — and hidden values! • Consult an architect before you *md. It’s his Job to know where the hidden costs talk and wtu\) materials will give the best value for your dollar. • The architect also knows why> there Is such a huge difference between the initial and the Ultimate cost of many building products. ! He’l| "likely advise the use of quality materials with a long life expectancy, like.ceramic tile for $our bathrooms. The permanence q real tile can also stave off many replacement and maintenance costs when put to use on surfaces such as kitchen countertops, walls and Boers, and in the high-traffic areas Of entranceways and game rooms. Aa architect will likely ten yea the electrical system Is ae place to skimp. Adding outlets later or rewirlag to meet the increasingly heavy, demand at aew appliance* eaa skyrocket coats ever handle later Installation of aa alr-rmdltlnwtog system eaa alse prove aa Ini pest sat investment 1st the aataet. * Copper tubing for heating and plumbing lines Is another wise ttem. It may cost somewhat more Hitlally, but It will more than pay for itself in yrms of peace of mind fnd repair-free service. test Ike Fakaless LAKE-RIDGE COLONIAL • Lotus Lak* Privileges • 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths • 1750 Square Foot • Attached Garage $15,900 Fairy paper Is tough, doesn’t cut as teal as garnet. Is need Aluminum oxide is way heavy and tough, can be used on either wood or metal. Silicon carbide is for work on soft metals, wood, glass and plastic. In addition to choosing the correct type; you must also pick the correct grade. These are basically fine, medium and coarse plus extra fine and extra coarse. NUMBER CODE Some dealers may carry sandpaper with the older style, number markings. The number system is useful for 'indicating file degree of coarseness or fineness these groups. The larger the number, the finer the grit. For example—2/0 is finer than 1 and 5/0 Is finer than 2/0. In another system, 50 is equal to 1, 100 is same as 2/0, and ISO the same as 5/0. ' Far home use, Just remember the designations: fine, medium aad coarse. Whether sanding by hand oi using a power sander remember— Very coarse — only for removing thick paint or varnish. Coarse — Jor rough sanding of sw wood. Use it to remove dents, saw marks, rough spots, splinters. Medium — smooth the work you’ve done with coarse paper. ist.ismts at our tee Spitsley m saMi .talas* THINKING GAS HEAT? If rsu’is coins to Inatall ss* hast ... and you can HOW ... you should not wslt. torn Consumers HOW Sad sot salt. W* carry a fin* Un* of many different make* of Os. Purnscs. . . . end »t prices you saa afford , to par Plnancinc throuch PHA with WO DOWN PATMSHT . . . M month* to pay the balance. And Wt can write your permit . . . yo* do not hate to CO to Consumer. Fewer tComp*ny . Why settle for lesv .. eaU us now WE SELL WHOLESALE TO ALL Phone FB i-04M GOODWILL Aitoaitic Hutiif Co. before finishing, aad extra fine between coats of finishing materials. . , Final sanding is best date by hand. Put the power tools aside at this pointy DISC SANDERS Disc sanders — a rubber disc moving in a circular motion with sending material fastened to the disc—are fine for paint and varnish removal. Belt sanders can be used on bare wood right up until fbtoj finishing. Then hand sand. Avoid using a disc saader on bare weed. It leave* a circular pattern as H eats scram the grain of the wood. When hand sanding, provide yourself with a block. There are a Variety of devices on the market fay holding sandpaper. Or wrap the paper around flat scrap of wood. Sanding without a block requires that you kedfo your hud perfectly flat and maintain a uniform pressure. Avoid pressing down with sanded and unsanded streaks. Don’t try to hasten the work with an abrasive that’s too coarse. Sand a little longer with a finer grit. The sparrow hawk’s name belies Its nature. This handsome little bird rarely attacks sparrows or other birds but lives largely insects. How to Make a Lawn Lamp An attractive and durable'lamp get can be made by the heme craftsman from 114 fey 4-inch tam-For maximum durability, preservative ty-treated I am her should be used. * * * The post is S feet long, with 3 feet under ground, leaving a 5-foot length to the cap. Square the ends of