Th« WMther THE PONTIAC >me 118th YEAR ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1960 -34 PAGES Irate Husband Slays Stepson, 12, in Troy It Was a Quiet Sunday Morning, June 25, 1950 Leave Korea, Reds Tell Allies Ten years ago, the border between North Korea and South Korea disappeared as the Communist forces moved south across the 38th ParaUel, touching off 37 months which involved much of the world in bloodshed and fruitless negotiation. Americans died there, abngside.UN Allies from Turkey, India, Canada and many other nations, as the battles ranged from one end of the peninsula to the other. Scenes like the one above, assistance for an injured soldier during one of the battles for the now-famous Pork Chop Hill, were typical. Victory was at hand before Red China poured divisions of “volunteers" into the fray. Todby, after 10 years, the line of demarcation is traced by the muzzles of weapons and wary patrols eying each other from hilltops. Sees New Jobs at Fisher Body Union Chiof Prodicts a Rise of 1,700-1,900; Company Is Mum Increased production at Fisher Body Division's Pontiac plant this (all wUl result In 4^ to 1,900 — jobs, it was predicted today by Gerald W. Kehoe, preddent * Fisher Body Local 596. UAW. 'Hie anticipated production volves assembly of the new Pontiac Tempest compact car and ef Pontiac convertible bodies. Kehoe said he expects die local’s membership to increase 1,700 to 1,900 in late October. A company spokesman said no prediction would be made shoot Local 596 membership totals 2.700 at present. The local broke ground Thursday for a new 997.000 haH, which is expected to be completed in the e ls Jetting Home Sunday; -He'll Talk to Nation Monday HONOLULU (AP) - President Isenhower ends his six-day Hawaiian rest stop today and Qies back to Washington the American people on Far Eastern The President is reported have drafted a hard-hitting speech denouncing the Communists for dth yo^ Japanese students to block Kis visit to Tokya Tanned and ref-iwhed, Elsea- Red China Flogs Russia for Whitewashing U.S.' After refueling at Travis AFB in California, he is due to arrive at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington Sunday morning about 7 t.m. Pontiac time, two SPEAKS MONDAY MOHT His athminute television-radio report to the nation will originate from h|s White House office at :30 p.nj.^*ontiac time Monday. By K. C. THALES LONDON (UPI)—Communist China today hit back LONDON (UPI) — Radio Mos-Eisenhower is reported annoyed cow charged today that the Unit-at the barrage of attacks on hia «l States plans to resume recon-Far mission by leading naissance flights over Russia from fiercely at Russia in the sharpening Slno-Soviet ideolog- Democrats who have Joined m aircran earners in the Mediterra-- » blasting his IrtabiUty to visit riot-nean Sea. ridden To^o as a blow to Ameri-can prestige. onderstood ical conflict, and in effect accused Moscow of attempting to “whitewash U.S. imperialism.” The attack came during a mass rally in Peiping attended by vice-premiers Marshal Chen Yi and Hsi Chung-Hsun, and the vice-chairmen of the Standing ----- ------- — Committee of the National aiTT-A n ,/u people’s Congress, accord- How Does the Voter reeir ingtothe New ewna News Watch toi New Press Poll j General Li Chih-min, one of thej jkey speakers, lashed out against “modem revisionists wb9 claim What are Mr. and Mrs. America thinking as the 1960 election year parade gets under way? Beginning Mondky in The Pontiac Press, their thoughts will be available to you. A new feature titled “Sum of the People” wiU bring you the beitjIgy-bjNdBy anadysls of election year that die true character of imperialists whose hands were smeared with Wood were envoys of peace.” “Hiis Is ta whitewash V. & Imperialism aad help it to carry public opinion all ever the country. From now to Noventoer. band-wagona and dark bonea, vote-gtumping and fiat-thumping, great debate and baby-kiatong will be the order of the dky. And behind all tiie political nizle-dazzle. the speechroakero-like you-wUl be praeccuptod by that single vital queeUon: r wM be cast Us boBatr Wh^ Aaa# be thtak at tha mwmutrn, The "Sum of the People’’ aeeks the answer. Authored by John F. Kraft, veteran New York City market researcher and opinion analyst, >1 peace,” he (Aarged. Again, neither Russia nor Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev personally was mentioned. No names have been mentioned since the conflict broke into the open with Khrushchev's attack Peiping's hard policy line at the Bucharest Party Congress earlier this « FVtllow'thla InterentiiiB and informative new ae( Monday 's Pontiac Press. JOHN r. KKAFT . tol MWht-t 9M, Bot the tener ef today’s (Oontinued on Page 2, Q(ll. 7) In Today's Press bower boards his orange-tipped Jet airliner at p-m. H8T—18 p.m. Pontiac UnM^or his re- New Lift Bridge Goofs Expensively FROM OUR NEWS WWES PANMUNJON, Korea—The Cwnmunists demanded today, on the 10th anniversary of their invasion of South Korea, that allied forces get out of the country. The Allies promptly replied that they will remain ------------------------^until the nation is demo- Brazilian Plane Falls; 51 Die cratically reunified. The Reds charged also that the Allies are building up their f(xves south of the 38th Parallel. U. [Marine Maj. Gen. Marion L. Daw-iron dismissed Jhe charge as a 1 "tiresome propaganda tirade.” Spot Wreckage in Bay but Find No Survivors; One American Aboard RIO DE JANEIRO. BrazU (AP) -A Brazilian airliner with 31 persons aboard, including at least one American, plunged into Gi bara Bay Friday night while approaching Rio de Janeiro, search teams found parts of bodies and wreckage but no survivors. ^The twin-engined Convair, 6l)0-mile flight from the new capital of Brasilia with a midway stopover at Belo Horizonte, was listed as missing incarly eight The crash was confirmed early today when navy search crews found the plane’s wreckage floating in the bay off the island of Paqueta, about 10 miles up the bay from Rio’s Dumont Airport. Later the searchers reported finding parts of bodies and pieces of luggage that had floated up on the beach. Among those listed aboard H** Newton B. Thompsoa, a native ef Waterville, Me., aa official of the American Bond and Share Electric Co. HOUGHTON (iW - The new Portage Lake lift bridge got off to a poor start Friday. It didn’t Tift in time. The J. F. Schoellkopf Jr., carrying a cargo of cool, dropped anchor to stop when the bridge didn’t lift on signal. Hie anchor cut a cable and severed telephone comunications to the Keweenaw Peninsula. A spokesman for Real AMinM said the passenger list carried other Anglo-Saxon naniK, including George Pflstern, Janet S. Latter 4md H. V. Lee. The line could not confirm their nationalities or give their addresses. TTiompson’s wife told reporters in Rio that her husband had been in Belo Horizonte on business. Michigan Bdl Telephone Co. estimated damage at upwards of 910.000. Reds Predict Spying Earlier reports had said the plane might be carrying several Brazilian congressmen who often travel from Brasilia for weekends in Rio. It was later learned that only one congressman Gomes Talarico — had boarded the flight in Brasilia. And he transferred oft upon learning the plan? would be delayed. Add Curbs on Church focused his speech on bb tentlM that the visUs he able to make—the Formosa and Korea — were “completely s « e c e s s f n 1“ is building better relations with these countries. The President has been silent since arrivimi hi sunny Hawaii the hotly duputed Tokyo phaae of his visit which he canceled at the suggestion of the Japanese government. Between golf games on a cloaely guarded course, Eisenhower has met with aides daijy to draft hb speech. The main emphasis will be on hb beUef that the Reds, directed by Peiping rather than Moacow, went ail out to dbrupt It'll Be a Nice Weekend tor Your Outing Whethos ypu’re cotng boating, on a pio^. or Juat plannins to 1 a quiet weekend wound the yard, you’ll hstve clear and sunny ikies in which to enjoy it. Today’s pleasant weather be followed tomorrow by HIgiMly wanner temperatures and M'11 be cxpectoi to be «. The lowest temperature preceding I a.m. today was S3 dtgreaa at 4:30 a.m. At 2 p.m. the mercury read a pleasant 90, ROME (UPI) — TTie government of South Africa is pbcing increasing restrictions on the activities ot ^the Roman Gatholtc Church there. 'Vatican sources said today. The Korean Truce CommiMion met in (ills border vUtogr at the request of the Communbls, who apparently wanted to take prop-ngmda advantage of the anniversary. In Seoul, Prime Minister Huh Chung declared that South Korea has abandoned ousted President Syngman Rhee's idea of unifying this divided peninsula by fenree. Huh CTiung, who assumed leadership after Rhee’s government was toppled by a revolt in April, said his Korean War anniversary statement that “our change political face has been aco panied by a change of heart. * “Gone . . . nre the cliches . nnd the ‘march north* oaths of yesterday. We strive to make reason and hoiMr the main In-strnmeats of our diptomney," be A 12-year-old boy was shot to death by his stepfather in Troy this morning as he returned home from a store. Minutes ear-; lier, the irate husband had fired a shotgun blast at the boy’s mother, but missed. Killed instantly with one shot was Mitchell Steele. His stepfather Paul Henley, 55^ of 2680 Wisconsin St, admitted the shooting, Troy Police Chief David Oratopp said. Henley surrendered at the house to Troy and Center Line state police. He offered no resbtance. His wife Gaynell, 37, was taken to VfiUiam Beaumont Hospital wlwre she is being treated tor “March north” was a favorite threat of Rhee. V/henever he be- and fired impatient over the longed division of Korea, ousted 85-year-oId leader would threaten to unleash the big South Korean army and go it alone, much to the embarrassment of South Korea’sf allies, including tlie United States, which controls ammunition and supplies. NOT LAST or TYPE Gen. Carter B. Magnider, Al-(xi commander in Korea, said in Seoul the world has not seen of Korea-type limited wars. The white-haired U.8. geaeral disputed the widely held beHef that antoher Cammnalsf attack OB South Korea weuld auto-mall-wHy trigger masalve V.S. atomic retaliation against Cum-" The 16 U.N. allies warned when they accepted the armistice 1953 that another Communist attack might force them tq react in a way that would no longer confine the war to the Korean penia- Magruder waa asked "whether a new Korean War would lead to direct attack on Red China. “With the appalling amount of destruction that would attend any all-out war. I am convinced that both sides would attempt to limit any future war,” he replied. ‘T do Boi boMeve la the atete-(Oontinued oa Page 2, Col. 6) Aims Shotgun at Boy After Missing Wife Victim Was Walking Up Driveway ^rom Store When Downed Mrs. Henley told officers that during the argument her husband went into the bedroom, grabbed his 12 gauge automatic shotgun I the hall at her th the kitchen. The shot missed. in out a side door and across the yard to the home of .i neighbor, hwi. Mary Lowery, 27Q1 Dashwood St. She fold Mra. Laweiy to call tba police aad get lata anetber neighbor’s car and drov’e around the btock tooklag tar her pou wbe bad gone ta Ota atorw Aa she rode past her ham, she saw her son sprawled out in the driveway. Henley was standing in the front of the houae with a shot-hia hands, she told offi- Police arrived shortly after. on the scene City Close to State Suit on Sewage Conceivably, the commission could give the city a little more time before going to court — time for a show-cause hearing at which city officials might try to put off the order. The poasibility seems remote. FROM cnLE*tO DimUMT — An idea and a 1930 Pontiac bpwght Manuel JMque aU the way from Santiago. Chile to Detroit. The idea 'is a gadget for improving brakes which he wants to sell to Gffleral Motors Carp. The 38-ycar-old medwnic left to South American hoane Jan. 14 and he and hia car held together, arriving here Thuraday. Jacque finanped some of this trip by taking and aelUng pictures. Now he hopes be can sell to idea as well. The state water Resources Conn mision will decide Thursday whether to go to court to force Pontiac to expand its sewage treatment plant facilities. On Friday, July 1, the city will be in default of the state’s oed.^r to have expanded facilities under contract. Default will come because the city has never provided the financing for the 93.300,000 in improvements which the State Department has accepted as the minimum necessary to abate pollution to the Ointon River. The Water Resources Commission will have before It only one recommendation from its engineering staff — that the Attorney General’s Office be asked to file auit against Pontiac in Oakland County Circuit Court. “In view of the tart*, that’s the only recommeudaUou we can make,” mM Loring F. Oeming, chief raglaeer tor the Cm- While Pontiac city officials have never encouraged action by tba Water Resources Commission, they’ve done next to nothii^ to diacourage it since the comima-Sion put Pontiac on the firing line last July. At that time the commission declared the city was creatinp .a public nuisance—“the worst pollution problem in the state.” one State Health Department engineer said. Pontiac was ordered to htfve expansion plans in shape for approv-~ “ 2, ObI. 1) Chile Given 2 Hospitals WASHINGTON (AP> - Two Army field hospitals flown to Chile and eet up to cope with earthquake caatuMet ha«o bcHi given to the Chiieta eovemmeHL A TWO 'i * i THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JUNE M, 1960 City Nears State Suit on Sewage (Continued From Page One) al by the State Health Department in Etecember of last year, have the expanaion under contract by July 1 of this year, and have the expansion completed by the end of next year. Pl*un VOTES NO. Only the first deadline was met: the state accepted the expansion plans which the city has had tVady lor the past three years. But voters have three times turned down general obligation btaid issues to finance the planned ^Upansion. i ‘Since l^t December, the city iTas dragged its heels on financing. There was some talk at the Oty CommisaiQn taUe about going to voters a fourth time. But this idea Propose County The Day in Birmingham Downtown Sidewalks on Monday Night Agenda Backers Beliewart said he probably woald be there anyway. •‘There's nothing much we can say, but we ou^t to be there lor l(wm's sake,” he explained. ■ Ewart’s attitude reflected that taken by Willman when he appeared before the Water Resources Commission last July 31 to answer charges of pollution. “We admit nothing and dory nothing,” said Willman, who bad already been decrying the ptdlu-tkm sitnatian in Pontiac for a ' time. PonOsc’s only positive actlou has been to request stote action against Wstcrford Township and Bloomfield Towuditp for poUn-tioa caused by storm drains system. The request for action against Waterford Township was renewed last month and a Water Resources Commission engineer made a personal inspection. State officials have favored an area-wide plan as a solution poUutkxi in the townships around PontiM|r- a plan such-as the one pl$ttod by the Oakland County Department,of Public. Works known as the Clinton lUver Basin Sewage Disposal System! There Were $$$ in the Breeze Two Birmingham women found the wind blowing in the right direction yesterday u they saw m sail past them down Maple road near Woodward avenue. They gathered up the bills In tens and twenties anid handed them over to a nearby clothing store before a worried Beverly Hills youth dashed up. John Matonican, 19, of 16233 Bir-i^Ood Dr., said he had just cashed a friend's $80 check in a Birmingham bank. The biUs came out of his pocket when he pulled odt a stick of gum. The bank assured a policeman that Matonican bad cashed the check and all $80 was returned to him. HOME FOR I’MON — This architect’s sketch shows what the new $97,000 hall for Fisher Local 596. UAW. will look like upon its completion, expected this fall. Groundbreaking cere- monies for the union local's headquarters were held Thursday at the Baldwin avenue site. The building was designed by the W. B. Eklwards Engineering Firm of Pleasant Ridge. A department tbe County Garage. The agenda for the meeting con. tains six items four of which involve either sewer or water projects of the drain commissioner’s office or tbe Department of Public Works. A growth in Kennedy backing after the governor endorsed him June 2 on Mackinac Island obviously ate into the'Symington and Stevenson potential. With 95 of the 102 delegates con- ANNUAL REPORTS The other two items include annual report from the Board's buildings and grounds committee and authorization to establish a method to sell 16 county-owned lots. One of the sewage matters will be creation of a sewage disposal system in Avon Township. Holly labor Rally Relocated to School HOLLY-Antlcipating large crowd to attend the UAW Local 524 rally here Monday at 2:15 p.m. local president Frank Hubble announce today that it will be he'd in the Holly Elementary School instead of the union hall. Tbe meeting wa* called by Hubble when it was learned Hut tbe village’s largeut employer, American Spring of Holly, lnc„ it going to relocate In Chariotio, N. C. President of the firm, Ian F. Steven, explained the move would be made in three to six months because of high weies and taxes. A full-scale campaign it planned by the Society of Industrial Realtors in Detroit to put a new industrial tenant in the building soon as possible. tacted, the tally on their first ballot preference, converted from delegate half-votes into whole coo-vention votes, produced this alignment: Kennedy 37*4. Symingtoq 3, Stevenson 3%, undecided 4%, not yet contacted 3%. MOST WOULD SWITCH Of the handful who stuck with Stevenaon, most indicated th(^ would switdi to Kennedy if Stevenson Irrevocably removed himself from consideration. a first ballot nomination of Ken- nedy was predicted by Ohio Gov. IT. niSalle on his arrival at the 52nd annual governors’ con feronce, opening Sunday. ••I will leave kim ballot If he c deflaltely la Loo AagHes that he He referred to the vote-changing delegates are allowed before the roll cell total is announced. Mrs. Harriett PhilUps of Haattag- Ivan Brown of Iron Mountain put his name in the Stevenson oolaiiin but said he "might be pc_______ to back Kennedy because he doubt-’ Stevenson would become At Glacier National Park, Mont. Butler also urged his party to riik a walkout by southern delegatee and possible detoat in Nc-vember by adopting a "forthriglit and courageous” civil righti platform at Its natioilal convention in Loe Angeles. Detroiter Dies After Being Hit by Weight NEW YORK orv-A Detroit business man in New York to celebrate his 60th birthday died . terday of head injuries suffered when a dumbbell fell from the apartment window of a television actress and struck him. Al>1n Rodecker died leas than ^ hours after tbe dumbbell feU eight stories from the apartment Kingswood School Officers Selected The board of directors of Kings- A well-nigh incredible chain of circumstances cost Rodecker his life,, He was felled is he strolled with his wife along one of New York's most fashionable streets, in ner sunlight, sated by an expensive luncheon at one of the city's great restaurants, ‘ But Rodecker's fatal rendezvous was the culmination of weeks of unrelated coincidence. Rodecker headed the Aaron De-roy Management Q>. in Detroit. He and his wife Katherine idanned their trip to New York some time ago, in celebration of his 60th birth day, which was Thursday. wood School Cranbrook has named officers for im€l. Chairman is WUliam B. Hartman of Pontiac. Vice chairman is Robert H. Flint, Bloomfirid Hills, and secretary is Mrs. William B. Hargreaves, Bloomfield HiUs. Charles Hummel of Birmingham was re-elected treasurer. Graham John Graham of Bloomfield Hllla retired from tbe board. Ben D. Mills, Bloomfield Hills, was elected to take his place, Pioneer Signal Better WASUING’TON - Thel'! Pioneer V space probe, now near-| ly 22 mUHon miles away from,, earth, has been coming in louder and clearer in the past few days. ' Test YOUR Driving Skill The Weather fONTIi sfer., Ntrtkwwt irlaSi It - IS tillc TtStr la rtaUta Loveit tcmptrtiurt prccadtag S « m. * A> t ytlocity IS • ll m p.h. -----— T, ^ .... t:ST ( m. •t S:ri p B It 7:SI t.m. Sua ttti stturdar at S:ll p-ia. SUD Titn Sundty at • -tf-MB iru Saturday ai lioae rto“ --------- rrMay la VMillat Meaa Uaiperaturt . Oat Taar act la ftaUac BfbMt tanpartlurt ...:.......... LotPtit Mapartturt ............. Mata ttmptraturt .............. Wcailitr-rartly cloady M la l«ll rrtSay’i Tta f Mtmphla I Miami Btaeh » Mllvaukra M 47 I -------------- 77 m I BrtaearlUt St ft I Chirata , 74 tl laionrapoiii OltiitnDaU ' 71 M Mem Orietat CiMtiaad n It MtwVtrfc Dram 7S U Omaha . DrirtU 71 IS PrlUUm Duluth 71 14 PiMeBtl i Port Wurth t] 71 PtttiburSh 8r lUplSt t| 44 ft. LouU tutl'iaa Si U i Praaaitea Skillful Driving How to master 30 of the most crucial situations of modem traffic 16 By MAXWELL N. HALSEY SHY FROM PARKED CAR You can rount on it! A car parked on the shoulder spells trouble. What if it pulls eut. or someone steps out from behind, or out of it, or a man chanftnir a tire steps bsck in front of you? Never drive at normal hiahway speed within two or three f^t of it. la MUwaMfoe. Nattsasl I NixM Is KhnsBlMhsv's eaadidafo •CANT COMPROMISE' "We cannot compromise prin- ciples In order to hold people in the party" Butler said in a television Interview yesterday. "We'\ got to stand up lor what's best for all the people, win or lose. The Democrntic chairman said K-- ranging fr**"* « fw* about $7,000 to almost $26,000 tor downtown city sidewalk improvements wlU be examined Monday night at the regular Oty Commission meeting. ' Costs to i«operty owners wUl be anywhere frcm about $7,000 to $16,000 depending which plan is used. As outliaed by Wlllism Kllteea; city englBeer, the tlrut plan !■-eludes the repair of extottng faulty sklewalks and steps, but does not call for the replacemenl of attempt to oell the package te HamUa and other couaty officials at a • p.m. dhuier meeting at the WaMroa Hotel. Under the second plan the curb steps wUl either be eliminated or Improved, and a larger number of sideivalks will be replaced to Improve tbe sidewalk slope. The third alternate provides tor the replacement of all sidewalks between the buildings and The m nrhere alope changes are planned. seek to attract new and diversified industry and encourage the dustry already established ime to remain. Moore, of 17 Prall St., said tha plan has been under study tor months. The new department would be financad by county funds Presenting 1 a b o r’s viewpoint Tuesday «1U be Fred V. Haggard, preaklent of the county AFIxnO Others Trill Incli^: Arthur Q. ElUott jr., Pleasant Ridge supe^ visor and realtor; Robert Eldred. executive vice preaident of the Cimimioilty National Bank; Monroe Oemun, Pontiac Board “ Education member; Lao Ha wood, Novi Indapendant man; and Byron Stagman WlUiam Roggenkamp, repreoantop tlvas of tha light and tool Industries. Get Out of Korea, Chino Reds Demand (Oontimiad Fi;om Page One) meat aametiinea heard that Korea." While the negotiators in Pan-munjom talked, the Red radio was blasting denunciations of the United States from Peiping, Hanoi, he is convinced Soviet Premier and Pyongyang, ffie principal Red Nikita S. Krushchev wants Nixon to win the presidential election, be- held cities in Asia. REPORT MEETINGS BIRMINGHAM ^ 'n>ree ceived by the firm was tor their design National Cowboy Hall of Fame being buUt la OUaboma City. Approval of In special assessment bonds for sanitary sewers in Bloomfield Township has been given by the Michigan Municipal Finance Commission in The sewers sre to be t^trurt-' fd aouth of Quarioa road between FrankUa and lakster roads la the Klrkwosd Rubdlvlslea. Since the original request of $30.-000, an sddltlonal |9,000 Is being soi^t since plans were revised with an increase In the drainage district. Township officials said they expect approval of the $9,000 borrowing In the near future. rchitectural fl has received one of eight national awards presented by the Oiurch Architectural Guild of America, It was announced yesterday. The award was preseated to Begrow aad Brorva, ITT N. Batoa St., for Ha deatga ol tbe Aa-tlocb Evangelical Luther aa Cbureb bow uader oeoatruettoa at U Mile and FanatiRtoa roada to Farmington Towaahip. 'Some 305 architectural firms throughout tbe country entered the It Tves tbe sixth national award Aon by the firm since 1957. One Red China Lashes Russ 'Whitewash' (Continued From Page One) It Tras Red China's first massive reaction to Khrushchev's insistence that Lenin must be interpreted with the times and his rejection of the Peiping-supported Leninist doctrine that war against capitalism is inevitable. WON’T ACCEPT IDEA China allows for no such free interpretation. A rauHous rebuff i The Communist broadcasts re- Khrushchev earlier ti Khrushchev attacks Nixon in speeches, Butler said, in hopes the American electorate will react . in anger and vote for tiie vicq 0Ksidetit. ported that anti-American mass meetings were held throughout Red Asia — most notary in Pyongyang, where the turnout was estimated at 300,(X)0 persons. But Nixon's "public altercations" with Khrushchev in Russia have shown Americans that Nixun is "no diplomat,” Butler said. Chan ioM demaaiMd the with-drawal of Allied troops from Korea at the meetiag here. Daw-aoa bluntly rejected tbe demand. “My predecessors and I have told you many times before when these forces, which now stand ready to help defend Korean freedom, Trill be withdrawn," Dawson said. Rain Mars Encampment 2nd Ballalion Rates High By CHEATER WAGNER Special Correapondent GAMP McCOY, Wis. - Pontiac's 2nd Battalion wound up its two weeks of training here terday, chalking up high scores on all phases of training exercises. Although the troops were plagued with constant rain at this southeastern Wisconsin military reservation, the esprit de corps of these Army reservists was high. Higbllghl of the tw«-week en-as a two-day blv- inspection teams, the 2nd Battalion came through in usuiJly fine form to capture high ratings. It was not all work, however, for these citizen-soldiers. The 2nd Battalion, for the second consecutive year, Tvon the regimental soft-ball championship. MaJ. Franklin D. Thompson, of Pontiac. 2nd Battalion commander, said: “Not only have these men ihorvn that they can discard their civilian way of life and become full-fledged infantrymen for two weeks, also that they possess team sportsmanship and fine conduct on thei bst condltkma. Tbe rate added reallam t» their Infantry trala-teg. "Thty will be Trithdrawn iriien your side permits the unification of Korea in conformity with the objectives of the United Nations and the desires of the Korean people — not before." DaTVsen also reaffirmed Allied determination to defend South Korea against any new attack by the Communists. Today, Peiping Tvent to torwi. In a cryptic reference to “modern revisionists,” Li Cbih-min made these charges: “Modern revisionists, frightened out of their wits by the Imperiallsto binckmnll of nuclear war, exaggerated the conse-queoces of the deotructiveness of nnclenr war sM begged Imperialism tor peace at any cost, In fact helping the impcrlailsts Candidate Connor „ to Talk at Dem Club Detroit Councilman Edward Con-..or. one of three Democratic candidates for governor. Trill speak before the Pontiac Township Democratic aub Monday night. Connor Trill appear at the township hall on Opdyke road at the meeting scheduled for 8 p.m. I Other candidates for congres-l playing field. I am proud of them. ” clonal, state and local offices will The 2nd Battalion, a part of the on hand to meet the public, 113rd Basic Combat Training Reg-Roy J. RiaBell, club chairman, imcnl of the 70th Division, was,jj,jj when Commnalst China’s delegate to the Bucharest Congress, Peng Chen, refused concessions to the Soviet Premier’s nrgn- The phrasing left little doubt, Soviet (tommunist affairs experts said, tiiat it was an indictment of Khrushchev’s^ peaceful coexisten *« policy and a rejection of the thesis that nuclear war is too dangerous to contemplate. The Communist Chinese previously had been reported as underplaying the risk of nuclear war. Today's statement put the Chinese view formally on record. There are approximately 100 million can, trucks and buses in the world, one for every 30 per- OPEN TIL 9 P.M. TONIGHT MONDAVI Git Your Short of BARGAINS GuoronNfd Savings durino GEORGE'S Groof SUMMER SALE NOTICE OF TAXES City of Posliae IWO CilT and School taxos wlU bo duo and poyohU at tho Oifico oi Iho CHt Troinuror luty L inO Ihffiigh'ftagust 1, INO without loos. August t IMO a oalloetien toa of 1% will bo addod and 1% additional will bo addod on Ibo Brst day oi oacb month thoro-oflor on any unpaid City and Poymont mado by moil must August L IWO to avoid poaal-ttos. Ahor Pobroofy 28. IMl aU unpaid IWO Nol proporty taoMS Trill bo rotumod to tb# Oaklaad Couaty Troosurot for aoDoctioa Tfilb additional ponallios providod by Slot# lorr. Porsonai Proporty Taxos or# not roturaablo and must bo paid by August I, lOM. WALni A. 6IDDIN6S CITY TREASUREI 3S i Parko St. Pontiac, Michigan DONT LET YOUR TAXES GO DELINQUENT Marked closely by U. S. Army to leave for home this afternoon.^ Sporks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME *‘Thoughful Service** PboBe PR t-BMl , ^ 11 ^ i -Bd $.». / I - . '' ON TARGET — Shouw sighting a target for their .30 caUher machinegun firing during training at Camp McOoy. Wis. are three members of Pontiac's 2nd Battalion. They ore (from left) Sp-4 MalooliR J. Mimr, 4130 Bunker St.. Walled Lake; S|0 Rkfipud N. Lundgrtn. 1006 Frsmont St., and Sp-4 Oliver M. Golding. 17510 Badicraft St.. Keego, Hartxr. The Pontiac Annocy re-aerve wit. akxig with other units of the 70th Trulniiv Division, concluded its training yerter-day and is expected to arrive home early Sunday. WEED NOTICE WEED Notice . WEED Notice Per Ordinance Number 448 os amended all property owners are hereby notified thot all property vocont or otherwise shall be FREE of WEEDS os of JULY Irtond remain so during the summer growing season (Sept. 1st). Property which is not cut and mointoined when inspected shall be cut by the Pontioc Porks ond Recreotion Department ot $12.00 per hpur. DAVID R. EWALT, DirMfpr Forks ond RocrooHon Dopt. 16311422 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 25, 1960 THREE North Korea Doubles . Air Force During Truce SEOUL, South Korea If^orth Korea has doubled ita air force (hiring the seven-year Korean truce. South Korea’s Defense ministry said today. A booklet said the Communist BOW have 1,000 airplanes, including 360 MIGlTs and MIGlSs. They had only 492 planes, including 260 MIGlSs in 1953 when the fighting ended, the booklet said, adding that air force pei^ sonal increased from 19,000 to 33.000 and army personal from 250.000 to 350,000. faeSes Foot Lockers 94 $8.95 Value 3-dly frame corutniction, baked enamel sheet steel covering and binding, wood reinforced tray, brass plated steel hardware, paper lined and leather handles. Plus state and federal taxes. . piiiiTtirmiBa 10 N. Saginaw —Saaenent Pay Raise Veto May Stand Up Rep. Griffin Opposed Federal Increases os Election-Yearing WASHINGTW le-Rep. Robert P. Griffin (R-Mic‘h), who chose the politically painful course of voting against a pay raise lor federal employes, said today he thinks a presidential'veto of the measure might prevail. * tl ♦ President Eisenhower pected to reject the measure providing a flat 714 per cent raise lor 1,700,000 federal workers. 'It clear^ both the House and Senate last week by lopsided margins. >SrtMlii. oalUag the bill an electhw-year “a«|Beeiw play,” said he IhliAs It was passed la SB effort to embarrass the ad-mhilstralisii, rather than to help federal workers. Griffin was Joined by four other Michigan house RepuWicans-Reps. Elford A. CederbCTg, Gerald R. Ford Jr., Clare E. Hoffman and August E. Johansen— in ing against the raise. Twelve others were for the bill. Rep. Al-M. Bentley (R) did vote. In the Senate, Sen. Philip A. Hart ID) was for it and Sen. Pat McNamara (Di did not vote. ★ A ★ Griffin said he favors a raise for 550,000 postal workers and other federal workers in the low); brackets "who really need it, not for other higher salaried employes. Why Accept Less for Your Money NOT 3% NOT 3^2% BUT 4% CURRENT RATE on AU SAYINGS Capitof Savings & Loaa Assoc. ZSW.Hwon FE 44561 PET DOCTOR •yA.W.aAollar.D.V.M. Ju Keyes Petitions Probed family? Answer: Parakeets can carry psitticosis or parrot fever, a potentially serious human disease. The quarantine laws of the United States Department of Agriculture have prevented its Importation and its spread. It is good policy to buy only U.S. raised parakeets. If yours is ill, consiilt your veterinarian can recognize the symptoms. Parents Urged to Get Shots Fast tor Children LANSING (UPI)-The Health Department has urged parents of children who will be starting school in the fall to get immunization required by law early. A law passed by the 1960 Legu-lature requires shots against small pox. diptheria, polio, tetanus and whooping cough. Children entering schoerf need statement from a doctor, a statement that parents object to the shots on religious or other grounds or a request from tiw parents that the shots be given'by the local health authorities. Farmers to Get More for Eggs This Summer EAST LANSING (*>-Michigan fanners should get four to eight cents per dozen more tor grade large white eggs tor the rest of I960 than in the same period last year, reports an agricultural economist at Michigan State University. Henry Larzelere said average prices tor these eggs are < pected to be about 35 cents dozen from now through September and*3»-39 cents a dozen during Octobcr-December. Young Lodge to Head International Labor Unit GENEVA (A-George C. Lodge, U.S. Assistant Secretary of Labor for International Affairs, was unanimously elected chairman of the 60-member governing body of the International Labor Organization here Friday. Lodge, 32-year-old son of Henry Cabot Lodge, U.S. delegate to the United Nations, succeeds Sweden's Ernest Michanek for a one-year term. spruce up for summer 'VACATIONS-«nd HOLIDAYS ora coming up! Cot your leisure - • ”psy party" . . . clofhing st Oeiham's right now. Take s vacrtion from rurnpl^ unkept clothes ... look your very best ... It'S easy at Greshams! LANSING III — Dr. Eugene C. Keyes of Dearborn has asked the State Supreme Court to order his name placed on tte Au mary MIot as a Oemoci didate tor lieutenant governor, a post he once held as a RepuhlL can. Keyes facMW possible disrpiali-flcatton for lack of enough valid signatures on his MUnlaating petitions. He peMtioned the' high court yesterday for an order directing Secy, of Stale James M. Hare to pul his name on the ballol. Meanwhile, the State Board of Canvassers ordered Robert M. Montgomery, state elections dlrec- Asks Name Be on Ballot tor, to decline comment on the controversy. Keyes’ court petition said he was "wrongfully and unjustly dia-crimlnated against” by dectkai officials. He asserted hia nominating More than half the worid’s labor force is engaged in agriculture, probably not less than 530 million persons, according to U. N. estimates. Mhe city of Shreveptwt, La., was named tor Henry Shreve, a designer of passenger-cargo boats. Solons to Discuss Juvenile Imws With Teen-Agers | LANSING (1»-Michigan's t(vn-i ageni will be invited this summer to tell lawmakers what they think about laws on juveniles. 1 A House committee studying ju-^ venlle problems decided Friday to go straight to the source in their, survey on the need for new legis-latton. ♦ ★ a 1 “We've talked to many adult experts but we want to sec what the people most directly affected think.’’ said Rep. Harry A. De-Maso (R-Battle Creek), commit-] tee chairman. ! DeMaao said his group planned a hearing in August or September for “teen-agers - those who have been or are in trouble, those whol haven’t and aren’t.” ] Get This Exciting Souvenir from the OLYMPIC GAMES IN ROME m A rwl coltactof'i ilini. A imcuI (Hirm^ poriurS, inaM and poatmarkaS fitaci Irom Roma. Italr. wiriiaa. itamp. Avt^iapAad bp aptilandini mtnibari d thp iTs. Otppipic Taaiii. An Opampi Dap nsptl HELP1HE U.S.WIN At the 1956 Olympic ^ CaiTkes. the U. S. team * finished second. We are J resolved that they shall € win in I960! To do this 1 funds must be made available to assure sending a complete, fully trained team to Rome. Your contribution is neettod now! An Unusual, Historical Koepsake You’ll Tr^asuro Through The Years Tn appreciation for your contribution, arrangements have been made to send the special Olympic postcard shown alwve to you or to anyone you specify. Send for this souvenir... and help the U. S. team to victory. Many other countries finance their Olympic teams with government funds. But the U. S. depends on your contributions. Send your dollar today! Donations to U. S. Olympic Association are deductible on income tax returns. Aa NOWI CUP COUPONI ----------------------------J ! etYMWfcMtoiidNi I Nm» TaA M, Nnr Twfe I I EiKtowd h SI.00 to Me lilt U. a. I I Olympic Ttw. rlMM wad mp Ihp I I wwidOlymiriemiwdrpMcwd. • !.-_______________________ Thi$ Space Donated hy Aistiili-NerwH Aguey, Ik. „ FE 2-9221 70 W. Uwrmce Cor. of Com vr There's a Satisfied Federal Modemizafion Cnstomer in You Neighborhood T Cdt FE 3-7033 Living comfort and Iho morkol valuo of your homo con both bo incroasod by a woll plannod modomiiing program, loch doilap apont odds moro than a dollar to tho valuo of your homo. Soo or coll ua for full dotoila. nom : Haro taona of the bast woys to incraoM ilvhie space in y««r bame. It is practi-' <«jp acanamkal aml aasy. An avaraga ‘ a raam son ba put on your A MODIRN KirCNIN NaHiIni’ odds m much to the volaa of. your homo, and thaplacuura the whala family gats from It, os o madam kitchen. The ovorata kitchen can. ba nomenaydawBb AN ATTIC ROOM 2 w . lacnusa much of tfw framawoHc is olraody In place on attic room 1s an aconemical way t# provida Ttw rosola valu# of your homo coo bo cars. An avaraga 2-cor garage sob bo beilt aiith no money dawn. FEDERU MODERNIZATION SPECIALS! One-and-a-Half Car Garage *679 One Week Only! Specially Priced at CALIFORNIA REDWOOD SIDIN&-AT NO EXTRA COST 12x10 Starter Room Addition ’689 Includts Plons — Footings — Foundotion Roofing — Redwood Siding — Windows FHA TERMS NO MONEY DOWN—5 YEARS TO PAY! For Free Home Eefimote Call .FE 3-7033 Day or Night Visit Oir ShowrMa Orsi Daily 9 !.■. to t r.m. SuidaT 10 to 4 Fltaty of Fna Paikiag FEDERAL C 1 11 2536 V I I T DIXIE Hw) I DIXIE Hwy. 3 BLOCKS NORTH OF TELEGRAPH Shog SIMNS TONITE ’HI 10 P.M. aif NONDAY 0 A.M. Is top.N. CLOSED SUNDAYS - Go to Your Church On EVCRYTHING YOU MAY NEED BIGGEST DISCOUNTS on Ev«ryetoy needs, for the femily, for the hotne. for the eer . . . end quelity geedc at cheap goods DIS* COUNTS. Saturday and Monday sale! • SUNBEAM 'Blade-Electric' Shavemaster Men's Electric Razor 4488 H ■ SATURDAY ■ ■ A MONDAY ■ ■ ONLY! Regular $24.95 National Seller -Now at SIMNS LOWEST PRICE! ...NOTrgJ.-l,i NuM at this Low Price! As Pictured • Complete With Coee New Sunbeam Blade-Electric Shavemaster is precision made for faster, closer, smoother shaves . . . it's nationally advertised throughout the country at $24.95, but SIMMS' special purchase brirsgs you savings of more than ' j. Full 1-year guarantee by Sunbeam. FREE sample of electric-shave lotion is included. Folding All Wood 5-FOOT STEPLADDERS Peliaked Hardwood CLOTHESPINS BAG of 50 Reg. $4.95 Value 2** ^ ^ 04' > Value For Hoi or Cold Liquidi PAPER CUPS PACK of 24 Leag Wood Hmdlo LAMBS WOOL Wax Applieafor Reg. 59c Value 39‘ < 88 Hoary Duly Aabbor Popular 'Derm' Nodal GARDEH HOSE GENERAL ELECTRIC 50-FEET For ALARM CLOCK Rrp A99 K'f A99 $4.95 m «.9S M Value H, Value Jli standard brass coupling fit Self-starting electric alarm. faucets. Limit 100 ft. (^us fed. tax) Limit 1 —tea rtMT —Msta riMr Ckoice of 2 Slyloi MEN'S SUMMER ^ SPORT SHIRTS lal QuaUly end Im. LADIES' Aid CmLD'S ANKLETS-7 Pr. $1.49 iff $1.89 Values 79' “ 1 I ^ i Values I 100 All Noial—Lock and ley PORTA-FILE RIANT CHEST Genaiao loalhora la CLUTCH PURSE LADY’S WALLET Reg. $3.69 Value 2” s 98 Coigato!’'lCiaat Fopaodoal Ifeaffoa. Ligaiaot, loaofia Flu TOOTH PASTE HAIR SPRAYS TWIN PAC PRESSURE BOMB fieg. ^AC $2.00 A Ac $1.06 nil iff 12.50 MU'' Value UO Values 98 N. Saginaw 26 Yoon Soaoa LocaCiaa i THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West Huron Street Pontiac. Michigan SATURDAY. JUNE 25. I960 Otoned and Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company ■ABOLD A. pmoaaALD Ro«t» B. Pitmiiai n jomf A. BiuT. Haut S. Ktm. Eail M. Thaiwba. It Seems to Me Pontiac Press Prepared to Cover Politics in Detail ^ With the first political convention ; two weeks away^ the shouting and ; tumult accelerata. The pace quickens. I I’d like to outline the position of I i The Pontiac Press through the two '.meetings and the rip-roaring campaigns that ensue. Exciting and stirring times are ahead. ★ ★ ★ These convenltons wHI be covered completely and impartially by The Pontiac Press. First, The Associated Press full wire services are ours,' plus their photographs. The United Press International Service is also ours together with its corps of experienced and capable writers. Our own man’s there, too. Joe Haas will be “on the job.” ★ ★ ★ If anything happens of special interest to Oakland County, news hound Joe will come up with the facts. Also, he will give you his impression of the people and circtim-stances that lead to unexpected developments. Joe roams unhindered from place to place. ★ ★ ★ We will have Newspaper Enterprise Association photography, colored pictures and interpretative summaries of developments. We’re going all-out for these two history making conventions and you’ll find the best, the most accurate and the latest de-^lopments in The Pontiac Press. ★ ★ ★ Let this be your political Bible. We won’t let you down. Our reports won’t favor either party or any candidate. We express our own opinion in the* editorial columns. No group or clique has a finger on The Pontiac Press. We’re free, independent and 117 years old. We can be wrong in your estimation but we can’t be bought, bribed or intimidated. ★ ★ ★ This newspaper will play the convention news for what it’s worth and we won’t operate a slide rule policy with the Democrats granted 143.6 ; columns and then an exactly com-' parable amount for the Republicans. , At times, this innocent and guileless ; j^licy becomes vapid and inane. 'T it it it I’d guess right now that the Democratic Convention will garner a vastly greater amount of space than the Republican. There prmniscs to be a titanic struggle ' for the Democratic nomination,^ whereas, Nixon is apparently a shoo-in. Hence, the Dems will probably get more space. On the other hand, if Kennedy sweeps into place on the first few ballots and Nixon finds himself up against a long, stern battle, this ‘ I will reverse. ★ ★ ★ When the two candidates are established, the space devoted to each will be relatively even. If the Democratic wheel horse puts on a mora spectacular and smashing campaign with greater fireworks, he’U get the nod; and if the thing is reversed, the scales will tip toward the Republicans. ★ ★ ★ In other words, we propose to be a modem, assertive, on-the-ball ~ newspaper that gives you all the news in direct proportion to what happens. partisan politics were swept aside and the Michigan Senators acted for the best interests of the community*. It required the united approval of both to lift the position from the “Acting” status which is really an interim appointment. ★ ★ ★ An “Acting Postmaster” is obviously handicapped in all his activities by the fact he isn’t officially the Head Man. This shackles his operations and the entire public suffers. This bond has been severed. Donaldson is Postmaster. ★ ★ ★ The residents of the area unite in offering direct and sincere thanks to Senators Hart and McNamara for their broadminded approach and willingness to place the good of the community above party patronage. Voice of the People Commends S. E. Knudsen for Article in Guideposts There is an article in the July issue of GuidepoaU written by Semon E. Knudsen. General Manager, Pontiac Division. General Motors. I commend Mr. Knudsen lor the article, and I heartily recommend the reading. _______ ‘We Won’t Be Able to Afford Illness* ‘Some Still Bxist Without Radio, TV* It looks as if the doctors and hospitals are determined to break our Blue Ooss and Blue Shield. I know of numerous' subscribers as well as myself who will discontinue it after the first of the month. We just can't stand any more. / ne hosplUla and doctors wlU be like the guy who UUed the to go to the hoepital, and they won’t be rich long If they nsake n trip or two. It's no wonder occupancy is low. It is gohhf to be still lower if they don’t cut their prices. Robbed and Ragged When Car! Sandburg recently spoke at Cranbrook he wondered about the millions who were soaking in the mediae ot movies, radio and TV. He added that DaVinct, Shakespeare, Milton, Jeftenon gnd Lincoln knew none M these. Instead. they experienced books, intelligent conversation and -intense lonelineas. Out of these came greatness. WouMn't it soothe Mr. Sandburg if he knew that, within three miles of where be spoke, there exists a family who. too, experiences no televisioii. movies or radio; that the members of this group rely on each other, on what books can bring Uiem, and that all of them have made friends with ‘loneliness’? Indeed, some still exist like these. Mrs. R. E. Vogt Birmingham. Appreciates Coverage Given Organization The entire membership of our organization is Just a little more enthusiastic about our own activities after seeing the recognition given us in the paper. ★ ★ ★ This la the ftrst time since Inception of the gronp that anyone, other than the members nnd their personnl contncts and the vnrtana Bre service agencies that we associate with, has had any notice ft the Donaldson Approved . . . . Ptmtiac owes Senators Hart and McNamara a vote of thanks for their action In ipprovlng the appdntment of WnxuM B. Donaldson m. Post-toaster. Either one oCtheM men could kavt blocked the eppointpent, but And In Conclusion------------ Jottings from the well thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Here’s something you won’t believe: New York is spending $800,000 this year fighting rats—and losing— ...........I hope you saw photos of some of those grandmothers vieing for the title of “Grandma America.” They could; have wrested the j title from Miss- America............ The long range weather forecast says July 18-28 will ^ JF / sep-^orrential rains , yW f covering the entire Barbara U.S. Also, they forecast rain “above normal in the middle west during the next three weeks.” I hope this news Is completely cockeyed. ★ ★ ★ A truck driver walked to the middle of his vehicle and pounded smartly on the metal sides. Half a mile later he repeated. After the fourth of these maneuvers, a policeman took him to the curb and asked softly: “Are you nuts?” The driver shook his head. “I have four tons of live pigeons and the truck only holds three. I keep one ton in the air.”.............. Purely personal nomination for 4! one of the most attractive young ladies in the area: Barbara Wilson Eccles............The Joneses are contributing seventeen cents apiece to a gift for Margaret Armstrong-Jones. The idea started in England and then leaped the ocean. There are 1,100,000 here..........Before TV, there were ten companies making,toy pistols, masks, knives and other weapons of mayhem and destruction. Today there are 200 and their business is enormous. ir ir if Chief Justice Murdock, U.S. Tax Court, says the briefest opinion he ever saw was this one on an income return: “As God is my witness, I do not owe this tax.” And the Judge’s opinion ran: “He’s not. I am. You do.” ............Ted Smite, A.P. Sports Editor, says a heavyweight championship fight attracts the most attention of any single sporting event' ...........Current Cuban refugees say when the Soviets are through with Castro, they’ll liquidate him in some “painless way.” His probable successor is Major EaREsro Guervara. In N.Y. this week I bet Bos Brown $5 Castro would be gone, gone, gone by J[anuary 1st...........Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—Flotd-Patteisom; the J’s—pilots who object to having inspectors watch them. —Harold A. PhrrroERALD ‘’some 30 yean ago Ettie Lee of Log Angeles, then a $200-a-month school teacher, realized that wayward boys need security, guidiance, and love. She resolved to establish homes for them. She had ample faith, but little money. Living on less than half her salary, she bought a small home, painted it herseH. She sold at a profit, bought a larger one, and so on until she had enough money for her fint ranch home for boys — with a Quiet Room where they could pray according to their faith. ”I never did anything except on my knees in prayer fint,” Miss Lee says. As her real estate dealings grew, she established five more ranches — and she also became wealthy. Troublesome boys became responsible young men in Miss Lee’s ranches, and now, at 73, she is planning four more of them. "Faith has led us all the way,” she says, “but we have put some good honest work with our faith.” ★ ★ ★ In an organization that is held together by force of friendship and a common interest alone, stimulus such as Mr. Simon’s fine article and the wonderful picture cannot be measured In value. James B. Forman, Captala EiMtaw Co. “1»« Dr. William Brady*s Mailbag: Days of All Faiths: Vinegar Safe for Liver; Aluminum Cookware OK Story Links Martyrdom of Saints By DR. HOWARD V. II.^Rl’ER It is hardly possible to consider Wednesday w i t hio u t including Tiursday. June 29 wiis originally St. Peter and St. Paul’s Day. commemorating the two great Apostles both of whom were said, to have been martyred in Rome on June 29 In the year 66 or 67. or possibly 68. But by now St. Paul has been crowded out by St. Peter and has been given June 30 to himself. Nevertheless, by strict interpretation June 29 is still St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s Day. Both thcoe great men are well known to nearly everyone—indeed they nre the best known of all the Apastles. This Is partly becaase we have more Inlorma- exaetly how Paul got there. Paul was a Roman cHisen. When he was arrested In Jerasalem and saw- two yearn drag by without a trial, be as a Roman ritlien demanded to be taken before tke Emperor. Thla waa his lawful privilege and the authbritles aenteneed to be erueilled, aaM a rough one—they even went through a ahipwreck—but in the end Paul wna surceeafUlly bronght to Rome. It is 'commonly said that Paul was beheaded and Peter crucified, both on the same day. Paul, as a Roman citizen was given this painless, more dignified kind of execution: Legend also tells that Peter, There is not much evidence that Peter and Paul died on the same day, but there is fairly good evidence that for many years they were luried together, in the same tomb. It is believed that in 258 their bodies were put in a secret place in the catacombs, and that the tomb became a shrine for many Christians who knew where it was. Scribblings on the walls there are still legible and many of them (about 80) appeal to Peter and Paul by name. (Copyright INO) Yoiir ronriment on; 1. the statement that vinegar, in the vinegar and honey mixture, plays hob with the liver. 2. The condemnation of aluminum cooking ware. 3. Fluoridation of water? (W.S.) Ans. - 1. It is harmless. 2. We have used aluminum rooking warp for years with no ill effects. 3. I’d prefer It to ordinary drinking Would appreciate knowing the of I Please send me| recipes for making bread and oth- OR. BRADT er things from wheat. (Mrs. K.M ) Ans.—Several such recipes, contributed by OUT readers, are given in the free pamphlet Wheat to Eat, for which eend me a stamped, self-addressed envelope. which yog brush your teeth. Think it might be castUe. I enjoy your column very much and find the "belly- breathing” very helpful. Would like to know the sort of som-ers.-iults you turn every morning. (Mary C.----) Ann.-Thank yos for (1) assuming I Htill have teett antf'ft) assuming that I brash ’em. The first sssiimpdos Is eerrecl. Te keep my leelk rieaa I depend on (1) regular ear* bjr deattet and (t) regnlar aoe of honp nnd water month hr tooth waoh. of the others. But you rould also turn It nronnd and coy the rea-aon we have more Information 1a that they were more able and made hIstoiT to puMh the reoord. St. Peter, whose name and story appears throughout the Gospels and in the Acts, was a Galilean, a fisherman, a married man and a brother of another Apostle, St. Andrew. Many episodes told .about him indicate that he was an impulsive cbi^arter, but Jesus saw also that deep doum he was a solid, dependable person. Peter’s real name was Simon, but on their very first meeting the Lord said He was going to rename, or nickname, him Peter, which means “rock.” Case Records of a Psychologist: Tactful Criticism a Business Must I think I said plain soap, not "pure" soap — almost any soap is pure, but some kinds of soap are unpleasantly scented or flavored For instructions for rolUng my kind of somersaults (forward rolU) send a stamped, sell-ad-dreWd envelope and ask for my free pamphlet "The Somersaultau-qua.” ★ ♦ ★ Peter three limee denied that he knew Jesas or had any raa-nertlon with Him. He was weak at times. But it was also Peter .vba first had the Insight to see that.Jesas was the Messiah. And U waa Peter who took charge Can you criticize people without engendering ill wUl? This ti a most di/ficvU psychological dilemma. Every teacher, businessman and parent should tutor himself thoroughly in the “samiwich method." It is the only sure-fire plan for handling this delicate problem. By OF.OROE W. CRANE CASE E - 496: Calvin K., aged 39, is a department store manager. "Dr. Oane, my biggest problem as an employer consists of bow to administer criticism,’'* he admitted to me at a the auniber of Apostles was restored to twelve (Acts, chapter 1. verses 15 to *•), preaching the first Christiaa aennsn «m, the morning af Peatecost (Acte, chapter S) and denumstratbig for the first time that tha attending. "Even when try to be reasonably tactful and| even when the cool rcction is vitallyl necessary, the vic-l tim of my criti- DR. CRANE always seems more or less Too often onr corrcctloa or' erltk-ism Is blurted out on tke spur of the moment nnd In an angry lone of voice. That is eapeclally true la onr dealing with members of our family, espednlly oar children! Criticism should preferably occur In private Interviews and a good teacher or employer should have unusual self-control. He should resist the natural human tendency to grow emotional and become embroiled in an angry verbal ex- Read in a magazine that our veg-etablea and fruiU are qrayed with deadly poisons . . . remember you suggested washing vegetables with a solution to remove poieon residues . . . (Mrs. C.B.K.y they ara young nnd Impress!sn- "You know, darling, how they try to imitate you in every way, for whatever you do Is perfect in their Ans.—Partleolariy lend araen-ate, canmiMily ased aa lasecti-rlde spray. Easagh may remala to eaose chrsnie arseaie poiasa-Ing, especially la very dry weath- HOW TO CRITICIZE Criticism always tends to deflate oir ego. It is human nature to resent ego deflation. The strategy la the sandwich method, therefore, consists of first bolslcrtng up the ego of the peroon being criticised so that the peosIMe deflatleB of the “meaity” layer of the saadaich wiffl be offset by the twin com- To remove any residue of lead arsenate first wash fruit or vegetable in soap and water, thai rinse with clear water, hnd finally rinse in 1 per cent solution of hydrochloric add. To prepare 1 per cent solution of hydrochloric acid mix a pint of standard U.S.P. diluted hydrochloric add (which is 10 per pent strength) with nine pints of water. After rinsing vegetablas, greens or fruit in the 1 per cent solution, for a few seconds, rinse once more with clear water to remove the add. SltMd IctUra, not won f p«rMUl btsUb sad hrstom, MM. eiMnotit. *r iTMtaml, vtU to --------- * Br. 1-------------- “ - powers (Acta, Hiapter S, versCa 1 to II). * A h Peter may have been Bishop of Antioch' for two years (47 to 49). History is not as clear about this ns we would like. But there la \ little serious doubt that he was Bishop of Rome for a long time — tradition says 35 years. 81. PAUL St. Paul, like Peter, ended his ministry and his life at Rome. We know even more about him than we do about Peter. In Acts there is detailed information about him, and his writings, the Epistles, are full of aelf-rweiation. We even liave an idea ot what he looked like. A-wecond-century document callM Acts of Paul and Theda says he was a "man small in sise, bald-headed. • bandy-leohd, built, vpp eyebrows meeting, long-nosed, foU of grace." * * "But new employes often require instruction When they make a mistake, it is essential.that they be corrected. "Such Criticism is helpful to them, tor it teecbes them how to avoid repetition of faults that would ultimately lead to loes of a job. "Bat haw caa a DIAGNOSIS IV beat technique to use in this delicate situatlan is the "sandwjeh method." Thus, by starting off with honest compUment, we enhance vanity of the victim. Dim we hand him the layer of the sandwich whk aists of our criticism. Even tbeo, try to make intellectual rather .than an tional matter, and sifo into ually by^tbe ”I wonder" ro ^ w w * Because the .v some deflation to his pride, I the sandwich with another b complinMHt, which should I his ego back to normal If not 8o be aure to amlla when yea employ the sandwich method, for on a friendly plane! meaty h eon- Jt an Smiles They help tike the sting out at your criticism. Send for my “Vocaticqial Guidance Kit” enclosing a stamped return envdope, end 30 cents. It offers many other poiinent Ideas of use to employers, as well as to parents and teachers. I when fltojr tors msS I Hie CoontiT Panon Alvayi am* W Dr. Omts* W CISM IB car* of tin SoeMaa PrtM, PooUae. aod prlB^ eat^ aton yov uaS for 111* porohnapoal cBaita aas paa- Sandwkh your correction or reprimand between two honest compliments. The first layer of the sandwich must be a sincere bit of praise. Thus you have put across the reproof dr correction, while retain-ii« his friendship and good will. SMILE*: Suppose a wile feels her husband is using too much Slang or pro-fonity around their ritildreh, and ra^er l< a da aa( ha*ow Jaat hsa(\ltoter This demands some aeU-contral and careful personality analyais on the part of tte critic so he can pick out a legitlmats virtue of his eni- ••John, you'are so wonderful in devoting time to pUyiiig with the children. They can hardly wait till you got komt at aigM. "The wQrtd Blight advanot mora rapidly it we weran’t all so dO-teimi^ that evarybody «Iad 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATLTRPAY, JUXE 23. 1Q60 FIVE Two,Ministers New Appointees Returned to Churchei fn Pontiac Aroa Rw. Vnaik BrHima iti md the Rev. Wa^ne Brookihear were niewly appointed to aerve at Akfera-ytate Methodist Church and St. tively, at the Detroit Annual Conference of the Methodist Church in Ann Arbor. Itetuniees to their respective ohnrelMO la the Pontiao area are the Rev. MUtoa U. Raah aad Osvett; the Rev. Reary Peweil, EtanwMd; the Rev. Paal T. Hart. First; the Rev. Janies W. Deeg. paUaad Park; aad the Rev. Janies MeCtaag at St. Paai. These appointees and others tai the Flint District wpr* present Mr the recent meeting In Ann Arbor at which the World Service and Finance Commission presented the 1313.837-doIlar budget for 1961. A survey of churches revealed that a number are willing to consider open occupancy and that 14 of them are willing to at Negro pastors. The Conference voted to raise three million dcdlars in the next four years. One million will be raised for two Michigan coUeget, Adrian and Albion, and for Garrett RibUcal Inatltute at Evanaton, Di. The other two mOlian doflara is to be used for church extension. Pastor to Probe Disappearance of Communism "U Communism Should Disappear Tornorrow" is the subject the Rev. Edward D. Aucfaard, pastor of Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian, has chosen fOTtonorrow. At 9 a!in.. the chancel choir will sing “For All the Saints’’ by Shaw. This is the last service during the summer lor which the chancel choir will sing. “Ob Wlaga a( Faith" by Mm-delaaabB at the 11 o’doek aerv-Ice. Ooaclading aeaaloa of the cur-rent laqalrer'a Claaa wiU be caa-dacted by Paatar Auchard at T Committee meeting Monday eve- (Mstian Koch, assistant Christian education, will report on the current vacation church school and autumn plans (or the church’i ministry of Christian eduication. Tbe PaiMt-Child EdncaHsa Program, a project a( the De-‘ trait OaaaeUa(ClMrebeB.depaH- at Oitteid Lake far OeC t, 14 aad », •eeoHUr** Mr- Km*. Elders J. O. Sarto and Charles Ur^ihart, the pastor and Mr. Koeh will represent the Orchard Lake church at the Presbytery of Detroit meeting at Calvin (Eust) United Presbyterian Church. Bishop Alien to Direct .Local Temple Dedication Bishtgi J. Claude Allen of tbe third district will direct the dedication services at 3:30 p.m. Sunday .of Bray Temple Christian Methodist Episcopal Church on Rockwell street. Also participating in the affair are Elder E. M. Dozier, presiding blder of tbe Detroit district, and the Rev. R. H. McEwen, pastor of the Temple. Adventist Funds to Assi^ Blind with II million Mind people in m wfM. 400.00S of whom m in the United SUtes and Canada, members of the Pontiac Seventh Day Adventist Church are taking rime out today to consider how them might 1^ a helping hand John P. Erhard, pastor of the church on Mt. Clemens street, has announced a special offering taken today to be sent to headquarters of the Christian Record Benevolent an. in Lincoln, Neb. Tbe aaaariatlaa. ke says, “kaa PASTOR'S SON ENTERS MINISTRY — Showing their son John tbe manual of Christian and Missionary Alliance are the Rev. and Mrs. G. J. Bersche of North Cau Lake road. To the right is Mrs. John Bersche. The younger Bersche has left for Louisville, Ky., where he will assume duties as assistant pastor at the Alliance Church. His father is pastor of the AlUance Church on North Cast Lake road here. Communion Service Set at First Presbyterian Local Church Colloction Will Go 1o Long-Livtd Bonevolont Association The annual summer communion service will be held in the First Presbyterikn Church Sunday at 9:30 and 11 a.m. with the Rev. William H. Marbach leading the first service. John Ward wUl sing tory solo “0 Lord Moat Holy” by Ceaar Franek. Missionary to Talk at Silvercrest Church beaks tkaa aay etber argaatla-tttn la Nortk Ameriea. Last year H gave art » mllUoa page* •* BraUle aad 4S.1M Isag-playiag raesHa tor thoae wka caaaot read pastor of Berean Baptist Church in Ft'int lor U years and a mis-skmary traveler. wUl speak at Silvercrest Baptist Church Sunday, according to Pastor Wayne E. Smith. Rev. Mr. Dagley will speak at both the 11:15 a m. and 7:30 >.m. aervices. ' The minister also reports that fopict dealt with by magazines of the association include health, youth stories and inspirational messages as weU as Bible correspondence courses. There are six monthly Braille pubUcationa for children, youth and adults, and a tree lending library of Braille and recorded books, Pastor Erhard says. This is the first Ume the church has taken an offering e«)ecially for the blind, the minister says. Presbyterians to Celebrate Rev. J. K. Bersche Follows Father Into Clergy Off to Serve Chuiih in Louisville John K. Bersche, son of the Rev. and Mrs. G. J. Bersche of North Cass Lake road, and his wife have left for Louisville, Ky., where he will assume duties as assistant pastor of the Alliance Church. A graduate of Waterford Township High School in 1956, he recently received Ms bachelor of science degree from Nyack Missionary College, his father’s alma mater. Mrs. Berwhe, whose father the Rev. 0. A. Thompson Is aa Alliance pastor In AUquIppa, Pa., alM has a bachelor of sdcace degree from Nyack. Accredited miasionaiy candidates under the Christian and Missionary Alliance, the Bersches will serve two years in Louisville. They will have charge of the music and youth work in the church. Upon completion of their service in Kentucky, they hope to be appointed to missionary service in New Guinea. The pastor of the Louisville Alliance Church is the Rev. C. A. Epperson who has on two occassions held revival meetings locally. The Christian and Missionary Alliance under which the Bersches will serve as missionaries is tbe sixth largest missionary group in the world. Under the society are over 3,300 missionaries and national worker! serving in 22 mission fields. Members of the alliance in the United States last year gave over 3.8 million dollars to world missions for a percapita mi»-sionary giving of 36.07 dollars. The local congregatkm of whk^ Mr^ Bersche is a member gaw more than 13,000 dollars last year. Old Jewish Medicine is Termed Unsound TRENTON, J. (It - A prizewinning study by a raMtinical student discounts the belief that ancient Hebrews had more knowledge of preventive medicine than Other peeves oi their time. The study by Joel Wittstein of Cincinnati, a senior student at Hebrew Union CollegeJewiah Itisd-ttte of Roligioa, was puMished by tbe Helene Fuld Health Foundation here. It says some the ancient Jewish laws are hygienically sound, but were derived from “taboo and magic, superstition and fear." Monoges Publications 'Sheaves Spoiling' Pastor's Theme ’The Sheaves are Spoiling’’ is Pastor F. William Palmer’a topic for the 11:15 worship service Sunday at the United Preabyterian Church, Auburn Heights. Nancy Lowery, a recent graduate from Ontral Michigan College will ting (or the service. 'Church Should Stay at Downtown Locale downtown churches move to the suburbs to get away (atom-unsightly bousing and cold business buildings? Monday the church softball team will meet the Elmwood Methodist Church team at 6 p.m. on the Auburn Heights Grade School diamond. Also scheduled for June 27 is an 8:30 p.m. committee meeting under the chairmanship of Dorothy Churchill making plans for the RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - A long- - . ^ time department store executive,130th anidveraary of the Martin E. Bratcher, is new general manager oi the puMtcatkms division of the Southern Presbyter|^’ Board of ChrisUan Education. In the new post, he will supervise tte annual production and ^stributlon of more than 24 million pieces of literature. He succeeds the late Cameron D. Deans, A swimming party will leave the diurdi tor Dodge Park No. 4 at 6 p.m. Sponsored by the Youth Cbuncil and intended primarily tor the youth of the church it is expected that many family groups will also be presm. DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Should million doUaK, which makes it No. says the Rev. Dr. W. A. Criswell, pastor of tbe biggesi Baptist church in Texas. In fact, the Rev. Dr. Oiswell’j First Baptist Church of Dallas is sinking its roots even more deeply intoRhe area around Ervan and ^ Jacinto streets in the shadows of skyscrapers. one of the wealthiest churches in the nation. Recently, it paid a million dollars tor a building across the street to add to its extensive facilities, whidi include a gymnasium, bowling alleys and a skating rink. The work among the underprivileged is supervised by First Baptist’s (3ood Shepherd Department, which has its own minister —the Rev. Johnny Barrett—and its own staff. • to c Tbe emphasis is on youngsters. The church has become a haven boys whose bare feet show through tattered shoes and girls who stare wide-eyed af the church’s beautiful paneled walla. First Baptist is worth about 10 TAGAnON B SCHOOL — "Pkneers for Chriat” is the a( tbe daily vacation Bible achpot now to aesaton at the - -ft. demenJ ' ‘ ------ FInt Fres IMbodtot Onirch on Mt. wwxlwmkkR are (tootn left) Randy Pike of South Geneaee ave-MB. Otoilea Mocria ot^ IfiU Mnet and lYank Bigger ot Rich- mond avenue. The seoioas are hdd froin.6 to 8 p. m. evenings becauae attendance Is good at these hours. The Bible school wtil contlmw through JuM 31, doatog with • 7:39 p. ita. program, Jum29. But much of the day-to-day work I done by members church. Junior deacons, among them some of the wealthiest men in Dallas, drive the buses that pick up the children and their parents. The Rev. Dr. Criswell bdieves that churches have a clear to serve downtown areas. ’Pressed against the downtown heart of any city is a large area of declining properties that are rented to the poor," he says. ‘The downtown church has i God-given commission to minister to these people.” ministering to them, First Baptist wins many as members. But quite a few prefer to stay with the Good Shepherd Department and the Rev. Mr. Bairett, who ministers to crowds of 500 more with an assist from a oorpa of 70 Sunday School workers. The Good Shepherd Depaitment began several years ago when C. F. Burch, then a new member of the church, dedicated himself to service in the underprivOeged i With four other men, Burch brought «boyf and giria to the church basement where ere fed and-taught BiMe lessons. Now the department has its own building, minister and three large -V Start Shelter ttpspital Sunday School Began Officially 40 Years Ago Lost Sunday of June Homecoming Sunday will be observed tomorrow at the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Forty years ago the last Sunday , I0:«e A.M. 8UNDAT SCHOOL jumoR^a^wm WEDNnDAT-1;M P M FRATXR g|tOoi« a'n_ W« Cofdially /nvita You (o Worship Wi(h Ifs. ttry and CbUdrcn'i Church Ampla Farkloi FIRST UNITED UISSIOHART CHURCH I. Batt BI . _..r, oT*. I_______ Parionate, (32 Benron Marimont Baptist Church tW. Walton FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL, 10 A. M. MORNING SERVICE....................11 A. M. “The Life of the World" YOUTH GROUP, 6:30 P.M. EVENING SERVICE ........ .... .-.7:30 P. M. “The Quenching Spirit" PASTOR SOMERS SPEAKING AT BOTH SERVICES “Holding Forth the Word of Life" NEW YORK - Eighty-two Indian and Spanish-speaking American youths today Were granted college scholarships by the< Board of Home Missions of the Congregational Christian Churches. The scholarships, which awarded annually, are meant ”to light a spark, to encourage all young people in these minority racial and cultural groups, where higher education is the exception rather than the rule, to seek an Rev. Galen R. Weaver, New York City, secretary for reli^on and race in the Board and director of the program, explained in announcing the grants here. The srhoiBnihIpt go to young men and women who may be expected to become leader* hi their cultural groups and In the na-I Hon, Mr. Weaver itated. “But,” he added, “there are no strings attached, no rellgtoua require-j ments, no stipulation that students return to their home com-munlUes or take up any particular prolesskm. ”We know that, wherever they go. they will be an asset to the nation and to their own ’ ' he said. I Students receiving scholarships I for the 196041 academic year come from 23 states and Puerto Rico; from Indian reservations and big city streeu, Mr. Weaver reported. Among graduates of the program, which began in 1954, are teachers o( English, art, music, and biology, several of them in Indian schools. There is a home demonstration agent working with Indian families, a worker for the National congress of American Indians, petroleum geologist, a staff nurse in a research hospital, an Army chaplain's assistant, an accountant. and a dancer who has had a Fulbright fellowship to Peru and has appeared on Broadway. The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. Lawrence Street Sunday Schl. 9:45 a.m. Young People’s Legion t> m. Morn'g Worship II a.m. Evangelistic Mtg. 7:30 p.ih. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. CAPTAIN and MiS. f! WILLIAM HEAVER Good Music —Singing —True (o fh# Word Prtaching God Meets With Us — You Too, Are Invited ’iTii* year’s srholarshlp students will attend colleges and universIHes ranging from New Enghuid to jOnlllofuln nnd hi-eluding Puerto Rico. Some will enter as freshmen. Others are udvuttced students who are being helped to finish tbeir college careers. Their ambitions for the future FmIIm FrcM Fh«t» PORT HURON OUTTNO — Janet White (left), president of Christian Youth Oub, and Mrs. William I. Spanburg, one of the youth sponsors, were caught by our,photographer this morning packing picnic baskets for the Donelson Baptist Church’s annual outing to Port Huron today. About 50 or 60 young people left at 8 a. m. for a day of games, swimming, picnic lunch, and an evening meal cook out with devotions later. Congregationalists Raise Retired Minister Annuities NEW YORK - The Congregational Christian Churches will double annuities of 500 retired minis-widows of ministers and greatly Increase payments to 900 others in an effort to relieve these veterans from the pinch of living on pensions bised on depression-day salaries. Inflation is taking a terrible toll in the lives of retired ministers and their widows.” Dr. William Kincaid Newman, New York City, secretary of the Annuity Fund for Congregational Ministers, stated. He announced his dcnomlnnlion plans to nllocate 6500,600 yearly from mIosloiMfy giving tor the In-created pension payments. ”It is time that every denomination took aggressive action to return their aged ministeri to sell-sufflciency,'* 01*: Newman said. NOT THEIR FAULT 'Their careful and frugal provi-ns for security have been swept away through no fault of their own. “They suffer from all the prob- Ministerial salaries now average 15,000 a year, more than eight times the pensions paid to the oldest ministers, althcMgh their pension plan was set up at a railo of two to one, he said. Depression years ministers receive pensions based on payments made into the fund by themselves and their churches, rather than a' flat sum. ■ Since many of them stuck to their churches through iffars of include teaching, medicine, nurs- that beset countless old peo- Waterford Community Church 5860 AndersonvlUe Rd. Worship Services______8:30, 11 A. M, Sunday School.........9:45 A. M. Evening Service..........7 P. M. Hour of Power....Wed. 7:30 P. M. R«f. Rebeft Winn* Welcome to a Friendly Church! FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ing, engineering, the Christian ministry, government ser\ice. social nvork, dentistry, journalism, business administration and the law. The Congregational Christian churches’ service to Indians and Spanish Americans began in 1846 with the founding of the American Missionary Association. By 1850 the Association had 2l missionaries; teachers, preachers, physicians, and farmers among the Indians of Minnesota, and others among the Spanish-speaking people and Indians In the Soifthwest. Education was a primary concern. and schools were foundW and supported until they could be turned over to local authorities. The association la now a part of the Board of Home Missions. pie today, but they refuse to become public charges. They deserve aid as a matter of right, not charity,” he added. Most of the pension increases will JO to men who served the greater part of their ministry in the 20’s and the depression-ridden 30’s, Dr. Newman, who is an attorney, said. The oldest group, 804 of whom are over 75 and ^ of wheun are over 85, have been receiving a flat pension of $600 annually. Their payments will be raised Jan. 1, 19^, and in the future to $1,200. Urges Motives' Study Oakland ond Saginaw Pontiac, Michigon Rev. H. H. Savage, Pastor Hot. W. E. Halcu. Au'l. Pastor 9:45 A. M—SUNDAY SCHOOL Class** for All Ago* KINGSTON, Pa. (»)-Churche8 should do more research Into human motivations In connection with religion, says James W. Carty. Jr. journalism professor at Bethanj College. Bethany. W. Va. He told a meeting hm that indi spends 11 billion ^ually on research to explore new frontiers of understanding, but the churches spend only $100,000 for research. Lasts: 10:45 A. M.—MORNING WORSHIP "Oomil* 0og«" Dr. H. H Sovag* , Evtning Sfrvico—7:00 P. M. ‘tvvybody't Doing h " Dr, H. H. Ssvag* Says Logic isn't Ail Theoe older men, who began their mittistrlea aboat the tun of the ceatary, were reeetviag “geo-erous peastoas lu teims of the pre World War I doUar,” Dr. daloosly low in terms of the 1960 dollar” and especially la terms of medical costs which are “moving up much (aster than the cost of living as a whole,” Dr. New- As each caalMato la ardalaed ha is vesM with a sMa whkh ..lijf Art We BsptWT” ta the topie the Rev, Amoe G. Jo>P6«. minister of the New Bethel Baptist Church 00 Brandi strsst. has chosen tor the U s.m. service whan the etergymaa Is advsMsed The church will edebrate its 35th anniversary at 3 p.in. with ths Rev. Joe Moee of Detroit hringiiit tiM iverssiy message. Mrs. WlUlt Stephens is chaiman of die event. Baptism and the sacrament of Holy Communion will be observed St 7 p.ra. Also during the sendee Bishop Emrich will present ^ach candidate with a New Testament,, a symbol of the authority "to read the Gospel in the churdi of God and to preach the same if he be thereto licensed by tbe bi himself.” St. Timothy Episcopal Oiurch is holding .the ordination becauee of the two-million-fiollar construction of the cathedral and Diocesan headquarters now in St. Cathedral in Detroit, where the event would ordinarily be held. United Church Synod to Meet Special Session Will Develop Constitution for Recently Merged Body NEW YORK - A special session of the United, Church of Christ’s General Synod will meet in Cleve-j land, Ohio, July 6 to 8 to develop constitution for the recently formed denomination. The United Church of Christ established in 1957 by a union of Evangelical and Reformed Church and the. General Council of Con gregational Christian Churches. CHUBCH OF CHRIST 17 LAmYITTf itt. ““’asaar Lerd-i Doy Wowlilp.1*015.11. Lord’s Day STOBlBf.I:** WidBoodoy Broolat. tmFJI. National LuAeran Council Churches ASCENSION WATERFORD Win. LoFounterin, Potter SUNDAY SCHOOL 9dX> A.M. SERVICE ............1000 A.M. CHRIST of the LAKES WHITE LAKE TWP. Ivan C. Aost. Potter SUNtfAY SCHOOL ..9i15 A.M. CHURCH SERVICE 10:30 A M. SYLVAN LAKE MMttat st Old Flao Lok* awioM MkMIa Balt at Long Lakt Rd. Patter CfOrk MePhaU SUNDAY SCHOOL .9:00 A M. SERVICES 800 tnd 10:15 A M. CHRIST WATERFORD TWP. Airport St Williams Uks Rd. Arrid E. Anderson. Potter BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR N. Adant Rd. IstwosB Long and Squars Laka Roads. Donald O. VII, Paster Sunday School ...9:30 A.M. Momlnq Worehlp .. 11 KX) A.M. THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ADVENT iilddIrtsU Id North of Holy Canmlimsa lit osd 3rd ST. JOHN'S PONTIAC RIU at. at Obsnr Bt. SUNDAY SCHOOL ..9HSA.M. CHURCH SERVICE 11.00 A.M. CXDNELSON BAPTIST CHURCH BllMOott Lot* ad. 01 TIMoa OR 30M Sunday Schdol .. 10 All. Morning Wonhlp .. U.*0l AIL Jualor tad BMlnnart'Church - ^ Youth Service............. ................. Evening Church Servica ............ Midw^ Senrlco....................7:60 PJt. Wadnaaday Putor-RCT. LBS ULOMB S. S ao0L-A»t«Oa RWALO ST. PAUL METHODIST 119 a. Bquert Lake Rd. .. Ff I-FIM Church aohool 10 AJd. Holy Communion 16 AJd. and 11:16 AJd. “The Broad of Lift ” Youth Pellowahlp 6 PM. to 6 PAL .UF»V».D FARRINO The two bodies came together under the term* of a prevloualy agreed upon bash of union which railed (or the drafting of a contti-tutfon—along lines set down by the bash of unlOD—after the United Church wag created. A church union of the type under j way in the United Church of Christ! haa never before been attempted; in the United States. XI bringt to-| gether two major Protestant de-1 nominationa with differing forms of church government, practices and, backgrounds. | ST. MARY'S-IN-THE-HIILS EPISCOPAL CHUICH 2512 JOSLYN ROAD (North of Waldon) 6 AM. — Holy Communion snd — Morning Prayer, Nurmry, Sunday BehooL THI RBV. WOaUR R. SCHUTZB. RBCTOR The boautifui tlono church in tha hill* The proposed United Church con-! stitution guarantees “the autonomy of any congregation or local church in the management of itg own affairs” and makes the local church ’the basic unit” of the denomina-l ion’s life and organization. After a (Inal draft of the eonstl-tutlon (or tbe Uaited Church to hammered out at the adjourned session of tbe general synod to July, H wUI be referred to local and regional bodlet (or ratlflca- According to the Basis of Union] agreement, the constitution must, have the approval of two thirds of] the Congregational Christian ceKIng virtually no cash salary at all, they do not have tbe baek-tog of savings that would have accrued to them to normal years. churches which vote on it, and of; two thirds of the Evangelical and! Reformed regional synods. j Added to this lack is “the appalling inflation of the post World War II years, which has made these men and their widows destitute,’' Dr. Newman said “Substantial increases will bi made in annual payments to these men and women to bring their annuities up to the level of the older group,” Dr. Newman concluded. Ex-Lutheran Becomes Married Catholic Priest CDPENHAGEN (AP) — A mar^ tied former Lutheran pastor to now a Roman Catholic priest. Although the Cathie (3iurch ordinarily requires its priests to be celibate, t^al permission was granted for Father Olav Roerdam Bonnevle, 54. to rem^ married after he was ordain^ a Catholic priest. *:-- He has been a Lutheran Comoderators lor the sessions in Cleveland will be Miss Frances Ka-| pitzKy, of Strasburg, Ohio, whs was ; year elected moderator of Evangelical and Reformed Gen-| eral Synod, and the Rev. Dr. Phillips. Boston, moderator of the Congregational Christian General (Council. ' Faiths Exchange Visits JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (D-ProtesUnt nd Catholic congregations exchanged visits here in a program to develop better community understanding. Talks explaining church customs and worship ' given In visits at Grove Avenue Methodist Church, St. Paul’s United Church of Christ and St. Patrick's Catholic Church. FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lato Avonuo Rov. Harold Uarthall, Potter Harry Nicholt, Protidont Rally Sunday — 2:30 P.M. Sarah Andtrson, tptakar Circles 4 P.M. Oinntr 5 P.M. Evening Sorvict 7:30 P.M. Mrs. Botsi* Young Wod. Juna 29 — Silvar Taa FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 NORTH ROBILAWN Sunday School 10 a.mr. — Morning Worship II a.m. Evening Sarvica •— 1 p.m. Wod. Prayor and Bible Study 7:30 p.m. r«t. Urey abator. Foftor Evongelicol United Brethren Church 212 Baldwin Ava. Phono PE 24)721 Holy Communion Worship — 1:30 and 11:06 AJd. Sermon — ’’Sluiring Ths Blasting'* Sunday achool - 6:46 AM. The “Y" Hour — 6:00 PM. Uialltor—RSV. M. R. BVnSTT |P» ^ Columbia Avenue ■ BAPTIST .^|F®SSS CHURCH 64w..tcoi^i.Av.. Sunday School..................9:45 A. M. Morning Worship............... 11 A. M. B- Logical •proofs" of God’^ e»stence are] 1616 oalariM hod tocieased oidy ?.vV CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC de Lubac, a J«ult solar. main-' tains in a new book, "The Discovery of GoiJ.” He nays exper-iences such as those of tbe mystic and poet are not outside intelleo SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whittomor* Stroot Sunday 7:30 P. M. Guost Spookor Wodnasday Silver Tea CfinHCH of SPIRITDAl FEUOWSHIP MALTA HAU, 82 PERKINS STREET Evening Service 7:60 pm. — Rev. Hector Wineman, speaker Thurs.. June 60 — SUver Tea Sunday, July I — I$er. John of Pontiac FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH NUtON AT WAVNB WORSHIP SERVICES . . . 9:30-11:00 I CHURCH SCHOOL. .... 0:30-11:00 All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike The REV. C. CK)RCE WIODIFIELD, UNITED GOSPEL SINGING CONVENTION JUNE 26lh, 2:30 TO 4:30 P.M. FIRST SOQAL BRETHREN CHURCH 3i0 Boldwin Ave Featuring QUARTETS, TRIOS. DUETS and SOLOS Pluk CONGREGATIONAL SINGING^ Good Greape of Talool This Baadey. Be Sere to ie Hero aed Smfoy Am -Aftoneaa ot Good Gompol ftofieg. EULAS HOUSTON, Pro*. , EI^IE GASKIN. SeeV The REV. DAVID K. MILLS, Curate B.IX) AM.—J4oly Commutdon lOdX) AM. Mowing Prayer and Sermon by the Rector. Churchy School. ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 801 Commarpa. MlUerd 8:00 AM.—Holy Communtan ' 10:30 A.M.—Morning PrSyor and Sermon CLARKSTON MISSION I meet In OorkMon Elementary School. 6595 Weldon Rd. 930 AM.—Holy Convminton and Sermon by • , The Rev. lertr^ T. White, preaching f V ■ I- fi " " THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE 25. I960 SEVEN \ Drain Your Mind of Resentment, Hostility as They Occur »»>l. Humon Uck‘ Icet rendered by its citizem. — Plato. Four Towus UETHODIET CHDBCH oootsT ban no. »t lockbavsn Sundoy School . Church Senrlca . FIRST ASSEMBLY : of GOD I 210 N. Perry St. 1 —•— -H BOSTON im-'*The Bible U a ho-lan book." the Rev. Jack Men-delaohn of Boston told a group hi Unitailaa-Univemllst religkwa cd-ueaton. "We cherish it and seek to have our t^dren kiMw and toye it as part ot their religious heritage. but superstitious veneratton the Bible is an idolatry quite out of keeping with minds capable of coping with today's spiritual problems." Sending Own Missionaries SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. A ClatM lor Every Ago EVANGELIST PAUL CANTELON Will Give a Beautiful Oil Painting to the Person Bringing the Largest Number oi Persons to Sun. School Confident Living ^hinpplnei and Japan Expand AAethodism to Okinawa and India TRINITY METHODIST •! KEEGO HARB6R Kotwrt H. BsneStet, MlnUMr 10:00 a.m. Sermon' 11:15 a.m. Sunday School Don't Allow Grievances to Wcirp Your Feelings Williams Lake . Church of the Razarene ---- • Corner Airport Sc Hatchery Koad 10 A.M. SUNDAY School 11 A.M. WORSHIP HOUR 7 P.M. WORSHIP HOUR MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 A.M. Baptismal Service (WILLIAMS UKE) HATCHERY ROAD and HARTFORD DRIVE 2:30 P.M. EVANGELISTIC RALLY 7:00 P.M. • EVANGELIST— PAUL CANTELON "Your Last Opportunity 3 Hear this Great Man and See His ________Artistry." ^'BARHAM EVANGELISTIC PARTY" EDGAR BARHAM Minlstor— RON CHRISTIE ■ Organist— Saxophonist^ Beginning TUES. JUNE 28TH Through JULY 3rd 7:30 P. M. Everybody- Welcome Pastor A. Q. Hashman ZION CHURCH of the NAZARENE 239 E. Pike Street 10 am.—Sunday School 11 ahi/—Morning Worship 7 pm.—Evening Service ' Pastor ,Fob»rt A. North ■ FE 4-6216 CHURCH of GOD E Pike at Anderson CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH G. W. Gfbaon. Mlnislor FE 4-0239 347 N. Saginaw Bible S<*ool ...... 9:45 AM. Morning Worahlp ..11:00AM. Youth Service ......6:00 PM. Evening Service 7:00 P.M. Prayer Meeting and Bible Study Wedneeday 7:30 PM. FIRST CHURCHt°4 NAZARENE 60 Stote Street SUNDAY SCHOOL ...... .....9:45 A M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP .........6:00 P M, MORNING WORSHIP ..........11:00 A M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE .....7:00 P M. J. E. Van Allan. Pastor Dick North. Minister of music Two overaeas diurch bodies related to American Methodism now sending out their own miai.____ aries to foreign lands | Reports from the Philippines and Japan to the Board of Missions in New York, tell of niissionaries being sent to countries as widely separated as Okinawa and India, the missionaries recruited and supported largely by Japanese and Filipino Christians. This expanded mlssteeary ao-Uvtty by overseas cbBrches n- allutlon -of the Methodist missionary force. This to part of a general pign to bicrenso tho proportton oi non-American, nan-Oaucaatan penmnnel In the Metbo-dtot force around the world. A dispatch to the Board from Doris Hess, of Hughesville, Pa., missionary, describes the bicreased missionary program of the Methodist Church in the Philippines. Report from Japan tell of the assignment of missionaries from the United Church of Christ (Methodist-related) to India and Taiwan and ot a plan for closer relation-between the Japan United Church and the United Church of Christ bi Okinawa. From Manila, Miss Hess writes: 'The timetables of missions in Asia are being reversed today as young men and women of Philippines. Methodism enter missionary service to nearby countrici.. once a part of the ori^nal Ptiilip-ptoes Annual Conference. They ent out by the Board of Mis slons of the Philippines Central Conference. Also, the manufacturer has learned that It la good business to make certain the customer is absolutely satisfied with the product. So after the fanner has had ample time to use the protein concentrate, a representaflve is sent to the farm to inquire Jf everything ^oes well. The farmer is never allowed to remain dissatisfied or disgruntled. If anything is wrong the representative wants to know about it, so he gets the farmer to talking and thereby draws off his grievance, if any exists. ★ ★ ★ In this way complainU are quickly adjusted and bad feelings are avoided. The sales manager says it is a matter of company policy never to allow a grievance to harden into hostility. So this procedure is followed and is called “grievance drainage," “Dr. Raymuado Rivera of Moaiia,, a former Methodist Yonth FeUowsUp leader, went ef tbn PhlllpplBes church. He began rural rUnical aervton in Malaya at Mtiawan in IffT. "Returning to the Philippines n December 1959, he married. His wife now serves with him in Christian education work in Malaya. Recently the Methodist Church in the Philippbies sent three nurses to the new Christ Hospital in Kapit, Sarawak. B<»Deo. These missionaries are graduates of the Mary Johnston .School of ng In Manila." By NORMAN VINCENT PEAU Did you aver hear ot grievance drainage? I came across this phrase in the office of a man who sells a protein concentrate used in feeding livestock. This man declares that the America^ farmer is the greatest individualist in the 'world. He says you have to use psychology in dealing with them if you expect to make headway with these fine individualists. I It seems this salesman gees direct to the farm, opens up his kit and sells the prodnet to the fanner right on hto awn plane. He does not expect the fanner to come to the start; he takes ths staro to the famer. PEALE This is a policy everyone conld profitably employ In relationship with other people. The breaknp of many friendships would he forestalled, the number ef divorces reduced, If people would leam to practice "grievance drainage." My mother used to say. "Never let the sun go down on your wrath." That is good advice. If you sleep on your wrath, it only sinks deeper into consciousness and can easily become a permanent part of your mental attitude. When you have been hurt, the best policy is to drain off the resentment Just as quickly as you can. ★ ★ ★ The word “resent" means to feel again. When you continue to think about a hurt and dwell on it, and talk about It, you are in effect refeellng ttie injury or rehurtlng yburself. And, of course, this may cause all sorts of unhappy psychological and emotional reactions. Apostolic Church of Christ 458 CENTRAL Young People Soturdoy___ 7:30 P. M. Sunday School & Worship.. .10:00 P. M. Sunday Evening Service — 7:30 P. M. Services Tues. & Thurs..7:30 P. M. Churcli Phone FE 5-8361 ■ UL 2-5142 Bishop L A. Paront Psmi. Putw LEACH ROAD COMMUNITY CHURCH > I Mlb bit et Sukurn Helihta. 1 Block North eC Auburn Rd. Buodnr Schoti la A. M. Horalot Worship It A. M. tmnlna Worship 7:M P. If. enlnt Worship 7: TuMdAp Nldbt Blblj Study. 7;M P. U. ”W You Nood Spiritual Encouragomont . . . REV. JOHN W. KUCKUK Guest Minister to Speak at Church of Atonement BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH WEST HURON AT MARK STREET Two WoruHlp Services - 8:40 and 11:00 A. M. Sermon by Rev. lohn A. Barker: "NEEDED — A REVOLUTION" 9:45 A. M. Church School Classes for All Wednesday 7:15 P. M, -- Mid-week Service of Prayer and Bible Study "An Amaricon Baptist Coavontion Cfiurch" The (Tiurch of the Atonement on Clintonville road will have the Rev. John W. Kuckuk as guest minister Sunday. The Rev. Mr. Kuckuk is associate director of the Institute I on the (Thurch in Corporate Society of the Presbytery of Detroit, Unit-led Presbyterian Church in the 'U.S.A. He will teach the adult Bible Qaas at 9:43 a.m. the lesson "The Church as a Mediator of Divine Laws." and he will speak on the ! "To Rebel With Grace’ the 11 a.m. worship service. The event is open to the public. An immediate grievance drainage empties your mind of resentment, grndges, antagonism, hostility. It prevents the debilitating effect inch unhealthy attitudes can tauve both emotionally and physically. We may hurt other persons either knowingly or unknowingly. We need to exercise care lest we do or say something which wounds a friend or loved one. Sometimes such persons will be hurt and say nothing about it, but it eats at them Just the same. So, when we realize that we have hurt the feelings of someone, the ‘thing to do is go at once to that individual and in a sincere and kindly manner make amends or give explanation and show that you are friendly and concerned. Grievance drainage can be a helji In married life also. Couples will find etralat and Irritatleits beflnuing te arise from time to time. Unkind words are said; hurt and anger . follow. Over many years of personal eonnaeling I have advised couples to forgive and forget before retiring for the night. To do this simply say you’re sorry, ask forgiveness, and express love for the other. And if a couple prays together, asking God’s brassing upon their marriage and their home, not only wUI they sleep better but they wUl become happier people. When grievance and hurts are drained off, they will have no opportunity to harden into misunderstanding and hostility. Grievance drainage! What an excltiiig technique for effective firing! fCopyrifht, 19M) Grace Lutheran Church to Observe Youth Day Grace Lutheran Church will observe Youth Sunday tomorrow at the 9 and 11 a.m. services, which time the Youth Choir, under School Ends 1 st Week Words ore, of course, the moot powerful drug used b,v mankind. The Providence Missionary Bap-J_KipUng. Ust Church Vacational B"-'-—'' ------- of First Christian Church on West Huron Street has completed its! first week of school training which ^ will continue next week. Mrs. GwendMyn Goodwin, principal, to in charge of the Vacatkmal Bible School which to open to the public. Raps High Birth Rotes BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (fi - Leon Macon, editor of the Alabama Bap-li.st. says editorially that "it is morally wrong to bring more children into the world than we can feed, clothe and educate." First Social Brethren Chuich 3ie Baldwin, T* 3-0394 Sat. Eve. Service ... 7:30 F.M. Survday School --10KX1AM. Sunday Morning Woi^ip ........11:00 A.AA. Sunday Evenirvg Worship .......7:30 R.M. Tues. Young People 7:30 P.M. Thursday Prayer ... 7:30 P.M. REV. tommy guest, Pastor "Watorlord Township* American Baptist Church" CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST REV. JOHN A. BARKER Baptist Group to Greet Guest Crescent Lake Road near Hatchery Road Worship 10 A. M. 11 A. M. Sunday School Large Parking Lot Nursery During AU Str. Sobrrt L. Adshii. Pkstor FIRST METHODIST Th« Rev.* John Barker From State Convention to Talk at Bethany The Rev. John A. Barker, director of evangelism and church extension work for the Michigan Baptist Convention, will I ‘ MORNING WORSHIP 10:00 A.M. “Take These Steps'* Rev. Paul Hart, Preaching 11:30 A.M.—CHURCH SCHOOL YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 6:15 P.M. Wednesday Bible Study and Prayer Fellowship 7:S0 P.M. minister Sunday at both the 8: a.m. and the 11 a.m. services of the Bethany Baptist Church, will speak on the theme, “Needed— A Revolution. ’ A native of Massachusetts, attended Northeastern University School of Business and Engineering and also Temple University, the latter in Philadelphia, Pa. ’The Rev. Barker holds his theological degree from the Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Philadelphia. He also did graduate work in Christian Education at Eastern. He was a nUsalcoary a of the Aiuericaa Baptist Home Mission Society, working in the First Maine Baptist Larger Parish In Danforth and also held several pastorates In Pisuoyl-vaaia and Maine prior to oomlng to the West Baptist Church In Bay City, where he served until this past year when he was called to hto preoMt pooition. Percy M. Walley, minister ol education, will conduct the two services, assisted by youth assistants Sue Hamilton and Michael! Godwin. Special music for both services will include a duet by Edwina Skelly and Tom Murphy at the early service and a sok) by Ralph Bergemann at 11 a.m. Mr. Walley w ill conduct church membership classes Sunday and on Wednesday will lead in the midweek service of Bible study at ■ 15 p.m. The Rev. Joseph I. Chapman, pastor, is now attending the World’s Baptist Alliance in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and will return July 8. I KEEGO HARBOR BAPTIST CHURCH 1711 a. can Lok* Rood SUNDAY BCHOOI^II A. U MORNINO WORSHIP-n A. If. SVBNINO WORBKlP-7:M f. M. -------If olth Seuthtra nantlit Coavtntien Unity Church Topic to Be 'law of 10th' Servico Hours Chonged Mrs. Diane Seaman, minister of Unity Church of Oakland County, will speak on "The Law of the Holy Tenth” Sunday at the 11 a.m. service. She has just returned from two weeks at Lee’s Summit, Mo., where she attended the annual conference ot the Unity Ministers Assn. Tomorrow is Abundance Sunday at which time abundance banks The hour of Bit))e School and worship at First Christian Church |has been chained for the summer schedule and will continue through the tirst Sunday in September. Bible School will at 9:30 and conclude at 10:10 a.m. will be returned. On Wednesday I June 27«through July 1, 9 Mrs. Seaman will conduct the jU noon. Children may be enrolled class in Bible interimetation with <>y calling the church office, her topic "East Meete West.’ CHURCHES of CHRIST Liston to the "Hoatld ol Truth" Each Sunday CKLW TV 8:30 AM. WXYZ 5:30 P.M. SYLVAN LAKE Bible School 9ri5 A.M. Morning Worship I0.-4S A M. "The SitorW ertd The Smell ” Service 6 P.M. "The Feith OiKe Delivered— PONTIAC lUS R etrty SL W.W. HAU ICiIitw . FE 2-6269 Bible Study 9:50 p.m. Morning Worship 10:50 "Is It Conviction or Certvenicnoe'' Evening Worship 6 p.m. "The Power of an Endtoto Ufe" Wed. BWe Study, 730 P. to OKE ORION wm. lOSO Hemmingwey Rd. eff Ctortuton Rd. Bible Study Sun: 9:45 am; ..Tues. 7:30 Worship 10:45 e.to. 6.00 pm.-^ Worship hour will begin at 10:15 a.m. and conclude at 11:06 a.m. General assembly will be saspaid-ed for this summa period. Losans Ropaief Fast NEW YORK Uk-Loaiw made to refugees resettled in toe United States under Lutheran auspices in the past 13 years are b^ repaid at a "remarkable rate." the National Luthei;gn Council reports. Of S4.4e0.83B loaned to reh«ee families since 1948, they've lepoia fS.-790,680 or 84.3 per cent. the direction of Roland Richter,! will sing "Oh God of Youth.” The Rev. Donald Ortner will be; the speaker. Installation of these officers of Walther League to scheduled for| the latter service: Robert Scott. | president; Sandra Ahlgrim, vice president; Ann Hodges, secretary; Nancy Parsons, treasurer; Terry Braun, sergeat at arms; Sandra Hufton, Lakeland Zone represent-; ative; and Susan Tyrrell, Christian, growto chairman. Members ef toe Walther meets st 9:30 a.m. each week. AO meetings are at 70 Chamberiain St. To Teach in Virginia !lNVITING, fl iUt V' •QAnEND You wM lilr* lit* tO>P«l muik, Ih* libto maisogti, th* warm tollowtiHp af iriandly paopla. iaBto Sunday School 9 45 A.M. Morning Sarvica 11 A.M. A WISE MAN REDEEMS THE TIME" 'Evening Servica 7 P.M. "GOD IS RICH IN MERCY" Youth Fellowship.6.00 P.M. THE ALLIANCE CHURCH a. W. Lanphrr. Aut P Central Methodist RZV MILTON H. BANK. D.D.. UlaUUr tsv. DANIEL J, WALLACX. B.D.. AMaelati MlaltUr REV. JOHN R. HALL, D.O., AuoeUU MlateUr MORNING SERVICES 8:30 A.M. and 10:46 A.M; “HOPE FOR THE BROKEN HEARTED" REV. BANK PRBACBINO (BROADCAST Over \VPON, 11:00 A.M.) FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 AIRPORT ROAD Survlsy School ...............10:00 A.M. Worship Sarvica ..............11:00 A M. Wednesday Prayer Service ...... 7:30 P.M. Evangelistic Service ......... 7 ;30 P.M. Pastor Easton, Preaching Ample Perking — Supervised Nursery "SEARCHING THE SCRIPTURES" with Roostvfit Wtlis, Ministir CHURCH CALENDAR SfrmoB and Worihlp . Evt. Wortbts Serai Bible Btudy Tuetday .. 'QUESTIONS THAT NEVER SHOULD HAVE BEEN ASKED" ---------*ome et th« eueetloiu which ere treeuently eeked and which eoe-■taatly dieturb meo ead which Inevl-Ubly divide beUevere aOsM be eolved by the Bible, the word el Ood. It It hoped that they may drat ' peace. Bph. THE qOBSnON: ■WONT 8PRINKUNO OR ROURINO aaked if men had not become nerverteri of C convenience. In the flrat century>hot even the ■ to eiisfeat to ut that the ApoiUea practiced • witboat retnutlon, why chould Bible WTlevera w h and practice ,n would ni e Tenement acrlptur, Tbli que eonauRanU ____ ____________ .„ •tudlad aU the a^pturea wMch apeak ut bapttam eoald 5!“***.**“* •“? Peur'^ ** ““ bantum ordatneu >y. uia urn in Id which waa tauiht.and practiced by the Apoatlei aa U recorded ..H . 1 , .... —. neceaaary for men to debate loud and Inaplratlon In tbt acrlptura Mt. 2t:l*................... In AetTj M and Rom I;!.. .. .. lone on thla aubject for baptlam I defined b c read: ‘ Baptlam li lettled for lISM ef Inapired ai IS NBW TESTAMENT BAPTISM but atki TBBTAMXNT BAPTISM. Prienda nolhlnt , teptlsm and aprlnklln* and pourlni la noC ***a ** Preaumptuoualy Sa"llliS!;.(V.bC’“l2!!?ve'r" he Inquirer knowa that aprlnkllne aaya ANSWER POR BANISM It ■ubatitute for bapttam but > Teatamant Baptlam. Ood >ia hta rommandmenta and - ___ ■fha Bible doea not for Hew Teatament Baptlam and neither CHURCH OF CHRIST 210 Hughes St , Pontioc, Michigan June 30 a church service will be held at 7 p.m. All children of the VacRtiaa Bible School sriO par- The Rev. Barton M. Uoyd will teach at Virginia Theological Seminary during the coming academic Beaaan. He is a vicar at St. Stephen EJptocopal Chordi. His resignation takes effect Ai«. 31. Pontiac Evangdiftic Center itnl 13 Booth Paddock Sunday School .......10 A M. Morning Worship . . 11 A.M. >Evening Worship . . .7 ;30 R.H. Brv, Albqrt B- Caopar. Paalwr First Congregational Church MiU„E. Huron and Mt. Gsawns ^talcolm K, Burton, Mintotor Morning Worship Sorvict 9.30 AM. Tto* By Tho Wators" The Rst. Mr. Burton, Predching . 10:30 AJN. Church School PILGRIM HOLINESS CHUR(3I BALDWIN AND FAIRMOUNT Sunday School 10 A. M-Prdmotion Day Program WorohipHourll A. M. V. B. S. Opon Houbo 6:30 P.M. V. B. S. Program 7 P. H M. C. Straight. Pastor Emmanuel Baptist Clhurch 645 S. Telegroph Rood SUNDAY SERVICES Rev. Wm. Fitzwoter 11 A.M. and 7:30 P M. 10:00 A.M. SUNDAY SCHheriy Leach, niece of the bride, and the bridegroom’s niece Lee Ann McCormickr in white organdy over blue satin. carried baskets of roee pet- Wayne Ostrand was his brother’s best man. The usher list included Bruce Bentley, Thomas Bolt and Norman Ter-pening, cousin of the bride-groom. MR.t. DAVID I- 08TRAM) Mrs. 'Spurlock chose blue lace over satin, with corsage of pink and white carnations. Yellow carnations accented the medium-browTi sheath dress of imported polished cotton lor the mother of the bridegroom. After a northern Michigan honeymoon, the couple will live on Dizabeth Lake road. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Spurlock of Mt. Vernon. III., and Mrs. Mabel Carnal of Denver, Coio.. grandparents of the couple, attended the wedding. Plans for the Watkins Lake Yachting Assn, annual '*SaUors' Breakfast" Sunday were completed early this week when several members met at the home of Mrs. Donald 0. Newman, left, on Lakewood street. Pictured' are, from left, chairman Mrs, Guy Duffield of Forest drive, Mrs. F. C. Fleck of Florence avenue and Mrs. Arthur Hoover of Joangay boulevard. The breakfast will be at the home of the John Nobles on Forest drive. Mrs. Noble is cochairman. lish ivy comprised the bride’s semicascade bouquet. On the esquire side were best man Richard A. Webster of Kalamazoo, and Ik-. John Shields of Flint, Dr. Robert Fonunesl of Detroit and Dr. Echyard Rennell Jr. ot Cold-water, who ushered. The bride is a I960 graduate of University of Detroit. Her husband is an alumnus of ' University of Michigan where he affiliated with DelU Sigma Delta fraternity. Items From Birmingham Area Peart accessories accented Mrs. Malinowski’s navy blue silk organza dress. Mrs. McDonald chose a jacketed sheath dress ot peacock blue and light blue accessories. Both mothers wore blush pink cym-bidium orrtiids. By RUTH SAUNDERS BIRMINGHAM -> Mr. and Mrs. Marcus E. Cunningham, with their son-in-law and daughter, the G. Bretnell Williamses, look off Friday for Battle Creek where their son Charles Baird Cunningham was married today to Natalie Ensign. She ii the daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. W. Scott Ensign of Battle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham gave the rehersal dinner Friday evening at nearby Gull Harbor Gub. Their other son Marc Jr. was his brother’s best is G. Keenan and Mrs. Paul D. Hammett. Mrs. George A. Beecher and two grandsons Bob and Billy Nancarrow of Saginaw are enjoying 10 days sightseeing in Virgil 'and Washington, D.C. Mr. and Mrs. Art M. BeGole will be hosts at supper Sunday for the Rev. and Mrs. Robert L. DeWltt and the Rev. and Mrs. Williiun C. Norvell of Christ Giurch Cranbrook. Both families will be saying farewell to this pariah, Mr. DeWitt to take up the duties of suffragan bishop of Michigan's Episcopal Diocese and the Rev. Mr. Norvell will move to Wiscon- Retirement to Mean 'I Will' Mrs. Phelan to Wed After Years With County sbi. Altiwugh retirement after 26 years in the same job is often a time for some tears. Couple Receive BAs look forward to marriage and a long vacation and honeyntoon out West. Last week the bride-elect was honored at a luncheon and shower given by Mrs. William E. Blythe and MTS. A. H. Meyer in the latter's home on Oxford drive. Mr. and Mrs. Thoma.s N. Hubbard Jr. (Susan Johnstone) announce the birth of a son. John Armstrong. June 15. Ready for their annual Fourth of July family party are Mr. and Mrs. Newton Skill-man Jr. of Lake Angelus Shores. It will be an all-day affair Suhday, July 3. Children will swim and play games before the elaborate fireworks display that win be seen all around the lake. Mr. and Mrs. George Wellington Smith of Franklin, who are loaning their home and swimming pool today for a clambake, will be on hand early. Mrs. Skillman’s parents. Dr. and Mrs. C. T. Ekelund and her sister Mary Sue will come from Pontiac. Her brother-in-law and aister, the Bruce Smiths, the David Brennans from Birmingham and Mr. and Mrs. Marcus W. Smith will Mrs. Marjorie D. Phdan. of 71 North Telegraph Rd., Waterford Township, faces this rather sad and happy task upon her retirement from Oakland County service. Mrs. Pltelan, a widow, began with the- purchasing department ot the Board of Auditors as a stationery stock clerk in 1934. .She’s held the job ever since. MR. and MRS. D. BR ANT COTJERMAN Graduates of Michigan State University are Mr. and Mrs. D. Brant Cotterman. Mr. CoUerman, son of the Don R. Cotter mans of West Iroquois road and an Alpha Tau Omega Fraterruty member, earned a B.A. Degree in production management. Mrs. Cotterman, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Hoivard J. McKenzie of Cas~ sOpolis and a Chi Omega Sorority member, received her B.A. Degree in education. The couple has returned to MSU where Mr. Cotterman will work toward his master's degree. County workers planned a reception for her. She will be married July 9 to Oxford bu.sinessman Russell Lebtoy. The newlyweds plan a six-week trip through the West. "Marge was well-liked by everyone, ” said John C. Austin, vice chaiiman of the Board of Auditors. To Meet Monday Members of Pontiac Chapter 360, Women of the Moose, will gather for a special enrollment meeting at S p.m. Monday in the Moose Honne. The affair will be Informal. come from Grosse Pointe. Many friends will bring their families for the day. The E. M. Vehmeyers have opened their cottage at Weque-tonsing for the season. Last week several friends went up for a long bridge-playing weekend, including Mrs. Cecil F. Charlton. Mrs. H. H. Hills, Mrs. George A. Bee, Mrs. Lew- Personal News of Interest in Pontiac Ezra “Butch ” Mason III of Keego Harbor left Monday morning by plane lor St. Petersburg, Fla. He will visit his paternal grandmother and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Mort Gilboe, with whom he How Do You Relax? will 1 ; to (NEA) — Slunping isn’t .. taxing —. it’s latiiguing. Sitting (.ill and erect permits you to sit comfortably, longer. in July. Butch is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Mason Jr., of Ken-rick street, and the grandson of the Ezra Masons of Hatchery road, Williams Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander J. Riker of Dorchester road, Birmingham, are announcing the birth of a son, William Matthew, June 14 in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Grandparents are, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Brooks of Akron, Ohio, and Dr. and Mrs. Aaron D. Riker of Orchard Lake. street announce the birth of a son. Richard WllUam. June 20 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. ' Grandmothers are Mrs. Frank Shotwell of Saginaw and Mrs. Joseph Petniska of Oliver in white organza with orchid hand-embroidery on the bodice, carried orchid carnations. Aqua embroidery distinguished identical white dreases for bridesmaids Lillian Angeloaanto. Mary Jane Puertas. Lorraine Tenuta of Drayton Plains, and the bridegroom’s sister Alice, of Berkley. They carried aqua carnations. Mr.' and Mrs. Frank Soda of Elizabeth Lake road hosted their daughter’s wedding breakfast, followed by midafternoon dinner and an evening reception at the lAC Hall on TUden avenue. Receiving with them were Mr. and Bdrs. John K. Davis of Princeton , road, Berkley. James St. Germaine o^f St. Clair Shores was best man. Guests were seated by John Wendland. Joseph A. Novak and Richard Aiello, all of Royal Oak, and Timothy Renard of Berkley. A new home on Shaddick street, Waterfbrd Towi)shtp, awaits the newlyweds who are presently Ix^ymoontng at Niagara Falls and northern Rings Now Preview Wedding Bells The Dallas B. Averys of Mansfield avenue arc returning from a vacation at Gettysburg. Pa., by way of the St. Lawrence Seaway. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Humphreys (Delores Ople) announce the birth of a son, James William, June 10 at St. Joseph Mercy H- DaVis choae a bouffant frock ot coral •ilk organza for the receptioj. Both mothers wore o^ids. MARY J. ZIMMg»MAN Fall vows are planned by .Mary Jean Zimmerman and George ReCKi, son of the Anthony G. Retsels of South Edith street. The bride-elect is the daughter of the Francis E. Zimmermoiw ot Walled. LMte. A September wedding planne^ by Phyllis Ellen Ray- mond. daughter of the George F. Raymonds of East Ypsi-. lanti avenue. She will wed Leo Edward VandenBossche of Stout street, son of Mrs. Robert ,L. Sonnenherg of North Anderson street and Bernard VandenBonche of Mt. Gemens. ANN L. CILUES An early fall wedding is planned by Ann Lodae Gilliea and Stuart C. Rsf. son of ^rs. Frederick C. Rae of Glenvtow drive. Royal Oak. and the late Mr. Rae. The brid»«iect is the dau^ter of Mr. and Mis. lrvii« Donald Gillies of Mo- DONNA MAE BUTTON The engagement of Donna Mae Sutton to Dale Grover . Breeding, sen of Mr. and Mrs. Wylie C. Breeding of Lymue About Baby's Eyes NEW YORK (UPI) _ Eyes of the normal infant should be straight by three months of Lane, Waterford Townriiip. is ’ announced by her parents Mr. and Mrs. DonaU Aldridge Sut-tsa ef Aii^rt road, Waterford ' Any. deviation beyond that age allmoat certain is indicaUve of a muacle imbalance or a lack of viston in one or both eyes, said Dr. Tolios O. Cooton of the Oklahoma Sdmd Carrothers and doubled in volume witldn the last Mvw nmnrrrm t * Newlyweds Start Trip to Island oi Bermuda Honeymoon destination for Donald Paul Fritz , of Grand Rapids and his bride, the former Karen BarliiR of Birmingham, will be the Hotel Bermudlana in Bermuda. They pledged wedding vows to le Rev. Father Lodan 'Hebert „ils morning in Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church, Birmingham. A Papal bleating was extended. White summer flowers and ferns "decked the altar. ’Ike bride la the daughter e( Mrs. Uweenoe A. Kent of Rtaa-ley t James Barling of West Iroqueb tits' Llly-oi-thr-vallcy French .«ilk Akneon lace were set into the hemline of the bridal gown I of imported white silk organza. Tlie 'elongated bodiee extended into a ‘bouffant skirt aad chapel train. The bride held a lacerk the spot with yrw fingers. or a brush, and rins-- it • la dear water. ^ Lubrication With a mild li- ■ qtild detersent or soapless ’ shampoo also is an effective * way of removing stains from ' lipstidt, tracing paper, and India ink, providing the stained -fabric is not harmed by moisture, the specialists said. MRS. DONAU> P. FRITZ Beverty Hailing of arusaa Point Park, fanner college room-i mate of the brMe, and Valerie Students Offer Spring Recital Leaving Sunday for Zonia International's 40th year convention in Toronto are local Zontians from C^t, Mrs. Earl Floyd of Southward street, Mrs. Roy H. Riddle of Edgefield drive and Mrs. Chad Melluiger of Blaine street. The local delegation has been PraU»« Prtn rk«t« asked to bring its club standard to the week long confab where Canada's distinguished Leonard Brockington will speak and the group will be entertained by the C^nadign Players of Stratford in Shakespeare’s "King John." Sally Barling, cousin of the bride, wore a floor-length sky blue ddf-fon dress and carrM a small basket of daisies and gypsophila. Junior and iienior high echool students of Mrs. Lester Snell were presented In a spring recital ’Ikurs-day at First CSturch ot the Naz-arene. Wife Must Worry, Too Financial Ignorance Not Bliss ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: How do you approach the sabject of ’’money” with your husband? We have been married for over a year and I d on' how much makes or even bow much rent we pay, I never see any of the bills. He tells me not to open them. He takes all the bills and pays them. I get an allowance for spending money and it is more than enough, so 1 save a little. ’The other day he asked me to sign a paper stating he was taking out a $1,000 loan. I don’t know what he needs a loan for. We arossuppoied to have money in the bank. When I ask questions about finances he tells me not to worry. But I worry, anyway. Don’t you think a wife should know something about the financial situation in a mar-riagd? IN THE DARK Better Check Causes You Tired All the Time? By J08EPHLNE LOWMAN While individuals are bom with varying amounts of vitality, the chronically tired ~state in which many persons move through life is often the result of pom- health habits and a dismal mental outlook Today I would like to list a few factors which lead to fatigue. Rushing, even for such unrewarding victories as making the next stop light, waste energy. Why lead a life too full of huff and puff* Thia eaanot be entirely controlled hut we can do more about It thaa we do. It.may be wloe to rat dowa on oome of yonr obligation and coramitmento they are enjoyable Perhaps your work is poorly organized. Whatever the reason, II worth while to try to banish hurry from your life. Maladjustments to family or social life take tons of energy. Irritat-circumstanc^ and negative emotions take a terrific toll of your pep. If you cannot change your si^tion, try to adjust tq it and slough off the disappointments and frustrations aa best you can. This 1 a matter ot aelf-survival. Boredom. ’This is one of the most wearying of all factors. Change it gcr interest in some activity, study, person or project. Disagreeable work. If you do Bst like the work you do, change If possible. If you cannot do this try to get a new \1ewpobit so that estlBg. This IS possible. Worry. This will keep you chronically dred. Too little sleep, malnourishment. lack of exercise; any physical ah-'' thing she can get her hands on. natalities such as diseased teeth or tonaUs or sinuses, low blood fallen ardies, eye etrain and many other such conations. DEAR IN; A wife should certainly know what comes In, what goes out, and why and when. Thank your husband for wanting to spafe you from the ’’money worries”, but tell him one way to keep your marriage off the rocks Is not to hide too many things under them. ' flowers { wax and real) and bends wire hangers out of shape. When she’s talking on the phone she writes all over everjdhing and scratches the paint off the wall. She seems to do all this unconsciously — not maliciously. I have watched her in amazement. She wasn’t as destructive at the age of 3 as' she is now-. She is very pretty and popular and makes A’s and B’s at school. I can’t understand this streak in her. Have you heard of cases like this, Abby? JUST WONDERING FMward G. Fritz served his brother as best man. John and Philip Fritz ushered. ’They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Fritz of Grand Rapids. The bride is a gi^uata of the schcnl of education, Unlvereity of Michigan, Where her husband received his degree in architecture. They will live in Easton, Pa. For the reception ip Rotunda Inn, the bride’s mother choee hyacinth blue draped chiffon and flowered hat. Sequlned pink and green print on a white background was Mrs. Fritz’s selectioj. Both won white cymbhllum Orchids. Yes, DEAR WONDERING: frequently. It’s nothing alarmed about. She’ll probably pass through this stage quickly. DEAR ABBY: I have a neighbor who likes to run in and out of my house several times a day. She’s cheerful and chatty and is the big-hearted type. She’s the first one there if I need help with the housework or someone to look after my children for a few hours. Well, I have one thing against her. She will clean out my candy dish, nut or fruit bowl and think nothing of It. Once she had the nerve to tell me what kind of candy she liked and where I could buy It. I hate to hurt her feelings, but how can I tel] her in a nice way that this gets my goat? - CLEANED OUT Guild Section Hears Report on Ingathering DEAR CLEANED: Bowls of nuts, candy and fruits are tokens of hospitality and are meant to be eaten. A good friend is hard to find. Don’t complain — and don't put out any more than you w^t to disappear. dear ABBY: I have been wondering what is wrong with my 16-year-old daughter’s behavior. She messes with every- At the table she pours the salt, pepper and sugar on the table and mixes K aJI together and makes ’’deeigns”. She pinefaes CONFIDENTIAL TO RICKY: Forget her. An unfotgiving sweetheart makes a poor wife. ’’What’s your problem?” Write to Abby in care of this paper. For a personal reply, en-cloae a stamped, aelf-addresaed envelope. Abby's best-selling book, ’’Dear Teen-gger”, is on sale at all bookstores. Queen Mary Section Ne^ework Guild met with Mrs. Charles Shearer at the home of her mother on Mechanic street Thursday. The 14 members attending ducted a business meeting under the direction of Mrs. Walter Galbraith, vice iH'esident. Mrs. Alex Joss, knitting chairman, listed the number of articles furnished by members and Mrs. Charles Garke reported on garments made by the group lor the November Ingathering. Members have voted to discontinue meetings during the summer. Mrs. Henry Milligan iqvitod the group to her home for the first fall meeting Sept. 8. Selections were played by Karen! Marehewltz, Starlette Wright. Terry Tolbert. Linda Allen. Carol Arm-bruster, Eva Lynn Mogos, Sally Wilson, Sandra Lafountain, Dick Williams and Sharlene Henshaw. Other students partldpatinc In the recital wen Bill Hartman, Pamela Morris. Sharel Isanhart, John Tolbert, Lynn Muster. Jean Fluery, Rebecca Rogers, Kenneth Brown and Jeannie Salathiel. Ushers were Paula Stone Raymond Badgaro. Circle Gathers at Member's Home New Look In Fur (NEA) — A new silhouette in fur fashions is the merry-go-round look in stone marten. The pelts are set horizoitally on concealed bands of delicate silk brocade. Mrs. Hill Shanholtz was hoetess to Naomi Circle of First Christian Church Tuesday evening. The 10 members attending heard] devotions from Mrs. Arthur f and participated in a program presented by Mrs. Lowell Mount. Mrs. James Boaz will be hoetess at the next meeting. AMERICA'S MOST COMFORTABLE SHOE • WUto • Gr*«n • Smok* • Gny • Brows Exclusively at DIEM'S Feadoc’s FepaJm Skoe Store 17 R. S«fiBAW StlMt I to Federal's Dept. Store Sorority’s Annual Dance Is Tonight in Rochester Rochester Country Gub will be the setting this evening for the annual summer ball sponsored by the Alpha Alpha Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha Sorority. Mrs. Harry Rhodes has served as chairman of the event. Decorations chairman Mrs. Jack Andress announces that a seaside theme wUl be carried out In dec-oratious. Mrs. Jack Holkr arranged for the orriiestra and publicity has been handled by Mrs. L. L. Schlef-ler. *ncket chairman Mrs. Charles Knowitoa reports that tickets may be purchased at the door. Patrons will include Dr. and Mrs. Alan L. Glne of Birmingham, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel T. Murphy Jr, Mayor and Mrs. Philip E. Row-ston, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Taylor Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Jay Lowe of Detroit and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mallory. Others, announced by patron chairman Mrs. Calvin Rhodes, are Mr. and Mrs. Leland Clemence. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Novotney, and Mrs. F. H. 0. Warner of Drayton Plains, Dr. and Mrs. Roy J Alexander of Dra>’t'jn Plains. Dr. and Mrs. D. B. Varner. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Gillen Jr. __ Birmingham and Mrs. Bertha Lampkin, sponsor of the sorority. Mrs. Don Murphy of Cooley Lake road. Gathering at the~BIoomfield terrace home of Kathryn Sumpter •lU be her escort Jerry Johnson f Birmingham. Mr. aiid Mrs. Harry Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. Gif-Marsh, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Holler, Patty Sumpter and her e» cort Phil LaPine of Royal Oak. On Shawnee lane Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Sdiiefler will entertain Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. FoQis, Blr. and Mrs. Nelson L. Ktahy. Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Boggs, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bateman, Mr. and Mrs. James Vincent and Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Grand of Garkston. Coming from Flint to attend the donee with Mr. and Mra. Fred Mueller of Crane street are Mr. Mueller’s brother and sista^in-law Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mueller. A number of sorority members will entertain at pre-dance parties. HosU include Mr. and Mrs. Robert Basse of UpUJOg drive whose guests will be Mr. and Mrs. George Otto of Oak Park and Mr. and The home of Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Marvin Jones on Mai'k road will be opened to Dr. and Mrs. J. Raymond Kuzara ot Lake Orion, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney A. Lit-tlemann ot Oak Park. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Patty of Milford and Barbara Moring and her escort Robert Holloway of Dearborn. Proceeds from the 8 p.m. to 1:30 •m. dance will b6^fit the sorority's 8t,ate philanthropic proj- ect. _ P.Q.C. Mirror Specials AN IDEAL GIFT FOR JUNE BRIDES Finest Twin Ground Plate Glass Mirrors with Polished Edges 30x40 30x54 36x48 36x60 36x72 $15.95 $22.95 $23.95 $29.95 $37.95 (ttbnt Irockelt SJM to M.MI Pontiac Glass Co. 2,3 West Lawrence St. FE 5-6441 Worry will keep you chronically tired. Dis-agreetd)Te work and lack of exercise also may add to that weary feeling. For Your Wedding Qnality and Quantity • A Wsiding Onert BMk • A Large ’’Jnet MarrieT’ Sign ' All Per fust $39.95 R. Haskill Studio Your Carpets and Rugs Wear Longer-Look Like New With Regular Professional Cleaning Let our experts clean and restore new life and beauty to your carpets, rugs and upholstered furniture. You’ll find your whole home takes on added warmth and we think you’ll be pleasantly surprised at the nominal cost. NEW WAY CARPET AND RUG CLEANERS « WISNBE STEBBT PX S-TIB ••n^ —a. r»*nw w— law NOTICE WE m BEMODEUNG Wb'II ba cloMd from July 4 to ' Re-open for business July 1 Ith. We ore now remodeling our shop for better quality and foster service. Our No. 2 Store will be open for business os usual. FE 2^24 FATHER & SON CLEANERS Office A Flont 941 Josyin No. 2 Store — M-S9 end Crescent Lake Dr. s.;-. Check Value-for a Bewitching Summer! Solon Wove with Style Ciit • UetlM hNr ssNiaf %"9AS ohe iadeM at |ost / The Permeneni you'll kwe a* no other before it!v Save at this special price. 2nd fleer leafy Selee 42 N. Saginaw !St. fhaaa Ffdaral •-1S4} MOM. VitL. Wl$. ■''I, V ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATUEDAY. JUNE 25. 1960. Eleetion Time 1960! Who will be nominated? '\ Who will be elected? The two most important questions for the next four years and perhaps for the next decade or more. It’s a real horse race this year with a new front runner every day. In order to give you the latest information on how your favorite candidate is running we’re going to bring you a special election year poll. Beginning Monday, June 27th The Pontiac Press will bring you SUM of the PEOPLE by John Kraft. This is a scientific ! sampling of public opinion from every part of our country. It will present a report every week in the early days of the campaign and more often as the finish line comes into view. Keep your eye open for SUM of the PEOPLE beginning next Monday. □ Johnson j I Kennedy Be Sure to Read SUM of the PEOPLE s Beginning ]Honday9 June 27 □ Nixon □ Rockefeller □ Stevenson □ Symington □ Favorite Sons □ Dark Horses □ Grass Roots Comer The Pontiac Press -i ' 's--' , V‘-' 2' 1 ■ '■ -■ "i 'u ■ .li' / \f.( '. 'Yi:'V. \ V' r THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 25, 1960 ELEVEN Chryikr Corp. S«l«cted DETROIT (II — The Autooetlea DlvWaa of North Amerlcui Avla-tion, lac., nld today Chiyiter Corp. man Interconttnental ballistic n sile. Autonetics has one of I prime contracto lor the I of a high precision (^ca^ aiming device for the Air Force Mlnute- CLEVilAND (II - The Natkmal Assn, of Plumbing Contractors will in Detroit next year. At closing sessions of the eonventioo Thursday, G. Allen Briggs of Oak Average temperature of earth’s surface is about 80 degr while the average temperature _ the planet Mars is 22 degrees be* Park, hUcb., was elected first vice low sero. presi^t. Come . . . Bring the Family! CARLS KIDDY LAND --------CUP THIS COUPON-------- GOOD FOR ONE FREE RIDE! tBoot •Whip •Train •Plane • Merry-Go-Round FREE R«gistroHon for Children's BICYCLE to Be Given Awoy the 4th of JULY 8 RU« Tlclwb PONY RIDE 25* BIRTHDAY PARTIES Fun for the Family CARL'S KIDDY LAND and GOLF RANGE 2045 Dixie neor cor. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-8095 TONIGHT . end SUNDAY Shew Starts I;i0 fM. - EXCLUSIVE! FIRST SHOWING! - JUMP ONI HANG ON! HERE COMES HANNIBAL and HIS CRAZED ELEPHANT ARMY! and Hoovan Halp Anyone Who Gott in- Hit Way! HANNIBAI NURiSHIS MIGHTI MASrODONS AGAINST. HALFTHE WORIDI theboij I and the taughingDog mnRMHniidKiniflB Whaf* Your Number, Dearie? Some popuUtion experts estimate! Night baseball, socalled. is often Ithe United States will have 200 played in sunUght to Anchorage Imlllion inhabitants by 1970. 'Alaska. No Alphabet on Phone Dials 1 fin^ food for low prices NEW YORK (AP)—nto nation’s numbers, like (FKeldstone) 7-2643, telephone system has started doing away with the alphabet Peculiar as It may seem, the reason is that the telephone people are running out of — all things — phone numbers. Nearly 24 million phones have been added in this country Just since 1950. Each one needed a a word prefix that people could understand. Plaza or Evergreen. but all dlgtts; 347-3643. Win all-dlglt Phone numbers be harder to remember? A A i numerals ca remembered for a short time Just as easily as letter-numeral com-BeU System ‘”That’s how most numbers are used; You look It up in the book and remember it Just long enough {to dial. It takes a while longerj The problem of finding such pre-|to remember the all-number ones, fixes was getting tougher all the permanently, but njost people re- TTw experts nearly went goofy trying to find more words and gave up. To add more digits to present numbers would make them even harder to remember. So It was decided to do away with the pesky letter prefixes and use simply number combinations. Wichita FaUs. Tex., was the first to get the new system. After two years it reportedly is working just fine. ’The change elsewhere will be a long-time process ^ Fried Chicken...........*1.35 French Fries. Cole 8Uw, Bread and Batter Y4 Lb. Hamburger ^ 55f SPAGHETminTH CLARK'S MEAT SAUa SaUd, Bread and Batter $100 TdSBB ABI BVnTDAT rRICBS CLAAK’S BEdTACBANT A DKIVE-IN Montcabn at Baldwin PE 4-7882 time. The experts concluded after a lot of study and testo that there was only one thing they could do and still give folks the service thejT want: Change the system. So eventually, phone numbers won’t be partly letters and pai;tly member only a few, anyway. Now, about the alphabet. ’There are only about 540 coiii-binations of two letters which will form words easily understood and distinguished, and which also will work to telephone switching equip- Can Rid Milk of Strontium-90 Rabbis Endorse Negro Sit-In Demonstrations DETROIT (d( - The Central Con- N.W M.thod the Radioactive '---- -------------- • With Calcium lonS|tions against segregated lunch counters in the South. 1 The rabbis also urged that re-| jligious and racial prejudice be ST. LOUIS IB — Development of left out of coming election cam-i a method for removing radioactive stfontium-90 from milk without altering the milk's nutrivitive value jwas reported Friday. A A Strontium-90 from nuclear test tllout, a bone-seeking substance, is believed by some scientists to cause leukemia and bone cancer If absorbed in sufficient quantiy. The greater 8(. Loots attsens’ paigns. .WWW I ‘iWe view with sympathy ancjl| encouragement the efforts of Negro students and their sympathizers through sit-in strikes and other non-violent methods of demonstration to dramatize' and to obtain relief from present forms of racial discrimination, and to achieve their constitutional right to practical equality of treatment," a conference statement said. oped by St. IxmiU •rlenttsts to research begun nine months ago under sponsorship of the PeVely Dairy Co. A pilot operation has been established at a Pevely .plant for more extensive tests to determine the process most practical for a commercial dairy operation. AAA The method described is by means of an ion exchanger which substitutes calcium for strontium-90 in the milk. Most water softeners operate in a similar way. The strontium-90 content of St. Louis area milk has been generally higher than in milk from other areas in tests conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service. We applaud," it added, action of the dean and those faculty! members of the Divinity School' of Vanderbilt University who re-| signed to protest against the dismissal of a divinity student for engaging in this type of activity.’ White Motor Nogotiatos Oliver Corp. Merger CLEVELAND (F) - White Motor Co. Friday anitounced "important ’in negotiations to acquire the Oliver Corp., farm equipment manufacturer headquartered in Chicago. The 112-year-old Oliver Corp. had sales of 114 million dolian in its fiscal year ended Oct. 31, compared with White Motor’s 333 million dollars of sales. TONITE-Lost Complete Show Starts 10:00 P.M. NOW! tlini MONDAY EAGLE JOHN AGAR JEAN BYRON — 2nd Thrilling Hit • VICTOR MATURE YVONNE DECARI OOIVIIVIEROE THE BIG DRIVE-IN SOUTH END of UNION LAKE RD. DRIVE-IN THEATER Sautli M UnlM Lake *M. Mm. 80s IM S-0G6I CMMrM Undw 12 Fim NOW SHOWING £X€LI/iSfV£—Isf POXTIAC AREA SHOWilAG Robeit Montgomeiy JiiMKCiifiNEr THB "Adniiral Hab^ OiuuntHours DENNIS WEAVER _ Produced and Directed b7 ROBERT MONTGOMERY __ A CASNEy-iinneowin PAooucnms. iHa Mn Screenplay by B^NE lAY TONK GILROY thru UNITEODQARHSTS They Called Him the BULL of the PACIFIC TU< b IM MIt. hi-itMl Let—tki DtfflY luua Slwy — ef the Iriitliif BiUdog iribtM Hell • laisen Tintd the Tide! . . . ALSO FIRST RUN SPECIAL!! BEtTER THAN A RINGSIDE SEAT! BLOW-BY-BLOW FILM OF THE PATTERSON-JOHANSSOII FIGHT TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JUNE 25. 1060 .HELD-OVER!. ITHME ACADEMY AWARD WINNERS. I THE PUUTZER PRIZE AUTHOR , ...AND NOW THE SCREEN IS STRUCK BY IIGHTNINOI imfii HU ff nwinvo Feofures ot 1 ;00 - 3 :l 7 5:20-7:40-9:55 EXTRA! BUGS BUNNY OF RUTH Base in Cuba Russia's Aim? U. S. Information Chief Hints Move to Offset U. S. European Bases WASHINGTON UB - George V. Allen, director of the U.S. Information Agency, declared Friday Russia may be engaged in a tit-for-Ut effort to establish a Communist base at the edge of the United SUtes. Such an objective as a counter to the U.S. bases near Russia, Allen tofd a House foreign affairs subcommittee, could account for international communism’s "new and intensified campaign for ibter-vention” in Latin America. That area at the worid la a Will Report as a Conventioh Chairman State Women to Make History BIG JAMBOREE MON. JUNE 27 8 P.M. ADMISSION T Featuring ERNIE CRAIG - AND THE CUT-A-WAYS - MANY OTHER TOP LOCAL BAIVDS BEER- aS!ol -WINE OLD DUTCH, MILL AvbwN at Ckardi M. UL 2-1020 Aub LANSING UB - One of Michigan’s most striking and succestful women politicians will hold the eye of the nation briefly on the second day of the Democratic national convention. ★ ★ ★ At the same time, delegates at Los Angeles and televiewert everywhere will see histoiy nude when the spotlights focus on Mrs. Mar-garent Price of Ann Arbor, Michigan’s national committeewoman. at aay aattonal political coavea- aaM, sad "The Caban revoiatkm, tones, has opened the door to la- of this hemtephere." He testified that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, who plans to visit Cuba, has given fresh evidence of Communist designs,< Latin America. In Cuba, he said, the Communist bloc contemplates , though somewhat veiled,’ support of the Castro regime — possibly hoping to provoke a situation in which the United States I be accused of military or economic intervention. A ★ ' A The U.S. govemment, he added, hSpes "The Cuban people, with their tradltioh of freedom, eventually will come to insist on a change of course for their goventment in order to obtain the DenAocracy and freedom they always have sought.' Rent One First Any family contemplating the purchase of a bouaeboat. but un-oertain as to whether It would like that kind of life, can find out some- tMng about it before dcdng any buyli«. Many companlea now rent l)0ur»»"v»tB, with the rental latbr applied against the purdiaae price if the family decides to buy. Tall, dark-haired and regally handsome, she will be a familiar figure to veteran delegates. She has toiled for the cause of Democratic liberalism since 1962 as national committeewoman. and wife of an auto company e cutive now itatiooed in Brazil, ' worked her way up in poUtlca, ( starting as a precinct delegate — the lowlest elective pbrition. Twice the ran for state auditor general, narrowiy missing election ' in IMS when shf^ became the first , woman in Mlchi^ politics to poll ' over 1,000,000 votes. In her busy career, Mrs. Price ' has been a national board member j of the YWCA, an executive board ' member of the National Mldcen- | tury Board of the YWCA, served in 1950 and 1960 on the Whtta House i Conference on Children and Youth, and was a delegate to the White i House Conference on Education in 1955. In the convention eight years ago, she took the floor to second the nomination of Gov. G. Mennen ; WlUiains for president. National conunitteeman Thomas H. E. Quimby said her duke to head the committee reflected an outstanding record on the national committee and the party’s SAC Bomber Launches Covey of 3 Quails OMAHA - A Strategic Air Command bomber Friday launched three McDonnell GAM 72 Quail decoy missiles into free flight over the Eglin Gulf test range in Florida, SAC headquarters announced. This is the first time a SAC crew has launched more than one Quail at the same time. I The unmanned decoy missile is 'designed for release in coveys in I order to confuse the enemy. Each demy carries electronic equipment wHch produces a bHp on mdnr screens similar j to that of a bomber, confronttaig enemy with the porblem of U. S. Signs Contract for Missile Range CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) -The Air Force announced Friday the signing of an $89,162,000 contract with Pan American Worid Airways for operation of the Atlantic Missile Range during fiscal 1961. The contract, representing a cost increase of $2,932,000 over last year’s range contract, reflects an intensified missile activity and the coming man-in-space age. Maj. Gen. Leighton I. Davis, chief of the Air Force MissUe Test Command here, said new facilities and more manpower would be needed oh the far-flung missile range because of the new launching plans. They include the Minuteman Intercontinental ballistic missile, the Centaur "moon ship” and the Mercury manned space craft programs. MRS. MARGARET PRICE sciousness of woman’s rightful role in politics. Democrats 'ooast they Installed women In tl ot 101 nntlonni ventlon delegnte bertha, whereas the state’s 46-votn Repnblloaa nntionnl conventton delegation In-cludeo only three women. Mrs. Price, mother df two sons To Begin Addition to Shoppers' Mall in Kalamazoo KALAMAZOO UB - ConstrucUonl will begin Tuesday on an addition!, to the downtown pedestrian shop-j pers mall here, the first permanent I downtown mall in the nation. ★ ★ ★ Another block is to be added to' two built last year. The entire project is in line with a 20-year| plan to revitalize the central bus-1 iness district. Each decoy flies in a (different direction at the same speed as the bomber, more than ^ nsiles an haur., When testing is complete, each B52G will carry several decoys jin addition to two GAM 77 Hound .Dog air-to-surface missiles. The 10-foot" long decoys carry their small fins folded around the body of the missile until launched so they do not take up space needed I for other weapons. TONIGHT! m UNIT I# PROGRAM SUNDAY-MON.-TUES. ALL COLOR PROGRAM! THE BELOVED BTORY-TELLER’S BEST-LOVED TALE. FOR ALL AQES OF THE HEART! Kennett A. Hull Named to MESC Appeal Post LANSING (iB - Gov. Williami Friday announced the appoint-of Kennett A. Hull of Detroit to the appeal board of the Michigan Employment Security Commission. He was named to a temf expiring March 31, 1966 succeeding Hubert H. Emerick. The post, requiring Senate confinnation. pays $40 a day up to a maximum cf $10,000 a year. Hull formerly was president of the Detroit Typyaphical Union. — CfBB Etily — Let tht KiddiM Eijvy 0« f Uygitud FREE BOAT RIDES! MR SPE^ACIE OF THE Jet ROE! HOWARD HUGHES’ JET PILOT iOHN WAYNE lANET LEIGH U. S. AIR FORCE HURON JUTUIIKinTER-SiUllIMKE-a;? »^ll£SWilTlilEJillW wKih.«ip™du«ib, NORMAN KRASNAd* owdi w GEORGE SIDNEY- m misark-george sner frgoucivw■ a counbia nciwE THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 25. 1960 THIRTEEN Know the Wordl®* straight Monkey WrenchsucceSSy India Hen 723 Tongues but Some English Is Understood by Alf WASHINGTON - In ImUa. then are 133 wayi to nik the time d dey hot onlr one way to reqoeit a monkey wrench. * * The 403,000,000 people In the complex nation speak 179 languages and 544 dialects, the Na- patois. teroM have crept late meet ef the native tengMs; a menkey wreaefe Is a “aasahiiy wieneh" freas Asaam te Bonabay. Ekiglish 1s one of 15 major languages recognized tor official use. It is toe lingua franca of. Indian officials and intellectuals, whoae ipeech often has the stately flavor of Macaulay and other IStlrcen-tuiy stylists. Members of the Indian Parliament usually debate In Eni^ish, the language most have in common. However, some legislators speak only their provincial tongues, and one representative 1 aboriginal tribe could understand no one but himself. The Indian Constitution eijab-llshes Hindi, an Indo-Aryan tongue, as the national language. What Is ralM “HIndr today aetuaUy Is Hinduttani, a dialect veoleni Hindi iwed by the man m toe street In nmeh ef ledto. Hindi is spoken by some 140,-000.000 persons, thus is the third most popular language in the world after Chinese and English. Hindi is related to Urdu, the official language of Pakistan. True Hindi developed from Sanskrit, an ancient classical language. Today, according to the last census of India, only 555 people speak Sanskrit, lliere is, however, a movepaent to purify popular. Hindi by throwing out bor-rowMi words and replacing them with Sanskrit. ^100,000 Jewel Theft NEW YORK WV-Faraed Oar-tler’i Jewelry store on Flllh Avenue was robbed early today of Jewdti valaed at »M,0S0. A thief snuMbed hi a window and sped eft In a car. CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (API -Tlie sixth straight sucoeiuful SJOaUmila fli^ ef a TItrar ndi-sile has cleared the way tor tost-|nf sn advanced moOhio) abstained fTomi^'"'"*'*''’®- ks a leading' Senate defender of the administration's recent actions in foreign affairs. Friday he made public a letter from Secretary of Stote (toristian A. Herter, which Wiley had solicited, in which Herter strongly rejected attacks on the administration's handling of Presi^t Elsenhower's canceled trip to Japan. Particularly." he said, "it i not fall within the jurisdiction of memben of the Foreign Rejatiom Committee." 4 "We racognlae, of course, that this ia a political year,” he added. Pontiac Theaters EAGLE Sat., Mon.: "Timbuktu." Victor Mature, Yvonne DeCario: "Invisible Invaders." John Agar, John TRADE FAIR Tues.. Fri.: "Gene Krupa f Sen. Homer E Capehart (R-Ind) '■ opposed issuing of any report at all. Wiley's U2 defense was sched-Jed as a Senate speech today, but Friday night the Senate adjourned until Monday. The prepared speech had been distributed earlier. Community Theaters Much of Wiley's fire appeared directed at a Senate speech Thursday by Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Montl, a comittee member and assistant Senate majority leader. Mansfield charged that titning of the ill-fated flight was left in the hands of obscure bureaucraU. Wiley questioned whether congressmen should "arrogate to themselves the ‘pedestal-type’ position of attempting to dictate internal policy-for the administration.” ■World In His Arms. " Gregory Peck, Ann Blyth. HURON Thurs.: "Who Was That Lady?” Dean Martin, Tony Curtis, Janet Leigh. OAKLAND "The Fugutive Kind." Marlon Brando, Joanne Woodward. "The Story of Ruth." Stuart Whitman, Peggy Wood, Cinemascope, color. STRAND Sat.: ‘"nie Qrcus of Horrors.’ color; "A Date With Death," Gei^ aid Mohr. Liz Renay. Harry Lauter. 88^ Thomas was arraigned yesterday in the Oakland County prosecutor's office. Royal Oak, and released mi a $250 bond. He will appear for a hearing next Tueaday. NASHVILLE. Tcnn. (AP) -The National Assn, for the Advancement of Colored People plans to sponsor legislation to reduce the congressional representation of states denying anyone the right to vote. udlth STtlrn: RacZtt ' Itfel." Tbret Stoofct. Sun . W«d.; "Thr Snow Queen Thute.. Set "Wonderfuf CoiiMi tobert Mltcliuin. JulU Loodm: ^ >1 the Corel Bee," Cliff Roberteon, Oie ^ Set . Sun : "The Snow Qu-cn," ■WUd end the IiiBOoent, ' Audte ’’Vrl. Set : "Hone from the I Robert MiUhum. Eleenor Perker. i Eecge Tuee : The >li Plehennen" Merthe Hyer. John Sexoa. color; "Wei- ^ ley of the Rodwoode.” Lynn Rtmey. Clnemefcopt.___ „ . _ Thure: "The Unforttyen." Unreiler. Audrey Hepburn. < "The 4D Man." color. Milford Set : "Welle Me When lt « Orer." Ernie Kovnee. Merge Moore. cMor. “ - Teoe.: "Around tbo World I TONYCURTIS DEAN MARTIN JANET LEIGH l i lee MM$ WMIMOSf - JOHN MdNfK ■ SAdSASA MCHOIS Op«n 10:49 NOW! WISHER STADIUM FONTIAC FRI. JULY 1st EKinilZMT-nCKD 'TIUT-Sni" DOmi FEATUU SHOW! 4 AMAZHIQ FEATS OF UFE AND DEATH UHDEB THE MB TOP ... BlfiOER THAN ANTHIN6 YOU’VE EVER SEEN SPECTACULAR TOWERING TERROR! On* man's lust . . . mad* m*n Ido boosts . . . strippod wom*c> of th*ir souls! For *v*r strangor thrills ... h* tum*d to* gr*ot*st show on *arth into a .. . WHIPLASH OF TERROR! 25-MEAT STARS-25 URAND ou OPRY . AND Rod FoUy Show On Sfogt suSdod In Parson STONEWALL JACKSON ALEC HOUSTON of Iho CSS-TV I KEN MARVIN DANNY DILL I RED MURPHY CEOftCC I HAMILTON, IV AK-TV Notmrk K •OIBY SMITH RooOTdIng siee DON SLAYMAN "WorM'e ChO^B riddto ATyor" "RED" SOVINE "Why Baby Why” ANTON DIFFRING'ERIKA REMBERG* With th« Ths OrfoiMi LONZO MARCUS TIRItY GEORGE MORGAN "CmDt Ussss" -'Sio'folTy* JUDIUE VJUk. addid attraction A eiOAIfTW BIREWOKKS MmI BtssUfs! Mils talht World ond 200 WORLD FAMOUS CIRCUS ACTS SIE! SEIt Stti m TEMPLE •! VEHUS SAVi-^VI—SAVE THE WIEEL or DEATM ADAM AMD EVE Md HOU Bid MORE! PLUS! AMAZING HEW SCIENCE PACT HIT You can't s*« it . . . you can tool ths Totrorl . . - A DAre : CEMUNIWimilEIIAINAinUnU STARTS SUNDAY Evtry Dromotic Moment Filmed Entirely Aboord The Worlds Most Glomorous Luxury Liner nl MINUTES 01 INTEHSt SUSriNSI! 31 THE LAST VOYAGE Id MtSMATioeei ncfeit ALL THE LOVE, LAUGHS AND MURDEROUS FUN OF THE BROADWAY SMASK HIT V FORD/REVnOLOS WAVONHOSUenON. MzEBO SEINER MhJOHN McOVtlt I rw.ee.db, WARNER BROS. etMOM wnr DANTON • KAREN STEEIX • ELAINE STEWART • wntud by JOSEPH LANDON POKITIAC'S _ HOURS — run I lAW O D*Hy—9:30 H 9:00 HOUSE OF tJTTm S«..en-DISCOUNTS -932 WEST HURON OPPOSITE HURON THEATER ■Y.' V FOURTfeEN THE RONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 23, 1960 Thomas Clears 7-Feet-2; Jones Beats Calhoun High Jump Star Keeps Breaking World Records Hayes Takes 110-Meter Hurdles in :13.6 to Nip Rival BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP)-John Thomas, a young man with spring in his toes and summer o» his mind, today has a new claim to lay before the high tribunal ot high Jumping. The long, lean teen-ager from Boston University cleared 7 feet 2 inches at the National AAU Track and Field Championships Friday night, becoming the first jumper in history to scale that height outdoors. But the summer is just beginning for the handsome. 19-year-old Negro, who will enter what he calls "the big one" next week and an even bigger one at the Rome Olympics in August. Bucs Get Help From Dodgers in NL Flag Race By The Associated Press The Pittsburgh Pirates are 3V4 games ahead again in the National League race, but it took one whale of a pitching parlay to do it. Next week’s show is the U. S. Olympic tryout final •at Palo Alto, and Thomas’ chances of qualifying are just about unqualified. TTie AAU meet, a generaUy unspectacular affair except lor the towering leap by ’Thomas, winds up this evening. Sprinter Ray _________ _ .............. _ Norton, of Santa Gara, who \wn at Bakers- the 100-meter final, is performing Visible near bis peafc and could steal LONG RUN — A1 Lawrence (429) of the University of Hous-s the 10.000 meter run of behind him is teammate John much of the sl^ with a victory Uwrence’s time was 30 tonight in the 200. minutes, 12.6 seconds. Pirates Boost Lead to 3’/! cinnati 5-3, with Willie Mays driv-lwith three runs in the first, one Ed Roebuck, a sore armed right-hander last year, beat Joey Jay in a duel of relievers by allowing just lour hits over nine shutout frames as the Los Angeles Dodgers defeated second-place Milwaukee 5-3 in 10 innings Friday nij^t. That ended the Braves' w’inning streak games. It was only the second -time Roebuck has gone riine innings since coming to the majors with the Dodgers in 1985. And Pirate southpaw Wilmer (Vinegar Bend) Mizell cam* through with his first complete game in 14 starts this season-only his second in 30 tries over more than a year—for a 4-1 victory over Chicago’s last-place Cubs. Third-place San Francisco, alt-T losing five in a row, beat Qn- ing in three runs and hitting two 'lomers. Philadelphia’s fired-up F*hils won six in a row for the first time in two seasons with a 4-3 decision over the St. Louis Cardinals. Roebuck, 28, who tried his hand at first base in the minors while nursing an ailing elbow last season, hadn’t gone more than five innings in any of his 22 previous appearances, all in relief, this season. He’s made just one start in the majors, and his only other nine-inning job also was in relief-when he beat the C^ibs 4-3 on Aug. 28, 1951. on rookie Frank Howard’s seventh homer, while winning two in row since Manager Walt Alston’s tongue-lashing. Hank Aaron belted his 17th homer, with one in the first for the Braves, who had the bases loaded when Roebuck got Ed Mathews on a doubleplay ball in the second. Roebuck (5-1) gave up nothing but singles, walked Just three and struck out seven alter relieving Sandy Koufax when the Braves tied it 3-aU in the second. The Dodgers, blanked for 8 2-3 innings by Jay (1-2), finally broke through when Wally Moon tripled and Don Demeter hit a sacrifice fly in a twd-run 10th. The other run unearned. The Dodgers, sixth-place world winner. He gave up a two-run homer by Gus Bell in the first Inning, then blanked the Reds until the ninth, when he needed relief help from Johnny Antonelli. Mizell (4-4) singled home a pair of runs as the Pirates made it three out of four. He walked two. struck out lour and allowed seven hits, losing his shutout on Jim Hegan’s triple and Jerry Kindall’s single in the filth. It was the Cubs’ eighth straight loss, matching the longest slump of the year in the NL, and gave Mizell a 3-1 record since Joining the Pirates hi a trade with the Cards a month Rookie Ken Walters drove two runs for the Phils, breaking a 3-3 tie with a fifth inning single off losing reliever Ernie Broglio (5-3). Robin Roberts (4-7) gave up seven hits, one Ken Boyer’ 18th homer, but won his third in by blanking the Cards on two hits after the second inning. Consecutive home runs by Mays and Willie Kirkland did it for the Giants, cracking a 2-2 tie in the sixth against loser Jay Hook (6-7), Mays singled home a run and scored in the first when he paired with Kirkland on a double steal. champions, chased Carl Willey Mike McCormick (9-3) was the Thomas took three shots at 7-2. He appeared to make it on the second, but the bar came down moments after he did. Hayes Jones a( PontUo led MIcMgaa entries In tbs meet by wtaiidng tbs llO-meter bundles Jnst a frsctlen of a second abend of Lee Oribonn. Jones finished in :13.6. (It is interesting to note that German world record holder Martin Lauri* took part in a meet in Mu Germany, yesterday and his fime in the ll(>-meter hurdles was :lil. His world record is 13.2.) David Meyers of Central Michigan was eliminated in the 400-meter dash when he finished fifth in the second heat, and Ken Bit lock, also of Central Wchigan, : a qualifier in the 800-raeter run. Thomas, who has gone 7-214 in-daors, said the last jump took s6 rttuch out of him that he didn’t feel like trying for anything above 7-2. / high he figures he can go in the next few years, Thomas responded ehisively: ’’.1 can keep going up until I miss." John’s jump was a full inch better than the recognized world record, set by Russia’s Yuri Stepanov in 1957, and a quarter of an inch better than Thomas’ pending outdoor record. His indoor mark cannot be recognized. Outside of Thomas, the only man to come really dose to a world record was hammer tl er Hal Connolly. Cfonnolly had a sore back—so sore he pulled out before the event concluded — but be heaved the ball and chain 224 feet 4H inches—just 11V4 inches short of his own world record. By The Associated Press ! started lor the Yankees and gave It begins to look like those Bal-iway in a tying, live-run fifth, tlmore Orioles, a bunch of Baby Johnny James (4-0) won it in re-Birds and some old pros, are go-, lief-with the help of a running, ing to hang in there in the Amer- ieaping riab Jby Roger Maris that Norton won the 100-meter daish without much trouble in :10.5. tour tenths of a second off thej^ world record. Tonight he figures to be the class of a 200-meter field that includes world record-holder Dave Sime. Others in the field are Bobby Poynter, Dave Styron, and WUlie WUliams. Parry O'Brien defeated rival shot putters Bill Nieder and Dave Davis with a throw 04-62 feet 6)4 Inches. But. as O’Brien put it, the winning heave was "nothing to rave about." Pane's recognized world record is 634 and Nieder has a pending record of 657. Nieder putted 62-6 with a sore leg heavily bandaged. Glenn Davis, who hold.s the world 400-meter hurdles record of ,•'49.2, won the event in :50.1. The chief disappointment Bobby Morrow’s failure to qualify’ in the 100. Morrow, who won gold medals in both the 100 and 200 In the 19i)6 Olympics, has Chance to qualify. In the 200 tonight. P^lladrlpiiM Phn««r Club. • 8tiKltr«. -SIS ( Iterhara, __ nnocn. M-*7 BIT .3 AMEBICAX LEAGUE M UTt 475 U 9 AB a ■ HEBBIPM. PlaiOT. dak Larkcr. L A. May>. 8.P. Minoao. Chi. 244 44 . Bm. 7* U 25 1 232 32 72 Kuann. Cla. Skowraa. N.T Loptt. HT. Curry. I»ul». 134 White. M. L. M 44 4 M . O-rSaf. Wa*. StI 21 72 Aaprntt, Cla. lU 15 Maotla. M.T. 192 P'nanfct. I Klua-akt. O 22 42 4 17 .177 22 52 2 * Xn N. Sharry. L A. 14 Crpada. 8.P 242 ' 247 2T 27 2 12 .171 152 tl 41 1 DO. Cla. ______iDf. Ball. Howard. N.T. 127 22 71 2 17 . Lo«an. Mi WIIU. L A. I It 35 55 2 EB-b-w. Wiah. NbuB. Boa. tearteto. Chl. Kaoafh, da. Carr. H.Y. •ntfn'b'y. EC. 132 21 14 4 U 12 12 1 U :S 22 Jll iii 21 27 I 19 : 15 21 0 10 . Moryn. 81.L. Poet. cm. Schmidt. 8.P. Cmy. K.C. Sclvere. Chl. Bmmt. K C. 112 15 r 2 BoUey. WMh. Qrten. Jkia Tuttle. K.C. McD’f’d. N.T. 107 17 40 9 ! f I! § Staphani. Ball. 122 14 Cbli^^DiW^.^ *1-^ ”a San Pnmcl«o (O Dail M) at cmcUmatl (McLUh 2-4I. 1 12 pm. Loa Angalc. (Dravlala 4-2> a keo (Buhl 7-3I. 1:22 p.m. 8UNDAT-S GA2IE8 «. Loula at_Wtladtl^la^X.,^12:«^P.m. Snyder, C^TltO Rlch'ui K.C: 124 IS 14 2 Del. in n N.T. 105 17 47 bicaco at Pltuburih. t >Z P an PrancU(» at CmcInnaU. 1: 1:12 pn PbUllm. Cle. 145 15 22 t 12 : 12 12 5 r .215 Running alao lowered hia ! Spoits calendar hitting support he uaually gets ^ from his mates. “TyJS?*’ Snead has 71-68—139 and Van Donck 6571—139. Then comes Palmer with 69-71t-140 and Gary Play-er of South Africa with 65-75-140. The team championship and the individual title is decided on medal scores after 72 boles. The team total is made up of the combined scores of the two players on each team. The tournament ends Sunday. Betsy Rawls Sets Fast Pace in, Western Open But there was no complaining about the Tiger hitting last night. The Tiger batsmen ripped into Don Lee for five singles in the first. Yost started it off with a single to center and Chico Fernandez and Charley Maxwell followed suit to produce one run. Fernandez scored on Al Kaline’s infield out aqd Maxwell romped home on Rocky Colavito’s single. E)etroit combed three Washii«-ton hurlers for 11 hits, including three doubles, but left 15 men stranded on the basepaths. The fourth Tiger run came in the seventh when Frank Bolling Idoubled and scored ~ single. llDtcl AT NORTH8IDE—Orttfi OriU RaMI BttUdtrt (IntorMtlanAl). 1:11 p.to.; UuOM NO. Ill Tt Sdo-BoI (AmeriMn . • p.m.; aNtll Realty (rt. LMtcPon’i Uateb Play ChampU rkM tk 1 0 1 0 Toa. Sk , . k^r n’k-T 1 2 0 0 P nandet m 2 I It 4 2 12 MaxweU K 4 1 4 2 22 2 221 I 2 22 2 CoItTtto rf 2 2 2 Mltaf 2 2 2 12 Berberwt CHICACK) (AP)-Befsy Rawls, the defending champion and the year’s leading money-winner, again was in the driver’s seat ^ the 31$t .Women’s Western Open headed into its third round toda.v. The last to finish over Beverly Country Gub'a wind-swept acres Friday, Miss Rawls matched par 73 to weave a halfway total of 149 and a three-stroke lead. Next at 152 was Mary Lena ■Fhuik, another of the many rank----------- teg pros seeking the t^ Plum oflwSsJSS:%t. tt'____________________ _____ $1.3U te the 17.300 iW- CaUyttp :k • 3 222 0 1222 ' 2 2222 Jit , 222 1 2 TJ4Mt k-strucl kut tor TtimytoUi ItotJpnl tut 2m- ErtuA. to Grounded tut tor Bt-rtob to 2 play rvewf, f mttcb p I and (I Mtehl- ______ ____ ______ InrlUttoBkl :h Pity Cbt^lonthlp - RU RON—UutrWr-nnAlt Dtcb pity to Rtd Run InrtUttontl etty Stdkkll AT aEA03En»-r-"---------- Butttntr t CTMtntrt (InltnittloniU >, 2:15 .... CIO Lockl 224 rt. Elkt I Aratrlcnnl. 7 pm.: Arro B**lt: ____ ____ - tmpKmthlp. AT RED KUN—Seminntl r toDtclr piM In - •It BdU ^ 0)41 1 CLASS A—Kniihu ol Oohiatout cu. WItntr Pttld, 2:22 p.to. CLAB8 B—ontri OilU -tt. Pan-------- ' Inm luUtuU. taycta Park. 1:12 .; 'IWIbott Lamktr »t. BUfakaih -------- ------ p.to.: 'fall llwahanU AT BBAUDBTfB-Mooto Me. IE Panuae PoUea lAmiicao), T p.aj Data-I BMfburtwr tra. Sna-M (AaMtf Baattnar'i Ctoanm (lattniauoiian. 1 p.to.: 222 Lounta »i. OrlfTt OrlU (mtatloiiali. 2i}2 pa. Bears Sign 2 Backs CHICAGO (f>-Rlchle PeUbon and GiarUe Sumner, a pair of defensive backs for the OiicRgo Bears, have signed contracts for the I960 135 U 27 2 15 . 7 32 2 11 . Grand tU>n boman—Mtoota. Chlctfo: Berberat, Detroit; Panrton and Elaut. Baltimore: Battey and Oai-(taier. Wtttainc-lax: Wtrtt, Orten and Etpultkl. Botloo: Power ad ——- -..... I Htid. Clereland: WUllarat. AMEBICAN LEAGUE field. Cfertltoil AE B B BBBBIPrt. 2(122 225 530 15 242 Z I 542 U 241 .251 2151 »a 544 22 255 .2 NATIONAL LEAGUE * L^i*’^' nation %L LEAGUE BE BBI Pel. 1 15 .& 14 52 lU 2 23 .344 Pitt. 132 IS 43 Chl 222 43 71 15 ^2 8P. 232 31 71 1 I. Phllt. 191 22 52 25 5 12 .221 22 I 42 .222 Demctar, L A. 34 Jt2 27 .m U 22 2 IS . in 11 27 3 U . 142 11 IT 2 11 S24 124 15 11 2 10 J Boyer, 2I.L. _ Anderioo. Cla. 102 Bouchee, Cbl. “ 24 54 2 12 J54 233 43 52 U S3 2 22 Z51 N«U. L A. keCoTcy. 8P. D'Or'co. PhllA. Dark. MS. Tbomat, Chl. Crandall, MU. 15 22 2 2 .152. 112 22 42 2 14 lU UiS Coker, Phtta. 125 2 25 5 11 X 2 .122 HcMllUui. cm. 122 21 122 21 12 2 12 .a II .172 Grand lUm :iomer«—Banki. Chlcacai H iberry. Moon. Roteboro and HowanL Lot AniJIet; Coktr. Philadelphia: Skinner. Stuart and Clr.nente. PUUburtbt Pinion, Bailer J-id Dotterer. CtootnnaU and McCorey. San Pransiaca. ana Mich. NATIONAL LEAGUE Friend. Pitt. Jones. 8.P. Klliw-th. CU. G'Den. S-lT MeDanM. SI.L. I Jl WmiaiM, L J }* Short. PhUa. * » Jacktoo. St.1 Sanford. 8.P. EUton. at. Green. Mt. Purkay, Ptiarro. MU Bum. mu. - _ Burttotto. MU. „. 5§^sato?TA. ,s s j{,5 J WUlay. MB. ~ W!~- IP B SB so W i BEA. iS iS S it S i 59 IM tl M a ! 7 t9 n 17 2i 31 1 2 ta s n S f 519 a a 15 s h 19 n H M 72 2 1 iS ,2 2 29 4 2 2.72 U9 Itt 41 73 • • t.|i M M IIhS7 $ I a 122 22 27 2 7 2.3 » 9 S 5 2* 59 iiieSini s s ? « 41 j9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JUNE 25, 1960 FIFTEEN MikeAndonian, Iceberg Survive at Loch Alpine Bv BIM. CORWEI.I. ANN, ARBOR - Mike Andonian and Boy Iceberg, former state.public links champions and ex-U. of D. teammates, were stilt alive today _ the Michigan Publinx Golf Association's Invitational Match Play Championship headed into the 3rd and 4th rounds of match play at Loch Alpine Golf Qub. Hunt, who won the state crown last year at Rochester, was ousted in the 2nd round by A1 Whited of Wayne, a 28-year-old Taylor Center school principal competing in hir 1st tournament. Piausa ’EM UP! - Morton W. (Cappy) Smith,the big Virginian rated favorite for top individual honors at the Detroit Horse Show, ^ PntiM PrcM PhM* looks lik^ he's literally lifting Sure Thing over the rails. Smith won the event, the green knock-down-and-out, with a clean ride. Youngsters in Spotlight as DHS Nears Windup Policemen CanH Stop Sno-Bol 9 in City Softball By H. GUY MOATS A packed program of widely varied character today marks the ‘‘semifinal” stage of the colorful and exciting Detroit Horse Show at Bloomfield Open Hunt Club, where yesterday the younger riders enjoyed another big day ai^ the favored hunters and jumpers progressed towards the top cham-IHonships. Yesterday’s a o 11 e n Imiuded Morton W. (Cappy) Smith’s “double” whea he added some place in the junior “knock-down’ feature, where a field of 28 youngsters battled for honors. There was S-way jumpoff for first, then a 3-way tie, and another tie, broken by toss of a coin. The six all had clear rides, three repeated, and it all wound up with Marilyn Kole the winner on Playboy. another exhIMtor. The Virgiaiaa had a dear ride on Sure Thing to win the green kaock-down-aad-out event, and rode Mrs. d. T. Malone’s Mr. Babbit for a 4th plaee la the working hunter (handy) claso. He was one of the day's bnaiest riders, also taking his Paa^^ over the special, course in the handy hunter com-petttton in perfect style. Among other highlights, Birmingham's Alison Cram added more luster to her week’s efforts in junior competition. ‘The l3-year-old, with her Sonnino, was top rider in three events induding the Southern Michigan Junior PHA trophy dast for handy working hunters. ’This event proved the undoing of at least a half dozen young riders and their mounts, when an "epidemic” of spills occurred, most on the same jump in mid-course. No damage was done to either riders or horses. There was double, Patrick Butler’s Buie-bird (Mrs. George W. Jayne up) and Mrs. Butler’s Wicklow (Buth Engel up) were a close 2nd and 1st hi the night’s windup, the open Jumper (AH8A) event. ‘The show reaches its climax Sunday, when final standings will be announced for championships, with top interest on the big jumper-hunter titles, for which Duke of Paeonian and Cappy Smith are the favorites. Sunday’s show opens at 11 a.m. The competition, including westerns and other classes, continues this afternoon ar.d tonight. raiDATg BI8IILT8 WORK. HUHTER HACU lJuMors)— urt Huff tPlxl* UlleTl; Sceist Ibrmuls Bobby Umbsrt); Blttenvcst (loDaM « . mortsD—Primary I uf the show, this week, was that involving Gabor Foitenyi of Grand Baplds, Gabor went down when Artist slipped into the first of the (wo “pineapple” obstaelM, and had to be given assistance hi rislag. Nel- ’The winners yesterday also included Mrs. E. E. Fisher s Primary in the Shuell Memorial lor Michigan bred hunters; another victory for John S. Pettibone’s Duke of Paeonian in the middle and heavyweight himter test, with (Bloomfield Hills) Battle Fashion, owned by Mrs. Graham J. Graham Bob Egan of Birmingham had the neat m the Shuell trophy winner. His 8-yeaTKtld daughter won the lead-line event Day’s toughest competition took . S. S. PUher): ____ _ J. psrt*n: ______ t.sun Lim (( yri., under)—LUbeth tan (Mr. and Mr*. Robert IssoK Paul ADVAnl^Pim IQOITATIOH-Haather ampbell; Merle Hammlll WOMC. HUHTIR APPTS (JVPlSri--are Thee WeU (Roc Waieerman); Plenlc Karen MykrantK; Blttei1«*ct (Bonnie [edfetl: Beachcomber (Julie Smith) ORaBN KN(Xnc-DOWN-OOT — Sure Thin* (Cappy Smith (; Atom Power (Car-lene BlounU; Bic Lift (Chuck Grant): *^I}lD"HiSGlYWT*mJN*^ of Paeonian (John Pettlbone); Battle Pa»h-J. Orahami; Dratnet HANDY WORK HONTIRB (Junlorel— _onnlno (AU«on Cram I; Bky Cryetal (Phil Po»(; Walt awl See (Jean Pratt); Bf--’-- ’ lie Smith( AND OUT (PBK—air Pa** (Howard MlUerl: Delayed (Sue WaUaoo); ----«»t (T. Bchnlte); Top Secret (Ptwd >ert IK: Wicklow (Patrick Sutter. iS**mmTKRS^«amaUur rideri)— light (Kryetn Oteney); Blue Myeterloue (Chrtety KNOCK-DOWN-OUT (Junior! ------- Idarilyn Kolec Scamp (Rotlle Maran-erg I: Flanigan (Rick Cmrai; "— 'The Pontiac Pidice team couMn'l slow down the Sno-Bol steamroUer Friday night in City League aoft-bail action at Beaudette Park. The American League leaders defeated the Police, 3-2, behind the three-hit pitching of Harlan (Fat) Keith. Keith had a one-hit shutout until the bottom of the 7th Inning when the Polloe milled fnrioanly with two hits and two runs before “Fnt” silenk«d the uprising. Huron Bowl c(dlected 10 safe blows, three by Dick Macintosh, for a 10-7 victory over Herk’i Auto Parts at Northslde Park. Don (^uackenbush socked three hits in a losing cause. "C" Battery defeated Rogera’ Electric. 9-2, on Chet Kubiak’s fOur-hitter. George Byrd clouted a lead-off homer in the 4th Ibr the losers. In the other scheduled game. Blue Star Drive-In gained a forfeit triumph over Universal Oil. 'Two nip-and-tuck one-run cisions in the American division highlighted Waterford League soft-ball activity yesterday at Drayton Plains. John Stndf’s two-nm triple was the key blow In n three-nm Sth inning ns gpeaoer Floor Covering rallied to defeat Bod’s Sunoco, S-t. Arlo Flesb^r wan the winning burier and Wayne Jaaks the loser. A single by Jim Patterson, _ Bssed ball and Struble’s single in the 6th broke a 4-4 tie and gave Drayton Drug a M victory over Lakeland Pharmacy. Bill (kxilet won'on the mound and Arky James lost. City Junior Baseball League results Friday included: Class D — Don Nichdie 4, Pontiac Central 3: West Bloomfield 3 , Lake Orion 9. Class E — Pontiac Police 13, Lake Orion 3; Auburn Heighto Boys Club S, Great Lakes Mutual Giants 1; J ft R Auto Stores 13. Big Shamrocks 0. Gary Kraft hurled a no-hitter for J ft R. Two Pontiac Golfers Left in Publinx Ineligible' State King Eliminated by Taylor SchoohPrincipal Teeing Off. By BOL OOBNWELL What They Shot at Loch Alpine ruBi, awi. OOT 4 vhuMd, Wsyn*. t. Abb Arbor, I sp: *; dsf. Okk Ste 5^ Dr. Fritz Adams of Orchard Lake Country Club and Harold (Skin) Keith of Drayton Plains gave par severe bating this week In record-smashing style at two different Oakland County links. % Adams, Orchard Lake’s club champion two years ago L C. tMmsr. Asa Aibsr. ________________________AM.' OM»Ib Cook*. Ink(t*r. 1 up; M Brsa*. tBk*Wr. d*(. Dick Ciwaa. FWaoute. S-Z; Vtttko PRESS BOX The Pontiac YWCA Is pUnping _ “Dulfen’ GoU League” storting Thursday July 7tb at 9:30 «-m. at the aty course. AH women golfers are invited to Join. Membership is 31.S0. Richard Williams of Birmingham received freshman numerals for Juhoi*.' ci*i^,' d*i. Tom sunn*. St {track at Princeton University the Clslr Shwpk 1*1; ptPB^T MelDtoisy. I r* Detroit, dot. Lorrjr CunBlnsbuiii, rant, past Spring. Jim Britifl. Aan Arbor. d*t. Sam LIm*. . . . . . . Hkiel Park. 1 up: Jo* Wllaoo. Detroit. and runnerup last year, set a new course records for -"‘/“pSu "r ‘' amateurs at Forest Lake Country Club as he repeated as champ In the Oakland County Medical Association tournament. The Birmingham physician fired a torrid 35-32—67, four imder par, in the doc-^ tors’ tourney. He carded They were the only PontUo gollers to sarilve Friday’s mntcheo on a cold and windy June day which also marked the ellmlnatioii ol Flint's .Gene Hunt, the defending chnmpton. nine straight pars on the front side for a 35 at the turn, then blrdled the 13th, 14th, 16th and 18th holes on the way home to go with five more pars for a 32 and his 67. While Adams was making his 18-hole tour, Keith made mincemeat of par in a nine-hold fling at Garkston Golf Club. Five other Pontiac pl¥ fell the wayside yesteroay. ’The local casualties included Wally Smith, Dick Ayllng, Charlie Barker, Jerry Kruskie and Chuck Canterbury. Andonian. oeeklng his 4th title In a five-year stretch, sdvnnced with a 4-t triumph over Ja& Al-dred of Fendnle and a *-l conquest of ITenton’s Jim Cook. Iceberg. MPGA president who won the Utle in 1960. had to work harder to keep going. He defeated Detroit’s Bill Schwope in the morning, 1 up, 19 boles, then sidelined Frank Kowal Jr. of Jackson in the afternoon, also 1 up. Ron Hannon of Detroit personal ly disposed of two Pontiac h 4 FOR THE ► A WOS I for the 4 Organ ^ Will Be Given Away Free. Ko Obligofion. A Get Your Tickets Free on Sales Lot i MAKE A DAY » OF IT ! A Masiw $ Electric OkoN 3 ORGANS wHI be giveN Free % with eay erder #1 h e lO-Ft. wide ^ 'rrailw. O F r S R k See the Latest In Mitdern Living 2 Story-^50* Long. 10' Wide Tiailei... 2 Batineoni-l UpiUiw and 1 DewniUiit 53' Ung. 10' Wide ZinuMi Tiailer with 14' Wide Living Boom... The Very Lateit 54' Ung VagaUnd - Front and Middle Kitchen Wodeli w Diiplay New Bar — Kitchen Modeli hy Ceneial on Display NewGentram Clan Models A Cenplete Lint of Travel Trailen 15' te 24' Regnlan and SeU- SALES 148iB S. Upeer Rd. 1 Mile South of Loke Orion V ■5 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JUNE 23. 1960 difltmK Mndi of mbieralsl ■re oommonly called varieties of MONDAY SPECIAL ★ One Day Only! ★ Speciol Group Of Light- Weight Jackets Regular S59S to SJ09S Nylons-'Cottois CRMGE IT TheHUD and take 6 Months To Poy CLAMS AND SARDINES FIGHT—Principals in the "war” over whether to feature the clam or sardine on a U. S. postage stamp honoring the seafood industry are in si jovial spirit during a slurmish at the Capitol Friday. Sens. Henry M. Jackson, left, and Warren G. Magnuson, both AF rh»M» Washington Democrats, trot out a bag of West Coast clams to convince the leader of the sardine forces. Sen. Margaret. Chase Smith (R-Mc), author of the bill championing the sardine on the stamp. It looks like a cold, wet war. Car Production Up 1.8 Per Cent Week's Falcon Output Sets Record; Trucks Made at Steady Rote DETROIT Ml —Ward’s Automotive Reports said Friday domestic auto makers increased their production 1.8 per cent this week. Production of 140,154 autos compared with 137,641 last week. Id the same week last year 127,217 cars were assembled. Ford scheduled a record IX,-(4S Falcon aasembllea this week. The previous record was IIJM April 11 1*. The agency said General Motm^ accounted for 42.6 per cent of this week's U.S. auto production. Ford 29.7 and Chrysler • 17.S. American Motors and Studebaker - Packard added 8.3 and 1.8 per cent, respectively. ★ * ■ Ward’s said the 1960 model output reached 5,238,237, compared to only 54168,000 for the entire 1959 model run. Truck output held steady, totaling 25,818 units against 25,720 last week. Vendors and Thieves Big Gainers in Tokyo State Will Vote on Promises Lindemer Says Paoplt Will Go for Party That h ^“Ccm SolvW AAonay Ills GAYLORD Ml-Michigan’ tion battles will focus on taxes and jobless workers, says State Republican Chairman Lawrence B. Lin-demer. The victory will go to the party that can convince voters it will do the best job of improving the employment picture and solving state tax and money ills, he said. “There has been a Denwcrmtic admlnistratioa in Michigan for U long years,” he told a group yesterday at a meetiug of the Northern Michigan _ Republican Assn. “The heritage'is a sorry one.” More than 200.000 Michigan citizens are unemployed and the federal government has classified nine population centers pressed areas, he said. The state’s general fund treasury will be approximately 70 million dollars In the red when the fiscal year closes June 30, Linde- ler ^d. State and local governmente, he added, both are looking tax revenue. State Employe Retiring | After 41 Years on Job _j LANSING (D-aareiK» S. McKenzie, 66, the highway department’s oldAt senior male employe will retire June 30 after more than 41 years of service. McKenzie, a squad leader in road design division, and his wife Lois plan to live on their farm near Perry. U. of M. Chinese Student, Who Hid, Doing Well ANN ARBOR Ili-Chheng Guan Lim, who hid out In’ four years, because ci poor grades at the Uni-veri^ of Michigan, can laqe Ms) -family and Mends with pride now.r The university says most of bis grades for the spring semester are| Bs-above averalte. Chheag hid eat for fear years hi the attle of aa Aua Arbor church beounoe he was ashamed to face his family a^^ fiteads after making poor grades ia Sweden is almost 1.000 miles ‘The use of farm fertilizers is eating though seldom wider than mated to result in a crop Inetpasa 3QQ „yes [that runs to 25 or more per cent He I switched to liberal arts and the 29-year-old student from Singapore is doing much better. He now Jives quietly near the campus. During his four ^ars of hiding, he talked with no one and lived on scraps from^ dturch kitdten. There’s oM thing more difficult than putting a child through school and that's putdng school a child ... The book that wlU really teU ydu j you'll spend your vaesNfon is your check bomt —Eari WMaon. FRIENDS TO FIND Friendship is ddica^ yet elastic and strong as steel. It is Uke a magrot to a compass, swings always to one point, ofi flnlty to the beart of » a^tota^ saiKilot baseball ganw. in a Bwrvtoe uiuo. Wherever men meet witooat stratified lto>s of ». t. vooaniss society. My wife found the most lovable friend of her We at • ' friend of hers met a lady to a SalvaMn Army salesroom where both fwre bmAim an^out-of-print book. Our public schools. CoUeges are excellent places for^lwe and 'glrtato make lasting friends. During the iMt war Block Parties were organised; 1 met the most-deUghtful person I ever hope to meet, and he lived two doors from me; we have been fast friends ever store. Mutual respect for divergent onions are affinities wWch come to the man^th a slk hat for the man with a slouch one, with an open-necked ootton shirt and tlte .tog one made of sheerest silk. Friei^lp human attribute and Wtod^U we know, the needle of our affection swings to the a. a. uru heart and a friend is born. VOORHEES^IPLE FUNERAL HOME M» Nerth Perry street Pheae FI X-B78 YAN KE E OPEN TONIGHT Til 9 N SUNDAY TOKYO (AP) - Politics aside, who has gained most from, the month-long series of left-wto| demonstrations against the U.S. Japan security treaty and the government of Premier Nobusuke Kishi? Tbe armies of ice cream, soft drink and hot dog vendors who peddled their wares to the demonstrators have. So have scores of newsboys who circulated among the crowds around the Diet selling the Com- J munist party organ Akahata. But chiefly the capital’s thieves. « reckless drivers and juvenile de- y linquents have, because so many 1^ police were switched from crime detection and traffic control to mob control. Newspapers have reported sharp reduction since June in arrests of thieves and traffic vio- e iators. Juvenile cases handled p also dropped 30 per cent, a paper $: said. the demonstrators, mainly students, and 180 police vehicles were damaged. Police say it owes $85,000 for damaged trucks rented to transport police forces. Motor Weight Taxes Up $2 Million to Date RiA 18-20 N. SAGINAW Downtown Pontioc Fri., >il 9 P.M. Rida Hm Bv« Dawnrewn Nation's Polio Cases Jump in Past Week WASHINGTON (AP)-A sharp increase in the number of polio leases was reported last week, the Public Health Service said today, a ★ * Thirty-seven cases, 30 of them!__________ paralytic, were report«l for week ended June 18. Nineteen!' leases, 16 of them paralytic, werel ^J * reported during the week endedt ijjune 11. ' rnte 30 pgralytlc caaci." I ever, are considerably below the 61 for the comparaUe Week 1959 but above the same week ;i958. -..............., I * ★ ♦ I Twelve of the thirteen cages re-| -ported in California were para-k lytic. Seven paralytic and onejf non-paralytic occuri^ in Los An-|-geles County. ' j ■ j A 500-pound bale of cotton fiber ; yields 140 pounds of vegetable oils. I Did You Know? The Oakland County Probote Court employs 20 secretaries and clerks and has a budget for 1960 of $137,090.50. I pledge economy wherever possible. Verne C. Hampton non-partisan CANDIDATi FOR SiCOND Probate Judge PrimoriM Teetdef, Aufutt 2nd We constantly receive, calls from housewives explaining that some magazine salesman or woman was at their door explaining some kind of a contest or they give a very strong 'sympathy appeal urging the housewife to purchase books or magazines. Your Business Ethics Board frowns on such tactics. Buy the riSigazines for what they are worth and give charity to some local legitimate agency. BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Waldron Hotel Bldg. Phone FE 5-6143 _-V - >' ■ $f S. S/LGHAIf ST. Next to Wrigf^rn h' for LIVING THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1900 PONTIAC, MICIIIOAN, SEVENTEEN Your Neighbor’s House Kingsburys Build Tri-Level Brick at Mohawk Lake By JANET ODKLL Pontlae Prm Homo Edit the owners never leel the job is really done. Thdrs was the eleventh house In Lake Angelus Golf View Estates. Now,, a year and a half later, there are 25 homes. We've had our eye on the Robert Kingsbury home for most of that time, waiting for the family to get everything "just right.” Draperies are floor length — beige and aqya striped. But for all 'practical purposes the Kingsbury house is done. In it live two adults, one three-year-oid boy named Dale and a very old French poodle called Cindy. A storage wall with planter top shuts off the vestibule from the living room. This unit takes care of card tables and chairs. Birch poles to match the cabinet ej^end to the ceiling. Of course, houses, like people, don't remain static; they are always in a state of change so that The KlBgsbnriys lived at Watkins Lake before Ray Rapaport built them this brick tri-level home on North Lake Drive. Their preaent lot Is Itt h^t (»RNU'E IJGHTS Living room walls are pale blue. The carpeting is beige and aqua textured wool. All cornice boaids have lights behind them. The Kofa which laces the vestibule is cinnamon brown. A pair of Danish modern chairs is wainut with bril-iianl orange upholster}'. All tables are walnut. The stack of leather TV cushions under the front picture window contains one beige, one aqua and one orange cushion. storage. This frees the rest of the room for Dale's play equipment. His bedspread Is brown. Curtains and the bubble lamp over the bed are white. Framed travel posters over the sofa provide interesting areas of cojQr, . Carrying out the beige, aqua and ^nge color scheme are the lamps and the modem clock on the one brick wall in The, guest room is all ready for visiting grandparents. A door has been cut through to the bathroom. Tan curtains, with a design that's mostly orange and green hang at the windows. The carpeting is beige shag-type. Furniture is blonde. this r The master bedroom has off-white walls. On the floor there is an aqua and beige tweed rug. Curtains are while. These lamps — there are two of them — have white ceramic bases with graduated squares of rust, brown and aqua. 'Die clock is walnut with two dancing figurines and the numerals in orange and blue. A pole lamp near the planter has brass lights and a round Formica topped shelf at chair level. Between the beds is a most interesting night table The top is a series of squares of inlaki wood, bach large square just a bit smaller than the one outside it. A Chinese lamp stands on this antique table. kitchen the floor Is covered In The headboards of the twin beds are also unusual. A walnut filigree is mounted on a white background supported by brass poles. SkirU and quilted spreads are, apricot color. Icum. White draperies hang a; the window wail. A trio of CMie fixtures directs light down cn the table. One is aqua one black, the third while. Ail have glass liottoms ami On the opposite wall there are twin chests with twin mirrors over them. STRIKING DESIGN - The headboards shown in this picture have an ui^ual design. Thin walnut filigree is mounted on a white background. Brass poles support the outer edges. The table between the beds is an a beautifully inlaid top. Spreads Walls and curtains are white. antique with are apricot. bni!t» The furniture is oiled walnut. The round table has a white Formica top. Chairs have black leather scats and in.serLs of cane in the backs. In the kitchen there are clear birch ciip!hpacd.s.^?lj*4J|q are aqua. Counter fops and splash backs ' arc beige. ROUND TABLE - The dining room table is a round one, topped with white Formica. Chairs and table frame are oiled walnut with black leather seats and cane backs. The ceramic bottles on the table am white and turquoise. A lighter aqua is seen in one of the cone-shaped light fixtures above the table. White draperies can be drawn across the window wall that opens onto the rear patio. Down on IIm- lowest level I the family room, f^allo ar rhilippine iiialiogany except foi An Urieatal nig covers most of the floor. The waU opposite the windows Is taken up with, an S-foot gray sofa. Near these windows Is an aqua and beige vibrator e h ■ I r. Tables arid A sewing center under the windows is a feature of the utility room. With chests to store equipment,. her sewing machine and an ironing Iward, Mrs. Kingsbury is well equipped to do the sewing she ae enjoys. BITTERFLV PAPER the bathroom Ls beige. White sequin spattered plastic lops the vanity. Butterfly paper is used for panels in the window shutters. There are tropical fish on the glass door of the shower. Dale's room has a cork floor. Three walls are beige with the fourth covered in Wells Fargo paper. Pictures of guns, saddles and ‘‘Man Wanted” posters on this paper feed the Imagination of a cowboy-orienlcd youngster. In the closet t s is built-in PLEASING fXILDRS — If this were a color picture, you would see the bright orange of the upholstery on the walnut Danish modern chairs. You would note with pleasure how aqua is coipbined with beige in the textured carpeting and in the floor-length dra- peries. You would approve of the brightly colomd travel posters over the cinnamon brown .sofa. The Mme colors are used throughout the house Young Dale and old Ondy provide the living element in the scene. THE ETERNAL MENDING—Mrs. Kingsbury is a seamstress, but the mending seemed uppermost in her mind when she was asked to pose. Behind her Is the divider storage wall of birefa that keeps card tables and chairs handy, but out Dl sight. Plants climb the birch poles. Direct light comes from the window at the left and from the brass pole lighto. ON NORTH LAKE DRIVE—The Robert Kingsburys were fortunate to haye been abietq^ save such a magnificent shade tree in their Iroot yard. Their Iri-levd home. bdilt by Itey Rapaport, combines fwiek and siding. The attached double garage elfcetiveky seU tiw house apart from the one next door. * Mi EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 25, 19g0 ^ifco^iitimOiwra J^in N^ Planners Offered "fork dty was opened April 7,1880. , Free Booklet on Floors If you're planning to build i Inew home or modemiie an lone, you may be faced soon wtdi the lob of selecting the flooring. [You'll find much helpful informa-|tion on grades, sizes and stjiet lof oak flooring, along with tips on [floor care, in a 32-page pocket size I booklet available to readers without charge. For your free copy write the Oak Flooring Information Service, 75 E. Wacker Drive, [Chicago 1. 111. Just ask for “Oak Floors lor Your Home.” PATIOS F«ctoiy-l»-7ra-Prieef STONt FOR 10x12 PATIO FOR ONLY •42 rsred to Tour 1 1 Cslen and SIk Roger A. Aothier PATIO fSTONE CO. 10570 Hifliland Read I min wm •( PmlUc Alrf*r< IM 3.4825 Switzerland has more than 1,500 lakes - 1.300 are in the Alps. 125 in the lowlands and 30 in tlw Jura Mountains. SELECT YOUR HOME IN RAINBOW UKKE Waterford's Finest Area for HomesUes CUSTOM BUILT CALIFORNIA. TRADITIONAL and TRI-LEVEL HOMES Priced from $20,400 nu Lars* Lot F. W. HELTMAN BUILDER OR 3-9411 WIUIAMI tAXi RSI THOMAS SliBDmsiON — Ward Ross U the builder of this three-bedroom home at 592 Sharons in Thomas subdivision. The exterior is a combination stone and marble, pressed into tarick form. Features of the home include a full basement, attached garage. IH baths and gas heat. The house sells tor $19,800 including the lot. A. R. Novotney is handiing saies. Go out M-5B between North Cass Lake road and Pontiac Lake road to Sharons. The model is open daily. L«t Rug Colors Set Pace The colors of an Oriental rug [can serve as an original color scheme for a room. Deep blues and rich maroons combined with ivories, yellows and tans can give you ideas tor the color ywj want to paint the walls as well as for the accessories. The pastel Oriental with its pale greens, pinks and blues can be a pattern for a room where a more delicate quality is desired. Consider Sound Proofing Home for Quiet Living A normal human skull is composed of 22 bones. small house feel big. and any house feel more solid. Also, most acoustical materials have a high thermal property, which cuts heating bills. A SWIMMING PARTY SWIMlilEEN EAST LANSING - With the help of science, the modem home canU « «-im iTOi MA 4-tAJ French Provincial Adds Beauty to Comfort By DAVID L. BOWKN Uke B good French wine, this iKNue has body, Kra<^ and beauty. It is a sparkling example ot the FYench Prpvind^ style, combining time-honored elegance with the re-quireoaents of modem American life. The French Provincial spirit is projected immediately by the wide, inviting front terrace stretching b fore the living room windows and contained ^between the two wings it the House. This spirit Is caaght ap aad promoted by the Mgli idtcked roof, the casement windows, the detail In the shatters, the pic- ANlTROL heating i«icooling IAS FQRNACE ien( OTTO JL TRZOS CO. 3101 ORCHARD LAKE RD. FI 2-0271 lives, and Son„ Call MA 6-<247l Initallad for as as $7.91 Par month. Call for 15(P Moves In! 3 B«droom-Full Bosement Aluminum Siding City Woter ond Sewer MODEL OPEN SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 12:00 NOON TIL 8 P.M. Model of 4t0Sf.« 3 Blocks Eost of Joslyn WILSON REALTY EM 3-6556 PLANNING TO BUILD? MODERNIZE? ... REPAIB? Call BOFS BUILDING SERVICE, Inc. 'TAoto la ae asbaltfala for osporioaco" 207 W. MenPcolm St. FE 4-9544 And one of the most wwlcome elements of the completion plan worked out by Architect Samuel Paul for B-U in the House of the IWeek series is that this restful I haven can be built in three stages. The basic house contains seven rooms, three of them bedrooms, in l.MO sq. ft. of space. TTiere are two areas for expansion that can be developed after the basic house is in use; an expansion attic yields two additional bedrooms and B-18 Statistics This French Provincial desigh offers three bedrobms, Lrshaped living and dining Toomd, kitchen, dinette and foyer in 1,M0 sq. ft. of first floor area. Overall dimensioas' are 70’ width by 42' depth. a first floor recreation room can be finished behind the garage. The exterior specified by Architect Paul is brick all around. It ran be kept In ita natural color or painted white. Both are rharacteristlc of the F rench Provincial. Kxlerlor dinienaions are W In Hldlb by 4r In depth. After crossing the impressive front terrace, a visitor is welcomed into this home in a large foyer — dominated by a decoraOve winding stairway to the upstairs. To the left is the gracious living room, with a simple but imposing fireplace. The dining room around the corner of the “L" features a huge bow window gracefully extending 'from wall to wall. To the right of the foyer are three good-sized bedrooms, each with double exposure. The master bedroom has two closets, one of them a targe walk-in. It also boasts a private bath with stall shower and a vanltory. The bedroom wiag can be completely closed off by closing a door at the foyer, thereby guaranteeing privacy In " IN THE GRAND TRADITION — There,are seven rooms, including three bedrooms, in the basic first floor plan of this charming French Provincial design. 'Two bedrooms and a bath can be added after original construction upstairs. This artist’s view shows the optional first floor recreation room, located directly behind garage, in its finished state. FIRST FLOOR PLAM FLOOR PLAN — Large entrance foyer provides efficient link for all major areas of the The open kitchen and dinette combination — a lew steps down the center hail from the foyer — can be equipped with all the up-to-|date appliances: dishwasher, counter-top range, built-in oven, large 13 cubic foot refrigerator and freezer. There is an abundance of cabinets as well as wall I cabinets. The optional ' recreation room behind the garage is secluded and yet easily accessible from the kitchen or dining room. If can be first as an open porch and then later encla»^. In the “before” stage, the din log room wall would be an exterior wall. The recreation room Study Plan Order Coupon Send to The Pontiac Press, PmUac. Mich. Enclosed is 60 cents in coin. Please aend me a copy of the study plan of The House of The Week Design B-18. (PlesM Print) the dining room floor to add the lavatory. The optional second floor can easily contain two bedrooms and bath, plus a wealth of storage. SEE US for Your GAS PERMIT! We Con Get It for You JUST RECEIVED A CHLOM SHPIEIT! Come in Now ond Select Your HootingjUnit Sore! WHOLESALFTO ALL! NO DOWN PAYMENT FIRST PAYMENT OCTOBER, 1960 Both GAS and OIL r-GAS-n 1—OIL—1 105.0N nv its,0N n« $208 »252 NO MONEY NO MONEY DOWN DOWN MOR-SUN Is ■aarantsed by Coed =5^ 47 Yesrs Old ----w THESE FAMOUS BBJUIDS----- GENERAL ELECTRIC, COLEMAN, ARMSTRONG, MOR-SUN, MONOGRAM GOODWILL Automatic HeatiRg V FE 8-0484 3401 WoU Nwron TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JUNE 25, 1960 HOME m OHcl brfy AmtfkiB Imib I • MiflliHal Mtttof, ] M-WNM (4Hl BMII) IVt-ct Intsrior •M iIm mott Mtftcthf in ■iMinNnU. CMt nm $79,500. Takn I«m. EinMt carBnHnt and bn nnr* I.5OM. AAost New U. S. Homes Fit I Into Three Price Ranges The vast majority ot homes bnilt this year will fall into three price ranees, report housing authorities. These ranges ate: Under $12,000, $12,500 ■ $16,000, $16,500 ■ $20,000. ♦ e e Only 18 per cent of U. S. homes aeJl for shove $20,000 and these generally feature extras including two-car garages, famUy recreation rooms, premium building materials such as fire-safe asphalt shingles, and fully-equipped kitchens. More than 500 newspapers print 11 or part ci the d^ stock ansactions of the New York Stock Exchange. FDR ANY MODERNIZATION WORK, CALL • RmiMd«ling FE 5-8405 • MIhT* AMBASSADOR INSULATION CO. 2110 Dhin Hwy. at Talatrsph BLOOMFIELD umber company Back Into Can One way of keeping a paint can neat and easy to done peoperiy after the Job is done is to punch several boles in the groove Intoj wiiidi the lid fits. This permits! ss paint to .drip back into the BASEMENT MODEL IN DECKER HEIGHTS $12,990 KAHNER CONST. CO. MODB, raOMS su 4-tasi THE CARPET QUEEN Down MOVB VM M MOR76ACI COSTS ONLY • 3 BIf Bodnom * HmI • 210 S«. rt Qimi Kitchn ONN DAILY 10 •• DAY BUILDING CO. |fe 4.7744 .^*^ranm » 3-78S3 | OPEN SUNDAY 10 A. M. - 3 P. M. V.GROOVE BUlHOGRinr 4.0 $4.00 SHUT nr CASH •■a (^asT* I Heavy Ga«f# DOWNSPOUTS Raead Squara Shapa Shapa $135 $153 Va-lnch HJLRDBORRD . 4x8' ||84 I SHEET ONLY I J por tlwot CABH »h4 CAEBT K TB0U6HS 8' Lm. .. ,97c ^ 10'L«ne$1.33 CASH ■aS CABBT NEW FAMILY ROOM. — Now that the Lester Amharts of 853 Glendale have seven grandchfldren, they need more room for entertaining. So they had Stacy Building Company add this 16x24-foot family room to their house. Walls are light turquoise. Floor Ule is white and gold. Except for the pumpkin Naugahyde chair PaaUaa Pra« Pfcaia in which Mrs. Amhart is sitting, all the furniture is gold and white. Absorbed in the book their grandmother is showing them are three-year-old cousins. Scott snd Cynthis Hankins. This remodeling included also a stone-front garage. You Need More Than Just Lamps The three largest moUoD picture, industries in the wortd today are in | the United States. Japan and 1 ‘ SWP EXTEBIOB PAINT We hove the all-new SWP A 100 Latex Exterior House Palntl The newest, finest Exterior House Paint on the market todayl Come In now! _ KEM.GLO - KEM-T6NE - BEAUTY-LOK CORWIN LUMBER I COAL CO. iwACoi. remw CHICAGO (in>I)-Mrs. Christina Affeld Bloom, a home furnishings coordinator, is waging a one-woman crusade against the two or three lamps that do the whole lisJiting job in many living rooms. “They’re fine for small areas, reading or close work,” she contends. "But the most skillfully decorated room shrinks in size, becomes indistinct and uninteresting without more adequate lighting.” Mrs. Bloom (of Carson, Pirie, Scott and Co.l proposes that more adequate lighting begin with diffused overall lighting, produced by wall fixtures, sunken spotlights in the ceiling, cornice or valance lighting. “Keep it subdued snd directed toward the ceUing, floor or walls," she said. To light the ceiligg in a room with a dark carpet, Mrs. Bloom 3 snd 4 Bodreom — 2 and 3 Oaths • Lincoln Croat • in.taa u ata.Ha Paal Lc Bast, BanOcr ant Dcrslaasr Onan Datlr IS-a ranllae Trail anO Weick BS. suggests wall fixtures that shoot light upward or torchieres. To light pale carpet on the floor, she suggests downward - directed wall fixtures or sunken spotlighU in the ceiling. Wall lighting is frequently done with cornice or yplance lights, buL Mrs. Bloom is more partial to fL" hires known as "wall washers. They’re attached to the walls, close to the ceiling, to bathe walls in even light, and tend to make a room look bigger. Choose Ismpn tor reading and other done work more for height than looks, Mrs. Btoom advises. “DIrecI light shines to the reader's •miess the shade of s lamp Is slightly bdow eye level.” A lamp considerably back of the reader can be higher. Mrs. Bloom’s pet peeve is the use of crystal chandeliers as lamps. She considers the crystal chandelier k magnificent piece of jewelry for the home, which > too bright to look at when it’s also a lamp. Crystal should be illuminated only by a separate spotlight or by tiny I spotlights concealed within the I chandelier, she said. I She also chides homemakers for foregoing the good illumination of fluorescent tubes on the grounds that they do tricks with colors and complextons. That's not the case with a new "home line” of flour-escent tubes, made by all manufacturers. They produce light of the same colw as incandescent ulbs. To silhouette the riispe of handsome or unusual furniture or accessories, Mrs. Bloom advises lighting the wall behind them. But to give a sculptural, three-dimensional effect to the same pieces, flood them with a strong, directional light. The shadow cast on the wall by such a directional light can be decorative in itself. Visit Beautifui Ciarkston Meadows A list glued to the inside of your tool box cover will tell you at a glance what it contains and will save rummaging lor a tool that isn’t there. Keep the list up to date, and be sure to replace the tools, as listed. PEDY-BILT Nmms CurutMd WoritMifhip uB llRtDriali GARAGES “ ** CUSTOM BUILT Sptciol Pricts Now in Efftct! • Block • Brick • Fromo 1 V^-CAR GARAGE •A SIDING — CEMENT FLOOR $54900 2-CAR GARAGE Compltte $69500 CALL OR 3-5619 COMPLETE MODERNIZATION PROGRAM • BMrMitoARMn • • PvrtkM • BmIIas—Biktos FREE ESTIMATES PHA TERMS CEMENT WORK Pedy-Bilt Garage Co. •UILDERS OF FINE GARAGES 7722 Auitoro, Wotorford IF NO ANSWER CALL FE 5-5475 Featuring Suburbon Living • With Downtown Conveniences Sidewolks to Villoge Shopping • Churches • Schools Poved Streets • Vi Acre Lots • Stream Frontoge Gos Boseboord Heot Just 3 minutes from interchange of new Chrysler Expresswoy. Colonial Ranch Also Tri-Leyel and Bi-Lerel Models ‘19,900 ‘22,900 INCLUDING LOT Featuring up to 1800 square feet of living areo, 2 fireplaces, gos hot water baseboard heat. JOHN W. STOPPER! - Builder Sales by ciarkston Real Estate Inc. 5904 S: Main St. — Clorktlpn MA 5-5821 Model Phone AAA 5-1721 sement *14650 This All Aluminum Viking Home For Only ^12s200 BUY NOW ... MOVE IN lefere School Starts Veto moi^^ payments from $85 induiles laesJliiKe. (RR^I i interest. Phone ~ ■1220 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE 25^1960 TWENTY-ONE IVhai Southern Pine tiding it treated with a Pentachlorophenol Bolution, a hniah ia obtained which will provide numy yean of service without attei&on. It weathen to a rustic driftwood effect which it especially desirable in tonw I of architecture. UVI A RIW IP at^QQabdiess Everything for the "Do-lt-Yourseir Man Including HARDWARE and tOOLS Everything Needed to Build or Remodel laclsdiag HELP WITH PLANS COMPLETE KITCHEN PLANNING Everything You Need for Inside or Outside Painting iBcIsdiag WAU - CEILING isd FLOOR TILE Competitive Prices end Dependoble Service From Your Deportment Store of Building Moteriols « lumber CO. Top Quality Materials For Customer Satisfaction 151 Ookland Av«. FE 4-1594 21-INCH LAWN FIGURES COLORFUL CUT-OUTS busy at garden chores lend interest to a flower border. The pair shown here are so life-like that they have taken prizes at hobby shows. Patterns 326 for the Girl and 327 for the Boy give actual-size cutting and painting guides. They are 35 cents each. They also are in the Lawn and Garden figure Packet No. 39 — a big value lor $1.' The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. Bedfoi^ Hills, New York. Grooved Panels Worth Extra The installation of hardboard panels for walls is a comparatively simple job when the tongue-and-grooved type is used. These special panels, eight feet in length and 16 inches in width, are secured with metal cAps and thus can be handled by one person. WWW Naturally, these panels cost more |than the ordinary nongrooved hardboard, but are becoming increasingly Dppular with tho^ who consider ease of installation worth the extra price. In one kind of woodgrnlned kardbonrd, n coot of Inoqner, varnish or wns is required nfter tke wnllfl hove been pnt up. b fnoe does not need The panels can be installed over an old wall that is reasonably straight. But if the wall is uneven, horizontal furring strips — one by two inches — should be applied. The panels then are attached to the furring strips by means of thc| metal clips. w w When the paneling is to be applied over open studding, no furring strips are necessary if the studs are straight and 16 inches apart on center; that is, 16 inches from the center of one stud to the center of the next The hardboard io hMtalled by starting from a corner and work-log around the room. The first panel Is applied with a grooved edge toward the area to be covered, so that It Is ready to engage the tongue edge of the next panel. Where an extra .strong installation is desired, adhesive can also be used. The dtaler wix> sells the hardboard paneling usually carries i the proper adhesive for this type of job. Architects Win Citation for Church The firm Begrow and Brown, Architects, Birmingham, Michigan were awarded a citation for the design of the Antioch Evangelical Lutheran Church, presently under construction in Farmington Township, by the Church Architectural Guild during their national meet-|ing in Minneapolis. The citation eads as follows: The plaa Is of portlealar lu- reiatlonshlp of the saactuary and the other ports of the bulldiag, (scheol, fellowship admlnistra-tMn, etc.) that tho program of ihe church Is one whole. These elements are not simply an appendage to the worship space. In elevation and detail also, this building Ig one which prosaic to the poetic. The firm of Begrow and Brown has won six national awards since its fexmation in 1957. Wait to Fill Cracks If you have purchased a new house and there are cracks in’the plaster, don't repair them until the house has finished s^tling. Mark the ends of the cracks with a pencil. When they have stopped lengthening, wide them slight and fill with spaclding compound. Allow them to dry thorough, sand and paint. GARAGES OF FAIt If Ooi«t« ‘A FREE COAT OF FAINT With Every Ooiwf* DEAL DIRECT Save ^0 to *100 No SalMm^'s CommiMioii to Fey No Mssty Dswst At Low At I •t$9M NO FAYMENTS TIL OCTORER MODERNIZATION • Attki • RecreetieR Reom • Forckes • A44iti*. '*■ ■ ■ You’ll Love the Life You Lead... in Fabulous LOTUS LAKE ESTATES Where Eyeryday Is a Holiday! Two Fontastic Values Await Your Inspection in This Delightful Retreat ... DOWN Over 1,000 Square Feet of Living Areo! 30 YEAR FHA TERMS Priced ot Only The Famous and Fabulous SPACE gCEEN You haven't seen o volue like this in ages! This omozing Sp>ace Queen has building experts from alt over Michigan scratching their heads and sharpening their pencils, AND NO WONDER! ^THIS EXCITING NEW HOME GIVES YOU: • 3 Bedrooms • Beach Privileges • 21’ KHehen • Full Basement •Storm Sewers • Full Insulation •45’x150’Lot • 2-Car Attached Garage • Perimeter Heating only 590 DOWN The Tremendoiis CHATEAU . Priced from *14,990 30 YEAR FHA TERMS Moin Modal and Solos Offica, 6214 WHIiamt Loka Rd., 2 Blocks Watt of Airport Rd. Fhona OR 3-0001—Opan Doily 1 to 9 F. M. Featuring: • 3, 4 or 5 Motftr-Sfxod Bodroomt * • V/2 BoHit • Hugo 520 Sq. Ft. TiM Rocrootion Aroo • 16' Form Stylo Kitekon with Ampio Dining Aroo • Full Intulotidn • 75'*15(r Eitoto-Sixo Lot Sales By: • Storm Sowort • Povod Drivo • Go* Hoot • Corpoting Uhl^yo timoo I 10450 W. NINE MILE RD. OAK PARK, MICH. JO 6-9B34 . ^ Built By: Carlo Cdnstrucfion Co. , JUNE 25. 1960 So CLEAN SO FURE With Soft Wottr Coll COOLEY FE 4.4404 Leftover Bamboo A narrow, framed length of leftover bamboo curtain can conceal an unwanted view of the kitchen from the living room — a common problem in apartmenti. Biti ol yam and ribbona woven into bamboo add color and texture. ELEOTRIC HEAT BlfiLIM ELECniC IM |.«2M MU 4.IUI OONTBACTOB When figuring out how much paint you’ll need for a Job, don’t [deduct the window area unle^ an opening ia more than 100 aquare feet in alie. You can figure that the average gallon of wall paint jeriU cover about 500 aquare feeU ENLARGE YOUR HOME NOW! ADD A ROOM Dad Can Make New Games in Home Shop Outdoor, at-home fUn for grade achool youngatera can be afforded at low coat by game facilitieB that can be made in abort order by Dad in hia workahop uaing a aplln-ter-free durable panel material widely uaed in the building Indua-try. One la a dart game which can Think of the odvantoges you will goin with another room-those extra bedrooms you need so badly, or use it os a den or perhops a guest room. Get our FrH htinwte today for this remodeling job. NO MONIY DOWN— PHA TRMS NEIDRICK BLDG. CO. 4S Cevrt Drived R 4-«909 "fiee Planalag Serrice" PONY ROCXER - You cooldn’t find a better present for that Uttle tyke in the family than the ahoo41y pony rodcer pictured here with N B Cs smallest actor young Billy Booth. It’s easy to buUd with the full siie pattern. You trace the pattern on plywood, then saw out the parta then put them together. Ihe art work U no problem. You simply trace the horse’s features on the wood, then paint over the tracings. The pattern gives you the colors to use, easy to fidlow directions and a list of needed materials. ’There are loU of illustrations to make the project an easy one. To obtain the lull size pony rocker pattern No. 131 send tl.OO by currency, check or money order to Steve Ellingson, ’Ihe Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., Van Nuys, Calif. Add 30 cents if you want it sent by airmail. Once a closet... ...now a beautiful I CRANE powder room! ' If you have a spare closet (or the end of a hall), you can have a glamorous powder room like this ... and it won’t cost a fortune, either. Naturally, you will want Crane ... the preferred plumbing. Crane quality fixtures cost no more, and they assure you full value and comfort for years to come. CALL US NOW FOR A FREE ESTIMATE FHA TERMS AVAILABLE EAMES & BROWN, INC. 55 East Pike Street Ft 3-7195 Sump Pumps Dry Up Cellars Seepage of water into basements has befome increasingly prevalent in recent years as new home construction has expanded into subdivisions which only recently were open field or wooded areas. Since new ground is usually heavily laden with motsUire, many householders find themselves confronted with the problem of how to get rid of water which seeps in around the walls and basement floor. A safnp pomp Is the answer to this problem as well as the equally serious dilficult^ created by water backiiig up In sewers during heavy ralas. Aslo kaown as a cellar drainer, the sump pump operates automatically when the water in the sump In which it Is installed reaches a be set up against the garage or IseatlsiM sad asarUag *o soor-back of the house. On a pa^ of MCK OK raw DOlWe. vm • va Masonite W ’Tempered Presdwood about tour feet square, mark scoring areas wiUi dmlk or paint from the youngsters’ Art set. * * * Safa suctkm-cup darts will adhere nicely to the amooth aartaee of the panel. A atnOar board lor piaytag beaahag eaa bo nuido aloo tron a ploM of the tenpored hard- A Simple basketbaU stop youngsters of any age can be miiM by facing rough lumber with Vs . ----^ i^ckstop The Dead Sea in Palestine Is about 46 miles long and 10 nilea and mounthig under it a bottomless iinum Ugbt bulbs now are bring made in the new cylindrical shape. The maker says it is the first change in the styling and design of household light bulbs in mtee than a quarter of a century. FURNACES VACUUM CLEANED Got HMfing L«nf-Air«—Mulldr SapraiiiD—Excdl MOERY'S K 2.4.70 The water from the sump pump cellar drainer may be discharged into a sewer or it may be dissipated in the back yard, the aUey, the garden, or other convenient place. Many plumbing contractors recommend the discharge of the water into a piece ol buried tile in the back yart. ’Ibe tile is filled with Survey Shows Hardwood Best for Flooring Floors of hardwood won top rat-! ing among 12 types of industrial floors in a recent evaluation presented by R. Baden Hellard, a leading British architect. Writing in the Building and Contracting Supplement of the Financial ’Times, an English publication, Hellard quoted a table based on! studies ^ a building research organization | ’This gave ratings from "very, good” to ’’poor’ for such impor-| tant characteristics ol a floor as! warmth, quietness, ease of cleaning. and resistance to abrasion, Impact and IndenUtion. Five of the flooring materials drew s “poor” claosUlratioB la one or more categories. Of the other seven, four came In the “Inlr to poor” rating In one category. No material equalled hardwood for peak performance in as many categories — cither “very good” or “good to fair” in most dam ifications and “good” and “gogd to fair” for the others. MODEL 164 ROBINWOOD PONTIAC, MICH. C&H BLDG. CO. DEAR READERS, WE OFFER THE PDBUC QDAIITT COHSTRDCTIOH AT ECOHOMICAL BDDGETS. HODSES THAT 0CUIDE All THE IDXDRT FEATURES OF THE MORE EXPEHSIVE HOMES WITHOUT THE COST, I.E., 3 LARGE BEDROOMS WITH CIOSET SPACE WITH YOU ffl MKD. A MASTER BEDROOM LAVATORY AHD A LARGE BATH FOR THE REST OF THE FAMILY. A FULL BASEMEHT FOR WORKSHOP, RECREATIOH AREA AHD LAUNDRY SPACE. A ROOMY KITCHEN WITH BEAUTIFUL PRE-FINISHED CABINETS. DISTINGUISHED ELEVATIONS SET OFF BY A COVERED CARPORT. All THIS FOR YOU, FHA LOANS AVAILABLE *11,990, SET IN BEAUTIFUL PERRY PARK, OFF NORTH PERRY, NEAR ALL DENOMINATIONS OF CHURCHES AND SHOPP0G AREA 0 WALKING DISTANCE, ACROSS FROM PONTIAC'S NEWEST AHD MOST ATTRACTIVE SCHOOLS. HOPING TO SEE TOD. Charles haven CHARLES LAVEN C&H BUILD0G CO. Good painters are also boxers. No, this has nothing to do with the pugilism. Boxing is the term used to describe pouring paint aft-loose storu* so that the water seeps er It Is stirred from one bucket away Into the garden or yard. to another to assure unifonn con-Sump pumps are made In dlf- sistency and smoothness. ferent sizes to meet varying load ------------------------- requirements. Householders who have basement water problems are | advised to consult with an experienced plumbing contractor who will be glad to recommend the type of pump that will best serve the purpose. BE SMART! tOnUERT TO DEPEnORBLE END WINTER HEATING NONIEIS NGW! Don't shackle yourself to old time heating methods! Let us install o new BRYANT gas furnace. Nothing beats noturol gas for comfort, thrift or dependability. Natural gas is cleaner, more economical and offers your family healthful, even heat. Take Advantage of Our Low Off-Season Rates! Call Today! NOW IN A NEW LOCATIO^^ AT 133 ORCHAUP LAKE AVE. WlMfy free MTkinw 4" eur torw _ AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. 133 Orchard Lake FE 2-9124 **Over SfOOO Succe$sful iMlaUations in the Pontiac Area** .................. ' . does your fomily hove growing pains? THI CUSTOM THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 25. 1960 TWENTY-THREE Calls for Potienc* One reason ttat nearly all our irflve oil comet from or othnr Mediterranean coiintriei is' that cultivation ot the trees requires old world patience. The tree does not rfach-fcU maturity until it is 20 years oW. then tt continues to pro-dtKe many years. In Spain, top •luallty oil it produced from the fruit of some dive trees hundreds of years old. Don’t forget how wonderful spring vegeUbles are for “dippers' — carrot and celery sticks, green pepper strips, asparagus spears, cucumber sticks — they’re perfect for dipping into s bowl of tangy sour cream and blue cheese blend. FRED W. MOOTS, Inc. Elaclricil Crabictof • INDUSTRIAL • COMMERCIAL • SERVICE 845 W. Huron S». FI 2-S924 — FI 2-4001 V S«f Thb Aniziag Softener Tedey it EH. STANTON Headag and FlsaiUag Cea (racier 103 SUte FE S-1683 HOMES FOR AMERICANS CHOICE CAPE -r nUs Capc Cjjd deslBii combines flexlliillty with charm — planned to meet the requirements of the small family, large family or two families. By varying the entrance, the second floor can be made into an apartment. The design as sHown has two bedrooms, kitchen, family, dining and living rooms and bath on first floor, and two bedrooms and bath on second floor. Floor space is 2,190 square feet. Architect is Samuel Paul, 89-51 164 St., Jamaica, N. Y., and the plan is HA 141P. \ Roller Embraces Fence The easiest way to paint a wire fence is with a long-napped roller ■that "embraces’’ the wire and makes it possible to coat all surfaces in one pass. Previouly un-palnted fences should be given a coat of metal primer. After this coat has dried, finish with exterior enamel or exterior aluminum paint. If you use a dehumidifier in your home check your framed pictures every so often to present their drying up and cracking. The Picture and Frame Iiistitute says that lack of normal amounts of moisture in the air can occasionally cause pictures to crack. COMPLETE BINLDINQ SERVICE • ADDITIONS • FAMILY ROOMS • KITCHENS • GARAGES • BATHROOMS • SIDING FRfE ESTIMATES-NO OtLWATION NO MONEY DOWN-M MONTHS TO FAY DARA BUILDI]\G 919 Jotlyn, Pontiac Workshop Patterns by SwUt Wx*lh Spson EVERYTHlNfl YOU NEED to plan an efficient modem kitchen of any size is in the Kitchen Planner 452. This pattern, which gives basic figifres, a scale gauge for making your own plan, and movable cut-ouU for standard fixtures, is 35c. Tills pattern also is in the Kitchen Planner Packet No. 51 which includes directions for building stepsaving equipment —all for $1. Workshop Paltem Servloo The Psntiac Prooo Bedford Hills, New York. You Can Put Your TRUST IN G & M Open Sundnp 12»4 G & M CONSTRUCTION 2260 DIXII HWY.-Noitli of Tstsgraph Rood Copper and bronze wtwn applied I be painted or varnished to prevent I the adjacent paint or masonry j grease with a cloth soaked in| Lake Superto ^ to the exterior ol the bouse shouidiugly stains from washiiig down on|when it ralna. Remove all dirt and|turpentine. If you're going to paint,!largest inland body ol trtm water, j* WHEN IT COMES YO HOME BUILDING or IMPROVEMENTS SEE US! Without Obligation, We'll Submit Ideas and Estimotes! Wont to bring your home in line with the most modern stondords oi comforts, convenience ond livobility? Let us show you how much con be done to meet your needs and wishes ot very modest cost. Our top croftsmen toke greot pride in turning out o sound and ottroctive iob. Just coll us. Protect your car in a sturdy, new garage Turn your basement into a den or rumpus room NO MONEY DOWN BUILDING and SUPPLY CO., Inc. raa uuws ud Moitgig* Stiricei Rvtilibl* FE 3-7141 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE Huron Bldg. — Pontioc I— We'll restore your roof soundly, economically Mr. and Mrs. Home Owner! BUY DIRECT ... 1 CASTONE MICH. coRp; You Benefit • Local Monufocturers and Instollers Financing to Fit Your Pocketbook • In Business 25 Yeors * Foctory Trained Mechonics _new— IiraUtod Ttrticil ltdwooi JUudHia SMiif CASTONE MICHIGAN CORP. FE 2-9421 2457 Poncell, Pontiac OTHER BLDG. SPECIALS AUiitieis AKitclMBS JPeidMS AAmtiigs^ S t Steni Wiidews A Steve FitBls T“;i 'TWKXTVKOUli TIIK l.»OXriAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 19Q0 periodically for knar or brakcnj No Bug. Aiiow«i UW-COST FAMliy. idilqtln which ahould be naiMj Incrdae the enjoyment of a ‘er-| down or replaced. Rotten shingles |«ce by enclosing the area alio should be removed and new. screening to keep insects out.j -{Screened skylights provide bght,'A||P| v|*|| permitting planting of grass andjwHCLICn^ shade-tolerant plants. With remov-| _ „ able windows the terrace becomes l|AM|tf a year-round, “outdoor" living ■■vwsf ammo f room for the family. JIM WILUAMS lac. 1483 laMwin Avc. FE 44)547 The BIG Fji* Over 1^00 Sq. Ft of Living Area • S BEDROOM TRl-LEVBL • m BATHS • FTMgHED FAMILY ROOM Model Open Daily and Sunday 1-9 Model Open Daily and Saadmr 1-f MODEL AT Ml R. FOURTH OFF iOSLYN STOUT, 77 N. SofiiMW St. Realtor FE 5-0660 The Young Men's Christian as-'sociations in the United States to-;tal about 1,688 with 1,8 millioni members. BASFMEVr FALLOUT SHELTER ~ Can be used as photographic dark|-oom. Shelter should have (A1 two-week's supply of food and medicines, (Bi shower, (Cl chemical toilet and (D> water tank. Floor and countertops should be surfaced with stain-proof ceramic tile for darkroom use. Down's Early Light Light from an eastern exposure is hard and can give a harsh look to bright colors. The best paint colors for a room with eastern exposures are light gray, French gray, cream, ivory, buff and fawn. Soft yellows and pinks are also very attiwetive and are particularly good in a small room. Window Units May Do Job UNIT STEP ALSO CUSTOM RAILING For a Step in Bmuty dHECK THESE FEATURES: • OM-Pibca CbmtnKtiM • ParmiMiit Itmrty-tiifgtd Ond or two window units often can effectively air condition a small house if it is completely insulated, has Ms of shade, and is tightly built. To make such a system satis-, factory, the house must first be Insulated with batts and {blankets of mineral wopi in all accessible outside walls, floorsj floors over vented crawl spaces, and around the perimeter of the foundation. I An insulation contractor with pneumatic equipment can Now mineral mo o 1 into Inacceeilble areas. Cracks around doors, windows and foundation should be se-I curely caulked to keep heat out. I Alr-tlew paths must be pro-j{ \1ded through all rooms by la-i stalting wall vests or faas la I solM interior partllons. At tbe I side of tbe house opposite • Strong IninfnrcMl Catting • Avoid Many InstnIIntinn ■ FrH btiimrttf — Wt Dtfivm’ AnywlMrtl Safety Tioad Rodaces SApplag UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE CONCRETE STEP COMPANY S 6497 Highlond Rd. (M-59) OR 3-7715 ■j exhaust fan will help remove M' warm air and keep tbe cool nlr || flowing through the house. ■: Engineering studies have shown ■ that such an inexpensive air-circu-2 lating system u^ng a 1-ton win-! dow air conditioner wUl worl ' g house of about 1,000 square feet I if it is completely insulated, ■ tightly-built, has wide root over-R hangs, adequate shading, and ' ■ well oriented to keep direct rays ■ of the sun out of the house. S A slightly larger home may re-g'quire two window cooling uni' r-ii' XlUXUBY SlcsilltBlLN XlIVING - AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD! fluon miinoR _ in th« Btaufiful Rochesttr AVON AREA . . . Just 20 minutei to th« G.M. Tsch Center end other Northeestem Plants. Close to School, Churches and Shopping. Only 10 minutes drive from New Michigan State College BrerKh Models open deity and Sursday 12 noon to 8 ALL ELECTRIC HOME Models from 9 3 BEDROOMS Lorge Fomily Kitchen Fruitwood Kitchen Cobinets 12,990 • BIG WIDE V4 ACRE LGTS • PAVED STREETS / • MUNICIPAL WATER / 1 i'f' FREE WITfl EVEBT HOME *900 WOBTB or TBE FOLLOWING wesunghoCse • BUILT-IN OVEN end RANGE • 11 Ft. REFRIGERATOR • AUTOMATIC WASHER. • ELECTRIC DRYER ^ • STORMS and SCREENS "FREE CARPETING" FIELD BUILDING COMPANY “Since 1935**0 model phone UL 2-4450 n^iiSifcila 41 Fabulous Value! Hew Modal in Ponfioc Knolls $99 Moves Vets In FHA Only ^50 Down Full Price ‘12.100~ 3 Bedrooms • Full Basement Gas Heat • Brick Front • Large Kitchen I th«M - Kderel S4l56 Opnn 12-f Daily 8 Sunday PRACTICAL HOME BUILDERS/Inc. 13440 WEST 7 MILE ROAD UNiversity 4 - H 2 7? NOW! See them in Pontiac SWIFT HOMES the WORLD'S Largest Selling Precision Cut Homes The . • • CAPRI Beoutiful Split-Level 24' X 48' Size deuvereo to your LOT^ ’5,265.00 The • . • CEDARHURST Two-bedroom home 24' X 28' Sixe DEUVERED TO YOUR LOT ‘2,790.00 The .. . GORDONAIRE Three-bedroom Home 34' X 28' Size DELIVERED TO YOUR LOT ‘2,790.00 NO MONEY DOWN Precision Cut Homes may be • seen in the Pontiac area. Drive out. todoyl See those shown above od display. Swift Homes offers you over 80 models to choose from and hundreds of floor plans. With Swift foctory-mqss production methods every piece of lumber is precision cut to size, bundled and numbered to sove time and material. Hove bur skilled crews erect it for vou nr DO-IT-YOURSELF. Either woy you sove thousonds. VourTholce oTolf colors, roof styles, door designs, and" window styles . . . oil at no extra cost. Yes, we con finance ond furnish finishing materials, includina foundation materials, Ijeoting, wiring,,drywall, interior trim and doors ' THERE'S A SWIFT HOME TO FIT EVERY FAMILY AT: TOWNSEND SWOT HONES, he. 2810 tapM, RmJ (M-24) 5 mile! Berth of Pentioc, Michigon, ef Grcemhitld Rood Lokt Orion, Michigon Phono FEDERAL 8-9636 OPEN SUNDAY 1 P.M. te 8 P.M. Mob. thru Fri. 10 te 8 P.M. tel. 10 fe < SWIFT TewnstBd Swift Hemet, Inc. 2110 Lapaar Raa8 Laka Oilaa.L MkMgaa Waaea eaaj ma ya«r FaN caiar cateiae tkedlaf all SwIU HaaMt. I aaelaea 25e far potraga aaJ lieMlia«. Nome...................................... Address................................ City......................Stott............ My lot locotion is Low Price Three Pa««A TWENTY-FlVh ADAM AMES By Loo Fine New Car Free~for~All Due in Fall By BEN PHLEGAR AP Automative Writer DETROIT—"I don’t know who'. __________ „ going to get hurt, but « certainly isn’t going to be the cuitom?*” Thla appraisal by one auto execo-, tive of the 1960 market now looks a* if it will be ever truer of 1961. Withta three moaths mast of the aew litodel can will be la I and the choice M yewrs —more ™ore sliea aad more modeU. " Aad noore of the can wtll he baached aear the low end of the price Bcale. Advertised delivered prices (the ones on the price sticken) may • hold at or near 1960 figures for competitive redSons. Nobody yet is talking for publication about definite prices, particularly with the prospect of a rise in the cost of steel. But there are growing Indications the Industry will make its most concentrated sales pitch to ' the so-called low-price field. it -k It Chrysle^Corp. and Ford started ■ this move'with some of their 19W ’ models. Now one General Motors Division is repcHled ready to Join the bandwagon. At Ford both Mercury and the short-lived Edsel moved down is droppmg oiie of its two big-car! Another down-the-scale pricing move at Chrysler 'went largely unnoticed because it involved the low-volume DeSoto. DeSoto-discarded its two top lines along with its station wagon and convertible and nestled into the price spot fcHTneiiy held by the top Dodge lines. Sales, however, have been even less than a year ago. DeSoto wUl appear in 1961 as a single series. Chrysler is said to be hoping this nameplate eventually can be converted into a rival for Ford’s highly successful Thun-derbird. At any rate It will not be kept as a full line. Reports rontinue that Pontiac, which hat led the HhrlnkinK medium price field with amating success lor the past two years, i also will offer at least one ! shorter wheelbase scries for IMt , which will sell competitively with ‘ Chevrolet. The sales technique already la used by Pontiac In will show up in 1961 from former I Additionally, Chevrolet wiU be medium price names. jadding.a station wagon to its Cor- The Dodge Lancer will corpe Infvair series and a Rambler con-two series and probably will be vertible is in the offing. Falcon, priced starting just above $2,100. The Lancer basically will be a dressed up Valiant, just as the Comet is a fancy version of the Falcon. The four-cylinder nnodrls of Ponllae's compeet Trtnpest could start about tte same figure as the Lancer. And both the new Buick Special aad the (Nds FU will try to come la just under the It.SM mark. These two have VI engines and are said to strongly resemble their parent big cars. All of these prices include federal and excise taxes and dealer prepvation charges. Factory list prices; which don’t include these sizable items, probably will be noticeably below $2,500. This year 37 models of Dart, Plymouth, Ford and Chevrolet were priced under $2,500. If Pontiac and Mercury squeeze in, competition for the customer’s dollar will be terrific. BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES THE GIRI^ By Franklin Folger By Edgar Martin 1 AV5ST TWtAOjS \iP UVW TVE VOW e»IS\0 VET UM«T HE** E’VOSED TSTWtN will offer at least one series for INI directly eompetitivo in price with the otaadard Ford. Mercury is also said to be ready to Use a six-cylinder engine for the first time. Ford and Mercury will share the same body shell. At CSirysler, Dodge invaded the Ford - Chevrolet - Plymouth price field with lU Dart and experienced spectacular success this year. Dodge sales are more than double year-ago figures. For 1961 Dodge Sees Possible 1961 Downturn Invastor Counsel Says a Leveling-Off Is Best That Can Be Expected NEW YORK (UPD-The Value Line investment survey says a leveling-off in business activity in 1961 is the best that can be looked for, but that there could be a downturn should there be any slackening in consumer spending. CoBswner speadbif so far has remained strMSg In the face of erratie output scheduling and will provide tho ground for Improved buslaeao this fall, It said. The investment advisory service said, however, that its ’’business forecaster” is still trending downward, and that the fall upturn may be no more than seasonal. (kxjdbody ft Co. continues to look for a somewhat improved market during the summer months. The final quarter, following the corrections still under way, will be a test period of the Brtmomy with nnich depending on the international situation and file presidential election, Goodbody believes. Detroit Living Cost Rises One Per Cent DETROIT OB—Living costs in Detroit moved up one-tenth of 1 per cent from April to May, the Labor Department reported Friday. This increased the May index for Detroit to 124.3, seven-tenths of 1 per cent above the level a year The government said increases - for medicaf care, transportation, apparel, reading and recreation were not entirely offset by (' creases for personal care, housing and food. An increase of swen-tenths of 1 per cent for transportation was . attributed to increased prices of gasoline and used cars. Ike Sends 3 Postmaster Nominations From State WASHINGTON kB - President Eisenhower has sent to the Senate three postmaster nominations in Michigan. They are: Warren Barrie, Hillman; Roland H. Bramer, Nahma, and Velma M. Weatherwax, Somerset Cento-. Italy’s first automobile opened in 1894. This could mean that instead of| the old (Chevrolet-Plymouth-FordI price grouping, the coming year will b r i n g a Chevrolet-Plymouth-Ford-Mercury-Dart price battle. BATTLE ROYAL And then come the compacts. | There are 45 models of Rambler, Lark, Comet, CJorvair, Falcon and Valiant priced under $2,500 this year. These include 17 fouisioor sedans, nine two-door sedans, three hardtops, one convertible and 15 station wagons. All six of these nameplates offer at least one four-door sedan under tZ.lW. Twenty-three com- ‘ pact models, all but one of them Lark or Rambler V8s, am priced* above $2,8W. A whole fistful o By Carl Grubert Z ' THEY PROBABLY GET " L, ALONG FINE TOGETHER./ • HE ADMIRES HER BEAUTIFUL WHITE BACK.. 'and sheS crazy about' -r HIS GREEN ONES./^—' A ^ i TWEXTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JUNE 25. I960 TATI Of MICI • Omm l«r Ik* •olunMfteloo. ‘VJSi. tht MtIUoB rMUlTktloa (bAli k* tcotpMl darlnii M HtimkadM, Bikor. tbt atrt foU vorUat 6»t>. prondM .... ... ..... ‘***‘ “• "**•* rilkU p«rBI( »ny UtkMT of mM (hlM. porooB «« vot# ib bbp mvboIup, *“* MM flM la thli or rUIoiro U vhMh ko Im4 not rw prMMt vborcBkouui (Ml don aut prooidlBo oar e>» . pnkaowa and uld or prlmorr oMctloo. «BM tbo pBbUe for Tmtfor «C twlitrattoa on tloetloa •oM^thlld oboBld ko day. BM, Ml. Xojr rotMMod olr^ ---------- -^thu who hot rMMTOd from oat tltcUoa U Uw BOB* of th* ptOBl* of ika M oaethor olottlon prtcloct of — ssa -'*1 ha Md ot tb* Ooklond %o«aty hor* hit ro^ttrotloa troatforrtd on ony 2r.£}»3s:~th;*'M« litiSf. 1^s5lr•r.s.rSi‘*^u5: oftdraoBa, ond “ “ rnoBdod to opi rtclttrouoa rtcordt thoU oompor* Th* prtntod pad clrMltMd la told County Wltaoto. tk*. Ronoroblt Arthur « ----- --------- ---------- th, city r. thU Mad! dadM^of r Feittlo* la ■ ty oTjae* A~ ---- — troatler tholi thta mltttd to rot* la^tuch prtcintt 1 I tlrctlaa only. Ilw opMcotltB f >*ftr ihoU M tiled with the to«i ____ " Aimnm i. moou. (A tma f vosEAeBOTia** ““Viiu I Choate itrtetin tM ^ttrttlon rocerdA and .. 'nabnnnUTIOH NOTTOEI^ O*l«-i?h0B|e’ hli'^'nStWratleB*^MtS?**tttpe< oral fnatory llttilon Taeodoy. Aufuil thereto In order to be edclM to fTod-'l.^r.? oS£?;.‘ ^Tte- i dun, M oad 3d, Iddd **I^K“i* htftbr dlrea that In ron- VAn OT IdlCBIOXN—In the Pro-ronalir wnh th* 'Ulthjlan t****'^^*** ©w* *• UM County ot Oakland. Lao •• 1. the taderMtaed Clerk, will|Ju**all* raeiMMi anea Bay day. *»**< kuaday and oi liS hSday. the dor of any ret^ or aptctol dretMi or prat---— mad* within the iM) dayi ____________ :edlat any titcilan or prlman Uon. lualtM tuch Mth day thaU .— on a Saturday. Sunday or Itfal hailday la which trtnt rettttratloa thau be accepted durla* th* aaat full work-n« dayl. prorldtd that no tuch treat-ier than permit any person to rou In aay townthip. city or miac* -he bad not resided iMi davi Trantfer of reiUtrai _ty. Sec. Ml- *nr f.._________— _________ who hat removed from one electlea proclaet tf a townthip. city or rlUaCf to another election precinct of thi laaM tewathlp. city or rillat* thtll Bar* th* ritht to make application to have hit rattstratloa tr—•----------- " any tiectloa or primary by executlai a reou— --tltnaiur* ter tach for •efirrtilon th* naa aay Iml voter m laid tewathlp, or vtOase aot atreedv remttered Bwy apply to me pertontOly for rvwiKratlaa. frevlded. however, tl . ran reeotv* d* ntmet for retIttraUon danct the time Intervtnint betwtea the Thirtieth day before tny refular. taeclel or official pnmtry tltctloa aad tb* dav of auch tleettoa. Notlee It hereby civea that t will be at th* follewlBi plieet on Wednesday JBne M. ItdO. It Town HaU from I p m. until * p.m.: Saturday July 1. ltd*, it Town Hall (lom It a.m. until 11 noca. and on Tuetdtv. July t. aid elecitoa at provided by Section tt Act No lit. Public Attt of 1M4. ‘rora d o'clock a.m. uatll d o'cloek p.m. n tald day far tht p«rpt*t of reviewlBt be refittration and rttuttnni tuch w be ouallfled titeten In tald towBthla, Ity or TtUafe ti thtll properly apMf laaw *f a* ptrtM b _______t of tl--------— - rcclttratloa. Conet Ittttlan. koto oi ao Of tiM prtClBCt tt loh. tad entlUed Han. If rtmtlalnt ti ptraooal ap- .________ ____________ »*4 Any elector who It unable to make peraonal S.UOB for rtflttrailM booaaat of il disability or abtence from the Ip, city or vlllatt la wbita hie .—. —-----------tortted. may be ref-' ts th* clot* of refittration tltcUon or pruaary olectlen _________ from tht Clerk of tht town- p, mty nr vUltf* In which it leeated iasal iwaldtoct, dupUcaU realttra- Sf?.!. befon returnlac tuch retlttratloa earda the Clefk ed the tewntblp, city or vlllal* befot* th* olet! of oTflo* hour* an the 1^ day of refittration prior to r eleetloa c. _________ __________ . . ary pu^ or other oftloer admin. bftnM fKAM ■<»««. Kla paam* •J&'ct? I detltaat* hit rwjWraMati Dartflatored ptrtent voM. Sac. 4*1. 1M Inapt---------------- at aay *l*etl*a or pitatry tleetloa ... itAU, *r la any district, county, ^ thereof, tbali I vote of any ---------- net recitterod (At _ which ht offer* to vote rided under Act lid. P.A. 1*54. — of rtfittratlon, application. ... ----- idd. Any reflttereo elector ty upon ebanfe of retldeao* within Trantfer e la th* matter *f t Cleophu* Shelton *^ltl( tint th* tame to the oleettea board — th* prteiBct In which h* la rtf-Utered. Upon recelrint tueh reqnttt intpector of tiectloo In eharye *' refittration records tht" -------------- ^ *wd that dlctton^of this c—“ of th* people ef the SS5 wUI_^M held at the Oakland County Service Center. IMfB West Bled.. _______________ .. tald jCounty. on the tth day tald petition land Cc"-*-. —out* A the City of July t afternoon, and' you are her* mtaed to appMr personally ft bclnf imaraetleal to make ptnontl service hereof, this summons and no-tloe thaU be Mrved by pubIleatiM o* £!• i**** Ptwvlout to tald hear II M Th* Peatlae Preti, a aewtpap* iteled and emulated In tsM Couaty. Wltaeu. the Hovorablc Arthur 1. Moor*. Judf* af tald Court, m tht City of Poatlae la taui County. day of Juba A.O. IN*. '“'UsiB Judf* of ProbaU VASCASSBNNO. ProbaU Refitur, O. D. lection Tueedev. Auiutt 1. U .. the Qualified BlecUrt of _________ County of Oakland. SUU ot Mehtfan. * timlal_ election hayj^ been called Uie'county“of’baklani^%fe’ *■■■ “ we Ind day of Aut ThertfoN. BOtlce U hereby flyen.------ -ay ouaUfled elector of tald Townthip of WhIU lake who lt not already ref-d upon the reittirailon books of rownthlp ot Whlu Lake, may refat Town HaU on Tuesday the 5th if July, IMS. tram t:M e'elock a.m. - . N o'cloek p.m.. Katun Standard Time. Notlea It further flvtn. that tuoh rtf- folUwlnt deyt prtviout u tald 5th dai of July. ItfS. te-wtt; at Town ---- Wednesday. June M. ItfO. *— astern Standard Tim*, nector unabi* U mak plication, procedure. S it!!*{rfcU'"iL pciuMal ap- ItUrlnt on the UT”’ paiufttured jwiont not MUtled to yoio. ito. 4*1. ni* Intpecurt of titetloa at aay tltetlM or primary dactun la tUU or la any dlitrtat. iounty ithip. city or rlllate thtrtof. ihaU rtotlet tht you of any porton wh --t It not rtfliured la mo rtflM book of the UwridUp. ward ,—---------...... ^ -... lifer of rofUtratlon. appi See. itt. Aay rcflttarcd __________ ipen ehaan of retidmoo within ..wnthiA cliy or viUafo cai ■" rtfittratlon U M irantfarvad — -"irtt* by tmdint u IMItt. AUPREO NEWBERRY ROMEO - Sendee for Mn. Alfred (Eva L.) Newberry, 86, o( 393 N. Main St, was held today at Wilbur's Funersl Home with biuial In Romeo (Cemetery. Mrs. Newber-ly died ’Iliuradsy at her home after a long UlneM. She was a member of the Romeo chapter of O.E.S. She left no immediate survivors. primary eleetloa. .tloa on election reflaUred elector upon the if'iRi:' than compart Ith the sitna-reilstra. Death Notices MRS. HENRY PRATT Mrs. Henry (Suphroney I.) Pratt, 88, of 16 Airport Rd., Waterford Towrjriiip, died yesterday following an illneu of li years. Mrs. Pratt is survived by two sughtert, Mrs. Martha E. Weil of Waterford Township and Mrs. Lea-venla Ohrken of Oxford, five n and two great great-grandchil- Service will be held at 1 L Sunday at her home. Her body is at Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, aaiitston. Burial will be in Lake-view Cemetery. w A N T R sicnati _______________________/h'airt'... muted to VOU U tueh precinct elects only. Th* tppllcttloa ft ter thaU be tUed with th* tewathlp. city TlUes* clerk who thtll traasftr tuch ...tr'i registration In eccordtnet with the tppllcttlon. When tb* name ot any —— - - township, city or vinage hat »d. It shf -- -------- chanM, It shsll be__________ tosrnshlp. alty or villas* clerk I the chtnm u tbow the proper t of stretl m the rtfittrotloa for the tiwur U change hU r^ttra-ttoe with rttpect thereU la order U bt tUglbl* U vnu ROBERT GRAY ' ROMEO — Service for Robert Gray, 79, of 13103 33-Mile Rd., wiU be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at | Tiffany • Young Funeral Home in Armada, with burial in Bruce Ometery, Armada. Mr. Gray, a retired farmer, died Thursday in Martha Berry Hospital, Mount Clemens, following a fou^month illness. He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Wilma Hecht and Mrs. Marion Wagner, both of Pontiac, and one grandchild. E The Name's the Thing in These Florida Courts EU W. KACHVK TROY - Service for EU W. Ka-iM chuk, 77, of Alberta, Canada, will be held at 7 p.m.. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Another service will be conducted at St. Mary's Orthodox Church. Bolan, Alberta: with burial in St. Mary's Cemetery, JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -i Circuit Court, Robert E. Lee it involved in a law suit; Grace Kelly Is suing for divorce; and Clark Gable and Merry Christmas having trouble getting support payments from one parent who has left the other. In Criminal Court, Daniel Boone has been charged with vagrancy; Robert Louis Stevenson with lar-teny; Robert E. Lee has another chairge, reckless driving; George Washington is charged with driving without a license. Lodge Calendar Mr. Kachuk, who was visiting his daughter, Mrs. Alexander Hauca. 185 WOton Dr., died yesterday at WilUam Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. after a brief illness. Besides Mrs. Hauca, he is sur-vlve^ by two sons Nicholas Kaye of Royal Oak and Mack of Hazel Park: and five daughters, Mrs. Ralph Banwarth of Berkley, Mrs. Gene Harding of Royal Oak, Mrs. Herman Spears In Ohio. Mrs. Alex Hanpuik and Mrs. Joseph Shalka, both 9f Alberta. Also surviving are 16 grandchildren; 3 great-grahdchildren; 3 brothers and 3 sisters. itratioa beetw of June 37th, 8 p.m. 18'^ E. Lawrence I hit legal — ------------ -• village------------ rttlttratlon to be IrtafferreS to ............... ..... aew oddreet by Mnding to th* aerk'tlon before * tl«n*« mueit. ttetlng hit pretent I election ;^**A the dtte he mo^ thereto.Ith* tow... th* tddrett from which he wet Ittt'le located i*tl*t*iM. or ta tppiTini in---------i—. a traaner. n* Clerk tl throash tb* lett . addrett. phytloel dlaebUlty or thttnee from th.jSt. Edith M. Coons. SSC. —AdV. townthip. eltv *r vlUtg* In which hit. I townthip. I I loctted. may b* ret-{ ih. -I... reeittr-- News in Brief oddrtt*. void t -—-L I—...........— •“O executing Ini Rummsg* sal*. Everything from rd*^ appllances to gtuffed zebras. Sun., 'ta .•d'm&'lIfSl! June 28-12 to S. 598 Abbey M.. “ — —■■ returning tuch mlitrttlon eordt‘Birmingham. —AdV. ^KTin____________ .hen.r*! Lawn mswor crank shaft inreUeo «mrd In proper precinct fl4. ttaacten chalf not be made withinlaay_____________ the (Ml day* ncit preceding any aetary ppbUe er day af ncittrttlon prior to ffuer tdm'i^ chAngs. 294 Oakland. Pin the ‘‘SMART SAVERS MEDAL” on Yourself! 1 JOSEPH KEHOE LAKE ORION — Service for Joseph Kefioe, 78. of 961 Lakeview St. will be held tomorrow at 2 p.m. at Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery. ■ Mr. Kehoe died yesterday at | Pontiac Oneral Hospital after a brief illness. Surviving is one brother, Patrick, of Gage Town. | LUKE J. ULLEYMAN Service for Luke J. LiUeyir.an, 56. of ChuU Vista, Calif., wiU be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Humphrey’s Funeral Home, Chula Vista. Burial will follow in Glenn Abbey Cemetery there. Mr. LUleyman formerly was employed ill Pontiac with General Motors Truck A Coabh Division 1948 when he moved to California. -He was an employe at Rohr’s Aviation CinT- until his death of a cerebral hemorrhage there early Thursday morning. Surviving are his wile, Isabelle of Chula Vista, Calif.; two brothers, Jack of Pontiac and George of Flint; and one aister, Annie Lever of San Diego, Calit May AddlSOO Jobs at Ford Rouge Plant i^.^,that could create 1,300 new jobs. | rf In a letter to United Auto Work-' ^|ers PresMent. Walter P. Reuther.; ^1 Cassidy also pointed out that new operations do not necessarily ^'guarantee an increase ' plant’s employment "inasmuch as .^lother factors bear on this Current Rate of Dividend on Insured Savings The Federal Savings and Lean Insurance Cerperation INSURES and GUARANTEES each saver's fnniti to I18JM.M — a protection against all types of loom The INSURED emblem signifies our membership in this govenunent agency. Pontiac Federal Savings #4^^ HOME OFFICE: 761 wf. Huron St. ROCHESTER: 407 Main St. PONTIAC: 16 W. Lawrence St. DRAYTON: 4416 Dixie Highway WALLED LAKE: 1102 West Maple Rd. Jap Gas Fird Quenched TOKYO (UPIl — Oilfield firefighter M. M. Klnley„ who came here from Houston to tackle a natural-gas fire in northern Ja-pan, succeeded today in quenching It by dumping SO tons of nud into the burning well. • CORRECTION (or Error in Our Ad of June 23,1960 FoMiig Chair Sit Rofl. $3.97 M. Red Bnd green saran nylon covert. Aluminum frame. $n44 y .......... iS Western Auto 162 N. Sog. FI 2-9253 V. a. CHmSTtNIlN, Mgr. s u L T S TRY W A N T A Death Notices BOtSCLAlB, JUKI S4. INS. CAROLS R. STM MeterUt Dr.. Klfhl*B«: »\tSSfea'{~?n*S Site turvlved by 1* ■ojiewir, eav ■■ graadeblidna ead __________ jre^^lMim^Fuaerel t»vlM wtU Fun* Maeleir w Dra*UoB-Ji >il*' DeBeltwi'----- U* la tut* _ ___ J* Funeral Heme. KBHOS. JONS M. Itt*. JOnSPH; **! Lakeview. Lake Orton; at* tt; dear brother ot Patrick K*ho*. PuiMral Mrvie* wiu b* held Sun- dty. June M at I p.m. from th* piUBMrftlt Paatral Bom*. Lek* Qrlen. Interment la Bait Lawa. Cemetery, ------ wuni* In Lek* Ortoa. Mr. Kehoe ---------tUt* at th* Plumertelt P«n«i*l Home. Lek* Orlen. PBATrrSoifl^ftJ IIM. SUPHRO^ B*y I. It Airport Rd.. Weurford; Oft M; deer mother of Martha t. Well and Leevenia Oehrkea: alto turvlved by nv* sraadcblidren. II freat-tnndchtldren and two trtat-freat-srandehUdr “ —- . .CO wl— ww —W.H — ««, at 1 p.m. from if Airport Rd.. Weterlerd. with Rev. WlUlam Rlebardt oinelatlat. Interment In Laktvltw Ctmttery, Cltrktton. mad* by Sharpe-Ooyett* Punertl Home, ^larktton;_________ TORN^JOHB JJ. IIM, KXVIM~oT 175 Centre! at. ton af Tvoane _______ _________ S'®*.. Punerel tervic* wid be held Monday, Juna n, at I p.m. from Prank CarruUier* Pu-**“' ”-----with Canon Klter At 10 njB. Tada^ tbera ware repilea nt The Preaa sfflce la the toHewIng 4, 8, IS, IS. IT, 18, 30, tS, 38, 42, 45, 41. 87, 71. Tt. 73. 74, 75. 84, M. M. 180, lot, 106, 108, 110, 118. FOl? WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.jn. to 6 p.m. All error* tbonld be ra aerttd immtdlauly Tb* Preu U(uai*t no reapon- Intertlon at th* ad mmt which hat b*i dered vtlutliM throi "kill Dumber." &7o pnbllcttloD tfttr lb* flrtt mttrtloa. CASH WANT AO RATES Llntt l-Oay J-Dtyt t-oay* 2 tl It 52 M S2 12 In Memoriam or LOVmO MKMORT OP OUR belovtd ton. Thomat B. WUton Jr^ whe petMd twty Jun* 26. the tie* of lov* art broken And levFd onet have to part U iMve* t wound that never heate: MARMAOUKE By Aadvmm A Leeminc "It’s one of those whistles that only a dog can hetr!" In Memorism 2 IN LOVINO MEMORY OP OOR -‘-*r buaband an-* ' me, who left ‘to* ***h d (ether. J. < Our eyet tb»d many a t»*r;' Jit end* th* tecood year Sadly rnlieta by your wif* L* ehlWnn end grandchildren. Funeral Directors COATS PONSRAL HOME Drayton Plaint '''* Ebnelson-Johns 'm.Tre «.r- Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME B*r*le*. Plan* or Motet PE S427S___ Cemetery Lots ^ PBRRV MT. PARE CEMETERY Betuiilul 6 irav* lot WIU divide PE 4-W42______________________________ lUIpJWanted M^le_ 65.174 tl 56.54$ ANNUALLY Mun neve at leatt 2 yesrt ot ctpertoc* in medical laboratory work end r*tltt*r*d at a medicti technoloftit with th* American Society of CUnlcal PathelofUta. AU Michigan CIvU Service bene-flu. Apply in perion or write Mr. Richard Luehmann. Peraon-nel Oiticer, Pontiac Blatt Hoi- armst^no w(x>len mills olfen a wonderful opportunity tor quaUfled penon, no Invevt-ment. no aollcitini, or outild* _ Pontiac__________________ ASSISTANT TO THI HNANCS director of the City ot Blrnuni-ham. Applicant muiit be colleie or butineaa ' Khool graduate. Outlet to Include accoumln* and office lupervltery work. Experl-ence not iiectttary. Position al-ictlltm tralnini • ------- field - Inturanc Help Waqte^MsIe^ 6 27«» North Woedward,__ MAINTINANCB MAN. STBAOY JOB for older man. At* 46 to M. Downtown eftlM bulMlns. Reply lALBiMEN -tb* home In- francla* dermer. Needed tt eact -tvedai work. Ctl ORTM22. 5 - 5 p PART TIME BEAL d eourteeut. PE ESTATE ot Ult RAKE OPPORTUNITY FOR REAL SALESMAN We train you In on* ot AaMrlct't lartttt induttrlu. Piwftr men with retau mUlai txptrtoo* aad lenuln* detIre - - - -- — Pir-' ---- Boftr-t BaItt i Servlet, ttt bum. caU PE I-61M. 8INOLE MAN TO DO OBNUiAL OA *-]5N;_________________ BPORTINO GOODS SALESMAN Beaded. Mutt tatVt lull knowledge of winter tkl **ulpm*nL Writ* Pontitc Presi Box 110. SALESMEN Seaton now opening In the aluminum awnln* butinttt. 11.000 to 62.000 a month Is not unusual at this time ot year. If you've had no txptrltne* In tbit line, wt wlU train you. Wt manutac- S^'ifllto ^lia' w:“walt*n Bfvd Drayton PItIna. ___________^ Salesman for Plywood WE NEED A GOOD BAUSMAN. WB PoarnvLY purnibh all LEADS. 2.... _NO PHOHB CAUS PLEASE _ W'ORKINU CHEF outllfltd to htnol* complete o r Urge e tbto bondtble. State age. municipal finance I tion. alck leave, group li •oclel aecurlty and working condition*. S ' Vaca- wltta qualifications; ________ _______ Submit appUcationt (Including training and work experience i to MtUtant City Mr---------- mlnghtm, MIcnIgen. Sadly misled -. _______________ Dad, Mr. and Mr*. Thomas X. WIUOB Br._____________ fir "LOVINO MEMORY OP OUR beloved —...... on DIO frary' day wt asidly mitt him Oetwy w* iMi ear tot; I^ly wt art nflhatu him. Help ut Ood to bear our Croat. Badly BiUttd by hit wife Rote and Good wages. Steady work. S« Sid Miller. 4112 W. Walton Blvd Drayton Plaint._____ ALUMINUM Only tboae with prior ------ need apply. Northern ' 7>40 Cooley Ukt Rd. •. write P Help Wanted Female 7 muo AND oonnrrto epmma. wthtnit. tiptrltnetd, tuO tlrn*. iff~OASRiiai p ktt. I^ply la p ilSISg Shop. Oxford. -- . B2a>fipROiD LADY POR OEn: tral hwit* WPrii tod ebUd car*. I dtyt. til 1 alsMt. own trans-porutlOB. Rttyrentt*. MA g-H4i. FXP. SALFSlXbTES For ladltt tperia wear. Pull a R5?s‘‘i:j^,id”6r“^»“-■iihiibNa JMWttiiY, k A H r y Plan, aa dtUvtry. a* ealltcilBg, DO iDveatmtnt. top tonmiitle*. party ttaton. Ideal far attt appaarlng, aablUeut molhtrs wbo drive. Baloy eur ttUlBg advantage* and excellent rtputotloo. We train you. OR 3-t40i. OIRL FOR I. noft Itaac Orary FITTER Woman age 20 to 50 who has had commercial fitting experience in retail store or who has had professional home sewing. Must be able to communicate with public . well and who will be able to sell alt{ratioh fm-r v i^ e. Please wply to opr Tel-Huron Store, 7'Souih Telegraph Rd., Pontiac, Winkleman’s. OIRLS WANTKO POR TKLE-pboB* work. No tkpdritat* ntc-titaiy. Salary plus aomatitttoos. TlMi N. latiBaw Bt. Offlet No. ft. ioJlnraSr^ABt^^ Pto*^. Call after s P.M. *Bly. wiPBcfoR' For oNV olxAn-iM %4& tJbortr Cittaera. KITCHEN WAITRESS H«!P JPPly *1 atg Boy Orlrt-Bi. *4*0 Dixit Hwy. ____ Lna^ M^uf^uian^pnrf “LADY IS-SS^”" SI year old corpqratloa hat tpta-los tor dlgalfitd tody, aatot tx-ptrtott h^ul. Btralnft thould tvtrtB* Mif*per month, t ptid weekly. Short hours, necessary. Ahp'- “ *' ilnft tL--- i^h. You're ‘ry. Ahpiy'TstS t.“l loyal <>ak. r - Ave.. Royal Oak. 11 tji. to 2 p m MA NiCDRii«.~ ElWaaiNCfED, work 2 deyt wk. In txclualv* uty ttlon. Ltta's “---- — 262 E. Brown Sl Blrtolnt- MATURB WOMEN - pWVbUB ----------- ------- 10 tcU thttr Top Mallty products. Cell today. Pb 4-4666 or wrU* Drayton nalot, P.O. Bax tlona. uermancat poeltlon wkh .......-w- eitabllahed Pontitc cooctro. ‘‘SuV t".h.*rp“ NcSls^-^^kuM^rlw- -----w . „„ V nerlenoad. A n n I v In ptrten, 1106 Wood- jhittom'^~werk‘*eniy**0^ Lintf! ^(^Ip Wanted Female 7 tl.574 to 66.64t annually Must hero at leatt 2 ytara of experience in Medical Laboratory work and Rtglatertd at e medical Technotoglat ----- klati. AU Miebigao CIvU beneftti Apoiy In ptraoo or prtt* Mr. KIchard Luehmann. Personnel Oftloer, Pontlae State Roe- ....— ™ pertan, Bloomfield Hoepttil 2106 r-— word tt Squert Lk. Rd. REPINED WOMAN. 16 TO Cleentof, Ironing, tbUd ttrt days. I night. RtftrtBCts. 4-4451. ______________ iit T Nino Btlon, MI 4-5116 OI and htvt knowledgt ol__ keeping. 6Vb day week Ap- pl2 Pontiac^ttsBot 46. ___ WOIMN, Lira IN CARB OP 2 18-28 IP YOU ARB ABOra AVBRAOB IN APPtARAHCB AND AMUnOUS, W1 HAVE A PBRMANB4T POBI-TION POR YOU. NO EXPBRIENCB NECESSARY, BUT TOO MUST BE BUaiNESS LIKE AND SINCERELY INTERESTED IN A SECURE FU-TORE. OPENINGS ARB LIMITBO TOT PARra‘demonstrators W* tr* now hlrlDt e Umlltd number of demonitratore, Ipr th* eomlnt teettn. W* tr* etlertof. ITAME BRAND TOYS OlFTS a OADOETS At.dlacoont up to 16 per cent off. •.A- .— trantporUtto to Plorl-ig and other talet aid Catalog a CaU I DETROIT (Jtv-Ford Motor Co. (i said last night it may shift new . operations to its River Rouge plant; D Thousands i BEAUTICIAN MANICURIST. BHl-BATWEsJ* I A.M. AND 1 P.M. .-j B,i„,ham U MU* S Telegraph. S.alary $90 Weekly ehlldrmi. Pt g-2T4i._______ WANTED; COUNTER OIBLS FOR wa Miracle Mil* Drive-In Theater. No tkptrlencq neotatary. Mutt be U or over. Appto tl Ib* conctstlon ttand In to* WtUrferd Drlvt-In Thttltr, Wtd. tors Sat. _afur J:20_p.m.________________ WRITK ROUHEKRite AMD BAHf tltUr whlto raotbar werkt. Ctorfct- tea tfta. MA 6-64J0.__________ WOMAN TO HELP WtTB UOHT housework, be companion to elderly tody. Live in, good wagea to rlgM party. 16^ V Pontto TraU, Walled t^o.____________ WANTED: WOMAN TO utfE Ht, tar* ot qhlldren, light housework. Room, board and some wagea. IP W, RundeU.____________ _______ WANTiEb; WOMAN TO LITE "fit *■■. for cblldreo wtitto adto-Cfall after d. OR 2-26*0. WOMAN. LIGHT HOUSE - of ehlldm. live I FOR WAITRESS. * [Ford Vice President Kenneth D. | ;Cassidy stressed that the plans! may change and cannot be con-,1 sidered a committment. s A PART TIME JOB FE 2 8 PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I appeerlng and havt a ear: y I may b* able to quBlify for to that wUl enable you to *e._ IN e week end itlU retain your regular Job. For tntormetlon call Mr. Alltn, OR 3.0*22 5 to t p.m BRAKE MECHANICS. MUSf~iE BKAUTICIAK Eicelleni itltry end eommlnlon-; iv.y,\ arrangemenu. Alr-condltlencd Uumtnum awa. Ibp. raid vaeettona apd m 1» a vnan'toi Fbdri* Mri. r„ W. Phvn. PE t-1243 on Blvd. Dray. BABY SITTER. LIGHT HOUSE- , work, live In. $15 wtek. PB2-M52. _ BEL MAR DELICATE-S-, .‘'EN IN KEEGO HAR- builder, broker - needs BOR INTERESTED IN ................. ......... ^ NIGHT MANAGER, FE 8-0711. . PuU c . *75 Orchard Lk.^d. (And they’re interested folks, too!) DIAL ' FE 2-8181 College' GRADS dele. Age 21-2$ tor ElccuUve.irain-ID* program Muct be willing to rciocete No fee MIDWEST EMPLOYMENT SERVICE, to Pon-tlse at Bnk._Bldg., PE 54227. ~ CANVASSiRS tveen u end 2. Ask for Mr. -_nn._______ ______________ due t6 Kx^AsimS will toaa* part ot my home dekvtry bleach bualneai to reUabI* party. !{^c*‘iSfs.“iffx‘r willing to atart at JU5j________ E^RIENCEb COOK. APPLY IK peraoq only Old VUU Tavern Ho-tel. 5*36 Dixie Hwy.. Wetorftrd. _________1 IdECHJ”"' I. WUaon Service. ( EXCELLENT _____________ botch body repair and pal___ J52T Lake Ed.. Kaego harbor.___________ (arm hand OR OROOW tO ear* for aaddl* bories. Middle-aged men preferred. Mutt b* iob-fr. OnOaiurt RMIng StaMet, tSlTI WttI 14 MU* — F(X)D SALESMAN To eeU on reteU ttoret to tt Peatlae - PUat area. SeUry *i ISSrttow phene Detroit. DI 1461* or writ* to Mr. Rdral. HIM Mtyert Rd.. Detrelt 36. High School Graduates UMTRD NUMBER OP APPU-CATIOIrs BEING ACCEPTED --------- — -------------- EM1_..._____ - • O NALLY KNOWN BEL MAR DELICATESSEN IN KEEGO HAR BOR INTERESTED IN KITCHEN, CASHIER WORK. DAY AND NIGHT SHIFT. FE 8-0711. . . Drive In. Telegraph near Dixie. Per l^'ci*0(Mri. y?la or p ^Ei^ilenced prelerrc^ I dittoed piuit, teed optartunlty. IdA t-ntfult Telegr^ at Ma- COOX’S HELPER HO BUNDAT8 MACHUS IW W. MAPLE. BIRMIMaHAM_ CBILORKN-S BPXCIAUT 8H(W 2 eato* ladlet. must be ckpe-—■toed In --- othtn^. CURB WAITRESSES Day * night shlR GRILL COOKS ' h night Appfr I fc grtU c t toon. te'BT* Woedward a* Bgaare Lake Bd. COSItBliciAirTRArRBDiNi: ferred. fuU 'time. Pontlae i Pontlae Pr" “ — CLCANINO. I WORK. ( PRONE POR INT ________________ jr^i DISBWT^m 6m LOWa EXPERtENranrBAR'"*Nb 'FMN- penon. Prefer Eip., jralh right party. Plei,«« Mr. Pact. OR 440$. COUPLE PlJE CARETAKER OP art. In eltr EiMrlenced only, ^ertneea. WrlU Bm 21, Portias Preai giving qualltleatloM. experIenocd oooe only. Ak- Kidil?n“’'A‘;e.»“ EXPERIENCEb OIRL PO* aHt*T Keir Apply Main Cltancn. tM* _ lajtoet^ Uke Bd.__________ XstABI^Hhp' wifRlNs' ROOT* -rallable._PuU er part ttme, Av-hr. Ut R. kerry. LADT WOULD LnET^OUi^rTb ■ ■" —' "tnt free. 61 Carter. Evelyn Edwards PUBLIC CONTA<7T ......gggg XEPER 6M I^Ily qualined.' up to Trial ?ilS“^PA‘;(?'^- SSJ: cAR‘“W“l‘iR'^ »*• Must tav* auto dealer *» OAL Tt •?? Seereery I* toe Jssa'7;A.v«a s OMMAL OPPICB ...... gbeae work; Head]* cBerte; SALARY 190 WEEK jr kOO ARB A SAUDSMAH AND whet you St* new teUlng u net Uto weKreeeee. l„„ ------ ■»,f 0 (todUurto , ^COOUNTIMO ^ERH 2 Veart aceatoitln* a KAMPSEN REALTOR - builder MU EJtobrtl. ^ Rd. . EVELYN EDWARDS VOCATK3NAL toto 4 PE 44*44 - PB 44M .V THE roXTlAt rUESS. SATI RIJAV. Jl NE ^5. I960 JEwiployin RE- APPREHtlCB CARPEH¥lSr^ wliAtt uork^FE _____ ctu Afttr «,■ iTi-im. _■ ■OTliTC^XAR^lND AMfittbOS •odU ttttdv tmplmmcBt chtulfcur t llotnit. PI 4-< CARPINTER WORK, NEW RemodtHot. PI CARPENTER, aPBCI Liifiiisi: OAkrakTERS. idcE work, by hour or job PE t-H«3 21 TIAR Wants tutor work, unontly. PI l-SI4t. CARPlimR WOR* OP ANT kUC^MO^lt. Coll tfttr ( P^ ADDmONAL WIRINO AND eitri plugt _etU_PE _ UWN jobs' and AIX AROUND work br bop tUtadlni coUtpc. OL l-24ld. _______ MARRIED man’ WAStS WORK. ^oert Wir J^B ______ MAIUtiEO MAN 11 WA^ BTlAOt work of tap kind. PE »-t«21. MAN WANTS WORK OP ANY KIND. ________PRI-MU __________ MAN WANTS ANY tCtND OP work. PE t-lfW.___ __ AN WtERES POR ANT~liRD OP work. PE 4-JM*. ___________ NEAT, AMamoUS HIOR SCHOOC irkdotu neodt omplormoot. Will-Inc to train. CtU botwoon I o.m. and 3 p.m, PE 2-W76_________, REUABLB HIUR SCfiOOL~iOY| repaired by factory trained_ at our oflloo. Oenoral Prlntlnp * Otfleo Supply Co. 17 W. Uu-ronoo Et. Phono PE l-OUI. s£iMimSj}~WAiX'' ciJanerY. Wall and wtndoi “ “ PAY 8 APPLIANCE PARTS M OAIOAND-AVK »-nit.________________ BOTPOtNt. WilRLPSOL A KBf- t-UU Luadsren A Tlncher Corp. NEW WAY ASPHALT Por free etIlmaUt on black top-pins your diivoway tall PE 4-7N0 AU work tuaranteod. PLAsfsimio-REW oft reFair Work Ouartnteod. PE t-03M. PLimBINO ALTERATlbikir ELec' — ------ water tntUUod. DL healtrt told i SAWS MACHINE SHAl MANLEY LEACH 10 BAOLI ^kkejeptnf * Laayky Syr^ 20 COMPUETE PAMILY LAUNDRY fnrtef thin MrvlM. P o a ‘ * ~ U^dry. Mt •. TtlnrapH. rntcirniErithfxci— STUMP removal Troo romortl. trlnmlai. ret Jj^jnNur-ry.MIA mni-«r.att^ Acrocr ~ — OolipLETE lANDSCAPINO. ...JInt. mtlnt. plantlnt. troti cleanup*' of'^M^Ortru!^ piT«SiSd _or^OR_S-01d». BULLiboauNO AND TAitZisbill work wanud. PE KMI. BULLDOTINO. LANDBCAPINO. COMPLETE LANDSCAPINO SERV-tee, work luaraotoed. McNelli Wurtery, Sift Ditto Hwy,, MA LANpeCAPiNO, UOHT HAULINO. _ond plowing. Rogt. PE 3-*7U. LANI^APINa AND TOP SOIL Moving mmI Trucking 22 Trucks to Rent tb-ToB Plokupo l>4-Ton SUkot TRUCKS TRACTORS AND BOUIPMBNT rruckt —■ Dump Truckt SomI Trullort Pontiac P'arin and Industrial Tractor Co. PEMH?' Opep Dally , Including Sunday Patntin| A DjecoiytiinfiJ YOU NAME m R^C/LL PAINT IT Isf"class’ Pi ______ .-0135 ____ INfERlbit.'iX- lenor. 10 por cont dlic. for oath. Outrtiiued Pree oct PE 44200 AA PAINTfito’k OECORAflNo'. 24 yeori tapenenct. Rootonoble. Proe cttlmotoe. Pfapno OL 2-UOO Proe cttlmotoe. Pfapno OL 2-UOO aUdy iNfiiucKDBdbKAtbir. Papering. PE 0-0142.______ Al“PAlNfiSo~k DECORATINO. Paper remoTod. PE 4-0010. C0ST6iirPAINTlNO AND PAFeR jiyUg. Etp. Intured. Rel. OR N T B R I O R AND EXTERIOR PAINTING Mro - state"thee service Pleasant Landscaping CnmpItU Inwn building, truotor grading ond mawlnt.^erUUaiag. uad^prtag and foU olaon-up. PK Statewide Tree Service Let ut trim and plant your tbrub. tery and moke your homo loot tig* Top Soil and houyy trucking. Mil —--------I PAINTINO. PAPERlNO. REMOV- ol Wotplng^PE 2-2312______ ; “PAINIINO A DECORATINO PAINfiNO. WALL WASRINO IN-tured. B T. Bundutky. PB 4-714S. UL 2-3100 ___ Bv Kate Osann I Rent Apto. FumUhed 37 ^nt Housae Uirfim. < 3 BBDRM. AU1 SLATER APTS.' 1 bkoRM . OARAoiTiLn. iJrl »m »-«ii*________ auo. Aduiu. OM A mo. oe,^ Rent Office Space 47 APTBR 0 AND EUNDAYE. SEE F* Rent Apts. Unfurnished M urr PLOOEf ONE e BATE ' PDooa. 0 eooms op op- . !r.jss.p.s..i!yf.isr ttun. LuwroMu uad Para Suoou. , ----------- Lawrontu uad'Parry Suoou. - P>»rcSnr^Ljfi^*.sa5: • I i«r^. >T. iN“HbD "n: Mbi^p- ^-pgtop^ndTr' ’ - 8f;;iig dSan«5r.JSo,*-- ^jmrklng, I5_^naier ^ ^ UNPURN I »»Uto. jjU.^Ul .dlyldo_fpr 3 On WttkiBi Lnk» >----- .. ....... tad Rd A p p I yjii^^ J»ptCB»-:«iET'-ElbE fs DEii»U». modem klUben. out b ' parkins epuct. PhoM FB'' Luko noar JMnoon. Cuupio tr : Avolubl^July’ -it I 1 rMb. NE#tY biecT stove : nort downtown PONTIAC. 14 AU-PuB.: burn. List t«uara feel af eleur opuot trulluble la new bultdtng < TTn-r-nm purtltloti to Ottit tonaoT. li booonwnt AulomuUr Ughto. bout and parting M. DudSySt Horizon f?*?-”ww*i *iSK* loUo 4t noiTtr Co^«. ■ I* .»■■■. PE t-OSdO._________ iFor Rent MIeceliaiicoue 48 timo curoukor work. Wnio uto Prett Er- *' bCCBLLBNT 1 home Fu" " heot. On I ■ A ^g7 PnT IM WMttemoro ~ , «>E Lt**S OR SALE BRAND NEW i —-i- -- - W, V J . 12 AKDlSSoluTB^^ F.tair& M:ioru!krEd,*®*i fiotLYWOOD APTS. r_____lljL^.Eo^ord EL_ MI 4-IIM ______C ! 2 MDHM. upWR^^c^^ uflL-1 H^i^>o1t^i^ ^iw in^ANic. i jpor Sale Houeee 1 RM8 . CTOVE AND RBFRIO.. I r 2 aduHo. 040. FB 4-IOSl. a BEDRM OROUND FLOOR.-ent.. near Blue Sty Tbtater. OM A mo.. FE 4-S62». _ . rjRobMs "and BAttt Rsira. r ond itove. MO mo. Polm VlUa Apt* 401 Auburn^ PB a-coot 3 RldS: AND BATE. ALL UTU-ITiU 1 complain all you e*ttti,WtA».aTjl0»uj.0m0A oant to about boys, but wha Hiwly t moolta. lauulro honilni. Proe eitimatet. Work I I doCoratM, ^ ' rROOMa "k~EATR LAROl~CLEAN mnOern A oultt. lit Roor. Beottd. No drtnktrt. Roforuncot. - ‘ .UL-: teievision Service 24 DAY OR NIORT TV BERVICE. ---- ------ PE O-llOi or FE 0^ WANTED: l t AND 1 HP. SIN- " “ ------ I (le_phau_ motor. EM 3-4300. ! WANTED: SPRAT OUmt A OOLF Mevlng ft Trucking ^ 1-A ReJiJpf‘1 Rates Upholstering 28 _________________________ , FE 0-3701 * I 3 A BATH ISt PL . 4 A BATB Wtd. Mitcellaneous 30 Rent ApU. Furnished 37 —-------- I ttoeo and refrfgertlor. all ‘ uuuUot lumitbtd. Ml Rat Apu.. m Oakland __________ — RMS AND BATH, SlbVE." rtt- ‘ .............VS™fc*« I 1-2035. FE 2-7220 gl 2 ROOHa AND BATH. NICELY • 1 r50MS ANBBATH. uPSkF. D^resEme^Ung. i ALnaanoN^^^ it pior- ______^1, “2??!!® ORMMAKINO, teratlont. Mri. EMelL FE J-MSL Oar^ flowing wIrnbr. AL WXRNSR. ROTO TrLUNO lawna and gardont. n 4-0040. OAROBN FLOWING DISEINO". yard work. Vic of PooUat A Lako Orton. MY MOIL GARDEN AND O.AWN PLOWINO and dragging. OR 2-1121.__ DARDEN PLOWINO AND FTTTINa AU kUidi oi trootor work. W. M. Llnnater. OR 3-2070._______ PLOOnNO. ORAOINO. DISCINO A k cutting. PE 4-4M OR OR ^..-aoW^^raio^^pE ANY CLEAN4IP OR UOHT RAUL. ANT KI N O OP UOHT HAUUNO AHY KIHD OP ^O^UUNO. HAUUNO AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. PE 0-0015. UOHT HAULINO AND LAWN mowing. PE 2-OUO.____________ LIOHT HAULDfO. ClJCAN UP AND Olid Jobt. PE 3-0134.________ UOHT MOVINO, UOHT HAUL- ln« d long dlttgt Rtonc ra 54 Lost and Found L0ET:BLACK A WHITE BEAOLB. uatwort to Major. Reword, DL 5-1270.__________________ LOST: LADIES' BLACE LEATHER Wool Huron but. Puptrt Ttry TtlutbN. FE 5-3270. MAN’i WRMTWATCni MlnuM Lunch. Home *iKiie“/ Orton*»lUe!__________________ LOWT; FORinCA PATTERN BOOK ...... portfolio Vic .. — tephlne. Voorhelt and ToietruM. Reward, FE 4-032S or PE 4-2071 LOST; LaBts obLD WRIST ^ M q^y Wanted 31 WOULD LIKE TO BORROW 02.500 on home ond fnrpimrt. FI >«1W7. Wanted to Rent 32 fumltbed. Clote In. udulU. Wett tide. ueouablo surugu. Ponitac Prtot. ___________________ __ LAKE ORION OR ROCHESTER. 2 or 1 liedroom ro"r tot noiix nt eomor i tleculo Ito»0. refrt^rntor, woihlng machine _Etreet, FE 2- Whlttemore._____________________ * ^j} .LJ***v3?*T*- horSn. RB- ______________ _ ' 4 ROOMB AND BATH. OFPiflr 2 ROOMS AND BATR. OIS.M PER . utllltlet furnlthed. prleate en-woek. In Pontiac, OR 2-0051. I tranro. ttove and refrlgaratur. 3 ROMS. PRIVATE BATH AND I l_ ._ enUance. Parking. I S. Paddock * 4 ROOMS AND BATH ON refereneoa. 1 Share Living Quarters 33 i 314 room new APARtMSNT: fySST* TTABIf BThSOWIT ■AI’IT'TV ^ ^ ^ prlTfttft bftttl Mid FPtfMICft, Child wifiM«w“^®f ^ OR LADY TO SHARE • welconw. OlngeUrlUe. FI 6-1M7. LsS rl" ““ i I 'iSf-SKT”"™'-"" I ... - -......... 6'orth® mi Munujl^*^* ?Sf.. I * »nt _Partlin gurnet. 430 N. ! — . !■ newly decorated. PE 5-'iT3l. 4 RMB. AND BATH UPPER ___________^PE 0-3527 ROOMS an5~eati* upFer. 04420,______________________ WEED. LA70N CtlTTlNO A H D| flower bed wort. FE 2-0203. I ybUNb MAN 23. YET, WUHul work^Pt 1-0720;______________I 'Y’OUNO MAN WANTS WORK OPi Work Wanted Female 12 AMBITIOUS YOUNO WOMAN MUST BUSINESS Service Directory ■f i UNEMPLOYED LADY thpre lAko homo with a or lady with child. WIU c__ chUd. Clooe to Bet. But. Bylytn - loe . PE 4-7700________________________ 4 ROOM UPPER IN p6nTUC. Oarage. Otllltlee fum KM 34714 . Parking ttcUltl >w. PE VOtfO ROOMS. MUent loenuon. n Rewftrd. Ptew return! U i-te33. | 1 * Wbl^lNO 27l (^nt^acts, Mtgs. »Yih'*“Swt^ jvf [tr^ up^^^ ANY FORMER VIVIANt WOOD- . t'Dnik T'C St''ni^siaMO***^' *” ***'*’*“* --- ”• Huron. New devel-, for your land contract. w^.r •« Molrote. tldewulka and psTod LVii « “f*’'*- ®>®« •• aehoote.TulI bath. »-****_*7*“*“«»._uc jL»_audJpun. n»m^ mom. kitchen A utUlty. ja~tUk LAROE BUNOAibW. NEAR ST »n«hJp*A BIOS per month. OR LAKEPRONTl O lkBRObM new! brick torraco. swImmUig. lltbing.. ‘PP®™"**"*'_______ _boatlni;_EM 34044. ^ 2 BEDRM. HOME IN WARDS OR- LARos 3 ROOM DUFun. ^im-l ‘ tj^Unlra^I^c and'Cooley ^koI l>u«>t«o from . downtown PunUi i«M0 _______from downtown F.--------- Pluotorod wollt. hardwood tleora - - ■ - -losom IP kitchen ---- payed drt*o NEAR obOO BEACH. HDNTOOn' owner. PE B427i._______ MB 0 iSith-ir dSSr5i'rBE01Ulf-5AS“Hfiff^^ ^0 month or MBM dowu. QRj gurogo. Vorj^ emMttton E to- ‘^“bJth^^mTftol **^!B-BEbRMR.. . CARPrfiNbT-OAE bSot-ot—— ■nil II -— I heat. olumlnum ttormo and B4ruf0. --- ESSJIi. ^*1‘-OT***. *1 rocroauon — gytX »®f» *Wo of Pontiac ;_Watklno^L -------------- * lEOROb- ------ , -- old. goo hoot, largo lot. down MA 4-1B03, \\’. Yalr. Cor. Stanley I Brick 3 bodrmt., rant—option to jr^7.Lg3T ' iT-rTFw buy wtthUt g mu. FE^UMM or B BEDRME.. aAEEMEirr, ATTACH-vif B-I7I7 • ™ • »wo od tto cor gumgu. corpotM llrtug , ---------------------- rm.. tllo bath, ptoatorod wuUt. . ■^1 oak noort,. uh»ml^um_^ttori|M n-- -7 ^*^***.. ..titr-Vi.,._— tlO.BOB. tormt. PE B-0000 _ ------ 3 aabhodirbAalauT. OR_34BI«_L ^ 1 corpotlnj. g--- —— “ * STourt V?! t ott Waod- peti, no chUdrou. OB______ * 'iiwir Lnkonnni, good koaoh. CeWAOEE W LAKE LfiSANAU: poymont. OR 34M0 __ BEDRil' RANSn^lbilh? NEW- ______ ______ Ranch'•* 3-OdJI or PE_M11. oxt. 7272 prtoo ooly KBSB p45 n PURN 5 RMS. PbRCH.~BAWbY ri »-MW jto«eh_;_EM 2-47M.____ 2 BEDROOM WEST SUBbitkAN. 'q? «*ff.T: MobioiN obTTAaEl 3W.g*y^« DL 24127, FURNISHED BAOIN AW"~ rt PooUoc. t owner, MA t-221 I aril. FB (-4477 oftei AdulU mly. : 5 LOE. RM. UPPER M CASH IN CONNECTION WITH , 6 p m. FE S-(SS( ™ 2-OOdl._________________' our National Adyortttlng pro^om.; RETIREMENT AESDRANCE CO 3 ”00^- i 5 RM. EAST BLVD. TERRACEJ For Mlllni only 65 boltfet Wat- a on iTV I tpaco FE 3-1244 or OA B-MOI „ rg; 3.3141 klniDouble_8tren|th Vanilla 150 ABli-IJY 3 lOE. RMS AND RATO FOR ----------------tRtk)M«~AND 'Ma'TH ~~ N. Ferry. FE 2-3053.___________I To tell your land contraet it, couple. W. aide. UO wk. fE 2-43M ‘ M'.Si BATH beach rent by' week™m only. MA (-tl7l. I' OR 3-B< Wlihti potlttoo u aalci counter giri. ^ 2011*MI2.__ BABT'SltTINb DbNE. UmiON-project a. D. AdTt— I. ni 3-B2I4 er PE 5- group. EV " —HEN .............. .. k bouoo cloonlng. PB 3 Building Service 13 l-A-l ALUMINUM BIOINO Inttollod or In ttock Awningi, Stormi, stone No moooy down—M mn. s uf Por hlgboit guodty, guuronte 1ST CLAES' ^CENSE^BUILDER »R BANDINO. « BANDER. iPB 54722. PABDLON - WATERLOK - MBDQi ii.USf?Eai'„i: A-1 BRICK. BbbCK AND CiM^NT wntk. Aloe Ilroplocoi. OR 244M -_rTffiiDs cement WOHK. Drtm, floori, ole. Jonaon. PE ~ T RE8iE®NTIAL OOMlfERCIAL AODITIONb OARAOES. aWNINOS Pontiac Homj^Seryice CE 416(7. .AS A ORODP OP EUILDBRS WE offer low prices through volumi ______ plant. W . e mortgage. Ho obligation. builders Exchange " »-»i* or uTa-a. -breaewai^rb^_cembnt wore nt All blnil> VWI a.e7tA Keith O, Elegwart, PE 8-07(2._ CEMENT WORE OP AIX klNDB. CUBTOM CONCRETE WORE TO DEV AC OLAES WALL! ALL weather living room. Roofing -aiding—Uuuloflan. Ooll FE 5-7207. DRY WALL TAPIHO AND nHUB-tog. Proa otUmateg PE (4711. Elic+RieAl sinV ->REk af PE 54430 BOMt. OA2UOE. CAEINE,AbSl tlnnt Lieaoai4 kaUdor. HU -Termt PE 4400k ------------------rBTLY, MONET FOR : NOW eanatruciioa. n ^EATOy _pR*J>CE f>LA8TEIUNO h REPAIR. REAS. 24IM ROOF REPAIRS EATEETRODOmWO PE *4(44 R. O. SRTDBR FLOOR UYDTO, toadtog uad flaltMag. fwano PE HOBBIES ARE FUN... for oTory momker of the family when you own yoor own home. Whtthor — —• •• • fu/^ I (Srdoa oink, or ^p Hl-Pi onUl Iho woo honro: ttVoB ptoolWe to your own bono. TOO will ttod the btot out of^ FE 2-fl8I Bailderi 1 Title and Abstract I.OOO't OP-COLORS IN ANY FINIBH PAINT Interior and Eitertor OVER 1.000 WALLPAPER PATTERNS __ pontiac-koCKcote PAINT STORE 2 E. .Cato ___ PE 2-7120 ALL YVork Guaranteed OARAOKE - AWmNOS ADDITIONS - STONE BuiMim Snppliei_ BENSON LUMBER Complete Line of Building Materials M( N. Saginaw COLONIAL LUMBER ABSTRACT S: TITLE OUARANTT COMPANY “For Your Prptection” FE 5-8118 IS WaaT LAWRENCE Serricet CONSOLIDATE ALL YOUR BILLS AND LIT US OIVB YOU ONE PLACE TO PAY BUDGET SERVICE CARPKITNO AND UFH0L8TIRY CLEANED PRiqp> lUpHT_PRJ-J*!! BLOOMEIELD WALL CLEANERS WALL CLBANINO WALLPAPER CLSANINO HOME WINDOW CLEANIRO FE 2-1631 3S CrtaooBt Dr. Ponttoe 1 EYD BARBER________ Everything in AND MIRRORS PONTIAC GLASS CO. 23 W. I,awrence St. FE 5-6441 , ASROTRBDB i loweit, pool- ------ — , . , ' KNAPP SHOES I r«"fl,rySi“A'Mh?i%*Ju"L-™^ PriJ Herman OR 3-15S2 ! euutty and mart|t(ei. Small * HJi? COlb WAVS OTOAL. (6 (0 COM- ! •7*“*“* pitta. Dorothy'a PB 2-1344. ‘ waiting. .«Jil_anjr_hout,_PK 4-3(44 ROOMS. OROUND PLOOR 2 BED-! It Ukt. '3 BEDROOMS. PULL BASEMENT ' “ * (irage ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? ARRO REALTY I ___(142 Caaa-EllaabaUi Road_ J ABSOLUTELY 'THE PA8TE8T A ' Uon on your (land contract. Ci buyert waiting Call R e i Partridge. PE 4-35(1. 1060 W. Hu- emerfency, a SEABOARD P N Perry. PE ____________________ ANT OIRL 6a WbllAN NEED-l^in *AIto***S ^htmt FE iwer, FB 2-0734, Cwfidenttol. ibSB WEIORT SAFELY AND economically wttb newly rtlooted Dex-A-Diet tobloU. M oonU at IN DEBT? IF SO LET US “builders Hardware’’ ELECTRICAL SUPPLIJM PLUMBING BUFFLIK8 FHA & ABC TERMS 7374 Highland IM. (5U0) OR 40316 NEW AND DEED ■ Building Matertolt —RECLAIMED BRICE-WlNDOWS-DOORE-TRIkl B1--- PANKUNO ROOPmO SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERML BAI« CO. 5340 Highland Rd. IM^I OB (-70(2 Paint $2.98 Per Gal. MORGAN RARDW/M . . 1460 BALDWni RD. FE 1-0147 WOLVERINE LUMBER COMPANY WE BUY, SELL. OR TRADE ALL TYPES OF BUILUING MATERIALS if BORE YOU EBB UB BBPORl TOO BUT ANT BUILDINO 320 S. P^DOCK ST. FE 2-9784 Bedrical FRED W. MOOTE ^ELE^IC^.n*C._,^,, ‘pact^ymain^ BLacTOcau!! ^Stractor VrSSSk, PB 1-OSM Ininrance 11 COMPLETE INSURANCE RM. 702 PONTIAC CTATE BANK BLDQ PE OiMM lounti ;^»i Serving Pontiac Since 1929 LAZELLE AGENCY backenstose Book Store II EAST LAWRENCE PE 2-I4I4 DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES — 720 Menomtooi, Mra Wolloea. PB Patios PAJIO STONE CO. PACTOBY TO TOO PRICES «70 Highland Rd.. M-IS. EM 2-4125 Institutional FURNITURE In Color for Your Office or Your Home GENERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W. UwTonoo St, PI 24131 Sfta Ladd's, Inc. Deveioperi of Fine Building Sites ' Hampton Electric Co. I W. HURON ST. FE 4-Ut . CLIP and SAVE YOUR READY REFERFNC^OR ALL FUTURE NEEDS. Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIG.^N CREDIT COUNSELLORS OR 3-1355 IMMEDIATE ACTION On any good land contraeU. New or leatoned. Your caih upon lal-Itfoctory InapecUon of property and title Atk for Ken Templeton K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2330 Orchard Lake Rd. PE 4-4503 I 3-2U1 Wanteii Real Estate 36 CASH 48 Hours, for Homes, Equity, Land Contracts TIM W 3 ROOMS AND BATH. PVT. ENT $11 per^ek. FE 50745;__ j ROOMS. ADULTS ONLY, NC Fliher Body. HorUand 3 NICE R005U. PRIVATE B Col[ after 4 3 ROOMS. PVT, BATH AND ENT. _37 Ellwood. ne 3-1700.____________ 1 RM. PVT. BATH AND ENT.. 1 man or couple. 100 Norton. 2 LOB. RMB.. PVT. ENT.. BATlf, —■— ........ •' pfne|ro»e. ^dulti;_________________ ROOMS AND BATH." itlCELY urn. Prlvute entrance No -•ro. Referencei FE 1-27(1 ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE Rids, a BATH ALL PRIVATE. ---------ITHAl UtlllUet turn, PE 8 _ RdblU AND BATB. MI B ____t WITH PVT. BATH ____i. Nicely furn^aamn. Cou- "FREE" -PLUS 1(6 INPORMALS-Wlth Erery Order Of Wedding Invitations WE PAY ALL YOUR BILLS Ptymente you can afford. If you ewe (6(0 to (SO.OOk'and blUt are urreari cull for an Our •anrlee toeludei beokketpUto. __ . jotocoplti et ________^ «* •** HOMEX SERVICES SoM**Ot** 141M ^ eki. peotaga Wtd. ChiMrew to Board 28 A-l UCENSEO HOME. OAV OR Wtft HMisehqMJk04isJ9 I^MS OP FURI te phone PE ykit Spot cooh for I CASH FOR PtnENirUHE AND AP-^n«i' Old ptocot or ■ iVRIGHT, Realtor — Oakland A*«. Ofton 'U1 (:3( PE (-75(1___or____PE (4306 CASH FOR FHA AND GI EQUITIKS ..an Uf tor Immediate depotll. R. 1. W ICKERSHAM _ _ 71(6 W MAPLE MATPAIB (-6250 3 ROOM PRIVATE l-LSTINGS WANTED CASH for your equity on houtei. vacant land. Land controcti. FE 4-3560 WM. A. _utllltlet,_ lnqiUre_(( Jlwlght.______ LOE RMS AND BATH. PVT., child welcome off W. Columbto. FE 4-1120____________________________ RM LOWER FBbNT APT . UTa fum., Mathew St., OR 3-7(07. RW. AND BATH BAST WEL- oom apartment all modem LAKE FRONT BEDROOM aW S per month Children permit- - Junt completed on 10 mllei of. ________________ 1 1^0 Hemptleid. 1(2 E Hu-' «»ter. >1 hour Detroll Sandy: with UOt down.__________ ™ ...... iwlmmlng, ikling, flihlng.i contmcl. Capital savlngt h Leon It fum.I g^ hornet, til rec-, Co. 75 W. Huron St!l% 4-0001. way. Needt painting, and dfeorat-Ing and tome repair work. 1 Mock from WUllamt Lake. (S.(t0 I PE 4-0304 or FE 2-7430 a' 00 OAKLAND 1 room aparf---- 1 rofrlg.. nirath. Sea Mri.' Roberu. Thbated aft (Ilto E. Sogtoaw. Call CADILLAC. 23. 3 RMS, HEAT. Efficiency Aoartments Living room, kitchen, bathroom. Included, itorage foelll"— •- JE^ I V I H O ROOM, kltehcn, bathroom, tr^erotor. MS N. NEW MODEKN ( RM. APT.. PVT. Uundry. OinurMce.'Oftrafe. Mlct Tetor. NISHINO? — Oftt up _ ___ SEABOARD nNANCB CO., UM _ R._P«rry ._rm_ Mt61. NORTHEND 4 ROOM UPPER OA8 hfftt. Sorry no ehlldrtn under 10. ilviM n peUd. ft —-------iUnalnf, ri i - telephone « lakepront. lddF eoe«Knto£ mMI* UDROOM COLON!__________ 1 1-4 (00%ookly. fil*'’uM *i5Sn!'tiiti------ itotment only, CUl'. ™«., SIS Koto St- OL 14141, ...s . — _ .2L I nji house. I^NDALB VA- --- ----dotw , ■ - f4tM foi v^ffiT'sli ut. thiA LAKE FRONT MODERN COTTAOBS (ROOMS AND HATH. PUU. BMIT. Newly dee., good lec. FE(-17(2 ( RMS. ON DRAYtON RD IN Ctorkitoa. Reoaonakle By own-• *»• MA (-13(2. < ( ROOM HOUSE AND BATR. OAS ' heat, booetoent. • — —— (CEliAUKEK LAKE, REAR CAD- -f*4jnt_HHEPARD. RRALTOR lltoo. Ma HwT^ *'***^|_MDLT1PLE UETINO BKRVICK MOODW. I ^M, GOOD mH-i* JUgL 2 C« O^ . m ^iy*^*v*iSM**** L^~eAND~i$Aar. I RM8. AND BATH PULL BSMT. 8-»7** •'"*“**• *»•»«»»• MA mant. Oak noors. *«fiplace**2' ———------------ --------- ear gursgo. By Et. Benedtot'i. _ FRONT , 1. monUi or aeo- P m. "h. Taylor. OR g roomI IM Dreiden. A T H. 3 APTS Kir RENT.'FE 14(71 If no^imer FE ^32 irocw. j RMS . BATH UTIL. FURN ytjj S-5041' floor. FE 4-0000._____ 4 ROOM PURNISHEO APf~PRI- ()KCH.\RD COURT APARTMENTS "Rent Orratly Reduced" *'nf*hed*'^ow' * **®*0O''* near khopplng center.' Bv week or mouth EM 3-6211. For Rent Rooms . large living room, ftre-tarcakfoat nook, baeemeiit. .—. ------- ------garage. Near icheoU. Tends. 31(4 Wood-' 35# Auburn. FI 1-M77. . 35(7 MINTON I BEDROdiriRbllE to Judah Luke Esiaiti. Pay menu -------------------------I Ql Oiwn - - - &me * Make otter fo^ eoultj 42 37M AUBURN AVB. KENNEDY _____31(1 IF HURON ST_____ LET’S GET MOVING Spring U Una to toovg^ W( have huyeri waiting for city lake property. imaU farmi and builneii. Call Iramadlatoly. Paul M. Jones, Real Est. S32 W. HMuren WANTED — LAKE LlBTINaS — “Buyers Galore’’ sSed*:'‘.’.v utimiei IB _________________ , 4 ROOia AND BATH PRIVATE ' Pontiac' entrance. Ptrvt floor FE (-6315. ‘ 4 ROOMS PRIVATE ENTRANCE bath. l(7Vk N. Saginaw. Apply the A.M. at tho Itontry. ____ 4 ROb^ CLOSE IN I ROOM. PENSIONER WELCOME 55 Wmiom. PE 444M, i « . "0051 APARTMENT EVERY-1 thln> IttnnimnnA —| ROOMS 34 N Ml JtND BATH. UPPER. 1 AND 3 BEDROOM8--umlthed A Unlumlehed AIR CONDinONBO - . ..... ..... ; thiM lurnlibed. modem t _ 3-52(6. _;_____ iattractive boom'for'oen-i i todlvld-! tlemoa_^ Sewa'* — ■——— decorator colon furnlthed. Auto heat and hot water Dithed. Kitchen fun. a -------- -----other with ptoil I HTOFirab at'door. loe '(rlgerator ' rm. FE (-7(22. co5fFORT«LE ROOM" rdWomT-Uemon. near Fuher Body and aerial and many c WE NEED LISTINGS^ F.C.WoociCo. WUItoma Lokt Rd at M-U OR 3-1235 PROSPfeCTS OR EDBPBCTBI Do you want to tell your p ROOMB._MODBRN. C^HXAC ADULTS MOR. 16 8ALMER ST . AFT. t --, ---- d« ’AdiJu only "((o' ^ U 8-6918 per^O;j™ 3-4207_________ Open Dal^and Sun 16 t_m-( pm. ' ( ROOM apartment. AYAILA^ i RAMONA TERRACK ( ROOMB. i toon, adultt. Ground floor. FB ' fV ^ chUdrtn wtlcomt. FE 44M( ' (-1344 or OA (-(0S(._____' _3-S#22._______________ ----- ' ( Room AND BATH. (K.M FBI ! WEST SIDE APTS . 2 BE&BOOMB week, tamtoh own utlUUet FB ' nnd bath up Uvfau room, dtotog (-((((. < room and kltcban flrtt floar. Sep- ( BOOM A*T. elderly COU- | ft*’VT* f* ’Tauwil.r'^t Pm,;ra‘’?U72"otJ?’U'**;ul (1( #EEKLT. 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE bath A aatrunee HMt A . Near PonUoc A PUhai ______ ! 4 ROOMS AND BATH, 34 N. Rent Houses Fumlslicd $9 AFT. NEAR OBNERAL ilOeFtTAL for worktog_ •ooded lot. Cuttem bum to m». O^r trunoferred. Phone OL A REAL BUY n OBO oul. ^ DUtom: White Luke prlv.. 2 leto. I •c^t nay reeteunhlg offer di or'mlU accept good er- —■ -0^. Inquire at (M IM.. White Lake. ru^ beautUttUy ittimtad. MdTt 2Ld“‘fir: jauTtW NA t-mi^i^i( ‘ M.4(s^ ESgiTriiri-------- Iroaoierredo Will toko MM tel "taMiiT'''"prrto^~bSwl,.,«»»r refue^^ ps TWENTY-EIGHT THE rOXTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 23. 1960 For S«k Houses 49i For Sale Houses 49 w».i (tr«»tace.--— M.dM »IUi MOe down. ,Sjj«“ BV OWNER eirlTaa tUnor/1 bodrra 3 bedroom. Cloae lit Large lot. On land c WOO down RalaBea H.l TRI-LEVEL STARTER, NO MONEY DOWN Build a home to be proud of. Your tot or oura. Baeo model. O. riatUey. Bulldor. KM 3-0403. LAEE FRONT — DIMED. FOBB 1 TRADE EQUITY IK 3 BDRM ■ tetting for thle 3 br home lor car or whM h-«* me with atUehed go-1 Draylon Plaint. OR CIVILIANS $190 DOWN IVORAK, »Sg3 (INDEPENDENCE i TOWNSHIP) I 3 bedroomi. Comer lot. Utility i room. Brick and aibeitoe Car-1 port. Vacant. Open. Walk In and I look at It. II Intereiled. call ^ For Sak Houses lohnson n TEARS OF SERVICE n Oakland County. Id mod- LAKB OAKLAND Here U ono •Undlag buye Larg^ bodrta ora gttehan. Horn oratad ouUldo fe iTing Bathafca'w'RSi*. OrerlMklng Lake. » you aoo it you will Uko It. AESFRONT ^ „ On Lake Oakland.^ e“'I'rln^nn tifuUy landacapod lot. i0i343. Underground iprinklor tyelom. Owi^ er will lacrlllee at bo M roUrad and wantt to more to Florldo. wm Uko a trade If you hart a For SukHpuses 49 COLORED THU VERT CLEAN 3 b^"^ brick itueco W'lion It b terrtne buy I Spucloui roomi. hurdwood floorartbalered waUi. Urge kitchen. THia CUTE 3 BEDROOM le rt-tered it Ml Central with a »em low down payment and notei Eatfa-claan In and out Pull battment. "Mora rlgtat In. IF YOU LIRE iPACE and a ranch-•tlyed home, we hove fuel the one tor you in w baths. 3 fireplaces. Family room opening out to lake. 3-car attached garage. Underground aprlnkltng | system Electronic garage doors. Maav extras. Telegraph Rd. to James K Bird i Right lo property. ; 2 B.R home and 3 Rasement Furnace Tc. HAYDEN REALTOR I M E. Walton FE 0-0441 I Open Ever "— • -- Home l?o. 3: Extra-Urge 3 rrae. with private drive. |3«.N0. Urms. By appolotmcnt. i Rolfe H. Smith. Realtor i 344 B. TELEORAPH RD. I rr. 3-7144__MA 5-0431 i Lake Angelas I OWNER TRANSFERED ; Nothing Down Nothing Down I 3 bedrooms, full _ _ —-- I MSUEM._aw A_Wbr HOYT $9,500 15.054. FE 5-MTI WrST SUBURBAN LAKEFRONT Nearly new year around Ledge-rock fireplace, glaes wall oytT-looking lake. Largo poreh, shaded loti. Priced a* BUN, TO 1-5051 Crescent Lake Estates Only 07M down -movet you to cute 3 bedroom ranch home, beat, ptocly landseapod lot. i noting and dmpee, lakg and P prIvUagas. Immedtota poueisi KENNEDY propeny. | “ > Dorothy Snvder Lavender: Realtor ist. 30 Yeare with tiled basement. 3 c garage 3 loU 110 500 with 03.1 jjj down. Termi. OR L1504.___ NO MONEY’DOVVN 3 bedroom brick ranch. F basement, newly decorated. RUSSELL \OUNG 7001 HUhi—---------- REAL ESTATE A BUlLDlNq i phone Ebf 3-3303 or MU 4J417 _ TE 3-3SS0 _________ra_4q300 gyoNDERFUL HOUSE TO MAKE OAKLAND LAEE. ATTRACTIVE 3 ,our home In. Urge 3 bedroom btdroom brick ranch, near new (rick raach with baaement. All school. Lake grMlm. gl.tOfl „«« ,rea BulR-ln oven and down SM monto, 4'i per cant! range. Urge lot and many other mortgase. OB 3-3014.________, excellent features, 015.450 As- OLDIR HOUSE FOB SALE. 135 sume 4>, per cent mortgage. OR Alice FE M31T or MI 0-34M. ! 4-0041.___________________ OWNER. SAVE COMMIBBIOH DEAL WEST SIDE BRICE. INCOME direct. Good neighbore. conv-n(- i.Oiisf PE 5-1042^_ enl location. 3 bedr(^, all mod- WALTERS L A K E. 4 1 ......—- "*— •* • Fireplace, screened-ln po«h car garage. 7 lots. 111.500 ATTENTION donthly^ayi OPEN I approximftte* nctudtnf ... R.\Y O’NEIL, Realtor 3- 303 8. Telegraph Open M MA FE 3-7100____________OR 3-3111 RHALTV 254 a TELEGRAPH FE 2*9140 - FE 2-9969 _ OmCE OPEN 1 TO 5 “BIG T*’ OPEN^illy and Sun^ay^l^ to 9 ■ !l b^room home, Pn baths, finished family room, gai heat, large 60 ft wide cltv lots. ONLY $590 Dn. moves you in. 77 N. Saginaw 8t. Warren Stout Real* tor FK 6*0166____ COLORED 3-Bdrm. Ranch Homes $10 Down (3i U baths New carpeting and draperlee. Frolesslonal-ly decorated. Ixua lacUltlei Include largt play room. bllUrde room, spaetbue porch areai and boat house with completo apartment. Sale swimming. Beautifully landscaped, g miles to MSUO. Public schools are new bulldingi. PX 5-NN. Nothing Down Will bulM 3 bedroom etarter h«m. Willi basement. Rouah i DOM McDONAU). , DORRIS Open House OPEN .Sunday 2 to 5 P.M. Hammond Lake Estates 2062 Lakeward Lane 3 car attachad garage, patio porch profeselonally landscaped grounds Features “family" room. “American" kitchen with dining ipace. fireplace, carpeting and drapee. dining room with planter divider, luxurious tile bath, con-ovenlent utility room with extra Uvatory. gas heat and •— ------- --‘-'legee. ucllon Orchard Lake Rd. die Bell, left 8“ - NORTH Hamm ’lUid Nicholie. Realtor 40 Mt aemeni St FE 0-1301 or FE 4-0773 For Sale HouiO^ 49 SUMMER SALE We Must Make Way FOR THE NEW TRADE-INS IN WATKINS HILLS Houses From $8,250 TO $24,500 - All Kinds - - Of Terms - $59.50 PER MONTH WEST SUBURBAN 2625 Watkins Lake Rd. nice 3 BIDIWM-^avrt sr • ij'y*o«V“"tor siii ’'‘“bNllY !».250 11% dibcount fob cash $60 PER MONTH OPEN SUNDAY 3 to 5 4213 Ledgestone Drive Waterford Area: exceptional basamen' 5 recreation ri with nrlvatg lavatory and with basin, gas beat nice patio on rear, lolld drive, chor (sliced lot. located In exclusive Pioneer Highlands off Voorhels rd. Open House "BUD" , Osmun St. GI Terms ! No down payment to quail- j (led OI Purchattr, psy only : the doling costs, on this I clean 3 bedroom family home j CHRISTIAN HILLS Near MSUo. bMutlfuJIy^ la^| SA1. 3-6, Sui>. 1-0 hllUMt. Ideal (or chlMrto., tractive home, attached 3-< SMseTYvtog* rJSS r4 bathe, finished family room, gae boat, large 50 ft wide cuy loU. ONLY 55M dn.> moves you In. 77 N Baglntw St. Warren Stout Realtor. PE 5-41M.__________________ ___oasement with 15 tloo room Cyclone ( EM 1-3301' the kiddles Only <> ... Parochial and p hoolt Only 014.050 -— 'x— • * Taylor. 1 aarage. ------- — 9wtcr Read aj^ c Romos at. OH ^ iiifliilnimasf F. fl Tdie owner wUl toTVe tb"eaH-Ucfc to feed the deer wlUi! ________________ - 1100 N 1-------—" *^' ' , ( OR 3-3070,__________ a ROYAL OAK AREA. RANCH TirFX ‘ * “idrm|. 37 ft. Ilvtog cJnlng Oat heat, basement. OSOt ^Owner LI 3-eOH.________ Jfl’fim. 3 BEDROOM BRICK on 1341380 ft. lot to (beautiful sub. 3 must N.W of vlllafe. " w„r._------------ I »«■!>»■ J«rmj.^o,ne_r._qi^l-»450 FOB COLORED BEDRkCliW Stop Look aiid Reason!! -----Ljeneed yard. 3 extm tate.| , — —J contr^ only _____ OO.TWOt at 076 per month Nice . .—J. qara»e iw neighborhood Locatod 7,; at 110 Weet Beverty. No bid too Aweo xw beat CoovCBl^ M, g, oonaldered I o5«lfl,.r4?1300‘'1B5S*Bpr®leld - SMAIX FARM Or Owner _______^________Ig,lj tomlHr home located oti 0 !ss.j!lra.s;L.-'i..sss 0000 dowo. PE 3-3701. _ 1 OL*»-*Ui**' Tuytor, itositor. t tor your picnics Only 12.000. terms. TED McCULLOUOH. REALTOR ARRO REALTY 5141 Cass-Ellsabeth Rd FE 5-1284 FE 4-*^844 Open 9 • m to 1:39 p m ALL DAY 8UWDAY ____ JOHN K IRWIN WATKINS LAKE PRIVILBORS. NEAR FINE LAKE: SpactoiM three bedreosa he exccileni lake prls mt Lake. Oce th fe'e^' -GIROUX CRE^NT LAKE PRIYILEOEB Three bedroom ranch home Pull basement, two c8r ga-.rage, storms and screens Nar-toallv Would ten tor 115.000 but owner mutt taU. offetod at only: SI1.5M. GAYLORD OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 P.M. COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST tures. 3 large bedrooms : tiled bsths. Oeorglw marbli fireplace full basement : car garage. We Invite yoi EXECUTIVE BUSINE88 OR PROFE8BIONAL MAN You should bo looking at thts beautiful home between Oaford fe Orloa. Faaturet three large bedrooms, eatra nice kitchen bpea Into lovely enclosed patio with (Ire-pi a e e. fliilthed batement with bar. atihehed two car garage The grounds are laniiscaped with the best. t34:IM win consider trade (in smaller h-m*. land contracts or what have you unU (or goo per month only 015.044 wlt^aiOM d«*a. BotWr tako a toft. with fireplace. Informal dining ai-ea. 1'4 baths, eating space kitchen, plus breakfast room. Jalousie porch, batement with ft ft. rec. room, workshop, many other features. Lovely landscaped SMITH .WIDEMAN OPEN ! SUN. 2-5 P.M. 1315 E HAMMOND LAKE DRIVE DIRECTIONS: MIDDLE BELT TO SQUARE LAKE ROAD. EAST TO HAMMOND LAKE DRIVE. _ flue taxes -- WEST SUBURBAN FINE I with eapoaed'Baiement. Nlea loeatloD. Paved street. - $300 DOWN — PLUS COBTt TO ANYONE FULL PRICE ONLY $10,950 $71 PER MONTH - FLUB TAXEi TO - GIs FOR THIB EXCELLENT WATERFRONT HOME - ABOUT $350 - TO MOVE IN Located on North Bide of Williams I^kc ^ $63 PER MONTH - PLUS TAXES TO - GIs LOVELY 2 BEDROOM home ^ Has teparau dining room and Uble space In the kitchen plus full batement with new furnace and a 3-car garage. Walking distance to school and stores. Walton Area $112 PER MONTH — PLUS TAXES — CLAKK.STON .Ml Brick Rancli AN bUTBTANDiNb HOME Inum storms and screens, awn- d".?:;. aY%',5r'£2 your family a favor, set it today 1 “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor : 40 Mt. Clemeo4 Bt. FE 5-1201 After 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 WHITE brick ranch nome aiiuaied Just ' across from the lake. The living room U 15 X 01 with oak floors and plastered walls. Separate dm- . Ing room Modem kitchen with built-in oven range A refrigerator. Each bedroom hat double : closets. 3 baths Breeseway At- i Uched 3 car brick garage. Full | On.'SSi! 're'ms'"' I WHITE BROS., REALTORS I OR 3 1305 I Open Dally 0 til •; Sun. 10 ’til 6 500 Dixie Hwy :a bedrooms. All oiner rooma very spacious. Lake Privileges $100 PER MONTH ON BXISTINO CONTRACT 3-BEDROOM RANCH 5 ACRES A LOVELY ROME situated Located Near Deer I^ke $125 PER MONTH PLUS TAXES A PINE NEW TRI-LEVEL HOME “WATKI ”s HILL.S” • HAS OVER <4 ACRE of f mmec'- - - ”T*.—5“ aarega, lun porch, oU boat. Ideal country livtof, achool bus at door, Only SIO.OSS with terms. OXFORD VILLAOB -a Bpie and span 5 room white bungalow, full baaamont with recreation room, oil heat, large ajtpanslon attic (or future bedrooms, new 3'v car gamge. fenced yard. Priced at only $12,008. Warren Stout, Realtor 7 N. Baftnaw Ph. PE 0-SlU Open Till 8 P JO. Walk to Wdrk e’l a good eltaa S (amfly ‘—Cloeo to Oeoqral Hoa- ment. oU beat, gkrage, S1S.SM. ' Parkhurst bt. Lovely 7 room modem home, close to CHy Hall or walking distance to downtown. Carpeted living room, den 3 bedrooms. ^ bath, gas heal, garage. OtSr- Colored For oolv It.ggi down you can Have this very fine famliy Itome. meat, gas furnace. 3 tar gamge. 0 rooma bsiUtto bath, baae-baainUul treOs Oi abrabbary. Fenced yard. Vacant. WILLIS M. BREWER ibflCFH F. REiaZ. BALn MOR MSS «. Haron St • FB 041S1 AFTER l:3S rC 14131 or FB «47M TOUR ROSTSaS: BETTY HELLER OPEN SUN. 2 - 5 P.M U40 COOLEY LAKE t ------t POSf--- 3 I Itvinf n i'aie TOUR HOflT: J tEriRED OOUFLE8 TliU li the home fbf Tea. 1 carpeted bedrooms k carpeted living roam. Nlea klldien with broakfaet nook. FuU bath. Shower to base-meat OH FA beat Mb car garaft. Large tot. WEST BLOOMFIKLO HfOH AREA ^ bedroom brtek and coder sided ranch home with Romeo brick front. Nice dlntog mom. Uvlnr room and kitchon Oai forced air heat. Recreation room. I- OPEN WATKINS SUNDAY 2 - 5 IN THU NORTH ROCHESTER Hn.Lfl AREA - Charming 4 bedrm. country home 3 ceramic hatha il bedrm., 1 bath dn i Large picture window. Ilvtog room, fireplace, dining room oil hot water heat. Comb, storms and screens, tosulatton. Oarage, small stable. 5 acenle acres. Reasonable — good terms Oo north Ihm Rochester to Orion “* turn left, go • — - to Ounn Rd.. turn left on Our« Rd Ol go to No. 3010. watch (or iTp. HOI.MES. INC. 1531 8 Lapeer Rd FE 5-3003 BLAIR N. CASS LAKE RD. imie* ov?f^ 0* ywi^*c5d. °Larte vcsUbiie entrance WoU lo waU carpettof to tU iMm room Oombtoattoa kllftca aw tUad bath. 011 beat. Waabei dryer Ftotabod llaU braeac Altacbad I car garage. IS landscaped tot. Located to ai- eeUent nelflbborboed. Cbn be bad far |l.ns dosra. FHA Urmi. GEORGE BLAIR realtor “S!Ia??6n FLAIN°f Evas. Call OR 3-I7SS___ OPEN V SMITH-WIDEMAN REALTY FE 4-4526 mem. I car sarate. Easy terms arranged. M-SI to Crescent Labe Rd ,_ right to Standard St., rlfhl . to Brigsa. ri^ to Bmue. GILES i?EALT\^ CO. rm ktiH smBALtiwiM atb.< HILLS SUBDIVISION Will Be "CLOSED" for thi "4th of luly" -WEEKELMD- TO OBT READY FOR THE Bl^SURPRISE POMI^ JULY BIG-BIG NEWS “candSlight AND SILVER" Monday thru Friday ntok t:3S TO 7:ls ' ON WPON Ward W. ROSS ’ INTORPORATED - ■™* ThooSt** “ OR 3-8021 FE 4-0591 THE J^OXTIAC PRESS. SATl’RDAV. JI NK 25. 1960 TWEXTY-XINK F*r Sale Nauees 49 CARNIVAL BATEMAN REALTY MOLiirLa uniNo unmet Svivan 2i80 Garland ONE or THE meet on 0« r I a ■ d Blvd --md lb-----*— By I)id( Turner | For Sole Lake Property SI j For Sale Acraafo 55; Bujiineie Opportunities 59 ‘ ^ LAKE I.OTS. tl.tM IM OK. *U ISWCUUR OH. MSa MOOUEI* me » miB. reatiac FE 4-48S* eenice tlatUMu farOufl "----»• o . r- "■ locatloa*. naaaclal bair avaUMIa For Sale Farms 56 n omsm ret furtiwr taferma- tlaa. tall Ft «;UU a^r t p.m. - ------- Mr Padilaea. Ft_4-S«M^^__________________ IWb. SBR VICK STATION tUto, llQt. sl:sin i..\kk ____ _____ iBcJoMd is ROOM MOEfilM FikM hobsi; hrrre»aT-aar. EM ____ _ ! 44 beautiful acrei. H mile road WHITE •!*« . NEw::MODERH; Aimis #i«ali'''|4>.Mi"’ :ra'u-'^-a&rj,o'?r.': I irach noarbT de*» CLARKSTON AREA It', Nrntobad horn*. »}•<••. Oeed buy for lareoti aatry taiaU M1.M4 a 4 dewa MA t-lllt E LOTS. tl.MS. no [> M mm Pontiac FI OPEN root furolthed hom< beach, larfe ei three bedraemi illlltv room, dou^' leway teriar A OMdlatt. Braki & mite‘'uike"MV ■ 4-H41 Sale Land Contracts 60 Pimtiac n 4-4U4. ; jM Otkli H ALL J«n)C5 K Blvd. Corner of Tilden 4 TEAR OLD BRICK RANCH with J car tarack. awrcatlOB roam with ahul-ntboard. 1 flraRlaaea. Itb ' bathtub and atall ahower. Camplete with ca~ " The home with that ' reel TOUR HObT, LUCAS - TULtOR/l JAMES K. KiORt TO FROPEXTY. OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 5 6140 J^akeview Clarltston Area ■EAUTtrUL ] TEAR OLD •rick ranentr Mth larit ..........RtRlljr ,"V. ............ ^ [sasisw.- ™ SUNDAY 2-5 6413 Lo}ran Williams I.ake ^iEDROgU^ ^-^Fujl^baae tachad darasa. B.autlful lake prlvllaaea and largi santan. RIa Mapla treat foi icrificr -“iTA’rcHEtlY RD IBOOWNS-NORTH AN - EAST TO rnuraicrV. OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 5 1885 Marie Circle Bloomfield T ROOM RANCH with lake «.*ah’?.t“K^}JS? V dayaT or'Erlthraii'AC 14441 ii^iection withow** 4MmB^ Sale Busbicss Property 57 ___1 June nth aad Nth i - WATCINS un. WATIR front j COMl«BCl^JUnS^44J^^ ___ _ _____ drapat'so Trade Includlu Yalta I _®r_ aall.JtalLal UN Joelyn utUlly roam and BY OWNER. COMMERCIAL AND larfe wooded lot Frice. or realdeneo. Dixie frontate. ----- . A----I Waterford VlUoae. • roama. 1', ____ batha. baMineat larate Very WILL SELL 41.0SS Bourhr IN food coBdlUoa. OR 3-3Ttf. ---■" —CEMENT BLOCE BL008 14 a M 4 par ceM taureat. Waal tide location JIM WRIGHT^ealtor *^1e- l^wur, umw •♦W, ......W-- — •■chinft tovkirtf land ^tra^ or property P4m- jlac_PreM Boa^ I3_ __ BRICE HOME - I Bice larta LAND CORTRACi™ tO BUT OR ----1 parchea Pull baaemeal ! to aeU Earl Oarrali. EM WSII _ ... ....k- ..... or CM 1.4IW________________ Money to Loon 61 Signature Dp la M MaatSa la Rtpay PH. FE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Cotnpanv e Eaak'B MU 4SSS1 OW NER KKTiklNr. Re..taurant SOxM cement bic bulldlnp. atone treat. 1 lau 1 lor parkins Modern rqulpme Seata 44 cuttomers BulMIni a eoulpment only I yeara old Mi ------- ----.dale Berta Borrow with Confidence ?y GET $25 TO $500 ** Household Finance Carperatlaa tl Psa^ „ . 3*4 S Sasinaw Bt PE 4SS3S I BUCKNER m‘ FINANCE COMPANY WHERE TOO CAR BORROW UP TO $500 Real 1 "“^•"PE s.3i_t _ 8"',«Vfr... - mir. ----HkUed U.. ElrNlaj^se Flyteauth LOANS $25 TO $500 OOMMSbClAL lor_____j Ob yaur atfiiMura or alhtr a^ ROCHESTER on larie katuUful t loL Juet all Square---- r. Woaawaid thla Pace Brick ______I haa 3 larif btdrma. divided baaemaat. f tireplac 1 car larate. BXCEPTfOH VALOE m»E C. .Schiiett. FE 8-0458 Val-U-Way FOR GOOD BUTS AND VALUES FOR COI.ORED - EXTRA LAROE 4 BED-m home, aewty decorr—■ —-asa. Nlct lei. H.M4. \T' M3 S4 FER MONTH-BIt room home on Raeburn Vacant, ready la maya It a W^nlnt Street. 1 { I ttimi. II NORTH side St MU* area Ooe af the belter alder bomci la perftat condlttoa. 3 bedroomi. attracUve llvlnp room, alao dining laam. Oat tired hot water heal, new sarasa. cpclane lenced yard well landtcaped A ytry neat bomt priced at SU.Nt. IPU DOWN for thla 4 t bath home on Scott Uke Rd with I nice I bedrooma. a huge ceavealenl kitchen, 1 Ma. fans* a®® ®®’l' perl ‘"'i William Miller „„ , I Realtor FE 2-0263 IT MM j OPEN 4 TO S^BUTOAY 1 TO 4 OPEN SUNDAY 3 to 5 3045 EDGEW’ATER $82 MOVES YOU IN. NOTHtMO MORE TO FAY ^79 PER MONTH Includtt evirythlns Huron National Foreat a able Hirer OR I-J336 For Sal* Lake Property 51 wimAMB brftuilfui RornpsU' ^---------- SMITH A & LILLY SALE OR LEAIB IN THE CITY of Fontlac. Commercial bulld-ip Sane I Ml ItxIN Ui t4'a . Drtve In deara Pt_3-a0N OR VrmtOUT FIXTURES ___S teal In heart at dowalowa ; Racheatar. Oaed canditlaa with . nawiy decorated 4 roam apart-maat uaatalra Chalaed parklap area at rear. Reply Fontlac ELIZABETH LAKE. BY I JUDAH LAEB ESTATES On a larte MalU tl. lot WILLIAMS LAEEFRONT •‘i;''" 3 badroomi. dlntnt room, modern | '®® kitchen, llvlns room with firt-1 "k**®" place. Encloced frenl parch, over-elted S-aar tarot* well land-tenned yard with trill and picnic UbI* Fertact awlmmthc beach . with eut-atonc breakwall Situated on blacktop atreet. 13.440 down. located 4 miles north ot Elvd on Johlyn Rd. DLOlUR BLOa. CO. I FE 4-tUI BUILDERS OF NATIONAL HOMEB lk.wt^Mei rnnie. Separate, dinint room. i Blacktop atreet Can talk trade. ; OPEN Sun. 1 to 7 THIRD ST. treat off Jqalyn, to OFEN algn la Ihe apot where you will find this new 1 bedroom heme leaturins wk floora. gae heat. lull bnee-neat Larte city lot. near bua tad scbaela. Thla '• • "«• lome — only ant m.HO; I4S0 mori $at)0 DOWN 3 bMrm. home with exceptional lake prlelletea at 4 acre aicMy wooded safe beach. •>! «•»<* f«r children la wade out shore. Lite saarda. __ dock ter your boat. $6,900 TOT'AI. Include! ACRE garden tpol . and larfe tarafe Wonderful lo- i cation nr. ichaol. shopping. Juat off Commerce Rd C. Schuett. FE 8-0458 tTTRACflVE'Lbf OR RIO LAKE Northwest of Pontiac. Shade trees. HALE-LONO LAEE A ..... ....... natural fireplace. ' dining room large gitssed-ln porch full baaemeal 44 acres, with approx 14 acres of woods, t a.-ml'e road lianlage Walking dtalancc to stores and I Itkea. I Pull price 411 sat. terms Call ^ o’-n^r. OLlve 1-1141, Rochester, wired, natural tas ,n Lake Vlllai* *-I Reallori pratec HhOMET & ALTO LOAN CO T N Ferry St Caniar E. Fika LOANS 144 TO 44SS-«H TO 444S communittToan CO. _ » B LAWRENCE PE MUl FRIENDLY SERVICE__ quRifc 134 TO 14M lSans Ci»7 Ptrkittc — Hioiit n MM ^e. shop. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS W4 TO 1441 Business Opportunities 59 f|; ft Slui Suburbun Property 53 friendly service- BEFn< AND W INE OPEN ^ Buf atock’aad taU^ror bM^n*!^^^ FWANCe'\» . 1114 N. Ferry, SUND.XV 1 lo 5 fixfuret* and^ equip 4*.lS0^n! _”-*J**l--------------- 2080 Tcggerdinc Rd. V?p* mJ'eSld'’ " HEN YOU NEED l‘< ACRES PAf'I' Abou' I milea wnt ot Fontlae _ ' .“VLi. OU' MSS to Tesserdlne Rd turn Realty OR 4-S4M arirt— i *gaac. priv». ras pr ce— I front. WILLIAMS LaEE, I tlshlm^ .> I sar property. Betl ' mile ITS tt I Ooe a D L E S E L T ROAD TO SQUARE LAKE RD “ OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 5 72 Delaware MID- OFEI R. J. (Dick)VALUET I Realtor FE 4-3531 I ^^O^^AND AnNUE SUNDAY U-4 extras and "Boat ot al LOW FRA TERMS Cat and be happily aurprlse YOUR ROBT niED ROSI YEAR ELIZABETH LAS KofSt?.*"*’**"* ’ Office Open Sunday 1-5' OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 151 EXMOOR Don't JudgeaBook By Its Cover! bath, bi DftCtOlt .aTY . . Larie 4 room homt with 3-ci i larasw an large lot. Flenty i I shade OOs furnace la thla hl| baaament 3 large bedroom*, dl ing roam And can be yours fu. ; I in.SM with )u*t 11,104 down. j OBOROE R. IRWIN, R^TOR j '141 W Waltdn PE l-IISl I I office OFEN SDN ~ * iWILUAMU'el#^ laraxc - fenced lot. 'Drive out M5S west neat Voorhels Road lataraactiaa. watch tar ^n ilfB at Edsearater Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor TS West Rurop Street FE 4-4T3S or FE 4dl4: ______I large living roi - separate dining room w adjoining soretaed por( Eating space In kitchen, fireplaces - — ■- iANNETT ROCHESTER DUTRICT *h*d*"Sa remodeled whM I Colonial. Canter hall wit ' open stair. klUbao. built I j oven * ranst. 1 .hadrms, i rm. far aaother. Lan| Uvln ! rm with fireplace BROWN 4444 O i??:, ~ 1144 DOWN — Modern 4 Rm bungalow near Bt. Michael's. Pull I basement Paved St. Real bar-I gala at aaly 414{M JT44S INCOME SPECIAL -Clean and In the very best of coadltion 4 Rms lor owntr and 3 Rm. furetebad Apt. to rent New t*a Furn. Paved Bt. Hera I* a aleai. "BIG T" OPEN Daily aad Sunday I to * p m . Ill t Fourth 8f TrI-level 1 bedroom home. I't btihs. Iln-•ahed family room, gta heal, large 40 ft. wide city lai*. ONLY NSO Dn. moves enu In 11 N Saginaw St Warren Stout Real-ter PE 5-1144________________ Here Is Real Value 1 bedroom modern kitchen, llvlns room has beautiful split field — Tre^laet. 3 car gartgr larte split Verdant law Possible Income West side. 4 bedroom horn bcaemeat forced air heat. Cooley Lake supurt ap^ntma^.^imlque bA-Ina, quallly throushout. Ill Tt of senic frontaie 1 mil* west Union Uk* Vlllase ITT} Cooley DrlT*. _ ______ K boSi'eTliuTI "bi i DUFLfcX ON SAND POINT NEAR prlvUegea. Ill.7f0< Caaevllle Uke new. modern, na- ---■ "-vplace. picture aindowa. clT ——* oars School kua at < ooar, niceiy landscaped Terms I U. Scliuett. FE 8-0458 ' .. orasmiM PARKWAY DRIvi***NI*Al? SofXlE Park No. 4 131 3x134 i ft llOtO. . PE 4-3441 Eves. Ft 4-1313 Hagstrbm ROCHESTER Commercial Property $25 TO $500 We wl.< be glad lo htip you. STATE FINANCE CO. Ttt Fontlac Etata ESBk BMt. FE 4-1574 altuaUoa far the y sm r ^ThK ___Credit Advisors 61A -.............. BUDGET YOUR DEBTS ' ! OOKSOUDATE BILLS-RO LOANS buildiBd aow on The property l^ir yaur beat bet h«5 an Income that caa eaiiiv ..s .Jos aw# .s.ibs moke jroor poymtois i Mortgage^^ns^_62 1743 COMMERCE L ■ d up 110 do prirlleses. C LOTS ' ELIEABETli LK FRONT ■ 7 golfing. X at gms. SEWS HAG.^TROM REALTOR 4S0S Highland Rd iMMi ...... _ _ DK ->-0*158 LAROE LOT. 130' FRONT LAKE wllb^^SM STAfEWiDE*: Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 71 Wtal Huron Street B S-SlSt ar FE S-Sltl . S1I.M4. t t. Smal CR.AW’FORI) AGENCY IM W WallOB PE I-334S I 444 E Flint MY 3-1143 , N 14444 PULL FRICE - Will lor 1 bedroom home Rasshire ! court Brtck terrace. Recently gjjg DOWN. 444 MO modernised r-' - —-- - - -• LAKE LOTS. II 444 tin t '"nc 4-4111 ™® ** f"'® Foatlxc PI - ,^,.L^ RRIV- ORASB LAKE, WHITE 1^1 TWF. Laketront cinder bloei' cattan, Schneider. MA 4-1141. Good swimming and tlshlng FE ^ LAKE LOT. WALTER --- Loads of -----------. roavtaleaca to Michigan lute University. Payed itreeU. cUy' CITY OF SX'LVAX j car SAcss*. Fanelad family roam with separate Ik bath CarpeUnt. drapea. and lai hot waltr heat. Owner moving to CaUtornta. Priced to tell I | HOME AND INCOME | SUBURBAN An approximate 1 aerts. Charm-1 lag Trl-Laeal turroanded by| beautiful treat and eatra alee I landtcaped laWa. Owner haa^ Brte*d“^M'*3hrlng"lo'MLL I - "Beat ad aU" - A rtnul{ houst on property that Ylil help mah* the paymaaU. R-ceUeot tocation and r* O'NHL N OWNER RBADilia FOR ARIZONA, wants quick deal --- --u loslyn >TtU li _____Llyh,_______... Uon kltchea and d I area. 1 nlc* *ise bedi lag $450 DOWN Real bargain! 1 bcdrooai rancher bum In 1443. New forced air turaace. AlumUnua atorma tod teraeat and axcallaat Craa- prlc* only SS.4fl. Suburban Living 'At Its Best Yoar Mtm homi b tha (CONVERTIBLE 24) VV. W. ROSS HOMES OR 5BQ21 NICHOLIE & HARGER CO. WEBSTER SCBOOL DISTRICT Thtat badiaaw baa*, fall b^mant. ^1 payavnit. n't vacaal. NORTH END Srtek - 1 badroama. fail basement, all boat deaa-nicd ta and out. Bardwoad fWt. About aMS down. Ota bt icca anrUa*. CURKSTON AR^ EHek aad tram* raacb baae. Threw badraaat. balb atf aa* ,3ugt decorat-fd. Abaat iSl aaoeat you a. SATURDAY k SUNDAY CALt! AYR SUNDAY CAi oil boat. Nicely laadicaped lot and Itk car garage. Price Juat reduced t* lU.340. Will take tpproxlaaUIy 41.711 M haoill* and aa-tumt txlatlngjiortgafe par-manU of |74. per aooth Including Uict and Inaur-ancc. Low Intertit rata g( S per cent. Don't delay. CHARlIINa CENTER HALL brick eoatemporary. Teati-bule haa tniranct rlosel. Log burnini natunl tire- Kace lo Uvlat raoBu The 11 dining room haa t ple-wtnMw overlooking t badraama an -----. Both baths tiled Tw. there l< ONLY 1 BLOCK TO FRIV-ILEOB LOT OK WATKINS LAKE. CLEAN CLEAN 1 bedroaa or- —^ home. Ooad tli* a ii* plaaaatil iBvfaita k^ srjsia I t rsi: matelF tl.M FRA. OWNER RKADINO WEST. Bag prUad far cash aala hit hwaa, lotaud a MSOO l.lwlf.. MM. aSHi Mm. -and bath. Lane atutro 4J a US. PaailU ar dtatat 4 4 X isl ARached 1 ear tai«t* Frietd it only IS.ISt Win take tppradaately S1.4M dawa aad atauaa aeiie^^Sw* m>d Open Sundky 1 -4 P.M. cit/ uftcT LiT'onv O'NEIL, Realtor S3H WESX^LROsN ^^telmeafe gPEj^ ' condition. New AC Oil Pura. • • • S4S40 SELL OR TRADE - 1 acre* 4 FAMILY BRICK - WEST with small home and itrts* SIDE. 5 rat. It bath each. Will trade Kf lert* home all occupied, full basem^it. / oil heal. 4 car sortie Ex- JAYNO HKIOHTS Our very cellea weal ala* location special 45 ft. brick rancher wlin ___ aluehed ,S»f. rVll p»»-V ranch-type fence. Priced arm l*'s baUii. Larte fireplace. .ns tan Built a oean S rw*. our very beat Ltke^bdl Thla U a rapataettlaa a be baaght far below acMai eotu jjjj „ O^^ iwlmmlng “LONGHTAirirFRONf” 1 bdrm cotlate. natural batch partly fura. LcROV DAVIS. Broker Real EaUte Sarvict of Faallac B D_ CHARLES. REALTOR •■US Telegraph________Pi a-SUI S30 COIN LANDRY EAROAIN POR im cash PE 44134 WE. KR sale. COMMiknAL BUSO- _ _ __________________ Oamunn St. Ponlltc LAEE U3t WALTERS LAtt. ®* occupied 3 chair wooded MAPI* 4-4743. after 3 p m -------— LOT 44 X H3 FT MARION Alii g74& with tS for tale or Jrade FE «-4«44 s-4741 LOT Its X Ml. OAKWOOO MANOR -y « ----------------------------I •uMtvUton acrcMa from PontUc I ___i.______ Drive-ln Thet GET A FEDERAL . MODERNIZATION MORTCiAGE Frlaed ta all paymaats. w* So tht work. Pay off axlatlnt marttage* or land caatraets. It you have a raatonablt aquity. Low latareat rata* O^a tad canyaatlanal M t® ®»1> I A»^a\Sl ^ Phan. OL SeTyki Atk LAKE OAKLAND Hagstrom OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 FU. | '’'I 3SI1 I I considtt trad* 0 t GiRhard Uk* | ' SUNDAY CALL OA S-ISII L. H. BROWN. Realtor 441 EUaabetii Late Road M?LTglE*gaT?^Eiiy.*C*E ■ Y&gVAI9 haSklMBa r CWn A . • rm., brick aarly EngUtb. Vestibule eaUaoce, slate fir. 14 X truvlng rm . fireplace, full six* dalng ra.. library, kltchan k dm on Ut floar K.r? ‘-'aST'idrt.’Sf, iamaaat roc. ra.. fireplac* My. ra., H.W. all hat. M ft. lait* trootas*. Mad-•capad M, boat bout*. 01-recUam: Turn wat off Tele-gj*ph Rd. to JAact K to OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 486 W. IROQUOIS ---1 1 PULL both*. I rage" oSy TU-IN "with ‘ LAUINGBR REALTY dk 4-0441 Open * t* 1431 Williams Lt Kd Open Sun of Wglion, OR 3-1554 ______I LAKE FRONT. 3 BBORM. I BATH : Owner transferred Bacrlflclng 1P43 Ukevy^w Orly*. Cooley Uk*. I LAKE LOTS AND " lake ■ FHIVl-' leteo lots, near Orchard Lake Rd. ’ j A Fontlac Trall_ FE 4-3413 | MANDON lake 1 BEOROOidSi I _ _ . awd Vetlr* and still have |44S a.. NEED UP TO 440* CA4H FOR: ">onIh tocome doing nothlnaV You do»® payment on a lol7 Seel f*® ®T... r®® „®P*r*te this norm all beaBOARD FINANCE CO. 1114 Ufm "»« pick-up route yeurtelf rx »-«Mi **“ - ------- See ... Compare M'.W HOME SITES For Better Humes FTIcad *a aell OFEN SUNDAY 1-4 FM COLONIAL BRICE. Swlm- rriSfdirlr«U.Tu' weU eoBstruetod 3 bedrm.. 3 Itle bath, ealqntal -“*■ roT ra. llxU. k . porch eyerlookliit a a a beM. Owaar bat radi pric* to S31.4SS. taraa. cludlat 1*-“^ *• ■—■>- • fcatiiikt. OB Yoai graph to Dr aa ini Syltaa Shores sarai* term*. -- l" biaek!*tuni*ris»P^on'^w" Ira- OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 121 WENONAH lODERN 3 BEDROOM tn-tceel. with l*.b baths carpetod llTlat room and dtalof room larxe kttchea wMh hraaktast nook, aenar®** room and aa- raB. FnU prlct IM.MS erllh emfVeaenl tora*. DIreatlon*— Waat OB Raraa to Oeacte* torn left to Wangaiali. RlfM aa We- OPEN LAKEFRONT ON PLEASANT LAKE. 100 FT SANDY BEACH. 3 bedrooms. FIREPLACE. BASEMENT. ELECTRIC HEAT CARPORT PRICED AT 417.000 MUST BE BEEN TO BE APPRRCIATIO DIRBCTTONB: DRIVE OUT KUEABETR LSEB ROAD TO LE3TA. TORN IJWT ON LBOTA TO OPEN SION I ReaTty, — “~ MA 4-1444 or MA_4-4301 _ I Cherokee Hills I.AKE LIVING __________7«,d.,W» FEDERAL MODERNIZATION CO. 2536 DIXIE HWY.________ Get Out pf the Rut I ! ■ your debt* aad mod-boa*! LM US pay ofl >rtsat* or load cantracL d *b t a aad aodtrnU* '^El . _____JR O tl W. Huron ____________ •**“* »'“• i" Swaps 63 ^*'^._**^* ft froouft on - ^ mat* toke'Iim iim > RtDROOM HOUSE BI PORTUC liop'* wick biV*m.r*woiid jy- e Ideal lor restauranL spmllnS > FEMALE WOLE FUFS^EC □od* kirage ar tix-l( .hop* v Srs:" rolii* • *»'**»» full price — ’ *■“ 14.400 an term. Outrtnteed r^regular^. Where eli 417.BSS iBvestmtnt? S3* month I 3*» ! swimmint. shopping. *« mile to ^ vvim new Chrysler and Northwestern i 521;, highways. Kenslnston Park, MU- j TTii, ford. Hl^land. Clarkatoa. Wa- j ®*®rai fe'4-44** aru **-%i CAR!- W. HIRD. Realtor ---------------------------- 4*3 Community Natl Bank Bldg — 4-4311 Brea PE 4-1343 HAGSTROM 4400 I’0.\TI.\C '—1 OR 3-«lM-__________________ 1043 CHRYSLER. NEW <^0RKKR. ■ - ----- racenlly oeer- tan plrkup or hauled OR 4-0358 1 Partridge truck. ford; "0000~OTEDifiOiN. rt cash or trad* tor bulldiu itrrlal CaU altar E p m., ^ OENESEE STREET - kiSSSS; ska '-heal 3-ctr ttrt'e paved drive. Cloie to school* b tbopplnt. Only 414.040 ■ LAKEWOOD TILLAOB ' ■114' Ukefrooi . .|t4J« sar uaetrout ........ ..444US Lake srerwooo" 144' Lakrlroat ........47400 171 Ukrfroat .. . atlOO Cole-Easlick Restricted Coimnunities EM 3-ati4 MU 4-im owner. __ 1740 DOWN — 1 bedroom* home. : roam heuM Lars* landscaped lot Automatic — W&rajLL ” SACRIFICE 100 BY 300' PAVEMENT. BLOOM-fleld Bird. B Bloonfltld Rtgh-laads Ul 73 41.000 aih. UWM tends OR 3-4344 _ __ CLARKSTON LAKE AREA LOT 74alM *B paved street. Il.ttS. i 414 dawn and tit manth. High ; school 1 black, sh^ng. churches. I grade tchool 3 min. kwtv Mr. ' _ Jama*. U _0-nil. Ft 4-^^_ Waterford Hills Estate ' A few aaasee tou left Avert** 144x44* Oaod dralnas* Ideal to BIRD - TO SEE Party Store to operate >ck Books aad steady 44 FORD, V-4. standard; SWWF lor boat ar wlU tell, alt* 41 Dodt* truck, swap or *_FE LSSlk. torn liSl tciecat. Neal oM cleao. Vacant. ____________________________________ _ .vro. DO. romsivneo FrUjli 44! Herbert C. Dsvis. Rltr. H. C. NEWINGHAM j JLr®*®‘ caJ.i".Sd SI .*?'___ „rE_Mju________________________________________________ CORNER CROOKS AND AUBURN 1 Dr?*?®.; **lfL>*>** | WOODED LOT ......... ........................SACRIFICE TEAR AROUND LAKE- ------------------- fn»t hoa# Sidins. L4iwt Ilrtplac*. Eta't.. CASH «eq‘ ..rase MrWhii. L 44 CHEVY SEDAN DBUTIRT. Iqr car. n 3-4SS1 B. Cw^ 'M CitEV., STICK. FOR UORT car ar seU_PE S17U ________ Telo-.Station Drive-In is pontiac for land cow" leweat tol^ i. drlye-a* 44'Tela- **' ....— —axoory SMt LMated - " 3 irxs.------------------— ^ lao* m^ h^w*y CASH FOR USED TV'S. RAOt6s. troataae and sparlodi pMm. sad Up* recardtrt. FE «»ra Bids could be'. »r3l7_______ ______________ elate FURRirURB - NUMBROUE FIICBS itkint of luralturt tor sal* or trad* Sly* for tardea tractor, gir cena-thers tiaaer ar aaylhtos of ealac. Call al_5* Jo*lyn._^4-ild4 OA8 REFRIOERATOR A STdfW. “ ViLUiar'- EAR OATLORO. wUh 144' -------- parkins Kara converted to llvlns quarter! SdS.qoo with Urmt Lei I you details on this and LABE RRONT . ._iVS4t* .. irroinao*, wtodaw**^ Tsc^ *^\l8dail° 3 *^b54r! “!« i T' »“h baseboard ra^sT'^lTuiUn ------------------------- ceraltM til* baUs. 1 car aU larac*. Oat h*a4. 114. ISS. torat pirectMaat F— Orchard Lake Rd. w*i Comaara* Rd. “ -eller Rd J m k/Umm A opn • Woamj FE 8-0466 rent beater Only SMS da-_ _ — — 3 bedvya haa* carpeted Be CATFO OFF ELISABETH LAKE RD HAS UVINO ROOM. DTNINO ROOM PULL BA8FMENT NEW OA8 FURNACR. I*y-CAR OARAOE JUST W.44* CASH . JIM WRIGHT. Reultor b ai- FEM9SS iiT*ii' • ncome Property t FAMILY BT OWNER. MUST IWI, mak*^ after. Ft S-I3S3 3 PaMILT INCOME. BRINOmO IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9671 ' OFEN EYENlNOt k SUNDAYS SW JOOLTN OCR MANSFIELD MULT^K Lornio sKRnci -------real llvlns Is here fee ss^sd?rA?Vj3!jr‘fc signed hoae*. I WUUaat U *hsa*. Owner. FE Partridge l.| I.ADD’U. INC. 43SS Dial* Hwy OR 1-114) NEAR uiuO. ooiiTxi Rochester “ “— SiENT fo MiaiIG:\N BUSINESS i 3rn "Sia^le^S -8ALES c6RK>R.\T10N| Si"'o?D^4VsJ IMS W. EURON Ranch with eaclasad breeMway. JOHN A LANDMEWte. RROEER ' 3* ,R attached garage La- : U71 S TWIegroab Rd FE 4-IISI FARE AT OOR FRONT DOOR 1 I eatod bn I acre af relM c ' UysMc^ By awaer. CaUF* b! 44SSI < Uyside^Ey awaer. THIRTY TX iSrti^. ‘ w-iVta •£nT*i™~« SttriMli SiitrtbaSi 'CB. "umS bb]^ WILL iWAP HO •BOM k eholM Ml CM, OB >4111.___________ IttLTAkS SUAIXBR TRAHJDt ---------------f.n"" “ WAHT GOOD OTBD HQPBgra^^ Sale Houseliold Qoodb 65 n*w modeU iltctotly seracM or crau marr«d modeli at Ms dU-Tw« ywi raiizicR upRio"t .mand hew In eratM. I ytaf warranty. $1M> Rr only Purnttuc, tt OrebArd LAk* rafOIDAIwrDEW FREEmIS „ ____A A^erAOiv_____ }MU. For Sale Clothing 64 BLA« CHirrOK worn oncg. rtia >04- O’t j-ow _.. _______________ i.An»-A cLtmtiMo. «be8 m to otNiHjuriLactiuc nan, iit. 4A. aotfe liA»A MTtr b«n wor^j ,435 vtnewo^. _____ fe’saSK iaiNWAiriLtcTBic;'4'TDiwaR. lor owner Phone „„ ApproAlmAW- PIHB LOHO - LENOTH TORMAL.| , j y.„ old, OR 3-ffoJ. •-■lac •. E»c. coi^MA>I»J — — - - *iV|^L^jroRJ|iAL_ OT I, Pa» weekly. ] Sale Household Goods 65 j H INCH ■ e'ibliet .Ink »3» R»rn|i. WAahara. »U S?tu« »» ChAlr., 15c, Detki 114. HlghchAi™, »1.50. Dln-g?%i Vutte MS. New bedrooms nilnf rooiK. mAUrcM, rufi end dlnetlea. factory a«on price. Ererythlnn in N. CAM, n 2-AI41. ________ rikLECTRIC RANOBS. 1 RKPRIO-erator. OR I-SIll. ____________ iSHn:. plaIpinom borm. set “ wHb bookcaae beadboArd, boa aprlofa A aiAttreaa. Alao 1 pe. drop leaf walnut dlnlu m act. uA with I cbalra. Eae eond. ^ s- i4n.___________ f' BBRVBL OA8 RBnUOBRATOR. Baally converted to botUe iM. Fine tor cottaae. eabbi. MT ljlS3. a bmrv mmn|IS KI }±^1L t PIECE SILVER ORAT BEORM. o«m. Double dreaaer. bopkeaao bed. lane obaR 1 vantty lampa. AS for $».SS. Pm only IS w»*b-ly. Pearaon'a Purnltan. 41 Or* enara Lake Ava._________________ 1 PttCB LIYWO BOOM BOrm Brand new davenport and ctalr. 3 modern atap Ublca, matcblnt ooffaa Ubla. 5 decorator lamne. aU lor SH. Pay only tt w«*kly-£nrara‘a Ptumltura, 41 Orchard IX 11 BEvicRBtBIJI RDOS. fit. Poam rubber backed rufa. *!• Tweed rufs. ttt.M: Aamlnat St^ Household Goods 65 REMODELING SALE New Uvtaf roam and badrMm at terrific aavtofa. Alao oompletc line of uaed furniture at draatlc-ally reduoed nrloce. Uka rafiiter-ator from tlS. Norte butomauc waaher and dryer, tilt. Bactrte Incinerator witA all boaea and ‘ controta S14.M. Bedroom aultea at 414.H. Rocklni ohalra. tt. Bit acreen TV'a at ttt.M Btovaa from tt. Draaaara from tt. DOUG’S FURNITURE*. WB BUT. 8BLL AND TRADE law BALDWIN n t-TlM_____ PB 1-0I4S ROOM CONOmONBR. RBMOVBS 11 Dlnta of water dally. Weallni* hooac deluxe model. —-- dlapenaer. Pay as oown. ai.aa per week. OOODYBAR SBRVICB STORB 10 JS. Caa. PB 1-1113 ROLLAWAT BX6. LIKE NEW, raaaonable PE 4-4111._______ RBPRIOBRATOR EXC. (X^. IN Comb, waaber and dryer, till. PE 4-I4M. REPRIOERATOR, OB, It CD. FT., dial defroat, IN# dealtn. ' Last one thia type. Brand new. Sbve IM on thIa floor model. Pay 11 wkly. NO MONET DOWN. Ooodyear Service Store, 31 S. Caaa, Pontiac. JV l-lllL___ REnUGIBRATOR. LATE MODEL deluxe, automaflc defroat, par batonca at tl.M par week. Uu< HALF OFF, PAINT SALE For Limited Time Only Tour cholca of any combination finlah. Exterior Houae and trim, i Vlnvl Latex Plat. PrtmermOloaa Enamel, Semi Oloaa. Plat darnel. Primer Saaler, Under Coatar. REGULAR $5.95^Gal. $hrGa\. Paint DIvUlon of FEDERAL Modernization Company 2536 DIXIE HWY. Plenty' of Free Parking IN OOR LOT »• 1 TO e WBEKDATB ___Sundays 10 to 4_ HTOB-A-BEb. TOAST COLOR. PWO-poni table. Kenmore gae etove. fil gal. lad^ water tank. Prey and red chrome dinette eet. FI 4-0317. “^%«F^ *** *^ i!S?i m ____»k.?_______ "^atoTO.^^. «VP«*nx_ moNBR^ pjnx ^KZE; —; AM la I------ ------- new. Pay total balance o or take up pajtBK ' ly Capitol PE t- 8PECIAL 1X11 RUOS. 134.M. Me-' -i Carpel. Woodward at Square ___juat ^low Ted'a. PE l-TTOl. SINOBR, UPHT WOOD CONSOLE, -•■•l-ia* equipped. 131 Curfe pi. n 1-4041._______________________ ____ 1C heater w —------->lni preaaure cooker, ra- dlo, and mlae. PE H»3t TRADE OAs'RANOE FOR ELBC--in(e. R. B Munro Electric ______ MO W. Huron. __________ TRAN8PERRBD OOT OP TOWN. Stove, refrl(.. waaher and dryer. lia' l-WI.***"_______________ TWIN BEDROOM. FORMICA DIN-etU. Uvlnx room ti—“— —■* curtalna.'ra 1-1041. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.29 M in. wall tUe Me R. Latex patot. •in. put paint. glN. Vinyl ” “°MOV1TO*^104 E. PUCE irCO. FT. OE, 1 DR. FHEBZER top refrlfjlio. PE_4-107V___ II m. OB CONSOLE TEUTON MS. IIW to. Olyc^o televOim. ISO. AD wool carpeta. 1x13, 1x11. 4X7 and 4x1. Bacrlflce IlM. Thayer baby, carriatc. 115. OB ^12 Felt Base Rugs $3.*>5 OUAR. HODSB PAINT, OAL. UJl Vinyl Linoleum, Yard 79c RDBEBR BASI PAINT, Oal. 44- wall tile. rdn. n ayaPa, 141 W. Huron PE 4-30S4 17- UPRIOHT PRMZER, EXCEL-lant coodttloo EM 3-4ttl IMl ADMIRAL BECTRIC R 0^ I ^tha. KENMORE WASHER, git. LAME BEADTIPDL OAB STOVE. Muat aeU ttala week-end. MI t-SSll.____________________ LSAVlNb BTATI. MOST fum cold dally. MT Mill.____________________ ANTWDE '"CHERRT BEDROOM eii^ for aale 47 Oleawood •»- WMl^rw' and | mona ^de-a-b< ■Inole be_. ----- an ware, glcaa, < 11x13, Blm-drum table _____ tub chelr, lint board, kltch- ___^Ina and mUc. aale. Ml 1-14CT__ mONRlfl mONIR. PROVE TO rt'liXrtii .............. comfort. Rent _____________ IMPERIAL PRIOIDAIRE REPRIO Caloric Deluxe laa rante 1 yr. old. PE MdM. ________ LOOK! BARGAINS! WASHERS & DRYERS ■elected 10 modeU ‘ r. PB 4-3173 C SOFA AND CHAIR ONLY $109.95 111 down — tt mo. Poam rubber euahlona 7 beautiful colora Bedroom OuUIttlng Co. 47M Dixie Rwy. Drayton Plalna ARP Market THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATUI For Sale MisceOaneMiB 67 For Sste MlBCcilBneous 67 il-OAU ELEC. HEATER. MI.M: je-ad. auto. r>4 beatar..,,IM.tt. Cab. atoka and fItttoSf. M4.M up. Uundry traya and aland and fauceU. llt.N. Caah and carry. SAVE PLDMRINO IE jupy ^Riro UM V-l. DODOl Ram perfect c ______________ MROAL. TANE AND SOME OIL. AIR CONDITION. S4-TON .WHITE-houae. SUkhtly uaad. EM >«|41; ANCHOR FENCES ALL EINOt OP ______M Alien, PE S-7S13__ BARGArNS 4x1x44 to. V-xrooved mAh. M-H. ixll iheettog ill par m. Panelyte eounUr tooptot 41c aqn 31 tal hot waur heater. 147.M. 3 year warranty. htt Mt Toilet HI M with trade. WOL\^RINE LuVlBCT 310 8. Paddock _ PB I-S7l4 bathroom nXTDHEB. OH, AND xaa fumacea Hot water A ateam boiler. AutomaUc water heater. Hardwerd. e'ec suppllea, iroek A pipe and ttUInta. Lowt Brothera Paint, Super Kemtone and Buat- ®‘*““ heioht8 supply ---Lapeer Rd. “ ' J" .ll;2af‘5W S" allpeeal pipe.... S" allpeeal pipe.... LARDER SIZES IN oiw*. Complete atock of flUtofa DRAIN TOR 1" thru 14" to atock 4" drain tUe CRC . .1 11 ta. 4" Otaaaaburt pipe .. .13 .11 Oa. 11" ateer culver”.....ttjlft. abort ploeca tor cxtenalona rua for aumpa and traaat tiapa 11" with 1 holaa......M U ea. 11" with 1 holea......ttJOaa. C.I. manhola eovera and gratca BLATLOCK Coal * Bulldmt Supply Ca. -Si Orenard Uka Ava. PB 3-7111 Bolens — Whcelhorse Tractor! and TlUera Power and riding mowera. Jacobaen. Yardman and Toro. 1 model! ** rldtiif mowera. Selection of ua —------- We tcrvice what \ EVANS EQUIPMENT SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES CO. 1340 Hlghtond Rd. IM-MI OB 3-71S1 BEEP AND PORK - HALF AND quarter!. Opdyke Mkt. PE 0-7041 BBAUTT njDIPMENT. NEW RE-friterator. Belltnt at low, low prlc^MT Ijttn.___________________________ Cash and Carry Specials Btd InaulatloB If o.a. 100 aq. ft........... 13.M Pourlny Inaulatloo, If. bof .. 0 .00 4x1 praflnltbed mahof. $6.41 ea. 1 X 11 fhelvini W. Bine. 11 Un. ft. (Call for a free eatimato on all your rough lumber A trim needa) HAGGERTY LUMBER 1147 Han«rt^Hwy”*^ MA 4-4151 Weekday! 7 to 5 Sat. 7 to 1 SINQER 8EWINO MACHINE IN bcautUul wood conaote. Juat atyled to make button holea. mor (rama. dealtna, rtc. Toura *or PM' month or pay *>»l«nc» i of ttl.40. Capitol. PE 5-5407. IT ALL SHOWERS. COMPLETE with . faucet! -end curtain. SOO.M' value 534.45: leVatorlea. complete with fleamlnt chrome feucets. 514.55: toilet!, 145.50 value it 011.50. Tbeae are factory aeconda. Iflchlfan Pluoreacent. 301 Or-ebard Lake Ave -M,_________________ TURQUOISE C A ifraT ^IIXIX PE* 4axx'-a Pefbotrd 4xSxtk Pefboard ......... 4xlxH Plyicore ......... 11x41 31 ft. Rock Lath . 4x1 Plaaterboard ....... Used Trade-In Dept. Dreaaer ................... tt.M Rocker ................... 114.11 Deak. 1 oak .............. 11115 Davenport A chair ........ {15.55 1 piece breaktaat act ..... tM.tS ■ plect aecUoaal ....... 135 50 ‘filferator ............ |S0 50 411 W. Huron PE 4-1133, Ceiling Tile------sq. ft. 9c “BUYLO" UNCLAIMED TILE OUTLET 101 8. SAOWAW^ PE 0-14 WASHERS - RiCONDITIOHtD automatic. Spindriera and wrlnt-era All with 00-day warranty. _P1 5-443L__________________ WA8HINO MACHINE CONVEN- ----1 tiM.iO value. SdO 05. Michigan Pluoreacent, Sj'^8??har5 Lk^ Burraeister LUMBER COMPANY 7540 Cooley Uke Rd. Open I a.m. to I Sunday 10 a.m. n dally COMPLETE SELLOUT OP IdlS-CELLANEOD8 ITEMS AT OIVE AWAY PRICES. TOOLS AND CHESTS ELEC. MOTORS, VAC UUM 8WBSPERS. PORT. WASH-MACHINE, CAMERAS CLOTHING MANY OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION COME AND SEE. EDWARDS______II B. 8AOINAW DO TOD HAVE A PAnfT OR decorating problemt Hundreda colora to choose from, tnterl or exterior. See our wall pap., and matching fabric eelectlon. Berry Bros. Jellad Magic no drip BULLDOZER - TERRA TRACK. Pontiac Pre-Cast W. Sheffield. PB , DOUBLE SINK COMPLETE 515 50 with trap. A grade PE 5-4711. Montcalm Supply. 155 W. r*—‘ 03 50 ^ _ “1™_ d 1^4 SO or make payment of per month. Unlvyraal Company. PE 4-0005 ______________ POUND lesi to pay. ancca of all a,i>vui>. -and new. Both euto and conventional. Oeneral Electric and Norge. Take up to 10 mos to ney. Peymente as low aa 0115 wkly. We trade-We miXV OoddySir'ttrvlce Store. 30 8. Caaa. PontlQC. PE 5-0113 _ UtRDE CRIB AND klATTRttS. brand new. 515.55. Pearaon’a Furniture. 43 Orchard_Lake_Ave. n V I N O ROOM _ PURNITDRE, Toastmaster toaster Pryrlte electric fryer....... _ . -------------------------- Bird cage ....................51 DELU30C BCHWIN RACBR BIKE. Electric buffer . almost new, Bumper pool BeOv buggy . 110' 4 American filer electric ----- OR 3-5403 e^er 5 p.m. _ with ubie and accessories, almost WESTINOHOOSE FROST -FREE "«* Bf"***- refrlx Phllco 11 ' TV. 317 E. _way. Lake Orion.____________^______ Third St.. Rochester ____ ELECTRIC PERMOOLASS 50 OAL ---------...via A V'C ••tor heater. lOO gal. (dl tank W Lenox oU burner with controls USED-TRADE-IN DEPT kltc^n sink. E^OSOfO _________ UPH LOUNGE CHAIRS » Pn.ST QUALITY OREKN CAST WOOD ARMED CHAIRS . 0 3 05 ,ron, 5 foot bathtubr ------------------ ------- • set --------------------------L-s ... -----u, trad! dept, for n trade. Coma ( 1 1 acres of ti ______ PE 1-0141. N MON SAT. I TO 1 PRI 0 TO 0 14 MONTHS TO PAY Ilea E. of Pontiac or 1 n If Auburn BelghU on Aubi , ........... ... cettag). It! bed. spring and mkttreal. baby I- furniture. 1440 kfanderford 'v mile 3.1 nort^Lonj^Lakt^Rd.. n«r Adams “iLiNOLEDM AND PAINT SALE. -price at o-m-I" - Con- A~UHED ELECTRIC RSmiOBRA-tor. Excellent condltlc* aumers Power Co. A~VALUE Hollywood headboards .. Hollywood bed frames the Odd cheaU u»e alaei ... Maple hunk t. m Baldwin Ave. . 010.05 j lunk beds......... loitoaM ooTPirnNo tic Hwy. _ ---- ___JATHINET.-,__________ dltlon, |I0:eLge alse play pen with MODERN __kte no s.eves . <•, UVINO ROOM SUITE. 030 _________»l Stirling St. ______ MOYINO — MUST SELL. IIJ^RIC - e 135. Refrigerator |7S. Llv-room aulte 135. Dining room i 135. MUc. articles. MArket MAPLE DININOllM. tin7TABLE buifet A chairs F— ““ _ PE_ 3-37». ___________________ MODERN BLOND DESK. COPTEE '' with matchlog step table, buggy. 3143 Crane. Drayton. " I MSONAVOK RJ^fo-PHONO ^CW- RECORD CABINETS REBUILT WASHERS 3 PC. UPH LIV. RM SUITE ....... SOFA BFD3 ....... !! 035.55 01555 11055 EASY TERMS METAL BEDS -1. -------- PIKE OOT-Y HiFi, TV and Radios 66 7 ' AND 11" TV, OOOD COND. PE 5-5370. REYNOLDS TRUMPW. MS^AR- It AND DRAIN ...5 .38 ft. 0 .48 ft. .{ .70 ft. 11.31 ft. SMALL OULBRANBBN OR AND Small Baldwin apartment piano, walnut 13M. Letter Mdhogany spinet, return SPECIALS! GALLAGHER’S IS E. Huron____PE J STORY AND CLARK MAPLE PIANO • years old, uaad very I‘“>- THOMAS' ORGAN, 1 MANUAL, ^ttOO. PE 1-3171. _____________ TDHINO AND REPAIRINO. M service, aU work guaran- by factory trator"---- CALBI MUglC 111 N. saflaaw TRUCK BED. 4 TRUCK TIRES. -"1x17. PE 1-1011._________ TIMKEN SILENT AUTO. OIL furnace, controls and tank. A-1 _condJtlon. PI 1-0751 after 5 p.m. TAKE ADVANTAOE OP THE BAR-OAIN8. Ready cash at SEABOARD FINANCE CO.. 1115 N. Everything to meet your needs Clothing Furniture. Anpllaneei Hi WEST LAWRENCE TALBOTT LUMBER a r.o. imin-, ■< aaah of all i lumber. Reasonable pr Oaktond Ave^ PI 4-4515. USED JIT PUMPS AND TANKS, 105 Warwick's, 3070 Orchard Lk. Road. PI 4-5000. ___________ USED COMBINATION STORM doors. All ataea, your choice. *' '* PI 4i0103.________________ White Pearl Drum Outfit SUoftrUnd Uka atw. ur$ pltnty OD thl« outni. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd , „ *-*5tt Acroat Iroa fel-Huron ^Ble Office Equipment 72 ADDING MACTONES. PROM MS 337 g. 8AOIHAW FE MM OmOT DESK ~ good POND! Sale Store Equipment 73 1 H P. ELEC MEAT ORINDlUl For Sale Pets : blue tolton.MwrtsjU immediately. on. OH J-S15S. ’lera. free" "and up to 14. OR PARAKEETS, OUAR. TO ^AUt, Hunt ! Pet Shop______BBJId*** PAkAKBSTB. OOABAHTBED TO talk.. Canartaa. aagaa, „f Craac’s Bird Batehary MM hum Rd ri. S4MS.____________ POE TEB- ______ 3-3304.________ siAMEio: EnrsNs. no a _ tot Mt. clemana S|L_________ atAMin KITTEHa. OKHTLl, houaebroken, roaaonable. Call Bundaya only. Ml 4-00S3.____ WANT OOOD ROME FOR 4 BOUSE ^lOken klttena^PK S-MS7.______ wuMaraner MAUE ptjp. 111. —70d Cocker. *•* RliblSTERED TOT WTD: UJ Dogs^Trained, Boarded M BHITTANT pups. McNARY-a ?rWjr,-i*isr“ir.tr;'‘is5i Poodle atud service. OL 1-0004. DOdS AND CATC BOARDm BuFr-SneU. 371 Telegraph. PB n Sales ■ AUCTION SALE FRIDAY**™” .7 P.M. SATURDAY • ■• •7P-M. SUNDAY.......2 P.M, pUIUf^III^An&fCM DO<» PHIZES EVENT AUCTION 11 * 14 MCUrtSTTO PAT B&B AUCTION 5089 DIXIE HWY. Lunch Room Ow AH®**** Aorou from Drayton Plalna New Bhopping Center AUCTION evert PRI. and SAT. 1 P.M; every sun. a P.M. 41400 Orand River Raise money for yourmlf or x;a!s:.ja.s*= ------”nE~CROWD TO iilf uctlon at S^to M^-t 7 p.m., 3117 Dixie .. ovott Lake roxd, second past Telegraph. Electric Up to M par cent elf. TCaak or ED*WILLIAMS 411 B. SagUiaw at Hattum 758x14 BLA« TIBBS. ALL ■fne., 1701 Orchard LAka Rd.. Kaago Harbor. ______________ ORIKDWO IN rtk CRANESHAPT ORlNDtNd'liT? car, n MW. Hunting Pdga I AKC PD V»fto R 81 .IKC FIELD CHAMPION SIRED _OR_3-34M_or_PEJr3S77.___^ EHOLISM SETTER POPS. I WES n Turner Ford Sales. ir excellent con-ana Sonnet fan. 550 14 Summit. PE 1-0454. ........ 33 8. Oratlot, Mt. _HQwarg_3;:4333._ ________ Sale Sporting Goods ^4 1 SET OP WALTER HAGEN WOODS 1 pair of Hyde Golf shoes, prac-_Ucally_naw. TRogan 5-0373. It X U COTTAOK TENT. UAED MV v-am 0X13 CAMPING TENT, TEAR OLD __________Pg 4-5010_ AQUA LUNGS NEW AND OSib. compressed air, 00 Parkhurat^t. BOVS ROLLER SKA'TCB. SIZE S. Like aew. Complete with case and toe item. 515. It Short St. F\J-153I.____________ CROWN 14 FT. ALUkHNUM traveler. Sleeps 4. Clean, 5535. ME 7-3M3 . 503 Front St. Holly. _ GUNS. MODERN AND ANIQI Buy, seU trade end repair. Bt SheU, 375 8. ' ‘ ^ CUSTOM BA L I H O. ________MELfoee 7-37tt._______ ALL TfPPS OP ISr CUTTINO Hay. WUI daltver. OA S-H7S. Machinery WESTERN P gravel plant. American I yai dragline. OR 8-5533 evenings. OUNS - BUY. SELL. TRADE. Manley Leach. 10 Bagley. _____ OOLP CLUBS, NEVER USED. aacrlfJee._J45 PE 3-7317._____ MARLIN LEVER ACTION, 30 - 05. priced tto. PE 4-7101_______ ADAMS TANDr-; ROAD GRADER UD-14 int. Diesel Engine. Very good condition. SCHRAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT 3530^Dlxle^wy^______^OR 3-1300 BULL DOZER TD-0, INTERNA-tlonel. completely rebuilt, with Ford doaer truck RE 3-0447. Bridget 01 PIRgT QUALITY 5 FOOT CAST 1 Iron bethtub^ 540.05. O. A. Tbomp- | ' son, 7006 M50. West.____________ ' CLEARANCE SALE Machinery and Tools No reaaonablc offer refused. Open ' planer. 30" wide teble, etord Mach. lathe M"x30‘ Radial drlU. Many more, i-aine. mtlllna, Planer tools and equip. Mill cutters, elec, motors. Power drills, air hammers, air cylinders. Surface plates, hyd. valves, etc. US Main St. Rochester. Open ^un^lNO^OL ^5160. WELDER PORTABLE OA8 DRIV-"i. Excellent eond. 3830 Longview. Do It Yourpelf 69 WE LOAN MONEY FOR BOATS. Motors, other aportlnggooda. *— SEABOARD PIN ANA. IISI Perry. “ * *"* 3Vk YDS. BLACK DIRT OR PEAT -^livery OR 3-0044. 1-A ROAD ORAVn 5 vA. OBJ $7. White beech aand^ Ton soil and fill. Oradlng. CqM PE 1-1 rofllEb A1 ____________ FOR RENT AIR PRESSURE T3^ Wall paper steamer, floor aanders. a -.o.,ii„ will - •|,'h,ra band sandara furnace cleaners Oakland Fuel Water Softeners 66A SPARTAN WATER SOFTENER. BIO FREEZER RBIPRIO. A NICE EAUTIPUL SINGER SEWING machine In blond cabinet balance owing 1a only 143 Ci PIECB BBDROOM with box springs end mattress. OE refrigerator. 1-OIOT _______________ iFor Sale Miscellaneous 67 1 PONY. 1150, 1 HERPORD COW. 0150. Ford Victoria 1053 - 0300. MU 4-4040 ___ _ i" RIDINO REEL TYPE LAWN _mower. $75. PE 4-0343 1 USED OAS PORCED" air" PUR-nace. all controls, fully guarao-terd 1110 Ace Heating A Cooling. 1735 Winiama Lake Rd. OR 3-4554. AIR COMPRB88ER. COM- 3-1134 after 4 p.m. B»t. ' GARDEN TRACTOR AND ATTACR-mrnts 135. 300 Weat^ Hopkins be- OARDEN TRACtORrW OAT^IL tank. 30 gal. gaa hot. water beat-.er. 3 pc. bath Bed A BathlnetU. 3001 Oalloway. _______________ Cameras and Equipm’t 70 3-4103 or come o_. ----- Field at OOio Cooley Lk. Rd. and make your own deal. ____________ FREE STANDING TOILETS $1805 —1 alnk ............. 55.05 ...... Doubli 30-ft~iengtha' ^i-ln n*—" 30-ft OR**3-ttl il Company. PE| .........ERj . WUI aacri-■- ------.th-l burner gaa range, other lUma. ] l USED SOP^NER. OOOD CON- WIU sacrifice In order to aell j dltlon, reaa. EM 3-0031.____ this week PI 4-0005'after 5:30-j STEEL FURNACE. IRON PIRE- o m. ............ ! men atokllr, duct work and con- MU8T SILL 3 BWUTIPUL FRENCH trola. 0 fool ilumlnum garage provincial cheVra. 3 drum tables. door Make offer. UL 8-1376. . -----eoffee tabte purnITURB BOOKS OP and aectloni occasional cnaira. oeu reusou-able Lincoln 1-7505._ OVERSTOCKED 20% OFF One week only June 33-30 4100 DUi# Hwy BENDIX COMBINATION WASHER and dryer, like new. WUI sacrifice. 4tt Emerson between Peath- erstone and Mt. Clemena____ BLACK BOSTON ROCKER. IIO; Hollywood twin beds. 140: oak dinette eet, buffet, Uble A four! ehatrsi sieemer trunk, 510. PKi P3-3ttO.________________ _ BUSt nt OVENS AND COOK RAH Bales pots, eomplete line of gaa a^j__________J _ ___ _ iJft'r? K*ic*frfc‘ ?&o "we?.|NF-?D AN AUTOMATIC I ml Knowledge, clothing I sale. Old Attic Reaal. -»-■ Josenhln^ off Huron^ PE^ MIOO. 3' WHEEL TRAILER UL 8-413S I 3036 Avalon. Auburn Heights ___ !3 ROOM COTTAGE TORN DOWN ■ ■ * hauled away make of- “*0 before 7 I 3-8011 lump PurapK i SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY JGAS WATER HF.ATER ? |6X7 steel tool shed: 3h water heeler exeprU | CAim FOR FURNITURE AND toola, PE 4-4004 or OR 3-S373 CASH FOR USED TVi^ PURNI- PE 1-7113. Apollance Seles Dept. CONSUMERS POWER CO. _________ _____ . . _ 28 W. L.AWRENCE poster bed. vanity and atool. Ft'—_ - -■ r-, .r^.. SMALL RADIOS ■ Workl^ or not. PE 5-0755 CRATE MARRED" refO.WMHEI 5115 off.. 3 used Prlgtaalre r< frlferatora. 545 f* — MM Orchard Lake Road. Keego Harbor TC_I:547A_______^ DON'T WATT TO REPURNM^ —. — — board *“pt~3^?r ONE OF A KIND i ilMln; CS.T —■ ■ , — - — X—STOSS' w«40« I UTINO ROOMmayTAO f* Wringer Waaher double bed: Etc. queen . speed queen _ Waaher O.E. REPRIOERATOR I All Appllaacee IRebuUt - serviced - Ouaranteed ** ** OOOD HOUSEKEEPINO SHOP DISCOUNT PRICES aaptr Earn iSadPower Rahullt g wn Mower Sharmolng M. Belts. Bags. Repair Pot All Sweepers E A RARORAVB8 B ,51 WiaT HURON PLATER PUNO MAHOOANT. -is RDWE . rolls, aeeda some repair, 550. MI __ f*t-0101 ♦•7637 oi^MA 5-1M7. _____ ’“.'opTn^uoTlO-,1;tt_pm. _ PLAYER PIANO," OIBSON RE-iiVENPbRT"AND i KE« ^ electric drjrerJ «n'"»i_r®_5-J46g_____ Ic waiher. PB 5-3M.>p07irBR MONTEr 015. BIECTRIC a or m^iS^We* SehS S?tor •“heTi?^ llK' '2U‘’“5^ ; ITw*T2d“sev7 mTto tits •rtog«t *»»•»« 535. 3l la. TV Pmaaeto ^little* ai^ tt*^wk ‘ SorUAhTdith waiher* 54*5'!”electric fuSSSLi alrrtra ttlsr? *10 B Sryef {60, studio couch never n oioug’ ** * ‘ ________ ---TraSTHOT WAMoni PEILOAB RANGE GOOD CONDl- T£K*l^i.”JeratolItt.'^TiTO2l SmSmm «Srt*ptoue*^2^ ALL MAKEB. fcjsar*a’S5«s| . office, fully Insulated, wire knotty tone Interior Hnlah. M" -ifimcr- -------------------- 14-3 ROMBX IN COIL LOTS. 3 cent per foot. 5 conductor heater cablet. 31 cents per foto. Duplex pliQs. 15 cents each. O. _A _Thompon. 7005 M-65 Weet. 31 H p! DUTTON RIOR-PRBB8URK boiler. iCan be used aa heating I with oil burr-r reti'-m pump and controls^ Phone_PI 3^0033. 173 8 Saginaw ~ PE 5-3100 ALCOA " ALUMINUM Combination DOORS • GUARANTEED 1 FULL INCH THICK aluminum comb, doors. Regu-torly prioad 530.00. You pay l-ft lengths ............ 34e ft. n K adit copper oU ft. eoU ............... 50c ft. l-pc bath seta with trim . OM U White or colorad. Factory 3nds—Irregulars 173 B PE 0-3I0S C.ARAGE DOORS Factory seconds, all standard slaea la stock from 035 and up. Electric door operators, folding closet doors and disappearing We give estimates on gangs re-modeUng. BERRY DOOR SALES Open from I to 5 Noon on Saturdays 171 8^ Paddock^______PE 3-0303 HOT WATER HEATlOtS, 30 OAL gas. New. Consumers Power approved. M0 50 value. 030 50 end 050 50. These are slightly marred. Also electric, oil and botUed gat heaters at terrific values. Mlchi-— Fluorescent. 303 Orchard * - 10. large doo house ________PE 5-tOtt___________ , A W N libWKRS SHARPENED. Pick-up and deliver. FE 3- LAKE PUMP DELIVERS , „ gallons per minute at 40 lbs pres- $no.06,, " • ----- trio West, LUMBER: TWENTY 3X13. 11 FOOT long. 03 each. Twenty 3x0. 31 foot long. 03 each. Oooo condition. _ Bell I or more. 753 Cortwright. MEN'S g U I ¥b. reasonable. ""chli^ bedspread and drapaa. Sale Musical Goods 71 130 BASS ACCORDIAN. CHEAP OL 1-1004 BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR. BY factory expert CALBI MUSIC CO 111 N BAOINAW PE 54333 BALDWIN ACR080NIC FRENCH Provincial design Cherry finish, custom built World's finest tone A action. Large discount. Terms. 10 per cent: balr.nce 30 months. CALBI MUSIC CO. _____ no N Saginxw PE 5-g331 BLOND THOMAS ELEC. OROAN. will aecriflc^0450 PE 34600._ BRAND NBW LOWRIT OROAlf. Two 13 In. speakers. 3 manual —-- -‘‘h percussion. Don’t be the price—you’ll . shop before you GALLAGHER’S II B Huron _ FB BEAUTIFUL BLOND BALDWIN OROA80NIC Organ with percussion and Leslie Speaker. Original cost $3,405. A bargalB al 11.655. Plano Tunlgg — Organ Repair Wiegand Music Center BAZAAR AREA. MIRACLE MILE _______PHONE PI 34534_____ ELECTRONIC ORGAN Used 5455 fooi UMd prftcUe* piano. Ro> condition^ MORRIS MUSIC CO. 34 S. Telegraph Rd. PE 34507 Across from Tel-Huron__ $175 FOR CASH TO PURCHASE steal Instruments, see BEABOaku FINANCE CO, 1155 N. Perry. ,PE 5-OWI.__________________________ MONET FOR ANT WORTHWHILl Purpose. Orl up to 5500. SEA BOARD PINANOC CO.. 1105 N. »-— PE l-OMl from 513.55 Haael’s House_,_ «..» Dixle^^ljhway, Draytoo ratoa. p L a~s TI c p1?i~RiDbcEb again •t-inc 1-Inch. II ce 7505 M5t.‘weat.~ PRONB ORDERS AOqtPTED ON • INOTALLATION ORDERS ONLY Inatallad Price $31.95 FEDERAL Mexi^rnization 3530 DIXIE HWY 5 AM TO I PM. XVERY DAT PATS 04 gUNDSYg 104 PB 3-7113 Plenty of Free Parking^ On Our Lot ' PLYWOOD CASH a CARRY •i" 4x1 Plyacore ...........UM •v" 4x0 exterior ...........MM ta" 4x1 Interior ........tt-tl PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. I4M Baldwin Rd._______PE 3-1043 PAINT OUTSIDE WITH KOTON reither wtthoyt fear of I 3070 Orchard Lake Rd. riNDOW, PHAOn, ALD- _____ —orm, I ft. 4 by 4 ft. 1. I 070 OR 3-304S. 1M4 V4 DODOE SOPER RTO I _Ram, perfect eond . OA 5-llSi. Special Paneling Offer •al pancUs aabofftn Vwfroofa. D arada INJI n4?,S'v'^c"‘r^e*^J..atoi **«•;.*• ,^in5iSrT7S..a.B Oak Flooring Select red ........ ffllf I No I Commea ..... OIM M Ho. 1 Opataea ..... Sltt M No 3 BhorU S SO M BENSON LUMBER CO. pmEm n GRINNELL'S Music Festival Pianos NOW ON SALE SAVE UP TO $185 Used Piano Specials Ortnnell upilkht . lit Leonard eonaole .{34 Spinet .......i . $31 Ortnnell Orand ..{IS Nixon upright ...$17 TERMS Grinnells n S. Saginaw ______PE STltt___ 4-544g after 5:3S p a. KIMBAU 8PINET PIANO. NX# Zenith maple -*-- —*----— tan n 5-34 FCtffik PiAiio^ yaar guarantee Terakt. CALBI OtUEIC 00. US N Saginaw_______ P------- MaIR> TUmNd::3iBtiflcp@i PE .84317 Trout Creek Ranch, Oreenableld D by Hlchtian School of t "— “le meet comn-r— la the state, ed 7 days waek. Information call "family rates Sand, Gravel and Dirt 76 Hay, Grain and Feed 82 STRAW IOC. A BALE. JIM, WIL-aqo._OlT34»M^ IJSO Snell Rd For Sale Livestock 83 GUERNSEY. 44 YR8. OLD MApl* 5-lOM ______________ AT STUD. SFRINOBRObE win. Registered Morgan. Call MA 6-1743. ^ ___________ young catUe,_ehlckena._MA_tlttl'. RBOI8TERED AMERICa"n SAI> die bred ataUloo. By Rex Peayine. MA 5-SMI PUREWID OUBRNBBT CALF FOR ealc. excellent for 4-H project. 5TY 3-5M1.__________________ nos. REO. HAMPSHIRE RAM. ^E 4-0013____________________ SADDLE IKHtSEB — BUOOIE8. Txek. Black standard brad marc regtatered. bay gelding, hay etal-Hon. bay marc with blase. Palomino marc. English saddle. 3 army-Engllah saddles. Surrey and dbL harncse, buggy and single barnesa. driving cart. 3173 Dai" ■on Uke Road, (------- ---- 74^ SEVERAL EXCiPTIONALLT GOOD ck®'uo6 pt'^hlaS tnd. Ph. Mu 4-0035. Hlghlaoid. RIDING HORSE Gentle w ’ ' ” * 5:30 OA I light I mgtri r and range, get r n act. ntw ly other plei t lockeri. t room fulte. many other pteees < furniture. 1 foot !<“*•“■ ‘ exceptionally nice i ■ clathlng. ■' - Har< maple round table with extension. Maple knlck-knaa shelf, l.tele--’lalona. 3 breakfast asU. Maw -----■—■ geveral alda small appliances, auctioneer. Oxfo Auction on M-14 Oiford;_____________ For Sale H rase Trailers 89 15 FT. ALUMINUM HOU8B TRAIL- _ ’! or Uade. MU 4-5743._ 11 FT. DELUXE MbDEL OAR-w od travel trailer, sleeps 0. sac. send., loti ol sxtras. LI 81511. i’ LATE ‘M. COMPLETELY SELF con talnsd. 11400. _OLl-4f" Sale Motor Scooters 94 MIDGET Race Tires Available FIRESTONE STORE 14S W. HURON W? Fttl'CHUiaAOT. IXCILLBHT condlthm. PB 3-7S0I. 1 P.M. AUC- "MU«r eondtioni i- ' mlshlngs nog. OL 1-05M after 4 . Hand- .iy-rolHiiAH 66bD chd.. iiio. raS' Call MA 813M after 5 wk dayi. CUSHMAN EAOLE ’57. tXC. eoiKHUon MA t-lttl. NEW a USED CUSHMAN KAOUM Simplex a Track BabbU 338 E Pike. Pbane PE 3^. SMALL OIRMfil MOTOR^CM. classed as a scooter Coct |3SS; sell for 01M..PE 54Stt.____ For Sale Motorcycles 95 VIZ 'a'lrirSASiSY DATOVqv Bradford, across_frem_pMTC_ ittTTBIUMPH CUB. UEE NEW. UL 3-3313.________:________ To" ALL 8TATI MOTORCTCLE. IS FT ALUMINUM HOnSTTRAIL- . tt. Clean, good condition, reaeon- ISSO TRIUMPH MOTORCTCLsm. able. OA t-3741. Anderwn Sales a Sertoce , FT. PRAIRB SCHOONER traller. Uke new eond.. wUI eell B8A. M for 0135S. Can be 5-37tt.________________ _ _ tCH LES S DEAl-ra. se_rylci_.U u^tkt. ^ 1H4 HOU8ETRAILER 30 FT. CALL after 4 p.m J6Y 3-4613.______ ’55. S3U5. CUSTOM PBATUREB. 1 bedrma., full colored bath and blinds. Real nice. Oood value. OR ^5451.____________________ ALUMINUM HOUSE TRAILER 35 ft. panelled thrdugbaul Hoi-water, shower, toilet. Qta cash. PE 5-33M A 1 R~8 T R K a M" LI&aTWEIOOT Travel Trailer Slaee IIE Ouar-aoteeu for Uie. See them end get a demonetraUon at Warner TrtUtr Balct JOM W Huroa iPlan ta one al Wady Byaa’i eielt- APACHE. ’ToUR-A-MOME. CRKE The big three " - ■- I am the 101 W. Montoalm . . Harley Davidson Bales a Service For Sale Bicycles 96 USED BICYCLES. 56 AND UP. ---" ” Schwinn bikes. ^541.55 csrlett’s Bike and ^b-II B. Uwrenee. PE usiarBICY^BB, 15. 34. 38 INCM rebuilt. Can PE 84133._______ aiRL’8"35'IH WEE. UEE NEW. POE SALK Orli e authorised tsetory i t nrlval k. BOLL ____..._7 days a week. MARIKW AND COACH __________ 15310 HOLLY RD.. HOLLY, MB 4-0771 WASH SAND AND relay mis at yard Beach sand, 75c yd. Prat grivel. II yd. Pill dirt. 30c yd. lOA stone and over-■Ise stone. 13 vd. American Stone Products. 1335 Sashsbaw. Clerkston. MA 5-3101. 1-1 PEAT HUMUS AND BLACK dirt Loaded and delivered. 7 days a week. Also fUl sand. 4*0 Lochaven PE 81413______________ A-1 PEAT HUMUS. STATE TESTED. - " ’ ■ 11,76. 14 yd. loan. del. 300 Baldwin I or MT 3-1143. „ . ____BLACK DIRT, aand,_flll_and grivel^Pt 3-7774. A-1 TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT. SPIRITED. BUT OENTLE 8AD- _DL^HORS^UL_3-3034,_________ WELL BRED QUARTER HORSE. $300. PE 44010^__^________ TOUNb CATTLI TOR SALE. 1041 Burrus Rd.. off Sherwood, off age space uniform lemperaturt Sashibaw. I control, iupertor construction and Com DA..Iewm> SC beauty of design. A price you ror rale Poultry 85 j warn to pay at a deal you rarely 1 get. The extra bonus dollars now RABBITS AND CAGES FOR j on your presen’ mobile home In nw ussi I trade on the all new Detroiter. Terms to your sellsleetioo. BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOMES SALES wtr-v Tffins vofiR. 430i pisis Hwy Drayton Plains Te* W*U«5 bNCLAIli«ia>"8ICTa-M, SOLD At repair charges. EM 3-43W.____ Boat^ AcceworioB 97 TTOEEL TRAILER P»R IT BOAT For sale cheap J1^5 Chippewa Dr “HORSEPOVflR BUIIH. new. 676 l»„hqcrpnw Evln- rude_olde^045jM.il*?5:^___ 13’ RUNABOUt.* 35 HP. .ELEC, mtr , trailer, cover, controls, etc.. $405 OB 3-7700.____________ 1 Ft" CAB "fOP BOAt. MOTOR and earritr PE_34030.___ i.PT~ yellow JACKET WtH A-1 TOP SOIL CRUSHED STONE, sand, gravel, sill Lyle CoakUm PE 81113 or PE 34578_______ A-1 TOP TOIL, mr HUMUS, sand, gravel A till PI 5-7S60 or — 1-1303 _ mi A75“8< Sale Farm Produce FOOT CAMpTnO CHERRIES, self 15 tolners. ------ _ , __________ FOB" SALl STRAWBERRIES FOR | ,, "“"X, your freeser. by case or quart,! Royce Long. 3050 Ford Rd., MU- Lake Rd. PI 3- ford. MU 4-4403, _____ _____ ________ TO* SALE^ STRAWBERktES. I ‘f***!"' Pick your own, bring containers. I Jl.ttI CeU FE Royes Long. 3000 Ford Rd., MU- ] ______,___ ford^MU^4-44M______________, FOR WtHT. ' BTRAWBERRIEB. PICK TOUB OWN , ________________________ Fenton Rd. 4 ml. 8. of Praton ADD A STUDIO ROOM TO TOUR ■■ of M-" ‘ —- -•—— 0-flM. r I miles f . Watch trallar. and double ] iLS BLACK DIRT. TOP SOIL. fill and manure. ----’ landacaplnr —" ‘ 4*^4331?'*** ^TENflO^! Buy Now and Save Black soil and peat humus, loaded and delivered. 7 days a week. Call Robert Devls. 311 Airport ^Road. day or night. PB i-OTO. _ BULL boZINO. ORADINO, TRUCK-tng. fill sand, clay, top toU, by __hour or Job. OR 3j40M.__ kLACK DIRT AND "Plil PB 0-0177 8TRAWBBRRIB8. PICK TOUR OWN, ! ALUMINUM AWNINO. ; 35c a quirt. 1300 Olddlngs Rd; Reas. CaU UL 3-3003. off Perry.________________ “ STRAWBERRIES. CALL BETWEEN 13 noon and 3 p.m. or after I p.m. PE 5-lSOI^___________ strawberries for sale. 3tb miles North of Ctorkston 10140 _M.i5. ___________■_ _ STRAWBERRIES FOR SALE jrE_6-3S37 Sale Farm Equipment 87 ?ro Ilf Is an OC4 H yard ma- Several good used Oliver tractors —1 demos All priced to "" w and used hay mowers ( deliver- —■"—■ - CRUSHED StONB. BAND. GRAV- el.JBerl Reward, IM 3-0031.__ PILL. SAND. OAT LOADED OR delivered. 34c yd. ot pit M-5S W. of Alraort. PB 4-1171. BuU ^ dosing. PI _5-7l57.___________ obbb DARK CLAY-LOAM, TOP soil. 5ta yards. 111 deUvered. PE ORAVEL, SAND, STONB, dirt. Black dirt, top s^ EM 3-33M. EM 83418_ PILL PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUPs ply. Sand, gravsi k dirt. Cament. mortar, trucking k Uli OR 3-1534. TOP MIL. ROAD ORAVEL, SAND, nil dirt. UL *•*" Wood, CoEl and Fuel 77 SLAB WOOD OR PmEPLACT wood, 3 eord. 017 Del. PE S4131. 1 BBAOLE. 4 YRS. OLD PROVEN. 3 beagle pups. I wks, | sUver mUdature poodle, lib moe. Alse. _joodle cupping. OB 3-3774,' 3 PBEINoaSB PUPPIBB. CAM BB registered. Reel beauties S4S. Can be seen at 8M Fremont.__ 4 AEC dachshunds AT MO'. aIc BRITTIANT----------------- mo4.. ehamplei stock. I left, v •hunt la faU, tacrlftei. ISS 1 AEC DACTSHUND aeF iu»iafiias^ (MdrUan erd. $35. OR 34403. AKC RBO nTBim OOCEBR PUPS _____ ____OR LHlS_______ BRlTARt BPANIBL BROOD BitCB. ,. MI 4-0037. __ ct lAcmduNo" #ttn ........................ iiOBTON BULL TERRIER. MlOi, papers. OR 34051, cbi*EirThjpPiB8 nSBBIiSr^ a {35. ( with ti used garden tractors from 155. New Llni.». --------- 150 amps at tlU. Come out ai see us 011,504. Just north of 0 ford^ OA 0-3001 PktOULX OLIVER SALES FOR RENT 15 FT. ’TOUR-A-ROMB. ■Iseps 5. J35 a week. PI 3-SMl. TOR THI BIST IN TRJULIB AWN-_lngs. CallJToi^Smlthj^Pl 3-55M. TOR RENT 14 POb’T VACA’TI^ Jraller. OR 34717. __________i I^MROb COtZkPSinX CAMPIRS and equipment Pg 3-5305 NIIIROD CAMPERS BALU AND RENTAL. MICHIOAN RENTAL' ALUS CHALMER TRACTOR MOD-el C and equip. 5450. PE 5-»35 a" RIAL GOOD BKLlcnOH OP garden tractors. Roto TUIers and libuGHTEN & SON CORUNNA RUBBER TIRE TM-ken boaring farm wagon, separate grain bos and bay deck, good tires, ready to go. Good fsiin trailer. SxlO box. 15tt Oliver 70 tractor, 11x31 rear Urea, ready to work. |401. Surge 3 unit compreeeor, ttS. 3 surge seam type bucket, |U each. Glen Empeon, I3i0 Granger Road, Ol-forif rtone Oakland S-3443. FORD 3H TRACTOR. FRONT END TORDTiUCTOR AND EQUIPMENT ___________OR 3-3«g___________ GARDEN TRACTOR AND ATTACB-ments 575 ISO W, Ropkbu be-tWeen II a.m. and 3 p.m. JOHN DEEIUC CDLTTVATORi. Custom baling, IMS White Lake Rd., Hlghlata._______________ JOHN DEERE TRACTOR. PLOW and cultivators small stir new Best offer. PE S444S. ___ NBW IDEA 4 BAR SIDE DBI^R rakt and teddar, Uka a PE 4-1443. OLIVER OC-463G Crawitr Inadtr with dwr bli 14 hr. Demo. Snvo glTMO. Pontiac Farm ot Industrial Tractor Co. We Service and Sell BOLEN TRACTOra ^D TOy»8 WHEEL HORSE TRACTORS LAWN BOY MOWEWB TORO MOWERS, JACOBSEN MOWERS YARD MAN MOTTBRS ‘ CHnOtT TERMS PM 44734 PE >1113 KING BROS. powme RD. AT OPDTEE fiction SrIeb 88 Help! Auction nee ea the nneilMT btoek. Bvery- anturday or sSioSay alght at 7 JO pm. MM DUIe Hwy. <01-181. Easy to nod. Lnaekraam opea. a 31 FT. Jacobson’s Trailer Sales and Rentals Ta-Ka-Sbuo-EUe, -------- cootahiad travel ■ysotwood, — _____ k Tour-A-Hom.. ... trallere, our specialty. Parts l. servles, hitches and overloads I stalled Complete hook-up. Doi be disappotnied. get your rest vationi In now! 5005 WIlUan.. LaU^ Road. Drayton Plains, OR 13 PT7 RUNABOUT WITH 71b H P. 1^34. OR 85014^ Bvthruda 13 Pb^ RDN-ABOUf WITH A Merc _35 for 0340 _PB 4-7m. 13 FT. PIBEROLAS BOAT, HAS all nccessorles snd cushioned ■eats 1061 »» »>P,, motor. »60. EM 3-33 5:10 pm.___________________ 14’ CHIS-CRAPr PLTWbOD BOAT, $75.^A 0-3530._______________ 14 Ft ALUM 11 H P. JOHNSdS . Motor.^Hydrs^le low jUt 14 PTT" PLTVraoro""wiTH l ctlI Inboard motor. 0135. EM 3-3510. iT^'pt CUTTER, PIBEROLAS boat. II HP Evtnrudc Mtr. also trslleijl.ooo. EM 3-TO5.____ is"^PT. RUNAilOnT DBLUX, 35 electric jolmgoii, n.ttS. OR 8-130. _ ________________ 16 FT. DUtipHT MOLDED PLT-■ 60 h p I--------------— IS PrTTO HP. UTBOARO. kiUBT eeU. best offer. PB 0-1547. II’ MOLDED MAofe RUNABOUT and traUer. 5355. 1 year old. ready for water, all extras, 35 H. P Evlnrude motor, 0471 for rig. Republic MIM. _______ Ig’ WOLVERINE MOLOib PLT- Oxford Trailer Sales WHERE QUALITY COMEg FIRST See the large selection of 10-wldes In OT to M’. i. 1 or 3 bedroom. smalt trailers, too. Oood ■elecUon of used. aU slses. 1 i S. of Lake Orion on M34. PAKKHURST TRAILER COURT & SALES New and niad ortrate lika « TJ •««! between Lete Orton am raord on M-M New Moaoa G-“Md, Ventoara U4I ikpat Laha Orton MT 54011/ traUer. or MobUe borne We have Mvcril buyers waiting for cverythhu from 15 ft. to SO ft MlZv^i^E a COACH BAU^^Ulli Holly Rd. HoUy. VACATION TRAILERS 15’ new Trall-Blaier, Apacbo campors, SaU ar rent. Mnkt rsservatfoos now. P, I. How] -" 3345 Dlnl# Hwy. oH 8-1455. VriLL SACRIPICE M 1 BEDROOM. fuU both. BxcsUcnt eondltloa. tl,-Ml. or imaU traUer ai part pay- WANTio 30 TO il **P. MOBILB home not ovor lYON. Quick cash tor yaur' aqulw MT 81301. Rent Trailer Spare 90 i N Opdyha VESTBRN MSI Orel TRAIL! Park.______ - Largo trailer spaoM I era. laundry. Peataiing muv soft water. PlUered weter to ------ Spaees at Ml k t •------- ohMgaa c traUei ______ Come^ikd eee OXFORD ISraiLB MANOR thma wha want the batt. OraST liU. lo tos’ Mmeid pattoe. • *- Auto Acceaaoriea I FOOT ‘IHOMPTON CLUnOR, PIberglas. llghu. controlc. top. Mark 30, trailer and extras. Oood condition. $475. OL 1-U31.___________ I’ THOMPSON OFFSHORE CAB-IP cnilsfi with 50 h.p Johnson elec, storting.' eltcirl c 11 controls, loaded with extras. locluds trailer, MA 87570 1157 CHRIS-CRAPT If ft. Runabout. Blond and rich red mahogany, double planked bull. Double cock pit tea la 0. _MA S-1141 ’00 - 15’ WAOEMAKER RUii- about. 30 Johnson l.fOf Iht. cap. a's‘f^t?ruVcril.V^.r•'% tttt MI 4-7354. BBAUnPUL 14’ BOAT AND TRAIL-" Uxhu, windshield, radio, 0355. 0 Ir Chris-Craft suitable for with hardware lll.ll up. Perry Service, Ine., 5135 Hlgfland Rd. Boat Repairs SlMCass Lk. Rd. ““••U^diV Buchanan Boat works ' Kg Plbcnlae Runabout, MM. New 13 ft. wood bouto. Ml: Steel. tlM: Ahimhram. nil. p|l berglas, 5170; TraDcrs, MS. Plywood T-Bottom RunabouU, fltO. MOO M50 West. Evlnrude Sales, sal 1-1301. BOAT. TRAILER. 31 , C.H.P —--------- anytime_____ ions - BOATS . . jUTufft._____ SU-r'flfelJa^e^o* s?. ra.r:‘^ tfee-irper-ror^U^S*", the PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 25. I960 THIRTY-ONE: Boats ft Accessoiios 97 tr CRtnan. mm. oauudo BOAT Wow mis TOf • OuAlIlT OMi Bm Ui SCOTT bOTOM trarrSHOUBS-SPQRTBCIUBT OOItATtCH-AaOA SWAN BOATS ALlX)T-RIVKROA»,t TRAII.SRS 1« PBR CRKT DOWN. U MORTBS CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES Iff TvDvOp Ttim—AU Motora «I B. WfltOB, Optn aim, n S-««01 KLSirOBTB g BBAT1 See M & M MotoraSales CUSTOM BOAT OOTSOM AND cfnvu rapAlri. PE 4-U71 or FE 441M. BoAt UMok a miute. all lor ooli SIM. MMt MV And uud riRt to ehooM (ran. Mercury ■OMrf a Ldoe aur boAU. Opoo T d«M A week. HOLLY MARINE AND COACH SALES. lUlt HOLLY RD holly. ME ^I. CRM-CRi^^AT^^lUa. STS. CHRIS CRAST BS. II ContlnentAl. ISO bp. i SO bn., B>c. cood.. boot a troUer. PE S s-tais. CHRIS CRAFT CAPRI, UEE NEW. nmo vnArJ ICR CTAPT SAdjnsH-ORTABLe; 1 UAX TRAILERS 101 Wanted Uicd fliirt__ AAA ;ar8 amra hiorir PRicai at HILAND SALES. INC. ABE POE MR. ID RAT JR. MSS M-M At Dnok LAke RS. TAIfF ADVANTAGE food condition Ilf por Ton Dol-b^orj, ..re, AU lor tor MMcf A JEROME "Bright Spot" For Sale Trucks 1Q3 For Sale Cars ‘U OMC ntuity HASKINS Truck Sale oT5»m 'ST FORD Vk-Toa Pickup V-S enstaie, beoter. Uko new eobdltloA tbroufbout. HASKINS CHEVROLET STSl Dixie Bny. At M-IS CUrkftoD MA^ S-iSTI Open niff tU S ■SI CBtV. aTAD. n S-3441 (» OR 3-IS«. Pontiac's Truck Center GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS Top Ca$h Paid - FOR OBID CARR - -CONDmON:--“A„, -riSS'-crr A REAL ROT. SSSS3. PI 4-SSST. ---«_>■»'*> SSSS. MAyftlr S-UU After S p “ -5AWS0i^r»Tfi«-ipECirL^- « - -.....— — USEiy - 44’ plywood boot wlthi®®*“"I _______M Auburn coror, TH bp Jobnion SX». TOPBOCE-JONE CAB TROCE. I PONTIAC WASTE____^PE S-OMS NEW - IS- WOMmoker IM CLBAN ’M CHKV: TORD fteertof '““*'*“* **ndtbl4ld end; „ pontUc. S300. PI 4-lSTS. ISSS FORD PS DUMP. VERT GOOD cond 4TI8 Ellcobotb I- runobout. windshield. ■>ry box, control! ai._ _____ Ivlnrude Lark. Ready ,S5- AVERILL'S ISll B FORD 1 TON TRUCE. A-1 running cood 1S5I Cher, pickup. A-1 running oond. PE S-SOOO bet. down and M months to psy. Tike MIS to W:. Highland. rlsW on Hickory Ridge Rd_. to Demode Bd, left end follow ilgns to DAWSON'S SALES St TIPSICO LAKE Phuns MAln S-31TS. Open KKLlJ’S HARDWARE 3N4 aBSuRN "D rai6WUtr"RONABOUf;^ snd trailer lOr bouee <>» ■ell. PB 3-tTll. _____ POR~BAtE;r~ALOMlNU>t TOAT and troller, Ills prssereers. gss tank IV, horsspower outboard ejui UAvfal. A.07M '. FE MtOI PKATHKRCRArr II' about. 30 h.p. Johnson, surter, stssrmg Wheel, w™*****^ controU and ooeor. OR 3-333S ^ otter S p.m._______________i TrANCHISED OWENS DEALER , . - S' PUkiblp CruUers i Inboard snd outboard J Plberels* runabout 15 opd IT ft Mrrcury outboard englne« and ATTENTION WE'RE PATINO TOP $$$ DOLLAR SOB CLBAN USED CARS Glenn's Motor Sales 353 W. HURON__PE 4-T3TI QUALITY MOTOR BALES NEEDS ALL MODEL CLEAN CARS TODAY I4S ORCHARD LAEE NN 3-T041 dependable UilD CARS HARDENBURO MOTOR PALEg . Cass at Pl»s__PE 5-7MS Used Auto Parts 102 1S53 OLDS MTB. AND TRANS '53 Cher, and powsr xllde< 155: Chav. rntr.. 1553 Pontiac mtr _PI 3-3M5._____________________;___ ■5T nmC*. ENGINE AND 'ST OLDS engine. CaU altar S, PE 3-STlS. CAB PARTS POR '43 TO '56 MOD-eU. Royal Auto Parto. 113S “* & MARINE SALES Woodward at South Blvd. FE 4-9587_____________ FOR BALE MOLDED PLYWOOD 13 foot boot wtlb cover Mark ?L,k”rtrJitl^r^'tllK ■"FOR THE FISHERMAN 3 A 5>^ HP EVINRDDE MOTOM CAB TOP CABRIERS-WE CARRY TRAILER PARTS JIHf» _ • I , TUBES ALL ALUMINOMI.j D^S A BOAT SHELTERS MARIN* HARDWARE A PAINTS For Sale Trucks^ tS DODOE. J MODiX-COE_____ NEW TIES. STH WHEEL. AND SADDLE TANKS NEW ENGINE. $545 JOHN J SMITH II 8 SAOINAW FE 3-7155 SSS CHKVROLKt 14' VANITTI. new paint. S new tiree, booeter brakos. maehanieally — 51450. Phone FE 3-4334. '53 FORD P-IOS FANIL. OHLT SlTt total priet. TOIA BOHR. INC. 130 B. Main, MUtord___IL,__^ 5 TON MACK. 13 YARD DUltF boa, EM_3-^S.______________ ■5S CHET lib-TON. STEEL RACK '51 Chev Long wheel bar' -----lev. W U---- 61 I-toi FE 3-5033 1S51 CHEVY DUMP. ‘TaST PAyITenTS' available ift“*3'usi“'' * from our place of buslneea, where i^^pWt5rto^to;^*‘Ho^r^ Uttle oSde Trailer. Reiular price, “JOHNSON MOTORS MFC BOATS USED MOTORS BOARDMAN’S to,5Hl^^^Rd^,4I^LakoR MECHANIC FOB EVINRODE— JOHNSON—MERCURY - SCpTT SPORTSMEN’S HEADQUARTERS M34 at tho Double Btortlght Open I days a weak MY 3-4511 ■ LAKE ORION_________ "outboard'repaih «*WJE OALE BUCCANEER OUTBOARD MOTOR dealer DIVISION OP OUTBOARD MARINE TOBP- AUBURN ROAD SALES A SERVICE WE HAVE 30 -NEW: PICKUPS—PANELS AND STAKES THAT "MUST GO" Now Is the Time for the New Truck Deal Of A Lifetime Our Used Truck Supply Oweni. Ine. A NEW OR ! f^isi. Cy FORD NEW '60 F-KX) no W.B. F. SIDE. PICKUP FULLY EQUIPPED AS FOLLOWS I cylinder engine, oil filter. P ... wipers, air claoner. R. V. mirror, dome light, electric bom. hub caps, 5 tlras and wheels. L.F sun Tiaort. haater and dafroatei 3 tall llfhU. front and ret turn ilcnala. waabera, federal ta and 3% state tax. Ucenaa an Complete Delivered $1768 Aak lor truA dept. FE 5-4101 CY OWENS. INC. ' 630 OAKLAND AVE. NEW DODGE DARTS $2058.15 Full Price $47.43 Per Month DELIVERED lOHN I. SMITH 1553 BUICE SPECIAL. RAH, VERY good rood. 4735 Eliaabotb Lk Rd. C l^ntog._______________________ '.W Buick. A-1 Cond. llkljdyrtle___ _ ____S’® list BUICK. GOOD CONDITION. For Sale C«rg ■u wnxTt Bgtadobaker Do Solo. . '54 Pontiac '53 Ford ■53 Chevy '51 Buick . . -51 Llncotn :SSTJ7cWer ■5r Oldi . •51 Ford •5S CHEVROLET 3 DR bEDAN. S CYL. AUT ITO. '51 C KING AUTO 115 8. 8AO»AW CYLINDER. - Cond. RIATKR VERY _ - VAN CAMP CHEV INC „ MILFORD MU 4-5335 tt iiircREVROLET PBOOB. RADie '* S HEATER. WHITE WALLS. AB- i 80LUTELT HO MONEY d6wN Assume payments, of 514 37 per BO Call Crodtt Mtr Mr. ParU . 4-7500 Harold Turner Ford S11T5. OR 3-ftlS. ■U CHEYT 1 DR REPOSSESSION I1S5 full price. No cash needed. Pay only S17 a aio. Due July iy Rite Auto. Mr. Belt FE t-453S IQS E. BLVD. AT AUBURN _ ISSS CHEVROLIT 3 DOOR. STA-tlna waton. SSSS^EM 3^. _ GOOD COHO. •|7 CRRYnEK OF^IK yoreerT^sm. ditton. S3t* — ir OL :------ RUNi Mmeci St.. RocbeiUr. OL 3-S331. | I OcSOTO. 4-OOOR. I g^. Beet offer. Call ^— . '15 DeSOTO 4 DR. SEDA^N. 555 I dn_l7.5S per_wk. BraM FE 3-S1I5 I im Demro 3-door hiuujtop. ; Brakes and steering. Excellent eoadlUon. SttS. .350 S MarsbaU. For Sale Cars KM 120 "A-1" KECONDITIOXED USED CARS '53's thru '59's BBINO BOLD AT ‘■RtKk Bottom Prices ’ llddie Steele AT BUlUtBETH LAKE ROAD FE S-317T___FE 5-OSSl '5S FORD V-S FAIRLANE. RSR. NEW BILL SPENCE "RAMBLER" WILL ACCEPT Ouns, outboarda botU. reWgera-tora and anpHaDeaa. tto. On our aew loss Mmblera or any good used ear as part paymaaL Dodge Dart $1975 SHELTON Pontiac-Buick Rochester, .Mich. OL 1-8133 |5‘S0 DOWN SFiaALS '50 Mercury Hxrdtop. 150! Pontiac Starchlef. 5551. Man: tr bargains Kcego Sales & Service KEEOO HARBOR __________ M hardtop'mebcury wackmi. White wall. fuUy powered. 31.808 miles. S1.5K OL CS475. ____ * ~ LAIR 3 r brakes For Sa^Cars -PORO-DEALER- ^ Used car abopptnx Center '54 PONTIAC 4 DOOR $145 I'Cy'Owens- SIS OAKtAHS ATBHUE IbY owner, so PONTUC OON-I vert. Perfeci eosid.. at Mobtie — Oaa. station, comer DIxto a.i Merco-matlc. 1 IS FcWucriTABCEllP,HYOIU . I p.a and p.b., Sun Plow, gl S-5S43. PONTUC ISIS 3-DOOB STARCHIEF ' Urdtop, S7SS. Call * Coast Guard app. euahlona, wind shield, ateering whaeL runnln Ufam*’ pfu?"^'- h.*p"^cS^l elect lUrter wlU hat. and UI box Alao eontroli OMPleta wltl '*OWIMB^ARIHK 380 orchard Lake Are. PI 3-S03 TONY’S MARINE Your Evinrude Dealer . SPECIAL only KSS, oat I 360“(S?_______i BOB FRO^-T. INC. .« isM riJRJ5J_DR j linoo^n-me^^urt ROCHESTER ! '90 „„ — . bk VI ---------... trana. Clean 47J» EUsabeUi _______ _ ____ ------------- ' IMS MratCURT HARDTOP — PORD GALAXY HARDTOP mo AND HEATER. MERC4>- .---as- a----W.a Sm. < tTr—PW Wn MATIC ftB«OLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. AMume p4y««U of S;”partia^t kU^’l-toSB. HaroM AutomaUc tranamlsslon, V4. BJ-, die. heater, power steering 01501 down Bob Frost. Inc.. Lmcoln. i Mercury,_MI 04034. iSrTORD custom 3-DOOR. V4. ....- ___________________ RADIO A HEATER. ABSOLUTE- , —MERCURY CONVERTIBLI LY NO MONFY IXIWN Assume ,p"e with red A white li ?rIdT"‘ig’/ K'-x"St ‘S? s'! INC -^--Ti1or’d“7oR ----‘^LlULN MEiliuRY- I _ MI 04034 ______ ■ 55 OLDBMOBILl SUPER IS. __OR 3-I04S bLOe WITH 1 .SM PONTIAC 4 REPOSSESSION .JIS full price. No cash medr tv. brakss. radio and beater. e FK 4-5313. ________ , M PONTIAC rtA'nON WAC^N.^ . EM°3W1 8 Conway. 43~PONTlAC HAROTOP. QOOO„ condition 5335 iets<» Urvlm Btotloa. M-34 aad‘Clarksto» Rd- TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS M 8. TELEORAPH FE 3-7060 •54 FORD 4 CTL. 4-DR., BTD. If poiiq convxrtiblx. iIar; lain at 0005. FK 3-0045 ___ LOOK AT THIS 4o money down. ItM Ford con-rerttbie. like new Lucky Auto lales 113 B Basinsw. PE 4-1000. 1093 BlrralngUm, MI 0-3450^_______ 1555 FORD. 1 DOOR, 0 CYL------------------------------- WALL8? ABBOLirfELV NO*MON-ET DOWN. Assume payments of aJS^rK' a?‘idl *4-7m. Harold Turner Ford. ________________ 1050 PORD, CLEAN PORDOMATIC, VjO. Mike offer. MI 5-3577. ~it FbRD 0. O b. DEPENDA-ble transportation, gai 3-0553. M PORD THUHOIRBIRD. RRD and white. 10.000 mUee, 33.455. _P^9-004L ________________ 1194 FORD. V-i DXLUXX 3-IX)OR Very nice. 5305. FK 3-7542. R. _ Riggins.__________ PORD 1191 CONVERT.. YOU BULL '52 < 553 00 full prloe. 157 So. J VALIANT CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES i Mtln Bt.. Clarkston MA 5-51411 Out wbera tba oeerbaad Is low | 1335 Auburn Rd , next to LirMOUm BLA^ S-blT BT. Savoy. R and h.. 0 cycle, auto, trans. This car has been malnuined at factory aervlca garage. 0750. OR 3-9530._ 14 PONTTAC 4 DR REPOB8ES-ston Take over payments. Braid PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS • PlNt CARS. B(HJ> R Ca“ llOO PerryjU Itadlson_ im RAMBLER CUSTOM 0 CYL . lOM POMTIAC 3 DOOR REPOSSESSION price No cash neodad. - 017 month Du* July lOth. iww Auto. Mr Bell PE 0-1630 _ I0O_E._blvd st_Avbura,_ '50 PONTIAC 1 DOOR CHU^AIM. irdewaU°*tirak Parka at MI 4-1000. RaraW IRmcr Ford. VOLKaWAOEN. BLACK. 1051 BE--dan Radio, whitewallk. nl^ OilflO. 4M Emarton. PK 3-403Q . 1000 VALIANT — RADIO AND -------------------* ‘?S 10 OLDS 00 3 DR. H;, Be Reaidy; For The 4th WITH A WILSON USED CAR : 1958 CHEVROLET ' IMPALA SPOara COUPE - Radio --•■ powergUde. Whitev " - ,»a.U{ 1958 FORD FAIRLANE TONYERraUE^ BeljJO Low mUeage ......... 01900 equipped Immaculate throagboult 1958 FORD COUn’TRY SEDAN. 4 door, radii and heater. Pordomatic, White.' walU. a ntca clean aar ... 0140B 1957 FORD V RETRACTABLE CONVERTIBLE J 3 ears In one. as a hardtop of"' eiinv*rtih1« Blftck Vhttft IS hftftUr. Fordo-'’ "o'ltol 1957 FORD : FAIRLANE 540. Rardlop. CMpa, Radio and heater, Pordomattev'.^ wbitewaUa Thla la ana you havw to see! Traded to us with leea than 10,000 mUet on apeedoai* cter. A gemi! ........ OllOB 1957 PONTIAC OOHVERTIBLE. A tet Mack beautr with a white top. Radio and cr. Whitt walla. Btandbi^ 1957 BUICK SPECIAL HARDTOP COUPE - . Ughi greaa In cater with match* lax Interior. Radio and beater. , AutoamUe traasmlexten. WBu*- ’ wane ................ Olios 1956 MERCURY •PORTS^EDAN^Radlo ! Ijike Orion ,i MY 2-2871^, MY. 2-23811 , Larry lerome } O-UM I ^ ROCHEsn^ PW nEALEB WILSON - PONTIAC-CADILLAC , 1350 N. ^ Woodward :• RIRMatOBAIi ■ thirty-two Romeo Man, 71, iCappy Smith Takes Dies Mei Crash Jumper Test Win Ion 32-Mile Road , Detroit Horse Show competitors , A 71-year-oW Romeo man diedl^j, (Cappy) Smith this fend a half miles east of Romeo, no stopping the husky Middleburg. ; Daad U Laurence O. Priest of Va.. horseman in his chase of top [23? fl Main St. He was a certified individual honors, feublic accountant. ★ * » Accarding to Romeo »Ute po- Smith this morning took his } lice, Prleiit made a I’ taro * the Sure Thing, over the route IlBteraectlOB of Romeo Plan^a»«^ I thiat SS-.MIIe roads In fr«lf of I for a first event win in the g another car epp" jumper test at Bloontfield Driver of ‘ the other car was|Open Hunt Club. Pandora A. Troppman. 31. of Rich- Ten Pin Farm. Palos Park, jnond. He received a cut on theHI • "as s^nd. ?°Si^ was taken to the Com-! knunity Hospital near A1 m o n t. included the first of the wester ^here be died about eight hours (men s ";^ern pleasure ho^ efter the accident won by William Hassell on Masco- • His bodv is at Wilburs Funeral lis: and ladies western pleasure ilome, Romeo. horse, won by Mrs. James Rook- Troppman was not held. Vr’s Royal Constellation. Ingemar May Need Birgit's Comforting Leftists Scream Slurs at U.S. I, FJUNT WOIRIES FOREVER AND INSULATE AT THE SAME TIMEI STOP with pooling, cbippiag. r blitloring, crocking inthill ALUM. SIDING NOW Alto STORMS and AWNINGS No Money Down $5 Por Mo. Up I^LL Jfie Vaiiehf NOW Oayo-^lvot.—^n. M No Antwor Call TT ^ GRAND OPENING OF out NEW LOaTION-297 OAKLAND AVE. DEAN'S HEATING SERVICE FE 5-5478 —Night FE 8-98^8 10,000 Fro* Gold Boll Stomps 3 BIG DRAWINGS July 9-12 1st Prixo-5,000 TV Stamps 2inI Prixo-2,000 TV Stamps 3rd Prlz*-1W TV Stamps Plus 20 Additionol Prises of 100 TV Stomps REGISTER NOW Special 1 CUP THE COUPON FURNACE 1 Deposit ot CLEANING ! DEAN'S HEATING SERVICE ond SERVICE . NOZZLES 'and FILTER 1 FREE! 50 EXTRA FREE! I TIIF Valun Stamps CARTRIDGES 1 NAME .... - 1^ ADDRESS Bp Sure! HAVE TOUR TURES CHECKED AT TOUR LOCAL TV SERVICE DEALER . . . THERE IS MO CHARGE FOR THIS SERVICE Your local TV oorrico will glodly chock your luboa lor you on prociaien inabumonts daaignad lor Uua particular phaao Your local TV lorTtco conlor irewnt On Iho uao oi Iho ae callad 'Tubo chackara" iound la naighborbood drug and food atoraa ds lhay conaidar thorn to bo doaignod principally to aoU tubaa. Ba aura you nood now tubos bolero inToating your hard oornod money, hare your TV tuboa aciantifically chackad by your noighbethood TV oorrico aloro. ii you do nood a tubo or two you will lind Uio correct style and number in hia vaat alock and at a pries that is comparabla to any. Whatever Tout TV Needs May Re. Tou Can Depend on Tonr Neighboiliood TV Service Center Oakland Connty Electronics Assn. DependaWe TV SERVICE Don't be fooled! Don't be misled by bargain prices or absurd claims of screwdriver mechanics or a neighborhood handy man! . . . Call a competent technician. There's a member of the Oakland County Electronic Association in your neighborhood— coll him for DEPENDABLE, GUARANTEED SERVICE. Aubgrn Radio I TV, 39 Auburn, Ff 4-H55 Baldwin Radia I TV, 1218 Baldwin Attt., FE 1-1231 Caudaa't Radio. A TV, 36 S. Ttitgroph, FE 4-9736 C A V Saltf A Sanrict, 158 Oaklaad Avt., FE 4-1515 Dnky Radia A TV, 348 Lahigb, FE 4-9802 Namptoa Ekctric Ca., 825 W. HarM, FE 4-2525 Nad's Radia A TV, 770 Orchard LAs Avt., FE 4-5841 JAataa't Radio A TV, 45 E. Woitoa Rhrd., FE 8-4569 Laatsch TV Service, 6734 Dixit Mwy., Clarkstaa, MA 5-5311 Latiawr Radia A TV, 3530 Sathabaw, Drayton, OR 3-2652 MatrapaUtaa TV, 919 Orchard Lokt Ava., FE 84M01 Ofcal Radio A TV, 3930 Elizabstk Lake Rd., FE 44945 Pbalpt Electric Ca., 4340 Mxig, Draytaa Pleias, OR 3-1217 Rich TV, 1959 North 0Hy<» M., FE 44221 StefMiki Radio A TV, 1157 W. Horae St., FE 24967 Sweat's Radio A AppHauca, 422 W. Haraa St., FE 4-1133 Weitaa Radio A TV, 515 E. WaHaa Ihtd^H^E 2-2257 WKC lee. Sarvica Dept., 45 N. Psrry St. FE 3-7114 By EARL WILSON NEW YORK —• Jan Murray's daughter, Diane, 8, was rehearsing a song "Catch a Falling Star." for the school show the other day, and Jan was Ustenlng attentively and appreci-atlvely as a parent should. * "Darling, when you come to the word •star,”’ Jan advised her, “you should make a little gesture, like this ...” “No, I won't!” announced his daughter. "My teacher says that's not the way to sing a song.” Jan, the Idol of millions of TV fans, the star of night clubs, summer theater and benefits, smiled patiently. “Darling,” he said, gently. “Daddy's been In show business 25 years. Who do you think knows more about singing a song—ydur teacher or me?” "My teacher, ” exclaimed Diane, “knows more about any-thing than you do!” That's one of the stories Jan Murray’ll probably tell when he returns to NBC TV Monday Sept. 5 with a new show called "Charge Account.” It’s “family stuff,” one of the TV commodities that's highly salable today. WILSON His wife, Toni, Is such a fastidious housekeeper that she empties the ash trays before you’ve put your clgaret ashes In them. “And she loves to make beds. I got up at 4 a.m. to go to the bathroom, and I got back, and the bed was made.” Toni is very affectionate.' Jan reports, particularly when she's got her hair In curlers. 'She’s wearing 20 pounds of stainless steel In her hair. She bends over and kisses you and rips your whole face to shreds, he says. Jan claims to be watching International developments closely. “Take those seven Astronauts,” he pointed out. “Only one is going—we need the other six to drag the one guy into the missile.” Jan hopes to get a few laughs on TV, of course. “Outside But Tokyo Mob .Only 3,000, Not 60,000 as Was Expected Today CW-WJR. Newi WWJ. Mem«ir WXYX. n*»». Wtipr CKLW. WCAR, N«w». e«|# WPON, NfVi. OporM TOKYO (UPI) - About 3.000 snake-dancing leftists shouting “We hate America!" and “We will smash the American warmongers" demonstrated briefly today outside the U.S. Embassy and the Parliament Building. There was no violence. The turnout was a fraction of the OO.ObO persons the Communist and Socialist parties and the fanatic Zengakuren student organization had said would take part in the demonstrations. The demonstratora headed for the U.S. EmbaMy ahortly before S p.m. A thousand poHoemen backed up by SO armored trucks blocked the approaehea, and the demonstrators were unable to get within 1,000 feet of the building. After chanting such slogans 4s "American imperialists, go home ” and "You killed Michiko Kamba" (a 22-year-old coed trampled to death recently by rioters) outside the embassy for about a quarter of an hour, the crowd headed for the Parliament Building a half-mile away. ISiSS—WJR. Dane* Timt WWJ. Mtlodiet WJBK. 8Ur«o tlM-WJR. Ntwi. Bportt WPOH. , WXVZ. Fred WtUs Canada Egg Wets Mayor of Moscow MURRAY Of Ed SulUvan and John Cameron Swayze, who’s getting laughs?” he asks. THE WEEKEND WINDUP ... "DON’T PRINT THAT! Rudy Vallee kidding his age. says. _ was the Pat Boone of the Stone Age ” . . . David Niven had to learn to smoke clgarets for “Ouns of Navarone” . . . Trumpeter Ray Anthony’s new night club routine features The Bookends—pretty Anita Bay and Diane Hall. NUGARA FALLS. Ont. (^P)-The mayor of Moscow was splattered Friday with a raw egg. thrown by a man believed to be a Lithuanian refugee, as he posed for pictures during a good will tour of Canada. Nikolai Bobrovnikov, who posing with TV's Wyatt Earp, Hugh O’Brian, and two Canadian mayors, was hit squarely on the neck, according to a news photographer who was taking the plc-mre. The egg th-ewer, Idcntlflcd by police ns Oed Janusomis, M, was caught after a 'S-mlnutc chase through Victoria Park. He arrested on undisclosed charges and later rel"«sed on szm ball. --Today's Radio Programs-- caiw a»io WJBK. Newt. Trafne . WCAR Ntwa. BhandAn I S:SS-W k-WJR Nawt, Oueat WXTZ. NOWS. W«U CHLW News. Toby Osyld WJBR :tawa WPON. Ntwa. Osaty I-.SS-WJR MutU Rstt CKLW. Newt. DseM WJBK. Ntwa Burn Txvt Braskinat Club CKLW, Nawt. Toby DbfM WJBK, Ntwa. Reid WPON. Newa, Lark WCAR Nawt, UArtya a;W-WJR W. WWJ,. Newt. b. WZTk, Haws. ■ CKLW. Jot V- MONDAV APTKRNOOM It:t»-WJR Nawt. Parm WWJ. Newt, Hauart WxVz. Ntwa. McHaalsy CKLW. Newt. Van WCAR Nawt, Purae WPON. Nawt, UwU l:SS-WJR Bboweaas WWJ. Ntwa. Muale CKLW. Jot Van WPON, Chuck Lewis WCAR. Ntwa. MuaU WJBR Raid (:Sa-^€KLW. Nawt. Shift Bk WWJ. MaxweU WXTZ. WInUr CKLW. Darlas WCAR. Kawa, Henna WPCN. Bob Lark WJBK. Lee t.-M-CRLW, Bud Dsvlea WXvit. WlnUr CKLW. Newa. Muale WCAR Newi. Bonnett WPON Carriage Trade 1 Darua. A.-SS-WJR. Ntwa Mutit WWJ. Nawt. Tambe WXTZ. Winter GM Sues State forTaxRetund Judge Moore Presents [Juvenile Courts Plan O’Brian continued to pose tiK pictures while police ches^ Janu- Slnger-comedienne Dorothy Loudon, who owns part of B|gQn)is, the photographer said. limousine service, bought an apt. house . . Duo: The Broad way Theater has the town's Mrs. Fanny Comstock. •MA.NY REI'l'GICI> Canada has many anti-Coni- only female theater manager— ^ Mayor Franklin Miller of Niag-J . ara FalLs, Ohi., and George * " 7. . Nelms b( Ottawa were posing TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: They tell Of the woman who went Bobrovnikov and O'Brian, to a psychiatrist for the first time, but couldn't talk till she i had a bag of groceries In her hand. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Nothing Is quite as as watching your boss do something you told him couldn't the Soviet Union early be done —^uote. Widter Slezak's annoyed about the parking problem. Hla daughter and her boy friends park themselves In the living room every evening . . . That’s earl, brother. Copyright, 1940) Oakland County Probate Judge! be financed by charitable and sci-Arthur E. Moore has proposed aj®n*^*c foundations. Firm Claims It Paid three-point program for juvenile; * ♦ * to AAlllinn Fwlen National Council of! The nearly 200 juvenile court. INOariy minion *-Airu judges, meeting in, judges voted yesterday to support by Mistake ' Detroit. ! proposed legislation that would set ' * * * up conservation work camps TJFTRniT (UPD-Gencral Mo- Judge Moore told the conference manned by young people. DETROIT (UPD-General MO- ^^uld cost S2.6 mU-j . * ♦ * tors Corp. filed suit against the ^ year. ] jhe Council asked Congress to Michigan Department of Revenue! * R ★ pass legislation “for the education saU U would bH up • eroup • and conservation of our natural him couldn t the Soviet Union early In World in mtangpbles taxes. i in «iii — Bobrovnikov made no comment s the incident. Mayor Miller declined to discuss the incident fursaying it might "jeopardize international relations. One Man, Two Teen-Agers Tb/ee Sent to Prison Man Held in Texas Red Light Bandit? An Oakland County man and two, handed Robert O. Felt, 17. of teen-agers vesterday were sen-! Oakley Dr.. Oawson, for stealing tenced to prison by Circuit Judge two tirw and wheels from a cu Stanton G Dondero. lot In Birmingham June 8. He .pleaded guilty June 13 to larceny . , . i from a motor vehicle. For attempting to break Into the _______________ Three Sisters Market, 608 W. Hu-' '■*«.r.J^iArresT Trio dy. 31, of L.vnn St. teiiecd to 1 to 5 yeai-s in Jaekson Prison. Again on Bet War II. The company said the taxes were ‘‘erroneously" paid in 1953, 1954 and 1953 on stock it owned in five foreign corporations. It said it requested return of the money in July 1957 but the request was denied. LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The FBI here ZBnoanced today the alreat la El Paso, Tex., of a man Identified as the one executed convirt-anthor Caryl Cliesaman claimed was the real Loa Ange- Kennedy pleaded guilty June iS 1 m ✓“N 1 to aflempled breaking and enter \JjTJ ing during the nighttime. wzxvaa ^ k.- Bruce Bishop, 19. of 312 N. .Sag- Three men already accused of inaw .St., was sentenced to 14 lO;violating state gambling taws were 5 years after pleading guilty June!arrested again .yesterday — 13 to breaking into the Pontiac|(^arged with possession of bet Typesetting Co,, 34 .S. Ca.ss Ave. giipg A sentence of 1 to 5 years was! (hree pleaded not guilty at ^ their arraignment before Municipal Loral FBI Chief William G. Simon said Severio Terranova, M, aim known as Cliarlea or Joe Terranova, was arrested on a warrant charging him with flee- [)Q|roit Candidate Asks The giant auto firm said the for eign corporations exlated under laws of the countries In which they operated and the Btock, therefore, was not subject to the MIcMgaa tax, The foreign corporations In eluded Vauxhall Motors, Ltd., and Oneral Motors, Ltd., In England; Adam Opel. A.G., in Germany: General Motors-Holden’s, Ltd., ir Australia, and General Motors in France. to aid the Juvenile court mo\e-ment throui^ publlcatloua, aOrv-Icea and experienced atnff mem-benv. esInbUnh n dosen model juvenile coorts nround the iwun-try to npgrmde sUndnrds of the court system, nnd work toward preventing juvenile delinqnenry by. InsUtnttng a protective serv-Iceu orgaaliallon In 4# commu- our youth." Calls ior Individualism ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) -The Rev. Reuben R. Figuhr, president of the Seventh Day Adventist general conference, urged young people yesterday to swing away from conformity and become indi-Moore said the program could viduallsts. _________. AUTO-TOURI8T8I ’TakeTmcmTucSm^ mMonr our Sava 240 mllat af dHvhii — Enjoy CUppar boapiulity— ing Uallforala to avoid prosecution lor burglary. to Be. Defeated at Polls loungas. Outside bedrooms with toilets, children's plsy-room, free raoviee, TV. dano. ing. fine food and refrMh-ments at reasonable prices. Pleads Not Guilty to Dance Violation Judge Maurice E. Finnegan and were released on personal bond. They are Jessie T. Jones. 49, of 50 Deland O.: EroesI John- ' — son, 47. of 459 Linda V1sU Dr.; and Lee R. Myers. 40, of 9! Crawford St. DETROIT (UPI) - Dr. Mel Rav-. itz, a leading candidate for the I I Detroit Common Council, has asked | voters to defeat him. NImon said Terranova had been sought for more than Terranova was charged counts of burglary in nearby Aiu- sa In May of last year. " " ’ Chessman and hia attorneys i Ravitz. who hRs been endorsed claimed that Terranov a might be by the AFLles? Don't be poshed! CUII first for our price qnd compare — We will save you from $5.00 to $12.00. Want to be rid of the household dust lodged in your duct worje' Only a large, power suction truck can clean duct work and chimneys thorofighly. rile IkU *1 rtfkl (wiir »r r •■4 •■*r*l«4. t taler* 4aU. Oar tea rimati r al»r*4 « * ImU, ■ KLEEN AIR FURNACE CLEANERS os J-0100 Have D&M = BUILD THAT GARAGE I & BREEZEWAY NOW!| GARAGES $1^54 j fu Low ru ■ I®*' s COMPLETE MODERNIZATION HOUSE RAISING —BASEMENTS INSTALLED • ROOFING f SIDING • ADDITIONS • RECREATION ROOMS Dr, U Bldg. Service I 6 ^ FE2-70MI Ennt. nr Swk OR 3-2276 ^5 E. WALTON COR. OPDYKE GET A GAS PERMIT and SAVE $ $ $ with the BURDETT - HOrriST GAS COHVERSION BURNER ever model Hm Amaxing Nnw lUNDETT Wrntft up In 40% MORI UsoUn Hnot from Oa< . . . Ends All Hooting Work orn^ Worry - AbMiutoly Noieo-lotn Too. 9URDETT GAS-OIL FURNACES I* Hnn Bnn-tir I* ! TlUi TO HT' Micliigaii Heating Co„ Inc #8 NEWBERRY STREET FE 8x6821 FE 8-66S1 FE 2-2254 / E%o; THE>OXTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JUNE 25, 1960 THIRTY-THREE Today’s Television Programs The Sierra Nevada mountains run ihrough inland CalUornia and roi4(hly parallel the Pacific coast line. Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice Channel »-WdBK-TV ChaaMi 4-WWJ TV Chaanel 7-WXYZ TV TODAY’S TV momiOHTS S:N (2) Early Show (began at 5:30 p.m.) (4) Mr. Adams and Eve (7) Pro Football (•) Popeye S:M (2) Eaiiy Show (began at 5:30 p.m.) (4) Honeymooners (7) Fpotball (oont.) (9) Talent Caravan 7:00 (2) Four Just Men (4) People An Funny (7) carl Decoy (9) Charile Chan 7:10 (2) Perry Mason (4) Bonanra (color) (7) Dick dark (9) Movie. Hedy Lamarr, "Crossroads” (’41). 0:09 (2) Perry Mason (cont.) (4) Bonanza (cont.) (7) John Gunther (9) Movie (began at 7:30 9:M (2) Wanted: Dead or Alive (4) Man and Challenge (7) Leave It To Beaver (9) Movie (began at 7:30 p.m.) 0:H (2) Mr. Lucky (4) Deputy (7) Uwrence Welk (9) Mr. D.A. 0:30 (2) Have Gun, Will Travel (4) News Special (cont.) (7) JubUee U. S. A. (9) News 10:10 (9) Weather 10:10 (9) Nation's Business 10:30 (2) Sea Hunt (4) Man From Interpol (7) Jubilee (cont.) (9) Movie. Tyrone Power, "Crash DWe” (’43). 11:00 (2) (4) News, Spts., Weather (7) SUent Service 11:30 (4) Movie. Roddy McDowell, "My Friend Fllcka” (’43); Joan Valerie, "Road Demon” (•80). 11:30 (2) Movie. Loretta Young. "Accused” (’48); Lynn Bari, "Meet the Girls” (’38). 11:30 (7) Movie. Lon Chaney. "Ghost of Frankenstein” (•42). 0:10 (9) Sacred Heart. (2) Christophers. (9) Herald of Truth. fl:H (4) News. 0:00 (2) Court of Health. (4) Church at the doss, roads. (7) Understanding Our World. (9) Temple Baptist Church. 0:U (2) To DweU Together. 0:30 (2) Detroit Pulpit (4) Frontiers of Faith. (7) Christian Science. (0) Oral Roberts. 0:40 (7) Accent. 10:00 (2) This Is the Life. (4) dutch CaiTO-(7) Faith for Today. (9) Cath^al of Tomorrow. 10:30 (7) Rickey the down (2) f elix the Cat (4) KU Oaraon. 11:00 (4) Sergeant Preston. (7) Johna Hopkins. (9) CSiristophers. 11:10 (2) Little Lulu. 11:30 (2) Union Pacific. (4) Michigan ConservaUon. (7) Three Stooges. (9) Special Agent. ll:tt (4) Americans at Work. SUNDAY MOBNlNa 7:00 (2) MediUtions. 0:00 (2) Mass for Shut-ins. 0:10 (9) Billboard. 0:00 (7) Matty’s Fnnday Funnies. (4) IF'o r 1 d Championship (kdf. (2) Face the Nation. 0:30 (2) GE CoUege Bowl. (7) Ixme Ranger. •9) Science Fiction. 0:00 (2) FYL (4) George Pierrot. (7) Citizen Soldier. (9) Popeye. 0:00 (2) Twentieth Century. (7) Rescue 8. (9) Joan Fairfax. 7:00 (2) Lassie. (4) Overland Trail (7) Broken Arnnv. (9) Movie. "One Last Fling.” (1949) 'Tired of being just a houaewife, a girt arrives at her husband’s music store, bent on going to work. Alexis Smith, Zachary Scott, Douglas Kennedy. 7:30 (2) Dennis The Menace. (7) Maverick. 8:00 (2) Ed Sullivan. (4) Music on Ice. SUNDAY AFTERNOON 13:00 (2) Detroit Speaks. (4) U. Of M. Preaents. (9) Mickey Rooney. (7) Championship Bowling. 13:30 (4) Builders’ Showcase. (2) Dr. Christian. (9) Damon Runyon Theater. (4) TV Readers’ Digest. (2) Movie. (7) World Adventure Series. (9) Movie. (7^ Boots and Saddle. 3:00 (7) Life of RUey. (4) Lab 30. I;30 (7) College News Conference. (4) Movie. 3:00 (7) Open Hearing. 3:80 (7) Campaign Roundup. (2) Inside Sports. (9) Movie. 4:00 (2) Spotlight: Anatomy of TV (7) Movie. 4:li (2) Inside %K)rtb. (2) Press Conference. (4) Briefing Seuion. TV Features SUNDAY EVENINO (9) Movie, (fommand Pei^ formance; "Flaming Road.” (1949) A carnival girl falls in love with a young, aristocratic weakling. Joajj Scott, Crawford. Zachary Sydney Greenstreet. 1:30 (7) Lawman. 8:00 (4) Mystery Show. , (2) Theater. (7) Rebel. 8:30 (2) Alfred HitdMock. (V Alaskans. 10:08 (2) Jack Benny. (4) Loretta Young. (9) News. 10:10 (9) Weather. 10:18 (9) To Be Announced. 10:30 (2) What’s My Line? (4) Not lor Hire. (7) Johnny Staccato (9) Movie. ’’Man with a Million” (English: 1954) Two wealthy brothers draw million-pound note from their bank. Gregory Pieck, Ronald Sauire. U:00 (2) News. (4) News. (7) Movie. "Forever Yours.” (1945). A society girl who entertains disabled vets, contracts polio. Gale Storm. C. Aubrey Smith. U:U (2) Weather. (4) Weather. 11:39 (2) Sports. (4i Sports. 11:M (2) Movie. "Race Street.” (1948) A big-time bookie battles an extortionist. George Raft, William Ben-dix, Marilyn Maxwell. 11:30 (4) Movie. "Straight, Place and Show.” (1938) The Ritz Brothers high-tail (t out to the track. Ethel Merman Richard Aricn. MONDAY MORNING 9:30 (7) Funews. 6:M (2) Meditations. 9:88 (2) On the Farm Frtmt. 7:99 (4) Today. (2) TV CoHege. (7) Breakfast Time. 7:99 (2) Felix the Cat 8:09 (7) Johnny Ginger. [8:18 (2) Captain Kangaroo. 8:39 (7) Stage 3. 8:09 (2) For Better or Worse. (4) I Married Joan. 0:39 (2) Movie. (4) Elxercise. (7) Exercise. ):S5 (f) Faye Elizabeth. 10:00 (4) Dough Re Ml (7) Divorce Hearing. 10:38 (9) Billboard. 10:39 (4) Play Your Hunch. (9) Ding Dong School (7) House of Fashion. U:09 (2) I Love Lucy. (4) Price Is Right. (7) Detroit Today. (9) Romper Room. 11:18 (7) News. 11:38 (7) Almanac. 11:89 (4) Concentration. (2) December Bride. (7) Topper. Deal With Red China, Humphrey Tells Ike WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn) has suggested to Pre^dent Eisenhower that he seek to bring Red China into disarmament negotiations at Geneva. ’It would be foolhardy for the United States to enter into any substantial disarmament agreement without the inclusion of luinist China,” Humphrey He spoke in the Senate Friday and also made public a letter to Eisenhower in which he outlined a new first-stage disarmament plan. In addition to bringing Red China into the talks, Humi^rey advocated prohibition of production of long-range bombers, under effective Inspection and control. This, he said, would "halt production of one of the major means by which nuclear bombs can be delivered.” By United Press International The role of women in politics is Satnrday DICK CLARK SHOW, 7:30 p.m. (7). Originatii^ froos the U.S. Naval Base, Treasure Island, Calif. Dick’s guests are the Four Preps, Jan and Dean, Dorsey Burnette and tile Olympics. PEItRT MASON, 7:30 p.m. (2). (Rerun) A community presents Mason (Raymond Burr) with one of his tou^wst cases as it seeks to suppress evidence that might free his client, suspected of murder in JOHN GUNTHER, 8 p.m. (7). (Rerun) A filmed visit to Greece, the land of democr|sy> birth. HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL, 9:30 p.m. (2). (Rerun) Pidadin (Richard Boone) teaches a shy young man how to handle a gun and is surprised when the young gunman dares to shoot it out w‘‘" him. PRESIDENrS TRIP. 9:30 p. (4). A summary and Valuation of President Eisenhower’s tour of the Far East. GUNSMOKE, 10 p.m. (2). (Rerun) Oiester (Dennis Weaver) is suspected of murder and his buddy must take him into custody. discussed by prominent lady politicos. John Secondari, moderator. WORLD -CHAMPIONIHIP GOLF, 5 p.m. (4). Cary Middlecoff and Mike Souchak meet in the final round of the $171,000 TV tournament. From Desert Inn Country Oub, Las Vegas. COLLEGE BOWL, 5:30 p.m. (2). Rutgers University seeks Its fifth consecutive victory and the championship at the expense of Bradley University’s all-Illinois team. ca> SULLIVAN SHOW. 8 pm. (2). The Ames Brothers, mezzo-soprano Rise Stevens, drummer One Krupa, tap dancer Conrad Buckner, ventriloquist Rickie Layne, singer Noel Hairlam per form. MUSIC ON ICE, 8 p,m. (4). A salute to the North Pole. Starring host Johnny Desmond, figure skater Shirley Linde, the Skip-Jacks, skater Manuel del Toro, duo-pianists Ferrante and Teicher, Beebe’s Hollywood bears, skater Buddy La Londe and daughter, Robbi. (Col- Seeday OPEN HEARING, 3 pm. (7). Negroes Will Parade at Party Conventions ST. PAUL, Minn. (UP!) — Ke-groes will stage mass demonstrations at bothipolitioal party con-ventiona next month, a Negro labm: leader said Friday. A. Philip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and an AFIrCIO vice president, said the demonstrations would try "to bring civil rights back before the conventions as a major campaigt) issue.” MYSTERY SHOW. 9 p.m. (4). sophisticated married couple (Mona Freeman and Arthur Franz) is beset by fears that start leading them to the brink of disaster. Waher Slezak, host. (C<^r). Both the Republicans and the Democrats "have tried to sweep civil rights issue under the Randolph tok) newsmen at the convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Victim of Plastic Bag Dr. Moore Positively Denies Ride ar rh*u(*i BORN THREE MONTHS EARLY — Mr. and Mrs. Murray Felson watch as Dr. Ben Bogen, right, weighs their daughter, Andrea at Malmonides Hospital in Brooklyn. N.Y., Friday. The Infant was born three months prematurely on March 24 and weighed one pound, U. ounoea. Friday, the day she was to have been bom, she weighed five and one-half pounds. VonezuHla Reds Weak, 2 U. S. Newsmen Believe NEW YORK (UPD-Two American newspaper editors who returned frcHn a two-week visit to Venezuela said last night the Communists do not appear to be strong in the Venezuelan press and gov-eriiment. Herbert Brucker, editor of the Hartford Courant, and John McMullen, aaaiatant managing editor of the Miami Herald, said Commu- : had been earlier in the Auction Rocket in Yard Only Attracts Chickens 'ARMINGDALE, N. J. (B Ain’t nobody in Julius Cohen’s rocket but us chickens. Cohen, a poultry farmer, put the rocket in his yard alter buying it at an auction from a bankrupt roadside attraction. People used to sit inside the make believe rocket and take make believe space trips. Now the only passengers are Cohen’i chickens who wander in and out. 8 (9) Mr. X in 8 (2) Search for TofrioiTow. (4) (color) It Could Be You. (7) Love That Bob. (9) ^rrytoon Time. I (2) Guiding Light. lS:aa (9) News. MONDAY AFTERNOON 8 (2) Love of Life. (4) Truth or Consequences. (7) Restlea Gun. (9) Let’s Look. ST. CLAIRSVILLE. Ohio (UPD-Dr. Barbara Moore emphatically denied today that she has been accepting rides on her crosscountry walk from San Francisco to New York. How could It happen?” she questioned. “I’ve been followed by hundreds of people, the police I just can’t understand how those rumors get started.” The 56-year-old vegetarian made the statement just before she left eastern Ohio community of 4,000 persons and headed for the West Virginia border only 10 miles away. , Persons la Cambridge, Ohio, 48 miles to Ike west, said yesterday they saw Dr. Moore gM Into did not retara to tho opot whero It picked her ap. "How could they see,” she asked. "It was pitch dark and it was raining hard.” The sunburned hiker said the American Legion had been watching her two-month, 11-day walk across the United States . . "and they've been aticking up lor the two sergeants that preyed me too . . .” The blonde British woman said the Legion didn’t want to beat tiw two Britiih oergeants acrooa the United States. The two, Mervyn Evans, 33, and Patrick Maloney, 34, completed their walk lost week and retumM to London, England, two days ago to a hero’s welcome. Dr. Moore previo'usly charged they had accepted ridea and threat-subpoena them if they tried to claim a transcontinental record. Rhode Island, smallest states, also bos the longest name which is "State of Rhode Island and the Providence Plantations. WEEHAWKEN, N. J. (AP)-A home economics teacher who had lectu^d her students about the dangera of plastic bags has been found dead, a plastic bag fastened | around her head. Police said the death Friday of Miriam S. Freud, widow, was an apparent suicide. Chock OHT prict on oil kin4« of Woshon boforo you buy, big sovings now in offoct. Wo boro to door our chowroom for now morcbondito for fht now opplionipof coming in for our big GRAND OPENING CELEBRA^ON. < NO MONEY DOWN — FHA TERMS 'i HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. Wtll Gel Your Gas Permit and give you a choice of 2 Bis Gas Specials! BIG DELCO 105,000 BTU FORCED AIR ^364*^ FOBNMZ IncludM On8t8 and Rttisrara DELIVERED for Full 6 Room Heu8o !M10[LC0-HEAI NO MONEY DOWN —Sll.fl PEB MONTH Delco Gas ConversioR Burpcr NOW ONLY HOLDEN RED STAMPS WITH EITHER FURNACE O'BRIEN BEATING & SUPPLY JB25 W. Huron Stroot noor Tol*Huron Shoppi$i9 Conttr Opon Evoningt 'til 9 P. M. FE 4-2S25 AuthoriMSd Oakland County DUtributor I 371 Vooriioit Rd. FE 2-2919 it) Bold Journey. (2) Our Miss Brooks. (7) About Faces. (9) I (7) Ufe of ROey. (2) As World Tuna. (2) Medic. (4) (Jura tor a Day. (7) Day in Cfourt (4) Loretta Young. (7) Gale Stcum. (2) House Party, (2) Millionaire. .4) Young Dr. Malone. (7) Beat the Qock. (9) Movie. (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These RooU. 0) Who Do You Trust? (2) Brighter Day. (4) Thin man. (7) American Bandstand. (2) Secret Storm. (2) Edge of Night. (4) Yancy Derringer. (9) Robin Hood. (2) Movie. (4) (color) George Pierrot ond RADIO SERVICE For jexpert ropoir on oil mokes and modois at reasonable rotes, coll us today. (9) Looney Tunes. 1:38 (7) Captain Gallant. i:M> (9) News. OBEL Rodio ond TV Sales —Ssrvico ^ 3930 msthstli Uke Rd. PI 4-494$ "esIabJisJiod 12 yaars'* RCA COLOR TV Sweet's Radio TV SONOTONE House of Heairing Free Heoring Teots Free ParUar at Bear ef "Opea Fees, hr Appeialmear. 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONTUC, laCH. (AdT.rUwmeet) HE RE-GREW HAIR Hair Specialist Here Moaday; Will Show How to Save Hair aad Preveat Baldness New home troatment methods for saving hair and improving Itg growth will be demonstrated in PONTIAC, MIOmOAN, on MCmDAYi JUNE r. 1900 only. Mr. P. I. BRODDE. repreeentlng the Lesley Hair and Scalp Special^ Ists, will personally examine hair-worried men and women from l;0d to 8:00 Plf. MONDAY at the Hotel WALDRON. The Lesley Specialists point that ronarkable results have been attained by means of a personal examination foUowod by almple Individual treatments that anyone can easily carry out in the privacy of his or her own home. Regular checkups in your city by a Lesley Specialist Bssure success in the minimum period of time. EXAMINE YOU FREE We want to make it clear that Your only obligation to yourself to ease your mind of hair worries by learning how to save and thicken your hair at home, will tell you frankly and sincerely whether or not you can bo be _ how long it will taka and how much it ;vll] cost. Wo do not accept casM that will not rowxmd. The cost of our treatments art ^preclably lowbr than most treatment of this type. WHO CAN BE HELPED? The Lesley Organization urgaa that you do not rtaign yourself to a future without hair. When you first notice your hair thinning, brought on usually by dandruff, itching, dryness, or follicles clogged alth aabum or seborrhea, take poalUve action at once. See a Hair and Scalp Specialist. Of course, we must have a client who stiU has some hair, u a m U completely bald, waited too long and Is refused is still producing short hair it Is possible to at least have and thicken 7i^t you have. Some conditions, such aa "spot bMnMH'* hiMislIv Hmvm SATISFACTION FOB 89J% Last year, theXesley tion was able to satisfy r w ' . lU clients. That is a noteworthy, will not ba ob-, record, and we art hisUflabiT|ti8>foti w ambarTassed prow^oftt Iway. Organiza-( 86 3% of WRITTEN GUARANTEE The Lesley Organization give^ a wrlttan guarantee when you aro accepted for a eoalp treatmant{ You must be satisfied wlthtQ Ooarantee Period or money will be refunded. DONT PUT IT OFF Do yourself a favor. It taks^ leas than 30 minutes for your freo Stop by the Hotel WALDRON] MONDAY, only, JUNE 37. between PM. and 8:00 PM. Ask a« the desk for MR. BRODm room number. He does not eragk brt appoinunent. Come at your eon-j venlence. Examlnatiofu are #ren V.. \ b'cloS^ ^ ^ ADIIINISTKBB) Af. THIRTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1960 $tqta Reicincls Order Toking Driver's License responsibility for Lloyd Arden Mar- Ay.t.jg PeoaVS Church tin of M18 Ora Rd , Oxford. - i-T i- if i, 1, for Nazi Confiscation . upon review of the clrcuro-wnoes, the secretary of the state’s office in Lansing has rescinded the . Roman Catholic Church EnOUah Storage Thursday and agreed to pay the 7 ® church tour million dollars a year. The action postdates that pub-j VIENNA. Aiwtraia (API — The based on information issued by ------- state office. Martin, therefore, has "uiwrous monasteries, churches church property ......................... ' " -----real'estate tolregime. Space for Soviet Grain MOSCOW 1*1 ^ Pravda said to land that only a small part of the tori had been made to me^t the Aether Gets Post harvest would be pitiperly stohsl. needs ouUlned by Premier NlklU * * 0 Is. Khrushchev at a party congress A lead editorial in the commun- in 1959. Singly ««< Jor p.«y „per «pbr.bM _«.»;..lc^ iscation 01 ~ agricuiiurai ana lacuirr -17“ ... —- the Naii sP«ce slated for this years ex-fop seeing to it that enough the Ukraine. White Russia and Ipected bumper crop had'been built'prefabricated concrete grain eleva-|Armenla. NEW 'VORK W) - Mrs. Maude Fry of Grand Rapids was elected hospital chairman Thursday of the American Gold Star Mothers, Inc., at their annual convention. SEARS SHOP SEARS SPECIALS Monday Night ’til 9 ROEBUCK AND CO No Phone Orders cod’s or Deliveries MONDAY ONLY! fine cotton sanforized boxer shorts men’s combed cotton UNDERWEAR 47^" Reg. 65c Charge It Combed cotton rib knit athletic shlrxs and briefs; fine flat T-shirts; sanforized broadcloth shorts. Men’s Fnniishings. Main Floor Children’s shorts with all afound covered elastic waist, one back pocket. Choose solid colors, prints. In 2-«. Infant’s Dept. Main Floor MONDAY ONLY! Picture Frame Style Utility Cabinet 24xl2xSS-ln. $16 Ch.r(* it Reg. 3495. Double door style f ^ Tw. mfttrtixr maul. wRlU flnUh. Monday only bargain . . . save! FnmHare Dept, Second Floor boys’, cotton knit Polo Shirts Charge It 77^ Trim cotton Jerseys in new burnished toite colors. Tailored to keep their shape. 6-16. Save 1.76! 2l in. Doll Carriage Regular 4.9 322 Charge It Boy’s Wear, Main Floor Styled just like a real baby's carriage in pretty plastic ' with decorations on sides. 21 Inches long, Inches high. Extra heavy frame with 5-inch wheels, white tires. 7.9S Carriage, 24-fn. . ^4.99 9.91 Carriage, 27-ln. .6.66 MONDAY ONLY! Special Purchase Plastic Coated Playing; Cards Charge u2 ”*1 Picture Frame Style Roomy Wardrobe Nylon Strung Badminton Racket Real good deal for bridge and 99< ea. Low price for good nylon strung racket. Imported laminated wood. Buy Monday! Same excellent play as feathered type, plus longer wear under extra hard use. ful gifts i ._ ________ , pirties. Asst, picture designs. Stock up! Easy to Fill Garden Sprayer 5.97 Aluminum Cot for The Sun Seekers 7.99 Netiont. Main Floor Sporting Goods, Perry St. Basement A heavily galvanized steel Unk rcsisU rust. Seal brass pump. Adjustable. 11.49 Sprayer, m-gal Reg. ».95 Lightweight for easy portability. Woven plastic lets breezes come through. 72 i 24. Fumitnre Dept., Second Floor MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY MONDAY ONLY! Sleep on a Cloud, DuPont Dacron Polyester Pillows Non-allergenlc Dacron fluff, odorless, will be buoyant for years! Comfortably large 20x26 In. Finished size. Snow-white cotton covers corded pink or blue. Limit of 2. Domestic Dept, Main Floor SAVE NOV;: Kingsford Charcoal Briquets lOIb.bag 66‘ Charge It ■ Walnut size briquets bum : hot. leave little ash - no wasted fuel. Be smart and g^t the be.stl Stock-up! Shop & Save! I 20 pound bag 1.22 Triple Wall 9 Ft. 24 In. Pool Holds 960 Gallons Charge It Regularly priced at 36.95. Ruggedly constructed! 12 gauge vinyl liner. Corrugated, non-rusting aluminum walls are backed with plastic coated fence. Also 12 and 18 ft. sizes. Swimming Pool Ladder.7.9.5 White Trim Paint That Won’t Stain .5.55 Change Oil Filters Every 4,000 Miles Reg. 4.M 88^ Will not wash down and discolor bricks, dark paints. Use on -storm sash, screens. Paint Dept, Main Basement Grit, dirt, dust in oil grind Auto Accesaories. Perry Bate- MONDAY ONLY MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! 4-Speed Portable Phono... Save 22.18 • Regularly at 79.95 57” • Separable Speakers $5 Down Men’s Suit Women’s Dress Bag Reg. 10.98^^ Reg. 12.98 ‘ Mta'f Wpwea'z JQ®® choice of Save Now! Ready Made Venetians! women’s casual shoes 2"*5 Complete stereo.......no extras to buy! 4-speed changer with dual synthetic sapphire needles plays all reebrds. Dual amplifier and .separable speakers with individual volume controls. RiMto and TV Drpi, Main Fldar Charge It Dress and suit bags^^fold enabling you to hang your clothes as you would Ih your closet. No fuss, no bother! Just the thing for your vacation this summer! Soft leather T-strap flatU? In white, ton, cream. 4V4-9. Medium wedge In white or beige. Attractive cutout design. 5-9. Luggage DepL. Ferry SL Baaement Shoe Dept, Main Ftoor ! Reg. 2.99 233 pr. Charge It Charge It Ideal control'of air, light and privacy! Blinds Wash ’n’ Wear Slacks for Dad are made of long-lasting steel with white finish. Neutral ebrds and tapes. Easy to keep clean! , Can be easily put up! Buy several at extra low price! Monday only special! 3.77. ' Cool, comfortable Dacron •"’■'ester, rayon tUcks. s 30-42. Venetian Blind DepU Mala Fleer Men’s Weak, Bfaia Fiear ^Satisfaction fflaranteed or your money back’ SEARS 1,54 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 54171 :( The Weather t;.r wutk*» Btfrt* rwM««t (OcMIb Mi'^t » 118th YEAH THE PONTIAC PRii^VfB PAfifS KECOUffi ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. JUNE 25. l»UO PAGES Get Out of South Korea, China Reds Tell Allies It Was a Quiet Sunday Morning, Jime 25, 1950 Nears State on Sewage The state water Resources Commission will decide I Thursday whether to go to court to force Pontiac to ' expand its sewage treatment plant facilities. On Friday, July 1, the city will be in default of the I state’s order to have expanded facilities under contract. I Default will come because the city has never provided ♦ the financing for tne $3,300,000 in improvements which ----------------- —tthe State Health Department has accepted as the I minimum necessary' t o j abate jwllul^on to the Clin-I ton River. : The Wale/ Resources Commis-si*i will have before it only one lecomme^tion from its engineer-In Rrtu staff/—that the Attorney Gen- Spot Wreckage in Bay asked to file suit but Find No Survivors; asains/Pontiac in Oakland County One American Aboard Brazilian Plane Falls; 51 Die Cii-cuit Court. “In view of the facts, that’s c only rrroninieiidatioa we can Demand Marks 10th Anniversary of Invasion Occupiers Stand Fast, Term Sudden Outburst a Propaganda AAove ’ said Ixtring K. Oeining, the Com- RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (API j A Brazilian airliner with 31 per-; ^hlef ' Isons aboard, including at least one! nilssloi I American, plunged into Guana- „ . bura Bay Friday night while ap-l Conceivably, the commission iproaching Rio dc Janeiro. Search K'v* the city a little more i teams found parts of bodies andjbntc before going to court time From Onr Newa Wlrea »• PANMUNJOM, Korea — The Commimists demanded today, on the 10th anniversary of their invasion of South Korea, that allied forces get out of the country. The Allies promptly replied that they will remain until the nation Is democratically reunified. The Reds charged also that the Allies are building up their forces .south of the 3Sth Parallel. U. S. iwi-eclage but no survivors. The twin-engined Convair. 600-miIe flight from the new capital of Brasilia with a midway stopover at Belo Horizonte, listed a.s missing nearly eight hours. Ten years ago, the border between North Korea and South Korea disappeared as the Communist forces moved south across the 38th Parallel, touching off 37 montfis which involved huch of the world in bloodshed and fruitless negotiation. Americans died there, alongside UN AUies from Turkey, Ipdia, Canada and many other nations, as the battles ranged from one end of the peninsula to the other. Scenes like the one above, assistance for an injured soldier during one of the battles for the now-famous Pork Chop Hill, were typical. Victory was at hand before Red China poured divisions of "volunteers" into the fray. Today, after 10 years, the line of demarcation is traced by the muzzles of weapons and wary patrols eying each other from hilltops. The crash was confirmed early Kxlay when navy search crews found the plane’s wreckage floating in the bay off - the island of Paqueta, about 10 miles up the bay from Rio’s Dumont Airport. Later the searchers reported finding parts of bodies and pieces's*^* Health Department engineer of luggage that had floated up on ^ ^ ^ ^ the teach i P®"*'ac was ordered to have ex- pansion plans In shape for approv-Among those listed aboard was (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Wewtbn B. Thompson, a native Sees New Jobs Ike Is Jetting Home Sunday,- at Fisher Body Union Chief Predicts a Rise of 1,700-1,900; Company Is Mum Increased production at Fisher Body Division’s Pontiac plant this fall will't^sult in 1,700 to 1,900 HONOLULU tAP) - President Elsenhower ends his six-day Hawaiian rest stop toda/ and flies back to Washington report to the American people on controversial Far Eastern journey. Jobs. It was predicted today by Gerald W. Kehoe, president Fisher Body Local 596, UAW. The anticipated production volves assembly of the new Ppn-t’ac Tempest compact car and of Pontiac convertible bodies. Kehoe said he expects the local’s membership to increase 1,700 to 1,900 In late October. A company spokesman said iw prediction would be made about job Inercuset. Local 396 membership totals 2,700 at present. The local broke ground Thursday for a new $97,000 hall, which is expected to be-completed in the He'll Talk to Nation Monday ’The President is reported have drafted a hard-hitting speech denouncing the Communists for plotting with young Japanese students to'block his visit to Tokyo. Tanned and ref-eshed, Eisen- Red China Flogs Russia for 'Whitewashing U.S.' After refuehng at Travis AFB in California, he is due to arrive at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington Sunday morning about 7 a.m. Pontiac time, I weeks from the day he set off • *1.000-mile good will trip. SPEAKS MONDAV NIGHT His 30-minute television-radiol $10,000. report to th« nation will originate' By K. C. THALER LONDON (UPI)—Communist China today hit back fiercely at Russia in the sharpening Sino-Soviet ideological conflict, and in effect accused Moscow of attempting to “whitewash U.S. imperialism.” The attack came during a m^ rally in Peiping attended by vice-premiers Marshal Chen Yi and Hsi Chung-Hsun, and the vice-chairmen of the Standing Committee of the National from his White House office at Predict Spying fi-30 p.m. Pontiac time Monday. i Eisenhower is reported annoyed LONDON -pe limited wars. The white-haired L'.S. generof disputed the widely held belief that snother Commualst attocH on South Korea would aalo-matl-BlIy trigger massive U.S. atomic retaliation against Coip- Canada Egg Wets Mayor of Moscow NIAGARA FALLS. Ont. (AP)-The mayor of Moscow was splattered Friday with a raw egg, thrown by a man believed to te a Lithuanian refugee, as he posed for pictures during a good will Mir of (Canada. Nikolai Bobrovnikov, who was posing with TV’s Wyatt Eiirp, Hugh O’Brian, and two Canadian mayors, was hit squarely on the neck, according to a news photographer who was taking the picture. The egg-th-ewer, IdenUfled by police, as Ged Janusomls, tO. was caughi aRer a tS-mlante chase through Vk-loria Park. He was arrested on undisclosed rbsrgcs O'Brian continued to pose for pictures, while police chased Janu-somis, the photographer said. MANY REFUGEES Mayor Franklin MUIer of Niag-ra Falls, Ont., and George Nelms of Ottawa were posing with Bobrovnikov and O^riaii. a Baltic eaaatry tokea aver by the Smiet Unioa early hi WwU War n. > no comment on the incident. Mayor MUIer d dined to discuss the incidanWfOr-ther, saying it might “j^par-dize interoafional ridatkint. V THE PONTIAC TRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 25, 1960 City Nears Stafe^ (Oontimied From Page One) al by the State Health Department in December o( laat year, have the expanskm under contract by Jily 1 of this year, and have the expaniioii contoleted by the end of next year. ^ Pinuo VOVES NO. Only the ficat deadline the state accepted the expansion plans which the dty has had ready for the past three years. » But voters have three times tuned down general obligation bond issues to finance the planned e^dansion. 2inc« last December, the city hdl dragged its heels on financing. There was some talk at the Qty Commission table about going to votgrs a fourth time. But this idei was soon dropped. If the state obtains a ronrt order against Pootlac, the dty OonunissiOB wU| be under legal obligation to flaaace the expansion anyway it wants. City Manager Walter K. Willman consistently has favored issuing the general obligathm bonds. ^ Under a court order, the Gty Commission could do this without a vote of approval by the people, hai>^ pointed out. aiming said h might take the AOpmey General’s Office up to twv months to prepare the suit lor filing. The task would fall to Assistant Atty. Gen. Victor Meier, who handles the Water Resources Ooftunission cases. Hm elty Is not required to ap- ConuaMoa at its monthly meeting next week. But City Attorney WIlUam A. Ewart said bo probably would be there anyway. ‘.‘There’s nothing much we can say, but we ought to be there toi form’s sake,” he explained. EJwart’s attitude reflected that taken by Willman when he appeared before the Water Resources Commission last July 31 to answer charges of pollution. “We admit nothing and deny nothing,” said Willman, who had already been decrying the pollution situation in Pontiac for a long time. Pontiac’s only positive artioa has been to request state actioB against Waterford TownsiUp and Blooaifleld Township for poUu-tion caused by storm drains feeding Into the Clinton River The request for action against Waterford Township was renewed last month and a Water Resources Commission engineer made a personal inspection. State otliclals have iavored an area-wide plan as a solution to pollution In the townships around Pontiac rr a plan such u the one pr«jnHd*by the Oakland County Department of Public Works -HOMK FOR UNION — This architect’s sketch shows what the new J97.000 hall for Fisher Local 398. UAW. wUl look like upon its completion, expected this fall. Groundteeaking "cere- monies for the union local’s headquarters' weg| held Thursday at the Baldwin avenue site. The building was designed by the VV. B. Edwards Engineering Firm of Pleasant Ridge. Lay Courthouse |6/g Majority of State Dem Stone Monday Delegates to Go for Kennedy Ceremony to Follow the Regular Meeting of County Supervisors The Oakland County Board of Supervisors will save the best tor the last when they meet' Monday for a rather routine June session as required by law. , * ♦ ★ More interestjWill be focused on the new county courthouse at the CoUnly Service Center when supervisors gather to lay the cornerstone at 2 p m. After their meeting at the Comity Office Rnilding in the morning, th^ entire 83-mmiber Board and offirlala will have a the Conaty Oarage. A * * The agenda (or the meeting contains six items — (our of which involve either sewer or water projects of the drain commissioner'! office or the Department of Public Works. ANNUAL EEPOR’TS The other two items include an annua] report from the Board’ buildings and grounds committee and authorization to establish a method to sell 16 county-owned lots. ♦ ♦ ★ One of the sewage matters will be creation of a sewage disposal system in Avon Township. Calls for Individualism ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. (UPlI -The Rev. Reuben R. Figuhr. presi-dent oyitt Seventh Day Adventist rarTbnference, urged ydung li^ple yesterday to swing away ly uepanmem qi w and known as the Ginton River'from conformity and become indi-Basin Sewage Disposal System. vidualists. Judge Moore Presents Juvenile Courts Plan From Our News Wires i mtiru, me m..j Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass),|ballot preferenw, mverM from with a big lift from Gov. WUliams. | delegate h^f-votM ^ wWe eoa-has corralled at least 37»i Michi- vent*"" votes, produced this tllgn-gan first.ballot votes for the Demo-cratic presidential nomination, and; ^ conceivably could bag 45'*. An even higher vote for Kennedy was possible if Adlai E. Stevenson .MOST WOUU> SWITCH should face completely out of the| of the handful who stuck with candidacy picture. : Stevenson, most indicated they This was indicated today , by a | ^v-ouW switch to Kennedy if Steven- the tally on their first a first ballot nomination of Kennedy waa predicted by Ohio GoV. Michael V. DiSalle on his arrival at the 52nd annual governors’ con ference. opening SundSy. DISalle roncMled Kennedy might not hnve enough votes on the first roil cnll but added oon-fidentiy Kennedy weuld win “before the reaulto are aanonneed.” telephone poll by the Associated Pr^ of the state’s 51-vote delegation to the party’s national convention starting July 11 in Los Angeles. icovered only token support for Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) and Stevenson, national standard-bearer In l»St nnd IMS. A growth in Kennedy backing after the governor endorsed him June 2 on Mackinac Island obviously ate into the Symington and Stevenson potential. With 95 of the 102 delegates con- irrevocably removed himself from consideration. H “I will leave him on the first ballot If he or a spokesman taya deftaltHy in Loa Angeles IhnI he will not be a candMale.” said Mrs. Harriett PhlUlps of Hunting-ton Woods. Ivan Brown of Iron Mountain put his name in the Stevenson column but said he “might be penuuded” to back Kennedy because he doubted Stevenson would become a candidate. At Glacier National Park. Mont., He refeired to the vote-changinit delegates are allowed before the roll call total la announced. In MUwankee, Natiwal Demo- Detroiter Dies After ’’V Being Hit by Weight NEW YORK iJh—A Detroit busi- of aclrros Ariene Francis nnd ness man in New York to cele-j struck him on the bend, brate his 60th birthday died yes-| . , .... . . teiday of head injuries suffered ’V‘‘H nigh increadible chain cf when a dumbbell fell ,he Rodecker his apartment window of a television actress and struck him. ; Alvin Rodecker died less than t4 hours after the dumbbell fell eight stories from the apartment Kingswood School Officers Selected Betancourt Has Swollen Face j Venezuela's President Sees Bomb Attack as Overthrow Plot CARAGU5, Venesuda (AP)—His (ace swollen and hands bandaged as a result of the bomb blast that narrowly missed killing him, preraed a search today for those bdhind the plot. it h •it Betancourt, back in Miraflores Palace after being treated in a hospital tor injuries, told reporters the attack was part of a widespread plan to overthrow his government and set up a new dictatorship.' ★ ★ ♦ •”rhe incident shows that the enemies of democracy-national and International—will resort to every possible means to try to establish tyranny in the country,” Betancourt told newsmen. ★ ★ dr Venezuela’s borders were sealed ff. air travel halted and some ThgHgay in Birmingham Downtown Sidewalks on Monday NigJut Agenda ed to facilitate the search. ★ ★ ♦ Defense Minister Lopes Hen-riques, who sat next to Betancourt and was burned when the bomb went off. alerted the country’s urmed^^orces against any attempt to overthrow the prealdent’s three-party coallHon government, Butler also urged his party to risk a walkout by aouthern delegates aiid poaaible delsat in Nc-vembw by adopting a '‘farthrifli(|| and courageous” civil rights platform at Its national convention In Los Angeles. •CANT COMPROMISE’ 'We cannot compromise principles in order to hold people in the party” Butler said in a television interview yesterday, got to stand up for what’s be.st tor all the people, win or lose. ’ * ★ ★ The Democratic chairman said he is convinced Soviet Premi* Nikita S. Kriishchev wants Nixon to win the presidential election, bt-cause he (eels Nixon will be the easiest American to deal with. •niree persons were /•P“rtetf filed and eight wounded In the last, which marked the third BIRMINGHAM - Three alternate plans ringing from a cost o( about 17,000 to almost 120,000 lor downtown city sldewhlk iDsprove-menU will be examlnsd " night at the regular Gfy C mission meeting. CosU to property owners wU anywhere from about (7,000 116,000 depending which plan is used. As outlined by WilUsm K|peen. cHy englnee/, the first plan includes the repair of exiotiiM: faulty oidewnlks nnd otepo, but does net call for the replaoement of the otepo. Under the second plan the curb Btepa will either be eliminated or improved, and a larger number of sidewalks will be repla^ to improve the sidewalk slope. The third alternate provides lor the replacement of all sidewalks between the buildingB and curts where slope changes ars plamwd. A Birmingham architectural firm hat received one of eight natkxial awards presented by the Onnroh Architectural Guild of America, It waa announced yesterday. The award was presented la Begrvw and Brown, tTI N. Batan Rt., for Its design of the An-tiooh Evangelical Litheran Chareh now nador eonetracHoa at II Milo and FarmliHfoa la Farmhigton TownBilp. Some 965 architectural firmi throughout the country entered the competition. It was the lixth natioiMl award won by the firm since 196T. of tbs man recent awards re^ ceived by the firm was tor fitslr deaigii of Natkmnl Cfosrboy Hall of Fame teing built in Oklahoma City. _______________ Approval of 00.000 In apeefsl ers in Bloomfield Township hs!; been given by the Michigan Mit* nicipal Finance Cfommiaskm in using. The sewers are to be coBctmct- la the Klikwood gnbdtvtolin. Since the original request of ISO. ooe. an additional 0,000 Is belhg sought since plans were revised with an increase in the drainage district. Township officials said they expect approval of the 0.000 borrowing in the near future. jGEORGE'$ . The explosion destroyed president’s car as he arrived ^ u army day ceremony on the Avenue of Heroes outside Csra- Oakland County Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore has proposed a three-point program for juvenile courts to th^ National Council of Juvenile Oxirt Judges, meeting in Detroit. ♦ ♦ ♦ ^udge Moore told the conference the program would cost $2.6 million a year. ★ ♦ ♦ He saU H wmiM set np a group ' with a budget of |16MN a year to aid the juvenfie court move- The board of directors of Kings-. iwood School Cranbrook has named! -’The nearly 200 Juvenilt court officers tor 1960^1 judges voted yesterday to «support life. He was felled as he strolled with his wife along one of New York’s most f^hionable streets, in sunitner sunlight, sated by on expensive luncheon at one of the city's great restaurants. But Rodecker’s fatal rendezvous waa the culmination of weeks of But Nixon’s “public alterca-unrelated coinci^^e tions” with Khrushchev in Russia Rodwker headed the Aaron De-ihave shown Americans that Nixon ^ Man^ement tt. m I^troit.’is diplomat," Butler said- He and his wife Kathenne planned! ____________________ their trip to New York sortie time] ago, in celebration of his 60th birth' Part of Alaska is as far west as day. which was Thursday. Hawaii. proposed legislation that would set up "conservation work camps manned by young people. The Council askH Congress to pass legislation “for the education and conservation of our natural resources, not the least of which is our youth.” Chairman Is William B. Hartman of Pontiac. Vice chairman is Roberf H. Flint. Bloomfield HUIs. and secretary is Mrs. William B. Hargreaves. Bloomfield Hills. Charles Hummel of Birmingham was re-elected treasurer. Rain Mars Encampment 2nd Battalion Rates High Most printing inks are a mixtureiBen D. Mills, Bloomfield Hills, was of certain pigments and a varnish, lelected to take his place. Ices and experienced staff roem-berw’ estabUsh • d«en model juvenile coarts aronnd the conn-Uy to npgraae stondnrds of the court system, and work toward preventiiig Juvenile delinquency by tasHtntlng a protective serv-Icet organlutloa la M communities acroou the nation. ♦ ♦ * . Moore said the program couW . be financed by charitable and scientific foundations. The Weather no O.B. W««lh« nsrws a*»«rt PONTUC sKD vicmn-r - ssiBr *■< . akMMt tm4»t, fair «««1 Ustasl. ••■Sk fair aaS a UtUa warwr. U« taalcht M U U. Blcb Saaiay *B U SS. JtartSwial wtaSa 1*71| .11... bMMalaf ▼artaMa alsSt aM SsaSay. TaOar la ea»“»» . . LovMt temperature prccedln* I a m. ”Xt I a.m.: Wind vclocitr IS - 14 m p b Dlracttoo; Northwaat. one teU Baturdar at 1:11 p m. Bun rteei Sunday at 4:41 a m. ' Moon leti Saturday at 1:01 p m IIBSD r^ Sunday at 1:lS a m. Ottawa Taantrataret • aS.:.......d* ipn............. J mday la PaaUae (aa raaarded daawtawa) Hlsbaal lemperatsra ...........JO , Lowaat tempsratura ............SI Mean temperature ..............SiS Waatber—Cloudy, eool Oae Tear dsa In raanae Hlfbeit Umperaturt ............ Loaeat umperaturt .......... . Maan temperature ..............is * WaaUter-narUy closdy Test YOUR Driving Skill Skillful Driving By (HESTER WAGNER .Special Uoirrspondcnt CAMP Mc(X)Y. Wis. — Pon-Bc's 2nd Battalion wound up its two weeks of tiyining here yesterday. chalking tip high scores n all phases of training exercises. Although the troops were plagued ith constant rain at this southeastern Wisconsin military reservation. the esprit decorps of these Army reservists was high. Highlight'of the two-week encampment was a two-day bivouac, wliere the troopa lived In How to master 30 of the most crucial situations <^f modern traffic 16 n IZ Krw - - _____ IS SS Omuht Detroit 11 SI reUiUo DuluUi W M Phoenli ywrlWoita SI II Pit-- — Or anpidt 11 44 St_______ ■tusbUo 41 n B. Pranetw* N 1* a au ------- kuOmcui n « By MAXWELL N. HitLSBT SHY FROM PACKED CAR You can count on it! A car parked on the shoulder .spells (rouble. What if it pulls out, or someone steps out from behind, or out of it, or s man chanzing a lire steps back in front of >oa? Never drive at normal highway* speed within two' or three feet of it. Clip ond Sove ^ ^ bat coudltions. The rain added realism to their infantry training. Marked closely by U S. Army inspection teams, the 2nd Battalion came through in usually fine form to capture high ratings. It was not all work, however, tor these citizen-soldier;. The 2nd Battalion, for the second consecutive year, won the regimental soft-ball champiAnship. Maj. Franklin D. Thompson, of Pontiac, 2nd Battalion commander, said: "Not only have these men sho>vn that they can discard their civilian way of life and become (uU-fledged infantrymen for two weeks, but also that they possess team sportsmanship and fine conduct on the playing field. I am proud of them.' The 2nd Battalion, a part of the 333rd Basic Combat Training Regiment of the 70th Division, was to leave for home this afternoon. Get Out of Korea, China Reds Demand (Osntinued FYoin rtgfOhe)'”" fine the war to-the Korean peninsula. 5 ★ W ★ Magruder was asked whether a new Korean War would lead to direct attack on Red China. * * * •With the appalling amount of destruction that would attend any all-out war. I am convinced that both sides would attempt to limit any future war.”^ he replied. “I do not believe in the statement sometimes heard that While the negotiators in Pan-munjom talked, the Red radio was blasting denunciations of the United States from Peiping, Hanoi, and. Pyongyang, the principal Red held cities in Asia. REPORT MEETINGS . The Communist broadcasts reported that anti-American mass meetings were held throughout Red Asia — most notably in Pyongyang, where the turnout was estimated at 300,«XI parsons. Communist jMaj. Gen. Joo Chan Joon demanded the withdrawal of Allied traupa from Korea at the mertlng here. Dawson Muntly rejected the demand. “My predecessors and I have told you many times before when these forces, whidt now stand ready to help defend Korean freedom, will be withdrawn,” Dawson said. ★ ★ * “They will be withdrawn when your side permits the unification of Korea in conformity with the objectives of the United Nations and the desires of the Korean people — not before.” * ★ d Dawson also reaffirmed' Allied determination to defend South Korea against any new attack by the Communists. Red China Lashes Russ'Whitewash' (OonttmiBd Fran Pagt One) There are two million more women than men in the United States. the ehlef targets. It was Red China’s first massive reaction to Khrushchev’s insistence that Lenin must be interpreted with the times and his rejection of the Peiping-supported Leninist 'doctrine that war against capitalism is inevitable. WON'T ACCEPT IDEA China allows lor no such free interpretation. gate to the BncherMt C’ougreee, Peng Chen, refnaed ceuceeitoBe to (he Soviet Premier’s argn- Today, Peiping went to town. In a cryptic reference to “mod-m revisionists,” U Giih-min made these charges: “Modern revIsfoaistB, frightened out of their wife by the imperialists Mackmall of unelOBr war, exaggerated the ceaee-quenoee of the destrnctlveaeee of nuclear war and begged Imper-laliem for peece at any coot, Iq fact helping the Imperinllsfo to undermine the mUitnnI spirit of the socialist countries.” The phrasing left little doubt, Soviet Communist affairs ei^rts said, that it was an indictment of Khrushchev’s peaceful coexisten-** policy and a rejection of the thesis that nuclear war Is too dangerous ) contemplate. * A ★ The Communist Qilnese previously had b^n reported as underplaying the risk of nuclear war. To(foy’s statenlent put the Chineae view formally on record. There are approximately million cars, trucks and buses in' the world, one for every 30 per- OPEN 7IL 9 P.M. TONKIHT fSarturdoyl Mi MONDAVI Got Yomp Sh«ro of BARGAINS Ouorontood Sovingt GEOSGE'S Gnat SUMMER SALE ’’fasl say charpe IT Ost HsMan's Stamps. Tssf NOTICE OF ’ TAXES CHy of Poifloc ' INO aiT ind SchooI UBss will i bs dus «md psqriridB at Ihs Olfles bI IhB CUT TrBBtursr Inly 1, IMO duBugk Anqust I. INO withoN Ibbb. Augnal L IM a eollBclfoB tea of 1% will bB uMod and 1% , additional wiU ba oddsd on tbo Brst day of oacb montb thoro-ollor on any unpaid Gly and School laxos. Poymoni mado by moil must ho poolnwrfcod not lalor than Aufttsl 1, ISOO to ovoid ponal-lioi. Aitor Pohruary 2S. INI all unpaid INS roal proporiy laxos will hs rstaraod to lbs Oakland County Troosuror lor eoUociion with additional ponaltfoo as providod by Stato law. Porsonal Proporiy Taxos oro not rotumahio and nauat bo paid by AnqutI I, IMS. 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THEBE IS NO CHABGE FOB TRIS SEBVICE Your local TV larvico will gladly ckock your tuboa lor you on prociaion initrumanta daiignad ior thia particular phaaa ol aarvica. _ , Your local TV aarvico cantar irowna on tbo uao. ol tho ao called "Tubo chockart’* found in naighborhood drug and food sloraa 01 thay ceniidar thara to ba daiignad principally to tail tubas. Ba aura you noad nsw tubas balors invasting your hard aamod money, have your TV tuboa aciantihcally chackad by your naighborhood TV aarvico atoro, if you do nood a tubo or two you will find the correct stylo and number in hU vast stock and at a price that it comparable to any. Whatever You TV Needs May Be, Toi Can Depend on Tonr Neighborheed TV Service Center Oaklaid CoHRly Elecironics Assr. Dependable TV SERVICE Don't be fooled! Don't be misled by bargain prices or absurd claims of screwdriver mechanics or a neighborhood handy man! . . . Cali a competent technician. There's a member of the Oakland County Electronic Association in your neighborhood — call him for DEPENDABLE, GUARANTEED SERVICE. Auburn Roeio I TV, 39 Auburn, FE 4-1655 BuMwin Rodiu A TV, 1211 RnMwin Avu., FE 1-6231 Cundun'i Rndiu A TV, 36 S. Tsitgmph, FE 4-9736 C A V Salts A Strvict, 1SI Onkland Avt^ FE 4-1515 Dolby Rudit A TV, 346 Lthigh, FE 4-9602 Homptua Eltctric Ct., 62S W. Hurtn, FE 4-2S2S Hod's Radit A TV, 770 Orchard Lnkt Avu., FE 4-5041 Jubttstn's Rodit A TV, 45 L WuNon Ilvd., FE 64569 Lootsch TV Strvict, 6734 Dixit Hwy., Oerkittn, MA S-S311 Lntimtr Rodit A TV, 3530 Setbtbow, Droyttn, OR 3-26S2 Mttrtptlitan TV, 919 Orchard L^ Aut.. FE 6-0401 Obtl Rodiu A TV, 3930 EHxobtffe Lokt Rd., FE 44945 Pbtipt Eltctric Ct., 4346 Dixit, l^to Plains. OR 3-1217 Rich TV, 1959 Ntrtb Oydykt Rd.,VE> 44221 Sttfooski Rodit A TV, 1157 W. Hurtn St. FE 24967 Swttfs Rodit A AMHanct, 422 W. Hurta SU FE 4-1133 WflItM Rodit A TV, 515 L WaNto Mod., FE 2-2257 WKC, Inc. Strvict Dtpt., 4$ N. Ptiry St. FE 3-7114 ports predict Cuba’s sugar produc-i t:ja—wwj. oid opry lion will drop a| least one million dh tons soon. Herter added that this - - • -- -a good time to diversify U.S. sugar supply sources. The committee , has been considering giving President Eisenhower author-1 ity to cut Cuba’s quota of the' w'vj. Music market. SAV8 HE’D GA5IBLK Castro said he would be willing: slnuav mooning to surrender Cuba’s share of the' ,.„_wjr F»nn rc*u sugar market in the United States ........ if his country's production drops a million tons—provided the Cuban quota is increased' by a million tons if production increas-that much. Castro said the American public is ’’being fooled" on the sugar situation^ sell sugar WWJ. MAodlci WJBK. stereo ll:DS-WJR. Ne«a. SporU WPON. .vt>'.!e mxVZ. Freg Wetii CKLW. Album Ttmr t:aa - WJR Favor!!* - Hyo WXYZ. OUMt Star C'BLLvv. Maicn ol Mini WJBK. Crucified Hour WCAR. Newt. Woodlint WPON. Sunday Serenade if they want it." thq prime minis- BiuiSk'i'a!* ter said. "We can contribute to wjbk. proieSint Hour thing than you do!” That’s one of the stories Jan Murray’ll probably tell when be returns to NBC TV Monday SepjklS with a new show called/“Cbarge Account.” It’s ‘family stuff.” one of the TV commodities that’s highly salable today. His wife. Toni, is such a fastidious housekeeper that she empties the ash trays before you’ve put your clgaret ashes iir thein. "And she loves to make beds. I got up at 4 a m. to go to the bathroom, and I got back, and the bed was made." Toni Is very affectionate. Jan reports, particularly when she's got her hair in curlers. "She’s wearing 20 pounds of stainless steel In her hair. She bends over and kisses you and rips your whole face to shreds, he says. Jan claims to be watching international developments closely. “Take those seven Astronauts,” he pointed out. “Only one is going—we need the other six to drag the one guy, into the missile." ; DETROIT (fi — American re-1 Jan hopes to get a few laughs on TV. of course. ’Outside of Ed Sullivan and John Cameron Swayze. who’s getting* J°“u„.^^2:an ActivWes a^ laughs? ’ he asks. |restoration of its duties to the THE WEEKEND WINDUP ... Judiciao-^Committee. “DONT PRINT THAT! Rudy Vallee kidding his age. says,! Meeting here in the 71st con-“I was the Pat Boone of the Stone Age” . . . David Niven ffl’!™’,^"*erence to learn to smoke cigarets for "Guns of Navarorte” . . . Trumpeter Ray Anthony's new night club roii.tine features Hie Bookends—pretty Anita Ray and Diane Hall. Singer-comedienne Dorothy London, who owns part of a a limousine service, bought an apt. house . . . Duo: The Broadway Theater has the town’s only female theater manager— Mrs. Fanny Comstock. MURRAY •ryiP N«*. PwtrirF ' »:I»-Wja. Album. RcLaIod WXYZ. Sunduy Brit I WWJ, Siinduy Mu«ic CKLW. Hcb OirlMUn WJBK. World Tomorrow WPON Pint Btptlit ilt:M-Wja. Hymn* : WWJ Radio Pulpit ' WXVE. Newt. Bun. Beet ; CKLW. Radio BIbla I WJBK. Nrwa. Epiacopal WPON. ChrUtophar 11 Its-WWJ. St. Paul s Cain WXYZ. Sunday B*u CKLW. Ponltar Baptlat ?:d her boy friends park themselves in the living FT a m Do/orrrvFo room every evening . That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1960) Supporters of Johnson Working on Southerners "interpretive cortex," must be ing infinitely repeated patterns of "Our mindH would be no filled {working if the mind is to remcm-:psychic activity with paut painful experieReen .her the symbols which are thej ♦ ♦ * and so.cluttered that wc should lessence of language, music and; "The normal individual is una-be In a stale of unbearsbie agony ! mathematics. Yet when il is re-ware of this inheritance, but the and hopeless eonfusioii." moved (here still is memory of psychotic is aware of little else, _ r L i Memory starts in the cerebral ‘‘’veuls- dwelling in a place of primoriwi to t avor Lehman iupnex because » picks ouf what ' * * ★ memory unmodefnized by personal Jis going to be remembered from is indebted to the experience.” NEW YORK lAPi — Demo-;* mass of stuff that could be re-' |icruliar memory losses suffered ' eratic State Chairman Michael !• selects either on a .bbsi*,' by siooholb-s, hystrries, epllep- Slojies of the Great Smoky moun- Prendergast resigned, Friday as ajo* asscx;iation (it is i-eminded of, jip«, M-hUophrenies for a tains are drained by 600 miles of delegate to the party’s national;by^something it is per-, great deal of Its knowledge of j.streams, many of which yield rain- By The Associated Press bufed to Kennedy. The New York .Supporters of Sen. Lyndon B.lTlmfs had quoted Kennedy as Jotfson of Texas intensified their: telling New-York’s Liberal party drifr today to stop Sen. John F. Thursday that he hoped to win Kennedy of Massachusetts from the nominatioij without a single snaring the Democratic presiden- Southern vote, tial nomination. At Ihe annual conference of gov--nors in Glacier National Park, Mont., Govs. Price Daniel of Texas and Buford Ellington of Tennessee organized a Southern caucus for Sunday morning. The aim was to assess Johnson’ , chances of defeating Kennedy all Kennedy told the Liberal P*>’tydeeded' Ihe national convention in Los that he had little delegate suppoill Angeles and to ■ stamp ouf talk from Ihe South but hoped and e.\-| BAY CITY ifi — Bill H. Fribley. convention to open a delegate post|ceiving) or. of strong stimulation, for former Sen. Herbert H. Leh-! ★ ♦ ♦ : I Having selected, the cortex tran.v| * * * |mits appropriate electrical im-j ^rendergast, who led the move,pulses along the network of nerves last week to exclude Lehman from|and at the height of a memory' C delegate list, bowed to a de-|rpgponse. ^ such impulses can: ion of a_i party caucus Thurs- be going out every second, day in Albany. ' I - ■ Memories that require aetIvHy, Ibow and bro^ trout for anglers. Oscar Chapman, chairman of! “ CiUzens-for-Johnson, caUed thel"'®*' “ con^honed his sUtement incredible. ' ‘he understanding "Those of US'who support Sen. ““ he be “completely free to Johmion for the presidency want|“*‘ '"y "'Y, the votes of every section of voice as my conscience dicUtes," the country” pected to win the nomination de-:nationai commander of Disabl^ spite this, Salinger said. Held in Theft of Car Laid to Chicagoan STURGIS (UPD-A 16-year-oldl Wa.vne boy was held today in a carl such as learning c referred to brain area called the : Mpporanipus which Iches over from there, so to speak. Once it is set up, the circuits ■an be made permanent. A skill which is acquired after much practice or knowledge that comes from much study is retained even when it’s.not used for a long time. "Fortunately we are unawaie of this process." said the summary Ameriimn Veterai^ told the open- ^ ^ " j,,' ,ing of Michigan DAV conven- Spectrum. ’Otherwise, jlion yesterday that the nation f .. ' I must accept disability compensa-ition “as a necessary and inherent 'cost of war and establish a permanent.' integrated program" to 'cover it. would all go mad^practicing ail our skills and rehearsing alt our knowledge at the same time. NEED HIPPOCAMPUS Without the hippocampus. I that Johnson has swayed too far from Ihe .Southern viewpoint .Some Southerners arc angry at him for piloting two civil rights bills through Congress. ^ * In Washington Friday. Johnson supporters claimed he wojild have 302 votes on the convention’s first ballot. They predicted 602'4 foi Kennedy. To win/761 voles are ceded. The Johnson people said that ............. their man would swell his total to highway more than 600 votes on the sec- nd ballot and would win on the Police said James Mentpl.~16, S '•”i. admitted stealing the car near his zs On the other hand. Gov. Mich- home .and cfashing through a police s al V. .DiSalle of Ohio, at the barricade near Jackson while flee- = f\ O kA governors conferept'e. predicted a ing from police. = tlOYC tJ Ot Iwl Tirst-ballot victory for Kennedy. Officers said Mentel told them = mi|| e^snaA ^ A A * * * ‘he jumped from Ihe car when it = Kllll |j TH/k | Cm A Ic AKf Also on the question of conven- struck, the first of several barri-= u ■ aa-a a lion votes, a Johnson supporter cades and escaped uninjured in S took issue with a statement attri- the darkness. = lav* J40 mllM at driving — Enjoy Qippar hoapitality — SpaciouB dacha, bMutifuI loungaa. OuUida bedroom* with toilats, children’s playroom, fraa movias, TV, dancing, fina food and refresh-manta at reasonable prices. Drlrell TIrV't Ofllrr: ISil Flr>t Nall*n!l Bldf m.». MiLWAureet For information, contact Wls- ma -llWNfil NOW IS THE BEST FURNACE J^u^LEANING TIME Cleoner Speciolist to See 06 you have furnace dealer pressure sslevnen troubles? Don't be pushed! Call first for our price and Compare We will save you from $5.00 to $12.00. Want to -be rid of the household dust lodged in yoor duct work! Only a large, power suction trvick eSn clean duct work and chimrveys thorougjilY. nil Mb *S s> • rrail*arr to |rl year rtoaalat i r%kl *v*r ar far a telar* «ato. Oar Iw* Hnalsf II aaS aarrateS. * KLEEN AIR FURNACE GLEANERS 0> I-OlOO & BREEZEWAY NOW!| GARAGES as Low as = 1 COMPLETE MODERNIZATION = 1 HOUSE RAISING ~ BASEMENTS INSTALLED = 4 ROOFING • SIDING • ADDITIONS 5 I • RECREATION ROOMS . D>M .Service I FE 2-7004 I Em. or Son. OR 3-2276 1 2255 E. WALTON COR. OPDYKE GET A GAS PERMIT and SAVE $ $ $ with the ^ BURDETT - HOTTEST GAS CONVERSION BURNER ever made! Th# Amazing New NUNDCTT Wrasta up to 40% MONE Uaabla Hoat from Ow . . . Ends All Hoating Work and Worry - Absoiutaly Noiso-loss Toe. BURDETT GAS-OIL FURNACES No Moiey Dowi^Up te 5 TIAIS TO PIT Michigan Heating Co., Inc. cv 86 NEWBERRY STREET FE 8-6621 ' FE 8-6651 PE 2-2254 T11K PON TIAC PllKSS. SAT V KDAY. Jl^ XK 25, li/ou ^tott Rtscinds Order Taking Driver's License { Upon review of the circum-ianceo, the secretary of the state’s |(tice in Lansing has rescinded the rder to furnish proof of financial ir^r,r’'o^ ch-rci, * w * jfor Nazi Confiscation » Roman c^iic Church Enough Storage Thursday and agreed to pay the . ® J* , church four million dollars a year, f The action postdates that -pub-| lished in this newspaper based on information issued by thel ... . . , - The VIENNA, Austraia t for The Sun Seekers 7.99 “''•W ca.,..,. Lightweight for easy portability. Woven plastic lets breezes come through. 72 s 24. Furniture Dept^ Second floor MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Sleep on a Cloud, DuPont Dacron Polyester Pillows tSrgeu Non-allergcnlc Dacron fluff, odorless, will be buoyant for years! Comfortably large 20x26 In. Finished size. Snow-white cotton covers corded pink or blue. Limit of 2. Domestic Dept, Main Floor MONDAY ONLY SAVE NO^! Kingsford : Qiarcoal Briquets 10 lb. bag 66' C Charge It ^ Wahiut size briqueU bum hot. leave little ash - no wasted fuel. Be smart and get the best! Stock-up! Shop St Save! I 20 pound bag . . . 1.22 MONDAY ONLY! Triple Wall 9 Ft. 24 In. Pool Holds 960 Gallons Charge II Regularly priced at 36.95. Ruggedly constructed! 12 gauge vinyl liner. Corrugated, non-rusting aluminum wails are backed with plastic coated fence. Also 12 and 18 ft. sizes. Swimming Pool Ladder.7.95 MONDAY ONLY! White Trim Paint That. Won't Stain Beg. 6J8 5.55 fsllM Will not wash down and (Ms-color brick*, dark palnU. Use on storm sash, screens. Paint DepL Main Basement Change Oil Filters Every 4,000 Miles “ 88^ Orlt. dirt, dast In oil grind against precision part.s. New filters will keep oil clean. Auta Acccsaorie*, Perry Base- MONDAY ONLYI 4-Speed Portable Men’s Suit Bag Phono...Save 22.18 Women’'s Dress Bag • Regularly at 79.95 5f^ a Separable Sp4!;aker8 Reg. 10.98 >88 $5 Down Complete stereo....... no extras to buy! 4-speed changer with dual synthetic sapphire needles plays all records. Dual amplifier and separable speakers with individual volume controls. Badia and TV bept.. Main FImt 8“ Reg. 12.98 i(r Cbargc It Dress and suit bags unfold enabling you to hang your olothes as you would In your closet. No fuss, no bother! Just the thing for your vacation this summer! Luggage DepL Perry 8L Basement choice of 2 styles women’s casual shoes Soft leather T-strap flattie in white, ton. cream. 4^-9. Medium wedge in white or beige. Attractive cutout design. 5-9, Shoe DepL. Main FIom- Reg, 2.99 2.3.3 Charge It Save Now! Ready Made Venetians! 19-inch thru for SPJ 36-in. widths ^ ^ Cluugc It Ideal control of air, light and privacy! Blinds are made of long-lasting steel with white finish. Neutral cords and tapes. Easy to keep clean! Can be easily put up! Buy several gt extra low price! Monday only special! Venetian B d DepL. Main Fleer Wash ’n* Wear Slacks for Dad ^ Reg. 4 M 3.77 Qool. comforUble Dacron |k>lye*ter, rayon slacks. Bises »-42. Men's Wear. Main Fkler ''Satisfaction guaranteed or your money, back’ SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 I" ■it