Tht Wtath«r ' VM. WMUfr Wmntt clmidjr, cooler , (DttoiUf rm*) VOL. 119 NCk 129 THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1901—40 PAGES Lovely to Look At QUEENLY SMILE WUh a radiant mntte that would make any Michigander take a gander, pretty Karen Jean Southway, 18, of Wyoming AT ratMn City, begins her reign as Miss Michigan. She outshone a field of 31 other lovelies Thursday at Muskegon. New Michigan Is Karen Souf/iway for Auto Firms Clamp Down on Commuters m(mm Reds Start Em Squeeze Dig Up '53 Law Requiring Okay for West Jobs Accuse 50,000 in East Sector of Sabotaging Communist Economy BERLIN (UPI) — The Communists tightened the screws on Berlin today by digging up a long-ignored law requiring East Berliners tor get permission before taking jobs in West Berlin. The East Berlin city government said it will impose strict enforcement of a long - standing regulation that residents of that portion of the City must* Mek To Film Firebird III MUSKEGON WV—A year of determihed effort has paid off with the title of Miss Michigan for serene and willowy Karen Jean Southway. She is from Wyoming, a community Just outside ^ Grand Rapids. The 18-year-old is top attraction tonight at the Miss Michigan Coronation Ball in Muskegon. She was Pontiac Motor Among Many Reporting Top Sales for Period Auto industry sales figures reveal that June was a banner month. Pontiac.^ Motor Division ^s one thorities before working in West Berlin. i The order originally was issued I Jan. 14, 1953, a few months before the bloody E^ast German uprising against die Communist regime. But it was not enforced, and West Berlin government statistics say about 50,000 East Berliners have jobs in the free part Of the city. Re-Elected to Preeidency Asks Salaries JerRanki^He-^te Excited and radiant, Karen said: "It would be wonderful if Nancy could give me some pointers for the Miss America contest.” AID PLEOCED Montague’s Nancy Anne Fleming, winner last year who went on to become Miss America, swered: “We'U give her all help we can.” ^autiful Nancy Anne eariier pressed a wish that Michigan could emulate Mississippi in the national pageant by producing two winnen in a row. Lansing’s Jane Ann Brougham, n. was nnmerap to Karen as UAW Alto Hands GM a Program to Create Job Opportunities Kroni Our News Wire# DETROIT — The United Auto Workers Union today handed Ford Motor Co. a demand for salaries for the rank and file and presented General Motors Corp. with a plan for creating job opportunities. 'The union banded Ford negotiators a demand for salaried pay for present hourly-rated workers and improvements in supplemental unemployment' benefits. TRe salary pay plan presented to Ford was first outlined by UAW president Walter P. Reuther in April. It calls far an end to the “obsolete and Intolerable” hourly wage syotem for factory workers. Reuther oald they ahould be paid a salary Jast like office workers. The UAW told GM work time should be reduced through shorter work weeks, shorter work years, annual sabbatic^ leave, longer vacations, more holidays, earlier retirem^ and a restriction on 3 overtime work. Acceptance of the plan, the union said, would create job opportunities in the auto industry to compensate for jobs which the UAW charged were lost through automation. Contract talks also coatiaued today at Chrysler Corp. and American Motors Corp. Present three-year pacts with GM, Ford and Chrysler expire at midnight Aug. 21. The AMC tract runs through Sept. 6. AMC appeared ready to play an aggressive tole in the contract negotiations. The company proposed a “fresh f j j r • new •> 391111(137 r8ir A o 0—. • .... * L/ivuilun crowned Thursday night in of several car-producing the state pageant finals in P<”’f>>'8 notable selling during the front of approximately 6,000 approving spectators. “She practically wore out driveway — even at 11 v’clodt at t-Hpractidng her walk and S^-wddHn^ father Ji Southway. a Grand sales, 99,717 can, |0|i|l«i tim year’s first quarter by-M per cent. There were 83|539 new Pontiacs sold then. Ford’s Uncotn-Mercury Division reported a surge in new oar sales during the final 10 days of last month gave the division its best June sales record since 1955. Ford Division reported car and truck sales for tlt| second quarteo (d 1961 were the highest for any quarter since the April-June period of A 1960 graduate of Rogers High School in Grand Rapids and a runnerup as Miss National Amvet, Karen won a preliminary MUs Michigan swimsuit competition with her measurements of 36-23-36 Moot 6H-inch carriage. She weighs 120 pounds. She has crown of light brown hair and has wide hazel eyes. Her rendition of the standaid pop tune “Someone to Watch Over Me” in mezzo-soprano voice scored heavily in the final talent test. A former high school cheerleader who bears a trick knee from her activity, Karen bowls and likes to watch all types of athletics." She Is proud of a IS-year old brother Jim, “aa all-A student at Rogers." He is the only other Karen’s $2,500 scholarship first prize will be used k> furtter her musical training. She hopes to enter the entertainment worid and turn latet; to being a teacher of She’s undecided at present on the school. American Motoi June sales were higher than in any month since June of 19W. ’The total of K),055 gave the corporation 185,052 sales for the first half of 1961, compared with 236. the first six months of last year. Dodge sales in June were the sdbond highest of 1961 with only April sales higher. The June total of 20,^, however, fell 39,346 units below June sales last year. Want No Sour Notes f/offa by Mile in Roll Call The Con admitted benoefoith “CUy auUioritles win make known with emphasis the ■law to those who have ilelat-ed It.” The Innouncement also accused East Berlin residents employed In West Berlin of being supporters of Western “capitalists’’ be sabotaging the Oommunist omy and triggering a war agaiiist the Oommimist bk>c. The new Red move came against M iigiiiieif w'mie' velopments on Berlin: — In Washington, the White House announced that President Kennedy will confer Saturday in Hyannis Port, Mass, with top advisers on the German and Berlin questions. White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said the session was part of a “conttai series of conferences on the tire German and Berlin prob-leA.” ■WON’T FIGHT — The Washington correspondent of the Times of London reported that President Kennedy "is not prepared to go to war” if East Germans assume control of the access routes to West Berlin. He also said the President is not prepared to fight “should the Soviet Union sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany." And he added that “essentially the (Contiiiued on Page 2, Col. 3) News Flash Mom STARr-Firebird ID. General Motors’ newest gas turbine-powered car. is the star of a movie being filmed at Highland Recreation Area by the Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild. Views of the sleek experimental Firebird cruis- ing Highland area roads will he featured in tba film, “Meeting the Challenge.” It will be seen by nearly two million school-age boys in the next three years as part of the guild’s youth-develop- MIAMI BEACH, Ra. (API -James R. Hoffa today breezed to an easy re-election victory as president of the 1.7-million member Teamsters Union. At the midway point oil a roll call of the 2.000 delegates. Hoffa’s opponent Milton J. Lias, head of Newark Local 478, had only votes. Tlie polling to the halfway point had taken about 2H hours. Hoffa cast his ballot ^ a delegate for himself when the Detroit Local 299 delegation was polled. Hoffa was nominated for re-election in a din of sirens, hdrns and bells and yeilir* ffom the 2,000 delegates whose ultimate choice of Hoffa was a foregone conclusion. Hoffa. In facL got aU the votes of the first M local uidonB polled. It wasn’t until delegate Cost of Reckless Boating Your Money or Your life With more than a half-million people romping and relaxing at Oakland County’s 423 lakes on an average summer weekend, common sense safety rules have to be observed and enforced. Sheriff Frank Irons warned today. His reminder is timed to prevent further tragedy In the wake of two local drownings and IS boating-injury accidents since the summer .began. An estimated 39.9M small power boaU Uke to the area’s lakes each summer weekend when the weather is fair, according to sherlfri deputy Sgt. Donald Kratt who heads the department’s water patrol. “They (the weekend sailors) are hbre to enjoy themselyss, and they will If ^they just use their heads,” Sgt. Kratt said.i Teamsters convention by nominal-•’Otherwise there surely will be more people hurt and killed as "the man with the on the water this summer. There’s no guarantee It won’t ’ be you.” “Do you know of a soul in this Edward H. Painter, of Local 7S, Onklsud, CsMf., was poHed that Uss got his find vote. Liss, 51, head of Newark, N.J., Local 478; was nominal^ by James Luken, of (Cincinnati, president of Local 98 and Joint Council 26, as the man with the best chance to bring the expelled Teamsters back to the AFL-CIO. “My candidate,” Luken said, 'would come home to the AFL-CIO with clean hands, clean record, with a clean name and with a genuine desire to do aORt is beet lor all labor uniona.'’ 1110 "clean hands” referent* touched off a series of protests from Hoffa supporters. John Roh-rttai tjf Cfiwellnd, one « ffii union’s International Trustees demanded vociferously that Luken’ remarks be wiped off the convention reeprd. LOSES TEETH Rohrich, in fact, sputtered angrily into a microphone that his false teeth popped out. He neatly caught them on the fly as the delegates roared with laughter. Hoffa silenced the criticism with an entreaty to ’’let this be a democratic, free, open election and let the best man win.’l John F. English, 72. veteran secretary-treasurer. touched ( t e demonstration NewU.S. Atlas Sets Record, * Lands on Target Comes Down 9,050 Miles From Cape for Significant Feat CAPE CANAVERAL, Fig, The business end of an Atlas missile hurtled out of the Western sky like a blazing meteor and crashed into the Indian Ocean early today at the end of the Imigest military rocket flight on record — a 9,050 mile journey from Cape Canaveral. The distance exceeded by * (Hily 19 miles the c ou r* e covered by two Atlasses also fired into the Indian Ocean last year. But. more important, it marked the first long-range success for ui advanced Atlas being developed to carry blockbuster payloads almost’ halfway around the world. •ne Air Force had beea deep- ★ ★ ★ There are 53 special deputies assigned to the water patrol to assure that everyone has a good time without acetdents, Sgt. Kratt said, but they need the assistance of boaters, swimmers and water skiers alike. Hoffa had surrendered the rostrum to John P. O’Brien of Oii-cago, the union’s first vice presi-Boaters falling to heed the advice are being imned dent, when time came for nomi-water-violatlon tiekets by the ^trol. The result has been nations. But Hoffa had to take it HOLLYWOOD (UPIl - Redj .1 #tiff fines ordered by justices of the peace who back the back temporarily to get the 2,000 searchlight beams criss-crossing WASHINGTON (AP) — The I water safety drive wholeheartedly. ' cheering delegates in order. the sky above the Hollywood Bowl United SUtes and ^ssia have 1 .......... T ' ’’Knock it off.” Hoffa said, on Tuesday, Thursday, Friday andi agreed to start talks Jnly 18 on ' dont play safe, they will find It costly to use while gaveling delegates back to Saturday nighu wUl warn airplanes a direct New Yoik-Moscow com- water here, one justice of the peace noted. their seats, all summer to stay away and notj merclal air route, the State Dc- | Reckless driving, the major Infraction, usually results country with more guts?” English asked. “If you do. I'd like to know.” from excessive drinking, according to Sgt. Kratt. ((Continued on Page 2, C3o^ 4) p WHEREVER yOU FLIT- 4t- ].. . but Not Hot The weatherman says Saturday will continue fair with little temperature change—a high of 78 degrees. Ttmight will be somewhat cooler, o, with the mercury dropping back to the mid SOs. NANCY WILL FOLLOW! The oiiUook Is for continued rath-.. . ^ weather ^th .nrt much Just pick up the phone 8^-to-day change in temperatures and call FE 2-8181 to have THE PONTIAC PRESS sent to your vacation ad-dress. 11 average about 4 to g degrees below the uamial Ugh of M to M aad aer-BMl tow of M to W tor the next five daya. through Wednesday. Precii^tation will total less than one-tenth of an inch with « chance few showers Tuesday night or Wedpeada.v. ‘The The name of Milton J. Um. president of a 4.800-member Newark, N. J., local, was put In nomination by James Lukens of Local 98. Cincinnati. Lukens recommended Liss as the candidate that would "give us the best chance to return to the house of labor.” I960 Champ Out in State Amateur Golf Jouinament JACKSON Oh — Defending cham- j I pion Don Stevens was ousted from the State Amateur (3olf Touma-nrient today in his first match, losing 4 and 3 to Pete Green. * ★ * Green, who plays at the Univw-sity of North Carolina, went 2 up on the defender from Detroit uith a par-36 front nine at the Country C3ub of Jackson. The stocky Orchard Lake golf- But pleased officials reported after today’s success that the problems appear to be licked. ♦ * dr The huge missile, 83 feet tall and weighing more than 100 tons on liftoff, blasted off just before midnight 'Thursday night uid darted iito a star-filled aky. ON PROPER CXIUR8E About 4H nilmites later, an tner-tlal guidance system sensed^the rocket was on the proper course and ordered engine shutoff and separation of the nose cone. Fifty-three minutes after the launch, two tracking planes and a ship followed the cone’s fiery path as it plunged back into the heat barrier of the earth’s atmosphere and dived on target about 1,000 miles southeast of C^ape Town, South Africa. BULLETIN A concrete pillar reportedly ,fell on three workere who were constructing a bridge for the new 175 expressway near Joslyn and Lake Angelas roads in Pontiac Town-sh^. The mishap occurred shprtly before 2 p. m. Th» Oakland County Sheriffs Department reported 9 was unknown whether any of the men were killed. The extent of their injuries was unknown. Ambulances were immediately dispatched to the scene. A* * In Today's | Press ^ Soff Sell r't para «i the Uth aad 140i hotos. both bogied by Stevraw, aad cloaed out the oiatch oa IS. In other early first round matches: Otto Schubel of Lansing beat Lorry McMillan of Flint 3 PRES'KNTING TRAGEDV-With more thaa a half-miUion persons using Oakland Ommy's numeroua lakes ahd waterw^'s summer weekends, common sense safely rales imiat be observed. ______.Ta.m^'w'o mTSi Safety Wrector S|gt. Donald Kratt (in uniform) and 1 AtTpiuT the mercury stood at.75.^ Shertg FVank Irons put (he message aents to a pair of "boaters,” '7 fellow offioere posing tor Bie photographer. They were “caught” speeding in a canal at Loon Lake. Note the sign behind the speeders’ boat. The "slow, no wake or swell” order is being enforced this year by state law, punishable by a maximum $100 fine abd/or 90 days in jail. Buddy Badger of Bloomfield Hills, a member of the Michigan State varsity, defeated Ray Palmer qf Southgate 4 and 3. j i Tom (kace of Lathrup VfUage! beat W. H. Yearnd 3 and 2. i Eye Future | ^ Building tunnels at nuclear | test site—PAGE tt. 1 -Uses the Ax * >■' Road men eye accident I trees-PAGE it. g Guides I Many Michigan cities have ^ master plahs—PAGE U. | ?00. Days | JFK has big success in If Congress—PAGE tS. Area Nena ..........SI ^ TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 7, mi i^uclear Test Ban Rejected by Soviet Union has rejected United States a note which soviet Foreign Mire proposals for a nuclear test ban iMer Andrei Gromyko handed U.S. again. She demands anew that the.. test ban talks be merged MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Hm Soviet government newre paper Isvestla printed the text Kassem of Iraq Pledges No War to Gain Kuwait They said disarmament experts in the go\>ernment were still studying the text of the note, but so far ihad found no change in the Soviet the Valtei ^ITED NAT10XS, (AP) - A l?»Mei Arab dirawal e( BritMi treeps teans was sure Inq woidd get Kuwait i Imms** fSr wMwnt going to war, he didn’t ny g. ga. test e bow. He hedged on the question of a piebiadte among Kuwait's SO,- UJC. day. Frem Oar News Wires j BAGHDAD - Premier Abdel Karim Kassem of Iraq srun he believes practically all Arab — exe^ the sh^ — support Us claim to the newly independent sheikdom of Kuwait. But he pledged once more not to use ftircc to get Iraq’s tiny oU-ridi ndghbor. t * Kassem gave his views Thursday In his firat interview with Western newsmen since ing last Sunday that be regards Kuwait as bistoically part of Iraq. Haappeared In excellent spirits. • f ★ "We will never use any means but peaceful means," be said, "ipe will never resort to aggres- ■ to the mother- do Bit Ivo la harhaifaa agta Though Kassem told n Bain Predicted, hut None for Drought Areas By The Asaedsted Press Showery weather was the outlook again today for widely scattered lectiona M the nation but no rain appeared Ukely in the drought-stricken areas from tans to mathem Vmama. it * -tr More showers fell during the n(^t and early nwrning along i front from North Carolina west--w|pd to Oklahoma and the northern Texas Panhandle. Light showers also sprinkled areas in tho-RocUes. western parts of the Great Plains, the Upper Great Lakes region, along the South Atlantic Coast and eastern Gulf CcStlt and in the northern Pacific Cdist states. ★ * * g&lirfall amounts were light in mm places, ranging from a tnidb to about 14 inch in a six-twir period. However, more than two Inches of rain doused Ponca City, OUa., and nearly one inch fen in Albany, Ga, Mostly fair weather prevailed In other sections of the country. A Kuwaiti government qiokes-maa today aecuaed Iraq of "building up forces" across the Kiwait-Iraq border, but offered to negre tiate his coqidry’s difterences with « MILES APABT "If KasMm wants peace talks,' the spokesman said, "we will have eace talks with him." But he -charged Kassem moving his soldiers south toward the border and estimated Otat the Iraqi and the Britiah-Kuwaiti troops now are less than 20 from each other. There has been ‘‘a Sot of movement" of Iraqi troops, he said. At the United Natkms, the Soviet Union is expected to demand that the Security Council set a deadline lor Britain to wltjldraw her troops from Kuwait. The State Department said Russia was trying by a "discouraging display of distortians and polemics" to obacure the fact that it reuses to agree to "halt nadear a under rftecUve ire REAFFIRMS DEMAND The Soviet note reaffirmed the Kremlin demand that any test ban treaty must rest on Soviet Pre- principle and accused the United States of "burning the bridges to The aete accaMd the UMteid States of preparlag te reeame Buclear tests aad said the Amer- ly attempts “to Justify bi the eye ef pahile opli^ (tMs) i«- The Soviet diplomat charged the British resolution was a maneuver 10 Justify the pretence of troops in the oil-rich little Persian Gull territory legalire them there for an Indefinite period of time." * a * In the council Thursday Britain again promised to remove her forces from her former protects orate the moment Kuwait’s ruler, Sheik Abdullah as-Salim as-Sabah conskfers Iraq’s threat to take over his sheikdom has been removed. feii^ShotMislakenly Is in Fair Condition A Highland Township youth shot by his neighbor who mistook him for s night prowler was reported In fair condition today at Pontiac General Hospital. Gary Hancock, IS. of 4M1 Eagle Road, wao peppered with The Soviet Union has long demanded this "general and complete disarmament." SEEKS RIGID CONTROLS The United SUtes has countered that each step towards disarmament — with a nuclear test ban the first step — must be accom-j j>anM by rl^ cqetroli. 'T The loviet note said the Ameri-in "idle allegations . . . distort the Soviet proposals." abdomen Wedaeoday night. The neighbor. Howard L. Giegler of 5049 Eagle Road, said he shot at the figure coming across his lawn when it failed to heed his warning shout. Giegler's statement was made at the Oakland County Prosecutor' Office yesterday. He was not held. Soviet Pressure Felt by Berliners (Continued From Page One) problem is now seen to revolve around the degree of recognition that may have to be allorded tp East Germany.” The Weather Full UJI. Weather Bureau Report POMIAC AND VICINITT—Fair and a little cooler tonight. Law 55. Tomorrow fair and little temperature change. High II. Northeasterly winds If to IS miles today AUminisbing tonight, becoming II to 15 miles Saturday. TeSajr la rtaUaa ^Lowttt ttniperatan prmdiiv I i At I a.Bi.: Wind nlocUr II m | Oimtion: North. Sun MU riiday at 1:11 pm aun rtMi Saturday at S:0] a m. Moon mU Friday at 3:ST p.n. Moon rlwa Saturday pt 1:11 a m. Oar Tear Af la Paalla —tamperatur* ............ LowMt temperature ...... . Mean Umperature ......... Waather—sunny. pleaeant * Tkareday la Paallaa ^ (ae recorded denlowo) MIsheet temperature ... ...... U>«eet tempereture ..... ....... Mean temperature ................ WMither—fltinoy, aU(btly warmer iar'e Temperatore Ckarl tl M KansaeClty it it 51 LoaAntelee . M 'I « .Miami teach M Alpena Kiunaba Or. Rapid! Rouabton Pelleton ------------ Tra» CTty 14 54 New York Albuquerqua S3 63 Omaha ...—II n Phoenl* 65 55 PItteburth 70 61 81 Louie „ „ 76 « SaKUkeC. 67 66 76 S3 a. PraneUc- " - ______ 66 56 B Bte kUl ESiuu .. _ “ - * 63 73 Waahlniton M 7S Chleaao ClnelirnaU 76 64 Brattle m U 66 66 Tampa M 77 63 73 Waahlniton 76 66 NATIONAL weather AT Phatolai WEATHER—Showers arp likely to dominate the » Atlantic Coast tonight With showers and thun-over tlw Northmi Rockies and the Central be cooter over the upper- and mid-Missuaippi over portkxis of the southern states, the Csd-PlainB and sections of (he Padflc Northwest. 'What is this,” the note asked of American proposals, "a manifestation of animosity toward communism or an attempt to distract attention from the weakness of the U.S. positlan on dtsarmament?' The Soviet note said, In so many Qrrult Judge WUliam J. Beer yesterday appointed three psyefaia-triata to examine Donald P. Betmy-field, accused of killing a Rqyal Oak ToTmship policeman. They to report their findings 1^ Judge Beer, at the request of Oakland County Pmfecutor George ' F. Taylor, appointed Drs. Ivan A. LaCore and Abraham Tauber, both wonis. that the Russiaiit hare of Detroit to examine the changed their minds on disarma-since Khrushchev laid his demands before Kennedy during the Vienna summit meeting. "The goreiBineat af the U.S.8.R.." Isvestla said, "haa Itoa of eadlag aaclear teats JoM-ly with the qaesMon of general should ooaalder nlUag a peace conference of all K aattoas which arere at Tear with NssI Gere maay. This, he said, would call the bluff of Soviet Premier Nikita Khroib-chev in his donands tor such a parley and confront him wifii a demand on how to srive the Gei^ man problem. Brandt said the West also should circulate a skeleton outline of a peace treaty for all Germany, just as the Soviet Union did some time ago. ^roet In Lon-lion reported tiMt Britain and France nlll Jsia the United Ktaleo next week In dellverliM Him robattalo of Kkrashdtev’o riewo on Berila. Bat the West-era Big Three will offer ao tan- The reports say the n will be in the nature of a holding operation while the West works firm future policy on united front when the showdown on Berlin finally comes — perhaps, by the end of this year. It was dteclosed that a Soviet jet fighter bussed the Allied plehof and Tegel airports in West Berlin Saturday, But a U.S, qwlns-l ‘”I1w incident was not considered a vhriatlcn of aitport saf^ regulations. Nothing ----.----I Hie Pay in BirmingliBin The portable library, actually private c|irs of the volunteers, usually visits persons who are unable to read themselves because of their infirmities but 'who have a relative or companions who will read to them. k a ★ Mrs. Meeks said the library program began in the spikig. h addmoa to vtoUl^ bones NDEBLAND — The large pfle of sparkling new fire hydrants, waiting to be installed at Tucson, Arte., with new dty. water mains, seemed • b land to this p Name 3 to Test Sanity in Killing Ex-AAental Patient Held in Slaying of RO Twp. Police Officer No Man Buildup in East Germany WASHINGTON (AP) - The rekindled Berlin otote apparently has sparked no Soviet militaiy hip in East Germany — at least not yet. ★ * a Informed sources uy that, except lor normal summer maneuvers, there have been no major Soviet troop shifts in that area since Soviet Premier Khrushchev 2S-year«ld former mental patient. Taylor said he wanted the saa-tty commiaahm appslateid to de-tonulae Beaayfield’a “mental capacity and hla ability to assist counsel.” Bennyfield, tit 10903 Algona St.. Royal Oak Township, te accused of the June 22 fatal shooting of Sgt. James Gatewood Jr., 45, when Gatewood and another officer investigated a report that Bennyfield had been bothering giris in the neighborhood. Taylor, said the delay in the court hear^ was asked by BenaylMd’s attorney, Goodman Cohen of Detroit, who was going to California. CentennialOver, Offices Closed Financial Report to Be AAade Public Following Whitfield's Vacation The doors closed for the time «i the Greater Pontiac Cen-tenniai today. Headquarters in the basement of the Pontiac Public Library shut up shop. a a a Financial records of the Juik Bennyfield to bekr;^k1thoBt bond celebratkm in the county jail. DAW Asks Salaries for the Rank anij File (Continued From Page One) its collective bargaining talks with the UAW Thursday. At the start of aegotlathiBa wMh GM, itord aad Ohrysler last week, Baotker arged the breaklag of PMtiac State iBhiik. where the Centennial's general chairman, Stuart E. Whitfield, is vice presi-lent. A flaaaelal repmt Is expeeted to bo made pubte by the Greater Poatiac Oenteaalal Commis-sloB after Whitfield retnras frotn Northera Michl- for auto irorfcera. He suggested Thursday that AMC because of its success in making compact cars could set a pattern for the big three. Unexpectedly. AMC Vice President Edward L. Quhman came up at mice with a set of bargaining goals. Bent rsoogaUton of the i ) of the new contract subject to change as chaaglag eoodltloaa require. AMCs chief negotiator also proposed setting up a continuing American Motors-UAW conference. This would carry out a suggestion nude by former President Dwight D. Eisenhower last fall that labor and management get together and dtecuaa their problems. ' NY City's Income High NEW YORK (AP)-New York City's income from sales and busl-nesa taxes—generally regarded as indicators of local business—rose to record levels over the past year despite a nationwide recea- Centennial souvenir d i n n rr plates will remain on sale at the library as long as the supply Left-over Ceritennial programs will be distributed there ee. A supply of unsold metal buttoiu has bean donated to the Pontiac Salvation Army to sell as scrap, a a ■ a The headquarters offices were turned over to Phyllis Pope, dty librarian, by Mrs. Richard E. Cditennial secretary, and Stuart A. Austin, Whitfield's chid'iikle during the edebrations. Sues for Injury After Walking Through Glass DETROIT (AP) - Jacob EWar. 52, a New York dvU enginern*. brought a $100,000 damage suit Thursday against a Birmingham motel for alleged Injury when he walked through a plate glass wall At the motel Aug. 24. 1959. EUar said the glass wall should have been marked as such. He suffered a knee injury. He brought his suit In U.S. District Oxirt against the Birmingham House Motel, 14$ Hunter Kvd. His wife Maria sued for $25,000 additional, claiming lou of heF husband’s aid. offensive re43peiied his Berlin against the West. The Soviets already have a ta> midable force in East Germany. According to latest estimates, there are 20 Soviet divisions there. Soviet divisions run around 13,500 men each, a a a In addition, the East Germans have six divisions of somewhat dubious quality. Communist Poland and Czechoslovakia, two satellites adjoining East Germany, mount 14 divisions each. These units are believed below full strength. TiUJC OF OTHER STEPS There has been speculation the United States may send another divlsitei to join the five already deployed in West (termany, and perhaps take other steps to dem-oiistrate U.S. determination to stand fast on Berlin. a a a French President Charles de Gaulle has indicated that one or more French divisions may be brought back from Algeria and perhaps shipped to West Germany where three other French divl-ions are based, a And these has been talk tl|e British may move fighter pianos, now based in England, to West Germany where three British divisions are posted as the army of the Rhine. Given high marks by American experts are West Germany's seven divisions. By next year,. the West (Armans expect 12. DOUBT SATELLITES U.S. officials question the reliability of Communist satellite troops and suggest ' this may prove a major worry to the &>-viets in event of an East-West test of strengtii over Berlin, a a a It is estimated that the Soviets and their satellites together have between 3,(XI0 and 4,000 combat planes in Eastern Eun^, most of them fighters—and more, if to tha ana. Volunteer wmkers on tite pnject are Mrs. Bennett Robinson, ftlrs. Arthur P. WlUiams, Mrs. Lytle Bowen, Mrs. W. WUllston Welch, Chsrles Brook and 'Mrs. Lewis F. Zahn.. ' Recreation activities for youngsters 6 te 15 yean ot age are.svail-able at six dty playgrounds, Eton Park, Pembroke, Adams, Pierce, Quartern and Midvale. The playgrounds are open from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Activities srrsaged tor age groups are voUcybaB, klekball, slagtBg, story telltog, scavenger Boys can still register for the an authorities rate Soviet troops in East Germany as well trained and well equipped, presumably with battlefield nuclear weapons. As for ttie satellite troops, these authorities said they lag behind the Soviets in fighting trim and gear. One source voiced doubt it is Soviet policy to hand nuclear weapons to the satellites. ★ ★ ★ The Soviet and American divisions arrayed In divided Germany “sfack up pretty even,” one official said. Another said the British and French divisions "are not behind us." And Germans, he added, are "coming up all the time." The five U.S. Army divisions in .Germany are priority outfits being equipped with the latest weapons, including bombardment missiles capable of dealing an atomic blow. Church Bookmobile Plan Picking Up Momentum BIRMINGHAM A wortfairhat .hureh auminer project galnlilg monteotum here te • bookmobile ,ram Initiated by the women of St. Jamee E^iteoopal Church. tin. GOorge R. Mpeka. Oirto tian education chairman, said that Leather vend lanyard projeefs are the erafta (or next weak. Diere te no charge for crafU program edieduled for the play areas next aewe of the church. The Btoratare la kept by the Anest Atlotney as Impostor BARRY M. GRANT Taylor Appoints Barry M. Grant as an Assistant Prosecutor George F. Taylor hae announced the appointment ot Barry M. Grant, former clerk and assistant attorney for |»obate court, as an assistant prosecutor. Grant. K, ot »10 Albert 8t, Royal Oak, replaoea Robert W. Carr who has resigBed to Mter private law practice. Grant begins Monday, Taylw said. Married and the lather of one child. Grant received his bachelor of arts degree from Michigan State University in 1957 and hit law degree from Wayne State University Law School last year. He joined Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore last September. aoftball league at any ot the six Ha's Practiced in East and West, Handled 100 Cqses 'Illegally' SAN FRANOSOO (AP)- m Bgoits lo Su TYancteoo last night aneatod an ex-convict who im-i a Waahington, D.C. ^ attorney and handled aone 100 At least three ot hie clients toce file death penalty.'' In WashiiMton, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover identified the man as Daniel Jackaixi Oliver Wendell Holmes Morgan, 50, a Negro. Morgan has been the object of an intensive search since to fled Washington June 23, the-FBI said. WWW Morgan practiced law in Washington under the 'name of L. A. Harris, an , attorney who practicea elsewhere but was admitted to the district bar in 1955. The three former Morgan clients who await execution on the pistrict of Columbia’s death row were oot identified. Morgan was born in Birmingham, Ala. He served two concurrent six- onth Jail sentences for contempt of court in 1957 after his arrest in Los Angeles for impersonating a Chicago attorney. WWW Hoover said Morgan's record includes convlcttoae for petty larceny. first degree rob^, vagrancy, ■ burglary and carrying concealed weapons. M lead to war. The Russian leader was said to have been especially critical of Mao ’Tze-tung's obsession with the Formosa issue, which the Kremlin i major not believe worth military conflict. True or not, U.S. ofliciala are fearful that some aectors of opinion fwl it would be better to strike a comproi peacefully Inclined Russia, than risk all-out conflict. Kennedy ao far has failed to take decisive step on two nujor lines M actionin the Beriin and German situation. He has yet to answer Khrusch-chev’s June 4 memorandum which the Stoviet leader renewed his demands for a Beriin and German settlement on his terms. And the President has yet to disclose what he wants the UJS. people to do to show a “greater awareness’’ of danger which he PITTSBURGH (AP) -lUed his estranged wife and his father-in-law then took his own life ’Thursday ni|^t a few hours after divorce proceedings were initiated against him. Hr A * William Johns, 20, shot his wife, Laveme, 18, and his fathe^in-law, Howard Terhorst, 45, in suburban Chstle Shannon and then killed himself in a nearby wooded section. SAW Today would have been the couple’s flrst wedding anniversary. Mrs. Johns was expecting a child. 'Death^ for 5 Kidnaaers I*®** ordowdl bfwuiH iwr j ransom money - MANILA (Xp) - Five FiUplno l-Wl pesos ($500)-xfo the viietlm.| Moslems have been sentenced to ' ——1 death for the ransom-kidnaping of Dakota is an Indian word (Sioux) a wealthy copra dealer in Jolo|meaning an alliance oi l^nds. THREB^^ It's SIMMS for Sovingi on Childron's TRICYCLES Styled As Pictured — AH Steel MIDWEST AMBULANCE FE 3-7037 S*mi-Pa«uma(ic Tired Delvxe Velocipedes $9.95 Volua 088 10"Wh««l ^ 12-la. 9.81 16-In. 10.88 Heavy 1 'A'' steel-tube frame, adjustable seat and handlebars. Bakad enamel. Hours of Fun in Your Owh Bockyord! CROQUET SET Sale 3“ $5.95 Value Russ Trade Fair in London Will Have Variety LONDON (AP) - The Soviet Union gave the press a preview ’Thursday of the biggest trade show it has ever staged in a foreign country. Items ranged from sputniks to shortie pajamas. ’The commercial exhibftion, filling 22 halls at London’s Earl's Court, opens today and runs until July 27. Thirty shapely Soviet girls modeled dozens of stylish dresse*. One even modeled skin-tight slacks. Featured in the automobile show was the Zil, a long and shiny car. Sacramento—It's Just the Home for Skunks SACRAMENTO. Calif. (API-One residential area along the Sacramento River here seems to have been adopted as home by a family of skunks—a very large family. So far this year poundmaster George P. Martin says six skunks have been shot and about 20 to 30 captured. Back in 1958 there were some 500 skunks in the Riverside area at one point. "I don’t think it’s quite as bad now,’’ Martin says. S12.95 Value ^ New — with washable shaving head which adjusts to tender or tough skin, ^atterproof case. New and no trade-in needed. . romont SHOPMATE 2.5 A$p. ^19 • : ElECTBIC II6 SAW Regular 829.95 . ; Cuts'2x4’s;.af 45 4 AQT : degree angle, 3050 1x01 Opera Slastts S2.^5 Value $14.95 NORELCO New SFORTSMAN —Heme and Away 1195 $24.95 NORELCO FKp-Tap Heed .... 1399 $23.50 New ItbNSON MARK 11 CFL .... 1588 $26.95 REMINGTON ROLL-A-MATIC ... 159s $28.50 SCHICK 9v SPEED AdKwtaMe Rexer ... 1695 $29.95 NORELCO 1788 New Fleetfufl Head.. l/QO $28.95 REMINGTON 11195 Aete-Hame 12 VaR $91.50 SCHICK 1066 1095 9-Speed A^eetaMe $32.50 SenbeaMi 555 3-Rbde Electric ... 1995 As shown ing, zip—tool is in, twist-^ool • strokes pe'r minute, is locked. Hard steel blades. As ^ 3 blades, pictured. • •eaaaw^aaaeeeeeeaeeueeaueeeeeeaeeeeee•••••#••# MIRROR Finiih—2.9 Amps $85.95 RIMINCTON 22« All brand nuw, factory guar-srrtMd shavers — no trade-in needed. Pay only the advertised price—no cost for free layaway,] « I. togiMnr , -JMto neer|\i aeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaeeeeeaeaeeaeeeeeeeeaeeee GworonKod 1st Quality—U.S.A. Made 2 Sheet Blankets Full 1^29 80x90 T Inch I Green or rote colors. Heavy fleece-napped, whip - stitched J edges. Easy to launiter. Pan I8x2I-I«dk Smdmd Siae Bed PILLOWS SbreddM UMmm Pm* FiHad^ $1^9 4 00 Value I ■ iACH Good quality print-ticking covered. Nen-allergic. SliMifilti'S •A” □iclric Drill 8" Regular $14.9S Value Powerful electric drill with geared chuck, 2000 rpms. For workshop hobbyist. With cord. New 2-ia-l Fix 'a' Save Eyelet Setting Tool $1 Value Includes Pak af Eyelets itiewB — gat M17 aeeraUD ^----let bole aad laU cjrriet. Oi OD BU117 ■atarUlt. Umb 1 wL C Z Famouf WEM ELECTRIC ‘ SOLDERING GUN 100-WATT HEAT UM vmoe - Me* M 3g utaot beU for toMer- Aw It lobe. At ptetored. N FOLISHING |fS|. oiHl SANDING WSC tuts Regular $1.29 Value Fitt V4" electric drills. Set has bonnet, arbor, pad, and sanding discs. 77' HARD- WABE ^-ImdFhtx OPEN TONITE and SATURDAY •til IB p.m. At SIMMS You Get DISCOUNTS tSSe SERVICE fare at S'mmt we don't juti moke a lole, we help you wMieny piefalaM OMI eeming the camera, piclvra taking etc. ond wo dM’l eere wkera yen bougQ your conwra... but if you naod a Comoro, you cun got It (or lata hare u Sknms. Friday and Sokintay spoctab. PHOTO DEPT. VALUES STOCK UP for SUMMER TIME PICTURES KODACHROME Color Fi bynCHNICOLOR 8mm MOVIES "tr** or 35mm SLIDES Reg. $1.85 Mailed to Your Homo with Ml . Developing A9C ee. by AUTOMATIC 80UINMINT at LOW DIKOUNT MKiS-choke of 20 oxp. Umm roR or 8mm rofl 0 load. Bring aH your 61m ta Simms for foil KODAK available at slightly highor pricos.) Sah FUSH^AMEM OutTib 299 5« S8J5 SATELLITE With film, bulbs and flash and batteries. KODAK‘STARMITE’ 3S7 KODAK lUNKErF Rogulor $15.95 voluo. Tho most popular snop modal Kodak. S1&5I KODAK FIA$NMITE2B Set With built-in Rosh, taka oH 3 kiitdsof picturas — slidos, snaps and block and white. Complete set at diKount. 11” 13" Newest KODAK AUTO-ELECTRIC EVE 8mm Movie Camera Reg. $49.95 - Now 187 Novor bofera a fuHy automatic ulectric^o movie camare at Mich a law prica — ft.6 Ions era moot fast, tnclosod ftadw, builHn 6Nt that lots you shoot indoori and oat on toe samo roU of fHm. Only $1 hoMa in ley-; POLAROID Electric Eye AutoHiatic J66 Camera 84' SIMMS Oil 87 DISCOUNT Price As odvortised on TV —tho Foloroid J66 noads no focusing, electric-oya oporotion is fully automatic. Takes lO-socond pictures. Built-in flash gun. Only $1 holds In frao Transistor RADIO 6-TRANSISTOR RADIOS $19.95-Voluo—powtrful 6 transistor radio with coso, battery and oor-phonal. Only $1 holds in froo layaway. 8-TRANSISTOR RADIOS $24.95 ‘REALTONE 8' - transhtar radio cemplota with caso, battery and eeeeeeeeei Charge Your Radio Bottary or Hoy Your Radio Through This |atttty Charger $3.95 Value • 069 * TRANSISTOR RAMO ill fl>is adopt*. e r*d< : Hi-Fi Spealcore 3" Beb.$S.fSValM Long life Imported bat-taries for almost all transistor radios. Frosh stock. Lima 12. S-VoRTraasittorBATniUES _____3„89‘ 7x35 BIN^^ 17” FOUR THE ioNTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JULY T, llWl Wm JKuiitflV n Mt's os Portable as People'" 139 95 CONVENIENT FINANCING Phont Opm 'rit 9:00 FE 2-8781 FE 4-1515 . Frid^nr «nd Monday CaV ELECTRO MART 158 OAKLAND AVENUE His Family All Gone in One Quick Dash day Ntyata had marks Smith made. Me had reverted to his native tongue of Ndvajo so great was the of hisinff his family. After viewing his loved ones In Gallup mortuary, he collapsed GALLUP, N.M. (APl-Thun- lior said Mrs. Smidi fafled to}<» the curb. RMatives led the day momlng'the better worid tor Charlie J. Smith and his wife and six children. * * Sr Monday, he was promoted from a pick and shovel man on a Sai^ Fe railway section gang to machine operator. The boost in pay would help him and his wife after struggling along for seven years of married life on the meager earnings of a section band. keep a proper lookout, * * ★ Gallup Police CUM Manuel horribie accklenta on t highway, said it was he bad ever aeen. , a Navajo Indian as was his wife, was Itijpught to the scene of the accident, which was only a few blocks from where he was working, just as the ambulance was taking the last of the chil- japart. ! |S£\ E.N KILLED The dreama and plans at the Smiths' future were blotted out in a tragedy-stricken hour of honor at 8:40 a.m. Thursday. Mrs. Smith. 35. “ Cecilia, 6; Richard, 5; Edward Lee, 4; Wanda Ann, 3; Loretta. 2; and Virgil Lee Smith, six KMitbs. were kiUed. The family was on its way ■e husband and father when Mrs. Smith made a left turn from i busy U. S. Highway 06 right in front of a heavy grtdn truck on '. the outskirts of Gallup. State Po- hospital sn hour later. could speak perfect Eng- lish. A friend. Ed Nayata. «id Smith hun't tkan able to speak EngUah sin« the accident happened. grief-stricken roan to their where he is waiting to bury his There are more than 2,000 Indian raaervations in Canada ^ are no longer occupied. REMEMBER—YOU BUY LOW AT BUY.LO CINUINI ARMSTRONG INLAID TILE 12x12 $10.88 10- Unelaum Wall Tila 25* FI 54“ Hiflk, Al CEILING TILE Whhe. IW gy^i HASne r PAINT Holps Yo« Ovoreont FALSE TEETH Loosomss md Worry Metonatc a* MMevS or (Ml ui-«t- MM iwesuM o( looM. wobbiy (alM tMtb.rasTSRB.oatmprovodalba-Uii«(DOB-oeld)powdor.bpttaklodoa I |»ur pUtM bold* them anoMMUMr | nut# I A BUY-LO 102-104 S. Saginaw (Next Dooi to May s) Free Forking in Rear bam anB*r*oUMr KMo.A*aMoialwr-V looM ptoMoTckl ■■ t drag oouatw. OPEN MONDAY and FitIPAY TIL SP.M. ARMSTRONG Asphalt Tile T ___S& Pcs. per car 9a*aVk Ynm ncnoii anoM riM( RAM •**r N**S* Wotow tD*' Wtm 9mm ^ ' RsbbsrBsM 4" High~lrra«. Linolaum RUGS T STILL IN PR06RESS... FRI6IDAIRE SALES RRIVE! Your Servicing Dealer For Over 32 Year^ PAYS 6kLY!i Wdsy-Sshii, »Fi Rsadsyf THS BIG-NEW 1961 FRIGIDAIRE REnUGERATOR-niEEZER 'A' 8ig 88 Lb. Reol Zoro Zono Frotzor 'A'AutomoHc Difrotting Cyclo-Motic Rafrigtro-tor SacHon Ar Naorly V4 Bushel of produce eforoge tpoce In twin (Mrceloin enamel Hydrotori if Room Golora on the Stocoge Door, including Butter Comportment, Egg Shelf 3 DAYS ONLY iAEQOO 90 DAYS SAME I FREE DELIVERY AS CASH and 2 Yaan ta Pay | HOOK UP LOWIST INTEREST RATES IN TOWN OUR OWN NO FREE MONEY . '1 SERVICE DOWN ONE YEAR FREE SERVICE Cl. rt nMIDAIIE 11 KUIXE FNI REEZER e StoFt 381 Lk. of Ffosos Poods | DAYS ONLY s an New CsbkM» Dsps It 10“ Wido. 5«H“ Hifli, Fitt Uador Moat KNckoa ( twnavaMa ShoH Fraalt ami Papaiar ‘ I Itofato far Paskafts“ - JUL “Oa lad I Trada AUTOMATIC OVER COOKIHG FrigMiirs Elsstrie Rasgs NEW FRIGIDAIRE/^. MOST GLRMOBOUS BENGES EVEB . . . LOOKS IVnT-Df — YET mSTBLLS IN MmOTES! Simply slide this compact 30" Flair Rang# Into the apace of your preaent rang#, cabirwt and all. • Ceek-Mattor automsHe evea control —- Cook wkllo yen are away. • Roll - To - Yen cooking top on clirtttr fine dhrlM panM. V Chnicn of soloia or tnow-creat wkita. 3 DAYS ONLY >288 "YOUR AmiANCE SKCIALISTS" 121 N. SAGINAN STREET gtowk OPIN FRIDAY ond MONDAY 'til 9 P. M. 3HP8 CLOSED WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS JULY «M AUG. FE 5-6189 tHE PONTIAC PRIj^SS, FRIDAY. JULY 7. 1961 FIVE Save |iy the Earn from the 1st Add to your savings account or open a new one by the 10th of the month and earn our higher-than-average dividend from the 1st. START SAVING SYSTEMATICALLY TODAY CURRENT RATE OF DIVIDEND ON SAVINGS • 761 W. HURON ST. • DOWNTOWN • ROCHR8TEB • DRAYTON PLAINS • WALLED LAKE • MILFORD New Unifed>^hurcb IpropoMd for W. Samoa Would Take In More By OHOROE W. CORNELL AMMMiated Press RellKton Writer PHILADELPHIA - A new-ly uniOed Protestant church today headed Into plans for possible merger with still another major denomination. Initial approval came from both sides. With its constitution put into effect only this week, the United Church ol Christ extended its call for union to the Christian churches (Disciples of Christj, and got an immediate favorable Svsponse. “We promised in the beginning not only to be a united church but a uniting church," said the Rev. Dr. Ben M. Herbster, of Norwood, Oliio, the newly named president of the 2-million-member United Chtreh. w * * After its general synod autbor-tied negotiations "looking toward possible union" with the C)iris-tlan (Disciples) church, its leaders replied that representatives were ready to begin talks this faU. 1.S MIUJQN MEMBERS niat denomination has about 1.8-million members in nearly 8,000 congregations* across the country. If combined with the United Church, whose merger Evangelical and Reformed and| Congregational Christian churches was completed only this week, it would make a body of almost 4 million in 14,000 congregations. The United Church Thursday, adopted a $14.3 million central! budget for 1962 and 1963, about 21 per cent above the current combined budgets of both merged churches. Ex-Teacher to Speak it Fund-Raising Dinner I Retired Detroit schoolteacher] Mrs. E. J. Lowe will speak to-'morrow night at Bethune School. 1154 Lake St., at a fund-raising din-jner for a scholarship program t<^ I be instituted by the Church I God, 296 W. South Blvd. The din-;ner will be at 7 p.m. A ★ A church spokesman said the church is joining for the first time with a twi^state program in Michigan and Ohio of the Churches of God to award young high school students college scholarships. The assembly, scheduled to end its week-long meeting today, tossecT out a move to give its blessing to the East Coast as a site for a national headquarters. Delegates refused to direct even short-term establishment of executive offices in New York City, and a review committee also eliminated a plan to restrict the search for a permanent site to the New York-Phlladelphia area. UNITED NATIONS^ N.Y. (AP) ■ Complete independence next Jan. 1-Jor Western Samoa, now a New Zealand trust terrtlory, was proposed in the U.N. Trusteeship Couitcil Thursday. * Britain. Bolivia, Burma and India circulated a resolution calling for the council to take the next steps in carry4i« out the results of a plebiscite held by tjie U.N. in the Western Pacific island territory last May 9. A total of 29.882 voted for and 5,108 arainst Independence, plebiscite officials announced. JUNK CARS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID we PICKUP FE 2-0200 COOK WITHOUT BUTTER, WITHOUT OIL, WITHOUT FAT FOR LOW CALORIE MEALS! NEW FRY PAN IS COATED WITH DUPONT TEFLON, FOOD WONT STICK, CLEANS EASILY! SHS9 Now you can cook eggs! Pancakes! Meats! All without putting a drop of fat or oil into the pan! Cook with less calories, less cholesterol and no stickirsg. This amazing new innovation in cooking is coated with Teflon . , . the cooking surface is so slick that nothing sticks. So easy to clean too, just a N’onfl* *nd a rinse. (Complete with a woodbn spatula that protects the surface. Phene FE 4.2SII iMwf 12" Electric Non-Stick Fry Fan with cotd, control, cov,er $18.88-Cbcng* it at Waita'a — Nonscwar«i . . . Lower Laval r^T-iiws* 1 lEN-STME SUIS mNCIMES, | MHATCSTIIBMtWmnS: ...wmmfootfi REDI-, spare J 9Mm0) L l*ooU punctuf**! 1A inflatos ti^l » UVf IWH-Fhiiilaonihecw. tbOtOpoN mHiPMcMim end On m Jb« MW Mnel > lASV-HMIM-JwlonKhfeliravnK*— jroOoM . .. SOMt Hoor U SCIENTIFICALLY TESTED LIKE A DOCTOR’S STETBOSCOPB-ON YOUR WATCH. MEN'S 17JEWEL TIMEX "400" Only 15 • WaNfpfwt, akockpreot, dwHptent • Anti-niatneNc • UnhreakahM mafnaptinf Ckmga Tamt Waiekaa AffO TOUK WATCH REPAIH of Woito't ^.. SfeMt Float IFs smort to shop ot Wolfe's during July THRIFT DAYS if Shop TONIGHT till 9 oXIock if Um o Woife't Flexible CCC Charge A rainbow of colors! Cool summer fobrics! Were 11.98 to 17.98 So many styles to choo^ from at such big savings! Solid And-printed cottons, arnel jerseys, cotton sTseers . . . in slim and full skirted silhouettes. Save to almost half on your summer dress! Sizes 10-20 and 4'/2-24'/2. Inexpensive and Moderale-Priced Dress Daptt. . . . Third Floor Saw on “NO-SUN” TANNING LOTIONS u 4 Oz. Position Lotion . . . .2.00 .49 8 Oz. Positon Lotion..........4.00 .98 4 Oz. Positon Creom...........3.00 .69 2 Oz. Positon Creom...........2.00 .49 3 0z. Ton Perfect 1.25 .39 3 Oz. Mon Ton 3.00 .98 5 Oz. Mon Ton.................5.00 1.49 2 Oz. Miss Mon Ton............3«50 1.25 ’ Cosmetics . . . Straat FIdbr All Kidi love . . . FUN SHOWER sr e 56" hifk, sprsyi 6 ft. in the air • Sprays ep to 25-H. in • Hi-impact, weather pieef • Cempare WaMa't law prka HoHoas . . . lower Laval All with melamine heat end itein nnittant tope! DINETTE SALE 3-PC. ROUND DINETTE SET Gay pink round table top with two pink chairs. Save at Wattes! 399^ 5-PC. DINETTE SETS Chrome legs, white patterned Reg. table with white chairs; or bronze grn qc legs, blond wood grain table, toast ▼|| chairs. Both 30 by 40" plus leaf. i 5-PC. ROUND DINETTE SET Brona;e legs, crest marble inlay Reg. 79.95 W 7-PC. DINETTE SETS Chrome legs, grey wood grain Reg. •7^1#, ebony chftrsr or -q a- bronze legs, toast wood grain tiy.yy table, toast chairs. 36 by 48" plus leaf. 7-PC. DINETTE SET Bronze legs, toast wood grain table Reg. leaves. r chairs. 36 by 48" plus 2 109.95 SEE YOURSELF FROM TIP TO TOE I f PITTSBURGH GLASS gj fULL VIEW DOOR MIRRORS WITH NEVEk-TiKNISH NUSSTONE HUUK BIG...BIO...60in. HIGH WIDE...I6in. WIDE SoItV/uce ^28 COMPLETE with plastic clips and screws " "he VeFfECT ftlirvlew " ^ mirror for every door In your home or office Mirrora . . . Lowat Laval Shorts ond shirt 2-PIECE PLAY SUITS 199 Sli« T-14 I Reg. 3.98 ' National brand playsuits of wash 'n' wear cotton. Short; with matching shirt.i Choose red, blue or lilac. DECORATOR PILLOWS 2.98 Voluei *1.99 Satin covered, kapok filled. 5 styles. RoHpna . . . Skeei Float BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS 1.98 Values *1.00 Wash 'n' wear cotton, short sleeves. Sizes 6-18. iey^' Wear . .. Spemd Float ChiMrMi't PLAY WEAR *1.00 Shorts, sleeks, polo shirt*, ' pedal pushers. 3^6X. •a Warn ... laeead Flim , THE PONTIAC PRESS UkBkfiac CtrceUUee P 0. Rates Confront U. S. Congress Again One of President Kknudt’s controversial bills which was tossed aside has suddenly reappeared. We refer to the suggested increase in postal rates. ★ ★ ★ The Pontiac Press has long taken the positioB that postal users should pay their own freight. We even dispatched Editor John W. Fitzgerald to Washington to testify to thiii before a Senate committee. We weren’t poasy-footing. Originidly. when the United States Post Office first came into existence, rates were as cheap as possible to enconrago the use of the system and help it become eoUbliahed. ,★ ★ That day is long gone. Tha thing’s become a Frankenstein. The total deficit runs between half a billion and a billion dollars a year. YOU pay it! if '- ★.... Succeeding Postauuter Generals have covrageonaly fought for anffleient postal rates to nuke the thing self-anataining. But they struggle in vain. Con- ___giress rana away. Primarily. Congress is afraid to offend voters all over .Ha districts. Secondly, there are very intensive lobbies that wave real and imaginary stieka at the entire Congress. ★ ★ ★ . Newspaper postal rates are among those under fire. The Pontiac Pmss believes in sufficient charges to pay the costs. We resent^ subsidy 'for newspapers Just as'much as we’d resent one for the steel companies, the night clubs or the candlestick make^,. Diritot by mail is an offender and you are increasing your own junk mail as long as you subsidize the users. They pay a part of the costs of sending you unwanted printed matter—and YOU pay the balance. Make no mistake about that. ★ ★ ★ No one wants to make a profit out of the post office. But the pioneer days of subsidized mails are done, dead and gone. Postal rates shonld be raised snffidently to make the mails self-supporting. tically been eUmiaated aa his dty gained a repniatioa for enforcing its litter law. ★ ★ ★ As additional parks o^n here.lmd our through highways carry more and more traffic, it seems about time Oakland County and its cities get serious about ending the desecration of (me of our chief assets—our beautiful scenery. Help Keep Highways, Parks Free of Litter With the imusually cold spring, the surge 9! area residents on to our highways /and into our parks was somewhat ddayed this year, but now the warm weather has triggered the avalanche. ^ In the wake of the highway hordes and park picnickers comes a surging tide of trash which threatens to blight most of the area through the summer. ★ ★ ★ People who would be appalled if you dropped an apple core in their living room think nothing of firing all their sandwich wrappings and scraps out the window of their -car. Park trash barrels, although plentiful, are usually more than a step away, which is quite a distance to ask anyone to carry his own garbage. ★ ★ ★ Some cities have enacted local anti-litter ordinances, and enforced them vigorously, with fines up to JIOO. Dearborn has been doing this since 1955, and Director of Public Safety Robebt K. Abchir says it has been an effective deterrent. Archer cited both commercial tr,neking firms and transient traffic as the chief lUtcrbugs be-fotw Dearborn adopted its ordinance and poated conspicuous signs along Telegraph Road. He reports that the problem lias prao The Man About Town Facts and Fakes Some Copies of Paper Are Authentic; Others Are Not KffMt Jaly 4 flop: AmecUUd Prem staff on traffic. -----, '* The Centennial of the Civil War Is bringing to light many copies of The New York Herald of April 19, 1M5. containing the account of the assassination of President Abrahsm Lincoln, some of which an authentic, but many of them are fakee. Inq>ired by Pontiac's Centennial, a great many local people have grnctOQ^ shown me such papers. A few irean after Lincoln's death, the manufacturers of Warner’s Safe Cnre, a patent medicine of that era, reissued thousands of copies of that paper, with their own large display advertisement on the second page. So, If your copy doesn't, have that advertisement, Its bona fide, but lUlt has the advertisement—sorry. The production of chewing tobacco Is at an all time low, and my good friend, John J. Navore of Waterford, (who never,used It because he says he can't spit straight), wonders if any of our readers are so pioneer minded that they can remember “Jolly Tar” plug tobacco, “Old Honor" fine cut and "Banner” smoking tobacco. So many compilmcnta have been received from readers who took onf suggesled Sqnirror Road drive that we’ve decided te sng-gest a few otbera Wateta fer them . in this coinmn. A rather unique experience was that of Forrest Byericy, told In a letter from his home in Detroit In iMtt he got stuck In the ruts hi trying to negotiate Waterford HlU In his car on the present Dixie Highway, and a fanner came out with a gun, because all the noise had frighten^ hU horses. A Uttle apple and silver sauce prevented any casualties, and the horses were persuaded to pull It out, on Byerl^s agreement that he would not start the engine. Even over at flint they save what's worthwhile, as Mn. Addle V. Stokes of ISO Bruce 8t. In that city writes me that she has some Pontiac newspapers from away back In the last century. Living close to the Webber Woods wild life sanctuary near Holly, sin. Beverley Kingman U feeding a bevy of quail who have become as tame as chickens. They come out of the woods at scheduled eating periods every day, Voice of the People: Bored With Doc Brady’s Theory on Childbirth will you pieue clamp aa Iran muzxle 00
re difficult to attain. He bdieved it possible to develop a mutual frieiidly understanding in which differences would disappear." ★ ★ w If there was any doubt about what was meant by U» agreements, it, was resolved in 1948, ,when the Soviets instituted a blockade of Berlih. Rail and highway traffic was stopped at the border, but the Allies broke the blockade with an airlift into Berlin and insisted upon their rights. tionforU racks Just to i which they are compelled to have. The inqui^ is marked national defense act It is not only here but evCTywhere. than the anaoaat asked. Tkst leoa ia IMS whea Tkomas Jet-fersm seat Jaases Msorse to France to acfollate the Lsaisl-aaa parchase. Napoleoa told his sgeat to ask high that he could ahraya cease down oa the price so he came dews from SIN mil-■aa to gU mUaB. I was also informed that the governor feels his confidence in Mr. Bladdonl has been Justified. Maybe ao, but I hope by the time we voters go to the polls again we feel that, a change ia justified. SoTuHoil td End -Unemployment There are three milUon moonlighters and three milUon married women in induatry. If they all dropped out, unempfoyment would end tomorrow. One That's Oat (Editor’s Note to Johnny kempf—Silly Casper’s score in the second round sbouhl have read 68 instead ot 67.) Portraits Iheto argameat. FWIMSWlevlel^' cMlentloB aboat Berlia Is ear-rect, thea the Westera AlUes, International law has long recognized the principle that, when* nations sign, an agreement, it is binding upon all of them and cannot be altered by one party in disregard of the will of the othm. PLAIN LOGIC Moscow may not like.it, but to apply its own rule would justify a reopening of the wartime an^idk* standings whereby Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia were incorporated into the Soviet Union. Each of these countries was an independent state before World War II. They have a right to seif-determinatioa They are today colonies of the Soviet goverainent. Dr. William Brady Says: Won’t Print Formulas; Have It on Postal Cards Elegant means that the remedy or preparation is of agreeaUe odor and taste and not unpleasant to use or take. England was the name of the phannacist who onguiatqd my gargle formula, Joseph W. England. Well, now that we arrive at the question of the formula for the gargle. I regret ' Many prescriptions In the handwriting of Dr. John D. Riker, father of Pontiac’s present day Dr. Aaron D. Riker. have been on display in the window of a local pharmacy. Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bolton of 83 Ruth 6t.; 57th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Eugenia Hackett of 2511 Auburn Road; 85th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Orange of Keego Harbor; 53rd wedding anniversary. Horace Marcnra of Bloomfield Hills; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Huban of Bloomfield Hills; 54th wedding anniversary. Mra. FldeUa Orentt of Drayton Plains; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Blatna Felch of Auburn Heights; 5Srd wedding anniversary. sad AMca, 1 esamples of a dlBregard of the right ot selMetermiBatton right St the backdoor of the Soviet One of the unfortunate aspects of the whole controversy ia the tendency in some American quarters to concede that the wartime agree-ment.«>d rale to driok water whaaisver yea feel thtnty and drink It toehold er as osM or waros as yea like. Majfoe aomc big advertiser didn’l approve of water. Or maybe the typographer setting that formula took Ma straight Anyway I dfata’t care alter that I don’t know whether the arnn sued. All I know is that I lost hours d sleep, one delightful day on the bowling green and one good Keiriacky ida^. ILaity one suMects Fm leading up*o the suggeotion that you send roe 36 cents ud stamped, adf-addressed envslope for the booklet "CamtCRL" which oonlBlBS s ttriok It adds greatly to Mach of the reason for the usual touring of this ooodiy is not the sctoal thriUs of seeing new places. Not it is the desire to socially "tramp your neighte’s see," as k ware, when he later starts teUing qf his tmvdt. ★ * ♦ For then you can break in and ask: "Dkto’t you visit the Garden of the Gods? No? My goodness, you haven’t seen anyti^ yett" Or tt may be Yoseniite or Yel-kfwstone or the Gnind Canyon. Mammoth Cave, etc. tove letters. GROW UP Moat of UB grow up and smile tolerantly at any member of oar own age bracket who still tries to strut bis stuff In this teen-age tsshion Iqr social boasting. "It’s the greaseless wheel tiist makes the nofae," runs an old aitoge. Thas,Hke fellow Whe la < sad able Is Bnilaaiu the 1 ■eos ot Ms wife deerat aeed to beast absot Ms tommy eeaqaesti. The unsure male, fearing impotence, is more Hkely to steer conversation around to sSlactous Jokes shd female conquedts. The daaaical Don Juan, taklag pride in Ms many female victims, psychological complexes Is early, so send for the "Behavior Test for . Tte-Agert," enclosttig a atamped return envelope, plus 20 1lM PwaM mn Is Sia»n»« to •srrter tor a net* a «h*r* mUMS la Otkiaaa. OSMSM, Unaa-•toa. llMMb. Laa**r aai W*2- ss%srrsiiiE;*!tr.!i 5::; SU*ta to th* Ualtod auto* «» M a I' ( THE POXTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 7i 1961 seven' Slmmonds, Naw. York, Bijys Amttordam Firm NEW YORK (AP) — ShninonU Precision Products, Inc., irf Tsiry-town, N, Y., has- announced the j^ircbasc of Audium SIeetnhAeoiu> tiche Industrie ^of Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Geoffrey R. Simmonds, president of the New Yoric firm, said toe purchase will give Simmomis a better coinp^tive position in the Common Market. Mitchell is the name of counties | in Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, North Cardina and Texas. |Sen. Hart Working i on Recreation Spots "Long Lloyd" Lloyd Morons WASHINGTON «»-Sen. PhUip A. Hart, D-Mlch., said he hopes to persuade the Senate Interior Com-mMtee to schedule hearings this fali on his bill to establish two recreation areas in Mkht- to FORD Fsirlsne 500, 4.or, V-8, Stick, Radio and H a a t a r. Whitawalia .................. ’04 FORD 4-Deer 1,595 '295 ’80 MERCURY MenUleir 4-Doer Automatic Transmission, Radio and Heater, Whitewalls, Power Brakes and Steering. Lika New. *2,195 ’67 PLYMOUTH ieivedero 4-Doer H'dtep ' V-8, Automatic Transmission, Radio and Heater, Whitewalls, Power Brakes and Steering. Sharp..., '595 ’60 FORD Convertible V-8, Automatic, Radio and Heats r, Whitewalls, Power Steering and Power Brakes... 1,695 ’67 MERCURY Convertible Automatic Transmission, Radio, Whitewalls. Extra *995 mCRCURY 232 S. SAGINAW--PONTIAC LINCOLN! FEderal 2-9131 -7 sAy i-L -'SAFE BUY-BEST PEAl'M-^ ' mercurv-continental-comet-english ford Hart said he slao expecta to accompany a member of the committee on n tonr of the two forest-nhoreltne nrena after this eeaeion of CengreH. The main objective of backers of the bill, he aaid, will be to complete hearings on the proposal this fall and obtain enactment by iCongreea next year. nie areas covered in tlie Mn, introduced last week, are Sleeping Bear Dunes, a 77.000-acre tract In Leelanau County, and Pictured Rod^, a 67,000-acre tract including 19,000 acre; in inland lakes, between Munising and Grand Marais. [Kelly Co. Gets Fix Job for Detroit Post Office I CHICAGO Ili-WilUam H. Kelly I Co. of Detroit has been awarded a S158.818 contract for masonry and roof repairs at the Detroit Ipont Office. I The award was announced by the General Services Administration. Yardney Gets Contracts NEW YORK (API - Yardney Electric Corp. says it has been awarded new contracts totaling more,than $1 million by the Navy' Bureau of Naval Weapons. TTie amount includes a $466,200 order for seawater batteries, a uempany spokesman said. Get set for vaeatioi at saviigi Biynowaidtliarcelf! OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 AAondoy through Saturday DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS Men’s knit shirts 1.44 Boys’cotton slacks Kir. 2-*5^ Seamfree nylons 'TiK'sr.i’r 3-‘2 Toddlers’ playwear 2-*3 Tots’, girls’ playwear 2-*3 Ruffled quilts 6.00 Women’s dresses 2.00 Misses’ sportswear 2-*5 Men’s washable slacks i7.00 Lingerie spectacular 2‘*3 No-iron curtain sale tw,—t'l-'iaHM*—, 1.00 Wnmon’e Hmccoe i.n •• i.n niuM. jmim’, flUlllwll W III VWWWW mlnM’. tall tbn wpm 5.00 Just sty 'CHARGE IT’ at Fidcral’t, taka ap ta 10 MONTHS ta payl Eserylhing ysi md for rslaxid oiliosr liviig... sow at Fadaral’s happy-go-liCky law tala prieat a. Buntinf inntrsprinf {Ildar a. AlaaiiBBai faldiaf abalia Aluminum & ttwl; vinyl Aluminum frama foidi OGO zip covert; pillow ormi. "tw flat. 5 potHiont. U b. Rfdwaad S*pe. tabla sat d. S'A* aaibralia I table cat 19“ c. S’ faldtaf aat bat baad*rcct Stu^ aluminum with mron 001 Big table, 2-benchet. .. Aluminum ui^erframe. Green 4 floral tilt-top OCGO unrbrelta, S' tieel table, dmU plaid c EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JULY 7. 1961 f ortfiac. Nearby Area Deaths • MM.TAVUIBnia_______ Jlre. nylor (Eva EdM) Ftatee. t of 36 a , dW W«te«h I at PonUac Geacral Itapital I o( a 7» 0(36 HI d& at Pc idowiDK 1 «n Honnaii Jr. and FMtnaiid. bedi o( Dealer. Mo., and David Natka of Saxton. Mo. Fantiac and Hoover Ammon jAicMn. Tenn.; a daughter. Ro-zonia Yarbrough, of Jackson, Tenn. aiM^a Bister. Floeder WiUis. also of Jackson. Services wiU be 11 a m. Monday at the William F. Davis Funerid Home, with burial in Oak Cemetery. Ms tether and mother Mr. awLand Mrs. Zelma Masters of Outo-n; and 10 IVIBVBV R. CMADVIN LAPEER - Service lor Harvey R. Chauvin, 43. of 559 Heenan Drive, will be at 3 p.m. Saiday in the Baird Funettd Home lot-lowed by burial tat Stiles Cemetmy. Mr. Chauvin died yesterday at Veterans Hotfiital, Ana Athor, for Reynold Beltler. 51. of 850 wife Wsn- Eade Lake Road, wiU be at 3 p.m. tomorrow « the C. F. Sher-FUneml Hotpe. Ortonville. followed by burial in Seymour Lake Hantooo Ftaneral Hqme. REYNOLD BETIUai BRANDCm TQWNSHIP-Servlre .Nelson, ail at home; his mothei Mrs. Anna Kenny of Sandlisky; a sister; and three stepbrothers. OEOROE R. GOCRI.AY . NOVI TOWNSHIP - Service for Cteorge R. Gouriay, 56, of 124| Northaven Rrad, will be at 1 p.m. | Monday at the Richardaon-Birdi Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Cremation will be at White Chapel Memorial Ometery, Troy. I Mr. Gouriay died today at his residence. Surviving Asides his wife Sarah a daughter, Georgina at home; a sister, a brother; and a grandson. IRA S- HtrUILANDiai KEEGO HARBOR-lra S. Huls-[ tender, 59. of 3337 Pridham Road, died yesterday at Pontiac General I- . I jf . • . I . Hospital after an illness of one One Of tww partners in a leading; Local funeral arrangements were m, « «t the C J ..... ^ . Mr tteitler died Wednesday at Murphy Ave.. died Thursday aC^is residence after a long illness. Pontiac General Hospital. He had surviving besides his parents Mr. been suffering from a heart ail- and Mrs. Henry Beitler am two ment for two weeks. daughters. Mrs. Helen Bendig of Mr. Niehaus was an employe of Ortonville, and Mrs. Beatrice Ken-General Motors Truck and Coach yon of Oarkston; a son. WilUam Division here, and tortneriy a of Westminister, Calif.; three sis-member of the VFW In Missouri, jiers, Mrs. Maitba Heart of Pon-SurViving are Ms wife Dorothy, tiac, Mrs. Edith Patrick of Qlfford Btenebs are two daughters. Mrs. Fred Bennett and Mn. BasU El-well. both of Pontiac; a brothar; and seven grandchildrea He was a member of Pontiac Lodge No, Hf FRAM. A Short Talk on Laos ROME (AP)-U.S. W. AvereU Harriman and Prince Norqdom Sihanouk id Cambodia had a XMntante talk about Laos today hut apparently nodiing sig- The Cag^ Sea, once a part of the ocean has become so diluted salt oontent is less of the Atlantic. WeDon'tWantWar, Says Soviet Depuly NEW YORK (AP)-Valerlati A. Zorin, deputy foreiRi minister nf the Soviet Onion, said Tlniraday “We ddn’t arant war and we don't believe the American people want war.’’ Zorin, head of hia country’s United Nations delegation, spoke briefly with newsmen on the Cu-nard liner Queen Elteabeth. which •ailed for channel ports with 2,077 m a leave and also to fake part in ihaarmament talks ached-to start there on July IT. John J. McCloy, special \dlaarm-it advioer to Preskfeht Kennedy, will repreaent the United were first admitted to Democratie primaries in Arkansas in m Zorin said he was going to Moo; GULBRANSEN ORGANS ot WitfRii Mtsie CmIm TWO DOCTORS ON DUTY ASSURE YOU , IMMEDIATE SERVICE “ 0« . EYE EXAMINATIONS FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS EYE GLASS REPAIRS PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER 103 N. Saginaw (acfon from Simms) fE J-0291 Hri. 9:30-5:30 Daily Mon. or Fri. Eve. ^ Apmt. A. A. Mila*. O.D. — P- C. Feteberg, O.O. Interment at Brandon Set Burial tor Play Agent Burial for WUliam J. Cornell. 33. oi Deteolt, wilt be tal Seymour Lake Ceactery following a ID a,m. service at Sf. Anne's Catholic Church. Ortonville. Mr. Cornell was suffocalEd along with his partner Wallace P. Prass. 33. in a fire in thdr aparimentl buiUing. The partnera ewaed Conwil A Pram Aswicteies of' Oetralt. wtileh kaadled pabHrity (or sev-e«l siiow plaeea hi the metro-politaa area, larladiac tie Mm-bert aad Rhtera ThMteni, Mo-I Uaited De- lifrT OjrifeTI^^p^^ hail man-! aged the Cass Theater and Music; Circle summer theater before en-, tering the pubfic relatkma busi-| ness. He is the son of Mr. and - Mrs, Horace R. Cornell of 3670' Seymour Lake Road, Brandon Township. Service and burial for Press will be in Bridgeville, Pa. The bodies will be at the R. G. aral G. R.| Harris Funeral Home, Detroit, un- j til 10 p.m. today. I Isn't That the Berries? RALEIGH. N. C. (UPn-North! Orolina Insurance Cjmnmisaioner Ch|rles F. GoldL who broke hi»| elbow picking blueberries July 4, discovered today he may not have aeddent Insurance. "THE SPECIAL DRIVES AND FEELS MUCH LIKE THE BIGGER kr mpoff* Molar rraod Atogoano, Fob., 1961 Says Motor Trand. .. has far more zip than a amallar compact ... at highway spaads tha car is firm, pracisa and yat has a maxinHim of the so-callad 'soft' rids." 'fCORD-BREAKING 85.4Y OFHaOWNERS RATE eiK SPECIAL ‘EXCELLENT’"' nperlt FepiJcw Atecftoiiki. Mordi, 1961 After a nationwide survey of Special owners, Popular Mechanics says, “no other American car has received an 'excellant* rating this high in recant years." •aeWego 45.4% wwitof. 13.5% OTwago, 3.r% poor. “BESTBUICK EVER BUILT’ After a month of testing a *61 Buick Invicta, Tom McCahill concludes: “Buick is • fan-tleman with dynamite in both fista . . . tracks like a race car.’* aa On# of tb« rtally fine things in" lift is living in a home of your own. Wt art ready to help you choose and finance a home that you can pay for while living in it.«« Letts show you how you can attain debt-free hpme ownership through small monthly payments, like rent Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. EnUiblUhed 1890 75 W. Huron St., Pontioc FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OF RUHDING 61 WINS TOP STYLE AWARD The American Institute of Decorators givas Buick its coveted award for “Distinguished car design and Its outstanding contribution to interior comfort." BUICK SPECIAL SWEEPS CLASS C INnGl$EIMIMrilUlllil2S.09MPG Places 1-2 among V-8 compact cars with automatic shift against America’s top economy drivers! "THE MOST WIDELY COPIED ENGINE IN THE NEXT 10 YEARS WILL BE BUICK’S SUPERB NEW ALUMINUM V-8” RIDE THE TIDE OF SUeem BUICK! SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY BUICK DEALER NOW . . . TOUR eUAUTT BUICK DKAUR IN rONTlAC U: OLIVER MOTOR SALES, INC.,-210 Orchard Uke Ave. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS After 8 Years GENERAL WAREHOUSE CO. Is Closing Its Doors FOREVER THOUSANDS OF DOLURS WORTH OF TOP QUALITY MERCHANDISE TO BE SACRIFICED AT COST OR BELOW, OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! EVERYTHING GOES! TOOLS Electric Drills - '/c”, Saws PowerSawsS”, S'/2”,r Sanders - AH Kinds Routers-BlnckS Decker Power Tools-All Types DeWaH Saws-2 Models Power Tool Accessories Tool Boxes Pipe Wrenches Jig Saws Bench Vises Screw Drivers Precision Tools Hammers Drill Bit^ Squares Sandpaper Auger Bits Rules Wrenches Chisels Hacksaws Hole Cutters Blades Levels THOUSAHDS OF OTHER ITEMS Fixtures For Sale Building For Sale or Rent All Sales Final-Hurry HOV5EWARES steam irons Toasters Coffee Makers Dishes Blankets Waffle Bakers Clocks Radios Clock Radios Portable Radios Vibrators Mixers Blenders Scales Heaters Fans Freezer Bags Can Openers Broilers Deep Fryers Popcorn Poppers Lawn Mowers Garden Tools Fertilizers Toys, Games Trains, DoRs THOUSAHDS OF OTHER ITEMS HARDWARE UGHTFinURES Paint, Brushes Etc. Sump Pumps Nuts, BoHs, Hails DahumidHiers Curtain Rods Cabinet Hardware Sponges, Mops Brooms, Squeegees Glues, Brads Lawn Chairs Bar-BJTs Seeders Clothasline Bedroom Lights-Bathroom Lights KRchen, Den Basement Lights Sockets, Bulbs Wire and Httings Boxes, ConnecL PinOpLights Flnorascents Staples, Plates SiartsrSiSwHehas Reeaptadas, Plugs Fisas, Lairteins THOUSANDS OF OTHER ITEMS General Warehouse Co. SUNDAY I lAI 10 30 AM General W( 2p^ 2258 Dixie Highway house Co. D »• AA- U* Pontiac, Michigan 9amto^pm 2PM I nignway Konnac, /viichigan to ^PM Plenty Of Free Parking Tools Hardware Electrical Paint light Futures Etc. Pontiac's Finest Selection AUTOMOTIVE rum. Nun. um. Hui tMo, whm. Wum,wuEt,eMt,iHnnL,Mi NO ITEMS HELD BACK Ah autonwllc baseball umpii^elto have perfect Jadgment of balls u been, invented. It la claimed ai^ strikes. j PRICES! Lifiag Siitei Duiai Imb Siitoi ItdiQOM Suites 6u uid Eltcirie lauf ti DiuuttM WAshers — Irouers leirifmttn Occusioul Chuin Oiiice Funiture And Many Otiiei Iteau FURNITURf SALES J Milt EmI of Auburn NtifhU 3345 Auburn Rd. (M-59) “yon Alwar* *njr lot Loti al L and S" »-• MON. Ikra MAT_TUI. lU »—»B UL 2-3300 LOW IN OUR TRADE-IN DEPT. ^ Foreign Trouble May Help Bill Sen. Fulbright Reports Rusk's Arguments for . Aid Program THE PONTIAC PKESS, FRIDAV, JUI.Y 7, NINE Real Values WASHINGTON, (AP)-Sen. W. Fuibright, D-Ark., gays.men-{acing conditions in Beriin, 'and C\iba have enhanced chances congressional approval I President Kennedy’s foreign aid 'program. Fulbright said Secretary of bean Rusk made-an-eacel-jlent presentation of these condi-Itlons Thursday in a athree-hour closed session of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. iM^'iBethlehem Reports Dip in Steel Work NEW YORK tffi-Belhlehem Steel!" Co. experienced a slight dip in I, production and employ-! ivur lu UK) ulu. , |iiu-iu since the beginning jof June; Rusk told newsmen after testi-[*>uL?Xpects *e upward trend to fji^ that ’‘tfwflf next fall, will be adjustments made in the it e h t«M* that menacing conditions around the world made visable to slash the $4.8 billion program. "TtM pressures to approve it will be very great,I\ilbright said. "The country is nervous about the outlook and the critica'l atmosphere will resolve doubts in favor of tee. "But," he said, “we hope to -get a good bill out." The committee today begins to write the version of the foreign aid bill it will present to the full Senate. The company’K employe pu eatlon, Bethlehem Review, ported that for the flnt I months of this year employment, prfidurtioit and orders rose. The dips were attributed to the| uutomobile industry's preparations to dose down for model change-joyers and vacation shutdowns in many steel-consuming industries. HOSPITAL-SURGICAL y . , INSURANCE FOR PIOPLI 85 YEARS OR UNDER NEW VACmnil CtEANEI 2 Yaar Cuarantok Froo Sorvico—Ro(. S^\y5 $19.95 for July Ooly ^ Revel Distributors FE 4-4240 WOMLN IS-W INCL. * W*. WOMCH ISOS INOL. V -V,. *2“ fMILDBKJI HNDBH M« VOMEV «»«S IXCL—• ai.. u TKASS OLD W oto. OLD EQUITY LIFE INSURANCE CO.- - WKITK TO P, 0. BOX Mil—DETBOIT U. MICH Pl.*» IsralM ..Mplel. I.r.rm.llis OlU tow (Mt piM. Psta AM ASareito • . z«s. suto 4 SLACK SPEQAL! Don’t a cent more for your easy-care slacks! 1 -e" FOR Jliiiik alxMii ill (fu gel nui oiir, Imt two pairs of rich-loukiiig slacks for a IViim-y low price of only $7. They’re * all a cool hleiid of Arnel* triacetate and rayon ima^wide ranjje of plain and fancy weaves . . . tailored in the pleated model with • ontiiniotis wai>l and, nylon and cotton pocketing'n’trim. No wa.nhday prohlems.. . . these handsome slacks machine wash and dry, need little prcs.sing, if anv. Pick from charcoal, hrown, blue, gray, tan, olive. Waist sizes 30 to 42. Cuffed inscams 29 to 34. f r GET EASY-CARE SUCKS Hicli l.Ien.l Da. roil* ]»olye-|rr 'n' rayon Irop-i top rnlor.s in men's vtai^t sizes 30 to 121 Save on Tropical SUCKS 11 Hctter «piality men's slacks in fine tropical blends. They are was\i aiid wear, «asy-care and need little or no ironing. Get the popular pleated front in 5 of the mod wanted colors. -Men’s #izei 30 to 42. PENNEY’S - DOWNTOWN Op*n Evory Mon., Frl. 9:30 A.M. to 9KX) 9.M. All Olftor WMkdoyo 9:30 kM. to 5:30 PM, PENNEY’S-MIRACLE MILE Opon Ivory Wockdoy—Monolay Throwfh Sotwrrfoy lOKM A JA. to 9:00 9JA. \. TEX THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JULY ^ UNCLE i! JOHN is :c-ing! Global War HAS Berome m ErankciMtein flacArlur's Assertion Was Accurate ir B.T raiL NEWSOM Nm |tary figures eliose published oirs have sought to gu^ historians of the future. HEAPQUARTERS for RCA COLOR TV New Crater Elratrraics MIM »»i TV B»Sl» rK\SMn Osra D*IIT T TMb writer »i lesiMiirfeat la Tokro la IMl aad iajr whea In Manila this week. General of ithe Army Douglas MacArthur took itime out from a sentimental I .journey to voice what he called [_ia “basic principle. He -said: "A great aatioa that eaters i •*“* *** apoa war tad does aot see H ! ■•■ *• • bo Ihraagh to victary mast ulH- »• Fraaehco. malety suffer all the eoase- MacArthur was a controversial qaeares of defeat.” figure then, and there were thoae Since his recall by President »-ho applauded and Tfmnan from the t^rean War demned theater lii virtual disgrace in 1951. the general has sought to establish in history the correttncss of stand. rrs HIS PKfvii>xiK And in this he surely has the it was his contention then and anti-communist nation to accept-ace of neutrality. A new crisis builds over Berlin. ■troof pooltloa oaoo I to Invite slmltor dio- MacArthur saw the “ct quencea of defeat” for a great nation which JaUed to drive through to victory in war. The same remilU can come from his quarrel' with the President of the United States a ___his demand that United Nalioos |< ids foits's in Korea be allowed strike the Red Chinese.inside their ywi I PrA/lil privileged sanctuary” beyond the f|YvJ MUClBni Lr6Qll Blank Paper Brings Yalu River. NEW LOCATION BROWNIE’S MILT > A.M. I r.M. Htrdwiie • Viriety SUNDAY 952 JOSLYN TtL FE 4-6105 9-2 P.M. COMPLETE LINE PLUMBING ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES B. P. S. PAINT and SUPPLIES WINDOW GLASS CUT ANY SIZE ALMINUM WINDOWS REPAIRED Sanders - Polish'en - Steomen VARIETY MERCHANDISE COMPLETE LINE of INFANT and CHILDREN'S CLOTHING SKIL ELECTRIC DRILL "jf'' $10.77 When he addressed the Philippines congress this week, he was haiidiig back again to the war in Kor^ 'Then, spaiming 10 years of the cold war.i and speaking of the de-velopinent of nuclear weapons, he said: Relative strengths from now on will probably change little with the years. Action by one will promptly be matched by .reaction from the other . . . global war lias become a Frankenstein to destroy both sides.'' About the general’s military views as they pertain to Korea there were grounds for controversy. Is no CENESEO. N.Y. (UPD - A math student at the New York State Unlversily College of Education here turned In the follow-per: '*Tbe DeveloiKnent of a K ematical Oonc^. Relating , to tile Differentiation td Inverse Trigonometric Function — a discussion and progressive, extensive treatment of aU that I know of the implicative significance lamina elements." - ★ * * ' Inside were three blank pages. Mathenutics instructors called the paper a concrete demonstration of an “empty set” and gave the student extra credit. Armco Corp. Calls In AU Laid-Off Workers MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP>-The Armco Steel Corp., announced that] all employes furloughed during the recession, earlier this year have been called back to work. A total of 1,164 men were furlough status at one period, ) cording to Don S. Holstein, manag-| er of Armco’s Middleiou-n works. | There ! troveray over Ms siwerthm that ; glohal war ha» become a Fras-i kenotein. Attempts to avoid such a catas-troi^ fill tody's news columns , , . a summit meeiing Vi iconferences on Berlin, on Laos, on |di.sarmameiil;______ THKV’SK yWJLKSS I In all there is a scns«* of same l NEW YORK (API — Emerson ness based on futility, cndlesslRadio ft Phonograph Corp. report-jnegntiations over is.sues which ed June orders of television and, jnelther are resolved nor dissolved.[radio sets wvre the highest fori j In Laos, the West retreats from I any June in the piist seven years. I :an attempt to create a strong!The figures were not disclosed. TV, Radio Orders Up Your Headquarters for GARDEN REDWOOD 48" ROUIID BEDWOOD TABLE and 2 BENCHES 40 90 REDWOOD TABLE and 2 BENCHES Staisid and K.D. 6 ft. «U 2" Tki^ * M0it COMfOiTf USE MDLTLPDIPOSE BURKE LUMBER 449S Dixie Hwy. 0^ Doily t-5:30 OR 3-1211 8.4 — Cloied Sondoy FAMOUS 13-PC. KEYSTONE ELECTRIC EYE MOVIE OUTHT... ' *119” bat lifM meter for tekina pictures bi celor er btock end white. Icuy to use prelector end every necessary accessory is included in this fobuleus effori NO MONEY DOWN f iiiithod Pkture In 10 SoccmmIs NEWPeUiROtt Euemc EYE CAMERA fotitlle^ ‘ lasiii tfi'ft <«N^at|r| A50 DOWN |i| BUILT S 19 50 McClellan Attacks Proposal by Hoffa FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPH — Sen. John McClellan, the Demo-| cratic racket buster from Arkan-| I, branded Teamster boss Jim-j my Hoffa’s proposed federation of| s as an “internal danger of alarming proportions" and urged antitrust controls. AT PhaMax SPANIARD WINS ^ Antonio de Cyarzabel y Marchesi of Madrid, young Spanish diplomat, and his bride, the former Beatrice Anna Cabot Lo^, potw after their marriage at Saint Brigid's Church in Peapack, N.J. The bride is the daughter of former U.S. ambassador to Spain, John Davis Lodge. The bridegroom wears uniform of the Spanish diplomatic corps. It's Done This Way but I Can't Tell You McClellan spoke Thursday ' to the 7*lh annual convention of the State Bar of Texas. SizzHH NdVaiMt CmI McOeilan, an old foe of Hoffa, said that Congress should place controls on unions simi\^ to the antitrust laws that govern business. We certainly cannot permit power to repose in one man to Call I nationwide strikes that would paralyze commerce and industry and affect the people, the health and^ security of the nation," McClellan said. Japan became the fifth largest steel ptoducing nation in 1959, placing France. Fit. SAT. WON. By NOWVtAN CORDELL ATLANTIC cmr. N. J, (AP) A hunch of magicians told me the inside story today: There’s trick to what they do. I I felt like ■ an American spy 'turned kmse In Khrushchev’s private files. Some 500 members of the International Brotherhood of Magi-jcians are bolding their convention here—and revealing secreU of their arts left and right to one another. And to anybody else who happens . to be around. I even found out how to cut off a woman's head with a genuine buzz saw—and restore it in good condition, of course. ’The head, that is. You see, it's done this way— ut I can’t tell. Sworn to secrecy, you know. However, if you’re Teally dying to find out how to make a worn-lose bet head, try reading. 'Listen, a magician's most closely guarded secrets are a able in any public library,” said one magician. “They always have been. Where do you think I got most of my act?" Besides, the secret is only part [ the effect,, he added. Even lore important is the performer's skiU. Ask yeur dstitr sbeut ■ rssl eeel sxtre-eest ofrtton-^evroltt atr condRIonlnB. SWIM SUITS 1.99, 99^ 1.99 Yes, ^ can tell the amateur,’’ said Okito. a specialist in oriental masic w ho has been a performer for 55 years. "The master's touch just isn’t there." Okito, whose teal name Ts Theodore Bamberg and who lives in Chicago, is descended from a fan^ of magtcians that Teacfaet bad( seven generations, to the early l7th century. And an eighth generatiod aP ready is performing in the per-of Okito's son, Fu Mancha, alias David Bamberg. TTie easiest people to mystify, said Okito, are brilliant ones. ’’They are more apt to think logically. which plays right into a magician’s hands,” he said. New Bible Sells Fast LONDON (AP)-Sales throughout the world of the new translation of the New Testament of the BiUe, published last March, have passed 2.5 million, the Joint pub-lishera, the Oxford and Cambridge presses announced Thursday. They said orders for thousands of copies are still being received daily. 99c«mf3-lf SNORTS 49* B«ys'-6irU’ SHIRTS 88* TOTT1**« I MINIUITS I SUMMER DRESSES © Scoop up on armful of thoio cool booutiei. Sunbocki, thoothi, otc. Junior' 5 »o 15; Mi.ioi' 8 to 20, largo sizoi 38 to 52. * SJ9SMbMkl44lrtMM. 3J9 * lURRnNl JsrsnirMMi..tU9 * 1199 llaofcEysMs 1944... ttJ9 Impala Omcerttblt Wonderfvl tray to Utko o^hantato «/ iki weather—and your dealer't summer earinge. REPEATED by POPULAR DEMAND Summertime-and the saviri is easy! It’ll pay you plenty to pad over to your ’Chevrolet dealer’s One-Stop Shopping Cent4 and get in on all the excitement there. Because Jet-smooth Chevrolets are outselling every other make of car, he’s able to turn on the savings like nobody else in town. Have him fit you with an elegant Impala, a popular Bel Air or a budget-wise Biscayne. Or maybe with one of those six sweet-going, cargo-craving Chevy wagons. Just bring along your desire to own a lot of car at an easy-to-own price. Chevy and your j i, | j Chevrolet dealer will look after the rest nicely, thank you. j0t-SIIlOOtll V>fJl0VrOl6t ChmytkrnwMmmCkACompo Sav^a-bundle buys on Corvurs, too! The climate couldn’t be better for getting into one of these agile Chevy Coryairs. For the time’s come to save a bundle on the car that’s a bundle of fun. Yessirree, juicy July buys on the Monzas with their family-style sports-car spirit... on the nimble, nickel-nursing Corvair 500’s and 700’s... on th? 6-passenger Lakewoods with their winning, wagonly ways... and, of course, on those able-bodied Green-Inier Sports Wagons that give you up to twice the space of regular wagons. Need more be said? Your Chevrolet dealer is the man to talk to. See the new ChemUts at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer't One-Stop Shopping Center. MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. 631 OAKiAND ot CASS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN SPECIAL PURCHASE from famous maker latest style SWIM SUITS vsualli *1445 to >19,95 (A terrific group of famous maker swim suits at fabulous savings. Choose solids or patterns, lastex or cotton in the most wonted styles and colors. Sizes 32*46. JUST SAY FE 5-416] GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE PtaPAMCINQ 74 N, SAOINAW ST, Notw HURON "v V •!' ',{■ fits RID STAMPS 1’^ •i TWELVE ‘ I- ' ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JULY 7, 1961 Many State Cities Proud of Their Master Planning I Note: fuiat MKhKM c hote well de«to|ierpioenint‘ h»ve a blueprint lor mrttu vueh or* rerxcud hithoir the next 30 years el community i oM-kcpi aiSnioM oiH mldoalto] orMo I pteTof S.’l^iai****""*** *”**" **' I Ottun But the planners who draw upi By NOMKR DOBBY master plans and other civic de- Writtea lor the AP signs usually don't speak so posi- Many Michigan ciUes are proud; lively about their brain children, possessora oi new master plans.‘They refer to them as “guides." ^ »• «tve the the cost ol naany thousands of dol-i |h,«„i„|ob «tet the itrccta and Minnesota Ends Probe on Riders No Public Report Due on Mississippi Action Until Filed i tied oat la all details by the foUowinc geaenitloa. FtexIMlity la stressed. If historj' supplies any trend lor fhc future, they have tittle to wwry about ^being taken too literally. Iii many instances, city plans gel .such flexible treatment that hardly is the ink dry before deviations have made the plans, unrecognizable. HJNT l.>i K-XA.MrLK Hint is a case in point. Knslest-grow’ing city in the state at the time, Hint adopted a master plan to guide its dwelopment In l!n7. followed It fairly closely in thei early 1920s, hut before some of the j main points could be put into ef-| fet*t shelved the plan for lack of; interest and money. Even more than the physical commercial uses of land In thej midst of a residential mne. | Benton Harbor, according to one top oQicial, for years was sloppy in its approach to zoning, but hm tightened up considerabiy. IN GRAND HAVEN | City Manager R,. V. Terrill , of .Grand Haven says most cities have done a bad job in planning for their growth. He believes the sufaurtts; with plenty of ex-' periance of the cities to profit by.i are doing-no better. Most growing townships now have zoning ordinances, but,very; few are doing aiiy advance planning for the tremendous growth; that, according to the experts, will hit them in the 1960s. i Here and there, Michigan has Nonie cmmly and regional plan- Kalamnsoo ^wonties and a trt-ceunty area cealering oa Laa- athMyi. are actively preparing themselvep to be eUgtble. New aid-to-depresaed areas leg-talation is exposed to apark new planning activity. _ . . „ Planning Is not new to swne Tbey conduct generalized uea-communiHes. even the smaller wide studies and sometimes serve cities, and federal assistance was sinali conununities without plan-not required for them to ning services of their own. | benefits. Adrian, for example, has for its For the most part, these have as I yet to beoome coordinators among the varioiu local plaririlng efforts. Ilea are eltiier mtag aaek grants or are having their appMentiena park and reemtion facilities will be ready when its people work s 30-hour week and have a lot of leisure time to enjoy them. Jet Passengers to See | Latest Motion Pictures NEW YORk (AP) - In a few days, jet airliner passengers get to lee the latest motion pictures without extra cost. Screenings during the transcontinental! A boon to communities under;ter, sewer, industrial she. airport. ^ 50.000 population are planning off-street parking and other ncedsjTrans World Airlines on July 19. grants of the federal governntbnt.jof future years. j * ★ a Kpown as "TOr grants, they' ♦ * | similar showings wUI be start- match the expenditures of small i Traverse City has an ambitious.ed on transatlantic (lights in Au-citles. urban townships and small pi-ogram of Irpprbycmcnts based gust. Equipment tor the aeiial i-ountics for planning of long-range on a searching look'at itself. j theaters was developed by In- developments. St. Joseph is planning so Its! (light Motion Pictures, Inc. Surgory Do«|n't Mend ^ Ex-GI's Criminal Life SACRAMB!NTO. Calif, (AP)-Doctors had hoped brain Burgery would end the criminal life of a former Army officer Injured in Kwean War combat. Sr * Victor Hunferford. 40. once a major decoral lunfert ___.______jrated for bravery, was held for bad check charges in 19fi8. Phystcims (heocizetU that Hungerford's criminal behavior stemmed from the Injuries. He' was paroled in April I960 following the operation. * * * \ Thuraday Hungerford mm returned to state cuatody. He was held Id San fYandtco- f Famous ADAa STRAWS TiE899«l*r-*2” TUXEDO RENTALS — LOW WEDDING f RICES CONN’S CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw XORGE REFRIGERATOR NO MONEY DOWN S-P-E-E-D-Y 'TV SERVICE REPAIR TRUCKS RADIO DISPATCHED FE 4-1133 SWEET’S RADIO and APPLIAI¥€E Fridoy 'til 9 p.m. FREE PARKING 422 WoBt Huran Street FE 4-1133 BIG 4 HARDWARES JULY CLEARAIKE! Limited Quontities... Just a Few of Each Kind-Broken Lots-Out They Go! at TOM'S HARDWARE only REG. ITEM SALE 29.95 Shetlaad Twia Brasli Floor PoHslior . 22.11 2.49 2-PUyer Bidaiiatoa Set ..............99 SPECIAL — WATER SKIS 14.95 2.29 Redwood Rose Trellis................LSI 12.95 Hip-Waders — Special ........ .....8.88 KOTON HOUSE PAINT Ont WMk Only $7.95 Gol. White ond Colon NOW $5.88 .19 10-Qt. Galvanised Pill........ ....59 41.75 26" Boy's or Girl's Bike......... 31.81 12;95 Pint Rasemaa'i Mitt .................6.99 9.95 Pielder's Glove or Catcher's Mitt ...5.99 5.95 Zepce Spiaaing Reel .................4.44 Reg. to 1.95 Spiaaiag Rods or Casting Reds ... 4.99 8.95 3-Gal. Piessaie Tank Sprayer .........6.11 24.95 Redwood Folding Tahle with Beaches . 17.99 16.95 5-Ft. Magnesian Step Ladder.........12.18 (NEW) 129.95, Oae only, used Go-Cart hyTardnaa......... ..................6C.0C 2.19 Tackle Res with Tuy 1.66 8.95 4-Player ladniaton Set. Cenplete . . .3.69 RIDING TRACTORS with ACCESSORIES We stock the biggest name brands in the industry, tig tr»de-in allowences now . . . terras to suit your budget! TOM'S HARDWARE 90S OrchaM Late Ava. FE 5-2424 at KEEGO HARBOR No. 1 REG. ITEM SALE 39.95 Window Fan .....................23.11 44.95 Window Fan . . . . . . . v . ...29.61 59.95 Floor Fan . . . .........>. . . .39.95 124.50 Jacobsen Reel Mower ___ _______ .99.50 169.95 Jacobsen Rotary Mower......... .149.50 119.00 1 Only—Roto Tiller, Used 75.00 29.95 1 Only—Presto Conner ..... .....20.00 SPECIAL 14.95 Presto Cooker 7,95 . 16.95 Black G Decker Drill .12.88 19.95 K Snnbeam Sprinkler ...8.95 2.79 14" GriU ...1,79 14.75 Ice Cream Freeser .11.11 1.39 29-Fc. Picnic Set ... .11 29.95 Chaise Unnge ...19.95 19.95 Matching Chair ...11.95 SPECIAL 10.25 Croquet Sot, 6 Boll ...... 7 7.88 4.95 Bool CnihiMU .U..2.95 1.90 26x40 Sapor Siii Mol ...2.97 190'x% Troatod Anchor Bopo . . .5.95 59'x¥i Troatod Anchor lope ....2.95^ KEEGO HARBOR No. 1 3041 Orchoiri Lake Rd. 682-2660 A at McGIBBEN & CHILD'S REG. ITEM SALE 3.95 60-Ft. Seanlou Hose Vi-ia. Dianeter . .2.99 12.95 HipWadm.wonderfnlbny!........1.18 3.95 Marine Distress Signal Kit...2.11 .79 Cotton Clethesliae—50 Ft.......62 SPECIAL — Plastic Badminton Birds .. 3 lor .44 1.98 Grass Whips—Long Handle......l.fS 14.95 Alnminnm Chaise Lonago ..... 9.99 PAINT CLOSE-OUT SUPER KEM-TONE Gol. 2.99 Quorf 1.19 11.95 Stainless Steel Flint KITCHEN TOOL SET Special 7.88 JULY UWN MOWER SPECIAL 30" 3 H P. Briggs Engine — Cast Alurninura Housing. 3 Blade Rotary . . . Wonderful Buy! log. 119.95 HOW 79.95 USED OUTBOARD MOTORS 25 NERCUIT...... itS.OO • IS EP. ewraUDB............179J0 • 16 &p: ILIC. STARTIHG with COHTROLS 17166 • TVi &P.FIRBST01R ........ 3S.66 • 7VS H.P.SEAKIH6.............4106 McKIBBEN & CHILD'S 1576 Union Lake Rd. EM 3-3S01 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1961 THIRTEEN KENDALE snnno Open Sai, VniU 1;00 During July and Augmt UAW Interprets Seniority Ruling DETROIT tfl-The UhttcoMununities.” Judge Kaess’ decision came In an action brought by five UAW Local 800 members against their employer, the Gemmer Manufac-tiffing Co., a division of the Roes Gear k ToM Co. ' Kea Morris, UAW Regie* 1 eodireetar, said the reUag by Judge Fred W. Kaeso gives workers a vested right ia oQBtract Is terralBated. Morris said the ruling means "emplojyrs now must reato they do not live in a social vacuum, that their decisions to close and Yuri Will Visit Britain Shortly, Russians Claim 265 Dead anTd 1,251 Hurt in Japoneiw Storm LONDON (UPI) — Toss News Agency surprised both British and Soviet officials in London today with the announcement that astronaut Yurt Gagarin wilt visit TOKYO (AP)—The goveouhent has announced that torrential rains last wwk in Western and Central Honshu resulted in death for 285 persons and injuries to 1,251. Eighty-seven personr are missing. An official report listed damage from floods and landslides triggered by the rains at $422 million. Disaster relief laws were put into effect in 13 prefectures (states).! as we know here, he has not heitn invited to coroe by Her Majesty’s government.” Tass said Gagarin was invited by a British firm which is cooperating with the Russians in producing the trade fair. Rain Does Two Things: One Canals the Other Tass said Gagarin would make is first trip to the West in connection with the Soviet Industrial exhibition u(hich opened today and runs through July 29. It Ad aot give a specUie date but the Cuban regime of Fidd Castro Is expeetiug him In Ha-vaaa July 24. A Briti^ Foreign Office spokesman said there had as yet been no [application lor a visa and "as far' 'Russian Trawlers Sub Map U. 5. Coast’ MISSOULA, Mont. (AP)-Eight smokejumpers were dispatched from Missoula Thursday to fight two fires reported on the Nex Perce National Forest in Idaho. Fred me, regional fire dispatcher, said the men ran into rain so heavy they cbuldn't jump. This was all right, however, as the Sbme rain had extinguished BOSTON (UPI)-The Soviets are mapping the New England eoastal waters in detafl through their trawler fled and a sab-g to aNop Navy ofScer. VIee Adm. John T. Hayward ras HkeJy that <*It is «mcaH for the Uidled this sort.” he said. “Remember that historieaUy wo are the rharopions of freedom of the seas and a great deal of this work can be done In international waters.” Marathon Gasolines STOP HOT-WEATHER STALLING Nothing is more embarrassing! You stop for a red light, it changes to green. You step on the accelerator. And the engine stalls. You press the starter hard. It grinds away. The gas gauge shows half a tank. Horns begin to blow. A traffic cop walks over. You get out. Lift the hood. Wonder what’s wrong. Trouble like this doesn’t have to happen to you this sumnwr. Marathon gasolines are power-processed for Midwest summers Marathon SUPER-M® and MILE-maker* gasolines are power-processed to help end hot-weather stalling. Laboratory controls provide gasolines that guard your engine against choking and strangling caused by vapor lock. These Marathon gasolines are also sdentifically filtered to dean out engine-stalling bits of dirt that can clog fuel systems. This summer, make it Marathon, for gasolines that are all go ’til the last drop’s gone. MARATHON goes farther to make friends lie f SMLE LaUAHWaiBBUIliMW Special Sale cf Swivel Rockers Juil wondvdul for that occoiionol choir ipot in your living High quality Nylon Friaz* upholstering—your choka of four colort. Cushioned with Foom Rubber. Selection limtSed to stock cm heMd Jubied to prior eoie. le hare riy. SS9.00 comparable value. Sola priced at.. Many ethwr chairs and reckars to choaea from Solo isrkod new from $29.9S *46” 6-Piece Genuine Walnut Bedreem Danish Mcnfern Styling. Hand rubbed oiled finish for' beauty and durobility. Simmons new quilt top eCAUTYREST mattress ond box spring included nd«C' complete at only...................... *298 u nsr • FrumuA Mulu Olptt Mbror • C^ • tprbife tm Mofeh COMPLETE SIX PIECE DELUXr TWIN BEDaumT • Two Ooitubw Unwd Oak Solid Pcmol Twin Nm tods • Two Sort* tnnonpriHg Mottroeeos o Two Motchhsa lofto Sox Spring* VAIUI- CUAtANCI PRICiD NOW AT- $14900 Save $40.00 TABLE and FLCKIR LAMPS Entire stock of table and floor lamps at droiticolly reduced prices for quick clearance. Save now on many exclusive nationally advertised mokes—some low as— ^4 95 You always got moro for your money at MILLER’S MORE QUALITY! . MORE STYLE! MORE VALUE! Our lower overhead saves you dollarsi Top Quality Plate Glass MIRRORS........ $ 498 Adjustable Steel Hollywood C |WQC BtD FRAMES . . ..........’ 6* End—Coffee and Lamp TABLES............ Full Size Floor Sample SIMMONS BED........ $36.00 CAjll CHEST OF DRAWERS......*24 $39.00 Floor Sample Serto CA ARR Innerspring MATTRE8S... .*24** $69.00 Genuine Walnut MAM Twin Size BOOKCASE BED. .*39 With Headboard wjiMiMl Cemplete HOLLYWOOD BED.T44 FURNITURI •reinMTms. «4o*i»4*«. CiMtflWelAfiMMMt A' FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JULY 7, 1061 Td.glob« Fme$t Qunlity ^ Carpets MrLEOD CARPETS mOBVAW a*. a«VAU LAU ■». NEW YOKK (AP)-lra Kunen. gineer, haa b^«i nuned wwcuttve vice pmident oC P'U'- TV System. Inc.^ of Now York. Telesiobe It experimentiac with a motoring and billing aystom of pay Recoming an Itsug in Politics Big Business Keeps Getting Bigger By MM DAWfKW Ibignoai fit big buainen It aet to play a, larger rola la the Ameri-- The iacreaatng'can economy i ' HAVE YOU SEEN JAYNO HEIGHTS Fabulous Models at featured on TV Channel 4 Builders Showmse. Completely Furnished Br Our Guests Choice lakefront and lake privilege sites available. OPEN DAILY A-8 SAT. 2-6 SUNDAY 1-8 Dtrectieaa; Diafe Bwy. U Silver Lake Bd. ta Walton, kft The miSEHVRSr’ 4 Bedroom ranch with full basement. The «FL^/R!’ Daringly modem with old-fashioned comfort. Special featui^ galore. The ^‘GREENBRIAW’ Unique advanced features — lavish beyond all comparison. AU Completely Equipped with FKIGIDAIBB KITCHENS your life. And it may soon become a larger iaaue In -politics. The govemmem iarif 1% enlarging Ita role in butlnesa-mbre public housing, sharply increased government construction, a drive tor more govemment-sponaored utilities, larger contributions to mdny facets of personal income such as Social Security and Jobless relief programs, programs to cut interest rates and increase private borrowing, a NEW BUSlNEtM 8VRC1E Private business is getting ready for what it confidently hopes will be a new surge forward —perhaps this tell, perhaps next spring. And usually that means that the big get bigger. Even dur-recamion the largest corporations, as a whole, made creditable showings in sales, earnings |id assets. And in the past decade the growth of the biggest has been 377 S. Telegraph F,,.. Bateman Reaity fe 4-0528-s-7i6i| In a study of the 100 largest nonfinandal corporations First National Oty Bank of New York. imlflts find M wifii assets of one billion dollars or more, compared with 22 in ISSO. In the 1950a nae with assets of more than |2 iUkNk nhe from 9 to 20.'" WWW Assets accounted include land, iant, equipment and current cadi, government securities, receivables and inventories. Combined the 100 largest were worth UTS billion, had total sales and revenues last year of |135 billion, paid federal income taxes of I6-4 billkm, and employed 5.8 in men and women. ItJ MHXION 8HAREHOLDEB8 Their registered shareholders totaled 12.5 million, although this includes duplication by thooe ing shares in more than one pany. The 100 paid out 16 b in dividends, an average of $2 a jare. w ★ ★ In the bilUon-dollar asset group are 28 manufacturers, 1 retail trade chain, 9 transportation com-pq^ and 16 utilities. The top nve in assets among the nonfinan- cial corporationa are American Telephone A Telegraph, Jersey Standard Oil, General Motors. U.S. Steel and Ford Motors. ♦ A * The top five in sales were GM, Jersey Standard, ATAT, Ford, and AAP. The top five In earnings were ATAT, GM, Jersey Standard, Ford and Texaco. Noting exineased worries lest Washington start taking a less favorable view of the bigness of big business, the bank economists list some of the ways that big business Is s help to government endeavors. ADD UP TAXES First comes tax paying. Adding federal, state, local and foreign taxeq paid and charged as costs, "D largest aheUed out |8-8 in 1960. They also collected for the government some IT billion in excise or sales taxes, paid 11.3 billion to old age pension and unemployment taxes, withheld about |1 billion from employes for old age pension taxes and |4 bll-IkMi for Income taxes. A A *, I But big business, say the bank] economists, also is Increasingly helping to vocational training, to-j eluding some retraining programs for workers displaced by automa-| tion or other economic changes. | Business spends more each yev on research and development programs, both on its own and to «rilaboratk>n with the government. Total such expenditures to industry to 1960 are put at 19.8 bUlion. I And many of the lOO largest] broad, which the bank econo-t mists 'say have more plus thanj minus signs to aidtog our^foreign' NEISNER’S FR1.S SAT. ONLY! AU THESE SHOES • AUOaUi’illMlt PmsSlniM ' • AU Wobmb’s Meydwwb Straw Hall DIRECTORS Irving B. Babcock CoBssllaal WakMM Cerperatioa Louis H. Cole fares ImMii Robert R. Eidred Execadvc Flee Presidest Commmaitr national taak at Poaliac Harold A. Fitzgerald PsUisker. The Poatiae Pteis Alfred C. Girard Preiidesl end Ckeiraon of the Board Ceaaaaify national Bank of Poatiae Alfred R. Glancy, Jr. Prosidoat. A,. A. Glaacy, Inc. Howard W. Huttenlocher H, W. Hsttenlecker Ageacy Harry M. Pryale Chairman of the Board Baldwin Rubber Company NalioBial 1 Bank Pontiac, Michigan Pontiac Advisory Gimmittee EDWARD r. BARRETT JAMES A CORWIN DAVID B. EAMES ROBERT M. GLENN GLENN a. GRIFFIN B. CURTIS MATTHEWS RALPH T. NORVELL ROBERT S. NELSON FREDERICK J. POOU STATEMENT OF CONDITION as of Close of Business June 30, 1961 RESOURCES Cash and Due from Banka ........................... $13,701,669.19 United States Government Obligations .!........... 30j015jl07^ I 43,716,776.69 State and Municipal Securities................ .. 20,538,683.01 Other Securities ......................................................... 207,051.48 iioana and Discounts ... ............ 20,185396.14 ^ Real Estate Ixtans................................ 18,292,944.86 38,478,841.00 Accrued Interest .......................................................... 701,489.61 Rank Properties and Equipment ............................................ 2,504,047.59 Other Assets ............................................................... 137,131.71 TOTAL RESOURCES .................................................... 106,284,021.09 LIABILITIES Deposits: Demand ..................................... $49,070,994.51 Savings and Time................................. 45,351,420.93 U.S. Government .................................. 1,402,127.90 Total Deposits .................................... $ 95,824,543.34 Unearned Interest........................................................ 1,516,839.19 Accrued Expenses and Other Liabilities...................................... 629,436.06 Reserve for IxMin Contingencies ............................................ 672,651.47 Capital Stock, Common ................................ 2,900,000:00 Surplus .............................................. 3,000,000.00 Undivided Profits ................................ ' 751,413.85 General Reserve ...................................... 989,137.18 7,640,551.03 TOTAL LIABILITIES .................................................. 106,284,021.09 umted StotM Gavernneat SecuriUM ta the unauiit of SMn41SA7 Book Valae. ta the forcffotaf •totement are pledged to Meure Federal sad Btote Geverameat I for ather parpeoes required by tow. TEN BRANCH OFFICE LOCATIONS • W. HURON STREET • N. PERRY STREET • KEEGO HARBOR • WALLED LAKE • MILFORD • UNION LAKE • LAKE ORION • BLOOMFIELD HILLS • WATERFORD • ROMEO Member F.D.I.C. COLONUU. LMBER • 7as Gat friendly and Conrtaou Sanrke*' 'YOUR' 2x4-li Kill Diiod nUlily Crodt ^ STUDS ~ 39* Acoustical-Ceiling PAGOHaTiGQi-veiimg TILE ~-10‘ FIR PLYWOOD '/4"x4x8 . . . .*9™ Per Sheet L PLYWOOD hill:"”'.....»4»5 ....»6« ,, _ ___ch a (eeod 2 tidetl SHEETROCK >/."x4x8_*1®* W'x4x8...1*r 99* ROCKLATH i«"«4r 4-Dr. Chest »14« ‘Wheelbarrow SX »5« OlltIO Horn Pslil $Si c*<. $398 Peg Board SO OQ Vs"x4x8 par wheat. fclWV 1x6 WkHe PIN Bnrte ^ 41/2^ 1x12 While Pin Boards "S: V/z* CEMENT.... bag FIELD TILE ..... 10< CEDAR 3 POSTS 49' FENCE BOARDS 1x6, Good Grodl lin. ft. 7‘ "CASH AND CARRY SPECIAU" COLONIAL LUMBER COMPANY M-59 at Williomt Lobe Road 7374 Highland DELIVERY ISERVICE OR 4^316 terms AvaiiaMa., Up la IE Maolha\ ta Pay, .'iq^ TRIM BASE SHOE 2c Door and Window CASING, 11/16x2 Vq .. . lin. ft. 8c %x%xV4 Round ... lin. ft. 3c 1x2 FURRING 2c 1-S FURRING lin. ft. 3c ' SM foot *r Bart THE PpyTIAC PRESS FRIDAYl JULY 7. 1961 FIFTEEN iKew Labor D«pt. Offic« ! CHlCAGQ,4i»^ Ul!(. Ubw ^)epBrtmeii( wOl o|Ni • ChloiKO 4 regional otllcc to 'luperviie ad-mimatntion of tin Mu>dnim-tirit-tHi Act In a Uve^te area whkh Inehideo Michigan. ' SfXXIMG OUT ALL FURNITURE AND ACCESSORIES lUY AT AND BELOW COST Nothing Held Back 'I noon nnonmi J IMS 8. TeUgMph British Actor Sellers Still Unknown Here By BOB THOMAS AP Mevle-TV LONDCW^fer Seller* in per-aon aeem* the least likely person to be the current king ot the Brit-' h film world. "Mr. Topaie," opened recently in ^ftnrionr The critical reaction? ROASTED IT ‘They gave it a roasting,’’ reported. "It didn’t botixit' i There are only two London critics ____i and they criticized It oomtructlvely. The other*? There ape BO standard* lor film cifti-dsm; most film critic* have no backiyound for it." [Jack," "Two-Way Stretch" etc.— have made him the most K^ht-after star in English films. Sellers isn’t entirely elated by this turn in his life. admitted his American impact has been with the art-house, not the mass audience. ! 'Perhaps ‘Lolita’ will do it,”; said Sellers, who plays a fasl-j talking American in the coitiro-vernal story. "It is a great film. No doubt it will run into censor Mt it is done inoffensively'’ . . .‘ t am by nature a rather ^uiet ’’ he says. "I used to ”"'' that it would be nice some day to have autograph. Now it alanBs me.^ t I met the 35-yearold actor at hepperton, pnAably the oidy studio in the irald that has church and graveyard outside its door. He was on the final day of making "That Uncertain Feeling" with Blai Zetterllng. After a breather in Paris, he w ' start "Waltz of the Toreadors.’ Sellers* debut as directoretar, HOME REMODELING • RBCfBOtiOB Rooms •„ Attic Rooms • Brsoxowoys • Goragss • Aluminum Windows and Doors TALBOTT CONSTRUCTION 1025 Oakland FE 4-4595 M0B0B0B0B0B0m The fans still like him, both . But I Lw (OR STORE MIRACLE MILE July Clearance Sale^- If "Lolita" fg^, Sellers might reach the Yankee mas^s with which may make here with Jack Lem-ask roe for my nigo this fall. And he is consider-.uniLa 1LI« Hollywood film* tor next year. Sellers will take a scouting trip | to California to October. If he' finds the natives' friendly, he may return. But England needn’t awry about losing its No. 1 boy. Not i ^ Ladies' Ladies' Ladies' CottogDresseS' Jamaica Shorts Sumniar Jewelry Regular to $24.98 Regular $4.98 Regular to $2.00 HP,.*19" $019 2 for W $6.00 CC|C2fbr VlP $1.00 I LADIES^ SUCKS-Reg. ‘7”... ........Now‘S’* LADIES’ PEDAL PUSHERS-Reg. *5”. .... .......Now *3" yet, anyway. Dixie County Agents to Tour State Farms EAST IJLNSlNC tir—Michigan State Univeraity has announced 12 county agricultural agents from nine southern states will tour agri-plturM areas erf Michigan next They are on study-tour scholarships sponsored by the Agricultural diemicais Department of the Dow Chemical Co., Midland, under the direction of a committee of the National Aasociation of County Agricultural Agents. Among Michigan stops, the University said, will be fruit farms in Be^en County, the Benton Harbor fruit market, a Battle Creek cereal plant, the world’s largest registered Holstein farm —Green Meadow Farms—the Dow Chemical plant in Midland and the Ford Rouge plant in Dearborn. ' Men's 1 Wits Regular to $69.95 ^,.’56 Men’e,^ Spotted Regular $25 to $45 18»’38 Men’s Dress Slacks Regular $8.95 $^9 2 for U $13.00 Men's Short Sleeve Sport Shirts Reg. $5.00 to $5.95 $099 2 for V $7.50 Men's KnHSliirts Regular $3.^8 $019 2 for W $6.00 Men's Baii'Lon Shirts Regular $7.98 $499 MEN’S STRAW HATS-Reg. ‘5 to »7*>.......Now »3” and MEN’S SHORTIE PAJAMAS-Reg. '3”.................Now 'S’* Men’s Bermuda Shorts and Deck Pants-'3’* to >7”.... *3” to *4" APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: Lei’s Talk Turkey! aot^^tt-Hnrpeultry business, but ore in the opplionce business, 100^%! W« hove over 1,200 fresh, brand new 1961 opplionce* in stock reody to be de-liverod tomorrow to onybody wbo'TOBlIy woiitf'twAuy oh Opplionce this week at Boys' Short Sleeve Boys’* Boys' Sport Shirts KnK Shirts Shorts Reg. $1.98 to $3.98 Reg. $1.98 to $3.98 Regular to $2.50 $31. 99*,.*1" the right price! Come in todoy, moke uS any reotonoble offer ond you got yourself o deal! I'm not just talking, tee for yourself now! 19 Cu. FL Famous Adaiiril AIR CONDITIONER ADMIRAL Make $79’5 FRiEZER DehimidiRer FLOOR MODIL *239** *59»* CLOSE-OUT t4" BCA Censel* tl.W.SS tl" ASmIrel Cenielc lUe.M tt" Tekle MeSel lIM.SS 17" rMtekIc 1 S».»S Stem, Beir-CenUlae4 m BeSle Boys’ Bermuda Shorts and Dock Pants, Reg. ^2” to M”—•2** to *3** Boys’ Short Sets and Slack Sets—Reg. ^2” to M”..*2** to ’3** Boys’ Summer Pajamas—Regular to ’2”. .......... .*1** and *2** I Icytpjoirdr \ ALL-PORCEUIN [Autofflatic WASHER Fully Automatic Washing at a Budget Price ■ tO-lb. tub capocity, automatic water temperatures, triple || rinsing, water-saving partial !cx)cl control, full-time under-M water lint filter, dual outomotic detergent and dry bleach, F outomotic sediment swirl- ^ j| out, convenient top loading. I Girls’ Drosses Reg. $3.98 to $8.98 $299 $599 Girls' Skirts and Sots Reg. $3.98 to $9.98 ’2**»’6*’ Girls* Short and Slack Sets Reg. $2.98 to $4.98 *2**»*3** Pre-Teen Swimwear Reg. $7.98 to $11.98 SQM igu Pre-Teen Blouses Reg. $2.98 and $3.98 $219 $299 Pre-Teen Sportswear Reg. $3.98 to $9.98 *3'*.HP* Girls’ Pa|amas-Reg. ’2"..........................Now *2” Girls’ Tennis Dresses—Reg. to *2.98..............Now *1” BUDCtT TERMS ■ jq i,thongr ■ GENEROUS TRADE ■ FAST 24 HOUR ■ NO MONEY DOWN ■ Courleoos, Alter WONTHS^^TO^PAY I Euliy Sotisf.ed [ AllOWANCE J DELIVERY J ON ANY PURCHASE | the Sole Service Frtfim'i CiBlMd DisceMt lArfM *• H| DHferMNe-frt«e tt to YmtmN FREHER APPLIANCE /V| f A Seffli-Annual Shoo Clearance THE SHOE WITH THE BEAUTIFUL FIT LadiN' BBskMi Shots Entir* Stock of Straw and Laathar Sandals, Wadgiat and Flats Rag. to $6.99 *3’®ond*4’° ^'^ClilhlrfB’fShow Bustor Brawn, Poll Pdrrot and Scamparoo. Sizas 516 to 3. Rag.toS8.99 $390 $^90 Mu’s Poitaao ShHt Loafers and Oxfords Ragutor to $14.95 $y9o Ladias’ U.S. Kadette Slipons—Reg. *4” Kow •y Ladies' Americas GM Shoes Drett in high or mid Seeh— CommIi In wedgfoe and flat* Children's Cames Ozlenl* Fomowt Srond wMt reinfercad toei- aiMarlUd-$iMtSlo3 $266 Men's Ball Bond CaavaeSheM OXFORDS or LOAFERS Sisa*«Wla13 $388 I MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Doily 10 A.M. 'til 9 P.M, - FE 3-7051 - Sunday 10 A.M. 'til 7 PAA, u I'M M M ■ M a-Wi JiH |i Use a Convenleiit Lion Charge Plan SIXTEEN", THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY V. 1061 i . m.. Living Is Great I ' ■ Residents of Lake By RBBA HUNTZELMAN Folks living around Lake Sherwood near MUlord don't have, to go to Hawaii to enjoy beautiful islands. They have four in the middle of their own man-made lake. * * ★ . It’s like Robinson Crusoe for youngsters under 12. They have a place to pitch tents, have cook-outs and sleep under the stars. Parents can keep tab on their offspring, for they’re never more than a stone’s throw from land. College students motor out to the islands loaded with food, bevwrages, blankets and sunbathing gear. Tents are erect- ed for changing to swimming apparel. However, thoae who appreciate the landscaped, picnic-tabled islands the most are the residents who are ready for a party at the drop of an invitation. Take Tuesday for example. At 6 p.m. motor boats ot every description began to pull up on the shore of the largest island at the south end of the lake. Gear-laden picnickers piled out, ready for a good time. Although it was a little windy every one ot the 40 "invaders” wore shorts, casual jackets and silly hats, and soon the men had a roaring fire going in the center of the ialaiid, whUe the women spread out their delectable "diah-to-paas” smorgasbord. ) When darkncM settled, mo-todsls on neaH^Csmnierce Road stopped, amazed at what appeared to be a huge fire burning in the' middle of the lake. Harold Walker and his wife Elaine had toiled all afternoon transporting dry logs to the island. The Robert Servos, the Rod McKusicks and the Robert MUIers assisted with other preparattons. Five years ago the area which the lake now covers was tilled with trees, land and email slopes. James dde had a dream, wfaidi with the aid of several men, came true. It was to clear the land, flood the pitqperty and nmnect the area with six otWr similar lakes through navigable canals. What most people thought was s humorous'* scheme by Cole (to have islands In the lake), proved to be one of the most unique ideas in any artificial lake project. And, the tiny Islands besides adding a romantic flavor are Arriving for an et^ening pUnir on one of the four islands ceniering manmade Lake Sherwood near Milford is this happy group. Torn yeien gets an assist horn WiUiam Hart, as William Werkand Mrs. Harold Walker wait to join the fun. Residents of the area are reportedly ready for a party .. at the drop of an invitation." Smiling for the photographer at the deliciously bedecked picnic table, these Lake Sherwood residents arrived on the island in a colorful array of motor boats in all shapes and sizes. The area's landscape is picturesque, and the swimming is "delightfuir Unruffled by high winds sweeping over Lake Sherwood, these picnickers, snugly bundled in heavy shirts and sweaters, roast hot dogs over a huge log fire in the middle of the island, from left are Toni Officers to Be Installed . Officers tor WO-HE-LO Council No. 36 ot Pontiac, Daughters of America, will be installed by Mrs. Harold Usher, deputy state councilor, and her team, Monday at 8 p.m. in Malta Temple. Mrs. Ernest Behr is Incoming councilor; Mrs. William Srllwartz, assistant councilor: Mrs. David Jones, past councilor: Roy Haney, vice coun- cilor: Nancy Tucker, asaociate " vice councilor: Mrs. Howard Franklin, conductor; Mrs. Howard Fagen, warden; Carolyn Tucker, inside sentinel; and . Mrs. Sylvester Van Horn, outside sentinel. it * * The Highsteppers drill team will entertain and refreshments will be served. The meeting Is open to the public. Close-Out SALE Fine Dinnerware Veen, Mrs. William Welburg and Mrs. William Wert. At the grill are Robert Servo and wife Kathy with Harold Walker. Have You Tried This? ?; Rich Tasting Loaf Made! With 4 Kinds of Flour | By JANET ODEIX irtium or «hol* vbeit g Poatiac PitMs Home Editor If you think bread is too much trouble to make, you , should take Mrs. Arthur . Weaver as an example. The - mother of 6 children, she does ‘ all the baking for the family: j One of her specialties is this ; bread made with 4 different * kinds of flour. Every year Mrs. Weaver (41-rolls In some class. She loves to cook, sew iind garden. She’s expert at flower arranging and cake decorating. She belongs to the YWCA and a church auxiliary. Furthermore, ihe Weavers have lots of company. FOUR FLOUR BREAD By Mrs. Arthur Weaver T ruB« lukewarm rater I nw oatmeal Dissolve yeast in 1 cup ; warm water and a little honey. Put walk, dissolved ' yeast, salt, oil, molasses and i honey In bowl and mix well. * Add oatmeal, rye flour, whole [ wheat flour and half of the f white flour.. Mik thoroughly. I Continue to add the white \ flour, kneading In the last I fm cups until the dough Is ‘ no longer stteky. Knead nn- ’ til smooth and elnstlc. \ Put into large greased bowl. Grease top of dough and cov- I er. Let rise 2-3 hours or until \ double. Form into 7 loaves, put in greased pans and let rise SO minutes. Bake 15 minutes at 400 degrees. Reduce heat to 375 and bake about 55 minutes longer, or until lost sounds hollow when rapped. CHOICE of OVER 200 PATTERNS at y, PRICE 16-Pc. Setg ..............I 2^ 45-Pc. Sets .............$12.05 12 Services ...... .....$19.95 Up DIXIE POTTERY 5281 Dixie, Waterford OR 3-1894 BUDGET SHOP SPECIAU OUR $10 PERMANENT $yso Bodget Dept. Mezzanine Floor at AIR CONDITIONED FDR YOUR COMFORT TONY’S Riker Bide,. » W. Huron 84. BEAUTY SHOP Women Do Man's Job in Germany FRANKFURT, Germany (UPD—After two world wars, German women more thai^ ever outnumber their opposite sex. The result: more women are going into occupatiois long considered the domain of men. W'omen gain more ground every year in the profession especially. MEDICINE POPULAR More than 10,000 women physicians already are practicing and every year the universities graduate more of them. Women grammar school teachers have been familiar for a long time, but during the last few years women teachers also havjB become professors in high sdxxds and gymnasiums. More than 28 per cent of West German professors are women. ★ ★ ★ Women also have moved into the fields of law and business —as attorqeys, judges and executives of civU and government administration. And, political parties are sending more women, especially academicians, into Parliament. Even that stronghold of the men, the ministry, has been penetrated by the first women who have been ordained parish priests. They long ago won recognition in church welfare organizations. ★ ★ A School enndlment indicates that the influx of women workers will continue. The latest figures available on enrollment In German universities showed that 26.3 per cent of all students were wom- Fall Color Outlctok (UPI) — Summer into fall cottons have a cok>r-unllmited look with bright, warm blues and magentas, hunting greens and ginger, bumfohed gold and the soft dove colors of grey and beige being shown in harmonies. In addition to the sol-, ids, there are Biadow plaids and jaunty hunting checks. Carol Comer to Wed July 15 Mr. aiM Mrs. Cart Comer of Arcadia Path Drive amwiwoe Bia engagement of their daughter Carol Lynne to Airman 3.C Patrick Johnaoii, ton of and Mn. J. W. JehnsM of Pleaaant Grave. Utah. A July 15 wedding is planned. Womens Section Abby Says; Don’t Hesitate Talk With Priest Quickly By ABIGAIL VAN BUIUCN Dear Abby: I think I married the wrong man. The first year of our marriage I got pregnant. My husband never cared for children and he told me every day how funny and disigustiiq; I looked. I hoped he would change after the baby came, but he was vrorse. When -the baby would cry at feeding time, my hus- ABBV band made me take the baby outside and feed him in the car. He even had adoption papers drawn up, but I refused to sign them. When our little boy was live months old I got pregnant again. This time my husband acted like a mad man. I started lifting things no woman in her right mind would think of lifting in that condition, and I had the miscarriage 1 wanted. (I still cannot forgive myself for this.) ,My religion does not permit divorce. Must I live with this beast the rest of my life? 1 am 19 and he is 24. IN MISERY DEAR IN: Your husband is either an arrested adolescent or he is ntentally disturbed. If you continue to live with him, you will be as sick as he it. Talk to your priest about a legal separation. And do it DEAR ABBY: My son is getting married soon. His wife4o-bc wants to call me “Mother.” I do not want her to call me "Mother" as I am not her mother. 1 want her to caU me by my first name. What is your advice on the subject? MV PREFERENCE DEAR MY: Tell your future d a u g h t e r-in-law what you prefer. But I hope you realize that your future "daughter” has offered to honor you with a warm and loving name. it it It DEAR ABBY; If yon want to do a real public service, please tell your readers when they send flowieih to patients in a hospital to send a small bouquet or a plant. I am amazed at the number of huge floral arrangements that come into a patient’s room. They get in the way y treatment, and are more trouble than they are people we want at the wedding. She said I could invite; my relatives. Some of our rel-. atives are not very classy. I don’t want to sound like! I am trying to snub them, but ' I know they wouldn’t fit irt* too good with the giri’s people. How can I invite part of the family (the part I think will fit in) and leave the other part out? MOTHER OF GROOM DEAR MOTHER: If ym plan to invite the relatives — invite all the relatives. Thm will probably be a few mistKs on the ghrl’s side iiU,.fit in perfectly with yours. ★ What’s bothering you? Fot a personal reply, write to Abby, The Pontiac Press, ‘ Pontiac, Mich. Include a stamped, self- worth. R.N. DEAR ABBY; Our son is marrying a glH from a very high-toned family. The girl’s mother asked me for a list of For Abby’s booklet, "How to Have a Lovely Wedding," send 50 cents to Abby, The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Mich. Four Pages in Today's Women's Section DEAR ABBY: My roodter has been in heaven for nearly six srears. 1 was only nipe when the Lnxl took her away, but there is soinethint that stands out la my mind every time I think of ter. Once she asked ieither my slBer or myadf to do a small chore lor her. We aiRued 'so, much over who should do it that she sent us outside, and did it herself. Pieoae put this in your column for girls who stiU hove a mother Uving. It might te helprid. Love, SHARON ELIZABETH SER4YDARIAN by Elizabeth Seraydarian, daughter of the G. M. Seraydariant of Orchard Lake to Charles L Godman, son of Ihe James N. ,Godmaat of Varre/t. 'Both Eattem Muhifon University. h THR PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JULY 7, 1961 I By JOUEPHINE LOWMAN Q. “Do yott know of ai^ way to gain a little weight in the hipa? n 17 and my meaaurementa are boat 35 inchee, waist 23 and hips 34. A, Tkoae an lovaly Pojtng in her Oxon Hill, Md., home Thursday was Judith Wright, 22, whose forthcoming marriage to Pete Dawkins, former Army football star, has^ been annomced. The couple will be married July 29 at West Point. Miss Wright is a University of Maryland graduate. Her fiance is a Rhodes scholar at Oxford. Personal News Q. “I am a girl of 19 with very serious problem. All last year I wore mascara until I noticed that my eyelashes were falling out. Then I switdied to petroleum Jdly and an eyelash curler. This didn’t seem to help. My doctor said it might be from a lade of vltamlna. Isn’t there anything I can do to help my'IMtest Pleasf don’t Ml me to eliminate makeup b^uae my eyes look too bare and pale without make-up.’’ A. At your age you ohould not A two-day stay at Hotel Sahara In Las Vegas, Nev., win climax a month's tour of the northern and western states for the Charles W. McCauleys and their children Dawn and Danny of Meadowleigh Drive, WaierftMrd Township. In California, they were guests of Mrs. McCauley's parents, tte O. J. Bourens, and visited Disneyland, Mar-Ineland and Mexico. . ★ ★ ★ Joining some 17,000 people at the convention of Xiwanls intemaUonal which d<^ Thursday at the Maple Leaf Gardena In Toronto, Ont., were the Robert D. Terrys of East Pike Street, the James M. Scribners of Birmingham, George W. KJeffer of Sylvan Lake and T. C. Tlley of Milford. ★ ★ ★ -The - East ■ ■ Walton--Boulevard" home - of the Andtew J;" Curds was the scene of a family picnic on the holiday. Visiting with their parents were the Bradley T. Oallihers, James H. Curds and the Bruce P. Boyds and their families. Other guests were ,the Claude Williamsons, the Essel AsUns, Orville Duncans, Truman Bolins, the Arthur Tapps and Nelson Duncan. ★ ★ ★ The birth of a daughter, Elizabeth Oay, June 22, at Pontiac General Hospital is announced by the Richard Pitchers (Sandra Monrod) of Clarkston. Grandparents are the Everett Monroes of Silver Circle Drive, Waterford Township and the Frank Pitchers of Royal Oak. ★ ★ ★ Lynda Lottner, daughter of the Harold Lottners of „ Jitkeslde Drive, Elizabeth Lake Estates, is attending Cranbrook siimmef Reiter IcKm w^^ July 29. ★ ★ ★ It Wjdif ' gfw ybU 'a lead. Ymi might iiry a visit to an eye specialist, although you did not men- Mrs. C. M. Bprentall and sons Robert and Gerald arrived Monday from New Brunswick, NJ., to spend a month with her parents, the M. A. Redmonds of Motorway Drive, Waterford Township. JULY SALE Suits Regular $65 to $145 $54 $89 Regular $40 to $80 Sport Coats »29 '• *63 Short ' Sleevd Regular $5.00 Sport Shirts $3*5 $3for$10 Slacks Regular $15.95 to $30 $1385 u $2385 Knit Shirts Regular $5j00 and $5.95 $390 Neckwear Regular $2.50 and $3.50 179 3 for $5 Of PONTIAC HURON ot TELEGRAPH I Metf., Thuft., Fri. 10 10 Wed, Set. 10 W « | Quegtlong Angwered Chair Helps Build Hips Mascara seldom produces allergic reactions but you might try one of those planned for women who are allergle to the regular cosmetics. AND although you told me not to tell you to do without eye roakwop, I am going to tell you anyway that H might be a wise forward aad take hoM of the top of the ehalr, elbews straight. Lift yow left leg back aad ap as leg. lift yoor right leg back aad up. Lower it. Contlaue, alternating left and right. Keep the knees stiff throughout the ex- fhe lashes upward with a little 'eyelash brush to provide stimulation. are several courses open to you. In the first place., be sure that you eat a wril-balaaoed diet You multiple vltiunln pill a day. A thorough Physical checkup would be helpful. problem, that of too much weight in the hipa, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for Leaflet 3, my tested hip-slimming exercises. Address Jc phine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. Massage the roots of the lashes Arc you sure that your IshIh-s arc thinning rather than breaking offt Eye make-up should be remo\-ed earh night l^tore going to sleep, Otherwise you might have some breakage of the lashes. If any M you have the opporite Wash'n'Wax The Home Furnishings In- SKVENTRgy^ tainly should know, says that homemakers need not be slaves to their furniture — and that constant waxing.and rewaxing is not necessary. Instead, wash furniture every few months with a soft cloth dipped into warm suds. Follow with a damp cloth, wipe dry, and apply paste wax. This sensible and easy treatment, plus frequent dusttog, will keep iUraiture at its best. Ex-City Resident Wed Former Pontiac residents, Mf. and Mrs. Albert LaFoun-tain of Frederic announce the marriage of their daughter Ruth to Ernest B. Barber June 17 in the First Baptist Chuich, Frederic. Rev. Ernest Lautt performed the snudl family ceremony. Carol Bindschatel of Fred, eric attended the bride. Wayne Barber stood as best man for ins brother and Robert Barber was groomsman. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Elroy Barber of Frederic. John ZarzOTiah M Pontiac ud the guests. After a honeymoon in Gaylord, the newlyweds ar;e at home in Frederic. Soda Cleans Iron (AP)—Shake baking soda on a damp doth and use it to dean the bottom of your' iron. You also can use diver polish on an iron. Rinse and diy the area after deanlng it. 4 JULY SALE Cotton Dresses Regular 5*1 ^^99 to $25 I 21 19 99 Sleeveless Blouses Regular 5 99 $4.50 Jamaica Sets Regular to $10 .3,, and ‘5 99 Jamaica Shorts 'Regular $6.00 ‘3” Spring Coats Regular 5 $55 to $95 0 ‘44 SAVE 20% TO 33% ON SUMMER AND SPRING SUITS, BOUTIQUES,* KNIT DRESSES, KNIT SUITS, SUMMER JEWELRY, ALL WEATHER COATS, SLACKS, SKIRTS, BLOUSES, HANDBAGS, HOUSECOATS ond SLEEPWEAR. Semi-Annual Shoe Sale Regular to $27.00 sr"9o to 18 90 All colors, all leathers, alt heel heights. All sizes but not every style in every size. Sorry, no mail, phone or C.O.D. orders. All sales final. ' ANDREW CCLLER CAPEZIO CARESSA TOWN 6 COUNTRY MADEMOISELLE FIANCEES CELLINI DOMANI 25% to 50% Off OF PONTIAC HURON at TELEGRAPH Mon., Thur*., Fri. 10 to 9 — Tum., Wed., Sat. 10 to 6 .1 ncludes ‘ Regulor *69.95 MAHRESS AND BOX SPRINGS 6-PIEGE BLACK WALNUT Beautifully groined wolnut woods with occents of block. Lorge Mr. ond Mrs. 9-drower triple dresser, full or twin size beds, framed mirror and SIMMONS $69.95 Tuftless — No buttons mattress and box spring. ALL 5 PIECES. Large Double Dresser NOW *139 INCLUDES 6-PIECE SGULPTORED OONTEMPORARY Note the permonent beouty of the richly groined Negaler |2d9.9S cherry ond wolnut woods and the sculptured drawer a pulls. 63" 9-drower triple dresser and framed plote ginss mirrnr, full or-twirv-siMS bad.v and SIMMONS $69.95 TuftiMS “ No buttons mattress and box spring. ALL 5 PIECES. INCLUDES HIT' MATTRESS ond BOX SPRING 5-PIEOE ITALIAN CLASSIC Time honored traditional takes on o new classic look. Elegont blending of distressed cherry woods in « thur Fauser Saturday In St. Hugo of the HUls Church, Bloomfield Hills, ate honeymooning in New England before returning to their home in Utica. The Fraak N, Trudella of eats of the former Carole Aaa TiwdeU. and tbe bridegroom Is tbe son of the Cheater Swanaans Four attendants wearing aqua silk organza over taffeta held deep pink rubrum lilies for their approach to the altar. Mrs. Robert Vyse of Garicstofl was her cousin’s honor matron. Bridesmaids were Murial Wilkie of Jackson. Janet B**ard of Pentwaler and Carol! Gundersen of Muskegon. MR8. A.MY H.«RP Okay to Ask Who It Is but By HM Bmify Poat MRS. RICHAKU F. SWANSON The wedding gown of white silk oiYanza was appliqued with seed pearls on bodice and bouffant skirt which fell into a chapel sweep train. Bouffant silk illusion veiling was caught by a Juliet headpiece of Alencon lace and pearls. Steph-anotis and lilies of the valley were combined in tbe bride's cascade. Installation Is Held by Auxiliary Some Girls Buy Their Own Ring NEW YORK (UPl) - Some females are rather unromantic. Th^ buy their engagement dta!-mond rings on a solo trip to the jeweler. Approximately four per cent of the gals sporting new engagement rings are in that ^ass, said researchers who eliy sales-. Interviews were conduct among retail iewel-ers natimiwide. Mrs. Tnidell chose white lace over beige taffeta and Mrs. Swanson appeared in a beige silk-jacketed ensemble. The new Mrs. Swanson is a graduate of Michigan State University. Her husband attends Lawrence Institute of Technology. I Figures also showed tnat 42 '^r cent of the diamond engagement rings are purchased by the man alone. Another 42 , per cent are purchased by the ' man with his fiancee and seven per cent are purchased by the man with Ms family or friends —but not fiancee. FAMILY PROJECT In another five per cent of the cases, almost a committee action is Involved when it comes time to buy tbe ring. The man, his fiancee, his family. her family and quite often, frtend8rhelp.tQ sel^ the ring. The survey also showed WaT " the traditional solitaire diamond ring maintains a 53 per>’ cent lead of total unit sales. Hie medii^n size at the center stone set in diamond engagement rings was found to be 42 points — eight points shy of a half-carat. The median price of a diamond engagement ring: J227— plus t.u^, Robert Dietrirk of Royal Oak served Ms cousIb as beid mas. In tbe inker cerps were Darryle Roberi Tradell, tbe bridal roupio, and Allen Swannon irle and rouain of the rharies Lo- Officen of the Disabled American Veterans Auxiliaor Pontiac Memorial Chapter No. lOt were to-stalled Ihursday evening fdkwtog banquet at the Bcmi»01sen Post 570. Mrs. Amy Harp wiH serve as commander; Mrs. Ruth Roberts, senior vice commander; Mp. Charles Copeland, junior vice cdnk mander; Mrs. Edward Eddington, chaplain; Mrs. Bertha WiUlams, treasurer; Mrs, John Martin, adjutant; Mrs. Ralph Ellsworth, state executive committee delegate; Mrs. Jay Helvey, historian; Mrs. Al- Q: Is it considered good taste to insist that callers give their names before even coming to the telephone? I have a friend whoM chtldfen always answer the telephone — the youngest just beghtoing to talk well enough to be un^ntood oMy part time—and she insists that they aak the caller who is calling, and will stand right at the telephone and wait untM they have obtained the name of the caller and give it to her bef«« she will take the telephone. At times you can hear this going on at the o^her end of the line. To have to .try to make a child understand who you are so that she can tell her mother befcme she will have the . courtesy to say "hello” herself is very irritating. I would aKMCCciate your opinion A: Everyone has a rigid to know who is caUtog before going to the tel^honc, but they should forego-this riidit when their telephone is answered by a child too young to be able to understand or repeat a name. Q: When a man and woman go to a buffet dinner, or supper together, is the man supposed to ask his companion what she would like and bring the filled plate to her, or does she go up to the table and help herswlf? A; She usually goes to the table with him to select what she would like to have. SjKiiigsfey ^ Bloomfield ] lim Hills Proudly Announces the Celehration of MEDITERRANEAN FESTIVAL WEEK Beginning Sunday 23 thru Saturday, July 29th ONE FULL WEEK of FUN and FROLIC The Decor, Entertainment and Cuisine Will Reflect All of the Itomance and Character of Colorful Mediterranean Lands EVERY DAY WILL BE A FEAST DAY AT THE KINGSLEY Watch for farther announ^ments ^of our i^iting.progress MI 4-1400 ^Detroit JO 4-5916 Q: My son has always been bert Jlulsman. conductress and| ^ed by everyone. Any Hat Should Do Just 1 Thing: Flatter a Girl 3^^ Fritz, sergeant at (NEA)—One of the biggest mistakes any woman can make is to get the notion that hats should be ’’amusing’’ or "conversation pieces." This frequently results In a mature face beaming under a load of purple poppies or cute bunnies’ ears. Such hats will stir up conversation all right, but none of it will be compU-menta^. Installing officer was Mrs. Charies Brurtcr of Detroit, past department 8th district national committee chairman. Mrs. Bruno also installed offi-jeers lor the Junior DAV Auxiliary, with Mrs. aar- Sowden taking office as chairman; Donna Helvey, commander; Janet Kay Lamberson, senior --vice i mander; Kathie Schumacher. Jun-vica commander; Barbara Wes-T, chaplain; Joan Martin, treas-t; Teny French, adjutant and Pe^ Cooper, patriotic instructor. A hat should do just one thing for youv make you look pretty. If it doesn’t, don’t buy iL, It should not make you look hard or (Suc' firir"tertf-way. It should, for yourself and others, add a bit of charm. It should be the right color to set off your skin and properly proportioned for your height and weight. And once on, ywi should be able to forget it. aside from knowing that you DO look prettier for wearing it. Smart Ladie^’ Apparel Pictured Are Just Two of Many FAMOUS MAKE BCATYA COTTONS Ypu’ll Recognize ¥liem Immediately as Famous Name Brands ^88 REG. VALUES to 12.95 SALE Sizes 5*15 Assorted Pastel Colors ’'Charge It” or Open a Long Term Budget Aciuunt OPEN MON., Tin RS., FKI. ’UI9 —SAT.tjlT Smart l^jidicb' Apparel 75 N. SAGINAW ST. On the go? A dress-and-jacket costume is safe because it is adaptable to temperature changes and looks neat in transit. other name for him would mean nothing to his friends. His fiancee would like to know if this^deri^tive may be used th£0. give him.4 _ is Edward or TiKodore, it is best taste to have his real nanrie iengraved on this one occasion. ■ Thousands of men are known through life as Tom or Dick, Bud or Sonny — but such names should never appear in any formal announcement. SALE! ALL «)RMALS Short Of Floor Length *10 BRIDAL SALON Riker Bldg. City Couples Daughter Married in Kansas City The William J. Hills left for a honeymoon in 'New Drieans. “BT-loxi antLPensacrrfa, Fla., after Saturday afternoon vows in Central Methodist Church, Kansas Qty, Mq. Dr. Thomas Mather performed the STB) lall family ceremony. Attending the reception for her daughter, the former gharon Patricia Meadows, in tbe Hotel Bellerive were the Lawrence E. Chapins of South Edith Street, and Jhe W. Leslie HUls of Great Falls, Mont., parents of the bridegroom who lives In Kansas City. With her street-length gown ofj champagne silk orgakza over peau de TOie. atyled with hell skill and , long-sleeved lace bodice, the bride wore wrist-lei^th matching kid gloves. Joanna Hill roses caught her headpiece and were included in her cascade bouquet of phalae-| nopsis orchids. BALOWIN TONE in the most complete o/gan ever built for the home Big organ fraiiire*:-22 independently-voiced Mops with couplers • 2 standard 61 key manuals • 25 note pedalboard • built-in Baldwin Leslie Speaker • Ensemble Pre-sett • Baldwin Percussion Ensemble*. Easy to playi-Cenlrally-Iocatsd, oolor-ooded controls. .Stereophonic realism !.-70-watU of rich tonal power divided in three channels • three console-contained speakers, plus Raldwin-Leslie rotating vane. *opHotuU at exua coal Choose from several hand-rubbei sooods in Traiuitional cabinetry Closed Wed. Afternoons—June, July, August Open Friday Evenings *Ul 9 CALBI MUSIC CO. 119 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 5-8222 PARK FREE REAR OF STORE Matron of honor. Mrs. Robert Unverferth of Kansas Gty wore beige peau de sole with beU skirt. She held a single Orange Delight rose with English ivy streamers. Lawrence Hill of Ann Arbor stood as best man for his brother. The bride Is « graduate of Kansas City Art Inalltute and School of Design. Mr. Hill is an alumnus of University of Denver, affiliated with Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sorority. The couple will live in Kansas City. Golden roses and elbow-length kid gloves accented Mrs. Chapin’s dress of beige silk crepe s^led with pleated skirt. The mother of bridegroom, wore white but-’terfly roses with her dress of deep; blue lace. New Men's Hose Cut Leg Fatigue Here’s something that>Tnen have stolen ftforn women: 10(Kr> ribbed nylon support hose that look just like regular socks but serve to ease leg fatigue. 'Those hose have horizontal ribbing to support the instep and shin, vertical ribbing for the back of the ankle and calf. A wise wife might teach her husband to launder his own socks but this isn't really necessary because these support -hose can be safely sudsed in a w'ashing machin^if encased in a mesh or net bagi Diamonds are traditionally the symbol of love ... At Enggass you will find just the^ right stone in the mounting of your choice at a price that will please you! QQimmtt. At Enggass you may pay for your Diamond or other jewelry on your own terms. PO>JTIAC iCWaRY CO. 25 North Saginaw Street Open Monday, Thursday and Friday Evenings Until t VISIT OUR MODERN OPTICAL department DR. SAROKIN, Optometrist Sunday Breakfast Buffet STOP IN ON YOUR WAY TO THE BEACH Te& sausages; scrambled eggs, SILVER DOLLAR PANCAKES, JUICE, SWEET ROLLS, TOAST, BEVERAGES, ETC. AU You Desire I at 8««aro Lake Kd. 9 to 12 V THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 7. 19^1. Bri^e Club Places 17 Tables in Play Th« Pontiac Duplicate Bridge Club had 17 taUei'in play at Monday'! meetiiig la the Elka Temple. Among the winners, were Mrs. Dair MacFherson and Mrs. Sidney Ayles, Earl Waterman and Fraidt Ferryman, Mrs. Sam Feldman end Mrs. Sam Reiaman and Donald Bowen and Ronald Flscus. Others were Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Canaday, Ernest Guy and Dr. Carl Bolten, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Van-Roebel and George Armstraig and Charles Tucker. NINETEEN Wash summer riothes soon after wearing. Penqiiretion weak«u fibers. Enroll NOW! INSURE YOUR FUTURE Proporo yourself for o coroor In Hio Beauty Miss Wilson atMd W«diMolish, cleaning solution, SMp, sponges and rags. matte washing machine, manr_______ the family laundress. Now thati mama has a car of her own, Mm, Is expected to be the family chuif-i feur. If she has a dlsbwadier,' then It isn’t supposed to be any trouble at all for her to have 30 or so guests in for a buffet. . If Mie has an etectric gadget to buff floors, thpn ft Isn’t supposed to be any triiA at all for mama to scrub and wax and polish floors. ' ' so it goes. gadget she acquires, the lady of the house t^kes on a. new Job or feela the cotnpalston to do a Job more frequently that haa ben made “easier” for her. If the doctor had an answer to the problem of the "tired mother Syndrome” it wasn't printed in the account of his talk. But I think women have got to find the answer for themselves. Ilbey have got-to do some figuring Now that mama has an auto-on how to make their gadgets work | 'Hje newest thing under the beach umbrella is a tent-shaped topping called the beach dress. It gri^fiilly hides what comes from] Theh- show business baekgroundiovereating. why there’s no water heater like an WATER HEATER SUILT-IN QUALITY MAKU A BIQ DIFFEIi. ENCE. Eveiw aleetrie water heater installed on Detroit Edison lines must meet Edison’s eucting specifications. Reeult: long life, high performance for every water heater. go beneath oountara or laundry equipment. Other poen-bilittee—in tlw kitchen next to Aneiectne wacerneaierisapaDM sixe. r or less man of going on and OBL driivering 164 s day (estimatad operating .really hot water—160* hot—with- coat for this tiae) you can have out burning out. And heavy ineu- kot water for ell the family’s httion all around kseps ^ out-aide ebMl of the water heater cool to the touch from top to bottom. Tbrn’t B6 hot metd i needs. Thera are also 80-and 110-gallon Maia for the few families who uee more water and may.ra-quire greater eapadty. ■'4- ^ DKTROIT BDISOli Gkapel 3£ilL Cslales ^ • HALF ACRE LOTS • WINDING PAVED STREETS • 73 FT. SPR4WUNO RANCH • 3 ^D 4 BEDROOMS • 2 CAR ATTACHED OARAGE OFEN 1-a Daily end Sunday, Clowd Thwndoyi PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL S. Ssgiaaw, Eagle Thesfer Udg., Pautlac, Mich. Earelimeale Available la Day or Eveaiag Closaes Wrife, Phone ot GoH im Persoa for free Pamphlet PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 Masraseubeveledteetes CUTTING - Yeif A diamond cut In proper proportiong shows an equal distribution of light and brilliancy at all distances from the eyes. It rtfracts the rays, which hit the diamond, back through the top. In a poorly cut diamond, however, the light rays leak through. Let our Diamond Experte show you the difference tclentifically. So^krowtl the Bus ark-shod downtown The Store Where Quality Counts BE SAFE — BE SURE — BE SATISFIED F. N. PAULI CO. Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store 28 West Huron Street FE 2-7257 Commercial from McCANDLESS cmpets REGULAR > $8.95 FOR ONLY *5.95 Sq. Yd. FROM FULL ROLLSI INLAID UNOtIUM......frsm $1.95 tq. yd. VINYL noon COVEMNO...from $ .69 M|. yd. AU WeXJL WILTON Reg. $11.96 $995 ONLY fr— Estimatms on Custom Dropory McCANDLESS 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 Froo EstfnMrtos on Countor Tops chmI Floor LWMThN SaltNoe $499 ■•Gd. White and Colors 11 North PtnySL Pan andRoHBr Set............89* 3 Paint BrashBi:............97* Rast-OlBam Paint....*2.89 Magilax Porch and ^ Deck Enamel... .£T.. .gaL *2J5^ Rox-Masonry Paint 10 Hit...................*3.S5 Amazing Raw KotoaKwixat.................^^9 Sifw w.ili«>li ■■dio.dy Iw mmut .oaMa W ■bwii. iuU.r 11 «l Sia.a «iiyl Floor Conrhf.. S;...” H* Safety Troof Wax.... £!%.....IT* McCANDLESS NOW ONLY FORMULA 99 HOUSE PAINT Reg. $7.95 $E95 h#per Ga! CAUL FEMSn T^yENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. miDAY. JULY 7. 1961 Dems, GOP Both HelpedhyKWith Foreign Aid Bills Br JAMBS MABI^ WASHINGTON —Premier Khnohchev hM be«n belptal aod Bnpartkl to the Rembbcan And Donocrotic athninistratiom id recent year* just aa they were gohis (hrouKh the wrtacer to get oon-gressional approval for their foreign aid plans. proved chanc^ for Kemedy’s foreign aid proposals. This waa after Secretary fl State Dean Rusk had told e about the troublfs oonunurinn is causing the United SUtes around the world. * Fulbright 1 Three years In a row he has stirred up such a rurkus atxxit something that Conpess looked on foreign aid aa a pretty good idea. If be bad p|^ quiet. Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy mi^ have had more tron-Me here at home. ■ i it in 1*9 when _____ I in the White _____.> by threateniri; Berlin. He did it again in 1999 by ininiting ESaenhower, wrecking the swn-mit meeting, and being generally belligerent. DIGS VP BEBUN And now. Just ag Kennedy waa having a gloomy tiihe getting approval for his new long-range for eign aid |»osAm, Khrushche\ dug up his Bertln scare again, trotted it odt. and made foreign aid sound like..one of the good ways to undercut him. i Thursday, for inrtance. Sen., J. W. Fulbrjght. Arkansas Demo-: crai and chairman of the Senate! foreign Relatkajs Oonmilttee.j said menacing conditions in Bsr-{ lin. Cuba a^ Laos have im- i: "The pressures (foreign aid) will 'Wvny great. The country is nervous about the outlook and the critical atmo^ihere will resolve doubts in favor of the bill." Since the war the United States has spent 195.8 billion on foreign .4 billion of It tor economic help and $25.4 USkm for tary assistance in one form or another. This aid has gon more than 70 nations Not all of it has been used wisely. Some of it was lost in commtion. some of it has gone to dicUtors who used it to suppress their own people in name ol anti-conununism. Lcry Hemingway to Best in Grave That's Unmarked KETCHUM. Idaho (AP>- E^ nest Hemingway, one of America’s greatest writeni, haa been buried in the peecefut valley of Jock Carttr's Wift Ditt (AP)-Joan Oar-wife of teievlalQO fjadk Carlmr. died on Thoraday lot ‘ MoniilBt HoptfuU Help Financt Stout CampBri MANISTEE IB — Candidates for Because the teeth of the fur teal are not fitted far chewing, It must bolt its'food whole and alive. paign posters under aa eartter am nounced rate schedule. vacatians for boy scouts of Troop UO at Manistee. The candidates paid a total of 975 to scouts who roamed the| iriMid L •■d Wam«» INSURANCE RELAXED AUDIENCE-Budset Director Dtvid Bell IsUu to reporters at the White House Thursday as Pierre Salinger, in shirt sleeves aixl with his' foot on a desk, listens in. Bell's talk with the newsmen followed W-mcetlng he had with President— Kennedy to discuss budgetary matters. Bril Is speaking in the office of Salinger, White House press secretary. The grave is unmarked. Simple graveside rites w held Jn the public cemetoy Thureday, ettwhded only by members of the- family and i A few townspeople and newsmen watched from the cemetery gale. A Roman Catholic priest read the ritea- That'a what the faniily wanted. Hemingway was converted to Catholicism some time back, al-| though one of hia aons aays his’ father waa not an active churchgoer in recent years. Seize Red Propaganda MEXICO CITY lAP) - Federal; police agents at Mexico’s Inter-! national Airport said Thursday | more than seven tons M to 11 p. m. when The 4-H Trail Blazers Qub. which includes some 50 youngsters from JO to 17 years old from Oakland and Macomb counties, hopes to raise $2,000 from this event. PUir Centennial at Church Leading Lutheran Clergy to Join in Observance TO PAY SCHOLARSHIP Proceeds will be used for the club’s scholarship fund, which is used to send 4-H Club members college In Michigan. Currently attending Central Michigan University on a Ttail Blazers Club scholarship is Tarole Jablinskey of 5951 Heyden Road. Dryden. HAROLD D. COLE HADLEY - Several of the state’s leading Lutheran clergymen will join present and former members of the congregation Jn-ln ittL week-long centennial observance which starts Sunday at Christ Lutheran Church. The church, located 3 miles south of here at 5245 Hadley Road, is one of the oldest in Lapeer County. The first unit of the present churdi was completed In Since that time the chancel, parish hall, kitchen, narthex, basement and meeting room have been add- Siz special festival services vtir mark the congregation’s Ex-County Man Dies at Age 65 WASHINGTON (CPI) - The Agriculture Department said today: U.S. farm exports set new records in both value and volume in the fiscal year ended June 30. The show drew nearly 4,M0 sprctalors last year. It Is approved by the American and Michigan Quarter Hmvc asooci-atlons aad the East MlcUgaa A total of K classes will be judged in the show, including Preliminary estimates by the fPd Arabian department’s Economic Research Tennessee Walkers ^ Service (ERS) set agricultural ex- *’*^1**1 . ... , ports for 196041 at $4,9 bUlion. This was 8 per cent above the'“PSaturday $4.52 billion in the preceding yeari“"“ programs while and 4 per cent larger th^ the! *** previous record of $4.72 billion s<^heduled for Sunday. 1936-57 when exports were stimu-ated by the Suez crisis. ! ERS said the quantity of* ex- Among the speakers will Rev. W. Harry Krieger, president of the Michigan District of the Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod; Rev. Hugo ’F«1)er, counsels of the. Flint Circuit; and Rev. John Koltz, superintendent of Lutheran High Schools in Detroit. Harold D. Cole Served Ooklcmd for Years in Many Posts new record, sur-INMsing the previous high year of tSW-M by about lo per cent. The maritime strike, which began June 16, reduced exports in recent weeks. Sales for dollars reached S3.4 billion for 196IV61. This is equal to the record for dollar sales established in 1951-52. Sales fordol-lars and food-for-peace shipments accounted about equally for the total gain in U.S. farm exports in 1960-61 compared with the preceding year, ERS said. Most of U» increase in exports r I96JWT was Tiroughr fibeoi-hy cotton and wheat, the leading U.S. farm export commodities. Eye Key Part £ r----Holly Masonic Lodge and a m aiOt rann rian The new center also will Im- totaled a record 650-million bushels, and refine existing products up l39-miUion bushels from 1959-in the automobile, truck, industrial GO. Dollar sales increased to West-and marine fields. |ern Europe mainly because of a Uow quality wheat coop there. Increased exports to Japan also con- Committee to Talk of Bkports oT«nm;«^g that Extending Act to Cover STAFF OF -S This work will be done for the Eaton central organization, with headquarters in Cleveland, and the company’s 26 divisions and suteidiaries with 35 plants in six states and four foreign countries. A staff of 76, in^uding 30 engineers, is employed at the research center under the supervision Sidney Oldberg, director of research, and Robert Brown, associate director of research. Giffels and Rossetti, Detroit architects, designed the one-stoiy building, which has 30,000 square feet of space. The building is so ' that it can be expand- ed easily in several directions. ROGERS CITY W - A friend of -we North- '”"" *■-. vjlle foUowing a honeymoon treated tor exhaustion northern Michigan, , ^ ^ ers City Hospital. State to Hear Appeal on Township Tax Rate Newcomers to Meet ROCHESTER — A mixer card game will fdiow Thursday’s 8 p. meeting of the Newcomer Gub of Rochester, tormerly the Planter Club, at toe Avon Township Hall. 407 Pine St. NANCTY B. WICKMAN An Oct. 14 weikllng is idanned by Nancy R. Wickman and Paul Duval whose engagement is announced by the bride-elect’s parents Mr. and Mrs. Thore Wickman of 3763 Waldon Road, Orion Township. The prospective bride-nrxun is top' son of Mr. and MiWr Arthur Duval of 4573 Rochester Rood. Troy. charged tram the hospital Thursday. Ha became III wMIe ea a cruise on Lake Huron. Wi:ST BLOOMFIELD TOWN^ SHIP—A hearing has been set by the State Tax Commission tor July 13 to listen to the township’s appeal of its 1961 tax rate set by the Oakland County Tax Allocation Board. Big gains were made in exports; of tobacco, hides, skins, poultry ' Country Clerk - Register Daniel ... -• Murphy Jr. said the hearing Hospital officials and Dr. \WI-wiU be at 3 p.m. in the Super-liam Jackson of Rogers City de- visors Room of the County Office dined to disclose the nature ofiBullding. 1 Lafayette St. Summerfield’s illness. | The township appealed its 1.40 Harry WhiUey. publisher of the rate-it asked 2.15 to meet its Presque He County Advance, said,budget-after the six-member tax Summerfield was told by Dr. 1 board in May debated at great Jackson that he was “exhausted length but never attached an added adn needed a complete rest for a|.23 to give the township $12,310 couple of days." 'extra. produds and meats. Feed grains, rice, fruits and preparatkms, and dairy products also held up well in value. Major reductions in value took place for animal fats, cottonseed and soybean oils, and vegetables and preparations. Newlyweds Are Living in West Virginia Town AVON TOWNSHIP-Now living in Charleston. W. Va., are newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Davis who were jnarried iir a recent ceremony at the Elmwood Methodist* Church? Rev. Henry W. Powell otfldated at the- candlelight rites before an The bride, the former Ruby C. Stover, is the daughter M Mr. and Mrs. Cecil W. Stover of 2868 N. stones embroidered at the 8a-brtoa neckline and at the point of toe long^ sleeves. She wore a halo veil and carried a bridal bouquet of white carna- The bride's sister Julie Ann maid of honor while another sis* ter, Virginia Marie, was flower glri. Best man for his brother wu Wayne E. Davis of Charleston, Va. Ushers were A-3c Donald Grant St. Mr and Mrs. Wayne ^ brother of toe bride, Dbvk of Charleston. W. Va„ are ^ stockweU. the bridegroom’s parents. ’ ^ For her weddlug the bride chose a Door-length gown el wUto raee petot talh ovfer Heene reception was held in the church parkxu immediately foUow- tributed to the About 70 per cent of all wheat X p 0 r 18 went under food-for-peace programs to food^ort countries like India. PakiJan, Egypt. Brazil and Poland. / LARGEST SINCE '34 Cotton shipments totaled 7-million bales, up 400,000 bales from last year. The cotton shipments were the largest since 1934. The department said factors that favorably atfectod U.S. cotton exports la 19$$dl were high eoBoamptioa abroad, relatively tow stocks la other major pro- U.8. snppHes priced ration. of eompetlDvely Exports of soybeans set a new record, reaching 142-million bush- AREA NEWS HOLLY - Harold D. Cole, 65, died Thursday at Durand Comiqu-nity Hospital at Durand, following a six-week illness. Service will be at the ^Dryer Funeral Home in Holly .^unday 2 p.m. with Rev. A. B. Howard officiating. A prayer service will be conducted Monday at two o’clock at the Congregational Church at Drummond Island and burial will be made in Drummond Island Cemetery. • Mr. Cole was a flight Instructor in the U.8. Air Corps la World War L,He was a member of the Oakland County ■herilfs department for 2$ years, serviag as deputy under seven sheriffs. Others are Rev. Wilfred Junke of Trinity Lutheran Church, Mount Gemens; Rev. August H. Klenke of Emmanuel Lutheran Church, Waldenburg; and Rev. Edgar J. Sander, now of Port Hope who was pataor of Christ Lutheran Church from 1942 to 1954. SCHEaVtlLE 8E^\1CFA Festival services are scheduled for 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. this Sunday and July 16 and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Tuesday evening will be dedicated to the church’s ladies’ auxiliary while Thursday services are to be held for the young people 6f More Than Wheat, Feed WASHINGTON (UPD-The Sen- He organized the first camp program for Oakland County Juvenile Home children, and was an Oakland County probation officer from 1943 to 1949. Postmaster at Holly from 1925 to 1933, he also served as treasurer of the Holly Board of Education for 10 years. He was a life member of the mem- Gon^on Plans Moving Ahead the Since his retirement in i9iS7’SK'. and Mrs. Cole have made their home at Gearwater, Florida, in the winter and on Drummond Island summers. Survivors are his wife Helen; son, James H. of Milford; daugh-Iter, Mrs. Howard Swartout of ate Agriculture Committee planned!Largo, Fla.; sister. Mrs. Bert today to consider a key section ofjWermuth of Fenton: and four the administration’s pared-down farm bill. The committee was to discuss extension of the Marketing Order Act to commodities otlier than wheat and feed grains. The administration now is concentrating Oft passage of this section and the 1962 wheat and feed grain programs. Under marketing orders, pro-dneers can agree to regulate the grades and bIsm of ranunodlttos they will ship, bnt not the acreage «r output of iudlvidual grandchildren. The family requests any memorials be sent to the Drummond Island Health Ginic for hospital equipment. $20J)00 Project Will Be Started in Oakland Twp. farmeni. The Senate group Thursday tentatively approved two stopgap ad-minis^tion proposals designed to trim farm surpluses a.s part of a compromise version of the original omnibus farm bill. OAKLAND TOWNSHIP-A $20,-000 rebuilding project on Collins Road between Orion and Gunn roads will be started soon by the Oakland County Road Comutission. ACREAGE-CUT PLAN Township Gerk Mrs. Lucy Alt said about three-tenths of a mile will be reconstructed and that a drainage problem on Collins Road near Orion Road will be corrected. The project will be paid lor on GENEVIEVE J. CLARK The engagement of Genevieve Jeanette dark and Thomas E. Towier is announced by the bride-elect’s parents Mr. and Mrs. Bert H. Gark of 33305 14-Miie Road, Farmtogton Township. The prospective bridegroom is the son'of Mr. and t ton couple left for a ioneymson to No date for the wedding bat Virginia. | betoi aet. The committee approved a plan to reduce wheat acreage in 1962 and another to curb 1962 production of feed grains-corn, grain sorghums and bariey. Beth praponals have won tentative approval from the Route Agriculture Cemmlttoe. However, the Seuato version of the wheut plan differs slightly from both the House and admlaistra- Road commission officials said no exact date has been set tor starting the work here. The road, which will be resurfaced with gravel, runs past the Oakland Township Hall located at 4393 Collins Road. Under the Senate feed grain plan, producers would have to agree to reduce acreage of the covered crops a minimum of 20 per to qualify for government price supports. return for the reduction, growers would get government payments based on 50 per cent of the normal production of the retire acreage. Ihe Senate plan also provkief that growers could retire an additional 20 per cent of their acreage in exchange fra payments at 6Q per cen^of normal return. DAVISBURG - The former Jen-e Lou Pierce became the bride of Bruce D. Taylor in a recent ceremony performed by Rev. Jack McCurry at the First Baptist Church of Davisburg. Approve $60,000 Loan by Avoftdaie Schools The Avondale Sdiool District is one of 14 Michigan districts which have received pennission from the Department of Public Instruction to borrow funds against anticipated Slate aid. The Department of Public Instruction today announced it would allow Avondale to borrow $60,000 against state aid expected during the 1961-62 school year. The largest ’ borrowing approved was a $150,000 loan by Saginaw Township Cbmmunity Schools, SagtoAw County^ r townNhip paying $1S,0M and the raunty financing the other half of the cost. The new parsonage was added in 1955. In preparation for the cen-tennial observance, the chancel has been remodeled, tjie church interior hat been redecorated, six inore pews have .been added and new carpeting has been laid in the chancel and center aiale. Eleven pastors have served the congregation since its founding. The present pastor. Rev. Edward Reinker, has been at Oulrt Lutheran Qiurch fra aeven years. Unioni^s Mull Offer by Norge The congregation, organized Group Okays Meeting to Be Held at Lansingj Will Hire Director LANSING W — The Constitutional Convention Sion — with an $ffi,0W grant at its disposal — moved ahead today on plans to hire an suitable site in Lansing. The 18-member cothmission, ap-pitoited by Gov. Swainson to get the convention off to a flying start, agreed unanimously at its first meeting Thursday that the capital city was the most logical place to hold the convention. A three-man rammittee was named to check into facilities available in Lnnslng nnd report its findings to the raniinlssion. The commission chairman, Howard J. Stoddard, president of the Michigan National Bank, said toe most logical sites appeared to be either the Lansing Gvic On-ter, one block west 4f the Capitol. or toe Kellogg Center Michigan State University. Stoddard emphasized that the advisory. Once the convention has convened Oct. 3 in Lansing, it may bold its sessions anywhere it chooses. The grant, from the W. K. Kellogg Foandntton, will be used to pay for the hiring of n fell-time director to guide the development of fact • finding studies on important phases of governmenl to be considered by the 144 convention delegates. Synod la IMI, ohni«ed I Firm Would Pension or Pay Off Employei Who Don't Move South MU^EGON (UPI) — Some 1,500 soon-to-be laid off factory workers today began pondering a settlement plan put forth by the Norge Division of the Bi^-Warner Corp. The company revealed to Local 404 of toe Allied Industrial Workers, AFLrCIO, it was willing tO transfer onlY 175 Wue-coHar em» ployes to its new location in Fort Smith, Ark., but said it would either pension off or pay off the rest of the work force. Bay G. Everett, president of the naioa, told the company Us gronp wants a week to review the ^an aad then will make Its declirion next Thnradny at a The firm, a long-time economic mainstay in Muskegon, announced in February its hitention to move Fort Smith, but Thursday was the first time it had indicated how it planned to settle longevity claims Norge intends to shut it factory here July 31 and then begin u immediate move intoi, its n^ headquarters. The company has already suspmded its second-shift operations, which threw some 250 workers out of *jobs last week. In addition to the transfer offer, the company said: —It would pension employes 60 years of age or older. —Make a cash settlement, based on length of service, in return lor which the employes would waive further rights or claims against the company. Union Says No to'Watchdog' Hoffa Suggests Idea, Put Up by Nonmember, to Convention five-man committee selected to screen nominations for the directorship. The director may be retained by the convention to handle administrative work while the delegates draft a new constitution to replace the present 53-year-old document. Any recommended change^ will require voter approval. MIAMI BEACH. Fla. W»-A proposal by a member of James R^ Hoffa's own Detroit Teamsters Union local — to establish a corruption watchdog committee over Teamsters affairs — was unanimously rejected Thursday at the national teamrters convention. Jennie Lou Pierce Weds Hoffa,. head of Local 299, as well as toe national union, put the proposal qF'to the convention even though he said the member, Melvin Angel ot 47555 Jeffry St.. Utica, wasn’t erttitled to have It introduced as he isn’t a convention delegate. The bride is the daughter of Ir. and Mrs. Emery, Pierce of 8245 Tindall Road. The bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Taylor of Lumberton, N. C. ot wUto salla wHh a V-shaped iieckHM atoHong potatod sleeves was ehooea by the bride tor her Her veil of illusion was held by a peail tiara. She carried a white orchid and stephanotia centered on a white Bible. Arlene Stayton of Holly seri’ed as maid of honor while Sharon Letotner of C e I i n a, Ohio, was bridesmaid. ' Best man was Lyno Cutler ot Arlii«tda Heighti. RL. The bride’s MRS. BRUCE p. TAYLOR and Emeiy Pierce Jr. of Garkston seated the guests. , A reception was b e 1 d in the diurch hall following tl|e r brotiiim. Da'^ Pierce ot Oxtord'mony. The Angel proposal called for a permanent five-man group of ont-riders to handle Internal anion disputes, safeguard union funds and make sure that “hoodlums nnd tncorrtgthle criminals’’ were barred from union office. Hoffa said Angd had been invited three times to present his plan to the convention resolutions commfttee and appeared before the group Thursday with hia wife but left without addressing tiie committee. ‘Try as we will, we can’t find this man,’’ Hoffa told the delegatee. Nobody spoke iir favor ol the resolution but a docen or so delegatee spoke In oniosttion. Q-E. Walla of Local 662, St Louis, called Angel’a plan “pure trftie." Other speekert praised Holts sad ■aid there was no need lor a group ' ke Angel pn^oeed. Joeeph Hedge, Local 170, Wor- „ eester. Mass., said “I canw here to vote for-Jlmmy I body's going to cl»age my mM." Several montbs ago AflRd oom-platoed to Detroit police that Hoffs and tiito 296 local aldis had roughed him up. Chaqin vara lodged agalmt ana at Rw aMm but latar dHsmimed. ■ ■ ■■ -i . ■ ' THE PCm.TlAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1961 ^am m4 IKius Trees May Kill Selves if Not Watched Closely TKMlom hu its own ftiQ shat«,tiKMe with firdUng roots, of maknotmls — those woodyjplsiiis M. J. Hooper. IMd repre-pcts with BUickha tendencies. AndiseitUtive of thn Dnvey Tree Exit may taise some tleuthiac on pert Co, Left alone, they have yoiH-pert to keep them trees from been known to strangle themselves injuring themselves. . to death. More often there is only Them frequently are teU-tale strangutatlon. The home signs that indicate this self-de-stroylng trait, but Jt soaaetimes takes the professional to rdot out the evils of this underground naovc- Mosquitoes Wiltleave Ice. If this sounds like the of a mad electronic scientist, wait a minute — the idea makes le the comoMnest root girdling — namely, the surface variety^ This means severing the of-fn^ root at the point of origin, then painting the wmm} to prevent ikeces of dry ice, hung in areas where mosquitoes are bothersome out ol doors, will d^ them away. Here's the reason, accanUag to the Cardox Diviskm of Chemetron Oorporation; Chrhsa dIoaMe gas givea by di7 lee Is bsavler thaa ■ Per Arue Only ■ ■ Sise lo-xir •42 ■ ■ ■ Lorge Selection of Siresi ond Colors 1 Stabs for Sidewalks. ■ ■ Swiauniaf PooU mmd Cstdss Amnt W« D«liv«r ROGER A. AUTHIER ■ During the growing season, the ■'tijee doctor will look for deficient development of trunk and 5j branches, excesshfe leaf scorch. Blwilting and other signs of mols-■iture deficiency commonly blamed ■{on drought. 2| Almost any kind of tree can ■ 'have girdling roots, but the con-■jdition is quite common with Nor-■<;way maples, sugar and red 2; maples, elms, planetrees, hmxe-^Ichestnuts and occasionally, oaks. ■ Nothing Now Rotio Stona Co. lOSTO WflMsad MUn WstS *1 rsaUM AUvwt IM I-AIIS _ Roses are one of the easiest planU in the srorld to grow. They thrive in every state of the Union, including Alaska, and they are widely planted throughout Europe and Asia. The roae, according tc archaeologists, has been 35,000,000 yean. Seotts Lawi Care Prodacts msKnena-ma nuns coMMm i FBmiZaS-BEMT NXES umt ^ NIW POftTIR-CAbU TIUCTOR AND MOWIR ^'Fer Quality—Saa Us and $ava" BARBER’S Laws I Pit Sspply 866S HiBhland Rd. (M-59) .Opaa Psily » *j»- “ciiTFs^ r 10 *• i axygea thaa esMs la the w-rsaadlag air. Mosqaliaes are re-pelM by this lower oxygen eoa- A 50-pound block of dry ice may be obtained already cut Into 10 slicea at carbon dioxide depota, dairies and Ice cream planU. This antount of dry ice will aonnaUy last all evening, longer if the weather la dry and the wind low, the Cardox people say. The pieces should be himg five or six feet apart, high enough so that no one will bump Into them. Wire may used, or baskets made of But don't handle the dry ke with your bare hands'. Geraniums Take Minimum Care Few kinds of plants respond so well to a minimum^ of attention as do geraniums. With plenty of sunlight and too much water or plant food, says the July issue of Better Homes k Gardens, they’U give you bright color for months outdoors — or almost the year around in pots indoors. There are many varieties to chooae from, and you can keep your plants healthy with Just imie bit of know-how. ♦ . a ★ Faulty feeding can be quite dangerous to a plant. If your geranium has been fed too much and too often, you’ll have healthy fbliage but no flowers. If plant leaves are yellowing, it's a good indication that the plant is starving. Feed geraniums with house-idant food every two months is enough for best growth and bloom. Day Lilies Have Some Enemies Day UUm are quite haAb' when cornea to restating alta^ by _ieecta. But entomdoglit Floyd F. Smith. the ns. DoNutiRot of Agriculture Research Division, Bdtaville, Idd.. says extensive hibridisetion to obtain flowers with new odor, slae and torm, and more hiah growth, may be to Inaect attadb are aome of the dajdily enemies and how to combat than; good contrd. Sotae Metaldehyds UNPREDICTABU; — Mrs. Orville Akin of 491 Hiird Street has unpredictable ruae plants. Right out of the middle of tier pet white rose grew an intruder with hundreds of small white rose-like blooms. Those who ||now roses think that pr^bly it is a multiflora, the understock on which many hybrid roses are grown. And that rose at the right was white last year, but pink this year. Mrs. AWn Is going to cut out the multlflora canes and wonders what color the pink rose will be next year. Most Lawns Can't Escape Onslaught of Ciabgiass August, crabgrass sends out flow-| erlng seed heads, usually three to six in number and arranged in a whorl at the end of the stalk, like the fingers on a hand. Mature “tilting,” with crabgrass seems | (g Are you the Don Quixote of gar-denland roamii% over your lawn Jousting with crabgrass with a lance-like weeding fork? This UnusualTrees Beautify Yard ' AphMw-MsMhlsn sprays, ap-pIlBd eufy in tiw aauwi as saw gfwwtii starts, aai repssled asedsd to pntoet Thrip—Malathion, two or three times, at weekly Intervals, or DDT and Lindane, as alternative tnat-wnts. Long-horned weevil and tanished plant bugs—Six per cent Chlordane dust or 2 tablespoons of 40 per cent pettable powder Chlordane per gallon of water. Spider Mites—Sprays containing Malathion or Kelthane should be applied, beginning eariy in the season, to foliage and mites, with one-^ half teaspoon of laundry detergent added to each gallon to increase wetting power. Puny Petunias Passe The vi^rous, free blooming plants of the Tiew Rosie Petunia ■ create niounds of rich rose flowers] In the garden. An early and con-| tinuous blooming, dwarf bedding i petunia, Rosie spreads about ft. The plants are covered with 2-in. ftowers and at the height of bloom produce a magnificent dls- SlopwMttg andw^fUng TRADE IN YOUR MOWER -on a WheBl-HoMB m tslwtoi toctw tM/ntwimjwO M a«ri lUntlml'T-'*’"!? MloMdNl aHnr year'Ml . . . ti 3 forward plat wtM. 2% afdoaal *■*!*? caatat4ioaatod rotary aal Makes Mowing A COME IN or CALL Our Kitchen StoH Will Plon a Custom Kitchen Especiolly for You! When you water, soak geraniums dear through, then let soil neariy dry out before watering again. If .lant is overwatered, there's danger of it rotting, while if Jt isn't watered enough, there's a good chance of it wilting. Tritomas Grow Colorful Flowers From Roots Tritomas used to be called "red hot pokers.” That was in the days when the flowers were all Now they come In cream-white, shades of yellow and apricot and even are two-toned, the top flowres on the stem a different color from those at the bottom. These flowers are bought as roots, planted in full sun In any fairly good atdl. The tall, straight bloom spikes are partknilarty good for use in decorating a modern-style boose. They continue sow the crop for next year. A single plant will produce as many as 200,000 seeds. Seei^ normally starts in late Auguri and continues through September. As the days get shorter fall, the plants cease growth and sunlight which crabgrass needs and turns the tops an ugly brown, desperately. futile, but tbe tournament can be won. In many parts of the country crabgrass Is ineviteble. Healthy lawns with thick, vigorous turf moved two Inches in height have greater strength to resist the pest. A Hew Kitchen Can Be Yours FOB BS HTTU AS *10®° Pur Week Call th^e BILL DIRG Nanber FE 4-1594 for FREE At-Home ESTIMATE ON ANY HOME IMPROVEMENT! But crabgrass is a persistent weed with its seeds resting dormant in the soil waiting to sprout when conditkms are right. Because crabgrass is an annual, it i start from new seed. With the advent of warm weather and rising humidity, the seed germinates and begins its subversion of desirable grasses. CrsbgrsM In the two-leat or seedHag stage Is yeOow-greea In color, but nonnslly dUflenIt to detect Is the lawn. As the first curve outward and downward In opposite directions. More leaves other pinnt which in torn pro-dnees still nnore plants. In the latter part of July and _ rsiomAMOAm,PoftriAC grass. Seeds can remain dormant in the ground for years and still be able to grow when they reach the soil snrfnce. Crabgrass will not thrive when there is reduced sunliidit. A fairly tall growth of grass will effectively ‘e out crabgrass. Among the lesser known trees on the campus of Michigan State University at East Lansing are: Acer buergerianum, the trident maple, a small tree with clean, smooth leaves that turn a bright red in the fall. Of Japanese origin, it should be used more often in this country, especially with tbe one story htmses. Another small maple is Acer or purple blow maple. Hie new leaves have a pur^e cast. Shaped somewhat like tlx^ of the sweetgum, they make the tree unique. The hardy rubber tree. Stunt Their Growth A height-retarding chemical called Phosfond which curbs stem lengths of such qiectacular plants as potted mums is now being introduced in florists and garden supply stores. Since mums often get too "leggy” and become unsightly, retarding stem growth adds to their attractiveness an) make it easier to keep tbeAi healthfully in regular-sized clay pots. an sreUng tree of some fUty feet. The low rubber camtent ena be seen hy palling h leaf npnit. The epaulette tree, Pterostyrax corymbosum, is impressive in tbe spring with its stril^ white flower formations. The Persian par-rotia, Parrotia persica, becomes a large shrub or small tree with small purplish early spring flowers. The trunk of an old specimen becomes mottled. All of these trees are hardy in the north and should be used much more often to add to our floral beauty and to the diversity woody plants. TRACTORS Fast Growing The red oak. quercus borealis, the fastest grower of all oaks, reaching a height ol 40 to 50 feet. I With broad symmetrical top it soon becomes an excellent riiade tree. Youhg red oaks need sunlight and develop best in porous, gravelly clay ^1. MID-SUMMER CLEARANCE • SIMPLICITY • JACOBSEN • YARDMAN Lip to 36 MONTHS to Pay SALES A SERVICE OpM DaUy 1A.M. to 9 R.M. • SPRINGFIELD 10% DOWN LEE’S 921 Mt Clement S4. FE 3-9830 To improve African violets. Insert a few rusty nails in the soil. The blossoms wUl be larger, more profuse and brighter in color. Short Gross Clippings Less Harmful to Lawn NEW YORK (UP!) - Frequent mowings helps to eliminate raking. Clippings more than an inch long are apt to stay pn top of the grass until long after they have' turned brown. But clippir^s less than an Inch long are apt to sift down through the- grass where they decranpoae without distracting from the greeti of the lawn, say gardening experts. KILL WEEDS in PONDS and LAKES I DUCO* Satin Sheen Ti!Tifl.Tnfll Ideal for woodwork or fur* niture throughoat the booss. fldorlssa. Quick diylBB.. Waahabls. DoeontorRludas match DuPont Wall Cdorfc DONALDSON LUMBER CO. 27 OKherd Loke Ayr. ra 2-BSBI Frao RarUnt WheeHhnbB SUNRBAN TRACTOR wwfnaMf-BWtiCRif I W/e/r jawntoctos^jw InctirtoasrtoeML »DIMM New Ml MUkene Whsdl Hotm BskM *srt apart of the hugest Isww. You tan 3T swaths...St specdi to < Call Si now for a free test As Low As .$410.00 KING BROS. Ptorttec Id. ct Opdykt Id. R 44734 R 4-1112 WITH AMOCO Standard 24-D Granulors 50 Lb. BAG Treats up to 20,000 Sq. FI. — CoUt ns- REGAL SEED B SUPPLY COMPANY PONnACSTOM MATTONSTO) SALE FAMOUS JACKSON ond PERKINS POTTED BOSE BDSHES FINEST QUALITY EVER-BLOOMING HYBRID TEAS, CLIMBERS ond FLORIBUNDAS 25 OFF CASH ond CARRY HOIIDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM . . . ALL IN RLOOM INCLUDING AMERICANA, PINK PARFAIT, STERLING SILVER end MANY OTHERS SALE SHADE TREES SALI FtICI $2^5 FAST GROWING SPECIALS • MAPLE • LINDEN • SYCAMORE • WILLOW ■og. loR49 TIwm are Ftotod, WsB Branclwd and in Fnl Last —I” to 10 ft. toH JACOBSEN’S BARDEI TOWN BURSERY 545 S. Broodwoy, Lake Orion MY 2-2681 isssetiddss — Oatniaa fosb BM and Nnrswy ... 10_________ Nsfth ol FsnNas nn Patty It. -a tctel topped only by Chicago’s Billy Pierce among active AL pitchers. The Senators also had <^y four hits, beating reliever Hoyt Wilhelm (6-4) on consecutive doubles by * Willie Tasby and Dale Long ’The White Sox returned to sixth place with their second victory in in the past 10 games—after winning 12 in a row. They did it wfth ci«eiJd* two runs in the sixth inning, pairing doubles by Minnie Minoso and AUeo p •SucAb York r-U. DP-O* L«bo«, Povor;. Bosor, EtctisrSwii ud Skowron. lOB-C10Tol«nd 1. New York 4. “ 4. 8P- artimiui’iii. w . ^4 ? ^ AB«1 .....41-4 1 1 I 4 SUnord (W. 7-4) 4 4 • 4 t . AMXaiCAN LEAOrK gaining his 291st career victory, i Sammy Esposito with an error, and the Los Angeles Angels, win- against Jerry Walker (3-4). Turk ning their sixth ta a row, re-lLown saved it for Wynn (7-1), Chock HcocIkU. He faaaed fix. Oxford Machants rolled over Don Nicholie 9-2 ta a Clau A-B game as John Keating one-hitter. The only blow off the Oxford hurler was a single by Bob An-erson ta the first tantaS-The winners pushed across six big runs in the fourth inning. Errors played a big part ta the scoring. Keating, Darrell Louell and Larry Allen got two hits each for OxfcHd. John Wagner and Clarence Jarvis picked up three. JlINIOa BASEBALL 8COEES CUn D Auburn Helthts BC ». PontUe North-TD 1 (A) Our LAdy of Itofato 14, Bulmon'* 1 tN) CUm E Nortbildi 10, Dlxlo Dulry S (Nl Ooeu-Colu IT. Orest Lskei 11 (N) WB Boyi Club 5. Oxford 1 (A) UOOM 13. E.U.B. S (A) Pontiac Skaters Gain 42 Spots for Nationals tel: Juvenile _ ________ _______ .... nelien: Juvenile C Boyt, Ind—Scott H»r-rlty; Juvenile D Boyt, 3nd—Usrk Port-lund: Juveolle D Olrlt, 3nd—Josn Hart- Lodlet Relay: lit—Mary . .. Jenet Ford. Ernettlne Wattt. Carol Pan-tel. Mixed Relay: 3nd—Mary Jo Kurk, Janet Ford, Ricky Speck, Jerry Charter; Srd—BroetUne watu, Carol Pantal. Kaniae CKy 31 « .344 THUBSDAY’S BESCLTS York 4, Cleveland 0. nl»ht ____Inftoo 1. Baltimora A nl(bt Detrdll 3. Box too 0 Lot Antclat 11. Mtoneiola 11 — (Cooley M) at Hew York (DaUy 4-14). night A Chicago (Herbert t-7) at Cltvelaad (iht--------7-4). night _____ :Ranioi 4-4) at Waihlngton (McClain 4-7). nigbt Angelet (McBrtdt 7-3) at (Poytark 3-3), Dlgbt 14X0004X1 SCREOCLE Mbineiota et Wathtaghn “ too at New Tort =w Oilcago at Oevelaod (1) acb^er; Junior Olrlt. Ud—Carol Cm Angeiet %*ree BtyU SlDKles: 8«nlor Men, »rd— ‘ •* - f"*- ‘ *My Most Memorable 18 Holes* Phoenix and Tucson Give Littler a Lilt Despite its toughest competition, Pontiac roller skaters captured the Great Lakes Regional Roller Skah ing Championships which qualified the winners for the North American Championships at Fort Worth, Texas, July 22-29. Tom Gregory, North American Senior Men’s Figure champion, will defend his title at Fort Worth along with juvenile Pairs, Mike Letaeke and Jeanne Hildebrand. Although they took fewer first i‘;ncy‘‘^k.M,"3rd=c.MuT~D;'riiV^^ itKiuco places, the Pontiac skaters wiU J»”‘g>,Lad^^ send its largest team (42 skaters) Boyx. Ud—DennU Horrall; JuvanU* SI to the nationals. These were the regional results' held at Ooklawn, 111. _ ____ Chicago (Card- Cncluatl'THunl _ ---- 3rd—Norbert* DonnoUy," Juid^y WhlU, Joa Qroom^ Linda Sumbur; Junior. 3nd—David Dovnliu, Oayla WU-bome, Jim Perry, Diane Oraul. Benlor, 3rd—David Schafer —" Ulllan: Junior, 3rd—Oennla_ —-------Diane Qreul: Juvenile, Srd— Rolland Lund and Robyn White. MY MOST MEMORABLE 18 GOLF HOLES (Third of a sertos) By GENE UTllER L.S. Opea Golf ChampioB When I showM up for the Phoenix Open ta February of 1959, was the reverse of the banquet speaker who needs no introductkHi.. needed all the introduction I could get. With the exception of three straight victories ta the Lis Vegas Tournament of Champions, I hadn’t been a winner of the tour since June of 1956. I was like the fellow who had such a low opinion of himself that he wouldn’t belong to any organization that would take him ta as a member. three rounds. The fourth hole at Arliona Country Club will nl-wayn be memorable.to me because It hud a big part in ead-lug the worst slump of my career. The fourth is a par four, 39!>-yard bole and nobody would call it a great g(rtf hole. But it looked great to me when I holed out a six-iron shot for an eagle deuce foom about 160 yards. I didn't kpoW it right .away, of course, but that shot won the tournament. Art Wall was running at me like <2arry Back and I just managed to last. I shot a last-round 70, he had a 66, and I won the money by stroke. After not ^winning for nearly two years, I was pretty shaky. In order to •shoot that 70, I made six birdies and an eagle. It was a thrilling m«mt«t for me heenuse I wnn starving for a victwy. Aad it gut me started OB my biggest year since I tarned pro in Feiyrnaiy of 18M. I won a total ef five toaraainents la Itn and each time my margin and on this day the hole was playing long because of the wind. Leaving the 18th tee oa the final round, I wnn tied with Art Wall and Joe OnmpbrtL My tee shot won la the fairway nad I ball on the green, nbout six feet below the pin. Uadw the clr-enmsUnres, It wan one of the finest golf shuts I’ve ever mn^. I missed the putt but made a birdie, finished the round in 66, and won my second straight tournament by a stroke. It did a lot for my confidence and it wasn't bad for my bankroll, either. I not only had won two tournaments back-to-back, but — please excuse the pun — had beaten my old pal Art Wall-to-Wall. In 1950, when AH was the leading money winner, that took a lot ert doing. No.4 U ABfZONA CC. I’ve had pretty good luck on the aocalled deaert “rat” courses, and I felt like a pro^iector with a gold strike when I won at Phoenix and Tucson in successive weeks. For two years I couldn't win anything; then I won two tournaments back-to-back. . The Tucson Open hi played at El Rio Country Oub and the name has a pleasant sound to me because it was there I hit one of the finest golf shots of my career. In this case it was the 18th hide, it’s a par fiv^ that measures 510 yards ^ there’s a slight dog-leg to the right. The green is small ChtetfO . . SZ 44 421 11 i PhliidelDhlB S3 51 -111 2! 1™^ ‘ravasoAX-s besclxs . ----- .— -------- ---- An»la« 10. St. Louis 1. night Welch: Inurmedlata Dance, i nttttarrt^L Chicago 3-3 . 11 and Carole WllU: Novlca A -Qerry^ McNelve and Judy 85r??an^.^ 3' Relghard: Junior Dance, 1st—D e n n 11. lODAX’S GA4IEB SS;'n*^i,‘fSd°Ju“d,«*"’ PlUl^riPhl. <»»rt 3.1) at Chlca Benlor, Jrd-LouU Parker, 8yl- cnemnaU (Hunt S4 and Purkey . Loit Angtlee (Xoulax ,11-4 and llame S-7) (2). twi-nigbt PttUburgh (Ha<^ M) -(Oaolnfer 1-3) night .oule (Cleotta 4-3) at ___________Ity. Dance: Senior hence, lev—txiuie *-»rx-: TIlVUHDi ir end Mary Clouie, 3nd—Charlee Wab- i,., Annie* 10. i le end An. Welch- InUrmedlet. D.nc. I"' We Dubbed It! PCH Did Gain State Golf Title Our faces are red — and With good reasoa In our Centennial edition, we stated that Pontiac Central High School had never won a state g(rtf championship. Ihis was an error, a couple of our loyal read-era have informed us, and the facts bear them out. As a matter of record, the West Huron Street school has won two state crowns — 1933 and 1941. With Herman Otto at the helm, the Chiefs won the sUte title ta 1933. Team members included Harold Stewart, Jerry Holmquist, Ed Rogers, Art Nelson and Bob Isgrigg. They repeated ta 1941 under coach Paul Allison. Team members were Larry Pentiuk, Don Valittae, Adam Wolenski, Neal McDowell and Mitchell Rampart. PhUadeIpbla st Chicago St. Louis at Ban Prancicco —" -• *“*1 AngeUi, Right r'8 KHEDtXE Examination for Law PITTSBURGH (AP)-A scheduled examination of Vernon Law’s taling pitchirtg arm was called off iThursday until Friday. Fixer Relieved of Pro Contract With b^las DALLAS (AP) — The contract of Bill Minneriy, involved in the basketball fix scandal, as a contact man, has been suspended by National Football League Q>m-missiomr Pete Rozelle, the office of the Dallas Cbwboyn revealed 'nmnday. Minneriy, University of Connecticut backfield star, was signed 'by -Dallas ih Japuary. OOME BACK HERE—Pittsburgh leftfielder Joe Oiristopher appears to have a fly ball hit by Sam Taylor of the Chicago Cubs widita his reach, top, as he runs toward the. leftlleld foul-line. Bttt the bail bounces behind him, center, and winds up at the feet of Cubs’ bullpen pitchers, bottom. Taylor reached sec-ond.-ilw at Chicago. Kocsis Heads Field of Michigan Amateurs JACK9CX4 tf) - Sam Kbesia, king of Michigan’s amateur golfers 20 years ago as a lad of 22, and defending champion Don Stevens headed the field into the 50th annual State Amateur Champion-shit) today. The field of 64 teed off this morning in the first of six match play rounds at the Country Club of Jackson. Semi-finals and final day the par 36-36—72 layout after two Kocsis, who resumed play ta the state amateur three years ago, was the medalist. He fired a 139 for 36 holes. when he ballooned to an 83 yesterday for a 156 total. There was a strong flavor of youOi nnoong the qnallflers behind the 42-year old Kocsis, the National Pnbllnx champion tn 1968 when most of the top con-grade aad high Hill, 22, brother of pro Davey Hill, was a member this soring oI !He Jackson Junior College team that finished second lor the National JC championship. Molenda is a 22-year-old student at Detroit Tech. Tom Grace, 20. of Lathrup Village, who qualified at 69-73—142, attends Notre Dame. Jackson’s Bob Zimmerman, 23, a qualifier with a 69-73—142, is a recent graduate of Duke. 0«m EoexU. BloomlleM HUl»-71-64-U4 Hill, jAcksoB—71-64-144 _ Mol«ndk. Detroit—64-74—141 Tom Ormce. Lathrup Vlllue-46-T3—144 The Btaomfleld HUis former champion from one of Michigan’s best-known golfing fnm-lles shot n 88 yesterday at the country club followng n 71 Wednesday at Spring Arbor. Stevens of Detroit, 3-and-2 vie- tSb to laM year over Tom Draper atjiSS Port Huron, was exempt from the *®.y B»im*r, nouthsate-73-70-i43 twoj.y wuiyiiig ™«nd. Mite mu 0l ta 1958. was a stroke behind Koc-;i»«k zinn. Royal oax—w-ij-us sis with a 71*69-140. They were the only tw(> golfers MLke Aa4onUn. PontlBc~76-75^145 JJm KodUck. Omnd Rapi"------ Country Qub and Spring Arhor.;g^ '£Xre.*'SrrK^7l'^ini;' layouts. John Molenda of Detroit was alone at 141 with rounds of 89 nndTt, Other former champions to sup vlve into the face-to-face match play struggle were Bud Stevens, 1959 champion and brother of the current defender, and Draper and four-time titlist Glenn Johnson. T'** Cr»k-71-73-146 Jo* Vault,. Saxlnaw-74-74-146 .t„h- -------- •-,cit«*_7o.T6-144 ....... —. »:Bon-74-73—147 Bill Cmii. Parmlntton-76-73—167 Douf JWUon. TMntnt!-7J-74 147 Bud Drtrok—TJ-75—147 Oen« Hunt. Flint—74-73—M7 £&‘aife”EaSS-’A:.!C,- Cults. Jackson. 73-74—146 M-23-US Bob QUck. Jackson—77-73—149 Detroit’s Bud Stevens shot a 72->i°x^it"'w^'nc-7l-V7-i7r^* t5-147 quallficaUhn. Draper' Birmingham was 73-73—146. John- ----------- son, who won three of his championships on this same Country Qub course, was 74-76—150. Lou Wendrow of Lansing, another ex-champion, missed the 152 playoff for the last four places , Berklsy—73-77-146 Oeorgt Llnkatrr. Borklsy—i Ouy Brlfts. Adrian—75,74—•». Junslnf-74-73-144 Richard Robertson. Pontiac—75-73-150 J»*)n«0h, Oroste He—74-76-136 XWVMDAYI maxs FINDS HOME—Mr. and Mra. Farrell C. Stiehm, Minneapolis, help Zmlo Versalles, center, with his luggage as they move him NA/Sa:i BL.RJO 1 LAS vIlajSr 133)1 Ms MinheapOlis hotel room. The SfiehUis took, the stt%- Iginjunj^tgo. ou cwitui.j pended Minnesota Twins shortstop to their 30-roora home. McMlllaiiJninnS:7SZl» Tony Lopuekl. Romulua—74-76—156 Dniv* Kameron. Detroit“r>7e<74->150 Bom Privbylek. Mu8kefon~73-77—IM SI.'!, J“rn(, Jackson—76-75-181 ntel J»'2»on—74-77-151 R«Plde-77-74-I51 V.„ P«rk-73-76-151 Jim Plllplak. Ann Arbor—71-73—131 ■i”. Wyandotte—7)1-76-131 Art oiri. Royal-75-77—162 (won playoff) Harold Brink. Orand Rapids—76-76—161 (won plsyolf) Mtsirice Keyser, Charlotte—73-74—153 (won playoff) Francis Lotte. .Ann Arbor—75-77—153 (won Dlavoffi ^ Six Shoot 66 in 1st Round PAUL, Minn. (AP)—The $30,(100 St. Paul Open Golf Tbur-nament swung into its second lUand today with each of six' play-ers hopeful of breaking into the lead after the traffic jam that had them tied at 66 ta the openii« [)und. Jerry Barber, Tom Nieporte, Don January, Buster (^pit, Johnny Pott, Wally Ulrich and Jeny Barber went into today’s play a one shot lead over a frio of ypunga pros—Tommy Aaron, Don Massengale and Lee Raymond. A shot rebind these two off the pace with 68s were six oUMn, leaving 15 players wilUn t*o strokes of each other in oat fl( ment’i history. v.V/ THE PONTIAC RRESS. FRIPAY. JULY 7, 1061 GOLD CREST Httik ItlUffiSr? OUM t» GOLD CREST ftr Me Uwest Prices in tmkli> CHECK & COMPARE-HERETHEIARE; IT«0l9«Rlt ^ > 4.44 1 RTAMnAftn 1 CNser (ri-M) / 1 D i ^U KM 1 FORD \ 8.95 Oworontaad ogaintt ^factiva w#rkman- fHHiicn > CHlt.tMlI) \ MIiuICtI > ^ 8.95 ship onrf iriotariali far at long os you awn your cor. nVMOSTN \ (N N)MM / ^ 8.95 CtOILlSC S iiJii) y* 12.95 ■SICK \ fit-Ml / > 18.95 1 Df LUXE 1 maiiiRli \ CHSMf (*l M) / i±66 Guarantaad ogointt fORO \ (imji-eri y > 12.95 manufacturing defacts for. os long CHlt.fMM) \ Ml 1 III 1 Cfl / > 12.45 as you own your car. Ouqranfecd far 1 va«« OHoimt PITMOSTH N (SS M)l-ICll > > 11.45 CIOILlAC > f*»4l> / > 15.30 normal waar, rust-out $ corrosion. 9SICS ^ (i»M) j >22.30 1 PREMIUM 1 STSDIIkKIR > CHSMr Ml M) J > S.88 fORO > >15.15 Unconditionally (M ll)l *fl > guorantood for as long os you own your car! NO rirliosTH > rH-M)MCil y FTilYo > 13.20 SERVICE OR PARTS etsiuLf A _ iH-ML . V rrvsff R f3E S AT ANY TIME! •siTr > (It W) / r353Fo [MnED UL.4 Th« TRUE 0010 CREST Storwl StFKSTS I, therefore Guaranty m.f. Kct a better brake reline regardleae how much you na^M " anywhere safe too! ‘ ^ your car OPEN SUN. 8 to 4 DAILY 8 to 8, SAT. 8 to 4 McKinley Faces Big T«t in Wimbledon Net Final W1MBL£D0N. England (UPD-Cbuck McKinley of St. Ana. M&, faced the biggest test o( his young life today when he stepped on t' tradiOoo4M>und center court meet Auetralla’e Rod Laver in the final of the men's ihiMN in the Wimbledon Tennis Champlanshipe. Although it is only a few months since McKinley was publicly crtti> cUed by the United States Lawn Tennis Association tor his ' while {dayins in the Davis Cup matches in Australia, the chunky young man today was in a position to restore prestige to U.S. amateur PHONE FOR PRICES NOT LISTED ^KSTinstaiution only ISminutisi the youi«est pleycr to capture the man's title since Sidney B. Wpod of New York won in 1931 at the age of ]». Laver, Seeded seoaod. was In-■tailed as a 9-1 favorite by Brltiah able of handling his American foe off Ms recent |day. In 1969, Laver lost to (Mmedo, and last year he wu defeated by Net BtaMe Taay 1 IN* has a Yank ta title at 1 Alex Oil a stadeol but be h The ftaal aftke wemea's dn. glee tonsorrew will match Chris-tine Trmnaa and Ai«ela Martl-msy. both or ragland Ns Bag- tllle slaee Dorothy Bound wen In im aad It atoo Is the first aU-Britlsh fhud la «1 years. Karen Hantae of Chula Vista. CMIf., and BlUle Jean MofOtt of Long Bea^. Calif., advanced to the finals of the women’s doubles by beating Sally Moore of Bakersfield. Calif., and Lesley Turner of Australia, 64. 64. Jsck Burke wean't the only person to be rewarded with the richest single payday of his career when the 4th annual Bulck Open came to an end last Mcoiday at Warwick Hills Country Club. Burke's caddy, Tom Smallwood of Pontiac, also enjoyed his fattest payday and the 18^year-old Pontiac Central graduate will quickly tell you there’s nothing quite like toting clubs for the champion. PoUowlng his victory over BUly Casper and Johnny Pott In their 18-hole play>--------- Tourney on Dixie Course Pontiac Putter Takes 7th MMW LIQUCMt COSr^KTSOIT, MICa ISM PSOOf. MtTtub raOM SMIN NBT BALUDV-hod Uver of AustrsUs i s ballet step after losing his racquet teas India’s Ramsnathan Kriahnsm at Wimbledon 1 won and meets Chuck McKinley today for the i Vence Randall, runnenip in the nathmal championship at Cincinnati last weekend, won the f300 Qrst prise in the Pott Putt tournament at Drayton Plains last Randall had 127 putts for 72 holes, scoring 20 sees and only three bogies. Second place went to Condy Roberson of Savannah, Geotgia who picked |1M with a total of 130 putts. Nationsl champion Lee Weldy of Savannah, winner of 13,000 last aeason, was tied for third and won |33. Robertson at IS is the youngest "regular” among the touring putt- ‘^iLr^liamaon of JackaonviUe, Fla. and Jim Oox of Phoenix City each has 137 putts in tying Weldy lor third. Best score among Michigan putters was turned in by Eveiwtt Koenig M Pontiac who finished 7th with iHinder per 142. He won |10. Koenig has been playing with the tour for two weeks and hopes to stay on the circuit with the Professioiud Putters of America. A large crowd witneseed fi>e toumaroant at the Dixie Highway These were the top scores and money winners: vtne* BmSiJL AthrUI*. M.C.. ITT ($3N>; OmST IteMnM. Savanth. — lla, iH (111*); Lat WVWj. SaTi Ocortia, Bob WlUlamun. Jack*-------- ud Jim Coil Pboonlx City ,aU JIT (III) Prank Wt, SaTaaaaB, Ml (IM): Th« Big Turnover in the Cor Market kos found us With toq inony good used curs. WE MUST SELL THEM! INCLUDING LABOR AND MATERIALS ONE-HOUR SERVICE IN THE DOGHOUSE Teeing Off 8 ^BILLfXMUilWEIX. Off, Burke bended Smell-wood e check for $350 end thet emount wu $280 more then Tommy bed ever received in five yeers of beg-totlng. best prsvious paycheck came three weeks ago at Oakland Hills, where he has been caddying since 19S7, when touring pro BUI FsrreU gave him |70 at the coo-cluskm of the U.S. Open. Opes thet ■BsaUwaad wvsri e«l sad boeght himaetf a |Me ante-roabils. He Ud haca dUBgaMfy ■evlag his moaey Is bey a ear aad PamirB paysif eanplelei 'I'm going to the bank right V," exclaimed the grinning youth, who wore that pleaaed-es-I expression Wtdnesday as he looked at Bqrke's signature and those numerals that went with it. Smallwood couldn't deposit his latest earnings on Tuesday, course, because it was the Fourth of July and the banks wpre dosed. But he didn’t waste any thiie' getting there the next day. iNi PCH gnd-■ato, played twe yean of vardty ever-par 78 last Mtay at Pontlae Ooestry Ctab was thdr beat 60 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN T,S9r^=TJ9S ASSINOIK WAGON Radio, Heater,, Automatic Transmis-,sk)o. Power Steerine. 1,575 Sn ORCHMD UK IS 1 Heck iMt ef Teler«pk M., BeMlec HAROLD TURNER, Inc. GOLD CREST MUFFLERS • BRAKES 464 S. WOODWARD Ml 4-7990 BIRMINGHAM JO 4-6266 caddied for a winner. Smallwood lives St 30S South Anderson. If any Oakland County youi«ster wants to know the vlrtuee of bdng a caddy, this little tale should help funlrii an answer ae two—eqiedal-ly if a boy happens to reap the benefits of caddj^ tor the durn^i. MOKE BVICX OPEN NOTES Burke’s |9,000 payoff at Warwick HiUs boosted him to 7th place among the PGA's all-time leading money winnera with |200,961.5L rather unusual ailment acOTosone shot in his hand eveiy six weeks. Inflamed tendons graAisIly cause the. thumb to lose iu elutlclty and Burke cannot play golf lor one week foUowing th eortiaone shot. A ★ Csqier, Pott and Burke each pocketed an extra S233.59 as his share of the playoff gate receipts. Total attendance for the five at Warwick wag 22,758. WOBT PUTTS We noticed that circuit-rider Bob Roeburg didn’t shoot any bUudng S9s St Warwick like the one he fired early last week in an exhl-bltian at Toledo's Glei«arry C.C. Could it be that Warwick Is more difficult than Glengarryf At any rate. It was a great round of golf. RosHutg carded 27-32 ova the 6,755-yard course which •----par ol 3S4^7L K«liy-Sprii)tfl#M Tibs-Type Hra 14“ GUARANTHD BONDIO BrokM Rtlifitd *975 r^-chtv.—flTWMtk WbMia PukaS ttm nm MUm *r I-Tmr FRII INSTALUTION MUFFLERS *^88 FONTUkC COmiTRT CLUB DMYIN6 RANOE NOW OPEN 8:30 t$ 11 P.M. 0^1 far Ymt CemreelMKe learning bow to hit ' ball oorrectly from _ ______®in«ranBir''^r’' your golf game started rMt in '61 with the best prora-sional advice. FRANK SYRON—Pre UOYO SYRON—Mr- A PGA-sponsored Pro-Am Metro tournament is scheduled Monday at Oakland Hills . . KnoUwood C.C. is being tmighened for next year’s ftotor Oty Opoi tourney. Ex-Hawkeyo a Cardinal ST. LOUIS (AP) - The Louis Cardinals of the National Football League Thunday signed Eugene Motley, a University of Iowa fullback who Uvea in Eaat St. Louis, m, as a fMe ag Poitiec Coutanr Sm EUsabeth Lake Bd. PE S-tM9 TIRE DBCOUNTS Wkr Sar a E-msT BraM Naw mnt Oan, FaOy OaaraaUM 670x15 $ 7,99 7J0xl4 ^ $10.99 NO MONIY DOWN IMim THE SERVKE BLUE SKY LANES Coll FE 2-3200 for Foil Rttorvoftont FOR ALL YOUR LUMBER REEDS 1x2 Fsrrlsg SIripi... It 'i;. 1x1 Roof Rtorii... 4< * 2x4-0 Eni-Msy SIb4i3B« 2x4 RaiisB Ltsglht...... 0« %; 4ilx%” Nariboari.....4130 2x4i1i” Psglwari...... 00«- OKOxyk” Fir Fiymsd, CIS 42J6 . KHITItt UHKI M. $31 Oekleiid Avmiug FE 4-0913 ' ... THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JULY 7, 1961 TWENTY-FIVE NBA Threatens Patterson's Reign NEW YORK (AP) - The Na-tkmal Boxh« Aawciatkm faced a ■howdown taday in Ita ettori to get heavyweight champion Floyd Patteraon defend his tide by Sept. 13 against one of tte six top NBA contenders. llie virtual ultimatAun was greeted with Jeers by Pattoibon's manager, lawyer and the promoter of the planned Patterson-Torn McNeely title fight in Boston. ♦ A ★ The NBA charges McNeely Is not a qualified contender, "and warns it may strip the chamirion of his crown if he goes through with the match. "Ridiculous,” sal Tom Bolan. "They didn’t take the title from Ingemar Johansaim and it was a year before he fought Patterson a return bout." "I believe Patteraon fought P^e Rademacher in an NBA state and he (Rademacher) never even had a professiohal fight,” man Greenberg. Masse-dmsetts boxing commissioner. "Who are they (the NBA) to decide the logical ooritenders?”' said Julius Noveniber, Patterson's attorney. "I thought that was up to the commissions. The NBA is nothing but a group of state commissioners front City League Averages CLASS A AND B mmotion rau>AT, Oxford Mrebonti TEAM aiTTINO Utr....... n MS tJ M .toi 1« MS U 41 .141 TEAM PITCaiNO Talbott >. Uorchanti . S° • O.C. ... NIchollo ...... Oxford Mtr. . . IS IT n s.u Mixed Tournament Set for Saturday The city’s annual Mixed Two-Ball Foursome golf toumanient, sponsored by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department, will be played &turday afteriiooh at Municipal golf course. Tee-off time is 12 o'clock noon. Defending champions of the 18-hole Scotch Foursome event for the 2nd straight year are Mrs. Zadah DeBolt and Stan Savage. Twenty-seven teams competed in last year's tourney and more are expected to enter tomorrow, according to L. C. (Crease) Baroer, Municipal course manager. Hoptag to praveat Savage aad DeBolt from wlaalag a Srd eoa-secative champtoMriiip are Mr.-aad Mrs. W. D. Wright of Lake Orloa, liN ruAaeraap. Post entries will be accepted, but they won't be given select pairings and starting times. Banter has announced. Several entries have already been received, Bamer said. The entry fee is $6 per team and registration can be made at the Municipal course tomorrow before the start of the event or by calling Bamer at FE 5-1702. winner and runherup teams while golf balls go to the 3rd and 4th place finishers. IJH—J»y Plowxri xnd Eunice Reteei -T. Hnmmitt nnd MonlU Himml^ T.M-Bettr ind Lloyd Wnlloco-Clyde Skinner nnd Reles Barker. 12:11—Joe Burtdort nnd Fhyllle Chnn-dler—Rny Allen nnd Mre. C. Znhn. U:S4—Louie Dnnlele and Carol By«n— Ocorge Ponttuk nnd Olortn Luther. tI:M-^lm nnd Bobble MlUor —Carl Bnynci and Afnee Larera. lI:»-8tao Baraso and Zadah Do-Bolf-Mr. and Mrs. D. Wrltht**. 13:42—Babe and Bernice Allen —Mr. and Mre. Frank Eyarrett. 13:M—R. Childress aad M. Childress— BIU Myers and Connie Doutlas. 1:11—Ad. Elkina and Russ H Bud -Mathews and Janet Beteler. 1:M-Ooorfs aad Ms Ross and D. Hammltt. 1:11—John WetUaufor mua 1,00—Bob Ksnt and partner. 1: IS—Dare and Oretchen Ray Keith aad Jerry Daniels. 1:24—Olen Hickson aad Chris Tate— Bill Tau and Bertha Hlckaan. 1:30—Mr. and Mrs. Smith-Mr. and Mrs. Id Boyer. •*V1M0 Runner-Up. Moore Rallies to Win LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-World fcathciweight champion Davey Moore of ^iringfield, Ohio, rallied after a slow start to score a unanimous 10- round decision o v. e: veteran Gil Cadilii of Mexico (Sty In a non-titie bout Thursday night. Moore, 132, had' his best round In the 10th when he dropped (Si-dilli, 129, to one knee eariy in foe round. He rushed Cadilii foe rest frf foe way. There were no other knockdowns. in Fsktty-F.M..... M WoedhuU-CtO ... 1 Barkcltr—P.M. ...; 33 13 II .407 S3 13 13 .3N Chuck Johnson—P.M. Jim Paschko—Talb. .. Btu Dcll-PM. a .117 ( .341 t .143 Chuck Johnson-P.M. Bta^, anyway. What is their au-tha«1ty7 'Mayte they’re in a conspiracy. Well see about that." * * ★ The NBA, which does not have Juriadictlon in New York and Massachusetts, lilted the light heavyweight crown from Archie Moore, but he Mill is recognized in thbse two states. David Ott, NBA president, said in Cleveland that Patterson will be treated as any other chainpkm. O’Amato pointed out Patteraon has fought four top contenders, and that the champion took Rademacher because "we couldn't get anyone elae." Patterson knocked out the Olympic champion in the sixth round at Seattle, in 1957. Washington is an NBA state.’ ★ ★ w Bolan said foe NBA edict will not influence his plans to stage the bout. "We’re going ahead with our plans for a title fight with Mc-Neeley tor late September or early October in Boston,” he said. "We expect to name the date by the end of the week. Patterson will be the champion until he foses the title In the ring." Patteraon could not be reached for comment. mck Neira—CIO _______ Pbllx Brooki-ClO OtoD Punck—Tilbeit . Amoi Brxniher-CtO J«ry RlII—CTO ....... John PlcMr—P.M....... A1 Barkclcy-P.M...... Chuck Johnnn—P.M. mix Brooke—CIO .. .. Howord Mcralno—Oxt. Cbot Woodmori—CIO . Bob Orr—CIO ......... RUNS; Pcilx Brook4-CIO ... Chtiwk JohuoD.;-P.M. . Nick Netro-mo >. ... Jorry BIll-CIO ...... Al Bork*l»y-P.M. ... Cloy WllIUm»-CIO . Bob RoboJt-P.M. .. . Balmy Sailing at PYC Mack Goodwin with his crew of wife Mamie and Bill Murray sailed through balmy breezes Wednesday night to win the Pontiac Yacht Oub Nile Owl Series. Ralph Behler and crew of wife Totsy and children Gay and Glenn fini^ed second while Jerry Gray finished third. Btu,Dcll-PM. mCTmro:. 4'orry Andcrion—ToJb. Z7+ _ Jim Wuncr—P.M. .. Zf-;- 3 Lorry DoDirtek—Jots ZS-i' 3 Jim Boy—CIO " * Jim Roy-CIO .................. Jim ^nwoy—Ntchollc ........... Lorry Dcmrlck—Jcti .......... Terry Andcrion—Talbott ........ .. John Tork-^cti ................ 34 SPEEDEE British Open Field Draws 369 Golfers BIRKDALE. England (API -Gary Player, reigning U.S. Mas- fors -chaiBplaiL.-jHsdieled today. ~ foe British Open Golf Championship starting Monday could produce a record winniiig score on the seaside links of Birkdale.i scorched dry by weeks of wind d sun. I "And Arnold Palmer could be the one to do it," said the 25-year-old South African, "Amie is playing this course extremely well.” ♦ ★ * Player and Palmer, of Latrobe, Pa.,—the leading money wintiers of the American circuit- — practiced together over the 6,844-yard layout and both have shot sub-par rounds, with Palmer | chalidng up a 69 Thursday. Par for the course is 36-36—72. • Palmer and Player are stand-1 out favorites in a field of 369 golf-| ers from 19 nations. I AvsHsbIs at Tbsss Dsalsrt McKIBBEN a CHILDS Yau’ll Hit the jackpot with a SHELTON DEAL! ~Here's Where Our Prices Start-1 BUICKS Tempests. . . ^ 2113 Specials . . *2330 Catalinas. ., .... *2631 LeSabres . ... . . *2993 Star Chiefs. .... *3003 Invictos . . *3447 Bonnevilles. ...*3255 Electras ...... Pint SalM Taa —Pick Yetr Own IqHipniAiit . . *3825 We Hove These Cars in Stock PONTIACS TEMPESTS CATALINAS 2 Deers.......4 4 Deers.......6 SteNen Wegens .... 4 VENTURAS 2-Deer Herdtop .. 4-Deer Herdfept . USABRES Skylerkt 3 2 Deers..............2 4 Deers...........2 4 Deers...........2 Stetien Wegens .... 2 2-Deer Herdtep .... 1 4-Deer Herdteps ... 2 Cenvertibles .......2 ^ *NVICTAS electras ^ 2-Deer Herdteps . .2 4-Deer Herdteps .. .2 CenvevliMe ...... 1 2-Doer Herdtopt .. . 2 Convertible ......1 2 Doers....... 4 Deers....... 2-Deer Herdteps . 4-Deer Herdteps . Stetien Wegens .. Convertibles . ,. . BONNEVILLES 2-Doer Herdteps . 4-Deor Hordte|)S . Convertibles ... aitfert enS Betehery RSe. We Need ’59 Pontiacs — Look at the Trade-In Values! We allow these prices on Sharp A-1 Pontiac 4-door Hardtops, equipped with Automatic Transmission, Radio, Heater, Power Brakes and Steering, Whitewalls, that are ready for ui to sell. This allowarKe on the Standard Size New Cars — Only a little less on the compact models. Comparable allowances' on all other makes and models. Catalinas-^2150 Star Chiefs-^2250 Bonnevilies-^2400 w I ___u SKLTON raNTMC-BUKK 223 S. Main St. ROCHESTER OL 1-8133 6 CARLOADS OF flRES L C. WIUIAMS^ Salesmm SEE DS FOR EXPERT SERTICE OR • CHEVROLET • PONTIAC • BUICK ‘15 Minutes from Pontiac* Hoaer Right MotoR ISO S. WASHINGTON OrrM-ZA, OXFORD FNONI OA t-2S2l Dayton DOES IT AGAIN ALL POPULAR 14" and 15" SIZES Dayton Thorofandi McGlarBRS-Cistons AU FUU pms AU rRKED BROW CANCOLATION PRICES WhitewiM Tubeless Dayton CUSTOM MADE TO SELL FOR MUCH MORE We Honestly Believe This td Be , . , The GREATEST TIRE SALE of the CEHTURY! BLACKWALLS — 6.78-15 CvstsM Nylsn Tsbt Typs .. .. ,«.tS 6.70-15 McCIwbr Nyks Tsbs Tyyt .11.95 6.76-15 Tbsrsbnd Tyrtx Tsbsisu.. .12.95 7.16- 15 Tbsrsbnd Tyrtx Tsbt Typt. .11.95 7.16- 15 Tbtrtbrtd TtbtiMi.......1195 7A6-15 McCIwts Nyks Ttbt Tyyt. .14.95' 7.66-15 Tbtrtbrtd Tyrtx Ttbtkw .14.95 6.66/1.26-15 McOwts NylM T.T. .15.95 6.66/126-15 Tbtrtbrtd Tyrtx nsn .1195 7J114 CwttM Nyltii Tsbtitu.......1195 7.56-14 Tbtrtbrtd Nylts Ttbthti . .15.95 166-14 CmtMB Tyrtx Ttbtitw ... .1195 16114 Tbtrtbitd NylM Ttbtitu . .1195 15114 CsttMB Tyrtx Ttbtkit........1195 Tbtrtbitd Tyi 15114 1 I Tyrtx TtbtItM . .1195 —— WHITEWALLS-------------------- 17115 Tbtrtbrtd Tyrtx TnbtlMt.. .1195 1711S MeCtatts Nyltn T«bt Tyyt. .1195 7.1115 Tbtrtbrtd Tyrtx T«bt Typt. .1195 7.1115 Tbtrtbrtd Tyrtx Tvbtltu.. .1195 7.61T5 Tbtrtbrtd Tyrtx Tobt Typt. .1195 7A115 CMttn Nyltn T«bt Typt... .1195 7A115 McOwta NylM Tsbtitu .. .1195 166/121-15 McCImbh NylM T.T. .17.95 166/12115 Mcdmn NylM Tlut .19.95 7.5114 OntM NylM Tnbtltu....1195 7J114 CiKttti Dthixt NylM Tltu. .1195 16114 Tbtrtbrtd NylM Tebtltu . .1195 15114 Tbtrtbrtd NylM Tobtlut . .19.95 Dayton Tire Cd. ALL PRICC PLUS FID. TAX AND OLD TIRt OFF YOUR CAR NYLM OAnON NULTI-NILEI PRENIUHS NY^ Deeifsed, estfaeered aad Mb far SAFEST twiifHte drhrinf. Here's the BEST in Mfety, mileage, riding comfort and styling. It's premium quality on every count . . . provides the ultimata in blowout protecion. It is superior to new car tire quality. FREE HenmM NO NONET DeWN FRONT END ALIGNMENT ss MurriEBS msTALUD $^95 I FREE (Mott Cart) W | Whool BiUact ^.95 SIZE BLACKWALL MFHITEWALL Tub* Type Tubefets Tub# Typt Tubeless 6.4b-15 $15.95 $17.95 tlK9S $20.95 6.70-15 7.50-14 16.95 11.95 19.95 22.95 7.10-15 8.00-14 18.91 22.95 22.95 24.95 7.60-15 8.50-14 19.95 24.95 27.M 8:00-15' 9.00/9.50-15 2195 24.95 26.95 30.95 TWEXTY-SIX // THE POXTJAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JULY 7, 1—1 tl ’s red hot RBd». _ wtth ■ thm-game Ie«d iB National Leaiue race after'WbminK six in a roar, push into Los Angeles tonighf for • a four-game showdown with the hot, second-place NEW MANAOEB - Johnny Keane, left, new manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, gets a handshake from Walt Alston, field boss of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Alston's team then went out and spoiled Keane's debut. 10-1. f^ew Cardinal Boss Hank Is Ready Predicts No Pennant forGiardello ers-Redlegs Start Red Hot Series in NL The Reds jumped fM games ahead of the tUtd-pInce iSlants bgr relief ace ^ Miller f siiWfe by Goa BeU. Southpaw Jim OTaole (7-7), edslass In his last ts, abut out the Oil three hits until the seventh rse siililH scored a nn. This is only the .second West Q)aat visit of the year for tlw Reds, who trail the Dodgers 4-5 in the season series. The last tine they set foot In the CbUaeom they were stumbling on an eight-game losing skid and they dropi^ three in a row to the Dodgers. That was in April. Dykes Receives Confidence Vote of Indian Boss homer, In the opener : Pirates, then added two the nigMcap for a 14oe4 day that 14 Now the Reds, riding on top since June 16, have won seven of their last eight after sweeping a two-game set at San Francisco with a 3-2 decision Thursday. The Dodgers made it six out of seven ^ih h 10-1 win against St. Louis “■ giving Johnny Keane, who replaced Solly Hemus as Card manager eariier in the day, a rough debut. Pittsburgh split a doubleheader at Chicago, breeting 15-3 before C^lbs bounced back for a S-1 Milwaukee wrapped CLEVELAND (AP)-The lateM managerial vote of confidence belongs to Jimmy Dykes of the slumping Oeveland Indians, his boss insists that doesn't .351. That's second, cedy to Cub Geoirie Altman's JS5. Bob IMead (9-0) was the first-game winner, aMxMgh allowiiw 11 bits. Dick EUsworth (30) lost H. he should start looking around for another Job. "We have no intention of changing managers," Ctoneral Manager Gabe Paul said Thursday night after Oevelaad had absorbed a 4-0 defeat by the New Ymt Yankees at New York’s Yankee Sta- ; LOS ANGELES UP - Promising ino miracles, and certainly no pen-^lant this year. 48-year-oId Jotegy JCeane. .the new manager of the |Bt. Louis Cardinals, said today: , “I am most concerned right now DETROIT - WUbert (Sklppy) Hemus. who paid a farewell visit' 's game. ; don't think there is anytldng iaeriously wrong that we can't oor-^wet' and we mlghf* do'ir might" "You've got to ermcct it when a club isn’t going good Mr. Busch (August Busch, owner of the eiito) and Bing 'Devine Keane, who signed a contract for ♦ (the remainder of this year ^ ^962, stepped up from hli CWdtaial 1 SoOy Hemus Thursday. 1 nan wna F the Job I "It's part of the game," said die-weight champion, will make his pro debut on the Henry Hank-Joey Giaidello fight card at the Convention Arena July 10. Promoter Max C Handler said McClure, a recent graduate ot rV w«l meat the chance to nunage." Jonathan Washington of Detroit in Kesuw baa beea wHh tbe Oartg-aal argaaisatiaB for » yean, mwi att .la the Mlaor League ehaia as a player aad maaager, taking the csMcUmr Job at St. 1 gray haired, affable man. "We believe that we can have a favorable season from now on. We're too far back for a pennant. hope to build up momentum which will carry us into next year." three-game sweep against last place Philadelphia with a 7-6 victory. The Dodgers collected a dozen hits, all but two of them sipglrs. and five unearned runs against the Cards, turning a 2-0 lead into a rout with a aeven-nin third iniK ing against loser Bob Miller (1-3) and reliever Maury McDermott. Right-hander Don Drysdaie (7-5). NFl. players Swapped of the four-round boots. Hank has been running dally on Belle isle wtth Johnny Summerlki. the.fine Detroit heavyweight of another ypar, and* boxing daily at the Motor City Gym. Giardello is probably the best fighter Hank has met to date. Gi-ardello is ranked eighth among the middleweights. The air-conditioned Convention Arena seats 12,000 and is probably the plushiest fight club in America with foam rubber seats for all. was Geveland’s straight shutout loss to the Yanks, its fourth straight defeat, and its 14th in 19 games since June 18— when the Injuns shared first place in the American League with Detroit In those three w-eeks. Dykes' club has stumbled back to third pIace-7H games off Detroit’s pace. The Indians haven't scored a run in their last 23 innings and only one in their last 36—that a homer by Tito ~ B’t triple and a by Ed Bailey. Juaa Maricfasl (M) tha kiaer as tbf Giants their third la a hiw-aU 3-2 decisions. Roberto demeate drove In five with five hits, one a twinrun 3*Y«ar>Oldi Aiming for Two Big PursM The class 3-year-oids of American turf, minus only Carry Back, move front and center again Saturday In the two richest races on the national bone racing program—the $100,00l)«dded Hollywood Derby at Hollywood Park and the f75.000-add«l Oasaic at ArUagton Park. The dlvialon’o daoa is wdl divided between tbe two races with M Have shown a preference for distance going in the 114 miles of the Hollywood feature and the speedsters in the mile of the Oastoe. Ih Time MIDAS MUFFLERS ARE GUARANTEED FOR AS LONS AS YOU OWN YOUR CAR i'SJtorgWPU'Z'iis cw. Tku'* vhM Ih* MIDAS as 79B owo ihai car. Saarsaicc OMaai! If aver rcpIactSKMia Msadad jo* wili pay nod tea for tlw aiidfcr iwtft aaly a aafvicp Siasw Daly MIDAS oSert ihia sasra>n*<- S<>*d ■( •-MIDAS M ae yatte caai! CaU MIDAS aad aad 435 1 SAGINAW otpff carps hororib FE 2-lBll — By Iba Aateelated Piesa nayer swapping in the National OBtbkB League moved into the mk^aumnner sports spotlight in big way today after the New York Giants plucked two prize plums from t)ie Washington Redskins in a three-team deal also involving the Dallas Owboya. In an, the Gtants-Redskins-COw-boys deal involved eight players, the big trade bringing ends Jim Podoley and Joe Waltcm to New York from Washington. At the same time, tbe Cleveland Browns announced acquisition of quarterback John Roach from St. Louis in a player exchange that sent halfback Frentloe Gautt and roolde end Taz Anderson Cardinals. ability to go the distance thatl! caught the eye of the Giant brass. The 6-foot, 2-inch, 205-pounder who starred at Central Michigan can fill tbe role either at end of flanker back. Poiioley, U, played four years with the Redskins, grabbing 78 passes for 1,411 yards and 11 touchdowns. His touchdown sprints included runs of 82, 68, 64 and 63'yards. Walton, 25, will be used as a 'tight” end. The forma* Pittsburgh star, a 6-footer weighing 185, pulled in 83 passes tor 1,308 yards and 11 touchdowns during his stay with the Redskins. Coach Sherman instructed both Podoley and Walton to report to canv at Fairfield, COnn., with toe earty group July 17 when Giant rookies wiB launch the training Softball Teams Full of Errors It was a comedy of errors Inj tha city recreation softball leagues] tensive end Fi^ Dugan to the beamed over tbe aoqulaitian of Roach from the St. Louia OutH-nals, pointliig out at Hiram. Ohio, where tbe Browm opened a three-day quarterback drill. "This adds "a quarterback to____ squad who can run wlAi the balL Roach also Is consideied a fine experience as a i The Cuba nailed th mw with a founva second faui-ig on. home runs by Dick Bertell aad Al Heist off one-time nemesis Wllmer Miaett (4-7). It aail’t aixto straight defsat. Gian HobMe (M) waa the winner. Mltwaukee blew 34 and 5-2 laads, than came from behind Uevar Don Fcrrareee (14) with in the eeveath bnlnt- A ______ bunt by plnd PVaak Thomei brought cUnciier. Johnny AntonelU, 94 in with Oevo- lend, won it in relief by feeing just one man in his return to the NL. . "S'lV sirs*!!!:«“.“ it.'! 4 • I • Moon U a • • 1 apt* eWlndh'B U • • t o • • ■ • Rawwd rf 4 a a 1 _______4«if Urter lb a 1 »( ^ . iiiisl:! , ii!i Miwlal a Mb: fr-lteB te M««a to Mbi sCuT lm AM.IM »-a df-Bu-Ctes. OrwnmM seTwilfo HBF—By DryMtal* (Unii, Buoh«k>. OTNkt VMVL CrbvteU. T-a:al A- "it’s the smoothest-sea to sear SAYS MR. SMOOTH TO MR. SILK nhhttwmiiuivitiTi. To obtain the pair, the Giants dealt Waahingtm place-kicking specialirt John Aveni, rookie end -—^—----------------------~)i ■ a’iii The Giants had acquired Aveni from the Chicago Bears and WhH-sell from the Minnesota Vikinga in trades only last week. Washington needed Avoii be-their No. 1 placeldcka-. Bob Khayat, has undeigone two stomach operations and may not play the comkig aeason. The Giants aent rookie kicker Allen Green from Mississippi and ^h 1962 draft choice to Dallas. The Cowboys, in turn, shuttled oy. Big hitters of the night were Dan Butler of Big Bear and Bruce Mann of St. Paul's With three hits each. Leaders Lose, but Stay Atop Waterford League The losers la Waterford's Na-. tional Softball League kept pace Srith each other in a tie for first Hobby Painting looer to Big Jim’s 1-0. and RAW beaten by LakelaDd, 54, remained in the Max Jarrett pitched a 1-hitter rDig Jim’s with the only run ■cored by Tom Moran tram fiift on a-tlngle by Jim HMte la the Sth imdng. Pitcher Doug Rleck acored an infield out la tbe Sth inning tor Lakeland’s winning nai. GOLF! tNuliM Urft wwWlUrfW^IIWW Iww# 3 Staitfaif Tttt NtWiitiif (MfiMCMMiTChb 2280 Uefoa LMw Rd. SUMMER BOWLING 3 GAMES $1^0 COCKTAIL LOUNCI AIR CONDmONID unwooD uns 3121 W. Hmwm PI 4.7041 PUY GOLF 9^ PRII TAPI JIICOROfR MCm« M ma a«s(M« W. M*S.. C*nwr fttj CONVENTION ARENA OPENING HENRY JOEY HANK«*GIARDELLO mk'iwalMkn Gn* MiMrwtfo art WfaHiWi. U tlwiri>,.M (fmm* i Si UPDM Aims tmume-si QmMri MmLn | * JULY 10 UMR# ] "OUIITT' Da yae tetond to OlVf SPKtAL CONUDfRATtON to ALL LIACUI / V\l ROWURS bmrlfof at Hw "900" OOWU V "GUILTY" "GUILTY" 7 Ot yM aHar THI UU OP M8ITINC AND BANQUIT ROOMS to cai , aity traeps far waattei sod feed rsWot affaht AT NO CHARCif * "GUILTY" 8 0a yae after THI ItST IN FOOD AND SIRVICI is a tofiaad stoMtebare ^ far hmchaa. dteaars and Jbaeqeatfc WhsHwr It ba a FAMILY DINNIR, 8IIVICI CLUl lUNCNiON. RRIOCI LUNCHION Ok A lANQUIT POR -OO PfRSOMP 'GUILTY" 9. WM TNI NIW AND IIAUTIPUL "900" LOUNCI prerida tha Utoiaat is ATMOSPHIRI AND RILAXATIONf "GUILTY" ■ Wd "GUILTY" TKIYWIKTK TnOMEIOFTIIE HiritM. "300"bowl 100 S. CASS LAKE ROAD FE 8.8792 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV. JULY 7. 1961 TWENTY-SEVEN Sof Welfare Plan •TUUmiDIE luirveleri Oa Oatjrf fonaarlr WJiita CUr 1«40 CASS URE RR. RUM HARIOR-^.2770 • NCNICKmC •SNACK BAK • SWIMMING • PADDLE BOARDS • PARK FREE XaVieoH DINING ROOM 3;S;24SriRePwtWaste hr Leadership Attack, OefenM AAark First Day as N.Y. Stata Investigates City ALBANY. N. Y. (AP)-A itrong attack and *a ttrong detente UMricAl the opening today of a ■tate Investigation of the attempt ' i«ak 1 its grlvBto Bmb for P*rlln *r CLOSiD MONDAYS 5741 IlisabMli Lakt Rd. near A FE 3-9391 BIGGER THAN EVER! WiHilhr BIG SOUND PRINCE WAILER5 at.... CLUB 59 LIQUOR —lEER —WINE DANCING FROM 9 PA4. fo 7 9516 Highlond Rd. at M-59 Speedwoy I Niias Waal of Roatiec CHtics of tho widely publicized Newburgh plan to limit the amount and duration of welfare payments reneWed charges that the proposed regulations were illegal, inhumane and founded anti-Negro pre^ice. ♦ A * "We believe that radal discrimination is the motivating factor behind the Newbur|d> program,' said the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. ^ NEEa> BKAPPBAISAL' Said Newburgh’s city manager, Joseph Mitchell: "There is a crying need for a^ reappraisal of the role of welfare our society. It cannm and uld not thrive in C.I.A. (Central Intelligence Agency) secie- Htor: • HELEN jNayiag year fctrorifo aaaibers oa the pioae • HARPO playiag the cloriael end SOS ... mask yoa likm BAR . . . serving your favorite bev-erage, deHcious pizza and sandwiches. Daily 7 to 2, Sundays 2 to 12. RESTAURANT Enjoy tasty home-cooked dinners prepaced by espert chefs. Mon.-Wpd., 4:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Thurs.-Saf., 4:30 a m. to 10 p.m. Carry-Out Service ea FoaS leer—Wine Forliso’t Biemar Bar ( Reslairail FE 3-9446 94-98 W. Huron FE 2-6229 UNIVE31SITY PARK. Pa. (API-Former President Dwi^t D. Eisenhower suggests that young Americana give priority to America history, civics and economics If they want to develop the necessary qualities of leadership. Sr * W The five-star general spoke Thursday at a luncheon highlighting the opening activities to s three-day conlemice of ExphMcr Scouts from Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and the DIatrict of Cohimbia. w * * ' he said, "the kind of leadership diat% g^ng to keep us from catastrophe is, first of all, character; a body that will carry the brain and the heart that it I supposed to carry.” He tpld the E>cplorer Sc 'we must be careful that government doesn’t come too far into our lives." in Halt Construction Work JACKSON W - Woiic was halted n some S6 millioh in Jackson County construction projects this morning as members of Bricklayers Union Local 15 set up picket was the second stoppage in less than two months. MftcheU’s remarks were pre-payed for a 'hearing before menv hers of the Stete Board of Social Wellare' He was among 10 Ni burgh officials who appeared under subpoenas issued as the New burgh program became a foes point for broad debate on the er Ure scope of public welfare. Sr ' ♦ Sr Officials of the Hudson Valley.l city of 31.000 about 60 jniles noyth of New York Oty, said that 5 per cent of the population was relief and that the taxpayers longer could absorb the cost. A large portion of those on i are Negroes. ★ ★ * Mitchell told the board 1 burgh did not believe "that government department has the right to conduct its programs without regard to. society as . a whole.’’ He has said the city is determined to proceed with social reform "by whatever means within our disposal," even if it means doing without state and federal aid. In Australia a cruiser is very large glass of ben-, schooner is the next biggest, middy Ls a 10-ouncer, and a pony i* the smallest glass of beer. three services spent an adiUtional 163 miUkm for machine tools in the fiscal year ending last June . Auditors Say $41,000 Machine Bought ’by AF While Two Lay Idle WASIINGTON (UPI) - Government auditors said today the Air Force bought a Wl.OOO screwmaking machine even though the Navy bad two of the complex devices lying idle in storage dumps. A ♦ A .The auditors said the Air Force purdiase was Just one example of waste caused "inadequate agement" procures set up by Defense Department to coordinate machine tooling buying by the armed services. Hm) Oeaeral AoeouUag Office (OAO). charged by Oen-gveas to look for waste and eor-naptloB in govenunent, saM ■In the course of our review, we identified procurements of over < $700,000 which were made when identical or substitutable idle equipment Aas available," The auditors, in a report to Congress, said the total defense department inventory contained 500, DANGINB-BMiaHTS Wwl.-Fri.-S«t.-Wii. Now — Tha Doon Qualls "D-NOTIS" "We consider the procurements ^ > have been unnecessary." Man, 5L Backs Into Police Car: Gets Jail Fine a’t pey to back into a police car, Herbert V. Goody koontz, 51. of 4123 Lotus Dr., Waterford Township, learned yeste^ day. Goodykoontz was arrested June! 26th after he backed into a police car driven by Patrolman Robert Irown. Fonad guilty #t drunken driving yesterday before Municipal dndge CMli MeCnllum, Ooody-keonts was sentenced to M days in the Oakland County JnU. He was also fined $100, ordered Tot PIZZA Coriy-Ottt Call FE 4^981 000 items of production equipment P«y »3.20 for repair of the worth about $5 billion. IPoUce car. placed on a year’s pro-, W w b bation, and ordered to attend Al- They said 140,000 of these ma-cohoH™ Anonymous meetings reg-chine tools — valued at $1.5 bll-j“***'*y. Hon—were in general reserve, De- * * * spite the large supply, however,] He faces trial July 13 on a later tte auditors reported that the drunken driving charge. TsniiUng, Dslicim Siizllsg Steak »1 J8 Bar-B4l Ribs-Ckieksi-Pizza-FMi Pork Chops-Shrimp Bisiisssmi’t Liadwos Clioict IiiqBDr—Btii—Wii_ TAKEOUT ORDERS 258S DIXIE HWY. WetkdayB 11 o.m. to 2 o.m. Soturdoy Noon to 1 o.m. Sundoy 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. Kitekon Opon 5 to II p.m. OR 3-9671 Holiday Events at Oakland Park Cut by One Day SHRIMP SEA FOOD PLATE FROG LEGS STEAKS Pizza **At Itz Be»V* Also Carry Out Orders FISH DINNER ALL THE FISH YOU CAN EAT Fridby, 5 to 10 pjn. I 1 Clover Leaf Inn - Tear PoTorito Cocktails oad Nixod Drinks 1967 Cass Uke Rd., Keego Harbor Phone 682-.1620 The long Fourth of July celebration at OakiaiMl NPV has beeb cut by one day and will end Satur-, day night instead of Sunday, according to Russell Themm. cele-' bration chairman for the North-! side Community Club. AAA Kiddies Day events have rescheduled from this afternoon to tomorrow from 1 to 5 p.m., Themm said. A fireworks display at 10 p.m. tomorrow will end the celebration, which began Monday. DRAYTON imi Biggest Little Jazz Band in Town WALLY EARL'S QUARTET Fri. and Sot. Nights SUNDAY NIGHTS f««hirin| “SULLY” on Mo's New Baby Grand COCKTAIL BAR and DINING ROOM Check of Weeds Started by City First Search Is Made in Perry Park Area; Pontiac to Be Covered The annual municipal week-cutting program is under way again CKy weed inspector Lester Stan- tiac and will continue in a counterclockwise direction around the cityi in coming weeks, according to David R. Ewalt, director of Parks ^ & Recreation. Stanley, principal of Hawthorne School, determines which vacant lots are overgrown with weeds. The Paries & Recreation Depart-nent then sends out notices to property owners announcing tl^t; if they don't trim the weeds in 10 days, the city wiU do so. AAA Property owners are biHed for any trimming by the city. Unpaid bills end up on a special assessment roll. Ewklt said the whole city will be covered once by the program. Weed cutting became a city policy after a Pontiac woman assaulted by a man hiding in deep' weeds next to the sidewalk on the* north side of town a few yearsi Evidence Insufficient' in Fatal Shooting of Paj DCTROrr m — Asst. Wayne Cbunty Prooecutor George D, Kent says ttere Is insufficiem evidence at this tinte to bring chaiige* agdinst Gerald Hollerbach In the fatal shooting of a cloae friend, GUbert Miller. , toM police be, shot Miller, alao 30. ton of a Deoptometrist, after miattJdng for a prowler at the HoUei^ bach home in Graaae ffointe Park June 2T. * 3P3E3P3E PiiTfiASMiUONVOmtiiPs happiness in your HEARTANDTEAROINYOUREYKi "AS BRIGHT AND happy a bauble AS HOLLYWOOD HAS EVER PACKAGED'. FULL OF FUHANDFROLIC!" ★ ★★★ “CAHTIHFLAS CONQUERS IN •PEPF. A JOYOUS PRODUCTION CRAMMED WITH delightful EH-TERTAIHMEHT!" -ILY. DaHv Mm "PEPr IS A prize package FtJR THE WHOLE fAMILl.lFYOURE looking eor entertainment WITHOUT OIRT OR VIOLENCE, ■PEPE' IS TOUR “AMEYE-POPPER! ■ •PEPFHASEVERY- i.’ Congrets set off at a wait's pace. , , By MTi'MDNTGtMIEIty WASHINGT(»4-Uke all Gwd^ this coivantoaal session Is di-vkW lato three parts. The third part, is now apcoming. protites to give more troutile I Durif« that second pehod be* tween Easter and the Fourth ol July lecets, the administration chalked up a phenomenal string stl successes. Soane observers extravagantly caU it the most productive single stretch since ^ Roosevelt's "first hundred days.” i result. year's operation are virtually SPIKES SCHOOL BOX None dther than House majority leatler John McCorma*^, a fellow Irish Catholic from Massachusetts. is spiking the President’s hi>pe» foe * J2.54>lUlon ■ to raise teachers' salaries and * ♦. * Although the gigantic measure sailed through the Senate last May. McCormack and other ing House action on the bill, unless the rules committee first approves KTS million in'loaiis to Catholic and other nonpublic schools. Both bills may die as a the flrtt snow flies, unless one side agrees to retreat and fight another day. OBTS EVEKYTHINO ' The Kennedy leglsIaUve successes to date are not. however, to be scoffed at. the youtWul pnxy achieved nearly everything he dreamed of. plus some fancy extra trinuninip op his huge HS-bUHon housing hiU. Like Santa Oaua's bag. tt contains somethli« lor everyone, aad it’s papa who really pays. Federal taxes are being raised to pay for the additional 111.7 biUion which Kennedy’s newly passed highway WH witi pump into the interstate highway pro- Even U these should be the toUl laurels lor the session, they will provide plenty of campaign fodder lor next year. The Ub- Guirr Rsnvu OAKLAND PARK IGIT 3 tkiMfk I Hresvsrtu J«ly 4tfi mil Mi « li| Onyt aM W|bh PONTIAC MOMES MATWa JULY 7.AU RIDES 10c Further to clog the headlong rush for adjournment. Senate majwity leader Mike Mansfield Is committed to bring out a MU to curb filibusters against civU rights at this session. It may not get anywhere, but could conceivably keep the — STARTS-- TONIGHT EM 3-9124 ' MARTIN I DHMafl Wraaglafs TV uS a*—»«an Ar«M« Eftry 8*tara*j Ha JUwlHtM CWms* 9451 EHsabarii Laka Rd. at Uaiea Lake Read FOR MIMRIRS AND CURTS Ffi., Sat.. Saa. 'M 9 P.M. isk ar CWcksa Ptaaar . .$1.00 toak ar Skrfmp Otanar .11,50 WATIRFORD EAGLES Na. 2117 47CI NiflkUad Rd. OR S-9910 I LVro ‘THE HOME STRETCH I Now Congress Is heading intb the home atratch-and the last two months between July 4 and Labor Day adjournment—and the outlook for the administration’s remaining "must" bills is admittedly dire. President Kennedy’s big farm bill is in a peck of trouble. Alread> 'a mere shadow of its || former sell, its key provision j which would have given Secretary Freeman wide authority to V control farm production has been killed In committees. R * * * ,K Faced with certain defeat of a ij| pian to let farmers and Free- jw man work out separate schemes ' O lor each com^iiy. the admin- iR istralion ha.s'offered a compro- K miae to let Congress rewrite the ^ * programs, but lew legislatois seem to be buying that either. Chencet for passage of the President s medical care plan lor the aged art practlcafly nU at this session. Backers of Kennedy’s five-year plan for hkndling toreign aid are alao pessihiistlc. and sharp cuts in the $4.5^1Uion request lor this Reds Have Their Eyei^ en Chilean Copper { SANTIAGO. ChUe rfl - Chile would find no Inconvenience In selling copper to the Soviet Union or Red China. President Jorgei Allessandri told a Chilean labor'^ . 5 TniirurcT Tt, d-lwta. KOI but IniiiiW I W.UISIIb«.l trip to the Communist nations, K told Alessandri that the Soviet J Union and Red China want to buy Chilean copper and urged him to enter Into negotiations wMh them. Alessandri, then reM*«d _ that Chne w annulment, according to State Supreme Court istice Harry E. Schiiick. Schirick dismissed an annulment I action brought by Lawrence G. Corcoran on ground that his wila l-rthen a 35-year^ild Navy moae-gave her age as 29 on their Ucenat appUcatkM when they |ried in 19M in FTorida. I The Judge found that Mrs. Corcoran did so becauae - - ‘ 25 at the time, wanted his parents !to think she was younger than she ; actually was. Schirick, however, granted the wife a legal separation ami $4Q a week support for hersei: and children. Donate insurance Firm CIUDAD TRUJILLO. Dominican : Republic (PA)—Three children of the late Generalissimo Rafael L. iTrujUk) have donated an insurance company to the Other victories for the administration include a ing minimum wages, the liberal-izatton of social security, an -emergency leed grain program, increased unemployment com-pensatioa. aid to depressed areas, treatlon of an interna-tiohal travel bureau, help lor H ■ox OFFICE OPEN 7:00 MA 4-3135 Fr§« PloygroHnd FRI.-SAT.-RUN. THE RISE AND FALL.OF HITLER'S 3rd REICH MEIN-KAMPF MSmimiMUMUT' -■KirAa-'tsaar COMING FRIDAY, 14rti' THE TRULY GREAT ONE! FOR THE FIRST TIME ON A DRIVE-IN SCREEN! NOW SEE IT ON THE WORLD'S LARGEST SCREEN i AND IN THE ONLY DRIVE-IN THEATER EQUIPPED TO PROJECT 3S-«5-70nm-TODD-AO ^EN-HUR’’ About 90 per cent of the ration’i natural gas is produced in the five states of Texas, Louisiana. Okla. Kioma, New Mexico and Kansas. CARL'S KIDDY UND 10 RIDES $1 Cec. DUIe a«id Taletrapb R THE PONTIAC PRE^S. FRIDAY. Jl I.Y 7, lOHl AEC Building Tannels Should Test Ban End YUCTA FUTS. Nev. (AP) - Despite the 32-month ban on nu- COMMERCE Twctwis ■■ AKOMEPUPIIOOUCTfON Afunm THE LOST COj a 11-foot-high tunnel in the new complex at the Nev^a test site at Yucca Flats, Nov. Despite a !-month ban on nuclear tests, the Atomic En- ★ # t * * * I I* ★ ★ SHOWS AT !«:•* [HVIDaSEI2NICKS GONE HTHIHE WIND m— HSUEHMMailellilJIIID " . . AP rh*i*r*i al the site. Some experts beiieve~Tliey'^niay ev entually lx* used to test the ultimate weapon; the neutron bomb. The AEC says the complex is being built for any use deemed necessary should nuclear testing resume. Times toured the bleak test area —48 miles long and 28 miles-wide —under AEC supervision. DESCRIBES Tl'NNELS Deserif)ing the tunnels, where | miners are excavating 24 hours | a dayv Miles reported; ’"At the end of one shaft, a low firing | chamber — 70 inches high, 76 inches wide and 63 feet long—ex-.tended off a 14-foot high tunnel, f Hisf arits far end were'three red-' painfM WPGE fWiSlSnr'Wnl Ground Zero! markings to show' the exact positioning of a nuclear | testing device. "This firing vault, obviously) tailored for a specific test, is ready to go, equipped with gravel and plywood flooring, power lines, lighting, ventilation, etc., and awaiting only the installation ofj the device itself and its instrumentation. ... "The main shaft runs straight into the mountain (Rainier Mesa) for perhaps a mile, then curves ! gently to the right, for an I all length of about a mile and a half. The United .States. rank.s .second the lai-gest importer of agricul-;world’s agricultural imports come only to the United Kingdom as lural products. One-si.xth of the 1 to the U.S. "Off the main shafts are the shot shafts, perhaps a half milc| long, curving sharply and hook-’ ing into shot chambers. The, curve, of course, is to help dampen the explosion so it will wreck the least amount of tunneling.' The AECs last 1958. w’as a small one, jeodonamed ■TRi 300 pounds of TNT. Titanii was the I03rd in the Nevada series, whlclj started imi. 27, 1951, with) operation Ranger, a 1.27 kiloton device lone kiloton is equal to 1.000 pounds of TNT). Gets Coast Guard Work CHARLEVOIX tir> - Koenig Construction Co. of Traverse City ha-won the general contract to build a new Coast Guard lifeboat station at Charlevoix. The firm was among five bidding on the project w hich is part of a S300.000 building program at the Charlevoix installation. FRIDAY "MEIN KAMPF" o» 7:00 and 11:10 "SINS OF RACHEL CADE" of 9:01 SAT. and SUN, "SINS OF RACHEL CADE" o» 1:00, 5:10, 9:15 "MEIN KAMPF" ot i;03, 7:13, 11:25 HURON \ yirilBI HURON MALININGf THE TRUE HORROR OF HITLER! EveiY Foot of Film Scenes Never Authentic From Secret Nazi Archives! Before Shown On The Amerifian Srrapnl RKIHIDiailiiNM MiSSiOMrD? ..They both fought for eurvival in the too-beautiful bodV h S!of Rachel Cade.' In the pitch-black of the African night...in^ Shar lover’s arms...Rachel Cade violated the laws of her God I m -r; Rachel Cade ANGIE DICKINSON-PETER FINCH- JUNGLE DEEP y'dl ADVENTURE oo CO IN THE V AFRICAN V CONGO {o "Sin was bad! V Sin was evil!" i ...the beautiful mission* 1 ary from Kansas had ' taught them. But in the V ' pitch4)lack of the African 1 ^ night...she stole into her lover’s ox. arms! gIr MOORE THIRTY Sntof SpMWI Sirioil Steak *1»§ punis-iiRQuns Ddiy t AJL to a AJL »mMr t PJL to t AJL Ptaito «f Ptm Pwkiito SION MUTUAL DEFENSE TREATY-A mutual defeUM treaty between the Soviet Union and North Korea, announced in Moaoow by Soviet Premier Niicita Khnuhchev. ia signed by Khnubchev and North Korean Communiit party leader Kim II Sung deft). Soviet ofOdals at the ceremony, from right to left are: First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan, behind Khrushchev; Frol Kozlov, a secretary of the Soviet Communist party central committee and former first deputy premier; and President Leonid Breshnov. Behind Sung, ia rear, is Soviet Defense Minister Marshal Itodion Malinovsky. Wasttrn ond Hillbilly Music by Wtndail Smith and His loud Hear Them Come One^ Come AU FridaySaturday 9 P.M.-2 PM. Spadafore Bar 6 N. Cots (CoffMor of Qaims Qualmo of Conscience Had4o Obey oi4)ie-Ekhniann U.S. to increase Fee for Registering Mail WASHINGTON (UPI) - Postmaster General J. Edward Day announced pl^ Thursday to raise from 50 to 60 cents the fee lor registering mail valutd up to HO, MIXED THE WAY YOU LIKE THEM I OANCINO NIGHTLY -«■««( kr tk« -S util* W*rS«" • Cniy na(m Jm m Orfaa • r>bato« JIB M Bai • CralMiaUI BnrS Bay M Draat MMday rim Sstwday, 11 A.M. to 2 A.M. CloMd Ssadayt OR 4-0022 Impfe UfAtod Peftiap eflle Side end Rear JERUSALEM. Israel (AP) -Adolf Dchmann begged Israd today to understand that his role in the Nazi extermination of the Jews was thrust upon him against his will just as “millions of ethers” had to foilow the dictatorship of Adolf Hilfer. Before the start of the prosecutions croesexamination, the former Gestapo officer told the special Isiaeli tribunal: ‘*f had no luck.” ' ■ Eichmam said society is bound together In a system wliereby a sUte exists on orders and obedi-linn and could never survive on "spies and traitors akme. ‘Tie who has a good sovereign to lead him is lucky," said Eich-mann. “l had no luck. The head of my state ordered these deportations (of the Jews to the death camps) and my task was to car-out these orders from the top.” this extermination of the Jewish people, oHered by the (krman CLUB TAHOE The num charged with major responsibility for the death of stat mOiion Jews refused to plead an "ethical” viewpoint tainly was guilty. ‘ethically, In one’s attitude to-vwas the first time he had laced ward oneself, the sense of guilt concepts above the law. Here I condemn myself and continue to examine noy^. I try to argue with myself. In cohlu-c I beg to aay here I have into the Nazi regime. But he nev-once used the word "Nazi’’ nor did be call Hitler by name. Socialite Succumbs T was a fo(d in Ihe haiKb of the strong and powerful and in the hands of fate itself, which knows no mercy.” he said. ’The court, the pronecution and the audience were held almost spellbound as E3chmann gave of his “true feelings.” He said under the system he joined in 1932 as a Nazi street fighter rising through the ranks to high office in the SS, he had to obey or die. RINDGE. N.H. (AP)— James Amory Sullivan. 88, socialite, artist, architect and descendent of an American revolutionary general, died Thursday. ONE OF PONTUC’S MOS? POPULAR NIGHT SPOTS: Waterford Lounge rwMrIy Ftostol’i-Comer M-Sb and EUnkatk taka Ed. LIQUOR—ENTERTAINMENT Moiin W«d,y Thurtu, Prl. Md'SRt. T. J, «KEE and 3 OTHERS: RoullcUt and Cameo Recording Ariiotn! effective Aug. 15. Day said 75 per cent of all domestic registered mail fella Into that category. The increase la exr pected to yield |3.9 million In addi-revenues. FOR mPORMATION CALL FB 6-8089 Tbt ELDORADOE’S Argentine Novelist Dead BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP)—Enrique Larreta, 88, well-known Argentine novelist and historian, died Thursday. 4769 Dixie Hwy Drovton Plains "The (legal) guilt is to be I borne by thoae responsible for the political decision to order deprn^ ■jna," Eichmann a*'* Generals might feign sickness or get transferred to other jobs,' he continued, but lieutenant colonels like himself could only kiH themselves to escape orders, tried to divorce himself from the job of transporting the Jews to destruction, but he never suc-jceeded, he insisted. While Eichmann had repeated-lly leaded "superior orders," it Shipped in From Moine |j| Loke Superior White Fish Shipped in From Mockinaw City Sing Along With Duffy at Our Singalong Piano Bar MOREY’S GOLF asf COUNTRY CLUB 22M UniM Lain laaS Dell’s Inn Going Away on Your Vacation? Have Your Pontiac Press Mailed to You and Enjoy All the News From^Home! Rotes: 50* Per Week; *2.00 Per Month Order 1 of 3 Ways . . Whichever Is Most Convenient 1. Ask your Corrier. He has Moil Subscription Orders. 2 Moil the Coupon with your remittance to The Circulation Department, The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan 3 Phone The Pontiac Press, FEderal 2-8181, ask for the Circulation Department and order your Vocation Subscription. PONTIAC PRESS Vocation Mail Subscription Order Data to" atort...... Dot* to disconfinwa . Rotos: $2.00 Par Month .50 Par Waok RFO..........CHy....... Moil thia coupon with your romiltonca to: Circulotioo Dopt., Pontioc I Pontioc, Mkhigon THE FONtlAG PRES&i. FRIDAY. JULY 7. 1961 eouR Long History of International Suez Canal Is Retold One-fourth of the U.3. population! The average hcane bityer today living on farme In 1932 received ii 33 yeara old, five yean yoHUg-one-nineteenth of the U. S. income, jer than he wae 30 yean agoF! ^ the whole agricultural economy of of British milit^ forces to Kuwait is Britain’s bluest power iriay in the Middle East since the abortive Suez Canal invasion of 1966. ^ But Britain has more support for its actions now than it did then, even though the basic cause of intervention was the same — oil. The British government reacted swiftly when Premier Abdel Karim Kassem, last month claimed lor Iraq the shiekddm of Kuwait which supplies about 40 per cent of Britain's oil. -British troops poured in to protect i&wait, which had been granted full independence in June affcr years as a British protectorate. Egypt. Nasser said the owners of the ..buniqdxa,, ojdM pweo "We should industrialize Egypt and compete with the West,” he loid cheering crowds the same "his troopq seized the waterway, canal oon^ny buildings and other Installations and facilities. seizure of the interna- tional canal touched off a lurious'before, it had withdrawn its troops storm cd protests in Europe. much|ft.on, Egyp, „nder an agreement nf u,hi„h depended, on the oil gtgned in 1954. shipped through the canal in taiA-ers to keep the wheels of industry Hie IM crisis was preeipi-Uted when president Oamel Abdel Nasaer of Egypt aa-noanoed that he had setsed the sirategie Sues Caaal and would use the inoome to bulM his Aa-wan dam aa the Nile. The week before, th^ United States and Britain had broken off prolonged negotiations with Nasser on the financing of the dam project, which was expected to change The ninth article said; “The Egyptian government shall tain the necessary measures for insuring the execution of the treaty.” INTERNATIONAL CONTROL Britain was the largest single shareholder in the company which operated the canal. Only months ssose ferns at tateraattoaal eon-treL Iha twe pewats, fotiHd by the VaHei Mates, called for a lag the 18M Convention signed by Prance, Britain, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Spain, Italy, The NetherlandH, Turkey and Russia. The convention ’’Inter-nattonallzed’’ the vital water link between the Mediterranean and Red aeaa. n and Pimnce-wirich alaa But Naaaer rejected an Invlta-tk« to attend. The conference went ahead without him and drafted an American-backed plan fdr "internatkinaliz-ing" the canal. A spokesman for ^Nasaer warned the canal would be blown up if attempts were made to implement the plan by force. Suez was held Sept. 19-21 at which a 15-nation Canal Users Association was formed. But fiVe days later the canal problem was dumped in the lap of the U.N. Security Council. I to A second London conference on the guertllhM. The following day Erance; and Britain sent a 12-hour ultimatum to Egypt and Israel demanding: The cotincil in earjy October! -Beth sides immediately hal unanimously approved "six prin-| hostilities, ciples” submitted by France and BriUln tte a»ai. Tta,. the waterway and cooperation with tMnnnrnriiv the users of the canal. *>* temporarily |at Ismailia, Port Said and Suez On O^. n, Israel, restiw over to separate the belligerents and Inereaaiag border forays by Arab protect canal shipping, guerrillas from tbe (iasa Kirip, | Israel accepted. Egypt refused. isn't ******* * MR^tri pro§T9U m 41m, but «• y«t. hoboily btH Im* ALWAYS proved! 00 ootarot |hiro borba. AgTboM "BEHER" IP YOU ARi PISCOURAOCD. DiSAPPOINTID. DOWN-HIARTED OR JUST PIAIN DIS6USTID WITH MfDt-CINiS CONTAINiNO HARMFUL DRUGS. DOPI. ALCO-HOU SALTS OR PAIN HILLERS, THEN GENUINE O-JII-WA RITTERS IS MADI FOR YOU. IT CONTAINS 12 PURR, PRUH HERRS tMOTHER NATURrS PiNtST) SO WHIN YOU ASR YOUR DRUGGIST FOR A ROTTLI OP O-JII-WA UTTERS. YOU KNOW YOU ARt-GOTING______- THI REST REMEDY AND TONIC AVAILAILI ANYWHERE. TIY O-JII-WA RITTERS TODAY. The first article of the convention provided: "The Suez maritime canal shall always be open and free, in time of war a time of peace, to every ve.ssel of commerce or of war, without distinction of Dag.” Beer as beer should taste Smart folks enjoy a lot MORE BEER with premium quality SUNDAY IS WPON KIDS' DAY AT WALLED UKE AMUSEMENT PARK Cdrig on IcMi ... bring tho family and hovo o nr apknic PUN, FUN, FUNI Clip tho cotipont, bring don't forgot your bothing tultl Tho fun storft ot 1 p.m. ond intil11p.m. kwtt un SK YOU SUNDAY - JULY 91 13 Mila and Novi Rood nm route was changed near Saugatuck| to avoid cutting into a bird sane ' tuaiy. ' Diseased trees get the ax. A major project of Eckert’s depart-; ment this spring wa.s the removal; of diseased Dutch elm trees along highway right of way. MAPLtSt, PINBIS. OAKH j The new tree plantings are most-1 ly hard and Norway maples, pines. Researchers are continually looking for more eftective spraya ; to kill weeds. S’TOP ’THAT URAAS One current experiment should interest lary householders with large lawns. ’The department Is working on a grS’ss growth inhibiter and has made experimental plantings along U.S.27 between Lansing and St. are selected lor durability and T^e idea Ls to slow the growth disease-resistant qualities as well,„,^he grass so maintenance crews as attractiveness. ^ won't have to cut it so often. ’Tte Korestry DepailnieiH - -hich comes under the road maintenance division—was given a spe-| cUI pi^lem '« rtde park and lH*way rest area, mile stretch ^ord Lx- | pressway in Detroit. , ^ ’The expreiMway' cat through | |# reot areas e\-eBtually are a heavily-populated reuldeuHal j planned, area. HottseboMers romplalned | .. J**IraX***"Aw^tairpl^^ Uhade. a scenic location, safe park- £lL*n''!;v| , plai/ied. Every!hingjhat grows along thej The selection of roadside park highway right of way is of imme-1 |g gio|.e difficult since diate concern to, the department' ,hree to five acres of land is need-crew of 10 district foresters and The problem grows when it some 75 wtMkers. > comes to finding sites lor the still Grasses and ground cover are;larger expressway rest areas, planted to stabilize the soil, pre-| Still under study is the question A’ent erosion and present a more | of just how elaborate the facilities attractive appearance. ‘should be in these rest areas. 01 R ANCESTORS By Quincy PLAN ’TO WBa>—Geqrdie Hormel at Austin. Minn., son of the late Jay C. Hormel of George A. Hormel and Co., has confirmed that he and Annie B'arge, B'rench actress of the ‘ Angel" TV series, will wed as soon' as her divorce from Dirk .Sanders is final. Annie has visited King’s Wood. Geordie's hotel on the Hormel estate, recently. No wedding date has been set. "He might do for a second comeefian if we changed his costume! ’ ADVERTiaaittST FOB BUM ^ ^ ( . . —rrceived b»' UucitloD. Bloomltrld .... » -PT»rtWa»l. ai»»w ■ ■- UlcblttB. until 1:00 p.m. M ImT. tor the conitrnctlon , „ nod Alterntlon to Koomtirld HIU« Hi«h achDol. In ncrordtnr# with pluu »nd «p«;lftc«tlon« prepnreO ODell. Henleti und Luckrnbnch, Ati Archltecu lumt. oitufu.-. Roush Orndlns o. — «nd AudiTorium Sertmtt .. u . Prominl No 5 -Propottt for Mechnni-col Trader Work tndudlnc PluniOink.; VenUlatUif. Heatin'a ConnertloBa to! 5S"3^P;opSrrt7.‘'r El«‘rir.r; Trade« Work Includink W'Irtni. Plxturr>., ronneetloDS to Squipmeni. a ' ’*Propoka!*No 4 Propotal for la and art rabineu and equipment , Propotal No S—Propotal lor KItehen Equipment BOARDING HOrSE GOyiM Hl5 Lire,MA30*2; r^LAS, SMUF^. MV SEitoRE [ 6eARD/-^X Wei^t k-tw' BARREL V^ITM ^500 ] ONCe A BDSlMESS By Dick Cavaili IMITAHOMe RUN THAT 66TA } NEW ALL-TIME / ? REcoRp. y \ IT BROKE THE woeeer ots ol firmness and weakness. Most of the pressure was on the July dellwriM which dealers said indicated continued liquidation toward withdrawal from that contract. Trading in the July deliveries ends on the 20th. Nearly all price changes during the first several minutes were wifiun small fractions of a cent with commercial buying slack all around. The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold them in wholesale package lota QuoUtions arc furnished by the Detrrit Bureau of Markets, as o Friday. Aipartsui, doi. beh. B*eu. dm. bcM. . Grain Prices CHICAGO OBAAN “•cirn ^ : Seek Detroiters in $200 Robbery and Slugging MARKETS Profit Takers Nip Stock Rally Detroit Produce NEW YORK I* - Profit taking nipped the stock market's "Summer rally" as prices declined slightly in moderate trading early Losses of key stocks went from fractions to a point or more. A minority of pivotal issues posted fractional gains. Movements were wider among some of the higher-priced or specially-situated issues. Betklehem aad other steels declined on the report that a Mg aeoondary oneiing of Tn,S00 shares of Bethlehem i-ommon Is that the seller Ptriley, curly, dot. I PsrddT. root, dot. Im r*»*. ou.............. “ ■ Rod, doi. I .hJto, dot Ctbbdtt. I ConarJ. k> Is the second TIURTY-THREE Woman Injured in Car Accident; Driver Located 61 Housing Loan Bill no">o» mmoiiot ^Becomes New law A Pontiac woman was Infured last night when the car In which she was riding hit a tree in Waterford Township. The driver was charged by township police with leaving the scene of a personal injury accident. Mrs. Carman DavMson, 18, of *4 Washington 8t„ was admitted WASHINGTON * - President Kennedy today signed a bHUon-dollar veterans' housing loan bill. The legislatloii chest and back Injuries. Her con-' ditlon was reported as saUafRC- I Kenneth T. Gannon. 62. of S^OO Elizabeth Lake Road. Waterford j Township was held by pdice. DETROIT tAPi—The Fhiehaul Trailer Cb. has elected FTederfck * H. Mueller. U.S, secretary of commerce in the Elsenhower cabinet, to its board of directors, Mueller now lives in Washington, D. C. PUiUC SAUI areas whore they cannot obtain private financing under govem-meal repayment gnaranteeo. j It adds $350 million to the $150 million already available for the remaining 15 months of the pres-! ently authorized program, and ex-' tends the loan authorization for more years , with yearly | amounts totaling $700 million. The ^ . The accident occurred on Hlza-|n»onpy « borrowed from the treas-beth Lake Road near Old Orchard [“O' for relending. Road at about 3 a m. today. I The bill also extends the time ^ ^ ^ ‘during which veterans would be llgible for home loans, both guar- fund, Massachusetts Investors Trust. New Haven Railroad' common and preferred stock fell sharply .on overnight news that the Kennedy j administration has turned down! the road’s application (or an emergency loan of $5.5 million and that NEW HOSPITAL BQlWMENT-Admiring the latest gift of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital's Blood Group are (from left) Dr. Emanuel Epstein, research chemist; Mrs. Robert Ricker, vice* president of the bipod group; and Dr. Julius Rutsky, director of clinical latsofatories. The new machine is a Turner Fluorometer Machliie. to be used in current,research in the field of cancer. Two months ago, the group donated another machine for use in the field ol electrophoresis. After the accident, Mrs. David->n *said she went to a nearby service station where attendants jcalled polire. Gannon was apprehended farther down Elizabeth Lake Road when he got out of his car to examine it for damage. anteed and direct. Wins Lear Contract Oakland Is Second in Postal Wofkefs CORRECTION in Thursday's Ponlisc Prass . . . SHOiS for • FLORSHIIM Naw $16.10 and $lg.tO llap. 119.95 to S24M Sslacfad StyUs WINTHROP and SIRLIY Now $6.10 10 $10.80 Rag. $9.95 to $15.95 Sibley's Shoes GRAND RAPIDS (At - Owens. Ames and Kimball Co. of Grand Rapids has beep named general contractor for an $886,000 addition ito Lear, Inc., Instrument Division. It is the first pha.se'of a ^.5-million expansion program announced by Lear for its Grand Rapids sites. the •il Lettuer, hasd, by. UUuec. Bibb. pfc. ..... Lbttuce, Boston, doi. of 2 Hit by CaM'^^o^an Won't Gets Head Injuries Charges g ruptcy Act. Other laSI shares declined also, ... I'm I partly in profit taking from their };Js'strong technical rally of Thursday.; »j Some profit taking by traders .IS Spiniteh,^ by. .'.’. ISs Turnlpi, by.................. i.zl Poultry and Egg$ The sheriff's department is seeking two Detroit men lor unarmed robbery in Highland Township Sat-■"TfWtey:"’-" ' " An ex-convict. Harold Karszneck 44, and a younger man known as'^__________ George .Sullivan are charged*'With|5“>“^>i robbing Gerald D Blakley of S2.T1 tri OYor i )b». IMO; brollari and trveri, Lester Drive Highland Township, Prices were irregular uii the; of $200 after hitting him over the! ™___ “T*®", . ! American Stock-Exchange in m^- head. Losses ol Shout 2^ normal in view of the market's advance for four straight sessions. Cautious before a weekend also was according to Hoyle. Bethlehem dropped to 40 on , an opening block of 15,009 shareo •nd extended ito kMM to more than a point. A idmilar Iom was taken by U. 8, Steel. Jonro A Laughlln Jogged np a Irac- A 2-.vear-old Independence Town- j in City Shooting Blakley told sheriff's detectives that when he regained consciousness he found the money was missing from his wallet. He required 18 stitches in his head. The attack occurred during a drinking party at a summer cabin at ?144 DaVista Road. Blakley told officers. DBTROrr. jyly 7 lid per doien by nrsi reoeivem aeiiv-i----- -------- , . j , ..’ed Co Dciroit. looM In 30-dosfn crmb. I points Were taken by Seeburg and Coneumert Orode : late trade 11.50-11.50: several i ----1 blgb choice yearlli ----- 13.75. 57 I—" ■ prime M4-1.030 lb two short . iposted by Rowland Products. 1 Struthers Wells and Kaweeki I Chemical. Phoenix Steel. Techni-! color and Webb & Knapp took minor losses the latter in heavy ;trading. Oifkiand County was second only to Wayne County in the number of Michigan postal employes last y ear, according to figures released by the-federal government. There were 1,942 pcruoHS employed b,v the poNt office in Oakland in 1980, according to a con-greasloaal report on federal cl. No charges will be prr.s.scd; rmploymenl b.v county. : against Julia Mac Green, J9, oti Oakland ranked sixth in the state; 180 Prospect St., held since Tues-ljn tQjaJ federal civilian employes,] day by Pontiac police in the snoot-1 with 1,356. i ing of another woman. | Wayne County was highest with! Police Sgl. John Wllll.ms inid iI®'®®;, Mrs. Cat^rtae Provo. SI. of 137 were Maromb Cal-^ Branch 8f.. derilned to sign a ij."""' Washtenaw, and Kent Coun-I complaint againsl Miss (ireen, ★ who had admitted the shooting on the back porch of her home, j Th'*'*’ "P”* federal vnlian employes in Michigan .She told detectives she shot Mrs.ijggp import disclosed. DeGeer, 72, of 3921 |BaldwinjPTOyQ j)ecause lhe victim Iwoke; Women working in U.l holds as maids have declined in number from about two million in 1940 to less than one million in 1960, according to the census. ship girl hit b.v a car v darted into Whipple Lake Road near her home last evening was listed in satisfagtory condition today at Pontiac General Hospital. 9515 Yale Road, suffered abrasions on her head an Internal head Injuries. The driver of the ear. Almond \ Road. Orion Township, told sher- l"lo •'-f home and attacked her i ppi^ased In the report listed Oak-iff’s deputies he applied the brakesp'*** " '*"*'*‘- jland second in population among Mrs. Provo, shot once in the | Michigan counties, with 690,259 •ith a 22-caliber automatic idents. as soon as he saw the child run] chest 1 out into the road from a bordering|pis^o| recovering in St. Joseph] The Michigan total was 7,823,194 ditch. •Mercy Hospital. las of Jah. 1, 1961. CORRECTION NOTICE I In Hm PoRtidc Ghns Co. M in tbo Tliorsfiny, Jviy 4 Pontine Pimbnrgli Florliido Floor Enom-ol wot iocorroctly pricoB nt $2.11 0 loRon. It tkooM Imvo rood: $2.18 A QUART $7.40 A GALLON Wo lincoroly rogrot ony in- THE PONTIAC PRESS on. ! COMPANY Hot (2) 40,000 Golion Plus SERVICE STATIONS For Lease ' Marvelous Opportunity for Qualified Party . . . Phone FE 5-9466 FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION! New York Stocks rigum bftrr dtclmyl polbt> elghthii reJk;' im»t|AdnilrtI rling I high trl^gi jlJW: ing Edwin J. Steward. 28..,of La^hJim"w5m um ibAol^to'sTis'oo! sing, with bank robbery in *21*7" holdup Thursday of the Ameri-;H.S5; mlied Loodt high good and low can Bank and Trust Co. has beenl»M^-*2i^'''^K»B*»ru*tos5«*'i? authorized by U.S. A 11 or ne—-George E. Hill at Grand Rapids. Icbnnert and cuttera ^ii.oo-isM. --Lansing Police Chief Charles buin ir(»”M!ol. Stagier ^ Steward was an^t- ,„v^^ ed at his home and $2,164 in bank good and choice 2«.00-33.M: etandard 122 00-27.44; cull knd utility 10.00-22.00. loot was recovered. . ^ep - comoarbd laet week , elaugh- The amount taken from the bank ;**f: was $2,985, police said. They said . St Kcnnceolt 20.7 KlmbClk . 23.5 Kraeae. 88 24 5 Kroger si - u a Naah . 51.5. STATEMENT OF CONDITION PONTIAC STATE BANK PONTIAC, MICHIGAN JUNE 30, 1961 prime iprlng Steward told them he had paid e than $600 in bills Thursday. News in Brief loat choice to prime old crop Iamb 1.00-17.00; good bnd choice 12.00-15 OC 111 to choice elauirhter ewes 2.50-7.50. CatUc--ealable 200. Slaughter claasea eady; amall lot low good yearling ateera _i.00; moat aundard to low good mixed offerlngt lt.t0-2100: ntlllty cowe It.OO 11.20; eailnere and euttera 13.00-10 00. Vealeri - latobla M. Not enough \o make a market. 'immes B. Hardy, 83, ol $415 Indianwood Road, Orion Township, was ordered to pay $100 or spend 30 days in Jai tor drunken driving yesterday when he appeared before Township Justice of the Peace Helmar G. Stanaback. Brunswick Sheep — salable 1 . Not e Hogi — salable .... _ butebera tOe lowar; sows head U. S. Ho. 1 107 lb. butchers 12.00; Un bead and a 210 Iba. 18.35; mixed 1(0-330 lbs. T.7I-1I.1S: N 220-300 Iba. 10 00-17.50. grades 300-500 lbs. 13.75- quotatloni. Mo. a and 3 o. 3 and * Sows 1.72; No. 2 1.50-12.09 RESOURCES Bald Lima 1 Balt A Oh . j Bell & Howell i Beth Steel 3 ?a“l7W. t My Burroughs Campb Soup 144. Cdn Pac .... 24. Carrier Cp .. 44. Cater Trac .. 27. Cetanaee . 25 Cert-Tead ... 55 Chat * Oh »• Chock PM Chrysler 4 Nat Cash R . 57.4, 5 Nat Dairy . 55.21 .2 NY Central .. 17.5! .3 Norf 5i Weal .103.41 Loans and Discounts.....................................$ 8,269,435.65 Real. Estate Mortgages.................................. 7,103,293.33 Total ........................................... .^ .$15372,728.98 Less Reserves ...................................... . 352,440.76 $15,02038832 32,0 r PSC OdkEl .... Pan A W All 33.5 Panh Kpl 44.7 I Cont Mot Cent Oil , Copper Rng d eowa 25c lower. The theft of two cameras val-i ———--------------- ued at $95 from her home was i i a i , . icurtis'pub reported to Pohtiac police yester-; Stocks of Area Interest day by Pauline A. -Smith. 41 O'Ri- xtotrs or area interest niug^ ai"* ley St. Plgurea after decimal points err eights Dow Chem tg.5 Pa RR ... 45 Pepsi Cola . 25.7 pifaer 75 Phclpi D . 55.5 PhOoo V ... Polaroid M J Proct A O 515' . 43.4 2", • HJ* »»» RCA 5‘.3 gj?ron' J Rex Drug 2? United States Government Securities................ Due within 1 Year. ................................ 3,837,866.56 Due after 1 Year but within 5 Years................ 8,428,773.81 Due after 5 Years.......................... ....... 1,884,574.60 Total U. S. Government Securities.................. State, County and Municip^al Securities..../:........ Cash and Due from Banks ^........................... Banking House and Furniture and Equipment........... Other Resources .............. ..................... Total Resources.................................... 14,151314.97 234,077.54 2,655,483.94 574,46937 169318.14 $32,804,752.18 Nothsnlrt EWlson, 2(54 ItotIwoocI Are., reported to Pontiac pdicc’ yesterday that a suit valued at $25 was stolen in a break-in ofjni„d.on his home. ............... Acroqulp Corp ............... J2.3 32 8 Atkansaa Loulstanft Oaa Co. 38 38.3 £* * Bald. Montrou Chem. Co. Pfd, 30.3 LIABiLmES A box of w'Bs Stolen from his car parked in the City Hall paridng lot, Frank Rizzuto, 794 Menominee Road, reported to Pontiac poUce yesterday. The theft of n polisher valued at $68 from the Pontiac Farm and Industrial Co.. 825 Woodward Aw. was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. ‘uaviuvun ................ 9 5 10 1 a iPcdcml Mogul-Bdwer Benrlngi 31 31.4(f'"KI*" lOrent LukM Chemicml . . 2 8 2 ■ IiimI .« twlHoover Bull A Beihlni.....212 21 5 gj? g}'"*'" Slued at ♦'•Leonard Refining miOcnWcc Oerber Prod ipe luiiowing guvia.iuna Bu Bw. ‘ »»»«rlly repreaent nctuul traniuctlono 9^”®“ proxlmute trading rang* o A ponrer mower and three rsdl-at(MB with a total value of $160 were stolen from hjs backyard, William Pierce. 36 Sanderson Ave., reported to Pontiac police yesterday. Rnmmam Sale. St Mary’s Halt, clean clo&ilng, useful household artldes. Bast Commerce St. at Hickory. Milford. Sat., July 9. $ ajn. to $ pjn. —Aav. Rockwall Standard Toledo Bdlfon Co. HE COVNTBR STOCR8. ring ouotatlona do ------ ------ .— ***“" lotA&P . . AmerIcan-HarletU Co ! U a V7 a Hammer Pap ”• ”IlHer»hChoc ______ "SoamleM Tube Co. 20.4 22 |Howe*end' Plonetr Flbanoe ........... 22 14 | ing Rand . Shatterproof Olaoa Corp- •• W , | Inland StI . Taylor Plbro . *' *’------ Trane. (Ho Pip Vtmori Olnser Wtnkicmana ............... Wotvorlno Shoe ............. 22.5 25 Wynndette Chemical ......... 75.4 75 MirrcAL rvNDs Electronic! Internallonot Prito Co. ............. McLouth Steel Co. OaktoBd Chapter Ns. 5, arniua) picnic. Subday July 9th. st I pm. aUhs Dsvlsburg Park Pavl-Uon. Pot-luok. All Masonic Bodies welcome. BegaUr CenunHiileatioH. Ponj^ Lodge No. U. P. and A. M. M.. July 7, 7:» pm. P. E. Mspley, W.M. -adv. Ex-Williams Adviser Geh High Army Post WASHINGTON (ft - Alfred B. Fitt of East Lansing, Mich-legal adviser to former Michigan Gov. G. Memen Williams, has been appoinf^ed deputy undersecretary of the Army,. Fltt, who began the $18.300-a-year Job Wednesday. wSI be in charge oT *rmy manpoher train-j ing and mobilization. ^emlc. " ! OenM Capital ........................$ 825,900.00 Surplus ................................................... 825,000.00 Undivided Profits and Reserves............................. 589,807.21 -•I Tbtokol ...I 1 2 7 Thomp Rw 55 - 51.1 TImk R Benr 54.2 44.4 Twenty Cen 42 25.5 Underwood 53.4 r 35 4 Un Cmrbtde 135 _ i , '■ Un Pne 110 Unit A 5.7 Unit AIre - • Unit Prult Un Obi Cp Un M a M 257 Total Capital Account t Demand Deposits.......... .............................. 15,973,163.53 U. S. Government Deposits............................... 332,642.77 Savings Deposits...............'........................ 13,695,463.21 Total Deposits........................................ Other Liabilities....................................... Total Liabilities..................................... $ 2,239,807.21 30,001369.51 563,675.46 $32,804,752.18 42.2 5 5 • J Int Nick InlPaper 435 4 OS 6 i Rub . t.25 5.5 'S:i »nTTl . 35.5 Wert Un Tel _ . 35 Weitg SI Int sneer ... 15.5 WHw A Cn Int Tel a Tel . 5».I Wool^rjh IblCrkCnnl .. M.5 1.47 13 4 Maaa. Ineeetori Omelh Maee. Ineeitori Tmrt .. Putnam Orowth............. Tticelalsa Bcctronlea . WeUlngton Itoulty Wellington .nnd •Noihtnnl --------- . 5.35 10 21 . 15.32 It.M I7.lf 15.55 , 14.(9 KM ------- M.27 Quotatlona. Cobb Back in Hospital; No Visitors', Sign Up United «Utes Government Securities carried st $1.299,755.67 In the foregoing statement a to secure Federal and State Government Deposits. a T 18 ,. OFFICERS American Stock Exch. Flgurei after decimal pomu aiw clghUu; 21.4 Imp on .. 43 4' CalBIPw . CohaBe c. CoagblM . CreolcPel tbnam Am DBond AS . M.5 Kalter lodai . 34.5 Mead John . IIJ Mohawk Alrl “ MJ tln^ 1(3 2 SbarwWm . 17.4 suck Air . 1( 7 Sonotonc . ail MILO J. CROSS ..........................President SMITH FALCONER ...............Exec. Vice President EARL W. BARTLETT ........Vice President STUART E. WHITFIELD ................Vice President SAM 8. HALE .................. Asst. Vice President EVERETT K. GARRISON ...........Asst. Vice President WILLIAM A. EUBANK .f......................Cashier ALICE M. KERNS ................. Assistant Cashier AGNES W. MOORE ........... .... AsslsUnt Cashier MARK 8. STEWART ............ AssisUnt Cashier and Branch Manager HAROLD K KEITH ............ Asslstont Cashier and ATLANTA (M-Ty Osbb, bnte-bnll’t OeoiTln p«meh sf y*Mer-ysnr. to bnok In the hospltol^. thta fiine with a Ro xtoltors sIgR on hto door. I » DOW-IOHBS t PJi. AVEHAOSS Ind!. S(2.S( off (.to RaUt 141.41 all 1.(3 UtlU. 112M off (to Stock! I3( H off (.52 lume te 2 p.m.. 3.1((.(80. Branch Manager ROBERT D. TERRY ............Branch Manager MERLE V. BENDER ...........Branch V TURRIS MeCULLY .......... !i Manager^ ...An^r DIRECTORS JOHN W. COWE ............................. Realtor MILO J. CROSS ................ .......•. President RODGER J. EMMERY . . .Secretary and Treasurer Stamprite Industries Cdrporatkm SMITH FALCONER ...............Exec. Vice President H. RUSSEL HOLLAND .............^. . .". Circuit Judge hlANK A. MERCER ................*........Physician GOODLOE H. ROGERS ..................... ..Attorney WM. D. THOMAS, JR^..................... President Thomas Economy Purniture Co. STUART E. WHITFIELD ................Vice President More Di« in Algiers f Emory UHlvendty Hoopltol re- | ALGIERS (AP)-French police ported fiiat file 74-jrear-oM Cobb |j,nd nationalist rebel gunmen was pesdmMtod on June 9 for jclsshed early today in a suburb obtervalioH and treatmrst of re- | of Oran. French authorities said a i earriag albneHta. French tmllceman tvss killed, a i A spokeoman aaM today Ma Moslem auxiliary policeman nmdIttoH to lair aMheHgh be 1 wounded (Uid one important rebelj|> speat aa uncomfortable aigbt. 'leader slain. il!.. BRANCH OFFICES AUBURN HEIGHTS—MERLE V. BENDER. Manager BALDWIN AVENUE—HAROLD H. KEITH, Manager DRAYTON PLAINS—MARK S. STfeWART, Manager MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER—ROBERT D. TERRY, Manager Member Federal Deposit Insurance Cor/mration .il'. "a THIRTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JULY 7. 1961 Editor L^ves Prisod for Job OR the Out^de MENARD, m. (UPI) — A 29-j'wold editor who steered prison newspSper to prominence in its fM- vUlt: Ml rt: tolOTM MB of Htn-T, kDd a • 1111 r: dnt tiltor ot Mrs. k*l« Btadto. ,»A. Bntrtc* X • S jr 0 B snd Wmw BclUar; d«»r broUitr rt .*1™. Rtort. Mrs. BdlUi PBtrM •ad Mrs. ZslBiB Msitors: stM 5SMr5lto“.fil“«d"S.S OrtoarUls. vlUi Ssr. MarrUi ^ sr.i.s.ar'5'n..svs ■rsndsoB »t Mrs. SrsljrB MeCls^ IsBd. PuasrsI ijnrle# trill bs hsM St*AiSs CBllMto^n»ureh. 0'“^ tUIs vKh Sts. Pr. JohB Hardy ettUlstiBi. Tstoraitot to esy- mwir Uks CwneUry. PimsrsI srrsBSSBM^ h, to* a P. ShrrmsB PwtorBl HoiBs. OrtOB-»IU«. Mr. C*msU wlU ll# to si*** St Um R. O. a O. a. Bwrli Btrsl Hmm. dltl CMS An. JbLV i. Hit. iVA.IbMk. srd Court; BfS tS; PiNnik M Rtbtal- win of Taylor PIbIsl.. —— tsottor el Sslton and Roonr An-mon sod Hotento Jtorbroiuh; is't T r."si*.n!?.’rri,in“tis,^uiS:s P.' DsVU PuBfrsI Homs wtth Rot. T. H. Holt otficisttof totormsnt ----- csmetsry Mrs. WbI- t to stot* ot U-- *•' Dovls FuBtrtl HtsBcto M***HuUlMder; dw to. HlJ»B?tt“nd Mn L.i ElwrU; dsor brothrr of Mph uVeo'irsadchUdrra! sr- ry-siJho'ry, •KfS"n*' KeofO Barber. _______— boroUiy Nto hsut: toloTsd soa of HsrmM Md Mortsrrt NIthaus; dear fattor of asBjn Of ^ Herman Hlehaui Jr., rtraioano Nlrtistts SBd Dsrld hoUoo. Pi^ Btrsl BrrsBsrinooto sr* pcadlBS at tht Himtoea Puarral Boros PRASS. JtJLT «. >tol. WALLIS r . ]45t W. Chicago Bird,. Detroit, •pR..?’dr.rar*S?M?.' dJSS »n“o.'Sr"’*'‘‘».rW Btrsl Homs. flJl Cm ^ trolt. ttoB to taksB to th* Hsmtl Puarral Homs. Oanr ^ C1»U Mf- ^52Sf:fTrr.5iiB.g wtn by tht C. T. 8h«rman Pu-PTal Honst. OrtonytUe. iniowix. mv 4. iiw. btbh- Sls^^l^eltowlsk* Char las Sy- Ito Ssltol-KSMlaU^^Oppartt!^^ A PART TIME JOB per mtoto guarsBtooe to rTortas"t^rc!ir»*TuyR^ BBOirhnMD on 0**®™!*: auras tor eaelort aim*. Wttts •tart, t awi Are You Unemployed r*r Retired? u**iriuriii. you. Part tUto or ,mu MTO*. nw PtoBO OoUa. Appir to parasa I a.m. to 11 a.a. Kast liedting & Cooling CANTTAKKR WAH1 Bsat. liaidsaoy troaU salary, ft L‘AB 6uvfM:— WAHTXo. Most ax Usia. dis Orthartt ______________','sSifr •oft Wattr lervlce. f Hoeh«tUr Rd.. Troy. l-dBU. XXPXRIXNCEO CAHVASeXRa. ...----------— J.,. .. aid - hardwars. Pntsr •«>•- ------- aad ssatura. S*s Mrs. BUIlass, Slroais Bros., St M. aoB- Executive Secretary IP TOO HAVE A RBCORO OP tueetssful ttlltot sod wllllat to work hard, will pay rlgbt maa -- r moalli whils tralalas ^sar. Ttercattcr. pro- LBADINO local and long DIB-taoes. boussbold goods inovet de-tlrrs *tprrltoe«d aatloaal ac-couot salrsmaa. Prrson able tc produce oct buslorts plus de-TtlopUg company leads. Bstary open, depeadfng on you. Office located Birmingham arts. Tcle-phoar tl g-MM for sptolatmrnt. MIBACLB 80PT WATIR SEii;------ Jowlk Mrs, Xals Melewskl and Mrs. Mary KroU. Rrcltatloa of Uis Ros^ wUl to Prldsy. \ at t p.m. St tbs Mrlrto A. Bchutt Puatrsl Home. Puarral terries win to held Saturdey. July A at 10 a.m. feom At. Vlacent de Paul CatbeUc Church, totersjni Jn Mt Rope CeSMtory. Mr. Syrowlk srtn U* la Stai* at tha Mefrto A. Bchutt Puaeral Home.________ . HlOH fa**;; Funeral Directors COATS PONTRAL HOME DRATTOK PLAINS OB INSURANCX SALESMAN. ENER-grtlc man for Insurance work. Must have solicitors Ilcsnss. Ex-esUent opportunity. Call Lawreacc W. Osytord. na W. Huron St. Donelson-Johns PUNERAL HOME -Designed for Punerals" BPARXS-ORIPPIN VoorheesSiple Cemet wy L s.adVipdl »-ot. PEHRT Mount Ptok Cemstory CaU alMr d p.m. PE t-im.____ Phone OR UMS. WHITE CHAPEL PROPERTT. ReformsUon Osrtoai. Sect. 1 Ik graved Ml 4-7874.________ BOX REPLIES At 14 aJB. TodAT there were replies at The Prege efflec la the followint The Peatlae Prcee FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From • aja. te 5 pja. All srrort ttaould to reported Immediately. The Press atsumei no retppn-slblllly lor srrors - olhor I'lsn to csncsl tha charges for that porUon of th* first insartioa^^ ed tot dsrsd valueless through tbs error. Whan esnccUatloos srs wads be turt to get your "klU number.” No adjustmtnts wUl to tUen ClostBi tfms for odvortlse-msnto coDtalnlng tvps tUes lartsr than regular agatt type Is Ik o’clock nnon Iho day prsTlent to pttbUe*tlon. * NOTICE TO ADVEBTieBBe Tha deadllns lor cuncolto-tion of trSBslsnt Want Ads Is t a m. the day of publication after the nrst tossrtloe. CASH WANT AO RATES Unet 1-Duy S-Duyt t-Days a ii.n tan ss.u of promotional raageraents. A___________________ high school education necessary. lin weak guaranteed I. We train. OR 3-SSdS Sarvtea , 13 “a. *88 ^Mtasntos. •Eussall Mtrioe. PR ssjrawui T WANTED a •alary. I Help Wanted MAN OR WOMAN WITH CAR. earn gk to S3 aad up per hour. NaUonaUy udvortiaod Watkins JK! 3r„fr:'a»srm Or part Urns. PE SJttk. Emptoyment Agencies 9 BOOmiEP'ER Woataa afa SSde wtth UM typ tog and kaa managa 1-girI down-bm olfleo. Muft ba fuU ebargs bocAksopar. MMlwaat Employment - 4M Ponttoa SUM Bank Bldg. PE Mlkl. . EVELYN EDWARDS •VOCATIONAL COONSEUNO SERVICE" 14)4 East Huron Suite 4 Phone FEdcral 4-0584 Sales It S3-S6 Wtth aulei >» •••ui tor sales posK._ to HE. frad and prafei eoUsfs. Salaried^ IMwei ploymsat — 4M Pentias »••• biM Bids, PE tarn. SECRETARY Ass W-kS lor downtown smes. Must have good typtof and ab^ £“... soltwster salesmen t NSKOKD - l.YOUNO MAN. Pp8-llbly just out of high scTiodl. To learn ecrvlce ' - ------- pUnace and _______________ buUdtng. |4S per week Write Pontiac Press Box no. o» for personal Interview. Send plc- Toy Party Plan Demonstrator Revolutlonnry new unloue toy selling program deolgited to earn or WAlnut 3-3»df>. EAVEHTROPOHINO fi^rinattoB your lyH** ptah Bwls|Uittag Pool Oe. OR Siegwart Construction Cement Work n i-k«ok____ SWIMMING POOL wlmmiM Pool Co, OH Busineu Service 18 Are Yom Debt-Ptapw? wtlhourn loua. Msko ono wtokb paymsnl IrailToilrnlaltaMBU aad ATOM^APpUfNT&OTI . City Adjustment Service FE 5-9281 ” AEROTREbS_____ KNAPP SHOES PHEO HEBMAW 6b ant bniLOR WoMAN NEEDIHO a friendly ndvlear. pbont PE k-»lkk. Altor » P m. or ^ answor call PE k-STM. (?0BtldSB-oi.D WAVE SPECIAL . . MO M. Perrr PE 1-U44 -'OBE WBiOHT SAPkLT'AND •eaooaieaUr wttb neVIy rsloasod Dsg-A-Dlel toblau. M esnU ai ,if5S!5s."j%.‘!rs«ir Sylvan Sboros and Long Lake Store sutidlvtsloa one morntog In the nest Id days lor moioulte I!St.;i Qono WordOB. PE k-im. ______olflcs. Osasrsl Printing A iLOOMPIELO WALL CLBAHXm. Wall and windows. RtssonAbls. FE S-ltkI.________________ ELECTRIC MOT6b SERVTCTC RX- Bookkeeping & TaxesJO Dressmaking, Tailoring 17 ALTERA-nORX MAJOR minor. Tour tome o ' Ounrnntocd. PE 4-4dk4.___ DREMMAEira. TAILQIUNO. terntlons Mrs! BodcU. PE 4S0H. TAIIXIRINO — ALTERATtORB Dress Maktog-Pur Rcutlrs EDNA WARNER________« S-kSM Garden Plowing IL’S COMPLETE LANDSCAPINO Plowtos: grudlns. .^tak. «mr-!, black dlrtTlto sdll, » Of OR 1-dib It 6r PE 4-4kH_____________ CUSTOM PLOW, DRAO. garden, yi * ----- SraOOL ORAD. kTSO i\LVN WANTED To learn tbs besting and nir-condltloning business. Rapid advancement and good pay while you learn. We train you. Apply In person, no phono calls. Kast Heating & Cooling 463., S, .^ginaw JOIN OALLAOHnt’S ACCORDION -School. Summer schedules now ! forming. Accordion luralshed free |' while learning. GALLAGHER'S 4S-«.-HutOB - “ • ■ No Layoffs! Ws Train Tou Por MEAT CUTTERS AND COUNTERMEN VERT MUCK IN DEMAND People Must ICat! S;>ecial for 30 Days ONLY $249 . REGULAR tUO Become n Meat CutUr MEAT CUTTER WANTED. MUST fully experienced In selt-aerv-opcratlon. Pontine are*. Box gg. Vassar. Mich. Manager for ctovroM dtalarsbip to take full charge of parts do-partment. Experltoes and rafar-ences nectssary. Rathburn Chev. Sales 5d0 S. Main__________NorthvUle pharmacist. SALARY. BONUS REAL ESTATE BALES EXPERI-sneed or will train persons with other sales sxperlenc*. R. J. Val- SALESMXN. WE HATE TWO OP-s with plenty of property to . Will train man In Real ale work. Lswrcocs W. Oay-1. 13tk W. Huron St or Brond-r and Pitot St.. Lake Orton. WANTED k men to work to replaeo jC men who wouldn't, kk years of nge or Older. kM 8 Telegraph. Pontine. WALLED LAKE AREA. IP TOU have rend all the other ads and haven't found your part time Job and It you are married — pcesently employed, but am Baby's Outgrown Things Are III Great Demand IT IS EASY TO RAISE EXTRA CASH WHEN you sell your un needables through Pontiac Press Want ^s. , FE 2-8181 TO PLACE YOUR ADI H^elp Wanted FenMle 7 experienced WArntEBBER wanted. 1 pan-time. Nights. Over 34 preferred. The Thunderbird Coney Island, 3183 W. Huron Rt. ... ______________J 7-3718 ACE TREE SERTtcE STUMP REMOVAL Tree remoral, trimming. Got bid. gg3-kdl8 Or FE 1-«731. '^%ment* worii, patios and fenclBf' FE 4-4kki or OR >41g8 COUPLSrTE LAWN WORE, OAR-plowlng. flalsbed grading and iioU. A kA803.____________ 10 WEEKS FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE DAT OR EVENINGS Cashiering or Meat Wrapping two weeks you will be a ork In the systems used sU (kipermnrkets Just $25 REGULAR 8d special offer. ROYAL FOOD CI.UB 818 W. 1! Mile CnU 847-UN Royal Oak, Michigan Work Wanted -A WALL WASHING CARPR. sofas machine cleaned. FE 4-1077. r CLASS 1 fee ettlmi UCEN8ED BUILDER. -----J. repairs, e—. - . AA WALL WASHING BY MACH. Russ, uphtlstery. FE kS44kf A-1 CARPENTER WORE FE 8-kS41 or PE 8-8417 Wtd. Chiidrn to Board 28 REUABLB DAT CABX. LICBN8BO Wtd. HouBehold Goods I BIO DOTUkEHCX WS pay mors cash tor furniture high dollar por PUBNfTURB and sppasness. nrompt courttras service. PE 4-7S(Lj>saripu Pur- .xr US BUT rr or bell rr pm YOU OXFORD COMMURIT? AUCTION -OA S-8M1_________ Wanted Misceliaweous ^ OrrlCE PURNTTURX AND Business soutpment Portjes Prtottof and Offles Supply. Ml ^ Money Wanted 31 WANTED 83.8«4 TO PAT OPP •ndkP4f4g« on houM ud fr ocret. UA i-4S77. week Share Living QiArtera 33'^ WOTted Tran^rUtioi^M WANTID - BIDE TO AND PROM Pitot. Worktos hours S to A,-Cit)l PH k-WST.____, ' Wtd. Contryto, Mtga. 38 ABILITY To get cash Tor your Land Con-trscts, equities and mortgages, ---- ... jpjy, Lst CsU payments too ‘UcCttlltoiTh' '•Bk-fl ‘■ARRO*‘feEAL7S^ 8143 Csss-EIlsutoth Road ACTION On your land contract, large or smsU. call Mr. HUtsr. PE 4-3880. Broker. 38g« Elto. f -- CASH 48 hours for your land soptrset -home or home equity. 348 Oakland Ave. PE 8-1441 WRIGHT ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST Action on your land -contract. Cash buyers watting. Call Resltor Par-tridge. PE 4-38S1. 1880 W. Huron. ASH---------- —-------- H J OR 3- “^lON BLUE __________Laid or dsitvered. Tractor work and fine grading. I*ree csttmstes. All work gunr- «toed. Craig and Broecs of ron-c. Licensed InndKStors. Wa finance. PI 8-7718 or ft 8-338k. ffltvinx Bjw^ t-l MOVING SERVICE. RXASON-ablo rates. PE 8-3484. PE k-gtod. g moVe Call IMMEDIATE ACTION Or any good land contracts. New — seasootd. Tour cash upon sat-NTEO, LAND COOTRACTS aelory tospecUon of property ■.xilftorit! Rertto™ nTl-kSa! 1338 Orchard Lake Roed FE 4-4863 Imalley Real Eatato. DL 3-1744. Wanted Re«i Estate 36 A FIRST CLASS MOTE Ci SMITH MOVINO CO. PE____________ BLACK DIR'i' - PRAT RUMUB. Loadtot dally )4 mile north of Ctorkstoai en M-U. Por delivery call g74-U74.________________ BAUUNO AND ROBBISR^ ANT------ ----OL ALL CASH G1 OR FHA Don’t lose your equity, call ns tor Immedlato deposU. R. I. WICKERBHAM 7144 W. Maplo__MAyfalr 8-4384 , anywhere. FE ^78io. RUBBISH. $S UOHT HAUUNO AND clean up. OR 3-3843.________ iTTaHT HAULING. ASH AND Paint j^gk^eco^^ 2^ 1ST CLASS PAlNTDfO. PAPER removal. Rcasont'”-mates. UL 3.3144. BOOKKXEPER BBTWBXN 34 AND 44 years old. Must have complete bo^eeping and general office exptftoncc. 8 day week (Saturday work I. Steady position, good salary and working conditions. Apply between 11 n.m. and 4 p.m. Oood Housekeeping Shop, 81 W. Huron St. _________ k DOCTOR OmCE, WEST SIDE Pontiac needs a laboratory technician. able to do BMR. XEO and assist vlth patients and sp-polnlments. Must be able to do simple chemistry, writ# fully to Pontiac Press Box 8l CKMINT WORK. BRICK BLOCK . J lady INTERIOR DECORATOR. and fireplaces. OR 3-1418 Papering. PR 8-8343._________ COLLEGE STD D E N T WOULD gxxBRIOB PAINTINO ANU WALL like emplo^ime^t fo* rest Bf som- -...... m CABINET MAKER. CABPEN'nCR. Kitchens a specialty^ ” * ““ CARPENTER AND COOK. OUARANTEE MY WORK. PAINT-■-1X, window and wall wruhlng, ‘ferenees. PE 3-3333.__ HANDY 14AN-PAINTINO. CLEAN. ■ or what MA 4-3403. wanted. PE 3-7441. biIampoo ( 141. 1714 N. T OOOD WAITRESS POR DAYS, I to 4. Oreg's 8178 Commerce. IRL POR OENERAh OPnCE work. 3 days per week. Must hava payroll experteocs and some book-keeping. Apply 8* Wayne.________ - OOOD COOK. _____aSEEPER -_____________ 38 to 84, live In, exe. recent crences, must have own cai to able to drive. Cure of 1 el no laundrv. Mondays and a.,.. '• off. Ml wtok. MI bookings furnished i premium paid . 'cataloc**^nd 'deBvci^es. lect, OR l-d087. HELPER, LIVE IN. I and TV. lU d-8g03. Registered Nurses For Public Health Nursinj Intorestfng career opporton- to varied programs of PubUe Heatth. On tbs Job trMntog ns toward*n oStnt^^blU HMUto Dtnt. In Royal Oak and PobUm. M.toO-M.OOd depsndlng on quaS-flcatlons and expertenee. Paid va-eatloiu and sM leavs. Ufs aad ^ftSTkoc-sy' ■ Atoly Pi —d bounty tayotto at. Ext, ISO.________________ ■AM8TRE8B. BXPBRIENCBO ON LATEST NEWS IS LISTD ON THESE PAOBS! Hews ot What Paapls Hava to SELL, RENT ar WANT TO BUT. Ordar year Ad on lha I- Day, Lew Cost Plan . . . _____ ELECTRICIAN ____work. Pull tune. OB ^443. LAWN MOWING. HAND DlOOmO, kind. Call FE 84)784. RiOISTERED PHARMAClBT ON vacation will do some relief work. EMplre 3-44dt,_____________ BPBCIALfZED modernization! palnUM- Wall wtshlaf. Fret estl- mates. PE 4-4378.__________ exterior ------ 10 per Lost and Found LOST LITTLE BLACK Cocker Spaniel. At the Drayton Sbopplnt Center. Children’s pot. Reward. OR l-883«. Quality work--PHA-----.smii prices. W. A. Wlnkoteton, MI-1784 WILL ACCEPT WORK OP ANY kind. PE V4444.___________i LOST: BLACK AND WHITE ENO-llsh Pointer. Vicinity of Wnter- tord HUl MA H44l.___________ OERMAN frtOBT HAIR. Work Wanted Female 12 LOST: A RUST COLORED POINT-cr. Vicinity of Baldwin and WnL too. Reward. PE 4S744. LOST; BfHITE MALE BOXfol, Ito years, --------- —----------^—-■ |i» ' rewani.' ra "btowtim 4 and 8.____________ ER SKIS Inndtor I MIMBOORAPHINO. TTPINO. SEC-retarlal S'rvlee. EM 3-3S43. Graduate wants wore poh 13r"Vttonar^SUT*Si4el^Wem-bm^Any work apprectotod. PE PRACTTICAL NURSE AVAILABLE. ___________II3-SS1S BARGAIN S X 11 addlttons. 4444 - 1). rage M88 • porcbes SMS • cemsnt ALL KINDS OP CEMENT S A-1 BRIA BLOCK AND CBkO^ work. No fob . too amall. Pir ^iwUty caU Rfo Johasob. BM r aiWation* amp ikoMBar. a? 3^.° •sUmatoa. OR I-IT41. LOST: WATER I BUILDER NEEDS 1 cm MORE Vacant Lots. City of Pontisc ny arcs. Past Action by buyer. CALL. PE 5-3474, U tr - ON'T LOSE YOUR B08tX. C8 for your home or equtty. Buy. toll. Trade and IM. Cl^ USTINOS - COLORED ___ Mlddletoo FE 8-3303 LISTING NEEDED-HATE PROB-pecti for 3-bodreom toms, Williams Lsks frontase. Wants quick 3 ROOlU. LOON LABE APART-•ment. OB 3-0441.______________ BOOM PLUS KJtTCHEH. JIL-nette and full bath. HIde-s-bed and other nice furniture. Main floor, everything private. Near Tel-Huron. tOS month, Incl. utUI-■■ PE »-44k3 after 4 " 1 BEDROOM DELUXE KITCHEN-spsrtment. Newly decorated, : floor, parkins at door, gas t. FE 4-1433 or PE 8-3361. 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY ALBERTA APARTMENTS W N. Paddock______ PE k-kOtl AND k CLEAN ROOMS, PRI- 1 AND L ___________ furnished lakcfront. OB 3-4104. S TORNlBHm OB 1 ROOMS AND PRIVATE BATH, working or elderly lody prt-fTred. Ut Enldwlp.__________ 2 LARGE ROOMS, P R I T A T B, E. side. PE a-SSI4, ITS 0. T — 1 ROOMS ON 1ST FLOOR, PRI-vsta entrance and bath. Wait side. PE t-Sld3._______ S AND I ROOM APARTMENT. Notkes and Personals 27 ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? Oet out cf deM aa a plan ya« —Employer iwl eastaati StTwtehas yowr doOar —No charge tor budxtl analyato Write or pbsM torfret booklot. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS '“pElSllf ■ ‘ ‘ S AND J-ROOW CAI^. 4174 "Akw cAixiNo'' - Fob bebv- ice to To«r boma. PE 4-48SS. "ffiariSP*”® (Dick I Taluat. Raaltor, 348 Dak- land Avenue, PE 4-3831._______ CUTE ROOMS. CALL AFTER 8:34. PE 8--- 1)4 ROfMU. NICELY P77RNI9r*D. 1st floor apt. Ample Mrklng. ^jo^wn. Apply It idKlmal.. Gloria Apartments 3 ROCM4 MODkhN, FTHST Pl60R. Near Hospital. | r --------------- I LARGE ROOMS, PRIYATE lATR private antraoee. DUlltlss fnr-ntshsd. Child veleome. cioi* m $17.84 per week. PE S AND Bath S8IALL OR 4 Room. PRIYATE tN-transt and bath. fum. or un-tara.. baautlflil atlshberbood. halt block to bua and market. PE 8-874$,__________ , I ROOMS AND BATH. vHuTOa. adulU. n 8-4343 _______ Rent Apts. Fumithed 37 airur*;fcr;-..r*“*“*-»« >.52PffA„*Sy?£*g°i.,SS^ 3-RM. APARTMENTS. I.. Ill to I •qmrid. Ill srivaU •ntrtnet, MtUltle* _______i. in luu Bi. ra Mo«>. f kooui. ALL PRivirc. chIuS —--------newm * ll*^n« o’rovV.' ' AMO BATH. LAOl tMlIltm. CAU Ml modtra AMrtmcDU, eoBT«iilnio*i ** prtTBU bomt. n 4-1141, attar rUkM 'itdSiii Akb hifii. tint ftSir. MB I-41II.____________ '« ROOMi. AUltlRN HKJOBTS 4 ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATB Lake prlvtlerei. OR Utimiaa a FB S-llM. -----4 Rb 1 ROOMS WITH tiled BATH. Inqulrt Apt. 1 at 47 Charlotte. WEIST APARTMENT 1 110 Auburn, 3-room opt. with I KL"?5JK’.d.’/*"**• “^ "‘“■I 1 ROOM AFARTMBNT N Z A R doemtoem. Refrigerator, hs*t and water furalehed. 333 N. Perry Street Rent Houses Furnished 39 1 ROOMB AND BATH. FRIVATI lower, does In.- Adults. Reference!. 171 a month. Fl 5-llH after 1 p.m. 1 BBDROOMS AND BATH. AUTO-matlc gae heat and hot water. PE 1-3051. 3 ROOMS. HBAT AND HOT WA-ter furn.. Ill per wk., pvt. beth and entrance. 110 B. Merrlmac. OR 3-llSl or FB 5-0001. ^BEOROOM HOMi. gCOTT LAKE .large living room, screened area. | 1% balhi, laundry. Oarage, gas. . automatic washer, Ironer. row boat. 1-yesr lease OR 1-3481 | 4 ROOMS, PRIVATB BATH AND entrance. baeement „ garage, dean.^t 4-IMC^. <3. HIIMr, -4 Rj^MS^ND^TH. tfriLlTlEd, i-BOOM FURNISHED COTTAOE. j electric stove, refrigerator, elec- ! trie pump, outside toilet, *10, week. 1175 Petrolle, Union lAke. KM 1-4B54. MEDROOM. 4111 BAS^ABAHLjUlJ. Open g to g Friday. | 3 BEDROOM HOME. NICELX \ furnished large screened porch ' Lake prfvllegee. Near hue line | end enopping center. Call FE | 5A8I7. 1 4 ROOMB, BATE 1404 BALD 4 ROOMS UPPER. Ill Tinuttemore. FE 2-7I33. 5-ROOM. GOOD KAST BIDE. ON bus line FB 3-IMg. ; 5 ROOMS AND BATH, FIRST , floor. UtUltlee fura. Baby wd> come. 130 per week. Inquire 273 Baldwin Ave. Hollerbeck Auto Parts. FE 5-lMl. Umnet. heM*fu'ra!^’^*!*!!**" , 1-BEDROOM HOME IlOW COM- i mere? Rd,. Union Uke Cell EM i 3-3U7 nfUr 6 ! 3 BEDROOM MODERN HOME. | 1 children welcome OR 3 *732 < 1-ROOM MODERN. > MA 5-5000. 5-ROOM AND BATH. OAS HEAT, West tide. » 4-1321. * ROOM HOUSE, 1 BEDROOM ‘ ra 5-1011 22 CADILLAC-3 ROOMS, BATH, heat, hot w^r, FE 0-1003. 4 rooms and bath. ^utiltUee ftir-nlshad, chlldrm permittod kl7.H per week or IM per month. K. O. Hempstead.^ Realtor, 102 East Huron. ra 4JUM. Jtftar t p.m. PE 2-1430. 1 ROOMS. 4 MI. WEST OF TOWN. <00 mo. FE 0*275. room terrace In Liberty Manor, garage, adults preferred. PhoiM ra *-4087. Fumlshed^Yl^room year 'round | cottage at Maoeday Uke. Imme* , apartmimtb, wnr sidb. Adults only. Please call FB 4-1011. dlate poeeeeslOD, references require. Call now. Crowford Agency FE g-2300 - MY 3-1143 AVON APARTMENTS. N B W V T decorated. 4 rooms and bath, on . bus line S111. Fike. FOR LEASE, 3 BEDROOM. HOUSE. { Furnished. ._41J Parkdafe. Near , Auburn, Corner of Edith 5 room* newly dceoYStod, uroer terrace, aas best ai)d,^SMafa.-•to 'per* «»th Alio: (*her terrace* MO mo. South Edith near Auburn. Inquire 111 8. Edith or call ra 4MW FUber 8«l» Phona l-E' 4-23H days, ra 4*134 evenings ,*MAMi'-''lIOOMr-'1l*XftfC^“ ''ifUR nlihed. Also 3-room apt. furnished. PE 4-1401. Rent Houses Unturn, 40 Brick 'Flat—Heated Attractive four family building 3014 Auburn Ave.. Auburn HU. Frout S rear private entrances living room, 1 bedroom, kitchenette dinette, beUi li garage. References required. Ill jier month, phone ra 3-7101 'or FE 5-*M5 2-BEDROOM ERICK Duplex full basement, gaa beat deooratod, W5_per month. NICHOLIE - HARGER FE 5-8183 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatic beat — Full basement WILL DECORATE $75 PER MONTH ,FE 4-7833 544 East Blvd. N. at Valencia 2 STORY. 3 BEDRSoM. 63 SOUTH Jessie. FE 5*012. CLEAR 3-ROOM APARTMENT, stove, refrlg. and ntll. pvt. bato ahd entrance. FE 1-7015 or PE Itwksa FIkST F Oee heat, refrigerator stove, utilities furnished. 53 Parke PI. FE COLORED — l-BEDROOki UP-stalrs apt. Oae best, 1*5 mo. ra 5-Ma. 2 BEDROOM WITH 2 CAR OA-rege In Lake Orion village. Base- THE PONTfAC PRESS, FRIDAY> JULY 7,. 1961 TlURTYeFIVB By Dick Turner next to new grade atboal. jiaa beat, ,4 mtlai oorth of Poo- tl: »'.ii~°iS}oV'i;.iMi!ii i^EDROOM BRICK. OAS Hkat and garage, near Pontlae Central Hlgh^M month. . SMITH, RBALTOR 41 ORKXN 8TRBBT irii|erator furnlah^. .._J Boapital. Children permitted. 17a. per month. Ill depoatt ra-oulrad K. O. Hempataad. Realtor. 101 Beat Huron, FE 4-tlM. After 4 p m FK 3-74M.________ >11 KDRN IN ihONTTAC. PUAtH- bedr»m bt^k, ^S^monta**** <41 UWIALS. braytop Flalna, ua brick. i. Real i TExaa 4-30I0.___________ I ROOUS NICE RESIDENTIAL area. Breeaeway. 1 ear garage. gM. Call *- ' — 711. 8TIRLINO. 1 BEFROTSTB meat ranch. Oaa beat. Ceramic tllann bath. Itorma and acreena.l Kllah4a aant fan-hood. Nice big; lot, with side drive. Low rent. FE; 7-7117 Rato Realty, For Sale Houses For Sale Housed 491 Fw ||ale Hoay ^ BY, OWNER. I ROOMS. BATH. * 1 BEDROOM RANCH, ALUMINUM SATTE MM. 141 baaemont. oU beat, in Man-1 and brick OR*)-lM ! brio* ranoh. dftaon. FE 4-lSll__________|-------------untiwehM^i DRASTIC EMERGENCy^^ ___really ateal U. Beautiful g room, 4 badroM, 1 bathroom ranch, near Sylvan Lake. I don't ,«^Jl*n‘.lb?/..T^^^............... 8chapl?r*[ A BY OWNER. 1-BEDROOM BRICE, new family loom. IMH. 1-car gani|e. ^^IM lot. Low/ln. pipnt. CHEROKEE HILLS 3-------- 2 FULL BATEMAN REALTY THIS NEW BOMB IB LOCATED II an excluilve weal aide neighbor hood I mlnutei from downtowi featuring aluminum elding, 1 bed roome. Targe llv room. 2 lul bathe, lull baeemeht •**»• v*.r« *Jis?t5rk"' J FABULOUS MODELS on tbeXe Haiulyman 1 apecUIx. { /--r iv -i x , o rv ae A 7 bedroom and a 3 bed- Open Daily 4 lo 8 P.M, , room Good locatione Keego Har-I Dixie Highway. BUver Lake Rai^ KS,tl.‘c“olUr55l ““ **““"• lux required _ _ | LETS TBADE 7100‘^CTM Lkke^d ^^pw^3-i2M ! 4-B IHJROOM BRICK UNUSUAL SITUATION biiement. hardwood fl ;b paneling, xtep-up vextibulc wiin tluet Built 1M7. Aluminum ttormi and icreeux Mahogany cabmetx, vanity and bath l.-ahaped kluhen. Only $i00 dn . no mortgage coat. Aseume appt mauTy 111.750 4'b per cent m ^age at $M per month Inclui 5l^vlMon.^On^ I_bou»e_._Call c ing. delightful nelghbore. eicwW Iwt area, g room_colcmlal. A UrgejSt(!lou» rt family home, lexelonal man •ter be kn e *17.500 LET'S TRADE I:ALMOST NEW ... g I and In Seminole HIIU. Beautl-'—'■ -incher 1.700 aquare .UPPER LONG LAKE Lake Privllegea , colonial ranch over- > “Talk about old-fa.shioncd—Janie’s parents still think m ajhumjs something you keep snapshots in!" Aliractive colonial ranen over- > looking lake. 3 bedrmt. I'u ! nvlon carpeu. draper and I and EXTRA. EXTRA nice baiemeut new carpeting loU of plui fcaturei. Ued he young executive or pro-’ —--------terrae aad For Sale Houses 49 j For Sale Houses 49. -BBDROOk BRICK. 437 E MA^ 6»7-737i._____________ rent priTH OPTION 4 bedroom. Big kitchen, ty acre Near Baldaln-Clarkaton Rd. area. *70 month. KLWOOD REALTY Owner. PE 4-MI7.___________ .APARTUENT l-CAR. OARAGE. _________ ' On pavement, new. lot included. ' r?Up -rmet+MLga; AOriWi down payment. model kltcWn. ''many'’’extrai! j LSTT's TRADE IwaM cloae*” to Vood b^fi! 1 $9,950 .... *1 u? I 3 bedroom home off Baldwin, _ ■ HouuixxAW BPri-yi ww Avenue. buUt In Utl. Carpetl. Paul M. Jones. Real l-.st. fe S;T?:\Wr’Lo‘:*eet“ FB .SBW,,:___________ beautiful lakefront lot included. Onlv 177.000 with li.700 down. F'LATTLEV REALTY ■mum**** F”' Iwm t v FURNISHED - .55211? 1-BEDROOM HOME. 4 LOTS,! good furniture lucludlni NklOH-l lake prlvllegee. gl.*M down OR: dryer. TV end tieeier 5 Custom-Built Home WILL HANDLE-ONLY 5 YRS. I gpgctoua 1-bedroom home. It I anri all -•rnndlU«»A li,.l Ilka-g,, golg located arge IM witiy walk-out baae-I. ttrepUee. beautiful kitchen neti. Frlgldalre bullt-lna. 73-llvtaf room carpeted. i5-foot oom with double wardrobe ddwn payment. ___ 3-bedroom __________________ Clarkaton with m baths. Large 173 ft lot. Better hurry on • 1-BEDROOM HOMB IN JUDAH ' Lake Estatee Sub Large lot, Ik. | prtvUegee 4»« OI mortgagw To- , *-■ payment 444. 0400 aeeuiMS rill anr T«bd contract '' WEST BIDE BRICE DUPLEX, rooms, tile bath, gat heat, ecreenei ta and. atormx nice yard, cloie tof oT school end store. Vasbtnder. Inc . ________________________ ..................... ;l', bedroom, 'PUUrBABEMENT, bedrooms. la K E front. 1 ^ter 4 pm g.SOO THREE-FAMILT - Near .......... '___________ reel money e <-rm Excellent locetio rtmlc tile bath, *Mtboard ho water neat, many other features prioed to lell. For further tnfoi matloo call Herbert C. Davis Charming . . . 1 Oakland Lake. riliHu 3 BEDROOM " fuu baaemeot. m Paved road 3 bedroomt. I'u bathe Separate dlnlnr rm.-PgUO hOrch Built 1907. riwner M^mK w. Of PonUac Beautiful buy 110.500. term. HAROLD R PRANES. R»»o- 170 MILES NORTH OH LAKE Ml0-aaukee MA 5-70S0. BANDY BEAtilB BLACK LAKE. [. 5th. UL 7-7347. CRESCENT LAKE PRONTAOK. bedfoomi. clean, niodeio, boat.: PE 5-4347. ________ CRANBERRY LAKTE. NEW 3-hED- HARBOR BEACH—LAKE HURON. call owner. Any- ____ _ Ot.ro 0-7460. 3- bedr6om home'wIW^ baiement. north end. gll.750. down payment to a qualified pur-chaeer WATERFORD REALTY. OB 3-4575. FE 7-7121. 3 lEDROOM TERRACE. l»Al heat, atormx and'icreeoi, garage. Very nice. $4,M0 with 12.M8 down balaoce 144 mouth, t Maynerd Court, FE 1-14M after 4 pm. 4- BEDR5bM W HIT E BTUCK ranch. Hb hatha, bekted iwlm------- —pol, shuffle board court, occupa^. SELL OR TRADE-Ten___________ new 1-bedroom brick ranch viu,-galow. completely carpeted. At-Uebed two^;ar garage. Two planl-eri. 7>utlt-ln ap^ancei. A kitchen as modem as tomorrow. Easy maintenance. Low taxee. Good restrlctloni. School btu at door. Priced at only *74.500 and worth every penny, will trade for Cbeep- Oilbert I MA 0-17OO. BUY. CELL AND 5 ROOM. 6 AUKES -«? ment on land c n pay- EM 1-3017 3-BEDROOM HOUSE. OVERLOOK-■-I lake, basemen' ' ' r 70x300, 113.00q, M.’ icrnfi* ^ ALSO LAKE LOTS Attached gai^e. Carpye^^m* $9300 Copper plumbing, W* do the financing. RUSSELL YOl^NG Builder___________ FE 4-3M0 Landscaping Television, Radio and Hi-Fi Service Rooms with Board 43 $9,500 xoundx unbelievable Oeorglan Colonial styling. Up- > °-rj*iHt.y-Si!l':,' stain there li 1 bedrooms, living ~ ^ ----- kltchr---------" -..........— TRI-LEVEL STARTER Mode! Open Oetly 10* P M. No money down, on your lot. your --- or BMevel. ^il\ 363-6M1 EM J-0463 Commerce Rd. 1440 a houee. dining r( _________________family s ligSl ft. bonus room w •• a bobb^ rooiL _______lx xtartllng per month, mcludes tarest. taxei, and In-the George Town; princlpat^ln. xurance. To drive north on Joalyo, pait Walton Blvd. Folloi dlesvlck Woods eigps w ui»-r.. D Lorah Building Co. FE 3-»172. JOHNSON EXECUTIVE NOW vacant owner transferred to Callornla. Beautiful 4-bedrm trl-level Close.^^ Forest La^ke Coun- clean bouse lo on trsde. r suburban QATOR TRAILERS Complete stock of msrine accessories. Pkiate and flbergles me-terlalt. WE RENT BOATi, MOTORS, TRAILERS PAUL A. YOUNG, INC OFEH 7 DAYS A WEEK 4030 Dixie Hwy. - On Loon Lake ._________OR 4-0411________ BuiMing Modernization BLOCK,, mick 5-*4li. work. Lome V. TerMersch. FB t-1 MERION BLUE SOD. YOU pick up; deliveries muds. 8M laid, Rdto-UlUng. 3001 Crooks Rd. UL 7-4*43.____________________ MEN ONLY. BOARD OPTIONAL ^ , Reasonable 141 Oakland FE JOHNSON RADIO K TV!_i-*lo«: IXO PINE, ROOF BOARDS 4e 111 4x8’ Peg Board 4x1’ V-Orove Mabogaoy . 4xSxVs Hxrdboard FHA TEKMS ON OARAOES PONTIAC LUMBER CO. CABH AND CAR^ 831 Oakland Ave. FE 4-0113 FREE E8T1MATE8 ■ Carpentry Work Cement Contracts CEMENT WOMC BY PEDT-BILT. bonded. Oarage. I ways and patios c OR I-MIS.___________ JPreBBmal^g, TBiloring THBRE’S 80METH1NO To* Want In Teday’e Head tbs Many Otter* Mew WhUe Toa’r* Here! i;i*N’'o“7 firw ft: m to. R. gts TD casing ....... j™ J*. 31/4 TD base ^ “•'J2'Jw IH - Ftt. et Zaeh 46% Off Waterford Lumber Cash and Carry 3S71 Airport Bd._____ OR 1-77M Plywood Pslnters ADecoratorf 1ST CLASS PAINTINO AND OEO-oratlBg. Taint Shop UL MMO. PAIMTIMO^^l^HQ-WAU. _ Plaitering Service THIS SPACE RESERVED For your business OR SERVICE AD TODAY! DUL FE Mill Michigan Tesa Ltceoae 1154 Hours 10 A M. - • “ 45 E. Walton Blvd. MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE T OR HIOHT. FE 5-llM. Tree Trimming Service EXPERT TREE SERVICE. WEEK eiUmatee. FE M503 or OR 3-1000. Truck Rental Trucks to Rent AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trueke—Seml-Trallere Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. no S. WOODWARD Ml 4>144S Daily lpc*w»? Upholstering win build 3 bedroom r*ncb-xlyle : ' home on your lot Pun beseihem: f-oak floors, tile bath, birch cupboards, 'OR 3-703*. - ! RUSS McNAB ART MEYER 1 $39 3-bedroom h on furnace 3 large Ideal location. Only Call today. Cu.itom Riiildiii) If you cannot fine _ _ to suit. w_e^ caa build ___ materials ^smd competitive bids. "flif .. we n ik::w.it knranahip petlUve bids. Stop li see our plant today. SMITH WIDEMAN 413 W Huron St. OPLN EVES. FE 4-4526 REAL 3 bedroom brick ra Features carpetiog, lu,, w»Bvuini. recreation room. Oas heat, fenced ■yard, m car garage. Handy — ACRE LOT BEAUTIP0U,T LANDSCAPED - WILL TRADE POR SMALLER HOME OR HOUSETRAIL-ER - ASK FOR BETTY WHEELER. WRIGHT 345 Oakland Ave. Open ’U1 I FE 5-0308 KENT i --Seeetasl i„„ EstebltUied C' deep Excellent r ----- , ______________ 35 ft 1IV4 1th ledgerock fireplace Aty e kitchen with tiled let] Tiled beth Rec, rm end bath Picture windows end with 14.501 - Ave« LOVELY LAKE FRONT -2 seres and Bl-level how-. * bedrms.. 3 baths, family rm. witig heatalator fireplace. Carpeted 11" rm. Attractive kitchen ertth In-' In range. Ideal for family i extra person, complete llvmv quarters on each level. -Thermo^ pane windows. Alum. - aidingi Large screened'patio. 3 ear gav rage. Boat, motor and dock Inq eluded. 130,500, ) Id llvt builj PRIVACY ■ Here Is an tslandj or your own and a home. Island* hat nice shade trees and piivato roed entrence. Nice porch on> home, unfinished 3nd floor. Dices kitchen Good beech. Here Ir " offer. Only SlLtOS with WEST SUBURBAN - ATTRACTIVE 3 bedrm. home with full bsmt. Lerge k'—— --- BARGAIN •Sion for this smell iburben home. 3 Dice e privileges. Call for Day I toniatlc oil heat: Only _ from town. Price 111.000 *1.100 t*\. tA^'LOK. Realtor RfeAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 7732 HIGHLAND ROAD iM5«i DAILY *-» SUNDAY 10-5 Convalescent Homes 44 attractive 3 BEDROOMS yard, nicely landscaped. 11.51 *---------------prtj LAKE. PRIVATE _______ _ jU. West CoL gate. FE 3-1133 or FE 3-S370 BY OWNER. 3 BEDROOM BRICit Rent Office Spa<^ 47 1 offices for RENT. 4840 DIX- le Hwy. OB 3-135*._____________ DENTAL SUITE USED BY DR. ■ U yeare. *540 Dixie Highway. Dreyton Plalni. OR 1-1155. HALF A BLOCK PROM DOWN town Pontiac. 850 sq----- * ' paneled offiu^_^JlghU, For Rent Miscellaneous 48 nent We nave moaeis. Also som ery good buys In 2 aud 3 bed oom homes with *500 Mwn. A. C. Compton & Sons _-0 W. Huron OR 3-4550 OR 1-741 THOMAS UPKOL8TERI?a 107 NORTH PERRY HT. FE 5-8888 Water Sofiener Service^ Water Softener Service Prompt Beniee on AM Mxvke* Bdhlck'e MY 3-3711 or FK 4-MM Wreckin| Servke complete HOUSE AND C«3M-merclal wrecking eervlee. MT MTfl. Wallpaper Steamer Floor eanders. poUebers, h I aandera. fumaee vacuum cl •re. Oakland Fuel * Paint, 430 Orchard Lake * *”" For Sale Houses 49 BY OWNER-LAKE PBlVlLEOKS 3-bedroom, rec. room.. 3-car attached garage. Oes heat. Car-ytinf Pa“- -**—^ ~,. atment. __________ RANCH Heights. 4-ytar-old. t carpeting, large lot. 1 leges. low down paym terms. KM 1-0713. braytocT Plains ^ar**,' move you in. Call WAl________ REALfY. OR 3-4130, FE ljUl 2 FLATS Good location oft Baldwin. One 5-room nnd hath, oae 0-room and bath. Oae furnaces, black-topped streete, aarafee. 111.100, -- streete, aarafee. 111.000, terms. PONTIAC REALTY FE M375 XIROOM M Oarden ■ gw* m Mae 1114P, Ml 5-mS down. |77 per monlb <12.000, FE 5-0035. 3 years old. full BUY-BUILD-BUY Now is the time, we will build on your lot a Mml:flnlebed home and will furnish materiel to finish, No down peymer* — " Moves You In NEW MODEL 965. Carlisle 3 Bedrooms Family-Size Kitchen Vanity in Batli A. iOHN.SON v't .SONS real ESTATE-insurance 1704 8. telegraph FE 4-2533 O'NEIL Floyd Kent Inc.’, Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy et Telegraph FE 2-0123 - ‘ 123 - cmen E Free Parkins SCHBAM galow with fuu oaxem heat, plaste^ * ck*’ a home* needs deeorat&i NICHOLIE MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE INUM RANCH STYLE with 2 car attached ^ %''***li richly carpeted. There uxcl kitchen and tiled* bal sfiVc flwri**and *ml ! some of t I,ocatioii and Convenieme Near, Joslyn Ave.. bungllow with a partUlly finished upstairs, full basement. LeBaron School Area, priced •' 110,300 on FHA terms. BcUcr ir privacy and pro- r 5 p.m BY OWNER rely homes on beautifully l^tci^e. 1375 Scott Lake dock, completely furnished $13.11 ._________owner U S-5S33 BY OWNER. HIORLAND TOWN-ship, 3 bedroom, screened porch, fireplace. '■ ■—* - K'ii. " 04.040. EH HOYT H CABS LAKE R h brick. Built In 1N4. SK*!;, OPEN DAILY 11 to 7 ; TWO-FAMILY INCOME Five rooms and bath < teree room* and bath Basement Models $100 Moves You In SPOTLITE FE 4-0985 room bungalow. Llv-with dining space, utility room. Automat->at. Newly decorated. >nly M50 moves you Pick the one A i-EW EXAMPLES: VE HAVE A STYLE TO FIT EVERT TASTE which fits VOU best 124.100 — A beautiful 1 bedroom brick. Rks everythlnt Including k •eeood fireplace, ta famUy room. 813.000 — 4 bedroom, 1% b rccrcstloo room Fireplace, petioS. f car garage. NICHOLIE-HARGER site W ’HURON FE 5-818,^ • JOHNSON stref:t Vacaat S-rm. modem on the wei lot, M.1M. Easy t treat Fenced la hack yard __________ 'carpattag. Lake prlvUtfse ovper bee been transferred. Foxetsslc|n to M days. , gll.lOO ------------- wSi cobellsr trade. 18.500 - Nothing down to Of im per-------- and InsU 1*4 S. TELEGRAPH ’’^fULTOLE ianwo sSVu3""i131 B. FURNLSHEu HOME Just a block from Sears, Immac late bunfalow, * big roome. complete baths, breakfast root enclosed porch, lovely basement, gas baat^ 1-car garage. Enure Seal. 011.k00. WILLIS M. BREWER JOSEPH F. RKI8Z. SAUS^MOR —.... »4-N E HURON ST. , „ , After 4:30 „ FE MM3 I FB 4-0*23 FU 4-4TM I 1\’AN W. SCHRAM I REALTOR FE 5-Wl ! 042 JOSLYN. COR. MANSFIELD I OPEN iniENINOS AND SUNDAYS • MUL’nPLE LiemNO service ! seTX buy TKADF akes, canals and . Attractive deco- ------_jroughoOt this 3 bedroom bungalow, MILLER .. Ilvlne I_________ kitchen. You can ---------- _ "<*• here and there's a 11 bam for him. Oarage. Full price you like t haps we es THAT WAY gll.OOO. how w OPEN SPACES — Country atmosphere yet not too far out_ The ideal retirement home 1 compels fast sale of his large 1 bedroom home. There's a full dining room, a heated year round sun Igtrcb. lovely living room tod kttehen on first floor. Basement, recreation rMm_. ®**.***?*; b I beach Courts Let's HUNTOCH* LAKE FRIVI-LEOCS One of the sweet-*, bungalows '------ — Decorated toe _________1 comblnattons all around toll down stair tor extra storage. Nice Ir* -" easy to clesn kitchen, with shower. Full base rec room, gas heat, rage. l*-ft breesaway. -dltloo Inside and out. I MACEDAY LAKE VIEW M OUt-atahdinf *-room home ^toa^ful toevery detail Mtrror-too ha^-wood floors, wsdl to wall «0£P^’ - Htgh dry kaaem^ 1^ comfort a Inapectloo ^3? a. includlhf uxts I JOHN J. VERMETT U^SSi . - .J..________ Rav O'Neil Realty ' • , 303 8 Telosraph Open • - • FE 37103 fE William ^ller ^E24 THE POXtlAC PRESS. Fftlt)AY. JULY Rr Jftile J^BKDROOM RAXCH ■f„\sv TKKMS »»IT kttncti** *ad caalomki* For Sale Dorris ABUntmOE KILLS. • roOM brick BftfflUh citablbl b wonderful Uatlv bone m m jitithbprheed of itetteetiob. For Sale tfa< if ■ F J . ■ c \ COMK OXI-i COME ALI. otun « b«i-' For Sale Homes 49 | HUXTOOX U\KE ANNETT Urban Rmewal r»rclBf TM 10 MOV*? ) bedrat srsf^S: HAYDEN : aiw TRI LtVEl. J Bodroont t l*r«» Umlly roo« OU r A Fur nut On oor im *1 Ctdar Idaod i L»kt. MW with *1.01 doan ; So mortfat* coat. Uowtr don. laraat. II*.TM FHA «trm> « ttOWH to al a on OUi 3 bodrooa kuacaloo, pricod U OBly r—---------- ?S' (Ht atmuti. ooly plact and au, I oor aaraae ; riolthtd baaraiant rot. tm. wUi ,{ romploltit furaialicd fcttchaa. | plui dtn or Mil btdrra Coroor I focattoo. tapdrtir laaduaptd. lenctd rtar raid wlUi I ta. ^ . for' soiaamlng pool. MI.IW sail'EXT KE.\I.TY | ‘*™‘* 460 \V. Huron FE 8-0458 I 4-Family Hnck Acroaa from Oontral Moapital , es«-L!iL»—_______i^^iitn'SlSf ,t?Si«. ! Coiiitr location, parod atroeta. ; ■iTT’ a^ roilal arta. thowa not PbOao dM-ITK _ | rwurn of 11 por cant. Only OBAM LASK moHT Inimtdlatc roaaeaalon. 4 roomt, BoU» It.M*. fuil prtct. Only ll.Mi down. MOUTH SIDE CWT BALDWU* I CKDAR ISLAHD LAU 1 Btdtoom fUnca Hoaa. laaodlau Moaata-aioa MIctly dtcoralod Eioctnc brat. tSJN Ttraia. No mantf- J.C.H.WDEX.Kraltoi W E. «a»ao n t-M Cmn Etta Sm 1 to 4 r Xew Officr 25.16 DIXIE HWV. , DORRIS AND SON Rt^TOIW »M Dait Hwy.__OR «SK« CRAWFORD CITT FARMERS DEUOHT 11 uroa «ltb 1 btdrooa bo«t. Mm IS Iran trota Cloat to LiV , Orton Only SU.SSO arKb M SSS --do., OXFORD HOME NtttI, loeattd. CIOM to ahoppinc 0« corntr W Oarage Baaemaat Only M.»SS ST OWNER. 2 BEDROOMS. MOD- SI f*mao **“ EXCEPTIOjCAL BUYS Jf,*jr»4i4^.'i idoT’K*.*.:' Professional I'-.e AluBlnUM Biding - 1 $350 ■ Moves Youlii NO MORTH-AGE COSTS BRANO NEW .VRetlroom home • Tatat Frlca W.NS Modtl at comer of Arlene and I FOB FOUL partlcnl pmntmef ‘ ‘ CALL I Loeely older home 4 bedrmt I Un I'a batba. Needa out aide paint. 111.WO. Paul M. Ioiie>. Keal.Est. gM W*T HURON OT ___________1 Modem J _____ apt faawrink 24 ft. Urlnt rai on 2nd fl. 4 car garage Ampl parking i - Horses? c M R. HAOSTROM REALTOR am Hlgkland Road FONTTAC OB *dJti FE .SdMS «ft*f S P ■ Big T' aa rjv Orlaa. _________ - ^ Gl Xothiiig Down ^ -"ai. -- practically nra I'a ■ •itb bulfclB «»QJts jisrs*. rm . oil beat II «f >;»■ cabineta in kitchen Ha» GAYLORD FAR UNDER PRICED for thli area 1-bedroom tiomr. tat beat large lot Route oniT i rr. old for only , ir»0 Ei»y lermt 41a'. I inleretl on bilODC*. 75 .Acres Ideal for riding club lb eceble tnd taearllT voodod localloa alth 36 mUet of riding Iralli odlncenl. Mtdtm 4 bodrni hlU-top home, it ft. llelng rm , upamlo dlnliit rm., full bate- “Our top quality belt gives complete salety and at the same time allows for enough room to fish for your credit cards.” potketbook. LM'k dttl non. SCHUETT RE.ALTY 460 \V. Huron FE 8-0458 • mtal I to 2 M...... torVulek tailt. with only 21.M« <>»:»», 'iSIlf' I Realtor. FE 8-SlSS. 11 N Wg-! Inaw at.. Ponllu. dally til I. 2 ACBK8, 'WE8T SUB^AN. 2-bedroon ranch-type houu I'a baths, breeieway. attached 2-car garage. taU kaument, rec. tpue galore. FE 4-02M._______ 2 ACRta CLARK8TON ARHA^ ttgg acre. 210 down. 2W “»■ )3;-Dot*. uV-nu. D& Brian ?p: For SBje Farms • ^ M .ACRE.S 2 room modem farm home. Bam to g SO. workshop and larage. 010.M0U Tormi. Clarence 1. Ridgeway fe's-woi oyg-^S^tTOKBLyP. 04 ROU.IRO ACRES NIAB ok-ford. Only mlnutea from Pratlnc, for eucutivo. gtnUeman farmer and horteman. Your modorn new 3 bedroom home la hert: fltiy-place 1 botha, 1 large rooma. 6^ bam. Mliton_Weayer, Inc. Broker, too Mala. RoebeaUr, OL iX8?f oWh.S"^S •Ml Thfbb Conty im fictaltr I of roaUbc. SS?k JCatMtSfe. Phona lor sarMoulafo... .STATfONS FOR LEAbE OOOD FOTENTUU Ploaao saU^ irSur mS3i. Tvbb OIL COMPARE TAVERN A+ RICHMOND steady I nn 8. TttogropK y» irtXL en6wn *i*^*«*CT^ aomt locaUon lor 2t yiara. BWk Sale Laihl Contracta 60 BlSa lE^MIRE. MAN MADB nH ss: ssi For Sale Houses WE WILL TRADE I .AXX EXT IXC. Realtors 130 E HURON 8T Open Evenlage and Sunday 1-0 FE 8-0466 . . ^ 3 TENrAChlMTA^m. ‘ ALL WITH OOOD BUILDINOBI J? Uke Property 51 -the followiho ‘ VACANT ACRBAai_^ IHOrcb. oft 3-T3M. 20-73 SOME BORDER WATKRI _UNpBRWOOD_ BEAL utUiiy o?**Cl«fk»uJn off r»«^**wlih*'brlck flVeplue waif rarpetrd.. laUod kitchen, built-uti thow It today. Call FI 1-0003. lake w»op«'", acreage We have It Lake Orion MY 2-mi. Lake Orlon'i largeat Real Etiate and Inauraaca Office Stop at Broadway and Flint, the main corner o( Lake Orion. Laarcnct W Oaylord 1303 W Huron FI-: 8-96‘>3 Trl-leeel 17 i 30 completed family room. I'a balht, complete ktlch-en bulll-lna We hare 10 building , *ll« alloa 00 Midland Stroot edf Sub. , cmai abaw Alto M altea In Fonllu ] R«hetler on ColumblaoSireet. Priced from ; ---------- 013.000 toctudlng lot See our mod- I TRANSFERRED GI HAkti.AIX 8g)E- l-BEOROOM HEN ----— D Clarkt- I H R HAOSTROM. REALTOR i am HlobUod Rood iM-Mi FONTUC OB 4«0S After 0 p m. FE 0^364 KAMPSEN REALTY TTWO FAWLT BRICE Fir, roomt . lour end ki palmed baa nue. two Cl In eicellml ... , and aut. LaeaU PRICED FOR I ________ ____ by owner, 4 ; f BIDE ytBTj I K.A.SX .'^IDF. I-PAMILT INCOME OR LAROE FAMILY HOME — VERY REASONABLY ' PRICED WITH EXCELLENT TERMS STOUTS Best Buys Today REbllNOLE HILI4 - EnglUh Co- A'^roRD - Vay^tjT “^,{^•1^* t room and bath ranch atyle bomb Lorely IM 1 IH parcel with bluktop drive. 3 car ga-rage, plua workabop Ideal for porty aho needa workahop. Only 01.0*0 down ARM HOUSE - ConeentenUT lo-ested on *1-13, neat now Chrya-ler Eapretiway Eitra largo bedroomt. country kitchen, plen. ly of room for garden on the large 100 i 00# parcel. Frtcod low at only 0060 down LARGE CARPETED LIVING RM I WRlliHI WITH fireplace. DININO RM.. I 343 Oakland Are Open til 0 30 MODERN KITCHEN. DIVISION-, KI-' ID B8MT.. NEW FURNACE, cl. .i-ft-tl —•“iSlIld. ONLY 0300 DN. “-■-‘legee OB < *0 fcedroc-. kll ready 1 ' A atone'i throw from I City Umita - only 0 yei NEW FURNACE, FENCED YARD. FULL PRICE— “ MAKE OFFER RETIRING’ SUBURBAN I't, I ACRES HUOE HICEORY NUT ’ TREKC, SCENIC SETnNO, 0-| ROOM MODERN RANCH. RA- I DIANT HEAT FULL B83IT j \ AND FAMILY RM ATTACHED 1-CAR OARAGE YOU LL LIKE < ; IT I 010.300 I UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE I i OR 3-I3S0 If BO ant OR 3=34irr ‘ — - WIT s.-nm - { 1 m6nthI inlm.rtd*'3rb.thI'Vy'^«u^ VILI^GE » V'l Mwet. piMTtd atroeta. Kar taM SELECf YOUR LAEE SITE NOW alfcl3B 1 — ' ueve^pment'corF ductiya u'nd ilth pin-tyu dairy '-‘-Tcom tyatem. Tappan , DEVEIXjFMENT corf. , .■r*tem modem boat, with new .Lake and ^t pWl- j Dorathy F. Hart. Broker ' kitchen, a^lm 30, Doyton Twp. ,a Priced frmn OSS.70S to 033.-1 EM 3-0013______MU 0-1703, County. Alton Dogrow. Open Oeturdoy o^Sunday j ugALL IHVE8TMENT FOR A| It. ml. W. of Wlyerwood “«t^-M /Jr oSSSo"***^ J*m V’'Iim***wAL ufl'*u ta*T vVl-Ho/evt* ’ SAM O WARJlirlCE i^ND SOJ^ famllr ^unita. 1 rooma each *»-, fPlTRACTIVi: i# ACRE FARM. - .. ...... “— *“* eluding utility room. Inatalled g bmuiom houte. bam, --- 0»w cl£cmc.~3iaL wat«l ,|Md. caon trtb. oHter bwUd- ---------- ...... through property. 034.000. 00.000 down. C. P.UXGUS. Realtor t-l-ioi ■ ORTONVILLB Quality Built Hornet Btpce : HAMMOND LARX FRONT; A BEAUTIFUL HOME (or 030.000 with----’ place, encteaed poeeb. tbortao. pane wladowa. corpetlno and many ektru. attachod oarage. WEST RU30E 8UBDIVUION: Our Lady of the Lake. Area. Bcauttful three-btdroom. l'»-bath home. Very large lamUy kitchen arts. Built-lna. Oat beat and hot wmer. Attacbed two-car , 00 OmT Blattered r * ' * " TauafniiT 1 laaduspod haatcr. water pump, toilet (a-cllUlea. He. ToUl price, 0000. Could be aecn Sat. ar Sunday at 40M High Street. WoodbuU Lake LAEE ANOELUS ' New two-level bi...-. lour big bedrooma. tamlly kitchen. aummer kitchen down. »•-taehed garage sod many esi leaturci. Call tor partlculi JOHX K, IRWIX * SORT-------- REALTORS TaatefuUy ** It : 034.0M. e I I 1 S) van Lake „ Sale Business Property 57 ACRES - 700-POpT FRONT ih'-i- , REsfAURANf"SR MOTEL AT pmy 0 detlmble, high 70-^to ^1 piXlE_jnjTRANCE^TO CHR«- *_ ¥‘r I c*r*«- JET .1 nratur. $10; Urtiig i... 013: Crib uid mottrer-raom aulta. ISt: Drm tablet. IIS. Eretrf-' NEW Urlng beda. dinattbt, ruai MM mat-IreaMt. Fsetory Saeondi about Vt nrloe. E-Z Urma 'buy. sell, TfcAOB Bargain Houao. 102 N. Oua ot LMayeMe PE 2*00 Opan 'HI t 2 8BTB OF BUNE OR TWIN_BE08. sa.^rj^aar'.ig fmia OF BRAND HEW. rt[R’-Itura. dayannoH and eWr. ta-lea. lamps. Mroom autto, mat- X5:c.nnar;iiio*f>‘w imta only 02.20 • we57 Faor- A^ fJr W»* PEARSON’S FURNITURE Merritt * Sdn MlI Dlklo Hwy , 270-1170, ___________ . - 12 FOAM BACEBO RUOS.: M, also twaadi and AkOnln-...tt. Rug pad, tt.N. Faaroon a Furniture. 02 Orchard Lake Arc dmpery. appioktmaUly 37 iroa. 000. 2 studio couches. $12 Piece. MA 0-3732. ____ automatic SMITH •a UndKi^d. ful hoBiP im • kVV. M->E *>wa g«r«se. blacktop drive. Mve road frontage Countnr “Vln Slt.MO. Terms.*’' Warren .Stout. Realtor ' 77 N. Saflnaw St FE 3*100 : DaUy U- * Shopper’s Special! A OOklOp comer lot. MiJF house needs (iBlebtag on the Inaldc. Lak priTllefes on$ lakes. All this to only 03.000 and 000 a month I your credit Is approved. Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 OPEN EVENINOB Here's opoortunlty (ram 01.3001 UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE CARL W. BIRD. Realtor oR *-»»« Vs-iwo UNION LAEE. 0 MILES WEST ig Rochester 70 x 00 block buUi of Pootlac at 15M Marrleslone. i mg with It x 12 partluoned troi < 300 foot (rooUge. 23 fruit trees, office Oood central locaUon an ranch home, 2 bedrooms. Bvlng priced for quick sale._• room with picture window. Fire- BATEblAN REALTY place, hardwood noort. bandy pE 0*322 FE ^t_ kitchen. 2 car garage. priTlIegea iTl 8 TELEORAFH-OPER EVES. •- umon Lake. Cloae to shopping------------------------- ,, WHIRLPOOL wmied' Lk..~Brrmmghim~IWym^^ ' AND~Ri: Need $25 to $500? See Seaboard_____ TTion^E 3-7017 ' korie 1185 X. Perry St. **$ ymrs PAREINO NO PROBLEM Seaboard Finance Co. frlierator. Phone FE 3-4317. APPUAK-^ •EBwSilTS-' Mubc rftH 1. upright -------- • lfetf.-n. reTrlg; MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE OPEN ' FREE RENT ijov the summer In a lake-front >me’ We are proud to offer Is lovely 7-room custom-built -sidrnce on beautiful Watkins k EicepUonklly fine-family rm • - 4 i nd other outstanding features I OU.I• ^ lU T 1 . iVl. IRWIN l. A. Webster, Realtor MY M2I1____________OA S2818 WATEtNO LAKE 70 TT. FRONT- WEST suburban k located off Wal- ‘slV&.^TVrm" WILL BUILD I Don McDonald SWIMMING POOL Llvtag Is e pleasure hi tbit custom built 7 room brick ranch - ‘ 11 baths Buivm ktteben Built Ml "pT" " ““J *«.“• condltlOT C-------- ramie die floor baa^ml. , pi,t,iy landscaped. Neer Rot wa»e.r heat. Attached nmahed | fo,g in,b -School 2', car gaw. Yart fenced a^ , elWOOD REALTY - WE ' beautifully landscaped Labe priv- | PHONE It2-24I0 llegct. Custom draoes and car- i------------------------------— {Ti! ^3400 DOWN Only 04qp down on CLARKSTON AREA 030S down will move 3 bedroom bitcklron WILLIAMS REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE 1M3 Baldwin ^ ^ FE 4-0347 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE" STRAPlilT .\S AX ARRO OW^NER TRA.N8FERRED ^ MuvJ 2**Itreplace”*’’T balhs’ *wHk*-«t basemmt. rec. room, attached le-rage 40 of good beach. Price reduced to 331 000 WILL SACRIFICE Lovely 3 bedroom ranch oak floors, rfreplare, hanoy klUheo water softener, garbefc disposal attached ga-rage, largp lot pice landsriped. lake prlvUeges Only 013.0SO ELIZAIUCn LAKEFRONT - 03' of x^ sandy besch with 3 bed- Hiiildcr .Must Liquidate Trade-In $195 TOI AL DOWN No nosing coat No Credit Check. Immediate Posses- Jr Hwli 3 Yeer O Direct with BuUdi BS BUILDER____FE 3-307t peracm can'f go’'wrong. Loea^ on large commercial lot, that s s good Investment In Itself. 00.400 with 01.000 dpwn A IIO.MI. of dlatincUon In OtMwa Hllla. This 4.*edraom all brick Ihigllsh style has full basement. 3 recreation rms, oaa beat. 3-car larate. carpHIng and drapes Included and other featurea too numerous ■ to mentloo. See this Impressive home that you'd be proud to | cell your own. Offered at 031.300 TODAY la the day to see this 3-bedroom with full baaement. camrt. alum, storms and screens. Located on fenced IH. 35 i 110. Only 0000 down Rolfe II. .Smith. Realtor 344 B. Telegraph Road FE 3-704S _______Open t to I -Deal ^cT^,l irage. paved drive. BHter 3 BEDROOM ■ HOMES............ Faccbrick Front I'aym'ts Less Than Rent $10 DN. STARTS deal Xo Mortgage Costs Oss heet-carpeted llring room DON T WAIT-BOY NOW I SOB CORWIN II block north of Montcilml (block east of Oakland i -FE S-37S2 Wettown Realty GILES 4-t'iiit Mrick liicoiiic lent north side location 'Ev. inyeMtsent -PT-tT-r— street Partlsl basement, oil heat, has been recently decorated. This won't laet. ]''.Ii/.abrt1i Shores Sub. 3-bedroom ranch home, built In 1131 Large 34-(t. living rnnm arllh mv# Celling hardwood ..... Well land- cyclone fenced. Bloomfield Town,ship 121 Highland Drive Nerd 4 Bedrooma? Then see this delightful family home with brick and frame extertor. Urge lot. 3 car garage.^ Featuring I'j ceramic tile baths, fireplace. full dining room, handy kitchen with lots of cupboards, gas heat, patio, to Inspect drive south, on Woodward AveDue to Hadaell's Pond, turn right on south sMe of Pood lib blocks to "Open." Salesman on prop-erty. “Bud ' Xicholie. Realtor M Mt. Clcmena St FE 3-1301 or FE 4*773 "BUD" over boat bouai, addltlonsl bunk | houae and tk bath, separate | laundry and tool storage build- , Ing with shower room, good ; beach, concrete breakwater. Of- { lered tt 123.000. terms. Be sure i garege and iltuatad ei Very Dice parcel with fruit trees, berries, good garden space end very nice 3 bedroom home with Urge famUy room Hat full basement. garage and Is vacant. Quick LAEE HOME - YEAR ROUND ■ -............. Templeton Fine buainees location o6 M-50. cnr anv tvpe Of bustnese. 1X33. Ill 24X34. Both in excellent condItioD, reasonably priced. K. L. Templeton. Realtor 2330 ORCHARD LK. RD. 002*000 '. Rent, L’se Bw. l^o^57A $. BXAUTIFUL -20XS0 STORES OB -'flees in one bldg. ■>' will make Urge unit 40 x “ ‘■/'Jf ... COMMERCE lake LOTS. 2703 310 or Fl 2-7440.____ ' M*Si “FE SA-rURDAY AND SUNDAY AT the iRi ranch Just north of 3 and east of M-23 near 8« Dam. You can gel a 300x400 electricity to. with or without cnbin as low at $203: 40 acre-foT 21,730. Low down paymee and oaay terma. Call Btanle Real Estate MAIn 0-0107. Evea Main ............ Income \VP:ST SIDE Lovely 20 room 4 family brtek. •“ -*r cent renUl loeaUto. First offered Owner retIrUg. By We.st .Sirl|-Home and Income , walking dlsUnce to downtowr tie balhs. large porch. Tip Toll IlijHa « Clarence 1. Ridgeway BROKER FE 3-7031 301 w. Walton Blvd j Live up or down. Temaots wll tUy Briggs 11, per cent grot I appointment FE 6-4143 ' M4t3. ‘ISiowW 143 or/rm lors, throughout. 7 aped lot. —' enty of i other “Bud ' Xicluilie. Realtor 40 Mt Clement St. EK .5-1201 Alter 6 p.iii. I'E 5-8004 UESUE R TRIPP REALTOR Seminole Hilb: 4 bedroom .home comDlcUl! (orated New room with JukeJiox. aecond kltrh. on U baeement. 3 ear attacbed garage. 211.160. wtU trade for 3 bedroom home near Northern High Behool ____ NEAR AUBURN HKIOHTB — Lovely 3 bedroom ranch 24' llelng room. earcUent kitchen, full basement gat heat, brewseway. I'a ear garage, well-landeeaped lot. , ...... 200 a 200 aeUlnx for only 115.200. - furnace. bUck top street. 10 a ijSaamiir iSSbME — or urge , 113 n. ui. buiHGii iiag istoe UinUy home I rooma. flraplace. | low down payment OaU FE 4-3010 2 SJ*i,^e gUsaed-ta porches ■ '' ““ tun basemem. oil Mrapre. and It M fuiplMed. sandy beach, only I •“ »!*l If!" ! THIS COTE AND COZY. 4 ROOM HIITER LOOK - It.TOO. 7 roamk. 3 baths. ■" "--iment. 3 NORTH BUB. 3 bedroom, gat I GILl S REALTY CO. ' , FE 3*173 331 Baldwin Avf. I MUI%’LE LISTINO*lSiffYICE I iVal-U-Wayi OOOD BUYS AND TRADES $330 DOWN - 140 MONTHLY 3-bedroom homr with modem bath Clean, cloae In. Immediate poaataaloo. COLORED - $300 DOWN Large S-room bungalow with basement 3-car garage. ImmedUte postcssloo. A bargain. R. ]. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-5551 341 OAELAND avenue OPEN a TO a -w-rv.w SUNDAY I Ji Btrei. FE 4-4371 For Sale Lake Property 51 3 BEDROOM SPLIT LEVEL B (or sale by owner 7 Hi VIThlte Lake. MU 4*0M. 15 Acres, 4oo feet Uke fmotagt Nonh o( Scott Lake. SacrUtce. 111.130. RUSSELL YOUNG BUU.DER FE 4-3300 ai Ltkt St Helen FI 2*t» Hagstrom \Ve Need "Trade" Homes It your home nearly paid for and you can't get your money out? We'll Help You Trnde \Y. H. BASS. Realtor gFECIALiaiNO IN TRADES Builder_____________FE 3-7210 NEAR 1VILLIAM8 LAU ROAD 2 bedrmt . plus heated-finished den (or 3rd. carpet In Uvlng-dlnlng rm.. drapes. |tb-car gs-rager iOO x 300 lot. (uU prict 113.000 ^ A STEAL - 00------- - - ranch. tpscMut kitchen with tf ul canboards. oak floors, (i boacme^ storms and ecraei large lencM yard. lake, piifllegi iMtnot kONT cottaoe 3 bedroams. glaaaed-U porch overlooking bconfifttl Cast Lake good •andy beach, phrtly fumlAed reafdoU well landacapaa 10 s 210 ^ im OT paved street. Only $7*00 to 3 BEDROOM ON PONTIACO NorthaWe Completely remodeled. Only 17.330 with |7N dowo. WM T 'TOMi REAGAN : CLARK NORTH ANDERSON. Desirable g-room home. 3 rooms and bath down, 1 up. tile bath, separate dining rooxt, wgH to wall carpeting. oak (iopra. pUaUrtd walla, full baaemtnt. gas furnace, corner lot. t-car garage CHEROKEE HILLS Large beautifully landscaped lot. breeaewty. JJjLA‘lmi'’*brl?r^repUce **water ^ LANSDOWNE-WlLLIAMS Ut RD. L*(2Kllf* kiam ?e7mw ' i * good .down payasent will ,M ROUND LAU FRIVILEOE8 la minutes to Ftntlac. 3-bodrm.. kltcbon and brtakfakt room, blue dining rm , furnace rm . sun porch. IIS front circular drive. Urge patio, a IttUe woi* ——— only *" *** needed here. ! $300 DOWN. 11 IM l-bedroom 1-flo floort. plaalered ; Urae k*. I FE 1-70M 1 CLAf......... 1 1101 W Huron I guild buy here. 3-bedrm.. FE 3-TOM CLARK UAL E8TA1W IVl W Huron Open 0 to $ MULTIPLE LUTING 8BRYICB ' REALTY PACE REAL BUY AT ONLY Barnes Lake Front ENJOY THE SUMMER IN YOUR OWN LAKE FRONT COTT/ CObUn-ETELY FURHIT’"'' TTAPE. ■EirY' LOW DOWN PAYMENT. H. R. HAOSTROM. REALTOR LAU ORION. EXCELLENT SAND bench. Caabnt break waUt an-dock, 3 bodroom summer hqmi city water and gaa. Modem kitcl en with snack-bar, Ilvt^ rm. wit ftrepibcc. Uise glaaaed fmt porch overloakTng At Uke. Nice-W ,U - ' ----- WEBSTER , ______feel at floor l _. feet no Dixie. Zoned commercial. i An Inveatora price. DORRIS AND SONS REALTORS . aSl Dixie Hwy. OR 4-012$ * LOANS Sale Retort Property 52 fr«7JrkM i '—--------■*- — --------i block W. of r< ______ . lota, completely nUhed. electric and water, t flshlnf - — ne*aiL3%. ^ Squirrel Rd„ Aubiira* Heists._____ HARDWARE STORE LOCATED IN • - Mtchinn dalryUnd. Near Suburban Property 52 PRIVATE LAKE Pine trees, gorgeous C. A. Webster. Realtor My 2-a3tl____________OA S-28I8 RANCH-TYPE 1-ACRE BEAUTI. fully landscaped on Wolverine “LET’S TALK - BUSINESS” Dairy Queen Owner must move quick Will accept offer. Low down payment. Real hot spot. Marine Business Enjoy aVtrwtlv’e MICHIGAN BUSINESS Siites Corjioration JOHN A. LANDUE88ER, BROKER 1373 Telegraph Rood PE 4-13S3 _____Open 'tU a eveninga.__ LOANS $25 TO $500 On your —-------“-----‘ Ity. 34 m ■ lt“o«?_....„^______ HOME &^UTO LOAN CO. 7 N. Perky St., Comer 1 LOAMS 133 TO SlOO BAXTER * UYINOSTORB S4 W. Lawrence St PE 4-1532 WHEN YOU NEED $2STb$500 We wlU ha gUd to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. ' 3N Ponttae State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 Credit Advisors 61A BUDGET YOUR DEBTS CONSOUDATE BILLS-NO LOANS For Your Beat Bet to Oat Out ot Debt, See Financial Advisers. Inc. 3tb B. SAOIHAW ----- ARE YOU IN DEBT? Now you can gSt out of debt without a loan Make ana weekly payment . TolS*..... business with I Id OamUhmenU and re-•°iVr wonderful (eaiurca Including (mall home. 0110.000 plus stock. ,.-1.000 down wm handle. Will trade 1 ttown payment back first PARTRIDGE A ASSOC., realtors Butinesaea thniout Mich. SUNDAY AT _____ _______ north of M*1 and east of M-33 near Beer ' Dam. You can get a 300x400 I electricity In, srlth or wlth< SUNOCO STATIONS Franchises ale available in Pontiac-Roch-ester areas offering' these opportunities: 1 - PAID TRAININO PROO^M I — YOUR OWN BOSS 2 - modest INVESTMENT a - OUTDOOR WORE I ^ mOR PIK FOR INFORMATION CA^ FE 4-4509 732 W. HURON. POWTUC, MICH. OPPOSITE MAIN POST OFFICE 1 Mortgage Loans 62 MY 1-3711. ANTIQUE MARTEL CLOCK ANb Other furniture. PE 4-1333. ATTENTION We carry a large aelecUon of rebuilt radios and "rVa. All arc tuaranteed at leaiit 3# days 7n , writing aif .M and up. We Mke trade-lna. TVt or asSer articles of value. Obcl Radio and TV. say#- Elisabeth Lake Road. FE 4-4443. Open 4 to t. A Mortgage Problem? Refinancing, remodeling and construction loans. CREPP HORTOAOE k REALTY EM 3*333 CASK AVAILABLE To Improve your home and pay up all of your debts plot your mortgage or land contract. Your home must be one-half paid for to q'jalKy. Ceil now for details. Harry Rosa, FE 2-4363. WUItam Benderoff. BETTER BUYS Adjustable bed frames 14.43 Hollywood headboardt 14.45 Innertprlng mattreaa 414.43 3 pc. bedroom suite 434.43 2 pc. living room iulte . . iM.30 BEDROOM ODTPITTINO CO 47S3 Dixie Drayton Plains OR 3*734 Open • UU 3:3# Mon. Ull 4:3# $600 to $2,000 On Oakland County homea, modern or not. Voss & Buckner, Inc. 30# National Bldg. FE 4-472$ • Berry Garage Door Factory Seconds AvaUaUa at ilxeabla discount ■ 33(# Cola Btraet, Blrmln^m PE 3*303 in 4-1033 MORTOAOES ON 1-ACRE DP. With lao-foot frontage. Mo appraisal tea. B. D. charloa. EquiUbla Farm Loan Berviee, 1711 8. Tale-graph. FE 4*431. Swaps 63 BIRDSEYE MAPLE DRESSER. 410. Twin badt, bland wood. $14. 323-3441. a-ROOM HOUSE. FREE AND clear. Trade for anything, of equal vahft or will rent. FE i-iail. BIO NSW is cxiBic ro&t kREkZ-cr. $1#4.#4. R. B. Munre Elactna Co.. 10## W. Ruron. PE 3-1431. BRAND HkW WROUhkr IRON bunk bcdi complete witi iprlngt and mattreaa, m.45. AIm made bunk and trundle beds at big dla-counta Pearaon't Furniture. 42 Orcham Lake Ave. IM3 PONTIAC STA'nON WAOON trailer. MA a-ll3a •38 CHEV., CONVERTIBLE. yIrY Kharp for •etfan. Will adjuti an? dUference EM 34KK1. BUILT-IN OVENS AND RANOES We have several eeta of Thermo- are offering at 7b’*thc ragular price. Included In thli sale are event with rotUacrlet and ranges with griddles. Never have we had a tale like thla on built-in equlpmint. Call (or quotattone. Royal Oak Kttebena. 423# N Woodward. Royal Oak. U 2-2»44. BOAT. MOTOR. TRAIIiER AHD lor what have you. MA BUY-SELL-TRADE Sweepcri, mowers, funa, tooU Barnes * Hargraves. 741 W. Huron BE88ER BLOCE MACRDfE, ALL attachments. Chimney and Pal-«S«r **'**” *'*®*”’ ®**®7s**r. Trada^' ^li OARDEN TRACTOR AND BQUIP-meut for boat. PE 1*217. CASH FOR used TVf, FUBRI-turt and mlac. P> $4Wf DDflNO ROOM BXt. INCLUDlMa china eablaet, buffet, dining rm. table and chairs. 34sytag wringtr washer. Electrolux aweeiier with attachmenU. Btlge wtth leaf pattern #xl3 nig. 114 Kemp St. RAVE CAR, RTILL TRADE OR good boat and motor, la- ■ ir pre-hrit*. PE S-M*3. IS# OoUapd. Blaek'i Auto teles r#om home, attachod jaragt. and breataway uit bathT hardwood floors. Balanct. $l.t##. WUl tradt equity for ear. bousetrallct, or what have you. C.;»ANGUS. Realtor ORTORYILLB •# South Street RA 7-llU CHEAF. SET OF END TABLES. Hollywood metAl bed frame and bcadbMrd, night itaiid. FE 4-71W DANIBR MODBRR DIRINO ROOM set by Drexel, light walnut. 3 side cbalre. 1 armchair. 1 table US A R D A N ^fcAClOKy jss IS mower. UL BUT#. D&U' Wtiikk. ts4. EuecTRic eondttlaa. FE S*4M. SWAP Home in town RrUI takt ear. vacant M «r land cantmet at down Bcymaat. 1 mama, bath tad nice K. BmaU baMiiea. R. f. fOlck^aluet. las^kMad Aft-nue. PE 44*il. “sWiviiSi.’Wssr BiMoik BED Urns utii mMi • gp“c.aiS5ia‘.K.“ja M$Ti3BrT4iBT5BifrT» . 3 kidtMm. 1 #era ■«dara h#MA THE PONTIAC PRESS. FEIDAV, JULY 7. 1961 Sale Hoii—hold Qo^e 65 ^ THIRTY-SEVEN ■aoiwic erov*. AdmlriU. Phlle«. rrtaWHr*. _ . •(•rif Md OE w” '■®¥ ssraSiT « Crump Electric, Inc. « ----... FE 4-M71 rkr^ KrMcbml. T»rrmc W. IlK.k «hlU tlMr last. -----rdri pleats. Utchlian N) Orchard LUc t iaLb »-tAr eabV ftlttB FREEZERS--$148 Mam# brawl frestsrt. AU fast traaia abeUti. handy door ator- lb MUa W. wmiama iata EdT^ fbft ^AU: MAHOOANT,BREAK-4TM>i *IW, Haaumiid aptnst, ywi^drua tabiaa, Ito pr.; nou- ROOF DICKIMO l"U”xll" ICS. double tonyue (rooTt *00 board fact, 170. : tU.N and ». Sweet's Radio and Aspl.. *33 W. Huron. FK 4-1133. KVa PADS. nu. AHb 0X10. FE For Sale Mlecelieiieoui 67 Fei^ Sale Miicellaneous 67 g; ?f;yutb,y^u.rnr«^- i " BEMCK SAW aORSCFOW-lestlonal aander. Ta- ^ci SOU/ FiFB. k FT ~ a i.ii »-laeb SOU Flpa ..'.■... a j.Ti Sump Puo»t ............ ijd.H SUFFLY m B. BAOIHAW________FE O-JIOO ------- ------- OREBN CAR- pet and pad. cleaned, *tt; automatic oil floor fumacO. controls and smoke pipe, lit; 3-way Hoor lamp and shade. M. Aboye Items - --------- 01, AIR CONDhtONER ......... food CO S-tUt a stove. Both ta 0 for both. MA . ALUMINUM SIDING STORM SASH - AWNIHOS ”■ " » mo. aiM U| __ owner and savi VALLELT Now ReUable Flonecf" pi, i-033 RABBIT - OIANT CHBCKKRRD buck. U. Boy's bike. J15. Oirl't Mfce. U. Pups—Part boxer and part Dobermln Plneer. M. OK ' automatic Ironer. IIS. Phone FE 5-1077 TO RENT A BINDER MACHINE Singer Bewln# Center TALBOTT LUMBER BPS paint, Oold Bond paint, DuPont Incite no drip wall paint. Hardware, plumbing, electrical suppUes and full line of lumber. Open B a.m. 'tU l:U. Bun. t to 1 mi OsSland Ays. FB 4-MB5 USED EllkCTRlC MOTORS. IBS* Barnes S Hargraves, 74g W. Huron Used Clearance Sale trailer. ) Oang TIZ^Y t. ^yient^l^^ ger, trlmmct, a .oboe edfer. trlmmct, snow blower. Toro power handle. Roto-tUler. Tractors. Electric motors, lib horsepower. S3 foot hoist chain. 3-13 Inch cot off saw blades, i horsepower Wisconsin engines. Used tractors. Evans Equipment. 4*07 Dixie Rwy. MA A7I7S or OR 3-7034._____________________ USED FURNACES. COMPLETE CaU aOE 7 ALL EINiDB OF LDb^ER FOR sale FE 0-7103. __________ ALMOST NEW. DIAL CONTROL Singer Sewing machine In beautl-fol Console Makes bUtteai holes bUnd hems' overeasttordeslgns’ without usioc attachments, 'nke on 15 payments or 5*4 10 total cash price. CaU PE 54407 Oapitol Sewing Center for appointment. BROKEN PLAT CONCRETE — bulldorlng. FE *-**43. BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND n/»i r cliatr *5. stroller g BABY _ i^itff'after 1* ____________ Uef Aid) >ORit — half and -----.... »•., fE 5-7N1. CEMENT STElni, READY MADE. —- Bpiasb block.----------- ^ caps. - ■■ Il'&O. ■■ “ ehlnin» caps. Pontiac Pre-CUst Stra (fc., 54 W. Sheffield. FE BtHD jNentouefft ftEPAiR"tr By factory expert. CALBI MUSIC CO. II* W. SAOINAW______FE M333 beautiful STEINWAY GRAND Ptano. witti ebeny flalsh. Oan't ten from a new on*. MORRIS MUSIC CO 34 S. Telegraph Rd FT 3-00*7 Across from Tel Huron BEAUTIFUL FRENCH PROVIN-clal splnet-puno. equipped with practicano. In excellent —•" Tot-or........... CONN OROANS btxjRT S CLARE PUi LEW BETTERLY MUSIC __ in * 0003 ___Frl. til * OPPOSITE B'HAM.T----“— Summer hours - dally CALL MA 5-1501 FOR ANY HOME improvement, alum. 11 d f porches, stone and wrought I, Barnes S Hargrav) BTOTEB. REFRIOKRATOR8. KID-a-bod. and etbar mise. itsmi. 17 and It Hovsy SACRIFICE. 53.S5 m6hTHLY PAY-manU. Singer Zlf Zng equipped. Cabinet stvle aewlng mndiine. Makes desifna, manograms, etc. I13.S0 toUl balance oi new con-tmet. enU FB S44S7. Capttol BewUis Canter. i E Wl^-ttidabiU. "t^'le- snle to nU. New, used and — possassad. Over 70 models .. choose from. Prices start BUtssr porubles. Slf.lt. sla tag equip mcA. Oait’a- AppHanras, . 4*gL Hatchafy Rd. OR 4-1101. BINDER 8EWINO MACHINE COTT- yg&oT- Intversal Company. irrubio couch. «" muntz tv. —.-------asher gas range, elec- , chest of drawers and speed queer AUTOMATIC CON-trot wrlngtr. * ytart old. like new. OlUy *4*. OR 34W3.-iOLld ftAHOOANir 4 bdllTEB twin betU. Wabogany dreaaer. Solid oak slant top desk. Ensy ehslR and ottoman. gO-lOtt,_____ Idairs Do-vsnt dryer. 544 for bi t Woodbard at Square ___1 Carpet, W<_________ Lk. Just below Ted's. FE 3-bNUSUAL MEXICAN POTTERY other decorative pieces. MovNig^ averting goes I For bargains or n Ufstims, stop and browse in afternoon and tvanlngs at 73 Miami Rd. Of caU FI 1-0333. Used Trade-In Dept. Bwlirel Rocker ....... 9UM kr«qJ5ra!i^b'2r . . . , Studio couch .......... OasTsnso, apt. also ... *34.50 Mld-a-bas ............. *40.50 Vanity, sbast and bad . 500 *5 3 pc curved secOonal .. 55* *5 THOMAS ECONOMY 341 Saginaw__________FE 34151 S RANGE FOR ELE^ B. B M----- —— Huron. — USED RBFBIOERATORS — Reconditioned—1 year warranty — I10J5 and UP -_____ . FRETTERS APPUANCE MIRACLE MILE CENTER fSf REABONAbUg MODER» end tables, Umps, lovely chair sofa damaged. OL 1-1307. WYMAN’S Port, alaet. aewlng m Onar! mern’ref^.......... § g *•— rclng........ gflM ?^."iutta SJ-g . .V. w-od*'^iln#ttc ■ • lism ti W. PUc FE 4-1133 EZ Term* WATER BOrraHER. USED IN-sulated. A-1. 3313 Mariner, Dray- Antiques ry. 4 early Ameiiesn — liit cood. 4733 Blood Rd. TV «nd RstHo ^ Walton comer of Joslyn t I4& ** 31 INCH COHBOl* MO^ Completely Reooodmooed I Tear Warranty miiucle mile center^^ Smt on* Uke ofar paymehu. ri IS^^^dMsfSSFfo^ inmooPHOHic For MiacellaneoiM 67 I FIVE TEAR OLD BEAOIJ. turns. M70 Orchard Color Yotir Cement Cement colors In bandy boxes 1 lb.. > lb., or ( Ib. packages 13 beautiful landscaps shades m. red *0c — 5-lb. red 11.(3 Also Master and mortar colors -LATLOOI COAL A SUPPLY CO. *1 Orchard Lako Ave. FE 3-7101 ORAm SAW. COMPLETELY RE- CASH WAY STANLEY ALUMINUM TKINDOWB 4xt tb Masonite .... *1 M 4x( 54 Pegboard .. g3.»« llx*g 33-ft. Rock Lath . .. * .** *xg Plasterboard . gl.35 4ag *4 Plyscore .. 14.71 Burniexster LUMBER COMPANY 7*40 Cboley Lake Rd. EM 3-4171 Open ( a.m. to * p.m. daily Sunday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. c6leman ptoor furnace aUd Field Cea»r rou, anci np Ui lor Tour BuUdlnf Keodi" SURPLUS LUMBER* material bales company *34S Highland Rd. (M50) OR 3-7003 electric light pixtureb all rooms. 1001 designs. puU downs, balloons, stars. Bedroom $1*5. ' porch gl.55. Irregulars, samples, K'lces only factory can give. Ichlgan Fluorescent, 393 Or- ^ chard Lake — 1*.__________ *HEE STANDINO TOILETS *1( 05 M ft. lengths 1 10 ft. lengths .. 1 JO n. coll .. t b trim . 000.05 fORkh^ PLUkBbtO. P A I M T. (Iasi, srlimg. Open 7 days, FE I. Montcalm Supply, 150 W. PLuosacitHT pfammES. ideal water besting Averagi house, $»»0 FHA ten— — Heating A Cooling Co. OR 34554. J^N blffcRE CR4WLER M01> W 40 ,5 roller. Wide track. Front end loader. *4 yd. bucket. With tut traUer. Call after 0 p.m. EM 430 Orchard Lk. FE 5 LATATORIEB COMPLETE 524 50 V a 1 u u $14.05, also bathtubs, toilets, ahower atalla. Irregulars, terrific values. Michigan Fluorescent. 303 Orchard Lake — 1. LOVELY SINGER SEWING MA- lshf*T»k« — rjvTr.°^ g^, i 8EWIN ,-r. like t.— with mahoaanv fl balance of |S1 *0.50 per mon< Company, FE Mroic^^ ^ $3.05. Large aeisCuon' of caM-ncts with or vrithout llahti, sliding doors. terrific buys. Michigan Fluorescent, 303 Orchard Lake. — SO NEW AND USED OAB AND OIL . For the t ai'' JFFICE furniture and 5IA-chlnes. used deaki.^chalTi. upholstered straight chairs. Ublts, storage files, ssfe, work bench, coat racks, drstttng machines, claetne A.B. Dick mlmi---------— . OR 1 protee- _______ 0-3010. A Offloe Bupply. POST UOHtT PORCH LIQHT. wrought Iron posts, llO.Og. Complete aetoettm oI_“sf‘», l>OWER MOWERS, $10. BIKES, gt. Easy waahw, *^^^ aK bans# Jamt, Mbla mi *“*OiiE2iro i^KpaWt^' 43$ Orchard Lako Ave. FE 04110 WALL BHOlFiRB OOttWjfti rtth' fanocto and curtains Odf JO value I34J0. Lavatories compleW with faucets *14.H. tollcU (31.M. ' Mlchlaan Fulorescent. 101 Ot- TAKE OTftk PAimSHfTa »1 J* weekly on 1000 OE 11 ca. fl. O^^YEM BERTICE STORE 30 g. Cass ' FE 54133 SHALLOW OR bCSP WELL SYA USED OIL rURNACB AND BLEC-trtc dryer, good cond. First reas. offer, on 1-075L____________ WORS~BiNCnE3. toil 7*Aii)ON Road. OB 1-0023. omo ilOWINO WriTH MOTT hammer knife. Ft 9'SI13. - 3 Wtrtto. '»»A'iLi«rNEW7'''' Cameras & Equipment 70 Sale Muilral Goods 71 By Kate Osann Sale House Trailers 89 a MOBIUB HOMUa .... -. 23 B. Oom travel trailers. Wolvorlna truck sampar als# homa typo mpbllo homos. Oom-P’oto IJ.IO of parts and bottls qaa. Hltebea InaUllsd and ears FE *4-m* 3172 W. Huron FOR RENT 1*' VACATION 'ntAltr sr. OR 14707. THE TIME IS NOW! FOR ua TO PICKUP AND SELL Vi’ HA^*'au“iRa“WiUTINoi CALL US TODAYI HOLLY MARINE A COACH BALES 15310 Holly Rd. HOLLY. ME 44771 Parkhurst Trailer Sales -PIMEST IK MOBILE LIVINO— Poaturtng “— ----- “ Boats and AccesBories 97 An%An»tk TRAVBUIR BOi Thompson CTInksr Built Boi ‘II JOHNBOH ItOTOIU GASOW KEEfW HARBOR, MlCH. “Well: you TOLD me to dean up my nxHnt ’’ Sand, 0 ravel and Dirt 76 RICH. BLACK DIRT- TOP SOIL. 5V4 yds, *10 del. Ft 44500. SPBCIAlPfABH^TBEAdH BAND, '50c yd. Pee Oravel. 01 Td.-BoaPPgP^« MY 3«74e3. BULMAN HARDWARE FE ^470^. I ffaaon. 8acrtftc< ^nd, Oravel and Dirt 76 1 OR 1 MlLUON YARDS Of shredded pest ar black dirt. Loaded or delivered. 7 days a wea 000 Lochaven Road. FE 1-1413. _________son.. BLACK DIRT. gravaL dcllvtrsd. vary rcaa. OR !-g33g or OR 3-7tW.______________ ::a top SOUs BLACK DIRT clay. ........ ............’ " 34434. Ill, sand and. gravel, od A-1 SANDY LOAM, TOP 8C1U black dirt and Itn. PE 542gl. ATTEN+fON TRDCKEfeS; liOAtl- as. SPSin-" * A-1 TOP BOIL. CTIUBHED ■«««& sand, B ww 14173. PEAf HWrts. kLACU! Dlft" .. c!artuil«i^cn’'M-U. Ft? delivtry ieach band OB boad or Lake Road. EM 34373.. 35c yd. RUI Male Pit. EM 34373. PONTIAC LAKE BUIuDERS supply. Sand gravel and dlrt.-,0emem ■oitar. tnieklag and Ula. OR 3-3*34_________________________ RICH DARK CLAY LOAM TOP ra’ ^*^**^^’ ^ POODLES (10 DpWN HUNT-8 »______ ~ >B «-3113 PARAKEgfS, OUARAN'nCED TO talk. Canarles^^ PUPPIES. *3 EACH OR 3-oa»« 8IA5fESE KITTENS WITH PA-pers. price reduced for quick sale. FE 44*43._______________ TROPICAL FISH. ALL PET SHOP. Dogs Trained, Boarded 80 DOOS AND CATS BOARDEDi Burr-Shcll, 375 B. Telegraph. lardlng. 1. 1-0504. ^Hunting^Dogs 81 Waldon Rd.. Clarki GERMAN POINTERS. MALE AKC'.' year 025-2500____________ REGISTERED BLACK AND TAft For Sale Livestock M l-HORSB BUOQY. OOOD CONDl- wood after 3:30. FOR BALB HOL8TEIH COW. 1 years old. Due to freshen any day. 3rd calf. Big strong heavy producer. Bangs vaccinated, dehorned. Oreat Oaks Stock Farm, noo Walton -------- — --------- Phone OL ‘ ' MILK OOAT AND 3 KOm. FE 4-3005. 100 Newark.________ fALOMINO OELDINO. 1 MARES. Sale Farm Produce 86 CHERRIES FOR SALE HONEY BEES 115. HONET ggc UP. 1 bcagla and pupa, laa BoUsin Road, Lake Orion. ; R E R R 1 E 8. qt*E*R A NTT Sprayed fruit Orchard at 111 N. Squirrel Rd. Auburn Heights. .cherries. Pick them yoOselT Oakland Ave. Sale Farm feguipment 87 HAY TOOLS; PRICIB REDUCED on new and uaed balers, choppers. mowers, rakes. We trade and finanoe. Bartland Area Hard-ware. Phone Hnrttand 3511. BARGAINS NE RATE A TRBMENIX3DB LARGE INTEHTORY OP USED TORS AND BQUIPMEpT. ALL ARt PRICED TO'SELL. CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE. KING BROS ^JkJSfriAC Hoad at op Sale Farm Equipment 87 YHEELH -ENS TR o miHiris w rowMiivrs, m mo of riding mowers, gli* up. i for demonstrattoD. Evans Ee ment 6507 Dials Rwy. MA M FRAZER HOTOTILLBKS >ART8 aM^q^medt, US* Opdyks Rd. P5r salb MoTORI >ber. n 5- IMACK HAY several' HATT"CONDindNERS. --------- -1. Davla MaeUBfry. Auction Sales antique and ROU8EBOLD AUC-tton. Saturday. July g. 10 a m. Haying purchased the contents of a Detroit Resale shop and storage foe^es at . UUca. Alfchlgan 1 vrtU aril At unrsaerved auction the contenta M the UUea build-Inga at the comer of U Mile and Ryan Road near UUea, Michigan. Jenny Lind beds, enst iron stoyes. and fireplace front. Oriental rugs. Captain's^ cbalrs^^jHanket chest. tures and bowls, Victorian mantel clock. Sessions regulator wall clock, wood, copper. Iron kettles, ladder back chairs, ^cture frames paintings, antique and custom Jewelry, child's sleigh plus large quantity of taousebold furniture. -------------- flgUy- - blnet. Venture — Buddy QUaltty Mobile Homoa. Loeatod half way betwaan Orion and Oxford on MK MT 3-4611. TRAILER RENTALB .scampers and Rousetrallers OOODELL TRAIIIR BALEB 3300 8. Rochester Rd UL 3-4550 TRAIliR ----- ----_j>^------ ■ MA 4-3535. controls. Wiring, bottle gas, F. B. HOWLAND 3345 Dials Hwy. _________OR WAN'fEO: 15 TO 17' LATE M trailer. FE 5-3454, travel COACHES I3ti FT td 30 in. Start at $395 ONE Of'tHE LAKGE.ST DISPL.AYS OF NEW AND USED MOBILE HOMES l.\ OAKLAND CX)UXTY , Hilly Marine & Coach 15310 ftolly Rd. ME 4-0771 -HOLLY. tnCRlOAN BANK RATES Ojieii Daily and Sunday and traUar. 15 HP Motor. 14 ft. Ptberglas boat. sWtrlng. wlndsbUld. and seat. Now outfit - 1515. 1414 W. Auburn Road UL 3-1007 iBsl Crooks and Uvamols Rdi.l ACROSS PROM AVONDALE HIOH UOHTINO BAIL BOAT. RBC tratlon uumbsr 3MS, excsilent Ion sails, bottom ftbarglassed. Owner In process of recondltlon-li^ ^t. Must sail. Pnat $335. Wanted Used Cars 101 For Sale tars IM WE NEED CARS! iSeSf Sfs, . M &M MOfOR SALES 3037 Dlala Hwy. or 3-1SS3 WANTED CAHi”WH "iAH iof'. Exchange houie cootrseti »n1747 . 30*0 DlxU Highway. fki-powiR BET-uf poR m eu-blc Inch Cbayrelct, 37 E. Rutsers 4* Mercury, elactrlc sUrt, S1.1IIU, tax and fr^bt tneludcd. INLAND LAKE SALEC PE 4-7121 AU New in Pontiac ORADY WHITE LAI>8TRAKB - AQUA SWAN ALUMA LAP HlTEROnSE VENUS CRUISER 10EST BiCND MOTORS Porta-Camper Camp Trailer ..eod, Alum- Flbwrslax, I ft.-14 f SCOTT MOTORS AND SET’*’'' CRUISE-OUT BOAT BALI S3 E. Walton PE Dally *4 Sunday KM Rent Trailer Space 90 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR thosw vriid want the batt. 4Yx«Y lots, la xto- cement patios, ttc. One mils savt of Oxford on Lako-ylllo R»*d OA 1-3033. THE BEAUnruI AttkORN Heights Mobile Vtllage, 170 N. Ogykt at M5I PE *-3301. \\ oodlantLLakc .Lots iOxfSO. Small down payment. Free deed to rtUrtd family only. Beautiful.(S acre park. 5 swimming beaches. Oas, sloetric. Tale-phone. Inyestlgatc. Owner W. Or-- »•— —-w— , Britton. Auto Accessories 91 For Sale Tires 92 8. Bagteaw 1 E 4-450S. OOOD USED TIRES KUHN AUTO SERVICE IM W. Huruw FE 3-1315 OUARANTkED USED TIRES, 13. B 6c B AUCTION BALES EVERT MONDAY OPEN 7 DAYS WEEK 0-1 BO f-SELL-RETAIL DAILY Door prises Syery Auction Lunch Room Open Every Auctlo 5080 DIXIE HIGHWAY HOUSEHOLD AUCTION tlALE 1> miles South tnd 1 mile V Utics on llVk Mile R^ Satu July 0 beginning at 10:30. 2 plate bomu of good fura Wintamx. proprleu SATURDAY, JULY t At 1 P.M. AttTactlve Boston rocker, milk safe, cherry bench. Uylng room furniture, rugs, end tables, TV and radios. Apartment size gas range, white metal hanging cabl- raunlty Auction ou I north of Oxford. Ed sales manager. OA S-2l LOOEI 750X14 BLACK TIRES, ALL ED WILLIAMS 451 8. Bxglnaw at Raeburn CRANK8RATT ORINDINO IN THE Sale Motor Scooters 94 Sale HoKse Trailers 89 10 FAMOUS MAKES TO CHOOSE FROM Bee the latest 47x18 wide and the new ABC Deluxe 1---- with roof wlhgx and bay See these ** ‘o pick quality mobile b from. I and 10 i.--- Buy or root your vacation trailer bert today. Oxford Trailer Sales Mila 8. of Lako Orton on M-24 1050 VENTOURA. ISxM, OOU3 Seal quality, mobile home, ir-new. See ar Square Lake Tra er Park, Lot 20. 1155 Pslrd Pontiac. -'50 marlStteT 1x3*', FURN--.w.., ___-T«i* pxcpIXrat condition. FE -2-2915. 1900 PONTIAC CHIEF. FE 2-0513___________ r 10. DETROirHR PONTIAC IXXIRINO FOB A MOBILE HOMKf LOOK NO FURTHER. HUTCHINSON'B ARE IN A POSITION TO OFFER YOU THE BEST DEAL EVER ON A MOBILE HUME E8T SELECnOl X MOBILE _jk. w# laa^mi __give-aways or------------------- of any kind. Just tnia prices. Stop In today and ohooaa from oyer 40 different floor plana. Top trade lowances on your praaent nlot *---- - honseboM fumHure. * Bob Hutchinson Mobil© Home Sales, Inc. UOl Dixie Highway Drayton Plalni OR 3-1302 Open 7 days a week. NEW IN PONTIAC PORTA CAMPER CAMP TRAILER COMPLETE WITH KITCHEN CRUIBB-OUT BOAT BALES *3 E Walton. PE t-44< Chief. *4,005. *500 down. NEW — 1001 40' 3 bedroom Detroiter. 04.305.’5500 down. Bab Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. 4301 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains Opsn 7 days - —'■ Jacobson Trailer Sales and Rentals All Dtw modsls In trarel trailers. 13 ft. for eompact csrs and np. Ressrva your trailer for vacations. Set UI for hitches, parts and servlea 5685 Williams Uki Road, Drsyton Plains. OR 34111. UORlWklOHT a demooatraUon at Wamar Trall- -------- 300S W. Huron. . E 'TS I. * Uras and wheala. Bserilanl ■‘t.'S&.’K.ssssrJtfa ROLBT CO. 14*0 B. WOODOARO AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-31E. ■M CHEVROLET DCPALA. UOS — 3,5*0 ml. PewargHd* * Radio and htater. PM . Jade Orean, * is-nMa. NORTH CusvKW CO lOOO 8. WOODWARD J BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-27M. 1*04 CHEVROLET C '*3 VAN. (' BOOT. vIRT OOOD cond. '53 tractor, cab evor, practically new tatlne, all In very good riiape. Can be aoen at 4*41 EUi. Lk. Rd.________________________ Better Used Trucks GMC ----s, OteTralets and Dodges. Taks your pick for only glM. teraa-. NORTH CRE^O-------------B. WOODWARD if^ Easy ter-.,-Har«°-,y^i LET CO too* 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM Ml 4-1711. ilM'dridVitdtJrflISSll.'ya Bi. Slnc, Black and Whtts, no rusL 0 money down. Lucky Auto ■aUs, m a.'Baglnaw. PE 4,1114. ‘4* CtHtVAIR 70*. 4 DOOR. POW-crgllde. radio, boater. Wlndsbteld wipers, folding seat, comfort group. Deluxe oqnipmsDl. Ermine white. Only II.mTeaBT TERMS. NORTH CHEVROLET CA 1**S ■ WOODWARD A-ne. BfitMIHO- Auto insurance 104, Check this rate! 530.000 Unlnsurod MotorlsU COMPREHENSIVE (fir*, theft, eb ----------(1100 deduetable) PHONE FE 4-3535 tor a tra* cost sod coyeragt comparison foldtr on your car WE ALSO TTRITK CANCELLED AUTO INSURANCE 1044 Joslyn Eves FE 3-4153 _____________ WE WRiYb CANCELLED AUTO. 1054 CRXVRQLCr 1-DOOR, fadto and boater. ,Oood tranaportatton, no amqsy down, auums payments of U.SS per month. Lloyd Motors, Uncolh-Mercury-Comot, 313 S. Saslnaw, PE l-Olll. -----RAbl6. HlAffch. B. suck, *175. OR 14346. 105* CHEVROLET BEUAIR 3- etc., XxccUeat condition threu(h-out. Must stU immsdlately with no cash Dsadad. just taks over sf^b^sur ?u? y*5S7.'“jK CREDIT MAHAOER AT vS3 AUTO SALES, 115 8. Ssflnaw, FE *4403. H55 CHIVROUrr OONVER-nBLE. Foreign end S^. b»rB 105 1*54 CORVETTE __________FE 5-4404 -60 TR 3 EXCEPTIONAL. isST converttblc. Damsfod—drivoablc. — ' *•*•■ iowden Motor aales. lOSO FIAT. 1 OWNER, I radio and bOater, Si onablc. Superior Auto Sales Pontiac Headquarters ' pqR Boat Repair Materials fiberolas epoxieb PAINTS VARNISH HARDWARE WINDSHIELDS CONVERTIBLE TOPS BOAT COVERS We tell you bow to do It. VOLKSWAGEN BALES AND SERVICE \VARD-McELROY, INC. 4455 W. HURON (M50) — - We Buy and Sell importod Cars 3 H P. to 76 H P. Trad* your old motor In on a new BCOTT by McCulloch You'U like doing business at „ OAKLAND MARINE EXCHA^NOB 301 8. Saginaw .________FE 8-4101 Used Boats, Motors. Trailers. KESSLER Auto, h Marine, 10 N. BUN. 104 OA 0-14(18 Oator trailers Everything for th# best ... OWEN'S MARINE SUPPLIED 304 Orchtrd Lake Ave. PE a-soiu________ ’ SEA RAY BOATS JOHNSON MOTORS Supplies. Repair Scry,_ PINTER'S 370 N Opdyke Rd. FE 4-0034 I MILE S OP BLUE SKY THEA. TERRIFIC BOAT DISCOUNT AT Tony t Marine. Evinruds motors, 35 yesrs repair eaperience. Or-rhsrd Lake Road at Sylvan Lake. We Have a Lot oj Tremendous Buys on New and Used Rigs! Cliff nreyer’.s Gun and Sport Center 15310 HoUy Rd ' *" For Sale Airplanes 99 CESSNtt 140. 104t. ELARCO OM. nlgstor. very clean, A-1 condl-FE 4-0113 evenings. ’Transportafi* Offered 100 4 rNOINE AIRLINER. NON-8TOP-Los Angeles, San Francisco, Ban Diego, *70 50. Hawaii, *00 00. New York, lit. Miami, 044. Ferry Service •— "" • $25 MORE For that high grade uaed ( ns before you sell. H. Dixie Mlgbwsy. California Market We need '00 Pontlxea. Oldx. Suit and Oadlllaei. Alao aharp '57, ' and '50 models AVERILL’S 3010 Dlxla Rwy. Enswertb S Boatte, MA 5-1408 AS MUCH AS 150 POR OOOD JUNK cars. CaU e03-3S5»~____ HELP! HELP! HELP! 7TE NEED EXTRA CLEAN USED CARS RIGHT NOW! "TOP DOLLAR PAID'. Glenn’s Motor Sales TOP IMLLAR POR CLEAN C. and trucks or trade up er d< EcoDomy ears, 3S'Aubutw. For Sale Cara ^ -DOOR SI * 1-ownei only 0705. 1 URBAN - - ____________ 555 B W< Blrmlnsham, MI 4-4415. of $11 CRKOI King ■ Iv to pay off balaneadue 1107. CALL MR. WBITB. IIT MANAGER, FX *4403. - lit 8. Saginaw 1055 BUICK 1-DOOR HARDTOP. • automatic trsnsmlsalon, radio and haater. whitewall tiret, power brakes and steering. Ho i----- down, payments of |l4 a m Lloyd Motors, LIncoln-Mei Comet. 333 S. Saginaw. 3-0131_________________ 1067 BUICK 4-DOOR ckNftlR? Lucky Auto Sales, 1 full prici B. Bagliisy '5* BUICK SPECIAL 3-DOOR WITH Dynaflow, radio and heater. 3 anow tires with rims, used very little, ^t. owner, runs good. CADILLAC. 1058, 3-d6oR COUPE. This car Is a real ptnklel Has power steering and brakes. If Bale price only II. warranty,' 8UBURBA USED CARS 515 8 Ml 4-4405 I 5300 cash. OR 3-»146. r Ures. beautiful genutnt blar Interior. Full power. Must set and drlv* t .. predate 1 Sale price tl.OML 1 year warranty. SUBURBAN - OLDS USED CARS. 555 8. Woodward, Birmingham. MI 44415.___________ TOP, __________ — ■ Ills, _______lOll'._______ ROI^T CO. 1000 8 VrCXJDWARD CH^ROLET. PAfUClirdOD our summer pleasure. Sale price _nly 41.805. 1 year warranty. BUB-URBAN-OLDS USED CARS. ° Woodward. Birmingham, AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4 '55 CHEVROLET HARDTOP. $405 1055 CHEVROLET LDOOR STICK Full race. 1050 truck motor. Bored to 4 Inches. MY M70*. CHEVROLET BEL-AIR -T. fully eqidnpad with tc teantsusuon. etc-. SBcel-e&idltlac ^ — ------ : HwnsmiBsioa, esc-, swcci-eondltlan. sharp tu-tone 1 and white flnMi- Must Immediately, abaolately SJ"oTl CALL Ml.. MANAGER. King baloheirW B. FB gSfe. net UI B. loss CHEVROLET CON3TERTIBLE. automatic transmltsli power pacte PI l-37$5. 1057 CHXnrROLET. 3 t radio and heater. Ai mission. Vacation spec R(SR MOTORS 134 Oakland Ave. FS 44IM Chrysler — PiymauUi — VhMt sports coupe, power steering, pow. er brakes Big engine, alandard ^nsj^hm, take mrer paymt.,. ■4i'{ioR»Alk~ggiWfl6b _ ON. TOhltewalls, Radio and Kost-tr. PowsrgBdt Tranamlaslon, S^^orSh’ CTn^rBolSt^ccL 1000 8. WOODWAIUI AVE.. BOt-MINOKAM. MI 4-373*. 7i CTETRbtK'••firfAfa'"* .....- —-----------a Heater. _______ ______ „ fSS.T* j mo. call Credit Msr„ Mr. Parka at MI 4-7MM, Harold 'Turaer Ford. 1»** aUiVr •li*»ADt ~g»(»TS ----- Black, V-S, Pawir glide. -etearterr-ww-wweer, ifptloiiaUy clean. MU 4-31*3 OMLT *•„ 10*7 MERCURY. Mr.. V4, automatic. radio and heater. 1*67 MERCURY. 3-dr . V-*, automatic. radio and beater, power steering, TOM BOHR. INC. 120 g. Main. MUford, MU 4-171* -41 CORVAIR MONZA 2 DOOR Black Flnlib. Automatic, Radio and Heater. TVbltewalls. Waibers, ONLY 4.SOO mUcs. «2,14S_. NORTH ately, absolutely a od, lost take Over ». *4.7(1 weekly te pay oft bsl-ancedua ofMflT CALL MR. WHITI, CREDIT MANAGER. FE *4402. King Auto Balaa 11* fl. Baglhaw WHY NOT! Enley th* comfort and pteitlgU of a Buick! Here's a l(5t Bulek LcUabr* sedan, radio, beater, Dynaflow . and whitewall tires that srou ean own for only $1*4 *0 down, (or your old ear of equivalent value) and monthly paymenta of *55.54. This includes all ehargea I sales tax, title and Ueena* plates). FISCHER BUICK '84 S. Woodward, BTiam MI 4-6222 1*M CHTVROLgT HARDTOP, V-l, antomitlc. new whitewsUa. $$$$. XJh a-a44. -DOOR. AUTOMAT- payments of *lt 4* per a— Lloyd Motori. Ltncorn-tteieury-Comet, 232 8. Saginaw. FE 2-*131. DESOTO 4-OOOR. AUTO- heater, extra nice 1 awntr. no money down, paymeate of 3*1 a month. Lloyd Motors. Uneeln-Mercury-Comet, 232 B. Baglnaw. FI ,24131.__________ • , I* DODOS. V*. EXCELLENT CON- ABSOLUTELY NO MOREY DOWN. Aaaam* payment* at 517.4* per mo. Credit Mgr^ Mr. Parks at SO 4-1***. BaroM Turner, Pard. “A-1” Special 1959 FORD Custom 10* *4oor, S cylinder with ftaadard transmlsalod, lA-dto and beater, a real aica car. $1045 BEATTIE 1960 FALCON 4-Deor John McAuliffc, Ford t OAKLAND hBve more tnccess in fsid* ing it in The Pontine Press Want Ads. THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. Jt%Y 7, mi F«r SMa Cm rORO. MV««QOII ■&»»». ritlriUMM. A1-««BCT wratnc-kM Ink*. «H*w Jwi nkt MW] IW By Sal* Cart ' , lOt ■N TOmO I DOOR AOTOKATIC. iMT 00. im a. ««^u« AT*. RuwBte^^ ** ' •*“ sTsaai' RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Ramblor Dealer LAKE ORION DON'T BUY ’Til. YOU GIVE US A try: A*1 Used Cars i ’56 Chevrolet ......$ 5Q5 aoooR. clean ’S; PlytiM ♦a I TULY SPECIALS ItH awebse CAIAlte wAsa. RrAr*-MaUc. lUAt* AM tot*l- I Asm kATAtop. Dt »*. HMt*r. > WhNtwi »■! Tmf *»I. 'tt, I Awwia pkratBl. For Sal* Cor* 106 UPA roRD taMOR. AtrrOMATIC IrMwimaa. r«At*.uA iMkIwr. Thtimu u»a *xtfk Bta* And M moMT Mwm. »»».»• pjr naatk UwyA Matwr*. Sfissi-^srui^r**- »* ■ ‘•‘"lor. I»rt*ct ««r. Atuok tArauabowt. muM ■•*• iMMAlktHr. bkM>lat*lt B« CA*k BMdtA. t*k. ^PhAlkae* Ain of k^WRIT*. CRl AOSR. ei aa«M. “cifiK 2JO, HEATER. warmtALL gftiffisias !?>.!» 'Haupt Pontiac Sales CLARSarON U On* Nil* aortk at C.S 1«' UApI* SPECIAL ivmi:* & A.r*-, ’56 Olds A-DR. 1 •5S Olds ..$.595 OVER '55 Pontiac ........$ 3‘>5 WAOOR, AOTOMATIC ’54 Olds ...........$ 395 REDAN. POWER M per _____ R AND c RAMBLER *B5nI_ 8DFER MAREET ATER. EM Mm AIAS CM*m»rc» RA k Cw M(T ,1 *M1 ^tm. lui^l 1955 Ford Fairlane IQSj MARMADUKE By Andenost Jt Laening bLDS. itM'S AND TcrtlU**. btlAtop*. 1 OBwra wpo «> daora *11 Is pw^>*«t MkdUloB. Sal* prieMI (ran t«H. R« nooejr dwWB. 1 **a> wBiraBtjr. aUBUR-BAH ORED CARS. MA S. IMS PORO l-DOOR. *4Si! i _____FE S-MIS__ MM WORD *MXM. RilPItO HllAT. *T. t erl. stralfht *h»ft PbU arte*.!, MS* BIRMWOHAM-BAMBLER. !-.«5^ao¥8|blsB^ IMT OLOkMOat^. SOPkR • t Door hardtop. (M» (ttU pitcc wRb no B0B*r dovB. Lwckr Ruto Saict. Ml S S*Aln»w; PE «-«>« INA OLDSIMBILB. 1 TONE. « door. pov*r hrakoa. wh«* —"■ c*U*Bt coBdltloa iSuat ImmTdiaUO. Bk*olut*ly no cun n**d*d, ]Bit Uk* OT*r p*j- ^(“taianc*'iM o(_jSk1. cRL kOt WHin. CREDIT UAH-AOER. n AAM2. Elm Ailto SalM IM a a«llB*w 1959 PLYMOUTH BUtloa Wafoa. radio aod *r. WhltawtU Ur**. *1M. TAYLOR'S OK USED CARS CHBTRinXT. OLO6H0RUJI uTSr -“gllVaJt, superior Ato B»lU 5M OoAIUhI lltr Mr Park* at Ml 4-TJM,'MERCURY, IMS. cbtONT PARE Harald Turnrr Ford___, SUttoo waton. r*all.T nharp' All StlSfl. Mlr prUMToniriUM, T***.*?* * Woodward. Blrailm- 1 yyar warraiity. SCBURB/“ *"* OLDS USED CAM. “ ^-------- I Wood-ii»M MERC Ikl* on* wttk matrhlm caealloBl eondnieo Ml. fully *oulpp^. OTt idimodUtrly. anto- ’S5 Mercury_______ . .$ 29^ ford, countrt souire sta^ lEOAN.-AOTOMATlC j Uk? orTr si"?J eiftllaat condMao Ml *-**" CRtOIT MANAOIR. FB S«402 --------iElng Auto Sala* IIS S. Sa«lBaw SSERCDHY S-PAmENOER "DEMOS" ’61 BONNEVTLLK CONVERTIBLE - All whil*. SBwrr *t*«rlat aad brakr* -**KEW CAB WARRANTT -SAVE $800 _4..:61.BONNEVnXr'^ VISTA - Power etcertof *od krake*. S.SSS mU*< NEW CAR WARRANTT : SAVE $800 TRUCK SPECIAL!!! •47 DUMP TRUCK $295 BtnriNO OR (TELLINO SEE OB BEFORE TOO DEAL HOUCiHTEN & SO.N B> EASY IeJ&IS. 9A FORD. FULL FRICE S3M •kcUd* Motor*. FB S-4M1 - - W ,MoBlealn ’56 FORD ..$595 H TON. OOOO TIRES ’55 FORD .$495 Sa TON. OOOD TIRES RUSS JOHNSON : Motor Sales ■ lAKE ORION MY 2-Wl MY 2-Zm UkMidt Motors. r UnnsdloUly. BMdsd. X—a__________ ^,jienU of ik!!j d’ra V!»ritA”ii! ist. WHITE CREDIT MANAOBR. FE t Anto________ JBD, very «v/i _______law, or IASS*.________ ■Sf PORO. ii-DOOR. A NICE CAR. saw fuU ^* wttk no inao»y down. Uieky Auto Sklu. Ml 8 Sactnnv. PH 4.WU. * 111 Willi ss n&joam (ONWAY'S AOTOMART '.** Ch»T- " > owner . silS Cp*. Not ruitod . . SIM -------« Sodan. __________ A ts U Pord HT. Die* ........ X«M TtlS Cooloy Lako Rd. Pk. lil-TWB MEBCORY 4-DOOR. AOTO- ---------------EWAlS. TIRES. ABSOLOTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Anuna ^PW«*iit» of SM.TS por mo. CaQ CredR M|r Mr. Park* at MI 4-1SSS. Biroli ■ TMWTi fttf., I 11-1 STOP! LOOK! SAVE! 1959 PONTIAC $2295 fTllla 4.door hardtop. Pow-_ ^rlat, kraku. wladow* Cer^nd’^eJSia ^ MmtUul rad nnith. "OS Plr*t 19.58 CHEVY .. .$1495 IBpalt l.door hardtop. Stick Shift, radla. heater aod while-wall Urt* A aoUd b)sek b**«y. 1959CHEVY ....$1995 lmp*l* eonverUhle. P « w * r ■Iterini aod brake*. Power-Ellde. radio. bosUr. Or**n with whit* top. 1958 OLDS.......$lk5 SAloor hirdtop Power iteerlsf asd br*ke*. Rydramtuc. white-will* Like D*w. 496BPONTr.\C . .$2795 1956 PONTIAC $ 79.t 1960 BUICK ....$2695 Edoer hardtop. Power *t*er1ni. power brako*. T^aaflow, radio. Mater and vhlta Ure*. Dark Cien with Udbt fr*«n tUin. U Ilk* new. |959 FORD ,..; .$1795 1960 RAMBLER $1695 Super d-dpor, I eylladar*, *UDdard traaamlttton.. ■ o 11 d (r**B tinlih. A real ibarpl*. 1960 PONTIAC $2595 1957 PONTIAC $ 995 Sutton w.agon, Hydrmmatte. .$ 795 1956 OLDS Super •W 4.do<..______._______ eteertna sod brake*. Hydramal-Ic. radio, heater *nd whit* tire* Blue with whit* top. A truly 1960 FALCON ..$1695 fcdoor *e()*n. FordO-M»Uc, r*-^. healer, euetom trim, blue 1961 BUICK ....$2095 fwilSliw |»e?n“tl*t |958 PONTIAC $1495 ^r Chief 4-door hardtop, fidramatlc. radio, boater, illil Em* and run* ilka new. 1958 BUICK ....$1495 Caatury hardtop. Dyaaflow, power tturtef and brake*. Uc* red and black flnlah. Sea lOTiO PONTIAC $2595 1956 CHEVY ...$ 695 Vi toe pickup. SUndard Iran*- 1959 FORD...........$1395 4-door aedan. t-cyllnder enclnr. 1956 BUICK ....$495 Special 4-door hardtop l^a-flow. radio, beater and eibltc tire*. Bur u la and tart I 1958 DE SOTO $1295 h DO money down, p B^MINOKiSd-ItA^UU m E. W“~1w*rd. • —" Ml d-i Pavar ^oartnA. .uw.. l-ddM. aeantepa OL l^SM^ auck. lias, sari . Montcalm iicr W ekr-mlst bln* wl int Interior, eqatp^ w._ •taerliif nnd brake*. ThU_____________ liut Ilk* new. I yenr warranty. See thU Drenm Bast at SDSUR-BAN-OLDS USED CARS. SSS 8. John Mc.\uhffc. Lord ‘ -AELAKD_______FE S-4M1 •51 PLYMOb'rit SAVOY S DOOR. S Cjrl., Stand—■ ' mlaaton, radio ^yd boaeci. Van Camp Chevrok t, Inc. ILFORD ___________MD 4-Mas ■M PLYMOUTH PDOOR. SCTUN- PLYMOUTH. ISIS e-DOOR. PflTH Hut 13.S0S actual mil**. A tonulao Blrmln(h*m trade. EdMpped with —------- -------‘niiim, lor —— pleeture. ■ I. bu only I cylinder ys^^Woodward. MSI PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR HARD-TOP. RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC tran4mib8iom, wmTE-WALL TIRE8,ABSOLCTELT HO Monet doWn. Auaw* pay-manU of tW.TS per mo. Call Cni-« M-e Mr. Park* at ut e-"oa Turner. Ford. )IO. BEATEN. WHITEWALL ■Y l 6 E E ABSOLUTELY NO MONWTTWWW fdilllimo--PM-menta of Sd.W par mo. Call Credit Mvr Mr. Park* at Ml O-ISOO. Harold Turnar, Pard. is PLYMOUTH belvedere: S23S. PE 4.A1M.________________ 'll BONNEVILLB VISTA. LOAD- edl OR PdIM.______________ MSS PONTIAC STAB CHIEF alon. a tally aqulppad (harp traen and whlU baauty. Mu*t mor* immediately, abaolutely no catb needed. Jtiet take oeer MymenU el SI.M weekly to pay all balanco duo of |M1. CALL MR. WHITE. CR*DIT MANAOER. PI S.«*dS. KInt Auto Balee US S. SAElnaw MEYER’S “El Camino Sales"’ ICHEVROLET) r E Walton Bled.. MM Pontiac a door, stick. *M experimental e n s I n e; '54 Plymouth 4 door, atlek. StS- PC 2-3235. . MdS PONTIAC CATALINA\WAO-on. loattad with axtraa. very clean ana nle*. full pile* sa.*5d. PC S-4UI. eteerinf and brake*. |2.1M. OR 4-nu, ______________ MSS CATALINA. HTDRAMATIC. radio, heater. lood condition. S1.3SS. PE 5-4314____________ M POHixAC BONNkVlLLE. M.OOO ----------------^ M PONTIAC CATALINA. ^ BiUck cooeert. ’M Chary. '54 Poed. ’S3 Pord. Hlpp* Auto Salta. PC '56 PONTUC cklfcPTiAN S-b60R: Very good machanteally. Bydra-malte dries. Haoda palaL SaiS. M54 PONTIAC 8TARCHICP. *»-dio. beater, bydrsmsUc. 1135. PE 2-03SS. wehaW > Bale*. M3 8. Saginaw, : ... ;CT-1?AN- Biriningham Trades WILSON PONTL\C-CADlLLAC 1350 N. Woodward Ml 4-M30 Convert. MM BXnqC INTICTA CONV— Ublt. Plre-Cnglne red with matching InUrlor and a Sodw whlM top. Radio and heatar, Dynanow, Power xteeiiiig. Power brake*, eleetrie wlndoer* sad whitewall Ure*. Impaccsbl*. Pull price $2,095 FISCHER BUICK-. 784 S.'Woodward. B'han MI 4-6222 1959 BUICK ....$1895 4-door eedsn. Pull power. Dyne-flow. groen and leery finlab. Like new tbrougbout. 1956 FORD ....$495 3-doer aedan. T4. Pord-O-MaUc. radio, baaur and WhlU Urta. SeUd gray fbiu£7 1955 FORD ....$495 Wagon Coontre Sedan. T4 ea-glae, Perd-O-Matte. radio boot- SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK J^OCHESTER OL 1-8133 Across from New Gar Sales ' OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. OR LATER iQosed Wednesday, Friday and Saturday at 6 p.m. GET THE JUIVIP ON JULY- BE READY FOR "VACATION TIME" Hit the Highway to Happiness in one > of these "'GOODWILL USED CAR" Beauties! '60 PONTIAC -'59 BUICK '59 PONTIAC $2695 '60 PONtlAC Ventura Sport Coup# with radio, beater, Rydramatic tranimltelon, power brake* and power aUerIng. $2695 "60 PONTIAC Catatla* VI tU 4-Doer vlUi $2495 ateeiing. whlUwaU t $1995 '59 PONTIAC Catalina 3-Door Hardtop hti radio, beater and Hydrtmst-Ic trantmUalon. Her* It a '$2095 '59 BUICK 4-Door. It hat radio, bealcr, automatic tranamlaalon. power brakaa and power "”$1995 beater, SMdramatle trau-mlaalon. Her* It a vary ■harp car and tt la In *x- "$1895 '59 PONTIAC ... —tlon Wagon. a radio, beaUr. Hydra-matte tranamlaaien. power brkkra, power aUertng aad luggag* rack. $2395 '57 CHEVY Button Wagon with radio baaur and automnUe tram mlulon. tt bat a real gow aaglM and body. $1095 FACTORY BRANCH PONTIAC GOODWILL USED CARS 65 Mi. Clemens St. -ALSO- pc 3.7954 Corner Cass and Pike ' ^ ^ DRIVE A MILE SAVE A PILEl New Dodore Dart $1946.65 SMALL TOWN LOW OVERHEAD 35.IM lOLE OUARANTEE RAMMLER-DALLAS Ml N. MAIN ROCHB8TE1 OL Mill DODOC - CHRT8LEB - TROCEI *Tl^*WASN.**B5nSaitf‘ Trana-mlatMB, RadU and Hpsur, Black PInIth and Rad Trim. A R«^ WARD AYE., RlRiaNOHAM. Ml 4-am. m * MMt ilATtg TOP. AUTOifATIC TRANMI8-BlOlt, RADIO AND NEATER. WHITEWALL TINES. ABSOLUTELY MO MOMBY DOWN. Aa- £“ar«i;%!rs;r^B*r.“p5s."jt Ml 4-MM. ----^---------- 1960 PONTIAC Una 3-Door, radle and haot-HydramaUe tiagamlaalen. • Jofin l^IcAuIiffe, ^ord t» OAKLAMD — • -* IM1 PONT MM RAMBLER STATION WAOON. AutomaUc. Radio beater. Servlet record* tvallabi ilsi S1VOEBAKER MM PORD .. VOLKSWAOBN REBblLT^ai 'M Paekaid Patrletain ... Raat. UR *54 a^^^Pora anil CbaVy 'll^ttiL PLENTY omns TO CHOOSE .-----Cnri — HASKINS Vacation MI7 Ch tM wl tfanaml IMT PonUae 4-door aUUon waton. BydramtUe, Power aUcrlng, Power brake*, radio, heater. Like new cpmUUob tbroa^iout. A real buy. 1958 VOLKSWAGON KARMANN ORU Raft w* bav* a atunnlDg tn-tnna traan baauty that'* raaliv a dream. Tb* radio and heaUr In thU car add U tt* luxurtou* comfort, a* well a* tta 4-tp**d trammlaalm. There art only M.OM mtlea on thl* gam aod> tbty'r* all aaty oo**.T& er-I* a* cuU at a bug In a ni and tt can b* youra (or onl . tt.3M. Crissman RCICHESTER OL 2-9721 power engl from the tl and balg* ItH a*vn dan. Powei Power brat HASKINS CHEVROLET GEE! WHAT A NICE CAR ! A ItST Bnlek Special. 3-door hard-top. Radio and bettar, Dynaflow. Power aUarlng. Power brakei and whlUwall Ure*. Iceberg wfalU with Mint green InUrlor. IB trery Way tbi* antomobUt ratlacta lb* careful car* given U tt by ttr — vlout owner. Pull price $995 Remember, we encourage you tb check our cars with a mechanic you know and trust. FISCHER BUICK 784 S. Woodward. B'ham MI 4-6222 Fw SdoCtfi. extra*. »L«M. PE MMS. MM RA»UB« WAaOH/ VERT isLiritaff-.±. ” OLIVER BUICK The Deater on the Comer Who Dooa Bttiuoca w tb* Bguai -Invites You to Inspect Our Fine Selection of Used UrsToday! 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 1959 FORD top maxe UU ear a muel. Bom* of the other feataras on tble mUt condlUon dream are Me radio end beaUr. power Jryon* of the M.Ms----------- thfi baby bare ----- eaay making There are 3 I1.3M and tl. c£^*tra Crissman ROCHESTER OL2-9721 Ig VOLESWAOEM. TOP CONDI-tlon. CaU EM 3-443t. HOMER HIGHT Small Town Trades: INI CoreetU 4 tpoed tranxmUelo-Fully equipped .. tmt Mgl Ou'U* Corvair* TM « AutomaUc traaemlttloa. L.._ and beater ... II»*» MM ChevI* Corvalro TM 4 door. Pwr 8^ Cart 1961 Oldsmobile 98 4-Door Sedan ""sPbCIAL $3495 JEROME Motor Sales no a. Saginaw_PE a-Tsn WILL ACCEPT Beau. Melera- Omu. ^Eeho eft a iteam wbUU*. Suntbiii* tram i thing moyaMp. a Bill Spence. Rambler 13 S. Main m. (MU) CLARESTOM OPEk EVES_________MA 54Mt OUVER BUICK The DeaUr an tb* Ooraer Who Dee* Bnalnaat M the Sguar* '60 BUICK ......-$2095 ...$1995 IDTOP. RA- eiM WhlU InUrlor . whit* r—-*— Special Urlor. WhlMwall prieel ’59 BUICK . 4-DOOR LetABRB HARI dlo, heaUr turbine — Cbevl* Btaeayn* 3 door. 8 erl. indard tranamUWoa. R a dlo MM Pord enetom |M. 1 Chevrolet -Pontiac -Buick Dealer BUICK...........$1995 IMTOiTA 4-DOOR SEDAN. Radio. ----, Urblno I—... wiu whlU ’57 CHEVROLET $795 3M STATION WROON. Radio, hi er. entomatle tr*n»ml**‘— MANT C- T^aOOEB PBOM OLIVER Motor Sales 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 CHEVY-LAND Sharp - Clean - Thoroughly Reconditioned Used Gars ’60 Chevrolet . Impala Sport Coupe $1995 '60 Chevrolet Impala Convertible $2295 '60 Chevrolet Bi.scayne 2-Door S-cyllnder engine, economical $1585 ’60 Corvair 4-Door $1485 ’60 Chevrolet Impala 4-Door Sdn. $2095 ’58 Chevrolet Delray 4-Door ’60 Chevrolet Brook wood Wagon 6-cyllndcr engine and Power- EQuIpped with d-cyllnder engine, tUndxrd tranamlMloa. betUr. Baby blu* flnlah. glide tranamluhm ooOiia^tbarp 4door. Alio hu radio, heater and apart ttutbai naver been on ttie ground. Jtwtl Mu* with $995 all vinyl InUrlor. $1995 ’58 Chevrolet Station Wagon A Urrifle Toeman 3rDoor utility unit wlU gUiUnlng aUvar luelU flnlth. HeaUr of oourMl ’60 Corvair 4-Door Sedan A real thsrp on* of U* TM tertei that ti equipped with radio, beater, tUadard trana- $895 mlaaloo. Wbluwall Una add U tb* beauty of (bit gam. $1395 '61 Chevrolet Nomad Wagon Factory offlclal'e ear. . Power ateerlng and brake*, potrer retV window. Many, many axtrax . .. Vd engine, auUmatlo tranamlaalon. whit* Urea, new car guar- '55 Chevrolet 2104-Door Economical 4-cyllnder engine and aUndard traumlsalon make thlx one an Ideal laoeod ear. Ha* radio. bexUr and ibarp light graan flnlah. '$2895 $375 ’61 Chevrolet Impala Sport Sedan V-S angina, antomatto tranamla-tlm. power aUcrtni and brake*, alM power wlndowa. Hhiu Ur*«, Ivory with red Interior. PacUry omeltrt ear. Maw ear $2795 ’60 Monza Sport Coupe Effoitlau PowergUda trnnamli-aton. radle, heater. Jewel bln* flniili aet off by whItewtU UrM. Tbla unit li fuat Uk* ntwl $1895 ’59 Chevrolet 2-Door ’59 Chevrolet Impala Convertible 4